THECHAf�LES RICHMOND HENDERSONLIBRARYI'HESENTED BYMRS. CHARLES R. HENDERSOf\'Cb� Cap and GownPUbllsb¢d at tbt UnlVtrsity. Of £l)ltagound¢r tbt dlrtttlOn of tbt Ord¢r Of tbtIron mask ••• tbt tblrd volumt ••••• €igbtttn bundrtd and ntntty-tlgbt.tomartin JI. RptrsonPrtsldtnt of tbt Board of trustttstbls !took IsRtsptttfully Dtdltattd.6r¢¢tlngsTn £ap and 60wn aoain we standJlnd wtlcome all wltb out$tntcb�d band,Our omtinos bm we now �xt�ndJlnd to tbe world w� would commtodOur brid account of coll�ge·land.Tn oain would words of ours expandtbe JOYs of lif� at our command,'for bm our jovs and trials blendTn £ap and 60wn.Tn trutb, your bum bit scrlb�s baot planntd Ito answ�r futur� v�ar$t d�mandJlnd mak� tbi$ book a wortbv frltndWb�n coll�g� days are at an tod;Jlnd �o�n tb�n makt 11ft $t�m grandIn £ap and 60wn.Cb� Board of €dltorsmanaging €dltorsARTHUR SEARS HltNNINGWII,l.OUGHBY GltORGlt W AI.l.INGJlssi8tant managing editorTHOMAS TltMPl.E HOYN!tAl.l.ltN GREY HOYTJlssistant Businu$ managerERNltST HAMIl.TON DIl.l.ONJls$odatt editorsMAURICE GORDON Cl.ARKltRUFUS MAYNARD REEDMARJORIE BltNTON COOKltEDWARD MAX BAKERWIl.l.IAM FRANClt ANDERSONETHEl. KEENRUTH ISABltl. V ANDltRl.IPWIl.l.IAM FRANCIS MAcDONAI.J)CHARl.OTTlt ROSE Tltl.l.ltRCARl. Howltl.l. SA WYllR.5THE CAP AND GOWN is greatly indebted to thefollowing artists for the illustration of this volume .",MR. WII.UAM DERRICK RICHARDSONMR. PERCY BERNARD ECKHARTMR. B. ENGLEBERT KEYMISS EDITH A. ELLIOTTMR. MARTIN FISCHERMR. JOHN T. MCCUTCiTEONMI$ GERTRUDE FULTONMR. ROBERT G. ELLISMISS NOLIA V. GILCHRISTMR. DONN CRANEMISS EFFIE GARDINERMR. RALPH LE Roy PECKMR. CHARLES EDWARD CONGDONThe Lanescape Photographs were contributed byMR. JOSEPH EDWARD RAVCROFTMR. EMORY COBB ANDREWSPROFESSOR MANN6-�.?;:;:;::-::::::?� �,- - 'tJ.h�JE7fr-;j£y'--JlD61anct BackwardBEING A CHRONICLE Of THE PROGRESS Of THE UNIVERSITY FOR THE PAST TWO YEARSIIHE University has at last reached that degree of vine-clad dignity whereit has a Past. From that time all glory dates; in that atmospheretraditions flourish. Already members of the Class of '96, the firstregularly graduated class, are returning to regale the students of thepresent with tales of "the old days" and wonder if the fun now can compare withthe larks of '94 or the wild freedom of '93 before the Midway was cleared away.They stroll about the campus in quest of old-time haunts only to start and stareat a massive pile of austere gray suddenly looming up before them. Occasionalvisitors go into ecstasies over our" stupendous piles" and tell you what an educationthey would have had if they could have read Homer in red-roofed buildings. Thenthey tell you how much of the University could be seen (or, rather, was not tobe seen) from the Ferris wheel. The nightwatchman will tell you over his mid­night pipe how his boy used to shoot ducks where the gymnasium now stands.Why the boy's sport should have been spoiled for the sake of the present buildingis a mystery known doubtless only to the President and to the Senior Class.Notwithstanding this exampl� of apparent retrogression, the growth of theUniversity in the past two years has been phenomena1. The four Biological buildingsill Hull Court, with their well-equipped departments; the Yerkes Observatory atWilliams Bay, Wisconsin; the elaboration of the system of affiliated institutions; thewidening of the scope of the University Extension, and the international expeditionsin which the University is a cooperator, mark a development unequalled by anyother institution of learning in the world.December 14, 1895, Miss Helen Culver of Chicago presented to the Universityproperty valued at $1,000,000, "the whole gift to be devoted to the increase andspread of knowledge within the field of the biological sciences." A part of this largecontribution was intended to further endow the biological departments, a part forthe erection of buildings, a part for sustaining an inland experimental station and amarine laboratory, and a part for sustaining on the West side of Chicago, UniversityExtension lectures on biology, particularly on the advances of science in sanitationand hygiene. This contribution is a memorial of Charles J. Hull, who was a trusteeof the old University.of Chicago. The corner-stones of the buildings were laidJuly 3, 1896, during the Quinquennial celebration. Work was pushed rapidly8throughout the following year, and they were formally opened at the ceremonies ofthe Nineteenth Convocation, July 1, 1897. The zoological, botanical, anatomicaland physiological departments now have equipments that place the University in theforemost rank of institutions for the study of the biological sciences. The otherprovisions of the gift are being carried out as rapidly as opportunities permit. TheHull Gate, and also the buildings, were designed and planned by Mr. Henry IvesCobb.The Yerkes Observatory is a work of which the University is justly proud. Withthe largest and most powerful telescope in the world and unparalleled means for usingit to the greatest advantage, we may, with all modesty, expect to make the mostvaluable contributions to learning in the field of astronomy for many years to come.The Observatory was founded in 1892, through the munificence of Mr. Charles T.Yerkes, of Chicago. In that year Mr. Alvan G. Clark undertook the construction ofan object-glass of 40 inches aperture, for the principal telescope of the Observatory,and Messrs. Warner & Swasey were given a contract for the. equatorial mounting.The latter was completed in the following year andexhibited by its makers at the Columbian Exposi­tion. An important feature, employed for the firsttime in this telescope, is a system of electric motorsby means of which the various motions are effected.The object-glass has been tested by ProfessorJames E. Keeler, who acted at the request of theDirector as the "expert agent" called for by thecontract. The definition was found to be fullyequal to that of the Lick telescope, while the lightgachering power is considerably greater. The for­mal dedication and opening took place July 2,1897.The University Press has achieved a nationaland international reputation for the journals andbooks which it has published during the past twoyears. Each department of the University has aperiodical in which appears the latest contributions to its own special field of knowl­edge. . In addition, books published under the direction of the departments and fromthe pens of professors pursuing individual research, have attracted the close attentionof the scientific and literary world.Plans for a large building adequate to the demands of the Press are complete,and work has already been commenced. The building will be located on the cornerof Ellis Avenue and Fifty-eighth Street. It will contain the offices, composing9rooms, presses and mailing department. The latest machinery for making a greatpublishing house will be put in, and the scope of the department widened.The University might well be content to be known only through its ExtensionDepartment, which has brought its many advantages for culture and instruction topeople who are prevented by circumstances from living on the campus or withindaily reach of the quadrangle. During the year 1896-97 the department maintained95 active Extension centers, with 141 courses in progress. Eight states were repre­sented. The total attendance at the Extension lectures was 29,344, and at the Exten­sion classes 17,382. Twenty-nine lecturers were engaged for the work of the year.In addition to the regular work the department has organized a system of travelinglibraries that the student may obtain the necessary reference and text-books recom­mended in the various courses.Beyond our national boundaries the University has made a most creditable show­ing. Polar and Oriental expeditions of discovery and research have all had represent­atives, while our professors in the astronomical, geological and biological departmentshave been leaders and organizers of parties for furthering investigation in their res­pective realms. The Barrows Lectures, endowed by Mrs. Caroline E. Haskell, weredelivered in India by John Henry Barrows, D.D., Professorial Lecturer for theUniversity.Probably more exemplary of our astonishing growth than any other feature isthe increase of the number of books in the libraries. For the two years ending withApril 1, 1898, the additions have amounted to more than 25,000 books.By no means a minor feature is the organized system of affiliated institutionswhich cooperate with the University. The most important one affiliated during theperiod covered by this chronicle is the Bradley Polytechnic Institute at Peoria, Ill.This institution had the advantage of starting under the general supervision of theUniversity. The opening of the school occurred October 8, 1897.As far as building is concerned the campus is changing as rapidly as the mostfin-de-siecle co-ed could desire, The gods from the faculty room on Mount Olympuscontinue to decorate this little domain in large patches of cold gray and fiery red tillthe effect is most striking and bewildering. But where, oh where, is the landscapegardener to add a softening, inviting touch to the scene? This criticism is, we believe,, common only among the men-the women care not a whit for the landscape so longas the trees in front of Kelly are strong enough to support a hammock and oldenough to maintain a discreet silence.College spirit, about which so much has been said and written since the firststudent registered at Cobb Hall, is steadily growing. For a long time keen observersthought they saw manifested among the students that insidious germ which for wantof a better term we call Harvard indifference. A second glance, however, proved10the trouble to be not indifference, but the lack of a past. The undergraduate spiritis keeping pace with the march of tradition. A few attempts have been made tomanufacture the latter precious article, but though partial success has attended theseefforts, it cannot compare with the natural growth, evidence of which we begin todiscern here and there. The youth of the institution must always be borne in mind.Six years may seem a long time to the student who has droned through his Greek andMathematics, but it is a short time for such an eternal creature as a tradition.Wrinkles are not natural to the babe's brow. If we see them there the child looksworn, pinched and ugly. Why, on our walls the vines have reached only the first­story windows. The students here now who are trying to put the Glee Club, the Capand Gown, and the Oratorical association on a paying and succes=ful basis; who aretrying to rouse more enthusiastic support for the athletic teams ; who are trying tostart literary magazines, daily papers and other enterprises-these students are pion­eers. Wait till the ivy has reached the second story casements. Let tradition go itsown -natural pace and college spirit will take care of itself.IICbt Board of trasteesOfflttrsMARTIN A. RYERSON, PRnSIDENTAN DR EW McLEISH, VICn-PREsIDENTCHARLES L. HUTCHINSON, TRnAsuRERHENRY A. RUST, COMP'rRoLLnRTHOMAS W. GOODSPEED, SnCRETARYF. T. GATES CHARLES L. HUTCHINSONEDWARD GOODMAN ALONZO K. PARKERWILLIAM HOLDEN FERDINAND W. PECKFREDERICK A. SMITHELI B. FELSENTHAL MARTIN A. RYERSONWILLIAM R. HARPER DANIEL L. SHOREYHERMANN H. KOHLSAATGEORGE C. WALKER. WILLARD A. SMITHCHARLES C. BOWEN DAVID G. HAMILTONWILLIAM B. BRAYTON THOMAS W. GOODSPEEDJESSE A. BALDWIN ANDREW McLItISHJOHN D. ROCKEFELLER, JR.12cmcers of Instruction and JldmlnistratlonWILLIAM RAINEY HARPER, PH.D., D.D., LL.D.,President of the University, Head Professor of the Semitic Languages and Literatures,and Director of Haskell Oriental Museum.GALUSHA ANDERSON, A.M., S.T.D., LL.D.,Head Professor of Homiletics.GEORGE WASHINGTON NORTHRUP, D.D., LL.D.,Head Professor of Systematic Theology.WILLIAM CLEAVER WILKINSON, A.M., D.D.,Professor of Poetry and Criticism.FRANKLIN JOHNSON, D.D.,Professor of Church History and Homiletics, and Dean of the English TheologicalSeminary.THOMAS WAKEFIELD GOODSPEED, D.D.,Secretary of the Board of Trustees, and University Registrar.ERI BAKER HULBERT, A.M., D.D.,Head Professor of Church History, and Dean of the Divinity School.HERMAN EDUARD VON HOLST, PH.D.,Head Professor of History.THOMAS CHROWDER CHAMBERLIN, PH.D., LL.D.,Head Professor of Geology, and Director of the Walker Museum.JOHN HENRY BARROWS, D.D.,Professorial Lecturer on Comparative Religion.CHARLES O. WHITMAN, PH.D., LL.D.,Head Professor of Zoology.13RICHARD GREEN MOULTON, PH.D.,Professor of Literature in English.CARL GUSTAV LAGERGREN, A.B., D.B.,Professor (in the Swedish Theological Seminary) of Systematic Theology, and Deanof the Seminary.JOHN MERLE COULTER, PH.D.,Head Professor of Botany.WILLIAM GARDNER HALE, A.B., LL.D.,Head Professor of Latin.HARRY PRATT JUDSON, A.M., L.L.D.,Head Professor of Political Science, and Dean of the Faculties of Arts, Literature,and Science.CHARLES RICHMOND HENDERSON, A.M., D.D.,Professor of Sociology in the Divinity School, and University Chaplain.SHERBURNE WESLEY BURNHAM, A.M.,Professor of Practical Astronomy.CHARLES FREDERIC MILLSPAUGH,Professorial Lecturer on Botany.CHARLES CHANDLER, A.M.,Professor of Latin.WILLIAM H. HOLMES, A.B.,Professor of Archreologic Geology.EMIL GUSTAV HIRSCH, PH.D., LL.D.,Professor of Rabbinical Literature and Philosophy.H. GUNDERSEN, A.M., D.B.,Professor (in the Dano-Norwegian Theological Seminary) of Systematic Theology,New Testament Interpretation and Biblical Literature, and Deanof the Seminary.14J. LAURENCE LAUGHLIN, PH.D.,Head Professor of Political Economy.ALBERT MICHELSON, PH.D.,Head Professor of Physics.FRANK BIGELOW TARBELL, PH.D.,Professor of Classical Archaeology and Greek Epigraphy.DANIEL GIRAUD ELLIOT, F.R.S.E ,Professorial Lecturer on ZO<Slogy.OSKAR BOLZA, PH.D.,Professor of Mathematics.ERNEST DEWITT BURTON, D.D.,Head Professor of New Testament Literature and Interpretation.ALBION WOODBURY SMALL, PH.D.,Head Professor of Sociology, and Director of the University Affiliations.JOSEPH PAXSON IDDINGS, PH.B.,Professor of Petrology.EDMUND JANES JAMES, A.M., PH.D.,Professor of Public Administration and Director of the University Extension Division.PAUL SHOREY, PH.D.,Head Professor of Greek.BENJAMIN S. TERRY, PH.D.,Professor of Medkeval and English History, and Dean in the Senior Colleges.JOHN DEWEY, PH.D.,Head Professor of Philosophy.HENRY HERBERT DONALDSON, PH.D.,Head Professor of Neurology, and Dean of the Ogden (Graduate) School of Science.C. R. VAN HISE, PH.D.,Non-Resident Professor of Pre-Cambrian Geology.15GEORGE BURMAN FOSTER, A.M.,Professor of Systematic Theology.ISAAC BRONSON BURGESS, A.M.,Academy Professor of Latin.ROLLIN D. SALISBURY, A.M.,Professor of Geographic Geology, and University Examiner.OLIVER CUMMINGS FARRINGTON, PH.D.,Professorial Lecturer in Determinative Mineralogy.FRANK FROST ABBOTT, PH.D.,Professor of Latin.ELIAKIM HASTINGS MOORE, PH.D.,Head Professor of Mathematics.JOHN ULRICH NEF, PH.D.,Head Professor of Chemistry.RICHARD ALEXANDER FULLERTON PENROSE, JR., PH.D.,Professor of Economic Geology.SHAILER MATHEWS, A.M.,Professor of New Testament History and Interpretation.EDWARD EMERSON BARNARD, A.M., Sc.D.,Professor of Astronomy and Astronomer of the Yerkes Observatory.GEORGE LINCOLN HENDRICKSON, A.B.,Professor of Latin.ADOLPH CASPAR MILLER, A.M.,Professor of Finance.WILLIAM H. GOODYEAR, A.M.,Professorial Lecturer on Art.JOHN M. PALMER,Professor of Military Science and Tactics.16CHARLES EDMUND HEWI'rT, D.D.,Secretary of Divinity School.FRANCIS ADELBERT BLACKBURN, PH.D.,Associate Professor of the English Language.JULIA E. BULKLEY, PH.D.,Associate Professor of Pedagogy, Dean (of Women) in the Colleges, and Head ofBeecher House.HEINRICH MASCHKE, PH.D.,Associate Professor of Mathematics.JOHN WILDMAN MONCRIEF, A.M.,Associate Professor of Church History.WILLIAM DARNALL ·MAcCLINTOCK, A.M.,Associate Professor of English Literature, and Dean in the Junior Colleges.OLIVER JOSEPH THATCHER, PH.D.,Associate Professor of Medieeval and English History.GEORGE BAUR, PH.D.,Associate Professor of Comparative Osteology and Paleeontology.IRA MAURICE PRICE, D.B., PH.D.,Associate Professor of the Semitic Languages and Literatures.JACQUES LOEB, M.D.,Associate Professor of Physiology and Experimental Biology.CLARENCE FASSETT CASTLE, PH.D.,Associate Professor of Greek on the Edward Olson Foundation.ZELLA ALLEN DIXSON, A.M.,Associate Librarian.MARION TALBOT, A.M.,Associate Professor of Sanitary Science, Dean (of Women) in the Graduate Schoolsand Head of Kelly House.17GEORGE STEPHEN GOODSPEED, PH.D ..Associate Professor of Comparative Religion and Ancient History, and UniversityRecorder.STARR WILLARD CUTTING, PH.D.,Associate Professor of German.FREDERICK STARR, PH.D.,Associate Professor of Anthropology, and Curator of the Anthropological Departmentof Walker Museum.ROBERT FRANCIS HARPER, PH.D.,Associate Professor of Semitic Languages and Literature.JAMES HAYDEN TUFTS, PH.D.,Associate Professor of Philosophy.SAMUEL WESLEY STRATTON, S.B.,�ssociate Professor of Physics.CARL DARLING BUCK, PH.D.,Associate Professor of Sanskrit and Indo-European Comparative Philology.CHARLES HERBERT THURBER, A.M.,Associate Professor of Pedagogy, and Dean of the Morgan Park Academy.CHARLES ZUEBLIN, PH.B.,Associate Professor of Sociology.EDWARD CAPPS, PH.D.,Associate Professor of Greek and Dean in the Junior Colleges.EDWIN HERBERT LEWIS, PH.D.,Associate Professor of Rhetoric.AMOS ALONZO STAGG, A.B.,Associate Professor and Director of the Division of Physical Culture.GEORGE E. HALE, Sc.D.,Professor of Astrophysics, and Director of the Yerkes Observatory.18MARTHA FOOTE CROW, PH.D.,Assistant Professor of English Literature.ALBERT HARRIS TOLMAN, PH.D.,Assistant Professor of English Literature and Senior College Examiner.WILLIAM HOOVER, PH.D.,Non-Resident Assistant Professor of Mathematics.FRANK JUSTUS MILLER, PH.D.,Assistant Professor of Latin, and Examiner of Affiliations.GEORGE EMORY FELLOWS, PH.D.,Assistant Professor of History.FELIX LENGFELD, PH.D.,Assistant Professor of Inorganic Chemistry.MYRA REYNOLDS, PH.D.,Assistant Professor of English Literature and Head of Foster House.HENRY W. ROLFE, A.M.,Non-Resident Assistant Professor of English Literature.H. SCHMIDT-WARTENBERG, PH.D.,Assistant Professor of German.ERNST FREUND, J. U.D.,Assistant Professor of Jurisprudence and Roman Law.OLOF HEDEEN, A.B.,Assistant Professor (in the Swedish Theological Seminary) of Practical Theology andExegesis.FRANCIS WAYLAND SHEPARDSON, PH.D.,Assistant Professor of American History.WILLIAM MORTON WHEELER, PH.D.,Assistant Professor of Embryology.19GEORGE HERBERT MEAD, A.B.,Assistant Professor of Philosophy.FRANK M. BRO:�'�'SON, A.M.,Academy Assistant Professor of Greek.EDWIN EARLE SPARKS, A.M.,Assistant Professor of American History.SHO WATASE, PH.D'.,Assistant Professor of Cellular Biology.WILLIAM ISAAC THOMAS, PH.D.,Assistant Professor of Sociology, and Superintendent of Departmental Libraries.GEORGE EDGAR VINCENT, PH.D.,Assistant Professor of Sociology.GEORGE CARTER HOWLAND, A.M.,Assistant Professor of Romance Languages and Literatures, and Junior CollegeExaminer.ALEXANDER SMITH, PH.D.,Assistant Professor of General Chemistry.JACOB WILLIAM ALBERT YOUNG, PH.D.,Assistant Professor of Mathematics.CAMILLO VON KLENZE, PH.D.,Assistant Professor of German, and Head of Graduate Hall.EDWIN O. JORDAN, PH.D.,Assistant Professor of Bacteriology.F. L. O. WADSWORTH, S.B., E.M., M.E.,Assistant Professor of Astrophysics.JAMES D. BRUNER, PH.D.,Assistant Professor of Romance Languages and Literatures.20JULIUS STIEGLITZ, PH.D.,Assistant Professor of Chemistry.CLIFFORD H. MOORE, A.B., PH.D.,Assistant Professor of Latin.JAMES ROWLAND ANGELL, A.M.,Assistant Professor of Experimental Psychology.ROBERT HERRICK, A.B.,Assistant Professor of Rhetoric.WILLIAM HILL, A.M.,Assistant Professor of Political Economy.ROBERT MORSS LOVETT, A.B.,Assistant Professor of English.SOLOMON HENRY CLARK, PH.B.,Assistant Professor of Public Speaking.RENE DE POYEN-BELLISLE, PH.D.,Instructor in Romance Philology.FREDERIC JAMES GURNEY, A.B., D.B.,Examiner's Clerk.PAUL OSCAR KERN, PH.D.,Instructor in German.WILLIAM MUSS-ARNOLT, PH.D.,Instructor and Assistant Recorder.PORTER LANDER MACCLINTOCK, A�M.,Instructor in English.KARL PIETSCH, PH.D,Instructor in Romance Literatures and Languages.WARDNER WILLIAMS, MuS.Doc., PH.D.,Director of Music.21THORSTEIN B. VEBLIN, PH.D.,Instructor in Political Economy, and Managing Editor of II The Journal of PoliticalEconomy."CLARK EUGENE CRANDALL, D.B., PH.D.,Instructor in the Semitic Languages.LUANNA ROBERTSON, PH.D.,Academy Instructor in German.THEODORE LEE NEFF, A.M. PH.D.,Instructor in Romance Languages.WAYLAND JOHNSON CHASE, A.M.,Academy Instructor in History.MASSUO IKUTA, PH.,D.,Instructor in Chemistry.HERBERT ELLSWORTH SLAUGHT, A.M.,Instructor in Mathematics.FREDERIC IVES CARPENTER, PH.D.,Instructor in English.JAMES HARRINGTON BOYD, Sc.D.,Instructor in Mathematics.HERBERT LOCKWOOD WILLETT, PH.D.,Instructor in Semitic Languages and Literatures and Dean of the Disciples' House.WILLIAM AUGUST PETERSON, n.n.,Instructor (in the Swedish Theological Seminary) in General History, Church His­tory, and the Swedish Language.CHRISTIAN JORGINIUS OLSEN,Instructor (in the Dane-Norwegian Theological Seminary) in Homiletics, ChurchPolity, and Pastoral Duties.DAVID J. LINGLE, PH.D.,Instructor in Physiology.22IRA WOODS HOWERTH, A.M.,Instructor in Sociology and Secretary of the University Extension Class-Study De­partment.HARRIS HANCOCK, PH.D.,Instructor in Mathematics.KURT LAVES, PH.D.,Instructor in Astronomy.CHARLES PORTER SMALL, M.D.,Examining Physician.ERNEST LEROY CALDWELL, A.B.,Academy Instructor in Mathematics.WILLIAM BISHOP OWEN, A.B., D.B.,Assistant Professor in Greek.WALTER A. PAYNE, PH.B.,Instructor and Secretary of the University Extension Lecture-Study Department.JAMES HENRY BREASTED, PH.D.,Instructor in Egyptology and Semitic, and Assistant Director of Haskell OrientalMuseum.CLYDE WEBER VOTAW, D.B., PH.D.,Instructor in New Testament Literature.THOMAS J. JACKSON SEE, PH.D.,Instructor in Astronomy.FERDINAND SCHWILL, PH.D.,Instructor in Modern History.OSCAR LOVELL TRIGGS, PH.D.,Instructor in English.ALBERT C. EYCLESHYMER, PH.D.,Instructor in Anatomy.KATE ANDERSON, S.B.,Instructor in Physical Culture.23NELS SORENSON LA WDAHL,Instructor (in the Dano-Norwegian Theological Seminary) in Church History.RALPH CHARLES HENRY CATTERALL, A.B.,Instructor in Modern History.JOSEPHINE CHESTER ROBERTSON, A.B.,Cataloguer.WILLIAM VAUGHN MOODY, A.M.,Instructor in English and Rhetoric.NEWMAN MILLER, PH.B.,Instructor and Secretary of the University Extension Correspondence-StudyDepartment.FREDERIC MASON BLANCHARD, A.M.,Instructor in Public Speaking.J�INDSA Y TODD DAMON, A.B.,Instructor in Rhetoric and English Composition.JOSEPH EDWARD RAYCROFT, A.B.,Instructor in Physical Culture and Head of Snell House.W. H. RUNYON,Instructor in Science in Academy.ELIZABETH WALLACE, S.B.,Associate in Romance Languages.EDWARD C. PAGE, A.B.,Associate in History.BRADLEY MOORE DAVIS, PH.D.,Associate in Botany.CHARLES MANNING CHILD, J;>H.D.,Associate in ZoOlogy.CHARLES RIBORG MANN, A.M., PH.D.,Associate in Physics.24ADDISON WEBSTER MOORE, A.M.,Associate in Philosophy.JAMES WESTFALL THOMPSON, PH.D.,Associate in History.ROBERT E. MILLIKAN, PH.D.,Associate in Physics.EDWARD KENNARD RAND, A.M.,Associate in Latin.GORDON F. HULL,Assistant in Physics.ALFRED WILLIAM STRATTON, PH.D.,Assistant in Sanskrit.FREDERICK EBY, A.B.,Academy Assistant.F. DAY NICHOLS, A.B.,Academy Assistant in English.JAMES H. RANSOM,Assistant in Chemistry.WINFRED E. GARRISON,Assistant in History, and Head of Disciples' House.U. F. BUCK,Laboratory Assistant in Psychology.CLARENCE ALMON TORREY, PH.B.,Inspector Departmental Libraries.CORA BELLE PERRINE, A.B.,Head of Accession Department.WILLIAM DAYTON MERRELL, A.B.,Laboratory Assistant in Botany.25GLENN MOODY HOBBS, S.B.,Assistant in Physics.FREDERICK WILLIAM SHIPLEY, A.B.,Assistant in Latin.HENRY CHANDLER COWLES, A.B.,Laboratory Assistant in Botany.WILLIAM FREDERICK YUST, A.B.,Loan Desk Assistant.OTIS WILLIAM CALDWELL, S.B ..Laboratory Assistant in Botany.STUART WELLER; S.B.,Assistant in Palreontologic Geology.FOREST RAY MOULTON, A.B.,Assistant in Astronomy.JANE ETTA DOWNEY, A.B.,Laboratory Assistant in Psychology.CHARLES J. CHAMBERLAIN,Assistant in Botany.JOSEPH GEORGE BROBECK, S.B., M.D.,Director of the Gymnasium and Assistant in History and Mathematics, MorganPark Academy.EDNA L. GOSS,Assistant in Academy Library.HERMANN BENJAMIN ALMSTEDT, LIT. B., PE.B.,Reader in German.ALICE NORTHRUP SIMPSON, A.B .•Reader in Latin and Greek.EDITH BURNHAM FOSTER, PH.B.,Reader in English.26CARL EVANS BOYD, PH.B.,Docent in Political Science.EDMUND BUCKLEY, PH.D.,Docent in Comparative Religion.AGNES MATHILDE WERGELAND., PH.D.,Docent in History'.W. FITE,Docent in Philosophy.Uni"trsity €xttnslon ttctarnsNATHANIEL I. RUBINKAM, PH.D.,Lecturer in English.AARON HODGMAN COLE, A.M.,Lecturer in Biology.W. M. R. FRENCH, A.B.,Lecturer in Art.THOMAS GRANT ALLEN, A.M.,Lecturer in Chemistry.GEORGE L. SCHREIBER, A.M.,Lecturer in Art.AUGUSTA CHAPIN, A.M.,Lecturer in English.LORADO TAFT, M.L.,Lecturer in Art.JENKIN LLOYD JONES,Lecturer in English.LATHAN A. CRANDALL, D.D.,Lecturer in American History.27GEORGE AMOS DORSEY, PH.D.,Lecturer in Anthropology.CHARLES ALEXANDER McMURRY, PH.D.,Lecturer in Pedagogy.HORACE SPENCER FISKE, A.l\i.,Lecturer in English Literature.MERTON LELAND MILLER, PH.D.,Lecturer in Anthropology.HANNAH BELLE CLARK, PH,D.,Lecturer in Sociology.JACOB'DORSEY FORREST, A.M.,Lecturer in Sociology.Tnstruttors Jlppolnttd for rhe Summtr Quarttr, 1$97CHARLES RUFUS BROWN, PH.D., D.D.,Professor of Hebrew and Cognate Languages in the Newton Theological Insti­tution.LESTER F. WARD, LL.D.,Professorial Lecturer in Sociology, Smithsonian Institution.THOMAS DAY SEYMOUR, LL.D.,Hillhouse Professor of Greek, Yale University.EDWARD BAGNALL POULTON, M.A. (Oxon), F.R.S. (London), Hon.LL.D. (Princeton), F.L.S., F.G.S , F.Z.S., F.E.S.,Hope Professor of Zoology, Oxford University.WILLIAM BENTON CHAMBERLAIN, A.M.,Professor of Elocution and Church Music, Chicago Theological Seminary.HENRY MORSE STEPHENS, M.A.,Professor of Modern European History, Cornell University.FRANK McMURRY, PH.D.,Lecturer in Pedagogy.28GEORGE HEMPL, PH.D.,Professor of English Philology and General Linguistics, University of MichigarWILLIAM HERBERT PERRY FAUNCE, A.M., D.D.,Pastor of the Fifth Avenue Baptist Church, New York, N. Y.FREDERICK BANCROFT, PH.D.,Lecturer on" American History. (Winter Quarter, 1897.)JOHN CALVIN METCALF, A.M.,Professor of French Language and Literature, Georgetown College, Ky.FRANCIS ASBURY WOOD, PH.D.,Professor of German, Cornell College, Mount Vernon, Iowa.EDGAR ODELL LOVETT, PH.D.,Instructor in Mathematics, Princeton University.HUTCHINS HAPGOOD, A.B.,Assistant in English, Harvard University.FRANCIS NEWTON THORPE, PH.D.,Professor of American Constitutional History, University of Pennsylvania.SAMUEL T. DUTTON,Superintendent of Brookline, Mass., Public Schools.Dtans Of JlffiUattd TnstitutionsJOHN J. SCHOBINGER,The Harvard School.JOHN C. GRANT,Kenwood Institute.ARTHUR GAYLORD SLOCUM,Kalamazoo College.HERBERT LEE STETSON,Des Moines College.29LAURA A. JONES,The Maynard School.WILLIAM PARKER McKEE,Frances Shimer Academy.HIRAM A. GOOCH,Princeton-Yale School.EDWARD OCTAVIUS SISSON,Bradley Polytechnic Institute.WILLIAM RIGGS TROWBRIDGE,The Rugby School.HENRY H. BELFIELD,Chicago Manual Training School.HOMER J. VOSBURGH, A.M.,Wayland Academy.WILLIAM BISHOP OWEN, A.B., D.B.,South Side Academy.Otbtr Offittn and Jlssistant$WILLIAM RUFUS ARMSTRONG, Bookkeeper, Comptroller's Office.ISABELLA BLACKBURN, Clerk, University Press Division.HORACE BUTTERWORTH, Assistant, Physical Culture.ANTOINETTE CARY, Assistant to Dean of Women.MARY E. CLARK, Stenographer, University Press Division.M. RENA COBB, Stenographer, President's Office.CHARLOTTE F. COE, Assistant, Library.HARRIET CROSSMAN, Stenographer, offices Comptroller and Secretary.ROBERT B. DAVIDSON, Assistant, Examiner's Office.CHARLES V. DREW, Bookkeeper, Comptroller's Office.LOUISE DICKINSON, Assistant, Library.FERDINAND ELLERMAN, Assistant, Astronomical Observatory.HENRIETTA ENGENSPERGER, Stenographer, University Press Division.HARRY J. Fox, Storekeeper.30CHARLItS A. FRANCIS, Mechanician, Physical Laboratory.MARILLA FREItMAN, Assistant, Library.ALMA F. GAMBLE, Stenographer, Examiner's Office.JAMES B. GARNER, Laboratory Assistant, Chemistry.MARGARET HARDINGE, Assistant, Library.CHARLES H. HASTINGS, Assistant, Library.KENKICHI HA YASHEI, Artist, Zoological Laboratory.HARRY D. HUBBARD, Clerk, Dean of the Faculties of Arts, Literature,and ScienceSAMUEL JOB, Registrar, Morgan Park Academy.JULIUS A. JOHANNESEN, Mechanician, Physical Laboratory.ANNA KA YLER, Bill Clerk, Comptroller's Office.JOHN LAMAY, Assistant, Physical ,Laboratory.JAMES CARTWRIGHT LOGAN, Clerk, Comptroller's Office.ERNEST LORENZ, Mechanician, Yerkes Observatory.ESTELLE LUTTRELL, Assistant, Library.ROLLIN E. MALLORY, Clerk, Registrar's Office.MERTON L. MILLER, Assistant, Walker Museum.SARAH E. MILLS, Assistant, Morgan Park Academy Library.JOHN W. MITCHELL, Proof Reader, Printing Department.RICHARD G. MYERS, Assistant Engineer.GEORGE M. NAYLOR, Accountant, Comptroller's Office.ALBERT O. PARKJJ:R, Chief Engineer and Superintendent.N. J. PETERSON, Steward, Morgan Park Academy.OTTO R. RYERSON, Clerk, University Press Division.BENJ. J. SIMPSON, Purchasing Agent.ANNA SMITH, Clerk, University Press Division.GUY SOUERBRY, Clerk, University Press Division.GERTRUDE SPRAGUE, Stenographer, University Extension Office.BERTHA STIEG, Assistant, Women's Gymnasium.ARTHUR S:rOCKS, Advertising Solicitor, University Press Division.GEORGE TUNELL, Assistant, Examiner'S Office.MARTHA VAN HOOK, Stenographer, Recorder's Office.J. WILLIAM WALKER, Foreman, Printing Department.ESTELLE WETMORE, Stenographer, University Extension Office.ELOISIt C. WOODFORD, Stenographer, Morgan Park Academy.ELIZABItTH YEOMANS, Manager, Women's Commons.31tbt Quadranglt ClubOfflm$ 1897-189$ROBERT FRANCIS HARPER,GEORGE E. VINCENT,EDWARD CAPPS,J OSll:PH PAXSON IDDINGS, President- Vice-PresidentSecretaryTreasurerJ. M. G. GLESSNERSHAILER MATHEWSFRANCIS W. SHEPARDSONThe Quadrangle Club is instituted for the association of members of the facultiesof the University of Chicago and othe� persons interested in literature, science orart. It has one hundred and ninety resident and forty non-resident members.The club-house, Lexington Avenue and Fifty-eighth Street, which was partiallydamaged by fire twice during the early part of the year, was burned on the morningof December 25, 1897. The original structure has been restored and an annex addedon the east side. To the north two hundred feet of adjoining property have beenpurchased. During the season of '97-'98 the following entertainments were given bythe club:SMOKE TALKS: Mr. Charles L. Hutchinson, Mr. D. G. Elliott, Mr. Ned ArdenFlood, Mr. John Henry Barrows, Mr. Frederick Starr, Mr. F. B. Tarbell, Mr. WilliamKent, The Glee and Mandolin Clubs.RECEPTIONS: Ladies' afternoon receptions, January 13, February 10, March 10,April 14, May 12, June 9, November 3; Ladies' evening receptions, July 14, Septem­ber 9; Settlement benefit reception, March 6; Chamber concert receptions, June 5,October 15, November 12, December 9, January 7 (in President's house), February 11(in Kelly Hall); reception to Mr. Marion Crawford, November 15; to Mr. AnthonyHope Hawkins, December 1; to the Faculties of Rush Medical College and otheraffiliated institutions, February 4 (in Haskell Oriental Museum).GENERAL ENTERTAINMENTS: Exhibition of Fancy Shooting, April 30; PosterExhibit, May 5-8; Chamber Concerts: June 5, the Spiering Quartette and Mr. GeorgeEllsworth Holmes; October 15, the Spiering Quartette and Mr. George Hamlin;November 12, the Spiering Quartette, Mr. Hans Bruening and Mrs. Dudley Tyng;December 9, the Spiering Quartette, Mr. W. H. Sherwood and Mrs. Minnie Fish­Griffin; January 7, the Spiering Quartette and Mrs. Ella Dahl; February 11, theSpiering Quartette and Mr. Walter Ames. Informal ladies' evenings: Thursdaysduring the Summer and Mondays from October to December.321897-1898'ftliOWsEDGAR WILLIAM ABBOTT, PH.B., Romance.WILLIAM CLINTON ALDEN, A.B., Geology.WILLIAM HARVEY ALLEN, A.B., Political Economy.ERNEST ALANSON BALCH, A. M., History.EDWARD AMBROSE BECHTEL, A.B., Latin.HENRY CHALMERS BIDDLE, A.M., Chemistry.SOPHONISBA PRESTON BRECKENRIDGE, PH.M:, Political Science.HERBERT MORSE BURCHARD, A.M., Greek.THEODORE CHALON BURGESS, A.M., Greek.FRED LEMAR CHARLES, S.M., Zoology.LISI CECILIA CIPRIANI, PH.M., Romance.FREDERIC ALBERT CLEVELAND, PH.B., Political Science.FULTON JOHNSON COFFIN, A.M., Comparative Religion.HERBERT JOSEPH DAVENPORT, A.B., Political Economy.HOWELL EMLYN DAVIES, A.B., Chemistry.KATHERINE BEMENT DAVIS, A.B., Political Economy.CHARLES EDWARD DIXON, A.M., Latin.ALBERT THOMAS FREEMAN, S.B., Sociology.JOSEPH C. FREEHOFF, S.B., Sociology.HENRX GORDON GALE, A.B., Physics.THEODORE ARTHUR GESSLER, A.M., Semitic.EMILY RAY GREGORY, A.M., Zoology.MICHAEL FREDERICK GUYER, A.M., Zoology,JOHN CHURCHILL HAMMOND, S.M., Mathematics.IRVING HARDESTY, A.B., Neurology.MARY BELLE HARRIS, A. M., Latin.FRED BURTON RENNIE HELLEMS, A.B., Latin.33ANNE BATES HERSMAN, A.B., Greek.GEORGE WILI.,IAM HUNTER, A.M., Zoology.KARL DETLEv JESSEN, A.B., German,EDWIN SHELDON JOHONNOT, JR.; S.B., Physics.JOHANNES BENONI EDUARD JONAS, A.M., German.PHILEMON BULKLEY KOHLSAAT, PH.B., English.JAMES LUDWELL LAKE, A.M., Physics.FREDERICK BROOKS LINDSAY, A. M., English.HENRY LLOYD, S.B., Mathematics.WALTER FLAVIUS MCCALEB, A.M., History.HERBERT NEWBY McCoY, S.M., Chemistry.JOHN HECTOR McDoNALD, A.B., Mathematics.EDWARD SHERWOOD MEADE, A.B., Political Economy.DANIEL PETER McMILLAN, A.B., Philosophy.KATHERINE MERRILL, A.B., English.WESLEY CLAIR MITCHELL, A.B., Political Economy.ERNEST CARROLL MOORE, A.M., Pedagogy.FRED NEHER, A. M., Chemistry.GEORGE NORI.,IN, A.B., Greek.WALES HARRISON PACKARD, S.B., Zoology.JOSEPH WILLIAM PARK, A.B., Sociology.ADNA WOOD RISLEY, A.B., History.ARTHUR KENYON ROGERS, A.B., Philosophy.WILLIAM RULLKOETTER, A.B., History.CLAUDE ELLSWORTH SutBENTHAL, A.M., Geology.HENRY LAWRENCE SCHOOLCRAFT, A.B., History.HELEN MCGAFFEY SEARLES, A.M., Comparative Philology.JOHN M. P. SMITH, A.B., Semitic.WILSON ROBERT SMITH, A.B., Botany.MARY MATTHEWS STURGES, S.B., Zoology.WORTHY PUTNAM STERNS, A.M., Political Economy.HELEN BRADFORD THOMPSON, PH.B., Philosophy.CYRUS FISHER TOLMAN, JR., S.B., Geology.MALCOLM WILLIAM WALLACE, A.B., English.34GRADUATE SCHOI.ARSOI.IVER MII.ES WASHBURN, A.B., Latin.FRANCES WII.I.ISTON, A.B., Biology.WII.I.IAM DOUWES ZOETHOUT, A.B., Physiology.CI.EMENT EUGENE ROOD, Astronomy.THOMAS KAY SIDEY, LATIN.WARREN PAI.MER BEHAN, D.B., Church History.GEORGE CROSS, A.M., Systematic Theology.EDGAR Dow VARNEY, A.M., New Testament Greek.$tbOlarsSENIOR COI.I.EGE SCHOI.ARS.FREDERICK MAYOR GII.ES, Philosophy.JOHN PRESTON MENTZER, Political Economy.CHARI.ES LINDSEY BURROUGHS, History.JENNIE HAI.I., Greek.IRENE INGAI.I.S CI.EA VES, Latin.PEARl. LOUISE HUNTER, Romance.MINNIE LESTER, German.ARTHUR WHIPPI.E SMITH, Mathematics.ARTHUR TABER JONES, Physics.MAX DARWIN SI.IMMER, Chemistry.FRANK WINANS DINNAN, Comparative Philology.EMII.Y CHURCHII.I. THOMPSON, Greek.SUSAN HEI.EN BAI.I.OU, Latin.GII.BERT AMES BI.ISS, Mathematics.HYMAN EI.IJAH GOI.DBERG, Chemistry.CECIl. V. BACHEI.Ui, Zoology.MABEl. AUGUSTA CHASE, Physics.SUMMERFRANK D. A. FOGI.EMAURICIt FAIRMAN Entrantt $tbOlars1897AU'tUMN:FREDERICK DENNISON BRAMHAI.r..J OSEPHINIt BURNHAM1898WINTERLAURA AMEUA THOMPSONPHII.IP GORHAM WRIGH'rON SPRINGEDWIN GII.BERT KIRK35Cbt Stulor Oratorical cenresrs1897Spring"frst ptf3eJENNIE HALL'Wlfnnets of ScbolatsbipsJAMES E. TUTHILLALLEN BURNSRALPH JANSSEN HARRY FULLER ATWOODCHARLES LEDERERJENNIE HALLSummer"ftst pri3eHARRY FULLER ATWOODWlfnnets of ScbolarsbipsCHARLES BUSHNELLHARRY FULLER ATWOOD MARCUS PETER FRUTCHEYFRED HACKAutumn,,{rst J)d3(EDWARD MAX BAKERWl{nners of ScbolarsbipsCHARLES BUSHNELL EDWIN CAMPBELL WOOLLltYr-EORGE SAWYER1898Winter,,{rst pri3eEDWARD MAX BAKER AMOS EBERSOLEHARTWELL WILLIAM WEBB'Wltnners of ScbolarsbipsEDWARD MAX BAKERAMOS A. EBERSOLEJOSEPH EDWIN FREEMAN JOHN FRANKLIN HAGEYCHARLES LEDERERHARTWELL WILLIAM WEBBSGCbt Junior Dtclamatlons1897SpringJ'irst l)ri3eERICK MUENTERMARJORIE BENTON COOKE'Wlinners of ScbolarsbipsCHARLES BRANERICK MUENTERERNEST SCROGINCI.ARA WEI.CHSummerJ'irst j)ri3eMARII.I.A PARKER'Wlinners of ScbolarsbipsN OTT WII.LIAM FLINTMARII.I.A PARKERJOHN JAMES W AI.SH BENJ AMIN TARANEI.SMIRRIAM FADDISAINSWORTH WHITNEY CI.ARKAutumnJ'irst j)ri3eMARJORIE BENTON COOKE'Wlinners of ScbolarsbipsWILLIAM FRANClt ANDERS:>NMARJORIE BENTON COOKE PAUl. BI.ACKWEl.DERGRACE BUSHNEI.LJAY SHOENMANN PATEK1898Winterlfirst l)ri3CARTHUR EUGEN� BESTOl-..'Wlinncrs of ScbolarsbipsABRAHAM A. ETTEI.SON Roy BARTLING TABORHARRY NORMAN GOTTLIEB GEORGE AMES BEERSARTHUR EUGENE BESTOR37ConuocatlonsTHE QUINQUENNIAL CELEBRAnONThe University Campus, June 30 to July 5, 1896.ProgramJune 30. The Annual Dinner of the Associated Alumni.July 1. The Graduate Matutinal.The First Presentation of the Synagogue Service of the Times of Christ.Luncheon to the Associated Alumni.The Convocation Chapel Service.Business Meetings of the Associated Alumni.Music - First Regiment Band.The Exercises of the Fifteenth Convocation.The Second Presentation of the Synagogue Service.The President's Reception.July 2. Dedicatory Exercises of Haskell Oriental Museum.July 3. Laying of the Corner Stone of the Hull Biological Laboratories.July 4. The National Holiday.Presentation of the National Colors by the First Infantry, Illinois NationalGuard.July 5. The Convocation Sermon.The Convocation Vespers.THE SIXIEENTH CONVOCATIONGraduate Quadrangle, October 1, 1896.ADDRESS: II Modern Tendencies in Theological Thought," President Augustus H.Strong, D.D., LL.D., Rochester Theological Seminary.THE SEVENTEENTH CONVOCATIONThe Auditorium, January 1, 1897.ADDRESS: " Lafayette," Mr. Henry D. Estabrook, Chicago.38THE EIGHTEENTH CONVOCATIONThe Auditorium, April 1, 1897.ADDRESS: II The University and its Effect upon the Home," Her Excellency, theCountess of Aberdeen, Ottawa, Canada.;oundtr'S CtltbratlonThe University Campus, June 30 to July 2, 1897.June 30. Alumni Day.July 1. Founder's Day.THE NINETEENTH CONVOCATIONHull Court.ADDRESS: II The Church and the University," Bishop John H. Vincent,D.D., Topeka, Kansas.July 2. Inspection of the Yerkes Observatory, Williams Bay, Wisconsin.THE TWENTIETH CONVOCATIONUniversity Congregational Church, October 1, 1897.ADDRESS: "The Unity of the World," The Rev. Amory H. Bradford, D.D., Mont­clair, New Jersey.THE TWENTY-fiRST CONVOCATIONThe Auditorium, January 3, 1898.ADDRESS: II Public Leadership," Hon. James H. Eckels, Comptroller of the CurrencyTHE TWENTY-SECOND CONVOCATIONUniversity Congregational Church, April 1, 1898.ADDRltSS: " Poetry and Science, Their Affinities and Contrasts," Professor WilliamKnight, St. Andrews University, Scotland.39Unlutrsitp 6utstsMR. JOHN D. ROCKEFEr.r.ER.PROFESSOR MOISSAN, L'Ecole de Pharmacie de Paris.PROFESSOR DORPFEr.D, German Archreological Institute,' Athens.MR. H. DHARMAPAr.A, Ceylon.MR. JOSEPH JACOBS, Cambridge.COMMANDER BOOTH-TuCKER.DR. MAGNUS, Berlin.REV. O. P. GIFFORD, Buffalo, New York.REV. CHARr.ES A. BERRY, Wolveringhamshire, England.PRESIDENT B. L. WHITMAN, Columbian University, Washington, D. C.MR. RICHARD MANSFIELD.HON. RICHARD OGLESBY.MR. SOL SMITH RUSSEr.L.PROFESSOR TRAVAS PEABODY, Harvard University.HON. GEORGE R. PECK, Chicago.REV. AUGUSTUS H. STRONG, Rochester, New York.HER EXCELLENCY, THE COUNTESS OF ABERDEEN, Ottawa, Canada.M. PAUl'. DU CHAlr.LU.BISHOP JOHN H. VINCENT, Topeka, Kansas.REV. AMORY H. BRADFORD, Montclair, New Jersey.HON. JAMES H. ECKELS.PROFESSOR WIr.LIAM KNIGHT, St. Andrews University, Scotland.M. RENi Domrrc, Paris.MR. GEORGE ADAM SMITH.40tilt mars balls1896·1891HEAD MARSHALLWILLIAM SCOTT BONDASSISTANT MARSHALLSJ AMES SCOTT BROWNGILBERT AMES BLISSDONALD SHURTLEFF TRUMBULLFRANKLIN HERMANN GESELBRACHTWILLIAM PIERC:a LOVETT1891-1898HEAD MARSHALLNOTT WILLIAM FLINTASSISTANT MARSHALLSWILLOUGHBY GEORGE WALLINGFRANKLIN HERMANN GESELBRACHTMARCUS PETER FRUTCHEYCLARENCE BERT HERSCHBERGER415E1"\I- sc sc x8FFICIl\L �tJB.s.THE GEOLOGICAL CLUB,THOMAS CHAMBERLAIN, PresidentTHE POLITICAL ECONOMY CLUB,JAMES LAURENCE LAUGHLIN, PresidentTHE GERMANIC CLUB,KARL JESSEN, PresidentTHE BOTANICAL CLUB,JOHN COULTER, PresidentTHE ENGLISH CLUB,MARTHA FOOTE CROW, PresidentTHE MATHEMATICAL CLUB,EUAKIM MOORE, PresidentTHE SOCIOLOGICAL CLUB,ALBERT THOMAS FREEMAN, PresidentTHE PHILOSOPHICAL CLUB,ARTHUR RODGltRS, PresidentTHE NEW TESTAMENT CLUB,EDGAR JOHNSON GOODSPEED, President. THE SEMITIC CLUB,ROBERT FRANCIS HARPER, PresidentTHE CHURCH HISTORY CLUB,WARREN PALMER BEHAN, PresidentTHE POLITICAL SCIENCE CLUB,CARL EVANS BoYD, President42tbt Jlssoclattd JllumnlGeneral CommitteeTHEODORE M. HAMMONDCLIFFORD W. BARNES IRA M. PRICEtbt £Olltglatt JlII.al JI$$odatioaJOHN EDWIN RHODES, '76EDITH B. FOSTER, '96FRED W. C. HAVES, '80EDGAR A. BUZZELl., '86FREDERICK D. NICHOLS, '97 PresidentFirst Vice-PresidentSecond Vice-PresidentSecretaryTreasurertbt mOlnlty }fllmnl JI$$OtlatiOnC. E. TAVLOR, '72C. H. D. FISHER, '77C. N. PATERSON, '82F. R. SWARTOUT, '(-.8IRA M. PRICE, '82 PresidentFirst Vice-PresidentSecond Vice-PresidentThird Vice-PresidentSecretary and TreasurerEXECUTIVE COMMITTEEC. R. HENDERSON G. S. GOODSPEEDI. M. COONE. H. LEWIS, '95F. W. SANDERS, '95F. 1. CARPENTER, '95 PresidentVice-PresidentSecretary and Treasurer43Cbt Unlutrsltp JournalsTHE BIBLICAL W.oRLDEdited by William Rainey Harper. A monthly magazine devoted exclusively tobiblical study.THE SCH.o.oL REVIEWEdited by Charles Thurber. A monthly publication of high-school and academicwork.THE BOTANICAL GAZETTEEdited by John M. Coulter. A monthly journal devoted to the science of botany.THE J.oURNAL er GEOL.oGYEdited by T. C. Chamberlin. A semi-quarterly devoted to the interests of geologyand the allied sciences.THE ASTR.oPHYSICAL J.oURNALEdited by George E. Hale and James E. Keeler. An international monthly review ofspectroscopy and astronomical physics ..THE J.oURNAL or POLITICAL EC.oN.oMYEdited by J. Laurence Laughlin. A quarterly publication promoting the scientifictreatment of problems in practical economics and also containing contri­butions on topics of theoretical and speculative interest.THE AMERICAN JOURNAL or THEOLOGYEdited by the Divinity Faculty.THE AMERIUN JOURNAL er SOCI.oL.oGYEdited by Albion W. Small. A bi-monthly journal.THE AMERICAN J.oURNAL er SEMITIC LANGUAGES AND LITERATURESEdited by President William Rainey Harper. A quarterly.THE UNIVERSITY RECORDA weekly containing articles on literary and educational topics, the convocationaddresses, the quarterly statements of the President and officialreport of the affairs of the University.44tbt Cbtcago IIlumnl ClubPHII.IP AI.I.EN,WII.I.IAM SCOTT BOND,RAYMOND CARI.ETON DUDI.EY,HAROI.D LECI.AIR ICKES, President-First Vice-President- Second Vice-PresidentSecretaryDONAI.D SHURTI.EFF TRUMBUI.I., -FREDERICK STEIGMEYER, TreasurerHistorianCbt Ho.,.,tr Of iltatb]I stud�nt knock�d at tb� fi�ry gat�. and tbt d�"iI stuckout bis b�ad:" now is it w�n you sbould tom� to bdl wb�tt you ougbtto bt In btd ? "H 0 D�on," tb� stud�nt bt an$wmd UP, H T bavt nottom� to stay,But T must pass in Prof. Uinttnt'$ dass, and tbis i$ tbtonly way;I'm stnt to Inmtigatt btll," bt said, H and bring backa full rtport."tbe dton grinned as be snapptd tbe ,In; H £ome In,"be said wltb a snort.H'Rtmembtr, tbougb, If you pass tbi$ door you'll bardlygtt back outside:the air i$ bad for a growing lad," and bt nung tbeportal widt.tbe stud�nt laugbed as be stepped witbin and poUtdyremooed his bat:H T worktd three years in our gym," bt said, Handwbat's bell aftef tbat?"46secret SOCittits at rbe ISntutrsUp of CbtcagoFRATERNITIESDELTA KAPPA EPSILONPHI KAPPA PSIBETA THETA PIALPHA DELTA PHI SIGMA CHIPHI DELTA THETAPSI UPSILONDELTA TAU DELTALOCAL SOClmESTHE MORTAR BOARDTHE ESOTERIC CLUBTHE QUADRANGLERSTHE SIGMA CLUBTHE OMEGA PHI SOCIETYTHE Q. V.HONOR SOCIETIESTHE OWL AND SERPENTTHE ORDER OF THE IRON MASKTHE THREE QUARTERS CLUBUPSILON IOTA OMEGANU PI SIGMA48t. mt.orla.jrtdtriCk Dpdt £awrtnCtGla$s of 1901Ditd 11,'11 22, 189$Dtlta Kappa EpsilonFOUNDED IN 1944Roll of £baptmPhi Yale UniversityTheta BowdoinXi ColbySigma AmherstGamma VanderbiltPsi University of AlabamaChi University of MississippiUpsilon Brown UniversityKappa Miami UniversityLambda Kenyon CollegeEta University of VirginiaPi Dartmouth CollegeIota Central University of KentuckyAlpha Alpha Middlebury CollegeOmicron University of MichiganEpsilon Williams CollegeRho Lafayette CollegeTau Hamilton CollegeMu Colgate UniversityNu College of the City of New YorkBeta Phi University of RochesterPhi Chi RutgersPsi Phi De PauwGamma Phi Wesleyan UniversityPsi Omega Rensselaer Polytechnic InstituteBeta Chi Adelbert CollegeDelta Chi Cornell UniversityDelta Delta University of ChicagoPhi Gamma Syracuse UniversityGamma Beta Columbia CollegeTheta Zeta University of CaliforniaAlpha Chi Trinity CollegePhi Epsilon University of MinnesotaSigma Tau Massachusetts Institute of Technology50OtUa Kappa EpsilonTHE DELTA DELTA CHAPTERESTABLISHED DECEMBER IS. 1893'fratr�$ in UniomitattGRADUATE COr.LEGESHenry Gordon GaleGilbert Ames Bliss Herbert Morse BurchardFred Toirer GalpinAdna Wood Risley Elmer Tilson SterensUNDERGRADUATE cor.r.scssWilliam Simmons BroughtonFrank Henry HarmsJulius H. P. GaussJoseph Edwin FreemanWilloughby George WallingWilliam France AndersonPercy Bernard EckhartClinton Luman HoyRalph C. HamillRalph Curtis ManningWilliam Thaw GardnerRoger Wilson KimballRobert Gordon Gould• Harold Eugene WilkinsCurtis Rockwell ManningWalter Lawrence HudsonHugh Lafayette McWilliamsDonald Saxton McWilliamsFrederick Hyde Lawrence51Pbl Kappa pstrOUNDED IN 1852Pennsylvania Alpha Washington and Jefferson CollegePennsylvania Beta Allegheny CollegePennsylvania Gamma Bucknell UniversityPennsylvania Epsilon Pennsylvania CollegePennsylvania Zeta Dickinson CollegePennsylvania Eta 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 Zeta Brooklyn Polytechnic InstituteNew Hampshire Alpha Dartmouth CollegeMassachusetts Alpha Amherst CollegeVirginia Alpha University of VirginiaVirginia Beta Washington and Lee UniversityVirginia Gamma Hampden-Sidney CollegeWest Virginia Alpha University of West VirginiaDistrict of Columbia Alpha Columbian UniversitySouth Carolina Alpha South Carolina CollegeOhio Alpha Ohio Wesleyan UniversityOhio Beta Wittenberg CollegeOhio Delta Ohio State UniversityIndiana Alpha De Pauw UniversityIndiana Beta Indiana UniversityIndiana Gamma Wabash CollegeIllinois Alpha Northwestern UniversityTllinois Beta University of ChicagoMichigan Alpha University of MichiganWisconsin Gamma Beloit CollegeIowa Alpha University of IowaKansas Alpha University of KansasCalifornia Beta Leland Stanford, Jr., UniversityNebraska Alpha University of Nebraska52I'bl Kappa psiTHE ILLINOIS BETA CHAPTERJratrts in UniomitattGRADUATE COLLEGESFrederick Albert Cleveland Ora Philander SewardRobert Bailey DavidsonUNDERGRADUATE COLLnGESJoseph White CampbellHarry CoyEugene RyanJohn James WalshThomas Temple HoyneJohn Andrew HowardFrederick Bradley ThomasWalter James CavanaghOtto Fitzalan HakesParke RossCecil PageEdwin Campbell WoolleyFrederick Edwin F--eeveDan Brouse SouthardWalter Stokes SharpeClarence Whitaker RichardsJ ames McClintock SnitzlerFred SassFrancis Baldwin53Btta tbua PiFOUNDED IN 1839ROll of £baptmMiami University . Northwestern UniversityOhio University Dickinson UniversityWestern Reserve University . Boston CollegeWashington and Jefferson College • Johns Hopkins UniversityHarvard University . University of CaliforniaDe Pauw University Kenyon CollegeIndiana University Rutgers CollegeUniversity of Michigan Cornell UniversityWabash College . Stevens InstituteCentre College . St. Lawrence UniversityBrown University Maine State CollegeHampden-Sidney College Colgate UniversityUniversity of North Carolina . Union CollegeOhio Wesleyan University Columbia CollegeHanover College Amherst CollegeCumberland University Vanderbilt UniversityKnox College . University of TexasUniversity of Virginia Ohio State UniversityDavidson College University of NebraskaBeloit College . Pennsylvania State CollegeBethany College University of DenverUniversity of Iowa University of SyracuseWittenberg College Dartmouth CollegeWestminster College University of MinnesotaIowa Wesleyan University University of CincinnatiDenison University Wesleyan UniversityRichmond College University of MissouriUniversity of Wooster Lehigh UniversityUniversity of Kansas Yale UniversityUniversity of Wisconsin University of ChicagoLeland Stanford, Jr., University54Btta Cbtta PITHE LAMBDA RHO CHAPTERESTABLISHED JANUARY 25. 1994'fratru in Unio�r$itat�GRADUATE COLLEGESAaron H. Cole Warren P. BehanHorace G. Lozier John CoulterUNDERGRADUATE COLLEGESHarry J. SmithSoren M. RussellTheodore H. PattersonHerbert B. MulfordMartin I. HarrisAllen G. HoytFranklin E. VaughanRoy C. GriswoldAlvin L. Barton Michael B. WellsArthur J. MacDonaldVan S. PearceRoy B. TaborLawrence M. JacobsErnest H. DillonGlenn P. HalfPaul BlackwelderLeroy T. �ernonAlbert S. RussellGeorge P. MacDonaldEliot BlackwelderCharles B. DavisGeorge G. DavisKellogg SpeedWilliam F. Eldredge55Jllpba Dtlta PblFOUNDED IN 1832Roll of £baPt�f$Hamilton Hamilton CollegeColumbia Columbia CollegeBrunonian Brown UniversityYale Yale UniversityAmherst Amherst CollegeHudson Adelbert CollegeBowdoin Bowdoin CollegeDartmouth Dartmouth CollegePeninsular U ni versity of MichiganRochester University of RochesterWilliams Williams CollegeManhattan College of the City of New YorkMiddletown Wesleyan CollegeKenyon Kenyon CollegeUnion Union CollegeCornell Cornell UniversityPhi Kappa Trinity CollegeJohns Hopkins Johns Hopkins UniversityMinnesota University of MinnesotaToronto University of TorontoChicago University of ChicagoMcGill Montreal, Canada56Jllpba neua PbiTHE CHICAGO CHAPTERESTABLISHED MARCH, 1896GRADUATE COLLEGESEdgar Johnson GoodspeedAlbert Thomas FreemanHenry Magee AdkinsonCecil V. BachelleGeorge Drillio IrelandJames Weber LinnUNDERGRADUATE COLLEGESClarence Bert HarschbergerFred MerrifieldNott William FlintNorman Kendall AndersonCharles Lindsay BurroughsCharles Verner DrewMaurice Gordon ClarkeRoger Throop VaughnWalter Scott KennedyLewis Carleton PettittHarvey Malcolm MacQuistonPaul Donald MacQuistonHoward Pendleton Kirtley'Varren C. GarrellElliott Salstonstall NortonSamuel Northrup HarperFOUNDED IN '855Sigma CbiRon of tbapttrsColumbian UniversityPennsylvania College .Bucknell UniversityUniversity of PennsylvaniaLehigh UniversityPennsylvania State CollegeDickinson College Purdue UniversityNorthwestern UniversityUniversity of MichiganUniversity of IllinoisUniversity of ChicagoBeloit CollegeIllinois Wesleyan UniversityWashington and Lee University University of WisconsinRoanoke College . Albion CollegeUniversity of Virginia . University of MinnesotaRandolph-Macon College . University of NebraskaHampden-Sidney College University of KansasUniversity of North Carolina University of MissouriMiami University . University of MississippiOhio-Wesleyan University . Tulane UniversityDenison University . Vanderbilt UniversityKentucky State College University of TexasUniversity of Cincinnati University of CaliforniaWest Virginia University . University of Southern CaliforniaOhio State University . Leland Stanford, Jr., UniversityCentre College . Hobart CollegeIndiana University . Dartmouth CollegeDe Pauw UniversityButler UniversityHanover College Massachusetts Institute of TechnologyColumbia CollegeCornell University58Sigma CbiTH[ OMICRON OMICRON CHAPTERESTABLISHED JANUARY 23,1897iratru in Uni\lmitattGRADUATE COLLEGESRussell Burton OpitzUNDERGRADUATE GOLLEGESFred F. SteigmeyerP. Merrill GriffithCharles Foster RobyWilliam Francis McDonaldHerbert Alonzo AbernethyLawrence De GraffMelvin Edward ColemanVictor Washington SincereRay Prescott JohnsonMarcus McClellen PlowmanJohn Patrick MoranClarence Alvin McCarthyWarren MacIntire59Pbl Ott fa CbtfaFOUNDED IN' 1848'Roll of £baptmUniversity of Miami Lombard UniversityIndiana University Alabama Polytechnic InstituteCenter College Allegheny CollegeWabash College Vermont UniversityWisconsin University Dickinson CollegeNorthwestern University Westminster CollegeButler University Minnesota UniversityOhio Wesleyan University Iowa UniversityFranklin College Kansas UniversityHanover College Hillsdale CollegeMichigan University University of the SouthUniversity of Chicago Ohio State UniversityDe Pauw University . Texas UniversityOhio University University of PennsylvaniaUniversity of Missouri Union CollegeKnox College Colby UniversityGeorgia University Columbian UniversityEmory College . Dartmouth CollegeIowa Wesleyan University University of North CarolinaMercer University Central UniversityCornell University Williams CollegeLafayette College Southwestern UniversityCalifornia University Syracuse UniversityState College of Michigan . Washington and Lee UniversityVirginia University Lehigh UniversityRandolph-Macon College Amherst CollegeNebraska University Brown UniversityGettysburg College Tulane UniversityWashington and Jefferson College . Washington CollegeVanderbilt University Leland Stanford, Jr., UniversityMississippi University Illinois UniversityAlabama University . Purdue UniversityCase Institute60Pbt neua CbttaTHE ILLINOIS 8fT A CHAPTERIEST"BLI6HE. F'IEBRUARV 18, 1897'fratrts II UnlotrsitattGRADUATE COLLEGESHomer Franklin HarshSamuel Mounds Coulter Harold LeClair IckesJesse Fowler SmithStacy Carroll Mosser Clarence Macon GallupRett Elmer OlmstedUNDERGRADUATE COLLEGESKnight French FlandersClarkes Francis StockeyRobert Emerson GravesFred Harvey Gall CalhounGeorge Henry GarreyCharles Warren ChaseCarl Howell SawyerEarle Crayton HalesGeorge Alembert BraytonWilliam Everton Ramsey61pst J)I'SIiOnFOUNDED IN 1833Roll of £baptmTheta Union CollegeDelta University of the City of New YorkBeta Yale UniversitySigma Brown UniversityGamma Amherst CollegeZeta Dartmouth CollegeLambda Columbia CollegeKappa Bowdoin CollegePsi Hamilton CollegeXi Wesleyan UniversityUpsilon University of RochesterIota Kenyon CollegePhi University of MichiganPi Syracuse UniversityChi Cornell UniversityBeta Beta Trinity CollegeEta Lehigh UniversityTau University of PennsylvaniaMu University of MinnesotaRho University of WisconsinOmega University of Chicago62PSi ISpstionTHE OMEG,\ CHAPTERIESTABLISHED NOVEMBER 24, 1S8Tiratm in Uniomltat¢GRADUATE COLLEGESErnest DeKoven Leffingwell Theodore Arthur GesslerUNDERGRADUATE COLLEGESMoses Dwi�ht McIntyreByron Bayard S.��thArthur SearsHennitJ�. -Donald Angus KennedyWilliam Derrick RichardsonWalter Joseph SchmahlCharles D. Wrenn HalseyEdwin Lee PoulsonSpencer MacDougall BrownEmory Cobb AndrewsBenjamin Bates Felix. Philip Schuyler DoaneHerbert Paul Zimmermann63Ddta Cau Dtlta'OUNOIrO IN 1BSIIRoll of £baptnsBeta Gamma University of WisconsinOmicron University of IowaBeta Eta University of MinnesotaBeta Kappa University of ColoradoBeta Pi Northwestern UniversityBeta Rho Leland Stanford, Jr., UniversityBeta Tau University of NebraskaBeta Upsilon University of IllinoisGamma Alpha University of ChicagoBeta Omega University of CaliforniaLambda Vanderbilt UniversityPi University of MississippiPhi Washington and Lee UniversityBeta Delta University of GeorgiaBeta Epsilon Emory CollegeBeta Theta University of the SouthBeta Xi Tulane UniversityBeta Ohio UniversityDelta University of MichiganEpsilon Albion CollegeZeta Adelbert CollegeKappa Hillsdale CollegeMu Ohio Wesleyan UniversityChi Kenyon CollegeBeta Alpha Indiana UniversityBeta Beta De Pauw UniversityBeta Zeta Butler CollegeBeta Phi Ohio State UniversityBeta Psi Wabash CollegeAlpha Allegheny CollegeGamma Washington and Jefferson UniversityRho Stevens Institute of TechnologyUpsilon Rensselaer Polytechnic InstituteOmega University of PennsylvaniaBeta Lambda Lehigh UniversityBeta M u Tufts CollegeBeta Nu Massachusetts Institute of TechnologyBeta Omicron Cornell UniversityBeta Chi Brown UniversityBeta Iota University of Virginia64i)tlta Cau OdtaTHE GAMMA ALPHA CHAPTERIEIIITA£lLtSHII:D MAY. 1888iratrts in UnlomitattGRADUATE COLLEGESFrank Cummins LockwoodVirgil Everett McCaskill Nelson Curtis FieldWilliam Shattuck AbernethyUNDERGRADUATE COI,I... EGESErnest Arthur ScroginFred Charles HackGeorge Loring WhiteCarl Diamond GreenleafFrank Russell WhiteElim Arthur E. PalmquistHaibert E. Payne ThomasClayton Wiley MoggThomas Venard GravesCharles Edward CareyErnest Edward Irons65Cbe Q. ".iratrt$ III UlllvtrsitattGRADUATE CO��EGESWilliam Harvey Allen Arthur Thaddeus PienkowskyUND�RGRADUATE CO��EGnsMarcus Peter FrutcheyJohn Franklin HageyRalph Leroy PeckMichael Francis GallagherJohn Preston MentzerCharles N. CrewdsonRowland Thumm RogersAinsworth Whitney ClarkGeorge White SawyerNewell Montague FairArthur Whipple SmithRufus MaynardReedWilliam K. HodgkinsHarry C. Collin66Cbt mortar BoardHelen Bradford ThompsonEleanor Lauder JonesSarah Elizabeth ButlerCharlotte Rose· TellerDemia ButlerJessie N ea SpraySarah Ellen CappsAlice Austin KnightHelen Demarest TaylorMary Nickerson LakinEdyth Merritt KohlsattMary Kirk RiderSallie Harkness Corning67tbt €sottrlc ClubESTABLISHED IN I.e ...HONORARY MEMBERSMrs. George Vincent Miss Edith B. FosterACTIVE MEMBERSSarah M unsonRuth VanderlipFlorence SkeffingtonGrace EberhartMabel Alice RunnerMary Judson AverettD. Madeleine HardingDavida HarperMabel Nassau68Cbt QuadrangltrsESTABLISHED IN ,a95Edna StantonMary WinterAnnie Bowland ReedJosephine Turner AllinEthel KeenSarah AddamsDaisy E. WiserBlanche WiserMarion Farwell TookerFlorence JenkinsSarah AmoryKatherine Hamilton LahmAnne MacWilliamsOlive WarnerAnna Locke HullMarion CalhounEdith BaxterMary Gertrude FultonKatherine Sayles Barton69(be Sigma ClubGrace CoulterMary Elizabeth ReddyMary Louise HannanSarah OsborneCornelia OsborneKatharine PaddockAnne Stearns RootFlorence 1. MacMahonElizabeth BuchananAugusta StuartRuth HillIsabel CrillyCharlotte Briggs CapenMarjorie Benton CookeGlenrose BellMargaret CoulterKatharine Paltzer70Cbt Omtsa Pbt SOCittpClara WelchMarietta NortonFannie TaylorHelen GardnerNellie O'BrienJennie CoonFlorence ShieldsGrace Sellon71tbt Owl and StrptntSENIOR SOC.lTYMarcus Peter FrutcheyClarence Bert HerschbergerJohn Preston MentzerJohn Franklin HageyMoses Dwight McIntyreFranklin Egbert VaughanGeorge Hoyt SawyerJoseph Edwin FreemanNott William Flint-r J-JOF�DEE.1JUNIOR SOCIETY1898Moses Dwight McIntyreJoseph Ed Will FreemanClarence Bert HerschbergerJohn Preston MentzerFred Cameron VincentMaurice Brown LeeTheodore Hiram PattersonForest Grant. John Franklin HageyCecil Page1899Allen Grey HoytMaurice Gordon Clarke Thomas Temple HoyneDonald Angus KennedyWilloughby George WallingPercy Bernard EckhartJohn James Walsh Ernest Hamilton DillonWilliam France AndersonRufus Maynard ReedArthur Sears Henning73fRESHM4N SOCIID.••• TA.U.HItS ... aRUAIIY. 18e.1899William France AndersonM. Gordon ClarkeThomas C. ClendenningWilliam Burgess CornellPercy Bernard EckhartLester B. FultonRalph C. Hamill1900Clinton Luman HoyArthur John MullenCarl SawyerWilloughby George WallingJohn R. WalshJoseph M. WilburHarvey T. WoodruffWalter James CavanaghWilliam Thaw GardnerLawrence HamillRoger Nelson KimballFrederick Paterson LachmundMorell LawLewis Lee LoseyRalph Curtis ManningRalph Hubbard NortonWalter Joseph Schmahl1901Francis BaldwinGeorge Gilbert DavisRobert Gordon GouldSamuel Northrup HarperWalter Lawrence HudsonFred Hyde LawrenceCurtiss Rockwell ManningHerbert Paul ZimmermannDonald Saxton Me WilliamsHugh Lafayette McWilliamsElliot NortonDouglas RayClark Scammon ReedKellogg SpeedWalter S. Sharpe74UpsUo·n Iota OmtsaMarcus Peter FrutcheyWilliam Otis WilsonHarold LeClair IckesHarry Delmont AbellsGeorge Hoyt SawyerStacy Carroll MosserHenry Magee Adkinsonnu PI SigmaFOUNDED dANU'''IV, 1886Charlotte Briggs CapenSarah Elizabeth ButlerMary Elizabeth ReddySusan Grace HardingDemia ButlerGrace Allen CoulterAlice Austin KnightMarjorie Benton CookeHelen Bradford ThompsonEleanor Lauder JonesEdith Burnham FosterMary Nickerson LakinGrace J osephine Eberhart76Officer.PresidentVice-PresidentSecretaryTreasurerJOHN FRANKLIN HAGEY,FRANKl.IN GESEl.BRACHT,CHARl.OTTE TEl.l.ER,BANKS JOHN WIl.DMAN,EXECUTIVE COMMITTEEEDWARD MAX BAKER, ChairmanEDWIN CAMPBEl.l. WOOl.l.EYKATHERINE PADDOCKHERBERT Al.ONZO ABERNETHY, 1: X,'I'rack Team, '96 and '97; "Reserves," '95and '96; The "Scrnbs," '97.WIl.LlAM HARVEY Al.l.EN.EVA El.l.EN ANDERSON.HAROl.D ERNEST ANDERSON.SWEN BENJAMIN ANDERSON.ELlZABnTH ApPS.TREVOR ARNETT, A 'lr,Treasnrer Debating Society, Spring '97 iSecretary of Debating Society, Autumn '97.HARRY FUl.l.ER ATWOOD,First and Second Annual Oratorical Prizes,'94 and '95 i Scholarship in Public Speak­ing, Spring and Summer '97 i First Prizein Senior College Debate, Summer '97 iPresident of Oratorical Association, '93and '95: President of Northern OratoricalLeague, '96 and '97.DEl.IA AUSTRIAN.HAROl.D LUCIUS AXTEl.l..FRANK BACHMAN. MARY FRANCES WINTERMARGARET RAMSEYEDWARD MAX BAKER,Representative in Chicago-Iowa Debate,'95 i President University Debating Club iPresident of Junior Council '96 i AssociateEditor "Ca]> and Gown," '98 i ChairmanExecutive ()ommittee Class of '98; Rewe.sentative in Chicago-Michigan Debate, 98 iScholarship and First Prize in Senior De­bate, Winter '98.Fl.ORENCE FIEl.DING BAl.l..HEl.EN HUNTINGTON BAl.l.,Artist on" Cap and Gown," '96.FREDERICK ROBERTSON BARNES,Glee Club, '9'1.MAX BATT.ADEl.AIDE STEELE BA Yl.OR.ETTA Ful.COMER BEACH.ARTHUR EDWARD BEERS,Basket Ball Team, '96.ESTHER BENNETT.78THOMAS BROGDEN BLACKBURN, � r A,The Omega Clnbj The'Ben Butler Club;Junior College Councillor, Spring '97;Chairman Junior College Council, Summer'97; Assistant Editor" Weelc!Y," '97 \ Asso­ciate Managing Editor "Weekly,' '98;Pitcher for Reserves, '96 and '97; Pitcheron Oonsolidated Team, '97; Substitute onFootball Team, '95.ALBER'l' \VILLIAM BOL'l'.ALIen BOOMER.JACOB WILLIAM BRAAM.ALBER'l' E. BROENn.ROwnNA BUELL.ALLEN TIBBALS BURNS,Basket Ball Team, '95 and '96.CHARLltS JOSEPH BUSHNELL,Entrance Scholarship, '94; Scholarship inPublio Speaking, Summer '97.DEMIA BU'l'LltR,The Mortar Board; N n Pi Sigma' TheIdlers; Weekly Board, '92 and '93 ; U niver­sity Choir, '9!.l and '93; University Chorus,'92 and '[l4; Vice-President of first Fresh.man Class, Autumn, '92: Member of Ac­ademic Day Committee, '94; Junior CollegeCouncillor.FRED HARVEY CALHOUN, � A a ,Captain of Track Team, '98; UniversityMile Championship, '96.JOSEPH WHI'l'E CAMPBELL, � K 'l',Glee Club, '93; Tennis Team, 93; Prome­nade Committee'94.CHARLO'l''l'E BRIGGS CAPEN,The Sigma Club , Nu Pi Sigma; Women'sMandolin Club. /96.SARAH ELLEN CAPPS,The Mortar Board.ZELMA ES'l'ELLE CLARKE.IRENE INGALLS CLEAVES,Vice·President Class of '98 j Captain ofWomen's Basket Ball Team, 97; Scholar­ship in Latin, '97.MELVIN EDWARD COLEMAN, :EX,Glee Club, '94. and '97; Secretary Glee andMandolin Club, '96; President Glee andMandolin Club, '97; Junior College Conn­cillor ; Leader University "Sings," '98;Chairman Constitutional Committee, '98.GEORGn EDWARD CONGDON,Artist on Uni!ersity Publications.MARION VERNON COSGROVE.HARRY lRUS COY, � K '1',Football Team, '94 and '96 : Halfback, '94and '95; Mandolin Club,.:. '�7 and '98 i Sen. -ior College Councillor; Track Team, 9(,). LAWRENCE DaGRAFF, :E X,Chairman Finance Committee Washin�tonPromenade),'98; Glee Club, '92-'93-'97- 98;Universitr Chotr, Spring and Summer, '97;Junior College Councillor; Chairman Sen­ior Council, Winter '98.BRNas'l' HAMIL'l'ON DILLON, Ball ,The Order of the Iron Mask; ChairmanJunior Council, Fall '97; Chairman AI"rangement Committee Washington Prom­enade, '98' Assistant Business Manager"Cap and Gown," '9t!i. Assistant BusinessManager Glee and Mandolin Club, '96-'97.FREDaRICK WILSON EAS'l'MAN, AY,Leader Glee Club! '93-'94; Manager GleeClub, '93-94; President Universi9 Chorus,'98-'94 and '97-'98; University Uhoir,'93-'94 and '97-98; Glee Club, '97-'98.JESSIE LEE FELGEll..KNIGH'l' FRENCH FLANDnRS, � A e ,Mandolin Club,' 97-'98 i "Scrubs" Foot­ball, '94.Non WILLIAM FLIN'l', A A � ,The Owl and Serpent; The Lion's Head:Coffee Housei' Dramatic Club, '97 -'98 ;Head Marsha 1, '97 -'98; Football Team,'93, '94 and '95; Assistant Editor Weekly,'97 and '98; Associate Editor" Maroon,"'9f5; Ivy Orator. '94; Scholarship in PublicSpeakin� Summer '97; Scholarship inDebate, winter, '98.MARCUS PE'l'ER FRU'l'CHEY, The Q.V.,The Owl and Serpent; Upsilon Iota Ome­ga; Chairman Junior Council, '96; Chair.man Mock Democratic Convention, '96'Marshall, '97 i;,\-ssociateEditor" Weekly,,1'96 and '97; Managing Editor" Weekly"'97; Prize in Public Speaking, Summer '97;Representative in Chicago -Illinois De­bate, '96; Senior Scholarship in Debate,March '97; President Y. M. C. A., '96;General Secretary Y. M. C. A'b '96; Man�agel' Glee and Mandolin Clu s, '97-'98;President Philolexian,LAURA GANO.ADA MASON GARDNER.BLANCHlt GA'l'ZER'l',Scholarship in Public Speaking, Autumn'97.GEORGE HORACE GAS'l'ON.FRANKLIN HERMAN GESELBRACH'l'jLincoln House; Scholarship in Physics,'96-97' Marshall '97-'98; Chairman SeniorCouncil. Autumn '97 ; Vice-President Classof '98; Track Team, '95.HIRAM GILLESPHt.LILLIAN GOLDSMI'l'H.GEORGIA GoWEN.79EVA BRONSON GRAVES, ,The Idlers.JOHN FRANKLIN HAGEY, The Q. V.,The Owl and Serpent; The Order of theIron Mask; Dramatic Club; Base BallTeam. '97; President Class of '98; GleeClub,'96-'97 h' President Glee Club, '97-'98;President T e Forum; Junior CollegeCouncillor; Senior College Councillor; Ju­nior Ball Committee, '96; WashingtonPromenade Committee, '97 and '98 ; Schol­arship in Senior Debate,Winter '98; Repre­sentative in Chicago-Michigan Debate,'98;Leader University Sings, "98.SUSAN HARDING,The Esoteric Clnb; Nu Pi Sigma; TheIdlers; Women's Glee Club.FRANK HENRY HARMS, I:i K E,Executive Committee Class of '98.JULIET HARRIS.CLARENCE BERT HERSCHBERGER, A I:i CP,The Owl and Serpent; The Order of theIron Mask; Football Team, '94, '96 and'97; Base Ball Team,'96.'97 and '98b' TrackTeam, '95, 96, '97 and '98' Junior ollegeCouncillo!'j Senior College Councillor; Sec­retary Y. M.'C. A.HERSCHEL VINCENT HIBBARD.LUTHER BOONE HILL.LULA MAY HOUGH.JOHN ANDREW HOWARD, cpK'l'.CHARLES LEO HUNLEY.,JOSEPHINE LILIAN HUTCHINGS.ISAAC BARNEY HYMAN,Track Team, '95 and '96.RALPH JANSSEN.HARRIET JENKINSON.JOHN HARRIS KELLEY.WILLIAM CASPER KERN.FI.ORENCE LA TOURETTE.PAULINE LA TOURETTE.CHARLES LEDERER,Oratorical Scholarship, Spring '97.N�LLIE BLANCHE LENINGTON,President of The Idlers, '97-'98; Secreta­ry Y. W. C. A., '97.ANGELINA LOESCH.FLORENCE MA� LYON.WILLIAM FRANCIS McDONALD, 1: X,Associate Editor" Weekly," '97; MasterProperties Dramatic Club, '97; AssistantEditor "Cap and Gown," '98. HELEN MAREL MARTIN,Women's Basket Ball Team, '95-'96.GEORGE MCDOUGALL.HARRY LAVERGNE McGEE,University Chorus, '95.MOSES DWIGHT MCINTYRE, 'l' Y,The Owl and Serpent· The Omega Club;The Order of the Iron Mask; The Ben But­ler Club; Assistant Editor" Weekly," '96;Associate Editor II Weekly," '07; Manag­ing Editor" Weekly, '98; Assistant Editor"Cap and Gown" '96; Assistant Editor.1 Maroon," '96; Junior Promenade Com­mittee, '96; Secretary Oratorical Associa·tion, '96; Senior College Councillor; Chair­man Entertainment Committee Washing­ton Promenade, '98.FRED MERRIFIELD, A I:i CP,Vice-President Y. M. C. A. ; Baseball Team,'97-'98; Treasurer Class of '98; SeniorCollege Councillor, Spring '9'7.JOHN PRESTON MENTZER, The Q.V.,The Owl and Serpent; The Order of theIron Mask; The Ben Butler Club; Scholarin Political Economy, '9'7; Assistant Man­ager Glee and Mandolin Clubs, '97-'98;Member of the Athletic Board, '97-'98;Assistant Editor" Weekly," '96-'97; Exec­utive Committee Washington Promenade,'97; Senior College Councillor, '97; Exec­utive Committee 'Class of '98; ExecutiveCommittee Junior Day, '96; Secretary­Treasurer Assembly Club, '94-'95,WILLIAM LLOYD MERCER.JESSIE LOUISA NELSON.RUSSEL BURTON OPITZ, 1: X ,Artist.on University Publications.SARAH NICOLI. OSBORNE,The Sigma Ulub ; The Idlers.CECIL PAGE, cpK'l',The Order of the Iron Mask; Junior DayCommittee, '96; Junior College Councillor;Correspondent Chicago "Journal," '96;Glee Club, '96-'97; Business Manager Dra­matic Club, '97 and '98; Chairman Dra­matic Committee Junior Day, '97; Wash­ington Promenade Committee, '98; SeniorCollege Councillor.CATHERINE DIX PADDOCK,The Sigma Club; The Idlers.;,.1'he MulberryClub; University Choir; women's GleeClub; Executive Committee Class of '98.EVERItTT J OSEPH PARSONS.WARD BEECHER PERSHING,Correspondent .. The Chicago EveningPost." ,NELE':M'A PETTIT,Women's Glee Club, '9'7 and '98.GEORGE Pl<'IRSHING.80ALICE PEIRCE.GENEVEIVE PENDLETON.ARTHUR THADDEUS PIENKOWSKY,Secretary Oratorical Association, '96-'97;President Morgan Park Club, '98; Secre­tary Chorus, '97-'98.GRACE GIBSON PINKERTON.MARGARET PIPER,Women's Basketball Team, '94-'97.INEZ DWIGHT RICE,The Idlers; Secretary Women's Glee Club;"Cap and Gown" Artist, '96; Senior Col­lege Councillor.ALICE MARGARET'RANSOM,Executive Committee, Class of '98.ELBRIDGE WASHBURNE RICE.DAVID MOON ROBINSON.JOHN JACOB RAPP.LAURA LOUISE RUNYAN,Junior Scholarship in Social Science, '96.D. M. SCHOEMAKER.ERNEST ARTHUR SCROGIN,Scholarship in Public Speaking; Washing­ton Promenade Committee, '98.MARY LYDIA SHERMAN,The Idlers; Senior College Councillor; Ex­ecutive Committee Christian Union,MAX DARWIN SLIMMER.ARTHUR WHIPPLE SMITH, The Q. V.HENRY JUSTIN SMITH, Be II ,Glee Club, '93-'96; Tennis Team, '93;Senior College Councillor.MARY CHASE SMITH.CARLTON HOSMER SNASHAl,l"EDNA STANTON,The Quadranglers. CHARLES FRANCIS STOCKEY, cIt � 0 ,Glee Club, '96-'97 and '97-'98.LINIUS LEHMAN STROCK.CHARLOTTE TELLER,The Mortar Board; Vice-President Y, W.C. A., '96-'97: Vice-President EconomicClub '97; Executive Commitee Class of'98 ; Valedictorian Class of '98; SeniorColle_ge Councillor; Assistant Editor" Capand Gown," '98; Secretary, Class of '98.CLARA ALBINA TILTON,Wom�D's Gle.e Club�� Women's Ba�ketpal�Team, President J.. W. C. A., 96- 97,Secretary Economic Clu�. President E(lo­nomic Club, '97-'98; women's TennisTeam, '96,ROBERT NEWTON TOOKER, JR., 'IT Y,The Omega Club; The Bismarck Club'Coffee House; Substitute on FootbaIiTeam, '94; Guard on Football Team. '96;Catcher on Reserves, '97; President BanjoClub,'94; President Academic College, '94.FRANKLIN EGBERT VAUGHAN, B a II ,The Owl and Serpent; Associate Editor.. Cap and Gown," '96; Mandolin Club,'95-'97;, Leader Mandolin Club, '97-'98;Seuior College Councillor.ANNA LOUISE WARWICK.IVAN CALVIN WATERBURY.HARTWELL WILLIAM WEBB.OLIVER ELWIN WELLS.BANKS JOHN WILDMAN, l: A E ,Financial Secretary Forum, Spriug '95;Winter, '96; Treasurer Class of '98.ALICE WINSTON.MARY FRANCIS WINTItR,The Quadranglers ; The Women's MandolinClub, '96, Executive Committee, Class of'98.EDWIN CAMPBELl, WOOLLEY, cIt K 'IT,Assistant Editor •. Weekly," '97 and '98;Managing Editor ., Weekly," '98' Ivy Poet,'96 and '97; The Mulberry Club; ExecutiveCommittee, Class of '98.LAURA MAY WRIGHT.1896·1897HORACE GILJ:..E'tTE LOZIER,ERNES't HAMIL'tON DILLON,GILBER't AMES BLISS,JAMES TYJ:..ER CAMPBEJ:..L,Cbt 61tt elUbJAMES SCOTT BROWN,HORACE GILJ:..ETTE LOZIER, -STACY CARROLL MOSSER,FIRS't 'tENORSHorace Gillette LozierCharles Coombs MacomberMelville Edward ColemanCharles Francis StockeyFIRS't BASSOSJames Scott BrownCharles Lindsey BurroughsCecil PageTENOR SOLOIS'tGlenn Plumb Hall ManagerAssistant ManagerPresidentSecretaryPresident- LeaderSecretarySECOND TENORSHenry Harwood HewittWilliam Burgess CornellJohn Tyler CampbellPaul Blackwelder,SECOND BASSOSStacy Carroll MosserJohn Franklin HageyHerbert HewittFred Bradley ThomasPearle Merrill GriffithBARITONE SOLOISTRobert Bailey Davidson82tbt mandolin ClubWILLIAM SCOTT BOND,EDWARD CANFIELD LACKNER,FIRST MANDOLINSWilliam Scott BondGilbert Ames Bliss 1896-1897LeaderSecretarySECOND MANDOLINSWilliam Hayden JacksonByron Bayard SmithFranklin Egbert VaughanKnight French FlandersFrank Leland TolmanGUITARSHenry Wheeler StoneEdward Canfield LacknerFrederic Frank StiegmeyerRoy Bartling TaborMarion Clyde WeirMorgan Park, Ill.South Chicago, Ill.Blue Island, Ill.Riverside, Ill.Oak Park, Ill.Central Music Hall, Chicago.Vincennes 9ub, Chicago. Kenwood Club, Chicago.Hyde Park Club, Chicago.Hinsdale, Ill.Elgin, Ill.Freeport, 111.Waterloo, la.Sioux City, Ia, Council Bluffs, Ia,Omaha, Neb.Des Moines, Ia.Marshalltown, Ia.Mt. Vernon, la.Clinton, la.83Cbt 61tt and mandolin Clubs1897 -1898MARCUS PETER FRUTC;EIEY,JOHN PRESTON MENTZER,MELVILLE EDWARD COLEMAN, -Roy BARTLING TABOR,tbt 61tt £IUbJOHN FRANKUN HAGEY,CHARLES FRANCIS STOCKEY,STACY CARROLL MOSSER,FIRST TENORSMelville Edward ColemanCharles Francis StockeyJohn McAllion BrosiusClarence Sydney SpauldingFIRST BASSOSFrederick Wilson EastmanJames Herbert McCuneAlbert Simpson Russell.Charles Lindsey BurroughsLaurence DeGraffSOLOISTS ManagerAssistant ManagerPresidentSecretaryPresidentSecretaryLeaderSECOND TENORSPaul BlackwelderHarry Beverly WardLouis Sampson WardFrederick Robertson BarnesPaul D. McQuistonSECOND BASSOSStacy Carroll MosserJohn Franklin HageyCarlton Hosmer SnashallCarl Howell SawyerGlenn Plumb HallVictor Washington SincereRobert Bailey Davidson84tbt mandolin Club1897-1898FRANKI.,IN EGBERT VAUGHAN,BYRON BAYARD SMITH, LeaderSecretary and TreasurerFIRST MANDOI.,INSByron Bayard SmithWilliam Everton RamseyFranklin Egbert VaughanEmory Cobb AndrewsKnight French FlandersSECOND MANDOI.INSRowland Thumm RogersHertry HirschGeorge Gilbert DavisRoger Nelson KimballGUITARSEd ward Canfield LacknerRobert Gordon GouldFrank Williamson DukeJames Wolke Ross HARPRoy Bartling TaborFI.UTEWilber Wheeler BassetMANDOI.A VIOLINAlvin Lester BartonHarry CoySonmt$Kensington, Ill.Lakeside Club, Chicago.Aurora, 111.Edgewater Casino Club, Edgewater, Ill.Oak Park Cycling Club, Oak Park, Ill.Morgan Park, Ill.Peoria, 111.Clinton, Ia,Des Moines, la. Cedar Rapids, Ia,Maquoketa, Ia.Abingdon, Ill.Davenport, la.Central Music Hall, Chicago.Oakland Music HallHinsdale, Ill.Lewis Institute, Chicago.Highland Park, Ill.Hyde Park Y. M. C. A., Chicago.85Cbt Banjo ClubROBERT GORDON GOULD, -HUGH LAFAYETTE MCWILLIAMS,PAUL DONALD MCQUISTON, • PresidentTreasurerLeaderBANJOSPaul Donald McQuistonRoger Nelson KimballHugh Lafayette McWilliamsHarvey Malcolm McQuistonDonald Laxon McWilliamsCurtiss Rockwell ManningGUITARSRobert Gordon GouldRalph Curtiss ManningEmory Cobb AndrewsMANDOLINGilbert Ames BlissTRAPSCharles Lindsey Burroughs86ESTHER WALLACE STURGES,MARY LOUISE HANNAN,GRACE ALr�EN COULTER,m�mbm President- LeaderSecretaryAnne RootGreta Irwin BlanchardMary LincolnHelen MarotMary Louise Hannan Grace A11en CoulterGrace Josephine EberhartFlorence La TouretteMargaret CoulterEsther Wallace SturgesLaura Love Inez PerrinSusan Grace Harding Clara Albina TiltonNeletta Elida PettitCb¢ Wom�n's mandolin ClubPresident and LeaderSecretary ann TreasurerJESSIE NEA SPRAY,PEARL LOUISE HUNTER,Alma YondorfAlice Austin KnightAlma Le DucMarion Farwell TookerRuth HardyCatherine Dix Paddock87Offittrs1896·1897WILLIAM D. MERRELL,ARTHUR T. PIENKOWSKY, -J. FRANK WOOD,MRS. HItRBERT E. SLAUGH'!',WARDNER WILLIAMS, - President- Secretary and TreasurerLibrarianPianistConductor1897 ·1898FREDERICK W. EASTMAN,ARTHUR T. Pn£NKOWSKY,HUGH G. LEIGHTON, -MRS. HERBERT E. SLAUGHT,'V ARDNER WILLIAMS, President- Secretary and TreasurerLibrarianPianistConductortbt CboirPaul MandevilleFrederic PlaceCharles StockeyGlenn Hall Maurice MandevilleArthur StocksFrederick EastmanStacy Carroll Mosser88WILLIAM FRANCE ANDERSON, •CECIL PAGE, •OTTO HAKES, PresidentBusiness Manager• Assistant ManagermembtrsWilliam France AndersonRobert Gordon GouldNott WilHam FlintCecil Page James Weber LinnOtto HakesArthur Sears HenningDonald Angus KennedyPercy Bernard Eckhart William Francis McDonaldJohn Franklin HageyJohn Coulter, Jr.Lawrence JacobsCarl Sawyer Marjorie Benton CookeMary Kirk RiderAlice Austin KnightEthel KeenJosephine Turner Allin89tbt mUlbtrrp ClubMrs. Martha Foote CrowCharles Raymond BarrettAnna T. BeardsleyMary Bowen Catherine Dix PaddockHenry A. PalmerCharles Sumner PikeElizabeth PorterAlice Edwards PrattColinda D. BishoprickAgnes Spofford CookEffie A. Gardner Vernon Purington SquiresFlorence M. WalkerArthur Sears HenningArthur Willis Leonard Ida Ashborn WeeksLeRoy Titus WeeksFrederick Brooks Lindsay Florence WilkinsonJ ames Weber Linn Frank W. WoodsGeorge L. Marsh Edwin Campbell WoolleyMarjorie Benton Cooke•HE Mulberry Club is a group of verse-makers, nearly all of whom arestudents in the University of Chicago. When of a Saturday morningthe spirit moves thereto, those that will, repair to the south side of thePine-tree Isthmus, an idyllic spot in Arcady, which borders onBohemia, but is farthest from Philistia. Here no emporium chimney can be seen­the pines take care of that-the water is blue to north and south, the forest is thick toeast and west. The rules of the club are few but inexorable:I. The club shall meet not regularly, but occasionally.II. Each member shall read to the others his latest verses, aud read them twicewithout reprieve.III. The Sacrosanctum Ypocras Theologicum Mori shall be quaffed.-The Mulberry Club Book.90NELLIE BLANCHE LENINGTON,CLARA DELIA HULBERT, - PresidentSecretaryEdith Foster Elinor FloodVinnie CrandallEvelyn MatzElizabeth CoolidgeEva Graves Daisy LeningtonSarah Elizabeth ButlerHelen ThompsonSarah OsborneSusan BallouAngie LoeschLucy JohnstonLila FishSusan HardingCornelia OsborneInez RiceEleanor JonesClara HulbertDemia ButlerCharlotte FoyeKate AndersonAlice Clark Mabel RunnerRuth VanderlipMary ShermanDavida Harper91£Incoln DOuStPROFESSOR GEORGE EDGAR VINCENT,PROFESSOR WII.I.IAM ISAAC THOMAS,FREDERICK MAYOR GII.ES,FRANKI.IN HERMAN GESEI.BRACHT,HENRY STEAD DAVIDSON, Head of HouseCouncillorVice-HeadSecretaryTreasurerMRS. GEORGE EDGAR VINCENTFrederick Mayor GilesClyde Buchan WalkerReuben Giles StowellAlbert Ellsworth HillClayton Wiley MoggDavid Moore RobinsonJohn Paul RitcheyHarry Orrin GillettWilliam Schnoonover HarmanPatrontsstsMRS. W. R. LINNMRS. WU.I.IAM ISAAC THOMASmtmbersHiram GillespieFred Charles HackHenry Stead DavidsonFranklin Herman GeselbrachtCharles Joseph BushnellFrank Russell WhiteOrmsby Elroy PettetErich MuenterRoy Batchelder NelsonAlfred Charles JohnsonSwen Benjamin AndersonCharles Jonas Boyer92Wasbington DOUStPROI<'ESSOR RAJ.PH C. H. CATTERALL -PROFESSOR EDWIN E. SPARKSHALBERT PAYNE THOMASBANKS JOHN WILDMANHUGH GUTHRIE LEIGHTON - CouncillorHead- Vice-HeadSecretaryTreasurermtmbtrsEarnest Arthur ScroginElim Arthur PalmquistVernon Sirvilian PhilipClifton Oscar TaylorLouis' Thomas ForemanEarnest Edward IronsArthur Eugene BesterFred G. Mutterer Amos A. EbersoleCbt araeuare ClubFREDERICK ALBERT CLEVltLAND PresidentOTIS WILLIAM CALDWltLL Vice-PresidentANTOINETTE CARY, ELIZABETH FAULKNER SecretariesHENRY MAGElt ADKINSON TreasurerThe Graduate Club entertained the Federation of Graduate Clubs at its ThirdAnnual Convention, December 30 and 31, 1897. Mr. Jacob Dotsey Forrest, of theUniversity, is the president of the Federation.93tbt Btn Bufltr ClubCharles Newman Crewdson, '98Philip Rand, '97Moses Dwight McIntyre, '98Arthur Sears Henning, '99Donald Angus Kennedy, '99Walter Joseph Schmahl, '00Rowland Thumm Rogers, '00John Preston Mentzer, '98Thomas Brogden Blackburn, '98Spencer McDougall Brown, '00tbt morgan park ClubOffimsARTHUR T. PIENKOWSKYCHARLES E. CAREYWILLIAM S. HARMANMISS MARGARET MORGANCARL D. GREENLEAF PresidentFirst Vice-President- Second Vice-PresidentSecretaryTreasurerm�mbn$Alice HepburnH.F.Hollis H. S. HollisA. F. HolsteMargaret MorganRuth E. MorganEliot Blackwelder Robert LymanR. S. McClureH. H. NelsonC. E. Carey E. A. PalmquistG. E. Congdon A. T. PienkowskyC. D. Greenleaf C. W. RichardsW. S. Harman J. E. Webb94PruldtntsEDWARD BRANSON, Autumn, '96JAMES GWIN, Winter, '97HARRY GRISWOLD, Spring, '97JOHN FRANKLIN HAGEY, Autumn, '97FRED CHARLES HACK, Winter, '98John Franklin HageyCarl Diamond Greenleaf Ernest Edward IronsGeorge Edward CongdonErnest Arthur ScroginFrank Russell WhiteElim Arthur Palmquist Howard Pendleton KirtleyCharles Edward CareyWilliam Kelly WrightRufus Maynard ReedBanks John WildmanAinsworth Clark Fred Charles HackFred Merrifield951896HARRY FULLltR ATWOODFRANK ZIMMERMANARTHUR THADDEUS PIENKOWSKYBURT BROWN BARKER PresidentVice-PresidentSecretary- Treasurer1897MICHAEL FRANCIS GALLAGHERNELS JOHN SltNNESARTHUR THADDltUS PIENKOWSKY -FRED CHARLES HACK PresidentVice-PresidentSecretaryTreasurertbe UntutrsUp i)tbattns Club1897WinterFRANK ZIMMERMAN, PresidentCLYDE BUCHAN WALKER SecretaryGEORGE CARROLL CONE TreasurerSp!inQBURT BROWN BARKER PresidentGltORGE SIKES SecretaryTREVOR ARNETT TreasurerAutumnMICHAEL FRANCIS GALLAGHER PresidentTREVOR ARNETT - SecretaryGEORGE WATSON Treasurer913Cbt Cblcago·lowa DtbattAT KENT THEATRE, fEBRUARY 5, 1897THE QUESTIONRrtSOI.VltD, That American municipalities should own and operate their own streetrailways.Tha Affirmative The NegativeUNIVltRSITY OF CHICAGOFRltD C. HACKEDWIN S. MEADEFRANK CI.EVltI.AND UNIV!tRSITY OF IOWAE. G. MOONH. W. HANSONJ. R. FRAILltYDecision in favor of the negative.Winntf$ In nortbtrn Oratorical J:tagut gontt$t1897AMltS, Michigan,WILlt, Wisconsin,GALLAGHER, Chicago, " Castilar ""Jingoism""The New Social Spirit"Cbt mtcbtgan·Cbtcago DtbattAT KENT THEATRE, APRil 29, 1897THE QUESTIONRltSOI.VltD, That the English system of cabinet government is better adapted to thewants of a democratic people than the American congressional system.The Affirmative The NegativeUNIVltRSITY OF CHICAGOBURT BROWN BARKltRRICHARD VAUGHANGltORG!t WATSON UNIV!tRSITY OF MICHIGANCHANDI.ltRSATHltRSCARMODYDecision in favor of the affirmative.Cbt Columbta·Cbtcago DtbattNEW YORK CITY, MARCH 25, 1898THE QUESTIONRESOLV!tD, That the policy of increasing the United States navy is wise and shouldbe continued.The Affirmative The NegativeUNIVItRSITY OF CHICAGOEDWARD SHltRWOOD MEADItCHARLltS ALBItRT FRItDItRICKMICHAItL FRANCIS GALLAGHER COI.UMBIA UNIVltRSITYBltRNARD ERNltSTCHARLItS FRItDItRICK WHItATONJOSItPH MItYItR PROSKAUltRDecision in favor of the negative.97Stolor COlltgt1896WII.I.IAM PRENTISS DREWDonald Shurtleff TrumbullEdith CappsWinterL. BRENT VAUGHAN, ChairmanCharles Byron WilliamsWilliam Simmons BroughtonAllen Tibbals·BurnsJohn Preston MentzerJessie Nea SpraySumlfterAI.I.EN TIBBAI.S BURNS, ChairmanJohn Harry J okishMoses Dwight McIntyreFrederick ThomasRalph LeRoy PeckGeorge Henry Garry AutumnJames Watson GwinAlice WinstonClarence Bert Herschberger1891SpringFREDERICK DAY NICHOI.S, ChairmanStacy . Carroll MosserClarence Bert HerschbergerFred MerrifieldJohn Franklin HageyLaura May KnightAutumnHARRY FuI.I.ER ATWOOD, ChairmanInez RiceMary Lydia ShermanCharlotte Rose TellerFrank Russell WhiteCharles Lindsey BurroughsFranklin Herman Geselbracht1898WinterHarry CoyRobert E. GravesCharlotte TellerLAWRENCE DEGRAFF, Chairmanloseph Eo FreemanAlvin Lester BartonFrederick Augustus Brown98tbt lunlor COUtSt CouncnSummerF.R.�D�RICK DAY NICHOI.S, ChairmanDemia ButlerMarcus Peter FrutcheyCecil PageMaurice Brown LeeAbraham Alcon EttelsonDudley Grant Hays18911896AutumnEDWARD MAX BAK�R, ChairmanFrederick Day NicholsMax SpiegelAnnie PetersonWilliam Burgess CornellAbraham Alcon EttelsonCharles Braden DavisWinterR.OB�RT LAW. ChairmanWilliam Otis Wilson Fred Charles HackRalph Hamill Walter Joseph SchmahlRobert Gordon GouldSpringRAI.PH HAMII.I., ChairmanWilliam Thaw GardnerRobert Gordon GouldLeRoy Tudor VernonFred Charles HackWalter Joseph SchmahlPaul Blackwelder Earl Dean HowardJulius Henry GaussGeorge SawyerEdwin Lee PoulsonSummerTHOMAS BROGD�N BI.ACKBURN, ChairmanJohn James WalshEdwin Lee PoulsonPaul BlackwelderWilliam Thaw Gardner Earl Dean HowardAlbert Simpson RussellAaron CahnMelville Edward ColemanLawrence DeGraffAutumnJohn James WalshAlbert Simpson RussellAaron CahnClark Scammon ReedERNltST HAMII.TON DII.I.ON, ChairmanEsther SturgesAbraham EttelsonCharles Duffield HalseyLeRoy Tudor VernonKellogg SpeedRobert Gordon GouldWalter Lawrence HudsonWinterCI.INTON LUMAN Hoy, ChairmanErnest Edward Irons Ella May NortonRowland Sherman Rogers Ruth Edna Morgan99tbt sraaaare Co'uncll1897AutumnOTIS WILLIAM CALDWELL, ChairmanAnne Bates HersmanE. A. Freeman Frederick Albert ClevelandJohannes Benoni JonasWinterJOHANNES BENONI JONAS, ChairmanWilliam Clinton Alden Florence LyonAnne Bates Hersman Herbert Joseph Davenporttbt Olutnitp CounCn1897-1898Autumn· WinterORLO JOSIAH PRICE, ChairmanEdgar Dow Varney De Silva Edgar MillerJohn M. P. Smith Frank WoodsJohn Gallup Briggs, Jr. Franklin Davenport ElmerHoward Spilman Galt Warren Palmer Behan100tbt Dtulnttp ScboolBowan REYNOLDS PATRICK,WARREN PALMER BEHAN,RALPH RENSSELAER SNOW,Warren Palmer BehanRudolph Michael BinderEdwin Howard BordenWilliam Everett ChalmersDaniel Israel CoonJerry Tinder CrawfordRobert Bailey DavidsonLawrence Dykstra CLASS Of 1891Offlter$� PresidentVice- President� SecretaryEdwin Bruce KinneyElisha Moore LakeCharles Augustus LemonArba John MarshCharles Henry MurrayWilliam George OramWilliam Pleasants OsgoodBower Reynolds PatrickWinifred Ernest Garrison John Thomas ProctorTheodore Arthur Gessler Harry Edward PurintonEdgar Johnson Goodspeed Theodoro Geraldo SoaresJullien Avery HerrickRalph Waller HobbsHugh Henry Hurley Ralph Rensselaer SnowElmer Tilson StevensJoel Franklin WoodFrancis Chester R. Jackson .George Clarence WrightAndrew Robert Elmer Wyant101tbt J)ntutrsltp Of Cbtcago WttklpSIXTH YURMOSItS DWIGHT McINTYRE, '98 - - Managing EditorCHARI.ItS H. GAI.I.ION Business ManagerFRItDItRICK BRADI.ItY THOMAS, '98, Associate Editor.JI$$lstant EditorsWII.I.IAM FRANCIS McDONAI.D, '98RAI.PH LItRoy PECK, '98Non WII.I.IAM FI.INT, '98JOSItPHINE TURNItR AI.I.IN, '99EDWIN CAMPBItI.I. WOOI.I.ItY, '98AI.I.EN GRItY HOYT, '99FI.ORItNCIt McMAHON, '99 THOMAS B. BI.ACXBURN, 98JOSEPH E. hEItMAN, '98'Retired Editor. In tbe UniversityMARCUS PItTER FRUTCHEY, '98GEORGIt A. SAWYER, '98ARTHUR SEARS HENNING, '99JOHN PRESTON MENTZER, '98STACY C. MOSSItR, '97JAMES WltBItR LINN, '97ESTHltR STURGES, '98103Cbt Cal) and Gown1898manallng €dltorsARTHUR SItARS HaNNING WIl,l,OUGHBY GEORGE W Al,l,ING.Hssistant manallal €dltor. THOMAS TItMPl,It HOYNaB.slness manalerAl,l,ItN GREY HOYTJlssistant Buslnes$ manalerERNEST HAMIl,TON DU.l,ONJI$sotlatt €dltorsMAUIlIcn GORDON Cl,ARKERUFUS MAYNARD RaaDMARJORllt BENTON COOKEEDWARD MAX BAKER ETHE� KEENRUTH ISABEl, VANDERI.IPWIl,I.IAM FRANCIS MACDONAI,DCHARI,O't'tE ROSE TEI,I,nRWII,I,IAM FRANCE ANDltRSON CARI, HowltI.I. SAWYltR'former Sap and 60wn €dlt01$MANAGING ItDITORS BUSINESS MANAGERS1895PHII.IP RANDCHARI.ES SUMNltR PIKIt W AI,TltR ATWOODOSWAl,D ARNOI,D1896PRII.IP RAND FRltDltRICK DAVlltS104Cbt €ncblrldtonPublished by the Class of 1897PHILIP RAND, ChairmanEUGENIA RADFORD STACY CARROLL MOSSERCbt mulbtrrp Club· BookPublished annually by the Mulberry Club and printed privately at the Wind­tryst Press, Chicago, Ill.1898Editorial £ommittttMARTHA FOOTlt CROWARTHUR S:ltARS HENNING CATHERINE DIX PADDOCKEDWIN CAMPBELL WOOLLEYCbt i)nlutrsitp Sons BookPublished by the Glee and Mandolin Clubs1897managersHORACE GILLETTE LOZIERJ AMES SCOTT BROWNSTACY CARROLL MOSSER105AI.PHA DEI.TA PHI HOUSE, 5700 Monroe Ave. Councillor, Associate ProfessorG. S. Goodspeed; Head, Dr. Ferdinand Schwill.BETA THETA PI HOUSE, 5714 Kimbark Ave. Councillor, Assistant ProfessorF. W. Shepardson; Head, William Bishop Owen.DEI.TA KAPPA EpSII.ON HOUSE, 5859 Washington Ave. Councillor, AssistantProfessor J. R. Angell; Head, Henry Gordon Gale.PHI DEI.TA THETA HOUSE, 5738 Monroe Ave. Councillor, Associate ProfessorJ. W. Moncrief; Head, William O. Wilson.PHI KAPPA PSI HOUSE, 5737 Monroe Ave. Councillor, Professor E. R. L.Gould; Head, George Tunell.SIGMA CHI HOUSE, 5716.Kimbark Ave. Councillor, Assistant Professor S. H.Clark; Head, Newman Miller.THE Q. V. HOUSE, 5744 Monroe Ave. Councillor, Associate Professor Starr W.Cutting; Head, Walter A. Payne.PSI UPSII.ON HOUSE, Graduate Hall. Councillor, Assistant Professor GeorgeCarter Howland; Head, Moses Dwight McIntyre.SOUTH DIVINITY HOUSE. Councillor, Dean E. B. Hulbert, D.D.; Head, Her­vey Foster Mallory.MIDDI.E DIVINITY HOUSE. Councillor, Head Professor E. D. Burton; Head,Edgar Dow Varney.GRADUATE HOUSE. Councillor, Head Professor A. W. Small; Head, AssistantProfessor Camillo von Klenze.SNEI.I. HOUSE. Councillor, Head Professor H. P. Judson; Head, JosephEdward Raycroft.BEECHER HOUSE. Councillor, Assistant Professor F. J. Miller; Head, Associ­ate Professor Julia E. Bulkley.KItI.I. Y HOUSE. Councillor, Head Professor J. L. Laughlin. Head, AssociateProfessor Marion Talbot.NANCY FOSTER HOUSE. Councillor, Associate Professor W. D. MacClintock;Head, Assistant Professor Myra Reynolds.DISCIPI.ES DIVINITY HOUSE. Conncillor, Associate Professor W. D. Mac­Clintock; Head, Edward S. Ames.CUMBERI.AND PRESBYTERIAN DIVINITY HOUSE. Councillor, Ira W. Howerth;Head, W. C. Logan.106tbt Cbrlstian UnionPROFESSOR JOHN COUr.TER -HENRV Lr.OVDGEORGE SAWYER PresidentVice-PresidentSecretary and Treasurertbt Pbl1antbro.,tc CommlttttJ;>ROFESSOR GEORGE HOWr.AND - Chairman and TreasurerGll;ORGE SA WVER Secretary107Cbt Jonns mtn's Cbrtsttan JlssoctattonFRANKLIN ELMERCHARLES BURROUGHSGEORGE SAWYERCHARLES TORREYHOWARD GALT PresidentRecording SecretaryCorresponding SecretaryTreasurerGeneral Secretary:be Jouns WOmtn'S Cbrtsttan Jlssoctatlon1897CLARA ALBINA TILTONCORA BELLE JACKSONHELEN WHITNEY BACKUSMARY SUSAN MILLERCAROr�YN LADD MoSS PresidentVice-President- Recording Secretary- Corresponding SecretaryTreasurer1898MARY SUSAN MILLERCHARLOttE TELLERELIZABltTH LINGLE -HARRIET CLARK -Lucy JOHNSTON PresidentVice-PresidentRecording Secretary- Corresponding SecretaryTreasurer108DtrtdOr Of Jltblttl($AMOS ALONZO STAGGCHARLES ALLENCHARLES FOSTER ROBY HENRY GORDON GALEJOSEPH EDWARD RA YCROFTHORACE BU1'1'ERWORTHtbt Jltblttle Rtprtstntatl\,tSThe Graduate SchoolsThe Divinity SchoolsThe Senior CollegesThe Junior CollegesThe Graduate SchoolsThe Divinity SchoolsThe Senior CollegesThe Junior Colleges - 1897HENRY TEFFT CLARKE, JR.HAYDEN EVAN JONES- WILLIAM SCOTT BOND- FREDERICK DAY NICHOLS1897·1898HENRY GORDON GALEROBERT DAVIDSON- JOHN PRESTON MENTZERLEROY TUDOR VERNONHENRY GORDON GALE FRANK CLAYTON CLEVELANDHARRY IRUS COY WALTER JAMES CAVANAGHERNEST DEKoVEN LEFFINGWELL JONATHAN EDWARD WEBBHERBERT MORSE. BURCHARDWALTER SCOTT KENNEDY THERON WARE MORTIMERRALPH C. HAMILLCLARENCE BERT HERSCHBERGERCHARLES FOSTER ROBY KELLOGG SPEED GEORGE HENRY GARRYWILUAM THAW GARDNERMAURICE GORDON CLARKEHAYDEN EVANS JONESHENRY MAGEE ADKINSONAUSTIN CRAIG BOWDISHNORMAN KENDALL ANDERSONTHEODORE HIRAM PATTERSONHARVEY FoxHARRY�DELMONT ABELLS HUGH GUTHRIE LEIGHTON'GEORGE HOYT SAWYER FRED MERRIFIELDALVIN LESTER BARTON LEROY TUDOR VERNONGEORGE LOUIS WHITE JOHN FRANKLIN HAGEYNOTT WILLIAM FLINT CECIL VINCENT BACHELLEFRED HARVEY CALHOUN GILBERT AMES BussCHARLES LINDSEY BURROUGHS BYRON BAYARD SMITHCHARLES FIRTH CARTER VAN VLECK BROWNROBERT NE;WTON TOOKER114liN FOOT-BALL Chicago has by continuous good work deservedly ea. rnedher place in the foremost rank. Our team has gained the honor of beingable to look forward to having their opponents in every game playingwith the stimulus and desperation which the deciding game of theirseason alone can give. To account for this success in so young an institution as theUniversity we call attention to the fact that we are supported by the two things whichyoung colleges are supposed to lack: members from which to draw material for a teamand spirit to back it. Especially we are fortunate in having a system to our coaching,as opposed to the method employed in other western co11eges, by which players are.compelled to unlearn each year what was knocked into them the year before. Forthe same: reason our future in foot-ba11 is assured, as the alumnicoaches under Mr. Stagg are slowly recruited from the victoriousteams of the present. The records of the two seasons, 1896 and1897, though marred by two defeats in 1896 and one in 1897, is oneof which we may be proud. During the two years we were victors inmore hard fought games with those teams struggling for the WesternChampionship than any other college, and while we cannot claim thechampionship for ourselves we deny the claim of any other team toit or to an equal record of victories.115eDt isss etamCHARLES FOSTER ROBY, CaptainCAVANAGH, CenterWEBB, Left Guard TOOKER, Right GuardKENEDY } Left TackleMORTIMERFIRTH } Left EndLEFFINGWELL ROBY, Right TackleHAMILL, Right EndCLARK, Quarter BackHERSCHBltRGER, Left Half Back COY, Right Half BackGARDNER, Full BackSUBSTITUTESHENRY CLARK, NEEL, SINCERE, DAVIS, CLEVELAND, BURCHARDCHICAGO'S FOOT-BALL RECORD FOR 1896.September 12, Marshall Field, Chicago, 24, vs. Englewood High School, 0,September 15, Marshall Field, Chicago, 24, vs. Hyde Park High School, 0September 17, Marshall Field, Chicago, 12, vs. Englewood High School, 0September 19, Marshall Field, Chicago, 43, vs. Wheaton High School, oSeptember 26, Marshall Field, Chicago, 48, vs. Eureka College, oOctober 3, Marshall Field, Chicago, 43, vs. Monmouth College, oOctober 7, Marshall Field, Chicago, 34, vs. Hahnemann Medical College, 0-October 10, Marshall Field, Chicago, 6, vs. University of Iowa, 0,October 14, Notre Dame, Chicago, 18, vs. Notre Dame, oOctober 17, Marshall Field, Chicago, 30, vs. Oberlin College, 0October 21, Marshall Field, Chicago, 36, vs. Armour Institute, 0,October 24, Marshall Field, Chicago, 6, vs. Northwestern University, 46-October 31, Marshall Field, Chicago, 12, vs. University of Illinois, O·November 7, Madison, Chicago, 0, vs, University of Wisconsin, 24November 10, Marshall Field, Chicago, 0, vs, Lake Forest University, ():November 14, Evanston, Chicago, 18, vs, Northwestern University, 6-November 23, Coliseum, Chicago, 7· vs. University of Michigan, 6,,Seventeen games were played, of which fourteen were victories for Chicago; two,defeats and one tie. The University scored. a total of three hundred and sixty-one,points to its opponents' eighty-two.11GCbt lSg1 CtamCLARENCE BERT HERSCHBERGER, CaptainCAVANAGH, CenterSPEED, Left GuardMORTIMER, Left TackleGARREY, Left End BOWDISH, Right GuardWEBB, Right TackleHAMILL, Right EndCLARK, Quarter BackKENNEDY, Left Half Back HERSCHBERGER, Right Half BackGARDNER, Full BackSUBSTITUTESFox, PATTERSON, ANDERSONCHICAGO'S fOOT-BALL RECORD fOR 1897September 18; Marshall Field, Chicago, 22, vs. Hyde Park High School, 0September 24, Marshall Field, Chicago, 11, vs. Hyde Park High School, 0September 25, Marshall Field, Chicago, 21, vs. Englewood High School, 0Gctober 2, Marshall Field, Chicago, 41, vs. Monmouth College, 4October 9, Marshall Field, Chicago, 71, vs. Lake Forest University 0October 12, Marshall Field, Chicago, 24, vs. Armour Institute, 0October 16, Marshall Field, Chicago, 39, vs. Beloit College, 6October 23, Marshall Field, Chicago, 21, vs. Northwestern University, 6October 30, Champaign, Chicago, 18, vs. University of Illinois, 12November 6, Marshall Field, Chicago, 34, vs. Notre Dame, 5November 13, Marshall Field, Chicago, 8, vs. University of Wisconsin, 23November 25, Coliseum, Chicago, 21, vs. University of Michigan, 12Twelve games were played, of which Chicago won eleven and lost one. TheUniversity scored three hundred and forty-one points during the season, to its oppon­ents' fifty-six.117tbt lSg1 ScrubsLYMAN } CenterLEIGHTONMANNING, Right Guard DUKE, Left GuardCLARKE, Right Tackle WALLING, Left TackleHOLSTE, Right End DA VIS, Left EndBROWN, Quarter BackKIMBALL, Right Half WALKER, Left HalfSCHMAHL, Full BackSUBSTITUTESPETTITT, GOULD, ABERNETHYSCHEDULE Of GAMESScrubs, 4, vs. Armour Institute 0Scrubs, 12, vs. Central Y. M. C. A., 12Scrubs, 6, vs. Lewis Institute, 0Scrubs, 0, vs. Morgan Park, 6Scrubs, 22, vs. Illinois Scrubs, 6The Scrubs played five games, winning three, losing one, and tying one.lis yet track work has not gained the enthusiastic support whichgreets other forms of athletics. This is the case throughout all theWest, and in spite of the fact that our western records are undenia­bly good, even at the Western Intercollegiate meets the crowds aresmall considering the number which a contest between almost anytwo of the colleges in base-ball or foot-ball would draw. It is not to be wonderedat that spectators fail to appreciate the wearisome succession of heats and the poor­ly managed and long drawn out field events. The same fault which permits the fieldevents to lag until nightfall and spectators to enter the field is responsible for thelack of well sustained rivalry throughout all the program. Another reason is in thenewness of the recognition of track work as a first class intercollegiate sport. Dualmeets offer more excitement, as the rivalry is more focused, but even here the con­tests are too new to attract the attention they deserve. Our own meets gain more andmore attention on the campus, and there is no reason why, with the increased spirit,and with the meets well advertised, we should not be both victorious and successfulfinanciall y.Cbt isss CtamCECIL V. BACHELLE, CaptainTheodore Hiram PattersonFrederick Franklin SteigmeyerErnest GundlachGeorge Louis WhiteFred Harvey CalhounEarl WilliamsonHarry ChaseEdward Lee Poulson Henry McClenahanCarr NeelCharles Raymond BarrettClarence Bert HerschbergerEarl PeabodyAlbert LogieHarvey A. PetersonCharles Lindsey Burroughs119Cbtcago's Crack Rtcord for 1 Sg6On February 29 the University in dual meet defeated Lake Forest at the Gym­nasium. Jackson, of Lake Forest, tied the world's record in the 35 yard dash, at .04}.The points: University of Chicago, 56; Lake Forest University, 33.The University gave its first annual invitation meet at the First Regiment Ar­mory, March 14. Chicago won easily, with 20 points to the First Regiment's 10.April 18, occurred the First Cup Meet, remarkable for the first appearance ofPeabody in bicycle contests. With a handicap of 50 yards he defeated Bachelle,scratch, in the mile event. On May 4 he again defeated Bachelle, both starting fromscratch, and ten days later repeated the victory. Attention was immediately centeredon this wonderful young rider who had appeared so unexpectedly. His rise in ama­teur cycling was rapid. During the remainder of the year in college and without, headded victory: after victory to his record. In 1897, however, his first year out of college,his achievements on the wheel became phenomenal. He steadily refused to becomea professional, though several times he showed himself equal to the cleverest riders ofthat rank. At the close of the season his victories outnumbered Zimmerman's ama­teur record. Nothing can speak better for Chicago's athletics than Peabody's cham­pionship of the cause of amateur cycling.The Triangular Meet, held in Marshall Field, May 30, 1896, resulted in a victoryfor Chicago. The summary:100 Yard dashMile Run120 Yard HurdlesMile Walk220 Yard Dash440 Yard Run220 Yard Hurdles880 Yard:RunOne Lap BicycleTwo Mile BicycleRelay Race Potter, N. W.Cragin, L. F.Steigmeyer, U. of C.Gundlach, U. of C.Potter, N. W.Potter, N. W.Perry, N. W.Cragin, L. F.Peabody, U. of C.Peabody, U. of C.Lake ForestRunning High Jump Holmes, N. W.16 Pound Shot Williamson, U. of C.16 Pound Hammer Woolsey, L. F.Running Broad Jump Perry, N. W.Pole Vault Perry, N. W. TRACK EVENTSD. H. Jackson, L. F. Patterson, U. of C.Alcott, L. F. McClenahan, U. of C.Neel, U. of C. Bettis, L. F.Anderson, L. F. Barrett, U. of C.Patterson, U. of C, D. H. Jackson, L. F.G. L. White, U. of C. W. F. Jackson, L. F.Herschberger,U. of C. J. J. Jackson, L. F.Calhoun, U. of C. Gates, N. W.Bachelle, U. of C. Moore, N. W.Bachelle, U. of C.Northwestern ChicagoFIELD [VENTSSteigmeyer, U. of C.Perry, N. "V.Lee, L. F.Neel, U. of C.Chase, U. of C. Herschberger, U. of C. 5 ft. 3l in.Steigmeyer, U. of C. 34 ft. 5Hn.Logie, U. of C. 103 ft. 6� in.Steigmeyer, U. ofC. 21ft.3 in.Jones, N. W. 9ft.120 10!4.55�.188.05i.22i.53}.27�2.07.3n5.55i3.4mChicago carried off a total of sixty-three points, with five firsts, ten seconds,and eight thirds; Northwestern, forty-four points, seven firsts, two seconds, and threethirds; Lake Forest, thirty-six points, four firsts, four seconds, and four thirds.June 6, Western Intercollegiate Track Meet, at Bankers' Athletic Club Field.The summary:TRACK EVENTSEvents First Second Third Time100 Yard Dash Maybury, Wis. Rush, Gr. Potter, N. .10Mile Walk Bunnell, Minn. Gundlack, U. ofC. Peterson, Wis. 7.3H120 Yard Hurdle Richards, Wis. Jackson, L. F. Schucardt, Wis. .16�440 Yard Run Rush, Gr. Downer, "Vis. Jackson, L. F. .50!Mile Bicycle Burton, Minn. Peabody, U. of C. Spaulding, Gr. 2.37iMile Run Cragin, L. F. Palmer, Gr. Fellows, Gr. 4.33220 Yard Hurdle Richards, Wis. Clark, Gr. Schucardt, Wis. .2nHalf Mile Cragin, L. F. Fellows, Gr. Calhoun, U. of C. 2.05�220 Yard Dash Maybury, Wis. Rush, Gr. Potter, N. .22�FIELD EVENTSHigh Jump Liegler, Wis. Mason, Wis. W. France, Wis. 5 ft. 7 in.Shot Put Cochems, Wis. Finlayson, Minn. Williamson, U. of C. 38 ft. 9� in.Broad Jump Neel, U. of C. Perry, N. H. France, Wis. 20ft. 9 in.Hammer Throw Cochems, Wis. Von Oven, U. ofC. Lee, L. F. 113ft.6Hn.Pole Vault Wilson, N. Herschberger, U. of C. Coffeen, U. of 1. 10 ft. 6 in.POINTSUniversity of Wisconsin 46 Lake Forest University 15Grinnell College 22 University of Minnesota 13University of Chicago 16 Northwestern University 10University of Illinois 4June 13, Dual Meet with the University of Michigan. resulting in a victory forthe latter. Gundlach, U. of C., broke the Western Intercollegiate record for the milewalk in 7.25,%. The summary:TRACK EVENTSEvents First Second Time100 Yard Dash Patterson, C. Thomas, 1\1. .10�220 Yard Dash Thomas, M. Patterson, C. .22�Quarter Mile Run Meining, M. Heald M. .54:Half Mile Run Calhoun, C. Woodruff, M. 2.26�Mile Run Peterson, C. 4.52�Mile Walk Gundlach, C. Tryon, M. 7.25l120 Yard Hurdles Steigmeyer, C. Nee1, C. .1n220 Yard Hurdles Ayres, M. Chubb, M. .28Mile Bicycle Marsh, M. Peabody, C. 2.39iRelay Race (955 Yards) Michigan Chicago 1.44�121FIELD EVENTSRunning High JumpRunning Broad Jump16 Pound HammerPole Vault16 Pound Shot Vernor, M.Le Roy, M.McConkey, M.Herschberger, C.Williamson, C. St. Clair, 1\1.Neel, C.Bennett, M.Tryon, M.DePont, M. 5 ft. 5fB in.21 ft. 10 in.106 ft. 6 � in.10 ft.34 ft. 11 in.Michigan won sixty-seven points, with eight firsts and nine seconds; Chicago,fifty points, with seven firsts and five seconds.tbt tssz ttamTHEODORE HIRAM PATTERSON, CaptainGeorge Louis White Charles Lindsey BurroughsByron Bayard Smith Isaac Barney HymanFred Harvey Calhoun George Alembert BraytonCarter Van Vleck Brown Harold Le Claire IckesClarence Bert Herschberger Cecil V. BachelleFrederick Patterson Lachmund Harry Bartlett CampbellAlvin Lester Barton Newell Montague FairWilliam Scott Bond, Jr. Frederick Augustus BrownCHICAGO'S TRACK RECORD fOR 1897The indoor work or the track team would have been uneventful, there being noimportant meets, but for the controversy between Mr. Stagg and the AmateurAthletic Union. In order to spur the members of the track team to greater effortsand to give them some experience in actual contests. Mr. Stagg arranged a dual meetwith the First Regiment, to be held March 12, 1897. However, about a week beforethe appointed date, Mr. Stagg received a letter from Mr. R. E. Fishburn, Presidentof-the Central Division oftheA. A. U., informing him that all participantsin the meetmust register with the A. A. U., under penalty of disqualification. Mr. Stagg determinedto test the matter and to fight the question out with the A. A. U. He accordinglyannounced in the papers of the city that he would hold an open meet and invited allwho wished to contest. The meet was held and Mr. Fishburn published a statementthat all who have taken part in it were disqualified and debarred from all further con­tests held under the rules of the A. A. U. But Mr. Stagg received no official noticeof his wholesale disqualification. The Universities of Minnesota and Illinois publiclyupheld Mr. Stagg in the stand he had taken, while the University of Wisconsin andNorthwestern University supported the A. A. U. The Manager of the Northwesternbase-ball team, in obsequious haste to do the bidding of the A. A. U., called on Mr­Stagg and declaredthat Mr. Stagg must submit to the A. A. U. and register his menor Northwestern would refuse to meet the University of Chicago on the diamond.Mr. Stagg replied that, so far as he himself was concerned, the A. A. U. had nothingto do with the case; he had taken his stand and would not recede from it. The justi­fication of Mr. Stagg came shortly after when the A. A. U. admitted its defeat byreceding from its position and removing its ban from our track team.122In the Dual Meet with the University of Illinois, at Champaign, May 11, Chi­cago was easily victorious, with 77 points to her opponent's 43. The summary :TRACK EVENTSEvent First Second Time100 Yard Dash Burroughs, U. of C. Patterson, U. of C. .10�220 Yard Dash Burroughs, U. of C. Hyman, U. of C. .231440 Yard Run Mills, U. of I. .Cabeen, U. of 1. .55Half Mile Run White, U. of C. Smith, U. of C. 2.0nMile Run Smith, U. of C. Brayton, U. of C. 4.57l120 Yard Hurdle Calhoun, U. of C. Porter, U. of 1. .18220 Yard Hurdle Calhoun, U. of C. Clark, U. of 1. .28iMile Walk Hoagland, U. of 1. Ickes, U. of C. 8.14�Mile Bicycle Bachelle, U. of C. Brown, U. of C. 3.04:Half Mile Bicycle Bache1le, U. of C. Breburger, U. of 1. 1.l4�fiELD EVENTSHammer Von Oven, U. of I. Enochs, U. of 1. 120 ft. 5 in.Shot Put Prickett, U. of I. Herschberger, U. of C. 35 ft. 6 in.Broad Jump Herschberger, U. of C. Campbell, U. of C. 20 ft. 3in.High Jump Byrne, U. of 1. Lachmund, U. of C. 5 ft. 5 in.Pole Vault Herschberger, U. of C. Coffeen, U. of 1. 10 ft. 3j( in.Chicago made a total of seventy-seven points,' with ten firsts and nine seconds;Illinois a total of forty-three points, with five firsts and six seconds.The second Dual Meet with the University of Michigan at Detroit, May 29, re­sulted in a defeat for Chicago. Michigan scored a total of 94 points, Chicago 46.White did especially good work for the University, winning two hard races, thequarter and the half mile. The summary:TRACK EVENTSEvent First Second Third Time1C ) Yard Dash Burroughs, C. Thomas, M. Patterson, C. .10t2� ) Yard Dash Thomas, M. Burroughs, C. Thompson, M. .22i44 Yard Run White, C. Batterman, M. Fair, C. .52iH1 tf Mile Run White, C. Barton, C. King, M. 2.07Mi � Run Wood, M. Smith, C. Burns, C. 4.38i120 Yard Hurdles McLean, 1\1. Calhoun. C. Ayers, M. .I6�220 Yard Hurdles Chubb, M. McLean, M. Calhoun, C. .2nMile Walk Tryon, M. Woodruff, M. F. Brown, C. 8.04�Quarter Mile Bicycle Turner, M. York, M. Bush, M. .36Mile Bicycle Turner, M. C. Brown, C. York, M. 2.37Relay Race (880 Y ds ) Michigan Chicago 1.341123fiELD EVENTSHigh JumpBroad JumpShot PutHammer ThrowVault Vernor, M.Reynolds, M.Lehr, M.Bennett, M.Herschberger, C. Flournoy, M. Herschberger, C.Vernor, M. Bond, C.Herschberger, C. Oliver, M.Oliver, M. Herschberger, C.Tryon and Adams, M. 5 ft. 9! in.21 ft.36 ft. 2 in.104 ft. 6! in.9 ft. 9 in.Michigan won a total of ninety-four points, with twelve firsts, nine seconds, andseven thirds; Chicago a total of forty-six, with four firsts, six seconds, and eight thirds.The Western Intercollegiate Meet was held at the Bankers' Athletic Club's Field,June 5. Four western records were broken, Maybury lowering the time in the 100and 220 yard dashes; Richards in the 120 yard hurdles, and Bunnell of Minnesota inthe Mile Walk. Burroughs pushed Maybury hard, his wonderful form for hisSophomore year promising greater things for the season of '98. The summary:TRACK EVENTSEvent First Second Third Time100 Yard Dash Maybury, W. Burroughs, C. Potter, N. W. 9�220 Yard Dash Maybury, W. Burroughs, C. C. Stevenson, Minn. .2H440 Yard Run W. F. Jackson, L. F. Fox, W. Mills, Ill. .5HHalf Mile Run Brennan, Minn. G. L. White, C. Fellows, Grin. 2.06iMile Run Copeland, W. Wood, Mich. Fellows, Grin. 4.38�120 Yard Hurdle Richards, W. McLean, Mich. Armstrong, Grin. .15�220 Yard Hurdle Kraenzlein, W. Chubb, Mich. Richards, W. .25�Mile Walk Bunnell, Minn. Hoagland, Ill. Tryon, Mich. 7.26Mile Bicycle Bush, Mich. Taylor, W. Turner, Mich. 2.36lFIELD EVENTSHigh Jump Kraenzlein, W. Vernor, Mich. Waller, W. 5 ft. 9. in.Broad Jump Dole, L. S. Jr. Gaines, Minn. Brewer, W. 21 ft. 3! in.Shot Put Cochems, W. Roller, De P. Brewer, N. W. . 40 ft. 1H in.Hammer Throw Von Oven, Ill. Cochems, W. Enochs, Ill. 122 ft. Hn.Vault Dole, L. S. Jr. Herschberger, C. Coffeen, Ill. 10 ft. 6 in.Firsts Seconds Thirds PointsWisconsin 7 3 3 47Michigan - 1 4 2 19Minnesota 2 1 1 14Chicago - 0 4 0 12Illinois 1 1 3 11Leland Stanford Jr. - 2 0 1 10Lake Forest 1 0 0 5Grinnell - 0 0 3 3De Pauw 0 1 0 3Northwestern - 0 0 1 1On June 11, to close the track season, the Annual Chicago Meet was held onMarshall Field. Five local records were lowered. Burroughs ran the l00-yard dash,paced in 10 seconds; F. A. White, the half-mile in 2.0n; B. B. Smith, the mile in4.46�; Bachelle, the two-mile bicycle in 5.17!, and the half-mile bicycle in 1.091.124Wtstun IntucOlltgtatt mtttsTIME:100 Yard Dash 1895 Crum, University of Iowa .101896 Maybury, University of Wisconsin .101897 Maybury, University of Wisconsin .09t220 Yard Dash 1895 Crum, University of Iowa .221896 Maybury, University of Wisconsin .22�1897 Maybury, University of Wisconsin .2H440 Yard Dash 1895 Hodgman, University of Michigan .sos1896 Rush, Grinnell College .50:1897 W. F. Jackson, Lake Forest University .5HHalf Mile Run 1895 Palmer, Grinnell College - J.59�1896 Cragin, Lake Forest University - 2.0511897 Brennan, University of Minnesota 2.06�Mile Run 1895 Clyde, Grinnell College - 4.38�1896 Cragin, Lake Forest University 4.331897 Copeland, University of Wisconsin - 4.38§120 Yard Hurdles 1895 Dyer, University of California .16i1896 Richards, University of Wisconsin .16t1897 Richards, University of Wisconsin .15t220 Yard Hurdles 1895 Torrey, University of California .27�1896 Richards, University of Wisconsin .2n1897 Kraenzlein, University of Wisconsin - .25iMile Walk 1895 Mervin, University of California - 7.3U1896 Bunnell, University of Minnesota - 7.3H1898 Bunnell, University of Minnesota - 7.26High Jump 1895 Clark, University of Illinois 5 ft., 9 in.1896 Leigler, University of Wisconsin 5 ft., 7 in.1897 Kraenzlein, University of Wisconsin 5 ft., 9 in.Broad Jump 1895 Woolsey, University of California - 21 ft., 9 in.1896 Neel, University of Chicago 20 ft., 9 in.1897 Dole, Leland-Stanford University - 21 ft., 31 in.Shot Put 1895 Cochems, University of Wisconsin 38 ft., 10Hn�1896 Cochems, University of Wisconsin 38 ft., 91 in.1897 Cochems, University of Wisconsin 40 ft., IIi in.Hammer Throw 1895 Edgren, University of California - 123 ft., 9! in.1896 Cochems, University of Wisconsin 113 ft., 6i in.1897 Von Oven, University of Illinois - 122 ft., lin.Pole Vault 1895 Culver, Northwestern University 10 ft., 6 in.1896 Wilson, Northwestern University - 10 ft., 6 in.1897 Dole, Leland Stanford University 10 ft., 6 in.Mile Bicycle 1895 Bachelle, University of Chicago 2.461896 Burton, University of Minnesota - 2.3711897 Bush, University of Michigan 2.361125IIHE BASE-BALL season of 1896 left us, after a season extending from.. March 31 to July 2, during which thirty-three games were played, withan undisputed title to the western championship. Sixteen westerncollege games were played, in which we made 127 runs to our oppo­nents' 80. In the series with Michigan, Chicago won three out of five. All the othergames we won. A well contested game was played with the Chicago League team,and we had the pleasure of seeing Capt. Anson struck out by Henry Clark.Indeed the season's work was so gratifying that an eastern trip was taken. En­thusiasm in ,the University stimulated by this inovation ran high, and we waitedbreathlessly' for those telegrams signed A. A. Stagg. Excitement had reached itsheight when the crowd gathered around the bulletin board on the afternoon of May27. And then as we gradually realized that it wasn't a practical joke, we went home.However, the team was as successful as we could expect, considering the extremelyhard trip. Of the four college games played we won from Cornell and Pennsylvania,and lost to Yale and Harvard. As an appendix to the eastern trip came the serieswith Brown on our own grounds. The games were all that could be asked for, thecrowds big, the weather lovely, while the spectators were held breathless, and victorywas undecided until the last put-out. It is greatly to be hoped that Mr. Stagg canclose negotiations with Brown or some other eastern college, as a climax for the sea­son of '98.The eighteen ninety-seven season was much shorter, lasting only about twomonths. Fourteen college games were played, of which we lost three. As for thechampionship, Illinois and Chicago won from each by the same score, but the recordsof the two teams point very much in our favor. All other championship contestantswere defeated, although we lost to Beloit by a score of 11 to 12.126tbt tess ttamHARRY DELMONT ABELLS, CaptainHENRY TEFFT CLARKE, PitcherHARRY DELMONT ABELLS, First BaseHENRY MAGEE ADKINSON, Second BaseJAMES SCOTT BROWN, Left FieldFREDERICK DAY NICHOLS, PitcherCLARENCE Bl!;RT HEltSCHBERGER, Center FieldTHOMAS SWEET, Short StopHAYDEN JONES, CatcherCHARLES WINSTON, Third BaseGEORGE HOYT SAWYER, Right FieldMAURICE GORDON CLARKE, Short StopCHARLES SUMNER PIKE, Left FieldTHE BATTING AVERAGE fOR 1896Games Times Hits Runs Home Three Two Stolenat Bat Runs Baggers Baggers Bases AverageNichols 30 123 50 49 7 5 13 28 SA 406Jones 27 120 37 28 1 1 4 24 -_.21 308'.'''4''''Sweet 27 111 33 34 0 1 7 20 297Winston 25 94 28 27 1 3 6 14 296Adkinson 23 84 24 24 1 4 7 17 285Abells 29 119 29 12 0 1 2 13 243Sawyer 6 22 5 5 0 0 1 - .2 227G. Clarke 22 88 20 14 0 1 3 5 227Brown 30 114 25 25 0 1 2 18 219H. Clarke 25 78 17 18 0 2 4 10 218Herschberger 25 96 19 13 1 4 4 7 197Pike 14 36 7 12 1 1 0 57 194fiELDING AVERAGE fOR 1896 .Accepted Chances Errors AverageJones, c. 197 9 956Abells, 1 b. 260 18 935Nichols, p. 90 8 918Pike, r. f. 36 5 878H. Clarke, p. 49 7 875Herschberger, c. f. 48 7 872Adkinson, .2 b. 82 13 862'Brown, 1. f. 72 13 847Winston, 3 h. 83 17 830G. Clarke, 3 h. 56 16 777Sawyer, r. f. 12 4 750Sweet, s s. 99 35 738127:Summar)) of tbt 6amtSt tessMarch 31, at Marshall Field, Chicago 13; Hyde Park High School 0April 6, at Marshall Field, Chicago 3· Englewood High School 0,April 8, at Marshall Field, Chicago 5: North End 4April 11, at Champaign, Ill. Chicago �; University ofIllinois 6April 14, at Marshall Field, Chicago 18; Illinois Cycling Club 6April 15, at Marshall Field, Chicago 19; City League 3April 16, at Marshall Field, Chicago 27; Lake Forest University 3April 19, at Marshall Field, Chicago 4; Whitings 5April 21, at Marshall Field, Chicago 8; Rush Medical 5April 24, at Marshall Field, Chicago 12; Blackburn University 9April 25, at Marshall Field, Chicago 6; Whitings 8April 29, at Marshall Field, Chicago 10; University of Illinois 4May 1, at Marshall Field, Chicago 2· Chicago National League 7,May 2, at Marshall Field, Chicago 28; Northwestern University 5May 4, at Marshall Field, Chicago 22; Illinois Wesleyan 3May 7, at Marshall Field, Chicago 8; Rush Medical 4May 9, at Marshall Field, Chicago 7· University of Michigan 3,May 11, at Marshall Field, Chicago 3; Detroit League 15May 13, at Marshall Field, Chicago 0; University of Michigan 6May 16, at Marshall Field, Chicago 14; Indiana University 9May 18, at Marshall Field, Chicago 9· Iowa College 1,May 20, at Ann Arbor, Mich. Chicago 2; University of Michigan 9May 22, at Ithaca Chicago 3· Cornell University 2,May 23, at Orange, N. J. Chicago 3· Orange Athletic Club 6,May 25, at Philadelphia Chicago 15; University of Pennsylvania 10May 27, at New Haven Chicago 5· Yale 31,May 28, at Cambridge Chicago 7; Harvard 10June 4, at Ann Arbor, Mich. Chicago 7· University of Michigan 3,June 11, at Ann Arbor, Mich. Chicago 10; University of Michigan 5June 13, at Marshall Field, Chicago 9; University of Wisconsin 5June 27, at Marshall Field, Chicago 1; Brown University 0June 30, at Marshall Field, Chicago 3; Brown University 13July 2, at Marshall Field, Chicago 5; Brown University 6Cbt 1891 CtamHENRY TEFFT C:r..ARKE, CaptainHARRY DE:r..MONT ABE:r..r.S, First BaseHENRY MAGEE ADKINSON, Second BaseJAMES SCOTT BROWN, Left FieldGEORE HOYT SAWYER, Right FieldC:r..ARENCE BERT HERSCHBERGER, Center FieldMAURICE GORDON C:r..ARKE, Short StopWI:r..tIAM THAW GARDNER, CatcherLEROY T. VERNON, Short StopFRED W. MERRIFIE:r..D, Third BaseJOHN FRANKUN HAGEY, Left FieldHUGH GUTHRIE LEIGHTON, CatcherBATTING AND FIELDING -AVERAGES, ·1897FIELDING BATTING,- ,---.A- __ -'; Stolen PassedGames Chances Errors Av'ge At Bat Hits Av'ge Bases BallsHenry Clark, p. 16 62 6 903 90 28 311 13Oardner.c. 21 167 9 947 92 33 358 9 17Abells, lb. 20 197 4 979 76 22 289, 6Adkinson, 2b. 8 51 4 937 34 12 353 8Merrifield, 3b. 22 100 16 840 85 23 271 11Vernon, ss. 17 75 12 840 59 15 254 10Brown,H. 13 33 4 878 51 14 275 9Herschberger, cf.22 45 8 822 96 31 323 9Sawyer, rf. 22 28 6 786 . 78 30 384 19Hagey, If. 9 11 4 636 34 5 147 0Leighton, c. 4 25 1 960 14 1 071 1 3G. Clarke, ss. 15 62 13 790 57 14 246 10129Summar)) of sames for lSg1April 9, at Marshall Field, Chicago 4' Edgars 1,April 14, at Marshall Field, Chicago 20; Hyde Park High School 3April 15, at Marshall Field, Chicago 19 ; Edgars 5April 17, at Champaign, Ill. Chicago 5' University of Illinois 9,April 20, at Marshall Field, Chicago 12 ; Cranes 4April 24, at. Marshall Field, Chicago 11; Lake Forest University 3Apri126, at Marshall Field, Chicago 6; Rush Medical 5Apri130, at Marshall Field, Chicago 14 ; Alumni 8May 1, at Marshall Field" Chicago 9' University of Illinois 5,May 4, at Madison, Wis. Chicago 5' University of Wisconsin 0,May 5, at Beloit, Wis. Chicago 11; Beloit College 12May 8, at Marshall Field, Chicago 5' University of Michigan 3,May 12, at Marshall Field, Chicago 4· University of Michigan 1,May 15, at Marshall Field, Chicago 10 ; Notre Dame University 2May 18, at Marshall Field, Chicago 12 ; Oak Park 6May 20, at Marshall Field, Chicago 4· University of Nebraska 2,May 24, at Marshall Field, Chicago 10; University of Iowa 6May 29, at Detroit, Mich. Chicago 3· University of Michigan 5,May 31, at Oak Park, Ill. Chicago 24; Oak Dark 13June 5, at Marshall Field, Chicago 18 ; University of Wisconsin 2June 7, at Ann Arbor, Mich. Chicago 24 ; University of Michigan 3June 12, at Oak Park, Ill. Chicago 6; Oak Park 16Total Games Played, 22; Won, 18; Lost, 4.Runs by University of Chicago 234Runs by Opponents 114Total College Games, 14; Won, 11; Lost, 3.Runs by University of Chicago 127Runs by Opponents 58Total Games in Championship Series, 8; Won, 6; Lost, 2Runs by University of ChicagoRuns by Opponents 7328130tbt I)nlutrsUp Rtstruts for 1891D. A. KENNEDY }BREEDEN CatcherBOND } PitcherBLACKBURNGRIFFITH }R. HAMILL - First BaseL. HAMILLRAND - Second BaseSCHMAHL Short StopWRIEDT Third BaseREED Left FieldHOLSTE - Right FieldGARREY - Center FieldSCHEDULE If GAMESReserves, 18, vs. Princeton-Yale, iReserves, 9, vs. Hyde Park, 6Reserves, 23, vs. Ashlands, 8Reserves, 6, vs. Auburn Park, 12Reserves, 12, vs. Morgan Park, 13Five games were played, three won and two lost.IILTHOUGH tennis as an intercollegiate sport has not the prominenceof track, base.-ba.ll, or foot-ball, yet o. u. r representatives have gainedinternational renown. We have reason to be proud not only of havingalways held the Western Intercollegiate Championship, but also inhaving our representatives in the past two years win the Western Women's Champion.ship, the Western Championship in singles, and the national championship in doubles.With the uniformly victorious team, with Mr. Neel, Mr. Bond, and Miss Pound tospeak for our interest in tennis and its result, we look for continuous success in tennis.Cbt lSg1 Ctunls CtamPHII.IP RAND, CaptainHAROI.D LItCI.4RE ICKES, ManagerWII.UAM SCO'l'T BONDCHARI.ES DUFFIItI.D HAI.SEYWII.I.IAM FRANCE ANDERSONEDWIN LEE POUI.SONP AUI. BI.ACKWEI.DERHARRY NORMAN GO'l'TUEBROBER.T GORDON GOUI.D132c --, .. jn�Cblcago's ttunls RtCord for lSg1The first series in the Annual Dual Tournament with NorthwesternUniversity was held on Chicag's courts, May 22. The University wasvictorious in both the singles and the doubles. In the former Bond,Backwelder, Poulson and Gottlieb won four of the six matches; in thelatter Bond and Rand and Blackwelder and Gottlieb won two of thethree. The summary:SINGLESBond, (C.) defeated Johnston, (N.) 6-2; 6-1Blackwelder, (C.) defeated McGrew, (N.) 6-4; 7-5McCaskey, (N.) defeated Rand, (C.) 6-2; 2-6; 6-4Poulson, (C.) defeated Gates, (N.) 6-4; 6-1Orchard, (N.) defeated Bateson, (C.) 7-5; 1-6; 6-1Gottlieb, (C.) defeated Pendleton, (N.) 6-1; 6-1DOUBLESBond and Rand, (C.) defeated Johnston and McGrew, (N.) 6-1; 6-4McCaskey and Ward, (N.) defeated Poulson and Gould, (C.) 4-6; 6-4; 6-4Blackwelder and Gottlieb, (C.) defeated Gates and Orchard, (N.) 7-5; 6-4On May 28 at Ann Arbor was held the Annual Dual Tournament with theUniversity of Michigan. The matches were hard fought on both sides. Chicago lostground in the singles but carried off all the honors in the doubles, bringing the tour­nament to a close with a tied score. The summary:SINGLESBond, (C) defeated Herrick, (M.) 2-6; 6-4; 6-1Danforth, (M.) defeated Blackwelder, (C.) 6-4; 6-3Russel, (M.) defeated Halsey, (C.) 4-6; 7-5; 7-5Lamb, (M.) defeated Gottlieb, (C.) 4-6; 8-6; 7-5DOUBLESBond and Anderson, (C.) defeated Danforth and Lamb, (M.) 6-4; 6-2Blackwelder and Gottlieb, (C.) defeated Harvey and Herrick, (M.) 6-4; 5-7; 6-2The second series in the Dual Tournament with Northwestern was played atEvanston, June 7, and resulted in an overwhelming victory for Chicago. North­western won only one of the seven matches in the singles, and one of the three in thedoubles. The summary:133SINGLESBond, (C.) defeated Johnston, (N.) 4-6; 6-4; 6-2Halsey, (C.) defeated Orchard, (N.) 6-3; 6-4Rand, (C.) defeated McGrew, (N.) 6-0; 6-0Gottlieb, (C.) defeated Ward, (N.) 6-3; 6-1Blackwelder, (C.) defeated Orchard, (N.) 6-4; 6-1Brewer, (N.) defeated Anderson, (C.) 6-4; 6-3Poulson, (C.) defeated Barnard, (N.) 6-2; 6-0DOUBLESBond and Rand, (C.) defeated Ward and Orchard, (N.) 4-6; 6-3; 6-1Orchard and Johnston, (N.) defeated Blackwelder and Gottlieb, (C.) 2-6; 6-1; 6-0Poulson and Anderson, (C.) defeated Barnard and McGrew, (N.) 6-1; 6-0The Western Intercollegiate Tournament was held on the courts of theQuadrangle Club, June 3-5. The Colleges represented were: Albion, Knox, North­western, Wisconsin, Michigan and Chicago. The matches were exciting and hardfought, though it was foreseen that the final struggle would pit Michigan againstChicago. Bond, however, had little trouble in carrying off the championship insingles in three straight sets. Bond and Rand also won the championship in doubles.The summary:SINGLESMcLEAN, W. } DANFORTH 1DANFORTH, M. 6-2; 6-2 I BOND 1MAYWOOD, A. } 1 � 6-2; 6-4MAYWOOD IGREEN, K. 6-4; 6-0 I I� BOND JBOND, C. } BOND I I6-1; 6-0 BONDWARD, N. J � 6-3, 6-1, 6-2CUSHING, K. } CUSHING 1 I4-6; 6-4; 6-3 ISANBORN, W. I� HALSEY 16-1; 3-6; 8-6 IHALSEY, C. } HALSEY I I6-3; 7-9; 6-1BURNETT, A. J � HERRICKI 6-3; 6-1 JHERRICK, M. } HERRICKJOHNSTON, N. 4-6; 6-3; 6-0 J134SANBORN AND McLEAN, Wisconsin 1 DANFORTH AND LAMB IJ 6-4' 8-6 IDANFORTH AND LAMB, M.} DAN�ORTH AND LAMB 'WARD AND JOHNSTON, N. 6-3,6-2 I(BOND AND RANDI 6-1; 6-3; 6-3jDOUBLESBOND AND RAND C. } BOND AND RAND6-4; 6-4 1 BOND AND RANDI 6-4; 6-1MAYWOOD AND BURNETT, A. jCUSIDNG AND GREItN, KBOND'S RECORD fOR 1897During the season of 1897 William Scott Bond received the following honors intennis: Winner of the singles and doubles in the Western Intercollegiate Tournament;second place in the Chicago Club's Invitation Tournament; second place in the WesternChampionship Tournament; winner with Myers in the doubles in the NorthwesternChampionship Tournament; winner of the West Superior Invitation Tournament;winner in singles and second with Budlong in doubles in the International Champion­ship Tournament held at Niagara-on-the-Lake.Miss Louise Pound won the Women's Western Championship by defeating suc­cessively:Miss Mary Steele, 6-0; 6-0Miss Mabel Wager, 6-2; 6-1Miss Edith Parker, 6-4; 6-3Miss M. E. Wimer, 7-5; 1-6; 6-4Miss Juliette Atkinson, 6-4; 6-1; 6-3Miss Jennie Craven, 7-5; 6-3; 5-2135tbt ttnnls JlssociattonOLIVER JOSEPH THATCHER, PresidentWILLIAM PRANCE ANDERSON, - Secretary and Treasurer€xttutioe £ommittttOLIVER J. THATCHER CHARLES WRENN HALSEYWILLIAM FRANCE ANDERSON HENRY ADKINSONMRS. STAGG136• i •FREDERICK HELLEMS, MasterARTHUR SEARS HENNINGKNIGHT FRENCH FLANDERSJOHN MENTZERDANIEL HULLPHILIP RANDWALTER JOSEPH SCHMAHLHENRY· TEFFT CLARKEJOSEPH EDWARD RA YCROFTDONALD ANGUS KENNEDYGEORGE SOMERSET STEWARD137THERON WINFRED MORTIMERGEORGlt GARREYGEORGlt DAVISWILLIAM FRANClt ANDltRSONBand-BaJJ tournamtntThe Second Annual Hand-ball Tournament was held during the summer of1897. The standing of the three highest teams:Watson and Samuels -Beers and SpiegelMcIntyre and Blackburn Games Won27 2228 1929 19 Lost Per cent.5 .8159 .67810 .6541381896·1891HORACE BUTTERWORTH -HUBBARDGARREYWRIEDTSCHMAHL -� ALSHULERBURNSRUSSELL Coach( Captain) Right ForwardLeft ForwardRight CenterCenterLeft CenterRight GuardLeft GuardSCHEDULE Of GAMESUniversity 26 vs. Pullman Athletic Club -Univeraity 16 vs. Pullman Athletic ClubUniversity 8 vs. Hull HouseUniversity 16 vs. Hull House -University 12 vs. West Side Y. M. C. A. -University 22 vs. North Shore Athletic Club -University 14 vs. University of Iowa 81414618138Seven games were played, five won and two lost.139W ALTER SCOTT KENNEDY, Pounds3835CLARENCE BERT HERSCHBERGER, - 37UCHARLES FOSTER ROBY, 3655WILLIAM THAW GARDNER, 3468THERON WINFRED MORTIMER, 3448OLE HALLINGBY, 3143HENRY GORDON GALE, 3119ERNEST DEKoVEN LEFFINGWELL, 3118JOHN WEBB, 3114FRANK CJ,A YTON CLEVELAND, 30411897·1898manaatrsWALTER JOSEPH SCHMAHLROGER NELSON KIMBALLCHARLES BRADEN DAVISSubscribtrsRobert Newton TookerJohn Preston MentzerCecil Page Ralf LeRoy PeckRalph HamillEdwin Melvin ColemanArthur Sears Henning Moses Dwight McIntyreDonald Angus KennedyJohn Franklin HageyWilliam Francis McDonaldEdwin Lee Poulson Roger Nelson KimballWilliam Alexander GordonCharles Braden DavisClinton Luman HoyPhilip Rand Howard Darst CaseyHerbert Paul Zimmerman Rowland Thum RogersRufus Maynard Reed William Thaw GardnerMaurice Gordon Clarke Nott William FlintThomas Brogden Blackburn Harry William BelfieldCharles Ward Seabury Ray Prescott JohnsonKellogg Speed William France AndersonByron Bayard Smith Allen Grey HoytWalter Joseph Schmahl Van Sumner PearceJohn Joseph Walsh Morton HarrisSpencer MCDougall Brown Arthur J. MacDonaldWilliamson Frank Duke Ernest Hamilton DillonEmory Cobb Andrews Joe DavisF. Egbert Vaughan1421897January 9 Glee and Mandolin Clubs returned from western trip.January 11 Kelly Hall reception.Idlers entertained at home of Miss Matz. A dress rehearsal of "Babes in thethe Woods" was given.January 16 Christian Union reception at Haskell Museum.January 18 Foster Hall reception.January 23 University informal at Rosalie Hall.Miss Capps initiated into the Mortar Board.Dr. Alexander Smith entertained the Canadian Club at the Del Prado.January 23 Delta Kappa Epsilon held a smoker in' honor of alumni.Louis Sass, Eugene Ryan and Joe Campbell were delegates from local chap­ter at the Phi Kappa Psi installation at Madison.Mrs. Edward Roby tendered her third annual banquet to the Foot-ball Team.January 25 Snell Hall reception.Miss Merrell of Beecher gave a dinner party.January 27 Quadranglers gave a dinner party at Kelly.January 28 Nu Pi Sigma gave a dinner party in Kelly.Annual banquet of Alpha Delta Phi alumni at University Club.Mrs. Harry Rockwood entertained members of Delta Kappa Epsilon and theirfriends at the Lakota Hotel.January 30 Musicale given by Mr. Seeboeck at Foster.February 1 John F. Hagey elected to Iron Mask.February 2 Misses Winter, Hull and Marine entertained at Kelly.Alpha Delta Phi initiated W. S. Kennedy, C. L. Burroughs and C. W. Drew.February 4 Professor and Mrs. George E. Vincent entertained in honor of the Eso­teric Club.Miss Allin gave a dinner party at her home.143February 11 Third annual assembly of Delta Kappa Epsilon, at the Chicago BeachHotel. Patronesses: Mrs. H. P. Judson, Mrs. A. W. Small, Mrs. F. A.Abbott, Mrs. G. E. Vincent, Mrs. J. R. Angell, Mrs. A. W. Moore.February 12 Lincoln's Birthday. Graduate Hall held open house.February 13 Installation of local Omicron Omicron chapter of Sigma Chi fraternityat the Masonic Temple.The Idlers entertained at Kelly Hall.February 14 Middle Divinity reception.February 15 Foster Hall reception.February 16 Annual Central Music Hall concert of Glee and Mandolin Clubs.Ladies' day at Quadrangle Club.C. B. Herschberger elected captain of Foot-ball Eleven for 1897.February 22 Fourth annual Washington promenade, at Chicago Beach Hote1. Pat­ronesses: Mesdames William R. Harper, George M. Pullman, John C.Rand, Samuel W. Allerton, John R. Adams, George E. Vincent, RobertE. Jenkins, George C. Walker. Committee: English Walling,chairman. Philip Rand, chairman of general arrangements;Miss Messick, Miss Spray. Robert Meloy, chairman receptioncommittee; William S. Broughton, John P. Mentzer, MissAgerter, Miss Capen. L. B. Vaughn, chairman finance commit­tee; H. L. Ickes, A. T. Burns, C.W. Williams, V. W. Sincere.Omega Club Dinner Party at Chicago Beach Hotel.Phi Kappa Psi house party.At the exercises of Washington's Birthday at Kent, Mr. Robert M.M. Lafaette delivered the address.F. F. Steigmeyer initiated into Sigma Chi.Sigma Nu initiated Messrs. Reed, Gwin, Shipley, McLain, and Galla­gher.Harry D. Abells wearing Owl and Serpent pin.Miss Eva Graves entertained at Foster.February 24 The Illinois Beta Chapter of Phi Delta Theta installed. The ceremoniestook place at the Great Northern Hote1.February 26 Foster Hall entertained II Octave Thanet " at dinner.Armory Athletic Meet.February 27 Mortar Board gave a II Black Cat Party."Phi Kappa Psi tendered a smoker to city alumni.Robert Law gave an informal dance at Delta Kappa Epsilon house in honorof Miss Drake and Miss Allen.144March 6 Settlement Benefit at Gymnasium. " Masterpieces of Sculpture, II "GibsonPictures, " "Marionettes," Michelson's Marvelous Anthroscope, PosterSale, Lecture by Robert Law.Reception at Quadrangle Club.March 8 Kelly reception.March 10 Miss Faulkner and Miss Clarke entertained at dinner.March 12 Annual Concert of the Women's Glee and Mandolin Clubs at Kent theater.The Quadranglers, The Mortar Board, The Esoteric Club and The Sigma Clubgave a reception in Walker museum.March 13 Senior reception at Kelly Hall.Miss Alice Knight gave a reception.March 15 Foster reception.Delta Kappa Epsilon musicale.March 18 Junior College reception in honor of those taking certifi­cates was held in Haskell museum.Junior finals.March 19 The Esoterics gave a reception at Mrs. Vincent's. Mrs.Vincent, Miss Foster and Miss Flood received.Home oratorical contest at Kent theater. First place wonby M. F. Gallagher, second place by E. Muenter. Presi­dent's reception to Senior Class.The Three-Quartets Club card party.Senior finals.March 20 Miss Kane and Miss Messick received at Kelly Hall.Mr. Gallion entertained Weekly board at the Del Prado.Apri11 Receptions at Haskell and Kelly, tendered to Lady Aberdeen.Harold L. Ickes elected managing editor, and John P. Ment-'zer assistant editor, of the" Weekly."Spring Convocation; address by Lady Aberdeen.Apri12 W. J. Cavanagh inititiated into Phi Kappa Psi.April3 Beecher Hall received.Phi Delta Theta held a smoker for city alumni.Delta Kappa Epsilon held an informal dance at the Chapter house.Beta Theta Pi initiated Carl Davis, '00, and Paul Blackwelder, '00.The Quadranglers initiated Miss Blanche Wiser, Miss Edith Baxter, Miss Sa­rah Addams, Miss Katherine Barton and Miss Edith Calhoun.Miss Ethel Miller elected President of Y. W. C. A., Miss Charlotte TellerVice-President.145April9 The Mortar Board initiated Miss Margaret Weirick. MissAlice Knight and Miss Helen Taylor.April10 Y. M. C. A. and Y. W. C. A. receptions at Haskell.Luncheon for Women Fellows at Foster Hall.Miss Kane gave a dinner in honor of Miss Kennedy, '96. andMiss McWilliams, '96.April12 Kelly Hall receives.The Omega Club initiated T. B. Blackburn, G. S. Steward, E.L. Poulson, C. W. Halsey, and W. J. Schmahl. Thebanquet was held at the Victoria Hotel.April17 Sigma Chi initiated R. B. Opitz, '97.The Three Quarters Club elected' Roger Kimball president, and Walter J.Schmahl secretary and treasurer.Miss Harding entertained at Beecher Hall.Miss Updegraff gave a dinner party at Foster to Vassar graduates.Mr. Vaughan, Mr. Barton and Mr. Tabor gave a box party at the Apolloconcert.Base-ball: Illinois 9; Chicago 5.April 22 Mass meeting in Kent Theatre in interest of the Greeks in the Grecian­Turkish war.Mr. T. H. Patterson elected captain of the Track. Team.Apri123 Messrs. Woods, Binder, Briggs, Slater, Clough, Price and Jones entertainedat South Divinity Hall.The Misses Paddock entertained at 5402 Cornell Avenue.April 24 Delta Kappa Epsilon initiated W. T. Gardner, '00, Ralph Manning, '00, andRoger Kimball, '00.Base-ball: Chicago 11 ; Lake Forest 3.April 25 President and Mrs. Harper gave a reception in honor of Bishop Vincent.Miss Osgood gave a chafing dish party at Beecher in honor of her sister.Last University informal..Apri127 Base-ball: Chicago 6; Rush Medical 5.May 1 Base-ball: Chicago 9; Illinois 5.Oratorical Association benefit at Rosalie Hall. Popular readings by ProfessorS. H. Clark.Informal dance. Committee: Robert Law, Willoughby Walling, John P.Mentzer, Fred Steigmeyer, Allen T Burns, Philip Rand, Nott W. Flint, .Robert B. Meloy, Knight Flanders, Fred B. Thomas, Theodosia Kane,Davida Harper, Marjorie B. Cooke, Jessie N. Spray.May 2 The Ben Butler Club entertained at Graduate Hall.146:RId tbe Meaurtl"s, far·a"av look In btr eYH- Is It for rltbes and ribbons and sweets;£an tbtfgods ttll tbe reaon for tbls, l!Pray 11 for books and etbereal realms Of tbe wise,1$ It for coln"rts, or bats, or gowns Or Is tbert a man in tbe landscape sweptSome otber girl wears in a reckless way? By tbe meaSlrtltss, far·away look In btr ey" 1May4 Base-ball: Chicago 5;.Wisconsin O.May 5 Base-ball: Beloit 12; Chicago 11.May 6 Base-ball: Omega Club 18; Beta Theta Pi 8. SigmaChiL9; Phi Delta Theta 17.May 8 Base-ball: Chicago 5; Michigan 3.May 10 Miss Susan Harding and Miss Ruth Vanderlip initiated into the EsotericClub.Base-ball: Alpha Delta PhH7; Phi Kappa Psi 11. SigmaNu 23; Delta KappaEpsilon 15.May 11 Dinner and. Informal at Rosalie Hall given by Mr. M. D. McIntyre and Mr.Philip Rand.Dual TraCK Meet: Chicago 77; Illinois 43.May 23 Base-ball: Chicago 4; Michigan 1.May 14 Poster Exhibit at Quadrangle Club.May 15 Base-ball: Chicago 10; Notre Dame 2.May 17 Miss Faulkner entertained at Foster.Annual public session of the" Forum. "May 18 Base-ball: Chicago 12; Oak Park 6.Nu Pi Sigma initiated Miss Grace Coulter,Miss Susan Harding and Miss DemiaButler.May 19 Sigma Nu Dance and Lawn Party.May 20 Base-ball: Chicago 4; Nebraska 2. AlphaDelta Phi 3; The Omega Club 2.May 21 Beta Theta Pi annual assembly at the Chicago Beach Hotel. Patronesses:Mesdames F. W. Shepardson, F. O. Lowden, J. H. Tufts, P. S. Grosscup,C. F. Castle, H. E. Slaught, H. L. McCormick, W. H. FairbanksMay 22 The University Tennis Team defeated the North�estern Team.May 24 Base-ball: Chicago 10; Iowa 6.A smoker given at the Phi Kappa Psi House in honor of Mr. Chester Barnes.May 26 University sing on Haskell Steps.Alpha Delta Phi initiated Fred Merrifield, '98, and Louis Pettitt, '00.May 27 Snell Hall open-house.May 29 ee Smoke Talk" at Quadrangle Club. Story of the Elgin Marbles by Pro­fessor Tarbell.May 29 Base-ball: Michigan 5; Chicago 3.Messrs. Blackburn, Rand, Linn, Henning, Kennedy, Schmahl and D. Ken­nedy gave a coaching party to Edgewater.May 31 Base-ball at Oak Park: University 24; Oak Park 13.148June 3 Quadrangle Club smoke talk in honor of Rev. John Henry Barrows.June 4 Western Intercollegiate Tennis: Bond won the singles; Bond and Rand thedoubles.University settlement, entertainment for children at Kent Hall and lawnparty.June 5 Twilight party given by the Mortar Board at Foster Hall.Base-ball: Chicago 18; Wisconsin 2.Athletic Meeting: Wisconsin 47; Michigan 19; Minnesota 14; Chicago 12.Quadrangle Club Musicale under direction of George Ellsworth Holmes,Walter Spray and the Spiering Quartette.June 7 The Chicago Tennis Team defeated Northwestern team.Base-ball: Chicago 24; Michigan 3.June 9 Ladies' day at Quadrangle Club. Exhibition Tennis;Second annual Dramatic Club entertainment at Rosalie Hall.June 10 Second annual party of the Quadranglers at Kenwood Institute. MissTalbot, Miss Kane and Miss Messick received.University Chorus rendered" Elijah" at University gymnasium.The following members of '99 wearing Iron Mask pins: Hoyt, W. G. Clarke,Echart, Walsh, Reed, Hoyne, D. Kennedy, W. Walling, Dillon, F. W.Anderson, Henning. 'June 11 University spring track meet: Burroughs made record in 100 yards dash of.10 fiat. White establishhed record of 2.0n in half mile run. Smithestabshed record of 4.46� in mile run.Sigma Nu initiated Mr. N. M. Fair, '98.June 12 The Mulberry Club spring meeting in Washington Park.Kelly Hall picnic in Washington Park.June 13 Mr. George H. Sawyer elected captain of Base-ball Team for 1898.Mr. F. H. Calhoun elected captain of Track Team for 1898.Mr. H. M. Adkinson, '97, and Mr. S. C. Mosser initiated into Upsilon IotaOmega.June 14 Miss Mary Lakin initiated into The Mortar Board.Professor Starr entertained his classes at his home.June 16 Mr. M. P. Frutchey, '98, and Mr. C. B. Herschberger wearing Owl and Ser­pent pins.University sing on Haskell steps.Sigma Nu entertained.June 17 Alpha Delta Phi reception.Sigma Chi gave a trolley party to South Chicago.June 18 Senior finals.149COMMITTEESEXECUl'IVE COMMI1'1'EERalph C. Hamill, ChairmanJ. H. P. Gauss E. D. HowardE. L. Poulson F. C. HackG. H. Sawyer W. J. SchmahlP. M. Blackwelder L. T. VernonR. G. Gould W. T. GardnerAl'HLETIC COMMI1'1'EEWilliam T .. Gardner, ChairmanM. G. Clark Donald Kennedy DRAMAl'IC COMMI1'1'ltECecil Page, ChairmanEugene Ryan Mary RiderPRINl'ING COMMI1'1'EEPercy B. Eckhart, ChairmanW. J. Schmahl A. G. HoytIVY COMMI1'1'EEMarjorie B. Cook, ChairmanGrace A. Coulter W. F. Anderson BALL COMMI1'1'EEJoseph M. Wilbur, ChairmanEdith Baxter Ethel KeenArthur Sears HenningDECORAl'ION COMMI1'1'EEAlice A. Knight, ChairmanN. W. Flint Annie B. ReedProgra. Of tbt DayTrack AthleticsDramatic Readingcc Merchant of Venice," Act I, Scene 3, Robert Law, Jr."Courtship with Variations"Virginia, Marjorie B. Cooke Ernest, John Coulter" Topics of the Day"By Mary Winter and James Weber LinnEthel Dyche Harriet RewRobert Owsley W. France AndersonA Maid, Percy B. EckhartIvy ExercisesJunior Promenade150June 18 Messrs. C. L. Williams, Wisconsin, '94, F. H. Ball, Wisconsin, '95, and C.W. Seabury, Michigan, '98, initiated into the Omega Club.June 19 Death of Mr. George W. Darrow.Nott W. Flint elected Head Marshall, and M. P. Frutchey, '98, C. B. Hersch­berger, '98, and Willoughby Walling, '99, Assistant Marshalls.Dual Track Meet: Michigan 94; Chicago 46.Chicago defeated Michigan in Dual Tennis Tourney.June 20 Baccalaureate sermon in Kent.June 21 President's reception to Senior Class.E. C. Hales, '99, and George H. Bra.yton, '00, initiated into Phi Delta Theta.June 23 Miss Kane entertained at her home.June 25 Robert N. Tooker, Jr., '97, and Miss Tooker, gave a house party at Fox Laketo Misses McMahon, Cooke, Allin, Kane, Fulton, and Messrs. N. Flint,Rand, Linn, D. Kennedy and J. Flint.Messrs. F. D. Nichols, Fred Merrifield, Cutler and Tuttle, represented theUniversity at Geneva Y. M. C. A. Conference.July 1 M. P. Frutchey elected managing editor of the"Weekly"; M. D. McIntyre elected assistantmanaging editor."The Enchiridion ' issued under editorship of PhilipRand, Eugenia Radford, Stacy C. Mosser.Summer Convocation.July 7 Manager Gallion gave a dinner to the Weekly board.July 11 President and Mrs. Harper gave a dinner to mem­bers of the Summer faculty.July 12 Phi Kappa Psi initiated Otto F. Hakes, '00, andheld an alumni smoker.July 16 Kelly Hall taUy-ho drive.July 20 Quadrangle club fire.The Mortar Board gave a lawn party in honor ofMiss Laura Graves.July 23 Miss Mary French Field gave a reading in Kent Theatre.July 24 Miss Paddock entertained at dinner.July 25 Beecher Hall tally-ho drive.Lawn Party given by the heads of the Women's Halls.Sigma Nu party at the Fraternity House.Professor F. I. Carpenter gave an Afternoon Tea to his classes.Miss Vanderlip's house party at Millhurst, The University guests wereMiss Terry, '00; Messrs. F. H. Harms, '98; Cornell, '99, and Dillon, '99.151Ont Dap on tbt CampusJlccording totbe Dally PapersPRESIDENT HARPER ENLISTSAnother Millionaire's Sympathies in theCause of Education.KELLY HALL IS BURNINGWith Envy of Foster-Cause Unknown.DEAN CAPPS SUSPENDEDThree Students Yesterday for Giving theYell on the Campus.PROFESSORS IN f\ . RIOTOf Enthusiasm for Cuba· Libre.'VARSITY STUDENTS ARRESTEDThe Spread of Flames in the Vicinityof Lake Avenue.WOMEN STUDENTS STRIKEThe First Note of Patriotism at theUniversity of Chicago.SEVEN PROFESSORS FOUND GUlL TVOf Entering Beecher with Intent to Marry.August 3 Western Tennis Tournament. Entries from the University: Carr Neel,'97; Bond, '97; P. McQuiston, '99; H. McQuiston, '99; Halsey, '00; Gott­lieb, '00; C. A. Torrey; Anderson, '99; Blackwelder, '00; Glen Hobbs.August 5 Beecher Hall held a musicale.August 10 Dean Bulkley entertained at dinner.A. T. Walker entertained at Graduate Hall.Phi Delta Theta entertained at the Del Prado.August 20 P. M. Griffith and Newman Miller, delegates to Sigma ChiConvention at Nashville.Banquet tendered Professor Ward of the Smithsonian Institute atWellington Hotel.September 2 Junior finals: Miss Parker won Peck prize.September 3 Alpha Delta Phi gave an Afternoon Tea in honor of Mr.James K. Hackett and Miss Mary Mannering.September 7 The Omega Club entertained at a Smoker.Miss Pound won Woman's Western Tennis championship.Mrs. Stagg and Miss Felton also represented the University.September 9 Senior finals: Mr. H. F. Atwood won first prize.September 14 Watson and Samuels won Hand-ball Tournament, with Beers andSpiegel second, and McIntyre and Blackburn third.October 1 Twentieth Convocation. Address by Rev. Amory H. Bradford.Y. M. C. A. and Y. W. C. A. reception to incoming students.October 2 University Extension four o'clock tea.October 8 Foot-ball: Chicago 76; Lake Forest O.Dedication of the Bradley Polytechnic Institute; Lyman J. Gage deliveredthe address.The Esoteric Club luncheon at Foster Hall.Beta Theta Pi initiated Leroy T. Vernon, '00, and Albert Russell, '00, at Vic­toria Hotel.October 14 Delta Kappa Epsilon stag party at Chapter House.October 13 Foot·ball: Chicago 39; Beloit 6.The Omega Club initiated Ernest D. Leffingwell, Philip S. Doane, SpencerBrown and Emory C. Andrews, at the Victoria Hotel.October 17 Graduate-Divinity debate. Joseph Leiter prize won by S. A. Roberts.October 20 Mass meeting prior to the foot-ball game with Northwestern.October 21 Foot-ball : Chicago 27; Northwestern 6.Dedication of Yerkes Observatory. Prof. J. E. Keeler delivered the address.October 27 Richard Wagner Society formed.153October 28 Marriage of Mr. G. S. Steward to Miss Kathryn B. Carter.Phi Kappa Psi smoker.November 4 The Omega Club initiated Mr. Ben. B. Felix and Mr. M. O. Gale.November 12 Quadrangle Club concert.Informal dance at Delta Kappa Epsilon House.November 13 Foot-ball: Madison 23; Chicago 8.Dance at Kelly Hall.Phi Kappa Psi stag coaching party to Foot-ball game.I(Week!y" Board coaching party to Foot-ball game.Alpha Delta Phi initiated E. J. Goodspeed, H. M. McQuiston, P. D. McQuis-ton, W. C. Gorrel, H. P. Kirtley, R. T. Vaughan.November 15 Foster Hall reception.November 18 Miss Kane gave a reception at her home.November 22 Delta Kappa Epsilon Convention.Delegates entertained by local chapter.November 23 Annual promenade of the Delta Delta Chapter ofDelta Kappa Epsilon.Sigma Nu initiated R. T. Rogers and R. W. Clark.November 24 Delta Kappa Epsilon Convention banquet.Installation of the Omega Club as the Omega Chapter ofPsi Upsilon at the Auditorium.Dinner party given for Miss E. Butler.November 25 Thanksgiving Day. THE ORIGINAL. HORSEOf TH r ILIADFoot- ball game in the Coliseum: Chicago 22; MichiganlZ. "And we put the Michiganders in the hole."November 26 Alpha Delta Phi smoker at the Chapter House.Mortar Board dance at Kelly.November 27 Informal at Rosalie Hall under the management of Messrs. Schmahl,Kimball and C. Davis.Luncheon in Kent Laboratory given by Dr. Smith.December 3 Sigma Chi initiated Lawrence DeGr:aff and Ray P. Johnson.South Divinity reception.December 4 Mr. Ben. B. Felix gave a dinner to friends from the University and tothe Foot-ball eleven.Miss Talbot gave a dinner party to Misses Winter, Perrin, Addams, Stuart;Messrs. Schmahl, Eckhart, Hagey and F. E. Vaughan.December 8 I( Weekly" Board Banquet Oat the Chicago Beach Hotel.154December 9 The Quadranglers gave a tally-ho ride to the North Side and a receptionat the home of Miss Stanton.December 10 Sigma Club musicale at 4455 Grand Boulevard.December 11 Three-Quarter's Club banquet. The initiates were: F. Baldwin, J.Davis, R. G. Gould, S. N. Harper, W. L. Hudson, F. H. Lawrence, A·R. Manning, D. S. McWilliams, H. L. McWilliams, E Norton, D. Ray,C. S. Reed, K. Speed, W. S. Sharpe, H. P. Zimmermann.Beta Theta Pi gave an informal at Kenwood Institute.December 18 Dramatic Club at Rosalie Hall.,.'THEI L I ADHANDYTRANSLATIONTHE MODERNONt: "COURTSHIP WITH VARIATIONS"Virginia Berkeley, Widow Marjorie B. CookeErnest Archibald John M. Coulter, Jr." BARBARA"BarbaraDorothyCecilFinnicum Mary K. RiderAlice A. KnightJohn F. HageyRobert G. Gould" CUPID'S TOUCHDOWN"By James W. Linn, '96Mildred EvansGrace MagruderThe MaidArthur HowlandG. Howe FasteFrankleigh Dull Ethel �eenAlice A. KnightJosephine T. AllinNott W. FlintPercy B. EckhartWilliam F. AndersonWilliam F. MacDonald, Master of PropertiesSome people are born women; some acquire women, and some have womenthrust upon them.In bygone days when heroes boldSat making merry 'round the fire,A harper sang of deeds of warAnd as he sang, he played the lyre. But now long past are those old days;The minstrels fast are waxing fat;And though our Harper no more sings,Yet still he plays-the diplomat.155Jls It Was StcnTelegraphed on the Spot by the Cap and Gown's Dramatic CriticThe annual performance of the Dramatic Club took place at Rosalie Hall, Decem­ber 18, 1897. A triple bill was given, consisting of a curtain-raiser "Courtship withVariations," " Barbara" by Jerome K. Jerome, and " Cupid's Touchdown," a localplay, the work of James Weber Linn, '96. The curtain-raiser made no pretensions asto plot, but the incidents were original and the dialogue interesting. Miss Cooke'swork was marked with its usual finish and pleasing individuality. As the charmingwidow, Virginia Berkely, she won the honors of the evening. Mr. Coulter's work inthis play was good, but his characterization lacked dash.Jerome's" Barbara," although it ought to have been shelved decades ago, wasvery well given by Miss Rider, Miss Knight, Mr. Hagey and Mr. Gould. As" Barbara," Miss Rider entered into the spirit of the part thoroughly and did someextremely strong acting. This is the first time that Miss Rider has been given a partworthy of her efforts and she showed herself deserving of still better things. Mr.Hagey, the embarrased lover, acted with an unmistakable and almost suspiciousrealism. Jerome's impulsive, light - hearted Dorothy and impulsive, light-heartedMiss Knight made a happy combination and added a much needed bit of vivacityto the dialogue. Mr. Gould's excellent make-up was, perhaps, the best part of hisaccurate presentation of Finnicum, the typical stage" legal-adviser."" Cupid's Touchdown," a skit based upon two popular themes-love and football,was, without doubt, the hit of the evening. It was thoroughly up-to-date in that itsaction was rapid, its dialogue bright and its plot nearly, if not quite, impossible.Miss Keen, with .both dash and delicacy, gave a very acceptable presentation ofcollegiate Miss Evans. Mr. Nott Flint, as Arthur Howland, "the best 'tickle' theteam ever had," managed to say the most impossible things in a most plausible mannerand also looked the part to perfection. Miss Knight made Miss Magruder a distinctcontrast to Miss Evans, and in so doing filled all the requirement of the part. Mr.Eckhart, otherwise known as G. Howe Faste, brought down the house in more waysthan one. Not only was each violent entrance greeted with a round of applause butit was only the valiant efforts of the stage manager that saved the scenery from ageneral collapse after his last headlong exit. Miss Allin, the maid "who was inci­dental," was" incidental" in the extreme, but by virtue of her regulation KellyMaid's costume added a bit of local color to the production.Mr. Gould, disguised as a dude, did his duty manfully and his insipid, drawlingFrankleigh Dulle, side by side with the bustling c1ubman, G. Howe Faste, served asa tribute to Mr. Linn's excellent handicraft. In short the warm reception given thisplay proved conclusively that a good local production is not only not an impossibilitybut an accomplished fact.156December 23 II Weekly" Board box party.December 25 Quadrangle Club Christmas illumination.December 30 Wellesley Club reception.1898January 1 Sigma Club reception.January 3 Twenty-first convocation; address by Hon. J. H. Eckels.January 4 Psi Upsilon annual promenade at Chicago Beach Hotel. Patronesses:Mesdames William R. Harper, William A. Bond, James P. Gardner,John C. Rand, George C. Howland, Robert N. Tooker, Henry H.Donaldson, Henry C. Bannard. Ushers: Philip Rand, '97; M.D. McIntyre, '98; A. S. Henning, '99; W. J. Schmahl, '00.January 6 Glee and Mandolin Club banquet and dance at the Beach Hotel.January 7 Quadrangle Club concert.January 8 The Sigma Club initiated Miss Crilly and Miss Root.January 10 Sigma Chi initiated Mr. Marcus M. Plowman.Kelly Hall reception.January 13 The Quadranglers initiated Misses McWilliams! Tooker, Jenkins,Lahm, Amory, Warner.January 14 Delta Kappa Epsilon gave a stag party.Informal at Rosalie Hall .. Mortar Board initiated Miss Mary K. Rider and Miss Sallie H. Corning.January'i7 Foster Hall reception.January 21 The Quadranglers gave a dancing party at Kelly.Northwestern Alumni of Delta l{appa Epsilon gave a banquet.Beta Theta Pi informal dance at the Chapter House.January 22 . Mr. B. B. Smith gave a dancing party at his house.J anuary 24 Snell Hall reception.January 25 Sigma Club dramatics.January 27 Day of Prayer for colleges .. January 28 Mortar Board gave a Salamagundi party.Miss Talbot gave a dinner party.February 4 Dinner party at Kelly Hall given by the following members of theQuadranglers: Misses Allin, Calhoun, Lahm, McWilliams, Tooker .. Quadrangle Club reception.February 7 Beecher Hall reception.157February 8 Annual Central Music Hall concert of Glee, Mandolin and Banjo Clubs.February 10 Gibson tableaux and informal at Rosalie Hall. Those taking part wereMisses Bell, Warner, Hamill; Messrs. Blackburn, Kennedy, Andrews,Flint, Schmahl, Coulter, Brown, Henning, Hamill.Quadrangle Club concert.Alpha Delta Phi convention at Toronto.February 11 Delta Kappa Epsilon initiated Harold E. Wilkins.February 12 University Informal at Rosalie Hall.Lincoln House reception.February 14 Kelly Hall reception.February 18 French and German dramatics. Our dramatic critic reports the enter­tainment to have been a great success. Everybody was there, and notan undergraduate has been found who could pick a flaw in the accent ofa single character.February 19 Indoor Dual Track Meet. Northwestern 47; Chicago 39.Phi Kappa Psi alumni dinner.Miss Paddock entertained at luncheon.February 21 Foster Hall reception.158,trtb Jlnnual Wasbtns_ton promtnadtChicago Beach Hotel, February 21PatronessesMrS. William R. HarperMrs. George C. HowlandMrs. George E. VincentMrs. John J. GlessnerMrs. George C. WalkerMrs. Henry H. DonaldsonMrs. Ferdinand W. PeckMrs. Harry P. JudsonMrs. Henry M. WilmarthCommitteesJoseph E. Freeman, General ChairmanCOMMI'.M'ItE OF ARRANGMJtNTSErnest H. Dillon, ChairmanM. Gordon Clarke' Knight French FlandersR)tCEPTION COMMI'.M'EEM. Dwight McIntyre, ChairmanJohn F. Hagey Cecil PageFINANCJt COMMI'.M'EELawrence DeGraff, ChairmanFrank L. White Ernest A. Scrogin159February 22 Messrs. J. F. Hagey, G. Sawyer, F. E. Vaughan, J. P. Mentzer, M. D.McIIltyre, J. It Freeman, and N. W. Flint wearingOwl and Serpent pins.Graduate Hall musicale.Washington House reception.February 25 Sigma Club open meeting.February 26 Beta Theta Pi stag party.Alpha Delta Phi initiated E. S. Norton, '01, and S. N. Harper, '01.February 28 Snell Hall reception.March 3 Morgan Park reception.March 4 Three Quarters Club dance at Rosalie Hall.Reception to visiting athletes.Graduate Club banquet.Middle Divinity reception.March 5 Western Intercollegiate Indoor Athletic Meet: Chicago first place, Wis­consin second.March 7 Beecher Hall reception.March 11 The Ben Butler Club initiated Messrs. S. M. Brown, J. P. Mentzer and T.B. Blackburn.March 12 Ben Butler Club informal at Rosalie Hall.March 14 . Beta Theta Pi Alumni Smoker.March 15 Sigma Club Musicale.March 16 Psi Upsilon Smoker given to city alumni.March 17 Graduate Hall open house.Cbt StittThe Cap and Gown desires to call attention to the unprecedented excellence andvariety of the theatrical attractions offered on and about the campus during the seasonof '97 and '98. Among those on the boards at present are:Mr. Walter Schmahl in "Romeo and Juliet.NOTlt.-The management announces that a different actress each week will becast for the role of Juliet.Robert B. Davidson in "The Little Minister."Thomas B. Blackburn in ., The Girl I Left Behind Me."Charles L. Burroughs in II The Fast Mail. "Mr. Percy B. Eckhart in II His Foster-Sister."Mr. John Coulter in "Never Again."160fitard on tbt CampusThe man sat on the sofa, talking of the weather,The co-ed close beside him-they oft sat thus together.The maid was in the parlor turning out the light;The man, the girl, the darkness-oh, lordy, what a sight!If it is fiction, we call it Romance; but if it is fact, we pronounce it Scandal.The man who most enjoys the play called Life, is he who can sit comfortably inin his seat and watch himself act his part in the drama.Whatever creeds there may be rest upon the stars. Therefore it is easy to shiftabout beneath them.Flattery is like a dinner of empty pate shells to a hungry man.A man never makes so great a hit as when he strikes the bottom of his grave.Epigrams are axiom like utterances, which the maker knows to be untrue.There are more beautiful women in one volume of poems, than there are in allthe world.Fortune is but a fickle coquette, whose smiles are not lavished without reward,"Where are you going, my pretty co-ed?"" I'm going to gym, sir, now," she said." And may I go with you, my pretty co-ed? "II As far as the door," she archly said.Profanity is foolish, sinful and satisfying.Hunger for knowledge like physical appetite is frequently sated with poor food.'Tis better to have loafed and flunked than never to have loafed at all.Why do you begin the word Faculty with a capital letter ?All words referring to Omniscence begin with capitals.Prexy be nimble, Prexy be quick.Hunt up some more millionaires you can stick.Sing a song of six pence, and half a dozen flunks,Forty-'leven notices-a quarter full of flunks.When the door was opened, "Young man," exclaimed the Dean,"It's plain to see you've spent your spring a gamboling on the green! "161Tn mtmorlamPROF�SSOR OLAUS DAHL, died March 10, 1897MR. G�ORG� DARROW, Head Bookkeeper, died June 14,1897MISS ETH�L MILLER, '98, died January 11,1898MISS AD�LAIDlt IDE, '96, died February 19, 1898MR. FREDERICK HVD1;t LAWR�NCE, '01, died Apri122, 1898£ontrlbutors to tbt tltnary PagtsN OTT WII.UAM FUNTTHOMAS TEMPI.E HOYNEANNA BOOTH SIMMSETHEI. KEENEDWIN CAMPBEI.I. WOOI.I.EYLER.OY TITUS WEEKSEDWIN H. LEWISFI.ORItNCE WII.KINSONEDNA STANTONWAI.TItRDItFFItNBAUGHMARTHA FOOTE CROWCHARI.ItS RAYMOND BARRETTAGNItS S. COOKGEORGIt Q. MARSHIDA ASHBORN WItEKSFRANCItS AYRltS MURPHYTHEODOSIA KANItFRANK W. DIGNANPHII.IP RANDEFFIE,A. GARDNItRJOHN WEBER LINNJI Girl of £azlstanWAS only a girl of Lazistan;In his veins the blood of the Sun-God ran.He plucked me out from the soil of the street,He called me the rose of his garden retreat.I was his fountain that laughed in the sun,His star that glittered when day was done.I was the jewel that lay on his heart,Mine was the shrine where he worshipped apart.And I was a girl of Lazistan;In his veins the blood of the Sun-God ran.He loved me, he kissed me, he lay on my breast,And I was the bulbul that sang him to rest.Into his arms I would melt for repose,And he would enfold me as leaves do the rose.I was only a girl of Lazistan;In his veins the blood of the Sun-God ran.* ** *They came in the midst of the dark fragrant night,And the almond-tree blooms fluttered down in affright,Of a sudden they swooped, like sorrow they came,And they blasted the flower of our love as with flame.Those purple-clad Parsis with arms waving wide," Woe, woe to the follower their law who defied."For I was a girl of Lazistan;In his veins the blood of the Sun-God ran.And now they have come to take me away,Yet we loved and we kissed but yesterday.They say the Eternally Pure decreeDoom, for lovers who loved as we.For him, in the Tower of Silence a bed,And Parsi prayers at sunrise said.For me, to be hurled like refuse farInto the river that runs by Istahr.The Eternally Pure have decreed in vain;We care not,. not we, for death and its pain,For the souls become one, of two lovers slat'n,-Even mine, a girl of Lazistan;And his, whose blood from the Sun-God ran.Florence Wilkt'nson.165Cardiac CompUcationsI closed the folio with a sigh. "Well, I am at your ladyship's service," I said,"any Herculean task that you care to impose."Betty by this time was hanging out of the window inspecting the night air and,incidentally, corrupting the mature mind of Foster by graphic imitations of AnnaHeld's carolings." Oh, it's not much," she said, drawing her head in again, "just to help me witha little note. "" Which means, I suppose, the solitary and unaided composition of the same andits meek submission to the editorial rulings of the severest and most refined of critics. "Betty pouted. "Oh, if you're going to be nasty about it! "I knew my part. I besought, protested my readiness, willingness, in fact, burn­ing and insatiable desire to compose notes to anybody, everybody-and was in duetime forgiven. I pulled out some paper."Who is it to?" I asked."To Grahme Brown," said Betty." My dear! "" Well?" she queried. Her innocence was delicious."I'll answer your faculty summons, your family letters, respond to your bills,even, but how can I write your love-letters? "Betty laughed. "Oh, most any way. Say what you think will please the man.?""But I won't feel it-it's sheer hypocrisy." I was indignant."So it would be if I wrote it-I don't feel it-tonight." And she hummed a bitfrom the "Belle of New York," and crept farther into the pillows.So I wrote:If I don't know how you will take this letter, but you have so often correspondedto my mood of the moment, that I write to you now out of the fullness of my heart-"" Beautiful start," said Betty, reading over my shoulder, "go on! "" , Out of the fullness of my heart,' " I mused, " 'out of the fullness of my heart-. �Betty, can't you suggest something? "The tapping on the window stopped and Betty turned and looked at me.Suddenly the satire of the thing struck us, we laughed and laughed. When shehad her breath, Betty reached for the Physiology: "The heart is a valvular pumpwhich works on mechanical principles, the motive power of which is supplied by thecontraction of muscular fibres," she read aloud.In the white heat of such knowledge of organs and functions our English meta­phors should be revised.And, now, when I meet a certain tall friend of ours, my mouth twitches at therecollection of how I once wrote to him, "out of the fullness of my heart. "166}lIma mattrREVISED VERSIONtonigbt Wt gladly sing tbt pralstOf btr of wbom we an tbt sons.Our loyal voitu Itt us raist,Jlnd blus btr witb our btnlsons.Of an fair motbfr$ faimt she,most wist of an tbat wisest be,most trut of aU tbe trut, say we,is our dfar Jllma mattr.fier migbty Itarning we would WI,tbougb lift Is sometbing mort tban 1m;Sbe (ould not love btr sons so welltovtd sbe not trutb and bonor mort.We praise ber deptb of (barity,fitr faitb that trutb sban make men tree,tbat rigbt sballlive mrnally,-We praise our Jllma mater.o fair young motber, tbrontd In grateBtsidt tbe a�urt inland sea,tbe motber of a mlgbty raceOf peatdul conquerors tbou sba1t be.Beyond tbe agts lift tbine eyuto wbert tby sbdtrlno walls yet riseBentatb tbe bope-filled w¢stern skits,Stm our dea, Jllma mater.Words by n. H. Lewis, '94Music by P. N. Mandeville, RochesterJI modtrn ;airp CaltIS name was Johnny Thornton. He was big, good-natured and thirty,with gray in the thin hair about his temples, and wrinkles at the cornersof his eyes, flecking the dark, permanent shadows beneath them, thatconscientious chaperones might recognize and point out his wickednessto their charges. But in addition, there was a whimsical upward twistto the corners of his mouth, which these ladies did not point out, nordid they explain the merry dancing of his eyes and the fair maidens wholooked and saw these things without their guidance, could only wonder and dream­who knows what dreams.It was a winter night and he had come to his bachelor hearth, a little tired, rathercold, and more than a little blue, so that the ice he took from the chest to cool vari­ous long drinks was much diminishd before the corners of his mouth curled againand the frown faded from over the once more merry eyes. What he had thought issacred because his mood faded away from the world, with the coals that glowed withits bitterness and deadened as it departed, and only what happend with the return ofthe mood all his world knew and shall be recorded.He was smoking his pipe when it happened, sitting before his fire, with a glass inone hand and his long red gown wrapped comfortably about him. The world hadreturned to peace with him, as everything did before the sun had half circled aroundit and all was well everywhere. He heard a fluttering of airy things behind him andthought he might be going to sleep, when a little wee voice that sounded like thescent of an Egyptian cigarette said:"I am come to do your bidding."He looked up quickly and then jumped to his feet. Turning to the fire, helooked into it for a moment and then drained his watered whiskey. She was stillthere as he turned slowly around. He looked at her steadily, but she did not disap­pear or even falter under his stare. He wet his lips and recovered himself." How the devil did you get in here with those clothes on?" he asked sharply,for she was wearing a gown a little less tangible than chiffon and a trifle more durablethan a dawn-shot mist., , I am a fairy, " she said and the star in her hair twinkled." I have no doubt of that," he replied, "but I thought your company was play­ing in Washington this week."168" I don't know what you mean. The fairy queen sent me to serve you. It isyour turn now. You have not commanded one of us since you were a little boy inEgypt a thousand years ago. What are your desires? "" My desires are many," he faltered, for he had never talked to anyone quit� likethis before. He did'nt know what to say next and she was staring about her in won­dering contentment. "Have a drink," he suggested as he pushed the bottle andglasses across the table toward her. She looked at them curiously." They are pretty," she said, "but what is this in the bottle? Is it a sleepingpotion? "" It is for some people, if they drink enough of it. "I I I am afraid it is an evil spirit.""Indeed it's not. It's the finest dew of all Scotland's hillsides."II It is like dew, but what is it?"" One of my best friends and you must be cold." He poured her a glass of it andlet the soda seeth and nibble about the sides of the long glass as he handed it to her.She raised the glass and drank the liquor with a queer little wry face and a grimaceof terror intermingled. He smiled at her and she set it down, reassured, as she smiledback." It makes me warm," she said. . The fairies of Scotland must have worked longfilling your potion with mystic heat." He started to laugh, but didn't and she wenton. "I was cold. We don't often venture out in this weather and our winter gownsof white mouse skin are all worn out. You see there is so little doing in our line, wecannot afford new clothes.""I'll arrange that at once," he said. "Here, take my lounging robe," and heslipped out of it quickly and wrapped it about her slight figure. He wheeled his bigchair around closer to the fire and snuggled her into it. "Great Scott! haven't youany stockings? ""Oh, we are very poor now. Everything is so dull. The queen actually hasn'thad her crown brightened for ten years and she is so proud, she won't leave thepalace.""Dear me! You don't say!" he observed and poured out another glass for him­self. "Won't you have some mere-a-dew.""Really, I don't think I'd better. It makes me feel so queer in my head.""Bless your little head, of course it does; it's a way it has. But are you sure youare quite comfortable? "" Oh quite," and she laughed a contented little chuckle, as though she were awaif of a kitten, purring in new found luxury."But you must be hungry. Can't I send out for a cold lobster, or some chickenor something? ' ,169" Oh, we never eat. Only mortals do that."" How lovely! It is an earthly habit. I suppose you have no stomachs, but haveyou any hearts among you?" She nodded an affirmative. "To be sure. I supposeyour hearts take up the space our stomachs do. Do you ever really love?"" We love everybody.""How unfortunate! You really can't enjoy it. The only fun there is in loving,is the excitement of keeping but one face at a time locked up ill one's heart. Do youkiss all the people you love? "" I don't know what you mean."" My child, don't jest. How old are you? "" Nearly a thousand years, I think. I've forgotten exactly. I'm almost of age."" I should think you were, but I shall have to remedy your deplorable lack of aproper education." He perched himself upon the arm of the chair and began hislesson." Oh, is that kissing? " she interrupted. "I've seen lovers do that. You do itvery nicely." He proved lIer words. "I know what you want me to grant you, it'sa sweetheart. But, oh yes, I remember; you have one and she was rude to you. Ishall arrange all that tonight, for she is a foolish girl. Do you love me as much asyou do her?"This ending to her chatter brought up a delicate question and he was explainingits distinctions when he became aware there was an earthly male comrade of his mid­night hours standing at his elbow, and his lounging robe was hanging over the backof the chair.MORALHe had not been asleep, and the next day she wrote him a note saying she wasvery sorry.Walter Deffenbaugh.1In 014 Saw wltb a ntW €4gtHE saying goes, "there's many a slipBetween the cup and the ruby lip,"But the wise old sage forgot to sayWhat kind of a slip they used in his day;However we guess, as drinks are few,'Twas an orange slip with a cherry too.170Snap SbotsOH' Willy, Willy, you incorrigible idiot, Willy! Think I can't read between.the lines? Think I don't know what" worthless life" is the exponent of,and can't translate your "loneliness, so sad and strange?" It is older thanCicero, dear boy; more men have studied it; and rendered into plain Eng­lish prose, it means-a girl! I can even guess which one, unless some Aph-rodite, new-risen since I left, emerging from the waves and dripping nakedly, hasfound you on the shore. But that I do not believe. Is it the red-haired one, Willy?Confess it; the maiden, to be poetic, with sun-gilded locks, divinely tall and (woe isme !) most undivinely freckled. Or is it the little girl, black-haired, coquettish, roll­ing as to her eyes, who told me once I was so fresh and blooming? Inaudibly I ans­wered she was so blooming fresh, and now perhaps she has snared you in the mesh ofher low-lidded glances. You are not the first, nor will you be the last. Or, may be Iam unjust, and it is not she. May be it is-but this is profitless work, guessing. Tellme who, at once, and let me comfort you; only never write to me again about a"worthless life," because you saw her in the chapel with another fellow.E> E> ®We talked till the fire in the grate burned low, and the shadows in the cornerscrept to our feet. We talked of suicide, and Bentley argued that a man's life is his own-to take or to keep. "And it is logical that one may go voluntarily," said he. "Justas some men will to sleep and to wake and accomplish it, so, I believe, some men dieby a self-imposed death sentence-yet without violence." We argued long, and final­ly he said: "Before I go, get a note that you'll find in Hegel and read it. Do notwait till to-morrow, but get it now." I thought it a strange request, but I had learnedthat all Bentley's whims meant something, so I crossed the room and found the note:U Good-bye, I have always known I have this power. The time has come. I shallmiss you, for I have always loved you. Good-bye." A chill fell upon my heart. Iturned to Bentley and touched his hand. It was cold, and when I looked at his faceI saw that he was dead.E>Fledgely is a friend of mine with whom I like to discuss things, or rather withwhom I discuss, for I do not like it. We always get heated, and I lose my temper,and come away angry with Fledgely and disgusted with myself for being angry. Thetruth is Fledgely cannot argue. He is a clever enough fellow, but his mind travels ina circle, and you never can pin him down to a point. When you think you have him,away he goes around the curve and you have to go over the whole argument with himagain. The other night we sat on the porch and talked politics. Fledgely is a stronggold-standard man. He has not studied the subject much, but his prejudices are allin favor of the capitalists and the moneyed men, so I tried to give him a few factsfrom economics that would help him. As usual he kept dodging the question, andfinally refused to see a point when I had made it as plain as day. Somewhat nettled,I left him and came to my room. A moment later, I went out to get my cane whichI had left on the porch, and heard him say to Judson, "-- good fellow, but he can'targue. He never sticks to the point."171I I i ..o� c ... �t�II J � n u I I " } t �1 , I Ii·Words byThomes Moore.� j 1 � � I r I ! 7 ;1"" _.,��.,,: �'<: .: x .=: .... " M I !-.; I� ", .. ,., -.x �1..! ". � .r r . _ ...... x. .!_, II\ i i rf'f rC'"ts. _. - - - - • --I t r It f t- - --(,� � ", .... «» -c -:: l* e « K : � � � k� I � I I I I ", , 1 . I I I .j', ., .1 .1 .1 ..I .J:(� � 1 Jt ",I:n I 1 � I I. r r I� I J5 1.. - -I .�. f F � f � f�. ;. � E ;;. -I;:;" -;>_ 7fFFfF 7 N :- � Z ., i r ,K :'1 I 1., oJ oJ �I "I �I .. .. .. .. ., .1 '"'1 ., .. ( ;t' ¥ e.¥.1�. J i U "�JF f I �I t � I � t r � � �i " . , OfI", •• 011. Ion(. c .tr � IIr .or........ """t�r 4 y.., It All yo.r 1iiI .. .I&r �";II; .$4t��H�:��.;�� '1 � .. I j .. I .1 .\7 .' .1 .. , .'...l • ., -,y.WT:oS::S Moore HllVe you not seen the tlm ld fear W Herbert Lanyon- - - .,--... .-( � , . ..\ . F- ��<<- , .. .. .. . .. N' N.N x"".1tr "� cl- I I -I I. \) I I I I ,j .J � J ) 7n7TI .. r:r:T )"7 �I ..I _I ... 1 tJ . T{ .. .. .. .. .. .. ...�..1,.1 .. .. II·G·"',7 ( Ij " I.1I'IfI'f­, I !� .- ........� . � �. -r-r7�f � ., � � e- N « xs � -< rrJ· Fr f\ I I I I I") .,J :I ::J � � . r 1--r:-1 ...... I.. I I ._ ".nere and tbutNo lack of College spirit here. Plenty of it if you go where it is tobe found. Same thing you find at Yale or Princeton, strengthened a littleby Chicago climate. Same old spirit toward college bills-their size andimmutability. Same complaints about the work-this course is dead easy-no use towork-this one is stiff and you'll get sliced-no use to bone. Complaints about theprofessor's jokes and about food and drink and the landlady and the tailor. Sameold search for a rattling good time-without paying for it. Go where college men docongregate and you will find the atmosphere charged with these vapors which con­dense and are precipitated easily and often. They make up the true college spirit­localized, indefinable and yet permanent.This theme is about a strange little man with a great red beard, who came out ofthe Romance library yesterday afternoon shaking his head at the world." O-h-h-h ! " said he. " The head-ache which is mine! "" Oh, these head-aches," said I, with ready sympathy. " Is it the bad air? ""The bad air?" he answered, throwing up his arms. "No, it iss that manKan-n-t, such a fellow! Hegel is nothing to him, nothing. It iss the-what iss it inthe English-the Pure Reason? O-h-h-h! Is not that it? First there is the connectionin the brain-the logic-and then above that there iss this Pure Reason. For hours Ihave study it; no wonder then if I have an ache!"Down the hall came a library girl, old and dry and wrinkled like the. covers ofher respectable books, and waving his hands Herr Rothbart rushed up to her."Who is he, Phil?" said I to the biggest man in the University, who happenedby just then." Reddy, eh? " Phil said. "He's some fellow or other; there are dozens about."In one of many classes, at the first assembling of the quarter, there were perhapstwenty men and no woman. There are arguments in plenty to prove co-education isideal education, but for me the feeling in my own heart as I looked around the classeverlastingly refuted them all. A sense of freedom, as if shackles had been strickenoff, was included in it; a perception of closer touch with teacher and classmates, and arealization of expanding confidence and power. And then the door opened, and Eveentered, Eve, the eternal, dragging the serpent. She was elderly and ugly to be sure;it was ...adly evident that she had dressed in the dark; but had she been the youngestand prettiest of all the college girls it would have made no difference. We were mentogether before she came, and then we were twenty men before a woman. PerhapsI imagined the rustle of disappointment that went around the class; but I dare swearI saw Doctor M's hard mouth grow harder, and I know my back suddenly bowed as ifunder a burden, all the heavier because for a little time thrown off.175IIHE Colonel's house stands on the right bank of the Mississippi, abouttwenty miles north of Keokuk, and just outside of Onawanda. Thebuilding is of grey stone, and turreted like an iceberg. Back of it aplanted wood, covering five acres, lifts through hazel brush; before it agreen lawn runs down to the edge of the bluff, ninety feet high, steep as a wall, andstanding sheer from the river. Over this bluff Ned had hurled the only dog he everowned, a spotted fox-terrier six months old. He teased the little beast till it bit him,and in an excess of anger he threw it over. For a week Roxy would not speak to him,and the Colonel never gave him another dog.The Colonel was the best known man in Onawanda, and the richest. He was tall,taller even than Ned became, when his black hair used to 100m in a line-up an inchabove everyone else. The Colonel's hair was white, though his mustache was stilldark; and in his forehead were three deep wrinkles. One came when his wife diedand left him Roxy to bring up as best he might. The second and third Ned had givenhim. The Colonel stood as stiffly as a major general as far up as his shoulders, buthe habitually carried his head bent forward, and did not always raise it even when hespoke to you. The Colonel loved both Roxy and Ned; but it could hardly be saidthat he approved of Ned.Ned-his full name was Edward Fitzgerald Carter-s-was the only son of theColonel's sister, Emily Frankland, and Edward Fitzgerald Carter, Sr., a gentlemanof Kentucky. Ned's mother died soon after Roxy's, and the Colonel almost immedi­ately invited his brother-in-law to live with him. The two Edward Fitzgerald Cartersaccepted the invitation; but the older did not accept it for long. The death of hiswife was for him the beginning of the end. He lived in the Onawanda house for twoyears. Then one day, Ned being nine years old, his father died. The Colonel him­self tied the crape band to Ned's hat, and they followed to the grave together.177Edward Fitzgerald Carter, Sr., had been a quiet man, undemonstrative, fonder of acigar than conversation. But neither his son nor the Colonel ever forgot him.Nothing was said; and Ned continued to live at Onawanda. For nine years more heand Roxy grew up together, and the Colonel gave the same attention to each; buttheir characters developed differently. Roxy was a quiet little maid, five yearsyounger than Ned, and as fair as her New England ancestry justified. She did muchas she was told; but she worshipped Ned openly and loyally, who did little as hewas told, and grew into a reputation that only. the Colonel's prominence kept frombeing notorious. He was at the same time reckless and strong, fearless, and with adash of cruelty; and he got into more fights and won them more gloriously than anyother young man in the vicinity of Onawanda. At eighteen he was tall, very dark,with a New England grimness of face and southern softness of profile that eternallycontradicted each other. He could put the sixteen-pound shot thirty-five feet; hecould run a hundred yards in eleven seconds, and the half-mile in two minutes more;and he could swim the three-quarter mile of yellow Mississippi that swept the Ona­wanda bluffs three times in an afternoon. As for the things he could not do: he couldnot enjoy the poetry of Browning; he could not move in a drawing-room withoutupsetting a table; and he could not dance. About this time the Colonel began tothink of college. When the Colonel grew worried he grew absent minded; and whenhe grew absent minded he used to spit in his spectacle-case and throw his glasses intothe fire. Two pairs melted before he decided to send Ned up to the University; butthe decision finally come to, the Colonel acted in haste. Three months after hiseighteenth birthday, Ned was regularly enrolled as a student at Chicago.It was on a day in early October. The field, with the green of summer still uponit, and the haze of a hot sun over it, seemed a setting all out of keeping for the fig­ures it framed. Foot-ball, when the heat of the year is not yet passed, is a veryunpleasant game to practice, and a good bit of a farce to watch. The men areuntrained and soft, and after every line-up lie about helplessly and pant. There is adeal of desultory kicking-even a green man thinks he can punt, and, a little later,drop-kick. The veterans, the men who are practically sure of their positions, the menwho after Thanksgiving will be put on the all-western team, loaf and " give the scrubsa chance." The head coach, who will in a few weeks become so vigorous and dog­matic, smiles and allows the discipline to become lax. He knows the result of over­work when the thermometer stands at eighty degrees. The sub-coaches and the cor­respondents on the side lines swear, now softly, now loudly, and honestly believe thatthere is no enthusiasm anywhere; and the correspondents take notes for the first ofthose discouraging reports that would convince the country that the standard of foot­ball is sinking year by year, only nobody ever believes them. Along the side lines,in the pleasant sun, stand hundreds of students, expressing their loyalty because they178'have nothing better to do. Later, when the season becomes cold and rainy, the prac.tices will not be so well attended; but there are many out in these sweet October days.On this particular afternoon, the first of his attendance at Chicago, Ned Carter.stood with the rest along the track beside the rope. He was one of a little group offour men-the other three all older than he-and was very much the center of inter­est. His size and his beauty made him conspicuous; and though he possessed in alarge measure that self-confidence and aggressiveness that is called "freshness," itonly added to his prominence. The other three men, representatives of a well-knownfraternity, had marked him for their own, and according to theirdifferent temperaments they were endeavoring to win his confi­dence and good will. Never is there better opportunity for theearly display of the qualities of a .successful politician than in theH rushing" game; and these three men, Alan Dale, Tom Carruthersand -Phillip Mann, were three of the best "rushers" in theUniversity, and and the three who had done the greatest deeds inthe struggle that marked the rise of their fraternity from thesecond to the first class. They clung closely to Ned now; theyappealed to him and subtly flattered him; they forebore to praisehim openly and so disgust him; they talked to him frankly andmade him one of them." Why don't you go in for foot-ball, Carter?" said Dale, theslenderest, frailest, most intellectual looking and "foxiest"Junior in college. "You certainly look to have the build."Ned laughed. "Don't think I care much for the game," he said.lows look too hot and dirty to be comfortable.""Oh, well, this weather won't last long" said Carruthers, a man as black as Nedhimself, with an open, laughing face, and an air of cordiality that never left him.'I Wait till the east winds begin to come in off the lake. Foot-ball is the only thingthat-will keep you warm then. And it's the greatest thing ever invented for giving aman standing and credit in the University. Study isn't in it. Look at me-neverfailed to lead my class, and yet get no credit because I'm not big enough to play foot-"Those fel-ball. ""You lead your class backwards into temptation, Tom" said Mann, the third ofthe trio, thin almost as Dale, plain to ugliness, with a big nose but. eyes full of lurk­ing twinkle. Mann had never yet failed to find humor in anything. I' If you wantMr. Carter to play foot-ball, tell him it is his duty to the University. If he doesn't doit then, tell him it's a better way to get gym. credit than running around a dirt heapin grey underclothes."Ned laughed again. "I read in the papers," he explained in a cheerful loud179,:"oice, "that the coaches kick the men when they didn't obey orders, and if a man­kicked me I'm afraid I'd get mad and make a fool of myself.""That's a Yale custom that we haven't learned yet," said Carruthers. "All the­kicking here is incidental, and mostly aimed at the umpire. So is the slugging,except occasionally-as, for instance, there! "The hot weather had made the players cross and irritable. There were a suspi­cious number of ugly falls on the scrub side, and the 'Varsity complained constantlyof holding. Suddenly, after a scrimmage, and just as Carruthers spoke, two menfaced each other in quick anger; there were two swinging blows; and then the eye ofthe coach fastened itself there, and in another moment the two men, ruled off for theafternoon, were walking together across the field.II Coburn and Wray-Coburn lost his head again," said Dale contemptuously.But in Ned's' black eyes the joy of battle smouldered." Is that in the game? " he said."Very much in it," laughed Mann. "The universities are trying to legislate itout, but human nature is tough.""Well that must be �a pretty good game," said Ned. "I believe I'll try it."Dale looked at him curiously. "Sluggers don't make good players," he said.II Oh, I don't know, said Ned, cheerfully. The next day began the career ofEdward Fitzgerald Carter, sometime guard of the University of Chicago e1even-acareer that, had it followed out to its natural end, would have remained as unparal­leled unto this day. What it was, you remember; and it comes unto this story onlyslightly. A full account of it will never be written, but anyone who is curious maygo to the head coach and ask; and if the head coach is in a good humor on that day,and has discovered a possible new phenomenon, and is convinced that he is not talk­ing for publication-the conviction must be pressed home to him, and that is noteasy-then he will unfurl his mind and set out zig-zag over a sea anecdote, andreminiscence, and dry philosophy, until he reaches the port of lost opportunities in­Foot-ball; and there he will drop anchor and rest, saying,�with a regretful sigh-"Yes,that was Ned Carter - " Hoss " Carter - and if I had had him four years instead oftwo-;" ami then you must go away very softly, for the head coach will have forgot-­ten you, and it is not well to interrupt his musings.It was a year later, at the beginning of his sophomore work, that Ned began to go<out in University society. His position there was from the first pretty firmly estab­lished. His freshman triumphs in foot-ball and on the track team would have beenenough in themselves to secure him a "bid" from most of the fraternities; his goodlooks and the Colonel's money brought the rest into line. Ned was the" hardestrushed" man of his year, and had known the joy of refusing many bids. Dale,Carruthers and Mann never let him go; and in the spring, when he was eligible, he-180was initiated into Alpha Kappa Pi. They urged him at once to go to those receptionsand teas that are for the Freshmen the Introduction to the Study of Society; andthough he resisted successfully for three months, he succumbed in the fall, and "did"where he was" bid." As I have said, he was at once a success.It is true that Ned Carter never learned the art of making pretty speeches. It istrue that he was never a graceful dancer, though, after a fashion, he learned to dance.It is true that his voice was unmodulated and harsh, and that his laughter had a touchof the crackling of thorns. But if he did not say the right thing, he did not say thewrong; he openly admired the girls he met, and there is much in that; and he was'" certainly," as even the Seniors admitted" a very good looking fellow." He wentout, and he went out, to teas, to dinners, to receptions, to everything that was con­sistent with the strictest of training rules. He admired everyone impartially, andtold his thoughts freely to the men of his fraternity. One day, day, however, he metMiss Carnegie; and from that time he spoke his thoughts no more. He went on withhis foot-ball playing, adding ever new laurels. Against Northwestern he played well,against Wisconsin better, against Michigan best of all. A story might be writtenabout every game. The old romance of the knight and his lady is as fresh to-day aswhen lances lay in rest and armor gleamed; and Alsace Carnegie, by or against herwill, inspired Ned Carter to worthier efforts every time he saw her. He bore a charmand was never hurt. When he had the ball he never stopped running, and on defensehe never considered the possibility that anyone else might tackle the runner. He wonthe heart of the head coach; and always, between halves, he looked about for MissCarnegie. She usually came to the games in her drag, with sometimes one man,sometimes three, attending her. She took her place at the end of the East grandstand, where the earlier carriages always moved to make room for her. There Nedwould look for her; and when he had found her he would play harder than before.Passion is more effectual than ginger tonic.The position of Alsace Carnegie in the University had never been satisfactorilysettled. The women indeed did not definitely aprove of her by offering her theshelter of a club, and so she remained an "independent." There were also, of course,those rumors, whispered of between dances and in the clink and clatter of teas, thatalways hang like a haze over a pretty girl not like all the other pretty girls. Men said ofher that she was" nervy;" occasionally that she was" easy." Plenty there were boldenough, and fond enough of beauty, to take her to dances, and to ride on her drag tothe games. But she had few callers among the men of the University. Her recordas a student was above criticism. That was established by the evidence of the dozensof people who were curious enough to look it up. She was neither very dark norvery fair; her eyes were as grey as a cloud; she was rather small than short, and slen­derly built. Her feet and her waist were the admiration of one half and the envy of181the other half, ofthe University. She could not sing, nor play, and she danced onlypoorly. But such as she was she appeared before Ned Carter; and he thought her agoddess, and worshipped her-not reverently, but passionately. From the day inearly November when he first met her, he steadily hurled his attentions at her; and in.less than two months he had asked her to marry him.Consider now what he was. Edward Fitzgerald Carter, aged nineteen and one­half years, sophomore at the University of Chicago; on the outside tall, strong anddark, on the inside a bundle of impulses and passions, uncontrolled and successful;joint heir-to-be with Roxana Frankland, of all the.land and estate of Colonel WilliamPrentiss Frankland-and that not little. Alsace Carnegie laughed in his face. Heasked her again, and she refused him point blank. He asked her again and she leftthe room. He took his hat and coat, went out of the Hall and across the campus; andthe same light smouldered in his black eyes that flamed there in a game."I shall ask her," he said to himself, "until she consents-or until I kill her."That was just after the Christmas vacation, and he had still in his pocket thephotograph of Roxy she had given him. He had known, when he was in Onawanda,that when he came back to Chicago he should ask Alsace Carnegie to marry him, buthe had not thought it necessary to tell either Roxy or the Colonel about it. In a dimand misty way he had sometimes thought the Colonel wanted him to marry R�xy.He took her photograph out now and looked at it, then smiled and put it back."Roxy, little girl," he said, "there isn't enough of the devil in you." Whichmight be taken as a reflection on Miss Alsace Carnegie.The next part of the life of Ned Carter and Alsace Carnegie might have been calledthe" hare and hound," except for the popular estimate of the character of those animals.Ned saw Miss Carnegie at receptions, concerts, dinners, dances-the whole round-andalways he asked her to marry him. He called on her, and they talked of the samething. Sometimes, in the depths of the carriage, returning from a dance, they twoalone, Ned's passion would almost master him, and he would grow fierce and demand.But Miss Carnegie could be as cold and hard as he was eager and angry; she wasemphatically, in spite of the rumors among the men that she was "easy," a girl whocould take care of herself. She was always and everywhere on her guard; she fencedwell, and she kept herself out of danger. And usually Ned's question "Will youmarry me?" was quietly put; he asked it so often, that winter and spring, that it grewalmost formal. They two were always together. The University gossiped, as theUniversity will, when other men dropped away, and on the campus and off the campusAlsace Carnegie and Ned Carter were sufficient for each other. But Ned cared not abit, and Miss Carnegie seemed to be as little bothered.January and February drifted away, and March blew itself out. The rains andbreezes of April made the yard soggy and unpleasant, and May dried it up again and182wrote across it in great yellow letters that to the uninitiated looked like splashes ofsunshine, "Spring." There were again the beginnings of tennis, and the track mengot out of the gymnasium with cries of joy. Nobody ever crossed the campus alone.It was the halcyon season of a co-educational university-the season when no one studiesbooks, and even the deans look life in the face and smile; when the lake finally putsa way the grey and dons the blue that lasts the summer through; when Seniors growsad and freshmen merry; when the year is almost done. A new fraternity had comeinto the University, and celebrated its advent with a dance. As usual, Ned Carter, , took" Alsace Carnegie; as usual he asked her to marry him; as usual she laughed.After the dance, when it was very late, the two came home in a carriage together.When they reached the college yard the dawn was in the air. The driver turned asusual up the road to the halls, but Alsace stopped him." Ned," she said, "tell him to drive straight across the campus to the EllisAvenue entrance; we'll get out there.""'Vhat are you going to do, Alsace?" said Ned, curiously." Never mind," said Miss Carnegie.The carriage crunched across the dim yard, and stopped beside Cobb, grim andheavy and bulky. The two got out. "That's all right," said Ned to the driver, andthe obedient Irishman whipped away. Then she faced him under the grey sky."We'll walk across the campus and talk it out, Ned," she said."What do you mean?" he asked stupidly.Alsace laughed. "You have been asking me every day, sometimes twice a day,for the last four months, to marry you," she said. "You think you know what youwant; but you don't at all, and I'm going to prove it to you: right now."Ned smiled pleasantly. "Go on," he said."What do you mean when you say you want me to marry you?" asked MissCarnegie."I mean," said Ned slowly, "merely that I want to marry you."" When? " she said abruptly."Now," he answered as promptly. She curled her lip."If you mean," she said, that you want to be engaged to me-to touch me, andhold my hand, and kiss me, to fondle me, and have me brush your forehead, and thenthrow me over and wait for the next girl, you are wasting your time. I'm not thatkind of a girl. If you want to marry me-marry me now-you can. I'm willing.Your good old uncle won't approve, and you'll probably get into all sorts of troublewith the Faculty. As compensation, however, you will have me. You don't knowanything about me, who I am, or who my parents are, or anything at all. I don'tpropose to tell you anything. I ;han't even tell you whether I am honest, as girlsgo. I say just this: If you want to take me up to Milwaukee and marry me there,183all nice and comfortable-you can. I shan't make an objection. There's a train thatgoes at half past two this afternoon; we can go up on that. Otherwise, you stop, for­ever, asking me your question and seeing me.""There is a boat," said Ned, "that leaves at nine this morning; why shouldn'twe take that? "She stopped in her walk - they had beenslowly drawing near the Hall-and looked athim. Her face was pale, and her grey eyeslooked very large and almost black by contrast.She was so little and frail and fair in her ballgown, in the gloom under the trees that line thewalk-her hair curling away from her foreheadlike a halo-that she must have seemed like aspirit to Ned. Then she said:II Do you mean it?"II Don't talk nonsense," said Ned. He maybe forgiven. It was a. strain that twenty-yearold nerves are not meant to bear. She bowedher head, and when she looked up she was cry­ing. At the instant a shade, a faint wave oflight, slipped over all the east. The sun wasrising over the quadrangles as Ned took her inhis arms.But she struggled free. "No, Ned," shesaid; "no, it won't do, even if-if-we are goingto be married." Between her tears and laughtershe was almost hysterical. I I There, the sun'sup and the watchman is looking at us. Get me over to the Hall quick, before any�one else sees us. I've got a key. I musn't have a bad reputation if I'm going tomarry you, Ned."At the door of the Hall she paused only a second. " It will have to be the train,Ned," she said. "I'm afraid I can't get ready for the boat. Meet me at one o'clockon the Walker steps. I won't have a satchel." Then she slipped inside, and left Nedalone.He walked again across the campus, light now, but absolutely still and sleepy,and found the watchman sitting in his chair at the door of Cobb. The old man lookedat him curiously, and Ned remembered that he was in evening dress." Do you smoke? " he said. " Will you get yourself some cigars with this, and­if you say anything you may get two very nice people into trouble."184CC All right, Mr. Carter," said the watchman, who was not too old to wink. ThenNed, with very strange feelings in his throat and chest, walked to the fraternity house.There were four men there sitting around a table playing seven-up and trying tomake up their minds to go to bed. All of them were, like Ned, in evening dress, andall had been to the dance. Three were Dale, Carruthers and Mann, who, more thanany others, had induced Ned to join Alpha Kappi Pi. The fourth was Morris Atkin­son, a fellow of Ned's own class. When Ned entered they greeted him with a mockcheer and pounded on the table."With a ho, ho, ho, see the gay Lothario! " hummed Carruthers. "Let's see,Ned, whom did you take last night? "The others laughed. Ned frowned. II Hurt your little feelings, old man?" saidCarruthers. " Well, don't hurt me. She's a very nice girl, and she gave me a danceto-night, which was good of her, though she did step on my toes three times. We satout the encore; I think I hurt my ankle, or something," and Carruthers winked.Ned took the cards and shuffled them in one hand, resting lightly on the edge ofthe table."When a fellow," he said, "Isn't enough of a gentleman to know when he isoffensive, we show him -like this," and he threw the pack into Carruthers' face,sharply. They fell and fluttered to the floor, and every man was on his feet." What do you mean!" cried Mann, startled out of his humorous composure.Nobody else spoke. Carruthers slowly plucked a card away where it had caught theedge of his waistcoat, and his face reddened and then paled again. Ned's hand stillrested on the rim of the card table. At last Alan Dale broke the silence."I think you must be drunk, Carter," he said, in his high, even voice. "Youwould better apologize at once, and then go and sleep it off."Ned's voice rose like a torrent."Apologize?" he said. "Apologize to a man who has insulted a girl, betterthan any of his sisters ever dared to be? A man who has insulted me-a man whohasn't the courage to resent a blow! I'll see him damned first-and you, too? "Carruthers stood as still as a stone. Dale spoke again and there was a note ofwonderment in his voice."You are certainly drunk, Carter," he said. "Carruthers did not insult you oranyone else, as you know .. He made a perfectly harmless speech; such an one aswould be delicacy itself, contrasted with most of yours. You have insulted him now,past apology, unless you are too drunk to know what you are doing. Tom, you shutup. Carter presumes on his physical strength. We'll try something else."Dale and Carruthers left the room. Atkinson said, "Shall I help you up to bed,Ned?" Ned gave no answer, and Atkinson followed the others. Mann alone stayed,and stared at Carter.185"'What's the matter, old boy?" he said. "Are you engaged to her?"" None of your damned business," said Ned."Oh, yes, it is, "said Mann. "It is the business of every man who is as proud ofyou as I have been. It's the business of every man in this fraternity, you know.You're not drunk; that's too easy. I want to know what the matter is."Ned came round the table to where the other stood, and faced him, toweringabove him." Phil," he said, "old man, I'll ten you something. I'm going to be marriedthis afternoon to Miss Carnegie. Do you think I'm going to let any damn man talkabout my wife, Phil?""For God's sake!" said Mann."That's right, Phil. We agreed on it only half an hour ago. I came straighthome, and heard this fellow abusing her. I suppose he said a lot of things before Icame. He'd better not say any more while I'm here.""Have you made up your mind about this thing? "r said Mann. Ned nodded."You know it means expulsion from the University, and-forgive me-all sortsof nasty talk.", , I suppose so.""You know, if you don't apologize to Carruthers, it probably means expulsionfrom the fraternity? ""I don't give a damn," said Ned." What time do you go? ""Leave here at one. I'm going to bed now. Good night." Carter turned onhis heel and left. Said Mann:" Oh, you damn, damn, damn fool!" And again, "What can I do?"That same day, by a Methodist minister at Milwaukee, were married EdwardFitzgerald Carter, aged (nearly) twenty, and Alsace Carnegie, aged twenty-three.Immediately afterwards Ned sent off two telegrams. One, to Colonel W. P. Frank­land, Onawanda, Iowa, read as follows:"Married here this afternoon. Shall we come home? Will probably be ex­pelled. Ned."The other, to Philip Mann, contained the one word" Done," and was signedE. F. Carter.Properly there is no more to the story. But the head coach, who has since vis­ited Onawanda, will tell you differently. He went out a year and a few months afterthis, when September was shading into October, to induce-secretly, but without theoffer of money, which constitutes the crime-to induce Ned Carter, sometimes guardon the eleven, to come back to his old place. The University had forgiven him, saidthe coach, and would gladly take him back; he could go and complete such a reputa-186tion in foot-ball as the West has never yet rung to. To the coach's mind, that seemedreason enough for anyone. But Ned laughed."I'm an old married man, now," he said. "I have to look after the Colonel'sproperty, and he couldn't spare me. Besides, if I came, Alsace would have to come,and how could the Colonel and Roxy spare Alsace? Besides-let me show you some­thing." And then Ned opened a case that hung against the wall. What was in itthe head coach will not tell you; but this it was: Two letters, two pins, and a motto.One letter, signed by the president, and pinned by the college pin, was the notice ofdismissal from college for a year. The other letter, signed by the secretary of thechapter and pinned by the Alpha Kappa Pi pin, was the notice of expulsion from thefraternity. And running around and between both letters was the motto:"What God hath joined together, let not man put asunder."James Weber Linn.Do\vn ",utern slopu tbe sun bas dim bed fun slOWly,tbe bm�es murmur tbat tbt day must die;tbt bnatb of night, like inttnst faint and bOly,Rist$ to b�aotn, darktning tbt sky.tbt littlt ripplts on tbt sand·sbm ",akingWblsptr togttber of tbt distant dtep,£batttr t0getbtr, tbt t'alm siltntt brtaking,Wbisptr again, and $0 sink batk to slttp.tbt purplt gloom, aeress tbt water's tbillnus,1;"ngs like a turtain, till an unseen bandDraws It aside, and, tbarioted itt stillnm,tbt wbitt moon ridt$ out 0' er tb� sbadowy land.From the Mulberry Club Book, printed during April, 1898,at the Wind-Tryst Press.187Stntor Dtu.slon mttttngHE time has come," the Prex he said," To talk of many things:Of Law-Schools, and the Man who Hates,And why the choir sings,And of our frequent cabbage-headsWho take themselves for kings."Division-meetings, and debates,And gym suits gray and queer,Of all the funny brood of Deans,And why we have them here.(The student dropped upon the groundA sympathetic tear. )" Of what the teachers' salaries are,And what they really get;Of what John D. remarked to meThe day that we first met;And how I grasped his nether limb­I'm pulling at it yet." Of how myself and Mr. StaggAre working for the West;Of correspondents for the press,Who are our chiefest pest;And why the dances close at one,Just when the fun is best."Of these, and many other thingsWhich-may I say-concernThe Student Body as a whole,Your time has come to learn.Present your questions one by one,I'll answer them in turn." But first, our time just now is up,My secretaries say,And next week, too, I see I must(I'm sorry) be away.This chat we'll-shall we say-postponeUntil some other day."188PtOplt Wbo POStII. GAlNST the white glare of the e1. ectric lights the trees cast inky shad-� ows; the gray buildings loomed up vaguely on the campus, andacross the soft spring air came the sound of foot-steps, leisurely orhasty, and an occasional burst of laughter. A girl in a second-storywindow, peering out over the quadrangle, turned from her survey to call" come in,"in answer to a rap on the door. Another girl entered, tall, slender and graceful, ascould be discerned even in the dim light afforded by the distant lamps."Oh, it's you Madge!" The girl in the window moved to make room for thenew-comer beside her on the couch. "That's right, make yourself comfortable. So,he's gone at last."II At last."" Bert?"" Yes. Yonder he goes."Together they watched a solitary figure in a light suit, swinging across thacampus towards the me�'s halls. Then the first girl turned to her companion with aquestioning expression.II Madge," she began, "tell me honestly, do you like Bert very much?""N-no."" 1 thought not. I've been thinking about it all evening-ever since. I foundyou'd gone walking with someone, presumably Bert. Now Bert's a nice fellow-goodlooking, plenty of pocket-money, and all that, but he's uninteresting as another wo­man's troubles. And you know it; yet you grant him loads of time and attention,while I-"" While you?"" Am nice to people that I really like. Madge, what do you do it for?"Madge sat for a moment, chin on hand, as if pondering the question. Then," Well," she said, slowly, "I believe it's my pose. Everyone has one, and sinceI came I've posed as the girl who is equally nice to everyone, and so-well, I have tobe nice to a lot of uninteresting people sometimes. "She spoke indifferently, but with a sudden interest looked at her friend, in aquizzical fashion."You have a pose," she remarked, "yes, you. And it's the 'sincere' pose.Well, you have your reward. Mr. Rankin said the other day that' By Jove! to winAgnes Farrel's friendship was to win the genuine article.' ""He paid me a charming compliment; he couldn't have said a kinder thing."189I' Ah-ha, Miss Agnes, see how pleased you are! You feel a compliment likethat to be the reward pf conscious merit, the reward that comes after labor. Oh, don'tget mad. Everyone poses. Tene, for example. Innocency is her watch-word, soshe opens her brown eyes very wide, says 'Honestly, do you mean that?' and refersto her mother as I my mamma.' "" And Louise?""Oh, Lou is worldly-wise and 'spierenced; vide three broken engagements.Poses, in both cases. Louise voluntarily shouldering the blame for that late Wednes­day revel, shielded about six people. Tene was so shocked that she had to spread thething all over college, just to explain how shocked she was."I' Do you think the men pose?"" Rather, and without so much finesse. " As Madge spoke the sound of retreatingfootsteps made her look out of the window." There," she exclaimed, "there goes one of the inveterates. His is the posterpose. His sentences are splotches of color; his general attitude pseudo-dramatic.Admire him? Of course I do. He is clever and original. But I'm being epigram­matic. Now," thoughtfully, "there's Billy-Billy McKee. He's sympathetic, if youlike. If you have the blues, he's been there himself. If you are jubilant, the world'stoo small for him. If you want a lark, you're just the girl, and if it's short storiesyou crave, why a grate-fire, an interesting book, and an interesting girl, as he confi­dentially assures you, are the summum bonum of existence."" You are simply horrid. I think Mr. McKee is lovely.""Yes, he is. But he's human. And did you ever strike him in an off mood?Well, you have something exciting in store for you.""How about Jack.'" Jack?" Madge laughed. " Oh, Agnes, Agnes. I knew you'd ask. Jack, theworldly-minded-Jack the spiritualist-Jack, the paternal, who gives you adviceabout things you told him yourself; why Jack is delicious!"" Don't prejudice me until spring is over.""Prejudice you! Jack is a darling, but -well, see here. Isn't he-doesn't he-­isn't it all too rich !""Rich! I should say so! Why, Madge, he-It"Don't tell me. I know all about it. I've gone with him myself."190J AYjs H. BcKltI,S, PresidentJOHN C. McKltON, Vice President D. VERNON, 2nd Vice PresidentJOS. T. TAI,BltRT, Cashier(tommercial lRational lSanlt(tbtcago, Ill.Capital, $.,000,000 ••• Surplus, $.,000,000DIRECTORSFRANX:I,IN MAC VltAGH. N. K. FAIRBANK. ROBltRT T. I,INCOl.N.JE:SSJ:t SPAUl.DING. NORMAN WILI,IAMS. JAMES H. E:CKJ:tLS.WM. J. CHAl.MJ:tRS. JOHN C. MeKItON.CAPITAL, $2,000,000The Continental National BanI{ of ChicagoCORNER ADAMS AND LA SALLE STREETCHICAGO, ILL.JOHN C. BLACK, President.ISAAC N. PERRY, Vice-President. 'GEORGE M. RItYNOI.DS, Cashier.. IRA P. BOWEN, Assistant Cashier. BENJAMIN S. MAYER, Ass't CashierDIRECTORSJOHN C. BLACK, ROSWELl. MIl.LER,GEORGE H. WHEELER, HENRY C. DURAND,JAMES H. DOLE, J.OGDaN ARMOUR,BERTHOl.D l.OItWENTHAL. WILLIAM G. HIBBARD,HENRY BOTSFORD.ISSAC N. PERRY,ERNEST A. HAMILL, PresidentCHARLES L. HUTCHINSON; Vice President FRANK W. SMITH, CashierJAMES P. HANKEY, Ass't CashierThe Com Exchange National BankOF CHICAGOCAPITAL $1,000,000 $1,000,000SURPLUS,DIRECTORSSIDNEY A. KENT, JOHN H. DWIGHT, CHARLES H. SCHWABEDWIN G. FOREMAN. CHARLES H. WACKER. EDWARD B. BUTLER,B. M. FREES. BYRON L. SMITH. ERNEST A. HAMILL.CHARLES COUNSELMAN. CHARLES L. HUTCHINSON.HERMAN fELSENTHAL, President K. G. SCHMIDT, Vice Preside.t FRED MILLER, CasbierOapital, - - - ,,500.000BANK OF COMMBRCB�84 La Sa11e Street" It ., Temple BuIlding, OHICAGODIRECTORSJACOB BIRK, Capitalist, formerly of the Wacker LEOPOLD POPPER, Wholesale Wool.& Birk Brewing Company. K. G. SCHMIDT Vice-Pres't Bank of Commerce.ELI B. FELSENTHAL, Attorney. CHARLES SEEGERS, Pres't Crescent LinseedHERMAN FELSENTHAL, President. Oil Company.S. M. FISCHER, Pres't Street's Western Stable ADOLPH SHIRE, Wholesale Cigars.Car Line. FRED W. WOLF, President Fred W. Wolf Co.,WM. GIFFERT Furniture Manufacture. Ice Machines.ADOLPH LOEB, of Ad. Loeb & Son, Fire Ins. SAMUEL WOOLNER, President Atlas DistillingFRED MILLER, Cashier. Company, Peoria.192Cbt Worst Part of tbt 6amtS the' Varsity came tumbling over the ropes "Brindle" Brown felt that hehad to make a tear. For yesterday he was only an ambitious sub ratherunder weight, but today found him regular quarter-back with a responsi­bility upon his shoulders that Napoleon might have envied. Yesterday,when he heard one of the coaches say the captain, "If young Brown willonly interfere hard, he'll do," he walked away with stiffened shouldersand a pugnacious chin feeling very sorry for the other side, but today ashe trotted out among the five-yard lines his courage was so mixed withnervousness that he had to stop and prove to himself by logical reasonsthat courage really had not left him in the lurch.Nor could he keep his eyes long away from the other end of the fieldwhere they were. He'd no idea they were such big fellows; they lookedlike all out-doors; and they seemed so terribly unconcerned as they passed theball about. And now he stood, fascinated with interest, staring at them while aqueer, leaking feeling passed down his spine and settled at the pit of his stomach."Brown! ""Brindle" jumped at the word, for the captain's voice rang sharp, "Come andhandle the ball! "He began passing to the full-back, every now and then stealing a look down-fieldjust to see what they were doing." I may get a line on their play," he murmured to himself in case he needed anexcuse. And then the cheering in the grandstand began for the individual playersand that caught his attention. Would they cheer him? he wondered hypocritically.He bated his breath to hear better. How smooth he felt when they rolled out:"Rah! Rah! Rah! Brindle Bro-o-own!"" 'Varsity this way," sung out the head coach; and as they gathered close to­gether listening to the incisive last words the little quarter-back found the arm of oneof the guards, a senior, about his shoulders. He looked up with conscious pride intothe brown eyes that smiled and winked at him as the head coach said:"Now every man to his place, and remember, fellows, play like blazes!"The other side scattered down field like the men on a well broken chess-board,while the 'Varsity lined up to kick off. The full-back fussed with the ball with vexingdeliberation, as though he was merely trying to make it look more artistic to thegrandstand, and" Brindle" again began to feel that queer, leaky feeling settle uponhim when the referee'S clear voice rang out: "Ready Northwestern? Ready Chicago?Play ball!" Then the little quarter-back's muscles grew tense; he set like a sprinter,and as he raced down under the kick he had to shut his teeth upon the joy that leapedup within him. The grandstand, the cheering, his own mental state, the whole world,had been left in the center of the field; he could see and think of nothing but thatone, purple-legged half-back into whose outstretched arms he saw the shiny, sailingoval would descend.193[1ft and €ndowmtnt Insuranct.ENDOWMENT INSURANCE IN THE NORTHWESTERN MUTUAL LIFEINSURANCE CO. OF MILWAUKEE may be secured by healthy menin amounts from $1,000 to $75,000. By keeping up the annual premiums(less dividend reductions) a man may beas absolutely certain of receivinghis Endowment at the end of the fixed period,· or that it will go to hisestate in case of previous death, as if he were the owner of a U. S. Bondfor an equal amount. Right here, see how much more accessible and available aNORTHWESTERN Endowment policy is than a Government bond. Suppose yousay you will buy a Government bond for $10,000. What does it cost? Anyway $11,000.You are 25 years old and just married. You cannot afford to pay any principal sumfor investment or protection, and you need at least $10,000 Life Insurance. Now, lessthan 3% on $10,000 at first (and less than 2% annually before you get through) will buy$10,000 Life Insurance-just as good as a Government Bond-containing an absoluteguaranty of cash to yourself at age 55 if you live till then. In the one case, you pay110% of the principal cash down. In the other you pay less than 2�% a year in theaverage until you receive the principal, with promise that if you die even the first yearthe whole amount goes immediately to your wife, and the remaining 29 installmentsof premium payments are cancelled. Where in all the financial world can you pur­chase a contract equal to this; a contract containing so many guarantees and advan­tages with so litte outlay of money?Men do not now say that they" Do not believe in Life Insurance;" or that they"never expect to take any." What they do say is, that they "are not yet quite ready,"or have not yet "decided upon the company." Of course, the best time to get Life In­surance is when we are sure we can pass examination. Even tomorrow may be too late.The "best company" is the one which the consensus of opinion of men insured foryears in all the leading companies, pronounces the best. There are a number of ex­cellent companies. Patrons of all commend the company they are in. The differencein testimony is this: Of other companies they write" They are good." Of the North­western they say, "It is best." Such testimony from personal experience of men whohave carried policies, in all the leading companies for years is worth money to YOU."Bishop William Stevens Perry of Iowa, just deceased, carried for years a number ofpolicies in the Northwestern. In an autograph letter he recently said, "My experi­ence with the Northwestern has been so satisfactory that I wish all my insurance wasin that Company." Hundreds of others say the same thing.Before insuring your life send for the pamphlet "Over Their Own Signatures."containing several hundred fac-simile autograph letters from leading men, giving theirexperience and policy records in the Northwestern and other companies. Sent pre_paid to any address. Men desiring information about policy, or young men of integ­rity, tact and good address, not yet established in business, and with disposition tohunt for a thing instead of staying in an office and waiting for it to come, are invitedto address or call upon A. W. KIMBALL, General Agent.C. D. NORTON, Ass't General Agent.8th Floor Chicago Stock Exchange,194to mp CbumJimmy, old boy, there is a lotOf so-called poetry extant­A lot of sentimental rotAnd sickening. melancholy rant­All about girls-or" maidens", rather,-And "love" and "lips" and "slaves" and "queens,"And all such soft, insipid lather.You know, and I know what it means;It means the author's versifyingJust to am use himself or passThe time. It sometimes means he's lying.It mostly means that. he's an ass.And if a fellow thinks that'a fun,All right. But, Jim, it makes me hotTo read real poets and to runAgainst this omnipresent rot.'For even Byron, you will find-But whoa! I'm getting off the track;I didn't start to write a grind. Where was I at? Hem:!-let's turn back.I made a slight animadversionOn certain poets' watery brewTo introduce my main assertion,Which, Jim, old boy, refers to you.Girls are all very well to joshAnd dance with, I admit that, Jim;But as for being friends, it's bosh­You might as well try cherubim.And so, old boy, I quickly tireOf soft effusions on affectionAnd damn the poet for a liarAnd drop him from my recollection.For, Jim, I like you.and I swearOf no girl can I say the same.I like to meet you anywhere,At any time, in any game.I always feel at home with you,Perfectly unconcerned and free.I know the converse too is true­You could come back with this at me.You think you're good friends with a girl(I know how 'tis and so do you know),When suddenly around she'll whirlAnd get as mad as mamma Juno.What for? You said what isn't proper.It's always "propers" "rights" and "wrongs"!You always have to have a stopperAnd handle her with sugar tongs.So I choose you. Your paw, old boy­And also, please, a cigarette.My turn to buy the festive bran,Or yours? Which is it ? I forget.Well, what's the difference? Here you go.­Ho! Busse, fill 'em to the brim.This is the girls-this foam I blow,And now, here'S looking at you, Jim!195RUSH MEDICAL COLLEGEN. E. Cor. Wood and Harrison sts., CHICAGOFACULTYDELASKIE 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., L.L.D., President.Professor of Diseases of the Eye and Ear. 31 Washington Street.HENRY M. LYMAN, A.M., M.D .• Treasurer,Professor of the Principles and Practice of Medicine. 100 State Street-JAMES H. ETHERIDGE, A.M .. M.D .. Secretary, .Professor of Obstetrics and Gynecology, 31 Washington StreetWALTER S. HAINES, A.M .• M.D.,Professor of Chemistry, Pharmacy and Toxicology. Laboratory in College BuildingJAMES NEVINS HYDE, A.M., M.D ..Professor of Skin and Venereal Diseases, 100 State Street,NORMAN BRIDGE, A.M., M.D.,Professor Of Clinical Medicine and Physical Diagnosis. Rush Medical College'ARTHUR DEAN BEVAN, M.D.,Professor of Anatomy, Descriptive and Surgical. 100 State StreetNICHOLAS SENN, M.D., PH.D •• L.L.D.,Professor of Practice of Surgery and Clinical Surgery, 532 Dearborn AvenueE. FLETCHER INGALS, A,M., M.D., Registrar.Professor of Laryngology and Diseases of the Chest. 34 Washington Street,DANIEL R. BROWER, M.D.,Professor of Mental Diseases, Materia Medica and Therapeutics. 34 Wast.ington StreetJOHN B. HAMILTON. MoD" L.L.D.,Professor of Principles of Surgery and Clinical Surgery, 100 State Street.JOHN M. DODSON, A.M., M,D.,Professor of Physiology and Histology. 34 Washington StreetSANGER BROWN, M.D.,Professor of Hygiene and Medical Jurisprudence, 34 Washington StreetTRUMAN W. BROPHY, M.D., D.D.S .• LL.D.,Professor of Dental Pathology and Surgery_, 126 State Street.W. T. BELFIELD, M.D.,Professor of Bacteriology and Lecturer on Surgery. 112 Clark StreetAI.FRED C. COTTON, A.M., M .• D,Professor of Diseases of Children. 677 Jackson Boulevard'LUDWIGHEKTOEN, M.D.,Professor of Morbid Anatomy and Director of the Laboratories of Histology, Pa­thology, Bacteriology and Hygiene.The curriculum of this school of MediCine requires a proper preliminary education. Students.will be required to take four years of study in the college, devoted to laboratory, didactic andclinical instruction, to recitations ana to manual training in the uselor instruments and appliances.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 numerous impor­tant practical courses in manual training in manipulations and in the use of the instrumentsemployed in medicine, surgery, obstetrics and specialties.Manual training in all departments of medicine is a special feature of the instruction in thiscollege. Systematic recitations, conducted in five commodious recitation rooms, are regarded as.a most important means of teaching.With over seventy professors and instructors and with ample room and appliances. this schoolis able to furnish its classes with the most approved srstemattc education in medicine.Physicians and medical students are invited to visit the laboratories and to inspect the educa­tional appliances of this school.For further information and for announcements apply to the College Clerk or to the Secretary,..J. H. ETHERIDGE, M.D., 31 Washington St., Chicago.196jrancesca'�.. �IUSEPPE was like the sunshine of his own Italy, but gossipg rumbled that� . he smiled to much upon Magda the wife of his brother, Antonio. Now: Antonio was morose, had a surly temper and was often away from hiswife for days together while Giuseppe owned the most engaging smiles,didn't know how to get angry, and besides was always by to lend a cheer­ful hand and help speed the dingy hours. And in these facts-I learned them after­wards-lies Magda's whole excuse which you may, or may not admit according toyour moral training and your knowledge of the people, and the judgment thesedemand.On this particular Sunday I swung round the corner into the Italian neighbor- 'hood remarking how the sun lighted up the ugly, squalid street; thinking Giuseppe apicturesque figure as with a red kerchief tied loose about his throat he sipped at ahuge bowl of saffron colored risotto and waved his spoon and smiled up at a windowwhere I could see only a red geranium bowing to the sun and I was smiling too when'Suddenly and noiselessly a little darker man passed me from behind like a chillshadow. Ignorant of the issue I kept still; gay and unconsious of fate Giuseppewaved his spoon at the flower when a quick scream from its window caused him todrop his bowl and turn. But it had scarcely smashed upon the pavement before hefell, stricken beside it while Antonio after flinging a stained knife at the windowwhere the red geranium nodded fled up the garish street.When the ambulance came Giuseppe was quite dead. The morbid crowd fol­lowed on after the corpse, leaving but two of us where Giuseppe had lately stood;myself wondering about the window and a starved cur that eyed me suspiciously as itgreedily lapped up a pool of yellew risotto that had collected in the gutter.N. W.F.Jln Old (outIn the days when I was a little, little boy, thought my grandfather the oldestliving man, and felt a vague uneasiness lest after all the teamster round the cornershould be a stronger man than Sampson; and when I grew a little older and barkedmy shins climbing the big walnut tree in the side yard; and a little older still andmade a two-pronged "sling-shot" and killed robins with it; right up to the timewhen I began to wander with " Harry Castleman " and "Frank)) in an enchanted,adventure-haunted land, and so put away childish things-in brief, that is, from myfifth to my eighth year, I was in love. With an angel. Her name was Gracie Tit­comb. I have forgotten what she looked like, though she must have been. dark andchubby, for I was slim and fair. But I remember I loved her long and faithfully; andwhen yesterday, rummaging through my boxes, I found a little card with a faded,straggling inscription "From Gracie, Christmas 1883, " I let my cigarette go out think­ing of her. Then I went down to write my daily letter to Marie.197Slttpp CimtThe shadows deepen on the hill;I hear a lonely whippoorwill.The twilight heals all labor scars;Above Craig's Mountain peep the stars.The purring leaves, the breathing herds,The hushing croon of brooding birds,The drowsy hum of insect flight,The downy footfall of the night,Are breathing secrets in my ear;They tell me Sleepy Time is near;They tell me thou art coming soon;With all thy train, 0 summer Moon.A dreamy peace swims in my brain,Like breath of woodland after rain;My soul's at rest, hushed on the seaOf undisturbed tranquility;The knotty problems of the dayMelt into mist and fade away;Time's roaring wheels no longer jar;I hear the dream-bells from afar.My eyelids droop, all burden's lift;My hands relax, my soul's adrift.Dream crowds on dream, while Love and HopeShift the bright kaleidoscope.I lose my way, and grope and guessIn slumber's mazy wilderness;I weave on childhood's glorious 100m,Or wade knee-deep in clover bloom,Or float on Lethe' bosom deep,A wanderer in the land of sleep.Leroy T. Weeks.198Ghi6aoO (i01l606 01 D6ntal SUf06fUDENTAL DEPARTMENT Of LAKE fOREST UNIVERSITYThe NeW' Building occupied by the Chicago College of Dental Surgery is, in all its ap­pointments, one of the most perfect and complete in this or any other country.ANNOUNCEMENTThe next annual winter course will begin Wednesday, October 5th, 1898, and continue untilApril 5, 1899. The statements made below as to conditions, fees and courses of lectures relate tothe year ending April 5, 1899, only.FEES AND EXPENSES. The course fee each year is $100.00. Board, including light andfuel can be obtained at a convenient distance from the college at from $2.50 to $4.00 per week.THE FACULTY The faculty consists of twenty-four members. Each member is especiallyadapted and qualified for the department for which he is chosen. In addition to the regular facultythere are twenty-two instructors and demonstrators, and twelve recitation masters.DR. TRUMAN W. BROPHY, Dean, 126 State St., Chicago, III.199HARVEY MEDICAL COLLEGEHarvey Building .t67-t69-t71 South Clark StreetTelephone Express284 _Clinics at Cook County Hospital• • • • Every Friday Night ••••Bedside Obstetrical Practice. Co-Educational, Regular School of Medi­cine, Four Years' Graded Course, Di­plomas recognized by the Illinois StateBoard of Health.���,.,c���..,c�,.,c,.,cBACTERIOLOGICAL LABORATORY.Medical Lectures from 7 to to o'clock every weekday evening. Hospitaland Clinical Attendance and Operative Surgery for Seniors during the day.Out-Practice Calls at all hours. This division of time is superior to the usualprogramme of student life, and insures practical work to every graduate.�ootb� fountainJust a dropAt the top,Like a beautiful gemIn the pearl diademOf a nymph of the sea,With her hair wild and free,Streaming back through the mistIn a multiform twist,O'er the white robe of sprayThat encircles alwayThis dream-world of laughter and song.And at last in the marble-edged poolIt dallies, deliciously cool,Where the sunbeams are drowned in the waves,And the gold-fish in idleness laves,And the breezes dream all the day long.A drop with a flowAnd a strange undertowThat sucks the drop backTo be drowned in the blackLabyrinth of confusion and vortex of night;Hid from the manifold life-breath of light;Lost to the life of the dew on the lea,To awake in the larger, the life of the sea.This life is a flowWith a strange undertow;With a rainbow and pearl,And an unending whirlOf laughter and tearsThat combine through the yearsThe turmoil of the seaAnd the peace of the starsWith the mountain rill's gleeAnd the frenzy of wars;Ever leaping from basin to pool, out of breath,To be tranquil at last in the valley of death.A dropAt the top,Like a dew-pearl aloneOn the top of the mountainAnd close to the throne;Millions united, then ripples, then rillsThat were braided together on star-hovered hills,Leaping in cascades and mad cataractsTill they reach the low valleys and sleep in the sod,To awaken again in the likeness of God.Leroy Titus Weeks.Northwestern University====LAW SCHOOL====•• 'fatUitY ••HENRY WADE ROGERS, LL.D., President of the University.HON. PETER STINGER GROSSCUP, LL.D., Dean.HON. HARVEY B. HURD, LL.D. BLEWETT LEE, A. M., LL.D.EDWARD A. HARRIMAN, A. B., LL. B. EDWIN BURRITT SMITH, A.M., LL M.JOHN H. WIGMORE, A. M., LL. B. JULIAN W. MACK, LL.B.Cbis taw $tbOOI recognizes that the study of law should properly follow thecompletion of a college course, and that the law school is, in its nature, a graduateschool. The School is conducted, not as a commercia! enterprise, but as a regulardepartment of the Northwestern University, with a permanent faculty of specialists. Thework expected of students is essentially university work. Over one-third of the studentsin the Law School possess academic degrees; among these are thirteen graduates of theUniversity of Chieago. The Law School course covers three years, but special provisionis made for college graduates who study law in college. College graduates may receivecredit for college work in law to the extent of one-half year's work in the Law School.Students entering with with such credit are permitted to complete the course in twoyears. For circulars or other information, address the Secretary,711 MASONIC TEMPLE, CHICAGO, ILL.NorthwesternUniversity •••MEDICAL SCHOOLIts standards have always been thehighest, and its rank the best. t •••For circulars of informationaddress the Secretary. • •DR. N. S. DAVIS, JR.,243 f Dearborn St.,CHICAGO, ILL. NorthwesternUniversityWOMAN'S MEDICAL SCHOOL(Wloman's Mebfcal cctteae of ctbfcago)333·339 South Lincoln ST.,CHICAGOClaims to give as extended, as complete, andas thorough a course of instruction in medicineand surgery, in all 'branches, as is given in anymedical. school in this country which admitswomen.Unsurpassed clinical advantages are had atthe Lincoln Street Dispensary, the Cook CountyHospital, the Woman's Hospital, the WesleyHospital, the Illinois Eye and Ear Infirmary, theChicago Free Dispensary, the Mary ThompsonHospital for Women and Children, and theHome for Destitute Crippled Children.For circular of information, addressDR. JOHN RIDLONctorresponbfng $ecretar�103 State St., CHICAGO202tbt Sbatttrt4 €IoptmtntA Novel in Two Chapters, by Blue Jeans LibbeyCHAPTER I.THE MEETINGRegynold Hotfoot Clubbige stood at the corner of two lonely streets. The gloomwas heavy about him; and the cool autumn wind blew the dust in little eddies abouthis feet, and brought down the rustling leaves upon his shining silk hat. He drewhis handsome, forty-dollar top-coat more closely about his manly form, and beat ner­vously with his foot upon the unsympathetic pavement. Suddenly a neighboringclock struck ten." The time has come," he said.And, as if in answer to his words, a voice in the darkness cried out:­" The woman is here! "A moment later Adelaide Glittering, the daughter of the haughty millionaire, wasclasped in his strong arms." Papa is busy signing checks," said the beautiful heiress, "and will not discovermy absence until he finds out that I am gone. But let us hasten."Hurriedly they stepped into a waiting cab and were driven to the house of a cler­gyman.CHAPTER I!.MAN'S DECEITThe ceremony was about to take place. Already the groom stood with hand out­stretched to receive the blushing bride. Suddenly, as if stung by a serpent, the proudbeauty drew back, and cried with a look of unutterable scorn:-" Regynold Hotfoot Clubbige you have deceived me!""Deceived you. How?" came the trembling question."You ask me how! You! who have come to marry me dressed in a sack coatand wearing a silk hat." And turning imperiously on her heel she swept from theroom.Regynold staggered a few steps after her. Then his emotion overpowered him;and, throwing his hands up in the air, he fell back into a swoon and the arms of thedisappointed clergyman.College of Physicians and SurgeonsOF CHICAGO.StbOOI of m�ditin�, Unl"mlty of Illinois······OPPOSITE COOK COUNTY HOSPiTAL .... ••FOUR years graded course. First two years largely laboratory work, last two yearslargely clinical work. Laboratory and clinical facilities unsurpassed in the UnitedStates. Six: annual scholarships of the value of $100.00 each are awarded to the stu­dents in the college. Students interested in medical education are invited to investi­gate this college. For information apply to ....DR. WM. ALLEN PUSEY, Secretary,103 STATE STREET, CHICAGOTHE HENNEn COLLEGE Of ECL[CTIC MEDICINE AND SURGERYA fULL fOUR YEAR COURSE Of EIGHT MONTHS EACHIS REQUIRED.Advanced standing allowed students who have taken preparatory medical work inliterary colleges. Women admitted on equal terms with men.For catalogue and full information addressANSON L. CLARK, A.M.,M.D.DEAN. N. A. GRAVES, M.D., SECRETARY412 FULTON STREETINCORPORATED, MARCH 1886.ttbe (tblcago ®pbtbalmlc (tollege1\ $cbooI of 1\ppUeb ®ptfcs anb ®pbtbalmtc•••• '(tecbntcs for jpbwtctans anb ®Pttcians ....'ttbe <Ibtcago ®pbtbalmtc 1JospttaI For Diseases of the Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat.®ptfcaI $cbooI for �b�stc(ans .Get out of that rut! It will pay you to post yourself thoroughly (not merely superficially as istoo often the case) in applied Ophthalmic Optics, Ophthalmoscopy, Retinascopy, and the tech­nique of the Ocular Muscular System. Learn to know that. it is a fact that the majority ofpatients suffering from (so-called) functional nervous disease do 80 from eye 8train. Investigateand you will know that the Ophthalmic College stands first in America in this special line toimpart the desired knowledge. Write or call.H. M. MARTIN, M. D., President607 Van Buren Street or 103 State Street OHIOAGO. ILL.w. T. KEENER American andForeign-- __ ....II!t.... _-'''Medical and BOOKSScientific..... • ••Catalogue gratisupon application 52 RANDOLPHSTREET..... CHICAGOTELEPHONE MAIN 1563204tb� prOCtSSionHAT'S the use of living?Care is on the way;Skies so bright on Monday,Tuesday will be gray;We must die to-morrow,Why not die to-day?What's the use of loving?Man with woman matesAs the world swings onward­Thinkest thou the Fates,With their shears and distaff,Care who loves-or hates?What's the use of hating?Hate is only loveWith the rough side outwards,Like a cast-off glove.Hate or shrug your shouldersMatters it above?What's the use of thinking?Running in a ring?After all your logic,Life's a piece of string.Tangle it with thinking­Gain you anything?What's the use of moaning?Say the world is bad­Keep the rotten appleWhen ripe can't be had.Circumstance is crazy?Very well; go mad!What's the use of dying?March will turn to May;Hell may take to-morrowIf its bright to-day;Go and drown your sorrow­That's the only way!205Chicago Law SchoolDAY AND EV[NING SESSIONSThe Under-graduate Courses lead to L.L.B. and admission to the Bar. Post-graduate Courses inJurisprudence, Constitutional Law and History, International Law and Political Economy, lead tothe degrees of LL.M. and D.C.L.tb� Sy$t�m employed by the (tbfcaqo 1aw Scbool is that knowu as the "Institutional method," aplan that has received the approval of the leading legal educators of the day. It is upon this methodthat sientific studies generally are now pursued, and its essential features are eqnally well adaptedto the study of law as a science. This method icontemplates : First, the developement of abstractlegal principles as a basis; second, the illustration of the principles by reference to cases; and, third,the practical application of principles to given facts in school courts. In this way the student iseducated rather than tnetructea, and having first acquired the tneoru, is afterwards inducted in thepractice by the application of abstract principles to establish facts .•.. FACULTY .••GEORGE W. WARVELLE, LL.D., Dean, Professor of Constitutional Jurisprudence.JAMES DE WITT ANDREWS, LL.M., Professor of Legal Procedure.AMERICUS B. MELVILLE, LL.B., Professor of Pleading and Equity.ANDREW J. HIRSCHL, A. B., LL.B., Professor of Law of Corporations.D. J. TONE, A.B., LL.B., Professor of the Law of Contracts.A. A. BRUCE, A.B., LL.B., Professor of Administrative Law.JOHN J. TOBIAS, LL.B., PH.D., Professor of Political Science.GEO. McA. MILLER, A.B., LL.B., Professor of the Law of Torts.CHARLES E. POPE, A.M., LL.B., Professor of the Law of Wills.EBIJ:N F. RUNYAN, LL.B , Professor of Common Law Pleading.JOHN A. BENSON, A.M., M.D., Professor of Pyschological Law.FRANCIS W. WALKER, LL.B., Lecturer on Corporations and Corporate Trusts.HON. SAMUEL S. PAGE, LL.B., Lecturer or Pleading and Practice.E. W. ADKINSON, A.M. LL.B. Lecturer on the Law of Eminent Domain.WILLIAM S. FORREST, A.B., LL.B., Lecturer or Criminal Law.LEROY A. GODDARD, A. B., Lecturer on Banking and Finance.HON. C. PORTER JOHNSON, LL.B., Lecturer on Legislative Powers.HON. L. D. CONDEE, LL.M., Lecturer on Municipal Corporations ..... ADVISORY BOARD ....HON. B. D. MAGRUDER, Justice of the Supreme Court of Illinois.HON. JOHN D. CRABTREE, Justice of the Appellate Court of Illinois.HON. SHELBY M. CULLOM, United States Senator from Illinois.HON. W. H. SEAMAN, Judge of United States Circuit Court.HON. RICHARD S. TUTHILL, Judge Circuit Court, Chicago.HON. R. W. CLIFFORD, Judge Circuit Court, Chicago.HON. JOHN C. BLACK, United States District Attorney, Northern District, Illinois.REV. S. M. MERRILL, D.D., LL.D., Bishop M. E. Church, Chicago.C. M. HIGGINSON, President Chicago Academy of Sciences.REV. CHARLES H. TAINTOR, PH.D., Secretary of Congregational Church BuildingSociety.REV. S. A. STEELE, D.D., Secretary Epworth League Society M. E. Church.JA<;OB. S. SMITH, LL.B., President Indiana National Gas & Oil Co., Chicago.For Catalogue address JOHN J. TOBIAS, Secretary, 115 Dearborn St., Chicago206causbt on rbe Wins_HAT an advantage little Saul and his .fello�s possess over Gamaliel!The advantage of numbers only; yet inestimable, January and JuneGamaliel sits within the same four walls, imparting instruction,unchanging, monotonous. Though his pupils are always different,they are never differentiated; he sees them, in the mass, not indi­vidually; he passes them or flunks them in bunches; he cannot distinguish them.This quarter is always the same as the last. A pleasant path enough, but he knowsits every turning.To Saul however the opening of each quarter is the discovery of a new world.In the past three months he has exhausted a subject; he has plumbed a teacher'Sintellect. Now he comes fresh and confident to new fields. Sitting demure and safein his multiplicity he narrowly observes Gamaliel, who is necessarily alone and prom­inent. He feels, with a smile, the old familiar thrill as the hard work before him isdiscussed. That thrill ceased long since to influence him. He notes Gamaliel'sindividuality in every lecture, in every sentence, and in every mannerism, and judgeshis character from an inconsiderate word. On the University books Gamaliel markshim; but he, on the tablets of his memory, with far greater accuracy records Gamalielas "passed," "passed with honor," or, it may be, "failed."* * * *I was writing a particularly hard thesis. I was to discuss certain economic ques-tions that had never been settled by mortal man-and what could one woman dowith them? My pencils were sharpened, the "authorities" were on a shelf beforeme, and notes, as numerous as ballots on election day, were all around me. But stillI did not get on, and when Professor --- came into the room I told him thedifficulty ••• Wait a moment," said he, "if it's wages you're writing about, maybe I havesomething will help. An' Economist' was sent me to-day, and I noticed it had anarticle on wages in it." A minute later he brought the" Economist." We cut theleaves. and found on page 73 a poem. This was the opening line:" The wages of sin is death. "* * * *I met him a day's journey from the Earth, and we traveled on together." I see by the sign," said I, "that you are one of the came-without-being-called.Tell me how you did it. I often wanted to, but never had courage.",. Oh, it was easy," said, he, "laudanum; I had been married just nine days."•• She was not true to you, then? ""Well, she was not the right one. She made doilies. I found them everywhere;• under the dishes, and under books and bags and boxes. At last she put them underthe legs of the chairs, and under my feet when I sat down. Then I came away. Sheread the • Ladies' Home Journal,' too."•• Oh, " said I, my heart going out to him.After we had gone a little farther, he said: " And you, what brought you here?Married? ""Pneumonia," I replied; "I would have been married the next month.""Lucky man! " said he. "If it is not doilies and the • Ladies' Home Journal,'maybe it is afternoon teas. Some women do that." And we journeyed on together.207THE CHICAGO CLINICAL SCHOOLFORMERLY CALLED THE• 'WEST CHICAGO POST-GRAUATE SCHOOL AND POLYCLINIC."$'"FACULTYSURGERY-D. A. K. Steele, M.D. ; J. B. Murphy, M.D.; T. A. Davis, M.D;; Chas. Davidson, M.D.;E. H. Lee, M.D.; Wm. Cuthbertson, M.D.; F. R. Sherwood, M.D.; J. N. Bartholomew, M.D.; W. A.Knfiewski, M.D.; F. Kreissl, M.D., Genito-Urinary Dept. Instructors-F. J. E. Ehrmann, M.D.;W. M. Burroughs, M.D., A. J. Behrendt.l-,.M.D.; C. W. Barrett, M.D.; Jno. S. Nagel, M.D.; W. S.Royce, M.D. ORTHOPEDIC SURGERl::-Alex. Wiener, M.D. .lnstructors-M. F. Clausius. M.D.; U. G, Darling, M.D. EYE-W. L. Noble, M.D.; Oscar Dodd, M.D. Instructors-J. R. Hamill,M.D.; W. O. Nance, M.D. GYNECOLOGY-S.G. West, M.D.; E. L. Moorhead, M.D.; M. Corbet,M.D.; Geo. W. NewtonilM.D�; H. P. Newman, M.D.; H. T. Byford.l-,.M.D. Instructors-J. J. Moor­head, M.D.�)V. E. M.·ler,_M.D.:,l Eunice Bertha Hamill, M.D . .ltiLECTRO-THERAPEUTICS­B. Pirosh, M.D. CHEM.l.STR ... AND TOXICOLOGY-John A. Wesner, M.D. INTERNALMEDIOINE-R. Michel, M.D.; J. H. Hoelscher, M.D.b· Geo. F. Butler, M.D.; Jos. Hawley, M.D.Instructors-G. M. Silverberg, M.D.; H. H. Forline, M. .; H. W. Banks, M.D.; C. D. Pence, M.D.NOSE, THROAT AND EAR-G. F. Hawley, M.D.; J. Homer Coulter, M.D. Instructors-J. B.Littlejohn, MD.; O. Berg, M.D. DERMATOLOGY-A. E. Bertling, M.D.; F. H. MontgomeqT}.M.D. RECTUM-J. M. Auld, M.D. NERVOUS AND MENTAL DISEASES-H. N. Moyer M.D.Iostructor-F. L. Glenn, M.D. OBSTETRIOS AND DISEASES OF OHILDREN-F. B. Earle,M.D. Instructor-Jenny Lind Phillips, M.D. CLINIOAL MIOROSCOPY-G. H. Weaver, M.D.ANATOMICAL DEMON!;TRATIONS-W. T. Eckley, M.D. ; S. G. West, M.D�; E. H. Lee, M.D.DISEASES OF THE STOMACH-W. B. Metcalf, M.D.'D. A. K. STEELE, M.D., PRESIDENT.T. A. DAVIS, M.D., SECRETARY. 8 t 9 W. Harrison se, ChicagoWEST SIDE HOSPITAL OF CHICAGO.819 WEST HARRISON STREETNewly constructed building, centrally located and easy of access. Well arranged wards for pa­tients of limited means. Large, well-furnished single rooms at reasonable prices. Profits from paypatients used exclusively for the maintenance of free beds. The privileges of the hospital extendedto the profession in general, who can bring cases to the institution and treat them as though theywere in their own homes. Most competent nursing furnished by the training school attached. Themedical staff is composed of the following gentlemen: Surgeons-D. A. K. Bteele, M.D. ; J. B. Mur­phy, M.D.; T. A. Davis, M.� . ..i Charles Davison, M.D.; E. H. Lee, M.D. Gynecologist-H. T. By·ford, M.D . ._LH. P. Newman. M.D.; S. G. West, M.D.; G. W. Newton, M.D. Orthopedic Surgeon­Alexander wiener, M.D. Oculists and Aorists-Boerne Bettman,M.D.; W. L. Noble, M.D. Inter·nal Medicine-Ralph Michel, M.D. For further information address the Secretary, S. G. West,M.D., 819 West Harrison Street, Chicago. Telephone West 975 Long Distance.THE MARION SIMS SANITARIUM438 La Salle Avenue, Chicago.q:j HIGH CLASS PRIVATE HOSPITAL for the reception of Gynecological cases�\ and for Abdominal Surgery. Centrally located in one of the best residence dis­tricts of the city, this institution offers accomodations which are superior in everyrespect and combine the comforts and luxuries of the home with the strict appoint­ments of modern sanitary science.The apartments are light and well ventilated, heated by an improved steam andhot-air system. Hardwood floors throughout; furnishings elegant and appropriate.Trained nurses of superior skill are in charge of the patients and the diet is the best.The operating rooms are specially fitted with all modern appliances for asepticsurgery. A competent physician in attendance at all hours.CHANNING W. BARRETT, HOUSE PHYSICIAN(Formerly House Physician Harper Hospital, Detroit.)For further in/ormation addreS8 ..HENRY P. NEWMAN, A.M., M.D., SURGEON IN CHARGE,103 STATE STREET, CHICAGO.208no Crtsl'asslngttPHYLLIS fenced her Maiden heartr�e.SPA�')\N�. Against all base intrusion,,�rr--'-' �, ---J' For she would pass her life a,part7 .... · .. -.... tf�. r::- - In virginal seclusion.She wrought her wall both stout and highAnd set a warning notice nigh:" No trespassing."But Cupid, flitting by one day,The fair enclosure spying,Flew o'er the wall with laughter gay,And found poor Phyllis sighing.She gave him welcome and he staid;But still the warning notice read:"No trespassing."I saw the rogue and ventured too.Sweet Phyllis eyed me coldly;But Cupid proved an ally trueAnd pressed my wooing boldly,So Phyllis bade us both remain;But set the notice up again:"No trespassing."C. R. Barret, '97.209The Chicago Laboratory Supply and Scale Co+Successors to w. A. Olmsted Scientific Co.3t-45 WEST RANDOLPH STREETManufacturers and Dealers inPhysical,. Physiological and Psychological ApparatusSend for CatalogueILLINOIS COLLEGB OF LAWRegular session opens September 5th. College Lecture Rooms, Library and Office,5'th Floor Journal Building; �60 Wasbing'ton S'tree'tSummer Law School opens First Monday in June and continues eight weeks.LL.B. Course, Three Years; Post-Graduate School Elective Courses, One Year's study, LL. M.degree; Two Years, D.C.Q. degree; Three Years, Ph.D. degree.FAOULTYHoward N. Ogden Ph.D., Dean, Comparative Jurisprudence, Evidence and Equity; John G. Hen­derson, LL.D" Crimes and Wills; Roswell Shinn, LL.D., Pleading and Practice and Damages;J. W. Smith. LL,D., Equi ty, Pleading and Practice, Receivers; J. T. Long, LL. D., Con tracts, Quasi·Contracts, Legal Ethics; Carl Evans Boyd, Ph.D., Roman Law, Comparative Constitutional Law;Alva E. Taylor, LL.M., Real Property, Corporations, Commercial Paper: Carlos. S. Hardy, LL.M., Sales, Agency, Partnership, Bailments; Charles A. Denison, LL.M., Constitutional and Inter­national Law; James Ewing Davis, A.M, LL.B., Domestic Relations; H. Stewart Derby, LL.B.,Insurance Law; Hugo Palm, LL.B., Ph.B., Torts; Lugwig Zeisler, LL.B., Guaranty and Surety­ships; Herny Watermann, LL.B., Ph.B., personal Property.SPEOIAL LBOTURERSJohn H. Roemer, A.M., LL.B., Negligence Cases; Taylor E. Brown, LL.M., Patents, Copyrights,Trademarks: William J. DonUn, A.M., LL.B., Eminent Domain, Special Assessments, 'I'axatton:Louis Boisot, A.B., LL.B., Mechanics' Liens; Daniel W. Heffron, A.M., LL.B., Admiralty andMaritime Law; W. Ha.rrison Hipp, M.D., Forensic Medicine.For further information, address the Dean, Journal BUilding, 160 Washington St., Chicago.OAKWOOD SPRINGS SANITARIUMThis Sanitarium was designed for the special care and treatment of those affiicted withdiseases of the mind and nervous system. It was built a.t a cost of over $100,000, and offers all thecomforts of a delightful home, with such treatment as wide experience and able counsel can give.S. B. Buclxmaster. M.D., Superintendent and Resident Physician in Charge. F'or­merlv Superintendent of Wisconsin State Hospital for the Insane, and Prof. Elecro-Therapeuticsand Adj. Prof. Physiology, College of Physicians and Surgeons, Chicago.Oscar A. King. M.D .• Chicago, President and Attending Physician. Prof. Neu­rology, Psychiatry and Clinical Medicine, College of Physicians and Surgeons, Chicago; Patholo­gist and Consulting Neurologist to the Wisconsin State Institutions for the Insane.CONSULTING PHYSIOIANSDr. Daniel R. Bower, Prof. Mental Diseases, Materia Medica and Therapeutics, Rush Medi­cal College; Prof. Nervous Diseases and Clinical Medicine, N. W, Univ., Woman's Medical Col­lege, Chicago. Dr. Archibald Church, Prof. Mental Diseases and Clinical- Neurology, N. W. Univ.Medical College; Prof. Neurology, Chicago Polyclinic, Chicago. Dr. Henry M. Lyman, Prof.Practice of Medicine, Rush Medical College; Prot, Mental and Nervous Diseases, ChicagoPolyclinic, Chicago, REFERENCES-By Permission.Dr. Frank Billings, Chicago; Dr. E. C. Dudley, Chicago; Dr. F'ernand Henrotin, Chicago; Dr.Henry B. Favill, Chicago; Dr. John H. Chew, Chicago; Dr. L. H. Frankenthal, Chicago; Dr. Sid­ney Kuh, Chicago; Dr. W. H. Palmer, Janesville, Wis.; Dr. A. E. Hoadly, Chicago; Dr. OttoSchmidt, Chicago; Dr. Henry Lewis, Chicago; Dr. J. B. Herrick, Chicago; Dr. D. W. Graham,Chicago; Dr. H. B, Stehman, Chicago. For further information, terms, etc., please address,DR. 5. B. BUCKMASTBR, Lake O"neva, wu.,or DR. OSCAR A. KINO, 70 State Street, Chicago210(out and IWe keep our watch together,Love and I,In the golden dreamy weatherWhen June holds in fee the sky.We watch the rainbow in the blue;Armfuls of roses for us two;We know our dreams will all come true,Love and I.We keep our watch together,Love and I,In October's mournful weatherWhen the winds go moaning by.Our eyelids strain against the sleet,But no inch will we retreat;We will hold at bay defeat,Love and I.We keep our watch together,Love and I,In the dark and stormy weather,Under winter's shuddering sky.A mound between us heaped with snow;Ice in our hearts, yet we'll not go;We'll keep our watch and perish so,Love and 1.We keep our watch together,Love and.I,In the dreamy, dreamy weather,Under heaven's eternal sky.We watch the dross turn into gold;We watch all loveliness unfold;And each other's hands we hold,Love and I.LeRoy Titus Weeks.211Casual ConTt4trattsII THIN blue ice-sheet crusted the board walk.With balancing arms, poising a big tigermuff at arms-length, Marilla slid along.Her progress a ripple of exclamations,' littleshouts, bubblings of laughter.' Her body'slanted forward to the drift of the motion. The man at herside walked along heavily. . He wished she' would even her.gait. Impossible to adapt any pace to her irregular motion.Her appreciation of his discomfort was an amusement."You're hating me, now;" this with nose and chin buriedin the, muff, and a delicious demureness of the lifted eye." Oh yes you are. I could tell you exactly the way you feel.""Do.""No. It wouldn't amuse me, I know, and you know. So what would be thegood. Besides, they're not pretty thoughts."His annoyance grew. An irritable jar substituted for his usual appreciative re­sponse to the little coquetries of which her manner was an aggregate.When they reached the house they. were to 'dine at-her brother's=-his friend's-she changed to the serious. "We are playing each other's parts, to-night," shesaid."You mean-""That I am the genial good-natured one, and you the moody. Which ourfriends would not believe. But do point your grievance. For the life of me, I'mblind. Granted I have found you in a rather cheap subterfuge. Haven't I beenchanning about it? A very little modifying you 'see, served. me. I always believedyou a liar. But accept my bon-hommie. You really better had. And you know Ishan't talk. Now rouse up, and don't spoil your own hand. I shall Iead up to yourtrumps, and if you play the game, may still respect you a bit. Here-colors to fightunder." And tip-toeing to reach his height, she pinned half her, violets to his coat,with a little caressing touch and a flash of blue eyes up to his. Then she stepped intothe door. 'Everyone about the campus knows him-at least by sight. He is rather good­looking, has literary and dramatic aspirations, dresses well, practices economy whenwith men, and is considered a good fellow generally by women. I once heard himdescribe himself in a newspaper office as a "free lance"; but among the social out­-casts he is always spoken of as the Immaculate Deception. He is well fortified.against the unpleasant jars of life by a self-possession born of conceit. I never sawhim confused or embarrassed but once; that was the other afternoon on the down,"town express train.Contrary to his usual custom he rode in' the smoking-car; and as he stood'leaning gracefully against the ice-water tank, he looked particularly well in his new'double-breasted coat and his sharply creased trousers. When the train stopped at thel-Iyde Park station, a drunken laboring man noisily entered the car. He walked up212T:Mi6hle(PATENTED)HIGH-SPEEDPRINTINGPRESS & ���������Th ... ". hi l d as a producer of all grades of printing because of its mechanicale I,de e ea S construction in all points which go to help do work expedi tiously andwell. It produces the finest grades of printing in a superior mannerand a daily product unat.tatned by a�y other printing press. The. accompanying" cut sh9wS thepress with our new sheet dehvery� WhICh de.llvers .the sheet �Jn'!ted side up or down., as the pressmanfinds it expedient in the production of various k inds of pr intmg. fhe Michie IS the only pressbuilt possessing these most valuable features, which add but small cost to the machine. '.The Miehle press has many other points of superiority over other makes which will gladlybe made lmown by correspondence with us.THE MIEHLE PRINTING P'RESS AND MFG. CO�CHICAGO, ILLINOIS, U. S. A.MAH OFFICE AND FACTORY, Cor. Clinton & Fulton Sts., CHICAGO.SOUTH SIDE OFFICE, 274 Dearborn Street, CHICA.GO. Em'ERN mICE, 30 Reade St., NEW YORK CITY.LONDON OFFICE, 29 New Bridge Street, E. C.THE HAHNEMANNI»¢dtcal COII¢S¢and fiOSJ)Ualof ebitago-u�TtiENEWH05PITAL�UILD;NG. THt: NEW COLLEGE BUILDING. Four Years' Course Obligatory.Graduates of University ScienceCourses for StudentsIntending to Study MedicineAdmitted to Advanced Standing.�new £oll¢g¢ and Hospital BuildingsErectedat a';Cost of $150,000Magnificently Equipped and FurnishedTHILARGEST HOMEOPATHIC ME mCAL COLLE6EAND HOSPITAL IN THE WORLDUbe-Ubtrt)2==1Rintb 'BnnllaI Session.�pe'ns September 13, 1898CLINICAL and Dissecting Material in abundance. Large, well equipped Labor­atories, Museum, Library, Reading Room, Smoking Room, and Ladies' WaitingRoom. Steam Heat and Electric Lights. For announcement and further particulars,address..... JOS. C. COBB, M.D., Registrar, 2811 Cottage Grove Avenue.213MARSH & GRANTPrintingCompany. DESIGNERS, ENGRAVERS.;!..;!..;!..}/. PRINTERS AND BINDERS359=361 D�arbOrn Sf.£or. Harrison st.This Bookis a Sample ofOur ....ColI¢S¢ }lunual WorkCorrespondenceSolicited .....C?�Write for our Booklets: H HOW TO GET IT" and ,:1.,:1.,:1.,:1.,:1.,;1.uADVER TISE AND BRING BUSINESS"214to the Immaculate Deception and asked for a match. Then, with all the volubilityof intoxication, he plunged into a detailed account of his past life, producing fromhis pocket letters and money as evidence of the truth of his story. The ImmaculateDeception, in his superior, aristocratic way, enjoyed the situation very much. Itgave him an opportunity to make bright remarks and to ask clever questions. Andthe innocent replies of the drunken man, and his utter ignorance of the fact that hewas being made fun of, were very amusing to the other passengers. At last, havingreceived a match, and having lighted his stump of a pipe, the drunken man drewback a step or two and scrutinized the Immaculate Deception from head to foot.Then he said in a voice of hearty admiration, and with the evident intention of con­veying a compliment:"You're a good-feller; and I always like to meet a good-feller." Then, afteranother moment of careful scrutiny, "I bet I know what you do. You work in a ho­tel; I can tell by that cigar and uniform."It was late at night, and the long street was almost deserted. The screens inthe window of a saloon were lowered. It was warm and bright inside and men weredrinking and playing pool quietly enough. Out in the dark, on the slippery sidewalk crouched the miserable figure of a man, his hat over his eyes, hands in his pock­ets to keep from freezing, his face close to the edge of the broad plate glass, lookingin over the screen. He was already in spirit inside, enjoying the warmth and good­fellowship With" the boys," though the lack of a dime for a drink kept his wretchedbody out in the rain. The head-light of the cable-car flashed over his rusty hat, bentshoulders and huddled figure, and left him in the same position, motionless.In pursuitOver me floatest thouRadiantly;Long in pursuit have IFollowed thee.Others with earthward gazeTreasures have gained;Empty my hands of wealth,Thee unattained ..Yet I shall follow thee,This is my fate­Nay, do not pity me,Able to wait.Ida Ahlborn Weeks.215ESTABLISHED J868-"'-INCORPORATED J888.LIBBY, McNEILL & LIBBYpacktfs and pnstrutfsOf mtatsCanned Meats, Smoked Meats, Barreled Beef, Extract of Beef,.Canned Soups, Condensed Mince Meat.HOTELS SUPPLI[D WITH CUTS or B[[f, PORK, MUTTON, VEAL, POULTRY, [TC.UNION STOCK. YARDSCHICAGO, ILL., U. S. A.C'ak� 6�ntua Sanatorium IsageneralSanitoriumhandsomelylocated on the shores of Lake Gen-·eva. It is equipped in the best pos­sible manner for Medical and, Sur­gical treatment. It is open for all proper cases. No cases of insanity, inebriety or other objectionablecases, however, are admitted or treated. For healthfulness and beauty the location is unsurpassed.The rooms are very large, with handsome fireplaces and large windows from which one beholds the­loveliest of views. The training. skill and efficiency of our nurses and mas8eur" as well as theequipment for baths and hydrotherapy are not surpassed by any other institution. All physicians of.the staff are in active attendance. The charges are moderate.MEDICAL STAFF.HENRY P. NEWMAN, M.D., Chicago, Operations in GynecoloiY.JOHN B. MURPHY, M.D., Chicago, Operations in Surgery.J. H. ETHRIDGE, M.D., Chicago, Operations In Gynecology.OSCAR A. KING, M.D., Chicago, Attending Neurologist.HENRY T. BYFORD, M.D., Chicago, Operations in Gynecology.HENRY B. FAVILL, M.D., Consulting Physician.MATTHEW CORBETT, M.D., Chicago, Attending Gynecologist.JOHN .E. HARPER, M.D., Attending Occuliat.THOS. A. DAVIS, M.D, Chicago, Operations In Surgery.N. S. DAVIS, Jr., M.D., Chicago, ConSUlting Physician.WM. BALLENGER, M.D., Attending Rhinologist and Laryngolist.JOHN H. CURTIS, M.D., Attending Physician.F. H. SKINNER, D.D.S., Attending Dentist.WAL T.ER B. METCALF, M.D., Resident Physician in Charge.For further information or Circulars, addressOSCAR A. KING, M.D., 70 State Street, Chicago; or,WALTER B. METCALF, M.D., Lake Geneva, Wi,.lrbe 1alle GenCl)a Sanatorium should not be confounded with the Oakwood Springs Sanitarium,located also at Lake Geneva, but devoted exclusively to the treatment of mental and the severerforms of nervous diseases. In organization it has no connection with this Sanatorlum.2161893Words by:P. FRANK STEIGMEYBR, '97 Air, "Benny Havens 0"Arr. by M. E. COLEMAN, '98Oh, we came here in the autumn of eighteen ninety-three;A half a dozen buildings had then the U. of C.Cobb Hall was then the only place where we could daily flunk,And in the dear old Drexel" Dorm.," was the only place to bunk.CHORUS:o Chicago, Chicago, how great you've grown to be,Since first we cast our lot with thine in eighteen ninety-three.Oh, there were more Profs. than students, but then we didn't care;They spent their days in research work, their evenings at the Fair;And life upon the campus was one continual swing;We watched the Ferris wheel go 'round, and we didn't do a thing.Oh, the commons started up that year, this was their bill of fare:." Sauce with mold, weak coffee cold, and a hunk of grizzly bear; "And the man who caught the most roaches, at breakfast or at tea,Was deemed the hero of the hour, thereafter wore a C.Oh, the girls were mostly twenty-eight, and after" Ph.D's,"They took four hours in those old days; there were no extra fees;And the men were mostly married, which proved a great hoodooTo all society events: what could the poor girls do?Oh, the Glee Club took a trip that year, they made it in a day;The second stop was Downer's Grove, the first was Aurora;But now we feast and dance and sing; through distance fast we're whirled,And when the Glee Club's air ship's done, we'll tour around the world.217Jack tatttrlp's RustOr the foiling of the Pirates-A Tale of Adventure on the Sea Beyond theThree-Mile Limit"Pipe all hands to the main quarter," cried the captain of the Bounding Lass,as he stepped down from the bridge. Instantly the clear, shrill notes of the bo's'n's.whistle split the quiet air, and the blue-jackets came rushing up from the fo'c's'le.When they had ranged themselves abaft the wheel, the captain addressed them:"My men," said he, "there is a low, close-hauled brig lugging in the starboardoffing. I like not her look, for unless I am mistaken she is a pirate."A ripple of suppressed excitement ran along the line of sailors." At a time like this," continued the captain, "four or five heads are better thanone. If we are caught not a man will live to be interviewed by newspaper corres-­pondents. Has anyone a suggestion to offer?"For several minutes there was a painful silence, broken only by the musicalhumming of the wind in the rigging, and by the rattle of the binnacle. Then,youthful, manly figure separated itself from the group of tars, and a boyish voicerang out:" Captain, I will save the ship !""Shiver my timbers," said Old 'rom, the bo's'n's mate, nudging the man nexthim, "if that ain't Jack Tatterly, the cabin-boy."The captain looked down sharply at the mere lad of about thirteen years, who-had offered to hazard so much .• , You are young," he said, frowning hoarsely."Yes," replied our hero modestly, "but so was Napoleon when a child."A flattering mutter of approbation from the sailors made Jack flush slightly."I shall leave everything to you," said the captain after a careful survey 'of thelad. "From now until we reach port you may consider the entire crew, myself inclu-­ded, under your command .. "Night and the pirate ship had been rapidly approaching; and by the time thatthe darkness was complete scarcely a league intervened between the Bounding Lassand her pursuer. After a few hurried preparations Jack Tatterly with Old Tom, thebo's'n's mate as his only companion, manned the captain's gig and silently rowedaway over the black, oily swells in the direction of the pirate vessel. Half an hour ofhard work brought the low, rakish brig into sight, and under the direction of Jack,Old Tom pulled the gig under the bowsprit. It was but the work of a moment forthe lad to throw a ratline over the spar and pull himself up hand over hand. Quickly218To Buyers ofRich .....CUTGLASSFINECHINABRIC-A-BRACandBEAUTIFULAND .....ORIGINALLAMPSWe extend a cor­dial invitation toinspect onr line.All ElevatedTrainsStop at ourDoor ....STATE & LAK[STR[ETPITKIN & BROOKSRETAILERS OF flN[(HINA Intercollegiate Bureau and Regis­•.• try of Academic Costume •..COTRELL & LEONARD472-478 BroadwayAlbany, N. Y. _Makers of the Caps, Gowns, andHoods to the Universityof Chicago.To University ofMichigan j Uni­versity of Minne­sota, Universityof Nebraska,Uni­versity of Kan­sas, Universityof Missouri, Har­vard, Yale, Prin­ceton, Columbia,Bryn Mawr. Wel­Ieslv, Radcliffe,and a hundredothers .Illustrated bulletin, samples, etc.,upon application.Rich gowns for the Pulpit and forthe Bench.Mr. W. C. Kern our Chicago Agentat the University of Chicago.HARRISON'S STUDIOCentral Music HallPlatinum... Finish The ...Finest Photosyet ....ProducedProfessional Photos a SpecialtyBreast Pin, Button,Cuff Button andScarf Pin ...Photographs in all theLatest Styles andSuperior Finish.HARRISON'S STUDIOJAMES SMEETON, M.A.MASTER OF' ADVERTISING F'OR CAP AND GOWN '98PHOTOGRAPH BY HARAlSON Cor. State and Randolph.Old Tom passed a twenty-foot boom up to him; and our hero rapidly and securelylashed it to the bowsprit. Then taking a dimly lighted ship's lantern from under hislantern. Almost immediately the lookout on board the pirate ship sang out:coat he carefully worked his way out to the end of the boom, and there fastened theI" Ship ahoy!"" Where away?" roared the pirate captain." Dead ahead, sir," replied the lookout." Ay! ay! I make her out," cried "the captain. And then he euphoniouslyadded, referring to the commanding officer of the Bounding Lass: "The damn foolhas lit a light."Jack, laughing quietly to himself. dropped from his perilous position into thestrong arms of Old Tom. Together they swiftly rowed back to the Bounding Lass.The good ship was put about, and made off on the leeward tack, cutting like a knifethrough the water, and throwing tons of spray against the heavens.All night long the pirate ship pursued the ever-distant light. And it was onlywith the coming of gray dawn that her barbarous captain discovered the clever ruseby which Jack Tatterly had saved the lives of himself et a1.T.H.Cbt Sorrowful StrtamIn the Land of Life it fioweth and floweth,The Sorrowful Stream.And through its waters each mortal goeth,However he dreamHe will never reach the pitiless beachOf the Sorrowful Stream.There are some, and the waters but lap their feet,Of the Sorrowful Stream,And some 'gainst whose breast the billows beatAnd the foam-crests gleam.And others there be, like wrecks of the sea,Washed away by the Sorrowful Stream.Florence Wilkinson.221•. Price $2.50 and up ..We are the only manufacturersin the United States who makeall kinds of Turkish, Russian orMedicated Vapor Bath, Hot AirApparatus, etc. for Home andHospital use."'&';!''''&';!'.:1-'''&.:1- J1,.;!...,&Catalogue Free. Also a copy ofJournal of Chronic Diseases ifDesired • .;!. .;!. .;!. .;!. .;!. .:I-,J&';!'.J&.;/I.;I..:I-.. FRANK S. BETZ & CO ..78 STATE STREET.Hospitals and Chemical Laboratories.We supply Medicinal Substances, Chemicals,Surgical Dressings and Requisites at favor­able prices. We will be pleased to submitquotations if requested. MORRISON, PLUMMER & CO.WHOLESALE DRUOOISTS. CHICAOO.The Latest Acknowledged StandardManual forPRESIDENTS, SECRETARIES,DIRECTORS, CHAIRMEN,PRESIDING OFFICERS,And everyone In anyway connected with pubalie life or corporate bodies, IsReed's Rules of OrderBYTHE HON. THOMAS B. REED,Speaker of theHouse of Representatives."I commend the book most highly."WILLIAn McKINLEY,President of the United state«."Reasonable, right and rigid."J. 5TERLINO nORTON,EX-Secretary af Agriculture.CLOTH, 75 CENTS,LEATHER, $1.25.RAND, McNALLY & CO., Publishers, CHICAGO.Western Bank NoteCompany••• CH'ICAGOEngravers and Bondsl===PrinttfS of.... • •• DiplomasBI\N� CHEC�SI\ND DRI\FTS.SI\FETY TINTS.PI\RCH�ENT I\NDSI\FETY PI\PERS.Lithograph Stationery For Manufacturers,Merchants and Bankers.First-class Designs and Engraving.Listable on the Stock Exchanges of NewYork and Chicago.222JI Woman ,rom SomtwbtrtA woman entered the parlor of a Philadelphia hotel and seated herself in a rock­ing chair. She was middle-aged and stout, and the chair creaked comfortably as itswung to and fro. She had been sight-seeing and was warm, and tired, and glad torest. A man sat at a table, near by, making a memorandum in his notebook; as heput the book away, he glanced toward her, and she immediately addressed him:" Did you ever see so many people? They come from every part of the world, too.I'm from Chicago, myself; I suppose you know where that is?"The man bowed with grave politeness. "Yes," he assented, "I know whereChicago is.""Everyone does;" said the woman, plying her palm-leaf fan with vigor, "that'sthe reaso� I always say I'm from Chicago; I get so tired of explaining. I'm reallyfrom Aurora, a town near Chicago. I don't suppose you ever heard of Aurora,though; hardly anyone has."The man's eyes twinkled. "Oh, yes; I have been in Aurora, a thriving littlecity. ". The woman stopped rocking and regarded her auditor with a kindling interest." So it is," she agreed cordially, "we can get almost anything there we want; there'swhere we go to do our extra trading; it's our nearest large town. You see we don'tlive exactly in Aurora; our home is at Shabbona, a few miles from there. It's only alittle town, just a station on the railroad. Of course, you never heard of it; nobodyhas."" Of Shabbona? " inquired the man, smiling, "yes, I know where Shabonna is.Years ago, I saw the old chief, too, for whom the town was named. Shabbona is apleasant village."The woman nodded cheerily and looked, with friendly eyes, toward the man,"Just w..hat I think every time I go there," she asserted, with approval. "We're notprecisely in Shabbona, you understand; that's our postoffice, though. Our farm isjust a few miles east."223••• BORDENS •••WHY USE and payout good money for a poor article of so-called milk, Skimmed, Wateredand otherwise adulterated in various ways to resemble whae it is not, when you can obtainBORDEN'S ABSOLUTELY PURE MILK AND CREAMFrom the very best dairies In the State of illinois.Put up in steam cleaned GLASS BOTTLES and hermetically sealed at the Company's own Bottlingstations at Elgin and Belvidere. Expressed to the city in Refrigerator Cars and delivered to custo­mers in patented Refrigerator Wagons. This Company also suppliesBORDEN'S CELEBRATED CONDENSED MILK(Unsweetened and Sterilzed.) Put up in Half-Pint Glass Jars.Orders by Mail or Telephoae to the following offices will have prompt attlntiOR.1546-5154 West Van Buren Street, Telephone 856 West.617-688 East Forty-Seventh Street. Telephone 508 Oakland.ILLINOIS BRA.NCH OF THE N. Y. CONDENSED MILK CO.This Book is Printedwith'" .:I-Ink .•• fromCbas. Entu lobnson .6j CO.99 HARRISON ST.�"tt"CHICAGO �OO�OOO��04)o�eOO�04)e�oo-===-04)OC:VBOOT JACK: Peculiarly suited to iATHLETES ..SPORTING MEN..IMEN=ABOUT=TOWN.A Handsome Aluminum Pocket Case for !ITobacco sent free to cons umer return ing tous 36 strips from s-cent cuts of Boot Jack.Order of any Tobacconist or of ..JOHN FINZER &. BROS., Manufacturers tLouisville, Ky. 1C:::::>OOO�aoc:::>OIlOOC:::::>OIlO-=-O�G-=-OOG��OOGTRAVELVia theDortbw�st�rn £jn�tt"tt"�TO ALL POINTSNORTH AND NORT�TCblcago Pboto ,inisbing CO.Developing and Finishingfor AmateurWC��I(odaks, and £amtra$� boulbt, sold,fxcbanltd and I\tnttd.PHOTOGRAPHIC SUPPLIES OF ALL KINDS.Mail oraers 8olicited. (Jatalogue andBargain List (In application::::::::::Special discounts on Cameras.609 Champlain Bldg., CHICAGO. DR. J. G.TRINE·S MOVEMENT CUREInltitute of thl Improved .. .•Experienced application of swedish move­ments, manual and mechanical massage to chro­nic forms of disease a specialty. Especiallyapplicable in case of Chronic Rheumatism.Paralysis. Sciatica, General Debility, SpinalCurvature. Stiff Joints, Gout. Muscnlar Atrophy,Imperfect Oiroula tion, Cold Extremitiest SwollenGlands, Dropsical Swellings, HremorrhOlds� Con­stipation of Bowels, Torpidity of the Liver,Dyspepsia, and forms of indigestion, Asthma,Pulmonary Weakness, Nervous affections of allkindsiNeuralgia. Sleepnessness, Diseases ef theFema e Pelvis, Displacements, etc. For theseaffections it is a radical cure. Chronic Catarrh,Chronic Headache, and a hOlt of minor ailmentshave been cured in this way. Send for circular.JOHN G. TRINE, •. D. Champlain Bldg. Room. 710-719.sense, and Ronstnst, on WbtdsThe two spun forward smoothly, side by side.I I Oh, the delicious spring morning," said the Sentimentalist, taking a deepbreath."Yes. Warm for April, isn't it?" answered the embryo summer girl, who wasstill chrysalissed in broadcloth and a gray fedora.A robin piped triumph from a fence, but two south-going cyclists passed, and heflew to an elm."Did you notice?" cried the Sentimentalist ecstatically. "Plucky little soul tobrave it out so early! ""Yes. But I must say, shirtwaists in April seems rushing the season."I I Shirtwaists? ""Yes. On the girl. Wasn't that what you meant?"A dividing puddle cut off the explanation. As he again glided to his place besideher, they passed a patch of starry dandelions.He was about to exclaim, but she interrupted:"Have you ever eaten any of the vile salad they concoct from those little yellowthings? You get it abroad, at little country places. Nasty stuff?"He hadn't. He was in Iuck, she said. They rode on.I I See that slope of pines by the farm there? It reminds me of a bit of road nearOcean Beach. Do you remember t ""Yes," she said again. "What a poky old place Ocean Beach was! Thankheavens, I have persuaded the family to go to Bar Harbor this year. I'm dying for ajo11y time.""And you'll have it there?"II Oh dear, yes! There are no end of things one can do there, you know. I'mdreadfully busy these days, planning a11 my gowns. You see there's tennis, and golf,and yachting, and riding and wheeling, besides the bathing and the going out. ButI do love the country! ""So do I." He was happy that they agreed for once.A stretch of woodland lay before them. The sunlight played across the ruddypine-strewn path in patches. The underbrush was tipped green. Little creepingcreatures ran to and fro, forgetting their winter lethargy.She struck a root and her wheel swerved. "Oh to have a11 these roadsasphalted ! " she sighed."Let's sit in the shade and rest," he said.225•• Cap¢strp Paintings ••..2,000 Tapestry Paintings to Choose From.38 Artists Employed, Including Gold Medalists from the Paris Salon.'WIaIl papersNew styles, designed by gold medal artists. From 10 cents per roll up. Send 50cents to prepay express on large sample book and drapery. A quantity of last year'spaper, $1 and $2 per roll, now IOC and 25c. Will include drapery samples in package.See our Metallic French Pressed, and lida papers, whichharmonize with all kinds of woodwork and carpets, andwe have special draperies to match. By all means see thesethings.Special silk draperies made at our Broomhead Mills,Paterson, N. J.ttapestrl! materialsWe manufacture tapestry materials. Superior to foreign goods, and half theprice. Books of samples, 10 cents. Send $1'50 for trial order, for :2 yards of 50-inchNo.6 goods, worth $3.00.IDecoratfonsWrite for our color schemes, designs, estimates. Artists sent to all parts of theworld to do every sort of decorating and painting. We are educating the country tocolor-harmony. Relief, stained glass, wall paper, carpets, furniture, draperies, etc.Pupils taught. Send $25.00 for a color scheme to decorate your home.On receipt of $1.00 Mr. Douthitt will answer any questions on interior decora­tions color-harmony and harmony of form, harmony of wall covering, carpets,curtains, tiles, furniture, gas fixtures, etc.� � '"'outbt'tt american ttapeatr\? co.,J. JJ...:.I. 286 3ftftb :t\\1enue, 1Rew moth.226She leaned her back against a rough pine trunk, drawing up her knees, and press­ing two deliciously audacious looking little feet, booted high in brown, into the soft,elastic moss tufts.The Sentimentalist sat opposite. He adored her this morning. She was certainlyvery seductive, with that fresh, crisp, youngness of hers, that matched the season.She seemed to embody it all, its subtle suggestiveness, the full promise of the youngyear, its wholesome spontaneity. He looked at her eyes-yes, and its enigma, itsdelicious mystery.Looking up she met his gaze." Do you know, Mr. Allerton, what would be simply ideal now?""Tell me.""Well, if we could have two splendid big ice-cold glasses of beer. Wouldn't ittaste good? "By which he perceived that the summer girl, like nature, whom she embodiedthis morning, was after all at heart a gross materialist.Edna Stanton.Writing a �tr$t(Rondeau with acknowledgements to Dobson.)To write a verse I'm asked to try.The one who asks I can't deny;Her pleading tones I can't refuse­r know I'll irritate the muse;But what does that, pray, signify?She bids me write, and though I dieI must attempt to glorifyErato. Pshaw! It gives the bluesTo write a verse.But then, here goes! List now a sigh;Imagine tears bedim my eye;I'm growing faint! What, no such ruseAvails? Then I am sure to loseMy wits. No wonder when I try-To write averse.C. L. Marsh.227WylieCampingCompanyYellowstoneNationalParkA New Method ofCaring for Tourists � � �Bozeman, MontanaOur camps are permanent; no more moving of tents.Excellent cooks at all camps; steel range cook stoves;dining and other tents heated with stoves. Largecompartment tents. Woven wire springs under finewool mattress beds; no sleeping on ground. Provis­ions best market affords. Our ticket includes thesteamer trip on Yellowstone Lake. Meet train everyday. Fine covered buggies to ride in. Longer timeat points of interest than any other method gives.. .Price of seven-day trip including every expense $35.00No extra charge for side trips.. . . . . . . . .Make a special feature of caring for wheelmen at $2.50per day. Send for. illustrated descriptive folder . -AddressW. W. WylieGardiner, Montana(During Park Seasonl(Remainder of Yeat )228JI CaltOW gather 'round me one and all,A story for to hear.A wondrous tale it is; so lendA most atttentive ear;And if it is not wise, or new, or true, at least it's queer.'Twas in the early far-off daysWhen first the world begun;The earth was in the workshop yet,But it was nearly done.How it was made I need not state (see Gen. I, 1).There hung the globe, quite fresh and new,And everything was there;Lake Michigan and Lincoln Park,With every single bear,And Potter Palmer's residence, and Hooley's, and the Fair.Dame Nature stood and eyed her workWith a complacent smile." It's all done but the paint," she said;" I'll let it dry awhile,And then I'll put the colors on and fix it up in style."And so she got her paint-box outAll ready to begin(The kind you buy for fifty cents,The cover is of tin,And there are little china plates to mix the colors in. )Dame Nature dipped her brush, and mixedThe colors in a trice;And oh! the pains she took to layEach color smooth and nice.For desert sands she used gamboge; the trees were all green bice.229Tapestry andArt Schools • •Six 3-hour tapestry-painting, china or miniature lessons, in studio, $5.00. Com­plete written instructions by mail, $1.00. Tapestry paintings rented, full-size draw­ings, paints, brushes, etc., supplied. Nowhere- Paris not excepted- are suchadvantages offered pupils. New catalogue 125 studies, 25 cents. Send $1.00 forcomplete instruction. in tapestry painting and compendium of 140 studie$.The Goddess of AtvatabarA trip to the Interior World. "Jules Verne in his happiest daysoutdone." 318 octavo pages, 4:4 illustrations, price $2.00, postage pre­paid. Paper covers, 00 cents.Manual of Art DecorationsThe art book of the century, 200 royal quarto pages. 50 superb full­page illustrations (11 colored) of modern interiors. Send $3.00 forthis $5.00 art book.GoblIn Pz-inted Burlaps25 cents a yard-36 inches wide. Lida leather paper at $3.00 perroll.Goblin Art Drs_peryTo match all sorts of papers, from 10 cents per yard up. In order thatwe may introduce this line of new art goods, we will send one yardeach of 50 different kinds of our most choice patterns for $7.50.J. F. DOUT'HITT286 fifth Ave.,near 30th St., New York American Tapestry and Decorative Co.Open evenings unti1lO, to discuss decorations with business men230So color after color came,All in the nicest taste.She tipped the mountain peaks with snow;Each curly stream she traced,And then she made old Ocean's gray and solitary waste.Now one paint only was unused;It was her choicest one,. " When I have found a place for that,"She said, "I shall be done."( 'Twas all in silver paper wrapt, to keep it from the sun. )" But what is fine enough," she thought," For this imperial hue? "The lily and the rose she tried,­The little violet too;She tried the maiden's blushing cheek, but that would never do.She tried it on the summer cloud,And on the sunset sky;The little stream was much too low,The mountain was too high." The thing must be just right," said she, "that wears this royal dye."Then lo! What is it takes her eye,Far in the rosy west?A banner bright that waves and leapsLike to a warrior's crest!Ah, that shall have the lovely hue to mark it for the best!And to this day, at misty morn,Or in the golden noon,Or mellowed with the sunset glow,Or 'neath the quiet moon,-The banner waves; and to this day its color is=-maroon !F. W. Dignan.231THE CHICAGO BEACH HOTELGEORGE B. ROSS, ManagerOn the Lake Shore andFronting 5Jst Strut Boulevard, ChicagoA SEASIDE RESORTWith all the Advantages and Amusementsto be derived from proximity to a large cityDemonstrated to be the mostdelightful:abid� plaee the year around in Chicago.000 FEET OF BROAD VERANDA450 OUTSIDE APARTMENTS220 BATH ROOMS .:f. .:f.Eight minutes from Van Buren Street by Illinois Central Rapid Transit.Send for Souvenir Booklet.232Cbt Dtptbs of I)tprauUpCI Gad! that's a stunning bit," said I. Loie had pinned up the new poster, andagainst the peacock coloring on the wall the ambers and golds were warm and deepLoie settled herself contentedly in the big chair. "She's awfully depraved," sheexclaimed delightedly." Yet fascinating," said I.cc That's the attraction," she asserted."Oh, not the depravity," said I, but her experi­ence of life, that perfect assurance."II You can have that without necessarily gettingsuch a mouth," she said."Don't let's point it to the mouth," I besought.We went to the eyes, the lift of them, the ener­vated forward droop of the shoulders." Yes," Loie repeated, "you can have no end ofexperience without anyone, anyon«, ever reading it inyour face."I looked at her. Her features were sharplychiseled and her coloring strangely exquisite.She laughed. " I'll tell you a story," she said.Her color deepened, and for the time of the tell­ing the gloom of her eyes was gone.I suppose there was nothing unusual in the story,but I am conventional and it seemed appalling. Shelaughed again when she had finished. But it endedin a sob and I took her little head in my arms to com­fort her.Then I wondered, was it true or was the little girlenjoying to the full the effect of a dramatic impulse?$trtna4tSoft stars shining,Clouds recliningOn the liningOf the blue.Roses feelingO'er them stealing,Softly o'er them,Mists of dew. My love lies sleeping;O'er her:creeping,In God's keeping,Dream-wings light.0, starlight beaming,Through lattice streaming,Enwrap her, dreaming,Through the night.LeRoy Titus Weeks.'ltfmball'lball. :::; 243 Wlabasb 1\".233CblS Stason'VB loved before:A score,Or more.Girls, fair, and fresh, and dainty.Oft, as I sitThey 'round me Hit-Risky, or coy, or saintly.I've challenged fateTo skateWith Kate,Or go with Polly wheeling;Maud at a ballHeld me in thrall,And Ethel's voice thrilled feeling.But now I swear(Eyes fairGold hair),At golf, May claims surrender;Plaid skirt and hoseNeatly encloseA figure round and slender.A mile or two,(And youWould too!)Around the links I followWith ratio, sameAs in her game,I find life fair or hollow.Edna Stanton.235JOHN J. MAG[E\)�\J�GIS)'CHEMIST T elpphone Oakland 464Cor. 57th St. and lake Ave.••• CHICAGOJACKSON PARK. STABLES273 E. 57th Strut Telephone Oakland 552J. H. KINTZPROPRIETORHYDE PARK AND CHICAGO BUCH STABl[S5110 Lake AvenueT elephnne Oakland 1099 ••• CHICAGOThe�mingtonStandard Typewriter'sNew. Modelsdraw old friends closer and attract newones, by the power of inherent merit andunfailing service. _WYCKOff, SEAMANS & BENEDICT327 Broadway, New York • • 31st St. and Michigan Ave.THE 61USWOLD6YG[,G GO.Gives Inside Prices toStudents of theUnivefsitu of GhiGaaoOn such well-known Bicycles asNI\T10NI\I.,IROQUOIS. 0 GRISWOLDPIE,RGE,Ivef Johnson andBarnes White fluerTHE GRISWOLDCYCLE CO.Cbt Instructor in '''apt)IIHE president wrote the instructor a little note, asking him, quite unoffi­cially, if he would not attend chapel now and then, in order to let thestudents see the enthusiasm for religious instruction that prevailed. throughout the faculty. The instructor, amiable though slightly blase,decided, half cynically, to consent. He remembered the chapel servicesat his own college, dignified, as even the Freshmen were; intellectual, as comported withthe reputation of an institution whose half-backs wore eye-glasses. Therefore, the in­structor, with a slight warmth in his heart, put on his cap and gown and went as hewas asked. His unfamiliarity with the routine placed him in some doubt as to whatto do with his cap. He attempted also to sit down at the wrong time, but his kneessprung straight again as he saw his colleagues still standing. There was a poor song,a short reading, a shorter prayer. Then the scholarly president jerked out a fewnotices, which met with more attention than the prayer. It was over. The instructor,in the black gowned row, :filed out, feeling vaguely as one who had found bread­crumbs in the holy of holies.She was a dear old soul, and she used to try to convert me. She approved of allthat I did, but I believe she thought I held heathenish and pagan notions on religion,and it troubled her. Usually I evaded her when this subject came up, but sometimesshe was gently persistent, and then she would look grieved at my answers. One daywe talked about the future world. My tongue ran away with me, and I explained atsome length my conception of heaven and hell, as states of consciousness, forgettingthat such an idea would be offensive to the little woman who listened. When I wasdone, she said:"And you don't believe in a hell?"·'No."" Pray for light, my dear. Pray for light."YRON took down a photograph from the mantle. He held it with a gentle,loving admiration." She was an artist," he said, "a great artist."" She had glorious hair," I ventured, looking over his shoulder."She had imagination"-"And what a throat!"-II She had a soul-a point of view-a conception of life."" But who was she; what did she do? " I asked." Her life was her art," he answered. IIA series of dramatic impulses.Of perfect poses. She had a genius for lying; a master mind. And theaudacity of her truths was most illuminating."" Where did you meet her, Myron? She looks foreign."He studied the photograph for a while, lost in thought. Then: &I I knew her inVenice, long ago. She was a little Russian girl. Her name was Marusha Anatoff."237C�eC9F��nnounce the· �rritlal of Th-eir GOLFING·�rel for· tfie Seasono· Nine1jy.. €ight.· The Produetio· of Welsh Mar·.�t. son & Co. .N• {Argve Middl.·etonuCo. £\1· n SollY 0 Co.·LONOON.EN·1ftlr1ttbt Uniotrslty Of £bitago Wttkly? If not, you miss somegood things each week. All the news of the Universityand many of the best literary productions are given ineach issue. Subscription price, Quarter, 75 cents; OneYear, $2.50."""'&�""The University of Chicago Weekly,Office, Basement Cobb Hall, � "" ,.,& ,.,& ,.,& ,.,& "" "" .JI. $238 ]I 'fountain PtnThe bestmade,is given Freewith ••••a paid inadvanceyear'ssubscription.Rondtaux to OrdtrHEN she had passed-soh, happiness divine,Rarer and sweeter than the Chian wineGod Bacchus brewed Apollo, long ago- ......(The figure's fiat, stale, profitless, I know,Used since the Muses first hung out their sign:II Rhymes furnished to young poets-prices lowAnd figures gratis, Yours to serve, The Nine,")­But here I must return to my first line:-When she had passed,My dull eyes sparkled to a livelier shine,My cold heart warmed again; and I, in fineWoke to new life all suddenly, as thoughElectrically shocked, forgot my woeAnd in that instant knew the pot was mine,When she had passed,Woman and wtntWoman, and Wine! I wonder whoFirst sung the glories of the two?Who bound them in the immortal phrase.And whether both he meant to praiseAnd which the more-I wish I knew.'Without them, what would poor man do?Work dully through the dreary days,Walk dumbly down the dusty ways­Woman, and Wine!What if the headaches would be few?And what if wine its thousands slew,And woman her ten thousands slays?In equal honor, equal praise.Still, still I hold, till life be through,Woman, and Wine!239CHICAGO SCALE CO.�U. S. Standard••• ScalesManufacturersof all varietiesof·-----.1\150 Dealers in Thousandsof Specialties, includingFINE FamilySewing Machines The BestMachines madeProm$10.00--To--$20.00for ell AgesetLOWEST: PRICES PIANOSORGANSBUGGIES.!end 'or Catalogueand CIRulan .••ChicagoScaleCo. .. ••• J 292.296 Jackson Boulevard, CHICAGO, ILL.240Cbt seascusOh, tell me a tale of the Kelly girl,In the days of the driven snow,Of classes and theses and musty tomes,Of the study of people who have no homes­" To train the brain," you know.With a ho, ho, ho, for the midnight oil,And the daughter of horrid, wasting toil,And here's to her massive brow!Then troll me a stave of the Kelly girlIn the days of the Summertime,c Of ., cuts" and strolls and drives and balls,Of pink shirt-waists and parasols,All strung to a lover's rhyme.With a ho, ho, ho, for frivolity,And the daughter of rollicking jollity,And here's to her flashing eyes!BARBBR SHOP AND CIGAR STORBCOR. 01 En'lEftSON AVIE. AND 57TH STREIET.I emplo1' only the most skilled barbers, I offer for sale�ttobacco ant) <ttgars oftbc'f)fgbestQuaUt\?I also own the cigar stand at theDel Prado Hotel. :: :: :: ••••• CHAS. LEE.Quality Rather Than Quantity.Pres. EUot of Harvard. says: •• The International is a wonderfully compact storehouse of accurate information."The International is Scientific It is the School- T eaehee ofand Practical. the Republic.Words are easily found. Pronunciationis easily ascertained. Meanings are easilylearned. The growth of words is easilytraced. and excellence of quality ratherthansupertluity of quantity characterizesits every department. The International and its abridgmentsare in general use in the colleges and pub­lic and private schools of the country.Should you not give the students accessto the same Dictionary in the home thatthey use in the schoolroom?24211 DUOThe curtains were closely drawn over the windows so. that the room would havebeen dark as night but for the dim light from a shaded candle. Stretched on the bedlay a yo.ung man. His face and brow flamed with fever, and his eyes stared wildlyout of their hollow sockets. Muttering in delirium he tossed restlessly to and fro,seeming to. expend in useless energy the little strength left to. him. The clean, pun­gent odor of disinfectants, the grave-almo.st clerical-physician, and the array ofbottles on the little table near the head of the bed, all gave evidence of the criticalcondition of the patient.At last the invalid grew calmer; the clear light of sanity came back into. his eyes,and he seemed to. comprehend the seriousness of his condition. Weakly raising him­self on his elbow he glanced around the room."Mo.ther!" he spoke in a strained, almost inaudible whisper. "Mo.ther!"A gentle, tired-eyed woman rose from her seat beside the bed and bent over thesufferer." Mother, if I should die to-night promise me-pro.mise me that you will send awithdrawal card to. the Dean."Then he sank back o.n the pillows, and fell into. a placid sleep.He had done his duty.T.H." We are Great in Prices, not in Words. ffTHE SENTINEL�� Clipper, .Andrae��� and Iroquois ....THE 1898 BACON AT $25.00 IS A WONDER.We Carry Everything in KODAKSSee Our Complete Outfit for 50 Cents. SUNDRIES Very Cheap.MEAD CYCLE CO.287 Wabash AvenueJ59 Wabash Avenue BRANCHES: 595 West Madison St.J 30 Michigan Avenue243.. � ......T .... �In· 01£ 3SO·De.RRBORD·�-- �iJ.IJ "·STREEY·C:fiICR60:ERfiRJI"mO C:Omp.JIRy.fn�nn'erJ &/UustmlorJ of Book Magazineana ieo(!-.:-aI m@r�antile�licatio1ls SpmirlauentionlJlUnI to �tN/�eGSrhool wor/( .. '(bt IUustrations In Cap and Gown art tbtproduCtions of tbls companp •• €stlmattsand sptClmtns seur upon a.,pncatlon·······JI pita from tbt manastmtntOur story, by no means, we think to end,Till we tell you with what we have had to contend.We have been slaving by night and by day,With the object in view of making this pay.'Gainst obstacles greatest we've had to buck;We've met mith some of the worst kind of luck.Much you have done with your plunk and a half,But we've had to raise a small golden calf." What, another one still ! " the business man cried,When to advertise here, to induce him we tried.Then we found in dismay, some eight magazines,Which the 'Varsity Press fills with ads. and with dreams.On account of all this, we're out, like the book,As plainly is shown by the way accounts look.One favor we ask to make next year's work light,So the management then will be spared such a fight.tbt PitaGive to our ads. your careful attention;To our advertisers the' most of your trade.When going to them the" Cap and Gown" mention;They've turned out the book; they deserve to be paid.245.-��C b¢ £ap and Sown- for 1$98 bas b��ncompil�d and ed-It�d at tb� majson dtsUagabonds in tb� Unl·"trSity of £bicago, andbas b��n don¢ into typeand bound by mum.marsb "tirant at tbtlrprint-sbop in D¢arbornstmt, £bicago, 1111nois�-��248