THEUNIVERSITYOF CHICAGOLIBRARYW.D.R.thJ^o-n.LOWiff 9c<3Che Cap ana GownVOL. IVPublished Annually under tbe directionof tbe Order of tbe Tron ma$k«««oftbe University of Chicago*** eighteenhundred and ninety nineToWILLIAM McKINLEY, L.L.D.This book is respectfullyDedicatedGreetingWith hearty love, 0 cMoiher! Thee Jfie greetWith this, the record of what W hal>e done,The chaptet of the laurels voe have Ifron,The roll of honors v>e have found so sfoeet.Although for us no drums of fame have beat,Before us habe no trembling captfbes run,Our 7>alor and our planning end in fun,Yet something v>ef{be accomplished; and ftis meetThat something here we bring unto thy feet,With hearty love.Board or editorsmanaging editorsWalter Joseph Schmahl Ralph Curtiss ManningBusiness managersLeroy Tudor Vernon Charges Branden DavisAssociate editorsRalph C. HamillEmory Cobb AndrewsElizabeth Earnist BuchananCharles Warren ChaseErnest Edward IronsClarence A. McCarthyMarion Farwell TookerHarvey Malcolm McQuistonHarry Norman GottliebParke RossCharles Scammon ReedHelen Davida HarperJessie Nea Spray.7Board or ArtistsB. EngleberT Key, Artist-in-ChiefWilliam Derrick RichardsonPercy Bernard EckhartDonn CraneDavid A. RobertsonC. J. NewmanEveritt LowryOtto J. SchneiderD. J. LavinFrank HolmeJoseph Carlx8Cbe Board of trustees or tbe Untoersitp of CbicagoOfficersMARTIN A. RYERSON, PresidentANDREW McLEISH, Vice-PresidentCHARLES L. HUTCH [NSON, TreasurerHENRY A. RUST, ComptrollerTHOMAS W. GOODSPEED, SecretarymembersClass 1. Term expires in 1899Charles C. Bowen William B. BraytonJesse A. Baldwin Enos M. BartonAndrew McLeish John D. Rockefeller, Jr.David G. HamiltonClass 2. Term expires in 1900Fred. T. Gates Alonzo K. Parker William H. HoldenCharles L. Hutchinson Frederick A. Smith Ferdinand W. PeckEdward GoodmanClass 8. Term expires in 1901Eli B. Felsenthal Martin A. RyersonWilliam R. Harper * Daniel L. ShoreyHermann H. Kohlsaat Willard A. SmithGeorge C. Walker* Deceased9Officers or instruction and AdministrationWILLIAM 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.ANDREW MARTIN FAIRBAIRN, D.D.,Professorial Lecturer on the Barrows Lectureship.FRANKLIN JOHNSON, D.D., LL.D.,Professor of Church History and Homiletics.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.HERMANN EDUARD VON HOLST, Ph.D.,Head Professor of History.THOMAS CHROWDER CHAMBERLIN, Ph.D., LL.D.,Head Professor of Geology, and Director of Museums.JOHN HENRY BARROWS, D.D.,Professorial Lecturer on Comparative Religion.CHARLES OTIS WHITMAN, Ph.D., LL.D.,Head Professor of Zoology.RICHARD GREEN MOULTON, Ph.D.,Professor of Literature (in English).10CARL GUSTAF 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., LL.D.,Head Professor of Political Science, and Dean of the Faculties of Arts, Literatureand 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 Archaeologic Geology.EMIL GUSTAV HIRSCH, Ph.D., LLD.,Professor of Rabinical Literature and Philosophy.HENRIK GUNDERSEN, A.M., D.B.,Professor (in the Dano-Norwegian Theological Seminary) of Systematic TheologyNew Testament Interpretation and Biblical Literature, and 'Dean of the Seminary .JAMES LAURENCE LAUGHLIN, Ph.D.,Head Professor of Political Economy.ALBERT ABRAHAM 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.,Prof esso rial Lecturer on Zoology.11FRANK WAKELEY GUNSAULUS, D.D.,Professorial Lecturer on English Literature.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 ExtensionDivision.CHARLES REID BARNES, Ph.D.,Professor of Plant Physiology.PAUL SHOREY, Ph,D.,Head Professor of Greek.BENJAMIN STILES TERRY, Ph.D.,Professor of Mediaeval and English History, and Dean in the Senior College.JOHN DEWEY, Ph.D.,Head Professor of Philosophy.HENRY HERBERT DONALDSON, Ph.D.,Head Professor of Neurology.CHARLES RICHARD VAN HISE, Ph.D.,Non-Resident Professor of Structural Geology.GEORGE BURMAN FOSTER, A.M.,Professor of Systematic Theology.GEORGE STEPHEN GOODSPEED, Ph.D.,Professor of Comparative Religion and Ancient History, and University Recorder.ROLLIN D. SALISBURY, A.M.,Professor of Geographic Geology, and University Examiner.12OLIVER CUMMINGS FARRINGTON, Ph.D.,Professorial Lecturer on Determinative Mineralogy.FRANK FROST ABBOTT, Ph.D.,Professor of Latin.ELIAKIM HASTINGS MOORE, Ph.D.,Head Professor of Mathematics.ISAAC BRONSON BURGESS, A.M..Academy Professor of Latin.JOHN ULRIC NEF, Ph.D.,Head Professor of Chemistry.JOHN MATTHEWS MANLY, Ph.D.,Head Professor of English.RICHARD ALEXANDER FULLERTON PENROSE, Jr., Ph.D.,Professor of Economic Geology.SHAILER MATHEWS, A.M.,Professor of New Testament History and Interpretation.EDWIN BRANT FROST, A.M.,Professor of Astrophysics.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.HAZLITT ALVA CUPPY, Ph.D.,Director of the University Press Division.GEORGE ELLERY HALE, Sc.D.,Professor of Astrophysics, and Director of the Yerkes Observatory,NED ARDEN FLOOD, A.M.,Director of the University Press Division.13JOHN McAULEY PALMER,Professor of Military Science and Tactics.CHARLES EDMUND HEWITT, D.D.,Secretary of Divinity School.FRANCIS ADELBERT BLACKBURN, Ph.D.,Associate Professor of the English Language.JULIA ELLEN BULKLEY, Ph.D.,Associate Professor of Pedagogy.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 Mediaeval and English History.GEORGE BAUR, Ph.D.,*Associate Professor of Comparative Osteology and Palaeontology.IRA MAURICE PRICE, D.B., Ph.D.,Associate Professor of 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, and Head of Kelly House.STARR WILLARD CUTTING, Ph.D.,Associate Professor of German.?Deceased.14FREDERICK STARR, Ph.D.,Associate Professor of Anthropology, and Curator of the Anthropological Department of Walker Museum.ROBERT FRANCIS HARPER, Ph.D.,Associate Professor of the Semitic Languages and Literatures.JAMES HAYDEN TUFTS, Ph.D.,Associate Professor of Philosophy.SAMUEL WESLEY STRATTON, SB.,Associate 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.ALEXANDER SMITH, Ph.D.,Assdciate Professor of General Chemistry.CHARLES ZUEBLIN, Ph.B., D.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.FRANK LAWTON OLCOTT WADS WORTH, S.B., E.M., M.E.,Associate Professor of Astrophysics.MARTHA 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.HANS M. SCHMIDT- WARTENBERG, PH.D.,Assistant Professor of German.ERNST FREUND, J.U.D., Ph.D.,Assistant Professor of Jurisprudence and Roman Law.OLOF HEDEEN, A,B.,Assistant Professor (in the Swedish Theological Seminary) of 'PracticalTheology and Exegesis.FRANCIS WAYLAND SHEPARDSON, Ph.D.,Assistant Professor of American History, the President's Secretary, andActing Recorder.WILLIAM MORTON WHEELER, Ph.D.,Assistant Professor of Embryology.GEORGE HERBERT MEAD, A.B.,Assistant Professor of Philosophy.FRANK MELVILLE BRONSON, A.M.,Academy Assistant Professor of Greek.16EDWIN ERLE 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, AM.,Assistant Professor of Romance Languages and Literatures, and Junior CollegeExaminer.JACOB WILLIAM ALBERT YOUNG, Ph.D.,Assistant Professor of Mathematical Pedagogy.CAMILLO Von KLENZE, Ph.D.,Assistant Professor of German, and Head of Graduate Hall.WILLIAM BISHOP OWEN, A.B.,Assistant Professor of Greek.EDWIN OAKES JORDAN, Ph.D.,Assistant Professor of Bacteriology.JAMES DOWDEN BRUNER, Ph.D.,Assistant Professor of Romance Languages and Literatures.JULIUS STIEGLITZ, Ph.D.,Assistant Professor of Chemistry.JAMES HENRY BREASTED, Ph.D.,Assistant Professor of Egyptology and Semitic Languages, and Assistant Director ofHaskell Oriental Museum.CLIFFORD HERSCHEL MOORE, Ph.D.,Assistant Professor of Latin.JAMES ROWLAND ANGELL, A.M.,Assistant Professor of Experimental Psychology.ROBERT HERRICK, A.B.,Assistant Professor of Rhetoric.17WILLIAM 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.REN£ DE POYEN-BELLISLE, Ph.D.,Instructor in Romance Philology.FREDERIC JAMES GURNEY, A.B , D.B.,Examiner's Clerk.PAUL OSKAR 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 Languages and Literatures.THORSTEIN B. VEBLEN, Ph.D.,Instructor in Political Economy, and Managing Editor of the Journal ofPolitical Economy.WARDNER WILLIAMS, Mus. Doc, Ph.D.,Instructor and Director of Music.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, and Academy Recorder.18MASSUO IKUTA, Ph.D.,Instructor in Chemistry.HERBERT ELLSWORTH SLAUGHT, Ph.D.,Instructor in Mathematics.FREDERIC IVES CARPENTER, Ph.D.,Instructor in English.DAVID JUDSON LINGLE, Ph.D.,Instructor in Physiology.IRA WOODS HOWERTH, Ph.D.,Instructor in Sociology, and Secretary of the University Extension Class-studyDepartment.JAMES HARRINGTON BOYD, Sc.D.,Instructor in Mathematics.HERBERT LOCKWOOD WILLETT, Ph.D.,Instructor in Semitic Languages and Literatures, and Dean of the Disciples'Divinity House.WILLIAM AUGUST PETERSON, D.B.,Instructor (in the Swedish Theological Seminary) in General History, Church History, and the Greek and Swedish Languages.CHRISTIAN JORGINIUS OLSEN,Instructor (in the Dano-Norwegian Theological Seminary) in Homiletics, ChurchPolity, and Pastoral Duties.HARRIS HANCOCK, Ph.D.,Instructor in Mathematics.CHARLES PORTER SMALL, M.D.,Examining Physician.KURT LAVES, Ph.D.,Instructor in Astronomy.ERNEST LE ROY CALDWELL, A.B.,Academy Instructor in Mathematics.WALTER A. PAYNE, Ph.B.,Instructor and Secretary of the University Extension Lecture-study Department.19CLYDE WEBER VOTAW, D.B., Ph.D.,Instructor in New Testament Literature.WILLIAM H. RUNYON, A.M.,Academy Instructor in Natural Science.THOMAS JEFFERSON JACKSON SEE, Ph.D.,Instructor in Astronomy.FERDINAND SCHWILL, Ph.D.,Instructor in Modern History.OSCAR LOVELL TRIGGS. Ph.D.,Instructor in English.ALBERT CHAUNCEY EYCLESHYMER, Ph.D.,Instructor in Anatomy.KATE ANDERSON, S.B.,Instructor in Physical Culture.NELS SORENSON LAWDAHL,Instructor (in the Dano-Norwegian Theological Seminary) in Church History.CHARLES MANNING CHILD, Ph.D.,Instructor in Zoology.ADDISON WEBSTER MOORE, Ph.D ,Instructor in Philosophy, and Head of University Houses.RALPH C. H. CATTERALL, A.B.,Instructor in Modern History.JOSEPHINE CHESTER ROBERTSON, A.B.,Cataloguer.BRADLEY MOORE DAVIS, Ph.D.,Instructor in Botany.HENRY RAND HATFIELD, Ph.D.,Instructor in Political Economy and Political ScienceWILLIAM VAUGHN MOODY, A.M.,Instructor in English and Rhetoric.FREDRIC MASON BLANCHARD, A.M.,Instructor in Public Speaking.20LINDSAY TODD DAMON, A.B.,Instructor in Rhetoric and English Composition.EDWARD KENNARD RAND, A.M.,Instructor in Latin. -JOSEPH EDWARD RAYCROFT, A.B.,Instructor in Physical Culture, and Head of Snell House.GERTRUDE DUDLEY,Instructor in Physical Cuhure.ELIZABETH WALLACE, S.B.,Associate in Romance Languages and Head of Beecher House.ALFRED WILLIAM STRATTON, Ph.D.,Associate in Sanskrit and Indo-European Comparative Philology.EDWARD CARLTON PAGE, A B.,Associate in History.CHARLES RIBORG MANN, A.M., Ph.D.,Associate in Physics.GLENN MOODY HOBBS, S.B.,Associate in Pl^sics.ROBERT ANDREWS MILLIKAN, Ph.D.,Associate in Physics.JAMES WESTFALL THOMPSON, Ph.D.,Associate in History.ALFRED REYNOLDS WIGHTMAN, A.M.,Academy Associate in Latin.AMY ELIZA TANNER, Ph,D.Associate in Philosophy.STUART WELLER, S.B.,Associate in Palaeontologic Geology.FOREST RAY MOULTON, A.B.,Associate in Astronomy.21FREDERICK DAY NICHOLS, A.B.,Academy Associate in English.HORACE BUTTERWORTH,Associate in Physical Culture.ALICE NORTHRUP SIMPSON, A.B.,Academy Assistant in Latin.CHARLES JOSEPH CHAMBERLAIN, AM., Ph.D.,Assistant in Botany.CLARENCE ALMON TORREY, Ph.B.,Inspector Departmental Libraries.HERVEY FOSTER MALLORY, A.B.,Assistant, and Secretary of the Correspondence-study Department.ALBERT FRANCIS BUCK, A.M.,Laboratory Assistant in Psychology.EDGAR JOHNSON GOODSPEED, Ph.D.,Assistant in Biblical and Patristic Greek.JAMES H. RANSOM, A.M.,Lecture Assistant in Chemistry.CORA BELLE PERRINE, A.B.,Head of Accession Department.WILLIAM DAYTON MERRELL, A.B.,Assistant in Botany.ELLA ADAMS MOORE, Ph.B.,Assistant in English.LAUDER WILLIAM JONES, Ph.D.,Assistant in Chemistry.FREDERICK WILLIAM SHIPLEY, A.B.,Assistant in Latin.HENRY CHANDLER COWLES, Ph.D.,Assistant in Botany.WILLIAM FREDERICK YUST, A.B.,Loan Desk Assistant.22OTIS WILLIAM CALDWELL, S.Assistant in Botany.HERMANN BENJAMIN ALMSTEDT, LiAssistant in German.JUNE ETTA DOWNEY, A.M.,Second Assistant in Psychology.FREDERICK EBY, A.B.,Academy Assistant in charge of the Introductory year.JOSEPH GEORGE BROBECK, B.S., M.D.,Academy Director of the Gymnasium and Assistant in Mathematics and Science.EDITH BURNHAM FOSTER, Ph.B.,Assistant in English.SUSAN HELEN BALLOU, Ph.B.,Assistant in Latin.ELEANOR SHERWIN, A.B.,Reader in Latin and Greek.WILBUR SAMUEL JACKMAN, A.B.,Lecturer in Pedagogy.ELLA FLAGG YOUNG,Lecturer in Pedagogy.CHARLES WILLIAM SEIDENADEL, Ph.D.,Docent in Ancient Greek authors on Music.EDMUND BUCKLEY, Ph.D.,Docent in Comparative Religion.GEORGE B. HUSSEY, A.M., Ph.D.,Docent in Greek.EDSON LEONE WHITNEY, Ph.D., LL.B.,Docent in Political Science.AGNES MATHILDE WERGELAND, Ph.D.,Docent in History.WARNER FITE, Ph.D.,Docent in History. v*"*"^B.,it.B., Pe.B.,23SAMUEL A. MATTHEWS, M.D.,Docent in Physiology.CARL EVANS BOYD, PhD.,Docent in Political Science.WINFRED ERNEST GARRISON, Ph.D.,Docent in Ecclesiastical History.ELEANOR PRESCOTT HAMMOND, Ph.D ,Docent in English Literature.LIZI CECILIA CIPRIANI, Ph.D.,Docent in Literature (in English).NATHANIEL I. RUBINKAM, Ph.D.,Lecturer in English.W. M. R. FRENCH, A.B ,Lecturer in Art.LORADO TAFT, M.L.,Lecturer in Art.JENKIN LLOYD JONES,Lecturer in English.LATH AN A. CRANDALL, D.D.,Lecturer in American History.GEORGE AMOS DORSE Y, Ph.D.,Lecturer in Anthropology.CHARLES ALEXANDER McMURRY, Ph.D.,Lecturer in Pedagogy.HORACE SPENCER FISKE, A.M.,Lecturer in English Literature.MERTON LELAND MILLER, Ph.D.,Lecturer in Anthropology.JACOB DORSEY FORREST, A.M.,Lecturer in Sociology.JOHN G. CARTER TROUP,University Extension Lecturer in English.24Instructors Appointed for tbe Summer Quarter, 1*9$NOAH K. DAVIS, A.M , Ph.D., LL.D,Professor of Moral Philosophy, University of Virginia.CASPAR REN£ GREGORY, Ph.D., D.D., LL.D.,Professorial Lecturer in Biblical and Patristic Greek.BERNARD MOSES, Ph.D.,Professor of History and Political Economy, University of California.GASTON BONET-MAURY, D.D.,Professor of Ecclesiastical History in the Protestant Faculty of Theology in theUniversity of Paris.CHARLES ALEXANDER McMURRY, Ph.D.,Lecturer in Pedagogy.FRANCIS ASBURY WOOD, Ph.D.,Professor of German, Cornell College, Mt. Vernon, Iowa.FREDERICK J. TURNER, Ph.D.,Professor of American History, University of Wisconsin.ARTHUR TAPPAN WALKER, A.M.,Professor of Latin, the University of Kansas.HOMER H. KINGSLEY, A.B.,Superintendent of Schools, Evanston. 111.THOMAS WALKER PAGE, A.M., Ph.D.,Professor of History in Randolph-Macon College, Lynchburg, Va.25GEORGE ABRAM MILLER, Ph.D.,Instructor in Mathematics, Cornell University.FRANK A. MANNY, A.M.,Supervisor of Public Schools, Indianapolis, Ind.ALBERT LINCOLN SMITH, Ph.D.,Lecturer in Bacteriology.JOHN PAUL GOODE, S.B.,Assistant in Physiography.WALLACE WALTER ATWOOD, S.B.,Assistant in Physiography.HENRY W. THURSTON,Lecturer on Sociology.Deans of Affiliated InstitutionsHERBERT LEE STETSON,Des Moines College.ARTHUR GAYLORD SLOCUM,Kalamazoo College.JOHN F. FORBES, A.M., Ph.D.,John B. Stetson University.HENRY MUNSON LYMAN,Senior Dean, Rush Medical College.JOHN MILTON DODSON,Junior Dean, Rush Medical College.WILLIAM PARKER McKEE,Frances Shimer Academy.EDWARD OCTAVIUS SISSON,Bradley Polytechnic Institute.WILLIAM BISHOP OWEN,South Side Academy.26JOHN J. SCHOLIN'GER,The Harvard School.HIRAM ABIFF GOOCH,Princeton-Yale School.JOHN COWLES GRANT,Kenwood Institute.HOMER JEROME VOSBURGH,Wayland Academy.LAURA A. JONES,The Maynard School.WILLIAM RIGGS TROWBRIDGE,The Rugby School.HENRY H. BELFIELD,The Chicago Manual Training School.A. F. FLEET,Culver Military Academy.fellows and Scholars Appointed for \m wfellows/. University Fellows.Edgar William Abbott, Ph.B., Romance.Solomon Farley Acree, S.M., Chemistry.Hamilton Ford Allen, Biblical and Patristic Greek.Myron Lucius Ashley, Ph.M., Philosophy.Alois Barta, A.M., Semitic.Henry Heath Bawden, A.M., Philosophy.Edward Ambrose Bechtel. A.B., Latin.Wilhelm Alfred Braun, A.B., German.Sophonisba Preston Breckinridge, Ph.M., Political Science.Isabella Bronk, Ph.B., Romance.Percy Bently Burnet, A.M., German.Frederick Albert Cleveland, Ph.B., Political Science.Elting HoughTELING Comstock, S.R., Mathematics.29Grace Patten Conant, A.M., English.Howell Emlyn Davies, A.B., Zoology.Charles Edward Dixon, A.M., Latin.Ernest Green Dodge, A.M., Gretk.Winfred Nichols Donovan, A.M. Semitic.Arthur William Dunn, A.M., Anthropology.Charles Ell wood, Ph.B., Sociology.John Wellington Finch, A.M., Geology.Joseph C. Freehoff, S.B., Political Economy.Henry Gordon Gale, A.B., Physics.Walter Eugene Garrey, S.B., Physiology.Russell George, A.M., Geology.Hyman Elijah Goldberg, S.B., Chemistry.Charles Elmer Goodell, A.M., Political Science.Emily Ray Gregory, A.M., Zoology.Michael Frederick Guyer, A.M., Zoology.Irving Hardesty, A.B., Neurology.Mary Belle Harris, A.M., Bucknell Fellow, Latin.Amy Hewes, A.B., Sociology.Gottfried Hult, A.M., English.Johannes Benoni Eduard Jonas, A.M., German.Delos Oscar Kinsman, L.B., Political Economy.Ralph GRierson Kimble, A.B., Sociology.Philemon Bulkley Kohlsaat, Ph.B., English.Derrick Norman Lehmer, A.M., Mathematics.Ralph Stayner Lillie, A.B., Zoology.Frederick Brooks Lindsay, A.M., English.Henry Lloyd, S.B., Mathematics.William Newton Logan, A.M., Geology.Florence May Lyon, S.B., Botany.Walter Flavius McCaleb, A.M., History.William McCracken, A.B., Chemistry.John Hector McDonald, A.B., Mathematics.Harry Alvin Millis, A.M., Political Economy.Samuel Chiles Mitchell, A.M., Political Science.Wesley Clair Mitchell, A.B., Armour Crane Fellow,Political Economy.Horatio Hackett Newman. A.B., Zoology.George Norlin, A.B., Greek.Caroline Louise Ransom, A.B., Archaeology.Fritz Reichmann, M.S., Physics.Adna Wood Risley, A.B., History.Clement Eugene Rood, Ph.M., Astronomy.Clarence Frisbee Ross, A.M., Greek.Marion Schibsby, A.B., Indo-European Comparative Philology.George Clark Sellery, A.B., History.30Charles Henry Shannon, Ph.D., Indo-EuropeanComparative Philology.Thomas Kay Sidney, A.B., Latin.Claude Ellsworth Siebenthal, A.M., Geology.George Reuben Sikes, A.B., Sociology.Max Darwin Slimmer, S.B., Chemistry.John M. P. Smith, A.B., Semitic.Wilson Robert Smith, A.B., Botany.Worthy Putnam Sterns, A.M., Political Economy.Frank Lincoln Stevens, M.S., Botany.Henry Waldgrave Stuart, Ph B., Philosophy.Edgar Howard Sturtevant, A.B., Comparative Philology.Helen Bradford Thompson, Ph.B., Philosophy.Malcolm William Wallace, A.B., English.Francis Williston, A.B., English.Delonzo Tate Wilson, A.M., Astronomy.Divinity Fellows.Henry Thomas Colestock, A.B., Church History.Elijah Abraham Hanley, A.M., Systematic Theology.Thomas Allan Hoben, A.M., New Testament.31ScholarsSenior College Scholars, 1898-99.Lydia Brauns, German.Roberta Irvine Brotherton, Chemistry.Charles Warren Chase, History.John Joseph Clarkson, French.Jennie Louise Coon, Mathematics.Charles Verner Drew, Geology.Abraham Alcon Ettelson, English.Ernest Edward Irons, Zoology.Alice Lachmund, Philosophy.Mary Chapman Moore, Greek.Julia Lilian Pierce, Latin.Marie Werkmeister, Physics.Graduate Scholars, 1898-99.Trevor Arnett, Political Economy.Helen Adelaide Baldwin, Latin.Max BaTT, German,Charles Joseph Bushnell, Sociology.Demia Butler, English.Fred Harvey Calhoun, Geology.Frederick Mayor Giles, Pedagogy.Angelina Loesch, Philosophy.David Moore Robinson, Greek.Arthur Whipple Smith, Mathematics.Edwin Campbell Woolley, Political Science.32Untoersitp Ruling Bodiestbe University SenateThe President, Chairman.Professor George Stephen Goodspeed, Recorder.Head Professor Galusha Anderson.Head Professor George Washington Northrup.Head Professor Eri Baker Hulbert.Head Professor Herman Eduard von Holst.Head Professor Thomas Chrowder Chamberlin.Head Professor Charles Otis Wthitman.Head Professor John Merle Coulter.Head Professor William Gardner Hale.Head Professor Harry Pratt Judson.Head Professor James Laurence Laughlin.Head Professor Albert Abraham Michelson.Head Professor Ernest DeWiTT Burton.Head Professor Albion Woodbury Small.Head Professor Paul Shorey.Head Professor Henry Herbert Donaldson.Head Professor Eliakim Hastings Moore.Head Professor John Ulric Nef.Head Professor John Dewey.Head Professor John Matthews Manly.Director Edmund Janes James.Professor Charles Richmond Henderson,Representing the Divinity Alumni.Professor Frank Frost Abbott,Representing the Graduate Alumni.Associate Professor Robert Francis Harper,Representing the Collegiate Alumni.The University Senate includes (1) the President; (2) the University Recorder;(3) the Heads of Departments of Instruction; (4) the University Librarian; (5) theDirector of the University Extension Division; (6) Members of the Faculties electedby the Congregation. The Senate holds stated meetings monthly to consider generalquestions relating to the educational work and policy of the University.33tbe University CouncilThe President, Chairman.Professor George Stephen Goodspeed, Recorder.Professor Charles Richmond Henderson, Chaplain.Head Professor Eri Baker Hulbert,Dean of the Divinity Faculty.Head Professor Thomas Chrowder Chamberlin,Director of Museums.Head Professor Harry Pratt Judson,Dean of the Faculties of Arts, Literature, and Science.Head Professor Albion Woodbury Small.Director of the Affiliated Work.Professor Rollin D. Salisbury,University Examiner.Professor Benjamin Stiles Terry,Dean in the Senior Colleges.Associate Professor Marion Talbot,Dean of Women.Associate Professor William Darnall MacClintock.Dean in the Junior Colleges.Associate Professor Edward Capps,Dean in the Junior Colleges.Associate Professor Charles Herbert Thurber,Dean of Morgan Park Academy.Dr. Thomas Wakefield Goodspeed,Registrar.Professor Edmund Janes James,Director of the University Extension Division.Ned Arden Flood,Director of the University Press.Assistant Professor Frank Justus Miller,Examiner of Affiliations.Head Professor Galusha Anderson,Representing the Collegiate Alumni.Professor Shailer Mathews,Representing the Divinity Alumni.Associate Professor Robert Francis Harper,Representing the Graduate Alumni.Dr. Herbert Lockwood Willett,Dean of the Disciples' Divinity House.34President Herbert Lee Stetson,Des Moines College.President Arthur Gaylord Slocum,Kalamazoo College.President John F. Forbes,John B. Stetson University.Senior Dean Henry Munson Lyman,Rush Medical College.Junior Dean John Milton Dodson,Rush Medical College.Principal William Parker McKee,The Francis Shimer Academy.Principal Edward Octavius Sisson,Bradley Polytechnic Institute.Principal William Bishop Owen,The South Side Academy.Principal John J. Schobinger,The Harvard School.Principal Hiram Abiff Gooch,Princeton-Yale School.Principal John Cowles Grant,Kenwood Institute.Principal Homer Jerome Vosburgh,Wayland Academy.Principal Laura A. Jones,The Maynard School.Principal William Riggs Trowbridge,The Rugby School.Director Henry H. Belfield,The Chicago Manual Training School.Superintendent A. F. Fleet,Culver Military Academy.The University Council consists of (1) the President; (2) the University Chaplain;(3) certain University Officers, viz.: Examiner, Recorder, Registrar; (4) the Deans ofall Schools, Colleges, and Academies; (5) the Director of the University ExtensionDivision; (6) the Director of the University Press; (7) the Director of the UniversityLibraries, Laboratories, and Museums; (8) the Director and Examiner of Affiliations;(9) Members of the Faculties elected by the Congregation. The Council holds statedmeetings, monthly, to consider matters relating to the general administration of theUniversity.35Otber Officers and AssistantsWilliam Rufus Armstrong, Bookkeeper, University Press Division.Isabella Blackburn, Clerk, University Press Division.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 Grossman, 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.Charles A. Francis, Mechanician, Physical Laboratory.Marilla Freeman, Assistant, Library.Alma F. Gamble, Stenographer, Examiner's Office.Margaret Hardinge, Assistant, Library.Charles H. Hastings, Assistant, Library.Kenkichi Hayashei, 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 KaylER, Clerk, University Press Division.James Cartwright Logan, Clerk, Comptroller's Office.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. Parker, Chief Engineer and Superintendent.N. J. Peterson, Steward, Morgan Park Academy.OTTO R. Ryerson, Clerk, University Press Division.Benjamin J. Simpson, Purchasing Agent.Donna Smith, Clerk, University Press Division.Emilia A. Tibbetts, Stenographer, University Extension Office.BERTHA Stieg, Assistant, Women's Gymnasium.Arthur Stocks, Advertising Solicitor, University Press Division.Martha Van Hook, Stenographer, Recorder's Office.J. William Walker, Foreman, Printing Department.Estelle Wetmore, Stenographer, University Extension Office.Eloise C. Woodford, Stenographer, Morgan Park Academy.Elizabeth Yeomans, Manager, Women's Commons.36Convocationstbe twenty-third ConvocationHeld in the Graduate Quadrangle, July 1, 1898.Convocation Chaplain, - - - Rev. Alonzo K. Parker, D.D.Convocation Address: Hon. William L. Wilson, Lexington, Virginia, Presidentof Washington and Lee University.tbe twenty-Tourtb ConvocationHeld in Kent Theatre, August 2, 1898.Convocation Address: "The University of Paris," Professor Gaston Bonet-Maury, D.D., the University of Paris.Degree of Doctor of Philosophy conferred on Elizabeth Jeffreys (Chemistry). Thesis:On Urethanes.Ernest Carroll Moore (Philosophy). Thesis: The Relation of Education to Philosophy in Greek and Early Christianity.tbe twenty-Tiftb ConvocationHeld in Studebaker Music Hall, October 1, 1898.Convocation Chaplain, - Rev. Henry L. Morehouse, D.D., New York.Convocation Address: "Some Essential Elements of the True Academic Spirit,"The Reverend Charles Cnthbert Hall, D.D., President of Union TheologicalSeminary, New York.37tbe twenty-Sixtb Convocation, mid-JIutumnHeld in Kent Theatre, October 17, 1898.I. The Convocation Procession.II. The Prayer: The University Chaplain, The Reverend Charles RichmondHenderson, D.D.III. The Address: On behalf of the Trustees, " The Firm Foundation of NationalPeace." The Reverend Alonzo Ketcham Parker, D.D.IV. Song: "America."V. The Address: On behalf of the Congregation, Head Professor Albion Woodbury Small, Ph D., Vice-President of the Congregation.VI. The Conferring of the Degree of Doctor of Laws upon WilliamMcKinley: In recognition of the wisdom and skill shown in conductingpublic affairs in a great international crisis.VII. The Benediction: The University Chaplain.VIII. The Recession.tbe twenty-Seventh ConvocationHeld in Studebaker Music Hall, January 4, 1899.Convocation Address: "American Imperialism." The Honorable Carl Schurz,New York.tbe twenty-eigbtb ConvocationHeld in Studebaker Music Hall, April 1, 1899.Convocation Address and Sermon (April 2): Reverend Henry Van Dyke, D.D.Baccalaureate Address (March 19): Dean Hulbert.39Cbe Quadrangle ClubGeorge Edgar Vincent,Shai.br Matthews, -Frank Frost Abbott, -Alexander Smith, -CouncilCharles L. HutchinsonFrancis W. ShepardsonWilliam Bishop OwenThe opening of the Club House, as re-built and re-modeled since its burning inDecember, 1897, occurred on June 20th, 1898. On that occasion Mr. Leopold Godowskygave a Complimentary Recital, which did much to launch the club upon the careerof success it has so uniformly pursue 1 since that time, and to show that it fills a mostnecessary part in the life of the University. At present its future seems certain. Nowand then protests are heard at the attempted total exclusion of the under-graduatebody from its precincts, yet it is said that from the point of view of its members thisconstitutes its greatest success. By so much more then ought those of us who havebeen favored, on rare occasions, with admittance to concerts and dances to feel gratitude to our graduate friends, and to resolve to " know them better " in the future.During the Autumn Quarter the following persons spoke before the membersof the club:Professor Karl Budde, of the University of Strassburg, on "The PoliticalSituation in Alsace-Lorraine."Mr. I K Boyesen, on " Norwegian Realism."Mr. George Horton, formerly American Consul at Athens, on the "VillageCustoms of Modern Greece."Mr. J. P. Iddings. on "The Yellowstone National Park."Mr. S. W. Stratton, ex-Lieutenant, U. S. N., on " Kxperience of a Volunteerin the Navy."At the same time the privileges of the Club were extended to ladies on eachMonday after four o'clock, and many informal dances and receptions were held onthese evenings.On Monday, December 19th, the club entertained the University Glee, Mandolinand Banjo Clubs.The third Chamber Concert of the season by the Spiering Quartet was held onJanuary 6th. Wednesday, January 18th was set apart as a Special Ladies' Day. OnJanuary 20th, a reception to Mr. and Mrs. Martin A. Ryerson was held, following apaper on "Sicily," read by Mr. Ryerson. The third Club Dinner for members washeld on January 27th.The Club Calendar for February included:February 3d: An address by Mr. John Graham Brooks.February 9th: The Fourth Chamber Concert, followed by dancing at 9:30.February 15th: Ladies' Day.February 21st: The Washington's Birthday Club Dinner, followed by a shop Talk.February 27th: Ladies' Night. Mr. (i. H. Mead gave a talk, illustrated byLantern views, on Hawaii. PresidentTreasurer- Vice-PresidentSecretary40Cbe marsbalsBead marshalWilloughby George WallingAssistant marshalsWilliam France AndersonCharles Vernor DrewWalter Joseph SchmahlRalph C. HamillCharles Lindsay Burroughsformer Bead marshalsJoseph Edward Raycroft, 1895William Scott Bond, 189GNott William Flint, 1898¦inSemi Official ClubsTHE PHILOSOPHICAL CLUB,Mr. Ashley, PresidentTHE PEDAGOGICAL CLUB,Mr. Glascock, Chairman of Executive CommitteeTHE POLITICAL ECONOMY CLUB,Mr. Trevor Arnett, PresidentTHE POLITICAL SCIENCE AND HISTORY CLUB,Mr. Edwin C. Woolley, PresidentTHE HISTORY CLUB,Mr. George M. Sellery, PresidentTHE SOCIOLOGICAL CLUB,Prof. George E. Vincent, PresidentTHE SEMITIC CLUB,Dr. Breasted, PresidentTHE NEW TESTAMENT CLUB,Dr. Votaw, PresidentTHE PHILOLOGICAL CLUB,Prof. Cutting, PresidentTHE ROMANCE CLUB,Mr. Howland, HeadTHE GERMANIC CLUB,Dr. Allen, PresidentTHE ENGLISH CLUB,Miss Myra Reynolds, PresidentTHE MATHEMATICAL CLUB,Prof. Moore, PresidentTHE PHYSICS CLUB,Mr. Milligan, PresidentTHE GEOLOGICAL CLUB,Prof. Chamberlain, PresidentTHE ZOOLOGICAL CLUB,Prof. Whitman, PresidentTHE BOTANICAL CLUB,Prof. Coulter, President44Cbe Cbicago Alumni ClubWilliam Scott Bond, - - - PresidentRalph Waldo Webster, - First Vice-PresidentMarcus Peter Frutchey, - Second Vice-PresidentWilliam Otis Wilson, - Recording SecretaryStacy Carroll Mosser, - Corresponding SecretaryC. R. Barrett, ----- TreasurerF. F. Steigmeyer, - - - HistorianCommitteesArrangementsMarcus Peter Frutchey, ChairmanR. C. DudleyHarry Wiley.membership, Ralph Webster, ChairmanHarry Magee AdkinsonF. F. SteigmeyerIn January, 1898, the present Historian of the Club sent out circulars to Alumni,asking their opinion regarding the formation of a Club for the advancement of allthe best interests of the University of Chicago. All answered ; but many, regardingthe Alumni Association as all-sufficient, were adverse to the proposition. However,a second circular announced a meeting of all City Alumni, at Cobb Hall, on theevening of February 14th. It was a stormy night, and only fourteen " loyals " werepresent — but they were " 93-ers," every one, and proceeded to temporary organizationby appointing a committee to draft a constitution to be submitted two weeks later.The second meeting at Cobb was equally small in numbers, but more enthusiastic.Upon discussion it was decided to make a final effort to arouse the enthusiasm of all,and the adoption of the constitution was postponed two weeks.In the parlors of the Great Northern, the third meeting took place. Everybodywas there, and everybody had a scheme for the good of the proposed Club. TheConstitution was unanimously adopted ; initiation fees were paid by all, and the vari-ious officers elected and committees appointed.Ever since that eventful meeting, the Chicago Alumni Club has been a greatsuccess. " They banquet, entertain, toast, and sing the old songs until another day."The membership of the Club now exceeds one hundred and fifty. In one yearof existence its success has become a recognized fact among Western Alumni ; itsfailure, an impossibility.The University athletics and University clubs have already been made to feel itspowerful influence. There is no organization, directly or indirectly connected withthe University, that is as essential to the welfare of the Alma Mater as " The ChicagoAlumni Club."45Cbe Uniocrsitp of Chicago SettlementDirectorsJames R. Angell, - PresidentRobert M. Lovett, - - SecretaryFrank B. Tar bell, - TreasurerW. R. Harper C. L. Hutchinson Miss Myra ReynoldsJ. M. Coulter E. H. Moore Mrs. Charles ZeublinC. R. Henderson A. C. Miller Mrs. MontgomeryMiss M. E. McDowellMiss Josephine BlinnThe University of Chicago Settlement was incorporated January 28, 1898. Themembership, is composed of regular contributors and their representatives, and affairsare under the control of the board of directors. The board of directors acts as thePhilanthropic Committee of the Christian Union, and thus retains a connection withthe University. Incorporation was necessary in order to acquire title to real estate.The Settlement now owns a lot of 100 feet in Gross Avenue, near Ashland Avenue,and hopes to erect a building in the near future. Work at the University Settlementis under the immediate supervision of Miss McDowell, the Head Resident.The societies regularly contributing to the support of the Settlement are,The University Settlement LeagueThe Lookout ClubThe Service Club46University Publications— OfficialUNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO JOURNALSCbe Biblical WorldPublished monthly.Cbe Scbool ReviewPublished monthly (except July and August).Cbe American Journal of SociologyPublished Bi monthly.Cbe Journal of Political economyPublished quarterly.Cbe Journal of GeologyPublished semi-quarterly.Cbe jflstropbysical JournalPublished monthly (except July and August).Cbe Botanical GazettePublished monthly.Cbe American Journal of Semitic Languages ana LiteraturePublished quarterly.Cbe American journal of CbeologyPublished quarterly.Cbe University RecordPublished weekly.47Secret Societies at tbe tfnloersitp of CbicagofraternitiesDELTA KAPPA EPSILON PHI DELTA THETAPHI KAPPA PSI PSI UPSILONBETA THETA PI DELTA TAU DELTAALPHA DELTA PHI CHI PSISIGMA CHI PHI BETA KAPPAEocal SocietiesTHE MORTAR BOARDTHE ESOTERIC CLUBTHE QUADRANGLERSTHE SIGMA CLUBfiottor SocietiesTHE OWL AND SERPENTTHE ORDER OF THE IRON MASKTHE SPHINXTHE THREE QUARTERS CLUBNU PI SIGMA51Delta Kappa €psilonPOUNDED IN 1844.Roll of ChaptersPhi Yale UniversityTheta BowdoinXi ColbySigma AmherstGamma VanderbiltPsi University of AlabamaChi University of MississippiUpsilon Brown UniversityKappa Miami UniversityLambda Kenyon CollegeBeta North CarolinaEta 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 Technology52ffiml*.Z fJWVW - fcQ^Q^^^^^^1 1.9Delta Kappa epsilonTHE DELTA DELTA CHAPTERESTABLISHED DECEMBER 1893Tratres in UniversitateGraduate CollegesRalph Waldo Webster Henry Gordon GaleSamuel Sweeney MacClintock William English WallingGilbert Ames Bliss Herbert W. BurchardAdna Wood Risley Christopher H. ColemanMarvin Gaylord John WellingtonJFinchRoy Avery RichardsonUndergraduate CollegesWilloughby George WallingWilliam France AndersonThomas Carlyle ClendenningPercy Bernard BckhartWilliam Burgess CornellClinton Luman HoyRalph C. HamillRalph Curtiss ManningHarold Eugene WilkinsCurtiss Rockwell ManningWalter Lawrence HudsonHugh Lafayette McWilliamsDonald Saxton McWilliamsDaniel TrudePhilip Tompkins SmithLewis Patton HornbergerMortimer Brainard ParkerEdward Christian KohlsaatVernon Tiras FerrisCharles Lewis Woodruff,Charles Eri HulbertCharles Sumner HayesPerley L. FreemanMaurice Mandeville55Pbi Kappa PsiRoll of ChaptersDistrict IPa. Alpha Washington-Jefferson CollegePa. Beta Allegheny CollegePa. Gamma Bucknell UniversityPa. Epsilon Gettysburg CollegePa. Zeta Dickinson CollegePa. Eta Franklin and Marshall CollegePa. Theta Lafayette CollegePa. Iota University of PennsylvaniaPa. Kappa Swarthmore CollegeDistrict 11N. H. Alpha Dartmouth CollegeMass. Alpha Amherst CollegeN. Y. Alpha Cornell UniversityN. Y. Beta Syracuse UniversityN. Y. Gamma Columbia UniversityN. Y. Epsilon Colgate UniversityN. Y. Zeta Brooklyn Polytechnic InstituteDistrict HIMd. Alpha Johns Hopkins UniversityVa. Alpha University of VirginiaVa. Beta Washington and Lee UniversityVa. Gamma Hampden-Sidney CollegeW\ Va. Alpha University of West VirginiaMiss. Alpha University of MississippiD. C. Alpha Columbian UniversityDistrict IVOhio Alpha Ohio Wesleyan UniversityOhio Beta Wittenberg CollegeOhio Delta University of OhioInd. Alpha De Pauw UniversityInd. Beta University of IndianaInd. Gamma Wabash College111. Alpha Northwestern University111. Beta University of ChicagoMich. Alpha University of MichiganDirtrict VWis. Alpha University of WisconsinWis. Gamma Beloit CollegeMinn. Beta University of MinnesotaIowa Alpha University of IowaKan. Alpha University of KansasNeb. Alpha University of NebraskaCal. Beta Leland Stanford, Jr., University56Phi Kappa PsiTHE ILLINOIS BETA CHAPTERESTABLISHED 1804fratres in UuioersitateGraduate CollegesPercy Bently BurnetRobert Bailey DavidsonEdwin Campbell WooleyAladine Cummings LongdenFrederick Albert ClevelandOra Philander SewardFrank Lincoln StevensUndergraduate CollegesFrederick Bradley ThomasJohn James WalshThomas Temple HoyneWalter James CavanaghParke RossFred SassJames McClintock SnitzlerWalter Stokes SharpeDan B rouse SouthardFrancis BaldwinChester David BarnesMilton Howard PettitHoward Sloan YoungAlbert Bertram GarcelonDean SwiftClarence Whittaker RichardsCharles Pelton Jacobs59Beta Cbcta piFOUNOCO IN 1839Roil of ChaptersMiami 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 . Vale UniversityUniversity of Wisconsin . University of ChicagoLeland Stanford, Jr., University('>()Beta Chcta piTHE LAMBDA RHO CHAPTERESTABLISHED JANUARY 28. 1804fratres in UniversitateGraduate CollegesHorace Lozier John Gaylord CoulterUndergraduate CollegesMichael Billman WellsCharles Branden DavisAllen Grey HoytWilliam Franklin EldridgeAlvin Lestor BartonMorton HarrisGeorge Gilbert DavisRoy Coleman Oris woldKellogg SpeedVan Sumner PearceEugene Harvey Balderston WatsonRoy Bartling TaborLawrence Merton JacobsGlenn Plumb HallLeroy Tudor VernonAlbert Simpson RussellGeorge Perry Mac DonaldEliot BlackwelderHerbert MulfordC>3Hlpba Delta PMFOUNDED IN 1832Roll of ChaptersHamilton Hamilton CollegeColumbia Columbia CollegeBrunonian Brown UniversityYale Yale UniversityAmherst Amherst CollegeHudson Adelbert CollegeBowdoin Bowdoin CollegeDartmouth Dartmouth CollegePeninsular University 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, Canada64Alpha Delta PhiTHE CHICAGO CHAPTERESTABLISHED MARCH 20. 1806fratres in UniversitateGraduate CollegesHenry Magee AdkinsonJames Weber LinnNott William FlintClarence Bert HerschbergerFred MerrifieldUndergraduate CollegesCharles Lindsay BurroughsMaurice Gordon ClarkeCharles Verner DrewRoger Throop VaughnWalter Scott KennedyHarvey Malcolm MacQuistonPaul Donald MacQuistonHoward Pendleton KirtleyGranville Hudson SherwoodWarren C. GorrellElliott Salstonstall NortonSamuel Northrup HarperWilliam Arthur MaloneyTurner Burton SmithCharles Scribner EatonBert James CasselsHarry Preston FrenchJerome Pratt MageeC7Sigma CMrouNoco in ibsbRoll of ChaptersColumbian UniversityI>enns)lvania CollegeP>ucknell UniversityUniversity of PennsylvaniaLehigh UniversityPennsylvania State CollegeDickinson CollegeWashington and Lee UniversityRoanoke CollegeUniversity of VirginiaRandolph-Macon CollegeHampden Sidney CollegeUniversity of North CarolinaMiami UniversityOhio- Wesleyan UniversityDenison UniversityKentucky State CollegeUniversity of CincinnatiWest Virginia UniversityOhio State UniversityCentre CollegeIndiana UniversityDe Pauw University-Butler UniversityHanover College Purdue UniversityNorthwestern UniversityUniversity of MichiganUniversity of IllinoisUniversity of ChicagoBeloit CollegeIllinois Wesleyan UniversityUniversity of WisconsinAlbion CollegeUniversity of MinnesotaUniversity of NebraskaUniversity of KansasUniversity of MissouriUniversity of MississippiTulane UniversityVanderbilt UniversityUniversity of TexasUniversity of CaliforniaUniversity of Southern CaliforniaLeland Stanford, Jr., UniversityHobart CollegeDartmouth CollegeMassachusetts Institute of TechnologyColumbia CollegeCornell University(vSa:rM?n^Sigma ChiTHE OMICRON OMICRON CHAPTERESTABLISHED JANUARY 23, I80Tfratres in UnipersitateUndergraduate CollegesCharles Foster RobyHerbert Alonzo AbernethyJohn Patrick MoranRay Prescott JohnsonClarence Alvin McCarthyWarren MclntireGuy Reed BellWilliam Thomas KirkWillett Lindley AllenMark A. ClevelandEarl Dean HowardHenry Berry Stark71Phi Delta CbetaFOUNDED IN 1848Roll of ChaptersMiami UniversityIndiana UniversityCenter CollegeWabash CollegeUniversity of WisconsinNorthwestern UniversityUniversity of IndianapolisOhio Wesleyan UniversityFranklin CollegeHanover CollegeUniversity of MichiganUniversity of ChicagoDe Pauw UniversityOhio State UniversityUniversity of MissouriKnox CollegeUniversity of GeorgiaP^mory CollegeIowa Wesleyan UniversityMercer UniversityCornell UniversityLafayette CollegeUniversity of CaliforniaUniversity of VirginiaRandolph-Macon CollegeUniversity of NebraskaGettysburg CollegeWashington and Jefferson CollegeVanderbilt UniversityUniversity of MississippiUniversity of AlabamaCase School of Applied Science Lombard UniversityAlabama Polytechnic InstituteAllegheny CollegeUniversity of VermontDickinson CollegeWestminster CollegeUniversity of MinnesotaIowa State UniversityUniversity of KansasUniversity of the SouthUniversity of OhioUniversity of TexasUniversity of PennsylvaniaUnion CollegeColby UniversityColumbia UniversityDarmouth CollegeUniversity of North CarolinaCentral UniversityWilliams CollegeSouthwestern UniversitySyracuse UniversityWashington and Lee UniversityLehigh UniversityAmherst CollegeBrown UniversityTulane University of LouisianaWashington CollegeStanford UniversityUniversity of IllinoisPurdue UniversityUniversity of Cincinnati72Phi Delta ChctaTHE ILLINOIS BETA CHAPTERESTABLISHED rrB«UARV18. 1807fratres in UnioersitateGraduate CollegesSamuel Mounds CoulterClarence Macon GallupRalph Harper McKeeStacy Carroll MosserJohn William BaileyClarence Frisbee RossFred Harvey CalhounUndergraduate CollegesCharles Warren ChaseHarvey Trunkey WoodruffEarl Crayton HalesDavid Aubrey MorrisGeorge Alembert Bray tonGuy Carson K inn am anWilliam Everton RamseyJames Milton SheldonLafayette Wallace CaseAustin Young HoyEric Martine LubeckFrank Wal bridge DeWolfP$i lipsilonroUNOCO IN 1833Roll of ChaptersTheta 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 CollegePXa Lehigh UniversityTau University of PennsylvaniaMu University of MinnesotaRho University of WisconsinOmega University of Chicago76Psi bpsilonTHE OMEGA CHAPTERESTABLISHED NOVEMBER 24. 1807fratres in UniversitateUndergraduate CollegesArthur Sears HenningByron Bayard SmithWilliam Derrick RichardsonPaul Eldredge WilsonEmory Cobb AndrewsWalter Joseph SchmahlSpencer Mac Dougall BrownCharles Dufheld Wrenn HalseyKdwTin Lee PoulsonWalter Irving MartinHerbert Paul ZimmermanWilson Shannon Chapman, Jr.James Ronald HenryBenjamin Franklin BuckGeorge Snow Gaylord79Delta Cau DeltarOUNOED IN 1859Roll of ChaptersBeta Gamma University of WisconsinOmicron I diversity of IowaBeta Eta University of MinnesotaBeta Kappa University of ColoradoBeta Pi Northwestern UniversityBeta Rho Leland Stanford, Jr., University-Beta 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 University-Beta Zeta Butler CollegeBeta Phi Ohio State UniversityBeta Psi Wabash CollegeAlpha Allegheny CollegeGramma Washington and Jefferson UniversityRho Stevens Institute of TechnologyUpsilon Rensselaer Polytechnic InstituteOmega University of PennsylvaniaBeta Lambda Lehigh UniversityBeta Mu Tufts CollegeBeta Nu Massachusetts Institute of Technology-Beta Omicron Cornell UniversityBeta Chi Brown UniversityBeta Iota University of VirginiaSO• 4**7 ^^sidTiAs 1MM] wL^^^M0 q^ A '^B^»V"**> AlH»BrC«II^B« sL#aBWDelta Cau DeltaTHE GAMMA ALPHA CHAPTERESTABLISHED MAY, 1808fratres in UnipersitateGraduate CollegesHenry Richmond CorbettGeorge Loring WhiteWilliam Shattuck AbernethySwen Benjamin AndersonUndergraduate CollegesHalbert E. Payne ThomasCharles Edward CareyErnest Edward IronsFrank Russell WhiteCarl Dimond GreenleafElim Arthur E. PalmquistThomas Venard GravesVernon Servilian PhillipsRobert Samuel McClureWilliam Schoonover HarmanEdward Allen SibleyFrank Perkins BarkerBenjamin Griffin LeeFrank Louis SlakerAlbert Langworthy JonesJoseph Chalmers EwingS3cm psirOUNOEO IN 1841Roll of ChaptersAlpha Pi Union CollegeAlpha Theta Williams CollegeAlpha Mu Middlebury CollegeAlpha Alpha Wesleyan University-Alpha Phi Hamilton CollegeAlpha Epsilon University of MichiganAlpha Chi Amherst CollegeAlpha Psi Cornell UniversityAlpha Tau Wofford CollegeAlpha Nu University of MinnesotaAlpha Iota University of WisconsinAlpha Rho Rutgers CollegeAlpha Xi Stevens Institute of TechnologyAlpha Delta University of GeorgiaBeta Delta Lehigh UniversityGamma Delta Stanford UniversityDelta Delta University of Chicago84$"19*:Chi PsiALPHA EPSILON DELTA CHAPTERESTABLISHED NOVEMBER 25. 1808fratres in UuiversitateGraduate CollegesJohn Franklin HageyArthur Whipple SmithMarcus Peter FrutcheyUndergraduate CollegesMichael Francis GallagherAinsworth Whitney ClarkNewell Montague FairRowland Thumm RogersHarry Williams BelfieldClarke Scammon ReedEdwin George AllinWillis Henry LinsleyFranklin Ackerman BogueLees Ballinger#7Phi Beta KappaRoll of ChaptersAlpha of Maine Bowdoin, Brunswick, Me.Alpha of New Hampshire Dartmouth, Hanover, N. II.Alpha of Vermont University of Vermont, Burlington, Vt.Beta of Vermont Middlebury, Middlebury, Vt.Alpha of Massachusetts Harvard, Cambridge, Mass.Beta of Massachusetts Amherst, Amherst, Mass.Gamma of Massachusetts Williams, Williamstown, Mass.Alpha of Connecticut Yale, New Haven, Conn.Beta of Connecticut Trinity, Hartford, Conn.Gamma of Connecticut Wesleyan, Middletown. Conn.Alpha of New York Union, Schenectady, N. Y.Beta of New York University of the City of New YorkGamma of New York College of the City of New YorkDelta of New York Columbia, New York CityEpsilon of New York Hamilton, Clinton, N. Y.Zeta of New York Hobart, Geneva, N. Y.Eta of New York Colgate University, Hamilton, N. Y.Theta of New York Cornell, Ithaca, N. Y.Iota of New York Rochester University, Rochester, N. Y.Kappa of New York Syracuse University, Syracuse, N. Y.Alpha of New Jersey Rutgers, New Brunswick, N. J.Alpha of Pennsylvania Dickinson, Carlisle, Penn.Gamma of Pennsylvania Lafayette, Easton, Penn.Delta of Pennsylvania University, Philadelphia, Penn.Iota of Pennsylvania Lehigh, South Bethlehem, Penn.Beta of Ohio Kenyon, Garnbier, OhioAlpha of Indiana De Pauw, Green Castle, Ind.Alpha of Kansas State University of Lawrence, Kan.Alpha of Illinois Northwestern, Evanston, 111.Beta of Illinois University of Chicago, Chicago. 111.Alpha of Minnesota, State University, Minneapolis, Minr.88Phi Beta KappaTHE BETA CHAPTER OF PHI BETA KAPPA IN THESTATE OF ILLINOIS.ORGANIZED APRIL 4. 1890membersWilliam Rainey HarperHarry Pratt JudsonBenjamin S. Terryp;iiakim Hastings MooreThomas Chrowder ChamberlinJohn Ulric NefAlbert Harris TolmanWilliam Gardner HaleAlbion Woodbury SmallPaul Shorey8<*Che mortar BoardESTABLISHED NOVEMBER. 1804Helen Bradford ThompsonDemia ButlerCharlotte Rose TellerJesse Nea SprayAlice Austin KnightMary Nickerson LakinEdyth Merritt KohlsaatVirginia Wynne LackersteenCora Roche HowlandCaroline Parsons EllsworthMarcia Stuart HargisMary Georgiana SloanMary Moody SmithKatharine Childs MarshCarlotta Mabelle Willett90Che esoteric ClubESTABLISHED IN 1894honorary memberMrs. George E. Vincentmember in facultyEdith Burn ham PosterJlctipe membersPllinor Douglas FloodHelen Davida HarperRuth Isabel VanderlipSusan Grace Harding( »race Josephine EberhartMary Judson AverettRebecca Madeleine HardingCarolyn Apperson LeechIrene CookMary Plthel FreemanAgnes Eleanor ChambersRhoda Jeannette Capps95Che QuadranglersESTABLISHED J»NU«»V 180"5Anne Bowl and ReedJosephine Turner AllinSarah Weber Addamslulith Daisy JenkinsSarah Ois AmoryMarion Par well TookerBrieta BoboLeona CanterburyP^unice Dana FollansbeNellie Julia MaloneBell L'pton HalstedAlice Clymer MacfarlanePoster Margaret LinnBertha Wiggsur>Che Sigma ClubESTABLISHES OOTOBCR. 1805Marjorie Benton CookeGrace Allen CoulterElizabeth P'arnist BuchananCornelia OsborneMargaret CoulterKatherine PaltzerEdith Mable DunningMaude Franklin SperryEdith EoffLouise Hooper Shailer101Che Owl and SerpentSENIOR SOCIETYFOUNOtO 1898William France AndersonCharles Lindsay BurroughsMaurice Gordon ClarkeCharles Verner DrewRalph C. HamillArthur Sears HenningAllen Grey HoytWilloughby George Walling102ORDERJUNIOR SOCIETYESTABLISHED JUNE 12, 1896flctiee membersLeroy Tudor VernonRalph Curtiss ManningWalter Joseph SchmahlRalph C. HamillCharles Brandon DavisEmory Cobb AndrewsRowland Thumm RogersSpencer MacDougall Brown105Che SphinxSOPHOMORE SOCIETYrOUtOED DECEMBER IS. 1998Leroy Tudor VernonJames McClintock SnitzlerGeorge Gilbert DavisParke RossFrancis BaldwinKellogg SpeedRay Prescott JohnsonClarence Alvin McCarthyClark Scammon ReedHarry Williams BelfieldCharles Scribner Eatonior>Cm ^^m2W* »»'glSV-.^hn-Jl-L"dAw*rWxwam Arthur MoloneyHoward Si*oan Young - PresidentSecretary and TreasurerActive membersOswald Hinton GregoryPerley L. FreemanGeorge Snow GaylordKdward Christian KohlsaatWilson Shannon Chapman, Jr.Lees BallingerCharles Sumner Hayes Harrv Preston FrenchCharles Pelton JacobsWillis Henry LinsleyLawrence Woodhull OsborneMilton Howard PettitCharles Lewis WoodruffCharles Eri Hulbert Vernon Tiras FerrisJerome Pratt MageeFredrich Graham MoloneyHarold Sayre OsborneEngene H. B. WatsonGeorge Alexander YoungWilliam Arthur MoloneyHoward Sloan Young111Ru pi SigmaESTABLISHED JANUARY, 1896Edith Burnham FosterHelen Bradford ThompsonDemia ButlerGrace Allen CoulterMarjorie Benton CookeMary Nickerson LakinAlice Austin KnightGrace Josephine EberhartElizabeth BuchananEdyth Merritt KohlsaatAnne Bowland ReedMarion Farwell TookerRuth Isabelle VanderlipJeanette Capps112fraternitp ComxntionsDelta Kappa epsilonDetroit, Michigan, November 17-20, 1898.Delegates:Clinton Luman Hoy Harold Eugene WilkinsPhi Kappa PsiPhiladelphia, Pennsylvania, April 15-18, 1898.Delegates:Eugene Ryan John Andrew HowardJohn James WalshBeta tbeta PiCincinnati, Ohio, July 12-15, 1898.Delegate:Paul BlackwelderAlpha Delta PbiToronto, Canada, February 10-14, 1898.Delegates:Nott William Flint Norman Kendall AndersonClarence Bert Herschberger James Weber LinnSigma £biNashville, Tennessee, 1897.Delegates:Newman Miller P. Merrill GriffithPbi Delta thetaColumbia, Ohio, November 21-27, 1898.Delegate:Charles Warren ChasePsi UpsilonMinneapolis, Minnesota, May 3-6, 1898.Delegates:Moses Dwight Mclntyre Arthur Sears HenningDelta Cau DeltaChicago, Illinois, August 25-27, 1897.No Delegates.Chi PsiWashington, D. C, February 28- March 2, 1899.Delegate:Ainsworth Whitney Clark.115Fraternity Members not Represented by Local Chapters.Pbi Gamma DeltaWilliam Kelly Wright ( Amherst College)Louis Thomas Foreman (Colgate University)Charles B. Dirks (Denison College)Kappa fllpbaFrancis Williamson Duke (Richmond College)116:00?In December, 1898, it occurred to Prof. G. H. Vincent that if the entertainmentfor the benefit of the University Settlement, which has come to bean annual affair,might this year take the form of a comic opera, to be written and presented by University talent, a form of amusement novel at Chicago might get a start here. Althoughthe idea, when he first suggested it, met little favor, he clung desperately to it ; andin January of this year called a meeting of about twenty men prominent in under-graduate life, and laid the plans before them. Theyreceived it enthusiastically, and at once elected a committee of arrangements. At that time it was decided for various good reasons, to allowonly male actors in the cast.In the next three weeks the opera was written, around an idea whichwas the joint production of Mr. Vincent and MLs Elizabeth Wallace.These two collaborated with Prof. F. J. Miller, Linn '97, Barrett '97, andMiss Cooke '99. Rehearsals began early in February, and by the tenthof March, through the really tremendous efforts of Mr.and Mrs. Vincent, Mr. H. G. Lozier, and Mrs. Wallace,and the unexpectedly hearty enthusiasm of the cast," The Deceitful Dean" had been whipped into shape andwas presented in the gymnasium. Its success was astonishingly complete. On the following night it wasif repeated with even greater smoothnes. The expense ofW presentation reached $750 ; the net profit to the Settle,If* ment, $1,600.6\d favorites (Mr. Stagg) and new (Freeman '02 ) ;good singing (Payne's, 'OI), and bad (Adkinson's, '96) ; acting (Gay-lord's, G. ) and "horse" (Hagey's, '98); beauty (Andrews '00), and119the reverse (Schmahl '00) ; grace (Cornell '99 ), and disgrace(the Dean's); energy ( Eckhart '99), and languid elegance(Lozier '96) —all these combined, with forty or fifty more, into anentertainment that made even the gynnasium endurable, and islikely to inaugurate a new form of amusement at the Universityof Chicago. Whisper ! but the plot of next year's opera is alreadythought out ; if you don't believe it ask Prof. Vincent."Che Deceitful Dean ttBook by Mr. J. W. Linn, Mr. C. R. BarrettMiss Marjorie Cooke and others.Score by Bizet, Sullivan, DeKoven,Eriglander, and others.Cast of CharactersReginald Blond in, the Deceitful DeanHarold Heartbreaker, Captain of the Football TeamG. Whizzer, a confidential friend of HeartbreakerMr. Percy B. EckhartA. Bludsucker, a wandering Registrar - Mr. H. M. AdkinsonR. W. Piper, the popular President - Mr. Horace G. LozierLawrence Lowmarker, the exacting ExaminerMr. A. W. Risi,EYPiccadilly Strutter, a Head Marshal - Mr. Rai,ph Hamiij,Adonis Ambler, First Assistant Marshal - - Mr. C. WebbWillie Walker, Second Assistant Marshal Mr. H. H. NewmanJames Hawkins, butler of Mary Jane Hall - Mr. John WebbSenor Aguilar y Anthropofygo, President of theUniversity of Iloilo (affiliated) - Mr. H. M. AdkinsonMartin Dooley, Extension Lecturer - Mr. France Anderson•Charlie Chanter, a modem Minnesinger - Mr. A. Ai,onzo Stagg120 Mr. PerryMr. Victor W. J. PayneSincereSandy Sawedoff , a wounded Hero -Cosimo Cosine, a merry MathematicianBromley Bromide, a cheerful ChemistCato Gerundive, an inflexible InflectorOscar Oratund, an electrifying ElocutionistWinnifred Worthington, " Queen of the Quad."Polly Plunger, confidante of Winnifred -Tabitha Teachem, Head of Mary Jane HouseMembers of Mary Jane House:Sylvia SansouciEthyl Van Rensselaer -Belle Archer -Josiejessnp -Eveline MontmorencyBetty Brown - - - -Mirabel de Lancey -Mary Clancy -Vivian Vassar, a graduate studentTillie Tiptoe, Ph.D., Doctor in Dancing -Samantha Snaggler, interested in annexationNettie Nicegirl, an unclassifiable studentMembers of the Chorus: Messrs. Clarence B. Herschberger, Henry Gale, M. GordonClarke, R. Johnson, F. A. Brown, Guy Kinneman, M. B. Parker, A. T. Stewart,Samuel N. Harper, H. P. Kirtley, Eliot Blackwelder, George A. Young, W. A.Maloney.Members of the Band: Messrs. E. G. Dodge, C. B. Elliott, W. H. Fuller, A. B.Fogle, E. D. Howard, A. F. Naylor, P. Rhodes, and H. E. P. Thomas.Students, University Band, University Military Company, University Glee Club,Pages, University Janitors, University Buildings, University Faculties, and othersupernumeraries. Mr. Basil MillspaughMr. Glenn HobbsMr. F. W. DukeMr. Walter Scott KennedyMr. H. M. Adkinson- Mr. Marvin GaylordMr. Stacey MosserMr. Scott Brown- Mr. W. B. CornellMr. Walter J. SchmahlMr. Harold WilkinsMr. Eliot S. NortonMr. Howard WoodheadMr. Perley FreemanMr. J. F. HageyMr. Clarence McCarthyMr. Emory Cobb AndrewsMr. Perley Freeman- Mr. Horace G. LozierMr. John L. Cookexecutive staff.Messrs. W. Walling and A. G. HoytMr. Horace G. Lozier -Mr. Clinton L. Hoy - -Messrs. R. C Manning and Edward C. KohlsaatMr. William Hilliard -Mr. R. G. Meyers - - - - General ManagersChorus MasterStage Manager*Master of PropertiesStage CarpenterElectrician125Unioersiip wen in tbe Spanish WarHarry Fuller AtwoodHenry T. ChaseW. E. De SombreKnight F. FlandersJohn Harris KelleyErnest De Koven LeffingwellHenry LloydHorace Lozier*Paul Le MaitreE. Whitney MartinAlfred Sayles NorthrupCecil PageWard B. PershingWalter SharpeW. T. SmithG. E. StevesonS. W. StrattonC. F. Tolman, Jr.AlumniMajor E B. Tolman, 1st Illinois InfantryD. D. O'Dell, Chaplain* Died of fever, at Siboney, Cuba, August 3, 1898.im6lee, mandolin and Banjo ClubsMarcus Peter Frutchey ... ManagerClark Scammon Reed - - - Assistant ManagerCbe eke ClubAlbert Simpson Russell - - Leader and PresidentVictor Washington Sincere - - Directorfirst tenors:Clarence Sidney SpauldingW. H. JonesCharles Sampson FreemanPerry J. Paynesecond tenors:William Burgess CornellRay Prescott JohnsonClarence A. McCarthyHenry Scott HollisFIRST bassos:Albert Simpson RussellMarvin GaylordEliot Blackweldersecond bassos:Frederick A. BrownG. P. McDonaldJohn Franklin HageyCarlton Hosmer SnashalOswald Hinton GregoryHoward WoodheadTENOR SOLOIST BARITONE SOLOISTLester bartlett Jones Robert Bailey Davidson128Cbe mandolin ClubByron Bayard Smith - - LeaderWilliam Everton Ramsey - SecretaryFIRST MANDOLINSByron Bayard SmithEmory Cobb AndrewsHenry E. HirshWilliam Everton RamseyWilliam Jacksonsecond mandolinsPaul E. WilsonGeorge Gilbert DavisForrest G. Smithmandola violinsJerome Pratt Magee Perley L. FreemanAlfred F. BeifeldFLUTEWilber Wheeler BassettGUITARSFrank Williamson DukeWalter Joseph SchmahlHugh Lafayette McWilliamsJames Wolke RossRalph Curtiss ManningTRAPSPerry J. Payne131Cbe Banjo ClubHugh Lafayette McWilliams - - - LeaderFIRST BANJOSHugh Lafayette McWilliamsDonald Saxton McWilliamsFrank Williamson DukeGUITARSRalph Curtiss ManningVerne n Tiras FerrisJames Wolke RossEmory Cobb AndrewsSECOND banjosCurtiss Rockwell Manning Harold S. OsborneMANDOLINByron Bayard Smith132Untoersitp ot Cbicago DHIltarp BandGlenn Moody Hobbs, - LeaderSOLO B& CORNETSGlenn Moody HobbsFrederic Mason BlanchardCharles Button ElliottEarl Dean HowardFIRST Bb CORNET E& CORNETAdelbert T. Stewart Francis Wayland ShepardsonPICCOLOWilliam Dayton MerrillCLARINETSOle Hallingbyfirnest Edward IronsAugustus Francis NaylorEmory Cobb Andrewssolo altoWilliam Harvey FullerALTOSErnest Green DodgeFrank Russell WhiteSolomon Farley AcreeFrank Williamson DukeTENORSPierre Rhodes Halbert Elmer Payne ThomasEUPHONIUMCharles Joseph ChamberlainSLIDE TROMBONESMichael Frederic GuyerAlbert Bertram GarcelonVernon Sirvilian PhillipsKb BASSESArza Bracken Fogle Leroy Ellsworth VietsSNARE DRUM BASS DRUMSClarence Mason Gallup Robert Bailey DavidsonByron Bayard Smith133Roma Hattie AdamsFrederick Augustus BrownJ. M. BrosiusGreta Irvin BlanchardBertha Ella ClarkEdward L. ColebeckHarold Bennett ChallissMarjorie Benton CookeGrace Allen CoulterAmos A. EbersolePerley L. FreemanJohn Christopher GustafsonJosephine Frances HazeltonMary Olive HuntingJacob Gish HamakerRebecca Madeleine HardingLester Bartlett JonesL. May LoveFlorence La FouretteAnna Mary MarrowGeorge Washington MuhlemanHarry Lachlin McNeillKatherine Childs MarshEdna Dianah OhrensteinEdith Sylvia PattonFrank Welborn PickelOrmsby Elroy PettetGrace Elizabeth PeabodyWilliam Levi RicherEsther Wallace SturgesClara Albina Tilton Dora May Wilbur134Cbe Unicersitp CbolrMOM JULY 1, 188S.Roma Hattie AdamsGreta Irvin BlanchardMarjorie Benton CookeGrace Allen CoulterBertha Ella ClarkMary Olive HuntingRebecca Madeleine HardingJosephine Frances HazeltonL. May LoveAnna Mary MarrowFlorence La FouretteKatherine Childs MarshEdna Dianah OhrensteinGrace Elizabeth PeabodyEsther Wallace SturgesClara Albina TiltonDora May WilburJ. M. BrosiusFrederick Augustus BrownEdward L. ColebeckHarold Bennett ChallissAmos A. EbersolePerley L. FreemanJohn Christopher GustafsonJacob Gish HamakerLester Bartlett JonesGeorge Washington MuhlemanHarry Lachlin McNeillFrank Welborn PickelOrmsby Elroy PettetW. L. Recker135Cbe Ciger's ReadFrank Williamson DukeByron Bayard SmithWilbur Wheeler BassettEmory Cobb AndrewsRay Prescott JohnsonPaul Eldredge WilsonClarence Alvin McCarthyWalter Joseph SchmahlRalph Curtiss ManningAlbert Simpson Russell136Percy Bernard Eckhart PresidentExecutive CommitteeWilliam France AndersonMarjorie Benton CookeArthur Sears HenningmembersJohn Coulter, Jr. James Weber LinnNott William Flint Arthur Sears HenningWilliam France Anderson Marjorie Benton CookeAlice Austin Knight Josephine Turner AllinLawrence Merton Jacobs Edith Daisy JenkinsRalph Curtiss ManningMarvin Gaylord Thomas Carlyle ClendenningCharles Scribner Eaton Maurice MandevilleClarence A. McCarthy Claribel GoodwinVirginia Wynne Lackersteen Margaret CoulterElizabeth Buchanan Leona Canterbury139Cincoln RouseAssistant Professor George Edgar Vincent - - HeadAssistant Professor William Isaac Thomas - CouncillorAlbert Ellsworth Hill - - - • - - Vice HeadErwin William Eugene Roessler - SecretaryHarry Orrin Gillet . . . - TreasurermembersFrederick Mayor GilesAlbert Ellsworth HillCharles Joseph BushnellClyde Buchan WalkerJohn Paul RitcheyA. C. JohnsonHarry Orrin GilletErich MuenterSwen Benjamin AndersonWilliam Schoonover tfarmanRoy Batchelder NelsonFrederick Dennison BramhallArthur Taber JonesR. W. PattengillJ. T. GoodenowG. L. TenneyCharles Walter BrittonDavid Moore RobinsonH. S. HollisRobert Samuel McClureHarold Hayden NelsonOliver Leroy McCaskillErwin William Eugene RoesslerRay Rickoff BoruffTrevor ArnettCharles Edward CongdonHoward WoodheadP. G. WrightsonFranklin Davis BarkerBenjamin Griffin LeeJerome Pratt Magee140Ulasbtttston RouseProfessor Edwin E. Sparks ----- HeadProfessor Ralph C. H. Catterall - - - CouncillorWalter H. Buhlig - Vice HeadClifton O. Taylor - - - - - - SecretaryHalbert Payne Thomas - - - TreasurermembersHalbert P. ThomasBanks J. WildmanWalter H. BuhligArthur E. BestorLouis T. ForemanJ. Fred MillerVernon S. PhillipsClifton O. TaylorJ. Walter BinghamDonald R. RichbergJohn D. SutherlandFrank L. SlakerH. R. StreetA. P. NelsonCharles M. BarberWalter SoderlingAlex. G. McKnightR. H. ReaPaul J. FoxNorman M. ChiverWilliam E. De SombreHugh LeightonAlvin B. SnyderJellmer R. Pettet141Spelman RouseProfessor Edward Capps - - House CouncillorGertrude Dudley ----- HeadAnna Lockwood Peterson - Secretary and TreasurerBouse CommitteeJennie Louise CoonElizabeth ChamberlinElizabeth Hathaway LingleAnna Lockwood PetersonmembersMary Elizabeth AbernethyHelen Whitney BackusLilian Carroll BanksOtie Eleanor BettsLydia BraunsMary Elizabeth CasteelVashti ChandlerElizabeth ChamberlinJennie Louise CoonLouisa Carpenter De CenAdelle EastonJulia Metcalfe FinneyHelen GardnerLucie HammondGrace HaymanRuth Isabel JohnsonElizabeth Hathaway LingleMinnie LesterClara Lilian MooneyEdith Leavitt NealMarietta NortonNellie O'BrienLaura O'BrienBertha Adelia PattengillAnna Lockwood PetersonMable PorterGrace Edith SellonElla WalkerKatherine Anna WaughClara Morton WelchMarie WerkmeisterNina Estelle WestonBelle Wilson142Graduate ClubOfficers of rot-wHenry M. Adkinson - - - - - PresidentWesley C. Mitchell Vice-PresidentMary B. Harris - - - - - Recording SecretaryHELEN B. Thompson - Corresponding SecretaryAdna W. Risley - Treasurerexecutive CommitteeElizabeth FaulknerSusan W. PeabodyFrances WillistonHenry LloydWilliam E. WallingThomas K. SideyMalcolm W. WallaceGeorge NorlinHowell E. DaviesWilson R. SmithThe Graduate Club of the University of Chicago was organized March 11, 1895,being a successor of the University Union, an association of departmental clubs.The active membership of the club consists of graduate students of the Universitywho have been elected after recommendation by the Executive Committee. Thepresent membership numbers two hundred and fifteen. During the years 1898 and1899 the club was addressed by Mr. Sol Smith Russell, Miss Mary McDowell, Hon.George E. Adams, Mr. Richard Mansfield, Prof. E. B. Poulton, Oxford University ;Prof. Hemy Morse Stephens, Cornell University ; Prof. Francis N. Thorpe, Universityof Pennsylvania ; Miss Olga Nethersole, and Major E. B. Tolman.143Cbe morgan park Club.ONOANIZED 18STOfficersWm. S. HarmanChas. E. CareyBlanche L. TrueJean a. LeslieHarold H. Nelson PresidentFirst Vice-PresidentSecond Vice-PresidentSecretary- Treasurermembers.Arthur PienkowskyWm. S. HarmanCarl D. GreenleafEliot BlackwelderHarold H. NelsonRobert S. McClureClarence W. RichardsJonathan E. WebbG. A. DudleyFlorence ParkerBlanche L. TrueB. K. KniperR. C. GilbertByron B. SmithPaul BlackwelderChas. E. HulbertWm. E. De SombreEva M. ClevelandLucy L. OsgoodWill R. JayneBenj. G. LeeHelen D. HarperHenry S Chas. E. CareyMargaret MorganGeorge E. CongdonAlice HepburnRobert LymanRuth E. MorganFannie H. HollisElim A. E. PalmquistOlive M. HandClara L. GermanClinton L. HoyJean A. LeslieWard A. CutlerHorace V. BogertAlbert L. JonesMargaret Selby GilmarnArthur J. WaltersFrank P. BarkerCarrie S. GilmanBen StrausSamuel N. HarperElla Linn. Hollis144forum Citerarp SocietyMeetings: Tuesdays at 8 P. M., Y. M. C. A. Room.OfficersGeorge Edward Congdon - PresidentArthur Eugene Bestor - - - - Vice-PresidentHugh Guthrie Leighton - TreasurerWilliam Alexander Gordon " ". " SecretarymembersGeorge Edward CongdonArthur Eugene BestorAinsworth Whitney ClarkFrank Russell WhiteThomas Venard GravesWilliam Alexander GordonHugh Guthrie LeightonJay Schoenman PatekVernon Sirvilian PhillipsHarry Bennett AndersonHalbert E. Payne ThomasHyatt Elmer CoveyWilliam Hiddleson AndrewsErnest Edward IronsWilliam Kelley Wright145Cbe PbilolexianMeetings: Wednesdays, 8 p. m., Cobb HallRobert Samuel McClure .... PresidentHarold Hayden Nelson .... Vice-PresidentWilliam Schoonover Harman • - SecretaryAlbert Henry Beifield .... - TreasurermembershipJonathan Edward WebbEliot BlackwelderCharles Eri HulbertEarl Crayton HalesWilliam Schoonover HarmanBenjamin Griffin LeeRobert Elliott GravesLewis GustafsonHarold Hayden NelsonEdward John GreenHenry Scott HollisFrank Perkins BarkerCharles Julian WebbAlbert Henry BeifieldHenry Wellesley JonesRobert Samuel McClure146Cbe Oratorical Association1898-1899Frank Russell White -Ernest Edward IronsTrevor ArnettHoward Pendleton KirtleyjfOoisory CommitteeGeorge NorlinHenry Thomas ColestockCharles Foster RobyRobert Samuel McClure PresidentVice-PresidentSecretaryTreasurer- Graduate CouncilDivinity Council- Senior CouncilJunior Councilnorthern Oratorical ContestANNUAL PRELIMINARY CONTESTKent Theatre, February 24, 1899WINNERArthur Eugene Bestor — Wendell Phillips, the AgitatorALTERNATELawrence M. Jacobs — American StatesmanshipEverett J. Parsons — GladstoneThomas C. Clendenning — National IdealsCharles F. Yoder — The Supremacy of the SpiritualHyatt E. Covey - Alexander Hamilton147Cbe Cbicago-TOinnesota DebateKent Theatre, January 13, 1899Resolved — That a constitutional amendment should be secured by which UnitedStates Senators shall be elected directly by the people.Affirmative Negative'A. J. Finch Thomas C. ClendenningM. Waldron Lawrence Merton JacobsM. Jerome Maurice MandevilleDecision in favor of the negative.Cbe Chicago .Ricbisan DebateChicago April 7, 1899Resolved— That a federal graduated income tax, admitting it to be constitutional,is desirable in this country.«Affirmative NegativeThomas C. Clendenning Charles SimonsLawrence M. Jacobs Sigmond SangerMaurice Mandeville George KingsleyDecision in favor of negative.148Uarsity Debating turnsGraduate— Diuinity Debates1898WINTERFirst Prize (Divinity)Samuel Rowland Robinson James Luther BynumscholarshipsSamuel Rowland RobinsonMilo James LovelaceJames Luther BynumWalter Flavius McCalebSPRINGFirst Prize (Graduate)Edwin Maxey William Buck GuthrieJohn Franklin HageyPrize for the best debater: Edwin MaxeyscholarshipsHenry Thomas ColestockEban Mum fordEdward Charles KunkleEdwin MaxeyWilliam Buck GuthrieJohn Franklin Hagey1898SUMMERFirst Prize (Graduate)Hugh William Hughes Martin SingerEugene M. ViolettePrize for the best debater: William Wallace ReedscholarshipsWilliam Wallace ReedE. W. AllenWilliam Ross SchoemakerHugh William HughesEugene M. VioletteMartin SingerAUTUMN: (No debate)151Senior College finals1898SPRINGFirst PrizeEdwin Campbell WoolleyscholarshipsRalph Leroy Peck Edwin Campbell WoolleyPercy Bernard Eckhart Joseph Edwin FreemanMarilla Zeroyda Parker Elbridge L. HeathSUMMERFirst PrizeAllen Grey Hoyt Joseph Edwin FreemanMichael Billman WellsscholarshipsJoseph Edwin Freeman Allen Grey HoytMichael Billman Wells Maximillian MorgenthauElim Arthur Palmquist .AUTUMNFirst PrizeCharles Francis YoderscholarshipsSamuel Hope Thompson Lawrence Merton JacobsCharles Francis Yoder Thomas Amiss StampGeorge Balderston Watson Marjorie Benton CookeWINTER1899DelateResolved, "That the Income Tax, if it were constitutional, would be advisable."Affirmative NegativeWilloughby George Walling Harry N. GottliebHarry B. Newman Lawrence Merton JacobsCharles Lindsey Burroughs Thomas Carlyle ClendenningDecision for the Negative. The University prize for excellence in debate wasgiven to Harry N. Gottlieb.152Junior College finals1898SPRINGThe Ferdinand Peck Prize of #50 was awarded to Vernon Sirvilian Phillips.SCHOLARSHIPSLindley Willet AllenVernon Sirvilian PhillipsEdith Daisy JenkinsRoy Batchelder NelsonJulian Frank GoodenowClarence Alvin McCarthySUMMERThe Ferdinand Peck Prize of $50 was awarded to Maurice Mandeville.SCHOLARSHIPSAnna McCalebH. E. ThomasFrances BurlingMaurice MandevilleH. W. JonesAUTUMNThe Ferdinand Peck Price of $50 was awarded to Robert Samuel McClureSCHOLARSHIPSCharles S. EatonRobert Samuel McClureJay Schoenmann PatekOliver Leroy McCaskillGrace SwitzerC. J. WilliamsonWINTERSCHOLARSHIPThe Ferdinand Peck Prize of $50 was awarded to M. R. Myers.Miss M. K. LincolnMiss Alma YondorfO. S. McCaskillM. R. MyersC. J. Williamson153*/'J Ai^li&mtSenior CollegeSPRING 1898Robert Elliott Graves Cecil PageRalph C. Hamill Joseph Edwin FreemanRoger Throop Vaughan Norman Kendall AndersonFranklin Hermon GeselbrachtSUMMERNorman Kendall AndersonGeorge Hoyt Sawyer Erich MuenterCharles Lindsey Burroughs Roger Throop VaughanRalph C. Hamill Pearl HunterFranklinrtlermon GeselbrachtAUTUMNWilloughby G. WallingErich MuenterMichael Billman WellsMargaret Maria ChoateRalph Curtiss Manning David Guy HurlburtRoy Coleman GriswoldCharles Foster RobyWINTERCharles Foster RobyRoy Coleman Griswold Frederick Augustus BrownDavid Guy Hurlburt Ralph C. HamillHoward Pendleton Kirtley William France AndersonRalph Curtiss Manning Clinton Luman Hoy Charlotte Rose TellerAlvin Lester BartonFrederick Augustus BrownCharles Lindsey BurroughsChairmanCharles Foster RobyMichael Billman WellsMargaret Maria ChoateChairmanWilliam France AndersonPearl HunterClinton Luman HoyRalph C. HamillChairmanAinsworth Whitney ClarkCharles Branden DavisWilloughby George WallingParke Ross154Junior College Council1898SPRINGErnest Edward Irons - - - ChairmanClinton Luman Hoy Allen Grey HoytRowland Thumm Rogers Glenn Plumb HallElla May Norton Clara Morton WelchRuth Edna Morgan Robert Samuel McClure. Fred Sass Roy PageSUMMERRobert Samuel McClure - - - ChairmanAllen Grey Hoyt 'Herbert Paul ZimmermannGlenn Plumb Hall Anna McCalebClara Morton Welch Wm. Schoonover HarmanFred Sass Russell WilesRoy Page Clarence Alvin McCarthyF. P. BarkerAUTUMNRobert Samuel McClure - - - ChairmanHerbert Paul Zimmermann Mortimer Brainard ParkerWm. Schoonover Harman Roy Batchelder NelsonRussell Wiles Kellogg SpeedClarence Alvin McCarthy Harold B. ChallissF. P. Barker John Manly ClendenningFrank L. Slaker1899WINTERLeroy Tudor Vernon - - ChairmanRoy Batchelder Nelson George Gilbert DavisKellogg Speed Leona CanterburyHarold B. Challiss Howard YoungFrank L. Slaker155Dioinitp Council1898SPRING-SUMMERElijah Abraham Hanley - - ChairmanWilliam Oeschger Theron Winfred MortimerFred Delisle Finn Charles Edward FingleyHoward Spilman Gait Clarence Mason GallupEdward Charles Kunkle William Ross Schoemaker1898-1899AUTUMN-WINTERHenry Thomas Colestock - - ChairmanWalter Scott Goode John Gallup BriggsEban Mumford Peter W. WrightJulian Emmet Yates James Robert PentufTWilliam Henry Garfield Robert Bailey DavidsonGraduate Council1898WINTER-SPRINGJohannes Benoni Jonas - - - ChairmanWilliam Clinton Alden Florence May LyonAnne Bates Hersman Herbert Joseph DavenportSUMMEREdward Ambrose Bechtel - - ChairmanMalcolm William Wallace Sophonisba Preston BreckenridgeFlorence May Lyon Harry Alvin MillisAUTUMNGeorge Norlin - ChairmanMalcolm William Wallace Sophonisba Preston BreckenridgeFlorence May Lyon Harry Alvin Millis156University RousesSOUTH DIVINITY HOUSE.Dean E. B. Hulbert, Councillor. E. A. Hanley, Head.MIDDLE DIVINITY HOUSE.Head Professor E. D. Burton, Councillor. James Robert Pentuff, HeadGRADUATE HOUSE.Head Professor A. W. Small, Councillor. Asssistant Professor Camillovon Klenze, Head.SNELL HOUSE.Head Professor H. P. Judson, Councillor. Henry Gordon Gale, Head.BEECHER HOUSE.Assistant Professor F. J. Miller, Councillor. Elizabeth Wallace, Head.KELLY HOUSE.Assistant Professor Robert JMorse Lovett, Councillor. Edith Burnham Foster, Head.NANCY FOSTER HOUSE.Associate Professor W. D. MacClintock, Councillor. Assistant Professor MyraReynolds, Head.LINCOLN HOUSE.Assistant Professor William Isaac Thomas, Councillor. Assistant Professor GeorgeEdgar Vincent, Head.WASHINGTON HOUSE.Instructor Ralph Charles Henry Catterall, Councillor and Head.SPELMAN HOUSE.Associate Professor Edward Capps, Councillor. Miss Dudley, Head.GREEN HOUSE.Head Professor Henry H. Donaldson, Councillor. Associate ProfessorMarion Talbot, Head.The following Houses outside the Quadrangles have been recognized by the University:CUMBERLAND PRESBYTERIAN DIVINITY HOUSE.Ira W. Howerth, Councillor. W. C. Logan, Head.DISCIPLES DIVINITY HOUSE.Associate Professor W. D. Mac Clintock, Councillor. Edward S. Ames, Head.ALPHA DELTA PHI HOUSE.5700 Monroe Avenue.Professor G. S. Goodspeed, Councillor. Doctor Ferdinand Schwill, Head.BETA THETA PI HOUSE.5757 Madison Avenue.Assistant Professor F. W. Shepardson, Councillor. Assistant ProfessorWilliam Bisnop Owen, Head.157DELTA KAPPA EPSILON HOUSE.5826 Washington Avenue.Assistant Professor James Rowland Angell, Councillor. Professor ShailerMatthews, Head.DELTA TAU DELTA HOUSE.566i Washington Avenue.Director Ned Arden Flood, Councillor. Associate Professor Alexander Smith, Head.PHI DELTA THETA HOUSE.5750 Madison Avenne.Associate Professor J. W. Moncries, Councillor. Doctor Otis William Caldwell, Head.PHI KAPPA PSI HOUSE.^737 Monroe Avenue.Professor George Lincoln Hendrickson, Councillor. Professor EdmundJanes James, Head.PSI UPSILON HOUSE.5660 Madison Avenue,Associate Professor Robert Francis Harper, Councillor. Assistant ProfessorGeorge Carter Howland, Head.SIGMA CHI HOUSE.5714 Washington Avenue.Assistant Professor S. H. Clark, Councillor. Philemon Bulkley Kohlsaat, Head.CHI PSI HOUSE.5S33 Monroe Avenue.Associate Professor Starr. W. Cutting, Councillor. Walter A. Payne, Head.The Christian Union has charge of the organized religious and philanthropic activities of the University. Atpresent the organizations represented are the Young Men'sChristian Association, the Young Women's Christian Association, and the Philanthropic Committee, which has incharge the University Settlement. In addition to its relation to these organizations, the Christian Union has chargeof the University Vesper Services, held each Sundayafterooon.The Executive Committee of the Christian Union iscomposed as follows: ex-officio members: President andChaplain of the University, and officers of the three organizations already mentioned; members by election: President, Vice-President, and arepresentative from each of the great divisions of the University (Junior College,Senior College, Graduate School, and Divinity School) ; member by appointment,the Secretary.The Executive Committee for the current year is as follows:PresidentVice-PresidentSecretary and TreasurerProfessor John M. CoulterCharles F. YoderF. C. Cleveland - - • -membersDr. William R. HarperDr. Charles R. HendersonR. M. LovettFred MerrifieldHoward P. KirtleyC. M. GallupAmos A. EbersoleAnne Bowland ReedGrace DarlingAnna McCalebReads of CommitteesC. M. GallupH. P. KirtleyE. C. KunkleA. E. BestorC. B. ColemanC. J. BushnellW. A. CutlerF. Barker Religious Meetings- Bible StudyMissionaryMembership- Intercollegiate RelationsReceptionFinance, Board and Rooms- Employment Bureau159young men's Christian Association.Thomas C. Clendenning ----- PresidentM. R. Myers ------ Vice-PresidentC. F. Yoder - Corresponding SecretaryH. P. Kirtley - Recording SecretaryE. H. Sturtevant TreasurerFred Merrifield - General Secretaryyoung Women's Christian AssociationAnne B. Reed ...... PresidentLucy M. Johnston - - - - - Vice-PresidentHelen Backus -..--- TreasurerEdith Bullis -. - - - - Recording SecretaryAnnaMcCaleb - - - Corresponding SecretaryCommitteesdevotionalEdith Neal Grace DarlingMEMBERSHIPLucy JohnstonPHILANTHROPICGrace BushnellMISSIONARYJoanna BarberPUBLICATIONMary PardeeFinanceHelen Backus160itiv^r$itvChe Uniucrsifp or Chicago WcckipSPRING1898Edwin Campbell Woolley, '98, Managing EditorJoseph Edwin Freeman, 98, Assistant Managing EditorCharles H. Gallion, Business ManagerAssistant editorsRalph Leroy Peck, '98 Allen Grey Hoyt, '99Nott William Flint, 98 William Francis McDonald, ^98Josephine Turner Allin, '99 Florence McMahan, '99Rowland Thumm JRogers, 'GO Walter Joseph Schmahl, '00Leroy Tudor Vernon, '00 Frank B. Rae, Jr.SUMMER1898Joseph Edwin Freeman, '98, Managing EditorAllen Grey Hoyt, '99, Assistant Managing EditorGharles H. Gallion, Business ManagerAssistant €ditorsWilliam Simmons Broughton, '98 Van Sumner Pearce, '98Frederick Bailey Thomas, '99 William Burgess Cornell, '99Lewis Lee Losey, '00 Herbert Paul Zimmermann, '01AUTUMN1898Allen Grey Hoyt, '99, Managing EditorWilliam Burgess Cornell, '99, Assistant Managing EditorCharles H. Gallion,Horace L. Burr, > Business ManagersAssistant editorsVan Sumner Pearce, '99 Josephine Turner Allin, *99Thomas Carlysle Clendenning, '99 Walter Joseph Schmahl, >00Leroy Tudor Vernon Lewis Lee Losey, '00Parke Ross, '00 Robert Samuel McClure, '00Herbert Paul Zimmermann, '01 Harry W. Belfield, '01163WINTER1899William Burgess Cornell, '99, Managing EditorWalter Joseph Schmahl, '00, Assistant Managing EditorCharles L. Gallion,Horace L. Burr, [ Business ManagersAssistant editorsVan Sumner Pearce, '99 Josephine Turner Allin, '99Thomas Carlyle Clendenning, '99 Leroy Tudor Vernon, '00Lewis Lee Losey, '00 Parke Ross, '00Robert Samuel McClure, '00 Herbert Paul Zimmermann, '01Harry Williams Belfield, '01 Charles J. Bushnellformer Officers of Boardmanaging editors1892, E. M. Foster 1896, Frederick /Day Nichols1893, E. M. Foster 1896, G. W. Axelson1893, H. L. Burr 1896, W. O. Wilson1893, H. C. Murphy 1897, W. O. Wilson1894, H. C. Murphy 1897, H. L. Ickes1895, T. W. Moran 1897, M. P. Frutchey1895, Frank W. Woods 1897, M. D. Mclntyre1895, Frederick Day Nichols 1898, M.D. MclntyreAssistant managing editors1891, T. W. Moran 1896, H. L. Iekes1895, William Pierce Lovett 1897, J. P. Mentzer1896, William Pierce Lovett 1897, M. D. Mclntyre1896, W. O. Wilson 1897, F. B. Thomas1896, H. L. Ickes 1898, F. B. ThomasBusiness managers1892, W. F. Durno 1895, C. H. Gallion1892, C. S. Pike 1896, C. H. Gallion1892, P. B. Kohlsaat 1897, C. H. Gallion1893, C. H. Gallion 1898, C. H. Gallion1894, C. H. GallionAssistant Business managers1895, W. M. Kelso 1896, W. M. Kelso161Cap and 6otonmanaging editorsWalter Joseph Schmahl Ralph Curtiss ManningBusiness managersLeroy Tudor Vernon Charles Branden DavisAssistant editorsRalph C. HamillEmory Cobb AndrewsElizabeth Earnist BuchananCharles Warren ChaseErnest Edward IronsClarence A. McCarthyMarian Farwell TookerHarvey Malcolm MacQuistonHarry Norman GottliebParke RossClark Scammon ReedJessie Nea SprayHelen Davida Harperformer Officers of BoardMANAGING EDITORS BUSINESS MANAGERS1895, Philip Rand 1895, Walter Atwood1895, Charles Sumner Pike 1895, Oswald Arnold1896, Philip Rand 1896, Frederick Davies1898, Arthur Sears Henning 1898, Allen Grey Hoyt1898, Willoughby George Walling 1898, Earnest Hamilton DillonAssistant managing editors1898, Thomas Temple Hoyne169senioR -fiTCUftSS J%OfficersCharles Lindsey Burroughs - PresidentAnne Bowland Reed - Vice- PresidentCharles Verner Drew , ----- SecretaryRalph C. Hamill ----- Treasurerexecutive CommitterGrace J. EberhartEsther W. SturgesIrene CookWilliam France AndersonWilloughby George WallingLindley Willett Allen, 2. X.Josephine Turner Allin.The Quadranglers: Member of the University Chorus, '96; Secretary of theAcademic Colleges, '95-'96; Assistant Editor of the Weekly, '96-'99; Women'sGlee Club, '96; Executive Committee, Junior Day, '96; Class Custodian ofthe "Ivy Spade", '96 '97; Dramatic Club, '97 99.William France Anderson, A. K. E.Owl and Serpent; Order of the Iron Mask; Three Quarters Club; Marshal,'98-'99; Dramatic Club. President '97-'98; Tennis Team '9-*-'97; Wrestlingteam-Light Weight, '98; Senior Council '99; Board of Editors, Cap andGown, '98; Junior College Scholarship in Public Speaking; Assistant Manager of the Musical Clubs '97-'98; General Chairman of Washington Promenade, '99.Katherine Andrews.Elizabeth Florence Avery.Frank Puterbaugh Bachman.Helen Whitney Backus.Margaret Baker.170Alvin Lester Barton, B. 0. n.Junior College Councillor; Senior College Councillor; Mandolin Club '96-'98;Track Team '97- '98.Edna Bevans.Ray Rickoff Boruff.Lincoln House, '97; Basket Ball Team, '97.Helen Mercedes Brehl.Frederick Augustus Brown.Track Team, '97 and '98; Senior College Council, '98-'99; Glee Club, '98'99.Charles Lindsey Burroughs, A. A. <p.Owl and Serpent; Track Team, '96, '97, '9S, "99. Relay Team, '98; GleeClub, '97, '98; Senior Council '93; Marshal '98-'99; Senior College Representative on the Board of Athletics, '98-'99; Honorable Mention, '97; HistoryScholar, '97-'98.Sarah Elizabeth Butler.Mortar Board; Nu Pi Sigma.Lucy Hamilton Carson.Charles Preston Cary.Elizabeth Chamberlin.Charles Warren Chase, *. A. 6.Ainsworth Whitney Clark, x« +•President, The Forum, '98; Scholarship in Junior Declamations, '97; FinanceCommittee, Washington Promenade, '99; Senior College Councillor, '99;Scholarship in Senior Debate, '98.Maurice Gordon Clarke, A. A. 4».Owl and Serpent.John Joseph Clarkson,Junior College Scholarship in French '98- '99.George Edward Congdon,The Forum; Lincoln House; Morgan Park Club.Marjorie Benton Cooke.William Burgess Cornell, A. K. E.Three Quarters Club; Glee Club, '95-'97 and '98 '99; Junior Day Committee'96; Philolexian, '95; Weekly Board, '9899, Managing Editor, Winter, '99.Grace Allen Coulter.171Charles Newman Crewdson.John Jackson Crumley.Ward Augustus Cutler.Helen Kelchner Darrow.Joseph Almond Dixon.Daniel Webster Dornsifb.Carleton Ellsworth Douglass.Charges Verner Drew. A. A. <p.Owl and Serpent; Marshal, '96-'99; Geology Scholarship '98-'99.Amos A. Ebersole.Percy Bernard Eckhart, A. K. E.Order of the Iron Mask; Three Quarters Club; Dramatic Club '96-99 President '98-'99; Weekly Board '96; Artist Cap and Gown, '96, and '98; SeniorScholarship in Oratory, Spring, '98; Junior Day Committee, '97.Abraham Alcon Ettelson.Junior and Senior Councillor; Scholarship in English '98-'99; Scholarship inDeclamation, '98.Newell Montague Fair, X. ^.Track Team '97-'98; Relay Team, '98; Junior Day Committee, '98; "Reserves" '96.Sara Feilchenfeld.Julia Metcalfe Finney.Louis Thomas Foreman, <p. r. A.Edward Frantz.Joseph Edwin Freeman, A. K. E.Owl and Serpent; Order of Iron Mask; Managing-Editor the Weekly Summer, '98; Scholarship in Senior College Debate Summer, '98.Carrie Ella Freudenthal.Julius Henry Philip Gauss, A. K. E.Roy Coleman Griswold, B. 0. n.Alice Haight.Sybil Verne Hall.Ole Hallingly, Jr.Jacob Gish Hamaker.172Ralph C. Hamill, A. K. E.Owl and Serpent; Order of the Iron Mask; Three Quarters Club; JuniorCollege Council '96-'97; Chairman of Junior Day, '97; Senior Council '98'99;Marshal, '98-'99; Foot-ball team '96, '97, '98.Lola Marie Harmon.Jerome Benjamin Harrington.Ella Martha Hayes.Josephine Frances Hazelton.William M. Henderson.Arthur Sears Henning, V. Y.Owl and Serpent; Order of the Iron Mask; Associate-Editor "Maroon," '95-'96; Literary Editor, "Weekly," '96-'97; Managing Editor, "Capand Gown,"'98; Dramatic Club, '97-'99; Mulberry Club '96-'99; Junior Day Committee,'96,.'97.Albert Ellsworth Hill.Henry Scott HOllis.Lincoln House, Morgan Park Club; Glee Club, '98-'99.Allan Hopkins.Charter member of the Forum.Cora Roche Howland.Mortar Board.Allen Grey Hoyt, B. 0. n.Owl and Serpent; Order of the Iron Mask; President of Class of '99; BusinessManager, "Cap and Gown," '98; Weekly Board '97-'98; Managing Editor,'98; Chairman, Junior Promenade, '98; Junior Councillor, '98; Winner ofPrize in Senior College Debate, '98; Junior Day Committee, '97.Clara Delia Hulbert.Pearl Louise Hunter.Women's Mandolin Club, '97-'99; Senior Councillor '98; Senior CollegeScholar in Romance, '97-'98.David Guy Hurlburt.William Hayden Jackson.Mandolin Club, '94- '97 and '98-'99; Scholarship in Latin, '96-'97.Lawrence Merton Jacobs, B. 0. n.Dramatic Club; Oxford Club; Senior College Scholarship in Public Speaking,Dec. '98; Chicago Minnesota Debate, Jan. '99; Senior College Debate, Mar.'99; Chicago-Michigan Debate, Apr., '99; Winner of Second Prize, OratoricalContest, Feb., '99.173Ruth Isabel Johnson.Lucy Marian Johnston.Charter Member of the Idlers; Honorable Mention in Junior Colleges.Balfour Johnstone.Emma Christine Jonas.Arthur Taber Jones.Lincoln House, '98-'99; University Chorus '95-98; Senior Scholar in Physics'97-'98.Florence Rachabi, Jones.Mabel Avery Kells.Robert McDonald Kirkland.Charles Klauber.Entrance Scholar, '96.Alice Austin Knight.Mortar Board; Nu Pi Sigma; Dramatic Club; Women's Glee Club, '96-'97,Women's Mandolin Club '97-'98; Junior Promenade Committee, '97.Mary Nickerson Lakin.Mortar Board; Nu Pi Sigma.Alma de Lalande Le Due.Irwin Lester.Minnie Lester.Elizabeth Hathaway Lingle.Mary Winifred Loughridge.William Pierce Lovett.Glee Club '94-'95; Editor of Weekly '94- '96; Assistant Marshal '97; University Choir.Olive Maguire.Clausine Mann.Paul Mandeville.Muriel Annette Massey.Morton Adolph Mergentheim.Anna Elizabeth Miller.Mary Susan Miller.Clara Lilian Mooney.174Maximilian Morgenthau, Jr.Erich Muenter.Elizabeth Margaret NollCornelia Stewart Osborne.Sigma Club.Caroline Bolles Paddock.Elim Arthur Eugene Palmquist.Marilla Zeroyda Parker.Everett Joseph Parsons.Van Sumner Pearce, B. 0. n.Weekly Board, Assistant Editor, '93-'i)9; Marshal's Aide at the Mid-AutumnConvocation, '98.Metta L. Persons.Anna Lockwood Peterson.Spelman House; Oxford Club; Economic Club; Junior Council '96; SeniorCouncil, '98.Hugh James Polkey.R. M. Rabb.Martha Binford Railsback.Anne Bowl and Reed.Quadranglers; Nu Pi Sigma; Vice-President, Class of '99; President of Y.W. C. A., '98-'99; Women's Mandolin Club, '96-'97.Rufus Maynard Reed, X. ?.Frederick Edwin Reeve.Charlotte Louise Reichman.Kate Clementine Rising.James Wolke Ross.Mandolin Club '98-'99.George Hoyt Sawyer.Mary Blanche Simmons.Septimus Sisson.Fred Warren Smedley.Byron Bayard Smith, V. Y.Mandolin Club '95-'99; Leader '98-'99; Track Team '93-00; Captain '99.Tiger's Head; University Band.Nettie Spencer.175Jessie Nea Spray.Mortar Board; Senior Council, '97; Washington Promenade Committee , '97;Women's Mandolin Club, '9S-98; Leader '97-'98; "Cap and Gown" Board '99;"Valedictorian," Class of '99.Joe Cecil Stone.Elizabeth Marguerite Strauchon.Charlotte Rose Teller.Mortar Board.Catherine Torrance.William Robert Tyndale.Roger Throop Vaughan, A. A. $.Councillor, '98; Honorable Mention in Junior College.Clyde Buchan Walker.Willoughby George Walling, A. K. E.Owl and Serpent; Order of the Iron Mask; Three Quarters Club; Presidentof Junior Day, '96; Managing Editor, "Cap and Gown," '98; Marshal '97-'98;Head-Marshal, '98-'99; Chairman of Senior College Council, Autumn. '98.John James Walsh, «p. K. ¥.Order of the Iron Mask; Three Quarters Club; Junior College Scholarship inPublic Speaking; Junior College Councillor; Junior Promenade Committee, '97.Jonathan Edwards Webb.University Chorus; Philolexian; Football Team, '96, '97 and '98.Charles Weber.Ella Corlette Weichard.Carl Frederick Weinberger.Michael Billman Wells, B. 0. n.Senior Councillor; Scholarship in Senior College Debate.Marie Werkmeister.Senior College Scholar in Physics '98-'99.William Kelley Wright, <p. T. A.Charles Frances Yoder.Senior College prize in Oratory, '98; Vice-President of the Christian UnionCorresponding Secretary of the Y. M. C. A.Albert Norval Young.176In FRemoriamJudge Daniel L. Shorey, died March 4th, 1899.Assistant Professor Baur, died June 25th, 1898.Miss Susan Cutler, died February 24th, 1899.Mr. Paul LeMaitre, died August 3d, 1898.Mr. John Manly Clendenning, died December 29th, 1899.AMOS ALONZO STAGG,Director of Athletics.Athletic RepresentativesThe Graduate Schools - - Henry Gordon GaleThe Divinity Schools - - Robert Bailey DavidsonThe Senior Colleges - - John Preston MentzerThe Junior Colleges - - - Leroy Tudor VernonCoacDesAmos Alonzo StaggHenry Gordon GaleCharles Foster RobyHorace Butterworth183Walter Scott Kennedy Charles Foster RobyMaurice Gordon Clarke Fred Harvey CalhounCharley Lindsey Burroughs Walter Joseph SchmahlMark Asa Cleveland Jonathan Edward WebbRalph C. Hamill Kellogg SpeedHugh Guthrie Leighton Fred MerrifieldLeroy Tudor Vernon Byron Bayard SmithCarter Brown Milton Howard PettitNewell Montague Fair Mortimer ParkerWilliam Arthur Moloney James Ronald HenryFrank Louis Slaker Edwin George AllenJulian Frank Goodenow Arthur Edwin BeersJoseph Chalmers Ewing Bert Jame9 CassellsOrville Silvester Burnett Walter James CavanaughAlvin Lester Barton Baudinot Gage LeakeWilliam Hiddleson Andrews William Thaw GardnerTurner Burton Smith Dan Brouse SouthardErnest August Wriedt Hall Mac ElreePaul Donald MacQuiston Charles Duffield W. HalseyHarvey Malcolm MacQuiston184EMFoot-Ball— Season1898Several events conspired tomake the foot-ball season of1898 especially noteworthy. Theschedule practically made threedistinct goals to be reached; viz:to make a good showing againstPennsylvania at Philadelphia onOctober 29, on the occasion ofthe first trip ever made to theEast by a University of Chicagofoot-ball team ; to get back atWisconsin, who had defeatedChicago the previous year andwith whom there had beenwaged a bitter contention regarding the professionism ofMaybury and Cochems ; and towin the championship of theWest from Michigan on Thanksgiving Day. The first two Chicago gloriously accomplished;the latter she was preventedfrom securing by only the narrowest margin in a game inwhich all of the accidents ofthe day were plainly in Michigan's favor.With the passing of this season comes the retirement of anumber of men who by theirsplendid playing and loyal devotion during the past three orfour years have been largelyresponsible for bringing Chicagoto the top in foot-ball. ToHerschberger, Clarke, Hamill,Mortimer and Cavanagh, theUniversity owes a debt of gratitude."It is mere blessedto ^ivetrinntc receivedLLCIk ComCenterLeft GuardRight GuardLeft TackleRight TackleLeft EndRight End -Quarter BackLeft Half -Right HalfFull Back - •s Kellogg SpeedWalter James CavanaghOrville, Silvester BurnettClarence James RogersTheron WinfredJonathan Edwards Webb( Walter Joseph Schmahl( Jamhs Ronald HenryRalph C. HamillWalter Scott Kennedy (Captain)j Maurice Gordon ClarkeI James Ronald Henry- Clarence Bert Herschberger- Frank Louis SlakersubstitutesMark Asa ClevelandJoseph Chalmers EwingPeter Knolla Bert James CasselsEdwin George AllenRecord of tbe team for mtSeptember 24, Chicago vs. Knox College, Marshall Field,September 28, Chicago vs. Rush Medical Coll., Marshall Field,October 1, Chicago vs. Monmouth College, Marshall Field,October 5, Chicago vs. Coll. of Ph. and Sur., Marshall Field,October 8, Chicago vs. Iowa State Univer'y, Marshall Field,October 15, Chicago vs. Beloit College, Marshall Field,October 22, Chicago vs. Northwestern Univ., Marshall Field,October 29, Chicago vs. University of Penna., Philadelphia,November 5, Chicago vs. Purdue University, Marshall Field,November 12, Chicago vs. University of Wis., Marshall Field,November 24, Chicago vs. University of Mich., Marshall Field,Total points scored : by Chicago 214, by opponents 40.Number of games won, 9 ; lost, 2.188Cbe 1898 ScrubsThe Scrub team had always been a variable quantity up to 1897, when the number of candidates out, warranted some organization. The 1898 scrubs were the bestscrubs up to date, and undoubtedly could have " licked" the 1897 scrubs all aroundMarshall Field. The life of a " scrub" is a hard one. He is beaten and "cussed" onthe field, and off the field receives no recognition.To the " Subs," the " Scrubs," and the " Dubs" the 'Varsity team owes much ofits glory.Center -„Left GuardRight GuardLeft Tackle -Right TackleLeft EndRight EndQuarter BackLeft HalfRight Half -Full Back the teamLeighton and C. WebbSnider and Gregory- Buhlig and Wriedt- Gaylord and Walling- Eldridge and RichClendenning- Smith and OsborneBrown and HolsteKirk and Walker- Sheldon and GoodenowFreeman and HungateSchedule of GamesScrubs vs. English H. S. - - 5-5Scrubs vs. Bennett Medical College - 12-6Scrubs vs. Morgan Park Academy - 5-22Scrubs vs. East Aurora H. S. - 11-18189Season w*There was no championship decided in base-ball in 1898. Chicago, Michiganand Illinois each had an equally poor claim to the honor. Chicago won all fourgames of the series with Illinois, and was in turn beaten in three out of the five games withMichigan. Michigan was twice shut out by Illinois, losing her series and championshipclaims. Chicago had the highest percentage of games won.Cbe teamWilliam Thaw Gardner CatcherTurner Burton Smith PitcherWalter Scott Kennedy 1st BaseMaurice Gordon Clarke - - 2d BaseFred Merrifield 3d BaseLeroy T*udor Vernon Short StopDan Brouse Southard Left FieldClarence Bert Herschberger - Center FieldGeorge Hoyt Sawyer (Captain) Right FieldSubstitutesErnest August WriedtHugh Guthrie LeightonHall Breaden Mac Elree190EmChicago's Base Ball Record tor 1898April 16,April 20,April 23,April 25,May 3,May 7,May 11,May 14,May 18,May 19,May 21,May 24,May 25,May 28,May 31,June 4,June 8,June 9,June 17, Chicago vs.Chicago vs.Chicago vs.Chicago vs.Chicago vs.Chicago vs.Chicago vs.Chicago vs.Chicago vs.Chicago vs.Chicago vs.Chicago vs.Chicago vs.Chicago vs.Chicago vs.Chicago vs.Chicago vs.Chicago vs.Chicago vs. Beloit College,Northwestern University,Whitings,Rush Medical CollegeUniversity of Michigan,Northwestern University,University of Michigan,University of Illinois,Northwestern University,University of Michigan,Beloit College,University of Illinois,University of Illinois,University of Michigan,University of Notre Dame,University of Illinois,Lake Forest University,U. of Chicago Graduates,U. of Chicago Graduates,Summary of points: Chicago, 132; opponents, 90,Chicago, 12 ; opponents, 7. Marshall Field, 4-3Marshall Field, 10-3Marshall Field, 1-2Marshall Field, 224Ann Arbor, 4-5Evanston, 6-1Ann Arbor, 4-2Marshall Field, 12-9Evanston, 8-1MarshaM Field, 2-4Marshall Field, 1-4Champaign, 6-5Champaign, 13-4Marshall Field, 1-4Marshall Field, 9-12Marshall Field, 2-1Marshall Field, 7-1Marshall Field, 5-12Marshall Field, 15-13Games won:The batting and fielding records for all practice and championship games wereas follows:Times 2 3at base base Home Er AverGames bat Hits Average hits hits runs Chances rors ageGardner, c. 18 77 24 312 4 5 1 116 6 948Smith, p 22 87 27 310 1 1 1 74 1 986Kennedy, 1st b. 24 99 38 384 9 6 2 343 11 908Clarke, 2d b. 23 86 32 372 7 0 0 104 3 971Vernon, s. s. 24 86 21 244 5 2 0 131 22 839Merrifield, 3d b. 24 95 29 305 8 0 1 106 8 924Southard, 1. f 20 72 17 236 2 2 0 42 9 786Herschberger c. f. 22 95 41 432 8 2 3 35 6 829Sawyer, r. f. 24 80 25 284 4 1 1 23 7 09:>Wriedt, sub 11 32 6 187 0 0 0 11 2 M8Leighton, sub. 11 38 9 237 1 0 0 97 5 948McElree, sub. 8 32 8 250 1 0 0 36 o 'JI I193SEASON 1898That track athletics in the West have shared with other college sports a rapidincrease in popular favor, is evidenced by the great numbers in attendance at themore important meets from year to year. From a position of obscurity, track athleticshave rapidly risen to a plane where they share, in a degree only slightly less, theinterest bestowed upon foot-ball and base-ball. A parallel improvement in methodsof coaching and training has gone on meantime, and records have been cut again andagain.The year 1898 was marked by three events worthy of more than passing notice inthe world of athletics. Pursuing a chronological order, the first to be considered isthe Athletic and Gymnastic Tournament, given under the auspices of the Universityof Chicago, at Tattersall's, on March 5th. This meet, far surpassing in extent anything of the sort ever before undertaken in this section, was successfully run off underthe direction of Professor A. A. Stagg; the grade of the performances being especiallyhigh. Besides the regular track and field events for colleges, high schools and academies, gymnastic fencing and wrestling contests were decided.Perhaps of greater importance from a national stand-point, was the representation of Chicago and Michigan in the college relay championship race at Philadelphiaon April 30th. It was the first time the West had ever been representedat this meet, and the highly satisfactory showing made, especially by».^ Chicago, is certain to result in a more cordial recognition of western skilland sportsmanship. That Chicago should have won on a foul is unfortunate, but there is some compensation in the knowledge that withoutthe foul, her chances of victory would have been at least even.The last of the significant features of the year was the secession ofChicago, Michigan and Illinois from the Western Intercollegiate Associa-194tion, followed by the holding of a triangular meet on Marshall Field on June 4th, atthe same time that the annual championship meet of the association was being decidedat Parkside. Maybury and Cochems of Wisconsin had been charged with professionalism by Michigan and Chicago, the charges being supported by apparently indisputable affidavits, in spite of which the men were exonerated by the Graduate ExecutiveCommittee, on the night of June 3d. The secession followed at once, Illinois standingby the two who had brought the charges. The W. I. A. A. A. attempted to retaliateby suspending from competition the men who competed at the triangular meet, and was upheld by the Amateur Athletic Association, anallied body. The triple alliance was too strong, however, ; mandatesof the opposing association were passed over unheeded ; and a finalretraction of obnoxious measures and a reconciliation was the inevitable sequence. This was brought about at a peace conference held atthe Auditorium on September 28th. Meantime Maybury and Cochemshad been adjudged professionals by the Wisconsin Athletic board, sothat all cause of dissension was gone.ebicago's Record for wsDuring the year Chicago, contested in seven intercollegiate meets,winning three outright, tying one, and losing three. The first meetof the year, an in-door dual contest with Northwestern, went to thevisiting school by virtue of Stagg's consent to the proposition to strikefrom the list of events the mile run and the mile walk, for whichNorthwestern had no men entered. The Tattersall's carnival followed, when Chicagoled the nearest competitor by twenty points. The performances of Smith, White,Burroughs and Herschberger at this meet are especially noteworthy.On April 30th came the relay championship at Philadelphia. TheChicago team led from the start, and until White was run into andpractically brought to a stand-still by Hoffman, the prospect for themaroon to finish in the lead was excellent. The first outdoor dualmeet was with Northwestern on May 7th. Burroughs, over- trainedfrom his work with the relay team, could not win the sprints ; Whiteand Fair of the relay team were also in poor form after their trip east,and one by one the points went to Northwestern, until enough hadbeen gathered for a complete victory. A week later, matters wereevened up by an easy victory over the Illinois team, whose advent hadbeen awaited with apprehension.Chicago's usual weakness in field events, together with the non-entry of Herschberger, Kennedy and Moloney, cost her her chance ofwinning in the Triangular meet with Michigan and Illinois on June4th, and she could do no better than win second place. On the following Saturday, a fitting climax to the successful season was reachedby a tie with Michigan in the annual meet at Detroit.195Cbe 1898 CeamFred Harvey Calhoun - - CaptainByron Bayard SmithGeorge Lewis WhiteCarter BrownClarence Bert HerschbergerAlvin Lester BartonCharles Lindsey BurroughsNewell Montague FairFrederick Augustus BrownArthur Edward BeersMortimer Brainerd ParkerBoudinot Gage LeakeWilliam Arthur MoloneyWalter Scott KennedyTheron Winfred MortimerWalter Joseph SchmahlWilliam Hiddleson AndrewsDonald Randall Richberg *Herbert Samuel WalkerJulian Frank GoodenowMilton Howard PettitElbridge Lionel HeathDavid Edgar Fogle196£o«os-WCbicaso-ftortbtoestern Indoor meet.A dual meet for February 19 was arranged and run off in the local gymnasium,Northwestern winning rather easily. Practice for the teams was all that was sought,a number of events in which Chicago was strong being struck from the program atthe request of Northwestern. The summary:track €oent$35 Yard Dash.40 Yard Hurdles.220 Yard Dash440 Yard Run880 Yard RunRelay, 12 Laps Jackson, N. W.Brown, N. W.White, C.Fair, C.Smith, C.Northwestern Burroughs, C.Hunter, N. W.Jones, N. W.Sturgeon, N. W.Barton, C.Chicago Jones, N. W.Calhoun, C.Webb, C.Webb, C. .041.061.26MlCowgill, N. W. 2.11*3.491field eventsShot Put Brewer, N. W. Perry, N. W.High Jump Perry, N. W. Schmahl, C.Broad Jump Perry, N. W. Leake, C.Pole Vault Herschberger, C. & Leake, C. Herschberger, C.Mantor, N. W.Hunter, N. W.Jones, N. W. &Wilson, N. W. I ft., 8#in.5 ft. 3^ in19 ft. 9 in10 ft. # inNorthwestern carried off forty-seven points; six firsts, four seconds and fivethirds; Chicago, thirty-nine points; four firsts, five seconds and four thirds.199Cbe Cattersall CarnivalMarch 5, under the auspices of the University of Chicago, was given an athleticand gymnastic carnival at Tattersall's. Chicago won easily in the college events.The summary:track events75 yard dash, Burroughs, C. Jones, N. W. Maybury, W. .0875 yard hurdles, Herschberger, C. Burleigh, I. Brown, N. W. .103*220 yard dash, Fox, W. Burroughs, C. Farley, N. D. .24440 yard dash, O'Dea, W. Jackson, N. W. Fair, C. .52?880 yard run, White, C. B. B. Smith, C. Mosely, W. 2.05£Mile run, Smith, C. Beers, C. Henry, W. 4.372Half mile walk, Hoagland, I. Parker, C. Hartman, W. 3.26?Relay race: Chicago, Northwestern, Illinois.Ticld eventsShot put, Cochems, W. Brewer, N. W. Powers N. D. 41ft. 9 in.High jump, Powers, N. D. Mason, W. Byrne, I. 5 ft. 9 in.Pole vault, Powers, N. D. Herschberger, C.Score by Points Leake, C. 10 ft , 91 in,Firsts Seconds Thirds TotalChicago, 5 5 2 42Wisconsin, 3 1 4 22Northwestern, 0 4 * 1 13Notre Dame, 2 0 2 12Illinois, 1 1 2 10200Cbe Relap RaceAt Philadelphia, April 30, Chicago won the relay champio;ship from Pennsylvania and Michigan. Hoffman of Pennsylvaniafinished first, by ten yards, but was disqualified for fouling White. Ttbe teamsChicago Pennsylvania MichiganBurroughs Bastian ThomasFair Wilson HayesMoloney Tewkesbury TeetzelWhite Hoffman Hatchtbe Race by QuartersBurroughs, .53 Fair, 511 f Moloney, 511 White, 51Bastian Wilson Tewkesbury HoffmanThomas Hayes . Teetzel Hatch203Cbe Rortbuxstern-Cbicaso meetThe first out door meet of the year was held on Sheppard Field, Evanston, May7th. Contrary to expectation, Northwestern won easily. The summary:track events100 Yard Dash Jones, N. W. Burroughs, C. Elliot, N. W. 101220 Yard Dash Jones, N. W. Burroughs, C. Moloney, C. .223440 Yard Run Moloney, C. Jackson, N. W. Fair, C. .531120 Yard Hurdles Brown, N. W. Herschberger, C. Calhoun, C .161220 Yard Hurdles Perry, N. W. Brown, N. W. Hunter, N. W. .281880 Yard Run White, C. Smith, C. Barton, C. 2.12Mile Run Smith, C. Beers, C. Gates, N. W. 4.501Mile Walk Parker, C. Pease, N. W.field events 8.05£Shot Put Brewer, N. W. Perry, N. W. Kennedy, C. 38 ft. 2 inHammer Throw Levings, N. W. Wilson, N. W. Mortimer, C. 103 ft.Discus Throw Herschberger, C. Mortimer, C. Rodman, N.W. 92 ft.Broad Jump Perry, N. W. Leake, C. Mantor, N.W. 20 ft. \ inHigh Jump Perry, N. W. Hunter, N. W. Schmahl, C. 5 ft. 4 inPole Vault Wilson, N. W. Jones, N. W. Leake, C. 10 ft.Northwestern took seventy-one points, with nine firsts, seven seconds, and fivethirds ; Chicago, fifty-four, with five firsts, seven seconds, and eight thirds.204Cbe Cbicaso-lllinols meetThe annual Chicago-Illinois dual meet was held on Marshall Field, [May 14,Chicago winning by a score of seventy- four to fifty-four. The summary:100 Yard dash220 yard dash,440 yard dash,120 yard hurdles,220 yard hurdles,880 yard runMile run,Mile walk,% mile bicycle,1 mile bicycle, Burroughs, C.Burroughs, C.Moloney, C.Herschberger, C.Andrews, C.Barton, C.Smith, C.Hoagland, I.Mehaney, I.Brown, C. Fair, C.Moloney, C.Fair, C.Burleigh, I.Moran, I.Smith, C.Beers, C.Richberg, C.Thompson, I.Walker, C. .101.23.5lfe.17.28*2.1H4.5417.54.3512.251Shot put,Hammer throw,Discus throw,High jump,Broad jump,Pole vault, field eventsSweeney, I,Von Oven, I.Sweeney, I.Byrne, I.Moloney, C.Herschberger, C. Moran, I.Enochs, I.Moran, I.Schmahl, C.Keator, I.Armstrong, ] 36 ft. 8 in.128 ft.102 ft. 11 in.5 ft. 5 in.19 ft. lHin.. 9 ft. 11 in.Chicago scored seventy-four points, ten firsts and eight seconds; Illinois fifty-four points, six firsts and eight seconds.Western collegiate meetJune 4, Chicago, Michigan and Illinois, the seceders from the Western Intercol-collegiate* Association, held a triangular meet at Marshall Field. Michigan won,Chicago second, and Illinois third. Summary :track events100 yard dash, Burroughs, C. Thomas, M. Westphal, M. .10*220 yard dash, Burroughs, C. Thomas, M. Thompson, M. .22440 yard dash, Teetzel, M. Fair, C. Thompson, M. Ml120 yard hurdles, McLean, M. Webster, M. Calhoun, C, .161880 yard run, Hatch, M. j White, C. and \\ Hayes, M. J 2.021Mile run, B. B. Smith, C. Wood, M. Beers, C. 4.33Mile Walk, Hoagland, I. Brookfield, M. Tryon, M. 7.11*X mile bicycle, Brown, C. Pettit, C. Thompson, I. .34Mile bicycle, Baldwin, M. Thompson, I.field events Goodenow, C. 2.401Shot put, Sweeney, I. Moran, I. Enochs, I. 36 ft.Hammer throw, Von Oven, I. Mortimer, C. Enochs, I. 130 ft.Discus throw, Moran, I. Caley, M. Mortimer, C. 103 ft. 2 in.High jump, Flournoy, M. f Byrne, I. and \\ Schmahl, C. \ 5 ft. 7}^ in,Broad jump, McLean, M., j Keator, I. and \| Russell, M. / • 22 ft. 3# in.Pole Vault, ( Adams, M. \\ Baker, M. and [ 10 ft.PointsFirsts i Seconds Thirds TotalMichigan, 7% 8% 5% 70Chicago, 4K 4^ 6^ 41Illinois, 4 3 4 33206micbigan-Cbicago Dual meetThe annual Michigan-Chicago dual meet was heldteams were very evenly matched, and the result was a tie.track events100 Yard Dash220 Yard Dash440 Yard Run120 Yard Hurdles220 Yard Hurdles880 Yard RunMile RunMile Walk% Mile BicycleMile Bicycle Burroughs, C.Burroughs, C.Moloney, C.McLean, M.Webster, M.Moloney, C.Wood, M.Tryon, M.Goodenow, C.Pettit, C.Shot put,Hammer throw,Discus throw.High jump,Broad jump,Pole vault, Lehr, M.Mortimer, C.Heath, C.( Flournoy, M )\ Tryon, M. J-(McLean, M. JRunnels, M. Westphal, M.Thomas, M.Teetzel, M.Herschberger, <McLean, MHatch, M.Smith, C.Brookfield, M.Pettit, C.Turner, M.field eventsKennedy, C.Herschberger, C.Fogle, C. at Detroit, June 11.The summary:Thomas, M.Thompson, M.Fair, C.Kennedy, C.Calhoun, C.Hayes, M.Beers, C.Brown, C.Brown, C.Baldwin, M. The.101.211.511.161.27*2.0034.39!8.11.3712.24Herschberger, C. 37 ft. 9 in.Bennet, M. 122 ft. 11 in.Russel, M.Herschberger, C. { £*£ £ } Dye, M.McLean, M. 96 ft. 8 in.5 ft. 6 in.20 ft. 9 in.10 ft,Chicago took nine firsts, six and one-half seconds, and seven and^one-half thirds ;Michigan seven firsts, nine and one-half seconds, and eight and one half|thirds. |Eachscored seventy -two points.207 ^*,~<ttniuersitp or Cbicago Records, 1894-18981*94IOO Yards Dash :10I E. F. Mandel C. A. A. Field June 2220 Yards Dash :23f J. Lamay C. A. A. Field May 25440 Yards Run880 Yards Run 2.09<3 J. C. Sherman C. A. A. Field May 251 Mile Run 4.47* H. Holloway C. A. A. Field May 25120 Yards Hurdles .191 L. Sass C. A. A. Field May 25220 Yards Hurdles1 Mile Bicycle 2.391 S Barrett C. A. A. Field June 2Shot Put 36 ft. 3 in. A. M. Wyant C. A. A. Field May 25Hammer Throw 78 ft. 91 in. A. M. Wyant C. A. A. Field May 25Running Broad Jump 21ft. H. V. Church C. A. A. Field June 2Pole Vault 10 ft. A A. Ewing1S95 C. A. A. Field June 235 Yards Dash .04* T. H. Patterson Marshall Field May 10100 Yards Dash -.101 T. H. Patterson Marshall Field May 10220 Yards Dash :23 T. H. Patterson Marshall Field May 10440 Yards Run :52I H. Holloway Marshall Field May 10880 Yards Run 2:132 E. W. Peabody Marshall Field May 101 Mile Run 5:13 A. C. Johnson Marshall Field May 10120 Yards Hurdles :18i L. Sass Marshall Field May 10220 Yards Hurdles :308 C. B. Herschberger Marshall Field May 101 Mile Walk 7:55 F. Johnson, Jr. Marshall Field May 101 Mile Bicycle 2:321 C. V. Bachelle Marshall Field May 10Shot Put 33 ft. 9 / C. B. Herschberger Marshall Fieldin* \ T. Neff C. A. A. Field April 13May 18Hammer Throw 73 ft. 7 in. C. B. Herschberger Marshall Field May 10Running High Jump 5 ft. 5 in. F. F. Steigmeyer Marshall Field May 13Running Broad Jump 20 ft. 21 in. C. B. Neel C. A. A. Field May 18Pole Vault 10 ft. 6 in. C. B. Herschberger1896 C. A. A. Field June 135 Yards Dash .042 / C. L. Burroughs\ P. G. Wooley U. of C. Gymnasium Feb. 29100 Yards Dash .108 T. H. Patterson Marshall Field June 13220 Yards Dash .22i C. L. Burroughs Marshall Field May 30440 Yards Run .54* T. H. Patterson Marshall Field May 4880 Yards Run 2.161 E. W. Peabody 1st Regiment May 41 Mile Run 4 522 H. A. Peterson Marshall Field June 13120 Yards Hurdles 173 F. F. Steigmeyer Marshall Field June 13220 Yards Hurdles .28* C. B. Herschberger Marshall Field May 301 Mile Walk 7.251 E. T. Gundlach Marshall Field June 13208Athletic Captains1 Mile Bicycle 2.29Shot Put 36 ft. 9 in.Hammer Throw 102 ft. 3 in.Running High Jump 5 ft. 41 in.Running Broad Jump 21 ft. 2 in.Pole Vault 10 ft. E. W. PeabodyE. V. WilliamsonC. B. HerschbergerF. F. SteigmeyerC. B. NeelC. Herschberger35 Yards Dash100 Yards Dash220 Yards Dash440 Yards Run880 Yards Run1 Mile Run120 Yards Hurdles220 Yards Hurdlesy2 Mile Bicycle .04! C. L..10 C. L.(Trial for record,).231 C. L..521 G. L.2:07 G. L.4:461 B. B.(Trial for record.)Mile BicycleMile BicycleShot PutHammer Throw :17S" :28>1:09*(Paced)3:0425:17!(Paced)35 ft. 5 in.86 ft. 1 in.5 ft. 4 in.Running High JumpRunning Broad Jump 20 ft. 3 in.Pole vault 10 ft. 7 in. C. B.P. H.C. V.C. V.C. V.C. B.C. B{£C. B.C. B. 1*07BurroughsBurroughsBurroughsWhiteWhiteSmithHerschbergerCalhounBachelleBachelleBachelle Marshall FieldMarshall FieldMarshall FieldU. of C. GymnasiumMarshall FieldMarshall FieldU. of C. GymnasiumMarshall FieldChampaignDetroitDetroitMarshall FieldChampaignMarshall FieldChampaignMarshall FieldHerschberger ChampaignHerschberger DetroitF. Steigmeyer U. of C. GymnasiumB. Herschberger DetroitHerschberger ChampaignHerschberger 1st Reg't ArmoryISO* May 4May 4June 13Mar. 1June 13June 13Mar. 13June 11May 11May 29May 29June 11May 11June 11May 11June 11May 11May £9Mar. 13May 29May 11Feb. 2035 Yards Dash100 Yards Dash220 Yards Dash440 Yards Run880 Yards Run1 Mile Run120 Yards Hurdles220 Yards Hurdles1 Mile Walk% Mile Bicycle1 Mile Bicycle 8Shot Put 35Hammer Throw 122Running High Jump 5Running Broad Jump 19Pole Vault 10Discus 96 .041:10*:22:5H:002:33.17.28*:05*:34:08(Paced)ft. 6 in.ft. 11 in.ft. 61 in.ft. 114 in.ft. 61 in.ft. 9 in. C. L. BurroughsC. L. BurroughsC. L. BurroughsW. A. MoloneyW. A. MoloneyB. B. SmithC. B. HerschbergerW. H. AndrewsM. B. ParkerC. V. BrownC. V. BrownW. S. KennedyT. W. MortimerW. J. SchmahlW. A. MoloneyC. B. HerschbergerT. W. Mortimer U. of C. GymnasiumMarshall FieldMarshall FieldMarshall FieldDetroitMarshall FieldMarshall FieldMarshall FieldEvanstonMarshall FieldMarshall FieldEvanstonMarshall FieldMarshall FieldMarshall FieldTattersall'sMarshall Field Feb. 19June 4June 4May 14June 11June 4May 14May 14May 7June 4May 14May 7June 4June 4May 14Mar. 5June 4211Uniuersitp of Cbicago In-door Recordsmade in Competition35 yards dash,75 yards dash,440 yards run,880 yards run,One mile run,40 yards hurdles,75 yards hurdles,880 yards walk, 4*856*2.05*4.3715*1033.17!Ft. In. T. H. Patterson,C. L. Burroughs,N. M. Fair,G. L. White,B. B. Smith,C. B. Herschberger,C. B. Herschberger,M. B. Parker, U. of C. Gym.,Tattersall's,U. of C. Gym.,Tattersall's,Tattersall's,U. of C. Gym.,Tattersall's,First Reg. Ar. ,36Shot put, 16 lb.Running broad jump, 19Running high jump, 5^Standing broad jump, 10Pole Vault, 10?Obsolete event. 11111757 W. J. Schmahl, U. of C. Gym.,W. J. Schmahl, U. of C. Gym.,L. Byrne, U. of C. Gym.,F. F. Steigmeyer, U. of C. Gym.,C. B. Herschberger, First Reg. Ar., Feb. 22, 1895Mar. 5, 1898Feb. 19, 1898Mar. 5, 1898Mar. 5, 1898Feb. 18, 1899Mar. 5, 1898Mar. 25, 1899Feb. 18, 1829Feb. 18, 1899Feb. 18, 1899Feb. 29, 1896Feb. 20, 1897Universitp of Cbicago Out-door Recordsmade in Competition50 yards dash, 52100 yards dash, 10220 yards dash, 22440 yards run, 512880 yards run, 2.001One mile run, 4.33120 yards hurdles, 17220 yards hurdles, 28*One mile walk, 7.251One mile bicycle, 2.8Ft. In.Shot put, 36 3Hammer throw, 122 11Running high jump, 5 61Running broad jump, 21 2Pole vault. 10 6Discus throw, 96 9 C. L. Burroughs,C. L. Burroughs,C. L. Burroughs,W. A. Moloney,W. A. Moloney,B. B. Smith,C. B. Herschberger,W. H. Andrews,E. T. Gundlach,C. V. Brown.A. M. Wyant,T. W. Mortimer,W. J, Schmahl,C. B. Neel.C. B. Herschberger,T. W. Mortimer, Marshall Field,Marshall Field,Marshall Field,Marshall Field,Detroit,Marshall Field,Marshall Field,Marshall Field,Marshall Field,South Side Gr.,Marshall Field,Marshall Field,C. A. A. Field,Marshall Field, April 18, 1896June 11, 1897June 4, 1898May 14, 1898June 11, 1898June 4, 1898May 14, 1898May 14, 1898June 13, 1896May 25, 1894June 4, 1698June 4, 1898June 1, 1895June 4, 1898212Western intercollegiate RecordsIOO yard dash, 10 J. V. Crum, University of Iowa, 1895220 yard dash. 22 J. V. Crum, University of Iowa, 1895440 yard run, 502 W. E. Hodgman, Michigan, 1895120 yard hurdles, 15* J. R. Richards, Wisconsin, 1897220 yard hurdles, 252 A. Kraenzlein, Wisconsin, 1897880 yard run, 1.591 L. R. Palmer, Grinnell, 1895MUe run, 4.33 H. B. Cragin, Lake Forest, 1896Mile walk, 7.26 F. S. Bunnell, Minnesota, 1897Mile bicycle, 2.25 P. H. Burton, Minnesota, 1896j A. C. Clark,I A. Kraenzlein, Illinois, 1895High jump, 5 ft. 9 in. Wisconsin, 1897Broad jump, 22 ft. 7# in. J. A. Leroy, Michigan, 1895Shot put, 38 ft. 10}i in . H. T. Cochems, Wisconsin, 1895Hammer throw, 123 ft. 9# in. R. W. Edgren, California, 1895Pole vault, 11 ft. A. H. Culver, Northwestern, 1895213The first inter-fraternity meet was held on Mashall Field June 15. All of thefraternities were represented, and good contests resulted. Men who had ever wonpoints for the University were barred from competition. The summary:50 Yard Dash— Hamill, Delta Kappa Epsilon; Poulson, Psi Upsilon; Gould, DeltaKappa Epsilon; 0:062.100 Yard Dash— Merrifield, Alpha Delta Phi; Hamill, Delta Kappa Epsilon; Gardner, Delta Kappa Epsilon; 0:112.220 Yard Dash— Merrifield, Alpha Delta Phi; Vernon, Beta Theta Pi; Hamill,Delta Kappa Epsilon; 0:23*.440 Yard Run— Hamill, Delta Kappa Epsilon; Coulter, Beta Theta Pi; White, DeltaTau Delta; 0:602.120 Yard Hurdles— Reed, Q. V.; Poulson, Psi Upsilon; Manning, Delta Kappa Epsilon; 0:21.880 Yard Run— Coulter, Beta Theta Pi; McCarthy, Sigma Chi; Rogers, Q. V.; 2:182.Mile Run— Case, Phi Delta Theta; McDonald, Beta Theta Pi; Richards, Phi KappaPsi;880 Yard Walk— Ross, Phi Kappa Psi; Eldredge, Beta Theta Pi; Freeman, Delta KappaEpsilon; 4:05.% Mile Bicycle— Ross, Phi Kappa Psi; Eldredge, Beta Theta Pi; Pettit, Alpha DeltaPhi; 0.36.Mile Bicycle— Ross, Phi Kappa Psi; Eldredge, Beta Theta Pi; Davis, Beta ThetaPi; 2:48.Shot Put— Roby, Sigma Chi; Speed, Beta Theta Pi; Coulter, Beta Theta Pi; 33 £eet.High Jump— Vernon, Beta Theta Pi; Poulson, Psi Upsilon; Vaughan, Alpha DeltaPhi; 5 ft. 3 in.Broad Jump— Poulson, Psi Upsilon; Vernon, Beta Theta Pi; Drew, Alpha Delta Phi;19 ft. h% in.Pole Vault — Drew, Alpha Delta Phi; Anderson, Delta Kappa Epsilon; Russell, BetaTheta Pi, 8 ft. 9 in.Beta Theta Pi scored thirty-five points, Delta Kappa Epsilon twenty-one, AlphaDelta Phi twenty, Phi Kappa Psi sixteen, Psi Upsilon fourteen, Sigma Chi eight, Q.V. six, Phi Delta Theta five, and Delta Tau Delta one.214The year eighteen ninety-eight witnessed a change in the management of tennisaffairs. The old association was disbanded, and tennis was placed under the supervision of the director of athletics. As a consequence it assumed greater importanceat the University.The method of choosing the team to represent the University was the same as informer years. The director selected the players, but each of them was subject tochallenge. An interesting tournament between those challenged and their challengersdetermined the final composition of the team. The members were :Charles Duffield Wrenn Halsey, CaptainHarvey Malcolm MacQuistonPaul Donald MacQuistonHarry Norman GottliebPaul BlackwelderEdwin Lee PoulsonHarry Williams BelfieldRoy Page215The first tournament of the year was played on Saturday, May 7, and resulted ina victory for Chicago. A picked team from the Kenwood Country Club was the'Varsity's opponent.. The summary :SinglesH. M. MacQuiston (C.) defeated Turner (K.), 6-3, C-3Halsey (C.) defeated Carter (K.), 1-6, 6-2, 6-1Belfield (C.) defeated Seabury (K.), 6-4, 6-2DoublesCondee and Turner (K.) defeated MacQuiston brothers (C.) 6-4, 6-3Blackwelder and Gottlieb (C.) defeated Carter and Seabury (K.) 6-3, 6-3The first dual tournament with Northwestern was held on the courts of the Quadrangle Club, Saturday, May 21. A high wind seriously interfered with the play.Chicago won without great difficulty. The summary :SinglesH. M. MacQuiston (C.) defeated Condee (N.), 7-5, 6-2P. D. MacQuiston (C.) defeated McConnell (N.), 6-4, 6-4McCaskey (N.) defeated Gottlieb (C. ), 4-6, 6-4, 6-4Brewer (N.) defeated Halsey (C), 6-8, 6-4, 6-4Blackwelder (C.) defeated Gates (N.), 6-3, 6-4Poulson (C.) defeated Judson (N.), 6-2, 6-2DoublesMacQuiston brothers (C.) defeated McCaskey and McConnell (N.), 6-4, 6-3Halsey and Poulson (C.) defeated Condee and Gates (N.), 6-4, 3-6, 6-2Blackwelder and Gottlieb (C.) defeated Judson and Brewer (N.), 6-4, 6-4Totals : Chicago 7 ; Northwestern 2The second tournament was held at Evanston on the following Friday. It wasplayed under more favorable conditions, and showed the true relative merits of theteams. Northwestern had the strongest team in its history, but each of its playersfound a little more tl an his match in his Chicago opponent. Rain prevented thecompletion of two of the double matches. The summary ;Singles*H. M. MacQuiston (C.) defeated Condee (N.), 6-2, 6-1P. D. MacQuiston (C.) defeated McCaskey (N.), 6-3, 6-2Gottlieb (C.) defeated Ashcroft (N.), 6-4, 4-6, 6-2Halsey (C.) defeated McConnell (N.), 6-2, 6-3Blackwelder (C.) defeated Brewer (N.), 6-4, 6-1Poulson (C.) defeated Pendleton (N.), 6-3, 6-1Belfield (C.) defeated Judson (N.), 6-1, 6-3Gates (N.) defeated Page (C), defaultDoublesMacQuiston brothers (C.) defeated Condee and Ashcroft (N.), 6-2, 6-1McCaskey and McConnell (N.) vs. Halsey and Poulson (C), 3-2, unfinishedBrewer and Judson (N.) vs. Blackwelder and Gottlieb (C), 6-3, 2-6, 3-0, unfinishedTotals : Chicago 8 ; Northwestern 1 ; unfinished 2216Uarsity tennis teamThe annual tournament with Michigan was held at Ann Arbor, Friday, June 10.Fate seemed to decree that the result should once more be a tie. The singles wereplayed off without mishap, Chicago winning three matches out of the four. Beforethe doubles were completed, however, a sudden rain storm stopped the play. Blackwelder and Gottlieb still had a fighting chance in their match ; but they were compelled to default. The MacQuiston brothers and Herrick and Danforth agreed tocontinue their match in Chicago the next week. In the continuation the MacQuis-tons failed to display the same form as at Ann Arbor, and lost two straight sets.They retrieved their defeat, however, in the Intercollegiate tournament a few dayslater. The summary :SinglesH. M. MacQuiston (C.) defeated Danforth (M.), 6-3, 6-2Herrick (M.) defeated P. D. MacQuiston (C), 6-3, 4-6, 6-2Gottlieb (C) defeated Ripley (M.), 6-2, 6-3Blackwelder (C.) defeated Mee (M.), 9-7, 6-0DoublesHerrick and Danforth (M.) defeated MacQuiston brothers (C), 6-8 in Ann Arbor,6-3, 6-3 in Chicago.Harvey and Wilber (M.) defeated Blackwelder and Gottlieb (C), 6-1, 2-6, 5-3Totals : Michigan 3 ; Chicago 3Chicago still reigns supreme in the domain of Western Intercollegiate tennis.That this holds true is due to Harvey Malcolm MacQuiston. His record for the yearproved him a worthy successor of Carr Neel and William Scott Bond. By his steady,consistent play he defeated his every opponent in the dual tournaments ; and, thencrowned his season's achievements by winning the Western Intercollegiate Championship in singles. His opponent in the finals was Condee of Northwestern. The scorewas 6-1, 6-3, 6-2.In winning the championship in doubles his brother, Paul Donald MacQuistonwas his able partner. The Michigan representatives, Herrick and Danforth were defeated in the finals by the score: 6-4, 7-5, 6-2.219Divinity Scbool tennisThere were twenty-seven candidates for the championship of the Divinity School.The tournament to decide it was of the "round-robin" character, and all spring wasrequired to play it off. P. P. Bruce gained the title of champion by winning all ofhis twenty-six matches. S. R. Robinson was second, losing only to Bruce.Summer tennisThere was unusual activity on the courts during the summer quarter. Many ofthe students substituted tennis for the regular gymnasium work, and as a consequencethe courts were in use the greater part of the day.Three tournaments were held. One was a woman's invitation tournament inwhich several of the best women players in the West participated. Miss Louise Pound,who with Miss Clara Tilton, represented the University, was the winner.Miss Pound and Prof. Hussey secured first place in the "mixed" doubles tournament which was held at the same time.The third tournament was open to all men in the University, professors andstudents alike. None of the members of the 'Varsity team were in residence, andconsequently the student representation was not very strong. Prof. Angell won thesingles, and Prof. Angell and Prcf . Thomas, the doubles.220former Htbletlc Captainsfootball1893, R. E. Wyant1894, C. W. Allen1895, C. W. Allen1896, C. F. Roby1897, C. B. Herschberger1898, W. S. KennedyBaseball1894, F. D. Nichols1895, H. D. Abells1896, H. T. Clarke1897, G. W. Sawyertrack1895, Harry Holloway1896, C. V. Bachelle1«Q7 i F- F- Steigmeyerl»tf rf, ^ T H patterson1898, F. H. Calhountennis1895, C. B. Neel1896, W. S. Bond1897, P. Rand1898, C. D. Halsey221feWalter Scott KennedyCharles Foster RobyFrank L. SlakerWilliam Thaw Gardner -Theron Winfred MortimerW. A. GordonJames Ronald Henry -John WebbFrank Clayton ClevelandKellogg Speed pounds.3835365534803468344832933173311430413027222Wrestling became of intercollegiate importance in eighteen ninety-eight. Aseries of bouts formed a part of the programme at the athletic carnival held atTattersall's in the spring. Chicago's representatives were; T. W. Mortimer, in theheavy-weight class ; C. B. Davis and W. F. Anderson, in the light weight. Theywere defeated by their more experienced opponents from the University of Wisconsin.In a competition held during the fall quarter, T. W. Mortimer won the championship of the University, in the heavy-weight class ; J. M. Sheldon, in the middleweight ; C. B. Davis, in the light-weight, and G. G. Davis, in the feather-weight.Rand-BallHand-ball has more devotees at the University than any other form of physicalexercise. It is seldom that the courts in the gymnasium are not in use. The usualsummer tournament did not take place in eighteen ninety-eight ; but in its stead atournament in doubles was played in the fall. A. P. Nelson and D. R. Richberg werethe winners225Women's Basket Ball Ceamsdass teamsCaroline Paddock, - CaptainElizabeth Avery. Edna Bevan sMaude Bates Grace Bushnell.Helen Brehl Louise De CewCarrie FreudenthalAlma Le Due * Edna OhrensteinLouise Roth Alvena ReichmanElla Robinson Alma YondorfMary Pardee - - CaptainFanny Burling Lilian BuckClara Comstock Grace JohnsonLouise Sherwood Mary ShirelyBlanch Simmons Cornelia SmithCorrine Unland Louis VincentAgnes Wayman Martha WhiteMargaret Gilman - CaptainCecile Bowman Edith BullisGrace Crukett Blanch EarhartJean Leslie Ella KahnAnne Roby Rose RosenbergGertrude Scott Nettie SpencerFlorence Strauss Frances ThomaMary WeberJunior College teamGrace Crocket, f. Lilian Buck, g. Agnes Wayman, c.Grace Bushnell, f. Anne Roby, g.SubstitutesCornelia Smith, f . Margaret Gilman, c. Grace Johnson, g.Senior College teamEda Ohrenstein, f . Helen Brehl, g. Edna Bevans, c.Alvena Reichman, f. Caroline Paddock, g.SubstitutesElizabeth Avery, f . Mary Pardee, c. Carrie Freudenthal, g.226The fencing club had a thriving existence during 1898. Under the able tuitionof Fred Burton Hellems some of the members became exceedingly skillful with thefoil. One of them, William E. Linglebach, won the intercollegiate fencing championship in the tournament held at Tattersall's during the athletic carnival. The membership of the club was considerably increased at the opening of the fall quarter. Thefollowing were members at some time during the year :William E. LinglebachKnight F. FlandersJohn Preston MentzerRalph Leroy PeckCharles Newman CrewdsonAinsworth Whitney ClarkWilliam Everton RamseyJerome Pratt MageeWalter J. SchmahlLees BallingerWilliam Henry LinsleyFranklin Ackerman BogueCharles Christopher CatronLafayette William CaseHarry William Belfield227Warren C. GorrellHoward Kirtley -Maurice MandevilleJohn Mills -Edward WrightsonElliott Norton Captain- First LieutenantSecond Lieutenant- First SergeantSecond Sergeant- Third SergeantCorporalsErnest E. IronsH. H. NelsonFred BramhallR. S. McClure228.Cbe Bunting of tbe Stag'Twas in the merry, merry springtime,Bold Bayard smote his knee:"A year, a year," he cried amain,"A year, and likewise three,We have endured the tyrannyOf this foresworen one ;If this goes on another yearBold Bayard's job is done."He hied him to the Northern lakeAnd found a Fisher there.41 Have you a heart, and stand his pranks?Revenge, fierce Fisher, swear."Fierce Fisher winked his dexter eye,He winked them both, I trow,He grasped his rod in both his handsAnd poised him for a blow.Bold Bayard ducked a clever duck," Forbear, forbear," quoth he.Fierce Fisher staid his hand eftsoons,But stood confusedly." Last year," quoth he, " you said I wasA rascal and a gent ;Nor wherefore come you to my lairOn talk of friendship bent ? "•' You called me a professional,And said hard things of me."Bold Bayard grasped him by the hand —" That was last year," quoth he." Now we must pledge eternal peaceUntil revenge we getOn the proud Stag who roams these woods,Or he will do us yet.So leave your suckers, fierce Fisher,But bring along your bait.We'll drink confusion to this Stag,Who now has grown so great.' '"Revenge, revenge," fierce Fisher swore,And likewise several d ns ;He left his suckers on the shore,And eke he left his clams.22944 A Fisher have I been," he quoth,And took a little drink,4 * But I will turn me Hunter now,And chase the Stag, I think."They hunted him both high and low,But ere the hunt began,44 A scheme, a scheme," bold Bayard cried,44 1 have a cunning plan."44 Proud Fisher, ere we hunt the Stag,A little dog I know,Who, when we whistle loud and clear,Will follow where we go.Hi3 nose is sharp, his scent is keen,He long the Stag has known,And what is more, he'll be contentWith one small marrow-bone."44 Good, good," fierce Fisher cried in glee,44 Your plan is good, my boy."So up the little doggy ran —His name was I s.They hunted high, they hunted low,With telegrams all armed ;They lay in ambush cunningly ;Still coursed the Stag unharmed.They fired a lot of paper-balls,The dog he howled and barked,But to the hosts who watched the hunt,The Stag appeared unmarked.44 His hide is tough," quoth fierce Fisher,I've hunted him before.His hide is tough, his horns are sharp,"Fierce Fisher loudly swore.44 He charged upon me long ago,Up by the Northern Lake ;I thought I'd done him then, but oh,That was a bad mistake.My biggest fish from Sturgeon Bay,He snatched away from me,My Homes he tried to devastate,He ate my May berree."230*4 Yes, I was there," quoth bold Bayard,44 They were a cheesy lot."44 How's that? how's that? quoth fierce Fisher.Quoth Bayard, 4< I forgot."44 A plan, a plan," quoth bold Bayard,He quoth right hastily,For he was 'ware that fierce FisherHad blood within his e'e.44 A plan, a plan," quoth bold Bayard,,4 A right good plan have I,A silver bullet we will shoot,And to the stag shall die."A silver bullet they did mould,A bullet and eke three,One for Bayard, and one for Fisher,And one for the little doggee.(But here I have a sad tale to tell,For in financial drouth,The little doggy stopped to drink,And his bullet fell out of his mouth.)44 Now on, now on," quoth bold Bayard,44 The hunt is up," quoth he.They found the Stag on a windy plain,And they shot right carefully.They had him penned to north, to north,They had him penned to south,Or they would have had, but the silver bulletFell out of the little dog's mouth.They had him penned to north and southAnd west ; but ah, the beastKicked up his heels and got away,For they forgot the east.44 Now this is your fault," quoth bold Bayard.Fierce Fisher quoth, 44 Not at all."And they both swore loud at the little doggyWho let the bullet fall.Bold Bayard cursed Fierce Fisher then,Fierce Fisher he cursed too,And a prophet can divine by the fall of '99What the pair of them will do.James Weber Linn.231r-u ii — \kbOXV-Cbe Jlssemblp Informal*1898-1899managersMorton D. HarrisRay Prescott JohnsonHerbert Paul ZimmermannSubscribersMaurice Gordon ClarkeArthur Sears HenningWilliam Thaw GardnerVan Sumner PearceRobert Newton TookerEdwin Lee PoulsonKellogg SpeedFrank Williamson DukeByron Bayard SmithMorton D. HarrisThomas Brogden BlackburnGeorge Gilbert DavisEmory Cobb AndrewsAllen Grey HoytWalter Joseph Schmahl235Ray Prescott JohnsonCharles Ward SeaburyOswald Hinton GregoryHarry Williams BelfieldHerbert Paul ZimmermannSamuel Northrup HarperGeorge AllenElliot Salstonstall NortonWilson Shannon Chapman, Jr.James Ronald HenryLawrence OsborneGeorge Snow GaylordHarold OsborneFred SassParke RossLeroy Tudor VernonCharles B. DavisJohn Gaylord CoulterGeorge P. MacDonaldWilliam F. EldridgeFranklin Egbert VaughanMichael B. WellsWilliam MoloneyClarence Alvin McCarthyGuy BellClark Scammon ReedWebster T. Smith236soApril 2. Dance at Kelly Hall. Kellogg Speed, EliotBlackwelder, George Gilbert Davis, William FranklinEldridge and George P. McDonald initiated into BetaTheta Pi.April 6. Clarence Whitaker Richards, Walter Sharp, Daniel Southard, Fred Sass, James McClintock Snitzler andFrancis Baldwin initiated into Phi Kappa Psi.April 8. Lafayette Wallace Case and Boudinot Gage Leakeinitiated into Phi Delta Pheta.April 9. Herbert Paul Zimmermann initiated into PsiUpsilon.April 11. Beta Theta Pi smoker.April 14. Professor Sparks entertained members of Washington House.April 16. Curtiss Rockwell Manning, Walter LawrenceHudson, Hugh Lafayette McWilliams, Donald SaxtonMcWilliams and Frederick Hyde Lawrence initiatedinto Delta Kappa Epsilon. Banquet of the Ben ButlerClub at the Grand Pacific Hotel.April 20. Psi Upsilon smoker.April 22. April meeting of the Graduate Club in Haskell.April 23. Marjorie Coulter, Katherine Paltzer and MarionMorgan initiated into Sigma Club.April 30. University Informal. Madeline Harding andMary Averett initiated into Esoteric Club. Rose ThorneSweet, Jessie Benning Waite and Virginia WynneLackersteen initiated into the Mortar Board.237May 4. First banquet of the Chicago Alumni Club atthe Pullman Cafe.May 6. Beta Theta Pi stag informal at chapter house.May 9. Sigma Club open meeting in the gymnasium.May 11. Reception at Washington House.May 14. Phi Kappa Psi smoker.May 19. Reception by Mrs. Vincent to Esoteric Club.First spring " sing" on Haskell steps.May 20. Meeting of Graduate Club in Haskell. Informal dance given by the Quadranglers.May 21. Walter I. Martin initiated into Psi Upsilon.May 23. Snell Hall 4 4 open house. » 'May 26. Second senior 44 sing" on Haskell steps.May 27. Edwin George Allen, Harry William Belfieldand W. Lingleback initiated into Q. V.238June 2. Beta Theta Pi informal dance at Kenwood Hall.June 6, Swen Benjamin Anderson initiated into Delta TauDelta.June 7. Initiated into the order of the Iron Mask: Walter Joseph Schmahl, Spencer MacDougall Brown, OttoHakes, Rowland Rogers, Le Roy Tudor Vernon, EmoryCobb Andrews,Ralph Curtiss Manning, Charles BrandenDavis, Ralph C. Hamill.June 11. Mortar Board dance at Foster Hall.June 11. Political Economy Club picnic at Wildwood.June 17. " Junior Day."June 20. Quadrangle Club reception.June 21. 44 Class Day.''9:30 A. M. Class sing in chapel.2:00 P. M. Class picture taken on Haskell steps.3:00 P. M. Class poem by Mr. Edwin C. Wool-ley. Handing down by Mr. Hagey, president of the class, of the gown to Miss JessieNea Spray, '99, and of the stone bench toMr. William France Anderson, '99. Presentation of memorial drinking fountain tothe University by Mr. Edwin M. Baker.Response by President Harper.8:00 P. M. Tally-Ho party.June 21. Informal dance at A. K. E. House.June 22. Mr. Guy Reed Bell, '01, initiated into the localchapter of Sigma Chi.June 24. Miss Carolyn A. Leech initiated into Esoteric club.Junior Day (June 17, i*o*)committees of the day.Rowland T. Rogers - General Chairman of the DayL. T. Vernon, N. M. Fair - Athletic CommitteeW. J. Schmahl, ChairmanP. D. Mac Quiston, H. E. P. Thomas, Printing CommitteeFred Sass, ChairmanMiss E. E. Buchanan, R. S. McClure - - - Decorating CommitteeMiss C. M. Welsh, ChairmanMiss Marion Tooker, Miss M. J. Averett - - Dramatic CommitteeR. G. Gould, ChairmanMiss R. E. Morgan Ivy CommitteeE. E. Irons, ChairmanProgram of tbe Day8:30 A. M. Nu Pi Sigma reception and dance at Foster Hall.10:00 A. M. Athletics on Marshall Field. Base-ball: 'Varsity, 15 ; Alumni, 13.Relay race: Won by the Senior College team over the Junior College team.2:00 P. M. Dramatics in Kent Theater:1. A MATRIMONIAL PREDICAMENT.CAST.M^on^nn f a ne^ married couple - -Gertie (Frank's cousin) -Stella (his sister) .....Norah (a maid) ------MrS. Glynn (Frank's mother) - - - -Ed. Asbury (Frank's college chum)II. A PAIR OF LUNATICS. j Rowland T. RogersI Alice Austin KnightJosephine T. AllinEdith D. JenkinsMarjorie B. CookeFlorence McMahanPercy B. EckhartHe (otherwise Tom Fielding)She (otherwise Daisy Manners)Mrs. LongMr. LongMr. Von BergmanOscar, the poetMr. WatsonAugust (a servant)Fanny (the maid)Hector CAST.III. HECTOR.CAST. William France AndersonAlice A. KnightMarjorie B. Cooke- Robert G. GouldMarcus M. PlowmanLawrence M. JacobsRalph C. ManningHugh L. McWilliamsSusan G HardingAnonymous2403:00 P. M. Ivy exercises east of Haskell. Oration: Mr. A. E. Bestor. Planting ofivy: Miss Madeline Harding.4:30 P. M. Reception on lawn by members of women's halls.8:30 P. M. Junior promenade at Chicago Beach Hotel.Allen GREY Hoyt - General ChairmanKellogg Speed, Ralph C. Manning - -- Reception CommitteeEmory Cobb Andrews, ChairmanLouis Carleton Pettit, Ray Johnson - Committee on ArrangementsGlenn Hall, ChairmanElliott Norton, Parke Ross - Finance CommitteeWilliam Thaw Gardner, ChairmanpatronessesMrs. William Rainey HarperMrs. Philip D. ArmourMrs. I. W. ShepardsonMrs. Noble B. JudahMrs. Charles D. HamillMrs. A. J. Earling Mrs. A. A. SpragueMiss Elizabeth WallaceMrs. Ferdinand W. PeckMrs. G. C. HowlandMrs. George E. VincentMrs. Cyrus H. McCormick243a*****OUTER QJuly 2. Luncheon given by President Harper at the Quadrangle Club for Hon. William L. Watson, the convocationorator.July 5.— Alumni Day.Program of the Day.1 p. m. President's luncheon in Haskell; 2 p. m., businessmeeting in Kent Theater; 3:30 P. M., Parade of variousclasses, '69 to '98; 5:30 p. m., sing on Haskell steps; 7 p.m.. dinner at the Quadrangle Club. Dr. D. S. Riggs,'78, acted as toastmaster. Toasts were responded to byPresident Harper, Galusha Anderson, E. A. Buzzell, '86,Miss Agnes Cook, '96, Henry Love Clark, '96, JamesWeber Linn, '97, G. S. Bond, '97, and Henry TefftClark, '96.July 8. Reception of Georgia Club in Haskell.July If:. Concert at Kelly Hall.July 23. Dance at Foster.July 29. Reception by members of women's halls.August 1. Reception in East Quadrangle.August 6. Informal dance at Kelly. Salmagundi party atBeecher.August 8. Professor Starr's reception for his classes held inHaskell.August 11. Reception by President Harper at his homeafter Junior finals.August 24. The "Beecherized-Fosterites" gave a dinnerparty and dance.August 24. Music recital in Kent.September 2. Musical in Beecher.244epatEEi />October 1 . Chester A. Barnes and Milton Pettit initiatedinto Phi Kappa Psi.October 2. Esoteric Club entertained by Miss Ruth IsabelVanderlip at 44 Millhurst."October 5. Informal Dance at Rosalie.October 7. Receptions at women's halls for new members.October 7. Sigma Club reception.October 8. Chicago Alumnae Association luncheon at theVictoria Hotel.October 14. Annual reception of the Y. M. C. A. andY. W. C. A. in the chapel. Miss Talbot gave a chafing-dish party to the members of Kelly. Delta KappaEpsilon stag party.October 17. Lincoln House supper.October 22. Psi Upsilon smoker.October 24. Freshman presentation and torch-light procession.October 28. Miss Wallace gave a dance at Beecher.Reception given by Graduate Club.October 29. Kelly Hall, Hallowe'en party. Foster Hall,Hallowe'en party and dance.October 31. Snell Hall, "open house."247JUNIOR PRESENTATIONThe First Annual Reception of the Freshmen...Into the Student-body of tbe University...Under theDirectionof theJUNIOR COLLEGE COUNCILKENT THEATREMonday, October 17, 7:30 p« m.*gprogrammeConcert -------- Pullman BandWhat Music Requires of the Freshmen - - Mr. Vernon S. PhillipsDuty of the Freshmen under Co-education - - Miss Edith D. JenkinsSong ..----.----Address of Welcome ------ Dr. W. R. HarperWhat the Freshmen Should Do for Athletics - - Mr. Leroy T. Vernon(W. S. KennedyFootball - ^C. B. HERSCHBERGERSong -----------Presentation Speech - Mr. Arthur E. BestorPresentation of Symbols - - Mk. Ruli^rt S. McClure, Pres, J. C. C.Reply of the Freshmen - - - Master Johnny ClendenningSong -----------Torch-light ProcessionBonfire and Music by the Band.248^,cNovember £ Spelman House reception.November 4. Mr. Eli M. Lubec initiated into PhiDelta Theta.November 7. Beecher Hall reception.November 10. Professor and Mrs. Vincent gave areception to the members of Lincoln House.November 11. Junior College Finals in Kent. Dinnerparty at Kelly in honor of Miss Talbot. BetaTheta Pi informal at Kenwood Institute.November 16. Mr. and Mrs. Vincent entertained theOxford Club.November 21. Foster Hall reception.November 23. Professor and Mrs. Vincent gave areception to the members of the foot ball team.November 25. Mortar Board Dance at Foster Hall.November 25. Installation of the Alpha EpsilonDelta Chapter of Chi Psi, followed by a banquet atMasonic Temple.November 26. First assembly informal at RosalieHall.November 26. The Mortar Board gave a breakfast inhonor of several alumnae who were in the city fora short time.November 28. Receptions at Snell and Green Halls.November 30. Professor Smith gave a dinner at theQuadrangle Club to the local chapter of DeltaTau Delta.249sr*>December 2. Delta Tau Delta initiation.December 3. Three Quarters Club initiation at thePalmer House.Charles HulbertHarold OsborneEugene WatsonJohn M. ClendenningWilliam Chapman.Vernon FerrisGeorge Young.George GaylordCharles JacobsFred MoloneyHoward YoungThe initiates were:William MoloneyEdwin KohlsaatCharles HayesCharles MageePerley L. FreemanLewis WoodruffLawrence OsborneHarry FrenchLee BallingerOswald GregoryGeorge LinsleyDance at Kelly hall.December 8. Beta Theta Pi informal musical.December 9. Delta Kappa Epsilon informal dance.December 9. First Annual Supper of the MorganPark Club.December 10. DeltaJKappa Epsilon 44war" smoker.Chi Psi informal dance. Delta Tau Delta houseparty.Decenber 1Q. Senior Finals in Kent Theatre.December 27. Informal dance at Foster Hall.250January 2. Psi Upsilon initiated George Gaylord and Benjamin Buck.January 9. Guy C. Kinnaman, J. W. Sheldonand D. A. Morris initiated into Phi DeltaTheta. Varsity informal. Psi Upsilondinner party.January 9. IJoward Young initiated intoPhi Kappa Psi.January 14. Varsity informal. Delta KappaEpsilon initiation and banquet. Initiates:Edwin Christian Kohlsaat, Vernon TirasFerris, Charles Eri Hulbert, Charles Sumner Hayes and Charles Lewis Woodruff.Alpha Delta Phi initiated Bert Cassells,Burton Smith and Charles Eaton. Alumnismoker at Phi Kappa Psi house.January 16. Beta Theta Pi initiated EugeneWatson. Alumni smoker at Chi Psi House.January 20. Washington House luncheon.Delta Kappa Epsilon smoker.January 21. Chi Psi initiated Lee Ballinger,Willis Lindsley and Franklirf Bogue. .January 23. Receptions at Snell and GreenHalls.January 25. Quadranglers initiated Julia Ma-lone, Leona Canterbury, Eunice Follansbeeand Brieta Bobo.251February 1. Psi Upsilon smoker. Phi Kappa Psi initiated Dean Swift and AlbertBertram Garcelon.February 2. Delta Kappa Epsilon Assemblyat the Chicago Beach Hotel.February 4. Glee Club dance at Foster.Third University informal. Phi KappaPsi smoker.February 10. Informal dance at Kelly. Junior Finals at Kent Theater.February 11. Phi Delta Theta informal danceat Rosalie.February 13. Receptions at Kelly and Graduate halls.February 14. Annual concert of Glee, Mandolin and Banjo Club at Studebaker Hall.February 17. Annual reception and banquetof Graduate Club at Chicago Beach Hotel.Delta Kappa Epsilon chafing dish party.Lincoln House supper and initiation. DeltaTau Delta initiation.February 20. Foster Hall reception.252February 21. Washington Promenade.Committees in charge:William France Anderson, General Chairman.FINANCE.Charles Branden Davis, Chairman. Ainsworth Whitney Clark. John James WalshARRANGEMENTS.Clinton Luman Hoy, Chairman. Gordon Clarke. Emory Cobb Andrews.RECEPTIONRoy Coleman Griswold, Chairman. Ralph C. Hamill. Arthur Sears Henning.PRINTING.Parte Ross, Chairman. Herbert A. Abernethy. Allen Grey Hoyt.Patronesses :Mrs. Harry Pratt Judson Mrs. George E. VincentMrs. James Rowland Angell Mrs. William B. OwenMrs. George C. Howland Miss WallaceFebruary 22. Sigma Club, Washington tea.February 27. Receptions at Snell and Green halls.253<C*J March 3. Alpha Delta Phi initiated Harry P.French and Jerome P. Magee. DeltaKappa Epsilon initiated Maurice Mandeville.March 3. Miss Olga Nethersole addressed theGraduate Club in Kent Theater.March 4. Varsity informal at Rosalie.March 6. Beecher Hall reception.March 10 University Settlement Benefit-Comic Opera— 4,The Deceitful Dean," inthe gymnasium.March 11. Phi Kappa Psi smoker.March 13. Annual dinner of Oxford Club atHotel Windermere. Kelly Hall reception.Spelman House entertained the Presidentand party.March 17. Three Quarters Club dance atKenwood Institute. Senior Finals inKent Theater.March 18. Dance at Green Hall. Phi DeltaTheta smoker.March 20. Foster Hall reception.March 27. Receptions at Snell and GreenHalls.254Cbe VisitantAFTER the Old College, which had so long staggered under its burden of debts,had finally given up the struggle and relieved itself of its load by lying downforever— after its final collapse, the buildings stood for a great while, as wecount time nowadays, empty. The lapse may have been for eighteen ornineteen years.The Old College had been a labor of love to its builders, and the most exquisitelycareful work had gone into the erection of these piles of brick and stone. Not thatthey were beautiful — that, the city's new civilization made too much to ask; nor delicate — there was no time for delicacy when fivt hundred young men were waiting onthe steps to be educated. But the buildings were strong, magnificently strong, horribly strong. They stood deserted and alone in the midst of a city that bustled andhurried about them, and in the midst of a life that constantly grew old and revived,turning from raw newness into shabbiness, and then into a kind of mocking age, thatpresently fell into itself and gave way to raw newness again — in the midst of all whichunpleasant and commercial senescence and rejuvenation, they bade a proud defiance todecay, standing stiffly and unruined. Even the window-panes seemed to bear somecharm against theft and breakage, and the windows looked on the world with none ofthat gap-toothed senility that vacant casements show. The dust that one wind blewin, the next blew out; rubbish there was none; a great clean emptiness hung roundthe place, and seemed to garnish it. It was for this very stanchness of the buildingsthat their owner let them stand, thinking it a pity, and bad policy besides, to wastesuch care and value as had gone into their construction. They hung heavy on his .hands, however. He made many attempts to sell them, or to rent them; but eitherthe memory of the past, or a want of industries that could use their big bare spaces,kept them from the attack of business. Men looked them over and went away; therush of business, swirling by, left them unengulfed; the city spread thinly and thenthickly past, and the clang of cable-cars re-echoed under their very gables, and rangthrough their still old rooms, and yet nobody would pay the price for them. Theystood on, undestroyed, undishonored, and finally their grim and obstinate refusal togive in to Time was rewarded. They, who had been college halls, were to be collegehalls again. The New College, walking in the footsteps of the Old, adopted them.It seemed to some a foolhardy thing to try to establisn a college where others hadtried and failed. But times had changed since the old institution had given up thefight; friends were more numerous and enemies less bitter. There were promises ofsupport from high quarters, and substantial gifts to push under them for a foundation ;and chief among these gifts was the one that determined the site of the New College,the gift of the buildings and grounds themselves. He, the owner, the very man soroared at and execrated in the old days for his hard hand; now richer than ever andwith a kind of desperate longing for public approbation that grew upon him with age,like his white hairs, and that he, poor fellow, dignified with the name of * "philanthropy;" he now saw his opportunity at the moment when the movement for the NewCollege had reached the very crest of desire, and paused, waiting for circumstance todecide whether it should push forward or fall back, to reap the harvest of approval hehad not sown; to give away the cake he had already eaten; and so he made his offer.It was accepted with eagerness.257And yet the situation had been an odd one for a college even in the old days, andit was still more odd now, with the incongruous hurry and intemperate excitement ofthe great city so very near. This oddness was as nothing in the sight of the promoters. They clapped down new buildings, with 4 'modern improvements," among theold ones; they adapted and furbished up the latter. But straightway these showedtheir cross-grained and mulish natures in a fresh light. For just as they had beforerefused to grow old, now they refused to be made young Paint them and tinkerthem as one might, their age looked unhappily and incongruously out. Their hardwood floors, though polished to a gleaming brilliancy, squeaked protestingly underfoot. Their quaint mouldings, in spite of ammonia and water, looked as they were,out of date thirty years; all the cleaning in the world served only to widen that spaceof years. The narrow casements, with their shining panes, glimmered anachronisti-cally. The old places clamored inaudibly for the old peace. But their ungratefulness— for what destiny half so good dared they have hoped? — passed unheeded. Presently the old recitation-halls became new recitation-halls, and the old dormitories newdormitories.Vigo roomed in number 21 of the East Hall; a corner room, which he had chosenbecause it was slightly larger than most of the others, and because its windows— ofwhich there were two — fronted south on the pale lawn of the quadrangles, rather thannorth on the busy street. A comparatively quiet side street ran by the east end of theroom, which was also the end of the building; and was bricked up solidly, withoutwindows. The room was, for a dormitory, spacious — perhaps eighteen feet long andten feet wide, with little angularities and irregularities that appealed to Vigo's taste,and made it easier to arrange his furniture and draperies than if it had been squareand boxlike. He fixed his bed in a niche near the windows, where it modestly retreated behind the jutting wall. His book-case was opposite; in such a position thathe could lie in bed and read the titles in his library. The divan and the dresser, wereequally easy to place. When it came to his desk, Vigo thought that he should havemore trouble; but as he stepped back to take a final purvey he saw the very spot for it,in one corner, perhaps a trifle too near the gaily-painted bunch of iron pipes that wereto furnish heat some day, but convenient to the light, and out of the way of everything else. He planted it resolutely down there. He got up his last curtain, drovethe last tack into his photograph holder, and then, getting the effect with his head onone side, found it very good.When he had completed his examination he sat down at his desk and pleasedhimself by looking backward to the time, nearly twenty years before, when his roomhad been last occupied. Who had the former tenant been ? Vigo had been sufficient! ycurious on this point to inquire of the official of whom he rented the room, but thatgentleman could tell him nothing. The books of the Old College, he said, had beeneither lost or burned, he did not know which; the old affairs had been completely settled up; and now, for such minor details as who had lived in a particular room, therewas no source of information except tradition. Vigo could surely, the officialthought, discover somebody who had studied at the Old College, able to enlightenhim. Vigo resolved that some such man he certainly would look up. Meanwhile, hewondered over the room, and let his imagination play as it chose. Had the old tenantbeen a freshman like himself; or somebody of weight and importance in the college?Perhaps he had been an athlete, as athletes went in those days— a mighty runner on258occasion. More probably, if he was a man of account, as Vigo felt sure, he hadturned his attention to oratory and debate, and made this very room echo with fireypractisings of "Webster's Reply to Hayne," or "My honorable opponent, the lastspeaker on the affirmative, is pleased to impeach the veracity of my honorable col-leage. But, Sir, I can tell him"— pouring it out in a flood, sweeping quite away thehonorable opponents, and landing the speaker and his honorable colleague high anddry upon the shore. Vigo's eyes flashed as he thought of the impetuosity of it. Ashe pondered on it, it seemed to him that he could see the Other Man — dark-eyed,dark-haired, with straight, thin lips and a look of vast determination- no nonsenseabout him anywhere. Vigo himself was small and fair and frail, imaginative andsensitive, and he admired the other type according as he felt himself to fall short of it.He wondered what the Other Man was doing now— a doctor, a minister, more probably a lawyer or even a statesman, thundering away at opponents as he used to do,always right and always winning. Vigo imagined him in a thousand different careers,ever the same, thin-lipped, eager, pressing. But strangely enough, it never occurredto Vigo that the Other Man might be dead.As Vigo sat at the desk, imagining these things,his eyes fell upon a, break in the papering just abovethe level of his face. He reached out and felt of itwith his finger. It was the head of a nail, wherethe workmen had carelessly left it protrudingthrough the new paper which had been put onover the old . Vigo look ed at i t curiously. It was anold nail, and rusty, though still strong. It hadevidently been in the wall a long time. SuddenlyVigo knew that that nail was the one link bindinghim to the Other Man— the man who had last occupied number 24. Twenty years before, the OtherMan must have driven that nail where it now stood.And why? It was low— more than half way downthe side of the room; and it was off in the corner.It came to Vigo in a flash that for these very reasons, and for the marvelous exactitude with whichit fitted above the very middle of his desk, that theOther Man, too, must have seen that this spotwas the only one for the desk; the Other Man musthave sat time and again just where Vigo was sitting now, and looked long at whatever hung fromthe nail. Vigo wondered what it could have been.A picture of course; but whose? Meanwhile Vigo,after scraping away the paper from the edge of thenail with his finger, took a photograph, in its fair little blue frame, from where itstood on his dressing case, and fitting a wire to'it, hung it from the nail. It was Herpicture; just her face smiling up at him. He sat down and looked at it again, andblushed, and laughed to himself; and then kissed the tips of his fingers to it, and said44 Good-Night— dear !" and went to bed.259He awoke suddenly with a feeling of effort. His lips were dry and his heart beating hard, and he was listening intently. He had not dreamed, yet every fibre in hirnwas strung up like a runner's when he is waiting for the shot. The room was quiteblack and dark. He did not know what time it was, but he felt sure it was late, forthe humming of the cable in the street outside had ceased. The only sound hecould catch was the barking of a dog in the other street, the one to the east. Theanimal was howling steadily and persistently; along bay; silence, and then another bay; anothersilence, and another bay. It came as regularly asthe ticking of a clock, or the hammering of one'spulse. There was a note in it that Vigo could notrecognize, which seemed neither anger nor warning; suddenly, in one of the pauses, it came to himthat it was fear. In the same breath the howlingdied away into a long smothered whine, and Vigoheard footsteps in the hall outside his door.Though they came uncertainly, as though theman, whoever he was, was not sure of his ground,there was no stealth in them. Not that they wereheavy, for Vigo could scarcely catch them, withhis fiercest attention; but they had a kind offirmness in them that told Vigo the walker didnot mind who heard him. They came slowlydown the hall, and paused outside Vigo's own door, which shook a little, as thoughthe wind rattled it. His impulse was to cover up his head with the bedclothes; buthe reflected unsteadily that he was nineteen, and that the dormitory was full of people, so he jumped up instead. He laid his hands on the matches where he always keptthem at the head of his bed, lit one, made his way quickly to the door, flung it open,looked out, and saw the empty hall. At the same moment there was a gust of windfrom the open window, and his match flared and went out. The dog outside resumedhis howling. In a trembling that he could not explain Vigo rushed back to bed andcovered himself up.In the morning, as his custom was, as soon as he got up he went over to greetHer picture. He pattered across the room in his pajamas, but when he reached thedesk he stopped with a little "Oh !" of dismay. The nail was empty; the picture hadfallen face down upon the desk, and lay there. He picked it up hastily but carefully,and was relieved to find that not even the glass of the frame was broken. It seemedto him rather surprising that the picture could have fallen, even a few inches, uponthe hard top of the desk, and sustained no damage. The nail was still in place andthe wire was unbroken; it was evident that the wind had merely shaken the photograph off. He put it in place again, and bade it an apologetic good-morning. Whenhe had finished dressing he went to breakfast, where he found one of the men whoroomed on his own floor."Hullo !" Vigo greeted him. " That was a high old wind last night, eh?"The other man laughed. "Wind? You must have been dreaming, Vigo. Therewasn't wind enough last night to lift a feather."m>Vigo flushed and did not answer. The other man went on: 44Did you hear thatconfounded dog, though?"Vigo leaned forward eagerly. 44Yes; did he bother you, too?"44 Bother me?" The other appeared to think. 44He kept me out of my beautysleep for half an hour, if that's what you call bothering. I'd have bothered him witha brick if I could have got at him; I need my beauty sleep."<4He kept me awake, too," agreed Vigo; 44he and that fellow who was walking upand down the hall."44 What fellow?"4 'Didn't you hear him ?"44I heard nobody."Vigo relapsed into silence. When he got back to his room again he re-examinedthe picture. Not even a crack appeared anywhere. It again seemed to him extraordinary that the photograph could have fallen, without sustaining the least damage.He looked about the room, pondering, and then for the first time noticed that thedesk was so shut off from the window, by the dressing-case and one of the projectionsof the wall, that no wind except the strongest, could reach it. The discovery settledone thing in his mind: the wind had not blown down his photograph. It occurred tohim that he must have left it lying on the desk the night before.44 And yet I would have sworn I hung it up," he said to himself, thoughtfully.He went about his college duties, but all day he revolved the question in his mind.He could not shake himself free from a sense of wonderment over the experience ofthe night. When he came back to his room in the evening— for this first day hadbeen so busy he had not had time to return before— he glanced at the photograph, andwas relieved to see that it hung where he had placed it. He perceived in himselfmore than half a fear that it might have fallen once more.That night he studied a long time; in fact it was nearly twelve o'clock when hesaid good night to Her and went to bed. Even then he lay awake a while, thinking;but finally he fell asleep. Nothing disturbed him. In the morning, however, whenhe went to look at the picture, he found it again lying face down upon the desk. Thistime the glass of the frame was cracked across. He removed the broken glass andkissed the picture tenderly before he set it back on his dresser. Later in the day,however, he got a new glass and put it in place, and then he took the wire and woundit round and round, and tied it with a peculiar knot he knew, twisting it till he feltsure it would defy any one to take it off without breaking the wire.In the evening he asked two or three of the men on the floor to come into hisroom for a while. They were all freshmen, young like himself, strangers to eachother and to the city. Vigo, with his eager desire for companionship, felt his positionas host keenly, and in one of the pauses of the rather solemn conversation, anxiousto enliven matters, he began to mention, somewhat shyly, his ideas about the OtherMan, who had last lived in number 24. Half laughing, he described the Other Man,as he had imagined him, and he pointed out the nail, the only relic that the OtherMan had left. He was rather sorry that he had done this, afterwards, because it involved an exhibition of the photograph that seemed to pointed; so much so that hecould not help blushing a little as they looked at it. But they were polite, and didnot chaff him at all, and so he grew not to mind. They were a good deal interested inthe picture, and the nail, and the Other Man, and finally one of them said:26144 Haven't you thought, Vigo, that the Other Man probably had a picture hanging where yours is hanging now?"44 Yes," Vigo agreed. 44I had thought of that; in fact it was mostly that thatmade me put my picture there."44 The Other Man would probably be jealous if he knew," said one of them.44 Oh, I hope not." Still, Vigo took the idea under consideration.44 What do you suppose the Other Man's picture was like?" somebody wondered.44 We-ell," pondered Vigo, 44he must have been dark, so she was probably fair;and I have been thinking of him as a big fellow, so I imagine her little, I suppose;little, but with big eyes, with a smile in them. I don't believe her mouth smiledmuch, though, because he wouldn't care for the doll-baby face at all. Of course shemust have been young, because he wasn't very old himself." Vigo broke off, withthe sudden consciousness that he had been describing Her; and the others, with theireyes on the photograph, were conscious of it, too, and laughed a little, which madeVigo blush again. Then he smiled that smile that always forced people, even thosewho thought him soft, to believe in him, and said, pointing boldly at the photograph:44 Perhaps she was something like Her; I hope so for, for the Other Man's sake."The others left presently, but before they went away they all shook hands andvowed to be good friends throughout college. Vigo went promptly to bed, and had astrange dream. It seemed to him he lay in bed broad awake and staring, as he hadlain the other night; and he heard the same curiously soft, determined footsteps comeslowly down the hall; and saw the door of his room open and the Other Man come in.The Other Man, was in Vigo's dream, just as he had imagined him — tall, dark, thin-lipped; with a face all of whose lines seemed to lead to the eyes; a concentrated face.The Other Man stood in the doorway a moment and looked at Vigo with a determinedstare; then he stepped rapidly across the room to the desk. Now the desk was behindthe jut of the wall, and Vigo could not see it from his bed, yet he was aware somehowthat the Other Man was fumbling with the knot of the wire by which the photographwas fastened to the nail. Vigo, in this curious way, that was not seeing, and yet was,knew that the Other Man found difficulty with the knot; could not unfasten it. Finally he seemed to Vigo to leave off trying, and take hold of the nail as though hewould pull it out. But before he had even stirred it he stopped and stood uncertainly;then turned the picture up and slipped Her photograph out. He looked at it, itseemed to Vigo, savagely for a moment, as though he would tear it, but then he laidit down. From somewhere he took another photograph, and stared at it regretfully,and then slipped it into place in the vacant frame; turned to Vigo a pair of burningeyes lit up with triumph; stared again a long, long time at the photograph in theframe; took up Her picture, and with his direct, light step, went out of the room anddown the hall again. It seemed to Vigo then that he himself got up, all in a nervoushurry, and crossed over to the desk, and seized the picture to discover what was thechangeling photograph; but with a grateful sigh discovered that in his dream he hadbeen dreaming; that the picture had not been changed; that Her eyes still looked outat him. Then he thought he went back to bed and to sleep. In the morning, whenhe really woke, the remembrance of the dream was still so distinct in his brain that hesighed gratefully again, as he assured himself in the cold daylight that the picturewas the same as it had been. Then he smiled at himself.262It was three or four days later, when the three boys he knew best were once moreall gathered in his room, that he told them about his dream. One of them, who intended some day to be a psychologist, explained it with a wisdom that would havebeen more lucid if he had not continually forgotten his terms, and been forced to fallback on 44 Well, brain-waves, you know," or, 44 Well, that's what Mr. Williams said."Somebody asked, at length:44 Did you see her face, Vigo— the Other Girl's, I mean ?" They called them theOther Girl and the Other Man, now, to distinguish them.44 That's the curious part of it," exclaimed Vigo. 4< It seems to me I did; and yet,when I try to remember, I can think only of the one face— as if they were both alike,you know. ' ' They agreed that it was odd. One of them went over and looked at thepicture closely; then he said:44 Hullo! You've changed the photograph yourself, haven't you ?"44 What do you mean?" asked Vigo.44 Why, the one you showed us the other day had a green mount, and this is black.How many pictures of Her, have you, Vigo ?" They all laughed.44 Why,"— Vigo began. Then he checked himself and crossed over. 4< I didn't remember that the mount showed at all in that frame."The other held the picture towards him. 44 It doesn't, usually. The corner slipsout when you jar it. I remember it did the other day, when I noticed it was green.Here, I'll shake it back." He did so; the corner of cardboard disappeared; but Vigohad time to notice that it was black, as the boy said. Vigo said nothing. He wantedtime to think it over.Again there was a space of three or four days, during which came no developments in the case of the Other Man; unless it could be called a development that for aweek nothing happened, after a space of three nights, in each of which had occurredsomething inexplicable to Vigo. Meanwhile, Vigo wrote to Her, telling her, underpledge of secrecy, of the odd transposition of Her photographs; and he found outfrom the registrar the address of a man who, the registrar thought, would remembersomething about number 24 in the days of the Old College; and wrote to him, too, aletter that cost him a great deal of thought and trouble to compose. While he waswaiting for answers to these letters, Vigo studied indifferently, and slept scarcelybetter. He dozed only to wake v» ith a start, listening for the coming footsteps downthe hall; he got up in the night to examine the photograph, and assure himself thatit had not been moved. In his days he thought of the Other Man, and of hisown dream that the photographs had been changed — a dream so oddly realized.and he found himself coming constantly back to the look of triumph in the OtherMan's eyes. In reason, if reason could be applied to what was wholly unreasonable,the Other Man must have been satisfied that in some way he had outwitted Vigo; buthow was it to outwit him, simply to change one picture of Her for another ? Vigopuzzled; and still nothing happened that could confirm him in any way in the beliefthat he had been allowed to see what is hidden from most people. He began towonder if he was on the edge of brain fever, without knowing it, and more than oncehe was on the point of telling the others all he knew. But he was shy; and what hadhe to tell, to justify his wild wonder, except that the photographs had really beentransposed? They would tell him that somebody was playing a joke on him, he263thought; and then he would determine to wait a little longer, at any rate until heheard from Her, and from the graduate of the Old College. Meanwhile, Vigo was ina fair way to be ill with worry.One afternoon he came into his room hurriedly. He had been doing so miserablyin his work that to-day he decided not to go to his afternoon recitation. As he threwopen his door he saw a man sitting at the desk, his back to the door staring intentlyat Her picture. At first Vigo thought it was one of the boys he knew, but almost atonce he was aware it was a stranger to him, and he wondered indignantly what thefellow was doing there. He gave a little cough to attract attention, and the manturned his head.They looked into each other's eyes,and Vigo saw that the stranger wastall, dark, thin-lipped; with a face allof whose lines seemed to lead to theeyes; a concentrated face; the face ofthe Other Man of his dream. Thesame flash that burnt the recognitioninto his heart showed him that thisman was not alive; that he might notspeak, or understand. They looked ateach other with a tremendous silence.Outside some boys were playing balland shouting; on the other side of thebuilding a cable-car rumbled alongand then stopped with a jangling jar.They looked at each other till the twoclangs came that signalled for the carto start, and then suddenly the OtherMan was not. But there fell on Vigo'sear the sound of footsteps, muffled, yetdirect, that passed him and went downthe hall — the empty hall. He crossedthe room and looked at the photograph, as the Other Man had lookedat it, in an ectasy of attention, and hiseyes were opened as they had notbeen before. He saw by a thousandsigns that it was not Her picture. Thelikeness was marvelous, but thepicture was not Her's. The arch ofthe eyebrows was more rounded, the mouth drooped a little at the corners, thecheeks were thinner — a thousand things were different. He understood everythingat once. This was the photograph that, years before, the Other Man had hung.The glance of triumph had been justified; the Other Man, who had fought so hard tokeep his little shrine sacred, had succeeded— had outwitted him. Vigo stripped thephotograph from the frame, and took it in his hand as if he would tear it to pieces;264then he remembered his dream, and stopped, and looked at it, and laid it gently onthe desk, face down. This was not She; but the Other Man had loved her.It seemed odd to vigo that he was not afraid. He felt a choking in his throat,and a kind of lightness about his heart, as though he had been running for a longtime; as one is afraid when he feels a sense of impending danger, and looks about forhelp, Vigo was not. He sat down at his desk and wrote again to her, saying nothingof his last experience, but enclosing the photograph, and asking her whether shecould in any way explain the likeness. Then he wrote a telegram to the student ofthe Old College, asking him to send at once any information he might have. He didthese things as simply and naturally as a man puts out his hands to save himself infalling; it never occurred to him that he might do anything else. When he had postedhis letter and sent off his telegram, he came back to his room, and though it was onlythe middle of the afternoon, he took off his clothes and went to bed. He felt hot,and his head ached. When they found him he was delirious.Your letter and telegram are at hand, asking for information as to the man whoroomed in number 24, College Hall, at the time of the breaking up of the Old College.In reply I may say that strictly speaking nobody roomed in number 24 at the timeyou mention, and for this reason. A young man named Clements had roomed therea short time previously. He was a most brilliant young fellow — too brilliant, in fact;for in an attack of brain-fever superinduced directly, as it was supposed, by overwork,he died in that room. To the best of my knowledge, no one could be found to takethe room in the few months between his death and the time when the Old Collegewent to pieces. In regard to this man Clements' personal appearance, concerningwhich you ask, I cannot speak so positively. As I remember him, he was tall andvery dark. His eyes were particularly bright, I believe; though indeed I may beconfusing him with some one else, and so cannot say with certainty. I am afraidthat I cannot furnish you with the address of any of his family, for, as I remember it,he was alone in the world; I think his burial was superintended by the college authorities.This is all the information I am able to furnish you with at this time. Trustingthat it may be what you wish, I remain - —Before I begin to answer your letter I must make a confession. It was so odd,and puzzled me so much, that I felt absolutely compelled to break the promise ofsecrecy you asked of me, so I showed it (the letter) to mamma. She said, of course,that some one must have been playing a trick on you. So much I felt sure of. Butshe could not tell, any more than I could, what picture of me the 44someone" couldhave got hold of. When the photograph came this morning, however, she understoodit at once. She recognized it as one of herself that she had had taken a long timeago, just before she was married, in fact. She disliked the style at the time, and hadonly two of them finished, one of which she still keeps. The other she supposed, ofcourse, lost long ago, until to-day it dropped out of your letter. The curious part —though of course it explains the transposition of the photographs— is, that this picturemust have lain in your dormitory ever since it was taken! Mamma gave it, nearlytwenty years ago, as I said, to a young man named Clements, who was a student inthe Old College. Mamma says she remembers very little about him, except that hewas dark, and had exceedingly bright eyes. Papa, however, says he was a very hand-265some fellow, 44and a great rival of mine for your mother, my dear!" Poor Mr.Clements died a long time ago, while he was at college, in fact. It certainly seemsstrange that his photograph should turn up now, and in such good condition, to bemade the basis of a practical joke on you. I suppose one of the boys there had it andnoticed the likeness. There is really nothing wonderful that you should not havenoticed the difference, for I have the two before me as I write, and, except for themounting, I find them exactly alike. I feel very proud that I look so much asmamma did — people have so often told me she was a great belle !James Weber Linn.* # * * # *Wben CW$ moon Was Reu>When this moon was new,I looked up through the night,And sent out all my soul in white,Pure stars of hope, and said 'twould beThe harvest moon of love to me.But 'twas not true;The night had drowned hope's twinkling stars,And gleams with lurid lightning scars,Since this moon was new.When this moon was new,I dreamed a sweet face bent above me,And sweet lips murmured low, 44 1 love thee."I said 'twould be so ere this moon was old,And o'er and o'er my pearls of joy I told.But 'twas not true;Broken is hope's golden bowl,—Love's joyous bells have learned to toll,Since this moon was new.Lk Roy Titus Weeks.COMPANYAI^ER^f OFTEC OLLE GEA.NNUAXJ*n_HE HANDLING OF A CONTRACT FOR ACOLLEGE ANNUAL FROM INCEPTION TOFINISH IS OUR SPECIALTY. DOING THE—I ENGRAVING, PRINTING AND BINDINGCOMPLETE IN OUR OWN ESTABLISHMENT. WRITEFOR INFORMATION AND PRICES. «••••««•«•««•65 to 71 PLYMOUTHPLACE * CHI CAGO *Bis SorrowNo women, except Miss Randall and myself, were in the long room of the PublicLibrary Building. All about us sat men reading foreign papers, trade journals, andmagazines treating the industrial arts. Most of the readers had the deadened look ofmen accustomed to hard, monotonous lives. He who sat across the table from MissRandall was plainer, more hopeless than the others. He was trying to read, but hisweak old eyes gazed off into vacancy ; he saw nothing in the pages before him. Likea homesick dog, he looked timidly about the room. At last his eyes fell upon theopen, sympathetic face of Miss Randall. Feeling his gaze, she looked up and smilingly half -nodded to him. He leaned toward her and said in a low voice :44 She died a week ago to-day."Fanny Burning.267Regular Season Begins abouttbe ist of October.Illinois Scbool of DentistrpCbicago, ill*Requirements forAdmissionC ATISFACTORY evidence of** a good English education.Both sexes are admitted on equalterms. Graduates of Pharmaceutical and undergraduates ofMedical Colleges, and also graduates of Veterinary Schools, areadmitted to the second year'scourse. :::::::::PrizesBeneficiary Of faculty Pri*e„.The student showing the highest averagein all departments and good deportment will receive the GeneralTicket for the next winter's course free. There are two of theseprices — one each to the Freshman and Junior Classes. For catalogue and information address ::::::::::::Dn frank &? Brown, Dean,ioo State Street, Cbicago, TIL268Cbe fieraldHERE'S a curus bird,Thet, ez fur's I know,'S never had a wordOf praise, high or low :Never 's had a verseOf all the poets sing :Clare if I ain't the firstEz thought of sech a thing.I 'most wish he hadSum other kind o' name;Makes me sort o' mad,But he ain't to blame.What I want to tell'S jest about this size,He knows mighty wellWhat he prophecies.Of 'n when the nightJest turns towards the day;'Fore a streak of lightGets here on its way,Jest at twelve o'clockThat bird flaps his wings,Feels the dayspring's shock';Lifts his voice and sings.'T ain't much of a song,Cock-a-doodle-doo :Mighty short and strong ;Mighty sure and true :I've thought till thought growsMost too much for me,How that Rooster knowsTwelve o'clock from three.I don't alius know,Thinkin' in the night,That the dark will growTo the morning bright ;But that feller's call,When he says he duz,Helps me bear it all,Now and things thet wuz.269(HiaGO&NORTHWESTERN RAILWAYCSTP.M.&O.RYF.E.&MV.R.R.ANDS.C&P.R1THE PIONEER LINE WEST AND NORTHWEST OF CHICAGO.20TH CENTURY TRAINSNORTH-WESTERN LIMITEDELECTRIC LIGHTED TO ST. PAUL AND MINNEAPOLISTHE COLORADO SPECIALONE NIGHT TO DENVERTHE OVERLAND LIMITEDCALIFORNIA AND OREGON IN THREE DAYSTHE DULUTH-SUPERIOR LIMITEDAND ST. PAUL FAST MAIL.THE BEST OF EVERYTHING.H. R. McCULLOUGH,34V.-P.&G. T.M. CHICAGO, ILL. W. B. KNISKERN,Gen. Pass & Tltt. Agt.270Mebbe he's jest gladHe's got one more day'N he might hev hadTo live and feel gay.Mebbe it's jest pride,And a wild delightThat some rooster died'Stead o' him last night.Mebbe somethin' more,Mebbe somethin' lessAils him than comes o'erMe in my distress.But his sense of timeFore there's light to seeEz worth this much rhyme,Er seems so to me.Anstiss C. Gary.* * * # * *tier Wild OatsDINNER had been quite a success that night. The usual endless discussions of| pedagogical methods, the morality of modern novels, and the Philippinequestion had given place to animated recitals of boarding-school yarns. Atlength there was a lull in the merriment, and the graduate student said :" Well, girls, I think I'll tell you about something I did once. It was the onlyscrape I ever got into at school, and in my senior year, too !"The Fellow across the table looked up in some alarm. The three undergraduateswere visibly surprised, and settled back in their chairs for the unfolding of meek littleMiss Brown's iniquity.iJ I went to school in a small Wisconsin town," she began, taking excited satisfaction in her listeners' attention. " Just across the village was a boys' military institute, and of course our rules were in consequence extremely strict. I had alwaysbeen a model scholar, but in my last term I was given rather a gay young room-mate.One fine winter morning, at her suggestion, I obtained permission to go sleigh-riding;and as a special favor we were allowed to go without a chaperone. Now what do yousuppose we did?""Do tell us, Miss Brown. We can't possibly guess," murmured the table." We took that sleigh and drove straight to the institute !" she announced in anawe-struck tone. " And then we made a tour of the entire grounds !"" And the boys came out and gave you a good time?" suggested the Freshmanafter an effective pause." Oh, no, it was recitation time, so they didn't see us."271* fj? fpfrofrofrofro fTO ffeffeffcffcffcffc frofrofTO fTO fTOfro^TO frofrowwro frofrofrofrofrofrofj>*frofTO?fTOfw/fff*JfTO?fH"^?f™/ 1853 1899et&T"The mill will never grind againwith the water which is past." Improve the present opportunity toorder your autumn and winter garmenu. The Edward Ely Company,Tailors, Chicago.TERMS:— Ten days, 10 per centdiscount.OtttdCttttdCdtdtdtdCdfidtttttdCdCdUCttttttttdFINE TAILORINGAT MEDIUM PRICESnTHE EDWARD ELY CO.TAILORS fjj>frofrofj*fm"lfj>?f$>f*rofro....Chicago JJ J63-J65 WABASH AVE.fy^ fw*ifj>f^<^fj>fj) fjfif^f^f^ <$¦><£><$> ^fj^fj^ ^f^f^f^ fJ>(£<J)<J) ^f^^^^i272points of ViewY DEAREST DOROTHY:It's your turn to write, but never mind, I'll forgive you, and this isonly a note to remind you of your promise to visit me this month.Now, why can't you come next week ? Monday's Kelly reception day,and on Tuesday, the fifteenth, comes the biggest hop of the year- theDelta Psi ball. My brother Jack's coming up for it, and will be delighted to look after your program. I'm going with Grant Lorimer ; ofcourse, he is still to the fore. Those two men, Grant in particular, aremighty good about getting up little special games. Now, you'll besure to come, won't you? Wear your newest gown, your sweetest smile,and look your prettiest, and we'll try to give you such a good time thatyou'll want to enter the *• U " next fall.Things are rather dull here now, though, generally, I manage tomake a little excitement when none looms up of its own accord. Have you read44 Over the Horizon ? " Quotable. But what a peculiar point of view. I detest thattype of woman, don't you ? Have you ordered your shirt-waists yet? Benson's havesome stunning patterns this year.I must close and run to a ten-thirty. Good-bye. Write right away and say youare coming to see,Yours with love,Lois.Kelly Hall, Monday, April 7, 189 —When the writer finished the foregoing note, she rose from her desk and stoodby the window, looking out across the campus and waving the paper to and fro todry it. It was brown paper with a tiny gilt monogram at the top, and indefinably, itsuited the personality of the girl poised evenly, erectly, in her correct tailor gown.The room, too, seemed to indicate not her individuality perhaps, but her type. Thegreen walls were hung with photographs and frat-pictures, mostly in black frames,with here and there a poster of Bernhart, Duse or Hardy. There were quantities ofpillows on the couch, all covered with maroon, or green, or deep orange, and curtains at windows and book-case, oriental in pattern, rich of tint Everywherewarmth, and deep tone color ; no pink, no blue, and not a drape to be seen.A final wave and the letter was slipped in its envelope, sealed, stamped, and directed. The girl walked over to the mirror and began dabbing at her front hair.44 1 hope she'll come," she said half aloud. 44 Dear Dorothy ! How will she takeit all, I wonder ? Wish they would let her come here. Good gracious ! that clock !it's never right," and she hurried out of the room, slamming the door.Dorothy came as a matter of course. At the ball she wore a beruffled whitegown, with a big sash round her waist. She looked as pretty as most, and prettierthan many ; and Jack Marsh pronounced her a 44 smooth little girl who knew howto dance." Two men she met took a second dance with her, and one of the two,Fletcher Hoi ward, asked for a third. Dorothy herself, in the excitement of her273Ukndell $ CompanyMakers ofeiHunplainBldfl. frattrnitpPins...Athletic medalsClass PinsandRings...126 State StretCbicago Suit to Order$20.00Our fancy worsteds have life and snap to them.These goods are made ot long: yarn, there-lore wear longer and look better thanthose usually sold. Lively patterns in checks, stripes,and pinheads.Order of lis and Get Your Moneys WorthSix : Little : Tailors78 MADISON ST.HarrisonMAKESGOODPICTURES Clothes DrpersHOT AIRSTEAM ORGAS&If you aredissatisfied withyourpresentphotographertry.......Harrison...CBNTRAL MUSIC HAI.LHe Knows Now.ff AAfi Thi* I Every Picture a work of art, orneau mist y0u don't have to take it. Everysitting must please you, if not, you may sit untilit does. Every Student gets a discount, if thispublication is mentioned. This cut shows Combined Dryer and Stove.Tor Residences, flats and Public InstitutionsEstimates promptly furnished.Send for Illustrated Catalogue.Cbicago Clothes Drper Wk$»** $? Canal Street, Cbicaflo.Eastern Headquarters, 1 123 Broadway, New York274first f rat-ball, was radiant. She liked everybody and everything, and found the menin general and the Delta Psi's in particular, splendid.44 1 suppose," she ventured, looking up at tall Fletcher Holward, <4I supposeDelta Psi is the finest fraternity in the world.' 'Fletcher smiled genially.44 We think so of course," he admitted. 4< And I assure you, without prejudice,that we are certainly second to none. All men speak of their own fraternity 4 withoutprejudice.' "Dorothy beamed an 4<of course," and it was a few minutes later fhat Fletcherasked for a second blank extra, and frowned to find everything 44gone to the seventh."During the evening, Dorothy looking about for her friend, observed that GrantLorimer seemed on the fair road to the monopoly of Lois* dances. ( He had takenthree with her to be sure, but then she was Lois' guest. ) At supper they all laughedand talked together, but Grant's most pertinent remarks were addressed to Lois.Except when courtesy demanded he looked at her, and the conversation of the twowas so full of reminiscences— those dear delights of intimate friendship — that Dorothy began building a little romance. In the carriage going home she looked andlistened, talking little and attaching hidden importance to everything Grant said.And, when at Kelly door as they said good-night, she heard them planning for 44 tomorrow," she thonght with a little sigh how lovely it would be if she, too, were44 like that."Upstairs the girls talked it over.44 I'm glad you had a good time," said Lois, throwing her satin gown over theback of a chair. ,4May I see your program?" She took the card and glanceddown it.44 Five regulars and an extra with Jack— nice, proper number — three with Grant,two with that Mr. Simms, and two with Fletcher Holward. Simms isn't very much ;in fact "—gravely — " he's a criminal. How did you like Mr. Holward ? "4,Acrimnal! Lois!"44 Yes. He's commonplace— that's criminal. But tell me, did you like Mr. Holward? " Lois, before the mirror was brushing out her long hair in comprehensivesweeps.44 Yes," shyly from the yougcr girl. 44 He seemed charming, and he was lovelytome. He asked for three dances."44 He is lovely, lovable and dangerous. He is self-centered and generous. He isnever in earnest, and he always thinks he is. He is sympathetic, and he never un- ,stands, yet for all that he's one of the smoothest men in college, and, Dorry, dear, forHim to have taken three dances was a worth-while compliment.44 Do you know him very well," queried Dorothy, pleased.,4Know him!" hastily, 44yes, I know him," finished Lois quietly. "We allknow each other here to a greater or less degree. May I sit here? Don't move.This is all right."She drew her dressing gown closer about her, shivering in the chill of the earlymorning. The braids of heavy hair hung about her in a loop; her gray eyeslooked big and soft. Altogether she seemed so gentle that Dorothy gathered courageto lean against her and whisper,275FREDERICK P. BAGLEY and CO..WHOLESALE DEALERS AND WORKERS IN MARBLE,EIGHTEENTH STREET VIADUCTCHICAGO.THER L. SMITH.R. OWLSN JAMES DAMBYPresident and Treasurer SecretaryUniox Foundry WorksArchitectural and. General Foundry Wot*1cFIRE ESCAPESOFFICE : - WORKS tT First Nat* Banlc Bldg. *& 70tli St, «fe Greenwood Ave*• .Telephone Exprema 300. ••CHICAGOFRATERNITY STATIONERY «COLLEGE ANNUAL INSERTS «COMMENCEMENT INVITATIONSPROGRAMS, ETC. ««««««««ENGRAVLD IN THELATEST « STYLESWm. Freund & Sons174-176 State St.««««««« CHICAGOOPP. PALMER HOUSE. THE faculties of modernhouses of learning recognize the fact that good ventilation and an even temperature are essential to the healthand working powers of theoccupants of school rooms.THE JOHNSON SYSTEMOF AUTOMATIC TEMPERATURE REGULATION insures the even temperature* It is adapted to anysystem of heating*JOHNSON TEMPERATURECONTROLLING COMPANY411 Dearborn StreetCHICAGO, ILL*27644 Will you tell me something? "44 What is it?"4C May be I ought not to ask, but— are you engaged to Mr. Lorimer? There ! Ifyou don't want to say so, never mind, but I do want to know, and I won't tell, and Ihope you are ! He is so big, and fine, and clever ;" this with fervor, 44 and he caresso much— I am sure of that ! why, he called twice since yesterday ! — that I couldn'thelp wondering and planning a little."Dorothy ceased speaking and timidly searched her friend's face for the reply. Itcame. Fr6m the beginning of Dorothy's questioning Lois had been smiling, and atthe end she laughed softly.44 Engaged? " she said. <4My dear girl, no. In love ! No. Just friends."Dorothy looked her incredulity. 4i I don't believe it, " she announced. 44 If anyone as nice as that were as found of me "44 You'd bowl completely over? Yes, I believe you would. That's your type."44 My type?"44 Yes, we are all types; you are one, I am another. That staid little womanwithout stay across the hall who goes in for Kant and Hegel, and the girl at our tablewho disapproves of Kipling and adores Lillian Bell— they're types. You don't understand, do you ? If you were only down here and could get the point of view ? "44 The point of view ? "44 Yes. That's what you gain at college— a point of view — the point of view — anappreciation of others Oh, that sounds like 4 Alice. ' A mouse, to a mouse— Oh,mouse "44 1 don't understand very well, but please about Mr. Lorimer ? "44 Oh, Grant?" Well I'll try to explain." As she spoke Lois began twistingher rings about her fingers, while on her face there grew an expression of analyticscrutiny. "We go together because we please each other aesthetically. We like thesame books and people and things to eat, and we laugh at the same things. Besides," her voice softened suddenly, "lam very fond of him," she said simply.44 Then, Lois, dear, what is the difference between this and a reality? Why don'tyou make it amount to— to— something ? "44 We can't. Why Dorry, it would mean many years of waiting— years ; and Idon't trust myself— or him. When it comes to things like this, now is the acceptedtime, and dealing in futures is uncertain business. I care now, and he does too, andhe's always making absurd propositions. Nice of me to tell you all this, isn't it?But honestly, Dorry, do you know," laughing, 44 1 believe if I took him seriously hepositively would be worried to death."44 Oh ! Lois, how can you ! He's not that way, I know."44 That way? What way?" Lois pointed to a bundle of programs hangingfrom the gas fixture. 44Most of the X's opposite the first, and last, and supperdances stand for Grant's name. Those frat -pictures— he gave me four of them. Onthe pin cushion are three of his frat pins— a Delta Psi among them. We are awfullyfond of each other now, and it will be mighty hard to call things off in June ; butcall them off we must, and then I'll go abroad with Aunt Alice, have a gay time, andforget everything. He'll forget, too — first."44 Forget? " Are you sure ? " breathlessly.277JOHN J* MAGEEDRUGGIST AND CHEMISTTelephoneOaklandU.464 Cor* 57th St* and Lake Ave*CHICAGOCelebrated...*> CANNEDMEATSare Universally acknowleged to be theBEST =^EEE=EE=Ox Tongue (whole)compressed Oorned BeefLunch TonguePeerless Sliced BeefVienna SausageLambs' TongueExtract of Beef EVEBY CAN IS GrTJABANTEEDCondensed Minced MeatPork and BeansPotted Beef, Ham and TongueSauerkraut and SausageBoneless ChickenTurksy and TongueVeal Loaf, Soups, Etc.PUT UP BYLibby, McNeill & LibbyCHICAGO, ILL.SOLD BY ALL GOOD GROCERSOur new booklet, "How to Make Good ThiDgs toEat" mailed on application.THIS SOLVES ™£ PROBLEMThe desire of the medical profession for betterelectrical apparatus has so materially increasedour business that we are now enabled to offerthem the same standard quality of goods atfrom 25 to 50 per centREDUCTION.Our 19th edition catalogue, just issued, containsnew reduced prices, new literature and showsthe newest apparatus. It will be mailed tophysicians upon request, postpaid, withoutcharge. Write for it.McINTOSH BATTERY AND OPTICAL CO., 521.531 Wabash Avenue, CHICAGO, ILL.2784 4 Tolerably. I have past experience to draw from. You asked me if I knewFletcher Holward. Yes, I used to go with him in pretty much the same way — andthere was some one before him, and that's all long ago, so I ought to know. Goodnight, Dorry." She moved toward the door, then turned, came back and stood irresolute. Something in Dorothy's face troubled her, and stooping down with a littlecaresing gesture, she kissed her.44 Does it seem hard to you — this new philosophy? Don't let it trouble you,dear. Forget it ; cling to your code of believing all things and hoping all things,and, perhaps," slowly, " you may find your Kingdom of Heaven all the sooner fornot having sought out and mastered * a point of view.* "******IN front of Haskell Museum the convocation procession formed. Members offaculty, students about to receive degrees, marshals, the orator of the day, abrass band, — all turned their backs on the president's office and took up the lineof march to the platform which had been erected in front of Graduate Hall.I had secured a good position to watch the pageant pass. The music stimulated mepleasantly, and when the president marched by with stately dignity, I felt for him,in spite of certain jarring memories, an almost kindly respect.44 There goes a Doctor of Laws ! That's what President McKinley and GeneralMiles are," explained a co-ed near me to her friend, some poor, illiterate ignoramuswho probaby knew more about making bread than about building a Roman bridge.Two by two the chief dignitaries filed past. Then came a man all alone, thehead of a body of students. A man whose mind was cast in Grecian mould, andwhose oracular ambiguity of speech would have made the pythoness of Delphi blushwith envious shame;— the father and friend of freshmen; a young patriarch, with afrank, jovial face inviting confidence. A man as pleasing as wine and as dangerous.Dignity oozed from his every pore; his very gown was redolent of power.Suddenly the respectful silence that had fallen on the spectators was broken.44 Mamma, is that God?" asked a childish voice.Except the great man himself, those who heard the question coughed guardedly;he, however, passed on with a strange expression on his face. I had expected himto laugh good naturedly at the sweet innocence of the child, but he did not so muchas smile. His face had flushed as if the situation embarrassed him, but yet he didnot act as if embarrassed. I seemed to know his feeling; but was unable to put thefinger of my consciousness upon it.At least ten days after the convocation exercises, the following peculiar psychological phenomenon took place. On my way home in the evening I purchased a newspaper. There was nothing remarkable about this act except my lavish generosity inallowing the newsboy to keep three cents change. However, on opening the papera head-line introducing some bit of sensational news, caught my eye. In an instantI recalled the convocation procession, the child's question, the strange expression ofthe great man's face; and then in a flash, I knew what that expression meant. Allwas made clear to me by a single line of glaring type. The head-line read, "Insultedby a Child."Thomas Tempi,b Hoynb.279Cbe onip one of Iftatip Cone$««««"» •»* «*wai(single-tone" instrumentsThe "Crown"Piano embodies ::the highest attainment? in the art ofpiano making; isthe highest type ofthe modern pianoforte, and is in accord with the bestideas of piano construction. Its ::piano qualities asto tone, touch, design, finish, and ::material, are unsurpassed. :: Themany tone capabilities give it rangeand capacity aboveand beyond all :: ::others. It is trulyin a sphere of itsown, and attracts ::and pleases all pianists and vocalistswho hear it. :: TheAngelasOrchestral,the marvelous self-playing instru- ::ment, plays any :::: :: music on anypiano: contains twosets oi organ reeds,so it can play theorgan alone, the ::piano alone, or :: ::both together, producing varied andcharming effects. ::GEO- P. BENTt MANUFACTURER # 209 WABASH AVENUEBent Block, CHICAGOm me Believe in €Xpail$iO!1... ano our was of proving tbe meritsof aucb a polio? bad been sbovcmin our new store.We have Doubted anc* cxPect double the trade* As as\ matter of fact we had to expands* , somehow* A growing trade madeQj&P&Clty us feel more cramped every season*Singular though, our prices have not expanded with thesize of our business, our stock, and our great new store* Theyare just the same as ever*Suits $20.00 and up. Trousers $5.00 and up.Overcoats $15.00 and up.NICOLL . . . THE TAILORCLARK AND ADAMS STREETS280CransgrcssionalWith apologies to Rudyard Kipling in particular, and every one in general.Head of our college, mighty Prex;— Greater than any man of old, —We beg of thee, most gracious Rex,Print all degrees on cloth of gold;Make learning still more costly yet,Lest we regret — lest we regret !Tell us, O Czar, — our puny brainCan't grasp the greatness of thy ways, —Does student loss mean college gain ?Do we pay fees because it pays ?Explain the rules about us set,Lest we regret — lest we regret !Mightiest One, we pray, make clearThat registration has no ills.Disperse the rumors that we hear;Explain that, like most bitter pills,Red tape will make us better yet,Lest we regret— lest we regret !Pardon another question, please,— 'Tis asked without a bad intent, —Must those who seek for LL.D.'sFirst fill the chair of president?O free us from Doubt's tangled net,Lest we regret — lest we regret !O Almus Pater, that 'tis trueWe are but noughts and thou the oneWho standing first dost give untoOur nothingness its worth, we own.But, though we're zeros, don't forgetEach makes thy greatness greater yet.Amen.Thomas Temple Hoyne.Hotel WindermereFhonting Jackson Pahk and Lake Michigan56TH ST AND CORNELL AVE.CHICAGOFAMILY HOTEL OFTHE FIRST GRADE Special facilities f©r-~Banquets.Receptions, etcF. J. BAILEY, MANAGERThe Light We Sett is :: : :attractj1afceleAealthfulChit 1$ a Statement of Tact.* is the Ideal Light for ::""*"* "SomamM& Ifi* tfi^Chicago Edison Company282Cbe Doctor's AwakeningJI Go-educational episodeSHE he was taking a course in biology. Not that she was particularly fond ofscience, but the hours of the lectures happened to suit her, and she had thefeminine fondness for working out details in the laboratory.It was there that he saw her for the first time. She was different from anyone he had ever seen in Soperville. He felt almost abashed before her warm, vibratingpersonality. The clear tones of her voice thrilled him, and made him remembervaguely the way he felt on drinking his first glass of apollinaris.He was tall, with loose-jointed arms and legs, like the expressionless limbs ofthose wooden toy figures that flap about on the least provocation. He was sandy,with large, pale blue eyes, and a thin red beard that hid the lower part of his face.His coat had two shiny spots on the rounded shoulders, and his large hands dangledfrom the short cuffless sleeves. He always wore gray striped trousers of heavy, coarsematerial that emphasized the thinness of his legs; his boots were blacked only onthe toes. He toiled'unceasingly in the laboratory ; he was making a special study ofthe eye, and his own blue orbs had an introspective look, as though they were examining themselves. He made few acquaintances, and seldom talked with the otherfellows. They had dubbed him " Doctor," and chaffed him occasionally. Once hearoused a ripple of interest when he turned to a group of young men who were talking flippantly on some religious topic, and said with a gleam in his pale eyes, "You'retalking of something you don't know anything about ; wait until you're converted "Then with sudden hesitation, "Are any of you Christians?" They shook their headshalf nervously. "Oh! why don't you come to Christ? You can* t find truth untilyou find Him. He'll comfort you in life and make death easy for you." The Doctorspoke with a nervous passion, which suddenly died out as he realized the unsympathetic and curious faces before him, A slow red wave crept over his face ; his eyestook on a shamed look, and he turned away awkwardly." I wonder if he's a crank or a fraud!" exclaimed one of the young fellows." He's a queer duck," said another, " but B6hl thinks that what the Doctor doesn'tknow about physiology isn't worth knowing."They advanced various theories concerning him, but the one generally accepteddescribed him as a country doctor making the precarious living of general practitioner,and possessed of a slow, determined ambition. He had probably managed to save alittle each year, and now, when he was nearing the forties, had come to the Universityto make up for the deficiencies of his early and hard-earned education.His admiration for her increased the second time he saw her. She had a calm,unconscious way of entering the laboratory, and of greeting her two or three friendsthere. He did not always catch what she said, but he heard the clear, golden tonesof her voice, and the quick laughter that followed her remarks. For the first timehe experienced the strange ache of loneliness at his heart ; he found himself watchingeagerly for her daily coming, and listening intently to hear what she said. He felta dull envy for those who could speak with her.283ERNEST A. HAMILL, President FRANK W. SMITH, CashierCHARLES L. HUTCHINSON, Vice President JAMES P. HANKEY, Ass't CashierThe Corn Exchange National BankOF CHICAGOCAPITAL, - $1,000,000 ^ SURPLUS, - $1,000,000DIRECTORSSidney A. Kent John H. Dwight Charles H. SchwabEdwin G. Foreman Charles H. W acker Edward B. ButlerB. M. Frees Byron L. Smith Ernest A. HamillCHARLES COUNSELMAN CHARLES L. HUTCHINSON¦112 2 i+ 11 * a# r>^*.A College Lecture Rooms, library and OfficeIllinOlS COIieSe OI LaW FIFTH FLOOR JOURNAL BUILDING, 160 WASHINGTON STREETRegular Session Opens September stbSummer Law School opens First Monday in June, and costinues eight weeks LL.B. Course, ThreeYears; Post-Graduate School Elective Courses, One Year's study, LL.M. degree; TwoYears, D.C.L- degree; Three Years, LL.D. degree.Contracts, Legal Ethics; Carl Evans Boyd, Ph. D., Roman Law, Comparative Constitutional Law; AlvaE Taylor, LLM., 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; HugoPalm, LL.B., Ph.B., Torts; Ludwig Zeisler, LL.B., Guaranty and Suretyships; Henry Waterman,LL.B., Ph.B., Personal Property. SPECIAL LECTURERS-John H. Roemer, A.M., LL.B. Negligence Cases; Taylor E. Brown, LL.M., Patents, Copyrights, Trademrrks; William J. Donlm, A.M.,LL.B.; Eminent Domain, Special Assessments, Taxation; Louis Boisot, A.B.; LL.B., Mechanics' Liens;Daniel W. Heffron, A.M., LL.B.. Admiralty and Maritime Law; W. Harrison Hipp, M.D., ForensicMedicine. For further information, address the Dean, Journal Building, i60 Washington St. , Chicago.THE KENWOOD INSTITUTEFOR GIRLS*AN AFFILIATED ACADEMY OF THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOGRADUATES of the School are received, withoutexamination, on certificate of the Principalat the University of Michigan, the Universityof Wisconsin, Vassar College, Smith College,and Weslesley College. Similar arrangementsmay be made with any college which receivesstudents on certificate .::::::::MISS ANNICE BRADFORD BIT ISPRINCIPAL40 EAST FORTY-SEVENTH STREET **¦ CHICAGO284One day one of her friends came into the laboratory with a guest and introducedhim to her. The Doctor felt a sudden anger that she would smile on a stranger whilehe, whose thoughts had been on her for so many days and nights, could not claima look. And then it came over him with a sudden illumination, that he too mighthave that privilege ; he could get Jones, who knew her, to present him. The pencilwith which he was tracing a delicate drawing trembled, and for a long time he didnot go on with his work, but sat staring out of the window over the snowy campus,with pale, unblinking eyes.Next day it was done. He hardly knew how ; but after an agony of irresolutionhe found himself bowing awkwardly before her. He worshipped her for her gracioussmile, and saw in it not a trace of amusement. For a moment he struggled hopelessly to remember one of the score of elaborately planned talks that he had goneover in his mind during the sleepless hours of the past night. It had all seemed soeasy then, and he had felt sure of a quick, responsive sympathy on her part. Nowhe was standing before her, stammering in his confusion, and forgetting his beautifully turned sentences. His wandering, embarrassed eye caught the work of a neighboring student who was studying the spasmodic movements of a frog from which thebrain had been removed."Do you believe in vivisection!" he asked with anxious earnestness, pointingtoward the quivering reptile."I? no," she answered, following his glance, while a quick look of repulsionpassed over her face. " I'm only a dabbler here, and it would be positively wickedfor me to torture poor things for all the contribution I could make to science. I suppose it's all right for those who make biology a life work."" No, no, it is not right for anyone," he broke in with brusque vehemence. " Thewhole system is cruel and wrong, — to make the innocent suffer, — and no good cancome of it. Knowledge gained in that way will bring only pain and suffering. Youmust believe that, do you not?"In his eagerness he had come close to her, and a look of annoyance showed inher eyes, but she answered him gently; and then making some light excuse turnedand left him.He worked no more that afternoon. The faint odor of violets which clung abouther had intoxicated him, it followed him everywhere. Over and over again therecame before hun the image of her tall rounded figure ; he saw the black hair thatwaved lingeringly away from the white softness of her neck ; the steady look in herdeep eyes ; the gleam of her teeth when she smiled.That evening Margaret Edgerton, Junior, was seated luxuriously in her bachelormaid's apartments at the University, talking with the few choice spirits who werewont to gather in her room of an evening to discuss, over the chafing dish, the exciting events of the day." Girls, I've met him at last, — the man with the red beard, — and he is even morehomely and awkward than I supposed. He gave me a sermon on vivisection, andlooked at me so reprovingly that I fancy he is going to pray over me to-night.""How did you happen to meet him, Margaret?" demanded one of the girls settling herself comfortably on the cushion end of the divan. And Miss Edgerton, inspired by a sympathetic audience, gave a detailed and spirited account of the affair.285Cbe Cbicago Beacb ftotelGeorge B. Ross, managerOn tbe Eake Shore and si StreetBoulevard, Cbicago.flSeaside ResortWith all the Advantages andAmusements to be derived fromproximity to a large city : : :Demonstrated to be the mostdelightful abiding place the yeararound in Chicogo :::::::1000 Feet of Broad Veranda 450 Outside Apartments220 Batb RoomsEight minutes from Van Buren Street by Illinois Central Rapid Transit.Send for Souvenir Booklet.28<;While she was in the midst of her story a maid knocked at the door, and handedher a note. Miss Edgerton tore it open hurriedly and a gentleman's visiting cardfell out of the large business-like envelope. It read, R. J. Dow, M. D., and on thereverse side was written in a small, cramped hand,My dear Miss Edgerton :May I have an interview with you to-morrow morning between half past eightand nine ? Please reply by bearer.Yours respectfully, R. J. Dow." Just listen, girls !" cried Miss Edgerton. And without any tweaks of conscienceshe read the few lines to the expectant group. " What shall I do ?" she concluded,with the air of a general addressing his council of war.There was no lack of speculation concerning his motive in writing. Some laughingly suggested that he wanted her to join an anti-vivisection club ; others that heonly wished to exhort her to forsake a frivolous life. Finally she wrote the following reply :My dear Dr. Dow :I shall not be able to see you at the hour you name ; but as I am always in thelaboratory from two until three in the afternoon, you can deliver any message youhave for me then. Very truly yours,Margaret Edgerton." I consider that perfectly non-committal, and at the same time coldly dignified,"said Miss Edgerton as she read her composition critically. " It's a shame to discusshim though, and make so much fun of him," she added, with sudden compunction." He's queer and awkward and ignorant, but he has feelings, and whatever he wantsto say to me will be the result of conscientious convictions.""But, Margaret, you'll promise to tell us what he says, won't you?" asked oneof the girls coaxingly."I don't know. It depends on whether or no he extracts a vow of secrecy,"answered Margaret gaily. " And if it's a religious talk I really cannot make fun ofhim. His reproachful blue eyes would follow me ever afterwards. He's pale andghastly enough in reality, but as a * harnt ' I really couldn't stand him."Next afternoon when Miss Edgerton 's room-mate came in from a walk she wasimmediately siezed upon by Miss Edgerton, who pushed her into an arm-chair andsaid in a low, awful voice, " Harriet, do I look like the pale and agitated heroine ofa * Duchess' novel?" Then, with a change of tone, " Where have you been? I havebeen dying to see you and tell you all about it."Having sufficiently aroused her room-mates curiosity, Miss Edgerton assumed adramatic tone and told her story." I went over to the laboratory as usual, little dreaming what was to happen.Suddenly, before I had begun work, that red bearded figure loomed up before me,and said in a deep voice, 4 May I have a few words with you Miss Edgerton ?* I answered in a careless and pre-occupied tone, * Yes, indeed, Dr. Dow, as many as youwish. ' He waited a moment, and I glanced up and saw him looking around in arather embarrassed manner. ' Can't we go over by that window ?' he said. ' There itwill be more quiet.' As there were only four people in the laboratory I thought it arather needless move, but assented as gracefully as possible. I perched myself on287sv-THE.oiuumeiscmpaiiipUnequalledCMIMIflATED WATERSAMD BEVERAGES. ^\MiMrox5elfctt, Qim^r,(HEConSUTIHlS COMPANY,\utlerStfteto5%56,»5b.CHictfo,288the window sill and he stood opposite me leaning against the casing. I looked outover the campus and said to myself, ' Now be firm ; if it's the anti-vivisection club,say no.' Just then he spoke. 'Miss Edgerton, I feel that I must ask you if youthink it worth while for our acquaintance to go any further.' His voice was low andhesitating. I could't imagine what he meant, so I said in a loud clear tone, ' Really,Dr. Dow, I don't understand you.' ' I mean that,— that — I must ask you if there isany hope for me?'"Fancy my feelings, Harriet ! I had only met him once and here he was almostproposing to me ! For a moment a wave of indignation swept over me, and I hadalmost made up my mind to say something that would crush him utterly, when Ilooked up and saw his lip trembling. Then the ungainly figure assumed a certainpathos, and I said quite gently, ' I am very sorry, Dr. Dow, but if I understand whatyou mean, it is hopeless, and our short acquaintance had better come to an end. 'He grew positively white, and said in a still lower voice, while his fingers workednervously, ' I can at least be glad that I have met a noble woman.'" Don't you see the pathetic side of it, Harriet?" concluded Miss Edgerton, asshe noticed her room-mate's interested but unimpressed face."No, I don't," answered Harriet, judicially. "It seems to me he was guilty ofunwarranted impertinence. He had no right whatever to thrust himself on you inthat way."" But don't you think he did it because he is so intensely honest ? He is probably one of those simply-constructed persons who follow out an impulse immediately,without getting entangled in a net-work of complicated motives. He saw me andthought he liked me ; and then he decided that the only fair and honorable thing forhim to do was to tell me his feelings. I think he had only the highest motives ;and if you had seen that tremble of his lip underneath his thin red beard, you wouldhave felt as I did, that here was a man transparently and uniquely honest. "" I don't agree with you, " answered Harriet, untouched by the picture. "I don'tdeny that he may be perfectly honest, but I can't see the pathos of it. If every manwho feels a sudden spasm of admiration for a handsome woman should think it love,and tell her of it, and demand that she decide whether or not their acquaintancecontinue, there would ensue a most uncomfortable state of affairs. These simple-minded, unconventional men are well enough in books, but in real life they make noend of trouble. I think Dr. Dow should be taught a lesson, and I think you havemissed a beautiful opportunity of reading him a lecture on elementary social forms.""But, Harriet, if you could see his shabby coat and his baggy trousers youwouldn't talk of ' social forms' in connection with him."" Next morning Miss Edgerton received from her quixotic admirer a letter whichread :" May I ask you to send me some little token, a bit of ribbon that you have worn,or a pressed flower, that I may keep it as a remembrance of you ? I feel happier tonight than I have for months, for although my hopes are blasted, I know I am abetter man for having known you. Sometime, perhaps,' I may be allowed to tell youa long story, but now, good bye. I trust you will greet me as if nothing had happened."On hearing the contents of this letter, Harriet said :289^ ^ V^ 4&PA* *s <& PittWESTERNBANK NOTECOMPANYidt ,*> »k > CHICAGOENGRAVERS AND PRINTERS OFBonds, Stocks, DiplomasBANK CHECKSAND DRAFTS,SAFETY TINTS,PARCHMENT ANDSAFETY PAPERS.Lithograph Stationery for ^Manufacturers,SMercbants and bankers.FIRST-CLA98 DESIGNS AND ENGRAVING.Listable on the Stock Exchanges ofNe<w York and Chicago. CANDY!! CANDY!!!SEND$1.25, $2*00 or $3,50FOR A SUPERB BOX OFFINE CHOCOLATESOR CANDIES,Express prepaid east of Denver or west ofNew York.Assorted Candies and Chocolates packedin enquis^t boxes or baskets to the valueof any amount of money enclosed, prepaid to its destination.A pleased customer is the bestadvertisement.C R GUNTHER,CONFECTIONER,212 State Street,CHICAGO.290" That's just the way with this kind of man. He will make your life a burdenunless you thoroughly annihilate him. He will keep gazing at you with a look ofpatient grief, until you are driven to be nice to him ; and then you will have to gothrough with it all again. Take my advice, write him a note in which you give himto understand that he is impertinent and presuming, and then you will have no moretrouble.""But, Harriet, "protested Margaret, '* don't you think it seems dreadfully cruel,when he thinks he is acting from the highest motives. If he wasn't such a crudelyinnocent sort of man, — if he had shown a shred of policy in the matter, — I should feeldifferent."" If you don't teach him a lesson somebody else will. He will have to learnsooner or later that people cant go around making these remarkable disclosures oftheir feelings. It isn't Arcadia and I think that he is a great goose, and that he oughtto know better. Now I'll tell you what I'll do ; I'll compose a letter to him and thenif you don't want to send it you needn't."Margaret agreed, and in a few minutes Harriet handed her the following :I must beg of you not to make any further effort to continue an acquaintance,which, to be frank, is distasteful to me. And may I add that a Christian gentlemanshould have more consideration than to annoy one whose work makes it impossiblefor her to avoid him." I don't know," she said doubtfully, as she finished, " but I suppose it will begood for him to realize how his conduct strikes a disinterested spectator." And shecopied the note and sent itA reply came very soon ; a dignified note apologizing for any annoyance he mayhave caused. A postage stamp was enclosed and a request that his notes be returned.Even the relentless Harriet was touched ; but she only said to the rather conscience-stricken Margaret, " Well, I'm glad he had the sense to see the error of his way, andI'm sure the next time he falls in love he won't be so effusively honest."The following day Margaret noticed that the Doctor was not in the laboiatory.Nor was he there the day after that. Her conscience pricked her as she wondered,rather romantically, it must be confessed, if he had been too prostrated by the blowto recover. She was sure of this a few days later when one of the young men whohad known him said to her :" Did you know that Dr. Dow had gone home ?"Her heart gave a guilty start and she said carelessly, " No, was it bad news ?""Yes, rather," answered her informant. " His wife telegraphed him that thebaby was dying. Poor old chap, he seemed terribly broken up."291Chicago 60H6Q6 oi Dental SurgeryDENTAL DEPARTMENT OF LAKE FOREST UNIVERSITYTlie New lltiilcling 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 about October 1st, 1890, and end about April 1st, 1000.The statements made below as to conditions, fees and courses of lectures relate to the year endingApril 5, 1899, only.FEES AND EXPENSES. The course for each year is $100.00. Hoard, including light andfuel can be obtained at a convenient distance from the college at from $2.50 to $1.00 per week.THE FACULTY. The faculty consists of twenty-four members. Each member is especiallyadapted and qualified for the department for which he is chosen. In addition to the regular facultythere are twenty-two instructors and demonstrators, and twelve recitation masters.DR. TRUMAN W. BROPHY, Dean, 126 State St., Chicago, III.292Bis fiottorn Romantic episode of the Dark Jlgc$THE sun was setting. Woolly clouds maculated the sky, reflecting with ruddy glowthe last light of the declining orb, as if Dame Nature had thrust her mightypaint brush into a lake of glittering color and then swung it above her head,spattering all the heavens with blotches of gold. Finally the light faded fromthe sky; and night spread her damp mackintosh over the earth. The sun had set.Gloomybuff castle loomed up in the coagulating darkness like a pile of giantpepper boxes. Innumerable shafts of light from the countless windows pierced thethe gloom. In fact the darkness about the castle looked like an enormous sieve.In the Grand Hall of the castle Countess Enlor Walbak von Heavyfoot leanedgracefully against the antique mantel-piece."You have mistaken my feelings toward you, Prince Vladimin," said she in awell-trained contralto voice. " Also you forgot that I have a husband."" Then may I not press my suit?" asked the agonized prince, twisting his fingersamong the decorations on his breast."As for that," replied the countess, "please yourself. Far be it from me toattempt to dictate your domestic policy; but as a friend, I should suggest that yousend it to a tailor." And a faint smile chased itself across her face." Before the countess finished speaking, Prince Vladimin flung himself on thefloor at her feet, and seized her hand."Just at this moment Count von Heavyfoot parted the magnificent portierresthat concealed the entrance to the hall. He was a man of large, muscular build,with shaggy eyebrows and a bald head. His high forehead betokened the man ofdeep thought." My husband ! " murmured the countess starting." No, your lover," replied Prince Vladimin, who was still ignorant of the Count'spresence, and did not wish to be misunderstood."Ha! Ha! " thought the count. This was a portion of the deep thought ofwhich he was.[I have never been able to gather the rest of this romance. The extreme delicacyof the situation in which the Count found himself may well be imagined when oneremembers that he drew his salary from the prince. The question is, what did thecount do?]Thomas Temple Hoyne.293*lEarti the HahnemannMetrical fioiiegeand fiospitalof Chicago.*3Wkr Four Years' Course Obligatory.Graduates of University ScienceCourses for StudentsIntending to Study MedicineAdmitted to advanced Standing.9new College and fiospital BuildingsErected at a cost of $150,000Magnificently Equipped and FurnishedTHE LARGEST HOMEOPATHIC MEDICAL COLLEGE AND HOSPITAL IN THE WORLDZhc jfortfetb annual Session ©pens September 12, 1899...CLINICAL 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 The Registrar, JOS. C COBB. M.D., 28J J Cottage Grove Avenue.C. H. VILAS, M.D., Dean, 254 East 47th 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 .WHOLESALE DRUQQISTS. CHICAGO.Chicago Photo Finishing Co*CamerasBought,Sold,Exchanged,andRented. ««««« Dealers in •«•««Pboto Suppliesfor Amateur and Professional PhotographersAMATEUR FINISHING OF ALL KINDSFIRST-CLASS WORK AND GUARANTEED NOT TO FADE.oM.**.*J*.*tJ*J*J* 608-9Champlain Bldg.CHICAGO294Cbe poet and tbe KepONCE, when the world was hard to understand, there lived in the very hardestpart of it, a man. The people of the world called him, — when they thoughtof him at all, which was seldom, — " The Poet."The man often felt that he did not want to be a " Poet." He would ratherhave been fashioned in the mould of those about him. Had the chance been offeredhim, he would have become a banker, or have accepted the position of president of anourishing pork packing or grain industry; not altogether from mercenary motives,but because of the longing in his nature to understand men and be understood bythem.But this chance was never offered. So he continued trying to make men hear themusic that was so distinct to his own ears. After awhile, when he could not makethem hear it, he grew discouraged. Not that he doubted the reality of the music,or that all men would be happier if they could hear it, it was only that the solitudein which the music was best heard, and understood, rendered him isolated from allthe interests of the world.You see it was quite an undertaking, — this endeavor of the Poet to make theworld come to his way of thinking. The world had not the least idea of doing it." What does the man mean?" people would say, when they had time between coaching parties and golf tournaments, dinners and balls, to read the poet's rhapsodies.' ' Why is he harping all the time about music? We know the rules that govern themaking of verses. It is all feet, you know, and that sort of thing. There is no mention of his " music " in prosody. Those of us who have graduated from Harvard, orYale, or some other college, are not going to be taught anything by this " Poet." Heis mad; there is no doubt of it. Why does he not go to work and make a fortune, orhave one left him like the rest of us? He ought to be shut up somewhere— had anyone time to attend to it. He is really getting to be quite annoying." (It is hard tobe considered annoying when one is trying his utmost to make the world happier andbetter. )One day, while the Poet was thinking earnestly upon all these things, he perceived in one of the walls of his house a strange door. The Poet knew all the wallsof his house, because it was a small house and the walls had often seemed to stifle hisasperation for the beautiful; but he had never seen this door in the wall before, ofthat he was certain. He went close to it, and examined it, and tried to open it. Itwas a singular door; it was made of silver and gold, of iron and many other metalsthat the Poet knew. There were damp places on it, as if made by tears that someone had not time to wipe away. There were many such places on the metals. Alsothere were semi-transparent places in it. The Poet could not tell what they weremade of, it seemed as if they were openings in the door that had become cloudedover with the breath of doubt and disbelief. There was no latch, nor any way ofopening the door, save a small key-hole that the Poet could not see through, althoughhe tried very hard to do so. While trying, he felt a presence near him, and, turningsaw a friend standing beside him. The Poet had never seen the friend before, but he295SCHOOLS AND COLLEGES. * ^ay^t.Enter any time.SummerScboolopens3ulp5th>99%TlKOTpvMKd Withpower toGrantDivfeniasConferDegm$. Diploma inGraduate£onro,CweVtatt.Diploma inPo»t-6radiiaicCourse,Chr<« or f onrV«ar$.oeElocution, Delsarte, Dramatic Art, Literature, Rhetoric,Vocal and Physical Culture, Bible Reading, ProfessionalCourse, Forsenic and Sacred Oratory, Music, andParliamentary Law.DEPARTMENT DIRECTORS:H. M. Soper, Oratory. Miss E. H. Dening, Delsarte and Physical Culture.Mrs. M. L. Rayne, Journalism. Mrs. J. F. Pease, Literature and Rhetoric.Miss Maud Peck, Piano. Mrs. Anna Morse-Crane, Vocal Music.Mr. Bennett Griffin, Violin.Long experience has given the management chance to test theoriesand methods of instruction, and to sift out all that is standard and practicalin this progressive age.Entertainment and Lecture Course Through the Year*Department Directors may be eng-agred for Beading's,Lectures and Concerts outside the city.Send for Illustrated Catalogue toHENRY M. SOPER, President,Soper' 3 Recitation Jlookf , 13 Nos.,25c. each. Tenth Floor, Steinway Hall,J7 East Van Baren Street, CHICAGO296felt as if he had always known and loved him. He began to talk very fast. He triedto tell his friend all that he had been endeavoring to do; all that he had felt andlonged for; all that he hoped to become, and that he hoped the world would become,until at last he broke down and cried and could not talk any more,but could only smile through his tears and be happy; Oh, sohappy ! because everything that he had always wanted and beendenied was changing into a perception* why he had always wantedand been denied these things.Although the friend had not said one word, somehow, everything was becoming very plain to the Poet. He wanted to askthis friend to forgive him for his life-long hunger and thirst forthe beautiful — the while he knew that because of this hunger andthirst the friend stood beside him;— he wanted to ask the man toforgive him for his doubts and despairs, — although he perceivedthat because of these things was the answer vouchsafed him.Altogether the Poet was working himself into such a transport ofgratitude and remorse and understanding that the visitor had toput a stop to it. He , took the Poet's hand and held it in silence alittle while. When the Poet looked at his hand afterward he saw,lying on his palm, a little shining key." That will open the door that leads to your rightful place inNo-Man's-Land," the friend assured him. " You may have to tryseveral times. Even when you are accustomed to using it, it willnot always answer to your need and open the door at your command. But it is the only key that can open the lock; and it is theonly aid we can render man to enable him to enter his rightfulplace in the Soul Country. I cannot explain why this door isnecessary; I can only assure you that when a man begins to batterholes in it, although he does not perceive it, he is capable of doingsome damage; and we always show him the error of his way, andoffer him this key. Men are not always capable of using it; as Isaid before, it will not serve you at all times equally. The hole inthe upper corner of the door was made by your discontent. It isthe occason of my present visit."1 * The Poet looked up and there was quite an opening in thatportion of the door.4 'If I had gone on," said he, "could I have destroyed thedoor, and would all mankind have been able to enter with me ?"The visitor shook his head and smiled gently.44 You could not have destroyed the entire door," he replied, I11 because before you had succeeded the destroyer of mankindwould have overtaken you. Many men, from many motives, seek to destroy this door.At the present stage of human thought the good motives and bad are equally destructive. The time is not yet for the leveling of this door."44 But if men understood !" cried the Poet, 4< if they united in a common impulse!if enough believed!"297CHICAGO SCALE CO.MANUFACTURES ALL KINDS OFU.S.StandardScalesBest Qualityat...Lowest Prices fi* >p 1 OfficialScales ofWorld's FairJ 893and OmahaExposition1998Our "New Banner" Wheel. A 899 ModelDIAMOND ORDROP FRAME ONLY $19.20SewingMachinesSafesCarriagesHarnessPianosOrgansEtc. We furnish a largenumber ofuseful articles, all ofwhich are sold atvery low prices.Send for informationand prices:ChicagoScale Co:292-6 JacksonBldv.Chicago, 111.298"Then," answered the visitor, 4iif the door were down there would be foundnothing on the other side of it. The time is not yet. ' '44 What is the key called?" asked the Poet humbly.44 Look and see," the friend replied.The poet examined the key carefully and perceived, although there was nothingto tell it to him, that the name of the key was Imagination. But when he turned tothank his friend the latter was no longer present.The Poet tried the key, and, after many efforts, was successful. It made no difference in the action of the key whether it was winter in the world outside, and thesnow was falling, and the cold blasts of winter were rattling at the doors and casements; or whether it was summer and the songs of birds and the scent of flowersIDeclinetoInsureMyLI T 6 said aprominent Merchant 1 UNTIL I ft°d a Company that buses a Policy under which=g all my rights are absolutely protected by law.The Statutes of Massachusetts relating to life insurance protect absolutelythe policy-holder's lights.undertime statutes the Berskshire Life Insurance Co*of Pittsfield, Mass , issues all its policies. Its policies are sufficient invariety to cover the need of every iusurer. Tt has FORTY-EIGHT YEARSEXPERIENCE. It is one of the largest DIVIDEND-PAYING Companies.It numbers among its policy-holders, men prominent in all the high callings of life.For information and for figures exactly adapted to your age, mail date ofbirth and address toFRANKLIN WYMAN, Special Agent,602 Title and Trust Building,100 Washington Street, CHICAGO.Established 1866.STAM5EN & BLOME,1HIGH GRADECEMENT WALKS]Every Branch of Concrete Construction,Bank Floor, unity Bloo.CHICAGO.Write to us forinformationregarding our newform of contract for glectriC LightCOMMONWEALTHELECTRIC COMPANY5502 South Halsted StreetTelephone 929 WestJ. G. McCarthy CompanyContractorsPAINTINGDECORATINGWOOD FINISHING, ETC.WALL PAPER 262-264 Washington Boulevard42-44 South Morgan StreetCHICAGO300came through the opening windows. The Poet could open the door, as far as suchthings were concerned, and enter into his rightful place. But sometimes the key wasvery obstinate indeed. When there was any sense of injustice in the Poet's heart;when he had been wearing a coat two or three seasons longer than any one in theworld has any right to wear a coat; when bills for coal and light and food came inwith a celerity only equaled by the manner in which these commodities went out,then, sometimes for days, the key would stick in the lock and would not turn or comeout, or do anything at all, but make the Poet wish that he had never seen it. It wasso provoking to know what that key could do and would not do. But, after awhile,the Poet would feel that perhaps it was partly his own fault. Then he would takethe key reverently, with such love and longing in his touch that it could not be obstinate any longer; and then, all in a moment, the Poet would be in his rightful placein the Soul Country. The door would be closed between him and the problems oflight and heat, the waiting bills, and the world's sentiment concerning his coat.On the other side of the door was a clear, soft, shining light. In this light wasshaped everything that the Poet desired. By it he read all the great thoughts thatcome to men; and as he read he perceived that men are nothing, but thought is all.The friends whom he loved best were there, and the friends whom the world callsdead were there, with the long lost love of his youth. And when the light shone ontheir faces there was no need of speech. Sometimes there was only a great stillness;and then, in the glory and awe of it, the Poet would see his own soul.And so the Poet came to understand why his soul loved him, — and how thestrength the Poet won from cold, and hunger, and loss, was reverenced by his soul.Then, when he fully understood the meaning of the union between the soul that neverknew uncertainty, and the man whose certainty was reached through the doubt ofworldly darkness and tribulation, he ceased to grieve; neither did he longer care because by man he was misunderstood.He told all about his wonderful mystery in his songs, and every now and then,some one in the world of men reads the songs and hears the music, and to every suchone the Poet lends his key.Anstiss C. Gary.301AtRetailRich GLASS*.?• Fine ChinaBEAUTIFULANDORIGINAL Lamps «g Bric-aBraeI piTKin^^RODKS lb TO LOVERS OF THE BEAUTIFULWe extend a cordial invitation toinspect our line.RETAILERS OFFINE CHINA AllElevatedTrainsstop at our door State andLake Sts.ORR & LOCKETT HARDWARE CO.50 State Street and 71 & 73 Randolph StreetManufacturers, Wholesale and Retail DealersWe make a specialty of FINE BUILDERS'HARDWARE ^ HIGH GRADE CUTLERY,POCKET KNIVES, RAZORS, Etc. J- J- J- J-THE BEST OF EVERYTHING AND THE LOWEST PRICE FOR THEQUALITY SOLD IS OUR RULE.302fl pspcbolosic FalacpThat one must think before one actsIn Psychology I was taught.But this does not agree with factsFor I took the course before I thought.T. T. H.Bis PbilamropbpESCOTT'S avocation and vocation were consistent One was the science of reading character from hand-writing, and the other was readingthemes at the University of Chicago. He began his work with correspondence courses in the summer. Instead of the daily package ofthemes being a burden to him, however, it proved a source of amusement ; for he had made such a thorough study of hand-writing that hewas confident he could describe the character of persons whose themeshe read. There were one or two ambitious men from small westerntowns, who apparently were trying to increase their vocabularies;there were a few university students who had minors to make up ;there was a large class composed of women — probably school teachers.In one of this last class Westcott became especially interested.From her hand-writing, he conceived her to be a woman about thirty-five years old, eager for an education and working for it against terrible odds. Her style confirmed his theory ; and he corrected herthemes with master-like indulgence.As time passed, Wescott became concerned about this woman. He sympathizedwith her very few attempts to write about the merry side of life, which, he reflected,she had seen through the small ends of opera glasses. She roused his pity so, thatby the end of the summer he felt it his duty to cheer her up. After some consideration he wrote on her last theme: "You are much too apt to see the sombre tints;you must remember that even from the most cruel thistle there floats thistle-down."One must know that Wescott was only twenty-six, and one must make allowancefor the years he had not lived.Finally Wescott wrote a letter to Miss Edith Sedgewick, Newtonville, Mass.,offering her financial assistance.It was November; and though Wescott had received no answer from Miss Sedgewick, he still nourished the theory that she was a most unfortunate woman. Whyshe had not written was clearly told by her proud, straight chirography. Wescottdetermined to send her money unasked. He drew a check, enclosed it in a note toMiss Sedgewick, and went out to post it,— glowing with philanthropy.As he slouched across the campus with one of the students, he asked conversationally :" Who is that girl who passed? "303HARVEYMEDICALCOLLEGEOPENED this winterwith the third largest Freshman Classof all the Medical Col-leges (14) in goodstanding in the city ofChicago.Has been given aFirst Position on theattending staff of CookCounty Hospital.Senior Class giveninstructions at the bedside in Cook CountyHospital.Sophomores, J uniorsand Seniors attendone evening each weekMedical and SurgicalClinics at Cook CountyHospital.Seniors given bedside instruction in thehouses of the poor.Seniors given clinical instruction in theevening at the college.Laboratories wellequipped for individual instruction.Laboratories not excelled in quality andquantity of individualoutfits.Send for illustratedannouncement.Frances Dickinson, M.D.Secretary. LEAPfNANATOMYALLTHERRESHMANCLASSES IN THEMEDICAL SCHOOLSOF CHICAGO BYONE HUNDREDHOURS.I&mmi fkmm ^mmmHARVEY BUILDINGEVENING 169 So. CLARK -ST.SCHOOL CHICAGO.Dissecting Class, 1807-SI8.304' * I forget her name, " said his friend. "But she's a corker. Comesfrom a small Massachusetts town; — Newtonville-— is that the name?Has been out in society a couple of years, — in Boston, I believe.Lives in Kelly.""By the by," said Wescott, as he left his friend. "When is thenext Kelly reception?" And resolving to meet the girl and find outif she knew Miss Sedgewick, he put the letter he had written backinto his pocket.Monday afternoon the Kelly girls received, Wescott showed up,although as a rule, he did not hunger for receptions. He had comewith a purpose, and his eyes followed one girl about the room. Hisphilan trophy, he reflected, had driven him to tea.Finally some-one introduced him to the young lady who occupiedall his attention, and he sat down with her in a quiet corner. He 'found her uncommonly agreeable; she was pretty and jolly, a perfectexample of the girl whose life is "one round of pleasure." The young man's philan-trophy was forgotten. The power of a girl's mirth had laid it low. Time slippedby and Wescott when he rose to go was surprised to learn how late it was."May I call, Miss ? " He hesitated expectantly."Sedgewick," she said, coming to his assistance with a humorous smile. "Its sohard to understand names at these wholesale introduction affairs! But I caught yoursat once, Mr. Wescott."305RUSH MEDICAL COLLEGEN. £• Cor. Wood and Harrison Sti., CHICAGO.Vacuus.DELASKIE 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.EDWARD L. HOLMES, M. D., L. L. D., President,Emeritus Professor of Diseases of the Eye and Ear. 31 Washington StreetHENRY M. LYMAN, A. M., M. D., Treasurer,Professor of the Principles and Practice of Medicine.WALTER 9. HAINES, A. M., M. D.,Professor of Chemistry. Pharmacy and Toxicology.JAMES NEVINS HYDE, A. M., M. D.,Professor of Skin and Venereal Diseases.NORMAN BRIDGE, A. M„ M. D.,Professor of Clinical Medicine and Physical Diagnosis.ARTHUR DEAN BEVAN, M. D.,Professor of Anatomy, Descriptive and Surgical,NICHOLAS SENN, M. D., PH. D., L. L. D.,Professor of Practice of Surgery and Clinical Surgery.E. FLETCHER INGALS, A. M., M. D.. Registrar,Professor of Laryngology and Diseases of the Chest. 100 State StreetLaboratory in College Building100 State StreetRush Medical College100 State Street632 Dearborn Avenue34 Washington StreetDANIEL R. BROWER, A. M.. M. D„ L.L.D.,Professor of Mental Disease?, Materia Medica and Therapeutics. 34 Washington StreetJOHN M. DODSON, A. M., M. D ,Professor of Physiology and Histology. 34 Washington StreetTRUMAN W. BROPHY, M. D., D. D. S., L.L.D.,Professor of Dental Pathology and Surgery.W. T. BELFIELD, M. D.,Professor of Bacteriology and Lecturer on Surgery.ALFRED C. COTTON, A. M., M. D.,Professor of Diseases of Children.LUDWIG HEKTOEN, M. D.,Professor of Morbid Anatomy and Director of the Laboratories of Histology, Pathology,Bacteriology and Hygiene. 126 State Street112 Clark Street677 Jackson Boulevard306AN old man, rough in appearance, his common blue overalls begrimed withloam from the plow, his shoulders bent under a heavy sack, made his wayalong a dusty road. His every movement expressed hopeless bodily weariness. His eyes sunken and sullen, he kept fixed on the ground, for the mostpart only raising them now and then, when some other farm-hand passed him. Otherwise he was perfectly oblivious of all but the wagon track through which he tramped.The sun sank lower and lower in all the fiery splendor of a heavenly city. Theman saw it not till as he neared the summit of a little hill, he dropped the sack witha sigh, and paused to rest in the glowing light. "Gosh, that's harnsome," was all hesaid; but for the moment he was a poet.307Cbicago £au) Scbool-Board of trustee*.Hon. Richard S. Tutthill, President,Judge Circuit Court, Chicago.Hon. Shelby M. Cullom,United States Senator from Illinois.Hon. C. W. Clifford,Judge Circuit Court, Chicago.Hon. John C. Black,U. S. Dist. Attorney, Northern Dist., Illinois.Gen. John C. Smith,Geo. W. Warvblle.Rev. 8. M. Merrill, D.D., LL. D.,BUhop of M. E. Church, Chicogo.Rev. Chas. H. Taintor, Ph. D.,Field Sec. of Cong. Church Building Society, Chi.Jacob S. Smith,Pres. Ind. Natural Gas and Oil Co., Chicago.O. M. Powers, A. M.,Pres. Metropolitan Business College, Chicago..Rees L. Phelps, A. B., LL. B.Wm. J. Pringle, A. B., LL. B.Theron M. Bates, Treasurer.John J. Tobias, Secretary. faculty.Geo. W. Warvelle, Dean,Professor of Constitutional Jurisprudence.D. K. Tone, Lit. B., LL. B.,Professor of the Law of Contracts.John J. Tobias, LL. B., Ph. D.,Professor of International Law.Geo. Mc. A. Miller, A. M , LL. B.,Professor of the Law of Torts.A. B. Melville, LL. B.,Professor of Equity and Crimes.A. J. Hirschl, A. B., LL. B..Professor of the Law of Corporations.Louis Boisot, A. B , LL. B ,Professor of Common Law Pleading.Charles E. Pope A. M , LL. B.,Professor of the Law of Wills.Edwy L. Reeves, LL. B.,Professor of Practice in Seminar.A. A. Bruce, A. B., LL. B„Professor of the Law of Bailments.Francis W. Walker, LL. B.,Lecturer on Corporations.Hon. L. D. Condee, LL. M.,Professor of the Law of Municipal Corporations.Hon. Samuel S. Page, LL. B.,Lecturer on Pleading and Practice.E. W. Adkinson, A. M.» LL. B.,Lecturer of Eminent Domain.William 8. Forrest, A. B., LL. B.,Lecturer on Criminal Law.Wm. 0. Belt, LL. M..Lecturer on Trade Marks.Preparatory course. Day and evening sessions. Undergraduate courses lead to LL. B., andadmission to bar. Post graduate courses lead to LL. M. and D. C. L.FALL TERM BEGINS SEPTEMBER 6.Students can be made self -supporting during the time of the law course.Club ^ates for <Soard from $1.50 to $2,50 per week.Scbool of Pleading and Practice.Method of Instruction. This course, supplementing the work of the undergraduateyears, is designed to exhibit the practical application of the principles of law to theordinary affairs and business transactions of life. From the nisi prius court appeals lieto the Appellate Court, giving an opportunity for practical work in the procedure byappeal or writ of error, the preparation of bills of exceptions, briefs and arguments, andother details of practice necessary for a proper presentation and final disposition of acase in the courts of last resort.For catalogue addressJ, J. Tobias,Secretary.US Dearborn Street, CHICAGO, ILL.308THEY were seated opposite each other at the table; the Philosopher of Kelly andthe Tease, who respected neither God nor man. The talk drifted to architectureand the Tease had just said emphatically that she loathed cold, dark churcheseven when they did have pointed roofs," when the Philosoper remarked inher dreamy way:" Do you know a curious idea came to me in English class yesterday. Did youever notice that Professor Jones looks like the Hull gate?"Even the Graduate Student looked up in some alarm at this statement; while theTease, taken of her guard for once, could only gasp feebly, " What?""Yes," said the Philosopher, rather surprised at her listeners, dismay. "Youknow architecture has a certain effect on you and so have people. I only mean thatthose two affect me exactly the same way. There's something about the dragons'heads — yes, there certainly is" — and she lapsed into dreamland.The Tease saw her opportunity and began with animation:" That is something like an experience I had Tuesday night. I woke up in thedark with a strange sense of a soul-truth upon me. So I searched around in the re-cesses of my mind awhile, and finally discovered what it meant. Do you know" —impressively — " that the house cat is the image of my chafing-dish ? They effect myemotions just the same, I mean."She glanced naively at the Philosopher." What an odd girl you are," the latter remarked.309Kent College of £aioMARSHALL D. EWELL, LL.D., M. D., DEAN.faculty.MARSHALL D. EWELL, A. M.f M. D., LL. D., F. R. M. S., etc.Dean, Professor of Elementary Common Law and Medical Jurisprudence andPrincipal of the School of Practice.THOMAS E. D. BRADLEY, LL. B„Professor of the law of Contracts, Evidence and Equity Jurisprudence .GRANT NEWELL, M. S., LL. B.,Professor of the law of Corporations, Real Property, Agency, Damage and Torts.JUDGE CHARLES G. NEELY,Professor of Criminal Law and Constitutional Law.FRANK HALL CHILDS, LL. B„Professor of the law of Bailments, Domestic Relations, Personal Property,Partnership, Sales and Wills.JAMES H. VAN HORN, A. M., LL. B„Professor of Statutory Law, Code Pleading and Negotiable Instruments.GEORGE J. TOBIAS, M. D., LL. B„Professor of Medical Jnrisprudence.WM. ELMORE FOSTER,Professor of Statutory Law.Cecturers*HON. R. M. WING,HON. W. S. ELLIOTT, JR.,JOHN C. EVERETT, LL. B.,DR. JAS. G. KIERNAN.DR. HAROLD D. MOYER.DR. G. FRANK LYDSTON, - \ Lecturer on PracticeLecturer on Legal EthicsLecturer on Jurisdiction and Practice ofCourts of Justices of the Peace .Lecturer on Forensic PsychiatryLecturer on Railway Medical JurisprudenceLecturer on Criminal AnthropologyThree years* course leading to the degree of 1,1,. B. IMPROVEDMETHODS UNITING THEORY AND PRACTICE.THE SCHOOL OF PRACTICE IS THE LEADINd FEATURE.Evening sessions of ten hours a week for each class. STUDENTSCAN BE SELF SUPPORTING WHILE STUDYING.For Catalogue and information, addressWILLIAM F. MOMEYER, LL.B., Secretary,618-619 Ashland Block, - - - CHICAGO, ILL.310IT was a beautiful day, bright, clear, crisp; just coldenough to make one energetic, and altogether perfectenough to make one glad to be living. I was walkingbriskly down fifty-seventh street, dreaming happydreams, when a loud whistle suddenly brought my thoughtsto the realms of the material. The whistle was repeated.Who is that? ' ' I thought, * 'a Psi Chi Beta? ' ' Then I heardit again. "No it is a Delta Pi I believe." My so-consideredpursuer whistled once more, but changed his tune. "Whythere must be two of them, "I said to myself," for that wasAlpha Phi Epsilon; but I won't turn around to see." Andproud of my power of resistance, I walked on. Just then the•bus, the "University Fare" ' Bus, drew up at my side, andthe driver called out." Hey, lady, I'vebeen-a-w'istlin; tryin'to make you look. Unless someone else 'as got it, yourpocketbook's a lyin' on the sidewalk, two blocks back."* * * * * *SHE sat where a tender lamp-light bathed the graceful folds of her gown, andlit up her well-chiseled profile. Her head rested on one hand, and the delicate face, full of life, was lifted a little as she talked earnestly to the man wholeaned over her. Her eyes were bright with feeling ; her voice quivered. Shewas young, passionate, lovely. And the man yielded.311Dr. J. G. Trine'sMovement=Cure InstituteEstablished In Chicago, Sept., 1867.ron theREMEDIAL. APPLICATION OFManual and Mechanical Massage and SpecializedSwedish Movements.These methods will cure Chronic Rheumatism, paralysis - Sf-iatrcn, ImperfectCirculation. Cold Extremities, Constipation o£ the Uowels, Hemorrhoids, Dyspepsiaind all forms of Indigestion, Torpidity of the Liver, Asthma, Pulnvmarj Weakness,Nervous Prostration, Neuralgia, Sleeplessness, dout, Spina) Curvature, Htiff Joints,Dropsical Swellings, Excels of Fa' and nil farms of Uterine Congestions. Fur weaklychildren these operations are indispensable.As an hygienic measure these treatments are of tho greatest importance, and area perfect substitute £<>r exercise. Reing largely passive all undue effort and fatigueare avoided, nencetothc aged, the delicate and weak, and lo brain workers, aresupplied a form of exercise of incomparable utility Call and investigate or sendfor circularSuite 710=719 Champlain Bldg., 126 State St., Chicago.Explanation of -Processes f reel v «iven. Hours for Examination and Treatment:LADIES AM) CIIILUKKN FROM » TO 1. HKSTLBHBN FROM '2 TO 6.CHICAGO COLLEGEOF LAW.Law Department of Lake Forest University.ATHENAEUM BUILDING.HON. THOS. A. MORAN, LL. D., Dean.Degree of Bachelor of Laws conferred on those who complete thethree years course satisfactory to the Faculty.College graduates who have a sufficient amount of credit in legalstudies may be admitted to advanced standing.Summer course during mouths of June and July.For further information address the Secretary,ELMER E. BARRETT, LL.B.,1501, 100 Washington St. CHICAGO.312SHE was rather small, a pretty girl, young and thoroughly natural in manner*This I noticed as I watched her from a distance at the Kelly reception.Soon I met her and was able to study her at closer range." I am very glad to meet you, Miss Williams," she said with a nod of herhead. "Are you in this University too?" I am a freshman, and so don't knowanything about the people I meet. Oh ! four years ? then you're a senior ! My ! I'mafraid I don't treat you with the respect due your gravity. I suppose you feel terribly learned, don't you? Oh, don't you? isn't that odd? lam sure I should. I'llhave to look up to you anyhow, shan't I? Freshmen always do. I don't consider afreshman's position a normal one, do you? We have to do so many odd things?Oh, there is Frank Weston ; do you know him ? Awfully nice freshman. He wasdown to call last evening, and did such an entertaining thing. He talked in ragtime — just as good as music. Did you ever hear anyone do it ? Very pretty ? I wishI could do just one parlor trick, as I call it— something to make people notice meand think me bright. Oh, I'm very glad to see you, Mr. Weston. I was just tellingthese girls about your rag-time. Have you seen Marion since " And we, nowunnoticed by her, melted into the crowd, sighed and wondered if all freshmen werealike.James H. Eckels, President D. Vernon, 2nd Vice-PresidentJohn C. McKeon, Vice-President Jos. T. Talbert, CashierCommercial national BankCHICAGO, ILL.CAPITAL, - - - $1,000,000SURPLUS, .... $1,000,000Director*.FRANKUN MAC VEAGH. N. K. FAIRBANK. ROBERT T. LINCOLN.JESSE SPAULDING. NORMAN WILLIAM8. JAMES H. ECKELS.WM. J. CHALMERS. JOHN C. MCKEON.CAPITAL, - - $2,000,000The Continental National BanR of ChicagoCORNER ADAMS AND LA SALLE STREETCHICAGO, ILL.JOHN C. BLACK. President.ISAAC N. PERRY. Vice-President. GEORGE M. REYNOLDS, Cashier.IRA P. BOWEN, Assistant Cashier. BENJAMIN S. MAYER. Asst Cashier.DIRECTORS.JOHN C. BLACK, ROSWELL MILLER. WILLIAM G. HIBBARD,GEORGE H. WHEELER, HENRY C. DURAND, HENRY BOTSFORD,JAMES H. DOLE, J. OGDEN ARMOUR, ISAAC N. PEKRY,BERTHOLD LOEWENTHAL.JOHN A. LYNCH, President. W. T. FENTON, Vice-President and Cashier.H. R.^^n\°N' } Assistant Cashiers.R. M. McKINNEY, 2d Assistant Cashier.Zbe national Bank of tbe IRepublicCHICAGO, ILL.Capital, • - $i,ooo,ooo.DIHBCTOR9.Frank O. Lowden, Lawyer. John A. Lynch. Alexander Mackay. W. T. Fenton.E. B Strong, of the late firm of Foss, Strong & Co. J. B. Greenhut, CapitalistLouis F. Swift, of Swift & Co., Packers. A. M. Rothchild, of A. M. Rothchild & Co.Henry Siegex,, of Siegel, Cooper & Co. Tracy C. Drake, of Alfred L. Baker & Co.314Cfte War president in peace(Kent Theatre, University of Chicago, Oct. 17, 1898.)44 And mav you * * * in the days to cdme, as in the past cherish the Republic and defend her."— President William R. Harper.From war's grim council-chambers freed at last,From vain regret o'er heroes' blood-stained fallAnd tropic fevers that the heart appall,Calm-eyed he waits the unknown issues vast.Above, the symbols of his country's past, —The shield protective and the flag that callOn freemen's hearts to break inhuman thrall,And right the wrong e'en at the trumpet's blast.And round about, the symbols fair of peace,—Gowns academic and the earnest calmOf scholars seeking aye for war's surcease;—Till, rolling full, ascends the nation's psalm,The lips of eloquence his praise increase,And learned laurel mingles with the palm.. Horace Spencer Fiske.Coo Crue44 Don't drink, my son,'4 the father said44 Or you will never get ahead."14 You're wrong," replied the son with scorn,44 For when I've drunk, I find at mornOn rising from my drowsy bedThat I have always got a head."T. T. H.Autumn CeauesYe are prophets of death, of the grave and its cold ;But ye whisper of peaceful sleep under the mould,Of sorrows forgotten in heaven's warm fold ;And ye shower down on me God's love with your gold.LE Roy Titus^Weeks.ReciprocityMindful of Chicago's founderThrough our four long years of toil,We, appreciative students,Burn up quarts of midnight oil.T. T. H.315Northwestern UniversityLAW SCHOOL..faculty..Henry Wade Rogers, LL.D., President of the University.Hon. Peter Stenger Grosscup, LL.D.* Dean.Hon. Harvey B. Hurd, LL.D. Bi,ewett 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. Juuan W. Mack, LL. B.Hon. Nathaniel C. Sears, LL. D. Frank C. Lowden, a. B., LL. B.CWS EflW $Cl)00l 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 commercial enterprise, but as a regulardepartment of Northwestern University, with a permanent faculty of specialists. Thework expected of students is essentially university work. Forty -two per cent of theregular students in the Law School possess academic degrees; among these are manygraduates of the University of Chicago, The Law School course covers three years,but special provision is made for college graduates who study law in college. College graduates may receive credit for college work in law to the extent of one-halfyears' work in the Law School. Students entering with such credit are permittedto complete the course in two years. College graduates may also retain the degreeof A, M. for advanced work in law. For circulars or other information, address theSecretary. 135 LA SALLE STREET, CHICAGO, ILL.Northwestern::: University :::Medical School&Its standards have always beenthe highest, and itsrank the best.For circulars of informationaddress the SecretaryDR. N. S. DAVIS, JR.2431 DEARBORN STREETCHICAGO, ILL. NorthwesternUniversityWOMAN'S MEDICAL SCHOOLCKHoman'0 ADeotcal College of Cbicago)333-339 South Lincoln St.CHICAGOCLAIMS to give as extended, as complete, andas thorough a course of instruction in medicine and surgery, in all branches, as isgiven in any medical school in this countrywhich admits women.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 Maty ThompsonHospital for Women and Children, and theHome for Destitute Crippled Children.For circular of information, addressDR. JOHN RIDLON103 Stat. Street ,m _ . CHICAGOBusiness Dress morning DressCelepbonemain3709 flnnunccmcntto tbefacultyand Studentsof tbeliniuersitp of Cbicagotbat mpSpring Stock,etc.*."€uerptbingbut tbeordinarp,Rotbingbuttbe Catest." 420DearbornStreetCbicagol». f>. DKCartbpmercbant CailorrAfternoon Dress evening Dress317H. ZEISS &TelephoneOakland558United 154LADIES'...ANDGENTLEMEN'S318COMPANY..9FINETAILORING E. 47th StreetNeatKenwoodIllinoisCentralStation319This Cap and Gown is oneof a limited edition, whichwas printed in the month ofMay, Eighteen hundred andninety-nine; compiled andedited at the University ofChicago, and printed andbound by SMARSH &GRANT at their College*Book Shop in Chicago &320