VOLUME V NUMBER 20University RecordFRIDAY, AUGUST 17, 1900THE INFLUENCE OF THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO,AND OUR PACIFIC POSSESSIONS.At the Midsummer Convocation, held on theGraduate Quadrangle, Friday, August 10, 1900,at 4:00 p.m., General Joseph Wheeler deliveredthe Convocation Address. He spoke as follows :When the distinguished President of this greatUniversity did me the high honor to invite me to bepresent and participate in these interesting exercises, I felt a very keen embarrassment at thethought of standing in the presence of a vast audience comprising Bachelors of Art, Masters ofArt, Doctors of Law, Doctors of Philosophy, Doctors of Divinity, professors in nearly all departments of education, and learned men and womenof nearly every vocation ; and when I considerthat these cultured men and women are from allparts of the union and have come to add still farther to the high culture they have already attained,I begin to comprehend the great influence of thisUniversity upon the educational institutions ofour country, and the benefit that will be derivedby the people within the sphere of the usefulnessof each of these institutions; and when I thusrealize that the knowledge here acquired is tobe disseminated to all parts of our land, andeven to the beautiful islands of the sea that circumstances have placed under our care, I appreciate the immeasurable power for good of thissuperb University. It is the success with which this and similarinstitutions have been administered that has encouraged most generous donations to the cause ofeducation.An . article upon educational progress in lastSaturday's Outlook commences with these words :" Those who are accustomed to observe the largermovements in education, and who know the far-reaching influence of particular events of a significant type, must agree that the educational progressmade during the past year has been from somepoints of view unprecedented." After recounting many events, all sustaining this assertion, theclosing paragraph says : " Last of all among thesignificant features of the year in education whichended on January 1 must be counted the fact thatduring the previous twelve months nearly 70 millions of dollars were contributed by privatedonors to educational ends in the United States."All this abundantly proves the growing interestin this question, and that the country is rapidlyawakening to the conviction that the work of theeducator is the most important and should be themost exalted of all vocations.This truth was thus forcibly expressed by ourown Daniel Webster : "If we work upon marble,it will perish ; if we work upon brass, time willefface it; if we rear temples, they will crumbleinto dust ; but if we work upon immortal minds,we engrave on those tablets something that willbrighten to all eternity."183184 UNIVERSITY RECORDThat distinguished French writer MonseigneurDupenloup beautifully says : " The work of theeducator bears a likeness to the work of theCreator. If he does not create from nothingness,he draws from slumber and lethargy the benumbed faculties ; he gives life and movementand action to an existence yet imperfect. In thislight an intellectual, moral, and religious education is the highest possible human work. It isthe continuation of the highest and noblest workof divinity, the creation of souls."These beautiful phrases carry our minds backto the first thoughts of creation. We recall thewords which are found in the third verse of thefirst chapter of Genesis : "And God said, letthere be light." These sublime words of theAlmighty as he called the world from chaos, hisfirst recorded utterance, his command to thebeings about to be created, "Let there be light,"might convey an idea involving something morethan a change from the darkness of night to thelight of day. May we not indulge the pleasingand beautiful fancy that this was an admonitionto us to enlighten minds that were to be implantedin the human frame, a command to the people ofall nations and all ages to give light unto themind ?"I consider," said Addison, "a human soulwithout education like marble in the quarry,which shows none of its inherent beauties untilthe skill of the polisher fetches out the colors?makes the surface shine, and discovers .everyornamental cloud, spot, and vein that runsthrough the body of it. What sculpture is toa block of marble, education is to a humanmind. The philosopher, the saint, the hero, thewise, the good, or the great man very often lieshid and concealed in a plebeian, which a propereducation might have disinterred and brought tolife."Leibnitz said : " The way to reform the humanrace is to reform the education of the young.The good education of youth is the first foundation of human happiness." Politicians may declaim upon the dangers whichlie in the path of our republic. They may tellof shoals upon which the Ship of State will begrounded, and rocks upon which it may be dashedto atoms, but so long as we have educational advantages like those afforded by the University ofChicago, we need have no fear for the perpetuityof republican institutions.In his first message to the first Congress, Wash-ton gave expression to this truth in these words :" Knowledge is in every country the surest basisof public happiness. In one in which the measures of government receive their impressions soimmediately from the sense of the communityas in ours, it is proportionately essential." In hiseighth annual message Washington said : " Promote thou, as an object of primary importance,institutions for the general diffusion of knowledge.In proportion as the structure of a governmentgives force to public opinion, it is essential thatpublic opinion should be enlightened."It would almost seem that the father of ourcountry had Dr. Harper and the Chicago University in mind when he wrote those sentences, orpossibly Dr. Harper and Mr. Rockefeller readthese messages and were impressed with theirwisdom, or, more probably, it is another proof ofthe old saying, that "all great minds think alike."I cannot refrain from saying a word regardinganother most valuable of these institutions, thatis, the wonderful work in the development of human character by bringing together students fromall sections. By this association are formedfriendships which grow sweeter and stronger asthe years go on ; as the companions of our earlydays grow fewer and our shadows lengthen towardthe sunset.General Francis A. Walker in a speech delivered in Boston July 9, 1 891, in speaking of thevalue of intellect and character employed thesewords: "I said of intellect and character; for itis character even more than intellect which enables one to bear the tremendous care, responsibilities and burdens of official duties."UNIVERSITY RECORD 185I know you will pardon me for referring justhere to my own beloved Alma Mater on the banksof the beautiful Hudson.I doubt if anyone who has not experienced itcan quite understand the strong and lasting loveof the West Point graduate for his classmates.I was greatly impressed with one of the manysad incidents of the Spanish -American War.There were two splendid young cavalry officerswho had be e es and roomates at WestPoint, and upon graduating they became consecutive files in the same regiment. They servedin the same garrison, and after they were marriedtheir wives became the dearest of friends. AtSan Juan Hill these devoted friends and gallantofficers "fell almost at the same moment and almost side by side. In all the reports and inevery mention of the men killed in Cuba thenames of these brave soldiers appeared together.Truly: "Their lives were lovely and pleasant andin their death they were not divided."I was very glad to be informed that there aregentlemen here studying with the view of permanently exercising their profession as teachersin the islands of the Pacific. They will find therebright, anxious pupils. The islands themselvesare rich in soil, minerals, and timber. The climate is charming and healthful.In approaching the Pacific islands the pictureof high hills covered with living green is presented. As we travel inland we find vast valleysbounded by table-lands and mountains.The people are very similar in many respects.The Hawaiian Islands are about 2100 milesfrom San Francisco, and it is remarkable thatwith all the charming attractions they remainedhid out in the ocean for 257 years after the Spanish government claimed the Philippines by rightof discovery.During all that period ships were constantlyvoyaging between Acapulco and the PhilippineIslands, passing a few degrees south of Hawaii inthe western voyage and about the same distanceto the north in the return, and yet this beautiful country escaped the grasp of a nation which during all that period was the great maritime nationof the world.Spanish history tells us that two ships dispatched by Cortez from the western coast ofMexico were lost and legends of the Hawaiiansnarrate that about that time a white sailor and hissister were cast upon the Hawaiian Islands, andas early as 1555 an old Spanish chart reports agroup of islands about ten degrees east of theHawaiian group.With these exceptions white men remainedignorant of their existence until they were discovered by Captain Cook in 1778.About 3400 miles west we reach Guam, a littleisland containing about 150 square miles andhaving a good harbor.The people are pleasing in manner and generous in hospitality. The census shows about 9000people.The soil is rich and all tropical products areabundant.There is much in the people of the Pacificislands to be commended. The more I have seenof this world and its inhabitants the more I havebecome impressed that we Americans are not theonly good people on earth. It seems to me thathuman nature is pretty much the same in allcountries. They love their wives, husbands, parents, children, brothers, and sisters. They havetheir churches and are very devout in their worship and Christian duties. They have sympathies,hopes, and ambitions.The vast level plains of the Isle of Luzon arevery like the level prairie lands of Illinois. Thevast fields of rice resemble our fields of wheat,and their sugar cane presents the same appearanceas our field of corn. The soil is so rich that insome localities four crops of rice have been raisedwithin twelve months, and I am told that atleast two crops are always raised when the landsare prepared for irrigation.The extent of the Philippine Islands from northto south "is greater than the distance from Chi-186 UNIVERSITY RECORDcago to New Orleans, and the variation in altitudeand latitude is so great as to give great varietyof climate and products of the soil. Wheat, corn,rice, tobacco, coffee, sugar, cotton, cocoanuts,bananas, hemp, and oranges all grow within therange of less than a hundred miles. Corn matures within sixty days from date of planting.Grasses grow in profusion and with great rapidity. Timber equal to the best mahogany or blackwalnut is abundant. Minerals are undeveloped,but there is strong evidence that they exist ingreat variety and in large quantities.Colleges of a high order are maintained inManila and other large cities, and' in every city Ientered I found a schoolhouse with desks andseats quite like the schoolhouses in this country.The men with whom I came in contact and hadbusiness relations wrote well and seemed to befairly educated.The traditions and legends of the PhilippineIslands tell us that more than a thousand yearsago people from India, China, and Japan attractedby the fertile soil and charming climate of thePhilippine Islands commenced settlement on thecoast, generally selecting the head of the verycapacious harbors which are numerous in thoseislands.They found a rude race, now called Negritos,black in color, docile, utterly uncivilized andapparently without any desire for progress. Theylived upon the spontaneous productions whichgrow with marvelous luxuriance.The descendants of the Negritos are few innumber and most of them now live in the mountain and barren districts.Magellan was the first European to visit theseislands. This distinguished navigator sailed fromSpain with four ships. On November 27, 1520,he passed through - the straits which are stillknown by his name. On March 19, 1521, hediscovered the Mariana or Ladrone Islands and afew weeks later he reached Cebu and in the nameof the King of Spam took possession of the entirearchipelago, which forty-three years later, in 1564, was named The Philippine Islands inhonor of King Philip the Second.¦ The people when found by the Spaniards hadmade quite an advance in civilization. Theywove fine fabrics from silk and made fine linens.They worked in metals and made knives andswords of highly tempered and superior steel.They had ships and carried on commerce withIndia, China, and Japan.Their agriculture was conducted with industryand skill, and this it must be remembered wasalmost a century before the first white settlementupon our shores and over 268 years before thegovernment under which we live was established.Among the early improvements by the Spaniards was the erection of fortifications for thedefense of Manila.As early as 1590 the city was encircled bybastioned and battlement walls.The several fronts are of the Vauban systemand are superior stone masonry. The workwould compare well with the best fortificationsof the middle ages anywhere in Europe.The walls are about two and one quarter milesin length and the old obsolete cannon are stillupon the parapets.The population inside of the walled city isabout 110,000, while the suburbs just outside thewalls contain a population more than ^twice asgreat as the fortified enclosure.The population of the entire city is stated to befrom three to four hundred thousand, and thepopulation of all the islands is estimated at fromnine to eleven millions.The area of all the islands is reported at114,356 square miles, about two and a half timesthe area of the State of New York and more thanone hundred times the area of Rhode Island.The largest island is Luzon. Its area is about41,000 square miles, and including the smallislands immediately adjacent and belonging to itthe total area is about 45,000 square miles, a littleless than the area of New York and considerablylarger than the states of Ohio or Pennsylvania.UNIVERSITY RECORD 187Luzon has nearly 4,000,000 population andleads the other islands in civilization and progress.The increase in population is quite. rapid andfamilies are very large, from ten to fifteen children in a family not being unusual.In 1845 tne total civilized population wasreported to be 3,507,277 and the census of 1876showed the population to be 6,200,000.Nearly all the children have bright, intelligentfaces and we found them very quick to learnsome English expressions.The religion is Catholic and Mohammedan,the former largely predominating. Many of theCatholic churches and convents are massive, imposing structures and possess architectural beauty.The people, especially the women, are verydevoted to their religion. .There is much in the Filipino women tocommend. Their industry is very noticeable. Ihave seen rice fields for miles in extent wherenearly all the laborers were women. In the planting season their work is done standing in waterand mud from a foot and a half to two feet indepth with the hot summer sun upon their headsand backs.Nearly all cultivation is still done by the mostprimitive methods of two thousand years ago.Every sprig of rice is planted by hand, the laborerreaching through a foot or more of water to themud bottom.In gathering the same slow process is pursued.The laborers go in the field with a small knifeand cut one sprig of rice at a time. When abunch a convenient size is gathered it is tied upand laid upon the ground.My observations among these people and thoseof China very forcibly impressed upon me theimportance of all institutions of learning devoting a full measure of effort to instilling a spirit ofchivalry and patriotic devotion. It was to keepthat spirit fresh and strong that Alabama enacteda law that the national flag should float over everyschoolhouse in the state. It is the utter absence of this feeling which hasreduced China to its low stand among nations,notwithstanding the high culture which has existed in that country for very many centuries.The enjoyment of peace is a blessed boon tohumanity, but the history of the world from itsearliest periods teaches that the only security forpeace is to be always prepared and read toyengage in war.. That nation whose people areready to respond to a call to arms with men andresources for any emergency is the one that shallmost certainly be able to avoid the desolation andhorrors of war. It is largely for this reason thatwe encourage a martial spirit, the greatest, in factthe only firm barrier against aggression.It matters little how great its wealth, its excellence in literature and science and art, a nationunprepared or indisposed to battle in its defenseforfeits the respect of the world.Assyria, Rome, Greece, and Carthage excelledin wealth, in science, and in art, but wealthengenders luxurious living, the martial spiritwhich made these nations great began to diminish and decay, until they finally descended fromthe highest to the lowest grades of nations.So long as the dominant spirit which controlsany country is one of honor, chivalry, glory, andpatriotism, so long will that nation continue toachieve power and greatness. The spirit of truenobility taught by American mothers has madeour country the pride and fear of the world. Itwas this spirit with which the ancestors of thepeople now before me were imbued, and whichcaused them to strike for country and for home acentury and a quarter ago. The necessity ofpatriotic teaching is, if possible, more importanttoday than in the early history of our country.We are now a great world power, and the destiny of the human race is in the future to belargely guided by influence exerted by this government. This should be impressed upon therising generation, and the memory of the flag ofour country floating over the schoolhouse andsongs breathing patriot devotion within its wallsshould be indelibly connected with the first impressions of the youth of our land.It is memories like these that create and fosterthat spirit which has been and ever will be thepride, glory, strength, and safety of this greatrepublic.188 UNIVERSITY RECORDTHE ALUMNI.EDWIN GILBERT COOLEY.The Alumni Association of the University ofChicago, with its brief history and its membership of new Alumni dating back only to 1893,and numbering not over 800 members, increased,however, by the incorporation of the 600 graduates from the old University, cannot hope to havefor years to come a long list of noted names,prominent in state affairs, in the professions, infinance, or in the educational field. Yet, despiteher brief history and her body of young Alumni,some of her graduates are taking important positions in all lines of work. One of the most successful Alumni is Edwin Gilbert Cooley, '95, recentlyelected Superintendent of the schools of Chicago.Born, in Clayton County, Iowa, 1857, of goodNew England stock, he spent his early years onthe farm. His education began in the villageschools of Strawberry Point, near which he grewup. At the age of fifteen years he was ready forthe preparatory school of the University of Iowa,to which he was admitted in 1872. Here he spenttwo years, completing not only the preparatorywork but also a part of the freshman course.At the close of his second year he found noresources from which to draw for his further education, so he was forced to give up his cherishedplans of completing. his college course. He wentback to his village home and joined with hisfather in the wheelwright's trade, and the nextfive years he spent in the wagon shop, in thebrickyard, in the machine shop, or in a creamery— never, however, losing that erasing desire for ahigher training and the preparation for a life ofintellectual effort.His first experience in his chosen field of workcame when he was appointed as teacher in theseventh and eighth grade in his home school atStrawberry Point. Though he had in mind thelegal profession, he continued in the school for three years as a teacher, and was then electedsuperintendent, which position he filled for twoyears. He was then called to the superintend-ency of the Cresco, Iowa, schools, where heremained for six years with continued success.During this time he prepared himself and successfully passed the state teacher's examinationfor a life diploma. In 1890, because of his widereputation in the state, he was elected a trusteeof the State Normal School at Cedar Falls, Iowa,for the term of six years.By this time Mr. Cooley's reputation as an educator was assured, one of his co-workers in Iowaat the time wrote, recently, of his work in thatstate :A dozen years ago I knew him at Cresco, Iowa, when hewas principal of public schools there. He was regardedthere and over the whole state as possessing unusual ability.All who came in contact with him recognized in him thefar-sightedness, the mental keenness, that mark the superiorman. It mattered little what questions came up in ourteacher's meetings, it most times appeared in the discussionsthat this young man in the quiet of his library had thoughtproblems out that his educational seniors had barely touched.In the year 189 1 he was called to the principal-ship of the East Aurora High School, and filled thethen difficult position with such marked satisfaction to the people of Aurora that when the offercame from the school board of La Grange, 111.,in 1893, the Aurora board used every legitimateinfluence to retain him. But his desire to be nearChicago, the storm center of educational progress in the West, and near the University of Chicago, where he might carry out his long-delayedplans of completing his college course, decidedhim in favor of La Grange.Then it was that he began his work in the University, attending the University during the summer, carrying on courses by correspondence andlater taking work in the Teacher's College. Hereceived the degree of Bachelor of Arts in 1895.His college work did not stop at this stage, heEDWIN G. COOLEY, '95SUPERINTENDENT OF SCHOOLS, CHICAGOUNIVERSITY RECORD 189continued his graduate work in Philosophy andPedagogy either in the Teacher's College or atthe University. The writer remembers the dayfollowing the election in the fall of '98, after Mr.Cooley's defeat in the closely-fought contest forcounty superintendent. Mr. Cooley, though justout of a heated political campaign, at once registered for work under Doctor Dewey and continued his more thorough preparation for his chosenfield of work. The political campaign was onlyan incident — a complete training for schooladministration was his true aim. His work wasplanned with the thought of some day taking aDoctor's degree.In November of last year Mr. Cooley waselected principal of the Chicago Normal School,to take effect this year, but greater honors were instore for him. When Superintendent Andrewsresigned to accept the chancellorship of the University of Nebraska, Mr. Cooley was at oncementioned as his successor, and June 13, 1900,he was elected Superintendent of the Chicagoschools, and took up the duties of his new officeJune 25.Superintendent Cooley's new field of work isin one sense entirely new to him. The problemof administering the office of superintendent over253,000 school children and 6000 teachers, withall the varied conditions of nationalities, religiousbeliefs, political affiliations and prejudices, foundin such a city as this, is very different from thecontrol of a township high school of 300 to 400pupils and a dozen teachers, in a suburban community like La Grange where all the elements arein harmony. Yet he enters upon his new workwith the assurance of twenty years of uninterrupted success as a teacher. His experienceranges from the first grade in the grammarschool to the last year of the high school. Hisexperience as a teacher and his knowledge ofnormal methods are toned and strengthened bythe scholastic training of the university. Hisearly struggles for an education, his experience inpolitics, his association with men in other pro fessions as well as his own, has given him thepractical business training and the ability to estimate men — qualities which are so essential tothe harmonious control of such complicated conditions as are found in Chicago.One of his former teachers said to the writer :"Principal Cooley is a man of sterling honesty.His deep sense of justice and his intensely earnestdesire to be fair with his pupils and teachers causehim often to weigh with greatest care seeminglytrivial matters. He makes up his mind slowly,he weighs problems carefully, but when heonce decides, you may depend upon it that hisdecision is honest and unchangeable."A prominent educational journal says in aneditorial :"Mr. Cooley is one of those broad mindededucational men of the West who will administerthe public school interests of Chicago withrare judgment and wisdom. He is a man ofprogressive ideas on educational questions andhas the courage of his convictions. He is a goodscholar, a diligent student and a clear-headedman. He is himself a teacher of exceptionalability and will demand a high order of teachingability of candidates seeking appointments."Mr. Cooley begins his work unpledged to anyfaction, with a harmonious school board, the support of the city press, and the best wishes of allfair minded citizens.All of these elements in his favor coupled withhis natural conservatism, his ability to adjust himself to complex conditions, his strong determination to succeed, his unswerving sense of justice,and his conscientious desire to deal fairly withall, certainly give promise of a clean, upright, andsuccessful administration of the school system ofthe city of Chicago.ALUMNI DAY, 1900.The success of the first Alumni Day exercises,held on June 19 instead of June 30, is certainly astrong argument in favor of the change of date.A beautiful day, a large attendance of the Alumni,190 UNIVERSITY RECORDthe game of ball between the* University of Pennsylvania and the University of Chicago, the class-day exercises,, the presence of the large graduatingclass and the student body, all assisted in makingthe day the most successful reunion which theAlumni have held in the short history of the University.The exercises, of the day began at 12 o'clockwith President Harper's annual luncheon on theWoman's Quadrangle. The hour was very pleasantly spent, in renewing old acquaintances, forming new ones, , talking over past experiences,singing college songs, and enjoying the excellentluncheon. In fact, the time was so pleasantlyspent that the members very reluctantly retiredto the chapel in Cobb Hall for the annual business meeting appointed for 1 : 30 p.m.At this meeting the usual business was transacted; the minutes of the last meeting read and'adopted ; the report of the Treasurer, which wassent to each: alumnus in the annual statement,was read and accepted; the new constitution,,which appears on another page, adopted ; . and anominating committee, consisting of Susan G.Harding, '98, Allen T. Burns, '97, and LieutenantWard B. Pershing, '98, appointed.The one new feature of the business meetingwas the reception of the Class of 1900 as a bodyinto the association. Just before the report ofthe nominating committee was made almost theentire Senior Class, consisting of eighty-ninegraduates, marched into the hall in cap and gownand were publicly welcomed into the Associationby President Helmer, whose very appropriatespeech in the name of the Association was responded to most happily by Charles S. Eaton asthe representative of the Class of 1900.The report of the nominating committee wasmade by Mr. Burns, and the Secretary was ordered to cast the ballot for the following officerselected under the new constitution :OFFICERS.• Edgar A. Buzzell, '86, President.Demia Butler Gorrell, '98, First Vice President. Donald S. Trumbull, '97, Second Vice President.Ralph W. Webster, '95, Third V4ce President.Mayo Fesler, '97, General Secretary.EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE.Charles R. Henderson, '70.Anne B. Reed, '99.William O. Wilson, '97.Frank A. Helmer, '78.Jennie K. Boomer, '95.John F. Hagey, '98.Harry D. Abells, '97.Darius R. Leland, '66.Alice Winston, '98.A motion was made to adjourn and was carriedby the members giving the yell for their differentclasses; 1900, of course, being the strongest.Then all joined in a good rousing Chicago yell.The new feature of welcoming the graduatingclass into the association was received so favorably by the Class of 1900 and added so much tothe success of the day that it will no doubt remainapart of each year's programme. The graduateswere made to feel that their four years' coursedoes not sever their relations to the University ;that their relation to the University through theAlumni Association in one sense is even morevital than during the college course, and that asalumni they have a voice in the. administration ofthe University through their representatives in theUniversity Congregation.Immediately following the business meetingthe class-day exercises were held on the Campusin front of Cobb Lecture Hall. The cap andgown and the senior bench were handed down tothe incoming seniors after the usual custom. Theclass of 1900 leaves as its memorial to the University a large elm tree which is to be placeddirectly east of the Chapel.At 4 : 00 p.m. the baseball game and band concert took place on Marshall Field, and wasattended by a number of the Alumni.The annual dinner was given at 7 : 30 p.m. atthe Quadrangle Club, Lexington avenue andFifty-eighth street. All the available space wastaken in the dining-room by the unusually largeDEMIA BUTLER GORRELL '98, First Vice President DONALD S. TRUMBULL '97, Second Vice PresidentEDGAR A. BUZZELL 86, PresidentMAYO FESLER '97. General Secretary RALPH W. WEBSTER '95, Third Vice PresidentUNIVERSITY RECORD 191attendance of Alumni. About 10 : 00 p.m. President Buzzell arose and in a few well-chosen wordsintroduced as "one of the old things" the toast-master of the evening, Frederick A. Smith, '66.Mr. Smith gracefully acknowledged the honor conferred upon him, spoke of the loyalty of the oldalumni for the new, the growing interest in theassociation, and then presented L. Brent Vaughn,'97, who was to speak on "Alumni Clubs." Mr.Vaughn said in part :Mr. Toastmaster, Alumnae, Alumni, Ladies and Gentlemen, Victims All : The misfortune of being an alumnus isso great that it is little short of a sin to call upon one to discuss this particular genus of humankind as associated intowhat is known as alumni clubs. Only a little while ago Iwas invited to speak in behalf of the local alumni. I realized then, and I now reaffirm that it is the one subject thecontemplation of which gives rise to absolutely no enthusiasm. It is a subject to be discussed when all others havebeen exhausted and most of the guests gone home.From the very nature of the constituency of an alumniclub, the subject ought never to be mentioned outside of theinner circle of some antiquarian society. Geologically speaking, an alumnus is a fossil ; in terms of slang, " a has been."Nor is he alone in his sad reflection upon the awful truthof this statement, the undergraduate body is supremely impressed with the same idea. We all have noticed today themingled attitude of the undergraduates — a twinkle in oneeye, a tear of pity in the other, and, withal, a general expression of contempt. More than this, and perhaps the thingthat hurts the worst, is the fact that the undergraduate considers the alumnus an easy mark. We are visited by themin behalf of about everything for which they need a littlefinancial support. Their line of argument is incontrovertible — we are alumni. I will say, however, that I haveyet to hear of the alumnus who has been solicited for anyintellectual support on any proposition whatsoever. Moreover, as organized into clubs we are accessible on the wholesale plan instead of retail — but the price remains the same.But we all remember how we were wont to consider thealumni whenever they intruded themselves upon our presence. We remember their patronizing talk, their emphasizeddignity, and we thought then — now we know it — that oldLawrence Sterne was quite right when he said that dignityis only a mysterious carriage of the body to cover the defectsof the mind.Of course it is all right to gather around the classic wailsand the druid oaks and old Haskell door on these annualfestal days, to put on our best clothes and wisest looks, toyell ourselves hoarse in front of the various halls, but for genuine happiness I'll back even poor old Oom Paul againstany one of the crowd on this day.There is about our condition as alumni an indefinablesomething, a kind of aching void, a recollection of a timethat is gone, that stands to each of us, a thing of regret.However, as alumni of the University of Chicago, we arenot without some honor, not without some pride, not withoutsome duty. Of the first two we need not fear neglect. Asto the last, it is in this, as in everything else, a matter ofeternal vigilance.Never before in the history of American colleges havetheir alumni been so much besought as during the past year.There seems to have been a sudden awakening to the factthat an institution's alumni are its most logical support.The eastern universities have seen fit to send their presidents all over the United States to arouse enthusiasm amongtheir alumni, to stir up dormant clubs and encourage the organization of new ones. As a result, we find some of themhave nearly twenty-five active clubs throughout the country.I think Chicago has always known the great value of suchorganizations, but we have been handicapped somewhat innot having the alumni. But with the restoration of the oldalumni, and with the few of the new, it seemed feasible thisyear to start the plan of associated alumni. Accordingly itwas designed to outstrip all rivals by sending our Presidenton a tour around the world. It was to be his work to perfectan organization wherever he might find one or more Chicagoalumni, and as a side issue he was to affiliate the universitiesof Europe, Asia, and Africa, and reorganize them in accordance with our general plan for secondary schools.Time interfered. It was found that three months wouldnot suffice for the work in hand, so the trip was divided up ;Secretary Fesler went to the Occident, Dr. Harper to theOrient. They started about April I. Mr. Fesler, armedwith blank forms of club constitutions, made a tour of all thecities of the West. It is needless to say that wherever hewent he established a club of University of Chicago alumni,and affiliated the surrounding city. The only place he hadany trouble at all was in St. Louis, where the street car strikeprevented some of the people from getting to his headquarters to pay him thei espects.Dr. Harper started out in the opposite direction, determined to go as far as possible and still be able to return intime for this banquet.His first stop was New York. He passed in triumphthrough the Mr. and Mrs. Dewey arch, called on Mr. Rockefeller, and dined at the third annual banquet of the new Chicago Alumni Club of New York. He crossed the Atlanticand congratulated Queen Victoria upon her success in SouthAfrica and the consequent inability to relieve her starvingmillions in India. He then jumped the English channel andarranged with Alumni Ferd. Peck and Ralph Dougherty to192 UNIVERSITY RECORDorganize a club in Paris, and after rejoicing with PresidentLoubet at the probable success of his side show, he crossedthe Rhine and paid his respects to Hoch der Kaiser. Hisvigorous protest against the passage of the American meatbill seems to have been too late.I regret that the Doctor had'nt time to drop down and seeAbdul Hamid and point out to him the opportunities thiscountry has for using that $100,000 he owes us ... .It now became evident that it would be useless to attemptto go on and meet Fesler coming West, so it was decided toabandon Africa for the present and to establish our supremacy in Asia. With his accustomed tact and foresight herepaired at once to St. Petersburgh to see the advance agentfor that continent. A master stroke, for be it known thatany course looking towards the establishment of supremacy— temporal or spiritual — over the continent of Asia presupposes an interview of at least thirty minutes with hisroyal highness the Czar of Russia. It was arranged that assoon as this little trouble with the Boxers is settled up theDowager Empress is to be enlisted in our cause and in duetime will pay us a visit and receive the degree of LL.D.—the second potentate to receive that distinction. Her majestywill then return to Peking and organize an alumnae club.In closing I desire to say that the plan to enlist the interests of alumni in the association just as soon as they aregraduated is of the greatest importance. This on the principle, as stated by Samuel Johnson, that "much may bemade of a Scotchman if he be caught young."Frances E. Williston, '96, who spoke of "TheDays that Come After," was next introduced andsaid in part :Mr. Toastmaster : I am happy in the opportunity to saya few words for the days that come after, for usually, I think,they are sadly abused. We always have so much to say forthe days that came before, that we quite neglect these otherdays, whose only failing is that they can be spoken of inthe present tense. However, we can never see, as we dotonight, a number of young things just stepping over thethreshold without a little feeling of wistfulhess — a little desire to turn back the clock — to have the dial point oncemore to that proud day in 1866, or '75, or '99, or wheneverit happened to be, that the sheepskin was put in our hands.The fact that this day with all its bright associations isso fleeting, so hopelessly gone with the setting of its sun,brings to us a certain sadness. Not a very acute form ofsorrow, though. I like the feeling of it — and don't we all ?This makes me believe it is'nt sadness at all, but a real gladness we feel in recalling that vanished day and realizing therichness and significance it has made possible for the following days. In spite of this, though, when we old thingssee the young things coming to join us, we catch ourselves wishing we were tender, formless things once more, greenand growing, as the phrase goes. In this characterizationI need not say that I mean no reference to the present graduating class, for, whatever they may have been up to thistime (and I confess I remember vividly what we used to beup to our time), they have now become one of us, and wealumni know, with the strength of conviction, that we areneither tender nor formless, green nor — I was going tosay growing, but that would have been a mistake. Weare still growing, every one of us is, and that's what makesus so nice. The detail of a graduation hasn't checked theglorious impulse to growth that swelled our hearts and, for atime, our heads when we started forth as hopeful freshmenfour or ten or twenty years ago.When I hear college graduates gush about their under"graduate days (and the graduates of other colleges do gushso outrageously and unreasonably), and when they wish sofondly for the good old days back again — and they weregood old days, too, but who really wants them back ? — I amput in mind of the landlady whose lodger complained toher that ihe little towels she provided wTere inadequate, andhow the resourceful lady answered him encouragingly, thatshe guessed she could fix that all right ; she'd furnish himless water.It's true we love our college days and we'd like wellenough to save all of them, if we could, but we think we'rebetter off, on the whole, to have things just as they are.That's saying a good deal, too, and it can hardly gounchallenged. We must have carried away somethingpretty precious with us, if its possession can make up forthe things that are really gone, the fleeting, pleasant acquaintances we formed, and the many equally fleeting bitsof information that we went to much pains to gather, andthen stored away so safely that their place knoweth them nomore.After considering all the thousand associations that makethe memory of our college days a delight, after recalling allthe scraps of knowledge that we've managed to take awaywith us, I find^that associations, memories, acquirements, allboil down into one simple little thing, rather intangible, butvery real. It's a thing that we all possess as college graduates ; it makes us very glad to meet each other now andthen, after much constant dwelling with the other kind ofpeople — shall we allow ourselves the egotism of saying thepeople who don't know ? This intangible but real littlething which makes surviving our commencement very muchworth while, is simply, I think, a certain point of view andbreadth of view which we contracted chronically in our college years. This rich outlook finds good expression in thatlittle couplet of Robert Louis Stevenson :" The world is so full of a number of things,I am sure we should all be as happy as kings."UNIVERSITY RECORD 193This point of view is a college point of view, a legacywhich, in a more or less perfect way, all colleges bequeathto their sons and daughters, and which our own University,with its expansive opportunities, is happily able to give usin very full measure. It is this for which we would renderour Alma Mater our grateful acknowledgment, if it hasmade the days that come after rich and happy, not only intheir memories, but in their present experience and possibilities.When we find ourselves sometimes looking rather unreasonably back with a little regret to the days that are gone,I remember the Irish servant who went to the door to answer the bell, and came back to report to her mistress, saying: "Shure, it was a gintleman looking for the wranghouse." If we look to other days for something better thanwe can find in the present postgraduate ones, shure we arelooking for the wrong days.At the close of Miss Williston's toast, LesterBartlett Jones, a former graduate student of theUniversity sang a solo to the great delight of allpresent and then responded to the hearty encoregiven him.It is to be regretted that the toast of Harry N.Gottlieb, representing the Class of 1900 could notbe obtained for publication here. He spoke veryforcibly of that kind of loyalty which every alumnus should feel toward his Alma Mater — a loyalty not tinctured with cynical criticism. Histoast was followed by the very effective readingof some verses by James Weber Linn, '97. Thepoem is published on another page.The last speaker on the programme was President Harper, who, every alumnus knows, is deeplyinterested in the welfare and growth of the Association. After speaking in very flattering termsof the work of the Association during the lastyear, and what it can do for the good of the University in the future, he related in an interestingand profitable manner some of the incidents ofhis recent trip through Russia.At 11 : 3a p.m. the fifth annual dinner of thealumni and the last exercise of Alumni Day wasover. The universal opinion was that the dayhad been the most successful and the most enjoyable in the history of the Association.A number of the alumni remained over thenext day to attend the Thirty-third Convocation which, as usual for the summer, was held on theGraduate Quadrangle. The large crowd, the largest graduating class in the history of the University, the conferring of twenty-five doctor's degrees,and the requirement that all who take the bachelor's degrees must be present to receive them,made this convocation more than usually impressive. The interest manifested this year by thealumni indicates that the decennial celebration ofthe University's history next June will be attendedby a large and enthusiastic body of alumni.EDITORIAL COMMENTS.The list of alumni will no longer appear inthe Annual Register, but will be published eachyear in a more complete form, in the alumninumber of the University Record.At the annual meeting in June a number ofthe members expressed the belief that Saturday,instead of Monday, would be a much better timefor Alumni Day exercises ; that business houses,schools, and offices were closed at least a part ofthe day and a much larger number of the localalumni could be present. The Executive Committee will be glad to have an expression fromthe alumni and arrange the exercises for the daywhich will meet the wishes of the largest number.It is the desire of the Secretary to make thealumni column in the University Record interesting and profitable to the alumni scattered allover the country. This can be done only by theassistance of the members of the association, whowill take the trouble to send us interesting bits ofnews concerning themselves and alumni withwhom they are acquainted.Also, the expenses of the association will bematerially lessened if the members will keep theSecretary informed of any changes in address andrespond promptly to any letters sent to them.The requirement that all graduates must bepresent to receive their degrees is commented194 UNIVERSITY RECORDupon most favorably from all quarters. Andsince the Convocation has been changed from thebeginning of the new quarter to the end of thecurrent quarter, the requirement will work nohardships on anyone. In the past, graduateswho cared to be present at the Convocation toreceive their degrees were compelled to remainin the city over the ten days' vacation. Underthe new plan the Convocation occurs before thequarterly examinations, from which graduates areeither exempt or are given special examinations.The alumni will see that the new constitutionmakes a number of changes in the membership,officers and general organization of the Association.The membership is no longer limited to thecollegiate alumni, but includes graduates of alldegrees, bachelors, masters, and doctors. Underthe old constitution those with the different degrees were under different organizations. Thenew constitution centralizes the power and makesthe work much more effective. Provision, however, is made for a separate organization if atany time a sufficient number desire it ; but allsuch organizations are to be, in a sense, subordinate to the general association.The offices of Secretary and Treasurer have beencombined under the one head of General Secretary, thus simplifying the keeping of the accountsof the association and giving the work to theSecretary, who is the only paid official in theassociation.If there was ever any doubt as to the successof the Summer Quarter at the University, thatdoubt certainly has disappeared after seven yearsof actual experience. The increase has beenmost remarkable as shown by the reports for thevarious years :1894 - 5971895 93i1896 - 10581897 ------- 12731898 14341899 ------- 1651 For the summer of 1900 to July 25 the attendance was 1522. This, of course, does not includelate registrations, nor the registrations of the second term, which will, without doubt, keep theratio of growth during the past six years.To one who has attended the University for anumber of summers, the growing interest in thework, the large number of familiar faces, andthe increase in the social life are very marked.There are students in attendance this quarterwho have been here every Summer Quarter of theUniversity history and a large number who havebeen here three, four or five summers. Teachersin the public schools, instructors in the collegesand universities, ministers from all denominations find work here during their vacations whichthey could take at no other time in the year.Hundreds of southern students come here wherethey can get the instruction they desire and atthe same time -avoid the extreme heat of theSouth.The success of the Summer Quarter is assured,and there is no work the University attemptswhich is more productive of good results.ALUMNI NOTES AND COMMUNICATIONS.Allan Hopkins, '00, is a United States guardat the Paris exposition.H. Foster Bain, Ph.D., '97, is interested in mining at Idaho Springs, Colo.Harry F. Atwood, '98, formerly of Chicago, ispracticing law in Port Angeles, Wash.Cecil B. Bachelle, B.S., '97, M.S., '98, is a physician in the German Hospital of Chicago.Allen G. Hoyt, '99, is an examiner in theTreasury Department, Washington, D. C.Worthy P. Sterns, Ph.D., '00, is doing somework for the Bureau of Statistics, Washington,D. C.Albert E. McKinley, '96, took his Ph.D. fromthe University of Pennsylvania in June and hasbeen appointed instructor of Political Science andHistory in Temple College, Philadelphia.UNIVERSITY RECORD 195Percy B. Davis, '97, who completed his coursein law at Harvard, is now practicing law in Chicago.Lolabel House, A.M., '98, has been appointedFellow in History at the University, of Pennsylvania.Hester D. Jenkins, '98, has been appointed instructor in the American College at Constantinople.Professor Charles R. Henderson, '70, deliveredthe commencement address at Lewis Institute,June 21.Grace Freeman, '96, teacher of history in Springfield high school, is spending the summer at theUniversity.Cora M. Porterfield, '96, has received a graduate scholarship in Bryn Mawr College for theyear 1 900-1.Walter H. Abbott, '96, is superintendent of theerecting department of Siemens & Halske Electric Co., Chicago.Henry W. Stuart, Ph.D., '00, has been appointed to the Chair of Economics and Historyin Ripon College.Robert B. Davidson, '97, who has charge ofthe religious work at the University of Michigan,is visiting the University.Edwin E. Miller, '99, fellow in Political Scienceand president of the Graduate Club, is travelingin Europe for the summer.June E. Downey, M.A., '98, is instructor inEnglish and Philosophy at the University ofWyoming, Laramie, Wyo.Isabella Stone, Ph.D., '98, teacher of Physicsat Vassar College, is spending the summer inLondon, Paris, and Holland.President Buzzell, according to the provisionin the Constitution, has appointed as a Nominating Committee for the year 'oo-'oi the followingpersons: Harold L. Ickes, '97 ; Lydia A. Dexter,'87 ; Fred Merrifield, '98; Earl C. Hales, '00. The School Review for June contains an articleon " Free High Schools for Rural Pupils," byHenry R. Corbett, Ph.D., 1900.Henry T. Clarke, '99, of Omaha, has recentlyreturned home from an extended trip in the Westwith a brother who was seriously ill.Mrs. Jessie Waite Wright, '77, is assistant toher husband, G. G. Wright, M.D., in the CarrollSprings sanitarium, Forest Glen, Md.Alma de" Lelande LeDuc, '99, was recentlyappointed to an assistantship in French in theUniversity of Kansas, Lawrence, Kan.Gilbert A. Bliss, Ph.B., '97, A.M., '98, Ph.D.,'00, has been appointed as instructor of mathematics in the University of Minnesota.Walter E. Garrey, Ph.D., '00, has beenchosen professor of physiology in the CooperMedical Institute at San Francisco, Cal.William H. Allen, '97, who recently took hisPh.D. from the University of Pennsylvania, hasbeen appointed instructor in that university.Lieutenant Ward B. Pershing, '98, is home ona sick leave from the Philippines where he hasbeen in active service in the regular army for twoyears.Carl B. Neel, '97, mining engineer in the West,is visiting relatives and friends in Chicago. Mr.Neel is well known as a former American champion in tennis.Miss Ellen Yale Stevens, '99, teacher of English in the Teacher's College, New York, is furnishing some outlined studies for the Teacher'sCollege Record.The Baptist Union for July contains an articleon Japanese missionary work, by Ernest W.Clement, '8o, who has been in the foreign fieldfor some years.John F. Voight, '96, city attorney for Mattoon,111., is now a candidate for the state legislature.Mr. Voight has taken a prominent part in thepolitics of his county.196 UNIVERSITY RECORDPaul Mandeville, '99, who has represented Swift& Co. in London during the last year, has returnedto Chicago, but remains with the same company.Ralph C. Hamill, '99, will coach the football team of Center College, Kentucky, this fall.Mr. Hamill is a student in Rush Medical College.Ferdinand W. Peck, '68, Commissioner Generalto the Paris Exposition, will receive from theFrench government, according to the custom,the cross of the Legion of Honor.The July American Journal of Sociology contains articles by two alumni, Ernest C. Moore,Ph.D., '98, "One Aspect of Vice;'' Charles A.Ellwood, Ph.D., '98, "Public Outdoor Relief."The class of 1900, through their treasurer,Clark S. Reed, presented to the Alumni Association the balance of $36 left in the treasury afterall the expenses of the class exercises were paid.The Journal of Political Economy for Junecontains two articles by Wesley Claire Mitchell,A.B., '96, Ph.D., '99, entitled "Preparation forthe Twelfth Census" and "The Inheritance TaxDecision."The Indianapolis University of Chicago Clubhas the honor of establishing the first alumniclub scholarship to the University. This scholarship will be given to some worthy student fromIndianapolis.Joseph Norwood, '96, who has been AssistantCashier in the National Bank of Greenville,South Carolina, has been elected President of theCarolina Mills, a corporation recently charteredfor the manufacture of Cotton Yarns.Helen B. Thompson, '97, who received theAssociated Alumnae traveling fellowship, willleave for Europe early in October for furtherstudy. Miss Thompson will take her Ph.D. fromthe University of Chicago this quarter.David P. Barrows, Ph.D., '97, Instructor inHistory at the State Normal School, San Diego,Cal., has, upon the recommendation of the Uni versity of California, been called to an administrative position in the school system of the Philippines.Dr. Barrows was born in Chicago, 111., on June 27,1873. He received the degree of A.B. fromPomona College in 1894, in '95 the Universityof California conferred upon him the degree ofMaster of Arts, and in '97 he received from theUniversity of Chicago, the degree of Doctor ofPhilosophy. He has won great popularity inSan Diego while at the head of the Departmentof History.The Alumni list was increased at the Midsummer Convocation by the addition of the following members (position and address given asfar as known):Andrews, Emory Cobb. Real estate. 115 Dearborn st.,Chicago.Bergey, Angelina Amenia. Teacher. 6428 Greenwood av.,Chicago.Boyer, Charles Jonas. Ipava, 111.Elder, Sarah. Teacher h. s. Kalamazoo, Mich.Gordon, William Alexander. Student Rush Medical col.Chicago.Greenleaf (Mrs.), Lilian Snow. Assoc. Prin. StanleyHall, Minneapolis, Minn.Hamilton, John Orr. 446, 55th St., Chicago.Hillyer, Thomas Arthur. Teacher. 5609 Drexel av., Chicago.Hoke, George Wilson. Asst. Prin. h. s. Wauwatosa, Wis.Hoxie (Mrs.), Lucy Bennett. 3862 Russell av., St. Louis,Mo.Lachmund, Alice. 3862 Russell av., St. Louis, Mo.Linch, Samuel Adams, A.M. Teacher State nor. WestSuperior, Wis.McLean, James Arnott. Prin. Prep. Dept. Tarkio col.Tarkio, Mo.Mead, Hugh Sager. Teacher. Bellefontaine, O.Nelson, John Elvington. Supt. pub. s. Geneva, 111.Norlin, George, Ph.D. Prof. u. of Colorado. Boulder, Colo.Peemoller, Thusnelda. 5625 Washington av., Chicago.Roessler, Erwin W. E. Student u. of Chicago. 1542 Oak-dale av., Chicago.Russell, Albert Simpson. 6357 Stewart av., Chicago.Smith, Arthur Maxon, Ph.D. Pres. Oahu col. Honolulu,H.I.Smith, Guy Delivan. Prin. h. s. St. Joseph, Mich.Stroebe, George Gottlieb. Supt. s. Ferrysburg, Mich.Wood, Edward Olin, Jr. Teacher h. s. De Kalb, 111.In the list of Fellows for the year 1900-1901are the following alumni :Clifton O. Taylor, '00, Philosophy.William E. Miller, '99, Political Science.Fred H. Calhoun, '98, Geology.Charles L. Burroughs, '99, History.Ralph W. Webster, '95, Physiology.Mayo Fesler, '97, History.Pearl L. Hunter, '99, Philosophy.Caroline M. Breyfogle, '96, Comparative Religion.David M. Robinson, '98, Greek.Edgar H. McNeal, '96, History.Nevin M. Fenneman, A.M., '99, Geology.James D. Bradwell, A.M., '00, Political Science.Sophonisba P. Breckinridge, A.M., '97, Political- Science.Evelyn Matz '97 has been elected principal ofthe Dearborn Seminary, one of the schools affiliated with the University, She will succeed Professor Martha Foote Crow, who resigned toaccept the position of Dean of Women and aprofessorship in English at the NorthwesternUniversity.Those who are acquainted with Miss Matzknow her to be a woman of more than usualability and predict for her most marked successin her new work. She has been doing graduatework in the University for two years.The election of Alumni members to the Congregation resulted as follows :LIST OF THOSE WITH THE BACHELOR'S DEGREE.Alonzo Abernethy, '66, Osage, la.Daisy M. Springer, '85, Chicago.Charles H. Wayne, '80, Elgin, 111.Charles S. Sweet, '75, Oak Park, 111.George F. Holloway, '86, Chicago.Charles R. Dean, '77, Washington, D. C.James K. Wilson, '72, Chicago. RECORD 197Frank G. Hanchett, '82, Aurora, 111.Cyrus B. Allen, '78, Omaha, Neb.Fred S. Comstock, '79, Chicago, 111.LIST OF THOSE WITH MASTER'S DEGREE.Alice Pratt, '93.I. W. Howerth, '94.Henry Dickie, '94.Elkanah Hulley, '93.Lulu C. Daniels, '95.Among the officers of instruction for the summer are the following Alumni :Edward Scribner Ames, Ph.D., '95, Philosophy.Herbert N. McCoy, Ph.D., '98, Chemistry.Elias P. Lyon, Ph.D., '97, Biology.Henry L. Schoolcraft, Ph.D., '94, History.William E. Moffatt, A.B., '96, Latin.Nevin M. Fenneman, A.M., '00, Geology.Arthur D. Dunn, Ph.B., '96, Neurology.Jonathan E. Webb, A.B., '99, A.M., '00, Botany.Mahlon O. Jones, of the class of '70, diedin Dinard, France, on June 18. He was theson of Wm. E. and Caroline Ogden Jones,both of whom are deceased. He was a nephewof Wm. B. Ogden, the first mayor of Chicago.Mr. Jones was a man of considerable wealthand has been, for several years traveling extensively in the hope of warding off consumption, the disease to which he finally succumbed.At one time he was prominent among Chicago clubs. He was twice married ; his second wife being a daughter of General Earl,of Washington, D. C.The deceased was fifty-one years of age andleaves a widow and one child.198 UNIVERSITY RECORDTHEWho may not thunder on the drumsTo cheer the warring hosts to fight,May still, when rest from conflict comes,Amuse the camp at night.Above his power the trumpet-tonesAnd shrill inspiring bugles are,But by the fire he shakes the bonesAnd tinkles a guitar.I dare not venture to advise,Caution or counsel right or wrong ;My humble music only triesTo help the night along.I sing of days we used to knowWhen giants dwelt withm the landWhere now the pigmies come and goIn troops on every hand.Our foreheads dashed against the starsAs through the years we rode our course ;Our gods, Apollo, Venus, Mars ;Our steed, the trusty "horse."The world beheld us, knew our worth,Took counsel as to what was meet ;Then lo, the treasures of the earthIt brought unto our feet.It brought the beauties of the EastWhose dances countless charms reveal ,It brought us Old Vienna's feast ;It brought the Ferris Wheel.At peace withm our college yardWe heard the Midway angels sing,And, in the language of the bard,"We didn't do a thing."But fled those wonders small and great,And hushed the Midway tom-toms soonAnd we were left to spin our fateBeside the still lagoon.Then followed years of toil and fret,Of ceaseless struggle for renown ;Hard years — they are not over yet —Whose burden weighed us down 'We learned to know the voice that sneersAt all our zeal for little things ;Laughs at our hopes, derides our tears,Our hard endeavormgs."Your life," it mocked, "is raw and crude,Your aims are childish at the best ;Yours the unrestful attitudeOf youth and of the West."We felt the truth behind the sneer,And winced and faltered oftentime ;The heights we fancied first so nearGrew such an endless climb ! BEAUTY*Because we might not at a strideDevour the course, we spurned the goal ;A part we had ; unsatisfiedWe clamored for the whole.No foe should bid our vigor yield —We swore it till the air was blue,And on the rostrum and the fieldWe made our boasting true.We cast about for that and thisTo hide our granite, all uncouth ,No remedy we dared to missTo cure our fatal youth.We tore the thorny boughs away,The fairy hedge we strove to climb,Wherein the wondrous Princess layOf story and of rhyme.But still our College Spirit slept,The fairy charm still bound her fastUntil the Prince the covenant keptTo waken her at last 'O restless years, not over yet,How slowly mounts achievement higher;How weak the pace your progress setContrasted with desire 'We thought to wave our magic wandsAnd see the glittering fabric spun ;The warp is rough against our hands,And yet so little done fWe thunder at the enchanted gatesUntil our bleeding fingers wince ;Still sleeps the Princess, and awaitsThe coming of the Prince 'What then ? Shall we let go the threadAnd tangle even what is weaved ?Conclude the Sleeping Beauty deadAnd all the world deceived ?Or shall we rather struggle on,Burnish our hopes and hush our fearsUntil the happy day shall dawnThat ends the Hundred Years ?Then shall our College Life awake ;The palace shall be gay with stir,And we shall enter in, and makeOur dwelling there with her.So here's a toast to end my rhyme :Away with all our craven fears,And pledge with me the happy timeThat ends the Hundred Years !James Weber Linn, '97.1 Read at the Alumni Dinner by James Weber Linn, '97, June 18, 1900.UNIVERSITY RECORD 199THE NEBRASKA UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO CLUB.Graduates and former students of the University of Chicago residing in Nebraska met at thehome of Professor and Mrs. W. G. LangworthyTaylor, Wednesday evening, June 7, 1900, to meetDean Judson of the University of Chicago and toorganize a University of Chicago Club.At the close of the reception Dean Judsonspoke of the present work and future plans of theUniversity and pointed out the advantages to bederived from an organization of the students andfriends of the University.A temporary organization was then effectedwith Dr. C. H. Gordon as chairman and MissMary R. Campbell as secretary.The report of the committee on constitutionand by-laws was read by Dr. C. A. Elwood. Thereport was accepted and on motion of Dr. Davenport the constitution and by-laws were adoptedas read.A committee on nominations, consisting of Dr.H. J. Davenport, Mrs. W. G. L. Taylor, and Rev.C. B. Allen, was appointed.While the nominating committee was deliberating, the question of time of meeting was discussed. The consensus of opinion was that theannual meeting' and banquet should be held thelatter part of February.Dr. Davenport reported for the nominatingcommittee as follows: President, Dr. D. R.Major; Vice President, Dr. Sutherland; Secretary, Dr. C. H. Gordon ; Treasurer, Miss Wilson ;Member of Executive Committee, Rev. A. W.Clark.Dr. Major asked the committee to submit someother name for the office of President, as it wouldnot be possible for him to act. On motion thename of Professor Taylor was submitted and theSecretary was instructed to cast the ballot for theofficers recommended.The club greatly appreciated the presence andtalk of Dean Judson. Owing to the conflict inappointments for Commencement week, the planfor having a banquet had to be abandoned andinstead the reception was given earlier in theevening, so that Dr. Judson could attend thebanquet of the Alumni of the University of Nebraska. With Professor Taylor as President, and withthe strong support of the local alumni, the clubpromises to be a strong center for University ofChicago life and influence.Mary R. Campbell,Secretary pro tern.CONSTITUTION OF THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO. ALUMNI ASSOCIATION.ADOPTED JUNE 18, 1900.ARTICLE I.NAME.Section i. The name of this organization shall be theAlumni Association of the University of Chicago.aPURPOSE.Sec 2. Its object shall be to advance the interests, influence, and efficiency of the University of Chicago, to promoteacquaintance among the graduates, and to strengthen theconnection between the Alumni and their Alma Mater.ARTICLE II.OFFICERS.Section i. The officers of this Association shall be aPresident, a First, Second and Third Vice President, a General Secretary; who shall be elected by ballot at the regularannual business meeting and shall hold office for one yearor until their successors are elected.executive committee.Sec. 2. There shall be elected an Executive Committee,consisting of twelve members including the President, Secretary and First Vice President. The other nine membersshall be divided, by lot, into three classes ; the first shallhold office for one year ; the second three for two years ; thelast three for three years. The term of office thereafter shallbe three years.DUTIES OF OFFICERS.Sec. 3. The President shall be Chairman of the Executive Committee ; shall preside at all the meetings of the Association ; and shall perform the other duties usual to hisposition.Sec. 4. In the absence of the President, the First VicePresident shall preside. In the absence of the First VicePresident the Second Vice President shall preside.Sec. 5. The General Secretary shall keep all the recordsof the Association ; shall collect and take charge of all therevenues ; shall give notice of all meetings ; shall be Secretary for each committee ; shall pay out money only whenauthorized by the Executive Committee ; shall keep the rollof the members ; shall carry on the correspondence of theAssociation ; shall exhibit the books at any time to anymember of the Executive Committee ; shall make an annual200 UNIVERSITY BEGOBDreport at the regular business meeting of the Associationand shall fulfill all other duties assigned to him by theExecutive Committee.Sec. 6. The Executive Committee shall make arrangements for the annual meeting of the Alumni ; shall fill allvacancies occurring by death, resignation, or otherwise, thoseso appointed to hold office only until the next annual election; shall fix the salary of the General Secretary; shallhave supervision of all property and funds of the Association,and shall make all laws and regulations not provided for inthis constitution. No money shall be paid out without itsconsent, one third of the members of the committee shallconstitute a quorum.COMMITTEES.Sec 7. There shall be three committees known as the"Committee on University;" the "Committee on AlumniClubs;" and the "Committee on Athletics." The threeVice Presidents, respectively, shall be chairmen of thesecommittees. Each chairman shall select two members. toserve with him. The committees are to make investigationsinto their respective fields, take charge of any work belonging to their respective fields and make recommendations tothe Executive Committee and the Association.ARTICLE III.MEETINGS.Section i. The annual meeting of the Association shallbe held on the day preceding the Spring Convocation unlessotherwise ordered by the Association or by the ExecutiveCommittee.Sec 2. The meetings of the Association, other than theannual meeting shall be held at such time and place and forsuch purposes as the Association or the Executive Committee shall from time to time determine ; but the Presidentshall call a special meeting at the written request of twenty-five members, in which case notice stating the object forwhich it is called, shall be sent to each member of theAssociation at least ten days previously.ARTICLE IV.MEMBERSHIP,Section i. Any person who has received a degree fromthe University of Chicago is an associate member of thisAssociation.Sec 2. Any associate member may become an activemember upon the payment of the dues for the current year.Only active members are eligible to office or have the rightto vote at the meetings of the Association. Twenty members shall constitute a quorum for business at any regular orduly called meeting of the Association.CLASSES.Sec 3. The membership may at any time be dividedinto classes, such as " The Collegiate Alumni ;" " The Grad uate Alumni." Each department may form a departmentalorganization but not in conflict with any provision of thisconstitution.CLUBS.Sec. 4. Provision shall be made by the Committee onAlumni Clubs, subject to the approval of the ExecutiveCommittee, for the organizations of clubs throughout the country. Such clubs when organized shall be considered a partof the Association.ARTICLE V.DUES.The annual dues for each active member shall be one dollar, payable on or before the first day of April of each year.The Secretary shall send notices of dues to the members byFebruary 15 of each year. If dues are not paid by March15, a second notice shall be sent. If not paid by April 1,the name of the delinquent member may be stricken fromthe list of active members.ARTICLE VI.NOMINATING COMMITTEE.At each annual business meeting a nominating committee of five shall be elected or appointed, of which the Secretary shall be one and chairman, which shall report to theExecutive Committee before April 1 the candidates for offices.for the enusing year. These names shall be sent to eachalumnus before May 1.congregation.Sec 2. The Nominating Committee shall nominate andreport to the Executive Committee before April 1, thirty persons from the list of Bachelors of Arts, Philosophy andScience who are eligible to membership in the Congregation,.and fifteen names from the list of Masters of Arts, Philosophy and Science, who are eligible to membership in the Congregation. The lists shall be sent to their respective classesbefore May 1 to be voted upon. The ten bachelors and thefive masters receiving the largest number of votes shall bedeclared elected.auditing committee.Sec 3. The President shall appoint an auditing committee of two, who shall audit the accounts of the Secretary forthe year ending April 1, and shall report to the ExecutiveCommittee before May 30 of that year.ARTICLE VII.AMENDMENTS.Section i. This constitution may be amended at anyregular meeting of this Association by a three fourths voteof all the members present and voting, provided that noticeof such amendment shall have been given at the last preceding meeting of the Association or shall have been sent to.each member three months before the regular business meeting.UNIVERSITY RECORD 201ALUMNI DIRECTORY.Note. — The form for the descriptive matter in the list of alumni is as follows : Name, degree and date of same, occupation, home address.Abbott, Edith May, A.B. 'oo. 283 Oakley boul., ChicagoAbbott, Frances Holmes, A.M. '00. 431 William st., East Orange, N. J.Abbott, Walter Hazelton, B.S. '96. Electrician. 411 E. 57th st., Chicago.Abells, Harry Belmont, S.B. '98. Teacher Morgan Park acad. MorganPark, 111.Abernethy, Alonzo, B.A., '66. Prin. Cedar Valley sem., Osage, la.Adams, Annie Lewis, B.A. '95. Teacher Fargo col., Fargo, N. D.Adams, Cyrus Cornelius, A.B. '76. Editor. 512 Madison St., Brooklyn,N.Y.Adams, George Matthew, D.B. '7°. Clergyman. Harvey, 111.Adams, Spencer Gavitt, D.B. '77. Clergyman. Sacramento, Cal.Adams, Walter Sydney, A.M. 'oo. Deny, N, H.Adams, William Harvey, A.B. '79. 635 N. Park av., Chicago.Adams, Victoria Anna, A.B. '95. Teacher h. s. 244 E. 60th st., Chicago.Addams, Sarah Weber, Ph.B. 'oo. Cedarville, 111.Adkinson, Henry# Magee, A.B. '97, M.A. '97. Teacher. 5540 Went-worth av., Chicago.Agerter, Harriet Coe, A.B. '97. Teacher. 353, 53d St., Chicago.Alden, William Clinton, A.M. '98. Field Asst. U. S. Geol. Survey. 112Marcy pi., Indianapolis, Ind.Aldrich, Byron L,, A.B. '73. Clergyman. Centralia, Wash.Allen, Cyrus Benjamin, A.B. '78, D.B. '83. Clergyman. 216 S. 31st av.,Omaha, Neb.Allen, Philip Schuyler, Ph;D. '97 Instructor u. of Chicago. 619 W. 60thst., Chicago.Allen, Josephine Turner, A.B. '99. 4805 Madison av., Chicago.Allen, William Harvey, A.B. '97. Instructor u. of. Pennsylvania. Philadelphia, Pa.Allison, Matthew Gay, D.B. , '94. Clergyman. Bloomington, Ind.Almstedt, Hermann Benjamin, Ph.D. 'oo. Instructor u. of Chicago.Chicago.Alschuler, Leon, Ph.B. '96. Lawyer. 2112 Michigan av., Chicago.Alsip, William Henry, A.B. '80. Brick manufacturer. 5140 Madisonav., Chicago.Ames, Edward Scribner, Ph.D., '95. Prof. Butler col. 28 Downey av.,Irvington, Ind.Anderson, August G., '86. Lawyer. 164 La Salle St., Chicago.Anderson, Elbridge R., S.B. '85. Lawyer. 244 Washington St., Chicago.Anderson, Elisha, A.B. '79, D.B. '82. Clergyman. 3630 Dodier st., St.Louis, Mo.Anderson, Eva Ellen, Ph.B. '97. 5854 Rosalie ct., Chicago.Anderson, Frank Leonard, D.B. '00. Clergyman. Maywood, 111.Anderson, Frederick L., A.B., '82. Clergyman. 12 Harper st.,Rochester, N. Y.Anderson, Kate Shumway, S.B. '96 (Mrs. Dexter Wadsworth). Quincy,Mass.Anderson, Hannah Matilda, A.B. '97. Artist. 5446 Cornell av., Chicago.Anderson, Harold Ernest, A.B., '98. Clergyman. Trinidad, Colo.Anderson, John Irvine, B.A. '80. Commercial traveler, 265 Canal St.,New York.Anderson, Norman Kendall, A.B. '99. Law student. Morgan Park, 111.Anderson, Swen Benjamin, Ph.B. '98. 806 N. Oakley av., Chicago.Anderson, William France, A.B. '99. Law student. 330 Oakwood boul.,Chicago. 'Andrews, Ernest John, S.B. '99. Teacher. Rockford, 111.Andrews, Katherine, Ph.B. '99. Teacher. Massena, N. Y.Apps, Elizabeth, Ph.B. '98. Teacher. 369 Elm av., Westmount, Montreal, Canada. «Arbogast, William Henderson, A.B. '97. Teacher. Normal, 111.Archibald, William Laird, M.A. '94. Clergyman. Milton, Queen's Co.,Nova Scotia, Canada.Arnett, Trevor, A.B. '98. Accountant comptroller's office. U. of Chicago. Chicago.Arnold, Joseph Kahn, Ph.D. '99. Rabbi. 898 Warren av., Chicago. Arnold, Oswald James, S.B. '97. Private secretary. Palos Park, 111.Asada, Eiji, Ph.D. '93. Teacher (Aoyama Gakuin Aoyama). Tokyo,Japan.Atkinson, David, Clarence, Ph.M. '94. Lawyer. Hammond. Ind.Atwood, Harry Fuller, Ph.B. '98. Lawyer. Port Angeles, Wash.Atwood, Wallace Walter, S.B. '97, Diiector Chicago inst. Chicago.Austriun, Delia, Ph.B. '98. 3129 Michigan av., Chicago.Axtell, Harold Lucius, A.B. '98, A.M. '00 Teacher Des Moines col.Des Moines, la.Avery, Elizabeth Florence, Ph.B. '99. Teacher. Elgin, 111.Aylsworth, Nicholas John, A.B., A.M. '63. Clergyman. 7 Myrtle av.,Auburn, N.Y.Bachelle, Cecil V., S.B. '97, S.M. '98. Physician. 575 W. Adams St.,Chicago.Bachman, Frank Puterbaugh, A.B. 'g8. Fellow Columbia u. VallevCity, N. D.Backus, Helen Whitney, Ph.B. '99. Teacher h. s. Lincoln, Neb.Badger, Samuel Douglass, D.B, '77. Clergyman. Salem, 111.Bailey, Gilbert, E., A.B. '74. Mining engineer. Lewiston, Cal.Bain, Harry Foster, Ph.D. '97. Mining engineer. Idaho Springs,Colo.Baird, Mary Brooks, A.B. '96. Teacher. Eureka, Kan.Baird, Perry E., A.B. '77. Lawyer. Chadron, Neb.Baird, Philip Castor, Ph.D. '98. College Springs, la.Baker, Edward Max, A.B. '98. Student u. of Chicago. 3612 Grand boul.,Chicago.Baker, Georgia Cary, Ph.B. '96 (Mrs. C. T. Wyckoff). Peoria, 111.Baker, Margaret, S.B. '98. 338, 57th st., Chicago.Balch, Ernest Alanson. Ph.D. '98. Teacher. 710 E. 58th st., Chicago.Baldwin, Helen Adelaide, A.B. '98. Granville, O.Baldwin, James Fosdick, Ph.D. '97. Instructor Vassar col. Poughkeep-sie, N. Y.Ball, Florence Fielding, Ph.B. '98. Teacher. 6147 Woodlawn av.,Chicago.Ballou, Susan Helen, Ph.B. '97. Associate u. of Chicago. 5831 Monroeav., Chicago..Bancroft, Nellie Elizabeth, A.M. '98. Teacher. Detroit, Mich.Banks, Lilian Carroll, Ph.B. '00. 4823 Langley av., Chicago.Barber, Charles Warren, D.B. '82. Clergyman. Grand Rapids, Mich.Barber, Frank W., A.B. '82. Banker. Franklin, Neb.Bare, John, B.A., '76. Clergyman. Red Bluff, Cal.Barker, Burt Brown, A.B. '98. Student Harvard law s. 8 Story st.,Cambridge, Mass.Barker, Cyrus A., A.B. '70. Pres. Barker Cedar Co. 3946 Lake av.,Chicago.Barnard, Harrison Bernerd, A.B. '95. Contractor. 510 W. 62d st,,Chicago.Barnes, Clifford Webster, A.M. '93. Teacher. Lake Forest, 111.Barries, Frederick Robertson, A.B. '98. Teacher. Wahpeton, N. D.Barnes, Samuel Denham, S.B. '94. Physician. 3617 Prairie av., Chicago.Barnet, Bertha, A.B. '00. Student u. of Chicago. 6130 Lexington av.,Chicago.Barr, Alfred E., A.B., '80. Lawyer. 189 La Salle st., Chicago.Barr, John, B.D. '78. Clergyman. 424 Center St., Pomona, Cal.Barrett, Charles Raymond, Ph.B. '97. Editor. 308 Dearborn St., Chicago.Barrows, Sarah Field, Ph.B. 'co. Columbus, Miss.Barrows, David Prescott, Ph.D. '97. Prof. San Diego, Cal.Barta, Alois, A.M. '97, Ph.D. '00. Teacher. 1004 Highst., Racine, Wis.Bartlett, Edward Pay son, B.D. '76. Clergyman. 904 E. Grand av., DesMoines, la.Barton, Alvin Lester, A.B. '00. 4920 Greenwood av., Chicago.Bass, Luther G., A.B. '77. Physician. 239 W. 112th pi., Chicago.202 UNIVERSITY RECORDBass, Oscar, A.B. '8o. Lawyer. 214 Clark st., Chicago.Bassett, Wilbur Wheeler, Ph.B. '97. Lawyer. 614 Reaper block, Chicago.Bates, Frances Barton, Ph.B. '00. Teacher. 1 Adams av., Evansville,Ind.Bateson, Frederick William, D.B. '98. Clergyman. Cascade, la.Batt, Max, Ph.B. '97. 3745 Vincennes av., Chicago.Bawden, Henry Heath, Ph.D. 'oo. Iowa City, la.Baylor, Adelaide Steele, Ph.B. '97. Prin. h. s. Wabash, Ind.Beach, Clinton Stillwell, Ph.B. '97. With E. A. Beach & Co. 57 Bryantav., Chicago.Beach, Etta Fulcomer, Ph.B. '97.Beardsley, Alice, Ph.B. '00. Teacher. 5830 Washington av., Chicago.Beardslee, John Walter, A.M. 'oc. Holland, Mich.Beatty, Maria, A.B. '95. Teacher. 546 E. 44th St., Chicago.Bechtel, Edward Ambrose, Ph.D. '00. Chicago.Becker, Henrietta Katherine, A.B. '00. Foster hall, u. of Chicago.Beckmann, Frederick Ernest, A.B. '97. Instructor u. of Minnesota,Minneapolis, Minn.Beebe, Edward H., A.B. '65.Beers, Arthur Edward, Ph.B. '97. Real estate. 3403 S. Paulina St.,Chicago.Beers, Ethel Ella, A.B. '97. Teacher. 3403 S. Paulina st., Chicago.Beers, George Amos, A.B. '00. Teacher. 3403 S. Paulina st., Chicago.Beers, Grace Ellen, Ph.B. '00. 3403 S. Paulina st., Chicago.Behan, Warren Palmer, A.B. '94, B.D. '97, Ph.D. '99. Clergyman.128 Buckeye St., Grand Rapids, Mich.Bell, Glenrose, Ph.B. '97. Designer. 5810 Washington av., Chicago.Benedict, Laura Estelle Watson, A.B. '00. Teacher. Lewis inst., Chicago.Bennett, Albert Arnold, D.B. '75. Missionary. Yokohama, Japan.Bennett, Esther, Ph.B. '97. 487 Jackson boul., Chicago.Bennett, Isabella Grace, A.B. '97. 802 E. 47th st., Chicago.Bernhard, Adolph, Ph.D. '94. Instructor u. of Chicago. Chicago.Berry, George Ricker, Ph.D. '95. Prof. Colgate u. Hamilton, N. Y.Bestor, Orson Porter, D.B. '77. Clergyman. 331 Clement av., Milwaukee, Wis.Betts, Otie Eleanor, B.A. '00. Teacher. 713 S. nth st., St. JosephMo.Bevans, Edna, Ph.B. '99. 353 W. 60th pi., Chicago.Bevans, Laura Helen, Ph.B. '98. Teacher. 353 W. 60th pi., Chicago.Beverley, Clarence A., A.B. '72. Evangelist. Urbana, 111.Biddle, Henry Chalmers, Ph.D. '00. Prof. Monmouth col. Monmouth,111.Bird, Grace Electa, Ph.B. '97. Teacher h. s. 255 Villa St., Elgin, 111.Bishop, Bertha Imogene, Ph.B. '98, A,M. '99. 419 Henry St., Alton, 111.Bishop. William Reed, Ph.B. '97. Student in Germany. Granby Centre,Black, Willis Lyman, S.B. '78. Publisher. Elgin, 111.Blackburn, Alexander, D.B. '73. Clergyman. Portland, Ore.Blackmarr, Frank Hamlin, S.B. '94. Physician. Oakland Music hall,Chicago.Blaine, Harriet Gertrude, M.A. '96. Teacher. Mt. Carroll, 111.Blake, Bryon Bradbury, A.B. '68. Manufacturer. Racine, Wis.Blanchard, Greta Irvin, A.B. '00. 235 S. Grove av., Oak Park, 111.Blanchard, William Lewis, D.B. '93. Clergyman. Barrington, 111.Bliss, Charles King, A.B. '97. Teacher. Hematite, Mo.Bliss, Gilbert Ames, S.B. '97, A.M. '98, Ph.D. 'oo. Instructor u. ofMinnesota. Minneapolis, Minn.Bloch, Leon, A.B. '00. Student Rush Medical. 601 W. Taylor st.,Chicago. xBo, Saum Song, A.B. '84. Chinese government service. China.Bolt, Albert William, A.B. '97. Supt. of s. Galesburg, Mich.Boganau, A.B. '75. Physician. Bassein, Burmah.Bond, William Scott, Ph.B. '97. Real estate. 4025 Drexel boul. Chicago.Boomer, Jennie Kathryn, Ph.B. '95. Teacher. 6021 Monroe av., Chicago.Boomer, Alice, Ph.B. '97. Teacher. Grand Island, Neb. Booth, Hervey W., A.B. '72. Lawyer. 1309, 100 Washington St., Chicago.-Borden, Edwin Howard, D.B. '97. Teacher Western col. Macon, MoBorough, Mary Gertrude, Ph.B. '00. 3016 Fake St., Chicago.Boruff, Ray Rickoff, Ph.B. '99. 7624 Wright St., Chicago.Bosworth, Alfred, A.B., '66. Banker. Elgin, 111.Bosworth, W. Eugene, A.B. '69. Merchant. Elgin, 111.Bosworth, Henry I., A.B. '74. Banker. Elgin, 111.Bowen, Mary, Ph.D. '97. Northwestern u. Evanston, 111.Boyd, Carl Evans, Ph.D. '97. Instructor. Manhattan, Kan.Boyd, Florence Helen, Ph.B. '00. 726 Lawrence St., Appleton, \» «.Braam, Jacob William, S.B. '97. Student. 177 Illinois st., Chicago.Bradwell, James Dowse, Ph.M. '00. Fellow u. of Chicago. 5800 Jackson av., Chicago.Brace, Edith M., S.M. '96. Teacher. Lincoln, Neb.B raker, George, D. B. '96. Clergyman. Stamford, Conn.Brandt, Berkeley, A.B. '95. Architect. 28 Rue d'Assas, Paris, France.Brauns, Lydia, Ph.B. '00. Teacher. Green Bay, Wis.Bray, William L., Ph.D. '98. Instructor u. of Texas. Austin, Tex.Brebos, Carl George, D.B. '00. Clergyman. 5490 Ellis av., Chicago.Breckenridge, Sophonisba P., Ph.M. '97. Dean's asst. Green hallvu. ofChicago. Chicago.Breckenridge, William Rochester, A.B. '70. Grain shipper. Kankakee,111.Breed, Charles Frances, S.B. '98. Mining. Golden, Colo.Breeden, Waldo, Ph.B. '97. Stenographer. 214 Clinton st,, Jamestown,N.Y.Brehl, Helen Mercedes, Ph.B. '99. Teacher. 5490 Ridgewood ct., Chicago.Breyfogle, Caroline May, A.B. '96. Fellow u. of Chicago. Green hall,Chicago.Beyl, John Lewis, D.B. '00. Clergyman. Valparaiso, Ind.Brinstad, Charles William, D.B. '93. Clergyman. 2219 Spruce St.,Omaha, Neb.Bristol, Charles Lawrence, Ph.D. '97. Prof. New York u. UniversityHeights, N. Y.Broadus, Edmund Kemper, A.M. 'oo. Prof. John B. Stetson u. Deland,Fla.Brockway, Guy, A.B. '86, Lawyer. 540 Marquette building, Chicago.Brode, Howard Stedham, S.B. '96, Ph.D. '96. Prof. Whitman col.Walla Walla, Wash.Broene, Albert E., B.A. '98. Lawyer. 210 E. Walnut st., Kalamazoo,Mich.Brooks, Edward Hammond, B.D. '83. 215 S. Workman st„ Los Angeles,Cal.Brotherton, Roberta Irvin, B.S. '99. 4319 Ellis av., Chicago.Broughton, William Simmons, Ph.B., '00. Clerk Treasury Dept. 1629Q st., N. W., Washington, D. C.Brown, Agnes May, B.A. '97. Teacher. Gambier, O.Brown Caroline Louise, B.A. '97. Teacher. Elgin, 111.Brown, Charles S.,A.B. '82. Merchant. Oakes, N. D.Brown, Edwin Putnam, B.A. '96. Teacher. Beaver Dam, Wis.Brown, Frederick" Augustus, A.B. '99/ Student. 4729 Langley av., Chicago.Brown, James Scott, B.A. '97. Lawyer. Title and Trust building,Chicago.Brown, George Lincoln, Ph.D. '00 Prof. South Dakota Agriculturalcol. Brookings, S. D.Brownson, Truman Gaylord, B.D. '83. Clergyman. Oakland, Cal.Bruner, Elizabeth Cooley, A.B. '83 (Mrs. J. D. Bruner). Charlotte-ville, Va.Buchanan, Elizabeth Earnest, A.B. '00. 6110 Madison av., Chicago.Buckley, Edmond, Ph.B. '94. Docent in u. of Chicago. 301 56th St.,Chicago.Buell, Rowena, B.A. '98. Social settlement work. 248 E. 34th st., New-York.Bullis, Edith Maud, A.B. '00. 6618 Parnell av., Chicago.Bullock, Ira Rudolphus, A.B. '00. Harvey, 111.Burchard, Herbert Morris, Ph.D. '00. Instructor Syracuse u. Syracuse,N.Y.Burdick, Willard DeLure, B.D. '93. Clergyman. Milton, Wis.UNIVERSITY RECORD 203Burgess, Theodore Chalon, Ph.D. '98. Teacher Bradley inst. Peoria, 111.Burks, Jesse Dismukes, Ph.B. '94. Teacher Normal s. San Diego, Cal.Burling, Fannie Crawfoid, Ph.B. '99. Eldora, la.Burlingame, George Elston, B.D. '99. Missionary. Clinton, Ky.Burnap, William Leonard, B.A. '86. Prof. Lake Forest u. Lake Forest, 111.Burns, Allen Tibbals, B.A. 97. Student u. of Chicago. Chicago, 111.Burroughs, C. L., A.B. '99. Teacher. 5722 Kimbark av., Chicago.Bunch, James Judson, B.D. '98. 7141 Champlain st., Chicago.Bush, Loren T., B.D. '71. Clergyman. Morrison, 111.Bush, Renber G., A.B. '75. Sugar refiner. 1305 Josephine St., New Orleans, La.Bushnell, Charles Joseph, Ph.B. '98. Teacher. 544, 59th st., Chicago.Butler, Digby Bell, A.B. '68. Lumberman. Frankfort, Mich.Butler, Demia, Ph.B. '98 (Mrs. Warren C. Gorrell). 6112 Kimbark av.,Chicago.Butler, Emma Lauretta, A.B. 'oo. Teacher h. s. Superior, Wis.Butler, Sarah Elizabeth, B.S. '98 (Mrs. J. E. Raycroft). 6109 Greenwoodav., Chicago.Butterworth, Horace, Ph.B. '98. Associate in physical culture, u. ofChicago. Chicago.Buzzell, Edgar A., B.A. '86. Lawyer. 91 Hartford Building, Chicago.Buzzell, Isetta Gibson, B.A. '86 ( Mrs. Edgar A. Buzzell) . 6136 Ellisav., Chicago.Byram, Perry M., A.B. '99. Machinist. 618 Fort Wayne av., Indianapolis, Ind.Byrus, Elinor, Ph.B. '00. 608 Ferry St., Lafayette, Ind.Byrne, Lee, M.A. '99. Teacher Bradley inst. Peoria, 111.Cabeen, James Wallace, B.D. '93. Clergyman. Zion ch., Chicago.Caldwell, Otis William, Ph.D., '98. Teacher Illinois State nor. Charleston, 111.Calhoun, Fred Harvey Hall, B.S. '98. Fellow Walker Museum, u. ofChicago, Chicago, 111,Calkins, Charles Rollin, B.A. '71. Real estate. 4635 Michigan av.,Chicago.Callard, George Henry, A.B. '00. 24 Snell hall, u. of Chicago.Calvin, Margaret Jeanette, Ph.B. '00. 106 Shenango St., Greenville, Pa.Campbell, George, B.D. '82. Missionary. Swatow, China.Campbell, George Alexander, B.D. '98. Editor. Pontiac Building,Chicago.Campbell, John Tyler, B.S. '97. Lawyer. Kansas City, Mo.Campbell, Joseph White, Ph.B. '98. Lawyer. Cambridge, O.Candee, Frances, Ph.B. '97. 135 Linden av., Minneapolis, Minn.Capen, Charlotte Briggs, Ph.B., '98. Bloomington, 111.Capps, Edith, B.A. '97. Jacksonville, 111.Capps, Rhoda Jeannette, A.B. '00. 504 Church st„ Jacksonville, 111.Capps, Sarah Ellen, Ph.B., '98. Jacksonville, 111.Caraway, Henry Reat, Ph.B. '95. Editor. Tuscola, 111. *Carey, Charles Edward, S.B. '00. Business. Red Oak, la.Carlson, Walter Gustavus, B.D. '96. Clergyman. Lake Benton, Minn.Carpenter, Frederic Ives, Ph.D. '95. Instructor u. of Chicago. Chicago, 111.Carpenter Paul Fant, Ph,B. '95. 306 Frost Building, Los Angeles, Cal.Carr, Homer Joseph, B.S. '97. Journalist. 138 Jackson st., Chicago.Carr, Norman, B.D., '75. Secretary Franklin col. Franklin, Ind.Carroll, Percy Peyton, Ph.B. '95. Publisher. Evansville, Ind.Carruthers, Christopher, B.A. '67. Baptist missionary.Carson, Lucy Hamilton, Ph.B. '98. Fellow u. of Illinois. 502 Goodwinav., Urbana, 111.Cary, Antoinette, B.S. '93 (Mrs. Antoinette C. Shipley). 1100 Washington boul., Chicago.Cary, Charles Preston, B.S. '98. Teacher nor. s. 1703 Cedar st.,- Milwaukee, Wis.Cafee, Carl Delos, B.D. '98, Ph.D. '99. Clergyman. South Bend, Ind.Case, Ermine Cowles, Ph.D. '96. Teacher. Milwaukee, Wis.Casteel, Mary Elizabeth, Ph.B. '99. Geneseo, 111.Castle, Mary, Ph. B. '95. Teacher. Granville, O.Castro, Matilde, A. B. 'oo. ' 16 South Wood St., Chicago.Cathcart, Florence Brownell (Mrs.), Ph.B. 'op. 814 Newington av.,Baltimore, Md. Chase, Harry Thurston, Jr., B.A. '96. Lawyer. 5749 Rosalie ct., Chicago.Chadbourn, Frank Wesley, B.A. '94. Columbus, Wis.Chaille, Uriah M., B.A. '73. Editor. Indianapolis, Ind.Chalmers, William Everett, B.D. '97. Clergyman. 521, 55th st., Brooklyn, N. Y.Chamberlain, Charles Joseph, Ph.D. '97. Instructor u. of Chicago. 6128Lexington av., Chicago.Chamberlin, Elisabeth, Ph.B. '99. 2311 Indiana av., Chicago.Chandler, Edward Kingsford, B.D. '71. Teacher Bishop col.. Marshall,Tex.Chandler, Grace Eleanor, B.A. '99. Mineral Point, Wis.Chandler, John, B.D., '99. Clergyman. U. of Chicago, Chicago, 111.Chandler, Vashti, A.B.. 'oo. 5737 Monroe av., Chicago.Chapman, Nathan E„ B.A. '85. Clergyman. Shell Rock, la.Chapin, Lilian, B.S. '97. Teacher. 5418 Kimbark av., Chicago.Chapin, Louella,M.S. '96. Teacher. , 5418 Kimbark av., Chicago.Chaplin, Trescott Fox, M.A. '97. Lawyer. Wainwright Building, St.Louis, Mo.Chase, Charles Warren, Ph.B. '99. Law student Harvard u. 1727 Cambridge st., Cambridge, Mass.Chase, Helen Van Ethen, Ph.B. '00. Teacher. 3251 Wabash av., Chicago.Cheney, David Bachelder, B.D. '83, B.A. '8o. Racine, Wis.Cheney, James Loring, B.D. '81. Clergyman. 17 Irvington st., Cleveland, O.Chesbrough, Ellis S., Jr., B.A. '71. Lawyer. 17 Bellevue pi., Chicago,Chester, Washington, B.D. '71.Choate, Margaret Maria, A.B. '00. Teacher. 223 Winthrop av,, Sheridan Park, Chicago.Chollar, Wilbur Thomas, B.S. '96. With Swift & Co. Boston, Mass.Christian Charles, B.A. '8i. Contractor. 154 N. Morgan st. Chicago.Church, Harry Victor, Ph.B. '94. Prin. h. s. Berwin, 111.Church, Jesse F., A.B. '79. Springfield, Mo.Chute, Arthur Crawley, B.D., '83. Clergyman. Halifax, N. S.Chute, Elbert, B.D. '82. Missionary in India.Cipriani, Charlotte Jane, Ph.B. '97. Student. 5443 Ingleside av., Chicago.Cipriani, Lisi Cecilia, Ph.B. '96, Ph.M. '99, Ph.D. '97. Docent u. ofChicago.Clapp, Cornelia Maria, Ph.D. '96. Teacher Mt. Holyoke col. SouthHadley, Mass.Clark, Anderson William, B.D. '80. Clergyman. Board of TradeBuilding, Omaha, Neb.Clark, Ainsworth Whitney, B.A. '99. With M. W. Harris & Co., Bankers. 5821 Madison av., Chicago.Clark, Emma Kirkland, A.M. '00. Teacher. P. O. Box 193, Peekskill,N. Y.Clark, Faith Benita, Ph.B, '95, Ph.M. '97. Teacher. 578 E. 60th st.,Chicago.Clark, Frank Humboldt, B.A. and M.A. '82. Lawyer. 3821 Ellis av.,Chicago.Clark, Hanna Belle, Ph.D. '97. Instructor u. of W. Virginia. Morgan-town, W. Va.Clark, Solomon Henry, Ph.B., '97. Asst. Prof. u. of Chicago. Chicago,111.Clark, Henry Love, Ph.B. '96. Lawyer. 1510, 100 Washington at., Chicago.Clark, William Arthur, Ph.D. '00. Prest. Nebraska State nor. s.Peru, Neb.Clark, Zelma Estelle, A.B. '97. Teacher. 5821 Madison av., Chicago.Clarke, Henry Tefft, Ph.B. '96. Lawyer. 2509 Cass St., Omaha, Neb.Clarke, Maurice Gordon, Ph.B. '99. Teacher u. of Texas. 2614 Ri°Grande St., Austin, Tex.Clarkson, John Joseph, Ph.B. '99. Bank clerk. 4859 Michigan av.,Chicago.Claypole, Agnes Mary, Ph..D '96. Instructor Cornell u. Ithaca, N. Y.Cleaves, Irene Ingalls, A.B. '98. Teacher. 150, 68th st., Chicago.Clendenning, Harmon T., B.A. '73. Clergyman. 4356 Union av., Chicago.Clinton, Solomon Trumbull, B.D. '83. Clergyman. Monroe, la.Clough, Clarence Edward, B.D. '98. Clergyman. Bloomington, Ind.204 UNIVERSITY RECORDCoffin, Fulton Johnson, Ph.D. '98. Teacher Bible nor. s. Springfield,Mass.Clement, Earnest W., B.A. '80. Missionary. Tokyo, Japan.Cohn, Aaron. Ph.B. 'oo. 3651 Indiana av., Chicago.Cole, Louis Samuel, B.A. '72. Physician. 3641 Ellis av., Chicago.Cole, William Wallace, B.A. and M.A. '77. Physician. Berthoud,Colo.Coleman, Christopher Bush, B.D. '98. Clergyman. Springfield, 111.Colestock, Henry Thomas, B.D. '99. Clergyman. Madison, Wis.Colgrove, Chauncey Peter, M.A. '96. Teacher Iowa State nor. CedarFalls, la.Colman, Helen Rowe, B.A. '98. Kalamazoo, Mich.Colver, Susan E., B.A. '82. Prin. Horace Mann s. 3953 Michigan ay.Chicago.Comstock, Fred S., B.A. '79. Lawyer. 72, 140 Dearborn st., Chicago.Comstock, Louise Bates, B.S. '96 (Mrs. L. C. Neff).' 6018 Stony Islandav., Chicago.Congdon, George Edward, B.A. '99. Teacher. Waterman, 111.Conley, John Wesley, B.D. '81. Clergyman. Oak Park, 111.Cook, Agnes Stafford, B.A. '96. Teacher. DeKalb, 111.Cooke, Elizabeth, Ph.D. '96. Teacher Lewis inst. Chicago.Cooke, Marjorie Benton, Ph.B. '99. 214, 51st boul., Chicago.Coolidge, Elizabeth Teasdale, B.A. '96. Teacher. 2917 Groveland av.,Chicago.Cooley, Edwin Gilbert, Ph.B., '95, Supt. s. Chicago.Coombs, J. Vincent, A.B. '82. Clergyman.Coon, David Burdette, B.D. '94. Clergyman. Little Genesee, N. Y.Coon, Daniel Israel, B.D. '97. Clergyman. Osage, la.Coon, James McCowen, B.A. '69, B.D. '74. Clergyman. 529 W. 61stst., Chicago.Coon, John T., B.A. '79. Journalist. Flint, Mich.Coon, Julia Hawley, B.A. *8o. Publisher. Flint, Mich.Coon, Reune Runyon, B.D. '77, B.A. '74. Clergyman. Stormsburg, Neb.Corbett, Henry Richmond, Ph.M. '00. Insurance. 108 La Salle st.,Chicago.Corkery, William M., B.A. '83. Clergyman. Brantford, Canada.Cornell, William Burgess,# B.A. '99. Medical student. Box 193. JohnsHopkins Med. s., Baltimore, Md.Corwin Lutie Rebecca, Ph.B. '00. Student u. of Chicago. Chicago.Cosgrove, Marion Vernon, B.A. '97 (Mrs. Thomas E.Wilson). Wil-mette, 111.Cowles, Henry Chandler, Ph.D. '98. Southington, Conn.Coulter, Grace Allen, A.B. '99. 341 E. 53d st., Chicago.Cox, Edward E., B.A. 81. Lawyer. Milwaukee, Wis.Coy, Harry Iris, B.A. '98. Student. 4039 Prairie av., Chicago.Coy, Lincoln Manchester, A.B. '86. Lawyer. 67 Clark st., Chicago.Crabb, Wilson Drane, Ph.D. '97. Teacher. Greenville, Ky.Crandall, Vinnie, Ph.B. '97 (Mrs. Hervey Bryan Hicks). 3844 Ellis av.,Chicago.Crawford, Jerry Tinder, B.D. '97. Clergyman. Parsons, Kan.Cressey, Edward Knowles, B.D. '78. Clergyman. Brooklyn Hills,Brooklyn, N. Y.Cressey, Frank Graves, B.D. '98. Clergyman. 1025 Stillwater av.,Dayton, O.Cressey, Minnie, B.A. '93 (Mrs. F. G. Cressey). 1025 Stillwater av.',Dayton, O.Cressey, George Angell, B.D. '72. Clergyman. Tomah, Wis.Crewdson, Charles Newman, Ph.B. '98. Business. 5733 Kimbark av.,Chicago.Cross, George, Ph.D. '00. Clergyman. Aylmer, Ontario, Canada.Crumley, John Jackson, B.A. '99. Lebanon, O.Cummings, John, Ph.D. '94. Journalism. 206-210 Broadway, New York.Curtis, John Birdsey, B.A. '95, M.A. '96. Teacher Blind Asylum.Jacksonville, 111.Cutler, Ward Augustus, Ph.B. '99. Bank clerk. 5742 Jackson av., Chicago.Dack, David, B.D. '84. Clergyman. Sincoe, Province of Ontario,Canada.Dains, Frank Burnett, Ph.B. '98. Teacher. 2421 Dearborn st., Chicago.Daniel, John Milton, A.B. '72, Teacher and clergyman. Tuscola, 111. Daniels, Mary Lucretia, B.A. '94. Teacher. 5412 Washington av., Chicago.Dana, Mary Ida, B.A. '96. Waltham, 111.Daniels, Lula Celeste, M.A. '95. Teacher. 58 Warren av., Chicago.Darling, Grace, Ph.B. '97. Teacher. 54th and Jefferson av., Chicago.Darrow, Helen Kelchner, B.A. '99. 6443 Jefferson av., Chicago.Davidson, Robert Bailey, B.D. '97. U. of Michigan. Ann Arbor, Mich.Davenport, Herbert Joseph, Ph.D. '98. Prin. h. s. Lincoln, Neb.Davidson, Florence, B.A. '99. Teacher. 1216 N. Monroe st., Peoria, 111.Davies, Howell Emlya, Ph.D. '00. Asst. u. of Chicago. 5720 Woodlawnav., Chicago.Davis, Alice, Ph.B. '99. Teacher. 693, 57th st., Chicago.Davis, Charles Braden, A.B. '00. Medical student. 2622 Prairie av.,Chicago.Davis, Katharine Bement, Ph.D. '00. 2 Avondale Park, Rochester, N. Y,Davis, George Berkeley, B.D. '79. Clergyman. Wallaceburg, Ontario.Davis, Henry Bethel, B.D. '71. Clergyman.Davis, Percy Boyd, Ph.B. '97. Lawyer. 3995 Drexel boul., Chicago.Dean, Charles R., B.A. '77. Private Secy. Dept. of State, Washington,D. C.De Bordes, Andre Beziat, Ph.D. '99. Instructor Kalamazoo col. Kalamazoo, Mich.DeCou, Edgar Ezekiel, M.S. '97. Teacher. Russellville, Ky.DeCew, Louiesa Carpenter, Ph.B. '98. 5550 Drexel av., Chicago.DeGraff, Lawrence, Ph.B. '98. Teacher. Des Moines, la.DeWolf, Delevan, A.B. '70. Clergyman. 12 Vanderpool St., Newark,N.J.DeWolf, Charles Harding, B.D. '76. Clergyman. National City, Cal.Depperman, Hermann H., B.D. '74. Clergyman. Bushnell, 111.Dexter, Lydia Aurelia, B.A. '84. Librarian. 2920 Calumet av., Chicago.Dibell, Charles Darrance, B.A. '96. Lawyer. 403 Cutting Building,Joliet, 111.Dickerson, Philip Jackson, B.A. '94. Clergyman. Corsicana, Tex.Dickerson, Spencer Cornelius, B.S. '97. Student Rush Medical col.Chicago.Dickerson, Mary, B.S. '97. Teacher State nor. Providence, R. I.Dickey, Laura Stanley, M.S. '99. 174 Montgomery st., Newberg, N. Y.Dickie, Henry M. A. '94. Clergyman. Windsor, Nova Scotia, Canada.Dickson, Leonard Eugene, Ph.D. '96. U. of Chicago. Chicago.Dignan, Frank Winans, B.A. '97. Student. 5853 Indiana av., Chicago.Dillon, Ernest Hamilton, Ph.D. '98. War Auditor's Office. Washington,D. C.Dingee, Gertrude Parker, B.A. '94. Teacher. 5520 Woodlawn av., Chicago.Dirks, Charles B., Ph.B. '99. Medical student. La Grange, 111.Dixon, Joseph Almond, B. S., '98. Teacher. 5809 Jackson av., Chicago.Dodge, Caleb Rand Bill, B.D. '83. Clergyman. Bellows Falls, Vt.Dodge, Earnest Green, M.A. '95. Prof. Berea col. Berea, Ky.Donaldson, Olive, B.A. '99. Leipsic, O.Doniat, Josephine Catherine, A.B. '00. Graduate student. 269 Oak St.,Chicago.Doolittle, Margaret, A.B. '00. Teacher. Washington, la.Dorman, John Benjamin, Ph.M. '95.Dornsife, Samuel Seiler, B.A. '97. 2834 Troost st., Kansas City, Mo.Dornsife, Daniel Webster, A.B. '99. 2834 Troost st., Kansas City, Mo.Dougherty, Horace Raymond, B.A. '96. Student. 906 N. Glenn Oakav., Peoria, 111,Dougherty, Mabel, B.A. '95. Teacher. 906 N. Glenn Oak av., Peoria,111.Dougherty, Ralph Leland, B.A. '97. U. S. Exposition to Paris. 906 N.Glenn Oak av., Peoria, 111.Douglas, Carleton Ellsworth, Ph.B. '97. Student. 5496 Ellis av., Chicago.Dowie, Alexander John Gladstone, A.B. '00. Student. Zion, 120^Michigan av., Chicago.Downey, June Etta, M.A. '98. Instructor u. of Wyoming. Laramie,Wyo.Drake, Daniel Hill, B.D. '73. Clergyman. Delavan, 111.Drew, William Prentiss, B.A. '97. Teacher. Salem, Ore.Dudley, Gleason Alfred, B.A. '98. Teacher. Sioux City, la.UNIVERSITY RECORD 205Dudley, Ramond Carleton, Ph.B. '96. Business. 2613 Indiana av.,Chicago.Duffield, H.T., A.B. '79. Physician, Pittsfield, 111.Dumke, Julia Florinda, Ph.B. '98. Teacher Lewis inst. Chicago.Dunn, Arthur D., Ph.B. '96. Student Rush Medical col. Chicago.Darbin, Eva Comstock, Ph.M. '00. Teacher Englewood h. s. Chicago.Dye, Friend Taylor, S.D. '00. Clergyman. 267 Gold st., Grand Rapids,Mich.Dykstra, Lawrence, B.D. '97. Clergyman. 948 W. 62d st., Chicago.Erhart, Robert Francis, Ph.D. 'oo. 5616 Monroe av., Chicago.Earle, Edith, B.A. '96. Deer Lodge, Montana.Earle, Mabel, B.A. '96, M.A. '97. Writer. Deer Lodge, Montana.Eastman, Frederick Wilson, B.A. '98. Musician. Denison, la.Eaton, Charles Scribner, A.B. '00. Law student. 226 Ashland boul.,Chicago.Eberhart, Grace Josephine, Ph.B. '99. 3515, 64th st., Chicago.Ebersole, Abraham, B.A. '95. Teacher Y. M. C. A. St. Louis, Mo.Ebersole, Amos A., A.B. '99. Secretary Y. M. C. A. St. Louis, Mo.Eckhart, Percy Bernard, Ph.B. '99. Law student. Cambridge, Mass.Edgreri, John Alexander, B.D. '72. Clergyman. Oakland, Cal.Edmand, Marietta Josephine, B.A. '97, M.A. '97. Teacher MilwaukeeDowner col., Milwaukee, Wis.Edwards, John Riley, B.D. '80. Clergyman. Anthony, Kan.Ege, Charles, A.B. '78, B.D. '82. Clergyman. Cordova, ill.Ege, William M., A.B. '81. Teacher. 421 Jackson St., Mason City, la.Elmer, Franklin Davenport, B.D. '98. Clergyman. 119 W 121st St.,New York.Ellwood, Charles Abram, Ph.D. '99. Prof. u. of Missouri. Columbus,Mo.Erickson, Frank Morton, M.A. '95. Teacher, Ripon, Wis.Escott, Edward Brind, M.S. '96. Instructor u. of Michigan. 126 TurnerSt., Grand Rapids, Mich.Esher, Edward B., A.B. '79. Lawyer. 234 Winchester av., Chicago.Evans, Edward Brice, B.A. '97. Teacher state nor. Stephen's Point,Wis.Evans, Rees Price, B.D. '72. Clergyman. Ottawa, Kan.Evans, William Griffith, B.D. '80. Clergyman. 2357 Grand av., Ogden,Utah.Everts, William Wallace, Jr., A.B. '67, B.D. '73. Clergyman. 454Ashland av., St. Paul, Minn.Eycleshymer, Albert Chauncey, Ph.D. '95. Instructor u. of Chicago,Chicago.Fairfield, Otho Perry, B.A. '96. Teacher. Alfred, N. Y.Fans, William W., A.B, '64.Farnham Charlotte Aurie, Ph.B. '99. Teacher. 25 Chestnut St., Boston,Mass.Faraum, Welcome Leander, B.D. '73. Clergyman. Tecumseh, Mich.Faulkner, Elizabeth, A.B. '85. Teacher. 98 Oakwood av., Chicago.Farr, Marcus Stults, M.A. '94. Asst. zoologist New York State Museum.Albany, N. Y.Felger, Jesse Lee, Ph.B. '98. Geneseo. 111.Felsenthal, Eli Benjamin, A.B. '78. Lawyer. 437, 108 La Salle st.,Chicago.Fenton, William, B.D. '75. Clergyman. 74 South Robert st., St. Paul,Minn.Fertig, James Walter, Ph.D. '98. Teacher Lewis inst. Chicago.Fesler, Mayo, Ph.B. '97. Fellow u. of Chicago. Chicago.Fenneman, Nevin Melancthon, M.A. '99. Fellow u. of Chicago. Chicago.Feuling, Alice Dynes, Mrs. S.B. '00. Teacher. 3644 Prairie av., Chicago.Finch, Charles Anson, B.A. '96. Clergyman. Cheney, Kan.Finney, Julia Metcalfe, Ph.B. '99. Teacher. 5755 Madison av., Chicago.First Henry C, A.B. '66. Clergyman. Upper Alton, 111.Fischer, Oscar George, S.B. '99. Teacher. Fairmont, Ind.Fisher, Charles Henry Day, B.D. '77. Missionary. Tokyo, Japan.Fish, Clarence Everett, Ph.B. '97. Lawyer. 8, 30th pi., Chicago.Fish, Leila Gladys, Ph.B. '97 (Mrs. H. F. Mallory). 3226 Calumetav., Chicago.Fisher, Albert Judson, B.A. '76. Real Estate. " The Yale," Station O,Chicago. Fisher, Charles H. D„ A.B., '74. Tokyo, Japan.Fisher, Fannie Gerauld, Ph.B. '99. 229 Woodward av., Kalamazoo, Mich.Fisher, Joseph Alfred, B.D. '80. Clergyman. Duluth, Minn.Fisk, Henry Alfred, B.D. '95. Supt. " People's Place." 1422 Hyde St.,San Francisco, Cal.Fletcher, Orrin Ottman, B.D. '83, A.B. '83. Clergyman. Suffield, Conn.Flanders, Knight French, B.A. '98. Student. Paris, France.Flint, Nott William, B.S. '98. Teacher Chicago inst. Chicago.Flint, Joseph Marshall, B.S. '95. Student Johns Hopkins Medical s.Baltimore, Md.Fogg, Emily, B.A. '97 (Mrs. E. S. Meade). 315 N. 33d St., Philadelphia, Pa.Folen, Otto Knute Olaf, Ph.D. '98. Asst. pro'f. u. of West Virginia.Morgantown, W. Va.Ford, Margaret, B.A. '97. Teacher. Beaton, Minn.Foreman, Louis Thomas, B.A. '99. Student. 10 Temple St., Chicago.Forrest, Jacob Dorsey, Ph.D. '00. Prof. Butler col. Irvington, Ind.Forward, Charles H., A.B. '8o. Lawyer. Oshkosh, Wis.Forward, James Stantial, B.A. '78. Clergyman. Berlin, Wis.Foskett, Harvey Bartlett, B.D. '82. Clergyman. Adams, Mass.Foster, Alonzo Delos, A.M. '69. Merchant. 174 E. Madison St., Chicago.Foster, Edith Burnham, Ph.B. '97. Teacher Chicago inst. Chicago.Fowler, Frank Hamilton, Ph.D. '96. Teacher. 1459 E. Knox St., Gales-burg, 111Fox, Andrew Noah, B.A. '96. Teacher. 1294 Wilcox av., Chicago.Fox, Herbert Wright, B.S. '95. 1280 Wilcox av., Chicago.Fox, Paul Jefferson, S.B. *oo. 4108 Prairie av., Chicago.Foye, jCharlotte Henderson B.A. '95. Librarian John Crerar Library,Chicago.Frantz, Edward, B.A. '98. Prof. McPherson col., McPherson, Kan.France, Welmer Cave, Ph.D. '95. Associate Bryn Mawrcol., Bryn Mawr,Pa.Frank, Lee Julius, A.B. '00. Law student. 3421 South Park boul., Chicago.Frederick, Charles Albert, Ph.B. '98. Teacher. Corning, la.Freeman, Grace, A.B. '96. Teacher. 629 S. 2d St., Springfield, 111.Freeman, John Charles, B.D. '71. Clergyman. Madison, Wis.Freeman, Joseph Edwin, Ph.B. '98. Law student. 1629 Q st. N. W.,Washington, D. C.Freeman, Marilla Waite, Ph.B. '97. Librarian. Michigan City, Ind.Freidman, Joseph C.,Ph.B. '96. Student. 5473 Ellis av., Chicago.Freudenthal, Caroline Ella, Ph.B. '99 (Mrs. J. W. Loewenthal). 4506Ellis av., Chicago.Frick, May Florence, Ph.B. '97. Teacher. Cedar Rapids, la.Frink, Henry F., B.S. '68. Lawyer. 814 Reaper Block, Chicago.Frutchey, Marcus Peter, B.A. '98. Student. 5833 Monroe av., Chicago.Fuller, Albert Wayland, B.A. '81. Clergyman. Delavan, Wis.Fuller, Henry Edgar, B.A. '78, B.D. '84. Clergyman. Ashland, Wis.Fuller, Henry F., B.A. '83. Mechanical engineer. 136 Woodland av.,New Rochelle, N. Y.Furber, Harry J., A.B. '86. Lawyer. 659 The Rookery, Chicago.Furness, Mary, B.A. '96. (Mrs. H. D. Hubbard.) 5828 Ingleside av.,Chicago.Gale, Henry Gordon, B.A. '96, Ph.D. '99. Associate u. of Chicago.Chicago.Gallup, Clarence Mason, B.D. '00. Clergyman. 367 Franklin st., Norwich, Conn.Gait, Howard Spillman, Ph.B. '96. Missionary. Tung Choo, Pekin,China.Gano, Laura Campbell, B.S. '98. Teacher. Richmond, Ind.Gardner, Effie A. Ph.B. '97. Dean of Baptist col. 877, 73d st., Chicago.Gardner, Henry A., A.B. '68. Lawyer. 1003 New York LifeBuilding,Chicago.Gardner, Ida Mason, Ph.B. '98. Teacher. 595 E. 65th st., Chicago.Gardner. James P., A.B. '81. Lawyer. 4803 Greenwood av., Chicago.Gardner, Ruth Edgerton, A.B. '81 (Mrs. J. P. Gardner). 4803 Greenwood av., Chicago.Gardner, William A., A.B. '78. Lawyer. West Plains, Mo.Garner, James Bert, Ph.D. '97. Instructor Bradley inst. Peoria, I1L206 UNIVERSITY RECORDGarner, James Davis, A.M. 'oo. Prest. of Tugalo inst. Carnesville, Ga.Garrey, Walter Eugene, Ph.D. 'oo. Instructor Cooper inst. San Francisco, Cal.Garrison, George P., Ph.D. '96. Prof. u. of Texas. 2600 Whitts av.,Austin, Tex.Garrison, Winfred Ernest, B.D. '97, Ph.D. '97. Editor. St. Louis, Mo.Garten, Richard, B.D. '71. Clergyman. Burlington, la.Garver, Roy Cyrus, Ph.B. '96. Law student. 708 E. Jefferson st.,Bloomington, 111.Gaston, George Horace, Ph.B. '97. Teacher. 46 N. Francisco st., Chicago.Gates, Errett, A.B. '99, B.D. '00. Clergyman. 5526 Jefferson av., Chicago.Gatzert, Blanche, Ph.B. '98. 3628 Grand boul., Chicago.Gaud, William Steen, B.A. '93. Teacher Shattuck Military acad., Fari-ebault, Minn.Gauss, Julius Henry Judson, B.S. '98. Medical student. 2735 Elliot St.,Denver, Col.Geewe, Alma Henrietta, B.A. 99. Teacher. 934 Albany av., Chicago.Geselbracht, Franklin Hermon, B.A. '38. Student McCormick Theological sem. 257 Fremont st., Chicago.Gessler, Theodore Arthur, B.D. '97. Clergyman. Lake Hopatcong,N.J.Gettys, Cora Margaret, B.A. '96. Examiner Civil Service Commission.5855 Butler st., Chicago.Gilbert, H. Franklin, B.A. '72. Clergyman. Damascus, 111.Giles, Frederick Mayor, B.S. '98, Teacher. 117 East Ridge st. Marquette, Mich.Gilbert, Rizpah Margaret, Ph.B. '93 (Mrs. R. M. G. Smith). Alva-rado, Tex.Gillespie, Hiram, B.A. '98. Prin. h. s. Chrismanj 111.Gillespie, William, Ph.D. '00. Instructor Princeton u. Princeton, N. J,Gilpatrick, Rose Adelle, Ph.B. '96. Teacher Coburn Classical inst.Waterville, Me.Glascock, William Henry, Ph.M. '99. Supt. schools. Bloomington,Ind.Godley, Anna May, Ph.B. '97. Student. Albert Lea, Minn.Godwin, Edmund, B.D. '77. Clergyman. St. Mary, 111.Goldberg, Hyman Elijah, B.S. '96. Fellow u. of Chicago. Chicago.Goldsmith, Lillian Rosalia, Ph.B. '98. Teacher. 423 Ashland boul.,Chicago.Goodman, Alfred Ebenezer, B.D. '96. Clergyman. Lincoln, Kan.Goodman, Charles Augustus, B.A. '97. Lawyer. 1007 Fort Dearbornbldg., Chicago.Goodman, James, A.B. '62, B.D, '74. Copy reader u. of Chicago printing office, Chicago.Goodrich, Henrietta, M.S. '98. Director School of Housekeeping. 45St. Botolphst., Boston, Mass.Goodspeed, Edgar Johnson, B.D. '97, Ph.D., '98. Associate u. of Chicago. Chicago.Goodspeed, George Stephen, B.D. '83. Recorder u. of Chicago. Chicago.Googins, Ella Haigh, B.A. '83. Teacher. 3247 So. Park av., Chicago.Gordon, Charles Henry, Ph.D. '95. Supt. schools. Lincoln, Neb.Gordon, John, B.D. '70. Clergyman. 1832 Park av., Philadelphia.Gordon, Kate, Ph.B. '00. State Hospital, Winnebago, Wis.Gordon, William Clark, Ph.D. '99. Clergyman. 80 Broadstreet, West-field, Mass.Gottlieb, Harry Norman, A.B. '00, Law student Columbia u. 3420Vernon av., Chicago.Gowen, Georgia Laird, B.A. '98. Student. 2604 Wallace St., Chicago.Grant, Elmer Daniel, M.A. '97. Teacher. 3464 Forest Glen av., Chicago.Grant, Laura Churchill, M.A. '96 (Mrs. Otto Folin). Morgantown,W.Va.Graves, Eva Bronson, Ph.B. '98. 4526 Woodlawn av., Chicago.Graves, Robert Elliot, B.S. '98. Teacher. 5663 Washington av., Chicago.Gray, Charlotte Comstock, Mrs., B.A. '97, B.D. '98, A.M. '00. Student.102 Herkimer St., Albany, N. Y.Gray, Clifton Daggett, D.B. 'oo. Fellow u. of Chicago. '27 Williams st.West Somerville, Mass.Gray, Lily, B.A. '76. 77, 53d St., Chicago.f Green, John Thomas, B.D. '75. Clergyman. Whitehall, 111.Greenbaum, Julius Curtis, Ph.B. '97. Lawyer. 64%, 31st St., Chicago.Greenleaf, Carl Dimand, B.S. '99. Merchant miller. Wauseon, O.Gregory, Emily Ray, Ph.D. '99. Student zoological station. Naples,Italy.Gregory, Cornelius W., B.A. '73. Clergyman. Los Angeles, Cal.Green, Elizabeth E. Harrington, Ph.B. '99. Teacher Bradley inst.Peoria, 111.Griffith, P. Merrill, Ph.B. '97. United States Consul. Matamoras,Mexico.Griffin, Edwin Milton, B.D. '93. Clergyman. Kent, N. Y.Griswold, Harry Hodges, B.S. '97. Banking. Whitehall, 111.Griswold, Roy Coleman, Ph.B. '99. Business. 2815 Indiana av.,. Chicago.Gurney, Frederick James, B.D. '83. Asst. to Recorder u. of Chicago.Chicago.Guthrie, Emily Wilson, B.A. '97. Teacher. 4033 State st., Chicago.Guyer, Michael Frederick, B.S. '94, Ph.D. '00. Teacher. Plattsburg,Mo.Gwin, James Madison, Ph.B. '97. Lawyer. 454 The Rookery, Chicago.Hack, Fred. Charles, B.A. '98. Law clerk and student. 209 Centre St.,Chicago.Hadley, Alvin Hervey, S.B. '00. Teacher. Monrovia, Ind.Haeger, Thusnelda, Ph.B. '97. Dundee, 111.Haft, Delia May, Ph.B. '96. Student u. of Chicago. 314, 45th st., Chicago.Hageman, Simon Sylvester, B.D. '99. Clergyman. Barrington, 111.Hagey, John Franklin, B.A. '98. Law student. 5833 Monroe av., Chicago.Haight, Alice, B.A. '98 (Mrs. F. B. Dains). 2421 Dearborn St., Chicago.Hales, Earl Creighton, Ph.B., '00. Law student. 640 W. 61st St., Chicago.Hall, Clement. B.D. '80. Clergyman. Youngstown, O.Hall, Columbus H., 'B.A. '72, B.D. '75. Prof. Franklin col. Franklin,Ind.Hall, George W., A.B. '81. Lawyer. Hinsdale, 111.Hall, Sybil Verne, A.B. '99. Secy. School for Blind. Jacksonville, 111.Hall, William Winchester, A.B. '72. Lawyer. 335 Broadway, NewYork.Hallingby, Ole, Jr., Ph.B. '98. Chemist. Dollar Bay, Mich.Halphide, Alvin Cavala, B.A. '93. Physician. 3458 Wabash av. Chicago.Halsey, Charles D. Wrenn, Ph.B. '00. Business. 427 E. 61st St., Chicago.Halsey, John J., B.A. '70. Professor Lake Forest u. Lake Forest, 111.Halsey, Richard Lennox, B.D. '83. Missionary. Sendai, Japan.Haymaker, Jacob Gish, B.S. '99. Abilene, Kan.Hamill, Ralph C, Ph.B. '99. Student Rush Medical col. The PlazaHotel, Chicago.Hamilton, Alethea, B.A. '95. Phoenix, Ariz.Hammers, William O., B.A. '66. Farmer. Anthony, Kan.Hammond, Eleanor Prescott, Ph.D. '98. Docent u. of Chicago. 5520Woodlawn av., Chicago.Hammond, John Churchill, M.S. '97. Asst. in Nautical Almanac office.Washington, D. C.Hammond, Lucie, Ph.B. '99. 5810 Drexel boul., Chicago.Hammond, Theodore M., B.S. '85. Publisher. Goldsmith block, Milwaukee, Wis.Hanchett, Frank G., A.B. '82. Lawyer. Aurora, 111.Hancock, Arthur, B.A. '95. Farmer. Overton, Va.Hannan, James, Jr., Ph.B. '00. Law student. 5134 South Park av.,Chicago.Hannan, Mary Louise, B.A. '98. Teacher. 5134 Grand boul., Chicago.Hardesty, Irving, Ph.D. '99. Asst. u. of Chicago. Chicago.Harding, Susan Grace, Ph.B. '98. Teacher. 1904 Surf St., Chicago.Harding, William Fletcher, Ph.M. '95. Printer. 1212 Park av., Indianapolis, Ind.Harmon, William Schoonover, Ph.B. '00. Student. 6450 Kimbark av.,Chicago.Harmon, Alta Annette, M.A. '99. Alexander, Mo.Harmon, Lola Marie, Ph.B. '99. Alexander, Mo.Harms, Frank Henry, Ph.B. '98. Teacher. 6543 Lafayette av., Chicago.Harper, Helen Davida A.B. '00. 59th st. and Lexington av., Chicago.UNIVERSITY RECORD 207Harper, Robert Francis, A.B. '83. Prof, u, of Chicago. Chicago.Harrigan, Alice Joanna, A.B. 'oo. Kalamazoo, Mich.Harrington. Jerome Benjamin, Ph.B. '99. Actor. 40 Gramercy Park,New York.Harris, Juliet, A.B. '98. Teacher. 4920 Forestville av., Chicago.Harris, William, M.A. '98, B.D. '98. Prof. Wesleyan Theological col.Montreal, Canada.Harrison, Marvin B., A.B. '77. Clergyman. Scribner, Neb.Hart, James Norris, M.S. '97. Teacher u. of Maine. Orono, Me.Hastings, William G., A.B. '76. Instructor u. of Nebraska. Lincoln,Neb.Hatfield, Ethel Glover, Ph.D. '98 (Mrs. Henry R. Hatfield). 6024 Ellisav., Chicago.Hatfield, Henry Rand, Ph.D. '97. Instructor u. of Chicago. Chicago.Hawley, Willis, A.B. '80. Gen. Secy. Y. M. C. A. Johnstown, Pa.Hay, Fannie Steele, Ph.B. '97. Teacher. 311 T st., N. W., Washington,D. C.Hay, Mary, Ph.B. '95 (Mrs. J. A. Minnick). 1220, nth St., N. W.,Washington, D. C.Hayden, Charles Albert, B.D. '73. Clergyman. Mt. Holly, N. J.Hayes, Ella Martha, Ph.B. '98. Student. 10652 Prospect av., Chicago.Hazelton, Josephine Frances. Ph.B. '99. 3464 Forest Glen av., Chicago.Hawthorne, Warren Coleman. M.S. '99. Teacher Harvard s. 4670 Lakest., Chicago.Heidel, William Arthur, "Ph.D. '95. Prof. Iowa col. Grinnell, la.Heil, John Henry, B.A. '95. Prin. h. s. Moline, 111.Hellems, Fred. Burton Rennie, Ph.D. '98. Prof. u. of Colorado. Boulder,Colo.Heller, Otto, Ph.D. '00. Prof. Washington u. St. Louis, Mo.Helmer, Frank A., A.B. '78. Lawyer. 132 Clark St., Chicago.Hemenway, Charles Asa, B.D. '93. Clergyman. Kalamazoo, Mich.Henderson, Charles R., A.B. '70, B.D. '73. Prof. u. of Chicago. Chicago.Henderson, Herman Charles, B.A. '95. Student. North hall, u. of Chicago, Chicago.Henderson, William M., A.B. '98. Lisbon, O.Henry, John Quincy Adams, B.D. '80. Clergyman. 156, 5th ave., NewYork.Henry, Elizabeth, Ph.B. '00. Teacher. 1265 Kentucky st., Quincy, 111.Herrell, David Cummings, B.D. '76. Clergyman. Perry, N. Y.Herrick, Jullien Avery, B.D. '97, Ph.D. '00. Clergyman. Bay City,Mich.Herrick, Henry Martyn, Ph.D. '00. Clergyman. Carpentersville, 111.Herrick, William J., A.B. '71. Lawyer. 2223 Prairie av., Chicago.Herron, John, Jr., A.B. '80. Manager mining co. Telluride, Colo.Herschberger, Clarence Bert, A.B. '98. Teacher South Side acad. 5720Kimbark av., Chicago.Hesse, Bernard Conrad, Ph.D. '96. Patent expert. 128 Duane St., NewYork.Hessler, John Charles, A.B. '96, Ph.D. '99. Instructor u. of Chicago.5756 Madison av., Chicago.Heuver, Gerald Dirk, Ph.D. '00. Clergyman. Winona, 111.Hewitt, Henry Harwood, A.B. '96. Student in Architecture. Paris,France.Hibbard, Herschel Vincent, Ph.B. '98. Teacher. 5638 Ellis av., Chicago.Hicks, Edmond Ware, B.D. '70. Clergyman. Toulon, 111.Hieronymus, Lora, Ph.B. '00. 555 S., West Grand av., Springfield, 111,Higby, John Henry, B.D. '81. Clergyman. Oakmont, Pa.Higgins, William Addison, B.A. '96. Machinist. N. Indianapolis, Ind.Higley, Louis Allen, S.B., '00. 5751 Drexel av., Chicago.Hill, Albert Ellsworth, B.A. '99. Teacher. 7100 Eggleston av., Chicago.Hill, Elizabeth Gertrude, B.A. '95. Teacher. Palo Alto, Cal.Hill, Luther Boone, A.B, '98. Teacher h. s. Princeton, 111.Hitchcock, Clara Maria, Ph.B. '97. Teacher. Painesville, O., LakeErie col.Hobart, Charles Henry, B.D. '80. Clergyman. Oakland, Cal.Hobart, Ralph Hastings, Ph.B. '95. Mngr. Wilcox Paper Co. 39 Dearborn av. Chicago.Hobbs, Charles Albert, B.D, '71. Clergyman. Delavan, Wis. Hobbs, Ralph Waller, B.D. '97. Clergyman. West Superior, Wis.Hodges, Charles Allen, A.B., '97. Prof. Juniata col. Huntingdon, Pa-.Hoebeke, Cornelius James, A.B. '95; Teacher. Orchard Lake, Mich.Holbrook, Florence, A.B. '79. Prin. of school. 4441 Champlain av.,Chicago. .Holcomb, George Perry, B.D. '93. Clergyman. Fancher, N. Y.Hollis, Harriet Frances, A.B. 'oo. Morgan Park, 111.Hollis, Henry Scott, A.B- '99. Teacher. Morgan Park, 111.Holloway, George F., A.B. '86. Lawyer. 22, 22 Fifth av. Chicago.Holmes, Samuel Jackson, Ph.D. '97. Teacher. San Diego, Cal.Hoist, Herman Valentine von, A.B. '93. Draughtsman. 1780 OldColony building, Chicago.Holt, Levi H., A.B. '74, B.D. '77. Educational missionary. Guthrie,Okla.Holton, Mina Gates, B.S. '96. Teacher. 33 Wall st., New Haven, Conn.Honore, Adrian C, A.B. '69. Real estate. 2103 Michigan av,, Chicago.Honore, Nathaniel R., A.B. '77. Real estate. 2103 Michigan av. Chicago.Hoover, Henry Ward, B.D. '99. Student, u. of Chicago. Chicago.Hopkins, Allen, A.B. '99. U. S. Guard, Paris Exposition. Paris, France.Hopkins, Frances, Inez, Ph.B. '96 (Mrs. J. R. Downey). Keokuk, la.Hopkins, Thomas Kramer, Ph.D. '00. Student, u. of Chicago. WalkerMuseum. Chicago.Hopkins, John Cook, A.B. '81. Real estate. 471 Fifth st., Aurora, 111.Hopps, Arthur D., A.B. '77. Farmer. Panola, 111.Home, George, B.D. '94. Clergyman. Beloit, Kan.Hostetter, Abram B., A.B. '68. Lawyer. Mt. Carroll, 111.Hostetter, Charles L., B.S. '65. Lawyer. Mt. Carroll, III.Hough, Lula May, A.B. '98. Teacher. West Bay City, Mich.House, Lolabel, A.M. '98. Fellow u. of Pennsylvania, 3550 Walnut St.,Philadelphia, Pa.Howard, Harry Cooper, Ph.B. '95. Lawyer, in S. Rose st., Kalamazoo, Mich.Howard, John Andrew, Ph.B. '98. Business. Kalamazoo, Mich.Howard, John J., B.D. '70. Clergyman.Howe, Fred Allison, Ph.M. '99. Teacher u. of Iowa. Carroll, la.Howe, Herbert A., A.B. '75. Prof. u. of Denver. University Park, Colo.Howerth, Ira Woods, A.M. '94, Ph.D. '98. Instructor u. of Chicago.Chicago.Howland, Cora Roche, A.B. '99. 4605 Drexel boul., Chicago.Hoxie, Robert Franklin, Ph.B. '93. Instructor Washington u. 3862 Russell av., St. Louis, Mo.Hoyt, Allen Grey, Ph.B. '99. Examiner Treasury Dept. Washington,.D.C.Hoyt, Norman Fox, B.D. '72. Clergyman. Delta, Colo.Hubbard, Harry David, A.B^'97. Sec'y president's office, u. of Chicago.5828 Ingleside av. , Chicago.Hubbard, Marion Elizabeth, B.S. '94. Teacher Wellesley col. Wel-Iesley, Mass.Hudson, Fletcher E., B.D. '83. Clergyman. Berwick, Ga.Huff, William Bashford, A.M. '96. Teacher. Boscobel, Wis.Hughes, Robert Lee, A.B. '95, A.M. '99. Supt. schools. Whiting, Ind..Hughunin, Arthur, A.B. '75. Manufacturer. Racine, Wis.Hulbert, Clara Delia, A.B. '98. Morgan Park, 111.Hulbert, David Wiley, B.D. '82. Clergyman. Wauwatosa, Wis.Hulbert, Ethelyn Louise, Ph.B. '95 (Mrs. A. R. E. Wyant). MorganPark, 111. xHull, Gordon Ferrie, Ph.D. '97. Prof. Dartmouth col. Hanover, N. H.Hulley, Elkanah, A.M. '93. Prin. Keystone acad. Factoryville, Pa.Hulley, Eloise Mayham, A.M. '93 (Mrs. L. Hulley). Lewisburg, Pa.Hulley, Lincoln, Ph.D. '95. Prof. . Lewisburg, Pa.Hulshart, John, A.B. '96. Instructor Bishop col. Marshall, Tex.Humphrey, Mary Helen, Ph.B. '98. Simsbury, Conn.Humphries, Jessie Halifield, A.B. '99. Prin. h. s. Millbum, Tex.Hunley, Charles Leo, A.B. '98. Prof, normal s. Rochester, Ind.Hunt, Esther D., A.B. '95. Teacher. Oskaloosa, la.Hunt, Frederick Leigh, A.M. 'oo. Instructor Culver Military acad.Culver, Ind.Hunter, John Franklin, A.B. '95, B.B. '99. Clergyman. Russell, 111.208 UNIVERSITY RECORDHunter, Pearl Louise, Ph.B. '99. Fellow u. of Chicago. 4549 Forestvilleav., Chicago.Hurlbut, George H., A.B., '68. Business. Belvidere, 111.Hurlbut, Leila Cole, Ph.B. '96. The Lessing, Surf st., Chicago.Hurlburt, David Guy, Ph.B. '99. Teacher. 6021 Ellis av., Chicago.Hurly, Hugh Henry, B.D. '97. Clergyman. Tremont, 111.Hutchings, Josephine Lilian, Ph.B. '98. 118 Third st. Madison, Wis.Hutchinson, Jennie Gordon, A.B. '99. Teacher State nor. Cedar Falls,la.Hutchinson, Jessamine Blanche, Ph.B. '99. Lake City, la.Hutchinson, John Irwin, Ph.D. '96. Teacher Cornell u. Ithaca, N. Y.Hyatt, Theodore, B.D. '69. Clergyman. Itaka, I. T.Hyman, Isaac Barney, A.B. '98. Lawyer. 4207 Grand boul., Chicago.Ickes, Harold LeClair, A.B. '97. Reporter Chicago Record. 5750Madison av., Chicago.Ince, Edward Armstrong, B.D. '74. Clergyman. Quincy, 111.Inskeep, Anna Lucy, Mrs., Ph.D. '98. Oakland, Cal.Irons, Earnest Edward, S.B. '00. Student u. of Chicago. 5731 Monroeav., Chicago.Jacobs, Lawrence Merton, A.B. '99. 180 E. Fifty-third st., Chicago.Jackson, Cora Belle, A.B. '96. Teacher. 2207 North Alabama St.,Indianapolis, Ind.Jackson, John Bert, A.B. '99. Prin. h. s. St. Joseph, Mich.Jackson, John Louington, A.B. '72, B.D. '76. Clergyman. 5607 Lexington av., Chicago.Jackson, Francis Chester R., B.D. '97. Clergyman. Burlington, Wis.Jackson, William Hayden, A.B. '99. Western Electric Co. 5726 Monroeav., Chicago.Jaffa, Meir, A.M. '96. Teacher. Wilkins, S. C.James, Benjamin F., A.B. '84. Lawyer. Bowling Green, O.Janson, Sarah Anna, S.B. '00. Teacher Woman's Medical col. Chicago.Janssen, Ralph, A.B. '97. Student in Germany. Zealand, Mich.Jarzembski Vladyslaus, B.S. '97. Translator in War Dept. 24 Floridaav,, N. E., Washington, D. C.Jayne, Edgar L., B.S. '73. Lawyer. 120 Randolph st., Chicago.Jeffreys, Elizabeth, Ph.D. '98. Columbiana, O.Jegi, John I., B.S. '96. Prof. State nor. Milwaukee, Wis.Jenkins, Hester Donaldson, Ph.B. '98, Ph.M. '99. Teacher Americancol. Constantinople, Turkey.Jenkins, Joseph, B.D. '98. Clergyman. Walworth, Wis.Jenks, Albert Ernest, B.S. '97. Student. 130 N. Hancock St., Madison,Wis.Jessen, Karl Detley, A.B. '96. Student u. of Berlin. Berlin, Germany.Jevne, Charles Arthur, A.B. '00. Student at Chicago Theological sem.252 N. Main St., Chicago.Johnson, Dora, A.M. 'oo. Springdale av.^ Memphis, Tenn.Johnson, Edgar Hutchinson, M.S. '99. Teacher Emory col. Oxford. Ga.Johnson, Franklin, Jr., A.B. '96. Lawyer, n Broadway, New York, •N. Y.Johnson, Herbert Parlin, Ph.D. '94, Teacher u. of California. Berkeley,Cal.Johnson, Lawrence, A.B. '84. Business. 6710 Vincennes av., Chicago.Johnson, Luther Apelles, A.M. '94. Teacher. Tehuacana, Tex.Johnson, Philip Matthew, A.B. '99, B.D. '99. Clergyman. Sparta, Wis.Johnson, Rachel, A.B. '00. La Grange, Mo.Johnson, Ralph Hiram, Ph.B. '96. Manufacturer. 721 Spencer av.,Marion, Ind.Johnson, Roswell Hill, S.B., 'oo. Teacher. 10 McKinley building,Joplin, Mo.Johnson, Ruth Isabel, Ph.B. '99. 215 Forty-second st., Chicago.Johnson, Victor Oscar, A.B. '96. Lawyer. Genoa, Neb.Johnston, Finlay McN., A.B. '80. Lawyer. McConnellsburg, Pa.Johnston, Lucy Marion, Ph.D. '99. Teacher. 5754 Washington av.,Chicago.Johnston, Samuel C, A.B. '76. Lawyer. Knoxville, la.Johnstone, Balfour, A.B. '99. 6818 South Chicago av., Chicago.Johonnot, Edwin Sheldon, Jr., Ph.D. '98. Prof. Rose Polytechnic inst.Terre Haute, Ind.Jonas, Johannes Benoni Edward, Ph.D. '99. Instructor Purdue u., LaFayette, Ind. Jone, Hugo, B.S. '95. Chemist. 411 City Hall. Chicago.Jones, Arthur Tabor, B.S. '99. Teacher. 2326 Indiana av., Chicago.Jones, Charles Melancthon, B.D. '74. Clergyman. Covina, Cal.Jones, Eleanor Landor, Ph.B. '96. Teacher. 573 E. 62d st., Chicago.Jones, Florence Rachel, A.B. '99. Governess American family, Argentine Republic, S. A.Jones, Elizabeth Sarah, Ph.M. '98. Student Ilex hall. Ridley Park,Pa.Jones, Hayden Evan, Ph.D. '98. Acad. asst. Morgan Park, 111.Jones, Jessie Louise, Ph.D. '97. Teacher Lewis inst. Chicago.Jones, Lauder William, Ph.D. '97. Associate u. of Chicago. Chicago.Jones, William Henry, A.B. '00. Student u. of Chicago. 260 N. Trumbull av., Chicago.Joralmon, Louis Bogart, A.B. '93. Real estate. 229 Equitable Building, Denver, Col.Jordan, Andrew L., A.B. '71, B.D. '72. Clergyman. Little Rock, Ark.Jordan, Herbert Ray, Ph.B. '97. Commercial traveler. 6217 Kimbarkav., Chicago.Kane, Theodosia, Ph.B. '97. 310 Oakland boul., Chicago.Keay, Edith, A.B. '00. 832 Northeast St., Indianapolis, Ind,Keen, William B., A.B. '69. Real estate. 519 The Rookery, Chicago.Kelley, John Harris, B.S. '98. 346 Public sq., Nashville, Tenn.Kellogg, Edith Sarah, B.S. '96. Teacher. 2970 Groveland av., Chicago.Kells, Mabel Avery, A.B. '00. Sauk Centre, Minn.Kelly, Alfred C, B.D. '83. Clergyman. South Chicago, 111.Kelly, Robert Lincoln, Ph.M. '99. Student u. of Chicago, 469, 56th St.,Chicago.Kennedy, Jennette, Ph.B. '96. Rib Lake, Wis.Kern, Paul Oskar, Ph.D. '97. Instructor u. of Chicago. Chicago.Kern, William Caspar, Ph.B. '98. Business. 411 E. 57th St., Chicago.Kerr, Luella Mary, A.B. '96. Teacher. Washington, la.Kinney, Edwin Bruce, B.D. '97. Clergyman. 404 Broad St., Bethlehem, Pa.Kinney, Oliver Brown, B.D. '82. Clergyman. 404 Broad St., Bethlehem, Pa.Kirkland, Robert McDonald, A.B. '99. Teacher. New Berlin, N. Y.Kirtley, Howard Pendleton, Ph.B. '00. Student Rush Medical col., Chicago.Klauber, Charles, A.B. '99. Teacher. 419 Garfield boul., Chicago.Klock, Martha Frances, A.B. '98. 1216 Broadway av., Kansas City,Mo.Knight, Alice Austin, Ph.B. '99. 4831 Kenwood av., Chicago.Kohlsaat, Philemon Bulkley, Ph.B. '94. Teacher Lewis inst. 311 Central Park av., Chicago.Kohlsaat, Edith Merritt, Ph.B. 'oo. 239 Ashland boul., Chicago.Kruse, William Henry, A.B. '94. Teacher Hastings col. Hastings,Neb.Kurtz, Frank, B.D. '93. Missionary. Vinikonda, Madras Presidency,India.Kummel, Henry Bernard, Ph.D. '95. Geologist. Trenton, N. J.Kyle, James William, A.M. '00. Prof, state u. of Missouri. Columbia,Mo.Lackner, Edgar Cranfield, Ph.B. '97. Lawyer. Salt Lake City, Utah.Lake, Elisha Moore, B.D. '97. Clergyman. Pontiac, 111.Lakin, Mary N., Ph.B. '99. 1 Western av., Topeka, Kan.Lamay, John, B.S. '95. Teacher. 3229 N. Illinois St., Indianapolis,Ind.Lambert, Lilian Vitalique, B.S. '95. Teacher. 1312 E. 14th st., DesMoines, la.Lambertson, Genio, A.B. '72. Lawyer. Lincoln, Neb.La Motte, Franz Alexander, S.M. '00. Teacher. 5632 Ingleside av.,Chicago.Langland, James, A.B. '77. Journalist Chicago Record. Chicago.Lansingh, van Rensselaer, B.S. '96. Electrical engineer. 5407 Woodlawn av., Chicago.Lathe, Agnes, A.M. '94. Teacher. 1023 Prince av., Athens, Ga.La Tourette, Florence, A.B. '97, A.M. '98. Teacher. Niles, Mich.La Tourette, Pauline, B.S. '97. Teacher. 709 Lowell st., Kalamazoo,Mich.Laun, Ella, Ph.B. '00. La Porte, Ind.UNIVERSITY RECORD 209Learned, Henry Barrett, A.M. '94. Journalist. South Manchester,Conn.Lederer, Charles, Ph.B. '98. Law student. 2200 Archer av., Chicago.Le Due, Alma de Lelande, Ph.B. '99. Asst. u. of Kansas. Lawrence,Kan.Lee, Elon N., B.S. '68. Lumber dealer. Webster City, la.Leech, Lilian Jane, Ph.B. '99. Des Moines, la.Leluner, Derrick Norman. Ph.D. '00. Instructor u. of California, Berkeley, Cal.Leighton, Hugh Guthrie, A.B. '00. Student. 6101 Washington av.,Chicago.Leiser, Joseph, A.B. '95. Rabbi. La Fayette, Ind.Leland, Darius R., A.B. '84. Teacher. 2722 South Park av., Chicago.Leland, Hector C, A.B. '84, B.D. '79. Clergyman. Orion, 111.Lenington, Nellie Blanche, Ph.B. '98. 207, 36th St., Chicago.Lemon, Charles Augustus, B.D. '97. Clergyman. Wayne, Neb.Lennes, Nels Johan, B.S. '98. Teacher. 1128 Washington boul., Chicago.Leslie, Robert, A.B. '69, B.D. '70. Clergyman. Grant's Pass, Ore.Lester, Irwin, S.B. '99. Law student. Tuscola, 111.Lester, Minnie, Ph.B. '99. Teacher. Tuscola, 111.Levering, Frank H., A.B. '72. Clergyman. 1131 N. 15th st., La Fayette,Ind.Lewis, Albert Buell, A.B. '94. Asst. u. of Nebraska. Lincoln, Neb.Lewis, Edwin Herbert, Ph.D. '94. Prof. Lewis inst. Chicago.Lewis, John Simon, Jr., A.B. '94. Journalist, The Gazette^ Montreal,Can.Lewis, Mary Catherine A.B. '95. Teacher. 5605 Madison av., Chicago.Lewis, Susan Whipple, A.B. '95. Teacher. 5605 Madison av., Chicago.Libby, George Nelson, S.B. '00. Chemist. Tecumseh, Neb.Lillie, Frank Rattray, Ph.D. '94. Asst. prof. u. of Chicago. Chicago.Lindsay, James P., A.B. '8o. Lawyer. 269 Paynes av., North Tona-wanda, N. R.Lindsey, Sarah Frances, Ph.B. 'oo. 5465 Washington av., Chicago.Lingle, Bowman Church, A.B. '97. Business. 3144 Vernon av., Chicago.Lingle, David J., B.S. '85. Instructor u. of Chicago. Chicago.Lingle, Elizabeth Hathaway, Ph.B. '00. 3144 Vernon av., Chicago.Linn, James Weber, A.B. '97. Asst. u. of Chicago. Chicago.Linne, Andrew August, B.D. '75. Clergyman. Fergus Falls, Minn.Livermore, Leander Elliot, B.D. '79. Clergyman. Alfred Center,N. Y.Linscott, Henry Farrar, Ph.D. '96. Teacher Chapel Hill, N. C.Lipsky, Harry Alexander, Ph.B. '96. Student. 3013 Prairie av., Chicago.Livingston, Katherine Agnes, Ph.B. '96 (Mrs. J. Preston Rice). 23Parsons St., Detroit, Mich.Locy, William Albert, Ph.D. '95. Prof. Northwestern u. 2031 Shermanav., Evanston, 111.Loeb, Ludwig, B.S. '96. Student. 528 Dearborn st., Chicago.Loesch, Angeline, A.B. '98. 46 Lincoln pi., Chicago.Loewenstein, Gustave Henry, A.B, '96. Hebrew Union col. Cincinnati, O.Logan, William Clark, A.M. '96. Clergyman. Irving, 111.Logan, William Newton, Ph.D. '00. ion Union st., Emporia, Kan.Logie, Alfred Ernest, A.B. '96. Supt. s. Wilmette, 111.Looney, Bell Eugene, A.B. '95. Teacher. Farmersville, Tex.Long, Mary Alves, Ph.B. '98. Teacher. 4746 Madison av., Chicago.Losey, Louis Lee, A.B. '00. Law student. 2322 Calumet av., Chicago.Longhridge, Mary Winifred, A.B. '99. 106 North Madison av., Peoria,Lord, George, B.D, '95. Clergyman. Geneva, O. .Lovejoy, Mary Evelyn, Mrs., A.B. '97. Red Wing, Minn.Lovett, William Pierce, A.B. '99. Student theological sem. Rochester,N. Y.Lozier, Horace Gillette, A.B. '94. Teacher Princeton -Yale s. 15 Northhall, u. of Chicago. Chicago.Love, Lura May, Ph.B. '00. Elmore, O.Lunn, Arthur Constant, A.M. '00. Teacher. 724 Villa st., Racine, Wis, Lutrell, Estelle, A.B. '96. Library asst. u. of Chicago. 5622 Ellis av.,.Chicago."Lyon, Elias Potter, Ph.D. '97. Asst. prof. Rush Medical col., Chicago.Lyon, Florence May, B.S. '97. Teacher Smith col. Northampton,Mass.Mabie, Henry C, A.B, '68, B.D. '75. Cor. Secretary American BaptistMissionary Union. Tremont Temple, Boston, Mass.Mabie, John S., A.B. '62. Clergyman. Escondido, Cal.Mabry, Thomas Ovid, M.S. '98. Student. Senatobia, Miss.McCafferty, Lulu, B.S. '94. Teacher. Princeton, 111.McCaleb, Anna, Ph.B. '00. 7727 Monroe av., Chicago.McCaleb, Walter Flavius, Ph.D. 'oo. Teacher. Carrizo Springs, Tex.McClay, Samuel, A.B. '80. Lawyer. Pittsburg, Pa.McClintock, Anna James, Ph.B. '96. Teacher. Lake Forest, 111.McClintock, Samuel Sweeney, Ph.B. '96. Teacher Princeton-Yale s.North hall, u. of Chicago. Chicago.McConaughy, George M., A.B. '77. Lawyer. 824 Equitable bldg.,Chicago.McCoy, Herbert Newby, Ph.D. '98. Prof. u. of Utah. Salt Lake City,Utah.McClure, Robert Samuel, A.B. '00. Student Harvard Law s. 7315 Vin-cennes av., Chicago.McCune, James Herbert, S.B. '00. Ipava, 111.McDonald, James H., M.S. '73. Physician. 13248 Ontario av., Chicago.McDonald, John Hector, Ph. D. '00. 63 Henry St., Toronto, Can.McDougall, George, A.B. '98. Clergyman. Aukeny, la.Mclntyre, Moses Dwight, A.B. '98. Law student. Hotel Plaza, Chicago.McGee, Harry Laverne, Ph.B. '98. Teacher. 16 Pacific av., Chicago.McKibben, George Fitch, B.D. '81. Clergyman. Granville, O.McKinley, Albert Edward, Ph.B. '96, Teacher. 816 N. nth st., Philadelphia, Pa.McKinley, William, Hon., LL.D., '99. President of the United States.Washington, D. C.MacLean, Annie Marion, Ph.M. '97, Ph.D. '00. Instructor. McGill u.,Montreal.MacLean, Ida Margaret, A.B., '97. Teacher. 224 Belden av., Chicago.McLean, Simon Tames, Ph.D. '97. Teacher u. of Ark. Fayetteville,Ark.MacLean, Thomas George, B.D. '69. Clergyman. Princeton, 111.McLennan, Simon Fraser, Ph.D. '96. Prof. Oberlin col. 249 Elm st,,Oberlin, O.McMillan, Daniel Peter, Ph.D. '99. Teacher. 5632 Ingleside av.rChicago.MacMurtry, Tillman Ephraim, S.B. '00. Physician. Cook Co: Hospital, Chicago.McNaul, Willard Carey, B.D. '93. Student u. of Chicago. S. Divinityhall, Chicago.McNeal, Edgar Holmes, A.B. '96. Fellow u. of Chicago. 7441 Euclidav., Chicago.MacNeal, Rose Mary, Ph.M. '98. Teacher h. s. Indianapolis, Ind.McPherson, William, Ph.D. '99. Instructor u. of Ohio. Columbus, O.Macomber, Charles Coombs, Ph.B. '97. Lawyer. Carroll, la.McWilliams, Mary Elizabeth, Ph.B. '96 (Mrs. Eugene Patterson).Mankato, Minn.Maddocks, Caroline Shaw, A.M. '95. Teacher. 5622 Ellis av., Chicago.Maguire, Olive, Ph.B. '99. 1260 W. Monroe st. Chicago.Malmsten, Andrew G., A.B. '82.Manchester, Herbert, A.B. '93.Mandeville, Paul, Ph.B. '99. With Swift & Co. Transit House, UnionStock Yards, Chicago.Mann, Clausine, A.B. '99. Teacher. 155 William St., Orange, N. J.Manning, Ralph Curtis, A.B. 00. Student Harvard Laws. 3242 Calumet av., Chicago.Markus, Milton M., Ph.B. '99. Cashier Sweet, Wallach & Co. 376Dearborn St., Chicago.Marot, Mary Louise, B.S. '94. 411 W. 1st st., Dayton, O.Marsh, Arba John, B.D. '97. Clergyman. Poland, N. Y.Marsh, George Linnaeus, A.M. '99. Student u. of Chicago. 115 Divinity-hall, u. of Chicago.Marshall, Richard Beauchamp, B.D. '00. Student u. of Chicago. 137S. Divinity hall, u. of Chicago.210 UNIVERSITY RECORDMartin, Ernest Whitney, A.B. 'oo. Student u. of Chicago. 31 Northhall, u. of Chicago.Martin, Helen Mabel, Ph.B. '98. Teacher. 3122 Rhodes av., Chicago.Martin, Henry W., A.B. '67. Real estate, ito Dearborn St., Chicago.Martinson, Emil Martin, B.D. '98. Clergyman. Maynard, Minn.Massey, Stillman E., A.B. '65. Merchant. Morris, 111.Massey, Muriel Annette, Ph.B. '98. Teacher. 923 W. Main St., Kalamazoo, Mich.Matheny, Martha Belle, A.M. 'oo. Colfax, 111.Matthews, James L., B.D. '82. Clergyman. Goodland, Ind.Matz, Evelyn, Ph.B. '97. Prin. Dearborn sem. 431 Oak St., Chicago.Matzinger, Philip Frederick, A.B. '96. Clergyman. 956 Jackson boul.,Chicago.Maxey, Edwin, Ph.M. '99. Teacher. Aurora, I1LMaxwell, Samuel Steen, Ph.D. '96. Prof. Monmouth col. Monmouth,111.May, Oscar G„ A.B. '67. Clergyman. Oakland, Cal.Maynard, Mary Duncklee, Ph.B. '96 (Mrs. William E. Chalmers). 52155th St., Brooklyn, N. Y.Mead, Albert Davis, Ph.D. '96. Professor. 62 George St., Providence,R. I.Mebane, William Nelson, B.D. '96, Ph.D. 99. Clergyman. Fredericks-burgh, Va.Mecum, Edwin Welton, B.D. '98. Clergyman. Des Moines, la.Meigs, Robert van, B.D. '98. Clergyman. Siloam, 111.Meloy, Robert Bingham, A.B. '97. Law student. 149 S. Paulina St.,Chicago.Mentzer, John Preston, Ph.B. '98. Lawyer. 410 Atlas blk., Chicago.Mercer, William Lloyd, B.S. '97. Teacher. Vicksburg, Mich.Meredith, Evan B., A.B. '79, B.D. '82. Bap. Sec'y for Kansas. 2022Walnut st., Kansas City, Mo.Mergentheim, Morton Adolph, A.B. '99, A.M. '00. Law student. 3529Calumet av., Chicago.Merica, Frances Marion, Ph.B. '97. Supt. schools. La Grange, Ind.Merrell, William Dayton, Ph.D. '98. Instructor u. of Rochester. Rochester, N. Y.Merrifield, Fred., A.B., '98. Student u. of Chicago. Chicago.Merryman, Dorcas Fidelia, A.B. '00. Medical student. 6752 Perry av.,Chicago.Meservey, Everett Lincoln, A.B. '99. Clergyman. Edison, O.Messick, Elizabeth. Ph.B. '97. Journalist. Massey P. O., Tenn.Metcalf, Guido Conti Sleeper, A.B. '98. Teacher. 6956 Water St., Chicago.Metz, James A., A.B. '64. Supt. of schools. Somerville, N. J.Meyer, John Jacob, Ph.D. '00. Frankenmuth, Mich.Miller, Anna Elizabeth, Ph.B. '99. Teacher. Oxford, O.Miller, Elsie Prince, S.B. 'oo. 5817 Jackson av., Chicago.Miller, John Anthony, Ph.D. '99. Prof. u. of Indiana. Bloomington,Ind.Miller, James Fred., S.B. '00. 1941 Farnum St., Davenport, la.Miller, Mary Susan, A. B. '99. Belton, Tex.Miller, Merton Leland, Ph.D. '97. Instructor u. of Chicago. Chicago.Miller, William Edwin, B.S. '99. Fellow u. of Chicago. 16 North hall.Chicago.Milligan, Henry Forsyth, A.B. '94. Clergyman. 1003 Perry av., Peoria,111.Millis, Harry Alvin, Ph.D. '99. Reference librarian John Crerar Library. . Chicago.Mills, John Freeman, B.D. '93. Clergyman. Grand Forks, N. D.Minard, Frederick Horace, B.S. '96. Mining Engineer. 409 Equitablebldg., Denver, Col.Miner, J. Ambrose, A.B. '68. Publisher. 526 Thompson St., AnnArbor, Mich.Minnick, Arthur, A.B. '97 Law student. 535 W. Adams St., Chicago.Mitchell, Harley Bradford, A.B. '76. Publisher. LaGrange, 111.Mitchell, Samuel Charles, Ph.D. '99. Prof. Richmond col. Richmond,Va.Mitchell, Wesley Claire, A.B. '96, Ph.D. '99. Dept. of U. S. Census.Washington, D. C.Moffatt, William Eugene, A.B. '96. Teacher Bradley Polytechnic inst.Peoria, 111. Moncreiff, William Franklin, Ph.M. '99. Student u. of Chicago. 5844Drexel av., Chicago.Monroe, Paul, Ph.D. '97. Instructor in Teachers' col. New York City.Moon, Elizabeth Letitia, Ph.D. '99 (Mrs. Elizabeth Moon Conrad). 126S. 34th st., Philadelphia, Pa.Mooney, Clara Lillian, A.B. '99. Teacher. 3549 Ellis av., Chicago.Moore, Addison Webster, Ph.D. '98. Instructor u. of Chicago. Chicago.Moore, Annie Pauline, Ph.B. '99. Holton, Kan.Moore, Caroline Sheldon, A.B. '96. Teacher. Mt. Carroll, 111.Moore, Ernest Carroll, Ph.D. '98. Instructor u. of California. Berkley, Cal.Moore, Gordon Beverly, A,B. '99. Teacher. Greenville, S. C.Moore, John Howard, A.B. '96. 5496 Ellis av., Chicago.Moore, Mary Chapman, A.B. '00. Teacher. Ascham Hall, Chicago.Moore, Richard Bishop, B.S. '97. Columbia, Mo.Moran, Thomas William, PhB. '95. Lawyer. 4710 Vincennes av., Chicago.Moorehouse,Lewis Cass, B.D. '78. Clergyman. Osceola, 111.Morey, Charles F., A.B. '79. Lawyer. Hastings, Neb.Morgan, Edwin, A.B. '94. Teacher. 24 State St., Newark, N. J.Morganthau, Maximilian, Jr., B.S. '98. Real estate. 201 Broadway,New York.Moritz, Robert Edward, Ph.M. '96. Instructor u. of Nebraska. Lincoln, Neb.Morrill, Gulian Lansing, B.D. '81. Clergyman. Owensboro, Ky.Morrow, Anna Mary, A.B. '99. Blue Earth City, Minn.xMorrow, William Ross, A.B. '97. Teacher. Dundee, 111.Morse, Anna Sophia, Ph.B. '00. Newbury, Vt.Morse, William H„ A.B. '81. Lawyer. 3244 Clinton av., Minneapolis ,Minn.Mory, Ruthella Bernard, Ph.M. '00. Teacher. 304 N. Charles St.,Baltimore, Md.Mosher, Roswell Curtis, B.D. '81. Clergyman. Albert Lea, Minn.Moss, Carolyn Ladd, Ph.B. '97. Teacher h. s. Ottumwa, la.Moss, Charles S., A.B. '69. Clergyman. 1315 E. 15th av., Kansas City,Mo.Mosser, Stacy Carroll, Ph.B. '97. Reporter Chicago Record. 5750Madison av.. Chicago.Mortimer, Theron Winfred, B.D. '00. Coach u. of Colorado. BoulderColo.-Mott, Robins S., A.B. '81. Lawyer. 915, 171 New York Life Building,Chicago.Moulton, Forest Ray, Ph.D. '00. Associate u. of Chicago. Chicago.Mountain, Joseph, A.B. '73, B.D. '80. Clergyman. Pewaukee, Wis.Moxley, Lina, Ph.B. '98. Teacher. 4746 Madison av., Chicago.Munson, John P., Ph.D. '97. Prof. State normal. Ellinsburg, Wash, rjMueller, Charles E. R., A.B. '68. Musician. 262 Ohio St., Chicago.Muenter, Erich, A.B. '99. Teacher. 1223 Wilton av., Chicago.Murphy, Henry Constance, Ph.B. '95. Editor. 226 Locust St., Evans -ville, Ind.Murray, Charles Henry, B.D. '97. Clergyman. 961 Laurel av., St.Louis, Mo.Myhrman, David Vilhelm, Ph.B. '96. Student u. of Leipsic. Germany.Neal, Edith Leavitt, Ph.B. '00. 409 E. 41st st., Chicago.Nead, George W., A.B. '70, B.D. '73. Clergyman. Norwood, Mass.Neel, Carr Baker, B.S. '97. Mining engineer. 4545 Lake av., Chicago.Neff , Theodore Lee, Ph.D. '96. Instructor u. of Chicago. Chicago.-Nelson, Jessie Louisa, B.S. '97. Clerk Treasury Department. 1445Binney St., Washington, D. C.Neighbor, Robert E., A.B. '67. Clergyman. 116 W. Walnut St.,Indianapolis, Ind.Nelson, Nels Lawrence T., Ph.D. '99. Teacher. Goodhue, Minn.Netherton, Thomas Monroe, A.B. '99. Teacher. Liberty, Mo.Newcomb, George E., A.B. '86. Lawyer. 771 W. Madison st., Chicago.Newell, Marquis Joseph, A.B. '99. Student. Kalamazoo, Mich.Newman, Harry Bauland, Ph.B. '00. Law Student. 4049 Grand boul.,Chicago.Newman, Jacob, A.B. '73. Lawyer.. 802 Chamber of Commerce Build-ing, Chicago.UNIVERSITY RECORD 211Newsom, Sidney Carleton,' A.M. '99. Teacher Manual Training s.Indianapolis, Ind.Nicholes, Charles W., A.B. '75. Real estate. 208 La Salle St., Chicago.Nichols, Frederick Day, A.B. '97. Student. Oxford u., England.Niles, Sidney S., A.B. '75. Pres. Niles Knob Co. Oak Park, 111.Nixon, Harmon Ausburn, B.D. '79. Clergyman. Boothsville, W. Va.Noble, Jane Frances, Ph.B. '95. Rice Lake, Wis.Noll, Elizabeth Margaret, A.B. '99 (Mrs. Ralph L. Soule). Berwyn, 111.Norden, Adolphe Chemieux, A.B. '00. 4639 Vincennes av., Chicago.Norman, Wesley Walker, Ph.D. '99. Prof. u. of Texas. Austin, Tex.Northrup, Alfred Sayles, A.B. '94. Lawyer. Kimbark av. and 59th St.,Chicago.Northrup, Emanuel, B.D. '83. Teacher. McMinnville, Ore.Norton, Adda Frances, Ph.B. '97. Teacher. 1544, nth St., Des Moines,la.Norwood, Hugh David, B.D. '84. Clergyman, Benson, 111.Norwood, Joseph, B.S. '97. Asst. cashier bank. Greenville, S. C.O'Brien, Nellie Regina, Ph.B. '00. 4723 Prairie av., Chicago.Oeschger, William, A.B. '95, B.D. '98. Clergyman. Fairbury, Neb.Oglevee, Nannie Gourley, Ph.B. 'oo. 98 Hamilton av., Columbus, O.Ohrenstein, Eda Dianah, Ph.B. '00. 5628 Washington av., Chicago.Olds, Rinaldo Lawson, A.B. '76, B.D. '80. Clergyman. Blue Hill, Me.Olsen, Holden Mathias, A.B. '00. Herscher, 111.Optiz, Russel Burton, B.S. '98. Student. 5558 Princeton av., Chicago.Oram, William George, B.D. '97. Clergyman. Randolph, O.Osborn, Loran David, Ph.D. '00. Clergyman. Centralia, 111.Osborne, Cornelia Stewart, A.B. '99. 4455 Grand boul., Chicago.Osborne, Sarah Nicoll, A.B. '98. 4455 Grand boul., Chicago.Osdel, Oliver Willis Van, B.D. '83. Clergyman. Spokane, Wash.Osgood, Ella Maria, Ph.B. '95. Teacher. 106 Browie av., Akron, O.Osgood, Henry Dodge, B.D. '84. Clergyman. Marseilles, 111.Osgood, William Pleasant, Ph.B. '95, B.D. '97. Clergyman. 565Broadway St., Fall River, Mass.Otis, Charles T., A.B. '74. Real estate. 2033 Prairie av., Chicago.Packer, Anna Sophia, A.B. '95. Librarian. 6443 Monroe av., Chicago.Paddock, Catherine Dix, Ph.B. '98-. Teacher. 5451 Cornell av., Chicago.Paddock, Caroline Bolles,B.S. '99. 5451 Cornell av., Chicago.Page, Cecil, Ph.B. '98. Law student. 5330 Madison av., Chicago.Paisley, Minnie MacDonald, A.B. '99* Teacher. Lerna, 111.Palmquist, Elin Arthur Eugene, A.B. '00. Student u. of Chicago.Chicago.Pardee, Ethel, A.B. '99. 624 La Salle av., Chicago.Pardee, Mark Bockes, A.B. '99. 624 La Salle av., Chicago.Park, Elizabeth Junia, Ph.B. '99. Student u. of Chicago. 5432 Lexington av., Chicago.Parker, Florence, S.B. '00. Student u. of Chicago. 10340 Longwood av.,Chicago.Parker, Marilla Zeroyda, Ph.B. '99. Teacher. 5622 Ellis av., Chicago.Parkins, Horace Greeley, A.B. '79. Lawyer. 115 Monroe St., Chicago.Parsons, Eugene, A.B. '83. Editor. 241, 37th St., Chicago.Parsons, Everett Joseph, A.B. '99. Berlin, Wis.Parsons, William E., A.B. '68. Cashier. Sherman House, Chicago.Paschal, George Washington, Ph.D. '00. Asst. Prof. Wake Forest col.Wake Forest, N. C.Patrick, Bower Reynolds, B.D. '97. Clergyman. Duluth, Minn.Patt, Benjamin F., A.B. '78, B.D. '78. Clergyman. 215 W. Churchst., Newark, O.Pattengill, Bertha Adelia, A.B. '00. Atlanta, 111.Patterson, Clarence N., A.B. '79, B.D. '82. Clergyman. Savanna, 111.Payne, Walter A., Ph.B. '95. Sec. Univ. Exten. Div. u. of Chicago.Chicago.Peabody, Earll Williams, Ph.B. '69. Clerk. 5747 Madison av., Chicago.Peaks, Mary Bradford, A.B. '00. Student u. of Chicago. 5728 Ellis av.,Chicago.Pearce, Van Sumner, Ph.B. '99. 61 E. 24th St., Chicago.Peck, Ferd. W., A.B. '68. U. S. Comm'r Paris Expos. AuditoriumHotel, Chicago.Peck, Ralph LeRoy, Ph.B. '98. Teacher. 791 Warren av., Chicago.Peeke, Ethelbert W., A.B. '8o. Lawyer. 3404 Wabash av., Chicago. Peirce, Alice, A.B. '98 (Mrs. Albert Hale Sylvester). U. S. Geol.Survey. Washington, D. C.Peirce, Julia Lillian, A.B. '00. 636 E. 56th st., Chicago.Pendleton, Genevieve, Ph.B. '98. Editor. Beecher Hall, Chicago.Perisho, Elwood Chappell, M.S. '95. Teacher State nor. Platte-ville, Wis.Perkins, Mary, Ph.B. '97. Teacher. 663 Washington boul., Chicago.Perrin, John William, Ph.D. '95. Prof. Western Reserve u., Cleveland,O.Perrine, Samuel A., A.B. '85. Missionary. Impur, Assam, Asia.Perry, Henry Francis, A.B. '99. Clergyman. N. 62d st., Chicago.Pershing, Ward Beecher, B.S. '98. Lieutenant U. S. Army. 337, 53dst., Chicago.Persons, Metta L., A.B. '99. Teacher. New Paltz, N. Y.Peterson, George Peter, B.D. '75. Clergyman. Jamestown, Kan.Peterson, Anna Lockwood, A.B. '99. Teacher h. s. Omaha, Neb.Peterson, Harvy Andrew, A.B. '97. Student Harvard u. 1727 Cambridge st., Cambridge, Mass.Pettet, Neletta Elida, A.B. '98. Teacher. Tobias, Neb.Pettet, Ormsby Elroy, A.B. '00. Asst. Chemist 111. Steel Works. 651Eriglewood av., Chicago.Pettet, Lewis Dumont, B.D. '84. Clergyman. Eaton Rapids, Mich.Pettet, Marshall Horton, B.D. '82. Clergyman. Detroit, Mich.Pfirshing, George, Ph.B. '98. Law student. 3001 Groveland av.,Chicago.Philips, David, B.D. '98. Clergyman. Plymouth, Pa.Phillips, Joseph P., A.B. '68. Clergyman. Belvidere, 111.Phillips, Thomas, A.B. 80. Physician. Iowa Falls, la.Pickel, Frank Welborn, M.S. '99. Teacher. Clinton, Miss.Pierce, Lucy Frances, Ph.B. '95. Writer. 4847 Grand boul., Chicago.Pierce, Dollie Grace, Ph.B. '99. Teacher. Utica, Mich.Pierce, Earle Vaydor, A.B. '94. Clergyman. Ironton, O.Pierce, Willfam L., A.B. '65. Real estate. Chamber of Commercebldg., Chicago.Pienkowsky, Arthur Thaddeus, Ph.B. '98. Teacher Indust. Training s.Indianapolis, Ind.Pike, Joshua, A.B. '65. Supt. schools. Jerseyville, 111.Pike, Charles Sumner, A.B. '96. Editor. 3908 Ellis av., Chicago.Pinkerton, Grace Gibson, A.B. '98. Student u. of Chicago. 338, 57thst., Chicago.Piper, Margaret, Ph.B. '98. Teacher. 3521 S. Hermitage av., Chicago.Polkey, Hugh James, B.S. '91. 3564 Vernon av., Chicago.Pollard, ^Evangeline^ Myrtle, A.B, '98 (Mrs. Edward M. Williams).Friends u., Wichita, Kan.Porter, Elizabeth, A.B. '94. Teacher. 578 E. 60th st., Chicago.Porterfield, Cora Maud, A.B. '96, A.M. '97. Teacher. 3715 Langley av.,Chicago.Portis, Moses Milton, B.S, '98. Student. 227 Loomis st. Chicago.Powell, Henry'William, B.D. '84. Clergyman. Mason, Mich.Powers, Fred P., A.B. '71. Journalist. 19 Beaver St., New York.Poulson, Edwin Lee, Ph.B. '00. Life Insurance. 3116 So. Park av.,Chicago.Pratt, Alice Edwards, Ph.M. '93, Ph.D. '97. Teacher State normal. SanDiego, Cal.Pratt, E. Hartley, A.M, '71. Surgeon. 1203, 100 State St., Chicago.Pratt, John Goodspeed, A.B. '97. Teacher. Virginia, 111.Pray, Theron B., A.B. '69. Pres. nor. s. Stevens Point, Wis.Prescott, William Howard, Ph.B. '94. Business. 55 Stones Levee,Cleveland, O. .Price, Alfred Bennett, A.B. '72. Teacher. Sioux Falls, S. Dak.Price, Ira Maurice, B.D. '82. Prof. u. of Chicago. Morgan Park, 111.Price, Orlo Josiah, B.D. '98. Clergyman. Newark, O. (Priest, Mrs. Jean Rowan, Ph.B. '00. Teacher. 5622 Ellis av., Chicago.Proctor, John Thomas, B.D. '97. Missionary.Purington, Harry Edward, B.D. ^97. Clergyman. Marquette, Mich.Rabb, Robert Morris, A.B. '99. Clergyman. 5651 Washington av.,Chicago.Radford, Alice Evelyn, Ph.B. '00. Student u. of Chicago. 5526 Cornellav., Chicago.212 UNIVERSITY RECORDRadford, Maud Lavinia, Ph.B. '94, Ph.M. '96. Asst. u. of Chicago.5526 Cornell av., Chicago.Radford, May Eugenia, A.B. '97. Examiner in u. of New York. 64Chestnut St., Albany, N. Y.Railsback, Martha Binford, A.B. '99. 1825 Penn St., Kansas City, Mo.Rand, Philip, Ph.B. '97. Business, n Joy St., Boston, Mass.Randall, Samuel B., A.B. '8i. Teacher Cal. col. Oakland, Cal.Ransome, Alice Margaret, Ph.B. '98. 532, gthst., Brooklyn, N. Y.Ransom, Caroline Louise, A.M. '00. Student. Echstrasse n, Hanover,Germany.Ransom, James Harvy, Ph.D. '99. Lecture Asst. u. of Chicago. 6034Ingleside av., Chicago.Ranstead, Janet Mercy, A.B. '99 (Mrs. Janet R.Lehman). 4 N.Jack- *son St., Elgin, 111.Rapp, John Jacob, A.B. '98. Lawyer. 1204 Ft. Dearborn bldg., Chicago.Ray, Lucia Holliday, Ph.M. '99. Woodruff pi., Indianapolis, Ind.Ray, Robert C, A.B. '82, B.D. '80. Clergyman. 622 Broadway, E.Providence, R. I.Raycroft, Joseph Edward, A.B. '96. Instructor u. of Chicago. 6109Greenwood av., Chicago,Ravmond, Jerome Hall, Ph.D. '95. Prest. W. Virginia u. Morgantown,"W. Va. .Raymond, William R., A.M. '78. Real estate. 3304 Vernon av.,Chicago.Rea, Joseph M., A.B. ^67. Clergyman. Grundy Centre, la.Read, Eliphalet Allison, Ph.D. '96. Prof. Kalamazoo col. Kalamazoo,Mich.Read, Isaiah Wolfe, B.D. '79. Clergyman. Jacksonville, 111.Reddy, Mary Elizabeth, Ph.B. '98. Teacher. 3244 Indiana av., Chicago.Reed, Annie Bowlend, A.B. '99. 5409 Jefferson av., Chicago.Reed, Clark Scammon, Ph.B. '00. Law student. 252 E. 66th St., Chicago.Reed, Grace, A.B. '84. Prin. Calumet av. s. 4342 Champlain av., Chicago.Reed, Rufus Maynard, B.S. '99. Polo, 111.Reed, William Wallace, B.D. '99. Clergyman. Fargo, N. D.Reeve, Frederick Edwin, A.B. '98. Teacher. Western Springs, 111.Reeve, James Josiah, B.D. '98. Clergyman. Guelph, Ont.Reichmann, Charlotte Louise, A.B. '99. 1324 Sheffield av., Chicago.Reichmann, Alvena Dorothea, A.B. '00. 1324 Sheffield av., Chicago.Reynolds, John Hugh, A.M. '97. Teacher. Conway, Ark.Reynolds, Katherine Hoyt, Ph.B. '00. Prin. West Side h. s. Aurora,111.Reynolds, Myra, Ph.D. '95. Asst. prof. u. of Chicago. Foster hall,Chicago.Rhodes, Jesse Cassander, B.D. '98. Clergyman. Kingsbury, Ind.Rhodes, John Edwin, A.B. '76. Physician. 34 Washingson St., Chicago.Rice, Corinne Lelia, Ph.B. '99. Teacher. 42 S. Cedar St., Oberlin, O.Rice, Elbridge Washburn, Ph.B. '97. Law student. 5558 Drexel av.,Chicago.Rice, Inez Dwight, Ph.B. '98. Teacher. East Las Vegas, N. M.Richards, David Towner, B.D. '72. Clergyman. Kirkland, Wash.Richer, William Levy, Ph.B. '98. Teacher. Coshocton, O.Rickert, Martha Edith, Ph.D. '99. 3 Great James St., Bedford Row,London, Eng.Riddle, James W., A.B. '70. Clergyman. 3318 Spring Garden st.,Philadelphia, Pa.Ridlon, John, A.B. '75. Surgeon. 103 State st., Chicago.Ridpath,x Clark Edward, A.B. '93. Lawyer. 880 W. Jackson boul., Chicago.Riggs, John D., A.B. '78. Pres. Ottawa u. Ottawa, Kan.Rising, Kate Clarentine, A.B. '00. Student u. of Chicago. 433, 57th st.,Chicago.Ritchey, John Paul, A.B. '00. Student Rush Medical col. 655 E. 62dst., Chicago.Roberts, Alfred, B.D. '70. Clergyman. Bel ton, Tex.Robertson, Alice Duval, Ph.B. '00. Fort Dodge, la.Robinson, David Moore, A.B. '98. Teacher. 6530 Lafayette av., Chicago.Robinson, Irene Elizabeth, Ph.B. '95. Teacher. 84 Muskegon av.,Muskegon, Mich. Robinson, Samuel Rowland, B.D. '98. Clergyman. Livingston, Mont.Robson, Alice, Ph.B. '97. Teacher State nor. col. Ypsilanti, Mich.Roby, Charles Foster, Ph.B. '99. Athletic instructor. 10805 av. J.,Chicago.Roe, James H., A.B. '65. Orange grower. Riverside, Cal.Rogers, Arthur Kenyon, Ph.D. '98. Instructor. Alfred, N. Y.Rogers, May Josephine, Ph.B. '95. Teacher. 5657 Cottage Grove av.,Chicago.Roney, Charles J., B.S. '76. Civil engineer. Redlands, Cal.Roney, William R., A.B. '76. Mechanical engineer. 26 Cortland St.,New York.Root, Martha Louise, A.B. '95. Teacher. Cambridge Springs, Pa.Ross, James Wolfe, S.B. '00. Transportation. 3604 Vernon av., Chicago.Ross, Parke, A.B. '00. 3926 Lake av., Chicago.Roth, Louise, Ph.B. 'oo. Teacher. 349 Congress St., Chicago.Rothschild, Isaac Solomon, Ph.B. '97. Lawyer. 4820 Champlain av.,Chicago.Rowell, Nat. T., B.S. '78. Contractor. Joliet 111.Rowley, Joseph, A.B. '65. Clergyman. 593 La Salle st., Chicago.Rubel, Ira W., A.B. '81. Pres. Rubel Paper Co. 318 Broadway, NewYork.Rubel, Maurice J., B.S. '97. Business. 3341 Wabash av., Chicago.Rugh, Ralph Elliott, A.B. '00. Medical student. Snell hall, u. of Chicago, Chicago.Rullkoetter, William-, A.B. '93, Ph.D. '99. Prof. Drury col. Springfield,Mo.Rumsey, J. Frank, B. S. '69. Broker. 6 Sherman St., Chicago.Runyon, Laura Louisa, Ph.B. '98. Teacher u. of Chicago. Foster hall,Chicago.Russell, Luther Parker, A.B. '99, B.D. '99. Clergyman. Chatsworth%111.Russell, John M., A.B. '82. Real estate. 185 Dearborn st., Chicago.Sage, Eben Charles, B.D. '82. Clergyman. New Haven, Conn.Sage, Eugene Gunnison, B.D. '80. Clergyman. Normal, 111.St. John, Wallace, B.D. '98, Ph.D. '00. Clergyman. Franklin, Ind.Sampsell, Marshall Emmett, B.A. '93. Clerk U. S. Court. Chicago.Sampson, John H., A.B. '73, B.D. '76. Clergyman. 275 E. 5th St., Riverside, Cal.Samuels, Benjamin, A.B. '00. Law student. 421 W. Taylor St., Chicago.Sanders, Frederick William, Ph.D. '95. Pres. New Mexico col. of Agri.Masilla Park, N. Mex.Sanders, James Franklin, B.D., '95, M.A. '99. Clergyman, Clinton, la.Sanderson, Eugene Clarement, B.D. '94. Pres. Divinity s. u. of Oregon.Eugene, Ore.Sanford, Edwin Merritt, B.A. '96. Teacher. Argyle, N. Y.Sargent, Charles R., A.B. '84. Clergyman. Belle Fontaine, O.Savage, Edward P., A.B. '68, B.D. '72. Clergyman. 1136 Minnehahast., St. Paul, Minn.Sawyer, Albert Henry, B.D. '73. Clergyman. Kirkwood, Mo.Sawyer, George Hoyt, Ph.B. '99. Prin. h. s. Osage, la.Schmahl, Walter Joseph, Ph.B. '00. 427 E. 61st st., Chicago.Schmidt, Emanuel, B.D. '98. Clergyman. Hamilton, N. Y.Schnelle, Frederich Oscar, B.S. '95.Shoemaker, Daniel Martin, B.S. '98. Teacher. Muscatine, la.Sphoenbrun, Leo, Jr., A.B. 'oo. Lawyer. 3916 Prairie av., Chicago.Schoolcraft, Henry Lawrence, M.Ph. '99, Ph.D. '99. Instructor u. ofIllinois. Urbana, 111.Schottenfels, Ida May, M.Ph. '95. Teacher. 4532 Lake av., Chicago.Schultz, Jacob B.D. '79. Clergyman. Knoxville, la.Schwarz, Edith Irving, Ph.B. '97. Highland Park, 111.Schweitzer, Arthur Richard, Ph.D. '00. Student u. of Chicago. 1906Oakdale av., Chicago.Schofield, Cora Louise, Ph.D. '98. Instructor Wellesley col. Wellesley,Mass.Scott, William R., A.B. '80. Clergyman. Halstead, Kan.Scroggin, Ernest Arthur, A.B. '99. Teacher h. s. Freeport, 111.Seaman, Allen B., A.B. '85. Lawyer. 632 Cooper bldg., Denver, Colo.UNIVERSITY RECORD 213Searles, Helen McGaffey, Ph.D. '98. Instructor Mt. Holyoke col. SouthHadley, Mass.Seidenadel, Charles William, Ph.D. '97. Docent u. of Chicago. Chicago.Sellon, Grace Edith, Ph.B. '00. 6349 Drexel av., Chicago.Sennitt, Carolyn Belle, Ph.B. '00. Teacher. Plainfield, 111.Seward, Ora P., B.A. '81, Ph.D. '99. Prof. u. of Utah. Salt Lake City,Utah. vShaklee, Alfred Ogle, B.S. '99. Teacher. Woodhull, 111.Shannon, John Alexander, A.B. '00. Teacher. 6344 May St., Chicago.Shatto, Charles Rollin, B.D. '94. Clergyman. Shenandoah, la.Sherman, Franklyn Cole, B.A. '95, B.D. '98. Clergyman. 48 Powell av.,Chicago.Sheppard, Robert D., M.A. '69. Prof. Northwestern u. Evanston, 111.Sherman, Mary Lydia, B.A. '98, Independence, la.Shirk, Granville Corey, B.D. '77. Clergyman. Montezuma, Ind.Shouse, Henry Messick, B.D. '99, Clergyman. Versailles, Ky.Shutter, Marion Daniel, B.D. '81. Clergyman. Minneapolis, Minn.Sidney, Thomas Kay, Ph.D. '00. Instructor Cornell col. Mount Vernon, la.Sikes, George Cushing, Ph.M. '94. Sec'y St. R. R. Commission. 215Jackson Park terrace, Chicago.Sikes, George Reuben, B.A. '97. Student u. of Chicago. 73 E. 61st st.,Chicago.Silliman, Caroline E., Ph.M. '96. Librarian. River Falls, Wis.Simmons, Mary Blanche, B.A. '99. Oskaloosa, la.Simpson, Alice Northrup, A.B. '82. Morgan Park, 111.Simpson, Burton Jesse, B.S. '97. Student. 748 W. Harrison st., Chicago.Simpson, Douglas Haszard, B.D. '82. Clergyman. Berwick, NovaScotia.Sisson, Edward Octavius, B.A. '93. Prin. Bradley Polytechnic inst.Peoria, 111.Sisson, Septimus, B.S. '98. Prof. Agricultural col. Manhattan, Kan.Slater, John Rothwell, B.D. '98. Clergyman. 324 Dearborn St., Chicago.Slaught, Herbert Ellsworth, Ph.D. '98. Asst. Prof. u. of Chicago. Chicago.Slimmer, Max Darwin, B.S. '97. Student Kent lab. u. of Chicago.Chicago.Smedley, Fred Warren, B.S. '98. Director of child-study. 171 La Sallest., Chicago.Smith, Arthur Maxson, M.A. '99. Student u. of Chicago. 5508 Greenwood av., Chicago.Smith, Arthur Whipple, B.S. '98. Student u. of Chicago. 5039 Lake av.,Chicago.Smith, Byron Bayard, A.B. '99. Instructor. 7721 Union av., Chicago.Smith, Catlett, Conway, B.A. '70, B.D. '73. Instructor Atlanta col.Atlanta, Ga.Smith, Edward F., A.B. '72.Smith, Francis M., A.B. '77, B.D. '80. Clergyman. Marion, la.Smith, Frederick A., A. B. '66. Lawyer. 132 Clark st., Chicago.Smith, Frederick Miner, B.D. '73. Clergyman. Pekin, 111.Smith, Henry Justin, B.A. '98. Care of The Standard, Chicago.Smith, John M. P., Ph.D. '99. Docent u. of Chicago. 469 E. 56th st.,Chicago.Smith, Kenneth Gardner, B.A., '96. Teacher. Dixon, 111.Smith, Warren Rufus, Ph.D. '94. Teacher Lewis inst. 546 Jackson boul.,Chicago.Smith, Wilson Robert, Ph.D. '99. Prof. McMaster u. Toronto, Can.Snashall, Carlton Hosmer, B.A. '98. Clergyman. 1499 Washingtonboul., Chicago.Snell, Arthur Veeder, Ph.B. '00. 650, 60th st., Chicago.Snider, Aaron W., B.D. '84. Clergyman. Portland, Ore.Snow, Ralph Rensselaer, B.D. '97. Student u. of Chicago. South Di-" vinity hall, Chicago.Snowden, Clinton A., A.B. '71. Indian commissioner. Tacoma, Wash.Soares,Theodoro Geraldo, Ph.D. '94, B.D. '97. Clergyman. Galesburg,Solenberger, Edwin Dwight, Ph.B. '00. Student u. of Chicago. Polo, 111.Spalding, Mary Doan, B.A. '96. Teacher. 5827 Kimbark av., Chicago. Spaulding, Clarence Sidney, D.B. '00. Clergyman. Pittsburg, Pa.Spencer, Nettie, B.S. '99. Buffalo, 111.Spray, Jessie Nea, A.B. '99. 5127 Cornell av., Chicago.Springer, Daisy M., A.B. '85. Teacher. 4832 Langley av., Chicago.Sproull, Mrs. Grace Hughes, Ph.B, '00. Teacher State normal. Greeley,Colo.Squires, Vernon Purinton, M.A. '95. Prof. u. of North Dakota. GrandForks, N. D.Stagg, Mrs. Stella Robertson, B.A. '96. 5704 Jackson av., Chicago.Staley, Jonathan, B.A. '75. Clergyman. Beaver Dam, Wis.Stanton, Edna Augusta, B.S. '98 (Mrs. A. A. Michelson). U. of Chicago. Chicago.Starring, George Henry, B.D. '81. Clergyman. Huron, S. D.Stearns, Charles A., A.B. '69. Telegraph operator. Encimitas,,Cal.Stearns, Edward F., A.B. '69. Prin. h. s. 3508 Ellis av., Chicago.Stearns, Jane Athlyn, S.B. '00. 4826 Kimbark av., Chicago.Stebbins, Althea V., Ph.B. '99. Teacher. 6340 Monroe av., Chicago.Steigmeyer, Frederick Franklin, Ph.B. '97. Lawyer. Telluride, Colo.Stein, Simeon G., Jr., B.A. '83. Banker. Muscatine, la.Stephenson, Roger Preston, B.D. '74. Clergyman. Garnett, Kan.Stern, Harry Levi, M.A. '96. Lawyer. 1003 New York Life bldg., Chicago.Sterns, Worthy Putnam, Ph.D. '00. 6027 Lexington av.Stetson, Herbert Lee, B.D. '78. Pres. Des Moines col. Des Moines, la.Stevens, Elmer Tilson, B.D. '97. Clergyman. De Land, Fla.Stevens, Frank Lincoln, Ph.D. '00. Avery and Bellevue avs., Syracuse,N. Y. 'Stevens, Raymond Williams, B.A. '96. Insurance. 4118 Grand boul.,Chicago.Stevens, Ellen Yale, Ph.B. '00. Instructor Teachers col. 120 West St.,New York.Stevenson, George Edmund Traver, B.D. '99. Clergyman. Lansing-burg, N. Y.Stevenson, James Henry, Ph.D. '97. Prof. Vanderbilt u. Nashville,Tenn.Stewart, Charles Wesley, B.S. '96. Physician. 709, 14th St., Denver,Colo.Stewart, Chase, A.B. '80. Lawyer. Springfield, O.Stieg, Bertha, B.S. '99 (Mrs. Marshall Evans). 82 Union St., Mt. Clair,N. J.Stiles, Bertha Vernon, B.A. '99. Teacher h. s. Taylorsville, 111.Stitt, Grace Edith Moore, S.B. '00. 12001 Butler st., West Pullman, 111.Stone, Edward Augustus, B.D. '71. Clergyman. Champaign, 111.Stone, Edward T., B.D. '71. Clergyman. Atwood Bldg., Chicago.Stone, Harriet, B.S. '96, M.S. '97. Teacher Forest Park u. St. Louis,Mo.Stone, Harry Wheeler, B.A. '96. Lawyer. 601, 115 Dearborn St., Chicago.Stone, Isabelle, M.S. '96, Ph.D. '97. Teacher Vassar col. Poughkeep-sie, N. Y.Stone, Joe Cecil, B.A. '99. Teacher. Brownwood, Tex.Stone, Maude Lorena, B.S. '96. Dir. Phys. Training nor. s. Emporia,Kan.Stowell, Reuben Giles, B.S. '98. Civil engineer. 459 Dayton St., Chicago.Strauchon, Elizabeth Marguerite, Ph.B. '99, Ph.M. '99. Teacher h. s.Rockford, 111.Strock, Linius Lehman, B.A. '97. Student. 23 Edwards pi., Princeton,N.J.Stewart, Henry Walgrave, Ph.D. '00. 5827 Kimbark av., Chicago.Sturges, Esther Wallace, Ph.B. '99. 56 Central av., Oak Park, 111.Sturges, Mary Mathews, M.S. '96. Student. 56 Central av., Oak Park,Summers, James, A.B. '78. 253% Washington St., Portland, Ore.Sunderland, Jabez Thomas, A.B. '67, B.D. '70. Clergyman. AnnArbor, Mich.Sutherland, George, A.B. '74, B.D. '77. Pres. Grand Island col. GrandIsland, Neb.Swaney, Homer A., A.B. '79. Lawyer. Pittsburg, Pa.Swarte, Lawrence James de, B.A. '95. Physician. 1805 Walnut st.,Milwaukee.214 UNIVERSITY RECORDSwartout, Fred R., B.A. '84. Clergyman. West Superior, Wis.Swartz, Samuel Ellis, Ph.D. '96. Prin. Broaddus Clas. and Scien. inst.Clarksburg, W. Va.Sweet, Charles S., A.B. '70. Sec'y Pullman Co. Oak Park, 111.Swingley, Blanche, B.A. '99. 4737 Kimbark av., Chicago.Swett, Mary Chase, Ph.B. '98. Student u. of Chicago. Hyde ParkHotel, Chicago.Tanka, Kilchi, B.A. '95. Teacher Tetsugah Kwan. Tokyo, Japan.Tanner, Amy Eliza, Ph.D. '98. Faribault, Minn.Taylor, Carleton E., A.M. '70, B.D. '72. Clergyman. 310, 15th St.,Rock Island, 111.Taylor, Clifton Oscar, B.A. '99. Student u. of Chicago. 5718 Kimbarkav., Chicago.Taylor, Elbert O., A.B. '68, B.D. '71. Lecturer. 95 Colberg av., Rosin-dale, Boston, Mass.Taylor, Thomas Jackson, B.A. '94. Prin. of schools. Bathgate, N. D.Tefft, Nellie Edna, A.B. '97 (Mrs. Sherman C. Spitzer). 239 MapleGrove, Oak Park, 111.Teller, Charlotte Rose, Ph.B. '99. Teacher Dearborn sem. 4315 Berkley av., Chicago.Temple, Levi D., A.B. '83. Clergyman. Flemington, N. J.Terry, Lee W., A.B. '81, B.D. '84. Clergyman. 504 W. 8th av., Denver, Colo.Thomas, Frederick Bradley, A.B. '99. 5735 Monroe av., Chicago.Thomas, George W,, A.B. '62. Capitalist. 164 Dearborn St., Chicago.Thomas, Henry Bascom, B.S. '99. Teacher Phys. Cult. Armour inst.Armour inst., Chicago.Thomas, Judson Benjamin, B.D. '80. Clergyman. Englewood, Chicago.Thomas, Mary Susan, Ph.B. '96. Meyersdale, Pa.Thomas, William Isaac, Ph.D. '96. Asso. prof. u. of Chicago. Chicago.Thompson, Charles Sproull, M.A. '94. Contracting freight agent. 99Adams st., Chicago.Thompson, Emily Churchill, A.B. '97, A.M. '00. 4457 Emerald av.,Chicago.Thompson, Helen Bradford, Ph.B. '97. Fellow u. of Chicago. 326 W.61st pi., Chicago.Thompson, James Westfall, Ph.D. '95. Instructor u. of Chicago. Chicago.Thompson, Samuel Hope, A.B. '99. Student. 6137 Woodlawn av., Chicago.Thompson, William, A.B. '67. Judge. Burlingame, Kan.Thorns, James Paul, A.M. '72. Clergyman. 640 N. Hoyne av., Chicago.Tilton, Clara Albina, A.B. '98. Private sec'y. 5701 Drexel av., Chicago.Todd, Elmer Ely, A.B. '96. Lawyer. Seattle, Wash.Tolman, Cyrus Fischer, Jr., B.S. '96. Student. 41 E. 34th pi., Chicago.Tolman, Edgar B., A.B. '80. Lawyer. 361 E. 58th St., Chicago.Tolman, Frank Leland, Ph.B. '99. Student. 41 E. 34th pi., Chicago.Tooker, Robert Newton, Jr., B.A. '97. Student. 263 Dearborn av.,Chicago.Torrance, Catherine, B.A. '98. Teacher Stanton col. Natchez, Miss.Treadwell, Aaron Louis, Ph.D. '99. Prof. Vassar col. Poughkeepsie, N. Y.Treat, Theodore N., B.S. '74. Lawyer. Plankinton, S. D.Triggs, Oscar Lovell, Ph.D. '95. Instructor u. of Chicago. Chicago.Trumbull, Donald Shurtleff, B.A. '97. Law student. 6122 Madison av.,Chicago,Tucker, George Eugene, S.B. 'oo. Student. Humboldt, Neb. .Tunnell, George Gerard, Ph.D. '97. Transportation business. 5735Monroe av., Chicago.Tupper, Edward Leonard, A.B. '93. 306 Grove St., Chicopee Falls, Mass.Tuthill, James Edward, A.B. '97. Teacher. Salina, Kan.Twiss, Richard B., A.B. '75. Lawyer. 501, 115 Dearborn St., Chicago.Tyndale, William Robert, A.B. '98. Medical student. Weston, la.Underhill, Anthony Lispenard, Jr., S.B. '00. Student u. of Chicago.North hall, Chicago.Valentine, Louis Peter, D.B. '00. Clergyman. 1012 Rose St., LaCrosse,Wis.Van Benschoten, Anna Lavinia, S.M. '00. Teacher. 5 Dwight blk.,Binghamton, N. Y.Van Deman, Esther Boise, Ph.D. '98. Ass't prof. Mt. Holyoke cohSouth Hadley, Mass.Vanderlip, Ruth Isabelle, S.B. '00. 5331 Madison av., Chicago.Van Home, Theodore Julian, B.D. '93. Clergyman. Brookfield, N. Y. Van Kirk, Hiram, Ph.D. '00. U. of Chicago. Chicago.Van Vliet, Alice, A.B. '96. Teacher Berkeley inst. Brooklyn, N. Y.Van Wie, Charles Ben, Ph.B. '00. Teacher. 392 E. 57th st., Chicago.Vaughan, Franklin Egbert, A.B. '98. Law clerk. 5427 Indiana av.?Chicago.Vaughan, L. Brent, Ph.B. '97. Editor. 170 S. Clinton St., Chicago.Vaughan, Richard Miner, B.D. '98. Clergyman, Bangor, Wis.Vaughan, Roger Throop, Ph.B. '99. 6048 Edgerton av., Chicago.Vincent, George Edgar, Ph.D. '96. Asso. prof. u. of Chicago. Chicago.Violette$ Eugene Morrow, A.M. '99. Teacher. Clinton, Mo.Voight, John Frederick, Jr., Ph.B., '96. Lawyer. Mattoon, 111.Votaw, Clyde Weber, Ph.D. '96. Teacher. 437 E. 61st St., Chicago.Waid, George Henry, A.M. '00. Clergyman. 385 McClellan av., Detroit, Mich.Waite, Lucy, A.B. '80. Physician. 70 State St., Chicago.Waldo,_ William Albigense, B.D. '99. Clergyman. 7804 Normal av;,Chicago.Wales, Henry Whitwell, Jr., Ph.B. '96. Lawyer. 4308 Ellis av., Chicago.Walker, Arthur Tappan, Ph.D. '98. Prof. u. of Kansas. Lawrence, Kan.Walker, Clyde Buchan, Ph.B. '98. Printer. 508 Charles blk., Denver,Colo.Walker, Dean Augustus, Ph.D. '95. Instructor Wells col. Aurora, N. Y.Walker, Florence Mercy, Ph.B. '94, Ph.M. '95. Teacher Grafton Hall.Fond du Lac, Wis.Walker, William A., A.B. '80. Physician. 151 W. 93d St., New York.Wallace, Malcolm William, Ph.D. '99. Teacher Beloit col. Beloit, Wis.Wallace, Sarah Emma, B.S. '97. Teacher. 7147 Eggleston av., Chicago.Wallin, Madeleine, Ph.M. '93 (Mrs. G. C. Sikes), 215 Jackson Park terrace, Chicago.Walling, William English, S.B. '97. Deputy factory inspector. 118Bunker St., Chicago.Walsh, Frank J., A.B. '86. 233 Lake St., Chicago.Walsh,John James, Ph.B. '99. Traveling salesman, 443 Racine av.,Chicago.Walshe, Frances Louise, Ph.B. '00. 2339 Calumet av., Chicago.Ward, Albert Suther, A.B. '99. Clergyman. Rensselaer, Ind.Ward, Harry Beverly, S.B. '99. 517 E. 55th St., Chicago.Ward, John Albert, B.D. '94. Teacher. Toledo, la.Warrant, Marcia Elizabeth, Ph.B. '00. Prairieville, Mich.Warwick, Anna Louise, Ph.B. '98. 518 Douglas av., Kalamazoo, Mich.Waterbury, Ivan Calvin, Ph. B. '98. Editorial work. 5475 Ridgewoodct., Chicago.Waters, Kate, A.B. '97. Teacher. Charleston, 111.Waterman, Henry Barzialli, B.D. '69. Clergyman. 309 Clinton av.,Oak Park, 111.Watson, George Balderstone, A.B. '99. Law student. 3403 Indiana av.,Chicago.Watson, William James, A.B. '79, B.D. '82. Clergyman. Malvern, la.Watts. Alfred, A.B. '73, B.D. '78. Clergyman. Fox Lake, Wis.Waugh, Katharine Anna, Ph.B. 'oo. 2400 Dearborn st., Chicago.Wayne, Charles H., A.B. '8o. Lawyer. Elgin, 111.Webb, Frank R., A.B. '71. Physician. 2901 Archer av., Chicago.Webb, Hartwell William, A.B. '98.Webb, Jonathan Edwards, A.B. '99, A.M. '00. Academy Associate.Morgan Park, 111.Weber, Mary, Ph.B. '00. Student. Lostant, 111.Webster, Ralph Waldo, Ph.B. '95. Fellow u. of Chicago. QuadrangleClub, Chicago.Weddell, John Weaver, B.D. '80. Clergyman. 1423 Perry St., Davenport, la.Weddell, Thomas R., A.B. '86. Editorial staff Inter- Ocean. 3934Michigan av., Chicago.Weichard, Ella Corlette, A.B. '99. Little Falls, Minn. *Weinberger, Carl Frederick, A.B. '99. Oak Lawn, 111.Weinschenk, Lucius, A.B. '82. Lawyer. Denver, Colo.Welch, Clara Morton, A.B. '00. Salem, S. Dak.Welch, Jeanette Cora, Ph.D. '97. Teacher. Col. of Physicians and Surgeons, Chicago.UNIVERSITY RECORD 215Weller Marion, A.B. '97. Teacher Elgin h. s. Elgin, 111.Weller, Oliver C, A.B. '73. Clergyman. 1531, 23d St., San Francisco,Cal.Wells, Michael Billman, Ph.B. '99. 4571 Lake av., Chicago.Wells, Dora, M.A., '98. Teacher. 5756 Madison av., Chicago.Wells, Oliver Elwin, A.B. '98. Prin. Teachers' Training s. Wassau,Wis.Workmeister, Marie Katherine, S.B. '99. 3329 Vernon av., Chicago.Westcott, Frank Howard, A.B. '97. Supt. public schools. Lacon, 111.Weston, Francis Edward, A.B. '70. Coal and iron miner and manufacturer. Upland, Pa.Weyman, Charles D., A.B. '72. Supt. street railroad. Milwaukee, Wis.Wheeler, John Kittridge, B.D. '79. Clergyman. 516 W. Adams St.,Chicago.Wheeler, Newton C, A.B. '73. Lawyer. 6510 Kimbark av., Chicago.White, George Louis Loring, A.B. '98. Lyons, Neb.Whitford, Alfred Edward, A.B. '00. Student u. of Chicago. 5455 Monroeav., Chicago.Whitney, Wilson, A.B. -71. Clergyman. 1569 Harvard St., Chicago.Whitson, Andrew Robinson, B.S. '94. Prin. schools. Beloit, Wis.Whyte, James Primrose, A.B. '96. Teacher. Lake Forest, 111.Wieland, Otto Ernest, A.B. '96. Teacher Eden col. St. Louis, Mo.Wier, Marion Clyde, M.A. '97. Rochester, N. Y.Wight, Wallace Edward, A.B. '94. Bible teacher. Kalamazoo, Mich.Wilcox, Frank J., A.B. '74. Asst. cashier First National Bank. North-field, Minn.Wilderman, James Hervey, B.D. '70. Clergyman. Edwardsville, 111.Wildman, Banks John, A.B. '98. Prof. Upper Iowa u. 473 W. Adamsst., Chicago.Wiley, Henry Dunlap, B.S. '97. Physician Presbyterian hospital. Chicago.Willard, Laura, M.S. '96 (Mrs. M. H. Taft). 7919 Edwards av., Chicago.Willett, Herbert Lockwood, Ph.D. '96. Asst. prof. u. of Chicago. Chicago.Williams, Charles Byron, A.B. '00. 5556 Ellis av., Chicago.Williams, Francis M„ B.D. '77. Clergyman. 1313 F. St., Lincoln, Neb.Williams, John William, Ph.B. '95. Norwood Park, 111.Williams, Robert R., B.D. '73. Clergyman. Otay, Cal.Williams, Winifred Maude, Ph.B. '99. Lake Mills, la.Willis, Gwendolen Brown, A.B. '96. Asst. business manager RacineTimes. Racine, Wis.Willis, Henry Parker, A.B. '94, Ph.D. '98. Teacher. Lexington, Va.Williston, Frances Greenwood, A.B. '96. Private instructor. La Salle,111.Wilson, Alfred Mundy, B.D\ '84. Instructor u. of Nebraska. Lincoln,Neb. .Wilson, James K., A.B. '72. Lawyer. 39, 184 Dearborn St., Chicago.Wilson, John F., A.B. '68. Board of Trade. 2019 Michigan av., Chicago.Wilson, William Otis, Ph.B. '97. Lawyer. 5750 Madison av., Chicago.Windes, John R., A.B. '78. Lawyer. Ina, Tenn.Windes, Romulus A., A.B. '77, B.D. '79. Clergyman. Cottonwood,Ariz.Winegar, Samuel J., A.B. '79, B.D. '82. Clergyman. Sioux City, la.. Winston, Alice, A.B. '98. Student u. of Chicago. 6109 Monroe av.'Chicago.Winston, Charles Sumner, A.B., '96. Western Electric Co. 6109 Monroeav., Chicago.Winston, Eugenia, M.A. '97. Teacher. Mansfield, Pa.Winter, Mary Frances, Ph.B. '98. 804 Seminary st., Rockford, 111.Wolcott, Harry Riggs, Ph.B. '99. Teacher. Grand Central Hotel, St.Cloud, Minn.Wolfe, William Leonard, B.D. '80. Clergyman. Rossville, la.Womack, Benjamin Robert, B.D. '76. Clergyman. 212 Pickett St.,Greenville, Tex.Wood, Alide Boise, A.B. '72. Hotel Oxford, Boston, Mass.Wood, Asbury, Ph.D. '95. Teacher. Mt. Vernon, la.Wood, Joel Franklin, B.D. '97. Clergyman. 643 W. Ohio St., Chicago.Wood, Malcolm, B.D. '75. Clergyman. Grenola, Kan.Wood, Nathan Eusebius, A.B. '72, B.D. '75. Pres. Newton Theologicalinst. Newton Centre, Mass.Woodhead, Howard, A.B. '00. Student u. of Chicago. 5016 Ellis av.,Chicago. .Woods, Clarence Hubert, Ph.B. '93. Physician. 290 Summit av.,Pasadena, Cal.Woodworth, George Bronson, A.B. '69. Civil engineer. 875 Old Colonybldg. , Chicago.Woolley, Edwin Campbell, A.B. '98. Student. 5535 Cornell av., Chicago.Woolley, Paul Gerhardt, S.B. '96. Student Johns Hopkins Medical s.Baltimore, Md.Wright, George Clarence, B.D. '97. Clergyman. Big Rock, 111.Wright, Jessie Waite, Mrs., Ph.B. '97. Asst. in sanitarium. ForestGlen, Md.Wright, William Kelley, A.B. '99. Canton, 111.Wright, Laura May, A.B. '97. Teacher. 4345 St. Lawrence av., Chicago.Wyant, Adam Martin, A.B. '95. Adrian, Pa.Wyant, Andrew Robert Elmer, B.D. '97. Clergyman. Morgan Park,Wyckoff, Charles Truman, Ph.D. '97. Teacher Bradley inst. Peoria,111.Wyman, Charles D., A.B. '72. General manager New Orleans TractionCo. New Orleans, La.Yaple, Edward Lewis, S.B. '97. Mendon, Mich.Yates, Julian Emmett, B.D. '00. Clergyman. Williams Mills, N. C.Yoder, Charles Francis, A.B. '99. Student. Warsaw, Ind.Young, Albert Norval, S.B. '99. Normal, 111.Young, Charles Alexander, Ph.B. '98. Instructor u. of Virginia. Charlottesville, Va.Young, Ella Flagg, Mrs., Ph.D. '00. Asso. prof. u. of Chicago. Chicago.Young, Emanuel Sprankle, B.D. '99. Teacher. N. Manchester, Ind.Yundt, Emory Roscoe, Ph.B. '95. Teacher. Schuyler, Neb.Zalmiser, Charles Reed, B.D. '00. Clergyman. North Mills, MercerCo., Pa.Zarbell, Ada, M.A. '94. Teacher. 4132 Ellis av., Chicago.Zimmerman, John Franklin, B.S. '97.Zoethout, William Douwes, Ph.D. '98. Teacher Harvey Medical col.5225 Green st. , Chicago.NECROLOGY.Allen, Carrie Howe, A.B. '79.Anderson, Gertrude Fuller, S.B. '84.Armstrong, Mulford C, A.B. '67.Babcock, Chester A., A.B. '70.Babcock, Fred H., A.B. '80.Baker, John Frank, B.D., '83.Baker, Samuel, Jr., A.B. '68.Bastin, Edson Sewell, B.D. '70.,Baston, Edon S„ A.B. '67.Beard, Franklin, A.B. '80.Bonfield, Joseph F., A.B. '64.Burr, John Danforth, B.D. '77. Carmichael, William H., A.B. '79, B.D. '82.Clark, Orrin B., A.B. '72.Davidson, Jay D., A.B. '72.Edmonson, Samuel Boone, A.B. '95 TEgbert, Thomas Edward, A.B. '74, B.D. '77.Ellis, Edward, B.D. '73.Emery, Ogden L., A.B. '76.Gardner, William D., A.B. '76.Hamilton, James Eugene, B.D. '84.Hastings, Hezmer C, A.B. '70.Hayes, Fred W. C, A.B. '80.Hawkins, Albert H., A.B. '69.216 UNIVERSITY RECORDHopps, Hermann K., A.B. '70.Hoyne, Temple S., S.B. '63.Hull, Charles, A.B. '66.Hutchinson, Benjamin F., B.D. '72.Hyde, Thomas W., A.B. '61.Ide, Adelaide Melcher, A.B. '96.Ingham, George C, '73.Ireland, Robert M., A.B. '74.Jensen, Nelson Peter, B.D. '80.Johnson, Anna Coon, A.B. '79.Johnson, J. Calvin, A.B. '80, B.D. '83.Johnson, Alfred C, A.B. '99.Johnston, James B., A.B. '73.Jonas, Emma Christine, Ph.B. '99.Jones, Louis C, A.B. '65.Jones, Mahlon 0., A.B. '70.Keith, Ella May, Ph.B. '94.Lansing, Fowler E., A.B. '77.McQueen, Charles E., A.B. '68.Merriam, Caryl C, A.B. '70.Miles, William H., A.B. '79.Morgan, Freeman Elden, B.D. '79.Nicholes, Charles W., A.B. '75.Olson, Edward, A.B. '73, B.D. '77.Orcutt, Alfred Stoddard, B.D. '80.Osgood, William W., A.B. '76.Parish, Charles 0., M.A. '96. Parker, Charles, A.B. '66.Perrine, David G., A.B. '73.Potter, Thomas Tillinghast, B.D. '73.Poyen-Bellisle, Rene de, Ph.D. '94.Rayl, David Kimpton, B.D. '82.Rittenhouse, Thomas Hoff, B.D. '76.Roney, Thomas C, A.B. '78.Rundell, Edwin Richard, A.B. '86.Russell, Jirah Dean, A.B. '79, B.D. '82.Rutherford, John, A.B. '65.Ryon, Carrie S., A.B. '80.Sags, Rufus A., A.B. '86.Sass, Louis, Ph.B. '96.Scammon, Charles, A.B. '61.Simpson, Benjamin Franklin, B.D. '82.Snashall, Jabez, B.D. '72.Talbut, John A., A.B. '82.Trumbull, Lyman M., A.B. '75.Tucker, Alfred B., A.B. '71.Van Schaack, Henry Cruger, A.B. '81.Weber, Charles, B.A. '98.Wilkinson, Israel, B.D., '80.Woods, Frank William, A.B. '95, B.D. '98Woods, William Brenton, Ph.B. '95.Wright, Eugene B., A.B. '72.Young, Joseph Lindley Murray, B.D. '71.CURRENTThe examination of Caroline May Breyfoglein the secondary subject for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy was held Thursday, August 16,at 3:30 p.m., in Room 28, Haskell Museum.Principal subject, Old Testament ; secondarysubject, New Testament. Committee : ProfessorsErnest D. Burton and Shailer Mathews, andAssistant Professor C. W. Votaw.A Pianoforte Recital was given by Miss Jean-nette Durno in Kent Theater, on Wednesdayevening, August 15, at 8 o'clock, at which thefollowing programme was rendered :- Sonata, op. 53, C major, Allegro, Introdu-zione, Rondo BeethovenAllegro, Intermezzo and Scherzo from the" Faschingschwank "- SchumanTwo Preludes, op. 81, Nos. I and III - Heller EVENTS.Kuss Walzer (Ballet Music)Valse Badinage (Music Box)Marche funebreEtincelles (Sparks)Rhapsody No. 12 - Straus-SciihttLiadowChopin- MoszkowskiLisztThe Faculty and Alumni ofTHE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOYOU REQUIRE WRITING MACHINES, STANDARD TYPEWRITERS AND SUPPLIESCan be obtained from us atGREATLY REDUCED PRICESTHE TYPEWRITER EXCHANGE CO.,124 La Salle St., Chicago, IllinoisOUR SUPPLIES USED THROUGHOUT THE UNIVERSITYUNIVERSITY RECORD 217THE CALENDAR.august 17-24-, woo.Friday, August 17.Chapel-Assembly: The Divinity School. Chapel,Cobb Lecture Hall, io:oo a.m.Address by Assistant Professor Votaw.Open Lecture by Dr. Willett, Congregation Hall,Haskell, at 3:30 p.m.Subject: "The Song of Songs: The Problem ofLove."Open Lecture by Professor Henderson, LectureRoom, Cobb Hall, at 3: 30 p.m.Subject : "Fields of Activity for the Scholar."Open Lecture by Professor von Klenze, KentTheater, at 4:30 p.m.Subject : "Goethe's interest in antiquity after thejourney to Italy. Interest in antiquity on the part ofother prominent German writers."Open Lecture by Professor Barnard, KentTheater, at 8:00 p.m.Subject: "The Moon." (Illustrated.)Sunday, August 19.Vesper Service in Kent Theater at 4:00 p.m.Readings by Mr. Frederick M. Blanchard. Specialmusic by the choir.. Piano selections by MissJeannette Durno.Monday, august 20.Chapel- Assembly : The Junior Colleges. Chapel,Cobb Lecture Hall, 10:00 a.m.Address by Professor Henderson.Open Air Band Concert on the University Quadrangles at 5:00 p.m.Tuesday, August 21.Chapel-Assembly : The Senior Colleges. Chapel,Cobb Lecture Hall, 10: 00 a.m.Address by Professor Henderson.Open Lecture by Dr. Willett, Congregation Hall,Haskell, at 3: 30 p.m.Subject : " The Book of Ecclesiastes : The ProblemOf Doubt."Open Lecture by Assistant Professor Sparks, Lecture Room, Cobb Hall, at 3:30 p.m.Subject : " Andrew Jackson."Material for the CALENDAR must be sent to tin order to be published in the issue of the same week. Open Lecture by Dr. Laing, Congregation Hall,Haskell, at 4:30 p.m.Subject : " A general account of the tombs at Bologna,Chinsi, Veii, and other important sites." (Illustrated.)Wednesday, August 22.Open Lecture by Dr. Willett, Congregation Hall,Haskell, at 3:30 p.m.Subject : " The Wisdom Books and the New Testament."Open Lecture by Professor Judson, Lecture Room,Cobb Hall, at 3: 30 p.m.Subject : " Local Self-Government."Thursday, August 28.Chapel- Assembly: The Graduate Schools. Chapel,Cobb Lecture Hall, 10:00 a.m.Address by Assistant Professor Votaw.Open Lecture by Professor Burton, CongregationHall, Haskell, at 3: 30 p.m.Subject: "Literary Sources for the Life of Paul.The Antecedents of his Theology."Open Lecture by Assistant Professor Sparks, Lecture Room, Cobb Hall, at 3:30 p.m.Subject : " Horace Greeley."Open Lecture by Dr. Laing, Congregation Hall,Haskell, at 4:30 p.m.Subject : " Etruscan Sculpture." (Illustrated.)Friday, August 24.Chapel-Assembly : The Divinity School. Chapel,Cobb Lecture Hall, 10:00 a.m.Address by Assistant Professor Votaw.Open Lecture by Professor Burton, CongregationHall, Haskell, at 3:30 p.m.Subject : " Righteousness, Law, and the Death ofChrist."Open Lecture by Assistant Professor Sparks. Lecture Room, Cobb Hall, at 3:30 p.m.Subject : " Abraham Lincoln."Open Lecture by Dr. Laing, Congregation Hall,Haskell, at 4:30 p.m.Subject: "Etruscan Painting." (Illustrated.)Open Lecture by Associate Butterworth, KentTheater, at 8:00 p.m.Subject : " Roman Games of the Circus and Amphitheater." (Illustrated with stereopticon views.)9 Office of Information by THURSDAY, 8:30 A.M.,Beautiful Expansible BookcasesADD OR SUBTRACT -ALWAYS COMPLETEZhe IRocftwelUMaftasb Expansion SystemsBuy the Sections as You Need Them and BuildYour Bookcase as Your Book Collection GrowsBook Section— Base and Top.The Bookcase Systemsare suited equally to the care of a dozenor a thousand books.IT IS MERELY A MATTER OFMULTIPLYING SECTIONS : :Exquisitely designed. Bases and Topsand Book Sections in plain Oak,golden quartered Oak, Birch-Mahogany and solid Mahogany. The Business Systemscombine all the features ofStandard Filing Cabinets includingCard Index Cabinets,Letter Files,Document Files,Catalogue Files,Pigeon Hole Cases,Legal Blank Files,Commercial ReportFiles, etc.COMPACT COMPLETESEND FOR CATALOGUERockwell & Rupel Co., Chicago, U.S.A. Building a Stack— Sectional Cabinet.The ElementarySchool Record «* A Series of Monographs onthe Experimental School ofthe Pedagogical Departmentof the University of ChicagoEdited by John Dewey, and Published by theUniversity of Chicago PressThe object of the Elementary School Record is to make possiblefor use in other schools the details of subject-matter and methodin the application of modern psychology in education, as demonstrated by the University Elementary School. The present planincludes the publication of a series of nine monographs, eachnumber containing a record of work done by a group in theschool, and also an article concerning the work of one departmentin all grades.Subscription for series, $1.25 ; single copies, 15 cts.of price by the publishers, Sent postpaid on receiptIfe University of Chicago Press, Chicago, 111.