1913_complete

212

description

 

Transcript of 1913_complete

Page 1: 1913_complete
Page 2: 1913_complete

Wrintty <nnlltg.r iltbrary

Clas:.J ~.ti:J ~:;.k;:_~---~ ( q I )

cor:>·Z-~~~

19 .......... .

cAccession "N.p .. ..

Page 3: 1913_complete
Page 4: 1913_complete
Page 5: 1913_complete
Page 6: 1913_complete

IIAUSAUER·JONES

PRINTING CO MPA:o\Y

B UFFALO, N.Y.

Page 7: 1913_complete

ES

~NY

W4t

ID riuity 1J uy 1913

]Inlumr XLI

1Jiublisl)rll by

IDI1r 3Juu1or (!Hann of IDriuUy QJ:ollrgr

ft;artfnrb. QJ:ouurrtirut MCMXII

Page 8: 1913_complete

1£bitorial

I T HAS been our purpose this year to make the IVY as much of a Campus Book as possible. Of course, there is a certain amount of material that must be included; but wherever it

has been found expedient, pictures and reading matter that reflect undergraduate thought and life have been preferred. We trust that this will meet the approval of our readers, and that it will give them something tangible by which to remember the year.

All those who have helped to make this book a success we hereby thank: Rosenbaum,'q.; Beij,'15; Peck,'15, and V. Young,'15. for their drawings; Lew,'13, and Bassford,'14, for photographs; and especially Doctor Arthur Adams for his kind assistance in proof­reading, and Miss Harriet E. Beards of East Orange, N. ]., for her charming sketches.

A short preface is generally appreciated; so we entrust to you this number of the IVY, and, if it pleases you at all, we have succeed­ed in our work.

Page 9: 1913_complete
Page 10: 1913_complete
Page 11: 1913_complete

~0

gu53on 'm:btobot£ ~c~ook, '02 \ubo ba~ \uodtdl ~o faitbfullp anb con~cientiou~lp

a~ ~ratluate ~ecretarp anb ~rea~urrr of tbe

gtblettc g5353octatton to promote ~port~ nnb to ~er'oe :qrrinitp

tbt~ number of tbe

i~ re~pectfullp tlebicateb

Page 12: 1913_complete

1Ebttor -tu-<!L4trf

VVALTER STUART ~ARSDEN, jR.

iblusiur.a.a .tltlauagrr

ALLAN BEHRENDS CooK

i\.a.at.ataut iblu.aiur.a.a g{auagrr

FRANCIS EARLE VVILLIAUS

lliitrrary 1Ebttor.a

THO:ti!AS GILBERT BROW

joHN jAY VVmTEHEAD, jR.

i\t4lrtir 1Ebttor.a

~ARCUS THORTON ~CGEE

ETHELBERT TALBOT SJVIITH

HENRY BEARDSLEY vv ARNER

4

Massachusetts

New York

New York

Connecticut

Connecticut

Connecticut

New York

Connecticut

Page 13: 1913_complete
Page 14: 1913_complete

C!Jorporatiou

THE THE

PRESIDENT OF THE CoLLEGE, ex-officio PRESIDE T* H artf01·d RT. REv. WILLIAM W . NILES, D.D., LL.D., D.C.L.

THE Ho r. WILLIAM HAMERSLEY, LL.D.* THE REv. FRANCIS GooDWIN, D.D.* THE Ho N. WILLIAM E. CuRTis, LL.D . J. PIERPONT MoRGAN, LL.D. JOHN H. S. QuicK, M.A. THE REv. WILLIAM H . VIBBERT, D.D. SYDNEY G . FISHER, L.H.D., LL.D. JAMES J. GooD WI r, LL.D .* P. HENRY WooDWARD, M .A., Secretary* WILLIAM S. CoGSWELL. M.A. THE RT. REv. CHAUNCEY B. BREWSTER, D.D . WILLIAlvi C . SKINNER, M.A.* AMBROSE SPENCER MuRRAY, ]R., M.A. THE Ho r . FRANK L. WILCOX, B.A.* THE REv. HENRY FERGUSON, LL.D. EDGAR F. WATERMAN, LL.B., Treasurer* EDWARD B. HATCH, EsQ. GEoRGE DAwsoN HowELL, B .A . . WILLIAM GwiNN MATHER, M.A. RoBERT THORNE, LL.B.t THE HoN. JosEPH BuFFINGTON, LL.D.t CHARLES c. BARTON, ]R., LL.B.t

*These members of the Corporation form the Executive Committee. tEiected by the Alumni .

6

Concord, N. H . HartfOTd Hartford

N ew York New York

Chicago New York

P hiladel phi a Hartford Hartford

] amaica, N. Y. Hartford Hartford

New York B erlin

Hartford Hartford Hartford Hartford

Cleveland N ew York Pittsburgh

Boston

Page 15: 1913_complete

THE R EVEREND FLAVEL SwEETEN LuTHER, Ph. D., LL.D .

President of Trinity College

Page 16: 1913_complete

rBoar1l of 1J1rllotus Jrr.awrut

THE PRESIDENT OF THE CoLLEGE, ex-officio

t;rutnr JJirllnw.a

FREDERICK EvEREST HAIGHT, Ph.D. WALTER STANLEY ScHuTz, M.A., LL.B. ALEXANDER TAYLOR MAsoN, M.A., LL.B. CHARLES SmRAs MoRRis, B.S. WILLIAM STIMSON HuBBARD, M.D. E. KENT HuBBARD, B.S .

3Juutnr lJirllnw.a GEORGE EMERSON BEERS, M .A ., LL.B. THE REv. J. ELDRED BROWN, M .A . PERCY SHELLEY BRYANT, M .A. FRANK ELISHA JoHNSON, M .A. THE REv. JoHN TAYLOR Hu TTINGTON, M.A., D.D. THE REv. JoHN jAMES McCooK, M.A., D .D., LL.D.

1\ssortattou of t4r 1\lumut GEoRGE DAwso r HowELL, B.A .. GEORGE WILLIAM ELLIS, B.A. JoHN F . FoRWARD, B .S. . • CHARLES GuiLFORD WooDWARD, M.A.

.§tattllittg Qtnmmittrr

Tr-IE PRESIDENT THE TREASURER

President Vice-President

Secretary Treasu1·er

Tr-rE REv. SA:r-.IUEL HART, D.D., D.Can. L., LL.D. LAwsoN PuRDY, LL.D. JOHN M . BRAINERD) M .A. VICTOR c. PEDERSEN, M.D. jACOB H . GREENE JoHN P. ELTO , B .S . HENRY J. BLAKESLEE, B.S.

8

Page 17: 1913_complete

@]I D 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 I@] 0 0 0 0

@]lo o o o o o o o o o o o o o THE REv. FLAVEL SwEETEN L u THER, Ph .D ., LL.D.

President, and Seabury Professor of M athematics and Astronomy

I I 5 Vernon Street

(Offi ce, IJ Seabury Hall)

B. A., Trinity, 1870; Ph . D., 1896 ; LL. D., 190+; Professor of \1athematics and Astronomy at Racine College, 1871- 188 1; P rofessor of \ 1athematics and Astronomy at Kenyon College, 1881-83; Professor at Trinity since 1883; President of Trinit)" College, 1904-; \!ember of American Societ~· of \lechanical Engineers; Senator from First District of Connecticut, 1907, 1909. il> B K, ~ T.

TH E REv. GEORGE WILLIAMSON SMITH, D.D. , LL.D.

Professor of M etaphysics, Emeritus

B. A., H obart, 1857; D. D., 188o; D. D. , Columbia; LL. D. , Trinity, 1887. Chaplain, United States Navy, 1864; Acting Professor of :\1athematics, United States laval Academy, New­po-t, 1864-65; Chaplain at Annapolis, 1865-68; Rector in various places t ill 1883; President of Trinity, 1883-1904. 8 J. X

9

0 0 0 0

oJ@J

Page 18: 1913_complete

CHARLES FREDERICK JoHNSON, L.H.D., LL.D. Professor of English Literature, Emeritus

69 Vernon Street B. A., Yale, 1855; :vi. A., 1863; L. H. D., 1895. Assistant Pro­fessor of Ylathematics, United States laval Academy, 1865-70; Professor at Trinity, 1883-; Author of "English Words"; "Three Englishmen and Three Americans"; "Elements of Lit­erary Criticism"; " vVhat Can l Do For Brady?" and other poems ; "Outline History of English and American Literature"; "Forms of Verse"; "Shakespeare and His Critics," etc. \If 1'.

THE R Ev. JoHN j AMES McCooK, M.A., D.D., LL.D. Professor of Modern Languages

396 Main Street B. A., Trinity, 1863; D. D., 1901; LL. D ., 19 1o; studied at Jefferson College, New York College of Physicians and Sur­geons, and Berkeley Divinity School; Second Lieutenant First Virginia Volunteer Infantry during the Civil War; Professor at Trinity since 1883; Rector of St. John's Church, East Hartford, since 1869. Author of reports on poor-law administration and prison reform; also of numerous magazine articles on vagabond­age, political venality, pauperism, drink, etc. il> B K, 8 .6. X.

RoBERT BAIRD RIGGs, Ph.D. Scovill Professor of Chemistry

3 5 Forest Street B. A., Beloit College, Wisconsin, 1876; Ph. D., Gottingen, Chem­ist for United States Geological Survey, 1884-87; Professor of Chemist:y, National College of Pharmacy, 1885-87; Professor of Chemistry, National College of Pharmacy, 1885-87; Contribu­tor to The American Chemical Journal, The American journal of Science, and other journals . B 8 II .

10

Page 19: 1913_complete

FRANK CoLE BABBITT, Ph.D. Professor of the Greek Language and Literatut·e

65 Vernon Street

B. A., Harvard, 1890; M.A., 1892; Ph. D., 1895; Fellow of the American School of Classical Studies at Athens, 1895-96. In­structor in Greek at Harvard, 1896-98; Professor at Trinity. 1899--; Member of the American Archaeological Institute; Member of the American Philological Association. Author of "Greek Grammar"; also papers in American j ournal of Archae­ology, and in lf arvard Studies in Classical Philology. <I> B K , 8t>X.

vVrLBUR MARSHALL URBA 'Ph.D. Professor of Philosophy

71 Vernon Street A. B., Princeton, 1895; Ph. D. , Leipzig, 1897; studied also at Jena, and was R eader in Philosophy in Princeton and Professor of Philosophy at Ursinus College. Member of American Psycho­logical Association and American Philosophical Association. Author of "Valuation, Its Nature and Laws," 1909, and contrib­utor to various philosophical journals and reviews.

HENRY AucusTus PERKINS, M.A., E.E. Professor of Physics

83 Gillett Street B. A., Yale, 1896; M. A., Columbia, 1899; E. E., Columbia , 1899. Member of American Physical Society; Societe Fran9aise de Physique; Associate Member of American Institute of Electrical Engineers. Author of "An Introduction to General Thermodynamics"; has published articles in American j ournal of Science, Scientific American, Electrical World, Comptes Rendus, Lt Radium, and the Physical Review. 2: :=:, <I> B K, A 11 <1>.

II

'-

',... .. ~··

··~ ·'r'

Page 20: 1913_complete

..

GusTAvus ADOLPHUS KLEENE, Ph.D_. Professor of Economics

90 Atwood Street A. B., Cniversity of :\1ich igan, 1891; studied at Berlin and Tubingen, at Columbia University, and the Cniversity of Penn­sylvania, receiving his Ph. D. from the latter institution. For two winters with the Charity Organization Societ)' of New York City; Assiscant in Economics at the University of Wisconsin; 1 nstructor in Economics and Social Science at Swarthmore Col­lege, and Lecturer at the University of Pennsylvani a. Contrib­utor to the Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science, American Statistical Association Publications, r ate Review, etc.

JosEPH DEVINE FLYNN, 1I.A.

Professor of Mathematics

73 Imlay Street B. A., Trinity, 1897; :\I. A., Tufts, 1908. Instructor in ~fathe­matics at Professor Stearns' School and at the Hartford Public High School; Assistant Professor of :\Iathematics at Trinity to 1907; Professo.- of :\Iathematics, 1907-. <t> B K, 4> r !!.. .

THE REV. CRANSTON BRENTON, M.S. Professor of the English Language and L iterature

73 Vernon Street B. S., Trinity, 1899; Graduate of the Berkeley Divinity School, 1901; :\I. S., Trinit~· , 1902. Minister in Charge, and Rector of All Saints :\Iemorial Church, 1\ew :\1ilford, Connecticut, 1901-04; Assistant Professor of English, Trinity College, 1904-o6; from ·1906, Professor of the English Language and Literature at Trinity College. !> 'li'

12

Page 21: 1913_complete

CHARLES EDWIN R oGERs, C.E.

Professor of Civil Engineering

IJ Vernon Street Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, 1896. Engineer and Contractor, 1 96-190 1; In structor Lehigh University, 1901-o4; Professor of ~Iathematics and Civil Engineering, Clarkson ~1emorial School of Technology and General Engineering Practice, 1904-05; Pro­fessor of Civi l Engineering, Trinity, 1905- ; :\1ember of the Rensselaer Society of Engineers. ~ :::=.:

HoRACE CHENEY SwAN, M.D . Medical Director, and Director of the Gymnasium

I I Lincoln Street .\I. D., Tuft s College :\Ied ical School, 1903. Inst ruc tor Histology, Han·a rd Summer School, 1903-05; Director of Gymnasium, Wesleyan University, 1903-os; ~1edica l Director and Instructor in Gymnasium, Trinity College, 1905-; Physica l Director of Y. :\I. C. A., St. Johnsbur~·, \ ·t., 1896; Y. M. C. A., Newton, :\fass ., 1899; studied at Springfield Training School, 1897-99. :\fember of H artford :\fedical Association, and Connect icut Medical Associa tion .

THE R Ev. ARTHUR ADA Ms, Ph.D. Professor of English

Trinity College B. A., Rutgers, 1902; :\I. A., 1903 ; Ph. D. , Yale, 1905; B . D. , Berkeley Divinity School, 1910. Instructor in English at the Cni,·ersity of Colorado, 1905-6; Ass istant Professor at Trinity , 19o6-o8; Associate P rofessor, 1908-19 11 ; Professor, 19 11-. l\Iember of the :\'lodern Language Association of AmPrica and of the American Philological Association. Author of Syntax of the Temporal Clause in Old English Prose, coll aborato r on the Gray and Wordsworth Conc-ordances, and au thor also of notes and reviews in .Hodem l.angnage Note.<.

13

Page 22: 1913_complete

RAYMOND GARFIELD GETTELL, M.A. Northam Professor of History and Political Science

74 Vernon Street B. A. , Ursinus, 1903; ~l. A., university of Pennsylvania . 1900. Inst ructor in History, U rsin us , 1:)02·05; P rofessor of History and Economics, Bates, 1900-07 ; No rth am P r:Jfessor of Hi s to r ~' and Political Science, Trinity, 1907- . M ember American Academy of Political and Social Science, also America n Political Science Association. Contribu tor to the publications of the American Academy of Political and Social Science and to the American Political Science Review. Author of " Introduction to Political Science," 1910, and " Readings in Poli t ical Science, " 19 11.

W A LTER BENJAMIN BRIGGS

Librarian

72 South Main Street, West Hartford Su perintendent of R eading R oom, H arvard U niversity Library, 1896-1904; R eference Librarian, Brookl r n ( . Y .), Public Li­bra ry, 1905-09; Libra rian, Trini ty, ~~-

JoHN GLANVILLE GrLL, Ph.D. Professor of R omance Languages

67 Brownell Avenue A. B., Ottawa University, 1896; studied in niversities of P a ris and Berlin, 1897-1900· Instructor in French and Spanish, Case School of Applied Science, Cleveland, Ohio, 19QH>4· M. A., Harvard, 1905. Instructor, Harvard, 19os-o6. Ph. D .. Harvard, 1900. Instructor, Columbia University, 1900-{)8; Instructor, Harvard, 1908-09; Professor, Trinity, 1909"-· Member Modern Language Association of America; Editor of Valdes' " La Her-mana San Sulpicio," 1912.

14

B. Sc., Ohio Stat Fellow and Assis Assistant, Depa structor Marine Ass i sta~t, Unite N.Y. Member ciation for the mental Biolog)" <1> B K, 1: :0:, tl

B. A., \Vas · Johns Hop Hopkins, I Instructor, <t>B K, ~A

B.S.,

Page 23: 1913_complete

MAx WITHROW MoRsE, Ph.D. ]. Pierpont Morgan Professor of B iology

8o Washington Street B. Sc., Ohio State, 1903; M.A., 1904; Ph. D.; Columbia, 1905; Fellow and Assistant, Ohio State; Fellow, Columbia University. Assistant, Department of Biochemistry, Cornell Medical; In­structor, Marine Biological Laboratory, Woods Hole; Scientific Assistant, United States Bureau of Fisheries; Instructor, C. C. ~ - Y. Member American Society of Zoologists, American Asso­ciation for the Advancement of Science, Society for Experi­mental Biology and :'.1edicine, Marine Biological Association. <I> B K, 2: S , t. T.

LE RoY CARR B A RRET, Ph.D. Professor of the Latin Language and Literature

IS Seabury Hall B. A., Washington and Lee niversity, 1897; M.A., 1898; P h. D., J ohns Hopkins University, 1903 . Instructor in Latin, J ohns Hopkins, 1903-07; Preceptor in Classics, Princeton, 1907-09; Instructor, Dartmouth, 1909-10; P rofessor, Trinity, 191o--. <I> B K, 2: A E.

ARCHER EBEN K NOWLTO N, B.S.

Instructor in Physics and in Mathematics

I9 Brownell Avenue B. S., Trinity, 1910. <1> r t..

2 IS

Page 24: 1913_complete

WALTER LORING B ARROWS, ::VI.A.

Instructor in Geology

22 Jarvis Hall ,\.B. , Princeton, 1907; :\I. A., Columbia, 19 10; Teaching-Fellow, Princeton, 1907-oB. ~ :=:.

JoHN \ iVI LLIAM HARRISON, B .S.

Assistant in Chemistry

14 Northam Tower B. S., Trinity, 19 r 1. Ll. K E.

PAUL ALLERTON CusHMA"', S.B.

Instructor in Drawing and in Descriptive Geometry

8I Washington Street S. B., ::\1assachusetts Institute of Technology, 1911.

I6

Page 25: 1913_complete

EDGAR FRANCIS WATERMAN, :.\I. ., LL.B. Treasurer

12 Seabury Hall B. A., Trinity, 1898; .\I. .\ ., Trinity, 1901; LL. B ., Columbi a, 1901. Secretary Uni,·ersity Club of H artford "' T.

THE R Ev. HENRY FERGUSoN, LL.D. Lectm·e1· in H is tory

123 Vernon Street

Page 26: 1913_complete

Trinity C'ollege, 1R75.

Page 27: 1913_complete
Page 28: 1913_complete

~rabuatr ~tubrntn

FRED Do ALD CARPENTER, B.A., I9IO . H. E. Russe ll Fellow, University of Leipzig, German~·

GusTAVE ALEXANDER FEINGOLD, B.S., I9I I T erry Fellow, Havard Universitr, Cambridge, .Mas .

J OHJ\' WILLIAM HARRISO ' B.S ., I 9I I 14 N . T.

Middletown

Hartford

Torrington

Non-~atrtrulatrb ~tubtnt.!I

GEORGE WILLIAM GILBERT

JOSEPH MoRRis LINETT

JOH N VALENTINE SPRAGUE

Graduate Students

Seniors .

Juniors

Sophomores

Freshmen

~ummary

on-Matriculated Students

20

Montville

Hartford

Rockaway Beach, N. Y.

3 37 38

ss 90

3

229

Page 29: 1913_complete

"CHIP"

CLASS CoLoRs

Red and Blue

<!Lla.an ®ffirrr.a

Qrqriatma.s Wrrm

WILLIAM HILL BLEECKER, JR.

PHILIP ALOYSIUS AHERN

WILLIAM REDMOND CuRTIS

CHAPIN CARPE ITER

Wrhtity Wrrut

CHAPIN CARPENTER

OLIVER GILDERSLEEVE, JR.

THOMAS FRANCIS FLANAGAN

]oH r BooTH CLARK

21

President

Vice-President

Secretary- Treasurer

Historian

President

Vice-President

Seaetary- Treasurer

Historian

Page 30: 1913_complete

1912 ~istnry

FOR three years of his college life, spring denotes to the college man the coming of leisure, the pleasure season, lazy days and easy ones, soon to bring the freedom of summer and

vacation. This pleasurable expectation lasts for three years of his college life, let it be said. For with the fourth and last year, there comes a change. The autumn passes quickly and actively, winter foLlows, and Junior week brings the realization of being really "out of" the affairs of college. The Senior has been separated from his fellows; now separated only tentatively; soon to be separated permanently. Spring brings to us who are about to leave the realiza­tion of the end of something that has been a long season of pleasure, and now we enter into a spring that is followed by a summer of much doubt and trepidation.

We have been here four years. We have played the role of the average class in college. We have had our battles, outside of the classroom and, not infrequently, within the classroom, too . Now we are in that peculiar position of being on the verge of gradua­tion. Here we make a retrospection, such as probably will not be made again. For the college man who thinks of his college days forgets the things that he ought to have done and the things that he left undone and the things that he ought not to have done and, with the growth of the past, the memories that stay are those of the pleasantest things.

But there comes with graduation a summary, a companson of what we have done with what we have not done. Let it be said that "191 2" has done her best. Forget her faults, for they are really the faults of omission rather than of commission. We do not propose to review them. What we have done, the men in college know. What we intended to do, we know, and you have forgotten.

So here we are with another springtime, and this is the spring­time of good-bye. United we have stood for four years. United we go out together, and tomorrow we shall be scattered to the four winds, united with one thought: that of Trinity- now, yesterday, and tomorrow. Trinity , 1912, bids you farewell! Auf Wiederseh­en! Banzai/

22

Page 31: 1913_complete

l

~tninr O!lann i&nll

PHILIP ALOYSIUS AHERN . Hartford

Football Team (3) (4); Baseball Team (2) (3); Track Team ( I ) (2); Class Football Team ( I) (2); Class Baseball Team (I ) (2); Class Track Team (1) (2); The Medusa; A X P .

WILLIAM CHRISTY ANDREWS Allentown, Pa.

GEORGE TuRNER BATES Boston, Mass.

Class President (2, I st term); Sophomore Hop Committee; Track Team (2); Sophomore Dining Club; \]i T.

23

Page 32: 1913_complete

WILLIAM AuGUSTUS BIRD, IV . Bu.ffalo, N. Y.

President of Senate (4); Holland Prize (I) (3); Tripod Board (r); Managing Editor (2) (3); Editor-in-Chief (4); First Whitlock Prize (z); Second (3); Second Alumni English Prize (2); First (3); Press Club (4); Sophomore Dining Club; Editor-in-Chief 1912 IVY; Senate (3); The Medusa; <I> B K, A D. <I>.

WILLIAM HILL BLEECKER, ]R. . Flushing, N. Y.

Track Team (r) (2) (3); Football Team (3) (4); Baseball Team (3); Hockey Team (3) (4); Senate (2); Class President (4, rst Term); Sophomore Dining Club; College Marshal (3); The Medusa; A D. <I>.

HowARD RAY BRoCKETT

~ 'lt.

Bristol

Page 33: 1913_complete

CHAPIN C A RPE TER P ottsville, P a.

Freshman-Junior Banquet Committee; l\llando­lin Club (I); Tripod Board ( r) (z ); Athletic Editor (3); Managing Editor (4); Tennis Team (r) (z) (3) ; Class President (4, 2nd T erm); Sopho­more Dining Club ; Sophomore Smoker Commit­tee ; Secretary-Treasurer Junior Promenade Com­mittee; I K A.

} AMES SHREWSBURY CRAIK . . Louisville, K y.

Sophomore Dining Club; Tripod Board (z ); Assignment Editor (3); Athletic Editor (4); Glee Club (r ) (3) (4); Track T ea m (2) (3); 'lt T.

WILLIAM R E DMOND CuRTIS . Point Pleasant, N. ].

Golf Team (1); A D. ~-

25

Page 34: 1913_complete

SAMUEL HERBERT EvrsoN . Albany, N. Y .

Tripod Board (z); Circulation Manager (3); Glee Club (1) (z) (3) (4); Church School Prize in English (z); 'lt T.

THOMAS FRANCIS FLANAGAN H artford

Assistant Advertising Manager Tripod (z) (3) (4); Business Manager 1912 IvY; Senate (4); Press Club (z) (4); A X P.

OLIVER GILDERSLEEVE, JR .. Gildersleeve

Football Squad ( r) (z) (4); Musical Clubs ( r) (z) (3) (4); President (3); Sophomore Dining Club; 'lt T.

z6

Page 35: 1913_complete

CARLOS SANFORD HoLCOMB . Torrington

Entered Junior Class from Yale University; A X P.

CHARLES HuRD HowELL Hartford

Class President (1, 1st term); Football Team (1) (2) (3); Captain (3); Mandolin Club (1); Leader (2); Hockey Team (1) (2) (3); Mana­ger (2); Baseball Squad (2); President Y. M. C. A. (2) (3);• The Medusa; A~ <I>.

JAMES HowARD HuMPHREY . Waterbury

Assistant Manager Football Team (2); Manager (3); Glee Club (1) (2) (3) (4); Sophomore Dining Club; Junior Promenade Committee; ~ K E.

Page 36: 1913_complete

KILBOURN i-.IAXWELL KENDALL Framingham, Mass .

Sophomore Dining Club; .6. '11.

LAURE CE HuTCHINSON McCLURE Hat·tford

Class President (r, rst term); Freshman-Junior Banquet Committee; Sophomore Dining Club; Chairman Sophomore Hop Committee; Chair­man Junior Promenade Com.mittee; 1912 IvY Board; .6. K E.

RAYMOND jAY NEWTON Gaylordsville

Holland Scholar (2). Second Alumni English Prize (4); <I> B K.

28

Page 37: 1913_complete

LEsLIE GILBERT O sBOR NE New Milford

A X P.

CLARENCE IRVING PE NN Weehawken, N.].

Sophomore Smoker Committee; I9I2 IvY Board; Senate (4); <I> r 11.

ELLIOTT FIELDING PETTI GREW New York, N. Y.

Freshman-Junior Banquet Committee ; Assist­ant Manager Track Team (2) ; l\Ianager (3); Sophomore Dining Club; Sophomore Smoker Committee; Junior Promenade Committee; Col­lege Choir (4) ; A 11 <I>.

Page 38: 1913_complete

THOMAS }AMES QursH, }R.

Hartford Club.

RAYMOND HuBBARD SEGUR

1912 IvY Board; ~ 'lr.

South Manchester

. Hartford

WrLLIAM SHORT, }R. . St . Louis, Mo.

Sophomore Dining Club; Chairman Sophomore Smoker Committee; Advertising Manager Tripod (z) (3) (4); Secretary-Treasurer Athletic Associa­tion (z); Class President (3, 1st term); Senate (3) (4); Junior Promenade Committee; President Athletic Association (4); College Marshal (3) resigned; The Medusa; I K A.

30

Page 39: 1913_complete

MAXIMILIAN SPORER Hartford

Sophomore Smoker Committee; :3 '1'.

WILLIAM ERNEST STEVEN Hartford

Freshman-Junior Banquet Committee ; Junior Promenade Committee; <I> r D..

ICHOLAS VINCENT WALSH Norwich

1912 IvY Board; Hartford Club.

3 31

Page 40: 1913_complete

New Britain

Track Team (I) (2) (3); Captain (4) ; Holder of Connecticut State Championship, and Indoor World 's Y. M . C. A. Record for Pole Vault; Senate (4) ; Class President (3, 2nd term) ; Sophomore Dining Club; 11 K E.

CHARLES RICHARDSON WHIPPLE . Malone, N. Y.

Glee Club ( I) (3); Freshman-Junior Banquet Committee; Sophomore Hop Committee; Soph­omore Smoker Committee ; Sophomore Dining Club; Junior Promenade Committee; I9I2 IvY Board; Senate (4); 11 \li .

Page 41: 1913_complete

1Jn fllllrmoriam Baltrr ~rntt 3Jarnts

of tl}r <Ulass of 1 g 12

1Jn fllllrmoriam JJol1n <Urompton i!;or.afall

Page 42: 1913_complete
Page 43: 1913_complete

"CHARLIE"

CLAss CoLoRs

Green and Gray

(!Ua.a.a (@ffirrr.a

<!!lfristmas IDtrtn

JoHN BIGELOW MooRE

CHESTER DuDLEY WARD

FRANCIS EARLE WILLIAMS

DANIEL BYRON DAWLEY

CHARLES HENRY CoLLETT

DAKIEL BYRON D AWLEY

RICHARD LAWTO DEPPEN

ETHELBERT TALBOT SMITH

wrinity wrrm

35

1913

. President

Vice-President

Secretary- Treasurer

. Historian

. President

Vice-President

Secretary- Treasurer

Historian

Page 44: 1913_complete

1913 i!;hltnry

GUIDED not at all by precedent established by former classes, "'13" refrains from taking this most excellent oppor­tunity to declare itself the Alpha and Omega, or even a

paragon of virtue. With dignity we don the mantle of upper-classmen, and with

fond hopes for the future we mingle a bit of sadness in anticipa­tion of our departure little more than a year hence ( ?) .

As we entered Chapel on that afternoon of autumn, back in 1909, a beautiful rainbow arched the heavens . On that day Trinity jumped into fame and has been there ever since. Like woman, she speaks for herself. In fear of Sophomore savagery we came out from Chapel to begin a long list of victories which lasted until our ranks were so sadly depleted.

During that fall we won both the baseball and football games . In the early winter, while the Sophomores were tripping the "light fantastic" in Alumni Hall, we stole away to ew Haven and held our memorable banquet which for the first time in history was unmolested . We even had some captives. It is with fondest recol­lections that we recall that happiest day of our history.

Our next great achievement came in March when that fierce fight on Northam stairs occurred. After the smoke had cleared away, ten Sophomores had been freed from all care for the rest of the night. Who can recall that fight without imagmmg himself the hero of a feudal raid? The next morning we raised our banner successfully.

As Sophomores we had a new and larger element to meet. We more than held our own in the rushes, and moreover won both baseball and basketball games. During this rather miserable period we endeavored to break up the banquet tendered the Juniors by the Freshmen and gave them one of the best runs for their money that they will care to have .

During our early years we had been told that the Junior year was the pleasantest in college; this sounded too inviting to let slip without a test; so back we came. As a class we have suffered much from loss in numbers. We have had, however, many things for which we should be thankful. But more than our achievements on the gridiron and in the classroom, the men of 'I 3 prize the bonds of comradeship and fellowship that bind the class together. Proud as we .are of the gray and green-above all is the pride with which we proclaim ourselves sons of "dear old Trinity. "

Page 45: 1913_complete

3Juutnr Qtlass 1!tnll

LEONARD DAWSON ADKINS . Easton, Md.

Tripod Board (3); Holland Prize (2); Church School English Prize (2); Third Alumni English

Prize (3); A D. <1>.

WILLIAM PoND BARBER, JR. Hartford

Holland Prize ( r ); Goodwin-Hoadley Scholar­ship; First Chemistry Prize (2); Sophomore Smoker Committee; Junior Promenade Com­mittee; ~ \ft.

JosEPH IoYES BARNETT Newtown

Junior Promenade Committee; Class Baseball Team (r) (2); A D. <1>.

37

Page 46: 1913_complete

RAYMOND HART BENTLEY . Hartford

THOMAS GILBERT BROWN Norwich

Tripod Board (1) (2); Assignment Editor (3); 1913 IvY Board; Press Club (3); College Choir (1) (z); Senior Dramatics (1) (z); 'liT.

KEN N ETH BEARDSLEY CASE . West Hartford

Tripod Board (2) (3); Circulation Manager (z) (3); Sophomore Dining Club; Sophomore Hop Committee; Sophomore Smoker Com­mittee; Junior Promenade Committee; Man­dolin Club (z); Glee Club (3); I K A.

Page 47: 1913_complete

CHAMBERS CHOW H ankow, China

CHARLES HENRY CoLLETT Dover, N. H.

Football Team (1) (2) (3); Captain-Elect (3); Track Team (I) (2); Secretary-Treasurer Athletic Association (3); Sophomore Dining Club; Soph­omore Smoker Committee; Junior Promenade Committee; Glee Club (I) (2) (3); Mears Scholar; Class President (3, 2nd term); 'lt T.

ALLAN BEHRENDS CooK Brooklyn, N. Y.

Tripod Board (1) (2) (3); Treasurer (2) (3); Business Manager 1913 IvY; Glee Club (3); Press Club (3); President (3); Senior Dramatics (z); A ~ <I>.

39

Page 48: 1913_complete

ANDREW JoHN CRICHTON

Hartford Club.

East Hartford

DANIEL BYRON DAWLEY Providence, R. I.

Class Track Team (I); Mandolin Club (I); 11 K E.

RICHARD LAWTEN DEPPEN 0 Shamokin, Pa.

Sophomore Dining Club; Sophomore Smoker Committee; Assistant Manager Baseball Team (2); Manager (3); Class Baseball Team (I) (2); Class Football Team (I) (2); A 11 <I>.

E

Page 49: 1913_complete

EvERETT MARBLE F AIRBANKS

Hartford Club; Senate (3).

. H artford

ALBERT HAITHWAITE, ]R. Brooklyn, N. Y.

Sophomore Smoker Committee; Class Baseball Team (r ); <t> r 11.

EDWARD WHITEHEAD JEWETT Norwichtown

Class Baseball T eam (r) (z); I K A.

Page 50: 1913_complete

MuNSEY LEw Shensi, China

Holland Prize (2); Second Chemistry Prize (2); :z 'lr.

ALFRED JOSEPH L'HEUREUX Jewett City

Baseball Team (1) (2); Captain (3); Sophomore Hop Committee; Sophomore Smoker Commit­tee; Class Baseball Team (1)(2); Class Football Team (2); <I> r 1:1.

MARcus THORNTON McGEE

1913 IvY Board; :Z 'lr.

. Hartford

Page 51: 1913_complete

WALTER STUART MARSDEN, ]R. Lenox, Mass.

Assistant Manager Track Team (2); 1\IIanager (3); Author Sophomore Dramatics (z); Editor­in-Chief 1913 IvY; Press Club (3); I K A.

JoHN BIGELOW MooRE Geneva, N. Y.

Sophomore Dining Club; Sophomore Hop Com­mittee; Secretary-Treasurer Junior Promenade Committee; Senate (2) (3); Football Team (3); Basketball Team (2); Class Football Team (1) (z); Class Track Team (1); Class President (3, I st term); A t.. iP.

RussELL CuRTIS OBLE New Milford

Sophomore Dining Club; Sophomore Smoker Committee; Glee Club (2) (3); t.. '1'.

43

Page 52: 1913_complete

DELos ScHUYLER PuLFORD, ]R. Tacoma, Wash.

Niandolin Club ( I ) (2) (3); Track Team (2); Tenni s Team (I ) (2) ; Manager (2); Captain­Elect (3); Business Manager I9I3 IvY resigned; Class Track Team (I) (2); t.. 'lt.

H AROLD EvERETT SAWYER . Feeding Hills, Mass .

EuGENE GoonwrN SMEATHERS Cleveland, 0 .

Page 53: 1913_complete

ETHELBERT T ALBOT SMITH . New York , N. Y.

Junior Promenade Committee; I9I3 IvY Board; Glee Club (3); Class Football Team (2); Class Track Team ( I ) (z); Lemuel J. Curtis Scholar; First Alumni English Prize (3); A X P.

RrcHARD ::.IoRSE SMITH Wethersfie ld

SAMUEL SEDGEWICK SwiFT . Detroit, M ich .

Sophomore Dining Club; Track Team ( I ) (z); Mandolin Club (I ) (z) (3); Manager l\Iu sical Clubs (z); President (3); Tripod Board (z) (3); Alumni Editor (3); !:.. 'l'.

45

Page 54: 1913_complete

RoBERT WRIGHT THOMAS Centerville, Md.

Baseball Squad ( r) (2); Class Baseball Team (r) (2); Sophomore Dining Club; Class President (2, r st term); Sophomore Hop Committee;

t::.. --It.

WILLIAM FRANCIS VAIL

Hartford Club.

. Hartford

ELIOT LEE WARD New York, N. Y.

Class Football Team (r) (2); Class Track Team (2); Junior Promenade Committee; Basketball Team (2); t::.. K E.

CH

c 0

H

J

4

Page 55: 1913_complete

CHESTER DuDLEY \VARD New York, N. Y.

Chairman Junior Promenade Committee; Soph­omore Smoker Committee; Class Football Team (2); Senior Dramatics (2); ~ K E.

HENRY BEARDSLEY \YAR!\ER New Milford

Baseball Team (2); Chairman Sophomore Smoker Committee; 1913 IvY Board; Class Baseball Team (r) (2); Class Track Team (1); ~ K E.

JoHx jAY WHITEHEAD, JR. Waterbury

Glee Club (r) (2) (3); Leader (2) (3); Freshman­Junior Banquet Committee; Sophomore Hop Committee; Junior Promenade Committee; 1913 IvY Board; Sophomore Dining Club; College Choir (z) (3); ~ 'IJI.

47

Page 56: 1913_complete

FRANCIS EARLE WILLIAMS Utica, N.Y.

Sophomore Dining Club; Sophomore H op Com­mittee; Junior Promenad e Committee; 1913 IvY Board; Class Football Team (z); <I> r 11.

RoBERT PRESTON WITHINGTON Newton Center, Mass .

Sophomore Dining Club; Assistant Manager Football Team (3); Manager-Elect (3); Fresh­man-Junior Banquet Committee; Press Club (3); Class Football Team (z); Class Baseball Team ( r); Class Track T eam (1) (z); A 11 <I>.

vVALTER CRANE H ATHAWAY Brooklyn, N. Y.

Entered Junior Class from D artmouth; <I> r 11.

Page 57: 1913_complete

"JIM"

CLASS CoLoRs

Maroon and White

Qllass (@fficrrs

<l!hri.atmas w.rrm

THEODORE FRANCIS WESSELS

FRA!\'K GRENVILLE STADTMUELLER

HoRACE FoRT

ED\'\'ARD PINKNEY WROTH

jAMES AsnToN MooRE

EDGAR SoLoN LELAND

RAYMOND HENRY DEXTER

CHARLEs EwELL CRArK, ]R.

airiuity airrm

49

President

Vice-President

Secretary-Treasurer

Historian

President

Vice-President

Secretary- Treasurer

Historian

Page 58: 1913_complete

19 14 i!iistnry

• • • • • • • •

MCMXIV

Here we are again,

You've heard of us before,

I

9 I

4

Rah-h-h-h-h

Lemon Squeezer!

(The 1914 History is hereby acknowledged as having been received on time.-En.)

so

Page 59: 1913_complete

~npqnmnrr Q1la.a.a i&nll

MERRILL LEMUEL KELLoGG ALLEN, <1> r Ll

FELIX EMIL BARIDON, Ll K E

ETHAN FROST BASSFORD, A X p jOHN PAUL BEGLEY

REGINALD METHERELL BLACHFORD

VVALTER FREDERICK BoRcHERT,Ll KE

KENNETH VVELLES BoYNTON, Ll >¥ GEORGE CoLLINSON BuRGWIN, JR., >¥ 1'

AAMAN CoHEN

CHARLES VV ALLACE CooKE, I K A

CHARLES EwELL CRAIK, JR. , >¥ 1' MoRTON STIMSON CREHORE, JR.

RoBERT ELLIS CRoss, ~ >¥ HowARD JosEPH D ALEY, JR.

THOMAS vv ALLIS DAVIS, Ll K E

RAYMOND HENRY DEXTER, I K A

STEPHEN FRANCIS DuNN

ARTHUR FoRD GEDDES EDGELow, I K A

1 OSEPH HENRY EHLERS .

GEORGE HowARD ELDER, A Ll <I> ARTHUR ALEXANDER OEL FENOGLIO

FRANCIS STUART FITZPATRICK, Ll K E

HoRACE FoRT, Ll K E

LESLIE RANKIN FREW

Louis YuRuc GABERMAN

Loms GoLDFIELD .

CHARLES 1 OSEPH HAASER

URY ALBERT HICKS, A Ll <I> THEODORE CANFIELD HuDsoN, JR., >¥ 1' RoBERT HENRY JOHNSON

PETER PAuL LAwLoR, <1> r Ll .

EDWIN MICHLET LAZARUS, A X p EDGAR SoLON LELAND,Ll KE

ABRAHAM LEVIN

THOMAS vv OLCOTT LITTLE, A Ll <I>

HowARD jEROME LIVERMORE, <I> r Ll

J AMES AsHTON MooRE, A Ll <I> JOHN SHAPLEIGH MosEs, A Ll <I> EDWARD j EFFERSON MYERS, I K A

51

East Windsor Torrington

Newark, N.]. . Hartford

Caro, Mich. Newburgh, N. Y.

New Milford Pittsburgh, Pa.

. Hartford

. Hartford Louisville, Ky . Cohasset, Mass.

Norwich . Hartford

Utica, N.Y. . Hartford Manchester

Detroit, Mich. . Hartford

Baltimore, Md. . Hartford

Olean, N.Y. Ellicott City, Md.

Thompsonville Hartford Hartford Hartford Hartford

Paynesville, Minn. South Manchester

Plymouth Mt. Carmel, Pa. Providence, R. /. Pittsfield, Mass.

. Hartford Wnt Hartford Geneva, N. Y.

Garden City, N. Y. Collinsville

Page 60: 1913_complete

LEo ]AMES NooNAN

jAMES JEREMIAH O'CoNNOR

PHILIP SuMNER PAGE, t.. 'It BENJA.>.1IN Lours RAMSAY, I K A

LoUis ONDERDONK DE RoNGE, At.. <I>

WILLIAM LEvi RosENBAUM, 'It T HERBERT AcKLEY SAGE, 'It T HENRY WHITING SELDEN, <I> r t.. CHARLEs TIMOTHY SENAY, <I> r t.. ERNEST THEODORE SOMERVILLE, A X p WILLIAM BENJAMIN SPOFFORD, 'It T FRANK GRENVILLE STADTMUELLER

CYRus THoMAs STEVEN, <I> r t.. ARCHIBALD WILSON WALKER, 'It T RrcHARD FoLsoM v..r ALKER, 'It T LESLIE FREDERICK WALLACE

THEODORE FRANCIS \ iVESSELS, 'It T RAYMo D WEsT WooDWARD, ~'It

EDWARD Pr KNEY WRoTH, At.. <I>

52

Hartford Wethersfield

Brookline, Mass. Plattsburg, N. Y.

St. J ames, Md. New Rochelle, N. Y.

Middletown West Hartford

New London Toledo, Ohio

Claremont, N.H. . Elmwood

Hartford Claremont, N. H. Claremont, N. H. Lawrence, Mass.

Portland Hartford

Baltimore, Md.

Page 61: 1913_complete

Qllaas nf 1 9 15

CLASS CoLoRs

Orange and Black

<nla.s.s ®ffirrr.s

<lr~ri.atutu.a afrrm

HERBERT EDWAY R YERSON

R oNALD EARLE KINNEY

ALFRED EDWARD D uNSFORD

HAROLD Su1IMERFIELD OLAFSON

afriuity wrrm

GEoRGE D AwsoN HowELL, ] R.

B ERTRAM L EoN BuRGOYNE S1IITH

J AMES OAH SLEE

HAROLD Su IMERFIELD OLAFSON

53

President

Vice-President

Secretary- Treasurer

Ilistorian

P resident

Vice-President

Secretary- Treasurer

Ilistorian

Page 62: 1913_complete

1 g 15 1!;istnry TRmiTY CoLLEGE, HARTFORD. Date--, 1912.

FaiTest GwendoLyn:- ! have just brought to a state of completeness my preparations for the arduous duties of tomorrow, and in the in­terim I concluded to employ profitably the fleeting germs of time by penning you a few lines. Of course, you have been wondering and mentally soliloquizing upon my apparent apathy in corresponding. The only legitimate apology that I can offer is that it is wellnigh impossible for one to write standing up!

\Vel!, here I am at the "Collegium Sanctissimae Trinitatis," and it is a wonderfully picturesque and charmingly situated nook. I am an atom in an organism of students the most marvelous in every respect that has ever invaded the hallowed walls and sacred precincts of the above-mentioned institution of erudition and indo­lence. You may rest assured that my every action, therefore, has been in perfect harmony and accord with· its exalted pretensions and lofty ideals. It is perfectly obvious that the best of us must make enemies at some period of our transient existence. Our ).lost oble and Venerable Class of 19 r 5 has been superciliously appellated "Fresh­man, "and that Class whose position of regulating college affairs has been usurped by us is most veraciously termed "Sophomore," or "\Vise-Fool!" These fools (we may omit the prefix" wise" as men-· dacious) are our inveterate foes, and examples of their maniacal em­ployments may be observed in the following narrative.

Gpon the afternoon of our first ).1onday at college, this mob displayed the audacity to cover the bulletin-board with their own persons, daring us to touch it within one minute! \\'as our honorable body to tolerate such a taunt flaunte-d in its face? Certainly not! Forthwith, we summoned several of our champions, hurled them against this "conglomeration of foolishness and wisdom," and the board was ours in a few seconds!

That evening, by way of retaliation for their boldness, we tied up, hand and foot, twelve of their company, while they managed to ensnare but four of ours! After accomplishing this, noticing that our enemies did thirst, vve marched in solemn procession to a "well­known watering trough" and did give them drink. This act of kind­ness was performed to soothe their feelings, overwhelmed by the indignities to which they had been subjected.

As a reward to our sister Class-the Juniors, who were most loyal supporters during all our trials and tribulations-- vve tendered them a banquet on the evening of December 7, 1911. ~otwithstand­ing their former discomfitures, the Sophs endeavored to disrupt this proceeding; needless to state, they were unsuccessful in their at­tempts. Of that I shall write you later; enough to say that we had a most exciting and hilarious time.

\Vork is pressing me, so I must needs close. With al l sorts of love, etc., etc.,

liAR OLD

Page 63: 1913_complete

1Ji rrsqmatt o.tlass i!tnll BERTRAM BENEZETT BAILEY, 6 K E

IRA ALLEN BALCH, A X p \ VrLLIAM EDWARD BARNETT, A 6 <P ARTHUR EvERETT BARNS, A X P JonN ARcHIE BARNS, A X P GEORGE BEACH, 6 ~ LEWIS GEORGE BEARDSLEY

KARL HILDING BEIJ, A X P RALPH HALM BENT, A X p RANDWICK ALBERT BISSELL, A D. <P CHARLES HERBERT BoEHM, A 6 <P HENRY LAWRENCE BRAINERD, \]1 T SMART BRAND, ~ ~ \VrLLIAM WASHINGTON BRINKMAN

JACOB BRODSKY

ERNEST FREEMAN BROWN, A X p THOMAS CooK BRowN

OGDEN DoREMUS BuDD, JR.,~ K E

\\"ALCOTT CHAPIN, I K A

EDWARD CPSON CowLEs

FR,\NCIS THOMAS CuRLEY, <P r ~ FREDERICK BoND DART, ~ T FREDERic GRIFFIN DoRWART, 6 ~ \\' ARD EvERETT DuFFY

ALBERT EDWARD DUNSFORD, 6 K E SAMUEL HARMON EDSALL A 6 <P DA IEL HAROLD EvANS

HERBERT CuRTIS FERRIS, A X P ~1AURICE LESTER FuRNIVALL

ERNEST HARTCRAFT GEYER, 6 K E

HAROLD LESLIE GIBBS

\VILLIAM THEODORE GRAY, JR., 6 ~ \VALTER GIBSON GREGG

EvERITT HEYWOOD HALL, 6 K E

FRANK \VILLIAM HEALY

HowARD RICE HrLL, 6 K E

AusTIN EBER HoDGE <P r 6 CoLIN l\IoNTAIGUE I GERSOLL, 6 ~ Loms FRENCH JEFFERSON

ARTHUR JoHNSON, 6 K E

RoNALD EARL KINNEY, <P r 6 THEODORE CHARLES KYLE, A X p ADOLPH 'vYILLIAM LAWSON, A X P EDWARD \\' ILLIS LuDWIG

JAMES SYLVESTER ~IcC,\BE, JR., \jJ r THoMAS FRANCIS ::\IcCuE

FELIX JEREMIAH :\IcEvtTT

STANLEY :\[ERTON l\IERRILL, A D. ll>

55

Yantic Manchester

Newtown Westmoreland, N. Y. Westmoreland, N. Y.

New York, N. Y. Roxbury Station

Hartford New Yo1·k, N. Y.

Brandon, rt . Baltimore, M d.

JI!It. Yernon, N. Y. Hartford I! m-tford II artford

Manchester James/own, N. Y. New York, N. Y. Barrington, R. I.

Kensington Dorchester, Alan.

Niantic Newport, Pa.

West Hartford London, England

Minneapolis, Minn. !I artford Newtown II artford

New York, N. Y. Westfield, Mass.

Boston, Mass. Meriden

Orange, N. }. New Bedford, Mass.

Richmond !Jill, N. Y Danbury

R1:dgejield Darien

llartford Brooklyn, N. Y.

New MilfoTd Putnam

llartford Aubunr, N. 1".

II artford South l'vl anchester

ll artford

Page 64: 1913_complete

STANWOOD ADAMS MERRILL, ~ \ji

HAROLD CoLTHURST MILLS, ~ \]i

}AMES ARCHIBALD rvhTCHELL, ~ \ji

JAMEs PATRrcK rviuRRAY, <1> r ~ \lARK ELMO O'CONNELL

HAROLD SuMMERFIELD OLAFSON, A X P

WILLIAM BLACK ORR, A X p THEODORE ABBOTT PECK, I K A JOliN RICHARD PERKINS, ~ \ji

WoRCESTER PERKINS, ~ \]i

PERCIVAL CAMP PLATT, I K A

EDWARD LEARNED PoLLOCK, }R., \]iT

WILLIAM BENFIELD PRESSEY, \ji T OYES HoLMES REYNOLDS

LEWIS BRADFORD RIPLEY ~ \ji

DAYTO KATHAN RIVAS, A ..1 <I> LAWRENCE SMITH RoBERT

THOMAS HERBERT RoBINSON

BENJAMIN TALBOT RoGERs, }R., ~ \)1

HERBERT EDWAY RYERSON, \ji T TEwELL RussELL SAGE, \!f T

RAYMOND LEEDS ScoFIELD, 2l K E CHESTER RHOADES SEYMOUR .

ISAAC BATTIN SHELLEY, A~ <I> }AMES OAH SLEE, ~ K E ALBERT LoRD SMITH, ~ \]i BERTRAM LEoN BuRGOYNE SMITH \]i T RoBERT RoWAN SMITH, <I> r ~ LEON SPITZ

DALLAS SuMMERFIELD SQUIRE, ~ 'i' FRANCIS BELL STITES,~ \ji

REvEL CooK STRATTON

]AcoB IsRAEL SuiSMAN

PAuL MoNROE SwiFT, I K A

ALLEN THOMAS USHER, I K A JoHN WILLIAM VJZNER

CHARLES CooLIDGE WITHINGTO:-<, A~ <I> CLIFToN \\~RIGHT, <1> r ~ PHILIP .JOHN YouNG, JR.

\ ' ERTREES YouNG, A~ <I>

FRESHMAN CLASS CoLORs

Three Shades of Green

Walpole, Mas.r. Troy, N. Y.

Centreville, Md. Norwich Town

Wallingford Brooklyn, N. Y. Columbus, Ohio

Washington Greenwich Greenwich

Hawleyville Chicago, Ill.

Ashton, R. I. Albany, N. Y.

Glastonbury Schenectady, N. Y. Winter Park, Fla.

Waterbury Fond du Lac, Wi;.

North East, Pa. Middletown New /Iaven

East Granby New York, N. Y.

Yonkers, N. Y. Middletown

Chicago, Ill. Danbur·y Hartford

Morristown, N. ]. Louisville, Ky.

J/artford Hartford

Yarmouth port, Mass. East Providence, R. /.

Hartford . Newton Center, Mass.

Danbury Nutley, N.]. Oakmont, Pa.

Page 65: 1913_complete

Jqautnm 1!\n ll

GEORGE LAWTON BARNES, A X p Bro HALL BARNETT, A 11 .P . ARTHUR SHIRLEY BARRETT, 11 K. E

DANIEL WEBSTER BATEMAN

CHARLES EDWIN BLAKE, 11 K. E

BARTLETT BRoOKE BoNNELL, 11 ~ FRA KLIN J ELSON BREED, ~ T JAMES ANDREW BRENNEN

RoBERT ERAsTus FooTE, A X P

PAUL F AIRBA ' KS HERRICK, A 11 .p JOHN CRoMPTON HoRSFALL, 11 K. E

RoBERT INGLESO ' .p r 11 WALTER ALBERT JAMIESON, A X p ·wALTER ScoTT JARvis, I K. A

OAH LEVINE

WILLIAM SAMUEL LINES, ]R., A 11 .P. FRANCIS ALBERT LovELAND, .p r 11 GuY HuBBARD 1 EWHALL

1 I K. A

FERGUS OLIVER, ~ T ALFRED ERWI RANK! ' ~ T JOHN FAR 'S LEY REDDICK, A 11 .p RALPH HE N RY SALTSMAN, <P r 11 CHARLES BuNSEN SHAW

MERRILL WoLVERTON SMITH, 11 ~ KARL Lours SoMMER, .p r 11 . EnwARD DENMAN TowNSEND, ~ T . DunLEY CHARLES TuRNER, 11 K. E

GuY HARRISON TYRRELL, 11 K. E

EDWARD BuLKELY VAN ZrLE, 11 ~

EDWARD SANFORD BARNEY, ~ T }AMES BENSON BAUMGARDNER, 11 ~ HowARD }AMES BuRGWIN, ~ T MERRITT FowLER CRoMWELL, ~ T HERBERT GRAY DANFORTH, 11 ~

HENRY BROWN DILLARD, 11 ~

19 12

1913

57

Ansonia ] acksonville, Fla.

Jersey City, N.]. Richmond Hills, N . Y.

Brooklyn, N. Y. Brooklyn, N. Y.

. Hartford East Hartford

Andover Springfield, Mass.

New Britain Hoboken, N.].

Utica, N. Y. Brooklyn, N. Y.

Rockville Hartford Hartford

Tompkinsville, N. Y. Milwaukee, Wis.

Wellesley Hills, Mass. Faribault, Minn. . Bayonne, N. ].

Torrington Bloomsburg, Pa.

. Hartford Clairton, Pa.

W est Hartford Watervliet, N. Y. New York, N. Y.

Springfield, Mass. Toledo , Ohio

Pittsburgh, Pa. Dobbs Ferry, N. Y.

Oldtown, Me. Huntsville, Ala.

Page 66: 1913_complete

ALBERT jAMEs EMMANUEL DRAPER, <I> r t. RoBERT MoNTAYNE FooT, At. ci> RoGER WILLIAMS GATEs, t. K E

GEORGE GERMAINE, t. K E

TuRPIN Hsi .

JoHN PARKE LEAVENWORTH, At. ci> STANLEY FIELD MARR, t. K E

}AMES ELMER McCREERY, t. K E

EDWARD EvERETT MoBERLY, ]R., t. '¥ ARTHUR FRANK PEASLEE, A X p joHN WoLcoTT RoBBINS

HoBART jAMES RoBERTS, A X P

CHARLES RoDGERS SANDSBURY

jOHN WESLEY SARLES, I K A

ARCHER PLATT SAYRES, A X p CouRTLAND WHITEHEAD SAYREs, A X P

HARRY GEORGE WooDBURY,'¥ T

JOSEPH WILLIAM ADAM, A t. ci> WILLIAM HEWSON BALTZELL, '¥ T MosEs AARoN BERMAN .

LEON MARK BRUSSTAR .

Lours SAMUEL CHAMBERS

CHARLES JUDSON CHILD, A X p R oGERs DAY CLARK, t. K E

EDWARD BRoDERICK DuFFEY

THEODORE FRIEDHOF, JR., t. '¥ EDWARD IsAAc GLEZER .

WILLIAM RussELL LANGDON, ci> r t. LAURENCE LENNOX, t. '¥ ALFRED BROOKS LISTER, A t. ci> PATRICK JosEPH McGUIRE

THOMAS HENRY MeN EIL, JR., t. '¥ OscAR ANDREWS MoNRAD, I K A

HARRISON CRANE NOYES, '¥ T JoHN RECCA .

JOSEPH SHAPIRO

LEVI FRANCIS SILVERSMITH

THEODORE LEROY STORY, '¥ T

1914

New York, N. Y. Red Wing, Minn.

. Hartford Waterbury

Shanghai, China Winsted

Waterville, Me. Fall River, MaJJ. New York, N. Y.

. Hartford

. Hartford Utica, N . Y.

Cumberland, M d . Bridgeport

Detroit, Mich. Detroit, Mich.

Francestown, N. H .

Dillon, Mont. Philadelphia, Pa.

. Hartford New Haven

New York, N. Y. Ansonia

Clifton, MaJJ. Hartford

Columbus, Neb. Hartford

Smyrna, Asia Minor Lynn, MaJJ.

Philadelphia, Pa. Manchester

Chicago, Ill. East Hartford

Norwich New York, N. Y.

Hartford Hartford Norwich

Page 67: 1913_complete

-~:-- -::- 4fl6!'. ~; .

Fl~L\LEL\.L~l tlt~

Page 68: 1913_complete

.Artiut flllttmbtr.a

CHAPIN CARPENTER

1913

1£oral 1J1 ratrruity

of 11. if(. A.

Founded 18 29 at

Trinity C o llege

WILLIAM SHORT, ]R.

KENNETH BEARDSLEY CASE EDWARD WHITEHEAD JEWETT

vVALTER STuART ~ARSDEN

1914

CHARLEs W A LLA CE CooKE ARTHUR FoRD GEDDEs EDGE Low

RAYMOND HENRY DEXTER EDWA RD ]EFFERSON ~YERS

wALCOTT CHA PIN

THEODORE ABBOTT PECK

BENJAMIN Lours RAMSAY

PERCIVA L CAMP PLATT

PAUL ~UNROE SwiFT

ALLEN THOMAS UsHER

6o

Page 69: 1913_complete
Page 70: 1913_complete
Page 71: 1913_complete

lf. !(. A.

JJfratrr.a in l!lrhr

ARTHUR K. BROCKLESBY,'?O

v .- ILLIAM D. MoRGAN,'72

\ VILLIAM c. SKINNER, ' 76

ERNEST DEF. MIEL,'88

lREN US K. HAMILTON,'9 1

GEoRGE W. ELLrs,'94

DUDLEY C. GRAVES, '98

RoBERT W. GRA Y, '9

EDWARD J. MANN,'04

IRVING R. KENYON,'07

H A ROLD G. HART, ' 07

PAUL M. BuTTERWORTH,'o

. RoBERTS K. SKrNNER,' Io

BENJAMI ' F. TuRNER,'ro

jAMES PoRTEus,'u

vVILLIAM c. SKI NER, JR.,' rr

(!lnrpnratinn

WILLIAM CoNvERSE SKINNER

WILLIAM DENISON MoRGAN

DuDLEY CHASE GRAVES

JoHN HENRY STEVENS QuicK

\\· rLLIAM STERLING CoGGSWELL

EDWARD MANSFIELD ScuDDER

]AMES STRATTON CARPENTER

GEORGE WATSON BEAC H

CHARLES ERLING HoTCHKiss

President

f/ ice-President

Secretary- T reasU1·er

HOBART WARREN THOMPSO

ERNEST DEfREMERY MIEL

ARTHUR CoLLINS GRAVES

lRENUS KITTEREDGE HAMILTON

THOMAS McKEAN

CHARLES LUTHER BURNHAM

Page 72: 1913_complete

ALPHA

DELTA

EPSILON

LAMBDA

PHI

UPSILON

SIGMA

TAU

Wqt 111ratrrnity nf itlta Jnt

Founded in 1847 at Columbia College and the University

of New York

1!\nll nf C!Uraptrrs

Columbia College

niversity of Pennsylvania

Trinity College

Williams College

University of Mississippi

University of Virginia

Sheffield Scientific School of Yale Univ.

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

Page 73: 1913_complete
Page 74: 1913_complete
Page 75: 1913_complete

irltn ~lsi

i\rtthr ftllrmbrr.a

GRADUATES

CRANSTO BRENTO

RoBERT HABERSHAM CoLEMAN

FRANK JUDSON BRAINERD, JR .

KILBOURN lVIAXWELL KENDALL ALFRED ELY PuLFORD

CHARLES RICHARDSON WHIPPLE

RussELL CuRTIS ToBLE SAMUEL SEDGWICK SwiFT

DE Los ScHUYLER PuLFORD, ]R. RoBERT WRIGHT THOMAS, JR.

JoHN ]AY WHITEHEAD, JR.

KENNETH vVELLES BoYNTON

GEORGE BEACH, ]R.

FREDERICK GRIFFITH DoRWART

\VILLIAM THEODORE GRAY, ]R.

CoLIN MoNTAGUE INGERSOLL

PHIUP SuMNER PAGE

]AMES ARCHIBALD MITCHELL

BENJAMIN TALBOT RoGERS

DALLAS SuMMERFIELD SQUIRE

FRANCIS BELL STITES

Page 76: 1913_complete

Founded in 1832 at Hamilton College

mnu nf <!l~a.ptrr.a

HAMILTON Hamilton College 1832

CoLUMBIA Columbia College 1836

YALE Yale University 1836

AMHERST Amherst College 1836

BRUNONIAN Brown niversity 1836

HuDSON Western Reserve University 1841

BowDOIN Bowdoin College 1841

DARTMOUTH Dartmouth College 1845

PENINSULAR niversity of Michigan 1846

RocHESTER University of Rochester 1850

WILLIAMS Williams College 1851

MANHATTAN College of the City of New York 1855

MIDDLETOWN \Vesleyan University 1856

KENYON Kenyon College 1858

UNION Union College 1859

CORNELL Cornell University 1869

PHI KAPPA Trinity College 1877

]oH s HoPKINS Johns Hopkins University 1889

MI NESOTA University of Minnesota 1891

TORONTO Toronto University 1893

CHICAGO University of Chicago 1896

McGILL McGill University 1897

WISCONSIN niversity of \Visconsin 1902

CALIFORNIA University of California 1908

ILLINOIS University of Illinois 1911

68

Page 77: 1913_complete
Page 78: 1913_complete
Page 79: 1913_complete

Qtqaptrr

J\lpqa irlta Jqi

Arttur •rmbrrs

vVILLIAM AuGUSTUS BIRD, IV

vVILLIAM HILL BLEECKER, JR.

WILLIAM REDMOND CuRTIS

LEONARD DAWSON ADKINS

JosEPH OYES BARNETT

ALLAN BEHRENDS CooK

GEORGE HowARD ELDER

RY ALBERT HICKS

THOMAS \ ¥oLCOTT LITTLE

1914

\VALTER MuRRAY FARROW

CHARLES HuRD HowELL

ELLIOTT FIELDING PETTIGREW

RICHARD LAWTON DEPPEN

JOHN BIGELOW MooRE

RoBERT PRESTO ' WITHINGTON

JAMES AsHTON l\!IooRE

JOHN SHAPLEIGH MosEs

Lours ONDERDONK DERoNGE

EDWARD PINKNEY WROTH

vVrLLIAM EDwARD BARNETT

RANDWICK ALBERT BISSELL

CHARLES HERBERT BoEHM

SAMUEL HARMON EDSALL

GEoRGE DAwsoN HowELL, JR ..

1915

71

STANLEY MERTO MERRILL

DAYTON KATHAN RIVAS

ISAAC BATTIN SHELLEY

CHARLES CooLIDGE WITHINGTON

VERTREES YouNG

Page 80: 1913_complete

l\lp~a irlta J~i

IJ1 rutrr.B itt l!lrbr

ALLEN, A. vV., Yale, '04

ALVORD, SAMUEL NI., Yale, '96

BASSETT, PRoF. A. B., Williams, '8 r

BECKWITH, REv. I. T., Yale, '68

BENNETT, HoN. EDWARD B., Yale,'66

BRYANT, PERCY F., Phi Kappa, '70

BuNcE, CHARLES H ., Yale, '6o

CADY, GEORGE F., Middletown, '69

CALDER, W. P., Middletown, '03

CALHOUN, DAVIDS., Yale,'48

CHESTER, T. WESTON, M.D., Hamilton

CLARK, WALTER H., Yale,'96

DusTIN, E. F., Yale,'o6

FRANCIS, C. W., Yale, '63

FuLLER, HoRACE S., M.D., Amherst, '58

GARVIN, ]oH , Yale,'o2

GILLETT, REv. ARTHUR L., Amherst, '8o

GooDwiN, CHARLEs A ., Yale, '98

GooDwiN, F. S., Yale,'93

GooDwiN, H., Yale, 'o6

GooDwiN, jAMES L., Yale, 'o2

GooDwiN, REv. }AMES, Phi Kappa, '86

GooDwiN, P. L., Yale,'97

GooDwiN, WALTER L., Yale, '97

GREENWOOD, A. H., Dartmouth , '99

GRoss, CHARLES E., Yale, '69

HATCH, EDWARD B., Phi Kappa,'86

HowELL, GEORGE D., Phi Kappa, '82

HuNT, E. M., Phi Kappa, 'o6

HuNTINGTON, REv.]. T., Phi Kappa,' so

LAMPSON, E. R., M.D., Phi Kappa, '91

LAWRENCE, THOMAS F., Yale, '99

MAERKLEIN, B. C., Phi Kappa, 'o6

MARVIN, L. P ., Yale,'92

MEAD, C. B., Columbia, '09 MoRSE, LEONARD, Amherst, '71

NORTHAM, CHAS., JR., 1iddletown, '04

PERKINS, HENRY A., Yale, '96

PHILLIPS, R ., Yale,' 12

RoBERTS, E. C., Yale,' ro

RoBERTs, ]. T., Yale, 'os

RoBERTs, P ., Yale, ' ro

ScHUTZ, RoBERT H., Phi Kappa, '89

ScHUTZ, WALTER S., Phi Kappa, '94

SEYMOUR, MARLOR, Amherst,' 14

ST. JOH N, SAMUEL B., M.D., Yale, '66

STARR, RosT. S., M.D., Phi Kappa, '97

THOMPSON, ARTHUR R. , Yale, '96

TwiCHELL,]. H., Yale,'o6

VAN ScHAACK, DAviD, Phi Kappa, 'or

WILLIAMS, ARTHUR C., Yale, '98

WINANS, W. W., Middletown, '89

\VoLFE, R. R., Phi Kappa,'o8

vVRIGHT, A. B., nion, '90

ZwEIGART, H.]., Amherst, ' 1 I

Page 81: 1913_complete

{

ID4r 1J1rutrruity nf 1llrltu if(uppu 1.Ep.ailnu

PHI THETA XI SIGMA GAMMA Psi UPSILON BETA ETA KAPPA LAMBDA PI IoTA ALPHA ALPHA OMICRON EPSILON RHO TAU Mu Nu BETA PHI PHI CHI Psr PHI GAMMA PHI Psr OMEGA BETA CHI DELTA CHI PHI GAMMA GAMMA BETA THETA ZETA ALPHA CHI PHI EPSILON SIGMA TAu DELTA DELTA ALPHA PHI TAU LAMBDA DELTA KAPPA TAU ALPHA SIGMA RHo DELTA PI RHO DELTA

Founded in 1844 at Yale niversity

Yale University Bowdoin College Colby University Amherst College Vanderbilt University University of Alabama Brown University University of orth Carolina University of Virginia Miami University Kenyon College Dartmouth College Central University Middlebury College University of Michigan Williams College Lafayette College Hamilton College Colgate University College of the City of New York University of Rochester Rutgers College Depauw University Wesleyan University Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute Adelbert College Cornell University Syracuse niversity Columbia niversity University of California Trinity College University of Minnesota Massachusetts Institute of Technology University of Chicago University of Toronto Tulane University University of Pennsylvania McGill University Leland Stanford, Jr., University University of Illinois University of Wisconsin

73

1844 1844 1845 1846 1847 1847 r85o 185 I r852 1852 1852 1853 1853 1854 1855 1855 1855 1856 1856 1856 1856 r86r r866 1867 r867 r868 1870 1871 1874 1876 1879 1889 1890 1893 1898 1898 1899 1900 1902 1904 1906

Page 82: 1913_complete

irltu 1Kuppu

1£psilnn

Arttur ftltrmhrr.s

1912

HoBART WELLS SMITH Co~K ]AME~ HowARD HuMPHREY

*JoHN CROMPTON HoRSFALL LAURE CE HuTCHINSO ' McCLURE

HARRY WESSELS

DANIEL BYRON DAWLEY

CHESTER DuDLEY WARD

fELIX EMIL BARIDON

WALTER fRA ' CIS BoRcHERT

THOMAS wALLIS DAVIS

BERTRAM BENEZETT BAILEY

OGDEN DoREMUS BuDD

ALBERT EDWARD DuNSFORD

ERNEST HARTCRAFT GEYER

jAMES

*Deceased

ELIOT LEE wARD

HENRY BEARDSLEY WARNER

fRANCIS STUART fiTZPATRICK

HoRAcE foRT

EDGAR SoLON LELAND

EvERITT HEYWOOD HALL

HowARD RicE HILL

ARTHUR JOHNSON

RAYMOND LEEDS ScoFIELD

OAH SLEE

74

Page 83: 1913_complete
Page 84: 1913_complete

Ev

FE fLY

FoR

fRE

FRE GA1

Gor

GRA

Page 85: 1913_complete

irlta 1Kappa 1.Epsilnu

ALLEN, \V. B., Yale, 'or

AYRES, W . A., Yale, '64

BABCOCK, A. L., Colgate, '03

BENNETT, :tvL, Toscan, Yale, '98

BoYD, H . C., Trinity, 'os

BuLKELEY, M . G., JR., Yale,'o7

CALL, A. D ., Brown, '96

CAMP, J. S., Wesleyan, '78

CASE, T. G., Trinity, 'oo

CLARK, C. H., Yale, '7 I

CoLE, F. W., Yale, 'o4

CoLLINS, ATwooD, Yale, '73

CoNANT, G. A., Amherst, '78

CoNE, J. B., Yale,' 57

CooLEY, C. P ., Yale, '91

.CooLEY, F. R ., Yale,'86

DAY, A. P., Yale,'9o

DAY, E . M., Yale,'9o

DAvrs, F . W., Yale,'77

EvANS, J . D. , Trinity, 'o r

FENN, E. HART, Yale, '65

FLYN , B. D., Trinity, ex-'os

FOR REST, C. R., yale, '6s

FREEMAN, H. B., Yale, '62

FREEMAN, H. B., JR., Yale, '92

GATES, A. F., Yale,'87

GoDARD, G. S., Wesleyan, '9 r

GRANT, R . M., ·wesleyan, '92

1ff ratrrs itt 1\trbr HARBISON, J. P., Trinity (H)

HrNE, C. D., Yale, '71

HowE, D. R ., Yale, '74

HYDE, A. W., Yale,'o2

HYDE, vV. w., Yale,'?6

I GALLS, DR. P. H., Bowdoin, '77

KEITH, DR. A. R., Colby, '97

LAKE, E . J., Harvard, '92

LoRD, J. W ., Trinity,'98

MATSON, W. L., Yale, '62

OLMSTED, H. B., Trinity, 'o8

PARKER, R Ev. E. P., Bowdoin, '56

PATTISON, R Ev. H., R ochester,'92

PHILBRICK, M. P ., Colby, '97

PIKE, C. S., Chicago, '96

P o D, H. C., T rin ity, 'o8

Po D, D. C., Trinity, 'o8

PRATT, W. W., Adelbert, '85

PRENTICE, S. 0., Yale, '73

Row LEY, DR. A. M ., Amherst, '95

SMILEY, E . H ., Colby, '75

SMITH, E. W., Yale, 'or

SMITH, F. M., Y ale,'8o

STARR, DR. P. S., Yale, '6o

ST. JoHN, W . H ., Yale,'91

TAYLOR, J. M., Williams,'67

TRAVER, R Ev. H. R. , Colgate, '66

\VELCH, A. A., Yale, '82

\VENTWORTH, G. R ., Trinity, ex-'o8

77

Page 86: 1913_complete

THETA

DELTA

BETA

SIGMA

GAMMA

ZETA

LAMBDA

KAPPA

Psi

XI

UPSILON

IoTA

PHI

PI

CHI

BETA BETA

ETA

TAU

Mu

RHo

OMEGA

EPSILON

OMICRON

Wqr 1J1 ratrruity nf Jsi lltpsilnu

Founded at Union College in I833

IUtll nf <U4nptrrs

Union College

ew York University

Yale University

Brown University

Amherst College

Dartmouth College

Columbia University

Bowdoin College

Hamilton College

Wesleyan University

University of Rochester

Kenyon College

University of Michigan

Syracuse University

Cornell University

Trinity College .

Lehigh niversity

niversity of Pennsylvania

University of Minnesota

University of Wisconsin

University of Chicago

University of California

University of Illinois

Page 87: 1913_complete
Page 88: 1913_complete
Page 89: 1913_complete

Qlqaptrr

J.at l!psilnu

Arttur ~.rmbrrn

GEORGE TuRNER BATES

jAMES SHREWSBURY CRAIK

THOMAS GILBERT BROWN

GEoRGE CoLLINSON BuRGWIN, ]R.

CHARLES EwELL CRAIK, JR.

THEODORE CANFIELD HuDsoN, ]R.

vVILLIAM RosENBAUM

SAMUEL HERBERT EviSON

OLIVER GILDERSLEEVE, JR.

CHARLES HENRY CoLLETT

HERBERT AcKLEY SAGE

vVILLIAM BE JAMIN SPOFFORD

ARCHIBALD WILSO Vil ALKER

RICHARD FoLsoM Vi' ALKER

THEODORE FRANCIS \ ;vESSELS

HENRY LAWRENCE BRAINERD

FREDERICK BoND DART

jAMEs SYLVESTER McCABE, ]R.

EDWARD LARNED PoLLOCK, ]R.

WILLIAM BENFIELD PRESSEY

HERBERT EDWAY RYERSON

EWELL RussELL SAGE

BERTRAM LEON BuRGOYNE SMITH

Page 90: 1913_complete

Jnt Upntlntt

1J1 ratrr!l tn litrbr

]. P. ANDREws, Beta,'77

E. S. BALLARD, Chi,'98

L. C. BARBOUR, Beta,'oo

E. I . BEMENT, Delta,'67

M. B. BRAINARD, Beta,'oo

N. C. BRAINARD, Beta,'oz

RT. REv. C. B. BREWSTER, Beta,'68

]. H. BucK, Beta,'9 1

]. R. BucK, Xi ,'6z

C. C. BuLKELY, Beta Beta,'75

P. D. BuNcE, M.D., Beta,'88

C. W. BuRPEE, Beta,'83

W. S. CAsE, Beta,'Ss

A. ST. C. CooK, Beta,'89

W. H . CoRBIN, Beta,'89

R. D. CuTLER, Beta,'o7

P. E. CuRTIS, Beta Beta,'o6

]. H. K. DAVIS, Beta Beta,'99

G. P ~ DAVIS, M.D., Beta,'66

]. C. DAY, Beta,'57

L. N. DENNISO , Xi,'oz

L. A. ELLIS, Beta Beta, '98

c. E . FELLOWS, Beta,' s6 G. H. GILMAN, Beta,'90

L. E. GoRDON, Xi,'9o

HoN. W. HAMERSLEY, Beta Beta,' s 8

R. W. HuNTI GTON, Beta, '89

PRoF. C. F. JoHNsoN, Beta,'ss

F. E. JoH soN, Beta Beta,'84

82

]. MeA . J OHNSO , Beta Beta,'o3

'vV. MeA. J o HNSON, Beta Beta,'98

l\11. S. LITTLE, Beta, 'o7

A. T. McCooK, Beta Beta,'oz

PRoF. A. R. MERRIAM, Beta,'n

C. S. MoRRIS, Beta Beta, '96

C. G. WooDWARD, Beta Beta,'98

P . S. NEY, Beta,'os

F. P ARSON, Beta,'93

A. PERKINS, Beta,'87

HoN. H. RoB ERTS, Beta,'77

H. S. RoBI NSON, Beta,'89

]. T . RoBI NSON, Beta,'93

L. F . RoBI NsoN, Beta,'8s

E . W . RoBI NSON, Beta Beta,'96

E. F . SANDERSON, Gamma,'96

G . H. SEYMS , Beta Beta,'72

H. P. ScHAUFFLER, Gamma,'93

F. SHEPHERD, Beta,'92

A. L. SHIPMAN, Beta, '86

T. E. V. SMITH, Beta,'n

I. E. STANTON, Beta,'ss

F. H. TAYLOR, Xi ,'84 .

]. R. TRUMBULL, Beta, '92

R Ev.]. H. TwiCHELL, Beta,'59

E . F. WATERMAN, Beta Beta,'98

F. E. WATERMAN, Beta Beta,'oi

L. S. WELCH, Beta,'89

H. H . WHAPLEs, Beta,'oz

Page 91: 1913_complete

'

Jqi ~amma itlta 111rattrutty

Founded in r848 at Washington and Jefferson College

ALPHA

Nu LAMBDA

Xr

OMICRON

Pr

TAU

OMEGA

Psr

ALPHA DEUTERON

THETA DEUTERON

GAMMA DEUTERON

ZETA DEUTERON

ZETA

0MICRO DE UTERO

Nu DEUTERON

BETA CHAPTER

Pr DEUTERON

DELTA

LAMBDA DEUTERO

RHo DEUTERON

SIGMA DEUTERON

ZETA Prn

DELTA CHI

THETA Psr

BETA CHI

KAPPA Nu KAPPA TAU

i&nll nf OJqaptrrn

\V ashington and Jefferson College

Bethel College

DePauw University

Gettysburg College

University of Virginia

Allegheny College

Hanover College

Columbia University

Wabash College

Illinois Wesleyan niversity

Ohio Wesleyan niversity

Knox College

Washington and Lee University

Indiana State niversity

Ohio State niversity

Yale University

University of Pennsylvania

Kansas University

Bucknell University

Dennison niversity

·wooster niversity

Lafayette College

William Jewell College

University of California

Colgate University

Lehigh niversity

Cornell University

University of Tennessee

Page 92: 1913_complete

Mu SIGMA

RHo CHI

GAMMA PHI CHAPTER

PI IoTA

CHI

ALPHA CHI

Nu EPSILON

TAU ALPHA

BETA Mu

Mu

CHI IoTA

SIGMA

DELTA Nu

PI RHo

OMEGA Mu

IoTA Mu

XI D EUTERON

SIGMA Nu

LAMBDA IoTA

THETA

CHI UPSILON

ALPHA PHI

ALPHA IoTA

CHI Mu

CHI SIGMA

LAMBDA Nu

TAU DEUTERON

LAMBDA SIGMA

SIGMA TAU

Jqi ~amma idta lfl'ratrruity

University of Minnesota

Richmond College

Pennsylvania State College

Worcester Polytechnical Institute

Union College

Amherst College

New York University

Trinity College

Johns Hopkins University

University of Wisconsin

University of Illinois

Wittenberg College

Dartmouth College

Brown University

Maine University

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

Adelbert College

Syracuse University

Purdue ni ersity

University of Alabama

University of Chicago

University of Michigan

Iowa State University

University of Missouri

Colorado College

University of Nebraska

University of Texas

Leland Stanford, Jr., University

Washington State niversity

Page 93: 1913_complete
Page 94: 1913_complete

J

Page 95: 1913_complete

J

illf7aptrr of

Jqt ~amma irlta

Arttur .ttllrmbrr.a

WILLIAM CHRISTY ANDREWS CLARENCE IRVING PENN

vVILLIAM ERNEST STEVEN

ALBERT HAITHWAITE

WALTER CRANE HATHAWAY

MERRILL L. K. ALLEN

PETER PAUL LAWLOR

HowARD JEROME LIVERMORE

FRANCIS THOMAS CuRLEY

AusTIN EBER HoDGE

RONALD EARL KINNEY

ALFRED JOSEPH L ' HEUREUX

FRANCIS EARLE WILLIAMS

HENRY WHITING SELDEN

CHARLES TIMOTHY SENAY

CYRUS THOMAS STEVEN

]AMES PATRICK :MuRRAY

RoBERT RowAN SMITH

CLIFTON WRIGHT

Page 96: 1913_complete

Jqi ~amma ielta

JJr ratrt.a itt lltrb.r

BACKUS, H. S., '02 BARLOW, H. E., A X BoNNER, C. W., 'o8 BRAINERD, c. B., N ~ BuRDICK, V. G.,'rr CARPENTER, F. D.,'ro CAMPBELL, J. N. H., N ~ CAWLEY, S., 'II CLAPP, R. J., rr CoNKLIN, W. E.,'97 CoRBETT, F. J., 'o8 CREEDON, A. W.,'og DuNHAM, D. A., 'o6 FALLow, E. S., 'o6 FLYNN, J. D., '97 FoRBEs, F. L., N ~ FosTER, E. 0., A X GREEN, H . C., 'ro GuNNING,]. W., '96 HI CHLIFFE, J. H., Q M ]ARMAN, F. T., N ~ KELLOGG, A. B., N E KNoWLTON, A. E ., 'ro LAKIN, W. F., 'og LESCHKE, A. H ., 'ro LOVELAND, F. A.,'I2 LINN, E. C., p McKoNE, C. W., 'o8 MASON, R. L.,'o8 MoRRow, C. E., 'og

AEDELE, T. c., N ~ UCKOLS, H. c.

OwENs, M. F., 'os PATTERSON, S. c., A X RoBBINs, H. E ., 'o8 SoMMER, K. L., 'r2 STITT, H. J. B., '03 STOKES, R. S., 8 '¥ TUTTLE, G. A., X ~

88

p

p

p

p

Page 97: 1913_complete

PHI Psi

PHI CHI

PHi PHI

PHI OMEGA

PHI ALPHA

PHI BETA

PHI DELTA

PHI EPSILO

PHI ZETA

PHI ETA

PHI THETA

PHI GAMMA

IDqr 1J1 ratrrnity nf l\lpqa Q!qt 18qn

Founded in 1895 at Trinity College

Trinity College

Polytechnic Institute of Brooklyn

University of Pennsylvania

Columbia University

Lafayette College

Dickinson College

Yale University

Syracuse University

University of Virginia

Washington and Lee niversity

Cornell University

Wesleyan niversity

Page 98: 1913_complete

ill4aptrr of

Artiur ilrmbrr.s

PHILIP ALOYSIUS AHER

THOMAS FRANCIS FLANAGAN

CARLOS SANFORD HoLcOMB

LESLIE GILBERT OsBORNE

1913

ETHELBERT TALBOT SMITH

ETHAN FROST BASSFORD

EDWARD MICHLET LAZARUS

IRA ALLEN BALCH

ARTHUR EvERETT BARNS

JOHN ARCHIE BARNS

KARL HILDING BEIJ

RALPH HALM BENT

ERNEST THEODORE SoMERVILLE

JoHN VALE ' TINE SPRAGUE

ER EST FREEMAN BROWN

HERBERT CuRTIS FERRIS

THEODORE CHARLES KYLE

ADOLPH WILLIAM LAWSON

HAROLD SuMMERFIELD OLAFSON

\VrLLIAM BLACK ORR

90

Page 99: 1913_complete

tll~l'.-1&.11'f IIOJi BY Tl1E FRATER NIH OF ALPMA(HI AliC

Page 100: 1913_complete
Page 101: 1913_complete

1Jf ratr.r.a ttt 1ltrb.r

BEACH, CARROLL, C., 1\II.D., Phi Psi,'96

HASTINGs, F. H., Phi Psi, '96

MoRGAN, V. F., Phi Psi, '99

ARNOTT, ALEXANDER, Phi Psi, 'oo

PLIMPTON, R. E., Phi Chi, 'or

LoRENz, E. H., Phi Psi, 'oz

MoRBA, K. P., Phi Psi, 'oz

BLAKESLEE, R. H., Phi Psi, 'os

BRAINERD, C. C., Phi Psi, 'o6

BuTLER, L. P., Phi Beta, 'o6

ULRICH, W. L., Phi Delta, 'o6

LATTIN, R . B., Phi Delta, 'o7

MooDY, W. H ., Phi Psi, '07

BuTHs, L. S., Phi Psi, 'o8

OzoN, W. 'vV., Phi Psi, ex-'o8

SHERWOOD, C. S., Phi Psi, 'o8

CoNNOR, M . A., Phi Psi, '09

BARBER, L. L., Phi Delta, 'ro

93

Page 102: 1913_complete

11Jnral1J1ratrruity

nf

~tgma J st

Artiur :tlrmbrrn

]oH FRANCIS FoRWARD

HowARD RAY BROCKETT MAXIMILIAN SPORER

RAYMOND HuBBARD SEGUR PAuL HERBERT TAYLOR

JoHN VVALTER VVoESSNER

\\r" ILLIAM PoND BARBER

RAYMOND HART BENTLEY

MuNSEY LEw

MARcus THORNTON McGEE

EuGENE GooDWIN SMEATHERS

RoBERT ELLIS CRoss

SMART BRAND

STANWOOD ADAMS MERRILL

HAROLD CoLTHURST MILLS

RAYMOND VVEsT VVooDWARD

] OHN RICHARD PERK! ' S

VVoRCESTER PERKINs

LEWIS BRADFORD RIPLEY

ALBERT LORD SMITH

94

Page 103: 1913_complete

7

Page 104: 1913_complete
Page 105: 1913_complete

1

_@,igma Jsi

1J1 ratrr.a itt lltrbt

ALLISON, N. K., 'II

FRANCis, G. S., 'ro

GEER, E. S., 'ro

SMITH, A. K., 'I I

SANFORD, W. 0., ' r I

97

Page 106: 1913_complete

Chartered r845

®tlirrrn

REv. joHN T. HuNTINGToN, M.A., D.D., 'so

REv. joHN j. McCooK, D.D., LL.D.,'63

REv. SAMUEL HART, D.D., LL.D. '66

GEoRGE L. CooK, M.A., '7o

RAYMOND J. NEWTON

WILLIAM A . BIRD, IV,'12

mrmbrrn .i\bmtttrll itt 1 g 11

GEORGE HENRY CoHEN,'II

FRANK RICE PROUT, 'II

ALFRED ERWIN RANKI ,'II

WILLIAM AuGUSTUS BIRD, IV, '12

RAYMOND jAY NEWTON, '!2

President

Vice-President

Secretary

Treasurer

Assistant Secretary

Assistant Treasurer

Page 107: 1913_complete

ATHLETICS

Page 108: 1913_complete

Wriuity Qtnllrgr i\t4lrtir i\ssnriatinu

WILLIAM SHORT, ]R.

CHARLEs H . CoLLETT

®ffirrrg

President

Secretary- Treasurer

tE.xrruttur C!rnmmittrr

WILLIAM SHORT, ]R.

CHARLES H. CoLLETT

J. HowARD HuMPHREY

RICHARD L. DEPPEN

w. STUART ~ARSDEN, ]R.

C. H. HowELL

A. J. L'HEUREUX

HARRY WESSELS

. President A .A.

Secretary- Treasurer A.A.

Manager Football Team

Manager Baseball Team

Manager Track Team

Captain Football Team

Captain Baseball Team

Captain Track Team

~rabuatr 1\butgnry C!rommiUrr

W. E. A. BuLKELEY,'8o

I. K. HAMILTON,'9I

PROFESSOR J. D. FLY N,'97

HARVEY C. PoND,'o8

100

Chairman

Secretary-Treasurer

PROFESSOR ] . ]. ~cCooK, '63

PROFESSOR R. B. RIGGS

Page 109: 1913_complete

C. H. HowELL,' 1 2

J. H. HuMPHREY,'Iz

R. P. WITHINGTO ,'13

PROFESSOR RAYMO JD G 0 GETTELL

Captain

Manager

Assistant Manager

Coach

C. H. HowELL,'I2, Right End G. D. HowELL, ]R.,'15, Left Tackle

R. E. KINNEY,'15, Right Tackle P. A. AHERN,'IZ, Left End

J. A. MooRE,'q., Right Guard H. W. S. CooK,'I2, Quarter Back W. H. BLEECKER, jR.,'12, Center P. P. LAWLOR,'I4, Left Half Back

F. S. FITZPATRICK,'14, Center C. H. CoLLETT,'13, Right Half Back

J. B. MooRE,'I3·, Left Guard T. C. HunsoN,'14, Full Back

~ubstitutrs

0. GILDERSLEEVE,'I2

E. s. LELAND,'I4

T . F. WESSELS,'I4

101

B. L. SMITH,'IS

H . R. HILL,' I 5

A. E. DuNsFoRn,'IS

Page 110: 1913_complete
Page 111: 1913_complete

October 7 October I4

October 2I

1Rrrnr~ nf ~amra

IJinntball

at Hartford

at Hartford

at Utica, N. Y .

Trinity 6

Trinity I3 .. Trinity 9

Worcester Tech. 0

Amherst 0

Colgate 0 October 28 at Hartford Trinity I4

at ew York City Trinity o

at Hartford Trinity 35

at Haverford, Pa. Trinity 24

at Providence,R. I. Trinity 6

Wesleyan 13 ovember 7 ew York Univ.

ovember II Massachusetts S.

November IS Haverford

November 25 Brown

~ummary

Trinity 107- 0pponents 3 I

Won 6, Tied 2

Lost o

IJinrmrr C!laptatun

'92 G. D. HARTLEY

'93 J. w. EDGERTON

'o2 T. M. SYPHAX

'03 W . B. ALLEN

'83 C. H. GIESY

'84 S. T. MILLER

's5 w. w. BARBER

'86 w. w. BARBER

'94 ]. STRAWBRIDGE 'o4 0. MoRGAN

'95 W .S.LANGFORD,J R. 'o5 ]. C. LANDEFELD

'87 w. w. BARBER '96 A. M. LANGFORD

'88 E . McP. McCooK '97 A. S. WooDLE

'89 E. McP. McCooK '98 W. B. SuTTON

'90 T . P. THURSTON '99 w. P. BROWN

'9I W . C. HILL 'oo W. P. BRowN

'9 I H. s. GRAVES 'o1 ]. HEKDERSON

103

'o6 P. DouGHERTY

'o7 E. ]. DoNKELL Y

'o8 A. B. HENSHAW

'09 A. B. HENSHAW

'10 E. B. RAMSDELL

0

6

6

6

Page 112: 1913_complete

1!ruirm nf t4r 1J1 nnthull §runnn

H owELL

The foot ball season t his year was t he most successful in t he annals of t he college. After ou r excellent show­ing last yea r we were watched by many of t he Eastern crit ics and coaches, who expected us to t urn out a fast team that would t ake every possible a dvan­t age offered under the new rules . We did-we turned out an unbeat- H uMPHREY

Captai n en team. Manager

Worcester Tech was our first opponent. In a ragged and un­certain game we won, but by a small score. It was evident that the team had not as yet hit its pace. We worked hard, for our next game was with Amherst. They expected a victory that day ; but the team was playing the game for all that was in them, and Amherst was lucky to escape with the score of only 13-o against her. The following week we met Colgate, who were looking for revenge for their last year's defeat; but before a large crowd they were defeated. The wet ground prevented much spectacular playing, but the team was working well.

The game with Wesleyan will ever remain in the minds of all who saw it as the most wonderful they ever beheld. The big Red and Black Team was unexpectedly strong and seemed to know all our plays . They scored two touchdowns and a field goal, while we were held to three points . Then, in the last period, with only six minu tes to play and the score 13-3 against us, something happened. The team swept down the field twice and scored two touchdowns, the second within the last ninety seconds of play. The rooters could scarcely believe their eyes, but when they came to realize what had happened, pandemonium reigned.

On Election Day, Trinity played New York University a tie game, o-o, in New York. The game was a distinct disappointment to all of Trinity 's followers. We had the better team and should have

10 4

Page 113: 1913_complete

won the game without difficulty. However, the team took a slump on this occasion, and a tie was the result.

Massachusetts Aggies were the next victims. The team re­deemed its work of the preceding game by running up a big score. In this game we completed I I forward passes for a total of 225 yards . The Haverford game at Haverford was easy. The field was wet, so Trinity employed a successful kicking game.

We closed the season at Providence, when Brown was tied, 6-6. Trinity scored in the first ten seconds of play when Collett made a touchdown, recovering the kick-off on the first bound, when it slipped through the arms of the Brown Half Back. Brown scored soon after on a long run by Sprackling. After this, the two teams played very evenly, and neither side was able to score again.

Hudson, our big Full Back, was chosen by many of the cnt1cs for their All-American Team, and was placed on Walter Camp's third team. Many of our other men were favorably mentioned for such honor by New York newspapers.

We cannot say too much for Professor Gettel!. Here is a History Professor who coaches and develops a successful football team as a side issue. He applies his classroom theories to the gridiron and, strange as it may seem, theywork out well. The onside kick he taught us last year was copied by Yale this past fall. During his time as Coach we have had a winning team, and we all hope he will continue for a longer time in that capacity.

Jlrrnrb in ~a.5t 1J1iur Jrar.5

POI ITS

WON . TIE LOST TRINITY OPPONENTS

I907 6 0 2 223 34

I908 4 I 3 I27 6s I90<) 6 2 I I30 39

I9IO 7 0 I I22 z6 I9II 6 2 0 I07 31

105

Page 114: 1913_complete

BASEBALL ]. 0. CARROLL, 'I I

A. E. RA KIN,'I I

R. L. DEPPEN, 'I3

THOMAS J. CoN ERY

PROFESSOR J. D . FLY JN

Captain

Manager

Assistant Manager

Coach

Coach

F. ]. BRAI JERD,'II, First Base W .H.BLEECKER,]R.,'Iz,CenterField

D . C. TuRNER, 'Iz, Second Base P. A. AHERN, '12, Left Field

]. F . HoRAN, 'I3, Third Base A.]. L'HEUREUX, 'I3, Catcher

]. 0. CARROLL, 'I I, Shortstop C. W. SAYRES, 'I3, Pitcher

A . B. LISTER,'I4, Right Field H . B. WARNER,'I3, Pitcher

_s,1tb.atuutr.a

C. H . HowELL,'IZ A . P. SAYREs,'13 v. A. HICKS, '14

I06

Page 115: 1913_complete
Page 116: 1913_complete

1Rtrnr~ nf ~atttt!i

lla.arbull

April I2 at Prov.idence, R. I. Trinity 0 Brown April 20 at Ithaca, N. Y . Trinity Cornell April 2I at Hamilton, . Y. Trinity Colgate April 22 at Schenectady, N. Y. Trinity I Union April 25 at Cambridge, Mass. Trinity 0 Harvard April 29 at Williamstown,Mass.Trinity 0 Williams May 6 at Hartford Trinity 3 New York University May I3 at West Point, .Y. Trinity 3 West Point May I8 at Medford, Mass. Trinity 0 Tufts May 20 at Hartford Trinity 3 "Mass. Aggies" May 24 at Hartford Trinity Springfield T. S. May 30 at Middletown Trinity 9 Wesleyan June 3 at Hartford June IO at New York June I7 at Hartford June 24 at Hartford

'67 E. R . BREVOORT '68 E. R. BREVOORT '69 A. BROCKLESBY '70 A. BROCKLESBY '7I E. B. WATTS '72 E . B. WATTS '73 E. B. WATTS '74 c. E. CRAIK '75 F. T . LINCOLN '76 G. S. HEWITT '77 W. E. RoGERS '78 F . w. WHITE '79 w. N. ELBERT '8o W. J. RoGERS '8I G. D. HowELL '82 A. H. WRIGHT

Trinity 3 Trinity 4 Trinity Trinity 5

j;ttmmary

Trinity 35, Opponents 72 Won 5, Lost I I

lJl'nrmrr QI.uptaitt.a

R.P.I. Fordham Wesleyan Waseda

'83 C. M. KuRTZ M. H. CoGGESHALL '84 F. E. JoHNSON '97 D. C. GRAvEs 's5 J. w. SHANNoN '98 D. c. GRAvEs '86 J. w. SHANNON '99 J. H. K. DAVIS '87 J. W. SHANNON 'oo H. McK. GLAZEBROOK '88 G. W. BRINLEY 'oi R. FisKE '89 T. L. CHERITREE 'o2 E. GooDRIDGE '90 R. McC. BRADY '03 H. D. BRIGHAM '91 H. s. GRAVES '04 E. J. MANN '92 H. S. GRAVES C. F. CLEMENT '93 G. D. HARTLEY 'o5 c. F. CLEMENT '94 J. J. PENROSE 'o6 J. F. PowELL '95 H. R. DINGWELL '07 0. w. BADGLEY

J. J. PENROSE 'o8 I. L. XANDERS C. DuB. BROUGHTON'09 M. A. CoNNOR

'96 A. J. WILLIAMS '10 A.M. SMITH

108

9 9 4 7 2 5 2

I3 2 2 2 2 0 6 3 4

Page 117: 1913_complete

1Rruirm nf tqr 1Banrhall ~rannn

The baseball sea­son of 1911 proved to be one of the most un­satisfactory through which Trinity has ever passed, and this wa~ accentuated by the fact that the other branches of sports were so suc­cessful. The team, at the start, had many dis­advantages to over-

CARROLL come, and the wonder RANKIN Captain is not that they did not M anager

do better, but that the season had even that measure of success which it possessed. When the season opened, the positions- short­stop, first base, center field and left field were found to be open. Besides, Trinity had but one pitcher left from the season before, and new men had to be developed to fill these positions. Up to the date of the Brown game, the team was in the hands of a professional coach, but when his contract had come to an end the team was with­out that dash and confidence upon which he had insisted. The trip through New York State was taken without a coach, but when the team returned, Professor Flynn very kindly took up the work. It was because of his efforts that we took a brace, and to his influence more than to anything else is it due that the team began to play better ball. The holding of Harvard, 2 to o, and the defeat we handed Wesleyan were both creditable showings, as was also the 5- 4 victory over Waseda University, of Japan, during Commencement week. While these were showings to be proud of, there were others that were very disappointing. Many of the old and some of the new men showed marked natural baseball ability, but they lacked the dash and confidence necessary for a winning team. The team, as a whole, was sadly deficient in batting and base-running, and the "inside" work, both at bat and in the field was deplorable. The prospects for a winning team next year are extremely bright, even though we lost a number of men by graduation . There is a wealth of fine baseball material in the Freshman Class, and this with the help of a regular coach should assure us a victorious season.

Page 118: 1913_complete

I9I I

PAuL MAxoN,'II

E. F. PETTIGREW, '12

W. S. MARSDE r, JR., '13 W. J. CoHOLAN .

Captain

Manager

Assistant Manager

Coach

IOO-YARD DASH 220-YARD DASH 44o-YARD RuN HALF-MILE RuN MILE RuN Two-MILE RuN Izo-YARD HuRDLES 22o-YARD HuRDLES HIGH JuMP BROAD JuMP PoLE VAuLT SHoT PuT . HAMMER THROW DISCUS THROW

IDI]r IDram

Collett, 'I3, Heater, '13, Hudson, 'I4. Collett, 'I3, Heater, 'I3, Maxon, 'I I. Buck,'II, Wessels,'I4, Baridon,'I4. Buck, 'I I, Wessels, 'I4, Bates, 'I2, Swift, 'I3. Buck, 'I I, Wessels, 'I4, Craik, 'I2. Spofford,'I4, Haight,'II, Craik,'I4. Nelson, 'I I, Daley, 'I4, Hudson, 'I4. Maxon,'u, Daley,'I4, Nelson,'II. Nelson, 'I I, Pulford, 'I3, DeRonge, 'I4 Nelson, 'r I, Hudson, 'I4, Humphrey, 'I2. Maxon,'II, Wessels,'I2, Pulford,'I3. Bleecker, 'I2, Clark, 'I I, Hudson, 'I4. Clark, 'II, Hudson, 'I4. Clark,'ri, Hudson,'I4, Dexter,'I4.

110

Page 119: 1913_complete

s

Page 120: 1913_complete

1Rrlrirw of tqr IDrark §ra!Ion

The track season proved to be one of the best in recent years.

The team had a big nucleus of veterans, and there was some very good material in the Freshman Class . Our new coach was a thoroughly competent man, and he worked hard with his material. The first part of the

MAXON season was spent in PETTIGREW Capta in training the men for :\1a nage r

their events; which proved very successful. Our first meet re­sulted disastrously for us, but, with less than two weeks of prepara­tion, we could not complain. The Wesleyan meet was a big surprise to both institutions, inasmuch as the score was so close and as we made such a good showing against our old rival. Captain Paul Maxon proved one of the stars at the N. E. I. C. A . A. meet at Springfield. He cleared the bar at twelve feet, three quarters of an inch; breaking the old record by nearly three inches . Indeed his work throughout the entire season was of sterling character and his captaincy was singularly efficient and popular. At the moment of writing his chances to "make" the American Olympic Team look very good. The last meet of the season was with R. P. I., and re­sulted in a victory for us . The men deserved this victory, for they had been working hard the entire season and had displayed great enthusiasm. The team was a great deal better than the one of the year before, as can be seen by comparison of records. The team for the coming season should be one of the best in the history of the College. Most of the veterans are back and there is a lot of good material to work into the places of those who have left. We have an ambitious schedule, but the caliber of the men seems to justify it, and we should have a very successful season.

112

Page 121: 1913_complete

IDrintty 1\tqlrtir 1!trrnr1l

E vent Record Name

IOO-YARD DASH IO I-5 sec. V. G. Burdick,'II

220-YARD DASH 22 3-5 sec. H. S. Graves,'92

440-YARD DASH 5 I sec. W. A. Sparks,'97

880-YARD RuN 2 min. 7 sec. W.J. elson,'Io

I-MILE RuN 4 min. 44 2-5 sec. F. E. Waterman,'oi

2-MILE Run 10 min. 39 sec. D. C. Pond,'o8

12o-YARD HuRDLES 16 sec. H. B. Olmsted,'o8

22o-YARD HuRDLES 26 I-5 sec. H. C. Pond,'o8

HIGH JuMP 6ft. I in. I. K. Baxter,'99

BROAD JuMP 22 ft. 5 1-4 in. H. C. Van Weelden,'o3

PoLE VAULT I z ft. 3-4 in . P. Maxon,'II

SHoT PuT 37ft. 7 I-2 in. S. Carter,'94

HAMMER THROW 136ft. 7 in. T. C. Hudson,'14

DISCUS THROW 103 ft. 6 in. T. C. Hudson,' I4

JJfnrmrr <!raptaht.a

'88 M. c. wARNER

'89 W. E. A. BuLKELEY

'90 R. H. HuTcHINS

'91 E. R. LAMPSON, JR.

'92 E. s. ALLEN

'93 c. A. LEWIS

'94 L. I. BELDEN

'95 E. DE K. LEFFINGWELL

'96 W. A. SPARKS

'97 w. A. SPARKS

'98 C. w. HENRY

'99 c. w. HENRY

113

'oo G. BRINLEY

'oi F. R. STURTEVANT

'o2 G. D. RANKIN

'03 G. D. RANKIN

'o4 C. W . REMSEN

'o5 c. W. REMsEN

A. R. GooDALE

'o6 D. W. GATESON

'o7 H. B. OLMSTED

'o8 H. B. OLMSTED

'09 H. I. MAxsoN

'10 C. B. JunGE

Date

I909

I892

I 897

I907

I90I

I906

1907

I906

1897

1902

191 I

1893

1912

I9I2

Page 122: 1913_complete

On Alumni Day, the twenty-fourth of June, 1911, Trinity Field was the scene of perhaps the most thrilling and spectacular game of baseball recorded in Trinity history. For weeks the papers had been printing pictures and full column items about the famous team from faraway Japan-the Waseda University Nine­and the management had seen to it that in every possible way this Oriental inva­sion of baseballists should not come and go unadvertised. "Sunny Jim" and the "Campbell Kids" proved long ago that advertising pays, and the gate receipts of the game were enough to show that the Japanese Flag, when flying over a ball team, would not only feed the curiosity bug of many Hartford people, but feed as well the little bug that carries away the admission money. The stands were filled to overflowing, and automobiles closely crowded together were lined up on either side of th,e diamond. At a rough estimate, 1500 people attended.

The game itself was intensely interesting, for the J aps displayed a clever ability to play our national game. They threw, caught, batted and ran the bases in the real American way and to a degree of perfection that held Trinity without runs until the ninth inning. Meanwhile, the Japs themselves had gathered four to their credit. Two runs in the first inning, due to hits byYawata,Ogawa,and Oi and an .outfield fly by Hara, and again in the third inning Oi scored on his own three-bagger and Hara's safe hit. In the fourth, Fukunaga, after getting a base on balls, stole second and third, and scored on Omura's bunt. p to this time, Trinity had gotten but four scattered hits, and as a result had reached third base but once. Then, from the fourth on until the ninth, there were but few hits, both teams fielding remarkably well, but driving easy grounders to the infielders, which in­variably resulted in outs at first.

When the ninth inning started, Trinity found herself facing a four-run lead with slight hope of victory over their clever little opponents. When L'Heureux's grounder took a bad bound, hitting short stop Iseda in the eye, and causing him to retire in the eighth, Trinity little knew of the advantage gained in this bit of hard luck to the J aps. Omachi took Iseda's place in the ninth, and through this change Trinity gained. Turner, the first man up, drove a sharp grounder between third and short, and stole second. Horan hit to Hara, who tried to hold Turner at second; finally resulting in Turner's reaching third and Horan's safely resting at first. Then, Carroll, who h·ad already gathered three hits, grounded to the pitcher, Matsuda, for the first out, after Horan had stolen second.

Brainerd hit to left field, scoring Turner and Horan, and reached second on the throw-in. Ahern then reached first on a hit to right field, but Brainerd was held at third. Lister then fouled out to Fukunaga, and Sayres was called upon to tie the score. This he did by a beautiful two-bagger, after two strikes had been called on him, and L'Heureux drove him in with the winning run, by hitting the ball through short stop. Trinity 5, Waseda 4·

During the entire last inning the bleachers creaked under the stamping of feet; and the cheers of the joy-crazed students, alumni, and friends filled the air. Trinity had snatched a victory from defeat, and here in this one final inning had displayed the spirit that throughout the season had been lacking. Fighting ability had been lost up to that time, but, when it was found, came 'Vaseda's downfall.

I 14

Page 123: 1913_complete

iliunr ~pnrtn

;

Page 124: 1913_complete

HOCKEY G. C. BuRGWIN

T. w. LITTLE

E. F. BASSFORD,'14, Goal

A. JoHNso ,'rs, Point

T. W. LITTLE,'14, Cover Point

Captain

Manager

G. C. BuRGWIN,'I4, Rover

v\. i . BLEECKER,'I2, Left Wing

C. H. HowELL,' 12, Right Wing

R. F. WALKER,'14, Center

December 9

January 13 January 20

January 27

February 17

i&rrnril

Trinity vs. Williams

Trinity o Amherst 3

no tee

at Amherst

Trinity I Mass. State 9 at Hartford

Trinity vs. S. T. S.

Trinity vs. Rensselaer

II6

no tee

no tee

}

Page 125: 1913_complete

1Rrnirm nf tqr ~ra.ann

T HE weather conditions were most unfavorable for hockey this year, so that only two games of the schedule were played. While they were both defeats, the team deserves much credit.

The College body is taking more interest in the game than ever before, and it seems very sure that hockey will soon hold a promi­nent place on our list of sports.

I I 7

Page 126: 1913_complete

R. M . NELSON,'! I . C. CARPENTER,'I2

R. M. NELSON,'II

April 22 April 24 May 6 May II May 12 May 20 June 10

Wrnnis 1\nsnriattnu D. S. PuLFORD,'I3 Secretary-Treasurer President

Vice-President A. E. PuLFORD,'I2 . Manager

1Rrprr.srntatiur.s at iGongwoo.b, 1 g 11

D. S. PuLFORD,'I3 G. C. BuRGWIN,'I4

at Troy Trinity 6 R.P.I. 0 at Schenectady Trinity 3 Union 3 at Williamstown Trinity 0 Williams 6 at Hartford Trinity 5 Mass. State at Hartford Trinity 5 Brown at Amherst Trinity 0 Amherst 6 at Hartford Trinity 2 Wesleyan

Record: Won 4, Tied r , Lost 2

R. M . NELSON,'rr, Captain

A. E. PuL.FORn,'r r D. S. PuLFORD,' I3 , Manager

G. C. BuRGWIN,'I4

C. CARPENTER,'I2

Annual lJTall wournamrnt Won by Burgwin,'r4 Runner-up, D. S. PuLFORD,'!:>

II 8

Page 127: 1913_complete

1!\ruirtu nf t4r wruuta ~rannu

T RINITY'S tennis season was one of the most successful in the history of the College. Considering the caliber of our oppo­nents, and the size of the institutions in comparison with ours,

only praise is due the team. The prospects for a victorious team this coming season are good, as we have a nucleus of veterans back and some good material in the Freshman Class.

I 19

Page 128: 1913_complete

The George Sheldon McCook Cup- Presented by Professor J. J. McCook,'63, as a memorial to his son, G. S. McCook,'97; to be awarded to the student making the best record in athletics during the year.

J. HENDERSON,'o2 H. D. BRIGHAM,'03 w. B . ALLEN,'04 0. MoRGAN,'o6

P. DouGHERTY,'07 E . J. DoNNELLY,'o8 P. RoBERTS,'09 R. C. ABBEY,'Io

E. B. RAMSDELL,' I I (present holder)

The Record Cup- Presented by E. Brainerd Bulkeley,'9o, to be awarded to students who break college athletic records.

H. B. 0LMSTED,'o8 D . C. PoNo,'o8 H. C. PoNo,'o8 W.}. ELSON,'IO

~rrsrnt ~nl~rrs

w. S. EATON,'IO P. MAxo r,'I I

H. w ESSELS,' I 2 T . C. HuosoN,'I4

The Underwood Cup- Presented by J. C. nderwood,'96, to be competed for at each fall Underclass Meet.

I9I4

Batting Cup-Held by J. F. Horan,'I3

Interclass Track Trophies

First, 1914 Second, I9I3

The Gymnasium, Leffingwell, and McCracken Cups were not competed for.

120

Page 129: 1913_complete

1J1ootball

C. H. HowELL,'Iz, Captain

]. H. HuMPHREY,'12, Managa

H . W . S. CooK,'I2

P. A . AHERN,'I2

w. H. BLEECKER, ]R.,'I2

C. H. CoLLETT,'I3

]. B . MooRE,'I3

ilasrball

]. 0. CARROLL,' I 1, Captain

A. E. RANKIN,'I 1, Manager

F. ]. BRAI ERD,'I I

A . L. GILDERSLEEVE,' I I

P. A . AHERN,"I2

w. H. BLEECKER, ]R.,'I2

PAUL MAXON,' 1 1, Captain

E. F. PETTIGREW,'12, Managa

W. W. BucK,'I 1

R. M. NELSON,'II

P. A. AHERN,'I2

w. H. BLEECKER, ]R.,'I2

Wrack

121

T. C. HunsoN,'14

F . S. FITZPATRICK,'I4

P . P. LAWLOR,'I4

]. A . MooRE,'I4

G. D. HowELL, ]R.,'15

R. E. KINNEY,'IS

R. G. GETTELL, Honorary

D. C. TuR ' ER,'12

]. F. BoRA ' ,'13

A . ]. L'HEUREUX,'I3

c. w. SAYRES,'I3

H. B. WAR ER,'I3

A. B. LISTER,'I4

H. WESSELS,'I2

C. H. CoLLETT,'I3

D. S. PuLFORD,'I3

T. C. Hunso ','14

T. F. WESSELS,'I4

Page 130: 1913_complete
Page 131: 1913_complete
Page 132: 1913_complete
Page 133: 1913_complete

AFTERNOON

EvENING

EvE INC

AFTERNOON

EvEN ING

AFTERNOON

EvENING

AFTERNOON

AFTERNOON

EvENING

3Juuinr 1!lllttk

Wl}urnllau. JJirbruary Btl}

I K A Tea

!:l 'lt German

!:l K E D ance

JJirtllau. JJirbruary !Ttl}

A !:l <I> Tea

Junior German

_s,aturllay, JJirbruary lntl}

College Tea

Junior Week Concert

_s,uullay. JJirbruary lltl}

Vespers

i\lloullay. JJirbruary 12tl}

'lt T Tea

Ju nior Promenade

1 25

Page 134: 1913_complete

3Juntnr 1ll!Jrrk OJnnrrrt Jr.ogram

Jart I

I. "Hail to Thee, Trinity" GLEE CLUB

2 . (a) "Monstrat Viam"

(b) "Bashful Bumpkin" MANDOLIN CLUB

3· Piano MR. McCABE

4· (a) "The Elf Man" (b) "The Scissors Grinder"

GLEE CLUB

5. Vocal Solo MR. c. E. CRAIK

6. "The Masqueraders" Waltzes MANDOLI J CLUB

7. " 'Neath the Elms" GLEE CLuB

Jart II

"The Pinker Lady"

J. J. WHITEHEAD, ]R.,'I3

Persons Who Would Play

Davis

A. E. joy

W. Rolfe

Selected

Gibson

jungst

Selected

D. B. White

Burgwin,'82

Rex, a King T. W . LITTLE,'I4

Dondidier, a Villain W . B. SPOFFORD,'I4

Tenor, a Hero J. H . HuMPHREY,'rz

The Pinker Lady J. J. WHITEHEAD, ]R.,'13

Cho1·us Ladies, Cho1·us Gentlemen, Members of the Imperial " Rushing B allet," Etc.

Accompanist, H. S . 0LAFSoN,'rs

126

c ]

9

Page 135: 1913_complete

3Juutor Jromruabr O!.ommtttrr

CHESTER D uDLEY WARD

JOHN BIGELOW MooRE

9

WILLIAM Po D BARBER, ]R. JOSEPH OYES BARNETT

KE TNETH BEARDSLEY CASE

CHARLES HENRY CoLLETT

ETHELBERT TALBOT SMITH

ELIOT LEE wARD

]01-1 jAY \VHITEHEAD, jR.

FRANCIS EARLE WILLIAMS

127

Chairman Secretary- Treasurer

Page 136: 1913_complete

ID~r Jlrnm <£irl

Page 137: 1913_complete

l

8 0

~H 00 Mp -o

December 3, I9IO

<!Lnmmtttrr

R E

GuY CARLTO HEATER, Chairman KENNETH BEARDSLEY CASE

MERRITT FOWLER CROMWELL

ALFRED JOSEPH L'HEUREUX

STANLEY FIELD MARR

JOHN B GELow MooRE

HoBART ]AMES RoBERTS

JoHN ]AY WHITEHEAD, ]R. FRANCIS EARLE WILLIAMS

129

Page 138: 1913_complete

~npqnmnrr ~mnkrr May 5, 1911

C!Lommittrr HENRY BEARDSLEY WARNER, Chairman

WILLIAM P. BARBER, ]R. ALFRED J. L'HEUREUX KENNETH B . CASE RussEL C. OBLE CHARLES H. CoLLETT ARTHUR F. PEASLEE RICHARD L. DEPPEN HoBART J. RoBERTS ALBERT HAITHWAITE, ]R. c. D. WARD

FARCE: "Dorothy Vernon of Jarvis Hall" By w. S. MARSDEN

"Dick" Pierce "Jack" Baker "Auto" Cha·mers "Chub" Ford Dr. Calvin Dorothy Vernon

Students, Etc.

L. D. ADKINS c. D. WARD S. S. SwiFT A . B. CooK

H. J. RoBERTS J. J. WHITEHEAD, ]R.

Page 139: 1913_complete

Presents

(A Nlusical Comedy in Three Acts)

Book and Lyrics by REGINALD BuRBANK,' I I

::VIusic by PRoF . F. J. LIDDLE, of Pittsfield, Mass .

Alumni Hall, June 24, 191 I

or ant

Frank Price, love-sick and in need of money J. HowARD HuMPHREY,'I2

Patton Price, Frank's Uncle- a self-made man ALLAN B. CooK,'I3

Philip Morris, Frank's roommate, born with a cigarette in his mouth c. EDGAR SHERMAN,' I I

Crispin Gruff, whose money Frank needs T. WoLCOTT LrTTLE,'I4

Shirley G1·uff, his daughter, in love with Frank THOMAS G. BROWN,I3

Ida Paine, Shirley's friend- a social light JoHN P . BEGLEY,'I4

Constant Krammer, a Phi Beta Kappa man FRANK R. PRouT,'I I

jimmy Fleece, a sneak thief, alias Robin Cheatsky . WrLLIA:tvi B. SPOFFORD,'I4

Howland Tai1·e, an old actor, Frank's valet WrLLIA 1 A. BrRD, IV, '12

Flam Florette, a show-girl, wife of Howland Taire CHESTER D. wARD,' I 3

Robin Cheatsky , a Socialist lecturer, alias Fleece WILLIAM B. SPOFFORD,'I4

Shootum Orloff, also a Socialist REGI TALD BuRBANK,' I I

College men, guests, etc.

IJI

Page 140: 1913_complete

11frr5~mau-3Juutnr iiauqurt

1913 from 1915

The Marble Hall, Holyoke, Mass.

December 14, 191 r

arommitt.r.r

GEORGE DAWSON HowELL, ]R., Chairman

F. B. STITES ]. VIZNER

w. ORR A. L. SMITH

H. EvA rs B. L. SMITH

T. A . PECK R. R. SMITH

A. ]OH NSON

moaats

H. E. R YERSON,

ex· officio

G. D. Hm-YE LL, JR., To .75:rn:zster "r9r3" H. E . R YERso ,'rs

Trinity Football R. E. KINNEY,'rs

Trinity Spirit F. E. SnTEs,'rs

Trinity Girls R. L. DEPPEN,'r3

'' r9r5" ] . B. MooRE,'IJ

IJ2

1

Page 141: 1913_complete

( 11 "

/

..

Page 142: 1913_complete

1Juy Ianarb

ID4r IDriuity lfuy

Established I 873

Ianarb of 1.Ebttnr!I

\VALTER STUART MARSDEX, ]R. ALLAN BEHRENDS CooK

FRANCIS EARLE WILLIAMS .

THOMAS GILBERT BROWK I ]OHN ]AY WHITEHEAD, ]R. I YLARcus THoRKTo r McGEE )

ETHELBERT TALBOT SMITH '

HEKRY BEARDsLEY vVARKER )

134-

Editor-in-Chief Business Manager

Assistant Business Manager

Literary Editors

Athletic Editors

J

Page 143: 1913_complete

j

J

Wrtpo!l 1Soarb

ID~r IDrtnity IDrtpn~ Established 1904

Published T uesdays and Fridays in each week of the college year

iaoar!l of 1.E!litor£1 Editor-in-Chief

WrLLIA:-r AuGusTus BIRD, IV, '12

Managing Editor CHAPr:t\ CARPENTER,' I 2

Athletic Edito1· ]AMES SHREWSBURY CRAIK,'I2

Assignment Editor THOMAS GILBERT BROWN,'!}

1iu£linr£1£1

Alumni Editor SAMUEL SEDGWICK SwiFT,'I3

News Editor LEONARD DAwsoN ADKI · s,'13

IDrpartmrnt Treasurer Advatising Manager

ALLA~ BEHRENDS CooK,'I3 \\ ILLIA:-r SHoRT, ]R.,'12

A sst. Advertising Manager and Secretary Circulation Manager THoP.rAs fRANCIS fLANAGAN,' r 2 KENNETH BEARDSLEY CAsE,'I3

Page 144: 1913_complete

~ruatr

1911-1912

WILLIAM AuGUSTUS BIRD, IV,'I2 President

WILLIAM BENJAMIN SPOFFORD,'I4 Secretary

EvERETT MARBLE FAIRBANKs,'13 WILLIAM SHORT, }R.,'12

THOMAS FRANCIS FLANAGAN,'Iz TicHOLAS VINCENT WALSH,'Iz

JoHN BIGELow MooRE,'I3 HARRY WEsSELS,'1z

CLARENCE IRVING PENN,'I2 CHARLES RICHARDSON WHIPPLE,'I2

CHARLES HuRD HowELL,'12 (Fall Term)

ALFRED JosEPH L'HEUREUX,'13 (Spring Term)

Page 145: 1913_complete

fllllu.atral Qtluh.a

®ffirrr.a

SAMUEL S. SwiFT,'I3, President

CHARLES H . CoLLETT,' 13 , Manager WILLIAM L. RosENBAUM,' 14, Asst. Manager

First Tenors

K. B. CAsE,' I3

C. H. CoLLETT,' I3

E. J. MYERS,'I4

~lrr (!llub

J. J. WHITEHEAD, ]R.,' 13, Leader

Seco"nd Tenors F irst Basses

J. H. HuMPHREY,' rz J. S. CRAIK,'rz

A. B. CooK,' I3 S. H. EviSON,'rz

J. B. MooRE,'I3 E. T. SMITH,'13

Second Basses

O.GILDERSLEEVE,' 12

J.W.WoESSNER,' I2

A . W. WALKER,' I4

L. 0. DE RoNcE: ,' r4 R. C. NoBLE,'I3 J.J. WHITEHEAD,'I3 T. W. LrTTLE,' I4

E. P. WROTH, ' I4 K. vV. BoYNTON,' I4 c. E. CRAIK,' I4 H . L. BRAINE RD, ' I5

W. T. GRAY,'rs U. A. HicKs,'r4 W. B. SPoFFoRD,' I4 E. H. HALL,'rs

D. s. SQuiRE,' rs N. R. SAcE,'rs W. B. PRESSEY,' rs R. L. ScoFIELD,' rs

First Mandolins

S. S. SwiFT,'I3

D. S. PuLFORD,'I3

F. E. BARIDON,'I4

J. A. MooRE,'I4

J. B. SHELLEY,' rs N.H. REYNOLDs,'rs S. A. MERRrLL,' IS

A. L. SMrTH,' rs

•nnbnliu atluh

F. E. BARIDON,' I4, Leader

Second Mandolins

H. J. LIVERMORE,' I4

R . W. WooDWARD,'I4

E. H. HALL,'rs

Guitar

T. w. LITTLE, ' I4

Piano

H. S. 0LAFSON, ' I4

G. D. HowELL, JR.,'rs

137

Page 146: 1913_complete
Page 147: 1913_complete

/

/ I

-r· T(t

-r-11 ,_, (_

,,.J _.1.

;

\

~rntor 1!1nnorary ~ortrty Established I893

~ntiluatr tltllrntbr.rs

ALLEN, EDWIN STANTON,'93 ALLEN, WALTER BEST,'04

AusTIN, WILLIAM MoRRis,'gS

BACON, FRED . STANLEY,'99

BADGLEY, OLIVER \VARREN ,'07

BARBOUR, HENRY GROSVENOR,'g6

BARTON, CHARLES CLARENCE,'93

BARTON, PHILIP LocKwooD,'oz

BATES, RoBERT PEcK,'93

BEECROFT, EDGAR CHARLES,'97 BELLAMY, RoBERT BAYARD,'oi

BowNE, GARRETT DENISE,'o6

BRIGHAM, HENRY DAY,'03

BRINES, MosEs J AMEs,'oo

BRoUGHTON, CHARLES DuBois,'95

BROWN, WILLIAM PARNELL,'OI

BRINLEY, GoDFREY,'oi

BRYANT, PERCY CARLETON,'07

BucK, GEORGE SuMNER,'og

BuLKELEY, JoHN CHARLES,'93 CAPEN, GEoRGE CLEVELAND,'Io

CARPENTER, ]AMES STRATTON, ]R., 'cg

CARROLL, JOSEPH OLIVER,' I I

CARTER, J ULIA T STUART,'g8

C.-'IRTER, LAwsoN AvERILL,'93

CARTER, SHIRLEY,'94

CHURCHMAN, CLARKE,'93 CLEMENT, CHARLES FRANcrs,'os

CoGGESHALL, MuRRAY HART,'g6

CoGswELL, GEoRGE EDwARD,'97

I39

Page 148: 1913_complete

~rabuatr .£illrmhrr!i- <!runthmr11 CoLLINs, WILLIAM FRENCH,'93 CRoss, WILLIAM RicH,'o8

CULLEN, ]AMES, ]R.,'93 CuNNINGHAM, GERALD ARTHUR,'o7

DANKER, wALTON STOUTENBURGH,'97

DAvis, JoHN HENRY KELso,'99

DAvis, CAMERON JosiAH,'93

DINGWELL, BARRIE RENZ,'94

DouGHERTY, PHILIP,'o7

DoNNELLY, EDWIN JosEPH,'o8

DRAVO, MARIO STUART,'07

DuFFEE, EDwARD LLEWELLYN,'os

EDGERTON, FRANCIS CRUGER,'94

EDGERTON, JoHN WARREN,'94

EDSALL, ]AMES KIRKLAND,'o8

ELLIS, GEORGE WILLIAM,'94

EwiNG, RoBERT MosBY,'os

FARRow, MALcoLM CoLLI s,'os

FISKE, REGINALD,'or

FisKE, WILLIAM SYDNEY Vv ALKER,'o6

GATESON, DA IEL WILMOT,'o6

GEORGE, EuGENE EvAN,'07

GILDERSLEEVE, ELSON HALL,'Io

GLAZEBROOK, HASLETT McKIM,'oo

GooDRIDGE, EDWARD, ]R.,'oz GosTENHOFER, CHARLEs EDWARD,'os

GRAVES, DuDLEY CHASE,'98

GREENLY, HowARD TRESCOTT,'94

GRovEs, JosEPH,'Io

HAIGHT, AusTIN DuNHAM,'o6

HAIGHT, SHERMAN PosT,' I r

HAMLIN, EDWARD PERCY,'95

HARTLEY, GEORGE DERWENT,'93

HENDERSON, ]AMEs,'oz HILL, FREDERICK CHARLEs, J R.,'o6

HoRNOR, HARRY ARcHER,'oo

HowELL, ALFRED,' I r

HuDSON, ]AMES MosGROVE,'oi

LANGFORD, ARCHIBALD MoRRISoN,'97

LANGFORD, \ VILLIAM SPAIGHT, JR .,'96

LEWIS, ELTON GARDINER,'99

LoRD, ]AMES WATSON,'98

LocKwooD, LuKE VINCENT,'93

MACAULEY, RICHARD HENRY,'95

MANN, EDWARD ]AMES,'04

MAXON, PAUL,'II

MAXSON, HARRY 1RL,'09

McCooK, GEORGE SHELDON,'97

McGINLEY, STEPHEN EssEx,'O<)

MciLVAINE, JoHN GILBERT,'oo

MEYER, HENRY Loms,'o 3

MoRGAN, SAMUEL ST. ] oHN,'o3

MoRGAN, 0wEN,'o6

MoRsE, BRYAN KILLIKELLY,'99

NicHoLs, JoHN WILLIAMs,'99

TILES, WILLIAM PoRTER,'93

OLCOTT, vVILLIAM TYLER,'96

OLMSTED, HoRAcE BIGELow,'o8

PAINE, OGLE TAYLOR,'96

PAIGE, JOHN HENRY, J R.,'97

PARSO ' S, EDGERTON,'96

PEARCE, REGINALD,'93

PECK, CARLOS CURTIS,'02

PEcK, RICHARD EuGENE,'oi

PELTON, HENRY HUBBARD,'93

PE ROSE, JOHN JESSE, J R.,'95 PLANT, WooDFORDE HAMILTON,'o9

PoND, HARVEY CLARK,'o8

PowELL, JoHN FRANKLIN,'o6

PRINCE, FREDERICK WELLEs,'oo

RAMSDELL, EARL BLA CHARD,' I I

RANKI , GEORGE DouGLAs,'o3

REMSEN, CoRNELius WAGSTAFF,'os

REMSEN, HENRY RuTGERs,'98

REYNOLDS, LLOYD GILSON,'98

RICH, ERNEST ALBERT,'99

ScHUTZ, WALTER STANLEY,'94

ScHWARTZ, DAviD Loms, ]R.,'oo

SHERMAN, CLARENCE EDGAR,' I I

SMITH, ALBERT MARSTON,'ro

SPARKS, WILLIAM ALBERT,'97

STRAWBRIDGE, JoHN,'9s

SYPHAX, T. MINTON,'o3

TAYLOR, CHARLES EDWARD,'94

TAYLOR, MARTIN,'o8

THOMAS, EDMUND CRAWFORD,'03

TowNSEND, HERMAN EDWARD,'o4

TRuMBULL, CHARLES LAMB,'o8

VIBBERT, AuBREY DARRELL,'99

VIBBERT, WILLIAM WELCH,'94

WAINWRIGHT, JoNATHAN MAYHEw,'95

WEBSTER, JEROME PIERCE,'ro

WEED, CHARLES FREDERICK,'94

WEIBEL, RICHARD ICKS,'02

WELLEs, PHILIP TuRNER,'os

WHEELER, CHARLES HAWTHORNE,'02

WHEELER, vVILLIAM HARDIN,'oz

WILSON,WILLIAM CRosswELL DoANE,'93

WILLIAMS, ALEXANDER ]OHN,'96

WILSON, GEORGE HEWSON,'93

WoFFENDE , RicHARD HENRY,'93

WooDLE, ALLEN SHELDON,'99

WRIGHT, R ICHARDSON LITTLE,'Io

Page 149: 1913_complete

WILLIAM SHORT, JR. President

WILLIAM HILL BLEECKER, ]R. Secretary-Treasurer

PHILIP ALOYSIUS AHERN WILLIAM AuGu sTus BIRD, IV

CHARLES HuRD HowELL

Page 150: 1913_complete

W. B. ALLEr ,'04 P. L. BARTo ','oz G. T. BATES,'I2 W. A. BIRD,'I2 W. H . BLEECKER, ]R.,'Iz H. C. BoYD,'os G . D. BowNE,'o6 H. S. BRADFIELD,'oz ]. W. BRADIN,'oo P . H. BRADIN,'OJ

. F. BREED,'I2 H. D. BRIGHAM,'OJ GILBERT BROWN,' 10 W . P. BROWN,'OI D. H. BROWNE,'OJ T . P. BROWNE, ]R.,'OJ C. E. BRUCE, ]R.,'OJ P. C. BRYANT,'07 B. BuDD,'o8

lllouu~dl by tl1r (!ilaaa of ·gg ou lllrbrunry 15. 1897

Qkabuatr .flli{rmhrr.a ~I. H. BuFFINGTON,'04 H. BuRGWrN, ]R.,'o6 H. H. BuRG WI ','r 1 W. C. BuRWELL,'o6 P. :VI. BuTTERWORTH,'o8 G. C. CAPEN,'ro c. CARPENTER,'I2 ]. S. CARPENTER, J R.,'09 L. G. CARPENTER,'og ]. 0. CARROLL,' II H. N. CHANDLER,'C9 S. T. CLAPP,'04 c. F. CLEMENT,'os ~1. w. CLEMENT,'OI A. C. CoBURN,'o7 R. G. CoGHLAN,'Io F. H. CoGGESHALL,'07 H. Vv. CooK,'ro ]. R. CooK, ]R. ,'ro D. S. CoRSON,'99 ]. S. CRAIK,'rz A. W. CREEDON,'09 \V. R. CRoss,'o8 G. A. CuNNINGHAM,'o7 R. Cu NINGHAM,'o7 H. L. CuRTIN,'o7 T. C. CuRns,'o7 ]. H. K. D AV IS,'99 H. DE W. DE MAURIAC,'07 T. N. DENSLOW,'04 W. c. DEWEY,' I I

E. ]. DrBBLE,'o4 E.]. DoNNELLY, 'o8 M . S. DRAvo,'o7

142

W. H. EATON,'99 v-.,r. S. EATON,'ro J. K. EDSALL,'o8 ]. D. EvANS,'or R. I. EwmG,'os R . FISKE,'OI W. S. W. FrsKE,'o6 R. H. Fox,'oo S. R . FuLLER, ] R.,'oo c. V. FERG SON,'07 D . W. GATEso ,'o6 E. E. GEORGE,'07 N.H. GrLDERSLEEVE,'ro 0. GILDERSLEEVE, ]R. ,' rz H. C. GooDRrcH,'09 C. E. GosTENHOFER,'os H. McK. GLAZEBROOK,'oo E. B. GoanRICH,'oz E . GooDRIDGE, J R.,'oz R.N. GRAHAM,'os W. T. GRANGE,'o6 H. D. GREEN,'99 H. W. GREER,'o8 JosEPH GRovEs,'ro M. G. HAIGHT,'oo s. P. HAIGHT,'! I STURGEs HARMON,'ro H. G. HART,'07 ]. c. HART,'09 L. G. HARRIMAN,'09 c. B. HEDRICK,'99 D. M. HE RY,'OJ A. B. HENSHAW,'ro

Page 151: 1913_complete

C. H. HrLL,'oz W. C. HrLL,'oo G. S. HrNE,'o6 H. 0 . HrNKLE,'og H. A. HoRNOR,'oo A. HowELL,' I 1 G. W. HusBARn,'o8 J. M. HunsoN,'or J. H. HuMPHREY,'rz H. HuET,'o6 R. H. HuTCHINSON,'03 B. D. }EWETT,'oo J. MeA. JoHNSON,'03 C. B. JunGE,'IO G. T. KENDALL,'99 K. M. KENDALL,'I2 I. R. KENYON,'07 G. T. KEYES,' I I C. M. KoNVALINKA,'r r w. LARCHAR, J R.,'03 P. T. LIGHTBOURN,'04 E. G. LITTELL,'99 W. G. LrviNGSTON,'og H. F. MAcGuYER,'o8 L. H. McCLURE,'rz G. B. McCuNE,'o? W. F. McELROY,' 10 S. E. McGr LEY,'og H. R. MclLVAINE,'04 J. G. MclLVAINE,'oo P . L. McKEoN,'o4 W. J. McNErL,'or W. F. MADDEN,'o8 E . H. MADDOX,'04 J. H. MAGINNrs,'oz H. S. MARLOR,'ro

iO

H. I. lVIAxSoN,'og P. MAXON,'II F. c. MEREnrTH,'os H. L. G. MEYER,'OJ S. ST. J. MoRGAN,'OJ 0. :\tloRGAN,'06 J. 0. MoRRrs,'o8 B. K. MoRsE,'99 A. S. MuRRAY, III ,' ro H. C. NEFF,'ro J. W. NrcHoLs,'gg H. B. 0LMSTEn,'o8 A. H. ONDERDO 'K,'99 H. C. 0wEN,'99 J. w. O'CoNNoR,'os C. C. PEcK,'oz R. E. PEcK,'o r E. F. PETTIGREw,'rz l\11. S. PHILLIPs,'o6 G. P. PrERCE, 'o6 N. F. PrTTs,'rr H. C. PoNn,'o8 J. PoRTEus,'n A. L. POTTER,' IO F. vV. PRINCE,'oo E . B. RAMSDELL,' I I c. G. RANDLE,'os G. D. RANDALL,'o8 A. E. RANKIN,' I I G. D. RANKIN ,'03 c. Vv. REMsE ' ,'os C. REEn,'o6 c. M. RHonEs,'os E. A. RrcH,'99 F. C. RrcH,'og P. RosERTs,'og

143

H. H. R nn,'or D. L. ScHWARTz,'oo H. L. ScHWARTz,'o6 J. B. SHEARER,'og c. E. SHERMAN,' I I A. c. SHORT,'OJ W. SHORT, ]R.,'rz \V. c. SKINNER,' I I P. R. SMITH,'07 W. P. STEDMAN,'os E. K. STERLING,'99 F. STEVE s,'o8 G. w. STEWART,' I I W. B. SuTToN,'99 J.P. W. T AYLOR,'02 l\11. TAYLOR,'o8 H. E. Tow SEND,'o4 C. L. TRuMBULL,'o8 vv. s. TRuMsuLL,'oJ A. R . vAN DEWATER,'OI R. B. VAN TrNE,'04 A. D . VIBBERT,'99 J. M . w AL KER,'OI c. D. WARDLAW,'07 H. L. WATsoN,'os J. P. WEBSTER,'IO B. G. WEEKEs,'o6 R. . vVEIBEL,'oz P . T. WELLEs,'os H. \VESSELS,'I2 C. H. WHEELER,'OI c. R. WHIPPLE,'I2 H . R. WHITE,'oz H . D. ·wiLsoN, JR.,'or K. WrLLOUGHBY,'og c. B. WYNKooP,'os

Page 152: 1913_complete

~npqnmnr.r lining Q1luh Arttur fllllrntbrrs, 1 913

EDWARD SA "FORD BARNEY

KEN ETH BEARDSLEY CASE

CHARLES HE R Y CoLLETT

jOHN BIGELOW :MoORE

RussEL CuRTIS OBLE

SAMUEL SEDGWICK SwiFT

MERRIT FowLER CRoMWELL RoBERT WRIGHT THOMAS

RICHARD LAWTON DEPPEN joHN jAY WHITEHEAD, jR.

HENRY BRowN DILLARD FRANcis EARLE vVILLIAMs

STA JLEY FIELD MARR RoBERT PRESTON WrTHINGTO r

HARRY GEoRGE WooDBURY

J

l

Page 153: 1913_complete

'

1!;urtfnrb Qtluh

THOMAS JAMES QmsH; JR. NICHOLAS VINCENT WALSH

ANDREw JoHN CRICHTON, ]R. EvERETT NIARBLE FAIRBANKS

WILLIAM FRANCIS vAIL

JOHN PAUL BEGLEY

HowARD JosEPH DALEY, ]R.

STEPHEN FRANCIS DuNNE

LESLIE RANKIN FREW

EDwARD WILLIS LuDWIG

145

CHARLES JOSEPH HAASER

RoBERT HENRY JOHNSON

LEO }AMES OONAN

}AMES }EREMIAH O'CONNOR

FELIX JEREMIAH McEviTT

Page 154: 1913_complete

"Probability the Guide of Life"

Founded in 1776 at Mary and Williams College

Alpqtt nf (!tnuurrttrut

W. c. ANDREWS

G. T . BATES

w. R . CURTIS

c. R. WHIPPLE

ALPHA OF GREAT BRITAIN

ALPHA OF IRELAND

ALPHA OF FRANCE

BETA OF FRANCE

ALPHA OF MASSACHUSETTS

BETA OF MASSACHUSETTS

ALPHA oF CoNNECTICUT

BETA oF CoNNECTICUT .

OMEGA oF CoNNECTICUT

BETA OF NEw YoRK

GAMMA OF NEW yORK .

IoTA OF NEw YoRK

ALPHA OF PENNSYLVAN IA

BETA OF PENNSY LVA N I A

UPSILON OF GERMANY

ALPHA OF Russi A

CHI CHI OF CHINA

Psi XI OF jAPAN

Chartered 1889

i!inll nf (!Lqaptrr.a

ALPHA BETA GAMMA OF GREECE

President Vice-President

Secretary Treasurer

Trinity College, Cambridge Trinity College, Du blin Ecole des Beaux Arts, Paris Sourbun, Paris Smith 's College Wellesley College Trinity College Wesleyan University Jai l niversi ty Vassar College Cornhill niversity Sagamore Hill , Oys ter Bay Bryn Mawr Nowhereatall Heidelberg University of Mskovitchjski University of Shanghai Port Arthur College Stoic School, Athens

'

Page 155: 1913_complete

June, 191 1

Music

Salutatory, vVith Address on "The Needs of Our Times"

GusTAVE ALEXANDER FEINGOLD, Connecticut

"The Greek Sense of Beauty" GEORGE HARRY CoHEN, Connecticut

::VIus1c

"The United States as a vVorld Power"

HAROLD NELSON CoNOVER CHRISTIE, -ew Jersey

"Political Independence and Party Loyalty"

LEvi P. NIORTON HICKEY, Connecticut

"The Short Ballot" ARTHUR CoRNWALLIS EATON, :\Iassachusetts

"The Utilitarian Trend in :\Iodern Education," with the Valedictory Addresses

JoH N HowARD Ros EBAUGH, Pennsylvania

:\Iusic

147

Page 156: 1913_complete

(!tla!l6 lay 1£xrrrisrs Jrognun

Musrc Aria from "The Pink Lady"

J rts illt ttf s Allllrtss CLARENCE EDGAR SHERMAN, Massachusetts

Musrc Song for Cornet- " All Alone"

MR. CHESTER W. SMITH

<Hhtss f;is tory JoH HowARD RosEBAUGH, Pennsylvania

Selection- "The Chocolate Soldier" Musrc

<Hhtss J o.rm BLINN FRANCIS YATES, Illinois

Music "Girl of My Dreams"

~tatistits ARTHUR LLOYD GILDERSLEEVE, Connecticut

Music Quartette from "Rigoletto"

Jrt.!il'tttation of Atl1ll'tit .Atuarlls "T" and "ATA" Certificates

Gold Footballs and Gold Baseballs

The George Sheldon McCook Trophy for Outdoor Sports

Music Selection from "Alma"

®ration LEvi P . MoRTON HICKEY, Connecticut

Music Song- " In the Garden of My Heart"

"Spring Maid"

<Hias s Jrop~tl HAROLD CLARENCE ]AQUITH, Connecticut

Musrc

J rt.!ittttation REGINALD BuRBANK, Massachusetts

Music '"Neath the Elms"

Caryll

von Tilzer

Strauss

Hoschna

f/erdi

Briquet

Ball I

Reinhardt

Page 157: 1913_complete

J1onorn an~ Jrij!r!i for tqr frar 1910-1911

ii;nnor£i itt tltr (!Ha£i£i of 1 911

Valedictory: joHN HowARD RosEBAUGH

Salutatory: GusTAVE ALEXANDER FEINGOLD

Honor Oration: HAROLD NELSON Co OVER CHRISTIE

Honor Oration: ARTHUR CoRNWALLIS EATO

THE CHEMICAL PRIZE

First Prize: WILLIAM PoND BARBER, ]R.

s d p . {ARTHUR FRANK PEASLEE econ rue: MuNSEY LEw

TuTTLE PRIZE EssAY: ( ot awarded)

GooDWIN GREEK PRIZES: ( ot awarded)

PRIZES IN HISTORY A D PoLITICAL SciENCE: (Not awarded)

ALuMNI PRIZES I ENGLISH CoMPOSITION

First Prize: WILLIAM AuGUSTUS BIRD, IV

Second Prize: LEVI P. MoRTON HicKEY

Third Prize: ALEXANDER LEo TRACHTENBERG

Committee of Award: THE R Ev. ARTHUR ]. GAMMACK, M .A.

FRANK w. WHITLOCK PRIZES First Prize: LEVI P. MoRTON HICKEY

Second Prize: WILLIAM AuGUSTUS BIRD, IV Committee of Award: THE HoN. joHN C. BRINSMADE, THE HoN. CHARLES

A . GooDWIN, AND THE HoN. THOMAS ]. SPELLACY

DouGLAS PRIZE

'vVILLIAM AuGusTus BIRD, IV SuBJECT: The Significance of "Insurgency" in American Politics

Committee of Award: THE HoN. FRANK B. WEEKS

THE F. A. BROWN PRIZE GusTAVE ALEXANDER FEINGOLD Committee of Award: His ExcELLENCY, SIMEON EBEN BALDWIN, LL.D.,

Governor of Connecticut, THE HoN. FRANK L. WILcox, and MR. WILLIAM

G. MATHER

I49

Page 158: 1913_complete

Jrr.srutrr

w. H. BENJAMIN,'57

G. R. HALLAM,'59

W. H. vVEBSTER,'6r

R. F. GooDMAN,'63

H. G. GARDNER,'6s

F. L. NoRTON,'68

jACOB LEROY,'69

VVILLIAM DRAYTON,'? !

c. E. WODMAN,'73

R. M. EDWARDS,'74

• • • • • • • •

MCMXIV

'57

'59 l nveniam viam aut faciam

'61 Per aspera ad astra

'63 Ne tentes aut perfice

'65 Facta non verba

'68 Semper crescens

'69 Numquam non paratus

'?I NuLLa vestigia utrorsum

'73

'74

ISO

J

ltrrriurr

G. R . HALLAM,'59

\\". S. CocswELL,'6r

·. B. DAYTON,'63

C. W. MuNRo,'6s

RoBERT SHAw,'68

E. V. B. KISSAM,'69

D. P. CoTTON,' ?•

F. 0. GRANNIS,'73

c. E. CRAIK,'74

H. \ ·. R uTHERFO Ro,'76

1

Page 159: 1913_complete

C. E. YlooRE,'76

]. D. HJLLS,'78

\V. R. LEAKEN,'8o

A. P. BuRGWIN,'82

A. D. NEELEv,'8s

A. H. ANDERSON,'87

E. C. JoHNSO N, 2n,'88

T. A. CoNOVER,'9o

G. HALL,'92

]. W. EnGERTON,'94

E. P. HAMLIN,'95

'76 I nservit honori

'78

'8o

'82 R espice finern

'8s Duris non frangi

'87 Multa in dies addiscentes

'88 Per angus/a ad augusta

'90 Semper agens aliquid

'92

'94 A gere pro viribus

'95 En avant!

'97

'99 Fortiter, fide/iter, feliciter

'or Novus ordo saeclorurn

'04

'o6

'o8

'IO

' I I

(Keepers of the Lemon Squeezer)

I)I

\Y. c. BLACKMER,'78

D. L. FLEMJNc,'8o

A. P. BuRGWJN,'82

S. H. GJEsv,'85

G. S. WATERs,'87

E. C. JoH NSON, 2n,'88

E. i\1cP. McCooK,'90

I. D. R ussELL,'92

F. F. JoHNSON,'94

]. STRAWBRIDGE,'95

G. E. CocswELL,'97

Page 160: 1913_complete

HARRISON,' 1 1 , Organist BLACHFORD,' 14, Assistant

PRESIDENT OBLIGATORY

Morning Pr~yer, 8 :30 A. M. Sunday, 10:30 A. M.

JJfir.st Wrnur.s

FoRT,' 14 WROTH,' I 4

"rcunb Wrnur.s

WHITEHEAD,' 13, Choirmaster PETTIGREW,'I2 SHELLEY,' I 5

JJfir.st ilu.sns

B ENT,' I S BoY TON,' 14

&rcunb iln.s.sr.a

WALKER,'I4 SPOFFORD,' I 4

LuTHER, Chaplain VoLUNTARY (Sunday)

Holy Communion, 8 :45 A. M .

EviSON,'Iz MARSDEN,'I3

Page 161: 1913_complete

Wqt 14thrnry

WALTER BENJAMIN BRIGGS, Librarian

iGtbrary QLnmmtttrr

THE PRESIDE T

THE LIBRARIAN

SYD ' EY GEORGE FISHER

PROFESSOR RoBERT BAIRD RIGGS

~tulltnt 1\s!ii!itantn

vVILLIAM AUGUSTUS BIRo, IV HoRAcE FoRT

SAMUEL HERBERT EviSON E. PINCKNEY WROTH

SAMUEL HART,'66

Lucrus WATERMAN,'?I

HIRAM BENJAMIN LooMis,'Ss

WILLARD ScuooER,'89

HowARD RicE HrLL

®pttmt

GEoRGE Ons HoLBROOKE,'69

LEONARD Wooos RrcHARDSoN,'73

HERMAN LILIENTHAL,'86

FRANCIS RAYMOND STURTEVA T,'or

EDWARD HENRY LORENZ,'02

HAROLD LooMIS CLEASBY,'99

WILLIAM PERRY BENTLEY,'02

ANSON THEODORE McCooK,'oz

MARSHALL BowYER STEWART,'oz

GusTAVE ALEXA DER FEI ' GOLD,' I 1

KARL PHILIP MoRBA,'oz

EoMuNo SAMUEL CARR,'os

JoHN HowARD RosEBAUGH,'II

I 53

Page 162: 1913_complete

PRoFESSOR joHN G. GILL

ALLAN B. CooK,'IJ

w. STUART MARSDEN,'I3

THOMAS G. BROWN,' I 3

ERNEST T. SoMERVILLE,'I4

w. A. BIRD, IV,'I2

T. F. FLANAGAN,'I2

C. CARPENTER,'I2

L. D. ADKINS,'I3

K. B. CAsE,' I 3

I)4

Honorary President

President .

R ecorder

Secretary

T1·easU1·er

J. J. WHITEHEAD, ]R.,'IJ

R. P. WITHIKGTOK,'I3

L. 0. DE RoKGE,'I4

E. P. WROTH,'I4

0. D. BuDD,'IS

Page 163: 1913_complete

,

Page 164: 1913_complete

(with apologies to the creator of Mr. Dooley)

" W ELL, sir," said Mr. Dooley, "I see beth' pa-apers that there's been some more high doin's up at that vin'rable an' illus­

threes instichoochion iv larnin', Thrinity Colledge Bein' as they're jist ivryday stoojents, with ivryday intellecks, they must have their ca-apers ivry now an' thin, so's not to get too seeryous an' civvylized. Ca-apers constichoot a relief fr'm th' arjoos r-round iv colledge jooties an' th' rellijous atmosphere iv th' leccher rooms. They ar-re a forchnit lot, Hinnissy, an' I invy thim, ivry wan iv thim, an' all their injyements. What a wondherful thing is youth, an' espicially iddycated youth with all its impechusness . Ould fellows like ye'ersilf an' me have no romance about th' colledge. Y e don't hear us givin' nine long cheers f' r our almy rna tther. Y e don't see us postin' up pasthers in th' arly hours iv Saint Pathrick's Day (may God bliss his gr-reat soul) with all th' copp'rs afther us. We're a sad lot iv ould !a-ads takin' a postgrajate coorse in our cillybrated univarsity iv th' Wicked Wurruld . But, Hinnissy, 'tis a rale pleasure to see th' bright faced freshmen comin' in each year to waken th' echoes iv our grim walls with their young voices.

"This here pa-aper says that this boonch iv down-throdden, pink-chaked fresh men is all r-right. Y e see, Hinnissy, they've jist won th' Saint Pathrick's Day scrap, an' it bein' as that is a gr-r-rand ca-aper at th' vin'rable colledge, an' it bein' a gloryous victhry f'r wanst over th' despicable sophymores whom th' freshmen hate with pizenous hathred, bein' as they're not in th'

Page 165: 1913_complete

laste conjaynial, ivrywan iv th' nineteen hundhred an' fiftheen men ar-re sort iv ixub'rant over it."

"An' what might this scrap be all about?" asked Mr. Hennessy.

"Divvle a thing cud I make out iv it," said Mr. Dooley," excipt what ye'er frind Hogan thold me about it. Th' pa-aper says they fought f'r th' supreemacy iv a tree: 'in dire conflict on th' green sward' it says, an' I thot that 'sward' was what they fought with . 'Tis prob'bly th' wan th' Irish saint himsilf killed th' snakes with, says I to mesilf-f'r he was an illigent swardsman. But Hogan says they fought with their fists, so I guess th' pa-aper's wr-rong.

"Hogan tells me these freshmen have a flag they fly to th' breezes . But, mind ye, there ain't anny stars nor sthripes on it, an' divvil a harp, but they put a lot iv geeomethrical figgures on it, an' 'tis all done up in colors, et cethry. Thin wan iv thim sews it up in his shirrut all r-ready to get up this tree- th' wan they fight f'r th' supreemacy iv. Whirr 'tis up an' floatin' to th' zeph'rs tin minyits without molesthation, thin th' fight is over an' th' victhry

IS won. "An' th' night befure, they have some intherestin' ca-apers,

whirr they infuryate th' officers iv th' law with their manny riochous dissypations, an' keep th' whole onforchnit polis foorce agnized all

night with their postin' iv pasthers all over crea­tion. An' whirr they get tired iv this mild form iv amusement with th' paste-pots, some injan­yous rascal with an illus­threes repytation f'r bein' nachrally bar'brous an' crool concocts sivral ex-

157

Page 166: 1913_complete

thry neefaryous schemes, jist f'r socyability's sake. An', be hivens, they acchally substichoot these new amusement schemes f'r th' ould wans, an' thry thim out immejately an' ver-ry thurly on th' prom'nent mimbers iv th' constablry. Ain't they th' little r-rascals though, Hinnissy?

"Hogan says this toime they had a gr-reat expriss wagon, an' thravelled all over th' sthreets iv Hartf'rd an' stuck up their pasters on all th' finces an' sign-posts they cud find. But 'twas not all aisy wurruk. Th' emacyated baste who was propellin' th' cart-load iv three thousand pounds iv human flish, not to mintion th' paste-pot an' pasters, collapsed timp'rarily an' they had a perrylous toime out iv it. But jist as they were goin' to perform an autopsy on th' in­consid'rate baste, he came to consciousniss an' a ralization iv his jooties.

"Thin later in th' avenin' an immense concoorse iv thim wint out to meet an undhergrajate who was coortin' his young la-ady, an' they tore him r-right out iv his swateheart's ar-rms an' dhragged him to their din, which was a gr-r- reat humilyation to him. An' sthill later in th' avenin' th' sophymores came pourin' down in gr-reat noomb'rs an' smothered th' pasters with fier-ry r-red paint, an' thin wint back to th' dormytories an' wint to bed.

"They ain't got th' Irish blood in their veins, Hinnissy, but they ar- re sthrong on th' colledge spirit stuff. They must fight, bein' as 'tis thraditional, an' so they make it intherestin' while they're at it. They have a Sinit jist imitatin' iv Congriss, an' this Sinit promulghates a parcel iv rools- but iv coorse, bein' as they're normal,

well-ordhered !a-ads, they nivver obey thim. They raise th' divvil with reg­ular prescribed Sinit rools with th' same impertur­bability that was wanst so charact'ristic iv me ould toime frind, Tiddy Rosenfelt. But Hogan tells me they were exci p­tionally tame this year,

s

1l

Page 167: 1913_complete

11

an' th' Hartf'rd cityzens har-rdly knew there had been such a gr-reat an' gloryous toime. Ye see, th' colledge docthor gin'rally has to do a little inspectin' iv heads an' limbs afther th' scrap, an' th' ambylances ar-re kept on th' r-run f'r a while. 'Tisn't dang'rous, Hinnissy. 'Tis on'y a gloryous scrap-an' gin'rally there ar-re broken heads an' twisted necks afther a gloryous scrap .

"Hogan says 'twas a muddy scrap, th' likes iv which was nivver seen before. They jist r-rolled ar-round in th' mud like a parcel iv pigs f'r twinty minyits, an' they were all minus their out'r accoutre­mints whin th' fight was over.

"Y e see, Hinnissy, this is th' way they wint at it. Th' fresh­men- th' bright-faced freshmen- woke up befure daylight, an' ate breakfast, an' thin thramped up to colledge, where th' sophymores were assimbled f'r their rayciption, a gr-reat concoorse iv forty iv thim, in th' prisince iv a vast multichood iv bysthanders. An' th' freshmen, undaunted be th' jeers iv that plebeean crowd iv infeeryor r-rank, marched acrost th' front lawn- th' campus, they call it- in a gr-r-reat squadhron like an ar-rmy, singin' an ·appropriate song, an' ivrything looked propitious f'r thim. An' whin they got weary iv loitherin', they stharted r-runnin' on th' doable-quick. Well, Hinnissy, they sthruck th' sophymores who were agin th' covethed tree with an awful cr-rash that was heard f'r miles away- th' pa-aper says it was a 'sickenin' thud'. An' th' sophymores melted jist like a snow­ball wud melt in th' undherwurruld, an' thin wan iv th' inthrepid freshman give a tur-rible leap an' ascinded th' tree with incredoolous swiftness. An' thin th' rest iv thim scrapped desp'rately on th'

I)9

ter-ra fir-rma practisin' half-Nelsons an' hamm'r­locks, an' fought like very divvils with each other, an' wallowed r-round in th' mud an' attimpted to sthrangle each other, all with th' kindest intin­tions in th' wurruld, while th' hero up in th' tree

Page 168: 1913_complete

held th' valyable little flag up to th' gintle breezes, an' th' ign'rant masses watched th' frivv'lous follies with contimchous stare.

"An' so ivinchooly th' freshmen won th' tur-rble sthruggle, an' thin th' hero descinded fr'm th' tree, an' they took an invintory iv their dead disthributed ar-round. An' thin they wint to th' dormy­tories an' put some clothes on their bare anatomies an' thin wint in to discuss lithrachoor an ' larnin' with th' profissors. An' all th' ould torn clothin' undher th' tree was picked up an' sold to a mimber iv th' Hebrew race, later, f'r an imminse amount iv money.

"Ye see, Hinnissy, these scraps they have at th' cillybrated instithootion ar-re big affairs, an' will long be raymimb'red . This mim'rable battle will go thundherin' down to immortality, an' th' hero will get his pitcher in th' pa-aper, which is more than ayether iv us can do with all our scraps. Don't ye invy thim all their gloryous fun , Hinnissy?"

r6o

1

Page 169: 1913_complete

1. ~nplJnutorr Stmoltrr Jlay

A large number of students and Sub-Freshmen are looking at the stage. Cook rushes in, excitedly shouting, "I have an idea!" He is greeted with a shower of cigarette boxes. Goes through the door of Jarvis scenery. Immediately the sound of a heavy fall, and the scenery rocks suspiciously. He appears at a window. Jewett comes on stage. He looks thoroughly at ease, and says to Cook, "I hear the Bishop is going to leave college." The Ia tter replies, "Yes, he has his trunk on his hand." The hard-working college janitors make a resolution to see the author of dramatics after the show. But, speaking in the vernacular, he foils them. Cook takes the center of the stage, but the wrong cue, and the show halts. \iVh itehead , in leading female role, is paving the way for his later successes. C. D. \Vard has the same name, but not the same sweet, graceful actions . They immediately develop a romance, which makes the play a farce. R oberts, smoking a cigar in a certain well known way, struts in and out. The falling action of the play is rapid; so is the curtain. The whole cast manages to get a curtain call.

2. 1\n i.~our itt {g;ym

Doctor Swan announces that the ballet class will now begin. He leads, in intricate figures, with E. T. Smith, Deppen , Cook, Case, Hudson; R osenbaum, and C. E. Craik following him. They rotate gracefully for ten minutes. Craik blows a kiss to th.e Doctor. Vail, C. D. Ward, and Whitehead take part in the next figure. They hop and kick for a time, when Ward leaves the class by request. Vail sneaks out with him. The Turkey Trot is now practised for a while with great abandon. Smith is shocked and has to leave. The class now does the back circle on the high bar and other work for ten minutes. Rosenbaum and Hudson are taken out on stretchers . A two-mile run for college record now takes place. Craik and Whitehead fall by the ways ide. A rope climb results in a hurried call for an ambulance for Deppen and Case. Cook does some tumbling stunts and gains a pound. He faints. Doctor Swan retires well satisfied.

161

Page 170: 1913_complete

3. Jrrs.a QUub illllutiug

In the Tripod room the President of the Press Club sits in massive dignity. Other members of the Club sit around in awe. Professor Gill arrives, smoking a cigar. The President introduces the speaker. Words of wisdom are heard, saying, "You must be wide awake," etc. Flanagan disgracefully falls asleep. The speaker ends by saying, "You must be energetic." Tumultuous applause. Flanagan wakes up. The President says, "We all appreciate Professor Gill's remarks." Business lags. Six new offices created for members to hold . Business lags, and the one cigar in the room goes out. Everybody in uni son says, "We must do somethi ng." On motion, the meeting adjourns, and all ru sh away to keep belated social engage­ments.

4. 1\lluirr to tl1r !Gourloru

Gentlemen, let me impress upon your minds that there is no open season for immorality. Modern dancing is not as graceful as the old-time steps . Your bunny­hugs and you r turkey trots-but I will not say what I was going to. If yo u want to do those things yo u had better go down to the running track. (Sawyer leaves the room. ) The love element is the greatest force in human life. If you do not think that the girl is the most beautiful creature in the world, there is something the matter, and yo u had better get someone else. I tell you there is a difference between the girl to whom you like to be engaged and the girl to whom you want to be married. You always want to kiss her, boys; kiss her, every time. Mr. Withington, who was Shakespeare? Oh, you fooled me that time. Well, time is up. I'm sorry I won't be able to meet you for a week. The lesson for next time is the same.

5. 1\u 1Juy i!lonrll illllrrtitt!J·

The Editor-in-Chief waits for some of the Board to come to the meeting. Finally, the Business ~tfanager appears. A quorum is now present and much weighty business is transacted. They decide to publish the book and make it a success. A literary editor comes in, is given an assignment, which he promptly forgets. The quorum decides to follow out the plan of the old book. An athletic editor calls up from the walk and says he cannot be present. He is not needed. The question of a dedication comes up. The editor and manager each get one vote. Professor Kleene and Instructor Cushman get half a vote each. One has to be economic when dealing with Woman Suffrage! The grind editor appears and pours oil on the troubled waters. The vote on the dedication is postponed until the candidates can see the literary editor. The unnecessary members now leave, and the impor­tant business goes on. Finally the Board adjourns to "Stick's", and gets a glass of milk with a prune in it .

162

fi.

f p h p n s tc p·

Page 171: 1913_complete

The scene opens with all windows shut, and the fellows writing their weekly letters home. Suddenly a cry of " Heads Out " breaks upon them, and all the win­dows fly open. A woman pushing a baby carriage goes past in silence. More silence, then another alarm. This time two beautiful young girl s go past amid loud salu­tations. Haithwaite recognizes old friend s and joins them. Silence again reign s, and then five go past back of the College. An exodus from the bedroom windows follows. Then quiet for a long time, and a false alarm or two are sounded by some kids. Some chorus girls with Noble and Sage in tow go past. The fellows now all come out and go for strolls on the "rocks "-for the air. Ah, but in the spnng-

7. ID~l' J;utfragl'ttl's

'Vhile "mere man," in the shape of a few students, lounged around the Campus, an automobi le with some Suffragettes as pa ssengers rolls up to the College. In a mili­tant manner they proceed to the bulletin board and put up a poster. The students look interested; indeed, they are so enthusiastic that they appropriate all the posters in the machine. The Suffragettes go to the College Office. Alas, Instructor Cu shman is not there! But Professor Kleene is delighted to see them and escorts them down the walk. With a parting "Grin" they speed away. The drawing courses can now be operated for the rest of the year, as the talented young instructor has hi s official seal- " Votes for Women. "

8. i\ Jl'rilous i.Enroutttl'r

An innocent dog wanders into the French room and is very popular. Pro­fessor Gill attempts to coax him out, but the dog ha s a taste for learning. The Professor endeavors to eject 'W!lj but the howl of protest from the canine dismays him. The animal escapes a caress from the irate Professor. The latter is non­plussed. Barnett comes to the rescue . In spite of howls he takes the brute by the neck, carries him triumphantly from the room and precipitates him down the sta irs. The Professor acknowledges it was a difficult position for him, but offe rs to tell any prospective teacher how to handle similar situations. The recitation proceeds tranquilly.

Page 172: 1913_complete

i.Gottrry IDirkrt.a from tqr ltubbrr t~ut of ~ontrr 1iqnibbum. tqr Qlqry.atnl ~tti!rr of

Jibbi.aqn f4ouolulu As translated by

3J zzy Jrtrofakt Jow-lilllom. 191 3

U nlimited Edition 77777

(N. B.-For the reader's convenience, the R oman numerals here have been made to correspond with those of the original Portuguese text .)

I Wake! For the Alarm Clock scatters into flight The Slumbers each has ' joyed in this past ~ i ght; The Groans of many greet the Springtime Sun, Which strikes old Northam with a Shaft of Light.

II Before those at Breakfast were well supplied, Methought a Voice within the Chapel cried,

"When Harrison ha s rai sed hi s ghastly din, \Yhy nod the drowsy Worsh ippe r outside?"

III Then to the ::vionitor, those who stood before The Chapel shouted- " Open thou the D oor! You know how little study time we have, And, chapel o'er, may stud y then no more."

IV Now the New T erm reviving old D es ires, The Student Soul to the Diamond retires; T o Ass. Managersh ip hi s Thoughts now turn, And long before he meant to, he perspires .

VII Come, fill the Pail , and in these days of Spring To heated baseball players cool Water bring: T o the year's End 'tis but a little way, And when you're Nlanager, there' time to sing.

XII A Book of Logic underneath the Bough, A Piece of Cake, some Wilbur's Buds- a nd Thou Beside me, Whitehead, singing some sweet Song­Oh, Logic Book were comprehensib le now!

Page 173: 1913_complete

XIII Some for a charge account at Stick's; and some Sigh for the football Manager's income; Ah, take the Cash, and let the Credit go-You'll sure derive more Benefit therefrom.

XX Thi s College Fence beside the Campus green, Thi s ancient wooden Fence on which yo u lean­Ah, lean upon it lightly, for who knows When 'twi ll collapse and send yo u on your Bean .

XXI Ah, Wesleyana, fill the Cup that clears To-day of past Defeat and future Fears: To-morrow- Why, To-morrow the same will be; You can't beat Trinity in Sev'n thousand Years!

XXII For some we loved, the loveliest and the best, Have spurned Admonition's strong behest, Have made a trip to 13 Seabury Hall, And one by one begun a Six Weeks' Rest.

XXIII And we that now make merry with the \Vines They left, at Harry Bond' s or at Heublein's, Ourselves must we to College sober go, Nor stop to meddle with the Street-Car Signs.

XXV Alike for those who for Football prepare, And those that 'round the Cinder Track must tear, A shrivelled Professor from the Class Room cries,

"Fools! your Reward is neither There nor There!"

XXVII

Myself in College often did frequent Tulin's and Stick's, and had great argument About Bills and Accounts : but evermore Came out in the same Rage wherein I went.

XXVIII

With Profs the seed of ·wisdom did I sow, And with Athletics tried to make it grow; And this was all the Harvest that I reap'd-

"You've won you r 'T,' but flunked your Course-now go!' '

Page 174: 1913_complete

XXXI Running up Vernon through the College Gate, Across the Campus at a fearful rate, The Chapel I gained just in time to hear The Monitor's sad cry, "Too late! Too late!"

XXXIII No one could answer; none knew where he'd gone; At 2 A. M. he returned forlorn; Nor spoke a Word, but all the Signs reveal'd Th' effect disastrous of a Night and Morn.

XXXVII For I remember stopping by the way To watch a Fresh get paddled well one day: And with his all-obliterated Tongue The Freshman murmur'd-"Gently, Soph, I pray!"

XXXVIII And has not such a Tale from days of Old Across collegiate generations roll'd Of such a Freshman, out of l?aser Earth Cast by the Sophomore into Human mould?

XXXIX And not a single Water-Bag we throw From out our Windows, but may steal below To light the fire of Anger in some Eye There hidden- poor Fresh! alas! how could he know!

XLIV Why, if the Soul can fling the Dust aside, Out on the Cinder Track with Heavenly stride, Were't not a Shame- were't not a Shame for him In Trinity College crippled to abide?

LIII But if in vain, on yon Gymnasium floor, You run, or on the Flying Rings soar, And can't of Tumbling master every trick, Next year "Ducky" will see you once more.

LIV \Vaste not your cash, to Spiegel give your suit, And when it is returned, commence dispute: Note the scattered wrinkles he has left in it­Of course you do not pay-give him the Boot !

LVI For "Is" and "Is-Not" though with Rule and Line, And "Up-and-Down" by Logic I define, :..1y Tracks across the Snow will show that I \Vas deep in nothing else la st night but- Wine.

166

Page 175: 1913_complete

LXIII

Oh, threats of Scudder and Sneers of U ndergrad !

(N. B.-The translator could get no meaning out of the rest of this verse. H e found something about the " Tripod" being "sad," but the sense was so utterly obscured by the confusion of incoherent profanity running through the whole thread of thought that he soon gave up hope of obtaining a lucid translation.- THE EDITOR.)

LXV

The History Theses of Devout and Learn'd Who passed before and oil at Midnight burn 'd, Are all much better written than our own, And so are copied, and to the Prof. returned .

LXVI

I sent my Soul through the Invisible, To inform the Tripod Board they couldn't spell; And by and by my Soul return'd and said,

"That Tripod Room Itself is Heav 'n and Hell!"

LXVII

Heav'n but the Vision of Tripodal Desire, And Hell the Shadow from an Editor on fire Cast on the Pages of the Issues to come; Those who emerge now, next week will expire.

LXVIII

They are no other than a moving row Of Frenzied Journalists that come and go 'Round with Assignments and Proof-Sheets pre ared At Midnight in all Misery and vVoe.

LXXXIII

Maids of all Sorts and Sizes, great and small , That danced along the walk or hugged the wall; And some loquacious damsels were; and some Danc'd much, perhaps, but never tark'd at all.

LXXXIII

Heads of all Sorts and Sizes, great and small, That leaned from windows up in Jarvis Hall; And some loquacious students were; and some Flirted, perhaps, but never talk'd at all.

XCIV

Indeed, Repentance when a Sophomore I swore-but was I sober when I swore? And then came Spring, and baseball victories Yiy threadbare Penitence apieces tore.

Page 176: 1913_complete

XCV

And much as Sleep has played the Infidel, And robb'd me of my Chapel Cuts- Ah, well, I wonder often what the I\1onitors buy One half so precious as the Sleep they sell.

XCVI

Yet Ah, that Spring should vanish with the Rose! Yet Ah, that Max should vanish with our Clothes! Yet Ah, that Exams should vanish with our 'Noes! Yet Ah, yet ah, yet ah again, who knows!

XCVII

Would but the unfolded Roll of Fate now yield One glimpse-if dimly, yet indeed reveal'd, One glimpse of how we in the Spring shall fare, When Wesleyan we meet on track and field?

XCVIII

Would but some winged Angel ere too late Arrest the yet unfolded Exams we hate, And make the ste rn Professor otherwise Decline, or solve, or quite obliterate.

XCIX

Ah Love, could you and I with Prex conspire To grasp this sorry Scheme of Marks entire, Would not we shatter it to bits-and then Remould it so that we could all get our degrees without doing

any studying?

(N. B .- The translator 1·ealizes that the last sentence above is a detriment to the verse in respect to rhyme and meter, but he was unable to resurrect an "ire" that would convey the exact meaning.- EDITOR.)

r68

Page 177: 1913_complete
Page 178: 1913_complete

~rinitp Cltollege ' artforb, <aonnrcttcut

,1,/o/:.iiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;- RINITY COLLEGE, under the name of Washington College, re­ceived its Charter in 1823. The present name was adopted in 1845. I ts chief found er was the Right R ev. Thomas Church Brownell, Bishop of Connecticut. Established by Episcopalians as a contri­bution to higher education , it is not a Church in t itution in the sense of being directed by the Church. Its advantages are placed at the

service of t hose of every creed . The principal building, in the English Secular Gothic style, 653 feet long, in clud­

ing J arvis and Seabury Halls and Northam Towers, is one of the most imposing and admirably fitted educational edifices in the ni ted States. It was in tended to form the west ~id e of a great quadr angle. Outside of the lines of this quadrangle at t he south are the Observatory, the Boardman H a ll of Natural History, and t he J a rvis Laboratories for Chemistry and for Physics. T o t he north of it are the Gymnasium , houses of the President and of the Professors, and Chapter Houses of the Fraternities. Below the College Campus to t he east and within t hree minutes' walk is the spacious Athletic Field. In beauty of sit uation , healthfu l condi t ions of life, and equipment for its special work, the College is not surpas ed .

The Faculty includes sixteen profes. or , four instructors, t he librarian and the medical director.

Among t he E lective studies wi thin t he respective courses there is no important subject for which adequate provi ion is not made.

The Library contains 60,000 volumes. Generous contributions of t he Alumni are making possible a rapid addi t ion to its resources. A Reference R eading Room is open every day and five evenings of the week.

The J arvi Chemical and Physical Laboratori!'s have an excellent equipment for Elementary and Advanced work .

The Hall of Jatural History contains the Museum, Biological Laboratories, and t he Psychological Laboratory.

In t he year 1903- 1904 a full technical course in C ivil Engineering was for t he first time made available for all qualified applicants.

There are numerous scholar hips providing pecuniary assistance for deserving students. The t hree Holland scholarships, yielding each $600 prr annum, are awarded to the three best students in the three lower classes, respectively . The Russell Graduate Fellowship of 500 i awarded biennially in the in terest of higher graduate study. The M ary A. Terry Graduate Fellowship of 550 is awarded annually. Prizes to t he amoun t of , 500 are a lso awarded to undergraduates for succe in the work of t he various departments.

Two examinations for ad mis ion are held at the College each year, the first during the days fo llowing the Annual Commencement, and the second in September, imme­diately before t he beginning of the Christmas term.

For CataloguPs, Exami-nation Papers, or information , apply to the P resident or to the ecref:lry of the Faculty.

12

Page 179: 1913_complete

WILLIAMS Earl spends many weary hours in 38 Jarvis Hall, sharing the

gloom of the Business Manager of this publication. His extra mo­ments are spent either in deep revery or in story-telling. He can do the latter to perfection when he is in good spirits.

E. L. WARD Right this way, ladies and gentlemen! In this cage we have

the only original antediluvian aggravation ever exhibited before the public; it buds like a rose, develops like a film, and is the only living example of the Darwinian theory in existence. Not too near the cage, please!

C. D. WARD Don't blame us for navigating such a craft on the social wave.

Dartmouth cast all the responsibility on us; although "Chet" really came down to keep his brother under proper restraint. Chet is no mean gymnast, but he doesn't waste his good looks on a cold, unre­sponsive Gym.

CASE "Hello! Is Kenneth there? Yes, if you please- Hello!

you, Kenneth? How are you, dear ?-That's good. Take yourself, won't you, Kenneth? Good-bye, dear."

Is that care of

Kenneth keeps pretty well. He takes long walks to get up circu­lation (TTipod joke!).

12 171

Page 180: 1913_complete

Buy And

at You

This Get

Big The

Store Best

" Hartford's Shopping Center"

Where everything in all desira­ble Merchandise can be found, where every want can be filled, every need supplied.

fleadquarters for Everything

BROWN, THOMSON & CO.

172

Page 181: 1913_complete

WITHI GTO "Who is that intellectual looking chap on the side-lines, wearing

a striped jersey and a worried look?" "Why, surely you do not mean Withington? Well, I would

not call him intellectual, exactly. He is taking the hardest courses in college, you see, and to be really intellectual one must be a good society man, too."

MOORE Our "Senator" is a very serious gent. They say he used to

smile before he came to college. ] ust go the rounds of the college football teams and find out how many players would care to line up against him a second time . The sand makes up for the lack of fat, John.

NOBLE "Buster" came to college to become prominent. In a way he

succeeded; but his good looks hampered his greatest efforts along this line. His favorite pastime is running for office, but, unfortunately, he wasn't built for a track man .

THOMAS "Laugh and we'll all laugh with you," Bob. Once upon a time

there was a policeman in Meriden and he didn't like Bob's laugh, so he tried to stop it. But he missed Bob's laugh and hit his nose­and so Bob is now President of the Maryland Club. Cops, beware!

Henry Kohn ~ Son

Connecticut's

Greatest jewelry

Establishment

890 Main St. Hartford

Factory, Newark, H. J. 173

Geo. 0. Simons

S uccessor to

Simons &. Fox 240 Asylum St.

All kinds of Silk, Bunting and Felt

F lags. Favors for Germans and Cotil­

lions. Official decorator for the Prom.

Page 182: 1913_complete

Insurance Company of North America

'----- --PHILADELPHIA, PA.------'

<:AMERICA'S OLDEST COMPANY

F O UNDED 1792

Total Assets, January I , 19 12

T otal Liabilities, January I , I 9 I2

Surplus over all Liabilities, January I, 1912

EUGE E L. ELLISO , President

BENJAMIN RUSH, First Vice-President

$I6,9S3,774·00

8,649,873.00

$ 8,303,901.00

JOHN 0. PLATT, Second Vice-President

T. HOWARD WRIGHT, Secretary

HENRY ''~" · FAR UM, Asst. Secretary

New England Department Hartford, Conn.

Charle.s E. 'Parker ((f! Co. MA/VAGE"RS

SO State Street First National BanK Building Hartford, Conn.

Page 183: 1913_complete

FIDELITY TRUST CO. 49 PEARL STREET

Bankers, Trustees, Guardian

DIRECTORS: JoH l\1. HoLCOMBE CHARLES E. GRoss

CHAS. G. WooDWARD FRANKL. WILcox

WILLIAM c. SKINNER R ICHARD l\1. BISSELL

CHARLES L. F. R om soN

BAR ETT

or Agent

WILLIAM B . CLARK

CHAS. p. COOLEY

GEo. D . H owELL

Just see what a happy countenance is catalogued under this name! " J oe" is a wonder! Just think of running off with the Chess Championship one minu te and with the appendicitis the next-and t hen emerging still undaunted. Ask J oe about the lantern and matches they used to hang out for him some five years ago.

WARNER Our general, all-around mental telepathist and reservoir of wit

and humor. He'd rather walk on car tracks than eat ice cream. Aside from a little good-natured egotism about his baseball ability, "Harry" is a good scout.

CRIGHTON This lanky chap is a very prominent and familiar figure on the

Campus- he is seen as often as twice a month. He is the very same brave hero who offered to throw the conductor out and ring up fares himself after the Freshman-Junior Banquet at Holyoke had made him rather frisky and spirited.

R. M. SMITH Beware of this walking phonograph, this traveling encyclopedia,

this human interrogation point! Come within a radius of sixty ya rds, and he will talk you deaf, dumb, and blind.

A3TNA NATIONAL BANK NEXT DOOR TO HARTFORD PUBLIC LIBRARY AND MORGAN MEMORIAL

CHECKING ACCOUNTS INVITED TRAVELERS' CHEQUES

MODERN SAFE DEPOSIT FACILITIES

I75

Page 184: 1913_complete

The Johns-Pratt Co.

"V ulcabeston" "Moulded Mica" "N oark" Fuses

and

Fuse Accessories

Hartford • • Connecticut

SA

" a

Page 185: 1913_complete

SAWYER See, children, here is a man. He is a good man, so he is called

a "missionary man." This man has eyes, two noses and a pair of mouths . But he is not a regular man; he is a hero. He was won at a church fair. You may pat the good, missionary, irregular hero­man, children, . but don't ruffie his hair.

VAIL . Don't look for the photo. It was partly the photographer's

fault. Vail is absolutely harmless. He has slowly gained the repu­tation of being a Shakespearean wit. That is partly his fault, also. A perfect lady ( ?)

L'HEUREUX His hair is red and his name is pronounced with startling varia­

tions; the best combinations of euphoniousness being reached by base­ball umpires. "Red" is the best Catcher Trinity has had in a month of Sundays, and he'll make a good Captain. The only fault we can find with him is his very great appreciation of Warner's humor.

JEWETT "It's too hot!" "No, it's too cold!" "Say, 'Bones', shove

on some more coal!" Never mind, "Bones", when we all depart this life, you'll have had your experience with fiery furnaces, and we­How Norwich Town ever survived the pranks of this youth is a dead mystery.

WM. H. POST

CARPET CO.

Decorators

Carpets

Rugs Wall Paper

and

Upholstery

219 Asylum Street

HARTFORD, CONN,

Trinity College

Barber Shop Manicuring by Lady Attendant

J. G. MARCH, Hair Cutter

Vibration Shampooing and Massaging, Electrical

Facial Massage

Rooms 1 and 2 Connec ticut Mutual Bldll .

Phone Connection.

\ 7 8 3 Main St.

177

Entrances

3& Pearl St.

Page 186: 1913_complete

"The L eading Fire Insurance Company of America"

STATE:\1EXT OF THE CONDITIO~ OF THE

tETNA INSURANCE COMPANY

HARTFORD, CONN. On the 31st day of December, 1911

Cash Capital, Reserve, Re-Insurance (Fire), Reserve, Re-Insurance (Marine), Reserve, Unpaid Losses (Fire), Reserve, Unpaid Losses (Marine), Other Claims,

$5,000,000.00 7,506,351.40 430,03~ . 63

549,38~.98 64,490.00

63~,937.96 7,834,194.74 Net Surplus,

Total Assets, $22,017,389.71 Surplus for Policy Holders, $12,834,194.74

LOSSES PAID IN NINETY-THREE YEARS :

$128,003,578.89 WILLIAM B. CLARK, President HENRY E. REES, Secretary

Assistant Secretaries A. N. WILLIAMS E. J. SLOAN E. S. ALLEN

GUY E. BEARDSLEY

W. F. WHITTELSEY, Jr., Marine Secretary

WESTERN BRANCH, 29 So. La Salle St., Chicago, Ill.

PACIFIC 3~B~~~!:nia St., San Francisco, Cal.

MARINE DEPARTMENT, . . . . . . .

f THOMAS E. GALLAGHER, General Agent 1 L. 0. KOHTZ, Assistant General Agent l L. 0. KOHTZ, Marine General Agent

{ E. C. MORRISON, General Agent A. G. SANDERSON, Assistant General Agent

I CHICAGO, ILL., 29 So. La Salle St. NEW YORK, 63-65 Beaver St.

) BOSTON, 70 Kilby St. ( PHILADELPHIA, 226 Walnut St.

Agents in all the Principal Cities, Towns, and Villages of the United States and Canada

178

Page 187: 1913_complete

CHOW Chambers Chow, Chape l

child, chaste from China. Han­kownever produced better brains nor a happier disposition. Who brought him over? See Lew.

LEW Munsey Lew, Chemistry

shark, chaste from China. Shanghai never produced better brains nor a happier disposition . Who brought him over? See Chow.

McGEE Marcus is a youth sober in

more than one sense- be it said to his credit. He helps to main­tain the dignity and the finances of the college bookstore, and is thus enabled to maintain his own.

DEPPEN The big man with the high

voice. He put in his thumb and he pulled out two plums­baseball managership and popu­larity. "Dick" is a philosopher and an ora tor. Who could deny that, after hearing his speech on "Trinity Girls," at Marble Hall?

SWIFT "Sam" has never exhibited

any traces of the velocity implied in his cognomen, even on the cinder track. He has run other things beside races, including musical clubs and girls, but never very fast. Easy-going, pleasure-loving, optimistic Sam!

179

The Capitol City

Lumber Company

115 Front Street

HARTFORD, CONN.

The Andrus & Naedle Co.

Headquarters for

SPORTING AND

ATHLETIC GOODS

Wholesale and Retail

272 Asylum Street

HARTFORD, CONN.

Page 188: 1913_complete

J. P. MORGAN & CO. DOMESTIC AND FOREIGN BANKERS

Wall Street, Corner of Broad

NEW YORK

DREXEL & CO., PHILADELPHIA Corner of 5th and Chestnut Streets

MORGAN, GRENFELL & CO., LONDON No. 22 Old Broad Street

MORGAN, HARJES & CO., PARIS 31 Boulevard Hauaamann

Deposits received subject to Draft

Securities bought and sold on Commission

Interest allowed on Deposits

Foreign Exchange, Commercial Credits

Cable Transfers

Circular Letters for Travelers, available in all parts

of the world

I SO

Dain

di

Specia

C01

Est

Ill

A ,

Page 189: 1913_complete

Jlis~op's Wta Jurty

Wqr 1!1ttbrustrtus Leading Caterers

Dainty Elegance in Serving Wed­

dings, Teas, and At Homes

Special Attention Given to Quality Dishes

Command us for Suggestions and

Estimates at our up-stairs parlor

111 PB7JRL STRBBT

A Table d'Hote Dinner and Supper

served every day and evening

Good Service

1 8 1

The

Edward Balf Co.

Crushed Stone, Sand Trucking

and Excavating

26 State St., Hartford, Conn.

Page 190: 1913_complete

-This Edition of The Trinity Ivy

\Vas printed by us

Hausauer-Janes Printing Co. ------PRODUCERS OF------

High-Class Book and Catalog Printing 253-257 Ellicott Street BUFFALO, N. Y.

1 8 2

il

H

11

Page 191: 1913_complete

COOK "Crimus! How I love my Gym! Listen- I 'm a luminous liter­

ary light, with a lugubrious learned look and a lively love for loquaci­ty. I tip the scales at -hush, at Gym." The only thing in life Allan regrets is his inability to grow stout.

DAWLEY _ Ask "Boone" about his glorious soap-bubble dreams in the

brewery . We t hought we had lost this optimist for a while, but books finally got the call over bottles, and we consider 19 13 fortunate.

MARSDE Behold our hard-worked "Editor-in-Cheese"! Is he good

natured? He must be to hold that job! "Stew" may be seen any spring day trudging over the cinder path, with the weight of a dozen hurdles on his shoulders . And that's not the only weight on his shoulders-ever since they addressed that letter, "Trinity College, care of W. S. Marsden," he has been trying to find a well-fitting hat.

BROW "Tom Brown at Trinity" would be a punning conceit. Prof.

Brenton said that puns are not good form these days, ·but that there might be some one with the sense of humor who could rival Shakes­peare. Tom looks fine when he is disguised . Do you remember his detective work last March?

Our Trinity of Attractions

1- Style 2 - Assortments 3- Value

in clothes, hats, shoes, and furnishings for

young men

-Horsfall's 93-99 Asylum St. 140 Trumbull St.

IT PAYS TO BUY OUR KIND

G. F. Warfield & Co.

3SooiH3tlltt~ an~

~tattoner~

77 and 79 Asylum Street

H ARTF ORD C ON N.

Page 192: 1913_complete

WHEN your product demands fine cata­logues, you know that attractive ideas, original treatment of illustrations and

engravings are what sell your goods. Don't re­strict yourself and your business; get the best.

Our Mark

Means the Best

MANTERNACH & DOUGLAS Illustrators and Engravers

=========HARTFORD, CONN.=========

Page 193: 1913_complete

COLLETT "Baldy," otherwise known as "Fat," was elected to next year's

football captaincy because he looked ferocious enough to do anything or anybody last fall, when he lost one of his prominent incisors. With his beauty marred he wouldn't smile even for the girls. We don't need to tell you that "Charlie" is popular- he is also a scholar of note.

ADKI S We wouldn't have it noised about for the world , but the night

before the "Eccy" exam- oh, but why bother with spilt milk? vVe all know "Len" is a very fine student, and a good friend to have.

WHITEHEAD R ead, mark, learn! This subject is worth it . It is no other than

the "Pinker Lady" who confronts you. Handsome, talented, charm­ing. Can you blame the ladies for their ill-concealed admiration? If they could only hear "Jack" singing as often as we do- but, why say more- indeed, space forbids.

BARBER He's a quiet chap, a little shaver. He minds his own business,

and between times gets in a little studying on the sly. Holland scholars never did loaf very much, somehow.

R. S. Gladwin, Prop. Telephone Charter 151

Quality FLOWER SHOP Choice Cut Flowers

Wedding and Funeral Work a Specialty

722 Main St. Hartford, Conn.

THE '? 0 '? V LA '7(

Hartford's POPULAR Barber Shop

l(ELLJ) & LEAVITT

726 Main St.

Special attention to Trinity Students

Page 194: 1913_complete

f>limpton MfB· Co. 252-256 "Pearl Street. Hartford. Conn.

Stationery 'Printing Engra-uing Embo.s.sing

Sample.s of Enara'()ina for all Social Occa.sion.s .sent anywhere on reque.st

P. II. BILLINGS MERCHANT TAILOR

9 Asy lum Street Nartlord, Conn. POPULAR PRICES

186 13

Page 195: 1913_complete

13

I ( \ ,,., ' _...

"t. Jatrtrk' .a lay

Qtompltmrnts of

ID4r iSalbwin-~trwart i.Elrdrir Qlnmpauy

2 14 Jrad &trrl't

ijartforll. <!loun.

Wright & Ditson H eadquarters for

Athletic Supplies College Stude nts and Athletes who want th e real. superior articles for the various

sports

Base Ball, Law n Tennis, Golf, Basket Ball, Track and

Field Sports

Should insist upon those bearinll' the WRIGHT & DITSON Trade Mark

Catalogue Free

Wright & Ditson 22 Warren Street

Boston C hicago Providence

New York

San Francisco Cambridge

Page 196: 1913_complete

DUNNE

Official Photographer

for the 1913 Ivy. . . .

759 MAIN ST. cor. Pearl

ggggaga~~•••

GOLDBAUM '& CO.

.. Exclu.si-()e Man~s

TailorShopu

110& Chapel St. New Haven, Conn.

Here Every Two Weeks

188

Groups a Specialty

gg~gg&gggggg

If you want the BEST

tOFFEE In Hartford, ask your Grocer

for

Helmet Brand a Hl~h Grade, selected Rich Coffee, Roasted and Packed

by

E. S. KIBBE CO. HARTFORD, CONN.

rifi§IDJDJririiJIJDIJIJ

PUI

ety t his plun man wal~ Cha: disc< worl feat1 mole his 1 FAI

?isp IS a that isn't no disa1 E. 1

tude look belie cline in eli: and dang same on tl SME

acte1 regu stud way cent. auth para spec

Page 197: 1913_complete

PULFORD "Skig" has gained notori­

ety through other mediums than his euphonious name. He plunged into prominence Fresh­man year by surreptitiously walking away with the Tennis Championship, to his brother's discomfiture. Since then, his work in Biology has cast his features into a more serious mold. He has got a head on his shoulders that is a head. FAIRBANKS

The boy with the sunny disposition! Paraphrased, this is an indication of "the smile that won't come off." But it isn't a smile that aggravates, so no one would want to see it disappear. E. T. SMITH

Rather effeminate pulchri­tude, don't you think? To look at the photo you'd hardly believe he was bibulously in­clined-but it's a very gradual incline. He's a leader in Gym and in studi~s, and expects to dangle a <I> B K key with the same ease with which he dangles on the high bars. SMEATHERS

A species having two char­acteristics not common to the regular college-bred species: a studious look and an aggressive way of smoking cigars. Re­cently unearthed records give authentic proof that "haud paratus" was the motto of this species.

Elastic Hose Knee Caps, ­

Anklets, and· Abdominal ..

Belts for the· support of Vari­

cose Veins, Swelled Limbs, Weak J oints, Sprains, Etc.

The Gladding Drug Company

1203·1208 Main Street

HARTF ORD. CONN.

Calhoun Show Printers Big Type Printers

Calhoun Press Commercial Printers

UP-TO- DATE PRINTERS A t Reasonable Prices

DIGNAM & WALSH 356 Asylum Street

Telephone Charter 5121 HARTFORD 1 CONN.

Page 198: 1913_complete

****************************** * * * * * * ~ ROBERT PORTEUS ~ * * ~ Mill Work and General :

: eontractor • • : * * * * * * : 13 Forest Street, Hartford, eonn. :

* * * * ****************************** FOR MANY YEARS OUR

COAL has given life and comfort to the halls of old Trinity and its splendid Fraternity Houses-

WE HANDLE THE FINEST GRADES OF COAL PRODUCED

GEO. W. NEWTON & SON

OFFICE: 15 PEARL STREET

Richard Birch & Co.

Plumbing and Heating

G • 21 Church Street Telephone connection

Page 199: 1913_complete

P I• ' High Class Vaudeville The Best Attractions 0 l S Two Performances Daily

I I

,, )'y ' / II ~/ ~ '\,/ __.-'

11 uy 1!loa r ll iJilb r ti ng

COMPLIMENTS OF ".,..:~~:a:a:~~.,.:~=-:a:~~:~ ··"'·······- ...... _._,."

The Wooster Billiard Parlor ~!U!U!~~!~ 104 Asylum Street, Hartford, Conn. ~!~~!~~!9!~

Page 200: 1913_complete

The Berkeley Divinity School c:/WIDDLETOWNJ CONN.

F OU. DED in 1854, in continuation of a Theological department at Trinity College by- Bishop J ohn Williams. It offers to students of Theology full instruction in the stud ies required of Candida tes for Orders, with various courses of Lec­

tures and advanced work in the several departments. The degree of Bachelor of Divinity is conferred on an:- graduate who atta ins a

high standard in examinations, shows a schola rl y acquaintance with Greek and Latin, and presents a satisfactory thesis .

The fifty-eighth Ordination will be held on the 5th of June, and the fifty-ninth year wi ll open on the 7th of Sept., 1912.

Canaiaaies for a.amission should make application for rooms and (if necessary ) for scholarships, early. Aaaress all communications to the Dtan.

Compliments of

The}. H. Grozier Co.

Sa11nu <11nutrartnr11

125 Warrenton cA<venue

HARTFORD, CONNECTICUT

The Place to Take Your Pictures

(lle

Picture Frame Shop

71 ASYLUM STREET Room 1- Up One Flight

Frames of all kinds made to order

The Best Work

PRICES RIGHT

C. E. JACQUITH Proprietor

s T

Page 201: 1913_complete

HAITHWAITE "Yes, this is Mr. Haithwaite * * Who? * * Oh, is that you,

Gertrude? * * Yes * * vVhy, what time shall I get there? * * No, make it earlier than that * * Oh, yes, please do! * * Why, you know I haven't seen you for nearly a whole day * * ow you're trying to show me a good time * * Bring another fellow? * * Is your friend pretty? * * Surely I'll bring- * * What, you don't like him? * * Well,- * * All right, I 'll see you at half past seven * * Goodbye.

BENTLEY Our language shark. He has been in French for three years­

even after Prof. Gill made t hat remark, "Can I get something from nothing? Can I get an idea out of my head?" But R aymond was undismayed. He wears a haircut that is unique, almost a queue. It is hard at present to tell whether his genius is musical or literary .

HATHAWAY A new arrival, direct from D artmouth, via Williams . An athlete

of limitless ability, now shining on the diamond. Can be seen any day between four and six on this stage. The audience will kindly applaud . For further record see page 2 00 of this volume, or any other copy of the book. Cheer up, Walter, we hope for the best.

COMPLIME/'IITS 01"

"QUALITY CORNER"

WltERE GOOD STYLES ltv MEN'S

OUTFITTIIVGS ABOUND

TNE

STACKPOLE· MOORE­TRYON COMPANY

ASYLUM, AT TRUMBULL ST.

ltARTFORD, COIVIV.

193

GOOD PRINTING AT

CONSIDERATE COST

MONOTYPE COMPOSITION FOR THE TRADE

284 Asylum Street

HARTFORD, CONN.

Page 202: 1913_complete

&D~~DD~~~D~~D~~&aaB&~~-~~~~-

111 C. G. Bostwick I I Successor to Beseman and Bostwick m m MANUFACTURER OF gj mJ Architectural Sheet Metal Work of Every Description D I Cornices, Skylights, Ventilators, Metal Fire Proof Windows I ~ Sheet Brass and Copper Works ~

m ~rr m ~ ~ m ~ GRAVEL ROOFING 10 Hoadley Place I ml SLAG Hartford, Conn. I 1£1 TIN 1M

m COPPER Telephone, Charter 3249 I ~~~!~~!~aaa~a~aaa~••~aaaaaaaaa~m

N. B. BuLL C. S. Bu LL

N. B. BULL & SON

Dealers in

Hot Air and

Hot Water Heaters

Winthrop Ranges, Plumbing and

Ventilating a Specialty, Tinware

and House Furni shing Goods.

345 Asylum Street

C. R. R. Nickse R. H . Nickse

MADISON GROCERY NICKSE BROS., P rop's

Established I 8 54 Telephone j 950 Broad St. Hartford, Conn.

194

r

T

R. Cl

Page 203: 1913_complete

MORAN Hartford's representative for Kuppenheimer' s

Young Men's Clothes

869 Main Street

Do You Expect to Travel This Year? THE HARTFORD TRUST COMPANY,

RALPH W. CUTLER. President

CHAS. M. JOSLYN, Voce-President

Carry your money safely by using American Express Com p a n y ' s Travelers' Cheques or Letters of C r e d it. You can cash them anywhere.

Corner of Main Street and Central Row

FRANK C. SUMNER, Treasurer

HENRY H. PEASE, Secretary

195

Page 204: 1913_complete

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~ ~ ~ Plain Painting Paper Hanging ~ ~ ~ I c. H. PIETSCH ®. SON I = Fresco Painters I ~ ~ = Interior and Exterior Painting of All Kinds = = METAL AND CANVAS CEILINGS ~ ~ ~ ~ Office, 1148 Main Street Shop, 1146-1154 Main Street ~ ~ Telephone ~

I HARTFORD, CONN. ~ ~ ~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~ ~ ~ HERBERT RANDALL HARRY G. BLACKMORE ~

~ ~ I RANDALL & BLACKMORE = I HIGH-CLASS PORTRAITURE II ~ ~ ~ 1 1 Pratt Street Hartford, Connecticut ~ ~ ~ ~ Official Photographers to the 1912 Ivy = ~ ~ ~ Delamater, Akers, Bundy-Newell, Stuart, Lucas and Lloyd Negatives owned ~ = by this Studio. We make a specialty of copying Daguerreotypes and Paintings ~

~ PLEASE MAKE APPOINTMENTS TELEPHONE ~ ~ ~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Page 205: 1913_complete

Patronize Our Advertisers

?

i!jarrnsn

MAX LATER DEALER. IN

New and Second-Hand Clothing 35 FRONT STREET, HARTFOR.D, CONN~

Paying highest cash prices for whatever cast-off clothing you may have to dispose of. Drop me a postal g iving you r add ress and I will call on you

197

Page 206: 1913_complete

C&l.rr (!Hub 1!tr4.rarsal Whitehead stands by the piano in graceful pose. He calls the

roll with much solemnity. Evison is also present. " Jack" proposes to start the rehearsal. "Evy" takes exception. They finally agree to start. Jack tries to hit "G," but gets "A" flat. Evy again takes exception; so does t he rest of the Club, anywhere from "D" to "C." They sing ensemble "Cuba nola Glide" and "Good Morning, Carrie"; Jack calls it good harmony . Evy takes exception. They then hum three of Beethoven's Sonatas. A telephone call from Short, asking permission to join the Club, breaks in on the dulcet melody. Jack is in favor of it; but Evy, thank goodness, takes exception. The plans for a concert at the Manhattan Opera House are discussed. Jack pro and Evy con. They finally decline, gracefully, but Evy has to take exception again, so Jack takes the honor. Jack now proudly announces that he is official barker for the "Misfit Clothing Co." Evy takes exception and the rehearsal breaks up.

:o;.rarll tn t4.r (!J.lass 1Rnnm PROFESSOR KLEE:\'E (calling roll)-Ward! WARD-Here! PROFESSOR K.- Wessels! W ESSELs- Hello!

PROFESSOR GETTELL- Primitive men were governed in all their actions by custom. ow, men, why wou ld they, for instance, not ride bicycles on the sidewalk?

BLEECKER-Because they didn't have bicycles!

PROFESSOR GETTELL- The Portuguese in sailing along the coast of Africa found a place where the vegetation was green and the climate cool. What did they call it?

BARNETT-Chili!

PROFESSOR BRENTON- On the Eve of Saint Agnes how did the young knight get past the old serving-woman into his lady's bower?

MARSDEN (in blissful ignorance of the lesson)-Slipped her some money!

PROFESSOR BARRET-Newton, will you go on with the next selection?

EWTON- Unprepared, sir!

Page 207: 1913_complete
Page 208: 1913_complete
Page 209: 1913_complete
Page 210: 1913_complete

Date Due

AU, Tf\ r I.- TAKI=N ~~- .

IRR.A-RV p;Qt~r.i -=:

-

I ---

,.LIMO t:QUirWt:"T au•:-.u Cat. No. 1090A

Page 211: 1913_complete

NOT TO BE TAKEN FROM LIBRARY

Trillity Ivy

Page 212: 1913_complete