1920
-
Upload
anne-millar -
Category
Documents
-
view
92 -
download
13
Transcript of 1920
eKGENEALOGY971.302T63ut1920
(^OBOBtlOIieCDJSlJS^r THE YEAR BOOK of THE GRADUATES
OF THE UNIVERSITY OF TORONTO
PublisKed by <^e Students Administrative Council
Applied Science
I
St. Michael's
'.University ColDentistry)
VOLUME XXIi.
Allen County Public bbraty
900 Webster Strest
PO Box 2270^^ ^,,,
FortW^y-:'" -- -
Hart House, University of Toronto
To the Members of the Graduating. Class :
'hose who leave the University of Toronto at the close of the
current acaciemic year will face a world which is laboriously
anci painfully adjusting itself to the terrible confusion into
which it was thrown by the practically universal war. In the
past, wars have been more or less local. The recent war left noportion of the earth untouched, but undoubtedly there was a magnificent dis-
play of self-sacrifice much of which is imperishable in its results. We assumedtoo easily that a new spirit would be created by the war with permanent effects
for good in the life of the world. We find, however, that evil also has beenlet loose. Parts of Europe are in a condition of indescribable suffering;
hatred is ablaze. The nations seem to be each so aggressive on its own behalf
that statesmen are warning the world that the situation cannot be remediedunless they cease to live to themselves alone and work for the common good.
What is true of reconstruction in the larger international field is true also in
domestic affairs. Unfortunately at home men and women have forgotten
that there was suffering in the past, and they ignore the present, going to
shameless excesses. If wantonness continues to run riot, sections of the people
will be goaded into fury. What can graduates of the University do for recon-
struction ? The primary essential is that they should adopt for themselves
the principles laid down by the European statesmen for the nations, not to
live solitary and apart but to devote themselves to the common good. Oursocial troubles will not be solved finally by legislation. Legislation must bedirected and organized by wise, broad-minded and sympathetic men andwomen. What we most need for reconstruction is a widespread, intelligent
and kindly interest in others. If this spirit can spread over the country the
result will be as when a spring-wind sweeps over the dark ground of winter
:
the dull and soggy earth would be clad with verdure and flowers begin to smile.
If the academic person is to be successful in reconstruction he cannot
approach the world with his pet theories and nostrums. He must havelearned first to observe the facts faithfully. Moreover, the world does not
believe too much in academic people. It is suspicious of "high-brows"—butit is never long suspicious of kindly wisdom. Now wisdom is acquired slowly. It is the fruit of experience, yet experience often doesnot bring it. But surely the university training has given suggestions as to the age-long methods by which wisdom comes. One functionof education is to produce the understanding mind, and wisdom follows on understanding.
Those who hold an academic degree should have learned something of the necessity of weighing the facts before coming to a judgment,realising that there are two sides to a question, and should have some understanding of the obligation that rests upon members of societywho have been benefited at the public expense to fulfil their duty in part by giving self-sacrificing service for the good of the community.If these principles and convictions take hold upon our graduates, they will soon become beneficent agents in Human Reconstruction.
My best wishes go with the graduating years for their highest and most enduring success.
/i. -V' /TLAjLin^jL-^
Valedictory
WOOLF COHEN
Years have passed since we dreamt of all that the University
might mean to us. Now, at our leave-taking-, we may attempt to
compare our dreams with their realization. But only in the future
sliall we lie able, witli proper perspective, to I'i'alizo and measure
thr iiinral and tangibh^ benefits of our scholastic life.
"We dreamt of whole-hearted intimates and generous emulation
in lecture-room and playing-field and debating-ehamber. Some of
these frieuds-in-reality leave now with us. Otiiers left but did
not return. Their memory, however, shall remain to us imperish-
alile. We dreamt, too, of high intellectual endeavour, and of pur-
suing truth for its own sake. Our reward has been ample only
in those rare and beautiful moments when we have felt the thrill
of mastering some difSculty. We dreamt, also, of being saturated
with the spirit of free inquiry and of being guided throughout
life by the lofty traditions and ideals of our University. Alma
Mater I the predecessors of class "20 have evidenced too much worth
for us to lack such guidance.
Our dreams and our education wovdd be fnt
thev not directed toward the great works tlia face us to-dav.
S.M'ictv. ilic nation, and the world, are confronti'd with formidable
]ii-(ilih'iiis and epoch-making changes. It is our pi-ivilcLrc and duty
to labour in their solution and read.iustment.
No thoughtful student can contemplate the trciiiendnns sacri-
fices, spiritual and material, of the past five years, without examin-
ing anew the international bond which brought them about. Nor
can she or he fail to be impressed with the diver.sity of language,
religion and culture of our country without asking some heart-
searching questions on Canadian nationality viewed as an internal
problem. Finally, and not least important, the underl.ving strife
in the economic spliere. regarded as promise by .some and as menace
liy others, lirings inevitably infinite reactions in the community
whose welfare sliould be our first concern as coming citizens.
Can the efl'orts of this citizen.ship. of which we are a part,
issue in a more merciful and still loftier standard of international
ethics? Will tliere be a broader and more tolerant outlook on
national affairs ? Is there to prevail a finer and more delicate .social
svmpathv ?
Torontonensis, 1920
,tli a HiiiUhr. Trll h,i„ I. tnn. lutv< I;,
nl- thr lllrliili.Ts of tlir .JT;1. i U^l t 1 1 1- rl.lss ,ls n Mnl'llll- ]H.n
. arlin.v.inrnl. of ihr \r.,,'s 1,, !„. ,1^ A ivninidrr of tl
s nf til,. \,N,,>. lli;it h;ivr iHTIi. W.llnil it. li;l-- 111 IMrtlll'
,l,v aiMl slurv IS Ilir histnr\ Ml' Class 'lid. Ui.di.rlyiii- ill;
. iiiin-wuvririii its stni.-tmv, slinuiiig- in bold relief at ..i
liddeii li\- iiiaii\- \vofds at aiKithef. there appears snniewlii
spii-il that a.Miiatrd tlir iiu'iiihri-s of 2Tn. Too soon tl
iial -railiiatrs \ull |.aft frum tlirif Alma Mat.-i- l.v inai
fied routes: In,, s,„„i tli.' t1,.,.t iipj' vafs will s,tv,. f,, ,lit
iiiories that .-ai'li sh.all li.ihl iii,,st ih^af. I'.iil r,,f all lli,'-
main <,in' link that iiinst s,t\v as th,' li,,ii,l li,.Hv,vn tl
lav and th,, T,,-i.i,,iT,,u-- this, tl,,. tw,.nlv-s,.,.,,n,l v,,liini,. ,
tl,,. T,>i;,,\ToM,
to thl-lll ln|. tl,,.
v<.nr lH„,k s,, «,
Miss V,.fa ('f,,s
of A] ..,1 S,.,
,iny \\,i|.k \\l],.f,. th,. name of one person is
~s,„-jat,-,l with th,. iif,"ltietiDn, there is a veryI,' nun, Is ,,r th,. ma jnfitv to sive more than
to that III, livi, Inai. The Editor de.Miis it
tli,.f,.r,,iv. that th,. lal„,iifs ,,r th,. ni,.iiilH.fs ,,f
iaf,l slh.tihl 1„. a|,|if,M-iat,.,l liv th,. -Tailuati's
k,. this ,,|,|„,rtniiitv ,,r ,.xpivssiii,j his thanks
• 11,1 f.iithfi
A s|„.,.|al
.Mr. .M. II. Mit,.h,
paiv.l l,y .Mr. .\1 it idii.ll.
ihI iss r Tiiia.x-
Th,. uivat task uhi,-li
,-liafa,.t,.f ai.,1 ahilitv
,lnal t,, iiiak,. th,' in'sttih.n- sii,.li liiM's as Hill ,.|ial,|,. th
I.,issil,|,. ,.,,iitfil,iiti,,ii t,, th,. w,,rk ,,f r,.l,nil,liiiu- th,. s,„.ial sti-m-tiiiv.
Th,. hcst IS none too -,iod, and thoii-h this may s,,iin,l Ifit,-. it is.
neverthele.ss, true. The tasks undertaken, th,. lal„,iir ,.\|H.n,l,.d.
the works accomplished, mu.st form a positiv it tilml mii t,, th,'
foundation of a .stable order. Our ener^i,.s must 1„. s,, i„.iit. .,ur
a.-hiev,.iii..nts must be s,, hib,.lled. tliat those \\ ho follow mav pitherins,,i,ati,,n ff,,!,, ,,iir- ..N.u,i|,l,. ami
(»n li,.|ialf ,,f the ToRO.KTONENSiS Board, the Editor sulimits to
th,. •jia,liiat,.s this twenty-second volume of Toroxtoxk.nsis. erav-
iin;' th,' usual indulgence for those minor errors which, howeverL;f,.at till' i-aie lie to avoid them, .seem bound to occur. The labourexpi'mlrd has lii-i'ii gfrtif. but the pleasure in achievement sharedby all im'inlii'fs of the Hoard has been ample compensation. It is
EDITOR.
^.11
REAR ROW
TOROXTOM
M. H. Mitchell, S.P.S.; D.
St. Jlichs.
SECOND ROW (left to right) :-E.Miss C. D. E. Cronin. LorctJoseph's: B. D. Armstrong.
FRONT ROW (left to right) :-MissManager; F. C. Hastings. EMiss V. Crossley, St. Hilda's
ABSENT:—J. B. Ryan, St. Michs.:
; E. L. Paterson. S.P.S.; G. E. StanIelsman, SP.S.; Miss L. Bounsall. FW. Haynes. Dentistry: C. H. Avery
F. G. O'Heir,[. R. Coatswi
Ridley, V.C; D. M.
n-Chief: H, J. Strong. U.C; Mis;
Robinson, B.A., WyclifTe College,
V.C: C. C. Gr:
Convocation Hall
To the Graduating Class of University College
PRINCIPAL HUTTON
rlns
(.1 lliift Ilniis,.. ,1. a Stihlmt riiiMii.
x 1^' " vi,„.„i1h-i-. ,,i,i M.is, in,i
uasiuill. ,iih1 ;>Urv It thr Stu.l.MlT-- Tiii
til.' uM KrM.l.-l.rr «lli ,l|.|Hltr tl lln
Univrl'Slty uf Tn|-,,l,tn ^11,1 111 tllr illt
means of the iiiiiiiiticnir,. ,,f tlir .Mass,,
hv Ihriu ,.f Hart llutts,..
Thr Oxlni-,! aial Cainl.l-hl'jv -I-iiiu
thr Civat Wi
tllr rlass of l:
sllllirs thr (Ixfor.l
ail. I utli.T r.Hiii.v a
«ill liaw iiuth
... it \,r tlial
Ilir attrartini)
Aill nut scr til.' tinal andHart linns,, in the l.ell
\v,.r ali,l .hiiiiis tn 1h. aililr,! m ninimrv uf lli.. students whoin^ihl aii,l III., stihlnit. win. tVU in tlir Crrat War. lint rvni so
will liavr srni a l.,.ttrr v,.ai- tnr stiidnits tliaii aiiv rlass since
,. -rrai Nvar wlifii riiiv,.rsitv Cnllr-,.. ,„ tllr iiniiii laiihlin- as
is nft,.,, rallr,!. »as lirM riv,.l,.,l.
PRINCIPAL HUTTON
I'lil and siis(.|.|itiliility : Imt im student, still less any\- lit' stiidnits. r 111 hr wiinlly niiallVi'ted by, uueonsoious..rrnt tn, iiiitirnvi'inents so inaiiifest and SO large in the
GRACE ADAMS.
thoughtFelt for Grace at Varsity.Four long years from Fall
What her future ?-Who can guess?
ANAH M. BALDWIN.
.Myself when young did eagerly frequent
Matriculated from Bishop Strachan School Lecture and group, and heard great argun 1916 with Governor-General's medal for ... pj , Voltaire but evermoregeneral Proficiency. Edward Blake Scholar- ;} , 1 .i,
^ "'^"""^ ""' <:Xer'!ior=
,hip in Modern Languages 1917. George ^'"?^°"' ''-'' "'''""f, "^l"'
" '" \ "'."
)rown Scholarship 1918, Vice-President Angli- Aid 'I'd ""h Ptofs the seed of wi;
PETER M. BALLANTYNE.
Bal. came to us from Chatham to enter '19
, & B. Became vice-president in his secondat rugby- --\fter
^M^'^^iGERTRUDE A. BEASLEY. JOHN K. BELL. GEORGE S. BERE. ERNEST C. BOGART.
Quiet, placid, and contented.London, Ont..
amloops" E^-"^ ="'^'"' °'^°'^''
Collegiate prepared him foi
London youthfu
offered the least and at
ities. Frequently whence-
gr.v.nvl i<^ C-Uim- with a
ngaged as director of
rural school. Then he
e year as a fresh Soph,
year joined the O.T.C..
MARY R. BREBNER. SEUBEN H. BRESLIN. HAROLD A. C. BREULS. JESSIE B. BRODIE.
"KccLlctrjcs to trtcmis. and h^z'c^lli brLiitty. Having passed through Pickering College
Born Holland Landing, July 8, 1894. Hal vL''rsi^y"'"H"e' Sf jomeT'^n^eTterp^IIing*' ^market High School. • • ' -
lyed rugby with Junior
O. S. Co. Mulock Cup iniVrcst in all college affairs by working onirsity IIL's, 1919. Saw numerous committees, being especially inter-
O T.C . and in France ested in the work of the Y. W. Large capa-combined with infinit
lake her a forceful personality whereve
CLARENCE E. CALE. JEAN A. CARSWELL. VIVIEN E. CHALMERS. JEAN CHRISTIE.
Collided with earth Sept. 29, 1894. at Toronto,
Educated Jarvis C. L Attended U. of T.
'12-'15. Enlisted Varsity Battery; travelled
on the Continent '16-'19. Species HomoMathematics; variety Bernardus Shavicus,
Author of "Epsilon*' and other poems. Arts
Di;i,ie/.v lull and most ilk-incly fair."
n. a daughter of the Manse, was bornirberry, Man. She moved to Ontario in
fouth and matriculated at Seaforth Col-
nd also Ready for dancing.' Hamiltoi
JSSM.
UNIVERSITY COLLEGE
ET'
EDMUND
If iMcV'ni
INES. MARY I. J. FORD.
.at Edmund ma V p uir \ears ago Inez came meeklythe public Mat j^ors afttr spending some time at O
H's'^eafTi^karn H'S'i '!=l'o<'l =nd Parkdale Collegiate Insti-
ud the "order of tute She has since worked her way through
^'^^nd'Ph^r'^ h"^the misteries of Household Science and is
he tame < f Fara ""^^^ prepared to start housekeeping on "06
HELEN R. FRASER.
h-.clincd to work, bn
GEORGE A. L. GIBSON.
"Formed oti lite good old f'latt,
History essays. The war spoiled hi*
dream of making the Rugby team and ol
graduating with his own class. It has al^'i
years wading knee-deep in Labs, of House-hold Science, then sought refuge in General.In the meantime she has kept up her pro-ficiency as a disciple of terpsichore and—in
are of Si
nte on \uKust 19, 1899. Sam;d that VVingham was too small for himhe came to Toronto. He matriculatedParkdale C. L in 1916
finishing touch to her already
cation acquired in Toronto,
U. C. in the autumn of 1916
d still answers the roll call of '3). She wa
In '19 up 115-pound boxing tive in 1917-18, and Vic. He left colleg.
red the Class of 1T7 at
to the Class of 2T0 U. C.
Beta Thcla Ti Fratirnity.
UNIVERSITY COLLEGE
berside C. I. he became a disciple of Masecond year, in 1917. He served the Kii
the Tank Corps from 1918: returned to
tures and Canadian girls, in time to grat
Western I ni%t'Mtv Vh.laisliip
:ar Honour \I ,th, ni.tu- On riti
erseas cnttitd M ni IT it \ .'.
JEAN HAMILTON
UNIVERSITY COLLEGE
WILFRED J. IRWIN. CLARE A. JONES.
c.nnse. I will cijclmil
MARGARET C. KELLAM.
SIHELEN C. KIRKWOOD.
'H^
FreJ favoured P. and B., 1T9, wi.h HonoMv^,^^^__
.__ ,.^,^,.^ ^^^^^^ ,, ^^^^^ ^^^^..Matriculation from Markham High School,
^^^j^, ^ju^ation at Columhian College,He now graduates from Third Year, 2T1, by ing as a neophyte at Toronto in fc
virtue of two years' service as Flight-Lieu- After two years of burning
tenant, i;,X,A.S.. where he was recommended scholastic activites for thos
for the D..S.C, Be played Mulock Cup Final ^°^^'''l"gf"t'hmigh he tlcw^
Margaret came from Xiagara
Moderns, U. C, 'ai. In her so;
nlus, he left i,e,- sane and legal mind found i
' '!'=. F'>-i"?S ,ive diversion from the serio
A
EDITH M- LAMBERT.
ROBERT D. MACAULAY
papers, Xovcmlier 9tli. 1S56. A Dawsun City Hails fromIjublicatio.i announced his arrival there IMJ.' Science 1T9. \
Varsity has borne evidence of his popularity, pipes and veespecially among the ladies. He deservessuccess at Osgoode, Let no editor blur his To businename. Class Executive '16, Class President ti,„ „.,„•IS. Lit Executive 'lO. Arts Dance Committee „ ^Z•1S-'19. He is a member of Beta Theta Pi But college
Fraternity. Where yot
F
ROBERT A.
riic Ir.iWt
Stratford
DOROTHY McLAGAN.
Margaret Eaton, Haverg
J 'Varsity, where she has
ds and a Class Executive
r. May her lovable qualit
1
W_ UNIVER SITY COLLEGE
MOSES S. MURAO.
HELEN M.
mEDGAR S. ROBINSON. MELVILLE F.
Northern llicliigan in %. Matric. at Cal- r-illegiate. Came to University in 1916.
at University of Albcrla. Capt.'u.C. Basket- riroiind the halls. Enlisted in fniversil'yball Team in 'IS. Pres.. Y., Cnairraan. O.T.C. in 1918, Member of his second andMock Parliament Committee, and Musical fourth year ENCcutive. and Tennis Execu-Director of Lit. in '19. Gentleman, a man tivc. .Second University Colours for Ten-
JEAN S. ROSS.
i^ "^ IVERSITY COLLEGE
im H mBERTRAM W. SHARPE. ERROL O. PHYLLIS SILK.
ilu- has wit aiiil song and
MK A. SILVERMAN.and laughter let old
When ez'erything goes dead ^'rong.
Saw tlie liglit of day. April 27, 18%, at^^^^ ^^^^ ^1^^ arrival of our suburban :
reterborougb. Out. Lived in Durham Co. ber. Began bis socialling scholarship to Europe 1
: versed in Parisian dietetit
Coll. Inst., 1915,
With his
Errol.'
"Frankic" first struck Earth plane. 1897-
Phyl graduated from Shelbourne into St. Entered Kenora Public and High Schools.
Margaret's, thence into Varsity. She burned jiatric, 1915. His illustrious academic ca-
tbe midnight oil in Queen's Hall for two ^^„ includes such incidentals as 2nd year
years, and then took to city li.e. A little p^. Hockey .i^rts .Tenninp Cup. Work on
of Gin- LV.bridge las niuci cann or renoun -.r
^^^^ ^^^ Jarvis Street Collegiate for tl
made his first natal cry on -May . , r t- <- i u.
more attractive offerings of I. -C. and HousiSolving the 'trie in matriculation.
^^^^ ^ Science in general, and the Y.W.C.M. & P. Constant as
|,, particular. Such special training as si\ - Vraduate"in '"Pole^
he entered VIt. President. U.C. the R in PV = Rt, he saw it through. He \,^^ ived fits ably
den's registrar gleefully added another
e village population in 1895- The red
1 house surrendered him to Harbord.
gave him to Varsity in 1913. The war"Stinie" enrolled with Mars, but
y "sailed the briny deen" with the".R. .X member of the Chi Delta Psi
UNIVERSITY COLLEGE
1916. Political Science. Result: 1919. Year biograpliies, even at others' expense thin(,s ind girling his bins at out him le Biantford Ontario in lS9b where he obVice-Pres.. Sec'y.. Hockey Club. Sporting Harold swam like a new star into tlie L'r nntnulated i to \ arsiti « ith 19 Here the ,j,„jj ,,3 ^3^,^ education at the Pul 1 c
Editor, won College Colours. Fii
of "Lit..-; Treas". .'\thletic Association, re-
a little, dances a litlle. Ambitions: Kco-
froin the infinitely distant \iulock'' (Tup'^
\ arious^^evecut'uVs"' jazr'bai'ds Schools and Collegiate Institute Desiring
Hamilton. He is heave 1 tar ivomen (supra) and h gh 1 ghts Man to acquire a higher education he came to
four years of Modern Hi'
511.
W^^II
MDORIS M. SUMMERS.
Much jiujy is ,1 ucrmcss lo llu- fiah:
oris matriculated from Riverdale Collegi-
\LMA J. F. SUTHERLAND. IDA E SUTHERLAND.
ilatenal-Graduate of Harbord Collegiate In. first saw daylight in 1S98 in Toronto.
\nother of Harbord Collegiate's illustrious stitute Sincei e, ambitious, and perse- Prep. School education at U.T.S. Enteredughters chose Household Science as a vering. Varsitv in 191=i '17-'lfi sneiit in FIvinp- andId for future fame. Interspersed her Details-Placed in Household Science. '16, ' -
' ' " ' fcnuous course with munition work, far- with munition factory, farm, and western teaching others so to do. Member fourth
UNIVERSITY COLLEGE
f- @.B ^ EVICTOR H TILLbON
M re o 1
:[ nmir II l<. o
^ttJ Dec 191
EVtLYN rUDHOPF tDWARD O TWISS. ELEANOR TWOHEY.
,','[ HL-e"ci'ci' "c'omc loo short ol m\- ,U:urcs.Vet tilled -lilli my abilities." '
^,lMatriculated from Chatham Collegiate In
rtitiitc with honours in general proficienc;
and first Carter scholarship; good standinfeach year in Jlodern Languages; diversions
<^ GEORGE B. UNDERWOOD. GARTON HERBERT UNWIN. RICHARD W. 1. URQUH^
. I soo.lly Mlow thou t
Fort Un'Appelle boasts hi
1898. Learnt the fundamt
Jaw. Originally 1T9. Urk
& B.. and distinguished hir
a fellowship. Only those «1
:s!liigc thou uic by -.ihar I <
erseas in Hous^
nate fussing Gordon applied enough odd
*^/
ROBERT BRUCE WEST MARY E. WILLI OLGA M. YOUNG.
jpped into the rnd inte
irch Uth. 18T' the class
ITS matnc Edward
;" entered Born in Toronto. Olga on reaching the
1me°K„7- f"f' '';;'?,• i" "'^ ''!' "gistered in Vnive:"fi^o
University College
History of Class 2T0
At th.' lir-iiiiiiiiu' ,,f Ortcl.n-. llUt;. ul.ni. in Fimiht tlu- I,,
f the Sdinmc Wiis heiii^' futi-ht. in CaiiiKhi tln' iiini ami wn
ho «-ere to become the "ISISO Class of I'liiversity C.llr-.' in
'niversity of Toronto," were leaning up au-aiiist Ah-. KitIh
milter. There were abont a hundred and fifty of them, and
csliiiiaii I'ves uu .squalls iil m-,
Ills, and a little later .saw 111
and lilaek greatcoats, which
idents gazed witli
cadets drilling oncts wearing black
I hull; like police-
Late every afternoon the men of this year drilled in the CO.T.C. with men of other years, on the university grounds and. in
very bad weather, in one or other of the university buildings.
Gradually, too. the men were dropping off and signing up for active
service, and all the while the women knitted at socks for the menwho had gone.
Just after the class had come back in the fall of 1917 for its
second year it read anxiously in the daily pai)ers of the terrific
battle which many of its dearest friends and closest relatives were
fighting "over there" in a sea of mud, in order to take Passchendaele.
The Sorame was bad. but this third Battle of Ypres was many times
worse and more disheartening.. That spring a class which hadseen nothing but war in its history graduated from the university.-
and the class of 1H20 considering tlic great German offensive in
- tlie class of l!t20 reduce
however, did it remain un(
Xovember the Eleventh'
an never fade'
via.
ill and political worlds the year IS
ng one; but in the history of this utlie historv of the class of 1920. it ^
,and the men ami u
time, against Mr. \'>V'
1. Their dntv is ,-|,.
r years
are onrv and
and sixty women who for the greater juirt of
l' experience of, so to say, watchiiifj the world,
of the men have done a lot more than watch
;
others wlio might have been here have died.- .,f stn.h'iits they have just watrlied and,1-. lllnst, at Ira^t nf thr lllell. Will llaVr all
has
d rl,.
I'..i-Uss; H. J. Strong. 2ntl HFROXT KOVV:- J. K. Bell. Secretary; Mis
1st Historian; J. E. Tanner, 2nd V
: ^ * M ^^ J. i s 1 JI i
*
;iVERSITV COLLEGE THIHD VKAR EXECUTIVE.
BACK RO\V:-.Miss M. J. McCtnvan, Prophetess;
J. L. McDougall, 2nd Vice-President; Mis
FRONT ROW:—Miss D. L. Tilley, Musical Dii
Cook, Lady Councillor; Miss M. Scott. U
i. Tait, Treasurer; W. J
Leonard, Poetess.
:ss; Miss L. Speers. Vic
:ian; (Insert) C. H. Besl
-President: R. V.
History of Class 2T2
M.ii:'- aihI ii|.Mh iris iiiirnM.j,
hoi, I ,,ur li.M.ls hi-li with ais,
Wnllld los,. his
and ti'utin
aVERSIT
BACK RO\V:-A. H. Vaugllan. 1st Gent. Councillor; C. E. Kite
MIDDLE ROW:-Miss L. M. Dow, 2nd Latly Councillor; I
Directress; F. K. Jasperson, 2nd Historian; F. C. Hamil;
FROXT RO\V:^Miss J. A. Wilson, Prophetess; Miss M. J. WrJnrt Vice-Pres,; Miss L. Maybee, 1st Lady Councillor.
EAR EXECUTIVE.
Hi^ory of Class 2T3
-lll,l,lrll,',l ill,. ll.illI^ ,,f tllc.s,. uIh,. r,,l' llV .VIlTv lin.l lllllsc,! WlM- MMMilMr. Th.'IV U,|s to !» Iln .lil I Iri I li; . lillt ilftrl' tllr I'efl-eslimeiltS,
fllllv nil till. piV^Will- lhl\^ :lt \\l|-slt\\ dll'lv Ur I'lv^lnrs ;|1||1,1,.,| lullnulll- ,1 silL^.iriulI, si PJ .J r^T lol I ,tllnsr |llt..|vMr,l in the tei'psi-
lir,.,|l,.ss|v nil. II- ilii. ivvrivil luills nf I '1 1 1 vrr- 1 1 v rnlli.-r. We XV. Ti- rli, ,|.,...|
1 1 ^ivi, Willi. Iivw 1., ill.' r.iniii.hi uli,'!-.. ili..y tripped the light
If U-ils nlllv \vli..|i w.. Ii..^fini t..
.St hiiir .,i^- III., t.itai ntt..ii.hiiH-.. lit r.c. iiii.i iM-i...i :i,-..,,i'.i
III
ll
...I 111.
'rii.. S.....III.I rl;iss |i;iriv \\;is |i,.|,l nt T.T.S. Daiiciiig was the
«v'i'.'iiti;,.si;.nn;;;n;i;;rfiM'v,,iH.rV..;i,-s'npn'i'i;is; '\v..'i;n,w-!!^!Iv,l''.'^;;'^s,!|v,.!''^L!"Ms!'k'''7l!..'''.t
iH.'l.lN. I',rli,i|is ili..ir s.,,|..in.|i iii Kr; iiiav ,i. •.•.., lit l'..r it.
Til.. X.'W \r,,r Ih.I.Is iiiaiiv j.,\s Ini' ili.. r|.,.slii,.s. Kaiiv in iIk-
-\- "f .V..I-... ll I. ..-11., IIS |,r,,v..,l thrillii..^- I.I ..III- y..iilliriil ..|Mii- y,.-,,. -T:; „,|| ,,,,,k,, h,.|. .[..Imi at a Inrinal .laiiee ill C'dlumbus Ilall.
s. TIlis,. uli.isaw thr iMi-st N,.af skit al .M....k I'ai-Iiaiii..|it slii.iil,! \v,. shall als., la, I, I ..iir aiiiiiial r......|.li..ii ill the due course of time,''' »"1' 11^- 'I'll'' I'lnii.iil r..siilt...l III tli.. survival .if tin- tift.'st ....iiilnri imv ..ui's,.! v..s ainvliil.. wit li t li,. tli,.light that the last mav1 111- fn-li .•x....iitiv.. IS ,.M,l..av„nii^ I„ a|.|...as.. tl X|,..,.tant „„, ,i,,,,ssanl v 1... tli,. I,.ast,
"11- "I"' V..I...I |,n,nT..ssiv..- an, Iwant t.. iiiak.' siir.. that tli.'.v Twi.t v-t liiv,. slaaihl hav.. a Ltr.al fiilii|... h..|n,... I,,.,.. W,. eaimot
"' ""' l"''-ii d...-..iv..,l, ,.,.;,]ly l„. siiiv ..r this iiiiiil u.. I. .am thr rasiilis ,,r ll xaiiiinations.
Till- Hi-st ..jass i.ai'tv was a siifpi-jsiii- su...-.-.ss. (Iwiii- t.i III.. I l..w..v..r. il' w.. pn.v.. as su,.,...ssful in i.iii- stn.li..s as w.. liave been-.. att..naaiM... .•X]i..rt,.<l thr Kast ami W.st Halls w.t.. ..n-a.jv.l in s|M,i-ts an,! in ..tli..r liran.-lH.s i.t' tli,. rnivrfsitv. wr iiiav sniiirtinie
I i.i...v..,l a fittiii'j l.a.-k-i-i.iin.l tor this m,. mural, I asi,,in Th,. I", i.r.mil I,, sav tli.,1 w.. I„.|.,iin,.,l I,, -tli,. illiistriniis yr:,'y n( lUl':;."
;e-Pres.; A. D. Gunn, President; A. C. Crys
Lady Councillor; J. V. Sorsoleil. Athletic Dire
Roll of Service, 2T3, University College
Allen. ('. E.
Balmer. II. K.
Barton. 11. (i.
Bell, J. E.
Blaokwell. L. E.
Boyle, J.
Breunand, (.'. G.
Brodie. W. M.'.rysoii. (i. (!.
'ii'dr.' E. R '
n-s.Lilr. .1. P.
'n.lniir. .1.
).iltoii, K. \V.
Davidson. S. W.Douglas. J. W.Evans. E. V.
Fawcett. W. L.
Ferguson. K. 1.
Frederick. W. D.
Gillies. A.Gilmore. L. E.
Grant, E. W.Grier, f. G. M.Gnnn, A. D.(Juthrie. D. P.
Haas. K. E.
IL.Miia. K. .1.
4/1 ^
Moraii. Mary Edith \Vi
The Women's Undergraduate Association
three in^iiii |.uri.
Tor ROWi-E. Chant, Ti
Corresponding Sec
r; M. McTaggart. jrd Veaary; H. Morson, 2nd Year Renee, Vice-President; M. Edge,
The Women's Literary Society of University College
furtlipr, that they arc .suftlricntly nit.Tcsl...l in their Liter.iry
Society to take an active part in tlic meetings. Tliat thi.s chiim waswell founded seems proven by the attendance at the meetings andbv the quality of the contributions to the propiramme.
Onrini;- th.- fhristniiis tcnii papers were read ..n -T. E. Fleckerby Ayatha Leuniinl. Waltei- I)e La .Mare hv Mai-N' N Ih'r, Brid-es
Bar Alrsoii Ewai De l:; Mi.s.s L, Miss .Mid
.Miss
d the
i-litful tati Duns
Queen's Hall
MISS LOUISE LIVINGSTONE, B.A.
Thf sriiini-s who are g-oiiifi-
niisscil. Their influence im
-,H,,1. Thr-y are thinking sa
nvrr. hut thrv will not In^etl
lid it is proba
iioiiiili one of tlie most
he iieeessity of prepar-
e pnilileiiis of alarger,
the miideni thoughts.
.•ii's 1!
ii-s has
,-s wh,-ii
MISS LIVINGSTONE
Queen's Hall, Our University College Women's Residence
UNIVERSITY COLLEGE BASKETBALL TEAM. 1919-20.
Tgaret McTaggart, Margaret Fair, Kathleen Pepler. Eleanor McKay. Margaret E.lge
-Margaret McTagg,
REAR RO\V;-MaFinlayson,
FRONT ROW:—
J
President;
ABSEXT:-Mrs. S
UXn-ERSITV COLLEG
ry Mustard, Gen. Meetings; Jennie Lane, Bible Study Con.;
Social Study Con.; Jessie Brodie, Missionary; Carol Staunt
ean Stevenson, Conference; Dorothy Loggie, Secretary; J
Marjorie Twitchell, Treasurer; Margaret Mahon, Social Con.tclver, Hon. President; Marjorie Webster, Student Volunte.
I'ROXT RO\V:-Marjruerite Gamble. Rfc. Sec: Irene
Elizabeth JIacleiinan. Cor. Sec.
>iBSE\T:-JIiss G. Wookey. Hon. Pics.; Ileiluij II
The Modem Language Club of University College
,1 thr iin'mlMTsli
rV tll.lM .vrr. ;ilHl tlirx u.
llirlv 1,,'IM- tlllvr lllrll oil
ll. lOiMjIl.h.
I thf Wuiii,'
I'l-.ifr.s,,,- Will .Hliln-.M IIm
.llML^S III,. I,;,,,,... U,.,V UIV,
Ul l-IH.W
University College Women's Dramatic Club
,i .Mrs.
il. 1^ workingC.i.iiiitli at the
HI !Ih' time has.1 1kiv(> not vet
The fact that the eluli is to lie allowed to use the
plays. Weco-operate
House tliea
to
\ear than formerly
good east for hoth
1 for consenting to
ortliv of tlic Hart
University College Literary and Scientific Society
ll.'t.'lv Ml-|lrll,lr,l. fur tile rx.vllrnt -no,! r.-is,,n ih.ll tllrrr «vlv thrll' ilt ll Irt I.-, t ll''ll- Ir.ulnuir
f,nv 111. -11 1,-rt ill tllr rnlli-v. rMHTKlllv ill tllr lipiHM' Wars. Til.' fnnil,., 1 , ,1 ir n I' t 1„ nrimil I'V fl
M-ssinii tlh- MH-ii'fy lia-, ivmiiiiimI its work in
It sutlrrs fniiii thr far! iliat tVw uf the stu-
ill thr att.'iula
l.rsf h lias l„vM ail iiiisiirpass,.,! srhiml nf ilrliatiii.j. in wliicli iiirii'^ vlirsii-a nl rni
j-rs a. Ms iiMirh tn ilic iMfrirsl uf the meot-
uliu uriv t.i l....-niii,. Iradcrs in I 'a rl la 1 iiri 1 1 , at tlir l,ar. nr m thr "i^^- Tiicy liav aliva.Iy lia.l niir ,„• nvn inloniial tallcs on literary
rliuivl,. tirsi ,.xpen.-nre,l the ma-i.-al elVeet ever iiien's iiinals nf an siil,|,.,-ls hy iiinnhers ,,f ,he slaft. an.l th,-y are i.hinnin- to invite
oi-,I,tI.n ,,res,.ntatinii of i.lras. or. in Ihr ro,nl,at of wits, ilraiik in-oiuinrnt mm ii, |,iil,lir lifa lo takr part in thrir ,iel.ates—after
lion" of .vi'n -reater .ortain''.- in a ,-oMr-,. u'hosr'
Li'Miairrnt thr s,,ri,.|v has rrsii, I its work in a proinisiiin. uav. ami hv iiiav
intinri s haw alwaxs lirrn liiiiito.l hv thr fiiii.hiiiimi ,i| hirk of h.ok forward to its future re,-or.l hoiiii; at h'ast eipial to that whie'h
resiihaitial aeeoinmoiiatioii. It lias serve,! as a comiiiou luretim: h;:s already eiideareil it to so many hundreds of graduates.
FRONT RO\V:-R. D. Macauley
Stephens, Treasurer; H. J. .lolinston. 2n(l Year
F. K. Jasperson, 2nd Year Rep.; T. A. Stone. Is
rator; M. L. Stokes, Vice-P esident; Prof. M. \Y.
Mock Parliament
tllrlvlnlv a littlr l.rttr|- tlKllI llsl
BACK ROW (left to right) :-RMIDDLE RO\V:-M. L. Stokes.
FROXT RO\V:-H. J. F. Stewas E, S. rampbell, J
DIVERSITY COLLEGE, Y. M. C, A, KXECUTIVE. 19ly-.
Social Service Department
^
To the Graduating Class of Victoria College
CHANCELLOR BOWLES
,lv.,iir,. u-aits tn-,l,.y. not mi a tVv
.-.. iiMMT.it, ,] i^ff.irt ..r til,' iiKiiiy, wild
:v,l t,, ili-inv h.avilv ,,ii ih,' .-,,111111,
IKlliti,'s. Iiut
This is the
ll:ls Immmi th,'
«-,nil,l s,viii iiiii„,ssil,l,- f,,r Diiy stu.l.-iit t,,,j,,,;;l fr,,iii (Ml,
with his tl|,.U-llts ,,11 his ,,«11 l.,'l-s,,luil rinhts, lil„'l-tl,,s :ll„l
^-^c
:hancellor bowles
Victoria College
IN MEMORIAM
Geo.L.R.Parrish
Class 2To I
Victoria College
ROBERT GORDON AGNEW.
B ri -Vpt 1898
D\eil—l_url\ BrownK G « rried teachers at Humber
L I and later Moderns Profs, in 1T9.1 ibed kn \\ 1 dge spasmodically before chamg to Dents Enlisted C.F.A. Backgraduate with 'O Master of Fussology.
ELMO LINFIELD ASHBOURNE.no gu
hfe Me
Bom in Twillingate. Newfoundland, 1897.
Four years at The Jlethodist College. St. Feb.,
^1 Johns. Entered ITS but answered the call legiat
g- of Empire in July, 1917. A skipper in the with the A.E.F. re
Navy, he sailed the Atlantic and Pacific, with 2T0, M. & P..
patrolling our coasts. A faithful worker, were nucleii for his
DALLAS WETMORE BATES.He who loves ,n,J laushs musi sure Jo
Dallas first cheered for the Hamilton '
eb., 1895. Preliminaries at Hamiltor
Joined 1T7 Vic, and after si
HARRY CLIFFORD BATES.
0„ly III
The sec
Clifford's Dundas, but graduated
ither. Originally '17. Delves i
of Physic:
Class Executii
'^nM
ALICE M. BROWN. OLIVE BURTON. GRACE BURWASH.
came to college.
ndependence grew
he irresistible call of dear old Vic.
ught Olive to University. In HonourLisehold Science she has brought credit
in herself and college. Her many friends
h her true success when college days
of Bob CommilClass Prophet.
cacocthcs scrib ambitions
VICTORIA COLLEGE
HELEN R. COATSWORTH. ROBERT BREMNER CUMMING.
D<.-lving into dietf
Tlirough college
Happy" Wnd. 'and
At Sussex by the Sea. Eng-. Aug. 10, 1S90. J.ick car
he became a citizen of this world. Began town. Wooeducation and matric. at Albert College, ''""S-
.^^'
Belleville. Entered Victoria. 'U. Returned,,|°^°^J"^J5'*'
•19. after break of 4 years' active service.|^^^„ ^^ ^
After grad. will take theology—later, the tennis and
dstock. to take a course of some- changed Glasgow. Scotland, for Chatham,• has been accused of taking Ontario. Entered Vic, 1913. Enlisted, 1916.
Commerce and Finance. He has Staff. London. .Actively responsible for
jtstanding athlete particularly in "I^eave Department.'" of grateful memory,basketball, and above all a good Musical, energetic, and possessing executive
ability R..b uill make good.
.B El '«- E M ILOUIS WILLIAM DIPPELL. MARJORIE DOUGALL. EDNA V. EASTCOTT. MARION JEAN KATHLEEN EDGINGTON.
In 1912 the quiet humor and geiiiai friend-
iness of Louis first appeared at Varsity.
ie applied himself readily to learning andship. Entering Vi
good-sports-Junior year.
illbrook. Ont.-Enterine with class nir
1 Edna completed three years in Chei
y and Mineralogy, winning the Danson Scholarship. She spent a year
iJ quicKlv maue " ~:
er cheerful per- ^lll tJ^H.
nd later O.A.C. G-J
Having imbilietl all that Woodstock Col-
legiate afforded, Jean came to Victoria anenthusiastic supporter of Modern History.In spite of life being; "
MURIEL F EVANS.
Muriel uas Ion. .n Ea<;tern On
ed \iL «ith the class of 2T0Parnassus b> dint o' Greek " CI;
RUTH ST. GEORGE FELLOWS
Fr..m Englaml lo Qnlo Toronto. Ruth joii,;^
Sophomore. Her sunn
EDITH MARGARET FISHER. MYRTLE E. GARDINER.
Modern H.!,to
drdmt de^^tL
the Ham- Vica] science with the legal profession
1916 came view. President of the "Bob," MembertonV nart S'"°" Cup Champions 'IS. President oi 1took part
^|.^^^^ ^^^ ,j^,^,^^ ^j ii^^ Athletic .Stick, elm tell llim Willard has displayerl those qnalities th
It «as at \\n,d>,or that Gen
le matriculated. When she
S. ROY GREER. JOHN FREDERICK GUENTHER. FOREST HANMER.
ll,c bugle.'' Johnny came (rom Hamilton with great - ^ ' •- '
Tlie tall of 19U brought to Varsity the learning, hut has not sunk under either 1-orest liegan to tal;e .-
sincerity, unconventionality. and "J.iie de burden. Overseas with C.F.A., 1916-19: a Sept.. 1895. at Burgessvilli
vivre" of the West, typified in "ROY." term at Edinburgh University. President. Woodstock Collegiate InsI
War! Scholastic ambitions sliattcred! Four Classical Association. Scholarship has not follow in the' steps of Hoyears in khaki failed to destroy a jovial spoiled two gifts of the gods—a lambent In 1914 he entered Vic. MS. He enlisted
ifjifi^jp""','^ ;
spirit. Well earned Military Cross the last wit and an interesting past. Basks for- 1916. returning the ne.\t year, and now hopes devutcd work
RALPH WILLARD HARDY. D.C.M., M.M-Ct 11,., Jy u. Ju 1/."
Born at Oakwood. schooled at Lindsay.
,., entered Vic with illustrious 1T7; al once' 'n '''^ made permanent Class Historian. Fatheredn 1911 at the 12th Canadian Infantry Brigade Signals.
began to Aug.. 1916-Mar.. 1919. Glee Club. HistoricalReception Committee attest his
his many friends acclaim his;nt good
for
VICTORIA COLLEGE
i.1 mm^3
JMELEDA FRANCLS HORNING.
ufon jcii) impiih^s. but fi-.iy //;
Cobourg. 189S. From Taitudicd and frivolej her wa'•rns. Class Historian, and'intluisiasm for Life and a p
RICHARD B. HORWOOD.
'.Vi;„7 fcmnici alicuim"
D.ck eiilercd liie classical course from ClenalleU.T.S. with the Prince of Wales scholarship Later Le,
Holds high converse with the might) dead Wtstminthrough books rather than lectures Has ) "= ''
expressed a desire to be buried en the hand ct '"t'*^
RICHARD SANDFIELD
' Tnu (f Inn of spirit f(7i
Parsonage «elcomed Du
RE FA L. HOWARD.
Dislikes-last a Westeri
ft. yISABEL N HOWARTH.
IAGNES D. JENNER.
Tlianit Gail for tec—Im glad I was :wt bon, bcf.n
E. WILLIAM JEWITT.
^^^' of Bill's modes
•d I'llS. Redeep." In
1^1
WILLIAM VICTOR JOHNSTON.
Wirgham High School in 1'
the B. & P. course at Victi
s done honour to the c dli
ame he bears. On the "Ac
JOHN EDDINCTON KERR.
/ do l:„ow of these.
riM therefore o:ily are refuted :n
For sayi„s •wlln„s."
led till 1917 at V. T. S. Honourth. Victoria College, I91"-2n. Oversei
IT.C. Interest: Boys' Work V
VICTORIA COLLEGE
V-vjW
If
G. META MEREDITH.
'Tis good in every case, you 1;
a quick sympathy combined uil
ideas regarding domestic felicity
WALLACE HANLEY MOSS.
Tntth lTc:ails."
JOSEPH WILLIAM NOSEWORTHY BERYL EVELYN
Malahide l"'^
'Business 'f^u„,3- "' '5°'' Englis
—Dickens. feci t.ayj of ho:wur."
ewfoundland Hay. From Humberside Collegiate Beryl plung-
ed into the depths of Household Science.
i imbibed freely of si,^ „„„. emerges \yith prospects for an un-iking an occasional clouded future. Her perseverance and ever-
jnthusiast? .\Kvays readiness to help others have proven her a
\£^
' IBANNETTE PEEVER. RUTH ELIZABETH RATZ. ELTHA RAYMER. WILLIAM ORR ROBINSON.
bring her to Vic. with '20. While at Col-
lege she has had her share of popularity
and good times. OtTicial critic of "Lit." a
ts: Cultivating a voice range. Bill's star appeared over Zurich. Out...It: atoral Club!
„.|^^^^ ,,^ g^, j,,^ ^^^^^^^. ^j„,„,i„„. He
tidioisness the" hav^'e riot ter matriculated at Carlyle. Sask.: taught
lly. school for two years; entered Vic in '1.';
Ml friends by her constancy and^^^^ Blovelt Scholarship in Philosophy in
smiled then vou c^iiM -oc "'6. Bill made some ^tavinch friends at col-
VICTORIA COLLEGE
^^tp:e^'^
^^*iy fM^ii.
ELIZABETH STERLING.
.l/.u-;i i.i.i.v he made of a Scotchmancalighl young."
Elizabeth, captured by kinj fateAt the susceptible age of eight,From native lieath transplanted to c
From fi'ssel'^Hi'gh Sch?o?"a?ed she
ROBERT EDWARD STEWART. BENSON SMITH SUMMERS.
Tlu
farm at Baltiir snore Morrisburg Collegiate ne'er prepared ai
iiore. ' Ontario, 1891. Cobourg Collegiate and Al-p^jj ^^^^ creditable or welcome tribute
forth to bert College. Belleville, prepared him for..yi^ " ^vjth a wealth of music, optimis
ri .1,^'''-" ''" Enlisted in '16. Corporal in the ^^^ energy "Ben" endowed 1T7. AdveMth Battalion C.E.F. Won the Military ,„„„^^ enthusiastic, worthy fighter, he St
hurled; Medal at Canal du .N'ord. .\ genuine unsel- covets knightly deeds and honours in t
.vorld.' |i«h character, full of Irish humour. front line of human progress.
WILLIAM ARTHUR WHALEY SWITZER.
.\merican by birth, Canadian by incl
tion. Medicine and ,^rts—aye that t
sichorean too, Sec'y. Biological Club
Pres. 270 Vic. 'IS.
MARION E. THOMPSON.
l/iiiigj yc s.iy and Ihc smiles
MURIEL H. THOMPSON. ROBERT GARNER THOMPSON.
linafrected, so composed a litind,
EDITH MARIE THORNTON.
Happily to slecr from gra-.c to ga.
^^luriel bails from Georgeto Madoc, Out., June 29
ni Stirling H. S. 1910lit '17; specialized ii
Ltt scholarship. Serv
IV.-How Sunnv Ways Make Friends.
than heldEnglish and History, College
i as a leading figure in her yt
e upon the Intercollegiate Deb
,II.-Fate'.s Goldc
^^^
ADELAIDE PEARL WESTON. NORMAN WESLEY WHITMORE.
back on ••Tile Old
RACHEL ELSTRED HENRY MERVYN WRIGHT.
tolh a Chatliam pru.luU:nc C C I 101.
ered public life nn Malaln fame a-, Prev .il I L S
Victoria College
History of Class 2T0
on tiM
K:i|.|i;i rlii. I;niil„li pi, si-nia ISrt.i lui
A.jiillini. ;n-ist,„. M,,|,ii„,-i ,|,.|ta im.
ArllrrlM. irUura. a. -Ill elm rho.
XlrU.VUI. \'l,'lnri,, LITII.
!(l a-iiin fhr liiui-v halls ,,r Vu- iv.oiiii
iTt. l!ut this tiiLH. lint with th,. rhu.
lllllllllrrs sMrllril siI I I
liiniv hv 1> llir 1 lia'H. anil the »1
assiiiiir,! Its |„v-uaf hal.its ami riistuiiis. Tli.- -ilol..-
th.' ivrrpinais aiMl ..tlirr I I'a.lit aaial artivitirs riniinshr,!
InHV «r tlVlllhIr 1,'st ,,llf l.alv nf M;,V l,r f Tllrl In ll,ns
Ih'.mi tuu J.,^. Im tills xvar AiiiirslrN Hall aii.l its aiiiir
rn.w.lnl lh;,l tl;r snnnrs urr,. hahhai In snnk mhrr .Inlll Ir
havr llllssr,! lliallV nf thn InNs ;,ll,l priMh-rs nf |-,.sl,hli
Whn has lint hralM lliat sl-h nf ivllrf thai It Is lln Inlrjv
tn tirr fl-nin tlln hall. I 't 1 1. 1.' lv| 1 a -1 1 kr. at turKr n'rlnrk '
naiiii':' l^Td wniihl s'lnvlv liavr .jnin.'.l il iii a IhhIv.
have .•in-iul nir tin- iiit.M-vraf Imrkrv and haskrtl.all
ships uith iinfailiii- iviiul iritv. \Vr haw hnast.^.l six
the lil'st tallllis Irani all. I lllf II tlln I i:,skrl hall. 1111(1 nui
li.Mt .' .\s
nf nlir nirliili,.,-s tlir,,n-h th,' mirllv nf lllr nxa
thrnll-h .llllstlliallt, hilt ill thr fall Ur WrlV Jnil
rh ahnw tlir avri-a.jv an.l I'TO dal Mn,„|r
ain yrai- of -JTl iii thr «av il -hmihl vm
ir sex fnr uphnhllM- the t I ;a I 1 1 InlI a I
_''l'll sp
mil, ill thru- al.sriirr. L'TO ,li.l \wr hit uilh tni
thn -iris unlv alwaxs ulllllILl hrlpn-s ill thr iir
.1 ..Ihrr patnntir wni-k. Wr a IV IraVIM- a \'lrlnr
air ahililv tn pi-n,li I iinirs. Ami «as thnv rvrr a claiin"'
iiimI \afsit\' at wliirh mii- vrar »as imt ivpivsrnt r,l ' Oh, frivnl-
, tr.aliti.ai-hivakiii- l^Tll riii N'lrinna rv,r fnrvrt ynii .' P:vrii
prnfrs.,,,.. ,|i;iv havr h,.hl up thrll' h, ill, Is 111 h'nn-nr at thr wnfkt »as lint ,h hut ,ln lint mil- t wn I'nilrr nf Wairs Srllnl af.sl I 1 p,. nnt In lurllllnll 1 1 1 1 liir mils Irssrr ll-hts. trsllfv that \yr havr
Ills 111 alaiialaiir,. .' .\ii.l what hrltn- wax nf iisi'iir- ,|H,sr hi-aiiis
II sl,i,|\ll|r hnw In rrf thr II I , x | „ 1 1 , 1 1 1 ,,f j.,v nut nf fiair H.^.'till-
ranks and friiiuiinr lirarts Huttrrr,! at thr ^
v-arrinrs that 'JTO was ii,,w ahir Inrlaiiii. Tlir
'hr fririidshii.s and
^ ^ a
^"^^^mn^*^
/ICTORIA rOLI.EGE WOM I- SOCrETY EXECUTIVI
Secretary; Harriet De« i
\1!SE\T:-Du
ims, Pianiste; Mabel Davis. Locals. "Acta.".rding Secretary; Marion_H!ggins. Leader Govt.; Marie "'"""'"
' ' ' 0pp.; Annette Pee\Vice-President; Essa Dafoe. LciPresident; Mii
ABSENT :-Ethel Patt,
4^
VICTORIA COLLEGE WOMEX'S DRAMATIC CLUB EXECUTIVE, 1919-20.
.erson. Joan McClenaghaM. Ardeth Hull, Hattie Dewey, Kathlei-n Jeffs, Mable Day
VICTORIA WOMEN'S CHORAL CLUI
Leil to right :-D.,
President; M
Victoria College Orchestra
At the l.eoiiiniu-;- (if tlu- academic- year 19111-21), Victoria Cdlb-v
lacked just oue unit to make its number of student organizations
complete, namely, an orchestra, organized and holding regular
liractices. Accordingly, on Thursday afternoon, October 23, liy
the kind permission of Miss Addison, who unfortunately was unalile
to be present, a delightful tea was held in Annesley Hall commonroom for the purpose of interesting prospective orchestra members
and arranging a schedule for the season. The Director of the
Toronto Conservatory of Music, Dr. Vogt, who was present, spoke
a few words of encouragement, and in glowing terms introduced
Mr. Frank Blachford, prominent violinist of the Conservatory,
whose services as conductor the orchestra was fortunate in semiring.
From that time regular practices have been he
nessed the assembling of a score or thereabouts
ge students,
interest in its
ok for the sea.son
if Vi,-toria
.ml v. The
An annual concert is being given at which music-lovers will
have the opportunity of listening to a varied programme of orches-
tral music, and where it is hoped they will be able to appreciate
the c'litci-in-isc of a few farsighted .students in commencing what
undoubtedly will liccome an indispensable college institution. They
who actively participate in making a success of the Victoria Col-
lege orchestra find that it is not the least important an.l iirnfitable
diversion of the University career.
VICTORIA COLLEGE LADIES' BASKETBALL TEAM.
BACK ROVV:-J,R. Stewai
FRONT HOW:—
'20, Min. of Debates; W. J. Maines, C. T., Postma
Scott, B.A., Mm. of Interior: F. R. Kcffer, '23, Pi:
of Reconstruction; A. F. Annis, '21. Min. of Trade
Min. of War; H. S. Cobb, '21, Song Leader; N. E.
Ayearst, '21, Min. of Finance; A, B. Stevenson, B.A.
Hon. President; C. H. Dickinson, '21, Vice-Presid
Sec. of State; R. H. Rickard, B.A., Critic.
f For
To the Graduating Class of Trinity College
PROVOST MACKLEM
PROVOST MACKLEM
This FaiiK.us I.NicliiT, wli.i ;il\v;iv>
lnul< fnl- -IV, I ,vs,|lt> ,1- tlir |-..u-.,r,l
Wol'k, h.Ml ;, .|U,ni,l W,IV nf rxprrsMII-111. Mis nf til.' llllll.L Til.. V;,lll.- nf II IV;
try, \.r .l.vhiiv.l. IS .'.iiiiil t.. hiiir 11 .1.
fi-..i:s,-.,niiii,.|it;il i-,iilu,iv. All. I tli.'iv
Ihls til,.
TRINITY COLLEGE
M. AILEEN BOYD.
'Modisl, kindly, ail-accomplishcd, imsc"
attended Hill Croft School, Bobcaygeon,
fA^J
yb^
JOHN L. CHARLESWORTH. ALBERT C. CLARK
Guelph from April 4th. 1896 until'
discovered at Trinity reading February 10, 1900, the stork paid a'
' luecocious head ol year 118- ^ „ n ^ \t ,. c ^t• -~. bridge, fussing and flirta- t° Dunnv.lle. Ont. Matr.c. at St. Clem,
to InniskiUing Fusiliers. College, Toronto. Prominent in athlcregret mis- Treasurer of the Literary Society '18; Di
atic Society 'W; Editor-in-Chief of "Rev
W» J^ 3MAY CLAYTON.
"Her open eyes ticstre the
Powder Plant, Trenton, and subsequent tothe explosion there, at Drummondville. P.Q.Belonged to 1T9. and tn the Household
mj^^Mi" • '-'- -' - '"'^ wmnTm
^- i!332^
F. GORDON COOK.
A native of Toronto. Matriculated fr
University Schools to enter ClassicsTrinity with Class iT'i. Volunteered for Ov
C^LRA CKOii-i
and a kindly
Was born in Duffield, Derbyshire, and The accident happened at Rosthern, Sask.,
educated in the Old Country, entering the ^^ j^j^, 3^ jp^g Matric. at Melfort High "ot monGeneral Course in Toronto University. Has ^ , ' ^ c , . u t- . * came toplayed tennis for the college four times, and School. From Saskatchewan University to ^
been Universitv champion twice. Is Presi- Trinity University. Toronto. Assistant belongs
dent of the U.W.D.U.. Secretary of S. Hilda's Treasurer Athletic Society and Librarian of a lieuten
"Lit.." and uses her artistic gifts to good Literary Society 1919. He will continue his the Ath
DE PENCIER.
he light of day in Toronto
1 twenty-three years ago. Hefrom McGiU, Vancouver, and
ith the R.F.A. Is Secretary of
a member of the Glee Club,
TRINITY COLLEGE
W^< ? ^'^'
TRINITY COLLEGE
m^^mmmwrnmM^w^mwmmmsmimm
/
JOHN B. WEST.
Began life at Brechin. April 15. 1890. Johnnie came to \V>-cliffe from St. Cath
Entered Trinity in G. and M. class '16 from arines Collegiate, enrolling in Classics M!
Orillia Collegiate. 26th Battery, France: hos_- Transferredjiis allegiance to Tnnity in s^ec
pital, England, home, and Trinit;ollege life, football
team, running! President Science Club, Editor
"Review," Secretary "Lit.", he may look with;onfidence to the future.
:ible. He is doomed to end his daysmisty MSS.
History of Class 2T0
rirrllnl,. ,II„I tllr rlr
.11. Thr vi, w^ls
thill- lllll.lr til, It WHS iii.hI.-. Ami Inu-^nK
lllllllillli." Ihr.,ll-ll fllr ilr|.;,|-llllv nf lllr a roivillrll I i. ,1 In i Ira.
ninrr illlll.^rl-uU-. lirl.Jlts 111 ihr K A.F. It WHS ahnllt fills ,|„1C
thr liinillirl's liroill, In yrrrixr ,T|-t,llll a ] .|M'l hit 1. .1 1
s uhl,-h. whilr
liiictivr. ran liiif.lh- lir ,.all,.,| r pliiin-iitarv. Tliiis thrrr \
llalHH.ii lluuth." Ci-a/v Clark.- ('nliral Cnlralr.- -(laiTii
draliaiii." -I.azv i.owr." I'lvinat iiiv I'al In s,,ii,- -liitual linl.l.i
as lllrv lir.jall t.i Iravr Vnlllll fill' iiiaiih I. In. Ihrv slhl
thrlMsrlvrs rathrlT,! to-rllirr 111 our plarr, Alid tlh
\V. Ilill. .1.
thr I'.alh. Touai-as till
illtillUril
ftf/f
Trinity College
H. Mason. Secretarj-Trc;
^m
Father Carr
Superior of St. Michaels College
ST. MICHAEL'S COLLEGE
fmmm3Jimmm9^mmmmmfmmmsmmmmmmw>fmmhS! ,,i/&—^MM.
m IRUTH M. AGNEW.
Of Icanting lightly like a fiozver.'
In the dawn of a joyful morn Riil
saw sunrise in Montreal, and has b.T
its ray ever since. For scholarvii!;.
ranted "The First of Firsts." IK.in Music and Moderns has been sta..
Joseph's College, wliich she repn-i i
"Varsity.- "The Lilies" and "Toru.u..i
RAYMOND B. CONLOGUE
Exul!,»,t ni the deed.-'
KATHLLLiN J COSTELLO.
ird graduate. "Kath" came to L.A.C.1 first and second years she dcvelop-
year this faded away before theheaped up wealth which Economics
CHARLOTTE D. CRONIN.
Ursuline Convent. Quebec City, until 19:
winning a scholarship in Arts. She won
JOH.N J. GLAVIN.
product of North Bay, and proud of it. *''"?"5, V?"V t^V
le. and is everybody's friend. Never wor- j'
all. 1S?6: matricu- ,
om Cornwall High School '13. and has "j,
recollections of a French college.
Trudged up Clover Hill to be a respected
i'nff' graduate of 2T0. War. sport and philosophy
ent. An claimed him The
Later he attended
ollege and St. Michael's. Hisi sanguine; his physique is stroi
liat he has decided to use hi
ST. MICHAEL'S COLLEGE
LEONARD J HODGINi JOHN C. JORDAN.
ST. MICHAEL'S COLLEGE
I 7&}:
St. Michael's College
To the Graduating Class in Medicine
DEAN CLARKE
.1. uhni t il,l ur.l.M' nf
.T.l l,v aiffnvnt nl.Mls.
Ill,' ,IHiV|VMl l'r,,vilir,>
<.{ Ihcil- Allii;! M.ilrr
:H\rv wll;ll .•Mlli-s lilav
.1,. rnl-ps or Hlllrll W(!
DKAN CLARKE
I N M EM O R^IAM
Ivan B.Marty
RAY CECIL WOODWARD.KEITH TEMPLE NIDDRIE.
Born, October Sth 1898 Enlisted from University of Toron- Second LieuDied. November 26th, 1916. to with Divisional Signal Company, Squadron.
"He was keenly interested in athle- i" February, 1916. The following.
tics and all Class aiifairs. His popu- ^I^y he went overseas. Was wound- '^"ea •" aa.
laritv was shown by his election as ^a "' 'h<: Amiens Drive on .\ugust
Trea'surer of the Fii^st Year. One of S'h, 1918, and died on August 10th.
the professors stated the sentimentsof all who knew the deceased, whenhe said during a speech, 'the whole
oorer by the death of
WILSON PORTER.
R.F.C.,
such'The Varsil
JOHN D. GEAR.
IVAN BERNARD MARTY.
ot wounds. .Apr
st, 1916.
-W6
JOHN PERCY ANDERSON. 1AROLD G ARM TRONG
\,„ly «.i^ l,..rn ,n X..rth X..rWk in 1S87.One "f H"'
itric. from Brantford Collegiate Institute wlh' ajsfsti';
1914. Entt-red Medicine in 1915. A good hprout" niatri
jtesMoii Sea,'
MRS. ISABEL AVER.
T al ei A e bega:
AROLD E. BAKER.
S96 Attended Public
O Ilia High School.
fW^
\\nm m #m t
1KATHLEEN McBRlEN BARTLEY.
;n Bartley, horn in Toronto. At minister's daughter. Iters has been gol
lie life. Irish wit. cool judgment, fie
WILLIAM FRANCI
three years' Medi-
GORDON L. BELL.
Ont. Matriculated at Barrie Collegiate.
Served as Surgeon Sub. Lieut. R.N.V.R. in
England and Far East. Joined the Benedicts
BiCKNELL.
,;v (;„ Q«cc,
On July 24th. 1895. the
1916. Wounded July 24th
MEDICINE
^Kp^ «. ^H
MEDICINE
folIoweJ the
is, 1916. Their perigrina
Sufficient to say. the;
beginning to differentiat
sible. indefatigable ani
Birthplacc-Griswold. Man.Past Hisory-Entered P. and B. 1T6arter Scholarships. Won his V. M. ai
' d hockey enthu
ayed a distinguished part in fres
good with Toronto practice. George!
rom the Faculty. HonourMeaford High_ School '15. AlsoBaedeker of Mu
ARTHUR ELLIS.
Took his first drink at Bond Head, 1880.
^latriculated at Jlount Forest. EnteredMedicine 1902. but was lured to the north
lating sufficient dough,
began life in L'xbridge. E.\hausted ,Fro")
.vledge of the local High School andough Normal, taught the home
TL^:
i\v after the usual periods01 pronation ana studv he is prepared to l^in
demonstrate that "Old Man Much Medicine" Calmade no mistake in claiming him for the Mu
WILLIAM ERNEST HENRY.
»•;,( of
WALTER PIPER HOGARTH.,„comrh,»u,s. . „,,,
ARCHIBALD LESLIE HUETHER.
For previous historv see Torontonensis.proposition over, then en- Winnipeg. .Time 14th. 1802. a son. Walter j,,; h;, ^^urse like many others was in- Born at a very early age in Hulbert; then
a in B. and P., graduating Piper. .\ W extern pr.itege. JLitricuIated ,.,„,.j ,„j \„t. i, „„. „[ , a;„l,t„ church, school, collegiate, commerce, love.• this time he had a well- Fo" Will . W -
. .- . i . :... terrupted, and although not of a flighty „„rtship. marriage, music, medicine-thus
, ..„ 1,- 1 J .„ entert !'.' " nature, he took to the air and did excellent temporarily ends his carnival of crime. Help-""""
''
>' work in Italv. where he received the Italian ed Frosh class win Daffydil. Vice-PresidentHis proven judgment Nav medal of hronze. On he helped of the fourth year.
,...;, Fat. good-natured, a good mixer, a consistci
s' Perce all over. .M.i
MEDICINE
GRAHAM ALBERY JORDAN.
d M d IT SL t RN \ K
h E d J dg
g- wood, Ont. High School at Belleville andjell's '^""fvcj";,
°J Ilarbord Collegiate. Toronto. Matric. 191.i.Lijute'nant. '
rgeon Entered Medicine. 1914. Visited abroad with third year. ?
..r physical
iBO«fiROBERT ETHBERT JO>CE FAU TINA A KELL> ILBURN WATTS KEMP. JAMES DOUGLAS KINSMAN.
Wl E t dPort Dov!--. 0:>
July morning 1S94. Public School Alliston ,,5 „„ ' Entered' Medicine with class '19.:ind Maxwell, Ont., High .School: Albert Cnl-
^^^^_ ei hteen months' service RNVR inTaughtHumbe-side Collegiat-,
(,t1912; Victoria College. 1913: Medicine. 1914-18;
WILLIAM DANIEL LANSPEARY.Small i„ slalurc b<:l full of fcp ami ambil,
W, D. Lanspeary first met his parent
Windsor, Ont., in 1895. Played quarter!
(or W.C.I., and matriculated there in
Early ambition, medicine and matrimonyfar he has succeeded in both. Bill san
HAROLD SMITH LITTLE.
collegiate educa-
•14. Enlisted as
J. spring '17. Re.
IS. Capacity for
Lov
WILLIAM CARUTHERS LITTLE.
llemher of A.K.K. Fr;
'^
i;
^2jFRANK PERCY LLOYD.
executive ability have repeat
-
m in academic positions of
impetuous but reasonable;nd: commands respect; gives;d. Is withal very human.
Everything but Medic
Physical Education
edicine '14. St. Mich:
February 28th. 1S«.
r matriculation Harbord C.I. 1910. Sue-j
ly put a year at Arts and school before jf
; P. and B. '16. Overseas 25th Battery, '^
1915, to August, 1917. GraduatedMember Alpha Omega Alpha II.
Lisle. Ont.. in the early nineties.
d from Riverdale Collegiate. Spent
ume time in prospecting and mining. Finally
lecided to wield Hippocrates' magic wand
JANET RODGER McCLURE.
.ersity as Alma Mater. Cheer11(1 unswerving loyalty in a ^^^^ ^^Janet a general favorite. May
3j,(l brid1917. Her hobbie
"i^aJrled and"graduate^d"fn thought it was t
are church parties erlightened. \V
Decided on Med i
g Med e T i
umJAMtS EDWARD McGlLLIVRAY. PETER DOUGLAS McINTOSH. ALEXANDER LYNN M k \1 , INFIEID HAl MEb MILLER
burn Collegiate, old MacWest with class '17. 2Rtbone-half years. M.M. .>;t
ew's well, finishing 100 per cent. Simon IK \ h, l ,1 ,tniB. Ale c t tl efor his Alma Mater; 191S saw him a ..-m,i,i.,,, t..-,i D.n id in handling the Grand
of Mars; later he pursued the elusive ilcit IK joined H ^r S "Undine," and soone into many a fatal "spin." For "Doug," the wardroom resounded with his infectiousys gracefully urbane and professionally laugh After demobilization he attended:r. we anticipate a respectable longevity Guy's Hospital, hut returned to Varsity to
1914. Entered Medic
as Surgeon Sub-Lie
^.K.K. He is not as
MEDICINE
ELFORD J. NELSON. NATHAN
Made sit to Guelph, April 12th, Barely born in the
icient knowledge there to in the Wild West at
admit him to Medicine. '15. Finds time to and glad of it. Xi
dabble in sports; has an ear for music; is developed pedagogicamerry of eye and jovial in disposition. "Nels"' tite for kinoodling.
can be serious when occasion demands, \ear, a tenor voice, ;
rly age of three
in Winnipeg.
Ml and an appe-
nt of Freshman
""IB
HAROLD T. PALMER.
heard the telephone March 30th
RUSSELL ETHELBERT PALMER.
ll.,i,c„ slowly."
Born London, 1892. Received early cduca-
on at .Aberdeen P.S. and L.C.I. Later came-J Toronto and matriculated at H.C.I. Learn-
d the art of the pharmacist, and finally
llured by the philosophy of Hippocrates,
PAUL EVAN PICKETT.
I find nonsense slngiihuly rcfrcsliins."
Born in Illinois, 1893. Attended school
Colorado. Oklahoma and Idaho. Took honomatric. at Vic. Treasurer of the fourth ye;
As President 1919-20, infused new life in
the Medical Y.M.C.A. Enhsted in Americi
ARTHUR PODNOS.
-five this youth
Paui.f h'
When twelve years old he crossed t
Then went through Harbord here.
GAYNER POWELL.
He cal'tcd it xcitit a better one.''
Gayner's early career is chronicled in Tor-
)ntonensis, '16. Since then he has upheld
lailor and a gentleman. A genial personality
DeWILLETT STANLEY PUFFER.
ere's but one in all
nally '16 P. and B., nearly three
LS, B..\. 'IS. He has held innum-
ive of^ces, capping them all as
MEDICINE
'MMS^ M'^RY JOHN QUIN^ JOHN SPENCE REID.
along the flov
Suh.Liem'ena
Born December :6tli. ISW. Tillsonburg, Ont. He 1
April. 1915. 1'.:; :,..: _ : I .; 1 1 1 SoUtH ScHoO
FRED RITTINGER.
drink at Kitchener, Ma
FREDERICK C. ROBBINS.
first applied at St. Ma
Mary's Collegiate. Wr several years, gradittle filthy
•
^a°s
iu-Actedm li'
vFIEl D RUbH NORMAN H RUSbELL
Oiillm il.iras as his birthplace primary edui
CKims the 1 ns list nice running champi in winners of wulock unp
College < f rharmacv fHonnurs) 19H Enter
rhirmac\ 1916 President third % ear 1917 18—Recuperating among
1 Ii han -Miss n FtBrampton Ontlor Meds Rugbi tea
of Mulock Cll- eiseas-IPlatoon Lieut 18th
Sth Field ^.j„e, 191.!. Ou
E. H. SHANNON.
Duly born in Toronto, and matriculated
from Ilarbord C.I. in 19U. The second mile-
ng ye.lr; back again j,„^ Medicine in 1915. By some wit, some'niber 6th, 1919, and industry, and some good luck, he evaded.Still happy. destruction and dissected his way through.
MEDICINE
ROY CLIFFORD SHAVER.
ciwiigh."
Toronto heard his first cry in 1885. Matated at Humberside, 1902. Entered Qu(
n '1.1. Overseas Egypt and France Me-orps. Entered Varsity '17. Hard luck, i
HAROLD GLENN STEVENSON.
"Stevie" down one frosty Qri;
ALVIE EARL STEWART.
ated in Hamilton, but in spit
:.C.I. and Oshawa High School, teaching; one year at Victoria;
Survived to graduate P. and B. '16. Never and entered Medicine. Fond
BERNARD CHARLES SULLIVAN.
Bernard Charles started life in Toronto
.Tuly 17, 189o. Senior matric. at St. Michael'i
College, and started in Meds. Landed over-
seas in the navy. Played hockey with St
Michael's College, and has a strong desirt
WILLIAM DOUGLAS SWAN.
USGEORGE THEODORE URQUHART.
(( lien cvcrythUig gncs dead icroiig."
Born in Brucefield, Ont.. 1890. Matriculated Discovered in Owen Sound in 1871. Polish-
1907. Pedagogue four years. Entered P. and ed off as a teacher at Stratford, Ont. After
B. 1911. Served on Class Esecutive in third three years' teaching had an inspiration for
year Arts. Won his "T" Varsity First Soccer high ideals, and entered Medicine. Alwaysteam. Graduated in Arts, 1915. Served as fancied poppies, so he visited Flanders Fields.
WILFRED P. WARNER.
and .luly 5th. 1896. Matric::1n'- ' «t T'-
irst Collegiate. 191,!. Entcril li- :'
A Tirpitz's submarines en.ii '
1
gave him to 2T0. His su
EDWARD WOODS. GEORGE TODD ZUMSTEIN.
Eddie first beamed on Fergus, where he _ , t i o, ^ ,„^,, tt''eceived his preparatory education. Cast in
in?Ta?Iy''yearrin St'' Cadiarfnek. where °"elis lot with the class of 20. Overseas with obtained honour matriculation at the Col-
'• His kgiale Institute in '14. Entered Medicinerses a with the class of 1T9. Overseas with the
Royal Kaval Volunteer Reserve.
Medical Building
Hi^ory of Class 2T0
F-,rlv 11, (l,.tnl,rr VI
F. Allan (Captain), C. K.
P. Soanes, F. H. Stringt
Smith, W. H. Smooklc
JuniorMed'sBasketBah^'Eam
WirfHERS or(2biFroRDSiprori Gup^~=»- FDR -iSlB^ §
Toronto General Hospital
132
Dean Mitchell
To the Graduating Class of Applied Science and Engineering
DEAN MITCHELL
As till' "radnatiiif
rai wavs. Ynii an,., 111.' tii-st t(i rill,.
numbers occasioned by the war.
You are different from other classes in that yiuir ranks liave
been more torn and depleted by the ravages of the war tliau pos-
sibly any other, and yon number amongst you more representatives
of other preceding years than will appear in any of those succeed-
ing .you. Those of other years who have reinforced you, returning
from the war to finish their interrupted studies, have accumulated
in such numbers that your class this year aggregates many morethan entered as freshman with you four years ago—there were
under seventy then ; there are over ninety imw . But there is a moreunique story than that, more pathrtir aii.l iiKire heroic: there are
only sixteen of your present class whu wnv licslnnen with you in
1916. These numbers tell of tlie sacritirr made In- the Applied
Class of 1920 in the great war.
Your studies and your University
ruptcd but time has gone on. Witli;
nlur
twenty-five years, most uf you have attained an age when, before
the war, many young engineers were well along in their experience
out in the world. But you have gained an experience worth muchmore to you in your wealth of knowledge and memory of the warstruggle, for many of you have been engaged in work that has lifted
you from the commonplace in engineering or applied .science and
has placed you in a position where you will have a marked advant-
age over those who wi'ic imt mi fnrtuuate.
So you go out til ilii' \\nrlil\ work equipped in a different way,
seeing the problems <<( ]](,• Iimih a different angle and with the
kind of technical kiiuu lcili:i' ami experience which will better fit
you for the stru-i;ic «f tli.- next few years through the uncertain
period of post war (Ii'vlnpment in Canada. I hope you will all
remain in Canada, tliat ynu will help build up our splendid coun-
try : we need every one of you. especially now, and I am sure youwill all be rewarded in the years to come by the knowledge—if bynothing else—that it was your Cla.ss at this particular time that
helped to make Canada great, greater than ever, in all that national
deveIii]iiiiiMit ill wliirli iiMjineers are so much a factor.
een inter- I wish yim thr best of good fortune and health and all success
now over as Engineers and Citizens.
IN MEMORIAM
Pte. Roy Andrew HartryBORN AT SCHREIBER ONT.
OCT. ?iO'> 1897KILLED IN ACTION AT CAMBRAl
;OCT. iSt 1918 '
Lieut.ThomasW.DuncanBORN ATMOORETOWN
AUG. ao't' 1896
I
CRASHED AT DESERONTOJ)d1EU of injuries SEPT26"'I918|
CaptEdward B.G.MortonBORN AT BARRIEAPRIL lO'-b 1898
REPORTED MISSINGJULY lo'i'ioie
History of Class 2T0
Th^ issihh
hlis
rilivvl-slly I. if Irl-ullr „lnr.- ,lirtir,llty ill attaiRmfJ- till' (!.•-
siivd ,.11.1. iIliii uc. tlir Mxn-n.jlit wiMaiil xniithsthat fmmd mii--
sflvrs iissniililnl on llir iTilh .lay nf S,.|.triiilH.i-. 1916, t(i fiixv .ilir
name to the year lieueel'oi'th to be kuuwu as 2T().
Coming as we did wlien the world was plunfii-d in the dr]iths of
war, we, medically unfit ones and youngsters too yminr;- to hear mir
country's arms, looked forward to a rather rough passage at the old
school. "We were certainly not disappointed. Amidst all tlie
gloom and despondency, however, which loomed before us there
was one glad ray of light—we had in our nnmlicr the first girl to
enter schnol ;|^ ,', rr.'shrtl... :tiu\ uv wrvr ccrtaiiilv |ii-uiiil .,f -(^ur
Marv" (ajH.lnni,., t.i Marv I'l.-kl'm-d .
After Iraniiiig tVniii the Pivsidrnt's a.ldivss h„w easy the workat the University really was, if one only wished to work sometwenty-four hours per day, we felt more comforted and took the
rest of the week off to look around. It was well we did—for in
doing so we obtained our status at our new home, and discovered
that compared to us a worm was highly elevated.
Not a bit daunted, however, at the withering glances of the
sophs we decided to run our own show and elected one Cunninghamto lead us, for, verily, we were led to believe that a captain wassorely needed. And then how protid we were, that day when the
photographer took our pietui'es and we so narrowly esca]ii'd the
open air hydraidirs Lab. jierfornied from an upper wimlow by the
sophs.
Then came that dread day when after a few pn.liininar\- bouts
in which ties, socks, etc., managed to disappear, we were issued in-
vitations to the social functions held in our honour in a little old
red gym. But we must hurry over this—for even now three and
Wi
d ar<
( 'liiisriiias. however, all our troubles and' M. but hardly had the last morsel of
luaiii wi' were awakened by remembraiioeMl-- aL'aiii all joy was removed from Life.
las kindled once more when a shortage of
losing of all university buildings and weparental hearth for two short M-eeks.
this term when the spring slush was be-
ginning to be coniinonplaee we lost .several members of our tribe
to the various fighting units, and, what appeared worse at the timeto us, we were forcibly ejected from our drafting room and placedin one corner to allow room for the R.F.C.. who came to imbibethe rudiments of flying in our erstwhile liappy home, .'^prins
A 1.1
i-ed
Due to faculty mandates, economic ventures, aiul the call of the
King only a meagre thirty-four of the original tribe returned to the
second year. What we lacked in numbers, however, we made up in
spirit, for were we now not the rulers of the roost. A difflcnity
jireseuted itself, however, at this juncture, for we found no r.iost
over which to rule. During the summer while we had been turn ins
out shells and cleaning boiler flues, the R.A.F. had eomman.le.r.'.l
the whole building and were now all over the place. • inr n]d
smoker, the pride of our heart, and the general retreat from h.-
tiires, was a carpenter shop, the drafting rooms were demonst ration
floors, and we w.i'<- iila.'.'.l off by ourselves in a few rooms, the
existence of wliirh ha.l h.'retofore been known only to the archi-
tect, who drew up th.' .niiiinal plan, if any, of the building.
History of Class 2T0 -Continued
Chirf Hill was theboss t',,1- tliissr>Mn,i, ami uii.lri' his I,M,lrrvliil. -i-iir,l. That aftmi roiivth.-r with the civws ,.f shii-s .Meils.
tlir fn.sh, ifjnorant of wliar ua. m stmv Im- tlirm. unv .liitiriillv Arts and Dnits. \^r InniaM a para.lr and iiiaWr iiiurh iioim. iiihI,'!-
haiMUcd oaeli in a flttiiicr iiianih-i- and iiia.h- 1.. I'.-.-l at ho This tlir h-ad.'i-shi]. nf First Matr Mitrh.'ll. kiiuwu as \\w -Wihl Spint."
diilv iirrfnnnod wp tnnk uii aiinthrr. which was that mT srlliiiL' \'lr- As a liltiii- , ml, Inn ,,f tin- ns,. l,, uhirli mir .hvl; had I ii |. hired
tnrv llniids diinii- a thivr-dav srssinii. Th.' rnni|u.t.-nl stalV nf 111 othrrA.-ars «,. iiaaintrd an a.M'o|.|aiir on a 'juii rarria'jr ami usrd
ariiiarios and rhartnvd acroiiniaiils .aiiplovrd liv tlir Cowrnniont ihat as our fnm'ra! roa.'h in uliirh to \nn-y \\u- llioiiol.t, ,,r ,h,. past
has. hou,.v,.r. to daf 1 n niiahlr to arrivr at tho ],riv,-nta-o .d' four ^.mi-s.
snr.Tss whirh altrn,h-d this \,-,itiiiv 111 liiiaihT. ^VlIll tlir sn^nimj of ilir arm isi iro mnrli of tlif ohl-iiin,. spirit
With C.O.T.C. work, rriinmi tappiii-, and an ..dd s,.s-,ioii on tlio rain., ha.-k to rhr -ood ship rniNrrsiIv. Tlir mm who had hmimat. tho vrar rapidh worr auav iiniil lliat spiaii- dav «lioi, wr so shM^pinu' aiu wlinv at all in tlir ri--iii- ami in ihr hoats rrtnrnrd to
valianll.v ovnvaiiir our mrdiral frirmls and rrmrnfrd thnr frimd- tlirir laiiiks and tlir mrals unv .sri^r,! a-aiii at Vr jlraiirry Hoard.ship tor aiiollnu- \r,ir, Tlir r.,m]uilsorv iiulitarv drill drsmlinl as a hod v liu lid inr- exer-
Shorllv aflrr'this tins,. t,.rril,l,. pap.'rs ai,p,.aiv,| a'jani, ami .-isr— ,.,.as,.d. ami ih,. r.ailni,. uas i,i,,r,. as loriii,.rK .
hnrrirdlv w,. .h.lwd into -( ah-ulus'- ami -St n.n-tli .il .Matrnals" On danuarv I'Ttli, l:il:). wr rrrnvrd an addition lo our rrrw nf
in an allrmpi to i,,sni-r our rnnrii in tlir fall. mrii who had lirm .srrviii- on .Mm of War ami who raiiir l,ark
.\firr thr drrks ha, I l„.,.n .-h.am'.l tli,. followim.j' fall in liop,.s ,,f now t,, l,.arn a-aiii tin- diiti,.s ,,f ili,. ,.|irim.-ro,,iii. Tli,.s,. stav,.,l ,,n
Wiishm.j- ,,iit thr iimii,.r,.iis stars a,.,.niiiiilat,.,l .lurin- tli,. past ...s- ,.v,.n aft.'r tli.' r..-ular .-ivw ha,l ,l,..,.rl,.,l lo s,.,.k tlr- i,l,.asurrs ,,f
shin, and the roll call lia,l 1 n mad,, il was f,„in,l that Caplam tli,. land tor th,. snmnn.r months, hut as tli,. sun trawl,.,! t,,wai.,l tli,-
Kr..lyside had under liis , .,,1111^111,1 ,,mI.\ I'l ,,r tl .rjiiial rv,^^ ,,r m.rih tli,..v al-,, pa,.k,.,l tlu'ir kits .,ml I, .11 ih,. ship in tli,. liamis ,,f
'Hi. Xinp mnro doekliamN ami pavs,.iiiivi. w,.r,. •^l,.an,.,l fi.,,111 th,. wan-hiiian. l-'rank.
ha,l l„',ii Willi lis for Ih,. |ir,.\i,,iis iw,, Na.ars. was f,,i.r,.d to raiirel th,. ,.nil of ,iur i,,iirm.\-. OnU' 17 of th,. original orew are on ourli,r pa^.a.j,. llii.,,i|.jli illdr-allh. an,l lli,. slat,.r,„,m w a. ,ji\vn to Miss |,a.v list ,,f 'X\. Tli,.s,. ,',1 h.^rs r,.pr,.s,.nt ,,ld-Mmers nf "lo, 'IG. '17, 'IS
liill. uho is tinishiiuj 111,. \,,\a,.i,.. Th,. slnirt Iw,, w,.,.k. afirr hviv- ami 'l!i. ami with sm^li a ,.r,.w th,. ,,ld 'LM) is k.-i'iiini;. lirr bow straiffbt
imj |„,i.| thai di.,.a,lfnl -tin ,..paii,,la" s,.i/.,.,l maiiv ,,f ih,. ,.r,.w ami l„.lor,. h,.r and with ,.;'o,m1 lii.-k will arriv,. at ih,' harlior with all
pa.ss,.iin.rr lisl. ami lli,. ship was foi.r,.,l t,, la\- to fr,,m ill,. iMli of al„,ar,l.
<>,.|,,h,.r t,, X,,v,.ml„.r th,. oth. Ami thus w,. l,.av,. ih,- ,,hl ship. Tli,.r,. ar,. sprin- brraki'rs
Thi'ii ,,11 Ih,. s,.,.,,ii,l ,hn- th,.r,. was h,.ai.d ,,11 Ih,. uimlwaril sid,. ali,.a,l. lull on,',. satVIv past lli,.m th,. liarl„,ur is in si-lil ami w,. -o
mm-h 11., is,, as ,,f wlii.l|,.s hh.uiirj ami l„.IIs nnniirj. ami ,,11 s,.|lim_' ,,11 ,,ur s.-parat,. wax- I,, ^^h,, km.ws what. ( bi ,,ur i,,iirm.v. li,,w-
mls w,. w,.r,. I, ,1,1 that p,.ar,. I'Vi.r. w,. will r,.m,.|iil„.r tli,. -,„„1 ,,1,1 lim,.s al ll 1 s,. ,,iilv
,.r a l,„.k-,|,.p |,ara,l,. ar,,nml h-aviii- tli,. ni|.-av,,nr.v bils 1,1 ll„. r,.,.,..s,.s. ami wli,.,i sii,.,.,.ss has at
h.,.k. w,. f,ain,l I,, 1„. in,.,,rr,.,.t hisl ,.r,,wii,.,l ,,iir ,.|iorls m th,. w,,i.|,l w,. will l,„.k l,a,.k t,, th,. pi;
I'll,. f,,ll,.\wii- .M,,n,lav u,. put nit -1. ami liar,Ilv lia,l \Kr wli,.r,. w,. r,.,.,.iv,.,l ,,iir ,.mj iii,.,.rin,.j siarl will I v y,y 111 our
.p,.(l am.ln.r lliaii th,. s im,. ii,,is,.s l„.,,k,. foi'lh auain in i;r,.at,.r hi'arts ami 1 all th,' ila.vs sp,.nt with th,' 111, .11 of 2T() as b,.ing thr
Ml.-, and this Inn,, w,- h-armil that trulv an ariiiist i.-,. ha.l b,...ii happi,.st nf oin. ,..Ki„-ri.-m-,-.
School of Applied Science and Engineering
eaaisieal
APPLIED SCIENCE
ROBERT A. BARBOUR.
icptemlier 4l]\. 1894. He wanclcr(
.1(1 school in class '17. From tl:
-een a typical example of "sch
specially in athletics and with
'resident S.P.S. Athletic Associai
FRANK WHITEHEAD BOOTH. CARMAN EDGAR BURTON. STUART KIETH CHENEY.
•I only ,Ld! Hull fortune send
school with yea
from old "Burt" made his debut in Whitechurch.-''"-
iced to delve Out.. January 19th. 1S95. Matriculated in Steiv it was who first put Vankleek Hill
• at the old Watford. Honour mathematics in St. Mary's'^"tjl.''^"^''-"'.!,^"',' ^^j%'''in'
'1'S'^'lS^ *'"°°-^*'d
15 to go on CM. Came "straight from heaven" to S.P.S. M^Yelf'Tv 'coming m-er" to 't'he Red'sAoolHad fiileen with the IT? Electricals. Made University and joining '16 Electricals. Here he distin-
1 19th C.F.-\, Hack team 191.5. Overseas C.F.A. Bunner fuishcd himself in school athletics until the
R.A.F..find :
3
Scientific Research Staff of British Adnalty. He took honours in first two yearswas elecled chairman of the E, and M.
ma belt." Scholastic prep, t
gsville Public and Leamii
1915. finally joining High Schools. After active service in
RODERICK CAMPBELL HARDIE.
cosmopolitan Britisher, born in England,
. claimed by Scotland, and a true Cana-1. British Columbia introduced him into
halls of study, and Toronto bids him
%
APPLIED SCIENCE
SS.SOTT
APPLIED SCIENCE
I*
APPLIED SCIENCE
mHAROLD G. YOUNG.
late, mid still quite early rise
BM
MAURICE H. CENTNER.
I'ork,
LAWRENCE CHAMBERS. GRANT HENDERSON.
First dis
•ears late:Maurice Centeclianical encyclopedia (??). To- riculated from here, and after missing a year,
c ^schools and Harbord Collegiate .lecided to be a Mechanical Engineer. Played
iuation '""^key for School in 19IS. Treasurer E. and
y. \Vc M. Club. 1917-18. Scholarship in third year.
Grant first
Owe"n's„i„';j''
light in Tara. Ont,
1T9. Dela
^*^.as-
''11' nfi tl' ii i[ 111 r
UBERT C. HOLLAND.
"Dutch" has been persistently
GEORGE L. MACPHERSON.
ncluding George was born January 25,
matriculated
Schools in 1
grin. Though 1
HUGH J. McCREERY.
ng at Glencoe. Ont..
country public schools, farm, London Colle- dale, Ontario. He matriculated from the Uni- l^l^'^^^l^ r,^°''^^I'C°"^e'"'=;
.En^Kf ^
Born in "London
ned :'8with
ng far-sighted.Residence knows himHis genial downwar<
I the Smoke" in IS^J.
ingland and the United
ss of '16 in 1915 and
1^
n.Wat«r
APPLIED SCIENCE
fiity Merliitv. Received his early education ;
luoo.l Public School and his matric. ;
liii and Leamington, Entered Civil Ei;ering with Class '20. Treasurer of Engiing Society 1918-19. and crowned his popi:y as President of graduating year.
O. V. BALL. GEORGE C. BENNETT. ELMER BIRDSALL.
i.ij' (. wear I
It is ahaiyi to leave the best ,n,lol.l." Only U
Born in 189,!, Toronto. .Tarvis Street Colle- B^^n in Waubaushene, Ont., March -'0. 1895,
giate and Technical School. School Class 1T7. receiving the usual early education, supple-f,"-^'"'','
Knlisted 1916 in 47th Battery. In France with mented by two years at Coldwater C. S. and'^•"'^"-*
Engineers. one at Midland H. S. .\Iways prominent in
:to
Craduarugby. Squeezed into Schoolhas had a 'Tipping" time ever
F
CRYSLER. EARL R. DAFOE.
"Xo. four times no.'
"Eddi.Technical High School. Toronto. School ^ated" Xapanee Collegiate, Queen's (Q for tl": i^-imiiif
:i3ss of ITr. Enlisted in 1916 in 47th Battery, hockey), "promoted" to IT" S. P. S. senior ^ " '
n France with the Engineers Transferred hockey T, '14-'1S. Enlisted March '15, France '
,
„ R.^F with 23rd Battery, hiked a DMk through ^j ,,
Salient and Somme. Rose to dizzy height Sicn^l -. -
of Bombardier. InvaHded to Canada '17. ai; M.M. kGrimly determined to graduate with 2Ta JTu, and mcThere's a reason.—blonde. nurses. He
ERNEST B
jy
^W FRANKLIN IRVIN.
APPLIED SCIENCE
z
APPLIED SCIENCE
ALLYN B. WHALEY. LESSLIE E. WILLMOTT.
DecemberScllool in 1912 from Oakwood. but
liedly on a free ride to Europe in 1915. HandlsaiJ^ ended Vic. career. Then IT"
Dallied in Rugby and Hockey and has hopesBj'i't'j'i'jin aml''Rl\'""pr°e'sk'lenr of' "School'-'
or a 2T0 degree. V.SI,C,--\, ".V good fellow, and ali there."
=s:_!'- V-. . ^-
tfiioife^^v Tf_(^
0^HERBERT BASIL CODY.
"He may be small, but lie's got big i
The origin of "H.B." dates from
and Collegiataming theioined the i
at the Observatof 2T0, holding
ARTHUR HERVEY DINGMAN.
.-1 little work, a little flay.To keef ns going—a)id so good-day."
JOHN FAILL.
"Ding" was born in Stratfc
Collegiate he entered Chemistr
Stratford was blessed with "Jack" in
in 1898. After extracting all possible knowledge I
S<""'ir<l the Collegiate he joined Chemistry of
HENRY COLBY KERMAN.
Before he's through with life.
St. matric U.T.S. Entered school as an
Iiid. Chem. Club, '17. Made smokeless pow-
der in Trenton, 'IS. President Ind. Chera.
Club. '19. Here's hoping for the future.
ugh the CoUegi,
:ty to his pedagogue>ept. 6, and after two
Ml.ARTHUR HAMBLETON
-Xalures a book uhereif: I r.
Liverpool, England, was his birt
School that he matricul;
started with 1X9. Seenlemical Club. He w.is witliti.^ns Staff two year., s.
that he matriculated. Can-
19U. With the studies of
\ice-President Chemical
APPLIED SCIENCE
JACK ERNEST T. MUSCRAVE.
lussie's" first "School'" yell. HuronJarvis Street Col-
legiate, Toronti
gas in England,
r^f'^:j^
CLARENCE W. GRAHAM.
the "Better "Ole"
CHARLES ALBERT RICHARDSON.
ring and 1395. Enrolled in the "School" with
by a "Cook's' tour" with
JACK C. E. SKINNER. WILLIAM S. WILLCOCK. OSWALD HEBRON HUGILL.
Bradford has him first registered in this
in 1915. After numerous expeditions to thenorth, entered S.P.S. with 2T0. His "School''hobby was the Mining and MetallurgicalClub, of which he was Secretary, and finally
Illy of u-orb to do.'
Landed on "terra firma" in 1890 at Flesber-on. Matriculated Oakwood. Toronto, andound his way into the "Old Red School"
Considers the
playing ;
Introduced to the world at London, Eng-land, 1S94. Came to Canada one year later.
Matriculated Sault Ste. Marie High School,1911, Began with class '16. Enlisted Febru-aiy. 1916. A pioneer member of the "Toike
f
ESTHER M. HILL. LESTER B. HUSBAND. WILLIAM S. KIDD. DONALD M. WATERS.
From Siiiiiiy Alberta, old 'Varsity called
ler grandchild to the Alma Mater of her
parents to pursue her chosen study. A B-A.
Alberta), with experience in teaching and
-Professor U-arc. i„ Do
Settled at School in 1911; li
rupted by Mr. Mars; but. wi
to replace some of that gen
suggest his beverage (when possible). Hissnail-like progress through the various facul-
ties was broken by four years' study of rapid
demolition in Europe. His forte is architec-
The Architectural Club of The University of Toronto
^i,,..( 'I, ail-man D. M. W;Srcivtarv M. A. Xnr>
TivaMiiV'!- E. W. Hahl
Thinl Yi'ar ('
Mis- K, M.
W. S. Wil]'.. il. \Vn
A. 11.
K. \V.
W. 1". l,a
II. .\. .M.
W^m UNiVEHsiry OP Toronto WjK ^MK
SEATED:-!! B
TorBOTTOM ROW
P. Culli
n^n
--")
T! -s. -A
wmm VJCTfl
wmmmWi 'j'.jj
§'rV
r/l
J! .9) •! & -
t" 5X
\ n«'''"'''W
To the Graduating Class in Dentistry
DEAN WEBSTER
Allntlll'l' war nf nl.|.nrTUl
luis rnliH- tn thr -IM.Iual
.Irntisii-v. Th.. Hrl.l i
liiitr. tlir ilav isliritilii
• ni.l rll.' Win- is rl,.;.l
rs nj- virtue, coiireiitment
I lia|i|.iii.-ss The countryrailing fur leaders.. TheNil-, the viy-firoiis, the
-II-, tl onravvous, the
i.Mtcil iiiu-l ilir.'i't the wav.Many of thr -i' aluates of
\w wnr(N of All-. Uuftrr. "it is n..t sinartn.'ss ,,i- sliai'p men• wante,! tn-,lay l.nt it is l,r,,a,l inei, sliarpene,! t,, a pmnt.-
Faeiilty liave aimed to prepare yon to meet the affairs of
their hr lest sense, having at the same time an eye to the
of a ealliiiLi whieh is expected will fiive the password to
.|inrtiiiiiiies f,,r tlir sweetesf tliiii-s in life as developedM.iial rdiifiileiiee I.eiH.'eii tile ileiitist and his clientele,
liuiirsi, faitlifiil ser\ic..s rriiilt'i-i'd. Place, wealth and
The r.ritish m.-
DEAN WEBSTER
DENTISTRY
_3S5BACKUS.
w ^rriM
'AP
KENNETH A. BLANCHER. WILLARD M. BOX. RANDOLPH W BRADLEY BENJAMIN BREGMAN.
Apr:
clJ'^c t'hers"'on.°,Ho"""Gradua.'=d i"hen' le^gSe^'^nd 'Sfn'Sln '£€"£? I^°'a otmore" Recdve*!!' h,s ''edu.Jt'i^n ,n xT/ontc''^S'L^grdlns '"l; ThToush HarWd Co"
HiBl'i Sdiool 'and Regina Normal School,l;"^','''^^'"' for^"a™,1j?ic^ a\"Ht>v°"'Enter^^^ a.TTa"ricullTe'r from Oak^ood ' Colkg"," te' Dented mTo r'c'^D s'%";th''h"I'''eLy\om^^
WiUded the birth for thrie years. Entered Queen's University the fall of '15. where he Joined class '.'0. R.C.D S \mbit
RCDS .6 Behe^es , ha, work i, good 1^% "^{^ ^^^.n,^^"^ ^^^:^:^- scien.ious, he is sure to makeansh-i futur.
class '20
IBS
Imi
HOWARD J. CAULFIELD. BURWELL J. CHARLES. SAMUEL H. CHURCHILL. ALEXANDER M. CLARK.
.Ales, fir: December
Arrived in Mount Forest in June. 1897,,_.^^ ^^^^^^ ^.^^^ S^,,;„,. ^„,^;^j ^^ ^
where he matriculated. Studious and con-^^.j,), ^i^^^ .,() a pleasant, genial fellow, and the fair se:
genial, he is sure to make a success of his „.ho has made real friends. Member Xi Psi cannot help but
chosen profession. Phi. luck.
Winnipeg schools and High School taught
Sammy grammar and manners. Has always
taken active interest in athletics, dancing HigrrSchnol" in MS. Taught school a yea
inirhim entered with class '20. Served two years i
ing mm ^,^^ r»..^t.,1 r.^,.r^= Of a quiet dispositioi
nninc smile. SolderHi;
spicious"A boy," said the doctor on April '.(th \%9. Hilliard s cherul ic coufirst shouted for liquid refresh- ^t Weyburn, Sask. Charl.e -ttcndej the ej tl.e ...l.ab.ta..t. ol Ilavelock in 1897. At event which took place at CHnton, Ont.
Battersea, 1S97. Graduated from Weyburn Collegiate, from which he matricu- Humberside Collegiate he assimilated much Matriculated at the Collegiate Institute of
, .. .. , f - knowledge, then entered R.C.D.S. m class 20. , . ,,, t,„,„,,„j T„,.n„.„ ,-„
High School. Entered dentistry 'ated. After spending a couple of years in Unfortunately losing a year through sick- ">^ ""<= «own in 13. Reached Toronto in
, the business world, he decided to enter class ness, he now belongs to -21. Member of .\t- time to start with class 1T9. Enhsted April20, and soon became an import.int
,_^ _^ ^^^^.^ ^^^ ,^.^ calling, we predict a Home Committee^ M?.^ His quiet.^ imassuming ,,„„. Although not particularly enthusiastic
to his size. ' Fr'r.l'iM'mtv'""'"" '"
"' ' '
'",''',''"'~'
"' "'""'- ""'' ''"*""''"^
''""'""'_ ,,^_ ,„,„. ,;,,.,,„, „, ,.n,ering University.
Ill EIJ GRA\T COL%TR>
19 Manager Xar^it^ Seiii r Hockc% tcnml** \ arivd athletic career Member champion Jenningi, Cun teams H and 1^ Captnin
."^^^ ECLIFFORD A. COURVILLE.
First hollered for eats at Chester Basin,
at llaxville. Out.. March U. 1S99. X.S., in the month of January. Matriculated
ilatcd from Ottawa University. Cora- into Acadia University ;n 19H; began the
R C-P-S. in fall of 1"]6, Enlisted in study of dentistry at Dalhousie Dental Cnl-
i -,-,,, .1 n,. :.( .^ A,„i.;ti.-.,, :i,.i„-, 5 \r„. K.,i(:..i i;cns. in :'<' v.-.r.] t
HARRY DAVIDSON.
England, was the fortun*
tage where Ha
DENTISTRY
'!4AMA
vVWWvHARVEY W. ECKEL. VANCL R FARRELL
"Like the water sllll. lie is I'.-ry Jeer" ".-.. /..../,,
Born at Clifford. Ont.. Harvey receive. I his'''"'
repriratory education at Clifford High Schnol, ^. ^^^^ ^.^^ ^^^^ windy niiUt dtsired a broader sphere, so entered p^, r,,^^, iggg -^ .j^^e yew intc
i.C D.S. with class 2T0. Joined 69th 0\er t, the wingse.is Battery, and later transferred to the hi^ early hf:..\.D.C. His conscientious efforts ai d genial \ear p II pi
lisposition assure for him a succes ful future Icr le 1 t cT
FRALICK.
ince blew into Grimsby som.e years in"
he storm, where he spent lated at AlbertaHtnculated '14. Spent a Overseas in C..A
JAMES E. ERASER.
prairies during 1916.
•ith class '30. Ernie
M:GORDON L. FRAWLEY.
"Fargct yesterday. JVhat's doing to-day
Toronto was honoured on May 1, 1899. Gord.
went to U.T.S., from there to Dents. Two .Roy was bor_n in Toronto, March 23, 1S96. Milton. Ont.. Myears sergt.-major in C.A.D.C. He ge
thousands of "Hello. Gord." Member of foot- ^.^^ Bj„j^j. .^p^il, 1916. Served "over there" uphold theball team '19. A typical college man of the ,„„ -resn. Returned October 8. 191S. to fur- fnlloi
right sort. Member of Xi Psi Phi Fraternity, ther "delve into the arts and science of den- Terp
With ApriCame Herb and flowers
ed the Into Aurora in -04.
Matriculated Oakwood Collegiate. Entered race. Matriculated at Brampton Collegiate. g='"E ''''^^°", °'^,, i
'm.-llmes'^Tai
R.C.D.S. with class '18. Enlisted with Var- and in '16 entered R.C.D.S. to carry on and "To be a dentist'" was his ambitiony Battery, April, 1916. Served "over there" uphold the parental name in dentistry; a g^, „.|,i, matric. from .Madoc came.
- , . .. .
of the fair art of a„h now he has achieved his aim.
GEO A GEMEROY JAMES F GIFFEN C. S. GILBERT. JAMES W. COLDING.
d r c D s h\ic \ d r D s
H fi
sfield, Ontario. Obta ScliQol .\rrived March 20, 1897.
M P O
BlW. GRACE.
Tl'i'c :l,'a„sl''IS Hint '."-'L' ll'l"."ic-.-'
oher 25th. 1895, was the aion of bringing Bouchette, Q
JACK GRAHAM.
fo„dly , fcwie dm A i^orhiian Hint ticcdclli not (c (..
Tlie "Only Original" was dropped into Glace ashamed."l.t.v. X,S.. on May 1st. 1896. X High School Born August 3. 1889, Township of Lome.''"::
""!:":;i!fl,:^"::J^ l^;!spa^i""S- p™^""" °' *^'""'°'"- '='""'=<' ^"""^
liege enter- School, Manitoba High School. Matriculated
the Rugby Manitoba University "16. Indentured in den-.C.D.S. w:el- ,,5,fj. in Manitoba '16. Served in Army Den-",
'!,i°j"n'ior '=1' Corps. Been coniieclcl «illi Il-.m,- Mis-
^t III. 11 year, sionary work for past tin \i ii.
ncis Xa
"^MJOHN M. GRAHAME.
'n° Jght's'for loveAnd the liny for duty."
: Stony Mountain. Man., February
Matriculated into Manitoba Univer-
JOHN C. GREEN.
"Cr. by ,u,t,m
Jack first hollered for nourishment in
I'eterboro, Ont., on August 1st, 1899. Received
his early education and matriculated at P.C.I.
Entered the sergeants' class at R.C.D.S. onFebruary 5th, 1917, in which he held the office
of Vice-President. Enlisted in C.A.D.C.
Thursday afternoons—out with the fair sex.
Jack should make good in dentistry.
CLAUDE C.UNTON
Peterboro, M
WILLIAM A. HARTLEY
began on May 28.
Attended \V
Institute
\j"', ^^'1=!!.!; Harbord Collegiate, Toronto, and entered the
Member of the Xi Psi
NELSON W. HAYNES.
"Ri-slless as the sea,
S„t full of mirth
Nelson first demamledton, Perth County, i
Early education at M'Stratford Collegiate \
class '20. Served >>rH
ber of Dental Soccer t. nbaseball sport. Ambiti_;.
% L^i
MICHAEL J. HENEY.
us first appearance i
Stonecliffe, Ont. Mior High School, and1915. Served as M.O.
H. HERRINGTON.
"'5 Saskatoon Collegiate 19Uicu- with class 'IS. Represeminrt- man year. Secretary. Ti
rear. Member R.C.D.S. Oriental Clubthe p5i p|,i Fraternity. His pleasant.
EDGAR J. HESSON.
R^D.S.'^FresKSophomore
GEORGE JOYNT.
WWm
DENTISTRY
WALLACE B, MITCHELL. EIJU MIYAKE. SAMUEL MODEL.
Ofu
Chllliwack, B.C.. in ISOS. Went Feb\'ilrt!^slr\.f'xok',.* jlpi^n'" Wenr^o ''"'" '" O''""' ''"" S""' Canada tor first i
h the leaves" to the wikis of South Rikkvo 'High School. Graduated from the ''me l«b. Matriculated at Technical H.S. '14. 2-U
Spent nine years of bliss in Bolivia Tokio Dental College in 1917. To increase his Made debut R.C.D.S. '16. On Dent, basket- legiate Institiback to Woodstock, where he knowledge of "Western" dental science he 1,^11 t^am Mfi Snpnt over a vear in the "17 \rp,
ed in 1916. \yallace chose dentistry entered class '-'0 in the senior year. Of a ^. " . ,
CHAS.
24, 1895. Served his apprenticeship i 1
I'lil.hc Schools and Jarvis Collegiate Oizert T.H.S.A. Entered class 2T0. De
A farm in Simcoe County was Elliott's
vino- earlv hirthplace. He entered Bradford High School*>„ ', in '04. obtained junior matriculation and sec-
lated 1916. Entered „„4 ^lass in '08. and after spending a few
TO Success predicted, years teaching, entered dentistry in '16.
early years in P ke r
Out. Later he migrated to Toronto ma "m^ l^^t
lating from St. Michael's College ii 191 He pcj i9in
College. It is a problem whether 1 e
I denti
ent one Septei
matriculated
George was born in Aurora, where
attended Public School. Then cameToronto, matriculated from J.C.I. and ente
R.C.D.S. in 1914. Enlisted in 1916 and retu
tl cla Member of the
^WM. A. POMMER.
:h\vestern University. Chicago. 111. Cam;.C.D.S. fall of -l.S. Mcmlier of Caiiatlia
and Bela Phi Fraternity.
DENTISTRY
W3
DENTISTRY
Oh Ho
Shag
JOHN O. SHAUNESSY.
ed on shift promptlj
NORMAN W. SNIDER.
h I lit: s It tlu Somii
1899 such Uisty jells, were he
It «as onb r
world He r
School educal
/ICTOR D. SPEER.
'\llR.C.D.S. in
the 1916. Returigh :T(1. in Oci
M '\
\^\
WILLIAM W. SPEERS.
C.F.A., April. take a decided interest in
1897, at Merton. Ont. After
Oakville High School in
the dental profes
Bill hails from Orangeville, Ontario. Born in Brussels in 18% he matriculated,
.. « lirated 1
Matriculated from O.H.S. 1911. Homesteaded into McGill University and entered R.C.D.S. February 7. 1S93, was the day of days at
and "wielded the birch" in the West, but w-ith class '19. Was absent during 1916, Brooke, Ont. Matriculated from Watford Jq^ returned to the land of I
deciding on dentistry as his profession, came resuming his course with class '20. "Jack" High School. Attended London Xormal. and lowed commercial life in St. Paul. After fiv
East ntered R.C.D.S. classgenial dispos
nack
possesses taught school four
nil in Ins C.A.D.C. His char:
Entered R.C.D.S.absence he
. He
class 'X. A
DENTISTRY
r^
r^\ \
BWENDELL W VOADEN.
uiiti Ejrb education at Woodstock. Ont.
itnculated from Ca\uga Collegiate Insti-
ile in lllj • Pjlished plates" for a year
I re enttring K C D S. Returned Irom
GEORGE T. WA:
1S»S, at Grimsby. Ontario,as "The" profession afterGrimsby High School. SerD. C. Spent many, many
ARTHUR H. WALTON.
Cliose dentistr:
1 with the C. A
\V. Toronto. M.ie C. I. and enlcaduatinir I91I. ".>
ERNEST J. WALROTH.
Family Bible says he arrived on "terra
irma" at Maberly. October, 1897. Early edu-
alion received at Perth Collegiate Institute,
'rominent in athletics. Chose Dentistry as
is profession and entered R. C. D. S. withCanada, joining 2T0.
v||#"
FRANK A WEESE
all
is first sqiiawl in Cnrn-
and High Schools. He
ARTHUR H. WlLSO^
lathed Nature's fragranc
^
M1894 at Kent Bridge
hough not Ont., whcri
ended Georgetown Collegiate,
y age to Dresden from which he matriculated 1915, and joined
net hted into R C Class 2T0. Served in 69tli Overseas BatteryihernfX P PI and Canadian Army Dental Cirps. N'ou-goes
MORMAN D. WINN.
Ont., 1
from }
D. ,';.
ROBIN E. WINN. LOUIS M. WINTROPE.
"Williout Iwslc. bul -.titlwiit rest."
First ushered into the world May 8, 1S99.
Matriculated from Jarvis Collegiate. Quiet
H. B. WOOD.
Chicago College of Dental.Surgery. 1914. Enlisted May. 1916. in C. A.
fe'rred to R.F.C., August. 1917. goingEgypt
". ^ .Returning to England,
a flying instructor at BeaulitOn returning to Canada, enter
THE LIBRARVBinlogical Building
PEARL B BARTINDALE RITA BOND. TRESSA MAY BURLEY.
Ridgetoun Collegii
Irst Dental Nurses' Cla
fel^"^^^^^
3r/\\
Kif>\ I
ETHEL VICTORIA COTTON.
Chicago claims the di-
pastures new. came to Toronto andfinisiiing course at Margaret Eaton.
SHIMARGARET ISOBEL JORDAN.
% U.P HM tl
LULU C. MACKLE. FREDA M. MAITLAND. MARJORIE H. MEADOWS. FREDA EVELYN MYLES.
_ .„., ^ i^jj-r-, ilarj'orie was born and eilucated in Toronto. Her winsomeness dates from April, 1900. atBorn in Brighton, Out. Attended Trenton Matriculated from Oakwood Collegiate Insti- Walkerton. After a preliminary scurry of
come a nurse brought her to the R.C.D.S. instructor; joined the Dental Nurses," 1919. she attended Whitby Ladies' College for twoi. ^ T^-ntal Nurse we feel she will make a years. Her bright and even disposition
she '" October, 1919. Her winning ways predic
fut ; opsi
Born and educated in Toronto, and now a
graduate of "Toronto." An original of Den-
tal Nurses- Class of the R.C.D.S. Her laugh
and sociable nature has won her friends
uithin and without college.
Hi^ory of Class 2T0
knnuM ;is a -piirk." Kaiii 1 1 iJMt V uilli tnaii-, siirh a^ inr.
(H-rlusal. aiil.'.l materially U, ii.tlal ii' rraiiiuiiis. ^^]ah
and liistnlrir.-y, alonjr with tl P'rr ulniirs" Miprrs macfivi'lv expanding heads, mi that wln'ii mif fi-rslii
ei,(lr,l\vc were of the uiianiinnns ,,|,ii,in,, that wr ha.
I
lli.-hr ill tllr hall of falll-.
Shortly |,ivvr,Ii),- 111,. Chn-liiias holidays a ,-ali raiiie
teers ill th.. Caiiadiaii AniiN Driital ( •ofps. ivsultiii- ill a]i|
ly half tho .-las, lirrdm- thr rail, tliivr ,,r uhuiii iiiadr tin
.sarrili.T. AV. .1. ('nn|„.r. ]{. .] . .Marion and C (i. Piokird.
drplrtiuii and thr Inrtl.rr n 1 of drntal ...r-rants a r.d
forth fnr fiii-thor ivmiits. purposing pr..li.orn.-y in lahorat
fact that aiil'iointiiionts uviv not" fort liroiii ni- as was at li
liatrd thr .dass Urnt Ihrnlln-ll tlHOr flVshliMMi all.l suplh.l,
poliian ,11 t
L. J. Miller. Rep. tj Boxing, Wrestl
MacLachlan, At Home CommitRep. to Track Team; J. A. Graham. Editor-
L. F. Dupins. Decorating Co.; J. W. Bartholemew,R. D. S.; J. R. McLachlan. Rep. ta Rugby;Rep. Torontonensis; \V. W. Race. Honor Ro
iley, Rep. Torontonensis; C. H, Avi
Hyi Yaka; E. St. McBride. Honour Roll,
o Hockey; J, Quick. Pres. Track Team:Butler, Tres. Soccer; H. R. Day. Ren. to
lome Committee.E. T. Lajoie, Pres. Athl
Pres. Senior year
F. E. Babcock, P
J. G Ciunt
; VV. R. Ri<
H. G. Brir; G. H.
Sec.-Trea
cKee. Pn
©THE CABINET
# 6 @ e e
b (T
6touwE^tea/5,,,
ooeeo
MyaYaka Staff-
TOP
iff t©iff
M m}
Dental Soccer Team^Mcifacultq diaiiipions_
I 1i llJ
^Em ^^ DENTAL HOCKEY TEAM ^^^k^L Interfaeultij dennincTs' (?*up f'liampions
DES MOIXES COXVEXTIO.V DE
The Fore^ers' Club
Although during the war the Faeult}' of Forestry nlmoNi dis-
appeared, at least in so far as students attending leetiircs, it lias
again sprung to life and now numbers 46. Our war record i.s one
of which we are justly proud. Out of 55 students enrolled in 1914.
52 served at the front. Eighteen foresters, four graduates and
fourteen midergradnntfs made tlie Kiipremc saeritiee. Five under
graduate forest<Ts k,t,' awanlnl tlic .\Iililai> Cmss.
The Foresters' Clul, i- iiiiii..nc(.,l activities m Oct., her, Tlir
fortnightly meetings, at whicli outside speakers are secured to
address the club on current Forestry subjects, have been well
attended. These meetings also provide the opportunity for stu-
dents and professors to become so well ai'quaiiitcd and tlicv are
(1 good-fellowship that
<tcrs. Tlie executive of
President A. W. Bentley
Vice-President J. F. Sharpe
Secretary-Treasurer T. A. Clarke
Seeond Year Representative H. L. ComminsFirst Year Representative T. F. Jenkins
The events nF tlie >-eai' peeiiliai' tii tile ['aeiilty of Forestry are
the Annual Stunt -Vielit" and I'.ontire, the Annual Dinner and
(irestc
To the Graduating Class of Pharmacy
DEAN HEEBNER
Th.' v.H-atinn nf V\,i,nn:,rv .mIN fnv n ,\nn\ tiMiniii- in tlir iiKistrrv nf it^ iinif.'ssioiuil
-uh- aiMl .Hhq.fiitinii to its r,,iiiiiir,vial .,-.|M.ct. I),ii-in.^ luiif v.Mi-s ,,f training iiiulrr tlie
iiisti-iicrioi, ,,f a phafiiiar.Mitiral .li,-,ius; y,,,, ar.pinv,! a rfrtan, aiimiiiit of knowlfdi;..
ynursrif iif rill' r,,iii-sr nf 1 Mst'ri let I, w I fiiniis|ir,l l,y the Ontario r'nlle.se of Phaniiary aii.l
th.'ivhy .Ntrii.lril yoiif r.lu.-atiuii ill tlir tli.'cvv aiid praetiee of phi.rmafv. whicli evnitiiallv
.iialilr.l yuii tu \<rr„u<r 1,-allv .|ii:il itinl ].hai-iiia<'Oi,tii'al .liomist^ an.l poss.^sors nf tlir
a.-iv,. Phni.l!.
Vullf flltlllv Ml ss will l|,.w \,r ,,f vnui- ,,W1, lllakill-. 1 )n Mnt ilHa-lllr that Vol, liavr
fillisllrd \nur stlldv 1 atlse Vnll liaVC MVUtV,! thr ruvctrd di] i|. Unas, f.,r vnu l,av uiilv
I M tau-ht what vnu niii.t .in. and tl iid nf vn.tr Cnlh.-v rniTi.-nlnin i> tlir (H.-inniii-
any cli'ments tlitit i!i
iiost important, andther as the factor i
si.mal rnthiisiaMii. ]f vmi ran \u- lii'.t in an\lhin.j rUr. and nnh- a third-ratr phaniiarist.
th.ni Icaw pliarniary fm- that snumthniu -I-.
I)n nnt l„. mnv prnfr.Mnnal mm ami wninr,,. fnr s nalisn, Inids tn narrnw th,. mind.
K.-nan,il:,T that vnn aiv riti/nis as uvll as plianiiansts. an.l tak.' an inrnvst in piihlir
affaii-s and in all iiinvnii.-nts that tnid t.. ri-lit wrnn-s and mrivri al.ns,.s. Ilavr a triir
DEAN HEEBNER
COLLEGE OF PHARMACY
WILFRID J. ABELL. WM. D. AIKENHEAD. MABLE AMY. W. WALLACE ARMSTRONG.
Born in '96 in Owen Sound. Hii
began his apprenticeship in the pcal profession. Saw service in th
is now with Class '30 O. C. P. ; in
..Tite, Out.
rharin.nc,v
irnest comes from St. Thomas, where he A Valentine on Feb. M, 18%, at
ended High School and served his appren- Matric. at Soo High. Apprenticed in the Si
eship. He served three and a half years Worked in London, etc. "Parade, shun!"
France and was wounded at .Arras. F.rnest Xov. W. 1017. Qualified as a birdman, had
E. LAWSON BRIEN. EDWIN L. CFORGE W BR OK
erseas 1915 to 1919. We ccmid i
f s O II f
rul Strong Dr
CHARRON.
'.N'inirara's michty roar" He matricu- Lhap's lite journey was begun,,,, J , ,
matrituj^ I9oo_„,i„us 1;
n 1!iU, and then the mortar and pestal j;^„ ;„ Brantf.jrd by the Grand.
rved in Through
rnoffi.He helped tliem in the Signal Cn
COLLEGE OF PHARMACY
GEORGE. W. CLARKE.
"Take no thought for to-morriyu:"
Born at Campbeliford, Ont., in 1895, where
he matriculated. Served apprenticeship in
home town and Toronto. Served in France
with -Ith Battalion for two years. Wounded
HERBERT G. CLEMENS. LLOYD ERWIN CLOSS. LEWIS COHEN.
DoBlenheim. Ontario, the favoured place.
Sept. 28. JS94. After matriculating there, his Born in 1899 in Lanark County, attended First saw light .M
courage took the form of absorbing pharma- High School in .-Mmonte. Served apprentice- village in Rvissia. j
ceutical knowledge from John D. Christmas, ship in Sault Stc. Marie. Enlisted in 1916; Came°"to Ottlwa 'in"I'hm.B. Chemically speaking, he won the served with the C.M.G.C. in France. Received I. Matriculated at
war, hut m.destly prefers to give the otdit the MM, while with the 4th M.G. Batt. "h'P »'''h ^.'"^y. V^-iTiN-,^.. Tj- 1 .1 , V- , , , T^, in Ottawa. Married
tn .MI4-\0.., His hair was tlu' nrit'inal N.^w iiik..k<-.1 hi the attack on Pharmacy. ^.^ p^ug Clerks' .X-ii.M".- t^^l
'I iii.il ..lininr ,liploma. Time—May, 1920. niacy'jO.
m:.
COLLEGE OF PHARMACY
rrrrit-. a2^
m
n
COLLEGE OF PHARMACY
DFRED C. FARRANT. G. FRANKLIN FINDLAY.
f,u;
II mn-m
JAMES W. FOOTE.
Rc-ci
Born near Bradford, matriculated from l-'irst saw the light of day June, 1897, Grey August I6th. 1895. was the memorable da
High School there. Went West, but didn't County. Out. Firm in the belief that K. R. Cayuga, Ont.. the lucky place. Matriculatic
find the golden lucre .is easily gathered there and O. and Materia Medica are very similar, at Welland. Initiated into the mysteries
as one would have us think. Served his both p.^ssessing quality of being easily Pharmacy by H. G. Foote, Pt. Colborn
apprenticeship with llr. Patterson at Xcw- twisted. Pharmacy '20. Heard the band play. Followed. Served ov
^^
R. STUART FOX.
\Vc shall hear of him a
J. CLYDE GEDDES.
1S97. Matriculated at O. S. C.
MICHAEL E. GLEESON.
He has a bcc in his boni:cl.
a. S. GOODYEAR.
n .\ugust 1st, 1897, at Sarnia, Ontario. Born Woodstock, Mar. 3, 1898. Mat)
"Foxy" was born in the large manufactur- Owen Sound, 19U. Enlisted August, 1915. .Matriculated at Sarnia Collegiate. Served Woodstock C. I.. 1915. Served apprci
ing centre of Wroxeter. but he was educated serving overseas, first with the 4th C.M.R. overseas in the 4Srd Battery. Served his iu town and Londc
in Brussels, Ont. He spent three and a half infantry and later with the Flash Spotting apprenticeship at Sarnia, Ontario, and hopes to Goodyear the tii
years "touring the Continent" looking for Croup, Can. Corps Survey Section. Was with to soon be paddling his own canof.
COLLEGE OF PHARMACY
Born March -'5. 1895. Thessalon. Ont. I- I I II f
Graduated Blind River High School. Appren- Fcl 1" Ik*ticed with O. H. Hewitt. Enlisted and went )} I'll
"s; " '~°''
overseas with the 119th Battalion. ^*'
gist Gielnh fr , T e 111
lelruar, 1016 Served in France w thMachine Gun Batt Blig iti near CamOncber 11 1118 11 mc March S 1919 jv
G. M. GRIFFITHS.
' ' '" Grace hails from DeCew Falls, which is
near Thorold. She is very strong on cold
Ban Fram -.a. Tp water, claiming that "few drops" in "doctors'
ERNEST R HALL
Kent Pet rhori
COLLEGE OF PHARMACY ^̂
FWWROBERT M. HOBSON.
IJAS. E. KEATING. /YNDHAM B KEETCH A. P. KNECHTEL.
Born in Madoc, 1S95. \
School. AVith a good
High A big Juke \
have April 1st, 1S%.
tended Pharmacy 'W-ViO. Pharmacy at O C P
the Ontario College
he may be found.
1 ggl ne nt O. C. P.
J. H. KNIGHT. GEO. C. KNOWLES. STEWART J LAING. RAOUL LAVIOLETTE.
Born? Yes. Where? Brantford WSSS. Matriculated? B. C. I. Ser%ed
Mh Royal Ottawa Bn. Recommendeihe field for commission. Chief abilif
hails from the "Highlands of On-ir more definitely from Huntsville. Octobiwith the big n
' '
he enlisted. Clarence Creek, Out. At Ottawa Univer-
/. With Mr. T. Payment. Oltaua. O. C. V.
COLLEGE OF PHARMACY
fcNORMAN McK. LEE.
The -i'orit ,•:,! c7 i",'.i.i" .'..'„c-,l/uii
Jan. 7, 1897. Passedmroiigii inc eaucanonai insflutions 01 tnat
"''"' D°':'"'iirs D R S ,
city and was inveigled into tlie profession, ^o^nto. ''served'^'thrLe' y( 1Now with Victory Class. O. C. P., 19-20. Inf. Battn.
\iMSTANLEY LEMMEX
Smith's Falls O d n .
J KARL LENAHAN. WM. A. LESLIE.
ed Owen Sound Col- Began in London. Ont.. Sept. 19, IS
ears with 102nd Batt. Matriculated Harbord C. I.. Toronto. OvO. C. P. for 1920 on seas R.F.C.. 1916. awarded Distinguished K
y. ing Cross. August, ISIS.
m IWILLIAM J LUCAS URBAN J. LYNCH.
'Uri„s „ fife of c.:scr i„J„s:,-
1 Dec. 14. 1S95. Saw four years
CLIFFORD K. MacDOUGALL.
Born in Bowmanville, 1S9S. Moved to Port'
Dalhousie, attended school in St. Catharines, future
G. MacHAFFIE.
things of him in the
COLLEGE OF PHARMACY
DELOS C. McKAY.
And a-i'oy every care and perplcrily fling. November,
Born at London, Ont., August 17, 1895.^
Attended Aberdeen Public School and London (,^,gg j„ j,,,
Collegiate Institute. Overseas 1916-19. On- Army car^
lario College of Pharmacy '20. had tempe
HENRY VINCENT ROSINGTON MOORE.
-^ti
RAPHAEL R. McKINDSEY. JOHN McMillan.In her
To srend Ma Cherdays
this small world., 1 T7 * /-• 1 Happened to drop into this world on ilay
, ^ ,.^ ,^ ,,hrough Forest Col-2Znd,K9i, at Haniilton, Scotland. Came to and Gait Collegiate,
record for non-suc- Canada in 1904. Educated in B.C. Served drugs and poisons for
lance and be merry, apprenticeship in Nanaimo. B.C., with J. B ^ store. Her atHodgins. former O. C. P. graduate. Enlisted ^in 1914. serving in France with the "Fighting ^^^^ ^^ secure ner .u
light of day at Drumbo,
from Drumbo Academy
Have no
IMtin
,m\f\tif'\f\!
HAROLD C MORRIS.GERALD LOCKIE MOOTE
"Theory and cxf^erieuce make success." 'Take no thonght for thu mono the ay i not njj\ i/icrc Ihe prize n giea
August 27th, 1S9S, saw the advent at Eliza- First saw the light Februar> 6th 1891 at ^^^„ ,„ Caledon Attended Public a
bethtown, Leeds County, Ont. Matric. 1914, Dunnville, Ont. Matric. at High School m ^^ . School in Erin Taught school in Brwhereupon fate decided that he learn the that town. Learned to wash graduates, dust ,
*^ , ' j .l i.
pharmacist's art, i.e.. pains and aches- i,^m^^ ^nd pill-pounding in general with E. ''^"'^ '<" "'™ >=''" ="'' "^"'" hcams appr,
mostly heart aches. Pharmaceutical educa- j ivT.-K-,>e nf cam,, town Served overseas in ticed to Dr. Gear, of Erin, later transierri
tion from H. H. Warren and J. W. Preston. {,•*''^''"' °' "™^ '"""• ^"""'
both of Toronto. Military education at the l^ojal .\a
ARTHUR T. MURPH-V
117-18-19. Pharmacy. G. Tamblyn, Ltd., Toront<
1917 In
1919 Je.
WM CHARl Eb NEWM;! FRED W. NOLAN. ROY G. NUNN.
11 I lilt, Niagara Talk,1, -^^^e
'-t irti.ll Ins drug career 24th BaDrviK St ires and after « orked
THOMAS WILFRED ORD.
itriculated S.C.L. Stratford. ApprenticedM. Meyers, later C. E. Nasmyth & Co.,
ratford. Enlisted May, 1915; four years
r. rce for fn
MbJOHN AMBROSE PAPE. R. J. PARKER. GEORGE H. PAULEY. HAROLD G. PENWARDEN.
Octulier 29th, 1896, at St. Thomas,Born in England in 1899. Matric. at Belle
ville H. S. in 1913. Sold pills in Belleville
Winnipeg and Toronto until inveigled int(
COLLEGE OF PHARMACY
WILLIAM HAROLD PEW. JOHN P. PHELAN.
7\ikc
There
MORRIS D. PITZERMAN.
Born in Kiev, Russia, 1S92. MatricuLitec
iQl"""""]"' n" """" V" Born at Giielph, October ISth, 1S92. Matric. in Poland. Graduated in Pharmacv. 191.f
'''"'" ''''° '"_;,'" =t Guelph C.I.. 1911. Model School certificate. University of St. Vladimir. Kiev. Bid ths
e birch. 1912 to 1915. Drug Czar good-bye in 1914.
1919. Pharmacy. 1919-:0.
THOMAS ANDREW QUINN.
Began life at Berkeley. Ont., April
ceshii
the person of A. C. Thorburn, druggknocked at his door and another misguided
al Sault Ste. Marie, Ont. Boxing and tennis
enthusiast. Holder of Steelton Tennis Club
Cup, 1913. Served with 15th Battalion in
France, and now trying to learn the whysand wherefors of Pharmacy at Ontario Col-
lege of Pharmacy
WILLIAM E. QUINSEY. J. A. RAGSDALE. JOHN WILLISON REID.
180S. Matriculated from Cayuga HighJune, 1914. Served in France.
Born lS9,i. Attended New York City Public Commonly knowu as Runt. Began this
Schools, then Jarvis Collegiate Institute till journey on November 25th. 1S96, at Guelph,1912, followed by a farm life. .-Vpprenticed Ont. Partially educated in Guelph Publicin Toronto. and High Schools. Matriculated in 191,;.
^ARRY ALWIN RENTON
IB
COLLEGE OF PHARMACY
HORACE L. RILEY. VORMAN EUGENE RIPPON
Born at Point Edward, July 13th, 1899. at O.S.C.I. Served apprentice
Attended Public School at London. 1903-19U; town. Wore the King's unito:
London Collegiate Intitute, 1912-15. O.C.P., started back to school.
hip in liome Great '
H. V. ROGERS. T.
In his early years H. V. showed signs of First appearance October 2Jrd. 1893. at Newfuture greatness in the pharmaceutical pro- Boyne, Ont. Graduated from Smith's Falls
fession. Our acquaintance with hiiti has con- schools. Entered on pharmaceutical career
vinced us that success must necessarily shine with L, A. Wilson of the same town. Thenupnn this devote,- at the shrine of Or P, j.Mned ihe crusa.le into the interior ,.f OC P.
Claims he likes work.
E. CLAYTON ROOT.
"The world belongs to the cu'i
•nt early days in Wiarton. II
.Norwich. San- active servi
ided Pharmacy, 1919.20.
'^^
TgffiCHRISTINE ROBERTSON.
big heart on the 1"20 O.C.P.
d we feel sure that she will win
SI OlllBorn .\ugusl ISth, 1S93, at Cumberland,
B.C. Educated in Vancouver, B.C. Very
6£th Field Depot Battery in February. 1917,
DEAN R. RUSSELL SINCLAIR SCHRAM.
London, always witli the motto in mind, Lovell showed him"Cura atque indiistria." Strong supporter of him under the can
temperance (W.C.T.L".). Heebner.
the day of his
matriculated in
a druggist, so Ju
Cieek, Ont., a smiling
him Born February 28th. ISJS. at Parkhill, Ont.
«'hen Educated in London-in-the-Bush. Matricu-
... lated 1916. Served apprenticeship in London
"plj'jr! and in C.E.F. Highest ambition: See Paris
'^T^\ff^fmM^T^i^mf^^
education in Smith's Falls, Born Fenelon Falls. Ont., August 12th
: years in Ottawa and re- 1S9J. Matriculated 1911. Apprenticed W. C. Cain Toronto before joining Avery, Toronto. Enlisted June, 1916, and 1S96. Exact date September 2i
1919-20. Pharmacy. served in France with 21st BattaHon. In- 1?^^^. ^^ ^^^^^'•\^. ^^^h School. Tra
vith Laurier Regin
, 1919. Came to PhaAtliletic Com- tlia
months with "A" Bat- Kinc
Barney" was raised in the lonely Htlle
,'n of Lucaii. He learned a lot about pill-
inding in London and Toronto, but he's
more at O.C.P. Served his
deemed wise. President Pha
COLLEGE OF PHARMACY
HARVEY D. STEWART.
COLLEGE OF PHARMACY
E! 1^jf
;ifj'
FORREST WRIGHT WALKER.
Minneapolis, Minn., on June .'1
Matriciil.itert from King F.cUv.iril Hi,
GLADYS R. WALTERS,
;;,,- Gi,i:i a;,L"
Niagara Falls. .She's music
KENNETH EDWARD ARTHUR WEBB,
Hespeler, Ont„ claim,s him ns a native, Toronto bov. born 189.=;, Graduate of OaBorn .-^pril 8th. 1896, Matric, at Gait Col- wood Collegiate Itistitule, Served three yea
uar in Medical 'Co"rps and .Air Force, Phar- s.-rai)i>'linK n'itl/intricaci'cs'
of modern pha
CHARLES FRED WEEGAR,
Born Calumet, Que,, February. 1893, andsoon moved to North Bay, where he attended
collegiate and served apprenticeship with A.
C, Rornbeck. April, 1916, joined Northern
Fusiliers, and after a sojourn in France
was again claimed by mortar and pestle, and
' 'snni^jv" ,
BRINA WEINROBE.
Half hidden ffoii
4AROLD DAVID WEST,
first dawn March 27th,
Riverdale Collegii
ig time" W, J, Mit<
1917, R.F.C. Flying Officer Indepen- Collegiati
ir Force. O.C.P., 1919,:o. spending
er the policy. "Sparethe child," He left St, Marythe spring of 1915. and :
'
summer at home, packedissions and travelled to the i
: of Ontario to spend four y
fter
COLLEGE OF PHARMACY
DORKli;et..«i
E F. WHITE
)\Mi, September 2iid. 1897.
f the R C I Introduced into..f Pharmao b^ A M. Jrittnn,
and C d r H Lame. r,f Wind-
O. M. WHITTEN.
with it. ;
good. He
ALBERT D1ER WILSON. NORMAN MILBURN WILSON.* arc yoii going to keep him down on the
He spent his boyhood days in Peterbor<
) become famous with the rest. Started a
drug clerk in Toronto. Between time
W uALBERT J. WOODS.
ireer of above at Mount Forest. Dmapprenticeship Educated at Jlount Forest, matriculating ii
ith the ILSlb 1915, Served in Canadian forces one anda^ with 2nd half years. Leader of Mount Forest Presbv
terian Choir, 1918. Attended college, I919.2C
III^IO^
The Ontario College of Pharmacy
To the Graduating Class of Veterinary College
morning aft
Born lit. Elgin. Ont. Primarily educated
t Ingersoll indicating liis heritance to
orldly estate. Entering O. V. C. 1916. he
jndescended to study the Equine and Bo-: result that the
augh has made h unders. Represeiitativc-
d Class Social Committ
\m.
A. G. FREW.
"Girls! Girls! hut I still love my dog."
Hails from Scotland. Ont. Primary eJuca-
ion at Public School and Continuation
Ichool, and a short course at O. A. C. Wish-ng to advance still further he entered O. V.
^"t M:^
J. S. GLOVER.
<cep ri-.-ers fiow quiet
C, 1914. We
3
lided has displayed mu
THOMAS E. HUMPHREY.
"Of fo-.i' zi'ot,U and many thoughts."
Born York County. Early life spent in that
ounty, and in attending Port Elgin High
ichool. Entered O. V. C, 1914. Sacrificed
years at what he considered inore good to
Veterinary Prof<
RONALD GRAHAM LAW. H. G. McDonald.
tigonish, N.S.. on Ja
O, V. C. in Oct., 1916.
J. E. NESBITT.
• rsc! a Iwrsc! my kingdom for a horse!'
iJed he belongs to a '.eeallliy client."
bitt is out for capital, and Capita
a is his home. Entered O. V. C. '15
ed '16. and returned O. V. C. 'IS. Hi.
!S are asking questions, elevatins th.
GEORGE E. STANLEY."Oti, Stanley, on/"
Birth, early life, and education in London,ng. Landed under Maple Leaf, 1909. Ap-!ared O. V. C. '14. Enlisted '15, and served
years in France, helping keep communica-on between front line and brigade head-
Returned O. V. C.
Students' Council and Torontc
I. Member. Class Social Comrai
Repri
IL- ^Z
"SLESLIE E. TURNE
First saw light of day in 1894 in Glas
Scotland. Came to Canada and followed f;
ing as an occupation. Decided upon a b(
profession and entered O. V. C, 1916,
Ontario Veterinary College Athletic Association
of T. IV, -..nl ;il thr
t :ir .MollIlT;,! ulirl,
til,. , lis,., IS ,-v..|ll.
ss,.,| Inn, s,. If \,y ihr,
li.,,l I,,';, I, 'II III,
,1 ll.l.l ^lls,, w,„
;i Irw i,i,,t,-l„'s «,'iv |,hn,.,l Ihis yr.n-
with |,i-.„Mi,v, th,' -Wis- will I,,. ol,l,
„.|Ms,'Uvsiii tins l,i„.„r sport.
l,„-k,-\' Is nl,,,ll„T .j;,l,l,' III;, I the ().\-.(
with H. (1. C.UH- .,s ,M|,t;,ni. th,' 1,-11
'h,' l-'i.'hl l),i\- li,'M ;,t th,' \-ai-sin' SI
;i -IVal s||,-,.,.ss. AlLM.II- ,.tl„.f I'rJ
IS Ass,,,. I, III, ,11. With
Ontario Veterinary College Science Association
.R. J. l!.,werm:i
.MEMP.EK«.
uriifi' i;
E. (t. F(ils(im,.li-.
T. E. Iliniipln-cy
His
re lias been attc
ents of the sei
iject the pi-onin
advai
Personal observations during onr atteudanee at coHi'i^e le id
to believe that these traditions have been zealously preserved.
"We have been greatly enlightened on many subjects throughmedium of tlie many excellent and varied I'^sjys tli.it liavi' li
read and so ably defended by its miMiilH r>.
During the fall term a new departui-.' frmn tln' usu il i-outini' i
characterized b.y some very interesting iliustiMicil licturrs and pi
tical demonstrations on Coal Tar produrts. X-i-ays, Asir i
etc., so clearly rendered by Mr. L. B. Jjrki'^. of tlir •.rniiir y.
lie will
1 and ii resting nature may be expected.
All meetings have been well attended by .students of
ears and livelv interest has been taken in the discu.ssion-
Tliis has ills.) been a means i.f furtln-ring the fraternal sjiirit
)etween tlie different years, as it affords a closer intimacy than tliat
if meeting between periods during the day.
Broad fields lie open for the Association and therefore a very
^lleeessfuI future awaits it, which fact is emphasized when one eon-
^idll•s the advancement the \'eterinary profession has made in
[( rent years, and also with the raising of the standard of the
leieriuarian, the lengthening of the college course and the nunier-
lUs new fields coming under the jurisdiction of veterinary science.
:he future of the Science Association must be assured.
rhe Ontario X'eterinary College
FACULTIES OF THEOLOGY
E-BRlCHARIl A BLACKBURN. FRANK Al hhLD CRIGIIFON
,1 Wi^.tir., Oi.nnn. Came to "Vic"
'romincnt iii Lit Y.. and Glee Club.
-Llci <;e<.onfl R.nvell Prize and also
CI
FREIHRICK M\RK t LUS JAS. M. FINLAY.
I .
I
,>f life,
:ars in A
M. C.
shops; Fullarton Circuit:
V,
Wr %^
IiS
JACK OLIVER.
be all luihckc
Hvp.rtl Ho^ 101!."
udies from Belleville and
probation in London Con-
MAXWELL C. PARR.
light of day
18M. Received early education at Brigdeii
and in Aylmer Collegiate, entering Victoria
polish at Vic." in 1918. His cheerful disposition and
,„ . u, , t'^'°''-
"'?"l^"'^ thoughtful actions made him a friend of all.
ly out into this day of opportunity with per- * , , . ^ , , rt, , . , ,
or sonality and ability which we prophesy is A good student, but 01 how he loved a
equal to the oci-asinn." good show and an exciting ball game.
FRANK SULLIVAN.
nd finally settled
noble art. and
WILLIAM HENRY SUMMERELL.So ,
THOMAS GEORGE WILLIAMS.
li-sovered. Born in Dorsetshire, Eng. ItineranBecame again visible in Canada, 1910. Sask.. 1«U ti 191''. when he entered SuiSbcd^^ Us r.tdiance over the Warren Cir- q^„^^^ ;„ Theoloijv at Vic. Absorbed
hedifying homiletic matter. UnobtriTheology,
* 19 El ^ El 101
!
i'CLIFFE COLLEGE READI>
:OLLEGE STUDENTS' MISSION SOCIETY
D. Gemmill. Asst. Se.
C. C. Harcoi.rt. B.A.. J. H. Pogson, President \V. A. Gcddes. B.A . Tri
Wycliffe College
To the Graduating Class in Knox College
PRINCIPAL GANDIER
'I
DOUGLAS B. ARMSTRONG.
chit of hcc.rt of oah that 'vouUiu't
ChildhoTOl-Zephyr, Ontario.
Youth-rxbridge.Manhood—U.C., '15, France, Knox
KNOX COLLEGE
JOHN GEORGE COGHILL.
hough vanquished, he could argue still."
JAMES D. CUNNINGHAM.
From North Battl
To toil and mo'.i\ Hyfcrion curls" '
Ay ol To >"^ " FARMER'S boy." American' by birth and Canadian by adop
High Saw the light of day in Vetus Scotia to- tion. "Hagel" hails from the Pacific Coast.
Knox wards the end of XIX. Century. Early in XX. Xew Westminster High School. '1.'; Provin-
neers. Century was wafted over the seas to the cial Normal School. '12; Arts. '17; University
ranee, land of the poppy and pigtail. Taught of British Columbia. He came to Knox for
Now Chinese boys Hygiene for a few years. Waft- Theology, and is found in this year's gradu-
ed back to Nova Scotia, Theology. aling class.
W^iANDREW LANE.
all that doth hecom
JAMES CLAZIE LOWRIE. JAMES NEVIN McFAUL. JAMES HAYES
Collegiate in Walkerton; taugb
ere he specialized and graduated i
16. Enlis
1916. Servi
ancy he is Canadian. He combines a
monizes the best elements of the old
new lands. He is a graduate of TJr
of Toronto—a veteran of France—
a
Born at Leamington, Dec. 15th. 1S85. Edu-
cated at Leamington High .School. Essex
High School, and Albert College. Belleville.
Ont. Entered ThcMogy. Va: . after spending
should be of Pn
KNOX COLLEGE
If
MJWUiU
IPhhROBERT W. RUMLEY tRIKAM bKENE ERNEbT CILMOUR SMITH.
Bu, the s"
July Iitl,,
life around college hall' To
CllCHIRO TEZUKA.
Born at Kakuda-inaclii. Miyaqi-Ken. Japan,January on], 18S6. Graduated from the To-kyo Ttieological College. Tokyo, Japan, in
Tune. 1911. Ordained. December 30th, 1912.
11111.1919. Pastoral work at Tokyo. Hakodate.Xiigata. Came to Cana.la. .\pril Sth. 1919.
K.NOX COLLEGE STUDENT
Kno\ College
The Blue and White
01,1 Tnrniitd. .M.iThcr ever dear.
All rhv sdiis tliv vcrv iiauio revere,
Vcs. we hail rhcc. iic-<t will fail thee,
l!uf will seek th\- l;1(ii'v with uuv miiilit
( Vrs. \v(. arc) ever Inval, faitlifiil. frai
W'c will sdiiiid tiiv praises in diu' sdii^,
Ave. and c-hecr lintli luial and hum.Tile K'.iVal lilue and White.
S.„.n (,niTnlle-edays will all he past.
l)nr\- hids ns j.art t'funi friends at last,
I'.ut we'll sever, tiaistin- evei'.
Ldve for X'arsitv niav ns ninte.
Then we'll sei'Ve the'.Mnther of ns all.
.\nd the ni.'rrv davs nf v.uith rerall.
While, whatever mav hefall.
We'll Hannt the Idue and White.
T()r<.i
son, •_>;. Sporting Reporter; H. E. Saun-
Reporter; H. Linton, '21. Reporter; R. S.
er; H, .T. iMcQiiillan, >0. Reporter; E. B.
SECOND RO\V:-\V. G. Colgate, "a. Associate Edit.ir; E. H. McKEditor: J. W. Gardner, '21, Associate Editor; R. V. Sjw;rs,
F. W. Dunton, '21, Local Editor; S. W. Stewart, ;.!, Report
THIRD RO\V:-Miss H. J. Dewey, '21, Reporter; Jliss M. CMiss J. E. H. McLennan, -21, Reporter; Miss M. Gogo,•22, Reporter; Miss J. McNish, '2j, Reporter; Mis
Reporter; Miss A. C. Cringan, '23, Reporter.
FOURTH RO\V:-M. L. Stokes, '20, Asst. Sporting Editor; '
Women's Managing Etlitor; Miss E. R, Cringan, '21. '
BOTTOM KO\V:-F. K. Jasperson, '22, Dramatic Reviewer;
Reporter; Mi
. McLean, '2
DACK ROW (left to right ):-G. E. Staiilt-y,
Houstoi,. R. S. Hosking. H. D. Laiisf
MIDDLE ROW;—\V. T. Holmes. R. A. Willia
A. P. McKeiizie, S. F. Everson.
FRONT ROW:-G. C. Bennett. Pres. Eng. Society; C. G. R
tonensis Rep.; O. G. Hague. Vice-Pres.; V. G. Lew
Mus. Org.; C. C. Grant. Gen. Sec.-Treas.; M. L. Stokes.
ABSENT:-R. V. So-.vers. Varsity Rep.; E. L. Wasson; B. J. Connolly; P. M. Ballantyne: J.
N. H. Russell, Pres. Meil. Society; W. R. Salter. Pres. Fe,l. Exec. U. of T. Y. M. C. .
Women Students' Administrative Council
Til.' Wninni Sn^,l^l,l^ A.liniiiistr;iliv.. ( niuinl is tlir iMilv uftinal alv— t -n|„T,iI,. with thr \Vnl,l,.|l\ E.lltnl- ,,f tllP Vill-MtV, tn
.>l--all ..f illl rillVrl-MlV W.illin,. Tills lunlv n.llsisls nf ;,ll rX.'i-IIIIVr (.nllMllIr 1 1 1 1 ( ITnll,- ill t r ilrlivitirs, iilnl tn nfuil II izo a bllivau tlin.l
11111.1. lip .if til.' Ihm.I ,,r ,.i„.l, ,-,,ll,.n,. ,111.1 th.' w n's |„vsn|,.|it ..f wlii.-li iiiatt.-fs ,,f iiii|„,fi i,, all In.v.Tsit v \v.„ii,ai niav I..- a.lu
111.' Fa.-ultv ,,r Al.'.li.-iii.'. a I- Ml iv|.ivs,aitali\.' ,.( .M.-li .-..H.-j.- ist,.|v,L SI,,, iv^ ist.-i's iiii.l.T'jra.lual.'s f.,r siiiiii,„.r w.ifk aii.l iiui
ami fa.-ultx-. an. I an .\.lvis,,rv l;,,af,l .•,,iii|i.,s,.,l ,,r tli,' D.Mii ,.f iliVfst i-at i.,Ms as t., ..p.ai iipj-s iii vat i.ais fi,'|,|s^
llia-n-s Hall, tli,' li.-a,ls ,,1' til.' riiiv.TsJH ('..H.-j,. aiiil \'i,-t.,fia Tin- riiiv.M-sitv War .MiMiinnaM 'aiiijiai.^ ii u as .-aiTi..,! ..ii .lui'
rill. Ills, til.. I), 'an ..f St. Ilil.Urs, an, I an Aliiuina.- ivpivsiaitativ.' flie fall tffiii. aii.i uii.l..|- th,' .liiv.-t i.ni ..f tli,' r,ain,-il ^'Jl-i wasfr.,in Si. .Mi..|ia.-rs, l.-.-t.'.! fnuii tli.' u-,,i,i..n stii,|,.|its,
Tntil tins \,-.,r \\u- li.'l.l .,f wnrk lias l„.,ai xrvv limit, ',1 .,win.j- Tlifnipjli tli,' i-,.iii-t.-sv .,f tli.- .\ilil.-li.- I )nv,-i.ifat,' tli,' Cantn til.. Ta.-t that III,' ,.r.jain/ati,,ii lias ans nf 'iMisJn- liiian.'.'s was .jiwii ti.-k.Ms f,„- ,-..|iIi-.' s,..ti.iiis at lli.- nil.-iv,,|l...j lat.- Kmlik.' til.. .•.„-,vs|„,ii,l,iii: iii.ars .,i-a,n/,atmii. At tli.' ,-l,,s,. ,,f last ami ll,„-k,'\ -aim^s, ulii,-li «.nv s,,l,l ammi.j' tli.' «.,iii,m. That i
.v.^ai- 111.' S..|iat.. .jiMnl.,1 a |..'titi V,.iii tli,' w.,iii.-ii nf ill.' riiivia'- .•niishhTat h.ii uas iinmisi akaMx a|.| iiv,-iat,',l uas .v.,l.-ii.-.'.l hvsil.N- thai tli.'V slmiihl iiax' tli,' sal •,mi|,iils,„-v Cain.-il (,; as ih.' snli,l l,|.,.-k .,f w.mimi whi.-li a|.]..-ai-.-.l tn .-li.-.T nii th.' Vai'sitv t.-i
nam. Tins allnu.'.l ih,. w,,iii,ai t.i shaiv j.aiil tinam-ial ivs, sihil- rn.lniiht,', II v this iiinnvati.,n has niv,m a -ivat |,.,.ist- t.i Vai-itv with th.. m.'ii 111 ih.' pnhli.-atinn nf th.' \"ai-sitv, T.,f..iit iisis siniat aiimn- tli.' w.mi.m.
ami tl;.' StII. hilts' l)iiv,.ini-v
An a-iv,.|ii..nt l„au.-.ai tli.. m,.|i ami w,,iii,-ii pi'nvi.l,., fny a .I..int
Ex.-.-n1iv... thn.ii.jh «li.is,. hamls niiist pass all matt.'fs allVi-tni-
Imlli C, lis. .Ml ivv.-nii.. .hmiv...! I'f..iii tli.. Cniim-il IV..s. \-afsitv.
Tni-,,nt,in.aisis. ami th.' StmLaits' 1 )iiv,-t,,fv is a.lminist,.iv.l l,v tlm
Iniiit Kx,-,mtiv,., At tl n.l .if .'a.-h n.mi- ,i1I snn.liis iii,„„.x is
ilivi.l.'.l pi',.p.irt ,11. 'K l„.tu,',.n tl,,' l»n Caim-ils.
This var Inr th.' lirst tnii.'. a salai-v is pai.l tn 111,- W ii's
E.lil..f-iii-('lii.-r ami th,' \V,.m.'ii-s .M,-nia..ini- K.litnf ,il' th,' \-.ii'sit\- npiTaimn uith I
East fall Ih,' W 'ii-s Ciini.'il aiipnint.'.l a (h'li.'i'al S.','t','tai'v- iii'na.h'ii.'il ami .1
Tl'.'asiu'.'i-. wh.is,. salal'v is |,ai,l .ait .,f th.' j.iint fiin.ls. II..,' .Inti.'s .,f th.' iif.' .,f an
h.. \"n,'alinMal Caima,' uas this x.'a
.1 th,' C.nf.'n'n.'.'.
E. E. Giaiiigcr, il. F. Edge, Ribey. K. McLaren. J. E.
BOTTOJI ROW (left to right) :-Misses M. E. Williamson, C^rr. Sec. U. C: H. R. Coatswonh. Vice-Pre^.. Vic; M. K.
O'Brien. Pres.. St. M.'s.; E. McPlierson. B..\.. Gen. Sec-Treas.: A. A. Curtiii. Treas.. Meds.; W. F. Scntt. Rec. .'^ec.
IXTF-R-COLLKGE D IRATING I_-XIO\.
BOTTOJI RO\V:-Kdent; C. CIj
ABSENT :-Premier V. G. I.twis. E.A., Pr(
The University of Toronto Y. M.C. A.
W. R. SALTER. B.A.
MsnlK, l»M'ausr ,,1' thr
np.^llill- n{ Ihirt IIolls,., al„| tl„. tlMM-IVl- uf
to tl luirt.Ts |in,vi(l,'.l in \\,r Sniitli Win-. Tl M liuildiiii;',
piv.-tr,l in l.vs.VC with fun, Is raiM.l tlirnii-l, tli.- cirurt^ of Ralph((inin.r. l'ruf.-.-.(.r Vnun-. ><{ Trinity, ami a :snm\i of their ffllow-
.siuilriii,, \vas ih,' tiiNt ImiiMiii- of Its kind to !» ilevoted to the work
pliysiral oriitri' of thr iiianv ac-tivitu's carried on bv the variousCollo-r AssorlatimiS.
It is. iiidiTil. fortunate that the transition of the Association to
Hart Ilousi- lias lieeii ciinfemporaneons with the influx of studentsfor the first -aftoi-tlir-uar- sossinn. Tlio Y.M.C.A. is enable.l to beof larfrcr usi'fulni'ss at a tiinr wlion iiiii(|ue opportunities are pre-
,I.Mit I'linstlall .\|,
lifo that has r,
\Vi
(piiry 1
is the
lall rol
oeally among the men of the facultios of
Bdueafion and of University. \'ictoria.
Oolletres. These local .associations, racli
t. This
th'roiiuli
The a.'tivities of the association .seek to -iv.' praet
n to the spirit of friendship and service wliieh siirh s
y stimulates. Thu.s, the student, when he eom,-s to t
in the autinnn, is "'iven a handbook jirejiared with a
•fulness amonjr the men of his Faculty: he is aeled i
n of a suitable ri)omini:--li(iuse : throiiirh the llocik K
rehase used books at moderate piarrs; if ho is a fivs
wie
this rnrn.ll
es. Thes service
working;
th.> .\ss,,riati..ii seeks
•Id. by presentiliji' the
'his beiiij; the year of
tioii. iiver a hundredriiiveisity of Torontoiiadian and Americani^eds and problems of
the close of the world
I makes ujion student
ST.WDIX
The Anglican Club
...Mrs.
A. Km
Secretary A. .\l. .V.lain-
Treasurer W. 1 'a\
n
4tli Year Repre.'^t'iitativc K .A-mai
3rd •I>. Ilnlnl,.,
2ud • H (urlin,],.
1st l:. <',irn:
F. O. E. Mi>s \-ru,,i,i;n
Tl'illitV Miss I'ntt
flHl.T til,' rapalll.' lra,l,-Vsl,i], .,f its |„vs„lrl,t. .Miss Lmv,,,, Rlrl,
ardsim. the Aiiiiliran Cliil. ..f \\ of T. rntriTd ii|..,ii a KnruafiMovement" of its nwii.
At the befriiiiiiii'/ •<( the vraf cii.'i-uvtir rtfnfts wnv mad.' ti
increase tlic niciiil„M-slii|, of tlir cliil. witli vn-y -ratifying residts
All .•iid.'avntiv was iiiadr t,. Iiav all tli.' faciiltirs ,,f the iniiversiti
r. pivseiit.M. with the result that iiieiiil».rs are enrolled from U.C,
Vie.. .St. Mike-s. St. Hilda's. F.o.E.
A new e.K).eriment has l.e.-ii tried this year in iiiakiiif: the meet
ines iiioiithlv instead of hi-i,iontlilv. IJesi.les meetini^s at thi
louse, elub gatherings ha
-\[rs. Ilallam, and at St.
. Dr. Tavlnr, ^Miss CartwleJleall woi-k.
> of the Aneliean Cluh w
11 held at the Union, at
I's. .Meetings have been
Jliss Thomas and other
ih were early emphasized: Fellow-iLiliean women of tlu' various faculties of the
,iew to mutual helpfulness: knowledge of the
f the Anglican Church in Toronto, with a viewwork. In the working out of the first of these
was formed which met Sunday afternoon in
I'arisli Hall under the m
%mSTk. t ft
||~-4-
TOP ROW:-J. Taylor. G. B. Beatty (Treasurer)
SECOND ROW:—C. B. S. Ritchie. B. Stephensor
THIRD RO\V:-W. C. Ik-Tavisli. R. Ryrie (Sect
BOTTOM RO\V:-R. B. West, T. O.nkley {Prf
W. Cohen. D. I.. Miller.
, C. Smith. S. Wilkins. W. P. F
. G. R. F. Trjop. J. Douglas (li
!tary). C. McL. Currie.
yseng, L. Woodland,
s (1st Year Rep.), J, A, Jackson a<
Frederick, C. .\shworth, L, C. Mutnzie (Hon. President). G. Bere (Vi
The University Veterans' Association of Toronto
As ,.iii-|v :is mii; -nMirr-stihlnit-. uhu lia.l K.-m unuinL'.l ..r this woi'l; uviv nut l.rinu' ^is -)v<,t as was Impr,! fur, hut tli.' uttVr uf
thrrwis,. ivii,lriv,l initit fui' rni-thri- sn-vir,. ov.Tscas. briiaii t.i the Cuvrfiiiiinit tu luau ^M) witlmut iiit.'ivst t.i iifedy sul.lier-
i-ililil.' liark tu tlir riiivrrsity aii.l .MMiiNiiir tlinr iiit.'i-i-iipt.Ml stiulnits was uii.luiil,tr,lly lafuvly ,liif lu tlir efforts of the assoeia-
tiicli.'s. At first they cann- in small iiiniilirrs. lait as tlir \v,ir tiuii. As a rrsull uf tli.' assuriat iun's artiuii in pointing out to the
ra-Liv,! uii. ih.'sr iM.rani.' lamvr. niitil ill .laiiiiarv. l!ils. H-lirn tha Aliiiniii .Maniurial Cuniiiiiitra tlic fiiiaiirial need ivhieh existed
prill- t.-rin c-uniiiirii,T,l, alnuit :!()() vatn-aiis lual ivturiir.l tu tha aiiiun- s,i|,|iar-stu.lri,ts in thr riiivarsitv luaiis ware made avail-
iiiv.TMtN. able fi'uiii the .Meiuurial Fiiihl as Hvli.
As u-as ,,atnral thrsa man uliu had faaa.l tuLirthar daiejvr andaath. dasnvd tu funu suiue kind uf an assuaiatiun wlia-h wuuld „•rve tu aaiaaiit the ties uf friendship that liad spnni.' up hatueaii ,llani. and whlrh «u„ld alsu tend lu karp tnivvar -reell tha llieui- i,,
ri.s uf thusa hniidrads uf lliair auiaradas uhu had -ivan np their ',,
vas f,a- tha sarrad .aiisa. Cunsaiiuaiith it Was that in Februarv, -,
HIM tha |-Mivarsify Wterans' Assurialiun was farmed. The meni-arship uf tha Assuaiatiun was liinitad tu tia.sa who had seen vohiii-
riii- Hrst uf all tu pruvi.la a su,-ial niaatin- plaaa fur former '"
uinrades-in-arms, and sea.aid tu take aara uf the interests uf I"
eturnad suldiar-stndanls. -'vera! even.n;;s.
id'a assistanaa fur snldiar-stinh'iits sniuiar tu that wliiali has 1 n suMiers will be present in nnud.ers' ai the rinvarsitv. A duuMextaiidad tu stinlaiits in (ireat Britain and Australia. Lul.liyina in '"iiid uf uniun exists l.etwaan thusa «hu liava l,uih stn.lia.l an.l
ha ITuiisa uf Cuiiiiiiuns AVHS Carried on during the greater ]iart uf fuuyhi tuaeiher. It may he that in th mm- y.ars the rniversitv
ha summar and als,, during the month of Oetober. A pidilieitv X'atarans' Assuaiatiun uf Tur.aitu will hlu^sum furtii m new -aiii-ampai-n was eun.luetad and extensive eorrespomlenee was baina- a aiiili uf vetei'an -ra.luatas ratliar than an assuaiatiun uf vatei'an
arriad un with the :\lembers uf the (!uvarnm,'nt. The rasiili. uf stiid.'nts.
Jiiriii- tha l!n!i.L'(l Near lliiv,
M, tWu uf whiah Ualv llifunilal
Littlefield, UniveW. J. H. Huston,
J. L. CharWyclifFe; A. H. Livingstone, Science.
L. M. Martin. Dental; W. N. MacQueen, President; Prof, }. J. MacKenzie, Hon. Vice-President; Dean MiteProf. T. R. Loudon. Hon. Vice-President; F. P. Lloyd, Vice-President; F. J. O'Leary. Secretary.
ABSENT:—R. A. Smyth, Pharmacy; W. R. Pedley. Medicine; Thain MacDowell. Hon. Vice-President.
G, H, \V. I.ucas. 20. Preside
THIRD ROW:—D. R. Coyne. C. \V". Streets,
W. D. Coulter, E. F. Waldron.
SECOND RO\V:-J. B. Martm. G. O. House. M. H. Mitchell, L. L. Henry, H. A. Kniglit, D. Woodhouse. J. E. WylC. H. McLean, W. D. Proctor. B. T. Stephenson, F. \V. Dunlon, V. Boden.
FRONT ROW (left to right) ;-E. H. McKinney, H. Breuls, E, W. Thompson, A. C. Walwyn. D. J. Sinclair, H, Fergus
G. H. Duff (House Master), H. B. Little (President). J. C Bell, R. W. Urquhart. H. Strong, V\ J. Sullivan. J.
Morden. J. A Jackson.
(J
-^x^-
Ward, F. H. Wilson, W. L. Shields, R. V. Sowi
MIDDLE ROW:-G. N. Black, L. H. Murphy, O. D. Jc
J. L. McDougall, R. L. Gilbertson, T. A. Stone,
bell, D. B. Code, R. M. Vincent.
BOTTOM ROW (sitting):—J McEachern, R. McDermeiDr. C. G. Imrie (House Master), J. K. Bell (Pt
Stuchen, F.
MEMBERS NOT IN PICTURE:-M. L. Stokes, W. L.
Smith, L. V. Smith, W. W. Terryberry.
Lewis, V. Voaden, W. W. Wc
, J. M.
\V. M.
Athletics
,lrtV
Athletics- -Continued
Track Athletics
Tlirre was a lar^e turuout of material at the beginning' of the
tenii and the Interfaeulty Meet ou October 17th drew the largest
attendance tliat has been seen in years. The comiietitiirs were well
distributed through the famltirs. and srvcral l..n;;-taiidin- iv,-nrds
were broken. S. P. S, tni.k the tii-st pla.-r wiih :;i imini-.. Ali'.ls.
following with 27 and University Ctillegc with Is. K. L. farruth-
ers, S.P.S.; R. S. Foster, of Vets.; Joe Breen, of S.P.S., and Rocl
Siuylie, of Mecls., were the outstanding athletes and carried off most
of the points. Carrnthers lowered the record for tlie 120-yard
hurdle (established in 1!)09 by L. A. Wright) by three-fifths sec-
onds, getting a new record of 16-3 5 seconds. Foster beat the
record for throwing the discus established in 1907 by A. D. Jlac-
Ka}-, the previous record being 109 ft. 3 iu., T\-hile Fo.ster"s recordwas 112 ft. 9iu. Iu the Intercollegiate McGill won the champion-ship, making a clean sweep of the track events, although in the field
events Yar.sity and Queen's were Ciisily the licst. Xn records werebroken, but Foster came within mic inch (if the Iiitei-cdlleijiate
discus record.
Harrier
As usual a large number of students turned out to train for the
Harrier Meet, and 43 undergraduates lined up for the Interfaeulty
contest. The Brotherton Cup was won by Triuit.v College, whoseteam uf fuui' men were the first to finish. Thev were closelv fol-
lowed by St. .Mi,.haers, Trinity II., S.P.S., Wycliffe, G. F. Leigh.iif Wyi-lilt'e ^;aining first place iu 36 min. 17 see. The following
week tlie Intercollegiate Meet was held in Montreal with 16 menrepresenting Queen's, R.M.C., Varsity and McGill. The coursewas five and a half miles and departed from the rules and customliy being largely over city streets. ilcGill won by two points,
winning 1st. 3rd' and 7th places; while Leigh and Bell, of Toronto,won 2nd and 4tli places respectively.
Hockey
.Mai-eh .-|th, when \-
el-eolle„ate Cha,,,,,,
.Mhin Cui.ser.e..
Ill the inte,a„e,l,ate
t K..M.('.. the Ulllller
oi the (Msteni division. 111 le
tied at the end of the third
N'arsiiy in ten minutes ovei
the 14tii .Mareli. at Trenton',
4 to 2 and the InteivoUeeiat
Hid N'arsity won tlieir home-and-dei-eil in Ottawa. This took place
1 hv a score of ."i to 4. the SeniorI'hey are thus ,,ualihed to enter
iMei'ii oToup in the finals. K.M.C.lej \ ar^ity in both games.1 1- inei i^ni'Cii's Ill's, the winnersaihl-lHiiiie games. Tlie score wasid and the championship won by
.Seoie IU to 9 on the round.•Ii was oi(h'red to be replayed oni-sity won the game by a score of
iiai
BasketbalIn the Senior series \'ars
Ottawa was ordered on thi- s;
sity won the game and the (i
I tied an,'
hoekev d
Boxing, Wrestling and FencingX'arsity won tlie Intercollegiate Chanipinnship in Kingston on
March 6th and 7th, winning .seven events in the finals, namely the
11-5, 125 and the heavyweight boxing; the 115. 125 and 135 wrestling
and the fencing.
lfa^^5
U.NIVERSITV OF TORONTO 1. RLGBV TEAM-1919.
REAR RO\V:-D. Maclean (Itgr.), F. C. A. Houston. C. A. Hughes, P. A. C. Ketchum. \V. E. Blatz (Vice-Pn(Trainer). JI. H. .Shatz. G. B. Beatty. E. Birdsall. A. W. Carew. C. F. Haraes, H. A. McLennan (Sec).
SECOND RO\V:-\V. L. Wallace. G. G. Duncan. H. C. Montgomery, H. D. Broivn, S. S. English. R. E. CaiGuthrie. J. G. G'Flaherty. R. D. Huestis, R, T. Weaver, E. G. Rolph.
FIRST ROWi^L. R. Sh..ehottom. W. T. Holmes (President), \V. C. Foulds (Hon. Coach). J. M. Breen (Capt ).
Wright (Hon. Pres.). Dr. J. W. Barton (Physical Director). F. G. Sullivan.
FRO-VT ROW X. \V. Taylor, J. C. Patti
K, R Ilarn-: C F I.vlgh.
ITV 0I-" TOKOXTO HARRIER TEAM.
l'.\I\ KRSITV OF TORONTO TEN.MS rLUB, loio.jl,
(Intercollegiate CliampionsJ
BACK RO\V:-D. A. C. Martin (Sec.-Treas.). J. S. Reid (Captiin). T. Sheard. H. S. Spencer. M. F.
FRONT RO\V:-C. S. Dickson. \V. C. Little. \V. B. Dickson (President).
" Toronto"
or the Pride of the North
WImmv smiles the h:kr ||c,-itll ;i sky ever hlnc. T]! Willi rhc I'.luc aii.l rlu' Whit, -I let tlU'lll
Whciv hi.M.iiis the iiiapli' ti'cc.
'
wave
TliMv stands 'r(,i-uiit(., tUr ]'ru]r .if tlir Xui-tli. lli-h o'lT til.' ul.l -ray 'I'.Avcr:
AihI her cliildivii all aiv we. F.'i-tli frnin its pm-tals haw str|.|MMl in tli<'ii
^,•s. we arc frnni Tnr.intn. nii-lit
Oiii' Ahiia Matci-. ..ui- thcr drar: This Duniininn's men (if |..,\V(.r.
And i.rou.llv nnw wv sin- her praises. Yes,—they cmic fi-dni Toi-onto.
That all ina\ kn.iw that liei- s.in> arc near. Onr iKilrle statcsinen. .,nr snidici's trne:An. I Inndlv rarh unc hails i hr nicin-rv
or that (lrai's|M,t •ncath the White and JJhie,
All hail t.. thee. T..r(.nt,.!
I'r.md .Mistress nfth,' Xurth I
With heart and \nn-e we praise thee.
.\s \vi' -(I niarehinu forth.
Fraternities and Sororities
Zota Psi. founded at TorontoKajipa Alpha, founded at Toronto..Alpha Delta Phi, founded at Toronto
Delta Chi, founded at O.sgoode
Delta Kappa Epsilon, founded at TnDelta Up.silou, founded at Toronto..Xu 8iunia Nu, founded at Toronto..Xi I'm I'hi. founded at TomntoAlpha Kappa Kai.iia. tuunded at Tor
ISeta Theta Pi, fouiuled at Toronto 1906Alpha Omeji-a Alpha, founded at Toronto 1906
Clii Delta Psi, founded at Toronto 11108
Psi Delta Psi, founded at Toronto 190!!
Plii Sigma Tau, founded at Toronto IHIO
Theta Delta Chi, founded at Toronto I!il2
Omeg-a Tau Sigma, founded at Toronto 191:1
Pi Delta Epsilnn. founde,l at Toronto PUSR. C. D. S. Oriental Clul.. fnuiuled at Tun.nto 1919
Zeta Psi Fraternity
Xfw Yni-k, 1S46.
Roll of Chapter
Uuiversitv of Xew York.
Williams 'Collejre
Rutgers College
ri.ivrsitv of Pennsylvi
l,s4>
Tufls College I^;^;;;
Lafayette I''"
University of North Carolina 1>.'>-'
Universitv of Jliehigan 1>"|>
Hnwloin'Cnllege 1^68
THETA XI CHAPTER
A. W. H. Sin,-
K. V. SiiM-lai
I). M.l.-.lnl, 1,1,1
\V. llcigliington.
.M,-(;r-.-,,r Y,i
KiiM.^' Smith.S. Hut, •hi-,, I,
Fratres in Facultate
K. .\. CI,'
Fratres in Universitate
K.
Zeta Psi Fraternity
Fratres in Bello
Lin
Kappa Alpha Society
Fratres in Facultate
Alpha Delta Phi Fraternity
('. ll]l ll i-
Alpha Delta Phi Fraternity-
Alpha Delta Phi Fraternity
Fratres in Bell
<'Ml,t. Eilwiird Ainhvwvra|lt. T. 1). Alvll,l,;,|,l.
Ijrllt. (I. M, li..v,l,
.M.i.i. S S. I'.iinih.nn. IVS.D. i killr
Maj. li. II. ItunilKiin.
Ma.), r. \V. Urattv. M.r.Capl. II. .1. Itiinlrn. 1 ).S.O.. D.F.C.
Linit. A. S. I'.niiniiut.
.Mi
.M.
Lieut. A. I!. Cavlrv.
.Maj. (;. W. Cliaplni.
Cai.t. <•. T. Clart.
Capl- ^^ •' •larUs.iii, MA'.i.i.ait. M. A. Clai'ksnn (,lir,l ,,r u.mihNLicnt. C. I'. Cutlnii, fmss ,,f St. Imm.i-i
.killr,! in a.-i„,ri .
l.i.MlI. A. .1.
l.inil. ('. .M.
Delta Chi Fraternity
OSGOODE HALL CHAPTER1' l(lr,l 1-M7^
JJirklllsnlL
Chk-a-.. K,
Buffalo.
Osgoode II
I I'XilS.
Wash i I
Xcliras
Active Chapters
C. S. MuKee "14, '20.
C. C. Calvin 'U, •1!1.
W. C. Jlilne -15, '20.
D. H. Rowan '21.
R. A. Sampson "18. ':
C. F. H. Carson "21.
R. Porsvth "13.
Beta Theta Pi Fraternity
Miami (A) ISUII ('(.lumlud (AA) 18S1Cincinnati (B\) Is41 AnilKr>t i BI )
1SS3
Western Reserve (B) 1S41 Win.lerliilt (B\') 1SS4
Ohio (BK) 1S41 Texa- (BOl ISS.",
Washington and JeHerson (L) 1S45 Ohio State (OA) 1SS5De Pann (V) 1845 Denver (AZ) 1888Indiana (II) 1845 Nebraska (AT) 1888Michigan (V) 1845 Pennsvivania State (AY) 1888Centre (E) 1845 S\Taru>e (BE) 1S89Wabash (T) 1846 I i,.rin,..uth (AU) IsS!)
Williams fZ) 1847 MiniRM.ta (BID 1S!I()
Brown (Kl 1847 W,-le\ an ( ME) IS'.KI
Xonh Carolina (HB) 1852 Mis>,,uri iZOl 1S!I(I
Ohio \\V-,|,\an (O) 1853 LehiyhiBX) ISIIl
H.moxarill 1853 \'ale.OXl 18!l2
Knox ( E) 1855 Leland Stanford (AM ) 1894Virginia (O) 1.S55 \\e>t \'irt;inia (BY) 190UDavidson (OA) 1S5S Bcwdoin ( BM ) 1900Bethanv (W) 1800 Col.,rado ( BT: 1900Beloit (X) 1862 Wa^hin^on Stair Cniversitv (HI') 1901
Iowa (AB) 1866 Piinhii' HM ' 1902Wittenberg (AL) 1867 lllin..i~ i M I'
i
1902WrMniinM.r lAV) 1867 Ca-e i\Ki 1903f lii.ai^o AP) 1S6S Iowa Slau- (I'M) 1905ll.nl-on ..Mil IStiS Toronto iOZ I 1900
\\a>hinL;toM lAI) 1M19 Oklahoma (LO) 1907Kati.a- lAXl 1872 Colorado Mines (BO) 1908\\i-<oi,,ii, ()M) 1873 Tulane (BE) 190S
Xorth-We-tern iPl ' 1873 Oregon (BP) 1909Dickinson lAMl 1.S74 South Dakota lIA'l 1912
Johns Hopkins (AX) 1S77 liahiLHi 1913
California (D ls7s Ma-a, luiset is 'lech. (BY) 1913
Kenyon (BA) 1878 Idaho iLL) 1914
Rutgers (BL) 1878 Colorado College (LV) UIUCornell (BV) 1878 Kansas State (LE) 1914Stevens (M) 1878 Whitman (LZ) 1915St. Lawrence (BZ) 1878 Georgia Tech. (LH) 1917Maine (BH) Is7s Washington and Lee 1917Penns\lvania (O) ISM I
( 'arnegie Tech 1919
Colgate (BO) 1880 Washington State College 1919Union (X) 1881
Beta Theta Pi Fraternity
Thomas Eiikiii.
Fratres in Senatu
K.lwai-.l Willi,
Norman Stuart Caiitlwfl
Fratres in Facultate
ALPHA CHI CHAPTER
Eric Wilson Haldenlr
Jay Bruee GrifHtli.
Genrg-e Enoi'h Wait.
O.M.ruv Vn-t Kavnrr.
Knlirrt Davy .Maraula,
Ilertzberg.
K(-niaM K.hvar.l Walter HagartAiUnir Kiv.l.rirk Wells.
Jaiiii's Eihvard Ki'therstonliaugh.
Herbert Garden Davidson.
Dudley Sutherland Stayner.
Hamilton James Stuart.
Harold Hildreth Randolph ilaodr
IJivi'i-li'v Hannah.Robert Franklin Sutherland.
Ernest Edward Cleaver.
Frank Talbot ilalone.
Erie Osborne.
Arthur Howard Robertson.
William Alton ilacLaehlan.
imas K.-u-c Hak.'
Beta Theta Pi FrateYnitv-Continue
Theta Delta Chapter Alpha Eta Chapter Phi Chapter
Millanl Francis (;il,.,,ii. -li-. Willi, mi Waltn- Hull. Xm-maii Al.iii Hill,
Zeta Phi Chapter Alpha Lambda Chapter
Vrl-v, Al.illllrus FlVilrnrk Arlliiir ( lll\rr,
Fratres in Bello
II. F. II. Mn-tzlHTi;'. F. W. I'.rxaii. I'.. H I'.iirtnn.
C. S, L. ll.Tizlirr-. II, T, Ilii^iiiil.otl;; 111, .1, II, Wrpjlil.
W, I-: lirnuii, II, K, II; Itnii, W, 11, l.n.JI,..
A, W, l;;,inl
, C, W.lMlrr.
;, Iv I!, Wun.l,
A, SiH.u,
W, .\, ?.hlrF;iri,hili. 'M. K, Al
.\ X. WnrtliiiiLiluii. W, C, |--|
W. l;. IlriMlrlN.iM, II, I', Dr,
C, A.
h\ w
K, I), .\|;iHaU. K .\, Si, I, ,,.,,11, \\ ,C, \\rvr.
II, <; |);ivl.ls.,li. .1, \V, I'.ullh.T .\, F. Ilallli;,.
1), S, .S|;,M„.,-. I-', .\, ll.llUrt, !:, S, CilMphrll
11, IF H, .\l ,rl)ui,;il,l, .1, .\. ,Mmi|,I,v, F. W, i;av,
n. Ilaniiali. I,' (i, II ,iin iltm,, II, II Wallar,.,
E. \y. IFi-ai-tv. II, I, IL,".,rlv, IF (i, V.MiiiLj.
- P„,wiii;ili. ' .1 T IF,^^,^,i. -I, W (.llli.h,
I-'. \V. F.iiniliaiii. i; I i;,. ., I--, \V. Kisr'l.,!,
K E. Clravn-. F. W. IFinkms. A. .1. Kil-.nii-.
Wi.-kr
HaM.'i
'.akrr.
l;, Carls jr. F, A .Mrllii-li
.\, Strvni. .M. A. .\uirrns.s
.1. IF
Delta Kappa Epsilc
Alpha Phi Chapter
Fratres in Facultate
Delta Upsilon Fraternity
Willi, nils
Delta Upsilon Fraternity
TORONTO CHAPTER
WaurioL' Iliittoii.
James Brebner.
William Belfry Hendry.James Frederiek Me('iird\
Joseph Stanley Will.
Fratrea in Facultate
HcrlxTt Alexaii.lrr ilnirr.
Hiram Job Crawford.Tliomas Richardson Loudon.Malcolm William Wallace.William Alexander Kirkw...,,
Alrxaii.ler .l.,hn MrKm/.ie.
L;e(,r^'e .Maitlai
Nu Sigma Nu Fraternity
Nu Sigma Nu Fraternity
Fratres in Facultate
Alan Brown.lierbert Alexander Bruce.Charles Kirk Clarke.
Hei-bert Kiintzon Dotweiler.Inhi, Cn-ald Fitz-rral.l.
l^,s,.^,. K.hl (irah.iiii.
Juhn Jo.seph ilackrnz
James Playfair .M.'.Mi
R.iherts
Ifv Rve
.Ius,.|
XI Psi Phi Fraternity
OMICRON CHAPTER
W. E. Wilmott.
Alpha Kappa Kappa Fraternity
Alpha ; Dartmouth Cullriri'
(lamma Tufts Medieal Schn..!
Holta University of Vei'iuuut
Elpsilon Jefferson Medical College
Zeta Lonjr Island College Hospital
Eta University of Illinois
Tlieta Bowdoin Medical School
lota University of Syracuse
Kappa Marquette University
Mu University of Pennsylvania
\u Rush Medical College
Xi Northwestern University
Omieron University of Cincinnati
Pi Ohio University
Sigma University of California
Upsilon University of Oregon
Clii Vanderbilt University
Psi Universitv of Minnesota
Omega I-iiivcrsity nf T.-nii.-
Alpha Beta Tiilanr rniviMty
Alpha Gamma I'liivcrsity i.f (Irni-'^ia
Alpha Delta .McOill [-iiivrMty
Alpha Bpsilon rnivci'sity of Tni-imt'i
Alpha Zeta George Washington University
Alpha Eta Yale Medical School
Alpha Tlieta University of Texas
All.ha Iota University of Mirhi-ai;
Alpha Kappa Medical College uf X'ii-inia
Alpha Mu St. Louis rniv.-rsity
Al]iha Xu University of Louisville
Alpha Xi Western Reserve L'niversity
Alpha Kilo Harvard Jledical School
Alpha Sigma University of Southern California
Alpha Tan Atlantic Medical College
Al]iha U]«iloii .loliiis Hopkins University
Alpha Phi University of ilissouri
Harry Bertram Anderson.
Allen Mackenzie Baines.
George Arthur Bingham.
Robert Joseph Dwyer.
John Taylor Fotheringhara.
Frederick Christopher Harrisc
Gladstone Wilfred Lougheed.
Patrick Walter Hughes MeKe
Facultate
Frederick Sydney Minns.
Brefney Rolph O'Reilly.
Wallace Arthur Scott.
William Albert Scott.
Charles Sheard.
Charles Buckingham Shut
lien.iamin Philp Watson.
Man-haiit Beckett AVhyte.
Alpha Kappa Kappa Fraternity-
.\^''/^
Chi Delta Psi
Edward Guy Hanley.George Foster Sweet.
Doug:Ias S^cott Pjirrie.
Charlr-, Cliirnr,! s:,.miii
Charl.'. Alhni llislmp.
Riehard Ihirn^ -Mi(l.llet(
Godfrey Edwards JIaena
Wilfrid James Irwin.
.Tolm Eekert Tanner.Lorraine Patrirk.
David Edwin Kol)ert.snn.
Fratres in Universitate
John Brebant Ridley.
Verne Gilsnn Hunt.Charles MaoEar.'ii \'iiiiiiL'.
Willi, iiM MrliitMv l;v.M-..„i
Wall.T Kuli-rls I'.ivu.in-.
Charlr. l;rN-.ni, \(u\\,^ .
.Inhll U'mN .\|rl,,M,l.
Geor-e SU,
Thomas Ki
Kirhard Kenneth Ruddy.Artlnir David Purdy.Kenneth .-MpxaiHh'r Hamilton.Frank Crrald Sullivan.
Baillie Tli.nii.nii St,pll..,l^,,n.
Arthur William Can-w.
John Lo!.'au Sutherland.
Lloyd Jlerlyn Priee.
William Seott McKay.TIenrv Summers Rarlow.
Fratres in Urbe
L. P. Burne.
Alpha Omega Alpha Honour Fraternity
Roll of Chapters
Alpl,., nf Oh .W.^strni Krsrr
, ...|rlVr|-s,.li Mr
Alpha n( Xrw V.
Alpha (if Mirhi-ai
Alpha ..I .\lassa.-linsf
Alpha of Califnniia. ,
(iamiiia ..f X.'W V(,i'k.
Alpha of (^urh,v
Alpha Omega Alpha Honour Fraternity-
Alan Brown.Abraham Brodpv.
Irving Heward Cameron.Walter Ruggles Campbell.Graham Chambers.Beaumont Sandfield Cornell.
Herbert Knutsen Detweiler.
Andrew Almon Fletcher.
Fratres in Facultate
William Edward Gallie.
Duncan Archibald Lament GrGoldwin William Howland.Andrew Hunter.Archibald Gowanloek HnntsmaJohn Joseph JIaekenzic.
Alexander JlcPhedran.
James Plavfair JIc^Furrich.
William Huntrr Picrsol.
Alexander Primrose.
Clarence Le.slie Starr.
Frederic Newton Gisborne Starr.
Ben.iamin Philip Watson.James Crawford Watt.David James Gibb Wishart.
William Francis Morris AdamsJohn Charles Sinclair Battley.
James Patrick Campbell.
Warint;' CitiiI,! C.islue.
Robert 1',,.!;., Cruiu.irtv.
Georjiv Wn-lii Cmsby.Hamilton Chahmrs CruikshankGordon ilclutyre Dale.
George Albert Davis.
Fratres in I
Isaac H. Brb.
Donald Thomas Frasei
Ru^'frles Kerr George.
JuM.ph .\|.prllir Oilrhl
.Imil.'s n,,lTi..iM [I.nv,'
Aivlnli;iM I'.vu.T ,\I;,r,
Albert Krnest .MeCulh
Paul Jlichael O'Sulliva
Louis Melville Rice.
James Wells Ross.
Thomas Clareii.-c Houtlrv.
Charles ^•in^^llt Srutt.
George Ilei'lirrt Stevenson.
Valentine Frederic Stock.
Frank .Muir Walker.Th.mias Esmond White.David Edmund Staunton Wishart.
Cecil Oswald Young.
Harold On
Phi Sigma Tau Fraternity
Fratres in Universitate
!•:. K. Dixnii. .1. A. Simiiirrs.
.1. II. L.-ate. M. 1). K;lllr.
J. F. Youn-r. II. L. (I'KnurUf.
J. R. Stirrett. W. K. .himi.'v.
C. A. Richardson. E. S. .M.-AIdiiie.
H. S. Speucer. R. S. Dale.
H. E. Purdy. A. J. Dates.
J. D. Conover. J. F. Burji-ess.
W. J. Xirhol. F. R. Fiddc:^.
II. D. Siaitli. W. V, (Ikr.
K. L. Ilut,-liis,,n. II. I!. Lr-,itr.
Fratres in Urbe
A. (i. L,.,slip. .1. E. (iiihlv.
J. D. Wilson. R. R. Stirretr.
H. C. Rose. J. W. Deyell.
E. G. Arelier, W. B. Fater.son.
W. F. B. Sntlicrland. ' G. P. Stirrett.
C. A. MaeDonald. W. li. .S|„.i-ht.
H. T. Stuart. II. X. .Mrl'h.isoi
G. D. Ferguson. .1. K. Ilaiiiilton.
F. C. Land).
Theta Delta Chi Fraternity
Dent
.Knr
EpsZetii
EtaKapXuXi .
Plii
ChiP.si
OmiBeta Cm II.
Pi Deuteron Cnllr:
Rlio Deuteron < "liii
Nu Deuteron Lrhiij
Mu Deuteron \imIi.
Gamma Deuteron riii\.
Theta Deuteron .\l;i^^.
Iota Deuteron Willi
Tau Deuteron rnivi
Sigma Deuteron I'liivi
Chi Deuteron Ci-nri
Delta Deuteron Inlvi
Zeta Deuteron ,Mc(;i
Eta Deuteron St, in I
Kappa Deuteron Iiiiv.
Lambda Deuteron ....rnivi
Xi Deuteron Iniv.
Phi Deuteron I'liivi
Beta Deuteron Imva
1S53lSo:i
1854lS5ti
1S57
Theta Delta Chi Fraternity-
Frater in Facultate
Almi Millrr Tlmnias.
Wilfred Lawreiirc .M.-Knizi,
Peter Dnn>;las .Mclntcsh.
JiR'k McFaul ^r.-Tvirhrni.
Ahni MiUvv I liuinas.
Walter Stanl.'v I'ahnrr.
I- M
Fratrea Universitate
Leonard Vernon Shier.
AVilson Jackman Ilambl;
Doufrlas C4. Clendeuan.Walter Mills Rowland.Aaron James Coueh.
Artlmr Kellv.
.Inlin .Martin MeGarrv.
.Taiiirs Hi.-hanl ilcGarry.Kr.'.lcrir ('. .Mvers.
Wli.llnuai'.l
Ralph l:.l^^alM Carroll.
.Mali-olm riau ilarLrod.
William Artliur E. PepleCyril Henry E. Stewart.
Ross Creelraan.
Fratr Urbe
Harold Austin Cooch.
George 'S'ictor Morton.Morton Jloore Keaehie.
Hubert C. Myers.
Fraser Edward Chestnut.
William Harold Watson.
Joseph Grant Ilelliwell.
Erie ilontague Abendaua.Cliarlet<in IMain Clement.
William llc\vs,,n O-Reilly
Atwell Fleming. Jr.
William John IJradshaw.
John Haekett Firstbrnuk
Donald Douglas.
Vivian S. MeClenauhaii.
Fratrea Mortui in Belle
Charles K. .Maephrrsun.
John Wilbur Crane.
Hugh Jarman Watson.
W. Douglas Robertson.
Ear
Fra
Omega Tau Sigma Fraternity
DELTA CHAPTERONTARIO VETERINARY COLLEGE
Fratres in Facultate
X. !•
R. Gwatkin.
H. D. Nelson,
r. D. JIcGilvi
Fratres in Universitace
W. 1). r.,i.krtt,. i;. S, K„.t,r. E. C. ^[a
E. W. I'.uii.l. .1. L. (Ilr.i.oii. A. \V. Ml
1.
Psi Omega Fraternity
DELTA CHZ CHAPTER
Harold Adams.Aubrey John Thomas Barton.
John Wesley Bartholomew.James Harold Best.
William Blair Black.
Alvin Alex. Cameron.Dwight S. Coons.
Jacob Grant Countryman.Arthur Greenwood Davidson.Lee Ralph Dodds.Bruce David Foster,
llcrlicrt R.'uImmi Garlmtt.(;...)i'ov Alex, (icmcrov.
•luhn .Mrliil.ish r.r:,\r.nnr.
John Carniihr,-, div,,,.
Kennetli Ki.lnit IhiriiN.
Le Roy llilih^ii.l llnlmrs.
Aubrrv Stii.irt llulinrs.
] n .Mpllulisr I.rt.-llirr.
Artlmr lliixtrr .M^iii-.
(irniM .Mrx. .MniMuii.
Carl II MS .\Invl,..
Ilu-ll MrCp.-tlr,
K..-r,' |;,,||,|, M. Dun;, 1,1.
iiruV'J,' lll,ll,|,ll|VV. MrK.L,,ri,- K,li;;,|- M;,rl.;,,-i,lai,
K(,h,Tt Cairn.liitr .M.'l.aiu
Johu.Mun-av .M,-l.,-u,l.
James Euai-t .M,'.MilI,.ii
Heber Clint. ,ii P.iw.-ll.
James (ilcns.m Pullar.
Ernest Andrew Rcid.
Hugh Alexander Ross.
Joseph Stewart RitchhWilliam Krn.'sl Sl,,.ii,b
Charles (li-aham S,,.wa
Fred Linii,.| Tl„,iiiiiv,,i,.
Robert R.inald Wliilak,
James Patterson Whyl,Russell Gilbert Wood's.
Pi Delta Epsilon
llnlluul- .I,i,n-,l;,llMlr S,,ri,.ty.
Follll.lr.l ,it Syl-^l.MlM' rniVfl-sity. 10(111.
Chapter Roll
Alplia Alpha Svraru^' Tniwrsity
Alpha Beta riiiv,TMi\ uf Xrl,i;iska
Alpha Gamma .Ma^sarliusrtts Iii-,k ..f TrrlnMild.j-x-
Alpha Delta \\r^\ry,,u rniv.Tsily
Alpha Kp^iliMi Cnluiiilna riiiversit v
Alpl-a Inia Colualr riiiv.Tsit v
Alplia Kappa UliiwrMlv uf Mirhiij'aii
Alpha Xii Dai't mh folh-v
Alpha ( iinirn.n fnivrrMis nf Illiiuiis
Al].ha I'i rmvi'Mtv of T..i-,,iito
lirta Alpha LauiTiir,. Cilli-v
Hrta Drita Ilaiiiliiir rniwi-Beta Epsihui ruivcrshy „{ T.aiM,-
Beta Zeta linviMty ..r rGamma Alpha riiivrrsit\ of ( 'alilnr
ALPHA PI CHAPTER
Fratres in Facultate
Fratres in Universitate
.luhii Laniuaii ( 'harh-u orth KduaiM llarv.'v .M.-Kiiinev
William (ir,,ruv Cnl-atp X,,nnaM An.livu MrMurravKiv.lnack Clai'kr llastiii-s Wilfiv,! Cliavlr^ Slrphriis
Kmm'M (Jai-ahl llathuav -loliii Sl.'uai't
.Inlil, l{,,ss 11, Hid .Milton Luiisdalr Siokcs
Krclrrirk Ccnl .Irnii ii,._'s Kraii.-i.s -lana'.s Sullivan
Khni, .Main .luhiison
Fratres in Urbe
Cliai-lrsHniili William Aniol Crairk liuhrrt Alan Samp.sonChihls C.llin- Cami.lHll (Irant llnhcrl (Ji.nh.n Staiiclls
1'.. Cnnkr Kiv.l.Tii'k Cliarlrs .Mrai's ChalmriN Harper W.'ir
TImma.s .Martin .Mnii-nvan
301
l/„„. rnsi,l,„t--\\.
In/ VHr-l'r,s„h„l
R.C.D.S. Oriental Club
it/(
All officers aud members of the .lul. j
members of this committee.
Senior Representative—V. A. Clark (cIki
man )
.
Junior Representative—R. G. W Is.
Sophomore Representative—E. W. DeviFreshman Rc|.rr>,Mitative— fl. T. Mittn
& AM.. ..f tin
H. I'.ell.
.A. Clark.
J. Charles.
. R. Farrell.
M. GrahamiA. Gemero\H. Herrin^tE. Harvett.
T. Irwin.
. W. Leach.'. R. Morrison.
. A. Spence.
A. Sadleir.
. -M. Sevmoiir.
on.
C. Duft
1). Lev
E. Mr}A. Wa'R. Wil:
G. Wn.L. Thoi
.1. L. Dirksnl,
A. (i. I)avia>
R. Duiilop.
R. II. Davis.
K. W. D.-vii,
W. C. Fu^t-r
I'.l.
Kappa Alpha Theta Sorority
Chapter Roll
Alpha
.
Beta . . ,
Gaiiima
Delta . .
Eta....
Iota . . .
Kappa
.
Lamlidii
:\Iii . . . .
nniicToi
Rho...
I P'-il'Ti
PhiChiPsi
OmegaAlpha Beta . . .
Alpha Gamma.Alplia Delta . . .
Alpha Eta. . . .
Alpha Thrf;,..
nf K,
Inta
l.:ii)ili(hi
,\lii . .
Kappa Alpha Theta Sorority (
Active Chapter
Duris II„wrll.
Alpha Gamma Delta Sorority
ALPHA GAMMA DELTA CHAPTERS
(iiimma \Vr^l''\ jii lnu ri'^ii y
Dolti, |-nivrvMly .,1 Alinnrs,,!,,
Epsilc.ii rmv.M-sifv nT KmliirkyZi-ta n|,„, rniv.Tsity
Etii n- I'auw rnivn-sily
Thfta (;,,n,-h.T Cnll,--,.
Iota rnivn-MtN „f W.isliinul.i,,
Kapp« \ll.-h.M,y Cill,-,.
LamlMla Xortlnvrstm, InivrisMy
Mil Bl-rliau Cnllror
Xu Bost.in r,nv,-,-,iy
Xi llliiinis W,'sl,n-aH rnivnsily
Omieroii riiiversity ..f California
Pi Cor ( 'ollege
RIki Iowa Siatr ( 'olleg'e
Si..ma Illinois rmversitv
Tmi rnivo.siry of Toronto
rpsiloii Oklahoma
Sorores in Universitate
(Jla.lvs Corl.'ss Cora .Minrrva Yonn-. ( In-tniilo Luiii.,. I !,nvinaii.
\nniV Mai-.'-nrriW Bcltoii .Alanan Lillian Mr.Uan.l. Katlil.vn i;,,l„.i1a .Manson.
Myrtlr Aliro Cuiinolly. Muriel Kloivnr,- HinM. I'hyllis Iiviir Karrar.
Iivi'ir' M!'l','rl''Kraiir,.-, .Madill. Jean Riissrll. Aliinrl An.lirv Dau-. 'r.'
],.yu, .1,-111 MrMiirtrv Ouvnn.'lli Don- .Madill. Ilrlm Kl i/alioth .\ii,|rr>oii.
M;,i.,.„ivl i'.li/alH'ili liii-MdI. .Mai'-aivi X'i.ila .MrMillan. I'liyllis Kii^mi,- .Mifhrll.
.Iran .Moll..:, I S, l>. .S ,. .\lar-a|vl Ilannali Frinl. CniiManrr Cndfivy.
Lillian lioslyn Cra.ly i.Mods.i. Lnia .Mar-arn Dow. .lo.,.|,l, mo .Ailooii .MrDonagh (Dunts.).
Sorores in Urbe
.Muriel Eva.lno Hall. .Mary Lauivn,-. ILirvoy.
Etiiel Vaustoiio WalUor. \oliiia .Mary .Maiisrr.
JIarv Dow .McKurr. Floivinv Crrtnalo .Mr'l'avisli.
Helen WhifHol,! Currie. Doiulhy Day.
\-,.ra .Mexaiulra liolunson. (lla.lNs Clmn. .\nuii,v
.Mai-arol Holm S.-utt .MrC,,v. Lena I'.ralrirr i'liii-lry.
Lnrna (onrviovo Wilscii. Scliiia .Malsun \).,v , Krfa).
(ila.lvs .Miiriol llriire. .MiMiv.l ,Ml|rra^ Clarkson (Beta).
Vrra' .Mowrv .M.-Keiizie.
Alpha Phi Sorority
Alplia Svi'acus,. Tiiiv.
]5fta X<irtli-\V,'st,'iii Iniv,
Giuuiua !), I'auw rniv,
Delta Cinirll Iniv.
Epsiinn 1 'iii\ci-sitx' lA' .M iiiii
Zrta (niurl,,.,' C,
Kta lIoMui, Iniv,
Theta riiiv,Tsii\ nf Miri
lota Univcrsitv of Wim-Kappa Leiand Staiifunl. Jr., Iniv,
Lambda Uiiivcrsitv n( ( \ilif
Xi I'MiwiNin ul' ToiontMOlllicn.ll riliv.TsitV ,,f .\^^M,llli
Pi Uiiiwrsity nf Xortli U.ikota
Klio ( )lii.i State UniversitySifiina I'liiveiNity of W'ashiiiptou
Tan rnivei-sitv of ()i'e<roil
I'pNilon Waslilinrn (V.Hege
I'lii rinvriMtv of oldahama( hi rniv,Tsit v of Montana
Sorores in Universitate'20.
Delta Gamma Sorority
Epsi
/rta.
Active Chapters
Wash.
I-. iMii
II. Mi,-1
^.';,"";;
Kappa Kappa Gamma Sorority
JETA PSI CHAPTER
New Chapters
•iiivci-Mty (,f Ariznua.
Soror in FacuUate
Ilrl,
l.'llt
Pi Beta Phi Sorority
Active Chapters
i-sitv (.f Wisconsin.
Ciill.-e.
ir.i Cullcse.
St. Liiwi
Buekncll ["nivn-sitv.
Diekin.sc.n ('..ll.-r.
University of Pittsliu
Ohio Tni'wrsitv.
Ohio Still, • Tiiivrrsi
UniversitN' of Wr-,i \'
Iowa \V^sl^^inl llliv,
Simpson Cnllr.jr.
Iowa Still.- Cull.'i^v.
Iowa Stiilc 1 |iivovsit\
L'nivoi'siiv of Mis.,, Ill
Wiishin.^toii CniviTsii
ni-ury Cill,-,'.
•2T0.
Vivien Chalmers.
Jean Hamilton.Xorah Elliott.
Francis Paterson.
Wilma Orr.
Kathleen Cnso'rove.
•JT:!.
Fhylis IVtrie.
Erminie Carson.
Winnifred Hudson.Ruth Kilbourne.
Jean MeCannell.Jlrs. W. MeKenna.Mrs. R. Coutts.
Gladness Chapman.Marguerite Chapman.Dorothy MaeMillan.Florence Plett.
riiiwi-silv of ()l;lalioiiiii.
Oklal la A-ri,-ii]liii-al an,l
il<.,'hani,-al Coll,-''-
University of Arkansas.Soucher Collesre.
Georpre Washin<rton College.
Ran.loli.li :\ra,',,ii CoIl,--e.
ll,,llins C,,!],'-,',
lohll II. SI, -Is,, 11 UiiiviTsitv.
,Utll,TII .\l,'lll,„iist Uw, ll, f,,ll,-,'.
l.,-laii,l Staiif,,r,l. Ay.. Univ,'rsitv.
Uiiiv,TMn- ,,f California.
Uiiivorsit
iLMA MATER
THE members of the Torontonensis
Board wisK to direct {Ke attention
of graduates and students to i\\e adver-
tisements herein, wimout which mis
publication would be impossible.
UNIVERSITY OF TORONTOmm AND UNIVERSITY COLLEGE
WITH WHICH ARE FEDERATED
Victoria ^/;/^ Trinity Universitiks a//^
St. Michael's, Knox ^W Wyclifee Colleges
FACULTY OF ARTS
Instruction in the courses leading to the degrees
of B.A.. M.A., and Ph.D. is given in the Univer-
sity, University College. Victoria College, and
Trinity College. The Colleges provide instruction
in the Classical, Modern and Semitic Languages
and Literature, Ancient History and Ethics—the
University gives training in the remaining subjects
of the Curriculum.
mmm
FACULTY OF MEDICINE
Complete courses of instruction with ample oppor-
tunities for clinical training at the General Hospital.
St. Michael's Hospital and the Hospital
for Sick Children.
« »
FACULTY OF APPLIED SCIENCE
Courses of four years' instruction in Engineering,
leading to degrees of B.A.Sc. and M.A.Sc.
For information, apply to the Registrar of the University, or to the Secretarie
of the Respective Faculties.
§CH001o»/DENTI§TRY
ROYALCOLLEGEOFDENTALSURGEONSOFONTARIO,TORONTO
AFFILIATED wifK tUe University of Toronto since 1888, it offers fKrough its large and tKoroughK
L efficient staff, up-to-date equipment and large clinic, opportunities for fKe stud>) of Modern Dentistry)
not excelled anvwhere. TKe course is four academic years, leading to tKe Degree of Doctor of Dental Surger>'
from fhe University of Toronto, and Licentiate of Dental Surger)) from tKe R. C. D. S. of Ontario.
/•'<-/• liirther niforinati,,,, „,/,lnss
WALLACE SECCOMBE. D.D.5., Superintendent, Royal College of Dental Surgeons of Ontario
240 COLLEGE STREET, TORONTO
1Rnor (loUecieTORONTO.
Fr,lrnilr,l in 1 1, fhr I'l. >f r.
H 11^ce't^cnnal Sbcologtcal College of
the ipresbijterian Cbnrcb in a;ana^a.
H cTratmiuj School for flDinletcii?,
nDieeionaricC' an^ E)cacone5£?c6
COURSES of study and Class Lectures in every
department of Biblical and Theological Learning
lead to the Knox College Diploma and the Degree of
Bachelor of Divinity. Students who are Graduates in Arts
may take their B. D. work along with that of the required
course. Knox provides a course in the English Bible,
covering the Literature of the New Testament in four
years and specially adapted to University students, who
may take the course for one, two, three or four years as
a Religious Knowledge option.
tj The magnificent new buildings are on the University
Campus and include Chapel, Library, Gymnasium, Dor-
mitories, and Dining Room. Students should make early
application for rooms.
nformation desired, apply
,1. K. MACDONALD, ESQ. Chairman of Board
REV. ALFRED GANDIER, D.D.. LL.D.. Principal
Hlyrliflfp (HoUpriPTORONTO
A rrfiiJirulial ahrnlouiral (Tnllrnr §f
tlir (Clntrrli nf tiialanii in (^alla^a
TTYCLIFFE College exists for the training
\ I of young men for the Christian Ministry
of the Church of England throughout
Canada and the foreign Mission Field.
The Courses of study of the College provide
for instruction in Arts at the University of
Toronto, with options at Wycliffe College,
leading up to the degree of Bachelor of Arts
and Bachelor of Divinity,
Wycliffe College is situated in the Univer-
sity grounds. Its students have full access
to all privileges of the University Liorary,
Hart House, gymnasium and athletic
grounds, etc.
For Calendar and informaiion as to conditions of entrance,
courses of study and bursaries, apply to the Bursar and
Registrar, Mr. H. Mortimer, Wycliffe College, Toronto.
TELEPHONE COLLEGE 4,;,S0
N. W. HOYLES, K,C., LL.D.
THE REV. CANON O'MEARA. LL.D.
President
Principal
ITnnitv (Xollei3e
"Trinity" is an Arts College in (he University of Ti
:: and a University conferring Degrees in Di\'
IFyou are proceeding to a Degree in Arts in 4ie Universits)
of Toronto, or to a Divinit^) Degree in ihe Univers.ts) of
Trinity College, tKe privileges of Enrolment and Residence
in "Trinity" are open to y'ou.
'TKe Women Students of Trmitsf College reside m St. Hilda 's
St. /nMcbael's
TORONTO, CAN.
Federated wif/i [he Universitv of Toronto
Residential College/O r
Catnolic Students
Facults' of Arts makes full provision for
all courses leading to tlie degree of B.A.
in tKe University of Toronto.
Academic Department prepares for Matriculation
REV. H. CARR. C.S.B.
Superior
FARMERBROTHERS
LIMITED
Art print Jjttpnrtrrs
pirtiirr I^r^t^us ^
492 Spadina Avenue
Toronto
TELEPHONE COLLEGE 2869
FREELANDT H t; S T L D K N T S
•
photographf:r
-pTUDIO is equipped
f^7\ ' with every facility
*—' necessary to pro-
duce the highest class of
work in every branch of
Professional Photography
Special Rates to Students
338 Yonge Street goul
TELEPHONE MAIN 6887
High School Boards and Boards of EducationARE AUTHORIZED BY LAW TO ESTABLISH
Industrial,Technical cmd kxt SchoolsWITH THE APPROVAL OF THE MINISTER OF EDUCATION
Day and Evening Classes
may be conducted in accordance with the regulations
issued by the Department of Education.
Theoretical and Practical Instruction
is given in various trades. The schools and classes
are under the direction of AN ADVISORY COMMITTEE.Application for attendance should be made to the Principal of the school.
Commercial Subjects, Manual Training, House-hold Science and Agriculture and Horticulture
are provided for in the Courses of Study in Public,
Separate, Continuation and High Schools
and Collegiate Institutes.
Copies of the Regulations issued by the Department of Education may be obtained from the Deputy Minister of Education. Toronto
(iutarin (Enllrgf
O O R R O R >
Chas. F. Heebner, Ph.G. i N.Y. >. Phm.B. i Tor. ) -DeanProless.-r of Theory and Practice ot Pharmacy and Disrens.ncDire, tor of the Pharmaceutical and Dispensin,; Laboratories
J. T. Fotheringham, B. A. (Ton), M. D., CM. (Trin. >
Ementus-Professer of Materia Medica
George A. Evans, Phm.B. (Tor.)
Prnfessor of Analytical Chemistry. Director of the Chemical LaboratoriLecturer in Chemistry. Pnysics and Toxicc.loey.
R. Oscar Hurst, Phm.B. (Tor.)
ACCEPTS students of Ontario, also students who are
. registered and have served a term of four years'
apprenticeship in the other Provinces of the Dom-inion ' or in Great Britain and the Colonies I, and if they
attend the two courses of lectures and pass the final
examinations, they will be granted the diploma as a
Pharmaceutical Chemist of the Province of Ontario.
W. B. GRAHAM. Registrar-Treasurer
44 Gerrard Street East, Toronto, Ont.
ONTARIO VETERINARY COLLEGE
The Value of Education in Business
THE day of the apprentice has virtually pasted
away. The day of specialists has dawned.
1 he average youth, aspiring to enter the
business world to-day, asks himself not " To what
master craftsman shall I bind myself?" but rather,
"To which school shall 1 go to tit myself by study ?'
The value of education in business and the
promotion of a proper realization of its worth rests
in large measure with the individuals who undertake
to demonstrate its benefits. 1' is that education which
enhances natural gifts and inspires to achievement
by the confidence of the possession of accurate
information that is most highly prized in commercial
life. Mere accumulation of facts and knowledge on
a wide range of subjects is of little value in the
business world. It is the trained intellect coupled
with the ability to act that commends itself to the
employer. A wide-awake schoolboy with a modicum
of learning but an abundance of energy is a more
likely employee, from the point of view of the big
business man, than the slow-moving pedant. Educa-
tion, to be considered valuable in business, must
prove itself as an aid to efficiency and as a means
of getting big tasks accomplished with accuracy and
despatch.
The value of education in business
is being demonstrated daily in in- -.^"T, EATON C°«,t.onumerable ways but never in any TORONTO - CANADA
place dis-associated from personality. That (act
cannot be too strongly emphasized. When the
youth chooses a course in preparation for business
life, he should do so only after careful consideration
of the possibilities it offers him of personal develop-
ment. A trained automaton is of little value ; an
educated personality is an asset to a business. Theability to undertake responsibility, the initiative to
tackle big problems and make important decisions,
the power to do successfully and quickly the task
that presents itself these are expected as a matter
of course from the educated man in business. In
so far as he can demonstrate that education enables
him. because of his superior personal development,
to fulfil these requirements more ably than the manwho has grown with the business, thus far does he
show the value of education as a force in business.
The man of education who contemplates entering
commercial life has, therefore, no mean responsibility.
Education is of great value in business. Yet the
fact must not be overlooked that scores of menwho have not had the advantage of University
education have risen to a high position in the
commercial world. The burden which falls upon
the college man is that of demon-
s'raling his worth and the valuf
of a trained mind and a developed
personality.
Casavant Organs
Are
Superior
in
Quality
Design
and
Workman-
ship
Over 800
Pipe Organs
Built by
^ This Firm in
Canada,
United States
South America
CaSAVANI FRtRES LiMITEESt. Hyacinthe, P.Q.
TDROSTO R EPRESE\T AT 1 V F :
L. E. MOREL, 440 SPADINA AVE.
Parke, Davis & Go's
Pharmaceuticals
Y^
Manufactured in Canada
D}) Canadians
Correspondence Solicited on
all Pharniaco-Medical Subjects
LABORATORY WALKERVILLE, ONTARIO
MONTREAL BRANCHi ST. ALEXANDER ST.. QTH FLOOR. READ BUILDING
TORONTO OFFICE
422 RYRIE BUILDING
WINNIPEG DEPOT
KEEWATDEN BUILDING
The Temple-Pattison Co., Ltd.
DENTAL SITPPLIES and EQl'IPMENT
243 COLLEGE STREET, TORONTO. ONTARIOBRANCHES : London Winnipeg Regina Calgary Edmonton an,i Vancouver
S. S. White Dental Manufacturing CoPhiladelphia, Pa.
^:PORCELAIN TEETH, VULCANITE RUBBERELECTRIC ENGINES, OPERA TING CHAIRS
GOLD PRODUCTS, INSTRUMENTSCEMENTS, ALLOYS
DENTAL and SURGICAL NITROUS OXIDEand OXYGEN EQUIPMENTS
OXYGEN GAS, NITROUS OXIDE GASTOILET PREPARA TIONS
TOOTH PASTE and POWDERS
V
The Unit Idea
in_ ^^^
Equipment w'
Combining ^n
Convenient Form
, tlie Spittoon,
Electric Engine,
® Operating Table,
and Light
DISTRIBUTERS IN CANADA
S. 5. White Company for Canada, LimitedTORONTO. ONTARIO
The Dental Companyof Canada, LimitedToronto s^ Ottawa Montreal
Dealers in Everything Used in the
Practice of Dentistry
Specialists in Equipment for Dental Suites,
and School, Hospital and Industrial Clinics
We will l.e pleased lo submit plans and color schemes for your office, without oblij
PARK BROS.Photographers
328.^ Yonge Street, Toronto
TELEPHONE MAIN 12oy
George ColesLIMITED
Caterers and Jftamifacturiqsi^
0(6^ Confectioners (^o
719 Yonge St., Toronto
HARCOURT & SON©ffirial Inbp iHakrrB
The Central Canada Loan and Savings CompanyOwed to Depositors and Debenture Holders S5,840,854.39
1. CASH on K.nd and in banks $ 528.584. bl
2. MORTGAGES secured by .mprcved farm
and citj* propertv I 1^6 633.16i. REAL ESTATE including Companv's offices.
corner King and Victoria Streets. Toron.o 179.432.58
4 SECURITIES consisting of Go<>ernment and
Muniapal Bonds and Stocks of first quality
and easiU saleable 5 308.025.05
5
.
LO.ANS r'e.pa>lable on demand and all secured
bv Kigh grade Bonds and Stocks 2,296,131.84
6. CAPITAL Subscnbed and subject to call 750.000.00
Total to meet indebtedness $10,258,807.24
This leaves a surplus of $4,417,952.85
On vKich sve solicit your business.
DEPOSITS RECEIVED h, sums of $hOO and upwards, subject to cheque ivlthdraival ii;f«-
30th Jane and 3Ist December.
DEBENTURES issued for amounts of $100 and upwards, bearing interest at 4!. to 5.p, ,
Offices: Corner KING and VICTORIA Streets, TORONTO
Upper Canada Tract Society
Headquarters for TKeological and Religious
Literature from all flie Leading English
Publi
UPPER CANADA TRACT SOCIETYRIC:HM0ND STRl-l-T LAST.