^Wif .rk 'S.^mmim -■ mp^^^^?^ '4 ©tf? l^tttjam (El«b 3pntu:pt0n, Nrui 3?rsfg ORGANIZED, OCTOBER 1879 INCORPORATED. MAY 1905 1912 ailub f nwar, 95 iUlfrrrr *t. l^nnrrtnn, 5f- 3. The undersigned Committee, obedient to the action of the Benham Club, at its annual meeting, May 8th, 191 1, has prepared this Book, in the belief that it will serve to enrich the interest of Benham men in the history of the Club and that it will help to maintain the same life and spirit in the undergraduate Club for the years to come. Kerr D. Macmillan, David deF. Burrell, Arthur Northwood, Harold McA. Robinson, Chairman. Princeton, N. J. April 15th, 1912. Atttia Am^lta ?ifttl|am lorn. Hag 4, 1B41 Si^ii. April 25. 1905 Extract from Mrs. Benham's will: "To the Benham Club of Princeton, New Jersey, the sum of Five Hundred dollars for the uses of that Club, trusting that the said Club may always continue in spirit and name as they are now." "I give and bequeath to the Benham Club here- inbefore named all the dining-room furniture, dishes, table linen, silverware, sideboard, kitchen utensils and the club pictures and my portrait in the parlor, now in number one hun- dred and eighteen Alexander Street, Princeton, New Jersey." CERTIFICATE OF INCORPORATION OF THE BENHAM CLUB This is to certify that the undersigned do hereby associate themselves into a corporation under and by virtue of the provisions of an act of the Legislature of the State of New Jersey, entitled "An act to incorporate associations not for pecuniary profit", approved April twenty-first, eighteen hundred and ninety-eight, and the several supplements there- to and acts amendatory thereof. First. — The name of this corporation is The Benham Club. Second. — The purposes for which this corporation is formed are as an eating and social club for the students and alumni of Princeton Theological Seminary, to promote good fellowship and foster friendships among the said students and alumni, and for the general welfare and comfort of the said students and alumni. Third. — ^The location of the principal office of this cor- poration is at No. 117 Library Place, Borough of Princeton, County of Mercer, and the name of the agent therein and in charge thereof, upon whom process against the corporation may be served, is William P. Armstrong. Fourth. — The number of trustees of this corporation is six. Fifth. — ^The names of the trustees selected for the first year of the existence of this corporation are William P. 6 CERTIFICATE OF INCORPORATION Armstrong, Charles R. Erdman, Edward R. Laughlin, James O. Boyd, Minot C. Morgan, James B. Brown, Princeton, New Jersey. In witness whereof, we have hereunto set our hands and seals this eighth day of May, A. D., 1905. William P. Armstrong (seal) Charles R. Erdman (seal) Edward R. Laughlin (seal) James O. Boyd (seal) Minot C. Morgan (seal) James B. Brown (seal) Signed, sealed and delivered in the pres- ence of Leroy H. Anderson TRUSTEES CHARLES ROSENBURY ERDMAN, President WILLIAM PARK ARMSTRONG, Sec'y.-Treas. Term expires May icfi2 MAITLAND VANCE BARTLETT JAMES OSCAR BOYD ARTHUR NORTHWOOD Term expires May ipi^ CHARLES ROSENBURY ERDMAN WILLIAM PARK ARMSTRONG Term expires May 19 14 HENRY EVERTSON COBB MINOT CANFIELD MORGAN Succession of Trustees William Park Armstrong, '05-, President 'o5-'o8, Sec'y.-Treas. '08- Maitland Vance Bartlett, '09- James Oscar Boyd, '05-, Sec'y.-Treas. 'o5-'o8. James Bedford Brown, 'o5-'o6. Edward Irvin Campbell, ■07-08. Henry Evertson Cobb, '08- Reid Stuart Dickson, '09-' 10. Charles Rosenbury Erdman, '05-, President '08- ''Edward Reed Laughlin, 'o5-'o9. JosiAH Marshall Linton, 'o6-'o7. Robert McNutt McElroy, 'o6-'o8. MiNOT Canfield Morgan, 05- Arthur Northwood, 'ii- Samuel Guerry Stukes, 'io-'ii. Alexander Thompson, 'oS-'og. CONSTITUTION AND BY-LAWS CONSTITUTION Adopted May, 1907. Article i. — Name. The name of the ckib shall be The Benham Club. Article 2. — Purpose. The purpose of the club shall be to provide for the asso- ciation of a limited and selected number of men whose fel- lowship may be mutually beneficial socially, intellectually, and spiritually ; and also to provide for good substantial table board at a reasonable charge. Article 3. — Membership. Section i. The membership of the club shall consist of active, graduate, and honorary members. Sec. 2. The active members shall be students pursu- ing some course of study in Princeton Theological Semin- ary ; but the number of such members shall not exceed thirty. Sec. 3. Graduate members shall consist of those who have once been active members. Sec. 4. Honorary membership may be conferred on any person by a unanimous vote of members present at any annual meeting of the club ; but the number of such members shall not at any time be greater than three. Honorary members shall have all the privileges of graduate members, but shall not vote or hold office. 12 constitution Article 4. — The Board of Trustees. Section i. The responsible management of the club in its corporate capacity shall be vested in a Board of Trustees, which shall consist of seven (7) members, six from the grad- uate and one from the active membership of the club. Sec. 2. At the annual meeting of the year 1907, seven (7) trustees shall be elected by ballot to wit: two (2) from the graduate membership to serve three (3) years; two (2) from the graduate membership to serve two (2) years; two (2) from the graduate membership to serve one (i) year; and one (i) who shall be the chief-elect, to serve one (i) year. Sec. 3. At each annual meeting after the year 1907 two (2) trustees shall be elected from the graduate mem- bership to serve three (3) years, and one (i) who shall be the chief-elect to serve one (i) year. Sec. 4. The trustees shall serve until their succes- sors have been elected. Sec. 5. Any vacancies in the Board of Trustees may be filled by the club at its annual meeting; or by the trustees, who may elect a member or members to hold office until the next following annual meeting. Sec. 6. The Board of Trustees shall have general charge of the afifairs, funds, and property of the club. Sec. 7. The Board of Trustees shall elect from its members a President, and a Secretary-Treasurer, to serve for a year or until their successors have been elected. Sec. 8. The Board of Trustees shall meet annually on the Monday before the second Saturday in May and at the call of the President or the Secretary-Treasurer. A majority of its members shall constitute a quorum. CONSTITUTION I3 Sec. 9. The President and the Secretary-Treasurer of the Board of Trustees shall sign all written contracts, notes, mortgages or other obligations on behalf of the club. Sec. 10. The President of the Board of Trustees shall preside at all meetings of the Trustees and at the an- nual meeting of the club ; but in case of his absence a pre- siding officer may be elected to fill his place. Sec. II. The Secretary-Treasurer of the Board of Trustees shall keep the minutes of the annual meetings of the club and of the meetings of the Board of Trustees, conduct its correspondence, keep its records and the club seal, receive subscriptions to the club, pay upon voucher the debts of the club approved by any other member of the Board of Trustees, but not the debts incurred by the active membership of the club, which shall be dis- charged by that body. He shall report in writing to the club at its annual meeting. Sec. 12. The Trustees shall appoint from their num- ber a committee of two to audit annually the books of the Secretary-Treasurer. They shall also hear and receive and place on file the report of the finances and of the general condition of the active membership of the club made by the chief. Article 5. — The Active Membership. Section i. Election of Active Members. — Members shall be elected to the club at meetings called for the purpose by the chief. A quorum shall consist of three-fourths of the active membership in Princeton, provided due effort has been made to secure the attendance of all members in town. The election shall be by ballot, every active member present being entitled to one vote. The ballot must be unanimous in order 14 CONSTITUTION to elect. Rejected names shall not be renominated for one year. Sec. 2. Officers. — ^The officers of the club shall be the following: Chief, Judge, Assistant-Judge, Ezra, Precentor, Assistant Precentor, Steward, and Assistant Steward, each of whom is to be elected annually by the senior, i. e. gradu- ating, class from the active membership. The senior class shall choose the chief, the judge, the steward and the precentor from the succeeding class ; and the assistant judge, Ezra and assistant steward from the second succeeding class ; but the assistant precentor may be chosen from any class. Sec. 3. Duties of Officers. — The Chief shall direct the business affairs of the active membership, make an annual statement to the Board of Trustees concerning the finances and general conditions, call and preside over all meetings of the active membership and of the senior class members of the club, represent the active membership in the Board of Trustees, preside at table, concur with the Ezra in fining the assistant-judge when the judge is absent, and perform all such other duties as usually pertain to the head officer. The chief elect shall be granted a seat but no vote in the annual May (spring) meeting of the Board of Trustees. The Judge shall administer the code, act as secretary of the active membership and of the senior class, and preside at table in the absence of the chief. The Assistant Judge shall fine the judge according to the code and in the absence of the judge shall perform his duties in administering the code. The Ezra shall record and collect the fines, and in the ab- sence of the judge shall concur with the chief in fining the assistant judge. CONSTITUTION 1 5 The Precentor shall take charge of the music at the club. The Assistant Precentor shall perform the duties of the precentor in the absence of the latter. The Steward shall provide for the table under the over- sight of the chief and shall perform such other duties as the chief shall assign him. The Assistant Steward shall be under the training of the steward and shall perform the duties of the steward in his absence. Sec. 4. Election of Officers. — The power to elect all officers of the active membership shall be vested in the sen- ior class, who shall announce the officers for the ensuing year ai the spring dinner. Sec. 5. An active member may be dismissed from the club by a three-fourths vote of the active membership. Article 6. — Senior Control. The members of the Senior class shall serve as an execu- tive committee, exercising general control over the affairs of the club and transacting its business, but shall hold itself amenable (except in the matter of election of officers) to the active club, and report to it from time to time. They shall also appoint from their number a committee of two to audit the accounts of the chief. At the option of the chief, the middle class may be invited for conference with the senior class, but at such conference no vote shall be taken. There shall be a regular monthly meeting of the Senior class at which the chief shall present a statement of the condition of the active membership, finan- cial and otherwise. All bills against the active membership shall be considered at this meeting, or at 1 6 CONSTITUTION a call meeting of the senior class. If the bills meet the ap- proval of the members present, the judge is authorized to provide the chief with vouchers for the same. All business transacted by the active membership in open meeting shall require a two-thirds vote. Article 7. — Annual Meeting. There shall be an annual meeting of the club in May for the election of Trustees, the hearing of reports from the ac- tive membership and from the Board of Trustees, and for the transacting of such other business as may properly come before it. Article 8. — House Committee. There shall be a House Committee appointed by the chief consisting of one member from the senior class, who shall be chairman, and two members from the middle class. This committee shall have advisory power in matters con- cerning the property and the furnishing of the club. The committee shall report through its chairman to the senior class. Article 9. — Emblem. The club emblem shall be a wish-bone encircling the let- ter "B" in such general design as is found on the seal of the corporation. Article 10. — Amendment. Section i. This constitution may be amended by a three-fourths vote of the members at the annual meeting. Sec. 2. Notice of proposed amendments must be sent to the President of the Board of Trustees at least one month before the annual meeting, and the President of the BY-LAWS 17 Board of Trustees shall have notice of such proposed amendments sent to the members of the club before the said annual meeting. At the said annual meeting the President of the Board of Trustees shall report the proposed amend- ments to the club and shall recommend such action as the Board think best. BY-LAWS Article i. — Seats at Table. The seating of the men at table shall be by lot, the classes drawing in order of seniority; the seat to be occupied by the chief shall not be in the drawing; the situation of this seat shall be permanent, and as follows : Chief, middle seat on right hand (East) side of table. Article 2. — The Code. Section i. The club in its deportment at table shall be governed by a code of fines administered by the officers of the club hereinbefore provided. Sec. 2. A committee appointed by the chief shall prepare each autumn a list of the finable offenses for that year with the penalties for each, and such other regulations as may be needed to guide the officers in the administration of the code. This code shall continue in force until a new one is adopted. Sec. 3. The proceeds from fines under the code shall be given to some Christian cause determined upon by the active membership. l8 BY-LAWS Article 3. — Remission of Board Payment Section i. In view of the services of the chief and the steward, no board payment shall be required of them. Sec. 2. In case personal sickness necessitates an absence of a week or more, a member shall have his whole board payment remitted for the time of sickness. If for any other reason than personal sickness a member be absent for over two weeks and less than four, fifty per cent (50%) of his board payment shall be remitted; if absent for over a month, seventy-five per cent (75%) shall be remitted. Article 4. — Amendment. These by-laws may be amended by a three-fourths vote of the Senior class. HISTORY HISTORY The Benham Club has not yet attained to one-half the span of a human life and its founders still call themselves young men ; but generation follows generation rapidly in the Seminary and other changes come so that already new members find themselves confronted with traditions, preju- dices and customs of which they do not know the history and for which they demand an explanation, and older mem- bers revisiting the Club are surprised at many innovations and ask what has been retained and what lost of the cus- toms that seemed to them the best. It is to link the past with the present, to introduce to each other the undergrad- uate and the alumnus that the following historical sketch is written. The Benham Club dates from the fall of 1879. At that time Seminary students took their meals at the Refectory or in private boarding houses. Those that preferred the latter usually formed themselves into groups or clubs, each centering on one member who presided at the table, took over all business responsibilities and received therefor his board free of cost. At its inception the Benham Club dif- fered in no wise from others nor were its founders conscious of inaugurating something new. The leader was George A. Marr and with him was closely associated W. I. Steans, the second chief. To Marr fell the task of securing a hos- tess and after a little searching he found Mrs. Benham. Steans' part was to get members but by mutual consent only congenial men were approached. At that time Mrs. Benham occupied the house on the northeast corner of Canal (Alexander) St. and an alley leading to the rail- 22 HISTORY way tracks and had room for twelve men, but so insistent were the founders upon congeniaHty as a condition of membership and so heartily did Mrs. Benham concur with their wishes, even foregoing her right to have the whole number, that it was not until late in the session of '79-'8o that the table was full. When it is added that Mrs. Ben- ham provided meals far superior to those of the Refectory (it was called the Refactory as a rule) and better even than was either demanded or expected of her, the two funda- mental characteristics of the Benham Club — good, well- prepared food and congenial, well-chosen companions — are seen to have been present from the beginning. The first group consisted of L. W. Beattie, Chas. Lee, H. A. Mac- Kubbin, Samuel A. Martin, G. A. Marr and W. I. Steans. The Benham Club at once became so popular that many sought admission. In its second year it had nineteen mem- bers and Mrs. Benham secured a larger house immediately north of her own. The change was beneficial in every way and the new premises, enlarged by the addition of a bow window in the dining room in 1894, remained the home of the Club and of Mrs. Benham until her death in 1905. In- deed the Club remained in the old house during the session of 'o5-'o6. The death of Mrs. Benham although a severe blow to the Club did not endanger its continuity. By this time it had acquired sufficient individuality and vitality to be confident of its position. The event too had been foreseen by the Club which had taken steps toward another form of organization and by Mrs. Benham herself who in her will assumed its continuance. Moreover changes in the Seminary made dis- continuance inadvisable. The Refectory had been closed for some years and the students were compelled to find board HISTORY 23 elsewhere. Several other clubs also had adopted the elec- tive principle. It was decided therefore at a meeting of graduate and undergraduate members to have the Club in- corporated, to buy a suitable home and so to perpetuate the old name and traditions. A house and lot were secured con- veniently near the Seminary, 95 Mercer St., and bought by the trustees. A new office, that of steward to which were attached the duties of housekeeping, was created, and the Club entered upon the latest stage of its history. When one inquires of the early days he becomes impressed by the prominent place unanimously given to Mrs. Benham. The Club today bears her name and respects her memory but the undergraduates do not and cannot have the same feeling toward her that their predecessors had. It is simple truth to say that all of them esteemed her highly and many really loved her. She was an excellent housekeeper and business woman, with unusual common sense and rarely de- voted to her "boys" as she called them. She seldom saw them indeed, being occupied in the kitchen at meal times, but she knew them all, and followed their course both in the Seminary and later with a genuine sympathy and pride that was almost motherly. She regarded her duties very seriously and all who were in the Club during her life time remember not only the over-abundant supply of good things she provided three times each day, unfailingly year after year, and the unwearying patience that must have been sorely tried sometimes, but also numberless little additions that showed she was mindful of the weather, the class room, a holiday, a birthday, an examination or anything else that might affect the mood of the Club. It was her devotion that made the Benham Club possible and any other name for it would be a misnomer. 24 HISTORY The Benham Club was at first and is still primarily an eating Club, and while, no doubt, some of its members have regarded it as little more than that, it has other characteris- tics which have both given it a permanent place in the affec- tions of the great majority of its members and contributed to its usefulness, stability and continuity. At the centre of these was the insistence upon the congeniality of its mem- bers. In this sense the Club has always been elective and formal voting seems to have begun as soon as the number of members required this method of choice. The sense of fellowship thus secured has always been present although expressed in different ways. The earliest sign of it is prob- ably the title "Chief" given to Marr in the first year of the Club's existence. It was given apparently in fun and ac- cepted in the same spirit, and this together with the original- ity and quaintness of the title testify to the spirit of the founders. The title, of course, still remains nor has its mock seriousness entirely been lost. An old custom that amused later generations was that of having one member read the morning papers and report their contents at the noon meal. In later times the members either read the papers for themselves or did not care to know their contents for this custom vanished early leaving no trace. Not so however with the "mace-bearer" whose duty it was to get the men out to breakfast. The Club has always wrestled with that problem and always failed to attain the ideal. When the mace failed, appeals were made to the men's finer feelings, to their sense of duty, to their con- science; a moral lock was attached to the door which was supposed to turn automatically at a definite time. Then a real iron lock was substituted to as little purpose. Mrs. Benham sympathized with the efforts at reform but her way HISTORV 25 of solving the problem was to serve two hot breakfasts, for the early and late respectively; and for those who dodged the mace, who had no finer feelings, no sense of duty, on whose seared consciences the moral lock did not work, who appeared at most outrageous hours, there was always an open door and hot eggs. The present writer, safe in the obscurity of anonymity, pauses in retrospect — "And new laid eggs, which Baucis' busy care Turned by a gentle fire and roasted rare". The reader and the mace-bearer passed away with other officials and customs that served their generation but the spirit of club unity that called them into being was gradually forming another office that was to be second only to that of Chief and become a permanent and essential part of the Club's inner life. This was the office of censor or, by its later name, Judge. The censor first appears in the year '80- '81 when his duties were to discover by fair means or foul and to report to the Club which of the members were engaged, the guilty ones being expected, at first individually then collectively, to "spread a feast" in the spring. In 1883 the office became permanent and its province enlarged. The censor was expected to correct real or imaginary errors of any sort, to settle disputes and in general to regulate the con- duct of the Club at meals. Two years later his name was changed to that of Judge and the system of fining made its appearance, the fines to be imposed by the Judge and the amount so secured to be given to foreign missions. Re- cently they have gone to Benham men in the foreign field. The office of Assistant Judge was created about the same time and some years later Ezra, the scribe, came into ex- istence to record and collect the fines. Until 1890, the Judge was a law unto himself but from that time until the 26 HISTORY present there is prepared annually by a special commit'tee a series of enactments known as the Code which are to be obeyed by Club members and enforced by the Judge and his assistants. This feature of the Club is sufficiently important to dwell on for it is connected radically with the Benham ideal. The Codes are all ridiculous and the method of administration scarcely less. To an outsider it must appear purely arbi- trary and without real basis. As a matter of fact however it is an excellent method of securing the recreation which has always been one aim of the Club. Although in a theo- logical seminary, Benham is not a theological club. In- deed one of its chief merits is that it has always frowned on anything that savored of the class room being introduced at meals, and there is always wide latitude given to the Judge in this matter by the perennial law that "heresy" is forbid- den. This is a matter that should be clearly understood in view of the possible charge of levity. Benham has always stood for scholarship and piety but those who seek it must look at the records of the men she has turned out, the monthly Club prayer meeting and the weekly Club prayer meetings by classes in the dormitories — and not on Ben- ham at dinner. The evening meal has always been jovial. From the be- ginning any member that could amuse the Club was ex- pected to do so then. In this respect the Club has never changed except that recently by common consent among the Clubs, Thursday is set apart as guests' night when perhaps a little more fun than usual may be expected. Attempts have been made from time to time to organize the "stunt- ing" but never with much success. The year '86 saw the ap- pointment of a musical director, and the office after falling HISTORY 27 into disuse has recently been revived in those of precentor and assistant precentor. Moreover the Chief nowadays is supposed to have control of the "stunting" but as a matter of fact it is still as unrestrained and informal as ever. It is a remarkable thing too that while there have been favorite songs that held their place for years, there is no one his- toric song or "stunt" that goes back to the beginning, nor has Benham ever felt the necessity of a Club song to encour- age enthusiasm or kindle affection. A possible exception is the custom of singing "Shall We Gather at the River?" Mrs. Benham's favorite, as the last hymn on Sunday evening. One pretty custom however became impossible by the re- moval to Mercer St. In earlier days the members walked up the long hill to music — generally some slow melody that agreed with the climb, and this will always be remembered by the men of those days. The present undergraduate Club has several features which older members may not recognize. The members of the senior class form an executive committee exercising a general control over the affairs of the Club. Among their duties is that of choosing the officers for the succeeding year. These are a Chief, a Judge, an Assistant Judge, an Ezra, a steward, an assistant steward, a precentor and an assistant precentor. The Chief retains the exalted position he has always had but his duties have become more onerous since Mrs. Benham's death. He represents the active Club on the board of Trustees, looks after the material comfort of the Club, having associated with him in this duty the steward and assistant steward, and is at the head of the "Judish" (Judiciary) in regulating its life and conduct. To the Judge falls the task of acting as secretary but his principal duty is to enforce the Code and the tone of the Club life depends 28 HISTORY largely upon his skill and judgment. Closely associated with him are the Assistant Judge and Ezra. The number of active members is restricted to thirty and these are chosen as equally as possible from the three years. The growth of the graduate department in the Seminary has made it possible and advisable to have it represented too, and there is rarely a time when either old members returned for advanced study or new members chosen from among the p. g's. are absent. Moreover Benham has been fortunate in having missionaries in foreign fields who during furlough revisit Princeton and make the Club their home, and also in that for the last fifteen years some one of the Faculty, also a member of the Club, has shared its life. The "pigs' den" is still in evidence and is as a rule reserved for such superior beings. The other seats with exception of that of the Chief are chosen by lot. In matter of customs there has been little essential change. Mrs. Benham's boys are not as tender hearted as she was and the member who appears after 8:15 A. M. (recitations now begin at 8:30) gets no breakfast. The wishbones are still saved, hung up to dry and worn in the old fashion when the annual photograph is taken. The device of the Club is a "B" within a wishbone. As late as the early nineties the engaged men still shrank from publicity, and confessions, which at an earlier time had been obtained by guile, had to be forced from them by the Judge's challenge. But about '96 they became sufficiently numerous and enthusiastic to organize for ofifence and de- fence. There were six of them and they dubbed themselves the "Hexateuchs" and their enthusiastic cheer, given stand- ing on chairs, was and is still known as the "Hexateuch" yell. The strength of this organization gradually discouraged mal- HISTORY 29 treatment and for long the expression of mutual enmity has been confined to the "Hexateuch" yell on the one hand and the "Anti-shemit" cheer on the other. The private investiga- tion of the censor and the direct challenge of the Judge have been superseded by a prophetic cake which appears at the Spring Dinner of each year, one half covered with brown and one half with white icing. Each member must cut a piece for himself and his choice of color reveals the state of his heart. The feasts and spreads of earlier days have been consoli- dated in the Fall' Dinner and the Spring Dinner. At the former the new members are tried out. Each is given a toast to which he must reply, and he is encouraged and dis- couraged as much as possible during his maiden effort. This is probably the liveliest night of the year. The other Junior test, namely the examination in Homiletics has latterly been held in one of the dormitories and become more pretentious. A committee of examiners is usually appointed who subject the Juniors to examination in the presence of the Club. Needless to say, there is little relation between the general subject and the questions, but the purpose is well subserved. The candidates have a chance to show what they can do at improvisation and absolutely ex tempore speaking. The prize is the same old notebook honored by all for its own in- trinsic worth but now still more precious by reason of the succession of notable names — those of the successful con- testants of the last twenty years. The Spring Dinner, in contrast to the Fall Dinner, is the farewell of the Senior class, each member of which has to speak. The poet who formerly voiced the serious thoughts on this occasion does not exist now, but each speaker is expected to lay aside levity in his remarks. 30 HISTORY The fact that quite a number of graduate members are within easy reach of Princeton has led to the institution of "Alumni nights". There are two of these each year, generally being before some athletic event in the University and notice iij sent to the alumni in the neighborhood. The object of these is to enable old Benhamites to renew their youth and undergraduates to see of what sort their big brothers are. On the whole they have not been well attended and it may be that they will be soon discontinued. Not so, however, with the Alumni Dinner at Commencement time when the alumni and undergraduates meet to sing the old songs, hear the old "stunts", transact the business of the Club and re- port what is going on within the walls of the Seminary and in the big world outside. Those who have been to these dinners know the power of the Club life; those who have not, should come and renew their strength and loyalty. There are many other matters that might be mentioned, but space forbids. As the songs and jokes about the table so the lesser customs change. Each generation lives partly to itself and does not seek to impose its follies and whims upon succeeding ones. Nor will this history record them. But the main current of the Club's life flows strongly and may be clearly traced from its source until the present day. To show this has been the purpose of this sketch and, when it is added that the water is still clear and sweet, our task is done. THE CLUB HOUSE THE CLUB HOUSE During the year 1902-1903 it became apparent that Mrs. Benham would not be able to continue much longer her ac- tive management of the Club. At the annual dinner in the spring of 1903 this situation was discussed. The proposi- tion to purchase a property met with favorable considera- tion. It was felt that the Qub should have a permanent home where Mrs. Benham might spend her declining years and where the life of the Club might be continued for the benefit of future generations of students in the Seminary. A committee was appointed to make inquiries concerning avail- able properties. This committee reported at the next annual meeting of the Club in May 1904 recommending the purchase of a property, whereupon the following action was then taken : "Resolved, that a finance committee, consisting of seven members, of which the Chief shall be ex of- ficio member, be appointed by the Chief as trustees of the Club to incorporate the Club, if necessary ; to secure option and purchase the property of W. B. Harris, on the corner of Mercer and Edgehill streets ; to raise, receive and administer the funds of the Club until the next annual meeting on the following conditions: that no objection from the proper Seminary authorities be raised, and that an amount of money be raised sufficient to justify, in the judgment of the committee, the purchase of the said property." The committee, consisting of A. T. Ormond (Chairman), Maitland Alexander, M. V. Bartlett, W. P. Armstrong, C. R. Erdman, Henry E. Cobb, and R. K. Hickok, having ascer- 34 THE CLUB HOUSE tained from the President of the Seminary that not only would no objection be raised to the plan, but that it had his cordial approval, and having received the necessary sub- scriptions, purchased on May nth, 1904, from W. B. Harris the property at 95 Mercer St., for $7,000.00, paying $1,000.00 in cash and giving a first mortgage for $3,500.00 with interest at 5 per cent (Bk 142 Mortgages 351) and a second mort- gage for $2,500.00 with interest at 6 per cent (Bk 142 Mort- gages 354). The original subscription list upon which this action was based contained the following names : M. Alexander A. T. Ormond A. H. Bradshaw M. V. Bartlett W. P. Armstrong R. P. D. Bennett T. H. P. Sailer Joseph Hamilton C. E. Diehl J, R. Ziegler M. C. Morgan J. J. Moment R. D. Schoonmaker S. C. Dickson Anonymous N. W. Harkness F. E. Simmons D. DeF. Burrell S. N. Hutchison C. E. Rath B. J. GiFFEN W. C. Erdman O. P. Barnhill R. M. McElroy R. F. Stirling C. L. Neibel E. A. Van Nuys R. K. HiCKOK J. G. Machen W. E. Brooks E. M. Mulock H. M. Robinson H. E. Jackson E. J. Russell S. A. Martin W. B. Cooke R. H. Wilson E. C. Nesbit W. H. Johnson W. C. MUNSON W. J. Wilkinson Parke Richards Paul Martin D. S. Carmichael It did not seem feasible to have the Club incorporated at that time and it v^as agreed by the committee that the title to the property should be vested temporarily in three of their number, — Alexander T. Ormond, Maitland V. Bart- THE CLUB HOUSE 35 lett and William P. Armstrong. The House was repaired and rented from September 1904 to July 1906. In the summer of 1906, alterations were made to fit it for the use of the Club ; tables and chairs were purchased ; the silver was presented by the Class of 1900 and the china by the Class of 1906. The Club entered its new home at the open- ing of the Seminary year in September. On May 8th 1905, the Club was incorporated. As it did not seem wise to change the form of the mortgages at that time, the title to the property remained in the names of A. T. Ormond et al, until January 29th, 1908, when upon legal advice a deed was given to the Trustees of the Club reciting the mortgages as the consideration (Bk 305 Deeds 364). On July loth, 1907, the second mortgage was reduced from $2,500.00 to $1,500.00 and the two were assigned to the Rector, Wardens and Vestrymen of St. Mary's Church, Burlington, N. J., with interest at 5 per cent. On August 8th, 191 1, the second mortgage was again reduced from $1,500.00 to $1,000.00 and the two were assigned to the Princeton Bank with interest at 5 per cent and the privil- ege of reduction in small amounts. In order to meet the interest on the mortgages, the taxes, and insurance on the property, the Trustees have received from the undergraduate Club the sum of $300.00 yearly, — a sum slightly more than the average rental received by it from the bed-rooms on the second floor. The subscriptions from the alumni and part of the surplus from the under- graduate Club have been applied to the maintenance of the property and the reduction of the second mortgage. The Club House has now been in the possession of the Club for seven years. During this time $1,000.00 has been paid on the purchase price and the mortgage indebtedness 36 THE CLUB HOUSE reduced from $6,000.00 to $4,500.00. Subscriptions have been received from about 93 alumni. Some of the original subscribers have paid their subscriptions in full and have not felt able to continue them beyond the first five-year period. Others have renewed their subscriptions for the second five-year period. Some have made contributions from time to time, and others have been removed by death. But all have shown an interest and constancy in supporting the Club in its financial obligations which give ground for confidence with respect to the future. Those who have had the courage to begin and the faithfulness to sus- tain this work will surely find successors in every new gen- eration of Benham men ; and in this assurance the Trustees look forward to the time when the property, unencum- bered by mortgage indebtedness, may be placed at the disposal of the undergraduate Club free from rental charges. SUCCESSION OF OFFICERS OF THE UNDERGRADUATE CLUB SUCCESSION OF OFFICERS OF THE UNDERGRADUATE CLUB 1 879- 1 880 Chief, George Augustus Marr. 1880-1881 Chief, George Augustus Marr. 1881-1882 Chief, WilHam Irwin Steans. 1882-1883 Chief, George Law Richmond ; Censor, Chalmers Martin. I 883- I 884 Chief, ^Caspar Robue Gregory; Censor, I 884- I 885 Chief, George Canfield Frost; Censor, James Coffin Per- kins; Historian and Poet, Charles Irvin Junkin. Chief, William Parker Finney; Judge, Benjamin Lewis Hobson; Historian and Poet, Charles Irvin Junkin. I 886- I 887 Chief, William Franklin Skinner; Judge, Francis Jacobs Cheek; Poet, *Edward Huntting Rudd; Historian, William Rankin Huston ; Musical Director, Charles Alexander Rich- mond. 40 SUCCESSION OF UNDERGRADUATE OFFICERS I 887- I 888 Chief, George Peck Pierson ; Judge, ; Poet, Charles Alexander Richmond ; Historian, Henry Evertson Cobb. Chief, *Francis Edgar Smith ; Judge, George Reynolds ; Assistant Judges, Lewis Bayles Paton, Charles Rosenbury Erdman; Poet, Benjamin Canfield Jones; Historian, Evan- der Bradley McGilvary. I 889- I 890 Chief, William Jessup; Judge, Lewis Bayles Paton; Poet, Historian, 1890-1891 Chief, *Frank Stiles Woodruff; Judge, Robert Hezekiah Beattie; Assistant Judge, Edward de Moss Miller; Poet, Charles Rosenbury Erdman ; Historian, William Courtland Robinson ; Ezra, *Leroy Learned Cameron. Chief, Hugh Trowbridge Dobbins ; Judge, William Am- brose Shedd ; Assistant Judge, David Ripley Todd ; Histor- ian, Sidney Seabury Conger; Poet, *Leroy Learned Cam- eron ; Ezra, Dean Richmond Leland. 1892-1893 Chief, Dean Richmond Leland ; Judge, George Living- stone Robinson ; Assistant Judge, Robert Henry Life ; Poet. Walter Lowrie; Historian, Robert Marshall Blackburn; Ezra, Maitland Vance Bartlett. SUCCESSION OF UNDERGRADUATE OFFICERS 4I I 893- I 894 Chief, Stanley Carnahan Hughes; Judge, Albert James Weisley; Assistant Judge, Robinson Potter Dunn Bennett; Poet, John Sinclair Stevenson ; Historian, Louis Burton Crane; Ezra, *Luther Davis. I 894- I 895 Chief, Maitland Vance Bartlett; Judge, William Harris; Assistant Judge, *Luther Davis; Poet, James Henry Dun- ham; Historian, Robert Henry Life; Ezra, William Leonard Spiegel. I 895- I 896 Chief, Alfred Hamilton Barr; Judge, Robert Reed Gailey ; Assistant Judge, Edward Hersman Montgomery; Ezra, Clif- ford McBride ; Historian, *Luther Davis. 1 896- 1 897 Chief, Edward Hersman Montgomery ; Judge, Samuel Dickey; Assistant Judge, William Brown Cooke; Ezra. Victor Herbert Lukens. I 897- I 898 Chief, William Brown Cooke; Judge, John Selby Frame; Assistant Judge, Robert Brewster Beattie ; Ezra, James Os- car Boyd. I 898- I 899 Chief, Spencer Cole Dickson ; Judge, *Walter Lowrie ; Assistant Judge, James McEldowney Eakins; Ezra, Charles Edward Diehl. 1 899- 1 900 Chief, John Edward Carver ; Judge, Jesse Reinhart Zieg- 42 SUCCESSION OF UNDERGRADUATE OFFICERS ler ; Assistant Judge, David de Forest Burrell ; Ezra, James Kennedy Anderson, Jr. 1900-1901 Chief, James Ramsey Swain ; Judge, James Marquis Duer; Assistant Judge, Frank Erdman Simmons; Ezra, George Jeffrey Russell. 1901-1902 Chief, Frank Erdman Simmons ; Judge, Walter Collins Erdman ; Assistant Judge, Robert Graham Leetch ; Ezra, Ezra Allen Van Nuys. 1 902 -1 903 Chief, Stuart Nye Hutchison; Judge, Raymond Hiram Wilson; Assistant Judge, Edward Johnson Russell; Ezra, Ralph Kiddoo Hickok. I 903- I 904 Chief, Ralph Kiddoo Hickok; Judge, Edward Johnson Russell ; Assistant Judge, John Gresham Machen ; Ezra, William Cooper Munson. 1 904- 1 905 Chief, Edwin McCord Mulock; Judge, John Gresham Machen; Assistant Judge, Raymond Curtis Donnan; Ezra, James Bedford Brown ; Precentor, Warren Ray Ward. 1905-1906 Chief, James Bedford Brown ; Judge, *Paul Dickson Ax- tell ; Assistant Judge, Charles Moseley Fames ; Ezra, Henry Conrad Ostrom; Precentor, Rockwell Smith Brank; Assist- ant Precentor, David Benjamin Updegraff ; Steward, Albert SUCCESSION OF UNDERGRADUATE OFFICERS 43 Christian Busch; Assistant Steward, George Herman Fickes. 1906-1907 Chief, Josiah Marshall Linton; Judge, Henry Conrad Os- trom ; Assistant Judge, Edward Irvin Campbell ; Ezra, Ches- ter Warren Todd; Precentor, Josiah Marshall Linton; As- sistant Precentor, Edward Irvin Campbell; Steward, Albert Christian Busch ; Assistant Steward, George Herman Fickes. I 907- I 908 Chief, Edward Irvin Campbell; Judge, Wesley Linn Hemphill; Assistant Judge, *Clarence Henry Schwenke; Ezra, Francis Powell Cheek; Precentor, Edward Irvin Campbell ; Assistant Precentor, Alexander Thompson ; Stew- ard, George Herman Fickes; Assistant Steward, George Snavely Rentz. 1908-1909 Chief, Alexander Thompson; Judge, David Carothers Whitmarsh; Assistant Judge, Richard Matthews Elsea; Ezra, William Clarence Thompson; Precentor, Alexander Thompson; Assistant Precentor, Frederick David Nieder- meyer ; Steward, George Snavely Rentz ; Assistant Steward, William Carlos Perez, 1909-1910 Chief, Reid Stuart Dickson; Judge, William Fenna Rog- ers ; Assistant Judge, Samuel Guerry Stukes ; Ezra, Lauren Gates Bennett; Precentor, Reid Stuart Dickson; Assistant 44 SUCCESSION OF UNDERGRADUATE OFFICERS Precentor, David Reese Evans ; Steward, William Carlos Perez; Assistant Steward, Charles Rutherford Rodman. 1910-1911 Chief, Samuel Guerry Stukes ; Judge, John Hall Axford ; Assistant Judge, David Reed Edwards ; Ezra, Arthur North- wood; Precentor, David Reese Evans; Assistant Precentor, Claire Fremont Vale ; Steward, David Reese Evans ; Assist- ant Steward, Harry W. Barr. 1911-1912 Chief, Arthur Northwood ; Judge, Langdon Cheves Mc- Cord Smythe; Assistant Judge, Robert Mead Patterson; Ezra, George Francis Browne; Precentor, Claire Fremont Vale ; Assistant Precentor, Reuben Archer Torrey, Jr. ; Steward, Harry W. Barr; Assistant Steward, Arthur Boughton Fowler. MEMBERSHIP IN MEMORIAM GEORGE TYBOUT PURVES PAUL DICKSON AXTELL WILLIAM PRATT BREED JAMES MACKLIN BRODNAX ROBERT ERNEST CALDWELL LEROY LEARNED CAMERON JAMES DENNISON CORWIN WILLIAM POYNTZ CRAIG WILLIAM LUKE CUNNINGHAM LUTHER DAVIS JAMES STUART DICKSON JAMES RAMSEY DONEHOO JOHN BOGGS EDGAR CASPAR ROBUE GREGORY WILLIAM PARKER HOLMES THOMAS EDWARD INGLIS EDWARD REED LAUGHLIN EDSON ALLOW AY LOWE WALTER LOWRIE LUTHER ALBERTUS OATES GEORGE ALFRED PAULL STANLEY KETCHAM PHRANER WILLIAM HENRY ROBINSON EDWARD HUNTTING RUDD CLARENCE HENRY SCHWENKE GEORGE ELMER SCOTT JOSEPH HENRY SKINNER FRANCIS EDGAR SMITH JOHN STONESTREET VAN METER EDMUND DILLAHUNTY VISER FRANK STILES WOODRUFF WALTER AUGUSTUS WYCKOFF Note of Explanation : The following information is intended to supplement that which is found in the Biographical Catalogue of Princeton Theological Seminary, published in 1909, a copy of which may be had by any alumnus, free of charge, on application to Rev. J. H. Dulles, Princeton, N. J. The items in the order of their occur- rence are as follows : Full name. College and year of graduation (a list of the abbreviations used for colleges and universities, with the number of alumni from each, is appended), present occupation and address, prizes, fellowships. B.D. degrees, lectureships in Princeton Theological Seminary, connection with the Faculty, Directors or Trustees of Princeton Theological Seminary, honorary or earned degree (except M. A.). Unless otherwise noted a church or a mis- sionary is in the Presbyterian Church in the U. S. A. INDEX OF ABBREVIATIONS C-College U-University. AlcCS, Alcoy, Alcoy, Spain i AdlC, Adalbert, Cleveland, O i AlgC, Allegheny, Meadville, Pa i AlmC, Alma, Alma, Mich 2 AugC, Augustana, Rock Island, 111 i BelC, Beloit, Beloit, Wis i BlU, Blackburn, Carlinville, 111 i CICE, Cliff, England i CnC, Centre, Danville, Ky 10 CnU, Central, Danville, Ky i . . 13 CUK, Central, Richmond, Ky 2 CoeC, Coe, Cedar Rapids, la i ColoC, Colorado, Colorado Springs, Colo 2 CoU, Columbian, Washington, D. C i CrC, Cornell, Mt. Vernon, la i CrU, Cornell, Ithaca, N. Y i 50 INDEX OF ABBREVIATIONS DckC, Dickinson, Carlisle, Pa i DCNS, Dalhousie, Halifax, N. S., Canada 3 Die, Delaware, Newark, Del 2 DvC, Davidson, Davidson, N. C 7 EC, Erskine, Due West, S. C 3 EmpC, Emporia, Emporia, Kans i FCI, Franklin, Franklin, Ind 2 FMC, Franklin and Marshall, Lancaster, Pa i GCC, Grove City, Grove City, Pa i GtC, Gettysburg, Gettysburg, Pa 3 HC, Hamilton, Clinton, N. Y 8 HpC, Hope, Holland, Mich 2 HSC, Hampden-Sidney, Hampden-Sidney, Va i IC, Illinois, Jacksonville, 111 4 JHU, Johns Hopkins, Baltimore, Md 3 KnC, Knox, Galesburg, 111 i LC, Lafayette, Easton, Pa 28 LFC, Lake Forest, Lake Forest, 111 7 LU, Lincoln, Lincoln University, Pa i MhlC, Muhlenberg, Allentown, Pa i MriC, Marietta, Marietta, 2 MUA, Melbourne, Melbourne, Australia i MuC, Muskingum, New Concord, 2 NUS, Neuchatel, Neuchatel, Switzerland i NWU, Northwestern, Evanston, 111 i OuC, Ouachita, Arkadelphia, Ark i OUE, Oxford, Oxford, England i PCSC, Presbyterian Coll., Clinton. S. C i PkC, Park, Parkville, Mo 2 PrC, Parsons, Fairfield, la i PU, Princeton, Princeton, N. J 131 OCC, Queen's. Kingston, Canada i INDEX OF ABBREVIATIONS 5 1 QUI, Queen's, Belfast, Ireland 2 RC, Rutgers, New Brunswick, N. J 4 RU, Rochester, Rochester, N. Y i SWPU, Southwestern Presbyterian, Clarksville, Tenn.. 4 TrkC, Tarkio, Tarkio, Mo i TUC, Toronto, Toronto, Canada 5 UC, Chicago, Chicago, 111 2 UCal, California, Berkeley, Cal i UE, Edinburgh, Edinburgh, Scotland i UGa, Georgia, Athens, Ga i UI, Indiana, Bloomington, Ind i Ula, Iowa, Iowa City, Iowa i UIl, Illinois, Urbana, 111 i UL, Lewisburg, (Bucknell) Lewisburg, Pa 1 UNB, New Brunswick, New Brunswick, N. B., Can. . . i UNb, Nebraska, Lincoln, Nebr i UNC, North Carolina, Chapel Hill, N. C 2 UnC, Union, Schenectady, N .Y 6 UP, Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pa. 13 UV, Virginia, Charlottesville, Va 2 UW, Wisconsin, Madison, Wis i VU, Vanderbilt, Nashville, Tenn 2 WaCI, AVabash, Crawfordsville, Ind 2 WC, Williams, Williamstown, Mass 5 WCI, Washington, Ind i WestC, Western, Westminster, Md i WhC, Whitworth, Tacoma, Wash i WJC, Washington and Jefferson, Washington, Pa. ... 9 WLU, Washington and Lee, Lexington, Va 2 WMC, William and Mary, Williamsburg, Va i WslUC, Wesleyan, Middletown, Conn i WslUO, Wesleyan, Delaware, 2 52 INDEX OF ABBREVIATIONS WstCM, Westminster, Fulton, Mo 3 WstCP, Westminster, New Wilmington, Pa. 2 WTC, Washington and Tusculum, Greeneville, Tenn. . . 2 WU, Wooster, Wooster, 13 WUM, Washington, St. Louis, Mo i YU, Yale, New Haven, Conn 7 HONORARY MEMBERS *PuRVES, George Tybout, UP '79, elected to honorary membership '93, died Sept. 24, 1901, New York City; Director P. T. S. '8^-92, Prof, of N. T. Lit. and Exege- sis P. T. S. '92-'oo, Director 'oo-'oi, L. P. Stone Lecturer '87-'88, D.D., LL.D. Hodge, Caspar Wistar, Jr., PU '92; elected to honorary membership '09, Asst. Prof, of Didactic and Polemic Theology P. T. S., Princeton, N. J., Instructor in the N. T. and Asst. in Dogmatic Theology P. T. S. '01-02, Asst. in Dogmatic Theology 'o2-'o7, Ph.D. Howe, Edward Leavitt, PU; elected to honorary mem- bership '09, Vice-President Princeton Bank, Princeton, N. J. GRADUATE MEMBERS Alexander, Maitland, PU '89; 'gi-'g2. Pastor ist Church, Pittsburgh, 920 Ridge Ave., Allegheny, Pa., Director P. T. S., D.D. Anderson, James Kennedy, Jr., LFC. '97; '98- "oi. Farmer, 733 Racine St., Milwaukee, Wis. Andrews, Fred Earl, RU '93 ; '94-'96, Pastor Church, Mc- Veytown, Pa. Armstrong, William Park, PU '94; '94-*97, '98- '01, Prof. N. T. Lit. and Exegesis, P. T. S., Princeton, N. J., In- structor in the N. T., P. T. S. '99-'o3. =''AxTELL, Paul Dickson, WU '03; 'o3-*o6. Died Jan. 17, 1909, near Homestead, Pa. Bachman, Robert, Jr., PU '99; 'oo-'oi, Asst. Minister Grace Church (Epis.), 802 Broadway, New York City. Baldwin, James Mark, PU '84; '86-'87, Prof. National University of Mexico, Mexico City, care Harris Forbes & Co., Pine and William Sts., New York City, Ph.D., Sc.D., LL.D., Correspondant Institute of France. Barnhill, Oliver Paul, CnC '00; '00-03, Pastor ist Church Stapleton, Staten Island, N. Y. Barr, Alfred Hamilton, PU '89; '94-'96, Pastor ist Church, 808 Park Ave., Baltimore, Md., Director P. T. S., D. D. Barr, Preston, PU '78; '79-'8o, Superintendent Schools, Lee, Mass. Barrett, Charles Wilson, CnC '98; '03-05, Pastor ist Church, Clay City, Ind. GRADUATE MEMBERS 55 Bartlett, Maitland Vance, PU '91 ; '92-'95, '99-'oo. Pas- tor Beck Memorial Church, 980 E. i8oth St., New York City. Bates, William Ezra, LFC '86; '90-'9i, Pastor Church Montesano, Washington, Beattie, Lee William, UnC '79; '79-'8o, '8i-'83, Supt. Madison Square Church House, 432 3rd Ave., New York City. Beattie, Robert Brewster, UnC '96; '96- '99, Pastor ist (Munn Ave.) Church, 44 Lenox Ave., East Orange, N. J. Beattie, Robert Hezekiah, PU '85; '89-'9i, Pastor ist Church Austin, 240 N. Waller Ave., Austin, Chicago, 111., Alumni Fell, in N. T. Lit. and Archibald Robertson Scholar '9i-'92, D.D. Beattie, Thomas Cumming, PU '78; '8o-'82, Pastor Gar- valia Church, Pasadena, Cal. Bedinger, Daniel Everett, CUK '83 ; '86-'87, Local preacher (M. E. Church South), Richwood, Boone Co., Kentucky. Bennett, Lauren Gates, WstCP '05; 'o8-'ii. Pastor ist Church, Morrisville, Pa. Bennett, Robinson Potter Dunn, PU '92; '92-'95, Pas- tor Summit Church, 512 Carpenter St., Germantown, Pa. Bishop, William Samuel, RC '87 ; '89-'90, Prof. Dogmatic Theology, University of the South, Sewanee, Tenn., D.D. Bittinger, John Baugher, HSC '83; '85-'87, Pastor Rich Valley, S. S. Chatham Hill, Saltville, North Holston Churches (Southern Presby.) Chatham Hill, Va. Black, Luther Scott, GtC '88; 'o8-'o9, Pastor College Hill Church, 129 Pierce St., Easton, Pa. Blackburn, Robert Marshall, WC '89; '90-93, Pastor ist Church, 409 Walnut St., Reading, Pa. 56 GRADUATE MEMBERS Boyd, James Oscar, NYU 95 ; '96-'oo, Elliott F. Shepard Asst. Prof. Oriental and O. T. Lit., P. T. S., Princeton, N. J., G. S. Green Fell, in Hebrew '99-00, E. F. Shepard Instructor in the O. T., P. T. S. 'oo-'o;, B.D., Ph.D. Bradley, Walter Hensill, WstCM '86; '87-'89, Presi- dent Blackburn College, Carlinville, 111., Ph.D., D.D. Bradshaw, Archibald Harmon, FCI '90; '93-'95, Rector Trinity Church (Epis.), Easton, Pa. Branch, Charles Henry Hardin, JHU '95 ; '95-'98, Pas- tor Westminster Church (Southern Presby.), Hopkins- ville, Ky. ±Jrank, Rockwell Smith, UV '99; 'o3-'o6, Pastor Inde- pendent Presby. Church 25 W. Oglethorpe Ave., Savan- nah, Ga. Bready, George Stuart, PU '07; '07-' 10, S. S. American Church, Hotel Imperial, Frankfort-on-Main, Germany. *Breed, William Pratt, UP '78; '8o-'82, Died Feb. 12. 1895, Tryon, N. C. Brewer, Daniel Chauncey, WC '86; '86-'87, Lawyer, 40 Central St., Boston, Mass. Brodhead, Claude Ross, PU '83; '86-'87, Missionary to Laguna Indians, Laguna, N. M. *Brodnax, James Macklin, PU '94; '94- '95, '96-'98, Died July 22, 1904, Southern Pines, N. C. Brooks, William Elizabeth, WstCP '00; 'oi-'o4, Pastor 1st Church, 125 N. 4th St., Allen town, Pa. Brown, Hugh, C1CE;'o3-'o5, Minister (Church of Scot- land) Strathmiglo. Fife, Scotland, B.D. Brown, James Bedford, PU '00; '01, 'o3-'o6, Pastor ist Church, Lock Box 1032, Alliance, Nebr. Burrell, David de Forest, YU '98; '98-'oi, '02- '03, Pastor ist Church, 116 Irvington Ave., South Orange, N. J., ist GRADUATE MEMBERS 57 Maitland Prize in N. T. Exegesis, "oo, Wm. Henry Green Fell. 'o2-'o3, Instructor in the N. T., P. T. S. 'o3-'o4, B.D. BuscH, Albert Christian, HC '03 ; 'o3-'o7, Pastor 2nd Church, 405 Market St., Trenton, N. J. *Caldwell, Robert Ernest, UNC '78; '86-'87, Died Jan. 3, 1904, Philadelphia, Pa., D.D. Caldwell, Walter Lindsay, SWPU '90; '97-'98, Pastor Woodland St. Church (Southern Presby.) 601 Fatherland St., Nashville, Tenn. Calhoun, John, PU '86; '86-'92, Pastor Mt. Airy Church, 33 E. Mt. Pleasant Ave., Mt. Airy, Philadelphia, Pa., D.D. Calverley, Edwin Elliott, PU '06; '06- '09, Missionary (Dutch Ref.), Busrah, Persian Gulf, Arabia, via Bombay. *Cameron, Leroy Learned, UnC '89; '89-'92, Died Aug. 4, 1896, near Albany, N. Y. Campbell, Colin Donald, QCC '96; '97-99, 'o4-'o5, Dis- trict Sec'y of the Alberta Auxiliary of the Canadian Bible Society, 611 Heiniinck St., Edmonton, Alberta, Canada, B.D. Campbell, Edwin Irvin, LC '05; '05-08, Missionary, Man- ila, P. L, Care Am. Presby. Mission. Candee, Charles Lucius, PU '95; '95-'98, Pastor West- minster Church, 1003 Broome St., Wilmington, Del. Carmichael, Donald Stewart, AlmC '01 ; 'oi-'o4, Pastor 1st Church, Bad Axe, Mich. Carver, John Edward, LFC '97; '97-'oo, Pastor ist Church, Box 427, Ogden, Utah. Cheek, Francis Jacobs, CnC '76: '85-'87, Synodical Supt. for Kentucky, 108 E. Lexington Ave., Danville, Ky., D.D. Cheek, Francis Powell, CnC '04; 'o6-'io. Instructor in Bible and Philosophy, Trinity Univ., Waxahachie, Texas, Alumni Fell, in N. T. Lit. and Archibald Robertson Scholar, 'o9-'io, B.D. 58 GRADUATE MEMBERS Cobb, Henry Evertson, RC '84 ; '85-'88, Minister Collegiate Church (Dutch Ref.), 370 West End Ave., New York City, D.D. Conger, Sidney Seabury, '90- '92, Pastor Union Evangelical Church, 3a Calle de Cordoba 74, Mexico City, Mexico. Cook, Welling Thomas, LC '05 ; 'o5-'o8, Missionary, Chong Ju, Korea. CooKE, William Brown, PU '95 ; '95-'98, Pastor ist Church (American), 226 Calle Arquiza, Ermita, Manila, P. I., B.D. Corum, Jesse Maxwell, Jr., VU '06; '07-^09, Pastor Church West Orange, 419 Main St., Orange, N. J., 2nd. Maitland Prize in N. T. Exegesis '08, Gelston-Winthrop Fell, in Church History, awarded '09, B.D. "•^Corwin, James Dennison, AdlC '88; '88-91, Died Sept. 26, 1892, Cleveland, O. Cowan, Hector William, PU '88; '88-'90, Farmer, Ho- bart, N. Y. *Craig, Willam Poyntz, PrC '81 ; '88-'89. Died July 14, 1897, Chicago, 111. Crane, Louis Burton, PU '91 ; '9i-'95, '96-'97, Pastor Westminster Church, 583 Westminster Ave., Elizabeth. N. ]., ist Maitland Prize in N. T. Exegesis '93, Alumni Fell, in N. T. Lit. and Archibald Robertson Scholar '94- '95, Director P. T. S. Craven, Charles Edmiston, PU '8t ; '84-'86, S. S. Church, Mattituck, N. Y., D.D. Creighton, John Wallace, WstCM '04; 'o4-'o5, '06-07, Missionary, Yeung Kong, China. Crenshaw, James Llewellyn, CnU. '07: 'o8-'io. Physical Chemist, Geophysical Laboratory, Washington, D. C, Ph.D. GRADUATE MEMBERS 59 *CuNNiNGHAM, WiLLiAM LuKE, '79-'8o, Died Oct. 5, 1897, Point Pleasant, N. J., D.D. "^ Davis, Luther, LC '91 ; '93-96, Died Feb. 15, 1909, Easton, Pa. Dickey, Samuel, PU '94; '95-'97, Prof. N. T. Lit. and Ex- egesis McCormick Theol. Sem., 4 Chalmers Place, Chi- cago, 111. Dickie, Henry, DCNS '83; '85-'86, Pastor ist Church (Canadian Presby.) Chatham, Ontario, Canada, D.D. *DicKSON, James Stuart, UP '80; '8o-'83, Died April i, 1909, East Orange, N. J., D.D. Dickson, Reid Stuart, UP '06; 'o7-'io, Pastor New Provi- dence Church, New Providence, N. J. Dickson, Spencer Cole, UP "95; '96-99. Pastor ist Church, 236 W. 3rd St., Bloomsburg, Pa. Diehl, Charles Edward, JHU '96; '97-'oo, Pastor ist Church (Southern Presby.) Clarkesville, Tenn., Benj. Stanton Prize in O. T. Lit. '99, D.D. Dobbins, Hugh Trowbridge, PU '88; '90-92, Pastor ist Church, Colusa, Cal., Divided 2nd Maitland Prize in N. T. Exegesis '91, Alumni Fell, in N. T. Lit. and Archibald Robertson Scholar '92-^93, ist Scribner Prize in N. T. Lit. '92. *Donehoo, James Ramsey, WJC '89; '93-'95, Died Jan. 10, 1912, Arnot, Pa. DoNNAN, Raymond Curtis, UnC '03; 'o3-'o6. Lawyer, 115 Union St., Schenectady, N. Y. Downs, Francis Siiunk, LC '06; 'o7-'io. Pastor Calvary Church, 123 S. Linwood Ave., Baltimore, Md., Gelston- Winthrop Fell, in Church History, awarded '10, B.D. Duer, James Marquis, IC '95; '98-'oi, Pastor ist Church, 408 Grant St., Wausau, Wis. • 60 GRADUATE MEMBERS Dunham, James Henry, PU '91 ; '92-95, Pastor ist Church, Mount Holly, N. J. Dustan, John Fr.\ncis, DCNS ; '8o-'83, Pastor Canadian Presby. Church, Bridgetown, N. S., Canada. Eakins, James McEldowney, LFC '97; '97-'oo, Pastor Church, 421 S. Union St., Warsaw, Ind. Eames, Charles Moseley, IC '04; 'o4-'o7. Missionary, Tsining, Shantung, China. Eddy, George Sherwood, YU '91 ; '95-'96, Secretary Y. M. C. A. for Asia, Care Y. M. C. A., 124 E. 28th St., New York City. Eddy, George Tryon, PU '86 ; "87-'90, Librarian New York City Public Library, Plandome, Manhasset, N. Y., Fell. in N. T. Lit. '90-'9i. *Edgar, John Boggs, PU 00; 'oo-'oi. Died Sept. 5th, 1909, Qiarleston, W. Va. Edge, Walter Warren, PCSC '99; '01 -'02, Pastor ist Church (Southern Presby.), Laurel, Md. Elliott, Alfred Orrin, UNb 01 ; 'oi-'o2, Pastor Church, Canton, 111. Elsea, Richard Matthews, HC '07; 'o7-'io, With General Electric Co.. New York City, Newark, N. J. Erdman, Charles Rosenbury, PU '86: '87-'89, '90-'9t, Prof. Practical Theology P. T. S., Princeton, N. J., D.D. Erdman, Paul, PU '94 ; '98-'oo. Missionary, Zahleh, Syria, 1st Maitland Prize in N. T. Exegesis '99, ist Scribner Prize in N. T. Lit. '00. Erdman, Walter Collins, PU '99; '99-'o2, Missionary, Taiku, Korea. Evans, David Reese, LC '08; 'o8-'ii. Pastor Hope and Hol- manville Churches, Hope Road, Lakewood, N. J. Evans, Robert Graham, CnC; '86; Farmer, Danville, Ky. GRADUATE MEMBERS 6 1 Evans, Thomas St. Clair, PU '97; "99-00, Charge of Re- ligious Work of Univ. of Pennsylvania, 3914 Baltimore Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. Farr, James McCullough, PU '90; '92-'94, Pastor ist Church, 242 S. Franklin St., Wilkes-Barre, Pa. Farrell, John B. Stewart, WaCI '97; '99-'oo, Pastor Church, Greencastle, Pa. Ferguson, John Albert, TUC '96; '97-'99, Pastor Knox (Canadian Presby.) Church, Belgrave, Ontario, Canada. Fergusson, John Moore, UE '83 ; '84-'85, Pastor St. George's (English Presby.) Church, Southend, Essex, England. Ferrando, Manuel, AlcCS '84; '95-'96, Director of Christ's Mission, 331 W. 57th St., New York City. Fickes, George Herman, LC '05; 'o5-'o8, Pastor Grace Church, 42 Cameron St., Rochester, N. Y. Finney, William Parker, PU '83 ; '84-'86, Prof. Rhetoric and English Lit. Lincoln University, Pa , D.D. Fitzgerald, David Bruce, WJC '84 ; '86-'87. S. S. Church, Morrow, O. Fleming, Matthew Corry. PU '86; '86, Lawyer, 71 Broad- way, New York City. Frame, John Selby, PU '95 ; '95-'98, Lawyer, Fargo, N. D. Freeman, Robert Guthrie, AlgC '04; 'o4-'o7, Pastor Church, Pasadena, Cal. Frost, George Canfield, PU '81 ; '82-'85, Oriskany, N. Y. Fullerton, George Stuart, UP '79 ; '79-'8o, Prof. Philoso- phy Columbia Univ., Care Columbia University, New York City, Ph.D., LL.D. Fulton, William Pomeroy, WslUO '81 ; '86- '87. General Secretary and Supt. of City Missions and Church Exten- sion of the Presbytery of Philadelphia, 4531 Pine St., Philadelphia, Pa., D.D. 62 GRADUATE MEMBERS Gailey, Robert Reed, LC '93; '94-'96, Secretary "Princeton Work", Peking, China. Gardner, Murray Hamish, HC '84; '87- '90, Pastor Church, Brewster, N. Y. GiFFEN, Bruce Johnston, EC '97; 'oi-'o3, Pastor Church, Parma, Ida., B.D. Giles, Henry Edgar, MuC '08; 'o8-'ii, Pastor ist Church, Newell, W. Va. Gillespie, George Elliott, PU '89; '90-'92, Pastor Church, Coatesville, Pa. Good, Thomas Roseberry, PU '04; 'o3-'o4, Pastor Union Church, Yokohama, Japan. Gordon, James Alexander, WU '82; '83-'85, Pastor ist Church, Van Wert, O., D.D. Graham, Malbone Watson, PU '89; '92-'94, Pastor Church, Williams, la., D.D. Greene, George Francis, PU '82 ; '82-'85, Pastor Church Cranford, N. J., Director P. T. S., D.D. ^Gregory, Caspar Robue, PU '80; '82-'84, Died Dec. 2nd. 1891, Wilkes-Barre, Pa. Hair, Thomas Johnston, UC '03; '03, Asst. Sales Mana- ger Acme Steel Goods Co., 2834 Archer Ave., Chicago, 111. Hallman, Harold Everett, HC '05 ; 'o5-'o7, 'o8-'o9, Pas- tor Frankford and Ocean View Churches, Frankford, Del. Hamilton, Joseph, WJC '90; '92-'93, Pastor Upper Buffa- lo Church, Buffalo, Washington Co., Pa., 2nd Maitland Prize in N. T. Exegesis '92. Harkness, Norris William, PU '96; '97-'oi, Pastor ist Church, East Hampton, L. I., N. Y. I-Tarlan, Richard Davenport, PU '81 ; '85-'86, Special representative Geo. Washington Univ., Washington. D. C, Director P. T. S. '89-'94, D.D.. LL.D. GRADUATE MEMBERS 63 Harris, William, Jr., PU '92; 'g2-gs, Missionary, Princi- cipal Prince Royal College and S. S. Maa Dawk Dang and San Sai Churches, Chieng mai, Siam. Harsha, Albert Kendrick, PU '83 ; '85-'86, Care Dr. S. K. Royle, 105 W. 76th St., New York City. Hata SnoHKicHi, WaCI '99; 'oi-'o3. Pastor ist Japanese Congregational Church, 260 Winona Ave., Pasadena, Cal., 1st Scribner Prize in N. T. Lit. '02, B.D. Hemphill, Wesley Linn, UP '04, 'o5-'o8. Missionary, Fatehgarh, India, ist Maitland Prize in N. T. Exegesis, '07 B.D. HiBBEN, John Grier, PU '82; '83-'86, President of Prince- ton Univ., Prospect, Princeton, N. J., Ph.D., LL.D. HiCKOK, Ralph Kiddoo, WU '99; 'oi-'o4. Pastor ist Church, East Aurora, N. Y., B.D. Hilton, John George, UnC '96; '97-'99, Pastor Church, Concordia, Kan. Hobson, Benjamin Lewis, CUK 'yy; '84-'86, Prof, of Apologetics and Missions McCormick Theol. Sem., i Chalmers Place, Chicago, 111., D.D. Hodge, Samuel Colgate, PU '88; '90, Pastor Brainerd Union Church, 103 N. 4th St., Easton, Pa. Hoffman, John Washington, WJC '92; '93-'95, Pastor 1st (Methodist Epis.) Church, 49 Belvidere St., Crafton, Pa. *HoLMES, William Parker, QUI '81 ; '82-'84, Deceased. Hood, Frank Carter, UI '81; '82-'84, Pastor ist Church, Madison, Ind., D.D. Hudson, Harry Summers, CnC '07; 'o8-'o9. Pastor Church, Sharpsburg, Ky. Hughes, Stanley Carnahan, PU '89; '92- '94, Rector Trinity (Epis.) Church, Newport, R. I. 64 GRADUATE MEMBERS HiJLLE, Ernst Hermann, UMG, UTG, ULG, UBG, UGG, '88- '95 ; '95-'96, Konigliche Bibliothek, Berlin, Germany, lie. theol. Huston, William Rankin, DIG '84; "86-'88, Pastor ist Church, Clifton Heights, Pa. Hutchison, Stuart Nye, LC '00; '00- '03, Pastor Ghent (Southern Presby.) Church, 58 E. Westover Ave., Nor- folk, Va. Hutchinson, Thomas Johnston, DvC '04; 'o7-'o8. Pas- tor (Southern Presby.) Church, Auburn, Ala. *1nglis, Thomas Edward, TUC '81 ; '82-'84, Died Dec. 31st, 1902, Boulder, Colo. Ingram, George Harvey, PU '80; '82-'83, Pastor Westmin- ster Church, 1240 E. State St., Trenton, N. J. Jack, Albert Elmer, LFC '84; '86-'87, Farmer, Antioch, 111. Jackson, Frederick Walcott, Jr., PU '87; '88-'9i, Prof, of English Language and Lit. in German Theol. Sem. of Newark, N. J., at Bloomfield, N. J., 107 Clark St., Glen Ridge, N. J. Jackson, Henry Ezekiel, LC '93; '93-'96, Pastor Christian Union (Congregational) Church, Montclair, N. J., 160 Cooper Ave., Upper Montclair, N. J. Jenkins, Daniel Edwards, MUA '88; '9o-'9i, Prof, of Dogmatic and Polemic Theol. and Apologetics Omaha Theol. Sem., Omaha, Nebr., L. P. Stone Lecturer 'o5-'o6, Ph.D., D.D. Jennings, William Beatty, DvC '80; '8o-'83, Pastor ist Church, 6012 Greene St., Germantown, Pa., Trustee P. T. S., D.D. Jessup, William, PU '86, '87-'90, Missionary, Zahleh, Syria, D.D. GRADUATE MEMBERS 65 Johnson, William Hallock, PU '88; '95-'97, Prof. Greek and N. T. Lit. Lincoln Univ., Lincoln University, Pa., B.D., Ph.D. Jones, Benjamin Canfield, LU '86; '87-'89, Pastor Church of the Redeemer, 370 Van Houten St., Paterson, N. ]., D.D. JuNKiN, Charles Irvin, UP '77; '83-'86, Hospital Supt. and Writer, Devon, Pa. Karner, George Newell, PU '83; '85-'86, Pastor Mill River and Southfield (Congregational) Churches, Mill River, Mass. Keith, William Neeley, LC '05; '05, 'o6-'o7. Medical student College Physicians and Surgeons, New York City in preparation medical missions, City Hospital, New York City. Kellogg, Augustus Clark, PU '93; 'oi-'o2. Pastor ist Church of Delaware and Knowlton Church, Delaware, N. J. Kellogg, Edwin Henry, PU '02; 'o3-'o6. Pastor 2nd. Church and Prof, of Bible Lit. Dickinson College, 106 S. West St., Carlisle, Pa., Gelston-Winthrop Fell, in Apologetics 'o6-'o7, B.D. Kellogg, Robert Wallis, PU '07 ; 'o6-'o7. Care Rev. E. H. Kellogg, Carlisle, Pa. Kershner, George William, FMC '74; '79-'8i, Custom House, New York City, 459 W. 123rd St., New York City. Kinter, William Alexander, WJC '86; '87-'89, Pastor 1st Church, Ambridge, Pa. Kirk WOOD, Robert Ogilvie, PU; '99-'oo, Pastor ist Church, Middletown, N. Y., D.D. Knox, Charles Rhodes, PU '85 ; '85-'86, Teacher, 84 Cor- nelia St., Utica, N. Y. 66 GRADUATE MEMBERS Labaree, Robert McEwen, MriC '88; '91-94, Missionary, Urumia, Persia. L.ACY, John McDowell Alexander, CoU; 'oi-'o2, Pastor (Southern Presby.) Church, Hinton, W. Va. Laidlaw, Walter, TUC '81 ; '82-'84, '85-'86, Executive Secretary the New York Federation of Churches, 200 5th Ave., New York City, Ph.D. Laird, Melvin Robert, IC '01 ; 'o2-"o3, Pastor ist Church, Marshfield, Wis. Lamb, John Henderson, EmpC '98; '99- '01, Missionary, P. O. Box 437, Manila, P. L Lamme, Charles Wilson (formerly Peterson), PkC '03; 'o4-'o6, Physician, under appointment to Persia, Algon- quin, 111., M.D. Landis, Henry Mohr, PU '83 ; '86-'87, Missionary and Prof, in Meiji Gakuin, Meiji Gakuin, Tokyo, Japan. *Laughlin, Edward Reed, PU '94; '94-'98, Died March 21 st, 1909, Atlantic City, N. J. Lee, Charles, WslUO "79; '79-'82, Pastor Church, Car- bondale. Pa., D.D. Lee, Theron, LC '04; 'o4-'o8, Asst. Pastor ist Church, 39 W. Chelten Ave., Germantown, Pa., Gelston-Winthrop Fell, in Apologetics 'o7-'o8, B.D. Leeper, Samuel Harper, PU '85 ; '86-'89, Pastor Church, 30 E. Washington St., Media, Pa. Leetch, Robert Graham, LC '00; 'oo-'o3, Pastor Russell Sage Memorial Church, Far Rockaway, N. Y. Leland, Dean Richmond, HC '89; '90-'93, University Pas- tor, Presby. Church, Univ. of Nebraska, 1315 S. 21st St., Lincoln, Nebr. Life, Robert Henry, PU '89; '9i-'93. '94-'95, Pastor (Congregational) Church, Haydenville, Mass. GRADUATE MEMBERS 67 Lindsay, Henry Drennan, EC "79; '82-'83, President Pennsylvania College for Women, Woodland Road, Pitts- burgh, Pa., D.D. Linton, Josiah Marshall, UP '04; ■o4-'o7. Pastor Beth- any Church, 26 Lawrence Place, Buffalo, N. Y. Little, Lacy LeGrand, UNC '89; '9i-'93, Missionary (Southern Presby.) Kiangyin, via Shanghai, China. Lopez-Guillen, Jose Maria, NUS '76; '87-^89, Canon of the Habana Cathedral (Epis.), Apartado 12, Guanabacoa, Havana, Cuba. Loux, Edv^ard Augustus, LC '92; '93-'95, Pastor ist Church, 307 W. 2nd. St., Berwick, Pa. "Lowe, Edson Allav^^ay, CoeC '82; '83-'85, Died Aug. nth, 1900, Santiago, Chile. LowRiE, Walter, PU '90 ; '92-'93, Rector of the American (Epis.) Church, 58 Via Napoli, Rome, Italy, ist. Mait- land Prize in N. T. Exegesis, '92, Alumni Fell, in N. T. Lit. and Archibald Robertson Scholar '93-'94. "LowRiE, Walter, PU '94; '96-'99, Drowned Aug. 29th, 1901, Fort Green Bay, Newport, R. L Luce, Henry Winters, YU '92, '95-'96, Prof, in Shantung Christian Univ., Wei Hsein, Shantung, China. Lukens. Frank, PU '90; '9i-'94, Pastor Church, Burling- ton, N. J. LuKENS, Victor Herbert, PU '95 ; '95-'98, Graduate Stu- dent P. T. S- and health seeker, Princeton, N. J. Lyle, Edwards Hays, WstCM '88; '92-'94, Pastor ist (Southern Presby.) Church, 105 E. Heard St., Cleburne, Texas, Ph.D. MacBrayne, Ralph Julius, 'io-'ii, Asst. Pastor St. Nich- olas Ave. Church, 261 Edgecomb Ave., New York City. McBride, Clifford, PU '94: '94-'97, Without charge, Elk- hart. Tnd., R. F. D. 3. 68 GRADUATE MEMBERS McClenahan, John Wallace, TrkC '95; '01-02, Pastor East Side (United Presby.) Church 315 E. 7th Ave., Gary, Ind. MacConn£ll, Jay Herbert, HC '95; '95-'96, Pastor ist Church, Fair Haven, N. Y. McCoy, John, WU '84; '86- '87, Pastor ist Church, Still- water, Minn., G. S. Green Fell, in Hebrew '87-'88. McDowell, John, PU '94; '95-'96, Pastor Park Church. 142 A Broad St., Newark, N. J. McElroy, Robert McNutt, PU '96; *96-'99, Edwards Prof, of American History Princeton Univ., Princeton, N. J., Ph.D. McEwan, William Leonard, CnC '82 ; '83-'85, Pastor 3rd Church, Pittsburgh, Pa., Director P. T. S., D.D. McGaffin, Alexander, PU '94; '94- '95, '96-'97, Pastor Euclid Ave. Church, 2033 Cornell Road, Cleveland, O. McGilvary, Evander Bradley, DvC '84; '87-'89, Prof. Philosophy Univ. of Wisconsin, 1902 Arlington Place, Madison, Wis., ist Scribner Prize in N. T. Lit. '89, Fell, in N. T. Lit. '89- '90, Ph.D. McGiNNis, Charles Ellsworth, PU '87: '89-'9o, Pastor Church, White Hall, N. Y., Ph.D. McKee, Samuel Lee, '87-'88, Pastor Church, West Salem. Wis. McKee, Thomas Parker, WU '89; '9i-'92. Pastor New Harmony Church, Brogueville, Pa. MacKubbin, Henry Albert, UP '78; '79-'82, Pastor Church of the Redeemer, ^27^ Wister St., Germantown. Pa. Macmillan, Kerr Duncan, TUC '94; '95-'oo, Instructor in Church History P. T. S., Princeton, N. J., Benj. Stan- ton Prize in O. T. Lit. '96. G. S. Green Fell, in Hebrew GRADUATE MEMBERS 69 '97-98, Instructor in the O. T., P. T. S., 'oo-'o3, Instructor in Semitic Philology P. T. S., '03-07, B.D. MacNair, Theodore Monroe, PU '79; '8i-'82, Prof, in Meiji Gakuin, Shiba, Tokyo, Japan. MacNair, William Irving, '95-'96, Y. M, C. A. Secretary 326 W. Broadway, Louisville, Ky. McNeill, Charles Chamberlin, WLU '03 ; 'o4-'o5, '05, Asst. to pastor 2nd (Southern Presby.) Church 109 E. Broadway Louisville, Ky. McWilliams, Thomas Samuel, CnC '86; '88-'89, Pastor Calvary Church, 7509 Euclid Ave., Cleveland, O., D.D. Machen, John Gresham, JHU '01; 'o2-'o5, '06-, Instruc- tor in the N. T., P. T. S., Princeton, N. ]., ist Maitland Prize in N. T. Exegesis '04, Alumni Fell, in N. T. Lit. and Archibald Robertson Scholar 'o5-'o6, B.D. Mack, Edward, DvC '86; '88-'89, Prof, of Hebrew and O. T. Lit. and Librarian Lane Theol. Sem., Walnut Hills, Cincinnati, O., G. S. Green Fell, in Hebrew '89-'90. D.D. Marr, George Augustus, UL 'yy; '79-81, S. S. Leiper Memorial Church and business, Swarthmore, Pa. Marsh, Arthur Ernest, 'o7-'o8, Asst. Westminster Chapel (Congregational), Westminster Chapel, Buckingham Gate, London, S. W., England. Martin, Chalmers, PU '79 ; '82-'83, Severance Prof. O. T. History and Lit. Univ. of Wooster, 98 Bealle Ave., Woos- ter, O., G. S. Green Fell, in Hebrew '82-'83, E. F. Shep- ard Instructor in the O. T., P. T. S. '92- '00, Students' Lecturer on Missions '94- '95, '99-'oi, D.D. Martin, Paul, PU '82 ; '83-'86, Registrar and Secretary of the Faculty P. T. S., Princeton, N. J., G. S. Green Fell, in Hebrew '86-'87. Martin, Samuel, LC '96; '98-'99, Pastor Church, State College, Pa. JO GRADUATE MEMBERS Martin, Samuel Albert, LC 'yy; '79-'8o, Principal State Normal School, Shippensburg, Pa., Acting Prof, of Prac- tical Theology P. T. S. 'o2-'o3, D.D. Master, Henry Buck, PU '95; '95-98, Pastor ist Church, Fort Wayne, Ind., B.D. Milburn, Joseph Anthony, '85-"86, Pastor Plymouth (Congregational) Church, 4336 Michigan Ave., Chicago, 111. Miller, Edward de Moss, PU '86; '89-91, '92-'93, Ger- rardstown, W. Va., Ph.D. Mitchell, Thomas William, UW '99; 'oo-'o2. Mission- ary, Chenchow, Hunan, China, via Hankow. Moment. John James, PU '96; '97- '98, Pastor High St. Church, 663 High St., Newark, N. J. Montgomery, Edgar Hersman, KnC "94; '94-'97, Pastor 1st Church, Aurora, 111. Montgomery. Richard, UP '79; '79-"82, Pastor Church, Ashbourne, Pa. Morgan, Minot Canfield, PU '96; '96-"97. '98-'oo, Pas- tor Central Church, Summit, N. J., Trustee P. T. S. MiJLLER, Hugo Arthur, UP "07; 'o7-'io. Missionary, Uru- mia, Persia. Muller, James Arthur, PU '07; '10-, Acting Curate Trin- ity (Epis.) Church, Princeton, N. J. MuLOCK, Edwin McCord, PU '02 ; 'o2-'o5. Pastor Paxton Church, Paxtang, Harrisburg, Pa. Munson, William Cooper, PU, '02; 'o2-'o5. Pastor ist Church, Shelby, O. Murdoch, Harvey Short, ColoC '93; '96-'98, Pastor Church and Principal Witherspoon College, Buckhorn, Ky. Murray, Walter Rue. WU '99 ; "00-03, Pastor Holmes- GRADUATE MEMBERS ^\ burg Church, 7823 Walker St., Holmesburg, Philadelphia, Pa. Neibel, Charles Lewis, PU '00; 'oo-"o3. Pastor Mt. Au- burn Church, 103 E. Auburn Ave., Cincinnati, O. Nesbit, Edwin Clyde, MuC "00; 'o2-'o4, Pastor ist Church, Martins Ferry, O. Nesbit, Harry, WJC '91 ; 'oo-'oi. Pastor Christ Church, 102 W. 36th St., Bayonne, N. J., B.D. Nevius, Warren Nelson, PU '99; 'oo-'o3, Pastor ist Church, Attica, N. Y., ist Maitland Prize in N. T. Exege- sis '02. Newell, John. ColoC '00 ; "o2-'o3, Pastor 3rd Church, 220 Stanton Ave., Springfield, O. Niedermeyer, Frederick David, UIl '04; 'o6-'o9, Pastor Adams Memorial Church, 207 E. 30th St., New York City. NisBET, Charles Richard, UGa '93; '97-'98, Pastor Cen- tral (Southern Presby.) Church, The Claremont, 1424 Admiral Boulevard, Kansas City, Mo., D.D. *Oates, Luther Albertus, DvC '87; '90-'9i, Died Nov. 15th, 1909, Philadelphia, Pa., 2nd Carter Prize in O. T. Lit. '89. Orbison, John Harris, PU '79; '8o-'83, Missionary, Jul- lundur, Punjab, India, M.D. Ormond, Alexander Thomas, PU '']']; '79-'8o, McCosh Prof, of Philosophy Princeton Univ., Princeton, N. J., Ph.D., LL.D. OsTROM, Henry Conrad, AugC '95 ; 'o4-'o7, Missionary (Southern Presby.) 30 Koun Cho, Mita, Tokyo, Japan. Overstreet, William Thomas, CnC '82; '83-'85, Pastor (Southern Presby.) Church, Perryville, Ky. Palmer, Francis, PU '90; '92-'94, Pastor Prospect St. Church, 347 Spring St., Trenton, N. J., 2nd Maitland Prize in N. T. Exegesis '93. 72 GRADUATE MEMBERS Parkhill, James William, PU '8o; '82-'83, Dean Lenox College, Hopkinton, la., D.D. Paton, Lewis Bayles, NYU '84; '86-'90, Nettleton Prof. of O. T. Exegesis and Criticism Hartford Theol. Sem., 50 Forest St., Hartford, Conn., ist Carter Prize in O. T. Lit. '89, G. S. Green Fell, in Hebrew '90-'92, Ph.D., D.D. *Paull, George Alfred, PU '78; '8i-'82, Died Jan. loth, 1912, Upper Montclair, N. J., D.D. Peacock, Chauncey Hulburt, LC '03; 'o3-'o4. Salesman Pennsylvania Coal and Coke Co., Philadelphia, 407 W. Chelten Ave., Germantown, Pa. Penrose, Stephen Beasley Linnard, WC "85; '87-'88, President of Whitman College, Walla Walla, Wash., B.D. D.D. Perez, William Carlos, LC 07; '07-' 10, Pastor Church, Branchville, N. J. Perkins, Frederick, HC '89; '9i-'92, Pastor St. John's (Dutch Ref.) Church, St. Johnsville, N. Y. Perkins, James Coffin, UCal '74; '83-'85, Missionary (Congregational) Madura, South India. Person, Hiram Grant, WC '91 ; '9i-'92, Pastor Eliot (Con- gregational) Church, 14 Hyde Ave., Newton, Mass. Phillips, Arthur, LC '00; 'o4-'o6, Pastor Church, Beverly, N.J. *Phraner, Stanley Ketch am,- '89-'9o, Died Jan. 15th, 1895, Singapore, Straits Settlements. PiERSON, Delavan Leonard, PU '90; '92-'94, Editor Mis- sionary Review, 151 5 Pacific St., Brooklyn, N. Y. PiERSON, George Peck, PU '82; '85-'88, Missionary, Asa- higawa, Hokkaido, Japan. Pires, Emanuel Conceicao, IC '02; '02-^05, Pastor ist Church, 313 E. Poplar St., Taylorville, 111. GRADUATE MEMBERS 73 Pressly, Mason Wiley, EC '79; '8i-'82, Physician, Travel- ing abroad, care B. W. Pressly, Mooresville, N. C, M.D. Rath, Charles Edward, LFC '00; 'oo-'o3, Missionary, Maasin, Leyte, P. I. Raynal, Charles Edward, SWPU '03; '03-04, Pastor ist (Southern Presby.) Church, Statesville, N. C. Rentz, George Snavely, GtC '03 ; '06- '09, Pastor Robert Kennedy Memorial Church, Welsh Run, Greencastle, R. F. D., Pa., 1st Scribner Prize in N. T. Lit '09. Reynolds, George, PU '86; '86- '89, Literary Work, 15th and Broadway, Kansas City, Mo., D.D. Richards, Parke, LC '02; 'o2-'o5. Pastor ist Church, 461 Pennsylvania Ave., Waverly, N. Y. Richardson, John McLaren, PU '99; '99- '00, Pastor ist Church, Bridgeport, Conn. Richmond, Charles Alexander, PU '83; '85-'88, Presi- dent of Union College, Schenectady, N. Y., D.D., LL.D. Richmond, George Law, NYU '80; '8i-'83, Pastor ist Church, Boonton, N. J., D.D. Robinson, George Livingstone, PU "87; '90- '93, Prof, of O. T. Lit. and Exegesis McCormick Theol. Sem., 2312 N. Halsted St., Chicago, 111., G. S. Green Fell, in Hebrew '93-'94, '94-'95, Ph.D., D.D., LL.D. Robinson, Harold McAfee, PkC '01 ; 'o2-'o4, '09-, Secre- tary Centennial Committee P. T. S., Princeton, N. J., Benj. Stanton Prize in O. T. Lit. '03, Wm. Henry Green Fell, in Apologetics and Christian Ethics 'o4-'o5. Alumni Fell, in N. T. Lit. and Archibald Robertson Scholar '10— 'II, B.D. Robinson, William Courtland, PU '88; '89- '91, Pastor Northminster Church, 3504 Baring St., Philadelphia, Pa., D.D. 74 GRADUATE MEMBERS *RoBiNSON, William Henry, PU '85; '86-'87, Died July nth, 1896, Roxbury, Mass. Rodman, Charles Rutherford, WhC '07; '08-' 11, Pastor Rolling Bay Church, Port Blakely, R. F. D., Box 76, Wash. Rogers, William Fenna, OuC '07; '08-' 10, Pastor (South- ern Presby.) Church, Higginsville, Mo. Ronald, Hugh Norman, AlmC '03; 'o3-'o6, Pastor ist Church, Thorntown. Ind. *RuDD, Edward Huntting. PU '83 ; '86-'87, Died July 8th, 1909, Dedham, Mass. Russell, Charles Partridge, PU '05 ; 'o5-'o6, Missionary (United Presby.) Prof, of Logic and Psychology Assiut College, Assiut, Egypt. Russell, Edward Johnson, PU '94; 'oi-'o4. Pastor Calvary Church, 288 Pelton Ave., West New Brighton, S. I., N. Y. Russell, George Jeffrey, PU '99; '99-'o2, Pastor ist Church, S. Main St., Southampton, L. I., N. Y., ist Maitland Prize in N. T. Exegesis '01, Alumni Fell, in N. T. Lit. and Archibald Robertson Scholar 'o2-'o3, B.D. Sailer, Thomas Henry Powers, PU '89; '91-93, Special Secretary Board of Foreign Missions, Englewood, N. J.. Ph.D. Sanders, Henry Peter, PU '00; '01-03, Pastor in Reems Creek field, Brankton P. O., N. C. Schlosser, Henry, UNC '81 ; '82-'84, Pastor N. Stamford (Congregational) Church, R. F. D. 30, Stamford, Conn. Schoonmaker, Robert Dalzell, PU ; '97-'oo, Business. 1003 Park Ave., Plainfield, N. J. *Schwenke, Clarence Henry, WU '03 ; 'o6-'o9. Died Nov. 2ist, 191 1, Matteawan, N. Y., 2nd Scribner Prize in N. T. Lit. '09. GRADUATE MEMBERS 75 *ScoTT, George Elmer, PU '88; '9i-'92, Died May 12th, 1908, New York City. Sharpe, Robert H. ; '9i-'92, Teacher, Hammonton, N. J. Shaw, Wilfred Weaver, QUI '79; '8i-'82, traveling for health, Care Mrs. Charles McGlone, Govans, Md. Shedd, William Ambrose, MriC '87; 'd>g-g2, Missionary, Urumia, Persia, Benj. Stanton Prize in O. T. Lit. '91, G. S. Green Fell, in Hebrew '92-'93, Students' Lecturer on Mis- sions 'o2-'o3, D.D. Sherrard, Robert Maurice, WJC '91 ; '94- '95, Principal Hiland Schools, 307 Neville St., Pittsburgh, Pa. Simmons, Frank Erdman, YU '99; '99-'o2, Pastor West- minster Church, 120 Amity St., Brooklyn, N. Y. Skinner, James William, CrC '80; '82-'83, S. S. (South- ern Presby.) Church, Brownsville, Texas, D.D. *Skinner, Joseph Henry, CnC '76; '8o-'82, Died July 5th, 1894, Clark Co., Ky. Skinner, William Franklin, Ula '81 ; '85-'87, Pastor Church, Gouvemeur, N. Y. *Smith, Francis EdGxVr,- '87-'89. Died Feb. 20th. 191 1, Brooklyn. N. Y. Smith, Frank Hyatt, PU '87; '89-'90, Acting Pastor Cen- tral Church, 29 Huntington Ave., Buffalo, N. Y. Smith, Henry Wilson, WC '69; '84-'86, J. C. Green In- structor in Elocution P. T. S., Princeton, N. J. Smith, Herbert Booth, WUM 05; 'o6-'o9. Pastor 2nd Church, 512 Church Ave., W., Knoxville, Tenn. Speer, Robert Eliot, PU '89; '90-^91, Secretary Board of Foreign Missions, 156 5th Ave., New York, Students' Lecturer on Missions '97-'98, 'o9-'io, D.D. Spiegel, William Leonard, PU '93 ; '93-96, Pastor ist Church, 2618 Erie Ave., Cincinnati, O. 76 GRADUATE MEMBERS Steans, William Irwin, LC '79; 79-'82, Pastor Church, Westfield, N. ]., D.D. Stearns, Edwin Ira, UP; '05-'07, Supt. Anti-Saloon League of N. J., 16 Clinton St., Newark, N. J. Stevenson, John Sinclair, OUE '90; '93-'94, Missionary (Irish Presby.) Rajkot, India. Stinson, William Charles, BlU '86; '86-'89, Manager Lecture Bureau World Home Supply Co., 702 Fuller Bldg., New York City, D.D. Stirling, Robert Fulton, PU '97; '97-'oo, Pastor Church, Dauphin, Pa. Stonelake, Charles Albert; '84-'86, Office Supervisor Prudential Insurance Co., 144 N. 9th St., Newark, N. J. Stout, James Coffin, RC ; '95-'97, Graduate Work in Ber- lin Univ., BerHn W. 62, Kalokreuthstr. 5, B.D. Stukes, Samuel Guerry, DvC '08; 'o8-'ii, Asst. Pastor 1st (Southern Presby.) Church, 414 Oak St., Chatta- nooga, Tenn. Swain, James Ramsay, PU '94; '98- '01, Pastor Woodland Church, 4103 Chester Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. Taylor, John William, WJC '92 ; '93-'95, Treasurer Union Trust Co., Clairton, Pa. Taylor, William Barrett, Jr., PL^ '09 ; 'o8-'o9, Traveling Salesman, Care Taylor Bros., Winston-Salem, N. C. Thomas, Eli Adolphus, SWPU '07; 'lo-'ii. Pastor (Southern Presby.) Church, 231 Stubbs St., Cedartown, Ga., B.D. Thompson, Alexander, HC 06; o6-'o9. Pastor Church, Little Britain, Pa. Thompson, William Clarence, WU '07; 'o7-'io, Pastor East Kishacocjuillas Church, Reedsville, Pa. Todd, David Ripley, PU '89; '90-'92, Lawyer, 146 Central Park W., New York City. GRADUATE MEMBERS 'J'J Todd, Chester Warren, WU '05; '05-08, Pastor Church Mt. Union, Pa. Tufts, William Mann, DCNS '85; '87-"88, Pastor ist Church, Columbus Ave. and Berkeley St., Boston, Mass., B.D., D.D. I'pdegraff, David Benjamin, YU '03 ; '03-06, Missionar}', Kohlapur, S. M. C, India. Vance, Selby Frame, LFC '85; 'Sp-'po, Prof, of English Bible Lane Theol. Sem., Walnut Hills, Cincinnati, O., D.D. Van Ess, Jacob, HpC '98; 'oo-'oi. Pastor 2nd Bethlehem (Dutch Ref.) Church, Delmar, N. Y. Van Ess, John, HpC '99; 'oo-'o2, '11, Missionary (Dutch Ref.), Busrah, Persian Gulf, Arabia, via Bombay. Van Dyke, George Bergen, PU '88; '9i-'92, Pastor Church, Upper Lehigh, Pa. *Van Meter, John Stonestreet, WLU '69; '8o-'8i. Died March 8th, 1904, New York City, D.D. Van Nuys, Ezra Allen, FCI '00; 'oo-'o3. Pastor ist Church, Goshen, Ind. Van Nuys, Walter Lowrie, WCI '91 ; '93-95, Pastor Hood River Church, Parkdale, Ore. *Viser, Edmund Dillahunty, SWPU "79; '79-'8i, Died Dec. 27th, 1895, Osceola, Va. Waddell, John Milligan, PU '86; '89-'92, Pastor Kana- wha Church, Charleston, W. Va., D.D. Wainwright, Louis Cathell, WestC '83 ; '89-'9o, Pastor Lower Path Valley Church, Fannettsburg, Pa. Wallace, Edwin Sherman, WJC '85; '86-'88, Vice Pres. Pittsburgh- Westmoreland Coal Co., 1006 Fulton Bldg., Pittsburgh, Pa., D.D. Ward, Warren Ray, PU '02; 'o2-'o5. Pastor ist Church, Mt. Gilead, O. 78 GRADUATE MEMBERS Warrington, Ernest William, DlC '05; "os-'oS, Pastor Church, Pilot Rock, Ore. Watson, Charles Roger, PU '94 ; '98- '99, Secretary Board of Foreign Missions United Presby. Church, 200 N. 15th St., Philadelphia, Pa., Students' Lecturer on Missions '07-08, D.D. Watson, Robert, UNB '93; '95-'96, Pastor Presby. Church of the Covenant in Cincinnati, 5450 Hamilton Ave., Col- lege Hill, Cincinnati, O., Ph.D., D.D. Webb, Samuel Green, UC '80; '8i-'82, Teacher, Lakewood, N.J. Weisley, Albert James, LC '91 ; '92-94, Pastor Green Ridge Church, 1734 Washington Ave., Scranton, Pa., D.D. Weld, William Ernest, WU '03 ; '06- '09, Missionary, Teacher in Allahabad Christian College, Allahabad, U. P., India. Whitmarsh. David Carothers, WJC '06; 'o6-'o9. Pastor Buffalo Church, Cumberland, O. Wilber, Fr^\ncis Allen, WU '']']■, '8o-'8i, Pastor 2nd Church, 2901 Wyandotte St., Kansas City, Mo., D.D. Wilds, John Thomas, PU '80; '83-'85, Pastor 7th Church, 134 Broome St., New York City. Wilkinson, William John, WMC '01 ; 'o2-'o3, 'o4-'o5, Dean of Washington College, Washington College, Tenn. Williams, Frank Edwin, WslUC '86; '89-'9i, Editor and Farmer, Elkton, Md. Wilson, Raymond Hiram, DckC '94; 'oo-'o3. Pastor Bell- vue Church, Gap, Pa., Benj. Stanton Prize in O. T. Lit. '02. WiTHiNGTON, Irving Platt, PU '80 ; '83-'85, Physician, 612 W. 136th St., New York City, M. D. GRADUATE MEMBERS 79 WooDBRiDGE, Samuel Isett, RC '76; '8o-'82, Missionary (Southern Presby.) 32 Range Road, Shanghai, China. * Woodruff, Frank Stiles, PU '85 ; '88-'9i, Died May 26th 1893. Elizabeth, N. J. Woods, David Walker, PU '82; '83-'85, Farmer, Gettys- burg, R. F. D. 4, Pa. * Wyckoff, Walter Augustus, PU '88 ; '88-'89, Died May 15th, 1908, Princeton, N. J. Young, Charles Van Patten, CrU 99; '99-'o2, Physical Director Cornell University, 112 Lake St., Ithaca, N. Y. Ziegler, Jesse Reinhart, PU '96; '97-'oo. Pastor ist Church, 509 Shelby St., Frankfort, Ky. Zimmerman, Charles Fishburn, PU '00; 'oo-'oi. Treas- urer Steelton Trust Co., Steelton, Pa. Living 312 Deceased 31 343 SUMMARY OF OCCUPATIONS (Graduate Members) Pastors or Assistant Pastors 187 Presbyterian Ch. in the U. S. A 143 Presbyterian Ch. in the U. S 18 Congregational Ch 7 Protestant Episcopal Ch 5 Canadian Presbyterian Ch 3 Dutch Reformed Ch 3 Union Chs. (Yokohama, Mex. City, Frankfort) 3 English Presbyterian Ch United Presbyterian Ch English Congregational Ch Church of Scotland Methodist Episcopal Ch Foreign Missionaries 34 Presbyterian Ch. in the U. S. A 25 Presbyterian Ch. in the U. S 3 Dutch Reformed Ch 2 United Presbyterian Ch i Protestant Episcopal Ch i Irish Presbyterian Ch i American Board (Congregational) i Professors in Theological Seminaries 18 Presbyterian Ch. in the U. S. A 16 Congregational Ch i Protestant Episcopal Ch i Other Kinds of ReHgious Work 12 Professors in Colleges 16 Presidents 6 Deans 2 Professors 8 SUMMARY OF OCCUPATIONS 8l Other Occupations 45 Business 1 1 Law 5 Medicine 4 Farming 5 Teaching 5 Miscellaneous 15 312. ..312 UNDERGRADUATE MEMBERS AxFORD. John Hall, DvC 'o8; 'o8-, Senior, Home address, 513 Lauderdale St., Selma, Ala. Pastor-elect Southern Presby. Church Demopolis, Ala. Barnard, Edward RxWMOnd, LC 'ii; '11-, Junior, Home address, Dundas Road, Hamilton, Ont., Canada. Barr, Harry W., WU '09; '09-, Senior, Plome address, Amanda, O. Pastor elect Church, Bradford, O. Bird, Rem'sen du Bois, LC 09 ; '09-, Senior, Plome address, 50 W. Pierpont St., Kingston, N. Y. Borden, William Whiting, YU '09 ; '09-, Senior, Perma- nent address, Borden Block, Chicago, 111. Browne, George Francis, WU '09; '10-, Middler, Home address, 6001 Main Ave., Pleasant Ridge, Cincinnati, O. BuTz, Arthur Nelson, MhlC '11; '11-, Junior, Home ad- dress, 547 Washington St., Allentown, Pa. Carver, Wallace Harper, PU '09 ; '09-, Senior, Home ad- dress, Princeton, N. J., Pastor elect Church, Matteawan, N. Y. Dickson, Thomas Sinclair, LTP '09; '09-, Senior, Pastor elect Ridgeview Church, West Orange, N. |., Maplcwood. N. J. DoDDS, Harold Willis, GCC '09; '11-, Partial, Home ad- dress, 334 W. Main St., Grove City, Pa. Edwards, David Reed, LC '09 ; '09-, Senior, Home address, Chatham, R. F. D., N. J., Under appointment Board For- eign Missions. Fowler, Arthur Bougiiton, PU '07; '10-, Middler, Plome address, Springville, N. Y. UNDERGRADUATE MEMBERS 83 Frost, Ellinwood Alden, TUC; 'io-, Partial, Home ad- dress, 235 School Lane, Germantown, Pa. Jones, Olin McKendree, BeIC '09; 'gq-'io, '11-, Senior, Home address, 1^32 E. 5th St., Duluth, Minn. La Rue, Jacob Servis, LC 'ii ; '11-, Junior, Home address, Hopewell, N. J. Louderbougii, John Janvier, PU '07; '09-, Senior, Home address, Salem, N. J., Asst. pastor elect ist Church, New- burgh, N. Y. McMillan, Leigiiton Gaines, PU '10; '11, Home address, 921 Government St., Mobile, Ala. Moore, John Warner, YU '08; '11-, Junior, Home address, 343 N. Hanover St., Carlisle, Pa. NiLES, Frank Sergeant, PLT '09; '10-, ATiddler, Home ad- dress. New Berlin, N. Y. North WOOD, Arthur, PU '09 ; '09-, Senior, Home address, 227 Tyler St., Trenton, N. J., Pastor elect Chestnut Level Church, Quarryville, Pa. Patterson, Robert Mead, VU '09 ; '10-, Middler, Home ad- dress, 2412 E. 1st St., Long Beach, Cal. Riggs, James Forsyth, Jr., PU '07; '10-, Middler, Home address, 56 Halsted St., East Orange, N. J. Smythe, Langdon Cheves McCord, UV '05; '09-, Senior, Home address, 31 Legare St., Charleston, S. C. Soltau, Theodore Stanley, NWU '09 ; '11-, Junior, Home address, Princeton, N. J. Taxis, Alfred Levis, GtC '09 ; '09-, Senior, Home address, Collingswood, N. J., Pastor elect Church, Havre de Grace, Md. Torrey, Reuben Archer, Jr., LC '10; '10-, Middler, Home address, Montrose, Pa. Vale, Cl.\ire Fremont, WTC 09 ; '09-, Partial, Home ad- dress, Princeton, N. J. 84 UNDERGRADUATE MEMBERS Vale, Roy Ewing, WTC '09; '09-, Senior, Home address, Washington College, Tenn., Pastor elect Church, Lam- bertville, N. J., Benj. Stanton Prize in O. T. Lit. '11. Walker, Elmer, LC; '11-, Partial, Home address, 903 Lyndale Ave., Trenton, N. J. Witt, Edmond Talmage, LC '11; '11-, Junior, Home ad- dress, Jennerstown, Pa. —30 mMm^'':i