GIFT OF PHI BETA KAPPA BETA OF INDIANA 1899-190© m liHife Digitized by the Internet Archive in 2007 with funding from IVIicrosoft Corporation http://www.archive.org/details/betaofindianachaOOphibrich c^^*/^: 3; l.y 1 Phi Beta Kappa THE BETA OF INDIANA CHAPTER HISTORICAL SKETCH AND LIST OF MEMBERS 1899-1909 edited by Donaldson Bodine Secretary and Treasurer WABASH COLLEGE Crawfordsville. Indiana July 1. 1909 Ld~7Sr 1 • - •) •' THE FOUNDING OF THE PHI BETA KAPPA SOCIETY In the year of our Lord 1632, "The Middle Planta- tions" of Virginia were established. There, in 1693, was founded the second college in the New World, the William and Mary College. In 1699 the name of the town was changed to Williamsburg and in 1722 it was granted a city charter, the first in Virginia. From 1699 to 1779 it was the capital of the commonwealth and was the political and social center of Virginian life and influence. In this historic town, on December 5, 1776, and probably in the very Apollo Room of the Raleigh Tavern where Patrick Henry made his famous speech, was founded the Phi Beta Kappa Society. The first set of by-laws limited the membership to collegians of over sixteen years of age, but almost immediately the scope of the society was widened to take in men prom- inent for scholarship or great public service. It was inaugurated as a secret society and there were adopted a Greek motto, a badge of membership, grip, seal, and colors, and this action as well as the designation of the society by the initial letters of its motto has been followed by all Greek letter college fraternities estab- lished since. In 1779 charters were granted and chap- ters established at Harvard and at Yale, and in 1787 these united in establishing the third New England Chapter at Dartmouth. The influence of the New England spirit made itself felt very early in an agitation for the abolition of the secret features of the society and under the leadership of John Quincy Adams and Judge Story, the Harvard Chapter abandoned those features and now about one- 333599 \UAUi 4 PHI BETA KAPPA half of the United Chapters are open societies and the others are secret only nominally. In 1881 there were twenty three chapters and the need was felt for a more perfect general organization and at the call of the Harvard Chapter a delegate con- vention was held and the matter discussed. As a re- sult of this convention and a subsequent one held at New York, a final convention at Saratoga Springs, September 6 and 7, organized ''The United Chapters of Phi Beta Kappa, " and adopted a Constitution and By- Laws. The central organization provided by the Con- stitution consists of a Senate of twenty members con- stituting a permanent body and a National Council meeting every third year and composed of the Senate and three delegates from each chapter. The growth of chapters has been rapid and there are now seventy - one on the rolls. From the earliest time the society has stood for fraternity and scholarship. Born under the standard of the Cavalier at the Royal College of William and Mary and adopted almost at once by the Puritan at Harvard and at Yale, the best influences of the colonial world united in its interests. In the differentiation that followed the establishment of other Greek letter fra- ternities, the Phi Beta Kappa came more and more to emphasize the highest standards of scholarship until to-day the privilege of wearing the badge of the society is regarded as the highest scholastic honor in the American college world. The influence of the Phi Beta Kappa has been great. Many of America's most honored sons have their names on the rolls of membership. From John Marshall, who was a member of the Alpha of Virginia, to Theodore Roosevelt of the Alpha of Massachusetts BETA OF INDIANA 6 and William H. Taft of the Alpha of Connecticut, the society can claim a long line of those who have been and are foremost in scholarship and public service. THE MOTTO AND THE BADGE The motto of the society is ^^^doaocpia Bioo Kol3epvTjTT]^''\ usually translated, ''Philosophy, the guide of life", and the official designation was "Societas Philosophiae" or ' 'Societas Philosophica. " The badge is a gold key bearing on its face a hand pointing to a group of stars, and the initials ^ B K. On the reverse side are engraved the date of the founding of the society, the name of the member, the name of the college, and the class or date of election of the member. The colors are pink and blue. THE ROLL OF CHAPTERS 1. 1776 William and Mary College, Alpha of Virginia. 2. 1780 Yale University, Alpha of Connecticut. 3. 1781 Harvard University, Alpha of Massachusetts. 4. 1787 Dartmouth College, Alpha of New Hampshire. 5. 1817 Union University, Alpha of New York. 6. 1825 Bowdoin College, Alpha of Maine. 7. 1830 Brown University, Alpha of Rhode Island. 8. 1845 Trinity College, Beta of Connecticut. 9. 1845 Wesleyan University, Gamma of Connecticut. 10. 1847 Western Reserve University, Alpha of Ohio. 11. 1848 University of Vermont, Alpha of Vermont. 12. 1853 Amherst College, Beta of Massachusetts. 13. 1858 Kenyon College, Beta of Ohio. 14. 1858 New York University, Beta of New York. 15. 1860 Marietta College, Gamma of Ohio. 16. ]864 Williams College, Gamma of Massachusetts. 17. 1867 College of the City of New York, Gamma of New York. 18. 1868 Middlebury College, Beta of Vermont. 19. 1869 Rutgers College, Alpha of New Jersey. 20. 1869 Columbia University, Delta of New York. 21. 1870 Hamilton College, Epsilon of New York. 22. 1871 Hobart College, Zeta of New York. 23. 1878 Colgate University, Eta of New York. 24. 1882 Cornell University, Theta of New York. 25. 1887 Dickinson College, Alpha of Pennsylvania. 26. 1887 Lehigh University, Beta of Pennsylvania. 27. 1887 Rochester University, Iota of New York. 28. 1889 DePauw University, Alpha of Indiana. 29. 1890 Northwestern University, Alpha of Illinois. 30. 1890 University of Kansas, Alpha of Kansas. 31. 1890 Lafayette College, Gamma of Pennsylvania. 32. 1892 Tufts College, Delta of Massachusetts. 33. 1892 University of Pennsylvania, Delta of Pennsylvania. 34. 1892 University of Minnesota, Alpha of Minnesota. 35. 1895 University of Iowa, Alpha of Iowa. 36. 1895 Johns Hopkins University, Alpha of Maryland. BETA OP INDIANA 7 37. 1896 University of Nebraska, Alpha of Nebraska. 38. 1896 Colby College, Beta of Maine. 39. 1896 Syracuse University, Kappa of New York. 40. 1896 Swarthmore College, Epsilon of Pennsylvania. 41. 1898 Wabash College, Beta of Indiana. 42. 1898 University of California, Alpha of California. 43. 1899 Haverford College, Zeta of Pennsylvania. 44. 1809 University of Wisconsin, Alpha of Wisconsin. 45. 1899 Boston University, Epsilon of Massachusetts. 4fi. 1899 Vassar College, Mu of New York. 47. 1899 University of Cincinnati, Delta of Ohio. 48. 1899 Princeton University, Beta of New Jersey. 49. 1899 St. Lawrence University, Lambda of New York. 50. 1899 University of Chicago, Beta of Illinois. 51. 1901 Vanderbilt University, Alpha of Tennessee. 52. 1901 University of Missouri, Alpha of Missouri. 63. 1902 Allegheny College, Eta of Pennsylvania. 54. 1904 University of Colorado, Alpha of Colorado. 55. 1904 Smith College, Zeta of Massachusetts. 56. 1904 Stanford University, Beta of California. 57. 1904 University of North Carolina, Alpha of North Carolina. 58. 1904 Colorado College, Beta of Colorado. 59. 1904 Wellesley College, Eta of Massachusetts. 60. 1904 Ohio State University, Epsilon of Ohio. 61. 1905 Mt. Holyoke College, Theta of Massachusetts. 62. 1905 University of Texas, Alpha of Texas. 63. 1905 Woman's College of Baltimore, Beta of Maryland. 64. 1907 Oberlin College, Zeta of Ohio. 65. 1907 Ohio Wesleyan University, Eta of Ohio. 66. 1907 University of Illinois, Gamma of Illinois. 67. 1907 University of Michigan, Alpha of Michigan. 68. 1908 Franklin and Marshall College, Theta of Pennsylvania. 69. 1908 Iowa College, Beta of Iowa. 70. 1909 University of Virginia, Beta of Virginia. 71. 1909 Tulane University, Alpha of Louisiana. THE FOUNDING OF THE BETA CHAPTER OF INDIANA In the spring of 1898 the members of the Faculty of Wabash College who were members of Phi Beta Kappa addressed a petition in due form to the Senate of the United Chapters of the Phi Beta Kappa Society asking for the establishment at Wabash of a Chapter of the Society. On the recommendation of the Senate , the National Council at its next regular meeting held at Saratoga Springs, September 7, 1898, granted the petition and issued the following charter: CHARTER OF PHI BETA KAPPA, UNITED CHAPTERS To Joseph Farrand Tuttle, Robert Augustus King, Charles Augustus Tuttle, Donaldson Bodine, Addison Alvord Ewing, John Henry Foster, Greeting: Whereas the National Council of the United Chapters of the Phi Beta Kappa Society has by resolution duly adopted on the 7th day of September 1 898, decreed the establishment of a chapter of the Phi Beta Kappa in connection with Wabash College at Craw- fordsville, Indiana, and has directed the Senate by the President and Secretary to issue a charter in the name of the National Council: Now. therefore, by virtue of the aforesaid act of the Council and the authority delegated to us, we do hereby incorporate and establish you and such others as you may hereafter elect and associate with yourselves, in conformity to the law of the Phi Beta Kappa Society, into a separate and subordinate branch of said society to be known and called the Beta Chapter of the Phi Beta Kappa in the state of Indiana, hereby granting you and your successors all the powers, privileges, and benefits thereunto appertaining, m as full and ample a measure as the brethren of the other and existing chapters enjoy; at the same time enjoining upon you in the organization and conduct of BETA OP INDIANA » the new chapter, and as a condition upon which this charter is grant- ed, strict compliance with the Constitution of the United Chapters and the Model Constitution herewith transmitted to you. In witness whereof the said Senate has caused the seal of the United Chapters of the Phi Beta Kappa to be affixed hereto, with the signatures of the President and Secretary. JOHN A. DeREMER. President. [Seal] E. B. PARSONS, Secretary. After the receipt of the charter a temporary organ- ization was formed and Professors Tuttle, Bodine, and Ewing were made a committee to draft a constitution and by-laws. On December 5th the committee made its report and the constitution and by-laws were adopted. Several subsequent meetings were held to discuss mat- ters of policy and finally on January 28th the organiza- tion of the Chapter was completed and the election of officers held. At this meeting a number of organiza- tion members were chosen from the Faculty of the Col- lege, the Trustees, and Alumni and on April 24, 1899, the first elections were made from the Senior Class. The only important change in the policy of the Chapter was made by the adoption on May 7, 1906, of an amendment providing for the election of two mem- bers from the Junior Class as a recognition of especial merit and as a means of bringing the Chapter into closer relations with the student body. Prom the first everything has been done to uphold a high standard of scholarship. No exact minimum grade has been set as a limit for eligibility for membership but the chapter has often elected from a class a smaller number of men than might have been chosen according to the by-laws and few if any have been elected with an average grade of less than 90 per cent. 10 PHI BETA KAPPA The Chapter holds two regular meetings a year and has held some more or less formal meetings for initiation of new members. It has invited its friends to formal addresses usually given before the Society dur- ing commencement week and up to the present the fol- lowing have honored the Chapter as PHI BETA KAPPA ORATORS Dr. John E. Cleland Dr. Maurice Thompson Dr. Meredith Nicholson Dr. Edwin A. Grosvenor Dr. Louis Howland OFFICERS OF THE CHAPTER Presidents 1899—1901 Joseph F. Tuttle, D. D., LL. D. 1901—1910 Benjamin Crane, A. M. Vice-Presidents 1899—1899 Robert A. King, A. M. 1899—1901 Benjamin Crane, A. M. 1901—1903 Robert A. King, A. M. 1903—1907 John E. Cleland, Litt. D. 1907—1910 Horace C. Hovey, A. M., D. D. Secretary and Treasurers 1899—1899 Addison A Ewing, A. M. 1899—1901 Robert A. King, A. M. 1901—1910 Donaldson Bodine, Sc. D. THE CHAPTER CONSTITUTION ARTICLE I This society is one of the co-ordinate branches of the body known as The United Chapters of The Phi Beta Kappa and shall be called the Beta Chap- ter of the Phi Beta Kappa society in the State of In- diana. ARTICLE II The object of the Phi Beta Kappa society is the promotion of scholarship and friendship among stu- dents and graduates of American Colleges. ARTICLE III The members of the Chapter shall be elected pri- marily from the best scholars of the graduating classes of the college, secondly from those graduates of said college whose post-graduate work entitles them to such honor, and lastly from persons distinguished in let- ters, science, or education; provided, however, that the selection from each graduating class shall not exceed one-fourth of the number graduated. But the Chapter may make further limitations or restrictions. ARTICLE IV In addition to scholarship, good moral character shall be a qualification of membership, and any mem- ber who is found to have lost this qualification may be expelled from the society by a four-fifths vote of the members present at a regular annual meeting of the society. 12 PHI BETA KAPPA ARTICLE V This Chapter shall send a delegation to represent it at each National Council of the United Chapters, shall contribute its equal part to the financial support of the United Chapters, and shall conform to the con- stitution of the United Chapters and all the lawful re- quirements of the National Council. ARTICLE VI This Chapter shall, by the enactment of suitable by-laws, provide for its election of officers, the initia- tion of members, the conduct of its meetings, and for such other matters as it may deem wise so to regulate. ARTICLE VII The officers of this Chapter shall be a President, Vice-President, and a Secretary and Treasurer, whose duties shall be those usually appertaining to such of- ficers. BY-LAWS I ELECTION OF OFFICERS The officers of the Chapter and the delegates to the National Council shall be elected by ballot at the an- nual meeting by a majority vote of members present. The President and the Secretary and Treasurer must be resident members. II QUORUM The members present at any regular or called meeting shall constitute a quorum. ni MEETINGS. The annual meeting shall be held on Tuesday of commencement week at nine o'clock A. M. Special meetings may be held at any time at the call of the President and Secretary, due notice having been given to all resident members at least one week in advance. IV ELECTION OF MEMBERS At the beginning of the Spring Term one- fourth of the graduating class may be elected on the basis of scholarship as determined by the records of the Reg- istrar's books. No student shall be eligible for elec- tion who has not done full work in residence during at least the last two years of the college course. 14 PHI BETA KAPPA No student who has not taken his whole under- graduate course at this College shall be elected unless his record for his time of attendance shall exceed for the corresponding time, that of any other student otherwise eligible. As a recognition of especial merit two members of the Junior Class may be elected and if so elected they shall be counted as part of the number (one fourth) to be elected from the same class as Seniors of the follow- ing year. The names of all persons proposed for membership except members of the college classes, must be pre- sented to the Chapter at the beginning of the Spring Term and voted upon at the next annual meeting. The election of all members, undergraduates, grad- uates, and others, shall be by ballot, and the votes of four-fifths of the members present are necessary to elect. V FEES The initiation fee shall be two ($2.00) dollars. VI AMENDMENTS These By-Laws may be suspended, altered, or amended at any meeting of the Chapter by a two-thirds vote of the members present. ROLL OF MEMBERS OF PHI BETA KAPPA, BETA CHAP- TER OF INDIANA (Great care has been taken to have this list com- plete and accurate; the Secretary would be glad to be informed of any mistakes or of future changes of ad- dress.) CHARTER MEMBERS Donaldson Bodine, ^ B K, Cornell University. Professor of Geology and Zoology, Wabash College, 4 Mills Place, Craw fords ville, Indiana. Ph. B., Cornell University, '87; Sc. D., Cornell Univer- sity, '95. Addison Alvord Ewing, ^ B K^ Amherst College. Rector of Grace Episcopal Church, Madison, Wis- consin. A. B., Amherst College, '92. James H. Foster, ^ B K, Hamilton College. Inspector N. Y. State Board of Charities, Verona, New York. A. B., Hamilton College, '95; A. M., Hamilton College, '98. Robert Augustus King, ^ B K^ Hamilton College. Professor of German, Wabash College, 515 West Wabash Ave., Crawfords ville, Indiana. A. B., Hamilton College, '85; A. M., Hamilton College, '88; D. B., Union Theological Seminary, '89. Charles Augustus Tuttle, ^ B K^ Amherst College. Professor of History, Political Economy, and Po- litical Science, Wabash College, 606 West Wabash Avenue., Crawfordsville, Indiana. A. B., Amherst College, '83; A. M., Amherst College, '86; A. M. and Ph. D., Heidelberg University, '86. le PHI BETA KAPPA Joseph Farrand Tuttle, B K, Marietta College, (Deceased). President Wabash College, 1862-1892. A. B., Marietta College, '41; A. M., Marietta, '44; D. D., Marietta, '60; LL. D., Marietta, '85. MEMBERS Wilbur Cortez Abbott, Elected '03, Professor of History, SheflBeld Scientific School, Yale Univer- sity, New Haven, Connecticut. A. B., Wabash, '92; Litt. B., Oxford University, '97; A. M., Wabash, '04; A. M., Yale Uni- versity, '09. Raymond Richard Alexander, '03, Superintendent of Schools, Salmon City, Idaho. A. B,, Wabash, '03. Albert Barnes Anderson, '99, United States District Judge, Indianapolis, Indiana. A. B., Wabash, '79; A. M., Wabash, '87; LL. D., Wabash, '07. Howard Fordice Ashby, '09, Ladoga, Indiana. A. B., Wabash, '09. A. Craig Baird, '07, Student at Union Theological Seminary, 700 Park Ave., New York City. A. B. , Wabash, '07. Daniel Pratt Baldwin, '99 (Deceased), A. B., Madison University, '56; LL. B., Columbia Law School, '60; LL. D., Wabash, '72, Madison University, '72, Hamilton College, '01; Litt. D., Wabash, '03; L. H. D., Syracuse Uni- versity, '07. MoRTiER Franklin Barrus, '08, Graduate Student and Assistant in Plant Pathology, New York State College of Agriculture, Cornell University, Ithaca, New York. A. B., Wabash, '08. John A. Bays, '08, Teacher in Government Schools, Philippine Islands. A. B., Wabash, '08. John Austin Booe, Jr., '07, Advertising Department Post Intelligencer, Seattle, Wash- ington. A. B., Wabash, '07. BETA OF INDIANA 17 Hubert Roland Brower, '06, Professor of English, College of Emporia, Emporia, Kansas. A. B., Wabash, '06. Raymond Dwight Brown, '08, Secretary and Treasurer Brown Shoe Store Co., Incorporated, 304 East Washington Street, Indianapolis, Indiana. A. B., Wabash, '08. RoLLO Walter Brown, '07, Professor of Rhetoric and Argumentation, Wabash College, 607 South Water Street, Crawfordsville, Indiana. Litt. B., Ohio Northern University, '03; A. M., Harvard Univer- sity, '05. Victor Buchanan, '03, Teacher of English, Broadway High School, 814 Minor Avenue, Seattle, Washington. A. B., Wabash, '03; A. M., Wabash, '04. Harold O. Burgess, '08, Principal of High School, Remington, Indiana. A. B., Wabash, '08. George Stockton Burroughs, '99 ( Deceased), President Wabash College, 1892-1899. A. B. Princeton Uni- versity, '73; A. M., Princeton University, '76; Ph. D., Prince- ton University, '84; D. D., Princeton University, '87; LL. D., Marietta College, '95. John Lyle Campbell, '99 (Deceased), Professor of Mathematics, Physics and Astronomy, Wabash College, 1856-1875, Professor of Physics and Astronomy 1876- 1903; Professor of Astronomy, 1903-1904. A. B., Wabash, '48; A. M., Wabash, '52; LL. D., Indiana University, '76. John Edward Cleland, '99, Business Director Board of School Commissioners of Indi- anapolis, 2324 N. Pennsylvania Street, Indianapolis, Indiana. A. B., Wabash, '62; A. M„ Wabash, '66; Litt. D., Wabash, '98. JoHir Jacob Coss, '06, Traveling Fellow Union Theological Seminary, 700 Park Ave., New York City, New York. A. B., Wabash '06; A. M. Co- lumbia University, '08; D. B., Union Theological Seminary, '09. Robert Francis Coyle, '99, Pastor Central Presbyterian Church, Denver, Colorado. A. B., Wabash, '77; A. M., Westminster College, '90; LL. D., Westminster College, '92. 18 PHI BETA KAP:PA Jasper Asaph Cragwall, '99, Professor of Mathematics, Wabash College, Kennedy Place, Crawfordsville, Indiana. B. E., Vanderbilt University, '86; S. M., Vanderbilt University, '95. Benjamin Crane, '99, Lawyer, Crane & McCabe, 510 West Wabash Avenue, Craw- fordsville, Indiana. A. B., Wabash, '73; A. M., Wabash, '87. Charles Elmer Crockett, '98, Secretary and Treasurer, Tribune Printing Co., South Bend, Indiana. A. B., Wabash, '98; A. M., Wabash, '08. Roy Cumins, '09, Teacher of Mathematics, Crawfordsville High School, Craw- fordsville, Indiana. Graduate Indiana Normal School; A. B., Wabash, '09. Edward Daniels, '99, Lawyer, Master in Chancery in United States Courts, Indian- apolis, Indiana. A. B., Wabash, '75; A. M., Wabash, '87. Wylie Johnston Daniels, '09, 1843 North Pennsylvania St., Indianapolis, Indiana. Elected as Junior from Class of 1910. Cline Fleming Davidson, '00, Physician and Surgeon, Seattle, Washington. S. B., Wabash, '00; M. D., Johns Hopkins University, '04. Charles Miller Davis, '07, Student of Law, Terre Haute, Indiana. A. B., Wabash, '08; elected as Junior from the Class of 1908. Thomas Kirby Davis, '09, Wabash, Indiana. A. B., Wabash, '09. Leonard DeBord, '07, 316 W. Madison St., Danville, Illinois, A. B. Wabash, '07. William Burns Duff, '06, Associate Professor of History, Wabash College, Crawfords- ville, Indiana. A. B. Wabash, '06; A. M., Columbia Univer- sity, '07. Carson Samuel Duncan, '01, Assistant Professor of English, Ohio State University, Colum- bus, Ohio. A. B., Wabash, '01; A. M.; Wabash, '02; A. M., Columbia University, '05. William Orrin Emery, '99, Chief, Synthetic Products Laboratory, Bureau of Chemistry, 2132 Flagler Place, N. W., Washington, D. C. S. B., Wor- BETA OF INDIANA 19 oester Polytechnic Institute, '86; Ph. D., Eriangen University, '88; Privat Docent, Bonn, '91; Professor of Chemistry, Wabash College, 1895-1901. George Archer Ferguson, '98, Master in Lake Forest Academy, Lake Forest, Illinois. A. B., Wabash, '98; A. M., Wabash, '05. John Allen Finch, '99 (Deceased), Lawyer. A. B., Wabash, '63; A. M., Wabash, '70. Harry Nelaton Fine, '99, Lawyer, Prosecuting Attorney, Montgomery Co., Crawfords- ville, Indiana. Ph. B., Wabash, '96; A. M., Wabash, '03. Gail J. Fink, '08, Yountsville, Indiana. A. B., Wabash, '09; elected as Junior from class of 1909 Samuel Edgar Fleming, '07, Teacher of History, Ballard High School, 6410 24th Avenue, N. W., Seattle, Washington. A. B., Wabash, '07. Ralph Mendenhall Frink, '05, Lawyer, 1120 Amsterdam Ave., New York City. A. B., Wabash, '05; A. M., Columbia University, '06; LL. B., Colum- bia University, '09. James Bert Garner, '99, Professor of Chemistry, Wabash College, Crawfordsville, Indi- ana. S. B., Wabash, '93; S. M., Wabash, '95; Ph. D., Chicago University, '97. Louis Gaskill Goetz, '07, Instructor in Chemistry, Manual Training School, Washington University, St. Louis, Missouri. A. B., Wabash, '07. Jesse Austin Greene, '99, IJditor of The Fort Waytie News, Fort Wayne, Indiana. A. B., Wabash, '89, A. M. Wabash, '98. Matthias Lorinq Haines, '99, Pastor First Presbyterian Church, 216 E. 13th Street, Indi- anapolis, Indiana. A. B., Wabash, '71; A. M., Wabash, '87; D. D. Daniel Dickey Hains, '99, Professor of the Greek Language and Literature, Wabash College, 302 West Wabash Ave., Crawfordsville, Indiana. A. B., Wabash, '95; A. M., Wabash, '98. Henry Clay Hall, '99, Lawyer, Lecturer on Insurance Law, Northwestern Univer- 20 PHI BETA KAPPA sity, 315 Dearborn St., Chicago, Illinois. S. B., Wabash, '95; A. M., Wabash, '03; LL. B., Northwestern University, '97. ' Hugh Henry Herdman, Jr., '99, Principal Washington High School, 689 Northrup St., Port- land, Oregon. A. B., Wabash, '96; A. M., Columbia Univer- sity, '98. Emory Earl Hess, '04, Stenographer and Law Clerk with Douglas, Lane & Douglas, 4525 Bagley Ave., Seattle, Washington. A. B., Wabash, '04. Bert Raymond Hoobler, '01, Physician and Surgeon, 131 East 67th St., New York City. S. B., Wabash, '01; A. M., Wabash, '03; M. D., Cornell Uni- versity, '05. Horace Carter Hovey, '03, Ex-Pastor First Presbyterian Church, 71 Lime St., Newbury- port, Massachusetts. A. B., Wabash, '53; A. M., Wabash, '56; D. D., Gale College, '83; D. D., Wabash, '07. Benjamin Rogers Howell, 99, Attorney-at-Law, 703 Utah Savings and Trust Building, Salt Lake City, Utah. A. B., Wabash, '97; A. M., Columbia Uni- versity, '99. Louis Howland, '09, Journalist, Editorial Staff Indianapolis News, Indianapolis, Indiana. A. B. Yale University, '79; A. M., Wabash, '01; Litt. D., Wabash, '03. Philip Hughes, '03 (Deceased), A. B., Wabash, '03. John Webb Irwin, '09, Caledonia, Ohio. A. B. Wabash, '09. William Patterson Kane, '99 (Deceased ), A. B., Monmouth College, '71, D. D., Wabash, '87; LL. D. President Wabash College, 1899-1906. Walter E. King, '00, Professor Bacteriology, Kansas State Agr. Coll. and Exp. Station, Manhattan, Kansas. A. B., Wabash, '00; A. M., Cornell University, '05; A. M., Wabash, '08. Hugh Macmaster Kingery, '99, Professor of Latin, Wabash College, Crawfordsville, Indiana. A. B., Wooster University, '84; A. M., Wooster University, '87; Ph. D., Wooster University, '92. BETA OP INDIANA 21 Hugh McMillan Kinqery, '07, 511 South Grant Avenue, Crawfordsville, Indiana. A. B., Wabash, '08; A. M., Wabash, '09; elected as member of the Junior Class of 1908. Elliott W. Kirk, '99, Physician, Veedersburg", Indiana. S. B., Wabash, *99. Arthur J. Klein, '06, Fellow at Union Theological Seminary, 700 Park Ave., New York City. A. B., Wabash, '06; A, M., Columbia University, '09; D. B., Union Theological Seminary, '09. Fern L. Lough, '08, Asst. Cashier State Bank of Remington, Remington, Indiana. A. B., Wabash, '08. Emory Roscoe Lowe, '04, Mishawaka, Indiana. A. B. Wabash, '04. Arthur Albert McCain, '99, Editor The Crawfordsville Journal, 3 Mills Place, Crawfords- ville, Indiana. S. B., Wabash, '89; A. M. Wabash, '99. Fred McCallister, '00, Deputy Prosecutor Marion County, 3824 Byram Ave., India- napolis, Indiana. A. B., Wabash, '00; LL. B., Indiana Law School, '02. Lee McCanliss, '07, Student in Columbia University Law School, Rockville, In- diana. A. B., Wabash, '07. Alonzo Simpson McDaniel, '04, Assistant Chemist, Bureau of Standards, Washington, D. C. A. B., Wabash, '04; A. M., University of Wisconsin, '05; Ph. D., University of Wisconsin, '09. George Lewes Mackintosh, '99, President Wabash College, Crawfordsville, Indiana. A. B., Wabash, '84; A. M., Wabash. '87, D.|D., Wooster University, '02; LL. D., Franklin College, '08. Henry Zwingli McLain, '99 (Deceased ), A. B., Wabash, '67; A. M., Wabash, '70; L. H. D., Wabash, '97; Professor of Greek, Wabash College, 1876-1906. John Scudder McLain, '99, Journalist, Editor Minneapolis Journal, 1885-1908, 1710 Knox Ave. S., Minneapolis, Minnesota. A. B. Wabash, '77; A. M., Wabash, '92. 22 PHI BETA KAPPA John W. Maoy, Jr., '08, Student Columbia University Law School, Winchester, In- diana. A. B., Wabash, '08. Thomas Riley Marshall, '99, Governor of Indiana, Office of The Governor, State House, In- dianapolis, Indiana. A. B., Wabash, '73; A. M., Wabash, '76; LL. D., Wabash, '09. KoY Massena, '02, Asst. Department Manager, Reid, Murdock, & Co., 6017 Rhodes Ave., Chicago, Illinois. A. B., Wabash, '02. Clarence Puson Merrell, '09, 709 West Main Street, Crawfordsville, Indiana. A. B., Wa- bash, '09. Arthur Bartlett Milford, '99, Professor of the English Language and Literature, Wabash College, Crawfordsville, Indiana. A. B., Princeton Univer- sity, '79; A. M., Princeton University, '82; L. H. D., Wabash, '09. John M. Mitchell, '99 (Deceased), Instructor in Robert College, Constantinople, Turkey. A. B. Wabash, '98. Charles Barclay Moore, '00, Principal Occidental Academy, 630 W. Ave. 54, Los Angeles, California. A. B., Wabash, '00; A. M., Columbia Univer- sity, '02. Charles Washington Moores, '99, Attorney, United States Commissioner, President Board of Education, 1918 N. Pennsylvania St., Indianapolis, Indiana. A. B., Wabash, '82; LL. B., Central Law School, Indianapolis, '83; A. M., Wabash, '85. Mark Deming Nave, '01, Counsellor-at-Law, 2 Wall Street, New York City. A. B., Wabash, '01; A. M., Wabash, '04; LL. B. Columbia Univer- sity, '08. Meredith Nicholson, '01, Author, 1500 N. Delaware St., Indianapolis, Indiana. A. M., Wabash, '01; A. M., Butler College, '02;Litt. D., Wabash, '07. Edgar William Olive, '99, Professor of Botany, State Agricultural College, Brookings, South Dakota. S. B., Wabash, '93; S. M., Wabash, '95; A. M., Harvard University, '97; Ph. D., Harvard University,' 02. BETA OP INDIANA 23 James Harvey Osborne, '99, Associate Professor of Latin and Mathematics, Wabash Col- lege. The Campus, Crawfordsville, Indiana. A. B., Wabash* '79; A. M., Wabash, '85. James Insley Osborne, '06, The Campus, Crawfordsville, Indiana. A. B., Wabash, '06; A. M., Wabash, '07. Ernest C. Pegg, '09, Hagerstown, Indiana. A. B., Wabash, '09. Herbert A. Pettijohn, '07, Student in Young Men's Christian Association Institute, Chicago. 66 E. Clinton St., Noblesville, Indiana. A. B., Wabash, '07. Jesse William Pierce, '05, Editor of The CUntonian^ Clinton, Indiana. A. B., Wabash, '05. Claud A. Pifer, '07, Rhodes Scholar from Indiana, Pembroke College, Oxford University, Oxford, England. A. B., Wabash, '07; A. M., Wabash, '08. Franklin Waters Plummer, '08, Instructor in Biology and Athletic Director, Macalester Col- lege, St. Paul, Minnesota. A. B. Wabash, '08. Douglas Perkins Putnam, '99 (Deceased), A. B., Wabash, '67; A. M., Wabash, '87; D. D., Wabash, '87; Professor in Lane Theological Seminary, 1904-1905. Charles Brewster Fitz Randolph, '99, Professor of Greek and Latin, Clark College, 21 Circuit Ave., Worcester, Massachusetts. A. B., Wabash, '96; A. M., Har- vard University, '01; Ph. D., Harvard University, '05. Samuel J. Record, '03, Forest Supervisor Arkansas National Forest, Forest Service, United States Department of Agriculture, Washington, D. C. A. B., Wabash, '03; A. M., Wabash, '06. Carl Seward Reed, '97, Monticello, Illinois. A. B., Wabash, '97; A. M. Wabash, '06. Melvin Deforest Renkenberger, '06, Instructor in Biology and Physics, Bradley Polytechnic Insti- tute, 213 S. Bourland St., Peoria, Illinois. A. B., Wabash, '06. Fred H. Rhodes, '09, Rochester, Indiana. Elected from the Junior Class of '10. 24 PHI BETA KAPPA Frank Humphrey Ristine, '05, Student in Columbia University, 1120 Amsterdam Ave., New York City. A. B., Wabash, '05; A. M., Wabash, '06; A. M., Columbia University, '07. William Aaron Roth, '99, Dentist, Seaton, Illinois. Ph. B., Wabash, '99. D. D. S. Walter Leroy Run van, '02, Asst. Secretary Religious Education Association, 6704 Stew- art Ave., Chicago, Illinois. A. B., Wabash, '02; D. B., Uni- versity of Chicago, '07. Hiram Hall Ruston, '99, 38 West 49th St., New York City. A. B., Wabash, '95; A. M., Wabash, '99; Ph. D., Harvard University, '02. LuciAN Richard Smith, '99, Lawyer, Mayfield, Kentucky. A. B., Wabash, '99. William Henry Smith, '06, Advance, Indiana. A. B., Wabash, '06; A. M. , University of Illinois, '07. Adrian Floyd Smitz, '06, Instructor in Memphis University School, Memphis, Ten- nessee. A. B., Wabash, '06. Harry Linn Starr, "99, Professor of English, Carroll College, Waukesha, Wisconsin. A. B., Wabash, '93; A. M., Wabash, '98. Clarence Dimick Stevens, '99, Professor of English, Cornell College, Mount Vernon, Iowa. Ph. B., Wabash, '94; A. M., Wabash, '00; A. M., Columbia University, '07. Gerald Hayden Stoner, '01, Physician, Valparaiso, Indiana. S. B., Wabash, '01; M. D., Chicago University, '05. Emmet C. Stopher, '06, Superintendent of Schools, Noblesville, Indiana. A. B., Wa- bash, '06. Ernest Clarence Stout, '05, Teacher in High School, Crawfordsville, Indiana. A. B., Wabash, '05. DUANE Studley, '99, Asst. Professor of Mathematics, Lewis Institute, 344 E. 57th St., Chicago, Illinois, S. B. Cornell University, '81. BETA OF INDIANA 26 Hugh R. Sutherland, '08, Office of The Governor, State House, Indianapolis, Indiana. A. B., Wabash, '08. George Beaty Sweazey, '99, Principal Salt Lake Collegiate Institute, Salt Lake City, Utah. A. B., Wabash, '97; A. M., Wabash, '00. Albert Duy Thomas, '99, Lawyer, Thomas & Foley, 414 West Wabash Ave., Crawfords- ville, Indiana. S. B., Wabash, '64; A. M., Wabash, '85. Mason Blanchard Thomas, '99, Professor of Biology, Dean, Wabash College, Crawfordsville, Indiana. S. B., Cornell University, '90; Ph. D., Wabash, '07. Maurice Thompson, '99 (Deceased), Author and Journalist. Litt. D., Wabash, '00. Lewis Wallace, '99 (Deceased), Major-General U. S. Army; Governor New Mexico; Minister to Turkey, Author. Ex- Wabash, '34; LL. D., Wabash, '81. Louis Wann, '07, Instructor in Robert College, Constantinople, Turkey. A. B., Wabash, '08. Elected as member of the Junior Class of '08. Guy Morrison Wells, '03, Assistant State Secretary Indiana Young Men's Christian As- sociation, 618 State Life Building, Indianapolis, Indiana. A. B., Wabash, '03. Herbert West, '97, Financial Agent, 306 California Building, Tacoma, Washing- ton. S. B., Wabash, '97. Herbert Hice Whetzel, '02, Assistant Professor of Plant Pathology, Cornell University, Ithaca, New York. A. B., Wabash, '02; A. M., Wabash, '07. Robert Naylor Whiteford, '99, Head of English Department, American International College, Springfield, Massachusetts. A. B., Wabash, '90; A. M., Wa- bash, '92; A. M., Johns Hopkins University, '93; Ph. D., Wa- bash, '93. Robert Karl Winter, '09, Fellow in English, Wabash College, Crawfordsville, Indiana. A. B., Wabash, '09. John Elias Wolever, '99, Pastor Presbyterian Church, Silver Cliff, Colorado. A. B., Wabash, '99. 2« PHI BETA KAPPA William Allen Woods, '99 (Deceased), Judge United States Circuit Court. A. B., Wabash, '59; A. M., Wabash, '70; LL. D., Wabash, '86. James Zimmerman, '06, Instructor in Chemistry, University of Minnesota, 1201 5th St., Minneapolis, Minnesota. A. B., Wabash, '06. BETA OP INDIANA 27 IN MEMORIAM Daniel Pratt Baldwin George Stockton Burroughs John Lyle Campbell John Allen Finch Philip Hughes William Patterson Kane Henry Zwingli McLain John M. Mitchell Douglas Perkins Putnam Maurice Thompson Joseph Parrand Tuttle Lewis Wallace William Allen Woods ?i»-sf* \ J^' ^^v.^ ^ W-.i Gaylord Bros. Makers Syracuse, N.Y. PAT. JAM. 21, 1908 UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA LIBRARY