Full text of "Index"
I This Book The Rrope-RT y.Of
i
Digitized by the Internet Archive
in 2010 with funding from
Boston Library Consortium IVIember Libraries
http://www.archive.org/details/index1910univ
THE TirrTl.K tOMI'ANV
Prititcrs a n d Binders
RUTLAND. VKRMONT
jiSisssssiiiSiiiiiiii^i
©Iff Mhtx
An Annual Published b\'
THE JUNIOR CLASS OF the
iMaaaarI)it0Ptt5 AgriruUural OInlkgp
Amlirrst, MasBcirljitBrttH
Brrrmbrr - Nturtmi
lain
olum? 3C?CXX
i^OAftr of fSxatotf^
Wm^^
WALTER ROE CLARKE
Fditor-in-Cliief
FRANK TUTTLE HAYNES
Business Manager
EDWARD FARNHAM DAMON
Assistant Business Manager
JONATHAN PHILLIPS BLANEY
Artist
I OUIS BRANDT
Artist
HENRY ALVAN BROOKS
Associate Editor
LEONARD SEPTIMUS McLAINb
Associate Editor
I'RANK LINCOLN THOMAS
Associate Editor
W 11 HAM CI ARFNCF JOHNSON
\ss()uilo Fdilor
■
■
1
^fl
^H^^B^^En^
hI
ff
A
i
i
.^fS^^^^^H^Hd
1
•
'^ '^^^^^^^^iHlHk^
1
^
V
^ / :g^^^^^H^
1
■■J*"
^--UJiJ^Bi.
1
1 s
^^^^^V^^^^^aLS^sl '■^^^^^I^^^^^^^^^^^^^H^ I
1
M
IP
HI
,-A'_^a>)^^|^^^^2EH^BHHfl^D|flPH|^^RSlvnif "
rr
' i>
5-^
J
^r^^ttng
Anollfpr gfar Ijaa roitir attli gone,
AnnJljpr battlr last at man,
Earl} a IcHODtt to aa 1)ub laitgl|t
00 pari? aomp nrui xhta brnitgl|t;
pifaaurp, anrrout, rare, all tljrtp
Jntcrintngle in amrrtcst ntpmorg.
iFrtpttba. romra&PH as 11|pp vat grrrt
We ask tljta our utork approtial mrrt :
" Sooka arp noirra of tljf past,"
War rrrorie, tnirliblp, in tljia utr'ur raat
(Comratipa. aa tl^par onr tl|ougI)ta mtve gturn to tljpp
Join apntimpnta in lour for M. A. 01.
Pr^far^
[•ill) a truf BBttsf af loyally
tn nib ifflaaB'rliusptt0, uif
abli tl)t0 ll)f 3niJpx of 1910
to tl)p popr ittrrfaaxng list of
arljifnpttttnta of Ijifr sons.
®t|f !£&ttora.
Wi tl|f m^mbpra of % QJIaaa of 1910.
in tohpn of our appr^riatton of
Ijia many otrtupa anii manly
rl|arartf r, afift rJionattlg
ifiiiratp ttjta
uolump
to
10
THE 1910 INDEX VOLUME XXXX
Philip Bevier Hasbrouck
HE name of the one to whom this volume is dedicated, at once suggests
a long hne of European ancestry of social rank and influence. The
surname is common in northern France, about Calais, whence came
Abraham Hasbrouck, a refugee, to find religious freedom in America.
It was in the latter half of the seventeenth century that he, with
others similarly persecuted, came to America to build for themselves
homes in a land of freedom. They settled in New York state, and
from then until now in the section where this pioneer Hasbrouck built his home, the name
has been a prominent one among the inhabitants.
That this early pioneer possessed the qualities of leadership is indicated by the fact
that he was called to participate in the affairs of the government as a member of Governor
Andres's staff.
The middle name, Bevier, came to Professor Hasbrouck through his paternal
ancestry, by marriage with the family of that name, made famous through Colonel Bevier,
who fought with the Americans at the siege of Quebec.
The early ancestry on the maternal side traces back to Louis Du Bois, the Walloon,
a pioneer settler of the Wallkill valley in New York. In France and Flanders there were
many noted men of this family, famous as surgeons, statesmen and historians.
It was largely through the influence of Abraham Hasbrouck, of Governor Andros's
staff, that the English crown was induced to grant lands to the early settlers of Wallkill
valley. Parts of these early grants still remain in the possession of the descendants of
those to whom the original allotments were made.
Barnes gives us an idea of the character of the Huguenot refugees who early settled
in this country, when he says of them: " Their severe morality, marked charity, elegant
manners and thrifty habits, made them a desirable acquisition. They brought the mul-
berry and olive, and established magnificent plantations on the banks of the Cooper.
They also introduced many choice varieties of pears, which still bear illustrious Huguenot
names. Their descendants are eminently honorable, and have borne a proud part in the
establishment of our Republic. Of seven presidents who were at the head of the Congress
of Philadelphia during ihe Revolution, three were of Huguenot parentage."
Such were the predominant characteristics of the people from whom the subject of
this brief biographical sketch has inherited those sterling qualities of character that have
made him such an efficient worker in M. A. C, for the past thirteen years. It is these
^^3yiyiM>c^ a/^^/^d^^^^t^-^^-^c^^
MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE II
inherited qualities, fostered and improved by a healthy environment and a right course of
living, that have developed the man whose life and work among us for so many years has
endeared him to all who have come in contact with him, as students, associates on the
faculty, or in other lines of college activities.
Philip Bevier Hasbrouck was born in Libertyville, Ulster County, New York, m
1870. He prepared for college at the New Paltz Normal School, and was admitted to
Rutgers College, New Brunswick, N. J., in the fall of 1889. Early in his college
course he developed a fondness for mathematical work, in which he specialized later,
taking courses in mathematics, physics and civil engineering. At the completion of his
college course he received the degree of B. Sc. Soon after graduating from Rutgers he
accepted a position as secretary to the Director of the Maryland Agricultural Experiment
Station, a position he retained until 1895, when he accepted a call to M. A. C, as
Assistant Professor of Mathematics. In recognition of his services and abihty as a teacher,
he has been promoted to Associate Professor of Mathematics and Adjunct Professor of
Physics. In June, 1905, he assumed the duties of Registrar, succeeding his classmate
and colleague. Professor Lull.
By reason of the work that has fallen to his lot in his capacity as teacher, registrar,
and a member of the faculty committee on entrance, he has secured a more intimate
acquaintance with the undergraduates than any of his associates on the faculty. His
relation to the students during their first years at M. A. C, and his personal interest in
every one of them, has resulted in his being selected by many men in college as an adviser
regarding their college and personal affairs. In the capacity of personal adviser, confi-
dant and teacher he has had frequent opportunity to impress upon those with whom he
has thus come in contact, the marks of his character that make for the growth of the true
college man and the development of a genuine college spirit. This intercourse between
teacher and student has served to magnify in him those innate qualities of consideration,
generosity, frankness and loyalty.
By every one who has been associated with him either as student or colleague, he
is held in high esteem as an earnest student, faithful teacher and friend.
l,.^.^ ^,95
GWjLIHJ^iR -1^8-03
1908
,. . y, September 14-15, Monday-Tuesday,
, /^/ Entrance Examinations
September 16, Wednesday, 1 :30 P. M.,
Assembly; Fall Semester Begins
November 25-30, Wednesday, 1 P. M. to Monday, 1 P. M.,
Thanksgiving Recess
December 18, Friday, 6 P. M., Winter Recess Begins
Winter Recess Ends
Fall Semester Ends
Spring Semester Begins
Washington's Birthday
Spring Recess Begins
Spring Recess Ends
Patriot's Day
Memorial Day
1909
January 4, Monday, 1 P. M.,
February 7, Sunday,
February 8, Monday, 1 P. M.,
February 22, Monday,
March 26, Friday, 6 P. M.,
April 5, Monday, 1 P. M.,
April 19, Monday,
May 30, Sunday,
June 19-23, Saturday to Wednesday.
Commencement Exercises
MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE
13
Board of Trustees
Members ex Officio
His Excellency Governor Curtis Guild, Jr., President of the Corporation
K.ENYON L. BUTTERFIELD, ..... President of the College
George H. Martin, . . . . Secretary of the Board of Education
J. Lewis Ellsworth, .... Secretary of Board of Agriculture
Members by Appointment
Arthur G. Pollard of Lowell .
Charles A. Gleason of New Braintree
Frank Gerrett of Greenfield
Samuel C. Damon of Lancaster .
P. A. Russell of Great Barrington
Charles H. Preston of Danvers
Carroll D. Wright of Worcester .
M. Fayette Dickinson of Boston .
William H. Bowker of Boston .
George H. Ellis of Boston .
J. Howe Demond of Northampton .
Elmer D. Howe of Marlborough .
Nathaniel L Bowditch of Framingham
William Wheeler of Concord
Term Expires
1909
1909
1910
1910
1911
1911
1912
1912
.1913
1913
1914
1914
1915
1915
Officers Elected by the Corporation
Charles A. Gleason of New Braintree .
J. Lewis Ellsworth of Worcester
Fred C. Kenney of Amherst
Charles A. Gleason of New Braintree
Vice-President of the Corporation
Secretary
Treasurer
Auditor
14 the1910indexvolumexxxx
Standing Committees of the Trustees
Committee on Finance
Charles A. Gleason, Chairman
George H. Ellis J. Howe Demond
Arthur G. Pollard Charles H. Preston
Committee on Course of Study and Faculty
William Wheeler, Chairman
William H. Bowker M. Fayette Dickinson
Elmer D. Howe Carroll D. Wright
George H. Martin
Committee on Farm and Horticulture
Farm Division
Nathaniel I. Bowditch, Chairman
George H. Ellis Charles A. Gleason
Frank Gerrett
Horticultural Division
' J. Lewis Ellsworth, Chairman
A. G. Pollard Elmer D. Howe
Committee on Experiment Department
Charles H. Preston, Cliairman
P. A. Russell William H. Bowker
J. Lewis Ellsworth Samuel C. Damon
MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE
Committee on Ne\v Buildings and Arrangement
of Grounds
William Wheeler, Chairman
William H. Bowker M. Fayette Dickinson
Frank Gerrett Nathaniel I. Bowditch
Examining Committee of Overseers
John Bursley, Chairman, of West Barnstable
W. C. Jewett, of Worcester
E. L. Boardman, of Sheffield
Isaac Damon, of Wayland
Frank Gerrett, of Greenfield
THE 1910 INDEX VOLUME XXXX
Kenyon Leech Butterfield
T was on a farm near the outskirts of the village of Lapeer, Lapeer
County, Michigan, that our President first saw the light of day, June
1 I th, 1 868. His early life was one of intense activity. He was
always striving how to do the many duties incident to the lot of a boy
on the farm by a shorter method or by increasing the effectiveness of
such work. He was the same in his school work and easily kept the
first place in his classes by this indomitable desire to push ahead.
In 1 886 he entered the Michigan Agricultural College, and while obliged to drop
out the next year on account of lack of funds, he returned the following year and grad-
uated with the highest honors in 1 89 1 . While in college we see this same masterful
desire to push on, to accomplish, to secure the highest return for his endeavor. During
his Junior and Senior years he won first place in the intersociety oratorical contest. Upon
his graduation he was offered an instructorship in the English Department of his Alma
Mater, but declined on account of not desiring to make teaching his life work. He
accepted, however, and held the position of Assistant Secretary for one year, resigning
lo accept the editorship of the Michigan Grange Visitor, which he held until that paper
was merged into the Michigan Farmer in 1895.
It was in this year that the Michigan State Board of Agriculture, recognizing the
value of educational work among the farmers, appointed him Superintendent of Farmers'
Institutes, and the next year. College Field Agent. At this time farmers' institutes were
not thoroughly understood, and had received no national recognition. To bring them out
from the chaotic condition in which they were then to an established and recognized place
in rural society required the ability of a man with strong powers of organization.
In 1899 Supt. Butterfield gave up this position and in 1900 took up graduate work
at the university of Michigan, taking his Masters degree in 1902. He was then appointed
instructor in Rural Sociology, which position he held until his election to the Presidency
of the Rhode Island College of Agriculture and Mechanic Arts in 1903. It was here
that his work attracted the attention of the Hon. Carroll D. Wright, head of the depart-
ment of Economics and Sociology in the Carnegie Institution at Washington, who ap-
pointed him to prepare an economic history of agriculture in the United States; this work
is still in preparation.
MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE
19
Among his many published addresses we notice: Social Problems of the American
Farmer, delivered at the Congress of Arts and Sciences, World's Fair, St. Louis; Social
Phase of Agricultural Education, read before the Association of American Agricultural
Colleges and Experiment Stations at Des Moines, la. His book. Chapters on Rural
Progress, was published in 1907.
The latest public recognition of his eminent services in the cause of agricultural
progress, is his appointment by President Roosevelt to the Commission on Country Life.
In 1 906 President Butterfield accepted the Presidency of the Massachusetts Agri-
cultural College. His work here has been steadily progressive. With his contagious
enthusiasm and wide experience, the College looks forward to a future of ever increasing
usefulness.
George F. Mills, M. A., Dean of the College, Head of
the Division of the Humanities, Professor of Languages
and Literature.
Born 1839. Williams College, 1862. A A $. Associate Principal
of Greylock Institute, 1882-89. Professor of English and Latin at
Massachusetts Agricultural College since 1890. Appointed Dean of
of the College and Head of the Division of Humanities in 1907.
Frank A. Waugh, M. S., Head of Division of Horticul-
ture and Professor of Landscape Gardening, Dean of Sum-
mer School, Massachusetts Agricultural College.
Born 1869. Kansas Agricultural College, 1891. KS. M. S.,
1893. Graduate student Cornell University, 1898-99. Editor Agri-
cultural Department Topc\a Capitot, 1891-92. Editor Montana Farm
and Stock Journat, 1892. Editor Denver Fid J and Farm. 1892-93.
Professor of Horticulture, Oklahoma Agricultural and Mechanical
College, and Horticulturist of the Experiment Station, 1893-95. Pro-
fessor of Horticulture, University of Vermont and Slate Agricultural
College, and Horticulturist of the Experiment Station, 1895-1902.
Professor of Horticulture and Landscape Gardening, Massachusetts
Agricultural College, and Horticulturist of the Hatch Experiment
Station since 1902. Horticultural editor of Counir}) Centleman since
Charles Wellington, M. A., Ph. D., Professor of Chem-
istry.
Bom 1853. Massachusetts Agricultural College, 1873. K2. Grad-
uate student in Chemistry, Massachusetts Agricultural College, 1873-76.
Student in University of Virginia, 1876-77. Ph. D.. University of
Gollingcn, 1885. Assistant Chemist, United States Department of
Agriculture, Washington, D. C, 1876. First Assistant Chemist, De-
partment of Agriculture, 1877-82. Associate Professor of Chemistry
at Massachusetts Agricultural College, 1885-1907. Professor of Chem-
istry at Massachusetts Agricultural College since 1907.
MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE
21
Charles H. Fernald, M. A., Ph. D., Director of Grad-
uate School and Professor of Zoology, and Entomologist
for Hatch Experiment Station.
Bom 1838. Bowdoin College, 1865. Ph. D., Maine Slate College,
1886. Studied in the Museum of Comparative Zoology at Cam-
bridge and under Louis Agassiz on Penekese Island. Also traveled
extensively in Europe, studying insects in various museums. Principal
of Litchfield Academy, 1865. Principal of Houlton Academy,
1865-70. Chair of Natural History, Maine State College, 1871-86.
Professor of Zoology at Massachusetts Agricultural College since 1886.
William P. Brooks, Ph. D., Director of the Massachusetts
Agricultural Experiment Station. Professor of Agriculture
and Agriculturist for the Massachusetts Agricultural
Experiment Station. Director of Short Winter Courses.
Born 1851. Massachusetts Agricultural College, 1875. *2K. Post-
graduate, Massachusetts Agricultural College, 1875-76. Professor of
Agriculture and Director of Farm, Imperial College of Agriculture,
Safforo, Japan, 1877-78; also Professor of Botany, 1881-88. Acting
President, Imperial College, 1880-83, and 1886-87. Professor of
Agriculture at Massachusetts Agricultural College, and Agriculturist
for the Hatch Experiment Station since January, 1889. Ph. D., Halle,
1897. Acting President of the College and Acting Director of the
Hatch Experiment Station, 1905-06. Director of Hatch Experiment
Station, 1906.
James B. Paige, D. V. S., Professor of Veterinary Science,
and Veterinarian for the Massachusetts Agricultural Ex-
periment Station.
Born 1 861. Massachusetts Agricultural College, 1882. Q. T. V.
On farm at PrescotI, 1882-87. D. V. S., Faculty of Comparative
Medicine and Veterinary Science, McGill University, 1888. Prac-
ticed at Northampton, 1888-91. Professor of Veterinary Science at
Massachusetts Agricultural College since 1891. Took course in Path-
ological and Bacteriological Department, McGill University, summer
1891. Took course in Veterinary School in Munich, Germany, 1895-96.
George E. Stone, Ph. D., Professor of Botany and Bota-
nist for the Massachusetts Agricultural Experiment Station.
Born 1861. Massachusetts Agricultural College, 1882-84. *2K
Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1884-89. In the summer
1890, in charge of the Botany Classes at Worcester Summer Sch'
of Natural History. Leipsic University, 1891-92; Ph. D., 1892
Studied in the Physiological Laboratory at Clark University, 1893
Assistant Professor of Botany at Massachusetts Agricultural College
1893-95. Professor of Botany at Massachusetts Agricultural College
since July, 1895. B. S., Massachusetts Agricultural College, 1897.
22
THE 1910 INDEX VOLUME XXXX
John E. Ostrander, M. A., C.
maiics and Civil Engineering.
E., Profeisor of Mathe-
^
Born 1865. B. A. and C. E., Union College, 1886; M. A., 1889.
Assistant on Sewer Construction, Wesit Troy, N. Y., 1886. Assistant
on Construction, Chicago, Saint Paul & Kansas City Railway, 1887.
Draughtsman with Phoenix Bridge Company, 1887. Assistant in En-
gineering Department, New York State Canals, 1888-91. Instructor
in Civil Engineering, Lehigh University, 1891-92. Engineering for
Contractor Alton Bridge, summer of 1892. Professor of Civil En-
gineering and Mechanic Arts, University of Idaho, 1892-97. Professor
of Mathematics and Civil Engineering at the Massachusetts Agricul-
tural College since July, 1897.
Henry T. Fernald, M. S., Ph. D., Professor of Enlomol-
ogl; and Associate Entomologist for the Massachusetts
Agricultural Experiment Station.
Born 1866. University of Maine, 1885; BOn, ^K*. M. S., 1888.
Graduaile student in Biology, Wesleyan University, 1885-86. Grad-
uate student Johns Hopkins University, 1887-1890. Laboratory In-
structor Johns Hopkins University, 1889-1890. Ph. D., Johns Hopkins
University, 1890. Professor of Zoology, Pennsylvania State College,
1890-99. State Economic Zoblogist of Pennsylvania, 1898-99. Pro-
fessor of Entomology, Massachusetts Agricultural College, and As-
sociate Entomologist, Hatch Experiment Station, since 1899.
George C. Martin, C. E., Captain Eighteenth Infantry,
United States Army. Professor of Military Science.
Born 1869. C. E., University of Vermont, 1892. 2*. With £n-
gmeering Ncids, 1895-97. Entered Army July 9, 1898, as Second
Lieutenant of Twenty-first United Slates Infantry. Promoted to First
Lieutenant of Second United Slates Infantry, March 2d, 1899. Pro-
moted to Captain of Eighteenth United Slates Infantry, August 26th,
1903. Placed on duty at Massachusetts Agricultural College by order
of the Honorable the Secretary of War, September 1st, 1905.
William R. Hart, B. L., A. B., A. M., Professor of Agri-
cultural Education.
B. L., Iowa State Law School, 1880. A. B.. University of Nebraska,
1896. A. M., University of Nebraska, 1900. Department of Psy-
chology and Education in Nebraska State Normal at Peru, 1901-07.
Professor of Agricultural Education, Massachusetts Agricultural Col-
lege, 1907.
MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE
23
James A. Foord, B. S., M. S. A., Acting Head of the Divi-
sion of Agriculture, and Professor of Farm Administration.
Born 1872. B. S., New Hampshire College of Agriculture and
Mechanic A'rts, 1898. M. S. A., Cornell University, 1902. 23,
4>K'I>, K2. Graduate Summer Schools of Agriculture, Ohio State
University, 1902; University of Illinois, 1906; Cornell University,
1908. Assistant in Cornell University Agricultural Experiment Sta-
tion, 1900-03. Professor of Agriculture, Delaware College, 1903-06.
Associate Professor of Agronomy, Ohio State University, 1906-07.
Associate Professor of Agronomy, Massachusetts Agricultural College,
1907; Professor of Farm Administration, 1908.
Fred C. Sears, M. Sc, Professor of Pomology.
Born 1866. B. S., Kansas Agricultural College, 1892. Assistant
Horticulturist in Kansas Experiment Station, 1892-97, M. Sc, Kansas
Agricultural College, 1896. Professor of Horticulture, Utah Agri-
cultural College, 1897. Director Nova Scotia School of Horticulture,
Wolfich, Nova Scotia, 1898-1904. Professor of Horticulture, Nova
Scotia Agricultural College, Truro, Nova Scotia, 1905-07. Professor
of Pomology, Massachusetts Agricultural College, 1907.
Philip B. Hasbrouck, B. S., Associate Professor of Mathe-
matics, Adjunct Professor of Physics.
Born 1870. B. S.. Rutgers College, 1893. X^. Assistant Professor of
Mathematics at Massachusetts Agricultural College from April, 1895,
to 1902. Associate Professor of Mathematics since 1902. Registrar
since June, 1905.
Fred C. Kenney, Treasurer.
Born 1869. Ferris Institute, 1890-91. Bookkeeper for Manistee &
Northeastern Railroad Company, 1891-1895. Assistant Secretary and
Cashier of Michigan Agricultural College, 1895-1907. Treasurer of
Massachusetts Agricultural College since July 1st, 1907.
24
THE 1910 INDEX VOLUME XXXX
S. Francis Howard, B. S., M. S., Assistant Professor of
Chemistry.
Born 1872. B. S., Massachusetts Agricultural College, 1894. 'I'SK.
Principal of Eliot, Maine, High School, 1895. Student of Philosophy,
Johns Hopkins University, 1896-98. Assistant Professor of Chem-
istry at Massachusetts Agricultural College since July, 1899. M. S.,
Massachusetts Agricultural College, 1901.
Clarence Everett Gordon, B. S., A. M., Associate
Professor in Zoolog]) and Geology.
Born 1876. B. S., Massachusetts Agricultural College, 1901. Stu-
dent Clark University, summer session, 1901-03. Science Instructor,
Cushing Academy, Ashburnham, Mass., 1901-04. Graduate student
in Geology and ZcSlogy, Columbia University, 1904-05. A. M.,
Columbia University, 1905. Instructor in Geology, summer session,
Columbia University, 1905. University Fellovi' in Geology, Columbia
University, 1905-06. Assistant Professor in Zoology and Geology,
Massachusetts Agricultural College, 1906.
Robert Wilson Neal, A. B., A. M., Assistant Professor
of English, and Instructor in Cerman.
Born 1873. B. A., University of Kansas, 1897. M. A., Harvard.
*BK. Member of the bar, Kansas. Assistant in English, University
of Kansas, 1898-99. Yale Graduate School, 1899-1901. Teacher
Wallingford, Conn., High School, 1900-01. Instructor in English,
University of Cincinnati, 1901-02. Harvard Graduate School, 1902-
03. Head of English Department, Rutgers College and Rutgers
Scientific School, 1903-04. Editorial Department T/ie iVorU's Work
1904-06. Massachusetts Agricultural College, 1906.
George N. Holcomb, B. A.. S. T. B., Assistant Professor
of Political Science.
Born 1872. Trinity College, 1896. Philadelphia Divinity School,
1900 Graduate student in American Institutional and Political His-
tory at University of Pennsylvania, 1900-01. Graduate student in
History and Economics, Harvard University, 1901-03. Williams
Fellow, Harvard Union, S. T. B.. Harvard, 1903. Then engaged in
agricultural work. Instructor in Economics in Massachusetts Agricul-
tural College. 190507. Assistant Professor of Political Science
in Massachusetts Agricultural College since 1907.
MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE
25
A. Vincent Osmun,
PTofessor of Boian]).
Agr., B. S., M. S., Assistant
Bo
Conneclicut Agricultural College, 1900. Assistant Slorrs
Agricultural Experiment Station, 1900-02. Massachusetts Agi
College, 1903. Q. T. v., *K*. M. S., Massachusetts Agr
College, 1905, Instructor in Botany at Massachusetts Agi
College, 1903-1907. Assistant Professor since June, 1907.
Itural
cultural
cultural
Edward A. White,
culture.
B. Sc, Assistant Professor of Flori-
Born, 1872. Massachusetts Agricultural College, 1895. KS. Assist-
ant Horticulturist, Massachusetts Agricultural College, 1895-97. While
& Frost, Florists, Arlington, Mass., 1897-1899. Instructor in Horticul-
ture, Baron de Hirsch School, Woodbine, N. J., 1899-1900. Assist-
ant Professor of Horticulture, Texas Agricultural and Mechanical
College, 1900-1902. Professor of Botany, Forestry, and Landscape
Architecture, Connecticut Agricultural College, 1902-07. Assistant
Professor of Floriculture, Massachusetts Agricultural College, 1907.
Percy Loring Reynolds, M. D., Assistant Professor of
Physical Culture and Education and Hygiene.
Born 1876. International Y. M. C. A. Training School, 1902.
M. D., University of Georgia, 1906. Assistant Instructor Training
School, 1901-02. XZX, Medical Fraternity. Physical Director and
University Physician, University of Maine, 1906-08. At Massachu-
setts Agricultural College since 1908.
Robert W. Lyman, LL. B., Lecturer on Farm Laxv.
Born 1850. B. S., Massachusetts Agricultural College, 1871. *K*,
Q. T. V. Followed Civil Engineering, 1871-78. Admitted to the
bar as attorney at lavf, 1878. LL. B., Boston University Law School,
1879. Appointed Judge District Court of Hampshire County, 1882.
Registrar of Deeds for Hampshire County since 1891. Lecturer
Rural Law and Citizenship Law, Massachusetts Agricultural College
since 1882.
26
THE 1910 INDEX VOLUME XXXX
Frank William Rane, M. S., Lecturer on Foreslr\).
Born 1868. Ohio Slate University, B. Agr., I89I. Cornell University,
M. Sc, 1892. Elected Professor of Agriculture and Horlicukure in
the West Virginia University, 1892. Elected Professor of Agricul-
ture and Horticulture in the New Hampshire College. Elected Pro-
fessor of Forestry and Horticulture, 1900. Became a member of
the American Association for the Advancement of Science, 1892, and
was elected a fellow of the same Association in 1898. Has been
lecturer to Massachusetts Board of Agriculture since 1900. Member
of 4*A9 college fraternity and of the AZ honorary agricultural fra-
ternity. Elected State Forester of Massachusetts, September 15th,
1906, and same date Lecturer on Forestry at Massachusetts Agricul-
tural College.
Robert D. MacLaurin, A. M., Ph. D., Lecturer in Or-
ganic Chemistry.
Born 1879. A. M., McMaster University, Toronto, 1903. Ph. D.,
Harvard University, 1906. Research in Physiological Chemistry at
Rockefeller Institute. Medical research. New York, 1906-07. Re-
search work at Massachusetts Agricultural Experiment Station since
1907. Instructor in Chemistry at Massachusetts Agricultural College
since July, 1908.
Sidney B. Haskell, B. S., Instructor in Agriculture.
Born 1881. C. S. C. *K*. Massachusetts Agricultural College,
1904. Assistant Agriculturist, Hatch Experiment Station, June, 1904,
to July, 1906. Instructor in Agriculture since September, 1905.
Harold F. ToMPSON, B. Sc, Instructor in Market Gar-
dening.
Born 1885. KS. Massachusetts Agricultural College, 1905. In-
structor at Mount Hermon School, January, 1906, to January, 1907.
Instructor in Market Gardening at Massachusetts Agricultural College
since February, 1907.
MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE
27
Ray L. Gribben, B. S. A., Instructor in Animal Hus-
bandry.
B. S. A., Io>Ya State College, 1 906. Assistant in Animal Husbandry
in charge of live slock judging, Iowa State College, 1906-07.
A. Anderson MacKimmie, A. B., Instructor in French
and Spanish.
Born 1878. A. B., Princeton University, 1906. *BK. Bondinot
Fellow in Modern Languages, 1906-07. Instructor in French, Col-
chester Academy, Truro, Nova Scotia, 1906-08. At Massachusetts
Agricultural College since 1908.
Edgar Louis Ashley, A. B., A. M., Instructor in German.
Born 1880. Brown University, A. B., 1903; A. M., 1904. *BK,
^'K*. Instructor in German at Brown University, 1903-1906. Stu-
dent at University of Heidelberg, Germany, 1906-07. Instructor in
German at Bates College, 1907-08. At Massachusetts Agricultural
College since 1908.
William P. B. Lockwood, B. S., Assistant Professor of
Dairying.
Born 1875. B. S., Pennsylvania State College, 1899. With Walker-
Gordon Laboratory Co., Boston and Philadelphia, 1899-1901. In-
structor in Dairying, Pennsylvania State College, 1902-03. Inspector,
Hires Condensed Milk Co., Malvern, Pa., 1903-06. Creamery and
Condensary Construction Work, 1906-08. Assistant professor of
Dairying, Massachusetts Agricultural College, 1908.
28
THE 1910 INDEX VOLUME XXXX
C. R. Duncan, Instructor in Mathematics and Phvsics.
Born in 1884. Rutgers, 1902-06. Two years on East River Division
of Pennsylvania Tunnels.
Frank M. Gracey, Assistant in Landscape Gardening.
Born 1884. Massachusetts Normal Art School, 1906. Massachusetts
Institute of Technology, 1906. Assistant Curator Massachusetts Nor-
mal Art School, 1904-06. Instructor in Drawing, Michigan Agricul-
tural College, 1906-07. Assistant in Landscape Gardening, Massa-
chusetts Agricultural College, 1907.
Ernest C. Fowler, B. S., Instructor in Chemistry.
B. S., Michigan Agricultural College, 1907.
Harry Milliken JeNNISON, Instructor in Botany at the
Massachusetts Agricultural College.
Born 1885. B. S., Massachusetts Agricultural College, 1908.
MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE
29
Charles Robert Green, B. Agr., Librarian.
Born 1876. Connecticut Agricultural College, 1895. With The
Harlford Couranl, 1895-1901. Assistant Librarian, Conecticut Stale
Library, 1901-08. Librarian at Massachusetts Agricultural College
since September 1, 1908.
L. I. Shaw, B. S., M. S., Instructor in Chemistry.
Born 1885. 2S, n$X. B. S., Alfred University, 1907. M. S.,
Syracuse University, 1908. Assistant in Chemistry in Alfred Uni-
versity, 1906-07. Member chemical faculty of Syracuse University,
1907-08. At Massachusetts Agricultural College since June, 1908.
Floyd B. Jenks, A. B., Instructor in Agricultural Education.
A. B., from Perdue University, 1896. Practical Farmer and Dairy-
man. Speaker for the Indiana Farmer's Institute. Teacher of Ele-
mentary Agriculture, Goshen High School, 1904-08.
A. E. Cance, B. S., M. S., Ph. D., Instructor in Agricultural
Economics.
B. S. from Yale University; M. S. and Ph. D. from University of
Wisconsin. Instructor in Agricultural Economics at Massachusetts
Agricultural College since 1908.
Experiment Station Staff
William P. Brooks, Ph. D., Director and Agriculturist M. A. G
Charles A. Goessman, Ph. D., LL. D., Expert Consulting Chemist 40 Amity St.
Joseph B. LindsEY, Ph. D., Chemist 47 Lincoln Avenue
George E. Stone. Ph. D., Botanist and Vegetable Pathologist Mount Pleasant
Charles H. Fernald, Ph. D., Entomologist
James B. Paige, D. V. S., Veterinarian
Frank A. Waugh, M. S., Horticulturist
John E. Ostrander, C. E., Meteorologist
Henry T. Fernald, Ph. D., Associate Entomologist
Edward B. Holland, M. S., Associate Chemist
Henri D. Haskins, B. Sc, Chemist (Fertilizer Control)
Philip H. Smith, B. Sc, Chemist (Food and Dairy Control)
ErwiN S. Fulton, B. Sc, Assistant Agriculturist
Edwin F. Gaskill, B. Sc, Second Assistant Agriculturist
R. J. Goldberg's, North Pleasant St.
Carl S. Pomeroy, B. Sc, Assistant Horticulturist 19 Phillips St.
Robert D. MacLaurin, Ph. D., First Assistant Chemist, Research Division
6 Kellogg Avenue.
3 Hallock St.
42 Lincoln Avenue
M. A. C.
33 North Prospect St.
44 Amity St.
28 N. Prospect St.
89 Pleasant St.
102 Main St.
1 2 Cottage St.
MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE
31
Lewell S. Walker, B. Sc, First Assistant Chemist, Feed and Dair^ Division
19 Phillips St
Philip V. Goldsmith, Assistant Chemist
James C. Reed, Assistant Chemist
John N. Summers, B. Sc, Assistant Entomologist
George H. Chapman, B. Sc, Assistant Botanist
E. A. White, B. Sc, Florist
Fred C. Kenney, Treasurer
Rose J. Brown, Secretary
William K. Hepburn, Inspector, Feed and Dairy Division
96 Pleasant St
66 Pleasant St.
66 Pleasant St.
66 Pleasant St.
96 Pleasant St.
Mount Pleasant.
Draper Hall, M. A. C.
Sunderland
Roy F. Gaskill, Assistant in Animal Nutrition M. A. C.
R. C. LiNDBLAD, Observer South College, M. A. C.
Jessie V. Crocker, Stenographer, Department of Botany and Vegetable Pathology
Sunderland
Harriet Cobb, Stenographer, Department of Plant and Animal Chemistry
33 Cottage St.
Other College Officers
Elwin H. ForRISTALL, M. Sc, Farm Superintendent
Ralph Jerome Watts, Secretary to the President
Newton Wallace, Electrician
E. Charles Rowe, Steward of the Dining Hall
Clara S. Stuart, ClerJi to the President, Dean and Registrar
Mary Caldwell, Bool(keeper
Henrietta Webster, Stenographer
M. A. C.
1 1 6 Pleasant St.
6 Phillips St.
M. A. C.
M. A. C.
Draper Hall, M. A. C.
Draper Hall, M. A. C.
32
THE 1910 INDEX VOLUME XXXX
Graduate Students
BoQUET, Arthur G. B.
B. S., Oregon Agricultural College, 1906
Bourne, Arthur I.
A. B., Darlmouth College, 1907
Chapman, George H.
B. S., Massachusetts Agricultural College,
Hooker, Charles
B. S., Amherst College, 1906
Jennison, Harry M.
B. S. Massachusetts Agricultural College,
Johnston, Frederick A.
B. S., Massachusetts Agricultural College,
Regan, William S.
B. S. Massachusetts Agricultural College,
Smith, Philip H.
B. S , Massachusetts Agricultural College,
Summers, John N.
B. S., Massachusetts Agricultural College,
Thurston, Frank E.
B. S. Massachusetts Agricultural College,
Whitmarsh, Raymond D.
B. S. Massachusetts Agricullural College,
Corvallis, Oregon
Kensington, N. H.
Wallingford, Conn.
Amherst
Millbury
Westford
Northampton
Amherst
Brockton
Worcester
Amherst
Ol)e Senior (Tlass
1909
MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE
35
Senior History
GAIN as the days grow shorter and the cooling, autumn breezes scatter
the fair-hued fohage, the class of 1909 returns for its last year at
M. A. C. Once more the campus rings with the shout of familiar
voices, and the hills reecho the cheers of "Oughty-Nine."
But how different the scene from that of our Freshman autumn!
Now it is as staid Seniors that we greet you; as tried and loyal com-
rades that we cluster together to carry to a successful finish the short
year that remains. For the last time as under-graduates we present to you our class
history.
It is not necessary to devote much attention to our Freshman and Sophomore years.
Those historic details have not only been recorded in the " Index," but have left their
impress upon those with whom we were brought in close relation.
As Freshmen we met a strong Sophomore class, and the hazing parties at which
we assisted were neither slight nor few. We profited by these experiences, and ere the
year was over we were able even to " better the instruction." As Sophomores we did
our duty and passed through a successful, triumphant year.
We expected, when we reached our Junior year, to settle down to a quiet life, but
found the task of coaching a large Freshman class not an easy one. However they
responded nobly to our teaching. During the first few months our " Index " occupied
our time, and we cheerfully leave to its readers the question of its merits.
The weeks dodged by, and soon we were chasing Coleoptera or searching Sunder-
land and Hadley for outcrops. Meanwhile the matter of track athletics was brought
up, and '09 responded heartily to the cry of contest. The same persistent pluck, which
has helped us so often, carried us again to victory. That, of course, needed a celebration,
and 1 9 1 I deserves our thanks for the excellent banquet which they tendered us. Hart-
ford was a jolly city that night and our Junior Banquet was another strong rivet in the
binding of our class interests and affections. In the mean time we ran off a minstrel show
with great success. Then that most difficult task of getting by the exams was safely
accomplished.
Now, after being scattered through the summer, we are gathered for the last time,
fewer in numbers, but stronger, more determined, more united than ever. As Seniors,
it is our duty, first, to carry ourselves through this year as a class of one mind, seeking
always the welfare and advancement of our Alma Mater; second, to pass on to our
successors the worthy traditions and customs of M. A. C. ; last, to foster and preserve
the unconquerable spirit of " Old Massachusetts."
THE 1910 INDEX VOLUME XXXX
Senior Class Officers
Arthur W. Hubbard
George M. Brown
Charles S. Putnam
Harold P. Crosby
Edward I. Chase
Myron F. Geer
President
Vice-President
Secretary and Treasurer
Class Captain
. Sergeant-at-Arms
Historian
Class Yell
Rah! Rah! Rah!
Nineieen-oughl-nine !
Rah! Rah! Rah!
Massachuseils,
Oughly-nine!
Rah!
Rah!
Class Colors
Maroon and White
MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE 37
Class of 1909
Alger, Paul Edgar Somerville
G. S. Cooley's, Sunderland; Varsity Football; Class Football; Basketball; Baseball; Class
Vice-President, 1908; Senate; second prize Burnham Eight
Barlow, Waldo Darius Amherst
$SK; Amherst, President Musical Association; Leader Glee Club; First prize Burnham
Essay
Barnes, Benjamin Franklin Haverhill
S3>; 79 Pleasant Street
Bartlett, Oscar Christopher Westhampton
C. S. C. ; Goldberg's; Rope Pull; President of Senate; Fraternity Conference; First Prize
Burnham Eight; Flint Speaking
Briggs, Orwell Burlton Egremont
Q. T. v.; 82 Pleasant Street; Business Manager Signal; 1909 Index; President Stockbridge
Club
Brown, George Murray, Jr. Cambridge
Q. T. v.; 4 South College; Class Vice-President 1908; 1909 Index; Third Prize Burnham
Essay
Caffrey, Donald John Gardner
C. S. C; West Experiment Station; Class Football; 1909 Index; Class Historian, 1908;
"H. H."
Cardin, Patricio Penarvononda Artemisa, Cuba
Q. T. v.; 7 South College; Manager Rope PuU
Chase, Edwardlrving Somerville
30 North Prospect Street; Class Football
Codding, George Melvin Taunton
*2K; 17 South College; Mandolin Club; Band
Corbett, Lamert Seymour Jamaica Plain
Q. T. v.; 6 South College; Class Football; Rope Pull; Class Vice-President, '06, "H. H.";
Vice-President Chemical Club
Crosby, Harold Parsons Lenox
C. S. C; 12 South College; Varsity Football; Class Football; Rope Pull; Class Captain;
Orchestra; Band; Burnham Eight
38 the1910indexvolumexxxx
Grossman, Samuel Sutton Needham
Q. T. v.; 11 South College; Varsity Foolball; Manager Varsity Baseball, 1908; Class Foot-
"tall; Senate; Class President, 1907; Class Captain, 1906; Union Committee; "H. H."
Curran, David Aloysius Marlboro
Walsh's : Class Football
Cutler, Homer East Thompson, Conn.
North Amherst; Class Football
Fulton, Gordon Russell Lynn
C. S. C; West Experiment Station; Manager Class Football; Class President, 1906; Senate;
Glee Club
Geer, Myron Francis Springfield
44 Pleasant Street; 1909 InJex; Signal; Class Historian; Class Secretary, 1908; First Prize
Burnham Essay; Flint Speaking
Geer, Wayne Emory Springfield
44 Pleasant Street; Senate
Hathaway, Elmer Francis Cambridge
KS; 79 Pleasant Street; Mandolin Club
Hsieh, En-lung Tientsin, China
6 Maple Avenue
Hubbard, Arthur Ward Sunderland
Q. T. v.; 5 South College; Varsity Baseball; Captain Class Baseball; Class President;
Orchestra; Fraternity Conference.
Ida, W arren Leroy Dudlej
9 North College
Ingalls, Dorsey Fisher Cheshire
Q. T. v.; 5 South College
Jen, H u a n Tientsin, China
Q. T. v., 31 East Pleasant Street
Knight, Harry Orisson Gardner
C. S. C; 96 Pleasant Street
Lindblad, Rockwood Chester North Grafton
K2; 20 South College; Manager Varsity Basketball; Manager Class Baseball; Assistant
Business Manager 1909 Index; President Fraternity Conference
Lull, Robert Delano Windsor, Vermont
•I>2K; 54 Pleasant Street; Business Manager 1909 Index; Class Treasurer; Vice-President
Y. M. C. A.
MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE
39
MacGown, Guy Ernestus
West Experiment Station; Class Baseball
Monahan, James Valentine
C. S. C. : East Pleasant Street
North Yarmouth, Maine
South Framingham
Neale, Harold Johnson Worcester
C. S. C. ; 9 South College; Varsity Basketball; Class Football and Basketball: Burnham
Eight; Varsity Football
Noble, Harold Gordon
K2; 20 South College; Class Basketball; Mandolin Club
Noyes, John
Q. T. v.; Wilder Hall; Class Baseball and Basketball; "H. H."
O'Grady, James Raphael
C. S. C; 8 South College; Varsity Baseball; Captain Class Baseball
Oliver, Joseph Thomas
14 Kellogg Avenue
Phelps, Harold Dwight
9 North College; Vice-President Stockbridge Club
Springfield
Roslindale
Holliston
Dorchester
West Springfield
Concord
F' otter, Richard Chute
Q. T. v.; 11 South College; Class Vice-President, 1907; Signal; Choir; First Prize Fhn
Speaking; Burnham Eight; "H. H."
Putnam. Charles Sumner
e*; 88 Pleasant Street; Class Secretary, 1908; Second Prize Burnham Essay
Sexton, George Francis
Walsh's; Varsity Football; Class Football
Shamiae, George Mansoor
Amherst, Mass.
Smulyan, Marcus Thomas
West Experiment Station
Thomson, Jared Brewer
C. S. C; 25 North College
Thompson, Myron Wood
Princeton
Worcester
Damascus, Syria
New York
Monterey
Halifax
*2;K; 18 South College; Manager Varsity Football; Class Football; 1909 Index; Fraternity
Conference; Class Vice-President
40 the1910indexvolumexxxx
Turner, Henry William Trinidad, Cuba
^C. S. C. ; 10 South College; Captain Varsity Football; Class Football; Baseball; Basket-
ball; Rope Pull; Attst 1909 Index; President Union; Burnham Eight
W arner, Frederick Chester Sunderland
Q. T. v.; 6 South College; Varsity Football and Baseball; Class Football and Baseball;
Captain Rope Pull
W aters, Theodore Charles Rocky Hill, Conn.
C. S. C; 6 North College
W ebb.CharlesRussell . Worcester
C. S. C. ; 10 South College; Class Baseball; Manager Class Baseball; Class Vice-Presi-
dent, 1905
Whaley, James Sidney East Orange, N. J.
12 East Pleasant Street; Artist 1909 InJex
White, Charles Howard Providence, R. I.
4 South College; Varsity Basketball; Class Basketball; President Y. M. C. A'.; Class
President, 1908; Class Secretary; Signal; Editor-in-Chief 1909 Index,; Leader Mandolin
Club; Glee Club; Flint and Burnham Speaking
White, Herbert Linwood Maynard
Q. T. v.; North Amherst; Editor-in-Chief Signal
Willis, Luther George Melrose Highlands
Q. T. v.; Amherst, Mass.; Varsity Football and Basketball; Class Basketball; Rope Pull;
Class Captain, 1906; "H. H."
Wilson, FrankHerbert Nahant
C. S. C; 12 Ncrth Colkge; Class Sergeanl-at-Arms, 1908; "H. H."
iD[)(i 3unior ^iass
X9X0
MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE
43
Junior History
ERE we are, once again looking back over the events of the past, not
as timid Freshmen, or as brave and daring Sophomores, but as loyal,
jolly Juniors with the true Mass'chusetts spirit.
Our first two years were not crowned with athletic victories,
for in these we were much handicapped by our small numbers, and
we also thought it better policy to teach the opposing classes the art
of politeness than to crown ourselves at the beginning with such
laurels. But in the all important struggle with the faculty we have proven ourselves
worthy, at least, of staying by our Alma Mater.
While we have settled down now to a life of peace and quiet we still delight to
recall the many escapades of the past. The strongest impressions of these may be left
with the class which follows or with some of the grave Seniors who heard and re-heard
the echo of " Vint's " paddle by the muddy waters of the college pond.
Besides the many events which are known to the other classes as well as to our-
selves, there are those of the class-room. While plodding through the trying days of
our Freshman year, a few of our men were lost by the wayside, but we are proud to
say that we enter now upon the " jolliest year of our lives " marching onward with
full ranks.
Perhaps our luck in not having " Billy's " Physics to deal with was the cause of
returning this year with as many as we had last, but still we feel sure that the time spent
on "Eulamellibranchiata" and "Mastigophora" has fully offset this.
To talk of ourselves and make what is said sound well is a most difficult task.
We are in such a position as this when relating the events of our past, for we must hit
between boastfulness and modesty.
As in centuries ago the Oracle was consulted for the future and what it would
bring forth, so to-day, if one could consult the Oracle, it would foretell a brilliant future
for the class of 1910. But these Oracles remain silent, their voices but a mystery,
and we can only hope to prove ourselves worthy sons of our Alma Mater.
THE 1910 INDEX VOLUME XXXX
Junior Class Officers
Leonard S. McLaine
Henry A. Brooks
Frank L. Thomas
Louis Brandt .
R. Harold Allen .
William E. Leonard
President
Vice-President
Secretary and Treasurer
Class Captain
. Sergeant-at-Arms
Historian
Class Yell
l—9—T—E—N!
Massachusetts,
Nineteen Ten.
Class Colors
Blue and White
MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE 45
Class of 1910
Allen, Rodolphus Harold Fall River
K2; 79 Pleasant Street; Manager Class Baseball; Class Basketball and Baseball; Class
Sergeant-at-arn:s; Mcndolin Club; Fraternity Conference
Annis, Ross Evered Natick
*2K; 116 PleEsant Street
Armstrong, Robert Pierson Rutherford, N. J.
$-)lv; 26 North College; Fraternity Conference
Bailey, Dexter Edward Tewksbury
e*; 12 North College
Bailey, Justus Conant Wareham
e*; 8 North College
Beeman, Francis Stone Amherst
KS; Main Street; Class Secretary and Treasurer, 1906; Rope Pull
Blaney, Jonathan Phillips Swampscott
C. S. C; 22 North College; Class Baseball; Captain Class Football; Varsity Football;
Class Basketball; Artist Index
Brandt, Louis Everett
K2; Clark Hall; Class Captain; Class Football and Basketball; Rope PuU; Glee Club;
College Choir; First Prize Burnham Eight; Artist Index
Brooks, Henry Alvan Cleveland, O.
*2K; 16 South College; Class Baseball; Class Vice-President; Signal Board; Senate; Index
Brooks, Sumner Gushing Amherst
*2K; M. A. C. Grounds; Class President, 1906; Class Track Team
Brown, Louis Carmel Bridgewater
K2; 28 North College; Class Football; Captain Class Baseball; Signal Board
Burke, Edward Joseph Holyoke
C. S. C; 9 South College; Captain Varsity Basketball; Captain Class Basketball; Man-
ager Varsity Baseball
46
THE 1910 INDEX VOLUME XXXX
Clarke, Walter Roe Milton-on-Hudson, N. Y.
_ K2; 1 Sculh College; Senate; Signal Board; Eailor-in-Chief Index; Secretary Y. M. C. A.
Cloues, William Arthur Warner, N. H.
Q. T. V. ; 7 South College; Class Track Team.
Cowles, Henry Trask Worcester
e*; 12 North College; Class Baseball; Rope Pull; Second Prize Burnham Essay
Damon, Edward Farnham Concord Junction
<!>2K; 18 South College; Class Baseball and Track Team; Assistant Manager Signal;
Assistant Manager Index; Social Union Committee
Dickinson,
a w r e n c e
S u 1
#2K; M. A. C. Grounds; Class Secretary and Treasurer, 1907-1908; Ma
Association; Mandolin Club
Eddy, Roger Sherman
Q. T. v.; 116 Pleasant Street; Class Football; Rope Pull; "H. H."
Everson, John Nelson
2 South College; Manager Class Basketball; Captain Class Track Team
Fisk, John Raymond
e*; 24 North College
Folsom, Josiah Chase
College Store, North College
Francis, Henry Russell
Q. T. v.; 10 North College
French, Horace Wells
Amherst
Musical
Dorchester
Hanover
Stoneham
Billerica
Dennisport
Pawtucket, R. I.
*2K; 15 South College; Varsity Football and Baseball; Class Football and Baseball;
Assistant Manager Va'sily Football
H
lynes, Frank Tuttle
Q. T. v.; 28 North College; Class President, 1^
Vice-President Social Union
Sturbridge
Senate ; Business Manager Index ;
Hazen, Myron Smith
Veterinary Laboratory; Class Football; Rope Pull; Varsity Football
Holland, Arthur Witt
Ki:; 24 North College; Treasurer Y. M. C. A.
Springfield
Shrewsbury
MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE
47
Hosmer, Charles Irwin Turner's Falls
8 South College; Varsity Football
Johnson, William Clarence South Framingham
Q. T. v.; 10 North College; Class Baseball; Index; Secretary and Treasurer Chemical Club
Leonard, William Edward Belmont
C. S. C; 22 North College; Class Football and Basketball; Rope PuH ; Varsity Football;
Senate; Class President, 1907; Class Historian; Burnham Eight; Class Track Team;
Fraternity Conference; Assistant Manager Varsity Basketball
McLaine, Leonard Septimus New York, N. Y.
K2; 1 South College; Class President; Class Vice-President, 1908; Index
Mendum, Samuel Weis Roxbury
e*; 8 North College; Third Prize Burnham Essay
Nickless, Fred Parker Carlisle
e*; College Store, North College; Class Track Team
Oertel, Charles Andrew South Hadley Falls.
Home
Partridge, FrankHerbert Cambridge
■J-SK; 13 South College; Class Football and Baseball
Paulsen, George New York, N. Y.
6 Allen Street
Prouty, Frank Alvin (Worcester
Q. T. v.; Snell Street; Class Football and Track Team
Rockwood, Albert Fletcher Concord
$— K; 15 South College; Class Baseball; Tennis Championship
Roy, Caliste Goldie Watertown
99 Pleasant Street
Schermerhorn, Lyman Gibbs Kingston, R. I.
Q. T. v.; 5 North College; Varsity Football; Class Football, Basketball and Baseball;
Rope Pull; Class Track Team; Class Captain, 1906-1907
Thomas, Frank Lincoln Athol
Q. T. v.; 21 North College; Class Baseball and Football; Class Secretary and Treasurer;
Index; Treasurer Musical Association
46 the1910indexvolumexxx:
Titus, Willard McCreedy Snow New Braintree
- ■t^K; 16 South College; Class Sergeant-al-Arms, 1908
Turner, Edward Harrison Reading
Q. T. v.; Plant House; Class Football; Burnham Eight; Fraternity Conference
Urban, Otto Velorous Taft Upton
K— ; 2 South College; Class Football; Class Track Team; President Chemical Club
Vinton, George Newton Sturbridge
Thompson House
Waldron, Ralph Augustus Hyde Park
Q. T. v.; East Experiment Station; Class Basketball; Mandolin Club; Class Track Team;
Band
Wallace, WiHiamNewton Amherst
6 Phillips Street
Ol)e Sopl)omore Class
19 11
MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE
51
Sophomore History
HE old, old proverb that " Time waits for no man " still holds true;
so we now find ourselves entering that mysterious realm of the Sopho-
more.
During our Freshman year we partly showed our real worth
by allowing the Sophomores to win but a single contest, that being
basket ball. In football, in spite of the fact that the Sophomores
had an older and more experienced team, we held them to a no
score." A very dark and gloomy outcome was predicted for 1911 in baseball, yet we
went onto the field and defeated 1910 to a tune not easily forgotten.
No one doubts but what 1911 showed herself worthy of old Massachusetts in the
way we pulled off the rope-pull, secured our president from the hands of the Sophomores
and ran off a successful banquet all in the short space of three days. We were challenged
by the Sophomores to pull rope during the April holidays. This, however, did not
appeal to some of the upper classmen, so the senate took charge. They ruled that the
rope pull should not come off until the following week. As a compromise they also
ruled that we must run our banquet off before the following Thursday.
During this time the Sophomores had not been idle. They captured our president
and spirited him off to parts unknown. We now sent out scouts with the result that at
an early hour Wednesday morning our president was with us. Plans were speedily made
and a very successful banquet quietly pulled off.
Our Sophomore history is but yet in its infancy, so let us hope that when it is full
grown it will show that we are a credit to Old Mass'chusetts.
52
THE I9I0 INDEX VOLUME XXXX
Sophomore Class Officers
James F. Adams
C. A. Smith .
Park W. Allen
Charles M. Damon
Raymond C. Barrows
Edward A. Larrabee
President
Vice-President
Secretary and Treasurer
Class Captain
. Sergeant-at-Arms
Historian
Class Yell
Ki Ro, Ki Ro, Ki Ro,
Nineteen Eleven,
M. A. a
Ke!
Class Colors
Brown and White
MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE
53
Class of 1911
Adams, James Fowler
Q. T. v.; 5 North College; Class President, 1908; Class Football
Melr
Allen. Park West Westfield
^J'ZK; 14 South College; Class Secretary and Treasurer; Orchestra; Glee Club; Band; Choir
Armstrong, Ralph Henry Holyoke
75 Pleasant Street
Baker, Herbert Jonathan Selbyville, Del.
K-; 11 North College; Burnham Eight
Barrows, Raymond Corbin Union, Conn.
Q. T. v.; ForristalTs; Class Sergeanl-at-Arms
Bean, Thomas Webster Holyoke
C. S. C; Soulh College; Varsity Baseball
Bentley, Arnold Gordon Hyde Park
Q. T. v.; 3 McClellan Street; Class Baseball; Manager Rope Pull
Blaney, Herbert W a r d w e 1 1 Swampscott
C. S. C; Pleasant Street; Manager Class Baseball; Burnhana Eight; Manager 1911 Index
West Springfield
Brown, Edgar Morton
e*; 11 North College
Brown, Irving Clarence
*-K; 6 Allen Street
Burnham, Arthur James
C. S. C; 75 Pleasant Street; Class Baseball
Bursley, Allyn Parker
6$; 6 Allen Street; Burnham Eight
Coash, William Henry
60 Pleasant Street; Class Baseball and Foolba
Natick
Holyoke
West Barnstable
La\vrence
54
THE 1910 INDEX VOLUME XXXX
Conant, Arthur Theodore
Home
Creidenberg
112 Pleasant Street
Damon, Charles Murry
C. S. C; Goldberg's; Class Captain; Captain Rope Pull
Davis, Egbert Norton
77 Pleasant Street
Davis, Irving Wilder
K2; Insectary; Band; Class Vice-President, 1908; Burnkam Eight
Drury, Harold Blake
23 North College; Burnham Eight
Gilgore, Irvin Craig
Q. T. v.; 3 McCIellan Street
Gunn, Clarence Armstrong
North Pleasant Street
Henry, W illard Francis
©*; 7 North College
Hill, Nathaniel Herbert
<I>i:K; 14 South College; Class Baseball
Howe, Harold Hosmer
K2; 79 Pleasant Street; Class Secretary and Treasurer, 1907
Huang, Chen-Hua
75 pleasant Street
Jenks, Albert Roscoe
88 Pleasant Street
Johnson, Leonard Matthews
27 North College
Labouteley, Gaston Edward
Ki;; Ki) House
Sunderland
Revere
Haydenville
Sherborn
Lowell
Athol
Schenectady, N. Y.
Southampton
Hopedale
Hopewell, N. J.
Springfield
Tientsin, China
Three Rivers
Easthampton
Lynn
MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE
55
L^arabee, Edward Arthur
K2; Clark Hall; Class Historian
Winthrop
Lodge, Charles Albert, Jr. Manchester
C. S. C. ; 87 Pleasant Street; Class Vice-President; Assistant Manager Varsity Baseball
McLaughlin, Frederick Adams Lee
K2; K2 House; Class Football
McNayr, Rupert Stanley
*2K; 13 SoutK College
Morse, Henry Bowditch
K2; K2: House; Class Football, Baseball and Basketball ; Varsity Footba
Nickerson, George Payne
'i'SK; East Experiment Station; Class Baseball
Nielson, Gustaf Arnold
C. S. C; 25 North College
Ostrolenk, Bernhard
23 North College
Parsons, Samuel Raynolds
Q. T. v.; Home; Signal; Organist
Ha
Patch, Roland Harrison
0<j). 9 Fearing Street
Pauly, Herman Alfred
Nash Hall
Pickard, Percy William
Q. T. v.; 7 North College
Piper, Ralph Waldo
Q. T. v.; 116 Pleasant Street; Class Baseball
Prouty, Philip Herman
Q. T. v.; 27 North College
Racicot, Phileas Armand
*2K; 15 South College; Orchestra
Salem
Amherst
West Newton
Gloversville, N. Y.
North Amherst
Wenham
Somerville
Hopedale
South Acton
Shrewsbury
Lowell
56
THE I9I0 INDEX VOLUME XXXX
Robinson, Ralph Cushing
_9 Fearing Street; Class Football
Sharpe, Arthur Harris
K2; K2 House; Class Foolball and Basketball; Editor 1911 Inde
Smith, Clarence Albert
Q. T. v.; Forrlslall's; Class Vice-President; Class Basketball
Smith, Raymond Goodale
3 Fea ing Street; Class Football
Stevenson, Lomas Oswald
C, S. C; 87 Pleasant Street
Warren, Edward Erving
82 Pleasant Street
Whitney, Raymond Lee
Q. T. v.; 21 North College; Leader of Band; Orchestra
Willard, Harold Francis
*2K; 44 Pleasant Street
Winn, Ervin Lawrence
96 Pleasant Street
South Boston
Saxonville
Northampton
Lynn
Nottingham, England
Leicester
Brockton
Leominster
Holden
Ol)e JPresl^man (Tlass
19 12
MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE
59
Freshman History
S IT possible that the class of 1912 has a history? We have been
together scarcely two weeks, and yet, during that time, events have
taken place which show in a large measure what the future of the
class is to be.
As we assembled in the chapel for the first time; some of us
happy and confident in the assurance of accepted certificates, others
anxious and worried over doubtful examinations, we were surprised
at the large size of our class and the small number of the Sophomores. After an ad-
dress of welcome from the president, and an explanation of college customs by the dean, we
were turned over to the upper classmen, who read numerous rules for our guidance during
this period of verdant ignorance..
As we examined our surroundings one disappointment greeted us. The pond, of
which we had heard so much, and through whose miry depths we had hoped to pull the
defeated Sophomores, was dry, and therefore the tug-of-war had to be indefinitely
postponed.
One morning, while the " Sophs " were industriously studying the how and why of
the law of gravity and kindred subjects, an automobile puffed up to the chapel, and
the class of 1912, called together by its friends, the Juniors, hastily assembled and the
class picture was taken. Meanwhile the " Sophs." had been told of what was taking
place, but all too late. They hurried from their classroom, arriving in time to see the
automobile carry the photographer and his camera safely out of sight.
Under the skillful coaching of the Juniors, we are fast developing a rope-pull team,
which we are confident will take yards of rope from our opponents, whenever they see
fit to challenge us. We have a number of men on the football squad, and the outlook for
a winning class team is bright. Our greatest victories will not be on the athletic field,
however, but in the classroom against such formidable rivals as the strong and weak
declensions, the irregular verbs, cube root, and the binomial theorem. We have come
here with a purpose, and are determined to prove ourselves worthy sons of the " Old
Bay State."
60
THE 1910 INDEX \'OLUME XXXX
Freshman Class Officers
Ezra I. Shaw
Daniel G. Tower
Thomas Hemenway
Herman C. Walker
Fred S. Merrill
Alden C. Brett
President
Vice-President
Secretary and Treasurer
Class Captain
. Sergeant-at-Arms
Historian
Class Yell
Rata, la ihrai, ia ihral, ia ihral!
Tera, da Ux, da lix, da lix!
Kicka, wah ha!
Kicl(a, Ti>ah ha!
1912
Rah! Rah! Rah!
Massachusetts.
Class Colors
Silver Gray and Maroon
MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE
61
Class of 1912
A c k e r m a n , Arthur J.
82 Pleasant Street
Beers, Rowland T.
Experiment Station Barn
Bent, William R.
E. Pleasant Street
Birdsall, Webster J.
58 Pleasant Street
Bodfish, Edward H.
6 Allen Street
Boland, Eric N.
9 Fearing Street
Brett, Alden C.
88 Pleasant Street
B rown. Merle R.
60 College Street
Burr, Frederick H.
Fearing Street
Cabot, George D.
75 Pleasant Street
Caldwell, Lawrence S.
3 McClellan Street
Campbell, Clare A.
35 E. Pleasant Street
Castle, Fred A.
116 Pleasant Street
Clancy, Eugene F.
South College
Clapp, Raymond K.
Forristall's
Cohen, Harold
96 Pleasant Street
Covin, Joseph W.
9 Fearing Street
Worcester
Billerica
Marlboro
Otego, N. Y.
West Barnstable
South Boston
North Abington
Greenwich Village
Ringville
Winchester
Lynn
Boston
Seattle, Wash.
South Hadley Falls
Westhampton
Boston
Boston
62
THE I9I0 INDEX VOLUME XXXX
Curran, Daniel J.
~E. Pleasant Street
Daniel, Edward S. C.
6 Allen Street
Deady, James E.
2 North East Street
Dee, J. Francis
96 Pleasant Street
Deming, Winfred G.
75 Pleasant Street
Dodge, Albert W .
88 Pleasant Street
Eastman, Edward B., Jr.
Eisenhaure, John L.
Tnompson House
Ells, Gordon W.
Mrs. Pitt's
Ellsworth, Henry B.
10 Allen Street
Fagerstrom, Leon E.
82 Pleasant Street
Finnegan, John T.
66 Pleasant Street
Fisherdeck, W a r r e n F .
Fitts, Frank O.
Fitzgerald, John J.
96 Pleasant Street
Folger, Ernest M.
Fearing Street
Fowler, George S.
44 Pleasant Street
Frost, Newton J. <
77 Pleasant Street
Gallagher, James A.
Mrs. Pitt's
Marlboro
Osterville
Amherst
Worcester
Weathersfield, Conn.
Wenham
North Amherst
North Reading
Cambridge
Holyoke
Worcester
Jamaica Plain
Amherst
North Amherst
Holyoke
Brockton
Wayland
Natick
North Wilmington
MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE
63
Garelick, George
47 Pleasant Street
Gaskill, Lewis W.
Goldberg's
Gelinas, Louis E.
Hamilton Street
Gibbs, Robert M.
Mrs. Fill's
Gibson, Lester E.
Mrs. Filt's
Goldberg, George
I 12 Pleasant Street
Gray, Frank L.
44 Triangle Street
Hall, Ralph S.
82 Pleasant Street
Hamilton, Percy
II McClellan Street
Harlow, Joseph A.
75 Pleasant Street
Heald, J. Morrill
II McClellan Street
Heatley, David B.
116 Pleasant Street
H e m e n w a y , Thomas
75 Pleasant Street
Hennessey, William F
Hickey, Frank B.
E. Pleasant Street
Hills, Frank B.
77 Pleasant Street
Hiltpold, Werner
35 E. Pleasant Street
Holland, Henry L.
28 N. Prospect Street
Hutchings, Herbert C
Forristall's
Buffalo
Hopedale
North Adams
Chester
Melrose Highlands
Boston
East Boston
Sturbridge
Cumberland
Turner's Falls
Watertown
Fall River
Winchester
Dorchester
Brockton
Bernardston
Easthanipton
Amherst
South Amherst
64
THE 1910 INDEX VOLUME xxxx
Kingsbury, Arthur F
Forristall's
Lamson, Robert W.
109 Main Street
Lloyd, Edward R.
Mrs. Fitt's
Lundgren, Arthur R.
88 Pleasant Street
M c G a r r , Thomas A.
Mrs. Fitt's
McLean, JohnR.
60 Pleasant Street
Martin, James F.
19 South East Street
Maxon, Donald C.
25 Sunset Avenue
Merkle, George E.
North East Street
Merrill, Fred S.
96 Pleasant Street
Messer, Alan I.
6 Phillips Street
Moreau, Theodore J
75 Pleasant Street
Muller. Alfred F.
88 Pleasant Street
Norris, Edward J.
96 Pleasant Street
Noyes, Harry A.
88 Pleasant Street
O'Flynn, George B.
96 Pleasant Street
Oppel, Eugene I.
82 Pleasant Street
Parker. Ralph R.
60 Pleasant Street
Pearson, Charles C.
96 Pleasant Street
Medfield
Amherst
Stow
Orange
Worcester
Medford
Amherst
Elkhart, Ind.
Amherst
Danvers
Pittsfield
Turner's Falls
Jamaica Plain
Somerville
Marlboro
Worcester
Litllefalls, N. Y.
Amherst
Arlington
MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE
65
Peckham, Curtis
Mr. Green's
Philbrick, William E.
96 Pleasant ^Street.
Pierpont, John E.
96 Pleasant Street.
Post, George A.
Hadley.
Pratt, Marshall C.
88 Pleasant Street.
Puffer, Stephen P.
Raymond, Arthur N.
88 Pleasant Street.
Reed, Edward R.
88 Pleasant Street.
Roberts, Clarence D.
82 Pleasant Street.
Robinson, Earle J.
116 Pleasant Street.
Rockwood, Lawrence I
1 16 Pleasant Street.
Sanctuary, William C,
147 South Pleasant Street.
Sellew, Lewis R.
77 Pleasant Street.
Shaw, Ezra I.
8 Spaulding Street.
Sheehan, Dennis A.
31 E. Pleasant Street.
Smith, Harrison E.
96 Pleasant Street.
Southwick, Benjamin '
Mrs. Pitt's.
Springer, Isaac
112 Pleasant Street.
Stack, Herbert J.
Clifford
Taunton
Williamsburg
New York, N. Y.
Lowell
North Amherst
Leominster
Abington
New Haven, Conn.
Hingham
Waterbury, Conn.
Amherst
Natick
Amherst
South Lincoln
Med ford
Buckiand
Boston
Amherst
66
THE 1910 INDEX VOLUME XXXX
Tong, Ying Hee
31 E. Pleasant Street.
Torrey, Ray E.
North A'mherst.
Tower, Daniel G.
96 Pleasant Street.
Tucker, JohnW.
Mrs. Pitt's.
Tupper, George W.
96 Pleasant Street.
Turner, Howard A.
E. Pleasant Street.
Wales, Robert W.
88 Pleasant Street.
Walker, Herman C.
77 Pleasant Street.
Warner, Roger A.
Forrislall's.
Whitney, Charles E.
Mrs. Filt's.
Wilbur, Emory S.
Thompson House.
Wilde, Earle I.
96 Pleasant Street.
Williams, Edward R,
116 Pleasant Street.
Williams, Silas
Goldberg's.
Wood, Howard H.
10 Allen Street.
Young, Edwin B.
35 E. Pleasant Streat.
China
North Leverett
Roxbury
Worcester
Roxbury
Dorchester
North Abington
Marlboro
Sunderland
Wakefield
East Wareham
Taunton
Concord
Fall River
Shelburne Falls
Dorchester
^
**■ -■
H'
^,r^^..H^.h
X
■
.■■*,'
-^^
68 the1910indexvolumexxx:
0. T. V.
1869-1908
Chapters
AMHERST
MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE
1869
BOSTON ALUMNI CHAPTER
1889
1 •'^» I
^m9^ ''~
MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE
69
Established 1869
B. Pa
Frederick Tuckerman
Gerald D. Jones
David Barry
J. E. Bement
0. T. V.
Amherst Chapter
Members
In Facultate
Robert W. Lyman
A. Vincent Osmun
In Urbe
Henri D. Haskins
James E. Deuel
Charles F. Deuel
E. H. Forristall
Albert McCloud
Incorporated 1890
Undergraduates
Orwell Burlton Briggs
George Murray Brown, Jr.
Patricio P. Cardin
Lamert Seymour Corbett
Samuel Sutton Grossman
Arthur Ward Hubbard
Dorsey Fisher Ingalls
Huan Jen
John Noyes
Richard Chute Potter
Frederick Chester Warner
Herbert Linwood White
Luther George Willis
William Arthur Cloues
Roger Sherman Eddy
Henry Russell Francis
Lym
Frank Tuttle Haynes
William Clarence Johnson
Frank Alvin Prouty
Frank Lincoln Thomas
Edward Harrison Turner
Ralph Augustus Waldron
James Fowler Adams
Raymond Corbin Barrows
Arnold Gordon Bentley
Irvin Craig Gilgore
Samuel Reynolds Parsons
Percy William Pickard
Ralph Waldo Piper
Philip Herman Prouty
Clarence Albert Smith
Raymond Lee Whitney
an Gibbs Schermerhorn
70
THE 1910 INDEX VOLUME XXXX
Phi Sigma Kappa
1873-1908
The Roll of Chapters
ALPHA
BETA
GAMMA
DELTA
EPSILON
ZETA
ETA
THETA
IOTA'
KAPPA
LAMBDA
MU
NU
XI
OMICRON
PI
RHO
SIGMA
TAU
UPSILON
PHI
CHI
PSI
Massachusetts Agricultural College 1873
Union University ......... 1888
Cornell University 1889
West Virginia University ....... 1891
Yale 1893
College of the City of New York 1896
University of Maryland 1897
Columbia University ......... 1897
Stevens Institute of Technology ...... 1899
Pennsylvania State College 1899
George Washington University ...... 1899
University of Pennsylvania 1900
Lehigh University 1901
Saint Lawrence University ....... 1902
Massachusetts Institute of Technology 1902
Franklin and Marshall College 1903
Queen's University ....... 1903
St. John's College 1903
Dartmouth College . 1905
Brown University 1906
Swarthmore College 1906
Williams College 1907
University of Virginia 1907
The Clubs
The New York Club, 1889
The Boston Club, 1897
The Albany Club, 1900
The Connecticut Club, 1901
The
The
The
Philadelphia Club, 1905
Southern Club, 1902
Morganlown Club, 1902
The Pittsburg Club, 1907
MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE
71
Phi Sigma Kappa
Organized 1873
Alpha Chapter
Incorporated 1892
Members
William P. Brooks
In Facultate
George E. Stone
S. Francis Howard
Philip H. Smith
Ralph J. Watts
Roy E. Cutting
In Urbe
Arthur W. Hall
Frank E. Thurston
Raymond H. Jackson
Undergraduates
Myron Wood Thompson
Robert Delano Lull
Waldo Darius Barlow
George Melvin Codding
Horace Wells French
Henry Alvan Brooks
Frank Herbert Partridge
Park West Allen
Nathaniel Herbert Hill
George Payne Nickerson
Harold Francis Willard
Edward Farnham Damon
Willard McCready Snow Titus
Sumner Cushing Brooks
Ross Everett Annis
Lawrence S. Dickinson
Robert Pierson Armstrong
Albert Fletcher Rockwood
Irving Clarence Brown
Rupert Stanley McNayr
Phileas Armand Racicot
Eugene Irving Oppel
11 the1910indexvolumexxx:
College Shakespearean Club
Massachusetts Agricultural College
THE CORPORATION.
Incorporated in 1 892
THE GRADUATE ASSOCIATION.
Organized September 4, 1897
THE COLLEGE CLUB.
Organized September 20, 1879
MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE
73
College Shakespearean Club
Honorary Members
Dean George F. Mills
Prof. George B. Churchill
Prof. John H. Genung
Prof. Herman Babson
Dr. Charles S. Walker
Dr. William Rolfe
Resident Graduates
Clarence E. Gordon
Sidney B. Haskell
Edwin F. Gaskell
Erwin S. Fulton
Frederick A. Johnson
George H. Chapman
Dr. J. B. Lindsey
Louis S. Walker
John N. Summers
Harry M. Jennison
Undergraduates
Harold Parsons Crosby
Donald John Caffrey
Gordon Russel Fulton
Harry Orrison Knight
James Valentine Monahan
Harold Johnson Neale
James Raphael O'Grady
Jared Brewer Thompson
Henry William Turner
Charles Russell Webb
Frank Herbert Wilson
Lomas
Oscar Christopher Bartlett
Jonathan Phillips Blaney
Edward Joseph Burke
William Edward Leonard
Frank Dobson McGraw
Gustaf Arnold Nielson
Herbert Wardwell Blaney
Thomas Webster Bean
Arthur James Burnham
Charles Murray Damon
Charles Albert Lodge, Jr.
Oswald Stevenson
74
THE 1910 INDEX VOLUME XXXX
Kappa Sigma
1867-1908
ZETA
BETA
ETA PRIME
MU
ALPHA ALPHA
ALPHA BETA
KAPPA
LAMBDA
ALPHA CHI
PHI
OMEGA
UPSILON
TAU
CHI
FSI
IOTA
GAMMA
BETA THETA
THETA
PI
ETA
SIGMA
NU
XI
DELTA
ALPHA GAMMA
ALPHA DELTA
ALPHA ZETA
ALPHA ETA
ALPHA THETA
ALPHA F.PSILON
ALPHA KAPPA
ALPHA LAMBDA
ALPHA MU
ALPHA NU
Active Chapters
University of Virginia ........ 1869
University of Alabama 1869
Trinity College, North Carolina 1873
Washington and Lee University ...... 1873
University of Maryland ....... 1874
Mercer University ........ 1875
Vanderbilt University 1877
University of Tennessee . . . ... . 1880
Lake Forest University ....... 1880
Southwestern Presbyterian University ..... 1882
University of the South 1882
Hampden Sidney College ....... 1883
University of Texas ........ 1884
Purdue University . . . ... . . . . 1885
University of Maine ........ 1886
Southwestern University ....... 1886
Louisiana State University ....... 1887
University of Indiana ........ 1887
Cumberland University 1887
Swarlhmore College ........ 1888
Randolph Macon College 1888
Tulane University 1889
William and Mary College 1890
University of Arkansas 1890
Davidson College 1890
University of Illinois 1891
Pennsylvania Stale ColLge 1892
University of Michigan . 1892
George Washington University ...... 1892
Union University ......... 1892
University of Penn-.ylvanij 1892
Cornell University 1892
University of Vermont 1893
University of North Carolina 1893
Wofford College 1893
^ 14-00 ^ »"< l'867
MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE
75
ALPHA PI
ALPHA RHO
ALPHA SIGMA
ALPHA TAU
ALPHA UPSILON
ALPHA PHI
ALPHA PSI
ALPHA OMEGA
BETA ALPHA
BETA BETA
BETA DELTA
BETA GAMMA
BETA EPSILON
BETA ZETA
BETA ETA
BETA IOTA
BETA KAPPA
BETA LAMBDA
BETA NU
BETA MU
BETA XI
BETA OMICRON
BETA PI
BETA RHO
BETA SIGMA
BETA TAU
BETA UPSILON
BETA PHI
BETA PSI
BETA CHI
BETA OMEGA
GAMMA ALPHA
GAMMA BETA
GAMMA GAMMA
GAMMA DELTA
GAMMA ZETA
GAMMA EPSILON
GAMMA ETA
GAMMA THETA
GAMMA IOTA
GAMMA KAPPA
Wabash College 1895
Bowdoin College 1895
Ohio Stale Universily ........ 1895
Georgia School of Technology ...... 1895
Millsaps College 1895
Bucknell University 1896
Universily of Nebraska ....... 1897
William Jewell College 1897
Brown Universily ........ 1898
Richmond College 1898
Washington and Jefferson College ...... 1898
Missouri State University . . . . - . . . 1898
University of Wisconsin ........ 1898
Stanford Universily 1899
Alabama Polytechnic Institut; 1900
Lehigh University 1900
New Hampshire Stale College 1901
University of Georgia ........ 1901
Kentucky State College 1901
University of Minnesota 1901
University of California I90I
University of Denver . . . . . . . . 1902
Dickinson College . 1902
University of Iowa 1902
Washington University . . . . . . . .1902
Baker University 1903
North Carolina Agricultural and Mechanical College . . 1903
Case School of Applied Science. ...... 1903
University of Washington 1903
Missouri School of Mines 1903
Colorado College 1904
Universily of Oregon 1904
Universily of Chicago ........ 1904
Colorado School of Mines 1904
Massachusetts Agricultural College ...... 1904
New York University 1905
Dartmouth College 1905
Harvard University 1905
Universily of Idaho 1905
Syracuse University ........ 1906
University of Oklahoma 1906
76
THE I9I0 INDEX VOLUME XXXX
Kappa Sigma
Alumni Chapters
Boston, Mass.
Buffalo, N. Y.
Ithaca, N. Y.
New York, N. Y.
Schenectady, N. Y.
Scranton, Pa.
Philadelphia. Pa.
Danville, Va.
Lynchburg, Va.
Newport News, Va.
Norfolk, Va.
Richmond, Va.
Washington, D. C.
Concord, N. C.
Durham, N. H.
Kingston, N. C.
Wilmington, N. C.
Atlanta, Ga.
Savannah, Ga.
Birmingham, Ala.
Montgomery, Ala.
Mobile, Ala.
Chattanooga, Tenn,
Corrington, Tenn.
Jackson, Tenn.
Memphis, Tenn.
Nashville, Tenn.
Louisville, Ky.
Pittsburg, Pa.
Columbus, O.
Chicago, 111.
Danville, III.
Indianapolis, Ind.
Milwaukee, Wis.
Kansas City, Mo.
Little Rock, Ark.
Pine Bluff, Ark.
Saint Louis, Mo.
Jackson, Miss.
New Orleans, La.
Ruston, La.
Vicksburg, Miss.
Waco, Tex.
Yazoo City, Miss.
Denver, Col.
Salt Lake City, Utah.
Los Angeles, Cal.
San Francisco, Cal.
Portland, Ore.
Seattle, Wash.
Fort Smith, Ark.
MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE
n
Kappa Sigma
Members
Charles Wellington
Frank A. Waugh
Wm. P. B. Lockwood
In Facultate
Edward A. White
James A. Foord
Harold F. Tompson
Edward B. Holland
William S. Regan
In Urbe
George E. Cutler
Raymond D. Whitmarsh
Undergraduates
Elmer Francis Hathaway
Rockwood Chester Lindblad
Harold Gordon Noble
Rodolphus Harold Allen
Francis Stone Beeman
Louis Brandt
Louis Carmel Brown
Walter Roe Clarke
Arthur Witt Holland
Arthu
Leonard Septimus McLaine
Otto Velorous Taft Urban
Herbert Jonathan Baker
Irving Wilder Davis
Harold Hosmer Howe
Gaston Edward Labouteley
Edward Arthur Larrabee
Frederick Adams Lee McLaughlin
Henry Bowditch Morse
Harris Sharpe
78 THE 1910 INDEX VOLUME XXXX
Theta Phi
MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE 79
Theta Phi
Founded February, 1908
Graduate Member
Paul Augustin Davis
Undergraduate Members
Benjamin Franklin Barnes, Jr. Charles Sumner Putnam
Dexter Edward Bailey Justus Conant Bailey
Henry Trask Cowles Raymond John Fisk
Samuel Weis Mendum Fred Parker Nickless
Edgar Morton Brown Willard Francis Henry
George Bates Merrill Roland Harrison Patch
80
THE 1910 INDEX VOLUME XXXX
Hubbard Thompson Leonard Turner Armstrons
Bartlett Lindblad Allen
MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE
Fraternity Conference
R. C. Lindblad .......... President
W. E. Leonard ......... Vice-President
O. C. Bartlett . ..... Secretary and Treasurer
Members
0. T. V.
A. W. Hubbard E. H. Turner
Phi Sigma Kappa
M. W. Thompson R. P. Armstrong
c. s. c.
O. C. Bartlett W. E. Leonard
Kappa Sigma
R. C. Lindblad R. H. Allen
Theta Phi
C. S. Putnam S. W. Mendum
Informal Committee
R. H. Allen, Chairman
E. H. Turner, Treasurer
82 the1910indexvolumexxxx
Phi Kappa Phi
Roll of Chapters
University of Maine Chapter
Pennsylvania State College Chapter
University of Tennessee Chapter
Massachusetts Agricultural College Chapter
Delaware College of Agriculture Chapter
--y
MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE
83
Phi Kappa Phi
Massachusetts Agricultural College Chapter
Officers
Dean George F. Mills
President
Clarence E. Gordon
Secretary
Harold F. Tompson
Charter Members
. Treasurer
E. A. Back, '04
A. W. Gilbert, '04
F. F. Henshaw,
■04
F. D. Couden, '04
S. B. Haskell, '04
H. M. White, '04
Faculty Members
A. L. Peck, '04
K. L. Butlerfield
C. H. Fernald
W. P. Brooks
G. F. Mills
C. Wellington
G. E. Stone
H. T. Fernald
J. B. Paige
J. E. Ostrander
F. A. Waugli
P. B. Hasbrouck
R. W. Lyman
S. F. Howard
A. V. Osmun
H. F. Tompson
J. A. Foord
C. E. Gordon
S. B. Haskell
Members by Affiliation
H. T. Fernald J. A. Foord
In Absentia
C. S. Walker
R. W. Lyman, '71
W. D. Russell, '71
W. Wheeler, '71
S. C. Thompson, '72
J. B. Minor, -73
J. H. Webb, '73
C. Wellington, '73
Graduate Members
E. H. Libbey, '74
E. E. Woodman, '74
J. F. Barrett, '75
W. H. Knapp, '75
W. P. Brooks, "75
C. F. Deuel, '76
W. A. McLeod, '76
H. Babson
G. A. Parker, '76
A. Clark, '77
C. S. Howe, '78
J. N. Hail, '78
S. B. Green, '79
J. L. Hills. '81
E. B. Rawson, '81
84
THE 1910 INDEX VOLUME XXXX
L. R. Taft, '82
J. E. Wilder, "82
J. B. Paige, '82
J. B. Lindsey, '83
C. H. Preston, '83
E. W. Allen, '85
J. E. Goldthwaite, '85
C. S. Phelps, '85
D. F. Carpenter, '86
C. F. W. Felt, '86
R. B. Mackintosh, '86
G. E. Stone, '86
F. B. Carpenter, '87
F. H. Fowler, '87
F. S. Cooley, '88
R. B. Moore, '88
F. W. Davis, '89
B. L. Hartwell, '89
D. Barry, '90
C. H. Jones, '90
F. J. Smith, '90
F. L. Arnold, '91
E. P. Felt, '91
H. M. Thomson, '92
F. B. Holland, '92
G. E. Taylor. '92
G. F. Curley, '93
F. S. Hoyt, '93
E. H. Lehnert. '93
T. S. Bacon, '94
S. F. Howard, '94
C. P. Lounsberry, '94
R. E. Smith, '94
H. A. Ballou, '95
H. L. Frost, '95
C. B. Lane, '95
F. L. Clapp, '96
S. W. Fletcher, '96
I. C. Poole, '96
J. L. Bartlett, '97
G. D. Leavens, '97
C. A. Peters, '97
R. D. Warden, '98
W. E. Hinds, '99
B. H. Smith, '99
F. H. Turner, '99
A. A. Harmon, '00
E. T. Hull, '00
A. C. Monahan, '00
C. E. Gordon, '01
W. R. Pierson, '01
A. C. Wilson, '01
T. M. Carpenter, '02
A. L. Dacey, '02
H. L. Knight, '02
J. G. Cook, '03
H. J. Franklin, '03
A. V. Osmun, '03
W. E. Tottingham, '03
E. A. Back, '04
F. D. Couden, '04
A. W. Gilbert, '04
S. B. Haskell, '04
F. F. Henshaw, '04
A. L. Peck, '04
H. M. White, '04
A. D. Taylor, '05
J. F. Lyman, '05
R. L. Adams, '05
E. C. Cushman, Miss.,
W. A. Munson, '05
G. W. Patch, '05
M. L. Sanborn, Miss., '05
H. F. Thompson, '05
B. Tupper, 05
G. N. Willis, '05
C. W. Carpenter, '06
G. T. French, '06
H. M. Russell, '06
E. H. Scott, '06
G. W. Sleeper, '06
W. C. Tannatt, '06
R. Wellington, '06
E. G. Bartlett, '07
W. E. Dickinson, '07
J. F. Eastman, '07
A. W. Higgins, '07
C. King, '07
C. M. Parker, '07
R. J. Watts, '07
T. L. Warner. '08
T. H. Jones, '08
E. W. Bailey, '08
L. D. Larsen, '08
T. A. Barry, '08
J. Daniel, '08
S. L. Davenport, '08
P. A. Davis. '08
C. S GiUett. '08
K. E. Gillett. '08
C. C. Gowdey, '08
H. K. Hayes, '08
W. F. Turner, '08
O. M. Turner. Miss.. '03
05 G. M. Brown, Jr., '09
m
ATHLETICS
— =sr®K!r^ OD®
[«1 = 4
IM1 = ® IISOWKI ^ §
IMl = ® [5)£iIST[Ml®l!!nrKI=g
IMl = 0® IH1@[LY eB®88 = §
M = aD w®ises§Tr(iis k[l=®
IPO= AMMlKSli" = ®
Ifll = 18 THFTS = B®
Bt^lttiti^
The Athletic Board
Members for 1908-09
Faculty
Dr. James B. Paige
Prof. Clarence E. Gordon
Dr. Percy L. Reynolds .
Prof. S. Francis Howard
John N. Summers .
M. W. Thompson
Alumni
George H. Chapman
Undergraduates
E. J. Burke
President
Vice-President
Executive Committee
Secretary and Treasurer
Auditor
R. C. Lindblad
Sexton Grossman Nielson Partridge Robinson
French, Asst. Mgr. Bullock. Coach Neale Hosmer Johnson Hazen Crosby Alge
Curran Blaney Morse Turner, Capt, Leonard Schermerhorn
Thompson, Mgr.
Walker
Varsity
Henry W. Turner .
Myron W. Thompson
Horace W. French
Matthew W. Bullock
Dr. Percy L. Reynolds
Captain
Manager
Assistant Manager
Coach
. Athletic Director
Team for 1908
Alger, Robinson, Center
Johnson, Hazen, Walker, Partridge, Guards
Sexton, Schermerhorn, Crosby, Tackles
Turner, Leonard, Crossman, Neilson, Ends
Blaney, Neale, Curran, Half Bacl(s
Hosmer, Full Baclf
Morse, Quarter Back
J^S^H
G 'i^^p9jHOI^9^^^^l
"k
J^j^^<^: 1 ,:
c
l£ ^^'^■^- '^ w'^ ' • '
d
i
yT*^' f:
4
''^itflK-WMiri
!»»■: w % «.
MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE
89
Football
UR FOOTBALL SEASON opened this year under rather unfavor-
able conditions, as many of last year's team were graduated. Among
them was our veteran quarter back, Cobb. This left us with the
proposition of developing much new material, a very hard problem to
solve in a small college.
Coach Bullock has met these conditions in a manner gratifying
to us all, as the results thus far predict. Our next two games with
Williams and Yale will be extremely hard, but if the team comes out in as good condition
as it has the first of the season it will be very satisfactory.
A great surprise came to the college when word was received that our manager was
unable to secure a game with Amherst. Two years ago when relations were renewed and
Amherst appeared once more on our schedule, the students as well as the faculty and
alumni welcomed it heartily, for this game arouses more enthusiasm than any other.
Naturally its absence came as a great blow and we hope that Amherst another year may
look at the M. A. C. game in a different light.
In closing I will say that the same spirit prevails here among the students during this
football season that has always been so characteristic in all our undertakings. And with
this same spirit in years to come let us hope that the new M. A. C. may be victorious.
MlT
^x ;^
■».» j
pi
n
mi
ISif, ,( Ill
IS^^^^..
''^m
90
THE 1910 INDEX VOLUME XXXX
1908
G. R. Cobb
S. S. Grossman
E. J. Burke
E. L. Breckenric
Baseball
Captain
Manager
Assistant Manager
Coach
1909
E. J. Burke
G. A. Lodge
College Team 1908
French, catcher
Gobb, Hubbard, pitchers
Hubbard, Gobb, first base
Shattuck, second base
O'Donnell, short stop
Tilton, third base
F. Warner, left field
T. Warner, right field
O'Grady, center field
Season 1908
Apr. 1 0. Rhode Island College at Kingston .
1 1 . Brown at Providence .
18. Amherst at Pratt Field
25. Springfield Training School at M. A. G
30. Norwich University at M. A. C. .
May 9. Worcester Tech. at Worcester
12. University of Vermont at M. A. C.
1 6. Connecticut Agricultural College at Storrs
23. Dartmouth at Hanover
29. Norwich University at Norwich
30 (a. m.) University of Vermont at Burlington
30 (p. m.) University of Vermont at Burlington
June 3. Springfield Training School at Springfield
5. Holy Cross at Worcester
6. Boston College at Boston
I 3. Boston College at M. A. C. .
Totals,
A. C.
3
Opponents
4
6
3
2
10
2
12
4
7
4
1
4
4
6
6
3
1
1
5
4
1
1
3
7
4
8
54
42
Won 10.
Lost 6.
92
THE 1910 INDEX VOLUME XXXX
Baseball
N REVIEWING the season of 1 908 one cannot help . being im-
pressed by the record which the team made. Victories over such
colleges as Brown and Vermont were extremely gratifying, especially
the latter, since Vermont had scored victories over Harvard, Dart-
mouth, Holy Cross, Notre Dame, and other leading colleges in the
East. Throughout the season, the team played with a speed and
versatility that would have reflected credit on any college team. The
enthusiasm shown by the student body helped the team wonderfully, while the services of
Coach Breckenridge were very much in evidence during the games with the larger colleges.
The percentage of games won was much higher than had ever been reached before, and this
is all the more noticeable because of the hard schedule which was played.
The prospects for this year do not seem quite so bright at present because we have
lost five men, among them the famous "Roger" Cobb, whose name is well known among
our rival colleges, and will be long remembered with regret by some of them. Two others
were also lost by graduation, Warner, rf, and Shattuck, 2b, while O'Donnell, ss, has left
college and Tilton 3b has entered Princeton. To offset this, the freshman class has brought
a grist of material and there is no reason why a fast team should not be developed.
A fine schedule has been arranged for the coming season and it presents a good op-
portunity for the further advancement of M. A. C. in intercollegiate contests, and in the
eyes of our numerous loyal alumni who are proudly watching the record of each season
from many distant parts of the world.
Let every man in college who can throw a baseball come out and do his best toward
developing a team that may surpass even the record of last season and be an honor and a
source of pride to all who have the best interests of college at heart.
llJMIIIIMtrtlt' lillllllll«'t> IHiH
Cobb's Liiitt Bull (or M. A. C:.
Neale
Regan Cobb
1907-08
E. J. Burke
H. M. Jennison
R. C. Lindblad
J. F. Doran
Lindblad, Asst. Mgr.
Jennison, Mgr.
Basketball
Captain
Manager
Ass'i Manager
Coach
Burlce, Capt.
Willis Daniels
1908-09
E. J. Burke
R. C. Lindblad
W. E. Leonard
Dr. P. L. Reynolds
Team for 1907-08
Burke, Cobb, Fortvards
Daniels, Center
Regan, Neale, Willis, Guards
94
THE 1910 INDEX VOLUME XXXX
Basketball
LTHOUGH interest in basketball for the past few years has been rather
dead, yet the sentiment expressed at a recent mass meeting showed the
student body to be still in favor of the game, and for another year
M. A. C. is to be represented by a team.
On looking over the record of the past season it can hardly be
said that it was a brilliant one, but it was at least successful consider-
ing the many difficulties with which the management had to contend.
The outlook for the coming season is encouraging. Handicapped somewhat by the loss of
a few men by the graduation of 1 908, yet with the old men we have with us and indica-
tions pointing to some promising material among the new men there is no reason why we
cannot turn out a winning team.
Now, to have a winning team requires the earnest and hearty co-operation of every
man in college. "Get together" fellows and show the good Old Mass'chusetts spirit by
giving your college team your best support.
MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE 95
Track
Executive Committee
On Track Athletics
H. W. Turner . . . . ' . . . . President
L. S. Corbett ...... Secretary and Treasurer
T. A. Barry E. F. Damon
W. S. Regan H. B. Morse
L. Brandt E. L. Daniels
M. A. C. Track and Field Records
Track Events
100 yd. Dash: G. N. Lew, '11. Time 10 2-5 sec.
220 yd. Low Hurdles: W. F. Sawyer, '08. Time, 29 2-5 sec.
220 yd. Dash: S. P. Tool, '95. Time, 24 2-5 sec.
440 yd. Dash: J. H. Chickering, '01. Time, 56 1-5 sec.
880 yd. Run: E. L. Macomber, '01. Time, 2 min. 10 sec.
Mile Run: H. E. Maynard, '99. Time, 4 min. 57 sec.
120 yd. Hurdles: L. C. Claflin, '02. Time, 18 2-5 sec.
1 Mile Bicycle: E. E. Saunders, '01. Time, 2 min. 28 2-5 sec.
Field Events
Running High Jump: K. E. Gillett, '08. 5 ft. 7 1-2 in.
Running Broad Jump: F. B. Shaw, '96. 20 ft. 6 3-4 in.
Putting 16 lb. Shot: H. P. Crosby, '09. 37 ft. 9 in.
Throwing Discus 4 lb. 4 oz. : W. E. Leonard, '10. 102.2 ft.
Throwing 16 lb. Hammer: F. G. Stanley, '00. 104 ft. 5 in.
Pole Vauh: F. B. Shaw, '96. 8 ft. 9 in.
96
THE 1910 INDEX VOLUME XXXX
WEARERS OF THE
M
Football
H. W. Turner
M. W. Thompson
S. S. Grossman
L. G. Willis
G. F. Sexton
F. C. Warner
H. P. Crosby
H. J. Neale
P. E. Alger
H. W. French
J. P. Blaney
L,. G. Schermerhorn
W. E. Leonard
C. I. Hosmer
M. S. Hazen
H. B. Morse
H. C. Walker
WEARERS OF THE
m
Baseball
J. R. O'Grady
S. S. Grossman
A. W. Hubbard
F". C. Warner
H. W. French
T. W. Bean
WEARERS OF THE
bMb
Basketball
E. J. Burke
G. H. White
H. J. Neale
L. G. Wilhs
Schermerhorn
Urban Turner Partridge
Eddy French Brown Leonard
Thomas Blaney, Capt. Hazen Brandt
Sophomore Football Team
Hazen, Turner, Center
Partridge, Eddy, Guards
Schermerhorn, Urban, Brandt, Tackles
Leonard, Prouty, Ends
Thomas, Quarter Bacl(
French, Blaney, Brown, Half Backs
Schermerhorn, McGraw, Full Backs
1910—0
1911—0
livcrson, Mgr. Brandt Blaney Schermerhorii SValdroii
Nielsen Allen Burke. Capt. Leonard
Sophomore Basketball Team
Allen, Burke, Leonard, Fonvards
' Schermerhorn, Center
Nielsen, Waldron, Brandt, Blaney, Guards
1910—10
1911—6
Tennis Champion
Albert F. Rockwood, 1910
100
THE 1910 INDEX VOLUME XXXX
Mftssetchu setts n-ru}-t3 iO
Clarke
Bartlett
Haynes Leonard
Grossman
Brooks
Fulton
College Senate
O. C. Bartlett President
P. E. Alger ......... Vice-President
W. R. Clarke ........ Secretary and Treasurer
P. E. Alger
S. S. Grossman
G. R. Fulton
W. E. Geer
Members
O. C. Bartlett
W. E. Leonard
F. T. Haynes
W. R. Clarke
H. A. Brooks
College Union
H. W. Turner
F. T. Haynes
President
Vice-President
R. J. Watts
F. C. Kenney
M. W. Thompson
Holland French
Brown Clarke White
Y. M. C. A.
C. H. White President
R. D. Lull Vice-President
W. R. Clarke Secretary
H. H. Howe Cor. Secretary
A. W. Holland Treasurer
R. J. Watts Auditor
Advisory Committee
Musical Committee
Membership Committee
Devotional Committee
Bible Study Committee
Reception Committee
Librarian
Pres. K. L. Butterfield
. L. Brandt
R. J. Watts
S. W. Mendum
G. M. Brown
H. W. French
R. H. Patch
MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE 105
Entomological Journal Club
Prof. C. H. Fernald C. W. Hooker
Dr. H. T. Fernald H. M. Jennison
J. N. Summers F. A. Johnston
A. G. B. Bouguet W. S. Regan
A. J. Bourne R. D. Whitmarsh
Stockbridge Club
Orwell B. Briggs ......... President
Harold D. Phelps ........ Vice-President
Robert P. Armstrong ......... Secretary
Executive Committee
Prof F. A. Waugh
Prof. J. A. Foord
Frank T. Haynes
Chas. S. Putnam
Benjamin Barnes, Jr.
106
THE 1910 INDEX VOLUME XXXX
The 1908 Stock- Judging Contest
HERE was instituted this year under the auspices of the New England
Federation of Agricultural Students an innovation which promises
much in the line of future results. This was a stock-judgmg contest
held October first at the Brocton Fair. The New England Federa-
tion of Agricultural Students was organized in December, 1907, at
Burlington, Vermont, and has for its purpose the drawing together of
the agricultural interests of the New England Agricultural colleges
into a closer relationship of sympathy and cooperation. These student judging contests
represent one of the several ways in which the Federation is planning to manifest itself.
In the contest this year the four colleges: Maine, New Hampshire, Massachusetts,
and Rhode Island competed, three men composing a team from each institution. The
details had been carefully arranged and the whole affair went through as smoothly as
could be desired and may well be called a striking success. Mr. J. R. Danks, superin-
tendent for F. Lothrop Ames, Langwater Farm, scored the contest and the results were as
follows: Maine scored 2685 points. New Hampshire was second with 2490, Rhode
Island third with 2460 and Massachusetts fourth with 2430. By winning the contest
the Maine students secure a magnificent silver trophy. Our Massachusetts team consisted
of Briggs '09, Armstrong and French '10.
These contests from now on will without doubt be an influence and an inspiration
in the work of our agricultural colleges. They will fill a long felt want and evolve into
a very important factor in our agricultural education.
MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE
107
Chemical Club
Otto V. Urban .
Lamert S. Corbett
Dr. C. Wellington
Dr. R. D. McLaurin
William C. Johnson
President
Vice-President
Vice-President
Vice-President
Secretary and Treasurer
Republican Club
Richard C. Potter
Frank T. Haynes .
Fred. C. Kenney
Frank A. Waugh
Philip A. Racicot
Roger S. Eddy
Herbert W. Blaney
President
Vice-President
Vice-President
Vice-President;
Secretary
Cor. Secretary
Treasurer
Democratic Club
Orwell B. Briggs .
Lamert S. Corbett
S. Francis Howard
John E. Ostrander
Louis C. Brown
Ralph G. Smith
John R. McLean
President
Vice-President
Vice-President
Vice-President
Secretary
Cor. Secretary
r^
MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE
109
Married Men's Club
Horace W. French
E. Harrison Turner
Lyman G. Schermerhorn
William E. Leonard
Frank H. Partridge
O. V. T. Urban .
Ralph A. Waldron
F. Alvin Prouty
Leonard S. McLaine
. Master of House
Chief Bottle Washer
. Head Nurse
Cradle Rocker
Janitor
Chef-de'Cuisine
Chauffeur
Lady's Maid
. . Valet
no
THE 1910 INDEX VOLUME XXXX
BROW* r 5 "=«
R.i.c,-o ;»
BARTMOBTIi:* m,,
M:5 ST. to
Not Yet But Soon Club
Louis Brandt .
Jonathen P. Blaney
R. Harold Allen
Summer C. Brooks
Louis C. Brown
Walter R. Clarke
Josiah C. Folsom
Myron S. Hazen
Arthur W. Holland
Draper Hall
. 23 Wilder Hall
1089 Worthington St., Springfield
Porter Hall (Once)
Anywhere
Mamaroneck, N.Y.
. 101 Safford Hall
Pearson Hall
Smith College
Hrown
Briggs
H. L. White, 1909
O. B. Bnggs, 1909
W. R. Clarke, 1910
E. F. Damon, 1910
R. C. Potter, 1909
M. F. Gear, 1909
C. H. White. 1909
L. C. Brown, 1910
H. A. Brooks, 1910
College Signal
Editor-in-Chief
, Business Manager
Assistant Editor
Assistant Business Manager
College Notes
Alumni Notes
Y. M. C. A. Notes
Athletic Notes
Department Notes
A. H. Sharpe. 1911
S. R. Parsons, 1911
Blaney
McLa
Damon
Index Board
Walter R. Clarke .
Frank T. Haynes .
E. Farnham Damon
Louis Brandt
Jonathan P. Blaney
Editor-in-Chief
Business Manager
Asst. Business Manager
. Artist
. . . Artist
Associate Editors
Henry A. Brooks
Leonard S. McLaine
Frank L. Thomas
William C. Johnson
114
THE 1910 INDEX \'OLUME XXXX
Handbook of the College
Published Annually by the Y. M. C. A.
Editor
Charles Howard White
»»wBP5T?'«>«r?«^
r
/\
r
3&
i^r
116
THE 1910 INDEX VOLUME XXXX
Musical Organizations
T IS ONLY during the past three years that this college has made any
attempt to have a Glee Club, Mandolin Club and Orchestra. The
lack of success of these clubs is due not to the want of material but
more to the lack of enthusiasm on the part of the student body.
Music should be an important feature of college hfe, and it is the duty
of every man if he has any musical ability to make a try for one of
these clubs.
The prospects of this year are brighter than ever before. With a large freshman
class to choose from, we hope to have a Glee Club, Mandolin Club and Orchestra of
which the college may well be proud.
In looking back over the past year one can hardly say that our musical clubs were
a success. Why should this have been so? It is due largely to the fact that the men
were too busily occupied otherwise to attend the rehearsals. This year the men should
do all they can to further the interests of these clubs by attending every rehearsal.
It is to be regretted that we have no musical instruction here in college and the large
amount of undeveloped talent is a strong plea for a musical training. It is to be hoped
in the near future this institution will have a Director of Music and that the musical asso-
ciation shall become a permanent organization and a source of interest and pleasure to all.
MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE
117
Musical Association
W. D. Barlow, "09
Lawrence S. Dickinson, ' 1
Frank L. Thomas, 10
President
Manager
Secretary and Treasurer
Glee Club
F. E. Thurston, '08
W. D. Barlow, '09
L. Brandt, '10
G. R. Fulton, '09
G. M. Brown, "09 .
James F. Adams, ' 1 1
Park W. Allen, '11
William F. Hennesey, ' 1 2
. First Tenor
. First Tenor
Second Tenor
Second Tenor
First Bass
First Bass
Second Bass
Second Bass
Orchestra
H. P. Crosby
H. P. Crosby
P. A. Racicot
Geo. A. Paulsen
R. W. Wales
P. W. Allen
S. C. Brooks
Leader
First Violin
First Violin
Second Violin
Second Violin
Trombone
. Piano
118
THE 1910 INDEX VOLUME XXXX
Mandolin and Banjo Club
Leader H. G. Noble
Mandolin . . . . . . . ... . E. H. Hathaway
Mandolin . . . C. H. White
Second Mandolin . . . . . . . . . G. M. Codding
Second Mandolin ......... Y. H. Tong
Second Mandolin F. C. Hull
Banjeaurine .......... R. H. Allen
Banjo R. A. Waldron
Second Banjo . . J. M. Heald
Second Banjo ......... G. D. Cabot
Guitar . . . . - . L. S. Dickinson
College Choir
S. Francis Howard .
Leader
S. F. Howard
. First Tenor
R. Potter
. First Tenor
L. Brandt
Second Tenor
F. A. Prouty
Second Tenor
H. Howe .
. First Basso
P. Allen
. First Basso
G. Brown
Second Basso
MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE
119
M. A. C. Clark Cadet Band
R. L. Whitney
R. A. Waldron
F. A. Prouty
P. W. Allen
I. W. Davis
E. L. Winn .
G. Goldberg .
W. C. Sanctuary
E. M. Folger
F. L. Gray .
E. I. Wilde .
E. S. Wilbur
S. P. Puffer .
R. A. Warner
W. F. Fisherdick
E. R. Williams
D. C. Maxon
L. W. Gaskill
G. D. Cabot .
C. A. Campbell
G. A. Post .
F. B. Hills .
N. J. Frost .
J. M. Heald.
J. W. Tucker
E. B. Eastman, Jr.
A. C. Brett .
E. I. Oppel .
C. I. Hosmer
Sergeant and Solo Cornet
Sergeant and Solo Cornet
Sergeant and Bass Drum
Corporal and First Trombone
Corporal and Snare Drum
. First Cornet
Second Cornet
Second Cornet
First Tenor
Solo Alto
Solo Alto
First Alto
First Alto
Baritone
B Flat Bass
E Flat Bass
. Tuba
Piccolo
. Flute
First Clarinet
First Clarinet
Second Clarinet
Second Clarinet
E. Flat Clarinet
Second Trombone
Second Trombone
First Trombone
Snare Drum
Cymbals
120
THE 1910 INDEX VOLUME xx;
Class Song
TrO- /?«>«2y '/o.
tk
'im\U\\ i ^l\] i \\ i \\\ \ \ U\M\y
i ^sm
V
^^
-4 i^^ i ^v(^ i^fi,;^!
I I U If - ... L ] rl
n
|."jjJJ | JJj | M^'ir.H ^
3=^^=s:
i
i
i:^j=<:3=3
S
±
fy^ >"/'
^^ 4i ilii ^ XJ
ftfn
f''jji i.i jjjjj j|jj| jjjj | j jjj | jjji | ,i
s
u^i AiAiuj m
rrmm
i i/jjj-j | j,i i jjjj i jjjjjjj'ijjjjdj^ i g s
s
4 4 , 4 4 , , 44 , 444 | 4i^, jf^
MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE 121
Class Song
We gather here to sing our song, to nineteen hundred ten.
We stand for Alma Mater, true Massachusetts men.
Our class shall lead in honor, in field and Hall of Fame.
We'll stand by her forever, to raise on high her name.
Chorus:
Nineteen ten forever.
The blue and white our guide,
All praise to thee O college dear,
Old Massachusetts tried.
Dear old class we hail thee,
Loyal Aggie men.
The echoing hills resound the cheer
For nineteen hundred ten.
We praise the hills and valleys near, the fairest of the land.
Let's join and give our cheer, boys; old Bay State's sons so grand.
When from thy sheltering care the class of Ten has gone.
We'll strive to echo forth the spirit of our song.
Chorus:
One Year with 1910
OCTOBER, 1907.
1 . Index Board Elected.
2. M. A. C. 0, Brown 5. 40th Anniversary of Founding of M. A. C.
3. Conference on Rural Progress.
4. Dedication of Trophy Room.
5. M. A. C. 11, R. I. 0. Informal.
6. Vesper Service conducted by Mr. Anderson of Amherst.
8. Bolt on Bobby.
1 0. Freshmen are unsuccessful with class picture.
1 1 . Freshman picture scores another failure.
12. M. A. C. 0, Dartmouth 6.
1 3. Vesper Service conducted by Mr. Estabrook of Amherst.
14. Billy says, "Get to the bottom of Mechanics."
1 5. Billy and Ray L. unite — Ginger = F = Mf.
19. M. A. C. 10, Holy Cross 5.
20. Sunday morning, 6. 1 5 a. m. — Some sleepy Freshmen.
2 1 . Bolted Neal in German.
22. Another foozle of Freshman picture.
23. Mettavvampe Mountain Club Formed.
24. Billy to Willy- "Why don't you use the brains God gave you?"
25. Mass Meeting.
26. M. A. C. 29, W. P. I. 0.
MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE
123
27. Sunday Evening Vesper Service.
29. Mass Meeting.
30. Mass Meeting.
3 1 . Mass Meeting.
NOVEMBER, 1907
I . Mass Meeting.
2. M. A. C. 0, Amherst 0, "in favor of the Aggies."
4. 1 909 bolts Daddy.
5. A zoological catastrophe.
6. Bolted Bobby in German.
7. Our Faculty "Sport" addressed the Y. M. C. A.
9. M. A. C. 19, Tufts 10.
1 3. Mass Meeting.
14. The word "training" is picturesquely defined.
15. Mass Meeting. 1909 bolts Holcomb.
16. M. A. C. 5, S. T. S. 0.
1 9. Trustees visit college.
20. Assembly addressed by Ex-Governor Utter of Rhode Island. Sophomore-Fresh-
men Foot Ball Challenge Posted.
2 1 . Nineteen-ten 0, Nineteen-eleven 0.
22. Reception to Foot Ball Men by the Ladies of the College.
23. Informal.
1 24 the1910indexvolumexxxx
27. College closes at 1.30 to-day for the Thanksgiving Recess.
28. Thanksgiving Day.
DECEMBER, 1907.
2. Stomach troubles cured.
3. No lessons to-day.
4. Professor Spencer of Amherst College speaks at Assembly on "Mexico."
5. Basket Ball season opens.
6. M. A. C. 36, Northampton Business College 1 3.
1 0. Rain, no drill.
1 I . Band Concert in Chapel.
12. Billy's last recitation with 1910 in Mechanics.
1 3. Friday, the I 3th, Frenzied Mechanics.
i 4. Sophomores 1 0, Freshmen 6.
16. "Nic" and "Mac" are excused from Chemistry.
I 7. Zoology Quizz, No. 2.
1 8. Christmas Holidays begin.
JANUARY, 1908.
1 . New Year's Day.
2. Spring Term opens. Thirty-one Short Horns register.
3. Billy says, "Get Busy."
4. Skating Carnival and Dance.
5. Awfully cold.
6. Chemistry Quizz.
7. German Examination, Weather Stormy.
8. Death of Dr. Armagnac.
9. Bolt on Gribben. '09 Index appears.
10. Brainy work: Voted to raise board to $3.75 per and to omit the Sunday night sup-
pers. M. A. C. 32, R. I. 14.
1 1. College Supper. Mr. Burnett reads "The Upper Berth."
I 3. First day of "Dry Analysis."
15. Bolt on Billy; little gained, much lost. s
16. Great skating "over the mountain" and "over the river."
1 8. Very successful informal.
19. The day after — everybody is sick.
20. Demerits all round — No cuffs. Exams, posted.
2 I . Boll on Bobby. Last lecture in Zoology.
MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE
125
22. Organ recital in chapel.
23. Mr. Willis of Worcester on "Life versus Living."
24. M. A. C. 1 6, Tufts I 5. Chemistry Quizz.
27. Bolt on Bobby.
28. Third and last of the Zoology Quizzes.
29. Final Quizz in Agriculture.
30. 9° below.
3\. Gordon says "One-third of forty-five = minus sixty.
FEBRUARY, 1908.
3. O the groaning! Can we stand the plugging?
8. The week is over. The time of worry is at hand.
9. We wait in fear and trembling.
1 0. Many sighs of relief. A few disheartened groans.
1 2. Lincoln's Birthday. Address by Caleb Stebbins.
1 3. M. A. C. 3, Williams 60.
1 4. Behold the "Prom" girl in the rain.
1 5. The rain continues to come and the snow to go.
1 6. O day of rest and talk.
17. 1910 elects its class officers.
21. M. A. C. 7, Holy Cross 16.
22. Washington's Birthday.
25. Short Horns rid us of recitations.
26. Kid has callers. A restless spirit in the class-room.
126
THE I9I0 INDEX VOLUME XXXX
27. Soph. -Senior Prom. Committee elected.
28. No English to-day.
29. M. A. C. 36, Worcester Polytechnic Institute 23.
MARCH, 1908.
1 . Weekly banquet at Draper Hall.
2. 1907-1908 College Catalogue comes out.
4. M. A. C. 1 3, Springfield Training School 10.
5. Mr. MacMillan on "College Men and the Coming Crisis."
6. Mumps are prevalent.
7. Informal. Sixty-seven couples.
8. Dr. Eliot of Boston conducted Vesper Service.
1 0. Munson gets busy with the Freshmen. Safe arrival of M. S. Howard.
1 1 . Bolt on Bobby. Blue birds arrive.
1 2. Farmer's Institute and short course graduation.
I 4. College Supper. Dr. Eastman gave a talk.
15. Severe thunder-shower.
I 7. Natural History Club addressed by Prof. R. S. Lull of Yale.
18. -Edward D. Mead on "Second Peace Conference at the Hague."
1 9. Bolt on Gribben. Our Editor gets hit by the Mumps.
20. Inter-class Indoor Track Meet. '09 wins with 37 points.
2 1 . Mettawampe Sugaring-oil Party at the Sugar Camps.
23. 1910 Visits the Dairy.
24. Agriculture Examination.
25. Very few fellows around college.
26. Spring Vacation Begins.
■■': r
11^^^
A. j/n^/ *'
MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE 127
APRIL, 1908.
2. College opened in a snow-storm.
3. Bolted Daddy's English.
5. Another snow-storm.
6. 191 around smoking new pipes.
7. Lecture by Professor Gulley of Conn. A. C. on "Fruit."
8. Mass meeting and more mumps.
9. Practical work for 1 9 1 in surveying.
1 0. M. A. C. 3, Rhode Island 4.
11. M. A. C. 6, Brown 3. Big celebration.
1 2. Chelsea Fire.
13. Waugh says "Get a wife at the very start."
15. Mass meeting. Kid gives a 12 minute quizz.
1 6. Mass meeting.
1 7. College Supper. Mr. Luce of Boston speaks on "College Life."
18. M. A. C. 0, Amherst 2.
19. Where, oh where is the Freshman President?
20. M. A. C. 10, Orange 0. Freshmen are nervous. •
2 1 . Freshmen win the Rope-Pull.
22. Band Concert. Freshmen hold class banquet.
23. Mr. MacPherson of Northampton on "Character."
25. Informal. M. A. C. 10, Springfield T. S. 2.
26. May-flower Sunday. Everybody takes a walk.
27. Daddy excuses us from English for the rest of the week.
29. Our Editor returns to college looking rather thin.
30. M. A. C. 12, Norwich 4. Chemistry final.
MAY, 1908.
1 . M. A. C. Musical Association gives concert in Stone Chapel.
2. '08 Celebrates its Tree Plantmg.
3. Professor Holcomb on "Arnold Toynbee."
4. '09 Plants an Oak. *
5. Demerits galore.
6. President Edwards of Rhode Island addresses assembly.
7. Horticulture quizz and class meeting.
9. M. A. C. 7, W. P. I. 3. 1910 Freshmen Banquet Celebration.
128 the1910indexvolumexxxx
10. Capt. Martin speaks on "Robert E. Lee."
12. ' M. A. C. 1, Vermont 0. Class meeting.
1 3. Ten Freshmen take a moonlight swim.
14. Secretary Hull of the Y. M. C. A. speaks on "Northfield."
1 5. High School Day.
1 6. M. A. C. 4, Connecticut "Aggies" 0.
1 7. Dr. WeUington speaks on "General Armstrong."
18. Freshmen defeat Amherst High School in base ball.
2 1 . Johnny gives a test in surveying.
22. Government Inspection. Inter-class Track Meet, 1911 wins. '09 presents a
Minstrel Show in Drill Hall.
23. Last Informal. M. A. C. 4, Dartmouth 6.
24. Professor Neal speaks on Sydney Lanier.
25. Exammation in English.
26. Faculty lose to '08, 11-0.
27. Address by Hon. A. S. Roe of Worcester on "General Stephens."
28. No English to-day.
29. Senior Examinations. M. A. C. 6, Norwich 3.
30. A very wet Memorial Day. Double header with Vermont — M. A. C. 0, Ver-
mont 1 ; M. A. C. 1 , Vermont 5.
31. "Henry Drummond" by Mr. Anderson of Amherst.
JUNE, 1908.
1 . Junior electives go in.
2. No English.
3. M. A. C. 4, Springfield T. S. 1 .
4. Senior vacation commences. The "Powers" decree that it will not be possible to
bolt examinations.
5. M. A. C. 1, Holy Cross 3.
6. M. A. C. 7, Boston College 4. Examinations posted.
7. Our Editor sets them up.
8. All quiet around the campus these nights.
9. The same.
1 0. Ditto.
1 1. Preparations for Sophomorc-Scnior "Prom " in full sway.
1 2. Flint oratorical contest.
MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE
129
I 3. M. A. C. 8, Boston College 0. Burnham Prize Speaking.
1 4. Baccalaureate Sunday.
15. Alumni Day. Sophomores 4, Freshmen 9.
1 6. Class Day. Sophomore-Senior Promenade.
1 7. Commencement Day. Good-bye to '08. Senior Banquet.
.How We '10 Men Pass the Summer
Allen — Time-keeper in cotton mill, Fall River.
Annis — M. A. C. Library.
Armstrong — Laborer on Hop Ranch, New York.
Bailey, D. E. — Farming in Lowell.
Bailey, J. C. — Vacationizing.
Beeman — Farming in West Brookfield.
Blaney- — Yachting on the North Shore.
Brandt — With Dean Waugh of M. A. C. Summer School.
Brooks, H. A. — Forestry in Orange, N. J.
Brooks, S. C. — Forestry on Conyers Manor, Greenwich, Conn.
Brown — Farming in Bridgewater.
Burke — Foreman in Mountain Park, Holyoke.
Clarke — Pomologist, Milton, N. Y.
Clones — Farming in New Hampshire.
Cowles — Farm Department at M. A. C.
Damon — Gypsy Moth Commission.
Dickinson — Surveying for M. A. C.
130 the1910index\olumexxxx
Eddy — \ acationizing at Nantasket Beach.
Everson — G>-psy Moth Commission, Hanover.
Fiske — Book Agent, United States.
Folsom — Farming in Billerica.
Francis — Drug Clerk, Cape Cod.
French — Farming at East Charlemont.
Haynes — Farming at Sturbridge.
Hcizen — Motorman in Springfield.
Holland — Farming in Shrewsbury.
Hosmer — Surveying for Town of Turner's Falls.
Johnson — Took School Census for Town of South Framingham.
Leonard — Horticultural Department of M. A. C.
McLaine — Traveled abroad.
Mendum — Hotel waiter. Block Island.
Nickless — Farming in Carhsle.
Oertel — Farming in South Hadley Falls.
Partridge — Waiter in Boston restaurant.
Paulsen — M. A. C. Summer School.
Prouty — Farm department, M. A. C.
Roy, Miss — M. A. C. Summer School.
Schermerhorn — Truck Farming, \X'est Newton.
Thomas — Farming at Athol.
Titus — For Muster Hill Stock Farm, New Braintree.
Turner — Horticultural Department, M. A. C.
Urban — ^Truck Farming, West Newton.
Vinton — Farm department, M. A. C.
Waldron — Automobile chauffeur.
Wallace — Hotel, Stonington, Conn.
SEPTEMBER, 1908
16. College opens at 1.30 P. M. 117 Freshmen enrolled.
1 7. The weary tramps to the top of the "Chem." Lab. begin.
1 8. Reception to Freshmen Class by ^ . M. C. A.
19. Dedication of M. A. C. Union.
20. Y. M. C. A. Rally.
21. Freshmen perform some stunts.
MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE
131
22. Freshmen outwit the Sophomores. Cattle Show Day.
23. Student Mass Meeting.
24. Class pictures taken.
25.
26. M. A. C. 2. Rhode Island 0.
27. Vespers conducted by Dr. Moxom of Springfield.
28.
29.
30. Talk by Henry Bond of Greenfield.
Cnmm^ttr^m^nt
Flint Oratorical Contest
Friday, June 12, 1908
Oscar Christopher Bartlett ....... Westhampton
"The Independent Voter."
Richard Chute Potter . . . . . . . . . Concord
"Marcus Aurehus."
Myron Francis Geer ......... Springfield
"Yellow Journalism."
George Murray Brown, Jr. ....... . Cambridge
"Chivalry in the Fight with the Saloon."
Charles Howard White ........ Providence, R. I.
"Two Views in a Great City."
Marcus Thomas Smulyan ....... New York, N. Y.
"Race Suicide."
134 THE I9I0 INDEX VOLUME XXX:
Burnham Prize Speaking
Saturday, June 13, 1908
Herbert J. Baker ........ Selbyville, Del.
"The Home in the Republic" — Crady.
Herbert W. Bianey ......... Swampscott
"Address to the Sons of Liberty" — Bales Student.
Harold H. Howe .......... Springfield
"Eulogy on President Garfield" — Blaine.
Irving W. Davis .......... Lowell
"Adams and Jefferson" — Webster.
Allyn P. Bursley West Barnstable
"The Victory of Marengo" — Joel T. Headle]).
Royal N. Hallowell ........ Jamaica Plain
"Grattan's Reply to Corey."
MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE 135
Baccalaureate Sermon
Sunday, June 14, 1908
By President Kenyon L. Butterfleld.
Subject: "The Reveille of Righteousness."
Glass Day Exercises
Tuesday, June 16, 1908
Planting of Class Ivy . . . . . . .By Class President
Ivy Poem . . . . . . . . . . H. T. Wheeler
Class Oration .......... D. Larsen
Class Song .......... L. W. Chapman
Class Ode D. P. Miller
Campus Oration ......... H. C. Chase
Pipe Oration K. E. Gillett
Hatchet Oration . . . . . . . . . . T. A. Barry
Class Tree Planted May 2, 1907.
Commencement Day
Wednesday, June 17, 1908
Commencement Oration:
Whitman H. Jordan, Sc. D., LL.D., of the New York Agricultural Experi-
ment Station. Subject: "True and False Appeals in Agriculture."
136 theI910indexvolumexxxx
Award of Prizes 1907-1908
The Grinnell Agricultural Prize:
To those members of the Senior Class who produce the best and second best
examinations, oral and written, in theoretical agriculture.
First prize, $40, John Daniel
Second prize, $20, Cliflord Dolan.
J. W. D. French Prize in Arboriculture:
To the writer of the best essay on the street trees of Amherst.
$25, to Charles S. Putnam.
Hills Botanical Prize:
For the best general herbarium.
$15, to David Larsen.
Burnham Prizes in English:
To Freshmen, for excellence in public declamation.
First prize, $25, Allyn Parker Bursley.
Second prize, $20, Herbert Jonathan Baker.
Honorable mention, Herbert Wardwell Blaney.
To Sophomores, for excellence in competitive essay-writing.
First prize, $20, No award.
Second prize, $10, Henry Trask Cowles.
Third prize, $5, Samuel Weis Mendum.
Flint Prizes in English:
To members of the Junior Class who produce the best and second best orations.
First prize, $30, Richard Chute Potter.
Second prize, $20, Charles Howard White.
Honorable mention, Marcus T homas Smulyan.
MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE 137
Entomological Prize:
First prize, $20, Carlton Craig Gowdey.
Second prize, $ 1 0, James Augustus Hyslop.
The Western Alumni Association Prize :
To that member of the Sophomore Class who, during his two years in college
has shown the greatest improvement in scholarship, character and example.
$25, to Frank Tuttle Haynes.
Military Honors:
The following cadets, members of the Senior Class, were reported to the
Adjutant-General of the United States Army and to the Adjutant-General of
Massachusetts, as showing special aptitude for military service:
Raymond Dean Whitmarsh.
Roland Hale Verbeck.
John Albert Anderson.
Chester Socrates Gillett.
Kenneth Edward Gillett.
Edwin Daniels Philbrick.
William Franklin Turner.
Hermon Temple Wheeler.
Samuel Judd Wright.
The Hills Prizes:
Best collection of Massachusetts trees and shrubs.
$ 1 0, to Stearns Lothrop Davenport.
Best collection of Massachusetts woods.
$ 1 0, to Winthrop Atherton Cummings.
38
THE 1910 INDEX VOLUME XXXX
Junior Promenade
February 15, 1908
Junior Prom Patronesses
Mrs. K.. L. Butterfield
Mrs. G. E. Stone
Mrs. P. B. Hasbrouck
Mrs. J. A. Foord
Mrs. J. E. Ostrander
Mrs. G. C. Martin
Junior Prom Committee
C. R. Webb, Chairman
Prof. P. B. Hasbrouck A. H. Hubbard
Capt. G. C. Martin M. W. Thompson
Prof. E. A. White H. W. Turner
R. C. Lindblad H. G. Noble
S. S. Grossman G. M. Codding
H. J. Neale
MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE 141
Sophomore-Senior Promenade
June 16, 1908
Sophomore-Senior Prom Patronesses
Mrs. K. L. Butterfield
Mrs. P. B. Hasbrouck
Mrs. J. B. Paige
Mrs. J. A. Foord
Mrs. G. C. Martin
Mrs. E. A. White
Sophomore-Senior Prom Committee
R. H. Allen, Chairman
Prof. P. B. Hasbrouck H. A. Brooks
Prof. E. A. White E. H. Turner
J. R. Parker W. E. Leonard
H. C. Chase L. S. Dickinson
L. Brandt R. A. Waldron
E. J. Burke W. S. Titus
Massachusetts Agricultural College
College Colors
Maroon and White
College Yell
Mass! Mass! Massachusetts!
Rah! Rah! Rah! Rah!
Mass'chusetts !
Clark Cadet Battalion Roster
Field Staff
R. C. Lindblad Major
M. W. Thompson ....... First Lieutenant and Adjutant
S. S. Grossman ...... First Lieutenant and Quartermaster
R. H. Allen Sergeant Major
D. E. Bailey ........ Quartermaster Sergeant
L. G. Schermerhorn ........ Color Sergeant
J. P. Blaney ......... Color Sergeant
Company Officers
COMPANY A
COMPANY B
COMPANY C
L. S. Corbelt
. H. W. Turner
. R. C. Potter .
. Captain
C. R. Webb .
. G. M. Codding
. F. C. Warner
. Firsl Lieutenant
H. J. Neale .
. j. Noyes
. E. L Chase .
. Second Lieutena
E. H. Turner
. S. C. Brooks
. R. S. Eddy .
. First Sergeant
H. A. Brooks
. L. Brandt
. L S. Dickinson
. Serseant
W. R. Clarke
. L. C. Brown .
. H. W. French
. Sergeant
W. C. Johnson
. F. T. Haynes
. M. S. Hazen
. Sergeant
L. S. McLaine
. W. E. Leonard
. G. W. Paulsen
. Sergeant
F. L. Thomas
. O. V. T. Urban
. A. F. Rockwood
. Sergeant
R. H. Armstrong
. J. F. Adams
. A. H. Sharpe
■ Corporal
H. J. Baker .
. I. C. Brown .
. A. P. Bursley
. Corporal
H. W. Blaney
. H. H. Howe .
. R. S. McNayr
Corporal
I. C. Gilgore .
. E. A. Larrabee
. G. E. Laboutelev
. Corporal
S. R. Parsons
. F. A. McLaughlin
. W. F. Henry .
Corporal
H. F. Willard
. P. W. Pickard
. T. W. Bean .
■ Corporal
C. A. Smith .
. H. B. Morse .
■ Corporal
144
THE 1910 INDEX VOLUME XXXX
A Review of the Year
T'S HARD for a student to take time enough to gather a review of
the year. College men are not made that way. Their thoughts
and actions are based upon the future. "To-morrow" is their watch-
word. Yet it behooves us to turn and take a retrospective of the
year, with its successes and failures, drawing lessons from each.
We will not linger over the magnificence of new buildmgs or
the increased enrollment of faculty, but rather give a history of the
student life and activities. Among the most prominent of the activities stands out tl-.e
glorious football season of 1907. At this period college enthusiasm was at its height.
The continued victories of our team even surpassed the hopes of our most optimistic.
In the early part of the year a Trophy room was opened which did so much to
create good fellowship and loyalty that it is with open arms that we welcome the estab-
lishing of a College Union and the opening of rooms in North College this year. This
good fellowship seems almost to have been the nucleus of a larger spirit of co-operation
of Trustees, Faculty and students. It truly marks an epoch in the history of M. A. C.
The Young Men's Christian Association has been as strong as ever and the new
department of Bible Study has worked well, promising to be the backbone of the
Y. M. C. A. activities.
A much needed organization for the study of nature was found in the Metavvampe
Club. Delightful excursions were taken to the nearby mountains, and in the spring the
club brought joy to the hearts of many of its friends by giving a Sugaring Off. The
fair maids of the neighbouring colleges were invited to partake of the abundance of
sweets.
The beginning of Y. M. C. A.'s track team takes its date from the past year. The
spirit for track was awakened, or rather re-awakened, because in the early athletic
history there was a track team in the late winter. On March 19th an interclass indoor
liack meet was held. The success of the meet and the good showing of material brought
the idea of an outdoor meet and in May one was held at Pratt Field.
Interspersed with all these events something else happened, "Aggie" trimmed
Brown in base ball to the tune of 6-3. "Breathes there a man whose soul's so dead"
that does not remember that celebration? The base ball season was characterized by a
goodly number of victories, placing us in the winning class in college base ball.
MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE
145
To impress even yet more strongly upon our minds that this was a year of begin-
nings and that we must be as httle children again, the fates decreed that the monster
mumps must have his way. Slowly, week by week, day by day, one by one, two by
twos, the ranks were diminished. At class rolls all absences accounted for by the
simple word "Mumps." Just before Commencement time the afflicted ones began again
to take their places and find themselves just on time for June exams.
Quickly the weeks had passed and the last few days of Commencement week were
before us. They came with feelings of joy and sadness. The joy of accomplished
work and prospects of a summer vacation. The sadness of saying good by to the boys
of 1 908, the largest graduating class in the history of the college.
The summer is over. We are back again. Back again with added cares upon our
shoulders, but also back again with the determination to make this year still better.
With the new class with its banner enrollment combined with the united upper classes, we
are going into the fight with added zeal and keeping always in view that symbol of the
future — "Co-operation."
A Glance Ahead
HE EDITOR of the Index has asked me to prophesy. I hesitate, for
it is unsafe to try to draw the curtains of the future. Yet everywhere
ideals are necessary. Men dream before they do. There must be
a plan for every building, a goal for every human achievement, an
ideal for every human purpose. We take these standards and work
towards them. We may not reach our ideal. Indeed, we may
change it from time to time, but we cannot get along without it.
All progress in an institution of this sort must be rooted in the past and evolve from
the present. Landscape architects tell us that some of the noble lines of trees on our
college campus are out of place. But some of these trees are forty years old. They
probably will remain where they are for a century longer. The college has been estab-
lished for over forty years. We cannot change its location; we cannot change its
history ; it has rooted itself in certain ways. We must abide the consequences of this
history — we must let the tree stand, we must let the tree grow.
The college is not quite like the tree. There are many things about it that we
cannot change, but we can shape its future growth. As a rule, the tree grows best if it
is left to itself. But an institution grows by what men do for it and put into it. So,
wise plans about a college ripen eventually into great achievements. Mistakes can some-
times be corrected, but we must not uproot. Our college must grow in accordance with
its history and its conditions. We must build upon the past and out of the present.
First of all, we must remember that this college is an agricultural college. Some-
times our friends forget this. This does not mean that it is a narrow college. The defi-
nition of agriculture is being constantly broadened, and is even now so inclusive thai we
might, if we cared to, easily become an agricultural university. But we are an agri-
MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE 147
cultural college. We cannot dismiss that fact. We do not wish to forget it. Let us
stick to our text. There is plenty of work to do. In fact, one of my fears is that some
institutions that have heretofore scorned the thought of agriculture, and perhaps looked
down upon us and our work, may in this day when agriculture is forgmg ahead so rapidly
get the start of us, take away our leadership in our chosen field.
We must remember that we are a New England college. This may mean little or
it may mean much. Of course it means that we must work in accordance with the ideas
and ideals of the school men of New England. It should not mean that we are to be
unduly deliberate, or unwilling to learn of others, simply because we have back of us ttie
prestige of New England.
Once more let us remember that this, as a state college, is under unique pledges to
the Commonwealth and to the United States. This fact means a good deal for us, as
faculty and as students. We have certain duties to the publiic, we have certam obh-
gations of conduct, simply because we are a state college. We cannot get away from
these, and no man is loyal to the college who tries to get away from them. We must own
the interests of the pubhc, because the public owns us.
What are some of the items of progress that we may look for during the ne.xt
decade?
SIZE: Personally, I don't care whether this is a large college or a small college.
I want it to be an efficient college. If we can maintain a strong institution that graduates
only fifty men a year, and these men are of a type that we can stand by through thick and
thin, it is better than to graduate five hundred men, the majority of whom are weaklings.
Yet if we can have some day an enrollment of a thousand men or more, can give them
the proper equipment, and can maintain the right sort of life for them, why not welcome
them? To my mind, the question of size is a subsidiary one. It all depends upon how
efficient we are.
EQUIPMENT : No one can foresee the growth of buildings and additions to
the faculty. It is obvious that we need some things very much. We have, for instance,
started to build up a strong division of agriculture. To do this, we will need the services
of several more professors, and we must have several large buildings for agriculture worthy
the name. We need a library which is fire-proof and adapted to the students' use, so
inviting that it shall become a great centre of student interest and activity. There are
other departments that need to be adequately housed. There are new departments that
will have to be created. We cannot have a well-equipped agricultural college until some
of these immediate needs for buildings and men are realized.
148 the1910indkxvolumexxxx
COURSES OF STUDY : Our courses of study, in the long run, will become more
flexible; there will be more electives for the advanced work. But the course, if possible,
will be even broader than now; we cannot surrender to the cry for over-specialization.
Our men must know something of the great human interests ; our graduates must possess
the tools of culture. More and more we must insist upon continually higher standards of
scholarship. This doesn't mean that we must try to get above the class of men who
naturally will come to us, but that the men who come must do constantly stronger work.
ATMOSPHERE: We are to see a better college spirit, with less emphasis upon
the fraternity and the class and the clique, and more emphasis, and continually more
emphasis, upon the college. The true M. A. C. spirit is a college spirit, and not a
clique spirit. There will develop gradually and naturally the cooperative idea between
the students and the faculty, so that we will not stand as opposing, but as cooperating,
forces. There will be an atmosphere of labor and not of leisure. But it will not be a
"dead" college. For the spirit of toil is a spirit of joy. Men will learn in college to
Icve to work. And they will play hard because they have worked hard.
I predict that the great thing about M. A. C. in future will be not so much its location,
which is ideal; not so much its equipment, which will continue to grow and which will
undoubtedly be satisfactory; not so much its faculty, which we trust will strengthen year
by year; not so much its attendance, which we hope will increase steadily and perma-
nently,- — but its atmosphere, — an atmosphere of devotion to its real purpose, of breadth
of view, of the cooperating spirit. On its altars shall be kindled the fires of an undying
love for Alma Mater. In its halls and on its grounds shall be created inspirations which
shall carry men into lives of high service to their fellow men, and young men will be glad
to come here to live for four weeks, or four years, because they will find an atmosphere
that builds them up, and that sends them out not only efficient workers but inspired by
the marvelous knowledge that science brings us, and by the spirit of service. For, after
all, these are the only adequate measures of a man's education.
X^^a^u^U'^^ ,
GRINDS
150 THE 1910 INDEX VOLUME XXXX
A Tale of A Starlight Night
Listen my children and you shall hear
Of a midnight bath that occurred one year.
When the sophomores were the class of ' 1
And what they did to the freshmen then.
The sophs had declared at the first of the year
That their course with the freshmen was perfectly clear;
They would treat them all as gentlemen
And to hazing would not subject them.
The scheme worked well, as some things do.
At first, because 'twas something new.
But freshmen there were not a few.
Who, fresh at first, still fresher grew,
And heeding not their friendly turn,
All their rules were wont to spurn.
Day by day they waxed in knowledge.
Day by day they waned in college
Rev'rence for the upper classmen.
Wrath of sophs called down upon them.
One day the sophomores got together.
('Twas the first of the mild spring weather.)
"This thing must stop, must cease, said they.
The freshmen too long have had their way."
Then one, the wisest of the class.
Said, "we my friends have played the ass.
Tho I speak not in accents polished.
Hazing should not, must not, be abolished."
Said one, whose forensic displays
Ofttimes caused "Daddy" much dismay,
'Friends, fellows, classmates,
Lend me your ears.
We shall not 'haze' the freshmen.
We shall 'train' them.
MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE 151
For a little training now and then.
Is good for e en the best freshmen.
How 'twill be done I'll say no more.
For I see my wife has got the floor."
"Mr. President! I rise to state
That beyond yon greensward lies a lake.
A sea, whose waters dark and gory
Are known as 'Freshmen's Purgatory.'
Into its bosom used to fly
Scant clad freshmen, in days gone by.
As other sophomores did, so, too, should we
Cast the freshest into this dismal sea.
Where, while the bullfrogs expatiate.
They have full leisure to cogitate
Upon their deeds, and meditate
Over their acts and actions. '
Many were the speeches made that day,
But the evidence pointed in but one way ;
"Into their hearts we'll strike dismay.
In brief, they swim without delay."
Such was the burden of their theme.
Let it suffice, we'll shift the scene.
Clad only in their birthday clothes.
Upon the bank the freshmen froze.
Round them ranged the sophomores stern,
Short of speech and taciturn
One less each time sat on the bank.
And fearfully gazed where last had sank
The comrade that but a minute before
Had shivered beside them on the shore.
Learned are they in an unknown lore.
Never will they be as fresh as yore
Quoth the freshmen,
"Nevermore."
A shout, borne over the budding trees.
Brought on the wings of the midnight breeze.
152 THE 1910 INDEX VOLUME XXXX
Told of the gathering freshmen clan,
Down in town, rallying to a man.
"This thing won't do," the sophomores said,
"Long should the freshmen have been in bed.
But, since they want to see the fun.
We should see that they see it done."
They stormed a house, their strongest hold.
Where freshies gathered with numbers bold.
"All freshmen out," the sophomores cried.
"Come and take us," freshmen replied.
The sophomore shouts and imprecations
Shook the buildings to its foundations.
And, where the freshmen had assembled,
The house, from floor to roof-tree, trembled.
But, when they'd seen the sophomore's ire.
And how, with wrath and rage on fire.
And anger wild, and how irate
The sophomores were, they knew their fate.
Then o'er their deeds they ruminate,
And wish the sophs to propitiate.
"Come out or we'll take you," one sophomore cried;
"We're coming, sir," the freshmen replied.
To college now their way they take.
And pause once more beside the lake.
The freshmen in a line must stand.
With sophomores ranged on either hand.
Each one as his name they call.
Steps forth, to be viewed by all.
His deeds and misdeeds they mention,
And, if they're needy of attention,
He's sentenced as is the custom hoary.
To a bath in "Freshmen's Purgatory."
One freshman who'd "come out to see the fun,"
Saw it and felt it all, ere he was done.
Twice in the pond he was made to swim,
And thrice the paddle they used on him.
The rest were then the gauntlet sent.
For this much reverence is lent.
MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE
153
For, in a manner much the same,
The Redskin, ere the Paleface came,
Treated the captives of his bow.
In the hazy Past of Long Ago.
But, instead of the club they used, 'tis said.
With unerring aim on the victim s head.
We used a paddle, made of pine.
Upon a spot that will not rime.
Some at first were inclined to walk.
But when they felt the paddle's shock.
Their pace they quickened, to a man.
And, toward the end. Lord! how they ran.
And every single mother's son
Left the line in a headlong run.
Thus my children, they did of old.
To freshmen, when they waxed too bold.
Take care that you do not as they.
But stick to the straight and narrow way.
154 THE 1910 INDEX VOLUME X XXX
Smith College, Northampton, Mass.,
April 20. 1 908.
Sweet William :-
I received your dear note this mornmg and was so sorry to hear you had the grip.
Drop it — take a suit case. No, I'm sorry I can't have you come over next Monday even-
ing for Alma Mater won't let me have callers on washday, but I would love to have you
come over Saturday evening as I said in my last. I was so sorry to miss the dancing class
last night. You must have had a slow time because you didn't dance with any other girl
in my absence, of course. I can just see you whirlmg the boys around. When I was
studying my history last night and came across William of Orange all I could think of
was William of Lemon. Richard the Lion-hearted made me think of William the Lion-
hearted. You certainly bothered me a lot, goodness I hope I don't get mixed in the
exams.
Yes, thank you, my grand uncle is much better. He has left off having the gout
and now has the rheumatism. Sister Edith has the measles and last week had the
mumps. I believe she expects to have the whooping-cough next. We are an invalid
family, you see. Just at present I'm suffering from palpitation of the heart. But you'll
come and see me soon. And then I'll have heart disease. Bring "Jack in the Pulpit"
with you.
Well, I must stop now.
Yours — I'm Bashful,
GUESS?
P. S. Now, William, you won't put this where any one can possibly see it will
you? You certainly can be trusted.
156 THE I9I0 INDEX VOLUME XXX:
Cheap Jokes
Kid (after cracking one of his jokes) : "There is a point to that joke and I don't
care if you do put it in your Index, but don't leave out the point as '09 did in theirs."
Johnny O: "How did you happen to break this tape, Mr. Folsom?"
Folsom: "Stepped on it."
Johnny O: "Well I'm glad it wasn't any worse than that, but from the numerous
dents it looks as if some one threw an axe at it.
Billy (in mechanics) : "McGraw, if I set this weight on the table what kind of work
does this table exemplify?"
McGraw: "I don't know but I should say it was woodwork."
Kid (looking at frat. seal on Allen's watch) : "That's cute?"
Allen: "No, Kappa Sig."
45 , „
= — 60; Gordon, that's all.
2
Why did Damon take a Rideout into the country? Because Lucy couldn't go.
Prof. Howard: "The laws of gravity were known even in the garden of Eden. "
Leonard: "Yes, Adam fell."
Kid (after pause) : "Yes and I believe you find that in verse 23."
Capt. Martin (to Blaney in Tactics) : "What effect does looking across a sheet of
water have on judging distance?"
Blaney (pauses).
Capt. Martin: "Perhaps you are not used to looking across water."
MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE 157
Sophomore English
(Outside Reading)
Allen — The Chorus Lady.
Annis — The Battle of the Books.
Armstrong — Temperance in the English Language.
Bailey, J. C. — Freckles.
Bailey, D. E. — The Task.
Beeman — The Tale of a Tub.
Blaney — A Pair of Blue Eyes.
Brooks, H. A. — Lady of the Lake.
Brooks, S. C. — Dictionary of the English Language.
Brown — The Spectator.
Brandt — The Autocrat of the Breakfast Table.
Burke — Mr. Dooley.
Clarke — The Index.
Cloues — The Good-Natured Man.
Cowles — The Faithful Shepherdess.
Damon — When Love Is Young.
Dickinson — Love's Labours Lost.
Everson — Letter to a Young Lady.
Eddy — The Man of the Hour.
Fiske — A Terrible Temptation.
Folsom — The Merchant of Venice.
THE 1910 INDEX VOLUME XXXX
Francis — The Amateur Photograher.
French — He Fell in Love With His Wife.
Haynes — Peck's Bad Boy.
Hazen — The Silent Man.
Holland— The White Devil.
Hosmer — A Tale of Two Cities.
Johnson — The Boss of Little Arcady.
Leonard — Night Thoughts.
McLaine — The Royal Tartan.
Nickless — Oliver Twist.
Mendum — The Germ.
Oertel — A Singular Life.
Partridge — Birdie.
Paulsen — The Stranger Within Thy Gates.
Prouty— The Wild Gallant.
Rockwood — The Last Ride Together.
Roy, Miss — The Princess.
Schermerhorn — The Ring and the Book.
Thomas — Tom Sawyer.
Titus — The Enchantress of Washington.
Turner— The World is Too Much With Me.
Urban — The Man of Feeling.
Vinton — He Dwelt Among the Untrodden Ways.
Waldron — "Fifty Miles from Boston."
Wallace— The Way of the World.
MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE
159
Class Elections
The Most Popular Man — Leonard.
The Homeliest Man — Vinton.
The Largest Beefer — Hazen.
The Most Modest Man — Folsom.
The Prettiest Man — Allen.
The Class Bluffer — Burke.
The Class Clown — Cloues.
The Greatest Fusser — Brandt.
The Class Sport — McLaine.
Faculty Elections
The Most Popular Man — P. B. Hasbrouck.
The Hardest Man — C. E. Gordon.
The Easiest Man — G. N. Holcomb.
The Greatest Cheap Joker — S. F. Howard.
The Jolliest Man — F. A. Waugh.
The Faculty Sport — F. A. Waugh.
The Smallest Joke — R. J. Watts.
The Faculty Preceptress — F. M. Gracey.
160 theI910indexvolumexxxx
Scraps from the Classics
Beeman:
"Let me have men about me who are fat.
Sleek men and such as sleep o' nights."
Turner:
"Yon Cassius hath a lean and hungry look.
He thinks too much, such men are dangerous."
Everson:
"And still they gazed and still the wonder grew
That one small head could contain all he knew."
Johnson ■
"Behold the child, by nature's kindly law.
Pleased with a rattle, tickled with a straw."
Annis:
"Twinkle, twinkle, little star.
How I wonder what you are."
French :
"Come, sweetheart, be my sweetheart
And wear this posy ring."
Miss Roy:
How dreary and lone
The world would appear
If woman were none!
Damon:
"The pleasures of life are the rights of men."
Holland:
'I must leave thee, maiden sweet!
Months will wane before we meet;"
Wallace:
"I ask but one recumbent chair."
Urban:
"I'm the fellah!"
MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE 16)
Brandt:
"He is but a landscape painter
And a village maiden she. "
Vinton :
"In her ear he whispers gaily."
Blaney :
"It is an ancient Mariner."
Brown :
"I'm not a chicken, I have seen
Full many a chill September."
Prouty :
"But hark! the air again is still.
The music all is ground,
And silence, like a poultice, comes
To heal the blows of sound ;
It cannot be; — it is, — it is, — •
A hat is going around!"
"Grinds"
"The smaller a man's brain, the closer to it, he rolls his trousers." — Urban take
notice.
Freshman meets Billy on street:
Fresh — "How do you do! I've changed my address from 88 Pleasant St. to
125 Pleasant St." Billy — "Is that so? Glad to hear it. Go up and push your
information thru the registrar's door."
Fiske 'to waiter in restaurant* : "Have you any fricasseed mastigophora with the
cilia removed?"
Waiter: "What?"
Fiske: "Ditto."
Waiter: "What?"
Fiske: "Ditto."
Waiter: "No, we're all out."
Kid: "What did we do at the last recitation?"
Allen: "You cracked a joke."
162
THE 1910 INDEX VOLUME XXXX
Math, Math, Mathematics
Rah, Rah, Rah, Rah,
Mathematics
BiUie, Billie, Billie.
Allen (giving description of mutton type of sheep) : "The sheep must carry its tail
high."
Johnny O: "All the leaders of squads have computed areas or at least have turned
in the work."
Prouty: "They all sit in the back row."
Kid: "Is hydrochloric acid, an acid, base, or salt?"
Allen: "Base."
Billie (calling the roll) : "Damon, Damon, where is Damon?
Voice: "Absent."
Gribben: "In this calculation all you do is multiply by 1000 and divide by 1000."
Billy: 'Bailey, J. C, you stop just where you are. You have taken 7 cuts."
Bailey: "You told me 8 the other day."
Billy: "Perhaps I mistook a O for a cut."
Mendum: "He was put up over night for a few days."
b" :
jfeMJ
e
.1.1. i^HHI
MBi iy ^"^fnj
P^y
■LM^KJ' -K JIHI
Li
^v .»
MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE 1 63
An Ode to Elsie B.
A humorist was Elsie B.
At least, that's what he once told me.
And who should know as well as he?
Hundreds of jokes he must have brained,
And scores he certainly has strained.
Dozens he doubtlessly has racked,
While half a score, perhaps, he cracked.
His jokes were given to us free.
If the point we'd pretend to see.
But, if we asked a diagram.
Drawn to scale, or a blue print plan.
Showing the point as plain as day.
Then twice the fee we'd surely pay.
As a fusser, too, the college owned his skill,
For, e'en tho jilted, he'd go fussing still.
In mathematics he was a "shark,"
Nor would he pale at "Billy's" bark.
In zoology, too, he could expatiate.
On why the arthropoda should sagaciate.
Certainly, 'twould be hard to find the mate.
Of sesquiped'al L. C. B. — the Great.
Overheard on the Campus
Stranger: "I understand they have instituted a number of new courses here this year."
Student: "O yes, the very latest course is one in matrimony. The course is open to
stenographers and bookkeepers only. We graduated about six last year, and prospects
are better this year, they say."
164 the1910indexvolumexxxx
Zoology
The class goes into the lecture.
Doc. Gordon is already there.
The first procedure is calling the roll.
And this is done with great care.
After carefully marking the absent,
And the tardy, too, as well.
Doc. starts right in on "Mollusca,"
Or of "Arthropods" may tell.
While most of the class is sleeping
And a few are taking notes.
On "Lamellebranchiata,"
The poor professor dotes.
But when examination comes,
We find where we have blundered.
For most of the class gets below twenty-three.
And only one shark gets one hundred.
Of course you have read the phrase in the Bible
That tells about Faith, Hope and Charity.
To get by a course such as Gordon teaches
All three are involved necessarily.
He must have Faith in teaching the subject.
The Hope lies with you and I,
Just where the Charity comes in the case.
Is when the whole class gets by.
MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE
165
Said Beetle to the Kid one day.
You are a rotten joker.
The only game that you can play
Is a rummy game of poker.
Swan Song of the Flunked
When I was fresh, and in my prime,
I could get a ten spot most any old time.
But now I am old and my brains grown cold.
And I can't get by to save my soul.
166 theI9I0indexvolumexxxx
Limericks
Frank Haynes they say is a shark.
And always gets A + for a mark.
All this we allow.
But we'll tell you right now.
That he's always in for a lark.
There was a young man called "Hen,"
Whom his friends asked where he had been.
But we all know quite well
There is no need to tell.
He was over the mountain till ten.
There was a young man named Hazen,
Who talked like bloody blue blazen.
But for all his hot air
He's right on the square.
And for this we hand him the raisin.
There was a young man named "Moc,"
For old England he stood like a rock.
And when he was asked
He said if he das't
He would take a big glass of "Old Bock.
MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE 167
We have a long man named Cy Clarke,
Who has a most terrible bark.
He's so fond of the girls
That his head fairly whirls
And he's afraid to go home in the dark.
Lib Bailey is as straight as a stick,
Indeed he is not very thick.
In math he does well.
As all of us tell,
And always gets by pretty slick.
There was a young man from Fall River,
And he was a friend of old "Sliver,"
For we all called him "Pete,"
After the girls he did beat.
Until he got stung by the "River."
There was a young man named Brown,
Who decided a skunk to hunt down.
When he saw a striped rabbit.
He told Pete Allen to grab it.
We thought he had bats in his crown.
.Tub Beeman is truly quite fat^
There is no dispute about that.
If his head could compete
With the size of his feet.
He'd wear a number ten hat.
MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE
169
Gone But Not Forgotten
L. C. Bartlett
W. H. Bigelow
E. H. Brown
A. E. Call
W. E. Gary
G. B. Ghase
W. E. Gurtis
J. G. Drohan
G. V. Eldridge
Wm. Faelton
H. A. Gould
D. B. Hastings
A. C. Kelley
Miss M. Lambert
L. E. Leonard
W. G. Lightbody
I. B. Lipman
F. D. McGraw
H. J. Moore
R. W. Newcomb
L. J. Orr
A. J. Robb
H. S. Smith
S. S. Smith
C. W. Stockwell
A. J. Sullivan
I. H. Taylor
W. F. Woodward
170
THE 19)0 INDEX VOLUME XXXX
1910 Past and Present
RODOLPHUS HAROLD ALLEN. Harold will be a
April, on the 11th. His home has always been in Fall Rivei
to his own story, but Cottage City, "Hamp," and some other
sorts claim part of the honor. Rodolph went lo B. M. C
School, Rah! Rah! Rah! where he
learned all the social arts, such as dancing,
fussing, and (drill?) Since coming to
college, "Pete" has mastered a few simple
studies, like zoology and chemistry. But
his brilliancy in the recitation room is
eclipsed by his athletic stunts. His poetic
temperament is shown by his spasm en-
titled, "There was a young girl from Fall
River." Peter seems to have an affinity
for Repeater, Bill Leonard. He man-
aged the class football team, played
on class basketball and baseball team, was chairman of the Sophomore-
Senior Prom. Committee, and Informal Committee.
Pete is a K2 and hopes some day to become a Forester.
voter next
according
D. High
ROSS EVERED ANN IS. This diminutive Lord Chesterfield first
opened his lustrous optical orbs al Natick. Mass., on July 5, 1886, only
to find himself one day loo late for the celebration. He has never re-
covered from this disappointment and wears a sad, meditative aspect lo
this day. Ross, in his youthful days, was
a plugger, vanquishing the N. H. S.
faculty in three rounds. Since he has
elected mathematics, however, he has ac-
quired such a pull with Johnnie that he
doesn't have to study. He fusses on occa-
sions, and is a great favorite with the co-
eds. He hibernates in the Library, and is
a member of 'I'-K.
MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE
171
ROBERT PIERSON ARMSTRONG. In 1883 a tornado struck
the town of Milford, N. Y. and left this animated particle of protoplasm,
whose common name is Bob. Chauncey's prep, schools are numerous,
among them being Hartwich Semmary and Stevens School. His present
home is not in the United States, but in Rutherford, N. J. Bob has been
with us only a year, but he has made his presence known. He is a true
and. loyal '10 man and was on the relay and slock judging teams. Bob
believes in farming so strongly that he
is going to turn into a Hayseed himself.
He belongs to the $2K Fraternity.
DEXTER EDWARD BAILEY. Dexter happened at Andover
March 29, 1890, but later moved to Tewksbury. He went through the
grammar school of thai village and entered Lowell High, from which he
graduated in 1906. Coming to M. A. C. during the middle of our
Freshman year he easily made good and has plugged so much since
then that he is now known as a class "shark." On account of his mili-
tary bearing and erect carriajje he has be
geant of the battalion. "Lib" likes to
rough house but has not yet learned to
lick his wife. He ran on our class relay
team, is a member of 6^ and has chosen
Chemistry for his life's work.
made Quartermaster Ser-
11
THE I9I0 INDEX VOLUME XXXX
JUSTUS CONANT BA'ILEY. Bill is a true son of Nature for he
was born out in Box Butte, Nebraska, on September 27, 1887. There
must have been Indians out there, because Tim always speaks in a whis-
per, as if he was afraid of being scalped. He now hoes in peace at
Wareham, Mass., and graduated from W. H. S. in 1906. Justus is a
running male of Lib.'s and there is always lots of both, for us all.
However, Bill is never lacking in case of trouble, and has ever proved
a good worker for our class. He belongs
to 6*1* and chooses Horticulture.
FRANCIS STONE BEEMAN. This high-stepping mammoth was
picked up in Barre, Vt., August 4lh, 1889. But on account of his
enormous proportions it was found necessary to move "Sliver," Junior, to
Amherst, where he now lives. "Tubby's" prep, school was Warren
High, and he graduated from there in 1906. "Fat" has been Class Secre-
tary and Treasurer because it was thought his size would scare away the
most daring robber. "Tub" was also anchor on the rope pull team. He
is a member of KS, and is electing
wheat.
MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE
173
JONATHAN PHILLIPS BLANEY. "Beetle" flew into Swamps-
colt, alighting there July 25, 1887, and graduating from the High School
in 1905. Feeling his incompetence to deal with "Conditions" at M. A.
C. he took a P. G. course at High School. We feel proud to have
John a member of our class, for since coming to college he has played
"Varsity** football and baseball as well as taking a prominent part in
our class games. This man's ability does not stop with athletics, for he
is an artist of this book and has proven himself no mean member of
the class in political economy. To back up his economic views Mr. Blaney
thoroughly believes that two people can live as cheaply as one; hence his
many trips "Over the Mounlam." He is a member of C. S. C, and
elects Landscape.
LOUIS BRANDT. This champion of co-education began to ad-
vocate his theory in the City of Learnmg, on November 5, 1887. De-
ciding that the atmosphere was too heavy there, he moved to the lighter
climate of Everett, Mass., and there graduated from Everett High in
'06. "Nimrod" is truly our fusser; his fair maidens are distributed from
Maine to California. "Lou" is a prommenl man in our class, having
been Class Captain, on the football and basketball teams, an artist of
this book, member of the Glee Club, First Prize Burnham Eight, and
other honors loo numerous to mention- He is a KZ and elected Horti-
culture.
" '^--...vf' ^^..sd^^ *
. Jr_.^_All
74
THE 1910 INDEX VOLUME XXXX
HENRY ALVAN BROOKS.-
"But gie me a canny hour at e'en,
My arms about, my dearie, O,
An warly cares and warly men.
My a gal ta saltierie, O!"
Spike was born August 18, 1886, in
Framingham, Mass. The honors received
by him are the College Senate, Signal,
and Vice-President of the Class. He
sure is a deep one, and to prove this
we state that he has elected Math, and
Scotch dialect. The latter is partly a
correspondent course and partly a night
course. He is a member of the "!>— K
fraternity.
SUMNER GUSHING BROOKS. Born August 17, 1888, under
the sunny skies of Japan, shipped from there to the Country of the Rhine;
again transferred to this fair land of ours; such have been the wanderings
of this fellow. We are glad to say that he has retained neither the tea-
loving characteristic of the Jap, nor the love for German beer. Sumner
graduated from the Amherst High School along with "Dick," who brought
him down the Botany walk to "Aggie." Sumner's knowledge of
customs gained for him the position of
1910's first President. He is a speedy
runner, though small, gets in his share of
fussing, and hopes some day to make
the apples of Massachusetts as widely
known as those of Oregon. *I*2IC claims
"Cush" as a member.
liege
MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE
175
LOUIS CARMEL BROWN.-
Where, oh where did this
Thing come from,
Nobody knows, nobody knows.
Bui it is thought that it came from Lakev
1886. Where it came from doesn't upsel
us, but the fact it is here now is the cause
of all our trouble. El-sie is a thorough
windjammer from Bridgewater, Mass.,
graduating from B. H. S. in 1906. Louis
has been leader of the class baseball team
and has also helped us by playing foot-
ball. Other honors have come to him
through his ability to sling ink for the
Signal. He is a K2 and is going in for
Math.
Sk k! Sk k! Sk k!
idgewater, Bridgewater, Bridgewater.
od, Ohio, about March 24,
EDWARD JOSEPH BURKE.—
"Holyoke, Holyoke, that's the place for me."
This nameless windjammer was thrust upon the world in the Empire
City of Holyoke, February 18, 1888. He prepared for M. A. C. at
Holyoke High, where he learned to play basketball. Peanut is now a
full-fledged dealer of hot air and has been
highly recommended to the American
Hoi-Air Dispensers' Union. Eddie is
manager of the "Varsity baseball team and
Captain of Varsity basketball. He is a
member of C. S. C. and has elected
Chemistry.
176
THE 191U INDEX VOLUME XXXX
WALTER ROE CLARKE. It would take the combined pens of
Homer, Herodotus, and Hearst to properly chronicle the doings of ' Cy."
He was born at Millon-on-the-Hudson, N. Y., IVlarch 29, 1886, pre-
pared at C. C. I. and entered M. A. C. with the class of 1910, for
which he has done a great deal since he has been with us. He made
the Signal board in his Freshman year. Also the Burnham Eight. He
is Secretary of the Y. M. C. A., member of the Senate, Assistant Editor
of the Signal, and Editor-in-Chief of
this book. Herodotus would say some-
thing of "Cy's" football days. Homer
would add a glowmg account of his mar-
tial stride and soldierly appearance, while
Hearst alone can tell what he would say
of this Ciliate. At present the only kind
of apple which "Cy" can raise is his
Adam's apple, when he lifts his voice in
harmony with the choir. He hopes,
however, to be able to raise some other kinds, so is majoring in Pomology.
He is a member of K2.
WILLIAM ARTHUR CLOUES. This studious, industrious, in-
structive, and learned youthful cogitator first uttered infantile sounds in
that renowned city of Boston, April 6, 1888. William has always been
a deep thinker and has visited many preparatory schools in order to im-
bibe more knowledge before he entered here. Among them are Mont-
pelier H. S., Littleton H. S., Simonds H. S., and Warner H. S. Arthur
also indulged in a P. G. course at Warner H. S. Art's paternal residence
is invaginated in the White Mountains or
Warner, N. H. Demosthenes is not lack-
ing in athletic ability, for he has demon-
strated that he can play ball and also do
good work on the track. He is a mem-
ber of Q. T. V. and is in for hoe-culture. Si,^. -. ^ Mt,U
MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE
177
HENRY TRASK COWLES. This Side-Wheel Steam Boat was
launched at Dover Mass., October 26, 1887. He soon had steam enough
in his boilers to bump up against the piles at Worcester. After graduat-
ing from the Classical High School he spent two years "cowling" up,
after which he proceeded with a full head of steam for M. A. C.
Since entering the harbor of M. A. C, "Blackie" has proven himself a
strong and loyal classman, for being used to "hawsers, ' he made good
on the rope pull team. His nightly voy-
ages across the river have qualified him
for the Fusser's Club. 6* claims him as
a charter member. Henry elects Biology.
EDWARD FARNHAM DAMON.—
"Here once the embattled farmers stood.
And fired the shot heard 'round the world."
What made Concord famous? This shot or "Beany"?
was Beany, for he began to manage things September 25
cord High School prepared him for his
illustrious career at M. A. C, where he
has proven himself to be full of college
spirit. Farnham has played class base-
ball and was a member of the track team.
His executive ability has made him As-
sistant Manager of the Signal and the
Index. Beany is a member of 'tSK and
will some day be a scientific farmer.
We think it
1887. Con-
Rah! Rah! Rah! Damon!
Damon is our cry.
178
THE 1910 INDEX VOLUME XXXX
LAWRENCE SUMNER DICKINSON. "Boy" first breathed the
exhilerating ozone of ihe Connecticut Valley in Amherst, August 29,
1888. He went through Amherst H. S., carrying Sumner with him, and
immediately after entered M. A. C. "Dickie" is very fond of his
namesake across the river and often visits him. The funds of the class
have enabled him lo do this on a presumptuous scale. His artistic ability
was shown by the ingenuity of the decoration at the Sophomore Prom.
He is a member of •I'SK and hopes some
day to be a Civil Engineer.
ROGER SHERMAN EDDY. This "Big Moose" was taken from
cold storage in Boston, April 26, 1887. "Rog" has kept cool ever since
and graduated from the Demeritte School in '05, and being interested in
agronomical subjects cast his lot with M. A. C, '09, and was a very
strong classman. When he came with 1910 it was a hard struggle to
change the spirit, but we are proud to say that his cool deliberations and
staunch advice have aided us over many a rough and stormy situation.
He is now as strong a 10 man as we
could ask for and his spirit is well shown
by his work on the class football and j
rope pull team. He has developed into
somewhat of a fusser, but is not yet a
candidate for the married men's club.
He is a member of Q. T. V. and
"H. H."
MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE
179
JOHN NELSON EVERSON. On ihe memorable day of June 18,
1887, John Nelson Everson was found among the boots and shoes of
West Hanover. When he was old enough to go to High School he was
shipped to Rockland, where he got his diploma in 1906. At M. A. C.
Johnnie has always been popular, as is well shown by the honors he has
received. He has been manager of our Sophomore basketball team and
Captain of our Sophomore track team. John seems to have a pull with
the Bloke, so sits in his office and watches
the drills. He has a bright future before
him, but we hope he won't "get the habit"
and roll his trousers too high. John has
elected Biology.
RAYMOND JOHN FISKE. Born May 4, 1888, at Stoneham,
Mass., there graduating from High School in 1906. Raymond is one
of the poets of 1910, as a perusal of this volume will show. The worst
trouble with his poetry is in the meter, for he measures its feet by his
own. Our Zoology sharks have not as yet been able to call this man
a mammal or a fish. His spouting seems to point toward his identity with
the Whales, but his Sclerenchymatous Parenchyma shows that he is re-
lated to the Sole. Fish is a proverbial
minister's son and keeps us busy holding
him to the straight and narrow way. He
belongs to the ©'I' and likes Horticulture.
180
THE 1910 INDEX VOLUME XXXX
JOSIAH CHASE FOLSOM. On October 15, 1888, the town
crier of Billerica announced the birlh of Josiah Chase Folsom. He went
to the Howe High School, from which he graduated in 1905, returning
the next year for a P. G. He came to M. A. C. in 1906 tied to Nick's
suitcase. Here he has become very prosperous and now is proprietor of
the College Store. This year he is trying to get his voice in tune with
the members of the Glee Club. "Josh" still tucks his napkin in his
neck, but we are convinced that he is
maturing, for he has been known to visit
Mt. Holyoke College. He is a member
of the Stockbridge Club and Y. M. C. A.
His major is wheat.
HENRY RUSSELL FRANCIS. On June 9lh, 1890, a great event
stalled the old fishermen gossiping, for on that day Henry Russell Fran-
cis was given to the world in the little village of Dennisport, which is
tucked away somewhere among the sand dunes of Cape Cod. He grad-
uated from Yarmouth High School at the age of 16 and immediately
turned his bowsprit toward M. A. C. His principal characteristic is
his good nature, for his combination of grin, cackle, and bullfrog laugh
Is enough to cure anyone of the blues.
"Fran" is a good "windjammer" and can
argue any instructor into submission. Har-
ry is ambitious and hopes some day to be
Major of the Batallion. He has elected
Landscape and is claimed by Q. T. V.
MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE
181
HORACE WELLS FRENCH. Married October 3, 1908, in Taun-
ton, Mass., Horace Wells French, of Pawtucket, R. L, and Beatrice
Beach Baxter, of Newport. The bride is the daughter of the well known
artist of Newport. The groom is the eldest son of Dr. French of Paw-
tucket, and is at present pursuing his studies along an agricultural line at
the Massachusetts Agricultural College, being a member of the class of
1910. French has taken a prominent part in both football and baseball
and is a member of the *I'2Iv fraternity.
His class takes this occasion to bestow
upon "Doc' 'and his bride its heartiest
congratulations.
FRANK TUTTLE HAYNES. "Publisher" Haynes came from
Sturbridge, which is somewhere east of the Mississippi. He was born
April 26, 1887, and graduated from the Southbridge High School in
1906. As a Freshman he was one of those quiet, unobtrusive ones, a
litlle greener than his neighbor. But it was not long before the exhilarat-
ing air, the magnificent opportunities for fussing and three banquets per
day at Draper Hall began to have their effect. Frank is a Senator, Soph-
omore Class President, an officer of the
College Union, is managing this Index,
won the Western Alumni Prize and, last
but not least, is Vice-President of the
Republican Club. He is a member of
Q. T. V. and has elected Wheat.
182
THE 1910 INDEX VOLUME XXXX
MYRON SMITH HA'ZEN, This rare piece of in"fal"uatmg beef
was weighed out (first) to an admiring throng at Springfield, Sep-
tember 16, 1886. At an early age he acquired, the habit of running.
Fat was soon shipped to Rockland Military Academy in a freight car,
where he was dealt out in lavish proportion by the commissary depart-
ment. Still finding this piece of beef fresh, it came to Aggie to be
corned. He has proven a valuable acquisition, having served on the
football and rope pull teams. Pickwick's
love for animals is displayed by the fact
that "Doc" Paige made him head nurse
for his sick cows. Believing in reciprocity,
he does considerable cutting up in "Doc"
Gordon's Biology course. Myron's beef-
ing qualities placed him upon the Burn-
ham Eight.
ARTHUR WITT HOLLAND. "Art" was born at Worcester,
November 27, 1888, but at present resides at Shrewsbury, where he look
his first degree in June, 1906. "Duch" is one of those energetic, little
fellows who are always about iheir business. He is an expert at all
dairy tricks and spends most of his lime playing with cream separators
and the like. He is Treasurer of the Y. M. C, A. Arthur expects lo
own a fruit farm of his own some day and so he Is taking Pomology.
K2 is his Fraternity.
MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE
183
CHARLES IRWIN HOSMER. Charley first saw the light of day
in Turner's Falls, Mass., on the 26th day of July, 1887. "Hosie" pre-
pared at Cushing Academy and received his diploma there in '05. From
there he sailed to the University of Vermont, but he couldn't slay away
from the "Old Bay State, ' so he entered M. A. C. as a Junior with the
class of '10. "Irwin" is a good athlete and has already made good as
full-back on the Varsity football team. His major is Landscape.
WILLIAM CLARENCE JOHNSON. "Kid" was born in South
Framingham, Mass., April 29, 1888. He early began to learn, but not
to grow. However his small size did not keep him from going through
the High School and trimming everyone there in the Chemistry depart-
ment. When thinking about going to college he, by chance, saw an
Index, and that immediately turned him toward M. A. C, where he en-
tered with 1910. "Bill," although a somewhat contracted paramoecium,
has made the class baseball team and is
one of the editors of this Index. He is
a member of Q. T V, and since he has
a good pull with Dr. MacLaurin and
Kid Howard, he is going to major in
Chemistry.
THE 1910 INDEX VOLUME XXXX
WILLIAM EDWARD LEONARD. "Legs" let out his first whoop
in Belmont on the 18th of April, *89, and has been whooping her up
ever since. He graduated from the B. H. S. in '06, havmg acquired
with honor the arts of bluffing and of fussing. Finding that the supply
of girls in Belmont was limited he decided to look for more promising
location and so entered M. A. C. with the rest of the fussers. He has
lived up to his reputation, and we are all expecting an announcement
before the year is out. Bill has been a
prominent man in the class having played
on the Varsity football, class football and
basketball and was captain of the rope
pull team. He was also President of the
class. Bill is an admirer of things beauti-
ful, so is electing Botany. He is a mem-
ber of C. S. C.
LEONARD SEPTIMUS McLAINE. Born June 27, 1887, at
Manchester, England. Present residence New York, N. Y. Prep.
Schools: Merlon House, North Wales; Lyon School, 564 Fifth Avenue,
New York. Nicknames: John Bull, Mac, and the "Englishman."
Classification:
Kingdom — King Edward's.
Phylum — England.
Class — Monstrous Pod.
Order— Rare Roast Beef.
Family — Two.
Genus — Good Fellow.
P. S. Unable to further classify this
specimen, but it thrives well on Aggie
soil^ having grown into a class President,
a Ki; and a Biologist.
MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE
185
SAMUEL WEIS MENDUM. "Weis or otherwise" thrust his pres-
ence upon Roxbury, August 17, 1888. Roxbury Latin School soon de-
veloped him into a "Pisces Sharkus." Bammie is sure to graduate at the
head of his class for he is in a class by himself. The college has not
yet recovered from its shock received upon hearing that Sammy elected
that cinch course "WVieat." However "Socrates" is a fine and helpful
classmate. Q^ claims him as a charter member.
#
FRED PARKER NICKLESS. This expert photographer focused
his optics for the first time in Carlisle, April 22, 1889. "Nick" is a
son of the "Old Nick," orator, debater, philanthropist with his molasses
kisses and ginger ale, and soon to be elected a member of the Married
Men's Club. The Howe School of Billerica gave him his "Prep" and
he came here with us, where he has run the intellectual gauntlet success-
fully. His primitive instincts were demonstrated in the Indoor Track
Meet by his ability to climb rope. Fred
is a strong classman and is one of O*!*.
Hoe-culture is his hobby.
186
THE 1910 INDEX VOLUME XXXX
CHARLES ANDREW OERTEL. Charles was born in South
Hadley Palis, July 13, 1888. He wenl lo the High School there, graduat-
ing in 1906. Charley is a hard worker, and expects some day lo become
a successful Pomologist. Oertel wears the cheerful smile that never comes
off regardless of the fact that he is a member of the Strap-Hangers'
Union. We wish him the greatest success in his life work.
:3;/ \
/\
^1^
FRANK HERBERT PARTRIDGE.—
Way down South — "Framingham" — where I was born.
By the camping grounds and the fields of corn,
I first saw light on a Wednesday morn.
And they called me Blondy when 1 blew my horn.
Attended Cambridge E. H. S. with nine other fellows. Frank had
great difficulty in making the baseball team, but finally made good with
ihr first-string men. With the aid of this brilliant experience, he readily
fcund a position on our class team and also proved invaluable on the class
football team. Beefer is a loyal classman and is workmg hard for our
Varsity. He is a member of 'I'-K and has elected Agriculture.
MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE
187
GEORGE WILLIAM PAULSEN. Georgie first began to cheer in
the second largest city in the world on July 29, 1889. He enjoyed the
Big City so much that he decided to make it his home. He graduated
from the Morris H. S. in 1907. Germans then went to Columbia for
one year and last summer paid us a visit. When September came he
found that M. A. C. had a great attraction for him so Bill packed his
trunk and joined our class. Although he has been with us but a short
time he is a true "Ten" man. He is a
Sergeant in C Co. and has elected
Pomology.
FRANK ALVIN PROUTY. Just by chance, this boy was discov-
ered in Worcester on the mornmg of April 6, 1888. Prout managed to
get through the English High School and came to M. A. C. with 1910.
While living here he has acquired some knowledge, some conditions, but,
best of all, a girl. Among other achievements he has played class foot-
ball, made the class track team and each morning his whiskey tenor vi-
brates with that of the "Kid" in one volume of melodious harmony. He
is a member of Q. T. V. and has elected
"Foordatics."
188
THE 1910 INDEX VOLUME XXXX
ALBERT FLETCHER ROCKWOOD. Born in the year of our
Lord, 1888, in the City of Fitchhurg. Moving from there to Concord,
where he attended High School with Tom and Beany. Roclcy entered
M. A, C. with 1911, but preferring even numbers took a step upward
into 1910. Albert played class baseball, and distinguished himself and
the class by winnmg the College tennis championship. Like his brother
mathematicians he is a great fusser and is also a member of $2K.
LYMAN GIBBS SCHERMERHORN. The "Horn" of this
"Skimmer" first attracted attention in Maiden. June 28, 1887. "Skim-
mer" is a big man, but believed in the motto: That a big duck m a
little pond is belter than a little duck in a big pond. Thus he went to
Rhode Island, but "things are not always what they seem," so Skimmer
came back to enter M. A. C, with 1910. Besides being a man of enor-
mous proportions he is also a man of enormous achievements, having
served as Class Captain, and as a mem-
ber of the class football, baseball, basket-
ball and rope pull teams. He was here
but a few months before he made his
"M" in football. Horn is a charter mem-
ber of the "Married Men's Club" and
also belongs lo Q. T. V. Horticulture
will be his future life work.
MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE
189
FRANK LINCOLN THOMAS. Tom ambled into Wallham, Oc-
tober 16, 1887. Waltham claimed him as her own until his second year
in High School, when the magnetic attraction of Concord's fair dames
drew him to that town. This class is fortunate in having Frank Lincoln.
He played class football and baseball and is an important member of the
Index Board. Frank may be styled the Beacon Light of his class from
the fact that those who know him know his nose. Prexy's Postman is a
hard worker and is bound to make himself
known in the World. He is a member
of Q. T. V. and is a leader of Wheat.
WILLARD McCREEDY SNOW TITUS.-
Ha
-Ha
-Haw — He — He — e — e — e-
Here we have the unsophisticated boy wonder, a one-celled amphibian.
Born on the Skidoo day of June, 1887, away up in the wilds of Canada,
he early became filled with the intense desire to become a Horse Jockey.
We hear that Billy-Boy has been exhibit-
ed at the Barre Fair numerous times along
with Sonoma Girl, whom he firmly be-
lieves to be the favorite over High Ball,
a by-gone trotter. After passing under
the wire at the North Brookfield High
School, "Mac" entered our class. Here
his mental faculties have been developed
in constant practice of "kidd"ing and his
muscular development strengthened by
constant sawing of "Smallwood." Willard is a member of i^'^K and has
elected Horseology.
190
THE 1910 INDEX \^OLUME XXXX
EDWARD HARRISON TURNER. This altltudinous gentleman
entered this sphere of usefulness at West Medford, April 19, 1889. He
moved from this diminutive burg to Reading in 1891. When Mr. E.
Harrison Turner reached our Campus the boys knowing his relationship
to "String," promptly dubbed him "Thread." Old Water-Melon Vine
is a good classmate; he has played on the f
pace as a mile-runner. His winnmg smile
compressor combined with his Republican
principles make him a useful politician.
His knowledge of machinery enabled him
to take care of the Hack Job at the
I908-'I0 "Prom." He is a member of
Q. T. V and has elected Sliver-culture.
tball team and exhibited his
id ability as an atmospheric
OTTO VELOROUS TAFT URBAN. Brave Otto was born in
the Hub, June 4, 1888, but early moved to the country town of Upton.
On account of his "Velor/' Bill was able to wrest a diploma from the
High School of that town. Here in college he has taken a great liking
for Tabby's course; hence his walk; he is the class weather-prophet, has
played on the class football team, and makes himself useful to all who are
seeking advice. "O. V. T." is also one of (hose bluffers up in the
"Math" Buildmg, who are such good
friends of Johnny-O. Olio is a member
of k:s.
MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE
191
GEORGE NEWTON VINTON. "Vint" was aropped off a fast
freighl al Woodstock, Conn., quite a while ago, in fact, September 5th,
1885. That makes him nearly old enough to be his own mother-in-law.
Connecticut was too slow for George so he moved lo Sturbrldge, Mass.
He graduated from Southbridge High in 1906 and at once packed his
carpel bag for M. A. C. Vinl is a great rooter and his stentorian tones
have been heard at many a class game. He has a tremendous pull with
the Agriculture Department, milking 1 9
cows per sitting. Therefore he has elected
Wheat.
RALPH AUGUSTUS WALDRON. This expert mechanic first
tooted his horn in North Rochester, Mass., April 28, 1888. But Augus-
tus was too speedy for that town, so he went to Hyde Park, where nothing
slow is allowed, gradualmg from the High School in 1906. In class
affairs Ralph is not at all backward, doing good work on our class basket-
ball team. Having musical ability, he plays in the mandolin club and band,
and is also a member of the Married Men's Club. Being under the
influence of "Billy"' Brooks, Ralph elected
Agriculture. A member of the Q. T. V.
Fraternity. .^H^^^MK
192
THE 1910 INDEX VOLUME XXXX
WILLIAM NEWTON WALLACE. Bill was born in a very
quiet village in Connecticut named Machapaque, on June 27, 1885. And
from that town inherited most of his tranquility. He moved to Amherst
in lime to graduate from A. H. S. with Dick and Sumner. He spends
his summers in the Adirondacks, where he makes money catching squirrels.
He does it by talking nutty to them. Rodney is a Landscaper and is on
the executive committee of the Mettawampe Club.
CALISTE GOLDIE ROY. Goldie appeared in Watertown on
November 28, 1881, and has since made that spot her home. A graduate
of both the Watertown High School and the Fitchburg Normal School,
she comes well prepared to compete with her brainy classmates pf 1910.
The Princess, as Private Secretary to Prof. Hart, is compelled to siudy
Psychology. Quiet and demure as she is, "Calisty" has been spoken to
foi eating peanuts up in the third story of the "Chem. Lab.". At present
she is the only active member of the
Peekaboos.
MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE
193
ou^?^^°^^^-
1 and So
\ arouse
vju i . culatiii!
^ A C Freshmen Banquet Un- eoast^.
^•^•%; Fire of Eggs. ,n^. «
Q_The fresh- 1 "^5 _ j'
^;^(l^^^-^"^c^pot\he history
most succcsstui L ,g t,his c\
iTiost „,,iipoe ant) ait vmnauet ai.
"^%r"a"™eTne.y a^^^,f-to'^
„p the S-^ doing their >j ^^g
^^o'Votecf them. ^^.^^,,„en got avvaV
from college ^ered ^''^VTo,-,, there
f°ff^°°';,e to Kort^ha^ripton^ F °^^a ^..d
and dro\ « J-", ny to ^unOY . ^jty.
they t°°^and toV the t'am to tm ^^^^,.
GreenfleUl ana discover t"e ^^^ve.
"T^^ 'uU an hotir l'^f°\tnd «St ^vhat
■VVhen the suy ^^.^gg P, this even-
had happened the ^^^ , th,s ^^^
S'^^'^fl'l "ntrnfers'^ot the cla^«,^^^ landed UorUe
ingflve w. Q^j^er iieig increased) ^o,.e c
on a ^'tn the nuw^'''\ in on the 9-15 I meets t
more trntll tn^ ca.n-.em on ^^^^^ ^^^^j
to 1^ ^"lss«"gw t'^'^'tt on tne ^ senatoil
o clock passens gathered this ^bout. i
'-Tth^y^^^^^^SnS^b^'^
^el^eftHhrcvv^^eSsinthe^-S^
landed o","\^g .The ^'■'^^^'"Icir speciat , j,uct. ^
room windovvs^ ^gd theu v ^^^^ ^ ^^^^ g
under ^ovei an sophs J^^ «^^\^ j^^^gm- mgton.
officer, and thei ^ ^\" ?en hanquet there r.
WeUingtor. to ^^^^ fienh n^'^^^^^^utee f,res.c
selves. -^ t Y over. ;^"^^,^„ Suwnet gecvetai
Sivas s^ccesstmij „qucl ^'/^rthur J. . Shaw, i
arranging ^?'„iXs Bv^^^^ ''""^yts^ presi- a pape;.
C. Brooks.^'Ot'V' Leonard, >W-^ ^'^j.^ts with tV,
Sullivan. W.^-t^,^ arid t«i.; ions , ^j nie
d^"^' ".^tkerf^ere: '■F'^^fer On"^^" T- 1 ^"^^o
and speakerb ^ ^;*i^ « Turner, was so
ot college l^^.ifgog.igiO," E. W- ^^ ;„ ^ne ^e cou,
enson...
league
that ot
EnglaiT
i& a T^
duct. H
': ^^^^^^^^H
1 ' 1
^^^K^SKm
IflHo
^9^^^b9HH^^^s^^
^Li , B
^HMH|f-jfn^
tmm
r : A :, ^
H|
p ti
fliin
^K^^^^^^H
^^
■HipI
■H
^
1910 Freshman Banquet
The Wilson, North Adams, Mass.
May 9, 1907
Sliced Tomatoes
Chocolate Ice Crean
Cheese
Fruit
MENU
Blue Points
Mullagatawney Delmonlco
Filet of Bass au Gratin
Pomme Parlsienne
Beef Tenderloins with Mushrooms
Puree Pomme
Roast Turkey Stuffed — Cranberry Sauce
Baked Sweet Potatoes
Cardmal Punch
Broiled Squabs on Toast — Currant Jelly
Fried Hommy
Lettuce Salad
Cigars and Cigarettes
Radishes
Assorted Cake
Crackers
Coffe
MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE 195
Toasts
Toastmaster
W. E. Leonard, Class President.
First Impressions of College Life — Our Later Ones . . . F. D. McGraw
1908-1910 E. H. Turner
Fussing . . . . . . . . . . R. A. Waldron
1910 in the Future . O. V. T. Urban
Anti-Hazing . . . . . . . . W. F. Woodward
Co-education . . . ... . . . . . A. E. Call
Uph-Uph and others . . . . . . . . L. S. McLaine
Mass'chusetts . . . . . . L. S. Dickinson
Committee
A. J. Sullivan
S. C. Brooks
Louis Brandt
TRAVELLER, at the foot of some high mountain, glances upward
noting the broken paths and jagged rocks obstructing the way.
So it was, when the Board of Editors, a year ago faced the
task of compiling the fortieth volume of the Index. But here we are
with the top of the mountain almost reached and our worK almost
over, and as the traveler likewise near the summit, looks backward
with mingled feelings of regret and satisfaction, down the path he
has mounted so the class of Nineteen-Ten looks back upon its work.
A class book we call this, but we have tried to make it of interest to every man
within and each alumnus without. Our purpose has been to make this book as simple as
possible. We have made it smaller than those of the last few years, feeling that it is
not right to burden a class in a college of our size with a book large enough for one of
three times our numbers. Such a book, well balanced, giving importance where import-
ance is due, has been our aim.
Now, kind reader, our success lies with you. But before the Editor lays aside
his work he wishes in behalf of 1910 to express their sincere thanks to all those who have
in any way contributed to this book.
With this introduction the class of Nineteen-Ten present to you the fortieth volume
of the Index, hoping that it may be added to the achievements of the men of M. A. C.
Democracy
When a stranger enters into our porl;als for the first time, and is shown into the
inner court and into the midst of the throng; when he has remained with us for a short
time, he will notice that there is a peculiar spirit found here. A spirit which may be found
MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE 197
in other colleges to some extent, but nowhere is that spirit so strong or so free as it is at
M. A. C. This spirit which we mention is the spirit of Democracy. By Democracy
is meant that all men shall have an opportunity to participate in the government; and so
it is here except we substitute for the word government the words college affairs. It
makes absolutely no difference whether a man has been born in the highest circles or the
lowest, or whether he is rich or poor. He is on the same footing with everyone else and
has just as great a chance to get on. When a man enters this college he puts away his
past, such as family, wealth, etc., and starts out for himself, and it depends upon the
man himself whether or not he is going to succeed.
This spirit of democracy should be, yes, must be cherished, because in the Erst
place it makes men. Men who are not afraid to do what is right. Men who will
stand up for "a square deal." And men who can be relied upon. These men are just
what the country needs; men who are prepared to stand the test, and are ready at an
instant's notice. Who, then, can say that this spirit should not be cherished?' In the
second place, it makes this college stand aloof from all others. Some colleges seem to
have forgotten that this is a democratic country, and have made it almost impossible for
a man to enter unless he is the son of an alumnus, or else has some influence. But
this institution is open to all for it is a state college, and is its leading educational insti-
tution, and it is not only a state college but also a national one. Therefore we owe it
as a duty to the state and to the national government to foster this spirit of democracy, in
order that we may be fitted to become true and loyal citizens.
Let us then go on with this democratic spirit as we have done in the past. Let it not
enter only into our own life but also into our publications, games, clubs, and all college
exercises. And then we will be free to say that this is a true representative of an American
democratic college.
Real Class Spirit
When a new class enters the walls of "Old Mass'chusetts and for the first time takes
its place on the roll with the classes which have gone before, it feels in this, the beginning
of a new life, an importance which only those who have passed through the same experi-
ence and have gone their way along the paths of time can really understand. This
feeling of importance is the beginning of a true class spirit, a feeling of loyalty and
adoration for their class which is now to start out on a never-to-be-forgotten career. This
spirit which has been so quickly aroused first takes the form of a desire for winning. It
does not make any particular difference what is won or, in many cases, who is beaten, as
long as the class has scored a victory that shall help to make its reputation. And thus
it continues during its first year.
1 98 the19I0indexvolumexxxx
But a change soon comes over a class and the sophomore year usually finds a class
greatly changed since its preceding year. As second year men their efforts are bent to
keep up a reputation made during their freshman year, and to create a marked impression
on the entering class that they are to be held in awe for they have passed through the
terrible iniquity of being a freshman and are now full-fledged sophomores ready to wield
the stick and raise the cry of war against any poor first year man who is caught in their
toils. Of course this is only the effervescence of a real class spirit hidden deep down in
their hearts, but sometimes acts bordering on rowdyism and unmanliness are apt to creep
into their nature ; very often, too, they show that with all the knowledge acquired in their one
year's residence at M. A. C. they have not yet learned how to take defeat manfully or,
that they have not yet discovered that self-sacrificing spirit which puts college before class.
Still these are only natural faults and we cannot expect to become perfect at once.
It is to the upperclassman that we look for high ideals and for an example which the
lowerclassmen shall follow. He is the man we expect to lead our college on to noble
deeds and glorious achievements, and it is to him that we look to train the underclassmen
so that they may become even more efficient when it comes their turn to take up the reins
which the older men have dropped. The upperclassman, then, feeling this responsibility
should be careful of the spirit which he develops and should endeavor to train the under-
classmen in the same way.
It is not class spirit to play a man in a class contest when he should be saved for a
varsity game. Far better to do without him. even at the cost of defeat when by such an act
the college may gain a victory. It is not class spirit to get out and pommel freshmen
simply because they are new men, but there is much more credit to the class which picks
out those men who need training and which shows those men by manly hazing that their
actions will bear changing. That class shows the real spirit. There is far more class
spirit shown by that class, which goes out night after night and practises pulling rope,
which has every man out whether large or small, even though they suffer defeat, than by
the class which wins and with cheering and celebrations produces more effect when it has
cost them less effort, labor and personal sacrifice. And so we might go on with numerous
examples which would all tend to illustrate the same point, namely, that class spirit is only
real and earnest when it has cost something either in the shape of personal sacrifice or hard
work, by forgetting petty quarrels or fraternity differences, and by a union of all its mem-
bers for a better class and a stronger college, and lest we forget we should always bear
in mind that we are
"Sons forever of the old Bay State,
Loyal sons, loyal sons are we."
MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE 199
"A New Day"
Another and vital step in the growth and advancement of M. A. C. has come to pass.
In past years we have had no physical director and there has been no systematic physical
training for the student body. The men on the various teams, especially the football team,
were the only ones to receive instruction of this kind, and at times not the best, because we
had not a man competent to give it. The rest of the students either got out for themselves
or got their exercise mostly in the daily routine.
As the college has grown, the need of an athletic director has been felt more and
more. There was no means of satisfying the demand for further physical trainiiig similar
to that given in most colleges. Then, there was no one to push athletics actively except a
certain class of students, and their work lay with the various teams. Naturally, things
lagged at times, an example being our track sports. For some years we have had no track
meets. At that this last spring, the need of a physical director was keenly felt when we
surprised ourselves by finding out what really good material we had for a track team, but
which could not be developed to best advantage under the then existing conditions. The
same has been true of nearly all teams, though we have, for years, turned out exceptionally
good ones. There have always been those who did not, for various reasons, enter the
existing sports, but who desired gymnasium work. True, we have had drill, but as it has
to be carried on here, it is necessarily inadequate and unsatisfactory; for it does not and
cannot furnish complete physical training.
President Butterfield's plan is to raise M. A. C.'s standard of gymnastic work and
athletics to that of our foot ball and base ball teams. So it is that the new Department
of Physical Education and Hygiene has been established. Its object is to interest each
man in those sports which he can use in later life as well as now to promote the best
physical health of the students by bringing to each the training he most needs.
The work is new as yet, and certain plans are to be worked out. Each man who
takes physical training will have a thorough physical examination. Records of this are to
be kept, and at the end of the course, another examination will be made to determine
results and to find out just how the man s physical condition has improved. To play on
college teams one must reach a certain standard in this examination. Gymnasium work
according to individual need will be required of each man, and for his exercise that branch
of sports most suited to him will be recommended.
This year a gymnasium is to be fitted up in the drill hall. Gymnasium work will
go together with drill. It will be required of all who drill. The class of 1912 will be
required to take the new physical education courses as well as all classes to follow. In
addition, those of the three higher classes who drill must take a certain amount of gym-
nasium work. It is to be optional to any not taking drill.
200 THE 1910 INDEX VOLUME XXXX
The first incumbent in this new department is Dr. Percy L. Reynolds, our professor
of Hygiene and Physical Culture. He is a graduate of Springfield Training School and
of Georgia Medical College. He has spent two years at the University of Maine, where
he has had remarkable success in organizing athletic contests in the student body. He is
an all-round athlete, and an especially strong man in track sports. The impression he has
made upon the students during the short time he has been here is of the best.
The future of athletics and physical training at M. A. C. is bright. Dr. Reynolds'
work is not yet on a firm basis, but is rapidly being established. The track team has been
started by this fall's cross country runs. Soccer football has been brought before us. A
handicap tennis tournament open to all has been held. And, again, Dr. Reynolds has
been a great help on the football field this season.
The new department's work will bring everyone into some branch of sports. It will
develop to best advantage all of our material and give us better athletes on our teams.
This will bring greatly added interest to such activities. It will create some much-needed
spirit. To do this. Dr. Reynolds will put in his best work. And we of the student
body must stand ready to do our share, for Dr. Reynolds will certainly push things if
which he has done already is any sign. A new day for M. A. C. sports is dawning.
The Song and Cheer Situation
It is my endeavor to set forth what I consider the condition of the singing and
cheering proposition at M. A. C, and in what respects it may be improved.
It is a noticeable fact that there is seldom developed at technical colleges that
degree of efficiency in singing which is to be witnessed at the classical colleges in general.
In our own case there seems to be too much of the practical atmosphere pervading this
college. We do not give enough time and thought to the enjoyment and patronage of
efforts along the line of music and kindred arts. One cannot but admit, however, that
in the past few years great strides in the right direction have been made, and it is with
optimistic eyes that we look ahead into the near future when conditions will be more favor-
able to the development of better singing and cheering.
At present the conditions are not ideal for the best development of a strong singing
and cheering contingent. Last year with great effort on the part of the cheer leaders fine
spirit was aroused at the approach of the Amherst game, and we had, no doubt, some of
the best singing and cheering that we have heard for some time. This year, however, we
were handicapped by not having a game with Amherst, a game which we have been
accustomed to look forward to, and at which it was our pride to make as good a showing
as possible. With no game with Amherst, interest was cut in two, and with reason.
MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE 201
Moreover, the two games which we did have on the home grounds were not our best games,
and one cannot expect to arouse over the games we expect to win the enthusiasm which
would be aroused were these home games with teams more of our match.
The disadvantage of having so few and only the poorer games on the home grounds
may lead some to ask the reason for this. The answer is plain. We have no athletic
field and cannot afford to bring the big teams up here to play, as we could easily do had
v/e an enclosed field. This then is the prime cause and though my object is not a plea for
an athletic field, I assert that the best in the singing and cheering line cannot be attained
here until we obtain an athletic field, with bleachers so that we can have the fellows
together m a cheering section. One more point, — at the games held on the campus it is
difficult for the leaders to hold the fellows in a bunch, as they should be in order to be most
effective. With bleachers every man could see without moving and the cheering section
could be handled more easily.
Havmg shown some of the disadvantages of the present conditions, we should suggest
some means by which conditions could be improved. First and of prime importance is the
need of an athletic field, and if I mistake not we will have here at M. A. C. just the sort of
field we have been striving for for a long time. Then alumni, trustees and student body,
I claim that there will be no reason why we should not have some real live cheering and
singing at the games.
I should not fail at this time to say that we are somewhat deficient in number and
variety of songs. We have our "Sons of Old Mass'chusetts" and a few others, but we
need more good live songs, typical of old "Aggie." I take this opportunity to call upon
the alumni and student body to make a strong effort and send along to the cheer leader some
new songs and some new cheers, — we need both.
In concluding I reiterate, we need more songs, we need more cheers, we need a
special rival, we need more live, stiff games on the home grounds and last and of greatest
importance we need an enclosed field. Then I say, with a large cheering section these old
hills will echo and reecho with our songs and cheers.
202
THE 1910 INDEX \'OLUME XXXX
The Associate Alumni
of the
Massachusetts Agricultural College
Founded 1874
Officers for 1908-1909
Austin Peters, '81 .
S. S. Warner, '73 .
C. M. Hubbard, '92
H. J. Wheeler, '83
H. F. Tompson, '05
David Barry, '90 .
E. B. Holland, '92
President
First Vice-President
Second Vice-President
Third Vice-President
Secretary
Treasurer
Auditor
Executive Committee
J. B. Paige, '82 E. A. White, *95
MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE
203
Local Alumni Association of M. A. C.
Founded 1905
Officers
Robert W. Lyman, '71 ....
President
David Barry, '90 .
First 'Vice-President
Charles W. Clapp, '86 .
Second Vice-President
Frank O. Williams, 90 .
Third Vice-President
A. C. Monahan, '00 ... .
Secretary
E. B. Holland, '92 ... .
Treasurer
G. P. Smith, '79
Auditor
204 THE 1910 INDEX VOLUME XXXX
Alumni Club of Massachusetts
Officers for 1908-1909
F. W. Davis, '89 President
Newton Shultis, '96 Secretary
W. A. Morse, '82 Treasurer
Directors
A. H. Kirkland, '94
F. G. May, '82
Bertram Tupper, '05
MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE
205
Connecticut Valley Association
of
Massachusetts Agricultural College Alumni
Founded February 21, 1902
Officers for 1908-1909
Charles A. Goodrich, '93, Hartford, Conn.
Charles E. Beech, '82, W. Hartford, Conn
James H. Webb, '73, New Haven, Conn.
Waher B. Hatch, '05, Hartford, Conn.
A. S. Kinney, '96, South Hadley, iVIass.
President
First Vice-President
Second Vice-President
Secretary
Executive Committee
Charles A. Goodrich, President, and Officers.
206
THE 1910 INDEX VOLUME XXX:
Massachusetts Agricultural College
Club of New York
Founded 1886
Officers for 1908-1909
Charles E. Lyman, '78
Alfred W. Lublin, '84 .
Prof. Henry E. Chapin, '81
Dr. Charles T. Leslie, '01
Sanford D. Foot, '78
Alvan L. Fowler, '80
Dr. John A. Cutter, '82 .
President
First Vice-President
Second Vice-President
Third Vice-President
Choragus
Treasurer
Secretary
MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE 207
Massachusetts Agricultural College
Club of Washington, D. C.
Founded 1904
Officers for 1908-1909
C. S. Crocker, 89 .......... President
H. L. Knight, '02 ........ First Vice-President
W. A. Hooker, '99. ....... Second Vice-President
F. D. Couden, '04 ....... Secretary and Treasurer
C. H. Griffin, '04 .......... Choragus
208 THE 1910 INDEX VOLUME XXXX
Western Alumni Association
of the
Massachusetts Agricultural College
Officers for 1908-1909
A. B. Smith, '95 ■ . . President
L. W. Smith, '93 Vice-President
P. C. Brooks, 01 . . . . . . . . . . Treasurer
M. H. West, '03 Secretary
Trustees
W. E. Stone, '82 L. A. Nichols, '71
J. E. Wilder, '82 G. M. Miles, "75
H. J. Armstrong, '97
Members
All Alumni west of Buffalo.
MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE 209
The Alumni
'71
E. E. THOMPSON, Secretary, Worcester, Mass.
Allen, Gideon H., K2, B. S., 179 Courl Street, New Bedford, Mass., former chairman Board of
Assessors of Taxes. Considerable Newspaper Work, Correspondence, Reportorial and Editorial,
Accountant.
tBASSETT, Andrew L., Q. T. V., 36 East River, New York City, Transfer Agent Central Vermont
Railroad Company.
tBlRNIE, W. P., K2, 34 Sterns Terrace, Springfield, Mass., Paper and Envelope Manufacturer.
BoWKER, William H., D. G. K., B. S., 43 Chatham Street, Boston, Residence Concord, Mass.,
President Bowker Fertilizer Company.
Caswell, Lilley B., Athol, Mass., Civil Engineer.
tCoWLES, Homer L., B. S., Amherst, Mass., Farmer. Residence Hadley, Mass.
Ellsworth, Emory A., 356 Dwight Street, Holyoke, Mass., Architect, Civil and Mechanical Engi-
neer (Ellsworth and Homes), Member American Society Civil Engineers; Boston Society Civil
Engineers; American Waterworks Association; New England Waterworks Association. Residence
40 Essex Street, Holyoke, Mass.
Fisher, Jabez F., KS, 94Yi Myrtle Ave., Fitchburg, Mass., Bookkeeper Parkhill Manufacturing
Company,
t Fuller, George E., address unknown.
*Hawley, Frank W., died October 28th, 1883, at Belchertown, Mass.
*Herrick, Frederick St. C, D. G. K., died January 19th, 1894, at Lawrence, Mass.
t'LEONARD, George B., LL. B., D. G. K., Springfield, Mass, Clerk of Courts.
Lyman, Robert W., B. S., at Massachusetts Agricultural College; LL. B.' at Boston University,
1879. 'i'K*, Q. T. V., Courthouse, Northampton, Mass. Residence II Linden Street, North-
ampton, Mass. Register of Deeds for Hampshire County; Instructor in Farm Law at Massa-
chusetts Agricultural College.
*MoRSE, James H., died June 2lsl, 1883, at Salem, Mass.
Nichols, L. A., B. S., K.2, 6233 Cottage Grove Avenue, Chicago, 111., Consulting Engineer, Presi-
dent of the Chicago Steel Tape Company. Residence 6054 Woodlawn Ave., Chicago, III.
tNoRCROSS, Arthur B., D. G. K., Monson, Mass., Merchant and Farmer. State Senator Hamp-
shire and Hampden District.
*Page, Joel B., D. G. K., died August 23rd, 1902, at Conway, Mass.
Richmond, S. H., B. S., 3W/i 12lh Street, Miami, Fla. Residence, Cutler, Dade County, Fla.
Agent Land Department, F. E. E. R. R.; also Truck Farmer.
Russell, William D., 'i'K*, D. G. K., 329 West Eighty-third Street, New York City, Manu.-
'facSuref, Paper Merchant.
^Deceased. tNot heard from.
210 the1910indexvolumexxx:
Smead, Edwin B., Q. T. V., Principal Walkinson Farm School, Hartford, Conn. P. O. Box
-335, Harlford, Conn.
Sparrow, Lewis A., Northboro, Mass., Farmer.
t Strickland, George P., D. G. K., Livingslon, Mont., Machine Shop Foreman.
Thompson, Edgar E., B. S., Residence, 5 Jaques Avenue, Worcester, Mass, Supervising Principal
Worcester Schools.
*Tucker, George H., died October Isl, 1889, at Spring Creek, Pa.
tWARE, WlLLARD C, 225 Middle Street, Portland, Me., Manager Portland and Boston Clothing Com-
pany.
Wheeler, William, 'I'K*, K2, 14 Beacon Street, Boston, Mass., Consulting Engineer. Residence,
Concord, Mass.
+ WHITNEY, Frank Le P., D. G. K., 104 Robinwood Avenue, Jamaica Plains, Mass. Dealer in
Teas and Coffees.
WOOLSON, George Clark, Purchase, Westchester County, N. Y., Superintendent "Hill Crest,"
Estate of William A. Read.
72
S. T. MAYNARD, Secrelarv, Northboro, Mass.
IBell, Burleigh C, D. G. K., address unknown.
tBRETT, William F., D. G. K., address unknown,
t Clark, John W., Q. T. V., Nonh Hadley, Mass., Fruit Grower.
tCowLES, Frank C, 223)/2 Pleasant Street, Worcester, Mass., Civil Engineer and Draughtsman.
Cutler, John C, M. D., D. G. K., 7 Gates Street, Worcester Mass., Physician; Author Cutler's
Comprehensive Physiology; Professor in Agricultural College, Sapporo, Japan. Order of the
Rising Sun, conferred by the Emperor.
*DyER, Edward N., died March 17th, 1891, at Holliston. Mass.
''•Easterbrook, Isaac H., died May 27lh, 1901, at Webster, Mass .
Fiske, Edward R., Q. T. V., 625 Chestnut Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Residence, 234 West Chelten
Avenue, Philadelphia. Manufacturer at Germantown, Pa.
Flagg, Charles O., Q. T. V., Hardwick, Mass., Superintendent of the Guernsey Slock Farms,
owned by Mr. George Mixler.
IGrover, Richard B., 67 Ashland Street, Boston, Mass., Clergyman.
*HoLMES, Lemuel Le B., Q. T. V., died August 4lh, 1907, al Mattapoisett, Mass.
Howe, Edward G., 10233 South Wood Street, Chicago, III., Teacher of Science in the Englewood
High School, Chicago, 111.; Author of Syslemalic Science Teaching, also Advanced Elementary
Science, Appleton Co.
IKjmball, Francis E., 8 John Street, Worcester, Mass., Accountant.
tLlVERMORE, R. W., Q. T. v.. Pates, North Carolina; Residence Red Springs, N. C„ Merchant
and Farmer.
*Mackie, George, M. D., D. V. S., Q. T. V., died .^ugusl 31st, 1906. at Aiilcboro, Mass.
"Deceased. 1 Not heard from.
MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE
211
Maynard, Samuel T., Norlhboro, Mass., Landscape Gardener and Fruil Specialist. Author of
"Practical Fruit Culturist," "Landscape Gardening as Applied to Home Decoration,"' "Success-
ful Fruit Culture," "The Small Country Place," etc.
MoREY, Herbert E„ 15 Exchange Street, Boston, Mass., Room 41. Residence 34 Hillside Avenue,
Maiden, Mass. Numismatic Association; American Society of Curio Collectors; American
Geographical Association; British Numismatic Association.
tPEABODY, William R., Q. T. V., General Agent A. T. and S. F. R. R., Atchison, Kansas.
*Saliseury, Frank B., D. G. K., died 1895 in Mashonaland, Africa.
Shaw, E. D., Holyoke, Mass., 59 Suffolk Street, Salesman.
tSNOW, George H., Leominster, Mass., Farmer.
*Somers, Frederick M, Q. T. V., died February 2nd, 1894, at Southampton, England.
Thompson, Samuel C, *,SK, *K$, Third Avenue and 177th Street, New York City. Residence,
810 East 1 73rd Street, New York. Civil Engineer; Engineer of Highways, Bronx Borough.
*Wells, Henry, Q. T. V., died September 19th, 1907, at Jamestown, R. I.
Whitney, William C, Q. T. V., 313 Nicollet, Avenue, Minneapofis, Minn., Architect.
'73
C. WELLINGTON, Secrelan. Amherst, Mass.
Cranberry Grower.
rd Junction, Mass., Reformatory Officer
Massachusetts
Canada; Pri
as." Resident
Eldred, Frederick C, Sandwich, Mas
Leland, Walter S., D. G. K., Co
Reformatory.
*Lyman, Asahel H., D. G. K., died of pneumonia at Manistee, Mich., January 16th, 1896.
Mills, George W., M. D., 60 Salem Street, Medford, Mass., Physician. M. D. (Harvard),
Brigade Surgeon, Major, Medical Department M. V. M., Member of the Association of Mili-
tary Surgeons of the United States, Chairman of Board of Health, Medford, Mass.
Minor, John B., *K*, Q. T. V., New Britain, Conn. Residence, Plainville, Conn. Paper Box
Manufacturer.
tPENHALLOW, David P., M. Sc, D. Sc, Q. T. v., McGiU University, Montreal,
fessor of Botany in McGill University; Author of "North American Gymnosper
210 Milton Street, Montreal, Canada.
*Renshaw, James B., B. D.
tSlMPSON, Henry B., Q. T. V., 902 Pennsylvania Avenue, N. W., Washington, D. C, Care of
Mutual Fire Insurance Company.
IWakefield, Albert T., M. D., Sheffield, Mass,, Physician.
tWARNER, Seth S., K2, Northampton, Mass., Dealer in Agricultural Implements and
Webb, James H., LL. B., *K*, K2, 42 Church Street, New Haven, Conn. Residence
Conn. Lawyer; Instructor in Law School, Yale University; American Editor of
Outlines of Criminal Law."
Wellington, Charles, Ph. D., *K$, K2, Amherst, Mass., Professor
sion at Massachusetts Agricultural College.
tWoOD. Frank W., address unknown.
Fertilizers.
, Hamden,
'"Kenney"s
nd Head, of Chemistry Dp
'■■De
tNot heard from.
212 THE 1910 INDEX \'OLUMEXXXX
'74
Benedict, John M., M. D., D. G. K., 81 No. Main Streel, Residence 80 Linden Street, Water-
bury, Conn., Physician.
tBLANCHARD, WlLLIAM H., Westminster, Vt., Teacher.
tCHANDLER, EdWARD P., D. G. K., Maiden, Fergus County, Mont., Wool Grower.
*CuRTIS, WoLFRED F., died November 18th, 1878, at Westminster, Mass.
*DlCKINSON, Asa W., D. G. K., died November 8th, 1899, at Easlon, Pa., from apoplectic shock.
Hitchcock, Daniel G., Warren, Mass., Agent Monaton Realty Investing Corporation, New York;
Manager Ideal Trips to the Catskills and Bahamas.
tHoBBS, John A., Salt Lake City, Utah, Proprietor Rocky Mountain Dairy and Hobbs' Creamery,
14 East Third South Street.
LiBBY, Edgar H., Mv*, Clarkston, Washington. Real Estate and other Investments, especially Irri-
gated Lands; Advisory Counsel in Organization of Irrigation Enterprises.
*Lyivian, Henry, died January 19th, 1879, at Middlefield, Conn.
t Montague, Arthur H., Granby, Mass., P. O., South Hadley, Mass., Farmer.
*Phelps, Henry L., died at West Springfield, Mass., March 3, 1900.
*Smith, Frank S., D. G. K., died December 24, 1899, in Cleveland, Ohio.
t Woodman, Edward E., *K*, Danvers, Mass., E. & C. Woodman, Florists' and Garden Supplies.
Zeller, Harrie Nick., R. F. D. No. 3, The Boulevard, Hagerslcwn, Md., Fruit Grower and
anvasser.
75
M. BUNKER, Secrelarv. Newton, Mass.,
Barrett, Joseph F., <I'K'I>, <I>-K, Barre, Mass., Business Address 60 Trinity Place, New York City,
Secretary Bowker Fertilizer Company.
tBARRI, John A., Bridgeport, Conn, residence 346 Maple Street, Springfield, Mass., Dealer in Grain,
Berkshire Mill.
Bragg, Everett B., Q. T. V., 135 Adams Streel, Chicago, 111., Residence 1838 Chicago Avenue,
Evanston, III.. Thud Vice-President General Chemical Company.
Brooks, William P., Ph. D., <I>K*, *SK, Amherst, Mass., Director of Hatch Experiment Station.
Bunker, Madison, D. V. S., 28 Park St., Newton, Mass., Veterinary Surgeon.
tCALLENDER, Thomas R., D. G. K., Northfield, Mass., Farmer.
tCAMPBELL, Frederick G., 'PSK, Westminster West, Vt., Farmer and Merino Sheep Raiser
ICaHruth, Herbert S., D. G. K., Beaumont Street, Dorchester, Mass., Assistant Penal Commis-
sioner, Suffolk County, Mass.
*Clark, Zenos Y., 'I'i;K, died June 4th, 1889, at Amherst, Mass.
*Clay, JabeZ W., "I'2K, died October Isl, 1880. at New York City.
Dodge, George R., Q. T. V., So. Hamilton, Mass., Garden Truck and Small Fruits.
Hague, Henry, 'I'-K, 695 Southbridge Street, Worcester, Mass., Clergyman.
Harwood, Peter M., 'I'i;K, Barre, Mass., Business Address, Room 136, State House, Boston, Mass.,
General Agent Massachusetts Dairy Bureau.
^Deceased. INot heard from.
MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE 213
tKnapp, Walter H., <I>K<i>, North Street, Newtonville, Mass., Florist.
tLEE, Lauren K., 611 Ryan Building, Saint Paul, Minn., Residence 631 Saint Anthony Avenue,
Saint Louis, Minn., Advertising Agency of L. K. Lee & Son.
Miles, George M., Miles City, Montana, Banker, Merchant, and Stock Raiser.
tOris, Harrv p., K2, Northampton, Mass., Manufacturer.
tRiCE, Frank H., 14 Sansome Street, San Francisco, Cal.
SoUTHwrcK, Andre A., 'i*2K, Taunton, Mass., Farm Superintendent Taunton Insane Hospital;
Residence, 355 Tremont Street, Taunton, Mass.
Winchester, John F., Q. T. V., D. V. S., Lawrence, Mass., Veterinarian; Member Cattle Com-
mission of Massachusetts; President American Veterinary Medical Association; President Massa-
chusetts Veterinary Association; Lecturer Massachusetts Agricultural College and New Hamp-
shire State College; Inspector Animals for City Lawrence.
76
C. FRED DEUEL, Secrelar]), Amherst, Mass.
+ Bagley, David A., address unknown.
Bellamy, John, D. G. K., 197 Webster Street, West Newton, Mass., Bookkeeper.
fCHiCKERiNc, Darius O., Enfield, Mass., Farmer.
Deuel, Charles F., "i>K*, Q. T. V., Amherst, Mass., Druggist.
*GuiLD, George W., Q. T. V., died May 8th, 1903, of heart disease, at Jamaica Plains Mass.
tHAWLEY, Joseph M., D. G. K., address unknown.
IKendall, Hiram, D. G K., East Greenwich, R. I., Assistant Superintendent for the Shepard Com-
pany.
ILadd, Thomas L., Care of William Dadmum, Watertown, Mass.
tMcCoNNELL, Charles W., D. D. S., K2, |7la Tremont Street, Boston, Mass., Dentist.
tMACLEOD, William A., A. B., LL. B., D. G. K., *K*, 350 Tremont Building, Boston, Mass.,
Residence, 22 Tremlett Street, Boston, Mass., Lawyer.
tMANN, George H., 68 Stoughton Avenue, Readville, Mass., Erecting Engineer, with B. F. Sturle-
vant Company, Hyde Park, Mass.
Martin, William E., Sioux Falls, S. D., Bookkeeper.
Parker, George A., *K*, <J.i;K, P. S. K., P. O. Box 1027, Hartford, Conn. Residence, 100 Blue
Hills Avenue, Hartfordi, Conn. Superintendent of Parks at Hartford,
t Parker, George L., 807 Washington Street, Dorchester, Mass., Florist.
t Phelps, Charles H., 155 Leonard Street, New York City, Dresden Lithographic Company.
tPoRTER, William H., *2K, Silver Hill Farm. Agawam, Mass., Farmer.
t Potter, William S., D. G. K., 4 Wallace Block, LaFayelte, Ind. Residence 920 Stale Street, La-
Fayette, Ind. Attorney at Law, Banker.
Root, Joseph E., M. D., *2K, 67 Pearl Street, Hartford, Conn., Physician and Surgeon.
Sears, John M., Ashfield, Mass., Town Clerk.
*Smith, Thomas E., D. G. K., died September 20lh, 1901, at West Chesterfield, Mass., of apoplexy.
*Taft, Cyrus A., died February 7th, 1908, at Whitinsville, of pneumonia.
^Deceased. tNot heard from.
214 the1910indexvolumexxxx
*Urner, George P., D. G. K., did April, 1897, at Wisley, Mont., from effusion of blood on brain.
*Wetmore, Howard G., M. D., D. G. K., died at 63 West Ninety-First Street, New York City,
April 27th, 1906.
*WlLLIAMS, John E., died January 18th, 1890, at Amherst, Mass.
'77
IBenson, David H., Q. T. V., North Weymouth, Mass.
tBREWER, Charles, Haydenville, Mass.
Clark, Atherton, *K<I', K2, 140 Tremont Street, Boston, Mass., Residence 231 Waverly Avenue,
Newton, Mass., Merchant, Firm of R. H. Stearns & Co.
*Hibbard, Joseph R., killed by kick of a horse June 17 th, 1899, at Sloughton, Wis.
tHoWE, Waldo V., Q. T. V., Newburyport, Mass., Poultry Raiser.
Mills, Jas. K., D. G. K., Amherst, Mass., Photographer.
tNvE, George F., 420 East Forty-Second Street, Chicago, III., with Swift & Co.
*Parker, Henry F., LL. B., died December 21, 1897, at Brooklyn, N. Y.
tPoRTO, Raymundo M. Da. S., 'I>-K^ Para, Brazil, Sub-Director Museum Pareuse.
*Sol'THMAYD, John E., <I>2K, died December 11th, 1878, at Minneapolis, Minn.
tWYMAN, Joseph, 247 Massachusetts Avenue, Arlington, Mass., Salesman.
78
C. O. LOVELL, Sccreiarv, 48 Summer Street, Boston, Mass.
tBAKER, David E., *EK, 227 Walnut Street, Newlonville, Mass., Physician.
*Boutwell, W. L., died September 28th, 1906, at Northampton, Mass., of meningitis.
Brigham, Arthur A., Ph. D., Brookings, So. Dakota, Principal So. Dakota School of Agriculture.
*Choate, Edward C, Q. T. V., died at Southboro, Mass., January 18th, 1905, of appendicitis.
*CoBURN, Charles F., Q. T. V., died December 26th, 1901, at Lowell, Mass.
Foot, Sandford D., Q. T. V., with Nicholson File Co., Patterson, N. J.; Residence 231, West
Seventieth Street, New York City.
Hall, Josiah N., M. D., *K*, /KSK, 308 Jackson Building, Denver, Colo.
tHEATH, Henry F., D. G. K., 35 Nassau Street, New York City, Lawyer.
Howe, Charles S., Ph. D., D. Sc, 'I'K*, 'I'2K, 2060 Cornell Road, Cleveland, Ohio, President
of the Case School of Applied Science.
Hubbard, Henry F., Q. T. V., 26 Custom House Street, Providence, R. I., Residence, 37 Elm
Grove Avenue, Providence, R. 1., Representing A. P. Irvin & Co., of New York City, Tea
Importers.
tHuNT, John F., 27 State Street, Boston, Mass., Residence, 232 Ferry Street, Maiden, Mass., Build-
ing Superintendent.
LoVELL, Charles O., Q. T. V., 48 Summer Street, Boston. Mass., I Madison Avenue, New York;
Residence, 26 Hurlburt Street, Cambridge, Mass.; President United Photo Materials Co.
LyIWAN, Charles E., Middlefield, Conn., Farmer.
»Dccca,cd. I Not heard from.
MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE 215
Myrick, Lockwood, Hammonton, N. J., Fruit Farming.
tOscooD, Frederick H., D. V. S., M. R. C. V. S., Q. T. V., 50 Village Street, Boston, Mass.,
Veterinarian.
tSpOFFORD, Amos L., 'KK, Georgetown, Mass., Private Eighth Massachusetts Infantry, Co. A.
Stockbridge, Horace E., Ph. D., K2, Atlanta, Ga., Editor Southern Ruralist; Author of "Rocks
and Soils."
TucKERMAN, FREDERICK, M. A., M. D., Ph. D., Q. T. v., Amherst, Mass., Anatomist; Author
of various papers on anatomy and allied subjecis in American & European Journals.
Washburn, John H., M. A., Ph. D., K2, Farm School, Penn., Director National Farm School;
Professor of Chemistry; Formerly President Rhode Island College for thirteen years.,
t Woodbury, Rufus P., Q. T. V., 3612 Campbell Street, Kansas City, Mo., Secretary Kansas
City Live Stock Exchange.
'79
R. S. SWAN, Secretary. Worcester, Mass.
tDlCKINSON, Richard S., Columbus, Neb., Farmer.
Green, Samuel B., *K*, KS, 2095 Commonwealth Avenue, Saint Anthony Park, Minn., Author
of "Amateur Fruit Growing," ' Vegetable Gardening," "Forestry in Minnesota," "Principles of
American Forestry," "Hedges and Windbreaks"; Professor of Horticulture and Forestry, Uni-
versity of Minnesota.
tRuDOLPH, Charles, LL. B., Q. T. V., Hotel Rexford, Boston, Mass., Lawyer and Real Estate
Agent.
Sherman, Walter A., D. V. S., M. D., D. G. K., 340 Central Street, Residence, 214 Paw-
tucket Street, Lowell, Mass., Veterinary Surgeon.
Smith, George P., IvS, Sunderland, Mass., Farmer.
tSwAN, RoscoE W., M. D., D. G. K., 41 Pleasant Street, Worcester, Mass., Physician.
Waldron, Hiram E. B., Q. T. V., 12 West River Street, Hyde Park, Mass., Residence, 112 High
land Street, Real Estate and Insurance.
'80
Fowler, Alvan L., *2K, 60 Sound View Ave., New Rochelle, N. Y., Receiver Manlsquan National
Bank, Manisquan, N. J.
tGLADWIN, Frederick E., *2K, 2401 North Sixteenth Street, Philadelphia, Pa., Mining Engineer.
tLEE, William G., D. G. K., Holyoke, Mass., Architect and Civil Engineer.
tMcQuEEN, Charles M., *I;K, 802 Pine Street, Saint Louis, Mo.
Parker, William C, *2K, B. S., LL. B., 294 Washington Street, 636 Old South Building, Boston,
Mass., Residence 162 Huntington Avenue, Boston, Lawyer; Massachusetts Representative from
Boston,
1 Ripley, George A., Q. T. V., 36 Grafton Street, Worcester, Mass., Farmer.
tSrONE, Almon H., Wareham, Mass., Deacon.
'Deceased. +Not heard from.
216 THE 1910 INDEX VOLUME XXXX
'81
J. L. HILLS, Secretar}), Burlinglon, Vt.
Bowman, Charles A., C. S. C., Dillaye Building, Syracuse, N. Y., Civil Engineer. Residence,
413 Foreman Avenue. Secretary and Treasurer of Morrison & Farrington, Inc., Civil Engineers.
*BoYNTON, Charles E., M. D., died at Los Bancs, Cal., date unknown.
Carr, W. Frank, C. E., Q. T. V., 116 Thirty-Second Street, Milwaukee, Wisconsin, Chief En-
gineer for The Falk Company; Member American Society of Civil Engineers.
Chapin, Henry E., M. Sc, D. Sc., C. S. C, 49 Lefferts Avenue, Richmond Hill. Long Island,
N. Y., Teacher of Biology and Physiology; Joint Author Chapin & Retlger's "Elementary
Zoology and Laboratory Guide"; Honorary Fellow Society Biological Chemistry, London; Pres-
ident Department of Botany, Brooklyn Institute of Arts and Sciences.
Fairfield, Frank H., Q. T. V., 42 Broadway, N. Y., President Black Sand Smelting Co. Resi-
dence, 153 Fourth Avenue, East Orange, N. J.
*Flint, Charles L., Q. T. V., died June, 1904.
*Hashiguchl Boonzo, D. G. K., died August 12th, 1903, at Tokio, Japan.
Hills, Joseph L., Sc. D., ^K*, K2, 59 No. Prospect Street, Burlington, Vt., Dean Department of
Agriculture. University of Vermont; Director Vermont Agricultural Experiment Station.
Howe, Elmer D., 't— K, Fair View Farm, Marlboro, Mass., Farmer; Secretary of Salisbury and
Amesbury Mutual Fire Insurance Co.
Peters, Austin, D. V. S., M. R. C. V. S., Q. T. V., Stale House, Boston, Mass.; Residence, Wal-
nut Avenue, Jamaica Plains, Mass.; Veterinarian and Chief of Cattle Bureau, Massachusetts
State Board of Agriculture.
Rawson, Edward B.. D. G. K., 226 E. Sixteenth Street, New York City; Residence, 332 Scher-
merhorn Street, Brooklyn, N. Y.; Superintendent Friends' Schools, New York and Brooklyn;
Lecturer on Education, Swarthmore College,
t Smith, Hiram F., M. D., 9 East Main Street, Orange, Mass.. Physician.
Spalding, Abel W., C. S. C, 422 Globe Block, Seattle, Wash., Spalding & Umbrecht, Architects;
President Washington State Chapter, American Institute of Architects, 1906.
tTAYLOR, Frederick P., D. G. K., Athens, Tenn., Farmer.
*Warner, Clarence D., D. G. K., died October 16. 1905, at Kimmswick, Missouri.
*Whittaker, Arthur, D. G. K., died March, 1906, at Needham, Mass.
"Wilcox, Henry H.. D. G. K., died at Honolulu, January 11, 1899.
tYouNC, Charles E., M. D., *2K, Sioux Falls, S. D., Physician.
'82
G. D. HOWE, Secretary). Bangor, Me.
t Allen, Francis S., M. D., D. V. S., C. S. C. 800 North Seventeenth Slieel. Philadelphia, Pa.,
Veterinary Surgeon.
AlPIN, George T., Q. T. V., East Putney, Farmer .
Beach, C. Edward, D. G. K., West Hartford, Conn., Farmer.
♦Deceased, t Not heard from.
MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE 217
*BlNCHAM, Eugene P., C. S. C, died March 31st, 1904, at Los Angeles, Cal.
Bishop, WilliaivI Herbert, *2K, Farm School, Pa., Professor of Agriculture at National Farm
School.
*Brodt, Harry S., Q. T. V., died at Rawlins, Wyo., December, 1906.
Chandler, Everett S., B. D., C. S. C, North Judson, Indiana, R. F. D. No. 3, Clergyman.
Cooper, James W., D. G. K., 1 Court Street, Plymouth, Mass., Pharmacist; Residence, 142
Court Street.
Cutter, John A., M. D., 325 W. 83d Street, New York, Physician; Author of "Fatty Ills and
their Masquerades," and "Food: Its Relation to Health and Disease."
tDamon, Saiviuel C, C. S. C, Assistant, Agronomy, Rhode Island Experiment Station, Kingston, R. I.
*Floyd, Charles W., died October 10th, 1883, at Dorchester, Mass.
tCoODALE, David, Q. T. V., Marlboro, Mass., Farmer.
tHiLLMAN, Charles D., <I>2K, Watsonville, Cal., Fruit Grower.
*HoWARD, Joseph H., died of typhoid fever, February 13th, 1889, at Minnsela, S. D.
Howe, George D., 25 Winter Street, Bangor Me., Commercial Traveler for H. J. Heinz Co.
tJoNES, Frank W., Q. T. V., Asseneppi, Mass., Teacher.
Kingman, Morris B., 11 Amity Street, Amherst, Mass., Florist; Residence, 91 South Pleasant Street.
tKlNNEY, B. A., Littleton, N. H., or 18 Bleachery Street, Lowell, Mass., Traveling Salesman.
May, Frederick G., *3K, 68 East Street, Dorchester, Mass., Printer; Residence, 34 Adams Street.
tMoRSE, William A., Q. T. V., 15 Auburn Street, Melrose Highlands, Mass., Clerk at 28 State
Street, Boston, Mass.
Myrick, Herbert, I to 57 Worthington Street, Springfield, Mass., Editor, Author, Publisher, Man-
ufacturer. Has completed largest office building of reinforced concrete in United States. Resi-
dence, 151 Bowdoin Street.
Paige, James B., D. V. S., "I-K* Q. T. V., 42 Lincoln Avenue, Amherst, Mass., Professor of Veteri-
nary Science at Massachusetts Agricultural College; Veterinarian, Massachusetts Agricultural
Experiment Station.
Perkins, Dana E., Medford Square, Civil Engineer; Residence, 12 Riverside Avenue.
Plumb, Charles S., Q. T. V., Columbus, Ohio, Professor of Animal Husbandry, Ohio State
University; Author of "Types and Breeds of Farm Animals," "Little Sketches of Famous Beef
Cattle," "Indian Corn Culture," "Biographical Sketches American Agricultural Scientists."
tSniVERICK, Asa F., K2, 100 Wabash Avenue, Chicago, 111., Vice-President of Tobey Furniture
Company.
Stone, Winthrope E., Ph. D., LL. D., C. S. C, H6 North Grant Street, West La Fayette, Ind.;
President of Purdue University.
tTAFT, Levi R., "fK*, C. S. C, Agricultural College, Michigan, Horticulturist, Michigan Experi-
ment Station; Superintendent Farmers' Institutes; Author of "Greenhouse Construction," "Green-
house Management," and Collaborator "Garden Making," and "Practical Gardening and Farm-
ing."
Taylor, Alfred H., D. G. K., Brunswick, Neb., Farmer.
*Thurston, Wilbur H., died August 1900, at Cape Nome, Alaska.
tWiLDER, John E., *K<I>, K2, 212-214 Lake Street, Chicago, 111., Wholesale Leather Dealer and
Tanner, Trustee of Beloil College, Beloil, Wis.
^'Deceased. tNot heard from.
218 the19I0indexvolumexxxx
Williams, James S., Q. T. V., President and General Manager of The Williams Brothers Manu-
facturing Company, Glastonbury, Conn.
Windsor, Joseph L., 922 Stale Life Building, Indianapolis, Ind., Residence La Grange, 111., Special
Agent Glens Falls Insurance Company, Specializing in Insurance Engineering.
'83
S. M. HOLMAN, Secrelar^, Attleboro, Mass.
tBACLEY, Sidney C, "I'^K, Tremont Street, Melrose Highlands, Mass., Cigar Packer,
t Bishop, Edgar A., C. S. C, Hampton, Va., Director of Agriculture in Hampton Normal and Agri-
cultural Institute.
tBRAUNE, DoMlNCOS H., D. G. K., address unknown.
tHEVIA, Alfred A., 4>2K, 71 Nassau Street, New York City, Mortgage Investments and Insurance.
HoLMAN, Samuel M., Q. T. V., 39 Pleasant Street, Attleboro, Mass., Real Estate; Photographer;
Member of Massachusetts Legislature, House of Representatives, 1907-1908.
LiNDSEY, Joseph B., A. M., Ph. D., *-*, C. S. C, 47 Lincoln Avenue, Amherst, Mass., Chem-
ist, Massachusetts Agricultural Experiment Station.
tMlNOTT, Charles W., C. S. C, 6 Beacon Street, Boston, Mass., Room 1009; Residence, R. F. D.
No. 2, Westminster, Mass.; State Agent, Gypsy and Brown Tail Moth Suppression.
Nourse, David O., C. S. C, Clemson, S. C, Professor of Animal Husbandry and Dairying,
Clemson College.
Preston, Charles H., <I>K<i> K2., Danvers, Mass., Farmer; Trustee Massachusetts Agricultural
College; Residence, Hathorne, Mass.
Wheeler, Homer J., M. A., Ph. D., C. S. C, Kingston, R. I., Director Rhode Island Agricultural
Experiment Station.
'84
L. SMITH, Secretaiy, 25 Mercantile Street, Worcester, Mass.
tHERMES, Charles, Q. T. V., address unknown.
Holland, Harry D., Amherst, Mass., Merchant, Firm of Holland & Galland.
Jones, Elisha A., 'I'SK, New Canaan, Conn., Superintendent of Waveny Farms.
tSMITH, Llewellyn, Q. T. V., 25 Mercantile Street, Worcester, Mass., Residence, 679 Main Street,
Representative Norfolk Clothes Reel Co.
'85
E. W. ALLEN, Sccrclarv. Washington. D. C.
t Allen, Edwin W.. Ph. D., >I>K<I>, C. S. C, Department of Agriculture, Washington, D. C As-
sistant Director, Office of Experiment Stations; Editor of Experiment Station Recortl ; Residence,
1923 Biltmorc Street. Washington, D. C; Secretary for Country Life Commission.
♦Deceased. I Not heard from.
MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE 219
tALMElDA Luciano J. De., D. G. K., Director and Professor of Agriculture of Piracicola Agri-
cultural College, Estado de Sao Paulo, Brazil.
IBarber, George H., M. D., Q. T. V., United States Naval Training Station, Newport, R. I.,
Physician and Surgeon in U. S. Navy.
1 Browne, Charles W., *K*, Temple, New Hampshire, Farmer.
tGoLDTHWAITE, JoEL E., M. D., *K*, C. S. C, 372 Marlboro Street, Boston, Mass., Physician.
Howell, Hezekiah, ^SK, Monroe, Orange Co., New York.
*LeaRY, Lewis C, died April 3d, 1888, at Cambridge, Mass.
tPHELPS, Charles S., 'i'li*, K2, Chapinville, Conn., Superintendent Farm Scoville Brothers.
Taylor, Isaac N., Jr., D. G. K., Merchant, 84-86 2nd Street, San Francisco, Cal.
'tTEKjRlAN, Benoni, C. S. C, 103 West 114th Street, New York City, Dealer in Oriental Rugs>
•86
DR. WINFIELD AYRES, Secretary). 616 Madison Ave., New York.
tATESHIAN, OsGAN H., C. S. C, Hotel San Remo, New York City, Dealer in Oriental Rugs and
Carpets.
tATKINS, William H., D. G. K., Burnsid,e, Conn., Market Gardener.
Ayres, Winfield, M. D., D. G. K., 616 Madison Avenue., New York City, Residence, Shippan
Point, Stanford, Conn., Physician; Adjunct Professor of Surgery at New York Post Graduate
Medical School.
Carpenter, David F., 'J'K*, K2, Orford, N. H., Superintendent Schools of Warren, Orford, Pier-
mont and Hanover.
Clapp, Charles W., C. S. C, 102 Main Street, Northampton, Mass., Assistant Superintendent
Connecticut Valley Electric R. R.
Duncan, Richard F., M. D., *2K, 1236 Westminster Street, Providence, R. L, Physician.
Eaton, William A., D. G. K., No. 1 Madison Avenue, New York City, Wholesale Lumber.
tFELT, Charles F. W., *E*, C. S. C, Chief Engineer, Gulf, Colorado & Santa Fe R. R. Co.,
Galveston, Texas.
Mackintosh, Richard B., *K<I>, D. G. K., 21 Abom Street, Peabody. Mass., Acting Superin-
tendent Salem Fraternity.
Sanborn, Kingsbury, 'I>2K, Riverside, Cal., Chief Engineer lo Riverside Water Co.; Civil and
Hydraulic Engineer.
Stone, George E., Ph. D., *K*, *2K, Amherst, Mass., Professor of Botany, Massachusetts Agri-
cultural College.
Stone, George S., D. G. K., Otter River, Mass., Farmer.
'87
F. H. FOWLER, Secretary, Boston, Mass.
+ ALMEIDA, A'uGUSTO L. De., D. G. K., Rio Janeiro, Brazil, Coffee Commiission Merchant,
t Barrett, Edward W., M. D., D. G. K., 67 Main Street, Medford, Mass., Physician.
^Deceased. +Not heard from.
220 THE 1910 INDEX VOLUME XXXX
Caldwell, William H., KS, Peterboro, N. H., Secretary and Treasurer American Guernsey Cattle
_ Club; Proprietor Clover Ridge Farm (Dairy and Gardens); Editor of Guernsey Publications;
Correspondent to Agricultural Press and Contributions to Agricultural Experiment Station Publi-
cations.
Carpenter, Frank B., *K*, C. S. C, 11 South Twelfth Street, Richmond^ Va., Residence, 602
Lamb Avenue, Barten Heights, Richmond, Va., Chief Chemist Virginia and Carolina Chemical
Company.
tCHASE, William E., East Burnside and West Avenues, Portland, Ore., Fruit and Garden.
tDAVis, Frederick A., M. D., C. S. C, Denver, Col., Eye and Ear Specialist.
tFlSHERDlCK, Cyrus W., C. S. C, Laplanta, New Mexico, Keeper of Varch Store.
Flint, Edward R., Ph. D., M. D., Q. T. V., Professor of Chemistry, Florida Agricultural and
Technical College, Gainsville, Fla.
Fowler. Frederick H., *K*, C. S. C, 136 State House, Boston, Mass., Residence, Wayland,
Mass., First Clerk and Librarian Massachusetts State Board of Agriculture; Author of a
"Synoptical and Analytical Index,'' "Agriculture of Massachusetts," 1837-1892; Catalogue and
Classification of Library, Massachusetts State Board of Agriculture, 1899; Auditor of town of Way-
land.
Howe, Clinton S., C. S. C, West Medway, Mass., Farmer.
AMarsH, James M., C. S. C, 391 Chestnut Street, Lynn, Mass., Treasurer of G. E. Marsh &
Company, Manufacturers of Good Will Soap.
Marshall, Charles L., D. G. K., 707 Stevens Street, Lowell, Mass., Florist and Market Gardener.
*Meehan, Thomas F., D. G. K., died April 4th, 1905, at Boston, Mass., of pneumonia.
tOsTERHOUT, Jeremiah C, Chelmsford, Mass., Farmer.
Richardson, Evan F., *2K Millis, Mass., Farmer; Massachusetts General Court, 1904; County
Commissioner, 1907-1910.
tRiDEOUT, Henry N. W., Q. T. V., 7 Howe Street, Somerville, Mass., Assistant Paymaster, Office
Fitchburg Division Boston & Maine Railroad, Boston, Mass.
Tolman, William N., *EK, 24 North Twenty-Second Street, Philadelphia, Pa., Civil Engineer;
Erecting Engineer, employ of United Gas Improvement Co.
tToRELLY, FiRMINO Da S., Cidade do Rio Grande do Sud, Brazil, Stock Raising.
IWaTsON, Charles H., Q. T. V., Wool Exchange, West Broadway and Beach Street, New York
City, Representative Wool Department for Swift & Company.
H. C. BLISS, 5ecre;ari;, Altleboro, Mass.
Belden, Edward H., C. S. C, 39 Boylston Street, Boston, Masis., Residence 18 Park View Street,
Roxbury, Mass., with Edison Electric Illuminating Company, of Boston.
Bliss, Herbert C, K^, 14 Mechanic Street, Atlleboro, Mass., Manufacturing Jeweler; Treasurer of
Bliss Brothers Co.; Director of Providence Jeweler's Board of Trade, Providence, R. I.
t Brooks, Fred K., C. S. C, 14 Washington Street, Haverhill, Mass., Residence 36 Brockton Ave-
nue, Proprietor Mcrrimac Laundry.
'Deceased. I Not heard from.
MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE 22 I
CoOLEY, Fred S., ^K^, •i'SK, Bozeman, Mont., Supervisor of Farmers' Institutes for Slate of
Montana. Residence, 603 South Central Street.
Dickinson, Edwin H., C. S. C, North Amherst, Mass., Farmer.
tFlELD, Samuel H., C. S. C, North Hatfield, Mass., Farmer.
Foster, Francis H., Andover, Mass., Civil Engineer.
Hayward, Albert I., B. A., C. S. C, Ashby, Mass., Farmer.
Holt, Jonathan E., C. S. C, 67 Bartlett Street, Andover, Mass., Students" Boarding House.
Kinney, Lorenzo F., Kingston, R. I., Commercial Horticulture.
Knapp, Edward E., K2, 3H4 Passyunk Avenue, Philadelphia, Pa., Residence, Wells Avenue,
Llanwellyn, Pa., in Mechanical Department Atlantic Refining Company, Philadelphia.
tMiSHiMA, Viscount Yataro, D. G. K., 5 Shinrudo, Azabuku, Japan, Farmer.
Moore, Robert B., 'I'K*, C. S. C, P. O. Box 2530, Passyunk Station, Philadelphia, Pa., Resi-
dence 5617 Girard Avenue, Superintendent Tygert-Allen Works, American Agricultural Chemical
Company.
fNEWMAN, Geo. E., Q. T .V., 287 North First Street, San Jose, Cal., Residence, 164 South Critten-
den Street, Model Creamery, Wholesale and Retail Dairy Products.
NoYES Frank F., D. G. K., 472 North Jackson Street, Atlanta, Ga., Superintendent of Lines and
Sub-Stations for the Atlantic Water and Electric Power Co.
Parsons, Wilfred A'., <I>2K, Southampton, Mass., Farmer.
Rice, Thomas, D. G. K., Business address, Dail}) News, Fall River, Mass., Residence, Savoy Hotel,
Fall River, Mass., Reporter for Daily Neas.
Shepardson, William M., C. S. C, Middlebury, Conn., Landscape Gardener.
+ Shimer, Boyer L., Q. T. V., Bethlehem, Pa., Mount Airy Park Farm, Breeder of Pure Bred
Slock and Poultry; Real Estate Business.
'89
C. S. CROCKER, Secrefarv, Philadelphia, Pa.
Blair, James R.. Q. T. V,. 158 Massachusetts Avenue, Cambridge, Mass., Residence 35 Maple
Avenue, Boston, Superintendent C. Brigham Co., Milk Contractors.
*Copeland, Arthur D., K2, died September 3rd, 1907, at Emerson Hospital, Boston, after an
operation for appendicitis.
Crocker, Charles S., KZ, 25 South Van Pelt St., Philadelphia, Pa., Chemist, with American
Agricultural Chemical Co.
Davis, Franklin W., <I>K<I>, ^SK, 85 Colberg Avenue, Roslindale, Mass., Telegraph Editor,
Boston Record; Secretary Massachusetts Agricultural College Alumni Club 1899-1903; President,
1908.
IHartwell, Burt L., Ph. D., M. Sc, *K*, C. S. C, Kingston, R. L, Associate Chemist, Rhode
Island. Agricultural Experiment Station.
*Deceased. +Not heard from.
222 THE 1910 INDEX VOLUME xxxx
t Hubbard, Dwight L., C. S. C, 645 Washington Street, Brighton, Mass., Civil Engineer, City En-
_ gineer's Office, Boston, Mass.
HuTCHINGS, James T., *-K, Assistant General Manager of Rochester Railway and Light Co.
Residential address. 656 Averell Avenue.
tKELLOGG, William A., *2K, Amherst, Mass.
Miles, Arthur L., D. D. S., C. S. C, 12 Magazine Street, Cambridge, Mass., Dentist.
tNoRTH, Mark N., M. D. V., Q. T. V., Corner Bay and Green Streets, Cambridge, Mass.,
Veterinarian.
NouRSE, Arthur M., C. S. C, Westboro, Mass., Farmer.
tSELLEW, Robert P. *2K, 31 Whitney Building, Boston, Mass., Residence, 166 Kent Street, Brook-
line, Mass., Eastern Representative of the J. W. Bills Co., Cincinnati, Ohio,
t Whitney, Charles A., C. S. C, Upton, Mass., Farmer,
t Woodbury, Herbert E., C. S. C, 1512 Delaware Street, Indianapolis, Indiana.
■90
F. W. MOSSMAN, Secrelar^). Westminster, Mass.
Barry, David ^K*, Q. T. V., Amherst, Mass., Superintendent Electric Light Works.
*BliSS, Clinton E., D. G. K., died August 24th, 1894, at Altleboro, Mass.
*Castro, Arthur De M., D. G. K., died May 2nd, 1894 at Juiz de Fora, Minas, Brazil.
tDlCKINSON, Dwight W., D. M. D., Q. T. V., 25 Melendy Avenue., Walertown, Mass., Dentist.
tFELTON, Truman P., C. S. C, West Berlin, Mass., Farmer.
tGRECORY, Edgar, C. S. C, Marblehead, Mass., Proprietor J. J. H. Gregory & Son, Seedsmen,
Marblehead, Mass.
Haskins. Henri M.. Q. T. V., 87 N. Pleasant Street, Amherst, Mass., Chemist, in charge of
Official Inspection of Commercial Fertilizers, Massachusetts Experiment Station, Amherst, Mass.
tHERREO, JosE M., D. G. K., Havana, Cuba, Associate Editor, Diario Je la Marina.
tJoNES, Charles H., 'I'K<I>, Q. T. V., Burlington, Vt., Chemist, Vermont Agricultural Experiment
Station.
*Lorinc, John S., died at Orlando, Florida, January 17th, 1903.
tMcCLOUD, Albert C, Q. T. V., Amherst, Mass., Life and Fire Insurance Agent, Real Estate,
IMossman, Fred W., C. S. C, Westminster, Mass., Farmer.
tRussELL, Henry L., D. G. K., 126 No. Main Street, Pawlucket, R. I., Residence, 34 Greene
Street, Secretary Pawlucket Ice Co.
tSlMONDS, George B., C. S. C, 63 Forest Street, Fitchburg, Mass., Postal Service.
Smith, Frederick J., M. Sc, 'I'K«I>, Q. T. V., Corner of Smith and Huntington Streets, Brooklyn,
N. Y., Residence 46 Reid St., Elizabeth, N. J., Manufacturing Chemist, Insecticides; Author of
papers. Board of Agriculture, 1897.
IStowE, Arthur N., Q. T. V., Hudson, Mass., Fruit Grower.
tTAFT, Walter E., D. G. K., Berlin, N. H., Draughtsman and Secretary Shccley A'utomalio
Railroad Signal Co.
''Deceased. I Not heard from.
MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE 22:
Taylor, Frederick L., M. D., Q. T. V., 524 Wavren Street, Boston, Mass., Physician; Medical
Director of Walter Baker Sanatorium.
*West., John S., Q. T. V., died at Belchertown, July 13th, 1902.
Williams, Frank O., Q. T. V., Sunderland, Mass., Farmer.
•91
W. A. BROWN, Sccrelary, Greenfield, Mass.
Arnold, Frank L., *K*, Q. T. V., 32 School Street, No. Woburn, Mass., Superintendent Oil of
Vitriol Department of the Merrimac Chemical Company.
Brown, Walter A., C. S. C, 90 Main Street, Greenfield, Residence 148 Davis Street, Greenfield,
Mass., Civil and Landscape Engineer; Treasurer of the firm of Clapp & Abercrombie Company,
Greenfield, Mass.
Carpenter, Malcolm A., C. S. C, 103 Belmont Street, Cambridge, Mass., Landscape Gardener,
t Fames, Aldice G., 'I'SK, North Wilmington, Mass., Literary Work.
Felt, E. Porter, D. Sc, Cornell, C. S. C, Geological Hall, Albany, N. Y., Residence, Nassau,
Rensselaer County, N. Y.; Stale Entomologist; Author of "Insects Affecting Park and Woodland
Trees"; also Bulletins and Reports.
tFlELD, Henry J., LL. B., Q. T. V., Greenfield, Mass., Lawyer; Judge Franklin District Court.
tGAY, Willard W., D. G. K., Melrose, Mass., Landscape Designer and Planter.
tHoRNER, Louis F., C. S. C, Montecito, Santa Barbara County, Cal., Landscape Gardener; Super-
intendent Cinque Foil Water Company; President Santa Barbara Horticultural Society; Secre-
tary Montecito Hall and Library Association.
Howard, Henry M., C. S. C, Fuller Street, West Newton, Mass., Market Gardener.
Hull, John B., Jr., D. G. K., Great Barrington, Mass., Coal Dealer.
tJoHNSON, Charles H., D. G. K., Lynn, Mass., General Electric Work;,
+Lage, Oscar V. B., D. G. K., Juiz de Fora, Minas, Brazil. Stock Raiser.
Legate, Howard N., LL. B., D. G. K., Room 136, State House, Boston, Mass., Residence 11
Copeland Place, Roxbury, Mass., Clerk Stale Board of Agriculture; Boston Y. M. C. A.
Evening Law School, Class of 1908.
Magill, Claude A., 902 Chapel Street, New Haven, Conn., Residence 59 Division Street, New
Haven, General Manager of The Connecticut Hassam Paving Company.
Paige, Walter C, D. G. K., Silver Hills, New Albany, Ind., General Secretary of Y. M. C. A.
RuGGLES, Murray, C. S. C, Milton, Mass., Superintendent of Electric Works.
Sawyer, Arthur H., Q. T. V., 98 Hudson Street, Jersey City, N. J., Residence 131 N. 16lh
Street, East Orange, N. J., Cement Inspector with Hudson Companies, New York City.
Shores, Harvey T., M. D., K2, 78 Main Street, Northampton, Mass., Residence 177 Elm Street,
Physician, State Health Inspector for Hampshire and Franklin Counties.
'92
H. M. THOMSON, Secretary, Amherst, Mass.
Beals, Alfred T., Q. T. V., 120 East 23d Street, New York City, Magazine Photographer.
'Deceased. tNot heard from.
224 THE 1910 INDEX VOLUME XXXX
BoYNTON, Walter I., D. D. S., Q. T. V., 310 Main Street, Springfield, Mass., Residence 73 Dart-
mouth Street, Dentist,
t Clark, Edward E., C. S. C. Hudson, Mass., Farmer.
tCRANE, Henry E., C. S. C, Quincy, Mass., F. H. Crane & Sons, Grain Dealers.
Deuel. James E., Ph. G., Q. T. V., Amherst, Mass., Druggist.
tEMLRSON, Henry B., C. S. C, 216 Parkwcod Boulevard, Schenectady, N. Y., Electrical Engineer,
Power and Mining Engineering Department, General Electric Company.
Field, Judson L., Q. T. V., 294 Fifth Avenue, Chicago, 111., Residence Oak Park, 111., Salesman
with Jenkins, Kreer & Company, Dry Goods Commission Merchants, Chicago.
tFLETCHER, William, C. S. C, Chelmsford, Mass., Drummer.
Graham, Charles S., C. S. C, Holden, Mass., Farmer.
Holland, Edward B., M. S., <I>K$, K2, 28 North Prospect Street, Amherst, Mass., Associate Chem-
ist, Massachusetts Agricultural Experiment Station, Department of Plant and Animal Chemistry.
Hubbard, Cyrus M., Q. T. V., Sunderland, Mass., Tobacco Farming.
tKNIGHT, Jewell B., M. S., Q. T. V., Poona, India, Residence Klrkel, India, Professor of Agricul-
ture and Director Experiment Station, Poona College.
Lyman, Richard P., M. D. V., Q. T. V., 1260 Main Street, Hartford, Conn., Residence 82 Oak-
land Terrace, Veterinary Surgeon; Secretary American Veterinary Medical Association; Editor
American Veterinary Medical Association Annual; Member State Board of Veterinary Exam-
iners; Organizer and First President of State Examining Board of Veterinary Surgeons; and
Author of Laws Pertaining to Glanders and Rabies in the State of Connecticut.
Plumb, Frank H., Q. T. V., Stafford Springs, Conn., Farmer.
Rogers, Eluott, 'I>2K, Kennebunk, Maine, Manufacturing.
*Smith, Robert H., died March 25th, 1900, at Amherst, Mass.
Stockbridge, Francis G., 'tK*, D. G. K., Narcissa, Pa., Superintendent of Triple Springs Farm.
Taylor, George E., Jr., *K*, Q. T. V., Shelburne, Mass., Farmer, Breeder of Pure-Bred Short-
horn Cattle; President Connecticut Valley Breeders' Association.
Thomson, Henry M., *K*, C. S. C, Amherst, Mass., Farmer.
tWEST, Homer C, Q. T. V., Belchertown, Mass., Traveling Agent.
tWiLLARD, George B., 'I>2K, Wallham, Mass., City Treasurer and Collector of Taxes.
Williams, Milton H., M. D. V., Q. T. V., Sunderland. Mass., Veterinarian.
•93
F. A. SMITH, Sccrclar^. Ipswich, Mass.
Baker, Joseph, Q. T. V., Riverside Farm, North Grosvenor Dale, Conn., Farmer.
fBARTLETT, FREDERICK G., D. G. K., 298 Cabot Street, Holyoke, Mass., Sexton Forestdale Cemetery.
Clark, Henry D., D. V. S., C. S. C, 15 Central Street, Fitchburg, Mass., Residence, 69 High
Street, Veterinary Surgeon.
ICuRLEY, George F., M. D. 'I'K<I>, C. S. C, 10 Congress Street. Milford. Mass.. Physician and
Surgeon.
*Decca5cd. (Not heard from.
MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE 225
Davis, Herbert C, Q. T. V., 82 NortK Forsyth Street, Atlanta, Ga., Railway Postal Clerk, U. S.
Government.
Goodrich, Chas. A., M. D., D. G. K., 5 Haynes Street, Hartford, Conn., Residence, 61 North
Beacon Street, Physician.
tHARLOW, Harry J., K2, Shrewsbury, Mass., Dairyman.
•t Harlow, Francis T., *SK, p. O. Box 106, Marshfield, Mass., Farmer and Cranberry Grower.
tHAWKS, Ernest A., C. S. C, Fourth and Broad Streets, Richmond, Va., Evangelist.
tHENDERSON, Frank H., D. G. K., address unknown.
Howard, Edwin C, *2K, Corner B and Third Streets, Soulh Boston, Mass., Residence 156 Hill-
side Avenue, Arlington Heights, Mass., Sub-Master Lawrence School, Boston, Mass.
tHoYT, Franklin S., A. M., C. S. C, 4 Park Street, Boston, Mass., Residence 37 Dana Street,
Cambridge, Mass., Editor Educational Department, Houghton, Mifflin & Company.
Lehnert, Eugene H., D. V. S., 'tK*, KS, Storrs, Conn., Professor of Veterinary Science and
Physiology, Connecticut Agricultural College.
Melendy, A. Edward, Q. T. V., Quincy, Mass., Government Drafting Rooms, Fore River Ship-
building Company, Residence, 21 Grant Street, Wollaston, Mass., Weight Clerk, C. and R. De-
partment, U. S. Navy.
t Perry, John R., 8 Bosworth Street, Boston, Mass., Interior Decorator.
Smith, Cotton A., Ph. B., Yale, '94, Q. T. V., 327 Douglas Building, Los Angeles, Cal., Resi-
dence, 954 Beacon Street, Real Estate Broker.
Smith, Fred A., C. S. C, Turner Hill, Ipswich, Mass., Manager of a Country Estate.
Smith, Luther W., <I?2K, Manteno, 111., Stock and General Farmer.
tSTAPLES, Henry F., M. D., C. S. C, 802 Rose Building, Cleveland, Ohio, Residence 8628 Wade
Fisk Avenue, Physician and Surgeon; Professor of Hygiene, Cleveland Homeopathic Medical
College; Secretary Homeopathic Medical Society of Ohio; President of Cleveland Homeopathic
Society; Vice-President and Member of Medical Staff of Cleveland City Hospital.
TlNOCO, LuiZ A. F., D. G. K., Campos, Rio Janeiro, Brazil, Planter and Manufacturer.
Walker, Edward J., C. S. C, Box 315, Clinton, Mass., Farmer.
•94
S. FRANCIS HOWARD, Secrefarl,, Amherst, Mass.
Alderman, Edwin H., C. S. C, R. F. D. No. 2, Chester, Mass., Residence Middlefield, Farmer.
tAvERELL, Fred G., Q. T. V., 131 State Street, Boston, Mass., Clerk.
Bacon, Linus H., Q. T. V., Main Street, Spencer, Mass., wilh Phoenix Paper Box Company; Resi-
dence, 36 Cherry Street.
Bacon, Theodore Spaulding, M. D., ^K*, <I>2K, 6 Chestnut Street, Springfield, Mass., Physician
and Surgeon; Secretary Hampden District Medical Society; Director Springfield Academy of
Medicine.
Barker, Louis M., C. S. C, Hanson, Mass., Civil Engineer.
*Deceased. tNot heard from.
226 THE 1910 INDEX VOLUME XXXX
tBoARDMAN, Edwin L., C. S. C, Sheffield, Mass., Farmer.
Brown, Charles L., C. S. C, 870-878 Slate Street, Springfield, Mass., Residence, West Spring-
field, Laundryman.
Curtis, Arthur C, C. S. C, Salisbury School, Salisbury, Conn., Master in English.
tCuTTER, Arthur H., M. D., *2K, 333 Broadway, Lawrence, Mass., Physician.
D.AVIS, Perley E., Q. T. v., Granby, Mass., Farmer.
Dickinson, Eliot T., D. M. D., Q. T. V., TBS Main Street, Northampton, Residence Florence,
Mass., Dentist.
Fowler, Halley M., Mansfield, Mass., Railway Postal Clerk.
tFowLER, Henry J., C. S. C, North Hadley, Mass., Agent for Alfred Peats & Company, Wall
Papers, Boston, Mass.
GiFFORD, John E., K2, Sutton, Mass., Farmer.
tGREENE, Frederick L., A. M., C. S. C, Red Bluff Union High School, Red Bluff, Cal., Prin-
cipal High School.
Greene, Ira C, Q. T. V., 222 Pleasant Street, Leominster, Mass., Greene Bros., Coal Dealers and
Wholesale Shippers of Ice.
HlGGINS, Charles H., D. V. S., C. S. C, Pathologist to Dominion of Canada; in charge of Bio-
logical Laboratory, Ottawa, Canada; Residence, 74 Fairmount Avenue, Ottawa.
Howard, S. Francis, M. S., *K<i>, *SK, Amherst, Mass., Assistant Professor of Chemistry, Massa-
chusetts Agricultural College.
Keith, Thaddeus F., Q. T. V., 8 Wallace Avenue, Fitchburg, Mass., Residence 98 Blossom Street,
Advertising Contractor.
KlRKLAND, Archie H., M. S., *SK, 6 Beacon Street, Boston, Mass., Entomologist; Superintendent
of Gypsy Moth Work; Residence, Reading, Mass.
LouNSBURY, Charles P., <i>K*, <I>2K, Department of Agriculture, Cape Town, South Africa, Gov-
ernment Entomologist, Colony of Cape of Good Hope; Residence Karlskrona, Kenilworth, Cape
Colony.
Manley, Lowell, K2, Weld Farm, West Roxbury, Mass., Farm Superintendent.
Merwin, George H., C. S. C, Southport, Conn., Slock- farming,
t Morse, AlveRTUS J., Q. T. V., 59 Main Street, Northamplcn, Mas>., Attorney.
tPoMEROY, Robert F., C. S. C, South Worthington, Mass., Farmer.
Putnam, Joseph H., K2, Litchfield, Conn., Farm Superintendent; Lecturer Connecticut Stale Grange.
t Sanderson, William E., KS, 36 Corllandl Street, New York City, Salesman forsj. M. Thorburn
& Company; Residence 161 State Street, Brooklyn, N. Y.
Smead, H. Preston, K2, East Dummerslon, Vl., Farmer.
tSMlTH, George H., C. S. C, Sheffield, Mass., Farmer.
Smith, Ralph E., 'I'K*, 'KK, Berkeley, Cal., Associate Professor of Plant Pathology, University
of California.
tSPAULDING, Charles H., 'I'-K, Lexington, Mass., United Stales Inspector of Dredging, Engineer-
ing Department.
Walker, Claude F., Ph. D., C. S. C, 155 West 65th Street, New York City, Residence 2 Saint
Nicholas Place., Co-Editor of "Outlines of Inorganic Chemistry and Laboratory Experiments."
tWniTE, Elias D., 'I'i;K, 283 Lawton Street, Atlanta, Ga., Railway Postal Clerk.
*Decea8ed. I Not heard from.
MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE 227
'95
H. A. BALLOU, 5ecre(ari), Barbadoes, West Indies.
Ballou, Henry A'., M. S., >J>K*, Q. T. V., Barbadoes, B. W. I., Entomologist, Imperial Depart-
ment of Agriculture for the West Indies; Author of Papers on Economic Entomology.
IBemis, Waldo L., Q. T. V., Spencer, Mass.
Billings, George A., C. S. C, Office Farm Management United States Department of Agriculture,
Washington, D. C; Residence 3649 Ilth Street, N. W., Washington, D. C; Assistant Agricul-
turist in Dairy Farm Management; Author of Bulletins and Reports of Dairy Husbandry, New
Jersey Experiment Station,
t Brown, Wm. C, D. G. K., 338 Boylston Stree', Boston, Mass., with J. J. Wingott, Interior Decorator,
t Burgess, Albert F., M. S., <I'2K, 1358 Newton Street, Washington, D. C., Entomologist in Bureau
of Entomology; Secretary of Association of Economic Entomologists.
Clark. Harry E., 'S'SK, Middlebury, Conn., Superintendent of Biscoe Farm.
CooLEY, Robert A., 'S?~K, Bozeman, Mont., Professor of Zoology and Entomology, Montana Agri-
cultural College, Stale Entomologist; Fellow A'. A. A. S.
Crehore, Charles W., <>SK, Chicopee, Mass., Farmer.
tDlCKINSON, Charles M., M. S., Q. T. V., 76-78 Wabash Avenue, Chicago, 111., Residence Park
Ridge, 111., Seedsman and Florist.
Fairbanks, Herbert S., K2, 13th and Chestnut Streets, Philadelphia, Pa., Residence, Germanlown,
Pa., Patent Attorney, Patents and Patent Causes; with Wiedersheim and Fairbanks,
t Foley, Thomas P., C. S. C, 17 Battery Place, New York City, Residence 466 Valley Road, West
Orange, N. J., Draughtsman with Construction Department of Otis Elevator Company.
Frost, Harold L., "i>K"^, *'2K, Arlington, Mass., Forester and Entomologist.
Hemenway, Herbert D., C. S. C, Home Culture Clubs, Northampton, Residence 57 High Street,
Northampton, Mass., General Secretary Home Culture Clubs; Author of "How to Make School
Gardens," "Hints and Helps for Young Gardeners," Illustrated Lectures on How to Plan ttie
Home Grounds, Gospel of Gardens, Our Common Trees, Children's Gardens in United States.
tJoNES, Robert S., "I'SK, Columbus, Ohio, Civil Engineer, Water Filtration Plant.
1 KuRODA, Shiro, "^wK, 127 Second Street, Osaka, Japan, Chief Foreign Department, Osaka Revenue
Administration Bureau, Utsobo, Kitadore.
Lane, Clarence B., ^K*, D. G. K., Department of Agriculture, Washington, D. C, Residence
4026 5th Street N. W., Washington, D. C, Assistant Chief Dairy Division United States De-
partment of Agriculture; Author of "The Business of Dairying"; in charge of Market Milk
Investigation.
Lewis, Henry W., McCall Ferry, Pa., Residence Rockland, Mass., Civil Engineer and Superin-
tendent of Construction.
tMARSH, Jasper, K2, Danvers, Mass., with Consolidated Electric Light Company.
Morse, Walter L., K2, Grand Central Station, New York City, Residence 1432 Pacific Street,
Brooklyn, Terminal Engineer for N. Y. C. & H. R. R. R. Co.
Potter, Daniel C, C. S. C, Fairhaven, Mass., Landscape and Sanitary Engineer.
Read, Henry B., *2K, Westford, Mass., Farmer.
tRoTT, Wright A., i'SK, Easthampton, Mass., Dairy Farmer.
^Deceased. tNot heard from.
228 THE 1910 INDEX VOLUME XXXX
Smith, Arthur B., Q. T. V., 332 Fifth Avenue, Chicago, 111, Residence 544 Winnemac Avenue,
- Bookkeeper for Wilson Bros.
'Stevens, Clarence L., died October 8lh, 1901, at Sheffield, Mass., of hemorrhage.
tSuLLlVAN, Maurice J., Littleton, N. H., Superintendent of "The Rocks."
ToBEY, Frederick C, C. S. C, West Stockbridge, Mass., Lime Manufacturer.
tTooLE, Stephen P., Amherst, Mass., Evergreen Nurseryman.
Warren, Franklin L., M. D., Q. T. V., Bridgewater, Mass., Physician.
White, Edward A., K2, 55 Pleasant Street, Amherst, Mass., Assistant Professor of Floriculture,
Massachusetts Agricultural College; Director Summer School; Author of "The Hymenialis of
Connecticut."
*BuRRINGTON, HoRACE C, "tSK, died at Greenwich, Conn., November, 1907.
Clapp, Frank L., *K.3>, C. S. C, Comwall-on-Hudson, N. Y., Civil Engineer, Board of Water
Supply of the City of New York.
Cook, Allen B., C. S. C, Farmington, Conn., Superintendent of Hill Stead Farm.
De Luce, Edmond, *wK, 256 Broadway, New York City, Export Manager.
tEoWARDS, Harry T., C. S. C, United Slates Department of Agriculture, 227 Calle Rege Malate,
Manila, P. L
Fletcher, Stevenson W., M. S., Ph. D., <I'K<I>, C. S. C, Blacksburg. Va., Director of Virginia
Agricultural Experiment Station; Author of "Soils" and "How to Make a Fruit Garden."
Hammar, James F., C. S. C, Nashua, N. H., Farmer and Florist,
t Harper, Walter B., M. S., Q. T. V., Bogalusa, La., Manager Turpentine Department, Great
Southern Lumber Company.
*Jones, Benjamin K., C. S. C, died August 21, 1903, at Springfield, Mass.
Kinney, Asa S., K2, Mount Holyoke College, South Hadley, Mass., Floriculturist and Instructor
in Botany.
Kramer, Albin M., K2, 351 Main Street, Springfield, Mass., Architect and Civil Engineer; Resi-
dence 452 Wilbraham Road, Springfield, Mass.
tLEAMV, Patrick A., Q. T. V., Midas Via Golconda, Nevada.
Marshall, James L., C. S. C, 18 Grafton Street, Worcester, Mass., Office of Bradley Car Works;
Residence 29 Gardner Street, Worcester,
t Moore, Henry W., K2, Worcester, Mass., Farmer and Market Gardener,
t Nichols, Robert P„ D. G. K., Care of B. Parker Nichols, Norwell, Mass.
Nutting, Charles A., <I'2K, Ashby, Mass., Farmer.
Pentecost, William L., D. G. K., Sliltville, Oneida County, N. Y., Superintendent of Brooklands
Holslein-Friesian Stock Farm.
Poole, Erford W., <I>K<I>, KS, P. O. Box 129, New Bedford, Mass., Estimator and Draughtsman.
Poole, I. Chester, D. O., 'I>K<I>, Ki), 204 High Street, Fall River, Mass., Osteopathic Physician.
Read, Frederick H., 'I'SK, Meshanticut, R. I., Teacher in English, High School, Providence,
R. I.; President Rhode Island Interscholastic Athletic League; Vice-President Eastern Com-
mercial Teachers' Association.
*Dccea9ed. tNot heard from.
MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE 229
t Roper, Harry H., C. S. C, East Hubbardston, Mass., Fanner.
Saito, Seijiro, C. S. C, Nautical College, Tokio, Japan, Teacher; Interpreter at Marine Courts;
Residence 12 Aoyama Takagi Cho, Tokio.
Sastre, De Veraud Salome, D. G. K., Cardenas, Tabasco, Mexico, Sugar Planter and Manu-
facturer.
Sellew, Merle E., *2K, Wallingford, Conn., Teacher, Central District, Wallingford.
Shaw, Frederick B., D. G. K., 18 City Square, Taunton, Mass., Manager Western Union Tele-
graph Company, Taunton; Residence 41 Winthrop Street.
Shepard, Lucius J., C. S. C, West Sterling, Mass., Farmer.
Shultis, Newton S., KS, 601 Chamber Commerce, Boston, Mass., Wholesale Grain Dealer; Resi-
dence, 1 4 Winthrop Street, Winchester.
tTsUDA, George, *2K, Editor of Agriculturist, Seed and Nurseryman, Ayabu, Tokio, Japan; Pres-
ident Tsuda 8t Company, Importers and Exporters of Plants, Seeds, and Agricultural Implements.
•97
C. A. PETERS, 5ecre/ari,, Moscow, Idaho.
Allen, Harry F., C. S. C, Norlhboro, Mass., Farmer.
tALLEN, John W., C. S. C, Northboro, Mass., Market Gardener.
Armstrong, Herbert J., *3K, 11337 Crescent Avenue, Morgan Park, 111., Assistant Professor of
Civil Engmeering, Armour Institute of Technology, Chicago.
Barry, John M., *2K, 509 Tremont Street, Boston, Residence 552 Tremont Street, Automobiles.
Bartlett, James L., *K*, Q. T. V., 615 State Street, Madison, Wis., Observer United States
Weather Bureau, Assistant Professor, University of Wisconsin.
Cheney, Liberty L., V. M. D., Q. T. V., 329 Telfair Street, Augusta, Ga., Veterinarian to the
Board of Health in Augusta.
Clark, Lafayette F., C. S. C, 1437 Seventh Street, Des Moines, la., Beatrice Creamery Co., in
charge of Testing Department.
Drew, George A., •i'SK, Greenwich Conn., General Manager of Conyers Manor, Estate of E. C.
Converse.
Emrich, John A., Q. T. V., 1704 Eye Street, Sacramento, Cal., Superintendent First Christian
Bible School.
tGoESSMANN, Charles I., D. G. K., Scranton, Pa., Industrial Chemist.
tLEAVENS, George D., 'Hv*, <HSK, 24-26 Stone Street, New York City, Residence, 530 First Street,
Brooklyn, N. Y., Second Vice-President The Coe-Mortimer Company, Fertilizers, Soil Expert
Agricultural Experts' Association.
tNoRTON, Charles A., $2K, 30 Grove Street, West Lynn, Mass., Pianos and Piano Tuner.
Palmer, Clayton F., A. M., C. S. C, Los Angeles, Cal., Residence 1622 Bushnell Avenue, So.
Pasadena, Cal., Instructor in Agricultural Nature Study, Los Angeles (State) Normal School.
Peters, Charles A., Ph. D., <f>K$, C. S. C, Moscow, Idaho, Professor of Chemistry, University
of Idaho. (Absent on leave at University of Berlin.)
Smith, Philip H., *-K, 102 Main Street, Amherst, Mass., Chemist in charge of Feed and Dairy
Division, Massachusetts Agricultural Experiment Station.
'Deceased. tNot heard from.
230 the19I0indexvolumexxxx
'98
S. W. WILEY, 5ecre/ari,, Baltimore, Md.
IAdejmian, Aredis G., D. G. K., Harpool, Turkey, Care Rev. H. N. Barnum, Farmer.
Baxter, Charles N., A. B., C. S. C, 10 J/2 Beacon Street, Boston, Residence Southboro, Mass.,
R. F. D., Assistant Boston Athenaeum Library.
Clark, Clifford G., D. G. K., Sunderland, Mass., Farmer.
Eaton, Julian S., B. S., D. G. K., 71 1 Prospect Avenue, Hartford, Conn., Chief Adjuster and
Attorney for Travelers* Insurance Co.
Fisher, Willis S., -J-ZK, 15 Bartlett Street, Melrose, Mass., Principal of Lincoln and D. W. Gooch
Grammar Schools,
t Montgomery, Alexander J., C. S. C, Natick, Mass., Waban Rose Conservatories, Rose Grower.
tNlCKERSON, John P., M. D., Q. T. V., West Harwich, Mass., Physician.
Warden, Randall D., 'i'SK, Board of Education, City Hall, Newark, N. J., Residence 67 Tracy
Avenue, Director of Physical Training in Public Schools,
t Wiley, Samuel W., K2, 15 South Gay Street, Baltimore, Md., Residence " Kenilworth" 339 Bloom
Street, Analytical and Consulting Chemist, Wiley & Hoffman.
Wright, George H., "J'SK, Ennis & Stoppani, Brokers, 34-36 New Street, New York City, Book-
keeper.
'99
D. A. SEAMAN, Secreiar}^, Ponce, Porto Rico.
fARMSTRONC, William H., 'J'SK, Henry Barracks, Cayey, Porto Rico, Residence, Cambridge, Mass.,
First Lieutenant, Porto Rico Regiment of Infantry, United States Army.
IBeamaN, Daniel, Q. T. V., Teacher of Horticulture and Entomology, Ponce Agricultural School,
Ponce. Porto Rico.
tCHAPlN, William E., 'I'SK, Wakefield, Mass., Teacher in charge of the Commercial Department,
Wakefield High School.
Dana, Herbert W., C. S. C, 5 Roslyn Street, Salem Mass., Advertising Manager R. H. White
Company, Boston, Mass.
Hinds, Warren E., Ph. D., <I>K<[>, C. S. C, Auburn, Alabama, Professor of Entomology and En-
tomologist to the Experiment Station, Alabama Polytechnic Institute; Author of Publications on
Economic Entomology, Thysanoptera of North America and Mexican Cotton Boll Weevil.
Hooker, William A., "I'i^K, United States Department of Agriculture, Bureau of Entomology,
Washington, D. C.
t Hubbard, George C, 'I>2K, Sunderland, Mass., Farmer.
IMaynard, Howard E., C. S. C, East Orange, N. J., Electrician.
t Merrill, Frederick A., Mount Vernon, Ga., Professor of Agriculture and Member of Industrial
Department of the Baptist Collegiate Industrial Institute.
tPlNCREE, Melvin H., C. S. C, Chemist, with American Agricultural Chemical Company, Balti-
more, Md.
*Dcccased. 1 Not heard from.
MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE
231
• Smith, Bernard H., M. S., LL. B., 1'K*, C. S. C, 177 State Street, Boston. Mass., Residence
29 Lowden Avenue, West Somerville, Mass., Chief Food and Drug Inspection Laboratory, Boston,
Mass.
tSMITH, Samuel E., C. S. C, Amherst, Mass.
Turner, Frederick H., ^K*, C. S. C, Great Barrington, Mass., Hardware Business,
t Walker, Charles M., C. S. C, Student Yale Forestry School, New Haven, Conn.
•00
E. K. ATKINS, 5ecrc/ari;, Northampton, Mass.
Atkins, Edwin K., K2, 15 Hubbard Avenue, Northampton, Mass., Civil Engineer, with E. C. &
E. E. Davis.
Baker, Howard, V. M. D., C. S. C, Care of Elliott & Company, 37lh Avenue West, Duluth,
Minn., Veterinary Inspector, Bureau of Animal Industry, in charge of Station.
tBROWN, Frank H., KS, Hosmer Street, Marlboro, Mass., Farmer.
.+Campbell, Morton A., C. S. C, Sangerville, Maine, Prmcipal High School,
t Canto, Ysidro H., Causaheub, Yucatan, Mexico.
tCRANE, Henry L., 'I'SK, Westwood, Mass., Farmer; Strawberries a Specialty.
*Felch, Percy F., C. S. C, drowned in Conneoticut River, North Hadley, July 8th, 1900.
Frost, Arthur F., C. S. C, 526-8 West 147th Street, New York, N. Y., Bridge Designer with
Public Service Commission of First District, 154 Nassau Street, New York.
tGlLBERT, Ralph D., Ph. D., C. S. C, 93 Broad Street, Boston, Mass., Residence 12 Grove Street,
Winchester, Mass., Analytical Chemist, in charge of the Laboratory of Arthur D. Little.
IHalligan, James E., K2, Box 246, Baton Rouge, La., Chemist, State Experiment Station; Asso-
ciate Referee on Sugar; Referee on Molasses Methods for the A. O. A. C, 1906-1907; Referee
on National Cattle Food Standards.
Harmon Arthur Atwell, V. M. D., ^K*, C. S. C, Flagstaff, Arizona, Veterinary Inspector,
Bureau of Animal Industry, Care of Dr. Marion Imes, Albuquerque, New Mexico.
Hull, Edward T., M. D., *K*, C. S. C, 2420 Seventh Avenue, New York City, Physician and
Surgeon; Pathologist at St. Mary's and Sloane Maternity Hospital.
Kellogg, James W., ^'SK, Box 645, Room 635, Capitol, Harrisburg, Pa., First Assistant Chemist
and Microscopist, Stale Department of Agriculture.
ILanders, Morris B., M. D., D. G. K., 13 East Street, Ludlow, Mass., Physician; New York
Hospital and Sloane Maternity Hospital; Attending Physician to O. P. D. Harlem Hospital.
tLEWIS, James F., <I>2K, Carver-Cutter Cotton Gin Company, East Bridgewater, Mass.
tMoNAHAN, Arthur C, 'i'K'i', C. S. C, Principal Turner's Falls High School, Turner's Falls, Mass.
Morrill, Austin W., Ph. D. (Massachusetts Agricultural College, 1903), 'tSK, Box 165, Orlando,
Florida, Entomologist, Bureau of Entomology, United States Department of Agriculture; in gen-
eral charge of White Fly Investigations; Author of Fumigation for the White Fly, as adapted
to Florida Conditions.
MuNSON, Mark H., C. S. C, Littleville, Mass., Sheep Raiser and Slaughterer.
*Deceased. tNot heard from.
232 THE I91U INDEX VOLUME XXXX
tPARMENTER, George F., M. A., Ph. D., *i;K, 3 Center Place, Waterville, Me., Professor of Chem-
istry in Colby College; Author of "Laboratory Experiments in General Chemistry," and papers
on Entomological Subjecits.
tSxANLEY, Francis G., M. D., Q. T. V., 144 Cabot Street, Beverly, Mass., Physician.
tWEST, Albert M., *2K, Whittier, Cal., Vegetable Pathologist, California Experiment Station.
'01
J. H. CHICKERING, Secretary, Dover, Mass.
t Barry, John E., KS, Schenectady, N. Y., General Electric Company, Testing Department.
1 Bridceforth, George R., C. S. C, Head of Department of Agriculture, Tuskegee, Ala.
t Brooks, Percival C, 'I'^K, 418 Englewcod Avenue, Englewood Station, Chicago, 111., Foreman
of Silicate Soda Department at Calumet Works of the General Chemistry Company.
Casey, Thomas, Q. T. V., 145 Main Street, Fitchburg, Mass., Attorney at Law.
Chickering, James H., *2K, Dover, Mass., Farmer.
.Cooke, Theodore F., C. S. C, 183 Elm Street, Pittslield, Mass., Teacher in Piltsfield High School.
Dawson, William A., C. S. C, Willimantic, Conn., Florist.
tDlCKERMAN, William E., 'I'SK, 97 Arnold Street, Providence, Rhode Island.
IGamwell, Edward S., C. S. C, 237 South Fourth West Street, Salt Lake City, Utah. Inspector for
Faust Creamery and Supply House.
GoRDAN, Clarence E., A. M., *K<i>, C. S. C, North Amherst, Mass., Assistant Professor of Zoology
at Massachusetts Agricultural College,
t Craves, Thaddeus, Jr., ^-K, Hatfield, Mass., Tobacco Grower.
Henry, James B., LL. B., D. G. K., 50 State Street, Lawyer; Firm name, Chapin & Henry;
Residence, 288 Sargeant Street, Hartford^ Conn.
Hunting, Nathan J., C. S. C, Shutesbury, Mass., Farmer.
Leslie, Charles T., M. D., C. S. C, Pittsfield. Mass., Physician.
IMacomber, Ernest L., <I>2;K, 17 General Cobb Street, Taunton, Mass., Freight Cashier, N. Y.,
N. H. & H. R. R. Company.
tOvALLE, Julio, M. B., D. G. K., Chili.
Pierson, Wallace R., "I>K*, K2, Cromwell, Conn., Florist; Secretary A. Pierson, Inc.
tRiCE, Charles L., C. S. C, Western Electric Company, 463 West Street, New York City, Resi-
dence, 223 North Ninth Street, Roseville, N. J., Electrical Engineer.
Root, Luther A., 'I>2K, Amherst, Mass., Farmer.
fScHAFFRATH, Max, Box 95, Coalinga, Cal., Oil Business.
Smith, Ralph I., Q. T. V., Agricultural Building, West Raleigh, N. C, Entomologist to North
Carolina Experiment Station and A. M. College; Residence, 106 New Burn Avenue, Raleigh. N. C.
Tashjian, Dickran B., Q. T. V., Turner Hill, Ipswich, Mass., Landscape Gardener to C. G.
Rice, Esq.; Special Editor of "Ardrivc," a semi-monthly Armenian Magazine.
tToDD, John H., Q. T. V., Rowley, Mass., Dairyman.
*Dccea8cd. I Not heard from.
MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE
233
Whitman, N. D., *2K, 2307 Wept 30th Street, Los Angeles, Cal., Engineer for Reinforced Con-
crete Pipe Company, 715-16 Central Building, Los Angeles, Cal.
Wilson, Alexander, C, <I>K*, <tZK, Heller & Wilson, Ballron Building, Market and Second
Streets, San Francisco, Cal, Consulting Engineer.
•02
H. L. KNIGHT, Secreiar}), Washington, D. C.
Belden, Joshua H., *2K, Hammond Building, Detroit, Mich., Home address, Newington, Conn.,
Special Agent of The Fidelity and Casually Company, New York City.
tBoDFlSH, Henry L., D. G. K., 56 Olivia Street, Derby, Conn., Civil Engineer.
tCARPENTER, Thorne M., *K*, C. S. C, Assistant Chemist, Wesleyan University, Middletown, Conn.
fCnuRCH, Frederick R., C. S. C, New Platz, N. Y. Manager Mohonk Farms.
Claflin, Leander C, *2K, 1107 Chestnut Street, Philadelphia, Pa., Residence, Media, Pa., Shoe
Shop of Waldo M. Claflin.
tCoOK, Lyman A., Q. T. V., Millis, Mass., Farmer.
CoOLEY, Orrin F., 1636 Court Place, Denver, Col., Residence 675 South Sherman Avenue, Chief
Engineer of The Bennett Tunnel and Machine Company.
tDACY, Arthur L., ^K*, C. S. C, "Turner Hill," Ipswich, Mass., Horticultural Foreman.
IDellea, John M., C. S. C, Great Barrington, Majs., Forester.
IDWYER, Chester E., C. S. C, Arbor Lodge, Nebraska City, Neb., Manager of Estate of Morton
Bros,
t Gates, Victor A., 'S'SK, Little Rock, Ark., Care of Scott-Mayer Commission Company, Whole-
sale Fruit and Produce; Residence 1116 North Third Street.
tHALL, John C, *SK, Sudbury, Mass., Poultry Farmer.
Hodcekiss, Harold E., C. S. C, New York Agricultural Experiment Station, Geneva, N. Y. ;
Residence 1 72 Genesee Street, Geneva, First Assistant Entomologist.
tKlNNEY, Charles M., *2K, 453 Cajon Street, Redlandsi, Cal., Organist.
Knight, Howard L., *K*, C. S. C, United States Department of Agriculture, Washington, D. C,
Residence 1731 T Street, Editorial Assistant, Office of Experiment Stations, United States De-
partment of Agriculture; Author of "Dietary Studies of a Week's Walking Trip" in Storr's
Connecticut Report of 1905.
Lewis, Claude I., M. S. A., C. S. C, Professor of Horticulture, Oregon State University /and
Oregon Experiment Station, Corvallis, Ore.
Morse, Ransom W., M. S. C, Q. T. V., 231 Pocaspel Street, Fall River, Mass., Residence 140
Winter Street, Business Manager Fall River Herald Publishing Company.
tPAUL, Herbert A., C. S. C, Escanaba, Mich.
tPLUMB, Frederick H., Norwalk, Conn., Instructor in Mathematics and Sciences, Connecticut Mili-
tary Academy.
1 Saunders, Edward B., D. G. K., Calais, Me., Manager Stwift & Company.
tNot heard from.
234
THE I9I0 INDEX VOLUME XXXX
tSiaiTH, Samuel L., C. S. C, Y. M. C. A. Work, Twenty-Third Street Branch, New York City,
-. N. Y.
tWEST, D. Nelson, Q. T. V., Care of G. G. While & Company, Hatfield, Wis.
•03
G. D. JONES, Secretary), North Amherst, Mass.
tALLEN, William E., *2K, 27 Boylston Building, Boston, Mass., representing Reiter, Fruhauf &
Company, Style Creators, New York City,
t Bacon, Stephen C, D. G. K., 364 West Twenty-third Street, New York City.
tBoWEN, Howard C, Q. T. V., Chemawa, Oregon, Teacher in Indian School.
tBARRUS, George L., K2, Lithia, Mass., Farmer.
Brooks, Philip W., Q. T. V., Imperial, Cal., Cattle Business, General Farming and Fruit Growing.
tCoOK, Joseph G., 'I'K*, C. S. C, Head Farmer at Northampton State Hospital, Northampton, Mass.
tpRANKLIN, Henry J., *K*, Q. T. V., 1472 Raymond Ave., St. Anthony Park, St. Paul, Minn.
tHALLICAN, Charles P., KS, Agricultural College, Mich., Instructor and Assistant Horticulturist,
Michigan Experiment Station,
t Harvey, Lester F., C. S. C, Rumford, Conn., Farmer.
tHoOD, W. L., Normal, Ala.
Jones, Gerald D., Q. T. V., Superintendent Cowles Farm, North Amherst.
tLAMSON, G. H., C. S. C, Slorrs Agricultural College, Slorrs, Conn.
tMoNAHAN, Neil F., C. S. C, Ridgeford, Conn.
tNERSESSIAN, Paul N., 32 West Street, Attleboro, Mass., Farmer.
OsMUN, A. Vincent, M. S., ^K*, Q. T. V., Assistant Professor of Botany, Massachusetts Agri-
cultural College.
Parsons, Albert, Q. T. V., Instructor in the Kamehameha School, Honolulu, T. H.; in charge of
Agricultural Department,
t Peebles, W. W., C. S. C, 424 Fulton Street, Chicago, III.
t Poole, E. M., K2, North Dartmouth, Mass., Dairyman.
+ Proulx, Edward G., 'PSK, Lafayette, Ind., Chemist, Indiana Experiment Station.
♦Robertson, R. H., D. G. K., died September lOlh, 1904, at Amherst, Mass., of peritonitis.
tSNELL, Edward B., Q. T. V., 81 Meadow Street, New Haven, Conn., Civil Engineer for N. Y.,
N. H. & H. R. R.
tTlNKHAM, Charles S., D. G. K., 15 Ashburton Place, Boston, Mass., Residence 126 Thornton
Street, Roxbury, Mass., Civil Engineer, Massachusetts Highway Commission.
Tottincham, William E., M. Sc, <1>K<I', Q. T. V., Experiment Station, Madison, Wis., Residence
915 W. Johnson Street, Instructor in Agricultural Chemistry, College of Agriculture, and Assistant
Chemist, Agricultural Experiment Station.
tToWER, WlNTHROP V., "I'-K, Porto Rico Agricultural Experiment Station, Mayagues, Porlo Rico.
I West, Myron H., Q. T. V., 28 Linden Court, Chicago, 111., Assistant Superintendent of Lincoln
Park, Clark and Center Streets.
»De
I Not heard from.
MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE 235
'04
P. F. STAPLES, Secretary, North Grafton, Mass.
f Ahearn, Michael F., C. S. C, Manhattan, Kan., Foreman of Greenhouses, Kansas State Agricul-
tural College; Coach of Kansas State Agricultural College Athletic Teams.
tBACH, Ernest A., Ph. D., ^Ivj*, C. S. C, Washington, D. C, Home Address, Florence, Mass.,
Special Field Agent, United States Department of Agriculture, Bureau of Entomology; Author
of "Dasypogonenas of North America, North of Mexico."
Blake, Maurice A'., Q. T. V., 197 Somerset Street, New Brunswick, N. J., Horticulturist at the
New Jersey State Experiment Station.
tCouDEN, Fayette, D., <i>K*, <J>2K, 1310 Columbia Road, Washington, D. C„ Entomologist, United
Slates Department of Agriculture, Bureau of Entomology; Law Student at George Washington
University, 1908.
Elwood, Clifford F., KS., Green's Farms., Conn., General Farming and Fruit Growing.
tFuLTON, Erwin S., C. S. C, Assistant Agriculturist, Massachusetts Experiment Station, Amherst,
Mass.
Gilbert, Arthur W., M. S. A., *K*, C. S. C, 32 Thurston Avenue, Ithaca, N. Y., Fellow in
College of Agriculture, Cornell University.
Gregg, John W., C. S. C, Baron de Hirsch Agricultural School, Woodbine, N. J., Professor of
Landscape Gardening and Ornamental Horticulture.
Griffin, Clarence H., *2K, 2002 G Street N. W., Washington, D. C, Medical Student at George
Washington University; Assistant in Laboratory of Bacteriological Chemistry, Bureau of Chemistry,
United Stales Department of Agriculture.
Haskell, Sidney B., <I>K$, C. S. C, Amherst, Mass., Instructor in Agriculture at Massachusetts
Agricultural College.
Henshaw, Fred F., ^K*, C. S. C, United States Geological Survey, Washington, D. C, Hydraulic
Engineer, in charge of Stream Measurements in Seward Peninsula, Alaska; Author of "Water
Supply Investigation" in Alaska in 1907."
Hubert, Zachary, T., A. B., 35 Humphries Street, Atlanta, Ga., Superintendent Grounds and
Buildings at Spelman Seminary; Lecturer on Agriculture for the Summer School at Clark Uni-
versity, Atlanta, Ga.
INewton, Howard D., C. S. C, 117 Wall Street, New Haven, Conn., Graduate Student at Yale
University.
tO'HEARN, George E., C. S. C, Pittsfield, Mass.
Parker, Sumner R., C. S. C, Kahuku, Oahn, I. H., Team Overseer Kahuku Plantation.
IPeck, Arthur L., *K<I>, C. S. C, Manhattan, Kan., Assistant Horticulturist Kansas State Agricul-
tural College and Experiment Station.
QuiCLEY, Raymond A., M. D,. C. Sv C, 4 Hamilton Street, Brockton, Mass.
tRAYMOTH, R. Raymond, K2, Rockford, III., Landscape Architect.
Staples, Parkman F., C. S. C, North Grafton, Mass., Farmer.
White, Howard M., ^K*, *2K, 1206 K Street N. W., Washington, D. C, United States De-
partment of Agriculture, Division of Pomology.
*Deceased. tNot heard from.
236 the1910indexvolumexxxx
'05
P. F. WILLIAMS, Secretar)), Milton, Mass.
Adams, Richard L., *K*, Spreckels, California, Residence Salinas, Cal., Director of the Spreckels
Sugar Company Experiment Station.
Allen, G. Howard, *2K, ]102 Flatiron Building, New York City, Residence 522 West 158th
Street, Care of J. G. Curtis, Vice-President Munson-Whittaker Company, Foresters; Vice-Pres-
ident Boston Nature Bureau; Author of "The Care of Trees."
Barnes, Hugh L., C. S. C, Box 35, Greenwich, Conn., Residence Slockbridge, Mass. Recently
resigned position as Horticulturist, Hampton Normal and Agricultural Institute, Hampton, Va.
Bartlett, Frank A'., *SK, Depot Square, White Plains, N. Y., Residence 147 South Lexington
Avenue, New York, Business Manager H. L. Frost & Company, Foresters and Entomologists.
+ Crosby, Harvey D., Q. T. V., Thompson, Conn., Florist.
Cushman, Esther C, *K<I>, Teacher of Biology, Beverly High School; Residence 683 Hope Street,
Providence, R. I.
IGardner, John J., C. S. C, Littleton, N. H., Assistant Superintendent of "The Rocks."
Gay, Ralph P., *SK, Plainfield, N. J., City Forester.
Hatch, Walter B., C. S. C, Torringlon, Conn., Superintendent of Construction of Hillside Cemetery.
tHoLCOME, C. Sheldon, K2, 15 Grandview Avenue, Somerville, Mass., with M. S. Ayer, Whole-
sale Giocer, State Street, Boston, Mass.
tHuNT, Thomas !■., C. S. C , Riverside, Cal., Pathologist, connected with Citrus Experiment Station.
Ingham, Norman D., C. S. C, Superintendent University of California Forestry Experiment Station,
Santa Monica, Cal.
tKELTON, James R., K2, Michigan Agricultural College, Instructor in Zoology.
Ladd, Edward T., M. S., K2, Baltimore, Md., Chemist for Baugh Chemical Company, Fertilizer
Manufacturers.
tLEWIS, Clarence W., Q. T. V., 28 Albion Street, Melrose Highlands, Mass., State Gypsy Moth
and Brown-Tail Molh Commission.
Lyman, John F., <I'K$, KS, 706 Yale Station, New Haven, Conn., Physiological Chemistry Stu-
dent in Yale Graduate School; Residence, AmhersI, Mass.
MunsON, Willard A., ^K*, "tCK, Superintendent Bay Road Fruit Farm, Waugh & Sears, Am-
herst, Mass.
Newhali, Edwin W., Jr., D. G. K., 114 Battery Street. San Francisco, Cal.
Patch. George W., 'I'K'I', <I>2K, Assistant Sales Manager Brown-Durrell Company, Boston, Mass.,
Residence, Arlington, Mass.
Sanborn, Monica L. (Mrs W. O. Taft). 'W<4>, Brook Farm, Northfield, Vt., R. F. D., No. 4.
Sears, William M., 'I'I^K, Norwood, Mass., Superintendent of A'rbordene Farm.
Swain, Allen N.. 15 Merlin Street, Dorchester, Mass., Forejsler and Horticulturist.
1 Taylor, Albert D., M. S. A., 'I'K<I>, C. S. C, Instructor in Cornell University, Ithaca, N. Y.
Tompson, Harold F., 'I>K>I>, KS, Instructor in Market Gardening. Massachusetts Agricultural College,
Amherst, Mass.
fTuPPER, Bertram, <V1K, Ki;, West Ncwion, Mass., Foreman at Ellis Farm.
^Deceased. 1 Not heard from.
MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE 237
Walker. Lewell S., C. S. C, Assistant Chemist, Massachusetts Agricuhural Experiment Station,
Amherst, Mass.
tWHITTAKER, CHESTER L., ^2,K, 1102 Flatiron Building, New York City, Forester and Entomolo-
gist; Residence, Somerville, Mass.
tWlLLIAMS, Percy F., K2, with Manning & Company, Boston, Mass., Landscape Architects.
tWiLLIS, Grenville N., <I>K<I>, i'ZK, New Haven, Conn., N. Y., N. H. & H. R. R.
Yeaw, Frederick L., "I^SK, Assistant Plant Pathologist California Experiment Station, Davis, Yolo
County, Cal.
'06
RICHARD WELLINGTON, Sec^elar^). Geneva, N. Y.
t Carey, Daniel H., Q. T. V., Rockland, Mass.
Carpenter, Charles W., *K*, K2, Monson, Mass., Farmer.
Craighead, William H., 427 State Street, Harrisburg, Pa.
tFlLER, Harry B., 39 Orchard Street, Newark, N. J., City Forester.
French, G. Talbot, *K*, $2K, Assistant Botanist, New York Agricultural Experiment Station,
Geneva, N. Y.
Gaskill, Edwin F., C. S. C, Assistant Agriculturist, Massachusetts Agricultural Experiment Station,
Amherst, Mass.
tHALL, Arthur W., Jr., *3K, North Amherst, Mass., Law Student with Hammond and Ham-
mond, Northampton, Mass.
Hastings, Addison T., Jr., Q. T. V., City Forester and Secretary for the Shade Tree Commission
of Jersey City; Residence 117 Wayne Street, Jersey City, N. J.
Hood, Clarence E., Q. T. V., Agent and Expert, United States Department of Agriculture, Bureau
of Entomology; Residence, 188 Rieger Avenue, Dallas, Texas.
tKENNEDY, Frank H., C. S. C, 31 West Elm Street, Brockton, Mass., Residence, Ashmont, Mass.,
Assistant City Bacteriologist and Milk Inspector at Brockton,
t Martin, James E., C. S. C, Yale Forestry School, New Haven, Conn.
MoSELEY, Louis H., C. S. C, Glastonbury, Conn., Student at Ohio School of Veterinary Medicine.
tMuDGE, Everett P., K2, New Canaan, Conn., Horticulturist.
Peakes, Ralph W., Q. T. V., Chemist, Boston, Mass.; Residence, Newtonville, Masp.
Pray, F. Civille, 3>2K, Sugar Chemist and Superintendent, Trinidad Sugar Company, Trinidad,
Cuba; Residence, Natick, Mass.
t Rogers, Stanley S., #K*, K2, Spreckels, Cal., Residence, Salinas, Cal., First Assistant Plant
Pathologist,
t Russell, Harry M., <I>K"i>, C. S. C, Orlando, Fla., Special Field Agent, United State Department
of Agriculture, Bureau of Entomology; Home address, Bridgeport, Conn.
tScoTT, Edwin H., *K4>, KJS, Petersham, Mass., Principal of Agricultural High School.
tSLEEPER, George W., *K*, C. S. C, Swampscott, Mass.
Strain, Benjamin, Q. T. V., Assistant Engineer, Central New England Railway Company, Pough-
keepsie, N. Y.
^Deceased. I Not heard from.
238 - THE I9I0 INDEX VOLUME
SuHLKE, Herman A., K2;, Assistant Superintendent of Penna Salt Manufacturing Company, Wy-
andotte, Mich.
+Taft, William O., C. S. C, Brook Farm, East Braintree, Vt., Farmer.
1 TanNATT, Willard C, Jr., ^Kj*, C. S. C, Easthampton, Mass.
tTlRRELL, Charles A., Q. T. V., 200 Fremont Street, Chicago, III., Landscape Architect.
Wellington, Richard <I>K*, Q. T. V., Assistant Horticulturist, New York Agricultural Experi-
ment Station, Geneva, N. Y,
tWHOLLEY, Francis D., Q. T. V., 1715 Railway Exchange Building, Chicago, 111.
tWoOD, Alexander H. M., KS, Easton, Mass., Farm Superintendent.
'07
G. H. CHAPMAN, Secretary, Amherst, Mass.
Armstrong, Arthur H., K2, Amherst, Mass., Graduate Student in Entomology, Massachusetts
Agricultural College.
Bartlett, Earle G., ^K*, *2K, Instructor Kamehameha Schools, Honolulu, I. H.
tCARUTHERS, JoHN T., Bordentown, N. J., Professor of Agriculture in Bordenlown Industrial and
Agricultural Institute.
tCHACE, Wayland F., C. S. C, Lake City, Minn., Landscape Gardening.
Chapman, George H., C. S. C, Amherst, Mass., First Assistant Botanist, Massachusetts Agricul-
tural Experiment Station.
tCHAPMAN, Joseph O., KS, Brewster, Mass.
Clark, Milford H., Jr., C. S. C, Superintendent of Forestry Department, Buffalo Park Com-
mission, Buffalo, Mass.
Cutler, Frederick A., *2K, Orange, N. J., Forestry.
Dickinson, Walter E., <I'K*, "IjSK, Chemist Cuban-American Sugar Company; Residence, North
Amherst, Mass.
Eastman, Jasper F., ^li'P, Assistant Agriculturist, New Hampshire Agricultural Experiment Station,
and Instructor in Agriculture, New Hampshire State College, Durham, N. H.
t Hartford, Archie A'., Weslford, Mass.
HiGCiNS, Arthur W., *K*, K2, Weslfield, Mass., Florist.
King, Clinton, 'MC't, Q. T. V., 28 Sagamore Street, Dorchester, Mass., Law Student, Boston
University,
t Livers, Susie Dearing.
Parker. Charles M., *K<I>, Q. T. V., Riverside Farm. Stratham, N. H.
Peters, Frederick C, <KK, F. C. Peters & Co., Foresters and Entomologists, Orange, N. J., Ard-
more. Pa.; Residence, Lenox, Mass.
Shaw, Edward H., <I'2K, Belmont, Mass., Market Gardening.
Summers, John N., C. S. C, Amherst, Mass., Assistant Entomologist, Massachusetts Agricultural
Experiment Station, and Graduate Student In Entomology, Massachusetts Agricultural College.
Thompson, Clifford B., 'I'— K, Instructor in Agriculture and Horticulture, Kamehameha, Schools,
1. H.
♦Deceased. fNot heard from.
MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE 239
tWALKER, James H., <I>2K, 39 Orchard Street, Newark, N. J., Foreman Newark Park Commission.
+Watkins, Fred A., 'i'SK, West Milbury, Mass.
Watts, Ralph J., *K'I>, ^SK, Private Secretary to President Kenyon L. Butterfield, Massachusetts
Agricuhural College, Amherst, Mass.
tWoOD, Herbert P., C. S. C, United States Department of Entomology, Dallas, Texas.
'08
JAMES A. HYSLOP, Sccrelars, Washington, D. C.
Alley, Harold, K2, B. S., Ossining-on-Hudson, N. Y., Commandant of Military Academy.
Allen, C. F., C. S C, B S., Agent United States Bureau of Immigration, New York City.
Anderson, A. J., <fCK, B. S., West Orange, N. J., Forester.
Anderson, K. F., B. S., Agriculture, Roslindale, Mass.
Bailey, E. W., K2, B. S., Fellowship in University of Illinois.
Bangs, B. W., Q. T. V., B. S., American Agricultural Chemical Co., Carteret, N. J.
Barry, T. A., C. S. C, B. S., Amherst Electric Light Co., Amherst, Mass.
Bartholomew, Miss Persis, Westboro, Mass.
Bates, Carlton, KS, B. S., 205 D Street N. W., Washington, D. C, United States Department
of Agriculture, Bureau of Chemistry, Scientific Assistant in Bacteriology.
Chapman, L. W., Q. T. V., B. S., Coe-Mortimer Co., Moosic, Pa.
Chase, H. C, C. S. C, B. S., Gypsy Moth Commission, Swampscolt, Mass.
Clark, O. L., *2K, B. S., Ethical Culture School, New York City.
Cobb, G. R., C. S. C, B. S., Pierson, Cromwell, Conn.
Coleman, W. J., C. S .C, B. S., 38 Orchard Street, Newark, N. J., Forester.
Cummings, W. a., Q. T. v., B. S., 200 Fremont Street, Chicago, 111., Park Forester, Lincoln Park.
Cutting, R. E., 'I'-K, B. S., Salesman, Quaker Oats Co., Amherst, Mass.
Daniel, John, Q. T. V., B. S., Field Agent, Experiment Station, Durham, N. H.
Davenport, S. L., KS, B. S., Fruit Farmer, North Grafton, Mass.
Davis, P. A., 6$, B. S., Instructor in Sciences, Dover High School, Dover, N. J.
Dolan, Clifford, B. S., Dairyman, Putney, Vermont.
Eastman, P. M., B. S., with J. T. Withers, Landscape Gardener, 1 Montgomery Street, Jersey
City, N. J.
Edwards, F. L., 'J'SK, B. S., Farm Superintendent, Lee, Mas^.
Farley, A. J., Q. T. V., B. S., Assistant Horticulturist, State Agricultural Experiment Station, New
Brunswick, N. J.
FarrAR, p. W., K2, B. S., 83 Harvard Street, Springfield, Mass., Assistant, City Engineer's Office.
Flint, C. L., K2, B. S., Metropolitan Park Commission, Milton, Mass.
Gillett, C. S., K2, B. S., Farm Owner, Southwick, Mass.
Gillett, K. E., -PSK, B. S., Gillett's Nurseries, Southwick, Mass.
Gowdey, B. C, C. S. C, B. S., 28 Albion Street, Melrose Highlands, Gypsy Moth Commission.
"Deceased. tNot heard from.
240 THE 1910 INDEX VOLUME XXXX
Hayes, H. K., KS, B. S., TarifFville, Conn., United Slates Department of Agriculture, Bureau of
_ Plant Industry.
Howe, W. L., B. S., Marlboro, Mass.
HuTCHINGS, F. F., Q. T. v., B. S., Instructor in Physics and Chemistry in South Manchester High
School, Conn.
Hyslop, J. A., Q .T. v., B. S., 205 D. Street N. W., Washington, D. C, United States Depart-
ment of Agriculture, Bureau of Entomology, Investigating Expert in Food and Forage.
Jackson, R. H., *2K, B. S., with Jackson and Culler, Amherst, Mass.
Jennison, H. M., C. S. C, B. S., Instructor in Botany at the Massachusetts Agricultural College.
Johnson, F. A., C. S. C, B. S., Post-Graduate Student at the Massachusetts Agricultural College.
Jones, T. H., Q. T. V., B. S., Easton, Mass,
Larned, a. J., Q. T. v., B. S., LyonsviUe, Mass
Larsen, David, KS, B. S., Honolulu, Hawaii, Plant Pathologist, Sugar Experiment Station.
Liang, Lai Kvi-EI, B. S., Graduate Student, Cornell University.
Miller, D. P., Kw, B. S., Forester, Shawnee-on-Delaware, Pa.
Paige, George, Q. T. V., B. S., 610 Elm Street, New Haven, Conn.
Parker, J. R., K2, B. S., Montague City, Instructor in Montague Agricultural High School.
Philbrick, E. D., *2K, B. S., Davey School of Forestry, Red Bank, N. J.
Reed, H. B., K2, B. S., Dairyman, Conyer's Manor, Greenwich, Conn.
Regan, W. S., K2, B. S., Post-Graduate Student, Massachusetts Agricultural College, Amherst,
Mass.
Sawyer, W. F., Q. T. V., B. S., Sterling, Mass.
Shattuck, L. a., C. S. C, B. S., Ipswilch, Mass.
Thurston, F. G., 'tSK, B. S., Post-Graduate Student at the Massachusetts Agricultural College.
Turner, Miss O. M., B. S., Amherst, Mass.
Turner, W. F., Q, T. V., B. S., Auburn, Ala., Assistant Entomologist, State Experiment Station.
Verbeck, R. H., "i'SK, B. S., Petersham, Mass., Principal of Petersham Agricultural High School.
Warner, T. L., Q. T. V., B. S., Clapp & Abercrombie, 90 Main Street, Greenfield, Mass.
Waugh, T. F., Q. T. v., B. S., Worcester, Mass.
Welungton, J. W., Q. T .v., B. S., Fruit Farmer, Waltham, Mass.
Wheeler, H. T., Q. T. V., B. S., Farmer, Lexington, Mass.
Whiting, A'. L., Q. T. V., B. S., Kingston, R. I., Assistant Agriculturist, Slate Experiment Station.
Whitmarsh, R. D., Kw, B. S., Post-Graduate Student at the Massachusetts Agricultural College.
Wright, S. J., Q. T. V., B. S., Poultry Manager, Marlboro Stock Farm, Marlboro, Mass.
^Deceased. tNot heard from.
MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE
241
Marriages
95
99
97
88
07
08
05
05.
05.
06.
06.
Wm. C. Brown to Miss Jacobs, at Peabody.
Daniel A. Beaman to Miss Cora E. Brill, Dec. 29, 1907, at Rio Piedras, P. R.
J. A. Emrich to Miss Nellie Croucher, Mar. 23, 1908.
S. H. Field to Miss Alice N. Clark.
Earle G. Bartlett to Miss Grace M. Knowles, Aug. 5, 1908, at Concord Jc.
Samuel J. Wright to Miss Mabel K. Farrar, Oct. 16, 1908, at Amherst.
Frank A. Bartlett to Miss Emma M. Loch, June 27, 1908, at White Plains,
N. Y.
Walter B. Hatch to Miss C. B. Ball, at North Amherst.
Grenville N. Willis to Miss Florence E. Ripley, Aug. 8, 1908.
Addison T. Hastmgs to Miss Marie S. Millet, October 5, 1908.
Fry Civille Pray to Miss Ella F. Hall, Aug. I 9, 1 908, at North Amherst.
Raymond H. Jackson to Miss Bertha Bolles, Oct. 22, 1908, at Amherst.
6
C^ntt ii(!9
Board of Editors
Philip Bevier Hasbrouck
Calendar
Trustees
Kenyon Leech Butterfield
Faculty
Experiment Station Staff
Graduate Students
Classes
Senior
Junior
Sophomore
Freshman
Fraternities
Athletics
Football
Baseball
Basketball
Track
Organizations and Clubs
Publications
Musical Organizations
Commencement
Award of Prizes
Proms.
Grinds .
Individual Records
1910 Banquet
Editorial
Alumni Associations
Alumni
Marriages
5
10
12
13
18
20
30
32
33-66
33
4!
49
57
67
85-96
87
90
93
95
10!
Ill
115
133
136
139
149
170
194
196
202
209
241
AbtJ^rttaittg itr^rtorg
Adams
Allen Bros.
American Fountain Pen Cc
Amherst Co-Op. Laundry
Amhers^ House
Amherst House Barber Shop
Aspinwall M'f'g Co. .
Barlow
Bias, ihe Caterer
Bobbink and Atlcii
Bosworlh
Bowker
Boynton
Brack
Briggs, Oliver
Burke, J. J. .
Campion
Carpenter &
Chew .
Childs, J. J
Chllson
College Supply Sloi
College Store
Cotrell & Leonard
Cox Sons & Vining
Dance. C, & Son
Derrick's Orchestra
Deuel
lorehouse
Coal Co'
Eddy Refrigerator Co.
Eimer & Amend
Elder .
Ellwanger & Barry
Ewells, C. E.
Farm Department M. A. C.
Fish, Henry
Folgcr, Stephen Lane, Co
Garde Llotel
Gilbert & Barker .
Gilmnn «< Moffctl
Grepory. J. J. II. ft Son
VI
XIV
XXIV
XIV
XXIX
XXll
XXXI
XXVII
XXV
XXIV
XVII
XIII
XIV
XIII
XVI
XXIII
XVIll
XVIII
XXVlll
XXVIII
XXV
Hearn, C. W.
Hews, A. H. & Co.
Holyoke St. R. R. C^
Hotel Warren
Horticulture Dept., \
Jackson & Cutler
Kibbie
Kingman, M. B.
I. M.
Labr,
Levin, R.
Lincoln Oil Co.
Lord & Burnham
M. A. C. .
Magee, W. H.
Marsh, E. D.
Marks
Middlelon
Millet, E. E.
Page, Shoe Sto
Paige, t. L. .
Pickwick Clothes Ston
Plumb .
Powers, the Tailor
Rawson, W. W. .
Russel, J., & Co.
Sanderson & Th
Sheldon
Springfield Republican
S'aab, W. K.
Troll. J. H.
Tutllc Co.
pson
Valente, A. & Co.
Waldo Bios.
Waterman Fountain
Ward
Willard. Charles 1
Wilson Flouse
Wiswell, 11. A. .
Wnodwnrd. F. W.
Wrlghl & DiUon
Pen Co
, & Co,
XXIV
XXV
IV, V
XIII
XXV
XVI
XIV
.X.WII
XXXI
Xlll
XXVI
XXX
Xl.\
XXll
"What a beard thou hast got?" — Schermerhorn.
PAIGE'S
Is the Place to ^et
Good Teams
Don't Forget the Place
REAR of AMHERST HOUSE
MAKING GOOD
There's only one reason why our store is
such a popular resort with college
men who desire snappy
footwear, viz:
Walk-Over Shoes
$3.50, $4.00, $5.00, $6.00
E. M. B O L L E S
THE CHAS. L WILLARD CO.
Colle ge E ngr avers and Printer s
156 Fifth Avenue,
New York
DANCE PROGRAMS, CLASS DAY PROGRAMS, INVITATIONS,
MENUS, EMBOSSED STATIONERY, SOUVENIR
COLLEGE CALENDARS
"He wanted a peg to hang his thoughts on." — Partridge.
"What! can the devil speak true?" Leonard reports all done in Algebra.
The
Latest Styles
in
COLLEGE SHOES
at
Pagers Shoe Store
Next to P. O. Amherst
R. LEVIN
First Class Boot and Shoe
REPAIRING
Good Workma}iship ; Lowest
Prices; Work Promptly
Attended to
19 Pleasant Street
AMHERST, - MASS.
I SANDERSON & THOMPSON I
CLOTHIERS, HITTERS
AND TAILORS
rp:liable merchandise at prices that are always
AS LOW AS the lowest
SANDERSON & THOMPSON, Amherst I
'1 Ic that dies pays all his debts." But pay your Inicx Ta.\ before you die. //ci.vn
Tlie man with no calling is seldom heard from.
i
i
i
m
m
w
M
M
m
m
m
i
m
PLAYING CARDS AND TALLY CARDS i
Deuel's Drug Store
Razors and Razor Strops
GILLETTE SAFETY RAZOR
Gillette Blades
DEUEL'S DRUG STORE
m
1
1
1
m m
M m
m
EASTMAN PHOTOGRAPHIC GOODS
FILMS, VELOX PAPER, FLASH SHEETS, §
AND SUPPLIES
m
m
i*®
Beware of him who talks much of his virtue.
Massachusetts Agricultural College
AMHERST, MASS
Ideal location. Attendance rapidly increasing.
Best College of Agriculture in New England.
Superior facilities for high grade work in all branches of practical and scientific Agriculture.
Tuition free to citizens of the United States.
Necessary expenses moderate.
Opportunity offered for needy students to earn part of their expenses.
Special attention given to the physical development of students.
ADMISSION
Entrance examinations required in English; French or German; Algebra; Plane Geometry; United
States History and Civics; Ancient, English, General, Medieval and Modern History (one of this
group); Solid Geometry, Chemistry, Physiology (two of this group). Applicants presenting cer-
tificates from approved high schools or academies accepted without examination.
COURSES
Four Year Course
Required courses during the first two years include English, French or German, Agriculture, Horti-
culture, Chemistry, Mathematics Physics, Engineering, Botany, Zoology, History and Military
Science.
Additional required or elective courses of the Junior and Senior years in Entomology, Geology,
Bacteriology, Landscape Gardening, Veterinary Science, Agricultural Economics, Political Science,
Pedagogy, Psychology, and Farm Law.
Military drill required the first three years, elective the fourth year.
Short Courses
Dairy Farming, 1 1 weeks in the winter, beginning the first Monday in January.
Bee Culture, 2 weeks in May and June.
Summer School of Agriculture, 6 weeks in July and August; chiefly to train teachers to introduce
elementary Agriculture in public schools.
Graduate School
Offers advanced courses in Entomology, Botany, Chemistry, and Horticulture leading lo the degree
of M. Sc. and Ph. D.
PARTIAL LIST OF EQUIPMENT
Clark Hall, for the Department of Botany, contains large laboratories and lecture rooms; also private
laboratories for individual research; the Knowlton Herbarium of 15,000 species of flowering
plants and ferns, also a large collection of mosses, lichens, and fungi. The thoroughly equipped
laboratories and the large collection of technical bulletms afford exceptional opportunity for
elementary and advanced study in all branches of Botany.
Wilder Hall, the administrative center of the Division of Horticulture, contains offices for the De-
partments of Pomology, Floriculture, Market Gardening, and Landscape Gardening; lecture rooms,
drafting rooms, and reading room for literature pertaining especially to Horticulture. In connec-
tion with the Division of Horticulture, a large recitation building and range of glass houses
representing the most modern ideas in green house construction and arrangement, are being erected.
Entomological Laboratory contains leclure rooms and laboratories, also one of the most valuable and
comprehensive collection of insects in the world.
Dairy Barn: a model in construction and equipment. Sanitary production of milk and up-to-dale
handling of the product is made a specialty. The farm of over 400 acres makes possible the
demonstration of proper farm operations and management.
Veterinary Laboratory and Hospital offer unique facilities for study of animal diseases and their
treatment.
Chemjatiy Building contains lecture rooms and well equipped laboratories for work in different
branches of Chemistry,
Library of 30,000 volumes.
Drill Hall and Target Range make efficient and attractive the work of the Military Department.
Modern Dining Hall furnishes board at cost.
Students room in College Dormitories or in private houses of the town.
The Massachusetts Agricultural Experiment Station, immediately connected with the College, gives
stucents an opportunity to become familiar with Experiment Station work and to observe or con-
duct original investigation.
Catalog sent on application to
President KENYON L. BUTTERFIELD.
Information regarding admission should be addressed to
PHILIP B. HASBROUCK, The Registrar.
(Forty-second year begins September 15, 1909.)
"The Tempesl." Bishop's Recitations.
»^.^oM,^^,^„^M,^„^^M,^,MM^„^.^^
o^^'l¥^^^
GOODS FOR MEN
C. & K. Derbys (Quality De Luxe); Reiser
Cravats, Sporting Goods
ENGLISH AND SCOTCH WOOLENS
Confined Styles, imported direct from London
THE BIG COLLEGE STORES
CAMPION
Amherst Dartmouth
M1^"(^*MW^°<^'^"^W^"^MWM"^"MW1^
A FULL LINE OF
JVATERMAN'S IDEAL
FOUNTAIN PENS
EVERY PEN GUARANTEED
HENRY ADAMS & CO.
THE OLD CORNER DRUG STORE
"It ia a great plague to be loo handsome a man." — Braiull.
"Comedy of Errors." — Soph. Surveying.
M. B. KINGMAN
FLORIST
M. A. C. '82
Store, Next to Tommy'
37 South Pleasant Street
AMHERST
The Place io get the best
Cut Flowers
FOR THAT GIRL
TELEPHONE IN TIME
POWERS
THE TAILOR
Has received the latest fabrics for the spring
and summer trade of '09 in Gentle-
men's Garments. Also does
Ladies' Garments in a
satisfactory manner
Cleaning, Altering, Repairing and
Pressing promptly done
Military Work a Specialty
AMHERST, - MASS.
Main St. Opp. Town Hall
Amherst Furniture and Carpet Rooms
MAKES A SPECIALTY of Students' Furniture, Carpets,
Rugs, Draperies, Bedding, Book-Cases, Blacking-Cases,
Desks, Window Shades, Picture Frames, Cord, Etc., at
Lowest Prices. The goods you need. Save freight and
cartage money by purchasing here : : : :
E. D. MARSH
18-20-22 MAIN STREET - AMHERST, MASS.
"Much Ado About Nothing." — Pol. Econ.
Worry does no good; it changes nothing,
To-day's best should be to-morrow's starting point
HENRY FISH
AMHERST, MASS.
The leading toggery shop of Amherst. Dealer in
all branches of
ATHLETIC
GOODS
SATISFACTION GUARANTEED
...SOLE AGENTS FOR...
Lamson & Hubbard Hats. Latest goods in
their season. No high prices connected
with this Store
MWJMW,
■'I'licre is a tide In llu- attalra of to-cdui ali..n If li.kcri al llir llc.id l.-ads im k, malnmony."— -Ui.ss Ro\i.
About the only person an apology satisfies is the one who makes it.
HEADQUARTERS FOR
Sheets
Pillow Cases
and Quilts
A full assortment of Denims for corner
seats. A large line of
Dry Goods, Notions
and Groceries
Jackson ^ Cutler
For Good Coal and Good
Service
TRY
C. R. ELDER
F. C. PLUMB
Barber Shop
All work of a first-class
order
Electrical Masssage
Next door to
Express office
Amherst, Mass.
G. E. BOSWORTH
Contractor
and Builder
GENERAL JOBBING AND
REPAIR WORK
12 EAST PLEASANT ST.
AMHERST, MASS.
It isn't at all surprising that some people are saddest when they sing.
Most men know better than they do.
MODISH
Clothing,
Hats,
Caps,
and Haberdashery
Always waiting you at
Pickwick Clothes Shop
AMHERST/.HOUSE
BARBER SHOP
The Shop that Leads Modern Improvements
All First-Class Workmen
Hair Cutting Our Specialty
MT. TOM SUMMIT HOUSE
Near Holyoke, Muss.
< O o = ^
TO ^"H. g
^ ^ n P
3 ". w c 5-
3 o ?r S. o
3 c a :r^ <:
f5,iii
'Sn.S o
^-HS
"Naluic, Naliirc, back lo Naluic." — I'inlo
A man's ideal woman is one kind of a pipe drean
E.E.MILLET,
Jeweler and
Optician.
Prescription Work a Specialty.
Special Attention Given to all Kinds of
Fine Watch Work.
Stephen Lane Folgcr,
Established 1892.
Manufacturing
Jeweler :: :: ::
Club and College Pins and Rings, Gold,
Silver and Bronze Medals.
Diamonds, Watches, Jewelry.
180 Broadway, New York.
Intercollegiate Bureau
of Academic Costume
COTRELL & LEONARD
ALBANY, N. Y.
Makers of
Caps
AND
Go\vns
To the American Colleges from the
Atlantic to the Pacific
CLASS CONTRACTS A SPECIALTY
FACULTY GOWNS AND HOODS
You ivill find a JuU line of Stationery,
Blank Books, etc. Also all Magazines and
Daily Papers at
Chas. E. Ewells,
Amherst, Mass.
We carry Books, Stationery, Athletic Sup-
plies, Pennants and Novelties.
We do Picture Framing. Leave your order
for the "Ship Shape Shop"
at the
College Supply Store.
All the Latest Books in Our Circulating
Library.
TTie young man who hesitates during leap year is won.
God helps him who helps himself, and may the Lord help that man who gets caught helping
himself around here. — Chain Lightning.
/. M. LABROFITZ
Tailoring store is the place to order first-class custom-made
clothing. A large line of foreign and domestic woolens on
hand.
Students' clothes pressed, cleaned and repaired.
Full dress suits to rent.
A good line of gents' furnishings.
Students' clothes bought.
11 Amity street, - - - AMHERST, MASS.
Telephone 54-4.
^SPINWALr
^POTATO )
.MACHINERY^
ABSOLUTELY THE BEST
Cutters flantens, SprayersS,
"" Write for free Booklet. "Potato Culture"
ASPINWALL MFG. CCjacksormich. us. a
OUR SPECIALTIES
Fruit Trees We sell a few choice trees of select varieties. Furthermore, we
are prepared to plan and furnish the stock for complete orchards.
Ornamentals Trees, Shrubs, and Climbers are grown and sold in all the best
species. We also have a limited supply of hardy herbaceous plants.
Cut Flowers Chrysanthemums, Carnations, and Violets in season. Suitable for
proms, informals, and general Sunday nights.
Landscape Gardening We have a complete Landscape Gardening depart-
ment in which we are able to prepare surveys, designs, planting plans, etc., and
to carry out such designs on the ground.
GOOD MEN We have a few dood men to put on the market
each year. Men who can do things. This is our Specialty of
Specialties. Next spring's crop promises to be a ^ood one.
Better order early.
DIVISION OF HORTICULTURE
Telephone
MiiSMichiisettes AjtrlcuHural Colle^io
nlxT, young man, it is far easier to lincl a wiie tiian it is to lose lu-r." — li hiltwv.
"As lo my voice, I have lost it with halloaing and singing of anthems. " — Prouh^.
Chas. Dance & Son
Plumbing,
Steam Fitting,
Tinning,
Roofing,
Church Windows
6 Clifton Ave.,
AMHERST, - MASS.
J. H. Trott
Plumbing, Heating, Steam,
Gas and Water Piping.
Paints, Stoves and Ranges.
Tinware.
All jobbing promptly done.
New England Phone
W. H. MAGEE
HORSESHOEING AND JOBBING
PRINTING HOUSE SQUARE,
AMHERST.
Carpenter & Morehouse
BOOK and JOB
"printers
The Amherst Record
AMHERST, MASS.
"Almost dwindled to an echo." — Mendu
XIII
Notwithstanding the numerous beautifying preparations on the market there are still a few
homely women in the world — The Stenographers.
Amherst Co-op Laundry
and Sanitary Clothes Cleaning
Our laundry work just a little bet-
ter than ever. Our new process
of steam cleaning; and pressing is
up to the minute. TRY US
AND BE SATISFIED
C. R. WEBB, '09, Laundry Agt.
R. C. LINDBLAD, '09, Clothes Cleaning
and Pressing Agt.
We make a specialty of
College, Class and
Group Work
The SHELDON STUDIO
Northampton, Mass.
ALLEN BROS.
BUILDERS AND BUILDING
SUPERINTENDENTS
Wood, Brick, Stone and
Concrete Buildings
Fire Losses adjusted ; Plans and esti-
mates furnished
Office 28 So. Pleasant Street
Residences 28 and 125 So. Pleasant St.
Tel. 121-4 and 121-3
AMHERST, MASS.
Removed from 106 Main St. to 191 Main St.
near City Hall
P. H. CHEW
BOOK-BINDER, PAPER RULER
BLANK BOOK MAKER
Binding for Libraries and
Colleges a Specialty
Magazines, Music, Choice Binding
NORTHAMPTON, MASS.
' laking tart of money is almost as liaid woik us camiim il." Diinioii.
XIV
'Tis folly to be wise.'*' — Mendun
FOR IRON NERVES, DRINK
IRON BREW
Wholesale and Retail
Plain Soda and Syphons for
Family Use
W. W. BOYNTON
River St. - Northampton
TELEPHONE CONNECTION
John Middle Ton
Imporfer r""' Moun
219 Wai.nut5t.
BOWLS MADE IN FRANCE
Pipes Repaired
WISWELL
DRUGGIST
Call on us when in
Town
82 Main St.
Northampton
W. L CHILSON
Trunks^ Bags^ Suit
Cases^ Fur Coats
Harness, Blankets and Horse Goods of all
kinds. The Trunk and Bag Store of
Hampshire Co. Both Hand and
Machine made Harness
Always on Hand
REPAIRING DONE PROMPTLY
141 Main St. Northampton, Mass.
WOODWARD'S
LUNCH
27 Main Street Masonic Building
NORTHAMPTON. MASS.
Lunches, Soda, Ice
Cream
Closed only from 1 a. m. to 4 a. m.
F. W. Woodward
Proprietor
"Thinking on the days that are no more." — The days of Trig.
The more you try lo please some people the greater will be your failure. — Cordon
4"i"i"t'M>'l"i"i"i"i''i"I"I"l"H"lT"M''l''l"i"i"l"l"l"t4"i'
THIS IS OUR
Handy Hand
BOOK
It is really a bool(
terial (or buildine or
is the kind o( reference liook that
should have hanging on a hook,
you now, help you greatly later on.
ng every sort of
Belo
1 list of just a few of the
Harvard, Busscy Institute, Yale, Smith
Cornell, Mississippi Dept. of Agri
culture, Iowa Agricultural College
New Jersey Agricultural College, Connec
ticut Agricultural College, Geneva, N. Y
Experiment Station, Baton Rouge, La
Experiment Station.
Lord and Burnham
COMPANY
11.13 Broadway. NEW YORK
jtA« T <i T ji i ji T jAt|*tTit T «ty*>y«*yj*yji y tt y »t^>y«>^>|<tyt'^j«^«^*|^*|j
man in in the riglil In
Derrick's
ORCHESTRA
WESTFIELD. MASS.
SOLO WORK A SPECIALTY
HAS FURNISHED MUSIC
FOR THE PROMS AND
INFORMALS SINCE 1905
C. V. DERRICK, - leader
J. RUSSELL & CO.
Holyoke, Mass.
WHAT RUSSELL SELLS HE
GUARANTEES
to romniii silcnl. -y./j/iis B.iilcV.
Then he will talk, good gods, how he will talk! — BroTDn.
Palace Auto Garage
J. J. Burke^ Manager.
Supplies of All Kinds.
Repairing quickly and neatly done. The only fire-pj-oof
Garage in the city. Ample room for transients .
Boys, when you want to take your frienas for a drive
call up 1526 and we will do the rest .
Division Street^
Holyoke, - - Mass.
A megaphone extra loud. — Cloues.
XVU
When a man is unable to make a living at anything else he is ehgible for a government job. — Perci) L.
Hotel Garde.
Asylum and High Streets.
One block from Union Station,
Hartford, Connecticut
Connecticut's Largest and Most Modern
Hotel. American and European
Plans. On direct water
route Nezv York to
Boston.
Garage Connected.
Walter S. Garde,
Proprietor.
Wright ^ Ditson
Manufacturers and Dealers in
High Grade Athletic Supplies
Lawn Tennis, Foot Ball, Base Ball,
Basket Ball, Hockey, Golf Goods.
In Best Styles and Qualities
Athletic Uniforms
a Specialty.
It IS generally con-
ceded that the clubs
equipped by Wright
&. Ditson, have the
best fitting, best look-
ing, and most durable
suits
The Wright & Ditson
Sweaters are easily the
hnest Made of very
choice worsted, well
cct fitting Nothing like one of our
Sweaters. Catalogue Free.
WRIGHT & DITSON,
344 Washintton St., Boston, Mass. 18 West 30tti St.. New York.
76 Weybosset St.. Providence. R. I. 84 Wabasli Ave. Cliicato.
Harvard Square. Cambridcc, Mass.
t^.|j<fii^,fi,ftt^,^,^,^t^.^,fii^ifi,^i^if>«^.J«if(,^bf<,^,^t^t^b^t^^i&A<XiAtlitfiili«XitX^ .{<
EIMER & AMEND
. 205 and 211 Third Ave., New York.
IMPORTERS AND MANUFACTURERS
Chemical and Physical Apparatus, Assay |
Goods and Chemicals.
Pure
I
■*
Hammered Platinum, Balances and Weights, Porcelain, Glassware, and %
C. P. Filter Papers, Microscopes, and Accessories. .j,
JENA NORMAL GLASS— The Most Reliable Glass for all Laboratory Uses.
Tested Purity Reagents in Patented Containert
C. P. Chemicals and Acids.
— (jlass lilowint;; l^onc on Our Premises.
li. & A. Tested Purity Reagents in Patented Containers. Kalilbaum's Strictly 4,
*
? BfeyN. 15. — (jlass Hlowint;; l^one on Our Premises. 41
"So U
and far l.<;lwe
XVIII
lohdu
"I am Sir Oracle,
And when I ope my lips, let no dog bark." — Turner.
8SCH00LST.B0SIDN 209SrATtST.CHIC/(G0 742MARKET5T3ANFMNCISC0 I36ST.JAMESST.M0NTRE(IL I2G0LDEN LANE,LOND0^tC.
When in North Adams stop at the
WILSON HOUSE
Special attention given to college Banquets.
Terms reasonable.
House recently equipped with modern improvements.
"A mighty shooter with his mouth-*'-^C^rtan.
XIX
"A book's a book, although there is nothing in it." — B's Nursery Book.
JAMES J. CHILD
Coal Co.
Bituminous Coal
and Coke
Burdett Building,
TROY, N. Y.
Marks, the Tailor
ENGLISH TWEEDS
for men
Satisfaction Guaranteed
Eastern Agency
141 Milk Street, Boston, Mass.
Cox Sons & Vining
262 Fourth Ave., NEW YORK
Makers of Caps and Gowns to M.
A. C., Harvard, Yale, Columbia,
Cornell, and many others
SA risiAciioN i:vi:kywfii'ri'.
High Street, - HOLYOKE, MASS.
THE STANDARD
FINE CANDIES
Lincoln Oil Co.
Manufacturers of
Lubricating Oils, Grease
and Prepared Paints
Cleveland, O.
Used Exclusively on the College
Farm
E. L. Johnson, Shutesbury, Mass.
<;.iuMal Avriiit for New Kiiclim.l
"1 luiiiply Dutnply."- Bccinan.
XX
"On argument alone my faith is built." — Fi's^e
ESTABLISHED 1895.
A. VALENTE & CO.,
General Commission
Merchants :: :: ::
FOR THE SALE OF
Fruit, Produce, Poultry
and Game.
27 North Market and 27 Clinton Streets,
BOSTON, - MASSACHUSETTS
"What a fall off there was." — After Freshman Finals.
XXI
Men flatter merely to protect themselves from women who flirt.
W. D. BARLOW. '09
PHOTOGRAPH ER
PICTURES TAKEN AT ANY TIME
AND PLACE
NOTHAMPTON ROAD, AMHERST, MASS.
i(
Wards "
57-63 Franklin street Boston
The place zvhere original
designs in fine
STATIONERY,
Class Day Programs, etc.,
are executed
" For the Land's Sake'
USE
Bowker's
Fertilizers.
They Enrich the
Earth and those
who till it.
Man wants bul hlllc licrc Ijclow— that is, lie wants a hlllc
XXII
Worry is as useless as il is to lell people not to worry.
PURE COLD STORAGE
FOR YOUR FOOD
A PERFECT CHAMBER
FOR YOUR ICE
THAT'S THE EDDY
1847-1909
1847-1909
ABSOLUTELY SANITARY.
BACKED BY SIXTY-TWO YEARS' EXPERIENCE.
D. EDDY & SONS CO., Manufacturers,
BOSTON, MASS.
Sometimes a little learning saves man from jury duty.
XXIII
When a woman becomes speechless with rage it Is time for the man in the controversy to
bike for the tail timber.
C. W. HEARN & CO.
Photographer to M. A. C. '08 and '10.
Next to Keith's Theatre.
164 Tremont Street,
BOSTON, MASS.
Telephone 2778-2 Oxford.
SPECIAL RATES TO COLLEGES.
»|«|j ij;. tj* t|;. t|* «^;.»j» i|*kf« »f* 1^^ tjt*l*«f» ij- *^ ^l* "^ >^* »|* 'f*'^-^
MOORE'S
t AMERICAN FOUNTAIN PEN CO.
* Adams, Gushing & Foster, Selling Agents
.5-
t 168 DEVONSHIRE STREET, BOSTON
OLIVER L. BRIGGS
AND SON.
BRIGGIS
The ^"^11 The best
Electric 4»!_is none
Cushion ft ff too good
Billiard and Pool Tabic Makers.
Also Supplies anil Kcpiiirs.
16 Ksscx St.,
BOSTON.
Muy wc never murmur willioul i ^lusi- ami nc
XXIV
"Here's to love and unity,
Dark corners and opporlunily." — Allen.
CREeORT'S EARLY EXCELSIOR, the best second
early low-growing pea without any exception. A yreat
favorite witli the leading gardeners.
'•BIG CROP." our new white rotato, ont-yields all the
well-known varieties, is less affected hy rot, is deliciuusly
mealy. Let us tell you all about it. Catalogue free,
J. J. H. GREGORY & SON, Marblehead, Mass.
RAWSON'S
HIGH
GRADE
SEEDS
Do not fail to apply for
Rawson's Garden Man-
ual for 1909. It con-
tains the most complete
list of choice things
offered in the country.
MAILED FREE
W. W. Rawson & Co.
5 Union St., Boston, Mass.
mMH^Ml^MlWiWWiWj
A. H. HEWS &CO.
(incorporated)
ESTABLISHED 1765
MANUFACTURERS OF
FLOWER POTS
CAMBRIDGE, - MASS.
CATALOGUE ON APPLICATION
'm'^'M'M'mmm'mmfi
OF EVERY KIND.
Implements. c=^^^^
TELEPHONES Machines. '=^^^^
RicnM0ND(|;3 Woodenware.
(INeORPORATED)
51 AND 52 NORTH riARKET STREET. BOSTON,
fujrnishes' ^japjroj-ed Jinipio} ees.
Morcantile, A^r-Jcullural. JHorficalfurol'
TELEPHON1E BICII. aT6,
Learn the past and you will know the future.
XXV
"Oh, H — I! what have we here?" — Only a Soph, essay handed back.
To Our Friends and Customers:
We thank our patrons for the generous orders given us, and trust our business
relations for the coming year will continue as pleasant as in the past; we solicit the
continued patronage of old and new customers.
THE TUTTLE COMPANY
E.%labli.sliiMl 1832
Printers, Booksellers and Stationers
11 and 13 Center St.. RLTi,ANl). VT.
"lime clalxjralcly ihrown away." -Anlmnl lin-idini;.
XXVI
"Great heavens! get back into your cradle." — Cloues.
The World's Finest Nursery Products
We have the following growing in our 150 acre nursery
in the highest grade possible :
Roses, in all kinds and varieties; Rhododendrons, Kalmias and other Large-Leaf
Evergreen Shrubs; Flowering Shrubs in standard and bush form; Hardy Climb-
ing and Trailing Vines; Summer Flowering Bulbs and Roots; Shade, Fruit
and Weeping Trees; Hardy Perennials and Grasses; Hedge
Plants, in all varieties; Evergreens and Conifers
We shall be glad to estimate on your list of wants in any quantity
VISIT NURSERY ASK FOR CATALOGUE
BOBBINK & ATKINS
Importers, Nurserymen and Florists RUTHERFORD, N. J.
The Newspaper for College Men Representative New England Journal
The Springfield Republican
Famous for its strong editorial page, excellent local and general
news service, and rich special features
INDEPENDENT, ABLE, ENTERPRISING
special attention to tlie news of Amherst and Colleges
DAILY $8.00 SUNDAY $2.00 WEEKLY $1.00
"I am the very pink of courtesy." — Ann'is.
xxvu
If a man tells a woman she Is beautiful she will overloot most of the other lies he tells he
GILMAN & MOFFETT
TELEPHONE 1079-3
Manufacturers of and Wholesale Dealers in
CONFECTIONER Y
207 to 211 Main Street Agents for Lowney's Chocolates
WORCESTER, - - MASS.
HOTEL WARREN
SOUTH DEERFIELD, MASS.
Livery Stable Connected T. J. AHERN, Manager
The Springfield Gas Machine
Gas for Lighting and Fuel Purposes
PRODUCED AT A MINIMLM COST
^mBMBmumBmBMBmBmBm
Gas Appliances, Gas Furnaces, Gas Heating
Burners, Gas Water Heaters, Incandescent
Gas Burners, Pipe, Fittings, Valves, and all
Supplies for Gas and Oil -g :^ -^ -^
Gilbert & Barker Manufacturing Co.
193 LYMAN STREET SPRINGFIELD, MASS.
-It's LcllL-r lo liuvc luvi-a and l.«l, lli.m nt^vci Ici Uave loved al all." Cv. LUiil;.
XXVIll
"Platonic affection is a vegetarian diet of love." — John Bull.
^ Holstein-Friesian, Ayrshire, Jersey and ^
Guernsey Cattle
i
I
I
i
i
i
TubircuMn Teiled
BERKSHIRE AND LARGE YORKSHIRE SWINE.
FRENCH COACH HORSES.
WHITE RUSTLER DENT CORN
DIVISION OF AGRICULTURE
Massachusetts Agricultural College
m
i
i
i
I
i
i
i
i
^l72f272fl7if/72fi3^^^^^^^^7SZ7SZ7ifA
Special attention given to large and small spreads
Ample room for transients
AMHERST HOUSE
D. H. KENDRI C K, Prop.
Terms reasonable
House recently equipped with modern improvements
l^^^^E
"Twice Told Tales. " — Munson's French.
XXIX
"A face like a benediction." — Holland
DRAIN OR LAND TILE,
ESTABLISHED 1869.
WALDO BROTHERS,
C. S. WALDO, SOLE PARTNER.
102 MILK STREET, BOSTON.
AKRON SALT GLAZED SEWER PIPE.
FIRE CLAY FLUE LININGS.
PORTLAND AND ROSENDALE CEMENTS. MASONS' AND CONTRACTORS' SUPPLIES.
ELLIVANGER & BARRY
Take pleasure in offering- the following VALUABLE NOVELTIES:
BECHTEL'S CRAB-Large double pink flowers. Very ornamental.
BISMARCK APPLE — A showy, large, red Fall apple; bears while quite young; a market variety.
BANANA APPLE— Beautiful yellow Winter apple.
BARRY APPLE— Valuable late-keeping Winter apple.
BARRY PEAR — Best late pear, extraordinary keeper; high quality, large.
PERFECTION CURRANT— New, best red currant; fine quality.
JOSSELYN GOOSEBERRY-Large, red. For market.
SHRUBS and PLANTS
LEMOINE'S NEWDOUBLE LILACS— Marvelously beautiful.
LEMOINE'S NEW HYBRID DEUTZIAS.
HARDY PERENNIAL PHLOX-In great variety.
DOUBLE AND SINGLE PAEONIES— Choicest assortment.
NEW CLIMBING and RAMBLING ROSES
DOROTHY PERKINS— Most licaulitui delicate pink variety.
HIAWATHA— Sinelc. bricht sc.irlct crimson.
I.ADY GAY— Deep riwe color.
I'HILAUl-LPHIA RAMBLER— ImprovcJ Crimson Rambler
RUHIN — Ruby RcJ.
NEIV HYBRID PERPETUAL ROSE
FRAU KARL DRUSCHKI— (Snow Queen)— Best hardy wliltc rose yet introduced; beautiful In bud and when fully open; ;\bundant.
NEW DWARK HARDY PERPETUAL BLOOMING ROSES KNOWN AS BABY RAMBLERS.
Valuable new roBcs. particularly desirable for plantitic out of doors in beds, masses, borders, etc., beiuK liardy and proklucini; all
summer lunif llowers in clusters, Kinc liouse plants belui: constantly in bloom. ANNY MULLER— Rose color. MME NORBERT
LEVAVASSEUR— Crimson. MAMAN I.EVAVASSEUR (Baby Dorothy) pink. NEW WHITE HYBRID RUGOSA ROSE. BLAl'i:
DOUBLE de CODBKRT— Semi-Double; purest white; handsome foliacc. »>> Superb new edition of our GllNnuAt. Catai.oci'c,
illuHtral'-,! nrnl drvriplivr, mailed free upon reinest. MOVNT IIOI'F NfRS-hKI HS. K'.l^r.tn: .V. Y.
"As You Like II."— Frislinum 1 lisloiy.
XXX
You won'l improve your chances by taking loo many. — Hazen.
Students' Supplies
Waterman's Ideal and Parker's
lucky Curve Fountain Pens
Necco Chocolates, Tonics, College Sta-
tionary, Post Cards, Photos, etc., sold at
THE COLLEGE STORE
FOLSOM 6i NICKLESS, Props.
" THE STORE FOR STUDENTS "
Massachusetts Agricultural College, AMHERST, MASS.
BIAS,
The Caterer
College work of all kinds solicited
Neatly and reasonably done
Proms and receptions a specialty
When you have anything in
this line boys, either for your
spreads or socials do not forget
BIAS,
AMHERST, MASS.
WM. K. STAAB
VASHIONS
ABRICS
AULTLESS
ITTING
Maker and Designer of
Mens' Clothes
Fall and Winter
Woolens now ready
Parlors 139 Main Street, up one flight
Northampton, Mass.
"My kingdom for a bib." — josh.
XXXI
^