&88lcF vesn THE Quinaueiiniai Register OF IOWA COLLEGE 1897 1848 Semicentennial 1898 Return this book on or before the Latest Date stamped below. Theft, mutilation, and underlining of books are reasons for disciplinary action and may result in dismissal from the University. University of Illinois Library L161—0-1096 THE auinquenniai Register IOWA COLLEGE 1897 1848 Semi-Centennial 1898 Digitized by the Internet Archive in 2017 with funding from University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign Alternates https://archive.org/details/quinquennialregiOOgrin Table of Contents INTRODUCTION IOWA COLLEGE IN THE CIVIL WAR I.—CORPORATION Officers of the Board of Trustees. Presidents. Secretaries. Treasurers. Auditors. Trustees. Examining Committee. Executive Committee. Librarians. 11.-BOARD OF INSTRUCTION Presidents. Professors and Instructors. III.—THE ALUMNI Graduates from College. Graduates from Department of Music. Honorary Degrees. IV.—INDEX Alumni. Summary. Residence by States. Occupations. Introduction Late in the year 1895 th e following circular was sent to each graduate whose address could be obtained: “Vo the Graduates of Iowa College: The time has come for the issuing of another Quinquennial Catalogue. In view of the fact that it is the last one prior to the semi-centennial celebration which we now plan to observe at com¬ mencement of 1898, the Trustees and Faculty have decided to make this quinquennial considerably fuller than heretofore. I am bidden therefore by their vote to ask each one of the graduates to send me a letter answering at least the following inquiries: (1) Date and place of birth; (2) Where did you prepare for college; (3) Places of residence since graduation; (4) Business pursuits; (5) Literary work done; (6) Degrees received; (7) Official positions held;— WITH THE DATES ATTACHED TO EACH ITEM. We ask the married women among the graduates to give the names, official titles and any items of interest concerning the lives and work of their husbands. We make a similar general request concerning wives of alumni. The answers to our inquiries will be, we trust, given with the ut¬ most frankness and fullness with no consideration of either pride or modesty. We desire full and exact matter of history. We do not want your letters confined with mechanical strict¬ ness to these inquiries but shall be glad of anything of interest you may choose to write. The last quinquennial, published in connection with the cata¬ logue of ’90-91, was in many respects unsatisfactory, as much so doubtless to the graduates themselves as to the college. It is planned this year to publish it in a separate volume of similar style with the catalogue. It will be very much fuller than the last one. Unfortunately the letters sent in response to inquiries made Introduction 5 for the last quinquennial were not preserved. I will ask the grad¬ uates to write their replies on one side only of the paper and leave a margin of at least an inch on the left side of the sheets, in order that these replies may be put together and permanently pre¬ served. I am also requested to make particular inquiry of each gradu¬ ate for information concerning the place of residence and employ¬ ment of former members of the class who did not graduate. In¬ formation concerning these will be of permanent value to the col¬ lege. The enclosed circular with which I am still making inquir¬ ies will indicate to you the reason why we desire this information concerning these non-graduate students. There are now nearly six hundred in the list of graduates of Iowa College. The story of their lives a.s it can be told in a quite full alumnal catalogue will be of great interest and of equally great value. This book cannot be made anything like complete without the hearty and generous co-operation of the graduates themselves. I therefore beg you to write me very fully of your¬ self since graduation, giving account of anything in your life or experience or work which will enable the college to make a record as complete as possible of the factors of your life that are of help¬ ful interest. Let no one say "I have done nothing worthy of record,” but kindly give us the fullest information along the lines above suggested and believe that we are interested in it. Asking you to give this matter immediate attention that the work of preparation of the catalogue may not be delayed, I am Faithfully yours, GEORGE A. GATES. It is the desire of the Trustees and Faculty that each alu?nnus make special plans to be present at our jitbilee in i8g8. We give notice thus early that we shall expect you here , in order that you ?nay begin to make plans to be present. Grinnell, Iowa, December, 1895.” Many responded promptly; many needed a second circular; many still a letter from Miss Truebiood, my secretary; several an added personal appeal from me; a few a personal interview after all the precedingatternpts; a very few, the most faithfully diligent search has failed to discover. Only two or three have flatly re¬ fused to answer inquiries—two have made no response to several 6 Iowa College Quinquennial letters received by them. Doubtless the compilers of future quinquennials will be able to fill some of the inevitable blanks in this one. This Quinquennial differs somewhat from the usual form of such publications, in that it is considerably fuller, probably more so than any future catalogue will be. The number of graduates will be too great to make it wise again; the accumulating years come between the earlier and later graduates so that the personal inter¬ est in each other can not in the future be what it has been in the past. Ties will bind the graduates to the college just as much, but to each other, as between earlier and later classes, considera¬ bly less. But in view of the approaching semi-centennial in 1898, it has seemed appropriate to take note of the fact that up to this time a very close bond has held the interest of our graduates both to the college and in large measure to each other. The loyalty of our graduates to their college is noteworthy and beautiful. In my ac¬ quaintance with colleges and college men I have not known it excelled. Most of the graduates have responded heartily to the circular quoted above. The replies have been, as asked, full and explicit. They have been freely edited in the interest of a fair uniformity. Most conscientious effort has been made to state all that may ap¬ propriately appear in such a volume as this. Many details have been written in reply to the urgent requests of the circular, which though not wholly appropriate in the printed volume, are never¬ theless carefully preserved for future editors of quinquennials, and for other reference. However gladly an editor of such a pamphlet would often ex¬ press estimates, not only his own but far beyond, of the value of work done, there would be a manifest impropriety in any such ex¬ pression. Distinctions not intended would inevitably be inferred. There remained no other course but to state mechanically the facts. Moreover some lives that seem to themselves obscure and unworthy of special note, have been filled with the most generous helpfulness and the most far reaching usefulness. This is particularly true of the lives of many of the women. A large number have replied that their lives have been so unevent¬ ful as to be undeserving of mention in our.catalogue; and one or two have plumply refused therefore to give anything. In some such instances a few facts have been gathered from other sources, and Introduction 7 small inaccuracies in dates etc. may be ascribed to such refusal. (The decliners deserve more errors!) Many women, most in fact, are naturally wives and mothers. A quinquennial makes only formal and brief note of such a fact; but who can measure the contribution to human society of the patient years in such ho?nes as the consecrated, educated wife and mother can make? These women have created homes that are centers of power for good, not only to the children in them, but in the town or community or city where they are. The college women of America are centers of refining, elevating, inspiring influence. Such women and such homes mean wider outlook for all young people who come into contact with them. There is restraint of wrong impulses and incitement to right ones, and encouragement to push out for education and a broader life. Let there be one generation of educated motherhood; there need be no fear of illit¬ eracy in the next generation. It has been interesting to note that many women graduates have gone back from college into their own homes, to make the home of father and mother richer for their acquisitions. It w T ould be a pity if college training should weaken in the young women of our homes their sense of obligation to or their affection for those to whom must always be their first duty. A large number of our women have referred apologetically to the fact that home duties together with church obligations and social demands have left little time for special study or literary pursuits. But why apologetically ? Were it not so, did the woman so misunderstand or misuse her education as to underestimate the superior value of just that womanly work of home, religion and society; work as unostentatious, and influence as unobtrusive, and power as silent, and life as vivifying as the sunlight, then in¬ deed would a heavy complaint be laid at the door of higher edu¬ cation of women. So let the unprinted records stand,—“wife and mother,”—“Home-maker for my father and mother” (or both) etc., full of honor, marking the sacrifice of service, than which there is no higher or holier usefulness. May one be permitted this added w r ord, in this really family volume? I have been often deeply moved by the tales of the lives as they have been almost, often quite, confidentially revealed in these many letters. The life experiences have been to me as touching as a series of dramas; the successes and the failures; 8 Iowa College Quinquennial the hard work and the happy years; the disappointments and the great blessings; the rich joys and the bitter, bitter sorrows; few commedies, more tragedies, but all deep and serious earnestness of reality, as the swift passing years have wrought their sobering mission upon the buoyant lives of college boys and college girls. Verily “Life is real, Life is earnest;” as the youthful Longfellow wrote. But the white headed poet in his Cambridge home knew, by an infinite measure of difference, better than the youth what the youth’s words mean. Iowa College wants all her living children around her at her scmi-centcnnial commencement, June, 1898. In the nature of the case this will be impossible but we shall surely see nearly all. Few indeed of the alumni of that date will be her guests at the next semi-centennial, and those few will come with white hair and feeble steps. But the oldest of our graduates is yet not very old. The college itself is in her mere youth. Our welcome home again to the whole family of children (and there are even now a few grandchildren) shall be wide and generous. Come. GEORGE A. GATES. Iowa College in the Civil War The trustees, teachers and patrons of the college were aggres¬ sively opposed to slavery. Grinnell had always been ultra enough to admit colored children to its schools, and had aided John Brown and “bleeding Kansas” by personal and pecuniary expressions of sympathy. When the South began the Civil War to insure teri- tory for the expansion of the “peculiar institution” it was natural that the war spirit should convulse the town and the college. It continued to do so till Lee surrendered. During no time for about half a century has it been so nearly impossible to put heart into college work. The news from the field was distracting enough, but the question of personal obligation as to enlistment was most distracting in the minds of teachers and pupils. Early in 1861 a class of twelve was just ready to enter the col¬ lege, the largest senior academy class in the history of the institu¬ tion and the first in Grinnell. The personal and college ambitions of years were on the verge of fruition. “Those students must wait till commencement!” But it was very hard to keep them. Study, too, was very difficult. It was no solitary incident when a war conversation occupied the full recitation hour. Some could be re¬ lied on generally, for very systematic college work, but Russell Eugene Jones and Carlos James Kelsey, pre-eminently, were con¬ stantly on the verge of abandoning Homer’s Iliad for Hardee’s Tactics. After Commencement, Company E of the 4th Iowa Cavalry was organized largely of those in the vicinity of Grinnell. The temp¬ tation to the field could be resisted no longer. Out of that first freshman class here R. E. Jones smuggled himself into the service by concealing a defective eye, rose to the captaincy and fell dead in near the last battle of the war as he was going over the breast works into a rebel fort, whose last defender was leaving it with a Parthian shot. C. J. Kelsey became a lieutenant, lost his health, yet clung to his company till after Appomattox, and then wrestled with disease and with business until 1878 when he died in Grinnell. The three college members of that company who were living in 1890, at the suggestion of their classmate, Hon. R. M. IO Iowa College Quinquennial Haines, were granted the honorary degree of “A. M.”by the col¬ lege trustees. For two of them it was the last possible opportu¬ nity, for Hiram H.Cardell and Joseph Lyman died before the next Commencement. Cardell was a lieutenant in his company and after the war devoted himself to the law in Perry, Iowa. Lyman was regimental clerk, then transferred to the 29th Iowa Infantry and made its adjutant, then its major. He, too, entered the law and was elected district judge and then sent to congress from the Council Bluffs district. The third of those survivors, John M. Car¬ ney, was the commissary sergeant of his regiment, the mayor of his town after 1865, and still resides in Gilman. Four others of that freshman class were connected with the army, graduated from the college and will be mentioned later in this catalogue, viz: Charles N. Cooper, Robert M. Haines, Stephen H. Herrick and Charles Scott. One other member finds no place among the graduates, for James E. Ellis enlisted in the 46th infantry in 1864, was made sergeant and died in Memphis from exhaustion by army service after a sudden transfer from Iowa to the mid-summer of Tennessee and Mississippi. Of the ten other students in the 4th cavalry, Norman S. Bates now of Highmore, South Dakota, captured a secession flag from its rebel bearer, in battle; John W. Jones of Madison was made sergeant and lieutenant; Thomas H. Craver died in service; William Augustus Chapman, now a physician in Hastings, Ne¬ braska, became a sergeant in the 46th infantry; States D. Palmer gained admission to the army by the appointment of a guardian that he might give his consent to it, and is now a business man in Chicago; William G. Work rose to a lieutenancy, was seriously in¬ jured by an explosion, and is now in businsss in Des Moines; Laurens Horton, L. O. Mathews, O. J. Mathews and Abraham Palmer served through the war. Reuben N. Munger was a private in the 2nd cavalry, and Ben¬ jamin F. Holland in the 3rd was killed in battle at Moore’s Mills, Missouri. Frederick B. Sanborn was a lieutenant in the 8th Iowa Cavalry. In infantry service, M. K. Campbell was in the 5th Iowa regi¬ ment and is now a banker at Harlan; William A. Elliott was in the 8th and now resides at Dodge City, Kansas: A. W. Hobbs was in the nth and was killed in battle; and James T. Loring entered the 14th and was killed at Nashville, Tennessee, December 16th, 1864, in his first engagement. The College in the Civil War ii Seven students joined the ioth regiment, i. e.: Charles L. Bailey; Oliver P. Daly became a lieutenant; Levi C. Ela who was made adjutant; and Charles Russell Cardell, Joseph W. Holland, B. Mendenhall and Amandus D. Risdon served as privates. The college gave to the 14th regiment Joseph A. Shanklin who was made a lieutenant; Oliver C. Kindley joined the 37th; Charles Leonard Bailey was lieutenant in the 47th; Edward Pruyn a ser¬ geant in the 139th Illinois infantry; and Thomas Chase slipped into a Rhode Island battery with only one sound eye. The 28th regiment was reinforced by John W. Carr, who received a captaincy, and is now the attorney of Poweshiek county; Ben¬ jamin F. Kierulff, who served it as regimental clerk and is now a Marshalltown physician; Albert E. Quaife who was a musician and now sends a son to college from Ionia; Joseph E. Shipley a business man in Chicago after the war; and by Benjamin F. Cas- sady who was accepted after two rejections and on a misunder¬ standing as to his age. The last named was killed in the hottest of the fight at Champion Hill, Mississippi. Only one student was sacrificed at Andersonville, James W. Dowd, who had joined the 112th Illinois infantry. The largest number in any one company, twenty-six, were en¬ rolled in Company B of the 46th Infantry for one hundred days in 1864, when Sherman began his march toward Atlanta and the sea. It was the hour of supreme effort on the part of the govern¬ ment and when the college retained no student within its walls who was liable to military service. The college contingent in¬ cluded the 1st lieutenant (a professor who had been detained in the class room until that time by the college trustees);* Charles Scott, the 2nd lieutenant, later a college alumnus and one in whose honor a scholarship fund is now contemplated; two regi¬ mental clerks, Stephen Henderson Herrick and James Irving Manatt, who graduated soon after; two musicians, Francis E. Ford who died immediately after his discharge of the disease then prostrating him, and Dana H. Robbins who lived but a few months longer; one orderly, Charles W. Hobart who died after a successful business career in Grinnell and Minneapolis; two ser¬ geants, W. A. Chapman and James E. Ellis, both of whom have been named already. Besides these there were five corporals and twelve privates of whom Charles N. Cooper, William Justus ♦The professor here hinted at is the writer of this article. G. 12 Iowa College Quinquennial Eaton, Gershom H. Hill, and Jacob P. Lyman are named among the alumni. Of the others George M. Adams graduated else¬ where and is now pastor of the Baptist Church in Grinnell; Charles Lorenzo Bailey became a farmer and was drowned in Michigan; Burton A. Billings and George W. Lancaster have been lost to our sight; Henry J. Bodurtha is in Omaha; Charles E. Cox en¬ listed in the 47th Wisconsin Infantry and has died; Theodore F. Crane studied law, has been in business and resides in Grinnell; Eveliti M. Fuller is a banker in Early; Seth W. Macy is a farmer near Colfax; Homer R. Page became a physician and died while professor in a Des Moines Medical College; and Loyal C. Phelps, Jr., and Frank L. Rouse are in business, the one in Chicago and the other in Colorado Springs. Four others connected with the enterprises of the war are named among the alumni,—Seth W. Arnold was in the Christian Commission; Mary E. Snell, a teacher in the United States schools at Gallatin, Tennessee; and two whose respect for the principles of the Friends, or, at least, whose regard for their an¬ cestors who were Friends, forbade them to bear arms, viz.: Rob¬ ert M. Haines and Jesse Macy, whose service as teachers and otherwise was of great value, the one with the Christian Commis¬ sion at St. Louis, the other in the Hospital at Savannah, Georgia. Thoughts of just eulogy for these students have come to mind and slipped away through my pen again and again, but they must be erased, for a fair discrimination either by the writer or the reader, is utterly impossible. Honor to one may seem like de¬ traction from another. Students before the cyclone will remember the memorial tablet on the wall of West College which bore the names of those who died in the army. Those who were here at that time will also remember how tenderly the mad tornado bore it down among the brick and the timber of that college ruin with¬ out a break or a scratch so that it reappears uninjured at the en¬ trance of Alumni Hall. Those soldiers who did not graduate and their friends may rest assured that, although their names may not be printed in subsequent quinquennials, the college will be no less careful to preserve all memorials of their sacrifices for the country than was the cyclone of 1882. Others might be named (although many cannot be), who turned aside from the very threshold of the college to join the army; per¬ haps none of these came nearer entering the institution than Charles F. Craver who had made all arrangements for doing so, The College in the Civil War 13 including a contract for boarding with the time agreed upon for beginning. He joined Company E of the 4th Iowa Cavalry, served through the war, built up a large manufacturing business in Grin¬ ned, became a member of the Iowa Legislature, and removed to Harvey, Illinois, where he now resides. Two of his sons have en¬ joyed the college advantages for which, for himself, he could only plan. There were others who came from the army to the college, who did not go out from it. We claim these also as “our soldiers.” The names of two of these appear in the record of the class of 1871, viz.: M. Austin and J. B. M. Bishop. Young Austin had passed the darkest and the brightest experiences of a penniless orphan boy when he enlisted in the 21st Massachusetts Infantry. He was promoted, wounded in battle, and suffered in prison and while escaping from it. The business boy foretold the business man by the possession of a few hundred dollars when he began his college course and when he ended it. The prophecy has been fulfilled in Grinnell and in Chicago. Mr. Bishop dropped into college from a farm. His connection with the army was not dis¬ closed until his teacher in United States History asked him to give an account of Sheridan’s movements in the Shenandoah Val¬ ley. The reply was unhesitating, minute, thrilling. His sur¬ prised instructor inquired, “Where did you find that, Mr. Bishop?” The low modest answer came back, “I was there.” The young student had been a part of that history and had been seriously wounded in battle. It would be appropriate to record here the names of all soldiers who were in the college while it was at Davenport, but no one who is now connected with it is able to do so. It will be deemed a special favor if any one will furnish a report of such service for preservation in the college archives. L, F. PARKER. Corporation OFFICERS OF THE BOARD OF TRUSTEES PRESIDENTS 1847.R.v. Alden B. Robbins.1864 1864.Rev. George Frederick Magoun, D. D.1884 1884.Rev. Ephraim Adams.1887 1887.Rev. George A. Gates, D. D.; LL. D. SECRETARIES 1847.Rev. Ephraim Adams. 1855 .Rev. Julius A. Reed. 1856 .Rev. George F. Magoun. 1861.Rev. Stephen Leonard Herrick 1885 .Daniel O. Eshbaugh. 1886 .Michael Austin. 1888.*..Rev. Horace H. Robbins. TREASURERS 1847.James McManus. 1853.Joseph Lambrite. 1858.Rev. Julius A. Reed. 1863.Charles H. Spencer. 1865.Rev. Darius E. Jones. 1868.Rev. Joshua M. Chamberlain.. 1887 .H. C. Spencer. AUDITORS 1855 1856 1861 1885 1886 1888 1853 1858 1863 1865 1868 1887 1858.... .... James McManus.. i860.... _Hon. Thomas Holyoke, M. D.. 1861.... _Hon. John Meyer.. 1863.... _Loyal C. Phelps. .1874 1874.... _Rev. Stephen L. Herrick. t-n 00 00 Corporation i5 1885.C. W. H. Beyer.1888 1888 .G. H. Hamlin.1889 1889 .J. G. Pettit.1890 1890 .C. W. H. Beyer. TRUSTEES 1847—1886... .Rev. Asa Turner.Deceased 1847—1853_Rev. Daniel Lane.Deceased 1847—1868_Rev. John C. Holbrook.Stockton, Cal. 1847—1868_Rev. Julius A. Reed.Deceased 1847—1896_Rev. Harvey Adams, D. D.Deceased 1847—1857....Rev. Reuben Gaylord.Deceased 1847—1896_Rev. Alden B. Robbins, D. D.Deceased 1847—1849....Rev. Ebenezer Alden.Deceased 1847— _Rev. Ephraim Adams, D. D.Waterloo, Iowa. 1847—1851... .William H. Starr.Deceased 1847—1856....Rev. William W. Woods.Deceased 1847—1854_Rev. G. C. Beaman.Deceased 1847—1863 .... Henry Q. Jennison. 1847—1879 .... James McManus.Deceased 1847—1863.... Charles Atkinson. 1850—1863....Rev. William Salter, D. D.Burlington, Iowa 1852—1883....Rev. Oliver Emerson.Deceased 1854—1859.... Joseph Lambrite.Deceased 1854—1859_Frederick H. Stone.<.Deceased 1854—1871_Rev. Jesse Guernsey.Deceased 1854—1890....Hon. Josiah B. Grinnell.Deceased 1856—1884_Rev. Geo. F. Magoun, D. D.Deceased 1856—1874_Hon. Jacob Butler.Deceased 1856—1874....Hon. George B. Sargent...Deceased 1859— 1861_David S. Sheldon.Deceased 1860— i877....Hon. Thomas Holyoke, M. D.Deceased 1860— 1886....Rev. Stephen L. Herrick.Deceased 1861— ....Hon. John Meyer.Newton, Iowa 16 Iowa College Quinquennial 1861— _Rev. Joshua M. Chamberlain.Grinnell, Iowa 1861—1871....Rev. George Thacher, D. D.Deceased 1863—1874_Loyal C. Phelps.Deceased 1863—1883_Rev. Daniel Lane, D. D....Deceased 1867— _Hon. Samuel Merrill.Los Angeles, Cal. 1870—1875_Hon. Henry E. J. Boardman.Marshalltown, la. 1872—1880_Rev. Henry S. DeForest, D. D.Deceased 1875—1876.Rev. William W. Woodworth. .Deceased 1875—1883_David Leonard.Deceased 1875— 188 1 _Hon. Lucian Eaton.Deceased x 875— _Jeremiah H. Merrill.Des Moines, Iowa. 1876— 1883_Rev. William Windsor.Los Gatos, Cal. 1876—1883_Hon. Nathaniel C. Deering.Deceased 1878—1882_Hon. R. D. Stephens.Deceased 1878—1880_Oscar C. Hale.Deceased 1880— 1883_James Callanan.Des Moines, Iowa. 1881— 1884_Hon. Samuel F. Cooper.Campbell, Cal. 1881— _Hon. Robert M. Haines.Grinnell, Iowa 1883—188 5 _Mrs. Louisa B. Stephens.Chicago, Illinois 1883— 1884_William T. Major.Deceased 1884— 1891_Edward R. Sears.Marshalltown, la. 1884— _Daniel O. Eshbaugh.Montclair, N. J. 1884— 1887_Robert Wright.Iowa Falls, Iowa. 1885— _Rev. Alvali L. Frisbie, D. D_Des Moines, Iowa. 1885— 1891_Rev. James S. Hoyt, D. D.Deceased 1886— 1896_Capt. C. P. Searle.Oskaloosa, Iowa 1886— _M. Austin.Chicago, Illinois 1886— 1887_Hon. Edwin Manning.Keosauqua, Iowa 1887— _Hon. J. A. Smith.Osage, Iowa 1887— _Albert Shaw, Ph. D.New York City 1888— _Gershom H, Hill, M. D.,. .Independence, la. 1889— _Rev. A. W. Archibald, D. D.... Hyde Park, Mass. 1889— .... Col. J. K. P. Thompson.Rock Rapids, la. 1889—1891.... R. E. Gaylord, A. M... This copy is sent to you without charge. Additional copies will be furnished, if desired, for twenty-five cents each. This price barely covers the cost. Corporation i 7 1890— _E. D. Rand, A. M.Keokuk, Iowa 1890—1893 H. M. Hobart, M. D.Deceased 1890— _S. A. Cravath, A. M.Grinnell, Iowa 1890— _H. H. Robbins, A. M.Grinnell, Iowa 1891— _N. F. Hawley, A. M.Minneapolis, Minn. 1894— _Rev. Loren F. Berry.Ottumwa, Iowa 1895— _Hon. I. K. Wilson, A. M.Des Moines, Iowa. EXAMINING COMMITTEE (Appointed by the State Association of Cong’l Churches and Ministers.) 1863.Hon. Oran Faville. 1863.Rev. Isaac Russell, M. D. 1863 .A. S. Kissell, A. M. 1864 .Rev. H. L. Bullen.. 1865 .Rev. John Todd. 1865.Rev. Henry K. Edson, A. M. 1865.Jonathan Piper. 1865.Asa T. Hudson, M. D. 1865 .Rev. William Windsor. 1866...Hon. Caleb Baldwin. 1866 .Rev. John White. 1866 .Hon. George G. Wright. 1867 .Rev. Asa Farwell. 1867.Hon. William G. Hammond, LL. D 1867.Rev. J. A. Hamilton. 1867.Professor N. R. Leonard. 1867.Hon. D. Franklin Wells. 1867.Orestes St. John. 1867 .Rev. Charles Gibbs. 1868 .Rev. H. L. DeForest.. 1868.Wells A. Bemis. 1868.Rev. J. K. Nutting. 1868.Rev. G. D. A. Hebard. 1868.Henry H. Belheld.. 1865 1865 1864 1865 1866 1867 1867 1866 1866 1867 1867 1867 1868 1868 1868 1868 1868 1868 1869 1869 1869 1869 1869 1869 iB Iowa College Quinquennial 1868 .Rev. Benjamin Judkins. 1869 .Professor W. G. Hammond, LL. D. 1869.Rev. Daniel Lane, D. D. 1869.Hon. J. Young Scammon. 1869.Rev. Joel F. Bingham, D. D. 1869.PI on. John F. Dillon. 1869.PIon. Abraham S. Kissell. 1869 .Rev. Henry Mills. 1870 .L. V/. Edgerley. 1870.Rev. H. B. Woodworth. 1870.Rev. John PI. Morley. 1870.Hon. Lewis W. Ross. 1870.Hon. G. M. Woodbury. 1870 .R.ev. John A. R.oss. 1871 .Rev. H. S. DeP'orest. 1871.Rev. A. L. Frisbie. 1871.S. A. Cravath, M. D. 1871.Rev. L. A. Dunn. 1871.W. E. Crosby. 1871.L. M. Hastings. 1871.Hon. Alonzo Abernethy. 1871.A. Armstrong. 1871.C. E. Plibbard. 1871 .R. M. Haines. 1872 .Rev. J. IP. Rogan. 1872.Hon. E. M. Beardsley. 1872.Hon. R. H. Gilmore. 1872.Rev. T. G. Brainerd. 1872.J. P. Lyman. 1872 .Charles H. Robinson. 1873 .Rev. W. W. Woodworth. 1873.Rev. J. G. Merrill. 1873.Rev. J. L. Ewell. 1873.Rev. Clayton Welles. 1869 1870 1870 1870 1871 1870 1870 1870 1871 1871 1873 1871 1871 1871 1872 1873 1872 1872 1873 1873 1873 1872 1872 1872 1874 1874 1874 1873 1873 1873 1875 1875 1874 187s i873- 1873- 1873- 1873 - 1874. 1874. 1874. 1874. 1874. 1874- 1874. 1875. 1875. 1875. 1875. 1875. 1875. 1875. 1875 1876. 1876. 1876 1876, 1876. 1876 1876 18 77 1877 1877 1877 1877 1877 1877 1877 Corporation 19 Hon. A. S. Welch.1875 Rev. W. S. Bray.1874 Prof. W. B. Potter.1874 Thomas Hedge, Jr.1874 Rev. William Windsor.1876 Prof. Alonzo Collins.1875 Hon. Lucien Eaton.1877 Mrs. J. B. Dakin.1876 Miss Prof. P. M. Sudlow.1875 Rev. J. A. Nash.1875 Rev. J. T. Hyde, D. D.1875 Rev. Benjamin Talbot.1876 Rev. T. O. Douglass.1876 Rev. L. PI. Cobb.1877 Hon. Frederick Mott.1876 Prof. W. PI. Wynn, D. D.1876 .George H. Lewis, A. M.1877 .William Hoy. 1876 . Supt. C. P. Rogers, A. M.1877 Prin. A. C. Hart.1878 , Rev. Sidney Crawford.1877 , Pres. J. Baldwin.1877 .Prof. D. Rhodes.1878 , Rev. W. A. Waterman.1878 . Rev. G. G. Perkins.1877 .Rev. J. W. Plealey, D. D.1877 .Rev. E. D. Eaton.1879 .Rev. J. M. Sturtevant, Jr., D. D.1878 .Rev. Joshua Leonard.1879 . Hon. J. C Knapp.1879 . Hon. C. C. Cole, LL. D.1879 . Prin. J. M. DeArmond.1879 .Miss Mary E. Snell.1879 .Miss Lizzie H. Avery.1879 Iowa College Quinquennial 20 1878.Hon. J. M. McDill. 1878.Prin. A. T. Free. 1878.Rev. W. F. Cowles. 1878.Rev. F. H. Magoun. 1878 .Prin. M. E. Rudolph. 1879 .Rev. C. PI. Eaton. 1879.Dr. P. J. Farnsworth. 1879.Miss Abbie Gifford. 1879.Rev. Cyrus Hamlin, D. D.. 1879.Rev. PI. C. Leland. 1879.Dr. John Lewis. 1879.Supt. A. L. Shattuck. 1879.Mrs. M. P. Valentine. 1879 .Miss Helen S. Whitcomb.. 1880 .Mr. M. Austin, A. M. 1880.Rev. T. G. Brainerd. 1880.Rev. Thomas Brande. 1880.Mr. A. P. Dodge. 1880.Rev. Dennis Murphy, Ph, D 1880 .Mr. Albert Shaw. 1881 .Rev. W. L. Coleman. 1881.Pres. David F. Call. 1881.Supt. R. A. Mathows. 1881.Miss Lizzie H. Avery. 1881.Rev. E. P. Smith. 1881.Prin. R. D. Jones. 1881 .Miss Anna D. Merrill. 1882 .Rev. C. PL DeWolf. 1882.Rev. T. O. Douglass, D. D. 1882.Rev. T. G. Grassie. 1882.Mrs. R. M. Haines. 1882.Mr. Ronald MacDonald... 1882.Mrs. P. G. Swalm. 1882.Rev. John Plerron. 1879 1881 1880 1880 1879 ,1881 , 1880 1881 , 18S1 , 1880 .1881 .1881 .1881 . 1880 ,1882 . 1882 . 1882 .1881 ,1882 . 1882 .1883 . 1882 .1883 . 1882 .1884 .1883 . 1884 .1883 1884 .1883 .1883 .1883 . 1884 .1883 1883 i88 3 i88 3 1884 1834 1884 1885 1885 1885 1886 1886 1886 1887 1887 1887 1887 1887 1888 1888 1888 1889 1889 1889 1890 1890 1890 1891 1891 1891 1892 1892 1892 1893 i8 93 21 1884 1884 1884 1885 1885 1885 1886 1886 1886 1887 1887 1887 1888 1888 1888 1888 1888 1889 1889 1889 189O 189O 189O 189I 189I 189I 1892 1892 1892 1893 1893 1893 1894 1894 Corporation Rev. John Haynes. Mrs. Nellie G. Clarke. Prin. W. G. Ray. Rev. George W. Reynolds Rev. J. D. Wells. Edward B. Howell. Rev. A. W. Archibald.... Rev. E. C. Moulton. Mrs. M. M. Kelsey. Pres. PI. H. Seerley. Supt. Henry Sabin. Rev. E. E. P. Abbott. Rev. C. S. Brown. Rev. M. L. Williston. Prof. N. Dunshee. Miss Emily Crane. Mrs. G. E. White. Rev. W. V/. Gist. Supt. C. P. Rogers. Supt. J. A. Wiley. Rev. D. M. Hartsough.... Prin. C. H. Carson. C. McK. Duren. Rev. Walter L. Ferris_ Rev. Charles Noble. Supt. S. H. Sheakley. Rev. Loren F. Berry. Rev. James B. Chase. Supt. F. B. Cooper. Rev. Henry Avery. Rev. George R. Dickinson Mr. L. A. McMurray. Rev. B. F. Boiler. Rev. J. T. Blanchard. 22 Iowa College Quinquennial 1893 .Mr. H. P. Moyer. 1894 .Rev. S. F. Millikan. 1894.Rev. E. C. Holman. 1894 .Mr. S. A. Merrill.. 1895 .Rev. C. R. Gale. 1895.Rev. E. Kent.. 1895.Rev. M. W. Darling. EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE 1861.Hon. J. B. Grinnell. 1861.Hon. John Meyer.. 1861.Hon. T. Holyoke, M. D. 1861.Rev. J. A. Reed. 1861.Hon. J. Butler.. 1863.Rev. S. L. Herrick. 1863.L. C. Phelps.. 1863 .Rev. D. Lane.. 1864 .Hon. J. B. Grinnell. 1866.Col. John Meyer.. 1866.Rev. J. M. Chamberlain. 1869.Rev. D. Lane. 1871.Dr. G. F. Magoun (Ex-officio). 1875.Rev. S. L. Herrick. 1878.Rev. William Windsor. 1880 .Ex-Gov. Samuel Merrill. 1881 .Col. Samuel F. Cooper. 1884.Rev. Ephraim Adams. 1884.J. H. Merrill. 1884.Hon. R. M. Haines. 1884 .D. O. Eshbaugh. 1885 .Hon. J. B. Grinnell. 1887 .Rev. G. A. Gates. 1888 .M. Austin. 1888.Rev. J. M. Chamberlain. 1894 1895 1895 1895 1896 1896 1896 1863 1863 1878 1864 1863 1866 1871 18 66 1884 1869 1875 1884 1886 1880 1881 1884 1889 1890 1885 1890 1891 Corporation 23 1889.Rev. H. H. Robbins 1891.S. A. Cravath. LIBRARIANS 1863.Carl W. VonCoelln, A. M. 1865.Samuel Jay Buck, A. M. 1871 .John Avery, A. M. 1872 .R. W. Swan, A. M. 1883.S. G. Barnes, A. M.; Ph. D. 1886.Henry K. Edson, A. M. 1886 .Carrie M. Edson, Assistant. 1887 .Oliver F. Emerson, A. M. 1889.Rev. Joshua M. Chamberlain, A. M 1896.Harley H. Stipp, Ph. B. 1865 1871 1872 1883 1886 1887 1889 1889 1896 Board of Instruction PRESIDENTS 1864.Rev. George Frederick Magoun, D. D.1884 1887.Rev. George A. Gates, D. D.; LL. D. PROFESSORS AND INSTRUCTORS [The present residence is given, so far as it is known.] Almy, Frank F., B.Sc.Grinnell, Iowa Professor of Physics, 1893—. Anderson, Mrs. Frank.Chicago, Illinois Instructor in Voice Culture, 1882-3. Anthony, J. R. J.Deceased Instructor in Elocution, 1886-7. Apthorp, Mary Elizabeth, A. M.Oshkosh, Wisconsin Assistant Lady Principal, winter and spring terms, 1883. Arnold, Benjamin F.Marcus, Iowa Assistant in Astronomy, 1891-2. Arnold, J. H., A. B.Redfield, South Dakota Assistant in Signal Service, 1890-1. Avery, John, A. M.Deceased Benedict Professor of Latin Language and Literature, and Acting Professor of Modern Languages, 1870-1. Carter Professor of Greek Language and Literature, and Acting Professor of Modern Languages, 1871-7. Bailey, Gertrude L.Duluth, Minnesota Instructor in Academy, one term, 1881. Baker, Thomas Thomas, A. B.Butte, Montana Assistant in Chemistry and Physics and Curator of Museum, 1874-5. Board of Instruction 25 Baker, Ella Agnes (Austin) A. B.Des Moines, Iowa Instructor in Academy, 1880-2. Balch, Laura A. Principal of Ladies’ Department, 1870-1. Ball, Francis Adams. Principal of Academy, 1850-2. Barbour, Carrie Adeline.Lincoln, Nebraska Instructor in Oil Painting, China Painting and Wood-Carv¬ ing, 1890-1. Barbour, Erwin Hinkley, Ph. D.Lincoln, Nebraska Stone Professor of Natural History and Curator of the Mu¬ seum, 1889-91. Barnes, Rev. Stephen G., Ph. D.; Litt. D.; D. D. Longmeadow, Massachusetts Acting Ames Professor of Rhetoric and English Literature, I ^ 73 _ 5 * Ames Professor of the English Language, Liter¬ ature and Rhetoric, 1875-91. Bartlett, Emeline.Grinnell, Iowa Preceptress of the Academy and Instructor in Greek and Latin, 1896—. Bartlett, Maro L.Des Moines, Iowa Instructor in Voice Culture, 1886-7. Beaton, Isabella.Berlin, Germany Instructor of Piano, 1893-4. Beaton, William.Grinnell, Iowa Instructor in Voice Culture, 1863-4. Instructor upon the Violin, 1877-8. Belfield, Henry H., Ph. D., Manual Training School, Chicago, Illinois Tutor, 1858. Blatherwick, Wilfred E., A. B.Grinnell, Iowa Assistant in Chemistry, 1895—. Booth, Edward M., A. M.Iowa City, Iowa Instructor in Elocution, 1873-5, 1888-91. Brannan, Cassius C.,. Instructor in Violin and Violoncello, 1881-2, 1884-5 and 1886-90. Brannan, Mrs. Lillie L. Assistant Instructor on Piano, 1889-90. 26 Iowa College Quinquennial Brewer, Fisk P., A. M.Deceased Acting Carter Professor of the Greek Language and Liter¬ ature, and Instructor in Modern Languages, 1877-8. Carter Professor of the Greek Language and Literature, and In¬ structor in Modern Languages, 1878-83. Brewer, William F., A. B., Agricultural College, Bozeman, Montana Instructor in Academy, 1891-2. Buck, Samuel Jay, A. M.Grinnell, Iowa Principal of Preparatory and English Department, 1864-9. Myra Steele Professor of Mathematics and Natural Philos¬ ophy, 1869-91. Acting President, 1884-7. Myra Steele Pro¬ fessor of Mathematics and Physics, 1891-3. Myra Steele Professor of Mathematics and Astronomy, 1893—. Bullen, Rev. Henry L., A. B.Moline, Illinois Professor of Mathematics and Natural Philosophy, 1850-8. Burroughs, Susie.Grinnell, Iowa Director of the Art School, 1893-5. Calkins, Raymond, A. B.Pittsfield, Massachusetts Seth Richards Professor of Modern Languages, 1891-3. Carmichael, Henry, Ph. D.Boston, Massachusetts Dodge Professor of Chemistry and Natural Science, 1871-3. Cattell, Archibald, Jr., A. B.Chicago, Illinois Assistant Instructor in Voice Culture, 1890-1. Chamberlain, Mary, A. M.Mills College, Oakland, California Assistant in French, 1891-2. Christian, Mrs. Maggie R...Grinnell, Iowa Instructor in Voice Culture, 1877-8. Churchill, Alfred V.St. Louis, Missouri Director of the Art School, 1891-3. Clapp, Rev. Charles W., A. M.Deceased Professor of Rhetoric and English Literature, 1864-71. In¬ structor in Vocal Music, 1864-67. Clisbee, Susan K...Knox College, Galesburg, Illinois Instructor in Violin, 1894-5. Coggeshall, George W., Ph. D. Harvard University, Cambridge, Massachusetts Assistant in Chemistry, 1889-90. Board of Instruction 27 Cole, Mrs. Fannie L. Gwinner.Grinnell, Iowa Instructor in Pianoforte, 1894—. Cole, Rossetter G., Ph. B.Grinnell, Iowa Director of Conservatory, 1894—. Cox, Peter R.Deceased Instructor in Voice Culture, 1885-6. Crawford, Andrew M., A. B. Instructor in Vocal and Instrumental Music, 1874-5. Crow, John M., Ph. D.Deceased Acting Professor of the Latin Language and Literature, and Instructor in French, 1883-4. Benedict Professor of same, 1884-5. Carter Professor of the Greek Language and Literature, and Instructor in German, 1885-8. Carter Pro¬ fessor of the Greek Language and Literature, 1888-90. Crow, Mrs. Martha Foote, Ph. D., University of Chicago, Chicago, Illinois Lady Principal, 1884-90. Instructor in the German Lan¬ guage, 1888-9. Davidson, Charles, Ph. D.Albany, New York Tutor, 1877-8. Denise, Edith, B. L.Grinnell, Iowa Instructor Elect in French, 1891-2. Instructor in Modern Languages, 1892—•. Dunn, Elizabeth H., A. B., M. D.Coldwater, Michigan Acting Preceptress in Academy, 1890. Edmundson, David Gordon, A. B.Des Moines, Iowa Tutor, 1872-3. Edson, Rev. Henry K., A. M.Grinnell, Iowa Acting Iowa Professor of the Theory and Practice of Teach¬ ing, 1879-80. Professor of same, 1880-92. Ellis, Mary, A. M.Mills College, Oakland, California Lady Principal, 1874-82. * Emerson, Oliver Farrar, Ph. D., Western Reserve University, Cleveland, Ohio Principal of Academy, 1885-8. Emery, Elwood A., B. S.Grinnell, Iowa Instructor in Voice Culture, 1894—. Fessenden, Debra C. Instructor in Instrumental Music, 1873-4. 28 Iowa College Quinquennial Fessenden, Marcia G. A. Lady Principal, 1873-4. Foster, Rev. Roswell, A. B.Deceased Instructor in Elocution, 1875-8. Fox, Anna E., Ph. B.Cheyenne, Wyoming Preceptress of the Academy and Instructor in Latin, 1891-2. Frisbie, Grace E.Des Moines, Iowa Instructor of Violin, 1883-4. Gates, Minnie W.Toledo, Iowa Instructor in Elocution and Physical Culture, 1890-1. Gates, W. Francis.Toledo, Iowa Instructor in Voice Culture and General Theory, 1890-1. Gerberich, Lyman S.Des Moines, Iowa Instructor in Violin and Violoncello, 1885-6. Goodenow, Rev. Smith B., A. M.Battle Creek, Iowa Acting Principal of Preparatory and English Department, 1863-4. Gray, Wade.Grinnell, Iowa Assistant in Physics, 1895. Greene, Rebecca T., B. S.Salinas City, California Assistant Lady Principal, 1885-8. Preceptress in the Acad¬ emy 1888-9. Preceptress in the Academy and Instructor in Latin, 1889-90. Guernsey, Charles W., A. B.Deceased Tutor, 1871-3. Guernsey, Julia M. Instructor in Voice Culture, 1881-2. Haines, Mrs. Joanna H.Grinnell, Iowa Assistant Instructor, 1867-8. Haines, J. H., P. B., M. D.Stillwater, Minnesota Assistant Curator of the Museum, 1891-2. Haines, Mary (Herriott) A. B.Des Moines, Iowa Preceptress in the Academy and Instructor in Greek and Latin, 1890-4. Haines, Robert M., A. M.Grinnell, Iowa Tutor, 1867-9. Hall, Frances I. (Bentley).Des Moines, Iowa Instructor in Drawing and Painting, 1888-91. Board of Instruction 29 Hall, Rev. Newton M., A. M.Oneonta, New York Ames Professor of the English Language and Literature, 1891-3. Hardy, Arthur S., A. M.“The Cosmopolitan,” New York City Professor of Civil Engineering, Applied Mathematics, and Military Drill, 1871-3. Harrington, Mrs. H. E.Oskaloosa, Iowa Instructor in Guitar and Mandolin, 1894-5. Hassell, Susan W., A. M.North Yakima, Washington Assistant Lady Principal, 1882-3. Hatch, Mrs. Minnie T.Des Moines, Iowa Instructor in Elocution, 1878-9. Hathaway, Joseph H., A. B., Harvard University, Cambridge, Massachusetts Assistant in Biology, 1894-5. Heald, H. H., Ph. B.Luverne, Minnesota Assistant in Chemistry, 1890-1. Heidel, W. A., Ph. D.Grinnell, Iowa Benedict Professor of the Latin Language and Literature, 1896— Hendrixson, Walter S., Ph. D.Grinnell, Iowa Dodge Professor of Chemistry, 1890—. Herrick, William H., A. M. Acting Dodge Professor of Chemistry and Natural Science, 1874-5. Professor of same, 1875-9. Dodge Professor of Chemistry, 1879-85. Herriott, Frank I., Ph. D.Des Moines, Iowa Acting Professor of Constitutional History and Political Science, 1895-6. Herron, Rev. George D., D. D.Grinned, Iowa E. D. Rand Professor of Applied Christianity, 1893—. Hid, James Langdon, A. M.Salem, Massachusetts Tutor, 1871-3. Hollenbeck, F. B., Ph. B..Sheldon, Iowa Assistant in Astronomy, 1892-5. Humble, Elizabeth J... Instructor in Drawing, 1877-8. Jacobs, Samuel A., A. B.Stafford Springs, Connecticut Instructor in the Academy, 1892-3. 30 Iowa College Quinquennial Jacobsen, Henry.Buffalo, New York Instructor in Voice Culture, 1891-2. Johnson, Frank W. Instructor in Botany, 1894-5. Jones, Arthur J., A. B.Minneapolis, Minnesota Assistant Curator of the Museum, 1892-3. Assistant in Biol¬ ogy and Geology, 1893-4. Assistant in Biology and Geology and Instructor in the Academy, 1894-5. Jones, Rev. Darius E.Deceased Instructor in Voice Culture, 1867-70. Jones, Marcus E., A. M.Salt Lake City, Utah Tutor. 1875-6. Instructor in Botany, 1878-80. Joy, Herbert H.Tacoma, Washington Instructor in Voice Culture, 1887-90. Kelsey, Carl, A. B...Goettingen, Germany Assistant Curator of Museum, 1889-91. Kimball, Willard, Mus. B.Lincoln, Nebraska Instructor in Vocal and Instrumental Music, 1875-7. Pro¬ fessor of Music and Director of Conservatory, 1875-94. Lane, Rev. Daniel, A. M.Deceased Principal of Preparatory Department, 1852-5. Professor of Mental and Moral Philosophy, 1855-8. Lawall, Marion L.Catasauqua, Pennsylvania Instructor in the Academy, 1895-6. Lawrence, A. L., Ph. B.Chicago, Illinois Assistant in Chemical Laboratory, 1891-2. Leach, Ernest J.Chicago, Illinois Assistant in Voice Culture, 1891-2. Lewis, George Henry, A. M.Des Moines, Iowa Principal of Preparatory and English Departments, 1869-71. Little, Fannie R. (Alvord) .Battle Creek, Michigan Instructor of Piano, 1877-8. Loughridge, Martha (Casebeer).Boise City, Idaho. Lady Assistant in Academy and English Departments, 1876-8. Lyman, Jacob P., A. M.Grinnell, Iowa Tutor, 1869-71. Mack, Minnie L.Deceased Assistant Instructor of Piano, 1887-90. Board of Instruction 31 Macy, Jesse, A. M.Grinnell, Iowa Tutor, 1870-1. Principal of Academy, 1871-83. Acting Professor of History and Political Science and Principal of Academy, 1883-5. Professor of History and Political Sci¬ ence, 1885-8. Professor of Constitutional History and Political Economy, 1888—. Magoun, Mrs. Elizabeth E.Deceased Acting Lady Principal, 1882-4 Magoun, Frederick Hyde, A. M.Deceased Tutor, 1875-6. Magoun, Rev. George Frederick, A, M.; D. D.Deceased Professor of Mental and Moral Science, 1863-90. Magoun, Herbert William, Ph. D.Oberlin, Ohio Tutor, 1881-4. Main, John H. T., Ph. D.Grinnell, Iowa Carter Professor of the Greek Language and Literature, 1892—. Manatt, Irving J,, Ph. D., Brown University, Providence, Rhode Island Tutor in Greek, 1870-1. Manley, Mary...Oberlin, Ohio Instructor in Voice Culture and Theory of Music, 1879-81. Mantey, Zeline. Instructor of Violin, 1882-83. Mason, Grace T.Grinnell, Iowa Instructor in Pianoforte, 1894—. Merrill, Anna D., A. B.Des Moines, Iowa Lady Assistant, 1879-80. Metcalf, E. S. Instructor in Voice Culture and Theory of Music, 1878-9. Millerd, Clara E., A. M.Chicago University, Chicago, Illinois Preceptress of the Academy and Instructor in Greek and Latin, 1894-96. Mills, Harlow S., A. B..Union City, Michigan Instructor in Vocal Music, 1873-4. Morris, Helen B.Grinnell, Iowa Instructor in the Academy, 1896—. Murch, A. Allerton, A. B. Instructor in English Language and Rhetoric, 1878-9. 32 Iowa College Quinquennial Noble, Rev. Charles, A. M.Grinnell, Iowa Ames Professor of the English Language and Literature, 1893—. Nollen, John S., Ph. D.Grinnell, Iowa Seth Richards Professor of Modern Languages, 1893—. Norris, Harry W., A. M.Grinnell, Iowa Instructor in Natural History, 1888-9. Stone Professor of Biology and Geology and Curator of the Museum, 1891—. Noyes, William Albert, Ph. D.Terre Haute, Indiana Tutor and Assistant in Chemistry and Physics, 1879-80. In¬ structor in Chemistry, 1880-1. Nutting, Rev. I. H. Principal of Preparatory and English Department, 1861-2. Palmer, Clarence A., Ph. B...St. Paul, Minnesota Assistant in Astronomy, 1891-3. Instructor in the Academy, 1893-4. Parker, Rev. Henry W., A. M.; D. D.Yonkers, New York Dodge Professor of Chemistry and Natural Science, 1864- 70. Stone Professor of Natural History, 1879-89. Parker, Rev. Leonard F., A. M.; D. D.Grinnell, Iowa Carter Professor of Ancient Languages, 1860-70. Parker Professor of Llistory, 1888—. Parker, Mrs. Sarah C., A. M.Grinnell, Iowa Principal of Ladies’ Department, 1863-70 Patterson, Estelle, A. B.Grinnell, Iowa Instructor in the Academy, 1894—. Perkins, Emily.Chicago, Illinois Instructor of Piano. 1891-4. Quinche, Alexander j., A. M. Principal of Academy, 1857-8. Rand, Carrie.Grinnell, Iowa Instructor in Social and Physical Culture, 1893-4. Principal for Women and Instructor in Physical Culture, 1894—. Randolph, John...Lincoln, Nebraska Instructor-elect in Voice Culture and General Theory, 1890- 2. Instructor in same, 1892-4. Raymond, Anna B.Grinnell, Iowa Assistant in Physical Culture, 1895—• Board of Instruction 33 Raymond, W. R., A. B.Detroit, Michigan Assistant in Chemical Laboratory, I 3 gi- 2 . Reed, Rev. J. A., A. B.; D. D.Deceased Acting Principal of Academy, 1862-3. Rew, Laura A.Grinnell, Iowa Instructor in Violin, 1895—• Richardson, Anna E. (Jones).Salt Lake City, Utah Lady Assistant, 1878-80. Ringheim, Siveri L. (Newman).Grinnell, Iowa Instructor in Elocution and Physical Culture, 1890-3. Ripley, Rev. Erastus, A. B.Deceased Carter Professor of Ancient Languages, 1848-58. Principal of Academy, 1848-51. Roberts, Gracie S. Acting Professor of Chemistry, Natural Science, and Civil Engineering, 1873-4. Roe, Martha. Lady Assistant, 1866-7. Rogers, Lillian (McLeanJ, A. B.Tarkio, Missouri Assistant in the Academy, 1888-9. Rude, Theo. Chr.Chattanooga, Tennessee Instructor of Violin and Stringed Instruments. 1890-4. Savage, A. C.Stuart, Iowa Assistant in Chemistry, 1890-1. Scofield, Susie.Lincoln, Nebraska Instructor of Piano, 1890-3. Scott, Hiram B., A. M.Kansas Assistant in Academy and Instructor in Elocution, 1887-8. Seelye, William J., A. M.Fairfield, Iowa. Actiag Professor of the Greek Language and Literature, and Instructor in German, 1883-5. Sheldon, David S., A. M.Deceased Professor of Chemistry and Natural Science, 1853-8. Sicard, Ernest, Ph. D.Chicago, Illinois Acting Benedict Professor of Latin Language and Litera¬ ture, and Instructor in French, 1885-6. Professor of same, 1886-8. Professor of the Latin Language and Literature, and French, 1888-9. Professor of the Latin Language and Literature, 1889-90. 34 Iowa College Quinquennial Simmons, James, Jr., A. M.Grinnell, Iowa Instructor in Mathematics, 1889-90. Instructor in Mental and Moral Science, 1890-1. Professor of Mental and Moral Science, 1891-2. Professor of Philosophy and Pedagogics, 1892—. Slaughter, Moses S., Ph. D.Madison, Wisconsin Principal of Academy and Acting Benedict Professor of Latin, 1889-90. Benedict Professor of the Latin Language and Literature, 1890-6. Sloan, Mrs. Susan M. G. Deceased Lady Principal, 1871-3. Smith, Rev. C. B., D. D. Professor of Rhetoric and English Literature, 1861-2. Smith, J. Fred, A. M.Grinnell, Iowa Principal of the Academy, 1890—. Smith, Jeddie H. Tutor, 1884-5. Smythe, Mattie M. Instructor in Voice Culture, 1883-5. Snell, Richard Bailey, A. B. .Snell Seminary, Oakland, California Tutor, 1871-2. Stacy, Sidney G., Ph. D.... Acting Professor of Latin, 1893-4. Swan, Richard W., A. M.Deceased Acting Benedict Professor of the Latin Language and Lit¬ erature, and Associate Principal of the Academy, 1871-3. Professor of same, 1873-83. Torrey, Joseph, A. B., Harvard University, Cambridge, Massachusetts Acting Dodge Professor of Chemistry, 1885-6. Dodge Pro¬ fessor of Chemistry, 1886-90. Towle, Rev. James A., A. M.Yonkers, New York Acting Carter Professor of the Greek Language and Liter¬ ature. 1890-2. Tyler, Florence Helen (Stevenson), A. B.Des Moines, Iowa Assistant Lady Principal, 1883-5. Verbeck, Luther M., B. S.Grinnell, Iowa Assistant in Chemistry, 1893-4. Instructor in Chemistry, 1894-5. Board of Instruction 35 VonCoelln, Carl W., A. M.Storm Lake, Iowa Professor of Mathematics and Natural Philosophy, 1863-9. Ward, Herbert C., A. B.Deceased Assistant in Chemistry, 1889-90. Ward, Thom.Rochester, New York Instructor in Voice Culture, 1885. Watson, Sereno, A. M.Deceased Tutor, 1852-3. Whicher, George M., A. M., Packer Institute, Brooklyn, New York Principal of the Academy, 1888-9. Whitcomb, Helen S. (Hobart), A. M.Deceased Assistant Lady Principal, 1872-9. Whitcomb, Selden L., A. M.Grinnell, Iowa Acting Professor of English Literature, 1894-5. Professor of English Literature, 1895—. Wightman, John R., Ph. D.Oberlin College, Oberlin, Ohio Seth Richards Professor of Modern Languages, 1889-91. Willard, William A., Ph. B.Grinnell, Iowa Instructor in Biology, 1895—• Wise, Homer E.Chicago, Illinois Instructor in Piano and Harmony, 1886-7. Wyckoff, Garrett P., A. B.Grinnell, Iowa Associate in Applied Christianity, 1894—. The Alumni I.—CLASS OF 1854. 1. John Hill Windsor. La Grange, Illinois. A. B.; A. M., 1861; B. D., Andover Theological Seminary, 1857. Born, Lip- hook, Surrey County, England, December 19, 1827. Brother of No. 2. Prepared for college, Academy of Iowa College, Davenport, Iowa. Student, Andover Theological Seminary, 1854-8. Pastor, Charles City, Iowa, 1861-4; Saco, Maine, 1864-8; Grafton, Massachusetts, 1868-83; Waterloo, Iowa, 1883-5; Belvidere, Illi¬ nois, 1885-8; Downer’s Grove, Illinois. 1888-92. Residence, Geneva, Illinois, 1894-6; La Grange, Illinois, 1896—. Moderator of Ecclesiastical Councils; Con¬ gregational Associations; Member of Board of Directors of Grafton Free Public Library, 1871-83; Secretary of Public School Board of Grafton, Illinois, 1870-4. Has published “Sketch of the Second Indian Church at Hassanamisa, now Graf¬ ton, Massachusetts, founded by John Eliot”; sketches of some places of historic interest in our country; History of Grafton. Massachusetts; current newspaper correspondence. Married, Portland, Maine, to Miss Lucy E. Libbey, Septem¬ ber 29, 1858. 2. William Windsor. Los Gatos, California. A. B.; A. M., Iowa College, 1863; B.D., Andover Theological Seminary. Born, Petersfield, England, September, 17, 1830. Brother of No. 1. Pastor, Congrega¬ tional Churches—Mitchell, Iowa, 1858-61; Davenport, Iowa, 1861-6; Sycamore, Illinois, 1867-72; Morrisville, New York, 1872-3; Marshalltown, Iowa, 1873-81; Aurora, Illinois, 1881-8; Los Gatos, California, 1888—. II.—CLASS OF 1855. 3. Lucien Eaton, deceased. A. B.; LL. B., Harvard University, 1857; A. M., 1865. Born, Denmark, New York, September 24, 1831. After working his way through Iowa College in three years he entered the Law School of Harvard University, from which he gradu¬ ated in 1857. Boston, Massachusetts, 1857-8. Admitted to the bar, St. Louis, Missouri, 1858. Entered the Union Army at an early period in the struggle; received the commission of Captain in the 23rd Regiment of Missouri Infantry Volunteers, 1863; received the appointment to the position of Judge Advocate for the department of Missouri, with the rank of Major, acting as a court of ap¬ peal from the decisions of the various military courts and commissions, with headquarters at St. Louis, Missouri, July 25, 1864. Appointed one of the four Registers in Bankruptcy for the Eastern Federal Judicial District of Missouri, by Congress, 1867, which position he held for many years. Retained as one of the counsel for the Government in the celebrated Whisky Ring trials, and the extremely important and delicate task was devolved upon him of going to Wash¬ ington and taking the deposition of President Grant, 1876. Edited ana managed the Southern Law Review which absorbed in its growth the Western Jurist and finally the American Law Review whose name it assumed. Married, March 21, 1861, to Miss Emily F. Partridge of St. Louis, Missouri, who died in Boston, The Alumni 37 Massachusetts, September 8, 1872. Married, June 15,1876, to Miss Hannah Noyea of Boston, Massachusetts, who died April 28, 1891. Mr. Eaton died suddenly of apoplexy, March 7, 1890, at Boerne, Texas, whither he had gone to rest from overwork, and his body is interred in the Bellefontaine Cemetery at St. Louis, Missouri. 4. William Henry Hildreth, deceased . A. B. Died, Davenport, Iowa, 1864. III.—CLASS OF 1856. 5. Milton Murat Price. Letcher, South Dakota. A. B.; A. M m Iowa College, 1859. Born, Hollidaysburg, Pennsylvania, Decem¬ ber 25,1836. Student Andover Theological Seminary, 1854-5. Admitted to bar, October, 1857. Traveled in Europe, 1858-9. Aide-de-camp to King Victor Emman¬ uel in the war between Austria and Italy, 1859. Farming, Scott County, Iowa, i860. Was commissioned by Governor Kirkwood of Iowa to raise the 13th and 14th Iowa Infantry Regiments. Was elected Colonel and gave way for Colonel Crocker, taking the office of Lieutenant-Colonel of the 13th Iowa Infantry, 1861-2. Was in service ten months under General Grant. Was wounded at Shiloh and totally disabled for service. Discharged May, 1862. Practiced law in Daven- f iort, Iowa, 1866-7. Register in Bankruptcy, Second Congressional District of owa, 1867-8. Appointed by President Grant, Consul General, Marseilles, France, which office he held from 1869-74. In July, 1870, when the Franco-Prussian war began, German Consuls were expellee! from France. At reauest of the German Government our Secretary of State, Hamilton Fish, ordered American Consuls in France to take charge of German interests until the war was over and a defi¬ nitive treaty was made. Was therefore Charge d’ affaires for German Empire, Marseilles, from July, 1870, till January, 1872. Clerk of the United States Circuit Court at St. Louis, Missouri, 1874-83. Colorado and Wyoming, 1884. Farmer, Letcher, South Dakota, 1885—. IV.—CLASS OF 1857. 6. Chester Case Humphrey, deceased. A. B.; B. D., Chicago Theological Seminary, 1861; A. M. 1867. Born, Liberty, Ohio, July 13, 1830. Student, Andover Theological Seminary, 1858. Chicago Theological Seminary, 1859-61. Pastor, Congregational Church, Austin, Minne¬ sota, 1861-3; Cass, Iowa, 1863-7: Amity, 1868-70; Osceola, Nebraska, 1872-4; Al¬ bion, Boone, Dayton and Oxford, 1874-9; Lawler and Waucoma, Iowa, 1881; Wayne and Hickory Grove, 1885-6; Beiknap and Cincinnati, 1886-8; Cromwell, 1888-9; Summer Hill, Illinois, 1889-90; Wythe and West Rockford, 1891 until death. Married, to Elizabeth S. Holt, of Andover, Massachusetts, September 29, 1859. Died, January 5, 1894. 7. Edwin Luther Jagger. West Hartford, Connecticut. A. B.; B. D., Chicago Theological Seminary, 1861; A. M., Iowa College, 1865. Born, Mill Hall, Pennsylvania, December 6, 1835. Prepared for college, Public Schools, Danville, Iowa, and Academy of Iowa College. Colporteur for Ameri¬ can Tract Society, summer of 1857. Principal of South Hill School, Burlington, Iowa, 1857-8. Student, Chicago Theological Seminary, 1858-61. Pastor, Congre¬ gational Church, Clifton, Illinois, 1861-2. Traveled through New England, sev¬ eral months in the fall of 1862. Pastor, Congregational Church, Warren, Massa¬ chusetts, 1863-7. Pulpit supply, Fair Haven, Massachusetts, three months in 1868. Pastor, South Deerfield, 1868-0; Southbridge, 1869-72; West Medford, Mass¬ achusetts, 1873-4. Ill health compelled him to resign his pastorate and live in Auburndale, Massachusetts, during which time in co-operation with others he 38 Iowa College Quinquennial prepared an illustrated work entitled, “New England Manufacturers and Manu¬ factories,” 1874-6. Boston, 1876-7; Auburndale, Massachusetts, 1877. Pastor, Bristol, New Hampshire, 1877-81. Travelled in Europe, 1879. Northampton, Massachusetts, 1881-6; Burlington, Iowa, 1886-7; Hartford, Connecticut, 1807-91. Chaplain of State Prison, Wethersfield, Connecticut, 1888-92. On account of ill health he gave up his work and has been an invalid since that time, living at West Hartford, Connecticut 1891—. Married, Chicago, Illinois, to Miss Ellen Sophia Cook, April 29, 1861. V.—CLASS OF 1858. 8. Henry Holmes Belfield. 5738 Washington Avenue, Chicago, Illinois. A. B.; A. M., Iowa College, 1868; A. M., Griswold College, 1861; Ph. D., Iowa College, 1878. Born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, November 17, 1837. Tutor in Iowa College, 1858-9. Tutor in Griswold College, Davenport, Iowa, 1860-1. Principal and Superintendent of Schools, Dubuque, Iowa, 1859-60, 1861-3, 1865-6. Second Lieutenant, First Lieutenant and Adjutant, 8th Iowa Cavalry Volunteers, 1863-5. Engaged in battle in various places in Tennessee; Atlanta campaign; captured after the battle of Newman, Georgia, and exchanged September 30, 1864, having been a prisoner in Charleston, South Carolina, under the tire of the Union guns; battle ot Nashville, and the pursuit ot Hood’s army to Corinth, Mississippi; Wilson raid. Principal of High School, Chicago, Illinois, 1876-83. Director of Chicago Manual Training School, 1884—. Has written papers on educational and other themes for magazines; lectured on educational and scien¬ tific subjects; and written and edited some school books. Expert of United States Department of Labor, 1891-2, which involved a study of Technical and Trade Schools in Europe and America. Report published in the Report of the United States Commissioner of Labor, 1892. Member of the Chicago Literary Club, the G. A. R., and the Military Order of the Loyal Legion. Member of the Boards of Education of Cook County, Illinois, and Hyde Park, Illinois. Presi¬ dent of the Board of Trustees of the Hyde Park Presbyterian Church, Chicago, Illinois. Married July 27, 1869, to Miss Anne Wallace Miller of Chicago, Illinois. Mrs. Belfield is a member of the Chicago Woman’s Club, in whose philanthropic work she takes a lively interest; also active member of the Woman’s Board of the Presbyterian Hospital. 9. Charles Theodore Steck. Shamokin, Pennsylvania. A. B. Born, Hughesville, Lycoming County, Pennsylvania, January 2, 1835 Prepared for college, Academy, Shippensburg, Pennsylvania, continuing his studies at Dickinson Seminary, Williamsport, Pennsylvania, until prepared tc enter the second term of the junior class of Iowa College, 1857. Was licensed aj a minister of the Evangelical Lutheran Church, 1861. Served nine months a: chaplain of the 79th Regiment Pennsylvania Volunteers, and resigned in July 1862, on account of severe illness. Pastor of Lutheran Churches—Hamilton Ohio; Altoona, Pennsylvania; Indiana, Pennsylvania; Pittsburg, Pennsylvania Bellefonte, Pennsylvania; and Shamokin, Pennsylvania. Mr. Steck has don< much literary work in addition to that required in the pastoral office. He i: widely known as a public lecturer, in which field he has made a specialty of lect ure recitals of the plays of Shakespeare. Has written many essays and addressei on educational and religious subjects, several poems and a drama of the wa time. Married, at Hamilton, Ohio, to Miss Frances Porter Parks, October 3,1865 10. Ewing Ogden Tade. Avalon, California. A. B.; B. D., Chicago Theological Seminary, 1861. Born, Mt. Vernon, Illinois June 28, 1828. Prepared for college, Denmark Academy, Denmark, Iowa. Stu dent, Chicago Theological Seminary, 1858-61. Pastor, Loda, Illinois, 1861-3 Graduate student, Union and Andover Theological Seminaries, 1863-4. Actinj pastor, Washington, Iowa, 1864. United States Christian Commission A^ent with headquarters in Memphis, Tennessee, 1864-5. Missionary, A. M. A., Chat tanooga, Tennessee, 1866. Organized the first Congregational Church (colored) The Alumni 39 Chattanooga, 1867; City and County Superintendent of Schools, same, 1867 - 71 - Professor of Mathematics, Tusculum and Greenville College, Tusculum, Ten¬ nessee, 1872-3. Organized first Congregational Church, and pastor of same, Ferndale, California, 1874-5. Pastor, Antioch, California, 1875-7. Organized Pilgrim Congregational Church, pastor of same, and Principal of Alden Acad¬ emy, Fidalgo, Puget Sound, 1877-84. Pastor, Antioch, California, 1885-6; East Grandville, Massachusetts, 1886-90. Assistant pastor to Dr. Jones, Washington, D. C., 1892-3. Pastor, Avalon, Catalina Island, California, 1894—. Married to Miss A. Louise Duncan, July i, 1861. VI.—CLASS OF 1865. 11. Mary Elizabeth Apthorp. 668 Algona Street, Oshkosh, Wisconsin. Ladies’ Course; A. B., 1867; A. M., 1870. Born, Quincy, Illinois, October 26, 1846. Prepared for college, Ipswich Seminary, Ipswich, Massachusetts. Teacher in High Schools in Iowa, Illinois, and Kansas, 1867-74. Instructor in Latin and Greek, Iowa State University, Iowa City, 1874-80. Student of German in Europe, 1880-1. Teacher of Latin and German, State Normal School, Oshkosh, Wiscon¬ sin, 1884—. 12. Robert Miller Haines. Grinnell, Iowa. A. B.; LL. B., 1874, and A. M., State University of Iowa. Born, Columbiana County, Ohio, December 29, 1838. Father of 342, 409 and 543. Prepared for col¬ lege at Earlham College, Richmond, Indiana, and Academy of Iowa College. Principal of Academy, Troy, Iowa, 1865-7. Tutor, Iowa College, 1867-9. Stu¬ dent, Law Department, State University of Iowa, 1869-70. Principal, Public Schools, Grinnell, Iowa, spring of 1870. Attorney, with J. P. Lyman, I. C. ’67, Grinnell, Iowa, 1871—. Alumni Trustee of Iowa College, 1881-7; and permanent member of the Board, 1887—. State Senator, 1878-82. Married, August 19, 1867, to Miss Joanna Harris, I. C. ’65. 13. Joanna Harris (Haines). Grinnell, Iowa. Ladies’ Course. Born, Harrisville, Pennsylvania, November 24, 1843. Mother of 342. 409 and 543 - Prepared for college, Academy of Iowa College. Assistant Principal, High School, Cedar Falls, Iowa, 1865-6. First Assistant, Academy, Troy, Iowa, 1866-7. Married, August 19, 1867, to Robert M. Haines, I. C. ’65. Assistant Lady Principal, Iowa College, 1867-8. Teacher, Public Schools, Grin¬ nell, Iowa, 1869-70. The children of Mr. and Mrs. Haines are the first graduates of the college, both of whose parents were graduates. 14. Maria Emily Hart. 2103 Woodland Avenue, Des Moines, Iowa. Ladies’ Course. Born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Private teacher, Gal- lipolis, Ohio. Teacher, Christian County, Illinois. Home duties claimed her attention for several years. Teacher, Public Schools, Des Moines, Iowa, 1880—. 15. Stephen Henderson Herrick. Riverside, California. A. B.; A. M., Iowa College, 1868. Born, Crown Point, New York, June 24,1839. Father of 544. Merchant, Grinnell, Iowa, 1868-80. Mayor of Grinnell, 1879-80. Riverside, California, 1887-92 and 1896—. Grinnell, Iowa, 1892-6. 16. Hester Abbie Hillis, deceased. Ladies’ Course,; A. M., Iowa College, 1887. Born, Parkersburg, Iowa, 1842. Sister of 46. Teacher, Western College, Toledo, Iowa, 1865-7. Joined the Cey¬ lon Mission under the American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions, 1868. Missionary to Tillypally and Panditeripo, 1868-80. Ill health compelled 40 Iowa College Quinquennial her to return to America where she gave a series of public addresses, numbering hundreds, 1880-4. Missionary to Secunderabad, India, 1884-7. In August, 1887, •he made a tour of the jungle villages where she was overcome by the heat and excessive work and died suddenly of heart failure. She was buried in Singer- anni. Miss Hillis was Iowa College’s first foreign missionary. The “Mission¬ ary Alcove” in the College Library is marked by her portrait and is known as “Hillis Alcove.” 17. John Denton Hornby. Logan, Iowa. A. B. Born, Wiscasset, Maine, 1836. Prepared for college, Denmark Acad¬ emy. Superintendent of Schools, Bentonsport, Iowa, 1865-75. While at Bentons- port, enlisted in the Civil War. Superintendent of Schools, Centerville, Iowa, 1875-82. Superintendent of Township High School, Magnolia, Iowa, 1882-8. County Superintendent, Harrison County, 1888-92. Superintendent of Schools, Logan, Iowa, 1892-5; Magnolia, Iowa, 1895—. Has been admitted to the bar. Appointed by Ex-Governor Gear with a commission to the Paris Exposition. Married, at Bentonsport, Iowa, to Sarah C. Brown, September 3, 1867. 18. Alice Jane LaDue (Gaylord), deceased. Ladies’Course. Born, December 26, 1845. Teacher, 1865-71. Married to J. G. Gaylord, farmer, May 21, 1871. Died at Nora Springs, Iowa, March 27, 1872. 19. Mary Plumb (Boynton). Cedar Rapids, Iowa. Ladies’ Course. Born in Oberlin, Ohio, October 6, 1845. Married to Joseph Edmond Boynton, merchant, August 7, 1867. Resided in Tipton, Iowa, 1867-8. Fort Dodge, Iowa, 1868-73. Cedar Rapids, Iowa, 1873—. Has been a member of a Woman’s Literary C[ub for iourteen years, which has done systematic work in the study of History. Has written many papers in connection with this club. State secretary of Woman’s Home Missionary Work, 1881-94. 20. Charles Scott, deceased. A. B. Born, Cabrach, Scotland, March 4, 1837. He came to the college from Montezuma, Iowa. Entered the army as Second Lieutenant of Company B, 46th Iowa Infantry, and served five months in 1865. A year of medical study after g raduation was a wrestle with declining health. He returned to Scotland, and ied there, October 8, 1866, before reaching his native town, where his body lies. 21. Mary Stearns (Waller). Rockford, Iowa. Ladies’ Course. Born, Pittsfield, Massachusetts, July 13, 1843. Prepared for college, Public Schools, Grinnell, Iowa. Teacher, Floyd County, chiefly in Charles City. Iowa, 1865-70. Married in 1870 to John R. Waller of Charles City, Iowa. Residence, alternately in Charles City and on a farm near Marble Rock, Iowa, and for several recent years in Rockford, Iowa, 1870—. Member of school board of Rockford, Iowa. 22. Eliza D. Sutherland (Schuyler). Lake Charles, Louisiana. Ladies’ Course. Born, Bath, New Hampshire, October 22, 1845. Sister of 23. Prepared for college, Grinnell Public Schools. At home, Grinnell, Iowa, and teaching occasional terms in country schools, 1865-83. Married, Grinnell, Iowa, December 25, 1871, to C. L. Schuyler, merchant, who died November, 1894. Woonsocket, South Dakota, 1883-94; Grinnell, Iowa, 1894-5; Lake Charles, Lou¬ isiana, 1895—. 23. Mary M. Sutherland (Kelsey). Grinnell, Iowa. Ladies’ Course. Born, Bath, New Hampshire, July 4, 1843. Sister of 22 and mother of 347. Prepared for college, Grinnell, Iowa. Married, 1869, to C. J. Kelsey. Mr. Kelsey was a member of the class of 1865, but in 1861 enlisted in The Alumni 4i the 4th Iowa Cavalry; served four years; became Lieutenant of Company E. He died December 1, 1872. Residence, Grinnell, Iowa, 1865-95; Helena, Mon¬ tana, 1895-6; Grinnell, Iowa, 1896—. 24. Jane Wilson (Smith). Traer, Iowa. Ladies’ Course. Born, Girvan, Ayrshire, Scotland, January 30,1840. Prepared for college, Academy of Iowa College. Teacher, Butler County, Iowa, 1865-7. Teacher in the College for the Blind, Vinton, Iowa, 1867-72. Married to S. P. Smith of Aplington, Iowa, now a merchant of Traer, Iowa, 1872. VII.—CLASS OF 1867. 11. Mary Elizabeth Apthorp. [See Class of 1865.] 25. Arietta Clark (Manatt). Providence, Rhode Island. Ladies’ Course. Born, May 26, 1847. Prepared for college, High School, Grin¬ nell, Iowa. Teacher of Music, Champaign, Illinois, 1869-70. Married in 1870 to James Irving Manatt, I. C. ’69. Residence, Granville, Ohio, 1874-6; Leipzig, Germany, 1876-7; Marietta, Ohio, 1877-84; Lincoln, Nebraska, 1884-9! Athens, Greece, 1889-93; Providence, Rhode Island, 1893—. 26. Martha Cleveland (Dibble). “The Montague,” Kansas City, Missouri. Ladies’ Course. M. D., Woman’s College of Medicine, Chicago, Illinois, 1885. Teacher, 1867-78. Married to Dr. LeRoy Dibble, a graduate of Bellevue Hospi¬ tal Medical College, New York, and a student in Vienna, Zurich, etc., in 1878. Student, Woman’s Medical College, Chicago, 1882-5. Practicing physician, Kansas City, Missouri, 1885—. Has written several articles for magazines, mem¬ ber of literary clubs, and holds a professorship in the Kansas City College of Medicine for Women. 27. Charles Noah Cooper. Campbell, California. A. B.; A. M., 1870; M. D., Chicago Medical College, 1869. Born, Talmadge, Ohio, March 27, 1844. During his college course he enlisted in the 46th Iowa Volunteers. Student, Chicago Medical College, and serving one term as House Physician and one term as House Surgeon in Mercy Hospital, 1867-9. Married, 1869, to Miss Lydia Windsor, a student of Iowa College in the class of 1867, and sister of Nos. 1 and 2. Practicing physician, Cresco, Iowa, 1869-71. Physician, Keosauqua, Iowa, 1871-5; Batavia, Illinois, 1875-86. County physician of Kane County, Illinois, 1880-6. Member of the American Medical Association, 1880—. He came to Grinnell to visit his brother, Colonel S. F. Cooper, arriving a few hours before the cyclone of Tune, 1882, and rendered what services he could in the sad days immediately following. Drug business, Cleveland, Tennessee, 1886-90. Practicing physician, Campbell, California, 1890—. Dr. Cooper’s resi¬ dence in so many places was occasioned by a long search for a climate that would mitigate suffering from inherited rheumatism. 28. Emily Crane. Grinnell, Iowa. Ladies’ Course. Born at Bloomfield, New Jersey, November 21,1845. Teacher, Cedar Falls, Iowa, 1867-8; Grinnell, Iowa, 1869-73; Newton, Iowa, 1874-82; Grin¬ nell, Iowa, 1882-3. Residence. Grinnell, Iowa, 1883—. 29. Josephine Frisbie, deceased . Ladies’ Course. Born, Euclid, New York, October 4, 1846. Prepared for col- 42 Iowa College Quinquennial lege, Osage Seminary, Osage, Iowa. Teacher, Public Schools at St. Ansgar, Iowa, 1867-8. Her health then failing, she returned to her home in Mitchell, Iowa, where she remained until her death in August, 1874. 30. Jacob Pierce Lyman. Grinnell, Iowa. A. B.; A. M., Iowa College, 1870; LL. B., State University of Iowa, 1871. Born, Arcade, New York, 1844. Prepared for college, Academy of Iowa College. En¬ listed in 1864 and served in the 46th Iowa Infantry. Teacher, Davenport, Iowa, 1867-9. Tutor, Iowa College, 1869-70. Student of Law, State University of Iowa, Iowa City, 1870-1. Attorney, in partnership with Robert M. Haines I. C. ’65, Grinnell, Iowa, 1871—. Married, 1873, to Miss Elizabeth Little, I. C. ’71, Mayor of Grinnell, 1885 and 1886. County Attorney, 1890-4. Commander of G. A. R. Post, 1893-4-5. 31. George Daniel Marsh. Philippopolis, Bulgaria. A. B.; A. M., Iowa College, 1870; B. D., Chicago Theological Seminary, 1871. Born, Quechee, Vermont, December 12, 1844. Brother of 40 and 198. Student, Chicago Theological Seminary, 1868-71; Yale Theological Seminary, 1871-2. Mis¬ sionary of A. B. C. F. M., in Bulgaria, mainly at Eski Zaghra and Philippopolis, 1S72—. Furloughs home in 1883-4 and 1896-7. Married, January 1, 1875, to Miss Ursula C. Clarke, who had latterly been a teacher in Mission Schools in Brousa and Manissa, Turkey. The insurrections of 1876 and the Russo-Turkish war in 1877 found Mr. and Mrs. Marsh amid scenes of pillage and butchery. The houses of their city were mostly turned into ash heaps. They with their two boys finally reached Constantinople, thankful to possess their lives, though little else. In Malta, where they went for six months of rest, the family v/ere known as the “Bulgarian Atrocities.” 32. Matthew Phelps, deceased . A. B. Born, Waukegan, Illinois, 1847. Prepared for college, High School, Grinnell, Iowa. Student of Law, University of Michigan, 1867-9. Attorney, Grinnell, Iowa, 1869-83. Married, at Iowa Falls, Iowa, to Miss Marielma Page, who died August, 1879. Died, Grinnell, Iowa, November, 1883. 33. Charles Francis Reed. University of Chicago, Chicago, Ill. A. B.; B. D., Chicago Theological Seminary, 1873. Born, Fowler, Ohio, April 7, 1844. Brother of 156, 157, and 256. Prepared for college, Grinnell, Iowa. Prin¬ cipal Public Schools, Marseilles, Illinois, 1867-8; Greenfield Academy, Missouri, 1869-71. Student, Chicago Theological Seminary, 1868-9, 1871-3. Pastor, Congre¬ gational Church, Napierville, Illinois, 18736. Traveled and studied in Europe, 1876-86. Pastor, Congregational Church, Haydenville, Massachusetts, 1886-90. Travelled and studied in the west, 1890-1. Pastor, Pierce, Illinois, 1892-3; Belvid- ere, 1893-4; Waverly, 1894-5 of Chicago, 1895 Graduate student in Biblical Theology, University 34. Edna Snell (Poulson). 1810 Gough Street, San Francisco, California. Ladies’ Course. Born, near Palmyra, New York. Sister of 49 and 58. Prepared for college, Oskaloosa, Iowa. Assistant Principal, High School, Dubuque, Iowa, 1867-70. Principal of Oskaloosa High School and lectured in various towns in Iowa. 1870-1. Nominated by Republican Party for Superintendent of Mahaska County Schools, 1871. Married to Dr. P. W. Poulson,*November, 1871. Resi¬ dence, Council Bluffs, Iowa, 1871-3; Salt Lake City, Utah, winter of 1873-4. Joined her sister, Mary E. Snell, I. C. ’69, in building up a Young Ladies’ Sem¬ inary, Benicia, California, 1874. Assistant Principal and teacher of History, Rhetoric and Literature, in the same, 1874-7. Obtained a divorce from Dr. Poul¬ son, 1878. Student of Elocution and Gymnastics, Chicago, Illinois, 1877-8; and teacher of the same, Oakland, California, 1878-84. Student of the Delsarte System and Vocal Culture, New York, 1884; and teacher of the same, San Fran¬ cisco, California, 1884—. Travelled in Europe, 1891-2. Is now part proprietor of the “San Francisco Lyceum of Expression,” which she helped to found. Has The Alumni 43 done literary work in the form of papers for Literary Clubs, some of which have been: “The Office of the Grotesque in Literature and Art”; “The Evolution of Personality through Pantomime”; “The Nineteenth Century Renaissance,— The Discovery of the Other Man” (Socialistic); “The Pioneer of Realism,— Henrik Ibsen”; “Some of the Problems that Confront the Teacher of Elocution.” VIII.—CLASS OF 1868. 35. Joanna Bailey (Baggs). Grinnell, Iowa. Ladies’ Course. Born, Westmoreland, Oneida County, New York, February 28, 1846. Sister of 139, 209, and 361. Prepared for college, Academy of Iowa Col¬ lege. Teacher, Montezuma, Stuart, Granville, Iowa, and Camp Point, Illinois, 1868-77. Married to George T. Baggs, farmer, May 31, 1877. Residence, Grin¬ nell, Iowa, 1877—. 36. Anna D. Brown (Taggart). North Denver, Colorado. Ladies’ Course. Born, Tippecanoe, Ohio, August 12, 1842. Prepared for col¬ lege, High School, Vinton, Iowa, and private study. Teacher, Public Schools, Vinton, Iowa, 1868-71; Grinnell, Iowa, 1871-3. Married, at Grinnell, Iowa, to Sam¬ uel Taggart, Real Estate dealer, 1876. Residence, Vinton, Iowa, 1876-82; Hast¬ ings, Nebraska, 1882-90; Denver, Colorado, 1890—. Town Clerk, North Denver, 1896—. Made campaign speeches in presidential campaign, 1896. 37. Harriet Clark (Butler). Woodsville, New Hampshire. Ladies’ Course. Born, Searsport, Maine, 1849. Sister of 25. Prepared for college, Grinnell High School. Married, 1870, to George C. Butler. Residence, Wooasville, New Hampshire, 1870—. 38. Ammie B. Condit (Eaton), deceased . Ladies’ Course. Born, Jersey, Ohio, July 18, 1845. Prepared for college, Academy of Iowa College. Teacher of school and music, 1868-72. Married, 1872, to William J. Eaton, I. C. ’71. Died, Grinnell, Iowa, 1873. 39. Laura Goodrich (Knowlton). 1101 East Madison Avenue, Cleveland, Ohio. Ladies’ Course. Born, Orwell, Ashtabula County, Ohio, October 2, 1842. Pre¬ pared for college, Orwell Public Schools and Academy of Iowa College. Teacher, Grinnell, Iowa, 1868-71; teacher, Eldora, Iowa, 1871-2. Married, at Waterloo. Iowa, November 14, 1872, to George Knowlton, a musician. Eldora, Iowa, 1872- 82; Mason City, Iowa, 1882-92; Dallas, Texas, 1892-4. Mr. Knowlton died in Dallas, Texas, March 19, 1894. Cleveland, Ohio, 1894—. 40. Ella Eliza Marsh. Grinnell, Iowa. Ladies’ Course. Born, Ouechee, Vermont, September 24, 1848. Sister of 31 and 198. Teacher of Freedmen, Greenville, South Carolina, 1868-70. Teacher, near Grinnell, Iowa, 1870-2; West Liberty, Iowa, 1872-3; Grinnell, 1873-4; Mobile, Alabama, 1874-5; 'at Soldiers’ Orphans’ Home, Davenport, Iowa, 1875-6; Moline, Illinois, 1876-8; Capiona, Kansas, 1878-9. Home, Grinnell, Iowa, 1880—. State Secretary of the Iowa Women’s Home Missionary Union, 1886-91. Secretary and Treasurer of the Poweshiek County Sunday School Association. Has written articles on Missionary and Sunday School themes in connection with Chautau¬ qua work. 41. Mary Pruyn (Janes). Ladies’ Course. Sister of 88. 44 Iowa College Quinquennial 42. Anna Robbins (De Forest). New Haven, Connecticut. Ladies’ Course. Born, Ashford, Connecticut, July 2, 1848. Sister of 48 and 204. Prepared for college, Muscatine High School, Muscatine, Iowa. Teacher of Music, Muscatine, Iowa, 1868-9. Married to Rev. H. S. De Forest, then pastor of Plymouth Church, Des Moines, Iowa, i86q. Council Bluffs, Iowa, 1871-7. Wa¬ terloo, Iowa, 1877-8. Talladega, Alabama (where Mr. De Forest was President of Talladega College, an institution of the American Missionary Association, from 1889 until his death, January 27, 1896), 1889-96. New Haven, Connecticut. 1896—. She has written several articles concerning American Missionary Asso¬ ciation work. 43. Anna M. Woodruff. 322 Howie Street, Helena, Montana. Ladies’ Course. Born, Hartford, Ohio, July 28, 1844. Prepared for college, Public Schools, Newton and Grinnell, Iowa. Teacher, Public Schools, Newton, Iowa, 1868-77; Bozeman, Montana, 1877-8; Helena, Montana, 1878—. Received an Iowa State certificate, 1871, and a Montana Life Diploma, June, 1895. IX.—CLASS OF 1869. 44. Seth Atwood Arnold. Grinnell, Iowa. A. B.; B. D., Chicago Theological Seminary, 1873. Born, Delaware, Ohio, February 16, 1839. Father of Nos. 399 and 479. Student, Chicago Theological Seminary, 1869-70 and 1871-3. Agent for The Advance, and Life Insurance Com- any, 1870-1. Pastor Congregational Churches, Wauponsee Grove, Illinois, 1871-5; Wittenberg, Iowa, 1875-81; Garden Prairie and Kelly, Iowa, 1881-7; Jewell Junc¬ tion and Lincoln, Iowa, 1888-91; Polk City, Iowa, 1891-2; Clay and Franklin Churches, Washington County, Iowa, 1894—. Residence, Grinnell, Iowa, 1893—. Married, 1865, at Brighton, Iowa, to Miss Melcenia Elliott, who was a nurse for three years in United States Hospitals at Jackson and Memphis, Tennessee; and St. Louis, Missouri; afterwards was first matron of the Iowa Soldiers’ Orphan Asylum at Farmington, Iowa. 45. Lorilla A. Hambleton. Harvey, Illinois. Ladies’ Course. Born, New Garden, Ohio, April 20, 1847. Prepared for col¬ lege, Academy of Iowa College. Searsboro, Iowa, 1869-82; Grinnell, Iowa, 1882-91; Harvey, Illinois, 1891—. 46. Frances E. Hillis (Willett). Woodbine, Iowa. Ladies’ Course. Born, Anamosa, Iowa, January 6, 1846. Sister of 16. Teach¬ er, Magnolia, Iowa, 1869-71. Married to L. D. Willett, farmer, 1871. Woodbine, Iowa, 1871—. 47. James Irving Manatt. Providence, Rhode Island. A. B.; A. M., Iowa College, 1872; Ph. D., Yale, 1873; LL. D., Iowa College, 1886. Born, Holmes County, Ohio, February 17, 1845. Prepared for college un¬ der Charles Scott, No. 20. Served in Forty-sixth Iowa Infantry, 1864. On staff of the Chicago Evening Post , 1869-70. Instructor in Greek, Iowa College, 1870. Student of Sanskrit and Classical Philology, Yale, and Classical Instructor in Russell’s Collegiate Institute, New Haven, 1890-4. Professor designate of Mod¬ ern Languages, Iowa College, 1874-7, but never served. Professor of Greek, Denison University, Granville, Ohio, 1874-6. Student of Greek and Germanic with Curtius and Farncke, Leipzig, Germany, 1876-7. Professor of Greek, Ma¬ rietta College, Marietta, Ohio, 1877-84. Chancellor of the University of Nebraska, Lincoln, Nebraska, 1884-9. Travelled in Europe 1882 and 1887. Consul, Athens, The Alumni 45 Greece, 1889-93, Professor of Greek Literature and History, Brown University, Providence, Rhode Island, 1892—. Published Xenophon’s Hellenica with Com¬ mentary (Ginn & Company), 1888; second edition, 1896. Joint editor with Dr. Chrestos Tsountas of Athens, of “The Mycenaean Age” (Houghton, Mifflin & Company), 1897. Has contributed articles to the Atlantic Monthly , Andover Review. Review of Reviews , Independent , Nation , and various other period¬ icals. Some of these papers have been translated and reproduced in Greek and German publications. Married, June, 1879, to Miss Arietta Winifred Clark, 1 . C. ’67. 48. Horace H. Robbins. Grinnell, Iowa. A. B.; A. M.. Iowa College, 1872; B. D. f Chicago Theological Seminary, 1874. Born, Muscatine, Iowa, August 20, 1845. Brother of 42 ana 204. Student, Chi¬ cago Theological Seminary, 1869-74. Pastor, Congregational Church, Alden, Iowa, 1874-7. Student, Andover Theological Seminary, 1877-8. Pastor, Congre¬ gational Church, Postville. Iowa, 1878-80. Railroad Civil Engineer, Texas, 1880-2; Canadian Pacific Railroad, North Shore of Lake Superior, 1882-5; Dakota, Minnesota and Iowa, 1885-7. Secretary of Iowa College, 1887—. Trustee of Iowa College, 1890—. Member of City Council of Grinnell, 1895-6. Married to Miss Abbie F. Whitcomb, I. C. ’69, Grinnell, Iowa, July 2, 1874. 49. Mary E. Snell. Oakland, California. Ladies’ Course. A. M., Iowa College, 1888. Sister of 34 and 58. Teacher of a private school which she, with Miss Loomis, I. C. ’70, founded at San Bernard¬ ino, California, 1869-70. Teacher, Benicia Seminary, a private school, in company with her sister, Mrs. Poulson, I. C. ’67, Benicia, California, 1874-7. Principal of Snell Seminary for young women, Oakland, California, which school Miss Snell also founded, 1877—. 50. Abbie F. Whitcomb (Robbins). Grinnell, Iowa. Ladies’ Course. Born, Chester, Vermont, 1849. Sister of 89, 134 and 293. Prepared for college, Academy of Iowa College. Teacher in Public and High Schools of Grinnell and Waterloo, Iowa, 1869-74. Married to Horace H. Rob¬ bins, I. C. ’69, Grinnell, Iowa, July 2, 1874. Resided, Alden, Iowa, 1874-7; Postville, Iowa, 1878-80; Grinnell, Iowa, 1888—. 51. Mahlon Willett. Decorah, Iowa. A. B.; B. D., Chicago Theological Seminary, 1873; D. D., Iowa College, 1892. Born, Chambly, Canada East, February 14, 1849. Brother of 109. Prepared for college, Private School, Decorah, Iowa, and Academy of Iowa College. Resi¬ dence, Decorah, Iowa, 1869-70. Student, Chicago Theological Seminary, 1870-3. Pastor, Congregational Churches, LaMoille, Illinois, 1873-4; Paris, Texas, 1874-6; San Jose, California, 1876-80; Santa Cruz, California, 1880-92; Spokane, Washing¬ ton, 1892-3; Oakland, California, 1893-6; Decorah, Iowa, 1896—. Has held many official ecclesiastical positions. Moderator and twice preacher of State Congre¬ gational Association of California. Married in San Jose, California, July 29,1879. X.—CLASS OF 1870. 52. R. Evelyn Hough (Sims,) deceased. Ladies’ Course. Born, Waterford, Virginia, 1851. Prepared for college, New¬ ton Academy, Newton. Iowa. Teacher, Public Schools, Newton, Iowa, 1870-2. Failing health took her to California in 1877. Teacher, Calusa County, Califor¬ nia, 1877-8; Nevada City, California, 1879-80. Married to Joseph Sims, Nevada City, California, 1881. Died, Nevada City, March 7, 1894. 53. Letitia Kinkade. Ladies’ Course. 46 Iowa College Quinquennial 54. Lora Loomis (Hubbell). Pleasant Place, Aliso St., Los Angeles, Cal. Ladies’ Course. Born, Colchester, Vermont, September, 1849. Sister of 82. Prepared for college, High School, Manchester, Iowa. Married, at Manchester, Iowa, to Stephen C. Hubbell, February 5, 1873. Los Angeles, California ,1873—. 55. Amanda McClellan (Austin), deceased. Ladies’ Course. Born in Vermont, July 30, 1840. Married at Iowa City, Iowa, July 13, 1871, to Michael Austin, Superintendent of Schools in Grinnell. Resi¬ dence, Grinnell, Iowa, 187.1-3; Iowa City, 1873; Toledo, Iowa, 1874, until her death, July 29, 1880. 56. Jesse Macy. Grinnell, Iowa. A. B.; A. M. Born, Henry County, Indiana, 1842. Tutor. Iowa College, 1870-2 Principal of Academy of Iowa College, 1872-83. Acting Professor of History and Political Science and Principal of Academy, 1883-5. Professor of History and Political Science, 1885-8. Professor of Constitutional History and Political Econo¬ my, 1888—. In Europe on leave of absence, 1887-8 and 1805-6. Has published: “A Government Text Book for Iowa Schools,” (Ginn & Co.), 1887; “Our Govern¬ ment,” (Ginn & Co.), 1890; “First Lessons in Civil Government,” (Ginn & Co.), 1894; “The English Constitution,” (Macmillan Co.), 1896; and many articles in Reviews and other periodicals. Married, Grinnell, Iowa, 1872, to Miss Maude Little, (Sister of Nos. 73 and 105) a graduate of Oberlin College, 1865. 57. Reuben Edward Sears. Marshalltown, Iowa. A. B.; A. M., Iowa College, 1873; LL. B., State University of Iowa, 1871. Born, Prophetstown, Whiteside County, Illinois, June 6th, 1848. Student Law Department. University of Iowa, 1870-1. Attorney, Marshalltown, Iowa, 1871-8. President of two manufacturing companies, one in Marshalltown, the other in Johnstown, Pennsylvania; President of two coal companies, and connected with several other business enterprises, 1878—. Has done much writing for local papers on municipal interests, railroad problems, patent laws, political and school matters, etc. Chairman of committees on Soldiers’ Home, factories, Electric Street Railways, etc. Because of the demands of private business, has declined several political offices, notably the nomination to Congress from the 5th Con¬ gressional District of Iow'a. Alumni Trustee, Iowa College, 1884-91. Married, at Marshalltown, Iowa, June 6, 1874, to Miss Agnes Childs. 58. Richard Bailey Snell. Oakland, California. A. B.; B. D.; Yale Theological Seminary, 1874. A. M., Iowa College, 1888. Brother of 34 and 49. Principal of schools of Grinnell, and tutor in Iowa College, 1870-1. During the year the school building was burned and Mr. Snell became tutor in Iow'a College, which granted privileges to the high school students who were burned out. Student, Yale Theological Seminary, 1871-4. Business man¬ ager of Snell Seminary, Oakland, California. XI.—CLASS OF 1871. 59. Michael Austin. 3404 Lake Avenue, Chicago, Illinois. A. B.; LL. B., Iowa State University, 1874. Born in Ireland. (Enlisted in 21st Massachusetts Infantry, 1861. In battles of Newbern, Bull Run (2nd), Antie- tam, Fredericksburg, the Wilderness, and Spottsylvania Court House, where he was wounded May 12, 1864; seige of Petersburg, etc.; taken prisoner at Peters¬ burg and kept in Libby and Salisbury prisons five months.) Superintendent of Grinnell Schools, 1871-3. Student in Law Department, State University of Iowa, 1873-4. Attorney, Toledo, Iowa, 1874-80. Manufacturer of Agricultural The Alumni 47 Machinery, Craver, Steele & Austin, Grinnell, Iowa, 1880-90. Manager of the same company, Harvey, Illinois, 1890-1. Director and Treasurer of Plano Manufactur¬ ing Company, Chicago, Illinois, 1891—. Deacon and Trustee of South Congre¬ gational Church, Chicago. Trustee, Iowa College, 1886—. Married, July 13, 1871, to Miss Amanda McClellan, I. C. ’70, who died July 29, 1880. Married to Mrs. Margaret Jane Kirby of Grinnell, Iowa, October 11, 1890. 60. John Brown M. Bishop. Toledo, Iowa. A. B. Born, Logan County, Ohio, June 23, 1845. Enlisted in Company F, 28th Iowa Volunteer Infantry, March, 1864; wounded severely at Winchester, Virginia, 1864, and discharged therefor, May, 1865. Prepared for college, Academy of Iowa College. Farmer, 1871-4 and 1881-4. Recorder, Tama County, Iowa, 1875-81. Abstracter, 1884-9. Loan and Insurance Agent, 1890-6. Deputy Inspector of Oils for Iowa, 1896—. Married, at Mechanicsville, Illinois, October 18, 1877, to Miss Alice E. Loughridge, formerly of class of ’73, I. C., and graduate of Ober- lin, Ohio, class of ’73, who was a teacher and Assistant Principal of Toledo Pub¬ lic Schools prior to her marriage. 61. James Loring Carney. Marshalltown, Iowa. B. S.; LL. B., University of Iowa. Bom, July 29, 1847, Lawrence, Massa¬ chusetts. Prepared for college, Academy of Iowa College. Student, Law De¬ partment, State University of Iowa, 1872-3. Attorney, Marshalltown, Iowa, 1876—. City Solicitor of Marshalltown for four years during the ’8o’s. County Attorney, 1891-4. Senator for Marshall County, 1896—. Member of Republican National Convention at Minneapolis, Minnesota, 1892. Married to Miss Minnie E. Tillot- son, May 1st, 1879. 62. Clement Long Clapp. 210 South Water Street, Chicago, Illinois. A. B.; A. M., Iowa College, 1891; A. M., Illinois College. Bom, Monroeville. Ohio, May 12, 1852. Prepared for college, Academy of Iowa College. Principal of Public School, Victor, Iowa, 1871-2. Graduate student in History and Eco¬ nomics, Yale University, 1872-3. Editorial staff of Joiimal and Courier , New Haven, Connecticut, 1873-4. Tutor, Illinois College, Jacksonville, Illinois, 1874-5. Editor and proprietor of “The Patriot,” Carrollton, Illinois, 1875-88. Secretary and treasurer of Sewell-Clapp Manufacturing Company, Chicago, Illinois, 1888-94. President of the same, 1894—. Married to Miss Emma E. W. Allan of New Haven, Connecticut. 63. Lena Clark (Abdill). Des Moines, Iowa. Ladies’Course. Born, Gorham, New York, February 10, 1851. Prepared for college, Newton, Iowa. Cashier in bank, Newton, Iowa, 1871-8. 'Married to L. B. Abdill, January 4, 1878. Residence, Danville, Illinois, 1878-9. Des Moines, Iowa, 1879—. 64. Charlotte Cobb (Lyle), deceased. Ladies’ Course. Married to Captain David A. Lyle, Ordnance Corps United States Army. Died in Boston, Massachusetts, March 1, 1884. 65. Samuel Porch Craver. Assuncion, Paraguay. A. B.; B. D., Theological School, Boston University, 1875; D. D., Iowa Wes¬ leyan University, 1887. Born, Franklinville, New Jersey, April 26, 1847. Stu¬ dent of Theology, Boston University, 1872-5. Missionary, Guanajuato, Mexico (where he was mobbed several times), 1876-83; Silao, Mexico, 1883-6. In charge of the publishing interests of the Mission in Mexico, City of Mexico, 1886-7. Missionary and Presiding Elder of the District, Queretaro, 1887-90. Presiding Eider of: tne Puebla District and President of the Theological Seminary of the Methodist Episcopal Church, Puebla, Mexico, 1890-5. Superintendent of Mis- 48 Iowa College Quinquennial sions of the Methodist Church, Paraguay, where he has full charge of all the work in that country, 1895—. During the greater part of the nineteen years he spent in Mexico he was one of the managing board of the publishing interests of the Mission. Married, at Mt. Pleasant, Iowa, to Miss Laura Gassner, Septem¬ ber 22, 1875. 66. Ermina Day Cochran (Menzendorf), deceased. Ladies’ Course. A. B., Iowa College, 1873; A. M., Iowa College. 1877. Born, Patterson, New Jersey, October 24, 1852. Prepared for college, Grinnell High School and Academy of Iowa College. Student in Iowa College, 1871-3, gradu¬ ating in the classical course in 1873. Student of Music, Boston, Massachusetts, 1874-5. Residence at home and teaching music, Kidder,Missouri, 1875-80. Same, Normal, Illinois, 1880-3. She had had at intervals during these years the best instruction and training in musical education to be obtained in America at that time. At the invitation of Chancellor I. T. Manatt, I. C. ’69, she opened a Department of Music in the University of Nebraska, 1885. Director, University School of Music, Lincoln, Nebraska, from 1885 till her death, March 7, 1803. Married, September 17, 1890, to Gustav C. Menzendorf, a fellow teacher in tne University School of Music. 67. William Justus Eaton. Rochester, Minnesota. A. B. Born, Andover, Connecticut, April 15. 1847. Prepared for college, Academy of Iowa College. Engaged in railroad construction, and Produce Mer¬ chant, Grinnell, Iowa, 1871-81. Produce Merchant, Rochester, Minnesota, 1881—. Married, 1872, to Miss Ammie B. Condit, I. C. ’68, who died in 1873. Married, 1876, to Miss Jennie Swan of Mount Pleasant, Iowa. 68. Pauline Given (Swalm). Oskaloooa, Iowa. Ladies’ Course. Born, Dahlonega, Wapello County, Iowa, 1850. Associate editor of Iowa State Register , Des Moines, Iowa, 1871-2. Married to Col. Albert W. Swalm, editor of the Jefferson Bee , October 1, 1872. Mr. and Mrs. Swalm jointly edited the Messenger , Fort Dodge, Iowa, 1874-7. Col. Swalm’s health failing, they travelled in Europe, 1877-9. Jointly published and edited Daily and Weekly Herald , Oskaloosa, Iowa, 1880-97. Mrs. Swalm has delivered addresses and written articles on sociological and literary topics; addressed the Press Con- § ress at the World’s Fair on “The Newspaper as a Factor in Civilization;” ad- ressed Woman’s Clubs, and Federations on “The Citizenship of Women,” “The Ideal State,” “Woman in the 30th Century,” etc. (Mr. Swalm enlisted in the 33rd Iowa Infantry and served in the western army under Gen. Price; has heldmany positions in the G. A. R.; Colonel of 3d Regiment, I. N. G.; at present Iowa member National Council of Administration; member of the Board of Regents of Iowa State University.) 69. Charles Whittlesey Guernsey, deceased. A. B.; B. D., Yale, 1875. Born, Derby, Connecticut, September 2, i8so. Pre¬ pared for college, Academy of Iowa College. Student, Yale Theological Semin¬ ary, 1872-3. Student, Andover Theological Seminary, 1873-4. Student, Yale Theological Seminary, where he graduated as valedictorian of his class, 1874-5. Preached, 1875. Student in Europe, chiefly at the University of Leipsic, 1875-6, during which time he decided upon the profession of law. Read law at Cleve¬ land, Ohio, and was admitted to the bar, November, 1877. Entered at once into partnership with Hon. George Willey. His article on “The Platonic Theory” was published in the New Englander during his last year at Yale, and his essay on “The Political Side of Puritanism” won the John A. Porter prize at Yale in 1875. Died of consumption, at Cleveland, Ohio, February n, 1878. A memorial tribute to him appeared in the News Letter y March, 1878, written by his class¬ mate, James L. Hill. 70. Harriet Frances Hamlin (Beebe), deceased. Ladies’ Course. Born, Wellington, Ohio, March 13, 1851. Sister of 100. Pre¬ pared for college, High School, Grinnell, Iowa. Married, 1875, to Mr. Eben N. Beebe. Lived in Iowa and Nebraska, 1871-81. Died, Grinnell, Iowa, December 1, 1881. The Alumni 49 71. Gershom Hyde Hill. Independence, Iowa. A. B.; M. D., Rush Medical College, Chicago, 1874; A. M., Iowa College, 1891. Born, Garnavillo, Clayton County, Iowa, May 8, 1846. Brother of 72 and 177. Prepared for eollege, Academy of Iowa College. Student of Medicine, Musca¬ tine, Iowa, 1871-2; Fayette, Iowa, 1872-3; Rush Medical College, Chicago, Illinois, 1873-4. Practicing physician, Moline, Illinois, 1874. Assistant Physician of the Iowa Hospital for the Insane, 1874-81; Superintendent of the same, 1881—. Lect¬ urer on Insanity, State University of Iowa, 1890—. Trustee of Iowa College, 1888—. Member of several medical societies; one of the Building Commissioners for the Cherokee Hospital; Elder in the Presbyterian Church, and Director of the Y. M. C. A. at Independence. Has written articles for medical journals, one or more each year for several years; also makes report to the Trustees of the State University every two years, and often reads papers at meetings of physicians. Married, in Lynn, Massachusetts, January 9, 1879, to Miss Louisa B. Ford. 72. James Langdon Hill. 225 Lafayette Street, Salem, Massachusetts. A. B.; B. D., Andover Theological Seminary, 1875; D. D., Iowa College, 1891. Born, Garnavillo, Clayton County, Iowa, March 14, 1848. Brother of 71 and 177. Prepared for college, Academy of Iowa College. Tutor, Iowa College, 1871-2. Student, Andover Theological Seminary, 1872-5. Pastor, North Congregational Church, Lynn, Massachusetts, 1875-86. Pastor, Mystic (Congregational) Church, Medford. Massachusetts, 1886-93. Residence, Salem, Massachusetts, 1893—. Preached the election sermon before the Governor and Legislature of Massachu¬ setts, 1878. Founded Society of Christian Endeavor in England, 1891. Helped to organize the United Society of Christian Endeavor, raised the money to start the work, and has been one of its trustees from the beginning. Gave alumni address at Iowa College, 1883. Has given lectures and addresses in different parts of the country to the number of several hundred. Together with his brother, G. H. Hill, I. C. ’71, they founded the Hill Prize for extemporaneous address, in Iowa College, 1895. Married to Miss Lucy B. Dunham, Bridgewater, Massachusetts, 1878, who is a writer of Junior Endeavor, Missionary and other lines of literature. Dr. Hill has published the following pamphlets and books: “A Decade of History;” “Modern Methods of Christian Nurture;” “Laymen to the Front;” “The Young People’s Prayer Meeting;” “Antiphonal Service (with music); “Antiphonal Service,” No. 2; “Vacation Books;” “The Superlative Vaca¬ tion;” “Notes and Suggestions for the Prayer Meeting;” “Woman and Satan,” “Reasons for Entering the Ministry;” “The Growth of Government;” “Studies in Colonial History” (four); “Little Willis;” and “Boys in the Late War.” 73. Elizabeth Little (Lyman). Grinnell, Iowa. Ladies’ Course. Born, Kewanee, Illinois. Sister of 105. Prepared for college, High School, Kewanee, Illinois. Married, Grinnell, Iowa, 1873, to J. P. Lyman, I. C. ’67. Grinnell, Iowa, 1871—. 74. Marion Little (Prentiss), deceased. Ladies’ Course. Born, Medina, Ohio, August 6, 1850. Sister of 81 . Prepared for college, Academy of Iowa College. Teacher ana student of Music, Denver, Colorado, 1871 7. Married to J. L. Prentiss, M. D., October, 1877. Residence, Canon City, Colorado, 1877-83. Teacher of Oil Painting and, in later years, in charge of the Musical Department of the Colorado Collegiate and Military Insti¬ tute, Canon City, Colorado, 1877-83. Died, November 20, 1883. 75. John Newton McLoney, deceased. A. B.; B. D., Yale Theological Seminary, 1874. Born, Summit County, Ohio, December 2, 1848. Prepared for college, Fairfield Academy and Academy of Iowa College. Student, Vale Theological Seminary, 1871-4. Pastor, Congrega¬ tional Churches, Vermillion, South Dakota, 1874-7; Sioux City, Iowa, 1877-9; Sioux Falls, South Dakota, 1879-84. Died, Sioux Trails, South Dakota, March, 1884. This skeleton of facts cannot be properly clothed upon in the brief notes of a catalogue; but it is a privilege to state in a single sentence that this minis¬ try of ten years was marked by a rare degree of success and usefulness. 50 Iowa College Quinquennial 76. Nathaniel Dudley Robinson. B. S. XII.—CLASS OF 1872. 77. Urban Belsona Balcombe. 1405 North Twenty-fifth Street, Omaha, Nebraska. B. S.; A. M., Iowa College, 1875. Born, Elgin, Illinois, February 24,1852. Pre¬ pared for college, Collegiate and Commercial Institute, New Haven, Connecti¬ cut. Has been engaged in the newspaper and type foundry business, traveling salesman. Deputy City Clerk, and Secretary of the Board of Public Works, Omaha, Nebraska, 1872—. Married, at Missouri Valley, Iowa, to Miss Clara Turner, April 9, 1890. 78. Emily Bale (Smalley). 6954 Grant Place, Chicago, Illinois. Ladies’ Course. Born, Stourbridge, Worcestershire, England, July 27, 1851. Prepared for college, Public Schools, Grinnell, Iowa. Teacher, Waverly, Iowa, 1872-5. Married, at Dubuque, Iowa, to Henry D. Smalley, October 27, 1875. Residence, Waverly, Iowa, 1875-81: Chicago, Illinois, 1881—. 79. David Gordon Edmundson. Des Moines, Iowa. A. B.; L. L. B., University of Iowa, 1875. Born, Oskaloosa, Iowa, 1850. Tutor in Iowa College, 1872-3. President of Security Loan and Trust Company, Des Moines, Iowa. 80. Ralph Emerson Gaylord. A. B.; A. M., Iowa College, 1875. Born, Danville, Iowa, September 8, 1849. Prepared for college, Omaha schools and preparatory department of Oberlin College. Assistant Principal, Omaha High School. Lawyer, and engaged in the business of loans, investments and insurance, Omaha, Nebraska. Alumni Trustee of Iowa College, 1889-91. Member of Nebraska Legislature. Married, Grinnell, Iowa, to Miss Mary E. Timmerman, October 2, 1879. (Mr. Gaylord left his home in Omaha for a business trip in 1894, and has not been heard from since.) 81. Julia Little (Mack). 34 East Jefferson Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan. Ladies’ Course. Born. Medina, Ohio, August 21, 1852. Sister of 74- Prepared for college, Academy of Iowa College. Married to Henry Mack, September 11, 1872. Grinnell, Iowa, 1872-4. Denver, Colorado, 1874-5. Canon City, Colorado, 1875—. Temporary home, Ann Arbor, Mich, 1890—. 82. Alma L. Loomis (Brainerd), deceased . Ladies’ Course. Born, Colchester, Vermont, January n, 1852. Sister of 54. Prepared for college, High School; Manchester, Iowa. Residence, Los Angeles, California, 1872-9. Married, at Manchester, Iowa, May 15, 1879. to Henry G. Brainerd, A. B., Dartmouth, 1874,; M. D., Rush Medical College, 1878, and a former student of Iowa College. Residence, Independence, Iowa, 1879-82, where Dr. Brainerd was a physician in the Hospital lor the Insane, under Dr. G. H. Hill, I. C. ’71. Died, May 12, 1882. 83. Cora L. Moore (Ross). Osage, Iowa. Ladies’ Course. Born, Mottville, Michigan, July 1, 1852. Osage, Iowa, 1872- 83 and 1889—. Hampton, Iowa, 1883-89. Married, 1881, to Albert C. Ross, a grad¬ uate of Cornell College, Iowa, who was a teacher and superintendent of schools for twenty-one years, and is now editor and publisher of the Osage News. Pur¬ sued the four years course of the Chautauqua Literary and Scientific Circle and received diploma. The Alumni 5i 84. Anna Jane Norris. Thurmont, Maryland, Ladies’ Course; B. D., Meadville Theological Seminary, 1882. Born, Bedford County, Pennsylvania, 1853. Sister of 85 and 86. Prepared for college, Academy of Iowa College. Teacher, Cedar Rapids, Iowa, 1876-9. Student, Meadville Theo¬ logical Seminary, Pennsylvania, 1879-82. Pastor Unitarian Church, North Platte, Nebraska, and Fort Collins, Colorado, 1882-7. Missionary and teacher, Mexico, 1887 9. Missionary in Iowa, 1889-91. Residence, Thurmont, Maryland, 1891—. 85. David Washington Norris. Grinnell, Iowa. A. B. Born in Maryland, September 1, 1848. Brother of 84 and 86, and father of 585. Teacher, Tama City, Iowa, 1872-3; Marshalltown, Iowa, 1873-4. Read law in Chicago in private office, 1874-6. Attorney and farmer, Grinnell, Iowa, 1877—. Married, Tama City, Iowa, to Miss Lizzie S. Gifford, December 24, 1874, 86. Emma Virginia Norris (Harman). Cedar Rapids, Iowa. Ladies’ Course. Born, Frederick County, Maryland, December, 1849. Sister of 84 and 85. Prepared for college, Academy of Iowa College. Teacher, Waverly and Bremer County, Iowa, 1872-3; Gilman, Iowa, 1873-4; Public Schools, Cedar Rapids, Iowa, 1874-80. Married, 1880, to Warren Harman, attorney, and City At¬ torney, 1896—. Resided at Cedar Rapids, Iowa, 1880—. 87. Kittie Otis (Eshbaugh). 123 Plymouth Street, Montclair, New Jersey. Ladies’ Course. Born, Lancaster, Wisconsin, June 16, 1850. Teacher, Lan¬ caster, Wisconsin, 1872-3. Married, 1874, to D. O. Eshbaugh, I. C. ’74. Resi¬ dence, Des Moines, Iowa, 1874-86. Montclair, New Jersey, 1886—. 88. Anna Pruyn (Moore). Athol, South Dakota. Ladies’ Course. Sister of 41. 89. Helen Sarah Whitcomb (Hobart), deceased, A. B.; A. M., 1875. Born, Chester, Vermont, July 28, 1851. Sister of 50, 134 and 293. Prepared for College, Academy of Iowa College. Assistant Lady Prin¬ cipal, Iowa College, 1872-7 and 1878-9. Graduate student of Greek, Yale, 1877-8. Married, November 28, 1879, to Dr. H. M. Hobart, I. C. ’74. Residence, Chicago, Illinois, 1879-88. Died in Chicago, Illinois, July 2, 1888. XIII.—CLASS OF 1873. 90. Elizabeth Huntington Avery. Redfield, South Dakota. A. B.; A. M., Iowa College, 1876; A. M., Iowa College, (on examination) in History and Political Science, 1893; Ph. D., University ot Minnesota, 1895. Born, Bozrah, Connecticut, July 3, 1851. Prepared for college by private study. Teacher in High Schools, Waterloo, Iowa; Rock Island, Illinois; Lansing, Vin¬ ton, and Marshalitown, Iowa; and Faribault, Minnesota, 1873-92. Graduate stu¬ dent in History and Political Science, University of Wisconsin and Iowa College, 1892-3. Graduate student in University of Minnesota, 1893-4. Principal of High School, Kasson, Minnesota, and non-resident graduate student of University of Minnesota, 1894-S. Professor of English Language and Literature, Redfield Col¬ lege, Redfield, South Dakota, 1895—. Has published several articles in School Journals; ‘‘Fragments of Iowa History gathered from Congressional Records,” published in “Iowa Historical Record,” and reprinted in pamphlet form; “The Influence of French Immigration on the Political History of the United States.” 52 Iowa College Quinquennial 91. Rebecca Carter (Collins). Marshalltown, Iowa. Ladies’ Course. Born at Mooresville, Indiana, 1846. Teacher, Marshall Coun¬ ty, Iowa, 1873-81. Married to Phillip L. Collins, farmer from Windham County, Vermont, 1881. Resides on a farm in Marshall County, Iowa. 66. Ermina Day Cochran (Menzendorf.) [See Class of 1871.] 92. Mary Isabella Hobart (Baker). Butte, Montana. Ladies’ Course. Born, Audubon, Montgomery County, Illinois, January 16, 1847. Prepared for college. Academy of Iowa College. Teacher, Port Byron, Illinois. 1873-84. Married, March 27, 1884, to T. T. Balter, I. C. ’74. Butte, Mon¬ tana, 1884—. 93. Edwin James. Jamestown, Iowa. A. B. Born, Rockingham Township, Scott County, Iov;a, January 19, 1849. Brother of 178. Teacher, St, Louis County, Missouri, 1873-6. Farmer, Scott County, Iowa, 1876—. Justice of the Peace, Buffalo Township, Scott County, Iowa, 1891-3. Married. June, 1874, Grinnell, Iowa, to Miss Mary A. Hamlin, I. C. ’74, who died March, 1877. Married, at Davenport, Iowa, to Miss Cornelia Stein¬ berg. 94. Frederick Hyde Magoun, deceased. A. B. Born in Bath, Maine, January 22, 1852. Brother of 151 and son of President George F. Magoun. Prepared for college, Academy of Iowa College. His health having failed during his graduating year, he traveled through Colo¬ rado and Wisconsin trying to regain his health, 1873-6. Tutor, Iowa College, 1876-7. Ordained, Gilman, Iowa, September 26,1878. Pastor, Gilman, Iow r a, 1878- 82; Storm Lake, Iow'a, 1882-5. Died at Grinnell, Iowa, April 15, 1885. XIV.—CLASS OF 1874. 95. Henry Carter Adams. Ann Arbor, Michigan. A. B.; A. M., Iow^a College, 1877; Ph. D., Johns Hopkins University, 1878. Born, Davenport, Iowa, December 31, 1851. Superintendent of Schools, Nassau, Iow'a, 1874-5. Student, Andover Theological Seminary, 1875-6. Student of Political Economy, etc., Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, Maryland, 1876-8. Student, Heidelberg, Berlin and a short time at the Ecole Libre des Sciences Politiques in Paris, 1878-9. Lecturer, Cornell, Johns Hopkins, and Michigan Universities, 1880-7. Professor of Political Economy and Finance, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, 1887—. Married to Miss Bertha Hammond Wright, September 3, 1890. Statistician of the Interstate Commerce Commis¬ sion, 1887—. At Washington on leave of absence in charge of the Department of Transportation of the Eleventh Census, 1890. Published: “Public Debts,” by Appleton & Co., since translated into Japanese; “The State in Relation to Industrial Action,” published by the American Economic Association; “Outlines of lectures on Political Economy,” two editions; “Annual Reports of Statis¬ tics of Railways in the United States, seven volumes, together with the Annual Preliminary Income Account, 1882-95, inclusive; Introduction to a volume en¬ titled “Philanthropy and Social Progress;” also Introduction to a volume entitled “State Railroad Control,” both published by Crowell; As Special Agent on Trans¬ portation of the Eleventh Census, had supervision of the two volumes on Trans¬ portation. Member of the International Statistical Institute; President of the American Economic Association; Secretary of the Michigan Political Science Association; Associate editor of the International Journal of Ethics. Engaged at present upon a book entitled “The Science of Finance,” which will be published by Holt & Co. of New York. The Alumni 53 96. Thomas Thomas Baker. Butte, Montana. B. S, Born, Coveton Township, Barbour County, West Virginia, November 12,1839. Brother of 173. Prepared for college, Academy of Iowa College. Cura¬ tor of Museum and Assistant in Chemistry and Physics, Iowa College, 1874-5. Teacher, Ruby Valley, Montana, 1875-6. Principal of City Schools, Virginia, Montana, 1876-7. United States Deputy Mineral Surveyor, 1877—. Residence, Butte, Montana, 1878—. Married, March 27, 1884, to Mary I. Hobart, I. C. ’73. 97. Hamilton Mansure Bartlett. North Yakima, Washington. A. B.; B. D., Andover Theological Seminary, 1877. Born, Winchendon, Mas¬ sachusetts, September 29, 1848. Brother of 189 and 190. Prepared for college, Academy of Iowa College. Student, Chicago Theological Seminary, 1874-5; An¬ dover Theological Seminary, 1875-7. Pastor First Congregational Church, Pom- fret, Conneticut. 1878-83. Assistant Minister of Grace (P. E.) Church, Provi¬ dence, Rhode Island, with Rev. Dr. David N. Greer, 1884-90. Rector of Christ Church, Christiana Hundred, Montchanin, Delaware, 1890-6. Rector of Episco¬ pal Church, North Yakima, Washington, 1896—. Deputy to the General Con¬ vention of the Protestant Episcopal Church, 1895. Has published articles in the Church Magazine of Philadelphia entitled “The Church and the Discontented Classes;” “The Work of the Church in Cities;” “The Childhood of John Rus- kin;” editorials in Providence Journal from 1887-90; presented j)aper on “Socal- ism” at the Church Congress at Washington, 1 ). C., 1891; “Christianity and Evolution;” “Authority and Private Judgment;” “Evolution and Idea ot God;” “The Church and the Scientific Spirit” in the P. E. Church Review; other ar¬ ticles, reviews and sermons in the Christian Union t Advance , Christian Reg¬ ister , and Providence Journal. 98. Martha Emma Brown (Carney). Gilman, Iowa. Ladies’ Course. Born, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, December 26, 1851. Pre¬ pared for college, Public Schools, Tama, Iowa, and Academy of Iowa College. Teacher, Public Schools, Tama, Iowa, 1875-6 and 1877-8; Haven, Iowa, 1876; Grand View, Iowa, 1876:8; Gilman, Iowa, 1879. Married to John M. Carney, Jus¬ tice of the Peace, and Land, Loan and Insurance Agent, April 28, 1880. 99. Daniel Oscar Eshbaugh. Montclair, New Jersey. B. S. Born near Milton, Northumberland County, Pennsylvania, Mav 24, 1850. Prepared for college, Academy of Iowa College. In business, Des Moines, Iowa, 1874-86. Montclair, New Jersey, 1886—. Has been engaged in the business of dealing in land securities, with one interruption, since 1875. President of the New England Loan and Trust Company, with business office at 34 Nassau Street, New York City, 1890—. Trustee of Iowa College, 1884—. Director of the Review of Reviews , 1891—. Director of the Bank of Montclair, 1889—. President of the Young Men’s Christian Association, Montclair, 1895—. Deacon of the First Congregational Church, Montclair, 1888—. Member ot the Advisory Board of the Children’s Home of Montclair, 1892—. Member of the Society of the Sons of the Revolution of New York City, 1891—. Has written occasionally for the pa¬ pers of New York and Montclair, Married, 1874, to Miss Catherine G. Otis. 1, C. ’72. 100. Mary Amelia Hamlin (James), deceased. Ladies’ Course. Born, Wellington, Ohio, September 27, 1849. Sister of 70. Prepared for college, High School, Grinnell, Iowa. Married, 1874, to Edwin James, I. C. ’73, St. Louis County, Missouri, 1874-6. Scott County, Iowa, 1876-7 Died, Davenport, Iowa., March 19, 1877. 101. Alexis Crane Hart. Franklin, Nebraska. A. B.; A. M., 1877. Born, Wisconsin, February 4, 1846. Prepared for college, Bradford Academy, Bradford, Iowa. Superintendent City Schools, Grinnell, 54 Iowa College Quinquennial Iowa, 1874-9; 1884-7. Superintendent City Schools, Mason City, Iowa, 1879-81, Principal, Wilton Academy, Wilton Junction, Iowa, 1881-3. Superintendent of Schools, Knoxville, Iowa, 1887-8. Principal, Franklin Academy, Franklin, Ne¬ braska, 1888—. Has written newspaper articles, educational reports and public addresses. Moderator oi General Association of Congregational Churches of Nebraska, 1893-4. Delegate of the General Association of Congregational Churches of Nebraska to the Ninth National Triennial Council of the United States, held in Syracuse, New York, 1895. Married, 1876, to Miss Elizabeth Big- gar, I. C. ’ 75 t who died July 24, 1883. Married, June, 1887, to Miss Clara Emer¬ son, I. C. ’82. 102. Henry Martin Hobart, deceased. B. S.; A. M., Iowa College, 1877; M. D., Hahnemann Medical College, 1876. Born, Arcade, New York, August 11, 1851. Prepared for college, Grinnell High School. Student, Hahnemann Medicai College, and valedictorian of his class, 1874-6. Physician, Chicago, Illinois, 1876-93. Married, November 28, 1879, to Miss Helen Sarah Whitcomb, I. C. ’72, who aied July 2, 1888. Married, at Gales¬ burg, Illinois, to Miss Amy Sturtevant, the eldest daughter of Dr. J. M. Sturte- vant, of Aurora, Illinois, June 16, 1891. Professor of Materia Medica and Thera¬ peutics in the Chicago Homoeopathic Medical College. 1883-93. Attending physi¬ cian, Chicago Nursery and Half-Orphan Asylum, 1880-93. Member of State, Na¬ tional and International Medical Societies. Trustee of Iowa College, 1890-3. Deacon and Trustee of Lincoln Park Congregational Church, Chicago, for many years. Trustee of Chicago Theological Seminary. Died of peritonitis, Chicago, Illinois, November 5, 1893. 103. Lucia Howland (Day). Fairmont, Minnesota. Ladies’ Course. Born, Roscoe, Illinois, 1854. Prepared for college, Grinnell High School. Teacher in Fairmont and Sherburn, Minnesota, 1875-83. Married to Frank A. Day, 1883. Mr. Day has been state senator for Minnesota since 1883 and is now lieutenant-governor and editor of the Martin County Sentinel. 104. Frank Hatch Kasson. 50 Bromfield Street, Boston, Massachusetts. A. B.; A. M., Iowa College, 1879; B.D., Andover Seminary, 1879. Born, Bara- boo, Wisconsin, June 14, 1852. Brother of 145. Pastor Congregational Churches, Templeton, Massachusetts, 1879-80; Tewksbury, Massachusetts, 1883-6; Fair- haven, Massachusetts, 1887-9; also supply at Abington and Marion, Massachu¬ setts; Kewanee, Illinois; and Hampstead, New Hampshire. Editor, Golden Rule , 1881-6. Associate editor, Con grcgationalist , 1886-7. Editor, Education , 1890— . Married, Plaistow, New Hampshire, to Miss L. Lizzie Day, December 25, 1880. 105. Fannie Little (Alvord). Battle Creek, Michigan. Ladies’ Course. Born, Kewanee, Illinois. Sister of 73. Prepared for college, High School, Grinnell, Iowa. At home and teaching Music, Grinnell, 1874-8. Married, Grinnell, Iowa, 1878, to Dr. A. W. Alvord, a graduate of Oberlin and the Medical Department of Michigan University. Clinton, Michigan, 1878-82; Battle Creek, 18S2—. Officer of Board of Managers of Woman’s Hospital of Battle Creek. 106. Harlow Spencer Mills. Benzonia, Michigan. A. B,; A. M., Iowa College, 1876; B. D., Chicago Theological Seminary, 1877. Born, Clay, Iowa, October 8, 1846. Prepared for college, Denmark Academy, Denmark, Iowa. Student, Chicago Theological Seminary, 1874-7. Married, October 16, 1877, to Miss Mary E. Fisher, astudentof Iowa College, 1870-2. Pas¬ tor Congregational Churches, Dunlap, Iowa, 1877-83; Forest Grove, Oregon, 1883-5; Alton, Illinois, 1885-7; Pluron, South Dakota, 1887-91; Union City, Michigan, 1891- 6; Benzonia, Michigan, 1896—. The Alumni 55 107. Cornelius Luther Perry. A. B. 108. Sarah Stuart (Noll). Grundy Center, Iowa. Ladies’ Course. Born, Stratford, Vermont, September 20, 1853. Prepared for college, Academy of Iowa College. Married, September 20, 187s, to T. J. Noll, LL. B., University of Iowa, 1875. Residence, Sibley, Iowa, 1875-6. Traer, Iowa, 1876-7. Grundy Center, Iowa, 1877-80 and 1881—. Lake City, Iowa, 1880-1. Mr. Noll is an Attorney and Real-Estate Dealer. 109. Norman Willett. Decorah, Iowa. A. B. Born, Chambly, East Canada, 1854. Brother of 51. In business as traveling salesman for a number of years. Now attorney, associated with his father and brother in the firm of Willett & Sons, Decorah, Iowa. Married to Anna Louise Helmke, Santa Cruz, California, February 6, 1894. XV.—CLASS OF 1875. no. Elizabeth Biggar (Hart), deceased. Ladies’ Course. Born, Huntingdon, Province of Quebec, Canada East, June 16, 1846. Prepared for college, Bradford Academy, Bradford, Iowa. Teacher, Public Schools, Grinnell, Iowa, 1875-7. Married, Grinnell, Iowa, 1876, to Alexis C. Hart, I. C. ’74. Residence, Grinnell, Iowa, 1877-9. Principal High School, Mason City, Iowa, 1879-80. Preceptress, Wilton Academy, Wilton Junction, Iowa, 1881-2. Died, Allison, Iowa, July 24, 1883. hi. William Burton. Kelsey, California. A. B.; C. E., University of Michigan, 1877; A. M., Iowa College, 1878. Born, Piketon, Pike County, Ohio, Juiy 9, 1844. Student, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1875-6. Student, University of Michigan, 1876-8. Teacher in Cali¬ fornia, 1877-9. Surveying and Civil Engineering at Kelsey, Eldorado County, California. 1879—. United States Deputy Mineral Surveyor for California, 1882—. Married, February 2, 1881, to Miss Mary Matthews, I. C. ’75. 112. Charles Davidson. Albany, New York. A. B.; A. M., Iowa College, 1878; Ph. D., Yale, 1892. Born, Streetsboro, Ohio, July 29, 1852. Student Yale University, Graduate Department, 1876-7. Tutor, Academy of Iowa College, 1877-8. Language Instructor, Mitchell Seminary, Iowa, 1878-9. Principal of Minneapolis Academy, 1879-84. Superintendent of Public Schools, The Dalles, Oregon, 1884-6. Master in English, Belmont School, Belmont, California, 1887-93. Student in English, Yale University, Graduate Department, 1891-2. Associate Professor of English, University of Indiana, 1893-4. Associate Professor of English and Rhetoric, Adelbert College of West¬ ern Reserve University, Cleveland, Ohio, 1894-6. Professor of English Literature, University of New York, Albany, New York, 1896—. Visiting Professor, Chicago University, Summer Quarter, 1895. Married, August 21, 1878, to Miss Hannah Noyes, I. C. ’78. Published: “A Few Words on the Spelling Reform,” American Journal of Education, March, 1877; “Differences between the Scribes of ‘Beo¬ wulf,’ ” Modern Language Notes, Vol. V., No. 2, Feb., 1890; “The Phonology of the Stressed Vowels of ‘Beowulf,’ ” Publications of the Modern Language Asso¬ ciation, Vol. VI., No. 3, 1891; “The Play of the Weavers of Coventry,” Modern Language Notes, Vol. VII., No. 3, March, 1892; “Concerning English Mystery Plays,” Modern Language Notes, Vol. VII,, No. 6, Tune, 1892; “Studies in the English Mystery Plays,” doctoral thesis published by Yale University, 1892; “English in the Secondary School,” School and College, Vol. 1, No. 10, December, 1892; “Review of ‘The English Religious Drama,’ by Katherine Lee Bates,” 56 Iowa College Quinquennial Modern Language Notes, Vol. IX., No. 4, April, 1894; “Mysteries, Miracle Plays, and Moralities,” Johnson’s Universal Cyclopaedia, Edition of 1896; “English in the Secondary School, with suggestions based upon the Reports of the English Conferences,” issued by the English Department, Adelbert College, Western Reserve University, 1896. 113. Joshua Eric Dodge. Department of Justice, Washington, D. C. B. S.; LL. B.. Boston University, 1877. Born, Arlington. Massachusetts, Octo¬ ber 25, 1854. Student, Law School of Boston University, 1875-7. Admitted to bar, 1877. Residence, Arlington, Massachusetts, 1875-8; Racine, Wisconsin, 1880-93; Washington, D. C., 1893—. Member of the Legislature of Wisconsin, 1891 and 1892; Chairman of the Wisconsin State Commission appointed for the purpose of promoting uniformity of legislation amongst the various states, 1892 and 1893; appointed Assistant Attorney-General of the United States, Septem¬ ber, 1893—. Delivered a course of seven lectures at Law School of Racine Col¬ lege, 1886. 114. George Washington Dungan. Otis, Colorado. B. S.; B. D., Yale, 1879. Born, Beaver County, Pennsylvania, December 31, 1848. Student, Yale Theological Seminary, 1875-9. Pastor, Congregational Churches, Fontanelle, Iowa, 1879-80; Hastings, Iowa, 1880-2; McCook, Nebraska, 1882-6; Otis, Colorado, 1886—. Married, to Miss Lucy Merrill, May 10, 1867. 115. William Edward Evans. Osborne, Kansas. B. S. Born, Reynoldsburg, Ohio, March 4, 1850, Prepared for college, Hazel Dell Academy, Newton, Iowa. Superintendent of Public Schools, Creston, Iowa, 1875-6. Practiced law, Newton, Iowa, 1877-84. Law, Real Estate, Abstract and Loan Business, Osborne, Kansas, 1885—. Married, Grinnell, Iowa, 1877, to Miss A. Rose Mason, who died September 22, 1882. Married, Louisville, Kentucky, July 24, 1886, to Miss N. Rose Simpson. 116. Marcus E. Jones. Salt Lake City, Utah. A. B.; A. M., Iowa College, 1878. Born, Jefferson, Ohio, April 25,1852. Brother of 457. Prepared for college, Academy of Iowa College. Tutor, Iowa College, 1870-7. Acting Professor Natural Science, Colorado College, 1879. Engaged in original research on the Botany and Geology of the region west of the Missouri River, 1878-96. Special expert United States Treasury for Utah, 1879-80. Special Field Agent United States Department of Agriculture, 1894. Member of State Missionary Committee of Home Missionary Society, 1895-6. Published: “Ferns of the West,” “Utah,” “Salt Lake City,” “Excursion Botanique,” “Contribu¬ tions to Western Botany,” Nos. 1-7, pp. 400. Author of many scientific articles on Geology and Botany. Married, 1880, to Miss Anna E. R. Richardson, I. C. ’78. 117. Mary Matthews (Burton). Kelsey, California. Ladies’ Course. Born near Toledo, Ohio, December 16, 1853. Teacher in Iowa and Nebraska, 1875-81. Married, February 2, 1881, to William Burton, I. C. ’75. Kelsey, California, 1881—. XVI.—CLASS OF 1876. 118. James Albert Casebeer. Boise City, Idaho. B. S. Born, Tipton, Iowa, June 5, 1850. Brother 162. Prepared for college, High School, Grinnell, Iowa. Teacher, Dayton, Nevada, 1876-80; Tipton, Iowa, 1880-1. Farmer, Radcliffe, Iowa, 1881-3; Tipton, Iowa, and Toledo, Iowa, 1883-4. The Alumni 57 Editor of Hay Springs Alert , Hay Springs, Nebraska, 1884-8. Editor of Casper Mail , and Postmaster, Casper, Wyoming. 1888-90. Boise City, Idaho, 1890—. Admitted to bar in Wyoming, and was sent as a delegate to the first Constitu¬ tional Convention and helped to frame the constitution under which Wyoming was admitted into the Union, Married, at Carson City, Nevada, April 20, 1878, to Miss Martha Ellen Loughridge, I. C, ’76. 119. Daniel Edgar Foristall. Nelson, Nebraska. A. B.; A. M., Iowa College, 1879; M. D., Chicago Homeopathic Medical Col¬ lege, 1878. Born, Fitzwilliam, New Hampshire, January 28, 18^3. Prepared for college, Academy of Iowa College. Practicing Physician, Clinton and Lyons, Iowa, 187880: Osceola, Nebraska, 1880-2; Atchison, Kansas, 1882-3; York, Nebraska, 1883-94; Nelson, Nebraska, 1894—. Coroner, York County, Nebraska, 1881-8. Member of Lity Council, York. Nebraska, 1886-90. Professor Ophthal¬ mology and Otology in the Medical Department of Cotner University, Lincoln, Nebraska, 1893-4. Married at Grinnell, Iowa, to Miss Mary Elizabeth Cutler of Boone County, Iowa, April 17, 1878. 120. Lyman Scott Keen. Bremen, Indiana. A. B.; B. D., Chicago Theological Seminary, 1879. Was in the ministry for fifteen years and now in business, Bremen, Indiana. 121. Martha Ellen Loughridge (Casebeer). Boise City, Idaho. Ladies’ Course. Born, Huntsville, Arkansas, September 17, 1851. Prepared for college, High School, Grinnell, Iowa. Residence, Grinnell, Iowa, 1876-8. Married, at Carson City, Nevada, April 20, 1878, to J. A. Casebeer, I. C. ’76. Residence, Dayton, Nevada, 1878-80; Tipton, Iowa, 1880-1; Radclifie, Iowa, 1881-3; Tipton and Toledo, Iowa, 1883-4: Hay Springs, Nebraska, 1884-8; Casper, Wyo¬ ming; 1888-90; Boise City, Idaho, 1890—. 122. Susan Pearson. Starkville, Mississippi. Ladies’ Course. Born, Starkville, Mississippi, November 14, 1850. Prepared for college, Bethlehem Academy, Elizabethtown, Kentucky, and select school at New Sharon, Iowa. Teacher, private school, Tampico, Mississippi, 1878-9. Teacher, Gainsville Female Institute, Gainsville, Alabama, 1880-3. Teacher, Grapevine, Texas, 1884-6. On the death of her sister at Starkville, Mississippi, who left four young boys with the dying request that Miss Pearson should care for them, she gave up teaching ana cared for them, 1886-90. Teacher, Public Schools, Starkville, Mississippi, 1890-—. 123. Benjamin St. John. Des Moines, Iowa. A B.; B, D., Yale Theological Seminary, 1880. Born, Walton, Delaware County, New York, December io, 1848. Prepared for college, Academy of Iowa College. Teacher and farmer, Riceville, Iowa, 1876-7. Student, Yale Theologi¬ cal Seminary, New Haven, Connecticut, 1877-80. In charge of a Home Mission¬ ary Church, Eldon, Iowa, 1880-3. Home Missionary work, Britt, Iowa, 1883-4. Pastor, North Park Church, Des Moines, Iowa, 1884—. Delegate from the Iowa State Association to the International Council (Congregational), London, 1891. Delegate from the Grinnell Association of Congregational Churches to the Na¬ tional Council in Minneapolis, Minnesota, 1892. Member Executive Committee of the Iowa Congregational Home Missionary Society, 1892—, Register of the Grinnell Association, 1887—. Married, May, 1880, at Kensington, Connecticut, to Miss Louise Upson. 124. Eugene Hartwell Taylor. Cedar Rapids, Iowa. B. S. Born, Denmark, Iowa, Oetober 23, 1853 Student, Institute of Technol¬ ogy, Boston, Massachusetts, 1876-8. Surveyor, first inhabitant, postmaster, rail- 58 Iowa College Quinquennial road agent, dealer in grain, lumber and coal, Newburg. Iowa, 1878-80. Draughts¬ man, Chicago, Illinois, 1880-82. Practicing architect in firm of Josselyn & Tay¬ lor, who were the architects for the Iowa Building at the Columbian Exposition, and now architects for the proposed Hospital for the Insane at Cherokee, Des Moines, Iowa, 1882-6; Cedar Rapids, Iowa, 1886—. Director of Y. M. C. A.; Superintendent of Sunday School, Trustee and Deacon of Church. Married, 1886, to Miss Mary M. Woodworth, sister of No. 125, a student in Iowa College, 1872-5. 125. Frank Goodrich Woodworth. Tougaloo, Mississippi. ^ A. B.; A. M., Iowa College, 1879; D. D„ Knox College, 1892. Born, Waterbury, Connecticut, December 23, 1853. Prepared for college, Hartford, Connecticut, High School, and Academy of Iowa College. Berlin, Connecticut, in the Y. M. C. A. work, and spent some time in the evangelistic work in the state which was done by the State Executive Committee of the Y. M. C. A., 1876-7. Student, Yale Divinity School, 1877-8. Grinnell, Iowa, studying and preaching, and acting pas¬ tor of the Congregational Church in Kellogg, Iowa, 1878-9. Delivered the Mas¬ ter’s Oration, Iowa College, 1879. Special student, Hartford Seminary, 1879-80. Ordained at Wolcott, Connecticut, June 23, 1880, and pastor of Congregational Church there, 1880-7. President of Tougaloo University, Tougaloo, Mississippi, one of the A. M. A. schools for colored people, 1887—. Addressed by invitation the white State Teachers’ Association on the “Kind and Scope of Education needed by the Colored Race,” 1892. Delivered an address before the World’s Fair Con¬ gress on Africa at Chicago on “Problems involved in the Education of the Afro- American,” 1893. Delegate to the First International Congregational Council at London, 1891. Married to Miss Nellie E. Upson of Kensington, Connecticut, June, 1881. XVII.—CLASS OF 1877. 126. Richard Burton Hassell. North Yakima, Washington. A. B.; A. M., Iowa College, 1890. Born, Fairplay, Wisconsin, November 3, 1853. Prepared for college, Academy of Iowa College. Principal of Schools and occasionally filled the pulpit of the Methodist Episcopal Church, Virginia City, Montana, 1877-8. City Superintendent of Schools; County Superintendent of Silver Bow County; pulpit supply of Presbyterian and Congregational churches; lecturer on educational topics; was admitted to the bar, Butte City, Montana, 1878-83. Attorney, Redfield, South Dakota, 1883-95 Pastor, Congregational Church, North Yakima, Washington, 1896—. President of the Board of Trustees of Redfield College, South Dakota, 1888—. State’s Attorney, 1889 and 1890. President of the South Dakota State Irrigation Association, 1894-6. Contributed articles to the Arena, Review of Reviews, and other publications on lines of religious and political reforms, and edited The Commonwealth during 1892. Married, 1880, to Miss Susan J. Whitcomb, I. C. ’77. 127. Carl Hess. Wilton, Iowa. A. B. Born, Giard, Iowa, April 26, 1855. Prepared for college, Academy of Iowa College. Principal of Schools, Monona, Iowa, 1887-8; Fort Atkinson, Iowa, 1878-83; Bush Creek, Iowa, 1883-4. Pastor Congregational Church, Sherrill’s Mound, Iowa, 1884-8; German Congregational Church, Davenport, Iowa, 1888-9. General Missionary among Germans for Iowa Home Missionary Society, 1889-94. Teacher and Financial Secretary, Wilton German-English College, Wilton Junc¬ tion, Iowa, 1894—. Married, 1882, at Grinnell, Iowa, to Miss Mary E. Knebel, a student in Iowa College in 1881-2. Has written religious articles for the German church paper, Der Kirchetibote , and the Sunday School paper, Segensquelle, and translated a number of Gospel Hymns from English into German. His ability to write and preach in both German and English is of great value to him in his church work. The Alumni 59 128. William Pierson Hillyer. Burlingame, Kansas. A. B. Born. Coshocton, Ohio, March 30, 1854. Prepared for college, Grinnell High School. Teacher of schools and student of law, 1877-9. Admitted to bar, Marshalltown, Iowa, 1879. Attorney, Gilman, Iowa, 1879-82. Merchant, Topeka, Kansas, 1882-92. Gave up his business and went into the minisitrv, 1892. Pastor Baptist Churches, Auburn, Kansas, 1892-3; Burlingame, Kansas, 1893—. Married to Miss Emma J. Propst, Grinnell, Iowa, 1880. 129. Herbert Sherman Huson. Tacoma, Washington. A. B. Born, Marquette County, Wisconsin, 1851. Principal, Public Schools, Breckenbridge, Missouri, 1878-9. With Central Law Journal, St. Louis, Missouri, 1879. With Kansas Pacific R. K., fall of 1879. Topographer for D. & R. G. R. R., Leadville, Colorado, winter of 1880. With D. & R. G. R. R., Salt Lake City, as resident engineer in charge of location and construction for Utah, 1880-2. With Canadian Pacific R. R., as locating engineer in Kicking Horse Pass, Rocky Mountains, 1882-3. Division engineer ana then principal assistant engineer of Northern Pacific R. R. west of Helena, with headquarters at Tacoma, Washing¬ ton, 1883-92. General Railroad and Government Contractor, Tacoma, Washing¬ ton, 1892—. Has written scientific and engineering notes for the American Soci¬ ety of Civil Engineers. Married, at Portland, Oregon, to Miss Lavina Whaley, 1892. 130. Burton Jay Merrill. Stillwater, Minnesota. B. S.; M. D., Bellevue Hospital Medical College, 1881. Born, Palmyra, War¬ ren County, Iowa, May 3, 1856. Student, Bellevue Hospital Medical College, New York City, 1877-81. Practicing Physician, Hudson, Wisconsin, 1881-2; Still¬ water, Minnesota, 1882—. Professor of Materia Medica and Therapeutics, St. Paul Medical College, 1886-8. Served as Coroner, eight years; County Physician, six years; Health Officer, ten years; Surgeon to C., St. P., M. & O. Ry., 1883—. Surgeon to St. Paul & Duluth Ry., 1893—. Attending physician to Minnesota State Prison, 1889—. 131. Caroline M. Moore, deceased . Ladies’ Course. 132. William Arthur Sloane. San Diego, California. A. B. Born, Rockford, Illinois, October 10, 1854. Studied and practiced law, Sedalia, Missouri, 1877-82. Managing editor of the Daily Banner , Carthage, Missouri, 1882-6. Practicing law, San Diego, California, 1886—■. Justice, City Court of San Diego, 1888-92. Republican candidate for Mayor of San Diego, 1895. Has done editorial work and newspaper correspondence; also delivered several addresses before religious and literary societies. 133. Joel Wilcox West. Omaha, Nebraska. B. S.; A. M., Iowa College, 1879. Born, Milwaukee County, Wisconsin, July 28, 1856. Brother of 260. Prepared for college, Academy of Iowa College. Ad¬ mitted to bar, Des Moines, Iowa, December 24,1878. Attorney, Greenfield, Iowa, 1879-81; Des Moines, Iowa, 1881-4. Coal mining business, Albia, Iowa, 1884-7. Attorney, Omaha, Nebraska, 1887—. Married, at Bentonsport, Iowa, to Miss Ida S. Cowles, I. C. ’79, November 4, 1880. 134. Susan J. Whitcomb (Hassell). North Yakima, Washington. A. B. Born, Grinnell, Iowa, 1856. Sister of 50, 89 and 293. Prepared for col¬ lege, Grinnell High School and Academy of Iowa College. Teacher, Grinnell High School, 1877-80. Married, 1880, to R. B. Hassell, I. C. ’77. Residence, Butte City, Montana, 1880-3; Redfield, South Dakota, 1883-96; North Yakima, Wash¬ ington, 1896—. Lecturer on educational subjects in County Institutes and State 6o Iowa College Quinquennial Associations. Lady Principal and Professor of English Literature, Redfield College, 1887-94. Lady Principal State University, Vermillion, South Dakota, 1895-6. XVIII.—CLASS OF 1878. 135. Albert Sturges Houston. Indianola, Nebraska. A. B.; B. D., Chicago Theological Seminary, 1882. Ordained for foreign mis¬ sionary service, March 24, 1882. Missionary, A. B. C. F. M., Ponape, Micronesia, 1882-5; Kohala, Hawaii, 1885-6. Pastor of Congregational Churches, Oakland, California, 1886-7; Fayette, Iowa, 1887-8; Gilman. Iowa, 1888-92; Clarion, Iowa, 1892-4; Indianola, Nebraska, 1895—. Married, March 22,1883, to Miss E. M. Dan- skin, Missionary A. B. C. F. M. 136. Richard Jones. Lake and Woodlawn Avenues, Albany, New York. A. B.; A. M., Iowa College, 1881; Ph. D., University of Heidelberg, Germany, 1893. Born, Berlin, Wisconsin, July 18, 1855. Prepared for college, Academy of Iowa College. Principal of Schools, Gilman, Iowa, 1878-9; Ottumwa, Iowa, 1879- 80. Principal of Guthrie County High School, Panora, Iowa, 1880-2. Principal of West Des Moines High School, Des Moines, Iowa, 1883-6. Professor of Eng¬ lish Literature, Illinois State Normal University, Normal, Illinois, 1887-91. Stu¬ dent, Oxford, England, 1891-2; Heidelberg, Munich and Dresden, Germany, 1892-4. Professor of English Literature, Swarthmore College, Swarthmore, Pennsylvania, 1894-6. Inspector of Literature, University of New York, Albany, New York, 1896—. Has written “The Ethical Element in Literature,” 1891; “The Growth of the Idylls of the King,” 1895; some pamphlets, and magazine articles. Married, at Grinnell, Iowa, December 28, 1881, to Miss Carrie Holmes Grinnell, I. C. ’80. 137. Hannah A. Noyes (Davidson). Albany, New York. A. B.; A. M., 1881. Born, Campello, Massachusetts, 1852. Sister of 155. In¬ structor, Mitchell Seminary, Mitcheilville, Iowa, 1878-9. Lady Principal and Master of Latin and History, Minneapolis Academy, 1879-84. Instructor in His¬ tory, High School, The Dalles, Oregon, 1885. Student of Economics, Graduate Department, University of Minnesota, 1886-7. Student of History, Graduate Department, University of California, 1887-8. Master in History, Belmont School, Belmont, California, 1888-93. Student in Politics and History, Graduate Department, University of Chicago, summer 1894 and summer 1895. Wrote, “A Reference History of the United States,” published by Ginn & Co. in 1892. Has also done much miscellaneous and casual literary work. Addressed the Century Club in San Francisco and the Congregational Club of Cleveland, Ohio. Mar¬ ried August 21, 1878, to Charles Davidson, I. C. ’75. 138. Anna E. R. Richardson (Jones). Salt Lake City, Utah, Ladies’ Course. Born, Orange, Massachusetts, January 16, 1853. Prepared for college, Academy of Iowa College. Acting Lady Principal, Iowa College, 1879-80. Married, 1880, to M. E. Jones, I. C. ’75. Salt Lake City, Utah, 1880—. Conductor of Kindergarten and Kindergarten Training School, private and con¬ nected with University of Utah, 1881-8. Superintendent of Chinese Mission of the American Missionary Association for Salt Lake City, 1893-6. XIX.—CLASS OF 1879. 139. Gertrude Laurinda Bailey. 713 East Fourth Street, Duluth, Minnesota. Ladies’ Course. Born, November 24, 1856, at Grinnell, Iowa. Sister of 35, 209 The Alumni 6i md 361. Teacher in Chester and for a few weeks supplied a vacancy in Iowa College, 1879-80. Teacher in Public Schools of Grinnell, Iowa, 1880-1. Teacher n Neosho Falls, Kansas, 1882-3. Resided in Grinnell, Iowa, 1883-93, and 1895-6. Arsons, Kansas, 1893-4. Duluth, Minnesota, 1896—. [40. Ella Baker (Austin). Des Moines, Iowa. A. B. Born, Volga City, Iowa. June 27, 18^9. Prepared for college, Grinnell digh School and Academy of Iowa College. Teacher, Chester, Iowa, 1879-80. reacher, Academy of Iowa College, 1880-1. Teacher, High School, Rochester, Minnesota, 1881-2. Married, August, 1882, to Charles H. Austin who is in the unploy of the Bradstreet Company. Resided in Rochester, Minnesota, 1882-4; Sioux City, Iowa, 1884-93; Des Moines, Iowa, 1893—. (41. Ida S. Cowles (West). Omaha, Nebraska. Ladies’ Course. Born, Bentonsport, Iowa, January 3, 1859, Prepared for col- ege, Denmark Academy and Academy of Iowa College. Married, November 4, 880, at Bentonsport. Iowa, to J. W. West, I. C. ’77. Greenfield, Iowa, 1880-1; )es Moines, Iowa, 1881-4; Albia, Iowa, 1884-7; Omaha, Nebraska, 1887—. 42. John Lawrence Greer. San Francisco, California. A. B.; A. M. Born, 1854. Prepared for college, High School, Davenport, owa. Attorney at Law, Des Moines, Iowa, 1879-84; Highmore, Dakota, 1884-90; ian Francisco, California, 1890—. Married, at San Francisco, California, 1893. 43. Newton Fremont Hawley. 313 Nicollet Avenue, Minneapolis, Minnesota. A. B.; A. M. 1882. Born, Springdale, Iowa, November 28, 1859. Prepared for ollege, Tipton High School and Academy of Iowa College. Teacher, Des domes, Iowa, 1879-80. Principal of schools, Quasqueton, Iowa, spring of 1880. nstructor in History and Mathematics, Minneapolis Academy, Minneapolis, Minnesota, 1880-1. Student of law, 1881-3. Admitted to bar, 1883. Practicing aw in firm of Hahn & Hawley, Minneapolis, 1884—. President of the Six Tclock Club, an organization for the consideration of municipal affairs in the :ity. Married to Miss Ellen M. Field, Minneapolis, September 5, 1884. 44. Edward Beach Howell. Butte, Montana. , B. S.; A. M., Iowa College, 1882; LL. B., State University of Iowa, 1882. Born, .enterville, Iowa, September 22, 1857. Prepared for college. Academy of Iowa .ollege. Superintendent of Schools, Butte, Montana, 1882-4. Attorney, Grin- tell, Iowa, 1884-5. Student, Andover Theological Seminary, 1885-6. Pastor, lalleck, California, 1886-9. Pastor Congregational Church, Butte, Montana, 893—. Has contributed articles to the New Englander and Yale Review and Review of Reviews. Married, to Miss Estina Wylie, August 2, 1883. 45 - LeBaron James Kasson. 213 Fifth Street, Des Moines, Iowa. B. S.; LL. B., State University of Iowa, 1880. Born, Almoral, Iowa, February , 1856. Brother of 104. Prepared for college, Academy of Iowa College. Stu- ent, Law Department, University of Iowa, 1879-80. Real Estate Dealer, Des loines, Iowa, 1880-90. Real Estate and Mining, Carthage, Missouri, 1890-2. Insurance, Kansas City, 1892-4. Manager of Commercial Life Association, )es Moines, Iowa, 1894—. Married, at Marshalltown, Iowa, April 20, 1882, to Miss Mary McFarland. 46. Hannibal Benjamin Kershaw, deceased. A' I° wa College, 1882. He took the early part of his college course t the University of South Carolina and when Professor Brewer left that institu- 62 Iowa College Quinquennial tion for the chair of Greek in Iowa College, Mr. Kershaw accompanied him. Teacher, Society Hill, South Carolina. 1879-82. At the same time he pursued a course of theological reading under the direction of the Methodist Conference and was preaching as a licentiate. Ordained and assigned to the Methodist Church (colored) at Beaufort, South Carolina, January, 1883. Died of consump¬ tion at Florence, South Carolina, May 8, 1883. 147. Magdalena Lindemann (Ward). Centralia, Virginia. Ladies’ Course. Born, Eisendorf, province of Holstein, Germany, May 26, 1851. Residence, Oak Park and Batavia, Illinois, 1879-81. Governess and Com¬ panion, Newton Center, Massachusetts, 1881-4. Teacher and Matron in Board¬ ing School, West Newton, Massachusetts, 1884-5. Matron and Missionary in A. M. A. School for Indians, Oahe, South Dakota, 1885-90. Married to A. Ward, farmer, 1890. Residence, Oahe, South Dakota, 1890-2; Centralia, Virginia, 1892—. 148. Charles Sumner Little. Bayside, California. B. S.: A. M., 1888. Born, Lenox, Massachusetts, November 2,1856. Teaching and Scientific Work, Colorado, 1881-3. Civil engineering and railroad work in Utah and California, 1883-5. Principal of Schools, Bayside, California, 1885-95. Mining, Bayside, California, 1895—. Has written short stories for publication, and given occasional addresses. 149. George Bronson McGuin. Grinnell, Iowa. B. S.; A. M., Iowa College, 1882: M. D., State University of Iowa, 188L Born, Sackett’s Harbor, New York, September 1. 1855. Prepared for college, Academy of Iowa College. County Superintendent of Schools, Fremont County, Canon City, Colorado, 1881-2. Physician and Surgeon, Grinnell, Iowa. 1883-4; North Branch, Minnesota, 1884-6; Brooklyn, Iowa, 1886-8. Druggist, Grinnell, Iowa, 1888—. Married, to Miss Emelia Olson, Minneapolis, Minnesota, October 12,1886. 150. Herbert William Magoun. Oberlin, Ohio. A. B.; A. M., Iowa College, 1882; Ph. D., Johns Hopkins University. 1890. Born, February 17, 1856. Prepared for college, Worcester, Massachusetts, and Academy of Iowa College. Assistant Principal High School, Oskaloosa, Iowa, 1879-80. Principal, Grammar School, Bath, Maine, 1880-1. Tutor, Iowa College, 1881-4. Life Insurance with the Connecticut General Life Insurance Company of Hartford, Connecticut, at Storm Lake, Iowa, 1884-5. Student, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, Maryland, 1886-7. Fellow, Johns Hopkins University, 1887-8; Fellow by Courtesy of Johns Hopkins University, 1888 qo. Acting Pro¬ fessor of Greek, Colorado College, Colorado Springs, 1890-1. Assistant in the New Book Department and McCoy Library, Johns Hopkins University, 1891-2. Acting Professor of Greek, Oberlin College, Oberlin, Ohio, 1802-3. Acting Pro¬ fessor of Latin, Oberlin College, 1893-5. Literary work done: ,r The Asuri-Kalpa; a witchcraft practice of the Atharva-Veda” (American Journal of Philology , 66, July, 1889); “Witchcraft among the Hindus” (Colorado College Studies, No. 2, (June, 1891); and many articles in Proceedings of American Philological Asso¬ ciation, School Review , etc. Married, June 8, 1892, to Miss Martha R. Mann, A. B., Wellesley, 1885. (Mrs. Magoun was a special student at Zurich, Switzer¬ land, 1886-7; Teacher in Botany, Wellesley College, 1887-8; Special student. Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1888-9; Acting Professor of Botany ana Biology, Colorado College, 1890-1.) 151. Mary Robbins Magoun (Raymond), deceased. Ladies’ Course. Born, Davenport, Iowa, July 5, 1858. Sister of 94, and daughter of President George F. Magoun. Prepared for college, Academy of Iowa College. Student of music, Boston, Massachusetts, 1880-1. Teacher in the Le Moyne Institute, under the A. M. A., Memphis, Tennessee, 1882-3. Contrib¬ uted articles for the Chicago Advance , the Congregationalist of Boston, and on the editorial staff of the Iowa State Register , Des Moines, Iowa, for several The Alumni 63 years prior to 1884. Visited in Boston and eastern states, 1884-5. Married, at Grinnell, Iowa, April 9, 1885, to N. B. Raymond, Attorney at Law, Des Moines, Iowa. Reported the Chautauqua Assembly at Colfax, Iowa, several years. Member of the Woman’s Ciub of Des Moines since its organization. Also very active member of the Woman’s Foreign Missionary Society of the Methodist Church. Died of heart disease, Des Moines, Iowa, October 13, 1895. 152. Richard Alexander Matthews. Chicago, Illinois. A. B.; A. M., Iowa College, 1882. Born, Jasper County, Iowa. Prepared for college, Academy of Iowa College. Superintendent of Public Instruction, Jas¬ per County, Iowa, 1879-84. Editorial staff, Iowa Capital, Des Moines, Iowa, 1884-6. Editorial staff, Orange Judd Farmer, Chicago, Illinois, 1886 96. Journal¬ ist and Advertising Agent for several publications, 1896—. Married, June 16, 1892, to Miss Dorathe Jenson of Chicago, who died July, 1894. Contributed extensively to the editorial departments of many journals, his work being largely along agricultural lines. 153. Anna Dearborn Merrill. Des Moines, Iowa. A. B.; A. M., Iowa College, 1883. Bom, Tamworth (now Chocorua), New Hampshire, July 31, 1858. Sister of 154. Prepared for college, Des Moines, Iowa. Teacher of Greek, Academy of Iowa College, 1879. Student of Greek, German and Music, Boston, Massachusetts, 1882-3. Instructor in Latin, Callanan Col¬ lege, Des Moines, Iowa, 1883-8. Residence, Des Moines, 1888—. Assists her father in his work as Treasurer of the Iowa Congregational Home Missionary Society. 154. Samuel Adams Merrill. Des Moines, Iowa. B. S.; A. M., Iowa College, 1882. Born Tamworth, New Hampshire, June 8. 1856. Brother of 153. Prepared for college, High School. McGregor, Iowa. Teller, Citizens’ National Bank, Des Moines, Iowa, 1879-88. Treasurer, Security Loan and Trust Company, Des Moines, 1888-96; Secretary of same, 1896—. Mar¬ ried, September 23, 1882, to Miss Fannie R. Hyde, a former member of the class of ’79. 155. William Albert Noyes. Terre Haute, Indiana. A. B.; B. S.; A. M., Iowa College, 1882; Ph. D., Johns Hopkins University, 1882. Born, Independence, Iowa, November 6, 18^7. Brother of 137. Prepared for college, private study and Academy of Iowa College Tutor, Academy of Iowa College, 1879-80. Instructor in Chemistry, Iowa College, fall of 1881. Graduate student, Johns Hopkins University, 1881-2. In employ of the National Board of Health, Baltimore, Maryland, summer of 1881. Instructor in Chemistry, Uni¬ versity of Minnesota, Minneapolis, 1882-3, Professor of Chemistry, University of Tennessee, Knoxville, 1883-6. Professor of Chemistry, Rose Polytechnic In¬ stitute, Terre Haute, Indiana, 1886—. Studied in Germany on leave of absence in 1889. Married. December, 1884, to Miss Flora E. Collier, a former student in Iowa College in the class of ’83. President of the Indiana Academy of Science, 1894. Vice-President of Section C of the American Association for the Advance¬ ment of Sciences, 1896. Has published: “Elements of Qualitative Analysis,” 1887; and the following papers on Science topics: “On the Oxidation of Benzene Derivatives with Potassium Ferricyanide,” six papers, American Chemical Journal 1884-89; “The Atomic Weight of Oxygen,” American Chemical Journal 1889^90; “Ueber die Succinylobernsteinsaure,” with Professor A. V. Baeyer, Berichte der Deutschen Chcmischen Gesellschaft , 1889; “On the Nitrites of Some Amines,” three papers, American Chemical Journal, 1892-4; “The Deter¬ mination of Phosphorus in Steel,” two papers, Journal of the American Chem¬ ical Society, 1894-5; “Camphoric Acid,” three papers, American Chemical Jour¬ nal and Berichte der Deutschen Chemischen Gesellschaft , 1894-5; A number of other papers of minor importance. 6 \ Iowa College Quinquennial 156. Frederick Watson Reed. New York Life Building, Minneapolis, Minnesota. A. B. Born, Fowler, Ohio, November 7, 1853. Brother of 33, 157 and 256. Prepared lor college, Academy of Iowa College. Principal of schools, Deer Lodge, Montana, 1879-80. Principal of West Side School, Helena, Montana, 1880-1. Mercantile business, Montana, 1881-4. Studying and practicing law, Minneapolis, Minnesota, 1885—. Married, at Cincinnati, Ohio, to Miss Selina Brown, December 30, 1891. 157. Georgiana Reed (Demarest). 5622 Ellis Avenue, Chicago, Illinois. A. B. Born, Fowler, Ohio, May 13, 18^2. Sister of 33, 156 and 256. Prepared for college, Academy of Iowa College. Teacher, Ottumwa, Iowa, 1879-81. Mar¬ ried, 1884, to Rev. S. B. Demarest, pastor Congregational Church, Baldwin, Michigan, who died August 14, 1887. Residence, Baldwin, Michigan, 1884-6; Waupaca, Wisconsin, 1886-7. Stenographer, Chicago, Illinois, 1890. Living at home and proof reader, Chicago, 1890—. 158. Albert Shaw. New York City. A. B.; A. M., Iowa College, 1882; Ph. D., Johns Hopkins University, 1884. Born, Butler County, Ohio, July 23, 1857. Prepared for college in the local schools and under a private tutor. Partner in the editing and publishing of the Grinnell Herald , and carrying on studies in History under Professor Macy, 1879 82. Graduate student in History and Political Science, Johns Hopkins University, 1881-4. Editor-in-chief of the Minneapolis Daily Tribune , 1884-8 and 1889-90. Traveling and studying in Europe, 1888-9. Appointed Professor of Political Institutions and International Law, Cornell University, 1890. This ap¬ pointment, together with calls to several college and university professorships, was declined in order to enter upon the establishment of the American Review of Reviews, which was done in 1891. President, Treasurer and General Manager of the publishing company of the Review of Reviews and also editor of the magazine, 1891—. Prepared a paper on the Development of Local Government in the West, which was published as a monograph by the Johns Hopkins Uni¬ versity and which also appeared in the Fortnightly Review , 1881. This paper was prepared at the suggestion of Professor James Bryce and the results of this with other work were used largely by Professor Bryce in the preparation of cer¬ tain chapters in his “American Commonwealth.” Published: “The Growth of Internationalism” in the International Review , 1883; “Icaria, a Chapter in the History of Communism,” published by Messrs. Putnam of New York, 1884, and in a German translation in Germany, 1886; “Co-operation in a Western City,” published as a monograph by the American Economic Association, and later published by the Johns Hopkins University as a part of a large volume on the history of industrial co-operation in the United States, 1886; “The National Revenues,” published by A. C. McClurg & Co., Chicago, to which many eminent American economists contributed brief chapters, 1888. Made special studies in Europe of the administration of European cities, 1888. Published a large num¬ ber of articles on American Constitutional and Legislative Questions in the Contemporary Review. The result of these studies of municipal questions abroad was a series of papers which appeared in the Century Magazine. Since 1891 in addition to the large amount of writing required as editor of the Review of Reviews, has contributed articles to other periodicals, including the Atlantic Monthly , the Century, the Forum , Scribner's, the Outlook , etc. His most im¬ portant publications in book form are two volumes entitled “Municipal Govern¬ ment in Great Britain,” 1894; and “Municipal Government in Continental Europe,” 1895, published in America by the Century Company and in England by T. Fisher Unwin. For this work in municipal government, he was awarded the John Marshall prize by the Johns Hopkins University in 1895. Several sub¬ sequent trips to Europe aided in the preparation of these books. Has given courses of lectures on municipal government in Europe, Johns Hopkins Univer¬ sity, and University of Michigan. Member of the American Historical Associa¬ tion and American Economic Association from the founding of those two bodies. Fellow of American Statistical Society, and connected with various other soci¬ eties and organizations of similar character. Alumni member of the Board of Trustees of Iowa College, 1887-96. Married, September, 1893, to Miss Elizabeth L. Bacon of Reading, Pennsylvania. The Alumni 65 XX.—CLASS OF 1880. 159. Warren Carter Baker. Bismarck, North Dakota. A. B.; A. M., Iowa College, 1883 Born, Petaluma, California, August 14,1855. Brother of 181. Prepared for college, Iowa Agricultural College, Ames, Iowa, and Academy of Iowa College. Managing editor of the Daily Herald , Grand Forks, North Dakota, 188795. Editor ot North Dakota Farmer, ,1895. Special correspondent of eastern press for eight years. Held clerical positions in sever¬ al legislative sessions. Secretary of Board of Directors of State Normal Schools, and of State Board ot University and School Lands, 1895—. Deputy State Super¬ intendent of Public Instruction for North Dakota, 1895—. Manager of the Na¬ tional Educational Association for North Dakota, and has charge of educational departments in several publications in the state. Staff correspondent of Minne¬ apolis Journal. With the Daily Herald he was one of the strongest forces that prevented the Louisiana Lottery from getting a hold in North Dakota. 160. Harvey Silas Bliss. Grinnell, Iowa. A. B. Born, Grinnell, Iowa, January, 1857. Brother of 174. Prepared for college. Academy of Iowa College. Teacher in country schools, 1881-3. En¬ gaged in farming, 1881—. 161. Ada A. Bulis. Decorah, Iowa. Ladies’ Course. Born, Decorah, Iowa, October 29,1859. Prepared for college. Decorah Public Schools and Toledo High School, Toledo, Ohio. Teacher and Principal, High School, Decorah, Iowa, 188190. Teacher, Spearhsh, South Dakota, 1892-3; Decorah, Iowa, 1893—. 162. Charles Sumner Casebeer, deceased. B. S. Born, Tipton, Iowa, October 6, 1862. Brother of 118. Entered Iowa Agricultural College, 1874, where he studied ^wo and one-had years, teaching during the winters. Entered Iowa College, 1877. Principal of Public Schools, Emmetsburg, Iowa. 1880-1. Resided in Nebraska, teaching and farming, 1881- 94. Becoming convinced of the truth of the Adventist doctrine, he became a minister in that communion. Married, to Miss Julia Eva Morris of Hay Springs, Nebraska, September 6, 1887. Died, August 30, 1894, at Hay Springs, Nebraska. 163. Carrie Holmes Grinnell (Jones). Lake and W'oodlawn Avenues, Albany, New York. Ladies’ Course. Born, Grinnell, Iowa, April 2, 1859. Sister of 176. Prepared for college, High School, Grinnell. Married at Grinnell, December 28, 1881, to Richard Jones, I. C. ’78. Residence, Panora, Iowa, 1881-3; Des Moines, Iowa, 1883-6: Normal. Illinois, 1887-91; Oxford, England, 1891-2; Munich, Dresden, Heidelberg, Germany, 1892-4; Swarthmore, Pennsylvania, 1894-6; Albany, New York, 1896—. Has written papers for Literature Club (Dante), and some descriptive letters from Europe t r home newspapers. Studied Music and Art in Germany, and attended some lectures in the Universities of Heidelberg and Oxford. 164. Clark Morrison Hamilton. New Haven, Connecticut. A. B. Civil Engineer; Assistant Engineer, N. Y. N. H. & H. R. R., 1887-90. Division Engineer, same, 1890—. 165. Harriette Susan Kellogg. Glencoe, Minnesota. A. B.; A. M., Iowa College, 1883. Born, Grinnell, Iowa, i860. Sister of 265. Assistant and Principal of High Schools in Grinnell, Montezuma, Shenandoah, and Marengo, Iowa, and Grand Forks, North Dakota, 1^80-93. Instructor in Latin and Literature in Stevens Seminary, Glencoe, Minnesota, 1893—. 66 Iowa College Quinquennial 166. Charlotte Idelette Martin. 709 Princeton Street, Ottawa, Kansas. Ladies’ Course. Born, West Grove, Iowa, October 29, 1856. Prepared for college, High School. Grinnell. Iowa. Housekeeper and teacher, Waverly, Kan¬ sas, 1880-4; Ottawa, Kansas, 1884—. Has written a number of articles in connec¬ tion with the offices of Secretary and President of the Y. P. S. C. E. and W. M. S. of the presbyterial and synodical societies of the Presbyterian Church. 167. Henry Asa Phelps. Colegrove, California. A. B.; A. M., Iowa College, 1883. Born, Addison, Wisconsin, August 27, 1852. Prepared for college, Academy of Iowa College. Teacher, Mitchell, South Da¬ kota, 1880-3; Yankton, South Dakota, 1883-8. Rancher, Colegrove, Los Angeles County, California, 1888—. Married April 8, 1895, at Colegrove, California, to Miss Alice B. Chafee of Hartford, Connecticut. 168. Edward Sallenbach. Clatonia, Nebraska. A. B.; A. M., Iowa College, 1883. Born, Switzerland, January 19,1851. Broth¬ er of 169. Pastor German Methodist Episcopal Church, Harrison, Kansas, 1880- 82; West Point, Nebraska, 1882-4; Osce la, Nebraska, 1884-7. Presiding Elder, Nebraska District West German Conference, with residence at Lincoln, Nebras¬ ka, 1887-91. Pastor, Kansas City, Kansas, 1891-5; Clatonia, Nebraska, 1896—. 169. Emil Frederich Sallenbach. Des Moines, Iowa. A. B.; A. M., 1883. Brother of 168. Attorney at Law, Des Moines, Iowa. 170. Gilbert LeRoy Shull. Baxter, Iowa. A. B.; B. D., Chicago Theological Seminary, 1880-3. Born, Canton, New York, August 1, 1853. Prepared for college, Academy of Iowa College. Student, Chi¬ cago Theological Seminary, 1880-3. Correctionville and Moville, Iowa, four months in 1882. Pastor, Congregational Church, Ivanhoe, Illinois, 1882-90; Har¬ lan, Iowa, 1890-1; Eagle Grove, Iowa, 1891-4; Baxter, Iowa, 1894—. Married, at Almoral, Iowa, to Miss Mattie A. Seger, September 13, 1883. 171. Ida Stevens (Miles). Grinnell, Iowa. Ladies’ Course. Born, Bath, New Hampshire, March 16, 1858. Prepared for college, Grinnell Public Schools and Academy of Iowa College. Teacher, Public Schools, Grinnell, Iowa, 1881-9. Married to William Miles, Banker and Manu¬ facturer, June 16, 1886. Residence, Grinnell, Iowa, 1880—. 172. Clara G. Vanderveer (MacDonald). Grinnell, Iowa Ladies’ Course. Born, near Grinnell, Iowa, August 21, 1861. Prepared for college, Academy of Iowa College. Teacher, Public Schools, Grinnell, Iowa, 1881-5. Student, Wellesley College, 1886-7. Teacher, High School, Brimfield, Massachusetts. 1887-90. Married, August 6, 1891, to Ronald MacDonald, one of the editors and proprietors of the Grinnell Herald. Residence, Grinnell, Iowa 1891—. XXI—CLASS OF 1881. 173. Achbor Jehu Baker. Grafton, West Virginia. B. S.; A. M., Iowa College, 1884; M. D., University of Michigan, 1886. Born, Barbour County, Wc ;-t Virginia, August 30, 1853. Brother of 96. Prepared for college in the Grinnell High School and Academy of Iowa College. Teacher in The Alumni 67 High School, Butte City, Montana, 1881-2. Principal of High School, Helena, Montana, 1882-3. Student in Medical Department, University of Michigan, 1883-6. Practicing physician, teacher of Vocal Music at Mallalieu University, and lecturer on Sanitary Science, Bartley, Nebraska, 1886-8. Practicing physi¬ cian, teacher in Medical Colleges of Denver, and taking graduate work, Denver, Colorado, 1888-95. Practicing physician and making special study of surgery, gynecology and nervous diseases, Grafton, West Virginia, 1895—. He has given a course of lectures on Sanitary Science in the schools of Grafton, and written many articles lor Medical, Educational and Literary Journals. Married to Miss Charity Alley of Greensburg, Indiana, January 3, 1890. 174. Edwin Clarence Bliss. Grinnell, Iowa. A. B.; M. D., Rush Medical College, Chicago, 1885. Born, Grinnell, Iowa, August 17, 1839. Brother of 160. Student of Medicine, Chicago, 1881-5. Assist¬ ant physician at Hospital for Insane, with Dr. Gershom H. Hill, I. C. ’71, Inde¬ pendence, Iowa, 1885-8. Practicing physician, Windom, Kansas, 1888-93; Grin¬ nell, Iowa, 1893—. Married to Miss Jessie VV. Meeteer of Little River. 'Kansas, January 15, 1890. Is pension examiner and city health officer at Grinnell. 175. Parke Buckley. Strawberry Point, Iowa. B. S. Born, Strawberry Point, Iowa, July 10, 1856. Farmer. Married, Grin¬ nell. Iowa, December 30,1885, to Miss Nettie Williams, who died January 29, 1889. 176. Mary C. Grinnell (Mears). 53 Ten Broeck Street, Albany, New York. Ladies’ Course. Born, Grinnell, Iowa, September 24. 1837. Sister of 163. Prepared for college, Academy of Iowa College. Married, September 6, 1882, to Rev. Dr. David O. Mears, who is now pastor of the Fourth Presbyterian Church, Albany, New York. Residence, Grinnell, Iowa, 1881-2; Worcester, Massachu¬ setts, 1882-93; Cleveland. Ohio, 1893-5; Albany, New York, 1895—. Has given many addresses in different cities on missionary and philanthropic work. In Cleveland was a member of the Woman’s Press Club of Northern Ohio, which office involved the duty of writing a good deal for different papers. Hon. E. A. Goodnow conditioned his gift of five thousand dollars toward the building of the Cottage on the condition that it should bear the name ‘ Mary Grinnell Mears.” (Dr. Mears delivered an addiess before the Literary Societies of Iowa College in 1882, and another in 1885 at the laying of the corner stone of the Library build¬ ing.— Hon. E. A. Goodnow, the donor of the building, is a resident of Worcester, Massachusetts, in which city Dr. Mears was pastor of the Piedmont Congrega¬ tional Church.—Dr. Mears has published: “The Life of E. N. Kirk, D. D.;” “Oberlin Lectures;” “The Pulpit and the Pew;” “Inspired by Suffering.” He received the degree of Doctor of Divinity from Iowa College of which he was elected President in 1885.) Mr. and Mrs. Mears secured of parishioners in Piedmont Congregational Church $800 for the purchase of books and $500 from Hon. William Hyde for a similar purchase. These books, selected by Dr. Mears, are now in the Library of Iowa College. 177. George Frederick Hill. San Francisco, California. A. B. Born, Savanna, Illinois, August 4, 1854. Brother of 71 and 72. Pre- E ared for college. Academy of Iowa College. Teacher, High School, Yankton, Dakota, 1881-2. Financial Agent for Iowa College, 1882-3 Real Estate Dealer, Des Moines, Iowa, 1883-6; Los Angeles, California, 1886-8. Real Estate and Banking, San Francisco, California, 1889—. 178. Harriet Florence James. 4 * 3/4 Olive Street, Kansas City, Missouri. A. B. Born, Scott County, Iowa, January 15, 1859. Sister of 93. Prepared for college, Grinnell High School and Academy of Iowa College. Teacher, Scott County, 1881-2; High School, Streator, Illinois, 1882-3; Poweshiek County, Iowa, 1883-3; High School, Avoca, Iowa, 1885-6. Stenographer for Craver, Steele and 68 Iowa College Quinquennial Austin, Grinnell, 1887-91, and Harvey. Illinois, 1891*2. Stenographer for M. Aus¬ tin, I. C. ’65, in the office of the Plano Manufacturing Company, Chicago, Illi¬ nois, 1892-3. Stenographer in the branch office of the Plano Manufacturing Com¬ pany, Kansas City, Missouri, 1893—. 179. Samuel Alexander Martin. Rowen, Iowa. A. B.; A. M., Iowa College, 1884; B. D., Chicago Theological Seminary, 1884. Born, Birmingham, Oakland Countv, Michigan, July 21. 1850. Prepared for college, Academy of Iowa College. Pastor, Congregational Churches, Vancleve and LaMoille, Iowa, 1884-90; Rowen and Galt, Iowa, 1890—. Married, at Mar¬ shalltown, Iowa, September 24, 1891, to Miss Amanda Dobson. XXII.—CLASS OF 1882. 180. Asa Lee Ames. Traer, Iowa. B. S.: A. M., Iowa College, 1885. Born, Buckingham Township, Tama County, Iowa, July 2. 1859. Prepared for college, Buckingham High School, Coe College, Cedar Rapids, and Grinnell. Iowa. Farmer, 1 raer, Iowa. 1882—. Married, at Iowa Falls, December 28, 1882, to Miss May Wilde, who died August 13. 1892. Married, at Des Moines, Iowa, January 31, 1894, to Miss Harriet D. Ray, 1 . C. ’82. 181. Henry Rolfe Baker. 70 Florence Street, Worcester. Massachusetts. A. B.; A. M., Iowa Co ! lege. 188;; B. D., Yale University, 1886. Born, Canter¬ bury, New Hampshire, November 8, 1837. Brother of 159. Prepared for college, Iowa State Agricultural College, Ames, Iowa, and Academy of Iowa College. Teacher in High School, Hampton, Iowa, and pu.pit supply of Congregational Churches. 1882-3. Pastor, Congregational Church, Janesville, Minnesota, 1887. Acting Pastor, Second Congregational Church, Hebron. Connecticut, 1888-9. Graduate student, Andover Theological Seminary, 1889-90. Graduate student, Harvard Divinity School, 1890-91. Pulpit supply in New England churches, 1891-2. Acting pastor. First Congregational Church, Crawford, Nebraska, 1892-3; Pilgrim Congregational Church, Durand, Wisconsin. 1893-4. Student in Philos¬ ophy, Psychology and Pedagogy, Clark University, Worcester, Massachusetts, 1894-5; Honorary Fellow in the same subjects, Clark University, 1895-6. 182. Dana Webster Bartlett. Los Angeles, California. A. B.; A. M., Iowa College, 1885; B. D.. Chicago Theological Seminary, 1887. Born, Bangor, Maine, October 12, i860. Principal of Park Academy, Park City, Utah, in charge of the New West Education Commission, 1882-4. Student, Yale Theological Seminary. 1884-6. Student, Chicago Theological Seminary, 1886-7. Pastor of Union Congregational Church, St. L mis, Missouri, 1887-91. Pastor of Congregational Church, Salt Lake City, Utah, 1891-6. Pastor, Bethlehem Con¬ gregational Church. Los Angeles, California, 1896—. Secretary of the Charity Organization of Salt Lake City, 1888-90. Trustee of Salt Lake College, 1894-6. Married, in 1883, to Miss Mattie B. McCullough, graduate of Washburn College, Topeka, Kansas. ’83, and teacher in Arizona and New Mexico in the schools of the New West Education Commission, 1883-7. 183. Rhoda O. Beard (Rand). Salt Lake City, Utah. A. B.; A. M., Iowa College, 1885. Born, Hardin County, Iowa, 1857. Sister of 227 and 363. Prepared for college, Academy of Iowa College. Teacher, Grinnell, Iowa, 1882-3; Coalville. Utah, 1883-6; Grinnell, Iowa, 1886-7; Hooper, Utah. 1887-8. Married in 1888, at Salt Lake City, Utah, to C. A. Rand. Residence, Salt Lake City, Utah, 1888—. The Alumni 69 184. Edith Cora Buck. Cedar Falls, Iowa. A. B. Born, Oberlin, Ohio. Sister of 295 and337. Prepared for college, Acad¬ emy of Iowa College. Teacher, Wilton Academy, Iowa, 1882-3; Public Schools, Grinnell, Iowa, 1883-8; Cresco, Iowa, 1888-91; LaCrosse, Wisconsin, 1891-2; State Normal, River Falls, Wisconsin, 1893-4. Student, Normal School, Oswego, New York, 1894-5. Teacher, Iowa State Normal School, Cedar Falls, Iowa, 1896—. 185. William Franklin Buck. Superior, Nebraska. A. B.; A. M., Iowa College, 1892. Born, Hillsborough, Ohio, October, 1853. Prepared for college, Academy of Iowa College. Residence, Grinnell, Iowa, 1882-4. Superintendent of Schools, Superior, Nebraska, 1884-8. Attorney, Su¬ perior, Nebraska, 1888—. Married, December 29, 1887, to Miss Laura Talmage Vincent. 186. Henry Elmore Downer. Davenport, Iowa. A. B. Local Editor, Democrat-Gazette , Davenport. Iowa. Principal of Ward School, Davenport, Iowa, 1889-96. Advance Agent for Andrews’ Opera Company, 1896-. 187. Annie May Easton (Mills). Fifteenth Street, Des Moines, Iowa. Ladies’ Course. Born, Cleveland, Ohio, t86o. Married to Fleasant J. Mills. Residence, Des Moines, Iowa, 1882—. 188 Martin Luther Eaton, deceased. A. B.; A. M., Iowa College, 1885; M. D., University of Michigan, 1885. Born, Salem, Michigan, November 12, 1857. Brother of 212. Prepared for college, Academy of Tabor College, Tabor. Iowa. Student, Medical Department Uni¬ versity of Michigan, President and Valedictorian of his class, 1882 5. Physician, Fairbury, Nebraska, 1886-94. He served as a staff officer in the War of the Ghost Dance in the Bad Lands, 1890-1; was with the Governor of Nebraska as one of his staff at the opening of the World’s Fair, Chicago. Married, at Lynn Center, Illinois, August 26, 1886, to Miss Marjorie McKillop, a student in Iowa College, 1880-2. It was his devotion to his work in care for others that cost him his life. He died of la grippe and pneumonia, at Fairbury, Nebraska, February 18, 1894. 189. Clara Emerson (Hart). Franklin, Nebraska. Ladies Course. Born, Sabula, Iowa, November 15, 1861. Sister of 97 and 190. Prepared for college, Clinton High School, Clinton, Iowa. Teacher, Public Schools, Sabula, Iowa, 1882-4; Grinnell, Iowa, 1884-7. Married, Grinnell, Iowa, June, 1887. to Alexis C. Hart. I. C. ’74. Residence, Knoxville, Iowa, 1887-8. Franklin, Nebraska, 1888—. Teacher, Franklin Academy, 1891-2. 190. Oliver Farrar Emerson. Cleveland, Ohio. A. B.; A. M., Iowa College, 1885; Ph. D., Cornell University, 1881. Bom, Wolf’s Creek, Iowa, May 24, i860. Brother of 97 and 189. Prepared for college, Denmark Academy, Denmark, Iowa. Superintendent of Schools, Grinnell. Iowa, 1882-4. Superintendent of Schools, Muscatine, Iowa, 1884-5. Principal of Acad¬ emy of Iowa College, 1885-8. Goldwin Smith fellow in English, Cornell Univer¬ sity, Ithaca, New York, 1888-9; Instructor in same, 1889-91. Assistant Professor of Rhetoric and English Philology, same, 1891-6. Professor of English Litera¬ ture in Adelbert College, Western Reserve University, Cleveland, Ohio, 1896—. Married, to Miss Annie Laurie Logan, ot St. Louis, Missouri, September 24,1891. Author of “History of the English Language” (1894), and of articles in Modern Language Notes , The Dial % Poet Lore , The Nation , The Chautauquan , The Academy (Syracuse), School Review , Publications of the Modern Language Association, articles in Johnson’s Universal Cyclopaedia, editor of Johnson’s Rasselas (1895). 70 Iowa College Quinquennial 191. Lillian Frisbie (Whicher). Brooklyn, New York. Ladies’ Course. Born, Ansonia, Connecticut, i860. Sister of 320. Prepared for college, Rockford Seminary, Rockford, Illinois. Teacher, Des Moines, Iowa, 1883- 5. Student, Wellesley College, 1885-6. Married in 1887 to G. M. Whicher, I. C. ’82. Residence, Hastings, Nebraska, 1887-8; Grinnell, Iowa, 1888-9; Law- renceville, New Jersey, 1889-92; Brooklyn, New York, 1892—. 192. John Nathan Greer. 2629 Pleasant Avenue, Minneapolis, Minnesota. A. B.; B. S.; A. M., Iowa College, 1885. Born in Scott County, Iowa, April 17, 1859. Student of Law, Davenport, Iowa, 1882-4. Principal, Grammar School, Davenport, Iowa, 1884-8; North High School, Minneapolis, Minnesota, 1888-92; Center High School, Minneapolis, 1892—. Married at Davenport, Iowa, Novem¬ ber 7, 1883, to Miss S. Elizabeth Russell. 193. Frederick Henry Harvey. Douglas, Wyoming. B. S. Born ; Anamosa, Iowa, September 7, 1858. Prepared for college, Acad¬ emy of Iowa College. Attorney-at-law, and Stockgrower, Douglass, Wyoming, 1882—. Prosecuting attorney, two terms. Member Wyoming Constitutional Convention. 194. Katherine Augusta Jones. 349 Oakwood Boulevard, Chicago, Illinois, Ladies’ Course; Ph. B., Iowa College, 1892. Student, Wellesley College, 1885- 6. Teacher of Latin, Hyde Park High School, Chicago, Illinois, 1886—. 195. Lillian Kennedy (Frater). David City, Nebraska. A. B.; A. M., Iowa College, 1892. Sister of 217. Teacher, Grand Island, Ne¬ braska, 1882-4. Married, Grand Island, Nebraska, 1885, to James J. Frater, phar¬ macist. Residence, Thurman, Iowa; Remsen, Iowa; Tacoma, Washington; David City, Nebraska. Received a certificate as a Registered Pharmacist, in the state of Nebraska, 1890. 196. Mabel Lanphere (Conklin). 28 New York Avenue, Brooklyn, New York. Ladies’ Course. Born, Lafayette, Indiana, 1861. Prepared for college, Gregg Seminary, Chicago, Illinois. Instructor in Vocal Department, Callanan College, Des Moines, Iowa, 1883-6. Society editor, Des Moines Saturday Evemug Mail, 1886- 8. Married to D. B. Conklin, artist, March 31, 1888. Residence, Brooklyn, New York, 1888—. Traveling in all parts of the union and lecturing on Temper¬ ance and Social Purity, 1894—. Is organizer for the National Woman’s Chris¬ tian Temperance Union, and National Secretary of the White Cross Society of America. 197. James Richard Lewis. Grinnell, Iowa. A. B.; M. D., Bellevue Medical College, 1884. Born, Ogden, Indiana, August 16,1858. Brother of 233. Prepared f >r college, Academy of Iowa College. Stu¬ dent, Bellevue Hospital Medical College, 1882-4. Physician, Grinnell, Iowa, 1884- . Mayor, 1891 and 1892; and Post Master, Grinnell, Iowa, 1894—. 198. Hammond Levi Marsh. Sabetlia, Kansas. A. B. Born, Grinnell, Iowa, 1858. Brother of 31 and 40. Teacher, Bristol, Wisconsin, and Malvern, Iowa, 1882-5. Student, Chicago Theological Seminary, 1885- 6, and 1888-90. Pastor, Genoa Bluff and Victor, Iowa, 1886-8; Fairfield, Iowa, 1890-2; Denmark, Iowa, 1892-4; Winona, Minnesota, 1894-5. Obliged to give up The Alumni 7i his pastorate on account of ill health, is now doing light farming, fruit raising and in temporary charge of a church, Sabetha, Kansas, 1895—. Married at Cap- ioma, Kansas, to Miss Mary Estelle Robinson, August 9, 1883. 199. Harriet Elizabeth Mart’ing, deceased. Ladies’ Course. Born, i860. Teacher, High School, Newton, Iowa, 1882-3. Teacher in the Academy connected with the Washington University in St. Louis, Missouri, 1883-5. Died of consumption, in St. Louis, Missouri, June 26, 1885. 2co. Caroline Helen Parsons. 402 North Grove Avenue, Oak Park, Illinois. Ladies’ Course. Born, Syracuse, New York, September 4, 1861. Prepared for college, High School, Grinnelt, Iowa. Teacher, Moline and Oak Park, Illinois, 1882-. 201. Cora Perry (Humbert). Armour, South Dakota. Ladies’ Course. Born, North Conway, New Hampshire, October 27, i860. Prepared for college, Grinnell Public Schools and Academy of Iowa College. Teacher, Public Schools, LeMars, Iowa, 1882-6. Married at Armour, South Da¬ kota, August 26, 1886, to James D. Humbert, a graduate from the Normal School at Platteville, YVisconsin, and student three years at University of Wisconsin. Mr. Humbert was clerk and then cashier in the Douglas County Bank; County Superintendent of Schools for four years, and is now an Attorney-at-law. 202. Harriet Diana Ray (Ames). Traer, Iowa. Ladies’ Course. Born, Hastings, Michigan, January 15, i860. Sister of 203. Prepared for college, Grinnell High School and Academy at Kewanee, Illinois. Teacher, LeMars, Iowa, 1883; Marshalltown, Iowa, 1884-5; Panora, Iowa, 1886-7; Omaha, Nebraska, 1888-04. Married, at Des Moines, Iowa, January 31, 1894, to A. L. Ames, I. C. ’82. Residence, Traer, Iowa, 1894—. 203. William George Ray. Grinnell, Iowa. A. B.; A. M., Iowa College, 1885. Born, Barry County, Michigan, February, 1857. Brother of 202. Prepared for college, Academy of Iowa College. Princi¬ pal of Schools, Delta, Iowa, 1882-3. Principal of Guthrie County High School, Panora, Iowa, 1883-7. Superintendent of Schools, Grinnell, Iowa, 1887-90. Editor and proprietor of the Grinnell Herald , Grinnell. 1890—. Married, Grinnell, Iowa, 1895, to Miss Sara A. Haines, daughter of R. M. Haines, I. C. ’65. Repub¬ lican member of the Iowa Legislature from Poweshiek County, 1896—. 204. Esther Robbins (White). Marsovan, Turkey. Ladies’ Course. Born, Muscatine, Iowa, February 20, 1861. Sister of 42 and 48. Prepared for college, High School, Muscatine, Iowa, Teacher, Public Schools, Muscatine, 1884-5. Married. 1887, to Rev. George E. White, I. C. ’82. Residence, Waverly, Iowa, 1887-90. Missionary, A. B. C. F. M., Marsovan, Tur¬ key, 1890—. 205. Fannie H. Sherman (Rutherford). Grinnell, Iowa. Ladies’ Course. Born, Chester Center, Iowa, June 10, 1859. Prepared for col¬ lege, High School, Grinnell, Iowa. Teacher of Music, Chester Center, Sheridan, Newburg, Grinnell and Malcom, 1882-9. Married, December 25, 1893, at Chester Center, Iowa, to James Rutherford. Residence, Grinnell, Iowa, 1893—. 206. Herbert Weston Somers. Rapid City, South Dakota. A. B.; A. M., Iowa College, 1885. Born, Barnet, Vermont, May 31, 1857. Brother of 513. Prepared for college, Academy of Iowa College. Superintendent, 72 Iowa College Qu t nquennial Public Schools, Rapid City, South Dakota, 1882-5. Banking with First National Bank, 1885—. Has held many offices in Church, Sunday School, Christian En¬ deavor, and Y. M. C. A. work. Member Board of Education, 1886-92. Secretary and Treasurer of Electric Light Company, 1888—. Married, 1886, to Miss Nellie Van Zandt of Jacksonville, Illinois. 207. George Meason Whicher. Packer Institute, Brooklyn, New York. A. B.; A. M., Iowa College, 1885. Born, Muscatine, Iowa, i860. Prepared for college. High School, Muscatine, Iowa. Teacher, Muscatine, 1882-3. Professor of Greek and German, Hastings College, Hastings, Nebraska, 1883-8. Student, Johns Hopkins University, 1884-5. Principal of Academy of Iowa College, 1888-9. Classical Master, Lawrencevilie Academy, Lawrenceville, New Jersey, 1889-92. Professor of Greek and Latin. Packer Collegiate Institute, Brooklyn, New York, 1892—. Married, 1887, to Miss Lillian Frisbie, I. C. ’82. Joint editor of the text-books, “First Latin Readings;” editor of “Selections from Viri Romae .” 208. George Edward White. Marsovan, Turkey. A. B ; A. M., Iowa College, 1885; B. D., Chicago Theological Seminary, 1887. Born, Marash, Turkey, Asia, October 14, 1861. Brother of 437. Prepared lor college, Academy of Iowa College. Professor, Hastings College. Nebraska, 1882-5. Student, Hartford Theological Seminary, 1885-6; Chicago Theological Seminary, 1886-7. Ordained, September, 1887. Pastor, Congregational Church, Waverly, Iowa, 1887-90. Missionary, American Board, at Mars >van, Turkey, Asia, 1890—. Married, June 29, 1887, at Muscatine, Iowa, to Miss Esther B. Rob¬ bins, I. C. ’82. XXIII.—CLASS OF 1883. 209. Jennie Bailey. 713 East Fourth Street, Duluth, Minnesota. Ladies’ Course. Born, Grinnell. Iowa, November 28, 1858. Sister of 35, 139, and 361. Prepared for college, Grinnell High School. Teacher and housekeeper, Grinnell, Iowa, 1883-95; Duluth, Minnesota, 1895—. 210. William Hungerford Brainerd. 220 Devonshire Street, Boston, Massachusetts. A. B. Born, Halifax, Massachusetts, April 1, 1862. Prepared for college, Academy of Iowa College, "student of architecture, Minneapolis. Minnesota, 1883-5; Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Boston, 1885-6 Architect, Bos¬ ton, 1886-91 and 1894—; St. Louis, Missouri, 1891-4. Deacon of church; Superin¬ tendent of Mission School; President of Y. P. S. C. E., Minneapolis and St. Louis. Has written articles on Composite Dwellings. Married, Boston, Aug¬ ust 2, 1889, to Miss Harriet Seaver Curtis. 211. Emily J. Crary (Jamieson). Warren, Pennsylvania. Ladies’ Course. Born, Buffalo, New York, August 28, 1862. Residence at home, Webster City, Iowa, 1883-5. Married, 1885, to M. W. Jamieson, I. C. ’83, and has ever since resided in Warren, Pennsylvania. 212. Hugh Finney Eaton. Ellis Avenve and Sixtieth Street, Chicago, Illinois. A. B. Born, Salem, Michigan, March 30, 18^9. Brother of 188. Prepared for college, Tabor College Academy, Tabor, Iowa, and Academy of Iowa College. Teacner in Arkansas, 1884 Engaged in several manufacturing enterprises in Kansas, Iowa and Illinois, 1883-93. Loan Broker, 114 Dearborn Street, Chicago, Illinois, 1893—. Married, August 22, 1883, to Miss Della F. Graver, a student in Iowa College, 1880-3. Married to Miss Joe A. Kenyon of Chicago, September 2, 1891. The Alumni 73 213. Eugene Stephen Gunnison, deceased. A. B. Born, February 16, 1862. Student of law in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, 1883-5. Ill health compelled him to remain at home, Fairfax, Iowa, 1885-7. Seeking a change of climate, he traveled through California, making a trip on foot through the Yosemite Valley, and spending the winter at Auburn and the summer at San Luis Obispo. September 18, 1888, he returned to Fairfax, Iowa, where his health gradually declined and he died on May 7, 1891. 214. Edgar Loomis Holyoke. Lincoln, Nebraska. B. S. Born, Grinnell, Iowa, December 16, 1857. Prepared for college, Acad¬ emy of Iowa College. Student, Rush Medical College, Chicago, Illinois, 1883-5. Practicing physician, Lincoln, Nebraska, 1885—. Appointed Commissioner of Insanity, January, 1896. County Coroner, 1890-2. Grand Medical Examiner of the A. O. U. W. for the State of Nebraska, 1890—. City Councilman, 1892-4. Married, Lincoln, Nebraska, October 22, 1889, to Miss Grace Edna Snelling. 215. Orson Howard. Salt Lake City, Utah. B. S.; A. M., 1886. Born, Salt Lake City, Utah, November 6, 1853. Prepared for college, Deseret University, Salt Lake City. Teacher, Public Schools, Salt Lake City, 1883-4. Professor of Natural Science, University of Deseret, 1884-90. Student, Bellevue Medical College, New York, 1890-1. Practicing physician, Salt Lake City, 1891—. Married at Salt Lake City, August 15, 1888, to Miss Sarah Ann Tripp. 216. Mark William Jamieson. Warren, Pennsylvania. A. B. Born, Warren, Pennsylvania, July 16, 1861. Brother of 383. Manufac¬ turer, Warren, Pennsylvania, 1883—. Married, 1885, to Miss Emily J. Crary, I. C. ’83. 217. Henry Herbert Kennedy. Woman’s Temple, Chicago, Illinois. A. B.; A. M.; LL. B., University of Michigan, 1885. Born, Clay, Washington County, Iowa, 1862. Brother of 195. Prepared for college, High School, Grin¬ nell, Iowa. Student, Law Department, University of Michigan, 1883-5. Attor¬ ney, Chicago, Illinois, 1885—. Married, Grinnell, Iowa, June 15, 1892, to Miss Minnie G. Perkins. 218. George Kessel. Cresco, Iowa. A. B.; A. M., Iowa College, 1886; M. D., Rush Medical College, 1885. Born, Fremont Township, Winneshiek County, Iowa, March 20, 1856. Student, Rush Medical College, 1883-5 Practicing physician, Decorah, Iowa, 1885-7. Prac¬ ticing physician and drug business, Cresco, Iowa, 1887—. Graduate student in the Hospitals of Vienna and Berlin, five months in 188). Member of the Cresco School Board, six years. Mayor of Cresco, two years. Member of State Medi¬ cal Association of Iowa, and American Academy of Science. Married, May 27, 1886, to Miss Lila C. Truitt, a teacher in the Grinnell Schools, 1883-5. 219. Elizabeth L. Little (Adamson). 1145 Garber Street, Lincoln, Nebraska. Ladies’ Course. Born, Cheshire, Connecticut, January 12, 1862. Prepared for college, Public Schools, Lewis, Iowa. Residence, Lewis, Iowa, 1883-5; Clay. Iowa, keeping house for her father, Rev. Charles Little, 1885-8; Lincoln, Ne¬ braska, 1888—. Stenographer, Lincoln, Nebraska, 1889-95. Married, December 15,1892, to William J. Adamson, who is employed in the Freight Department of the Burlington and Missouri Rail Road. 74 Iowa College Quinquennial 220. Flora McKay (McNulty). Virginia City, Montana. Ladies’ Course. Lit. B., 1890; A. M., Iowa College, 1893; M. D., Women’s Medical College, Chicago, 1887. Born, near Denver. Colorado, March 4, 1861. Prepared for college, High School, Virginia City, Montana. Residence, Vir¬ ginia City, Montana, 1883-4. Married at Virginia City, September 8, 1884, to C. A. McNulty, M. D., College of Physicians and Surgeons, Chicago, and Cor¬ oner of Madison County, Montana, 1894—. Residence, Livingston and Boze¬ man, Montana, 1884-5; Boulder, Colorado, 1885-6; Chicago, Illinois, 1886-7; Butte City, Montana, 1887; Virginia City, Montana, 1888-93; Chicago, Illinois, 1893-4; Virginia City, Montana, 1894—. Completed the four years’ Chautauqua Liter¬ ary and Scientific Course and now studying for the garnet seal course. Has written articles for papers, magazines and the Virginia City Literary Society; one of the editors of Our Faith and Works , a magazine published in the inter¬ est of the local Episcopal Church; Secretary of the Union Circle of King’s Daughters, 1892—; Secretary of the Episcopal Guild; appointed Secretary of the Madison County Columbian Exposition Association in 1892. Has held many of¬ fices in ecclesiastical and social organizations. 221. Frederick Hume Murray. Tacoma, Washington. A. B.; A. M. 1891. Born, Mitchell, Iowa, May 16, 1861. Prepared for college, Academy of Iowa College. Merchant, Brooklyn, Iowa, 1883-8. Student in Law Department, University of Iowa, 1888-9. Attorney, Tacoma, Washington, 1889—. City Attorney of Tacoma, two terms. Married, Brooklyn, Iowa, to Miss Phenie B. Corruthers, May 20, 1891. 222. Willie Brown Pinkerton. Rock Rapids, Iowa. A. B.; A. M., Iowa College, 1886. Born, Waupun, Wisconsin, August 16, 1861. Brother of 287. Prepared for college, Academy of Iowa College. In business, Crookston, Minnesota, 1883-4. Teacher, Crookston, Minnesota, 1884-5; Plankin- ton, South Dakota, 1885-6. Preacher, Henry, South Dakota, 1886-7. Student, Chicago Theological Seminary, 1888-9. Student, Andover Theological Seminary, 1889-90. Pastor, Waverly, Iowa, 1890-3; Rock Rapids, Iowa, 1893-5 and 1896—. Student, Harvard University, 1895-6. Married, at Grinnell, Iowa, June 25, 1891, to Miss Agnes E. Gurney. 223. Monroe Junius Potwin. Stanley, Iowa. B, S. Born, Ellington, New York, i860. TeaGher of Music and Salesman of musical instruments, Grinnell, Iowa, 1883-4. Farmer Stanley, Iowa, 1884—. Married, Monona, Iowa, September 16, 1884, to Miss Maud Emery. 224. Arthur Lincoln Preston. Avoea, Iowa. A. B.; A. M., Iowa College, 1886; LL. B., University of Michigan, 1884. Born, Newton, Iowa, October 21, i860, Brother of 328. Attorney, Grinnell, Iowa, 1884- 93. Attorney, Avoca, Iowa, 1893—. 225. Sarah L. Smith (Seward). Mima, Washington. Ladies’ Course. Born, Bowen’s Prairie, Iowa, May 22, 1857. Prepared for college, High School, Monticello, Iowa. Married to Arthur L. Seward, Home Missionary at Aurora, Nebraska, August 16, 1883. Aurora, Nebraska, 1883-4. Coalville, Utah, 1884-9, Mima, Thurston County, Washington, 1889—. Post¬ master, 1893—. 226. Addie M. Stevens (Janes). 238 Prospect Avenue, Spokane, Washington. A. B. and B. S. Born, Montour, Iowa, June 17, 1861. Prepared for college, Female Seminary, Rockford, Illinois. Residence, Montour, Iowa, 1883-4. Married, The Alumni 75 to Charles H. Janes, July 9, 1884. Residence, Grinnell, Iowa, 1884-9; Grand Island, Nebraska, 1889-90; Portland, Oregon, 1890-6. Spokane, Washington, 1896—. XXIV.—CLASS OF 1884. 22 7. Florence A. Beard (Bright). Columbus, Ohio. Ladies’ Course. Born, Hardin County, Iowa, February 13, 1864. Sister of 183 and 363. Prepared for college, Grinnell Public Schools. Teacher, under the American Missionary Association, at Memphis, Tennessee, 1884-5. Teacher un¬ der the New West Education Commission, Utah, 1885-8, and 1889-90. Student, Yale University, 1888-9. Married, July 17, 1890, to Rev. Jesse L. Bright, graduate of Yale Divinity School, 1890, and pastor of South Congregational Church, Col¬ umbus, Ohio. 228. Susan Burroughs. Grinnell, Iowa. Ladies’ Course. Sister of 247. Prepared for college, Grinnell Public Schools. Teacher, Polk City, Iowa, 1884-5. Teacher, Grinnell Public Schools 1885-7. In¬ structor in the Preparatory Department of Western College, Toledo, Iowa, 1887-8. Student in Department of Music, Iowa College, 1888-90. Student of Art, LeMars, Iowa, 1890; Boston, Massachusetts, 1891-2. Student in Chicago Art School, 1893. Director of Art Department of Iowa College, 1893-5. Residence, Grinnell, Iowa, 1895—. 229. Carrie A. Case (Munger). Lincoln, Nebraska. Ladies’ Course. Teacher, Cedar Falls, Iowa, 1884-6. Married, 1888, to T. C. Munger, a student in Iowa College, 1881-3, member of the law firm of Stewart & Munger, and member of the Nebraska Legislature in 1895. 230. Irene Lyda Clark, deceased. Ladies’ Course. Born, Grinnell, Iowa, December 19, 1862. Prepared for col¬ lege, Grinnell High School and Academy of Iowa College. At the com¬ mencement of 1885, she gave the alumni poem. During the year 1886 she gave a series of addresses in the interest of the New West Educational Commission, and opened a school for Mormon children at Midway, Utah, under the same aus¬ pices. At the end of one year’s work she was called home to Grinnell, by the death of her mother, and became head of her father’s household until her death. She died of typhoid fever, April 4, 1887. 231. John Wharton Clark. Washington, D. C. A. B. Attorney. 232. Stella F. Hoyt (Cook). Chapman, Kansas. Ladies’ Course. Teacher, Breckenridge, Missouri, 1884-5. Married, 1886, to S. M. Cook, a student of Iowa College, 1881-3, and a graduate of the State Uni¬ versity of Kansas. Mr. and Mrs. Cook have been at the head of the Dickinson County High School, Chapman, Kansas, 1888—. 233. George Watt Lewis. Grinnell, Iowa. A. B. Born, Ogden, Indiana, September 19, 1862. Brother of 197. Prepared for college, Academy of Iowa College. Druggist, Grinnell, Iowa, 1884—. 234. Mary A. Logan. A. B. j 6 Iowa College Quinquennial 235. Henry Martin Lyman. Stanton, Nebraska. A. B.; A. M., Iowa College, 1887; B. D., Chicago Theological Seminary, 1892. Born, Sheffield, Illinois, August 13, 1858. Brother of 250 and 251. Teacher. Pub¬ lic Schools, and Civil Engineer, Grinnell, Iowa, 1884-5. County Surveyor, Powe¬ shiek County, Iowa, 1883-5. Student, Hartford Theological Seminary, 1885-7. Home Missionary in Nebraska, summer of 1886. Civil Engineer, employed by the East Tennessee, Virginia and Georgia Railway Company, Brunswick, Geor¬ gia, in 1888; same. Knoxville, Tennessee, 1889-91. Pastor, First Congregational Church, Cripple Creek, Colorado, 1892-4. Pastor, New England Congregational Church, Stanton, Nebraska, 1894—. Married, Knoxville, Tennessee, to Miss Jessie Abina Gillett, May 31, 1892. 236. Charles Hugh Morris. Des Moines, Iowa. A. B. Born, Limerick, Maine. July 18, i860. Prepared for college. Academy of Iowa College. Secretary and Treasurer of the Des Moines Coal Mining Com¬ pany, 1884—. Married, at Pierce, Nebraska, to Miss Laura V. Sloan of Des Moines, Iowa, November 18, 1891. 237. Bernice E. Newell. 303 South G. St., Tacoma, Washington. Ladies’ Course. Born, Otisco, New York, 1862. Prepared for college, Public Schools, Mitchell, Iowa. Teacher, Polk City, Iowa, 1884-5. Studying Kinder¬ garten, Des Moines, Iowa, 1885 6. Teacher, Grinnell, Iowa, 1886-7; Riverside, California, 1887-8. Journalism, Tacoma, Washington, 1889—. Special writer and society editor, Tacoma papers, four years. Special correspondent of Tacoma Ledger and Northwest Magazine (St. Paul) during World’s Fair, 1893. At pres¬ ent contributor to School Education , Minneapolis; Home Companion . Spring- field, Ohio; Northwest Magazine; McClure's Magazine; holds positions on Tacoma Morning Union and correspondent for Seattle Post-Intelligence. Clerk in State Legislature, 1892-3. Has published a volume of illustrated poems and several sets of children’s stories. 238. Adella M. Smoke. Wichita, Kansas. A. B.; A. M., Iowa College, 1887. Born, Galesburg, Jasper County, Iowa, June 6, 1861. Prepared for college, Academy of Iowa College. Principal of Schools, Polk City, Iowa, 1884-5. Teacher, High School, Grinnell Iowa, 1885-7; same,* Wichita, Kansas, 1891. Principal of academy, Kingfisher, Oklahoma, 1891-3. Principal of Fairmount Institute, Wichita, Kansas, 1893-6. Professor of Latin in Fairmount College, Wichita, Kan., 1896—. 239. Albert Strong. Winterset, Iowa. A. B. Born, Windham, Ohio, October 27. 1861. Brother of 258. Editor of the Winterset Madisonian , Winterset, Iowa, 1888—. 240. Flora Wetmore (Taylor). Stuart, Iowa. A. B.; A. M., 1887. Born, Iron Ridge, Wisconsin. Prepared for college, Acad¬ emy of Iowa College. Graduate student, Wellesley College. 1884-5. Teacher, Public Schools, Perry, Iowa, 1886-7. Student of Music, Boston, Massachusetts, 1887-8. Teacher, Denmark Academy, Denmark, Iowa, 1889-90. Married, Sep¬ tember, 1890, to Rev. G. A. Taylor, Pastor of Congregational Church, Stuart, Iowa. Residence, Stuart, Iowa, 1890—. The Alumni 77 XXV.—CLASS OF 1885. 241. James Burton Adkins. Ottawa, Kansas. A. B.; B. D., Chicago Theological Seminary, 1888. Born, Rock Creek Town¬ ship, Jasper County, Iowa, July 15, i860. Prepared for college, Academy of Iowa College. Student, Chicago Theological Seminary, 1886-8. Pastor, Congrega¬ tional Churches, Bio miington, Wisconsin, 1888-92; Cortez, Colorado, 1892; Ona- wa, Iowa, 1892-5; Ottawa, Kansas, 1895—. Married, at Weybridge, Vermont, to Miss Mary Ellen James, July 11, 1888, 242. Charles A. Alden. Shannon, Illinois. A. B.; A. M., Iowa College, 1888. Born, Leaf River, Illinois, October 22, 1855. Prepared for Coliege, Rock River Seminary, Mt. Morris, Illinois, and Academy of Iowa College. Principal of Schools, Shannon, Illinois. Married, Freeport, Illinois, to Miss Edith A. VanBrocklin, July 12, 1894. 243. Susan E. Avery (Mather). Centralia, Illinois. Literary Course. Born, Chapin, Iowa, 1863. Prepared for college, High School, Mason City, Iowa. Married, at Kansas City, Mo., March 30, 1886, to I. F. Mather, I. C. ’85. Teacher in Hull Academy, Hull, Iowa, 1886-7. Precep¬ tress of Stockton Academy, Stockton, Kansas, 1887-91. Clinton, Missouri, 1891-2. Pittsfield, Illinois, 1892-5. Centralia, Illinois, 1895—. 244. Ellen S. Blake (Campbell). Harvey, Illinois. Literary Course. Born, Montour, Iowa, October 22, 1863. Prepared for col¬ lege, Montour High School and private study. Teacher, Primary Department. Niobrara, Nebraska, 1885-8. Married. December 12, 1888, to Mr. A. W. Camp¬ bell. Resided, Arkansas City, Kansas, 1888-91; Harvey, Illinois, 1891—. Mr. Campbell was connected with the firm of Craver, Steele & Austin. 245. Helen Richards Brewer. * Lincoln, Nebraska. Literary Course; A. B., Iowa College, 1888. Born, Stockbridge, Massachu¬ setts, 1862. Sister of 246, 278, 366, 367, 527, and daughter of Professor F. P. Brewer, Prepared for college, Academy of Iowa College. Teacher in private schools, Colorado Springs, Colorado, 1885-7. Assistant principal, and principal of high school, Sutton, Nebraska, 1887-91. Lameness caused by injury to knee confined her to her room in Grinnell, 1891-4. Matron of Hagerman Hall, Women’s Dormitory of Colorado College, Colorado Springs, 1895. Worthington, Minne¬ sota, 1895-6. Student, University of Nebraska, 1896—. 246. Mary Emilia Brewer. Sivas, Turkey. A. B. Born at New Haven, Connecticut, 1863. Sister of 245, 278, 366, 367, 527, and daughter of Professor F. P. Brewer. Prepared for college in the Academy of Iowa College. Teacher at North Adams, Massachusetts, 1885-7. Teacher at Oskaloosa, Iowa, 1H87-8. Missionary, A. B. C. F. M., and Principal of Girls’ Boarding School in Sivas, Turkey, 1888—. (Miss Brewer has been in the very midst of the Armenian Massacres. She has often imperiled her own life to save others, showing heroism that has received wide recognition.) 247. Sarah P. Burroughs (Adams). Galesburg, Illinois. Literary Course. Born at Versailles, Indiana. Sister of 228. Prepared for college, Grinnell High School and Academy of Iowa College. Teacher, Public 73 Iowa College Quinquennial Schools and High School, Kellogg, Iowa, 1885-6. Teacher, Newton, Iowa, 1886-7. Married, June, 1887, to B. D. Adams, a business man in Grinnell. Residence, Grinnell, 1887-91; Minneapolis, Minnesota, 1891-4; Galesburg, Illinois, 1894—. 248. Jennie A. Chapin, deceased. Literary Course. Born in Union Township, Hardin County, Iowa, October m, 1862. Prepared for college, High School, Union, Iowa, and Academy of Iowa College. After graduation she took up the Chautauqua course and her last work was the preparation of a paper to be read before the Union Chautauqua Circle. In September, 1885, she entered the Union schools as teacher in the primary de¬ partment where she remained until the day of her death. She died suddenly with congestion of the brain, November 21, 1886. 249. Florence Hope Kirby (Manning). Keosauqua, Iowa. Literary Course. Born, Milwaukee, Wisconsin, December 25. 1863. Prepared for college, Public Schools, Toledo, Iowa. Chariton, Iowa, 1886-7; Greenfield, Iowa, 1888; Keosaqua, Iowa, 1888—. Married, Toledo, Iowa, July 18, 1886, to Ed¬ ward Bates Manning, Banker, who died at Greenfield, 1888. 250. Addison Franklin Lyman. Somerville, Massachusetts. A. B. Born, Sheffield, Illinois, January 28, 1861. Brother of 235 and 251. Pre¬ pared for college, High School, Kellogg, Iowa, private study and Academy of Iowa College. Student, Hartford Theological Seminary, 1885-7. Preacher, Eagle Grove, Iowa, summer of 1886. Superintendent of Bridge Construction in Ten¬ nessee and Georgia, 1889. Student, Harvard Divinity School, 1890-1. Civil En¬ gineer. Somerville, Massachusetts, 1892—. Married, December 4, 1895, to Miss Anna A. Foster of Somerville, Massachusetts. 251. Anna L. Lyman (Ashmun). Albuquerque, New Mexico. Literary Course. Bom, Sheffield, Illinois, 1866. Sister of 235 and 250. Pre¬ pared for college in Kellogg Public Schools and Academy of Iowa College. Teacher in country school and Kellogg Public School, 1885-7. Stenographer, Colorado, 1887. Teacher under New West Education Commission, Slaterville, Utah, 1887-8. She was the only Christian and only educated person in the set¬ tlement. Ill health caused by overwork necessitated giving up the work. Mar¬ ried, June 4th, 1890, to Rev. E. H. Ashmun, a graduate of Tabor College and Yale Theological Seminary. Mr. Ashmun was pastor of Congregational churches in Nebraska, and Highlands, Colorado, and is now Superintendent of Home Mission Society for Congregational Church in New Mexico and Arizona, 1893—. Resided, Highlands, Colorado, 1888-93; Long Beach, California, 1893-5; Albu¬ querque, New Mexico, 1895—. President of the Woman’s Territorial Union. 252. Irwin Frank Mather. Centralia, Illinois. A. B.; A. M., Iowa College, 1888. Born, Gallipolis, Ohio, i860. Prepared for college, Ripon, Wisconsin, and Wilton Academy, Wilton, Iowa. Principal of Hull Academy, Hull, Iowa, 1885-7. Married, at Kansas City, Missouri, March 30, 1886, to Miss Susan Avery, I. C. ’85. Principal of Stockton Academy, Stock- ton, Kansas, 1887-91. Professor of History, Baird College for Young Ladies, Clinton, Missouri, 1891-2. Superintendent of Public Schools, Pittsfield, Illinois, 1892-5. Superintendent of Public Schools, Centralia, Illinois, i8q5— . Has writ¬ ten articles for the Advance , Golden Days % Youth's Companion , Western School Journal , Geographical Magazine , Illustrated World 253. Mary Ellen Perry. Grinnell, Iowa. Literary Course. Assistant, High School, Grinnell, Iowa, 1886-91. Residence, Grinnell, Iowa, 1885—. The Alumni 79 254. John Dennis Posten. Libby Montana. Ph. B.; A. M m Iowa College, 1888. Born, Missouri, May 8, 1849. Prepared for college, High School, Grinaell, Iowa. In business, Des Moines, Iowa, 1886. Teacher, Clarksville, Missouri, 1887. Read law with firm of Ball Brothers, Mont¬ gomery City, Missouri, 1888-90. Attorney at Law, and Commissioner United states Circuit Court, Libby, Montana, 1891—. 255. William James Pringle. Aurora, Illinois. Ph. B.; A. M., Iowa College, 1888; LL. B.. Lake Forest University, 1896. Born, Madrid, New York, June 10, 1862. Prepared for college. Public Schools, Madrid, New York, Principal of Schools, Elmwood, Illinois, 1885-01. Superintendent of Public Schools, Northfield, Minnesota, 1891-3. Principal of High School, Aurora, Illinois, 1893—. Has done graduate work at Cornell University. 256. Franklin Rupert Reed, deceased . A. B. Born, Fowler, Ohio, 1855. Brother of 33, 156 and 157. Was a Junior in the New Haven Theological Seminary of Yale College, and was under appoint¬ ment to preach during nis vacation at Seneca, Frank County, Dakota. He left New Haven by boat April 30 to spend two or three days in New York. Thursday, May 13, 1886, his dead body was found floating in the East River off New York City with a bullet hole in his left temple. 257. Eliza E. Stanley (Renand). Lynnville, Iowa. Literary Course. Born, Milford, Wayne County, Indiana, October 10, 1856. Prepared for college, Lynnville, Iowa. Teacher, Poweshiek County, Iowa, 1885-6. Teacher, Primary Department, Smith Center Schools, and elsewhere in Smith County, Kansas. 1886-9. Teacher, Whittier College, Salem,Iowa, 1889-90. Teacher, Jasper County, Iowa, 1890-1. Married, Lynnville, Iowa, December 30, 1891, to Rev. Charles Renand, a minister in the Friends Church. 258. Edward Angel Strong. Lumber Exchange, Minneapolis, Minnesota. A, B. Born, Portage County, Ohio, May 20, 1864. Brother of 230. Prepared for college, Mitchell Seminary, Mitchellville, Iowa, and High School, Winterset, Iowa. In lumber business with Strong and Price, Winterset, Iowa, 1885-6. In lumber business with J. H. Queal & Co., Des Moines, Iowa, 1886-9; Minneapolis, Minnesota, 1889—. 259. Charles Alfred Taylor. Seattle, Washington. A. B.; A. M„ Iowa College, 1888. Born, Bay City, Wisconsin, March 28, 1859. Prepared for college, Academy of Iowa College. Principal, High School, Gnn- nell, Iowa, 1885-8, Principal, Public Schools. Wilton Junction, Iowa, 1888-00. Principal, High School, Marshalltown, Iowa, 1890-1. Principal, Public Schools, Orting, Washington, 1891-3. Principal, South School, Seattle, Washington, 1893—. Married, Grinnell, Iowa, to Miss Susie M. Chafee, July 22, 1885. 260. David Millard West, deceased . Literary Course. Born, Cedar Falls, Iowa, October 2, 1863. Brother of 133. Prepared for college, Academy of Iowa College. Employed in the Coal Mining business, Albia, Iowa, 1885-7. Read law in office of his brother, J. W. West, I. C. *77, Omaha, Nebraska, 1887. Admitted to bar at Omaha, Nebraska, 1888. After his admission to the bar, was for a short time at Des Moines, Iowa, and in Arkan¬ sas. Then returned to Council Bluffs, Iowa, where he practiced law until his death, October 17, 1894. Married, April 2, 1892, at Davenport, Iowa, to Miss Anna Watt. 8o Iowa College Quinquennial 261. Edgar Guilford Worden. Lewistown, Montana. Ph. B., A. M.. Iowa College, 1893. Born, Kelly’s Island, Ohio, May 5, i860. Prepared for college, Public Schools, Keosauqua, Iowa. Principal of Schools, Eden, South Dakota, 1885-6. In 1886 was one of the founders of the Eden Echo , and one of the editors, 1886-9. Admitted to the bar at Canton, South Dakota, 1887. Clerk in the United States Land Office, Helena, Montana, 1889-90. Attor¬ ney at Law, Helena, Montana, 1890-2; Lewistown, Montana, 1892—. Married, Canton, South Dakota, September 8, 1887, to Miss Kate Rogers of New York, who is a graduate of the Chautauqua Circle. XXVI.—CLASS OF 1886. 262. Charles Walter Hodgdon. Hoquiam, Washington. A, B.; LL. B., University of Iowa, 1889. Born, West Chazy, New York, Sep¬ tember 5, 1861. Principal of Schools, Adair, Iowa, 1886-8, Student in Law De¬ partment, State University of Iowa, 1888-9. Attorney, Hoquiam. Washington, i88q— . City Attorney, Hoquiam, Washington, 1891—. Superior Judge of Mason ana Chehalis Counties, 1896—. Married, at Ames, Iowa, to Miss Mary Sargent, April 28, 1896. 263. Harry A. Hull. Dillon, Montana. Ph. B.; Bachelor of Didactics, Iowa State Normal School, 1884; A. M., Iowa College, 1890. Born, California, Pennsylvania, September 1, 1865. Prepared for college, Cedar Falls High School and graduated in Iowa State Normal School before entering Iowa College. Principal, Public Schools in following places; Ponca, Nebraska, 1886-7; Shelton, Nebraska, 1887-94; Cozad, Nebraska, 1894-5; Dillon, Montana, 1895—. Published a directory of sixty thousand teachers covering ten states, 1892, ’93 and ’94. Editor of magazine. “The Beautiful in Nature and Art, 1892-3. Written articles for “The Penman’s Journal” of New York City, and other educational journals. 264. Frank Stewart Hunt. Dubuque, Iowa. A. B. Born, Tewksbury, Massachusetts, March 22, 1864. Brother of 497, Pre¬ pared for college, Des Moines High School and Academy of Iowa College. Sur¬ veyor Chicago Great Western Railway, 1886-7; Timber Inspector, same, 1887; resident engineer, same, 1888. Division and Exploring Engineer, Duluth and Winnipeg Railway, 1889 and 1890. Assistant Engineer in Civil Engineering De- E artment, Chicago Great Western Railway, St. Joseph, Missouri, 1891; same lubuque, Iowa, 1892—. 265. Mary H. Kellogg (Moninger). Galvin, Iowa. Literary Course. Born, Grinnell, Iowa, February 21,1866. Sister of 165. Pre- § ared for college, Grinnell Public Schools. Teacher, Public Schools, Shenan- oah, Iowa, 1886-7. Married, December 27, 1887, to W. R. Moninger, 1 . C. ’86. Residence, Hartland, Iowa, 1887-9; Galvin, Iowa, 1889—. 266. Laura Leona Larrabee. 410 South I Street, Tacoma, Washington. Literary Course. A. B., 1888. Born, Grinnell, Iowa, October 21, 1866. Pre¬ pared for college, Grinnell High School and Academy of Iowa College. Teacher, Public Schools, Grinnell, Iowa, 1888-90. Teacher of Latin, High School, Tacoma, Washington, 1890—. Has made special study of Roman History and English Literature since graduation. The Alumni 8i 267. Kybi Lummis. 1428 Woodland Avenue, Des Moines, Iowa. Literary Course. Born, Danville, Indiana, May 5, 1864. Prepared for college, High School, Perry, Iowa, and at Coe Collegiate Institute, Cedar Rapids, Iowa. Student of Art, 1886-7. Teacher, Public Schools, Perry, Iowa, 1887-8. In the employ of Harris Emery Company, Des Moines, Iowa, 1888—. 268. John Howard Moninger, deceased. A. B. Born, Hazel Green, Marshall County, Iowa, April 18, 1862. Brother of 269. Prepared for college, Academy of Iowa College. Collector for firm of Moninger & Ringland, Boone, Iowa, 1886-7. Principal, Public Schools, Fort Calhoun, Nebraska, spring of 1887. Drowned in the Iowa River, near home in Galvin, Iowa, June 30, 1887. 269. William Ringland Moninger. Galvin, Iowa. A. B.; A. M., Iowa College, 1889. B irn, Hazel Green, Marshall County, Iowa, April 18, 1862. Brother of 268. Prepared for college. Academy of Iowa College. Teacher of country schools, Marshall County, Jowa, 1886-7. Traveling salesman for Craver, Steele & Austin, spring of 1887. Principal of Hartland Academy, Hartland, Iowa, 1887-9. Farmer, making a specialty of fine stock breeding, Galvin, Iowa, 1889—. Member of the Board of Regents of the State University for Fifth District, 1892—. Member of the Finance Committee of the State Agri¬ cultural Society, 1895—. Married, December 27, 1887, to Miss Mary H. Kellogg, 1 . C. ’86. 270. Emma Case Moulton. Red Oak, Iowa. Literary Course, Born, Waverly, Iowa, August 26,1866. Prepared for college, High School, Mason City, Iowa. Teacher, Public Schools, Ames, Iowa, 1886-8; Shenandoah, Iowa, 1888-90; High School, Red Oak, Iowa, 1890—. 271. Harry Waldo Norris. Grinnell, Iowa. A. B ; A. M., Iowa College, 1889. Born, Pittsfield, New Hampshire, Septem¬ ber 11, 1862. Prepared for college, Academy of Iowa College. Principal of Schools, Lynnville, Iowa, 1886-7; Cullison, Kansas, 1887-8. Instructor in Natural History, Iowa College, Fall term, 1888. Graduate student and Fellow in Natural History, Cornell University, New York, 1888-90. Graduate student, University of Nebraska, 1890-1. Professor of Biology and Geology, Iowa College, 1891 — . President of Iowa Academy of Science and member of State Geological Board, 1895. Married, at Lincoln, Nebraska, to Miss Harriet Victoria Ruliffson, a for¬ mer student in Nebraska University, June T4, 1893. 272. John B. Scott. Tacoma, Washington. B. S. Born, Marion, Iowa, January 6,1865. Prepared for college, High School, Marion, Iowa. Attorney, Tacoma, Washington, 1886—. 273. John Daniel Ware. Omaha, Nebraska. Ph. B.; LL. B., State University of Iowa, 1888; A. M., Iowa College, 1889. Born, Durant, Iowa. November 5, 1861. Prepared for college. Academy of Iowa College. Student of law, State University of Iowa, 1887-8. Attorney, Grinnell. Iowa, 1888-9; Omaha, Nebraska, 1889—. 274. Emma Wolcott. Clay, Iowa. Literary Course; B. S., Iowa College, 1888. Born, Clay, Iowa, August 18, 1866. Teacher in Wadsworth Normal, Wadsworth, Ohio, 1888-9. Teacher, Fisk Uni- 82 Iowa College Quinquennial versity, Nashville, Tennessee, 1890-4. Graduate student in History, University of Chicago, 1893. Residence, Clay, Iowa, homekeeper for her father since her mother’s death, 1895—. XXVII.—CLASS OF 1887. 275. Elmer Ellsworth Bartlett. 919 Washington Street, Cedar Falls, Iowa. B. S.; A. M., Iowa College, 1893. Born, Western, Iowa, November 3, 1862. Brother of 276 and 524. Prepared lor college, Iowa State Normal School, Cedar Falls, Iowa. Because of the poor health ot his lather, Professor Bartlett, he had charge of some of his classes in the Iowa State Normal School, 1887-8. Assistant Principal, Public Schools, Ogden, Iowa, 1889-92. Principal, Public Schools, Orient, Iowa, 1892-3. Graduate student in History and Literature, Univeisity of Michigan, 1893-4. Connected with bank in Cedar Falls, Iowa, 1894—. 276. William Abbott Bartlett. Winona, Minnesota. B. S.; A. M., Iowa College, 1890. Born, Western, Iowa, September 27, 1864. Brother of 273 and 324. Prepared for college at Cedar Falls High School and and Iowa State Normal School. Teacher, Black River Falls, Wisconsin, 1887-90; Joliet, Illinois, 1890-1. Professor of Mathematics, Tabor College, Iowa, 1891-4. Graduate student in Mathematics, Harvard University, 1894-5. Instructor in Mathematics in the High School of Winona, Minnesota, 1895—. 277. Beulah Bennett. Oskaloosa, Iowa. Literary Course; A. B., Iowa College, 1890. Born, Oskaloosa, Iowa, Decem¬ ber 15, 1866. Prepared for college at Penn College, Oskaloosa, Iowa. Student of Kindergarten in Des Moines and Chicago. Teacher in Chicago, and New York Chautauqua. Has written articles for the Kindergarten Magazine, pub¬ lished in Chicago. 278. Grace Lyman Brewer. Moline, Illinois. Literary Course. Born. New Haven, Connecticut, 1865. Sister of 245, 246, 366, 367. 527, and daughter of Professor F. P. Brewer. Prepared for college, High School, Grinnell, Iowa. Teacher, Chester, Iowa, 1887-8; Kawaiahao Seminary, Honolulu, Hawaiian Islands, 1888-91; Kearney, Nebraska, 1892-4. Student, De¬ partment of Music, Iowa College, 1894-5. Teacher, Public Schools, and pursuing studies in connection with the University Extension Course of Lectures, Moline, Illinois, 1895—. 279. Julia Elizabeth Burnard. La Grange, Illinois. Literary Course. Born, Brodhead, Wisconsin, September 8, 1866. Prepared for college, High School, Algona, Iowa. Teacher, Public Schools, Grinnell, iowa, and special student in History, 1887-93. Teacher, Public Schools. LaGrange, Illinois, 1893-5. Proof-reader for 1 ke Advance of Chicago, 1895-6. Proof-reader for A. L. Swift & Co., Chicago, 1896. Residence, LaGrange, Illinois, 1896—. 280. Edna Denison (Blackwell). 409 East Fifth Street, Muscatine, Iowa. Literary Course. Born, Muscatine, Iowa, August 4, 1865. Prepared for col¬ lege, High School, Muscatine. Married, Muscatine, Iowa, October 21, 1891, to J. Scott Blackwell, dealer in Real Estate. 281. Alice Heald (Wheeler). Grinnell, Iowa. Literary Course. Born, Pine Grove, California, 1863. Sister of 410 and 575. The Alumni 33 Prepared for college, Chester Center, Iowa. Missionary of the A. B. C. F. M., Harpoot, Turkey, 1888-91. Married in 1891, to Rev. Wilmot H. Wheeler, at that time a missionary in Turkey. Mr. and Mrs. Wheeler have resided in Grinnell, 1892—. 282. Florence Luella Hedges. Grinnell, Iowa. Literary Course. Born, Grinnell, Iowa. June 27, 1865. Prepared for college, High School, Grinnell, Iowa. Student in Pharmacy in the Kansas State Univer¬ sity, 1889-91. Druggist in store of her father, Dr. T. M. Hedges, Grinnell, Iowa, 1887-9, and 1891—. 283. Francis S. Needham. Lake View, Iowa. B. S.; Born, Stacyville, Mitchell County, Iowa, November 2, 1864. Prepared for college, Academy of Iowa College. Surveying, summer of 1887. Teacher, Warren County, Illinois, winter of 1887. Bookkeeper, Chicago, 1888-9. Cashier ol Lake View State Bank, Lake View, Iowa, 1889—. School director; town treas¬ urer; deacon in church, etc. Married, 1888, to Miss Eugenie E. Schaller, a stu¬ dent in Iowa College, 1886-8. 284. Mary Paine (Parsons). Grinnell, Iowa. Literary Course. Born, Aigona, Iowa. December 2, 1863. Prepared for col¬ lege, Algona Public Schools. Teacher, Public Schools, Aigona, Iowa, 1887-90. Married, October j, 1890, to W. M. Parsons, I. C. ’87. Residence, Des Moines, Iowa, 1890-1; Iowa City, Iowa, 1891-3; Grinnell, Iowa, 1893—. 285. Walter Maurice Parsons. Grinnell, Iowa. A. B.; A. M., Iowa College, 1803. Born, Big Rock, Iowa, March 19, 1864. Pre- S ared for college, Academy, Wilton, Iowa. General Secretary, Y. M. C. A., 'skaloosa, Iowa, 1887-9. Assistant State Secretary, Iowa Y. M. C. A., with head¬ quarters at Des Moines, 1889-91. Secretary Y. M. C. A., State University, Icwa City, 1891-3. during which period a $35,000 building was erected for work among students. Financial Agent for Iowa College, Grinnell, 1893—. Chosen member of State Executive Committee, Iowa Y. M. C. A., 1895. Married, October 1, 1890, to Miss Mary Paine, I. C. ’87. 286. Louisa C. Paterson. Princeton, Minnesota. Literary Course. Born, Rock County, Wisconsin, June 17, 1862. Prepared for college, Public Schools, Aigona, Iowa. Teacher, Public Schools, Aigona, Iowa, 1887-9; North Des Moines Public and High Schools, Des Moines, Iowa, 1889-96; First Assistant in High School, Princeton, Minnesota, 1896—. 287. Lillian Pinkerton (Watson). Hamilton Place, Oakland, California. Literary Course. Born, Waupun, Wisconsin, January 12, 1864. Sister of 222. Teacher, Chetopa, Kansas, 1887-8. Married, October, 1888, to 1 . S. Watson, I. C. ’87. Has pursued the Chautauqua Reading Course. 288. Anna Elizabeth Ransom. Grinnell, Iowa. B. S. Born, Bernhard’s Bay, New York, June 9, 1864. Prepared for college, private tutor and preparatory department of Wells College, Aurora, New York. Residence, Montezuma. New York, 1887-8; Grinnell, Iowa, keeping house and studying music in Iowa College Conservatory, 1888-90; Oneida, New York, 1890-1; Student of drawing and wood carving in Cincinnati Art Academy, Cincinnati, Ohio, 1891-2. Grinnell. Iowa, 1892-5. Student in Cincinnati Art Academy, 1895-6. Residence, Grinnell, 1896—. 84 Iowa College Quinquennial 289. Marian Stacy (Skinner). Anamosa, Iowa. Ladies’ Course and Music. Born, Anamosa, Iowa, April 10, 1864. Sister of 331. Prepared for college, Anamosa High School. Teacher, Anamosa. Iowa, 1087-90. Married, 1890, to W. B. Skinner, M. D., Rush Medical College, and graduate of Medical Department of University of New York City. 290. Annis Nettie Sutliff (Proctor), Grinnell, Iowa. Literary Course. Born, Reynolds, Illinois, December 7, 1866. Prepared for college, Academy of Iowa College. Teacher, Public Schools, Newton, Iowa, fall of 1887; Boone, Iowa, 1887-00; Grinnell, Iowa, 1890-1. Received a State Cer¬ tificate, August, 1894. Married, July 14, 1892, to John W. Proctor, Grinnell, Iowa. Residence, Grinnell, Iowa, 1891—. 291. Marion Jeanette Sweeney. Waterloo, Iowa. Literary Course. Born, Morning Sun, Iowa, February 20, 1859. Prepared for college, East Waterloo High School, and Iowa State Normal School at Cedar Falls, Iowa. Teacher, Waterloo, Iowa, 1887—. 292. Irving Sanford Watson. Hamilton Place, Oakland, California. B. S. Born, Du Page County, Illinois, April 9, 1862. Prepared for college, Academy ol Iowa College General Secretary Y. M. C. A , Ottumwa, Iowa, 1887-91; same, Oakland, California, 1891-4. Manufacturer, with some time given to special Y. M. C. A. work along financial lines, Oakland, California, 1894-6. Business Manager of the ‘‘Golden Fissure Mines” situated at Enterprise, Butte County, California, 1896—. Married, October, 1888, to Miss Lillian Pinkerton I. C. ’87. 293. Selden Lincoln Whitcomb. Grinnell, Iowa. A B.: A. M., Iowa College, 1891; A. M., Literature, English and German, Columbia College, 1893. Born, Grinnell, Iowa, July 19, 1866. Brother of 50, 89, 134. Prepared for college, Grinnell High School and Academy of Iowa College. Teacher, Stockton Academy, Stockton, Kansas, 1887-9. Graduate student in English Philology, Literature and Philos phy, Cornell University, Ithaca, New York, 1889-91. Substitute teacher, Iowa State Normal School, March-June, 1891; Instructor in Civics, same, 1891 2. Graduate Student in Literature, English and German, Columbia College, 1892-4; Fellow in Literature, same, 1893-4. Substi¬ tute teacher, Iowa College, March-June, 1895; Professor of English Literature, same, 1895—. Has published ‘ Chronological Outlines of American Literature,” by Macmillan, 1894: “Nature in Early American Literature, Sewanee Renew, February, 1894; Verse in Midland Monthly , Review oj Reviews and Cosmopoli¬ tan. XXVIII.—CLASS OF 1888. 294. Arthur Willard Bartlett. Grinnell, Iowa. B. S. Born, Grinnell, Iowa, May 21, 1862. Brother of 362, Prepared for col¬ lege, Grinnell High School and Academy of Iowa College. Mercantile business, Grinnell, Iowa, 1888-91; with Spaulding Manufacturing Company, 1891-4; in Mer¬ chants’ National Bank, 1894—. Married, 1889, to Miss Catherine V. Burroughs, who was a member of the class of ’88 until its senior year. Mrs. Bartlett died April 16, 1892. Married, June 21, 1894, to Miss Marrietta Towle, a former stu¬ dent of Iowa College and Conservatory, who died March 18, 1896. 245. Helen Richards Brewer. [See Class of 1885.] The Alumni 85 295. Samuel Cory Buck. Cresco, Iowa. B. S.r A. M., Iowa College, 1891; M. D., Rush Medical College, Chicago, 1892. Born, Grinnell, Iowa, September 1, 1866. Brother of 184 and 337. Prepared for college, Academy of Iowa College. Teacher in Orphans’ Home, Davenport, Iowa, 1888-90. Student in Medical Department of Michigan University, 1890-2. Practicing physician, Cresco, Iowa, 1892—. Has held the position of City Physi¬ cian, County Physician and Commissioner of Insanity. Married, October io, 1893, to Miss Olive B. Trigg of Rockford, Iowa, who was a student in Iowa Col¬ lege, 1889-90. 296. Fred Everts Burlew. 426 Stimson Block, Los Angeles, California. B. S. Born, Ithaca, New York, September 25,1863. Brother of 403. Prepared for college, Public Schools, Grinnell, Iowa. Admitted to bar, 1889. Practicing Attorney in the state of Washington, 1890-5; Los Angeles, California, 1895—. 297. George Watson Cowden. Grinnell, Iowa. A. B.; A. M., Iowa College, 1891. Born, Mercer County, Illinois. Brother of 406. Prepared for college, Guthrie County High School, Panora, Iowa. Princi¬ pal, High School, Grinnell, Iowa, 1888-90. Superintendent of Schools, Grinnell, Iowa, 1890—. Married, Grinnell, December 25, 1894, to Miss Bertha M. Johnson. 298. Lizzie Annette Fisher. Grinnell, Iowa. Literary Course. Born, Chester, Iowa, September 4, 1866. Sister of 490. Pre¬ pared for college, Academy of Iowa College. Teacher, Chester Center, Iowa, 1888-91; Villisca, Iowa, 1891-3; Grinnell, Iowa, 1893—. 299. Mary Alice Higgins (McCredie). Vancouver, Washington. Literary Course. Born, Malone, Iowa. September 21. 1868. Prepared for col¬ lege, Public Schools, DeWitt, Iowa. Teacher, Public Schools, Parkersburg, Iowa, 1H88-9. Married. DeWitt, Iowa, August 23, 1888, to W. W. McCredie, Ph. B., 1885, and Ph. M., Cornell College, Iowa, 1888. Residence, Iowa City, Iowa, 188090; Vancouver, Washington, 1890—. Stenographer in her husband’s office ana Court Reporter, Vancouver, Washington, where Mr. McCredie is practicing law and is Prosecuting Attorney of Clarke County, Washington, 1895—. 300. Charles Wesley Janes. Riverside, California. A. B. Born, Butler County, Iowa, August 4,1862. Prepared for college, Acad¬ emy of Iowa College. General Secretary of Y. M. C. A., Newton, Kansas. 1888- 90; Santa Cruz, California, 1890-2, Los Gatos, California, 1892-4. County Secre¬ tary of Y. M. C. A., Santa Clara County, California, 1893-4. General Secretary of Y. M. C. A., Riverside, California, 1894—. Married, July 31, 1888, to Miss Jennie Wray, I. C. ’88. 266. Laura Leona Larrabee. [See Class of 1886.] 301. Volney Watson Macy. Marshalltown, Iowa. A. B.; A. M., Iowa College, 1891. Born, Grant City, Henry County, Indiana, November 15, i860. Prepared for college. Lynnville Academy and Academies of Penn and Iowa Colleges. President of Whittier College, Salem, Iowa, 1888-90. Principal of Watson Seminary, Ashley, Missouri, 1890-2. Principal High School, Astoria, Illinois, 1802-3. Principal High School, New Sharon, Iowa, 1803-4. Prin¬ cipal of New Providence Academy, New Providence, Iowa, 1894-5. Principal of Albion Seminary, Albion, Iowa, 1895-6. Married, Lynnville, Iowa, July 11, 1888, to Miss Clara P. Stanley, a former student of Iowa College. 86 Iowa College Quinquennial 302. Edwin Cone Miller. Sylvan, Washington. Literary Course. Born. Muscatine, Iowa, June 17, 1S66. Prepared for college. Academy of Iowa College. Real Estate business, Orting, Washington, 1888-9. Fruit grower. Sylvan. Washington, 1889—. Member of State Legislature, 1894. Married, at Tacoma, Washington, to Miss M>rtle O. Spaulding, February 29, 1896. 303. Almond Ellsworth Palmer. Topeka, Kansas. B. S.; A. M., Iowa College. Born, Bowen, Iowa, 1861. Brother of 304 and 352. Prepared for college, Academy ot Iowa College. Traveling salesman, 1888-90, Instructor of Elocution, University of Wisconsin, 1890-1. Completed the full course of two years in Oratory and English, Emerson College of Oratory, Bos¬ ton, Massachusetts, 1892-3. Professor of Rhetoric and Oratory, Washburn, Col¬ lege, Topeka, Kansas, 1893—. Has many engagements as reader and elocution¬ ist in many popular lecture courses. 304. Frank Eber Palmer. Greenfield, Iowa. A. B. Born, Bowen’s Prairie, Iowa, September 21, 1863. Brother of 303 and 3$2. Prepared for college, High School, Monticello, Iowa, and Academy of Iowa College. Principal of Public Schools, Spirit Lake, Iowa, 1888-91; same, Guthrie Center, Iowa, 1891-4; Principal and Superintendent, Public Schools, Greenfield, Iowa, 1894—. Married, 1892, at Guthrie Center, Iowa, to Miss May Lenon. 305. Nancy Powell (Udall). 1124 So, I Street, Tacoma, Washington. Ladies’ Course. Born, McGregor, Iowa, March 12, 1869. Prepared for college, Academy of Iowa College, Cashier'and book-keeper, McGregor, Iowa, 1888-9. Teacher, Orting, Washington, 1889-92; Tacoma, Washington, 1892-4, Married, to William H. Udall, Merchant, Tacoma. Washington, August 1, 1894. Has made a special study of Music, French and Literature. 306. Nellie Richards (Wilson). Des Moines, Iowa. Literary Course; Music. Born, Elk Grove, Wisconsin, November 19, 1867. Prepared for college at Callanan College, Des Moines, Iowa. Student and teacher of music, Mason City, Iowa, 1888-91. Married, Mason City, Iowa, Novem¬ ber 25, 1892, to I. K. Wilson, I. C. ’88. Residence, Perry, Iowa, 1892-3; Des Moines, Iowa, 1894—. 307. Lilian Rogers (McLean). Tarkio, Missouri. A. B. Born, Webster County, Iowa, May 25, 1863. Prepared for college, High School, Fort Dodge, Iowa, with private instruction in Greek. Assistant in the Academy of Iowa College, 1888-9. Principal of High Scho > 1 , Villisca, Iowa, 1890 2. Professor of Latin, Tancio College, Tarkio, Missouri, 1892-4. Married, August, 1894, toj. Arnott McLean, Principal of the Academy and Normal Departments of Tarkio College. 308. Charles Otho Stevens. 17 Concord Square, Boston, Massachusetts. A. B. Born, Almorai, Iowa, February 6, 1864. Prepared for college, Academy of Iowa College. Architectural draughtsman, Sioux City, Iowa, 1889-92; St. Louis, Missouri, 1892-3; Boston, Massachusetts, 1894—. 309. Mary Tabor (Webb). Slaterville, Utah. Literary Course. Born, Erie, New York, April 27, 1862. Prepared for college, Iowa State Normal School, Cedar Falls, Iowa, and Academy of Iowa College. The Alumni 87 Teacher, Aredale, Iowa, 1888-90. Married, at Aredale, Iowa, December 10, 1890, to Charles M. Webb. Residence, Slaterville, Utah, 1890—. 310. Jennie Wray (Janes). Riverside, California. Ladies’ Course. Born, Butler County, Iowa, September 28, 1863. Prepared for college, Academy of Iowa College. Married, July 31, 1888, to C. W. Janes, I. C. ’88. Teacher, Public Schools, Newton, Kansas, 1889-90. Residence, Santa Cruz, California, 1890-2; Los Gatos, California, 1892-4; Riverside, California, 1894—. Active worker in the Ladies’ Auxiliary of the Y. M. C. A. 311. Isaac Kinsey Wilson. 203 Sixth Avenue, Des Moines, Iowa. A. B.; A. M., Iowa College, 1891. Born, Earlham, Iowa, September 12, 1867. Prepared for college, Earlham High School. Farmer, Earlham, Iowa, 1888-91. Representative from Madison County to Twenty-fourth General Assembly, 1892. Editor of Perry Chief y Perry, Iowa, 1892-3. Chief Clerk of House of Representa¬ tives, Twenty-fifth General Assembly, 1894, Secretary of the Hawkeye State Savings Association, Des Moines, Iowa, 1894—. Secretary of the State Execu¬ tive Committee of the Y. M. C. A. in Iowa. Gave the “Master’s Oration” com¬ mencement of 1891. Married, Mason City, Iowa, November 25, 1892, to Miss Nellie Richards, 1 . C. ’88. 274. Emma Wolcott. [See Class of 1886.] XXIX.—CLASS OF 1889. 312. William George Bale, deceased. A. B.; LL. B., State University of Iowa, 1892. Born, Iowa City, Iowa, Novem¬ ber 11, 1863. Prepared tor college, High School, Waveriy, Iowa. In business, Tacoma, Washington, 1889 90. Student, Law Department, State University of Iowa, 1890-2. Attorney, Iowa Falls, Iowa, 1892-3. Died at Graymont, Illinois, January 18. 1893. 313. Luella Mae Bixby. 1400 Vernon Street, Los Angeles, California. Literary Course. Born, Grinnell, Iowa, February 20, 1868. Sister of 364. Pre¬ pared for college, Grinnell High School and Academy of Iowa College. Teacher in country schools and Grinnell Public Schools, and studying specially kinder- f arten. Went with parents to Tacoma, Washington, 1891. Began teaching in indergarten in Puyallup, Washington, but was compelled on account of ill health to drop the work. At home, engaging in home missionary work so far as health would permit, Tacoma, Washington, 1892-5. Attending Froebel In¬ stitute, a training school for kindergartners, Los Angeles, California, 1895—. 314, James Perkins Burling. 925 Fifty-sixth Street, Chicago, Illinois. A. B.; A. B , Harvard University, 1891; B. D., Chicago Theological Seminary, 1893. Born, Eldora, Iowa, Oct. io, 1866. Brother of 338 and 529. Prepared for col¬ lege, Academy of Iowa College. Student, Chicago Theological Seminary, 1889- 90. Student, Harvard University, 1890-1, Student, Chicago Theological Semi¬ nary, 1891-3. Pastor, Green Street Congregational Church, Chicago, Illinois, June, 1893. Ordained, September 12, 1893- Dedicated new church building, October 14,1894. Married to Miss Terese Temple, February 21, 1895, 315. Anna Gertrude Childs. Oneonta, New York. A. B.; A. M., Iowa College, 1893. Born, Rockford, Iowa, August 22, 1867. Prepared for college, Cedar Falls High School. Teacher of Vocal Music in 88 Iowa College Quinquennial State Normal School, Oneonta, New York, 1889—. Spent summer of 1886 in Europe. 316. Edith May Clark (McCornack). Sioux City, Iowa. Literary Course; Music. Born, Traer, Iowa, May 17. 1867. Prepared for col¬ lege, High School, Traer, Iowa. Teacher, High School, Traer, Iowa, i8qo- 2. Student in English at Harvard Annex and one year’s work in Dr. Sargent’s Nor¬ mal Course, Cambridge, Massachusetts. 1892-3. Texas and New Mexico in com¬ pany with her brother, winter of 1804. Married, August, 1894, to Fletcher H. McCornack, a student in Iowa Coliege in ’80-90, cashier of the Coleridge State Bank. Residence, Coleridge, Nebraska, 1894-0; Sioux City, Iowa, 1896—. 317. Frank Culbertson. Yale, Iowa. A. B. Born. Panora. Iowa, February 14, 1868. Prepared for college, Guthrie County High School. Panora, Iowa. Residence, Panora, Iowa, 1889-90. Land and railroad surveyor, Washington, Idaho, and Montana, 1890-3. Lumber dealer, Jefferson, Iowa, 1893-b; Yale, Iowa, 1896—. 318. Elizabeth Hopkins Dunn. 48 North Monroe Street, Coldwater, Michigan. A. B.; A. M., Iowa College, 1892; M. D., Northwestern University Woman’s Medical College, 1894. Born, Toulon, Illinois, April 13, 1867. Prepared for col¬ lege, Grinnel High School and Academy of Iowa College. Instructor in Acad¬ emy, Port Byron. Illinois, 1889-90 Acting Preceptress of Academy, Iowa College, 1890. Student, Northwestern University Woman’s Medical College, 1890-4; in¬ structor in Physiology in the same, 1894-^. Practicing Physician, Chicago, Illi¬ nois, 1894-5; Same, Coldwater, Michigan, 1895—. 319. Martha Sarah Fisher (Stacy), 1162 N. Pennsylvania Street, Indianapolis, Indiana. A. B.; A. M., Iowa College. 1892. Born, Chester, Iowa, September 12, 1865. Prepared for college, Grinnell High School and Academy of Iowa College. Sec¬ retary. Cit\ Y. W. C. A., St. Joseph, Missouri, 188 -91. Married, February 25, 1891, at Grinnell. Iowa, to E, E. Stacy, 1 . C. ’89. Residence, Indianapolis, In¬ diana, 1891—. Is officer of State Committee of Indiana Y. W. C. A.; President, Indiana Branch ol Woman’s Board of Missions ol the Interior. Traveled in Europe, summer of 1894 320. William Albert Frisbie. Minneapolis, Minnesota. B. S. Born, Danbury, Connecticut, December 12, 1867. Brother of 191. Pre¬ pared lor college, Academy of labor College. Manufacturer, Des M< ines, Iowa, 1886-90. Reporter and Assistant City Editor of The Tribune , Minneapolis, Minnesota, 1890-2. Assistant City Editor of Minneapolis Times , 1892-3. City Editor of Minneapolis Journal , 1893—• Has done some literary work in short stories and verse. Director Minnesota State Prison Association. Married, at Des Moines, Iowa, to Miss Nellie McCord, May, 1893. 321. Carrie May Goodell. Corydon, Iow r a. Literary Course. Born, New York, Iowa, May 27, 1867. Prepared for college, Public Schools, New York. Iowa, and private teacher. Assistant Principal of Schools, New York, Iowa. 1889-90; Assistant Principal of Schools, Corydon. Iowa, 1890-4. Student, University of Chicago, 1894-5. Superintendent of Schools for Wayne County, low'a, 1896—. 322. Anna S. Lyon (Patton). Mason City, Iowa. Literary Course. Born, Rockford, Iowa. February 29, 1868, Sister of 323, 418 aud 501. Prepared lor college, High School, Rockford, Iowa. Teacher, Cresco, The Alumni 89 Iowa, 1889-90, Married, to W. L. Patton, Merchant, December 31, 1890. Resi¬ dence, Greene, Iowa, 1891-2; Mason City, Iowa, 1892—. 323. Clara Bradford Lyon. Rockford, Iowa. Literary Course. Born, Rockford, Iowa, June 30, 1869. Sister of 322, 418 and 501. Prepared for college, High School, Rockfora, Iowa. Teacher in the Senior Grammar Grade of the Rockford Public Schools, 1888-90. Teacher in the Second Primary Grade, Hampton, Iowa, 1890. Student in Voice Culture and Delsarte, Chicago, Illinois, 1891. Part of the year was a member of Faculty of Hyde Park Conservatory. Special teacher of Music, Public Schools, Hampton, Iowa, 1892-4. Teacher and Assistant Principal of High School, Rockford, Iowa, 1894—. 324. Frederic O. MacCartney. Rockland, Massachusetts. Literary Course; B. D., Andover Theological Seminary, 1893. Born, Prairie Du Chien, Wisconsin, November 2, 1864. Prepared for college. High School, Storm Lake, Iowa, and Academy of Iowa College. Student, Andover Theologi¬ cal Seminary, 1889-90 and 1891-3. Preaching in Denver, Colorado, 1891, helping to establish the North Denver Congregational Church. Admitted to the Uni¬ tarian ministry, 1893. Assistant Minister in Second Church, Boston, Massachu¬ setts, with Rev. Thomas Van Ness, 1894. Pasror, Unitarian Church, Rockland, Massachusetts, 1895—. Married, November 24, 1890, to Miss Harriet Walworth, I. C. ’89, who died in Denver, Colorado, March 12,1891. Has published songs and stories, one “prize story” in Youth's Companion. Spent the summer of 1895 in England and Scotland. 325. Arthur Couch Merrill. Tacoma, Washington. Literary Course. Born, Anamosa, Iowa, May 9, 1867. Prepared for college, High School, Anamosa, Iowa. Manufacturer, Fox Island, 1889-90. Shipping business, Tacoma, Washington, 1890—. 326. William Herrick Newman. Grinnell, Iowa. A. B.; A. M., Iowa College, 1892; M. D., Rush Medical College, 1893. Born, Grinnell, Iowa, June 14, 1866. Prepared for college, High School, Grinnell, Iowa. Teacher, Stockton, Kansas, and Santa Fe. New Mexico, 1889-90. Student of Medicine, University of Iowa, and Rush Medical College, 1890-3. Practicing physician, Grinnell, Iowa, 1893—. Member of the Iowa State Medical Society, and American Medical Association. Married, August 23, 1893, to Miss Siveri L, Ringheim, I. C. ’89. 327. Lucia Estella Peirce. Grinnell, Iowa. Literary Course; B. S., Iowa College, 1890; A. M., Iowa College, on examina¬ tion in English, 1894. Born, Grinnell, Iowa, July 25, 1868. Sister of 503 and 504. Prepared for college, Academy of Iowa College. Teacher, Public Schools, Grin¬ ned, Iowa, 1890-1; Guthrie County High School, Panora, Iowa, 1891-2. Principal of High School, Rock Rapids, Iowa, 1892-3. Worked on the card catalogue of the college library, and studied for the Master’s Degree, Grinnell, Iowa, 1893-4. Bookkeeper and cashier for J. A. Stone & Bro., Grinnell, Iowa, 1894-5. Teacher, High School, Grinnell, 1895—. 328. Myrta Lilian Preston. Grinnell, Iowa. Literary Course; Ph. B., Iowa College, 1893. Sister of 224. Teacher, Fisk University, Nashville, Tennessee, 1889-91; Oshkosh, Wisconsin, 1891-2. Gradu¬ ate work in English Literature, Wellesley College, 1892-3. Teacher, Public Schools, Grinnell, Iowa, 1893—. go Iowa College Quinquennial 329. Ada J. Ringheim (Fitchpatrick). Nevada, Iowa. Literary Course. Born, Nevada, Iowa, December 3, 1868. Sister of 330 and 429. Prepared for college, Nevada High School and private study. Assisted her father in store, Nevada, Iowa, 1889-91 and 1892-4. In Europe for several months, 1891. Teacher, Talladega College, Talladega, Alabama, 1894-5. Mar¬ ried, Nevada, Iowa, August, 1895, to William Fitchpatrick, real estate agent. Residence, Nevada, Iowa, 1895—. 330. Siveri L. Ringheim (Newman). Grinnell, Iowa. Literary Course. Born, Nevada, Iowa, August 23, 1866. Sister of 329 and 429. Prepared for college, High School, Nevada, Iowa. Student in School of Oratory, Boston, 1889-91, receiving a diploma from the same. Student and Assistant In¬ structor, Harvard Annex, under Dr. Sargent, summer of 1891. Teacher of Ora¬ tory and Physical Culture, Iowa College, 1891-3. Married, August 23, 1893, to Dr. W. H. Newman, I. C. ’89. Residence, Grinnell, Iowa, 1889—. 331. Edson Eugene Stacy. 1162 North Pennsylvania St., Indianapolis, Indiana. B. S.; A. M., Iowa College, 1892. Born, Anamosa, Iowa, July 10,1866. Brother of 289. Prepared for college, Anamosa High School. Assistant State Secretary Y. M. C. A., Indianapolis, Indiana, 1889-90; State Secretary of same, 1890—. Married, at Gainnell, February 25, 1891, to Miss Martha S. Fisher, I. C. ’89. One of the Indiana delegates to the Thirteenth International Conference and Jubilee Celebration of the Y. M. C. A., London, summer of 1894. Has written many articles on Y. M. C. A. work, and given addresses at meetings conven¬ tions, etc. 332. Lee Monroe Swindler. Panora, Iowa. A. B. Born, near Panora, Iowa, January 10, 1864. Prepared for college, High School, Panora, Iowa. Superintendent of Schools of Guthrie County, Iowa, 1880-95. Principal of Guthrie County High School, Panora, Iowa, 1895—. Mar¬ ried, April 14, 1891, to Miss Laurayne Browne. 333. Edwin Arthur Wadsworth. Grinnell, Iowa. B. S. Born, Henniker, New Hampshire, May 8, 1865. Prepared for college, Academy of Iowa College. Traveling salesman, 1889-91. With firm of Morrison, McIntosh & Co., Glove Manufacturers, Grinnell, Iowa, 1891—. Married, Audu¬ bon, Iowa, November 8, 1893, to Miss Grace Burnside. 334. Harriet Walworth (MacCartney), deceased. Literary Course. Born, Monticello, Iowa, October 27, 1867. Prepared for col¬ lege, Monticello High School. Resided in Newburyport. Massachusetts, study¬ ing German and Music, 1889-90. Entered Wellesley College for two years of graduate work, fall of 1890. The next month she contracted a severe cold which precipitated latent pulmonary weaknesses. She was soon sent to Denver in hope of benefit from that climate, where she died, March 12, 1891. Married, at Newburyport, Massachusetts, November 24, 1890, to Rev. F. O. MacCartney, I. C. ’89. 335. Frank Enos Willard. Marshalltown, Iowa. B. S.; A. M., Iowa College, 1892. Born. Kewanee, Illinois, October 17, 1867. Brother of 561 and 600. Prepared for college, Grinnell High School and Acad¬ emy of Iowa College. Superintendent, Pubiic Schools, Spencer, Iowa, 1889-96. Superintendent of City Schools, Marshalltown, Iowa, 1896—. The Alumni 9i XXX.—CLASS OF 1890. 336. William James Barrette. 1077 South Eighth East, Salt Lake City, Utah. A. B. Born, Davenport, Iowa, 1867. Prepared for college, High School, Dav¬ enport, Iowa. Lumber business, St. Louis, Missouri, 1891-2. Attorney in part¬ nership with C. S. Crookshank, I. C. ’90, Des Moines, Iowa, 1892-3; Alton, Iowa, 1893-4; Eagle Grove, Iowa, 1895. Manufacturer of woodenware in company with J. S. Rawson, I. C. ’90, Ocosta, Washington, 1896. Attorney, Salt Lake City, Utah, 1896—. Married at LaCrosse, Wisconsin, June 25, 1895, to Miss Elizabeth Suiter. 277. Beulah Bennett. [See Class of 1887.] 337. Irving Jay Buck. St. Louis, Missouri. B. S.; A. M., Iowa College, 1893. Born, Grinnell, Iowa, August 21, 1869. Brother of 184 and 295. Prepared for college, Academy of Iowa College. In business, St. Louis, Missouri, 1890—. Married, St. Louis, Missouri, June 27,1895, to Miss Phebe Michael. 338. Edward Burnham Burling. Chicago, Illinois. A. B.; A. B., Harvard University, 1891; LL. B., Harvard University, 1804. Born, Eldora, Iowa, February 1, 1870. Brother of 314 and 529. Prepared for college, High School, Eldora, Iowa, and Academy of Iowa College. Student, Harvard University, 1890-91. Student, Harvard Law School, 1891-4. Traveled in Europe, 1894-5. Assistant Corporation Counsel, Chicago, Illinois, 1895—. 339. Lillian Burt. 830 Thirteenth Street, Des Moines, Iowa. A. B. Born, Winterset, Iowa, June 13, 1868. Prepared for college, High School, Des Moines, Iowa. Teacher, Public Schools, Walnut, Iowa, 1890-1; Des Moines, Iowa, 1891-3. Residence, Des Moines, 1893—. 340. George W. Coggeshall. Harvard University, Cambridge, Massachusetts. B. S.; Ph. D., University of Leipzig, 1895. Born, Des Moines, Iowa, Decem¬ ber 21. 1867. Prepared for college, West Des Moines High School. In business, Des Moines, Iowa, 1890-1. Student of Chemistry, Harvard University, 1891-2; University of Leipzig, Germany, 1892-5. Assistant Instructor in Laboratory of General Chemistry, Harvard Summer School, 1892. Assistant in Chemistry, and in charge of the Laboratory of Physical Chemistry, Harvard University, 1895—. 341. Clarence Samuel Crookshank. Santa Ana, California. B. S.; A. M., Iowa College, 1893. Born, Central City, Iowa, April 17, 1867. Brother of 375. Prepared for college, High School, Gladbrook, Iowa. Student of law, St. Louis, Missouri, 1891-2. Attorney, Des Moines, Iowa, in partnership with W. J. Barrette, I. C. ’90, 1892-3; Riverside, California, 1893-4. Lumber busi¬ ness, Riverside, California, 1894-6; Santa Ana, California, 1896—. 342. Mary Haines (Herriott). Des Moines, Iowa. A. B. Born, Grinnell, Iowa, Tune 8, 1870. Daughter of 12 and 13, and sister of 409 and 543. Prepared for college, Academy of Iowa College. Instructor in Latin and Greek, Academy of Iowa College, 1890-1. Student, Bryn Mawr Col¬ lege, Pennsylvania, 1891-2. Teacher, Academy of Iowa College, 1892-4. In- 92 Iowa College Quinquennial structor in Latin and Greek, Packer Institute, Brooklyn, New York, 1894-6. Married, Grinnell, Iowa, December 1, 1896, to Frank I. Herriott, I. C. ’90. 343. Elmer Maxwell Hayden. Tacoma, Washington. A. B. Born, Panora, Iowa, October 25, 1868. Prepared for college, Guthrie County High School, Panora, Iowa. City editor of Tacoma Daily Ledger, 1890-2. Student in law department, University of Michigan, 1892-3. Practicing law with firm of Doolittle & Fogg, Tacoma, Washington, 1893—. Married, at Benton Harbor, Michigan, August 21, 1895, to Miss Mamie L. Cady. 344. Frank Irving Herriott. Des Moines, Iowa. A. B.; A. M., on examination in Political Science, Iowa College, 1892; Ph. D., Johns Hopkins University, 1893. Born, Durant, Scott County, Iowa, October 19, 1868. Prepared for college, High School, Stuart, Iowa. Graduate student in Economics, Law and History, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, Maryland, 1890- 3. On Pittsburg Dispatch, during summer of 1891. Instructor in Political Economy, Woman’s College, Baltimore, Maryland, 1892-3. Editor of University Extension , a monthly magazine, and the University Extension Bulletin , a bi¬ weekly, aud Lecturer on Civics for American Society for Extension of Univer¬ sity Teaching, Philadelphia, 1893-5. Acting Professor of Political Science and Constitutional History, Iowa College, 1895-6. Married, Grinnell, Iowa, Decem¬ ber 1, 1896, to Miss Mary Haines, I. C. ’90. 345. Leslie Loomis Hoyt. Manchester, Iowa. B. S. Born, Manchester, Iowa, November 23, 1869. Student, Business Col¬ lege, Cedar Rapids, Iowa, 1890-1. With First National Bank, Manchester, Iowa, 1891— . 346. Caroline Lillian Hubbard. 1428 Woodland Avenue, Des Moines, Iowa. A, B. Born, Polk City, Iowa, April 22, 1868. Prepared for col[ege, West Des Moines High School. Teacher, Des Moines Public Schools, 1890-1. Teacher of Latin and Mathematics in Miss Rachel C. Clarke’s Preparatory School for Girls, Fifteenth Street, Des Moines, Iowa, 1891—. 347. Carl Kelsey. Goettingen, Germany. A. B. Born, Grinnell, Iowa, September 2, 1870. Son of 23. Prepared for col¬ lege, Academy of Iowa College. Teacher of Science, High School, Marshall¬ town, Iowa, 1890-2. Student, Andover Theological Seminary and engaged in Social Work in connection with Berkeley Temple, Boston, 1892-5. During 1893, spent two days each week at the Massachusetts Reformatory at Concora, working among the prisoners; in 1894, acted as Superintendent of Societies in same institution. Ordained, September 13, 1895. Pastor, First Congregational Church, Helena, Montana, 1895-6. Traveling and studying iu Europe, 1896—. Married, at Clinton, Illinois, September 2, 1896, to Miss Gertrude Holdeman. 348. Margaret Elizabeth McCowan. Winona, Minnesota. A. B. Born, May 14, 1865. Sister of 460 and 547. Prepared for college, High School, Elmwood, Illinois. Teacher, Government Indian School, Fort Mojave, Arizona, 1890-2; Public Schools, Hampton, Iowa, 1892-3; Assistant, North Des Moines High School, Des Moines, Iowa, 1893-6; Teacher of History and Politi¬ cal Economy, High School, Winona, Minnesota, 1896—. 349. William Henry Martin. Hartington, Nebraska. B. S. Born, Sunberry, Delaware County, Ohio, June 29, 1866. Brother of 462. Entered Iowa College from Coe College, Cedar Rapids, Iowa, to junior classifi- The Alumni 93 cation in 1888. Deputy County Treasurer, Cedar County, Nebraska, 1890-2 and 1894-6. Assistant cashier and director in First National Bank, Hartington, Ne¬ braska, 1892-4. Elected clerk of courts, an office which holds four years, Novem¬ ber 5, 1895. Married, at Logan, Iowa, August 30, 1893, to Miss Hattie Cadwell. 350. Albert William Merrill. Harlan, Iowa. A. B. Born, Des Moines, Iowa, March 29, 1869. Prepared for college, High School, West Des Moines, Iowa. Principal of Public Schools, Oswego, Illinois, 1890- 1. Teacher of Science and Mathematics, High School, Fort Dodge, Iowa, 1891- 2. Principal, High School, North Des Moines, Iowa, 1892-3. Superintendent of Schools, Stuart, Iowa, 1893-6. Superintendent of Schools, Harlan, Iowa, 1896—. Married, June 29, 1893, to Miss Louise J. Jessup, of Oswego, Illinois. 351. Jennie Frances Morgan. Kellogg, Iowa. Literary Course. Born, Kenosha, Wisconsin, 1867. Prepared for college. Academy of Iowa College, and private study. Has been teacher of Science and Mathematics, High School, Sauk Rapids, Minnesota; Ripon, Wisconsin; Bor¬ den Academy, Borden, Indiana. 352. Mary A. Palmer (Keister). Grinnell, Iowa. A. B. Born, Monticello, Iowa, November 7, 1868. Sister of 303 and 304. Pre¬ pared for college, High School, Grinnell, Iowa. Teacher, Rolfe, Iowa, 1890-1; Grinnell, Iowa, 1891-2. Married, to C. C. Keister, Merchant, Grinnell, Iowa, December 28, 1892. 327. Lucia Estella Peirce. [See Class of 1889.] 353. Joseph Scott Rawson. Cambridge, Massachusetts. B. S. Born, Des Moines, Iowa, October 22, 1869, Brother of 466. Prepared for college, West Des Moines High School, and Manual Training School, St. Louis, Missouri. Traveling salesman and secretary of Iowa Pipe and Tile Co., Des Moines, Iowa, 1890-6. Manufacturer of wooden ware, Ocosta, Washington, in company with W. J. Barrette, I. C. ’90, 1896. 354. Susannah Sands. Talladega. Alabama, A. B. Born, Downham, England, March 6, 1859. Prepared for college, Academy of Iowa College. Teacher, Talladega College, under the A. M. A., Talladega, Alabama, 1890—. 355. Luther M. Verbeck. Grinnell, Iowa. B. S.; A. M., Iowa College, on examination in Chemistry, 1895. Born, Malcom, Iowa, September 27,1868. Prepared for college, High School, Malcom, Iowa, and Academy of Iowa College. Commercial Chemist, Chicago, New York City and Early Bird, Florida, 1890-92. Student of Chemistry, Harvard University, 1892- 3. Instructor in Chemistry, Iowa College, 1893-5. Grinnell, Iowa, 1895—. 356. Herbert Clark Ward, deceased. B. S. Born, Jericho, Chittenden County, Vermont, July 24, 1868. Prepared for college, Academy of Iowa College. Assistant Secretary, Y. M. C, A., Des Moines, Iowa, 1890-2. He was in Muscatine, Iowa, in the service of Y. M. C. A. when he was stricken down with violent hemorrhage of the lungs, and died after a few days, June 10, 1892. 94 Iowa College Quinquennial 357. Lambert Lester Woods. Grinnell, Iowa. B. S.; A. M., Iowa College, 1893. Born, Chester, Iowa, August, 1867. Prepared for college, High School, Grinnell, Iowa. At home, Grinnell, Iowa, 1890-1. In the employ of Craver & Steele Manufacturing Company, Harvey, Illinois,July to October, 1891. In the employ of the Illinois Steel Company, 1891-2. Chief Chemist for the Griffin Car Wheel Company, Chicago, 1892. Chemist in charge of Laboratory of the Colorado Fuel and Iron Compady, Pueblo, Colorado, 1893. Farmer and manager of his father’s estate, Grinnell, Iowa, 1894—. Has been a student in Chemistry, in the special line of manufacture of iron and steel. 358. Alfred Wright. Vail, Iowa. B. S. Born, Waverly, Iowa, October 8, 1868. Prepared for college, High School, Marengo, Iowa. Teacher, Denison, Iowa, 1890-1. Lumber business, Carroll, Iowa, 1891-2. Lumber business, Vail, Iowa, 1892—. 359. Lilly L. Yoder (Jamieson). Warren, Pennsylvania. A. B. Bom, Sharon, Pennsylvania, April 8, 1868. Prepared for college, Pub¬ lic Schools of Sharon, Pennsylvania, and Des Moines, Iowa. Teacher in Mis¬ sion School, Slaterville, Utah, under commission of A. M. A., 1890-3. Teacher, Sixth Grade, Public Schools, Des Moines, Iowa, 1893-4. Married, September 20, 1894, to C. W. Jamieson, I. C. ’91. Peterson, Iowa, 1894-5. Warren, Penn¬ sylvania, 1894—. XXXI.—CLASS OF 1891. 360. Jacob Hiram Arnold. Redfield, South Dakota. A. B. Born, Defiance, Ohio, June 8, 1864. Brother of No. 478. Prepared for college, Academy of Iowa College. Professor of Mathematics, and doing work also in Chemistry and Physics, Redfield College, Redfield, South Dakota, 1891-3. Special student in Physics, Northwestern University, Evanston, Illinois, sum¬ mer of 1893. Dean of the Faculty of Redfield College. 1893-4. Professor of Po¬ litical Economy and Hiseory, Redfield College, 1893—• Married to Miss Bertha Harrison, of Ripon, Wisconsin, September 1, 1894. 361. William Doolittle Bailey. Duluth, Minnesota. A. B.; LL. B., Yale Law School, 1893. Born in Grinnell, Iowa. Brother of 35, 139 and 209. Prepared for college in Grinnell High School and Academy of Iowa College. Student in the law department of the State University, 1891-2. Student at Yale Law School. 1892-3. Attorney in Duluth, 1893—. 362. Stella Theodotia Bartlett. Grinnell, Iowa. A. B. Born, Grinnell, Iowa, April 8, 1869. Sister of 294. Prepared for college, Grinnell Public Schools and Academy of Iowa College. Student. Moody Bible Institute, 1893-4. Secretary of the Young Women’s Christian Association at Cedar Rapids, Iowa, 1895-6. Homemaker for her brother, A. W. Bartlett, I. C. ’88, and his two children, 1896—. 363. Elmer Lester Beard. Grinnell, Iowa. A. B. Born, Hardin County, Iowa, 1869. Brother of 183 and 227. Prepared for college. Academy of Iowa College. Partner in business firm (drugs and books) of J. G. Johnson & Co., Grinnell, 1891-6. Firm of Beard & Alley, drug¬ gists, Grinnell, 1896—. Married, 1892, to Miss Ollie Hartzell. The Alumni. 95 364. William Sumner Bixby, Powhattan, Kansas. A. B.; B. D., Chicago Theological Seminary, 1894. Born, Grinnell, Iowa, September 6, 1869. Brother of 313. Prepared for college, Academy of Iowa College. Student at Chicago Thelogical Seminary, 1891-4. Pastor of Congre¬ gational Church, Powhattan, Kansas, 1894—. Spent one vacation during his theological course as pastor of a mission church at Tacoma, Washington. 365. Albert Whitcomb Braley, deceased . A. B. Born, Kellogg, Iowa. Prepared for college, Kellogg High School and Academy of Iowa College, Secretary of Y. M. C. A., Fort Dodge, Iowa, 1891-2. City editor of the Daily Chronicle , Fort Dodge, Iowa, 1892-3. City editor of the Daily Times , Mason City, Iowa, 1893-4. Superintendent of schools, Kellogg, Iowa, 1894-6. Died, August 9, 1896. 366. Lily Field Brewer (Porter). 'Worthington, Minnesota. A. B. Born, Raliegh, North Carolina, 1868. Sister 245, 246, 278, 367, 527, and daughter of Professor F. P. Brewer. Prepared for college, Academy of Iowa College. Grinnell, Iowa, 1891-2. Teacher, High School, Worthington, Minne¬ sota, 1892-4. Married, Grinnell, Iowa, August, 1894, to Edgar L. Porter of St. Cloud, Minnesota, a graduate of Carleton College in 1887. Mr. Porter is Super¬ intendent of Public Schools, Worthington, Minnesota. 367. William Fisk Brewer. Bozeman, Montana. A. B. Bom, North Carolina, 1870. Brother 245, 246, 278, 366, 527, and son of Professor F. P. Brewer. Prepared for college, Grinnell High School and Acad¬ emy of Iowa College. Instructor in Academy of Iowa College, 1891-2. Fellow in Latin, University of Chicago, T892-3. Instructor in Latin and History, Portland Academy, Portland, Oregon, 1893-4. Student in English, Harvard Summer School, 1895. Instructor in English, Lake Forest Academy, Lake Forest, Illinois, 1891-6. Professor of English and Latin, Montana State College of Agriculture and Mechanic Arts, Bozeman, Montana, 1896—. 368. Mary Winnifred Bryant. Charleston, South Carolina. A. B. Born, Ticonic, Iowa, May 17, 1879. Prepared for college, Academy of Iowa College. Teacher in LeMoyne Institute, under the auspices of the A. M. A., Memphis, Tennessee, 1891-5. Teacher in Normal Department of Avery In¬ stitute, under the same auspices, Charleston, South Carolina, 1895—. 369. Bertha Evangeline Bush. Garner, Iowa. Ph. B.; A. M., Iowa College, on examination in History and English, 1894. Born, Galva, Illinois, May 30, 1866. Sister of 370. Prepared for college, Normal School, Whitewater, Wisconsin. Teacher in Public Schools, Grinnell, Iowa, 1891-96. Gainer, Iowa, 1896—. 370. Helen Sue Bush (Olds) deceased. Literary Course. Born, Galva, Illinois, March 2, 1869. Sister of 369. Married, Garner, Iowa, October, 1891, to Rev. Otis C. Olds, of Clinton, Wisconsin. Mr. Olds is a graduate of Beloit College and Chicago Theological Seminary. Before their marriage Mr. and Mrs. Olds pledged their lives to missionary work and in December, 1891, they were sent by the American Board of Commissions for For¬ eign Missions to Mexico, Rev. Mr. Olds having been there already two years. Cusihuiraichic, 1891-3. Parral. 1893-4. Died of diphtheria, Parral, Mexico, De¬ cember 2, 1894. Her personal friends, including missionaries in Mexico, and Americans in Parral, and several in the United States, have erected a much- needed church building in memory of Mrs. Olds’ devoted Christian life. The church at Parral, though its members are all poor, raised for this object between six and seven hundred dollars. The building was dedicated January 20, 1897. A g6 Iowa College Quinquennial marble tablet in the vestibule of the church bears the name of Mrs. Olds, in memory of whom this temple was built. 371. Christian Carl Carstens. Marshalltown, Iowa. A. B. Born, Bredstedt, Sleswick-Holstein, April, 1865. Prepared for college, Davenport High School. Superintendent of schools, Ames, Iowa, 1891-5. Prin¬ cipal of High school, Creston, Iowa, 1895-6. Married. June, 1893, Miss Blanche McMeans, 1 . C. ’91. Principal, High School, Marshalltown, Iowa, 1896—. 372. Archibald Cattell. 134 Monroe Street, Chicago, Illinois. A. B. Born at Davenport, Iowa, July 14, 1870. Prepared for college, Daven¬ port High School. Traveling Salesman for the Cable Lumber Company of Dav¬ enport, 1891-2. City editor of the Davenport Daily Leader , summer and fall of 1892. Student in the Law School of University of Michigan, 1892-3. Admitted to bar, 1893. Practicing law in the office of Judge Erb, 1894—• Married to Miss Rose Haskell, I. C. ’93, at Fort Dodge, Iowa, Nov. 15, 1893. 373. William Ezra Chase. Epworth, Iowa. A. B. Born, Fremont, Nebraska, January 1, 1872. Brother of 530. Prepared for college, Sioux City High School and Hull Educational Institute. Teacher of Languages in the Academy at Hull, Iowa, 1891-3. Teacher of Latin, etc., in High School, Caiumet, Michigan, 1893-4. Principal of Schools, Benjamin, Texas, 1894- 5. Teacher of History and German in Epworth Seminary, Epworth, Iowa, 1895- . 374. Arthur Hambleton Craver. Harvey, Illinois. A. B. Born, Grinnell, Iowa, June 2, 1870. Prepared for college, Academy of Iowa College. Connected with the firm of Craver, Steele Manufacturing Com¬ pany, 1891-5; Harvester King Company, Harvey, Illinois, 1895—. 375. Lida Edna Crookshank. Santa Ana, California. Literary Course; Ph. B., 1804. Born, Central City, Iowa, September 8, 1870. Sister of 341. Prepared for college, High School, Gladbrook, Iowa. Santa Ana, California, 1891-2. Teacher of Latin and German, High School, Lancaster, Wis¬ consin, 1892-3. Santa Ana, California, 1893—. 376. Charles Eben Cushman. Argentine, Kansas. A. B.; B. D., Chicago Theological Seminary, 1804. Born, Upper Alton, Ill¬ inois, June 10, 1870. Prepared for college, Grinnell High School and Iowa Col¬ lege Academy. Student, Chicago Theological Seminary, 1891-4. Preaching in the Congregational Church, New York, Iowa, summer of 1892. Preached in the church at White Cloud, Kansas, for six months in 1893. He received a call to become pastor on the completion of his seminary course. Pastor, Congregational Church, White Cloud, Kansas, 1894-6. Ordained, June 10, 1895. Pastor, Argen¬ tine, Kansas, 1896—. 377. Harlan Paul Douglass. Ames, Iowa. A. B.; B. D., Andover Theological Seminary, 1894; A. M., Iowa College, on ex¬ amination in Sociology and History, 1896. Born, Osage, Iowa, January 4, 1871. Brother of 487 and 538. Prepared for college. Academy of Iowa College. Stu¬ dent, Chicago Theological Seminary, 1891-2. Student, Andover Theological Sem¬ inary, 1892-4. Pastor, Congregational Church, Manson, Iowa, 1894-5. Student in Sociology and History, Harvard Divinity School, 1895-6. Pastor, Congregational Church, Ames, Iowa, 1896—. Married, Cedar Rapids, Iowa, June 25,1895, to Miss Rena Sherman, a student of Iowa College in 1894-5, The Alumni 97 378. Henry George Everett. 1040 Tenth Street, Des Moines, Iowa. Ph, B., Scientific. Born, Point Fortune, Canada, May 21, 1867. Prepared for college, West Des Moines High School and Preparatory Department of Drake University. Entered Iowa College for the senior year fiom Drake University. With the Central Life Assurance Society, Des Moines, Iowa, 1891—; Vice-Presi¬ dent of same, 1896—. 379. Anna Estelle Fox. Cheyenne, Wyoming. Ph. B. Prepared for college, High School, Charles City, Iowa. Preceptress of Iowa College Academy, 1891-2. Latin teacher in the High School, Grinnell, Iowa, 1892-4. Principal of the High School and instructor in Latin and Litera¬ ture, Cheyenne, Wyoming, 1894—. 380. Madeline M. Gaston. Topeka, Kansas. Literary Course. Born, Ottumwa, Iowa, November 29, 1869. Prepared for college, Ottumwa High School. Teacher, High School, Ottumwa, Iowa, 1891-3. Student, Emerson College of Oratory, Boston, Massachusetts, 1893-4. Teacher of private pupils in Elocution, Ottumwa, Iowa, 1894-6. Instructor in Elocution, Bethany College, Topeka, Kansas, 1896—. 381. Olive Hoffine. Grinnell, Iowa. Ph. B. Born, Brookville, Illinois. Prepared for college, Academy of Iowa College. Teacher, Public Schools, Pomeroy, Washington, 1891-5. Teacher, Public Schools, Grinnell, Iowa, 1895— 382. Harry K. Holsman. 153 La Salle Street, Chicago, Illinois. Ph. B., Scientific. Born, Dale, Iowa, July 3, 1866. Prepared for college, Guth¬ rie County High School, Panora, Iowa. Building Superintendent for Burke & Company and Bagley & Company, interior decorators and contractors, Chicago, Illinois, 1891-3. Architect, firm of Brainerd & Holsman, Chicago, Illinois, 1894—. Member of Central Department of Young Men’s Christian Association, Chicago, Congregational Club, and Art Institute of Chicago. The architect of several dwelling houses and business blocks in Grinnell. 383. Charles Wesley Jamieson. Warren, Pennsylvania. Ph. B., Scientific. Born, Warren, Pennsylvania, July 9, 1867. Brother of 216. Prepared for college, High School, Grinnell, Iowa, and Academy of Iowa College, With International Packing Company, Chicago, Illinois, 1891-2. Bookkeeper for Plano Manufacturing Company, Chicago, Illinois 1892-3. Traveling for the Green Bay Lumber Company, Des Moines, Iowa, 1893-4; Yard Manager for same com¬ pany, Peterson, Iowa, 1894-5. Assistant Manager of Warren Refining Company, Warren, Pennsylvania, 1895—. Director of Merchants Oil and Lamp Company, of Williamsport, Pennsylvania. Married, Des Moines, Iowa, September 20,1894, to Miss Lilly Yoder, I. C. ’90. 384. Clara Franciska Knebel. Winside, Nebraska. Literary Course, Born, Grinnell, Iowa, 1868. Prepared for college, Grinnell High School and Academy of Iowa College. Teacher, Sheridan, Iowa, 1891-2. Teacher, Primary Department, Winside, Nebraska, 1892—. 385. Theron Upson Lyman. Vilas Block, Madison, Wisconsin. A. B.; LL. B., University of Wisconsin, 1894. Born, Dunlap, Iowa, Septem¬ ber 7, 1869, Entered Iowa College, Junior classification, from Tabor College. 9 8 Iowa College Quinquennial Student, Law Department of University of Wisconsin, 1891-4. Attorney, Madi¬ son, Wisconsin, 1895—. 386. Charles Ethelbert McKinley. Rockville, Connecticut. A. B.; B. D., Andover Theological Seminary, 1894. Born, Anita, Iowa, May 18, 1870. Prepared for college, High School, Anita, Iowa, and Academy of Iowa College. Student, Theological Seminary, Chicago, September to December, 1891. In charge of Bethany Chapel, Cedar Rapids, Iowa, 1892. Student, Ando¬ ver Theological Seminary, 1892-4. Pastor, First Congregational Church, Yar¬ mouth, Maine, 1894-6. Pastor, Union Congregational Church, Rockville, Con¬ necticut, September 1, 1896—. Married, August 30, 1894, to Miss Fannie Keister, a member of ’91, in ’87-’88. 387. Blanche McMeans (Carstens). Marshalltown, Iowa. Ph. B. Born, at Maquoketa, Iowa, June, 1868. Prepared for college in the Public Schools of Maquoketa and Monticello, Iowa. Teacher of German and Latin in Monticello High School, 1891-3. Married, June, 1893, to C. C. Carstens, I. C. ’91. Teacher of History and English in the Ames High School, 1893-4. Residence, Marshalltown, Iowa, 1896—. 388. Mary Patterson Martin. Peterson, Iowa. Literary Course. Born, Mineral Point, Wisconsin, 1866. Prepared for college, Academy of Iowa College. Teacher, and some of the time occupied with home duties, Peterson, Iowa, 1891—. 389. Alice S. Miller (Fry). Corydon, Iowa. Ph. B., Scientific. Born, Ovid. Iowa, June 22, 1866. Prepared for college with private instruction and in Academy of Iowa College. Teacher, Ovid, Iowa, 1891- 4^ Entered hospital in Chicago as trained nurse for four months during 1892. Teacher, Green Cove Springs, Florida, 1894-5. Married, March 9th, i8q 5, at Jackson, Florida, to Francis Rhinehart Fry, a graduate of Western College, Toledo, Iowa, now engaged in farming. Residence, Corydon, Iowa, 1895—. 390. Isabella Eugenia Powers. New Hampton, Iowa. Ph. B. Prepared for college. High School, New Hampton, Iowa. Principal of High School, Spencer, Iowa, 1891-2. Principal of High School, New Hampton, Iowa, 1852—. State Superintendent of Prison Work, and member of District Flower Committee, Y. r. S. C. E., 1895—. Travelled through the east, summers of 1893 and 1895. Took a special course of literary work in Didactics under direc¬ tion of State Superintendent, fall of 1895. 391. Benjamin Jewett Ricker. Grinnell, Iowa. Ph. B., Scientific. Born, Grinnell, Iowa, June 27, 1868. Prepared for college, Coe College and Academy of Iowa College. Minneapolis, Minnesota, 1891-2. Lumber business, Fresno and Selma, California, 1892-4. Collector in Nebraska and North Dakota, for Plano Manufacturing Company of Chicago, 1894-5. Mem¬ ber of firm of Morrison, McIntosh & Company, Manufacturers of Gloves, Grin¬ nell, Iowa, 1895—. 392. Mary Elizabeth Simmons. Lake Geneva, Wisconsin. Ph. B.; A. M., Iowa College, on examination in English and Latin, 1895. Born, Elkhorn, Wisconsin, July 2, 1866. Prepared for college, Lake Geneva High School and Seminary; Whitewater, Wisconsin, Normal School; and Mt. Holyoke Seminary. Assistant, High School, Spencer, Iowa, 1891-3. Instructor in Latin, The Alumni 99 State Normal, Cedar Falls, Iowa, 1803-5. Homemaker for her father after the death of her mother, Lake Geneva, Wisconsin, 1895-6. Supervisor of Training School, State Normal, 1896-7. Lake Geneva, Wisconsin, 1897—. 393. Clifford Lamont Snowden, Harlan, Iowa. A. B. Born, Fairmount, Virginia, 1869. Brother of 555. Entered Iowa Col¬ lege from Penn College, making Sophomore classification. Student in Chicago College of Law, editor Chicago Street Railway Review , and special newspaper correspondent, 1891-4. Student, Chicago Theological Seminary, 1894-5. Preach¬ er, Congregational Church, Strawberry Point, Iowa, summer of 1865. Graduate student, Chicago University; Pastor, Congregational Church, Half Day, Illinois, 1895-6. Pastor, Congregational Church, Harvey, Illinois, 1896. Superintendent of Hyde Park Boys’ Club; Resident of Social Settlement, “Chicago Commons,” 1895-6. Pastor, Congregational Church, Harlan, Iowa, 1897—. 394. Lee L. Summers. Milwaukee, Wisconsin. Ph. B., Scientific. Born, Rochester, Michigan, September 14, 1863. Prepared for college, High School, Marshalltown, Iowa. Supervisor of Drawing in the Schools of Grinnell, Iowa, 1891-2; the same, Milwaukee, Wisconsin, 1892—. Grad¬ uate student in History under Professor Parker, Grinnell, Iowa, one year. Chair¬ man of the Examining Committee of Western Drawing Teachers’ Association, 1894. President of the same Association, 1895. 395. Hannah E. Taylor (Partch). South Gate, Shang Hai, China. A. B. Born, Illinois, 1864. Prepared for college, Normal School, Dexter, Iowa, and one term in Parsons College, Fairfield, Iowa. Teacher in Highland Uni¬ versity, Highland, Kansas, 1891-4. Took Nurse’s Training Course at Cottage Hospital, Des Moines, Iowa, two months in 1895. Married, September, 1895, to Rev. George E. Partch, a graduate of Highland University, ’90, and of McCor¬ mick Theological Seminary,’95. Mr. and Mrs. Partch are missionaries under the American Board, Shang Hai, China. 396. Alice Lizzie Walker. Boston, Massachusetts. Ph. B. Born, Bath, New Hampshire, January 25, 1870. Sister of 517. Pre¬ pared for college, High School, Grinnell, Iowa. Teacher, Fisk University, Nash¬ ville, Tennessee, 1891-4. Student in Boston City Hospital, course for trained nurses. 1894—. 397. Jacob Louis Witmer. Des Moines, Iowa. A. B.; LL. B., Iowa College of Law, Des Moines, 1895. Born, Lancaster, Penn¬ sylvania, February 4, 1867. Brother of 519, Prepared for college, Academy of Iowa College. Life Insurance Business, Des Moines, Iowa, 1891-3. Student of Law, Iowa College of Law, Des Moines, 1893-5. Practicing Attorney, firm of Witmer & Strock, 1895—. 398. Louise Barbour Wright (Gould). Quasqueton, Iowa. Ph. B. Sister of 601. Residence, Quasqueton, Iowa, 1891-3; Ann Arbor, Mich¬ igan, 1893-4; Monteer, Missouri, 1894-5. This time was mostly spent in recover¬ ing from a badly sprained ankle, the accident occurring during her senior year. Teacher of Fourth Grade, LeMoyne Institute, under A. M. A., Memphis, Tennes¬ see, 1895-6. Married, to W. E. Gould, of Kankakee, Illinois, September 11, 1896. Residence, Quasqueton, Iowa, 1896—. 100 Iowa College Quinquennial XXXII.—CLASS OF 1892. 399. Horace Wade Arnold. Vancouver, Washington. A. B. Born, Grinnell, Iowa, July 14, 1866. Son of 44 and brother of 479. Pre¬ pared for college, High School, Ames, Iowa, and Academy of Iowa College. Principal of High School, Iowa Falls, Iowa. 1892; Principal, Public Schools, El¬ gin, Iowa, 1893; Bellevue, Iowa, 1893-;; High School, Vancouver, Washington, 1895-6; Superintendent of City Schools, Vancouver, 1896—. Served as supply editor for county papers; written several articles for school journals, and a paper for the Oregon State Teachers’ Association on "The High School and Its Courses of Study,” 400. Minnie Atkinson. Forest Grove, Oregon. Literary Course. Born, September 30, 1868, at Bombay Presidency, India. Sister of 439 and £23. Resided at Lake Park, Washington, 1892-5; Forest Grove, Oregon, 1895—. Teacher, first grade, primary department, Forest Grove Public School, September, 1895—. 401. Fred Lane Blackinton. 4723 Prairie Avenue, Chicago, Illinois. A. B. Born, Denmark, Iowa, August 20, 1869. Prepared for college, Den¬ mark Academy. In First National Bank, Chicago, Illinois, 1892—. Assistant superintendent of teachers, Armour Mission, Chicago. 402. Ora Herbert Brockway, 3515 North Fifth Street, Des Moines, Iowa. A. B. Born, Denmark, Iowa, September 8, 1866. Prepared for college, Den¬ mark Academy. Teacher, Renwick, Iowa, 1893. Engaged in the wholesale hay business, Des Moines, 1893—. 403. Charles Benjamin Burlew, Grinnell, Iowa. A. B. Born, Ithaca, New York, October 1, 1869. Brother of 296. Prepared for college, Grinnell High School and Academy of Iowa College. Bookkeeper for the Spaulding Manufacturing Company, Grinnell, 1892—. 404. Sadie Maria Campbell. Franklin, Nebraska. A. B. Born, DeWitt, Iowa, January, 1866. Sister of 444. Prepared for col¬ lege, High School, DeWitt, Iowa. Preceptress of Franklin Academy, Franklin, Nebraska, 1892—. 405. Mary Chamberlain. Mills College, Oakland, California. Ph. B.; A. M., on examination in French, German and English, Iowa College, 1893. Born, Eddyviile, Iowa, September 28, 1868. Preparea for college, Acad¬ emy of Iowa College. Traveled in Europe, and student in Paris and Leipzig, 1893-4. Visited Alaska, 1894. Instructor in Mills College and Seminary, Ala¬ meda County, California, 1894—. 406. Arthur May Cowden, deceased. Ph. B., Scientific. Born, Mercer County, Illinois, February 21, 1864, and came early to Iowa. Brother of 297. He had very limited school advantages but be¬ came a teacher for several terms in district schools and one term in the public schools of Bagley, Iowa. Upon graduation he became interested in the business of canning corn and tomatoes and visited several factories with a view of gain¬ ing a better knowledge of the process. For this purpose he visited Council The Alumni. ioi Bluffs where his love of sport took him to Cut Off Lake for a sail. The boat capsized and he was drowned, October 7, 1892. His body is buried in the ceme¬ tery at Adair, Iowa. 407. James Raley Cravath, Chicago, Illinois. Ph. B., Scientific. Born, Grinnell, Iowa, July n, 1872. Prepared for college, Grinnell High School and Academy of Iowa College. Editor of Street Railway Review , Chicago, Illinois, 1892—. Secretary, Chicago Electrical Association. Has written several articles for Electrical Worlds and made successful inven¬ tions in electrical appliances for street railways. 408. Annie Wheeler Ford. Logan, Iowa. Ph. B., Scientific. Born, Magnolia, Iowa, August 31, 1870. Sister of 570. Pre¬ pared for college, Logan High School and Callanan college, Des Moines, Iowa. Assisting her father and uncle in their law office, Logan, Iowa, 1892—. Student of History in a reading circle. 409. James Harris Haines. Stillwater, Minnesota. Ph. B., Scientific; M. D., Rush Medical College, 1895. Born, Grinnell, Iowa, March n, 1872. Son of 12 and 13, and brother of 342 and 543. Prepared for col¬ lege, Academy of Iowa College. Student, Rush Medical College, Chicago, Illi¬ nois, 1892-5. Physician at City Hospital, Stillwater, Minnesota, 1895—. 410. Henry Howe Heald. Luverne, Minnesota. Ph. B., Scientific. Born, Sumner, Maine, October 6, 1866. Brother of 281 and 575. Prepared for college, Grinnell High School and Academy of Iowa College. In employ of Thomson Houston Electric Company. Lynn, Massachusetts, 1892-3. Grocery and Dry Goods business, Grinnell, Iowa, 1893-5. Farming, Lu¬ verne, Minnesota, 1895—. 411. Albert Nicholas Hoffman. Parkston, South Dakota. Ph. B., Scientific. Born, Rockford, Iowa, December 16, 1872. Prepared for college, High School, Rockford, Iowa. Principal of Schools, Rudd, Iowa, 1892-3; Teller and Bookkeeper, Parskton State Bank, Parkston, South Dakota, 1894—• 412. Hugh William Hughes. West Liberty, Iowa. A. B. Born, Lime Springs, Iowa, November 16. 1870. Prepared for college, Academy of Iowa College. Railway Postal Clerk, on the fast mail between West Liberty and Chicago, 1892—. Married, Grinnell, Iowa, July 25, 1893, to Miss Clare E. Wiley. 413. Charles Clyde Hunt. Montezuma, Iowa. A. B. Born, Cleveland, Ohio, November 9, 1866. Brother of 498. Prepared for college, High School, Monticello, Iowa, and Academy of Iowa College. Teacher, High School, Northfield. Minnesota, 1892-3; High School, Cherokee, Iowa, 1893-4. Deputy Treasurer of Poweshiek County, Iowa, 1894—. 414. Clara A. Jones (Weatherly). 35 West Second Street, Boston, Massachusetts. Ph. B. Born, Lancaster. Wisconsin, March 25, 1865. Prepared for college, High School, Lancaster, Wisconsin, and student at Wisconsin State University. Residence, Lancaster, Wisconsin, 1892-3; Milford, Iowa, 1893-5; Cambridge, Massachusetts, 1895-6. Married, July 28, 1893, to Arthur L. Weatherly, I. C. ’92. In social settlement work, Boston, Massachusetts, 1897—. 102 Iowa College Quinquennial 194. Katherine Jones. [See Class of 1882.3 415. Sen Joseph Katayama. Kyoto, Japan. A. B. Born, Echigo, Japan. Spent two years in California, and one year in Marysville College, Tennessee, and entered Iowa College to freshman classifica¬ tion in 1888. Student, Andover Theological Seminary, 1892-4; Yale Theological Seminary, 1894-5. Traveled in Europe, summer and fall of 1895. Teacher, Kyoto, Japan, 1896—. 416. Delno Ernest Kercher. 1931 South Eighteenth Street, Philadelphia, Penn. A. B.; M. D., University of Pennsylvania, 1895. Born, Wooster, Ohio, 1869. Prepared for college, Highland, Kansas. Student, Medical Department of Uni¬ versity of Pennsylvania, 1892-5. Practicing Physician, Philadelphia, Pennsylva¬ nia, 1895—. Attending Physician for children at South Eastern Hospital and Dispensary; Attending Gynecologist to Dispensary of Methodist Episcopal Hospital; Assistant Surgeon to Dispensary of Presbyterian Hospital. Married, at Kewanee, Illinois, September 26, 1893, to Miss N. Elizabeth Little. 417. Myrta Alice Lyman. New Haven, Connecticut. A. B. Born, Castile, New York, January 27,1870. Prepared for college, Acad¬ emy of Iowa College. Teacher, under American Missionary Association, Macon, Georgia, 1892-3; Tougaloo University, Tougaloo, Mississippi, 1893-5. Connecti¬ cut Training School for Nurses, New Haven, Connecticut, 1895—. 418. George Asa Lyon. Rockford, Iowa. Ph. B., Scientific. Born, Rockford. Iowa, June 9, 1871. Brother of 322, 323 and 501. Prepared for college, High School, Rockford, Iowa. Cashier of bank, Marble Rock, Iowa, 1892-3. Assistant Cashier, First National Bank, Rockford, Iowa, 1894—. 419. James C. Mcllrath. Vancleve, Iowa. Ph. B., Scientific. Born, Antrim, Ireland, 1865. Prepared for college, private study. Dealer in General Hardware, Vancleve, Iowa, 1892—. Married at Mar¬ shalltown, Iowa, 1892, to Miss Jennie R. Doud. 420. Lucy Maud Law Manning. Grinnell, Iowa. A. B. Born, Shullsburg, Wisconsin, March 23, 1869. Sister of 582. Prepared for college, private instruction, and Academy of Iowa College. Teacher of Piano, Greek and some English branches, Fargo College, Fargo, North Dakota, 1892-3. Teacher of Music, Emmetsburg, Iowa, 1893-4. Teacher of Latin and English, High School, Sibley, Iowa, 1894-5. Student, Iowa College School of Music, Grinnell, Iowa, 1895—. 421. George Linnaeus Marsh. Marshalltown, Iowa. A. B. Born, Marshall County, Iowa, February 20,1871. Prepared for college, High School, Marshalltown, Iowa. Abstracter in his father’s office, summer of 1892. City editor of the Ottumwa Daily Courier , fall of 1892. City editor, Marshalltown Times-Refiublican, 1892-4. Clerk in the State Legislature, doing special newspaper work and reading law, winter of 1894. Student of law, office of Ex-Senator r. M. Sutton, Marshalltown, 1894-5. Admitted to bar, May, 1895, Attorney, member of firm of Sutton & Marsh, Marshalltown, Iowa, 1895—. Sec¬ retary of Marshall County Republican Central Committee during 1895; Presi- The Alumni 103 dent of Young Men’s Republican Club; Member of Board of Directors of Mar¬ shall County Library Association. 422. Frank Leroy Meeker. Marshalltown, Iowa. A. B. Born, Marshalltown, Iowa, July 23, 1869. Prepared for college, High School, Marshalltown. Traveling salesman for the Ketchum Wagon Company, summer of 1892. Read law in his father’s office, 1892-4. Admitted to bar, 1894. Junior member of law firm of Meeker & Meeker (father and son), Marshalltown, Iowa, 1894—. Took active part in the republican primaries and state convention during the campaign of 1895. 423. William Thomas Moyle. Grinnell, Iowa. A. B. Born, Iowa County, Wisconsin, September 10, 1867. Prepared for col¬ lege, High School, Hampton, Iowa, and Academy of Iowa College. In grocery business, firm of Rapson & Moyle, Grinnell, Iowa, 1892—. Married, June 21, 1896, to Miss Lida Swisher. 424. Estelle Patterson. Grinnell, Iowa. A. B. Born, Eldora, Iowa, August 3, 1869. Prepared for college, Eldora High School. Teacher, High School, Webster City, Iowa, 1892-3; same, East Des Moines, Iowa, 1893-4. Instructor in Latin, Academy of Iowa College, 1894—. 425. Samuel John Pooley. Grinnell, Iowa. Ph. B., Scientific. Born, Plymouth, England, November 10, 1868. Prepared for college, High School, Manchester, Iowa. Bookkeeper for the Foster-Bailey- Goodrich Company, Grinnell, Iowa, summer of 1892. Bookkeeper, First National Bank, Grinnell, 1892—. 426. Burt Eardly Powell. Berlin, Germany. Ph. B., Scientific. Born, Putnam Township, Fayette County, Iowa, Decem¬ ber 14, 1867. Prepared for college, Tabor College. Instructor in History in the Academy of Pacific University, Forest Grove, Oregon, 1892-5. Graduate stu¬ dent in History, German and French, Harvard University, Cambridge, Massa¬ chusetts, 1895-6. Student, University of Berlin, 1896—. 427. Ruth Myra Rew. Grinnell, Iowa. A. B. Born, Corydon, Iowa, September 16, 1869. Sister of 589. Prepared for college, Academy of Iowa College. Teacher, Public Schools, Clarinaa, Iowa, 1892-3. Residence, Grinnell, Iowa, 1893-4. Student, Chicago University, 1894-5. Teacher, High School, Tipton, Iowa, 1895-6. Residence, Grinnell, 1897—. 428. Mary Ethel Rice. Logan, Iowa. Ph. B., Scientific. Born, Magnolia, Iowa, 1868. Prepared for college, Acad¬ emy of Tabor College. Teacher, Public and High School, Logan, Iowa, 1892—. 429. Emma Christine Ringheim. Liebig Str., No. 8, Leipzig, Germany. Literary Course; Ph. B., Iowa College, 1896. Born, Nevada, Iowa, November 29, 1869. Sister of 329 and 330. Prepared for college, Nevada High School and Academy of Iowa College. Teacher, Lutheran Academy, Madison, Minnesota, 1892-3; Public Schools, Minneapolis, Minnesota, 1893-6. Graduate student, Uni¬ versity of Minnesota, 1896. Student in German Language and Literature, Leip¬ zig, 1896—. 104 Iowa College Quinquennial 430. Esther Spencer. Marshalltown, Iowa. Ph. B. Born, Alden, Iowa, April 24, 1868. Sister of 473. Prepared for college, High School, Jamestown, New York. Teacher, New Providence Academy, New Providence, Iowa, 1892-3. Teacher of Latin and English, High School, Webster City, Iowa, 1893-6. Assistant Principal, High School, Marshalltown, Iowa, 1896—. 431. Anthony TePaske. Orange City, Iowa. A. B.; A. B. Harvard University, 1893. Born, Fillmore County, Minnesota, October 15, 1868. Prepared for college, Northwestern Classical Academy, Orange City, Iowa. Student, Harvard University, 1892-3. Instructor, Northwestern Classical Academy, Orange City, Iowa, 1893—. 432. Mary Lavern Tone. 935 Ninth Street, Des Moines, Iowa. Ph. B. Born, Huron County, Ohio, January 31, 1869. Prepared for college, Des Moines High School, and attended Callanan College, Des Moines, three years. Teacher in Miss Clarke’s Preparatory School, Des Moines, Iowa, 1892-3. Traveled in Europe, studying French and German in Paris and Leipzig, with Miss Mary Chamberlain, 1 . C. ’92, 1893-4. Residence, Des Moines, 1894—. 433. Clara Ellen Townsend. Sheldon, Iowa. Ph. B., Scientific. Born, Sandyville, Iowa, July 28, 1870. Prepared for college, Preparatory Department, Simpson college, Indianola, Iowa. Teacher, LeMars, Iowa, 1892; High School, Ackley, Iowa, 1893-6; Public Schools, Sheldon, 1897.— 434. Clyde Leslie Ward. Chicago, Illinois. A. B. Born, Rock Island, Illinois, July 5,1869. Prepared for college, Academy of Iowa College. Traveling for the Osborne Murphy Company, Red Oak, Iowa, 1893. Traveling collector for the Plano Manufacturing Company, Chicago, 1894—. 435. Arthur L. Weatherly. 35 West Second Street, Boston, Massachusetts. A. B, Born, Simcoe, Canada, March 30, 1868. Prepared for college, Cedar Valley Seminary, Osage, Iowa. Student, Andover Theological Seminary, 1892-3. Ordained to the Ministry, July 17, 1893. Pastor, Congregational Church, Mil¬ ford, Iowa, 1893-5. Married, at Lancaster, Wisconsin, July 28,1893, to Miss Clara Allyn Jones, 1 . C. ’92. Student, Divinity School of Harvard University, 1895—. Engaged in Social Settlement Work and editor of the American Co-operative News , Cambridge, Massachusetts, 1897—. 436. Clara Belle Whisler. 708 North Fourth Street, Tacoma, Washington. Ph. B., Scientific. Born, Waubeek, Linn County, Iowa. Prepared for college, Guthrie County High School, Panora, Iowa, and Kansas State Normal School. First Assistant in the Schools of Garfield, Washington, 1892-3. Teacher of Math¬ ematics, Tacoma Academy, 1893-5. Residence, Tacoma, 1896—. 437. Susan Margaret White. Indianapolis, Indiana. Literary Course. Born, Weathersfield, Vermont, April 8, 1867. Sister of 208. Prepared for college, Grinnell High School and Academy of Iowa College. Teacher, Public School, Grand Junction, Colorado, 1892-3. Sunday School Vis¬ itor for First Protestant Methodist Church, Pittsburg, Pennsylvania, 1893-4. Student, Moody Bible Institute, Chicago, 1894-5. General Secretary, Y. W. C. A., Indianapolis, Indiana, 1895—. The Alumni 105 XXXIII.—CLASS OF 1893. 438. Mary Allison. Stuart, Iowa. A. B.; Ph. B., 1884. Born, Kendall County, Illinois. Prepared for college, State Center High School and Academy ot Iowa College. Sister of 521. Gradu¬ ate student in Iowa College in French and German, 1894-5. Teacher, near Grin¬ ned, 1895-6. Teacher, High School, Stuart, Iowa. 1896—. 439. Henry Herbert Atkinson. Burnett, Washington. A. B. Born, Ahmadnagar, India, May 26, 1870. Brother of 400 and 523. Prepared for college, Academy of Iowa College. Teacher, Spanaway School, Lake Park, Washington, 1893-4. Teacher, Burnett, Washington, 1894—. 440. Herbert Huse Bigelow. 144 East Third Street, St. Paul, Minnesota. Ph. B. Born, Brookfield, Vermont, May, 1870. Brother of 482 and 525. Pre¬ pared for college, High School, Le Mars, Iowa. Traveling salesman, 1893. Lumber business at Fullerton, Nebraska, 1894. Traveling salesman, 1895. Printing business, St. Paul, Minn., 1896—. Married to Miss Nina E. Penney, at Fullerton, Neb., October 9, 1894. 441. Ada Arvelia Boiler. Walnut, Iowa. Ph. B. Born, Muscatine, Iowa, August 27, 1872. Sister of 563. Prepared for college, High School, Walnut, Iowa. Residence, Walnut, 1893—. 442. Mary Rebecca Bowen. Wellesley, Massachusetts. Ph. B. Born, Centerville, Iowa, July 16, 1869. Prepared for college, Center¬ ville High School and Drake University. Graduate student of English Lan¬ guage and Literature, Chicago University, holding the Iowa College fellowship, 1893-4. Went to England with Mrs. Martha Foote Crow, holding the Emerson traveling fellowship ol the University of Chicago, working during the summer of 1894 with Mrs. Crow in the British Museum; student at Oxford doing special work in the Bodleian Library, and taking lectures of Professor Napier in Old Etiglish, 1894-5. Graduate student in the University of Chicago on the Emerson fellowship, studying Old English, with Romance Language as a minor, 1895-6. Instructor in Wellesley College, 1896—. Has written verses, several magazine articles, and one paper in Modern Language Notes. 443. Mary Burns. Grinnell, Iowa. A. B. Born, New York City. Prepared for college, Academy of Iowa Col¬ lege. Residence, Grinnell, Iowa, 1893—. 444. Emma Belle Campbell. Chadron, Nebraska. Ph. B. Born, DeWitt, Iowa, 1869. Sister of 404. Prepared for college, DeWitt High School. Teacher, Public School, Spencer, Iowa, 1893-4; Academy of Chad¬ ron, Nebraska, 1894—. Pursuing special study in Greek and Roman History. 445 - Nellie M. Crockett (Osborne). 1233 Chapel Street, New Haven, Connecticut. Ph. B. Born, Seward, Illinois, January 4, 1867. Prepared for college, High School, Beloit, Wisconsin. Assistant Principal, High School, Pecatonica. Illi¬ nois, 1893-4. Student, Yale Art School, 1894-5. Married, August, 1894, to C. A. io6 Iowa College Quinquennial Osborne, a graduate of Beloit College, ’91, and Yale Divinity School, ’95. Resi¬ dence, New Haven, Connecticut, where Mr. Osborne is assistant pastor of Dwight Place Church, 1894—. 446. Iona Imogene Davis. Sleepy Eye, Minnesota. A. B. Born, Jasper County, Iowa, September 4, 1868. Prepared for college, Academy of Iowa College. Principal of High School, Fairfield, Iowa, 1893-4. Principal of High School, Sleepy Eye, Minnesota, 1894—. Instructor in a Teachers’ Training School, Tracy, Minnesota, summer of 1895. 447. Wallace Russell Davis. Osceola, Iowa. Ph. B. Born, Keosauqua, Iowa, July 20, 1873. Prepared for college, Public Schools, Avoca, Iowa. Engaged in Hardware business, Ottumwa, Iowa, 1893-5. Osceola, Iowa, 1895—. 448. Arthur Henry DeLong. 223 Hermitage Avenue, Chicago, Illinois. Ph. B., Scientific; B. D., Chicago Theological Seminary, 1896. Born, Butler- ville, Iowa, May 10, 1869. Brother of 486 and 568. Prepared for college, Friends’ Academy, LeGrand, Iowa. Studied medicine in office of Dr. Clark, Grinnell, Iowa, summer of 1893. Columbian guard at World’s Fair, fall of 1893. Student, Chicago Theological Seminary, 1893-6; Rush Medical College, Chicago, 1896—. Was engaged in work in the Pacific Garden Mission, Armour Mission, during his theological course. 449. Alice Chloe Dunham. Grinnell, Iowa. A. B.; A. M., on examination in Latin and Greek, Iowa College, 1895. Born, Neponset, Illinois, November 21, 1869. Prepared for college, Academy of Iowa College. Teacher, High School, Estherville, Iowa, 1893-4. Graduate student, Iowa College, 1894-5. Teacher, High School, Grinnell, 1895—. 450. Frank Fort Everest. 248 Merriman Block, Council Bluffs, Iowa. Ph. B. Born, Homewood, Illinois, May 1, 1869. Prepared for college, Ped- die Institute, Hightown, New Jersey, and Academy of Iowa College. Merchant, Grinnell, Iowa, 1893-5. In Real Estate Business, Council Bluffs, 1895—. Mar¬ ried, January 1, 1894, to Miss Florence Folsom, student in Iowa College, 1891-3. 451. Anna Belle Foss. Red Oak, Iowa. A. B. Born, Neponset, Illinois. Prepared for college, High School, Neponset, Illinois. Student at Knox College, Galesburg, Illinois, one year before entering Iowa College. Teacher, Public School, and Principal of the Washington School, Red Oak, Iowa, 1893—. 452. Effie R. Haines. Oconto, Wisconsin. A. B. Born, Abingdon, Iowa, October, 1872. Prepared for college, Kellogg and Burlington High Schools. Private teacher in the family of Rev. B. Fay Mills, Pawtuxet, R. I., 1893-4. Teacher of German and English, Clarinda Edu¬ cational Institute, 1894-5. Teacher of German and Latin, High School, Oconto, Wisconsin, 1895—. Student for degree of A. M., Iowa College, in departments of German and Greek. 453. Joseph Miles Hanson. 460 Jackson Street, St. Paul, Minnesota. A. B. Born, Darlington, Wisconsin, March 24, 1868. Prepared for college, Academy of Iowa College. Assistant pastor of People’s Church, with Rev. Dr. The Alumni 107 S. G. Smith, St. Paul, Minnesota, 1893-4. Founder and Superintendent of “St. Paul Commons,” a social settlement, St. Paul, Minnesota, 1894—. Edited Church Work , 1893-4; contributed newspaper articles and delivered public ad¬ dresses on the subjects of settlement work and social reform. Is now engaged in a special form of settlement work which he is developing according to the necessities of the immediate enviroments in St. Paul. 454. Emma Rose Haskell (Cattell). 6125 Monroe Avenue, Chicago, Illinois, Ph. B., Scientific. Born, Fort Dodge, Iowa, May 28, 1871. Prepared for col¬ lege, Hartford, Connecticut, Public Schools, and St, Mary’s Hall, Faribault, Minnesota. Married, November 15, 1893, to Archibald Cattell, I. C. ’91. 455. Blanche Emma Hay. 1623 Center Street, Des Moines, Iowa. Ph. B. Born, Edgerton, Ohio, August 6, 1864. Prepared for college, Guthrie County High School, Panora, Iowa. Graduated in the Ladies’ Course at Ober- lin, 1890. Principal of Grinnell High School, 1890-5. Did work in History and Latin in evening classes with Professors Parker and Slaughter, and in Litera¬ ture by private study, while Principal of the Grinnell High School, which en¬ abled the Faculty to grant her tne degree of Ph. B. with the class of 1893. Teacher of Latin, High School, West Des Moines, Iowa, 1895—• 456. Samuel Hiller. Kahoka, Missouri. Ph. B., Scientific. Born, Kahoka, Missouri, June 29, 1872. Prepared for col¬ lege, Kahoka College. Cashier Exchange Bank, Kahoka, 1893—. 457. Arthur Julius Jones. 2629 Pleasant Avenue, Minneapolis, Minnesota. A. B. Born, Grinnell, Iowa, March 21, 1871. Brother of 116. Prepared for college, Grinnell High School and Academy of Iowa College. Assistant in Biol¬ ogy, Iowa College, 1893-4. Assistant in Biology and Instructor in the Academy, Iowa College, 1094. Teacher of Biology and Greek, Central High School, Min¬ neapolis, Minnesota, 1894—. 458. Cornelius A. Jongewaard. Orange City, Iowa. A. B. Born, Mahaska County, Iowa, 1868. Prepared for college, North¬ western Classical Academy, Orange City, Iowa. Student, Western Theological Seminary, Holland, Michigan, 1894-6. Preached near Raymond, Minnesota, summer of 1895. 459. Albert Lynn Lawrence. 1450 Monadnock Building, Chicago, Illinois. Ph. B., Scientific; LL. B., University of Iowa, 1896. Born, Tama City, Iowa, November 19, 1871. Prepared for college, High School, Le Mars, Iowa. Grinnell, Iowa, 1893-4. Student of Law in Jud»e Hubbard’s office, Cedar Rapids, Iowa, and Law Department of University of Iowa, 1894-6. Assistant Patent Specifica¬ tion writer in office of Barton and Brown, and attorney, Chicago, 1896—. 460. Hervey Smith McCowan. St. Cloud, Minnesota. Ph. B. Born, August 15, 1867. Brother of 348 and 547. Prepared for college, High School, Elmwood, Illinois. Student, Theological Seminary, Chicago, Illi¬ nois, October, 1893, to February, 1894. Graduate student, Iowa College, and preacher at Eddyville and Union, Iowa, February to June, 1804. Business Man¬ ager of The Kingdom , 1894-5. Pastor. First Congregational Church, St. Cloud, Minnesota, 1895—. Has made a special study of Sociology and Modern Litera¬ ture. Has published: “Iowa College,” “A Misunderstood Man,” “The Chris¬ tianity of Wealth,” “The School of the Kingdom,” and other articles in maga¬ zines. Devotes considerable time to platform lectures in the states of the Northwest. io8 Iowa College Quinquennial 461. Mary Elizabeth Mack. Grinnell, Iowa. A. B. Born, Grinnell, Iowa, March 25, 1873. Prepared for college, Grammar School, Boston, Massachusetts, and Academy of Iowa College. Teacher of Music, Grinnell, Jowa, 1893-4. Student of Music, Ann Arbor, Michigan, 1894-5. Student of Music, Chicago, Illinois, 1895-6. Grinnell, Iowa, 1896—. 462. Edward Morris Martin. 512 New York Life Building, Omaha, Nebraska. Ph, B. Scientific; LL. B., University of Nebraska, 1895. Born, Delafield. Wis¬ consin, September 23, 1871. Brother of 349. Prepared for college. Hastings Col¬ lege, Hastings, Nebraska. Traveling on the Pacific coast, and studying law in office of Lion. J. C, Robinson, Hastings, Nebraska, 1893-4. Student in Law De¬ partment, University of Nebraska, 1894-5. Practicing law connected with the firm of Bartlett, Baldrige & DeBord, Omaha, Nebraska, 1895—. 463. Clara Elizabeth Millerd. 1153 Lawndale Avenue, Chicago, Illinois. A. B.; A. M., on examination in Greek and Philosophy, Iowa College, 1894. Born, Benton Harbor, Michigan, September 14, 1873. Prepared for college, Chicago West Division High School, and Academy of Iowa College. Graduate student in Greek, Latin and Philosophy, University of Chicago, 1893-4. Precep¬ tress and teacher of Greek and Latin, Academy of Iowa College, 1894-6. Ab¬ sent on leave, Graduate Student, Chicago University, 1896—. 464. Clarence Albert Palmer. St. Paul. Minnesota. Ph. B. Born, Patch Grove, Wisconsin, January 3, 1865. Prepared for college, Cedar Valley Seminary, Osage, Iowa. Instructor, Academy of Iowa College, 1893-4. In insurance business, Deep River, Iowa, June to November, 1894. Proof reader for West Publishing Company, St. Paul, 1894—. 465. Carrie Benton Parker. Spencer, Iowa. Ph. B. Born, Mason City, Iowa. Prepared for college, High School, Mason City, Iowa, aud Academy of Iowa College. Principal High School, Spencer, Iowa, 1893-6. City Superintendent of Schools, Spencer, Iowa, 1896—. 328. Myrta Lilian Preston. [See Class of 1889.] 466. Hollis Allen Rawson. East Fourth Street, Des Moines, Iowa. Ph. B. Born, Des Moines. Iowa, February 26, 1871. Brother of 353. Prepared for college, West Des Moines High School. Student, Harvard University, Cambridge, Massachusetts, 1893-4. Bookkeeper for Iowa Pipe & Tile Company, Des Moines, Iowa, 1894-5; traveling salesman for same company in Iowa and Ne¬ braska, 1895—. 467. Walter Hancock Rhodes. Lewistown, Illinois. Ph. B., Scientific. Born, Havana, Illinois, July 4th, 1871. Prepared for col¬ lege, Havana Public Schools. Assistant cashier, and later, cashier of bank in Lewistown, Illinois, 1894—. Married, June, 1895, to Miss Flora B. Wolfe, of Freeport, Illinois, a former student of music in Iowa College. 468. Alexander C. Rinkenberger. Chicago, Illinois. Ph. B., Scientific: M. D., Chicago Medical College, 1888. Born, Blue Island, Cook County, Illinois, July 7, 1869. Prepared for college, High School, Blue The Alumni 109 Island, Illinois; graduated from the Chicago Homeopathic Medical College, 1888; Student in the office of Dr. Henry M. Hobart, I. C., ’74, and at the Uuiversity of Illinois. 1888-9. Travelled for a Chicago Educational House, and practiced medicine, Blue Island, Illinois, 1893-4. Employed by the Plano Manufacturing Co., West Pullman, Illinois, 1894-6; Special Collector for same company, 1896—. 469. Harvey Easton Roberts. Postville, Iowa. Ph. B., Scientific. Born, Postville, Iowa, December 2, 1871. Prepared for col¬ lege, Public Schools, Postville. Clerk, Wholesale Clothing House, Chicago, June to December, 1893. Graduate student, State University, Madison, Wis¬ consin, 1894. In Grain Elevator business with his father, Postville, Iowa, 1894— Superintendent of Flower Mission, Iowa State Association of Christian En¬ deavor. 470. Nathan Edwin Sanders. Springfield, Massachusetts. A. B. Born, Grinnell, Iowa, June 28, 1870. Brother of 551. Prepared for col¬ lege, Grinnell High School and Academy of Iowa College. Farming, Grinnell, 1893-5. Graduate student of Christian Sociology, Iowa College, 1893-4. Student, International Young Men’s Christian Association Training School, Springfield, Massachusetts, 1895—. 471. Otto Ralph Savage. Adair, Iowa. Ph. B., Scientific. Born, Prairieburg, Iowa, January 3, 1872. Prepared for college, High School, Stuart, Iowa. In Exchange State Bank, Stuart, Iowa, 1893-6. Lumber business, Adair, Iowa, 1896—. Married at Stuart, Iowa, January 6, 1897, to Miss Gertrude L. Rakestraw. 472. Caroline M. Sheldon. 830 Nineteenth Street, Des Moines, Iowa. A. B.; A. M. Iowa College, on examination in Greek and English, 1895. Born, Potsdam, New York, 1^60 Graduated in 1878 from the State Normal School at Potsdam, New York; Teacher in New York State: Teacher, Public Schools of Stuart, Iowa, four years, and four years in the High School of Marshalltown, Iowa: Principal of the Newton High School, two years; Governess in private family in Marshalltown, one year. Entered the Senior class of Iowa College, 1892. Instructor in Literature and French, High School, West Des Moines, Iowa, 1893—. Studied in France especially in the Public Libraries in Paris, summer of 1895. Has done literary work for magazines and newspapers. 473. Fannie E. Spencer. Thomasville, Georgia. Ph. B, Born, Alden, Iowa, December 23, 1869. Sister of 430. Prepared for college, High School, Alden, Iowa. Teacher, Public and High Schools, Spencer, Iowa, 1893-6. Governess, Thomasville, Georgia, 1896—. 474. Edwin Stanton Van Gorder. Audubon, Iowa. Ph. B., Scientific. Born, Exira, Iowa. July 6, 1872. Prepared for college, Academy of Iowa College. Graduate student of French and English Literature, Harvard University, 1893-4, Assistant cashier of the First National Bank, Audubon, Iowa, 1894—. 475. William Edward Wells. Granville, Ohio. Ph. B., Scientific. Born, Panchganni, India, November 25, 1870. Prepared for college, Academy of Iowa College. Student of Medicine, University of Penn¬ sylvania, Philadelphia, 1893-4. Graduate student in Biology, Denison Univer¬ sity, Granville, Ohio, 1896—, > no Iowa College Quinquennial 476. Charles Stoddard Williston. Association Building, Chicago, Illinois. A. B.; LL. B., North Western University, 1895. Born, Flushing, New York, Tuly 21, 1871. Prepared for college, High School, Davenport. Iowa. Student of law, North Western University, 1893-5. Practicing law with law firm ot Runnells & Burry, Chicago, Illinois, 1895-7. Practicing law with firm of Holt, Freeman & Williston, Chicago, 1897—. XXXIV.—CLASS OF 1894. 477. Anna Preston Adams. Mason City, Iowa. Ph. B. Born at Mason City, Iowa, February 2, 1873. Prepared for college, Mason City High School. Teacher, Third Grade, Public School, Mason City, and later in the High School, 1894—. Is doing newspaper work for one of the town papers; pursuing course of reading in Sociology; President of a Young Women’s Club studying History and Literature; Superintendent of Junior Christian Endeavor work in Northern Iowa. 438. Mary Allison. [See Class of 1893.] 478. Benjamin Franklin Arnold, deceased, A. B. Born, near Vinton, Iowa. Brother of 360. Prepared for college, Acad¬ emy of Iowa College. Graduate student in Department of Applied Christianity, Iowa College, 1894. Failing health necessitated outdoor life in Northern Iowa and Dakota, 1895. Residence, Glendale, Arizona, 1895-6. Marcus, Iowa, 1896-7. Married, at Marcus, Iowa, December 27, 1894, to Miss Nettie Runnings. Died, at Marcus, Iowa, February 21. 1897. 479. Charles Elliott Arnold. Clarinda, Iowa. A. B. Born, Grinnell, Iowa, August 31, 1868, Son of 44, and brother of 399. Prepared for college, Ames High School and Academy of Iowa College. Teacher, Hawthorne, Iowa, 1894-5. Teacher of Sciences and Instructor in Physical Cul¬ ture for boys, High School, Red Oak, Iowa, 1895-6. Principal, High School, Clarinda, Iowa, 1896—. 480. Emil Hessel Beckman. Stillwater, Minnesota. Ph. B., Scientific. Born, Grundy Center, Iowa, February 15, 1872. Prepared for college, Grundy Center High School. Teacher, Grundy County, Iowa, 1894-5; High School, Stillwater, Minnesota, 1895-6; Principal of same, 1896—. 481. Adah Irving Bedford. 215 Rich Street, Ionia, Michigan. Ph. B. Born, DeWitt, Iowa. April 14, 1870. Prepared for college, High School, DeWitt, Iowa. Teacher, Racine Academy, Racine, Wisconsin, 1894-5. Principal of Ward School, Ionia. Michigan, 1895—, 482. Geneva A. Bigelow. Grinnell, Iowa, A. B. Born, Brookfield, Vermont, April 13, 1872. Sister of 440 and 5 2 5 * P re_ pared for college at Mclndoe’s Falls, Vermont and LeMars High School. Assist¬ ant teacher in the High School, Fullerton, Nebraska, 1894-5. Teacher in kinder¬ garten, Grinnell, Iowa, 1895—. The Alumni. iii 483. Clark Eugene Brown. Mobile, Alabama. Ph. B. Born, Grant County, Wisconsin, December, 1868. Brother of 484. Prepared for college, Academy of Iowa College. In business for Powers, Fowler & Lewis, Chicago, Illinois, 1894—. 484. Harry Leslie Brown. 108 South High Street, Janesville, Wisconsin. Ph. B., Scientific. Born, Boaz, Wisconsin, August 14, 1870. Brother of 483. Prepared for college, Decorah Institute, Decorah, Iowa, and Academy of Iowa College. Principal of High School, Lone Rock, Wisconsin, 1894-5; Teacher, Summer School, Richland Center, Wisconsin, 1895; Teacher of Science, High School, Janesville, Wisconsin, 1895—. 485. John Peet Clyde. New Haven, Connecticut. Ph. B. Born, Waucoma, Iowa, September 18, 1869, Prepared for college Academy of Upper Iowa University, Fayette, Iowa. Graduate student in De¬ partment of Applied Christianity, Iowa College, 1894-5. Pastor, Union, Iowa, and doing non-resident work in Political Ethics and a comparative study of the ethical teachings of the Romantic and Realistic Schools of Modern Novelists, for the degree of A. M., 1895-6. Student at Yale Theological Seminary, 1896—. 375. Lida Edna Crookshank. [See Class of 1891.] 486. Kittie Maria DeLong. Belle Plaine, Iowa. A. B. Born, Butlerville, Iowa, April 16, 1872. Sister of 448 and 568. Prepared for college, LeGrand Academy. Teacher in country schools, Montour, Iowa, 1894-5; Public Schools, Belle Plaine, Iowa, 1895—. 487. Truman Orville Douglass. 12 Divinity Hall, Cambridge, Massachusetts. A. B. Born, Osage, Iowa, April 17, 1873. Brother of 377 and 538. Prepared for college, Grinnell High School. Graduate student, Iowa College, 1894-5. Student, Harvard Divinity School, studying History and Philosophy, 1895—. 488. Lola Lilian Eells. Ontario, California. Ph. B. Born, Muscatine, Iowa, December 26, 1871. Prepared for college, High School, Jefferson, Iowa, and Academy of Iowa College. On account of heart trouble she went to California with her parents where she has resided in Pasadena and Ontario, 1894—. 489. Ernest Wilder Fellows. Grinnell, Iowa. A. B. Born, Vinton, Iowa, April 29, 1874. Prepared for college, High School and Tilford Collegiate Academy, Vinton, Iowa. Teacher in grammar grade and later acting superintendent of schools, New Sharon. Iowa, 1894-5. Private secre¬ tary to Dr. George D. Herron, Grinnell, 1895-6. Teacher in Public Schools, Grinnell, 1896—. 490. Fanny Orythia Fisher. Missouri Valley, Iowa. Ph. B. Born, Chester Center, Iowa, June 18, 1871. Sister of 298. Prepared for college, Academy of Iowa College. Teacher, Guthrie County High School, Panora, Iowa, 1894-5; Assistant Principal, same, 1895-6; Teacher, High School, Missouri Valley, Iowa, 1896—. 112 Iowa College Quinquennial 491. William Richard Gelston. Elk City, Nebraska. Ph. B., Scientific. Born, Elk City, Nebraska, January 1, 1868. Prepared for college, Fremont Normal and Business College and Academies of Tabor and Iowa College. In business with his father, and Solicitor for Fire Insurance, Elk City, Nebraska, 1894—. 492. D. Fred Grass. Council Bluffs, Iowa. Ph. B. Born, Council Bluffs, Iowa, May 5, 1873. Prepared for college, Coun¬ cil Bluffs High School. Teacher of Political Economy, Civil Government and Algebra, Council Bluffs High School, 1894—. 493. Josiah Bushnell Grinnell. Grinnell, Iowa. A. B. Born, Grinnell, Iowa, May 21, 1872. Prepared for college, Academy of Iowa College. Farming, near Grinnell, 1894—. 494. Charles Wesley Hackler. New Sharon, Iowa. A. B. Born, Adams County, Illinois, January 2, 1869. Prepared for college, High School, Superior, Nebraska. Principal of High School, New Sharon, Iowa, 1894— . 495. Joseph Henry Hathaway. Cambridge, Mass. A. B.; A. B., Harvard University, 1896. Born, Grinnell, Iowa, March 4, 1875. Prepared for college, Academy of Iowa College. Graduate student in Biology and Political Economy, and Assistant in Biology, Iowa Coliege, 1894-5. Student, Marine Biological Laboratory, Wood’s Holl, Massachusetts, summer of 1895. Student, Harvard University, 1895-6. Student, research work, Agassiz Labora¬ tory, Newport, Rhode Island, summer of 1896. Student, and Assistant in Zo¬ ology and Biology, Harvard University, 1896—. 496. George Earl Hilsinger. Sabula, Iowa. Ph, B., Scientific. Born, Sabula, Iowa, March 14, 1874. Prepared for college, High School, Sabula, Iowa. Cashier of J Hilsinger’s Bank, and Notary Public, Sabula. Iowa, 1894-5. Student in Law Department, Harvard University, 1895. Sabula, Iowa, 1896—. 497. Alfred Ingalls Hunt. Grinnell, Iowa. A. B. Born, Champaign, Illinois, June 6, 1868. Brother of 264. Prepared for college. Academy of Iowa College. Machinist in the shops of the Great West¬ ern Railway, St. Paul, Minnesota, and Railroad fireman, 1894-5. Grinnell, Iowa, 1895— . 498. Wallace Castile Hunt. Walsenburg, Colorado. A. B. Born, Monticello, Iowa. January 23, 1871. Brother of 413. Prepared for college, High School, Monticello. Iowa, Editor of the Walsenburg World , Walsenburg, Colorado, 1894—. 499. Ernest Beckwith Kent. Chicago, Illinois. A. B. Born, Michigan City, Indiana, November 18, 1873. Prepared for col¬ lege, Preparatory Department of Atlanta University, Atlanta, Georgia. Gradu¬ ate student in Sociology and History, Iowa College, 1894-5. Pastor’s Assistant, First Congregational Church, Winona, Minnesota, 1895-6. Student, Chicago Theological Seminary, 1896—. The Alumni. ”3 500. Elston Fullerton King. Lincoln, Nebraska. Ph. B., Scientific. Born, Elgin County, Ontario, January 30, 1873. Prepared for college, High School, Guthrie County, Iowa. Student in Medical Depart¬ ment of State University of Nebraska, 1894—. 501. Arthur Chandler Lyon. Rockford, Iowa. Ph. B., Scientific. Born, Rockford, Iowa, November 16, 1874. Brother of 322, 323 and 418. Prepared for college, High School, Rockford, Iowa. Teacher, Rockford, Iowa, 1094-5. In business, Mason City, Iowa, five months in 1895, In his father’s bank, Rockford, Iowa, 1895-6. Teacher, Rockford, 1896—. 502. Robert Storrs Osgood. 81 Ashland Boulevard, Chicago, Illinois. A. B. Born, Des Moines, Iowa, January 26, 1873. Prepared for college, West Des Moines High School. Employed in Planing Mills of Wheeler, Osgood & Co., Tacoma, Washington, 1894-5. Student, Theological Seminary, Chicago, Illinois, 1895—. 503. Gurdon Duane Peirce. Grinnell, Iowa. Ph. B., Scientific. Born, Grinnell, Iowa, September 27, 1870. Brother of 327 and 504. Prepared for college, Academy of Iowa College. Mercantile business, Grinnell, Iowa, 1894—. 504. Helen Teresa Peirce. 278 Ashland Avenue, River Forest, Oak Park, Illinois . A. B. Born, Grinnell, Iowa, June 14, 1874. Sister of 327 and 503. Prepared for college, Academy of Iowa College. Teacher, Iron Mountain, Michigan, 1894-5; Marietta, Wisconsin, 1895-6. Graduate student, University of Chicago, summer of 1896. Teacher, Public Schools, River Forest, Oak Park, 1896—. 505. Margaret Amanda Pepoon. Chicago, Illinois. A. B. Born, Round Grove, Iowa, November 25, 1869. Prepared for college, High School of Grinnell, Iowa, and Winona, Minnesota. Teacher, country school, near Grinnell, Iowa, 1894-5. Teacher of Languages, Hull Educational Institute, Hull, Iowa, 1895-6. In a training school for nurses, Chicago, Illinois, 1896—. 506. Harriet Temple Perkins. * Blair, Nebraska. Ph. B, Born, Hamilton, Missouri. Prepared for college, Academy of Iowa College. Chicago, Illinois, 1894-5. Special student in the Teachers’ Training School, Moline,Illinois, 1895-6. At home and teaching in Public School, Blair, Nebraska, 1896—. 507. Frederick Allyn Pinney. 1219 “I” Street, N. W,, Washington, D. C. Ph. B., Scientific. Born, Ottumwa, Iowa, August 16, 1869. Prepared for col¬ lege, High School, Burlington, Iowa. Engaged in business, Burlington, Iowa, 1894. Private Secretary to Senator John H. Gear, Washington, D. C.. 1894—. Clerk of Senate Committee on Pacific Railroads, 1895—. Attendant at evening sessions of National University Law School. 508. William Randolph Raymond. 173 Fifteenth Street, Detroit, Michigan, A. B. Born, Council Bluffs, Iowa, May 23, 1870. Prepared for college, Council Bluffs High School and Academy of Iowa College. Graduate student, Depart- Iowa College Quinquennial :i 4 ment of Applied Christianity, Iowa College, 1894-5. Superintendent of Educa¬ tional work in Plymouth Institute, an Institutional Church in charge of Rev, Morgan Wood, Detroit, Michigan, 1895-6. City express business, Detroit, Mich¬ igan, 1896—. Student for degree of A. M., Iowa College in Literature and Philo¬ sophy. Married, at Burlington, Iowa, June 16, 1896, to Miss Helen D. Clapp. 509. Paul William Richards. Red Oak, Iowa. A. B, Born, Red Oak, Iowa, March 16, 1874. Prepared for college, Academy of Iowa College. Studied law in his father’s office, Red Oak, Iowa, 1894-6. Ad¬ mitted to the bar, May 15, 1896. Practicing law, Red Oak, Iowa, 1896—. 510. Orion Littell Rider. Toledo, Iowa. Ph. B., Scientific. Born, Forest City, Illinois, January 7, 1874, Prepared for college, Mt. Ayr High School, and spent one year at Western College, Toledo, Iowa. Secretary to the president of Iowa College, 1894-5. Stenographer for Struble & Stiger, Attorneys, Toledo, Iowa, 1895—. 511. Addie L. Robert. Angola, Indiana. A. B. Born in Chicago, Illinois. Prepared for college, Academy of Wheaton College, Wheaton, Illinois. Student in Tabor College during her freshman and sophomore years. At home, Angola, Indiana, 1894—. 512. Mae Frances Sherman. Bristol, Iowa. Ph. B. Born, Marshalltown, Iowa, December 2, 1871. Prepared for college, Academy of Iowa College. Teacher, Haverhill, Iowa, 1894-5; Bristol, Iowa, 1895—. 513. Pearl Ellsworth Somers. 329 Hermitage Avenue, Chicago, Illinois. A. B. Born, Green Mountain, Iowa, September 9, 1870. Brother of 206. Pre¬ pared for college, High School, Grinnell, Iowa, private instruction and Academy of Iowa College. Student, Rush Medical College, Chicago, Illinois, 1894—, 514. Edna C. Sylvester. Ogden, Iowa. Ph. B. Born. Ogden, Iowa, October, 1871. Prepared for college, Academy of Iowa College. Teacher, Public Schools, Ogden, Iowa, 1894—. 515. Burt J. Thompson. Forest City, Iowa. Ph. B. Born, Forest City, Iowa, May, 1872. Prepared for college, Forest City High School. Cashier, Winnebago County Bank, Forest City, Iowa, 1894—. 516. Hervey Wilburt Tyer. Perry, Iowa. Ph. B., Scientific. Born, Adel, Iowa, February 7,1870. Prepared for college, High School, Perry, Iowa, and Academy of Iowa College. Principal of Public Schools, Deep River, Iowa, 1894-6. Studying law at home, Perry, Iowa, 1896—. 517. Ernest Walker. 1285 Bonney Avenue, Chicago, Illinois. Ph. B., Scientific. Born, Bath, New Hampshire, December 25, 1871. Brother of 396. Prepared for college, High School, Grinnell, Iowa. With the firm of Craver & Steele Manufacturing Company, Harvey, Illinois, 1894-5. Clerk in station of Santa Fe Railroad, Chicago, Illinois, 1895—. The Alumni US 518. Joseph Whyte. Blencoe, Iowa, Ph. B., Scientific. Born, Clinton County. Iowa, October 3, 1865. Prepared for college, Academy of Iowa College, In business with Cunningham & Company, Dealers in Hardware, Lumber, etc., Blencoe, Iowa. 1894—. 519. John Earl Witmer. Monroe, Iowa. Ph, B., Scientific. Born, Greencastle, Iowa, March 6, 1869. Brother of 397. Prepared for coliege, Academy ot Iowa College. Teacher, Country School, one term, in 1894. Principal of Schools, Jolley, Iowa, 1895. Instructor of Science and Languages, Calhoun County Normal School, Rockwell City, Iowa, 1895-6. Superintendent of Schools, Monroe, Iowa, 1896—. 520. Garrett Polhemus Wyckoff. Grinnell, Iowa. A.B. Born, Fairview, Illinois, October 4, 1871. Prepared for college, High School, Gilman, Iowa, and Academy of Iowa College. Graduate student in So¬ ciology and Political Economy, Iowa College, fall of 1894. Instructor, High School, Grinnell, Iowa, November and December, 1894. Assistant, Academy of Iowa College, January, 1895. Graduate student in Sociology, Political Economy and Political Science, Columbia University, New York City, January to July, 1895. Graduate student in Sociology, University of Chicago, 1895-6. Associate Professor of Applied Christianity, Iowa College, April, 1896—. XXXV.—CLASS OF 1895. 521. James Allison. Cambridge, Massachusetts. Ph. B. Born, Kane County, Illinois, June 29, 1869. Prepared for college, Grinnell High School. Brother of 438. Student of law, Chicago, Illinois, 1895-6. Admitted to bar, Ottawa, Illinois, June, 1896. Student, Law Department, Har¬ vard University, 1896—. 522. Ernest Wilbur Atherton. Grinnell, Iowa. Ph. B., Scientific. Born, Floyd, Iowa, August 17, 1870. Prepared for college, Academy of Iowa College. In business, Grinnell, Iowa, 1895—. 523. George Ernest Atkinson. Oakland, California. A.B. Born, Solapur, India, June 15, 1872. Brother of 400 and 439. Prepared for college, Academy of Iowa College. Student, Pacific Theological Seminary, Oakland, California, 1895—. Secretary of “Bay Association of Student Volun¬ teers,” which comprises the volunteers of five colleges and two seminaries. 524. Mary E. Bartlett. Cedar Falls, Iowa. □A. B. Born, Denmark, Iowa, September 5, 1872. Prepared for college at Cedar Falls and by private study with her father, Professor Bartlett of the Iowa State Normal School. At home, Cedar Falls, Iowa, 1895—. Student of Vocal Music in Department of Music, Iowa College, 1896. 525. Helen Sarah Bigelow. Sutherland, Iowa. A.B. Born, Brookfield, Vermont, January 21, 1874. Sister of 440 and 482. Prepared for college, LeMars High School and Academy of Iowa College. Teacher in High School, Sutherland, Iowa, 1895—. ii6 Iowa College Quinquennial 526. Wilfred Edwin Blatherwick. Grinnell, Iowa. A. B. Born, Waterloo, Iowa, October 10, 1871. Prepared for college, Hull Academy, Hull, Iowa. Assistant in Chemical Laboratory of Iowa College, 1895—. 527. Albert Davis Brewer. Lincoln, Nebraska. A. B. Born, Columbia, South Carolina, May to, 1874. Brother of 245, 246, 278, 366, 367, and son of Professor F P. Brewer. Prepared for college, Grinnell High School and Academy of Iowa College. Teacher in Weeping Water Acad¬ emy, Weeping Water, Nebraska, 1895*6. Student of Medicine, State University of Nebraska, 1896—. 528. Mary Jestine Bridge. Lincoln, Nebraska. Ph. B. Born, Warren, Illinois, April 12, 1875. Prepared for college, Omaha High School. Teacher, Argo, Colorado, a suburb of Denver, Colorado, 1895-6. Graduate student, University of Nebraska, 1896—. 529. Helen Burling. Eldora, Iowa. Ph. B. Born, Eldora, Iowa, 1874. Sister of 314 and 338. Prepared for college, Eldora Public Schools. Graduate student in Literature and English Composi¬ tion, Wellesley College, Wellesley, Massachusetts, 1895-6. Eldora, Iowa, 1897-—. 530. Arthur Reynolds Chase. Correctionville, Iowa. A. B. Employed in the Post Office, Correctionville, Iowa, 1895—. 531. Charles Warner Clark. Iowa City, Iowa. Ph. B., Scientific. Born, Montezuma, Iowa, February 16, 1874. Prepared for college, Academy of Iowa College. Graduate student in Political Economy and English Literature in Iowa College, 1895-6. Student in Law Department, State University of Iowa, 1896—. 532. Frank H. Clements. Iowa City, Iowa. Ph. B., Scientific. Born, Prairie City, Iowa, November 10,1871. Prepared for college, Newton High School. Newton, Iowa, 1895-6. Student of law, State University of Iowa, 1896—. 533. Carlos Merton Cole. Atlantic, Iowa, A. B. Born, Durand, Illinois, February 22, 1872. Prepared for college, High School, Sioux City, Iowa. Teacher, Albion Seminary, Albion, Iowa, 1895-6. Principal, High School, Atlantic, Iowa, 1896—. Married, at Ida Grove, June 25, 1896, to Miss Catherine Newland. 534. Arthur Ryland Crary. Boone, Iowa. Ph. B., Scientific. Born, Boone, Iowa. December 17, 1872. Prepared for col¬ lege, Boone High School and High School, Ann Arbor, Michigan. Engaged in hardware business with his father, Boone, Iowa, 1895—. 535. Bern Mott Culver. West Superior, Wisconsin. Ph. B., Scientific. Born, Sandwich, Illinois, June 21, 1873. Prepared for col¬ lege, Sioux City High School and Academy of Iowa College. Book-keeper for the LaBelle Wagon Works, of which his father is assignee, 1895^. The Alumni n 7 536. John Fred Darby. LaGrange, Illinois. Ph. B. Bom, Odell, Illinois, August 31, 1872. Prepared for college, Public Schools, Elmwood, Illinois. Student in the Marine Biological Laboratory, Wood’s Holl, Massachusetts, during summer of 1895. Teacher of Biology, Lyons Township High School, LaGrange, Illinois, 1895—. 537. Frank Woolson Darling. Oak Park, Illinois, Ph. B., Scientific. Born, Albion, Michigan, October 19, 1872. Prepared for college, Sioux City High School and Academy of Iowa College. Traveled in Europe four months alter graduation. Teacher of Biology and History, High School, Aurora, Illinois, 1895-6. Teacher, Oak Park, Illinois, 1896—. 538. Matthew Hale Douglass. Alton, Iowa. A. B. Born, Osage, Iowa, September 16, 1874. Brother of 377 and 487. Grad¬ uate student in Political Science and English Literature, Iowa College, and Secretary for his father, Rev. T. O. Douglass, Secretary of the Iowa Congrega¬ tional Home Missionary Society, 1895-0. Assistant Principal, High School, Alton, Iowa, 1896—. 539. Annie W. Evans. Spencer, Iowa. Ph. B. Born, Williamsburg - , Iowa, 1869. Sister of 540. Prepared for college, Academy of Iowa College. Teacher, High School, Spencer, Iowa, 1895—. 540. Price Vincent Evans, deceased. A. B. Born, Williamsburg, Iowa, 1871. Brother of 539. Prepared for college, Academy of Iowa College. Teacher, High School, Osage, Iowa, September, 1895. Died, Osage, Iowa, October 14, 1895, 541. Edith Foster. Grinnell, Iowa. A. B. Born, Ladora, Iowa, November 26, 1875. Prepared for college, High School. Muscatine, Iowa. Residence, Breckenridge, Missouri. 1895-6. Grinnell, Iowa, 1896—. 542. John Lewis Gillin. Hudson, Iowa. A. B. Born, Hudson, Iowa, October 12, 1871. Prepared for college, High School, Marion, Iowa, and Preparatory Department of Upper Iowa University, Fayette, Iowa. Entered Iowa College, September, 1894, beginning of Senior year. Pastor, near Hudson, Iowa, 1895—. President of the society of “The King’s Children” for district of Illiokota, 1895—. 543. Robert Miller Haines, Jr. Iowa City, Iowa. A. B. Born, Grinnell, Iowa, June 17, 1875. Son of 12 and 13 and brother of 342 and 409. Prepared for college, Academy of Iowa College. Student, Cornell School of Law, Ithaca, New York, 1895-6. Student, Law Department, State University of Iowa, 1896—. 544. Stephen Leonard Herrick. Riverside, California. A. B. Born, Grinnell, Iowa, September 1, 1873. Son of 15. Prepared for col¬ lege, Pomona College, Claremont, California. Graduate student in Political Science and Sociology, University of Chicago, 1895-6. Riverside, California, 1897-. ii8 Iowa College Quinquennial 545. Frank Bradbury Hollenbeck. Chicago, Illinois. Ph. B., Scientific. Born, Green Lake, Wisconsin, August 14, 1868. Prepared for college, Hull Academy, Hull, Iowa. Student, Rush Medical College, Chi¬ cago, 1895—. 546. Laurence T. Kersey. New Providence, Iowa. Ph. B., Scientific. Born, New Providence, Iowa, January 8,1868. Prepared for college. New Providence Academy. Principal of Academy, New Providence, Iowa, 1895—. 547. Joseph Stewart McCowan. Marshalltown, Iowa. Ph. B. Born, Elmwood, Illinois, March 18. 1869. Brother of 348 and 460, Prepared for college, Academies of Wooster University, Wooster, Ohio, and Iowa College. Bookkeeper for C. W. H. Beyer & Co., Grinnell, Iowa, 1895-6. Assistant teacher in High School, Marshalltown, Iowa, 1896—. 548. Edward Paul Miller. 1410 Pine Street, Burlington, Iowa. Ph. B. Born, Burlington, Iowa, October n, 1873. Prepared for college, Bur¬ lington High School and Academy of Iowa College. Clerk, Wholesale Hard¬ ware Store, Burlington, Iowa, 1895—. 549. John Frederick Reed. Elmwood, Illinois. Ph. B., Scientific. Born, Elmwood, Illinois, March 7, 1869. Prepared for col¬ lege, Elmwood High School. Teacher, Elmwood, Illinois, 1895—. Has made a special study of French and German since graduation, preparatory to a course in Chicago University. 550. Lillian Estelle Roberts. Wellesley, Massachusetts. A. B. Born, Dover, New Hampshire. December 2, 1873. Prepared for college, High School, Postville, Iowa, and Academy of Iowa College. Student for A. M. degree in Greek Poetry; also courses in English Poetry and Latin, Wellesley College, 1895. 551. Annie Josephine Sanders. Grinnell, Iowa. Ph. B, Born, near Grinnell, Iowa, February 23, 1873. Sister of 470. Prepared for college, High School. Grinnell. Iowa. Teacher of Music, Grinnell, 1895. Teacher of country school, Poweshiek County, Iowa, 1896—. 552. William Steele Sanders. Grinnell, Iowa. Ph. B., Scientific. Born, Grinnell, Iowa, January 30, 1873. Prepared for col¬ lege, Grinnell High School. Farming near Grinnell, 1895—. 553. Fred Marion Sargent. Aurora, Illinois. Ph. B. Born, Felicity, Ohio, August n, 1873. Prepared for college, High School, Grundy Center, Iowa. Graduate student in History, Philosophy and Economics, Harvard University; and non-resident graduate student of Iowa College for degree of Master of Arts, 1895-6. Teacher, East Aurora High School, Aurora, Illinois, 1896—. The Alumni i 19 554. Jay Smith. Neola, Iowa. Ph. B. Born, Romeo, Michigan, December 21, 1871. Prepared for college. High School, Avoca, Iowa, ana Academy of Iowa College. Teacher, Council Bluffs, Iowa, fall of 1895. Farmer, Hancock, Iowa, 1895-6. Teacher, Neola, Iowa, 1896—. 555. Arthur Edgar Snowden. Milbank, South Dakota. A. B. Born, Oskaloosa, Iowa, December 6, 1872. Brother of 393. Prepared for college. High School, LeMars, Iowa, and Academy of Iowa College. Col¬ lector for Plano Manufacturing Company, Chicago, Illinois, 1895—. 556. John LeRoy Stevens. 81 Ashland Boulevard, Chicago, Illinois. Ph. B., Scientific. Born, Montour, Iowa, April 11, 1871. Prepared for college, Academy ot Iowa College. Student, Theological Seminary, Chicago, 1895—. 557. George Herbert Struble. Toledo, Iowa. Ph. B., Scientific. Born, Toledo, Iowa, April 17, 1873. Prepared for college, Toledo High School and one year at Western College. Reading law in the office of Struble & Stiger, Toledo, Iowa, 1895—. 558. Ella P. Thompson. Algona, Iowa. Ph. B. Born, Waterloo, New York, June 21, 1873. Prepared for college, High School, Algona, Iowa, and Northern Iowa Normal School. Teacher, High School, Owatonna, Minnesota, 1895-6. Algona, 1896—. 559. Jacob Van Der Meide. Orange City, Iowa. Ph. B., Scientific. Employed in the Northwestern State Bank, Orange City, Iowa, 1895—. 560. Ralph Lee Whitley. Chicago, Illinois. A. B. Born, Osage, Iowa, February 27, 1871. Prepared for college, Osage High School, Cedar Valley Seminary and Academy of Iowa College. Student, Rush Medical College, Chicago, 1895—, 561. William Albert Willard. Grinnell, Iowa. Ph. B., Scientific. Born, Grinnell, Iowa, April 24, 1873. Brother of 335 and 600, Prepared for college, Academy of Iowa College. Student of Biology at Marine Biological Laboratory, Wood’s Holl, Massachusetts, summer of 1895. Instructor in Biology, Iowa College, 1895—. XXXVI.—CLASS OF 1896. 562. Prescott Lee Blodgett. Grinnell, Iowa. A. B. Born, Central City, Iowa, February 27, 1872. Prepared for college, Academy of Iowa College. Resident Graduate Student, Iowa College, 1896—. 120 Iowa College Quinquennial 563. Chester Dickinson Boiler. Walnut, Iowa. A. B. Born, Muscatine, Iowa, January 26, 1875. Brother of 441. Prepared for college. High School, Walnut, Iowa, and Academy of Iowa College. Employed in the Exchange Bank, Walnut, Iowa, 1896—. 564. Bertha May Booth. Sutherland, Iowa. Ph. B. Born, Anamosa, Iowa, July io, 1871. Prepared for college, High School, Anamosa, Iowa. Teacher, Grand Junction, Colorado, fall of 1896. Teacher, Public Schools, Sutherland, Iowa, 1897—. 565. Anna Caroline Bousquet. Grinnell, Iowa. A. B.; A. B., Central University, Pella, Iowa, 1892. Born, Pella, Iowa, Sep¬ tember 16, 1871. Student, Chicago University, summer of 1894. Graduate stu¬ dent, Bryn Mawr, 1894-5. Entered the Senior class, Iowa College, September, 1895. Resident graduate student for degree of Master of Arts in German, French and English, Iowa College, 1896—. 566. Minnie A. Carothers. Bayard, Iowa. A. B. Born, Bayard, Iowa, August 25, 1872. Prepared for college, Hfgh School, West Des Moines, Iowa. Teacher, Bayard, Iowa, 1896—. 567. Mina Rucha Collins. Davenport, Iowa. Ph. B. Born, Davenport, Iowa, December 20, 1872. Prepared for college, Davenport High School. Davenport, 1896—. 568. Charles Alanson DeLong. Montour, Iowa. A. B. Born, Butlerville, Iowa, December 17, 1873, Brother of 448 and 486. Prepared for college, Friends’ Academy, Le Grand, Iowa. Assistant Principal, High School, Montour, Iowa, 1896—. 569. Herman Vergil Failor. Denison, Iowa. Ph. B. Born, Newton Township, Jasper County, Iowa, May 18,1872. Prepared for college, High School, Kellogg, Iowa. Teacher, High School, Denison, Iowa, 1896—. 570. Fannie Miller Ford. Norfolk, Nebraska. Ph. B. Born, Magnolia, Iowa, November 29, 1872. Sister of 408. Prepared for college, Logan, Iowa. Logan, summer of 1896. Teacher, Norfolk, Nebraska, 1896—. 571. John Pennock Gruwell. Oskaloosa, Iowa. A. B. Born, Grinnell, Iowa, November 28, 1874. Prepared for college, High School, Grinnell, Iowa. Clerk in book department of J. G. Johnson & Co.’s Book Store, Grinnell, 1896. With his father in abstract office, Oskaloosa, 1897—. 572. Henry Harrison Harbaugh. Mason City, Iowa. Ph. B. Born, Washington, Iowa, August 27,1869. Prepared for college, High School, Sac City, Iowa, and Preparatory Department of Central University, The Alumni 121 Pella, Iowa. Railway Postal Clerk, running between Mason City, Iowa, and Peoria, Illinois, 1896—. Married, 1896, to Miss Mable A, Brooks of Livermore, Iowa, a student in Conservatory of Iowa College, 1894-5. 573. Clinton Ephraim Harris. Des Moines, Iowa. A. B. Born, Grinnell, Iowa, December 2, 1875. Prepared for college, Grin¬ ned High School. Reporter, Des Moines Leader , Des Moines, Iowa, 1896—. 574. George Hobart Harvey. Jacobson Block, Denver, Colorado. A. B. Born, Kellogg, Iowa, March 7, 1876. Prepared for college, High School, North Denver, Colorado, and Academy of Iowa College. Manufacturers’ and Importers’ Agent for Colorado and Wyoming, 1896—. 575. Benjamin Harte Heald. South Haven, Michigan. Ph. B, Born, Chester, Iowa, 1873. Brother of 281 and 410. Prepared for col¬ lege, Public Schools, Grinned, Iowa. On a fruit farm, South Haven, Michigan, 1896—. 576. Bruce Vickroy Hill. Lincoln, Nebraska. Ph. B. Born, Kellogg, Iowa, October 19, 1872. Prepared for college, High School, Kellogg, Iowa, and private study. Graduate student in Physics and Mathematics, and Assistant in Physical Laboratory, State University, Lincoln, Nebrasxa, 1896—. 577. Lovina Hill. Guthrie Center, Iowa. Ph. B. Born, Panora, Iowa, July 2^, 1870. Prepared for college, Guthrie County High School, Panora, Iowa. Teacher of Music, Guthrie Center, Iowa, 1896—. 578. Harry Harper Hinkle. Selma, Iowa. Ph. B, Born, Selma, Iowa, September 22, 1872. Attended Iowa Wesleyan University, Mt. Pleasant, Iowa, and entered Iowa College to Sophomore classi¬ fication. Traveling salesman in New York and Michigan, fad of 1896. In the Mexico office of Morris & Butt of Kansas City, exporters of live stock and grain, City of Mexico, 1896—. 579. Robert Jay Huntington. 324 Hermitage Avenue, Chicago, Illinois. Ph. B. Born, Boone, Iowa, April 20, 1873. Prepared for college, High School, Boone, Iowa. Hot Springs, Arkansas, summer of 1896. Chicago, 1896—. 580. Lillian Frances Kilburn. 3027 Vernon Avenue, Chicago, Illinois. Ph. B. Born, Montezuma, Iowa, June 2, 1873. Prepared for college, Monte¬ zuma Public Schools, and Academy of Iowa College. Student of Kindergarten, Armour Institute, Chicago, 1896—. 581. Charles Ensign Lynde. Des Moines, Iowa. A. B. Born, Des Moines, Iowa, July 6,1869. Prepared for college, Des Moines High School and Academy of Des Moines College. City Secretary of Y. M. C. A. ana resident of the Social Settlement, Des Moines, 1896—. 122 Iowa College Quinquennial 582. Myra N. Manning. Wyoming, Illinois. Ph. B. Born, Shullsburg, Wisconsin, September 1, 1872. Sister of 420. Pre¬ pared for college, Grinnell High School and Academy of Iowa College. Assist¬ ant Principal, South Side High School, teaching Latin, German, English and History, Wyoming, Illinois, 1896—. 583. Dwight Justin Mereness. Glidden, Iowa. A. B. Born, Glidden, Iowa, February 23, 1872. Prepared for college, Glidden High School, and attended the Fort Dodge Collegiate Institute one year, and Buena Vista College, Storm Lake, Iowa, two years before entering Iowa College. Farming, studying and teaching, Glidden, Iowa, 1896—. 584. Ida Imogene Morris. Newburg, Iowa. Ph. B. Born, Newburg, Iowa, September 25, 1875. Prepared for college, High School, Grinnell, Iowa, Newburg, 1896—. 585. Fritz Windsor Norris. Washington, D. C. A. B. Born, Grinnell, Iowa, February 2, 1876. Son of 85. Prepared for col¬ lege, Grinnell High School. In business at the Stock Yards, Chicago, Illinois, summer and fall of 1896. Newspaper reporter, Washington, D. C., 1896—. 586. Kate Elizabeth Our. Walnut, Iowa. A. B. Born. Wilton, Iowa, luly 14, 1870. Prepared for college, High School, Atlantic, Iowa. Teacher, Walnut, Iowa, 1896—. 587. Jessie Belle Peterson. Marshalltown, Iowa, A. B. Born, New Sharon, Iowa, October 27, 1872. Prepared for college, Mar¬ shalltown High School, and private instruction. Homekeeper for her father, since the death of her mother, in 1896, Marshalltown, Iowa, 1896—. 588. George Judson Piersol. Rockwell, Iowa. Ph. B. Born, Marble Rock, Iowa, October 25, 1871. Prepared for college, High School, Rockwell, Iowa, and Academy of Iowa College, In business, Rockwell, 1896—. 589. Jennie Mabel Rew. Grinnell, Iowa. Ph. B. Born, Chesterfield. Illinois, September 1, 1873. Sister of 427. Pre¬ pared for college, High School, Grinnell, Iowa. Grinnell, 1896—. 429. Emma Christine Ringheim. [See Class of 1892.] 590. James Crawford Sellers. Oskaloosa, Iowa. Ph. B. Born, Albia, Iowa, July 4, 1872. Prepared for college, High School, Oskaloosa, Iowa, and attended Penn College two years. General Agent of the Equitable Life Insurance Company of New York, with headquarters at Oska¬ loosa, Iowa, 1896—. The Alumni 123 591. Winnie May Shannon. Rock Rapids, Iowa. Ph. B. Born, Elgin, Iowa, October 26, 1876. Prepared for college, High School, Rock Rapids, Iowa. Rock Rapids, 1896—. 592. William Cornelius Spaan. New Brunswick, New Jersey. A. B. Born, Orange City, Iowa, February 10, 1873. Prepared for college, Northwestern Classical Academy, Orange City, Iowa. Student of Theology, Seminary of the Reformed Church of America, New Brunswick, 1896—. 593. Harley Herman Stipp. Grinnell, Iowa. Ph. B. Born, State Center, Iowa, February 25,1872. Prepared for college, State Center High School and Academy of Iowa College. Librarian of Iowa College, 1896—. 594. Alice Sudlow. Newton, Iowa. Ph. B. Born, Sully, Iowa, 1873. Prepared for college, High School, Daven¬ port, Iowa. Newton, 1896—. 595. Mark Daniel Taylor. Spencer, Iowa. Ph. B. Born, Potton, Quebec, Canada. Prepared for college, High School, Spencer, Iowa, and Academy of Iowa College. Teacher near Ruthven, Iowa, 1896—. 596. Leta May Thompson. Rock Rapids, Iowa. Ph. B. Born, Rock Rapids, Iowa, 1876. Prepared for college, Rock Rapids High School. Rock Rapids, 1896—. 597. Ralph Egbert Towle. Webster City, Iowa. A. B. Born, Chicago, Illinois, April 5, 1875. Prepared for college, Grinnell High School and Academy of Iowa College. Instructor in Latin and English Literature, High School, Webster City, Iowa, 1896—. 598. Frank Emerson Trigg. Spencer, Iowa. A. B. Born, Charles City, Iowa, December 8, 1872. Prepared for college, Charles City Public Schools, and High School, Rockford, Iowa. Teacher, High School, Spencer, 1896—. 599. Dora May Wilbur. Sanborn, Iowa. A. B. Born, Charles City, Iowa, September 30, 1875. Prepared for college, High School, Sanborn, Iowa and Academy of Iowa College. Sanborn, 1896—. 600. Harry Gaylord Willard. Spencer, Iowa. Ph. B. Born, Grinnell, Iowa, May 7, 1875. Brother of 335 and 561. Prepared for college, Grinnell High School. Teacher of Science, High School, Spencer, 1896—. 601. Charles Alfred Wright. Quasqueton, Iowa. Ph. B. Born, Quasqueton, Iowa, October 22, 1869. Brother of 398. Prepared for college. Academy of Iowa College. Studying medicine, Quasqueton, 1896—. School of Music CLASS OF 1879. Frank Eaton. Wells, Minnesota. Teacher of Music, Wells, Minnesota, 1879—. CLASS OF 1880. Tama City, Iowa. CLASS OF 1881. Oskaloosa, Iowa. CLASS OF 1883. Lavinia Williams. Grundy Center, Iowa. Teacher of Music, Grundy Center, Iowa, 1883—. Lillie Brown. Mrs. Mary Seevers. CLASS OF 1884. Katherine E. Lyman (Camp). Arispe, Iowa. CLASS OF 1885. Leta May Crawford (Lewis). Ketchum, Idaho. Lillian Belle Higgs. Storm Lake, Iowa. Alice Rude Ware. Grinnell, Iowa. Student of Art in Iowa College under Professor Churchill. Grinnell, 1885- Homer E. Wise. Wells, Minnesota. School of Music 125 CLASS OF 1887. Agnes Gurney (Pinkerton). Rock Rapids, Iowa. Married, Grinnell, Iowa, June 25, 1891, to Rev. W. B. Pinkerton, I. C. ’83. Residence, Waverly, Iowa, 1891-3; Rock Rapids, Iowa, 1893-5; Cambridge, Mass¬ achusetts, 1895-6; Rock Rapids, Iowa. 1896—. Vina Buel Ives (Stevens). Brookfield, Missouri. Marian Stacy (Skinner). Anamosa, Iowa. [See No. 289.] CLASS OF 1888. Nellie May Richards (Wilson). Des Moines, Iowa. [See No. 306.] CLASS OF 1889. Almetta Carr (Ross). Neligh, Nebraska. Born, Montezuma, Iowa, October 12, 1863. Teacher of Music and Harmony, Neligh, Nebraska, 1889—. Married, Neligh, Nebraska, December 21, 1895, to Herbert L. Ross, a teacher in the Neligh City Schools. Edith May Clark (McCornack). Sioux City, Iowa. [See No. 316.] Lilian Gertrude Law (Walker). Perry, Iowa. Born, Fertile, Iowa, August 5,1867. Abstract work, Forest City, Iowa, 1889-90. Graduate student in Conservatory of Iowa College, spring of 1890. Bookkeeper, City Bank, Forest City, 1890-1. Married, Forest City, June 10, 1891, to Mr. Charles E. Walker, brother of 396 and 517. Residence, Grinnell, 1891-3; Perry, Iowa, 1893—. Emily Metcalf Perkins. 5517 Cornell Avenue, Chicago, Illinois. Born, Kidder, Missouri. Teacher of Piano, Conservatory of Iowa College, Grinnell, 1889-94; the same, University School of Music, Lincoln, Nebraska, 1894-6. Student of Music with Godov/ski, Chicago, Illinois, 1896—. Laura Alice Rew. Grinnell, Iowa. Born, Wayne County, Iowa, 1868. Prepared for college, Academy of Iowa College. Graduate student in Music, 1889-90 and 1891-3. Teacher of Violin, Corydon, Iowa, 1890-1. Student of Violin and Harmony, Chicago,Illinois, 1893-5. Teacher of Violin, Iowa College, 1895—. Grace Wyckoff. LaCrosse, Wisconsin. 126 Iowa College Quinquennial CLASS OF 1890. Isabella Beaton. 9 7 Potsdamer Str., Berlin, Germany. Born, Grinnell, Iowa, May 20, 1870. Teacher of Music, Harlan, Iowa, 1890-3. Instructor, Iowa College Conservatory, Grinnell, 1893-4. Student of Piano under Moszkowski, and of Composition under Boise, Berlin, Germany, 1894—. CLASS OF 1891. Fannie L. Blake (Spaulding). Avoca, Iowa. Nora E. Boiler. Walnut, Iowa. Gertrude Brooks (Money). Sioux Rapids, Iowa. Teacher of Music, Grundy County, Iowa, 1891-2. Married to G. C. Money, D. D. S., of Sioux Rapids, Iowa, November 16, 1892. Housekeeper and teacher of Music, Sioux Rapids, Icwa, 1892—. Lida Edna Crookshank. Santa Ana, California. [See No. 375.] Clara Foss. Grinnell, Iowa. Born, Neponset, Illinois. Teacher of Music, Neponset and Kewanee, Illinois, 1891-2. Student of Music, Oberlin Conservatory, Oberlin, Ohio, 1892-3. Teacher of Music, Grinnell and Kellogg, Iowa, 1893—• Grace G. Lawrence. Jefferson, Iowa. Ernest J. Leach. Chicago, Illinois. Has been teacher of Music and in charge of church choir, Cedar Falls, Iowa, and spent some time in evangelistic work. Grace Teall Mason. Grinnell, Iowa. Born, Sacramento, California, September 29, 1872. Teacher of Piano at home, Mason City, Iowa, 1891-4. Teacher of Piano, Iowa College School of Music, 1894—. Student of Music, Chicago, summer of 1895. Sarah Parker, deceased. Born, Polk City, Iowa, August 12, 1871. She was stricken with fatal illness just before her graduation and was barely able to receive her diploma with her class on commencement day. She died August 5, 1891. Anna Patrick. Victor, Iowa. Willette Trefethen (Tuckey). Portland, Maine. Married, Peak’s Island, Maine, 1897, to B. F. Tuckey of Portland, Maine. School of Music 127 CLASS OF 1892. Esther Silsby. Ashland, Oregon. CLASS OF 1893. Mrs. Anna E. Coffin. Union, Iowa. Kate M. Condit. Claremont, California. Jeannette Gemmel. Quasqueton, Iowa. Born, Quasqueton, Iowa, May 4, 1871. Teacher of Music, Quasqueton, 1893-4 and 1895—. Teacher of Music, Peterson, Iowa, 1894. Herbert S. Miller. 143 Lexington Avenue, New York City. Born, Centralia, Illinois, January 14, 1870. Grinnell, Iowa, 1894-5. Teacher of Music, New York City, 1895—. Has been Organist of Church of the Ascension, New York City; and Soloist, Brick Presbyterian Church, Orange, New Jersey. Grace Moss. Lebanon, Missouri. Born, Irving, Illinois. Before entering the Conservatory of Iowa College, she f raduated from the literary department of Eureka College, Eureka, Illinois, eacher of Music, and organist in the Christian Church, Lebanon, 1893—. Clara M. Spencer. Brooklyn, Iowa. Pauline Weidensee. CLASS OF 1894. May Bonner. Omaha, Nebraska. Gertrude Fitzmaurice (Wood). Rochester, New York. Ada C. Grahame. Waterloo, Iowa. Irene L. Hoke. Monticello, Arkansas. Thursia Manatt. Brooklyn, Iowa. Myrtle Edna Ritchey. Keota, Iowa. Born, Keota, Iowa, May 3, 1875. Student of Voice Culture and Piano, Lin¬ coln, Nebraska, 1894-5. Teacher of Music, Keota, Iowa, 1895—. 128 Iowa College Quinquennial Bessie M. H. Robert. Angola, Indiana. Born, Portland, Oregon, 1872. Student of Vocal Music, summer of 1894. In¬ structor in Music and Art, Jackson College, Missouri, 1894-5. At home and teacher of private classes in Music and Art, Angola, Indiana, 1895—. CLASS OF 1895. Elizabeth P. Harwood. Grinnell, Iowa. Student of Music, Chicago, 1895-6. Instructor of Piano, Iowa College, Grin¬ nell, 1896—. Faith A. Slocum. Charles City, Iowa. Born, Charles City, Iowa, January, 1875. At home, and teacher of Music, Charles City, 1895—. Clara Warren. Burlington, Iowa. CLASS OF 1896. Carrie M. Bowen. Traer, Iowa. Born, Traer, Iowa, May 8, 1875. Teacher of Music, Traer, 1896—. Rose H. Hellberg. Anamosa, Iowa. i86 3 . 1865. 1865. 1866, 1866. 1866. 1867. 1868. 1868. 1868. 1869, 1869, 1870. 1870, 1871 1871, i 87 i 1871 1872 1873 1877 1878 1883 1884 1886 1886 1886 1888 Honorary Degrees Master of Arts .Abram Scott Kissell .Daniel George Frisbie .Francis Wayland Palmer .Orville Willard Merrill .Charles C. Parry, M. D. .Charles Abiather White, M. D. .Jonathan Piper .Charles Frederick Boynton .Charles Henry Conklin .Orestes Hawley St. John .Charles Aldrich .Moses Willard Bartlett .Richard Brockway Bull .John Teesdale .Lucius Caleb Blanchard .George Henry Lewis .Edward Pruyn, LL. B. .Rev. George Reed Ransom .Arthur S. Hardy .Job Cushman .Mary Ellis .John Wesley Chapman .Samuel Hawkins Marshall Byers .Judge William R. Lewis .Hon. Edward A. Goodnow .Hon. Charles F. Craver .Charles F. Buss .Alexander Fleischmann 130 1889 i88g 1890 1890 1890 1892 1892 1865, 1867 1867 1868 1868 1868, 1869 1870 1870 1871 1871 1873 1874 1875 1875 1875 1877 1878 1878 1879 1882 1882 1883 1883 1884 Iowa College Quinquennial .Rev. J. F. Heilner .H. T. Englehorn .Rev. John L. Atkinson .Capt. John Wesley Carr .Hiram Landis Getz, M. D. .E. C. Dudley, M. D. .Luther C. Harris Doctor of Divinity. .Rev. Henry Martin Dexter .Rev. Samuel David Cochran .Rev. John Putnam Gulliver .Rev. Alexander Huntington Clapp .Rev. Israel Perkins Warren .Rev. Lyman Whiting, A. M. .Rev. Increase Niles Tarbox .Rev. Jesse Guernsey .Rev. George Slocum Folger Savage .Rev. Charles Edward Cheney .Rev. George Thacher ..Rev. Rhys Gwesyn Jones ..Rev. Stephen Rollins Dennen ..Rev. John Bascom .Rev. Selah Merrill .Rev. Joshua Thomas Tucker ..Rev. Jesse W. Hough .Rev. Isaac Pendleton Langworthy ..Rev. Samuel Ives Curtiss .Rev. William W. Woodworth ..Rev. Ephraim Adams .Rev. David Otis Mears .Rev. Silas Leroy Blake ..Rev. James Scott .Rev. James Brande Honorary Degrees 131 1884.Rev. James Powell 1886.Rev. A. F. Sherrill 1886 .Rev. E. M. Cravath 1887 .Rev. Henry E. Barnes 1887,.Rev. Albert H. Heath 1887.Rev. William Kincaid 1887.Rev. Robert W. McAll 1887...Rev. Daniel Lane 1887.Rev. Harvey Adams 1889.Rev. Allen C. Barrows 1889.Rev. Julius A. Reed 1889.Rev. C. E. Harrington 1889.Rev. Thomas Davies 1891.Rev. James L. Hill 1891 .Rev. William H. Ryder 1892 .Rev. Charles A. Berry 1892.Rev. Mahlon Willett 1894.Rev. Edward T. Fairbanks 1896.Rev. Stephen G. Barnes Doctor of Laws . 1863.John Forest Dillon 1863.George Grover Wright 1865.James William Grimes 1865.Edwin McMasters Stanton 1867 .James Harlan 1868 .James Williston Patterson 1869 .James Frederick Joy 1870 .Chester Cicero Cole 1870 .William Gardner Hammond 1871 .Thomas Drummond 1871.James B. Howell 1871.J. M. Sturtevant 1873.James Madison Love I3 2 1874 1876 1877 1880 1880 1881 1883 1884. 1886 1887 1890 1891 1891 Iowa College Quinquennial .Israel Ward Andrews ..Samuel Freeman Miller .Charles Hammond .George Washington Crary .James Amazias Whitney ...James Falconer Wilson .William Bruce Allison .David J. Brewer .Irving J. Manatt ..Ephraim Cutter .Lorettus S. Metcalf ,.W. L. Pattee ...Samuel H. Virgin Index of Alumni Names Adams, Anna P. Adams, Henry Carter .... Adkins, James Burton Alden, Charles A. — Allison, James . Allison, Mary .... Ames, Asa Lee . Apthorp, Mary E. — Arnold, Benjamin Franklin Arnold, Charles Elliott .... Arnold, Horace Wade Arnold, Jacob Hiram .... Arnold, Seth Atwood Atherton, Ernest Wilbur.... Atkinson, George Ernest Atkinson, Henry Herbert Atkinson, Minnie. Austin, Michael .... Avery, Elizabeth H. Avery, Susan (Mather) .... Bailey, Gertrude L .... Bailey, Jennie . Bailey, Joanna (Baggs) .... Bailey, William D. Baker, Achbor Jehu .... Baker, Ella (Austin) Baker. Henry Roife _ Baker, Thomas Thomas Baker, Warren Carter .... Balcombe, Urban Belsona Bale, Emily (Smalley) .... Bale, William George Barrette, William J. _ Bartlett, Arthur Willard Bartlett, Dana Webster .... Bartlett, Elmer Ellsworth Bartlett, Hamilton Mansure Bartlett, Mary E. Bartlett, Stella T. _ Bartlett, William Abbott Beard, Elmer Lester .... Beard, Florence (Bright) Beard, Rhoda (Rand) .... Beaton, Isabella . Beckman, Emil Hessel _ Bedford, Adah I. Belfield, Henry Holmes .... Bennett, Beulah . Year No. 1894 4 77 1874 95 241 1885 242 !g95 521 1893 438 1882 180 1865 n 1894 478 1894 479 1892 399 1891 360 1869 44 1895 522 1895 523 1893 439 1892 400 1871 59 !§73 90 1885 243 1879 139 1883 t868 209 35 1891 361 1881 173 1879 140 1882 181 1874 96 1880 i59 1872 77 1872 78 1889 312 1890 336 1888 294 1882 182 1887 275 1874 97 i §95 524 1891 362 1887 276 1891 363 1884 22 7 1882 183 1890 1894 480 1894 481 1858 8 1887 2 77 as Ph iio 52 77 77 ii5 105 no 68 5 39 ( 4 i no no 100 94 44 115 115 105 100 46 5i 77 60 72 43 94 66 61 68 53 65 5 o 5 ° 87 91 U 82 53 ii5 94 82 94 75 68 126 IIO no *34 Iowa College Quinquennial Names Bigelow, Geneva A. . Bigelow, Helen Sarah Bigelow, Herbert Huse . Biggar, Elizabeth (Hart) Bishop. John Brown M. Bixby, Luella Mae. Bixby, William S . Blackington, Fred Lane Blake, Ellen (Campbell). Blake, Fannie L. (Spaulding) Blatherwick, Wilfred Edwin Bliss, Edwin Clarence Bliss, Harvey Silas . Blodgett, Prescott Lee Boiler, Ada A. . Boiler, Chester Dickinson Boiler, Nora . . Bonner, May . Booth, Bertha May . Bousquet, Anna Carolina Bowen, Carrie M. . Bowen, Mary Rebecca Brainerd, William Hungerford Braley, Albert W. Brewer, Albert Davis . Brewer, Grace Lyman Brewer, Helen Richards . Brewer, Lily F. (Porter) Brewer, Mary E. . Brewer, William Fisk Bridge, Mary Jestine . Brockway, Ora Herbert Brooks, Gertrude (Money) Brown, Anna (Taggart) Brown, Clark Eugene . Brown, Harry Leslie Brown, Lillie. . Brown, Martha (Carney) Bryant. Mary W. . Buck, Edith Cora . Buck, Irving Jay . Buck, Samuel Cory. Buck, William Franklin . Buckley, Parke . Bulis, Ada A. . Burlew, Charles Benjamin Burlew, Fred Everts . Burling, Edward Burnham Burling, Helen . Burling, James P. Burnard, Julia Elizabeth. Burns, Mary . Burroughs, Sarah (Adams) Burroughs, Susan . Burt, Lilian. . Burton, William . Bush, Bertha E. . Bush, Helen (Olds) Campbell, Emma Belle Campbell, Sadie Maria . Carney, James Loring Carothers, Minnie.. Year No. Names Preston, Myrta L. — . Price, Milton Murat . Pringle, William James .... Pruyn, Anna (Moore) . Pruyn, Mary (Janes) .... Ransom, Anna Elizabeth. Rawson, Hollis Allen .... Rawson Joseph S . Ray Harriet Diana (Ames) .... Ray, William George . Raymond. William Randolph_ Reed, Charles Francis . Reed, Franklin Rupert .... Reed, Frederick Watson. Reed, Georgiana (Demarest) .... Reed, John Frederick . Rew, Jennie Mabel. .... Rew, Laura Alice . Rew, Ruth Myra . .... Rhodes, Walter Hancock Rice, Mary Ethel . .... Richards, Nellie May (Wilson) Richards, Paul William .... Richardson, Anna (Jones) Ricker, Benjamin Jewett .... Rider, Orion Littell . Ringheim, AdaJ. (Fitchpatrick) Ringheim, Emma Christine Ringheim, Siveri (Newman) .... Rinkenberger, Alexander C. Ritchey, Myrtle Edna .... Robbins, Anna (DeForest) Robbins, Esther (White) .... Robbins, Horace H. . Robert, Addie L. . Robert, Bessie M. H. Roberts, Harvey Easton .... Roberts, Lillian Estelle . Robinson, Nathaniel D. _ Rogers, Lillian (McLean) St. John, Benjamin. . Sallenbach, Edward . Sallenbach, Emil Frederich _ Sanders, Annie Josephine Sanders, Nathan Edwin _ Sanders, William Steele. Sands, Susannah . . Sargent, Fred Marion . Savage, Otto Ralph. . Scott, Charles . Scott, John B. . . Sears, Reuben Edward . Seevers, Mrs. Mary. . Sellers, James Crawford. Shannon, Winnie May .... Shaw, Albert. . Sheldon, Carrie M. . Sherman, Fannie H. (Rutherford) Sherman, Mae Frances .... Year No. bfl rt Ph 1889 328 5 89 1 108 18C6 5 37 1885 255 79 1872 88 5 i 1868 41 43 1887 288 83 : §93 466 108 1890 353 93 1882 202 7 i 1882 203 7 i i §94 508 11 3 1867 33 42 1885 256 79 1879 156 64 J §79 i 57 64 I o 95 549 118 1896 589 122 1889 12^ 1892 427 103 1893 467 108 1892 428 103 1888 3 o 6 5 86 1 125 i §94 509 114 1878 138 60 1891 391 98 i §94 510 114 1889 329 90 1892 429 5 103 1 122 1889 1 330 90 !§93 468 108 1894 127 1868 42 44 1882 204 71 1869 48 45 1894 5 ii 114 1804 128 1893 469 109 1895 55 o 118 1871 76 50 1888 307 86 1876 123 57 1880 168 66 1880 169 66 1895 551 118 i »93 470 109 1895 552 118 1890 354 93 1895 553 118 1893 47 i 109 1865 20 40 1886 272 81 1870 57 46 1881 124 !§96 59 o 122 1896 59 J 123 1879 158 64 1893 472 109 1882 205 71 1894 512 114 142 Iowa College Quinquennial Names Shull, Gilbert LeRoy . Silsby, Esther . . Simmons, Mary Elizabeth Sloane, William Arthur . Slocum, Faith . Smith, Jay . . Smith, Sarah (Seward) . Smoke. Adella M . . Snell, Edna (Poulson) . Snell, MaryE. Snell. Richard Bailey . Snowden, Arthui Edgar . Snowden, Clifford Lamont Somers, Herbert Weston . Somers, Pearl Ellsworth. Spaan, William Cornelius . Spencer, Clara M . Spencer, Esther . . Spencer, Fanny E. . Stacy, Edson Eugene . Stacy, Marian (Skinner). Stanley, Eliza E. (Renand) . Stearns, Mary (Waller) . Steck, Charles Theodore . Stevens, Addie (Janes) . Stevens, Charles Otho . Stevens, Ida (Miles) . Stevens, John LeRoy .. Stipp, Harley Herman . Strong, Albert . . Strong, Edward Angel . Struble, George Herbert . Stuart, Sarah (Noll) . Sudlow, Alice . .. Summers, Lee L. . Sutherland, Eliza (Schuyler) .. Sutherland, Mary (Kelsey) Sutliff, Nettie (Proctor) . Sweeney, Marian J, . Swindler, Lee Monroe . Sylvester, Edna C. . Tabor, Mary (Webb) .. Tade, Ewing Ogden _ Taylor, Charles Alfred .. Taylor, Eugene Hartwell. Taylor, Hannah E. (Partch) . Taylor, Mark Daniel . TePaske, Anthony. . Thompson, Burt J. . Thompson, Ella P. . Thompson. Leta May . Tone, Mary Laverne . Towle, Ralph Egbert . Townsend, Clara Ellen . Trefethen, Willette (Tuckey) Trigg, Frank Emerson . Tyer, Hervey Wilburt . Van Der Meide, Jacob . Vanderveer, Clara G. (MacDonald) VanGorder, Edwin Stanton . Verbeck, Luther . Year No. Page 1880 170 66 1892 12 7 1891 392 98 1877 132 59 1895 128 J §95 554 119 1883 225 74 1880 238 76 1867 34 42 1869 49 45 1870 58 46 1895 555 119 I §S I 393 206 99 1882 7 1 1894 513 114 1896 592 123 T o 93 127 1892 430 104 I §93 473 109 ^89 33 i 90 1887 289 5 84 (125 1885 257 79 1865 21 40 1858 9 38 1883 226 74 1888 308 86 1880 171 66 1895 556 119 1896 593 123 1884 239 76 1885 258 79 1895 557 119 1874 108 55 1896 594 123 ^91 394 99 1865 22 40 1865 23 40 l88 7 290 84 i3 §7 291 84 1889 332 90 1894 5 i 4 114 1888 309 86 1858 10 38 1885 259 79 1876 124 57 1891 395 99 1896 595 123 1892 43 i 104 1894 W 114 1895 558 119 1896 596 123 1892 432 104 1896 597 123 1892 433 104 1891 126 1896 598 123 1894 5i6 114 1895 559 119 1880 172 66 1893 474 109 1890 355 93 Index of Alumni 143 Names Wadsworth, Edwin Arthur .... Walker, Alice Lizzie . Walker, Ernest . . Walworth, Harriet [MacCartney] Ward, Clyde Leslie. .... Ward, Herbert Clark . Ware, Alice Rude . . Ware, John Daniel . Warren, Clara . . Watson, Irving Sanford . Weatherly, Arthur L. _ Weidensee, Pauline . Wells, William Edward .... West, David Millard . West, Joel Wilcox . . Wetmore, Flora i/Taylor]. Whicher, George Meason .... Whisler, Clara Belle . Whitcomb, Abbie [Robbins] .... Whitcomb, Helen [Hobart] Whitcomb, Selden Lincoln Whitcomb, Susan [HassellJ White, George Edward .... White, Susan Margaret . Whitley, Ralph Lee .... Whyte, Joseph . Wilbur, Dora . . Willard, Frank Enos . Willard, Harry Gaylord .... Willard, William Albert. Willett, Mahlon . . Willett, Norman . Williams, Lavinia . . Williston, Charles Stoddard Wilson, Isaac Kinsey .... Wilson, Jane [Smith] . Windsor, John Hill. . Windsor, William . Wise, Homer E. .... Witmer, Jacob Louis . Witmer, John Earl. .... Wolcott, Emma . Woodruff, Anna M. . Woods, Lambert Lester. Woodworth, Frank Goodrich .... Worden, Edgar Guilford. Wray, Jennie [Janes] .... Wright, Alfred . Wright, Charles Alfred .... Wright, Hiram Clarence. Wright, Louise Barbour [Gould] Wyckoff, Garrett Polhemus Wyckoff, Grace . .... Yoder, Lillian Lovette [Jamieson] Year No. 1889 333 1891 396 I §94 5i7 1889 334 1892 434 1890 1885 356 1886 1895 1887 273 292 1892 1893 1893 435 475 1885 260 !§77 133 1884 240 1882 20 7 1892 436 1869 5o 1872 89 1887 293 18 77 x 34 1882 2C5 1892 ul x §95 1894 518 1896 599 1889 OOD 1896 600 1895 561 1869 5i 1874 1883 t8 93 1888 109 476 311 1865 24 x §54 1 1854 l88 5 1891 2 397 1894 5i9 1886 274 1868 43 1890 357 1876 125 1885 261 1888 3io 1890 358 1896 601 1895 1891 398 i8 94 520 1889 1890 359 333 , 352 , 355 , 357 , 362, 363, 381, 39i, 403, 420, 423, 424, 425, 427, 443, 449, 461 , 482, 489, 493 , 497 , 5 ° 3 , 520, 522, 526, 541, 551, 552, 561, 562, 565, 589, 593. Grundy Center, 108. Guthrie Center, 577. Harlan, 350, 393. Hudson, 542. Independence, 71. Iowa City, 531, 532, 543. Jamestown, 93. Kellogg, 351. Keosauqua, 249. Lake View, 283. Logan, 17, 408, 428. Lynnville, 257. Manchester, 345. Marshalltown, 57, 61, 91, 301, 335, 37L 387, 42i, 422, 430, 547, 587- Mason City, 322, 477, 572. Missouri Valley, 490. Monroe, 519. Montezuma, 413. Montour, 568. Muscatine, 280. Neola, 554. Nevada, 329. Newburg, 584. H5 New Hampton, 390. New Providence, 546. New Sharon, 494. Newton, 594. Ogden, 514. Orange City, 431, 458, 559. Osage, 83. Osceola, 447. Oskaloosa, 68, 277, 571, 590. Panora, 332. Perry, 516. Peterson, 388. Postville, 469. Quasqueton, 398, 601. Red Oak, 270, 451, 509. Rockford, 21, 323, 418, 501. Rock Rapids, 222, 591, 596. Rockwell, 588. Rowen, 179. Sabula, 496. Sanborn, 599. Selma, 578. Sheldon, 433. Sioux City, 316. Spencer, 465, 539, 595, 598, 600. Stanley, 223. Strawberry Point, 175. Stuart, 240, 438. Sutherland, 525, 564. Traer, 24, 180, 202. Toledo, 60, 510, 557. Vail, 358. Vancleve, 419. Walnut, 441, 563, 586. Waterloo, 291. Webster City, 597. West Liberty, 412. Winterset, 239. Wilton, 127. Woodbine, 46. Yale, 317. 146 Iowa College Quinquennial Kansas—i 15, 128, 166, 198, 232, 238, 241, 303* 364, 376, 380. Louisiana— 22. Maryland— 84. Massachusetts— 72, 104, 181, 210, 250, 308, 324, 340, 353, 396, 414, 435, 442, 470, 487, 495, 521, 550. Michigan— 81, 95, 105, 106, 318, 481, 508, 575. Minnesota —67, 103, 130, 139, 143, 156, 165, 192, 209, 258, 276, 286, 320, 348, 361, 366, 409, 410, 440, 446, 453 . 457 > 460, 464, 480. Mississippi—122, 125. Missouri—26, 178, 307, 337, 456. Montana— 43, 92, 96, 144, 220, 254, 261, 263, 367. Nebraska— 77, 101, 119, 133, 135, 141, 168, 185, 189, 195, 214, 219, 229, 235, 245, 273, 349, 384, 404, 444, 462, 491, 500, 506, 527, 528, 570, 576. New Hampshire—37. New Jersey— 87, 99, 592. New Mexico—251. New York— 112, 136, 137, 158, 163, 176, 191, 196, 207, 315. North Dakota— 159. Ohio—39, 150, 190, 227, 475. Oregon—400. Pennsylvania— 9, 211, 216, 359, 383, 416. Rhode Island— 25, 47. South Carolina— 368. South Dakota —5, 88, 90, 201, 206, 360, 411, 555. Utah—116, 138, 183, 215, 309, 336. Virginia —147. Washington— 97, 126, 129, 134, 221, 225, 226, 237, 259, 262, 266, 272, 299, 302, 305, 325, 343, 399, 436, 439- Washington, D. C.—113, 231, 507, 585. West Virginia— 173. Wisconsin—11, 385, 392, 394, 45 2 > 484, 535 - Wyoming—193, 379. Foreign— Bulgaria, 31. China, 395. Germany, 347, 426, 429. Japan, 415. Paraguay, 65. Turkey, 204, 208, 246. Summary i47 Occupations. Architects. 4 Attorneys. 51 Business .... 95 Civil Engineers. 3 Consul. 1 Farmers. 20 Journalists. 27 Legislators. 13 Ministers. 53 Missionaries. 23 Pharmacists. 5 Physicians. 20 Surveyors. 7 Educators— Chancellor. 1 College Presidents. 4 College Professors. 37 Superintendents and Principals. 95 Teachers. 213 Music Teachers. 16 Trained Nurses. 4 Y. M. and Y. W. C. A Secretaries. 7