.<- K'^-- '"^.^^ ~^>^^^'^' ..iijilffiiili ^ ?6^ ClorneU Unioeraitg ffithratg Dt^ata, I7nn Qnrh (1.:^, Hov±Vvwl5^ SlOmGE ine aate snows wtien this volume was taken. To renew tliis book copy the call No. and give to the librarian. HOME USE RULES All Books subject to recall All borrowers must regis- ter in tha -librarv to bor- row books for home use. All books must be re- turned at end of college year for inspection and lepaira. Limited books must be returned within the four week limit and not renewed. Students must return all books before leaving town. Officers should arrange for the return of books wanted during their absence from town. Volumes of periodicals and of pamphlets are held in the library as much as possible. For special pur- poses they are given out for a limited time. Borrowers should not use their library privileges for the benefit of other persons. Books of special value and gift books* when the giver wishes It, are not al- lowed to circulate. Readers are asked to re- port all cases of books marked or mutilated. Do not deface books by marks and writing. Cornell University Library Z5055.U4 P54 Bibliographvof,PhiBeta^^K^^^^^^^ 3 1924 029 572 991 olin The original of this book is in the Cornell University Library. There are no known copyright restrictions in the United States on the use of the text. http://www.archive.org/details/cu31924029572991 /- ner, 1909, pp. 23-56. 1906. Charles Francis Adams. Some modern college tenden- cies. Delivered June 12. In The Columbia University Quarterly, September, 1906, viii. 347-371. Also in Three Phi Beta Kappa addresses, Boston, Houghton Mifflin Co., 1907. 1907. Talcott Williams. A democratic economy. Deliv- ered June II. In The Columbia University Quarterly, September, 1907, Ix. 431-42. 1909. A. Lawrence Lowell. Competition in college. Deliv- ered June I. In The Columbia University Quarterly, September, 1909, xi. 421-38. Also in The Atlantic Monthly, June, 1909, ciii. 822-31. 19 10. William Allen White. A theory of spiritual pro- gress. An address delivered before the Phi Beta Kappa Society of Columbia University in the City of New York. Emporia, Kan- sas. The Gazette Press. 1910. 8vo, pp. [vi],53. 600 copies printed. The address was delivered on May 31. Also in The Columbia University Quarterly, September, 1910, xii. 408-20. 191 1. Theodore E. Burton. Some prevalent misapprehen- sions concerning our political life. Delivered June 6. In The Co- lumbia University Quarterly, September, 191 1, xiii. 410-22. General. William R. Shepherd. See Ph. B. K. Ptibl. N. S. 3, pp. [9- 10]. 146 CORNELL UNIVERSITY. Theta of New York. Organized May 28, 1S82. Catalogues. 1884. In The Cornell Daily Sun, June 18, pp. 3-4. 1906. Compiled by J. McMahon and Clark S. Northup. i6mo, pp. 49. 1912. Compiled by Clark S. Northup. 8vo, pp. 39. Orations and Addresses. 1890. Horatio Stevens White. Phi Beta Kappa address. Delivered June 16. In The Cornell Era, November 22, 1890. xxiii. 86-88. 1906. Clark Sutherland Northup. The present claims of culture upon the Phi Beta Kappa. Read February 20th. An ab- stract was printed, 4V0, i p. 1907. Charles William Eliot. Academic freedom : an ad- dress delivered before the New York Theta Chapter of the Phi Beta Kappa Society at Cornell University, May 29, 1907. Ithaca, N. Y. 1907. 8vo, pp. 24. Also in The Harvard Crimson, about May 31 ; in Science, July 5, 1907, N. S. xxvi. 1-12; in The Journal of Pedagogy, September-December, 1907, xx. 9-28. Comment by Rollo Ogden (Phases of academic freedom) in The Nation, August 15, 1907, Ixxxv. 136. 1909. James McMahon. Address to the initiates of the Cor- nell Chapter of Phi Beta Kappa, April 21, 1909. Ithaca, N. Y. 1909. i6mo, pp. 8. 1909. Jeremiah Whipple Jenks. Preparation for old age. Delivered May 19. An abstract appeared in The Cornell Daily Sun, May 20. 191 1. Lane Cooper. The function of the leader in scholar- ship. An address delivered after the initiation of new members May 30, 1911. Printed for the author. Ithaca, New York. 1911. 8vo, pp. 35. 19 12. Lane Cooper. Ancient and modern letters. An address delivered after the initiation of new members, April i, 1912. In The South Atlantic Quarterly, July, 1912, xi. 234-43. Also reprinted, 8vo. pp. 12. 147 1914- Jacob Gould Schurman, Dexter Simpson Kimball, Henry Augustus Sill, Frank Thilly. Liberal culture. Deliv- ered February 17. Abstracts appeared in The Cornell Daily Sun, February 18, and The Cornell Alumni News February 26, 1914, xvi. 263. General. Constitution of the Th€ta Chapter of the Phi Beta Kappa Society at the Cornell University. 1883. 8vo, pp. 3. 1890. 8vo, pp. 3. 1906. i6mo, pp. 16; ed. by J. McMahon. The Cornell Daily Sun. Phi Beta Kappa. March 20, 1909, xxix. 125, 4, 6. Comment in same March 21 and 22. March 22, 1909, pp. 4, 6. Phi Beta Kappa and the Zeitgeist, May 29, 1909, pp. 4, 5. Arthur Livingston. A manifest unfairness in Phi Beta Kappa. In The Cornell Daily Sun, March 19, 191 1, xxxi. 124. 4-8. Replies and comments in same, March 20, pp. 4, 8; March 21, pp. 4, 8 (H. C. Elmer) ; March 22, pp. 4-5 (A. Livingston) ; March 23, p. 4 (H. C. Elmer, A Leroy Andrews). James McMahon. What Phi Beta Kappa and Sigma Xi mean at Cornell. In The Cornell Daily Sun, April 17, 1907. Clark Sutherland Northup. Elections to Phi Beta Kappa. In The Cornell Era, Mid-Winter, 1911-12, xliv. 177-9. — Phi Beta Kappa elections. In The Cornell Daily Sun, March 24, 1909, xxix. 127. 4, 6. — The quarter-centennial of Phi Beta Kappa. In The Cornell Era, June, 1907, xxxix. 461-463. —See also Ph. B. K. Publ., N. S. 3, p. ,[ii]. DARTMOUTH COLLEGE. Alpha of New Hampshire. Organized August 20, 1787. Catalogues. Andover. 1806. 8vo, pp. 15. 1809. Svo, pp. 16. 1812. 8vo, pp. 16. Andover. 1815. - Svo, pp. 16. 1818. Svo, pp. 16. Ha- verhill, Mass. 1822. Svo, pp. 15. 1S32. Svo, pp. 23. , 1836. -148 8vo, pp. 23. 1838. 8vo, pp, 23. 1839. 8vo, pp. 24. Concord. 1841. 8vo, pp. 26. 1844. 8vo, pp. 28. 1851. 8vo, pp. 39. 1853. 8vo, pp. 40. 1856. 8vo, pp. 44. i860. 8vo, pp. 62. 1867. 8vo, pp. 68. 1874. 8vo, pp. Ji. 1884. 8vo, pp. 74. 1887. 8vo, pp. 76. 1897. 8vo, pp 58. All the catalogues unless it is otherwise noted were published at Hanover Orations and Address. 1800. Asa Burton. Sermon before the * B k Society at their anniversary at Dartmouth College. . . . Aug. 26, 1800. Han- over. 1801. i2mo, pp. 18. Text, I John iv. 8. ' 1802. Asa McFarland. Oration pronounced before the so- ciety of * B K at their anniversary at Hanover, Aug. 25, 1802. Hanover. 1802. i2mo, p. 24. 1804 Stephen P. Webster. Oration pronounced before the society of * B K at their anniversary at Hanover, Aug. 21, 1804. Hanover. 1804. 8vo, pp. 15. 1805. John Vose. Oration pronounced at Hanover, Aug. 27, 1805, before the 4> B K Society. Hanover. 1806. i2mo, pp. 14. 1806. Daniel Webster. The state of our literature. Deliv- ered August 26th. In his Works, National Edition. Boston. 1903. XV. 575-582. See the Life of Webster by George Ticknor Curtis, i. 96-8. 1816. Nathaniel Appleton Haven. Address before the Phi Beta Kappa Society at Dartmouth College, delivered August 18, 1816. In his Remains, n. p., 1827. 8vo, pp. 24-35. ( To be Continued) REPRESENTATIVE PHI BETA KAPPA ORATIONS The committee charged with the preparation of a volume of Phi Beta Kappa addresses (see The Key i. i. 25, ii. i. 39) find that the publication of the volume will be facilitated if they can guarantee the publishers a sale of five hundred copies. It is plan- ned to issue a book of about five hundred pages, with a photo- gravure frontispiece, in a limited edition, representing the best typography and binding that can be secured. Provided arrange- 149 ments can be made with authors and publishers, the contents will probably be chosen from the following list: R. W. Emerson, "The American Scholar," Harvard, 1837. H. Bushnell, "The Principles of National Greatness," Yale, 1837. J. Durfee, "Science and Progress," Brown, 1843. A. P. Peabody, "The Connection Between Science and Reli- gion," Harvard, 1845. F. A. March, "The Scholar of To-Day," Amherst, 1868. A. H. Bullock, "Intellectual Leadership in American History," Brown, 1875. R. G. Hoar, "Individualism," Vermont, 1880. C. H. Bell, "The Worship of Success,'.' Dartmouth, 1881. E. B. Andrews, "The Social Plaint," N. Y. Alumni, 1892. G. C. Southworth, "The Making of Our Civilization," Kenyon, 1892. A. D. White, "Evolution vs. Revolution in Politics," N. Y. Alumni, 1896, Cornell, 1913. T. N. Page, "The Hope of Democracy," William and Mary, 1900. B. I. Wheeler, "Things Human," Chicago, 1901. B. Perry, "The Amateur Spirit," Columbia, Tufts, 1901. J. J. Chapman, "The Unity of Human Nature," Hobart, 1901. F. E. Schelling, "Humanities Gone and to Come," Pennsyl- vania, 1902. W. H. Page, "The Cultivated Man in an Industrial Era," Chi- cago, Columbia, 1904. A. B. Hart, "The Hope of Democracy," Tufts, 1907. C. W. Eliot, "Academic Freedom," Cornell, 1907. E. L. Parsons, "Democracy and a Prophetic Ideal," Stanford, 1907. W. Wilson, "The Spirit of Learning," Harvard,' 1909. B. Wendell, "The Mystery of Education," Johns Hopkins, 1909. E. A. Grosvenor, "The Attitude of the Scholar," North Caro- lina, 1909. J. Royce, "What is Vital in Christianity?" Vassar, 1909. J. Dewey, "Humanism, New and Old," Cornell, 1912. The price of the book will not exceed $3, and as the eciition will be limited, the volume may be expected to increase in pecu- niary value. If each chapter will take seven copies, the publi- cation of the book will be immediately possible. Those desiring the work should send their names at once to the chairman of the committee, Prof. Clark S. Northup, Cornell University, Ithaca, N. Y. ISO jVotame 2 Number S Contents Page Man's Triumph- Era-^A Poem , . .21 The UtoiVersity of the State of Washington . 823 The Alpha of Washington . . ; 229 Washingtoii University, St., Lrouis J . 233 The Beta of Missouri . ; . . 238 The Iota of Massachusetts at RadclifFe . 242 A Phi Beta Kappa Bibliography . . . 249 Representative Phi Beta Kappi» Orations . 251 In Memoriam ,. . . • • ^S* Phi Beta Kappa Newis and Notes . . 255 OCTOBER, 19U I Makers of Approved Standard PHI BETA KAPPA FOUR SIZES «BK #BM No. 4 $5.50 14'K GOLD -^ ACTUAL SIZE Your order will have immediate attention. Give Name, Glass and Date to be engraved on the back. - A PHI BETA KAPPA BIBLIOGRAPHY By Prof. Clark S. Nortijup, Cornell '93. (Continued from Vol. 2, page 149). DARTMOUTH— (Continved). 1817. Daniel Dana. The connection between moral and intellectual improvement : address delivered at the anniversary of the New Hampshire Alpha of the "i> B K Society of Dartmouth College, Aug. 26, 1817. Exeter, N. H. 1817. i2mo, pp. 20. 1824. Samuel L. Knapp. An oration pronounced before the society of Phi Beta Kappa at Dartmouth College, Aug. 19, 1824. Printed by request of the Society. Boston. 1824. 8vo, pp. 32. 1825. Charles B. Hadduck. An oration pronounced before the * B K Society of Dartmouth College, Aug. 25th, 1825. Pub- Hshed by request. Concord, N. H. Jacob B. Moore. 1825. 8vo, PP- 35- 1828. Frederick Hall. An oration on the importance of cul- tivating the sciences, delivered at Dartmouth College before the New Hampshire Alpha of * B K, Aug. 21, 1828. Baltimore. 1828. 8vo, pp. 28. 1832. George Kent. The characteristics and claims of the age in which we live : an oration, pronounced at Dartmouth Col- lege, Aug. 23, 1832, before the New-Hampshire Alpha of the # B K Society. Concord. Moses G. Atwood. 1832. 8vo, pp. 42. Reviewed in The New England Magazine, November, 1832, iii, 427. 1840. Caleb Sprague Henry. According to the records of the chapter, this address was printed; but no trace of it has been found. 1841. Tayler Lewis. The believing spirit: a discourse deliv- ered before the New Hampshire Alpha of the * B K Society, 1841. New York. 1841. 8vo, pp. 39. Portrait in The Key, March, 1914, ii. 2.80. 1843. Levi Woodbury. An oration before the * B K Society of Dartmouth College. Hanover. 1844. 8vo, pp. 37. 1845. Leonard Bacon. An oration before the * B K Society of Dartmouth College, delivered July 30, 1845. Hanover. 1845. Svo, pp. 23. 1846. Joel Parker. Progress: an address before the 4> B K 249 Society of Dartmouth College, July 29, 1846. Hano^er. 1846. 8vo, pp. 26. 1847. Samuel G. Brown. The spirit of a scholar : an address before the $ B K Society at Dartmouth. 1847. 1850. William B. Sprague. See Bowdoin Orations and Addresses, 1850. 1851. John James Gilchrist. Classical learning in its rela- tions to active life : an address before the $ B K Society of Dart- mouth College, on Wednesday, July 30, 1851. Hanover. 1851. Svo, pp. 28. 1862. George L. Prentice. The national crisis : being an address delivered before the $ B K Society in Dartmouth Col- lege at Hanover, July 30, 1862. New York. 1862. Svo, pp. 32. 1865. Alpheus Crosby. The present position of the seceded states and the rights and duties of the general government in respect to them: an address to the * B K Society of Dartmouth College, June 19, 1865. Boston. 1865. 8vo, pp. 16. 1866. George Stillman Hillard. The political duties of the educated classes : a discourse delivered before the * B K Society of Dartmouth College, July 18, 1866. Boston. 1866. Svo, pp. 48. Also delivered before the Amherst Chapter on July 10, 1866. 1S75. James W. Patterson. The relations of education to public questions : an address delivered before the $ B K Society at Dartmouth College, June 23, 1S75. Hanover. 1875. Svo, PP- 23. 1878. Alfred Russell. Some effects of the growth of cities on our political system. Address before the # B K Society of Dartmouth College, June 26, 1878. Lowell. 1878. Svo, pp. 23. Published by the Society. 1S81. Charles H. Bell. The worship of success. In An- niversary of the New Hampshire Alpha of the $ B K Society at Dartmouth College, June 29th, 1881, pp. 3-27. Hanover. 1S81. Svo, pp. 33 [32]. 18S7. Frederick Chase, George Hoadly. Historical ad- dress by Frederick Chase, Esq., and oration by the Hon. George Hoadly, LL.D., delivered before the Phi Beta Kappa Society of Dartmouth College, at its centennial anniversary, June 29, 1S87. Cambridge. 1887. Svo, pp. 39. {To be Continued) 250 Volume 2 311 h '"4'' ''■''■>■ ';*■•■ ™w Number 6 Contents i'te'N The Alpha of North Dakota "^f*i- The iPhi Beta Kappa Association in Japan The Way of Fulfilment— A Poem The Alpha of Maine at Bowdoin Phi Beta Kappa Publications A Phi Beta Kappa Bibliography In Memoriam , . . Phi Beta Kappa News and Notes JANUARY, 1915 Page 269 277 279 283 294 302 306 Makers of Approved Standard PHI BETA KAPPA KEYS FOUR SIZES No. 3 $(i.50 No. 2 $7.50 r4.K OOLO — ACTUAL SIZE Your order will have immediate atten^ta^^; Give Name, Class and Date to be engraved on tke back. prepared an excellent history of the University and Chapter for publication in the March number of The Key. The Vanderbilt Catalogue was prepared by Prof. Herbert Cushing Tolman, Yale '88, who was one of the two members to whom the charter was granted in 1901, and one of the chapter's most loyal supporters. Sixty pages, two-thirds of the whole, are given over to historical matter of great interest including fac- similes of early records, the Vanderbilt Charter and the chapter certificate. The catalogue also contains considerable biographical material respecting the 166 members of the chapter. A PHI BETA KAPPA BIBLIOGRAPHY By Prof. Clark S. Northup, Cornell. {Continued from Vol. 2, p. 250.) 1905. Benjamin Ide Wheeler. Abundant Hfe. Delivered June 27. In The University of California Chronicle, Decem- ber; 1905, viii. 79-91. 1914. Samuel Walker McCall. The relation of constitu- tional restraint to the individual. Delivered March 7. An ab- stract appeared in The Dartmouth for March 8, 1914. Poems. 1803. J. Warren Brackett. The ghost of the law or An- archy and despotism: a poem before the * B K of Dartmouth College at their anniversary, Aug. 23, 1803. Hanover. 1803. 8vo, pp. 24. 1824. Nathaniel H. Carter. The pains of the imagination, a poem, read before the $ B K Society, at Dartmouth College, Aug. 19, 1824. Boston. Commercial Gazette Press. 1824. 8vo, pp. vi, 25. 1834. Ralph Waldo Emerson. See Harvard Poems, 18.^4. 1875. George A. Marden. Philosophy the guide of life: a poem before the $ B K Society at Dartmouth College, June 23, 1875. (No. t.-p.) 1881. John Boyle O'Reilly. The three queens. In Anniver- sary of the Nezv Hampshire Alpha of the * B K Society at Dart- mouth College, June 29, 1881, pp. 29 [28] -33 ,[32]. Hanover. 1881. 8vo, pp. 33. 297 Also in James Jeffrey Roche, Life of John Boyle O'Reilly, New York, Cassell, [1891], 8vo, pp. 600-604. General. Frederick Chase. See above under Orations, 1887. Francis Lane Childs. Dartmouth Chapter's 125th anniver- sary. In The Key, March, 1913, i. 11. 21-26. Ilhistrated. The Dartmouth, March 6, 1914, contained a notice of the approaching anniversary and an editorial article on the Society. James Thayer Gould. Bibliography of Dartmouth College and Hanover, New Hampshire. Corjcord. 1894. 8vo. Pp. 51-54 include a bibliography of Phi Beta Kappa at Dartmouth. John K. Lord. The Alpha of New Plampshire. In The Key, March, 1913, i. 11. 9-21. Illustrated. John M. Poor. See Ph. B. K. Publ, N. S. 3, p. [4]. Oscar M. Voorhees. Dartmouth College. In The Key, March, 1913, i. 11. 3-9. Illustrated. DENISON UNIVERSITY. Theta of Ohio. Organized January 18, 191 1. Catalogues. 1914. 8vo, pp. 34 (in Denison University Bulletins, N. S. 49). Ed. by W. A. ChamberHn. Orations and Addresses. 191 1. Francis W. Shepardson. Address at the foundation meeting. In The Key, March, 191:, i. 3. 9-12. 1913. George E. Horr. The new sense of humanity. An address before the Phi Beta Kappa of Denison University, June II, 1913. In Denison University Bulletins, N. S. 49, pp. 35-56. General. Raymond W. Pence. The Theta of Ohio at Denison Univer- sity. In The Key, March, 191 1, i. 3. 6-13. Illustrated. DEPAUW UNIVERSITY. ALPpA OF Indiana. Organized December 17, 1889. Catalogues. Has published none; but the Junior Annual yearly gives the names of members living and deceased. 298 General. William F. Swahlen. See Ph. B. K. Publ., N. S. 3, p. [12]. DICKINSON COLLEGE. Alpha of Pennsylvania. Organized April 13, 1887. Catalogues. 1914. 8vo, pp. 19. General. John Fred Mohler. See Ph. B. K. Publ, N. S. 3, p. [11]. FRANKLIN AND MARSHALL COLLEGE. Theta of Pennsylvania. Organized January 30, 1908. Orations and Addresses. 1908. J. Spangler Kieffer. Education and pessimism. In The Reformed Church Review, October, 1908, Fourth Series, xii. 433-52. 1911. [James] Brander Matthews. The American language. Delivered June 7 and stenographically reported. In The Reformed Church Review, July, 1911, xv. 285-95. 1912. Joseph Buffington. A recall of Benjamin Franklin. An address . . . delivered at Lancaster, Pa., on June 12, 1912, before Theta Chapter of Pennsylvania of the Phi Beta Kappa Society, in connection with Franklin and Marshall Col- lege. Lancaster, Pa. The New Era Printing Co. [1912.] 8vo, PP- 39- General. John B. Kieffer. The history of our charter and the purpose of our organization. Read at the first public meeting, January 30, 1908. In The Oriflamme, 1909, xxvi. 21.1-21. George F. Mull. See Ph. B. K. Publ., N. S. 8, pp. 19-20. THE UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA. Alpha of Georgia. Organized March ^y, 1914. 299 Catalogues. The Key, May, 1914, ii. 4. 194-5. General. See Ph. B. K. Publ, N. S. ix. 5, 11, and The Key, May, 1913, i. 12. 19-20, October, 1913, ii. i. 28, and May, 1914, ii. 4. 190-97. Notices of the installation also appeared in the Athens Banner and the Athens Herald, March 27 and 28, 1914, and the Atlanta Constitution, the Augusta Chronicle, the Savannah Press, and the Savannah Nezvs, March 28, 1914. GOUCHER COLLEGE. Beta of Maryland. Organized February 24, 1905. General. Johnetta Van Meter. See Ph. B. K. PubL, N. S. 3. p. [23]. See also same, N. S. 2, p. [8] . GRINNELL COLLEGE. Beta of Iowa. Organized April ii, 1908. Catalogues. 1910. i6mo, pp. 7. 1913. 8vo, pp. 34. General. The constitution was printed in 1910, 32mo, pp. 11. Clara E. Millerd. See Ph. B. K. PubL, N. S. 8, p. 20. ■HAMILTON COLLEGE. Epsilon of New York. Organized May 24, 1870. Catalogues. 1906. 8vo, pp. 19. General. Joseph D. Ibbotson, Jr. See Ph. B. K. PubL, N. S. 3, p. [10]. 300 HAMPDEN-SIDNEY COLLEGE. General. See Edward Everett Hale in The Atlantic Monthly, July, 1879, xliv. 106. HARVARD UNIVERSITY. Alpha of Massachusetts. Organized September 5, 1781 Catalogues. 1806. sm. Svo (by the fold, a 4to), pp. 15. 1810. 8vo (by the fold, a 4to), pp. 14. 1814. Svo, pp. 20. 1818. Svo, pp. 23. 1823. Svo, pp. 23. 1826. Svo, pp. 24. 1829. Svo, pp. 26. 1833. Svo, pp. 28. 1836. Svo, pp. 30. 1S39. Svo, pp. 30. 1S42. Svo, pp. 32. 1S46. Svo, pp. 48. 1S49. 8vo, pp. 50. 1S53. Svo, pp. 58. This was the first to give the constitution ; all later issues have it. 1S56. Svo, pp. 60. 1S61, Svo, pp. 58. The folds of this are in '6's; those of all preceding, in 4's. 1S73. Svo, pp. 66. 1885. Svo, pp. 72. 1S91. Svo, pp. 75. In 1S97 a Supplement to the last, 1892-1S97, sm. Svo, pp. 12. 1902. Svo, pp. 85. 1912. Svo, pp. V, [3], 211, with 12 plates; compiled by William Coolidge Lane. The Catalogue of 1912 contains a transcript of the early records, includ- ing much that is important for the general history of Phi Beta Kappa in New England. Reviewed in The Harvard Graduates' Magazine, Dec, 1912, March, 1913, xxi. 365-6, S93-4; in The Nation, Nov. 28, 1912, xcv. 512- The Harvard Library has a complete set of these catalogues. Orations and Addresses. 178S. John Quincy Adams. "The text of Mr. Adams's oration is included in his manuscript Diary,, deposited in the library of the Massachusetts Historical Society. A type- written copy is in the Phi Beta Kappa files in the Harvard Library." W.. H. Tillinghast. 1789. William Emerson. On taste. 1794. Charles Coffin. The duellist. 1796. Timothy Bigelow. An oration, pronounced at Cam- bridge, before the $ B K, at their annual meeting on Thursday, July 21, 1796. It being the day following the public commence- ment. Boston. Manning and Loring. 1797. Svo, pp. 15. Deals with the origin and character of the Society. 1798- John Thornton Kirkland. An oration, delivered at the request of the society of 4> B K, in the chapel of Harvard Col- lege, on the day of their anniversary, July 19, 1798. Boston. John Russell. 1798. Bvo, pp. 24. Deals with "those principles, manners, and institutions which are the price and pledge of all America's other blessings.'' Opposed to French infidelity and Godwin's Political justice. 1800. Abiel Abbot. 1805. Oliver Fiske. 1806. Thomas Boylston Adams. On philosophy. 1807. Theodore Dehon. Literature. 1808. James Richardson. An oration, describing the influ- ence of commerce on the prosperity, character and genius of na- tions. Written at the request of the society of <1> B K and deliv- ered on their anniversary, at Cambridge, September i, 1808. Pub- lished by desire. Boston. Russell and Cutler. 1808. 8vo, pp. 20. 1809. Joseph Stevens Buckminster. Discourse on the dan- gers and duties of men of letters. Pronounced at Cambridge be- fore the society of * B K, on Thursday, August 31, 1809. The Monthly Anthology, Sept., 1809, vii. 145-58. Also in Works of Joseph Stevens Buckminster, with memoirs of his life, Boston, 1839, ii. 339-362. 181 5. William Tudor, Jr. An address delivered to the Phi Beta Kappa Society, at their anniversary meeting at Cambridge. In The North American Reviezv, November, 1815, ii. 13-32. On the subjects for poetry furnished by America. 1816. Francis Calley Gray. An address before the society of # B K on Thursday, 29th August, 1816. In The North American Review, September, 1816, iii. 289-305. Subject, the obstacles which oppose the cultivation of letters. (To be continued.) IN MEMORIAM Judge David Cross^ Dartmouth '41, "Dartmouth's grand old man," and the oldest member of the Alpha of New Hampshire of Phi Beta Kappa, died in Manchester, N. H., October i, 1914, at the ripe old age of ninety-seven. For the past decade and more Judge Cross visited Hanover every year either at Com- mencement or at "Dartmouth Night," and always took part in 302 ■*'^^^^^^^^^??T*'*^^ Volume 2 Nnmlier 7 (Eontents ■\ ■ John Heath, The Founded The Alpha of Rhode Island at Brown Ebb and Flow— A Poem . . Representative Phi Bet^ Kappa Orations Recent Phi Beta Kappa Publications . , A Phi Beta Kappa Bibliography In Memoriam . . Phi Beta Kappa News and Notes Page . 317 327 . 342 342 . 344 345 . 352 354 ■::r, ^-ii.#*^^^^v' ' ' ■^' - ■•■>-• -^ '„ : - . '.^J.:m^^^<-,.. :'^^''::'l''l^^ MARCH, 1915 ' C '■ Makers of Approved Standard BETA KAPPA FOUR SIZES No. 3 $6.50 14-K GOLD — ACTUAL SIZE No. 2 $7.50 Your order will have immediate attention. Give Name, Class and Daite to be engraved on the back. / C-SSSSSf/flf ^SSS ••r^rg^rr^ ing the fact that much new material has been brought to light through recent researches. Most of this information has been published in The Phi Beta Kappa Key, and is available for all who would know the history and development of the fraternity. In telling of the founding of the chapter Prof. Shepardson re- produces a large number of letters sent by Dr. Parsons, the Sec- retary of the United Chapters, and others, to Professor, now President Harry Pratt Judson, and gives a facsimile of the char- ter issued in 1898. The Chapter was formally instituted July i, 1899. Then follow the membership rolls arranged with especial care as follows: Charter Members (11), Faculty Members (no). Former Faculty Members (30), Graduate Students Affiliating with the Chapter (19), Honorary Members (5), and members Elected on Receiving the Degree of Doctor of Philosophy with Grade Suinma cum Laude (50), Alumni Members from the graduates of the Old University of Chicago (15), and Under- graduate members, arranged by dates of election (518). A list of the 25 who have died is also given under the heading, "The Chapter Eternal." Of especial interest is a list of the twenty books published by members elected in course, and another lisi of Higher Degrees Conferred on Members. It will be seen that the Chicago Chapter, in addition to the three well recognized groups of members has another which may be designated Post Graduate Members, owing to the rule which admits students earning a Ph.D. with grade, Summa cum Laude. A PHI BETA KAPPA BIBLIOGRAPHY By Prof. Clark S. Northup, Cornell '93. (Continued from Vol. 2, p. 302.) HARVARD— (Co^tinved). 1817. William Crafts. An oration on the influence of moral causes on national character, delivered before the * B K Society on their anniversary, 28 August, 1817. Cambridge. Hilliard and Metcalf. 1817. 8vo, pp. 16. 1821. John Chipman Gray. An oration pronounced before the society of Phi Beta Kappa, at Cambridge, August 30, 1821. 345 The advantages to American literature of enjoying a conformity of language with the English. In The North American Reviezv, October, 1821, xiii. 478-490. 1822. William Jones Spooner. An address delivered at Cambridge, before the society of Phi Beta Kappa, at their an- nual meeting, August 29, 1822. Boston. Oliver Everett. 1822. 8vo, pp. 34. Deals with the prospects of American hterature. 1824. Edward Everett. An oration pronounced at Cam- bridge, before the society of Phi Beta Kappa, August 2y [26], 1824. Published by request. Boston. Oliver Everett. 1824. 8vo, pp. 67. Also New York. J. W. Palmer & Co. 1824. 8vo, pp. 40. A 2d, a 3(i, and a 4th edition were published, the last (by Cummings, Hilliard & Co.) in 1825. Reprinted (The circumstances favorable to the progress of intellectual life in America) in his Orations and speeches on various occasions, Boston, 1850, i. 9-44. Reviewed in The North American Review, April, 1825, xx. 417-440, October, 1850, Ixxi. 449-451 ; by W. B. Sprague in The New Englander, February, 1851, ix. 52-53. 1825. Nathaniel Langdon Frothingham. The revolutions in letters. "The manuscript of this address is in Harvard College Library." W. H. Tillinghast. 1826. Joseph Story. A discourse pronounced before the Phi Beta Kappa Society, at the anniversary celebration on the thirty- first day of August, 1826. Boston. Hilliard, Gray, Little, and Wilkins. 1826. 8vo, pp. 58. Proposes "to trace out some of the circumstances of our age, which con- nect themselves closely with the cause of science and letters." Reprinted in Story's Miscellaneous Writings, Boston, 1835, pp. 3-33; in Frank Moore's American eloquence. New York, 1857, ii. 424-437; and in The world's great classics. New York, Colonial Press, 1900, orations of American orators, i. 378-411. Reviewed in The North American Review, January, 1827, xxiv. 129-41. 1830. Orville Dewey. An oration delivered at Cambridge before the society of Phi Beta Kappa, August 26, 1830. Boston. Gray and Bowen. 1830. 8vo, pp. 32. Theme : "The loftiest attainments of the mind in every sphere of its exer- tion are immediately the fruit of nothing but the deepest study." 1832. Jared Sparks. On some of the characteristics of his- tory as a subject of study, and particularly the history of the United States. 346 On the original manuscript, whicli is among tlie Sparks papers in tlie Harvard Library, has been written: "Has nearly all been printed in The Boston Book, 1837, and American Museum, 1839. 1833. Edward Everett. Education of mankind. In his Ora- tions mid speeches on various occasions, Boston, 1850, i. 404-441. First delivered at New Haven, August 20, 1833, before the Yale Chapter, and for the most part repeated by request (with additions) at Cambridge, August 30. 1834. William Howard Gardiner. An address, delivered before the Phi Beta Kappa Society of Harvard University, 28 August, 1834, on classical learning and eloquence. Quid voveat dulci nutricula majus alumno Quam sapere, et fari ut possit quae sentiat? Hor. Ep. I. iv. 8. Cambridge. James Munroe and Co. 1834. 8vo, pp. 68. Reviewed in The New England Magazine, November, 1834, vii. 416-8. 1835. Theophilus Parsons. An address, delivered before the Phi Beta Kappa Society of Harvard University, 27 August, 1835, on the duties of educated men in a republic. Boston. Russell, Odiorne and Co. 1835. 8vo, pp. 28. Reviewed in The New England Magazine, October, 1835, ix. 303-5; by E. in Harvardiana, ii. 30-32. 1836. Francis Wayland. The practical uses of the principles of faith. Delivered September i. Apparently not printed. See F. and H. L. Wayland, A memoir of the life and labors of Francis Wayland, New York, Sheldon, 1867, 8vo, i. 351- 2; J. O. Murray, Francis Wayland, Boston, 1891, p. 79. 1837. Ralph Waldo Emerson. An oration, delivered before the Phi Beta Kappa Society, at Cambridge, August 31, 1837. Published by request. Boston. James Munroe & Co. 1837. 8vo, pp. 26. Second edition, 1838, pp. 32. Reprinted (The American scholar) in his Miscellanies, Boston, 1856, pp. 77-111; in Nature, addresses, and lectures, Boston, 1884, pp. 83-liS; and in other editions of his miscellanies, as well as separately many times (e. g. Man thinking, London, C. E. Mudie [1844] ; New York, Laurentian Press, 1901, 8 vo, pp. 59) ; also in Representative Ph. B. K. orations, Boston, Houghton MifHin Co., 1915. Reviewed by C. P. Cranch in The Western Messenger, November, 1837, iv. 184-188; in The Democratic Review, February, 1838, i. 327-29; by William Henry Channing in The Boston Quarterly Review, January, 1838, i. 106-20. See also Charles F. Thwing, Emerson's "American scholar" six- 347 ty jears after, The Forum, August, 1897, xxiii. 661-71 ; Emerson, Journal, Boston, 1912, iv. 341 ; and Northwestern Orations and Addresses, 190,^ 1841. Frederic Henry Hedge. Conservatism and reform. An oration delivered before the 4> B K Society of Harvard College, at their first meeting after the change in their constitution en- larging the terms of membership. In his Martin Luther and other essays, Boston, 1888, pp. 129-165. Comment by E. E. Hale in James Russell Lowell and his friends, Boston, 1899, pp. 128-g. 1843. George Stillman Hillard. The relation of the poet to his age. A discourse delivered before the Phi Beta Kappa Society of Harvard University, on Thursday, August 24, 1843. Boston. Charles C. Little and James Brown. 1843. ^^o, PP- 53- There was also a second edition, same size. Reviewed in The North American Review, October, 1843, Ivii. 505-9. 1844. George Putnam. An oration delivered at Cambridge, before the Phi Beta Kappa Society in Harvard University, 29 August, 1844. Boston. Charles C. Little and James Brown. 1844. 8vo, pp. 36. Subject, The connection between intellectual and moral culture; between scholarship and character, literature and life. Strictures on the moral character of Voltaire, Byron, and Burns pro- voked a reply : Remarks upon an oration delivered at Cambridge, by George Putnam, before the Phi Beta Kappa Society, in Harvard University, August 29, 1844. By a member of the Suffolk bar. Boston. William D. Ticknor & Co. 1844. Svo, pp. 35. 1845. Andrew Preston Peabody. The connection between science and religion. An oration delivered before the Phi Beta Kappa Society of Harvard University, August 28, 1845. Bos- ton. Charles C. Little and James Brown. 1845. 8vo, pp 29. Reprinted in Representative Ph. B. K. orations, Boston, 1915. 1846. Charles Sumner. The scholar, the jurist, the artist, the philanthropist. An address before the Phi Beta Kappa Society of Harvard University, at their anniversary, August 27. 1846. "Then I would say to the young disciple of Truth and Beauty, who would know how to satisfy the noble impulse of his heart, through every opposition of the century, — I i.vould say, Give the world beneath your influence a direction towards the good and the tranquil rhythm of time will bring its develop- 348 ment." Schiller. Boston. William D. Ticknor & Co. 1846. 8vo, pp. 72. There was also a second edition in the same year. Commemorated John Pickering, Joseph Story, Washington AUston, and William Ellery Channing. See Emerson's Journal, Boston, 1912, vii. 228. Reviewed in The North American Review, January, 1847, Ixiv. 254-7. 1847. George Perkins Marsh. Human knowledge: a dis- course delivered before the Massachusetts Alpha of the Phi Beta Kappa Society, at Cambridge, August 26, 1847. Boston. Charles C. Little and James Brown. 1847. 8vo, pp. 42. Also in his Life and Letters, New York, Scribner, 1888, pp. 431-452. Reviewed in The New Englander, April, 1848, vi. 311-12. 1848. Horace Bushnell. An oration delivered before the society of Phi Beta Kappa, at Cambridge, August 24, 1848. Cambridge. George Nicholls. 1848. 8vo, pp. 39. Third edition, 1848, same size. Treats of work and play under various aspects. Also printed as Work and play in his Work and play, or Literary varieties. New York, Scribner, 1864, pp. 1-42. Also in his Literary varieties. New York, Scribner, 1881. Reviewed in The New Englander, October, 1848, vi. 597-598. 1849. George Washington Bethune. The claims of our country on its literary men. An oration before the Phi Beta Kappa Society of Harvard University, July 19, 1849. Cam- bridge. John Bartlett. 1849. 8vo, pp. 52. Also in his Orations and occasional discourses, New York, G. P. Putnam, 1850, 8vo, pp. 381-428. 1850. Timothy Walker. The reform spirit of the day. An oration before the Phi Beta Kappa Society of Harvard Univer- sity, July 18, 1850. Boston and Cambridge. James Munroe and Co. 1850. 8vo, pp. 38. 1851. William Buell Sprague. An oration pronounced be- fore the Phi Beta Kappa Society of Harvard University, July 17, 1851. Albany. Gray, Sprague and Co. 1851. 8vo, pp. 60. Treats of "The American mind — her character and destiny." 1853. Henry Whitney Bellows. The ledger and the lexi- con : or Business and literature in account with American educa- tion. An oration before the Phi Beta Kappa Society of Har- vard College, July 26, 1853. Cambridge. John Bartlett. 1853. 8vo, pp. S3. Comment in The Harvard Register, Feb., 1881, iii. 61. 349 i8s6. Leonard Bacon. The relation of Christianity to law and government. Delivered July 17. In The New Englaiidcr, August, 1856, xiv. 447-463- 1858. Thomas Hill. Liberal education. An address deliv- ered before the Phi Beta Kappa Society of Harvard College, July 22, 1858. Cambridge. John Bartlett. 1858. 8vo, pp. 34. Reviewed in The North American Review, Oct., 1858, Ixxxvii. ST^-7^- 1861. George Sew all Boutwell. The conspiracy; its pur- poses and its power. In his Speeches and papers relating to the Rebellion, Boston, Little, Brown & Co., 1867, 8vo, pp. 94- 122. 1862. George William Curtis. The American doctrine of liberty. An oration delivered before the # B K Society of Har- vard University, July 17, 1862. In his Orations and addresses, New York, Harper, 1894, i. 95-122. Reprinted in Representative Ph. B. K. orations, Boston, 1915. 1867. Ralph Waldo Emerson. Progress and culture. Ad- dress read before the $ B K Society at Cambridge, July 18, 1867. In his Letters and social aims, Boston, 1875, pp. 183-209; new and revised edition, Boston, 1884, pp. 197-222; and in other editions. 1870. Oliver Wendell Holmes. Mechanism in thought and morals. An address delivered before the Phi Beta Kappa So- ciety of Harvard University, June 29, 1870. With notes and af- terthoughts. — "Car il ne faut pas se meconnaitre, nous sommes automates autant qu'esprit." — Pascal: Pensees, chap. xi. 4. — Boston. James R. Osgood and Co. 1871. i2mo, pp. loi. Reprinted in Pages from an old volume of life, 1883, 1891, 1892, pp. 260- 314. Reviewed by William Dean Howells in The Atlantic Monthly, May. 1871, xxvii. 653-654. 1871. Noah Porter. The science of nature versus the science of man. See Trinity Orations and Addresses, 1871. 1873. Charles Francis Adams (the elder). An address de- livered at Cambridge before the society of the Phi Beta Kappa, 26 June, 1873. Cambridge. John Wilson and Son. 1873. 8vo, pp, 28. Subject, the relation between the college and the state. 1874. Charles Carroll Everett. The gain of history. In The Unitarian Review, August, 1874, ii. 16-36. 350 Also in his Immortality and other essays, Boston, The American Uni- tarian Association, igo2. 1875. Theodore Dwight Woolsey. The relations of honor to poHtical life. An address delivered before the society of the Phi Beta Kappa of Harvard College, July i, 1875. New Haven. Judd and White. 1875. 8vo, pp. 28. 1876. Jeremiah Lewis Diman. The alienation of the edu- cated class from politics. An oration before the Phi Beta Kappa Society at Cambridge, June 29, 1876. Providence. Sidney S. Rider. 1876. 8vo, pp. 37. Reprinted in his Orations and essays, Boston, Houghton, Mifflin & Co., 1882, pp. 41-75. 1877. Thomas Francis Bayard. "Unwritten law." An ad- dress delivered before the Phi Beta Kappa Society of Harvard University, at Cambridge, Massachusetts, June 28, 1877. Bos- ton. A. Williams and Co. 1877. 8vo, pp. 47. 1878. John William Dawson. The present rights and du- ties of science. In The Princeton Review, Nov., 1878, vii. 674- 696. Also reprinted. 1880. Richard Salter Storrs. The recognition of the super- natural in letters and in life. An oration. Delivered July i, 1880. New York. Anson D. F. Randolph and Co. [1881.] 8vo, pp. 57. An abstract was printed in The Harvard Register, August, 1880, ii. lSS-7- 1881. Wendell Phillips. The scholar in a republic. Ad- dress at the centenary anniversary of the Phi Beta Kappa of Harvard College, June 30, 1881. Boston. Lee and Shepard. New York. Charles T. Dillingham. 8vo, pp. 36. Also printed in The Boston Daily Advertiser, July i, 1881, and in The Boston Commonwealth, July 9, 1881. Also in Carlos Martyn, Wendell Phillips, New York, Funk and Wagnalls, 1890, 8vo, pp. 570-94; and in Representative Ph. B. K. orations, Boston, 1915. Comment by George William Curtis in Harper's Magazine, September, 1881, Ixxiii. 625-626; reprinted (Wendell Phillips at Harvard, 1881) in his From, the Easy Chair, pp. 129-138. Parts quoted by Copeland in Men and days in Phi Beta Kappa, pp. 101-102. 1882. Carl Schurz. The condition and prospects of Ameri- can society. Delivered June 29, 1882. In The Boston Daily Ad- vertiser, June 30, 1882. (To be Continued) 351 IN MEMORIAM Charles Greene Rockwood, Ph.D., Yale '64, died at Cald- well, N, J., July 2, 1913, in his seventieth year. From 1868 to 1873 he was Professor of Mathematics and Natural Philosophy at Bowdoin, and of Mathematics and Astronomy at Rutgers the next four years. During this period he became an Associate mem- ber of the Alpha of New Jersey. In 1877 he accepted an invita- tion to the chair of Mathematics in Princeton, where he served until 1905. He was instrumental in securing a Phi Beta Kappa charter for Princeton, was president of the chapter a number of years, and its delegate to the Council. He was a member of sev- eral learned societies, and an honorary member of the British Association for the Advancement of Science. His Ph.D. was conferred by Yale in 1866. Prof. Katherine Coman, Ph.D., Michigan '80, died at her home, Wellesley, Mass., January 11, 1914, in her fifty-seventh year. Miss Coman came to Wellesley on her graduation as in- structor in English, and continued in the service of the college until her death. In 1883 she became professor of history, and in 1900 was made head of the new Department of Economics and Sociology. In 1913 she retired from active service, being made emeritus professor. Thus her active service at Wellesley con- tinued for a third of a century. Professor Coman was an author of note, her last work, published in 1912, being entitled "Economic Beginnings of the Far West," in two volumes. At the time of her death she was working on an "Industrial History of New England." She became a member of the Eta of Massachusetts .at its organization in 1904. Judge Willard Penfield Voorhees, LL.D., Rutgers '71, died at his home. New Brunswick, N. J., May 31, 1914, in his sixty- third year. Soon after graduation he began the study of law in the office of the late Judge B. R. Woodbridge Strong, a fellow alumnus of the class of 1847, was admitted to the bar in 1874, and practiced continuously in New Brunswick, his native ■city. In 1908 he was appointed an Associate Justice of the New Jersey Supreme Court, and continued in this office until his death. He had been since 1909 a Trustee of his alma mater. He was an accomplished musician, and for many years was ■organist in the First Presbyterian Church. Rutgers conferred on him the LL.D in 1910. Ho.N. John Langbourne Williams, Litt.D., Virginia '51, died in Richmond, his native city, on February 13, 1915, in his eighty- third year. He was graduated from the University of Virginia 352 Volume 2 Number 8 Contents Page John Heath, The Founder— Concluded . 365 Activities of the Harvard Chapter -. . 373 The New Scholarship .... 376 The Upper Hudson Association . . 382 Additions to Phi Beta Kappa Membership . 383 W^ar and Civilization — A Poem. . • 387 Representative Phi Beta Kappa Orations . 394 A Phi Beta Kapa Bibliography . . 395 In Memoriam ..... 398 Phi Beta Kappa News and Notes . . 401 MAY, 1915 im^il^^^i^i^mffi Makers of Approved Standard PHI BETA KAPPA KEYS FOUR SIZES $BK No. 4 I $5.50 ** No. 3 = $6.50 f 14-K GOLD — ACTUAL SIZE No. 2 $7.50 Your order will have immediate attention. Give Name, Class and Date to be engraved on the back. tions given date from the famous year of 1837, which marl B K Fraternity of Harvard University, June 30, 1892. Bos- ton, etc. Houghton, Mifflin & Co. 1892. Sm. 8vo, pp. 24. Also printed in The Harvard Graduates' Magazine, Oct., 1892, i. 17-30. 1893. Francis Amasa Walker. College athletics. Oration delivered before the Phi Beta Kappa Society, in Sanders Thea- tre, Thursday, June 29, 1893. In The Boston Transcript, June 30, 1893; The Harvard Graduates' Magazine, Sept., 1893, ii. i-i8 (also reprinted separately); and The Technology Quar- terly, July, 1893, vi. 116-131. 1894. Henry Cabot Lodge. True Americanism. Oration de- livered before the Phi Beta Kappa Society, in Sanders Thea- tre, Thursday, June 28, 1894. In The Harvard Graduates' Magazine, September, 1894, iii. 9-23. Reprinted (A liberal pducation) in his Certain accepted heroes and other essays in literature and politics, New York, etc.. Harper & Bros., 1897, pp. 155-185- 1895. John Fiske. The cosmic roots of love and self-sac- rifice. In his Through nature to God, Boston, Houghton, Miff- lin & Co., 1899, sm. 8vo, pp. 57-130. Originally called "Ethics in the cosmic process.'' A few slight changes were made in the printing. Intended as a reply to Huxley's Romances lec- ture at Oxford in 1893. 1896. George Shattuck Morison. The new epoch and the university: oration delivered before the Phi Beta Kappa So- ciety in Sanders Theatre, Cambridge, Thursday, June 25, 1896. In The Harvard Graduates' Magazine, Sept., 1896, v. 1-18. Also reprinted. 8vo, pp. 18. Also appears as chap. vi. of his The new epoch as developed by the manufacture of power, Boston, Houghton, Miff- lin & Co., 1903. Same. La nueva epoca y la universidad; discurso pronuncia- do ante la Sociedad "* B K" en el teatro de Sanders, Cambridge, el jueves 25 de junio de 1896. Traducido del ingles por Agustin Aragon. Mexico. 1896. 8vo, pp. 24. {To be Continued) 397 IN MEMORIAM Joseph Tomlixson, AI. D., ^Villiams 75, died at the Jefferson Hospital, Philadelpliia, Pa., following an operation for cancerous affection, on May 19, 1913, in his fifty-eighth year. He was a native of New Jersey, and after his college course studied at the College of Physicians and Surgeons, Xew York City, and was graduated in 1878. After two years of hospital experience he practiced in Plainfield, X. J., New York City, Shiloh, N. J., where he succeeded to his father's practice, and, since 1893, at Bridge- ton, N. J., where he had an extensive practice and enjoyed a high reputation in medical circles. He was a Fellow of the American Academy of Medicine and a member of local, the New Jersey State, and the American A'ledical Associations. He was a mem-- ber of the Bridgeton Board of Education, and in many other ways showed his deep interest in public affairs. A widow and two sons survive him. William Alexander Platt, AI. A., Williams '76, died in Alontclair, Denver, Colorado, Alarch 22, 1914, in his fifty-ninth year. He was born at Zanesville, Ohio, but spent his boyhood in Bath, N. Y., where his father was pastor of the Presbyterian Church. After his college course he taught for six years and then took up newspaper work on the editorial staff of the Nczi' York Mail and Express. After nine years of strenuous labor failing health compelled him to seek a change of climate. In 1893 he removed to Colorado and for several years had charge of the Colorado Springs Gazette. During the free silver controversy his was the only paper in the state to advocate the gold standard. Thus he rose to a leading position in the councils of his party and in 1903 was given a position in the office of the Secretary of State, and was later made Commissioner of Public Printing, which office he held until 1908. His death occurred after a long struggle with disease. A widow and two sons survive him. John Ellsworth Goodrich, D. D., Vermont '53, died at Burlington, Vt., February 23, 1915, in his eighty-fifth year. Prof. Goodrich was a native of Massachusetts, but spent the greater part of his active life in \^ermont. After his graduation he studied Theology at Andover and was graduated in i860. He was Chaplain of the ist Vermont Cavalry during the latter por- tion of the Civil War. With this exception teaching was his life work. In 1868 he became Superintendent of Schools in Burling- ton, and two years later accepted the professorship of Rhetoric and Latin in the University. After fiUing this chair for five years he was professor of Greek and Latin for five years, and of Latin 39^' Volume 2 Nnmber 9 Contenta The Alpha of Vermont The Old Songs Athene — A Poem A Phi Beta Kappa Bibliography . In Memoriam • Phi Beta Kappa News and Notes VERMONT NUMBER OCTOBER, 1915 Page 413 430 431 433 441 450 Sfl Makers of Approved Standard PHI BETA KAPPA KEYS FOUR SIZES r f • * #eK No. 4 $5.50 it No. 3 , $6.50 . U-K GOLD — ACTUAL SIZE No. 2 $7.50 Your order will have immediate attention. Give Name, Class and Date to be engraved on the back. PETROIT CSJga a Raig A PHI BETA KAPPA BIBLIOGRAPHY By Prof. Clark S. Northup, Cornell, '93. (Continued from Vol. 2, p. S97-) 1898. Seth Low. The trend of the century. Oration dehv- ered before the Harvard Chapter of Phi Beta Kappa, in Sanders Theatre, June 30, 1898. In The Harvard Graduates' Magazine, Sept., 1898, vii. 1-20. Same. Reprinted in The Atlantic Monthly, August, 1898, Ixxxii. 153-65. Same. New York. Thomas Y. Crowell & Co. [Cop. 1899.] Sra. 8vo, PP- 31- Same. The outlook. "The trend of the century.'' [With foreword by C. F. Home.] New York, [Cop. 1907.] 8vo, pp. 25. Frontisp. The mean- ing of modern Hfe; issued under the auspices of the National Alumni, no. I. 1899. Charles Joseph Bonaparte. Our national dangers, real and unreal. Oration delivered in Sanders Theatre before the Harvard Chapter of Phi Beta Kappa, Thursday, June 29, 1899. In The Harvard Graduates' Magazine, September, 1899, viii. 1-15. Also reprinted. 8vo, pp. 15. 1900. William Everett. Patriotism. Oration delivered in Sanders Theatre, before the Harvard Chapter of Phi Beta Kappa, Thursday, June 28, 1900. In The Harvard Graduates' Maga- zine, September, 1900, ix. 1-19. Same. Boston. W. B, Clarke Co. 8vo, pp. 23. Same. Philadelphia. Peace Association of Friends. 1901. 8vo, pp. 23. 1901. Wayne MacVeagh. The value of ethical ideals in American politics; an address delivered before the society of the Phi Beta Kappa of Harvard University, June 27, 1901. Wash- ington, D. C. Judd and Detweiler. 1901. L. 8vo, pp. 32. Also in The Harvard Graduates' Magazine, September, 1901, x. 1-22, and in The Arena, October, 1901, xxvi. 337-61. 1902. George Herbert Palmer. A study of self-sacrifice. Delivered June 26, 1902. In The Harvard Graduates' Magazine, Sept., 1902, xi. 12-27. Also included in chap. vi. of his The nature of goodness, Boston, Hough- ton MifHin & Co., 1904. 1903. Carroll Davidson Wright. The course and influence 433 of romantic socialism. Delivered June 25, 1903. In The Har- vard Graduates' Magazine, September, 1903, xii. 8-23. 1904. Samuel Walker McCall. The newspaper press. De- livered June 30, 1904. In The Harz'ard Graduates' Magazine, September, 1904, xiii. 22-44. Also reprinted. 8 vo, pp. 23. 1905. James Burrill Angell. The European concert and the Monroe doctrine; a discourse before the Phi Beta Kappa So- ciety of Harvard University, June 28 [29], 1905. Ann Arbor. 1905. 8vo, pp. 16. (University Bulletin, N. S. vi. 15.) Also in The Harvard Graduates' Magazine, September, 1905, xiv. 13-24. 1906. Edward Charles Pickering. The aims of an astrono- mer. Delivered June 28, 1906. In The Harvard Graduates' Magazine, September, 1906, xv. 12-21. Also reprinted. 8vo, pp. 10. 1907. James Bryce. What is progress? Delivered June 27, 1907. In The Harvard Graduates' Magazine, September, 1907, xvi. 1-19. Also in The Atlantic Monthly, August, 1907, c. 145-56. 1908. Horace Howard Furness. On Shakespeare, "or. What you will." Delivered June 25, 1908. In The Harvard Gradu- ates' Magazine, September, 1908, xvii. 1-25. Comment by G. Bradford, Jr., in The Nation, Oct. 15, 1908, Ixxxvii. 358. 1909. WooDROw Wilson. The spirit of learning. Delivered July I. In The Harvard Graduates' Magazine, September, 1909, xviii. 1-14. Reprinted in Essays for college men. New York, Holt, 1913, 8vo, pp. 3- 27; and in Representative Ph. B. K. orations, Boston, 1915, pp. 466-80. Also summarized in The Beta Theta Pi, November, 1909, xxxvii. 220-4. 1910. Charles Evans Hughes. Some aspects of our democ- racy. Delivered June 30. In The Harvard Graduates' Magazine, September, 1910, xix. i-io. Summarized in The Tribune, July i, 1910, p. 4, and in The Evening Post, June 30, 1910. 191 1. JosiAH RoYCE. James as a philosopher. Delivered June 29. In The Harvard Graduates' Magazine, September, 191 1, XX. 1-18. Also in his William James and other essays on the philosophy of life. New York, Macmillan, 191 1, 8vo, pp. 1-45. 1912. Jean Adrien Antoine Jules Jusserand. Rocham- beau in America. Delivered June 17. In The Harvard Gradu- 434 ates' Magazine^ September, December, 1912, xxi. 1-17, 212-29. Also published separately as follows : Rochambeau in America. From unpublished documents. An address delivered before the society of the Phi Beta Kappa of Harvard University, June 17, 1912. Washington. 1912. 8vo, pp. 52. 1913. Samuel jMcChord Crothers. The charm of English prose in the seventeenth century. DeUvered June 16. In The Harvard Graduates' Magasinc, September, 1913, xxii. 1-15. 1914. William Howard Taft. The Supreme Court of the United States and popular self-government. Delivered June 15. In The Harvard Graduates' Magadne, September, 1914, xxiii. 1-14. 191 5. James Ford Rhodes. Lincoln in some phases of the Civil War. DeHvered June 21. In The Harvard Graduates' Magazine, September, 191 5, xxiv. 1-19. Poems. 1797. Thomas Paine (afterward Robert Treat Paine). The ruling passion : an occasional poem. Written by the appointment of the society of the * B K and spoken, on their anniversary, in the chapel of the University, Cambridge, July 20, 1797. By Thomas Paine, A. M. Published according to Act of Congress. Boston. Manning and Loring. 1797. Sm. 4to, pp. 32. 1798. Charles Pinckney Sumner. "The manuscript of Sumner's poem is preserved in the Phi Beta Kappa collection in the Harvard Library, but no precise subject is indicated." W. H. Tillinghast. 1799. William Biglow. Education: a poem, spoken at Cam- bridge, at the request of the Phi Beta Kappa, July i8th, 1799.— Train up a child in the way he should go, and when he is old he will not depart from it. Solomon. — Salem. Joshua Cushing. 1799. 8vo, pp. 17. Extracts were reprinted in The Key, October, 191 1, i. 5. 29-32. 1803. William Jenks. The social principle. 1805. Thaddeus Mason Harris. On American patronage. Addressed to the $ B K Society on the anniversary meeting, Au- gust 29, 1805. In The Literary Miscellany, Cambridge, 1806, ii. 196-198. 1806. Benjamin Whitwell. Experience, or, Folly as it 435 flies. A poem, delivered at Cambridge, on the anniversary of the $ B K Society, Aug. 28, 1806. Purus non eget venatis gravida sagittis pharetra. Hor. Boston. Anthology Office. 1806. Svo, pp. 23. 1809. Joseph Head. Enthusiasm. An occasional poem, writ- ten by appointment of the society of # B K, and delivered at Cam- bridge, on the anniversary of their institution, August 31, 1809. Its track . Glory pursues and generous shame, The unconquerable mind, and freedom's holy flame. Gray. Boston. Anthology Press. 1809. 8vo, pp. 10. Also in The Monthly Anthology, Sept., 1809, vii. 145-58; and in his Works, Boston, 1839, ii. 339-62. 1810. Washington Allston. "Allston's Poems appeared in 1813, but nothing in the volume distin- guishes the Phi Beta Kappa poem, and the same is true of the enlarged edition published in 1850." Tillinghast. 181 1. Jacob Bigelow. A poem on professional life, deliv- ered by appointment of the society of Phi Beta Kappa, at their anniversary, August 29, 181 1. ' Boston. J. Belcher. 181 1. Svo, pp. IS- 1812. Edward Everett. American poets. [Boston.] 1812. Svo, pp. II. Printed by Hilliard & Metcalf for private distribution. 1813. N.-VTHANiEL Langdon Frothingham. Genius. In The General Repository and Revieiv, Oct., 1813, iv. 379-87. 181 5. Samuel Oilman. Human life. In his Contributions to literature, descriptive, critical, humorous, biographical, philosoph- ical, and poetical, Boston, 1856, pp. 512-543. 1817. John Ware. Poem, delivered before the * B K Society of Harvard University, on their anniversary, August 28, 1817. A few introductory lines, and some other passages, which were spoken, are omitted- in printing. Cambridge. Hilliard & Met- calf. 1817. Svo, pp. II. Also in The North American Review, November, 1817, vi. 109-115. A criticism of contemporary fiction, 1821. William Cullen Bryant. The ages. In his Poems, 436 Cambridge, Hilliard & Metcalf, 1821, pp. 7-24. Also in later editions. Reviewed in Tlie North American Review, Oct., 1821, xiii. 381-83. 1823. George Bancroft. Rome. In his Poems, Cambridge, Hilliard & j\[etcalf, 1823, pp. 63-77. In Bancroft's Poems published in 1823, the Phi Beta Kappa poem is not designated; Dr. Pierce, however, noted the subject in his diary. 1824. Henry Ware, Jr. The vision of liberty; recited before the Phi Beta Kappa Society of Harvard University, August 26, 1824. Piiblished by request. Boston. Oliver Everett. 1824. 8vo, pp. 12. Reviewed in The North American Review, Oct., 1824, xix. 468-70. 1828. Frederic Henry Hedge. Modern poetry. A manuscript copy, by Mrs. Hedge, is in the Harvard Library. 1829. Charles Sprague. Curiosity: a poem, delivered at Cam- bridge before the Phi Beta Kappa Society, August 27, 1829. Bos- ton. J. T. Buckingham. 1829. 8vo, pp. 30. Second edition, July, 1834. Also in his Writings, New York, Charles S. Francis, 1841, pp. g-35, and in later editions. Reviewed in The North American Review, April, 1841, lii. 534. 1830. Grenville Mellen. The age of print : a poem deliv- ered before the Phi Beta Kappa Society, at Cambridge, 26 Au- gust, 1830. Boston. Carter and Hendee. 1830. 8vo, pp. 40. 1831. Benjamin Kent. Poem delivered before the Alpha of the $ B K Society, at Cambridge, September i, 1831. Not printed. A ms., 4to, pp. 8, is in the Harvard University Library. On liberality. 1833. Henry Wadsworth Longfellow. The past and the present. Subject, education. Does not appear in his published works. A revised form of a poem delivered in 1832 before the Bowdoin Chapter. See S. Longfellow, The life of Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, Boston, 1891, i. 195. An extract (The soul) was published in The Knickerbocker Maga- zine, January, 183S, v. 71. See The Key ii. 6, 293. 1834. Ralph W.vldo Emerson. Not published. The original manuscript is in the Harvard Library. A few lines at the end describing Webster are printed in his Poems, Works, Riverside edition, Boston, 1884, ix. 312; Centenary edition, Boston, 1904, ix. 398-9. Also reprinted by A. Copeland, in his Men and days in Phi Beta Kappa, Newark, N, Y., 1907, 8vo, p. 56. Cf. J. E. Cabot, Memoir, i. 228; Dartmouth Poems, 1834. 437 Somewhat less than half of the poem is printed in The Key, Jan., 1913, i. 10. 25-8. 1835. Ephraim Peabody. New England emigration westward. Delivered before the Phi Beta Kappa Society, Cambridge, Mass., September 27, 1835. In The Western Messenger, December, 1835, i. 409-422. 1836. Oliver Wendell Holmes. Poetry: a metrical essay. In his Poems, Boston, 1836, pp. 3-39. Reviewed by Horatio Hale in Harvardiana iii. 147-50. See Ives's Bibliog- raphy, p. 61. 1837. William Parsons Lunt. Psyche. In The United States Magazine and Democratic Review, April, 1838, ii. 17-31. 1839. James Flint. Change: a poem delivered before the Phi Beta Kappa Society of Harvard University, August 29, 1839. Printed, not published. Salem. The Observer Press. 1848. 8vo, pp. 24. 1840. Francis Calley Gray. Poem spoken at Cambridge, before the Phi Beta Kappa Society of Harvard University, Au- gust 27, 1840. Boston. Charles C. Little and James Brown. 1840. 8vo, pp. 36. "Is there no Music in this Western world? No brow round which the Poet's wreath is curled? Is all here dark and grovelling?" A forecast of the future of poetry in America. Reviewed in The North American Review, January, 1841, Iii. 262-5. 1843. At the annual dinner Oliver Wendell Holmes read An after-dinner poem. Printed (as Terpsichore) in Graham's Mag- azine, January, 1844, xxiv. lo-ii, and in his Poems, London, 1846. In the Household edition of his Poems, 1877, entitled An after-dinner poem. See Ives's Bibliography, p. jy. 1844. William Wetmore Story. Nature and art: a poem de- livered before the Phi Beta Kappa Society of Harvard Univer- sity; August 29, 1844. Boston. Charles C. Little and James Brown. 1844. 8vo, pp. 48. At the annual dinner Oliver Wendell Holmes read his Lines recited at the Phi Beta Kappa dinner. Printed in his Poems, London, 1846, In his Poems, 1849, entitled Verses for after-dinner. See Ives's Bibliog- raphy, pp. 42-3. 438 i845- Charles Timothy Brooks. A poem pronounced before the Phi Beta Kappa Society, at Cambridge, August 28, 1845. Boston. Charles C. Little and James Brown. 1845. 8vo, pp. 36. Chiefly on the immortality of poetry and the poetic impulse. 1846. James Freeman Clarke. A poem, delivered before the Phi Beta Kappa Society, Alpha of Massachusetts, on its anniver- sary, August 27, 1846. Boston. Wm. Crosby and H. P. Nich- olls. 1846. 8vo, pp. 24. "Our Country and its Hopes, the theme I choose." 1849. John Brooks Felton. The horse-shoe: a poem spoken before the Phi Beta Kappa Society in Cambridge, July 19, 1849. Cambridge. John Bartlett. 1849. 8vo, pp. 29. Reviewed in The North American Review, October, 1849, Ixix. 528-30. 1850. Bayard Taylor. The American legend. A poem before the Phi Beta Kappa Society of Harvard University, July 18, 1850. Pubhshed by request. Cambridge. John Bartlett. 1850. i2mo, pp. 27. Not included in Taylor's collected works. See his Life and letters, i. 173- 1855. William Henry Hurlbut. Wealth and beauty. A poem read before the Phi Beta Kappa Society in Cambridge, July 19, 1855. Cambridge. John Bartlett. 1855. i2mo, pp. 31. Reviewed in The North American Review, October, 1855, Ixxxi. 546-9. 1861. Elbridge Jefferson Cutler. Reveille. A poem read before the Phi Beta Kappa Society at Cambridge, July 18, 1861. In his War poems, Boston, Little, Brown and Company, 1867, pp. 9-17. Same. Liberty and law. A poem for the hour. Army Series. No. 4. [Boston.] American Unitarian Association. 1861. 8vo, pp. 11. Noticed by Edward Everett Hale in The Christian Examiner, Septem- ber, 1861. See also the Memoir of Mr. Cutler. A ms. note in the copy of War poems in the Harvard University Library says : "Reveille was reprinted in the South during the war, with such changes as made it serve the Confederate cause. It was afterward re- printed in England as evidence of the spirit which animated the Con- federacy." 1862. Samuel Francis Smith. The original manuscript is in the Harvard Library. 1865. George Henry Boker. Our heroic themes. A poem read before the Phi Beta Kappa Society of Harvard University, July 20, 1865. Boston. Ticknor and Fields. 1865. i2mo, pp. 20. 439 1867. At the annual dinner Oliver Wendell Holmes read his Chanson without music, by the Professor Emeritus of Dead and Live Languages. Printed in The Atlantic Monthly, November, 1867, XX. 543-544. Reprinted in Songs of many seasons, 1875. 1868. William Everett. Hesione: or Europe unchained. A poem delivered before the $ B K Fraternity of Harvard College, July 16, 1868. Boston. Little, Brown and Co. 1868. 8vo, large paper, pp. 28. 1870. William Reed Huntington. The child's supremacy: a dream. In his Quinquaginta, privately printed, 1888. Also in his Sonnets and a dream, Jamaica, N. J., The Marion Press, 1899, pp. 47-60. 1871. Francis Bret Harte. Aspiring Miss DeLaine. (A chemical narrative.) In his Poetical works. Household edition, Boston, Houghton, MifBin and Co., [1882], pp. 212-218. 1873. At the annual dinner on June 26 Oliver Wendell Holmes read A poem served to order. Printed in The Atlantic Monthly, .'September, 1873, xxxii. 296-297. Reprinted in Songs of many .seasons, 1875. 1874. Christopher Pearse Cranch. The century and the nation. Read before the Phi Beta Kappa Society of Harvard Col- lege, June 25, 1874. In his The bird and the bell, and other poems, Boston, Jas. R. Osgood & Co., 1875, pp. 251-269. 1875. Walter Mitchell. The mocking-bird. Delivered July I, 1875. In Scribner's Monthly, December, 1875, xi. 171-176. A part of Edward Everett Hale's poem at the dinner was published as follows : Alma Mater's roll. A part of an historical speech at the Phi Beta Kappa dinner at Cambridge, July i, 1875. In Scribner's Monthly, September, 1875, x. 623. 1877. Edmund Clarence Stedman. Hawthorne. Read June 28. In his Hawthorne and other poems, Boston, James R. Os- good and Co., 1877, 8vo, pp. 9-25. Also in later editions of his poems. See Stedman and Gould's Life, ii. 287, 293-94- 1878. Richard Henry Stoddard. History. In his Poems, New York, Charles Scribner's Sons, 1880, 8vo, pp. 437-44. {To be continued.) 440 Volume 2 Number 10 Contenta Some Pamphlets and What They Reveal The Vassar-Lafayette Inaugurations James Monroe Taylor Brotherhood — A Poem Elgin Ralston Lovell Gould A Phi Beta Kappa Bibliography . In Memoriam .... Phi Beta Kappa News and Notes . Page 461 467 469 471 475 480 488 494 JANUARY, 1916 Makers of Approved Standard PHI BETA KAPPA KEYS FOUR SIZES No. 2 $7.50 U-K GOLD — ACTUAL SIZE Your order will have immediate attention. Give Name, Class and Date to be engraved on the back. distinguished success in cleansing New York politics of narrow partisanism and venality. As Chamberlain, Dr. Gould was a commanding figure, — coun- selor of the mayor on fiscal matters, leader in constructive plan- ning and expert administrator of his own office. The defeat of Alayor Low in 1903 was a mighty set back to civic progress in New York, and in no respect more lamentable than because it took from the service of the city a high-minded, skilled and exceptional public servant in the person of Dr. Gould. In the intervening years between his withdrawal from office and his death, Dr. Gould organized a bank, participated in the con- tinuing work of the Citizens' Union, and kept always in effective- ness the company which he had built up for bettering housing conditions. It was in this period that I came to know him and to experience his friendly counsel and support at crucial times in my own public work. His death was in every sense untimely. It came when America was more fully realizing the need of the services of men of Dr. Gould's quality in its public affairs. The Universities of America are being increasingly requisi- tioned for public service. The great state institutions that have grown so rapidly in recent years, supported as they are by public taxes and guided by public opinion, are making higher education more democratic than it was a generation ago, and hence less a barrier to pubHc service. Six years after Dr. Gould retired from the chamberlainship, Mayor Gaynor took great pride in announcing that he had ap- pointed a number of college men to important public positions. Now it is so commonplace that no comment is made on it. We have gone further in that we are now expecting our colleges and universities specifically to train for public service. And so we look back to Dr. Gould as a pioneer by whose example and life we gain a prophetic insight into the future of American city government. To those younger Americans who look with confident hope to a future civic democracy, skilled, effective, of sane but courageous ideals, the life and public services of E. R. L. Gould stand forth as an inspiration for future achievements. Living we loved and honored him. Dead we reverve and shall emulate him. 479 MEMORIAL RESOLUTIONS. The Phi Beta Kappa Alumni in New York desire to place on record their deep sense of the loss sustained by the City and by themselves in the death in August last of Dr. Elgin Ralston Lovell Gould, for many years an honored member of their Association and of late its President and member of its Council. His was a life of true social service. "Laboriously tracing what must be, .Ind what may yet be better — " he worked unceasingly in many fields with breadth of vision and with scientifically trained intelligence for the permanent good of the com- munity. In grateful memory of so noble a life, in profound sorrow that he was tiaken in the fullness of his powers, the Alumni attest anew their faith in the ideals for which Phi Beta Kappa stands, and honor the man whose many-sided civic usefulness has enlarged and quickened their under- standing of the ways in which those ideals may be realized. A PHI BETA KAPPA BIBLIOGRAPHY By Prof. Clark S. Northup, Cornell '93. (Continued from Vol. 2, p. 440.) 1880. Edgar Fawcett. The republic. Read before the Phi Beta Kappa Society of Harvard College, June [sic], 1880. In his Song and story, later poems, Boston, James R. Osgood and Co., 1884, 8vo, pp. 51-65. , Also in The Harvard Register, August, 1880, ii. 157-159. , 1881. Charles Godfrey Leland. The poem was never published. See Mrs. Elizabeth Robins Pennell's biography of Leland, Boston, 1906, ii. 115-118, where is printed a letter from Dr. Holmes on the poem and the reception given it. ' At the annual dinner Oliver Wendell Holmes read his Post-prandial. Printed in The Atlantic Monthly, September, 1881, xlviii. 365, and in his Poems, Riverside edition, 1891. 1883. Robert Grant. Yankee Doodle. A poem delivered be- fore the Phi Beta Kappa Society of Harvard University, June 28, 1883. Boston. Cupples, Upham and Co. 1883. i6mo, pp. 31. 1885. John White Chadvi^ick. A legend of good poets. A poem delivered June 25th, 1885, to the Phi Beta Kappa Frater- inity of Harvard University. Boston. Geo. H. Ellis. 1885. 8vo, pp. 20. 480 At the annual dinner Oliver Wendell Holmes read his poem To the. poets who only read and listen. Printed in Ttu Atlantic Monthly, Au- gust, i88s, Ivi. 264-265. 1890. Richard Watson Gilder. Ode: read before the society of the Phi Beta Kappa, Harvard University, June 26th, 1890. [Cambridge. 1890.] 8vo, pp. [8]. Printed on only one side of the leaf. Subject, an address to "the spirit of beauty." Also in The Critic, June 28, 1890, xiii, 323. Also in his Two worlds and other poems. New York, The Century Co., 1891, pp. 105-112, and in his Five hooks of song. New York, The Century Co., 1894, pp. 183-187. 1891. Henry Grafton Chapman. Poem delivered before the Phi Beta Kappa Society of Harvard University, June 25, 1891. {1891.] L. 8vo, pp. 12. Also in The Boston Advertiser, June 26, 1891. 1892. Ernest Francisco Fenollosa. East and West. A poem delivered before the Phi Beta Kappa Society at Harvard Univer- sity, June 30, 1892. In his Eas.t and West, The discovery of America and other poems, Newr York, Thomas Y. Crowell and Co., 1893, pp. 1-47. 1893. Maurice Thompson. Lincoln's grave. Delivered. June -29, 1893. Cambridge, etc. Stone and Kimball. 1894. i6mo, pp [49]. A part was also printed in The Harvard Graduates' Magazine, Sep- tember, 1893, ii. 45-47. 1894. Theodore Chickering Williams. The making of man ; poem delivered before the Phi Beta Kappa Society at Harvard University, June 28th, 1894. Oxford. B. H. Blackwell. 1894. Sm. 8vo, pp. 15. 1895. At the annual dinner William Everett read a poem on Holmes, Winthrop, Hoar. Printed in The Harvard Graduates' Magazine, September, 1895, iv. 17-18. 1897. Edward Waldo Emerson. The winning game ; a poem recited before the Phi Beta Kappa Society of Harvard Univer- sity, in the Memorial Hall, July ist, 1897. Cambridge. Riverside Press. 1897, Sm. 8vo, pp. 14. 1898. Edward Sandford Martin. The kingdom, the power, and the glory. Read before the Harvard Phi Beta Kappa at Cam- bridge, June 30, 1898. In his Poems and verses, New York, etc.. Harper & Brothers, 1902, pp. 66-75. 481 , Also in The Harvard Graduates' Magazine, September, 1898, vii. 26-29, and in Harper's Weekly, July 12, 1898, xlii, 635. 1899. Owen Wister. My country : 1899, written for the $ B K Society, Harvard, June, 1899. In Harper's Weekly, July i, 1899, xliii. 640-41. 1900. Clinton Scollard. Lawton ; an ode. [Read before the Phi Beta Kappa Society of Harvard College, June 28, 1900. Clin- ton, N. Y. The Osborn Press. 1900.] 8vo, pp. [ii], 17. Printed on only one side of the leaf. 1901. George Santayana. Spain in America. In his A hermit of Carmel and other poems, New York, Charles Scribner's Sons, 1901, 8vo, pp. 216-31. 1902. Nathaniel Southgate Shaler. Valor; * B K poem, June 26, 1902. In The Harvard Graduates' Magazine, September, 1902, xi. 5-12. Also reprinted. 8vo, pp. 8. See his Autobiography, Boston, 1909, p. 443. 1903. LeBaron Russell Briggs. Mater fortissima. Deliv- ered June 25, 1903. In The Harvard Graduates' Magazine, Sep- tember, 1903, xii. 1-5. Also in his Routine and ideals, Boston, etc., Houghton, Mifflin and Co., 1904, pp. 223-232. 1904. Thomas Wentworth Higginson. Now and then. De- livered June 30, 1904. In The Harvard Graduates' Magazine, September, 1904, xiii. 45-47. 1906. George Cabot Lodge. The soul's inheritance. In Scrib- ner's Magazine, September, 1906, xl. 362-65. Also in his The soul's inheritance and other poems, Boston, Houghton, Mifflin & Co., 1909, 8vo, pp. i-ii. 1907. John Tyler Wheelwright. The field of stars. Phi Beta Kappa poem (Jamestown Exposition year), 1907. In The Harvard Graduates' Magazine, December, 1908, xvii. 370-371. 1908. Percy Mackaye. An ode to the universities. Delivered June, 1908. In The Evening Post, New York, June 25, 1908. Also in The Harvard Graduates' Magazine, September, 1908, xvii. 213- 218. Also (Ode to the American universities) in his Poems, New York, Macmillan, 1909, pp. 24-37. 1909. Barrett Wendell. De praeside magnifico. Deliv- ered July I. In The Harvard Graduates' Magazine, September, 1909, xviii. 15-18. 482 Also in The mystery of education and other academic performances, New York, Scribner, 1909, pp. 255-64. [910. Henry Van Dyke. Who follow the flag. New York. Charles Scribner's Sons. 191 1. 8vo, pp. 14. 1912. John Jay Chapman. Phi Beta Kappa poem. Read June 17. In The Harvard Graduates' Magazine, September, 1912, xxi 18-21. 1913. George Edward Woodberry. In memoriam: Charles Eliot Norton. Read June 16. In The Harvard Graduates' Maga- zine, September, 1913, xxii. 35-8. Reprinted in his The flight and other poems, New York, Macmillan, 1914, 8vo, pp. 151-7. Comment in The Dial, July i, 1913, Iv. 42. 1914. [William] Bliss Carman. Phi Beta Kappa poem. Read June 15. In The Forum, November, 1914, Hi. 677-83. Reprinted in W. S. Braithwaite, Anthology of magazine verse for 1914, Cambridge, Mass., 1914, 8vo, pp. 3-9. 191 5. Alfred Noyes. The Phi Beta Kappa poem. Read June 21. In The Harvard Graduates' Magazine, September, 1915, xxiv. 40-46. General. Timothy Alden, Jr. List of orations and poems before the Phi Beta Kappa. In his Catalogue of the library of the Massachu- setts Historical Society, Boston, John Eliot, Jr., 181 1. See Proceedings of the Mass. Hist. Soc, Boston, 1879, i. 221-2. Thomas Gushing. Undergraduate life sixty years ago. In The Harvard Graduates' Magazine, July, 1893, i. 547-60. On Phi Beta Kappa, p. 557. Ralph Waldo Emerson. In his Journal, Boston, Houghton, Mifflin Co., 1912, 8vo, ii. 404, iii, 333, iv. 341, v. 30, vi. 230, vii. 228. Edward Everett Hale. The founder of Harvard's Phi Beta Kappa. In The Harvard Graduates' Magazine, September, 1906, XV. 200-1. Albert Bushnell Hart. The $ B K Society and the Boston police force. In The Harvard Register, March, 1880, i. 67-8. The Harvard Crimson. The Alpha of Massachusetts. Re- printed in The Key, March, 191 1, i. 3. 28-30. The Harvard Graduates' Magazine, beginning with Septem- ber, 1893, has regularly printed reports of the meetings of Phi Beta 483 Kappa. See ii. 88, iii. 52-3, iv. 629, v. 53-4, vi. 107, 559, vii. 1 13-4, viii. 104-5, i-^- Qij X- 95. ^i- 102-3, xii. 77-8, 440, xiii. 96-7,. xiv. 81-2, XV. 77-8, 445, xvi. 207-8, xvii. 87-8, xviii. 90-1, xix. 79-80, 468-9, XX. 95-7, xxi. 489, xxii. 94-5, 466, xxiii. loo-i. William Coolidge Lane. Anniversary of the Alpha of Mas- sachusetts. In The Key^ October, 1912, i. 9. 24-7. Activities of the Harvard Chapter. In The Key, May, 1915, ii. 8. 373-& Illus. See also Ph. B. K. Publ., N. S. 3, p. [4I • Laurence Bradford Packard. Phi Beta Kappa at Harvard. In The Key, January, 191 3, i. 10. 5-25. lUustrated. John Pierce. Some notes on the anniversary meetings of the Phi Beta Kappa Society, Alpha of Massachusetts, 1803-1848. In Proceedings of the Massachusetts Historical Society 1892-4 [June, 1894], 2d series, ix. 110-43. Reprinted by Mr. Lane in his Catalogue of 1912, pp. 145-169. Josiah Quincy. In his The history of Harvard University^ Cambridge, John Owen, 1840, 8vo, ii. 397-9. 2d ed. Boston. Crosby, Nichols, Lee & Co. i860. Records, documents and memoranda. In the Catalogue of 1012,. ed, by William Coolidge Lane, pp. 85-180. Report on the choice of undergraduate members of the $ B K Society. In The Harvard Graduates' Magazine, December, 1906,. XV. 216-21, 349. William Hopkins Tillinghast. The orators and poets of Phi Beta Kappa, Alpha of Massachusetts, with a bibliographical description of those orations and poems which are in Harvard College Library. In The Harvard Library Bulletin, May, 1891,. vi. 265-70. Reprinted in revised form in the Catalogue of the Harvard Chapter.. 19 12, pp. 62-78. The William and Mary College Quarterly, January, iBg'>i, vi. 199. On the return of the Harvard charter to Cambridge. HAVERFORD COLLEGE. Zeta of Pennsylvania. Organized January 20, 1899. Catalogues. 1904, November. i6mo, pp. 15. 1909, January. i6mo, pp. 16- 484 Orations and Addresses. 1904. George Herbert Palmer. George Herbert as a religious poet. Appears substantially in his edition of Herbert, Boston, Houghton, Mifflin & Co., 1905, i. 85-120. General. Wilfred P. Mustard. See Ph. B. K. Publ, N. S. 3, p. [16]. HOBART COLLEGE. Zeta of New York. Organized July 6, 187 1. Catalogues. 1894, April. 8vo, pp. 24. Supplement, June 27, 1894, i p. Orations and Addresses. 1880. Francis Philip Nash. The mission of American col- leges and the relations of the Phi Beta Kappa Society to that sub- ject. An address delivered before the Phi Beta Kappa Society in, Hobart College, Geneva, N. Y., June 22, 1880. Geneva, N. Y. College Press Print. 1880. 8vo, pp. 22. 1883. George William Douglas. The function of a church col- lege in the sphere of modern culture. Delivered June 26. Cam- bridge, Mass. 1883. 4to, pp. 24. 1885. Charles Andrews. An address commemorative of the Hfe of the late Hon. Charles J. Folger, LL.D. Delivered by Hon. Charles Andrews, Associate Judge of the Court of Appeals, at Geneva, N. Y., before the Hobart College Chapter of the Phi Beta Kappa Society, June 23, 1885. Geneva : W. F. Humphrey, Print- er. [1885.] 8vo, pp. 23. 1886. Delano Chipman Calvin. An address in memory of the Hon. Horatio Seymour, LL.D., delivered by Hon. Delano C. Calvin, LL.D., at Geneva, N. Y., before the Associate Alumni- of Hobart College and the Phi Beta Kappa Society, June 23, 1886. Geneva: W. F. Humphrey, Printer. 1886. 8vo, pp. 31. 1888. William Clark. The formation of opinion. An ad-' dress delivered before the Phi Beta Kappa Society at Hobart Col- 48s lege, June 28, 1888, by the Rev. Prof. Wm. Clark, M. A., LL.D. Published by request of the Phi Beta Kappa Society of the Cor- poration of the College. [Cambridge, Mass. William H. Wheel- er, Printer. 1888.] 4to, pp. 20. 1898. Edward Patterson. A successful life. Address in memory of Clarence Armstrong Seward, Delivered before the Phi Beta Kappa Society at Hobart College, Geneva, N. Y., June 22, 1898, by Hon. Edward Patterson, LL.D., one of the Justices of the Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York. Geneva: Press of W. F. Humphrey. 1898. 8vo, pp. [ii], 38. 1900. John Jay Chapman. The unity of human nature. An address delivered before the Phi Beta Kappa Society at Hobart College. Delivered June 20. In The International Journal of Ethics, January, 1901, xi. 158-67. Also reprinted, 5vo, pp. 10. Also in his Learning and other essays, New York, Moffat, Yard & Co., 1910, 8vo, pp. 173-90; in Representative Ph. B. K. orations, Boston, 1915, 8vo, pp. 254-62; and in Richard Rice, Jr., College and the future : essays for the undergraduate on problems of character and intellect. New York, Charles Scribner's Sons, 1915, 8vo, pp. 359-70. 1902. Frank Warren Hackett. The attitude of the scholar towards men in public life. An address delivered June 18, 1902, before the Phi Beta Kappa Society of Hobart College. Geneva, New York. Press of W. F. Humphrey. 1902. 8vo, pp. 26. 1905. Edward Everett Hale, Jr. Modern standards of crit- icism. Delivered June 21. In Hobart College Bulletins, July, 1905, iii. 4. 5-22. 1906. Oscar McMurtrie Voorhees. Our Phi Beta Kappa father and their fraternity. See William and Mary, General. 1906. Frank Engs Blackwell. The theatre. Delivered June 20. In Hobart College Bulletins, July, 1906, iv. 4. 5-18. 1908. Arthur Gordon Webster. The creed of a scientist. Delivered June 17. In Hobart College Bulletins, July, 1908, vi. 4- 7-31- 1909. Dickinson Sergeant Miller. The practical man. De- livered June 16. In Hobart College Bulletins, October, 1909, viii. I. 6-26. 1910. Henry Rutgers Marshall. Sub-consciousness. De- livered June 16. In Hobart College Bulletins, July, 1910, viii. 4. 8-24. 486 ipii. Charles Downer Hazen. The college and the citizen. Delivered June 15. In Hobart College Bulletins, July, 191 1, ix. 4. 8-28. 1912. Frederick Winslow Taylor. Principles of scientific management. Delivered June 20. In Hobart College Bulletins, July, 1912, X. 4. 7-46. 1913. Joseph Alexander Leighton. A defence of reason and a plea for the theoretic life. Delivered June 19. In Ho- bart College Bulletins, July, 191 3, xi. 4. 8-27. 1914. George McAneny. Phi Beta Kappa oration. Deliv- ered June 18. In Hobart College Bulletins, July, 19 14, xii. 4. 6-17. On opportunities for the college man in the public service. 1915. Joseph French Johnson. College products and by- products. Delivered June 17. In Hobart College Bulletins, July, 1915, xiii. 4. 8-15. General. Clark Sutherland North up. The Hobart installation. In The Key, January, 1914, ii. 2. 84-9. Milton Haight Turk. See Ph. B. K. Publ, N. S., 3, p. [10]. See also The Key, January, 1913, i. 10. 43, October, 1914, ii. 5. 258-9. THE UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS. Gamma of Illinois. Organized November ii, 1907. Catalogues. 1908. Sq. i6mo, pp. 15. General. Frances Simpson. See Ph. B. K. Publ, N. S. 8, pp. 17-18. (To be continued.) 487 IN MEMORIAM ^^'ILLIAM Stokes Wvjian, LL. D., Alabama "51, died at his home, Tuscaloosa, Alabama, October 20, 19 15, having nearly com- pleted his eighty-fifth year. Of Xew England ancestry, he was born at iMontgomery, Ala., studied one year at Harvard, anrl received his A. B. at the University of Alabama in 1851. After a brief experience as a teacher at Carrollton, he was called to teach Latin and Greek in his alma mater, and from 1855 to 1901 was professor of Latin. On six occasions he declined the presidency of the university. He served as president pro tcni. four times, and was president one year, 1901-2, when he retired from active service. As a teacher he attained marked distinction and was highly esteemed by all his colleagues. He served in the General Assembly of Alabama, 1870-72, and continued to manifest a marked interest in public affairs. He was a profound student of the historic sources of the southwestern and gulf states, was an author, and contributor to several magazines. A few poems and translations of the Odes of Horace are of marked power. When the movement for the reorganization of the Alpha of Alabama was fostered he was one of the three surviving members who met to carry the plan through. The meeting was held at his home August 18, 1912, and he acted as secretary. By the aid of his private records and his clear and accurate memory it was possible to secure a fairly complete list of the members of the chapter during its activity from 1851 to 1861, for he was associated with it practically all the time. See The Key, Vol. i, No. 8, pp. 21-23. The LL. D. degree was conferred on him in 1882 by his alma mater. William Henry Bowen, D. D., Brown 57, died in Providence,. R. L, February 13, 1915, having nearly completed his eightieth year. After a brief experience abroad and at teaching he studied for a year in Andover, and in 1859 was ordained to the ministry. He served several Free Baptist Churches in Maine and Massa- chusetts, and in 1888 removed to Providence where he made his home. He occupied a number of influential positions including the presidency of the Board of Overseers of Bates College. The degree of Doctor of Divinity was conferred by Hillsdale College,. Michigan, in 1874, and by Bates in 1907. Two sons and a daugh- ter survive. Elijah Washburn Coy, Ph. D., Brown "58, died in Cincinnati,. Ohio, March 29, 1915, aged eighty-two. He entered Brown from Hebron, Me., and won Phi Beta Kappa at the conclusion of his junior year. For nine years he was principal of the Peoria, Illinois, High School. In the meantime he s}:udied law and was- 488 Volume 2 Nnmber 11 Contents Page Western Reserve University . . . 505 The Alpha of Ohio .... 515 The Golden Key — A Poem . . 517 The By-Products of the Modern College . 518 The Meeting of the Phi Beta Kappa Senate . 526 A Phi Beta Kappa Bibliography . . 529 In Memoriam ..... 537 Phi Beta Kappa News and Notes . 543 WESTERN RESERVE NUMBER MARCH, 1916 Makers of Approved Standard PHI BETA KAPPA KEYS FOUR SIZES ft No. $5 ' — &-= * .'so la * No. 3 3 $6.50 U: « ** No. 2 $7.50 14-K GOLD — ACTUAL SIZE Your order will have immediate attention. Give Name, Class and Date to be ' engraved on the back. ^■5 5 gg5 A PHI BETA KAPPA BIBLIOGRAPHY, By Professor Clark S. Northup, Corxf.ll '93. (Continued from Vol. 2, p. 4SJ.) INDIANA UNIVERSITY, Gamma of Indiana. Organized January 20, 191 1. Catalogues. A list of the charter and foundation members is given in The Key, March, 191 1, i. 3. 15-16. Orations and Addresses. 1911. Andrew Cunningham McLaughlin. PoHtical parties and popular government. Delivered June 20. Published by the Chapter. X. p. N. d. 8vo, pp. 22. 1913. Wilfred Pirt Mustard. The pastoral, ancient and modern. Delivered in June. In The Classical Jl'cckly, March 27, 1915, viii. 161-7. General. \\'arner Fite. The Gamma of Indiana. In The Key, March, 191 1, i. 3. 14-22. Illus. See also Ph. B. K. Publ, N. S. 9, p. 10. THE STATE UNIVERSITY OF IOWA. Alpha of Iowa. Organized September 30, 1895. General. Laen.as G. Weld. See Ph. B. K. Publ., N. S. 3, pp. [13-14]. JOHNS HOPKINS UNIVERSITY Alpha of Maryland. Organized October id, 1895. Catalogues. 1904. 8vo, pp. 56. From this the revised constitution was re- printed in 1906, pp. 4. 'The original manuscript of the bibliography from Indiana to Pomona inclusive was lost in the mails. In preparing a duplicate of this part, it is possible that the compiler has omitted some items. He will be grateful for notices of any errors or omissions. 529 OraTIOXS and ADDRliSSI-IS. 1909. Barrett ^^'I•:^•DELL. The mysiery of education. Delivered April 24. In The in\slci-v of education and other academic per- formances, New York, Scribner, 1910, 8vo, pp. 7-78. Reprinted in Representative Phi Beta Kappa orations, Boston, Hough- ton Alifflin Co., 191S, 8vo, pp. 442-65. Comment in The Dial, July 16, 1910, xlix. 27-^9. 191 4. Henry Holt. On the cosmic relation.s. Substantially included in his On the cosmic relations, Boston, Floughton Mifflin Co., 1914, 8vo, 2 vols. General. A circular letter wa.s published in 1896 giving "facts relative to the history of the fraternity and the chapter." i sheet. Edward C. Armstrong. See Ph. B. K. Piibl., X. S. 3, p. [14]. J. Elliott Gilpin. See Ph. B. K. bulletin of information, 1903- P- [3]- THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS. Alpha of K.\nsas. Organized April 2, 1890. Catalogues. [1896.] 8vo, pp. [8]. 1903. 8vo, pp. 41. Or.\tions and Addresses. 1896. Frank Heywood Hodder. The duty of the scholar in the writer's responsibility. In The Kansas University Quarterly, July, [896, V. 55-78. Same. Lawrence, Kan. 1896. Svo, pp. 24. 1898. Arthur Graves Canfield. The tone of literature and the writer's responsibility. In The Kansas Universit\ Quarterly, July, 1898, vii. 3. 39-55. 1903. Kate Stephens. The University of Hesperus. Deliver- ed in June. In her .--hnerican thumb-prints : mettle of our men and women, Philadelphia, J. E. Lippincott Co., 1905, sm. Svo, pp. [33] -84. Miss Stephens believes this to have been the first Phi Beta Kappa ora- tion delivered by a woman ; it was probably the only one down to 1915, when Miss Gildersleeve was the orator at Columbia. 530 General. Wilson Sterling. See Ph. B. K. Publ, N. S. 3, p. [12]. KENYOX COLLEGE. Beta of Ohio. Organized June 29, 1858. Catalogues. 1899. Compiled by Lewis Caleb Williams and George Parkin Atwater. 8vo, pp. 102. Orations and Addresses. 1892. George C. S. Southworth. The making of our civiliza- tion. An oration before the Phi Beta Kappa of Kenyon College, June 22, 1892. Salem, O. Press of Harris & Co. 1892. 8vo, PP- 25- General. Maxwell B. Lang. See Ph. B. K. Publ., N. S. 3, p. [7] . LAFAYETTE COLLEGE. Gamma of Pennsylvania. Organized April 5, 1890. General. Oscar McMurtrie Voorhees. The A'assar-Lafayette inaugu- rations. In The Key^ January, 1916, ii. 10. 467-9. R. B. Youngman. See Ph. B. K. Publ, N. S. 3, pp. [12-13]; LAWRENCE COLLEGE. Gamma of Wisconsin. Organized February 20, 1914. Catalogues. A partial list of members is given in The Key^ March, 1914, ii. 3. 130-31. ; Orations and Addresses. 1914. Edward Asahel Birge. College and life. Delivered February 20. An abstract is given in The Key, March, 1914, ii. 3. 131-32. 531 General. Albert Augustus Trever. The Gamma of Wisconsin. In The Key, March, 1914, ii. 3. 127-134. . Lawrence College. In The Key, March, 1914, ii. 3. 123-6. lUus. See also The Key, May, 1913, i. 12, 23-4. LEHIGH UNIVERSITY. Beta of Pennsylvania. Organized April 5, 1887. Catalogues. ' [1889.] 8vo, p. [i]. Orations and Addresses. 1904. William Peterfield Trent. Literature and science.. In Greatness in literature and other papers, New York, Crowell,, 1905, 8vo, pp. 109-46. 19 10. Charles Joseph Bonaparte. Statesmanship in the ad- ministration of justice. Delivered June 11. In The Key, Janu- ary, 1912, i. 6. 19-31. General. Charles J. Goodwin. Phi Beta Kappa at Lehigh University. In The Key, January, 1912, i. 6. 16-19. Hlus. Albert G. Rau. See Ph. B. K. bulletin of information, 1903, P- [3]- MARIETTA COLLEGE. Gamma of Ohio. Organized June 9, i860. Orations and Addresses. 1869. Israel Ward Andrews. The American college: an ad- dress before the * B K Society of Marietta College, June 29, 1869. Marietta, O. Register Office. 1869. 8vo, pp. 22. 1875. Franklin W. Fisk. The unity of the professions. De- livered June 29. In The New Englander, July, 1876, xxxv. 534-47. MIAMI UNIVERSITY. Iota of Ohio. Organized June 14, 191 1. 532 General. Archer Everett Young. The Iota of Ohio at Miami Univer- sity. In The Key, October, 191 1, i. 5. 16-29. THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN. Alpha of Michigan. Organized November 13, 1907. Catalogues. 1909. In The Michigan Ahtiiinus, April, 1909, xv. 276-8 (list of alumni), December, 1909, xvi. 116-20. Orations and Addresses. 191 1. James Bryce. The study of ancient literature: address to the University of Michigan Chapter of the $ B K Society, April, 191 1. In his Uniz'ersity and historical addresses delivered during a residence in the United States as ambassador of Great Britain, New York, Macmillan, 1913, 8vo, pp. 317-38. Also summarized in The Michigan ^-lluninus, May, IQII, xvii. 473-4. General. Alfred H. Lloyd. Phi Beta Kappa, Alpha of Michigan. In The Michigan Alitninns, December, 1907, xiv, 100-103. See also Ph. B. K. Puhl, N. S. 8, pp. 18-19. The Michigan Alumnus. The Michigan Chapter of Phi Beta Kappa. April, 1909, xv. 276-8. Gives a list of alumni members and the constitution. See also pp. 330- 31- The Phi Beta Kappa Society and the University of Michigan. November, 1899, xi. 47-53. Se£ also April, 1907, xiii. 276-7 (on the application for a char- ter) ; December, 1909, xv. 116-20 (on alumni elections ; see also pp. lOO-IOl). Frederic Logan Paxson. Elections to the Michigan Chapter of Phi Beta Kappa. In The Michigan Alumnus, March, 1909, XV. 229-30. See also Ph. B. K. Publ, N. S. 4, P- U- MIDDLEBURY COLLEGE. Beta of Vermont. Organized August 17, 1868. 533 Orations and Addresses. 1901. Walter Seth Logan. A more socialistic state; oration before the $ B K Society of Middlebury College, Vermont, de- livered June 25, 1901. New York. 1901. 8vo, pp. 28. THE UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA. Alpha of Minnesota. Organized December 13, 1892. Orations and Addresses. 1908. Edward Asahel Birge. See Wisconsin Orations and Addresses, 1908. General. Hope McDonald. See Ph. B. K. bulletin of information, 1903, p. [S]- Cora E. Marlowe. See Ph. B. K. Publ, N. S. 3, p. [13]. THE UNIVERSITY OF MISSOURI. Alpha of Missouri. Organized December 5, 1901. Catalogues. 1909. 8vo, pp. III. 2 woodcuts. Orations and Addresses. 1909. Charles William Eliot. The contemporary American conception of equality among men as a social and polished ideal. Oration delivered by President Charles William Eliot of Harvard University June 2, 1909, before the Alpha of Missouri. N. p. N. d. 8vo, pp. 24. 1911. Frank Thilly. The characteristics of the present age. In The Hibbert Journal, October, 191 1, x. 253-66. General. James Thayer Gerould. See Ph. B. K. bulletin of informa- tion, 1903, p. [i] ; Ph. B. K. Publ., N. S. 3, p. [19]. MOUNT HOLYOKE COLLEGE. Theta of Massachusetts. Organized January 30, 1905. 534 Catalogues. The secretary is preparing a catalogue. General, Carrie A. Harper. Mount Holyoke College and its seventy- fifth anniversary. In The Key, January, 191 3, i. 10. 28-34. [Helen Elizabeth Hoag.] See Ph. B. K. Publ., N. S. 2, P- [?]■ MiGNON Talbot. See Ph. B. K. Publ., N. S. 3, p. [22]. See also Ph. B. K. : information resp. institutions that have applied for charters, 1904, pp. [1-2]. THE UNIVERSITY OF NEBRASKA. Alpha of Nebraska. Organized December 23, 1895. Catalogues. 1906. i6mo, pp. 23. Orations and Addresses. 1910. James Westfall Thompson. History, tradition, and culture. Delivered June 16. A summary appeared in The Ne- braska State Journal for June 17. General. Frederic C. Clements. See Ph. B. K. bulletin of information, 1903, P- [3] ; Ph. B. K. Publ., N. S. 3, p. [14]. COLLEGE OF THE CITY OF NEW YORK. Gamma of New York. Organized July 24, 1867. Catalogues. 1893. 8vo, pp. 6. Orations and Addresses. 1880. John Hampden Dougherty. The influence of our gen- eration upon education. Delivered November 18. In Papers read before the New York Gamma Chapter of Phi Beta Kappa at the College of the City of New York, 1880- 1 (New York, Lehmaier, 8vo, pp. 56), pp. 3-15- 1881. Gilbert Holmes Crawford. The opposing policies, of i\Ir. Gladstone and Lord Beaconsfield. Delivered January 28. 535 In Papers read before the New York Gamma Chapter of Phi Beta Kappa at the College of the City of Nezv York, 1880-1, pp. 17-31- 1881. Adolphus Henrv Stoiber. The establishment of an in- ternational tribunal. Delivered April 26. In Papers read before the New York Gamma Chapter of Phi Beia Kappa at the College of the City of Nezv York, 1880-1, pp. 33-56. 1882. John Bach Mcmaster. French society during the reign of Louis XIV. Delivered January 27. In Papers read before the Gamma Chapter of Phi Beta Kappa at the College of the City of New York, 1882 (New York, Lehmaier, n. d., 8vo, pp. 62), pp. 5-21. 1882. EflVi'AED Morse Shepard. Dishonor in American public life. Delivered April 27. In Papers read before the Gamma Chapter of Phi Beta Kappa at the College of the City of New York, 1882, pp. 22-46. 1882. Henry Snyder Carr. Emerson as seen through his prose. A paper read before the Phi Beta Kappa Society at the College of the City of New York, October 28, 1882. New York. Lehmaier & Co. 1882. 8vo, pp. 16. Also in Papers read before the Gamma Chapter of Phi Beta Kappa at the College of the City of New York, 1882, pp. 47-62. 1892. Leigh Harrison Hunt. On the making of etchings; and also a few characteristics of some great etchers. Delivered in November. New York. Goldman. 1892. 8vo, pp. 25. 1893. William Burnet Tuthill. Environment in architec- ture. Read before the Gamma Chapter of the Phi Beta Kappa Society April twenty-fifth, MDCCCXCIII. New York. 1893. 8vo, pp. 39. 1894. Edward Martin Colie. John Ruskin as an ethical teach- er. Read before the Phi Beta Kappa Society, December 18, 1894. New York. 1894. 8vo, pp. 22. 1896. Charles A. Doremus. A page from the chemistry of to-day. 1896. Gustave LeGras. The evolution and philosophy of the infinitesimal calculus. Read to the Gamma Chapter of the Phi Beta Kappa Society May 4th, 1896. New York. 1896. 8vo, pp. 31- {To be continued.) 536 -=■ — ^ — Volume 3 Number 2 Content0 Con cerhing the Twelfth Council . Niagara— 7A Poem Darwin P. Kihgsley . . . . Phi Beta Kappa and Intellectual Culture Th^ Delta of Pennsylvania . Respecting Phi Beta Kappa Keys A Phi Beta Kappa Bibliography . The Flat Hat Club at William and Mary In Memctriamv . . . . Phi Beta Kappa News and Notes ., PENNSYLVANIA NUMBER JANUARY. 1917 Page 51 55 56 58 62 78 80 87 89 94 The Phi Beta Kappa Fraternity OmECTORY OF CHAPTERS ' With number in the order of establishment, the Setretary, and date. IJ Alabama— Mpba, ,ot Alabama, University, Prof. J. J. Boater, A. M. ,...1*851 64 Allegllieny—Eta, of Pennsylvania, McadvUle, Prof. W. A. Elliott, L. H. D.....190Z 13 Amhertt — ^Beta of Massacbu»>tts, Amherst, Prof. lievi B. Elwel), A. M 18SS. 78 BeMt — Beta of Wisconsin, Beioit, Prof. Eirastus G. BnOtb/Fh. D;.. . . . .....1911 46 Boston — ^Epsilon of Massacimsetts, Boston, Ada A. Cole, Ph. B.. . i ..189S < Boiodainr^Alpha. of Katne, Brunswick, Prof. Geo. T. Files, Ph. D...>..^....182E 7 BrownJ-MpSa, of Btaode Island, Providence, Prof. James Q. Dealey, Ph. D..1880 43 Odlifornia-^Mpba, of California, Berkeley, Prof. Perdval B, Fsty, Ph, D.. ..1891 82 Carleton — ^Beta of Minnesota, Northfield, Prof . Curvta H. Gingrich, Ph. D 1914 ei CMoago — ^Beta of Illinois, Chlca«o, Prof . Francis :W. Shepardson, Hit. D...>..1899 48 Pincinnati-^Delta of Ohio, Cincinnati,' Mrs. M. O. Hartmann, B. U. 1899 39 OoZ6y-fBeta of Maine. Watervllle, Prof. J. William Blacic, Ph. t> . . . .189* 24 boljtote— Eta of New Tork, Hamilton, Prof. F. C. French, Ph. D ...il878 65 Colorado Vniversity — Alpha of Colbraaoi Boulder, Prof. F. Ramaley, Ph. D..19&4 S9 Colorado College — ^Beta -of Colorado, Colorado Springs, Prof. H. E. Wood- bridge, M. A. ....T ; ..1994 21 Oohimbia-r-t>eita, of New York, New York City, Preston Wm. Slosson, A. B. .1869 S5 Cornell — theta of New York, Ithaca, Albert IieRoy Andrews, Ph. D ..1882 4 I>artmoutftT-Alpha of New BamiMhlre, Hanovei* Harolil G. Bugg, A. B....'.1787 74 DerUaon—Tbeta, of Ohio, Granville, Prof. W. A. Obamberlla, Ph. D. :... .1911 29 be Pouw^— Alphfi of Indiana, Greencastle, Prof. A- B<. CauldwelU A. M.. . . .'V.1S89 26 Dioklnaon — -lAlpha of Pennsylvania, Carlisle, Prof . Joim F.Mohler.Ph. D..'.1887 S9 FrankUn and Uarshall — ^Theta of Pennsylvania, Lancaster, Prof. A. Thomas G. Apple, Ph. D. ....... , 19«» 81 Georfflio— Alpha of Georgia, Athens, Prof. W. D. Hooper, A. M. 1914 64 Gouohsr^Beta of Maryland, Baltimore,: Misa Eklna F. Schwarz, A^ B...'. 1996 76 Grinnell — ^Beta of Iowa, Grinnell, Prof. Caroline Sheldon,, A. M. 1991 22 Bamilton — ^Epsllon of New York, Clinton, Prof. J. .IX Ibbdtson, Jr., A. M... ..1879 3 Harvard — ^Alpha of MJassaShusetts, CarnbridgCr William C. Lane, A. S.. . . . . .1711 44 Haverford — Zeta of Pennsylvania, Haverford, Prof. L. W. Reid, Ph. D .1896 23 Hobart — Zeta of New York, Geneva, Prof. Willis P. Woodman, Ph. D ,1871 67 illtoois — Gamma of niinoii^ tTrbana,' Prof. -Jacob Zeitllh, Ph. D ....1967 75 Indiana — Gamma of Indiana, Bloomhigtoh, PTof: ,F. 'W. Tilden, A. M.. . . ;. . . .1911, 36 Iowa — ^Alpha of Iowa, Iowa City, Miss Beryl G. Hart, A. B.. 1896 '37 Joftns Bopkina — ^Alpba of Maryland, Bslhimore, Prof. John C. French, PhrD.189B 31 Kansa<>.^Alpha of Kansas, lawrence. Prof. E. D. Cressman, Ph. D..... ., ..1896 14 vKemj/ojt^-Beta of OUST Gambler, WiUlam Clinton -Settz, A^ B.....:.. .1858 32 Lafayette— Gajoma, at Pennsylvania; Easibn, Prof. Wm. 9. Ball, Ph. D. . ... . .1890 79 Lauirence — ^^Gamma of Wisconsin, APPleton, Prof. Ix>uls A. Youti, Ph. t>..r..l914 27 Lehigh — Beta of f'ennsylvanla. South Bethlehem, I^of. C. L. Thomburg, Ph. D. .,;....... ;lm 16 Marietta — Qamnia of Ohio, Marietta, iProf. Arthur G. Beach, A, M.. , . . ..J. .1860 ■71 affcMnir-Iota.of.Ohl.o, Oxford, Prof. Harlan Si3iwab, B. A. .j.*.i.l911 68 Michigan — Alpha of MlchigaiC Ann Arbor, Prof. Johft G. Winter, Ph. D. ...1907 19 Mlddleburj/ — B,eta of Vermont, Mlddlebury, Prof. Chas. B. Wright, Lltt. D. .1868 35 Minneaota — Alpha of Minnesota, Minneapolis,, William H.. Bussey, Fh. D..'.1892 53 Miasouri—Mptiarot Missouri, Columbia, Prof." Guy B..Colbum,''Hi. D.. . . i i . . .1991 *2 wt. Molvoke — ^eta- of Massachusetts. South Hadley, Asso. Prof. Margaret S. Morriss, Ph. D,...,. >.. , ......1906 1917 Respecting Phi Beta Kappa Keys 79 In accordance with the authority thus granted the Secretary has secured bids from eight reputable manufacturing jewelers, includ- ing all those who have been advertising in The Key, and in the course of a few weeks he hopes to announce the decision, and the award of a contract for the manufacture of all the keys needed by the members of Phi Beta Kappa for a period of three years. In this decision he has asked the assistance of the Treasurer, and has consulted by letter several members of the Senate. From bids at hand it is evident that both the members and the Fraternity will profit, for a reduction will be made in the price of keys to members, and still a royalty be reserved for the Treasury of the United Chapters. The officers of the Chapters are hereby advised of this pending arrangement, and requested to plan such steps as shall put their chapters in line with the new regulations. There seems no rea- son why the plan should not pi^ove successful from the beginning. The propriety of this action is evident to all who have studied the key problem. While all keys are supposed to be of 14 k. gold,, several have been found on analysis to be of 10 k. or thereabouts, and the grotesque forms that were put out for a time seem shock- ing to all those who have any respect for the simple design of the early medal, the prominent features of which are all retained in the standard key. While the adoption of the standard key has done much to correct this it has not prevented jewelers from of- fering for sale keys of smaller size and lighter weight in order to secure local trade. On two occasions during the last triennium the Secretary has been under the necessity of requesting jewelers to withdraw from sale undersized keys. In another case a firm sold to one of our larger chapters a supply of keys for an entire delegation that were manifestly inferior in design and workman- ship, on the assurance that they were standard. Of this inferiority the Chapter officers were not aware until I called their attention to it. While I also went in person to the firm and protested, all I could secure was the verbal assurance that they would thereafter conform more nearly to the standard design. But they would not make a public assertion to this effect by placing an advertise- ment in the Phi Beta Kappa Key. Respecting those jewelers who have advertised in The Key 8o Phi Beta Kappa Key January we have had no complaint. We believe they have delivered only standard keys of competent workmanship, and it will not be an easy task to select one or more as official jewelers, for that will in effect be refusing to select the others. The action of the Coun- cil leaves us no option. We must fall back upon the fact that Phi Beta Kappa has made possible for the jewelers the business of manufacturing Phi Beta Kappa keys — aggregating in recent years between $7,000 and $8,000 per year. In paying for their keys members have in reality paid advertising and marketing charges in addition to the first cost and the profits of manufacture. What is proposed is to eliminate the marketing charge, or rather to di- vide it between the purchasers and the United Chapters. That is, the Fraternity that in reality originates the business is to be rec- ognized as entitled to a share in its profits. It is well to understand that the successful working out of this plan will require the hearty co-operation of the Chapter officers. Under legislation in force a certificate signed by a Chapter officer is necessary to secure from a reputable jeweler the delivery of a Phi Beta Kappa key. If officers will sign certificates directed to the official jeweler only, the arrangement will go into full effect at ■once. The loyalty and good faith of all Chapter officers in this as in all other matters is confidently anticipated. A PHI BETA KAPPA BIBLIOGRAPHY By Professor Clark S. Northup, Cornell '93. {Continued from Vol. 2, p. 536.) COLLEGE OF THE CITY OF NEW YORK— Continued. 1897. George C. Lay. The preliminary period of the American Revolution: a paper read before the Gamma Chapter of the Phi Beta Kappa, College of the City of New York, November 15, 1897. 8vo, pp. 31. ' Reprinted from Godey's Magazine, 1898. 1902. GuSTAVE LeGras. Mathematics as a means of culture. Read in April. 1905. John Huston Finley. Higher education in the igij A Phi Beta Kappa Bibliography 8i United States. Delivered November 24, 1905. An abstract ap- peared in The City College Quarterly, March, 1906, ii. 16-21. 1906. Charles Baskerville. The chemical elements and their transmutation. Read January 29, 1906. An abstract appeared in The City College Quarterly, March, 1906, ii. 22-6. 1906. E. CosENZA Mario. The American student at Rome. Delivered jNIarch 30, 1906. In The City College Quarterly, June, 1906, ii. 105-17. 1907. Melatiah Everett Dwight. Japhet in search of a grandfather. Delivered January 28, 1907. An abstract appeared in The City College Quarterly, March, 1907, iii. 53-4. 1907. Henry Mottet. An outing in Iceland. An abstract ap- peared in The City College Quarterly, June, 1907, iii. 107, October, PP- 173-4- 1909. Louis E. Van Norman. A moral satisfaction in the writing of a book. Delivered in March. In The City College Quarterly, March, 1909, v. 15-25. General. The College of the City of New York. In The Key, October, 1913, ii. I. 40-44. See also The Key, January, 1916, ii. 10. 494, 497. NEW YORK UNIVERSITY. Beta of New York. Organized December 23, 1858. Orations and Addresses. 1886. Charles W. Baird. Phi Beta Kappa oration. The scholar's duty and opportunity. By Charles W. Baird, D. D. New York: W. M. Halsted, Printer, No. 8 Spruce Street, 1886. 8vo, pp. [ii], 17. Delivered June 14, 1886. 1903. Robert MacDougall. University training and the doc- toral degree. Delivered June 3. In Education, January, 1904, xxiv. 262-76. General. Henry Mitchell McCracken. See Ph. B. K. PubL, N. S. 3.P- [8]. 82 Phi Beta Kappa Key January THE UNIVERSITY OF NORTH CAROLINA. Alpha of North Carolina. Organized November 7, 1904. Orations and Addresses. 1905. J.\MES Wilson Bright. Aleridies, or The new South. Delivered January 27. Three stanzas forming a part of the address were printed by the author for private distribution ; and a report was printed in The Tar Heel, February i, 1905. 1909. Edwin Augustus Grosvenor. The attitude of the scholar. Delivered May 29. In The University Record, June, 1909, no. 74, pp. 6-16. Reprinted in Representative Ph. B. K. orations, Boston, Houghton Mifflin Co., 191S, 8vo, pp. 395-403. Also delivered before the Rutgers Chapter, igog. General. R. H. McLain. See Ph. B. K. Pnbl, N. S. 3, p. [21]. I. C. Wright. See Ph. B. K. Publ, N. S. 2, pp. [4-5]. See also Ph. B. K. . information resp. institutions that have applied for charters, 1904, p. [3]. THE UNIVERSITY OF NORTH DAKOTA. Alpha of North Dakota. Organized June 13, 1914. General A'ernon Purinton Squires. The Alpha of North Dakota. In The Key, January, 1915, ii. 6. 269-77. IH^s. See also The Key, May, 1913, i. 12. 22. NORTHWESTERN UNIVERSITY. Alpha of Illinois. Org.\nized Febru.\ry 18, 1890. Catalogues. 1894. i2mo, pp. 18. 1896. Supplement. 1910. 8vo, pp. 57. Orations and Addresses. 1891. Lewis Henry Boutell. Thomas Jefferson, the man of letters. Printed by the Chapter. 1893. William Frederick .Poole. The university library and 1917 -J f/" Beta Kappa Bibliography 83 the university curriculum. Phi Beta Kappa address, Northwest- ern University, June 13, 1893. Chicago, etc. Fleming H. Revell Co. 1894. i6mo, pp. 55. 1895. James Taft Hatfield. James Russell Lowell, the flow- er of American culture. In Addresses delivered at the Loivell coiiuncmoration, Berlin, ]\Iayer & Miiller, 1897, pp. 11-28. 1902. Frederick Jackson Turner. Western contributions to democracy. In The Atlantic Monthly, January, 1903, xci. 83-96. 1903. William Morton Payne. The American scholar in the twentieth century. In The International Quarterly, December, 1903, viii. 262-79. Also reprinted, pp. 20. See Harvard Orations and Addresses, 1837. 1906. GusTAV E. Karsten. Folklore and patriotism. Deliv- ered in June. In The Journal of English and Germanic Philology vii. 2. 61-78. Posthumously printed. An extension or sequel to Herder and the Volks- lied, in the Bulletin of the Washington University Association, No. 3, pp. lOlff. 1910. Felix Emanuel Schelling. The humanities gone and to come. See Pennsylvania Orations and Addresses, 1902. General. Omera Floyd Long. See Ph. B. K. Publ, N. S. 3, p. [12]. OBERLIN COLLEGE. Zeta of Ohio. Organized November 8, 1907. Catalogues. Roll of Phi Beta Kappa. In The Oberlin Alumni Magazine, June, 1910, vi. 367-73. Orations and Addresses. 1910. Edward Increase Bosworth. Address of welcome to the new members of Phi Beta Kappa. Delivered May 31. In The Oberlin Alumni Magazine, June, 1910, vi. 363-65. 1910. Paul Shorey. The unity of the human spirit. De- livered May 31. In The Oberlin Alumni Magazine, June, 1910, vi. 343-62. Reprinted in Representative Ph. B. K. orations, Boston, 19x5, 8vo, pp. 481-500. 84 Phi Beta Kappa Key January General. Charles Nelson Cole. Phi Beta Kappa. In The Obcrlin Alumni Magazine iv. 94-8. The Oberlin Alumni Magazine. A depreciation. June, 1910, vi. 373-76. Charles Henry Adams Wager. See Ph. B. K. Publ., N. S. 8, P- 15- See also Ph. B. K. Publ, N. S. 4, pp. 9-10. OHIO STATE UNR'ERSITY. Epsilon of Ohio. Organized December 8, 1904. General. [W. E. Henderson.] See Ph. B. K. Publ, N. S. 2, pp. [6-7]. Henry R. Spencer. See Ph. B. K. Publ., N. S. 3, pp. [21-22]. See also Ph. B. K. : information rcsp. institutions that have applied for charters, 1904, p. [5]. OHIO WESLEYAN UNIVERSITY. Eta of Ohio. Organized November 9, 1907. General. William E. Smyser. See Ph. B. K. Publ., N. S. 8, pp. 15-17. See also Ph. B. K. : information resp. institutions that have applied for charters, 1904, p. [6] ; Ph. B. K. Publ, N. S. 4, p. 10. THE UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLA'ANIA. Delta of Pennsylvania. Organized December 9, 1892. Catalogues. 1897. 8vo, pp. 16. 1902. 8vo, pp. 26. Orations and Addresses. 1898. George Wharton Pepper. Our national Constitution as related to national growth ; a consideration of certain aspects of the war with Spain. [Philadelphia.] 1898. 8vo, pp. 16. Delivered June 7. 1899. Walter George Smith. Education and morality in 1917 --^ -P'" Beta Kappa Bibliography 85 America. Delivered June 15. Publislied with the poem of that 3'ear in an 8vo pamphlet, pp. 20. 1900. DwiGHT M. LowREY. Mr. Zangwill and the Jew. De- livered June 13. Published with the poem of that year in an Bvo pamphlet, pp. 18. 1902. Felix Emanuel Schelling. Humanities, gone and to come. Delivered June 18. Published with the poem of that 3'ear in an Bvo pamphlet, pp. 22; see pp. 3-16. Also delivered before the Northwestern Chapter in 1910. Reprinted in Representative Ph. B. K. orations, Boston, 1915, 8vo, pp. 286-97. 1903. Jesse Young Burk. The culture of our founders. De- livered June 17. In The Alumni Register, July, 1903, vii. 482-92. 1904. Martin Grove Brumbaugh. Words and things. Ad- dress before the societies of Phi Beta Kappa and Sigma Xi, June 15, 1904. In The University Bulletin, June, 1904, pp. 60-71. 1906. Clarence Griffin Child. Scholar and teacher. Ad- dress before the societies of Phi Beta ELappa and Sigma Xi, June 12, 1906. In The Alumni Register, July, 1906, x. 478-93. 1909. Horace Clark Richards. The structure of the world- stuff. Address delivered before the joint meeting of Phi Beta Kappa and Sigma Xi, June 16, 1909. In Old Penn, October 2, 1909, viii. pp. [3-8]. 1916. John Huston Finley. Mobilization. In The Univer- sity Record, New Series, Chicago, July, 1916, ii, 184-192. Delivered also before the Chicago Chapter on June S, 1916. Also printed (in part) in The New York Times Maga/^ine, July 9, 1916, pp. 4-5. Portrait. Poems. 1899. Harrison S. Morris. Destiny. Read June 15. Pub- lished with Mr. Smith's address ; see above. 1900. John Hall Ingham. The citizen. Read June 13. Pub- lished with Mr. Lowrey's address ; see above. 1902. Francis Howard Williams. Ad astra, an ode. Read June 18. Published with Mr. Schelling's address; see above; see pp. 17-22. 1903. Hugh A. Clark. Art and life. Read June 17. In The Alumni Register, July, 1903, vii. 492-4. 86 Phi Beta Kappa Key January General. George DePue HiADZsits. The University of Pennsylvania. In The Key, October, 1916, iii. 35-38. Walton B. McDaniel. See Ph. B. K. Publ, N. S. 3, p. [13]. Arthur H. Quinn. See Ph. B. K. bulletin of information, 1903. P- [3]- The thirteenth annual dinner of the Delta of Pennsylvania. In The Old Penn Weekly Review. Reprinted in The Key, May, 1913, i. 12. 16. POMONA COLLEGE. Gamma of California. Organized March 7, 1914. Catalogues. A list of members is given in The Key, May, 1914, ii. 4. 177-9. Orations and Addresses. 1914. George Herbert Palmer. Address at the installation, March 7. An abstract is printed in The Key, May, 1914, ii. 4. 174-5- Poems. 19 14. Alice Maria Parker. The way of fulfilment. Read June 15. In The Key, January, 1915, ii. 279-83. 1915. Harry A. Brandt. An ode to man. Read June 14. In The Pomona College Quarterly Magazine, June, 1915, iii. 146-9. General. D. Herbert Colcord. Pomona College. In The Key, May, 1914, ii. 4. 171-3. Illus. Alice Maria Parker. The Gamma of California. In The Key, May, 1914, ii. 4. 173-81. See also The Key, May, 1913, i. 12. 25-7, October, 1915, ii. g. 450-51. (To he Continued.) Volume 3 Number 3,2 , Contente The Delta of Illinois at Knox Fraternity Journalism Views of Washington University VirgilV First Eclogue Remembered The Passing of Three Senators ,. A Phi Beta Kappa Bibliography . InMemoriam . . . . Phi Beta Kappa News and'Notes^ . Pace 99 110 115 119 122 124 132 135 KNOX CHAPTER NUMBER MARCH, 1917 v^ The Phi Beta Kappa Fraternity DIRECTORY OF CHAPTERS , With mmilier in the^^^order ot estafcllshtawtiji the Secretary^: and date. 12 AlabdinaT^Mpba. at AlalBcma, TJnlversltiy, Prof. J. irr^Doster, A. M 1861 54 Alle^jheny— Eta^of Pennwriratiia, Meadvim, Prof. W. A. Elliott, L. H. D 1902 IS Amherst— Beta of Massachusetts, Amherst. . . , . .^, . i .". .1853 78 BeZoie— Beta of Wisconsin, Beloit, Prof. ErastUs G. Smith; Ph. D. ..,..>'... .',1911, 48 Soaton — ^Epsilon of Massachusetts, Boston, Ada A. Cole, Ph. B. ij . . . . .1899, a SowdoinT-~Alpha of Maine, prunswicki Prof; aeorivT, Files, Ph. D.^. ;....,.. .1J2 5 7 BroiOTt-TfAltha of Rhodb Island, Providence, Srof. James Q. Pealey, ph/;D. . . .ISSO 4a CoW/ornio— Alpha of California, Berkeley, Prof. Percival B. Fay, Ph. J>......\%^ 82 Oorleton— Beta of Minnesota, Njorthfleld, Prof. Ctirwin H. ajngrich. Ph. D 191i 51 Chicago — Beta of Illinois. Chicago,. Erofi. Francis W. Sliepardson, LL. D.... .1899 48 Cinci1^naU — Delta of Ohio, Cincinnati, Mrs. H. G, Hartmann, B. ti.i. .,..,.. .1899 39 Colfti/— Beta of Maine, Waterville, Prof. J. William Black, Ph:'!). :. .*- 1896 24 Gotoote— Eta of New Tprk, Hamilton, Prof. F. C. French, Ph. D. . , i 1878 65 Colotado XJnimersity — Alpha. of Colorado; Boulder,''Prof.' F: Bamaley, Ph. D. . . .1904^ m. Colorado Oolleg'e—'Beta. of Colorado, Colorado Springs, Prof.?H. B. Woodbridee; iL A. ; '., ^.-^ .'. . . . . . , ........ .1904 21 Columbia — Pelta of New ToTk, jkevr Tork City, Cla,rencerA. Manning, Ph, D,. .1869 ' 25 Corneil — Theta of New York, Ithaca, Albert LeRoy Andrewat P'h' Di ....... . .1882 ' i: flurtmoufili — ^Alpha of New Hampshire, Hanover, HarialSjGr, Rusg, A.- B. . ...1787 74 Den«9»rv-Theta of, Ohio, Granville, Prof. W. A. Chaniberite, Wn.-Tlj .1911 iV'Pe Pauia. — ^Alpha of Indiana, Greencastle, Prof. A. P. Cauldwell, A. M.. , 1*89 26 Djcfcjoaon— Alpha of Pennsylvaifla, Carli^e, .Prof. Jjohn F. MOWer; Ph. D....18S7 69 Franklin ana, MarahaW — ^Theta of Pennsylvania, Lancaster, i Prof ., A. Thomas 6. Apple, Ph. D. ..i >...".... ^.,..1903 81' a-eorgia — ^Alpha of Qiotgla., Athens, Prof. W. J). H*oper,^.'M ..> .. . .1914 64 Gaucher — Beta of Maaylarid,, Baltimore, Miss Edna P. Sdl^warz, A. B;. . , . . . .1906 70: Orinnell — Beta of Iowa, Grinnpll, Prof. Caroline Sheldon, A. M '. 1908 Z2 Hamilton — Epsilon of Now York, Clinton, Prof., J. D. Ibbotson, Jr., AT" M. ,..1870 3 Harvard — Alpha of Massachusetts, ' Cambridge, William C. Lajne, A. B. .. .:.1781 44 Haverford — Zeta of Pennsylvania, HstveipforB, Prof, l! W. Reid, Ph. D. . . . . . . .1890 23: HobartT-r-Zeta. of New Yorl?, Geneva, Prof. Willis P., Woodman, Ph. D 1871 67 Illinois — Gamma, of Illinoia, Urbina, Prof. Jacob ZeitlinJPh. D 19(f7 15 Indiana — Gatnma of Indiana, Bloomington, Prof. P. W. TiWen, A. M- ...... .1911 36, Iowa — ^Alpha of Ipw4, Iowa, City, Miss Beryl jG; Hart, A, B *.' .1896 ^T Johns Hopkins- — ^Alpha of ifaryland, Baltimore, Prof . John C. French, Ph. n"i.l895 31 Kanaaa — Alpha of Kansas, Lawrence, ErcSi E. D. Cressman, ph,, B. .'....;. .,.1890 14 Kenyon — Beta of Ohio, Gambler, William Cllntojri Seitz, A. B. 18?'S 8^7 Kmox — Delta of Illinois, Galesburg, 1?r<3i. James A. Campbell, A. M.. /. 1917 v32 Laffiyette — Gamma of Penh'sylvat^^, Baston, Prtff. Wm. S. Hall, Ph., D. .... .'.4890 19 Litwrenee — ^Gamma of Wlscoftsln, Aispleton, Pro;p; Louis A. Youtz, Ph. D 1914 27£ieAiffh— Beta of Penjisylvanla, South BetWehemi Prof. C. L. T^ornburg', Ph. D.18'87 16 marietta — KSamma of Ohio, Marietta, Prof. Arthur G. Beach, A. Mt>. . .r .i860 77 Miamt— Iota of Ohio, Oxford, Prof. Harlan Schwab, B. A. . . i ;..... i'. . ,1911 68 afic»iffo»i— Alpha of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Prof. John G. Winter, Ph. © . ;1907 , 19 Middlelmri—^ata. of Vermont, Middlebury,rProf. dhas; B, Wright,' Lltt.D. .. .1863 35 Minfiesota—Aipha. of Minnesota, Minneapolis, William H. Bussey, Ph. D 1892 53 MiaaoUrir—Alplia, of Missouri, Columbia, Prof. Guy A Colburn, Ph. D.;-. . . .^.1901 62 Mt. HoZj/ofce-'— Theta of Massachusetts, South Hadley, Asso. Prof, Margaret S. MorriBB^ Ph. D, 1906 FRANCIS BROWN, LL.D., Dartmo-uth '70 For over thirty-seven years connected with the Faculty of Union The- ological Seminary, New York 124 Plii Beta Kappa Key March glad to print as frontispiece the portrait that accompanies the article in The Outlook. In the January number of The Key appeared In Memoriam notes respecting three members of Phi Beta Kappa who had ex- erted wide influence as editors of prominent periodicals — Dr. Wil- liam Hayes ^^'ard, Amherst '56, of The Independent, Horace \Mi!te, Beloit '53, of the New York Evening Post, and Hamilton W. Mabie, of The Outlook. This suggests the propriety of an article on Phi Beta Kappa in Journalism. A PHI BETA KAPPA BIBLIOGRAPHY P'v Prof. Cl.\rk S. Xorthup, Corxell '93 (Continued from page 86). PRINCETON UNIVERSITY. Beta of New Jersey. Organized June 7, 1899. General. Samuel R. Winans. See Ph. B. K. Pubi, N. S., 3, pp. [17-18]. RADCLIFFE COLLEGE. Iota of Massachusetts. Organized May ii, 1914. General. Caroline Barnard Shaw. The Iota of Massachusetts at Radclifife College. In The Key, October, 1914, ii. 5. 242-8. Illus. See also The Key i. 12. 19. THE UNIVERSITY OF ROCHESTER. Iota of New York. Organized April 20, 1887. Catalogues. 1904. 8vo, pp. 31. 1914. 8vo, pp. 30. 1917 A Phi Beta Kappa Bibliography 125 OrATIOXS and ADDI-tESSKS. i8qo. Edward Everett Hale. The professor of America. In his Works, Boston, Little, Brown & Co., T900, vol. viii, Addresses and essays, pp. 65-85. 1903. Talcott Williams. Education and combination. Ora- tion delivered before the Phi Beta Kappa Society at the Univer- sity of Rochester, June 15, 1903. 8vo, pp. 13. 1906. Oscar McMurtie Voorhees. Our Phi Beta Kappa fathers and their fraternity. Delivered March 16. See William and Mary, General. 1911. Benjamin Ide Wheeler. The races and tongues of men. Delivered June ig. In The Uniz'ersity Chronicle, Berkeley, Cal, Jan., 1912, xiv. 13-24. 1912. Thomas Frederick Crane. Address before the New York Iota of the Phi Beta Kappa May 25, 1912. [Rochester. 1912.] 8vo, pp. 13. On continuing liberal studies after leaving college. 1915. Bliss Perry. Phi Beta Kappa's famous day [August 31, 1837, at Harvard]. Delivered June 13. Comment in Bulletin of the UniversJv of Riiclu'S'cr, November, 1915, xi. 4. 4-5. Generai Charles Hoeing. See Ph. B. K. Piibl., X. S., 3, p. [11]. RUTGERS COLLEGE. Alpha of Xew Jersey. Organized Feliruary 22. 186'^;. Catalogues. 1891. Svo, pp. yj, iii. Includes a historical sketch of the Phi Beta Kappa Society, b}- Oscar J\I. Voorhees. Orations and Addresses. 1876. CoRTLANDT Parker. The Open Bible, or Tolerant Chris- tianity the source and security of Am'erjcan freedom and pro- gress : an address delivered before the Phi Beta Kappa Society of Rutgers College, New Brunswick, N. J., June 20th, 1876. By Cort- 126 Phi Beta Kappa Key March landt Parker, Esq., of the class of 1836. Printed for the Society. 8vo, pp. 29. 1909. Enwr.v Augustus Grosvenor. An address on the atti- tude of the scholar by Prof. Edwin A. Grosvenor, LL.D., Presi- dent of the United Chapters of Phi Beta Kappa, delivered at the fortieth anniversary of the founding of the Alpha Chapter of Phi Beta Kappa in Xew Jersey at Rutgers College, New Brunswick, New Jersey, June 21, 1909. N. p. N. d. Svo, pp. [ii], 8. Delivered also before the North Carolina Chapter, 1909. General. Francis K. W. Drury. See Ph. B. K. bulletin of information, 1903. P- [4]- CuLLEN W. Parmelee. See Ph. B. K. PiibL, X. S. 3, pp. [8-9]. See also The Key ii. 8. 404. ST. LAWRENCE UNIVERSITY. Lamud.v of Xew York. Organized June 24, 1899. Or.xtions and Addresses. 1903. Elon Rowse Brown. The small college and society. De- livered June 23. In Literary exercises of the Phi Beta Kappa Society, Lambda of New York, at St. Lawrence University, June 23, 1903, Canton, X, Y., 1903, pp. 3-12. Poems. 1902. Irving Bacheller. The New World. Read June 24. In The Laurentian, July, 1902, xv. 162-3. Also in his hi various moods. New York, Harper, lyio, Svo, pp. 5-8. 1903. John Langdon Heaton. Demeter. Read June 23. In Literary exercises of the Phi Beta Kappa Society, Lambda of New York, at St. Lazvrence University, June 23, 1903, pp. i3-r6. Also in Tlic Laurentian, July, 1903, xvi. 169-72. 1904. Charles Kelsey Gaines. Our own. In The Lauren- tian, July, 1904, xvii. 157-9. 1917 -"^ ^'" Beta Kappa Bibliography 127 General. Robert D. Ford. See Phi B. K. Publ., N. S. 3, p. [18]. SMITH COLLEGE. , /' Zeta of }i1assachusetts. Organized October 19, 1904.' General. Elizabeth Deering Hanscom. See Ph. B. K. Publ., N. S. 3, p. [20]. See also Ph. B. K. : information resp. institutions that have applied for charters, 1904, p. [2] ; Ph. B. K. Publ, N. S. 2, p. [3]. LELAND STANFORD, JR., UNIVERSITY. Beta of California. Organized November i, 1904. Catalogues. 1905. i6mo, pp. 21. 1909, April. 8vo, pp. 32. 1913. 8vo, pp. 41. Orations and Addresses. 1906. William Ernest Hocking. The necessary and suffi- cient conditions of human happiness. Delivered October 13. In Annual open meeting of the Plii Beta Kappa Society at Stanford University, October 13, 1906 (Stanford University Press, 1907, 8vo, pp. 31), pp. 3-28. 1907. Edward Lambe Parsons. Democracy and a prophetic idealism. Delivered May 21. In Phi Beta Kappa: annual open meeting of the Beta of California Chapter at Stanford University, May 21, 1907 (Printed by the Chapter, 1907, 8vo, pp. 26), 3-21. Reprinted in Representative Ph. B. K. orations, Boston, 1915, 8vo, pp. 377-94- i9e)8r'JosEPH Worcester. The dual nature of all things. De- livered ]\Iay 19. In Phi Beta Kappa : annual open meeting of the 128 Phi Beta Kappa Key March Beta of California Chapter at Stanford University, May I0, 1908 (Printed by the Chapter, 1909, 8vo, pp. 30), pp. 3-12. 1909. Horace Davis. A'ocational training. DeHvered May 18. In Phi Beta Kappa, Beta of California Chapter, fifth annual open meeting at Stanford University, May 18, 1909 (Printed by the Chapter, 1910, 8vo, pp. 24), pp. 3-18. 191 1. Chester Harvey Rcwell. Education and the new democracy. Dehvered May 20. In Piii Beta Kappa, Beta of California Chapter, seventh annual open meeting at Stanford University, May 20, 191 1 (Printed by the Chapter, 191 1, 8vo, pp. 23), PP- 3-17- 1912. Alvin Saunders- Johnso-n. An ethical aspect of the new industriaHsm. Dehvered May 18. In Phi Beta Kappa, Beta of California: eighth annual open meeting, Stanford University, May 18, 1912 (Printed by the Chapter, 1912, 8vo, pp. 21), pp. 3-17- Also appeared in The Soutli Atlantic Quarterly. January, 1913, xii. i-ii. 1913. Edward Bull Clapp. Epictetus. Delivered May 18. In Phi Beta Kappa, Beta of California: ninth annual open -meet- ing, Stanford University, May 18, 1913 (Printed by the Chapter, 1913, 8vo, pp. 22), pp. 3-16. 1914. Edwin Holt Hughes. Culture and power. Delivered May 16. In Phi Beta Kappa, Beta of California : tenth annual open meeting, Stanford University, May 16, 1914 (Printed by the Chapter, 1914, 8vo, pp. 26), pp. 3-19. 1915. Benjamin F. Bledsoe. The new humanism in the law. Delivered May 15. In Phi Beta Kappa, Beta of California: eleventh annual open meeting, Stanford University, May 15, 1915 (Printed by the Chapter, 1915, 8vo, pp. 29), pp. 3-22. Poems. 1905. Raymond Macdonald Alden. The golden key: "Phil- osophy the guide of life." Read May 22. In The Key, January, 1911, i. 2. 13-15. 1906. Charles Kellogg Field. Prayer. Read October 13. In Annual open meeting of the Phi Beta Kappa Society at Stan- ford University, October 13, 1906, pp. 29-31. 1917 -^ Phi Beta Kappa Bibliography 129 1907. Alphonso Gerald Newcomer. Plato passes. Read May 21. In Phi Beta Kappa: annual open meeting of the Beta of California Chapter at Stanford University, May 21, 1907, pp. 22-26. 1908. Charles Augustus Keeler. Ithuriel's spear. Read May 19. In Phi Beta Kappa : annual open meeting of the Beta of California Chapter at Stanford University, May 19, 1908, pp. 13-30- 1909. Clarence Wing. Choral ode to Beauty. Read May 18, In Phi Beta Kappa, Beta of California Cliapter, fifth annual open meeting at Stanford University, May 18, 1909, pp. 19-24. 1910. Melville Best Anderson. The happy teacher. New York. B. W. Huebsch. 1910. 8vo, pp. 54. Read May 21. 191 1. Henry David Gray. Verses. Read May 20. In Phi Beta Kappa, Beta of California Chapter, seventh annual open meeting at Stanford University, May 20, 191 1, pp. 18-23. 1912. Frank Walter Weymouth. Earth. Read May 18. In Phi Beta Kappa, Beta of California : eighth annual open meet- ing, Stanford University, May 18, 1912, 8vo, pp. 18-21. 1913. David Starr Jordan. In the wilderness. Read May 18. In Phi Beta Kappa, Beta of California : ninth annual open meet- ing, Stanford University, May 18, 1913, 8vo, pp. 17-22. 1914. Irene Hardy. The scholar and the world. Read May 16. In Phi Beta Kappa, Beta of California : tenth annual open meeting, Stanford University, May 16, 191 4, 8vo, pp. 21-26. 191 5. Frank Ernest Hill. The saving fire. Read May 15. In Phi Beta Kappa, Beta of California: eleventh annual open meeting, Stanford University, May 15, 1915, 8vo, pp. 23-29. General. Orrin Leslie Elliott. See Ph. B. K. Publ., N. S. 3, pp. [20-21]. See also Ph. B. K. : information resp. institutions that have applied for charters, 1904, p. [i] ; Ph. B. K. Publ, N. S. 2, p. [4] ; and The Key, Jan- uary, 191S, ii. 6. 295-0, January, 1916, ii. 10. 496-7. 130 Phi Beta Kappa Key March SWARTHMORE COLLEGE. Epsilon of Pennsylvania. Organized June 9, 1896. Orations and Addresses. 1898. Benjamin Ide Wheeler. The Old World in the New. In The Atlantic Monthly, August, 1898, Ixxxii. 145-53. 1903. Oscar M. Voorhees.. Our Phi Beta Kappa fathers and their fraternity. Substantially as printed in Phi Beta Kappa Publications, N. S. 6, pp. ;i-26. . , >- 1905. Edwin A. Grosvenor. The evolution of the Russian government. In The National Geographic Magazine, July, 1905, xvi. 309-32. 1906. Joseph Fitch. Scholar and citizen. In The Swarth- morean, June 6 and 14, 1906. 1907. Franklin Spencer Edmonds. Ethics and politics. A summary appeared in The Phoenix, 5th month, 1907, xxvi. 121. 1909. RuFUS M. Jones. The function and value of the de- nominational college. In The American Friend, 8th month 12, 1909. Poems 1904. J. Russell Hayes. The scholar's ideal. In The Friends' Intelligencer and Journal, 6th month 11, 1904. 1906. Ferris W. Price. Libertino patre natum: an Horatian reverie. In The Swarthmorean, October 11, 1906. 1907. Elizabeth Powell Bond. Blest of the gods. In The Phoenix, May, 1907, xxvi. 120-1. John Russell Hayes. Golden volumes. Read on the same occasion. In same, p. 123. 1908. Wilbur Macey Stine. The souls of peace — a sonnet series. Some of the sonnets appeared in Croivn of toil, a book of sonnets, Philadelphia, The Acorn Press, 1910, i2mo, pp. vii. 120. 1909. Mary Wolverton Green. The spirit of peace. In The Friends' Intelligencer and Journal, 5th month 15, 1909. General. Abby Mary Hall (now Mrs. C. Roberts). See Ph. B. K PmR, N. S. 3, p. [15]. See also Ph. B. K. bulletin of information, 1903, p. [4]. {To be Continued.) Volume 3 Number 4 Contents Paae Dr. Hale's Contribution to Phi Beta Kappa History 147 A Fossil From the Tertiary . . . . 1 52 The Sword of Lafayette— Poem . ' The Bronze Liberty — Poem Princeton Phi Beta K^appa. Activities Randolph-Macon Woman's College The Delta of Virginia Instituted A Phi Beta Kappa Bibliography InMemoriam . . . . '. Phi Beta Kappa News and Notes 156 158 459 165 174 177 182 187 RANDOLPH-MACON CHAPTER NUMBER MAY, 1917 The Phi B^ta Kappa Fraternity DIRECTORY OF CHAPTERS , with number In the order of est?,bUshinent, the Saprete,F3^, and date. 12 Alabama — ^Alpha pf Alabama, TJnIversity, Prof. J. J. jDoster. -A-'II- • • , 1851 ; 5i. Allegheny— ^ta. of Pennsylvania, Meadville, Pr6f> W, A. Elliott, L. K.p 1902 13 Amherst — Beta of Massachusetts, "Amherst .1853 89 Sates — ^Ganima of Maine, Lewistown, Prof. Arthur N. Leonard, Ph. D .1917 T8 BeloU — Beta of Wisconsin, Beloit, Prof. ErastijS G. Siiiith, pfi. D l^lly. 46 Boston— Epsilon of Massachusetts, Boston, Ada A. Cole, -PK B". , 1899 -6 Bowdoin — ^Alpha of Maine, &unsvl, jr.. A.- M 1870 5 Harvard— Alvha, of MsCsSachuset^, fcanttbridge, William C, Lane, A. B. . . i. .I'Jsi j 44 Hd-yer/ord—^Zeta of. Pennsylvania, Haverford; Prof. L. W. Reid, Ph., t). !......, .1890 ZiiJSobart — Ze'ta of ySew York, GerieV^, t'rof . Willis P. Woodman, Pb.' D. . . . .-..,1871 67 IlUnois — Gamma of .IlIinois,~Urbah4i, Prof. Jacob Zeitlin, Ph. D. 1^07 75 /ndiamo-^^Garama of Indiana, Bloomjngton, Prof. F. W. TlMen, A. M ....1911 36 Iowa — Alpha of iQwaf Iowa .>City, l^jss Beryl G. Hart,. A. M. , . . . ,. .1895 37.rohW ffojifcjms— Alpha of Maryland, Baltimore, pr&f. John C. French,'Ph. D. iiS95 31 p:ansas — Alpha of Kansas, Lawrence, PrOK B. D. Cressman, Ph. D .1890 14 Kenyon — Beta of Ohio, Gambler, William Cljnton Seitz, Al B ;,..... .'.1858 - , 87 Knox — iDelta of IHinois, Galesburg, Prof. James A. Campbell, A. M. ...'.. ..1917 32 Lafayette — Giannna of PehnSylva-nia, Easton, Prof. Vm. S. Hall, Ph. D. . 1 1890 79 Lawrence — Gamma of "^Wisconsin, Appleton, Prof. Louis A. Toutz, Pli. D .1914 27 Lehigh — Beta of Pennsylvania, South Bethlehem, Prof. C, L. Tho^nburg, Ph. D.1887 16 Marietta-^Ga-mma. of Ohid, Marietta, Prof. Arthur G.Beach, A/ M 1860 77 Miami— Iota, of Ohio, Oxford, Prof. Harlan Schwab, B. A...... ,. . 1911 68 Michigan — Alpha of Michigan. Ann Arbor, Prof. Johp G. Wiilter, Ph. D.. ....1907 19 Middlebury— Beta, of Vermont, Middlebupy, Prof. Chas. fe. Wright, Litt. D..,-.'.1863 35 Mimnesoia — Alpha pf Miiine'sota, Minneapolis; William H. BUssey, Ph. D..:.-..1892 53 Missouri — Alpha of Missouri, Columbia, Prof. Guy B, Colburn, Ph. D. ...... .1901' 62 Mt. Solyoke—*rbeta. of Massachusetts, South Hadley, Asso. 'Prof; Margare.t, S. i Morriss, Ph. D. .,..., .^. '. . . . . , 1906 1917 ^ ■^''^** Beta Kappa Bibliography 177 for scholarly and earnest study vivified by emotional appreciation of the subject. He concluded that the classics, especially Greek, are best fitted as a medium for the larger education, as they by their restraint, purity, and other qualities are fitted to give the universal expression which modern literature lacks. Finally he held up as an ideal the love of knowledge as he had defined it, a philosophia which may well, in truth, be the guide of life. The prolonged applause that greeted the end of Dr. Shorey's address was a remarkable tribute to his ability and personality. After the singing of "The Star Spangled Banner" by the au- dience. Dr. Booker pronounced the benediction. A PHI BETA KAPPA BIBLIOGRAPHY By Prof. Clark S. Northup, Cornell '93 {Continued from page 130). SYRACUSE UNIVERSITY. Kappa of New York. Organized February id, 1896. Catalogues. 1905. 8vo, pp. 58. 1907. (Men and days in Phi Beta Kappa, by Arthur Cope- land), 8vo, pp. 143. Orations and Addresses. 191 5. David Jayne Hill. The American conception of the state. Delivered March 12. In part printed in The Syracuse Post-Standard, March 13, 1915. Published in full in his . huericanism, what it is, New York, Appleton, 1916, 8vo, pp. [1-46]. General. Edgar C. Morris. See Ph. B. K. Publ., N. S. 3, pp. [14-15]. THE UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS. Alpha of Texas. Organized February 2, 1905. Catalogues. [1905. J i6mo, pp. II. [1913-] 8vo, pp. 42. i;/8 Phi Beta Kappa Key May Orations and Addresses. 1908. Edwin W Fay. Address delivered to the initiates of Phi Beta Kappa, ]\Iay 21, 1908. In The University of Texas Record, June, 1908, viii. 116-119. General. Sylvester Prijier. The Alpha Chapter of the Phi Beta Kappa Society in the State of Texas, the University of Texas, Austin, Texas. In The Uiiiz'ersity of Texas Record, August, 1905, vi. 107-13. Also reprinted, 8vo, pp. 8. . Phi Beta Kappa. [An undated circular.] 8vo, pp. 3. See also Ph. B. /v.: information rcsp. institutions that have applied for charters, 1904, pp. 2-3; Ph. B. K. Puhl, N. S. 2, p. [8], N. S. 3, pp. [22-23]. TRINITY COLLEGE. Beta of Connecticut. Organized July 2, 1845. Catalogues. 1853. 8vo, pp. 21-24, 3-t the end of Air. Harwood's oration; see below. 1895. 8vo, pp. 36. 1905. 8vo, pp. 43. 191 5. 8vo, pp. 48. Nlcticed in The Key, Oct., 1915, ii. 9. 452. Orations and Addresses. 1S51. Thomas M. Clark. See below under Union Orations and Addresses, 1851. 1852. AIark Anthony DeWolfe Howe. Public opinion, directed and impelled by conflicting influences. An oration, de- livered before the Connecticut Beta of the Phi Beta Kappa So- ciety, in Christ Church, Hartford, July 28, 1852. Published by request of the Society. Hartford. S. Hanmer & Co. — Calendar Press. 1852. 8vo, pp. 18. 1853. Edwin Harwood. The relation of the Incarnation to the progress of human thought. An oration before the Con- necticut Beta of the Phi Beta Kappa, at Trinity College, Hart- ford, July 2y, 1853. Hartford : Press of Case, Tiffany and Com- 1917 '4 Phi Beta Kappa Bibliography 179 pany. 1853. 8vo, pp. 20. Followed by: Catalogue of the officers and members of the Connecticut Beta of the Phi Beta Kappa, which received its charter June 16, 1845. Pp- 21-24. 1856. Benjamin Apthorp Gould, Jr. An American uni- versity. An oration before the Connecticut Beta of the Phi Beta Kappa Fraternity at Trinity College; Hartford, 1856, July 15. Hartford. Case, Tiffany and Co. 1856. 8vo, pp. 32. See comment in The Key, Jan., 1916, ii. 10. 462-7. 1868. William Rudder. The mutual relations of natural science and theology. An oration pronounced before the Con- necticut Beta of the Phi Beta Kappa Society, in Christ Church, Hartford, Conn., July 7th, 1868. Philadelphia. Henry B. Ash- mead. 1869. 8vo, pp. 48. 1871. Noah Porter. The sciences of nature versus the science of man. New York. Dodd & Mead. 1871. i2mo, pp. 98. "Portions of the following essay were delivered as an ad-- dress, before the societies of Ph. B. K., at Harvard and Trinity Colleges, in June and July last." Also 'in Science and sentiment, with other essays, New York, 1882, pp. 38-76. General. Samuel Hart. In Ph. B. K. Publ., N. S. 3, p. [6]. . In The Key, March, 1914, ii. 3. 101-2. Portrait. . The Beta of Connecticut. In The Key, March, 1914, ii. 3. 111-15. lUus. For the charter see The Key ii. 3. 107-g. TUFTS COLLEGE. Delta of Massachusetts. Organized November 18, 1892, Catalogues. 1910. 8vo, pp. 38. Orations and Addresses. 1901. Bliss Perry. The amateur spirit. Delivered June 18. See Columbia Orations and Addresses, 1901. 1903. Samuel Walker McCall. The scholar in politics a i8o Phi Beta Kappa Key May conservative. Delivered June i6. In The Tufts College Gradu- ate i. 2. 32-44. Also reprinted, i2mo, pp. 15. 1904. Frank Benjamin Sanborn. American education be- fore and after George Washington. Delivered June 14. In The Tufts College Graduate ii. 2. 65-84. 1905. Henry Blanchard. The seat of learning the helper of the Hfe of the spirit. Delivered June 19. In The Tufts Col- lege Graduate iii. 2. 60-76. 1907. Albert Bushnell Hart, The hope of democracy. De- livered June 18. In The Tufts College Graduate, July, 1907, v. 2. 57-73- Also in his National ideals historically traced, 1607-1907, New York,. Harper & Bros., 1907 (vol. xxvi. of The A^nerican nation, a history), pp. 341-60. Also in Representative Ph. B. K. orations, Boston, Houghboa Mifflin Co., 191S, 8vo, pp. 362-76. 1908. George Thompson Knight. Culture and humanity. Delivered June 16. In The Tufts College Graduate vi. 2. 56-76. 1909. Curtis Guild, Jr. The soldier of peace. Delivered May 5. In The Tufts College Graduate vii. 2. 49-58. 1913. Philip Stafford Moxom. The educated man. De- livered May 7. This is substanitially the samie as Dr. Moxom's commenoement address at Atlanta University, May 26, 1910, which wias published as Atlanta Univer- sity Leaflet no. 25, 32010, pp. 24. iPoEMS. 1902. Oscar Fay Adams. Sicut patribus. [A poem read at the annual meeting of Tufts Chapter, Phi Beta Kappa, June 17, 1902.] [Boston. New England Anti-Imperialist League. 1902. J 8vo, pp. [8]. 1903. Henry Nehemiah Dodge. The mystery of the West. Read June 16. In The Tufts College Graduate i. 2. 20-32. 1905. DwiGHT MuNSON HoDGE. Das Gemeine. Read June 19. In The Tufts College Graduate iii. 2. 76-81. 1906. James Harcourt West. Man's triumph-era. Read June 18. In The Tufts College Graduate iv. 2. 59-75. Selections were reprinted jn The Key, Oct., 1914, ii. 5. 221-3. Printed in full in his Pnenis of human progress and other pieces, Boston, Th;» ^91/ A Phi Beta Kappa Bibliography i8i Tufts College Press, 1914, 8vo, pp. 3-26. See The Key, Oct., 1914, ii. 5. 259-60. 1909. Frederick Allison Tupper. The golden carillon. Read May 5. In The Tufts College Graduate vii. 2. 58-66. 1910. Percy Mackaye. Tennyson. Read May 11. In his Poems and Plays l, New York, Macmillan, 1916. The Sistine Eve and other poems, pp. 16-20. 1912. John Albert Macy. The voices of the books. Read May 8. In The Tufts College Graduate, July, 1912, x. no. 4. 1913. Robert Haven Shauffler. The crucible. Read May 7- 1915. Robert Frost. The road not taken. The. sound of trees. Birches. Read May 5. In The Atlantic Monthly, August, 1915, cxvi. 221-4. The first two were reprinted in Current Opinion. Sept., 1915, lix. 199. The first was reprinted in The Literary Digest, Diec. 4, 1915, Ii. 1302. General. Frank G. Wren. See Ph. B. K. Publ., N. S. 3, p. [13]. TULANE UNIVERSITY OF LOUISIANA Alpha of Louisiana. Organized February 26, 1909. Catalogues. 1912. Sm. 8vo, pp. 23. 1914. Sm. 8vo, pp. 16. Orations and Addresses 1911. Edward Asahel Birge. Science and wisdom. An ad- dress delivered before the Phi Beta Kappa Society, Alpha of Louisiana, Tulane University, May 15, 1911. Published by the Society. New Orleans. 191 1. 8vo, pp. 23. Also delivered before the Grinnell Chapter. 1912. Edwin Whitfield Fay. Culture in education. Deliv- ered May 27. In The Tulane Graduates' Magazine, July, 19 12, i. 91-108. Also, as delivered in an earlier form, in The University of Texas Rec- ord xi. 357-69. (To be Continued.) IN MEMORIAM Wayne MacVeagh, LL.D., Yale '53, died at his home, Washington, D. C, January 11, 1917, in his eighty-third year. He was born in Penn- sylvania and began the prcatice of law in Chester County, where he was District Attorney from 1859 to 1864. He saw service in the Civil War as Captain of Infantry in 1862 and Captain of Cavalry in 1863, when the in- vasion of Pennsylvania was threatened. President Grant appointed him Minister to Turkey in 1870. He remained abroad a year, and in 1872 be- came a member of the Pennsylvania Constitutional Convention. In 1877 President Hayes sent him to Louisiana as head of a commission to en- deavor to adjust disputes of contending parties. President Garfield ap- pointed him Attorney-General of the United States in 1881, but he re- signed on the accession of President Arthur and resumed the practice of law in Philadelphia. President Cleveland in 1893 appointed him Ambassa- dor to Italy, where he remained four years. In 1903 he was chief counsel for the United States in the Venezuela Arbitration before the Hague Tri- bunal. He wrote much in favor of international peace. Amherst con- ferred the LL.D. in 1881, as did the University of Pennsylvania in 1897, and Harvard in 1901. A widow and three children survive; also his brother, Franklin MacVeagh, Yale '62, Secretary of the Treasury in the cabinet of President Taft. RiCHAED Olney, LL.D., Brown '56, died at his home, Boston, Mass., April 8, 1917, in his eighty-second year. A native of Massachusetts, Mr. Olney returned after graduation to his native state, studied law at Har- vard, and had practiced law in Boston since his admission to the bar in 1859, except four years during which he served in President Cleveland's cabinet as Attorney-General, 1893-95, and Secretary of State, 1895-97. His only other public service was as member of the Massachusetts House of Representatives in 1874. In 1913 he declined appointment as Ambassador to England ; and in 1914, the governorship of the Federal Reserve Board. The following year, however, he accepted membership for the United States on an International Commission under treaty with France. He was for a term a fellow of Brown University, and was regent of the Smith- sonian Institute, 1900-08. He was also a member of the Massachusetts His- torical Society and the American Philosophical Society. Harvard in 1893, Brown in 1893, and Yale in 1900, conferred the LL.D. His most conspic- uous service as Secretary of State was his insistence that Great Britain arbitrate claims with Venezuela. Samuel Dickson, LL.D., Pennsylvania '55, died suddenly from an attack of heart disease at his home in Philadelphia, May 28, 1915, in his seventy- ninth year. He was a native of Newburgh, N. Y., and was valedictorian of his class. After his graduation he studied law, and was admitted to the 182 Volume 3 Numbers 6 and 7 Contents P«Be From Alice of Monmouth — A Poem . . 243 Cent«iary of the Alpha of New York . 244 A Plea for the Humanities — An Oration .. / 245 -ReunionOde . . . . . 253 Patriotism in Am^can Colleges . . . -254 Our Country's Call>^-A Poem . . . 255 The Beta of New York at Nfew York University . 256 Breaking a Precedent in Chapter Organization 271 To Our Captain' — A Poem . ., i .273 The Delta of New York at Columbia University 273 Thrfee Distinguished College Presidents . . 286 A Fossil From the Tertiar^— Concluded . . 292- A Phi Beta Kappa Bibliograj^y— Continued ., 300 In Memorial . . . * . 308 Phi Beta Kappa News and Notes . . .316 JANUARY and MARCH, 1918 The Ph! Beta Kappa Fraternity DIRECTORY OF CHAI^TERS With number In the order of establishment, the Secretai*y, and date. ' 12 Alabama'— Alpha of Alabama,' University, l>rof^ J. JL.Doster, A. U .1861 S4 Alleghenv— Eta. of Pennsylvania, MeadviHe, Prof. W. A. Elliott, L. Hi. D.'. . .1902 13 Amherst-:-Beta. of Massachusetts, Amher^, Prof. Charles B. Bennett, Ph. D. . .1853 89 Bates — Qamiina of MalneV Lewiaton. Prof. Arthur N. Leonard, Ph. D .1917 78 Beloit^— Beta o;r Wisconsin, Beloit, Prof. Erastua-G. Smith, Fh« D. .......... .1911 4-6 Boston — Bpsilon.Of Massachusetts, Bostbn, Ada A. Cole, Ph, B. ...;.,.?..... .l»»9i 6 BowdoiH — ^Alpha of Maine, Brunswick, Prof, Geo. T. Files, Ph. it . .'. 1826 7 Brown — ^Alpha of Rhode Island, Providence, Prof, Barnes Q, Dealey, P&, D. . . ,1830 43 Cali/omfo— Alpha of California, Berkeley,\Prof . PercivaJ B. Pay, Ph. b.,....189l 82 Carleton — Beta of Minnesota, Northfleld, Profi Curvin H. Gingrich, Ph. D....1914 Bl^OWcoffO — ^Beta of Illinois, ChlcaKpi trof. Francis W. Shepardspn, IiLr. D... ..1899 48 Cindinnati — ^Delta of Ohio,, Cincinnati, Mi^s Helen A. Stanley, 3676 Zumsteln Ave. ..:;:.. i '. ..,./..;. .1899 29 Colfty— Beta of Maine, Waterville, Prof. J. WiHiain Blick, Ph. Di.. ,i*.189« *4 CoIffote-^Etft of New York, Hami]|tOn, Prof. P. C. French, Ph. D 187» E5 Colorado XJniversitji — ^Alpha of Colorado, Houlder,. Prof. ^. Ramaley, Ph. C.,.1904 69 Colorado College — Beta of Coloradd, Colorado Springs, Pnjf. Albert R. BlWftg- wood, B. C. L... ; , . . , ,. . . .,..,.. ..'. 1901 21 CotemBiO'-Delta of New Tork, New York City, Edward Gluclt, A. B ...1869 25 Cornell — Theta of New York, Ithaca, Albert IfeRoy. Andrews^ Ph.,D. r^. .. .. . ..1882 4 Dortmowtft— Alpha of New Hampshire^ Hanover, Harold G. Bugg, A. B.... 1787 74 Uenisojt— Theta of Ohio, Gra.nVille, Prof. W; A. Chamber/ini, Plk !>.''..,..■.,.. 1911 29 De'Pauw — ^Alpha of Indiana, Greencastle, Prof. A.. P. Cauldwell,,^ M.. .....1889 26 Dickinson — ^Alpha Of Pennsylvania, Carlisle, PrSf. John F. l&abibT, Ph. I> 1887 69 Frdnklin and Marshall — Theta of Pennsylvania, Lancaster, , Prpf. W. E. Weis-- gerber, Ph. M .^. .. i ..-........_..'..'............ .i .1903 81 Oeo^flJo-^Alpha of Georgia, Athens, Prof. W. D. Hooper, A. M. ...... ,"".ii... .. .1914 64 Goitcfter-^Beta of Maryland, Baltimore, Miss Edna P. Sohwara, 'A. B.. , , . . . .1905 70 Grinnell — Beta of iQwa, Grinhell, Prof. Caroline ' Sheldon, ; A. M. ...,;.;.,. .1908 - 22 Bamilton — ^^Epsilon of New Yof'k, Clinton, Prof , J. D. Ibbofson, Jr., A. M....187fl 3 Harvard — ^Alpha of Massachusetts, Cambridge, WllHam C. LanS, A. B. .-. ...1781 44 Haverford — Zeta of Pennsylvania, Hayerfbrd, Prof; L.-W. Iteid, Ph. D. . . .... ,1890 23 Boidrt—Zeta, of New York, Geneva, ;P>of. Willis P. Wpodman.Ph, D. ...■;..; 1871 67 Illinois; — Gamma of Illinois, Urbana," Pj-of. Jacob Zeltliij;: Ph. D, ............ . .1907 75 Indiana— rGsiTonma. pf Indiana, ^loomingtoh, Miss Kat^Prlne Basley, A. B 1911 36 Iowa — ^Aipha of Ipyita, Iowa City; Miss Hertha ~L. Vos^Ph; ;B: .... 1 . i .... t.. .^**^ 37 Johns Bopkins-^Alpba, of Maryland, 'fealtimore. Prof. John d, French, Ph. D.,1896j, 31 Kansas — ^Alpha of Kansas, 'I,awrdnce;; Prof. J. G. Brandt, Ph. D...... .1890 14 Kenyonr-^B&ta, of Ohio, Gambler, Luth^r'H.-Tate. ...... . , , .,,. .1868 87 Knox — ^Delta of Illinois, Galesburg, Prof. Ja^es A. Campbell, A.- M . , . .V'i . - 191T ^42 Lafayette — Gamma of Pennsylvania,^ Easton, Prof . Wm. S. Hall, Ph. D. .'.IV-'tlSSO 79 Laiorence — Gamma of Wisconsin, Appleton. frPf. Loiiis C. Baker, Ph., D. . . '. /.'.lOli 27 ieftix/TiT-Beta of Pennsylvania,," South Bethlehem, Prof. C. L. Thornburg, Ph. D.188T 16 Marietta — GftWima pf Ohio, Marietta, Miss Mary, S. Newton. ... i ............. .i860 TT Mianii — ipta, Pf Ohip, Gxfprd, Prpf. -Harlan Schwab, B. A.:, ........ .-v.. .... .1911 68 Michigan — Alpha pf Michigan, Ann ArbPr; Prof. J. "Vp. SchPll, Ph. D. . .\>>. /, .1907 19 Middlebury — Beta of Vermont, Middlebury, Prof. phas. B. Wright; Lltt. D....1863 35 Minnesota — Alpha of Minnesota, Minriestpplis, Frederic K. Butters,, Ph. D. . , . .1892 es Missouri — Alpha pf Misspuri,. CPlumbla, Prpf, Guy B. Cplbum,- Plu^ D. . . .. . . .1901 ( Ponolmled on third page of cover) Volume 3 \'. Numbers 6 and 7 Contents From AKce of iMomnouth-^A Poem Centenary of the Alpha of New York A Plea for. the Humaniti^ — An Oration ^ Rewu<»i Ode . .. . v • Patriotism in American Colleges . Oiir Country's Call— A Poem . . . The Belaof New York at New York University , Breaking a Precedent in Chapter Oi^ganization To Our Captain — ^A Poem .'' . . The Delta of New York at Columbia University -Three Distinguished College Presidents . A Fossil From the Tertiary-— Concluded . A'Phi Beta Kappa Bibliojgrapy — Continued InMemoriattt • . . IHii Beta Kappa News and Notes . . ~ ; \ Page 243 244 245 253 254 255 256 271 273 273 286 292 300 308 316, JANUARY and MARCH, 1918 j HJ..^ The Phi Beta Kappa Fraternity DIRECTORY OF CHAPTERS- With number in the order of i^tablisltment, the Secretary, s,n4 date. '12 Alabama — ^Alphi^ of Alabtima, University, Prof. J. J. Doster, A. M.... 1851 54 Alleghenv— Eta. of Pennsylvania, MeadvlIIe, Prof. W. A. Elliott, L. H. D 1902 , 13 Amherst — Beta of Massachusetts, Amherst, Prof. Charles E. Bennett, Ph. D...1863 89 Bates — Gamma of Matoei, Lewlaton. Pi-of. Arthur N. Leonard, Ph. !D, .'^. . .1917 78 BeiiWt— Beta of Wisconsin, Belolt, Prof. B|;astus G. Smith, Ph. D r, ...1911 46 jBostbn-^Epsllon of Massachusetts, Boston, A^ A. Cole, Ph. B. ...... ..r; .. .1899 6 Sowdpinr^Alpha. of Maine, Brunswick, Prof. Geo. T. Files, Ph. b. ......... . .182S 7 Brown — ^Alpha of Rhode Island, Providence, I'rof. j'anies Q. Dealey, Ph. V.,. .1830 " 43 CoK/oT-nio— A^pha- of California, Berkeley, Prof. Percival B. Fay, Ph. iD ..ISSi 82 OorletojtT-fieta of Minnesota, Northfleld, Prof. Curyln H. Gingrich, Ph. D. ...1914 51 CWcoffo— ^Beta of Illinois) Chicago, Prof. Francis ^W. Shepardson, LL. D... ..1899 48 Cincmnati — -Delta df Ohio, Cincinnati, Miss Helen A. Stanley, 357fi 2umstein Ave. .',;*,. ; 1899 39 Colby— Beta, of Maine, Watervllle, Prof. J. WillUtm Black, Ph. D. . . . ; 1896 24 Colgate — Eta of New York, Hamilton, Jrof. F. C. Fren61i,^Ph. D. . . . . ., 1878 55 Colorado University — ^Alpha of Colorado, Boulder, Prof. F. Hamaley, Ph. I>>...19d4, 59 Coloraplo College — Beta of Colorado, Colorado Springs, Prof, Albert R. Elllng- /wobd, B. C; L.. . . . .,. .'. . .,. .7., . .-.' , . . .1904 21 OdteniMo— Delta of New York, New York City, Edward Glnck,.-A. B. ... ; . ^. .1869 .25 OorneW-rTbeta of New York, Ithaca, Albei^t LeRoy Andrews, Ph. D. li82 . 4 DortmoMfft-rAlpha of New Hampshire, Hanover^ Harold G. Rvigg, A. B....1787 74 Denison — Theta of Ohio, Granville, Prof. W. A. Chamberllh, Ph. D-. /'.ISrJ. 29 De PavM — ^Alpha of Indiana, Greencastle, Prof. A. F. Cauldwell, A. 1^.. .. .. .1889 26 DJoftJnson— Alpha of Pennsylvania, Carlisle, Prof. John F. Mohler^Ph. p. ...1887 69 Pranklin and MarsHatU—Thetsi. of Pennsylvania, Lancaster, Prof . W, B. Weis- ;^^' gerber, Ph. Si , : ^ .......,,' /.... .1903 81 Georoio.— Alpha of Georgia, Atljens, Prof. W. D, Hooper, A. M ........ . .-. . '» . . . 1914 , 64 GoMcfter— Beta of Maryland; Baltimore, Miss Edna F. Sbhwarz, A. .B.-. il905" 70, Grm«elZ^Beta of lowa^ Grinnell, Prof. Caroline Sheldon, A. M. ...j. 19,08 22 Samilto^ — Epsilon of Jsfew'York, Clinton, Prof. J. D. Ibbot^on, Jr., A. M.. ..1870 3. Harvard^— Alpha of Massachusetts, Canibridge, WlUiara C. Lane, A. B 1781 44 Hover/orif-^Zeta, of Penijsylvania, Haverford, Prof. L. W. Reld, Ph. D. . . . ... .1890 23 ffo&or^— Zeta 6^ New YorkPOeneva, Prof. Willis P. Woodman, Ph. D. . . ,. . ..1871 67 IZZMmis— Gamhia of Illinois, Urbana, Prof. Jacob Zel;tHn, Ph. D..,., ,.....^1907 ,75 Indiana — €lamma of Indiana, Bloomlngtonj Mis^ Katherine Easley, A. B. . . . . . .1911 36 lotua— Alpha of lowa, Iowa. City, Miss Hertha L. Voss, Ph. B. ..-/;. 1895 37 Johns Hopki'iis — A-lpha of Maryland, Baltimore, Prof. John Ci French, Ph.^'D. .1896 31 Konsffls-^Alpha of Kansas, Lawrence, Prof. J. G. Brandt,, Ph. D ....1890 14 Ken j/oM— Beta of Ohio,' Gambler, Luther H. Tate . . . i .;..;, 1858 il Knox — ^Delta of JUinois, Qa'lesburg, plrof. James Al Campbell, A. , M ....... . 1917 32 Lafayette— wt— Alpha of Alabama, University, Prof. J. J. DOster. A. M. ....'....... .18&1- 64 Alieghenv—^ta, ot Pennsylvania, Meadville, Prof. W. A. BlUott, K H. D. ...1902 13 Amfterst-^Beta of lilassachuSetts, Amherst, Pr.9f. Charles B.lBennett, I>h. D. ..18B3 89 Botes — Gamma of Mkine, E,ewis,ton. Prof. ArtWr N. Leonard, Ph. D. ....... ..1917 78 BeipW— Beta of Wisconsin, Beloit, Prof., Jlrastus G. Smith, tb. V. .\.. . .':\ .r.l911 46 Boston — ^E^sllon of MassaciuEeits, Boston, Ada A- Col©/ Ph. B. . . ..'.^ . . . i . J .1899 6 SowdoU — ^Alpha of Maine, Brunswicfc, Prof. <}eo. ,T. Filea,, Ph. D. ,'.'. ...'.... .1826 ■7 Broum-vAlpha'of Rhode Island, Providence, Prof. James Q. Dealfey, Ph. b 1830 43 Caiiiornia^-Xlplta of Cajifomia, Berkeley, Prof. Perclvatl B. Pay, Ph. D......189* 83 Oarteton-JBeta of Minnesota,- Northfield, prof. Curvin Bf. Gingrich, Ph. t» . . y. 1914 61 CWcopo^^Beta of Illinois,- Chicago, Prof. Francis W. Shepardson, Lli. D.....lg9*' 48 CJncmnay— Delta of Ohio, Cincinnati, Miss Jieien A. Stanley, 3576 Zumstelh- Ave. '..:.,, ,1899 39 Colby— B^ta of Maine, WaterVUle, Prof. J. ■William Black, Ph. D "; .-. .1896 24 Colgate— Eta, of. New York, Hamilton, Prof. F. C. Fren^, Ph. D »,f 1878 55 Colora)^o University — Alpha of Colorado, Boulder, Prof. F. Bamaley, Ph, D. . . .1904 69 Colorado College — Beta of Colorado, Colorado Sprin^is, Prof. Albert R. Elllng- wood, B. C. L1..J . -•. ..... .... .,. ....'. .;.... ...... .-i . . ... ....... ^, , .1904 ^ 21 CptewBto—r Helta oi:Ne-» York, new Tork City, Edward Ghick, A.' B. ...... .1869; ' 2Et Cor jteB-^TJieta of New Tork; Ithaca, Prof. AlberfjLeBoy Andrews, Ph. b... 4151882 4 CorfmOKtft— Alpha of Neinr Hampshire, IJanover, H%roW G', Buggr A. JS. . .yl78'r 74 13eniso«y-Theta of Ohio, Granville, Prof. W. A. Chamberlfai, Ph. D,. ..«. .j^. .1911 29 JDe Pa»4)-^Alpha of Indiana, Greericastle, Prdf, A. F. Cauldwelli A. M.. . .;'^.1889 1^26; Dickinson — Alpha of Pennsylvania; . Carlisle, Prof. John F^/Mohiei', Ph. D. ....1887 S9 Franklin and Marshall — Theta of Pennsylvania, Lancaster, Prof. W. E.'Wels-' " Berber, Ph. M. ...!..... .....:.....;.. .1908 ' 81 Georgia — ^Alpha of GfSorgla, Atheris, Prof. W. D. Hooper* A- M. ...;..-, ...1914 Si~ Goucher- — Beta of llaryland,- Balfiinorer Miss Mary Patten, A, 3 : 7% . . ^ . ... 1905 , • 7fl Grinneljr— Beta, of Iowa, jGrinnell, Prof. Caroline 'Sheldon, -^ M... ^.,, .....19bS J^Z Hamllton-^Evsilon oj New york, Clinton, Prof. J. D; Ibbotsoti, :Jr„ A. M;..;,1870 3 Harvardj—Aipba, of Massachusetts, Cambridge,* WUlfam'-CJ. Lane, ,&„ p..... .Vlil 44 Baverford — Zeta of Pennsylvania, Haverford, Prof. L. W. Beld» Ph. 3>1 ...... .1^90 23 Hoftart — ^Zeta al_New Tork,V(3eneva, Prof. Wfllts P. Woodman, Ph. D. .. .^s . .187J. 6T Illinois — Gamma Of Illinois, -Urbanls., Prof . Jacob Z^ityn, Ph. B. . . ..:. -. * . . . ,.,19(17 ii Jtidiaina — Gamma of Indiana, Bloominfeton, Miss Katharine EaSley, A. B. ...;.., 1911 ' ~ 3,6_ /oi«a— Alpha of Iowa, lojiva City, liIiss,Hertha L.. Vo'ssJ Ph. B. . ...... ;..... . .V'.1895 ^31 Johns H()j)fci«s^-^Alpha of Maryland, Baltiftiore, Prof. Joseph T. ^Sl)rig3Wald, ' Ph. 3D -.!.,.. ;,.......,.,;'..........l.,., ...Vi. 1895 31 Kansas — ^Alpha of Kansa?. Lawrence, Prof. J. G. Brandt, Ph; E>. . . . . i . . .^ ,,. .^. 189fl 14 Ke«i^o»— Beta of Ohib; Gambler, Luther H. Tate... ......1858 87 Xnoa;— I?elta of Illinois, dale$bi}rg/ Prof. J. L. Cogger, Ph. D. . ...^ ......... .1917 32'Lafavette — Gamma of Pennsylvania, Easton, Prof. win. S. Ha,ll, Ph. D. ; .^ . . . 1890 79 Ltiwrenee — Gamma of Wisconsin; Appleton, Prof. L...^^. 1917 '78 Befoit—Beta of Wlsconstn, Beldit, Prof. Brastus G. Smith, (Ph. D. . - .. i. .. .. .1911 46 Boston — EJpBilon of Massachusetts;; Boston, Ada A. Cole, Ph/ p. 1899 6 Bowdoin— Alpha of Maine^ Bruns-w^ick, Prof. GeO. T. Biles, p4i. D. ; . ^.-. . ; 1826 7 Brown — ^Alpha of Rhode Island, Providence, Prof. James Q. Dealer, Ph. C 1830 43 CoH/omlfj^Alpha of California, Berkeley, Prof. Percival B. Fay,, Ph. D...:..18tt 82 Carleton — Beta of Minnesota, Nbrthfleld, Prof. Corvin H. Gingrich, Ph, D. ...1914 Bl CWcaffo-T-Beta of Illinois, -Chicago/ Evelyn M. Albright, Ph. D..;., ..1899' 48 Cincinnat'fr— Delta of u Ohio, Cincinnati, Miss Helen .^ Sts^nley,- SBTfr Zumsteln , Ave ':.' , . . : ..-. . ... .1899 39 Ootbu — Beta Of Maine, Waterville, Trof. J. 'William JBlack, Ph. t» j . . . »,• T. 18 J« 24 Colgate — ^Eta of New York, Hamilton, Prof. F. C. French, Ph. X}.,.i.',.. :Y... .1878 65 Colorado JIniijeraU]/ — ^Alpha of Colorado, Boulder, Prof. F, -Hamalgy, Ph, D. . . .1904 M Colorodo^ CoKeje-*-6^a of <3olorado, Colorado Spr^ings," Prof. Albert R. Blllng- wood, B. C. Oi., ., . .5.'. ......:...., . . .... . . ... : . . . . ._. ... .if.1904 21 OolumMa — Delta' of New York, New Tbrk City, Frederick W. Sohblz, A. M.. .. .i«5? 25 CoraeZJ— Theta of New York,, Ithaca, Prof. Albert LeE'py Andrews, Ph. D. . . . .1882 4 Z)«rtjjTdut/j— Alpha of New Hampshire, Hanovir, Harold G. Rugg, A; H. .. .1787 74 Jtenlson — Theta of Ohio, ffranvllle, Prof. W. A. Chanibe'rlln, Plk;D. ..^,..:,. .1911 29 -De Panw — Alpha of Indiana^ Greencastle, Prof . Joseph P. Naylor, Ms.. . ..... .1|889 26 DiSckinspn — Alpha of Pennfiylvanlai Carlisle, Prof. John F; Mohler, Ph* D. .;. .1887' 69 Pr-ankUn and Harshallr-^Tbeta, of Ppnnsylyania, Lancaster, Prof. W. B. Wels- ' gerber," Ph. M ..^. . ..,....,. '. .i 1908 81 Georgia — ^Alplia of Georgia, Athens, Prof.|W. D. fiooper, A. M.'. , . 1414 %i Gaucher — 'Beta of Maryland, Baltimore, Miss Mary Patten, A. S^.. .....1905 70 GW«»6lJ-^E6ta;.of rowa, Grliinell, Miss Inez Henley, A. B. . . .y. , •••••; 1908 22 B'omiJtoji— Bpsilon of New^ife'k.'^l'^toS' Prof. J. D. Ibbotspni, Jr., A. M..>'^1876 3 Haruord— A-lpha of Maspachusetts, Cambridge, William C. La.rie, A. B.,. ;,. .17fli ii Maverford — Zeta of Pennsylvania, Haverford, Prof. L. W. Reid^ Ph..t) ...li90 23 HtfBort— Zeta of New York, Geneva, Prof . Willis p. Woodman, Ph. D. ..'.... .1871 67 IlUnpla — Gamma of IlllnqjB, XJrl;ana, Pinof. Jacob Z'eitlirii Ph. D. .. .^ .....-;.: .1907 75 Indiana:r-rGa,mrna, of Indiana, Blobmington, Prof. Guido Stempel, Ph. D. ., . . . ,1911. 3,6 Joioc>— Alpha of Iowa, Iowa City^, Miss Bessie L. Pierce, A. M;. . . . .......:. . . .1895 SI Ja^s Mapkins- — Alpha of Maryland, Baltimore, Prof. Joseph T. Slngew^ldl ' Ph. D. i ...... . ;...... ^ : . . ... . . . . .1896 31 ITowsos— Alpha of Kansas, Lawrence, Prof. J. ,G. Brandt, Ph. D. . . .,,.,. ..... .1890 •14 Kenyan — Beta of Ohio, Gambler, Prof.' E^^ymond D. Cahall, Ph; D.. 1858 87 Knox — ^Delta of lUlnois, Galesburg, Prof. J. L. Conger, PfaiD.. '.^.,..1917 . S2 Lafayette — Gamma of Pennsylvania, Easton, , Prof . Wm. S. Hall, Pli. D., ^4-890 79 ZiOt«re»6e— Gamma of Wisconsin, Appleton, Profl Louis C. Baker, Pb. O, .... ;1914 27 Lehigli — Beta of Pennsylvania, South Bethlehem, Prof. C. L. Thornbnrtr, Ph. I>.1887 16 Mariettas-Gamma of Ohio, Marietta, Miss Mary S. NjSwt<)n ,1860 77 afiatJt*— Iota, of Ohio, Oxford, Prof. Harlan Schwab, B. A. . .''. 1 ... .J . . .. ,W11 68 MUshiganr-^Aivba. of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Prof, John W. Spholl, Ph. D. , 1907 19 Middle ftiiri— Beta of Vermont, Middlflbury, Prof.. Chats. B. Wright, Lltt D....1863 35 Minnesota — ^Alpha of Minnesota, Minneapolis, Frederic K. Butters', Ph. D.. ..,J892 63 Mi«so«)-i — ^Alpha of Missouri, Columbia. Prof^' F. JW. Tisdel, Ph. U/. . . . .i. . . . . .1901 (Oonciwded on third page of cover) A PHI BETA KAPPA BIBLIOGRAPHY By Prof. Clark S. Northup, Cornell '93 {Continued from Page 348) WILLIAM AND MARY COLLEGE. Alpha of Virginia. Organized December 5, 1776. Orations and Addresses. 1855. Hugh Blair Grigsby. The Virginia convention of 1776. A discourse before the Virginia Alpha of the Phi Beta ]\.appa Society, WilHamsburg, July 3d, 1855. Richmond, Va. Randolph. 1855. 8vo, pp. 206. 1898. Herbert Baxter Adams. The study and teaching of history. Phi Beta Kappa address at William and Mary College, Williamsburg, Virginia, February 18, 1898. Richmond, Va. Whittet & Shepperson. 1898. 8vo, pp. 18. 1900. Thomas Nelson Page. Character the true test of a civilization. Delivered in the Senate Chamber, Richmond, Feb- ruary 19. 1904. Albert Shaw. Address at meeting of the Phi Beta Kappa Society held in Richmond, Virginia, April 13, 1904. Svo, pp. 27. On Thomas Jefferson. Reprinted (Jefferson's doctrines under new tests) in his The outlook for the average man. New York, Macmillan, 1907, 8vo., pp. 185-240, and in Representative Ph. B. K. orations, Boston, 191S, pp. 298-325. 1904. Lyon Gardner Tyler. Early courses and professors at William and Mary College. Delivered December 5. An ex- tract in The William and Mary College Quarterly Historical Mag- azine, October, 1905, xiv. 71-87. 1906. Daniel Coit Gilman. Address [The significance of a liberal education, by D. C. Gilman], and poem [The fount of Castaly, by A. C. Gordon] ; delivered before the Phi Beta Kappa Society of the College of William and Mary, at Williamsburg, Va., Dec. 5, 1906. Richmond. 1907. Poems. i860. Thomas Dunn English. The two voices; a poem. 385 386 Phi Beta Kappa Key October Delivered July 4. In The Southern Literary Messenger, i860, xxxi. 321, where will be found also the correspondence between Professor Joynes, the secretary, and the author. 1897. Thomas Wentworth Higginson. - Harvard's greeting to William and Mary. An ode read at the celebration of the Phi Beta Kappa Society of William and Mary College, Friday, Feb- ruary 19, 1897. In The William and Mary College Monthly, March, 1897, pp. 216-8. Reprinted in The Key, May, 1912, i, 8, 5-7. 1902. Robert Underwood Johnson. Italian rhapsody. Read February 10. In The Atlantic Monthly, March, 1902, Ixxxix. 410-13. 1906. Armistead C. Gordon. The fount of Castaly. Read Dec. 5, 1906. In The Key, March, 1914, iii. 3. 103-4- Also published in a pamphlet with Dr. Oilman's address ; see above. General. Anniversary at the Alpha of Virginia. In The Key, March, 1911,1.3.22-3. John Beqwn. His letters to his uncle from Williamsburg in 1779-80 are reprinted from The Wisconsin Aegis in The William and Mary College Quarterly Historical Magazine, July, October, 1900, ix. 18-23, 75-83. William Robertson Garrett. See Vanderbilt Orations and Addresses, 1901. John Lesslie Hall. The Alpha of Virginia since 1849. I" The Key, March, 1912, i. 7. 36-40. James E. Heath. John Heath. In The Key, March, May, 191 5, ii. 7. 317-26, 8. 365-73- Illus. For his genealogy, see The William and Mary College Quart. Hist. Mag., July, 1915, xxiv. 109-15. The Raleigh Tavern in Williamsburg. In The William and Mary College Quarterly Historical Magazine; January, 1906, xiv. 213-15- Herbert Gushing Tolman. The Phi Beta Kappa in Virginia. In The Vanderbilt Observer, November, 1905, pp. 7-12. Lyon Gardiner Tyler. The College of William and Mary. In The Key, March, 191 2, i. 7. 5-7. igiS A Phi Beta Kappa Bibliography 387 Abridged from his book on the college. The making of the Union. Richmond, Va. 1899. 8vo, pp. 36. Pp. 11-12 on Phi Beta Kappa. . Original records of the $. B. K. Society, 1776-1781. Edited by Lyon G. Tyler. In The William and Mary Colle... 1911 46 BojtOTi — Epsilon of JM^as&achusetts, Boston, Ada A. Cole, Th. B. ....'.... .7. .. .1899 6 Btiwdoin — ^Alpha of Maliie, Brunswick,. Prof , Geo. T. Files, Ph. D. ,..,.'.. ,.y .1826 7 Brown — Alpha of Rhode Island, ^royiden..'i\ , . 1878 55 Colorado Vniveraity — Alpha of C^radS; Boulder, Prof.F, Ramaley, Ph, I>....1904 , 69 Colorado College — Beta of Colorado, Coloradp Springs, Prof. -Albert R, ElUng- ^ ■ ',wood,'B. C. L .'..,./,•;•... .,.,'. ,,>/, ,. ..;l'. ;...'.;.,. ., ..'.,,. . ,-. ..l'9p4 21 doiumbior— Delta, Of New York, New York Cit*^. Frederick W, Soholz, A^M.. . ..Ig'eg 25 CorrtsZ!— Theta of New York, Ithaca, Prof. Albert teRoy Andrews, Ph. D;. 1882 4 CortmoutTi— Alpha of New Hampshire. Hanover, Harold G. Ruas,. A. S 17,87 74 Deni^on — Theta of Ohio, Graijville, Proic, W. A. ChamberliOr Ph, D- .|.i...i9li -29 De Pawtu— (Alpha of Indiana, GreeTicas3tle,^Prot, Joseph P. Naylor,,M. S.. .'.'.^ .1889 26' IJjcfciMaon— Alpha 'oi;_ Pennsylvania, Carlisle, Prof, John F, Mohler, Ph, 0, .'. .^SSII 69 Franklin and MarshaH-^heta, of Pennsylvania\ Lancaster,- Prof, W, E, "Welsr.' ''"^ ; gerbe^, .Ph- M*. , . . , , , , . . . . .,-.., , .ISOS 81 ffeoj-ffio— rAlphi of Georgia,~Athens, Prof, iW. D, Hooper, A, M .1914. 64 GoMcfter-— Beta of Maryland^Baltiraore, SCiss Mairy, Patten, A. B,, 2008 Madison Ave. - /. . .V . .' . .-.V'. ; . ;.....,.,. ,1905 70 Orinnellr— Beta,' of Iowa, Grinnell, Miss Inez Henley, '-A. B. ..'..'.......:...., . ,1908 ' 22 ff^wiZton— Bpsilon of New York, Clinton, iProf. /J. D. Ibbotson, Jr.,, A, M.i.^lSTO 3 Harvard — Alpha of Massachusetts, Cambridge, \WilUam'C. Lane, A. B. .,';.. 1,781 44 Haverford — Zeta of Pennsylvania, Haverford, Prof. L. W. ,R.eid, Ph, Di. ,'.... .1890 ZZ,. Hobart — Zeta of NeW; York, Geneva, Prof. Willis P. Woodman,. Ph. D.. 1871 67 ZIHnois— Gamma of Illinois, Urbana, Prof. Jacob Zeiflin, Ph. D. .....'..,... .dSOl . '7'5 ZiMZiaMo-T^Gamffla of, Indiana, Blobmington, S'rof. Gul&o Stempel, A. M,. 1911 , 36 JoiSo— Alpha.o£'Ipwa, Iowa City, Miss Bessici L, Pierce,, A.' M,, ...,.,, .,,, ...1896 37 Johns Hopkins — Alpha of Maryland, Baltimore, Prof. Joseph T, Singewald, Ph, D , ., ..y^.. ; . , .'.1895 31 jKonsas-^Alpha of Kansas, Lawrence, Prof. J, G, Brandt, Ph', D, , . . , . . .-; , . . , il89Q 14 .g:e»i,3/o«.^— Beta of Ohio,,,Gambier, Prof, RayrnondjD, Cahall, Ph. T>..'. .^ ..... .A85S 87 JSTnox-^Delfa ot Illinois, Galesburg', Prof,' j,aj.. Conger, Ph, D tC.v. 1917 32Ldfayet'te — Gamma of Pennsylvania, EastOn, Prof, Wm, S. pall. Pit. rt, •';,.. ..il890 ISLawrenee- — Gamma of Wisoonslh, Ap^eton, Prof, Louis C< Baker, Ph, !D.,.. .. ,19i4 ri £,ehigh—BetSi of Pennsylvania-, Soi^th Bethlehem, Prof, C, tr.,Thornburg,,:Ph, t).i887 .16 j/orieUa— Gamma of Ohio, Marietta, Miss Mary St. Newtpri. .:,.-. ...■,^.,. ,.,, .^'.1860 ■77 Mfami—Iot& of Ohio, Oxf&rd, Prof. Harlan Schwab, B. A. '. ,..1911 68, Jlf,fcftti/ajt— ,Alpha of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Prof. Joh:^ W..SchOll, Ph. D. . , . . . .1907 19 mddlebury—Betk of Vermont, Midaiebury/ Prof . Clias. B. Wright, Litt. P.;. ,11863 35 JWinnespto— rAlph.a of Minnesota, Minneapolis, Frederic It. Butters,- ph. IC. ...1891/ 53 Jlfi|«o,Mri— 'Alpha, of Missouri, , CloVumbia; Prof. F. M. Tisdel, FH. p..^ ,,.1901^^ >- ■ (Concluded on third page of cover) " -- ■ - V-,' . ' . /" 1919 The Original Phi Beta Kappa Records ■ 481 voice, he was not initiated. f The business being finished an ad- journment took place. At a meeting of the $ B K, October 29th, 1779. The president being absent, one was balloted for a majority ap- pearing in favour of Mr. Brown, he resumed the chair. The Clerk being likewise absent one was balloted for and a majority was for Mr. Nivison. In consequence of one of our Laws, we proceeded to the choice of .two gentlemen to declaim on the Anniversary. Mr. Short and Mr. Brown were elected for that purpose. Mr. Fitzhugh and Mr. Cocke to write, and Messrs. Stuart and Brent to argue. The business of the evening being finished, an adjournment took place. Meeting convened the 13th November, 1779. Ordered that the Gentlemen appointed to declaim and argue at this meeting be continued therefor at the ensuing meeting. A subject is directed on the following question : Whether a General Assessment for the support of Religious Establishments is or is not repugnant to the principles of a Republican Govern- ment. Mr. Brown discharged from appointment at last meeting to de- claim on the Anniversary, and a Ballot taken for another person in his stead — Mr. Stuart elected. Ordered that summonses issue to convene the absent members on the Anniversary. Various Causes suggesting to this Society the Necessity of ap- pointing a vice-president of this Body to reside in College, and the insufficiency of former laws having occasioned delays in Business and other inconveniences therefrom ; It is hereby declared a future law of this Society, that a standing vice-president be appointed who shall have the same powers, in the absence of the efficient president that is given by Law, and it is ordered that this be added to the standing Laws of the Society.* So much of any former law as is repugnant to this is hereby repealed. fit will be seen that the rule requiring absolute unanimity in elec- tions to mernbership was fully enforced. This is the second occasion when a candidate was rejected. ♦This addition to the laws was not incorporated in the code already printed. {Te be Continued) A BIBLIOGRAPHY OF PHI BETA KAPPA By Prof. Clark S. Northup, Cornell '93 (Continued from Page 388) YALE UNIVERSITY Alpha of Connecticut. Organized November 13, 1780 Catalogues 1806. 8vo, pp. 15. 1808. 8vo, pp. 16. 1813. 1818. 8vo, pj). 22. 1821. 8vD, pp. 23. 1823. 8vo, pp. 24. 1824. 8vo. 1826. 8vo, pp. 31. 1829. 8vo, pp. 36. 1832. 8vQ, pp. 35. 1835. 8vo, pp. 39. 1838. 8vo, pp. 46. 1841. 8vo. 1847. 8vo, pp. 47. 1852. 8vo, pp. 50. 1898, for 1852-98. 8vo, pp. 126. 1905. 8vo, pp.292. 1915. 8vo, pp. [ii], 359. Illus. Orations and Addresses 1797. Charles Chauncey, Jr. An oration, delivered before the Society of the $ B K ; at their anniversary meeting, in the city of New Haven, on the evening preceding commencement, Anno Domini 1797. New Haven. [1798.] 8vo, pp. 34. On the advancement of the race in science, politics, and morals. 1797. Ebenezer Grant Marsh. An oration, before the $ B K Society at their anniversary meeting, New-Haven, on the fifth of December, 1797. Hartford: Printed by Hudson & Good- win. 1798. .8vo, pp. 32. 1802. Eli Ives. An oration, on chemistry and botany ; de- livered before the Phi Beta Kappa Society, at New Haven, De- cember 9, 1802. Published by order of the Society. New-Haven: Printed by Joel Walter. 1803. 8vo, pp. 16. Mainly on the new science of chemistry. 1806. Samuel Farmar Jarvis. Want of patronage the prin- cipal cause of the slow progress of American literature — An ora- tion, delivered before the Society of Phi Beta Kappa, upon the 482 1919 'i Phi Bctii Kappa Bibliography 483 anniversary of that institution, December 5th, 1806. New-Haven. 1806. 8vo, pp. 22. Reviewed [by James Savage] in The Monthly Anthology, May, 1807, iv. 280. 1822. James Gates Percival. Oration delivered before the $ B K Society, September loth, 1822, on some of the moral and political truths derivable from the study of history. New-Haven: Published by A. H. Maltby and Co., No. 4, Glebe-Building. 1822, 8vo, pp. 19. Also in his Life and letters, ed. by Julius H. Ward, Boston, Ticknor & Fields, 1866, pp. 523-39; see also pp. 116, 131. 1825. James Gould. An oration, pronounced at New Haven, before the Connecticut Alpha of the Phi Beta Kappa Society, Sep- tember 13th, 1825. New Haven. T. G. Woodward & Co. 1825. 8vo, pp. 31. Reviewed in The l^ew York Literary Gazette, Nov. 18, 1825, i. 11. 173; in The United States Literary Gazette, Jan. i, 1826, iii. 258-62. 1826. James Abraham Hillhouse. An oration at New Haven, before the Society of $ B K, September 12, 1826, on con- siderations which should influence an epic or a tragic writer irj the choice of an era. New Haven. A. H. Maltby & Co. 1826. 8vo, PP- 3^- Also in his Dramas, discourses, and other pieces, Boston, Charles C. Lit- tle and James Brown, 1839, ii. [6i]-99. Reviewed in The North American Review, January, 1827, xxiv. 129-41 ; in The United States Reviezv and Lit- erary Gazette, March, 1827, i. 462-3. 1827. Denison Olmsted. An oration on the progressive state of the present age. Delivered at New Haven, before the Con- necticut Alpha, of the Phi Beta Kappa, September nth, 1827. New Haven : Printed by Hezekiah Howe. 1827. 8vo, pp. 24. 1830. Thomas Smith Grimke. Oration on the advantages, to be derived from' the introduction of the Bible, and of sacred literature, as essential parts of all education, in a literary point of view merely, from the primary school, to the university : deliver- ed before the Connecticut Alpha of the B K Society, on Tues- day, September 7, 1830. New Haven: Printed by Hezekiah Howe. 1830. 8vo, pp. 76. Also in his Reflections on the character and objects of all science and literature, and on the relative excellence and value of religious and secular education, and of sacred and classical literature. New Haven, Howe, 1831, 8vo, pp. [iii]-i62. 484 The Phi Beta Kappa Key January 1 83 1. James Kent. An address delivered at New Haven, be- fore the Phi Beta Kappa Society, September 13, 1831. New- Haven: Printed by Hezekiah Howe. 1831. 8vo, pp. 48. Published at the request of the Society. On "the beneficial influence which the studies and discipline of such a literary institution [as Yale] are calculated to have upon the morals and manners, the intelligence and public spirit of the community." Reviewed in The New England Magazine, October, 183 1, i. 362. 1833. Edward Everett. An address, before the Phi Beta Kappa Society in Yale College, August 20, 1833. Published by request of the Society. New Haven. Hezekiah Howe & Co. 1833. 8vo, pp. 35. On the nature and efficiency of education. Repeated at Harvard, Au- gust 30. Reprinted (The education of mankind) in his Orations and speeches on various occasions, 2d ed., Boston, Little, Brown & Co., 1878, i. 404-41. Reviewed in The New England Magazine, January, 1834, vi. 89-90. 1834. James Abraham Hillhouse. An oration, pronounced at New Plaven, by request of the Common Council, August 19, 1834, in commemoration of the life and services of General Lafay- ette; New Haven. H. Howe & Co. 1834. 8vo, pp. 40. 1836. James Abraham Hillhouse. The relations of litera- ture to a republican government. In his Dramas, discourses, and other pieces, Boston, Charles C. Little and James Brown, 1839, i2mo, ii. [ioi]-i43. 1837. Horace Bushnell. An address on the principles of national greatness. Delivered August 15. 8vo, pp. 27, Reprinted (The true wealth or weal of nations) in his Work and play, or Literary varieties. New York, Scribner, 1864, pp. 43-77, and in Repre- sentative Ph. B. K. orations, Boston, 1915, 8vo, pp. 1-23. 1838. Heman Humphrey. A discourse delivered before the Connecticut Alpha of B K at New Haven, August 14, 1838. New Haven. L. H. Young, No. i, Exchange Place. Hitchcock & Stafford, Printers. 1839. 8vo, pp. 23. On maintaining high standards of higher education. 1839. Leonard Bacon. The proper character and functions of American literature. A discourse, before the Society of Phi Beta Kappa, in Yale College, August 20th, 1839. New York. Office of The Biblical Repository. 1840. 8vo, pp. 25. 1840. Albert Barnes. Oration on the progress and ten- 1919 A Phi Beta Kappa Bibliography 485 dency of science, before the Connecticut Alpha of Phi Beta Kappa, New Haven, August 18, 1840. Philadelphia. Printed by I. Ashmead. 1840. 8vo, pp. 40. 1842. Samuel Henry Dickson, M. D. An oration, deliver- ed at New Haven, before the Phi Beta Kappa Society, August 17, 1842. New Haven. Hamlen. 1842. 8vo, pp. 47. On the question whether knowledge leads to happiness. Reviewed by J. L. Kingsley in The New Englander, April, 1843, i. 229-30. 1843. William Buel Sprague. An address, delivered Au- gust 16, 1843, before the Society of Phi Beta Kappa in Tale Col- lege. Published by request of the Society. New Haven : Printed by B. L. Hamlen. 1843. 8vo, pp. 48. On the responsibilities, the temptations, and the rewards of men of let- ters. Reviewed in The New Englander, April, 1844, ii. 330-3. 1844. Willis Hall. An address delivered August 14, 1844 before the Society of Phi Beta Kappa in Yale College. New Haven. B. L. Hamlen. 1844. 8vo, pp. 32. On the productiveness of modern learning, and on utility as a motive and a rule of human conduct. 1846. Daniel Dewey Barnard. Man and the state, social and political. An address, delivered before the Connecticut Alpha, of the Phi Beta Kappa at Yale College, New Haven, August 19, 1846. New Haven. Printed by B. L. Hamlen. 1846. 8vo, PP- 51- 1847. Simeon North. Anglo-Saxon literature. An oration, before the Connecticut Alpha of the Phi Beta Kappa, New Haven, August i8th, 1847. Utica. Roberts, S. & C. 1847. 8vo, pp. 31- On the literature of the Anglo-Saxon race. 1848. "Charles Brickett Haddock. The patriot scholar. An oration pronounced before the Phi Beta Kappa at Yale College, New Haven, August 16, 1848. Published by request of the So- ciety. New Haven. B. L. Hamlen. 1848. 8vo, pp. 24. 1849. AsHBEL Smith. An oration pronounced before the Connecticut Alpha of the Phi Beta Kappa at Yale College, August 15, 1849. Published by request of the Society. New Haven. B. L. Hamlen. 1849. 8vo, pp. 32. On the permanent and unchanging identity of the human race. 1850. John. Whiting Andrews. An oration pronounced be- 486 The Phi Beta Kappa Key January fore the Connecticut Alpha of the Phi Beta Kappa at Yale Col- lege, New Haven, August 14, 1850. Published by request of the Society. New Haven. B. L. Hamlen. 1850. 8vo, pp. 48. On the characteristics of the last half century. 1851. Daniel Lord. On the extra-professional influence of the pulpit and the bar. An oration in New Haven, before the Phi Beta Kappa Society, of Yale College, at their anniversary meet- ing, July 30, 185 1. New York. S. S. Chatterton, Printer. 1851. 8vo, pp. 20. 1853. 'Henry Boynton Smith. An address on the problem of the philosophy of history, before the Phi Beta Kappa Society of Yale College, July 27, 1853. Philadelphia. 1854. 8vo, pp. 30. 1854. William Henry Seward. Address before the Phi Beta Kappa at Yale College, July 26, 1854. New Haven : Printed by B. L. Hamlen, Printer to Yale College. 1854. 8vo, pp. 27. On the forces and tendency of the republic. Reprinted in his Works, Boston, Houghton, Mifflin & Co., 1884, 8vo, iv. [160] -178. An extract in George E. Baker, Life, New York, Redfield, 1855,. 8vo, pp. [2911-295. Com- ment in same, p. 169. 1859. William Strong. American legislation. 1862. Charles Tracy. The true and the false. An oration, by Charles Tracy, Esq. ; also The Stars and Stripes, a poem, by Rev. Charles D. Helmer ; pronounced before the Phi Beta Kappa Society, at Yale College, July 30, 1862. Published by the So- ciety. New Haven : Printed by E. Hayes. 1862. 8vo, pp. 47. The oration fills pp. 1-22. 1866. Andrew Dickson White. The most bitter foe of nations, and the way to its permanent overthrow. An address delivered before the Phi Beta Kappa Society, at Yale College, July 25, 1866. New Haven: Thomas H. Pease. 1866. 8vo, pp. 36. Reviewed in The New Englander, October, 1866, xxv. 758-60. 1868. Joseph Parrish Thompson. How to build a nation. An oration before the Phi Beta Kappa Society, at Yale College, July 22d, 1868. New Haven. Thomas J. Stafford. 1868. 8vo, pp. 30. 1869. Emory Washburne. The college as an element of the state. An oration pronouncad before the * B K Society of Yale College, July 21, 1869. New Haven: Published by the Society. 1870. 8vo, pp. 21. 1919 A Phi Beta Kappa Bibliography 487 1875. Theodore Dwight Woolsey. An address on the re- lations of honor to poHtical life, delivered before the Society of the Phi Beta Kappa of Yale College, July i, 1875. New Haven. 1875. 8vo. 1886. Daniel Coit Oilman. See Harvard Orations and Ad- dresses, 1886. 1887. Theodore Dwight. What a Yale man ought to be. 8vo, pp. 29. 1887. Daniel Henry Chamberlain. Education at the South. Address of D. H. Chamberlain, of New York, before the Yale Chapter of the Phi Beta Kappa, at Linonia Hall, New Haven, Conn., February 9, 1887. New York. Evening Post Job Print. [1887.] 8vo, pp. 26. Cover-title. 1899. William Oraham Sumner. The conquest of the United States by Spain. A lecture before the Phi Beta Kappa Society of Yale University, January 16, 1899. Boston. Estes & Co. 1899. 8vo, pp. 32. Praised in The Dial, Oct. 16, 1899, xxvii. 267. 1906. Hanns Oertel. The quality of scholarship. An ad- dress at the annual dinner. In The Yale Alumni Weekly, May 16, 1906, XV. [721]. 1907. Tracy Peck. Allocutio habita inter convivium sol- lemne Societatis Phi Beta Kappa Yalensis in hospitio Neo-Por- tuensi a. d. xv. Kal. Aprilis mcvii. 1908. WooDROw Wilson. The training of intellect. [An address at the dinner, March 18.] In The Yale Alumni Weekly, March 25, 1908, xvii. [637]-[639]. Also in John Milton Berdan, John Richie Schulz, and Hewette Elwell Joyce, Moiern essays. New York, Macmillan, 1915, 8vo, pp. 349-58. William Oraham., Sumner. The early days of the Society and what it means in Yale life. [An address at the dinner, March 18.] In The Yale Ahimni Weekly, March 25, 1908, xvii. [639]- 640. Arthur Twining Hadley. Oermany and America and the universities of the two countries. [An address at the dinner, March 18.] In The Yale Alumni Weekly, March 25, 1908, xvii. 640. 1911. Bernadotte Perrin. Rooks. Delivered at the 131st 488 The Phi Beta Kappa Key January annual dinner, February zy. In The Key, March, 191 1, i. 3. 25-27. Poems 1822. James Gates Percival began his Prometheus II as a Phi Beta Kappa poem to be presented at the Yale meeting of this year ; but his appointment was subsequently changed at his own request to that of orator. Cf. Ward's Life, p. 116. 1825. James Gates Percival. Poem delivered before the Connecticut Alpha of the Phi Beta Kappa Society, September 13, 1825. Published at the request of the Society. Boston. Richardson and Lord. 1826. 8vo, pp. 40. "Of Mind, and its mysterious agencies, And most of all its high cre- ative power." Reprinted (The mind) in his Poetical works, Boston, Tick- nor and Fields, 1865, ii. 126-55. Reviewed by Henry Ware, Jr., in The North American Review, April, 1826, xxii. 317-33; reprinted by Julius H. Ward in his Life and letters, Boston, 1866, pp. 239-41, cf. pp. 258-9. Reviewed by W. C. Bryant in The United States Review, March, 1826; reprinted by Ward in his Life and letters, pp. 237-g. Noticed in The Connecticut Herald, Sept. 20, 1825. See also Ward, Life, pp. 116, 210, 215, 222-9, 233-9. 1826. James Gordon. Brooks. Anniversary poem delivered at New Haven, Conn., before the Connecticut Alpha of the Phi Beta Kappa, September 12, 1826. New York. Carvill. 1826. 8vo, pp. 28. On the nature and haunts of genius. 1832. Alanson Hamlin. Poem on slavery. Reviewed in The New England Magazine, September, 1832, iii. 259. 1839. Grenville Mellen. Our years. Read August 20. 8vo, pp. 52. 1845. Elizur Wright, Jr. A poem delivered before the Phi Beta Kappa Society in Yale College, August 20, 1845. New Haven : Printed by B. L. Hamlen. . 1846. 8vo, pp. 20. 1846. Daniel March. A poem delivered before the Phi Beta Kappa Society in Yale College, August 19, 1846. New Haven. B. L. Hamlen. 1846. 8vo, pp. 12. On human life as a conflict. 1847. Luzerne Ray. The- coming age. A poem pronounced before the Phi Beta Kappa Society of Yale College, August 18, 1874. New Haven. B. L. Hamlen. 1847. 8vo, pp. 16. 1919 A Phi Beta Kappa Bibliography 489 Reviewed in The New Englander, April, 1848, vi. 311. 1850. Oliver Wendell Holmes. Astraea: or The balance of illusions. A poem delivered before the Phi Beta Kappa So- ciety of Yale College, August 14, 1850. PubHshed by request of the Society. Boston. Ticknor & Fields. 1850. i2mo, pp. 39. Never reprinted as written, except in his Poems, London, 1852. In the Riverside Edition broken up into Spring, The study, The bells, Non-resist- ance, The moral bully, The mind's diet. Our limitations. See Ives's Bibliog- raphy, pp. 129-30. Reviewed in The New Englander, November, 1850, viii. 656. See William E. A. Axon, The Library, October, 191 1, 3d ser. ii. 356-62. 1851. Alfred Billings Street. The Pilgrim spirit. A poem, delivered before the Connecticut Alpha of the Phi Beta Kappa Society at Yale College, New Haven, July 30, 185 1. New Haven. B. L. Hamlen. 1851. 8vo, pp. 16. Not reprinted in his Poems, New York, 1867. 1858. William Allen Butler. Two millions. [Delivered July 28.] New York. D. Appleton & Co. 1858. i6mo, PP- 93- Two editions were also published by Sampson Low, Son & Co., London, 1858, i6mo, pp. 96. 1861. Champion Bissell. A poem pronounced before the Phi Beta Kappa Society at Yale College, July 24, 1861. New Haven. Hayes. 1861. i2mo, pp. 18. 1862. Charles D. Helmer. The Stars and Stripes, Deliver- ed July 30. See above under Orations and Addresses, 1862. The poem fills pp. 23-47. , 1868. George Thurlow Dole. Yale revisited. A poem: before the Phi Beta Kappa of Yale College, July 22d, 1868. Pub- lished by the Society. New York. Thomas J. Stafford. 1869. 8vo, pp. 26. 1869. Edward Rowland Sill. The clocks of Gnoster-Town ; or, Truth by majority. A poem, pronounced before the Phi Beta Kappa Society of Yale College, July 21, 1869. New Haven: Published by the Society. 1870. 8vo, pp. 11. General [Lyman Hotchkiss Bagg.] In his Four years at Yale, New Haven, Charles C. Chatfield & Co., 1871, 8vo, pp. 223-35. 490 Tlic Phi Beta Kappa Key January Ebenezer Baldwin. In his Annals of Yale College, New Haven, H. Howe, 1831, 8vo, p. 234. Charles AIark Gill. The Phi Beta Kappa at Yale. In The Key, October, 1912, i. 9. 4-21. Phi Beta Kappa at Yale. In The Key, ]\Iarch, 1911, i. 3. 23-24. Faron W. Wakefield. See Ph. B. K. Publ, N. S. 3, p. [3]. The Yale Alumni Weekly. Phi Beta Kappa: an attempt to interest freshmen in its work. January 13, 1904, xiii. 376-7. Many other notes are scattered throughout the files of the Weekly, e. g. xiii. 492, 780-1, xiv. 6gi-2, xv. 422, 507, 509, 580, 798-9, xvi. 521, 591, xvii. 490, xviii. 517, 533, 640, 657, 666-7, 988-9. For the other volumes, consult the index. Yale Chapter Phi Be"ta Kappa. Constitution, room regulations, suggestions. 1898. 8vo, pp. 8. The Yale chapter's 1320! banquet. In The Key, October, 1912, i. 9. 27-9. Condensed from The Yale News, March S, 1912. The Yale Courant. The place of Phi Beta Kappa in academic undergraduate life. Quoted in The Yale Alumni Weekly, March 25, 1908, xvii. 647-8. . Recognition of scholarship. February, 1909. Reprinted in The Yale Alumni Weekly, Feb. 10, 1909, xviii. 515-16. See also The Key ii. 3. 155-6, 11. 543, iii. 5. 236. Volume 4 Number 3 Contents Page 147 John Marshall ... The Beta Chapter of Washington . .157 Theodore Roosevelt — A Poem .163 Some Phi Beta Kappa Administrative Problems 164 The Nu Chapter of New York . . 180 A Phi Beta Kappa BibUography .193 In Memoriam . . . . .196 Phi Beta Kappa New* and Notes . . 202 MARCH, 1920 The Phi Beta Kappa Fraternity DIRECTORY OF CHAPTERS With the number In the order of establishment, the Secrtary, and the date. 12 Alabama — ^Alpha of Alabama, University, Prof. J. J. Doster, A. M 1851 64 Allegheny — Eta of Pennsylvania, Meadville, Prof. "W. A. Elliott, L. H. D 1902 13 Amherat — Beta of Massachusetts, Amherst, Prof. H. dePorest Smith, Ph. D..1853 89 Bates — Gamma of Maine, Lewiston, Prof. Arthur N. Leonard, Ph. D 1917 78 Beloit — Beta of Wisconsin, Beloit, Prof. Erastus G. Smith, Ph. D 1911 46 Boston — Epsilon of Massachusetts, Boston, Ada A. Cole, Ph. B 1899 6 Bowdoin — Alpha of Maine, Brunswick, Gerald G. Wilder, A. B 1825 7 Brown — ^Alpha of Rhode Island, Providence, Prof. James Q. Dealey, Ph. D..1830 43 California — Alpha of California, Berkeley, Prof. Harold L. Bruce, Ph. D 1893 82 Carleton — Beta of Minnesota, Northfleld, Prof. Curvin H. Gingrich, Ph. D....1914 51 Chicago — Beta of Illinois, Chicago, Prof. Henry W. Prescott, A. B 1899 48 Cincinnati — Delta of Ohio, Cincinnati, Miss Helen A. Stanley, 3576 Zumstein Ave 1899 39 Colby — Beta of Maine, Waterville, Prof. J. William Black, Ph. D 1896 24 Colgate — Eta of New York, Hamilton, Prof. F. C. French, Ph. D 1878 55 Colorado University — ^Alpha of Colorado, Boulder, Prof. F. Raraaley, Ph. D....1904 59 Colorado College — Beta of Colorado, Colorado Springs, Roger H. Motten, A. M.1904 21 Columbia — Delta of New York, New York City, Frederick W. Scholz, A. M 1869 25 Cornell — Theta of New York, Ithaca, Leon A. Hausman, Ph. D 1882 4 Dartmouth — Alpha of New Hampshire, Hanover, Harold G. Rugg, A. B 1787 74 Dcnison — Theta of Ohio, Granville, Prof. Bunyan Spencer, B. D 1911 29 De Pauw — ^Alpha of Indiana, Greencastle, Prof. Joseph P. Naylor, M. S 1889 26 Dickinson — ^Alpha of Pennsylvania, Carlisle, Prof. H. M. Stephens, Ph. D 1887 69 Franklin and Marshall — Theta of Pennsylvania, Lancaster, Prof. W. E. Wels- gerber. Ph. M 1908 81 Oeorgia — ^Alpha of Georgia, Athens, Prof. W. D. Hooper, A. M 1914 64 Gaucher — Beta of Maryland, Baltimore, Miss Marion Janney, A. B 1905 70 drinnell — Beta of Iowa, Grinnell, Miss Inez Henley, A. B 1908 22 Hamilton — Epsilon of New York, Clinton, Prof. J. D. Ibbotson, Jr., A. M 1870 3 Harvard — ^Alpha of Massachusetts, Cambridge, Prof. William G. Howard, A. M.1781 44 Haverford — Zeta of Pennsylvania, Haverford, Prof. L. W. Reid, Ph. D 1890 23 Hobart — Zeta of New York, Geneva, Prof. Willis P. Woodman, Ph. D 1871 92 Hunter — Nu of New York, New York, Prof. Luise Haessler, A. B 1920 67 Illinois — Gamma of Illinois, Urbana, Prof. Jacob Zeitlin, Ph. D 1907 75 Indiana — Gamma of Indiana, Bloomington, Prof. Guido Stempel, A. M 1911 36 Iowa — Alpha of Iowa, Iowa City, L. C. Raiford 1895 37 Johns Hopkins — ^Alpha of Maryland, Baltimore, Prof. Joseph T. Slngewald, Ph. D 1896 31 Kansas — Alpha of Kansas, Lawrence, Prof. John Ise, Ph. D 1890 14 Kenyon — Beta of Ohio, Gambler, Prof. Raymond D. Cahall, Ph. D 1858 87 Knox — Delta of Illinois, Galesburg, Prof. J. L. Conger, Ph. D 1917 32 Lafayette — Gamma of Pennsylvania, Easton, Prof. Wm. S. Hall, Ph. D 1890 79 Lawrence — Gamma of Wisconsin, Appleton, Mrs. Adeline Link, Ph. D 1914 27 Lehigh — Beta of Pennsylvania, South Bethlehem, Prof. C. L. Thomburg, Ph. D.1887 16 Marietta — Gamma of Ohio, Marietta, Miss Mary L. Heller, A. B 1860 77 Miami — Iota of Ohio, Oxford, Miss Grace G. Glasgow, A. B 1911 68 Michigan — Alpha of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Prof. John W. Scholl, Ph. D 1907 19 Middlebury — Beta of Vermont, Middlebury, Prof. Chas. B. Wright, Litt. D 1863 35 Minnesota — ^Alpha of Minnesota, Minneapolis, Miss Clara Hankey, A. B 1892 63 Missouri — Alpha of Missouri, Columbia, Prof. George I. Dale, Ph. D 1901 iConcluded on third page of cover) A BIBLIOGRAPHY OF PHI BETA KAPPA By Prof. Clark S. Northup, Cornell '93 (Concluded from Vol. in, Page 490) PHI BETA KAPPA IN ATLANTA Organized in 191 3 Has published nothing. THE PHI BETA KAPPA ASSOCIATION OF BEIRUT, SYRIA Organized December 9, 1912 General See The Key, Jan., 1913, i. 10. 43-4. THE PHI BETA KAPPA CLUB OF BUFFALO Organized December 2, 1909 Orations and Addresses 1919. Alexander Schwarcmann. The present state of Russia. Delivered February 15. In The Illustrated Buffalo Ex- press, February 15, 1919, p. 42. Reprinted in The Key, May, 1919, iii. S72-g, under the title, The Russia of the last Quarter-Century, with Special Reference to Bolshevism. General See Ph. B. K. Publ, N. S. 10, last p. : The Key, March, 1915, ii. 356, March, 1917, iii. 135, March, 1919, iii. 565. THE PHI BETA KAPPA ASSOCIATION OF CLEVE- LAND Organized March 20," 1909 General Clarence P. Bill. See Ph. B. K. Publ, N. S. 8, p. 23. See also Ph. B. K. Publ, N. S. 10, last page. 193 194 The Phi Beta Kappa Key March THE PHI BETA KAPPA ASSOCIATION IN THE DIS- TRICT OF COLUMBIA Organized December 6, 1913 Catalogues 1914. Register, etc. i6mo, pp. 20. 1917. Register, etc. i6nio, pp. [22]. Orations and Addresses 1914. James L. Slayden. Observations in Mexico Before the Revolution. Delivered March 16. An abstract was printed, one 8vo page, as No. 2 of the Association's Abstracts. 1914. Lieut. Clarence N. Hinkamp, U. S. N. Submarines and torpedoes. Delivered November 20. An -abstract was print- ed, one 8vo page, as No. 3 of the Association's Abstracts. Poems 191 6. Percy McKaye. School. Read February 26. In his The present hour, New York, Macmillan, 1914, 8vo, pp. 81-8. Reprinted in his Poems and plays. New York, Macmillan, 1916, Part i, pp. 81-8. General Frederik Atherton Fernald. The Phi Beta Kappa Associa- tion in the District of Columbia. In The Key, January, 1914, ii. 90-1. See also The Key, October, 1914, ii. 256-7, May, 1915, ii. 403, May, 1919, iii. 633, October, 1919, iv. 59. PHI BETA KAPPA IN INDIANAPOIS Organized in 1912 Has published nothing. PHI BETA KAPPA IN KANKAKEE, ILLINOIS Organized in 1912. Has published nothing. 1920 A Phi Beta Kappa Bibliography 195 THE PHI BETA KAPPA ASSOCIATION IN JAPAN Organized January 8, 19 14 General Ernest W. Clement, The Phi Beta Kappa Association in Japan. In The Key, January, 1915, ii. 277-9. The Japan Association at Tokyo. In The Key, March, 1914, ii- 135- See also The Key, March, 1917, iii. 136, October, 1917, iii. 235-6, January-March, 1918, iii. 319-20, October, 1918, iii. 397, March, 1919, iii. 566. THE PHI BETA KAPPA ASSOCIATION OF JERUSALEM Organized July 31, 1918 General John H. Finley. Perfume from the Orient. In The Key, October, 1919, iv. 50-52. See also The Key, January, 1919, iii. 500, May, 1919, iii. 632. PHI BETA KAPPA IN MAINE Organized Provisionally December 5, 1916 General See The Key, May, 1917, iii. 187-8. THE PHI BETA KAPPA ALUMNI IN MILWAUKEE Organized November 24, 1916 Catalogues 1918. Pp. 24. 75 members. General See The Key, October, 1918, iii. 398-9. THE PHI BETA KAPPA ASSOCIATION OF MONT- PELLIER, FRANCE Organized April i, 1919 General Amos M. Matthews. Phi Beta Kappa meeting in France. In The Key, October, 1919, iv. 60-1. 196 The Phi Beta Kappa Key March THE PHI BETA KAPPA ALUMNI IN NEW YORK Organized April 28, 1877 Catalogues 1888. i6mo, pp. 17. 1897. i6mo, pp. 48. 1906. i6mo, pp. 85. 1908. i6mo, pp. 108. Addresses 1879. Noah Porter. Science and sentiment. Delivered April 21. In Science and sentiment, with other essays, New York, 1882, pp. 9-37. 1882. Dexter A. Hawkins. Education in its relations to pauperism and crime. Delivered March 13. Printed under the title of The relation of education to wealth and morality, and to pauperism and crime'. Bridgeton, N. J. News Power Plant. 1883. 8vo, pp. [ii], 20. 1883. Benjamin N. Martin. Scientific philosophy of soci- ety. Delivered January 16. In The Journal of Christian Philos- ophy, 1883, ii. 250. 1884. John Krom Rees. The new standard time system. Delivered February 29. In The School of Mines Quarterly, Jan- uary, 1884, V. 136-9. Folding map. Reprinted in Knowledge May 16, 1884, v. 349-50. 1884. William Gilbert Davies. The law of mortmain in reference to investments in real estate by corporations. Delivered May 15. In his Papers and addresses. New York, 1907, pp. 175- 99. Reprinted from the Statement of the Mutual Life Insurance Company of New York. 1886. J. S. Newberry. The industrial arts as factors in civ- ilization. Delivered May 20. A partial summary, under the title, The industrial arts as factors in modern history, was print- ed in Science, May 16, 1884, iii. 597-9. 1888. Borden P. Bowne. The anatomy of atheism. Deliv- ered February 20. Printed under the title of The natural his- tory of atheism in The Andover Review, August, 1888, x. 169-82. 1888. Richmond Mayo-Smith. Restriction of immigration. Delivered May 10. In his Emigration and immigration, New- York, Scribner, 1890, chap. 12, pp. 266-83. Volume 4 Number 4 Contents Installation of the Beta of North Carolina Theodore Roosevelt — A Poem The Message of The Key Morning — A Poeni ... David Jayne Hill Edgar Addison Bancroft Col. Daniel Carroll Brent Robert Edwin Peary A Phi Beta Kappa Bibliography Meeting of the Phi Beta Kappa Senate In Memoriam .... Phi Beta Kappa News and Notes Page 211 226 227 234 235 238 239 240 245 251 254 266 MAY, 1920 IJ: The Phi Beta Kappa Fraternity DIRECTORY OF CHAPTERS With the number in the order of establishment, the Secretary, and the date. 12 Alabama — Alpha of Alabama, University, Prof. J. J. Doster, A. M 1851 64 Allegheny — Eta of Pennsylvania, Meadville, Prof. W. A. Elliott, L. H. D 1902 13 Amherst — Beta of Massachusetts, Amherst, Prof. H. deForest Smith, Ph. D..1853 89 Bates — Gamma of Maine, Lewiston, Prof. Arthur N. Leonard, Ph. D 1917 78 Beloit — Beta of "Wisconsin, Beloit, Prof. Brastus G. Smith, Ph. D 1911 46 Boston — ISpsilon of Massachusetts, Boston, Ada A. Cole, Ph. B 1899 6 Boiodoin— Alpha of Maine, Brunswick, Gerald G. Wilder, A. B 1825 7 Brown — Alpha of Rhode Island, Providence, Prof. James Q. Dealey, Ph. D..1830 43 California — Alpha of California, Berlceley, Prof. Harold L. Bruce, Ph. D 1893 82 Carleton — Beta of Minnesota, Northfleld, Prof. Curvin H. Gingrich, Ph. D,...1914 51 Chicago — Beta of Illinois, Chicago, Prof. Henry W. Prescott, A. B 1899 48 Cincinnati^— Delta, of Ohio, Cincinnati, Miss Helen A. Stanley, A. M., 3576 Zumstein Ave 1899 39 Colby — Beta of Maine, Waterville, Prof. J. William Black, Ph. D 1896 24 Colgate — Eta of New York, Hamilton, Prof. F. C. French, Ph. D 1878 56 Colorado University — Alpha of Colorado, Boulder, Prof. F. Ramaley, Ph. D....1904 59 Colorado College — Beta of Colorado, Colorado Springs, Roger H. Motten, A. M.1904 21 Colum,bia — Delta of New York, New York City, Frederick W. Soholz, A. M 1869 26 Cornell — Theta of New York, Ithaca, Leon A. Hausman, Ph. D 1882 4 Dartmouth — Alpha of New Hampshire, Hanover, Harold G. Rugg, A. B 1787 74 Denison — Theta of Ohio, Granville, Prof. Bunyan Spencer, B. D 1911 29 De Pauw — ^Alpha of Indiana, Greeneastle, Prof. Joseph P. Naylor, M. S 1889 26 Dickinson — Alpha of Pennsylvania, Carlisle, Prof. H. M. Stephens, Ph. D 1887 69 Franklin and Marshall — Theta of Pennsylvania, Lancaster, Prof. W. E. Weis- gerber, Ph. M 1908 81 Georgia — Alpha of Georgia, Athens, Prof. W. O. Payne, Ph. D 1914 64 Ooucher — Beta of Maryland, Baltimore, Miss Marion Janney, A. B 1906 70 Grinnell — Beta of Iowa, Grinnell, Miss Inez Henley, A. B 1908 22 Hamilton — Epsilon of New York, Clinton, Prof. J. D. Ibbotson, Jr., A. M. ...1870 3 Harvard — ^Alpha of Massachusetts, Cambridge, Prof. William G. Howard, A. M.1781 44 Haverford — Zeta of Pennsylvania, Haverford, Prof. L. W. Reid, Ph. D 1890 23 Hobart — Zeta of New York, Geneva, Prof. Willis P. Woodman, Ph. D 1871 92 Hunter — Nu of New York, New York, Prof. Luise Haessler, A, B 1920 67 Illinois — Gamma of Illinois, Urbaina, Prof. Jacob Zeitlin, Ph. D 1907 75 Indiana — Gamma of Indiana, Bloomington, Prof. Guido Stempel, A. M 1911 36 Iowa — Alpha of Iowa, Iowa City, L. C. Raiford 1896 37 Johns Hopkins — ^Alpha of Maryland, Baltimore, Prof. Joseph T. Singewald, Ph. D 1896 31 Kansas — Alpha of Kansas, Lawrence, Prof. John Ise, Ph. D 1890 14 Kenyan — Beta of Ohio, Gambler, Prof. Raymond D. Cahall, Ph. D 1858 87 Knox — Delta of Illinois, Galesburg, Prof. J. L. Conger, Ph. D 1917 32 Lafayette — Gamma of Pennsylvania, Easton, Prof. Wm. S. Hall, Ph. D 1890 79 Lawrence — Gamma of Wisconsin, Ajrpleton, Mrs, Adeline Link, Ph. D 1914 27 Lehigh — Beta of Pennsylvania, South Bethlehem, Prof. C. L. Thomburg, Ph. D.1887 16 Marietta — Gamma of Ohio, Marietta, Miss Mary L. Heller, A. B 1860 77 Miami — Iota of Ohio, Oxford," Miss Grace G. Glasgow, A, B 1911 68 Michigan — Alpha of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Prof. John W. SchoU, Ph. D 1907 19 Middlebury — Beta of Vermont, Middlebury, Prof. Chas. B. Wright, Lltt. D 1863 "Z Minnesota — Alpha of Minnesota, Minneapolis, Miss Clara Hankey, A. B 1892 63 Missouri — Alpha of Missouri, Columbia, Miss Emma Cauthorn, A. B 1901 (.Concluded on third page of cover) A BIBLIOGRAPHY OF PHI BETA KAPPA By Prof. Clark S. Northup, Cornell '93 (Concluded from page 196) 1889. Henry Codman Potter. The place of the scholar in American life. Delivered March i. In The Forum, July, 1889, yii. 467-80. See also Harvard Orations and Addresses, 1890. 1890. John Fiske. Thomas Hutchinson, last royal governor of Massachusetts. Delivered March 24. In his Essays, historical and literary, New York, Macmillan, 1902, i. 1-51. 1890. Augustus C. Merriam. Telegraphing among the an- cients. Delivered May 26. Cambridge. J. Wilson & Son. 1890. 8vo, pp. 32. Papers of the Archaeological Institute of America, Classical Series, iii. no. i. 1891. Thomas Randolph Price. Hedda Gabler — Ibsen's dramatic method as compared vifith Shakespeare's. Delivered June 2. In Shakespewiana, January, 1892, ix. i. 1892. Elisha Benjamin Andrews. The social plaint. De- livered May 23. In The New World, June, 1892, i. 201-16. Reprinted in Representative Ph. B. K. orations, Boston, 1915, pp. 216-32. 1893. RossiTER Johnson. Turning points in the American Civil War. Delivered February 6. In Annual report of the American Historical Asso'ciation for the year 1894, Washing- ton,i89S, pp. 39-53. 1894. WooDROw Wilson. A literary politician [Walter Bagehot]. Delivered November 22. In his Mere literature and other essays, New York, 1894, pp. 69-103. Also in The Atlantic Monthly, November, 1895, Ixxvi. 668-80. 1895. William R. George. The children's republic. De- livered June 3. Substantially reproduced in The Junior Republic^ an address delivered before the Society of Mayflower Descend- ants 1892 80 Pomona — Gamma , of XIalifprnia, Clariemont, Miss Grace E. Berry, Ph. D 1914 49 Prtnoeton— Beta of New Jersey, Princeton, Prof. Edmund Y.Robhins, Ph. D...1899 84 2JodeKjy«— Iota of Massachusetts, Cambridge, Caroline B, Shaw, A. & 1914 * 8> Sandoliih-ilfacon— Delta of "Virginia, Lynchburg, Prof. Herbert C. Lipscomb, Ph. D 191J 28 Roahemtvr — Iota of New Tork, Rochester, Prof. John R. Slater, Ph. D •J;?*'' 20 But^jcrs-^Alpha of New 'Jersey, New Brunswick, Prof. A. C.^ deRegt, Ph. D. . . .1869 66 Snftth — ^Zeta of Massachusetts, Northampton, Prof, Laura S. Clarkr A. M 191)4 57 S{oi»t/or(J— Beta of California, Stanford'tJniversity, O. L. Bllidtt, A M.. ....,.> .1904 ' 60 -St! X/Owr«nce^Laiifbda of New York, Canton, Prof.vRobt. D. Ford, M. S... .. 1899 41 Swarthhmore — Epsilon of Pennsylvani?., Syrairthmorfe, Mrs. Helen B. S. Brin- '' ton, A Mt aiedJa, Pa .\ .. .1896 40 Syracuse — ^kappa of New York, Syracuse, Prof. W. H. Metzler, Ph. D...;..1896 63 , TeirosTrrAIplia of_ Texas, Austin, Anna Belle May, A. B.. !....'.. 1905 8 Trtnity — Beta of Ct. Hartford, Prof.*ArthUr Adams, Ph. D. .'. ■ .1845 33 Tit/ts*-Delta of Massachusetts, Tufts College, Prof. W. R. Ransom, A. M....1892' 72 Tulane — ^Alpha of Louisiana, New Orleans, Prof.' Imogen ' Stone, A. ,M 1909 6 Union — ^Alpha of New York, Schenectady, Prof. Morton C. Stewart, Pti. D^. . . .1817 52 VanderWZt— Alpha of Tehnefeee, Nashville, Trof. ^. T, McGill, Ph. D....... 1901 ''47 Tosaar— ^Mu of New "S^^kl Poughkeepsie, Elizabeth W. Amen, A. B. ....'..;. .1899 ' 11 Vermont — ^Alpha of Vermont, Burlington, Mary Russell Bates, Ph. B. 1848 71 Vtrijrinta>— Beta Of Virginia, Uniyerslty, Prof.^ohii J, Luck, Pi. D. .......... .1909 42(Tt'a6dafc— Beta of Indiana, CraWfOrdsvHle, Prof . James H. . OsbornS A. M.'. ..1898 76 WasMngton and Lee-rT-aa.ram3, of Virginia, Lexington,; J. W. Kem,-Ph. D . .1911 83 WasWnfiton Stof e^-^Aft)ha,. of Washhieton, Seattle, Prof. F. M. Padelford, Ph. I>:1914 86 Washington Vnioersity^^^ta. of Missouri, St. Louis, Prof. Hunley W. Herring- ton, Ph. b. .^.. . i .........>....,-........ 1914 _ 60 WellesTey — Eta of Massachusetts, Wellesley, ProfT Alice Wa,lton, Ph. D...*.. 19,04 * Wesleyan — Gamma of Connecticut, Middletown, Prof. F. W. Nioolson, A. M..1846 10 Western Reserve — Alpha Of Ohio, Cleveland, Prof. Charles B. Gehlke, Ph. D,,1847 ! 73 west Vtromtd^-Alpha'^f Wfest, Vi^ginia, Morgantown, Prof. M. Strathers, Ph.D.i910 Ph. D .:.........:. .^, , . , , r . . . .1910 1 William am ifory-r^Alpha of Virginia, Williamsburg, JProf.,- John L. Hall, Ph. D..1776 17 Williams — Gamma of Massachusetts, WlUlamatoWn, Prof. Samuel B. Allen, A. M ^. . . .-. . .-. . . . . <. 1864 46 Wisconsin — ^Alpha'of Wisconsin, Madison, Prof. Bayard Q. Morgan, Pi. D 1899 3 YoZe-^Alpha of Coraiecticut, New Haven, Prof. HoHon A, Farr, !Ph.D 1780 /^ J. F. NEWMAN JEWELER New York Chicago Kansai City- San Franciico Announcement By . authority of the ' National Council of the United Chapters of Phi Beta Kappa', J. F. Newman, of 11 John-Street, New York, N. Y., has, been appointed sole official jeweler to the fraternity. All orders for keys should be sent to the office of the United Chapter&on order fonns which m^ay be secured froih chap- ter secretaries. Write your chap- ter for informationbefore ordering. ; OSCARM.VOORHEES,Sec'y. 350East 146th Street, NewYork.N.Y. ^ " ^ H*^^. -k^-i *.* '■y •*-■>? i si^