. The Kappa Sigma book; a manual of descriptive, historical, and statistical facts concerning the Kappa Sigma fraternity. enary, 1885); 12. Maine(Maine. 1886); 13. Ohio (Ohio Northern. 1886): 14. Pennsyl-vania (Swarthmore, 1888) : 15. South Carolina (South Carolina.[890) : 16. Arkansas (Arkansas. 1890) : 17. Michigan (Michigan,1892) ; 18. District of Columbia (George Washington—formerlyknown as Columbian—1892) : 19. New York (Cornell, 1892) ; 70 THE KAPPA SIGMA BOOK 20. Vermont (Vermont, 1893) ; 21. Kentucky (Bethel, 1894) ;22. Mississippi (Millsaps, 1895); 23. Nebraska (Nebraska,1897) ; 24. M


. The Kappa Sigma book; a manual of descriptive, historical, and statistical facts concerning the Kappa Sigma fraternity. enary, 1885); 12. Maine(Maine. 1886); 13. Ohio (Ohio Northern. 1886): 14. Pennsyl-vania (Swarthmore, 1888) : 15. South Carolina (South Carolina.[890) : 16. Arkansas (Arkansas. 1890) : 17. Michigan (Michigan,1892) ; 18. District of Columbia (George Washington—formerlyknown as Columbian—1892) : 19. New York (Cornell, 1892) ; 70 THE KAPPA SIGMA BOOK 20. Vermont (Vermont, 1893) ; 21. Kentucky (Bethel, 1894) ;22. Mississippi (Millsaps, 1895); 23. Nebraska (Nebraska,1897) ; 24. Missouri (William Jewell, 1897) ; 25. Rhode Island(Brown, 1898) ; 26. Wisconsin (Wisconsin, 1898) ; Califor-nia (Stanford, 1898) ; 28. New Hampshire (New Hampshire,1901); 29. Minnesota (Minnesota, 1901); 30. Colorado (Den-ver, 1902) ; 31. Iowa (Iowa, 1902) ; 32. Kansas (Baker, 1903) ;33. Washington (Washington, 1903); 34. Oregon (Oregon,1904) ; 35. Massachusetts (Massachusetts State, 1904) ; 36. Idaho(Idaho, 1905) ; 37. Oklahoma (Oklahoma, 1906). The Fraternity early observed the decadence of many of the old. KAPPA SIGMA HOUSE, MISSOURI sectarian colleges in the North, where fraternities in the past hadmost of their chapters, and shunned them. At the same time,she prophesied the splendid future of the state institutions—theresult of the congressional acts of 1862 and later—and otherinstitutions founded since the civil war. Fraternities of Northernorigin in these places had no more prestige due to the age oftheir chapters than did Kappa Sigma. The fraternity thus foundopportunities in the North and West similar to those she hadmet in the South—the best universities, and these not overcrowd-ed by Greek letter societies. At present in the leading seats ofAmerican educational progress—the state schools, colleges, and EXTENSION OF THE FRATERNITY universities—Kappa Sigma has a larger number of Chapters thanany other fraternity. Nearly fifty per cent of them are so l


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