. The Forester . Colors Purple and White /IbOttO Fin de Siecle fell-Rah! Rah! Rah!Zip! Boom! Zein!Fin de Siecle!Ninety-nine! ©fficers J. H McCUNE President R. E. Mathews Vice President R. B. Campbell Secretary J. H. Rheingans Treasurer W. J. Rice Sergeant-at-Arms , F. A Crandall . Corresponding Secretary S. E. Gruenstein .... Historian R. B. Dunn Poet 45 /IDembers W. JacksonD. S. WentworthS. E. GruensteinJ. J. JacksonJessamine E- BrittonIda SawyerMay H. RogersA. H. ColwellWilda SmithC. B. HossackCathrine GardnerVerne Hall O. H. KellerFannie HopkinsF. A. CrandallFlora B. McDonaldMiriam McNittBe


. The Forester . Colors Purple and White /IbOttO Fin de Siecle fell-Rah! Rah! Rah!Zip! Boom! Zein!Fin de Siecle!Ninety-nine! ©fficers J. H McCUNE President R. E. Mathews Vice President R. B. Campbell Secretary J. H. Rheingans Treasurer W. J. Rice Sergeant-at-Arms , F. A Crandall . Corresponding Secretary S. E. Gruenstein .... Historian R. B. Dunn Poet 45 /IDembers W. JacksonD. S. WentworthS. E. GruensteinJ. J. JacksonJessamine E- BrittonIda SawyerMay H. RogersA. H. ColwellWilda SmithC. B. HossackCathrine GardnerVerne Hall O. H. KellerFannie HopkinsF. A. CrandallFlora B. McDonaldMiriam McNittBeatrice TupperJ. E- KempCarl RankinJ. H. McCuneE. R. BrownR. B. CampbellElsie Gridley\V. J. Rice Jean S. Wood Lila Phelps J. W. Ramsey Josephine A. Byllesby Grace Coleman Daisy M. Bell R. E. Mathews R. B. Dunn J. H. Rheingans R. Huizenga S. B. Brearly R. H. Alcott k^^m^n. Ibistor^ of tbc Jfresbntan Class. ORE illustrious, undoubtedly, than all its prede-cessors, but, nevertheless, a great deal more modestand retiring, as well as entirely forgetful of itssuperior superiority over anything Lake ForestCollege has ever previously been entered by. Suchis a terse description of the class of 99. In viewof the aforesaid and above-mentioned modesty ourotherwise possibly brazen cheeks become suffusedwith a virginal blush as we start to tell the briefhistory of the so-called ninety and nine, and as aresult this account will be short, likewise sweet—as is the female portionof the class. The Freshmen of Lake Forest introduced themselves to the membersof the faculty last fall and immediately proceeded to business. Theirnumber was large and they were pretty as well as accomplished—that isto say, until they had studied mathematics for a month or two. Thenthey all looked care-worn—just as though they were in love, which^however, was not the case. A class party, given by the young women, a sleighr


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Keywords: ., bookauthorlakefore, bookcentury1800, bookdecade1890, bookyear1896