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L.Curiis.  I,,  s..  Eaton.    P.  L.  Schoellkopf.     E.J.  Xewkirk.        B.H.Smith.  E.B.Lehman.        E.S.Mason. 

K.  F.  Ball.        M.  C.  Shaw.  K.  H.  Storms.  A.  E.  Fairlie.         E.  H.  Moore.  A.  M.  Lister. 


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Contents. 


A  Guide  to  the  Opera     . 

A  Legende  of  Stisaunge  W'o.mmen 

A  Rose  of  Yesterday 

Ai.M !   Fire  !   Bang  !       .  .  . 

Ai.i.  IIaie  to  the   College    Beai'ti 

FIL  ..... 

Ax  Alpiiaiset  of  Celebrities  . 

Anti(|iities  .... 

Ballad         ..... 

Book  of  Snobs   .... 

Captains  Courageous 

Charge  of  the  Lightning   Maids 

In  the  Cheering-up  Bisiness    . 

Innocents  Abroad 

Les  Miserables 

« 
Little  Masterpieces 

Looking  Backward    . 


PAGE 

iiS 

57 
26 


•59 

13 
S7 

ss 

9' 

1  2  [ 

130 
102 
82 
5 
'3- 
1 1^ 


Master   Beg(}Ars 

Moon  Folk 

Que.st  of  the  Golden  Girl 

Qio  Vadis  .... 

Seats  of  the  Migiitv 

Sweet  Bells  out  of  Tune 

Tales  of  Unrest 

The      Adventi'res       of        1900 

Welleslevland  . 
The  Ba.ttle  of  the  Strong 
The  Choir  Ins'isihle 
The  Law  is  a  Ju.mui.e 
The  Occult  World 
What  All  the  World's  A-seeking 
When  All  the  Woods  are  Green 
Wise  and  Otherwise 


116 

145 
64 


27 
123 
loS 

,23 

95 
161 

74 
84 


Foreword. 


We,  the  Class  of  1900,  offer  to  a  sympathetic  world  this 
volume,— an  enthusiastic,  though  inadequate  account  of  our  starring 
tour  through  Wellesley,  with  sundry  remarks  upon  women  and 
things  that  have  marred  or  blessed  our  progress.  "We  speak 
truth,"  as  our  illustrious  predecessors  have  said,  "not  so  much 
as  we  would,  but  so  much  as  we  dare,"  and  the  public  may  read 
between  the  lines.  We  offer  no  apologies— indeed,  why  should  we.^ 
Read  for  yourselves  and  you  will  be  satished  with  what  we  have 
done   and   what   we   have   written. 


SEATS 


0 


^4> 


I^IEMTV 


PERH.VPS  our  loneliest  moments  were  those  when,  in  our  dear  okl  chapel,  we  used  to  gaze  back 
up  at  the  faculty  gallerx',  and.  after  craning  our  necks  even  to  the  breaking  of  stiff  linen  collars, 
make  out  an  indistinct  form  or  two  in  the  deep  gloom.  In  our  Freshman  days  only  those  of  us 
who  sat  upon  the  platform  could  really  enjoy  this  view,  and  then  it  is  possible  we  did  not  fully 
appreciate  our  jjrivileges.  Was  it,  perhaps,  that  our  young  eyes  were  too  busily  employed  watching 
those  other  stately  forms  which  filed  solemnlv  down  to  the  chairs  in  the  center?  However  that  may 
be,  it  was  onlv  when  we  got  to  be  Juniors,  and  sat  in  the  first  row  of  the  opposite  gallery,  that  we 
came  to  know  that  other  dark  corner  of  the  roof  like  a  well-beloved  book,  and  learned  to  pierce  the 
encircling  darkness  and  compute  the  ratio  of  vacant  and  occupied  chairs  above  to  occupied  and  vacant 
chairs  below.  Then  it  was  that  we  could  realize  how  grateful  our  instructors  were  for  that  shadowy 
gloom.  And  vet,  if  we  had  not  many  of  those  dear  faces  to  gaze  upon,  yonder,  at  least,  were  their 
seats,  dimly  outlined  and  indistinct  from  where  we  sat,  but  fraught  with  meaning  to  most  of  us. 
There,  as  we  sat  silentlv  imder  the  shadow  of  the  great  organ  at  our  left,  we  used  to  meditate  sadly 
on  those  empty  chairs. 


Our  minds  went  back  to  those  far-off  da_vs  of  our  Freshman  year,  when  we  reguhirly  wore  golf 
capes  to  Math,  class  to  keep  from  shivering,  and  when  a  glance  from  her  of  the  polyhedron  and  the 
aggravatingly  increasing  increment  //  froze  the  veiy  blood  in  our  tender  veins.  But  even  those  hours 
of  suffering  faded  away  as  we  recalled  moments  of  ignominy  spent  in  Room  N  before  the  English 
scepter.  We  could  use  our  pointers  without  flinching  now,  and  we  had  learned  to  do  without  our 
golf  capes  ;  in  short,  a  new  joy  had  come  into  our  lives,  and  we  could  now  accost  even  the  Seniors 
with  a  sang-froid  which  was  only  to  be  attained  in  Power  through  Repose.  And  yet  our  hours  were 
not  all  of  boldness.  How  we  cowered  down  in  our  chairs  and  grew  rosy  red  with  shame  as  those 
gentle  tones  carried  down  to  us  the  too  familiar  words  of  our  latest  literary  production — and  not  "  fur 
good"  !  Moreover,  when  we  did  forgive  her  that  injury  even  so  far  as  to  attend  one  of  her  concilia- 
tory teas,  why  did  Fate  will  that  the  only  parting  words  which  came  to  our  lips  were,  "Such  a 
perfectly  lovely  time  !  " 

As  the  words  of  the  Dean  floated  up  to  us  concerning  the  deeds  of  the  wonderful  children  of 
Israel,  hours  spent  with  those  versed  in  the  sacred  lore  came  before  us.  Their  chairs  were  there — 
yes;  and  filled.  On  the  whole  we  were  cheerfully  inclined  toward  those  upright  figures.  Perhaps 
they  may  have  looked  stern  when  we  spoke  of  the  "serious  place  in  the  world's  history,"  and  the 
"age-long  security  of  the  desert."  I\'rhaps  they  may  have  called  us  stupitl  when  we  puzzled  our 
brains  over  the  words  "Age  of  Solomon  "  on  the  examination  paper  ;  for  how  were  we  to  know  wliat 
precise  period  of  the  gentleman's  career  was  referred  to  ?  Perhaps  they  may  have  turned  us  to  account 
for  continually  confusing  the  Apocryphal  with  the  Apocalypse.  But  I  have  my  doubts  whether 
they  did  not  enjoy  all  these  lilunders,  and  crack  huge  jokes  o\cr  them  for  their  own  diversion  and 
table  conversation;   else  why  should  the  same  pitfalls  have  been  laid  for  each  succeeding  class? 

More  empty  chairs  ;  more  recollections.  We  expected  to  go  abroad  sometime  in  our  lives,  and 
used  to  file  nervously  into  Room  O  with  our  Lesebuchs  or  our  Chardenals  and  offer  up  devout  prayers 
that  our  weak  spot  might  yet  be  hidden  a  little  longer,  for  that  once  exposed  all  hope  was  gone. 
And  we  needed  all  the  hope  we  could  get  those  days,  with  that  ever-present  nightmare — two  courses 
in  science  attending  us.  What  cared  we  for  the  construction  of  the  yellow  dandelion  'i  Pistils,  petals, 
stamens — all  tasted  the  same  to  us  when,  mashed  into  a  green  pulp,  the\  were  served  daily  for  dinner. 
As  for  the  soul  of  the  flower,  we  could  read  all  about  that  in  2  Chronicles.  Those  were  times,  I 
regret  to  say,  when  we  did  not  properly  make  use  of  our  opportunities.  There  were  even  periods 
when   we  could   have  willingly  allowed  the   department  of  Physics  and  Chemistrv  to  put  on  liroiv/i 


sackcloth  and  ashes,  and  live  in  the  basement  of  the  Chemistry  Building  for  the  rest  of  its  natural  and 
artificial  life.  As  for  Latin  and  Greek  and  Philology,  their  chairs  were  all  there;  was  that  not 
enough  ?  The  recollection  of  those  dry  morsels  of  wit  gleaned  from  Horace  and  Tacitus  was  too  much 
for  even  ovu-  most  humorous  mooils.  W'e  turned  with  a  sigh  to  the  gentle  sympathy  of  that  one  who 
told  us,  as  Freshmen,  how  many  times  to  yawn  before  going  to  bed,  and  how  many  blankets  were 
needed  for  a  cold  night.  It  w^as  maintained  by  some  ungrateful  ones  that  this  was  going  a  little  too 
far;  but  what  might  have  become  of  our  precious  healths  later  in  our  college  career,  when  literature 
courses  dwindled  down  to  not  more  than  eight  \olumes  of  Dickens  per  recitation? 

Even  then,  in  the  pride  and  lUihh  of  Juniority,  we  were  filing  regularly  to  Lectin-e  Room  I, 
where  Professor  James  or  Professor  Titchener,  or,  mayhap,  the  eminent  and  transparent  Professor 
Hcjffding,  was  revealing  his  pages  to  us  in  a  great  wave  of  light.  Those  were  times  when  our 
correspondence  gained  way,  even  if  the  great  wave  of  light  did  not,  or  when  we  had  time  enotigh 
to  meditate  on  a  coming  special   topic   in   French  while  our  worthy  instructor  studied  her  lesson. 

Far  back  in  the  darkest  corner  of  that  dark  corner  a  little  group  of  chairs  by  themselves — 
the  seats  of  History  and  Economics.  Why  were  the  owners  not  in  chapel.'  Why  did  the  chairs 
themselves  seem  almost  to  hide  away  from  view  ever  since  that  June  when  it  became  an  open 
secret  that  the  sixty-page  final  papers  (not  guiltless  of  bringing  dark  circles  under  our  eyes  and  a 
suspicion  of  gray  on  our  temples)  were  all  returned  on  the  \ery  afternoon  of  tlie  day  they 
were  passed  in?  How  we  wrinkled  our  brows  then  as  we  wondered  how  one  even-be-he-or-she- 
marvelous  instructor  with  two  classes  of  twenty-five  each  could  read  and  correct  thirty  hundred 
large,  closely-written  pages  in  five  hours'  time,  with  or  without  luncheon  1  But  wonderful  things 
were  happening  constantly  then,  and  some  of  them  were  sad  as  well.  How  this  reflection  called 
up  to  us  the  remembrance  of  that  course  in  Geology  (no  lab.  periods)  which  we  all  religiously 
elected  for  a  snap,  upon  the  advice  of  upper-class  friends,  and  straightway  proceeded  to  flunk.  Ah, 
that  was  surely  the  most  sorrowful  experience  of  our  existence  I 

And  then  sometimes  our  thoughts  would  lightly  rise  to  those  ethereal  regions  where  Art  and 
Music  float  in  a  sort  of  vagueness.  But  at  this  point  the  heavy  voice  of  the  organ  always  began 
to  chide  us,  and  as  we  rose,  regretfully,  we  gazed  our  last  on  the  tlark  corner  and  the  empty  chairs. 


Officers  of  Instruction  and  Government. 


NAME. 

Ethelred  Abbot,  B.A.,  N'assar 

Assistant  in  cliarge  of  Art  Library. 


ADDRESS. 

Wellesle}-,  Mass. 


Emilv  Gkeexe   Balch,  B.A.,  Biyn  Mawr 
Instructor  in  Economics. 


Prince  Street,  Jamaica  Plain,  Mass. 


Bertha  M.  Ball.\xtyxe,  B..S.,  Mass.  Institute  of  Technology,  72  Washington  Street,  Hudson,  Mass. 
Instructor  in  Zoology. 

Emilie  Jones  Baiikeu,  M.D.,  New  York  Medical  College,   27S  Central  .\venue,  Fredonia,  X.  Y. 
Resident  Pliysician  and  Superintendent  of  the  Eliot. 


Katherixe  Bates 


Ph.B.,  Cornell 


\ 


'  (  M.D.,  New  York  Medical  College  )    ' 
Assistant  in  English. 


Dardenne,  \lo. 


Katherixe  Lee  B.\tes,  M.A.,  \\'ellesley 
Professor  of  English  Literature. 


95  West  Street,  Portland,  Me. 


Malvixa  ]\L  Bexxett,  B.S.,  Boston  University 
Instructor  in  Elocution. 


49  Linnaean  Street,  Cambridge,  Mass. 


Mary  Bowex,  Ph.D.,  Chicago  University 
Instructor  in  English  Literature. 


'3 


Centreville.  Iowa. 


NAME. 

Mary  Alice  Bowers,  M.A.,  Radcliffe 
Instructor  in  Zoology. 


Charlotte  Almira  Bragg,  B.S.,  Mass.  Institute  of  Technology 
Associate  Professor  of  Chemistry. 


ADDRESS. 

.    Saco,  Me. 


Biaggville,  Mass. 


Alice  Van  Vechtex   Brown 
Professor  of  Art. 


Wellesley,  Mass. 


Ellex  Louise   Burrell,  B.A.,  Wellesley 
Acting  Professor  of  Pure  Mathematics. 


Wellesley,  Mass. 


Caroline  I^rockwav  Butler     .... 
Registrar. 

Mary  Whiton  Calkins,  M.A.,  Smith 

Professor  of  Ps_vcl"ioIog_v  and  Philosophy. 

Ellor  Eliza  Carlisle        ..... 
Associate  Professor  of  Pedagogy. 

Mary  Sophi.a.  Case,  B.A.,  University  of  Michigan 
Associate  Professor  of  Psychology  and  Philosophy. 


Elmiia,  X.  Y, 


.    Bellevue  Street,  Newton,  Mass. 


315  Crown  Street,  New  Haven,  Conn. 


Welleslev,  iSfass. 


Bertha  L.  Caswell  .... 

Assistant  Cashier. 

Mary  Caswell  ..... 

Secretary  to  the  President. 

E\a  Chandler,  B.A.,  University  of  Michigan 
Associate  Professor  of  Mathematics. 


^Velleslev,  Mass. 
Wellesley,  Mass. 
Wellesley,  Mass. 


H 


AxGiE  Clara  Chapix,  M.A.,  Michigan  University 
Professor  of  Greek  Langunge  and  Literature. 

Lucia  Fidelia  Ci.aiske        ..... 
Superintendent  of  Simpson  Cottage. 

Katiierixe  Comax,  Ph. 13.,  University  of  Michigan 
Dean  ;  Professor  of  History  and  Political  Economy. 

Marv  Elizahetm  Cook       ..... 
Superintendent  of  Wood  Cottage. 

Grace   Emily   Cooi.ev,  Ph.D.,  Zurich 
Associate  Professor  of  Botany. 

Clara  Eatox  Cummixgs    ..... 
Associate  Professor  of  Cryptogamic  Botany. 

Jexxie  Prestox  Daxiell  .... 

Instructor  in  Music. 

Grace  E.  Davis,  B.A.,  Wellesley 

Instructor  in  Pliysics. 

Bertha  Diixis,  B.A.,  Wellesley 
Instructor  in  Mathematics. 

Louise  Anxe   Dexxisox      ..... 

Superintendent  of  Freeman  Cottage. 


ADDRESS. 

1 6  Cayuga  Street,  Auburn,  N.  Y, 


22  Summer  Street,  Aiulover,  Mass. 

6^20  Lexington  Avenue,  Chicago,  111. 

Wellesley,  Mass. 

Wellesley,  Mass. 

Wellesley,  Mass. 

Pierce  Building,  Copley  Square,  Boston. 

lo  Allston  Terrace,  Brighton,  Mass. 

Wellesley.  Mass. 

Wellesley,  Mass. 

)  25  Walker  Street,  Cambridge, 


„  r.  T^  (  B-A.,  Harvard. 

Edward  Staples  Dkowx,  ■   ,,  t^  V.      1    •  1      r^ 

(  b.D.,  Cambridge  Theological  School,  )  Mass 

Instructor  in  Xew  Testament. 


IS 


NAME. 

Katharine  May  Edwards,  Ph.D.,  Cornell 
Associate  Professor  of  Greek. 


ADDRESS. 

Wellcslev,  Mass. 


Elizabeth  W.  Fette  .        Care  Frau  Ileiniich  Krecke,  .Sabzuflen,  Lippe  Detmokl,  Germany. 

Instructor  in  German. 

Elizabeth  Florette  Fisher,  B.S.,  Mass.  Institute  of  Technology,  142  Trenton  St.,  E.  Boston,  Mass. 
Instructor  in  Geology  and  Miner.ilogy. 

Caroline  Rebecca  Fletcher,  M.A.,  Radcliffe  .     35  Blake  Street,  North  Cambridge,  Mass. 

Instructor  in  Latin. 


Fraxc  E.  Foote,  B.A.,  Wellesley 

Assistant  in  Zoology  Laboratory. 


345  Culver  Road,  Rochester,  X.  Y 


Mary  Marion  Fuller 

Assistant  in  Chemical  Laboratories. 


P.  O.  Box  39,  Wellesley  Hills,  Mass. 


Eleanor  Acheson  McCulloch  Gamble,   Ph.D.,  Cornell,        15  Broad  Street,  Plattsburgh,  N.Y, 
Instructor  in  Psychology. 


Henrietta  Gardiner,   B.A.,  Radcliffe 
Assistant  in  English. 


24  Concord  Aveijne,  Cambridge,  Mass. 


Lydia  Boker  Godfrey,  Ph.B.,  Boston  Universit}-,  Morningside  (Lake  Placid),  Essex  Co.,  N.  Y. 
Librarian;  Instructor  in  Bibliography. 


George  Gould 
Cashier. 


Wellesley,  Mass. 


Louise  Clara  ]SL\ria  Haber.meyer,  M.  von  Heineman,  Pavelstrasse  11,  Braunschweig,  Germany. 
Instructor  in  German.  , 

16 


NAME. 

SiSAX  Maria  Hali.owki.i.,   M.A.,  Colby  Universitv 
Professor  of  Botany. 


ADDRESS. 

Wellesley,  Mass. 


Elisabeth  Hakdek,  B.A.,  Wellesley 
Instructor  in  Mathematics. 


114  Gwinnett  Street,  East,  Savannah,  Ga. 


Sophie  Chantai.   Hart.    M.A.,  University  of  Michigan,         729  Grove  Street,  San  Francisco,  Cal 
Associate  Professor  of  Rhetoric. 


Adeline  Belle  Hawe.s,  M.A.,  Olierlin 
Associate  Professor  of  Latin. 

Harriet  Hawes  .... 

Librarian  Enieriiiis. 

Ellen  Haves,  B.A.,  Oherlin 

Professor  of  Applied  .Matliematics. 


Caroline  HAZ.VRn, 


f  M.A.,  University  of  Michigran  ) 
I  Litt.  D.,  Brown  University        J 


President. 


LuciLE  Eaton   IIii.l    .... 
Director  of  Physical  'I'raininj;. 

Henrv  Cutter  Holt 

Instructor  in  History  of  Architecture. 

Emm.\  Sophi.\  Hosford 

Teacher  of  Vocal  Music. 


41  James  .Street,  Bangor,  Me. 


Welleslev,  Mass. 


Wellesley,  Mass. 


Peace  Dale,  R.  I. 

Wellesley,  ]Mass. 

S  Cliff  Street,  Winchester,  Mass. 

Pierce  Building,  Coplev  .Square,  Boston. 


Marion  Elizabeth  Hubbard,  B.S.,  Chicago  University 
Instructor  in  Zoology. 

17 


Wellesley,  Mass. 


NAME. 

Emii.v  Josephine  Hurd       .... 
Teacher  of  Piano. 

Florence  Jackson,  B.S.,  Smith 

Instructor  in  Chemistry. 

Margaret  Hastings  Jackson    .  .  .  , 

Instructor  in  Italian  and  French. 

Sophie  Jewett  ....... 

Associate  Professor  of  English  Literature. 

Helen  Marian  Kelsev,  B.A.,  Wellesle}-  . 
Instructor  in  English  and  Mathematics. 

Eliz-xbetii   Kimball  Kendall,  M.A.,  Radcliffe 
Associate  Professor  of  History. 

Alicia   M.   Keves         ...... 

Instructor  in  Art. 

Alphonse  M.   La   Meslee,   M.A.,  Harvard 
Lecturer  on  French  Literature. 

Grace  Langford         .         .         .         .         . 

Instructor  in  Physics. 

M.\RiE   Leclerco  ..... 

Instructor  in  French. 


ADDRESS. 

Wellesley,  Mass. 

15  Engle  Street,  Englewood,  X.  ]. 

Main  Street,  Soutlt  Weymouth,  Mass. 

S92  Main  Street,  Buffalo,  N.  Y. 

.    Tliere.=a,  N.  Y. 

4  Havihind  Street,  Boston,  Mass. 

Care  Judge  Keyes,  Concord,  Mass. 

17  Felton  Hall,  Cambridge,  Mass. 

Chiltonville,  Plymouth,  Mass. 

Roseneath  Cottage,  Dresser  Street,  Newport  R.  I. 


Adelaide  Imogen  Locke, 


B.A.,  Mt.  Holyoke 


B..S.T.,  Hartford  Theological  Seminary 
Instructor  in  Biblical  History. 

18 


East  Alstead,  N.  H. 


NAME. 

Laura  E.  Lockwood,  Ph.D.,  Yale 

Instructor  in  English. 

Alice  Hanson  Luce,  Ph.D.,  Heidelberg     . 

Instructor  in  English  Liteviiture. 

^L\UTIIA  Cause  McCaui.lev,  M.A.,  Wellesley 
Instructor  in  English. 

Annie  Sanders  Mandei.i, 

Superintendent  of  Waban  Cottage. 

Helen  Abbot  Merrill,  Q.A.,  Welle.sley 
Instructor  in  Mathematics. 


ADDRESS. 

Wellesley,  Mass. 

56  Pleasant  Street,  Auburn,  Me. 

Si  I  West  Street,  Wilmington,  Del. 

BaUlwinville,  Mass. 

Brentwood,  X.  Y. 


M.\r(;aretii.\  Elwixa  Mitzl.vkf,  Care  Consul  Ed.  Mitzlaff,  Elbing,  West  Prussia,  Germany. 

Instructor  in  German. 


Annie  Sybil  Montague,  ALA.,  Wellesley 
Associate  Professor  of  Greek. 


26  Fayette  Street,  Cambridgeport,  Mass. 


Albert  Pitts  Morse  ..........     South  Xatick,  !Mass. 

Curator  of  Zoological  Museum  and  Assistant  in  Zoological  Laboratories. 


Margaretha  MCller 

Associate  Professor  of  German. 

Ann.\  Stedm.\n  Newman  . 

Superintendent  of  Xorumbega  Cottage. 

\\"ii.i.i.\.M  Harmon  Niles,  IVLA.,  Yale 
Professor  of  Geologv. 


Nollendorfplatz  9,  Berlin,  Germany. 
106  Crowfoot  Street,  Pittsfield,  Mass. 
10  Linders  .Street,  Cambridge,  Mass. 


19 


NAME. 

Julia  Swift  Orvis,  B.A.,  Vassar 

Instructor  in  History. 


ADDRESS. 

Dixon,  111. 


Ellen  Fitz   Pendletox,  M.A.,  Wellesley 
Secretary  of  the  College. 


.    Westell V.  R.  I. 


Louise  Towxsexd  Penxv,  B.A.,  Wellesley, 
Instructor  in  Cliemistrv. 


Greenport,  X.  Y 


C.VRRiE  Fraxces  Pierce,  15. A.,  Wellesley 
Assistant  Reference  Librarian. 


Care  T.  D.  Pierce,  Easthampton,  Mass. 


H.vrriet  Noyes  Raxdall 

Assistant  in  G^'mnasium. 


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E-MMA    ReXSCH 

Instructor  in  French. 


Wellesley,  Mass. 


Risii  RiiEEs,  M.A.,  Amherst 

Instructor  in  Biblical  History. 


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AUGU.STO    ROTOLI 

Director  of  Choral  Music. 


176  Huntington  Avenue,  Boston,  Mass. 


Oli\e  Rumsey,  M.A.,  Smith       .... 

Instructor  in  English. 

Lydia  Elizabeth  .Saxdersox,  B.A.,  Mt.  Holyoke 
Assistant  in  Biblical  History. 

Helexe  Alexaxdrine  Schaeys 
Instructor  in  French. 


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Wellesley,  Mass. 


NAME. 

Cora  Louisa  Scofield,  Ph.D.,  University  of  Chicago 
Instructor  in  History. 


ADDRESS. 

\\'ashington.  Iowa. 


VlDA    DUTTON    SCUDDER,   M.A.,    Smith 

Associate  Professor  of  English  Literature. 


250  Xewbiuy  Street,  Boston,  Mass. 


E\'ELVN  Barrett  Sherrard,  I!. A.,  lihiiira  College   . 

Resident  Healtli  Officer;   Lecturer  on  Phvsiology  and  Hygiene. 


Welleslev,  Mass. 


WiM.iA  Thomas  Stovall 

Organist;  Instructoj- in  Musical  Theory. 


.    305  Broad  Street,  Danville,  Va. 


Mary  Adaline  Stovvell 
Teacher  of  Piano. 


76  Commonwealth  Avenue,  Boston,  Mass. 


Marie  Volkaerts 

Instructor  in  Frencli. 


P.  O.  Box  38,  Upper  Montclair,  X.  J. 


Edmund  vox  Mach,  ISI.A..  Harvard 
Instructor  in  Greek  Art. 


I  Walker  Terrace,  Cambridge,  Mass. 


Alice  Vinton  Waite,  M.A.,  .Smith 
Instructor  in  English. 


Welleslev,  Mass. 


Harriet  Ann  Walker 

Assistant  in  Botanical  Laboratories. 


Welleslev.  Mass. 


Alice  Walton,  Ph.D..  Cornell   . 
Instructor  in  Latin. 


6S  Chestnut  Street,  West  Xewton.  Mass. 


Carla  Wenckebach  .  .  .  .  . 

Professor  of  German  Lani^uage  and  Literature. 


Welleslev,  Mass. 


NAME.  ADDRESS. 

Eltzabeth  p.  Whiting Wellesley,  Mass. 

Superintendent  of  Fiske  Cott.-ige. 

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Professor  of  Physics  and  Physical  Astronomy. 

Mary  Alice  Wii-lcox,  Ph.D.,  Zurich  .  .  .  .So  Mountain  Avenue,  Maiden,  Mass. 

Professor  of  Zoology. 

Chari.es  H.  Woodbury,  B.S.,  Mass.  Institute  of  Technology,  192  Boylston  Street,  Boston,  Mass. 
Instructor  in  Drawing. 

Mary  Emma  WooLLEY,  M.  A.,  Brown  University  .  .         28S  High  Street,  Pawtucket,  R.  I. 

Professor  of  Biblical  History. 


THE   LAW   IS  A   JUMBLE, 


N 


0\V,  this  is  the  law  of  the  College,  as  old  and  as  true  as  the 

sky. 
And  the  gill  that  shall   keep   it   ma)-  prosper,  Init  the  girl   that 

shall  bleak  it  must  i\y  : 
Wash  daily  the  tips  of  the  fingers;   drink  deeply,  but  never  too 

deep  ; 
And  remember  the  night  is  for  cramming,  and   forget   not  the 

day  is  for  sleep. 
The  Sophomores  may  follow  the  Juniors;   but,  cub,  when  thy 

sentiment's  grown. 
Remember  the  Senior's  thy  Senior, — go  forth,  get  a  crush  of 

thine  own. 
Keep  peace  with  the   lords  of  the  jumble,   the   .    .    .   and   the 
.    .    .    ;   take  care 
To  trouble  not   .    .    .   the  silent,  nor  mock  not  the   ...    in  her 

lair. 
The  lair  of  the  girl  is  her  refuge,  and  where  she  has  made  her 

her  home. 
Not  even  the  heail   one   may  enter,  not  even  the  Council   may 

come. 
You   may   see   for  yourselves,  see  your  mates,  see  the  Fac.  as 

ye  need  and  ve  can. 
But  see  not  for  pleasure  of  seeing,  and  seven  times  never  see 

man. 


23 


The  food  of    the  pack   is   the   meat  of  the  jjack,  ye  must  eat 

where  it  lies, 
Aiifl  no  one   ma}'  cany   away  of  that  meat  to  her  lair,  or  she 

flies. 
Lair  rights  are  the  rights  of  the  Senioi' ;    from   all   of  her  year 

she  may  claim 
All  that  to  the  rest  is  forbidden, — and  none  may  refnse  her  the 

same. 
Cub  right  is  the  right  of  the  Freshman  ;    from  all  of  the  rooms 

she  may  claim 
What's  left   when   the    others    have    chosen, — and    none    may 

refuse  her  the  same. 
Cave  right  is  the  right  of  the  Faculty,  to   hunt  by  herself  for 

her  own  ; 
She  is  freed  from  all  calls  to  the  pack  ;    she  is  judged  by  the 

Council  alone. 
Because  of  her  age  and   her  cunning,  because  of  her  grip  and 

her  paw. 
In  all  that  the  law  leaveth  open,  the   word   of  the  head  here  is 

law. 
Now  these  are  the  laws  in  a  jumble,  and  many  and  mighty  are 

they. 
But  the  head  and  the  hoof  of  the  law,  and  the  haunch   and  the 

hump,  is  "  Obey  !  " 


-4 


A   ROSE  OF  YESI'ERDAY. 


T 


HEY  made  her  Freshman  president  ; 

She  rowed  upon  the  crew  ; 
She  scored  tlie  highest  at  the  links  ; 

Was  tennis  champion  too. 

She  did  not,  as  a  Sophomore, 
Qiiite  vanish  from  the  scene, 

For  stories  from  her  pen  appeared 
In  each  month's  Magazine. 

Her  first  forensic  was  a  joy  ; 

Her  second  was  a  dream  ; 
In  Calcuhis  she  was  not  coy  ; 

In  Greek  she  was  supreme. 

Her  Senior  liiain  was  wont  to  soar 

In  deep  I'hilosoph}'; 
Her  daily  themes  but  made  her  more 

Beloved  of  Faculty. 

And  when  she  left  these  classic  halls. 
That  rang  aloud  her  praise. 

She  did  not  doubt  that  soon  her  name 
Upon  the  skies  would  blaze. 

But  we,  who  thought  this  prodigy 

Could  never  Fame  escape. 
Have  heard,  i|uite  incidentally. 
That  now  she  teaches  ABC 
At  Crowville,  on  the  Cape. 


The  Adventures  of  igoo 
IN  Wellesleyland. 


In   this   fable's  looking-glass, 
Behold  the   history  of  our  Class, 

Nineteen   Hundred  Glorious! 

In  Wellesleyland  victorious ! 
And   all   her  friends,  the   beings  strange, 
That   in   Wellesleyland   do   range. 
And  what   you  find   of  fun   in   this. 
We   pray  you,  take   it   not   amiss. 


27 


CHAPTER    I. 

DOWN    THE    RABHIT-HOI.E. 

AS  before  (so  the  manuscript  begins),  Alice  lay  dreaming  in  the  orchard  grass, 
revisiting  in  fancy  the  scenes  of  that  strange,  absurd  Wonderland,  where  nothing 
ever  occurs  save  the  Utterly  Unexpected.  Therefore  it  was  nothing  surprising 
when  the  White  Rabbit  appeared,  as  trim  and  natty  as  ever,  with  a  green  ribbon 
marked  "  Ninety-nine"  tied  in  his  buttonhole.  He  was  gone  in  a  flash,  but  Alice 
rose  and  ran  to  the  spot  whence  he  had  vanished,  and  there  she 
found  the  rabbit-hole.  It  had  changed  litde:  the  sides  of  the  well 
were  still  lined  with  cupboards  and  bookshelves,  now  laden  with 
confused  heaps  of  blue  books,  writing  materials  and  examination 
papers.  The  orange  marmalade  jars  were 
filled  with  alcoholic  specimens.  Alice  had 
barely  time  to  note  these  alterations  as 
shelf  after  shelf  rose  above  her  head;  and 
soon  her  feet  touched  the  bottom  with  a  little  thump.  She 
was  standing  before  a  small  door  bearing  the  motto,  "  Entrance 
to  Wellesleyland.  Admittance  to  Class  of  Nineteen  Hundred 
only."  The  White  Rabbit  sat  in  a  ticket  office  next  to  the  door  ; 
he  was  most  erect  and  dignified,  and  he  bowed  to  Alice  with 
■en^^SnM  an  air  of  kindly  but  critical  observation. 
i  "  I've  been  looking  for  you  a  long  time,"  he 

V  said,   "but  you  were  slow  in  passing  your 

^'  examinations  ;  there  must  have  been  an  un- 

y^^  usual  number  of  shelves  full  this  )ear.      Do  you  want  to  go  through 

Jr^^  that  door?"     "If  I'm  not  too  tall,"  said  Alice,  timidly,  remember- 

m      ■  '"S  how  great  an  obstacle  her  size  had  presented  at  the  time  of  her 

former  visit. 
"  Size  !  "  shrieked  the  Rabbit.     "  Tall  !     Law  bless  me,  but  you're  the  smallest 
that  has  ever  come  this  way.      My  tail  and  whiskers,  how  ridiculous  !  "  and  he  broke 


28 


into  a  great  peal  of  laughter.  Then  he  sobered  down  and  looked  at  Alice  scornfully. 
"  Now  we  " — with  a  tug  at  the  ribbon  in  his  buttonhole — "  are  none  of  us  under  five 
feet  eleven  inches,  and  we  are  all  growing." 

"  O  yes,  I  suppose  so,"  said  Alice,  impatiently,  for  she  was  becoming  tired  of 
all  this,  and  wanted  to  .see  what  was  on  the  other  side  of  the  door.  "  But  you  can  tell 
me  about  that  some  other  time.     Ticket,  please." 

The   Rabbit  handed  her  a  card  tied  with  green  and  white  ribbon.     On  it  was 

written  : — 

Behold  the  noble  Sophomore, 

So  stately  and  so  tall, 
Invincible  in  snowball  fights, 

And  eke  in  basket  ball. 

How  cheerfullv  she  seems  to  grin  ! 

How  neatly  spreads  her  paws  ! 
And  welcomes  little  Freshmen  in 

With  gently  smiling  jaws  ! 

CHAPTER    II. 


THE    POOL    OF    TEARS. 

"  I'm  sure  this  isn't  the  right  ticket,"  said  x^lice, 
and  her  eyes  filled  with  tears  as  she  opened  the  door 
and  found  herself  in  a  small,  square  room,  with  one 
window  at  the  end  and  the  ceiling  so  far  away  that  she 
could  just  discern  its  outlines.  "  O  dear!  "  she  cried, 
"  must  I  live  here  ? "  and  with  these  words  her  foot 
slipped  and  she  found  herself  up  to  her  chin   in   salt 

water.  "  I  wish  I  hadn't 
cried  so  much,"  she  thought, 
as  she  swam  about  trying  to 
find  the  way  out.  "Just 
give  me  your  hand,"  said  a 


29 


friendly  voice  ;  and  Alice  felt  herself  drawn  out  upon  dry 
1^  land.     She  looked  back  at  the  pool  and  saw  that  it  was 

^  -  rimmed  by  smooth  grass-slopes,  upon  which  the  after- 
noon sun  flickered  through  mossy  oaks  and  beeches. 
"  How  pretty  !  "  said  Alice. 
"  That  is  Longfellow  Pond,"  replied  her  rescuer,  a  timid  little  mouse  ;   "  used  as 
a  reservoir  for  the  tears  of  homesick  Freshmen.     One  of  the  trustees  hit  upon  this 
method  of  utilizing  a  hitherto  neglected  source  of  ornamentation.     The  pond,  as  you 
see,  is  quite  full   just  now  and  will  be  during  February.      In  May  and  June,  however, 
it  is  almost  dry.       But  good-by,  little  one  ;   I'm  wanted  in  the  Gym.       Let 
me  know  when  you  need  me,"  and  she  hurried  up  the  east  stairway,  leav- 
ing Alice  at  the  pond  quite  disconsolate. 

"  You  had  better  buy  a  post-office  key,"  said  the  White  Rabbit,  who 
came  trotting  along  the  path  ;  he  was  carefully  attired,  and  carried  a  fan 
and  a  pair  of  white  kid  gloves.     "  Why  ?  "  asked  Alice. 

"  Because  I  have  sent  you  an  invitation  for  the  Sopho- 
more reception.  However,  if  you  are  not  particular  you  can 
come  right  along  with  me  now,  and  call  for  your  invitation 
afterwards.  We  often  do  that  here.  You  must  pin  these 
to  your  gown  ;  "  and  he  handed  her  a  bunch  of  narcissus  and 
a  slip  of  paper  bearing  her  own  name  and  home  address. 
"  Your  introduction  slip,"  explained  the  Rabbit,  as  he  led 
Alice  into  a  great  hall  filled  with  huge  palm  plants  and 
girls  in  light-colored  gowns.  "These  people  are  our  classmates,  and  after 
you've  met  some  fifty  of  them  I  shall  give  you  soma  frappc,  and  then  you 
must  meet  fifty  or  so  more  before  I  take  you  home." 

"  They  look  very  friendly,"  said  Alice.  "What  did  you  mean  by 
those  rhymes  on  the  ticket  ?  "  But  the  White  Rabbit  had  somehow  become 
separated  from  her  and  was  lost  in  the  crowd,  so  that  Alice  gave  up  the 
vain  search  for  him  and  wandered  out  of  doors  down  to  the  campus,  where 
the  moonlight  was  whitening  the  hillsides. 


30 


CHAPTER   III. 


ADVICE    FROM    A    CATERPILLAR 


Engrossed  in  the  beauty  about  her,  Alice  almost  ran  into  a  tall  Caterpillar  in 
cap  and  gown,  who  had  been  seated  on  a  toadstool  with  her  arms  folded,  quietly 
meditating,  and  taking  no  notice  of  her  or  anything  else. 

They  looked  at  each  other  for  some  time  in  silence.  At  last 
the  Caterpillar  drawled,  in  a  languid,  sleepy  voice,  "  Who  are 
)OU  ?  " 

This  was  not  encouraging,  and  Alice  replied,  shyly  :  "I  —  I 
hardl)-  know  who  I  am  just  at  present.  I  used  to  think  I  was 
someone  until  I  came  to  W'ellesleyland,  but  I've  had  a  great  fall  in 
my  own  estimation." 

"  In  the  rabbit-hole,  you  mean.      Explain  yourself." 
"  It  isn't  easy,"  said  Alice.      "  Perhaps  you  haven't  found  it  so 
yet ;   but  when   jou   have  to  graduate, — you  will    some   day,   you 
know, — and  then  after  that  just  turn  into  an  ordinary  Caterpillar 
again,  I  should  think  you'll  feel  a  little  queer,  won't  you?" 
"  Not  a  bit,"  said  the  Caterpillar.     She  seemed  to  be  in  such  an  unpleasant 
rame  of  mind  that  Alice  turned  away. 

"  Come  back,"  the  Caterpillar  called  after  her.      "  I've  something  important  to 
Alice  turned  back. 
"  Don't  be  fresh,"  said  the  Caterpillar. 

"  Is  that  all,"  said  .Mice,  swallowing  her  anger  as  well  as  she  could. 
"  No,"  said  the  Caterpillar  ;   "  speak  a  piece." 
Alice  folded  her  hands  and  began, — 


say 


■You  are  okl,  O  Senioi,'  tlie  Freshmnn  said. 
'  And  your  hair  with  much  study  is  white  ; 
Yet  you'll  .sit  up  all  night  at  a  Freshman  spread  : 
Do  you  think,  at  your  age,  it  is  right.?' 


'  '  In  iiiv  vouth,'  said  the  Senior,  '  I  gave  up  such  fun, — 
I  feared  it  might  injure  the  hraiu  ; 
But  now  I  am  perfectly*  sure  I  have  none, 
Why,  I  do  it  again  and  again.' 

••You  are  old.'  said  the  Fieshman,  'as  I  mentioned  before, 
.\nd  have  grown  most  uncommonly  fat, 
Yet  you  play  basket  ball  like  the  gay  Sophomore  ; 
Pray,  what  is  the  reason  of  that?' 

'  '  In  m\   Noutli,'  said  the  Senior,  '  I'd  no  flesh  to  spare; 
Though  now  it's  not  easy  to  budge, 
Yet  I  still  keep  a  graceful  and  athletic  air 
^Vith  the  aid  of  Welsh  rarebit  and  fudge.' 

"  '  You  are  old,'  said  the  Freshman  ;    '  I  hear  people  say 
You  have  grown  most  uncommonly  staid  ; 
Yet  you  roll  hoops  down  hill  on  the  first  day  of  Jvlay 
In  a  wild  and  a  wondrous  parade.' 

"  '  In  my  youth,'  said  the  Senior,  '  I  romped  and  I  played, — 
A  thing  that  I  fear  no^v  to  do  ; 
But  I  still  hold  this  wonderful,  solemn  parade, 
To  amuse  little  Freshmen  like  you.'  " 

"  That's  not  said  right,"  said  the  Caterpillar.  "  In  fact,  it's  wrong  from  beginning 
to  end."  She  yawned  once  or  twice  and  then  crawled  away,  merely  remarking,  "  You 
are  the  most  uninteresting  class  in  Wellesleyland." 


CHAPTER    IV. 

THE    RABIUT   SENDS    IN    A    LITTLE    BILLET-DOUX. 

"  I  don't  care,"  said  Alice,  "  I  can  play  basket  ball.  The  White  Rabbit  said  so, 
and  he  ought  to  know.  Which  reminds  me  that  I  ought  to  be  calling  at  the  post 
office  for  my  invitation."  She  hurried  to  her  box,  opened  it  and  drew  out  the  follow- 
ing note  :  — 


32 


"  The  Class  of   Ninety-nine   invites  Miss  Alice  to  a  snowball  fight  on   Cottage 
Hill,  lanuar)  twenty-ninth,  at  4  p.  m.     To  win  the  Nineteen  Hundred  pennant." 
"  What  an  odd  sort  of  reception,"  said  Alice. 

"  Rather  a  cold  one,  I  fancy,"  said  a  voice  that  xA.lice  recognized. 
She  turned  and  saw  the  Mouse.  "You  had  better  practice  for  the  fight," 
she  continued. 

"  How  ?  "  asked  Alice. 

"Well,  I  don't  know  of  anything  better  than  class  meetings  and 
class  elections  for  developing  endurance  and  the  combative  spirit.      It  I 
were  you  I'd  call  a  meeting  to  elect  your  class  president." 
"  But  it's  not  past  Midyears  yet." 

"Well,  what  if  it  isn't.      Nineteen  Hundred  scorns  Midyears,  doesn't  it?" 
"Yes,"  said  Alice,  dubiously.      But  she  took  the  Mouse's  advice,  and  that  is  how 
it  happened  that  Nineteen  Hundred  established  a  precedent  by  electing  her  Freshman 
president  before  Midyears.     This  is  also  one  of  the  reasons  why  she  won  the  glorious 
fray  on  Art  lUiilding  Hill. 


CHAPTER    V. 


THE    LOBSTER    QU.VDRIU-E. 

In  Wellesleyland  the  seasons  pass  quickly.  By  the  time  that 
the  last  patch  of  ancient  snow  had  faded  from  the  hillsides  it  was  plain 
that  Alice  had  lost  her  childlike  frankness  and  naivete.  .She  began  to 
look  mysterious  and  preoccupied,  and  to  hang  "  Please-do-not-disturb  " 
signs  on  the  door  of  her  room.  When  the  campus  was  aglow  with 
May  color  she  carefully  avoided  the  White  Rabbit,  and  was  uncom- 
municative even  to  the  Mouse.  Silently  and  secretly  during  the  long 
spring  twilights  she  would  steal  to  a  retired  corner  of  the  Waban  shores, 
to  return  when  the  first  stars  were  glimmering  through  the  dusk. 

(Just  here  occurs  a  break  in  the  manuscript — whether  intentional 
or  not  is  unknown.      Perhaps  Alice  had  reached  a  point  in  her  history  too 


painful  to 


33 


be  recorded.     After  long  search  the  present  compiler  could  find  only  the  following 
jingle  to  fill  out  the  blank.) 

"  Will  vou  walk  a  little  faster.'"'  said  the  Jester  to  Pierrot: 

"  The  skies  are  growing  darker,  and  it's  going  to  rain,  I  know. 

See  how  eagerlv  the  juniors  and  the  Sophomores  advance  ; 

Thev  are  waiting  on  the  campus — oh,  please  hurry  up  the  dance  ! 

Will  you,  won't  you,  will  you,  won't  you  kindly  hurry  up  our  dance  : 

Will  vou,  won't  you,  will  you,  won't  you  kindl\-  hurrv  up  our  dance! 

You  can  really  have  no  notion  how  entrancing  it  will  be. 
We  have  practiced  it  these  many  weeks  so  very  faithfully." 
But  the  Jester  sighed,  "  Too  late  !   Too  late  !  "    and  gave  a  look  askance  ; 
"  The  rain's  begun  to  spatter  down,  we'll  never  have  our  dance. 
Alack!   alas!   alack!   alas!   we'll  never  have  our  dance  ! 
Alack  !  alas  !   alack  !  alas  !  we'll  never  have  our  dance  !  " 

Tliere  was  hustle  and  confusion,  there  were  groans  from  every  class, 
Anil  their  Mardi-Gras  attire  left  gay  streaks  upon  the  grass  ; 
But  with  courage  and  umbrellas  did  they  congregate  next  day. 
And  they  celebrated  Tree  Day  in  an  unconventional  way. 
But  they  never,  never  had  their  dance,  I  much  regret  to  say; 
But  they  never,  never  had  their  tlance,  I  much  regret  to  say. 

When    the    anniversary  came  of  Alice's  fall   down    the 
rabbit-hole,   she  had  begun   to  feel  quite  at  home  in  Wellesleyland. 


A    MAD    TEA    PARTY. 

But  one  day  on  her  way  across  the  campus  she  was 
startled  by  seeing  the  Cheshire  Cat  sitting  on  a  bough  a 
few  yards  off.  The  Cat  grinned  at  Alice  in  the  old  familiar 
way.  "Won't  you  come  to  my  Mad  Tea  Party  the  first 
h'riday  in  June?"  he  asked. 

"  But  I  don't  want  to  go  among  mad  people,"  Alice 
J  A     remarked. 


34 


"Oh!  you  can't  help  that."  said  the  Cat.      "  We  are  all   mad  here.      I'm  mad. 
You're  mad,  or  you  wouldn't  have  come  here." 

Alice  didn't  think  that  proved  it  at  all  ;  however,  she 
did  not  wish  to  be  discourteous  to  a  newcomer,  so  she  said, 
"I  shall  be  very  glad  to  accept  >our  invitation,  Mr. —  Mr. — " 
"Just  Nineteen  Hundred  and  One,"  supplied  the  Cat, 
and  immediately  began  to  dwindle  away,  until  there  was  very 
little  left.  This  performance,  Alice  found,  was  characteristic 
of  Nineteen  Hundred  and  One  so  that  finally  she  grew  quite  accustomed  to  seeing  him 
in  a  fractional  state.  "  But  what  shall  I  wear  to  the  party?"  thought 
Alice,  wondering  what  was  the  most  appropriate  garb  for  such  an 
occasion.  And  here  her  strongly  developed  sense  of  the  artistic 
came  to  the  rescue.  Witness  the  following  noteworthy  entry  in  her 
diary  shortly  before  June  ist  :  — 

.      "The  question  brought  before  the  Class  was  the  arrangement 
of  final  plans  for  Tree  Day.      It  was  moved  and  carried  that  we  wear  our  hair  up,  on 
Tree  Day.      It  was  moved  and  carried  that  we  wear  silver-paper  crowns,  two  inches 

high  in  front  and  tapering  down  to  one-half  inch  in  the  back, 
and  that  these  crowns  have  no  ornament." 

Alice  enjoyed  the  Mad  Tea  Party  so  much  that  in  her 
Junior  year  she  thought  she  would  ask  the  Duchess  who  rules 
Wellesleyland  for  permission  to  give  a  party  of  her  own,  to 
be  known  as  the  Junior  Dance.  But  the  Duchess  shouted, 
"Off"  with  its  head!"  and  poor  Alice,  through  no  fault  of  her 
own — nor  through  any  lack  of  energy  on  her  part — was 
forced  to  behold  the  slaughter  of  her  cherished  plans.  Yet 
somewhere  in  the  depths  of  her  subconsciousness  remains 
a  lingering  hope,  almost  a  certitude,  that  the  Junior  Dance 
is  not  dead,  but  sleepeth.  And  so,  although  she  goes  sere- 
nading no  more,  as  in  the  gladsome  days  of  her  first  coming  to  Wellesleyland,  Alice 
sometimes  takes  her  guitar  and  makes  its  strings  vibrate  to  a  mournful  melody:  — 


35 


The  ^\  raitli  of  the  Junior  Dance  arose 

In  the  halls  of  Wellesley, 
And  it  wailed  like  the  wind  o'er  the  winter  snows. 

And  it  was  most  dread  to  see. 
It  wrung  its  liands  as  it  walked  tlie  Hoor 
Of  the  First  Floor  Center  and  corridor. 

"  ()  why,  O  why  have  ye  slaughtered  me, 
Who  was  so  voung  and  fair? 
What  cause  of  hate  had  ye,  stern  A.  C, 

That  ye  were  not  moved  by  prayer? 
Lo  !   once  I  bloomed  like  the  buds  in  May, 
And  now  am  I  faded  like  smoke  awav  !  " 

The  Wraith  of  the  Junior  Dance  doth  still 

Rise  for  the  college  maid  ; 
It  wandereth  at  its  own  sweet  will, 

And  it  will  not  be  laid. 
But  ever  it  moans  as  it  walks  the  floor 
Of  the  First  Floor  Center  and  corrido)-. 


THE    QUEEN  S    CROQUET    GROUND. 

It  was  during  Alice's  junior  year  that  Queen  Nine- 
teen Hundred  and  Two  came  to  Wellesleyland.  Alice,  of 
course,  was  delighted  to  see  her,  having  forgotten  the  royal 
■,-^-;j=.  hot  temper  tor  which  her  majesty  had  been  lamed  in  old 
days.  "Let  me  see,  "  said  Alice,  "she  used  to  like  croquet, 
but  every  one  plays  basket  ball  here,  so  that  will  do  just  as 
well.      I  think  I'll  challenge  her  to  a  game." 

So,  on    the  appointed  day,   came  a  great   crowd    of 
Wellesleyland   inhabitants  to  the  croquet  ground.       Even 
the  Duchess  was   there,  and  the  Rabbit  and   the  Cheshire 
Cat  had  reserved  places  on  a  grassbank. 
"Get  to  your  places!"  shouted  the  Queen  in  a  voice  of  thunder,  and  the  game 
began.      It  was  a  curious  affair:   the  players  all  played  at  once  without  waiting  for 

36 


turns,  quarreling  all  the  while,  and  in  a  very  short  time   the  Queen  was  in  a  furious 
passion. 

Alice  began  to  feel  very  uneasy;  to  be  sure,  she  had  not  as  yet  had  any  dispute 
with  the  Queen,  but  she  knew-  that  it  might  happen  any  minute.  During  the  resting- 
time  she  walked  over  to  the  Cheshire  Cat  to  air  her  views  of  the  game.  "They  play 
so  queerh,"  she  said;  "and  they  all  quarrel  so  dreadfully  one  can't  hear  oneself 
speak.  And  they  don't  seem  to  have  any  rules  in  particular;  at  least,  if  there  are 
no  one  attends  to  them — and  you've  no  idea  how  confusing  it  all  is." 

"  How  do  you  like  the  Queen  ?"  said  the  Cat  in  a  low  voice. 

"  What  a  question  to  ask,  when  she's  the  only  Queen  here,"  said  Alice. 
"  Here  she  comes  now." 

"  Whom  arc  you  talking  to  ? "  said  the  Queen,  looking  at  the  Cat, 
or  rather  what  was  left  of  it,  with  great  curiosity. 

"  It's  a  friend  of  mine, — a  Cheshire  Cat,  called  Nineteen  Hundred 
and  One,"  said  Alice.     "Allow  me  to  introduce  it." 

"I  don't  like  the  look  of  it  at  all,"  said  the  Queen.      "  It  may  kiss 
my  hand  if  it  likes,  but  I'd  rather  have  it  removed." 

Alice  felt  that  the  situation  was  growing  strained,  so  that  she  was 
glad  when  the  game  began  again.  It  went  very  much  against  the 
Queen,  who  fairly  screamed  with  passion.  She  had  already  sentenced  three  players 
to  be  executed  for  having  missed  their  turns.  Alice  w'on  in  the  end,  which  made  it 
hard  for  the  Queen,  especially  as  the  Cheshire  Cat  grinned  with  delight  at  the  results. 
But  the  Queen's  anger  did  not  last  for  long,  and  a  permanent  reconciliation  was 
sealed  at  the  Russian  Honeymoon.  Henceforth  the  Oueen  and  Alice  mio-ht  often  be 
seen  walking  through  Wellesleyland  arm  in  arm. 

PIG    .-VNI)    TEPPER. 

Alice  had  reached  her  last  year  in  Wellesleyland,  and  was  rejoicing  in  cap  and 
gown,  front  seats  in  chapel,  and  precedence  in  the  elevator,  when  one  day  she 
decided  to  call  on  the  Duchess.  To  her  great  surprise  she  found  the  Duchess  sitting 
in  a  rocking-chair  in   the  Center  holding  a  baby,  who  was  sneezing  and    howling 

37 


alternately  without  a  moment's  pause.  Even  the  Duchess  sneezed  occasionally,  and 
the  only  undisturbed  creature  was  the  Cheshire  Cat,  who  sat  beneath  a  palm  near  by. 
"  Will  you  please  tell  me,"  said  Alice,  timidly,  "  why  the  baby 
sneezes  like  that?" 

"  Poor  little  Nineteen  Hundred  and  Three,"  said  the  Duchess, 
aftectionately.  "  I've  given  her  a  dose  of  academic  pepper  to  make 
her  bright  and  sharp.  It's  well  to  begin  when  they  are  youno-.  Here, 
you  may  nurse  it  a  bit,  if  you  like,"  and  she  flung  the  baby  at  Alice 
and   hurried   out  of  the  room. 

"  If  I    don't    take    this    child    away   with 
me,"    thought    Alice,    "they're    sure   to    kill   it 
in   a  da_\-  or  two." 

The  baby  grunted  in  reply,  and  Alice  looked  very 
anxiously  into  its  face  to  see  what  was  the  matter.  It  was 
an  unusually  fat  child:  could  it  be  turning  into  a  pig?  Alice 
remembered  that  something  similar  to  this  had  occurred  in 
the  old  days.  So  she  set  the  little  creature  down,  and  was 
relieved   to  see  it  toddle  oft'  quite  independently. 

Ji.  ^  it.  ii. 

Here  the  manuscript  comes  abruptly  to  a  close,  and  so  we  must  leave  little  Alice 
to  her  last  few  days  in  storied  Wellesleyland.  Only  a  short  time  and  she  must  return 
to  the  Land  of  Common  Thines.  How  she  will  miss  them  all, — the  Duchess,  the 
Caterpillar,  the  Mouse,  the  Rabbit,  the  Cheshire  Cat,  the  Queen,  and  last,  but  not 
least,  the  Baby — all  companions  tried  and  true  in  strange  adventure  and  merry  jest. 
Here,  through  her  faithful  historian,  she  kisses  her  hand  to  them  all  with  a  hearty 
"  AzK  atq7ie  J 'ale." 


38 


CLASS    OF    1900. 


Class  of  Nineteen  Hundred. 


TREE       . 
FLOWER 


Hanxah  IIlme 
Alice  E.  Chase  . 
Chloe  Curtis 
Caroline  M.  Locke 
Oriana  p.   Hall 


Mossy<up  Oak. 
Fleur-de-lis. 


COLORS 
MOTTO 


Purple  and  Lavender. 
From  Strength  to  Strength. 


Rah  !     Rah  !     1900  ! 
Rah  !     Rah  !     1900  ! 
Rah!    Rah!    Rah!     Rah! 
Wellesley  ! 


OFFICERS. 


Pye^idcHt, 
I  'ice  Presidetit. 
Corresponding  Sec  re  fa  ry. 
Recording  Secretary. 
Treasurer. 
Edith  IL  Moore 


Mary  Rockwell 
Elizabeth  A.  Towle 
Nina  F.  Poor 
Lelia  S.  Eaton       -i 
Agnes  E.  Fairlie    I 
Athletic  Member. 


Mxecntive  Committee. 


Factotums. 


Honorary  Member. 
Helen  Miller  Gould. 


MEMBERS. 


NAME. 

Aberckomi'.ie,   Corix.xe  Aftox 


ADDRESS. 

Houston,  Tex. 

*  Z,  B.S.,  Wagner  Club,  Philosophy  Club,  Golf  Club,  College  Settlement,  A. A.,  Basket  Ball   d),  Vice 
President  ofClass  (i),  LO.N.O.,  Corresponding  Secretary'  Matrimonial  Bureau,  Xorumbega  Play  {J\^. 


Ames,   M.xbei.i.e  ]SL         .  .  .  .  , 

A.  A.,  Golf  Club,  The  One  and  The  Twelve. 


26  Easton  Street,  AUston,  Mass. 


40 


NAME.  ADDRESS. 

AxDERsox,   K.\Tii.\RixE  Mii.LicEXT         .....  20  Oitou  Place,  Buffalo,  X.  V. 

B  S.,  A. A. 

Ayres,  Maky  Stevexs Biooklvn,  N.  Y. 

Entered  Class  in  Junioi-  year. 

Bailey,  Flokexce  Ethel Billerica,  Mass. 

A  K  X,  B.S..  A.  A.,  Wagner  Club,  Golf  Club,  Collese  Settlement. 

Ball.   Katharine  Fraxce.s t  Myrtle  Avenue,  Plainfielcl,  N.  J. 

Z  A,  C.A  ,  B.S.,  A. A.,  I.S.S.I.,  College  Settlement,  Executive  Committee  of  Class  (i),  Jester  Dance  (i), 
Basket  Ball  Team  (i,  2,  3,  4),  Head  of  Basket  Ball  (3),  Business  Manager  of  Legenda,  Associate  Member  of 
tbe  Philosophy  Club. 

Barbour,  :Mary  Smith 32  Perkins  Street,  West  Newton,  Mass. 

AroPA,  B.S.,  C.A.,  Fleur-de-lis  (i),  Class  Treasurer  (2,  3),  Secretary  C.A.  (3),  Um-ha-ha  Tribe  (3,  4), 
Manufacturer  of  Laundry  Bags   (4). 

Bayle-ss,   Wilhelmixe Greenwood  Inn,  Evanston.  111. 

Z  A,  B.S.,  A. A.,  C.A.,  Philosophy  Club,  Zoology  Club,  Golf  Club,  Coxswain  Class  Crew  (i),  Corre- 
sponding Secretary  of  Class  (2),  Secretary  C.  A.  (3). 

Beax,  Ida  May Oldtown,  Me. 

Entered  Class  in  Senior  year. 

Beers,  Jexxie  F Newtown,  Conn. 

B.S.,  C.A.,  A  A.,  C.C,  Wagner  Club,  Golf  Club,  Red-Headed  Club,  Class  Lists  (4).  Entered  Class  in 
Sophomore  year. 

Berry,  Mabel  Chase East  Derry,  N.  II. 

B.S.,  A. A.  (i),  Wagner  Club. 

Beyersdorfk,  Matilda  von  .  .  .   Waverly  Hotel,  i  ith  Street  S.,  Minneapolis.  Minn. 

B.S.,  A.  A.,  Wagner  Club. 

Blaxchard,   Edith  Louise 25  Dover  Street.  Brockton,  Mass. 

College  Settlement,  College  Chorus,  Pirouette  (i). 

4' 


NAME.  ADDRESS. 

BowMAX,   Ethei,      .........      355  Rioadway,  Somerville,  ]SIass. 

Shakespeare  Society,  B.S.,  A. A  ,  Philosophy  Club,  Mandolin  Club,  Golf  Club,  College  Settlement,  Class 
Factotum  (i),  Flower  Dance  (i),  Basket  Ball  Team  (i,  2^  I. S.S.I.  (2),  Junior  Play  (3),  President  Philoso- 
phy Club  (4). 

Braixerd,   Helex  Cath.\rixe        ......        39  Ferris  Street,  St.  Albans,  Vt. 

B.S.,  A.  A.,  Golf  Club.     Entered  Class  in  Senior  year. 

BfCK,  Evelyn  Mary      ...........         Bucksport,  INIe. 

B.S.,  C.A.,  Wagner  Club,  'gS  Basket  Ball  Team  (i).     Entered  Class  in  Junior  year. 

BuRBAXK,  Marjorie        ...........       I^lvmptoii,  Mass. 

B.S.,  A. A.,  Philosophy  Club,  Flower  Dance  (i),  Class  Crew  (2,  4). 

BuRTT,  Gr.\ce  Louise    ...........        Andover,  Mass. 

Wagner  Club,  Somerset  Y's,  Chorus.     Entered  Class  in  Junior  year. 

Byixgtox,  Margaret  Frances      ....  i  50  West  66th  Street,  New  York,  N.  Y. 

Z  A,  B.S.,  C.A.,  A. A.,  I.S.S.I.,  Class  Treasurer  (i).  Columbine  ( i),  Corresponding  Secretary  Christian 
Association  (2'),  College  Settlement. 

Cameron,  Jessie     .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  -3,31  Gano  Street,  Providence,  R.  I. 

T  Z  E,  B.S.,  A. A.,  College  Settlement,  Golf  Club,  History  Club,  Philosophy  Club,  Psi  Sorority,  Unitarian 
Club,  Court  Dance  (i). 

Chase,  Alice  Elizabeth        ....  5  16  Woodland  Terrace.  M'est  Philadclpliia,  Pa. 

*  S,  B.S.,  C.A.,  A.A,,  Golf  Club,  College  Settlement,  Wagner  Club,  History  Club,  K.  &  C.  Firm,  O.K., 
Economics  Club,  Basket  Ball  Team  (i).  Freshman  Aid  (i),  Executive  Committee  of  Class  (2),  Junior 
Prom.  Committee  (3),  Junior  Play  (3),  \'ice  President  of  Class  (4). 

Chase,  CARf>LYN  Louise  ...........   Deny,  N.  H. 

T  Z  E,  B.S.,  C.A.,  College  Settlement,  Philosophy  Club,  Court  Dance  (i). 

Colby,  Emma  F.      ...........  .  Natick,  Mass. 

B.S.,  C.A.,  Pirouette  (i). 

42 


NAME.  ADDRESS. 

CoLMAX,  Margaret  Howe     .  .  .  .  .  .  .7  Plea.sant  Street,  Arlington,  Mass. 

Z  A,  B.S.,  A.A.,  C.A.,  Wagner  Club,  Golf  Club,  I.S.S.I.,  C.L.C.,  Old  Maids'  Club,  Mu  Omega,  Junior 
Aid  (i).  Committee  on  Class  Constitution  (i),  Vice  President  of  Cla.«s  (2). 

Cook,  Mary  Lmogexe     .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .100  Park  Street,  Montclair,  N.  J. 

B.S.,  C.A.,  Philosophv  Club,  College  Settlement,  Class  Crew  (3),  Junior  Plav  Committee  (3).     Entered 
Class  in  Sopbomore  year. 

CiiAMTOX,  Ei.LEX   Hrown         ...........    Rutland,  \'t. 

B.S.,  C.A.,  College    Settlement,  Zoology  Club,  Economics    Club,  Coacb    for   Class  Crew   (2),  "Jolly 
Eight." 

Crom.vck,  Alice  Prextiss      .......  2  Orient  .Street,  Maiden,  Mass. 

Shakespeare  Society,  B.S.,  Philosophy  Club,  Hailequin  (i). 

Crosby,  H.\rriet  Fr.\xce.s     ..........  Wilton,  N.  H. 

History  Club.     Entered  Class  in  Sophomore  _vear. 

Cross,  Axx.a.  Foster      ........       2  Webster  Street,  Nashua,  N.  H. 

ATdPA,  B.S.,  C.A.,  Flower  Dance  (i).  Class  Crew  (i,  2),  L'm-ha-ha  Tribe  (3),  Executive  Committee  of 
Class  r3). 

Curtis,  Ciii.oe  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  Brookfield  Centre,  Conn. 

B.S.,  C.A.,  A. A.,   Philosophy  Club,  Chorus  (2),  Class  Crew  (3,  4),  Corresponding  Secretary  Christian 
Association  (4),  Corresponding  Secretary  of  Class  (4),  Literary  Editor  of  Legenda. 

Da\export,  May  Oi.mstead  .....      269  Myrtle  Avenue,  Bridgeport,  Conn. 

B.S.,  C.A..  Basket  Ball  (i).  Harlequin  (i).  Chorus  (2). 

Dutch,  Marioiui-:  Fi.kmmixgs  .........    Winchester,  Mass. 

Z  a.  B.S.,  A. A.,  Tennis  Club,  Pride  and  Prejudice  (3),  Member  of  P'reeman  Ideal  Family. 

E.\TOX,  Lelia   Sophia     .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  iS  Sawin  Stieet,  NaticU,  Mass. 

APOPA,  B.S.,  A.A.,  Wagner  Club,  Golf  Club,  Chorus,  S-'ub,  Columbine  (i).  Class  Crew  (3,  4),  Class 
Factotum  (4),  Literary  Editor  of  Legenda. 

43 


NAME.  ADDRESS. 

Elliot,  Mildred  S Grafton,  M.-iss. 

T  Z  E,  B.S.,  A. A.,  College  Settlement,  History  Club,  Golf  Club,  Glee  Club  (3I,  |uuioi-  Tree  Day  Com- 
mittee (3),  Psi  Sorority. 

Fairlie,  Agnes  Edmund  ......    1035  East  Bay  Street,  Jaekson\ille,  Fla. 

B.S.,  C. A.,  A. A.,  Tennis  Club,  Somerset  Y's,  Chorus,  Jester  ( i),  S-'ub  (3),  Cap  and  Gown  Commitee, 
Class  Factotum  (4),  Art  Editor  of  Legenda. 

FisKE,  Marion  .........      6  Walnut  Street,  Brattlelioro,  Vt. 

B.S.,  .\.A.,  Golt  Club,  Junior  Play  (3).     Entered  Class  in  Junior  year. 

FooTE,  Edna  Bigelow   ...........  Evanston,  111. 

A  K  X,  B.S.,  Wagner  Club,  Pirouette  (i).  Member  Chicago  University  (3),  Chicago  Club. 

Gage,  Gertride  Bi.air  ..........  Monson,  Mass. 

A  K  X,  B.S.,  C.A.,  A. A.,  College  Settlement,  Golf  Club.  Basket  Ball  Team  (i,  2,  3,  4),  Marshal  at 
Inauguration  (4). 

Gallagher,  Elizabeth   F.     .  .  .  .  .  .35  St.  Luke's  Place,  Montclair,  N.  J. 

B.S.,  Pirouette  (i)- 

Geyer,  Emma  Lena        .......  330  Wayne  Avenne,  Dayton,  Ohio. 

B.S.,  C.A.,  A.A.,  Wagner  Club,  Philosoph\  Club,  S-kib  (,3),  Crew  (4").     Entered  Class  Junior  year. 

Gordon,  1\L\rv  Ger.\ldine     ....     3S49  'May  Street,  Walnut  Hills,  Cinciniiati,  Ohio. 

4'  -,  A. A.,  Philosophy  Club,  College  Settlement,  Golf  Club,  Basket  Ball  Team  (i),  Corresponding  Secre- 
tary of  Class  (1)1  Author  of  Class  Song  (i),  Receiver  of  the  Spade  (i),  Rhymsters'  Club  (2,  3,  4),  Short 
Stor\  Club  (3),  Magazine  Board  (3J,  Editor  in  Chief  of  Magazine  (4),  D.T.S.C.  (4). 

Grcsvexor,  Euretta  Gordon        .........       Abington,  Conn. 

B.S.,  Wagner  Club. 

Hall,  Oriaxa  Fiiillip.s  ....  i  ^58  Massachusetts  Avenue,  Cambridge,  Mass. 

*  2,  B.S.,  A. A.,  C.A.,  Golf  Club,  Tennis  Club,  College  Settlement,  Wagner  Club,  C.  C,  Mu  Omega, 
Chorus  (2),  I.S.S.I.,  Basket  Ball  Team  (3),  President  of  Somerset  Y's  (4),  Treasurer  of  Class  (4). 

44 


NAME.  ADDRESS. 

Halsey,  Florence  ..........       Xorth  Paterson,  N.  J. 

■!>  2,  B.S.,  A. A.,  College  Settlement,  Golf  LMub,  Tennis  (Class  Champion),  C.C,  l.S  S.I.,  Basket  Ball 
— Captain  (i,  2) — Head  of  Sport  (4). 

llA-Mii/roN,  Florence   Burton         .  .       ^  .  .  .  24  Linwood  Street,  Roxhury,  Mass. 

A  K  X,  B.S.,  A. A.,  College  Settlement,  Wagner  CUib,  Golf  Club,  Flower  Dance  (i),  Senior  Concert 
Committee  (4),  Secretary  Cliorus  (4),  Glee  Club  (4). 

Harracii,  Can-ie  \[.  .......  S02  Fifth  Stieet,  Des  Moines,  Iowa. 

T  Z  E,  Fleur-de-lis  (i). 

ILvRDixG,  Alice  Elizaretii   .  .  .  .  .  .  .100  Park  .Street,  Monfclair,  N.  J. 

Shakespeare  Society,  B.S.,  C.  A. — Vice  President  (3) — President  (4),  Class  Crew  (i).  Tree  Daj"  Orator 
(i).  Midsummer  Night's  Dream  (2),  President  Students'  Volunteer  (2,  3), .Ivy  Orator  (3),  Cap  and  Gown 
Committee,  Marshal  at  Inauguration  (4). 

Hemingway,  Marjorie  B.       ......  .        2 19  Pine  .Street,  Ilolyoke,  Mass. 

*  2,  B.S.,  C.A.,  Wagner  Club,  Crew  (i),  Court  Dance  (i).  Chairman  Senior  Concert  Committee  (4). 

Hewitt,  Nancy       ............        Hiawatha,  Kan. 

Entered  Class  in  Senior  year. 

Hopkins,  Mary  Alden  ............     Bangor,  Me. 

Hi-ME,  Elizabeth  Norris       ......  24  Home  Place,  Xew  Haven,  Conn. 

B.S.,  A. A.,  C.A.,  Tennis  Club — Head  of  Sport  (4),  Warrior  (i),  Chorus  (2,  4),  Chairman  Missionary 
Committee  (4),  House  Committee  (4),  Marslial  at  Inauguration  (4). 

Hu.ME,  Hannah       ........  24  Home  Place,  Xew  Haven,  Conn. 

Z  A,  B.S.,  C.A.,  A. A.,  Somerset  Y's,  College  Settlement,  Philosophy  Club,  History  Club,  Wagner  Club, 
I.S.S.I.,  Recording  Secretary  of  Class  (2),  Class  President  (3,  4),  Crew  (4),  Aid  at  Inauguration  (4). 

Hint,  Abby  Otis   ............        Braintree,  Mass. 

B.S.,  A.A.,  F.F.C.,  Jester  (i),  Basket  Ball  Team  (i,  2,  3). 

45 


NAME.  ADDRESS. 

HuNTiXGTOx,  SrsAX  Dickinson       ......         206  Broadway,  Norwich,  Conn. 

*  2,  B.S.,  C.A.,  College  Settlement,  Spanish  Club.     Entered  Class  in  Senior  year. 

Joiixsox,  Susie  C.  ..........  Auburndale,  Mass. 

B.S.,  C.A.,  Somerset  Vs,  Philosophy  Club,  Golf  Club,  Chorus  (i). 

Keepers,  Alice  ]\Iay      .......       341  Belleville  Avenue,  Newark,  N.  J. 

B.S.,  C.iV.,  Somerset  Y's,  A. A.,  Harlequin  (i),  Chorus  (i,  2,  3),  Crew  ( i,  2),  College  lists  (4). 

KixG,  Florexce       ...........         Trumansbury,  N.  Y. 

B.S.,  A. A.,  Philosophy  Club,  .\mazon  (i),  Marshal  at  Inauguration  (4). 

Kxox,  Alice  Daxa  ...........     Englewood,  N.  J. 

Shakespeare  Society,  B.S.,  A. A.,  Golf  Club,  Mandolin  Club,  C.   &   K.   Firm,  O.K.,  Basket  Ball,  Class 
Factotum  (i).  Leader  of  Jester  Dance  (i).  President  of  I. S.S.I.  (2),  Junior  Play  (3),  As  You  Like  It  (3). 

L.\xcE,  Julia  Edith        .......  167  Dana  .Street,  Wilkes-Bane,  Pa. 

B.S.,  C..\.,  Wariior  (n.  Junior  Play  (3). 

Laxghorxe.  Agnes   Swixtox  .  .  .  .  .916  Putnam  Avenue,  Plaintield,  N.  J. 

B  S.,  C..\.,  A. A.,  Golf  Club,  Wagner  Club,  Pirouette  (i),  French  Play  (3) 

Lehmax,  Edith   Bl.vxche       .  .  .  .  .  .  i :;  i  Forest  .Street,  Cle\eland,  Ohio. 

Shakespeare  Society,  B.S..   A. A.,  Golf  Club,  College  Settlement,   Wagner   Club,   History    Club,  C C, 
S  M.B.C.,  Fleur-de-lis  (i),  D.T.S.C.  (4),  Literary  Editor  of  Legenda. 

Lextell,  M.  Ethel         .....  S92  Bovlston  .Street,  Newton  Highlands,  Mass. 

College  Settlement,  Jester  Dance  (i). 

Lewis,  Nellie  A. Catskill,  N.  Y, 

B.S.,  A. A.,  Wagner  Club,  T.B. 

Lester,  Axx.v  Mary        ...........        Galveston,  Tex. 

B.S.,  College    Settlement,    Philosophy    Club,    Wagner    Club,   Junior    Prom.    Committee    (3),    Literary 
Editor  of  Legenda. 

46 


NAME.  ADDRESS. 

Locke,  Caroline  Mariox      .........  Saxton's  River,  Vt. 

AroPA.  B.S.,  C.A.. Recording  Secretary  of  Class  (4).     Entered  Class  in  Junior  year. 

Loop,  Florexck  Estelle      .  .  .  .  .  .  .212  South  Street,  Pittsfield,  Mass. 

ATOPA.  B.S..  Philosophy  Club.  Warrior  (i).  Chairman  Cap  and  Gown  Committee,  President  of 
ArOPA  (4). 

Lu.M,  Elizabeth  .Sherwood Elizabeth,  N.  J. 

B.S..  C..\..  Chorus.  Warrior  (i).  Pleasure  Crew  (i). 

Marks,  Jeaxxette  A.  ..........       Westport,  N.  Y. 

Z  A,  C..\..,  A.\.,  Golf  Club,  College  Settlement,  Rhymsters'  Club,  College  Settlement  Re.iding  Club. 
Entered  Class  in  Senior  year. 

Marshall,  Dora  E.        .....  .  1736  Buena  Vista  .Street,  Allegheny,  Pa. 

B.S.,  A. A.,  Columbine  (i),  Crew  (4). 

Masox,   Edxa  Sarah      ......  454  Ward  .Street,  Newton  Centre,  Mass. 

Z  A,  B.S.,  C.A,,  .A..\.,  College  Settlement,  Golf  Club,  Mandolin  Club,  Court  Dance  (i),  Class  Factotum 
(2),  Senior  Concert  Committee  (4).  Marshal  at  Inauguration  (4). 

Masox,  Ella  .Sylvixa  ......  454  Ward  Street,  Xewton  Centre,  Mass. 

Z  A.  B.S.,  A, A,,  C.A  .  College  Settlement,  Golf  Club,  Mandolin  Club— Leader  (4),  Court  Dance  (i). 
Class  Factotum  (2),  Marshal  at  Inauguration  (4),  Art  Editor  of  Legenda, 

^L\TTHEws,  Inez  Louise         ..........      ISLirquette,  I^^Iich. 

B.S-,  C.A.,  A. A,.  College  Settlement,  Wagner  Club,  Philosophy  Club,  Junior  Play  Committee  (3), 
House  Council  (4).  Marshal  at  Inauguration  (4). 

Meisexbach,   Hilda  H. 2229  S.  Broadway,  St.  Louis,  Mo. 

Shakespeare  Society,  B.S.,  A. A.,  C.A.,  College  Settlement,  Philosophy  Club,  Wagner  Club — Executive 
Committee  (3) — Chairman  (4),  Golf  Club,  Economics  Club,  Psi  Sorority,  Basket  Ball  Team,  Class  Execu- 
tive Committee  (i).  Mistress  of  Ceremonies  (i).  Class  President  (2),  Vice  President  of  B,S.  (3),  Chairman 
Junior  Play  Committee  (3),  President  of  Shakespeare  Society  (4). 

Merriam,  Ida  Fraxces Sharon,  Mass. 

B.S.,  A, A.,  College  Settlement,  Philosophy  Club. 

47 


NAME.  ADDRESS. 

Metcalf,  Maud 12S  Anawan  Avenue,  West  Roxbuiy,  Mass. 

B.S.,  A. A.  (i,  2,  3),  College  Settlement,  Crew  (i,  2,  3),  College  Settlement  Reading  Club  (4),  Concert 
Fimd  Committee  (3,  4),  Senior  Concert  Committee  (4). 

Miller,  Grace  M. Le  Roy,  N.  Y. 

C.A.,  Basket  Ball,  '93-94.     Entered  Class  in  Junior  year. 

MiLLETT,  Alice  L 336  Cabot  Street,  Beverly,  Mass. 

B.S.,  A.\.,  C  A.,  College  Settlement,  Chorus  (i),  Harlequin  (i),  F.F.C. 

MooRE,  Edith  H. 133  Hunnewell  Avenue,  Newton,  Mass. 

Arol'A,  B,S.,  C.A.,  A.A.,  Class  Crew— Captain  (i,  2,  4),  Varsity  Crew  (i,  3),  Fleur-de-lis  (i),  Chorus 
(i),  Um-ha-ha  Tribe  (4),  Athletic  Member  of  1900  (4),  Art  Editor  of  Legenda. 

Moore,  Florenxe  Almera Talcottville,  Conn. 

B.S.,  A. A.,  C,A.     Entered  Class  in  Junior  year, 

Morris,  Lrcv  Vax  Name 34  Plymouth  Avenue,  Buffalo,  X.  Y. 

Morse,  Carolvx  Louise 96  Washington  .Street,  Medford,  Mass. 

AroPA,  B.S.,  A. A.,  Golf  Club,  Tennis  Club,  Economics  Club,  'Varsity  Crew  (3  yrs.).  Entered  Class  in 
Senior  year. 

Newkirk,  Eliza  Jacorus        ..........  Wyncote,  Pa. 

Z  a,  B.S.,  A. A, —Vice  President  (3),  C,A.,  College  Settlement,  Mandolin  Club  (2,  3),  Class  and  'Varsity 
Basket  Ball  Teams  (2,  3),  Recording  Secretary  of  Class  (3),  President  of  Z  A  (4),  Literary  Editor  of  Maga- 
zine (4),  Art  Editor  of  Legenda. 

N0RCR0.S.S,  Edith  J 16  Claremont  Street,  Worcester,  Mass. 

T  Z  E,  B.S.,  A. A..  Golf  Club,  College  Settlement,  Jester  Dance  (i),  Psi  Sorority,  Chairman  of  Com- 
mittee on  Class  Pins  (2),  Treasurer  of  B,S.  (3),  President  of  T  Z  E  (4). 

NoYES,  Florence  Ethel        .  .  .  .  .  .95  Highland  Avenue,  Somerville,  Mass. 

B.S.,  A. A.,  C.A.,  College  Settlement,  Flower  Dance  (i),  Class  Crew  (i,  2,  3). 

Nuxxemacher,  Paulixe 1700  Grand  Avenue,  Milwaukee,  Wis. 

*  2,  B.S.,  College  Settlement,  History  Club,  Wagner  Club,  Basket  Ball  Team,  Junior  Play  (3).  Entered 
Class  in  Junior  year. 

48 


3JAME.  ADDRESS. 

Oljphant,  Mary    R.        ..........  .  Ashhind,  Kan.- 

Z  A,  B.S.,  C.V.,  A.  A.,  Pride  and  Prejudice  (3). 

Peul,  Edith  Aigusta    ........  34  Hill  Stieet,  Newark,  N.  J.- 

B.S.,  C.A.,  Philosophy  Club. 

Pini-Lips,  Mabei.le  Ciiari.tox         .  .  .  .  .921  Madison  Avenue,  Plaintield,  N.  J. 

T  Z  E,  B.S.,  A..\.,  College  Settlement,  History  Club,  Economics  Club,  Executive  Committee  of  Class  (i). 
Executive  Committee  of  A. A.  (i),  Chorus  (i),  Psi  Sorority,  Class  Basket  Ball  Team — Captain  (2),  'Varsity 
(Basket  Ball  Team,  Business  Manager  of  Wellcsley  Magazine  (4). 

Pierce,  Louise  N. Old  Town,  Me. 

Wagner  Club,  Philosophy  Club,  Columbine  i  i ). 

Poor,  Xina  Foster  ............      Belfast,  Me. 

B.S.,  A. A.,  Golf  Club,  Wagner  Club,  Glee  Club— Leader  (4),  Warrior  (i).  Class  Crew  (1),  Basket  Ball 
Team  (3),  President  House  Committee  (4),  Executive  Committee  of  Class  (4),  Literary  Editor  of  Maga- 
zine (4). 

Pope,  Axxa  Isabella Spencer,  Mass. 

B.S.,  A. A.,  C.A.,  Philosophy  Club,  Golf  Club,  Chorus,  Lacrosse  (i),  Gypsy  (i). 

Reeve,  Rachel  Cooper 640  Cooper  Street,  Camden,  X.  J. 

AFOPA,  B.S.,  C.A.,  A. A.,  College  Settlement,  Court  Dance— Leader  of  Second  Minuet  (i),  Chairman 
of  Gavel  Committee  (2),  Class  Crew  (3,  4),  Um-ha-ha  Tribe  (3),  House  Council  (4),  President  Rowing 
Club  u)- 

* 

RiDGEWAv,  Helen  F 13  Park  Street,  Xaslnia,  X.  H. 

B.S.,  Pirouette  (r),  Pleasure  Crew  (i),  "Jolly  Eight." 

RiGLEV,  Lois  Eliza -       2  iS  John  Street,  Owosso,  Mich. 

B.S.,  A. A.,  College  Settlement,  Coach  for  Class  Crew  (i),  Fleur-de-lis  (i). 

Ring,  Rl  th  Prentiss 2020  West  Park  Avenue,  Philadelphia,  Pa. 

Z  A,  B.S.,  A. A.,  College  Settlement,  Economics  Club,  Wagner  Club,  Golf  Club,  Tree  Dav  Committee 
Cl),  Class  Social  Committee  (i,  ;,  3),  Basket  Ball  Team  (i,  4),  Pretzel  Club,  President  Snob  Club,  President 
Pennsylvania  Club. 

49 


NAME.  ADDRESS. 

Rockwell.  Marv   ...........  Junction  City,  Kan. 

<!>  S,  B.S..  A. A.,  College  Settlement,  Wagner  Club,  Philosophy  Club,  Economics  Club,  I.S.S.I.,  Stroke 
on  Class  and  'Varsity  Crews,  Chairman  of  Freshman  Class,  Chairman  Tree  Day  Committee  (i).  Executive 
Committee  of  Clas*;  (i,  3.  4),  President  of  <f>  2  (4). 

RocKwooD,  Emily  Patterson         ..........       Calais,  Me. 

B.S.,  A.A  ,  Wagner  Club,  Chorus  (2),  Harlequin  (O.  F.F.C. 

Rogers,  Caroline  Wright    ........        James  Street,  Barre,  Mass. 

B.S.,  A. A. .Jester  Dance  (i),  Coxswain  of  Class  Crew  (:,  3,  4),  House  Council  (4). 

Rowe,  Alice  T.  H.         .  ......        37  Shaw  Street,  West  Newton,  Mass. 

A  K  X,  C.A..  Fleur-de-lis  (i).  Gavel  Committee  (2),  President  of  A  K  X  (4) 

ScHOELLKOi'K,  Pai'la   Loltise  .....       I /GO  Grand  Axcnue,  Mil wiuikcc,  Wis. 

•t  2,  B.S.,  College  Settlement.  Wagner  Club,  History  Club,  Golf  Club,  President  of  Barn  Swallows  (4), 
Business  Manager  of  Legenda.     Entered  Class  in  Junior  year. 

Scott,  Katiierixe   Billock  .........    Sioux  Falls,  S.  D. 

B.S.,  C.A..  A..\.,  Golf  Club,  Warrior  (1),  Basket  Ball  (i). 

Searle,  Frances    ..........    Babylon,  Long  Island,  N.  Y. 

B.S.,  A. A.,  Philosophy  Club,  I'"Iower  Dance  (i).  Class  Crew^  (2,  3,  4),  '\'ar.sity  Crew  (3),  Business  Man- 
ager of  Rowing  Club  (4). 

Seward,  Edna   L'Estkange  ......      261  Broadway,  New  'iork,  N.  Y. 

ATOPA,  B.S.,  C..\.,  Somerset  Y's,  Philosophy  Club,  College  Settlement,  Flower  Dance  (i),  Class 
Crew — Captain   (3),  'Varsity   Crew,  Calculus   Class  (3),  Um-ha-ha  Tribe  (3),  Secretary  of  Philosophy  Club 

SiL\w,  Martha  Cornelia      .......    436  Pacific  Avenue,  Pittsburg,  Pa. 

<i>  2.  B  S.,  A. A.,  College  Settlement,  Golf  Club,  Triangle  Club,  l-'resident  Pretzel  Club,  Pennsylvania 
Club,  Class  Factotum  (3),  N.N.N. 5,  French  Play,  Associate  Editor  of  Legenda. 

Sherman,  Rose  E.  .......         163  Dartmouth  Street,  Lowell,  Mass. 

B.S.,  C.A.,  College  Settlement,  Philosophy  Club,  T.U. 

50 


NAME.  ADDRESS. 

SissoN,  Bert  ha   Loiise  .  .  .  .  .7  North  Second  Street,  New  Bedford,  Mass. 

B.S.,  A. A  ,  College  Chorus  (3,  4),  Warrior  (i). 

Smith,  Bektua  Harris  ......  Perrysville  iVveniie,  Allegheny,  Pa. 

B.S.,  A. A.,  College  Settlement,  Wagner  Club,  Golf  Club,  Economics  Club,  I.O.N. O.,  Pennsylvania 
Club,  P.P.C.,  Pretzel  Club,  Basket  Ball  Team,  Junior  Play  Committee  (3),  Marshal  at  Inauguration  (4), 
Business  Manager  of  Legenda,  Norumbega  Play  (4). 

Smith,  Estelle  Franci.s Fredericksburg,  Tex. 

A  K  X,  B.S.,  C.A.,  A  A.,  Golf  Club,  Wagner  Club.  Corresponding  Secretary  of  Class  (3). 

Smith,  Florence  W 8  Mellen  Street,  Cambridge,  Mass. 

B  S.,  A. A.,  College  Chorus,  Harlequin  (i). 

S.MITH,  M.  Irene 319  Prospect  Avenue.  Milwaukee,  Wis. 

B.S.,  A. A.,  Wagner  Club,  Philosophy  Club,  Crew  (3,  4).     Entered  Class  in  Senior  vear. 

Smith,  Oli\e  F .  .S3  Linden  Street.  Xew  Bedford,  Mass. 

SouTHwicK,  Bertha State  Hospital,  Taunton,  Mass. 

B.S.,  Amazon  (0. 

Sperrv,  Etiiei.  Mii.LicENT 3 1  Cookc  Street,  Waterbuiv,  Conu. 

<!>  2,  B,S.,  A.  A.,  C.A.,  College  Settlement,  Wagner  Club,  Philosophy  Club,  Golf  Club,  I.S.S.I.,  N.N.N., 
Basket  Ball  Team  (i,  2),  Class  Factotum  (3). 

Storm.';,  KAriiuiN.x   ILmsbekton      .........         Evans\ille,  Ind. 

B  S.,  A.  A.,  College  Settlement.  Philosophy  Club— Membership  Committee  (4),  Golf  Club,  Pretzel  Club, 
Snob  Club,  Basket  Ball  (4),  Southern  Club,  Chairman  Tree  D.iy  Committee  (3),  Manager  of  French  Play 
Ballet  (3),  Junior  Play  (3),  Marshal  at  Inauguration  (4),  Norumbega   Play  (4),  Editor  in  Chief  of  Legexda. 

TowLE,  Elizabeth  Ax(;eline 45  Day  Avenue,  Westfield.  Mass. 

ATdPA,  B.S.,  Economics  Club,  Amazon  (i),  Junior  Prom.  Committee  (3),  Vice  President  of  Class  (3), 
Executive  Committee  of  Class  (4),  House  Committee  (4),  Business  Manager  of  M'elleslev  Magazine  (4). 

Tracy,  Abby  Ruth         ...........        Leicester,  Mass. 

B  S.,  C.A. 

SI 


NAME.  ADDRESS. 

VoGEL,  Eliz.vbeth  a 5S3  Ca.ss  Street,  Milwaukee,  Wis. 

*2,  B.S.,  A. A.,  College  Settlement,  Economics  Club,  Wagner  Club,  Senior  Aid  (i).  Captain  of  Basket 
Ball  Team  (i).  Treasurer  of  A.  A.  (2),  Treasurer  of  Wagner  Club  (4). 

VoRHEE.s,  CoisxELi.x  EsTELi.E  .  .  .  .  20  Pateisoii  Stiect,  New  Brunswick,  N.  J. 

B.S.,  C.A.,  Philosophy  Club,  Wagner  Club. 

W.XLnuoN,  AxNiE  :\I 54S  Cumberland  Street,  Portland,  Me. 

U.S.     Entered  Class  in  Sophomore  year. 

Walker,  Edith   Gordon 99  Jason  Street,  Arlington,  Mass. 

B.S.,  C.A.,  A. A.,  President  of  Golf  Club,  College  Settlement,  N.N.N. ,  Red-Headed  Club,  President  of 
Mandolin  Club,  Basket  Ball  Team  (i).  Lacrosse  Team  (ij.  Junior  Plav  (•J),  French  Plav  (3),  Norumbega 
Pla^  (4). 

W.\LKEH,  Florence  Loulse 35  Summer  Street,  Westboro,  Mass. 

B.S.,  College  Settlement,  President  of  Glee  Club,  Junior  Play  (3).     Entered  Class  in  Sophomore  year. 

Westf.vll,  Berth.\  Grace    ..........    Cambriilge.  X.  Y. 

B.S.,  A. A.,  Wagner  Club,  History  Club,  B.isket  Ball,  College  Chorus  (2),  F.F.C.,  Jester  Dance  (i). 

White,  Rebecca  Mlrritt 25  Xortb  State  Street,  Concord,  X.  II. 

T  Z  E,  B.S.,  A. A.,  Wagner  Club,  Flower  Dance  (i). 

Whiting,  Alice  Elizabeth 2j6  Oak  Street,  Ilolvoke,  Mass. 

<i>  2,  B.S.,  C.A..  Wagner  Club,  Sophomore  Aid  (1),  Marshal  at  Inauguration  (4). 

Whitney,  Amy  I. Thompsonville,  Conn. 

Shakespeare  Society,  A..\.,  College  Settlement,  Wagner  Club,  Philosophy  Club,  Court  Dance  (i). 

Wilcox,  Lucie  Etta Lihue,  Kauai,  Hawaiian  Islands. 

Z  A,  B.S.,  A..\.,  C.A.,  College  Settlement,  Golf  Club,  Jester  Dance  (i),  Executive  Committee  of  Class 
(2). 

WiLKLNs,  Eliza   G Mansfield,  Conn. 

B.S.,  C.A.,  Somerset  Y's,  Lobster  (i). 

52 


NAME.  ADDRESS. 

Williams,  Alicp:  C.        .  .  .  .  .  .  .  17  West  L'tica  Street,  Buffalo,  X.  Y. 

B.S.,  A.A.,  History  Club,  Economics  Club.  F.F.C. 

WiLLi.\MS,  Alma      ...........  Vennontville,  Mich. 

B.S.,  A. A.,  Tennis  Club — Class  Champion  (3),  Class  and  'Varsity  Cre\ys,  Beefsteak  Club,  Concert  Fund 
Committee,  Senior  Concert  Committee,  Junior  Play  (3). 

Wright,  Lucy         ...........  Sandv  Hook.  Conn. 

ArOP.A.,  B.S.,  C.A.,  Philosophy  Club,  Basket  Ball  (i),  Motley  Cro\yd  (i),  Giyer  of  Spade  (2),  Junior 
Play  (3),  Literary  Editor  of  Wellesley  Magazine  (3),  Executive  Committee  of  Class  (3),  Associate  Editor  of 
Wcllesley  Magazine  (4),  House  Committee  (,4),  Unclassified  Heathen  (4). 

Wright,  Mabel      .........     422  Gold  .Street,  Brooklvn.  X.  Y. 

B.S.,  C.A.,  A.  A.,  College  Settlement,  Wagner  Club,  Flower  Dance  (i),  Treasurer  of  Barn  Swallows  (4), 
A  Professional  Dunner  (i,  2,  3,  4). 

Yeater,  Laur.\  Jame.sox        ...........    Sedalia,  Mo. 

YouxG,  Bertha  Guiles  .....         i  102  X'orth  .Second  .Street,  Harrisburg,  Pa. 

B.S.,  C.A.,  A. A.,  Golf  Club,  Pirouette  (i),  Junior  Play  Committee  (3),  Independent  Order  of  Math. 
Fiends  (i,,2,  3,  4). 

Young,  Edith   Caroline         .  .  .  .  .  .62  Wellington  Street,  Worcester,  Mass. 

B.S.,  C.A  ,  College  Settleinent,  Economics  Club,  Philosophy  Club,  Priest  (1),  Class  Song  Committee 
(i).  Junior  Play  Committee  (3),  Marshal  at  Inauguration  (4),  Chairman  Committee  on  Class  Pictures  (4). 


jeicanor  ©arrowe  Smitb 

^ic^  /IRarcb  15,  IS99 


flDarion  jfranccs  Sullivan 

Died  /IRarcb  IS,  IS99 


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We-r^    ntvtr  seen    our    PURPLE   FLOWER. 
We  ntvit     HOPE    to    see    one    . 
But  1+5  name   ls  in  Grau's   Manual, 
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)VIen  clcpen  ^aban  •.*  Hnd  fast  bcsydc  tbat  See  on  a  bygbc  JMon- 
taync  is  rigbt  a  fayr  Rous  and  in  tbat  Rous  ben  niony  folk  of 
mony  JMancrcs  and  dyvcrse  frames  =.•<  Hnd  tbci  ben  for  the  most 
partye  ^ommcn  and  tbci  ben  gode  wcrryours  and  wyse  and 
tvortbi  -Jf-  But  tbci  seggen  tbat  oon  kynd  of  CClommcn  tber  is  tbat  no  man  ne 
saugb  noon  so  fiers=.*«  Cbei  ben  verry  lyk  unto  wylde  Bestes,  and  tbat  tbc 
otbere  ^ommen  cone  duellcn  witb  bem  in  tbc  same  Rous  is  to  me  a  grct  JVIer- 
vaylle. 

Hnd  yif  tbat  I  undirstonde  arigbte,  tbe  otbere  folk  tbat  ben  in  tbis  Lond 
clcpen  tbcisc  straunge  CQommcn  'Juniours,  for  tbci  seggen  tbat  tbe  CQommen 
ben  yit  yongc,  but  tbat  tbci  willen  sum  Cyme  becum  more  gentyl  <:^'  Hnd  tber 
gon  fulle  wondcrfuUe  Cales  tborcwc  tbe  Lond  tbat  tbcisc  CClommcn  ban  an 
Hlliaunce  witb  tbat  cucl  Contrce  Spain  u<  for  tbc  CClommen  bercn  an  Scild  and 
tbci  sweren  bi  tbis  Scild  and  tbci  reysen  ber  Colours  f  ullc  bigbe  and  bcr  Col- 
ours ben  reed  and  yclowc  =.*<  Cberfor  scyden  us  JVIcn  tbat  tbcisc  CClommcn  ben 
frendes  of  Spain. 

But  tbci  ben  ne  so  mocbel  stronge  CClommcn  and  welfygbting  als  tbat 
tbci  reccben  no  tbyng  of  ber  Lyf ,  and  tbci  dar  wel  werre  witb  tbc  otbere 
^ommcn  yif  tbat  tbci  don  ony  tbyng  tbat  is  6rcvauncc  to  bem  =.<  Cbc  JVIcn  in 
tbat  Contrce  scyn  bow  tbat  it  is  ne  yit  mocbel  ouer  an  Y^cr  sitbens  tbcisc  Bar- 
baryencs  ban  wcrred  ageincs  ber  yongerc  Naybours  in  tbc  same  Rous  =.*»  Hnd  tbci 
bclden  Sege  aboutcn  tbc  otbere  CClommcn  and  al  tbogb  tbci  weren  nc  so  succes- 
fulle  als  mygtb  be,  yit  tbci  scbewed  remarkyblc  Valour  and  grct  Power  of 
Snduraunce. 


57 


But  tbeisc  straungc  CQomtncn  ne  schewcd  bcm  scls  als  dougbti  and  als 
wortbi  als  tbci  scbolde  at  tbc  gret  Courneiynge  wban  tbat  alle  tbe  OTommcn  in 
tbc  Lond  cam  and  assayed  bcr  Strcngtbc  =.•*  Hnd  tbci  prctcndcn  tbat  tbc  8kylle 
tbci  nc  scbcwcd  bcr  prowcs  at  swicb  a  Cyme  was  tbat  tbci  woldc  nc  spcndan  so 
mocbcl  of  bcr  Labours  for  nougbtc,  but  allc  tbc  otbcrc  CQommcn  in  tbat  Con- 
trcc  trow  wcl  tbat  tbeisc  CClommcn  ben  nc  so  noble  and  strongc  als  tbci  avaun- 
ten  ^  Hlso  anotbcre  Cyme  bit  bif  clle,  ye  scbullc  undirstondc,  tbat  wban  tbc 
otbcrc  CClommen  wrattbed  bcm  dclyverly  and  wolde  nc  Icct  bcm  slcpcn,  tbci 
cam  boldly  to  tbc  fraye  and  reysed  gret  Dole  and  stompt  appcrtcly  on  tbe 
Colours  of  tbe  dispytous  Cribe,  but  oon  of  bcr  l^ombcr  tbat  was  ne  so  f  iers 
als  alle  tbc  otbercs,  spake  wondur  soft  to  tbe  cruclle  Bncmies  and  sootbed  bcr 
onruli  disposiciouns. 

But  allc  be  bit  tbat  tbci  ben  somdellc  f  iers  and  wykkcd,  yit  natbclcs  nc 
ben  tbci  nougbt  witb  outcn  Drede  ^<  Hnd  allc  tbe  CClommen  in  tbc  Lond  ban  gret 
Pitie  for  bem,  sitbens  tbci  ban  mony  grevous  Cryals  biforn  bcm  .,*  for  ye 
scbullc  undirstondc  tbat  in  tbis  Contrec  ben  two  f  ulle  dreadf  ulle  JMonstres  and 
alle  Pcrsouncs  clcpt  '^uniours  moot  conquerc  tbeisc  wratbcfullc  JVIonstrcs  ccbc 
Ycer  in  fayr  and  appcrte  Batayllc  ^<  Hnd  I  tell  you  tbat  tbci  scballe  be  sor 
peyned  and  grctly  wery  biforn  tbat  tbc  f ybt  be  oucr  ..<  Hnd  non  mortallc  )VIan 
wot  yif  tbci  scballe  liuen  tborewc  bcr  Cribulaccioun  or  no,  but  icbonne  of  tbeisc 
straungc  Olommcn  bopetb  for  tbe  beste,  and  also  alle  tbe  otbcrc  CClommen 
desiren  tbat  tbci  scballe  scbcwcn  bcm  scls  more  dougbti  tban  tbci  ban  in  tbc 
Paste. 

Glossary. 

ageines^  against.         delyverly^  deliberately.        uathclcs,  nevertheles'-.      skylle,  reason. 
appertely,  openly,      dispvtous^  quarrelsome.      sc/'Id,  shield.  soiudelle,  sonie\sliat. 

ic/ioimc,  each  one.  ^''aff'^"i  ^''y- 


Class  of  Nineteen  Hundred  and  One. 


TREE    . 
FLOWER 


Linden. 
Dark  Red  Carnation. 


COLORS 
MOTTO 


Crimson  and  Gold. 
Be  ure  linde. 


Margaret  C.  Mills  . 
Catherine  H.  Dwight 
Elizabeth  N.  Ferxald 
Marion  F.  E.  Cooke 
Minnie  Pappenheimer 


Nigon-tiene — an ! 
Nigon-ticne — an ! 
Wellesley !     Wellesley ! 
Nine -teen — one! 

OFFICERS. 


Presidctif 

J 'ice  Presiiient. 
Recording  Secretary. 

Corresponding  Secretary. 

Treasurer. 
Emma  S.  Seward 


Auguste  M.  Helmholz 
Helen  L.  Williams 
Susan  E.  Hall 


Bertha  Batting 


1 


Bertha  L.  Doane  > 

Athletic  Member. 


Executive  Committee. 


Factotums. 


NAME. 

Ambler,  Olive  C. 
Ambler,  Fannie   W . 
Anderson,  Catherine  R. 
Andrews,  Catherine  E. 
Arnold,  Lucy  E. 
Barnes,  Rachel 


MEMBERS. 


ADDRESS. 

Natick,  Mass. 

Natick,  Mass. 

Constantinople,  Turkey. 

1095  Xoith  Ilitjli  Street,  Columbus,  Ohio. 

North  Abington,  Mass. 

.   Barnesboro,  Pa. 


59 


NAME. 

Basco.m,  Makion  a. 
Batchei.der,  Grace  E. 
Bates,  Lottie  E. 
Baxter,  Madei,ixe  C. 
Bexsley,  Agnes  L.     . 
Berrymax,  Julia 
BissELL,  Grace  L. 
Blackmer,  Axxa  \V. 
Blattner,  Clara 
Blakeslee,  Elizabeth  L. 
Bowers,  Bessie  B. 
Browx,  Carrie  E. 
Burnett,  Ethel  H. 
Bussey,  Frances   F. 
Clark,  Wenoxa  L. 
Cohen,  F.  Sybil 
Cole,  Gertrude  P. 
Collin,  Mary  M. 
CoNLON,  Eleanor  R 
Cooke,  Marion   F.  E 
Croll,  Mabel  E. 
CusHMAN,  Marion  B 
Davis,  Axxie  II. 
Davis,  Kathrina  M. 
Day,  Leila  W . 
Dean,  Cecil  H. 
Dix,  Elizabeth  E. 
Dixon,  Lilian     . 
Doane,  Bertha  L. 
Do.vner,  Diamond 
DooNAN,  Caroline  M 
Douglas,  ]VL\rion 
DuRSTiNE,  Florence 
Dwioht,  Catherine  H 
Ed\v.\rds,  Anne  K.     . 


Cla 


ADDRESS. 

Holden,  Mass. 
.     Northfield,  Vt. 
75  School  Street,  Norwich,  Conn. 
6 1  Deering  Street,  Portland,  Me. 
Springfield,  X.  Y. 
.  Shelbyville,  Ky. 
390  Linwood  Avenne,  Buffalo,  N.  Y. 
94  Maple  Avenue,  Cortland,  N.  Y. 
1S29  Lafayette  Avenue,  St.  Louis,  Mo. 
317  North  Second  Street,  Olean,  N.  Y. 
136  State  Street,  Montpelier,  Vt. 
.     Webster,  Mass. 
26  Prospect  Street,  Natick,  Mass. 
remont  Avenue,  Chestei'  Hill,  Mt.  Vernon,  N.  Y. 
.     North  New  Portland,  Me. 
1012  Douglas  Street,  Sioux  City,  la. 
12  School  Street,  Peabody,  Mass. 
Mount  Vernon,  la. 
.     6  Fox  Street,  Worcester,  Mass. 
North  Brookfield,  Mass. 
Freeland,  Pa. 
72  Jason  Street,  Arlington,  Mass. 
277  Western  Avenue,  Allegheny,  Pa. 
29  Fulton  Place,  Glens  Falls,  N.  Y. 
Egypt,  Mass. 
105  Hawkins  Avenue,  Braddock,  Pa. 
545  Mississippi  Avenue,  Memphis,  Tenn. 
1507  Walnut  Street,  Philadelphia,  Pa. 
3319  East  Ninth  Street,  Kansas  City,  Mo. 
1015  Williams  Avenue.  Portland,  Ore. 
Wellesley,  Mass. 
29  Chamber  of  Commerce,  Minneapolis,  Minn. 
S3  Wilson  Avenue,  Columbus,  Ohio. 
113  Chene  Street,  Detroit,  Mich. 
1304  Cass  Street,  La  Crosse,  Wis. 


60 


NAME. 

Everett,  Ethel  M. 
Everett,  Maisel  T. 
Faile,  Cecilia  D. 
Ferguson,  Eleaxor  R. 
Ferguson,  Gertruije 
Fernald,  Elizabeth  N. 
Fletcher,  E.   Belle 
FoRciER,  L.  Ethel 
Ford,  Alice  P. 
GiBBS,  Ethel  X. 
Greathead.  Alice  M. 
GuNN,  Mary  I. 
Hall,  Frances  A. 
Hall,  Susan  E. 
Hart,  Bertha  M. 
Hazeltine,  ^Vlice  I. 
Hazeltine,  Margaret  X 
Helmholz,  Auguste  M. 
Heru,  Charlotte  B. 
Hewitt.  Helen  F. 
Hillemeier,  May  C. 
Holmes,  Ethel  D. 
Hoyt,  Beryl  A. 
HuBBs.  Gertrude  H. 
Kimball,  Mabel  H. 
King,  Clara  T. 
Klemm,  Clara  L. 
Knox,  Maryal 
Lathrop,  Frances  E. 
Leavens,  Mary  A. 
Leonard,  Nettie   A 
Logan,  Alice  L. 
McCaullay,  Elizabe- 
McCoRD,  Annie  E. 
McNeil,  Laila  A. 


45tl 


ADDRESS. 

12  ]5eliiiont  Street,  Lowell,  Mass. 

12  Belmont  Street,  Lowell,  Mass. 

.     White  Plains,  X.  Y. 

Ben  Avon,  Pa. 

Bowdoinham,  Me. 

Faimington,  N.  H. 

.    Marshalltown,  Iowa. 

677  Leonnril  Street,  Brooklyn,  X.»Y. 

145  Tremout  Street,  Ansonia,  Conn. 

.     Grafton,  Mass. 

519  Broadwav.  Lowell,  Mass. 

t'xbridge,  Ma^s. 

21  Chestnut  Street,  Wakefield,  Mass. 

S20  Princess  Street,  Wilmington.  N.  C. 

50  Buckingham  Avenue,  Waterhury,  Conn. 

226  Winsor  Street,  Jamestown,  N.  Y. 

32  Cedar  Street,  Belfast,  Me. 

625  Van  Buren  Street,  ^Milwaukee,  Wis. 

311    South  Sixth  Street,  Pekin,  111. 

^63  Broadway,  Saratoga  Springs,  N.  Y. 

39  South  Fifth  Avenue,  Mt.  Vernon,  N.  Y. 

702  Monroe  Avenue,  Green  Bay,  Wis. 

Carroll,  Iowa. 

36  Washington  Avenue,  Evansville,  Ind. 

26  Brooks  Avenue,  Xewtonville,  Alass. 

Summit,  N.  J. 

S06  North  Main  Street,  Bloomington,  111. 

Pelham  Manor,  N.  Y. 

and  Warwick  Boulevard,  Kansas  City,  Mo. 

79  Westland  Avenue,  Boston,  Mass. 

.     S91  Winthrop  Avenue,  Chicago,  111. 

1007  Lincoln  Avenue,  x\llegheny,  Pa. 

Si  I  West  vStreet,  W'ilmington,  Del. 

II 19  Allegheny  Avenue,  Allegheny,  Pa. 

45  Summer  Street,  St.  Johnsbury,  Vt. 


61 


NAME. 

Marshall,  Mvra  II.  A. 
Mills,  Margaret  C. 
Packer,  Lulu  E. 
Pappenheimer,  Minni 
Park,  Julia  B. 
Parker,  Rena  D. 
Parton,  Mabel  . 
Patterson,  Marian 
Perry,  Alice  E. 
Piatt,  Eulalie  M. 
Porter,  Bessie  P. 
Ragsdale,  Lena  M. 
Randall,  Pearl  B. 
Reed,  Ethel  F. 
Reed,  Laura  L. 
Robinson,  Mauv  A. 
Rodman,  Cornelia  B 
Rogers,  Isadore  C. 
Ross,  Marion  P. 
Rounds,  Edna  E. 
Ruth,  Thyra  J. 
Sage,  Pauline    . 
Seward,  Emma  S. 
Sherman,  Jessica   L. 
Sherwood,   Ethel  O 
SiEBERT,  Anne  M. 
Smith,  Hattie  M. 
Smith,  Mary  C. 
Spencer,  Mary  D. 
Stewart,  Louise  G. 
Tait.  Rilla  B.   . 
Terry,  E\a 
Wangner,  E.milie 
Weakley,  Rowena 
Weed,  Lilla 


ADDRESS. 


w 


Wellesley,  Mass. 

33  Highland  Avenue,  Middletown,  N.  Y. 

13S  East  Sixth  Street,  Phiintneld,  N.  J. 

West  Eighty-second  Street,  New  Yorlc  City,  N.  Y. 

Wellesley,  Mass. 

.     61  East  Pearl  Street,  Nashua,  N.  H. 

-54  High  Street,  Newburyport,  Mass. 

3  Lake  View  Avenue,  Jamestown,  N.  Y. 

574  Marshall  Avenue,  St.  Paul,  Minn. 

Tunkhannock,  I'a. 

20  Cherry  Street,  Danvers,  Mass. 

Clarksville,  Tenn. 

.    Waterbury,  Vt. 

.      65  Elm  Street,  Mechanic  Falls,  Me. 

Terrace  Place,  Troy,  N.  Y. 

59  Livingston  Avenue,  New  Brunswick,  N.  J. 

Waterlnny,  Conn. 
South  Sudbury,  Mass. 
.     Ipswich,  Mass. 
70S  Sixteenth  Street,  Des  Moines,  Iowa. 
667  Washington  Boulevard,  Chicago,  111. 
McGregor  Avenue,  Mount  Aulunn,  Cincinnati,  Ohio. 
261  Broadway,  New  York  Cit}',  N.  Y. 
Sioux  Fall,  S.  Dak. 
S3  Hamilton  Avenue,  White  Plains,  N.  Y. 
813  Bryden  Road,  Columbus,  Ohio. 
.     61  Lime  Street,  Newburyport,  Mass. 
21S  Walnut  Avenue,  Roxbuiy,  Mass. 
Blodgett  Mills,  N.  Y. 
■34  Higliland  Avenue,  Winchester,  Mass. 
61  Pleasant  Street,  Bradford,  Pa. 
Riverhead,  Long  Island,  N.  Y. 
216  Seconil  vStreet,  Newark,  N.  J. 
.  Shelbyville,  Ky. 
est  Willow  Grove  Avenue,  Chestnut  Hill,  Philadelphia,  Pa. 


6j 


NAME. 

White,  Henrietta     . 
Whitley,  Erminta  M. 
Williams,  Elsie  S.     . 
Williams,  Helen  L. 
Wood,  Elizabeth  M. 
Woods,  Teresa  M.     . 
Woodward,  Mayannaii 
Wright,  Edith  M. 
Di  Zerega,  Bertha  V. 


ADDRESS. 


2^  Beach  Avenue,  Svvampscott,  ISIass. 

.     4  Stetson  Avenue,  Plattsbuig,  N.  Y. 

143  Urban  Street,  Mount  Vernon,  N.  Y. 

Glastonbury,  Conn. 

Winthrop  Highlands,  Winthrop,  Mass. 

.     Newburyport,  Mass. 

369  Tenth  Street,  Portland,  Ore. 

iioi  Upper  Third  Street,  Evansville,  Ind. 

30  McDonough  Street,  Brooklyn,  N.  Y. 


63 


QUO  VADIS. 


T 


MERE  be  none  of  Welleslev's  daughters 

\\'ith  a  Class  Song  built  like  thine  ; 
And  like  music  on  the  waters 

Is  thy  voice,  as  we  opine  : 
When,  as  if  its  sound  were  causing 
In  Waban's  deep  a  great  upheaving, 
The  very  waves  rise  up  aspiring, 
With  the  tune,  to  heights  untiring. 

And  thy  "  Strong  to  Live  "  forever 
Rings  unceasing  in  our  ears. 

For  it  seems  that  thou  canst  never 
Have  thy  fill  of  yells  and  cheers  : 

Thy  Field-day  prizes  are  a  store, 

But  still  we've  heard  it  all  before  ; 

We  know  that  in  athletic  lore 

Tliou  art  a  daisv  evermore. 

The  daisy,  with  its  drooping  head  ! 

Suggestive  of  thy  chiefest  gi"ace, 
Would  it  have  left  its  early  bed 

To  dance  in  such  a  public  place? 
And  is  thy  birch  tree  weeping  yet? 
And  will  it  ne'er  its  cuts  forget? 
You're  really  such  a  rainy  set 
E'en  Float  was  ne'er  before  so  wet. 


65 


But  graver  duties  wait  th}'  miuil, 

To  train  a  fair  joung  Freshman  band  ; 
In  thee  a  trusty  guide  they'll  find, 

Whose  friendship  they'll  not  understand, 
Until,  with  but  the  fairest  seeming, 
Thou  learn' st  the  secrets  that  are  teeming 
In  heads  that  are  for  Tree  Day  scheming, — 
Cruel  blow  to  Freshman  dreaming  ! 

But  whither  go'st  thou,  1903, 

Thou  somewhat  thoughtless  Sophomore ; 
Hopes  have,  ere  this,  mocked  not  a  few, 

And  mighty  plans  have  died  before : 
And  yet  thou  wilt  not  strive  the  less, 
But  ever  let  thy  deeds  express 
That  "  Strong  to  Live"  must  mean  success. 
As  thou  shalt  on  thy  course  progress. 


66 


Class  of  Nineteen  Hundred  and  Two. 


TREE  .        .        .Cut  Leaf  Weeping  Birch. 
FLOWER Daisy. 


COLORS 
MOTTO 


White  and  Gold. 
Strong  to  Live. 


Wellesley  1902!     Rah!     Rah!     Rah! 
One  Nine  Naught  Two  Wellesley ! 


Frances  L.  Hughes     . 
Mae  McE.  Rice    . 
Bessie  W.  Manwaring 
Jessie  F.  Hutsinpillar 
Clara  H.  Lorenzen    . 


OFFICERS. 


President. 

I  'ice  President. 

Corresfonding  Secretary. 

Recording  Secretary. 

Treasurer. 


JNHAM  ^ 

3.  Draper    \ 


Gertrude  M.  Foster 


Jessie  D.  Burnham 
Constance  B, 
Amy  H.  Adams 
Jeannette  L.  Gregory i 
M.  Agnes  Brown  i 

.     Athletic  Meml}er. 


E\eciitivc  Committee. 


Factotums. 


^ 


NAME. 

Adams,  Amy  Warrex 
Atwood,  Lottie 
Babcock,  Annie  Fuller 
Baker,  Clara  Edith 
Baker,  Mignon  P. 
Barnes,  Clare    . 


MEMBERS. 


address. 


2iS  East  Foster  Street.  Melrose,  Mass. 

1935  Eleventli  Street  N.  W.,  Washington,  D.  C. 

.    T  Forest  Avenue,  Natick,  Mass. 

47  Elm  Street,  Melrose  Highlands,  Mass. 

Canon  City,  Col. 

16  Cottage  Place,  Tarrytown,  N.  Y. 


ADDRESS. 


Batting,  Bertha 
Beard.  Helen  \V. 
Behrhorst,  Edith   R. 
Birch,  Blanche  L. 

BOGART,    PhCEBE    M. 

Boynton,  Lutie  J- 
Bridge,  Xona  S. 
Brooks,  Mary  W. 
Brown,  Edith  H. 
Brown,  Gertrude  S. 
Brown,  M.  Agnes 
Brown,  Sara  M. 
BrNTiNG,  Florence  M. 
BuRNiiAM.  Jessie  D. 
Button,  Jane  W. 
Campbell,  Elizabeth    R. 
Carlisle,  Annie   S.    . 
Cole,  Alice  W. 
CoNKLiN,  Clare  H. 
Cooke,  Juliette  ]M. 
CouGiiLiN,  Ellen  M. 
Crockett,  Grace  M. 
Davis,  Bertha  E. 
Decker,  Harriet  L. 
De  Forest,  Helene  E. 
Douglass,  Jessie 
Draper,  Constance  B. 
DuRFEE,  A.  Blanche 
Ellison,  Phjebe 
Ensign,  Katiirine  \V. 
Evans,  Florence 
Faber,  Charlotte  A. 
Fleming,  Maud  R. 
FooKs,  Mary  R. 
Forbes,  Ruth  R. 


62  Gates  Avenue,  Montclair,  X.  J- 
.     Shelton,  Conn. 
.    •     .  .  .  Avalon,  Pa. 

I  23 1  Thirty-first  Street,  Washington,  D.  C. 
2033  \V'ashington  Avenue,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
44  Pleasant  Street,  Bradford,  Mass. 
Si  West  Twelfth  Street,  Fremont,  Neb. 
(-)rillia.  Ontario,  Canada. 
.    Concord,  Mass. 
.    Taunton,  Mass. 
317  Campbell  Street,  Williamsport,  Pa. 
406  North  Street,  Harrislnirg,  Pa. 
.     5  Stratford  Road,  Winchester,  Jilass. 
264  Prospect  Avenue,  Milwaukee,  Wis. 
6350  Germantown  Avenue.  Philadelphia,  Pa. 
549  East  Leverington  Avenue,  Roxborough,  Philadelphia,  Pa. 

61  Howe  Avenue,  Passaic,  N.  J. 

3  Cole  Street,  Beverly,  Mass. 

322  North  Grove  Avenue,  Oak  Park,  111. 

34 1 S  Park  Avenue.  Minneapolis,  Minn. 

74  Union  Street,  Wilkes-Barre,  Pa. 

509  Pleasant  Street,  Oak  Park,  111. 

Reformatory,  South  Framingham,  Mass. 

Convent  Station,  N.  J. 

.     Fort  Edward,  N.  Y. 

251  High  Street,  Newburyport,  Mass. 

Gallaudet  College,  Washington,  D.  C. 

639  East  Capitol  Street.  Washington,  D.  C. 

167  West  Wayne  Street,  Fort  Wayne,  Ind. 

504  East  Second  Street,  Duluth,  Minn. 

203  West  Walnut  Lane.  Germantown,  Pa. 

12  Gibbs  Street,  Rochester,  N.  Y. 

3  10  Central  Avenue,  Oil  City,  Pa. 

Laurel,  Del. 

5915  West  Cabanne  Place,  St.  Louis,  Mo. 


68 


NAME. 

Ford,  Amv  M. 
Foster,  Gertrude  M. 
Gamble,  Alexandra  McG 
Gilchrist,  Norma   L. 
GoDDARD,  Harriet 
Gordon,  Mary  P. 
Goltinlock,  Margery  M. 
Greex,  Lucile    . 
Gregory,  Jeannette  L. 
Grover,  Helen   L. 
Haixes,  Rachel  S. 
Hall,  Mary  H. 
Harrington,  Helen 
Harrison,  Lucy  H.     . 
Haskell,  Jessica  J.   . 
Hastings,  Florence  X. 
Hawley,  Edith  M.     . 
Hayward,  Dora  S.    . 
Heinen,  Florence  G. 
Henning,  Anna  A.     . 
Hill,  Helen  F. 
Hires,  Linda  S. 
HoBBS,  Charlotte  E. 
Hotz,  Katharine  E. 
HoYT,  Elizabeth  M. 
Hughes,  Frances  L. 
Hunt,  Bessie  N. 

HUTSINPILLAR,  JeSSIE    F. 

Hyde,  Mabel  H. 
Ihlder,  Rebecca 
Kampman,  Carolyn    . 
Kelly,  Sara  W. 
Kinney,  Harriet  M. 
Kinney,  Maude  A. 
Knapp,  Frances  L.     . 


ADDRESS. 


433  W. 


1404  Rokeby  Street,  Chicago,  IlL 

iiS  South  Eighth  Street,  La  Crosse,  Wis. 

15  Broad  Street,  Plattsburgh,  N.  Y. 

.     Laurens,  Iowa. 

205  East  Xiiith  Street,  PhiinHeld,  X.  J. 

105  Cherry  Street,  Towanda,  Pa. 

.    Warsaw,  X.  Y. 

Xorth  Clinton  ^Vvenne,  Trenton,  X.  J. 

^  West  Avenue,  Xorwalk,  Conn. 

5  Academy  Street,  Arlington,  Mass. 

ne  Avenue,  (Jermantown,  Philadelphia,  Pa. 

484  Washington  Street,  Dorchester,  Mass. 

i6;;o  Grant  Avenue,  Denver,  CoL 

35  Cone  Street,  Atlanta,  Ga. 

16  Holt  Street,  Belfast,  Me. 

S27  Monroe  Avenue,  Green  Bay,  Wis. 

213  Xorth  Jefferson  Street,  Huntington,  Ind. 

64  Locust  Hill  Avenue,  Yonkers,  X.  Y. 

311  Xorth  Front  Street,  Milton,  Pa. 

394  South  Centre  Street,  Pottsville,  Pa. 

.    Dedham,  Mass. 

Merion  Station,  Pa. 

Lovell,  Me. 

Morton  Grove,  111. 

40  Oak  Street,  Hyde  Park,  Mass. 

.   Cortland,  X.  Y. 

.    Oakham,  Mass. 

45  Xorth  Fifth  Street,  Ironton,  Ohio. 

34  Cutler  Street,  Morristown,  N.  J. 

-39  Warburton  Avenue,  Yonkers,  X.  Y. 

45  Sandford  Avenue,  Plainfield,  X'.  J. 

Xorth  Raynham,  Mass. 

Portland,  Ore. 

54  Port  Watson  Street,  Cortland,  X.  Y. 
.....     Milford,  N.  H. 


69 


Lee,  Rosaline  X. 
Lennox,  Sarah  E. 
Liiiiiv,  Lillian   L. 
Lister,  Helen  T. 
Lombard,  !NL\rinette 
Lorenzen,  Clara   H. 
Lowe,  AL\rion  \V. 
Lyon,  Alice  G. 
McAlarnev,  Martha  W. 
McAusLAND,  Lulu  L 
McIntire,  AL\rcia  C.' 
Mahler,  Belle  . 
Manwaiung,  Bessie  W. 
Marston,  Charlotte  P. 
Mason,  Irene 
Mathews,  May  . 
Maxwell,  ]\L\rv  A. 
Metcalf,  Mabel  A 
Montgomery,  Mary 
Moody,  Lucy  B. 
Morrison,  Alice  C. 
Mullin,  Stella  L. 
Newhart,  Grace 
Noble,  Sarah  G. 
NoYES,  Ethel  \V. 
Nyere,  Mabel  L. 
Osborne,  Florence  M, 
Packard,  Blanche  E. 
Parker,  Jennie  B.     . 
Patten,  Mary   . 
Perkins,  Bertha  G. 
Petrie,  Florence  E. 
Philbrick,  Annie  B. 
Pitkin,  Caroline  E. 
Pitkin,  E.  Winifred 


ADDRESS. 


13  School  Street,  Peabod}',  Mass. 

95  Prospect  Avenue,  Milwaukee,  Wis. 

.     125  Academy  Street,  Laconia,  N.  H. 

.    Galveston,  Tex. 

205  Prospect  Avenue,  Milwaukee,  Wis. 

517  Fourth  Avenue,  Clinton,  Iowa. 

Weliesley  Hills,  Mass. 

Redlands,  Cal. 

214  West  State  Street,  Harrisburg,  Pa. 

32  Warren  Street,  Taunton,  Mass. 

.    Saco,  Me. 

432  Russell  Avenue,  Cleveland,  Ohio. 

560  Mable  Avenue,  Bridgeport,  Conn. 

.     Danvers,  Mass. 

Metuchen,  N.  J. 

445  Ellison  Street,  Paterson,  N.  J. 

372  Castle  Street,  Geneva,  X.  Y. 

93  Vernon  Street,  Lowell,  Mass. 

.Somerset  Avenue,  Taunton,  Mass. 

Beaver,  Pa. 

Stonington,  Conn. 

24  Bowdoin  Street,  Worcester,  Mass. 

Xew  Ulm,  Minn. 

44  Edwards  Street,  Xew  Haven,  Conn. 

Xewtonville,  Mass. 

Weliesley  Hills,  Mass. 

Second  Avenue,  Cedar  Rapids,  Iowa. 

Oakham,  Mass 

I  Charles  Street,  Reading,  Mass. 

Palatine,  111. 

.  Topsfield,  Mass. 

Ingram,  Pa. 

Rye  Beach,  N.  H. 

234  East  Avenue,  Oak  Park,  111. 

703  Madison  Avenue,  Albany,  N.  Y. 


NAME. 

PiTKix,  Florexck  E. 
Poor,  Edith 
Power,  Etiiei.  M. 
Preston,  Bertha  F. 
Prouty,  Louise 
PuLsii-ER,  Caroline  R. 
Putney,  Ethel  W. 
Reaiidon,  Mary  I. 
Reppert,  Mary 
Rice,  Mae  McE. 
Root,  Florence  A. 
Rounds,  Helen  M. 
Sage,  Nora  A.  . 
Sanborn,  Ethel  L. 
Sargent,  Harriet  C 
Sa'Wyer,  Ella  L. 
Sherman,  Edith  E. 
Silver,  Georgia 
Slack,  Elvira  T. 
Smedley,  Lydia  M. 
Smith,  Bertha  . 
Smith,  Lillian  W. 
.Smith,  Mary  E. 
Smith,  Myrtle  . 
Snyder,  Anna  E. 
Snyder,  IVLary  D. 
Southworth,  Inez  M. 
Spink,  Alice  G. 
Stackhouse,  Lucy  B 
Steiner,  Anna  '\l. 
Stevens,  Bertha  M 
Stocking,  Annie  W 
Storm,  Mary  B. 
Stowe,  Annie  B. 
Strum,  Nellie  A. 


ADDRESS. 


.  234  East  Avenue,  Oak  Park,  111. 

.   78  Main  Street,  Andover,  Mass. 

583  Broadway,  South  Boston,  Mass. 

S3  H'S^  Street,  Ipswich,  Mass. 

.     Spencer,  Mass. 

Yarmouth,  Mass. 

Wellesley  Hills,  Mass. 

Wcllesley,  Mass. 

^12  West  Tiiird  Street,   Jamestown,  X.  Y. 

137  Main  Street,  North  Adams,  Mass. 

.     1430  Pearl  Street,  Denver,  Col. 

Calais,  Me. 

785  Orange  Street,  New  Haven,  Conn. 

271  Washington  Avenue,  Chelsea,  Mass. 

Graniteville,  Mass. 

.  West  Boyiston,  Mass. 

22  Ellsworth  Avenue,  Cambridge,  Mass. 

206  East  Forty-sixth  Street,  Chicago,  111. 

Bethel,  Conn. 

222  South  Avenue,  Bradford,  Pa. 

505  Prarieton  Avenue,  Terre  Haute,  Ind. 

Weatogue,  Conn. 

156  Porter  Street,  Melrose,  Mass. 

28  Arlington  Street,  Somerville,  Mass. 

725  Third  Avenue,  Cedar  Rapids,  Iowa. 

.     I  2  19  Fourth  Avenue,  Louisville,  Ky. 

West  Stoughton,  Mass. 

150  South  Angell  Street,  Providence,  R.  I. 

Wallingford,  Pa. 
58  Washington  Street,  Allegheny,  Pa. 

Bartlett,  N.  H. 

Williamstown  Station,  Mass. 
52  South  Clinton  Street,  East  Orange,  N.  J. 

.  Caryville,  Mass. 
31  Sharon  Avenue,  Auburndale,  Mass. 


7" 


NAME. 

Stuugis,   ^Iabel   L.     . 
Sullivan,  Frankie  E 
SWASEV,   AxxiE   L. 
SvLVESTER,   Louise  E. 
Takt,  Clara  C. 
Thayer,  Alice  . 
Thomas,  Clara  J. 
Thomas,   Ruth  E. 
ToMKiNs,  Sarah  G. 
Turner,  Edith  . 
Vail,  Anna  Blaik 
Vail,  Marv  G. 
Van  Doren,  H.  May 
Wali.ower,  Clara 
Wells,  Blanche  H. 
Wells,  Julia  F. 
Wetmore,  Mabel  S. 
Wheeler,   Hetty  S. 
Wherry,  Edith  M.   . 
White,  F.   Arabeli.  . 
Whitman,   Helen 
Wilcox,   Alice  McI. 
Wilcox,   Elsie  H. 
Wilderman,   Augusta  A 
Wood,  Laura  A. 
Wood,  Miriam  B. 
Woodward,   Lucy  M. 


ADDRESS. 

24  Winnemay  »Street,  Natick,  Mass. 
26  Monmouth  Street,  East  Boston,  Mass. 

Cornish,  Me. 

306  Webster  Avenue,  Scranton,  Pa. 

119  Pleasant  Street,  Arlington,  Mass. 

7  Oread  Place,  Worcester,  Mass. 

6  Oak  Street,  Peahody,  Mass, 

I  1  Marble  Street,  Roxbury,  I'vLiss. 

34  Xayl.nul  Avenue,  Providence,  R.  L 

Geneva,  111. 

Blairstovvn,  N.J. 

Blairstown,  N.  J. 

.     Phojnix,  N.  Y. 

410  North  Third  Street,  Harrisburg,  Pa. 

2^00  Stevens  Avenue,  Minneapolis,  Minn. 

Fairfax,  \'a. 
oS  South  Fitzhugh  Street,  Rochester,  N.  Y. 
390  Park  Place,  Bridgeport,  Conn. 
Red  Bank,  N.  J. 
630  East  Thirt\  -Sixth  Street,  Kansas  City,  Mo. 

Ingram,  Pa. 

3  2  Mitchell  Avenue,  Waterbuiy,  Conn. 

Lihue,  Kanai,  Hawaiian  Islands. 

60S  Mascontah  Avenue,  Belleville,  111. 

36  Hartford  Street,  Roxbury,  Mass. 

249  Webster  Avenue,  Muskegon,  Mich. 

Watertown,  Conn. 


7^ 


WHEN   ALL  THE  WOODS  ARE  GREEN. 


W 


HEN  all  the  woikl  is  young,  girls, 

And  all  the  woods  are  green. 
And  one  is  but  a  Freshman, 

Barely  seventeen. 
That's  the  time  for  fun,  girls. 

So  trip  it  \vhile  you  maj- ; 
A  child  must  have  its  toys,  girls, 

And  ever\-  goose  her  day. 

When  one  has  quite  decided,  girls, 

Upon  the  way  to  school. 
That  she  is  going  to  star  it. 

And  never  break  a  rule, 
What  a  fearful  shock,  girls. 

To  a  Freshman  three  weeks  old. 
To  find  that  all's  not  plav,  girls. 

Nor  all  that  shines  is  gold  ! 

When  one  is  coy  and  shy,  girls. 

And  hates  to  make  mistakes. 
What  pain  to  spy  a  Soph' more 

Smiling  at  her  breaks  ; 
And  though  'tis  always  grand,  girls. 

To  tread  the  path  of  Fame, 
Too  rapid  transit  on't,  girls, 

Is  apt  to  bring  one  shame. 


74 


When  all  is  fresh  and  new,  girls, 

And  life  one  song  of  glee, 
A  maid's  imagination 

Is  wonderful  to  see. 
'Tis  "slip,  slap,  ham,  zoo, 

Lickity,  lackity,  lee. 
Rah,  rah,  rah,  rah,  Wellesley, 

Nineteen  Hundred  and  Three  !" 

When  life's  a  shade  less  green,  girls. 

And  jSIidyears  dread  are  near. 
The  world  looks  not  so  merry  ; 

Each  goosie  drops  a  tear. 
Yet  still  there's  ground  for  hope,  girls, — 

A\'here's  life,  there's  hope,  vou  know; 
So  weep  and  wail  and  work,  girls; 

Rain  makes  all  green  things  grow. 

When  Freshman  year  is  old,  girls. 

The  woods  will  lose  their  green  ; 
The  geese  will  turn  to  swans,  girls. 

Each  maid  into  a  queen. 
We  know  the  sad  truth  now,  girls  ; 

You've  come  to  us  to  stay. 
We  weep  no  more,  but  prav,  girls, 

That  you'll  know  more — some  dav. 


75 


Class  of  Nineteen  Hundred  and  Three. 


NAME. 

Adams,  Cora  M. 
AixsLEE,  S.  Belle 
Alberts,  Charlotte 
Allen,  Louise  W. 
Allen,  Sarah  T. 
Anderson,  Marv  F. 
AuTEN,  Sarah  R. 
Baird,  Nora 
Baker,  Alice  L. 
Barret,  Pansy  E. 
Barrett,  Saidee  C. 
Barron,  ISIary  G. 
Barth,  Florence 
Batt,  Edith  R. 
BoGGS,  Mary  L. 
Bowditch,  Eliza 
BowEN,  Vera  C. 
Brink.man,  Christine 
Brown,  Udetta  D. 
Bruce,  Lillian  H. 
Buhlert,  Helene  L. 
BusHONG,  Elsie  G. 
Camp,  Saidee  S. 
Cannon,  Christabel 
Carr,  Grace  M. 
Champlin,  Mabel  F. 
Clark,  Maktha 


We 


ADDRESS. 

.     Warren,  Mass. 

657  Putnam  Avenue,  Brooklyn,  N.  Y. 

West  Webster  Avenue,  Muskegon,  Midi. 

1S5  East  Street,  Pittsfield,  Mass. 

Dartmouth,  Mass. 

14  Goodwin  Street,  Fitchburg,  Mass. 

.     Princeville,  111. 

116  St.  Joseph  Street  East,  Lansing,  Mich. 

Hyattsville,  Md. 

3S6  Case  Avenue,  Cleveland,  Ohio. 

34  West  Seventy-first  Street,  New  York,  N.  Y. 

Fairbault,  Minn. 
8  16  Kansas  Avenue,  Atchison,  Kan. 
I  vSouth  Broadway,  Tarrytown,  N.  Y. 
233  New  Hampshire  Avenue,  Washington,  D.  C. 
It  Georgia  Street,  Roxbury,  Mass. 
^2  Vandervoort  Street,  North  Tonawanda,  N.  Y. 
72  I  West  Eighteenth  Street,  Kansas  City,  Mo. 
One  Hundred  Twentv-ninth  Street,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
iS  Shepard  Street,  Worcester,  Mass. 
34  Gray  Street,  Arlington,  Mass. 
232  North  Fifth  Street,  Reading,  Pa. 
.  Highland  Farm,  Jackson,  Mich. 
40  Dwight  Street,  New  Haven,  Conn. 
Bowdoinham,  Me. 
South  Ferry,  R.  L 
45  K  Street  N.E.,  Washington,  D.  C. 


76 


NAME. 

Clifford,  Edith 
CoALE,  Helen  M. 
Cogswell,  Helen  P. 
Colt,  Mary  E.  S. 

CoNO\ER,   ElIZABEI  II 

CosTE,  Miriam     . 
Croshv,  Rinv  I. 
Crossman,  Florence 
Cutler,  Lucy  S. 
Dalry.mple,  Alice  E 
Davis,  Marion  L. 
Dean,  Grace  M. 
Dobbin,  Flora  A. 
Dole,  Blanche  . 
Downey,  Mary  B. 
Eaton,  Mary  A.  C. 
Edwards,  Grace  L. 
Emmett,  Mary  A. 
Everett,  Ethel  G. 
Farniia.m,  Grace  C. 
Feineman,  Sarah  X. 
Feiss,  Jessie 
Fife,  Gertrude  M. 
Fink,  Claudia  G. 
Fitch,  Helen  M. 
Foster,  M.  Eugenia 
French,  Georgia  B. 
French,  Hazel 
Friend,   Leah  B. 
GiBBY,  Alice  L. 
Gilligan,  Maud  E. 
Goodwin,  Jessie  S. 
Gordon,   Isabella   P. 
Greene,  Elsa 
Haines,  Mary   H. 


D. 


ADDRESS. 


4 1 68  Pine  Street,  St.  Louis,  Mo. 

Torris  River.  X.  J. 

423  Russell  Avenue,  Cleveland,  Ohio. 

419  Crescent  Avenue,  Buffalo,  N.  Y. 

401  Salem  Avenue,  Dayton,  Ohio. 

4S  Nicholson  Place,  .St.  Louis,  Mo. 

3.37  Waverley  Avenue,  X'evvton,  Mass. 

Needham,  Mass. 

.     S42  North  Main,  Rockford,  111. 

Rochester,  N.  H. 

209  Shurtleff  Street,  Chelsea,  Mass. 

Tipton,  Iowa. 

Shushan,  N.  Y. 

104  Pearl  Street,  Fitchburg,  Mass. 

^2  Piedmont  Street,  Worcester,  Mass. 

25  Grove  Street,  Middleboro,  Mass. 

Lisle,  N.  Y. 

Peace  Dale,  R.  I. 

South  Pine  Street,  Dover,  N.  H. 

VVellesley,  Mass. 

Rochester,  N.  H. 

Lake  Avenue,  Cleveland,  Ohio. 

Wolcott,  Vt. 

Punxsutawnev,  Pa. 

36  Linden  Street,  AUston,  Mass. 

.   Glendale,  Ohio. 

Fremont,  Neb. 

221  East  Avenue,  Oak  Park,  111. 

Caribou,  Me. 

100  Crawford  Street,  Roxbury,  Mass. 

44  Pond  Street,  Natick,  Mass. 

22  Boynton  Street,  Worcester,  Mass. 

105  Cherry  .Street,  Towanda,  Pa. 

Ogden,  Utah. 

5433  Wayne  Avenue,  Gerinantown,  Pa. 


ADDRESS. 


Haley,  Mollie  S. 
Hall,   Helen  L. 
Ham,  Jull\  M. 
Hanxa,  Genevieve  C. 
Hannahs,  Laura  E.  . 
Hardman,  Grace  M. 
Hastings,  Gertrude  L. 
Hatch,  Zoe  R. 
Hayden,  Maibelle  B. 
Hegeman,  Lucy  M. 
Hershey,  Marie 
Hewitt,  Julia  A.   W. 
HiBBs,  Laura  G. 
Hicks,  Florence  C.   . 
Holbrooks,  Flora  E. 
Holt,  Carrie  ]VL 
Hough,  Helen  V. 
Hull.  Mary  S. 
Hunt,  Myrtle  C. 
Hurlbutt,  Bessie  G. 
Jenkins,  Mary  B. 
Jenks,  Emily  F. 
Jones,  Edith  M. 
Kittredge,  Elizabeth  M 
Knodel,  Catharine  F. 
KiHL,  Angelina  S.    . 
La  Croix,  Theresa  W. 
Lathrop,  Jessie 
Lewis,  Grace  E. 
Lietman,  Stella  E. 
Lincoln,  Ruth  P. 
Linn,  Catherine  L.  . 
Little  Mary  V. 
Locke,  Eugenia 
LooMis,  Mary  L. 


For 


East  Banington,  N.  H. 

43s  Spooner  Avenue,  Flainfielcl,  N.  J. 

239  Central  Avenue,  Dover,  N.  H. 

36  Jackson  Avenue,  Bradford,  Fa. 

.    31  Roseville  Avenue,  Newark,  N.  J. 

170  Glen  Avenue,  Council  Bluffs,  Iowa. 

13  Park  Avenue,  Natick,  Mass. 

607  Pine  Street,  Jamestown,  N.  Y. 

427  Upper  First  Street,  Evansville,  Ind. 

200  Pennington  Avenue,  Passaic,  N.  J. 

609  Avenue  B,  Sterling,  111. 

Shevvville,  Conn. 

Riverton,  N.  J. 

93  Pleasant  .Street,  Arlington,  Mass. 

.Sutton,  Mass. 

Saxton's  River,  Vt. 

Newton,  N.  J. 

67  Mercer  Avenue,  Plainfield,  N.  J. 
49^^  E.  Pine  Street,  Portland,  Ore. 
East  Boxford,  Mass. 
303  .South  Raskin  Street,  Natchez,  Miss. 
Pawtucket,  R.  I. 
15  Grove  Street,  Natick,  Mass. 
Dover,  Me. 
Irvington-on-Hudson,  N.  Y. 
Somerville,  N.  J. 
44  .South  Common  Street,  Lynn,  Mass. 
■fifth  and  Warwick  Boulevard,  Kansas  City,  Mo. 

.      Beaxer  Falls,  N.  Y. 

43  Wooster  Street,  Allegheny,  Pa. 

36^  So.  Limestone  Street,  Springfield,  Ohio. 

,  .         1 131  Colfax  Avenue,  Denver,  Col. 

2S7  Lauderdale  Street,  Memphis,  Tenn. 

S  Davenport  Street,  No.  Adams,  Mass. 

.    34  Pine  Woods  Avenue,  Tro}',  N.  Y. 


78 


ADDRESS. 


Lord,   Kate  I.    . 
LoRixG,  Julia  E. 
LuBECK,  Mabel  V. 
Lucas,  Helen  E. 
Luff,  Annie  V. 
LUKEXS,   E\axgeline 
LusK,  Minnie  E. 
McCouD,  Lettice 
McCrellish,  Elizabeth 
McCuTciiEON,  Theodora  N 
McIlwain,  Mary  C.  . 
McKiNNEY,  Mary  A. 
McLauthlin,  Sara  L. 
ALa-Rland,  Mary  K.    . 
j\L\R.sTON,  Mary  G.    . 
Maxwell,  L.  Margaret 
May,  Maud  R. 
Miller,  Ernestine  L. 
Miller,  Maud     . 
Millett,  Cora  M. 
Mills,  Cora   R. 
Mills,  Emily  \V. 
Moodie,  Helen  T. 
Morse,  Lelia  D. 
Morse,  Rosalind 
Murkland,  Ethel  S. 
Neuhauser,  Bijou  W. 
Newton,  Elsie  D. 

NiCKERSON,   MaRJORIE    L, 

Noera,  Florence  A. 
Otis,  Ethel 
Packard,  Emma  S. 
Page,  Henrietta  R. 
Page,  Katherine  R. 
Phipps,  Nurella  E.   . 


413  .• 


ulnir 


Stafford  Springs,  Conn. 

Galesburg,  111. 

1690  Wellington  Avenue,  Chicago,  111. 

East  Carver,  Mass. 

.  620  Oak  Park  Avenue,  Oak  Park,  111. 

Oxford,  N.  J. 

Warsaw,  N.  Y. 

Blue  Island,  111. 

.    242  East  State  Street,  Trenton,  N.  J. 

Greenwich,  Conn. 

Saltsburg,  Pa. 

Sewickley,  Pa. 

5S  Lincoln  Street,  Maiden,  Mass. 

1 2  vSchool  Street,  Andover,  Mass. 

1 2 10  Ash  Street,  San  Diego,  Cal. 

372  Castle  Street,  Geneva,  X.  Y. 

514  Washington  Avenue,  Scranton,  Pa. 

Wellsboro,  Pa. 

252  Park  Avenue,  Paterson,  N.  J. 

.     10  \^illage  Street,  Marblehead,  Mass. 

19  Highland  Avenue,  Middletown,  N.  Y. 

50  Chestnut  Street,  Oneonta,  N.  Y. 

223  North  Jefferson  Street,  Dayton,  Ohio. 

Putnam,  Conn. 
Newtonville,  Mass. 
.    64  Johnson  Street,  Lynn,  Mass. 
iSiS  Chestnut  Street,  Philadelphia,  Pa. 
n  Avenue,  Mount  Auburn,  Cincinnati,  Ohio. 
.    Eliot  Street,  Milton,  Mass. 
14=;  Hillside  Avenue,  Waterbury,  Conn. 
36  Arch  Street,  Providence,  R.  I. 
.     100  Prospect  Street,  Brockton,  Mass. 
Wellesley,  Mass. 
Wellesley,  Mass. 
.  Holliston,  Mass. 


79 


NAME. 


ADDRESS. 


PiERSOx,  Caroline  E 
Piper,  Florence  M. 
Pitman,  Anna  L. 
Poor,  Mattie  V. 
Powell,  Grace  K. 
Proctor,  Lucia  M. 
Ramsay,  Grace  S. 
Rastall,  Frances  E 
Raymond,  Clare  S. 
Richards,  Cl.\ra  S. 
Ripley,  Anxe  A. 
Roberts,  Elsie  Van  T. 
RoBsoN,  Marian  W. 
Rodgers,  Caroline  J. 
Rosenwasser,  Alice  B. 
Rowe,  Edith 
Russell,  Florence    . 
Sargeant,  Louise 
Schopperle,  Gertrude  C 
Sharman,  Lakrie  J. 
Shepard,  ^L\rv  S. 
Sherwin,  Daisy  G. 
SiiLESiNGEK,  Lillian 
SiLSBY,  Harriet  M. 
Smith,  Belle  ^^'. 
S.MousE,  Daisy    . 
Steiner,  Grace  E. 
Stillwell,  Grace  E 
Stockwell,  Alice  VV. 
Stoker,  Dora  D. 
SuLLiv.\N,  Oli\  E  \V. 
Tanner,  Margaret  W 
Taylor,  Esther  B.    . 
Terry,  Frances  G.    . 
Thomas,  Mary  G. 


420  Crouse  Avenue,  Syracuse,  X.  Y. 

Fells,  Mass. 
.    Laconia,  N.  H. 
Hillside,  Me. 
IS  I'l'ospect  Street,  New  Britain,  Conn. 
20  Trowbridge  Avenue,  Newtonville,  Mass. 
19S  Lincoln  Place,  Brooklyn,  X.  Y. 
3c;oi  Magnolia  Avenue,  Chicago,  111. 
.     Lawrenceville,  N.  J. 
iS  Chestnut  Street,  Watertown,  Mass. 
414  Maple  Avenue,  Oak  Park,  111. 
.     Corning,  N.  Y. 
Wellesley  Hills,  Mass. 
Solon,  Ohio. 
2  Woodland  Avenue,  Cleveland,  Ohio. 
Circleville,  Ohio. 
I :;  Hillside  Avenue,  Waterlniry,  Conn. 
...  Plymouth,  N.  H. 

.    63  Grove  Avenue,  Oil  City,  Pa. 
■59  East  Brookline  Street,  Boston,  Mass. 
McCliutock  Avenue,  Allegheny  City,  Pa. 

Ayer,  Mass. 

266  Forest  Street,  Cleveland,  Ohio. 

.  Cherryfield,  Me. 

.     Ashfield,  Mass. 

Des  Moines,  Iowa. 

^S  Washington  Street,  Alleghen}-,  Pa. 

793  Osceola  Avenue,  St.  Paul,  Minn. 

3  Orkney  Road,  Aberdeen,  Boston,  Mass. 

917  Xorth  Quincy  Street,  Topeka,  Kan. 

Middleboro,  Mass. 

38  Rhode  Island  Avenue,  Xewport,  R.  I. 

East  Bridgewater,  Mass. 

I  I  Xaval  Academy,  Annapolis,  Md. 

93  Granite  Street,  Qiiincy,  Mass. 


So 


Tjirai.l,  Harriette  M. 

TiLTOX,     WlNOXA 

Todd,  Bessie  M. 
torrence,  axx  r. 
ToRREV,  Elizabeth  C. 
Treworgv,  Maridx  C. 
TuRXEV,  Jesse    . 
TuRXEV,  Lizzie  . 
Van  Nuys,  Axnis  H. 
Van  Wagexex,  Florexce 
Voorhees,  Martha    . 
VosE,  Winifred 
Wander,  Elizabeth  A. 
Wariteld,  Rubv  E.   . 
Warrex,  Fraxces  H. 
Weber,  Hilda    . 
Welton,  Gertiude  W. 
Whiddex,  Ednaii  F. 
W^hitney,  Edith   I. 
Whitxey,  Ruth 
WiLLCox,  Harriet   H 
Wilsox,  ISIary  M. 
WiLsox,  Lurexa  L. 
Wintringer,  Mary 
Wise,  Ruth  C. 

WoODBL"RY,   -VrCiUSTA 

Woods,  Bertha   R. 


.     142  Lancaster  Street,  Albany,  N.  Y. 
15  Princeton  Street,  East  Boston,  Mass. 

Calais,  Me. 

Cambridge,  Ohio. 

Lakehurst,  X.  J. 

33  J"y  ■'^t'eet,  Boston,  Mass. 

.    Paris,  Ky. 

.    Paris,  Ky. 

•    7 '5  Spring  Street,  Los  Angeles,  Cal. 

Oxford,  X.  Y. 

.    Baldwinsville.  X.  Y. 
Calais,  Me. 
419  East  57th  Street,  Xew  York  Citv,  X.  Y. 

Oakdale  Mass. 
Cheyenne,  W^vo. 
1342  Forsythe  Avenne,  Columbus,  Ohio. 
17  Holmes  Avenue,  Waterbury  Conn. 
226  Xorth  Elmwood  Avenue,  Oak  Park,  111. 
304  Blossom  Street,  Fitchburg,  ISIass. 
.    Harvard,  Mass. 
T  I  2  Washington  Boulevard,  Chicago,  111. 
.   Windsor,  Conn. 
.     Steep  Brook,  Fall  River,  JSIass. 
Steubenville,  Ohio. 
62  Prince  Street,  West  Newton,  Mass. 
13  Washington  Street,  Beverly,  Mass. 
71^  French  Street,  Erie,  Pa. 


Si 


'V^^ftf^    ^m! 


NN0CEMT5  ABR0/\1] 


MEMBERS  OF  THE  CLASS  OF  NINETEEN   HUNDRED  AND   FOUR. 


NAME. 

Bass,  Elizabeth 
Brown,  Alice     . 
Brown,  Emily  S. 
Brown,  Pearl  E. 
Chase,  Helen  B. 
Crombie,  Mary  H. 
Darby,  Anne  E. 
Davis,  Berenice  C. 
DuTCHER,  Daisy  G. 
Eari.y,  Caroline  B. 
Evaxs,  Florence  F. 
Hayes,  Jennie  A. 
Hyde,  Ethel  G. 
Landis,  May  V. 
McLeod,  Margaret   . 
^Miller,  Anastasia  C. 
Morse,  Sarah  D. 
Payne,  Elizabeth  M. 
Platt,  Bertha  D. 
Richards,  Marie   L. 
Rudolph,  Lucretia  A. 

SUMMY,  Ed  MA    E. 

Walker,  Marel  E.    . 
Weatherbee,  Emma  E. 


ADDRESS. 


Wilton,  Me. 

S19  North  Main  Street,  Rockford,  111. 

.Stafford  Springs,  Conn. 

.     Comstock's  Bridge,  Conn. 

Brooklyn  Terrace,  North  Adams,  Mass. 

750  Wallace  Avenue,  Pittsburg,  Pa. 

S6  Walnut  Street,  Kokomo,  Ind. 

1254  Bryden  Road,  Columbus,  Ohio. 

Hopedale,  Mass. 

944  North  Main  Street,  Rockford,  111. 

591  Broadway,  Everett,  Mass. 

Gonic,  N.  H. 

171  Hancock  Street,  Cambridge,  Mass. 

1025  Fifth  Street,  San  Diego,  Cal. 

Wyoming,  Ohio. 

Versailles,  Ky. 

28  Northampton  Road,  Amherst,  Mass. 

207  West  Third  Street,  Duluth,  Minn. 

32  Grove  Hill,  New  Britain,  Conn. 

2033  Greene  Street,  Philadelphia,  Pa. 

Canton,  .S.  Dak. 

26  Lane  Place,  Chicago,  111. 

Courtland  Avenue,  Glenbrook,  Conn. 

85  Burncoat  Street,  Worcester,  Mass. 


S3 


WISE  AND  0TH[RW1SE 


SPECIAL    STUDENTS. 


Bean,  Lalra  A. 
Bki.l,  Florence  E.    . 
Blanchard,  Jessie  E. 
Burnett,  Elizabeth  L. 
Havexs,  Jane  C. 
HiLLVER,  Grace 
Padgett,  Anna   II.     . 
Phelps,  Katiierine  L. 
Rankin,  Anna  A. 
Ross,  Kate  M. 
Samson,  Esther  L.    . 
Williams,  Madeline 
Wood,  Ellen  C. 


ADDRESS. 

New  Prague,  Aliiin. 

Grove  City,  Pa. 

22,5  •'^oi'th  Grove  Avenue,  Oak  Park,  111. 

73  School  Street,  Webster,  Mass. 

Benton  Centre,  N.  Y. 

Cedar  Hill,  Anacostia,  D.  C. 

Fairton,  X.  J. 

1002  East  Broadway,  Monmouth,  111. 

667  Newark  A\enue,  Elizabeth,  X.   |. 

Wellesley,  Mass. 

Wynian,  Iowa. 

192  I  Wrightwood  Avenue,  Chicago,  III. 

.     Danvers,  Mass. 


it' 


S.S 


t, 


iQunies- 


GRADUATE    STUDENTS. 


ADDRESS. 


Andrews,  Grace 
BozEMAx,  Mary 
Briggs,  Emily 
Capen,  Mary  W. 
Carothers,  Wiliielmixe 
Cook,  Grace 
Coombs,  Alice    . 
Dadmux,  Fraxces  M. 
Douglas,  Florence    . 
Emery,  Sarah  S. 
Ham,  Caroline  J. 
Hill,  Nettie  1. 
Lytle,  Axxa  \V. 
Moody,  Georgixa 
Norcross,  Mrs.  Helex  W 
Pennell,  Edna  . 
Pexnell,  Ethel  A.    . 
Pope,  Louise 
Read,  Katharine  B. 
Rickey,  Grace  G. 
Rogers,  Frances  L. 
Sawyer,  Harriet  S. 
Smith,  Mary  F. 
Stokes,  Maud     . 
To\vnsend,  Grace  B. 
Webber,  Maria  G.     . 


Wellesley,  Mass. 

.    Poseyville,  Ind. 

1265  Westminster  Street,  Providence,  R.  I. 

38  Greenough  Avenue,  Jamaica  Plain,  Mass. 

521  South  Fourth  Street,  Grand  Forkes,  N.  Dak. 

Wellesley,  Mass. 

Needham,  Mass. 

47  Pleasant  Street,  Marlboro,  Mass. 

Grafton,  N.  Dak. 

.  9  School  Street,  Saco,  Me. 

.    19  Oakes  Street,  Everett,  Alass. 

Indian  Orchard,  Mass. 

Greenwood,  Neb. 

.    64  Robie  Street,  Halifax,  N.  S. 

Wellesley  Hills,  Mass. 

.  Fredericktown,  Ohio. 

Auburndale,  iMass. 

10  Wade  Building,  Cleveland,  Ohio. 

10  Westminster  Avenue,  Roxbnrv,  Mass. 

Athol  Center,  Mass. 

.     120  Market  Street,  Iowa  City,  Iowa. 

1S9  St.  Botolph  Street,  Boston,  Mass. 

West  Chester,  Pa. 

304  West  Adams  Street,  Fairfield,  Iowa. 

Wellesley  Hills,  Mass. 

•79  Highland  Street,  West  Newton,  Mass. 


S7 


■'"^fVi, 


Ballad. 

Behind  closed  doors  with  bolts  of  brass 
They  met— a  noble  throng ; 

Factotums  up  arose  to  count 
More  than  a  hundred  strong. 

"How  now,"  the  mighty  leader  cried, 
"Shall  yon  Forensics  fare? 
Shall  they  be  left  alive  to  tell 
Sad  tales  of  silvered  hair  ? 

88 


"  Sad  tales  of  sleepless  nights  of  toil 
Mid  coffee  black  as  ink,— 
Ay !  tales  of  shame  into  whose  depths 
Each  Junior's  forced  to  sink? '" 

Then  up  and  rose  that  valiant  crew 
And  cheered  with  all  its  might : 
"  Heigho ! "  they  cried,  "  those  papers  red 
Shall  ne'er  see  Tree  Day  night ! 

"  And  none  may  come  to  do  the  deed 
Save  purple  tleur-de-lis. 
Come  all  for  bloody  deeds  prepared. 
And  never  dream  of  peace  ! " 

Then  on  one  night  as  black  as  pitch 

in  secret  ranks  they  filed. 
Far  out  beyond  the  haunts  of  men 

into  the  forest  wild. 

With  sturdy  guides  to  lead  them  on 
Through  marsh  and  tangled  vale. 

Then  up  the  hill,  then  down  the  hill, 
They  halted  in  that  dale. 


And  swift  in  white  they  robed  themselves, 

Oh,  wan  and  ghastly  they ! 
What  'gainst  the  blackness  of  the  hill 

So  still  and  lifeless  lay  ? 

Oh,  give  the  'larm !   Oh,  sound  the  cry ! 

Some  ten  young  Sophs  who  lie 
With  crouching  knees  upon  yon  hilj 

Must  be  prepared  to  die. 

Then  up  and  fell  that  mighty  host 

Upon  the  cowardly  foe, 
And  smote  them  right,  and  smote  them  left, 

And  laid  those  traitors  low. 

The  red  and  gold,  it  drooped  its  head, 

It  turned  and  ran  away. 
Heigho !  what  dark  and  fearful  deeds 

Were  wrought  ere  break  of  day  ! 

Where  are  those  papers  red  as  blood  ? 

Where  all  their  ashes  white  ? 
Those  shrouded  forms,  those  flickering  lights 

Have  vanished  in  the  night. 

90 


Book  of  Snobs. 


ONE    book    has  come  to   us    lately  for  wiiich   we  wish    to   thank    the   worthy  autiior,   who  has 
done  us    all  a  service    in  giving  to  the   public   so  complete  a   handbook   of    this  more   than 

technical  subject ;  we  rejoice  to  find  at  last  our  long-felt  need  supplied.  It  is  true  that  the 
author  is  somewhat  of  a  dreamer  and  an  idealist,  whose  philosophy  is  of  a  o-entle,  though  a 
transcendental  sort ;  but  he  knows  his  subject  thoroughly,  and  those  who  study  the  book  carefully 
cannot  fail  to  have  many  of  their  doubts  laid  at  rest  and  their  difficulties  solved.  For  the  lienefit 
of  those  who  have  not  yet  seen  this  valuable  acquisition  to  Nineteen  Hundred's  Circulating  Library 
we  give  below  a   few   significant  extracts. 

"  The  spirit  of  the  Clubman  is  essentially  the  spirit  of  the  Snob,  and  rightly  so.  One  cannot 
blame  those  who  feel  within  their  frames  the  touch  of  an  esoteiic  wisdom  for  bandino-  together  and 
keeping  among  themselves  this  spark  of  divine  knowledge  and  truth.  To  publish  to  a  stolid  and 
uncomprehending  world  the  peerless  gem  would  be,  indeed,  to  cast  pearls  before  swine.  All  the 
world  lives,  and  all  the  world  thinks,  but  it  lives  not  and  thinks  not 
in  the  faultless  manner  of  those  whose  aims  and  praise  we  sing.  To 
justify  would  be  superfluous." 

This  is  our  author's  Thesis,  which  he  proceeds  to  elaborate  for 
pei'haps  six  hundred  pages.  We,  however,  are  more  vitally  interested 
in  what  he  says  of  certain  ones  of  these  exclusive  bands  known  to 
fhe  world  as  "  Clubs."     We  quote  again  : — 

"  List  to  the  tale  of  those  choice  souls  whose  mighty  purpose  is 
to  drive  awav  the  spirit  of  gloom  in  which  the  unenlightened  welter, 
— the  S.  P.  G.  Could  aught  be  nobler,  more  sublime?  They  live  in 
joy  which  others  cannot  share ;  they  sing  where  others  weep  with 
woe  ;  they  never  have  the  blues. 

"  And  those  fair  maidens  who,  with  fortnightly  glee,  upon  the 
Wellesley  Sabbath  close  unwilling  transoms,  lest  sweet  odors  smite 
with  pain  the  nostrils  of  the  un-consuming !  From  Jove  himself  their 
spark  of  wisdom  fell — it  must  be  nectar  and-ambrosia  which  they  carrv  up  in  paper  bags. 


91 


"Then  spenk  we  also  of  those  ivsthetic  vhgins  who  wear  upon  their  hair  a  crown  of  snow 
that  o-listens  in  the  sun,  and  makes  us  shudder  on  a  rainy  day.  Theirs  is  true  altruism— to  hide 
beneath  a  milk-white  tam  what  may  or  may  not  be  there. 

"And  other  headgear  bands  together  maids  of  agreeable  taste.  What 
dreams,  what  visions  stir  beneath  the  tlaming  crowns  of  the  Red  Headeds ! 
Alas,  the  uninitiated  know  not  I  It  must  be  that  they  seek  the  fountains  of 
eternal  youth,  for  none  so  jovial  or  so  gay  as  they. 

"But  there  are  others  wiser?  Yes;  and  sadder.  For  do  they  not  all 
mysteries  divine  of,  not  what  is^  but  what  there  is  to  come,  and  wear  above  their 
burdened  hearts  the  symbol  of  their  future  end,  in  tombstones  black  and  terrible i' 
O  tremble,  ye  whose  hearts  are  light  and  gay;  ye  whose  minds  do  not  their 
awful  knowledge  bear!  Such  truth  as  that,  indeed,  would  better  go  uncom- 
prehended. 

"Two  maids  there  are  who  mourn,  sad  and  most  melancholy,  sole  rem- 
nants of  a  now  departed  club,  whose  quondam  inembers  ever  sported  gayly  a 
wee  symbol  cut  from  purest  gold,  to  keep  before  them  the  remembrance  of  their 
salad    days,   when    mad    triangles  with    elusive  perpendiculars    danced    in    their 

dreams  and   spoiled  their  beauty  sleep.      Poor  maids,  we  can  but  pity 
them,  wrest  from   the  smiles  of  their  once  dear  companions! 

"  Still  other  maids  there  are  for   whom  the  least 

affair  contains  some  secret  reason  for  a  club.      Fanciful, 

sweet  damoiselles,  their  very  names  appealed  to  them,  and 

from  their  tirst  initials  they  coined  a  ponderous  word,  with 

/  :^    ^  ^^ — r-^    I  other  letters  linked  beside,  to  carry  with  them  as  a  label, 

^  ')^  \   /  ticketing  their  tender  years. 

"  One  club  there  is — we  speak  not  of  it  till  the 
last — which  holds  within  its  mystic  charter  all  the  tran- 
scendental knowledge  of  the  realm  of  Snobs,  for  by  less  mighty  thoughts  its  aims  are 
not  corrupted.  True  Snobs  are  these,  for,  like  the  dreamy  Buddhist,  they  do  wor- 
ship the  great  Self  that  moves  behind  the  Clubs  that  be,  their  only  wish  to  com- 
prehend, and,  at  the  last,  to  be  absorbed  within  the  Soul  that  is  the  one  great  law 
above  the  Wellesley  Universe.  Ah,  few  are  they;  they  count  but  four  devoted 
followers  of  this  great  ideal.  They  are  not  moved  by  worldly  praise  or  blame  of 
others ;  they  only  watch  the  Moving  Finger  writing  names  of  some  in  lines  of  linger- 
ing light,  and  others  damning  with  the  one  dread  word  '  Impossible.'  No  nightly 
revels,  do  they  make   unto  themselves,  but,  deep   immersed   in   the   dreamless  sleep   of 


92 


those  whom   wronging    critics    touch    not,   oft    thev    muimur,    '  Lord,   I    thank    thee    I    am    not    as 
others  are.'  " 

The  conchision  of  this  vahiablc  treatise  is  a  marvel  of  beaut\-,  both  of  thought  and  of  exijres- 
sion.  But  it  is  too  long  to  be  quoted  here  entire, —  containing  a  matter  of  some  four  hundred 
pages, — and  so,  for  cutting  it  would  be  a  most  unutterable  crime,  it  must  be  left  for  the  future 
delectation  of  our  readers,  who,  we  hope,  have  been  sufficiently  impressed  by  this  brief  sketch  to 
pursue  the  subject  in  all  its  bearings. 


93 


F.  F. 


Shakespeare  Society. 


OFFICERS. 


President 
I  ice  President 
Recording  Secretary 
Corresponding  Secrcta  rv 
Treasurer 
Custodian  of  House 
First  Factotuni 
Second  Factotum 


Hilda  H.   Meisenbacii. 
Ethel  Bowman. 
H.   Louise  Williams. 
Alice  D.   Kxox. 
Alice  P.   Cromack. 
Catherixe    H.    DwiGIIT. 

Alice  G.  Spink. 
Janet  L.   Gregory. 


^ 


MEMBERS. 


IX  facultate. 

Eleanor  Aciiesox  McCulloch  Gamble. 

Elisabeth  Hardee.  Sophie  Jewett. 

Sophie  Chaxtal  Hart.  Elizabeth  Kimball  Kexdall, 


Helen  Marian  Kelsev. 
Ellen  Fitz  Pexdletox. 
Sarah  Frances  Whiting. 


Ethel  Bowman. 
Alice  P.  Cromack. 


class  of    iqoo. 

Alice  E.   Harding. 
Alice  D.   Knox. 
Amy  I.  WiiiTXEY. 


Edith  B.  Leiimax. 
Hilda  H.   Meisenbach. 


Anna  W.  Blackmer. 
Clara  Blattxer. 
Eleanor  R.  Conlon. 
Marion  F.  E.  Cook. 


CLASS  OF   1 90 1. 

Mary  C.   Davis. 
Bertha  L.   Doane. 
Catherine  H.   Dwight. 
Susan  E.  Hall. 


Jessica  L    Siiermax. 
Ro^vENA  Weakley. 
Helen  L.   Williams. 
Bertha  V.   di  Zerega. 


Annie  S.  Carlisle. 
Clare  H.  Coxcklix. 
Constance  B.  Draper. 


class  of  1902. 

Harriet  Goddard. 
Janet  L.  Gregory. 
Elizabeth  Hoyt. 

96 


Frances  L.   Hughes. 
Alice  G.  Spink. 
Louise  Svl\ester. 


Zeta  Alpha. 


OFFICERS. 


President 
Vice  Preside  11/ 
Recording  Secretary 
Corresponding  Secretary 
Treasurer 

Marshals 

Editors  of  til c   True  Blue 


Ellen  Louise  Bukrell. 


Grace  L.  Cook. 


Katharine  F.  Ball. 

WiLIlELMlNE    BaVLESS. 

Margaret  F.  Bvingtox. 
Margaret  H.  Colmax. 


Eliza  J.  Xewkirk. 

Margaret  F.  Byixgton. 

Mary  R.  Oliphaxt. 

Edxa  S.  Masox. 

Marjorie  F.  Dutch. 
(  Frances  E.  Lathrop. 
(  Mary  C.  Smith. 
(  Ella  S.  Masox. 
(  Paulixe  Sage. 


MEMBERS. 

IX  facultate. 
Martha  Gause  McCaulley.     Charlotte  Fitch  Roberts. 

1898    SPECIAL. 

Li  XA  Converse. 


CLASS  of 


1S99. 


CLASS    OF     1900. 

Marjorie  F.  Dutch. 
Haxxah  Hume. 
Jeanette  a.  Marks. 
Edna  S.  Mason. 
Lucy  E.  Wilcox. 


Franc  E.  Foote. 


Ella  S.  !NL\son. 
Eliza  J.  Xewkirk. 
Mary  R.  Oliphaxt. 
Ruth  P.  Ring. 


Frances  E.  Lathrop. 
Elizabeth  McCaulley. 


Emma  .S.  Aldex. 
Charlotte  A.  Faher. 


class   OF    1 90 1. 

Julia  B.  Park. 
Laura  L.  Reed. 

CLASS  OF   1903. 

Ruth   R.  Forbes. 
Helen  L.  Grover. 
Lillian  L.  Libby. 


Pauline  Sage. 
^L\RY  C.  Smith. 


Anxa  a.  Hexxing. 
Rebecca  Ihlder. 


The  Agora. 


OFFICERS. 


President 
r  Ice  President 
Corresponding  Secretary 
Recording  Secretary 
1  reasurer 
Sergcant-at-Arms 
Custodian 

Executive  Committee 

Editor  in   Cliicf  of  A I  'n  I'  A 


Florence  E.  Loop. 
Anna  F.  Cross. 
Edith  M.  Wright. 
Lelia  S.  Eaton. 
Anne  M.  Siebert. 
Minnie  Pappenheimer. 
Mary  S.  Barbour. 
Elizabeth  A.  Towle. 
Carolyn  L.  Morse. 
Margaret  C.   Mills. 
Rachel  C.   Reeve. 


Mary  Whiton  Calkins. 
Cakla  Wenckebach. 


Mary  S.  Barbour. 
Anna  F.  Cross. 
Lelia  S.   Eaton. 
Caroline  M.   Locke. 


]\L\RY  A.  Leavens. 
Margaret  C.  Mills. 
Minnie  Pappenheimer. 


Mary  W.   Brooks. 
Mary  A.  Brown. 


MEMBERS. 

IN    FACULTATE. 

class  of  1S9S. 

Mary  W.  Capen. 

class  of   1900. 

Florence  E.   Loop. 
Edith  H.   Moore. 
Carolyn  L.  Morse. 
Rachel  C.   Reeve. 

class  of   iqoi. 

Emma  S.  Seward.     . 
Anne  M.  Siebert. 
Lilla  Weed. 

CLASS    OF     1903. 

Jane   W.   Button. 
Rachel  S.  Haines. 
Annie  W.  Stocking. 


Katharine  Coman. 
Alice  Vinton  Waite. 


Frances  Rousmaniere. 
Edna  L'E.  Seward. 
Elizabeth  A.  Towle. 
Lucy  M.   Wright. 


Mayannaii  Woodward. 
Edith  M.   Wright. 


Jessie  F.   Hutsinpillar. 
Ethel  W.  Noyes. 


98 


Phi  Sigma  Fraternity. 


ALPHA   CHAPTER. 


OFFICERS. 


President 
I  ice  President 
Treasurer 

Recording  Secretary 
Corresponding  Secretary 

Marshals 


ViDA  Dlttox  Scudder. 


CORINNE    A.    AbERCRO.MBIE. 

Alice  E.  Chase. 
M.  Geraldine  Gordon. 
Oriana  p.  Hall. 
Florence  Halsey. 


Catherine   R.  Anderson. 
Madeline  C.  Baxter. 


Amy  \V.  Adams. 
Jessie  D.  Burnh.wi. 
S.  Elizabeth  Lennox. 
Marinette  Lombard. 


MEMBERS. 

in  facultate. 

Katharine  Lee  Bates. 

CLASS  OF   1896. 

Mary  E.  Chase. 

CLASS  OF  1900. 

Marjorie  B.  Hemingway. 
Susan  D.  Huntington. 
Pauline  Nunnemacher. 
Mary  Rockwell. 
Paula  L.  Schoellkopf. 


Mary  Rockwell. 

AL\RTiiA  Cornelia  Shaw. 

Florence  Halsey. 

Alice  Elizabeth  Whiting. 

Corinne  Afton  Abercrombie. 

Madeline  Cummings  Baxter. 

AuGUSTE  Marie  Helmholz. 


Annie  Sybil  Montague. 


CLASS    OF 


1901 


Annie  H.  Davis. 
Cecilia  D.  Faile. 

class  of   1902. 

Bessie  W.  Manwaring. 
Martha  W.  McAlarney. 
Caroline  E.  Pitkin. 
Florence  E.  Pitkin. 
Alice  McL  Wilcox. 


^L  Cornelia  Shaw. 
Ethel  M.  Sperrv. 
Elizabeth  A.  Vogel. 
Alice  E.  Whiting. 


AuGUSTE  jSL  Helmholz. 
Alice  L.  Logan. 


Mae  McE.  Rice. 
Georgia  Silver. 
Mary  B.  Storm. 
Julia  F.  Wells. 


99 


Tau  Zeta  Epsilon. 


OFFICERS. 


Prcsidoit   .... 
Mce  President 
Corresponding  Secretary 
Recording  Secretary 
Treasurer 

Keepers       .... 

Editor  in  Chief  of  tJic  "  /;•/.'; 


Edith  J.  Norcross. 

Carolvx  L.  Chase. 

Jessie  Cameron. 

Mildred  S.  Elliot. 

Rebecca  M.  White. 
f  Ethel  N.  Gibbs. 
(  Pearl  B.  Randall. 

Mabelle  C.  Phillips. 


MEMBERS. 


Prof.  Charles  Eliot  Norton. 
Edith  M.  Howes. 

Alice  Van  \'echten   Brown. 


honorary. 


IN  facultate. 


Prof.  Anton  Springer. 
Ida  Bothe. 


Margarethe  Muller. 


Margaret  Hastings  J.\ckson. 


Jessie  Cameron. 
Carolyn  L.  Chase. 


class  of   1900. 

Mildred  S.  Elliot. 
Carrie  M.  Harbach. 
Rebecca  M.  White. 


Edith  J.  Norcross. 
Mabelle  C.  Phillips. 


Marion  B.  Cushman. 
Anne  K.  Edwards. 
Belle  Fletcher. 


class  of   I 901. 

Ethel  N.  Gibbs. 
Gertrude  H.  Hubbs. 
Marian  Patterson. 


Pearl  B.  Randall. 
IsADORE  C.  Rogers. 


Marion  \V.  Lowe. 


class  of   1902. 

Clara  H.  Lorenzen. 
Anna  B.  Vail. 


Anna  E.  Snyder. 


Alpha  Kappa  Chi. 


President    . 
Vice  President   . 
Recording  Secretary 
Corresponding  Secretary 
Treasurer  . 
First  Factotum  . 
Second  Factotum 

Executive  Committee 


OFFICERS. 


MEMBERS. 

llDNOIiAU^'. 

I)i;.  I'^nwAun   L.  Ci.auk. 


Alice  T.  Rowe. 

Edxa  B.  Foote. 

EsTELLE  F.  Smith. 

L.  Etiiei,  Forciei!. 

Cakkie  E.  Browx. 

Marcia  C.  McIxxrRE. 

Alice  E.  Perry. 
{  Alice  Waltox. 
<:  Florexce  E.  Bailey. 
(  Gertrude  B.  Gage. 


Ancie  Clara  Ciiapix. 


ix  i-aciltate. 
Caroline   Rebecca   Fletcher. 


Alice  Waltox. 


Florexce  E.  Bailey 
Edxa  B.  Foote. 


class  of   1S96. 

Grace  B.  Towxse.vd. 

class  of   lyoo. 

Gertrude  B.  Gage. 
Florexce  B.  Hamilton. 


class  of   1s99. 
Frances  M.  Dadmux. 

Alice  T.  Rowe. 
Estelle  F.  Smith. 


Bertha  Batting. 
Carrie  E.  Brown. 


Edith  Beiii;iiorst. 
Elizabeth   R.  Ca.mrreli. 


class  of   1 901. 

L.  Ethel  Forcikr. 
Alice  E.  Perry. 

CLASS    l)F     1902. 

Katharine  E.  IIotz. 
Marcia  C.  McIxtire. 

FrANKIE     E.    Sl"LLI\-AN. 
SPK(_  I  AI-. 

Ethel  M.  IImuuxg. 


Bessie  Porter. 


Florence  M.  Osborxe. 
Carolixe   R.  Pulsifer. 


lOI 


IN  THE  CHEERING-UP   BUSINESS. 


STARS  are  twinkling, 
Fire-flies  sprinkling 
Lights  along  the  dusky  lane  ; 

Voices  ringing, 

Snatches  singing 
Of  the  gayest  college  strain. 
Listen  to  the  merry  hum 
Of  the  swallows,  as  they  come  ! 

Swallows,  swallows. 

Flying,  flying 

To  the  Barn. 

Eyes  are  shining. 

Partners  lining 
For  the  quaint  Virginia  reel ; 

Now  they're  dancing 

To  strains  entrancing  ; 
Out  and  in  they  gayly  wheel. 
Watch  the  bright  and  pretty  scene  ; 
Gowns  of  white  and  boughs  of  green 

Swallows,  swallows. 

Whirling,  whirling 

In  the  Barn. 

Time  is  flying. 

Music  dying. 
Gongs  have  sounded  o'er  the  way  ; 

All  are  smiling. 

Pairs  are  filing 
Round  with  cushions  bright  and  gay. 
Hear  the  twitter,  high  and  low, 
Of  the  swallows,  as  they  go  I 

Swallows,  swallows. 

Flitting,  flitting 

From  the  Barn. 


CM 


>  J  u  ^  I  n  c  f,  $ 


FRENCH    PLAY. 


ji;kior  play. 


BARN    SWALLOWS. 


President 
Vice  President 
Secretary 
Treasurer 

Custodian 


Paula  L.  Schcellkopf,  1900. 
Bertha  L.  Doane,  1901. 
Charlotte  A.  Faber,  1902. 
Mabel  Wright,  1900. 
Rebecca  Ihlder,  1902. 


^ 


BOARD  OF  DIRECTORS  OF  THE  CHRISTIAN   ASSOCIATION. 


President  .... 

I  ice  President 
Corresponding  Secretary 
Record ing'  Secretary 
Preasiirer  .... 

CJiairnian^  Missionary  Committee 
Ciiairman,   Temperance   Committee 
C/iairn?an,   General  Petitions   ll'ori  Committee, 
C//airma//,  Devotional  Cotnmittee 
Cliairman,  Pcception  Committee 
Chairman,  Bible  Study  Committee 
C/iairman,  Mission  Stndy  Committee 


Alice  E.  IlAnniNG,  1900. 
Pauline  Sage,  1901. 
CiiLOE  Curtis,  1900. 
Edith  C.  Young,  1900. 
Margaret  C.  Mills,  1901. 
Elizabeth  N.  Hume,  1900. 
Ellen  Hayes  (Faculty). 
Susan  E.  Hall,  1901. 
Helen  A.  Merrill  (Faculty). 
Hannah   Hume,  1900. 
Margaret  F.  Byington,  1900. 
Imogene   M.  Cook,  1900. 


106 


MSTEK- BEGGARS 


WELLESLEY   COLLEGE  CHAPTER  OF  THE 
COLLEGE   SETTLEA^ENT   ASSOCIATION. 


President 


r  ice  Presidents 


Secretary  and  7 rcasiirer 
Librarian 


Jeannette  a.  Marks,  1900. 
f   Faculty,  Mary  Bowex. 
I    Senior,  Margaret  H.   Colxiax. 
>    Junior,  Mary  C.   Smith. 
I    Sophomore,  May  Matthews. 
I   Freshman,  Mary  H.   Cro.mbip:. 

Sarah  G.  Tomkixs. 

Elizabeth  X.  Ferxald. 


^ 


SOMERSET  Y'S. 


President   .... 
Secretary  and  1  reasiirer    . 


Oriaxa  p.  Hall. 
Emma  S.   Sewakd. 


107 


Chorus. 


Director 
Secretary 


Louise   \V.   Ai.i.ex. 
E.   Pansy  Barret. 
Bertha  Batting. 
Blanche  L.   Birch. 
Edith  L.  Blaxchard. 
Clara  Blattner. 
Emily  S.   Brown. 
Gertrude  S.   Brown. 
Sara  M.   Brown. 
Helexe  L.   Buhlert. 
Grace  L.  Burt. 
Elsie  G.   Bushoxg. 
Helen  P.   Cogswell. 
Gertrude  P.  Cole. 
Ellen  M.   Coughlix. 
Mabel  E.   Croll. 
Mary  H.   Crombie. 
Anna  E.   Darby. 
Katiiimna   M.   Da\is. 
Anrci.i.A   B.   Durfee. 


OFFICERS. 


MEMBERS. 

Lelia  S.   Eaton. 
Agxes  E.  Fairlie. 
Grace  C.  Farnham. 
Helen  M.   Fitch. 
Amy  M.  Ford. 
Norma  L.   Gilchrist. 
Su.sAx  E.   Hall. 
Florexce  G.   Heixex. 
Marie  Hershey. 
Florence  C.   Hicks. 
Flora  E.   Hoi.brook. 
Elizabeth  X.  Hume. 
Clara  L.   Klemm. 
Angelina  S.   Kuhl. 
Kate  I.  Lord. 
Elizabeth  S.   Lumm. 
Irene  C.  ISLvson. 
Lulu  L   McAusland. 
Helen  A.   Merrill. 
Mabel  A.   Metcale. 


augusto  rotoli. 

Florence  Burton  Hamilton. 


Lucy  B.  Moody. 
Sarah  D.  Morse. 
AxxA  L  Pope. 
Ethel  W.   Pitxey. 
Anxa  a.   Rankin. 
Clara  S.  Richards. 
Kate  M.   Ross. 
Marion  P.   Ross. 
Larrie  J.   Sharman. 
Bertha  L.   Sissox. 
Mary  D.  Spexcer. 
Florence  W.   Smith. 
Hattie  ]\L   Smith. 
Lillian  W.   Smith. 
Louise  G.   Stewart. 
Annie  B.   .Stowe. 
Edna  Summy. 
Elizabeth  A.  Wander. 
Blanche  H.  Wells. 


109 


GLEE    CLUB. 


Glee  Club. 


AIA^ 


FIRE! 


BANG! 
OFFICERS. 


President 
I^cader  . 
Librarian 


Florence  Walker,  1900. 
Nina  Poor, 1900. 
Amy   Ford,  1903. 


?^ 


MEA^BERS. 


First  Soprano. 


Dl\m()nd  Donnek,  1901. 
IIkTTV    ^^'IIEELER.    1903. 


Second  Soprano. 


Mildred  Eliot,  1900. 
jMariox  Cook.  1901. 

Florence  Hamilton.  1900. 
MviiA   Marshall.  1901. 

Florence  Walker,  1900. 
Nina  Poor,  1900. 


First  Alto. 


Second  Alto. 


Elizabeth  MacCrellisii,  1902 
Angelina  KChl,  1903. 


Claire  Raymond,  1903. 
Madeline  Williams,  1903. 

Lottie  Bates,  1903. 
Elsie  Roberts,  1903. 

Ruth  Forhes,  1903. 
Amy  Ford,  1903. 


MANDOLIN    CLUC. 


nf  0 


Mandolin  Club. 


President 
Leader 

Secretary 


OFFICERS. 


E.  Gordon  Walker,  1900. 
Ella  S.  Mason,  1900. 
Ethel  N.  Gibbs,  1901. 


Ella  S.  Mason,  1900. 
Ethel  Bowman,  1900. 

JiLiETTE  M.  Cooke,  1902. 


MEMBERS. 

First  Man  do!  ill. 


Second  Mandolin. 


Ethel  N.  Gibbs,  1901. 
Caroline  Kampman,  1902, 


Margery  M.  Gouinlock,  1902 


Georgia  Sil\er,  1902. 
i'3 


Guitar. 
Edna  S.  Mason,  1900.  Alice  McI.  Wn,cox,  1902. 

Alice  D    Knox,  1900.  LrciA  Procter,  1903. 

^landohi. 
Jessica  Latiirop,  1903. 

Harp. 
E.  Gordon  Walker,  1900. 

\'ioli>i. 
Marie  L.  Richards,  1904. 

Castanettes  and  Tamhoiiriuc. 
Alice  D.  Knox,  1900. 


Graduate  Club. 


OFFICERS. 

Prcsidoit 

•              .              .              .              . 

Frances  L.  Rogers. 

Secretary             .           j» 

Nettie  L  Hill. 

7  reasiirer 

MEMBERS. 

IN    FACULTATE. 

Mary  Frazer  Smith. 

Katharine  Lee  Bates. 

Alice  A.  Luce. 

Elisabeth  Hardee. 

Ellen  F.  Pendleton. 

Grace  Andrews. 

Anna  W.  Lvtle. 

Frances  L.  Rogers. 

Mary  Bozeman. 

Georgina  Moody. 

Harriet  Sawyer. 

Emilv  Briggs. 

Helen  W.  Norcross. 

Mary  F.  Smith. 

WiLHELMINE    CaROTIIERS. 

Edna  Pennell. 

Maud  Stokes. 

Alice  Coombs. 

Ethel  A.  Pennell. 

Grace  B.  Townsend 

Florence  Dolitjlas. 

Louise  Pope. 

]\LvRiE  G.  Webber. 

Nettie  I.  Hill. 

Grace  L.  Rickey. 

"5 


M 
O 


0 


N 


F 


O 


L 


K 


Philosophy  Club. 


Preside?/! 
I  'ice  President 
Secretary 


McmbersJiip   Commit  tee 


Ethel  Bowman. 

Marv  Sophia  Case. 

Edna  L'Estkange  Sewaud. 
(  M.  Imogene  Cook. 
(  Kathrina    Harbekton  Storms. 


A  CliWc  tithe  open 


Wagner  Club. 


Executive    CoDiinittec 


■Secretary 
Treasurer 


-Factofi. 


I    Hilda  H.  MEisEXBAcir. 

Cahla  Wenckebach. 
)    Margaretiie  Muller. 
I   Pauline  Nijnnemacher. 
I   Catherine  R.  Anderson. 
I  Marion  W.  Lowe. 

Margaretiie  E.  Mitzlaff. 

Elizabeth  A.  Vogel. 
\    Leila  W.   Dav. 
'   Katharine  E.   Hotz. 


119 


Tales  of 


Unrest. 


MAGAZINE  BOARD. 

Editor  in   Cliicf. 
Mary  Geraldine  Gordon,  1900. 

Associate  Editor. 
Lucy  Wright,  1900. 

Managing  Editors. 

MAliET,LE   ChARLTOX    PhILLIPS,    I9OO.  ELIZABETH    A.    TuWLE,    I9OO. 

Literary   Editors. 


Martha  Gause  McCaulley,  '93. 
Ei.izA    J.  Xewkirk,  1900. 


Nina  F.  Poor,  1900. 

Mary  Caroline  Smith,  1901. 


Captains  Courageous. 


ATHLETIC    ASSOCIATION. 


AfcusTE  M.  Hei.mhoi.z 
AIary  C.  Smith 
Julia  F.  ^VI•:I,Ls 
Helen  L.  Williams 
Alice  Waltox     \ 
Mary  Bowex         ■     . 
Emily  G.  Balch  ) 
LuciLE  Eaton  Hill 
Edith  H.  Moore 
Emma  S.  Seward 
Gertrude  M.  Foster 
Rachel  C.  Reeve    . 
Florence  Halsey    . 
E.  Gordon  Walker 
Elizabeth  X.  Hume 


President . 
I  ice  President. 
Secretary. 
Treasurer. 

Facidtv  Members. 

Division  of  Pliysical  Training. 
Senior  Member. 
Junior  Member. 
Sophomore  JMember. 
President  of  Rowing  Club. 
Head  of  Basket  Ball. 
Head  of  Golf. 
Head  of  Tennis. 


BATTLE    oriNE     STRONG 


OXE  frosty  February  day,  when  Xineteen  Hundred  was  a  baby,  barelv  five  months  old,  she  be- 
gan her  athletic  career  with  a  boldly  characteristic  step.  Kicking  aside  her  swaddling  clothes 
of  meek  and  docile  dependence,  she  \vriggled  her  chubby  self  into  a  sweater,  and  tugged  on  bloom- 
ers, leggins,  and  boots.  Then,  straightening  her  curls  in  a  determined  pigtail,  and  capping  this 
climax  with  a  headgear  of  toboggan  cut,  she  trudged  fearlesslv  over  to  Art  Building  Hill  and  cast 
the  mitten  gauntlet  of  defiance  at  the  feet  of  her  enemies,  the  Sophomores. 

Xow,  lest  there  be  some  ignorant  folk  who  would  argue  from  this  that  Xineteen  Hundred 
evinced  a  combative  and  pugnacious  tendenc}',  even  in  her  first  youth,  a  word  must  be  said  in  regard 
to  these  same  Sophomores.  They  are  gone  now — gone  forever  ;  and  far  be  it  from  us  all  to  speak 
ill  of  the  departed.  Yet  they  were  ever  of  a  teasing  disposition,  and  loved  that  troublesome  pre- 
cept. "  Spare  the  rod  and  spoil  the  child."  Therefore  Xineteen  Hundred  suffered  much  at  their 
hands  until  this  day  in  February,  when  she  swore  to  meet  them  in  fair  fight  and  cool  their  ardor  in 
the  snow.  .So  she  made  herself  a  goodly  store  of  white  and  stinging  bullets,  and  took  her  stand 
behind  her  snowy  rampart  to  await  the  coming  of  the  foe.  Who  of  Xineteen  Hundred  that  was  in 
that  virgin  strife  will  ever  forget  it?  The  storming  of  the  fort,  the  mad  rush  for  the  flag,  the 
straining,  struggling  moments  when  the  Sophomores  pulled  and  pelted,  and  the   pluckv  little   Fresh- 

123 


men  holding  on  and  holding  on  nntil  the  fight  was  ended  and  the  flag  was  theirs, — who  will 
ever  forget  it?     Xinetv-nine  may  try  to.  but  Nineteen  Hundred — never! 

Wiiat  could  have  been  more  fitting,  then,  in  the  brilliant  light  of  her  first  victory,  than  that 
she  should  declare  her  intention  of  going  on  "  from  strength  to  strength"  in  works  of  still  greater 
prowess?     Nor  has  this   lofty  aim  been   unfulfilled,  as  we  shall  see. 

Ha\ing  found  the  hall  an  effective  weapon  in  her  first  battle,  Nineteen  Hundred  conceived 
the  idea  of  engaging  in  a  new  conflict  in  which  this  same  weapon  shoidd  again  figure,  but  in  a 
size  more  fitted  to  her  increased  athletic  stature.  So  she  tackled  basket  ball  with  zest  and  ardor, 
and  in  the  course  of  time  went  forth  to  plav  the  team  of  Ninety-eight.  Of  course  she  was 
beaten.  Who  wasn't  liv  the  peerless  team  of  Ninety-eight?  If  Ninety-eight  were  in  college  iiov: — 
but  no  I  Whv  deal  in  probabilities  when  a  perusal  of  the  actual  facts  is  so  inspiring?  She  swal- 
lowed her  little  pill  bravelv,  bitter  though  it  was,  and  sensibly  learned  the  value  of  the  lesson  of 
defeat.  Then,  being  a  class  ever  distinguished  for  her  public  spirit  and  her  untiring  efforts  to  pro- 
mote the  welfare  of  the  college,  she  generously  undertook  to  teach  this  same  valuable  lesson  to  all 
her  sister  teams  of  basket  ball.  It  has  cost  her  some  effort,  at  times,  to  fulfill  this  character  of 
mentor,  but  when  she  reflects  that  they  have  all,  one  by  one,  taken  the  helpfid  dose  from  her  hands 
which  she  took  from  Ninetv-eight,  she  can  rest  in  the  peaceful  assurance  that  her  labors  have  not 
been  imfruitful.      May  another  rise  up  after  her  who  shall  take  up   this  truly  philanthropic  work  ! 

Golf  1  Who  shall  speak  of  Nineteen  Hundred's  history  on  that  score  without  the  joyful 
tear?  ^\'hat  a  re\ival  of  the  sport's  ebbing  fortunes  took  place  when  one  member  of  Nineteen 
Hundred,  who  was  a  Walker,  too  (characteristic  indispensable  in  golf),  came  to  the  front,  gathered 
the  straggling  enthusiasts  into  a  regular  organization,  increased  the  membership  of  the  club  from 
the  teens  into  the  nineties,  and — uh,  glorious  achievement!  — brought  out  to  Welleslev  many  coaches 
of  the  other  sex  in  the  altruistic  hope  that^ve  might  '•  tr\'  to  have  some  matches  in  the  future."  Before 
those  days  a  golfiac  was  a  thing  to  wonder  at  upon  the  campus, — a  vara  avis,  so  to  speak.  Now.  on 
any  fine  and  sunny  afternoon,  the  careless  observer  may  see  short-skirted  maidens,  young  and  old, 
brandishing  sticks  with  a  menacing  air,  or  wildly  rooting  up  the  tiu'f  in  their  enthusiasm,*  while 
others  go  poking  furtively  among  the  weeds  and  boggy  places,  seeking  after  "that  old  ball  I  lost  !  " 

If  Nineteen  Hundred's  golf  record  is  so  stirring,  what  shall  we  say  of  her  crew  work? 
From  wiiom  did  the  '\'arsity  take  her  stroke?  Nineteen  Hundred!  Who  gave  the  College  Eight 
five  oars  in  Junior  year?  Nineteen  Hundred!!  Under  whose  auspices  did  the  Rowing  Club  first 
begin  its  organized  work?  Nineteen  Hundred's!  !  !  And  on  that  sad  June  evening  of  1S99,  when 
"all  the  world  was  in  the  sea."  did  Nineteen  Hundred's  rowing  ardor  suffer  from  the  wet  blanket 
so  bounteously  bestowed  by  the  weather?  Not  a  bit  of  it.  On  the  contrary,  wlien  work  had  begun 
for  Senior  year  the  crew  sprang  up   again,  with   spirits  all  the  fresher  for  their  little  sprinkling,  and 

*If  jou  don't  believe  this  e.xaiiiine  the  campus  for  bare  spots. 


124 


sent  their  own  and  other  shells  upon  the  lake  for  practice-rowing  in  the  fall, — a  step  without  prece- 
dent in  the  history  of  the  rowing  sport.  Tndy,  in  prowess  ac|uatic.  as  hath  been  said,  "O 
Nineteen  Hundred,  you're  dain/v!"  * 

'•But  what  of  tennis?"  Someone  says,  "Nineteen  Hundred  hasn't  much  to  boast  of 
there,  eh  r ' ' 

To  wliich  mocking  speech  we  answer  that  a  class  cannot  cari_\'  such  heavy  majors  as  basket 
ball  and  golf  throughout  her  course  without  slighting  a  minor  elective  or  two;  and,  moreover,  a 
Jack  of  all  trades  is  a  master  of  none,  you  know.  Do  we  hear  that  same  scoffer  murmuring  some- 
thing to  the  effect  that  he  wonders  why  a  class  so  starrily  athletic  did  not  take  the  cup  at  Field  Day 
in  her  Junior  year?  But  let  me  ask  that  person  what  she  supposes  a  Junior  class,  already  treading 
hard  upon  the  heels  of  her  veteran  Seniority,  could  possibly  want  of  a  c/ip?  Cups,  my  scornfid 
friend,  are  gifts  appropriate  only  for  the  very  young  and  tender.  For  this  reason,  therefore,  Xine- 
teen  Hundred,  with  her  unfailing  tact  and  good  sense,  stood  gallantly  aside  and  let  this  tribute  pass 
into  the  hands  of  Nineteen  Hundred  and  Two,  her  own  pet  Freshman  babies.  For  her  the  virtue 
of  winning  the   basket-ball   championship  was  that  dav  its  own   reward,  nor  was  any  other  needed. 

And  so  endeth   mir  tale  of  valorous  deeds   and   athletic   triumphs  of  the  Class    of  Nineteen 

Hundred. 

She  journeved  on  from  strength  to  strength. 

And  when  the  wav  seemed  z-ci'v  long 

She  fought  the  harder,  till,  at  length, 

She'd  won  the  battle  of  the  strong. 
*L.  E.  II. 


Te  tna.  ■memorg 


igOO  CREW. 


Nineteen  Hundred  Rowing  Squad. 


BOAT        ....        FLEUR-DE-LIS. 

Captain. 
Edith   II.   Moore. 

Coxsvjaiii . 
Caroline  W.   Rogers. 

Marjorie  BiRBAXK.  Edith   H.  Moore. 

Chloe  Curtis.  ■  Rachel  C.   Reeve. 

Lella.  .S.  Eatox.  Mary  Rockwell,  Stroke. 

Emma  L.   Gever.  Frances  Searle. 

Hannah  Hume.  M.   Irene  Smith. 

Dora  E.   Marsuai.i..  Ai.ma  Williams. 


igOO    BASKET-BALL    TEAM. 


NINETEEN    HUNDRED    BASKET-BALL  TEAM. 


Mabei.le  C.  Phillips,   Capt. 
Katiiakixe  F.  Ball. 
Gertrude  B.  Gage. 
Oriana  p.  Hall. 
Florenxe  Halsey. 

PaCLINE    Nl'XXE.MACIIER. 


Ruth  P.  Rixc. 
Paula  L.  Schoellkopf. 
Bertha  H.  Smith. 
Kathrixa  H.  Storms. 
Elizabeth  A.  Vogel. 
B.  Grace  Westkall. 


129 


CHARGE  OF  THE  LIGHTNING   MAIDS. 

(Al-TER    TeXNVSOX.) 


H 


ALF  an  inch,  half  an  inch. 
Half  an  inch  onwaid. 
Passing  the  Basket  Ball, 
Strode  Nineteen  Hundred. 
•Forward,  ye  lightning  maids. 
Rah,  rah,"  their  classmates  said; 
'Pass  on  the  Basket  ]5all. 

Bold  Nineteen  Hundred." 

Forward  went  each  brave  maid, — 
Was  there  a  one  dismayed? 
No  ;   for  they  each  one  knew 

Not  one  had  fumbled. 
Theirs  not  to  make  replj". 
When  umpires  "fouls"  would  cry, 
When  Freshmen  captains  try. 
Coaching  their  busy  cry. 
Onward  the  yaliant  fly. 

On,  Nineteen  Hundred  ! 

Freshmen  arms  under  them, 
Freshmen  arms  over  them, 
Freshmen  arms  round  them. 

Waved  wild  and  floundered. 
All  of  their  tricks  were  lame. 
All  of  their  wavings  vain. 
Back  to  the  Juniors  came 
Championship,  honor,  fame; 
Easily  they  won  the  game, 

Gay  Nineteen  Hundred. 

When  can  their  glory  fade? 
Oh,  the  great  score  the\'  made  ! 
All  Wellesley  wondered. 
Honor  each  lightning  maid. 
Honor  the  game  they  played. 
Our  Nineteen  Hundred. 


(Written  to  commemorate    tlie  victory  of   1900   over   1902    in    May.   iS 
championship.) 

'3° 


wliich    decided    tlie  Basket  Ball 
E.  J.  N. 


Little  Masterpieces. 


BY   FAMOUS    AUTHORS. 


Water    Babies. 

The    Golden   Age. 

Ode   to   the    First    Floor   Center. 

It's   Only   a   Question   of   Time. 


Engaged. 

Botany   vs.   Biology. 

Song   of   the    House    Council. 

A    Ballad   of   Unwritten    Letters. 


L'  Envoi. 


\  /    \  \1 


WATER    BABIES. 


ic 


D 


O  we  have  a  beautiful  time  at  Float?" 
Asked  a  pretty,  gay  Freshman,  trimming  her  boat. 
Said  the  Soph  at  her  side,  "A  good  time,  it  is  true, 
If  you  can  possibly  get  on  the  crew  I  " 
For  in  her  heart  she  felt  quite  irate 
To  think  she'd  been  dropped  on  account  of  her  weight. 

"A  good  time" — a  Junior  struck  in — '-you  may, 
When  you  haye  an  exam,  the  yerv  next  day  !  " 
Ninety-nine  took  up  the  sarcastic  refrain, 

"  A  good  time  at  Float?     Oh,  yes — in  the  rain  !  " 
The  Freshman  was  silenced.      She  brightened  at  length. 
And  spoke  with  decision,  plus  a  good  deal  of  strength. 

"  I'll  have  a  good  time  if  I'm  not  on  the  crew  I  " 
She  paused  a  bit  longer,  and  a  deep  sigh  she  drew. 

"After  all,  what  care  I  for  exams,  at  Float, — 
When  Jack  is  coming  to  row  in  my  boat? 
And  if  by  chance  we  get  caught  in  the  rain, 
\Vhy,  't  won't  matter  to  us — not  the  least  little  grain." 


'33 


THE   GOLDEN   AGE. 


w 


HEN  you're  nothing  but  a  Freshman, 
You  don't  have  to  sit  and  drudge  ; 

You  can  spend  your  days  in  playing, 
And  your  nights  in  making  fudge. 

Yet  you  say,  "  To  be  a  Senior  ! 

To  have  left  this  mazy  math.. 
To  dread  no  Bible  Papers, 

And  to  face  no  Room  P's  wrath  ; 

To  wear  the  Senior  raiment. 
And  smile  the  Senior  smile. 

And  be  chummy  with  the  Faculty, — 
Ah!   tliat  would  be  worth  while  !  " 

When  you're  nothing  but  a  Freshman, 
That's  the  sort  of   thing  you  say  ; 

But  when  you  arc  a  Senior, 
TJicn  you'll  talk  another  way. 


'34 


ODE   TO   THE    FIRST   FLOOR   CENTER. 


O 


FIRST  Floor  Center,  thou  momiment  of  ages  past, 
O  thou  vast,  cahn  sarcophagus  of  great  ones  dead, 
At  which  succeeding  Freshman  eyes  grow  big  with  dread, 
With  their  sweet,  innocent  beliefs,  too  good  to  last. 

0  thou  who  bloom' st  with  tokens,  ready  cut  and  tied. 
Of  Freshman  love  to  Seniors  affable  and  sweet, 
Fair  garlands,  worthy  to  be  showered  at  their  feet : 

We  owe  thee  much,  O  First  Floor  Center,  and  more  beside. 

1  stand  within  thy  columned  arches  dim  and  vast; 

Of  the  long  ages  that  have  been  their  own  I  dream  ; 
\ly  life  as  nothing  is  dissolved  beneath  the  gleam 
Of  thy  infinity  :  I  bow  before  thee,  monarch  of  the  past. 


'35 


IT'S   ONLY   A    QUESTION   OF  TIME. 


(With    Apologies    to    the    Belles    of    Bellesley.) 


w 


HEN   Nineteen  Hundred  met  to  choose  her  senior  president, 
It  seemed  as  If  the  class  were  all  on  mortal  combat  bent  ; 
When  suddenly  above  the  strife  they  heard  sweet  music  ring. 
The  students  in  the  corridor  had  thus  beafun  to  sinor: — 

"  It's  only  a  question  of  time  ; 
'Twill  be  an  achievement  sublime. 
The  sages  agree 
It  surely  must  be. 
It's  only  a  question  of  time." 

Now,  Nineteen  One's  a  gentle  class,  as  anyone  can  see  ; 
If  the  river's  set  afire  they  will  not  the  culprits  be. 
They're  mild  at  studies,  gayeties,  and  striving  ior  the  cup. 
And  everybody's  wondering  when  that  class  will  wake  up. 

"  It's  only  a  question  ot  time,"  etc. 
.  136 


But  Nineteen  Two  is  certainly  an  energetic  class; 

And,  since  tliey've  won  the  cup,  their  zeal  has  come  to  such  a  pass 

That  the  Faculty  regard  them  with  a  disapproving  frown, 

And  upper-class  girls  ask  each  day,  "  How  shall  we  calm  them  down  ?" 

"  It's  onl\'  a  (juestlon  ot   time,"  etc. 

The  tender  little  maidens  of  the  Class  of  Nineteen  Three 

Are  very  young  and  sweet,  and  very  innocent,  you  see. 

At  every  turn,  in  every  way,  this  innocence  is  seen  ; 

And  all  exclaim,  "  When  will  they  cease  to  be  so  fresh  and  green  ?" 

'Tt's  only  a  question  ot  time,"  etc. 

For  many  years  a  wail's  been  heard,  with  each  successive  fall, 
From  Freshmen  in  the  village  who  want  rooms  in  College  Hall. 
But  keep  up  heart,  ye  village  maids,  the  time  is  coming  round 
When  every  Wellesley  girl  shall  have  a  room  on  Wellesley  ground. 

"  It's  only  a  question  of  time,"  etc. 

In  years  to  come,  it  may  be,  that  the  editorial  staff 
Will,  like  the  other  maidens,  jest  and  smile,  and  even  laugh  ; 
For  in  the  days  to  come  the  students  all,  it  may  be  seen, 
Will  send  in  contributions  to  the  Jl'dlcslcv  Magazitte. 

"  It's  only  a  question  of  time,"  etc. 

137 


Since  we  came  here  as  Freshmen  to  be  joked  bv  Ninetv-nine, 
We  never  yet  have  seen  the  sun  upon  a  Tree- clay  shuie  ; 
But  rest  assured,  ye  Seniors  all,  upon  some  future  date 
There'll  surely  come  a  sunny  da\',  it   we  will  only  wait. 

"  It's  only  a  question  of  time,"  etc. 

Now,  all  the  students  yearn  so  for  a  Junior  Promenade, 
That  every  )-ear  they  brave  the  Academic  Council's  rod. 
And  beg  upon  their  bended  knees  a  Prom  that  they  ma)'  get  ; 
And,  though  they've  had  no  luck  so  far,  the)''re  bound  to  have  it  yet. 

"  It's  only  a  question  of  time  ; 
'Twill  be  an  achievement  sublime. 
The  sages  agree 
It  surely  must  be. 
It's  only  a  question  of  time." 


13S 


w 


ENGAGED. 


E  met  at  the  seaeshore  one  summer: 

She  was  (hihitv  and  clever,  and  aged 
Twentv-one  (I  would  never  believe  it) 
Ah  1    then  she  was  never  engaged. 


When  the  time  came  for  Harvard  to  open, 
Mv  sorrow  was  somewhat  assuaged 

When  I  learned  she  was  going  to  Wellesley  ; 
How  I  hoped  she'd  remain  unengaged  ! 

But  'twixt  committees  and  lectures. 

Crew,  Glee  Club  and  Golf  battles  waged, 
To  m_v  plea  for  an  hour  she  answered, 

'•  I'm  sorrv,  vou  see,  but  '  engaged.'  " 

And  when,  at  the  feet  of  this  maiden, 

I  offered  the  heart  she  had  caged. 
She  firmlv.  but  mournfully,  murmured, 
"Too  late.  Willie  dear:    I'm  engagetl." 


139 


BOTANY   VS.   BIOLOGY. 


^UZZLING  over  her  notes  sat  Kate ; 

She  had  found  there  something  she  couldn't  translate. 
"  '  T.  o.  s;  b.,' — now  let  me  see  ; 

I'm  sure  I  don't  know  what  that  can  be. 
What  does  '  s  '  mean  ?     Can  it  be  soil  ? 
Oh,  I  know — '  to  obtain  skeleton — boil.' 

Dear  me,  I  reall}-  very  much  fear 

That  my  poor  notes  aren't  always  clear." 

Over  the  stove  she  placed  a  big  dish  : 
"  Hope  Mary' 11  keep  out;   that's  all  I  wish  !  " 
But  inside  of  ten  minutes  Mary  bounced  in  ; 
She  was  little  and  pretty,  although  a  bit  thin. 
She  had  scarce  closed  the  door  when  her  cheeks  turned  to  rose, 
Indignant  she  turned  up  the  end  of  her  nose. 
"O  Kate,  what  is  it.'     Dear  me,  such  a  smell ! 
Biology  specimen.?     Frog?     Well,  well!" 

A  week  passed  liy.     One  pleasant  spring  day 
Mary  ran  in,  full  of  mischief  and  gay. 

A  curious  plant  she  carried  with  care, 

That  it  wasn't  the  sweetest  she  was  fully  aware. 
Kate's  eyes  on  her  roommate  she  anxiously  bent, 
"  JV/iai  have  you  there.'     Dear  me,  what  a  scent !  " 

Mary  smiled  sweetly,  "My  dear,  can't  you  see.' 

Sympocarpits  foetidus  for  my  botany." 


140 


SONG  OF  THE  HOUSE  COUNCIL. 


O 


H  !   a  proctor's  face  is  sad, 

And  a  proctor's  hair  turns  gray, 

For  a  proctor's  life  is  hard, 
As  anyone  would  say. 

For  how  can  a  proctor  smile 

A  shadovy  of  a  grin. 
When  all  a  proctor  eyer  sees 

Is  traces  of  dark  sin? 

She  stands  before  a  room 

Which  rings  with  merry  din. 

And  knocks  upon  the  door — 
How  quells  the  noise  within  ! 

Her  footstep  far  is  known  ; 

And  the'  her  errand  be 
To  borrow  a  slice  of  lemon, 

Or  a  little  drop  of  tea, 

Such  is  her  reputation, 

That  she  must  stand  outside 

Until  from  her  the  guests  and  feast 
The  portieres  diyide. 

She  goes  to  seek  a  friend. 

To  ask  her  in  to  tea ; 
Before  she  speaks,  her  friend 

Turns  to  her  frigidly  : 

"We  make  no  noise,  your  proctorship  ; 
Who  come  you  here  to  see  ? 
We  registered  last  night ; 
What  can  the  matter  be.'" 

Oh  !   sad  is  a  proctor's  life, — 
So  sad  and  yoid  of  beauty. 

Indeed,  what  may  a  proctor  know 
Of  anj'thing  but  duty? 

Tune. — "I  went  to  the  animal  fair." 


A    BALLAD    OF   UNWRITTEN    LETTERS. 


T 


HEY  haunt  my  dieanis;   thev  break  1113'  rest, 

The  letters  that  I  mean  to  write  ; 
Like  ghosts  of  tollies  unconfessed 

They  rise  in  visions  of  the  night. 
Reproachful  faces  seem  to  stare  ; 

Neglected  friends  surround  niv  bed: 
Reproachful  voices  rend  the  air 

Until  I  wish  that  I  were  dead. 

There's  Jane, — and  Mary,  and  Jeannette, 

And  dear  Aunt  Sue,  and  Cousin  Will, 
And,  oh,  so  many  waiting  yet, 

Kind  missives  unacknowledged  still  ! 
And  one  or  two — I  hesitate 

To  give  the  names,  for  fear,  some  dav. 
The  malice  of  mischievous  fate 

Should  throw  this  jingle  in  their  way. 

Oh,  letters  that  I  mean  to  write. 

Pigeon-holed  in  mv  desk  and  brain, 
Unsullied  paper,  ghastly  white. 

Give,  give  to  me  mv  peace  again  ! 
Do  you  not  see  mv  papers  throng.'' 

Forensics,  due  without  delav? 
Life's  short,  Legexda  work  is  long, — 

And  what's  the  difference,  anyway.' 


Freshman,  to  whom  there  still  lemains 
Some  leisure,  heed  this  hiunble  lay  ; 

Take  warning  and  avoid  these  pains, 
And  write  vour  letters  while  vou  mav. 


14^ 


w 


L' ENVOI. 


lll^N  the  la^t  Lki.enda  is  written,  and  tlie  last  lone  volume  is  sold, 
When  our  fame  is  spread  through  the  College,  and  our  pockets  jingle  with  gold, 
We  shall  rest — and,  faith,  we  shall  need  it;    we  shall  heave  twelve  sighs  of  relief; 
We  shall  caper  about  and  lie  happy, — yea,  happy  beyond  belief! 

We  shall  howl  with  delight  and  abandon,  like  infants  of  five  at  play; 

We  shall  turn  somersaults  on  the  campus  the  space  of  a  summer's  day; 

We  shall  laugh  at  the  jokes  we  have  written  till  our  tears  fall  down  on  tlie  earth. 

And  no  Academic  Council  shall  stifle  oiu^  harmless  mirth. 

And  only  our  classmates  shall  praise  us — we  trust  they'll  forget  to  blame; 
And  we  know  that  however  we  grind  (  ?)  them,  they  will  love  us  ever  the  same. 
And  in  confidence  end  we  thses  pages,  with  wit  and  with  wisdom  stored. 
Record  of  Things  as  we've  seen  Them, — the  Welleslev  Legenda  Board. 


■43 


CClbat    is    writ   is    writ; 
{jQould    it    were    worthier. 


•'The  time  has  come."  the  showman  said, 
'•  To  look  at  many  things  : 
At  Deans  and  tea  and  men  and  bahcs, 
At  Cambridge  and  at  kings." 

C  A.  An-RCK-MB-. — "  And  she  will  talk  ;    Lord,  koic  she  u  ill  talk  '.  "' 

M.  M.  Am-s. — "  Who  thinks  too  little,  and  who  talks  too  much  " 

K.  M.  Axd-ks-x. — "The  warmth  of  genial  courtesy; 
The  calm  of  self-reliance." 

M.  S.  Av-RS.  — "  Xothiiig  if   not  critical." 

F.  E.  B-L-Y. — "  Mv  kin^;dom  for  a  horse." 

K.  F.  B-i.i,.  —  ■•  Let  us  be  among  the  fe^v  who  do  their  duty." 

JvL  S.  B-ni!-R.  —  •'  I  am  armed  so  strong  in  honesty." 

W.  B-vi,-ss.—-- Little;   but,  O  my!" 

y.  F.  B-Rs.  —  "At  least  we'll  die  with  harness  on  our  backs." 

]SL  C.  B-UKV. — "  Still  rinis  the  water  where  the  brook  is  deep." 

!NL  vox   l)-v-Rso-RFF.  —  "The  full  stun  of  me 

Is  an  unlessoned  girl,  unschooled,  unpracticed. 
Happv  in  this,  she  is  not  yet  so  old 
But  she  may  learn." 

146 


G.  L.  B-ss-i,L. — "A  sudden  thought  strikes  me; 

Let  us  swear  an  eternal  friendship." 

E.  Ri.-NCH-KO. — ■'  Scribbles  as  if  head  clerk  tu  the  Fates." 

E.  B-WM-N. — '•  Some  certainly  are  remarkable  for  taking  uncommon  good  care  of  themselves." 

F.  Hr-nt-n. — "My  friend,  \ye  were  truly  sorry  to  lose  thy  company." 
E.  M,  15-CK.— "My  will  is  law." 

M.  B-UB-NK. — "  PhiIosoph\-  will  clip  an  angel's  wings." 

G.  L.  B-RTT. — "  So  smooth,  so  sweet, 

So  sihery's  thy  voice." 

M.  F.  Bv-NGT-N. — "  I  feel  within  me 

A  peace  above  all  earthly  dignities — 
A  still  and  quiet  conscience." 

T.  C-M-R-N. — "  The  world  is  too  much  with  us,  late  and  soon, 

Getting  and  spending,  we  lay  waste  our  powers." 

A.  L.  Ch-s-. — "  Your  mind  will  lie  all  the  better  for  not  running  on  one  point  continually." 

C.  L.  Cii-s-. — "  Come  one,  come  all,  this  rock  shall  fly 
From  its  firm  base  as  soon  as  I." 

E.  F.  C-i.BV.  — "  Her  tender  years  with  innocence  were  clad." 

M.  H.  C-i,M-N. — "  O  that  ye  had  some  brother,  pretty  one, 

To  guard  thee  on  the  rough  \vays  of  the  world." 

I.  M.  C-  -K. — "  Myself  when  young  did  eagerly  frequent 

Doctor  and  Saint,  and  heard  great  argument." 

E.  B.  Cr-mt-n. —  "■  We  pine  for  kindred  natures 
To  mingle  with  our  own." 

A.  P.  Cr-m-ck. — •'  We  grant,  although  she  had  much  wit 
.She  was  very  shy  of   using  it." 

147 


H.  F.  Cr-sbv. — ''Some  meeker  pupil  you  must  find." 

A.  F.  Cn-ss. — "Neatness  in  moderation  is  a  virtue." 

C.  C-RT-s.  —  •'  The  empty  vessel  makes  the  greatest  sound." 

M.  ().  D-\'-M"-KT. — "  Pll  flatter  mv  fancy  I  may  get  anither ; 

My  heart  it  shall  never  be  broken  for  ane." 

M.  F.  D-TCH. — "  What  is  the  world  to  her, 

Its  pomp,  its  pleasures,  and  its  nonsense  all.'" 
« 
L.  .S.  E-T-x. — "  Her  equal  lives  not — 
Thank  God  for  that !  " 

M.  S.  Ell-t — "  'Tis  said  swans  sing  before  they  die; 

Would  some  could  die  before  tlley  sing." 

A.  E.  F-uL. — "  Little  things  on  little  wings 
Bear  little  souls  to  heaven." 

M.  F-.SK. — •'  He  is  well  paid  that  is  self-satisfied." 

K.  F-i.i,-R. — "  The  stars  shall  fade  away." 

G.  B.  G-G-. — "  For  Nature  made  her  what  she  is, 
And  ne'er  made  such  another." 

E.  L.  G-v-R. — "Idleness  is  the  root  of  all  evil." 

E.  N.  G-BBS. — "  Great  credulity  of  countenance." 

M.  G.  G-RD-x. — "Oft  on  the  dappled  turf,   at  ease, 
I  sit  and  plav  with  similes." 

E.  G.  Gr-sv-n-r. —  "  Is  she  not  a  modest  young  lady?" 

O.  P.  H-Li,. — "Give  her  time  and  she  will  see  the  point." 

148 


F.  H-LS-Y. — "  Much  niijjht  be  said  on  both  sides." 

F.  B.  II-.M-i,r-x.  — "  So  tender  and  so  good  to  see, 
Because  she  is  so  sweet." 

C.  M.  II-KH-cH. — "  Let  us  not  be  forever  calculatin;^'  and  plotting  for  the  future." 

A.  E.  II-RD-XG. — "'Your  fair  discourse  hath  been  as  sugar." 

A.  I.  H-Z-I.T-X-. — ••  The  very  whitest  lamb  in  all  m\  fold." 

M.  B.  H-M-NGW-v. — "  Her  reason  is  as  a  grain  of   wheat 
Hid  in  a  bushel  of  chaff." 

E.  N.  H-M-. — ••  We  can  never  be  too  cautious  :   there  is  a  deal   of   wickedness  going  about  in 
the  world,  a  deal  of   wickedness." 

H.  H-M-. —  "■  I  have  bought 

Golden  opinions  from  all  sorts  of  people." 

A.  O.  H-XT. — "  In  the  bright  lexicon  of  youth 

There  is  no  such  word  as  '  Fail.'  " 

S.  H-NT-NGT-x. — "  But,  Gawd,  w'at  things  are  the_y  I  'aven't  done.^" 

S.  C.  J-iixs-x. — •'  And  I  oft  have  heard  defended  ; 
Little  said  is  soonest  mended." 

A.  yi.  K-p-RS. — "  My  life  is  one  deni'd,  horritl  grind." 

F.  K-XG. — •'  Moderation  is  good,  but  moderation  alone  is  no  virtue." 

M.  H.  K-FTR-Dc;.. — '-Neat,  not  gaudy." 

A.  D.  Kx-x. — '-There's  something,  undoubtedly,  in  a  tine  air. 
To  know  how  to  smile,  and  be  able  to  stare." 

J.  E.  L-NC-. — "  We'll  let  her  stand  a  year  or  twa  ; 

She'll  ne'er  be  half  sae  saucy  yet." 

149 


A.  S.  L-X(;n-i'a-. — "Silence  is  golden." 

E.  B.  L-H.M-x. — ■•  O,  let  winged  Fancy  wander." 

N.  A.  L-w-s.  — "  Not  stepping  o'er  the  bounds  of  modesty." 
A.  M.  L-ST-R. — "  Go  to  the  ant,  thou  sluggard." 

C.  M.  L-cK.-. — ••  The  greatest  clerks  ben  not  the  wisest  men." 

F.  E.  L-P. — "  Her  only  labor  was  to  kill  time." 

E.  S.  L-M. — "  1  never  did  repent  for  doing  good, 
Nor  shall  not  now." 

].  A.  M-KKs. — "  I  am  groping  for  the  keys 

Of  the  heavenly  harmonies." 

D.  E.  M-RSii-LL. — "  A  very  gentle  beast,  and  of  good  conscience.' 

E.  S.  M-s-x.  )  "  How  happy  could  I  be  with  citiier 
E.  S.  W-s-x.  )      Were  t'other  dear  charmer  away  !  " 

I.  L.  M-rrii-ws.  — "  Pray,  do  not  fall  in  love  with  me." 

I.  F.  M-Ri:-M. — "  What  the  tongue  is  I  suppose  the  man  is." 

M.  M-TC-LF. — "  Masking  the  business  from  the  common  eye. 
For  sundry  weighty  reasons." 

A.  M-LL-R. — "  Out,  out,  lirief  candle." 

G.  M.  M-i.i,-R. — "  I  am  amazed,  and  know  not  what  to  say." 

A.  L.  M-i-i.-TT. — "  Some  that  smile  have  in  their  hearts,  I  fear. 
Millions  of  mischief." 

E.  H.  M-R-. — "  Her  feet  Ijeneath  her  petticoat 

Like  little  mice  stole  in  and  out. 
As  if  they  feared  the  light." 

■50 


F.  A.  M-R-. — "  \Vliere  ignorance  is  bliss 
'Tis  follv  to  be  wise." 

L.  V.  X.  M-RR-S-. — "  O,  'tis  an  easy  thing 
To  paint  and  sing." 

C.  L.  M-Rs-.  — '>  Lay  on,  McDnff  !  " 

E.  ].  X-WK-RK. — "  I  awoke  one  morning  and  found  myself  famous." 

li.  J.  X-RCR-ss. — "  Let  never  maiden  think,  ho\ve\'er  fair. 

She  is  not  fairer  in  new  clotiies  than  old." 

F.  E.  X-v-s. — "  I'm  ower  young  to  marry  yet." 
P.  X-.w-M-cn-R. — "  Cash  goes  out  fast." 

M.  R.  Oi.-Pii-NT. — "  She  makes  a  solitude  and  calls  it  Peace." 

E.  Osn-RX-. — '•  And  gladly  wolde  she  lerne  and  gladly  teche." 

E.  A.  P-i.L. — ••  1  am  a  man  more  sinned  against  than  sinning." 

M.  C.  Pii-i.L-ps.  —  '•  Great  wits  are  sure  to  madness  near  allied." 

L.  X.  P-RC-.  —  -'Xow  fair  befall  thee,  gentle  maid." 

L.  Pr.vMPT-x. — ''A  dillar,  a  dollar,  a  ten  o'clock  scholar. 
What  makes  you  come  so  soon.^ 
You  used  to  come  at  ten  o'clock. 
And  now  vou  come  at  noon." 

X'.  F.  P-R. — ''Keep  silence,  good  folks,  and  I  pray  30U  attend. 

For  Pm  no  common  singer,  you'll  find  in  the  end." 

A.  L  P-P-. — "Let  us  improve  our  minds  by  mutual  inquiry  and  discussion." 

R.  C.  R-\-. — "And  if  she  will,  she  will,  you  may  depend  on't ; 

And  if  she  won't,  she  won't,  and  there's  an  end  on  't." 


H.  F.  R-nG\v-v. — "A  rosebud  set  with  little  wilful  thorns." 

L.  E.  R-GL-Y. — "The  very  pink  of  perfection." 

R.  P.  R-NG. — "She  stood  among  them,  but  not  of  them." 

M.  R-CK\v-i,i,.  — "  Her  very  foot  has  music  in  it 
As  she  comes  up  the  stair." 

C.  \V.  R-G-RS. — "There  was  not  a  day  but  she  rattled  away 
Like  water  forever  a-dropping." 

F.  H.  R-SM-N-R. — "Born  to  instruct  and  mend  mankind." 

A.  T.  R-W-. — "The  world's  a  joke  with  me." 

P.  S-G-. — "Mark  the  high  opinion  she  cherished  of  her  own  importance." 

P.  L.  .Scil-LLK-PF. — "Her  name  quite  unpronoimcealile,  impossible  to  spell." 

K.  B.  Sc-TT. — "One  vast,  substantial  smile." 

F.  S-Ri.-. — "Hang  sorrow  !   care  will  kill  a  cat, 
Therefore  let's  be  merry." 

E.  L'E.  S-w-KD. —  "  I  must  have  liberty. 

Withal,  as  large  a  charter  as  the  wind 
To  blow  on  whom  I  please." 

M.  C.  Sii-w. — "Tender  handed  touch  a  nettle  anil  it  stings  you  for  your  pains; 
Grasp  it  like  a  man  of  mettle  and  it  soft  as  silk  remains." 

R.  E.  Sii-RM-x. — "Age  cannot  wither  her,  nor  custom  stale 
Her  infinite  variety." 

B.  L.  S-ss-N. — "A  daughter  of  the  gods,  divinely  tall  and  most  divinely  fair." 
B.  H.  SAt-TH. — "The  very  touchstone  for  all  men  to  count  their  virtues  by." 

15^ 


E.  F.  Sm-tii. — "There's  such  a  charm  in  melancholy, 
I  would  not,  if  I  could,  be  gay." 

O.  F.  Sm-tii. — "Don't  vou  know   that  the  harder  you  are  at  work  the  happier  you  are.'" 

B.  J.  S-Tinv-CK. — "Let  every  man  enjoy  his  whim; 

What's  he  to  me,  or  I  to  him.'" 

E.  M.  Sp-urv. — "  My  conscience  is  my  bark." 

K.  H.  St-iois. — "What  I  have  been  taught  I  have  forgotten; 
What  I  know  I  ha\e  guessed." 

E.  A.  T-WL-. — "  Let  us  have  Facts,  Facts." 

A.  R.  Tr-cv. — "  Modest  as  a  vestal  virgin's  eye." 

E.  A.  V-G-L. — "  High  breeding  is  something;   but,  well  lired  or  not, 

Li  the  end  the  one  ciuestion  is,  'What  have  you  got?'  '" 

C.  E.  V-Kii-s. —  "No  vain  desire 

Of  foolish  fame  had  set  his  heart  a-fire." 

A.  yi.  \V-i,DR-x.  — "  I'll  sit  at  my  ease  and  do  as  I  please." 

E.  G.  W-i-K-R. — "I've  grown  ^uite  tired 

Of  lieing  admired." 

F.  L.  W-i-K-R. — "  A  smile  for  all,  a  welcome  glad, 

A  jovial,  coaxing  way  she  had." 

B.  G.  W-sTF-i.L. — "  Surely  I  shall  be  wiser  in  a  year." 

R.  ^L  Wii-T-. — "The  look  composed,  and  steady  eye, 
Bespeak  a  steady  constancy." 

A.  E.  Wii-T-NG. — "  There  is  a  garden  in  her  face. 

Where  roses  and  white  lilies  grow." 

i.';3 


A.  I.  Wii-TX-v.  —  *' Auld  coiniiule  dear,  and  hrither  sinner." 

L.  E.  W-M.c-x. — "A  bright,  particular  star." 

E.  G.  W-LK-xs. — "  Folly  and  innocence  are  so  alike, 

The  difference,  tiiough  essential,  fails  to  strike.' 

A.  C.  W-LL— MS. — "  Everything  by  starts,  and  mithing  long." 

A.  W-Li,— MS. — "  Far  Frenssh  of  Parys  was  to  hire  unknowe." 

L.  Wii-GHT. — "  O,  but  she's  slv — sly." 

M.  Wii-cHT. — "  What  means  this  heaviness  that  hangs  upon  me; 

This  lethargy  that  creeps  through  all  m}'  senses?" 

L.  J.  Y-T-s. — "There  is  a  law  higher  than  the  constitution." 

B.  G.  Y--NG. — "  So  wise,  so  vo/iiii;\  they  say,  do  ne'er  live  long." 

E.  C.  Y— NG. — "  Amid  the  mighty  fuss,  just  let  me  mention. 
The  rights  of  women  merit  some  attention." 

"  Are  there  any  further  remarks?  " 


I.S4 


Baby's  ABC  Book. 


A 


B 


C 


D 


F 


is  for  Atliletics, 

,\n(l  yoii  must  all  agree, 
If   it  were  not  for  this, 

Where  would  our  Wellesley  he? 

is  for  the  Basket, 

In  which  the  bail  is  sent; 
Then,  in  Xinetecn  Hundred's  praise, 
With  shouts  the  air  is  rent. 

is  for  the  Caddv 

Who  costs  a  lot  of  chink  ; 
Autl  is,  therefore,  but  rarel}'  seen 
Upon  a  Wellesley  link. 

is  for  the  Wicked  Words, — 

It  is  an  ancient  joke, — 
Which.  u]5on  the  golfing  links, 
'Tis  said,  are  often  spoke. 

is  for  the  Egotist. 

Who  thinks  his  game  the  best, 
i\nd  makes  you  talk  of  it  all  day  ; 

I  own  I'd  like  a  rest. 

of  course,  for  Fencing  ; 

'Tis  not  the  favorite, 
For,  when  we  try  to  cut  and  thrust 

We  cannot  get  it,  quite. 


155 


G 


H 


J 


K 


L 


for  nothing  else  but  Golf, 

A  lazy  person's  game. 
To  those  who  plav  at  Basket  Ball 

It  seems  a  trifle  tame. 

it  stands  for  Hurdle, 

Seldom  met  with  here  ; 
For,  if  we  tried  to  jump  too  high, 

We  would  fall  down,  I  fear. 

is  for  the  Idlers, 

Who  don't  go  out  at  all. 
But  sit  and  grind,  or  else  make  Fudge, 

When  they  could  play  at  Ball. 

is  for  the  Jeerer  ; 

Even  worse  is  she. 
Who  says,  "  Myself  in  siic/t  a  guise, 

At  least,  you'll  never  see." 

is  for  the  Kitchen, 

Which,  all  must  agree. 
Is  for  the  hungry  athlete 
A  pleasant  thing  to  see. 

is  for  the  usefid  Line; 

In  every  game  'tis  seen. 
To  keep  us  in  our  places. 

When  we  play  upon  the  Green. 


Mfor  inter-class  Matches, 
To  stir  our  flagging  zeal  ; 
When  we  beat  jovial  Nineteen-one 
How  happy  then  we  feel. 

156 


N 


O 


P 


Q 


R 


i'^  for  the  Novice  ; 

To  her  all  praise  is  due, 
For  how  ridiculous  she  looks 

lu  Basket  Ball  or  Crew. 

is  foi-  the  pliant  Oar 

That  bends  upon  the  lake, 

When,  with  might)'  backward  swing. 
The  '\'arsity  stroke  we  take. 

is  for  the  Putting-green  : 

A  smooth,  green  scjuare  of  sward 
A  course  of  rolling  would  improve, — 

But  that  we  can't  afford. 

stands  oft  for  "  Qiiestion  "  — 

Red-tape  I  own  I  hate  ; 
But  we,  for  Rules  of  Order, 
Do  seem  insatiate. 

stands  up  for  Rowing; 

'Twill  never  be  forsook 
By  those  most  loyal  maidens 

W'ho  don't  care  how  thev  look. 


s 


T 


stands  for  Short  .Skirt, 
A  necessary  adjunct. 
'Tis  well  that  Basket  Ball  in  Bloomers 
Has  now  become  defunct. 

it  stands  for  countless  things  : 
For  Time  in  Basket  Ball  ; 
For  Tennis,  played  by  .Summer  Girls; 
And  Tub,  the  best  of  all. 

1.57 


u 


V 


w 


X 


Y 


Z 


is  tor  the  Umpire, 

A  most  unlovelv  M;ii(l, 
Whose  business  'tis  to  quarrel 

With  everj'thins;  that's  said. 

is  for  sweet  victory, 

As  Nineteen  Hundred  knows  ; 
But  she  is  much  too  modest 

To  crloat  over  her  Foes. 

's  for  the  dripping  Wet, 

Which  fills  with  anguish  all 
Who  long  to  go,  and,  merrily, 
To  play  at  Basket  Ball. 

is  for  the  unknown  Game 

In  future  years  we'll  play. 
When  Basket  Ball  and  Tennis 

Have  faded  quite  away. 

is  for  the  Young  Man 

Who  from  Harvard  comes,  or  Tech., 
To  teach  us  games.      At  our  short  skirts 
He's  often  shocked,  I  'spect. 

is  for  the  Zenith 

Of  Athletic  Praise  and  Fame, 
Where  will  blaze  forevermore 

Fair  Nineteen  Hundred's  name. 


158 


MT»eR,«E  i^t  B.Tf.        ALL   HML    TO     THE    COLLE&E    BEAUTLFUL         cnr^c^sa 

Con   MaTb 


tr 


klue' 


All  hail     +0      "t'ti    Olt-'s        .vhc     are       rr„+U',  'f'      I'^r       "^XJ  1       ,.      ii      J- 


psn      -to        4« 


T.c,^    Jdt    jSells  u|o       cast    l>u    fj,^         e  n,        ,ng  TJ  ^f     On  "Mit 


:r3-^ 


S 


i^^l^ 


^ — r — /^ 


irrfr- 


if-cilD-   m^-  haod.      Urt        Seeking       -(rht 


^.- 


tIS  4vcr»^  uilJti-        -|-|-lt 


\?a  n  <1 : 


mxedom. 


Xf  you  would  seem  wise 
Looh  through  Others'  eyes. 

Your  point  of  view, 

Chough  good  to  you, 
)VIay  not  impress  the  Others,  too. 
Say  what  they  thtnk,  ever; 
Chen  they'll  call  you  clever. 


WHAT  ALL  THE  WORLD'S  A-SEEKING. 


This  fool,  who's  from  his  nione\'  parted, 
Tells  bargain  hunters,  anxious-hearted. 
That  they  buy  best  who  patronize 
The  tj'nis  wlio  herein  advertise. 


The  Wellesley   Legenda. 


:mmmm 


THE 


gPONDEX 
eSHOE 


f^  O   F? 


{WOMEN 

A  G  E  M  U  I  N  E 
SIX  DOLLAR 
ARTrCL  E     FOR 


50 


A  LL 

Styles 

>\  NI  D 

LeathersS^"^ 


MADE    BY 

DEXTER  POND   &   CO. 

BOSTON  STORE '^^ 
I59TREM0NTST. 


Shreve, 
Crump  &  Low 

Company 

Diamonds 


Watches,  Gems,   Canes,  Umbrellas. 

Finest  Stock  of  Stationery. 

Class  Day  Invitations. 

Colleije  Printing  of  every  description. 

Class  and  Society  Pins. 


147  Tremont  St.,  Boston. 

Cap  A^D  Gown  Makers 
TO  Wellesley. 

Cotrell& 
Leonard 

CLOAKS 

AND 

FURS. 
Makers  of  Caps  and  Gowns 

To  the  American  Universities. 


472  AND  474  Broadway,  Albany,  N.  Y. 


The  Wellesley  Legenda. 


Index   to    Advertisements. 


Baker,  W'inthrop  M. 

Cleland,  W.  F. 
Colonial  Pen  Co. 
Conant,  M.  J.  &  Co. 
Cotrell  &  Leonaid 
Cowdrev,  E.  T.  &  Co. 

Dexter  Pond  &  Co. 
Diehl,  F.  Ji-.,  &  Co. 

Eastern  Teachers'  Agency 

Fisk  Teachers'  Agency 
French,  Abram  &  Co. 

Goldthwait,  Joel 
Griffin,  Thomas  B.    . 

Hall  &  Hancock 
Hall,  Martin  L.  &  Co. 
Holden 

Horner,  Carl  J- 
Honghton  &  Dutton 
Hovey,  C.  F.  &  Co. 


Jones,  McDuffee  iV  Stratton 
Jonasson,  Meyer  &  Co. 


AGE 

PAGE 

S 

Lowell  Bros.  &  Bailey- 

6 

29 
1 2 

24 

Marshall  &  Kelly       . 
McKechnie,  C. 
McNamee,  John  H.  II.      . 

13 
39 

4 

3 

s 

Xotnian  Photographic  Co. 

4 

O'Callaghan,  Thomas  &  Co. 

4 

29 

Peters,  C.  J.  &  Son  . 

30 

Pfister  &  Vogel  Leather  Co. 

14 

18 

Raymond,  George  P. 

4 

23 

Shattuck.  Charles  E. 

2  2 

3  + 

Shepard,  Xorwell  &  Co.   . 

10 

23 

29 

.Shreye,  Crnmp  &  Loyv  Co. 
Soule          .... 
Springer  Brothers 

3 

6 
20 

6 

Squire,  John  P. 

o  > 

24 

Stnrtevant  &  ILiley  . 

-1  -> 

14 

Sullivan,  >L  &  Co.    . 

14 

20 
12 

Tea  Room 

28 

16 

Tailbv,  J.  &  .Son 

29 

6 

Walnut  Hill  School  . 

26 

S 

Wood.  Frank    . 

26 

The  Wellesley   Legenda. 


PPRECIATING  the  importance  of  sending  out  perfect-fitting  garments,  we 
^;1  have  secured  the  services  of  men  tailors,  by  whom  all  alterations  and 
changes  in  garments  will  be  made  the  coming  season.  We  feel  that  the 
extra  expense  thus  incurred  will  be  a  great  advantage  to  us  in  securing  the  confi- 
dence of  our  customers,  and  in  establishing  a  reputation  for  perfect-fitting  garments. 
Our  intention  is  to  give  our  customers  the  same  values  as  they  would  get  from 
cu^^tom  tailors,  at  from  40  to  50  per  cent  less  in  price.  N.  B. — Seven  per  cent  dis- 
coimt  will  be  allowed  to  all  Wellesley  students.  THOS.  O'CALLAGHAN 
&  CO.,  558-568  Washington  Street,  opposite  Adams  House. 


GEORGE     P.    RAYMOND, 

COSTUME   PARLORS^  ''Tr'ir"'""^- 

Costumes    for    Private    Theatricals,     Operas,     Masquerades, 
Costume  Parties,  Minstrel  and  Spectacular  Entertainments,  etc. 

Telepho.ne  and  Mail  Orders  carefully  attended  to. 


The  Notman  Photographic  Co. 

Photographers  for 
Wellesley  College,   1900;  Smith  College,  and  Mount  Holyoke  College. 

^84  BovLSTON  Street  and  }  Park  Street,  Boston,  also 
1286  Massachusetts  Avenue,  Cambridge. 


J.  H.  H>  McNamee 

Harvard  Square 
Cambridge 


Binds  any  kind  of 
a  Book 


!i!Ti;y''i'li'Fii'i'' '     ^^  ^^y  style  you  wish 

and  at  reasonable  rates. 


The  Wellesley  Legenda. 


OLittlc  Bills. 


H,  little  bills! 

They  make  me  sad ; 
They  give  me  ciiills; 
Thev  drive  me  mad. 


And  mock  and  wink 
And  shout  with  glee: 
"  You  owe  some  chink 
To  Mr.  B. 


At  dead  of  night, 

When  I  would  sleep, 
'Tis  their  delight 

To  round  me  creep; 


For  tlowers  bought. 

And  then,  you  know, 
That  pay  you  ought 

The  Laundry  Co. 

"  And  those  A.  A. 
And  B.  S.  dues 
You've  got  to  pay ; 
You  can't  refuse. 


"  If  you  do  not ! " 

"Oh,  cease  !  "  I  cry, 
"  Or  else,  I  wot, 
I'll  surely  die." 


These  little  bills 

Drive  me  stark  mad. 
When  they  are  paid 

1  shall  "be  glad  ! 


The  Wellesley  Legenda. 


D*3mamKAi-  That  HALL  &  HANCOCK,  407  Washington  Street,  Bc.st.in.  liav( 
rvclllCUlUCI    ^-eeded  to  the  HAT  and  FUR  business  of  O.  A.  JENKINS  & 


e  suc- 
CO. 


RAmAmhpi-  Tliat   HALL  &  HANCOCK  have  Exclusive  Stvles  in 


Rpmpmhpv  That  HALL  &  HANCOCK  have  a  choice  assortment 
rvClllClllUCl    ^-,f  Novelties  in  Fur  Scarfs,  Collarettes,  Capes  and 


Sacqiies. 


Remember  that  HALL  &  HaNCOCK  ^-^^^^^'^^ '"  *^""'^>' 


College  Publications. 


Fine  China,  Glass  and  Lamps. 

An  extensive  stock  of  the  best  products  of  Foreign  and  Domestic  Potteries  and  Glass  Factories. 

HOUSEHOLD  REQUISITES, 

CHOICE   ENGAGEMENT  CUPS   AND   SAUCERS, 

WEDDING   GIFTS. 

JONES,    MCDUFFEE    &    STRATTON,    120  Fra.iklinSt,.  Boston,  Mass. 


Joseph  Q.  Lowell. 


Lowell  Bros.  &  Bailey, 


OSMON  C  Bailey. 


General  Commission  Merchants  and   Wholesale  Dealers  in  Foreign  and 
Domestic  Fruits  and  Produce  of  all  kinds. 


73  and  7>  CLINTON  STREET,         BOSTON,  MASS. 

Reference:  Fourth  National  Bank,  Boston  Fruit  and  Produce  Exchange. 


1 

W*^, 

^-  '    .r 

,a«i* 

>.. 

■--■-I.  ^ 

In 

writing-,    please      1 

mention 

Legenda. 

Si 


iNMOUNTED   PHOTOGRAPHS 


Of  Bncicnt  an&  /iDoOcru  Moths  of  Hrt,  representing 

THE  masterpieces    OF  PAINTING,  SCULPTURE   AND  ARCHITECTURE 

Views  from  All  Parts  of  the  World.  Mounted  Phutosraphs  for  framinj;' 
in  great  variety;  all  the  new  subjects  as  fast  as  published.  Artistic  Framinj;  to 
order.    Over   ISOO  subjects  in   stock.    Mail  orders   receive   prompt   attention. 


SOULE    PHOTOGRAPH    COMPANY, 


li?    WASHINGTON    STREET, 
BOSTON,  MASS. 


The  Welleslev  Legenda. 


There  once  was  a  lady,  Miss  C  , 
Whose  forte,  all  her  classes  agree. 
Was  talking  with  zest, 
Without  pause  or  rest, 
On  everything  from  A  to  Z. 


Zo  Jf.  S.,  1900. 


There  was  a  young  lady  named  Frances, 
Who'd  a  fondness  for  scalpels  and  lances. 
She  dissected  a  cat, 
And  said,  "What  of  that?" 
This  cruel  young  lady  named  Frances. 


"Conccrnino  H.  fll>.  OL." 


There  was  a  young  person  named  Anna, 
Whose  neatness  would  sure  take  the  banner. 

She  folded  her  clothes, 

And  laid  them  in  rows. 
In  a  hii;lily  methodical  manner. 


•fln  leno.  Xit.,  ll>11. 


Dickens'  plots  do  on  me  pall ; 
1  can't  say  1  don't  care  at  all. 

If  I  must  read  him, 

Let  me  say, 
I'd  like  his  plots  another  way. 


The  Wellesley  Legenda. 


JWeyer  Jonasson   &   Co. 


(Masomc  Temple.) 


NEW  YORK: 
Broadway  and  l2tli  St. 


Cloak  House 


PITTSBURG  : 
6th  and  Liberty  Sts. 


Boylston    and    Tremont    Streets. 


IVhy  not  use  the  best  ? 

Superior  quality  for  the  price   paid  is  the  peculiar 
characteristic  of 

Cowdrey's 
Coffees^ 

"Cowdrey's  Post  Prandial" 

is  prepared  especially  for  aftei-diiuier  use. 
It  makes  a  perfect  finish  la  a  good  dinner.  One 
pound  cans  40  cents. 


»5 


"  Cowdrey's  Breakfast, 

A  rare  blend  of  high-grade  Coffees, 
selected  for  aroma,  flavor  and  strength.  One- 
pound  cans,  35  cents. 


New   Form   of    Advcrl.seoicnt    Adopted   June  1    1899 


EXPRESSLY  FOR  THE  FINE  TRADE  ■ 


WINTHROP    M     BAKER 

545   ATLANTIC     AVE       BOSTON 

The    Above    Cut    Appc.irs   o-i    B.ick   of   Every    P.ick.i^e 


The  Welleslev  Legenda. 


There  was  a  girl  in  Wellesley, 
And  she  was  wondrous  wise ; 

She  took  a  course  in  Pol.  Econ. 
To  learn  to  economize. 

BLit  when  she  got  into  that  course, 

Lo,  what  was  her  dismay, 
To  see,  in  countless  stupid  books. 

Her  pennies  roll  away ! 

So,  when  she  saw  what  she  had  done, 
With  all  her  might  and  main, 

She  made  her  plea  unto  the  Dean, 
And  so  got  out  again. 


11  n  lUcllcslc?. 

She  had  resolved  no  speech  of  hers 
With  slang  should  be  encrusted; 
But  it  seems  to  me 
More  blameworthy 
To  say  "I'm  bursted  "  than  "I'm  busted." 


— 

F^^ 

m^ 

- 

^^ii&S\ 

— jL^-    - 

■ul 

^f  V;-'l 

W^=- 

x  jlni 

^•:J^- 

Vill 

:f!^^ 

K;v' 

1 

^^^•^ — M 

! =^ 

■  "-m 

a:s;5p5r 

^^=^ 

r^"^ 

^';^f==- 

=% 

ifj-^ 

10 


The  Wellesley  Legenda. 


Always 

5^.50 

Pair. 


THEY  COME  IN  THIRTY-FIVE  STYLES. 
THEY  HOLD  THEIR  SHAPE 


THEY  ARE   THE   PERFECTION   OF  FIT. 


SOROSI  s 

O 
R 

O 

s 
I 


THEY  ARE  THE  H EIGHT  OF  STYLE. 
THEY  GIVE  PERFECT  COMFORT.  :  :  : 
THEY  LOOK  WELL  AND  WEAR  WELL. 


1 


SOROSI  S 


Shepard,  Norwell  &  Co., 


WINTER   STREET, 

BOSTON,  MASS. 


The  W'elleslev  Legenda. 


11 


lln  CoUcoc  Iball. 

The  Towle  passes  down  the  hall, 

And,  somehow,  I  don't  care  at  all. 

The  transom's  open—!  must  say 

1  rather  fancy  it  that  way. 

My  light  streams  out ;  it's  after  ten ; 

I'll  go  to  bed — 1  don't  care  when. 

If  you're  inquisitive  to  know 

Why  my  two  lights  thus  boldly  glow 

Step  down  the  hall,  dear  Towle,  and  look; 

My  story's  told  in  yonder  book. 


I'd  rather  cram  up  than  to  grind; 
I'd  rather  be  front  than  behind; 

And  as  for  my  brain, 

I'm  glad  it's  all  sane; 
I've  a  right  to  be  proud  of  my  mind. 


My  friends  all  have  manners, — 

Yes,  that  much  I  know ; 
And,  also,  they've  morals, — 

I've  always  s'posed  so. 
But  that,  alas,  counts  not, — 

At  least  so  I  find, — 
For  in  college  we're  sized  up  and  classed- 

Just  by  '-mind." 


12 


The  Wellesley  Legenda. 


Quite  likely  if  your  Fountain  Pen  does  not  bear 

the  name  and  guaranty  of  the  makers, 


A.  A.  Waterman    &   Co. 


See  the  initials  "'A.  A."  before  the  name  "Waterman" 


you  paid  too  imicli  for  it  or  got  too  small  a  pen. 
best  and  are  very  nuiderate  in  price. 


A.  A-  Waterman  &  Co.'s  new  guaranteed  pens  are  the 
If  nijt  to  be  found  at  the  Col/i-ge  Ag.'iuy, 

Send  to  the  Makers'  Agents,   THE   COLONIAL   PEN    CO.,    No.  36   Bromtield   Street,  Boston,  Mass. 


MARSHALL    &    KELLY. 


Portraits  in    Platinum  and  Carbon. 


studio,  263  Washington  Street,  Newton. 


Terminus  of  electric  car  lines  from  Wellesley. 


Telephone  Connection. 


Special  Rates  to  College  Students. 


HOUGHTON  &  DUTTON 


No.  3  Beacon  Street, 
Boston,    Mass. 


Artists^  Material 

Material  for  China  Painting. 


This  department  is  better  stocked  with  standard  goods  than  any  other  in 
Boston,  and  our  prices  are,  of  course,  beyond  competition.  We  mention 
below  a  few  ot  the  best-known  artists'  requirements. 


22c. 
15c. 


20c. 


JOC. 

24c. 


24C. 


4SC. 

2yc. 


40c. 

32c. 


7=;c. 
49c. 


70C. 
S7c. 


LACROIX  COLORS:  — 

List  Prices :  iSc. 

Our  Prices:  12c. 

DRESDEN  COLORS:— 

List  Prices:  75*-" ■ 

Our  Prices:  20c. 

FRY'S  COLORS.  We  carry  a  full  assortment  direct  from  Fry's  Studio 
in  New  York.  BISCHOFF'S  COLORS,  at  our  usual  reduction  from 
regular  prices. 

Glass  Burnishers,  each 23c. 

China  Painters' Palette  Knives,  each 19c. 

Full  Line  of  China  Painters' Brushes,  each     ....      3c.  to  15c. 
ROMAN   GOLD.— Coolev's,  Hall's.   Walter's.   Marsching's, 

Si.cosize 64  c. 

And  a  full  line  of  Oils,  Mediums,  etc. 


We   have    a    full    line   of  Winsor    & 
Newton's  Oil  Colors  always  in  stock. 
Ordinary  Colors,  each,  7c.,  all  others  in  proportion. 


Oil  Paintin":  Material. 


r^'inva^        Superior  Cotton  Canvas,  )o  in  wide,  per  yard,  30c. 

*^dlivd5.       Fine  Linen  Canvas,  j6  in.  wide,  *'  60c. 

Winsor  &  Newton's  British  Canvas.  .56  in.  wide.  "  73c. 

MOUNTED  CANVAS —All  stocK  sizes  always  on  hand.    Special  sizes 
made  to  order  at  very  short  notice. 


Rnishi^'s  ^°^  *"'''  P3'"''"&-  Bristle.  Russia,  Sable  and  Red  Sable;  a 
Dl  Ll^  llCo    complete  assortment  in  prices  ranging-  from  3c,  to  3Sc.  each. 

Wntf^r  Polnr  Mnfprill  We  carry  a  full  line  of  W.  &  N.  Water 
VVait^l  l^UlUr  IViaiCIUI.  colors  m  tubes  and  pans  at  a  big  reduc- 
t'on  from  regular  prices. 

Water  Color  Brushes,  each,  from  .....  3c.  to  $5.60 
Ruuget  Water  Colors,  whole  tubes,  regular  25c.  size,  eacli,  8c. 


Drnu;ino-    In«;frnmf^nt*;     ^^  ^^^  J"^*  '"  receipt  ofa  very 
ItlWIlI^     IlliU  UiUClU^.     large  importation  direct  from  the 
foreign  manutncturers,  and  we  are  selling  them  at  very  low  prices.     We 
meniion  a  few  of  the  leading  kir»ds,  as  follows : 
NICKEL-PLATED  SCHOOL  SETS,  in  nice  pncket  cases. 

49,   72  and  98  cents  each 
GERMAN  SILVER  SETS  for  students  and  professionals.    A  large  as- 
sortment to  select  from  in  prices  rans^ing  from  $1 .35  to  $10.35  a  set. 
T  squares,  from  15c.  to  40c.    I  Curves,  from     .        .        .        17c.  to  89c. 
Triangles,  from   17c.  to  8yc.    |  Triangular  Bo.xwood  Scales,  12  in.       67c. 
DRAWING  BLOCKS,  60  sheets  to  each  block,  made  especially  for  us. 
No  one  can  begin  tu  sell  a  good  drawing  block  at  anywhere  near  our 
prices,  which  are  as  follows  : — Size  6  .\  8         8.\io         g.\i2         10x14 


8c. 


15c. 


It  will  pay  you   to   visit   this   branch  of  our 
you  need  any  article  in  this   line. 


17c.  20c, 

business  when 


The  Welleslev  Legenda. 


13 


I  lUtS 


^I^i^==^K^^r!3. 


Adown  the  silent  corridor, 
Two  rows  of  pennants  swing; 
To  each  and  every  passer-by, 
A  frowning  word  they  fling. 


Adown  the  silent  corridor, 
Admittance  is  to  none, 
For  signs  forbidding  all  agree 
That  she  who  reads  must  run. 


Adown  the  silent  corridor, 
These  warnings  useless  seem, 
For  every  room's  a  paper-mill, 
And  idle  folk  a  dream. 


14  The  Wellesley  Legenda. 


M.  SULLIVAN  &  COMPANY, 

•  •  COSTUN/LKRS  •  • 

73iJ  Washington  Street,  Boston,  Mass. 

We  have  the  largest  and  most  complete  line  of  COSTUMES  that  can  be  found  in  this  city  or  elsewhere,  consisting;  of 
Historical  and  Fancy  Dress  for  Masquerade,  Private  Theatricals,  Operas,  Recitations,  Tableaux  and  Fairy  Tales,  Parties,  Minstrel 
Shows:  also  supply  competent  men  for  making-up.  Our  long  and  extensive  experience  places  us  in  a  position  to  confidently 
assert  that  we  can  safelv  be  relied  upon,  and  every  order  placed  with  us  will  be  carried  out  witli  the  most  careful  minuteness 
of  detail  and  accuracy.  It  will  always  be  our  ambition  to  excel  in  our  work  and  give  the  best  service  at  reasonable  prices. 
Costumes  designed  and  made  to  order.     IVritefor  eslimates. 

Holden's  Studio, 

Photography 

in  all  its  branches. 

Class  rates  to  North  Avenue  (next  church), 

any  of  Graduating  Class.  NATICK,  MASS. 

Pfister  &  VoGEL  Leather 
Company, 

Tanners  and  Curriers  of  Upper  and  Sole  Leather, 

Corner  ist  Avenue  and  Oregon  Street, 
MILWAUKEE,  WIS. 


TANNERIES.  BRANCHES. 

"Huron,"  and  "Inverness"  at  Cheboygan,  Mich.  BOSTON:    S5  and  S7  South  Street.      E.  J.  Brown,  Manager. 

''Menomonee,"  "Pevee,"  "Island," -'Chrome"  and  "Bay  View"  NEW  YORK:    37  Spruce  Street.    Wm.  H.  Heller,  Manager. 

at  Milwaukee,  Wis.  WORMS  A/M,  GERMANY.    Fritz  Tent,  Manager. 


We  are   makers  of   the   celebrated   "  Mercury  Sole "    Leather  for  soles  of  athletic  shoes.     Highly 
recommended  by  the  President  of  the  Wellesley  College  Athletic  Association. 


The  Wellesley  Legenda.  15 


|1^HE  Senior  donned  her  cap  and  gown; 

^W    The  Freshman  came  and  knocked  her  down. 

Then  wore  the  cap  and  j^own  away. 

The  Senior  said,  "  Let  her  have  her  way." 


Come,  Rhyme,"  1  sighed,  "  forsake  me  not ; 

Stand  here  beside  my  chair." 
He  danced,  he  leaped,  he  frisked  about. 

And  seized  my  pen  in  air. 
He  doffed  his  saucy  cap  of  red. 

And  fanned  himself  a  lot. 
Oh,  say,"  he  cried,  "you  mustn't  work. 

It  is  so  plaguey  hot !  " 


■fln  autumn. 

To  all  the  leaves,  on  every  bough, 
The  Spring's  bright  hues  are  lent : 

The  press  of  Time  is  painting  now 
Its  colored  supplement. 


16 


The  Wellesley  Legenda. 


C.  F.  HOVEY  &  COMPANY 


7 


Importers,  Jorbehs   and 
Retailers    of 


PARIS   : 

No.   7  RfE  Scribe. 


BOSTON : 
33   Summer  Street. 
43  Avon   Street. 


^0  C.  ]f.  lb.  t^  Co. 


E  thank  you,  sirs,  most  kindly  for  the  httle  "ad"  you  sent; 
y\->  We  appreciate  sincerely  that  'twas  done  with  ^ood  intent. 

But  we  do  not  need  "  trousseaux," 
And  we  can't  use  "  infants'  clothes," 

Still,  we'll  bear  in  mind  your  offer  when  on  matrimony  bent. 


The  Wellesley  Legenda. 


17 


A  nice  modest  young  man  was  engaged 
To  teach  H.  to  twelve  girls  twice  his  age. 

How  his  spirits  did  sin]<! 

How  his  cheeks  did  grow  pink! 
How  he  wished  to  be  out  of  that  cage! 

'Jt 

1  thought  I  saw  a  facuitie 

A-coming  down  the  hall ; 
I  looked  again,  and  saw  it  was 

Only  a  rubber  ball. 
"  Ha,  ha! "  I  shrieked  with  laughter  rude, 
"  It  isn't  you  at  all." 

The  creature  passed  my  door  in  stealth  ; 

I  tossed  my  head  in  scorn. 
Immediately  she  turned  and  said  : 
"  Miss,  this  cannot  be  borne  ! 
''  Ahem  !  observe  the  common  peace. 
"  Ahem,  so  long,  till  morn  !  " 

«^ 

Once  a  maid  had  but  two  Copley  prints 
For  the  walls  ot  a  roo*  quite  imminse. 

Said  she,  "  'Tis  pathetic; 

Were  1  mathematic, 
I  could  surely  succeed  in  this  pinch." 


18 


The   Wellesley   Legenda. 


Cl)e  eastern  Ceacbcrs'  flgcncp 

IS  FILLING  GOOD  POSITIONS  IN  ALL 
GRADES  THROUGHOUT  NEW  ENGLAND. 
WE    ARE    CONSTANTLY    IN    NEED    OF 

COLLEGE-TRAINED    TEACHERS 


^N  order  to  meet  the  increased  demand,  as 
the  number  of  students  seeking  higher  edu- 
cation is  on  the  increase,  the  prominent 
educators  of  the  country,  who  are  intro- 
ducing the  broader  training  in  the  lower 
grades,  are  demanding  the  COLLEGE- 
TRAINED  women  as  directors  in  the 
departmental  work. 

Send  for  circulars,  and  put  your  name 
on  the  list  before  Commencement,  so  that 
we  may  begin  to  work  for  you  early  in  the  season.  We 
will  pay  special  attention  to  your  wishes,  and  will  give 
you  every  opportunity  for  securing  a  good  position.  The 
Agency  at  the  present  time  is  the  best  and  surest  method 
of  securing  early  appointments  and  advancement.  Be 
sure  that  you  join  the  right  Agency. 


When  in  town  call  at  our  office,  50  Bromfield  Street,  or  write  for  particulars. 

ESTABLISHED    IN    1890. 


EASTERN    TEACHERS'    AGENCY, 

MISS    E.    F.    FOSTER,    Manager. 

50    Bromfield    Street,     Boston,     Mass. 


The  Wellesley  Legenda. 


19 


On  the  campus  a  building  called  Stone, 
Of  contention  has  long  been  a  bone ; 

For  one  sees  but  too  quick 

It  is  only  red  brick — 
Still,  the  name  really  gives  it  a  tone. 


IPivc  Ic  IRoi! 


One  in  a  long,  dark  pigtail  cries, 
"  Now  to  your  places  all." 
!  hang  my  head;  indeed,  1  dread 
This  game  of  Basket  Ball. 

The  ball,  it  mounts  up  to  the  skies, 
We  watch  its  sickening  fall ; 

Wildly  we  rush,  each  other  push. 
And  on  the  ground  we  sprawl. 

They  jump  upon  us  where  we  lie. 
They  kick  us  where  we  fall; 

With  groan  of  pain,  we  play  again 
The  noble  t;ame  of  B.asket  Ball. 


20  The  Wellesley  Legenda. 


CARL  J.  HORNER, 


n    Winter   Street,   BOSTON. 

TAKE  ELEVATOR  TO  STUDIO. 


The  Photographere^ 


Highest   Grade   Work. 

SPECIAL   RATES  to  Students  mentioning  this  Advertisement.  Class  Photographer  for   Wellesley,  '98. 

WANTBD. 


Harvard  University, 

Cambridge,  Massachusetts. 


One   hundred   graduates  of  Wellesley  College  to  act  as  tutors  in 
ELEGANT  MANNER  to  students  of  Harvard  in  the  year  190O-I901. 


I  SPRINGER    BROTHERS 


Cloak,  Suit  and  Fur  House, 


^  ^ateda.  155  TREMONT  STREET,  ^[^^^t"^^* 

^         New   Styles   Ladies'   Tailor   Suits,   Coats,    Capes,    Furs,    Qolf  Capes  and   Skirts, 
I^  Bicycle  and   Walking  Skirts,  Waists,  etc. 


SUPERIOR  C^  T       T    T~^    CT^  '^ 


►N 


N 


FURS 


The  Wellesley  Legenda. 


21 


Heads  of  half-bald  girls  remind  us 

We  should  choose  our  work  with  care, 

And,  departing,  carry  with  us 
Half  our  braid  of  natural  hair. 


%9t 

There  are  lights  that  sparkle  at  midnight, 

There's  a  light  that  beams  at  high  noon ; 
There  are  lights  in  our  Mathematics  class. 

There's  a  light  from  the  jovial  moon. 
There  are  lights  both  solar  and  human, 

That  are  needed  and  loved  by  men, — 
But  the  lights  that  are  not  wanted 

Are  those  that  burn  after  ten. 


22 


The   Wellesley   Legenda. 


Established  1826.  Incorporated  iSqi. 

Telephone  Connection. 


Sturtevant  &  Haley 

Beef  and  Supply  Co., 


Wholesale  and  Retail  Dealers  in 


Beef,  Pork, 

Lard  and 

Hams. 


EVERETT  O.  FISK. 


W.  B.  HERRICK, 
A.  G.  FISHER. 
HELEN  G.  EAGER. 
H.  E.  CROCKER. 
W.  D.  KERR. 
L.  S.  TILTON. 
h.    B.  SPAULDING. 
W.  O.  McTAGGART, 
J    D.  ENGLE. 
ISAAC  SUTTON. 
C.  C.  BOYNTON. 
CALVIN  ESTERLY. 
C.  C    BOYNTON, 
S.  E.  STEWART. 


President: 

4  Ashburton  Place,  Boston,  Mass. 

Managers  : 

4  Ashburton  Place.  Boston. Mass. 

4  Ashburton  Place,  Boston.  Mass. 

4  Ashburton  Place,  Boston,  Mass. 

156  hiftli  Avenue.  New  York,  N.  Y. 

156  Fifth  Avenue,  New  York.  N.  Y. 

:50s  Pennsylvania  Avenue,  Washington,  D.  C. 

578  Wabash  Avenue.  Chicago.  III. 

25  King  Street,  W.,  Toronto,  Can. 

414  Century  Building,  Minneapolis,  Minn. 

7JO  Cooper  Building,  Denver,  Col. 

420  Parrott  Building,  San  Francisco,  Cal. 

420  Parrott  Building,  San  Francisco.  Cal. 

525  Stimson  Block,  Los  Angeles,  (--al. 

525  Stimson  Block,  Los  Angeles,  Cal. 


Correspondence  with  Employers  is  invited. 
Registration  Forms  sent  to  Teacliers  on  application. 


Smoked   and   Dried   Beef,  Sinoked,  Corned  and  Salt-petered 
Tongues.  Tripe,  Sausages,  etc. 

38  and  40  Faneuil  Hall  Market, 
BOSTON,   MASS. 

THE 

Fisk  Teachers'  Agencies 

EVERETT  0.  FISK  &  CO.,  Proprietors. 


Rugs  and  Carpets. 


Joel   Goldthwait  &  Company, 

1C9  Washington  Street, 

Near  Cornhill  and  Adams  Square  Subway  Station, 
BOSTON. 


G. 


Chas.  E.  Shattuck, 

■and  dealer  in  Tea,  Coftee,  Confectionery, 
f'OCCK     f"'i"cy    Crackers,     Crockery,    Glassware. 

Flour,    Hay    and   Grain.     Fine  Butter  a 

specialty.      (Established  1S75.) 

Wellesley,  Mass. 


Every  cook  knows 
w/mt  I0  Qxpectof 

SQUIRES 

PURE  LEAF  LARD 

JoftnP Squire  Si  ^^oslon 


wmm 


The  Wellesley  Legenda.  23 


Inquiring  Harvard  man.— "Wellesley  girls  have 
a  charming  manner." 

Radcliffe  girl.—"  O,  do  30U  think  so  ?  They 
seem  to  me  so  feminine." 

®vcvbcar&  on  tbc  Boar^  MnUi. 

"  1  think  1  shall  apply  to  Mrs.  Bntler  for  a  change 
of  house,"  said  a  discontented  Junior. 

"  Why  ?  "  asked  the  sympathetic  friend.  "  1 
thought  you  were  fond  of  the  girls  at  Norumbega." 

"  So  I  am,"  said  the  discontented  one  ;  "  but  not 
one  of  them  has  a  hat  which  is  becoming  to  me." 


"  Yes,"  she  said,  pensively,  "  the  girls  in  our  high- 
school  class  have  scattered  in  all  directions ;  not  one 
of  us  is  left  together." 

The  Freshman  explained  with  clearness,  force  and 
elegance  :  "  The  projection  of  a  line  upon  a  plane  is 
the  series  of  dots  of  the  ends  of  the  perpendiculars." 


24 


The  Wellesley  Legenda. 


Come  to  Us  for 
Your  China  and  Glass 


Chafing  Dishes 

and 

Sterling  Silver. 


^^^I^RANKLiN  AND  Devonshire  ST5.,P^ 


M.  J.  CoNANT  &  Company, 


commissiON  dealers  in 


BUTTER,   CHEESE,    EGGS   AND    BEANS 

21  AND  22  South  Market  Street, 
27  Chatham  Street, 

BOSTON,  MASS. 


M.  J.   CONANT. 

W.  S.  Vincent, 


IVIartin  L.   Hall  &  Company, 

Wholesale  Grocers, 

ij  and  14  South  Market  Street, 

?3  AND  M  Chatham  Street, 


A.   J.   ADAAIS. 

Fred.  P.  Virgin. 

Chas.  G.  Burgess. 


BOSTON,  MASS. 


The  Wellesley  Legenda.  25 


Even  if  the  Faculty  do  pronounce  it  "  Towel," 
it's  no  si^i;n  that  the  earth  has  been  wiped  up  with 
her. 

At  least  one  of  the  Se wards  can  say  statistics. 

Pray,  where  is  your  merry  crew,  Margaret  ?  We 
haven't  seen  them  since  Freshman  Tree  Day. 


26 


The  Welleslev  Legenda. 


WALNUT 
HILL  #  #  # 

^cgooe  for  (Bide 

NATICK,   MASSACHUSETTS. 


^  Two    miles    from 

Wellesley. 

^  Certificate  admits 

to  leadino;  Collepfes. 

^  Golf,  Tennis, 

Basket-ball. 

3ffu5tratcb    Cafafoguc. 


MISS     CON  ANT     and 
MISS     RIGELOW, 

Principals. 


HIS  BOOK  IS 
PRINTED  AND 
BOUND     BY 

FRANK  WOOD 


\\1  WASHING- 
TON STREET, 
BOSTON.  MASS. 


Printer, 

11  SPECIAL  ATTENTION 
GIVEN  TO  COLLEGE  AND 
ILLUSTRATED  PUBLICA- 
TIONS. \  FIRST-CLASS 
WORK   AT   REASONABLE 

P  I\|V,_^C.O.      ^^S  ■^-'^  5v3  -i'VD  2K9  J-.J)  q)-^  5\.9 


The  Wellesley  Legenda.  27 


It  the  post  ol^ice  is  crowded  and  you  are  due 
at  a  nine  o'clock,  the  economics  department  can  show 
you  the  shortest  way  out. 

The  President  has  other  duties  than  to  hold 
doors  open  for  Freshmen,  Alice. 

They  tell  me  m\'  name  is  Legenda, 

And  I  must  submit,  I  suppose  ; 
But  according  to  my  notion  of  gender, 

'Twere  better  to  call  me  La  Goose. 


28 


The  Wellesley  Legenda. 


M.    E.    CHASE. 


Cbe  Cea  Room 


WELLESLEY. 


...  MENU ... 


SOUP 


TOMATO      . 
MOCK  TURTLE 


TEA    ANO    COFFEE 

l.i         TEA 

l.i         COFFEE 

CHOCOLATE 

MILK 


1(1 
111 


COLD    MEATS 


TONGUE 
HAM       . 


BROILED 


STEAK  . 
CHOPS 


FISH 

SALMON — Cream  Sauce 


EGGS 

SCRAMBLED 
OMELET       .... 
BOILED         .... 
DROPPED    .... 
DROPPED  ON  TOAST      . 


F>OTATOES 

FRENCH  FRIED 

CREAMED 


30 


l."i 
1.1 


BREAD    AND    ROLLS 

BREAD  .... 
ROLLS  .... 
TOAST 
MILK  TOAST 
MARYLAND  BISCUIT 

CAKE 
CHOCOLATE  CAKE 
CHOCOLATE  CAKE  with  Cream 
TEA  ROO.Vl  CHOCOLATE  CAKE 
FRUIT  CAKE 


PICKLES 


CUCUMBERS 
CHOW  CHOW 


PRESERVES 

GINGER  WITH  CREAM    . 
MARRONS  WITH  CREAM 
STRAWBERRIES 
RASPBERRIES     . 


ICE  CREAM 

ICED  TEA  WITH  LEMON 

QINGER  ALE 

LEMONADE 


Lunches  Put  Up  to  Order. 


Fresh  Candies. 


II.") 
Ill 
l.i 
05 


OS 
10 
OS 

OS 


in 
III 


III 
111 

10 
10 
10 
10 


Fruits  in  their  Seasons. 


FIFTY-CENT  TABLE  D'HOTE  DINNERS  for  eight  or  more  persons  will  be  served  if  twelve  hours'  notice  is  given. 
CATERING  for  Teas,  Receptions  and  Dances  a  specialty. 


The  Wellesley  Legenda. 


29 


W.   F.   CL ELAND 


Dry  and  Fancy  Goods 


Lar!;e  Assortment  Cretonnes  and  Art 
Denims,  Stamped  Linens,  Embroidery 
Silks,  Ribluins.  etc.  HOSIERY,  GLOVES 
and  U^DER\VEAR  specialties 

We  will  ijive  a  special  discount 

of  10  per  cent  to  Wellesley  students. 

9   Clarks  Block,  ]\Iain  St. 
Natick. 


J.  TAILBY  &  SON, 

Florists, 

WELLESLEY,  opp.   R.  R.  St.\tiox. 


C,  )VIcKecbnic,  Caterer^ 


Manufacturer  of 


lee  Cream,   Siierbets,   Frappc, 
Fancy  Cake.s  and  Rolls. 
Orders  delivered  at  College. 


Telephone   5-4. 


10   MAIN  STREET,  NATICK,  MASS. 

Next  Door  to  Post  Office. 


f  Dicbl,  >.,  &  Co, 

H.ACK,    LIVERY,   AND 
BOARDING  STABLE, 


Central   .Street,  near  B.   &   A.  R.  R.  .Station, 
Wellesley,  Mass. 

Ciiriages  at  all  trains.     Hacks  rurnished  for  Parties  and  Funerals. 
Careful  diivers  provided.    Telephone  Connected. 


i( 


HU  Hboard/^ 


'"pHOS.     7^.     GRIFFIN     (for    fourteen    years 
Flowers  ami  Plants  of  the  choicest  varieties  for        *■     driver  of  the  College  Coach)    inay  be  found 
all  occasi.ms;   Palms,  etc.,  to  let  for  decoration.        :   near  the   Wellesley    Post   Office  on   arrival   of  all 
Flowers    carefully  packed    and    forwarded    by   j  trains.      Alumn;e   carried  at  same  rates  as  under- 


Mail  or  Express  to  all  j)arts  of  the  L'nited  States 
and    Canada. 


graduates.      B.    &   A.    Trip   Tickets  to  Boston,  20 
cents  each.      Order  Box   at   north   door  of  College 


<Eir-Or,lers  hy  mail  or  otherwise  proinplly  attended  to.    j     Hall.        P.    O.    addreSS,    BoX     I32,   \\'elleslev,   jNIaSS. 
Connected  by  Telephone.  t 


30 


The  Wellesley  Legenda. 


f 


J 


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F^foVfopOSE^ 


TYPESETTERS 
ELECTROTYPERS 

PHOTO-ENGRAVERS  PD|kJTlN&  F^^'c^S^, 
WAX  ENGRAVERS  X^'^i'.lv'""'  / 
STOCK  CUTS  ©@         ^ 


THE    ILLUSTRATIONS     IN    THIS    BOOK    WERE    MADE    BY    THE    ABOVE    FIRM. 


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