fir £\hT\'^
\^^^\JM^ UcO^ \
Copyright, 1922
by
Lucy Lewis Thom
WFLLES^LFy
OLLI
e
^
.e
POOLE'S INDLX
Educational Review 13
Who's Who 29
Woman Citizen 129
The World's Work 133
The Christian Endeavor World 134
Judge 135
The Etude 137
Theatre Magazine 143
Review of Reviews 147
Outing 151
The House Beautiful 163
The Smart Set 176
Collected Clippings 183
Unnorarg
Mtmbtr
of 1922
7
The Snake Path
Pliotograpit hy The Maynards
Tower Court
10
Photograpit ly The Maynards
The Archway
11
"i
srm^
M^
^
1
'^H3
1
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fli
12
EDUCATIONAL
REVIEW
Dean Waite
of
Wellesley College
13
President Pendleton
(i^fiSrrts m\h QIommtttrrH
Month nf SruatPPH
Edwin Farnham Greene, B. A Boston
President of the Board
William Henry Lincoln Brookline
f'ice-Presiderit
Sarah Lawrence Boston
Secretary
Lewis Kennedy Morse, B. A., LL. B Boston
Treasurer
William Fairfield Warren. S. T. D., LL. D Brookline
Lilian Horsford Farlow Cambridge
Edwin Hale Abbott. LL. B Cambridge
Louise McCoy North, M. A Madison, N. J.
Andrew Fiske, Ph. D Boston
George Edwin Horr, D. D., LL. D Newton Centre
George Howe Davenport Boston
William Edwards Huntington, S. T. D., LL. D Newton Centre
William Blodget, B. A Chestnut HiU
Caroline Haz.ard, M. A., Litt. D., LL. D Peace Dale, R. L
George Herbert Palmer, M. A., Litt. D., L. H. D., LL. D Cambridge
Eugene V. R. Thayer, B. A New York City
Galen L. Stone Brookline
Paul Henry Hanus, S. B., LL. D Cambridge
Candace Catherine Stimson, B. S New York City
Alice Upton Pearmain, M. A Boston
Belle Sherwin, B. S Willoughby, O.
Charlotte Howard Conant, B. A Natick
Alfred Lawrence Aiken, M. A Worcester
Jessie Claire McDonald, M. S Washington, D. C.
Ellen Fitz Pendleton, M. A., Litt. D., LL. D. (ex-officlo) . . Wellesley College
iExFruttup (Eommittrr
Edwin Farnham Greene, B. A., Chaimian
Andrew Fiske, Ph. D.
George Howe Davenport
Galen L. Stone
Cand..\ce Catherine Stimson, B. S.
Lewis Kennedy Morse, B. A., LL. B. (ex-officio)
Ellen Fitz Pendleton, M. A., Litt. D., LL. D. (ex-officio)
IS
iFtnaurp (Unmntittrr
William Blodgett, (jhiurinmi Galen L. Stone
Edwin Farnliam Greene Eugene \'. R. Thayer
Lewis Kennedy Morse {ex officio)
QlnutmtttPP nn Iml^tngH
George Howe Daxenport, Cli/iirm/iii Alice Upton Pearmain
Sarah Lawrence Ellen Fitz Pendleton
William Blodgett Edwin Farnham Greene
Lewis Kennedy Morse
(Enmmtttpp on (Brannha
Caroline Hazard, Chairman Galen Stone
Lillian Horsford Farlow Charlotte Howard Conant
Belle Sherwin Ellen Fitz Pendleton
Lewis Kennedy Morse
IGtbrarg (Enunrtl
George Herbert Palmer
Lillian Horsford Farlow
Trustee Members
Ellen Fitz Pendleton (c.v officio)
Lewis Kennedy Morse
laciilty Members
Mabel Elisabeth Hodder Helen Abbott Merrill
Alice Huntington Bushee Charlotte Elmira Bragg
Margaret Hastings Jackson Ethel Dane Roberts {ex officio)
16
(§f&(na nf A&mtniatratinn
Ellen Fitz Pendleton, M.A., Litt.D., LL.D President
Alice Vinton Waite, M.A Dean, Professor of Enylish Language
and Literature
Edith Souther Tufts, M.A Dean of Residence
Katharine Piatt Raymond, B.S., M.D Resident Physician
Mary Caswell Secretary to the President
Mary Frazer Smith, B.A College Recorder
Marie Louise Stockwell, B.A Assistant Secretary to the President
Frances Louise Kn.app, B.A Secretary to the Board of Admission
Marian Gibbs Milne, B.A Secretary to the Dean
Bertha Lydia Caswell Purchasing Agent
Evelyn Amelia Munroe, B.A Cashier
Charlotte Scott Whiton Purveyor
Mary Snow Head of Washington House
Helen Willard Lyman, B.A Head of the Elms
Harriet Lester Head of Shafer Hall
Mabel Priest Daniel, B.A Head of Cazenove Hall
Effie Jane Buell Head of Pomeroy Hall
Charlotte Henderson Chadderdon Head of Claflin Hall
Elizabeth Burroughs Wheeler Head of Eliot House
Katharine Harris Head of Little House
Alice Lillian McGregor Head of Toiver Court
Harriet Hatton Maynard Head of Townsend House
Alice Varney Ward Head of Guest House
Martha Fay Clarke Head of Leighton House
Mary Hubbard Morse Richardson Head of the Homestead
Jessie Ann Engles Head of Crofton House and Ridgeivay Refectory
Josefa Victoria Rantza Stallknecht Head of Loveivell House
Viola Florence Snyder Head of Noanett House
Adaline Foote Hawley, B.A Head of the Birches
Elvira Genevieve Brandau Head of Wood House
Frances Rayxor Meaker Head of Beehe Hall
Helen Seymour Clifton Head of Freeman House
Charlotte Mary Hassett Head of Clinton and Harris Houses
Belle Morgan Wardell, B.S Head of 'Norumbega House
Carrie Irish Head of Stone Hall
\7
Ethel Isabella Foster Head of I-'iske House
Mary Gilman Ahlers, B.A Head of Wilder Hall
Stella Burse Balderston Head of Jf'ebb House
Henry Herbert Austin, B.S Superintendent of the College Plant
Frederick Dutton Woods, B.S Superintendent of Grounds
Florence Irene Tucker, B.A Assistant to the Purveyor
Leila Burt Nye Manager of Post Office
Amy Harding Nye Manager of Information Bureau
ICtbrarg ^taff
Librarian :
Ethel Dane Roberts, B.A., B.L.S.
Associate Librarians :
Antoinette Brigham Metcalf, M.A.
LiLLA Weed, M.A.
Cataloguer:
Helen Moore Laws, B.A.
Flora E. Wise
Assistant Cataloguers :
Eunice Lathrop
Sarah L. Butler
Florence L. Ellery
Ethel A. Hunter
Assistants:
Ethel A. Pennell
Madge F. Trow
Helen B. Straughn
Secretary to the Librarian :
Mary L. Courtney
Librarian of Alary Hemenicay Hall:
Julia Ci.emma Knowlton, Ph.B., B.L.S.
Alice Freeman Palmer l elloiu
Viola Blackburn, B..A.
18
(iffirpra of Juatrurtum
^ Art
Professors
Alice Van Vechten Brown '
Alice Walton, Ph.D.
Associate Professor
Myrtilla Avery, B.L.S., M.A.
Instructors
Celia Howard Hersey, B.A.
Harriet Boyd Hawes, M.A., L.H.D.
Lecturers
Eliza Jacobus Newkirk, M.A.
Edith Moore Naylor, M.A.
Art Museum Assistant in Charge
Gladys Adams Turnb.'\ch, B.A.
Assistants
Agnes Anne Abbot
Alison Mason Kingsbury, B.A.
Astronomy
Professor Emeritus
Sarah Frances Whiting, Sc.D.
Professor
John Charles Duncan, Ph.D.
Instructor
Leah Brown Allen, M.A.
Biblical History Literature, and Interpretation
Professor
Eliza Hall Kendrick, Ph.D.
Associate Professors
Adelaide Imogen Locke, B.A., S.T.B.
Olive Dutcher, M.A., B.D. -
Assistant Professors
Muriel Anne Streibert, B.A., B.D.
Louise Pettiboxe Smith, Ph.D.
Seal Thompson, ALA.
1 Absent on Sabbatical leave.
2 Absent on leave.
19
Leclurer
Gordon B. Wkllman^ Tli.D.
Assistant
Lillian A. Leathers, B.A.
Botany
Professor
Margaret Clay Ferguson, Ph.D.
Associate Professors
Laetitl\ Morris Snow, Ph.D.
Howard Edward Pulling, Ph.D.
Assistant Professors
Mary Campbell Bliss, M.A. ^
Mabel Annis Stone, M.A. '
Alice Maria Ottley, M.A.
Helen Isabel Davis, B.A.
Instructors
Margery Claire Carlson, M.S.
Helen Stillwell Thomas, M.A.
Jennie May Robinson, M.A.
Assistants
Ellen Armstrong, B.A.
Anna Parker Fessenden, M.S.
Dorothy Moore, B.A.
Chemistry
Associate Professors
Charlotte Almira Bragg, B.S.
Helen Somersby French, Ph.D.
Mary Amerman Griggs, Ph.D.
Instructor
Gertrude Williams, M.S.
Assistants
Marion Elmira Warner, B.S.
Mildred Wegner, B.A.
Economics and Sociology
Associate Professor
Jane Isabel Newell, Ph.D.
Assistant Professors
Elizabeth Donnan, B.A.
Frances Fenton Bernard, Ph.D. ^
' Absent on leave.
- Absent on leave for the first semester.
20
Lecturer
Harry Bass Hall, Ph.D. '
Robert R. Mussey, Ph.D. ''
Instructors
Leila Ruth Albright, M.A.
Marion Bancker, M.A.
Elizabeth Ellis Hoyt, B.A.
Olga Spencer Halsey, M.A.
Education
Professors
Arthur Orlo Norton, M.A.
Anna Jane McKeag, Ph.D., LL.D.
English Composition
Professor
Sophie Chantal Hart, M.A.
Associate Professors
Agnes Frances Perkins, M.A.
Josephine Harding Batchelder, M.A.
Amy Kelly, M.A.
Helen Sard Hughes, Ph.D.
Alfred Dwight Sheffield, M.A.
Assistant Professors
Elizabeth Wheeler Manwaring, B.A.
Annie K. Tuell, M.A.
Frances Lester Warner, B.A. ^
Instructors
Helene Buhlert Bullock, M.A.
Elisabeth Wilkins Thomas, B.A.
Elvira Jennie Slack, M.A.
English Language
Professor
Alice Vinton Waite, M.A.
Associate Professors
Laura Emma Lockwood, Ph.D.
Amy Kelly, M.A.
' Appointed for the first semester only.
- Appointed for the second semester only.
'■^ Absent on leave.
21
English Literature
Professors
Katherine Lee Bates, M.A., Litt.D.
VlDA DUTTON SCUDDER, M.A.
Margaret Pollock Sherwood, Ph.D., L.H.D.
Alice Vinton Waite, M.A.
Martha Hale Shackford, Ph.D.
Laura Emma Lock wood, Ph.D.
Associate Professors
Charles Lowell Young, B.A.
Martha Pike Conant, Ph.D.
Alice Ida Perry Wood, Ph.D.
Laura Alandis Hibbard, Ph.D.
Assistant Professor
Annie Kimball Tuell, M.A.
Instructors
Mary Bowen Brainerd, Ph.D.
Katherine Canby Balderstox, M.A.
French
Assistant Professor
Eunice Clara Smith-Goard, IVLA.
Visiting Lecturer
Elisabeth Clevenot, Lie. es L., Bac D., Dipl, E.S.
Instructors
IVLathilde Boutron-Damazy, B. es L.
Dorothy Warner Dennis, B.A., Dipl. E.U.
Marthe Pugny,
Ruth Elvir.'V Clark, Litt.D.
Jeanne Elisabeth Franconnie, C.P., C.S.
Marie Elisabeth Ponsolle, C.P.
Assistant
Katharine Halsey Dodge
Geology and Geography
Professor
Elizabeth Florette Fisher, B.S.
Associate Professor
Mary Jean Laniir, B.S.
22
Assistant Professor
Margaret Terrell Parker, M.A. '
Assistant
Frances Vandervoort Tripp, B.A.
Lecturer
George Hunt Barton, B.S.
German
Professor
Marguerite Muller ^
Associate Professor
Natalie Wipplinger, Ph.D.
Assistant
Elisabeth Biewend
Greek
Professor E/neritiis
Angie Clara Chapin, M.A.
Professor
Katharine May Edwards, Ph.D.
Instructor
Edith Marion Smith, M.A.
History
Professor Emeritus
Elizabeth Kimball Kendall, M.A., LL.B.
Professors
Julia Swift Orvis, Ph.D.
Mabel Elisabeth Hodder, Ph.D.
Associate Professors
Edna Virginia Moffett, Ph.D.
Barxette Miller, Ph.D.
Assistant Professors
Edward Ely Curtis, Ph.D.
Judith Blow Williams, Ph.D. '
Instructors
Margaret Bancroft, M.A.
Sarah Wambaugh, M.A. ^
Phillips Bradley, B.A. *
Department of Hygiene and Physical
Education
Director
Mabel Louise Cummings
' .'\bsent on leave.
- Absent on Sabbatical leave.
' Absent on leave for the first semester.
* Appointed for the second semester only.
23
Fmiess'jr Liiwritus
Amy Morris Ho.mans, M.A.
Professor
William Skarstrom, M.D.
Associate Professors
Eugene Clarence Howe, Ph.D.
Julia Eleanor Mood^', Ph.D.
Instruclors
Edna Barrett Manshii'
Elizabeth Halsey, Ph.B.
Margaret Johnson
Mary Sophie Haagensen
Harry Edward Brown, B.A.
Mary Rees Mulliner, M.D.
Assistant
Fanny Garrison, B.A.
Librarian
Julia Clemma Knowlton, Ph.B., B.LS.
Recorder
Ruth Farish Reynolds, B.A.
Curator
Anna Elizabeth Andrews
Italian
Professor
Margaret Hastings Jackson
Latin
Professors
Adeline Belle Hawes, M.A.
Alice Walton, Ph.D.
Associate Professor
Caroline Rebecca Fletcher, M.A.
Assistant Professor
Anna Bertha Miller, Ph.D.
Mathematics
Professor Emeritus
Ellen Louise Burrell, B.A.
Eva Chandler, B.A.
Professors
Helen Abbot Merrill, Ph.D.
Roxana Hayward Vivian, Ph.D.
Associate Professor
Clara Eliza Smith, Ph.D.
24
Assisl/iiit Professors
Mabel Minerva Young, Ph.D.
Lennie Phoebe Copeland, Ph.D.
Mary Floence Curtis Graustein, Ph.D.
Instructors
Marion Elizabeth Stark, M.A.
Rachel Blodgett, Ph.D.
Ruby Willis, B.A.
Music
Frofessors
Hamilton Clarence MacDougall, Mus.D.
Clarence Grant Hamilton, M.A.
Instructors
Emily Josephine Hurd
Albert Thomas Foster
Blanche Francis Brocklebank
Joseph Goudreault
Carl Webster
RA^•^IO^'D Clark Robinsox
Assistant
Miriam Louise Merritt, Mus.B.
Philosophy and Psychology
Professors
Mary Whitin Calkins, M.A., Litt.D., LL.D.
Mary Sophia Case, B.A.
Eleanor Acheson McCulloch Gamble, Ph.D.
Associate Professor
Christian Alban Ruckmick, Ph.D.
Instructor
Flora Isabel Mackinson, M.A.
Assistants
Marjorie Cornelia Day, B.A.
Florence Moran Orndorff, B.A.
Physics
Professor Emeritus
Sarah Frances Whiting, Sc.D.
Professor
Louise Sherwood McDowell, Ph.D. '
Associate Professors
Frances Lowater, Ph.D.
• Grace Evangeline Davis, M.A.
1 Absent on leave.
2 Absent on leave for the first semester.
25
Assistant Prolessnr
Lucv Wilson! Ph.D.
Instructor
Mildred Allen, M.A. -
J ssistant
Hilda L'iDiA Begem ax, B.A.
Reading and Speaking
Professor
Malvina Bennet, M.A.
Assistant Professors
Edith Margaret Smaill
Elizabeth Parker Hunt, Ph.B.
Spanish
Alice Huntington Bushee, M A.
Assistant Professor
Angela Paloma, M.A.
Instructor
Ada May Coe, B.A.
Zoology and Physiology
Professor Emeritus
Mary Alice Willcox, ScD.
Professor
Marion Elizabeth Hubbard, B.S.
Associate Professors
Julia Eleanor Moody, Ph.D.
Alice Middleton Boring, Ph.D.
Assistant Professors
Esther Maud Greisheimer, Ph.D.
Assistants
Harriet Vose, M.A.
Eleanor Dewey Mason, B.A.
Mary Lellah Austin, B.A.
Curator and Lecturer
Albert Pitts Morse
Instructors
Margaret Alger Hayden, M.A. '
Harriet Cutler Waterman. M.A.
Mabel Irene Smith, M.A.
Helen Warton Kaan, B.A.
' Appointed for the secoiul semester only.
2 Appointed for the first semester only.
26
3n iMrmariam
(Earnltttp 2Surlt«g SlinmpHnn.
Profraaor of 2oolnntt
27
. i-
28
Who'sWho
29
DOROTHY S. AIKEN
2304 Newkirk Aveiuie
Brooklyn, N. V.
^ OD
'\V\'^A\W
MARY M. ALLEN
Glenilale, Ohio
o
MARGARET C. BIRGE
Falls Church, Va.
KATHERINE ANDERSON
28 Moultrie Street
Dorchester, Mass.
LAURA H. ALLEN
Baker Road
Concord, Mass.
HOPE B. ANGLEMAN
128 West 8th Street
Plainfield, N. J.
31
DORA M. ARMSTRONG
27 Fairfield Avenue
Holyoke, Mass.
CATHERINE T. ASHBURNER
236 South Kensington Ave.
La Grange, 111.
DOROTHY A. ARTER
3526 Harney Street
Omaha, Neb.
JEAN M. ASHTON
26 Hunter Place (j£)
Springfield, Mass.
MILDRED H. ASCHEIM
2235 Clark Avenue aK^
Far Rockaway, N. Y. ^-'^
"T
CHARLOTTE AVERILL
1148 Main Street
T^>\a>*.
Campello, Mass.
32
MARY AVDELOTT
339 Buena Vista Avenue
Pekin, III.
FRANCES BAKER
Hotel Windcmere
Chicago, 111.
MARGARET E. BABB
Homer, 111.
JOSEPHINE C. BARBOUR
113 Appleton Avenue
Pittsfield, Mass.
ELIZABETH BADGER
212 East Livingston Street
Orlando, Fla.
MARY PRINGLE BARRET
Henderson, Ky.
33
LUCILLE J. BARRETT
A Wellington Apartments
Spokane, Wash.
BARBARA A. BATES
18 Ri\'ersi(le Drive -~
Binghamton, N. Y. ^
EDITH M. BARROWS
13+ Prospect Street
Willimantic, Conn.
^.m
FRANCES E. BAUM
1+1 West 73rd Street
New York City
MIRIAM BATCHELDER
10+ School Street
Concord, N. H.
RUTH S. BECKER
12+3 3+th Street
Des Moines, Iowa
34
f,
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V.
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ALICE BENNET
25 Waller Street
New London, Conn.
EDITH A. BERMINGHAM
Ovster Bav, New York
FANCHON E. BENNETT
1109 East 52nd Street
Chicago, 111.
AIMEE LOUISE BETTMAN
2323 Park Avenue
W^alnut Hill, Cincinnati, O.
EUGENIE W. BENT
Stone Acres
Southville, Mass.
MYRA H. BEYER
61 Norwood Avenue
Buffalo, N. Y.
3S
NATHALIE BIEDERMAN
1397 East Boulevard
Cleveland, Ohio
DOROTHY J. BOGART
54 The Prado
Atlanta, Ga.
MIRIAM F. BISBEE
104 Washington Avenue
Waltham, Mass.
EDITH BOHMFALK
128 East 45th Street
New York City
DOROTHY BLOSSOM
266 Henry Street
Brooklyn, N. Y.
ALFARATA BOWDOIN
240 Brown Street
Providence, R. I.
o
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36
i:,»-^'
MARGLERITE M. BRASH
807 7th Street
Beatrice, Neb.
«
LUCILLE C. BRENNER
90 Browne Street
Brookline, Mass.
IS*, T-
MARIAN E. BRECKENRIDGE
I9S Green Street
^^'oodbridge N. J.
f'^ *r
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MARION R. BRISTOL
Foxboro, Mass.
o
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DOROTHV C. BREINGAN
13S South 6th Street
Newark, N. J.
MRS. K. ELIZ. D. BRYANT
192 Washington Street
Welleslev Hills, Mass.
siaiiiii^
32
MARY ALICE BUSHNELL
Standwood and Terrace Roads
East Cleveland, Ohio
<^
HARRIETTE F. CAMP
215 Mount Auburn Street
Watertown, Mass.
MARGARET R. BYARD
401 Ross Avenue
Hamilton, Ohio
NINA A. CAMP
Ocala, Fla.
ELEANOR F. BYE
310 2nd Street
Lakewood, N. J.
MARJORIE H. CAPEN
53 Marion Street
Brookline, Mass.
ijim—
38
.^
ELIZABETH O. CARRINGER
nil Humboldt Street
Denver, Colo.
w
V
HELEN F. GARY
1377 Bryden Road
Columbus, Ohio
MARGARET A. CARTER
30 Appleton Place
Glen Ridge, N. J.
l'^ *^
HELEN H. CHAIN
64 Stratford Road
Melrose, Mass.
'J
PAULINE G. CARTER
481 Cumberland Avenue
Portland, Me.
CATHERINE CHAPMAN
3303 Hamilton Street
Philadelphia, Pa.
39
LOIS A. CHILDS
Bernardsville, N. J.
MARY ELIZABETH CLARK
2+6 West Water Street
Lock Haven, Pa.
BEATRICE CHRISTMAN
410 North Byers Avenue
Joplin, Mo.
RUTH CLINGAN
::443 6th Street
Bouhler, Colo.
HILDEGARDEE.CHURCHILL
25 Spring Street
Amherst, Mass.
PAULINE A. COBURN
Weston, Mass.
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40
DOROTHY G. COCHLIN
736 \\'ashington Street
Tiavei>e City, Mich.
SARAH B. CON ANT
118 Weston Avenue (^
Waitham, Mass.
HELEN L. COMISKEY
47 Weston Road
Weliesley, Mass.
LAVERNA M. CONE
15 St. Helena Street
Perrv, N. Y.
DOROTHEA B. COMLY
Comiv Avenue «,~,
Port Chester, N. Y. ^JU
Cct^owAD S.-W
OJ->-»jC-v.
CATHERINE R. CONGDON
7+ Lincoln Street
Wooitfonls, Me.
41
ELIZABETH CONGDON
112 Elm Street
Worcester, Mass.
(SD
A(Sr--.M
a . \ vim^
HENRIETTE C. COOPER
325 Riverside Drive
New York Citv
f^%:
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KATHARINE R. COOKE
303 Main Street
East Orange, N. J.
%
/
GLADYS L. CORTHELL
27 Wilson Street
Portland, Me.
BETTY A. COOPER
40 Chapel Street
Augusta, Me.
EMMA COUCH
177 Beale Street
Wollaston, Mass.
^^*^-
42
JEAN O. COULTER
Sandy Spring, Md.
HELEN E. CRANDELL
88 South Ocean Avenue
Freeport, N. Y.
ELIZABETH F. CRAFTS
263B 5th Avenue, Maisonneuve
Montreal, Queb., Can.
o
MARY M. CRAWFORD
Mitchell, Ind.
RUTH TICE CRALLE
Blackstone, Va.
MARGARET G. DAILEV
210 4th Street
Fall River, Mass.
7
43
|i
fji
TILSE E. DANIELS
75 Heights Road
Ridgewood, N. J.
<S"
HELEX C. DAVIS
Kane, Pa.
WINNETTA DAVID
101 Bull Street
Charleston, S. C.
REBECCA D. DAVIS
523 East Capitol Avenue
Little Rock, Ark.
iUl
m
M^
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BERTHA H. DAVIDSON
21 Marion Road
Upper -Montclair, N. J.
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EMELINE DAY
R. F. D. 1
Paris, Texas
44.
RUTH J. DEAN
c/o Swift Beef Co.. Ltd.
58 W. Smithfield
London, E. C. I.
England
KATHERINE H. DeWOLF
11 Burton Street
Bristol, R. I.
KATHERINE E. DENNY
3530 Harney Street
Omaha, Neb.
LOUISE H. DeWOLF
11 Burton Street
Bristol, R. I.
MARGARET M. DENTON
104 Gay Street
Manchester, Iowa
MARION L. DEXTER
319 Wilder Street
Lowell, Mass.
w
'«f\
45
ISABEL D. DIETRICH
JOl Jefferson Street
Boise, la.
ELIZABETH DRAKE
North High Street
Bethlehem, Pa.
ELINOR DODGE
415 River Road
Manchester, N. H.
DOROTHY K. DUKES
The Greenway Apartments
Baltimore, Md.
NAOMI DOWNER
126 North Essex Avenue
Orange, N. J.
RUTH P. DUNBAR
246 Plam Street
Campello, Mass.
46
^ _^-
DOROTHY DUNCANSON
86 Upilike Street
Proviileiice, R. I.
MARGARET DYE
Garrett Park, Md.
ALICE DUNHAM
111 North I7th Street
East Orange, N. J
OD
^sQL^f, 3o-Ju.-v/-c^La>v:i
MARGARET M. EDDY
347 Madison Avenue
New York City
MILDRED E. DURANT
27 Glenville Avenue
Allston, Mass.
CD
ADELE EICHLER
56 Ellison Park
Waltham, Mass.
47
ELIZABETH D. ELY
6 Kendall t5rcen, N. E.
Washington, D. C.
et
v^^iiX.
'•iSa-A.j-txxJC
B. MILDRED EVANS
3^8 Washington Avenue
Glen Ridge, N. J.
MARJORIE ELY
261 State Avenue X^\i
Pontiac, Mich.
CAROLINE EWE
3208 Portland Avenue
Minneapolis, Minn.
DORIS D. ENGLE
R. F. D. 3
Freepoit, 111.
MARGARET K. FAUVER
1417 East Erie Avenue
Lorain, Ohio
48
RUTH B. FEINBERG
58 Crawford Street
Roxbury, Mass.
LORA H. FLANEGIN
Elrawood, 111.
MARIAN L. FISHER
514 12th Avenue
Munhall, Pa.
ELIZABETH FLEMING
Fort Oglethorpe, Ga.
ELIZABETH FITCH
1033 Elmwood Avenue
Wilraette, 111.
lUi :i^^uu^.f^<^
HELEN G. FORBUSH
23 Winnemay Street
Natick, Mass.
49
^^4M>w
I *^ '3^^
E. RUDISILL FREEMAN
1012 West Berry Street
Fort Wayne, Inil.
CHRISTINE H. FORDON
West Hamilton Street
Geneva, N. Y.
GRACE K. FREEMAN
Chicago Ranch
Briggsdale, Colo.
HELEN L. FRANKEL
3511 Grand Avenue
Oes Moines, Iowa
^ ALICE E. FRENCH
Waltham, Mass
49 Pleasant Street /T))
-^
BERNADINE FREEMAN
1203 Wabash Avenue
Mattoon, III.
SO
JEAN A. FRIEDMAN
5614 Waterman Avenue
St. Louis, Mo.
QO
ELIZABETH FRY
Areata, Cal.
o
MARY LOUISE FRITCHMAN
Sebring, Ohio
RUTH L. GALLAGHER ^
6101 Hugh Avenue (jt-^
Cleveland, Ohio
^ ^
ELIZABETH C. FROST
Oriskany, N. Y.
V
GEORGIA GAMBRILL
50+8 Westminster Place
St. Louis, Mo.
51
ELIZABETH T. GARDINER
32 Larch Street
Providence, R. I.
G. MARION GEORGE
85 Lexington Avenue
Buffalo, N. Y.
RUTH A. GARDNER
->*~j Maple Lawn
Pownal, Vt.
u
LOIS M. GIBBONEY
235 West Juniper Avenue
Wildwood, N. J.
ILSE M. GEHRING
1448 West 101st Street
Cleveland, Ohio
a.^-^^ -^ 1^^
OD
MARY R. GIDDINGS
Housatonic, Mass.
52
EMILY E. GORDON
332 Cornelia Street
Boonton, N. J.
JANICE M. GRANT
Mansfield Center, Conn.
SUSAN H. GRAFFAM
3 Chapin Street
Brattleboro, Vt.
MAUDE B. GRAY
2515 4th Avenue
Los Angeles, Cal.
GRACE E. GRAHAM
Fort Myers, Fla.
ANNE R. GREEN
10838 Deering Avenue
Cleveland, Ohio
^
53
VIRGINIA H. GRIFFEN
35 Breiiton Terrace
Pittsfield, Mass.
DOROTHY A. GROVER
1442 Belmont Street
Washington, D. C.
^fr!^:p.
MARGARET E. GRIFFITHS
834 Park Place
Brooklyn, N. Y.
DORIS GUNDERSON
701 South Elmwood Avenue
Oak Park, III.
B. MABEL GROSS
Starbuck, Wash.
EDNA V. HAENICHEN
634 Broadway
Paterson, N. J.
54
ta-.-j'jUiij^!
MARGARET HALL
West Acton, Mass.
ELIZABETH HAND
Riverside, Conn.
RACHAEL C. HALL
Diamond Street
Jacksonville, 111.
^L'VRY HANKINSON
122 Bement Avenue
Staten Island, N. Y.
i[
ETHEL M. HALSEY
1406 7th Street
New Orleans, La.
MARTHA E. HANNA
20 Springfield Avenue
Cranford, N. J.
^-
f
55
hi
m€/^
e\
GRACE H. HARDING
538 Eastt I'lth Street, North
Portland, Ore.
OLIVE HATTON
Sheldon Terrace
Grand Haven, Mich.
RUTH HARRISON
San Antonio Heights
Upland, Cal.
M.ARIAN S. HAYNES
325 South Park Avenue
Freemont, Ohio
RUTH HASTINGS
Stamford, Texas
ELOISE P.
HAZARD
Main
Street
Albion,
N. V.
56
~\**\
BEATRICE I. HEBBARD
Brockport, N. Y.
> *C5!,
FRANCES F. HICKS
^311 Pieitmont Avenue
Berkeley, Cal.
HORTENSE R. HENENBERG
1217 Gano Street
Hallas, Texas
DOROTHV V. HIGLEY
99 North Broad Street
Norwich, N. Y.
MARYAN G. HENNINGER
229 North 5th Street
Reading, Pa.
RUTH E. HILLYAR
2685 Euclid Boidevard
Cleveland, Ohio
57
r5i -
CHARLOTTE W. HILTON
5640 Woodlawn Avenue
Chicago, 111.
DOROTHY HOLLOW AY
2522 Ritchie Avenue
East Walnut Hills. Cincinnati, O.
JESSIE H. HOIT
481 Western Avenue
Albany, N. Y.
DOROTHY HOLMES
72 Glenwood Avenue
Brockton, Mass.
HARRIET D. HOLCOMBE
8 Warren Square ^,^_
Jamaica Plain, .Mass. UcJ
7
Ac;nES H. HOUGHTON
680 Longfellow Avenue
Detroit, Mich.
58
ISABELLA S. HOUK
107 North Washington Street
Delaware, Ohio
JULIA T. HU
Wusik, China
OLGA L. HOURWICH
Edsall Avenue
Morsemere, N. J.
DOROTHY M. HUNT
P. O. Box 37
Waterloo, N. H.
^VJ
ELIZABETH F. HOXIE
132 Pleasant Street
Arlington, Mass.
fh'A
V- -J
JESSIE M. HUNTER
Center Road
Shirley, Mass.
59
WARY C. HUTCHINSON
Mayfield Roati
South Euclid, Ohio
CAROLINE L. INGHAM
25 East 22nd Street
New York City
KIKUE IDE
(Mrs. Asami)
Minakuchi, Shiga Ken, Japan
KATHERINE INGLING
555 North Garfield Avenue
Pocatello, Idaho
H. CARR IGLEHART
1008 Cathedral Street
Baltimore, Md.
ISABEL M. INGRAM
21 Teng Shih Kou
Peking, China
60
MARION E. IRELAND
80 High Street
Newbiiryport, Mass. •
FLORENCE G. JEUP
2415 North Talbott Avenue
Indianapolis, Ind.
MARGARET S. JACKSON
2822 West Park Boulevard
Shaker Heights, Cleveland, O.
HELEN L. JOBSON
136 East Water Street
Lock Haven, Pa.
BEATRICE W. JEFFERSON
Glenarm, Ky.
ESTHER D. JOEL
15 Locust Street
61
MARGARET S. JOHNSON
Orchard Knob Farm
Dallas, Texas
MARION G. JOSEPH!
92+ West End Avenue
New York City
MARION JOHNSON
56 Harvard Avenue
Hyde Park, Mass.
ADOLPHIA KATZKY
Branscome Apartments ,~
St. Louis, Mo. Cit-^
MILDRED A. JORDAN
5++7 Lakewood Avenue
Chicago, 111.
MARY G. KELLY
1617 Arizona Street
El Paso, Texas
62
GERTRUDE M. KESSEL
2 East 58th Street
Kansas City, Mo. QD
k*^ v
SARA F. KIRK
111 Gilford Avenue
Jersey City, N. J.
KATHRYN KIDD
2721 Humboldt Avenue, South
Minneapolis, Minn.
HARRIET M. KIRKHAMi/
120 Clarendon Street T*\
Springfield, Mass.
ELIZABETH KIMBALL
35 Moultrie Street
Dorchester, Mass.
HELEN A. KIRWIN
32 Lyman Street
Waltham, Mass.
'Sk
7
63
^^ ^
•p^sfe
MARGARET D. KITTINGER
234 Depew Avenue w
Buffalo, N. Y. \J
ADELAIDE F. KOHN
4907 Greenwooii Avenue
Chicago, III.
MARJORIE J. KLEIN
1360 Denniston Avenue
Pittsburgh, Pa.
CLARA B. KOOSER
210 Rosemont Avenue
Welister Park, St. Louis, Mo.
-//lv\-
m
V
ELIZABETH M. KNOWLTON
18 Forest Street
Cambridge. Mass.
NANCY M. KREIDER
Annville, Pa.
64
ETHEL KURTH
780 Marietta Avenue
Milwaukee, Wis.
ELIZABETH L. LAMAR
2301 Pearl Street
Sioux City, la.
ESTHER B. LACOUNT
124 College Avenue
West Somerville, Mass.
RUTH F. LARCOM
44 Putnam Street
West Newton, Mass.
OLIVE L. LADD
823 South 17th Street
Lincoln, Neb. (<Yr\
Ac>^JU)ji»ii% ^ . (-1/\.CX->^^OJL>i_
I EMILY LATHAM "(1)
I Norwich Town, Conn.
65
SYLVIA M. LEARY
167 Birr Street
Rochester, N. Y.
VERMTA LIGGETT
Mount Vernon, Wash.
PAULINE H. LEONARD
348 Carew Street
Springfield, Mass.
RUTH G. LINDALL
62 Waldeck Street
Dorchester, Mass.
HELEN C. LEVY
60 Seneca Street
Far Rockaway, N. Y.
ELIZABETH C. LINDSAY
Taia Maul, Hawaii
66
ALENE S. LITTLE
1617 Hawthorne Park
Columbus, Ohio
ESTELLE C. LOHR
419 9th Avenue
McKeesport, Pa.
ROSE LOEWENSTEIN
15 Kimball Road
Lynn, Mass.
f
%ir*
CAROLYN H. LORIG
1323 North Lyon Street
Colorado Springs, Colo.
HELEN B. LOGAN
16 Bala Avenue
Bala, Pa.
EMMA VAIL LUCE
514 West 122nd Street
New York City
17^
im)
67
DOROTHY V. D. LUKENS
132 Westfielii Avenue
Elizabeth, N. J.
ELIZABETH H. McALONEY
201 Bellefield Avenue „
Pittsburgh, Pa. jBko^-^V^^^
ELIZABETH K. LUM
(Mrs. Ervin T. Drake, Jr.)
Ridgewood, N. J.
ELEANOR T. McARDLE
27 Sherwood Street
Roslindale, Mass.
KATHARINE V. LYDELL
196 Congress Street
Bradford, Pa.
MILDRED E. McCARTY
1 Webster Street
Natick, Mass.
68
MARJORIE McGILLICUDDY
90 Mellen Street
Portland, Me.
RUTH H. McMillan
162 Pleasant Street
North Adams, Mass.
ELIZABETH McILVAINE
+08 North Monroe Street
Peoria, III.
CATHERINE R.McREYNOLDS
32+1 R Street, N. W.
Washington, D. C.
MARGARET McLAUGHLIN
The Highlands
Washington, D. C.
GENEVIEVE E. MARCELL
+5+5 Holmes Street
Kansas City, Mo.
69
JULIA H. MARTIN
R. F. D. 4
Quakertown, Pa.
MARGARET MERRELL
239 Union Avenue
Framingham, Mass.
RUTH E. MAY
257 Monroe Street
Brooklyn, N. Y.
VIRGINIA P. MERRIAM
272 Concord Street _7^
Framingham, Mass. *^
RUTH T. MELCHER
143 East Maxwell Street
Lexington, Ky.
MILDRED D. MILES
350 Linwood ,'\veniie
Buffalo, N. Y.
70
Av
WINIFRED B. MILLER
76 \riddlesex Street
Swampscott, Mass.
i-Kf-^
'^ ^
ADELAIDE S. MILNE
Apawamis Avenue
Rye, N. Y.
GERTRUDE E. MILLER
14 West 52nd Street
New York City
MARY C. MITCHELL
Stafford Springs, Conn.
CAROL F. MILLS
769 Congress Street
Portland, Me.
CAROLINE P. MOENCH
Gowanda, N. Y.
71
nOROTHY M. MOREHOUSE
Prospect Avenue
Daiieii, Conn.
Q
KATHARINE K. MORSS
6703 Cresheim Road
Mt. Airy, Philadelphia, Pa.
HELEN' MURIEL MORRIS
4800 Drexe! Boulevard
Chicago, 111.
^i^
A. RUTH MURRAY
» 12 Spafford Road
Milton, Mass.
ELIZABETH C. MORRISON
379 7th Avenue
Newark, N. J.
~i->rx "U'
erv/^-r-«
■ Q^.Q^Y^Sl
€f~
nOROTHY E. MUZZEY
87 Maple Street
Walthani, Mass.
172
LOUISE NEUFFER
506 5th Street
Dimmore, Pa.
MARGARET OAKES
56 Linden Street
Wellesley, Mass.
EMILY G. NICHOLS
271 Alfred Street
Biddeford, Me.
MARION A. OLMSTEAD
298 Chenango Street
Binghamton, N. Y. QD
EDITH M. NUTT
11 Union Street
Natick, Mass.
GRACE L. OSGOOD
14+ Commonwealth Avenne
Boston, Mass.
73
r^
MARJORIE E. PACKARD
Ashland, N. H. /jrif\
TACY W. PARRY
110 Beechwood Road i^^
Summit, N. J. (_^
MARY PAGE
96 Fenway
Boston, Mass,
ELIZABETH A. PARSONS
1109 84th Street
Brooklyn, N. Y.
VIRGINIA H. PAINE
924 High Street
Bath, Me.
LEAH M. PATT
3520 Cherry Street
Kansas City, Mo.
74
ELEANOR PECKHAM
85 Waterman Street
Providence, R. I.
RUBY M. PHILLIPS
6 Summit Road
Wellesley, Mass.
BEATRICE N. PENNY
3 Allison Avenue
Haverstraw, N. Y.
LALIAH B. PINGREE
60 Gorham Avenue
Brookline, Mass.
MARION P. PERRIN
94 Lake Street
Hamburg, N. Y.
LENORE PIQUETTE
1807 Bolton Street
Baltimore, Md.
JL'-^\
:t-z:
75
DOROTHY E. FLETCHER
1112 Euclid Street, N. VV.
Washington, U. C.
MADELEINE J. PRITZLAFF
3100 Highland Boulevard
Milwaukee, Wis.
NOLA L POOLEY
288 Rutter Avenue
Kingston, Pa.
1^ ^
MARIAN L. PROBERT
443 East Market Street
Akron, Ohio (_^
HELEN POWERS
22 Ciinant Street
Danvers, Mass.
LOUISE W. PULVER
Hillsdale, N. Y.
7
76
ETHEL M. QUINN
85 East Main Street
Gowanda, N. Y.
HARRIET B. RALSTON
6620 Kinsman Road
Squirrel Hill, Pittsburgh, Pa.
[^ #■
^
>■,.■€■'
> .,ii
LEAH M. RABBITT
Mount Rainier, Md.
■:¥% 0i\
y
^'^
HARRIET C. RATHBUN
20 Green Village Road
Madison, N. J.
RUTH RAINIER
2716 Sutherland Avenue
Indianapolis, Ind.
SARA A. RAY
16 Stanley Street
Dorchester, Mass.
^1
\m''
77
,<«■■•>':
HELEN RECKEFUS
506 North 6th Street
Philadelphia, Pa.
ALICE RICHARDS
Woodmere, N. Y.
1
^fX^V-
MARGARET E. REESE
213 Dibert Street
Johnstown, Pa.
k:.\therine n. robinson
34 Clifford Street
Roibury, Mass.
_ EVA M. REIBER
'''•■~{ 919 Neosho Street
Emporia, Kas.
CAROL M. ROEHM
1247 25th Street
Detroit, Mich.
psvJUcLC
,^i MicX ■
78
i:
ft^-^'-'-JiJ
■v*(t^
RUTH ROGERS
701 North Wayne Street
Piqiia, Ohio
CORNELIA R. ROSS
16 Clarke Place
Frederick, Md.
i^'
NEDALEINE ROSE
255 West 90th Street
New York City
FLORENCE A. ROSS
-205 Parkwood Avenue
Toledo, Ohio
LILLL'^N R. ROSENWEIG
2105 Tioga Street
Philadelphia, Pa.
■%■
C2^
■ff C**
BESSIE ROTHSCHILD
1410 4th Avenue
Columbus, Ga.
79
ESTHER M. RUSSELL
182 Cambridge Street , ^
Winchester, Mass.
1
oiu,M m^c
uAJq^w
MARION SCOFIELD
548 Main Street
Oconto, Wis.
MARGUERITE SCHACHNER
1368 East SSrd Street
Chicago, 111.
RUTH P. SEARS
37 Cherry Street
Danvers, Mass.
RUTH SCHLIVEK
Union Village
Woonsocket, R. I.
t;ERTRUDE C. SEELVE
20 Coolidge .Avenue
Glens Falls, N. Y.
- ■ i-
80
DOROTHY K. SHANK
Chambersburg, Pa.
MYRA E. SHIMBERG
516 Euclid Avenue
Syracuse, N. Y.
RUTH SHEPPARD
89 Lowell Avenue
Newtonville, Mass.
h^ ■**-
o
•*^
^^
ABIGAIL E. SMITH
5440 Maple Avenue
St. Louis, Mo.
[^ 4r
MARGARET SHERWIN
885 Park Avenue
New York City
BEATRICE i. SMITH
332 Penn Avenue
Scranton, Pa.
iS
81
1 ~ f '
MARGARET A. SMITH
6 Salem Street
Woburn, Mass.
ISABEL L. SNOW
195 West Elm Street
Brockton, Mass.
MARJORIE C. SMITH
35 Winthrop Road
Brookline, Mass.
KATHERINE S. SNYDER
425 North Queen Street
Lancaster, Pa.
■*' i^ ]
SHIRLEY S. SMITH
+3 Abbott Road
Wellesley Hills, Mass.
»-■ 'Ke
MARY E. STAHL
3401 Michigan Avenue
Chicago, 111.
*,
82
N ^
.^:
MARTHA E. STARR
3506 Lowell Street, N. \V.
Washington, D. C.
<en->
JOSEPHINE B. STIEFEL
Pittsburgh Circle
Ellwood City, Pa.
DOROTHY LEE STEVENS
Broadway and 5th Street
Mayfield, Ky.
MARGARET STODDART
9 East 40th Street
New York, N. Y.
REBECCA STICKNEY
38 Pleasant Street
Arlington, Mass.
DOROTHY STONE
60 Fenway
Boston, Mass.
o
83
«T| «
KATHERINE A. STONE
30 Summit Road
Medford, Mass.
MARIE F. STRUCKMANN
3421 Oak Park Avenue
Berwyn, 111.
ENID C. STRAW
297 Orange Street
Manchester, N. H.
ALICE J. STRYKER
155 Belvedere Avenue
Washington, N. J.
M« ^"
EDNA STREBEL
752 Lafayette -Avenue
Buffalo, X. Y.
sD.«w (rw-<
■s
6
RUTH M. STURGES
Geneseo, N. Y.
84
FRANXES F. STURGIS
20 Derring Street
Portland, Me.
MARY H. TEAGAN
2285 West, Grand Boulevarde
Detroit, Mich.
ELEANOR M. SUMNER
+506 Maiden Street
Chicago, 111.
LUCY LEWIS THOM
Sandy Spring, Md.
MARION E. TAYLOR
1239 Boulevard
New Haven, Conn.
(""Sr-
ELIZABETH M. THOMPSON
580 East 22nd Street
Brooklyn, N. Y. (XD
M
85
I
■^'
^..
FRANCES H. TIEDTKE
2460 Parkwood Avenue
Toledo, Ohio
A
EDITH TOMKINS
16 Stockton Street
Princeton, N. J.
MIRIAM R. TIRRELL
244 Main Street
South Weymouth, Mass.
DOROTHY TOWER
344 Normal Parkway
Chicago, 111.
NANCY D. TOLL
Hillcrest Farm
Greenwood, Mo.
ELIZABETH A. TRACY
Meriden, N. H.
86
K*:*y&>.
JANET D. TRAVELL
40 5th Avenue
New York, N. Y.
MARJORIE E. TYLER
721 Cherry Street
Rockford, 111.
LUELLA B. TUCKER
71 South Brunswick Street
Oldtown, Me.
^^
DORIS R. ULMANN
155 West 74th Street
New York, N. Y.
HARRIET B. TURNBULL
835 Western Avenue
Pittsburgh, Pa.
DOROTHY UNDERHILL
21 Norwood Avenue
Summit, N. J.
87
MADELINE VAN DORN
30 Mururay Street
Mt. Morris, N. Y.
ELIZABETH VINTON
676 Chicago Boulevarde
Detroit. Mich.
RUTH VAN ORDEN
Spring Valley, N. Y.
HARRIET V. VOUGHT
Mt. Carmel, Pa.
JOSEPHINE VINCENT
1314 Summit Boulevarde
Spokane, Wash.
GERTRUDE WADE
793 West 4th Street
Superior, Wis.
88
AVIS C. WALSH
109 East State Street
Terra Alta, W. Va.
ELEANOR L. WARREN
Leicester, Mass.
JANET WARD
3+ Kensington Avenue
Jersey City, N. J.
o
\L\RGARET H. WASSERMAN
Wissahickon Ave. & Hortter St.
Germantown, Pa.
MARY CELINA WARD
Camp Hill, Ala.
PAULINE WATKINS
68 Gray Street
Arlington, Mass.
89
;^
>-^
BEl'TY P. WATT
25 Oakland Street
Wellesley Hills, Mass.
DOROTHY M. WEIL
69th Avenue and Uth Street
Oak Lane, Philadelphia, Pa.
MARGARET E. WATTERSON
700 Oakwood Avenue
Dayton, Ohio
.io
<i
-/■ V
HELEN R. WELDONi./?i3
197 West High Street
Somerville, \. J.
DESDEMONA WATTS
2304 Scottwood Avenue
Toledo, Ohio
DOROTHY WESCOTF
281 Harvard Street
Cambridge, Mass.
90
ADALINE E. WHEELER
34 Alveston Street
Jamaica Plain, Mass.
^ •♦
M
MARIAN I. WHITE
La Clede, Idaho
ANITA MERRY WHEELFR
815 Norlh I Street
Tacoma, Wash.
D. CAROL WHITMARSH
1023 Hickory Street
Texarkana, .^rk.
LOUISE Y. WHEELOCK
Leicester, N. Y.
ERNESTINE WIEDENBACH
Beechmont Park
New Rochelle, N. Y.
#■
91
JT -J
^.
KJ.IZABETH N. WILLCOX
115 Davis Avenue
West New Brighton, N. Y.
OD
HELEN WILLIAMS
316 West 9th Street
Pueblo, Colo.
DOROTHY M. WILLIAMS
720 North Florence Street
El Paso, Texas
RUTH WILLIAMSON
509 South Wabash Avenue
Chicago, 111.
ELIZABETH J. WILLIAMS
135 North 6th Street
Douglass, Wy.
ESTHER L. WINDSOR
321 South 5th Avenue
Le Grange, 111.
92
VIRGINIA WOLFLIN
207 West 9th Street
Amarillo, Texas
HELEN M. WOODRUFF
2 South Jackson Street
Elgin, 111.
ESTHER WOODFORD
401 North 4th Street
Queer Lake, la.
HELEN R. WOODS
26 Forest Avenue
Everett, Mass.
o
CAROL WOODRUFF
154 Stiles Street
Elizabeth, N. J.
DOROTHY E. WOODWARD
1227 Longfellow .Avenue
Detroit, Mich.
o
'•■- #
i
93
ELIZABETH M. WOODY
1012 Cherokee Road
Louisville, Ky.
■^^ ^.
MARIAN A. WRIGHT
292 South West Street
Bellevue, Ohio
CORNELIA M. WOOLLEY
2+5 North Beacon Street
Brighton, Mass.
-T - V
MARGARET E. WYLIE
42+ Whitney Avenue
Wilkinsburg, Pa.
ELIZABETH T. WORCESTER
Hollis, N. H.
JANE N. WYNNE
Beech Creek, Pa.
94
PAO KONG YANG
Kiang Soo, Weusik, China
KATHRYN YOUSE
1621 Columbus Avenue
Sandusky, Ohio
GEORGINA E. YATES
3 Hewlett Street
Waterbury, Conn.
HEI-WAN YUNG
52 Caine Road
Hong Kong, China
HELEN V. YATES
3 Hewlett Street
Waterbury, Conn.
RHODA ZIEGLER
580 Walnut Street
Nevvtonville, Mass.
95
MARY C. ZWEIZIG
148 South 5th Street
Reading, Pa.
3ff«rtVr HJpmbrr nf 1922
HELEN WILKINSON
2740 Bostwick Street
Alton, 111.
90
3Fartttpr ilmbpra of 1922
ADOLPH, LAURA S 15+0 Beechwood Blvd., Pittsbiugh, Pa.
AMBLER, GLADYS (Mrs. A. E. Stocker) 800 Seward St., Evanston, III.
ANDERSON, MARTHA H Ladd's Lane, Exeter, N. H.
ANDREWS, KATHERINE L 3145 Berkeley Ave., Bervvyn, 111.
ANKERSON, ELFRIEDE H 138 Overlook St., Mt. Vernon, N. Y.
AVERY, MIRIAM (Mrs. Leslie L. Stafford) 1326 East Wiltetta St., Phoenix, Ariz.
BANCROFT, VIRGINIA B 1615 Race St., Denver, Colo.
BAULD, DOROTHY E High Acres, Framingham Center, Mass.
BEAL, DOROTHY 117 Park St., Montclair, N. J.
BELDEN, ALICE C 34 Scarborough St., Hartford, Conn.
BELL, FRANCES Whitney Ave., New Haven, Conn.
BLISS, HELEN U 369 Merriman Rd., Akron, Ohio
BLOCK, MARJORIE (Mrs. Robert Kuhn, Jr.) Crescent Apts., Avondale, Cincinnati, Ohio
BOLTON, ELIZABETH L 1357 E. 23rd St., Brooklyn, N. Y.
BRISTOL, ELEANOR R Foxboro, Mass.
BRISTOL, MARY LOUISE Foxboro, Mass.
BROWN, MARGARET L 219 Rugby Rd., Brooklyn, N. Y.
BUHL, MARY W 630 Webster Ave., New Rochelle, N. Y.
BUNKER, MARY C 603 Washington St., Worcester, Mass.
CLARK, HELEN 0 926 Judson Ave., Evanston, 111.
CLARKE, HELEN D 304 N. 22nd St., Omaha, Neb.
CLEVELAND, LOIS L. (Mrs. Wm. Kirkland ) Houston, Texas
CONKLIN, LEONORA F Madison, N. J.
CROOKER, MARION A Wanakah, N. Y.
CUMMINGS, FRANCES R 4921 Dorchester, Ave., Chicago, 111.
CURTIS, MARGARET O Amarillo, Texas
DACY, MARION A 120 Riverside Drive, New York City
DAVIES, GLADYS C Madison, N. J.
DAVIES, MARION Pelham Apts., W. Horter St., Mt. Airy, Philadelphia, Pa.
DAVIS, JULIA M Media, Charles Town, West Virginia
DENNO, MILDRED R Castleton, Vt.
DEYO, DOROTHY W 32 North St., Binghamton, N. Y.
DICKSON, JUSTINE V 1115 Michigan Ave., Evanston, 111.
DISBOROUGH, MARGARET 200 W. Cliff St., Somerville, N. J.
DURHAM, ALICE 632 Fortieth St., Des Moines, la.
EASTMAN, HARRIET D 48 Highland Ave., Orange, N. J.
EATON, ELSIE B 522 38th St., W. Rochester, Minn.
ELSING, MARGARET F 195 Euclid Ave., Ridgewood Park, N. J.
FAIRFIELD, DOROTHY East Pepperill, Mass.
FALCONER, ELEANOR D Magdelena, N. M.
FA YE, MARGARET L 3122 Claremont Ave., Berkeley, Cal.
FERNBERG, BABETH 387 Downer PI., Aurora, 111.
FISKE, PRISCILLA H. (Mrs. J. B. Dunbar, Jr.) Whitinsville, Mass.
FITCH, RUTH F. (Mrs. John A. Appelhof) 5254 Maplewood Ave., Detroit, Mich.
FLANNER, MAUD Blackwell, Wis.
FOSTER, GERTRUDE Miles City, Mont.
FRENCH, LOUISE (Mrs. Cyril Wynne) American Embassy, Tokio, Japan
FULLER, DOROTHY South Hadley Falls, Mass.
97
3Fnrmrr fHrmbrrH of 1022- Cont'iuui-d
GARLOCK, ALICE M 9 Williams St., Newark, N. Y.
GOSS, CATHERINE Sherman Ave., Omaha, Neb.
GREEN, FRANCES (Mrs. Wilbur Cross) 21 Buckingham St., Rochester, N. Y.
HAINES, EDNA (Mrs. E. C. Gordon) 1714 Green St., Philadelphia, Pa.
HALFF, EVELYN (Mrs. E. Ruben) Minneapolis, Minn.
HALL, ELIZABETH Youngstown, Ohio
HARPER, LOUISE W Edgemont Station, East St. Louis, 111.
HARRIS, MARGARET E 1136 Portland St., E., E. Pittsburgh, Pa.
HOPPER, MARGUERITE F 337 Prospect Ave., Hackensack, N. J.
HOPSON, FLORENCE A Falmouth Heights, Mass.
HURLEY, MARJORIE C 66 Belcher Ave., Brockton, Mass.
HYPES, MURIEL 1126 Michigan Ave., Evanston, III.
JACKSON, HELEN (Mrs. Lowell MacMasters) Clear Lake, Iowa
JACKSON, MARY Homewood, Miami, Fla.
JEPHERSON, MARY (Mrs. Edwin Buck) Ossining, N. Y.
JONES, ELIZABETH B 4733 Woodlawn Ave., Chicago, III.
JONES, LAURA C Kappa House, Boulder, Colo.
KANE, ROSAMOND 15 Newton St., Brockton, Mass.
KERNS, GERTRUDE 424 E. 2nd St., Ottumwa, Iowa
KILGORE, MARGARET E 127 14th Ave., Columbus, Ohio
KLAUBER, STELLA 4721 Drexel Blvd., Chicago, 111.
KLUGH, VIRGINIA C. (Mrs. I. C. Gaverick) 653 W. 51st St., New York City
KRANTZ, ALICIA A 1310 Main St., Honesdale, Pa.
KUTZ, ELIZABETH S 830 N. 5th St., Reading, Pa.
LEADBEATER, CAROLYN M Fryeburg, Me.
LEAVITT, LOUISE (Mrs. E. M. Davidson) 10720 Fairchild Ave., Cleveland, Ohio
LEEDOM, HELEN 301 W. 1st St., Oil City, Pa.
LIGGETT, FLORABEL 817 N. 9th St., Kansas City, Kan.
LONG, RUTH (Mrs. E. Frond) 281 S. Franklin St., Wilkes-Barre, Pa.
LOUCHEIM, FLORENCE Belvard Apts., 86th St. and Broadway, New York City
LUCAS, ALMIRA 809 Broadway, Paterson, N. J.
McCLINTOCK, SARAH G Phi Beta Phi House, Seattle, Wash.
McGUIRE, DOROTHY C 818 Lovejoy St., Portland, Ore.
MARKS, MADELINE 142 Rutledge Ave., Charleston, S. C.
MARSHALL, DOROTHY M 740 Park PI., Niagara Falls, N. Y.
MARTIN, GRACE B. (Mrs. H. H. Brown) W. Bloomfield, N. Y.
MAUGHS, VIRGINIA 326 West 7th St., Fulton, Mo.
MILLER, B. WINIFRED 96 Middlesex Ave., Swampscott, Mass.
MORGAN, FRANCES E Malverne, N. Y.
MOYER, ELIZABETH 721 Kensington Ave., Plainfield, N. J.
NASH, MARY B 310 Groveland Ave., Minneapolis, Minn.
NASH, MARY E Auburndale, Mass.
NORTON, ELEANOR P 227 Broadway, Norwich, Conn.
O'BRIEN, HELEN C Chatham, N. Y.
OVERFIELD, PERCEVAIL L 207 E. 17th St., Brooklyn, N. Y.
PARIS, MARIAN E 1138 Wilder Ave., Honolulu, T. H.
PARKER, LILLIAN F 29 Gage St., Fitchburg, Mass.
PAYNE, ANNA M Portland, Conn.
PELTON, MARJORIE Lynnfield, Mass.
PHELAN, MARY B 206 Water St., Fitchburg, Mass.
PHILIPS, ELIZABETH P 48 South St., Goshen, N. Y.
98
Satmn fUnnbrra nf 1522 -Continued
POTTER, ELINOR V 103 Miln St., Cranford, N. J.
RAFFEL, MINNIE F 23 Crescent St., Waterbury, Conn.
RIMES, ORA 502 West 60th PI., Chicago, III.
ROGERS, JANET (Mrs. Howe) Wollaston, Mass.
ROTH, JULIA M. (Mrs. Henry Clark) McKeesport, Pa.
RUNDLE, BLANCHE L 53 Hawthorne Ave., East Orange, N. J.
SATTLEY, DOROTHY 5605 Darlington Rd., Pittsburgh, Pa.
SCRIPPS, MARGARET E Rushville 111
SELDEN, CONSTANCE Deep River, Conn^
STERNBERG, ANNA G. A West Hartford, Conn.
STONE, HELEN E 100 Russel Ave., Watertown, Mass.
STRAUSE, LOUISE H. (Mrs. Stern) Gotham Hotel, New York City
TAYLOR, RUTH G 1009 Vine Ave., Williamsport, Pa.
THOMAJIAN, ZAROUHIE 10 Lagrange St., Worcester, Mass.
THUN, MARGARET E Wyomissing, Pa.
WAGNER, DOROTHY 3625 Warwick Blvd., Kansas City, Mo.
WALDHEIM, HELEN S. (Mrs. E. Piatt) St. Louis Mo
WEBSTER, BARBARA H Banchito Rosa, Glendale, Ariz^
WEISER, CATHERINE G New Ulm, Minn.
WETMORE, DOROTHY E 4 Lake View Park, Rochester, N. Y.
WEYL, EMILIE S Elkins Park, Pa.
WILKIN, MARIAN 1329 Classen Blvd., Oklahoma City, Okla.
WILLIAMS, DOROTHY A Yarmouthville, Me.
WILLIAMS, ELIZABETH R 5059 Raymond Ave., St. Louis Mo.
WILLIAMS, HELEN H 316 West 9th St., Pueblo, Col.
WINSTAIN, SARA +44 Union St., Hudson, N. Y.
WOLMAN, LAURA C 28 Main Ave., Gardiner, Me.
WOODWARD, MARGARET C 92 Broadway, Bangor Me
YOST, SARA H Redwood, N. Y.
YOUNG, BEATRICE 15 Lakeview, Arlington, Mass.
3n iKptttnrtam
f tjijUta Allnt
dl^an J»p iFarpHt
99
1922 - IG^g^nba - 1925
(EkHH of 1923
Ojftcers
Edith Brandt President
Janet Warfield Vice-President
Josephine Brown : Recording Secretary
Elizabeth Ehrhart Corresponding Secretary
Helene Bixby Treasurer
Esther Rolfe . . . . \
Elizabeth Abbott V Executive Board
Lorraine Combs )
Madeline Block / r , , .
t ractotums
Victoria Mial '
101
(UlasH nf 1923
ABBOTT, ELIZABETH 27 Nahant Place, Lynn, Mass.
ALDRICH, ADELINE 7 Collins Ave., Troy, N. Y.
ALLEN, ELIZABETH Philipse Manor, North Tarrytown, N. Y.
ALLEN, MARGARET H 1320 Boyle St., N. S., Pittsburgh, Pa.
ALLEN, YOLANDA S 1101 Beacon St., Boston, Mass.
ANDERSON, BERNICE K 1 Mt. Royal Ave., Hamilton, Ont., Canada
ARNOLD, CHARLOTTE W 10 Francis St., Annapolis, Md.
BACHARACH, FLORENCE S 1434 North I7th St., Philadelphia, Pa.
BALDERSTON, STELLA M Wellesley, Mass.
BALL, ELEANOR B Blue Ridge, Summit, Pa.
BARCALO, MARGARET P 617 West Ferry St., Buffalo, N. Y.
B,\RNEY, ROSAMUND 34 Pearl St., New Bedford, Mass.
B.'iRRON, AUDREY 5 Arborway, Jamaica Plain, Mass.
BARTHOLOMEW, MARJORIE Kenmawr Hotel, Pittsburgh, Pa.
BAXTER, HELEN F 309 Westminster Road, Brooklyn, N. Y.
BEECHER, DOROTHY E •. 265 Ames St., Lawrence, Mass.
BELCHER, RUTH M 168 Warren St., Newton Centre, Mass.
BELL, ERMA V 1312 91st Ave., Woodhaven, N. Y.
BENDIG, MARY ELIZABETH 4830 Cedar Ave., Philadelphia, Pa.
BIRKENSTOCK, ELSA 19 Berkley Heights Park, Bloomfield, N. J.
BISHOP, SARAH , 63 Trenton Ave., Morrisville, Pa.
BIXBY, HELENE C Wellesley, Mass.
BLOCK, MADELINE D ■• 4920 Greenwood Ave., Chicago, 111.
BOND, MIRIAM A 468 Pleasant St., Maiden, Mass.
BOND-NELSON, OLIVE E 468 Breckcnridge St., Buffalo, N. Y.
BOSSI, GWENDOLEN ■ ■ . . . Media, Pa.
BRANDT, EDITH R • 4337 Larchwood Ave., Philadelphia, Pa.
BRASH, CATHARINE W 807 North 7th St., Beatrice, Neb.
BRENNAN, MARIE R 236 South Clinton St., East Orange, N. J.
BROWN, R. JOSEPHINE 47 Livingston Ave., Yonkers, N. Y.
BRYAN, ELIZABETH A 2263 Main St., Titusville, Pa.
BUCKINGHAM, KATHARINE 18 Hesketh St., Chevy Chase, Md.
BURCHARD, MARJORIE E 310 Oxford Road, Kenihvorth, 111.
BURNS, HELEN P 2207 Spring Garden St., Philadelphia, Pa.
BURTT, HELEN K 5408 University Ave., Chicago, III.
BUSHNELL, PERSIS W 184 Pearl St., Thompsonville, Conn.
BUTTERFIELD, LOUISE 21 East 31st St., Savannah, Ga.
BUXTON, RUTH 963 Park Ave., Plainfield, N. J.
CALHOUN, SARAH E 33 East Mt. Pleasant Ave., Mt. Airy, Philadelphia, Pa.
CATEN, FLORA H Century Building, Pittsburgh, Pa.
CAVIS, HARRIET Bristol, N. H.
CHAMBERLIN, HANNAH 665 Farmington Ave., Hartford, Conn.
CHANDLER, DORIS L 34 Oakside Ave., Brockton, Mass.
CHAPMAN, ALICE B 11 Hayes St., Norwich, N. Y.
CHICHESTER, EDITH H 619 Lake St., Pctoskey, Mich.
CLEAVELAND, DOROTHY 805 19th St., Rock Island, 111.
CLEVELAND, NORA C 8 Courtland Place, Houston, Texas
COLLINS, LYDIA M 320 Academy Place, Westfield, N. J.
COMBS, LORRAINE A 2100 Lincoln St., Evanston, 111.
102
QIIaBB of ia22—Con/i>n/cd
COOPER, MARY P 62 Caroline St., Ogdensburg, N. Y.
CORWIN, VIRGINIA 787 Vose Ave., Orange, N. J.
COUSINS, MARGERY 2 The Court, Rochelle Park, New Rochelle, N. Y.
COY'KENDALL, WINONA 15 Lenox Place, Maplewood, N. J.
CRAWFORD, JANET 596 Cambridge St., AUston, Mass.
CURRY, A. HAZEL Ford and Fonda Aves., Troy, N. Y'.
DAHILL, ALOY'SE H Robeson St., New Bedford, Mass.
DAILY, MARGARET G 210 4th St., Fall River, Mass.
DALTON, HELEN A 363 Springfield St., Chicopee, Mass.
DARNELL, ALICE H 23 Prospect Ave., Moorestown, N. J.
DAVIES, ELIZABETH G 531 Park Ave., Johnstown, Pa.
DAVIES, HELEN 326 West Horrter St., Mt. Airy, Philadelphia, Pa.
DAY' ALICE M 39 Atno Ave., Morristown, N. J.
DeNIKE, EDITH W •■ +88 Western Ave., Albany, N. Y'.
DODSON DOROTHY L I860 Columbia Rd., Washington, D. C.
DUFFILL HELEN L 51 Stratford Road, Melrose, Mass.
DY'MOND EMILY' 4 Beaconsfield Road, Worcester, Mass.
EHRHART, ELIZABETH G. 440 Carlisle St., Hanover, Pa.
ELLIS, LESBIA 23 Spruceland Ave., Springfield, Mass.
ELY' ESTHER S 5122 Pembroke Place, Pittsburgh, Pa.
EMERY', HELEN A 13 Lebanon St., Sanford, Me.
EVANS, CORNELIA S Franklin, O.
EXTON, BARBARA C 63 Clarkson Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y.
FIELD HELEN E 17 Arlington St., Brockton, Mass.
FISK, ISABELLE E 2203 Fulton Ave., Walnut Hills, Cincinnati, O.
FISKE, MARGARET L 15 Eliot St., Exeter, N. H.
FITCH REBECCA 1033 Elmwood Ave., Wilmette, 111.
FORBES, MARGHERITA C 35 Baltimore St., Lynn, Mass.
FORD SARAH E 6 A Beaconsfield Apartments, Houston, Texas
FOWLER, MARY A 39 Ingersoll Grove, Springfield, Mass.
FOX, DOROTHEA +63 State Road, Cynwyd, Pa.
ERASER, MARY D 216 Kearney Ave., Perth Amboy, N. J.
FREAR, BEATRICE F 7 East Market St., Bethlehem, Pa.
FRENCH, M. CATHERINE 808 West Oklahoma Ave., Enid, Okla.
FRITZ CONSTANCE E 754 Chestnut St., Manchester, N. H.
GALLAGHER, DOCLIE 274 Norwood Ave., Youngstown, O.
GAY, ELIZABETH R 522 East Main St., Lexington, Ky. -,„»
GIBSON, MARY ANNA 403 West 4th Ave., Corsicana, Tex.
GORDON, AGNES K ■ ■ 28 Alton Place, Brookline, Mass.
GRAY, MAUDE B 2515 4th Ave., Los Angeles, Cal.
GRAY'SON, LUISA H Monongahela Rd., Washington, Pa.
GRUENER, JENNETTE R 65 Lawrence St., Fitchburg, Mass.
HACKNEY, MARY •■ 467 Wyoming Place, Milwaukee, Wis.
H.A.GLER, CLARISSA H 1900 West Lawrence Ave., Springfield, 111.
HAINES, ELIZABETH A 54 East Main St., Moorestown, N. J.
HARPER, MILDRED W 1318 Baugh Ave., East St. Louis, 111.
HARVEY, JANE E. B E. Gravers Lane, Chestnut Hill., Philadelphia, Pa.
HASTIE, ELIZABETH H 107 Westervelt Place, Passaic, N. J.
HATHAWAY, MARION J 46 Allen St., Riverpoint, R. I.
HAUPTMAN, FREDA 31 Van Ness Place, Newark, N. J.
1(U
(ClaBB uf 1923 — Conlinued
HAWES, DOROTHY \V East Holliston, Mass.
HAWLEY, ALYS M ■• 517 Park Ave., Syracuse, N. Y.
HEAD, ELIZABETH 436 State St., Bangor, Me.
HENRY, ALINE E 28 Olcott Ave., Bernarrfsville, N. J.
HESKETH, FLORENCE E 246 Edmund Place, Detroit, Mich.
HIGGINS, DORIS M. 46 Cedar St., Maiden, Mass.
HILL, ADELINE B ■• 11 East 127th St., New York, N. Y.
HIRSCH, MARGUERITE H East Dedham, Mass.
HOLLENBECK, ADELAIDE S 22 Curtis Place, Maplewood, N. J.
HOLLOWAY, RACHEL G 461 Fort Washington Ave., New York, N. Y.
HOLT, KATHERINE 949 Kensington Ave., Plainfield, N. J.
HOOGS, MARGARET E 1905 Makiki St., Honolulu, Hawaii
HUGHES, MARY G Box 85, Graham, Va.
IGLEHART, JULIET B 1008 Cathedral St., Baltimore, Md.
INGRAHAM, MARGARET H Oakland, R. I.
JACOB, R. HILDEGARDE Moylan, Pa.
JAMES, CAROLYN 5 West St., Portland, Me.
JAMES, ELIZABETH F 69 Waverly St., Springfield, Mass.
JEMISON, VIRGINIA Altamont Road, Birmingham, Ala.
JOHANBOEKE, LEE 1410 M St., Washington, D. C.
JOHNSON, ELEANOR Hopedale, Mass.
JOHNSON, LUCY B 14 Sacramento St., Cambridge, Mass.
JOHNSON, MARIAN R •• 728 N. W. 3rd Ave., Galva, 111.
JOHNSTON, DOROTHY L 1028 South 2nd St., Springfield, 111.
JONES, KATHARINE 475 Atlantic Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa.
KASUYA, YOSHI Nishisuma, Kobe, Japan
KELLY, ELEANOR L Owl's Nest, Prospect St., East Cleveland, O.
KENT, RUTH A Holloday Ave., Suffield, Conn.
KING, ELIZABETH 78 Lawnwood Ave., Longmeadow, Mass.
KING, H. DORCAS 54 Warner St., Springfield, Mass.
KINGSBURY, KATHARINE K Calhoun Drive, Greenwich, Conn.
KLUNE, EVELYN E 20 Melbourne Place, Buffalo, N. Y.
KRIGER, BARBARA 82 East 3rd St., Corning, N. Y.
LACK, GLADYS 299 Magnolia Ave., Jersey City, N. J.
LADD, CAROLYN T 11 Maple St., East Andover, N. H.
LARIMORE, BETTIE C 1351 Q St., N. W., Washington, D. C.
LEACH, DOROTHY 534 Post Road, Fairfield, Conn.
LEAVITT, MARGARET G Purcell, Okla.
LEITH, ALEXANDRA 6B Cambridge Apartments, Baltimore, Md.
LEWIS, KATHLEEN G 157 West 79th St., New York, N. Y.
LIGGETT, VERNITA Mount Vernon, Wash.
LOUD, PRISCILLA 1515 5th Ave., Bay City, Mich.
LUDLUM, KATE A 57 Highland Ave., Jamaica, N. Y.
LYBRAND, E. GRACE 72 South Whipple St., Lowell, Mass.
McCarthy, MARY R 21 Cotting Ave., Marlboro, Mass.
McCLURE, JULIA B 413 Franklin Ave., Vandergrift, Pa.
McCULLOCH, CATHARINE W 707 Noyes St., Evanston, 111.
McCULLOCH, MARGARET C. 446 Center St., Orange, N. J.
MacDOUGALL, JANET 55 Franklin St.. Bristol, R. I.
104
fillaBH nf 1B23 — Continued
McJUNKIN, RUTH 7 Bodwell St., Hartford, Conn.
McMASTER, ESTHER L Jamestown, Pa.
M.\COMBER, DOROTHY 6321 Kenmore Ave., Chicago, III.
MARINE, DOROTHY ... P. O. Box 483, Glendale, Ariz.
MARSH, KATHARINE A 712 American Bank Building, Kansas City, Mo.
MARSH, RUTH 'TT... ■■.. 712 Atkinson Ave., Detroit, Mich.
MARTENIS, RUTH B 315 Ridgewood Ave., Glen Ridge, N. J.
MATHIESEN, ANNA 124 East Washington St., lovra City, la.
MATTHEWS, RUTH E 15 Oakland Ave., Brockton, Mass.
MAY, HILDA M 152 Summer Ave., Springfield, Mass.
MAYNE, MIRIAM R 139 Bay 17th St., Brooklyn, N. Y.
MERRICK, ESTHER 1252 Waverly Place, Elizabeth, N. J.
MERWIN, FLORENCE L 49 Spencer St., Winsted, Conn.
MERZ, DOROTHY R Maysville, Ky.
METHENY, MARGERY 4302 Chestnut St., Philadelphia, Pa.
METHFESSEL, HELEN E 606 West Ellsworth St., Waverly, la.
MEYER, EDITH L 261 Orange Road, Montclair, N. J.
MIAL, VICTORIA L 38 Elm St., Morristown, N .J.
MILNE, ELIZABETH •. 641 West 6th St., Erie, Pa.
MOORE, RUTH T 48 North Whitney St., Hartford, Conn.
MORRIS, CONSTANCE 1 714 Marquette Building, Chicago, 111.
MOSES, FRANCES 68 Whittier St., Andover, Mass.
MUMFORD, HELEN J 17 Stearns St., Newton Center, Mass.
NOYES, MABEL R 25 Auburn St., Nashua, N. H.
OLDRIEVE, HELEN L Holmes St., South Hanson, Mass.
OSGOOD, MARJORIE C 79 Pennsylvania Ave., Newark, N. J.
OTT, IRENE 523 Wahl Ave., Milwaukee, Wis.
PACKER, NATALIE 518 Church St., Boundbrook, N. J.
PARKER, HOPE 39 Nonantum St., Newton, Mass.
PARSONS, CONSTANCE 131 8th Ave., La Grange, 111.
PARSONS, ESTHER Bradford Road, Wellesley Hills, Mass.
PAYNE, ANNA R 603 Wyoming Ave., Kingston, Pa.
PEDERSON, E. RUTH 97 Reade St., New York, N. Y.
PFALZGRAF, FLORENCE L 32 Woodland Road, Maplewood, N. J.
PIRIE, ISOBEL 162 Prospect Place, Brooklyn, N. Y.
PLUMMER, DOROTHY' 140 Eastern Promenade, Portland, Me.
duPONT, VICTORINE 993 Charles River Road, Cambridge, Mass.
POOLE, HELEN F R. F. D. 1, Fairmont, W. Va.
PORTER, HELEN F 24 Linden St., Wellesley, Mass.
PRESTON, CATHARINE F 365 Walnut St., Roanoke, Va.
PRICE, LOUISE D 24 Temple St., Brockton, Mass.
RABINOWITZ, SOPHIE H 220 Sackett St., Providence, R. I.
R.\DLEY, MARION 251 East Broad St., Bethlehem, Pa.
RAUH, LOUISE 752 South Crescent Ave., Cincinnati, O.
RESCH, HELEN L 124 Scott St., Youngstown, O.
REYMANN, E. IRENE 6326 Burbridge St., Germantown, Pa.
RHODES, CAROL B 507 Potomac Ave., Buffalo, N. Y.
RICHARDSON, ALICE M 119 Harrison Ave., Montclair, N. J.
RIVENBURG, MARJORIE J .^ 359 South Main St., Hightstown, N. J.
ROBBINS, ADELAIDE .' 215 Livingston, St., New Haven, Conn.
105
(ElaBH nf 1923 — Continued
ROBBINS, MABEL Ritzville, Wusli.
ROBERTS, BARBARA S Elkins Park, Pa.
ROGERS, DOROTHY L •• 16 Crandall St., Binghamton, N. Y.
ROGERS, ETHEL M 1 Wallace St., Newark, N. J.
ROLFE, ESTHER C 4014 Pine St., Philadelphia, Pa.
ROUND, ELIZABETH \V 90 Broad St., Newburgh, N. Y.
RUSSELL, MARY H. 380 Riverside Drive, Nevf York, N. Y.
SANFORD, ELIZABETH 26 North West Ave., Freeport, 111.
SCHLIVEK, BLANCHE Union Village, Woonsocket, R. I.
SCHULTZ, ELLEN L 120 Blancke St., Linden, N. J.
SCOTT, CLARISSA M ■ 239 Florida Ave., N. W., Washington, D. C.
SCOVILLE, NADINE E 16 Frederick St., Waterbury, Conn.
SCRIMGEOUR, DOROTHY E 23 Hickory Drive, Maplewood, N. J.
SCUDDER, HELEN 161 George St., New Brunswick, N. J.
SEELYE, MARION G 20 Coolidge Ave., Glens Falls, N. Y.
SEYDEL, FRANCES LOUISE 143 Lafayette Ave., N. E., Grand Rapids, Mich.
SHERRARD, LAURA D. 55 Lake Shore Road, Grosse Pointe Farms, Mich.
SHINDEL, ISABEL D 121 West Broad St., Tamaqua, Pa.
SHIRLEY, MARY R. F. D. 2, Manchester, N. H.
SHOTWELL, LOUISA R Skaneateles, N. Y.
SHULTS, GERTRUDE M Lakemont, N. Y'.
SIBLEY, MARJORIE L 20 Circuit Ave., Worcester, Mass.
SINE, LUCILE 936 Gait Ave., Chicago, III.
SMALL, KEITH LOUISE 4042 Live Oak St., Dallas, Tex.
SMITH, DOROTHEA A 927 North Calvert St., Baltimore, Md.
SMITH, FRANCES M 132 Washington St., Painesville, O.
SMITH, GLADYS N Orange Ave., Milford, Conn.
SMITH, JANET K 1249 Judson Ave., Evanston, III
SMITH, JULIA R 146 North Essex .\ve.. Orange, N. J.
SMITH, RACHEL L 51 Laurel St., Branford, Conn.
SNIFFEN, ALICE C The Boulevard, Hampton, Va.
SPINNEY, DOROTHY B. Elm St., North Berwick, Me.
SPRINGER, DOROTHY L 2 March Way, West Roxbury, Mass.
STAHL, HELEN H 190 Emery St., Berlin, N. H.
STAPLES, MARY G. 293 Court St., Auburn, Me.
STEVENS, SUZANNE E 619 West Hancock Ave., Detroit, Mich.
STIMSON, SUSAN E Washington, 111.
STOCKBRIDGE, ELIZABETH L 45 Elston Road, Upper Montclair, N. J.
STOLZ. REGINA 718 East Jefferson St., Syracuse, N. Y.
STRYKER, SUE B 155 Belvidere Ave., Washington, N. J.
SWETLAND, RUTH K Peddie Institute, Hightstown, N. J.
TAKIZAWA, MATSUYO Utsunomiya, Japan
TAUB, ROSA B 2016 Travis St., Houston, Tex
TAYLOR, ELEANOR M Charlestown, Md.
THOMAS, NAOMA R 2 Forbes Terrace, East, East Pittsburgh, Pa.
TREADWELL, E. FRANCES 26 Jason St., Arlington, Mass.
TYLER, MARJORIE E 721 Cherry St., Rockford, III.
VAN HORSEN, WINIFRED 53 Marshall St., Newton Center, Mass.
VAN SAUN, ELTSE li 200 Hampton St., Cranford, N. J.
VERGASON, HELEN C Norwich Town, Conn.
106
(SlaSB nf 1923 — Continued
VOLK, DOROTHY V 4208 Swiss Ave., Dallas, Tex.
WALLACE, JOSEPHINE Dublin Road, Greenwich, Conn.
WALLACH, PAULINE H 95 North Broadway, White Plains, N. Y.
WALSH, MARJORIE J 204 East Main St., Morris, 111.
WARDEN, MARY L 260 Liberty St., Newburgh, N. Y.
WARFIELD, JANET M 519 Highland Ave., Montclair, N. J.
WATERMAN, IDA M 145 Harrison Ave., Westfield, N. J.
WATKINS, LOUISE 0 1637 Makiki St., Honolulu, Hawaii
WEBBER, IDA M • 27 Sycamore St., Holyoke, Mass.
WEED, L. DENTON 59 Main St., Binghamton, N. Y.
WHEATLAND, HELEN M 84 John St., Newport, R. I.
WHEELER, MARY A East Longmeadow, Mass.
WHITE, MARY A. 137 North Harrisburg Ave., Atlantic City, N. J.
WHITE, RUTH L 124 Circular Ave., Pittsfield, Mass.
WILDER, EMMA M 361 Austin St., West Newton, Mass.
WILLARD, MARGARET Madison Conn.
WILLIAMS, BESSIE M Skaneateles, N. Y,
WILLIS, EDNA Gorham, N. H.
WILSON, CONSTANCE C Valley Road, Nahant, Mass.
WILSON, DOROTHY A 15 Horton St., Newburyport, Mass.
WILSON, THEODATE P Purcellville, Va.
ZEISER, MARGARET J 82 Carey Ave., Wilkes-Barre, Pa.
ZIMMERMANN, EDITH J 511 Juneau Place, Milwaukee, Wis.
ZIMMERMANN, HELEN R 3982 Acushmet Ave., New Bedford, Mass.
4.1
107
IBZZ - fogntba - 1922
(EkHH of 1924
Officers
Carroll McCarty President
Frances Kinghorn Vice-President
Constance Towner, R Recording Secretary
Dorothea Schmedtgen Corresponding Secretary
Jeannette Johnson Treasurer
Florence C. E. Anderson Executive Board
Cary B. Millholland
Joy Scheidenhelm 1
J. Virginia Berresford I Fariotums
Virginia English
108
(Elaaa nf 1924
ABBOTT, KATHERINE V 606 E. Military Ave., Fremont, Neb.
ACLV, H. ELIZABETH 155 Richmond Road, Pittsfield, Mass.
ADAMS, KATHERINE A Wellesley, Mass.
ALBEE, HARRIET I ■.. 5 Liberty St., Concord, N. H.
ALLEN, CHARLOTTE L • 1 143 Shady Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa.
ALLEN, GLADYS B 91 Broad St., Waymouth, Mass.
ALLEN, HARRIET VV 57 Frost St., Cambridge, Mass.
ALTMAN, FRIEDA 30 Esmond St., Dorchester, Mass.
ANDERSON, FLORENCE C. E Short Hills, N. J.
ARNOLD, MARY G 373 Broadway, Paterson, N. J.
ARONOFF, SARAH 1 148 Pine St., Auburndale, Mass.
ATKINSON, H. JOSEPHINE Halley, Pa.
AVERY, ELIZABETH 221 North St., Peoria, 111.
B.\BBITT, ELIZABETH C 2728 Nuanu Ave., Honolulu, Hawaii
B.-XOG, BABARA 840 Riverdale St., West Springfield, Mass.
BARCLAY, ATHLEEN 90 Lexington Ave., Holyoke, Mass.
BARNEY, KATHARINE 38 Pearl St., New Bedford, Mass.
BARTLETT, MARTHA L. HI South Carolina Ave., Atlantic City, N. J.
BEATON, HELEN K 24 Bridge St., Manchester-by-the-Sea, Mass.
BERGEN, PHEBE S •■ 112 Flushing Ave., Jamaica, N. Y.
BERRESFORD, J. VIRGINIA 520 West 114th St., New York, N. Y.
BIGGS, HELEN 606 66th Ave., Oak Lane, Philadelphia, Pa.
BLACK, ELIZABETH S. . Holland Farms, Garret, Pa.
BL.'MSDELL, DORIS C Hotel Hemenway, Boston, Mass.
BLANCHARD, EMILY L 16 Daily St., Nutley, N. J.
BLODGETT, HOPE 14 Mishawum Road, Woburn, Mass.
BLUM, ADELAIDE L. 4716 Ventnor St., Atlantic City, N. J.
BOAL, AUGUSTA W Roncevert, W. Va.
BOGGESS, ELIZABETH F 45 Weissinger-Gaulbert Apts., Louisville, Ky.
BORG, DOROTHY Irvington-on-Hudson, N. Y.
BOSLEY, KATHARINE 171 Highland Ave., Buffalo, N. Y.
BROWN, ELEANOR 3425 Holmes St., Kansas City, Mo.
BROWN, KATHARINE M 55 Maple Ave., Hastings-on-Hudson, N. Y.
BROWN, MARGARET E 5051 Walnut St., Philadelphia, Pa.
BRUCE, DOROTHY 305 West Franklin St., Richmond, Va.
BRUCH, HELEN J 1201 Greenwood .^ve., Wilmette, 111.
BRUSH, M,. LOUISE Fitchville, Conn.
BUETHE, ELIZABETH C 4723 Kenwood Ave., Chicago, 111.
BUNKER, RUTH M 6 Macopin Ave., Upper Montclair, N. J.
BURGHER, LAURA H 3015 Oaklawn Ave., Dallas, Texas
BURR, M.-VRGARET 943 Summit Ave., St. Paul, Minn.
BUSSER, HELEN E 720 Westview Ave., Germantown, Pa.
CALDWELL, ANNE D. 206 16th Ave., Columbus, Ohio
CAMPBELL, EDNA M 242 Belmont St., Wollaston, Mass.
CAMPBELL, MARGARET M 380 Richmond Ave., Buffalo, N. Y.
CARLEY, HELEN K 151 11th St., Lowell, Mass.
CARPENTER, M. LUCILLE 5300 Oak St., Kansas City, Mo.
CARROLL, MARY LEE Homewood, Elioak, Md.
CARTER, ELEANOR K. 306 Glen St., Glen Falls, N. Y.
109
(UlasH nf \^i2-\—Co>itl>i!iiyl
CASE, BESSIE B 1140 Martine Ave., Plainfiekl, N. J.
CASE, GENEVIEVE C 127 VVarrenton Ave., Hartford, Conn.
CHALKLEY, HANNAH 920 Kirby St., Lake Charles, La.
CHANDLER, MARY 341 Brook St., Providence, R. I.
CHESTNUT, ALICE L 1817 Frankford Ave., Philadelphia, Pa.
CHILD, LOUISE A 645 171st St., New York, N. Y.
CLAPP, MARTHA S 5418 University Ave., Chicago, 111.
CLARK, GLADYS 2 Bellevue Place, Auburn, N. Y.
CLIFT, GERTRUDE G 101 West River St., Wilkes-Barre, Pa.
CODDING, MILDRED B 14 Putnam St., Somerville, Mass.
COLBY, MARY D 24 Vinton St., Melrose, Mass.
COLLINS, HELEN M 84 Montauk Ave., New London, Conn.
COLPITTS, LEOTA C 410 Prospect St., Fall River, Mass.
COLV^'ELL, JANE H • • . . 423 West Court St., Paris, 111.
CONGER, BARBARA L 823 North Prairie St., Galesburg, III.
CONWELL, AGNES E 17 Monmouth St., Somerville, Mass.
COOPER, ELIZABETH M 22 Frank St., East Haven, Conn.
CRAWFORD, MARY E. P 333 East 10th Ave., Tarentum, Pa.
CROSBY, HILDA 249 North Oxford St., Hartford, Conn.
CUDEBEC, CEVIRA . - 7 Rue de Tilsitt, Paris, France
CUNNINGHAM, KATHERINE Bellefield Dwellings, Center Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa.
CURRY, LALIAH 12 Bennett Road, Newton Highlands, Mass.
VAN DAELL, IRMGART E 17 Scott St., Cambridge, Mass.
DALTON, DORIS 72 Addington Rd., Brookline, Mass.
DANZIS, FLORENCE M 608 High St., Newark, N. J.
DAVIDSON, ANNA PARKER 1825 Adams Ave., Scranton, Pa.
DAVIDSON, NANCY C 846 Washington St., Norwood, Mass.
DAVIS, DOROTHY ■■ Beaver St., Sewickley, Pa.
DAWES, MARIAN 1 803 Chicago Ave., Evanston, 111.
DEAN, ELIZABETH A 46 Alderman St., Springfield, Mass.
DEWING, DOROTHY L 6 Woodland St., Arlington, Mass.
DIACK, JESSIE M 1 Diack Place, North Troy, N. Y.
DIETS, MARION M 65 Cottage St., Jersey City, N. J.
DIXON, LOUISE 32nd St., Chestnut Hill, Philadelphia, Pa.
DOMOTO, YUKI 5000 Melrose Ave., Oakland, Cal.
DORRANCE, KATHARINE 307 William St., East Orange, N. J.
DRAPER, MARY B 225 Meigs St., Rochester, N. Y.
DROWN, LAURA Denville, N. J.
DURKES, LEONA 722 East Fellows St., Dixon, 111.
DURST, LOUISE •■ 1553 Madison Ave., Covington, Ky.
EARP, RUTH Drew Forest, Madison, N. J.
EASTMAN, HELEN L 14 Pelham Terrace, Arlington, Mass.
EASTON, FRANCES 15 Westminster St., Providence, R. I.
EDDY, MARION J 4 Warren Place, Montclair, N. J.
EDWARDS, LOUISE H 5870 Clemens Ave., St. Louis, Mo.
EGBERT, AMIE D 39 Elm Rock Road, Bronxville, N. Y.
EISELE, DELLA L 425 Clay Ave., Scranton, Pa.
EISEMAN, WILMA E 2 Vermont Apts., Atlantic City, N. J.
ELLINWOOD, MARY E 567 Superior St., Milwaukee, Wis.
ELLIS, HARRIET +53 Wyoming Place, Milwaukee, Wis.
no
(ElaBB lit" 1924 — Continued
ELLIS, RUTH H New Haven Ave., Ansonia, Conn.
ELLSWORTH, ELEANOR \V 192 North Whitney St., Hartford, Conn.
ENGLISH, VIRGINIA 71 Bentley Ave., Jersey City, N. J.
EPSTEIN, GLADYS L 586 Farwell Ave., Milwaukee, Wis.
EVERETT, CONSTANCE A 200 10th St., Waseca, Minn.
EWART, MIRIAM R. . +8 Central Ave., Milton, Mass.
FAISSLER, MARGARETA A 508 Somonauk St., Sycamore, 111.
FALES, MAY LOUISE •4 Parmenter Ave., Troy, N. Y.
F.-\RBOUGH, VIRGINIA 1259 Harbert Ave., Memphis, Tenn.
FARIS, BETHANN B. . 4005 Baltimore Ave., Philadelphia, Pa.
F.ARMER, LOIS B 8 Draper Terrace, Montclair, N. J.
PENNING, KATHARINE H 3317 Newark St., N. W., Washington, D. C.
FIELD, ELIZABETH 4815 Walton Ave., West Philadelphia, Pa.
FIELDING, KATHARINE L. D. 130 Ridge St., Glens Falls, N. Y.
FISHER, ELEANORE L Harrington St., Rochester, N. Y.
FISHER, GLADYS L 910 Ocean Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y.
FISHER, LUCY H 74 Woodland St., Worcester, Mass.
FLAGG, GWENDOLYN 70 Carroll St., Portland, Me.
FLEMING, JOAN 1401 North Main St., Bloomington, 111.
FOLEY, FRANCES ELIZABETH 5354 Delmar Ave., St. Louis, Mo.
FORD, DOROTHY •■ 41 Bath St., Clifton Forge, Va.
de FOREST, MAY 955 Hillside Ave., Plainfield, N. J.
FOX, MARY W 1709 S St., N. W., Washington, D. C.
FR.\CKLETON, MARY LOUISE 1924 East 75th St., Cleveland, Ohio
FRANC, RUTH L 120 West 70th St., New York, N. Y.
ERASER, ELIZABETH 1427 Seyburn Ave., Detroit, Mich.
FREEMAN, BARBARA •■.... 83 Ridgewood Ave., Glen Ridge, N. J.
FREEMAN, ESTELLE 414 South Jefferson Ave., Saginaw, Mich.
FRIEDMAN, AGNES D ■■ 464-2 Lindell Boulevard, St. Louis, Mo.
FRUMBERG, DORIS V 39 Kingsbury Place, St. Louis, Mo.
FURLONG, FRANCES D 74 Linwood Ave., Youngstown, Ohio
GANZEL, JOYCE L ■■■■ 633 Westfield Ave., Westfield, N. J.
GAYLORD, HELEN L 137 Lake Ave., Saratoga Springs, N. Y.
GEHRING, EMMA R ■ • 11427 Bellflower Road, Cleveland, Ohio
GEORGE, ISABEL L 214 Sterling St., Watertown, N. Y.
GIST, MARGARET A P- O. Box 643, Cisco, Texas
GLEICHAUF, ELEANOR W 36 Girton Place, Rochester, N. Y.
GORDON, ALICE 332 Cornelia St., Boonton, N. J.
GOUDEY, DOROTHY H 157 Clark Road, Brookline, Mass.
GRANT, DELNOCE E Bureau of Engraving, Peking, China
GRANT, M. LOUISE .• 5 Whittier St., East Orange, N. J.
GREEN, LYDIA 325 Long Hill, Springfield, Mass.
GRIER, ELIZABETH • • • 141 Summer St., Maiden, Mass.
GRIMES, CAROLYN R 146 East Haverhill St., Lawrence, Mass.
GROSSMAN, ETHEL B • 210 Riverside Drive, New York, N. Y.
GULLETTE, ANNA P 52 Bryn Mawr Ave., Trenton,, N. J.
HALL, C. ANNIS ■• 37 Crooke Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y.
HALL, LILIAN 101 York Ave., Towanda, Pa.
HANCOCK, MARY A 1018 2nd St., S. W., Roanoke, Va.
HANDY, CLAR.'V T 120 Townsend Ave., Stapleton, N. Y.
Ill
QIIaaB iif 1924 — Coniiinwd
HARRIS, A. HOPE 3001 Dent Place, Washington, D. C.
HAYWARD, C. VIOLET 0 11 Garfield Place, Upper Montclair, N. J.
HEAPHY, DOROTHY B 308 West 103rd St., New York, N. Y.
HELLER, RUTH ■ ■ 108 West 57th St., New York, N. Y.
HELMRATH, CHARLOTTE 99 Woodland Ave., Summit, N. J.
HICKS. VIRGINIA 2926 Nebraska St., Sioux City, la.
HIGBEE, RUTH 1131 South Pittsburgh St., Connellsville, Pa.
HOAGLAND, NORNA V 76 Elmwood Place, Bridgeport, Conn.
HOAGLAND, WILHELMINA T 334 Parkside Drive, Peoria, III.
HODGDON, N.XTALIE 65 Cross St., Maiden, Mass.
HOLBROOK, MARGARET K 49 Dudley St., Medford, Mass.
HOLDEN, LOUISE P ..... 284 Wilder St., Lowell, Mass.
HOLMES, HELEN F 25 East Lincoln Ave., Mount Vernon, N. Y.
HORTON, MARION ■ 94 Merry Mount Road, Quincy, Mass.
HUNT, E. VIRGINIA 1913 Kenyon St., Washington, D. C.
HURD, CATHERINE ■■ 368 Fairgreen Ave., Youngstown, Ohio
HUTCHINSON, YSABEL 1010 Worcester St., Framingham Center, Mass.
ILIFF, LUCINDA M • ■ 5527 Pulaski Ave., Germantown, Pa.
JACKSON, MARY ELIZABETH, 2832 West Park Boulevard, Shaker Heights, Cleveland, O.
JACKSON, PHOEBE G Toulon, III.
JACKSON, RUTH LEE 1731 Columbia Road, Washington. D. C.
JOHNSON, ELIZABETH 1039 Murrayhill Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa.
JOHNSON, JEANNETTE 2171 Overlook Road, Euclid Heights, Cleveland, Ohio
JOHNSON, RUTH A Bellevue, la.
JONES, ANNE MARY 210 Beech Tree Lane, Wayne, Pa.
JONES, MARGARET A Rice Hotel, Houston, Texas
JOSEPH, ALICE -. 113 Hodge Ave., Buffalo, N. Y.
KARPELES, CLAIRE L 146 West Chelten Ave., Germantown, Pa.
KESSLER, RUTH Smethport, Pa.
KINGHORN, FRANCES 33 Cushing St., Providence, R. I.
KIRKHAM, ELIZABETH F 120 Clarendon St., Springfield, Mass.
KNAEBEL, KATHARINE W 1707 Morrison St., Chevy Chase, Washington, D. C.
KRUPP, PAULA 901 West Boulevarde, El Paso, Texas
LAMB, CYNTHIA 2652 Lafayette St., Denver, Col.
LAMB, MARY E • 2541 Baldwin Ave., Detroit, Mich.
LAMONT, ETHEL 224 Ballantine Parkway, Newark, N. J.
LANGDON, DORIS Plymouth, Conn.
LEE, MURIEL 210 South Euclid Ave., Westfield, N. J.
LEINBACH, ALICE 247 South 6th St., Reading, Pa.
LEUSSLER, VIRGINIA M •• 1137 South 31st St., Omaha, Neb.
LEVY, ALICE F 10 West 90th St., New York, N. Y.
LEWIS, DOROTHY O • ■ 12 Washington Ave., Warren, Ohio
LINHART, LOIS 4100 Allequippa St., Pittsburgh, Pa.
LIPSCOMB, SARAH W •■ 330 22nd Ave., Nashville, Tenn.
LOEB, ELEANOR S 101 States Ave., Atlantic City, N. J.
LOTHROP, ELLEN W 414 Elmwood Ave., Buffalo, N. Y.
LOVELAND, MARTHA D 19 Magoun Ave., Medford, Mass.
LUCE, ELIZABETH 514 West 122nd St., New York, N. Y.
LUKENS, CLARA •• 132 Westfield Ave., Elizabeth, N. J.
LYON, JEAN D 44 Point St., Yonkers, N. Y.
112
(fllaBB Uf 1924 — Continued
LYON, SYLVIA S 24 Beverly Road, Hartford, Conn.
McCARTY, CARROLL 149 Lake St., Hamburg, N. Y.
McCOY, EDA 724 South Negley Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa.
McFARLAND, MARY F Widridge, West Chester, Pa.
McINTYRE, FRANCES 206 St. Mark's Square, Philadelphia, Pa.
McKERNON, EMMA P. O. Box 99 Framingham, Mass.
McKINNEY, CONSTANCE 10 Houston Ave., Middletown, N. Y.
MACKINTOSH, C. JANE 1625 East 115th St., Cleveland, Ohio
McNAMARA, HELEN C. 353 School St., Webster, Mass.
MADDEN, MOLLIE W. . . . Hays, Kas.
MALTBY, LOUISE E 18 Bradley Ave., West Haven, Conn.
M ARCUS, MILDRED 16 Chamberlin Parkway, Worcester, Mass.
MARKS, NANETTE H 894 Myrtle Ave., Albany, N. Y.
MARSHALL, FRANCES 674 Glynn St., Detroit, Mich.
MARSHALL, LILLIAN M 71 Summer St., Everett, Mass.
MARTIN, MARION E 166 Webster Ave., Bangor, Me.
MASON, CAROL Y 27 Bailey Road, Watertown, Mass.
MATHEWSON, MARIAN C Vineyard Haven, Mass.
MAYER, GLADYS D 400 Penn St., Huntingdon, Pa.
MAYO, OLIVE D 1457 Seminole Ave., Detroit, Mich.
MEGAHAN, HELEN E 900 West 3rd St., Williamsport, Pa.
MEIER, FLORENCE E 177 State St., Framingham Center, Mass.
MERITT, KATHLEEN E 46 1st Ave., Gloversville, N. Y.
MIAL, KATHRYN 38 Elm St., Morristown, N. J.
MILLHOLLAND, CARY B 2306 California St., Washington, D. C.
MILLS, ALICE E 16 Harriet Ave., Waverley, Mass.
MITCHELL, MARGARET B 54 King St., Bristol, Va.
MOFFAT, K. LOUISE 437 Maple Ave., Edgewood, Pittsburgh, Pa.
MONTGOMERY, MARGARET 918 John's Road, Augusta, Ga.
MOORE, ELABEL 218 W. 13th St., Anderson, Ind.
MORRISON, MARION 204 Broadway, Youngstown, O.
MORSE, M. HALLET 1459 East 4th St., Brooklyn, N. Y.
NELSON, MARGARET 113 Winthrop St., Augusta, Me.
NICHOLS, MARGARET S 804 Strong Ave., Elkhart, Ind.
NORD, ELSA C. E 116 Bush St., Jamestown, N. Y.
NORRIS, NATALIE E 649 North Main St., Bellefontaine, O.
NORTH, CORNELIA B 53 Livingston St., New Haven, Conn.
NORTON, SUSAN 992 Charles River Road, Cambridge, Mass.
NOYES, HELEN 21 Barton St., Newburyport, Mass.
NOYES, MARGARET 1233 Judson Ave., Evanston, 111.
NYE, GERTRUDE Brush Hill, West Springfield, Mass.
O'BRIEN, E. MILDRED 634 East Gansevoort St., Little Falls, N. Y.
OSBORN, EDITH 89 North Walnut St., East Orange, N. J.
OSBORN, HELEN 89 North Walnut St., East Orange, N. J.
PAGE, ELLEN S 3 Colonial Place, Pittsburgh, Pa.
PAIGE, ELIZABETH 420 Oak Grove St., Minneapolis, Minn.
PAINE, MARGARET E 5 8th Ave., Spokane, Wash.
PARKER, MARIAN 516 West 3rd St., Oil City, Pa.
PARKER, MILDRED J 15 Perry St., Danvers, Mass.
PASCHAL, ELIZABETH 2221 Faraon St., St. Joseph, Mo.
113
(ElaSB Uf 1U24 — Omlinucd
PATTON, FRANCES L 320 South SJiid St., Omaha, Neb.
PAUL, CAROLINE N Wakefield, N. H.
P.WTON, SUSANNA H 901 Mechanic St., Emporia, Kansas
PECK, JANE W 30 Mt. Pleasant Ave., Wyoming, O.
PECKHAM, ELOISE M P. O. Box 374, Newport, R. L
PERKINS, EDITH B 321 Glenside Road, South Orange, N. J.
PERKINS, MARGARET S 32 West South St., Wilkes-Barre, Pa.
PERKINS, POLLY 2 Crescent Place, Walnut Hills, Cincinnati, O.
PETERS, LOUISE M 726 East 23rd St., Paterson, N. J.
PHELPS, CHRISTINA .• 441 Park Ave., New York, N. Y.
PHILLIPS, MARY CATHERINE 210 Walnut St., Montclair, N. J.
PHILLIPS, RUTH I 214 Lincoln Ave., Amherst, Mass.
PIKE, KATHERINE 65 Church St., Winchester, Mass.
PIPER, NESTA ■■ Sudbury, Mass.
PLATNER, JOSEPHINE 1 10 North 54th St., Omaha, Neb.
POHLSON, MARY ELISABETH 18 Orchard St., Pawtucket, R. I.
POMEROY, KATHERINE M •• 27 Cayuga St., Seneca Falls, N. Y.
POWERS, LAURA 237 Wayland Ave., Providence, R. 1.
PRESBREY, PRISCILLA Little Falls, N. Y.
PRIEST, ELEANOR 45 Wend all Ave., Schenectady, N. Y.
RAFFERTY, FRANCES V 338 Elm St., Gardner, Mass.
RAIGUEL, CATHERINE F 735 South Prospect Ave., Grand Rapids, Mich.
RAND, KATHARINE 71 Warren St., Needham, Mass.
RAUH, LOUISE W • • 987 Marion Ave., Avondale, Cincinnati, O.
READ, ELIZABETH K Sharpless and Mountain Aves., Melrose Park, Pa.
REISS, MURIEL A 168 Roseville Ave., Newark, N. J.
REMIEN, MARIE K 527 Briar. Place, Chicago, 111.
RENNINGER, DOROTHY M 622 North Front St., Reading, Pa.
REX, MILLICENT B 631 North 5th St., Reading, Pa.
REYNOLDS, VIRGINIA H 521 Madison Ave., Lakewood, N. J.
RICHARDSON, ANNIS C Ivy Ave., Glendale, O.
RICHARDSON, RUTH A 119 Harrison Ave., Montclair, N. J.
ROBERTS, A. MYFANWY 424 East 5th St., Mount Vernon, N. Y.
ROBINSON, CAROLYN A 101 Hillside Ave., Newark, N. J.
ROSEBRUGH, L. ELEANOR 120 Circle Road, Syracuse, N. Y.
ROSENBAUM, HELEN S 298 Grove St., Montclair, N. J.
RUBACK, LAURA H 510 Pawling Ave., Troy, N. Y.
RUSSELL, MARION D 13 Allston St., Dorchester, Mass.
SANDERS, LOUISE 820 West 6th St., Austin, Texas
SANFORD, CORA G 12 Bull St., Newport, R. I.
SAVAGE, LUCILLE D. 40 Wellington Ave., Rochester, N. Y.
SAYLOR, E. JOSEPHINE 407 Walnut St., Reading, Pa.
SCHAEFER, BEATRICE C 27 South Main St., Middletown, Conn.
SCHAEFER, MAR(JARET J 265 Wilson Ave., Beaver, Pa.
SCIIEIDENHELM, JOY 704 Lake Ave., Wilmettc, 111.
SCHMALTZ, MARIAN J •■... 4949 Woodlavvn Ave., Chicago, 111.
SCHMEDTGEN, DOROTHEA 710 Greenleaf Ave., Wilmette, 111.
SCOTT, ALVA B 68 Washington Square, New York, N. Y.
SEEMAN, JANET 425 West End Ave., New York, N. Y.
SELLER, KATHARINE A. 795 Flanders St., Portland, Ore.
114
(ClasB nf lS24—ContiiiuiY/
SHANKS, MARGARET ■ Stanford, Kv.
SHEEHAN, MILDRED F 519 llth St., Bowling Green, Ky.
SHERWOOD, ELEANOR 77 South Munn Ave., East Orange, N. J.
SIMPERS, ELLA T 125 Grandview Road, Ardmore, Pa.
SKELHORNE, HAZEL M. 4 Avalon Place, Worcester, Mass.
SKINNER, MARGARET V. L Webster Cottage, Hanover, N. H.
SMART, HELEN E 45 Deepdene Road, Forest Hills. N. Y.
SMART, PEARL B 10 Wadleigh St., Exeter, N. H.
SMITH, ANNA M 557 Wyoming Ave., Wyoming, Pa.
SMITH, BEATRICE M Beechmont, New Rochelle, N. V.
SMITH, DOROTHY E First National Bank, Colorado Springs, Col.
SMITH, JEAN T 252 Hague Ave., Detroit, Mich.
SPEER, MARION L 6 Hope St., Stamford, Conn.
SPEER, WILDA R 821 West 178th St., New York, N. Y.
SPENCER, MARY J 535 Winthrop St., Toledo, O.
STAMP, SARAH E. Linden Ave., Lenox, Wheeling, W. Va.
STANLEY, H. VIRGINIA 8502 Euclid Ave., Cleveland, O.
STARR, LILLIAN A 130 Mulberry St., Springfield, Mass.
STIEFEL, HELEN M 53 East 74th St., New York, N. Y.
STINSON, CATHERINE P 29 Jackson St.. Little Falls, N. Y.
STODDARD, SUSANNE 37 Crescent Road, Madison, N. J.
SUTHERLAND, ISABEL B 374 Ames St., Lawrence, Mass.
SWAIN, LOUISE M. S Gray's Lane, Haverford, Pa.
SYKES, GRACE J 490 Richmond Ave., Buffalo, N. Y.
TEGTMEYER, RUTH H 523 Belmont Ave., Chicago. 111.
THAYER, GRACE L Chateaugay, N. Y.
THAYER, MARGARET S 4 St. Paul's Court, Brooklyn, N. Y.
THOMAS, HELEN F 1445 North 17th St., Philadelphia, Pa.
THOMPSON, MARY H 2421 Girard Ave., South Minneapolis, Minn.
THOMPSON, SARA W. 202 North 3rd St., Miami, Fla.
THURMAN, NANCY C 20 Madison Ave., Madison, N. J.
TOBIAS, PAULINE J 50 West 77th St., New York, N. Y.
TOWNER, CONSTANCE M The Mendota, Washington, D. C.
TOWNSEND, HELEN West Boylston, Mass.
TREBLE, NITA A Spencerport, N. Y.
TREFETHEN, ELEANOR A 166 High St., So. Portland, Me.
TURLEY, HAZEL 505 West llth St., Oklahoma City, Okl.
TWIGGAR, LOIS 100 South Highland Ave., Ossining, N. Y.
VAN ALSTYNE, HELEN S 53 2nd Ave., Troy, N. Y.
VARY, VIRGINIA B 206 West Thomas St., Rome, N. Y.
VAUGHAN, HELEN M 10 Berry St., Danvers, Mass.
WAGNER, AUGUSTA B 525 East 85th St., New York, N. Y.
WAIN, ISABEL S •. 3041 Fairfax Road, Cleveland, O.
WALDER, LOUISE A 2768 Mt. Troy Road, No. Pittsburgh, Pa.
WARD, CORA A Hillcrest, Somerville, N. J.
WARE, HELEN E 124 Clinton Ave., Montclair, N. J.
WARNE, NAOMA E 936 Summerfield Ave., Asbury Park, N. J.
WARNER, MARY E Pennsdale, Pa.
WATERMAN, GRETCHEN M 104 West 70th St., New York, N. Y.
WATTON, SADIE E 260 North Main St., Ansonia, Conn.
lis
(JIlaB llf 1BZ4- Conlitiiud
WAYLAND-SMITH, EMILY Kenwood, N. Y.
WEAVER, NANCY S 414 Bellevue Ave., Wayne, Pa.
WELCH, IRENE E 3 Kay St., Westboro, Mass.
WELLS, ELISABETH Oak Hill, Middletown, Conn.
WEST, M. ELIZABETH • ■ 924 M St., N. W., Washington, D. C.
WETHERBEE, ELIZABETH W 47 Terrace Ave., Newton Highlands, Mass.
WHITE, LAURA E 3210 Newark St., WashiiiKton, D. C.
WIHTTEMORE, C. LOUISE 215 Pleasant St., Wiiithmp, Mass.
WHITTEN, KATHARINE 503 North Main St., Greensburg, Pa.
WILDER, JEAN E 2 Sylvan St., Worcester, Mass.
WILLIAMS, MARION G 362 Crescent St., Waltham, Mass.
WILLYOUNG, HELEN M 527 West 121st St., New York, N. Y.
WILSON, HELEN E 66 Highland Road, Somerville, Mass.
WINKLEMAN, ELVENE A 1429 London Road, Uuhith, Minn.
WISNER, FLOY S 1199 Vance Ave., Memphis, Tenn.
WITHERS, HANNAH C Chester, 111.
WITHERS, LAURA L Chester, III.
WOELFEL, HELEN L 522 East 5th St., New Albany, Ind.
WOODWARD, THERESE 24 Sanders Ave., Lowell, Mass.
WRKJHT, ANNETTE N Logan, Philadelphia, Pa.
WRIGHT, M. MARJORIE Pinecrest, Bristol, Tenn.
WYER, BEATRICE Fort Sheridan, III.
YARROW, HARRIET Wellesley, Mass.
YOUNG, ADA HELENE Birckhead Place, Toledo, O.
116
1322 - fogntfta - 1322
(Elaaa uf 1325
Officers
Marion Montgomery President
Mildred Wetten Vice-President
Evelyn Roat Recording Secretary
Eleanor Hunter Corresponding Secretary
Helen Ireland Treasurer
Marian Beckford Parlotums
Eleanor Hopwood \
Margaret Black > Executive Board
Virginia Downing )
Ruth Kent Song Leader
117
(Ebss nf 1925
AARON, MILDRED H •■ 1937 North Broad St., Philadelphia, Pa.
ALCAIDE. ESTELLA S 42 Manchester Road, Brookliiie, Mass.
ALEXANDER, DORIS •• 261 Gibson St., Lowell, Mass.
ALEXANDER, ELEANOR G 225 West 108th St., New York, N. Y.
ALLEN, MARION K 38 Aberdeen St., Newton Highlands, Mass.
ALLEN, MARY W 28? Walpole St., Norwood, Mass.
ANDERSON, J. ANNETTE 840 State St., Carthage, N. Y.
ANDERSON, N. ELIZABETH 6419 IJartlett St., Pittsburgh, Pa.
ANSHEN, LILLIAN V 140 Hamilt-Mi St., Providence, R. I.
ARN, VIRGINIA 1014 East 9th St., Chattanooga, Tenn.
ARROWSMITH, E. PHOEBE 430 Highland Ave., Orange, N. J.
ASCHER, JOSEPHINE S • 56 Garden Place, Brooklyn, N. Y.
ASTROM, ELIZABETH I. 14 Chestnut St., East Orange, N. J.
AURELIO, PRISCILLA D 13 Edinboro Place, Newtonville, Mass.
AUSTIN, SARAH N 77 Prospect St., Summit, N. J.
BALDWIN, FLORENCE L 7 Kingscroft Road, N. W., 2, London, Eng.
BARB.XRICK, JULIA M. 120 Manthorne Road, West Roxbury, Mass.
BARNETT, AIMEE ESTHER 1426 High St., Denver, Colo.
BARTLETT, PHYLLIS B 19 East 72nd St., New York, N. Y.
BARTON, FRANCES G. 3 Clarendon Place, Buffalo, N. Y.
BEARD, MARCIA 508 South 42nd St., Philadelphia, Pa.
BECKWITH, MARY A 743 North Michigan Ave., Chicago, 111.
BEEMAN, KATHRINE H 30 West 116th St., New York, N. Y.
BEERMAN, HAZEL B 317 West 89th St., New York, N. Y.
BERKEY, VIRGINIA D Cumbermede Road, Palisade, N. Y.
BEVERSTOCK, MARY L 82 Sturges Ave., Mansfield, O.
BICKFORD, HELEN M 15 Mt. Pleasant St., Nashua, N. H.
BICKFORD, MIRIAM 7 Rankin St., Worcester, Mass.
BILLINGS, DORIS A 454 Washington St., Canton, Mass.
BLACK, ISOBEL S. 109 Lorraine Ave., Upper Montclair, N. J.
BLACK, MARGARET G 109 Lorraine Ave., Upper Montclair, N. J.
BLAIN, MARGARET C •■.. Hungchau, Chekiang Province, China
BLAKE, CHARLOTTE 4 Rue Roquepine, Paris, France
BLANDY, ALICE S. 401 Monmouth St., Gloucester, N. J.
BOSLEY, EMILY E 171 Highland Ave., Buffalo, N. Y.
BOWKER, BETTY H 75 Rochelle Ave., Wissahickon, Pa.
BOYDON, RUTH Northfield, O.
BRACHT, ALMA C. V 1328 N. A St., Spokane, Wash.
BRADY, CLARA 3810 Morrison St., Washington, D. C.
BRANDON, AGNES L 178 Baldwin Ave., Detroit, Mich.
BREWSTER, ALICE 64 Spruceland Ave., Springfield, Mass.
BROWN, EVELYN L Broad St., Barre, Mass.
BROWNE, MARY F • ■ St. John'.s Rectory, Washington, Conn.
BRUCE, KATHRINE •• 4 Caswell St., Fitchburg, Mass.
BUCHAN, SARAH C 324 St. Paul St., Brookline, Mass.
BUCHANAN, HELEN H ■■ 128 3rd St., Troy, N. Y.
BUMP, F. I.UCILE 189 Beechmont Drive, New Rochelle, N. Y.
BURNETT, MILDRED 2 Sunset Ave., Amherst, Mass.
BURRELL. ANNE P 603 Garden St., Little Falls, N. Y.
BURROWS. HELEN F ■. 666 Ridge St., Newark, N. J.
118
(£laaa uf 1925 — Conunucd
BUSH, VIRGINIA H •■ The Maples, Morton, N. Y.
CAGE CHAILLE 3716 Montrose Blvd., Houston, Texas
CALDWELL, VIRGINIA B • • 130 Summit Ave., Mount Vernon, N. Y.
CAPERS, DOROTHY J Wellesley, Mass.
CAPLAN, ANNABELLE 81 Morning St., Portland, Me.
CARPENTER, CONSTANCE • • 210 N. 7th St., Newark, N. J.
CARR, SARAH 4824 Kimbark Ave., Chicago, 111.
CATRON, INEZ V .•••.•••. ■•• '217 S. 2nd St., Springfield, 111.
CAVENY, SUSAN E Waverly Road, Wyncote, Pa.
CHANDONNET, HELEN S • •. 156 Brook St., Manchester, N. H.
CHAPMAN, ISABEL H 3303 Hamilton St., Philadelphia, Pa.
CH.APMAN, SYLVIA 75 Prescott St., Newtonville, Mass.
CHASE, DOROTHY A 1+6 Pe-"' St., Holyoke, Mass.
CHRISTIE, SARAH B Riverpoint, R. I.
COATES, MARY G 264 Upper Mountain Ave., Upper Montclair, N. J.
CODE MARY 220 Devpey Ave., Edgewood Park, Pa.
CODMAN, FLORENCE L • • 4116 Spruce St., Philadelphia, Pa.
COHEN, MILDRED ...:..... 774 N. Main St., Waterbury, Conn.
COLE IRENE W ......;...■...■..... 73 Jefferson St., Salamanca, N. Y.
COLLINS, MARGARET E •...■.....:..•.... 56 Wellington St., Worcester, Mass.
COLLINS, MARION M 45 Mt. Vernon .'\ve., Braintree, Mass.
COLVERT, ESTHER L ...i ■•■ 200 S. Brady St., Attica, Ind.
COME, ELIZABETH •• 113 Manhattan Ave., New York, N. Y.
CONANT VORA P 275 High St., Newburyport, Mass.
COOK, KATHRINE C ■• ■ ■ 2532 Jule St., St. Joseph, Mo.
COPELAND, VIRGINIA 930 Chestnut Ave., Wilmette, 111.
COWPER, PRISCILLA P. ■. Berkshire Road, Wellesley Hills, Mass.
CR.'\TSLEY, ELIZABETH J 11 Dorchester St., Springfield, Mass.
CRAVEN, IDA S 510 Grove Ave., Noble, Pa.
CUBLEY, ELIZABETH H 15 Leroy St., Potsdam, N. Y.
CURTIS, HARRIET E ...■...-...•....■... 317 W. 6th St., Erie, Pa.
DAMON, LOVINA G • ■ 185 Albert St., Torrington, Conn.
DAVENPORT, HARRIET C 118 Lincoln St., Framingham, Mass.
DAVID, ROSE D ■ ' Whitfield PI., Newport, R. I.
D.^VIS,' ANNA E •■ 733 N. 43rd St., Philadelphia, Pa.
DAVIs! LORETTA A • ■ ■ ■ 1854 Nela Ave., East Cleveland, O.
DE COSTER, DOROTHY 164 St. James Ave., Springfield, Mass.
DELANO, MARGARET L P. O. Box 176, Vineyard Haven, Mass
DENHAM, JANE S ■......-. 604 Tallmon St., Syracuse, N. Y
DICK, HERMINA ■• .■. 227 Sanford Ave., Flushing, N. Y.
DODGE, ALICE •■ • 134 B St., N. W., Washington, D. C.
DOUGHTY, MARGARET B 66 Hardenbrook Ave., Jamaica, N. Y.
DOWNING, VIRGINIA 1033 Niagara St., Denver, Colo.
DROUET, ELINOR •■ 56 Florence Ave., Arlington Heights, Mass.
DUBBS, JENNIE E 1221 Greenwood Ave., Wilmette, 111.
DUESBURY, HOPE 124 Messer St., Providence, R. I.
DUGE, EDN.^ E 29 Ridge St., Greenwich, Conn.
DWINELL, MARION •• 82 Pleasant St., Ayer, Mass.
DYER, ELIZABETH E 1151 Thurman St., Portland, Ore.
EAGLESFIELD, A. RUTH 731 'Parade St., Erie, Pa.
119
(Claaa of 1SZ5 — Continued
EASTON, KATE V. A London Road, Albany, N. Y.
EDGE, FLORNA Cedarcroft, Kennett Square, Pa.
EDGELL, HARRIET 98 Elm St., Gardner, Mass.
EDSON, ISABEL E Falconer, N. Y.
EDWARDS, FRANCES Northfield, Vt.
ELIASON, MARY S. New Castle, Del.
EMERY, RUTH 13 Lebanon St., Sanford, Me.
EVERETT, ESTHER L 908 East Elm St., Waseca, Minn.
FALK, ELEANOR A 130 East 44th St., New York, N. Y.
FINCKE, MARGARET E 106 Farlow Road, Newton, Mass.
FINNEMORE, JEANNETTE 57 Stewart St., Bristol, Conn.
FLEISCHM.'XNN, GLADYS R 345 West 88th St., New York, N. Y.
FLETCHALL, KATHARINE B 9 Jewett St., Northampton, Mass.
FLETCHER, KATHARINE 753 Highland Ave., Elgin, 111.
FLETCHER, LUCILE P 30 Spruceland Ave., Springfield, Mass.
de FOREST, EMILY J 955 Hillside Ave., Plainfield, N. J.
FORKNALL, HELEN S 10 Auburn Ct., Brookline, Mass.
FOSTER, VIRGINIA H ■ 1313 Niazuma St., Birmingham, Ala.
FRANK, MILDRED S 126 East Clay St., Lancaster, Pa.
FRANKS, MANDELEINE Pelham Ct., Germantown, Pa.
FREEMAN, EVA 501 Lafayette St., Easton, Pa.
FREEMAN, VICTORIA E 501 Lafayette St., Easton, Pa
FREUND, LOUISE M 1088 Shady Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa.
PRICK, GRACE M 5200 Oak St., Kansas City, Mo.
GANTZ, EDITH R 40 Roland Ave., Roland Park, Md.
GARDNER, MARY LOUISE 41 Tappan St., Baldwinsville, N. Y.
GARSON, ELEANOR Whitehall Hotel, Cleveland, O.
GIDDINGS, JANET F Housatonic, Mass.
GLUCK, A. MARCIA 101 East 72nd St., New York, N. Y.
GOLDFINGER, GLADYS S 1667 Crawford Road, Cleveland, O.
GOLDING, MARGARET W 2117 Faraon St., St. Joseph, Mo.
GOODMAN, ANN 320 West 71st St., New York, N. Y.
GOODWIN, EDITH R The Knoll, Lansdowne, Pa.
GREEN, MARARET 10838 Deering Ave., Cleveland, O.
GREEN, MARY H 204 St. Clair St., Portland, Ore.
GREENE, MARION E Middletown Springs, Vt.
GREIL, ANNA L 521 South Perry St., Montgomery, Ala.
GRIFFIN, SUE K 114 Main St., Hudson Falls, N. Y'.
HADESTY, LORRAINE 1310 Mahantong St., Pottsville, Pa.
HALL, AURELIA H 83 North Walnut St., East Orange, N. J.
HALL, DOROTHY M 985 Farmington Ave., West Hartford, Conn.
HALL, ISABEL K 9 Lancaster St., Cambridge, Mass.
HAMBLEN, CHARLOTTE East 235 9th Ave., Spokane, Wash.
HAMBURER, DOROTHY J 1005 Madison Ave., Albany, N. Y.
HAMBURGER, EMILY 26 Woodlawn Ave., Wellesley Hills, Mass.
HAMILTON, MARGARET D 929 President St., Brooklyn, N. Y.
HAMILTON, VIRGINIA C P. O. Box 365, Lexington, Ky.
HAMMATT, JULIA B 878 Longmeadow St., Longmeadow, Mass.
HANNAH, MARGARET H 337 Morewood Ave., Pittsburgh. Pa.
HARBISON, KATHERINE W 410 Maple Ave., Danville, Ky.
HARDS, INA 1 68 Elm Ave., Mount Vernon, N. Y.
120
(niaaa of 1S25— Continued
HARRIS, DOROTHY G 6606 Dalzell Place, Pittsburgh, Pa.
HARRIS, MARGARET A 152 Holabird Ave., Winsted, Conn.
HARRISON, ESTY 3+0 West 72nd St., New York, N. Y.
HAUGHTON, FRANCES M 3 Avon Road, Schenectady, N. Y.
HAYSSEN, MARIE E. 1404 North 5th St., Sheboygan, Wis.
HE.'^RDING, VIRGINIA H 2305 East 3rd St., Duluth, Minn.
HEDERMAN, HELEN R 38 Schofield Ave., Webster, Mass.
HELLMAN, JANICE B 311 West 71st St., New York, N. Y.
HELWIG, FLORENCE M 711 East 18th St., Brooklyn, N. Y.
HEMPSTEAD, KATHRINE B 89 McKinley Ave., Norwich, Conn.
HENDERSON, RUTH E 45 Ohio St., Bangor, Me.
HERBERICK, GRACE LUCILE 1211 Medina Road, Akron, O.
HERSTEIN, MIRIAM A 190 South Barksdale St., Memphis, Tenn.
HESS, DOROTHY C 530 West End Ave., New York, N. Y.
HEYDRICK, MARGARET M 927 Elk St., Franklin, Pa.
HEYL, FANNY 147 South Garfield Ave., Columbus, O.
HEYMAN, ANNA H 26 Slocum St., New Rochelle, N. Y.
HILL, ELEANOR B 6818 Thomas Boulevard, Pittsburgh, Pa.
HILLS, KATHARINE 84 High St., Saco, Me.
HIRSCH, BEATRICE F 707 Ponce de Leon Ave., Atlanta, Ga.
HORNBECK, ELIZABETH B 42 Warren St., Ellenville, N. Y.
HOOVENS, AGNES 1311 South 8th St., Goshen, Ind.
HOPE, MURIEL U Madison, N. J.
HOPWOOD, ELEANOR M 2729 Edgehill Road, Cleveland Heights, O.
HORTON, DOROTHY S 90 Keene St., Providence, R. I.
HOSLEY, DORIS W 70 Main St., East Haven, Conn.
HOUGEN, EVELYN 511 North 6th St., Manitowoc, Wis.
HOUSTON, MARY M 1115 Mellon St., Pittsburgh, Pa.
HOWARD, MARY E R. F. D. 1, Holley, N. Y.
HOWERTON, DOROTHY K 353 Woodmere Ave., Grand Rapids, Mich.
HOXIE, MARY P 25 Grotto Ave., Providence, R. I.
HUGHES, M. FRANCES 108 Bloomfield St., Dorchester, Mass.
HULL, JENNIE P Main St., Millbury, Mass.
HUNTER, ELEANOR 417 Riverside Drive, New York, N. Y.
HUNTER, VARINA 4316 Grand Ave., Des Moines, la.
HUTCHESON, MARY I Hampton Drive, Clayton, Mo.
HUTCHINSON, JEAN 31 Hartford St., Dorchester, Mass.
HYDE, DOROTHY F 51 East 5th St., Chillicothe, O.
ILG, FRANCES L Lombard, 111.
IRELAND, HELEN S 100 South William St., Johnstown, Pa.
JACKSON, HELEN F 49 Coolidge St., Brookline, Mass.
JAMES, JULIA W 314 Norwood Ave., Buffalo, N. Y.
JEFFREY, RUTH E P. O. Box 643, Mount Kisco, N. Y.
JOHNSON, MABEL B 37 Grandview Terrace, Hartford, Conn.
JONES, GWENDOLYN S 297 Fourth Ave., New York, N. Y.
JONES, HELEN L Billerica, Mass.
JONES, MARTHA C New Castle, Ky.
JOSEPH, EVA 1676 Magnolia Drive, Cleveland, O.
KAUCHER, MARION J 523 Douglass St., Reading, Pa.
KEEFE, JEANNETTE F 411 Clinton Ave., Oak Park, 111.
KEELEY, FRANCES S. Kayford, W. Va.
121
KELLY, JESS 2320 South 21st St., Philadelphia. Pa.
KENNEDY, \L-\RY C 50 Park St., Saratoga Springs, N. Y.
KENT, RUTH Montrose, Pa.
KITTREDGE, WINIFRED J 1 Beasom Blk., Nashua, N. H.
KLEE, HELEN L 5307 Northumberland Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa.
KLEIN, MARION J 345 West 88th St., New York, N. Y'.
KLOPP, DOROTHY E. • ■ State Hospital, Allentown, Pa.
KNAPP, HELEN E 97 Center St., Waverly, N. Y.
KNIGHT, DOROTHY • • 243 Crane Ave., Royal Oak, Mich.
KNIGHT, KATHARINE H 216 Brunswick Ave., Gardiner, Me.
KREBS, MARGUERITE M 37 Robinwood Ave., Jamaica Plain, Mass.
LANSBURGH, ROSALIE W. • • Hartsdale, N. Y.
LARIMER, MILDRED Chariton, la.
LAUGHLIN, LUCILE 464 Deering Ave., Portland, Me.
L.^UGHLIN, MARJORIE 76 2nd St., Waterford, N. Y.
LAWRENCE, RUTH Room 813 Waldorf Astoria, New York, N. Y.
LEHMAN, DOROTHY' M ■• 31 West 56th St., New York, N. Y.
LEMONDS, ELIZABETH E 109 Hillcrest Ave., Louisville, Ky.
LESTER, M. THELMA 843 Chestnut St., Springfield, Mass.
LEVINE, BEATRICE Sherboro, Mass.
LEWIS, DOROTHY 0 12 Washington Ave., Warren, O.
LEWIS, FRANCES 1829 Farmington, Road, Cleveland, O.
LEWIS, OLIVE G 47 Kensington Ave., Jersey City, N. J.
LIBBEY, RUTH 69 St. Botolph St., Boston, Mass.
LIDSEEN, LILITH 434 South Scoville Ave., Oak Park, 111.
LINCOLN, ELIZABETH H 1884 Stonewood Road, East Cleveland, O.
LINCOLN, MILDRED D. •■ 7 Pleasant St., Fairport, N. Y.
LITTLEFIELD, PAMELIA M 64 Laurel St., Melrose, Mass.
LLOYD, EUNICE A. • 523 East Bean St., Washington, Pa.
LOEB, AMELIA L 300 South Pauline St., Memphis, Tenn.
LOTHROP, MARY L •... 379 Green Bay Road, Glencoe, 111.
LOVEJOY, RUTH D 28 Wren St., West Roxbury, Mass.
LOWENSTEIN, LEONORE 808 West End Ave., New York, N. Y.
LUDINGTON, ELEANOR 56 South Swan St., Albany, N. Y.
McALEXANDER, JOSEPHINE 2101 North Delaware St., Indianapolis, Ind.
McCaffrey, IRENE 5012 Friendship Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa.
McCOLL, MARJORIE A Bennettsville, S. C.
McCOY, HELEN Wilmington, O.
McCREA, SARETTA B 39 South Main St., Millbury, Mass.
McCRILLIS, K. RUTH Holley, N. Y.
McDIARMID, GERTRUDE 614 Evanswood, Clifton, Cincinnati. O
McDOUGALL, S. ELIZABETH 19 Beech St., Rockland, Me.
MclNTYRE, GERTRUDE E 65 Court St., Iloulton, Me.
MACK, MARJORY' •• 3836 Reading Road, Cincinnati, O.
MacKinnon, EFFIE M 129 Dixwell Road, Shanghai, China
MAHLEY, HELEN Sullivan, Ind.
MAN, EVELYN B ...: North Stonington, Conn.
MARCY, HILDA H 32 West Utica St., Buffalo, N. Y.
MARSH, FLORA E 4157 Davenport, St., Omaha, Neb.
MARTIN, ELIZABETH C 401 Center St., Wallingford, Conn.
MAXWELL, MARTHA L :..-... ■...•.... 529 West Pike St., Clarksville, W. Va.
122
(TlasB nf 1925 — Contniiu/l
MAVNARD, MARTHA D ,..,.....,... 53 Pine St., Burlington, Vt.
MKAKER, MARGARET L 18 West Broad St., Bethlehem, Pa.
MEMORY, RUTH V 1 Kermit Road, Maplewood, N, J .
METCALF, CLARISSA N Pinehurst, N. C.
MEV.'W, MARY A 140 East Wheeling St., Washington, Pa.
MILLER, CHARLOTTE B. . . 411 East Main St., Batavia, N. Y.
MILLER, DOROTHY A. . Tf 547 Lake Ave., Rochester, N. Y.
MILTON, F. ELEANOR 910 Central St., Dodge City, Kas.
MIT TELDORFER, MENA H • ■ 212 East Grace St., Richmond, Va.
MONROE, MILDRED 113 Washington St., Brighton, Mass.
MONTGOMERY, MARION 15 Green Bay Road, Hubbard Woods, III.
MOORE, KATHARINE 257 King's Highway, West, Haddonfield, N. J.
MORRIS, CHARLOTTE S Brownsboro Road, Louisville, Ky.
MORRISON, LOUISE D 1789 Matthews Ave., Shaughnessy Heights, Vancouver, B. C.
MORRISON, MABEL 144 Kensington Road, Garden City, N. Y.
MOULTON, ELIZABETH V •• 919 West Market St., Lima, O.
MULLEN, MARGARET G 64 Highland Terrace, Brockton, Mass.
MURRAY, JANE E 535 West Mahoning St., Punxsutawney, Pa.
NACHTMANN, MARY N. 765 Madison Ave., Albany, N. Y.
NEVINS, MARJORIE E Glenwood Ave., Franklin, N. H.
NISSLY, CAROLINE E • ■ Mount Joy, Pa.
NORD, OLIVE R 502 Lakeview Ave., Jamestown, N. Y.
Nt)RTHUP, KATHRYN 3248 CoUinwood Ave., Toledo, O.
OKESON, ANNA R 442 High St., Bethlehem, Pa.
OSBORNE, MARY ELIZABETH Valley Road, Melrose Park, Pa.
OWEN, LOUISE M 95 Highland Ave., Highland Park, Mich.
PARSONS, A. HARRIET 72 Isabella St., Toronto, Ont., Can.
PATTERSON, HARRIET ■ ■ • • • 5852 Marlboro St., Pittsburgh, Pa.
PATTERSON, JEAN L 58 Ontario Ave., Hamilton, Ont., Can.
PAULSON, ESTHER -. . ■■■■ 1442 Walnut St., AUentown, Pa.
PEDERSEN, MARJORIE I 260 West 76th St., New York, N. Y.
PENDERGAST. A. DELL 310 Belt Ave., St. Louis, Mo.
PERRIN, CAROL P 94 Lake St., Hamburg, N. Y.
PETTEE VIRGINIA . 155 Girard Ave., Hartford, Conn.
PINKUS, RUTH E 296 Primrose Ave., Mount Vernon, N. Y.
PITCHER MARION L 47 Greenwood Lane, Waltham, Mass.
QUIGLEY, HELEN S 221 West Main St., Lock Haven, Pa.
R.'\NDALL, MADELINE 198 Waterman Ave., East Providence, R. I.
REES EDITH • ■ 25 Park St., Williamstown, Mass.
REMIEN, RUTH I •■•• 527 Briar Place, Chicago, 111.
RESOR, EUNICE C .•■ 2900 Vernon Place, Cincinnati, O.
RICHARDSON, EDITH Wellesley, Mass.
RICKERT, HELEN 1502 Mahantongo St., Pottsville, Pa.
RO.'\T, EVELYN C ; . . ; ^ 2«6 College Ave., Kingston, Pa.
ROBBERT, HELEN A 1166 East 31st St., Brooklyn, N. Y.
ROBERTSON, JEAN K '. 42 Richmond Ave., Buffalo, N. Y.
ROBINSON, JANET ....^?:il West Main St., Clarksburg, W. Va.
ROBINSON, MARY LOUISE :': 74 East 1st St., Oil City, Pa.
ROBINSON, PRISCILLA A ■. 3 Pearl St., Westfield, Mass.
ROSENTHAL, FRANCES E Sutton Manor, New Rochelle, N. Y.
ROSENWALD, RUTH 3318 Benton Boulevard, Kansas City, Mo.
123
(HlaBH of 1925 — Continued
RUPRECHT, ELSE D 170 Rugby Road, Brooklyn, N. Y.
SAMMIS, HENRIETTE 165 Washington St., Hempstead, N. Y.
SARLES, ELIZABETH L 296 South Main St., Liberty, N. Y.
SAVINI, FRANCESCA 128 West llth St., New York, N. \.
SAWYER, HELEN T 37 Fairfax St., West Newton, Mass.
SCHEIDENHELM, MARY LOUISE 804 Forest Ave., Wilmette, III.
SCHICK, CATHERINE M 360 Westchester Ave., Port Chester, N. Y.
SCHNEEBELI, MARTHA 718 North Lime St., Lancaster, Pa.
SCHNITZER, BLANCHE H 970 Park Ave., New York, N. Y.
SCHUMACHER, RUTH E 109 Hillcrest Ave., Yonkers, N. Y.
SCHUTTE, DOROTHY' S 6433 Forward Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa.
SCHWIERS, ROSE M 215 West 106th St., New York, N. Y.
SCOTT, JANET • 73 Willett St., Albany. N. Y.
SEARS, JEANNE T 382 Hope St., Providence, R. I.
SEARS, MIRIAM W 37 Cherry St., Danvers, Mass.
SEAVER, MARGARET G 105 Rockland Ave., Maiden, Mass.
SECRIST, HELEN C 54 Lake Ave., Melrose, Mass.
SEITER, EMILY L 2201 Highland Ave., Mt. Auburn, Cincinnati, O.
SELLIGMAN, DONI 1462 South 1st St., Louisville, Ky.
SEMANS, SARAH 2745 Hampton Ct., Chicago, 111.
SHANNON, SARAH S Saxton, Pa.
SHARPE, WINIFRED Lincoln Way, East, Chambersburg, Pa.
SHAW, DOROTHY 119 West 40th St., New York, N. \".
SHEA, KATHRYN 266 Main St., Nashua, N. H.
SHEARMAN, HELEN 242 Fort Pleasant Ave., Springfield, Mass.
SHEARS, ELIZABETH Hyde Park, N. Y.
SHERWOOD, AGNES P Pine Island, Rye, N. Y.
SHIELDS, ELIZABETH C Bennington, Vt
SHIRLEY, ELISABETH R. F. D. 2, Manchester, N. H
SHIVERS, KATHARINE D 112 Delaware St., Woodbury, N. J.
SIMS, ELIZABETH B 22 Schofield Ave., Webster, Mass.
SMITH, ALICE L Beechmont, New Rochelle, N. Y.
SMITH, BARBARA Phenix, R. I.
SMITH, ELIZABETH L 16 West 88th St., New York, N. Y.
SMITH, MARION 37 Fairfield Ave., Holyoke, Mass.
SMITH, MILDRED 748 Buena Ave., Chicago, III.
SPENCE, ELIZABETH R 4415 Pershing Drive, El Paso, Texas
SPERBER, ROSALIND H 51 Charlotte St., Dorchester, Mass.
SPRECHER, ALMA C 1110 Wheatland Ave., Lancaster, Pa.
SQUIER, AGNES D 52 Mountainview St., Springfield, Mass.
STARR, ELIZABETH A 130 Mulberry St., Springfield, Mass.
STEARLY', HELEN G 60 Berkeley Ave., Newark, N. J.
STEELE, MARGERY S 63 Vine St., Hartford, Conn.
STEPHENS, BEVERLY R Lafayette, La.
STERNBACH, RUTH 12 East 78th St., New York, N. Y.
STEWART, VIRGINIA Car Allotment Com., Bluefield, W. Va.
STILES, MARJORIE G 10 King St., Westfield, Mass.
STILLMAN, ELISABETH Tenafly, N. J.
STILSON, HELEN 2032 Jefferson St., Duluth, Minn.
STONE, DOROTHY H 770 Lake St., Newark, N. J.
STRONG, HELEN B 226 Edgewood St., Hartford, Conn.
124
(SlaBB nf 1925— Continued
SULLiVAN, MARY E 234 Paulison Ave., Passaic, N. J.
SULLIVAN, SUSANNE 20 East 55th St., New York, N. Y.
SWISHER, MARGARET S. 124 Wyllis St., Oil City, Pa.
TALMEY, ALLENE 203 Clinton Ave., New Rochelle, N. Y.
TAULENE, ELEANORE 363 Gowen Ave., Philadelphia, Pa.
TETER, ELIZABETH L 5637 Woodlawn Ave., Chicago, 111.
THOMAS, AUGUSTA S 251 West 80th St., New York, N. Y.
THOMPSON, ALICE 222 Lancaster St., Albany, N. Y.
THOMPSON, ELIZABETH 10 Arlington Road, Cranford, N. J.
THOMPSON, HENRIETTA 10 Arlington Road, Cranford, N. J.
THOMPSON, MARJORIE 1083 Farmington Ave., West Hartford, Conn.
TINGLEY, MILDRED L 212 Highland Ave., Attleboro, Mass.
TODD, ROBERTA W R. F. D. 1, Paterson, N. J.
TOWLE, EVELENE M 215 Franklin St., Newton, Mass.
TREFTS, HAZEL J pierce Ave., Hamburg, N. Y.
TRUMAN, CHARLOTTE W 61 Parade St., Providence, R. I.
TULLOCH, E. AVIS 18 St. John St., Jamaica Plain, Mass.
TUERS, LOUISE 418 Park Ave., Paterson, N. J.
ULLMAN, SELMA A 1911 Ross Ave., Dallas. Tex.
ULLMANN, FRANCES M 521 East Walnut St., Springfield, Mo.
VAN GELDER, ELIZABETH P 1403 Delaware Ave., Wilmington, Del.
VILAS, KATHLEEN 182 Columbia Heights, Brooklyn, N. Y.
WADHAMS, DOROTHY L 72 North Franklin St., Wilkes-Barre, Pa.
WALLACE, ABBE Pleasantville, N. Y.
WALLACE, ELEANOR H 1406 Pennsylvania Ave., N. S., Pittsburgh, Pa.
WALLACE, KATHERINE A 1750 Sycamore Ave., Los Angeles, Cal.
WATERHOUSE, MARTHA M 1947 Kuaumoku St., Honolulu, Hawaii
WATKINS, HILDA G 1637 Makiki St., Honolulu, Hawaii
WATSON, ELIZABETH 2130 Fulton St., Toledo, O.
WATT, ANN B 714 Hastings St., Pittsburgh, Pa.
WECKERLE, INEZ 713 Hastings, St., Pittsburgh, Pa
WEEKS, ANNA Y 122 Philadelphia Ave., West Pittston, Pa.
WEIS, MARION 0 506 East 1st St., Monioe, Mich.
WELCH, RUTH H 253 Washington St., Providen~p R. I.
WETTEN, MILDRED B 4810 Ellis Ave., Chicago, 111.
WHITE, DOROTHY 5525 Dunmoyle St., Pittsburgh, Pa.
WHITE, KATHARINE C 9 Howland St., Boston, Mass.
WHITE, MARION T 124 Circular Ave., Pittsfield, Mass.
WHITMAN, IMOGEN C Bourne, Mass.
WILLIAMS, ANNE W 107 East Chase St., Baltimore, Md.
WILLIAMS, ELOISE 70th and Market Sts., Philadelphia, Pa.
WILLIAMS, MARGARET C 225 High St., Chattanooga, Tenn.
WILLIS, HELEN C 299 Ridgewood Ave., Glen Ridge, N. J.
WILLIS, VIRGINIA Hollyhurst, Mount Vernon, Wash.
WILSON, DOROTHY G 17 Ridge Road, Sagamore Park, Bronxville, N. Y.
WILSON, FRANCES H 370 Summit Ave., Hackensack, N. Y.
WILSON, MARION S 14 Windermere Place, St. Louis, Mo.
WILSON, MARY E 1134 West Berry St., Fort Wayne, Ind.
WOLF, ELEANORE 41 West 70th St., New York, N. Y.
WOLFSON, ANNA R 46 Brookledge St., Roxbury, Mass.
WOOD, ALICE E. K East Ave., Rochester, N. Y.
125
(CUlBB Uf lSZ5 — Co)i/i/iiter/
WOODS, CARULVX 2+2 State St.. Hanger. Me.
WRIGHT. M.\Rc;.\RET P 806 East Main St., JBellevne, O.
WRIGHT, WINIFRED 292 South West St., Bellevue, U.
WYLE, FLORENCE S • 186 Morris St., Albany, N. Y.
YOUNG, CHARLOTTE E 1934 East 84th St., Cleveland, O.
ZELL, DOROTHY M 251 Ridgewooil Ave., Glen Ridge, N. J.
ZUBER, NATALIE 824 Beecher St., Walnut Hills, Cincinnati, O.
Inrlaaatfir^
ADLER, IRENE 27n5 Western Ave., Mattoon, III.
BARRY, MARGARET P. O. Box 716, East Lansing, Mich.
BEALL, CORNELIA A Lake Bluff, 111.
BREWER, ESTHER Maytield, Ky.
CHAPMAN, RUTH I Avon Lake, O.^
CHATER, JOAN 6 Bay Ridge Place, Brooklyn, N. Y.
CUMMINGS, HANNAH F 28 1st Street, South Glens Falls, N. Y.
DOUGL.-VSS, JEAN 136 N. Szechnen Road, Shanghai, China
EMMONS, HELLEN L 25 Federal Street, Brunswick, Me.
FELTON, RUTH M 632 Orange Street, Macon, Ga.
FISHER, HARRIET R 7113 Clinton Ave., Cleveland, O.
FLYNN, DOROTHEA A • • 131 N. Detroit Street, Xenia, O.
GOODMAN, BERTHA 74 N. 20th Street, Portland, Ore.
IVES, MARY E 125 W. North Street, Delphi, Ind.
JOHNSON, M. ADELAIDE 104 Hathaway Ave., Houston, Tex.
KEENER, LOUISE R. F. D. 3, Morgantown, W. Va.
LEONARD, DOROTHE M. 4641 Maiden Street, Chicago, 111.
LOH, ZUNG NYI 12 Foh Chang Li, Shanghai, China
LONG, MARY E 161 Besson Ave., Uniontown, Pa.
MAXON, KATHARINE L Berlin, N. Y.
MYERS, MARGARET R Penn's Station, Pa.
OGDEN, JOAN 25 Kennard Road, Brookline, Mass.
PARSONS, HARRIET T 2732 Durant Ave., Berkeley, Cal.
REVEILLE, MARIE F Conques-sur-Orbiel, France
RIPPLE, DORIS M 1255 Conk Ave., Lakewood, O.
ROLLER, ELIZABETH H Harrisonburg, Va.
ROSS, JEAN P. . 2205 Parkvvood Ave., Toledo, O.
SINCLAIR, RUTH B 437 Roslyn Place, Chicago, III.
SNYDER, KATHARINE 7 W. Union Street, Somerset, Pa.
STOCKER, SILKA G • ■ 1238 Longfellow Ave., Detroit, Mich.
THOMPSON, FLORENCE B Church Street, Palouse, Wash.
WALTON, MARGARET B Gambler, O.
WALTZ, EMELYN 554 Longwood Ave., Glencoe, III.
WHITE, VIRGINIA 906 Glen Oak Ave., Peoria, 111.
WOLF, HELEN D Rockwood, Pa.
YATES, EVELYN 1620 16th St., Washington, D. C.
YOUNGER, RUTH R 2519 Etna Street, Berkeley, Cal.
ZIA, GRACE 729 N. Szechnen Road, Shanghai, China
FIELD, MARY M. (MRS.) Wellesley, Mass.
KWEI, CHI-LIANG ' 912 Hardoon Road, Shanghai, China
WONG, KUO SIEN 89 Scott Road, Shanghai, China
120
draliuat? (Elub
Officers
Ellkn Armstronc. ' ''t'S'tlfllt
Marion- Warner Vice-President
Alice Rupp Secretary
Alfiulu Kalitarvi Treasurer
(ira&uatp i>tuliirnts
1921-22
ARMSTRONG, ELLEN. B.A • • Welle.ley, 1919
AUSTIN, MARY LELLAH, B.A Wellesley, 1920
CARLSON, MARGERY C, B.S •■ Northwestern Uii., 1916, M.S., Uii. of Wis., 1920
CASE, MARY SOPHIA, B.A Un. of Mich., 1884
COE, ADA MAE, B.A Mt- Holyolce, 1913
COHEN, INEZ TERESE, B.A ■ • •' Wellesley, 1921
DAY, M.\RJORIE C, B.A Wellesley, 1914
DENNETT, FRANCES Certificate of Hygiene, Wellesley, 1921
EAMES, ANGIE V., B.A Wellesley, 1918
HALSEY, ELIZABETH, .. Certificite of Hygiene, Wellesley, 1916, Ph.B., l":i. of Chicago, 1911
HEMENWAY, VERA, B.A Wellesley, 1919
HOLMES, PAULINE, B.A Wellesley, 1918
JENKINS, MARY B., B.A Wellesley, 1903
K.'^LIJARVI, ALFHILD, B.A Smith, 1921
KENNEDY, MARGARET J., B.A ■■ Wisconsin, 1902
KINGMAN, ANNA A., B.A Wellesley, 1914
KNAPP, FRANCES L., B.A Wellesley, 1902
LINDSAY, S. BLANCHE, B. A. Mt. Holyoke, 1921
MAYNE, EDITH RITTENHOUSE, B.A Wellesley, 1921
MOORE, DOROTHY, B.A Wellesley, 1918
ORNDORFF, FLORENCE M., B.A Wellesley, 1923
RATHBONE, JOSEPHINE, B. A ■ • Wellesley, 1921
ROGERS, JOY NICHOLS, B.A., B.S Ohio State University, 1919
RUPP, ALICE, B.A Wellesley, 1920
SMITH, HELEN PARKER. B..\ ■■ Wellesley, 1920
STUART. HELEN STENGER, B. A W^ells, 1918
TRIPP, FRANCES VENDERVOORT, B. A Radcliffe, 1920
WALDO, CORINNE ABERCROMBIE, B.A ■• Wellesley, 1900
WARNER, MARION E., B.A Connecticut, 1919
WEGNER, MILDA T .. B.A Mihvaukee-Downer, 1920
WILLIS, RUBY, B.A Wellesley, 1909
127
^tuiiFUta in irpartrnpnt nf Hygipup
1921-1922
BECKLEY, RUTH Rockford College
BERGER, CHARLOTTE E Wellesley College
CLIFTON, ELEANOR University of Minnesota
COLLINS, VIVIAN DUNBAR Wellesley College
EDWARDS, HELEN LUCILE Ohio Wesleyan
FOX, GLADYS HILDA Wellesley College
HUESMAN, TERESA University of Minnesota
KIMM, ADELE ADELHEIT University of Iowa
NEWTON, S. SELAH Syracuse University
RATHBONE, JOSEPHINE L Wellesley College
REARICK, ELIZABETH CHARLOTTE Rockford College
RICE, CAROL MARGARET Smith College
ROGERS, JOY NICHOLS Ohio State University
SHERMAN, HELEN Wellesley College
SPURRIER, MERLE Ohio Wesleyan
TALBOT, JENNIE University of Wisconsin
WINNER, HARRIET Wellesley College
WELLS, GWENDOLYN Wellesley College
128
Woman Citizen
WELLESLEY COLLEGE GOVERNMENT
ASSOCIATION
SENATE
HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES
HOUSE PRESIDENT'S COUNCIL
VILLAGE SENIORS
MDCCCCXXII
Officers
Emmavail Luce, 1922 President
Margaret R. Byard, 1922 Vice-President
Elizabeth Head, 1923 Secretary
Irene Ott, 1923 Treasurer
Faculty Members of the Senate
Miss Pendleton Miss French
Miss Tufts Miss Kendrick
Miss Lyman
Student Rleinhers of the Senate
Emmavail Luce, 1922 Irene Ott, 1923
Margaret R. Byard, 1922 Josephine Atkinson, 1924
Elizabeth Head, 1923 Sarah Carr, 1925
130
OTrllfBlrij (EuUrgp (Sourniiurnt Aaaariatiun — Continued
House of Representatives
1922
Elizabeth Badger
Josephine Barbour
Helen Chain
Sarah Conant
Helen Forbush
Mary Louise Fritchman
Use Gehring
Harriet Holcombe
Caroline Ingham
Elizabeth Knowlton
Dorothy
Ruth Lindall
Eleanor McArdle
Margaret Merrell
Mildred Miles
Caroline Moench
Grace Osgood
Elizabeth Parsons
Leah Rabbitt
Harriet Ralston
Shirlev Smith
Stev
1923
Adeline Aldrich
Marjorie Bartholomew
Mary Elizabeth Bendig
Elizabeth Bryan
Helen Burtt
Lorraine Combs
Mary Cooper
Winona Coykendall
Elizabeth Ehrhart
Mary Eraser
Constance Fritz
Jane Harvey
Isabel Shindel
Margaret Hoogs
Marion Johnson
Barbara Kriger
Caroline Ladd
Margaret Leavitt
Miriam Mayne
Marjorie Metheny
Elizabeth Milne
Hope Parker
Elizabeth Round
Elizabeth Sanford
Blanche Schlivek
Helen Atkinson
Louise Child
Laliah Curry
Mary Draper
V^irginia English
Mary Frackleton
Margaret Gist
Hope Harris
Ruth Heller
Elizabeth Johnson
1924
Augusta Wagner
131
Elizabeth Luce
Jean Lyon
Helen Osborn
Ellen Page
Laura Powers
Carolyn Robinson
Mary Thompson
Constance Towner
Lois Twigger
Helen Vaughan
IHrllrBlrii (Cnllryr (Snurrnmrnt AsBiuUttiim — C.o)}ii>iu<d
1925
Florence Baldwin
Catherine Beeman
Mildred Burnett
Mary L. Beverstock
Lucile Bump
Mary G. Coates
Virginia Downing
Mandeleine Franks
Frances Haugliton
Dorothy Knight
Lilith Lidseen
Marion Montgomery
Augusta Thomas
Marv \Vilson
House Fresidenls' Council
Luella B. Tucker Beebe
Margeret E. Wvlie Cazenove
Myra H. Beyer' Claflin
Eugenie W. Bent Fiske
Elizabeth D. Ely Freeman
Gertrude Wade Norumbega
Caroline Ewe Pomeroy
Janet Ward Shafer
Ruth H. McMillan Stone
Isabel Dietrich Tower Court
Emily Latham Wilder
Dorothy Wescott IVood
Village Seniors
Dorothy Blossom Clinton
Pauline Coburn Eliot
Ernestine Wiedenbach Elms
Madeline VanDorn Leighton
Harriet C. Rathbun Little
Ruth E. Hillyar Lovewell
Tacy W. Parry Noanett
Josephine Vincent Tozvnsend
Margaret R. Byard Washington
Katherine R. Cooke ff'ebb
Marv R. Giddings 11 Abbott Street
Carol M. Roehm 18 Belair Road
Helen V. Yates 7 Waban Street
Frances F. Sturgis 628 JVashington Street
Fire Chief
Marion George, 1922
Advertising Manager
Hope Parker, 1923
College Auditor
Mrs. Westcott
132
/
THE
VOFIBS VfflBK
ELIZABETH FROST, 1922, President
DOROTHY ROGERS, 1923, Vice-President
LOUISE WATKINS, 1923, Secretary
MARY LOUISE FRITCHMAN, 1922, Treasurer
RUTH BECKER, 1922, Business Manager
ELEANOR HOPWOOD, 1925, Freshman Member
133
Christian Association
The Christian Endeavor World
Emily Gordon, 1922, President; Pauline Coburn, 1922, Vice-
President; Joy Scheidenhelm, 1924, Secretary; Elizabeth Abbott,
1923, Treasurer.
Miss Kendrick, Chairman Religious Meetings Committee;
Miss Wilson, Chairman World Fellowship Committee; Mar-
garet Hoogs, 1923, Undergraduate Field Representative; Hope
Angleman, 1922, Chairman Membership Committee; Mary Louise
Fritchman, 1922, Chairman Conference Committee; Carol Rhodes,
1923, Chairman Community Service Committee; Mary Eraser,
Chairman General Aid Committee; Esther Rolfe, 1923, Chairman
Social Committee; Jane Harvey, 1923, Chairman Publicity Com-
mittee; Margaret Conant, 1919, General Secretary.
134
DEBATING CLUB
JudS
e
Marion P. Perrin President
Margaret Merrell Vice-President
Elizabeth Sanford Secretary
Erma V. Bell Treasurer
135
Date— March 18, 1922
Resolved: That the United States should grant complete independence to the
Philippines immediately.
AFFIRMATIVE TEAM (WELLESLEY)
Speakers
Erma Bell, 1923 Katharine Cooke, 1922
Marion Perrix, 1922
Jlternates
Muriel Reiss, 1924 Martha Hanna, 1922
Cornelia Evans, 1923
NEGATIVE TEAM (HOLYOKE)
Speakers
Alice Dunham, 1922 Elizabeth Buethe, 1925
Eleanor Brown, 1924
Alternates
Janet Crawforu, 1923 Priscilla Cowper, 1925
Sarah Thompson, 1924
Margaret Merrell, 1922 Chairman of Debate
Caroline Ingham, 1922 Business Manager
136
Hrllralpy ainUrgr (Ulpir
HAMrLTON' C. MacDougall Chnir Master
HiLDEGARDE Churchill, 1922 Chorister
Adelaide Robbins, 1923 Issistant Chorister
Florence Jecp, 1922 . j ■, ■
, ( Librarians
Dorothy iower, i922j
Jean Wilder, 1924 issistani Librarian
138
Eleanor Bye, 1922
Catherine Chapman
Caroline Ewe, 1922
Margaret Leavitt, 1923
Ruth Mcjunkin, 1923
Ruth Martenis, 1923
Ruth Mathews, 1923
First Sopranos
Marjorie Osgood, 1923
1922 Ruth Swetland, 1923
Mary Warden, 1923
Laura Powers, 1924
Louise Durst, 1924
Katherine Beeman, 1925
Edith Goodwin, 1925
Mary Aydelott, 1922
Dorothy Breingan, 1922
Laverna Cone, 1922
Hildegarde Churchill, 1922
Grace Harding, 1922
Anita Merry Wheeler, 1922
Gwendolyn Bossi, 1923
Muriel Crewe, 1923
Second Sopranos
Alice Sniffen, 1923
Hannah Withers, 1923
Laura Burgher, 1924
Nancy Davidson, 1924
Marjorie Wright, 1924
Ruth Kent, 1925
Josephine McAlexander, 1925
Katherine Harbison, 1925
Contraltos
Janet Ward, 1922
Esther Woodford, 1922
Mary Zweizig, 1922
Hannah Chamberlin, 1923
Elizabeth Ehrhart, 1923
Mary Hughes, 1923
Miriam Mavne, 1923
Adelaide Robbins, 1923
Constance Wilson, 1923
Hilda Crosby, 1924
Delnoce Grant, 1924
Alice Leinbach, 1924
Marion Russell, 1924
Laura Withers, 1924
Frances Eleanor Milton, 1925
139
*>•' ■!;■■::■!■-
UpUpslrii (Unllpgr ^yutpl|nnu (iPrrhrstra
Albert Foster Conductor
Florence Jeup, 1922 President
Lucy Johnson, 1923 Secretary-Treasurer
Nancy Davidson, 1924 Student Conductor-Librarian
140
UrUfHlrii (CuUrgr *iinipl|iiiui (!3rrl|rBtra — Conumicd
first I iolins
Hope Blodgett. 1924 Florence Jeup, 1922
Gwendohn Bossi, 1923 Lucy Johnson, 1923
Mary Ellinwood, 1924 Emily Latham, 1922
Margaret Fiske, 1923 Edith Nutt, 1922
Mary Fox, 1924 Eleanor Peckham, 1922
Grace Harding, 1922 Winifred Wright, 1925
Second liolins
Marguerite Brash, 1922 Dorothy Knight, 1925
Vora Conant, 1925 Eleanor Rosebrugh, 1924
Katherine DeWolf, 1922 E. Josephine Savior, 1924
Margaret Fincke, 1925 Margery Steele, 1925
Katherine Knaebel, 1924 Helen Woelfel, 1924
Harriet Curtis, ]^25
Ruth Lovejoy, 1925
Violinccllo
Helen Sawyer, 1925
Helen Vergason, 1923
Flute
Marion Speer, 1924
Harp
Marjorie Pedersen, 1924
Cornet
Miss Blodgett
Piano
Miss Tufts
Jean Wilder, 1924
Mary Zweizig, 1922
Bass
Edna Campbell, 1924
Mr. McDougall
141
Hrllrslpo (Cnllpgr (SIpp (Elub
Helen Crandell, 1922 President
Anita Merry Wheeler. 1922 Leader
Elizabeth Ehrhart, 1923 Secretary
Miriam Mayne, 1923 Treasurer
Members
Adelaide Aldrich, 1923 Dorothy Macomber, 1923
Eleanor Ball, 1923 Carol Mills, 1922
Dorothy Breingaii, 1922 Ruth Martenis, 1923
Erma Bell, 1923 Miriam Mayne. 1923
Eleanor Bye, 1922 Eda McCoy, 1924
Alfarata Bowdoin, 1922 Laura Po\yers, 1924
Hildegarde Churchill, 1922 Alice Sniffen, 1923
Lal:ah Currey, 1924 Esther Rolfe, 1923
Muriel Crewe, 1923 Marjorie Smith, 1922
Hannah Cliamherlin, 1923 Grace Thayer, 1924
Caroline Ewe, 1922 Mary Warden, 1923
Elizabeth Ehrhart, 1923 Carol Whitmarsh, 1922
Kathcrine Eielding, 1924 Gretchen \Vaterman, 1924
Lois Gibboney, 1922 Jean Wilder, 1924
Ethel Halsey, 1922 Janet Ward, 1922
Elizabeth Head, 1923 Esther Woodford. 1922
Elizabeth Kirkham, 1924 Eltse Van Saun, 1923
Alice Leinbach, 1924 Mary Zweizig. 1922
1.42
Barnswallows' Association
143
2Jar«aumUtiuts' AHsnriattntt
Officers
Frances Baker, 1922 Pitiidini
Nora Cleveland, 1923 rice-President
Barbara Conger, 1924 Secretary
Virginia Jemison, 1923 Treasurer
Helen Baxter, 1923 Business Manaycr
Grace Freeman, 1922 Chuiniuui Costume Committee
Doris Gunderson, 1922 Cluiirninn Mnke-Vp Committee
Carol Mills, 1922 Chnirmnn Pliscodtis
Alice Richardson, 1923 Chuinnan Properties Committee
Lorraine Coombs, 1923 Chiirman Scenery Committee
Harriet Cavis, 1923 Chairman Lighting Committee
Helen Scudder, 1923 Chairman Ushering Committee
Marjory Sibley, 1923 Chairman Publicity Committee
:144
DRAM J COMMITTEE
Miss Tufts Faculty Member
Frances Sturgis, 1922 Senior Member
Adeline Aldrich, 1923 Junior Member
Katherine Brown, 1924 Sophomore Member
Elizabeth Alorrison, 1922 The Agora
Alfarata Bowdoin, 1922 Society Alpha Kappa Chi
Carol Whitmarsh, 1922 Phi Sigma Society
Mary Allen, 1922 Shakespeare Society
Carol Mills, 1922 Society Tau Zeta Epsilon
Emma Couch, 1922 Society Zeta Alpha
TREE DAY COMMITTEE
Lucille Barrett, 1922 Chairman
Adaline Wheeler, 1922 j
Dorothy Dodson, 1923 V Plans
Virginia Berresford, 1924 )
Olive Ladd, 1922 Costumes
Elinor Peckham, 1922 Music
Mary Alice Bushnell, 1922 Dancing
Harriet Kirkham, 1922 Properties
Ruth Lindall, 1922 Finance
Helen Forbush, 1922 General Arrangements
JUNIOR PROMENADE
Carolyn Ewe, Chairman
Caroline Ingram
Margaret Jackson
Katheryn Kidd
Dorothy Woodward
SENIOR PROMENADE
Elizabeth Fry, Chairman
Carol Whitmarsh
Elizabeth Vinton
Alfarata Bowdoin
145
R E V I E W
REVIEWS
Wellesley College News
Wellesley College Press Board
Legenda Board
147
.:^m
il: J
i
VJ ^ ^^ ^ . >
■
k i ^ 1
3iFllp0lpy (EnUrgp Npuis
Elizabeth M. Woody, 1922
Beatrice Jeffersox, 1922
Dorothy M. Williams, 1922
Dorothea Comly, 1922
Margaret Watterson, 1922
Elizabeth Allen, 1923
Mary F"raser, 1923
Margaret Hoggs, 1923
Dorothy Merz, 1923
Elizabeth Sanford, 1923
Helen Stahl, 1923
Elizabeth Buethe, 1924
Louise Child, 1924
Barbara Conger, 1924
Ruth Heller, 1924
Charlotte Morris, 1925
Evelyn Roat, 1925 '
Susan Graffam, 1922
Barbara Bates, 1922
Lucy Johnson, 1923 Issistant
Ruth White, 1923
May Fales, 1924 {
Annette Wright, 1924 )
. Editor-in-Chief
Associate Editors
Assistant Editors
. . Business ^Itinager
Circultition ^lanager
Circulation ^lanager
Advertising Manager
Assistant Managers
14fi
Miss Manwaring Chairman of Publicity
Members
Katherine DeWolf, 1922
Louise DeWolf, 1922
Barabara Exton, 1923
Betty Larrimore, 1924
Pauline Leonard, 1922
Mary Page, 1922
Florence Pfalzgraf, 1923
Eva Rieber, 1922
149
Lucy Lewis Thom Editor-in-Chief
Mary Pringle Barret Associate Editor
Martha E. Hanna )
Adelaide Kohn ? Literary Editors
Alice Richards j
Helen M. Woodruff Jrt Editor
Ethel Halsey |
Margaret Sherwin .) Assistant Art Editors
Katharine A. Stone '
Mary Page Business IManager
Mary Louise Fritchman Advertising Manager
Elizabeth H astir |
Margery Mkthexy / Issistant Business Managers
Janet Crawford ;
150
ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION
OUTING
Mildred Durant, President; Ida Weber, Vice-President; Ellen Page, Secretary;
Josephine Wallace, Treasurer; Katherine Pomeroy, Custodian.
151
Arrl|pri|
Helen C. Davis Elizabeth M. Knovvlton, W
Katherine H. DeWolf Ruth P. Sears (Capt.)
Martha E. Hanna (Head), //' Avis C. Walsh
Mary G. Kelly (sub.)
152
laspball
Alice Bennet
Hildegarde E. Churchill
Pauline A. Coburn, W
Doris Engle, W
Susan H. Graft'am (Capt.), IV
Dorothy V. Higley
Edna F. Strebel
Mary Edith Stahl (Head)
Lucy L. Thom
Ernestine Wiedenbai h
153
laskptball
Dora A. Armstrong (Head), W
Dorothy Blossom
H. Carr Iglehart
Ruby M. Phillips, W
Marion Scofield (Capt.), W
Nan Taylor
Dorothy M. Weil, IV
Mary Hankinson (sub.)
Mildred Jordan (sub.)
Ruth M. VanOrden (sub.)
154
(Crnu
Barbara Bates, 6, IV
Dorothy Breingan, Cox (Head)
Rebecca Davis, 2, W
Mildred Durant, Stroke, IV
Margaret Griffiths, 4
Alene Little, Bow
Harriet C. Rathbun, 7, W
Alice Richards, 5 (Capt.)
Shirley Smith, 3
iSs'
(Sulf
Ethel Kurth (Head), Jf Frances H. Tiedtke, IV
Sara F. Kirk Helen M. Woodruff (Capt.), fV
Betty P. Watt (sub.)
1S6
Mnrkpg
Catherine Chapman
Helen G. Forbush (Head), IV
Grace E. Graham
Marian S. Haynes
Helen B. Logan (Capt.), IV
Nancy M. Kreider
Marion Josephi (sub.)
Marion Olmstead (sub.)
A. Elizabeth Parsons, fV
Madeleine J. Pritzloff, IV
Florence A. Ross
Dorothy K. Shank, IV
Rebecca Stickney
Elizabeth M. Thomson, IV
Catherine McReynolds (sub.)
Anita Wheeler (sub.)
157
Myra Beyer, //'
Ruth Melcher
Use Gehring (sub.)
Eilttng
Margaret Watterson
Elizabeth Wilcox (Capt.), W
Doris Ulman (sub.)
158
(Upttnia
Sarah B. Conant (Capt.), //
Jean O. Coulter
Elizabeth Hand
Isabel M. Ingram, fV
Janet G. Travell (Head), IV
Elizabeth Fleming (sub.)
Harriet D. Holcombe (sub.)
Harriet M. Kirkham (sub.)
159
Srark
Aimee Louise Bettman (Head), IV
Dorothy Grover
Charlotte Hilton
Tacy Parry, W
Marion Dexter (sub.)
Mildred McCarty (sub.)
Helen Powers, IV
Sarah Ray
Marie Struckman
Harriet Turnball (Capt.), IV
Adelaide Milne (sub.)
Margaret Reese (sub.)
160
Inllro lall
Ruth Dean (Capt.). IV
Jessie Hunter
Esther Lacount
Leah Rabbitt
Ruth Sheppard, IF
Elizabeth Tracy
Carol Woodruff (Head), JV
Laverna Cone (sub.)
Dorothy Morehouse (sub.)
Winifred Miller (sub.)
161
7/?c HOUSE BEAUTIFUI!
®itp Agnra
Officers
Pauline Watkins, 1922 President
Lois A. Childs, 1922 Vice-President
HiLDEGARD Churchill, 1922 Secretary
Helen Bixby, 1923 Assistant Secretary
Hope Angleman, 1922 Treasurer
Elizabeth Ely, 1922 Purveyor
Frances Smith, 1923 Assistant Purveyor
Agnes Houghton, 1922 Keeper of the House
Elizabeth Morrison, 1922 Drama Committee Member
Jeannette Greuner Keeper of Records
164
Jin IFaruUatP
Julia Swift Orvis
'Mary W. Calicins
Helen S. French
Olga Halsey
Mary J. Lanier
Laura Lockwood
Frances L. Knapp
Alice Rupp
Mabel A. Stone
Seal Thompson
Esther Trethaway
Alice V. Waite
Judith B. Williams
Uonurarjj iUpmbrra
Mr. and Mrs. Edw. Farnham Greene
General John J. Pershing
1922
Hope Angleman
Alice Bennet
Lois Childs
Hildegarde E. Churchill
Pauline Coburn
Elizabeth Ely
Mary R. Giddings
Emily Gordon
Susan Graffam
Margaret Hall
Martha E. Hanna
Marian Josephi
Agnes Houghton
Elizabeth McAloney
Virginia Merriam
Elizabeth Morrison
Leah Rabbit
Alice Richards
Carol Roehm
Shirley Smith
Madeline Van Dorn
Marian Wright
Helen Yates
Pauline Watkins
1923
Helene Bixby
Josephine Brown
Helen Burtt
Alice Chapman
Virginia Corwin
Jeannette Greuner
Elizabeth Hastie
Florence Hasketh
Lee Johanboeke
Carolyn Ladd
Margaret McCuUoch
Miriam Mayne
Mabel Noyes
Esther Rolfe
Gertrude Schultz
Frances Smith
165
i>nriFtg Alpl^a 2Cappa (Elii
Dorothy Cochlin, 1922 President
Cornelia Ross, 1922 Vhe-President
Ruth P. Sears, 1922 Record'nu/ Secretary'
E. RuDISiLL Freeman, 1922 Corresponding Secretary
Dorothy M. Weil, 1922 Treasurer
Elizabeth Crafts, 1922 Custodian
Erma Bell, 1923 First Factotum
Elizabeth King, 1923 Second Factotum
Helen M. Chain, 1922 Editor of the Scroll
Alfarata Bowdoin, 1922 Drama Committee Member
166
Jin 3FantUatP
Malvina M. Bennet
Dorothy W. Dennis
Alice Walton
Muriel A. Streibert
Caroline R. Fletcher
Clarence G. Hamilton
Antionette B. P. Metcalf
Agnes Perkins
Katherine Balderston
Adeline B. Havv'es
Margaret Bancroft
Hunoraru MmxbvvB
Margaret Anglin Baker Mrs. Clarence G. Hamilton
Ellen Armstrong
Alumnap
Mary L. Austin
1922
Dora Armstrong
Alfarata Bowdoin
Marion Breckenridge
Eleanor Bye
Helen Chain
Dorothy Cochlin
Elizabeth Crafts
Winetta David
Margaret Fauver
Rudisill Freeman
Elizabeth Gardiner
Use Gehring
Elizabeth Williams
Jessie Hoit
Emilv Nichols
Ruby Phillips
Cornelia Ross
Ruth Schlivek
Ruth P. Sears
Dorothy Stone
Edna Strebel
Josephine Vincent
Dorothy Weil
Marion White
Dorothy Williams
1923
Elizabeth Abbott
Stella Balderston
Erma Bell
Marie Brennan
Mary Eraser
Dorothy Johnston
Elizabeth King
Kate Ludlum
Janet McDougall
Ruth Marsh
Anna Payne
Carol Rhodes
Blanche Schlivek
Naoma Thomas
Margaret Willard
167
Officers
Dorothy Underhill, 1922 President
Ruth Harrison, 1922 Vice-President
Dorothy Bogart, 1922 Recording Secretary
Florence Ross, 1922 Corresponding Secretary
Kathryn Kidd, 1922 Treasurer
Mary Princ.le Barret, 1922 Head of ll'ork
Elizabeth Lum, 1922 Custodian
Dorothy V. D. Lukexs, 1922 Assistant Housekeeper
Dorothy Bogart, 1922 Librarian
Carol WhiTMARSH, 1922 Drama Committee Member
Mariorie Burchari), 1923{
Marion Seelye, 1923 S Marshnh
168
Jin iFaruUatP
Josephine H. Batchelder Elizabeth Manwaring
Katherine Lee Bates
1922
Mary Pringle Barret
Dorothy Bogart
Jean Coulter
Bertha Davidson
Isabel Dietrich
Dorothy Dukes
Elizabeth Fry
Margaret Griffiths
Ruth Harrison
Eloise Hazard
Kathryn Kidd
Sara Kirk
Olive Ladd
Elizabeth Lindsay
Dorothy Lukens
Elizabeth Lum
Marion Perrin
Florence Ross
Katharine Stone
Nancy Toll
Dorothy Underbill
Carol Whitmarsh
Helen Woodruff
Jane Wynne
1923
Mary Elizabeth Bendig
Marjorie Burchard
Dorothy Cleaveland
Hannah Chamberlin
Alice Day
Dorothy Dodson
Victorine du Pont
Helen Emery
Marv Warden
Elizabeth Head
Esther McMaster
Ruth Pederson
Louise Rauh
Marion Seelye
Frances Seydell
Dorothy Springer
Dorothv Volk
169
^Irabpfipparp ^nmtg
Officers
Elizabeth Hand, 1922 President
Elizabeth Willcox, 1922 J'ice-President
Florence Pfalzgraf, 1923 Ritordiiuj Secretary
Margaret Sherwin, 1922 Corresponding Secretary
Margaret Barcalo, 1923 Treasurer
Mary Allen, 1922 Keeper of the House
Beatrice Jefferson, 1922 Chef
Mary Cooper, 1923 1 Factotums
Mary Hackney, 1923 >
Mary Allen, 1922 Drama Committee Member
17U
iln Jarultatp
Mary B. Brainerd
Laura M. Dwight
Eleanor A. McC. Gamble
Sophie C. Hart
Amv Kelly
Eliza H. Kendrick
Louise McDowell
Ellen F. Pendleton
Margaret P. Shenvood
Bertha Knickerbocker Straight
Edith S. Tufts
Mabel M. Young
Unnorary fHrmbrrB
Edith Wynne Matheson Kennedy
Julia Marlowe Sothern
Alumnap
Rachel Blodgett
Bernice E. Conant
Marjorie Day
Helen L. Smith
Angie Eames
Pauline Holmes
Margaret Conant
Mary McA. Allen
Margaret Babb
Dorothy Blossom
Mildred Durant
Margaret Carter
Adele Eichler
Elizabeth Frost
Ethel Halsey
Elizabeth Hand
H. Carr Iglehart
Margaret Jackson
1922
Beatrice Jefferson
Emmavail Luce
Catherine McReynolds
Caroline Moench
Muriel Morris
Dorothy Muzzey
Eleanor Peckham
Harriet Rathbun
Margaret Sherwin
Frances Sturgis
Elizabeth Willcox
Margaret Wylie
1923
Margaret Barcalo
Edith Brandt
Mary Cooper
Elizabeth Gay
Mary Hackney
Margaret Hoogs
Juliet Iglehart
Virginia Jemison
Marian Johnson
Margaret Leavitt
Marjory Metheny
Edith Meyer
Irene Ott
Florence Pfalzgraf
Dorothy Rogers
Helen Scudder
Laura D. Sherrard
Winifred Van Horsen
171
i'flmtg QIau 2rta iEpHtlnn
Officers
Dorothy Tower, 1922 President
Lucy Lewis Thom, 1922 Vice-President
Ruth McMillan, 1922 Recording Secretary
Lois Gibboney, 1922 Corresponding Secretary
Doris Gunderson, 1922 Treasurer
Grace Freeman, 1922 Head of Work
Josephine Barbour, 1922 Keeper of the House
Louise Watkens, 1923 Assistant Keepers of the House
Marguerita Forbes, 1923
Dorothea Comly, 1922 Store Keeper
Dorothea Comly, 1922 Editor of the Iris
Carol Mills, 1922 Drama Committee Member
172
Hit iFarultatp
Alice V. V. Brown
Helen Davis
Laura I. Hibbard
Mabel E. Hodder
Alice I. P. Wood
Gladys A. Turnbach
Margaret H. Jackson
Hamilton C. McDougali
Helen Cope
Josephine Rathbone
Ahimnap
Gwendolyn Wells
Marjorie Butterfield
Constance Vander Roest
1922
Frances Baker
Josephine Barbour
Mrs. K. Elizabeth D. Bryant
Mary Elizabeth Clark
Dorothea B. Comly
Sarah B. Conant
Helen Frankel
Grace Freeman
Lois Gibboney
Dorothy Grover
Doris Gunderson
Florence Jeup
Helen Woods
Margaret Kittinger
Emily Latham
Ruth MacMillan
Carol Mills
Adelaide Milne
Dorothy Moorehouse
Dorothy Stevens
Lucy Lewis Thom
Dorothy Tower
Anita Merry Wheeler
Ernestine Wiedenbach
Ruth Williamson
1923
Rosamund Barney
Helen Baxter
Catherine Brash
Katherine Buckingham
Helen Burns
Louise Butterfield
Wynona Coykendall
Elizabeth Ehrhart
Constance Fritz
Marguerita Forbes
Constance Parsons
Louise Watkins
Ruth White
Dorothy C. Wilson
173
^nriftg Hrta Alplia
Officers
Ruth Melcher, 1922 President
Marjorie Ely, 1922 f'ice-Fresident
Adaline Wheeler, 1922 Recording Secretary
Caroline Ingham, 1922 Correspondiny Secretary
Janet G. Travell, 1922 Treasurer
Emma Couch, 1922 Head of (fork
Elizabeth Fleming, 1922 Custodian
Helen Stahl, 1923 issistant Custodian
Charlotte W. Hilton, 1922 Editor of Xeta Alpha Annual
Lucy Johnson, 1923 Assistant Editor of Annual
Lorraine Combs, 1923 First Marshal
Barbara Kriger, 1923 Second Marshal
Emma Couch, 1922 Drama Committee Member
174
Jn iFantltatp
Myrtilla Avery
Martha P. Conant
Martha Hale Shackford
Eliza J. Newkirk
Alumnap
Mrs. Charles H. Wardwell
1922
Lucile Barrett
Dorothy C Breingan
Margaret Byard
Katharine Cooke
Emma Couch
Marjorie Ely
Elizabeth Fleming
Helen Forbush
Marion George
Grace Graham
Marian Haynes
Charlotte Hilton
Harriet Holcombe
Caroline Ingham
Ruth Lindall
Genevieve Marcell
Ruth Melcher
Tacy W. Parry
Ethel Quinn
Gertrude Seelye
Mary Edith Stahl
Janet G. Travell
Janet Ward
Margaret Watterson
Adaline Wheeler
Elizabeth Woodv
1923
Adeline Aldrich
Madeline Block
Lorraine Combs
Jane Harvey
Lucy Johnson
Barbara Kriger
Hope Parker
Alice Richardson
Barbara Roberts
Elizabeth Sanford
Julia Smith
Helen Stahl
Eltse Van Saun
Janet Warfield
175
itt Ipta IKappa
Eta Chapter of Massachusetts
Officers
Helen A. Merrill Presidint
Clarence G. Hamilton Vice-President
Lucy Wilson Treasurer
Alice Walton Secretary
In Facultate
LEILA ALBRIGHT, M.A Vassar,
MILDRED ALLEN, M.A Vassar,
MARY L. AUSTIN, B.A Wellesley,
KATHERINE C. BALDERSTON, M.A Wellesley,
EDWARD C. BANCROFT, M.A., M.D Amherst,
KATHERINE LEE BATES, M.A., Litt.D Wellesley,
RACHEL BLODGETT, Ph.D Wellesley,
MARY BROWN BRAINERD, Ph.D Wellesley,
ELLEN L. BURRELL, B.A Wellesley,
ALICE BUSHEE, M.A Mt. Holyoke,
MARY W. CALKINS, Litt.D., LL.D Smith,
MARY S. CASE, B.A University of Michigan,
COHEN, B.A Wellesley,
P. CONANT, Ph.D Wellesley,
University,
INEZ T
MARTHA
MARY L. COURTNEY, B.A Boston
ELIZABETH DONNAN, B.A Cornell University,
KATHERINE M. EDWARDS, Ph.D Cornell University,
CAROLINE R. FLETCHER, M.A Wellesley,
HELEN S. FRENCH, Ph.D Wellesley,
ELEANOR A. McC. GAMBLE, Ph.D Wellesley,
MARY CURTIS GRAUSTEIN, Ph.D Wellesley,
CLARENCE G. HAMILTON, M.A Brown University,
SOPHIE C. HART, M.A Ra.lcliffe,
901
915
920
915
883
907
916
909
909
918
910
884
921
911
909
906
906
919
906
907
920
888
914
176
ADELINE B. HAWES, M.A Oberlin, 1908
HARRIET BOYD HAWES, Litt.D Smith, 1910
LAURA A. HIBBARD, Ph.D Wellesley, 1919
MABEL E. HODDER, Ph.D Syracuse, 1895
HELEN W. KAAN, B.A Mt. Holyoke, 1919
ALFHILD KALIJARVI, B.A Mt. Holyoke, 1921
ELIZA H. KENDRICK, Ph.D Wellesley, 1907
ALISON M. KINGSBURY, B.A Wellesley, 1919
LAURA E. LOCKWOOD, Ph.D University of Kansas, 1891
HELEN A. MERRILL, Ph.D Wellesley, 1907
ANNA BERTHA MILLER, Ph.D Goucher, 1917
JULIA E. MOODY, Ph.D Mt. Holyoke, 1918
LOUISE S. McDowell, Ph.D Wellesley, 1910
JANE I. NEWELL, B.A Wellesley, 1907
MARGARET T. PARKER, B.A University of Chicago, 1916
ELLEN F. PENDLETON, Litt.D., LL.D Wellesley, 1906
CHRISTIAN A. RUCKMICK, Ph.D Amherst, 1909
VIDA D. SCUDDER, M.A Smith, 1915
MARTHA HALE SHACKFORD, Ph.D Wellsley, 1907
MARGARET P. SHERWOOD, Ph.D Vassar, 1899
CLARA E. SMITH, Ph.D Mt. Holyoke, 1918
LAETITIA M. SNOW, Ph.D Goucher, 1905
MARION E. STARK, M.A Brovpn University, 191 5
SEAL THOMPSON, M.A University of Chicago, 1914
ROXANA H. VIVIAN, Ph.D Wellesley, 1907
ALICE V. WAITE, M.A Smith, 1915
ALICE WALTON, Ph.D Smith, 1915
FRANCES LESTER WARNER, B.A Mt. Holyoke, 1911
HARRIET C. WATERMAN, M.A Brown University, 1917
JUDITH BLOW WILLIAMS, Ph.D Vassar, 1912
RUBY WILLIS, M.A Wellesley, 1909
LUCY WILSON, Ph.D Johns Hopkins, 1917
ALICE I. PERRY WOOD, Ph.D Wellesley, 1919
MABEL MINERVA YOUNG, Ph.D Wellesley, 1920
Graduate Students. 1921-1922
ANGIE V. FAMES, B.A Wellesley, 1918
VERA C. HEMENWAY, B.A Wellesley, 1919
EDITH R. MAYNE, B.A Wellesley, 1920
CAROL RICE, B.A Smith, 1920
1922
Kikue (Ide) Asami Hortense Hennenberg Grace Osgood
Alfarata Bowdoin Marion Ireland Marjorie Packard
Helen H. Chain Gertrude Kessel Ruth Schlivek
Hildegarde Churchill Marjorie Klein Myra Shimberg
Gladys Corthell Ruth Lindall Shirley Smtih
Elizabeth (Lum) Drake Margaret Merrell Enid Straw-
Emily Gordon Mildred Miles Janet Travell
Mary Hankinson Carol Mills Doris Ulmann
Emily Nichols
177
iMall)emattra (Club
Mary Hankinson, 1922 Iresident
Margaret Miirrei.l, 1922 Vice-President
Mary Wheeler, 1923 Secretary-Treasurer
Hope Angleman, 1922 Senior Executive
Margaret Ingraham, 1923 Junior Executive
Miss Merrill Faculty Member
^tuiirnt THolutrpra
Laliah Pingree, 1922 Leader
Laverna Cone, 1922 Secretary-Treasurer
Ruby Phillips, 1922 Ruth Earp, 1924
Margaret Eddy, 1922 Jean Lyon, 1924
Doris Engle, 1922 Jean Douglas, 1925
Margaret Willard, 1923 Sally Wharton, 1925
Gertrude Shults, 1923 Effie MacKinnon, 1925
Mary Blaine, 1925
^luJirut'a Ath ^nrirty
Miss Mary Caswell Treasurer
Constance C. Wilson, 1923 Chairman
Charlotte W. Hilton, 1922 Advisory
Elizabeth M. Luce, 1924 | o. , > „, i,/„,../,„,,
xr Tj T_r 1 me ' btudent Members
Virginia H. Hearding, 1925 \
Sfutsclifr Brrpht
Ilse Gehring, 1922 President
Julia Martin, 1922 Vice-President
Marion Radley, 1923 Secretary
Helen Zimmerman, 1923 Treasurer
(<Ioamii;iiiUtau (EUtb
Hei-wan Yong, 1922 President
Ruth Dean, 1922 Vice-President
Matsuyo Takizawa, 1923 Secretary
Harrietts Camp, 1922 Treasurer
IKatuf (Ulub
Pauline G. Carter, 1922 President
Dorothy Palmer, 1923 Vice-President
Eleanor Trefethen, 1924 Secretary
Marion Martin, 1924 Treasurer
(Erxaa Ollub
Mary Greene Kelly, 1922 President
Keith Louise Small, 1923 Treasurer
Irnunnt Glluh
Susan Graffam, 1922 President
Carolyn Ladd, 1923 Secretary
([Il1Un•a^u (Club
Grace K. Freeman, 1922 President
Dorothy Smith, 1924 Vice-President and Secretary
178
Wlfxa Ollub
Mary Alice Bushnell, 1922 President
Jane MacIntosh, 1924 Vice-President
Annie C. Richardson, 1924 Secretary and Treasurer
mirliigmt (Elub
Agnes Houghton, 1922 President
Laura Sherrard, 1923 Vice-President
Jean Smith, 1924 Secretary and Treasurer
jHumpauta (Elub
Kathryn Kidd, 1922 President
Mary Ann Nash, 1922 Vice-President
Elizabeth Page, 1924 Secretary
Mary Thompson, 1924 Treasurer
g>outljpnt (Club
Ruth Tick Cralle, 1922 President
Carr Iglehart, 1922 Vice-President
Theodate Wilson, 1923 Secretary and Treasurer
Pariftc (Enaat (llhib
Elizabeth C. Lindsay, 1922 President
Louise Watkins, 1923 Vice-President
Delnoce E. Grant, 1924 Secretary and Treasurer
CEtrruIu (EaateUattii
Ethel Quinn, 1922 President
Ida Waterman, 1923 Vice-President and Treasurer
Alice Bennett, 1922 Secretary
Miss BushEE Faculty Member
AUiattct iFratiratar
Adeline Wheeler, 1922 President
Anna Payne, 1923 Vice-President
Charlotte Arnold, 1923 Secretary
Lillian Rosenweig, 1922 Treasurer
iForum
Officers
Muriel Morris, 1922 President
Erma Bell, 1923 Secretary
Marion Johnson, 1923 Treasurer
Membership Committee
Miss Kelly Gertrude Kessel, 1922
Muriel Morris, 1922 Elizabeth Sanford, 1923
Augusta Wagner, 1924
Program Committee
Muriel Morris, 1922 Clarissa Scott, 1923
Louise MofFat, 1924
Honorary Members
Miss Kelly Mr. Sheffield
179
(Sommrnrrmpttt Program
June Play Friday, June 16
Second Performance Saturday. June 17
Garden Party Saturday. June 17
Baccalaureate Sermon Sunday, June 18
Commencement Vespers Sunday. June 18
Step-Singing Monday. June 19
President's Reception Monday. June 19
Commencement Tuesday. June 20
Class Supper Tuesday, June 20
Midnight Step-Singing Tuesday, June 20
Alumnae Day Wednesday, June 21
180
181
COMPILER'S PREFACE
I am of the class of 1922 of Wellesley College; therefore, as goes without
saying, intellectually minded. Consequently, you can readily imagine how, when
I overheard a rank outsider state that:
1. The college world was a small world after all;
2. The outside world knew little and cared less about said college world ;
3. The college tendency was to overestimate its own importance;
at once, in my usual scholarly manner, I began to search for evidence on the matter.
The data included in this volume I consider conclusively pro\e to the contrary
of this statement, that my college and class, at least, cannot be overestimated in
the opinion of themselves or the reading public, since they figure so prominently
in these many current magazines from which I have taken clippings.
182
College Infested by Swarms of Green Bookworms
By C. GREEN
The Outlook
An illustrated Yearly Journal of College Life
EMMAVAIL LUCE President
NANCY TOLL I ice-President
HELEN WOODRUFF ■...■■ Recording Secretary
MARY PRINGLE BARRET Corresponding Secretary
GRACE OSGOOD Treasurer
MARGARET EDDY / ^ , ■ o j
V AdiJtsorv Board
ELEANOR NORTON ^ ^uh, su y u
MARGARET BYARD Senate Member
MARION SCOFIELD |
FRANCIS STURGIS V Executive Committee
LOIS CLEVELAND \
DOROTHY UNDERHILL > j,^^,^,„^^
MARTHA ANDERSON <
MARGARET EDDY Song Leader
September, 1918
183
Good Housekeeping
A Novel Party
An attractive and novel party for young folks
which has been more than once tried and found
highly successful among the Wellesit-y girls,
is sometimes laughingly referred to as the
C. A. Reception. The girls go in pairs and
often wear their graduation dresses. All the
freshmen go, and it is very pretty .ind sweet
to see the generosity with which the i.pper-
classmen resign to their friends the privilege
of taking freshmen.
Games are played during the evening. One
of these is called "Pardon Me" or "Ouch". It
consists of trying to put your foot in the same
place in which your neighbor is trying to put
hers, the object being to get yours there second
and say "Pardon me," before your neighbor
can say "Ouch!"
Entertainment is provided by the receiving
line, which shows the true ilemocratic spirit uf
Wellesley by shaking hands with any and all
who desire it. It later makes speeches and reads
telegrams from those who are glad they can
be there in thought.
But by far the most important game of the
evening is to see who can most quickly fill a
card with names. This is really a guessing
game. Each player is presented with a number
of unfamiliar faces and she must, unaided,
apply the proper name to the proper face. !f
she succeeds in this, she is allowed to record
the name on her card. But if she should be
obliged to say "Your face is not familiar but
your manner is," she forfeits the name. As
soon as a girl fills her card she can go out.
No other prize is necessary.
LITERARY DIGEST— TOPICS IN BRIEF
During the Wellesley week of prayer, 1922, and Dr. Coffin first became acquainted. This
Coffin will prove to be, not the grave, but the goal of their ambition. — H'ellesley Townsman.
At after-Math, after-Comp and after-Hygiene teas, '20 entertained '22 right royally —
shall we say "to a T" ? — Boston Transcript.
Although the Wellesley Freshman class very nearly defeated the Sophomores in the yearly
Indoor Meet, '21 managed to win by a narrow margin. — Boston American.
'Twas more meet thus! — Cliristian Science Monitor.
We don't know who put the tree in Tree Day, but we do know who took the monkey tails
out. — Zoological Survey.
Wellesley's Dolly Sisters turned out Flossier than was expected. A Little Hale for their
dollies ! — Boston Traveler.
As Eugene Hygiene, Fran Baker first began to swallow in professional Barn(swallowl
style. — Neiv York Glohe.
z~v
184
The Contributors' Column
The ATLANTIC MONTHLY
INCIPIT VITA NOVA
{(tn (tnonymous poem)
Chained by enchantment to the spot.
My being throbs with palpitating joys;
Yet I am stilled.
A thousand lovely fancies
Play upon my mind,
A thousand lovely words
Spring to my lips;
Yet I am dumb.
I stand spellbound,
Chained by enchantment to the spot.
I have just seen
My Village Senior.
I stand spellbound,
The anonymous poem, Incipit I'ita Nova,
is known to us only as the work of a fresh-
man at Wellesley College. Although its
subject is local, the spirit of the little ode
seems to us so lovely that we feel the poem
cannot fail to charm any audience save
those who have experienced the feeling or
sentiment themselves.
A Freshman Crush
LIFE
LAY MISERABLE
M — ight a known
I — t wouldn't
S — top
E — verlasting
R— ain
A — nd drop,
B — eating through the
L — ivelong day,
E — vermore and endless-lav!
Th« Di.vt.ne FtoMie dbout to tfove
her Lni-m't+able "Ipavvtch''
Freshman Serenade
185
HARVARD LAMPOON
(with apologies to K.C.B. and Wellesley)
It's No Use Beiin/ I'atr'tnt'ic
Without Coinpftition
WHEN THE war was on
EVERYBODY
TALKED PATRIOTISM.
BUT I noticed
WHAT THEY meant
BY PATRIOTISM
WAS ANOTHER kind
OF COMPETITION.
IN THE VICTORY Loan
THE SENIOR class
AT WELLESLEY College
WANTED TO win
FOR THEIR class reputation;
SO THEIR honorary member
GAVE A lot
AT THE end
AND MADE their
TOTAL HIGHEST.
BUT 'TWENTY-two
HEARD ABOUT it
AND LOIS Childs
BEAT THEM to it
AFTER ALL.
SHE RAISED 'twenty-two's total
SOME HIGHER
THAN EVEN the Seniors'
FRIENDLY HONORARY member
HAD RAISED theirs.
SO 'TWENTY-two won the loan.
'TWENTY-TWO is a patriotic class.
IT LIKES to win.
There iins a livjr garden
YOUTH'S COMPANION
1922's ALPHABET
By an old subscriber, novi a IVellesley girl
A is for Ambler, fair Gladys, you see.
On Tree Day she led our gay ceremony.
B is for Barrett, artistic Lucille,
'22 cannot fail v.ith t'lis girl at the wheel.
C is for Carr, who with prank and with smile
Makes everyone stop, listiMi, chuckle a while.
D is for Dot, our junior commanjer
A Tower so strong that Tizzie did land her!
E for Elizabeth, chill Ibbie Frye
Who frightens vou horribly when she goes
by.'
F is for Flanegin, her with the hair
You wonder, in gazing, just what makes
it flare.
G is for Gordon, our Emily famous
So brilliant and capable— docMi't she shame
us !
H is for Hastings, so S. S. and G.
Was anyone e'er sentimental 'tis she!
I is for Ireland — ah, surely you know
Why Teacher must chuckle and smile at
her so.
J is for Jefferson, her from Kentucky
She writes for the News^Adonais is lucky!
K is for Kirkham — hear everyone cheer —
'22 can say Rah! Rah! for her every year!
L for Liz Woody; she's never too late
To general the "News" or help win the
debate.
M is for Mid, second famous Durant
"Do without her?" roars A. A., "My
heavens! we sha'nt!"
N for our Nancy, the Seniors' fair guide
We're proud of her? Yes! And we'll
fight at her side!
O is for Olive, the prettiest Ladd
— As all will agree — that a class ever had.
P for Peg Byard, who went to the vill
Now who'll throw bouquets at her? '25
will!
Q is for Quinn, Billy, with the bright smile
One just has to see her, each once in a
while !
R is for Red, whose flaming hair
Made lively the scenery, 'most everywhere.
S is for Sticky, best musical shot
She's written about all the songs that we've
got!
T for Travel!, Wellesley's queen of the court,
Yes, Janet's her real name, but "Bobby"
for short!
U is for Underbill, Dorothy, bright
She once was Factotum, now Phi Sig's
delight.
V for unparalleled Admiral Vail
Who took '22 and C. G. on a sail.
W is for Weyl, the funniest one.
Al Jolson? Just say the word and it's done!
Now X, Y, and Z are too much you see
'22's problems all are untangled — Oui oui!
186
WOMAN CITIZEN
THE NATION'S HOPE
That woman is assuming, easily, her more and more prominent position in
the political world, is shown by the masterly way in which the class of 1922 of
Wellesley College conducted its first formal meeting, late in November of this
year.
It might be mentioned that the solemnity of the occasion was slightly marred,
early in the evening, bv the presence of somewhat noisily loquacious Sophomore
pickets Upon being requested by President Pendleton to enter, they at once with-
drew, with the exception of two members of the class, who secreted in the inner
regions of the pulpit, found a graceful exit difficult.
The meeting terminated with the following elections:
Emmavail Luce, President
Helen Woodruff, Secretary pro. tern.
LITERARY DIGEST REPRINT
"The authorities of Wellesley College en-
couragingly report that at least 3% of their
students have not yet succumbed to influenza.
In an interview with Miss Tufts the College
Registrar and mother to all the gills, our re-
porter gathered that the college is doing its
best to have the girls lead a healthy, happy,
outdoor life, to make them careful in their
conversation, and so to keep them fre,- from in-
fection. To this end all stores, village houses,
dormitories and class-rooms are closed to the
students." — New ynrk Sun.
-A-iyv-^/^
187
Good Housekeeping
FURNISHINGS AND DECORATIONS
Bv Winifred Fails
Lesson 1 — The Freshman Room
An effective treatment of the college room is such as may be seen in
almost any freshman ilormitory at Wellesley. As one enters the room the first thing
that catches the eye is a mass of multi-colored and inharmonious pillows piled
high on the bed, artfully transforming it — with the aid of a colored couch cover — into a study
lounge. Color is every- tion, and Merrill and
where. A large and Smith, artistically in-
brilliant blotter adorns CAN YOU ANSWER THESE termingled with soap
the desk, while above FOUR QUESTIONS ^j,,j ^^^^^ ^1^^,,^^ ^,jp_
it hangs a colored and If not, reread this lesson in which pers and shoetrees, the
illustrated copv of "An y°" ^^'" «"<! "one of them answered. ^^^^^^^ ^^ ,^^, ^^^,^,^
.■r r ,^- 1 '., i-i I "S "^''t day take pen and ink
If for Girls. LIse- ^^^ ^^^;,g ^^^, ^^^^ answers for fudge-cake, and the
where — all the else yourself. work basket Mother
there is — hang two or i. Are magenta and cerise the insisted upon,
three Maxfield Parish same color, and if not, why not, ^0 fit out such a
pictures, a photograph l^J.^^^.!!^,' difference does it make ^^^_^_^^ ^^^ ^^^ ^^^ ^^^^_
ing color contrasts is
of the Alice Freeman
Palmer Memorial, Am-
herst, Princeton, Yale,
Cornell and Tech, etc.,
etc. banners with pho-
tographs of the donors.
The bookcase is cop-
iously filled with copies
of Hough and Sedg-
ivick, English Composi-
CAN YOU ANSWER THESE
FOUR QUESTIONS
If not, reread this lesson in which
you will find none of them answered.
The next day take pen and ink
and write out the answers for
yourself.
1. Are magenta and cerise the
same color, and if not, why not,
and what difference does it make
anyhow ?
2. Precisely Howe should Hough
and Sedgiuick be arranged on a
bookcase shelf?
3. The accepted place for clothes
being all over the room, to what
use or uses may a closet be put ?
4. How, in brief, can one make
a ten-by-twelve room adequately
resemble Parlor, Bedroom and Bath?
essential, and a strong
passion for covering
every available por-
tion of wall space.
Equipped with these
two assets and a ready
pocketbook, any girl
can make a howling
success of her room.
Freshman Fire Drill
188
Armistice Day and its Celebration
189
GOOD HOUSEKEEPING
IVcllesley Maid Fashions de:ree a natty day-time silhouettes
fjovei sleeves y a?id slightly marked %vaistli?ie; while fo7' dress
occasions the hloo?ner ejfect e?icounte?-s fornndahle ?rval,
i?i Siva thing li?ics.
EDITED BY
LADY TUFTS GORDON
Administration Building,
Sept. 3rd.
My dear Readers,
It has always been my pleasure
to do my very best to tell you
of the new styles of each season,
but it is particularly nice to be able
to write you from Wellesley of
the Wellesley fashions as I am
seeing them here. Here along
Central Street, where the Welles-
ley office of Good Housekeeping
is situated, are Jimmy Lee and
Mme. Whitney. At the Place
Hemenway is Spaulding Bros., and
Mrs. McCarty with her famous
negligees.
Bloomee
The Spanish note so
popular this season is
employed in this cos-
tume and brings ivith
it a refreshing hreatli
of the great icinJ-
sti'ept outdoors.
Bathee
This sleeveless model is
a striking example of the
uneven hem line always
much in vogue. Note
the close-fitting turhan,
luhich, zi'hen donned,
gives a touch of color to
this otherwise dark ivhite
creation.
Matinee
Saturday is chrysalis day
at H-' ellesley. The but-
terfly type, persisting
from season to season, is
here shoii-n.
THE TATTLER
THE success of the Junior Play at Wellesley College can be most easily measured
by the impressions of the audience. Henry Cooper, dramatically inclined,
expressed herself as follows:
"It was simply divine! My junior sister — I think that such a sweet idea! —
had me up to dinner in her room, and we had the most heavenly fudge sauce on
our ice-cream for dessert. And then we went and sat together at the play, and
in the thrilling parts she held my hand.
"There was such a dreadful mix-up in the plot I thought it could never come
out right. And Betty was so sweet, and Peter just so wonderful — wasn't Schaef
the best man and most wonderful lover you ever saw? ! ! — that I thought I'd die
if they didn't love each other in the end . . . that last clinch in front of the fire
was such a satisfaction."
Miss Alice Richards likewise approved the play.
"Bully good show, g rls, bully good show! I tell you, Schaef is some boy!"
From Smart Set
SUCCESS
A iKjuynious
A GIRL left the backwoods to come to
college, and she saw that the other
girls had frequent dates while she
had none. Desirous of obtaining the best
advice possible for remedying her sad con-
dition, she set out one day in the rain, to
a temple of learning which was in the
neighborhood. The most learned man in
the world opened the door for her, and he
wore galoshes and carried an umbrella as
was suitable for a wise man on a rainy
day. And he knew everything there was
to know.
"How can I have dates?" she asked.
"They always say that they will call up
some time but, somehow . What shall
I do?"
The learned man pondered. After a
long pause, during which the girl bit her
nails with anxiety, he said, "There is no
royal road to learning. If, like me, you
know everything, does it not follow that
that on which you desire information will
be among that everything? Emulate me,
and apply yourself to wisdom, and then
you will be able to solve your own
problem."
As this seemed reasonable, the girl went
back to college and applied herself to
wisdom.
After a fitting length of time, she realized
that she knew nearly everything, but she
found that they no longer even said that
they would call up somet'me. So she
forswore the learned man's advice, and set
out one freezing winter day to find an in-
sane asylum which was in the neighborhood.
A lady, one of the more insane inmates,
opened the door for her. The temperature
was fifteen below zero, and she wore lace
stockings, and her babblings were suitable
for her environment.
"Oh, tell me how I may have dates like
the other girls!" cried our heroine. Her
eyes filled with tears which froze before
they fell.
"I had many dates before they brought
me here", said the lady, "why don't you try
to be like me?"
A flash of inspiration seized the girl,
and she tore home through the woods, sold
all her books, and spent the proceeds on
a comparatively negligable dress and a pair
of filmy lace stockings. Within five days,
she had dates for every evening in the next
month. But not be'ng used to such light
apparel, unfortunately, she was unable to
keep them, for she contracted pneumonia
and died.
191
ODE TO WELLESLEY COLLEGE
From the A nti-Tobaccotiht League
Oh, Wellesk'v, let us crack our throats
To give you praise indeed —
Because your students by a vote
Eschewed the noxious weed.
The seniors up to freshmen came,
And asked them if one ought
Associate with one who smoked.
Oh, never! — Horrid thought!
Pubhc opinion you aroused,
With questions swift and cogent ;
And to the question, "Shall we smoke?"
Your righteous, thundering, "NO!" sent.
Your move we highly do commend
In this important matter.
And hope your next reform will be
To make your earpuffs flatter.
New York Times Book Retneiv
and Magazine
THE TWIG UNBENT
.-/ hook revieiv hy
H-ILLING LION YELPS
r-r^UE THIG, an anthology of
m Wellrslcy Freshman composi-
J. tions compiled hy a select and
selectinij hoard. Published al
Nalitk Press.
We welcome the appearance of a
new organ of literary expression, The
Tiviff, a publication issued fortnightly
by the Wellesley Freshmen English
class. "We have fallen victim to an
idea," writes the editor, "the captivat-
ing idea of collecting our best themes
and making a magazine of them."
As a whole. The Tivig deserves un-
stinted praise and commendation. Its
scope is as wide and all-embracing as
the characteristic scope of the fresh-
man mind; everything is admitted.
So much for our consideration of
the ensemble. As we turn the pages,
we note particularly Miss Dorothy
Wagner's charming appreciation of
Robert Louis Stevenson. The little
sketch by Miss Mills is a clever bit
of characterization, showing to what
heights she can reach. Some of our
readers may penetrate the disguise
of "Peter Rabbit" and recognize a
friend.
"The Falling of the Masks" by the
eminent young sociologist, Julia Mar-
tin, has been a veritable storm center
of indignant attack. The author has
been assailed as unpatriotic, in that
she has put a premium on knowledge
of the (/crman language. It is re-
ported that since the publication of
this story there has been unparalleled
use of the German dictionaries in the
College Library. The writer shows
throughout, such a daring defiance of
convention as is outside the sphere
of comprehension of the Wellesley
Freshman English Class.
tLAre. to <«roci-
2.0e ye\J JWdnt" I
tmrf1\t"r to be
dllowca i.n
J Do v**" vrtot*
-to SfTloHE'
Other contributors include Lucy
Thorn (whose life, it is rumored, is
one long, mad, chase for copy), Eliza-
beth Mclver Woody {the Miss Woody,
of Kentucky), Ruth Schlivek, Eliza-
beth Willcox — all well-known to our
readers. The versifiers must not be
neglected, for it is poetry that "strikes
the vital spark which kindlfs enthus-
iasm and deepens inspiration." Miss
Packard is The Tiviifs luisinicre of
that "sweet food of sweetlv uttered
knowledge."
We should like to dwell longer on
the charms of The Titig. Suffice it
to say, we shall look forward to each
forthcoming shoot, and we invite our
readers to join us in watching it grow.
ci^:w
The Tw.'g
192
RESQLVEOi,
rThat SoplvjiTioresi.nct nresKmen, should V»vc (o the Village.
A«irmaXive.
Freshman-Sophomore Debate
Life
HOW IT IS DONE IN WELLESLEY
Hello, Central, give me Wellesley 889-
0321. Hello, is this Crofton? Well,
Crofton, this is Noanett. You must vote
on Tree Day mistress tonight. What ?
Who's up, you say ? Why, Gladys Ambler.
Yes, vote right away and telephone results
in to us right off. What? Who else is
ijii_l!l!l- nominated? Why no one else. We only
need one mistress!
NOANcr AT 10 P^j
193
From Judge
JUDGE AT THE PLAY
IVay Out in Persia is not so very far
afield, after all ; for in the leading roles
we find our good friends Julia Roth and
Hildegarde Churchill. Moreover, though
the slave trade scarcely comes within our
experience, we have seen before both danc-
ing and girls like those of the Persian slave
market. The heroine's declaration of in-
dependence sounds familiar too. All in all.
Way Out in Persia is a distinctly good
show !
Vanity Fair
WE ELECT TO THE
HALL OF FAME
Gladys Ambler, for being the only nominee
for Tree Day Mistress.
Dishy, for singing her way out of college
into a "career".
Emily Gordon, for making her deb, in
debate.
Margaret Eddy, for having a real leading
spirit.
Julia Roth, for first passionately rendering,
"Look, look in my eyes".
Beth Wilco.x, for leading the young ladies
of Mrs. Nye's in an outburst of vehement
freshman spirit in the guise of song, at
stepsinging.
Martha Anderson, for being generally and
thoroughly well-liked.
Hilda Churchill, for revealing herself be-
hind the Operetta footlights. She
"simply won't "
Dot and Dash, for punctuating Eliot life.
Red Dixon, for joshing her Way in and out
of our class.
Emmavail, for landing us "safe, now, in
the Sophomore class! "
More Signs of Spring
Contemporary Verse
SPRING AT WELLESLEY
{Somethinij to take the spring out of springtime)
How joyfully we welcome the springtime of the year!
It brings to us forgetfulness of all the winter drear.
Once more we wield the mighty oar or throw the basketball ;
Once more we take up all the sport that we laid down last fall.
But oh, such bitter m,isery that sometimes us awaits
For springtime has its showers, and required gym its fate!
Instead of out door call outs to fill our souls with vim,
We trip it slowly as we go to dance in indoor gym.
194
ST. NICHOLAS LEAGUE
Subject for this number — My Most Interesting Experience
Green Spring
bi< Everybody (Phi Beta, etc.)
(aged 13)
It was early morning and the rain was falling fast as terrific sounds were
heard. They came from the Chapel. Hark! What was it?
It was May Day, and the Seniors were scrubbing the Wellesley Chapel steps,
which was an annual event. There were many girls, dressed in strange clothes,
acting very queerly. One of them, called Littlehales, was particularly red-nosed,
and she carried a mop. It was a funny sight, and one never to be forgotten.
As I watched them, I thought, "O, what fun to be a Senior! What fun to
be a Senior and carry a mop and make the Freshmen laugh!"
My Treat
by Iniso Dumb
(aged 18)
I went with my sister to see the Wellesley May Day afternoon. All the college
girls were dressed up like children, and seemed very young.
There was a lot of playing on the green, and icecream cones and colored lolly-
pops. Emmavail Luce, who my sister told me is the Freshman President, was crowned
May Queen by the Senior President, Mary Crane. It was quite pretty.
My treat ended by listening to the step-singing on the Chapel steps, which was
very lovely. A girl (Sue Lowell Wright, my sister said) got up and waved her
arm in time to the music. The Juniors gave the Freshmen a Baton, and the
Freshmen sang about being "O, so happy!"
So ended a very happy day, and I caught the 8 :37 trolley to Framingham. I
hope to go to Wellesley some day.
A Lovely Mempry for Me
b\i Enthusy Astic
(aged 11)
Awarded R. S. V. P.
I had a lovely time today —
I went to Wellesley College,
Where lots of girls go every year
To get a lot of knowledge.
As from the Chapel I came out
And walked toward the hill,
There sat in living numerals
Hundreds of girls so still.
In white and gold, the Sophomores
dressed.
Did sing a song sublime,
To Senior sisters said farewell.
I had a lovely time !
On May Day
by Tra Lalala
(age 7)
Honorable Mention
As I stood on the hill so high
I saw the Seniors running by.
Their hoops they banged as they
rushed down
And many a one fell on her crown.
Their black gowns fluttered
on the breeze —
Not one of them was at her ease.
The first one at the Chapel door
Was Janie Mathews, filled with awe.
What a pleasant sight to see!
Three cheers for dear old Wellesley!
195
BREAKING INTO THE IfORLD Of J IT.] IRS
BY HARDLYLESS GREEN
The Outlook
^// Illustrated Yearly Journal of College Life
Caroline G. Campbell President
Harriet M. Kirkham Vice-President
Dorothy Tower Recording Secretary
Mildred E. Durant Carrespondiny Secretary
Harriet D. Holcombe Treasurer
Sarah B. Conant \
Tacy W. Parry > Executive Bnard
Elizabeth Woody )
Ruth Gardner ) , , ■ ,^ ■
, - - , r Jdvisory l^oinniittee
Mildred Miles (
Margaret Watterson \ r-
' /• nctotums
Margaret Faye j
Hildegarde Churchill Sung Leader
September, 1919
196
Yoi)D6 GiJlool Qtjd louoO Uamooi OcpV lyiO . Tte Om:
109
mrse /uue
1919
Vogue
SMART EVENING GOWNS COME FORTH FROM THE CLOSET
THE UNPRESSED MODE, AS ADOPTED BY WELLESLEY SOCIETY, IS SEEN AT THE BARN
Tripping majestically under the wisteria which lingered in clusters about the small
wooden effigies (pillars of the Barn), the last word in unpressed evening gowns of past
and present found their way unwillingly to Twenty-Two's Charity Ball (the Sophomore
Promenade). This Ball, given for the benefit of those poor little starving Freshmen, was
Miss Louise Strouse's last and greatest success in the social whirl of Wellesley.
It is something to have seen the amazing color effects of this bizarre collection. It
reminds one of the crude flaming simplicity of a Gaugin or a Matisse. If one should go
away wondering if the violent individuality of Milady at Wellesley could stand more self-
consciously before the public, one would doubtless be wrong.
197
m
AMONG OUR COLLEGE WITS
J Complaint Against Borrowers
To borrow and to borrow and to borrow
Creep in my little friends from day to day,
September until June — and all my clothes
Have lighted other girls to parties gay.
Out, out, my friends! You have enough
already!
I've nothing left to stand in but my skin!
Hats, fur coats, stockings, evening dresses —
You'd take my teeth if they weren't fastened
in!
ly.s
AN ANSWER TO
^■i Complaint J gainst Borroivers
Nay, Cleopatra, do not be distraught.
Though maidens ravish you of all your
store.
One borrows your Brill skirt she long has
sought ;
One wears away the dress last night ynu
wore ;
Another plagarizes your best hat ;
A fourth, the furs she's just made you
resign.
They cannot wear your wit — remember
that!
They have to hang their words on your
clothes-line!
Think how they'd like to snatch your
dimples too.
Or leave a note for you to say they took
Your eyelashes to town — they "hope that
you
Won't mind " their taking your most subtle
look
And softest smile . . . Don't grudge to
lend the rest.
Since you must be a miser with your best !
The Dartmouth Glee Club
be Ur.cd.
Math Burial
199
yltlantic Monthly
A WINTER'S WAIL
Oh, I'm weary for the southland where the days are long and sunny,
And the nights are soft with starlight beneath a southern sky,
And the sweet white jasmine blossoms in the swamps along the gulf-coast
Fill the air with haunting perfume I'll remember till I die!
For I'm sick of old New England's most unsympathetic climate,
Where when it isn't snowing it's always bound to rain.
And the only thing that's certain is the semi-weekly blizzard —
Take me somewhere south of zero where I might get warm again!
200
ALL-STORY WEEKLY
COLLEGE DETECTIVE WORK
/•/ tale of real happenings
Al sat alone in her room with a tense,
drawn expression about her usually laugh-
ing mouth. Only a moment ago the tele-
phone receiver had dropped into place with
a dull click. Now she was alone, facing
her problem.
Tomorrow, her class President had just
said, the freshmen would announce their
Tree Day Mistress. To-night, if immortal
tradition was to be preserved, some Sopho-
more must find out the IMistress' name.
Despondently, Al considered this great prob-
lem of sophomoric existence.
The door burst open, and the Senior
Vice-President rushed in.
"Al," she cried, "do t\ pe this stuff for
me quickly — I'm frantic to get it done!"
She dumped a pile of manuscript on the
bed by Al, and dashed out again.
Still abstracted, Al went to her type-
writer and began to copy. Suddenly her
jaw dropped and her hands fell from the
keys. In amazed silence she pored over
the manuscript the Senior Vice-President
had left her.
"By jumiping Jerusha!" she gasped. "By
gum, if the old girl hasn't given me all the
Tree Day dope to copy! "
IMuttering to herself the all-important
name, Al reached the door, only to meet
the Senior Vice-President, breathless and
nervous.
A wide smile spread from ear to ear on
Al's engaging countenance.
The Senior Vice-President wrung her
hands. "What have I done — idiot, im-
becile, absent-minded lunatic that I am!
Al, you won't tell on me — you won't use
that stuff — "
"Too bad, old thing," Al answered.
"But facts is facts. — I tell \'ou what, we'll
strike a bargain. I'll tell the class Walsh
is the girl, but I won't say how I know she's
Mistress — till — till you're out of college,
say!"
The Senior Vice-President fell on Al's
neck.
"All right," said Al, dodging, "Agreed.
You're safe — till '22's Legenda comes out!"
Turning, she sped to the telephone.
The next morning the Sophomore class
chanted knowingly, "Marjorie Walsh,
Freshman Tree Day Mistress." But only
Al and the Senior Vice-President knew
exactly how they got that knowing air.
Life
WELLESLEY ODE
To an Instructor
Drone on, fair one, in voice so low
I hear you not in the back row.
Drone on, fair one, I am lost in dreams;
My rapt look is not what it seems.
Drone on, fair one, and still believe
That I am listening — looks deceive!
201
Life — IVellesley Number
FOUNDERS HALL STEPS
How can one trip down daintily the steps of Founders Hall?
The only trip that one can make is followed by a fall.
How can one mount them gracefully and not look halt or lame?
You start out with the right foot, and keep rising with the same.
How can one mount these awkward steps? Just watch the faculty!
They are dainty, graceful, dignified — for one step they take three.
"Let Them That Have Ears
'22 TO '23
The Museum Trotter
TO A NEGLECTFUL FAMILY VISITING IN CALIFORNIA
When your steady source of income has so to speak gone West,
And you can't reduce your budget though you've really done your best,
And your bank account has balanced down to just 3.90 flat,
And you have a bill outstanding for a dress, and shoes, and hat; —
When your cash on hand's a nickel, and your credit isn't much.
And you're paying up your smaller debts in postage stamps and such,
And you cannot even buy your ticket home because you're broke.
Well, or course it may sound funny, but it really ain't no joke!
202
Little Folks Magazine
JANET'S JOY
It was a beautiful afternoon in June; the sun was shining its
brightest, and the green grass and trees made a beautiful picture.
Janet danced joyfully about. "It's Tree Day, it's Tree Day", she
kept repeating over and over. There was a cause for Janet's happy
excitement; she was to be a cloud in the Tree Day Dances. All
spring she had trudged up to Tower Court green every afternoon,
learning how to float gracefully like a cloud. Janet was a big girl
for her age, and she had gained thirteen pounds since she tried
out for Tree Day.
But all her worries were over now ; Tree Day had arrived. She
flushed a pretty pink as she stood to be examined by the censorship
committee. But she need not have been alarmed; she was charm-
ing in her flowing costume of blue tulle. Her every-day orthopedic
shoes (Janet was very sensible in getting shoes that did not pinch
her feet. She wore size 10)— were replaced by dainty dancing
slippers.
Finally the moment came. Musicians, struck up the Tree Day
hymn, and all the girls marched in, dressed in white and wearing
pretty daisy hats which they had made themselves. After they had
sung to the audience, they took their places on the hill, where they
made a lovely picture. Janet was too excited to notice much until
after she had danced. Everyone clapped loudly for the clouds, so
Janet didn't feel so badly about falling down in the middle of her
dance. She did it so gracefully that no one suspected that that was
not part of it.
Janet was greatly thrilled when Gladys Ambler, the Tree Day
Mistress for the Freshmen, came out on the green. Everybody
clapped for her, especially the Freshmen. Dorothy Stone was the
other star (except, of course, the wonderful Birdie Krupp who was
Lightning. Birdie wore silver armor encased in tulle.)
After a long dance Dorothy finally succeeded in getting the
sacred spade away from the Sophomore who had it. All the Fresh-
men had been waiting for this moment. They dashed madly down
the hill after her. Janet was a cloud no longer. Panting for breath
she ran with the rest to '22's royal spruce tree.
203
Then all the Freshmen stood back of their new purple banner
with the big 1922 on it, and sang their class song for the first
time. The Sophomores were very glad to hear it; they had been
wondering what it was like. After that, Emmavail, the president,
told everybody that 1922's class flower was the sweet pea. ("Say
it with flowers", Janet thought.) Then they all cheered for them-
selves and their big sisters. The cheer kept ringing in Janet's ears
as she hurried home to write her mother about everything:
"Wellesley, hoorah,
Wellesley, rah,
1922, Wellesley!"
Tattler
What to Wear
At Home — Nothing in particular.
/;/ the Lib — Concentration.
At C. A. — A consecrated smile.
At the El Table — White sweater, gloves, and footwarmer.
At Barnswallou's — Thrilled expression and gym shoes.
At Dorm Ddiuing — Your roommate's glad rags.
At the Tea-Rooiii — A pose of indifference, as if fudge cake were a common matter,
and often served in dormitories.
At Classes — \'our best bluff, or a poker face.
Jl'ith your friends — ^ our natLiral disposition.
CHRISTIAN ENDEAVOR
JUST CHUMS
A Talk for Mothers
BOBBY'S sister had just finished her sophomore year at college. Bobby and
his sister were having a long talk together about his troubles and of her
many college problems. They were lying on the top of a hay-mow, enjoying
to the full the blazing sun and sultry wind. Bobby's sister placed her hand con-
fidentially on her brother's shoulder.
"Bobby," she said, "there's one thing we have not discussed, and that's religion."
Bobby nodded his head in his slo\\- boy's fashion. "That's so," he agreed,
chewing a straw reflectively.
"You know," his sister went on, "I've spent a >ear studving the Old Testament.
All of us Sophomores at Wellesley do. It's part of our general education to learn
about religion. We learned all the kings of Israel and lots of the things they
did . . . We sophs even had a song about
"Shalmanesar, Tiglath-Pileser
Jezebel and Bathsheba."
Really, Bobh\ , \\c learnt a lot about religion this past year."
Bobby began chewing a second wisp of straw. "My!" he murmured, "Think
how much us fellers miss by not going to Wellesley! "
204
W'cllcjiey College News
P oj F
SOPHIE MORE'S BOOKCASE
(A rhymed review)
'Twas June, and ere she packed her trunk,
Young Sophie More did think a thunk,
To clear her bookcase of the crew
That harbored evernhing she knew.
She piled her books with mixed emotions —
All Berkeley's everlasting notions,
Sdie by side with Locke discreet,
And Descartes' theory half complete.
Brown Haeckel followed hard upon,
And now, her work but scarce begun.
She showered colored discs, a sea,
Of experiments in psychology.
The Kings of Israel filed out next,.
With a paper on Job, particularly vexed.
And sheaf of notes, all ink and smudges.
On Hezekiah, Psalms, and Judges.
Came bottles from the apothecary.
And Walker's Rhyming Dictionary.
Odd notes, lost crayon, a dusty banner,
Thumb tacks and a forbidden hammer.
She banged together battered Chaucer,
Ink-marked as she hadn't oughter.
And ancient papers, marked deep blue —
(Poor Sophie took — alas, — Comp Two.)
Tin-foil and snarled picture wire.
Heaped the debris even higher;
Dust cloths, spoons, and Canvas-White,
Jam jars, that really were a sight.
Young Sophie now surveyed the junk.
Of Baker's chocolate took a chunk.
Heaped on her forehead cracked ice.
And read "Tliis Side oj Paradise."
205
206
THE AGE OF DISTINCTION
BY SUCHA JOLLY, JR.
The Outlook
^n Illustrated Yearly Journal of College Life
Dorothy Tower President
Pauline Coburn Vice-President
Helen H. Chain Recording Secretary
Tacy W. Parry Corresponding Secretary
Mary Page . . . • Treasurer
Grace Freeman j
Martha E. Hanna \ Executive Board
Emilie Weyl )
Ethel Quinn ) j? . .
V ractotums
Carol Whitmarsh )
Hildegarde Churchill Song Leader
207
Society Plan Adopted
THE NEW SOCIETY
.7 Jounuil of (Jfiirnon
ADOPTED BV WEI.LESLEY SOCIETIES A NEW PLAN
FOR ADMISSION OF NEW MEMBERS. NO CANDIDATE
TO BE PLACED IN A SOCIETY WHICH SHE DOES NOT
DESIRE, AND EACH CANDIDATE ABLE TO STATE HER
OPINION OF SOCIETIES IN ORDER OF PREFERENCE.
ALL THE CANDIDATE HAS TO DO IS TO FILL OUT
THE INCLOSED BLANK AND WAIT FOR THE CENTRAL
COMMITTEE TO ANjWER. IF NOT CIVEN PROMPT
ATTENTION, SHE MAY ASK MISS DENNIS ALL THE
REASONS WHY.
FORM OF APPLICATION
I long for Society
I ilesire Society
I shoiiici accept Society
I ilon't mind Society
I conscientiously object to Society
1 should resign from Society
Signed
NOTES ON THE AMERICAN
COLLEGE WOMAN
By Thomas Sneer
1
Her Hiitii'jr
AT tea the other day, I met Miss
Blank, that scintillating college wit.
She smiled nonchalantly over her
cup as she launched her latest. "Such an
interesting experience in Immigration class,
my dear. I met a man who went up a
pole and came down a Russian."
Her Artistic Convictions
1 sat by Miss Vacant at the art lecture.
She looked at the side and murmured,
"How utterly hideous."
"This is, of course, familiar to you all,"
Miss Avery remarked, a moment later,
"How would \'ou criticize it, Miss
Vacant?"
The girl observed, "It is a remarkably
beautiful piece of work. There is great
rh\thm and beauty of line."
Her Resource
Miss Absent chuckled merrily. "No,
I no longer have a checking account. When
I went to draw out my $25 he told me
I had just 85c left, and that they would
charge me $?> to get that. So I simply
closed my account. I must ha\e inherited
mv business head from father."
Her Tact
Aliss Corpulent bemoaned her luck.
"Miss Bennett says I am not suited to the
part of the ghost in Hamlet."
Her sympathizing friend remarked con-
solingly, "I think she's horrid! Why
when I saw Hamlet the ghost was fat."
Her Aplomb
I saw Miss Creant dragged from under-
neath a Freshman's bed, the night of class
elections.
"I'm so glad to tind you in," she mur-
mured to her captors, "Won't you subscribe
to the Wellesley College News? Sign here,
please."
St. Nicholas Leaijiic
AN EPIC IN OUR LIFE
By Ion A Hotdog, Age 9
(Awarded S.O.S.P.D.Q.)
'Twas on a cold and wintry day —
The snow and ice all over lay —
When they banned our dear old ilogcart.
Up to that time from long before
Joy reigned among us ; but never more
Since they banned the dear old dogcart.
The appetites of all have changed.
For other menus they've arranged.
Since was banned the dear old dogcart.
As now we slowly go our way
We glance reproachfully,* and say,
"They bainicd our dear old dogcart."
* .At the people who like fish-nights better than
westerns anyway.
208
"Tragedy of Nan"
Good Housekeepiiuj
Household Dictionary
ALLOWANCE. From the roots. 1. all — (this is all there is; there isn't any more).
2. ow — (explanation of dismay at departure thereof). 3. ance — (relatives — possible
source of future supply.)
DATE. Variously defined as "a mess", "an angel", etc. See Lake Path, Pond Road,
Wellesley Inn.
FACULTY-STUDENT AGREEMENT. Framed in the C. G. office.
FOUNTAIN PEN. See Lost and Found.
Note: This is not an advertisement.
FREE AFTERNOON. Opportunity for making up lost vfork. Usually occupied with wash-
ing hair, finishing Shifk, walking around lake, waiting for Postman, discussing
marriage, waiting for telephone call, making fudge.
LETTER. A. Bill from Tea-Room.
B. Letter from family without check.
C. Letter from family with check.
D. Bill from Dartmouth.
TELEPHONE CALL. "Another nickel, please!"
CHRISTMAS VACATION. Defined by 1. Faculty— a time to read reserve books.
2. Students — time to get Mamma to sew on hooks. Time to sleep up. Time to
lose sleep.
MUSIC. According to modern usage, jazz. Derived from the roots. 1. Mew ("Has anybody
seen my cat?") 2. Sick (from the well known poem dedicated to jazz beginning
"Hasten, Jason.")
TEA. 1. In the outside world: Tea. 2. In Wellesley: Toasted cheese sandwich, lobster
salad, fudge cake with whipped cream, bill on first of the month.
209
Outing
207 Cazenove Hall
Welleslev College
Oct. 25, 1921
Oh, dear A. A.
I'm sad to say
I had to stray
The other day
From the very straight
And narrow way
Of training.
My best beloved fiancee
Returning from a seven-week stay
In most remote and far-away
Kentucky
Besought me home to wend my way
For one brief week-end.
I yielded to his earnest plea;
The consequence was sad to see
And most disasterous for me
And training.
Back from New York and two days' glee
I took the midnight hopefully.
That loss of two hours' sleep would be
My only cut in training.
But oh alas, and woe is me,
I had forgotten your decree
That athletes all must bathed be
Each morning very chillily.
The honored Pullman company
Not knowing this necessity
Neglected to provide for me
The suitable facility
To wit: a shower or tub.
And what young girl of modesty,
Howe'er athletic she may be
Without undue publicity
Within an upper berth like me
Could "substitute dry rub?"
So I submit this humble plea
That gracoiusly you'll pardon me
For cutting training ruthlessly
And thus addressing poetry
Or rather verse, both fresh and free
With such unheard of flippancy
To your respected dignity.
I sign myself most humbly
Elizabkth U. Willcox.
210
211
thp: new republic
The Week, November 2nd. 1920
HOW electrified and how amazed would our several candidates
for the Presidency have been, had they visited the campus of Wel-
lesley College last Saturday evening! Had they glimpsed them-
selves as the students of that institution of learning impersonated
them, we feel that the sight would have caused deep meditation.
Could Harding, for example, have seen his beloved "front
porch" transported on an old hay-wagon; could he have heard his
wife (impersonated by the president of Student Government), de-
claring her resolution to see that he got enough to eat, etc., etc.,
we wonder what his remarks might have been. We should have
enjoyed seeing Cox, Debs, Watkins and Christiansen listen to them-
selves harp upon their own merits, likening themselves to Lincoln
and Washington, etc. Certain it is that no speakers received more
superb introductions than those delivered by the chairman of the
great night, Emilie Weyl, of the class of 1922.
LIFE LINES
"22's lost banner didn't seem to be much
of a loss after all, judging by the loss of
interest in inter-class affairs shown by that
class in their Junior year!
Agora's fire seemed to rouse the fire of
society patriotism in every Agoran breast.
A clear case of cause and effect being
similar.
Travel talks by Emih' Gordon are re-
placing Burton Holmes in popularity in
the neighborhood of ^Vellesley.
The world at large begins to talk Dis-
armament. Wellesley, it seems, aided by
Mrs. Trowbridge and Dr. Goldthwaite,
talks nothing but dis-Garmament !
The all-college picture was taken for the
Fund. No doubt the photographer felt
that he obtained a fund of experience.
IMuricl Morris, as President of the newly
formed Liberal League, is in for a liberal
share of leagued opposition.
Woolly Halff dropped overboard from
the good ship Wellesley, but she had an
engagement ring for life saver.
ME
.-I Philosophical Didlot/ue
By I. O. U.
"I am not, I was not,
I never could be.
Whatever you see here
Is aught else but me.
There's consciousness,
Body, some reality, —
Phenomena surely;
But there ain't any me!"
"^ ou err my young friend,
You err seriously.
My body is mental.
The mental is me."
"Ah, no, pray consider
One moment with me !
The rest's all a phase —
The body is me!"
Now I ask your indulgence.
Kind friends, so you'll see
The state I am in
From Philosophy!
CONTRIBUTORS' COLUMN
I. U. U., the author of Me, is one of our
younger, more collejjiately witty readers, a
student of Philosophy at Wellesley College. Her
dialogue, though entirely new in substance, is
modelled after the writings of the classic phil-
osophers, with which, of course, we are all
more or less familiar.
212
Dear Girls:
So many letters come to me from girls at
college asking advice about their correspondence,
that I have decided to set forth a little page
of suggestions that some of my young friends
have found helpful.
With the letter to the Family — academic
prominent and request-for-check-in-closing —
with this letter you are all so familiar that I
shall not stop for it, but hurry on to the more
vital subject of mixed correspondence. As to
your young men, girls, and the letters they are
to receive from you:
First, how often should you write? Well,
not oftener than once a day, except to those to
whom you are engaged at the time. This is
a good, safe rule. And if your correspondence
is of a merely friendly nature, though looking
forward to better things, I believe that live
evenings a week are all that should be devoted
to it. Sometimes, when not quite certain of the
status of a correspondent, it is wise to keep
him waiting a few days for his reply.
Now as to form to use in your reply. Never
put a date on your letter— this will successfully
baffle the young man who always starts: "Yours
of the 2nd inst. at hand, and in reply—" and
with the same emphasis never leave off an ad-
dress. If you are convinced that he will not
reply, give a false address. This will save your
pride', and prevent your disappointment— and
speaking of disappointment, girls, there is one
form of note that is so important that it cannot
be omitted. This is the — "I-am-here-from-
Eloise", or "call-me-up-from-Gertrude" note,
one of which should be sent at the beginning
of the year to all friends or bare acquaintances
at Harvard or Tech. If you do not know
dormitory addresses, send care of the Dean or
Registrar, and by all means use a postal card,
as it may have enormous circulation. Select a
likeness of your own dormitory, with possibly
X marking room, and write on the back: "I
wonder if vou are at Harvard (or Tech) this
year. I am at Wellesley. I have Thursday
and Saturday evenings free. My telephone
number in W'ellesley 121212122. Well, so long.
Hoping to see you soon." This card will wander
from place to place and may be posted on his
fraternity bulletin board. It is almost certam
to bring some reply.
Now about letters whose subject is the tender
passion. Use all your subtlety on these, as
there is not a chance of his understanding. As
to the start— almost indispensable is the form
"So-and-so-dear-" which any girl can tell you
will bring far better results than "dear-so-and-
so," — but none of the complications of "my
own" or "My only." In ending letters, do be
discreet, girls! Don't risk "yours truly", or
"Sincerely vours," especially if he is through
college and in business. It is much better to
end simplv, "Well, I must stop, Harold— Cleo-
patra", or at most, "In conclusion let me say
good-bye — Cynthia."
213
Wom.^n's Home Comp.^niom
THE TOWER ROOM
The College Girl's Correspondence
If you wish occasionally to liven up such
letters with a little account of your doings, be
sure to bring in casual mention of all your
college chums with men's nicknames;
"Jack was around all day today. Tonight
Billy and I are going for a bicycle ride, and
tomorrow me and Harry are going to visit the
cider mill."
Finally, if you ever feel that the interest in
your correspondence is waning, here is a prize
device that has been used again and again:
write two letters, just alike, of fairly warm
context, ending "Well, dear, only the thought
that I am to see you so soon keeps me up.
Goodbye, and a sweet kiss." Write one to
Leo and one to Albert. Send Albert's to Leo
and Leo's to Albert. Both will be up within
two days.
Goodbye, dear girls— I am sure you will be
successful. I wish you as many special deliveries
as there are days in the week.
The House Broke Janitor
Drama
Why Wake?
Why wait indeed, when such an hila-
rious farce is offered by the Faculty
Players in the Wellesley College Barn?
Nobody did wait. The whole college
went, saw, and was convulsed. No inova-
tion of this new and startling age has been
met with such whole-hearted appreciation
as the open faculty plays, The Nice IVanton
and The Critic.
FRANNY'S FIRST PROM— /■,/A77>- J .IIR
I. Friinny has just sent off the dhnne invi-
tation to her hcivitchingly ijorgeous man and
ii-onders if he ivilt fall for the ingenious line or
tii-o that she inclosed about fearing to ask such
an ApoUonic person to a IVellesiey Junior Prom.
II. .She iionders lihelher they ix'ill have a
taxi to ride to the gym in, and ivhat kind of
flowers he will send. Will they he red roses,
since the only things that go with her dress
are orchids f
(3^
III. The chaperones worry about indeceny
H'hat can be holding Franny's dress in front
when in back there is only one line visible!
Oh dear, to think what great responsibility
hangs on a single thread! ..■ .grotesque, indeed!
ir. They didn't have a taxi coming home.
Young .Ipollo explains that he couldn't remem-
ber whether the taxi man's name was Diehl or
Perkins, but I'ranny thinks lie looks too sleepy
to call a number anyway.
214
SANCTUM TALKS
"Ah, good morning, Miss Metzger."
"Good morning. Life."
"Er — if we may be excused for asking,
which Miss Metzger are you?"
"I'm Marg, Life."
"Oh, then you're Operetta, not Maga-
zine. We've long been wanting to con-
gratulate you on that production, Marg.
It was a gem."
"Now, Life, don't flatter. You know
I'm a modest girl, — it embarrasses me just
to be reminded I'm Rook's twin!"
"We know that, Marg; we know that
all too well. You get fussed and distant
on the slightest provocation. Between
you and us, that's the secret of your fame
and your popularity. But what we started
to say — "
"Yes, about Operetta, Life. Let's get
it over with."
"Operetta, Marg, was a gem. It pleased
everybody. The college enjoyed it enor-
mously; the Neivs found something about
it to criticize unfavorably ; and the Senior
Prom men found an entirely new set of
jokes in it to laugh at. What more could
one ask of a college production?"
VOO DOO
So this is what Wellesley says! And
after so many years of friendship atween
us twain, too !
We give '22's prize song, winner of
interclass song competition —
Oh, you've heard how four young women
Of four colleges one day
Were walking out together,
When a young man came their way
And Vassar said, "What is he worth?"
Bryn Mawr, "His fam'ly, too?"
And Smith, "Just show me where he is!"
Wellesley, "What can he do?"
Can he set a song by Einstein Theory
Or psychoanalyze a cat?
Can he parse organic compounds
By Arklight on Ararat?
Can he tell by sines and cosines
What his score around the course?
When philosophizing madly
With Descartes before the horse?
Could he save a pretty girl from drowning
If he found her in the swim?
Said Wellesley, "If he is no use,
I have no earthly use for him!"
THE SURVEY
March 19, 1921, Wellesley College won
both intercollegiate debates in which it
took part. This is a debating triumph for
Wellesley, since its negative team was the
only one of the series to win this year. We
find it of interest that so much can be
said by college girls for and against the
restriction of European immigration, and
we congratulate the officials of debate at
Wellesley, as well as the debaters (who
included four juniors. Woody, Cooke, Per-
rin and Gordon!)
215
THE lNni;PENDEiNT«//r/THE WEEKLY REVIEW
WELLESLEV COLLEGE COMMENCEMENT A
NOTABLE ONE
COINCIDENT with the ghid news that its drive for
$2,700,000 had been successfully completed, was
Wellesley College's award to the celebrated Mine.
Curie of the degree of Doctor of Science at its Commence-
ment exercises, June 20. This was the first honorary degree
that Wellesley College had ever awarded, and marks the
Commencement of 1921 from all other commencements of
the past. We heartily commend Wellesle\'s departure from
precedent, and congratulate her upon her triumjih in securing
the large sum with which she is to begin her endowment.
WELLESLEY COLLEGE NEWS
'22 Fills .-Ill-College Offices
E.XCITEMENT HIGH OVER RESULTS OF BALLOTING
The cheering green was packed with ex-
cited girls, who waited breathlessly for the
results of all-college elections for 1922. After
cheers and cheers and still more cheers from all
the classes, the mass on the Senior steps slowly
divided, and the finally chosen officers came
one by one from the Chapel basement.
The chief offices were filled as follows:
President College Go-veniment Emmavail Luce
President Christian Association Emily E. Gordon
Editor-in-chief NEWS Elizabeth Woody
President Barnsiualloius Frances Baker
President Debating Society Marion Perrin
President Atliletic Association Mildred E. Durant
OUTING, NOVEMBER, 1920
BLAZING A TRAIL
We are always interested in the athletic
activities of Wellesley College, and par-
ticularly in the achievements of the dif-
ferent classes in the annual competit'on.
The class of 1922 this year exhibited ex-
traordinary skill in all fields of sport.
Represented in all branches of organized
athletics, from archery to volley-ball, this
agile group of maidens walked off with
top-honors, to the tune of 44 points to a
second score of 33. We shall not be sur-
prised when the most g'fted among them
rise to more than college recognition.
In "Float Night", the inter-class com-
petition of the eights, '22 again was vic-
torious. Ihe crews rowed over the course
in the sunset hour, and. judging from a
standpoint of both speed and excellency of
form, the junior crew surpassed the other
three class crews, with a score of 91 points,
as against 87, 84 and 76. The tableau "W"
was then formed by the four crews, and
a water pageant, composed of a series of
lighted floats, the Owl and the Pussycat,
Father Neptune, etc., floated by the large
crowd of spectators on the flashlit shore.
It was hard to dampen the ardor of the
gathering, even though a lusty rain poured
down upon the scene, during the progress
of the pageant. This annual Float Night
should be \\itnessed by all who enjoy good
oarsmanship, and good pageantry, for it
is a truly unique collegiate event.
216
217
RESPONSIBILITY— A THESIS
BY A. NOBLE SENIOR
The Outlook
An Illustrated Yeariy Jour?ia/ of College Life
Nancy Toll President
Lucille D. Barrett Vice-I resident
Sarah B. Conant Recording Secretary
Elizabeth Fleming Corresponding Secretary
Harriet Kirkham Treasurer
Dorothy E. Muzzey \
Madeleine Pritzlaff ;- Executive Board
Shirley S. Smith '
Helen Crandell ) r,
y ractotums
Dorothy Dukes \
Hildegarde Churchill Song Leader
218
With the Academic Ghost Still Hovering
over us
Result :
TURNING 'EM OVER AT WELLESLEY
Field Day, sports, four competing classes
some interesting events in ivhich '22 figured prominently
BY A Confirmed Sportsman
To the bred-in-the-bone sportsman, noth-
ing is more exhilarating than an afternoon
spent at Field Day at Wellesley College.
There's always a nipping and an eager air,
that u'hips the blood into your face and
out again. There are always more than five
sports going on at the same time, so that
you get lots of exercise dashing from one
to the other in a mad attempt to see Edna
Willis' pitching, Das Smith and Weilo at
basket-ball, as well as the Black twins in
hockey. More than all this, there's a rush-
ing mob of spectators to watch, and coffee
and doughnuts for sale.
This year the particular Field Day that
I had such sport dodging the camera men
and the runners, '22 came out on top
again. The contest was pretty close — close
enough to give the Seniors a few grey hairs
before they counted up their scores and
the totals were announced — but the Seniors
won in the end. I lay the victory to class
stars — Tacy Parry and Helen Powers, Bob-
by Travell, Beth Willcox, Weilo and
Forbes — but the underclassmen seemed to
think 'twas age and vast experience what
did it!
Of course you can never again get
thrill that I did ; for never again will
compete at Field Day.
the
'22
CONFIDENTIAL GUIDE
Les Fammes Savantes — Personally, we
didn't see Les Femmes Savantes, but from
all reports, that was our mistake! We
hear that 1922 was well-represented by
L. DeWolf and Barbara Bates, and that
the production as a whole was quite a
success.
^^
From a Farnsworth Art Exhibit
SONG OF THE NIGHTINGALE, by Day BreO
An Etching
^ THE SQUARE ROOT OF MINUS 1, by Jf'hn
NUDE EATING SOUP WITH A FORK, by U.
Guessit T"E FUTURE FROM A COLLEGE WINDOW,
Would Carving An Impression
220
WELLESLEY A LA GREENWICH VILLAGE
THE bee on tlie window sill batted
one eyelid. This lo\e stuff was be-
yond him. Anita Merry Wheeler,
sprawled on the couch in her well-known
Rosalind pose, was saying,
" 'Love is a quest,
Luring you on.'
That's absolutely true, that is. Love is
the one sure drawing card in anything —
real life, poetry, or drama. "
Beatrice Jefferson, pencil in hand, was
jotting down notes, while Mary Zweizig
learned eagerly forward.
"Good, good!" Bee was murmuring.
"That's the stuff — talk about love and
people are always interested. " Leaning
back in her chair, she added with a smile :
"Now personally, there's nothing interests
me so much."
Mary colored a little, and said softly,
"You, too?"
"Yes," Anita Merry said slowly, "love
is a necessity and men are an institution.
Why, half a girl's education comes from the
men she knows!"
Mary's color mounted again. "Of course
I'm not very experienced ..." she began.
"That's what all the old hands say,"
Bee interrupted sotto voce.
"but love is certainly a wonderful ex-
perience," Mary concluded.
Anita Merry was listening with cocked
eyebrow.
"Yes," said Bee, "love's the thing. That's
where we make our money on Operetta.
College girls are famous for their sentimen-
tality."
"But," protested IVIary, "you wouldn't
just commercialize lo-ove!"
Anita Merry cocked the other eyebrow.
"We'll have a try at it anyhow," she said.
Just at this moment the bee woke up
with a start that joggled him off the sill.
Both Anita Merry's eyebrows were cocked.
Bee's pencil was flying busily, and Mary
was humming snatches of song to herself.
"Mercy!" he buzzed, stretching his
wings, "I must have fallen asleep w^hen
they began to work and dreamt all that
talk about love. Somebody ought to psycho-
analyze my dreams! . . . Well, this is
just another Operetta meeting — guess I
won't stay."
So saying, the bee meditatively stretched
his left hind leg, and flew away to Franny
Baker's bonnet.
A COLLEGE DITTY
"Will you, won't you, answer quickly," wrote the maiden to the male
(The seventh hoped-for hero of this sad, lugubrious tale),
"This invitation to our Prom, which gladly 1 advance?
I should be extremely happy if you'd come and join the dance."
He was the eighteenth cousin of a distant friend of hers,
Who raked him up from somewhere to silence her demurs.
She'd tried in vain, or vainly, each single man she knew;
Exhausted now, she'd reached the stage where any hero'd do.
His answer reached her swiftly. "I'm greatly pleased indeed.
Though I had never heard before of Cousin Sally Reed
You said would introduce us. But anyway, I'll be
Arriving at your parlor door at twenty after three."
The fateful hour approached, and he. The meeting quickly passed.
She gained again the stairway where her eager comrades massed.
"He's freckled and he's four feet high — goodbye to all Romance !
But never mind, my motto is — 'Just anything in pants!'"
"Will you, won't you, will you? Please do!" to the maiden said the male,
(Which was a trifle later than the first verse of this tale.)
Please answer my proposal I so eagerly advance,
And join with me forever in one long continuous dance!"
They say this happy couple never, never will grow old.
Because their agile actions keep their blood from running cold;
For every spring in Maytime they renew their old romance
And the children hear them crying, "Will you, won't you join the dance?"
"Will you, won't you, will you, won't you," and old memories entrance,
"\\'ill you, won't you, will you? Please do! You will, won't you, join the dance?"
And it really doesn't matter how old-fashionedly they prance.
For they both are joung together, and it's Senior Prom they dance!
221
\ui^ ciTxJ Qu^'tn oi 'Win Hay.
222
Cosmopolitan
THE WOMAN'S WAY
Anonymous
I WAS looking for a job. I had
a college education and great
capabilities. I was willing to
start humbly as associate editor of
a magazine, or principal of a high
school, or personnel manager of a
department store, with a few thou-
sand a year. But I had difficulty.
It was always the same. I would
go into an office. I would see the
manager (sometimes). I would
say, "Give me a job, please". He
would say, "What can you do?"
I would say, "I am a college grad-
uate." He would say, "That is
too bad. What can you do?" I
would show him my diploma, but
to no avail. Sometimes he would
even laugh. I became discouraged.
Life looked very dark to me.
Then I remembered one great
thing college had taught me. When
the sugar is in the center of the
table, no one will pass it to you:
you must reach for it. I deter-
mined to reach for what I wanted,
boldly and independently.
I went into an office. They led
me straight to the President's pri-
vate room. He looked at me with
piercing eyes.
"Why do you come to see me in
my office?" he asked.
"I want a job," I said.
"We haven't any jobs for you,
my darling", he replied affection-
ately.
"So," said I. I was a woman
of few words. "If you will not
give me a job, I will make your
home too hot to hold you."
"O very well then, dear," said
he, "you can have a job; and now
come sit on my lap."
I complied. "Thanks, dear
Father", I said.
BOSTON VERSION OF A
POPULAR SONG
{Quoted with permission of the author)
Segregated at the time when I arise,
Dreadfully alone in the evening,
I am esconced in solitary grandeur in a
comfortable chaise lounge
Dreadfully unhappy there.
With no partner at cards.
Without companions, I am desolated,
Observing the Waltham on the mantel-
piece.
I greatly desiderate to rest my cranium on
someone's clavicle.
I dislike growing superannuated,
Thus segregated.
• 223
BABSONS STATISTICAL REPORT
The Class of 1922 of Wellesley College, Wellcsley, Mass.
Issued January, 1, 1922
Senior Class Vote
p , J •» ■,■ Dottie Underbill, 1st place
Best aisfniilion ,, , ,, ,', ,'
Mark Hanna, 2iui place
Most typical H'clleshy
Girl Dot Tower
»,„,, ,,„,,.. I Dot Tower, 1st place
Most popuUir ^ ,. , ' . ^.
' '^ Peg Byard, 2n(i place
Most impressive Il>by Fry
Noisiest Betty Parsons
,. , ■ , ,.■ Muriel Morris, 1st place
Most intellK/ent , • ,,, , ^ , ,
Liz W oody, 2nd place
Most disillusioning .... Fran Baker
Best all-around Mid Durant
Haugliliest Elizabeth Fry
T- ■• , Margaret Eddy, 1st place
1 ardiest ,,. v .. ui. -i j i
Charlotte Hilton, 2nd place
Most famous Emily Gordon
Most tactful Emmavail Luce
Most personality "^''^" Woodruff Is^t place
"^ Emmavail Luce, 2nd place
Most sentimental Ruth Hastings
Most confirmed Prom
trotter Rebecca Stickney
Funniest nose Janet Travell
Most past Rebecca Stickney
Most future Emily Gordon
Faculty pest Margaret Wasserman
Bicicest scrapper '^^"^^ "„ """•'',' I'!''"
Cornelia Ross, 2nd place
Most sophisticated Louise Neiiffer
Most artistic "^'.^" Woodruff
Lucille Barrett (tied vote)
Best dancer
Morally Grace Osgood
Physically "<":""'>; ^tone
Eloise Hazard (tied vote)
Biggest conscience ^"'V'^''il''u' '" ?''T,
Pauline C oburn, 2nd place
Best looking Olive Ladd
Best bluffer Frances Baker
Best flunker Margaret Eddy, 1st place
Marian 1 aylor, 2nd place
Best all-round Mildred Durant
Best reducer Frances Tledtke
Best athlete Janet Travell
Helen Forbush (tied vote)
Best clothed olive Ladd
Most clothed The UeWolfs
Most continuously
grinning Dor thy Higley
Most confirmed hlusher .. Aiince Louise Bettinan
Lihe hound Grace Osgood
Faculty fusser Elizabeth Fry
Most educated Muriel Morris
Most highbroij; Marjorie Packard
Most masculine Heiiriette Cooper
Most feminine Dorothy Underbill
Most S. S. and G .( Charlotte Hilton
/ Emma Couch (tied vote)
Noisiest Elizabeth Parsons
Most engaged Alice Richards
Best bobbed Ethel Halsev
Junior Class Vote
Best knoivn Vail Luce
Best looking Olive Ladd
Most collegiate Mark Hanna
.1/0./ highbro-v: S ^''''y ^'^
( Muriel Morris
Funniest * ^"'^ Papons
/ Carr Iglehart
Most absent-minded ...Betty Morrison
Most temperamental . . . .N'edaline Rose
, Liz Woody, 1st place
Most likely to succeed . ) Lj.cy xhom, 2nd place
/ Dash Williams
Most diplomatic Liz Woody (tied vote)
.Marion Perrin (tied vote)
Faculty Vote
Biggest bluffer Miss Baker
H'itliest Miss Iglehart
Most scholarly Miss Gordon
Miss Gordon
Greatest future j^ji^^ Luce (tied vote)
Best looking Miss Fry
Most attractive Miss Helen Woodruff
Most enthusiastic Miss Parsons
,,.,,. ( Miss Travell
Most intelligent ■, ... ,, . ... . ,
/ Miss Morris (tied vote)
,, , / \ Miss Parsons, 1st place
Most carefree ' ,. „„,.,,.' ' , ,
( MissD. Williams, 2ndplace
Most entertaining Miss Iglehart
Most collegiate Miss Blossom
224
The American
How I Won My Success
WHAT IT MEAXS TO BE A PHI BETA KAPPA AND HOJF
TO GET THERE
By O. C. Mee
1 have had the priv-
ilege of serving under
three great instruc-
tors, whose names
would be familiar to
all of you. JMiss X
had the reputation of
being rather a hard
woman to get along
with, and I had felt
a good deal of appre-
hension as to my fu-
ture relations with
her. I soon found
that this fear was
groundless.
The popular pic-
ture of Miss X is
not a true one. To be sure, she is
a strict disciplinarian, requiring reading
reports of 5000 pages a week, but the
requirement is not unjust, for at
least that much reading is necessary for
any understanding of her lectures. I
found that by studying half an hour
just before dinner, I could cover the as-
signments easily.
DON'T LET YOUR
INSTRUCTORS
CODDLE YOU!
The best thing that can happen
to anyone is to have a strict task-
master at the very beg'nning, and
to be taught that there are no
limits to work.
When your instructors try to
ease up, when they offer you ex-
tensions on your papers, or wish
to postpone a quiz, resist them.
Do not falter, for that is not the
road to success.
Miss Y had differ-
ent methods. Her
policy was to require
daily trips to Boston
for research work,
with oral or written
reports at each class
appointment. This
was, of course, in ad-
dition to the regular
assignments. I owe
her a great deal, for
without the stimulus
she provided, I might
have slackened in my
efforts.
Miss Z, has been
variously described as
cruel, heartless, and the like. Never was
a person more maligned. The monthly
theses she required did more than anything
else to hold me to my purpose.
The road to success as I have travelled
it is not impossible. After the first two
years, I e\ en found time for my meals.
But it is only by constant effort and un-
tiring work that success is gained.
SANCTUM TALK
"Good-morning, this is Life. Is this
Student Opinion?"
"Yes. Good-morning, Life."
"Excuse us if we are a little taken aback
at your appearance — We thought — "
"Y es, I know what you were thinking.
You expected, if you got to me at all,
to find me in a dirty white sweater, sloppy
bloomers, and rolled stockings. Really,
Life, I'm surprised at you!"
"We apologize — But you know what's
said of you, and we'd never met you face
to face before!"
"That's all right; I'm used to it. First
people say I don't exist, and then when
they discover I really do — well, there's
no limit to what's said!"
"But surely, no one who knows you" —
(we had quite fallen for Student Opinion.)
"Ah, Life, that's where you're mistaken.
Many people know me, but they abuse me
for false purposes. They misrepresent me.
Some girl rants for two columns in a
Free Press about nothing in particular.
She makes no points; she uses poor English.
And people shake their heads and mutter
'A, Student Opinion again!'"
"But don't you ever speak for yourself?
Surely, if anyone ever heard you — "
"The real trouble is, Life, they don't
take me seriously. And that makes me
awfully tired."
"We sympathize thoroughly. . .Thank
you for the talk. We're glad to have got
to know you better."
225
226
DISAPPOINTMENT BUREAU
Application Blank
Please give three answers to every question — (1) the answer you suppose is
desired, (2) the answer you'd like to give, (3) the answer. Make seventeen copies,
and be prepared to supply others upon request.
Expect no position from this application.
I.
Name
Surname
Married name — if any to be
Age at present date On last birthday ? On next ?
Mailing address ?
Color of eyes? Nose? Hair?
Distinguishing features ? What size shoe do you wear ?
Do you dance ? Disposition ?
II.
III.
IV.
V.
Have you taken any course in college? In space below, list courses taken, instructors
you have had in college, classes attended, classes cut, assignments, and anything else
connected with your curriculum.
Do you wish to work after you graduate? If so, check preferences: Hard work,
medium hard work, middling hard work, fair to middling hard work, fairly hard work,
hardly hard work, not hard work at all.
Do you wish a salary for your services?
List your college activities by underlining what interests you, double underlining things
to which you are devoted, checking whatever appeals to you, and crossing out anything
which strikes you as undesirable in the following list: Housemeeting, hash, P.P. of P.,
carnival, prom, cut, line, food, quiet, freshman, goloshes, petition, Adonais.
VI. — References :
Indicate where the most complete record of your college career may be found:
Office of the Dean,
Office of the Dean of Residence,
Minutes of the Senate.
VII. — Locality desired for position:
Where are you best known? (In some cases,
it is impossible to place the applicant more than 1500 miles from locality indicated.)
Tree Day, 1922
228
3f rllralry Alumuar Qpuartrrly Alumnae Notra
1922
Katherine Anderson is achieving great suc-
cess in landscape gardening. She has just
received a commission from J. D. Rockefeller,
Jr. to lav out the new N. Y.-Conn. Interstate
Park.
Dora Armstrong has put basketball on the
map in Samoa. She is head coach of the
Samoan Invincibles and is trying to arrange
an international match with Java, which also
has a fine team.
Frances Baker has given up her career of
co-star with Al Jolson to become matron of
the Goshen, Kansas, Foundlings' Home.
Lucille Barrett's excellent panorama can-
vas, "The Atlantic Fleet at Target Practice",
has been accepted by the Wellesley College
Rowing Club for decoration of the skiff
house.
Elizabeth Fry was the attraction of the
evening at Symphony on "Wellesley Night."
For encores she sang some of the old operetta
songs, to the enthusiastic applause of the
audience.
Mary Louise Fritchman. The 63rd edition
of "When Summer Went" has just been pub-
lished and Miss Fritchman is acclaimed as
the writer of the day.
Janet Travell has taken Dr. Southard's place
at Wellesley. They say that Dr. "Bob " has
made a hit with the students.
Elizaheili Parsons may be seen any day
at Macy's, New York. "The best floor
walker we've ever had", the manager assures
us.
Alfarata Boii'doin is now giving Miss
Manwaring's course in versification.
Helen C/iain is doing a flourishing business
in constructing national platforms.
Elizabeth Kimball is chief model at
Cherie's exclusive shop in Paris.
Hal Kirkham, although she has resided
since her marriage in New Zealand, has en-
tered two daughters for Wellesley, and two
sons for Harvard.
Grace Osgood is chief of Boston police.
Mary Pringle Barrett is known throughout
New York as the typical Southerner. She
has a flourishing popcorn stand outside the
Ritz.
Dorothy Toixer is wife of the head of a
fashionable preparatory school for boys. To
every Middlesex boy she personifies the ideal
matron.
Rebecca Stirkney leads the American smart
set in Paris.
Gertrude Kessel (M. A. Radcliffe, 1924,
Ph.D. 1926) is in Washington advising the
President during the present economic crisis.
Alene Little is teaching music and swim-
ming at a private school in Alaska.
Muriel Morris has been appointed to the
office of Assistant Secretary of State. Her
new book "From Cicero to 1932" is having a
large sale in diplomatic circles at Wash-
ington.
Mary Page is in Europe taking a rest-cure.
(She has been there since the publication
of the 1922 Legenda.)
Rutli Schli-vek is writing plays for David
Belasco. She is helping the producer, who
is now too old to help himself.
Frances Sturgis has taken over the head-
ship of the Maine "Society for the Pre-
vention of Cruelty to Children." Her last
year in college particularly qualified her for
this work, although this fact was not the
dominating reason for her appointment.
Emilie H'eyl has written a "best-seller"
"Poppycock and Platitudes", to which Sir
Al Jolson (lately knighted by the English
King), has affixed a preface.
Mary Zii-eizig has at last consented to sing
parts of her opera, "Marsh-mallows", at
the N. Y. Hippodrome Sunday Concerts.
Dorothy Higley is Harrison Fisher's model
for his latest magazine cover, "Girl with
Smile."
Margaret ff'asserman's pamphlet "How to
Do It and Why", can be obtained from her
by enclosing thirty cents and a postage stamp.
Luella Tucker is mistress of a Georgia
plantation, where she and her husband are
famous for their rose garden.
Mary Giddings is now head of Walnut
Hill.
While the editor of the Atl.\ntic Monthly
is ofi^ on Sabbatical leave, Mildred Ascheim
is getting out New Englands famous per-
iodical.
Elizabeth Woody is making herself felt
at Washington. The charming senator from
Kentucky "has a way with her", to quote
one of the leading papers.
Catherine McReynolds sailed last week
for China with her husband, Fu Ching Wow,
former emissary to the United States.
Margaret Eddy is band leader in Ravenna,
Iowa. Weekly concerts are to be held all
this summer.
Katherine and Louise DeH'olf are out on
a Chautaqua Circuit. Their number has re-
ceived great apjilause wherever it has been
shown.
Elizabeth Fleming has written an interest-
ing sketch, "Five years in the Army."
Dorothy H'illiams is serving as sheriff of
her county. We've noticed that the border
has quieted down lately.
Sarah Conant lectures now and then to
the Department of Hygiene. Her school of
Physical Education is ranked among the
foremost in this countrv.
229
Betty Lindsay has a ten-year contract with
the White Star line, and is the chief attraction
that draws travellers to that company's
steamers in mid-ocean on every trip. Miss
Lindsay performs for a horde of breathless
passengers her dare-devil "under the steamer
and up on the other side" dive.
Florence Jeiip and Heifetz are now playing
duets in all the concert halls of America.
Barbara Bates is manager of Raymake
and Whitcock's Coney Island tours.
Edilh Bermintjham is riding in Ringling's
circus with her pet horse, although she has
received several handsome offers from Mov-
ing Picture companies.
Hildegarde Churchiil raised a large sum
singing "I didn't raise my boy to be a
soldier" at the National Pacifist Reunion,
Peacedale, R. I.
Henriette Cooper is publishing a new book,
"Pacified Passions." She has presented an
autographed copy to the Wellesley College
Library.
Caroline Eice is substituting for Mary
Ciarden in the latter's Chicago opera roles.
She scored a notable success in her rendering
of the title role of "Tosca."
Lora Flanegin is editing the "What the
\A'ell-dressed Woman Will Wear" column
in New York's theatre programs.
Grate Freeman has been commissioned by
the Hoston .\n League to decorate the ceiling
of the handsome new South Station soon to
be completed.
Elizahetli Frost has gone to Iceland as a
missionary.
Emily Gordon was the chief speaker in
the International debate, U. S. vs. Russia,
held recently in Carnegie Hall, New York
City. 'Is the Family Necessary to the
State? " was the subject. Thousands of people
vvaiteil after the debate to shake hands with
Miss Gordon.
Martha Hanna's shop, "Martha's Fudge
Nook", is doing a rushing business in the
Wall St. business section. She writes: "I
cannot account for my success, unless it is
due to my constant making of fudge during
my four college years. Philosophy has
taught me optimism, and that is the gang-
plank to triumph. My sales during the past
month amounted to $79,626.47."
Eloise Hazard and Rudolph Valentino are
doing exhibition dancing every evening in
the Crystal Room of the Ritz-Carlton in
New York City.
Carr Iglehart's original monologues are
very popular in Boston, New York and
Philadelphia, where she gives them at re-
ceptions.
Among the files of the Alumnae office this document has just come to light.
It is of special interest in connection ■with '22's recent tenth reunion.
WILL
Executed hy some members of the class of '22 icliile presumably of sound
mind and god health.
Whereas: the Legenda Board of Wellesley College in the year of their troubles,
1922, is about to pass out, it does hereby leave to futurity these few relics:
1 Chaperons to Wellesley College for swimming purposes;
2 Pond Road to future exploration ;
3 The greybook to the Treasure Room ;
4 Ma.xfield Parrish to the next freshman class;
5 The Sheik to any shelf in the Librar>- but a reserved one ;
6 The Chapel seats to a home for hunchbacks ;
7 Friday fish in the ocean ;
8 Miss Hart to Diehl with Perkins;
9 The snobs to themselves ;
10 The bills for Legenda to John D.;
11 Our sense of humor to anyone who would appreciate it;
12 Pagie to sell Legenda while the rest of the board escapes on a shore party;
13 The Censorship Cotnmittee in the lurch;
14 The rest to another time.
Codicil — We tried to get Cookie to !ea\e her freshmen, but with no success.
230
Vanity Fair
1. She was strong for chokers the first 2. Geraldine's college course has at last
of senior j'ear.
■'~i. —
borne fruit — a bit over-ripe.
(Y'^
3. Miss Ahvavs-was-bored forgot to look 4. Some of us, alas, never change, and
before she leaped. will always wander, wander, wander I
LOST, LOST IN THE AVIDE, WIDE WORLD
231
THE WELLESLEY ALUMNAE QUARTERLY
OLD FAVORITES
These are some of the favorites '22 said and sung again at their tenth reunion
For those of you who didn't quite remember the words, here they are now.
1
'22's happy, O, so happy!
It's the month of May.
It's the time when all the green things grow ;
We're doing it too, so we ought to know.
Welcome Maytime, Freshman's playtime ;
June is coming soon!
When exams are over and we are free
O, how happy we shall be!
22's happy. O, so happy!
It's the month of Mav.
2
O Evolu, O Evolu!
There's nothing in the world you cannot do !
\'ou took the monkey and you made him into man
Long since, 'tis true.
Now you've brought a greater phenomenon to pass.
You've taken 1922 that embryonic mass.
And changed it by a miracle into a senior class!
O, Evo-Ivo-Ovo-Evolution!
3
O, we want to grow up,
Yes, we want to grow up,
Though w-e're having a wonderful time!
Seniors and tea-rooms and all things nice
Add to academic duties pep and spice.
Yet we want to grow up,
Yes, we ^\ant to grow up,
Though Psych and Bible are not far away.
Through all the sophomores' awful persecution
We pass with our undaunted resolution
That we want to grow up,
Yes, we want to grow up,
'Cause we want to be juniors some day!
4
Their last words were:
"I have a few' more pearls to cast."
"A vawst advawntage."
"Why wait?"
"Grotes(iue, but not indecent."
"Precisely Howe?"
"Roll call today — (i\e minutes of se\enty-five slides."
"Before we announce the score ..."
"Even though I say Hobbes and Descartes, I may mean Locke
and La Mettrie."
"The Library is not a place for social gatherings."
"Work, for the night is coming."
2i2
Seen at 1922's Tenth Reunion
CONGRESSIONAL RECORD
In view of the present spirit of unrest
in college, the Legenda Board of Wei-
lesley College wishes to define its policy.
1 Puns—
Believing firmly that all editors should
be punished for puns that are not pun-
gent, we crave indulgence for not having
the moral courage to live up to our
convictions.
2 Censorship —
As the taste of the individual must
always be subordinated to the good of
the community, our censorship may seem
to some too narrow or too broad. The
individual may feel free, therefore, to
ink out anything not meeting her stand-
ards. Ample room for private additions
is provided on the margins. ( Rice paper
may also be used.) Censored jokes
(without explanation) may be had from
the editors if requests are accompanied
by written permission of the applicant's
parents.
3 Complaints —
Any complaints must be made in writ-
ing on July 4, 1922, to the editor-in-
chief of 1923 Legenda.
4 Resignation —
The board feels that as a body it must
tender its resignation for two reasons:
(a) now that Legenda is out we might
as well be resigned to our fate.
(b) We are about to graduate any-
how.
5 Communications —
Any expressions of confidence, sym-
pathy, or congratulations may be said
with flowers before June 21, 1922.
233
Index to Advertisements
Tilt- following have been good enougli to lulp us finance our Legenda. If we have
tlie opportunity, let us repay them with patronage.
Page
A. Gan 18
A. G. Spaulding and Bros. 3
Alfred Ogre Hohen 5
American Refrigerator Transit Co 6
Anderson Conservatories 25
Andre 8
Bachrach 11
Badger Lumber Company 17
Bailey. Banks and Biddle Co 16
Berkshire Mutual Fire Ins. Co 19
Charles L. Willard 13
Copley Square Hotel 6
Cotrell and Leonard 10
Crahan Engraving Compiny 15
Dieges and Clust 3
Dichl 10
Donohoe, J. A. 25
Durgin, Park and Company 21
Dwinnell-Wriglit and Co. 8
E. A. Davis Company 3
E. E. Gray Company 20
K. M. White and Co. 10
v.. T. Burrowes Co. 21
I'Vanklin Simon Company 17
I'raser 20
Friend 20
George T. Johnson Co. 19
C'oodspced's Book Slio)! 0
Gramkow (5
Hayden Costume Company 7
Henry L. L.iwrenee Coni)).inv 11
Hill and Bush 10
I. Cxerber 18
I\y Corsets 23
.lames C. Lee 19
.1. A. Osgood 23
Var/e
,1. Carroll Brown 21
John C. Hastie 21
Jones Peterson Xewhall 6
Joy Hong Low -1
Madame Whitney 20
Manahan 21
Marinello 18
McKechnie 2t
Meyer Jonasson 7
Montgomery-Frost Company 18
Morandi-Procter Co. 12
Natick Theatre 23
Peirce School Business Adminis. 22
Perkins Garage 7
Perry Pharmacy 23
Rosen Brothers 21
Royal Exchange Assurance 1
Royal Fruit Company 20
Shattuck and Jones 18
S. H. Couch Company 22
Sorosis Shoes 9
Souther and Souther 16
Sue Rice IS
The Blue Dr.igon Tea Room _- 10
The Chaplin-Fulton :Mfg. Co. 12
Van Duzer F'xtract Company 25
Walnut Hill School 1 1
Walter Baker and Company 12
Ward's 1
Wellesley Inn 12
Wellesley National Bank 19
Wellesley Shoe Store 21
A\'elleslcy Tea Room 16
Wheeler-Fresh Eggs 11
White Eagle Oil and Refining Co 18
White House Cafe 2:i
U'iliiam Fl.anders Company 1 !■
WELCOME
//'(• hope you will find our neiv store and location as comjortable and
convenient as ive have tried to make it. If'e have designed it to be one
of IVellesley's comfort shops and ivith its healthy atmosphere, com-
fortable waiting room, rest room, etc., you ivill always be welcome to
make use of it.
E. A. DAVIS & CO.
OPPOSITE THE INN
WELLESLEY
May tenth, 1919.
My dear Miss *
It will be impossible for me to play golf
this afternoon with you, owing to unforseen
circumstances.
We must plan some other time.
Sincerely,
JOSHUA.
* Almost any name in the freshman class may be
substituted here.
DIEGES & CLUST
Manufacturing Specialty Jewelers
CLASS PINS
CLASS RINGS
MEDALS
73 TREMONT STREET
BOSTON 9 .MASS.
SPALDING
Athletic Goods
of Quality
The Spalding trade mark is the never-
failing guarantee of all that is best in athletic
implements, clothing for all games, sports
and physical upbuild.
It pays to
get the Best —
A I w ay 8
A. G. Spalding
& Bros.
74 Summer Street
Boston
-^n-^^^i'
When you discover the Admission Card
you thought you'd lost.
//; buying please mention Legenda
Stationers
Engravers
Printers
COMMENCEMENT AND CLASS
DAY INVITATIONS
MONOGIL^M AND ADDRESS DIES
SOCIETY STATIONERY
Menii«, Programs, and Dance Orders
Stationery Supplies
Fountain Pens Leather Specialties
and Brass Goods
57-61 FRANKLIN STREET
BOSTON
JOY HONG LOW
THE TYPICAL
Chinese Restaurant
8 TYLER STREET
BOSTON MASS.
The Frosh (in Ec 101) :
are you in Economics?"
The Senior (in Ec 201) :
stages of 'consumption.'
"How far
'In the last
A SOVIET DRAMA
"I say, what is a joke?"
"Shet up! don't you know more than
to criticize the government?"
Royal Exchange Assurance
INSURES AGAINST LOSS BY
FIRE. LIGHTNING, WINDSTORM, EXPLOSION, RIOT
Ayents in all Irnportdiit cities and Imvns in the ivorld.
United States Head Office :
83 MAIDEN LANE, NEW YORK
EviiRARD C. Stokes, U. S. Manager
Gavlk T. Forbush, Associate Mannyer
In buying please mention Legenda
4
ALFRED OGRE HOHEN
Photographer
252 BOYLSTON STREET BOSTON, MASS.
In buying phase mention Legenda
5
GRAMKO W'S
ICE C R EAM
Party 0?'(lers a Specialty
CATERING
14 Grove St. Wellesley
JONES, PETERSON
& NEWHALL CO.
BOSTON
Party getting rough
D 1 s t i 11 c t i 1' e
FOOTWEAR and HOSIERY
49-51 Temple Place
American Refrigerator
Transit Company
Perishable Freight Line
ST. LOUIS, MO.
COPLEY SQUARE
HOTEL
Huntington Avenue at Exeter Street
BOSTON'S HOMELIKE HOTEL
'Che Excellent Cooking
in This Hotel is Known
from Coast to Coast
Ladies travelling without escort
are assured of courteous attention
360 ROOMS
260 WITH PRIVATE BATH
RATES 82.00 TO ? 12.00 PER DAY
JOHN HOWARD LACY, Proprietor
Mid Miles endeavored to explain to the
House of Representatives that automobiles
were allowed only to Seniors because there
was no parking space. "This ruling has
been passed," she said, "because of limited
sparking places."
Coming to mass meeting, Mary?
Mv dear! I'm a Protestant!
Rare Books, Prints and Autographs
GOODSPEED'S
S'^ PARK STREET, BOSTON
For a generation the mecca of bookloccrs
throughout the United Slates
Classified Catalogues in all departments
regularly issued and mailed on request
In buying please nivnl'ion Leijcnda
6
Try this on your victrola
Ps3^chology test; college girl's reaction
Word
1st Girl
2nd Girl
Sh-h! Sh-h! Sh-h!
Chaperon Rules Mother
Midyears Bridge STUDY !
Grey Book Book
Eligible Man Society
Eating Club Beans
Fund Broke Pledge
Western Hotdog ! Ohio
9 :45 Good-night Bed
Pro Nuisance Unknown
Flunk Note Roommate
Petition Insult Apology
Clothes Borrowed Laundry
Cold Um-m Weather
Cresse\ Marcia Ag'ncourt
The Roth Memory Method will do it!
Which kind of moron are you?
Meyer Jonasson & Co.
FROCKS SUITS WRAPS
SKIRTS BLOUSES
SWEATERS
Hosiery tiiid Uiidenvcnr
Youthful Modes
Tremont and Bovlston Streets
Boston
J. M. VINE
Telephone Connection
Hayden Costume Co.
COSTUMES
for the
AALATEUR STAGE
OPERAS CARNIVALS
AL'\SQUERADES, Etc.
786 Washington Street
Opposite Hollis Street
Boston, Mass.
TELEPHONE WELLESLEY 409
PERKINS GARAGE
for TAXI SERVICE or AUTOMOBILES
For trips to Boston, Concord and
Lexington, Wayside Inn and
all points of interest in
New England
111 biiyiiKj plcdse mention Legenda
7
Character
doesrit happen, ifs a
matter of development
is the result of more than thirty
years' earnest effort to excel all
accepted standards of coffee ex-
cellence, and to-day there's
''NONE BETTER A T ANY PRICE"
'White House Tea is in the same
class with White House Coffee.
All varieties in 1-4 and 1-2 lb. sealed canisters.
All packed under'the White House brand.
DWINELL- WRIGHT COMPANY
Principal Coffee Roasters
BOSTON - CHICAGO
^msiifs'
SPFfIe
^^ "^iw,
Pb
W hat the college woman wears
^
Mci\inei.»i
Tel. Back Bay 3790
Room 5(17
1920
DIPLOMAS
1S94 - 1895 - 1902
ANDRK
Mitrcel ll'avhif;, S/iam/tooliii^, I'liriiil Manicure
I'arisuiu Hair (:ii(>/>i)i!;, Hair Tinting
Hair Gooi/s, Etc.
234 Boylston Street
BOSTON MASS.
Prrniaiiciit \V.i\c SceaminjE Process dour in tu-o hours
Professor: "Look, Martha, at the young
man running in haste toward his class-
room. The boy must be eager for
knowledge."
The Wife: "Hut you fi)rget that it is
raining, Tliomas."
A sound argument isn t always one that
makes tlie most noise.
//( hiniuij please mention Leqenihi
8
The New Shoe
WITH 25 YEARS HISTORY
IMAGINE a shoe with moccasin comfort and metropolitan smartness. IMAGINE a
shoe with all the beauty which fashion demands and every feature which the most exact-
ing medical and surgical authority can suggest. IMAGINE a shoe that you will be proud
to wear — a shoe that makes your feet and ankles slender and shapely. IMAGINE a shoe
that can be worn all day long, which leaves your feet rested and ready for dainty and
elegant Sorosis Evening Slippers. There you have
^he^ <?. Xittk 6hoc
TWENTY-FIVE years ago a shoe was introduced that met with favor in this country
and in Europe. It was the first woman's shoe to be branded with a trade-mark, as
proof of the maker's confidence in his product. Because of its popularity, imitations
appeared. The courts soon decided that the name Sorosis on a shoe was for the protection
of the public, and the use of any name resembling it was a violation of the law.
Because the A. E. Little Company — makers of Sorosis Shoes — were the only shoe manu-
facturers who maintained an experimental laboratory and made their own lasts, America's
most eminent surgeons requested this company to collaborate with them in designing a shoe
for suffering feet. Their united efforts resulted in the development of the Sorosis Orthopedic.
In a period of less than two years twenty-two thousand prescriptions for this shoe were
written by New York physicians and filled at the New York store, alone.
The orthopedic Sorosis is not beautiful, as the other Sorosis shoes and slippers. But
out of the A. E. Little Company's 25 years of shoe study, experiment, and manufacture has
now grown a new kind of shoe, for work and play — the A. E. Little Shoe. It not only satis-
fies the prescription of the most conscientious surgeon — but it also is beautiful.
With the purpose of bestowing the greatest good among the greatest number, the sale of
the A. E. Little Shoe will not be limited to Sorosis stores or departments, but will be opened
to all reputable shoe merchants who will carry a full range of sizes and widths to insure
proper fitting; and the price is only $12.50. Consult your dealer or send for information
direct to us.
NOTE ONE: The A. E. Little laced boot is recommeniied : for morning or all
day wear. This not only gives proper support to the foot in work or play, but also
sustains the ankle and keeps it from swelling. For afternoons, the oxfords may
well be chosen.
NOTE Tff^O: If your family physician has not heard or read about the A. E.
Little Shoe in the advertising pages of the Journal of the American Medical
Association, please refer him to us for full information.
Catalog upon request
A. E. LITTLE CO.
Also Makers of Sorosis Slioes for Men, Women, and Ciiildren
' Lynn, Mass.
449 fifth Avenue, N eii: York
In buying please mention Leyendii
9
E. M. WHITE & CO.
Manufacturers and Dealers in
Canvas Canoes and Motor Boats,
Paddles, Poles, Oars, Etc.
156 WATER STREET
Old Town Maine
CAPS, GOWNS, HOODS
MADE TO ORDER AND RENTED
Official Makers L'ntiL'r The Intercollegiate Commission
COTRELL & LEONARD
ALBANY. N. Y.
Sample and Catalogue upon requeet
Hill & lush (To,
372-378 BOYL3TON STREET
BOSTON - MASSACHUSETTS
1919
1922
The Evolution of the Flanegin
THE BLUE DRAGON
TEA-ROOM & INN
Sunday tNj^ht Suppers a Specialty
The kind of food you wish mother could make!
MRS. DANIEL MISS SNOW
OPENS September 1922
Telephone 16
DIEHL'S GARAGE
& TAXI SERVICE
R. DIEHL. Proprietor
37 CENTRAL ST. WELLESLEY. MASS.
Limousines and Touring Cars
to let by Hour, Day or Week
Baggage transferred to and from station
Meet All Trains
Orders promptly attended to
'23: "All Gaul is divided into three
parts."
'24: "Yea?"
'23 : "\c:\, and you got all three of
Onions are paradoxical. They build
you up plusically, but drag you down
socialh'.
/;; biiyhi)/ plitt.w riioitioii Liyiiitlii
10
larl|rarl|
PHOTOGRAPHS OF D I ST I n'C:T I'o N
PHOTOGRAPHERS OF 1922 LEGENDA
//; buying please mention Leijenda
11
The Chaplin-Fulton
Manufacturing Company
Knymeers,
and Manujncturrrs of
Fulton Gas Governors
and Regulators,
and Steam Specialties
28 to 34 Pexx Avenue
PITTSBURGH, PA.
FOUND IN A TOWER COURT
TELEPHONE BOOTH
A ring on tlie hand is worth ten on the
phone.
1st Student: I never know a thing in
that course.
2nd Student: O, I never think of going
to it unprepared ! I always have at least
a flunking knowledge of the subject!
BAKER'S
SWEET CHOCOLATE
Delicious
F/avor
Absolute
Punty
High
Quality
Sweet Chocolate is \ery sustaining,
as it contains more nourishment
than the same amount of beef.
WALTER BAKER & CO., Ltd.
Eslablisbed 1780 DORCHESTER, MASS.
MORANDI-PROCTOR
COMPANY
Designers and Manufacturers
of
COOKING APPARATUS
for
Hotels. Restaurants. Clubs, Schools and
Institutions
CHINA, GLASS and SILVER DEPT.
86-88 WASHINGTON ST.
BOSTON, M.\SS.
WELLESLEY COLLEGE
LIBRARY
Hours:— 8:15 A.M.— 9:30 P.M.
Sundays:— 2:15 P.M.— 5 :30 P.M.
PERSONAL ATTENTION
INK FREE
Raul your Legenda h: our Iji'tiuti-
fiil modenily equipped rcadiny room
Wellesley Inn
WELLESLEY, MASS.
"^
You (Did your friends
are aliaays welcome
In buying please mention Legenda
12
Charles L. Willard
INCORPORATED
PRINTER
Nevr York
This Book Printed
and Bound by Us
150 Nassau Street
In buying please mention Lcyenda
13
RED LILY
CANNED FRUITS & VEGETABLES
PRISCILLA-IVIINUET COCOA-CHOCOLATE
is u'liiit //c/.v f/ivfii us our
rt'putiitioii
>VM. M. FLAIVDKRS COMPANV
1 {OST< )N NORT HA M l^FOIV
Sopli : "What would you say if I
flunked four subjects?"
Frosh: "Get out; \ou're fooling!"
Soph : "That's what the Dean said."
Fresh Eggs and Butter
Shipped by Parcel Post
A. E. WHEELER
Colebrook Connecticut
He: "Fm inclined to kiss you."
She: "How stupid of me, I though-
you were mereh- round shouldered!"
Walnut Hill School
A Collec/e Preparatory Sch-jr.l
for Girls
Two miles from Wellesley
Forty-four acres of ground
Outdoor sports
(larchil I'rcparalidii lender Co/iifif/eiit
I'l'iiilwrs fur Cnllcz/i' It ork
-^
MISS CONANT n,ui MISS BIGELOW
l'rl/i(i/>nls
EST.'VBUSHED 1S44
H. L. Lawrence Co.
WHOLESALE & RETAIL DEALERS
|)OULTRY and
1 PROVISIONS
46-48 Faxkuil Hall Markht
BOSTON, MASS.
//; huyiiiij plt'tisc iiiciilinu Lfi/fiiiiii
14
TeWJ'^^.^g PHOTOENGRAVING /S?^5ftgf%^
50 Exchange Place, ProOidence. R.I.
r^—n 5=i »W> r,^ -^ " ..^■m.r^—r' • -^
III biiyhuj please tiifiitioii Legenda
15
Bailey, Banks & Bidclle Co.
Jnvflirs — Silrersrniilis Stationers
PHILADELPHIA
Honor Roll Tablets, Fraternity Emblems, Rings Seals,
Charms, Plaques, Medals, etc., of the better kind
"T/ie Gift Book" Mailed Upon Ri-rjurst
ILLUSTRATING and PRICING GRADUATION and OTHER GIFTS
SOUTHER & SOUTHER
395-397 BROADWAY
NEW YORK
AMERICAN PAPETERIE CO. PAPETERIES-TABLETS
EASTERN TABLET CO. ENVELOPES-CREPE PAPER
SHERMAN ENVELOPE CO. COMPOSITION BOOKS
THE TISSUE CO. STENOGRAPHER NOTE BOOKS
SPATZ TABLET & BOOK CO. PADS and SCHOOL SUPPLIES
STANDARD PENCIL CO. PENCILS
TELEPHONE CANAL 1356-7
Wellesley Tea Room and
Food Shop
TAYLOR BLOCK WELLESLEY SQUARE
Jllce G. Coombs, '93 Grace Coombs, '94
In buying please mention Leycnda
16
THE Individual Misses Shops Specialize
on College Clothes for Class Room and
Campus, Evening, Afternoons, Holidays and
Vacations.
franklin Simon & Co.
^Jl Store of Individual Shops
Fifth Avenue, 3"tli and 38th Streets, New York
WHEN HARVARD CAAIE INTO
ITS OWN:
Radcliffe debater: "I have this on the
authoritv of a Harvard student.'
"And it came to pass," mused the pro-
fessor, as he listened to the poor student
trying to recite.
"AVaiter! There's a fiy in my ice cream.'
"Serves him right; let him freeze."
The Old Reliable
BADGER LUMBER CO.
ESTABLISHED 1866
/;; buying please nientl'jn Let/eiida
17
LAM PING-NOLAN
FORMERLY MARINELLO SHOP
BEAUTY CULTURE
ESTABLISHED 1905
MARCEL WAVING - WATER WAVING
PERMANENT WAVING
SCIENTIFIC TREATMENT OF THE
SCALP. SKIN AND NAILS
CHIROPODY - ELECTROLYSIS
ELECTRIC BATHS - SWEDISH MASSAGE
462 BoYLSTON St.. Boston Mass
TELEPHONES:
BACK BAY 5172 5173. 5174
Hugh Mont*i;onier\' !• red Perr\-
Harry \V. Chi-hiilm J. M. Frost
MONTGOMERY -FROST CO.
OPTICIANS
THREE SHOPS
366 Boylston St. 40 Bromfield St.
101 Massachusetts Ave.
corner Newbury St.
Phone 6217 Back Bay BOSTON. MASS
A. OAX
FASHIONABLE LADIES' TAILOR
RIDING HABITS A SPECIALTY
Cleansing — Pressing — Altering
All Kinds of Furs liemodelled
548 W.ASHiNGTOx Street
Wellesley, M.ass.
Next to the Post Office. Tel. Wellesley 471-\V
S//C Rice Studio
and Gift Shop
1 0 Grove Street
Wellesley, Mass.
To be remembered as the shop of
Beautiful Things and Fine
PHOTOGRAPHS
Shattuck & Jones, Inc.
128 Faxeuil Hall Market
BOSTON, MASS.
I. GERBER
Upholsterer and Cabinet Maker
40 CENTRAL ST. WELLESLEY, MASS.
I have the latest samples in Furniture Covers
and Draperies.
Printed Linens and Colored Velvets of Cotton
and Silk.
Cretonnes, Willow Chair Cushions and Win-
dow Cushions.
Also bedsteads made to order at reasonable
prices.
Furniture repaired.
Special attention tji-ven to iiork ixhile parties
are aiiay.
Compliments of
WHITE EAGLE OIL AND
REFINING CO.
Kansas City - Missouri
Ladies Home Journal
HEALTH HINTS
Breakfast wisel\', but not too weU.
Patronize pre-digested foods. Tr\- hash.
E.xercisc to get and retain tliat schoolgirl
comple.xion.
Motor for the fresh air.
Use bone rims to escape boneheads.
Try the elevator to avoid fatigue.
Avoid the Library for the same reason.
/;; haying please mention Legeuda
IS
The
Geo. T. Johnson Go.
The Atlas Mills
MAKERS
Sanitary Paper Products
76-78 BATTERYMARCH ST.
(Near Franklin)
BOSTON, MASS.
Capacity 30,000 lbs. daily
Specialties :
Toilet Papers Paper Towels
Drinking Cups Cup Dispensers
Paper Napkins Food Wrappers
Economical Service Devices jor
Toilet Paper and Paper Toivels
BEFORE and AFTER
using
Slip-On Cover-All Sweaters
Just the thing for the
college girl
l^rkalfto mutual
of
pJlafirli. HasH.
EstabltBhrli 1335
FOR
Vacation Barefoot Sandals
JVhiie — Sand — Tan —
Patent Leather
SPORT SHOES
James E. Lee
Wellesley Boot Shop
WELLESLEY, MASS.
Compliments
of the
Wellesley
National Bank
//; biiyiiiij please mention Leyenda
19
THE FLORIST
65 Linden Street
Welleslev
Teleohone 597
/• nr Beautiful
COMMLXCEMEXT
HOSIERY i,nd lingp:rik
FIR CORSETS and GIRDLES
LOVELY GIFTS
Save time and ivorry by seeing the
iv'jnderl ul assurtinent at
MADAME WHITNP:Y
Up One Flifilit— The Waban Bldji.
For a week he called every night, either by phone or in person. Everything
was going fine. She wore his f rat pin ; he wore her class ring. Then one day
he went away. She never heard from him. He used
A Friend
E. E. GRAY CO.
Tile Flare to Buy Your
CRACKERS and CHEESE
PICKLES, JA'IS raid JELLIES
STEAKS, CHOPS and FRESH FISH
First Class Goods at Loivest Prices
KRF.E UELIVEKV
THE ROYAL FRUIT CO.
We carr\' a full line of Fruit,
Vegetable^;, Groceries, Nuts,
Crackers, the best in town of
WELLESLEY
569 Washington Street
Tel. 484 Welleslry J. K. Georgas Free Delivery
//; buying please mention Leijenda
20
Senior Society Member: "How do you
like my pound cake, dearie?"
Junior Ditto: "Why, er-er-er, doesn't
it weigh more than that?"
Prof, (after a long-winded proof) : "And
now we find that X equals O."
Sleepy Freshman : "My word! All that
work for nothing!"
Telephone Park 214
31. Carroll Iromn
INCORPORATED
STUDIO and HOME
PORTRAITURES
536A MAIN STREET, WORCESTER, MASS.
117 MAIN STREET, SPRINGFIELD, MASS.
Wellesley Shoe Store
SHOES, RUBBERS, SROE FINDINGS
and
UP-TO-DATE LANDIS
MACHINERY
Old Shoes Made Into Neiv at a Fair Price
Done Quickly and Guaranteed
A. Lodisco
561 Washington Street
Wellesley Square WELLESLEY
Excuse me, Miss Pandora, but you
are overlooking a REAL treasure-box —
one that will safeguard all those de-
lightfully intimate fineries and insure
for you an astonishing vogue of pul-
chritudinous irresistibilitv.
ENTRUST YOUR FUTURE TO A
BURROWES HOPE CHEST
Made of selected Southern Red Cedar,
in many beautiful designs.
If your dealer cannot supply you,
write for catalog. Easy payment terms
if desired.
The E. T. Burrowes Co.
501 Brown St. Portland, Maine
Telephone Back Bay 4092 Warren Chambers
ROSEN BROS.
LADIES' and MISSES' APPAREL
READY-TO-WEAR
MADE TO ORDER
419 BOYLSTON STREET
BOSTON, MASS.
SMART FASHIONS
3osiorh
III buying please inentioii Leijenda
21
TELEPHONE SYSTEMS
for
Private Installations
Annunciators :: Push Buttons
Radio Head Phones
S. H. COUCH CO., Inc.
Factory: NORFOLK DOWNS, MASS.
Boston Office
170 PURCHASE ST.
Chicago Office
373 WEST MADISON ST.
Peirce School of Business
fllUEf
'^[[[[fe J']
:l«
m ■
Administration
The education of a young woman is not complete
unless she also has been taught how to efficiently
handle her financial affairs, or has received a training
\\hich will enable her to support herself if thrown
on her own resources.
5<S//; Jniiual Catalogue, descr'ih-
iiKj our business and secretarial
courses, jvill he sent upon request.
PEIRCE SCHOOL
of
BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION
PIjNE ST. (West of Broad) PHILADELPHIA
//; buying please mention Leyeuda
11
Compliments of
JOHN J. DOYLE
Proprietor
White House Cafe
Depot Grounds
MAIN STREET NATICK, MASS.
Compliments
of the
NATICK THEATRE
Miss Dutcher: Miss Haines, what
would you answer to that ?
Heinie: I don't know, Miss Dutcher.
Miss Dutcher: Why, I practically gave
you the answer when I asked the question !
Heinie: Then won't you please repeat
the question?
THE EVOLUTION OF THE
IGLEHART
Freshman year ;
"Oh, dear, I wish that noise would stop!
It offends my osculatory sense."
Sophomore year ;
(the theme comes to its climax) . . .
"It was a dreary day.
Never had Inez felt more gutteral ..."
Junior year ;
(entering the bookstore) "May I buy
a Harmony of the Syncopated Gospels,
please ?"
Senior year ;
(across the counter at Davis') "Please
give me some mesmerized darning
cotton."
Miss Donnan : Miss Cooper, would
you say reading the assignment for today
was labor for you and me ?
Henry: I don't know about you, but
it certainly was labor for me !
HALLETT E. JONES
PERRY PHARMACY
NATICK, MASSACHUSETTS
Drugs of Quality
Tiger
PARENTALLY SPEAKING
I sent ray girl to Wellesley
With a kiss upon the cheek. •
I paid ten thousand dollars
And got back a Bolshevik!
J. A. OSGOOD
Old Town Maine
IVY CORSETS
AND
IVY BANDEAUX
In AH Their Beautiful Models
Look Inside for Stamp
"IVY"
Take No Substitute
8 Grove St., Wellesley
182 BovLSTON St., Boston
In buyinff please tiienlion Legenda
23
Conservative: "But, m\' dear, marriage
is a great institution!
Radical: Well, w lio wants to be in an
institution, anyhow?
Bobby Travell, looking at her latest
tennis cup — That's rather good-looking,
though I usually prefer the plain ones!
A LA WELLESLEY
Analytically Minded One: "Let's see —
what would the tame girl think?
Board of Editors: IV e can't tell you!
DURGIN, PARK & CO.
If e serve ddicious
LOBSTER SALADE, STEAK
and
STRAWBERRY
SHORT. CAKE
30 North Market Street, Boston
"Why the absent look?"
"Oh, I'm looking for someone who isn't
here."
Ever notice how a student who never
liears her alarm clock in the morning sel-
dom misses the dismissal bell at the end
of a lecture?
"Oh dear, I simply can't express it."
"Can't express what?"
"This package, it's too big."
C. M. McKECHNlE «6 CO.
10 MAIN STREET
Natick, Mass. Tel. Natick 52
Catering
BAKING PRODUCTS
ICE CREAMS and ICES o/
EXCEPTIONAL QUALITY
Excellent Etjuipment for Large or Small Parlies
Alumni Dinners Class Banquets
Receptions
Delivery Prompt and Free
Say ii
lo wer "i
Mark Tzvain
Scrap Books
Daniel Slote & Co.
John C. Hastie, Proprietor
395 Broadway
New York City
In bttying please mention l.egenda
24
If it can be said Say It With Flowers of Quality
Corsages a specialty Prompt and Efficient Service
ANDERSON CONSERVATORIES
Telephone Wellesley 570
Natick 13
J^an Ditzer's Certified
Flavoriruj Extracts
have for over 71 years
been increasing their
popularitii' among do-
mestic science institutes
and the better class of
homes.
At All Good Groiers
VAN DUZER EXTRACT CO.
Springfield, Mass. New York, N. Y.
Girls' Number, Yale Record
FATE
Two girls sat side by side, writing busily
in their Hygiene Examination. One was a
paragon of academic virtue who emerged
from the Library only for meals and took
careful class notes. The other divided her
time between the Inn and the Copley, and
had lost her Syllabus — which was empty,
anyway.
Both failed.
JUNE 1122
THE END
John A. Donohoe, Phar. D.
APOTHECARY
Stair of college trained men insures
reliability in prescription
compounding
Middlesex Bldg. Natick, Mass.
Opposite the Common ; Phone 797 W.
Freshman: "Hey, pop, why do they
have clocks on socks?"
Sopliomore: "So they can see how fast
the seams run."
FOR GOOD
Doctor: "Fd advise that you retire to
some quiet retreat where you will be cut
of? from all communication with the out-
side world."
Patient: "Fve got it Doc — a telephone
booth."
In buying please mention Legenila
25