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g THE % O LIBRARIES q COLUMBIANA in tit ©itu of %Ur %Jovh BETWEEN LENOX AND SEVENTH AVENUES H. F. KOCH CO. 5th Street, West The Largest Department Store in upper New York. Broadway and Amsterdam Avenue cars transfer you direct to this store Senior, 3umov f SojJtjomovc, anti iFresfjman ALL unite in proclaiming THE KOCH STORE the ideal up-town shopping place, offering the best and most satisfactory shopping economies. Quality is paramount here and never comes second to price — it is the Koch method of making customers and keeping them. Merchandise that represents the skill of the world ' s foremost craftsmen, in almost limitless quantities, and at Prices so little that down-town shopping is an extravagance which is the reason for the continued onward march of this busy establishment. Shoes College Ribbons Dresser Sets College Pins Waists Manicure Needs Commencement Costumes Notions Millinery and, in fact, every need for the collegian at prices that are the lowest it is possible to offer for thoroughly dependable and trustworthy merchandise. a Ctffanj) Company DIAMOND AND GEM MERCHANTS JetueleD Ctyatn i vacelets All I . .-karat gold Photographs upon request Bracelet. Eight jades Set in Burmese gold, al ornamental links - - each $ 2 3 00 Bracelet. Nine turquoises in Burmese gold links each 2 .00 Bracelet. Seven amethysts set in antique gold links - - each 2J.OO Bracelet. Eleven topazes in ornamental an- tique gold links - EACH 32 00 Bracelet. Seven opals set in Burmese gold , links each Bracelet. Four large peridots mounted in antique gold links - each -O.OO Bracelet. Open cable link, polished or Ro- man gold, no jewels - each 5 00 Designs of diamond and other richer jeweled bracelets to suit individual tastes (Engagement ' Bracelets Polished or Roman gold, with permanent locking catch, $18.50, 27.OO, 28.OO, and 36.OO each Tiffany and Company are strictly retailers. They do not employ agents or sell their wares through other dealers JFtfU; afoenue • J tof£orfe AT 37th STREET FORMERLY AT UNION SQUARE Tiffany Co. always welcome a comparison of prices jWaii £ rDrr$ All Mail Orders are handled by trained men, whose experience and knowledge of what is most in favor at the moment assure careful selections or intelligent advice for those simplv desiring assist- ance Ctffrmp Companp 1906 2Muc 25ooEt will be sent to intending purchasers without charge. This catalogue contains J3o 3Tllu6trationis It is a compact little volume of over 500 pages, with concise descriptions and range of prices of jewelry, silver- ware, watches, clocks, bronzes, porce- lains, glass and other artistic merchan- dise r 4B0I bracelets cm ftpprotoal Upon receipt of satisfactory references from any National Bank or responsible business house, Tiffany Co. will send on approval selections from their stock to any part of the United States b ANDREW J. ROBINSON COMPANY BUILDING CONSTRUCTION RTTTT HRRQ OPT THE BARNARD COLLEGE BUILDINGS Columbia University THE SCHOOL OF MINES Columbia University THE CARNEGIE LECTURE HALL Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute THE CHEMICAL LABORATORY Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute THE ST. PAUL BUILDING New York, N.Y. THE SECURITY MUTUAL BUILDING Binghamton, N.Y. THE BLAIR BUILDING New York, N.Y. THE HOTEL ESSEX New York, N.Y. THE PARKSIDE Philadelphia, Pa. THE ARTS CLUB New York, N.Y. THE BORDEN BUILDING New York, N.Y. THE MAGDALEN HOME Inwood, N.Y. THE ST. LUKE ' S HOSPITAL New York, N.Y. THE EAST RIVER SAVINGS BANK New York, N.Y. THE MESSIAH HOME Fordham, N.Y. THE MEMORIAL HOSPITAL New York, N.Y. THE BELMONT BUILDING New York, N.Y. THE HARTFORD BUILDING New York, N.Y. THE REID MEMORIAL LIBRARY Passaic, N.J. THE SPEYER SCHOOL New York, N.Y. THE CHURCH MISSIONS HOUSE New York, N.Y. THE BRYANT PARK STUDIOS New York, N.Y. THE PEOPLE ' S PALACE Jersey City, N.J. THE RESIDENCE OF MR. STUYVESANT FISH New York, N.Y. THE HOFFMAN BUILDING New York, N.Y. NEW YORK HOoPlIAL New York, N.Y. THE RESIDENCE OF MR. H. 0. HAVEMEYER New York, N.Y. THE DEASIDE HOSPITAL Staten Island, N.Y. THE TRANSIT BUILDING New York, N.Y. THE FIDELITY CASUALTY BUILDING New York, N.Y. THE HOME INSURANCE CO. BUILDING New York, N.Y. THE PRESCOTT BUILDING New York, N.Y. THE HEIGHTS CASINO Brooklyn, N.Y. THE RESIDENCE OF HON. ELIHU ROOT New York, N.Y. THE NEW YORK HISTORICAL SOCIETY BUILDING New York, N.Y. THE QUEENS COUNTY TRUST BUILDING Jamaica, L.I. THE NASSAU UNION BANK Glen Cove, L.I. 123 East 23rd Street, NEW YORK CITY c KNOX HATTER AGENTS IN ALL OF THE PRINCIPAL CITIES Address all Communications to 452 FIFTH AVE. O fail Cf- f o j 45 2 Fifth Avenue, Corner 40th Street rVCLdll OLOIC | 194 Fifth Avenue, (Fifth Ave. Hotel) NEW YORK d 02- 0 Fifth Avenue, S.W. corner j tb Street NEW YORK Telephone 4688-38 Opposite Tiffany ' s portraits Productions of the Photographic Art by all Processes Oil Paintings, Miniatures, Copying and Reproductions a Specialty. A Particular Place for Particular People. EIMER AMEND 205 TO 211 THIRD AVENUE - NEW YORK IMPORTERS AND MANUFACTURERS OF CHEMICALS, CHEMICAL PHYSICAL APPARATUS Sole Agents for JENA LABORATORY GLASSWARE The Best Laboratory Glass Made KAHLBAUM ' S STRICTLY C. P. CHEMICALS REAGENTS GRUEBLER ' S MICROSCOPICAL STAINS PREPARATIONS Pure Hammered Platinum, BALANCES AND WEIGHTS, Royal Berlin and Royal Meissen Porcelainware. Best Bohemian and German Glassware, and C. P. Filter Papers Full line of TV f N. B. Glass Blowing done Bacteriological IV I C V f C C C f C i C C F k Q.Q.C X ' f- C on our premises. Inspec- Apparatus IVl 1C1 UjVUUVJ V_X. X lV-Vv J 1 IV O tion of premises invited. e VOLUME XI THE YEARBOOK OF BARNARD COLLEGE PUBLISHED BYTE CLASS OF NINETEEN HUNDRED SEVEN ' Tw pleasant, sure, to see one ' s name in print; OA book ' s a book although there ' s nothing in if. 0 BARNARD COLLEGE : Columbia Unix versity : in the City TN e w York : 1906 Copyright, 1 906 By Juliet Stuart Points [4] ' ttt ntt{lmtel t$tto atm rf of [7] SILAS B. BROWNELL, LL.D. Cljatrman i fcc-Ctjamnan MRS. A. A. ANDERSON FREDERICK S. WAIT Clerft Crcagurer GEORGE A. PLIMPTON, 41 East 33d Street MISS HELEN DAWES BROWN 24 West 38th St. MRS. WILLIAM C. BROWNELL 58 West 59th St. MRS. FRANK G. BRYSON 167 West 73d St. NICHOLAS MURRAY BUTLER, Ph.D., LL.D. Columbia University GEN. HORACE W. CARPENTIER 108 East 37th St. MRS. JOSEPH H. CHOATE Stockbridge, Mass. REV. WILLIAM M. GROSVENOR, D.D. 209 Madison Ave. FREDERIC B. JENNINGS 86 Park Ave. MRS. FRANCIS P. KINNICUTT 39 East 35th St. FRANKLIN B. LORD SETH LOW, LL.D., MRS. ALFRED MEYER ALBERT G. MILBANK MRS. HENRY N. MUNN MRS. HENRY FAIRFIELD EDWARD VV. SHELDON MISS CLARA B. SPENCE MRS. JAMES TALCOTT 322 West 56th St. 6 East 38th St. 10 Wall Street 49 Wall St. 30 East 64th St. 7S5 Madison Ave. 49 Wall St. 281 Lexington Ave. OSBORN 850 Madison Ave. 15 East 38th St. 26 West 55th St. 7 West 57th St. [8] 33oavti of Crustecs Crccuttnc Committee DR. BROWNELL Chairman MRS. ANDERSON Vice- Chairman MR. WAIT Clerk PRESIDENT BUTLER MRS. MUNN DR. LOW MR. PLIMPTON MR. MILBANK MR. SHELDON Committee on finance MR. LORD, Chairman MR. JENNINGS MR. MILBANK Committee on BuilDings anD Brouno0 MRS. OSBORN, Chairman MRS. MUNN MRS. BRYSON THE PRESIDENT, Ex-officio Committee on Education MRS. MEYER, Chairman DR. LOW DR. GROSYENOR THE PRESIDENT, Ex-officio [9] LAURA DRAKE GILL [ 10] NICHOLAS MU RRAY BUTLER, President, A.B., Columbia College, 18S2; A.M., 1883, and Ph.D., 1884; LL.D., Syracuse University, 1898, Tulane Univer- sity, 1901, and Johns Hopkins, Princeton and Yale Universities, and the University of Pennsylvania, 1902 ; stu- dent at the Universities of Berlin and Paris, 18S4-S5 ; Assistant in Philosophy, Columbia University, 1885-86; tutor, 1886-S9, and Adjunct Professor, 1889 90; Professor of Philosophy, Ethics and Psychology, and Lecturer on the History and Institutes of Education, 1890 95 ; Professor of Philosophy and Education, 1895- ; President of Columbia University, 1902-; President of the New York College for the Training of Teachers, 1 887-91 ; Editor of the Educational Review. LAURA DRAKE GILL, Dean. A.B., Smith College, 1881 ; A.M., 1885; student at Smith College, 1887-89; student at Leipzig University, 1890-92; student at Sorbonne, Paris, 1892-93; Instructor in Burnham School, Northampton, Mass., 1880-98; Red Cross volunteer work in the Spanish-American War, 1898; Director of Relief Work of Cuban Orphan Society in Cuba, 1898-1901 ; Dean of Barnard College, 1901- EDWIN R. A. SELIGMAN. A.B., Columbia University, 1879; A.M., 1883; Ph.D., 1S84 ; LL.D., 1904; Lecturer on Economics, 1885-88; Adjunct Professor of Political Economy, 18SS; Professor of Political Economy and Finance, 1891-1904 ; McVickar Professor of Political Economy. HERBERT L. OSGOOD. A.B., Amherst College, 1877; A.M., Amherst, 1880; Ph.D., Columbia University, 1889; Adjunct Professor of History, 1890-96; Professor of History, 1896-. EDWARD DELAVAN PERRY. A.B., Columbia University, 1875; student at the Universities of Leipzig and Tubingen, 1876-79; Ph.D., Tubingen, 1879; tutor in Greek, 1880 -91 ; tutor in Sanskrit, 1880-83; Instructor in Sanskrit, 1883-91 ; Profes- sor of Sanskrit, 1891-95; Jay Professor of Greek, 1895-; Professor of the Greek Language and Literature, American School of Classical Studies at Athens, 1900-01. GEORGE RICE CARPENTER. A.B., Harvard University, 1886; Rogers fellow in Comparative Literature, Harvard University, 18S6-88; studied in Paris and Berlin 18S6-88 ; Assistant in English, Harvard University, 1888-89; Instructor in English, 1S89-90; Associate Professor of English, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1890-93; Lecturer in English, Wellesley College, 1892-93; Professor of Rhetoric and English Composition, Columbia University, 1893-; Trustee of the Columbia University Press; Secretary, Department of English, 1899-. Absent on leave. FRANKLIN HENRY GIDDINGS. A.B., Union College, 1877; A.M., 1889; Ph.D., 1891; LL.D., Oberlin College, 1900; Lecturer on Political Science, Bryn Mawr College, 1888-89; Associate, 1889-91 ; Associate Professor, 1891-92; Professor, 1892-94; Lecturer on Sociology, Columbia University, 1890-94; Professor, Columbia University, 1S94-; Vice-President, Institut. International de Sociologie, Paris, 1901. JOHN B. CLARK. A.B., Amherst College, 1872; A.M., 1877, 1890; LL.D., Princeton University, 1896, Amherst College, 1897; Professor of Political Economy, Carleton College, 1S77-81 ; Professor of Political Economy, Smith College, 1882-1893; Amherst College, 1892-95; Columbia Universi ty, 1895- ; student at Heidelberg University 1872-75; President of the American Economic Association, 1893-95 ! Works : The Philosophy of Wealth, The Distribution of Wealth, The Control of Trusts, The Problem of Monopoly. JAMES RIGNALL WHEELER. A.B., University of Vermont, 1880 ; student at the American School of Classical Studies at Athens, 1882-83; Ph.D., Harvard University, 1SS5 ; Student at the Universities of Berlin and Bonn, 1885-86 ; Lecturer in the Hopkins Hall Courses of the Johns Hopkins University, 1S88; Instructor in Greek and Latin, Harvard Uni- versity, 1888-89; Professor of Greek, University of Vermont, 1889-95; Professor of the Greek Language and Literature, American School of Classical Studies at Athens, 1892-93 ; Professor of Greek, 1895-. FRANK N. COLE. A.B., Harvard University, 1882 ; A.M. and Ph.D., 1886; Fellow in Mathematics, Harvard University, 1882-85 ; student at University of Leipzig, 1883 85; Lecturer in Mathematics, Harvard University, 1885-87; student at the University of Gottingen, 18S7, Instructor in Mathematics, University of Michigan, 1888-89; Assistant Professor, 1889-95; Professor of Mathematics, Columbia University, 1895- ; Editor of the Bulletin of the American Mathematical Society : Secretary of the American Mathematical Society. JAMES HARVEY ROBINSON A.B., Harvard University, 1887 ; A.M., Ph.D., Freiburg in Breisgau, 1890 ; Lecturer in History in the Univer- sity of Pennsylvania, 1891-92 ; Associate Professor, 1892-95 ; Professor of History, Columbia University, 1895- ; Acting Dean of Barnard College, 1900-01. Works: The German Bimdesrath, Petrarch the First Modern Scholar, Introduction to the History of Western Europe, Readings in European History. CALVIN THOMAS. A.B., University of Michigan, 1874; A.M., 1877; LL.D., 1904; student at the University of Leipzig, 1877-78; Instructor in Modern Languages, University of Michigan, 1878-81; Assistant Professor of German, 1881-86; Professor of Germanic Languages and Literatures, 1886-95; Gebhard Professor of the Germanic Languages and Literatures. Columbia University, 1896-. Absent on leave. [  ] CARLO LEONARDO SPERANZA. Licenziato del Liceo di Padova, Italy, 1861 ; Dottore in Giurisprudenza, University of Padua, 1866; Brevetto d ' Istruttore di Francese del Consiglio Scolastico Provinciale di Padova, 1S70; A.M., Columbia College, 1886; Instructor in Italian, Vale College, 1S80-S3; Instructor in Italian, Columbia College, 1883-86; Instructor in the Romance Languages and Literatures, University of the City of New York, 188S-91 ; Instructor in Italian, Barnard College, 1S90-96 ; Instructor in Spanish and Italian, Columbia University, 1891-93 ; Instructor in the Romance Languages and Literatures, 1893-96; Adjunct Professor, 1 896-1 902 ; Professor of Italian, 1902- ; American correspondent of La Preseveranza, 1887-96; Cavaliere della Corona d ' ltalia. WILLIAM P. TRENT. M.A., University of Virginia, 1884; LL.D., Wake Forest College, 1899; Post-graduate student in History and Politics, Johns Hopkins University, 1887-88; Professor of English and History, University of the South, 18S8- 1900; Dean of the Academic Department, University of the South, 1893-1900; Professor of English Literature, Barnard College and Columbia University, 1900-. HERBERT GARDINER LORD. A.B.. Amherst College, 187 1 , and A.M., causa honoris, 1900; tutor in Latin, Knox College, 1871-72; Principal of High School, Holliston, Mass., 1872; student at Union Theological Seminary, 1874-77; Professor of Philo- sophy, University of Buffalo, 1895-98; Professor of Philosophy, Columbia University, 1900-. NELSON GLENN McCREA. A.B., Columbia University, 1885; A.M., 1886; Ph.D., 1S88; University Fellow in Classical Philology, 1885 88; Tutorial Fellow in Latin, 1888-89; student at the University of Berlin, 1894; tutor in Latin, 1889-95; Instruc- tor in Latin, 1895-1000; Adjunct Professor, 1900-03; Professor, 1903-. LIVINGSTON FARRAND. A.B., Princeton College, 1888, and A.M., 1S91 ; M.D., Columbia University, 1891 ; student at Universities of Cambridge and Berlin, 1891-93; Instructor in Physiological Psychology, Columbia University, 1893-99; Instruc- tor in Psychology, 1S99 1901 ; Adjunct Professor of Psychology, 1901 02 ; Professor of Anthropology, 1903- ; Assistant Curator of Ethnology, American Museum of Natural History, 1903-. BENJAMIN DURVEA WOODWARD. Brevet d ' Instituteur, Academie de Paris, 1885 ; B. es S., University of Paris, 1885 ; A.B., Columbia College, 1888 ; A.M., Columbia College, 1889; B.es L., University of Paris, 1 891 ; Ph.D., Columbia College, 1891 ; Prize Fellow in Columbia College, 1888-90; Instructor in German, Barnard College, 1890-91 ; tutor in the Romance Lan- guages and Literatures, Columbia College, 1890-94; Instructor, Barnard College, 1891-98, and Columbia Uni- versity, 1894-1901; Adjunct Professor, Columbia University, 1901-1902; Professor, Columbia University, 1902- ; Assistant Commissioner-General of the United States to Paris Exhibition of 1900, 1898-1901 ; Officier de la Legion d ' Honneur. [ ' 3] HENRY E. CRAMPTON A. B., Columbia University, 1893; Ph.D., 1899; Assistant in Biology, Columbia College, 1893-95; Instructor in Biology, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1895-96; Lecturer in Zoology, Columbia College, 1S9699; tutor in Zoology, Barnard College, 1894-1900; Instructor, 1900-01 ; Adjunct Professor, 1901-04; Professor, 1904- ; in charge of Embryology, Cold Spring Harbor Biological Laboratory, 1904- ; Instructor in Embryology, Marine Biological Laboratory, Woods Hole, 1895-1903; Vice-President of the New York Academy of Sciences ; Associate Staff, Station for Experimental Evolution, Carnegie Institution. WILLIAM TENNEY BREWSTER. A.B., Harvard University, 1892; A.M., 1893; Assistant in English, Harvard University, and Instructor in English, Radcliffe College, 1893-94; tutor in Rhetoric and English composition, Columbia College, 1894-1900; studied in Lisbon, Madrid, and Paris, 1897-98 ; Instructor in English, Barnard College, 1900-02 ; Adjunct Professor, 1902-. CHARLES KNAPP. A.B., Columbia University, 1887; A.M., 1S88; Ph.D., 1890; University Fellow in Latin, 1S87-90; Tutorial Fellow in Latin, 1890-91; Instructor in Latin at Barnard College, 1891-1900; Assistant in Latin at Columbia University, 1896-1900; Instructor in Greek at Barnard College, 1897-1900; Instructor in Classical Philology, 1900; Adjunct Professor of Classical Philology, 1902-. MORTIMER LAMSON EARLE. A.B., Columbia University, 1886; A.M., 1887; Ph.D., 1889; University Fellow in Letters, 1886-89; student at the American School of Classical Studies at Athens, 1887-88; Lecturer in Greek, Barnard College, 1889-95 and 1895- 19C0; Associate Professor of Greek and Latin, Bryn Mawr College, 1895-98; Professor of Classical Philol- ogy, 1900-1905. HENRY L. MOORE. A.B., Randolph-Macon College, 1892; Ph.D., Johns Hopkins University, 1896; Adjunct Professor of Political Economy, Columbia University, 1902- ; Appointment to Faculty of Barnard College, 1902-. HERBERT MAULE RICHARDS S.B., Harvard University, 1S91 ; S.D., 1895; Assistant in Botany at Harvard University and Instructor at Radcliffe College, 1891-95 ; student at the University of Leipzig, 1895-96; tutor in Botany at Barnard College, 1896- 98 ; Instructor in Botany, Harvard University, 1897- 8 ; Instructor in Botany, Barnard College, 1898-1903; Assistant Professor, 1903- ; Associate Editor of the Bulletin, Torrey Botanical Club; Associate Editor of the American Naturalist ; Assistant Editor of Botanisches Centralblatt. Deceased. r hi MARGARET E. MALTBY A.B., Oberlin College, 1882; A.M., 1891 ; S.B., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1891 ; Ph.D., Gottingen, 1895 ; student at Art Students League, New York, 1882-83; student at Massachusetts Institute of Technology 1SS789; student at Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Instructor in Physics at Wellesley College, 188993; student at Gottingen, Germany, 1S93-96; Instructor at Wellesley College, [896-97; Instructor at Lake Erie College, 1897-98; Research Assistant to President Kohlrauscll at the Physikalisch-technische Reichsanstalt zu Charlottenburg, Germany, 1898-99; Instructor in Chemistry, Barnard College 1900-1903; Adjunct Professor of Physics, Barnard College, 1903- ; Foreign Fellow of the Masschusetts Institute of Tech- nology, 1893 95; Foreign Fellow of the Associate Collegiate Alumna:, 1S95-96. LOUIS AUGUSTE LOISEAUX. Certificat d ' Etudes Primaires Superieures, Academie de Dijon, 1887 ; Brevet d ' Instituteur, Academie de Dijon 1887; 15. es S., University of Dijon, 1S94; Instructor in French, Cornell University, 1891-92; tutor in French, Columbia College, 1892-93: tutor in the Romance Languages and Literatures, Columbia University, 1893-1900; Instructor, 1900-04; Adjunct Professor, 1904-. JAMES T. SHOTWELL. A.B., Toronto University, 1898; Ph.D., Columbia University, 1903; Assistant in History, Columbia University, 1900-01 ; Lecturer in History, 1901-03; Instructor in History 1903-05; Adjunct Professor of History, 1905-. GEORGE WILLIS BOTSFORD. A.B., University of Nebraska, 18S4; A.M., 1889; Ph.D., Cornell University, 1891 ; Professor of Greek, Kala- mazoo College, 1886-90; Bethany College, 1891-1895; Instructor in the History of Greece and Rome, Harvard University, 1895-1901 ; Instructor in Anc : ent History, Columbia University, 1902-05; Adjunct Professor, 1905-. ALVIN SAUNDERS JOHNSON. A.B., University of Nebraska, 1897; A.M., 1898; Ph.D., Columbia University, 1903; Teaching Fellow in Greek, University of Nebraska, 1897-98; Fellow in Economics, Columbia University, 1900-01; Reader in Economics, Bryn Mawr College, 1901-02; tutor in Economics, Columbia University, 1902-04; Instructor, 1904-1905; Adjunct Professor, 1905-. Absent on leave. [ 5 ] ©ffutrs of tJ)c ©nttorstt} Who may give instruction to students in Barnard College JOHN KROM REES, E.M., Ph.D Rutherfurd Professor of Astronomy WILLIAM HENRY CARPENTER, Ph.D Ward Professor of Germanic Philology JAMES McKEEN CATTELL, Ph.D Professor of Psychology HENRY ALFRED TODD, Ph.D Professor of Romance Philology FRANZ BOAZ, Ph.D. Professor of Anthropology JOHN FRANCIS WOODHULL, Ph.D. . ' . . Professor of Physical Science in Teachers College FRANKLIN THOMAS BAKER, A.M. Professor of the English Language and Literature in Teachers College EDWARD HOWARD CASTLE, A.M Professor of History in Teachers College RIC HARD E. DODGE, A.M Professor of Geography CHARLES EARLE BIKLE, A.M Adjunct Professor of Mathematics in Teachers College JAMES EARL RUSSELL, Ph.D., LL.D Barnard Professor of Education FRANCIS ERNEST LLOYD, A.M Adjunct Professor of Biological Science in Teachers College FRANK MORTON McMURRY, Ph.D. . Professor of the Theory and Practise of Teaching in Teachers College PAUL MONROE, Ph.D Professor of the History of Education in Teachers College SAMUEL TRAIN DUTTON, M.A Professor of School Administration in Teachers College GONZALEZ LODGE, Ph.D., LL.D Professor of Latin and Greek in Teachers College EDWARD LEE THORNDIKE, Ph.D Professor of Genetic Psychology in Teachers College DAVID EUGENE SMITH, Ph.D Professor of Mathematics in Teachers College HENRY ROGERS SEAGER, Ph.D Professor of Political Economy FREDERICK J. E. WOODB RIDGE, LL.D Johnsonian Professor of Philosophy FELIX ADLER, Ph.D Professor of Social and Political Ethics JULIUS SACHS, Ph.D. ...... . Professor of Secondary Education in Teachers College ELIJAH WILLIAM BAGSTER-COLLINS, M.A. . . Adjunct Professor of German in Teachers College WILLIAM ADDISON HERVEY, A.M. . . Adjunct Professor of the Germanic Languages and Literatures RUDOLF TOMBO, Jr., Ph.D. .... Adjunct Professor of the Germanic Languages and Literatures JOHN A. MacVANNEL, Ph.D. . . . Adjunct Professor of the Llistory of Education in Teachers College LEONARD BEECHER McWHOOD, A.B Adjunct Professor of Music WILLIAM ALLAN NEILSON, Ph.D Professor of English CHARLES LANE POOR, Ph.D Professor of Astronomy CORNELIUS RUBNER . Professor of Music JOHN DEWEY, Ph.D., LL.D. Professor of Philosophy WILLIAM ROBERT SHEPHERD, Ph.D Adjunct Professor of LLi story ARTHUR FRANK JOSEPH REMY, Ph.D. . . Instructor in the Germanic Languages and Literatures Absent on leave. [ ' 6 ] ©tljer ©fitters of instruction MARIE REIMER, Ph.D Instructor in Chemistry EDWARD KASNER, Ph.D Instructor in Mathematics WILLIAM E. KELLICOTT, Ph.D Instructor in Zoology GERTRUDE M. HIRST, Ph.D Instructor in Classical Philology HENRY BARGY, A.M Instructor in the Romance Languages and Literatures WILLIAM P. MONTAGUE, Ph.D Instructor in Philosophy WILHELM ALFRED BRAUN, Ph.D Tutor in the Germanic Languages and Literatures TRACY ELLIOT HAZEN, Ph.D Tutor in Botany VIRGINIA C. GILDERSLEEVE, A.M Tutor in English HENRY F. ML ' LLER. B. « L. ...... Tutor in the Romance Languages and Literatures ELEANOR KELLER, A.B Tutor in Chemistry HARRIET BROOKS, M.A Tutor in Physics ANNINA PERIAM, A.M Tutor in the Germanic Languages and Literatures FREDERICK W. J. HEUSER, A.M Tutor in the Germanic Languages and Literatures ELSIE CLEWS PARSONS, Ph.D. Lecturer in Sociology IDA H. OGILVIE, Ph.D Lecturer in Geology GEORGE PHILIP KRAPP, Ph.D Lecturer in English LOUISE ROPES LOOMIS, A.M Lecturer in History CHARLES A. BEARD, Ph.D Lecturer in History PAULINE HAMILTON DEDEREK, A.B Lecturer in Zoology MARGARET A. REED, A.B Lecturer in Zoology WILLIAM B. PARKER, A.B Lecturer in English ALGERNON DE V. TASSIN, A.M Lecturer in English GRACE A. HUBBARD, A.M ' Lecturer in English PHILIPP SEIBERTH, A.M. ..... . Lecturer in the Germanic Languages and Literatures MARGARET E. BALL, A.M Assistant in English MARION E. LATHAM, A.B Assistant in Botany LILLIE M. LAWRENCE, A B. .......... Assistant in classical Philology FRANK E. WARD Organist ©fficcrs of SJtmuntstratton N. W. LIGGETT, A.B Bursar ANNA E. H. MEYER, A.B Secretary AGNES OPDYKE, A.B Acting Registrar FREDERICK A. GOETZE Superintendent of Buildings and Grounds Absent on leave. [ ' 7] 3!n 3l9cmovtam ittorttmer Hamson Carle SDicb September 26, 1905 44 Crulp one must ?ap ujitl) the poet tuhom lie loucb crccebmgln anb to tonosc toorbtf Ik liab often gtucn clearer interpretation than lii£ pre bccessorS : ' XetTTO jLai ei re Tv%ais dvaTwv iced ev epy xacn Xevaaajv. ' 25n all among nts students fortunate enough to nnouj anb appreciate !)ts beep scholarship anb thorough kindness, Mortimer itamson £arlc fcotll ener ue hclb in affectionate mcmorn. [2. ] Cije ©ntiergratmate 2tesoetatton Founded April 7, 1902 ELIZABETH GRACE EVANS, 1906 HAZEL HUDNALL PLATE, 1906. CLAIRETTE PAPIN ARMSTRONG, 1908 . EVANGELINE COLE, 1907 . cfirecuttoe Committee ELIZABETH IVERSON TOMS, 1906, Chairman ELEANOR HUNSDON, 1908 GRACE CLAPPERTON TURNBULL, 1907 HILDA WARREN HEDLEY, 1909 . President Vice-President . Secretary . ' Treasurer Student Council Officers of the Undergraduate Association and four class presidents ELIZABETH GRACE EVANS, 1906, Chairman FAITH DELATOUR CHIPPERFIELD, 1906 EVANGELINE COLE, 1907, Secretary JEAN DISBROW, 1907 HAZEL HUDNALL PLATE, 1906 MARY OSBORNE MARSHALL, 1908 CLAIRETTE PAPIN ARMSTRONG, 1908 RUTH CHILDS, 1909 ELIZABETH IVERSON TOMS, 1906 [ 23 J I.C H JHNo, Behold this smiling senior — her family ' s joy and pride — She has a high degree and the world to see and a solitaire beside. [ H : ] mtox Class Esse quam videri CLASS FLOWER . . MARGUERITE CLASS COLORS . . GOLD AND WHITE FAITH DE LA TOUR CHIPPERFIELD MABEL E. BROWNE .... CATHARINE M. POST JESSIE P. CONDIT .... VIRGINIA T. BOYD ) DOROTHY BR EWSTER j [ 5] President I ' ice- President Treas urer Secretary Historians JSarnartjesta THE EPILOGUE Senicus : It would not be fitting for the little Princess Freshnelda to be seen in the Epilogue. In truth, she is not yet recovered from her terror at the sight of the Bogies which advanced against her when she entered the kingdom of Barnardesia ; and, indeed, were she to try the Epilogue, who knows but she might deliver it in Latin Prose that others in the kingdom could no longer compre- hend ? Nor would it be wise to invite the Faculty Chorus or one of its distinguished members to speak : for the Epilogue to our play must be brief, and the faculty cannot be brief — save in Eng- lish B ; and, accustomed though they are to scintillate in the limelight, they yet know naught of Epilogues, for they seldom get beyond the exposition. Who, then, must take the part but poor Senicus, who is now bidding farewell to the stage of Barnard in the last role of historian ? If it be true, as Rosalind says, that a good play needs no epilogue, may it not perchance be true that a good class needs no history ? Yet are good plays the better for good epilogues ; so our solemn Senior Class may be the livelier in a history. What a case am I in then, since ' tis well known that peaceful and quiet lives have little to chronicle ! So smooth has been our easy path through all the fields of learning, that when we felt the need of a history, we perforce turned aside from the pursuit of wisdom to don the socks and buskins ; and by the magic of our genius we have made our history in histronics. Since our first coming to college, we have tried to entertain you with our plays, which you have most graciously commended, and by your pleasure paid our pains. Our four years ' engage- ment on these boards has been one unprecedented success in every form of dramatic activity that we have essayed, be it comedy or tragedy, melodrama or farce, vaudeville or musical comedy. By it, moreover, we have proved — and I know you will not disagree — that a college education in [z6] no wise unfits a woman for the stage. Now the class of Nineteen Six is going on the road, no longer as a company of players, but as single stars to shine on other stages, each in a different part. Whether it will be in comedy, or tragedy, or tragi-comedy, or comio-tragedy, the years alone will show. And as the time is almost come to ring down the curtain on our last act, we hope that in vour kindness you will, when we take our leave, bid us Godspeed. [ V] [ 28 ] Sfuntor Class Fiicth vota exsequere audax CLASS FLOWER CLASS COLORS JEAN DISBROW GRACE CLAPPERTON TURNHULL. EMILY LAMONT MacEWAN . SOPHIE PARSONS WOODMAN HELEN GOODHART .... GERTRUDE LOUISE CANNON . MRS. DEODATA W. EARLE MISS LOUISE ROPES LOOM IS X JACQUEMINOT ROSE RED AND WHITE £Dfficcrg President . Vice-President Recording Secretary Corresponding Secretary Treasurer Historian . Honorary Members [ 9] [3o] Htstorp of rtjr Class of 1907 n { HE CLASS OF 1907 may be compared to a miniature nation, whose government is a perfect democracy, with universal wo- manhood suffrage. There are absolutely no political bosses. The officers serve out of pure patriotism, and never get any salaries. Two or three times a month we have a national pow-wow, where everyone speaks at once, and where, like the ancient Teutonic tribes, we express our approval or disapproval of the matter in hand by loud vociferations. Our history may be divided into three epochs. We shall call the first the Savage, or Aboriginal Period : it may be compared to the Stone Age, not because stones played any part in our daily life, but because we ourselves were as yet somewhat rough and unpolished, waiting to be ground and smoothed in the mills of Latin Prose and Math. A. Our first act was to organize the government. This was followed by a period of festivity, which had so demoralizing an effect on our primitive minds, that we neglected to fulfil the requirements of the above-mentioned mill- grinders, and drew down on our heads the wrath of the higher powers. [ 3 ' ] This was scarcely over when a neighboring nation invaded our terri- tory, and capturing us all, led us into a horrid dungeon, from which issued shrieks and sulphurous smells, and there we saw and suffered things of which it is not permitted to speak. f The second era of our history was a period of transition. It may be likened to the Bronze Age, because, as bronze is an alloy of two metals, so we were a combination of the foolishness which still remained from the Stone Age, and the wisdom which was to blossom in the succeeding era. The former side of our natures we indulged first in a Hallowe ' en frolic. Then fearing that we had injured our dignity, we became ultra serious and had a revolution, which fortunately resulted only in some changes in the constitution. After this we gave our attention to the development of literature. We were all authors, and wrote, besides literary essays, whole volumes on such learned subjects as Japanese Emigration and How Shakespeare wrote Bacon. We also patronized the drama, which flourished amazingly during this epoch. To show our appreciation of art we decided to The Sophmores. f The Mysteries. [32] revive the Olympic Games, and held a festival in the [amphijtheahv. where our athletes won the highest honors. The victory was celebrated by a grand triumphal procession. The sacred rooster was borne at the head, and after him trooped the jubilant victors, with banners flying and wreaths hoisted on [window] poles, to the satisfaction of themselves, the envy of their defeated rivals, and the edification of the spectators. We come now to the present dispensation, which we may call the Golden Age ; during this age we give our time mainly to the pleasures of life and the advancement of the national glory. Already we have celebrated a horse-race rivalling in magnificence even the famous one in Ben-Hur ; and this was followed by a splendid dramatic entertain- ment, at which the whole ten Muses presided. The prosperity of the country is unusual, the taxes are low, and on the Exchange the stocks of the Superfine Gonsolidated Fudge Go. are above par. mi [33] Who is this insignificant still playing with her dolls ? A child like this should never be in Barnard ' s stately halls. [34] opIjomorc Class yvwui aavTov CLASS FLOWER . . CORNFLOWER CLASS COLORS . . ROYAL BLUE AND WHITE Officers MARY OSBORNE MARSHALL President IRMA ALEXANDER Vice-President MARGUERITE CORLIES NEWLAND Secretary JOSEPHINE A. PRAHI Treasurer HELEN LOEB Historian ANNA E. H. MEYER Honorary Member [35] €l)e tetory of tl)t Cla s of 1908 IN the dear by-gone days when great authors really existed, some of the renowned masters in the art of writing seem to have had a premonition that in the year of our Lord 1904, a class should enter the classic halls of Barnard, whose exploits should be worthy of even their mighty pens. Gray, Burns, Shakespeare, Coleridge, Milton, Lowell, Longfellow and Coleman recognized the opportunities of the sub- ject to such a degree that their words, with a few trifling (?) changes, form a fairly exhaustive history of the class of 1908. [36] €l)t tftrgt of College, 1904 i The bell ding-dongs the fateful hour of nine, The chatt ' ring girls wind slowly o ' er the lea, The Freshmen College-ward conduct their line ; And leave the world to its frivolity. II Disconsolate they wander through the halls, Snubbed right and left as up and down they roam, Until this mournful cry ascends from all — I don ' t like College, and I ' m going home. Ill So, all rejoicing in their new-found knowledge, They wend their homeward way free from distress, And when at home they ' re asked Did you like College ? Each with enthusiasm answers yes. Cl)e tftrgt c ngltel) Consultation You see, Professor Brewster, where I stand In English work ; though for myself alone I would not be ambitious in my wish To wish my theme much better ; for my work, I would ' twere bettered twenty thousand times, The style were polished, and the structure clear. Only to stand A in your account I ' d do much ; but alas ! I ' m, as you see, But an unlesson ' d girl, unschool ' d, unpractis ' d, Happy in this, she is not yet so old but she may learn. Happier in this, she is not bred so dull but she may learn, Happiest of all is that her gentle spirit Commits itself to you to be directed. [37] ifftelD l®txy Senior to right of us, Junior to left of us, Sophmores in front of us, Marvell ' d and wonder ' d. Storm ' d at with hoot and yell, Boldly they did and well, Glorious it is to tell Of our Hundred. When can their glory fade ? O, the high score they made ! All College wondered. Honor the score they made In gym. suits arrayed, Our noble Hundred. oltloqu? after ff(nalg And what is so rare as an A in June ? Then, if ever, come mournful days, Then stern professors withhold the boon, So greatly desired by the seeker for A ' s. Whether we work, or whether we play, We ' re just as far as ever from A. fir t tiap of College, September, 1905 ABSENCE MAKES THE HEART GROW FONDER [ 38 ] i Listen, my children, and you shall hear Of the finest Soph play ever given here ; ' Twas November the 17th, 1905, — Every maid who is now alive Remembers that famous day this year. II The coach spoke to the c ast If you have stage-fright, If teeth are chattering and knees are weak, At least remember your lines aright, Loudly, clearly, distinctly speak. Act, if you can, and look pretty, And I in the wings at the side will be, Ready to prompt if you make a mistake. So now do your best, and cease to quake : Remember, your Class ' s name is at stake. Ill You know the rest, for you yourselves saw The stupendous success of the Heir-at-Lato, How the audience laughed till they took a fit, At Dr. Pangloss ' s erudite wit. How they cheered the cast with a hip hip hurray And vowed they ' d not laughed so in many a day. We ' e sure future historians with pride will relate The tale of the Sophomore Play of ' 08. an aftertt)oufit)t On their own merits, modest men are dumb, Plaudite et valete. Terence, hum. [39] Latin A and Mathematics I have moved this child to tears — It soon would die an early death, did Junior nurse not calm its fears. [4°] jfrcsljman Class CLASS FLOWER CLASS COLORS FERN AND WHITE CARNATION GREEN AND WHITE £DffiCCV0 RUTH CHILDS FLORENCE SIMS WYETH WINIFRED BARROWS EDNA ADELE TOMPKINS JULIA GOLDBERG VERE KUPFER Cot . President . Vice-President Recording Secretary ■esponding Secretary Treasurer Historian [ 4 ' Htstorp of tlje Class of 1909 It is a black-masked Sophomore, The Gymnasium doors are opened wide And she stoppeth one of three ; And we want you to come in — By thy long black gown and glittering eye, Your fellow-Freshmen are inside, Now wherefore stopp ' st thou me? You may hear the awful din. She held me with her gripping hand, And led me forth until We reached the realms of torture Where the Sophomores had their will. What they did to us there, no one will ever know, for we promised to keep the mysteries mysterious forever. [4 ] One week later, on Friday the thirteenth of October (herewith may the supersti- tious see the error of their ways!), came the Junior ' s reception to the Freshmen. And how they did receive us ! Races and betting, music and dancing — everything to en- trance and captivate our eager minds. They proved them- selves real sisters and even gave us the money with which to bet. The horses were such pretty, glossy, spirited animals, and pawed madly in their stalls, chafing for the race. You see they were thoroughbreds to the bone. A little more than a fortnight after this, 1906 gave us Barnardesia, a most delightful and highly original musical comedy. The plot was al- legorical, and the story and its meaning did much to show us the true relations between Seniors and Freshmen. We, who up to that time had looked upon 1906 as something of this earth apart, learned then to see them in a newer and truer light. But think not that 1909 finds sole interest or pleasure in being entertained. Minime hercule ! [43 ] as our friend Cicero would say. Who par- takes in all the college societies ? Who, with © Nillll v flying hair and glaring eye, snatches the basket- ball from your trembling hands ? Who, pray, wears out the tennis courts? (These are rhe- torical questions. The answer 1909 is not necessary.) And talking of what the Fresh- men can do, — have you seen how prettily our Study was decorated ? And then the Tea that was given in honor of the newly fixed- up Study — the only informal Tea, I think, that has ever been given at Barnard ! And the tea was the least of it too. There were games, and beautiful Spanish (or were they Dutch?) waitresses, and a real, live fortune-teller, who read your palm behind a screen on which hung this inviting sign : Here is a young maid from the East, Whose fortunes raise hope without yeast; Come, your fortunes now try, Do not pass this place by, And afterward come to our feast. And last, but let us hope not least, the Freshman takes pleasure in her lessons too. She realizes that studies serve for delight, for ornament, and for ability, Bacon, ahem ! She has learned to watch bravely and unflinchingly for her Latin prose paper, as it comes out of the bad pile. She has learned that a line is infinite; that it [44] extends forever; from here to London, or even to the moon. She has learned, too, how to write descriptions, narrations, and all that sort of thing, don t you know. We may have our faults and shortcomings, but, as in the words of the dear old song, Take us altogether, we ' re a bright and shining light, or at least we hope to be, for each one of us has entered the kingdom of Barnardesia, meaning to do her best there, and to do it with all her heart and soul. [45 J Class of 1906 Florence Emily Bell Louisa Powell Blackburn Virginia Tucker Boyd Elizabeth Elliot Bradford Elisabeth Randall Brautigam Alice Dorothy Brewster Marjorie Ferguson Brown Mabel Emma Browne Jean May Bruce Emma Augusta Chapman Faith Delatour Chipperfield Amelia Cohen Jessie Parsons Condit Nellie Oakes Darling Katherine Eliza Darrin Lovenia A dele Dorsett Lucy Putnam Eastman Matilda Ernst Rose Erstein Elizabeth Grace Evans Ruth Deane Fairchild Marie-Louise Fontaine Florence Elizabeth Foshay Edna Emilie Frank Helen Frankfield Edyth Friedenrich Rosa Fried Willa May Fricke Marie Gelbach Evelyn Miriam Goldsmith Katherine Frances Goodyear Eleanor Maud Greenwood Caroline Dumont Hall Adelaide Hart Alice Haskell Jessie Elizabeth Haynes Edith Heiniann Senta Herrmann Eleanor Sanford Holden Bertha Clarkson James Ethel May Knox Elsie Kohut Annie Lee Emma Bouquet Lee Bessie Louise Lewis Florence Lilienthal Florence MacMillen Grace Beatrice MacColl Jeanette MacColl Fanny Mayer Lucie Mayo-Smith Florence Jessie Morgenthau Mary Washburn Murtha Anna May Newland Minnie Antoinette Nies Josephine Paddock Hazel Hudnall Plate Catharine Mary Post Elizabeth Smith Post Anna Mutch Rae Virginia Ralph Ella Jane Reaney Mabel Elizabeth Weiss Rich Madeline Dorothea Rohr Isabelle Katherine Russell Augusta Salik Florence Schlageter Clara Helene Schmidt Irma Scott Seeligman Mildred Ethel Shanley Natalie Ida Shinn Marion Loder Simons Edith Somborn Florence May Stapf Edna Walmsley Stitt Virginia Taylor Elizabeth Iverson Toms Mildred Adele Wells Helen Isabel Williams Julia Elektra Ludlow Youn [46] Class of 1907 Irene Bennett Adams Amalie Louise Althaus Anna Genevieve Anthony Eva Fanny Auerbach Margaret Hart Bailey Hannah Mansfield Battell Cora Elizabeth Bennett Beatrice Molly Bernkopf Judith Bernays Mabel Louise Boote Josephine Brand Alice Margaret Bushong Gertrude Louise Cannon Anne Carroll Helen Carter Amelia Cohen Sabra Carrington Colby Emma Cornelia Cole Evangeline Cole Jessie Patterson Cooke Jean Disbrow Agnes Elizabeth Ernst Florence Belle Furth Cara Leslie Gardiner Phylinda Gaston Marie Gelbach Annie Elizabeth Goedkoop Helen Goodhart Florence Gordon Lucile Grant Grace Bernheimer Guggenheim Lollie Belle Hardwick Helen Josephine Harvitt Alma Laura Hays Lilian Hellin Hazel Henderson Beatrice Felicia Herzfeld Jennie Ililborn Kathleen Elizabeth Hurty Marguerite Baer Israel Eva Jacobs Irma Etelka Jellenik Alma Joachimson Lucetta Pitney Johnson Sarah Keeney Blanche Margaret Klein Irene Constance Kohn Sara Emma Lay Lucile Locke Mary Elizabeth Lord Amalia Lowenthal Mabel Perkins Mac Donald Emily Lamont MacEwan Fannie Moulton McLane Pierina McLaughlin Louise Odencrantz Charlotte Rose Oesterlein Helen Cushing Perry Josephine Southworth Pratt Juliet Stuart Points Mary Catherine Ruth Reardon Ida Charlotte Ray Katherine Louise Rapp Ethel May Rosemon Lucile Estelle Rosenberg Elizabeth Rusk Elsie Schachtel Ethel Bell Schramm Helen Shoninger Clara Elizabeth Smith Katherine Augusta Smith Constance Straus Mary Edla Tibbetts Helen Abbie Tracy Elizabeth Alden Seabury Tredvvell Dorothy True Grace Clapperton Turnbull Muriel Valentine Lillian May Wardell Mary Barbour Walker Edna Major Wilkes Sophie Parsons Woodman Daisy Irene Yale Anne Whittemore Young [47 ] Class of 1908 lima Alexander Elizabeth Allen Clairette Papin Armstrong Laura Julia Armstrong Alma Ash Dora Askowith May Charlotte Axt Elizabeth Mitchell Back Rose Beekman Bessie Andrews Beers Martha Tracy Boardman Thorborg Marie Brundin Anna Corley Brush Mary Hornor Budds Emily Thorp Burr Kdith Maie Burrows Aminta Gomes Casseres Ethel May Clary- Mabel Clendenin Regina Coveney Marion Barton Crowell Hazel Lucile Davies Eleanor Agnes Dwyer Marjorie McClintock Eastman Clara Cecilia Eaton Dorothea Eltzner Ethel Grace Everett Edith Ferns Elda Lillian Fink Helen Ren wick Glen Margaret Ida Doris Golde Helen Young Gray Mabel Ray Hays Lillian Heim Elsie Winifred Heimlich Alice Leah Hershfield Martha Lillie Adele Hoermann Jessie Ferguson Houston Eleanor Hufeland Marie Augusta Hufeland Eleanor Cary Hunsdon Helmina Jeidell (Mrs. E. J. Jeidell) Mary B. Hyatt Joseph Edith Josephi Anna Mildred Kerner Maude Irene Rlein Helen Babette Loeb Anna Laurie Manley Maud Louise Marren Agnes Margaret Marshall Mary Osborne Marshall Florence Josephine Mastin Mary Maxon Mary Agnes Miller Nana Louise Moore Esther Morehouse Ada Herminie Muller Marguerite Corlies Newland Ellen Kathryn O ' Gorman Freda Marjorie Peck Mabel Louise Peterson Josephine Anna Prahl Elsie May Quinby Mary Gladys Quinby May Katharine Quinn Louise Catherine Rennert Adelaide Requa Elizabeth Devereux Robinson Olive Leah Roe Lillian Rosanoff Anna Elizabeth Roth Annie Rothenberg Florence Sammet Linda Belle Savitz Caroline Eustis Seely Cecilia Minna Sillcox Mabel Frieda Stearn Gertrude Rose Stein Pauline Steinberg Marguerite Julie Strauss Louise May Tattershall Louise Traitel Annie Grace Turnbull Helen Ida Veith Gertrude Wells Margaretta Wightman Marian Wilson Florence Martha Wolff Catharine Buckingham Woolsey Margaret Hall Yates Jennie Marie Young [48] Class of 1909 Matilda Abraham Lotta Belle Acker Helen Louise Aiguier Lee Francis Alexander Gladys Stokeley Arkenburgh Maud Elizabeth Armstrong Beatrice Marguerite Aron May Dorothy Baar Lila Gilbert Baldwin Winifred Barrows Eva Elise vom Baur Florence Atvvood Black Helen e Marie Boas Marion Alice Boyd Emma Bugbee Dorothy Caiman Antoinette Lartigue Carroll Edna Marie Cassebeer Ruth Childs Lillian Wadsworth Clossen Jessie Isabelle Cochran Leslie Conner Mabel Irene Cowen Margie Elizabeth Dann Marie Celia Demarest Josephine Agnes V. Dempsey Helen Caroline Dreyer Hannah Carolyn Falk Margaret Huddleston Frink Eleanor Gay Mary Frances Godley Julia Goldberg Ethel Lizzie Goodwin Alice Catherine Grant Theodora Hall Elinor Isabel Hastings Emma Antoinette Hebbard Hilda Warren Hedley Esther Belle Hellin Rita Hochheimer Ethel Wentworth Hodson Anna Sophie Holm Eloise Nella Horan Helen Sara Hoyt Jennie Fields Warren Hubbard Francis May Ingalls Ethel Marguerite Ivirney Dorothy Cooke Jacoby Alice G. Jaggard Margaret Frances Kenney Lois Kerr Vera Eleanor Kloster Vere Boehm Kupfer Olga Lee Bernice Leerburger Jessie Levy Rose Adelaide Levy Una Logan Myra McLean Alice Mayer Eunice Hotaling Miller Helen Newbold Josephine Gertrude O ' Brien Ella Oppenheim. Edna Phillips Helen Sarah Phillips Nellie Edna Rich Sophie J. Rich Adelaide Richardson Olga Emma Rilke Antoinette Riordon Sara Rome Fannie Rosenfelder Edna Rebecca Scales Helen Gertrude Scheuer Mildred Dechon Schlesinger Edith Christine Seguine Lillian Silbemagel Dean Florence Smith Elsie Smith Adelaide E. Smithers Herlinda G. Smithers Priscilla Dixon Stanton May Belle Stark Mary Elizabeth Swenson Edith May Talpey Lucy Irene Thompson Julia de Forest Tiffany Louise Comfort Tiffany Edna Adele Tompkins Laura Shearer Turnbull Georgia Anna Ver Planck Lois Bessie Westaway Ethel Genevieve Weston Florence Wolf Mildred Woodhull Florence Wyeth Jennie Dwight Wylie [49] Cf)e 3Sarnarti WLnion ISABELLE KATHARINE RUSSELL, 1906 Undergraduate President EMILIE JOSEPHINE HUTCHINSON, 1905 Graduate President EVANGELINE COLE, 1907 1st Vice-President JULIET STUART POINTS, 1907 Secretary AGNES MILLER, 1908 2nd Vice-President CLAIRETTE PAPIN ARMSTRONG 908 Treasurer FRANCES HOPE PURDON, 1905 Graduate Editor ALICE DOROTHY BREWSTER, 1906 Undergraduate Editor [ SO] tlntiergratmate JNembers CW Of 1906 Virginia Boyd Elizabeth Bradford Dorothy Brewster Marjorie Brown Elizabeth Brautigam Faith Chipperfield Lucy Eastman Marie Fontaine Florence Foshay Willa Fricke Rosa Fried Edna Frank Edith Heimann Senta Hermann Caroline Hall Alice Haskell Annabel Lee Lucie Mayo-Smith May New land Josephine Paddock Hazel Plate Belle Russell Anne Rae Clara Schmidt Irma Seeligman Edith Somborn Mrs. Young Ruth Fairchild Adelaide Hart Louisa Blackburn Elizabeth (ones Augusta Sahk Virginia Taylor Cla s Of 1907 Anialia Althaus Margaret Bailey Helen Carter Jean Disbrow Evangeline Cole Lillian Hellin Kathleen Hurty lima Jellenik Irene Kohn Fannie McLane Lottie Oesterlein Juliet Points Mary Reardon Elizabeth Rusk Edla Tibbits Helen Tracy Muriel Valentine Sophie Woodman Gertrude Cannon Agnes Ernst Daisy Yale €W$ Of 1908 Clairette Armstrong Dorothea Eltzner Mary Marshall Dora Askowicz Elizabeth Fox Agnes Miller Marjorie Eastman Helen Loeb [5 ' ] Cj)e Houng Women ' s Clmsttan 9tesoetatton of 3Sarnarti College £)fftccttf ELEANOR SANFORD HOLDEN, 1906 . ELIZABETH SMITH POST, 1906 .... ANNE CARROLL, 1907 AGNES MILLER, 1908 ....... SOPHIE PARSONS WOODMAN, 1907 [5 ] President . Vice-President Corresponding Secretary Recording Secretary Treasurer Irene B. Adams Helen L. Aiguier Lee F. Alexander Beatrice M. Aron Clairette P. Armstrong Lavira J. Armstrong Gladys S. Arkenburgh May C. Axt Margaret H. Bailey Lilia P. Baldwin Bessie A. Beers Florence E. Bell Marion E. Boyd Mabel E. Browne Anna C. Brush Mary H. Budds Emily Burr Edith M. Burrows Anne Carroll Helen Carter Edna M. Cassebeer Anita G. Casseres Emma C. Chapman Ethel A. Cleary Emma C. Cole Evangeline Cole Jessie P. Condit Leslie Conner Marion Crowell Hazel L. Davies L. Adele Dorsett Marjorie M. Eastman Agnes E. Ernst Matilda Ernst. Elizabeth G. Evans Anna G. Anthony Thorborg Marie Brundin Emma Bugbee Samuella Cameron Antoinette L. Carroll Jean Disbrow E. Agnes Dwyer Lucy P. Eastman Rosa Fried Cara Leslie Gardiner Phvlinda Gaston Elizabeth F. Fox Ethel L. Goodwin Alice C. Grant Lucile Grant Eleanor M. Greenwood Jessie E. Haynes Elsie Heimlich Eleanor S. Holden Anna S. Holm Eleanor C. Hunsdon Eleanor Huf eland Kathleen E. Hurty Bertha C. James Lucetta P. Johnson Lois Kerr S. Emma Lay Annabel Lee Olga Lee Lucile Locke Emily L. MacEwan Lucie Mayo-Smith Agnes M Marshall Mary Marshall Florence J. Mastin Mary Maxon Agnes Miller Nana L. Moore Minnie A. Nies Louise C. Odencrant . Josephine Paddock Josephine S. Pratt Catherine M. Post Elizabeth S. Post Gladys Quinby Elsie M. Quinby associate jftcmbevg Marie Gilbach Florence Gordon Emma Hibberd Senta Herrmann Jessie F. Houston Marie A. Hufiland Louise Kolff Amalie Fowenthal Abbey Porter Leland Ada H. Muller [53] Mary K. Quinn Annie M. Rae Virginia Ralph Louise C. Rennert Adelaide Requa Ethel M. Rosemon Elsie Schachtel M. D. Schlesinger Florence Schlageter Clara Helene Schmidt Mildred E. Shanley Esther Shaw Natalie I. Shinn Marion E. Simons Florence M. Staff Mabel F. Steam Edna W. F. Still Louise Saltershall M. Edla Tibbits Lucy I. Thompson Edna A. Tompkins Helen A. Tracy Elizabeth A. C. Tredwell Dorothy True Annie G. Turnbull Grace C. Turnbull Laura S. Turnbull Muriel Valentine Mary Barbour Walker Mildred A. Wells Helen I. Williams Edna M. Wilkes Marian Wilson Sophie Parsons Woodman Margaret II. Yates Julia E. L. Young (Mrs. R. M.) Anna May Newland Marguerite C. Newland Helen Newbold Hazel H. Plate Marie Louise Rattigen Adelaide Richardson Sara Rome Ethel B. Schramm Elsie Smith Daisy I. Yale Barnarti atljlettc association KATHERINE LOUISE RAPP . AGNES ELIZABETH ERNST . CLAIRETTE PAPIN ARMSTRONG FREDA M. PECK .... CLAIRETTE ARMSTRONG ' o8 . JOSEPHINE PRAIIL ' oS . President . Vice-President Secretary Treasurer Chairman Tennis Executive Committee Chairman Basketball Executive Committee [54] atijlcttc association M. Abraham ' 09 T. B. Adams ' 07 T. Alexander ' 08 L. Alexander ' 09 E. Alsberg ' 02 gr. G. F. Alsop ' 03 gr. A. G. Anthony ' 07 G. S. Arkenburgh ' 09 C. P. Armstrong ' 08 E. F. Auerbach ' 07 M. C. Axt ' 08 W. Barrows ' 09 F. Baldwin gr. E. W. Bassett ' 05 gr. J. Berneys 07 F. A. Black ' 09 H. Boas ' 09 M. Boote ' 07 E. Bradford ' 06 J. Brand ' 07 E. Bugbee ' 09 E. Burrows ' 08 D. Caiman ' 09 C. E. Campbell ' 08 A. L. Carroll ' 09 E. Cassebeer ' 09 R. Childs ' 09 J. Cochrane ' 09 A. Cohen ' 07 S. C. Colby ' 07 E. Cole ' 07 H. Cooley ' 05 gr. M. Co wen ' 09 C. Darling ' 06 K. Darron ' 06 J. Disbrow ' 07 A. Draper ' 05 E. Elkens ' 99 gr. D. Eltzner ' 08 A. F. Ernst ' 07 F. C. Ernst ' 08 A. Erstern ' 06 H. C. Falls ' 09 E. Ferns ' 08 H. Fischer ' 04 gr. N. L. Fontaine ' 09 E. E. Frank ' 06 II. Franktield ' 06 R. Fried ' 06 V. M. Fricke ' 06 F. B. Furth ' 07 C. L. Gardiner ' 07 M. Golde ' 08 J. Goldberg ' 09 E. Goodwin ' 08 E. M. Greenwood ' 07 C. D. Hall ' 06 T. Hall 09 E. B. Hanay ' 05 gr. H. E. Hamtt ' 07 A. Haskell ' 06 E. Hastings ' 09 M. R. Hayes ' 08 A. L. Hays ' 07 L. Heine ' 08 E. Heimlich ' 08 A. L. Hershfeld ' 08 B. F. Herzfeld ' 07 E. A. Hibbard ' 09 J. Hilborn ' 07 E. H olden ' 06 E. Horan ' 09 M. Hoffman ' 05 gr. M. E. Horan ' 07 J. Houston ' 08 E. Huf eland ' 08 M. A. Hufeland ' 08 E. C. Ilunsdon ' oS F. M. Ingalls ' 09 E. Jacobs ' 07 D. C. Jacoby ' 09 E. losephi ' 08 J. Kaufman ' 08 V. E. Kloster ' 09 I. C. Kohn ' 07 V. B. Kupfer ' 09 L. Lacy ' 98 gr. M. Latham ' 03 gr. S. E. Lay ' 07 N. M. Lean ' 09 B. Leerbinger ' 09 J. Levey ' 09 R. Levey ' 09 E. Lieber ' 08 H. Loeb ' 08 M. Lowenthal ' 08 G. B. MacColl ' 06 J. MacColl ' 06 E. L. MacEwan ' 07 F. J. Mastin ' 08 M. Maxon ' oS F. McLane ' 07 M. McLean ' 09 M. Marshall ' 08 F. Mayer ' 06 L. Mayo-Smith ' 06 A. E. Meyer ' 98 gr. A. Miller ' oS A. H. Muller ' 08 N. L. Moore ' 08 E. McKee ' 06 A. M. Newland ' 06 M. Newland ' oS J. Paddock ' 06 F. M. Peck ' 08 E. Phillips ' 09 H. Phillips ' 09 E. L. Porter ' 07 I. Prahl ' 08 V. Ralph ' 06 K. L. Rapp ' 07 M. L. Rattigen ' oS I. C. Ray ' 06. M. C. Reardon ' 07 A. Requa ' 08 S. J. Rich ' 09 A. R. Richardson ' 09 E. Robinson ' 08 O. L. Roe ' 08 L. Rosenberg ' 07 A. Rothenberg ' 08 F. Rosenfelder ' 09 E. Rusk ' 06 I. K. Russell ' 06 F. Sammett ' 08 E. Schaihtel ' 07 I. S. Seeligman ' 06 E. Shaw ' 08 H. Shoninger ' 07 T. Silbernagel ' 09 C. Silcox ' 08 C. E. Smith ' 07 E. Seguine ' 09 K. Smith ' 07 E. Somborn ' 06 H. Scheuer ' 09 M. Stark ' 09 E. Smith ' 09 M. F. Steam ' 08 A. E. Smithers ' 09 G. R. Stein ' 08 P. Steinberg ' 08 M. J. Strauss ' 08 G. I. Thompson ' 09 L. Traitel ' 08 L. Tattershall ' 08 E. Trepin ' 08 D. True ' 07 A. G. Turnbull ' 08 L. Turnbull ' o E. A. Tredwell ' 07 J. Tiffany ' 09 C. Tiffany ' 09 J. Ver Planck ' 09 E. Von Bauer ' 09 M. B. Walker ' 07 G. Wells ' 08 H. E. Wells ' oS H. I. Williams ' 06 E. M. Wilkes ' 07 M. Wilson ' oS F. M. Wolff ' 08 F. Wolf ' 09 J. Wylie ' 09 F. Wyeth ' 09 M Woodhull ' 09 [ 55 ] 9tesoetate alumnae of JSarnarti College TBoarD of J ircctorg Eva Sherwood Potter, ' 96 Anna E. H. Meyer, ' 97 May Amerman Johnson, ' 03 Carita Spencer, ' 02 Elsa Alsberg, ' 02 . Ella Fitzgerald Bryson, ' 94 Alice Maplesden Keys, ' 93 Virginia Crocheron Gildersleeve, ' 99 { Jean Wallace Miller, ' 03 Mary Stuart Pullman, ' 93 Alice Goddard Chase, ' 96 finance Committee PAULINE HAMILTON DEDERER, ' 01 (1905), Chairman Helen St. Clair Mullan (Mrs. G. V. Mullan), ' 98 (1906) The President (ex-officio) . Emily J. Hutchinson, ' 05 cflla BJeco jHcmorial ttcaDmcj IKoom Committee ANNA COLE MELLICK, ' 96 (1905), Chairman Florence Miller Sill, ' 00 (1906) May Appleton Parker, ' 04 (1907) tattettcg Committee ANNA E. H. MEYER, ' 98 (1906) Chairman Amy Loveman, ' 01 (1905) Marion Elizabeth Latham, ' 03 (1907) Clara Elizabeth Hudson, ' 01 (1908) President Vice President Corresponding Secretary Recording Secretary Treasurer Aiumnee Trustees § tuDcntjer 3tt) Committee ALICE MAPLESDEN KEYS, ' 93 (1908), Chairman Adaline Caswell Wheelock, ' 97 (1907) Helen Erskine ' 04 (1910) Clara de Lissa Berg, ' 98 (1906) May Amerman Johnson, ' 03 (1909) [ 56] CHARLES KNAPP, Ph.D. HARWOOD HOAULEV, Ph.D. GERTRUDE HIRST, Ph.D. LILLIE LAWRENCE, A. P. Members 1906 Elizabeth Randall Brautigam Mabel Emma Browne Emma Augusta Chapman Katherine Eliza Darrin Elizabeth Grace Evans Ruth Deane Fairchilcl Adelaide Hart Senta Herrmann Ethel May Knox Annabel Lee Emma Bouquet Lee Minnie Antoinette Nies Hazel Hudnall Plate Mildred Ethel Shanley Helen Isabel Williams Mrs. Julia Elektra Ludlow Younj Marie Gelbach 1907 Lilian Hellin Sara Emma Lay Louise Christina Odencrantz Juliet Stuart Points Katherine Louise Rapp Elsie Schachtel 1908 Clara Cecilia Eaton Ethel Grace Everett Eleanor Cary Hunsdon Mrs. Edward J. Jeidell [57] Tt co K goodness BSarnavti %oologp Club Mem ANNE MUTCH RAE, 1906 President HELEN L. PALLISER, 1905 Vice-President HENRY E. CRAMPTON Ph.D. Honorary Vice-President EDITH SOMBORN, 1906 Secretary LOUISA P. BLACKBURN, 1906 Treasurer OtJ)cr Jftcmf)cr£ of tf)c a jtrecutibc 25oaro EDITH B. HANDY, 1905 HELEN W. COOLEY, 1905 onorarp ffitmbtvg LAURA DRAKE GILL, A.M. HENRY EDWARD CRAMPTON Ph.D. LIVINGSTON FARRANT, A.M., M.D. [ 58] CJjc jWanDoltn Club ELIZABETH BRADFORD, 1906 Manager FREDA M. PECK, 1908 90ant oling MABEL BOOTE, 1907 FREDA M. PECK, 1908 FANNIE M. McLANE, 1907 HELEN A. TRACY, 1907 ETHEL B. SCHRAMM, 1907 Bioling ELIZABETH E. BRADFORD, 1906 MARIE LOUISE FONTAINE, 1906 LAURA S. TURNBULL, 1909 Guitar ANNA M. KERNER, 1908 $iano JOSEPHINE A. PRAHL, 1908 35arnarti Chapter of tfje Cfmrcl) tutients JWtsstonarp association FLORENCE M. STAPF . ETHEL M. PEYSER . MARGARET HART BAILEY . CLAIRETTE PAPIN ARMSTRONG President Vice-President Secretary . Treasurer jffl embers Lee Alexander Clairette P. Armstrong Laura J. Armstrong Margaret H. Bailey Myrtle E. Benway Elizabeth S. S. Buckingham Ruth Childs Mary E. Connor Mary H. Davis Alice O. Draper Marjorie Eastman E. M. Garretson Annie E. Goldkoop Willystine Goodsell Nona Gould Eleanor H. Greenwood Frances H. Hibbard Gertrude M. Hirst Helen S. Hoyt Kathleen Hurty Eleanor C. Hunsdon Isabella Jewell A. Mildred Kerner Libbie M. Lawrence Abby P. Leland E. M. Machines Alice March Mary O. Marshall R. P. Meade G. E. Moore Grace Owen Ethel M. Peyser M. M. Pinckney L. L. Powell Ella Reaney Virginia Ralph Leonora W. Scheib Caroline A. Seeley Augusta Stettler Florence M. Stapf Anna S. Tattershall Louise M. Tattershall Muriel Valentine J. Marie Young J. B. Wardlaw Frances Weemes Helen I. Williams [60 j College Settlement aaHOttatton !3avnatD Chapter ELSA G. HERZFELD CARA LESLIE GARDINER JEAN DISBROW Graduate Elector Undergraduate Elector Secretary 1 906 J. PADDOCK L. P. EASTMAN L. M. WARDELL 1 1 907 M. E. LORD j 1 908 1909 f M. O. MARSHALL 1 M. J. STRAUSS j J. GOLDBERG ( E. SEGUINE [6, ] £)fftccrg MARJORIE FERGUSON BROWN President SENTA HERRMANN Vice-President HELEN LOEB Secretary IRMA JELLENIK ... Treasurer EDITH SOMBORN Fifth Member of Executive Committee [62 ] 2U §5 octtte jfrancatsr MARIE-LOUISE FONTAINE President JOSEPHINE PADDOCK ice-President ADELAIDE HART Secretary ALMA ASH Treasurer pierina Mclaughlin Fifth Member of Executive Committee [63 Jttoms Club ELIZABETH IVERSON TOMS, ' 06 NANA MOORE, ' 08 MABEL PETERSON, ' 08 OLGA RILKE, ' 09 . President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer ELIZABETH EVANS MADELINE ROHR AMALIE ALTHAUS GERTRUDE CANNON AGNES ERNST MARJORIE EASTMAN ETHEL EVERETT ELIZABETH FOX NANA MOORE ADA MULLER LOTTIE MULLER RUTH CHILDS HILDA HEDLEY ELOISE HORAN ETHEL IVERNEY 1906 1907 LOUISE ODENCRANTZ 1908 IRMA SEELIGM AN ELIZABETH TOMS RITA FANNING MABEL HORAN KATHLEEN HURTY 1909 [64] MABEL PETERSON MAY QUINN ELIZABETH ROBINSON OLIVE ROE FLORENCE SAMMETT HELEN VEITH UNA LOGAN MYRA McLEAN ADELAIDE RICHARDSON OLGA RILKE Offers LOTTIE R. OESTERLEIN EDNA E. FRANK . AGNES MILLER ALMA ASH President Vice-President Secretary - Treasurer Fourth Member of Executive Committee Matilda Abraham Lotta B. Acker Alma Ash Mabel Boots Anna C. Brush Clementine Campbell Edith A. Dietz Florence E. Ernst Edna E. Frank Grace M. Farrelly Lillian Heim Dorothy Jacoby Jeannette Kaufmann Lottie R. Oesteilein Agnes Miller Anna E. Reiley Lucile Rosenberg Nina Schultz Mabel F. Steam Barbour Walker Mildred Woodhull [65] Officers ANNE CARROLL, 1907 . DAISY YALE, 1907 . LOUISE TATTERSHALL, MAUD WARREN, 1908 . 1905 Anna Reiley 1906 Marjorie Brown Alice Haskell Adelaide Hart Emma Lee Mildred Stanley Sn f aculatc Miss Hirst Miss Reed Miss Lawrence I 908 President V ice- President Secretary Treasurer i onorarp jftcmbcr£ Dean Gill Miss Hirst members 1907 Mabel Boote Anne Carroll Annie Goedkoop Lottie Belle Hardwick Ethel Rosemon Katharine Smith Daisy Vale Special tuticnt Bessie Brown Eugenia Lee Edith Thompson 1908 Helen Glen Maud Warren Anna Roth Annie Rothenberg Gladys Quinby 1909 Anna Holm Dean Smith Myra McLean Helen Scheuer AT HOME: Wednesdays from four to five o ' clock. [66] Committee tn Cijarcje ELIZABETH R. BRAUTIGAM, ' 06, Manager MARJORIE EASTMAN, ' 08 FREDA PECK, 08 DOROTHEA ELTZNER, 08 ' MARY REARDON, ' 07 MARGUERITE STRAUSS, ' 08 4Boo £ for £ alc Home made candy, note paper, pad paper, flags, banners, text- books (for sale and for rent), caps and gowns (for sale and for rent). i ourtf of £rcf)angc 9-10 Mon., Wed. I2 -3°- ' . wa y s ex | at ; i- „ n.,„ -Gri 1-2 Always ex. hat. 10- 11 1 ues., Inuis., bn. ■. 11- 12 Mon., Wed., Fri., Tues., Thurs. 2 3 Mon - rrl - L 67 ] Chapters KAPPA KAPPA GAMMA 1891 ALPHA OMICRON PI 1897 KAPPA ALPHA THETA 1898 GAMMA PHI BETA 1901 ALPHA PHI 1903 DELTA DELTA DELTA 1903 PI BETA PHI 1904 PHI BETA KAPPA [68] [69] j appa j appa (gamma jfraternttj) fotmUcU ©ctobcv, 1S70 IMl of Chapters Beta Alpha Beta Gamma Beta Delta Beta Epsilon Beta Zeta Beta Eta Beta Iota Beta Lambda Beta Mu Beta Nu . Beta Xi . Beta Omicron Beta Pi . Beta Sigma Beta Tau Gamma Rho Delta Epilson Eta . Theta Iota Kappa Lambda Mu . Xi . Pi . Sigma Upsilon Phi . Chi . Psi . Omega University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pa. Wooster University, Wooster, O. University of Michigan, Ann Arb.or, Mich. Barnard College, New York City. Iowa State University, Iowa City, la. Leland Stanford, Jr. , University, Palo Alto, Cal. Swarthmore College, Swarthmore, Pa. University of Illinois, Champaign, 111. Colorado State University, Boulder, Col. Ohio State University, Columbus, O. Texas State University Austin, Texas. Tulane University, New Orleans, La. University of Washington, Seattle, Washington. . Adelphi College, Brooklyn, N. Y. Syracuse University, Syracuse, N. Y. Allegheny College, Meadville, Pa. Indiana State University, Bloomington, Ind. Illinois Wesleyan University, Bloomington, 111. University of Wisconsin, Madison, Wis. Missouri State University, Columbia, Mo. De Pauw University, Greencastle, Ind. . Hillsdale College, Hillsdale, Mich. Buchtel College, Akron, O. Butler College, Irvington, Ind. Adrian College, Adrian, Mich. University of California, Berkeley, Cal. Nebraska State University, Lincoln, Neb. Northwestern University, Evanston, 111. Boston University, Boston, Mass. University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, Minn. . Cornell University, Ithaca, N. Y. . Kansas State University, Lawrence, Kan. [70] 35eta Cpstlon Chapter Of appa 2iappa @amma jftatermt? founUcU 3fanuarp, 1891 In Facilitate VIRGINIA CROCHERON GILDERSLEEVE ELIZABETH HALL (BI) MARY HARRIMAN EMILIE JOSEPHINE HUTCHINSON MARJORIE FERGUSON BROWN ALICE HASKELL MARGARET HART BAILEY JEAN DISBROW Graduate 1906 JOSEPHINE PADDOCK 1907 ELSIE CLEWS PARSONS LILY SYLVESTER MURRAY MARTHA GAUSE STAPLER MARGARET HOLMES STONE LUCIE MAYO-SMITH ANNA MAY NEWLAND JULIET STUART POINTS MARY BARBOUR WALKER CLAI RETTE PAPIN ARMSTRONG LAURA JULIA ARMSTRONG ELIZABETH FREEMAN FOX 1908 ELEANOR CARY HUNSDON MARGUERITE COOLIES NEWLAND KATHARINE BUCKINGHAM WOOLSEY [73] Slpija ©mtcron $t jfraternitp Boll of € )aptm Alpha . . . Barnard College, Columbia University, New York, City. Pi .... H. Sophie Newcomb Memorial College, Tulane University, New Orleans, La. Nu .... New York University, New York City. Omicron . . . University of Tennessee, Knoxville, Tenn. Kappa . . . Randolph-Macon Woman ' s College, Lynchburg, Va. Zeta . . . University of Nebraska, Lincoln, Neb. New York Alumnae . . . New York City. [74] aiplja Chapter Of aipija ©mtcron $t jfratermtp JFotmUeU 3fa ttarp, 1897 oBratmate JEAN HERRING LOOMIS JEANNETTE MAGDALEN WICK FANNIBELLE LELAND 1906 ELEANOR SANFORD HOLDEN ELIZABETH IVERSON TOMS 1907 KATHLEEN ELIZABETH HURTY JOSEPHINE SOUTHWORTH PRATT LUCETTA PITNEY JOHNSON ETHEL BELL SCHRAMM 1908 EDITH MAIE BURROWS JOSEPHINE ANNA PRAHL MARY MAXON ELIZABETH DEVEREUX ROBINSON MARGARET HALL YATES Special EUGENIA CONVERSE LEE EVELYN BLUNT MACDONALD [77] Happa 9lplm Ci)eta jfraternttp Iota .... Lambda Chi .... Alpha Beta Alpha Delta Alpha Epsilon . Alpha Zeta Sigma Alpha Beta .... Epsilon Eta .... Mu . Pi ... Alpha Gamma . Alpha Eta Delta Kappa Rho .... Tau .... Upsilon Psi Alpha Theta Phi Omega Gamma Alumnae Eta Alumn.-e Alpha Alumn Epsilon Alumna eta Alumna Mu Alumna Kappa Alumnae Lambda Alumn.e Beta Alumna Delta Alumnae Xi Alumn.e . Iota Alumn.t. JounKeli January, 1870 IMl of Chapters Cornell University, Ithaca, N. Y. University of Vermont, Burlington, Vt. Syracuse University, Syracuse, N. Y. Swarthmore College, Swarthmore, Pa. Woman ' s College of Baltimore, Baltimore, Md. Brown University, Providence, R. I. Barnard College, New York City. Toronto University, Toronto, Can. De Pauw University, Greencastle, Ind. Indiana State University, Bloomington, Ind. Wooster University, Wooster, O. University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Mich. Allegheny College, Meadville, Pa. Albion College Albion, Mich. Ohio State University, Columbus, O. Vanderbilt University, Nashville, Tenn. University of Illinois, Champaign, 111. University of Kansas, Lawrence, Kan. University of Nebraska, Lincoln, Neb. Northwestern University, Evanston, 111. University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, Minn. University of Wisconsin, Madison Wis. University of Texas, Austin, Texas. Stanford University, Stanford, Cal. University of California, Berkeley, Cal. New York City. Burlington, Vt. Greencastle, Ind. Columbus, O. Indianapolis, Ind. Cleveland, O. Pittsburg, Pa. Athens, O. Minneapolis, Minn. Chicago, 111. Kansas City, Mo. Los Angeles, Cal. [78] aiplja Seta Chapter of Biippa Slpija Cljcta jfraterntty founUcii fH vtb 1 $98 4B rabuate HELEN WILKING COOLEY AGNES LACY DURANT 1906 ELIZABETH ELLIOT BRADFORD ELIZABETH GRACE EVANS CAROLINE DUMONT HALL 1907 CORA ELIZABETH BENNETT LUCILE LOCKE MURIEL VALENTINE 1908 MARY OSBORNE MARSHALL RUTH BOUTON HOWE ROMOLA LYON special EVA ELLSWORTH JOHNSON [8. ] (gamma Pjt 33eta jftatmutp founUrt jraotormbcr, 1S74 HoU of Cl)aptcr0 Alpha .......... Syracuse University, Syracuse, N. Y. Beta .......... University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Mich. Gamma .......... University- of Wisconsin, Madison, Wis. Delta ........... Boston University, Boston, Mass. Epsilon ........... Evanston University, Evanston, 111. Zeta .......... Women ' s College of Baltimore, Baltimore, Md. Eta ..... ..... University of California, Berkeley, Cal. Theta .......... University of Denver, Denver, Colo. Iota ............ Barnard College, New York City Kappa ......... University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, Minn. Lambda ....... . University of Washington, Seattle, Wash. Mu .......... Leland Stanford Jr. University, Palo Alto, Cal. Huston Alumnae . . ' . . . . . . . Boston, Mass New York Alumnae ...... New York City, New York Milwaukee Alumnae ........ Milwaukee, Wis. San Francisco Alumnae ...... San Francisco, Cal. [ 8 j fota Chapter of (gamma Pjt 33eta jftatrrnttp founfccfc J-ioUrmbrr, 1901 FLORENCE EVELYN BEERS VIOLA LAURA KIMBALL Members 4 ratmate LAURA ELIZABETH MATTHEWS UNA A. WINTERBURN JEAN MAY BRUCE WILLA MAY FRICKE ETHEL MAY KNOX 1906 EMMA BOUQUET LEE HAZEL HUDNALL PLATE ANNE MUTCH RAE K I ) X A VA I MS I I A S ' l ITT ANNE CARROLL HELEN CARTER 1007 EMMA CORNELIA COLE ELVA LOIS PORTER iex-1907) 190S ELDA LILLIAN FINK HELEN YOUNG GRAY ELLEN K. O ' GORMAN LINDA BELLI ' . SAVITZ ELIZABETH CATHERYN ZANGLER [ 85 ] aipfja 5pjn jfraternttp Jounica ©rtaber, 1872 Boll of Cl)aptcrg Alpha ..... Syracuse University, Syracuse, New York Beta ...... Northwestern University, Evanston, 111. Gamma ..... De Pauw University, Greencastle, Indiana Delta ..... Cornell University, Ithaca, New York Epsilon ..... University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, Minnesota Zeta ...... Woman ' s College of Baltimore, Baltimore, Md. Eta ...... Boston University, Boston, Mass. Theta ..... University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Mich. Iota ...... University of Wisconsin, Madison, Wis. Kappa ..... Leland Stanford, Jr., University, Palo Alto, Cal. Lambda ..... University of California, Berkeley, Cal. Mu ...... Barnard College, New York, N ew York Chicago Alumn e . Central New York Alumn.k Boston Alumn,e . Minnesota Alumn. . New York City Alumn.e Southern Alumn E Western New York Alumn K Chicago, 111. Syracuse, N. Y. Boston, Mass. Minneapolis, Minn. New York, N. Y. Baltimore, Md. Buffalo, N. V. [86] jttu Cfjapter of aipfta jfratrrmtp JFountirtj ittap 9, 1903 In Facilitate ETHEL DODGE WILCOX 43ratmate PAMELA WARREN LYALL ISA BELLE MOTT HILDA LOUISE STABER ETHEL DODGE WILCOX 1906 ELISABETH RANDALL BRAUTIGAM 1907 EVANGELINE COLE AGNES ELIZABETH ERNST HELEN ABBIE TRACY DAISY IRENE YALE 1908 MARJORIE McCLINTOCK EASTMAN FREDA PECK [ 8 9 1 Belta Belta Belta jfraternitj? fotmtocU IS8S Holl of Cljaptcrg Alpha ..... Boston University, Boston, Mass. Beta ...... St. Lawrence University, Canton, N. Y. Eta ...... University of Vermont, Burlington, Vt. Xi ..... Woman ' s College, Baltimore, Md. Omicron ..... Syracuse University, Syracuse, N. Y. Rho ...... Barnard College, New York, N. Y. Sigma ...... Wesleyan University, Middletown, Conn. Tau ...... Bucknell University, Lewisburg, Pa. Psi ...... University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pa. Alpha Xi . . . . Randolph-Macon Gamma ..... Adrian College, Adrian, Mich. Epsilon ..... Knox College, Galesburg, 111. Zeta ...... University of Cincinnati, Cincinnati, O. Mu ...... University of Wisconsin, Madison, Wis. Nu ...... Ohio State University, Columbus, Ohio. Upsilon ..... Northwestern University, Evanston, 111. Chi ...... University of Mississippi, University, Miss. Delta. ..... Simpson College, Indianola, Iowa. Theta. ..... University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, Minn. Kappa. ..... University of Nebraska, Lincoln, Neb. Lambda ..... Baker University, Baldwin, Kan. Pi ..... University of California, Berkeley, Cal. Phi ...... University of Iowa, Iowa City, Iowa. Alpha Alliance Beta Alliance Gamma Alliance . Delta Alliance . Epsilon Alliance . Beta Alliance Eta Alliance Theta Alliance Omicron Alliance Sigma Alliance Rho Alliance Boston, Mass. Canton, New York. Adrian, Mich. Indianola, Iowa. Galesburg, 111. Cincinnati, Ohio. Burlington, Vermont Minneapolis, Minn. Syracuse, New York. Middletown, Conn. New York, N. V. [9o] C oFrmajt r 19 05 or lim TM Octxa Dez-th FUktchi JfUIOT T Pun, . 3kljo Cijajptcr Of Belta Bclta Belta jfraternttj) JotmfleU ' June 6, 1903 IKoll of jtt ember CATHERINE MARY POS T 1900 ELIZABETH SMITH POST 1907 SARAH KEENEY IDA CHARLOTTE RAY CARA LESLIE GARDINER KATHERINE LOUISE RAPP DOROTHY TRUE ELIZABETH ALDEN SEABURY TREDWELL 1908 ETHEL MAY CLARY FLORENCE JOSEPHINE MASTIN [93] $t 33eta Pjt jfraternttp JFounUclj 3pvtl, 1S67 Vermont Alpha Vermont Beta . Massachusetts Alpha New York Alpha New York Beta Pennsylvania Alpha Pennsylvania Beta . Pennslyvania Gamma Columbia Alpha Maryland Alpha Ohio Alpha Ohio Beta . Illinois Beta Illinois Delta Illinois Epsilon Illinois Zeta Indiana Alpha Indiana Beta Indiana Gamma Michigan Alpha Michigan Beta . Iowa Alpha Iowa Beta Iowa Zeta . Wisconsin Alpha Missouri Alpha Louisiana Alpha Kansas Alpha . Nebraska .Beta Texas Alpha Colorado Alpha Colorado Beta California Alpha California Beta Boll of Chapters Midcllebury College, Middlebury, Vt. University of Vermont, Burlington, Vt. Boston University, Boston, Mass. Syracuse University, Syracuse, N. Y. Barnard College, New York City. Swarthmore College, Swarthmore, Pa. Bucknell University, Lewisburg, Pa. Dickinson College, Carlisle, Pa. George Washington University, Washington, D. Woman ' s College of Baltimore, Baltimore, Md. Ohio University, Athens, Ohio. Ohio State University, Columbus, Ohio. Lombard College, Galesburg, 111. Knox College, Galesburg, 111. Northwestern University, Evanston, 111. University of Illinois, Champaign, 111. Eranklin College, Franklin, Ind. Indiana University, Bloomington, Ind. University of Indianapolis, Indianapolis, Ind. Hillsdale College, Hillsdale, Mich. University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Mich. Iowa Wesleyan University, Mt. Pleasant, Iowa. Simpson College, Indianola, Iowa. Iowa State University, Iowa City, Iowa. University of Wisconsin, Madison, Wis. University of Missouri, Columbia, Mo. Newcomb College, New Orleans, La. Kansas University, Lawrence, Kansas. University of Nebraska, Lincoln, Neb. University of Texas, Austin, Texas. University of Colorado, Boulder, Colo. Denver University, Denver, Colo. Leland Stanford University, Stanford, Cal. University of California, Berkeley, Cal. [94] Dreka.T ' hiUt $eto fork 3Seta Chapter Of $t Beta Pjt jFraternitj) JFotmtielj ittap, 1904 Graduate ABBY PORTER LELAND JULIA HEULET FREED MARY WASHBURN MURTHA ELLA JANE REANEY 1900 FLORENCE MAY STAPF BESSIE LENA LEWIS ANNABEL LEE VIRGINIA RALPH 1907 IRENE BENNETT ADAMS AMALIE LOUISE ALTHAUS MARY CATHERINE RUTH REARDON SOPHIE PARSONS WOODMAN BESSIE ANDREWS BEERS 1908 MAUD IRENE KLEIN [97] jUrto gork Belta (Coiumbta {Hntoersttp) Chapter of Pjt 3Seta liappa jfraternttp 25arnarD College Section € fficerjeS VIRGINIA CROCHERON GILDERSLEEVE . . . . ' President LAURA DRAKE GILL Vice-President AMY LOVE MAN Secretary GERTRUDE WOLFF OPPENHEIMER Treasurer €W$ of 1905 MARGARET CECILIA BYRNE HELEN WILKING COOLEY EMILIE JOSEPHINE HUTCHINSON CARRIE KAPLAN EDWINA LEAH LEVY MARY LOCK LILY SYLVESTER MURRAY FRANCES HOPE PURDON €la££ of 1906 ALICE DOROTHY BREWSTER ALICE HASKELL [ 98 ] PUBli CATION [99 ] [ 100 ] 3Sarnarti Bulletin The, •BuULlEliN GOES TO PRESS WPAfs Published weekly throughout the College Tear MARJORIE FERGUSON BROWN Managing € itor£ EDITH SOMBORN, 1906 CAROLINE D. HALL, 1906 SOPHIE P. WOODMAN, 1907 AGNES MILLER, 1908 E. A. S. TREDWELL, 1907, Business Manager a sociate £Ditor0 HELEN COOLEY, Alumna Member VIRGINIA T. BOYD, 1906 MARGARET H. BAILEY, 1907 MARY C. R. REARDON, 1907 CLAIRETTE ARMSTRONG, 1908 ELEANOR C. HUNSDON, 1908 HELEN LOEB, 1908 [ IOI ] [ ,oz ] ALICE DOROTHY BREWSTER, 1906 Editor-in-Chief FRANCES HOPE PURDON, 1905 Graduate Editor ALICEHASKELL,i906 Undergraduate Editor EDITH SOMBORN, 1906 Business Manager HELEN CARTER, 1907 ....... Assistant Business Manager [ ' 03 1 ' Act well your part, there all the honor lies! ' [ IO + ] [ ' OS ] Ci)e aSuttev0tes f iftf) Annual Undergraduate plan May 5 and 6, 1905 ACT I Room in Hiram Greene s Cottage at St. Augustine, Florida ACT II Hall in the Cottage ACT III Mr. Greene s Cottage at Lenox, Mass. Hiram Greene Barrington Greene Frederick Ossian Andrew Strong Nathaniel Belser . Mr. Coddle Mrs. Ossian Mrs. Stuart-Dodge Suzanne Greene Miriam Stuart-Dodge Casst of Characters R. D. Fairchild, 1906 E. A. Dietz, 1905 A. F. Fischer, 1905 E. Markley, 1907 . A. A. Talbot, 1905 . A. Hart, 1906 Jean Disbrow, 1907 . Alice V. W. Smith, 1905 Marguerite Israel, 1907 . Jessie Cooke, 1907 [ -o7 ] Given Friday, April 28, 1905 By the € a$$ of 1908 In BRINCKERHOFF THEATRE r. Cover Design 2. Frontispiece, Alma Mater 3. Grandmother ' s Gown 4. Money Musk . 5. Six Cups of Chocolate 6. Advertising Section Fairy Soap . Baker ' s Chocolate Mellin ' s Food Lowney ' s Chocolates . Cream of Wheat . Danderine . Horlick ' s Malted Milk Pearline Eibby ' s Canned Goods . Union Pacific Railway Be Tall . Esther Shaw, Marion Wilson Eleanor Hunsdon . Marguerite Strauss, Marguerite Newland Laura Armstrong I Alma Ash, Gertrude Bussey, Nana Moore, I Margaret Yates, Irma Alexander, Laura Armstrong . under direction of Helen Loeb . Ellen O ' Gorman, Lottie Muller Mary Maxon Dorothea Eltzner, Marie Rathgen, Jeannette Kaufmann, Alice Herschfeld, Blanche Markley Freda Peck Marjorie Eastman Clara Eaton . Florence Wolff . Alma de Vries . Marion Golde . Edith Burrows Eva Johnson, Clairette Armstrong [ ' °8] Clje Belle ' s Stratagem A Comedy by MRS. HANNAH COWLEY Revised By MR. EUGENE B. SANGER Presented by Cfje Associate gUumnae of 23arnaro College $crgong of tl)t $la? doricoukt Hardy Villers . Saville . courtell Flutter . Folly Doricourt ' s Footman- Hardy ' s Servant . Letitia Hardy Mrs. Rackett Miss Ogle R. Lyon 1904 E. Allen 1902 . A. V. W. Smith 1905 W. K. Frothingham 1904 . C. Spencer 1902 . E. M. Pool 1903 H. W. Cooley 1905 A. A. Talbot 1905 A. A. Talbot 1905 . Elsie L. Totten 1902 Florence L. Beeckman 1904 Agnes L. Dickson 1999 Maskers, Dancers, etc. ACT I Scene I. At Doricourt ' s. Scene II. Apartment in Mr. Hardy ' s House. ACT II The Masquerade ACT III Scene I. A Room in Mr. Hardy ' s House Scene II. Doricourt ' s Lodgings. Scene III. Apartment at Hardy ' s. [ ' °9 ] [ no] IMjrieme Representation annuelle Donnee par les £ mtH f ranraiscs de COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY et BARNARD COLLEGE au ' Theatre de Barnard College 31 c Crain $o. 12 Scinette par Fernand Bessier PERSONNAGES Un Monsieur Une Dame . Le seine se passe dans la salle tl ' attenle d , une gare. INTERMEDES MUSICAUX . M. John H. Marshling Mile. Marie-Louise Fontaine %t jWcticcin lalgrc %ui Comidie en trots aetes par A oliere, representee pour la premiere fois a Paris, sur la seine du Palais Royal, vendredi le 6 aoilt 1666. PERSONNAGES Duns I ' order de leur entree en scene Sganarelle, mari de Martine Marti: se, femme de Sganarelle M. Robert, voisin de Sganarelle . Lucas, mari de Jacqueline Valere, domestique de Geronte Geronte, pkre de Lucinde Jacqueline, nourrice chez Geronte et femme de Lucas Lucinde, fille de Geronte [ ] M. Frederico Lage Mile. Marie- Louise Fontaine M. Charles Collins M. Louis J. Mercier M. Oscar Houston M. Charles Collins Mile. Carita Spencer Mile. Pierina McLaughlin A MUSICAL COMEDY BY BLANCHE MARKS AND EDITH SOMBORN Given i y Cfjc €ia££ of 1906 to tlic €la££ of 1909 Friday, November j, 1905 2E ramatt0 persons A. Hart . R. Fairchild M. F. Brown . E. I. Toms . Rosa Fried Anna Rae Fdith Somborn King Collegium of Barnardesia ..... Officio, Secretary and Grand Filer of Applications to the King Prince Senicus, 1906, adopted son of King Lord Sophero, 1908, his friend ..... Princess Freshnelda, 1909, daughter of King Collegium Fairy Godmother, 1907 . . Suzann a Jane, attendant of Princess .... ( Misses Bell, Chipperfield, Condit, Darrin, Ernst, r aculty Chorus . . . . u , ' 1 1 u ' ' ' Haskell, Hermann, Holder), Nevvland, laylor Freshman Chorus . . . Misses Frank, Knox, Plate, Rae, Schlageter, Seeligman Bogies ......... Misses Hermann, Mayo-Smith, Post Ballet Misses Erstein, Frankfield, Holden, Mayo-Smith, Nevvland, Post, Taylor, Wells B-A-R-N-A-R-D Chorus Misses Bell, Chipperfield, Darrin, Haskell, Hermann, Ernst, Plate Senior Chorus . . Misses Chipperfield, Darrin, Frankfield, Haskell, Erstein, Taylor [ 3 ] [ 4] ileteatCato Given by the € a$$ of 1908 November lyth and iSth, igo Cagst Lord Duberly, born Daniel Dick Dowlas Dr. Pangloss, LL.D. and A.S Mr. Stedfast Henry Moreland Zekiel Homespun Kenrick Waiter at Inn John Lady Duberly Caroline Dormer Cicely Homespun Pages Dowlas S. Mar] one Eastman Marguerite Newland Florence Wolff Elsie Ouinby Helen Loeb Irma Alexander Marion C rowel 1 Ada Muller Dorothea Eltzner Elizabeth Robinson Marguerite Strauss . Alma Ash Gertrude Wells, Edith Burrows [ 5] 3ott m tianfe, tier Ctscl) tst getiecfet Presented 6y the 2Dcut£d)cr Jirci of 23arnartJ College November 10, 1905 Cast Leonhard Hammer Franz . Hermine Adelhetd gustchen Mathilde Abraham, 1909 Edna Tompkins, 1909 Florence Wolff, 1909 . Rita Hochheimer, 1909 Senta Herrman, 1906 Berenice Leerburger, 1909 L 6 ] 3fumor Ijoto Given by the CLASS OF 1906 March 7, 1905 THE KLEPTOMANIAC A COMEDY IN ONE ACT By MARGARET CAMERON Cast of Characters Mrs. John Burton, Peggy ..... Mrs. Valerie Chase Armsbv, a Widow Mrs. Preston Ashley, Bertha .... Miss Freda Dixon . ... Miss Evelyn Evans, a Journalist ..... Mrs. Charles Dover, Mabel, a Young Bride . Katie, Mrs. Burton ' s Maid ...... Scene: Mrs. Burton ' s Boudoir Hazel Plate Elizabeth Toms Marie-Louise Fontaine . Adelaide Hart Caroline Hall . Fdith Somborn Virginia Taylor CHERRY BLOSSOMS By VAN TASSEL SUTPHEN MARA — Blanche F Marks PETTICOAT PERFIDY A COMMEDIETTA By SIR CHARLES TO UNG, Bart. Mrs. Montrevour ......... Marjorie F. Brown Mrs. Norwood Jones ......... Lucie Mayo Smith Juliette, Lady ' s Maid ........ Blanche F. Marks Scene : Mrs. Montrevour ' s Flat in Albemarle Street, London. [ 7] Bo junior g J)oto Given by the CLASS OF 1907 December 16, 1905 part I dftrant) jmmjestrel l)otu Interlocutor : Miss Irene Constance Kohn ( Miss Muriel Valentine , ■S at a T? I am bo I Miss Agnes Iirnst Miss Eva Jacobs Miss Leslie Gardiner ittonungsttJC Origins Ouartrttr Miss Fanny McLane Miss Helen Shoninger Miss Alma Hays Miss Marguerite Israel Miss Blanche Klein Miss Lucille Rosenberg Miss Eva Jacobs 1007 jfltingtrcljtf Misses Anthony, Auerbach, Bernkopf, Bennett, Cole, Disbrow, Gordon, Goodhart, Hilborn, Hays, Israel, Johnson, Jellenik, Klein, Lord, McEwan, McLane, Odenkrantz, Perry, Rapp, Rosenberg, Rosemon, Shoninger, True, Turnbull, Tracy, Wilkes, Woodman, Yale. [ 8 ] introductory 0tocrturc By the famous and original IOOJ Minstrels J OU£S The Prettiest Girl in Borneo (a nautical lay) .... Miss Helen Perry Nobody (a dark-faced lament) ....... Miss Eva Jacobs Luca Linda Lady (a syncopated Serenade) .... Miss Jennie Hilborn Assisted fry the Morningside Heights Quartette Medley Finale ........ By the Assembled Company [ 9] p art 2 €Hto r. Monologue .......... Miss Irma Jellenik 2. (a) Who ' ll Buy My Dolly? (b) Jogrefree ......... By The Infant Prodigies Florence Furth, Alma Hays, Lucille Rosenburg, Kathleen Hurty, Margaret Bailey, Molly Loewenthal, Blanch Klein 3. Recitation .......... Helen Cashing Perry [ 120 J 4. Senorita Carmencita Spanish Girls . Mandolin .... 5. Madame Zenobia Ventrigabo Marguerite Israel Helen Goodhart, Lillian Hellin, Ethel Rosemon, Irma Jellenik, Helen Shoninger Fanny McLane The most famous female ventriloquist, who has appeared with overwhelming success before all the crowned heads of Europe (including the Prince of Pilsen and the Czar of Russia) Grace Turnbull [ ' ] 6. Sextette ........... Irene Constance Kohn Assisted by Cora Bennett, Helen Perry, Lottie Oesterlein, Ethel Rosemon, Jennie Hilborn. 7. Looking for Henry Brown ....... Miss Jacobs [ 122 ] 4i jfemalta A Fitful Fantasy in Three Fits By Lottie Oesterlein, ' 07 Cft t {in order of entrance} Patience (a grind) Belle (a society girl) . Dolly (a feminine girl) Justina (the class politician) Poet a (a would-be poet) Herculena (an athletic girl) Queen of Femalia . Natives of Femalia . Students of Barnard Trained- Nurse . Sophie Woodman, Lucille Helen Tracy, Daisy Yale, Elizabeth Rusk Marguerite Israel Ethel Rosemon Emily McEwan Lottie Oesterlein . Agnes Ernst Grace Turnbull Rosenberg, Molly Loewenthal, Emma C. Cole. The Same . Beatrice Bernkopf The wise man hath his follies no less than the fool. I 4 ] [ 5 ] gtconti annual jftelti  ap MILBANK QUADRANGLE May i, 1905 BASE BALL THROW Agnes Ernst ' 07 1st Place Elizabeth Bradford ' 06 Eleanor Hunsdon ' 08 Cora Bennett ' 07 ) Emily McEwan ' 07 ) 2nd Place HIGH JUMP 1st Place 2nd Place BASKET BALL THROW Anne Fisher ' 05 1st Place Elsie Schachtel ' 07 ) , „, tit m 1 o I 2 l d Place Mary Maxon 08 STANDING BROAD JUMP Florence Mastin ' 08 1st Place Helen Palliser ' 05 2nd Place Cooley-Talbot Cohen-Handy RELAY RACE 1905 Team 1st Place [ 7] 175 ft. 3 in. 169 ft. 3 in. 4 ft. 1 in. 4 ft. 4 out of 10. 2 OUt of IO. 6 ft. 4 8 in. 6 ft. 4}i in. Cfje (greefe (games March 2g, 1905 CLASS OF 1907 vs. CLASS OF 1908 Laurel W reath won by Class of 1907 1. Invocation to the gods 2. Drawing of lots 3. Epic poetry 4. Running broad jump 5. Wrestling 6. Running high jump 7. Quoits 8. Archery 9. Tug of war Tie program Juliet Stuart Points, 1907 Omens in favor of 1908 ( 1st Gertrude Cannon, 1907 j 2nd Agnes Miller, 1908 ( 1st Emily L. MacEwan, 1907 2nd Nana Moore, 1908 Agnes Ernst, 1907 Juliet Points, 1907 1st Eleanor Hunsdon, 1908 j 2nd Cora Bennett, 1907 1st Eva Johnson, 1908 2nd Fannie McLane, 1907 1st Anne Carroll, 1907 2nd Eva Johnson, 1908 Class of 1907 vs. Class of 1908 Won by Class of ICjoy Total : 37 to 19 in favor of 1907 10. Nectar and Ambrosia served to victors and vanquished [ I2 9 ] Cennte Cournament Fall, i go 5 College Champion CLAIRETTE PAPIN ARMSTRONG Class Champions ALICE HASKELL, 1906 KATHERINE LOUISE RAPP, 1907 CLAIRETTE PAPIN ARMSTRONG 190? JULIA DE FOREST TIFFANY, 1909 tftnal$ of t c fall Cennte Cournament ALICE HASKELL, 1906 ) J. CLAIRETTE ARMSTRONG, 1908 CLAIRETTE ARMSTRONG, 1908 j 9 7 i 6-0 LOUISE RAPP, 1907 JULIA TIFFANY 1909 I JULIA TIFFANY, 1909 j 6-3 ; 6-4 [ 3° ] CLAIRETTE ARMSTRONG, i 9 o£ 3-6; 6-1; 7-5 % nterclass Brimte 1906 1907 Under the auspices of the BARNARD UNION PROFESSOR LORD PROFESSOR BREWSTER CHARLOTTE MORGAN ' 04 Ouc£tton R ESOLI ' ED : That Gladstone ' s Policy in the Transvaal in 1881 was ' Justifiable. AFFIRMATIVE 1st JULIET STUART POINTS, 1907 2nd AGNES ELIZABETH ERNST, 1907 Speakers NEGA TIVE 1st ALICE HASKELL, 1906 2nd LUCIE MAYO SMITH, 1906 AFFIRMATIVE: JULIET STUART POINTS, 1907 NEGATIVE: ALICE HASKELL, 1906 Periston in jfauor of ttjr ffirmattUf [ «3 ] Junior 3SalI Given by the CLASS OF 1907 February 21, igo6 Committee Chairman CORA ELIZABETH BENNETT AMALIE LOUISE ALTHAUS HELEN GOODHART ANNA GOODKOEP SARAH KEENEY ETHEL BELL SCHRAMM MARY BARBOUR WALKER Ex-officio JEAN DISBROW GRACE CLAPPERTONTURNBULL [ «3 ] opljomore Bance Given by the CLASS OF 1908 December 22, f ?Oj Committee Chairman MARGARET HALL YATES LAURA J. ARMSTRONG NANA LOUISE MOORE ELLEN Q ' GORMAN ELIZABETH ZANGLER MARY O. MARSHALL, Ex -officio IRMA ALEXANDER, Ex-officio [ 34] eastern tuticnt Conference held under the auspices of YOUNG WOMEN ' S CHRISTIAN ASSOCIATION at Silver Bay, Lake George June 2 j -July j, 1905 Committee SOPHIE P. WOODMAN, ' 07, Chairman MARY W. MURTHA, ' 06 JOSEPHINE PADDOCK, ' 06 ELIZABETH S. POST, ' 06 FLORENCE J. MASTIN, ' 08 1903 Jean W. Miller 1905 Sally Fletcher Laura H. Parker Lydia Spark man 1906 Faith D. Chipperfield Hazel H. Plate Eleanor S. Holden Mary W. Murtha Elizabeth S. Post Catherine M. Post Edna W. Stitt 2DcIcgAtc$t Leader: Eleanor Sanford Holden 1907 Irene B. Adams PImma C. Cole Anne Carroll Margaret H. Bailey Grace C. Turnbull Sophie P. Woodman Emma Lay 1908 Agnes Miller Laura J. Armstrong Clairette P. Armstrong May Quinn [US] Class Bap ©jrerctses CLASS OF 1905 Columbia G y m n as ium Friday, June 9, 1905 1 Class Son 2 Salutatory 3 Roll Call 4 History of the Class 5 Statistics 6 Presentation of Gifts Class of 1905 Helen Wilking Cooley Sallie Faulkner Fletcher Cecil Inslee Dorrian Georgina Grace Bennett Frances Hope Purdon 7 Class Gift presented to College Ruth Angeline Reeder 8 Announcement of elections to 4 BK 9 Valedictory Emilie Josephine Hutchinson 10 College Song Class of 1905 11 Tree Dedication on Milbank Quadrangle [ ' 36] Cijc opljomortati 1907 dpiC (Awarded the laurel wreath at the Greek Games, 1905.) BOOK I Oh heavenly goddess, from thy shrine look down And breathe celestial fire in my dull soul ! That I may tell with fitting grace a song Of many a noble deed, to fame unknown ; Of virtue, brightest in adversity, And perils dire that naught could e ' er surpass Except the courage high that vanquished them : Till Hercules himself shall blush for shame And own his labors scarce deserve their fame ; And brave Aeneas deem his famous sail, With all its woes, the merest pleasure cruise; While bright Ulysses, from th ' Elysian fields, Shall stretch the eager hand of friendship down To welcome those whose deeds have matched his own ! The sun shone bright, and cloudless was the sky, When from the lofty arch and frowning gate Of Barnard Castle passed a stately train. No mail-clad knight, with gaily-waving plume, There poised his lance or reined his prancing steed ; [ ' 37] No burnished helm, or jewel-hiked sword Flashed back the sunlight in a thousand rays. Streamed o ' er a line of gentle maids, all clad In gowns of sober hue, and soft hair crowned With caps as stiff as any helm of steel, That bore a silken tassel for a plume. And on those banners, wrought in white and red, Four mystic letters tell a meaning tale : Unum — the best, most perfect, one, alone; Novem — the number of Apollo ' s choir; Nihil — for nothing ever daunts the brave; Septem — perfection, meets the first again, And ends the motto of this brilliant train. Thus to the Hudson ' s sloping banks they pass, And launch their fragile barks upon its wave, And floating toward the sea, glide on, elate, To brave the wiles of Fortune and of Fate. BOOK II 1 Their little fleet had scarcely gained the sea When clouds o ' ershadowed all the smiling sky ; Rain fell in torrents, waves dashed mountain high, And billows lashed the unoffending stars. Then from the deep an awful voice was heard, And through the gloom there loomed a mighty ship, Whose decks were crowded with a noble throng, The famous men of ev ' ry age and clime. There swart Egyptians, Jews, and Saracens, Arabs, and Turks, and men of Babylon, The sons of Hellas and of fallen Troy, And Rome, the mighty mistress of the earth, Stood side by side with war-worn Saxon chiefs, And knights in all the pride of chivalry, And bearded Norsemen, children of the sea. Say, who am I? calledone,and laughed aloud; Now tell our names, and all our mighty deeds, Ye daring maids, that brave this stormy sea ! Our lives have made the historv of man : Think you our deeds may lightly be forgot ? And have we wrought for this, — that foolish maids Should write the annals of our stirring day In one small book, and name it — History A? Then many a maid grew pale, and trembled sore ; But one, more bold, stood out before the rest, And thus addressed the angry sage, and said : Fair sirs, we thirst to know your glorious deeds, And prithee who shall tell them half so well As they who did them first ? Your ship is large, Now let us stand, I pray, upon her deck, That we may know such famous company, And learn from each what he himself hath wrought. Nay, come, fair maid, with all your sister train, And let our tales reward your courtesy ; The storm hath ceased, Neptune hath calmed the sea, Smoothed ev ' ry ripple out with zealous care, Swept all the clouds away, and cleared the air. History A. [ 138] BOOK Thus gliding smoothly o ' er the sunlit sea, They came at last to where a wooded shore Raised its cool groves above the sparkling waves. And here the stranger ship, with kind farewell Departing, left them on the pebbly strand. Before them stretched a forest, dark a nd deep, Where aisles of lofty trees led dimly on, And voices seemed to whisper in their leaves. Yet with brave hearts they entered, one and all, And wandered on, and wandered far, nor came To any end. At last, bewildered quite, They met a woman on whose open brow Stern wisdom sat enthroned ; she, chiding some ' Clieniistrv I. BOOK But now alas ! before those daring maids Arose the greatest peril of their way. A mountain loomed before them, vast and high, Whose lofty peaks seem to shut out the sky ! Its sides were steep and rugged, boulder-strewn ; One steep and narrow path led up the slope, Where, as they toiled, new dangers rose before. A mighty lord ruled o ' er this mountain vast, The great Sir Marmaduke, whose towering form And piercing gaze belied the gracious smile With which he welcomed to his stately halls Those weary maids. Two sisters dwelt with him : And one was gentle, and unapt to rule, Yet well advised to check poetic flights, And teach the better rule of common sense, — A rule Sir Marmaduke right well approved ; 1 English B. i III 1 For aimless wandering, led them swiftly on Through all the mazes of that trackless wild. Each for herself must toil, o ' er rocky ground, Build her own bridge to span each rushing stream, And meet alone the dangers of the way. And thus they learned to know the mystery Of all the elements of earth and air ; All their hard names, as calcium carbonate, Potassium chloride, or permanganate, Acetic acid, or lead acetate. And thus, the stony path of learning trod, Those maids, a wiser and a wearier train, From out of the woods at last emerged again. IV 1 The other, though of queenlike dignity, And versed in all the tricks of argument, Yet with her mirthful glance and ready wit, Lessened the tedium of each dry discourse. Sir Marmaduke did not approve you know, Of ladies errant, and that sort of thing. He begged the girls to rest with him awhile, And, to amuse them (and to improve their minds), He set them tasks to do -, long themes to write Unruly arguments to tame ; nor stayed he here, But set them poring over ponderous tomes, Until their heads grew weary with the weight Of facts they held. Yet he, with gracious smile, Extolled the rules of English B ( for this they call His castle) : as a doctor, kind but firm, Will gently press a bitter dose upon 39] His shrinking patient, with ' Tis for thy good, Reluctant one ; or even coat it o ' er With sugar. Thus Sir Marmaduke with zeal, Ruled his small realm, he and the sisters twain. There in his castle on the craggy hill He keeps those luckless maids. Beyond, they see A fair and smiling plain stretch far away, And half despair of ever ever reaching it. The way, they know, to peace and happiness And wisdom, lies before their weary feet, — ' Tis paved with sheets of paper ruled in red ; They tread it still, with many signs of grief, The goal — but not the pathway there — a Brief! Reasonable The sailorman sees one great sea. But not so I ; For C ' s galore always see, — I wonder why ! [ 1 4° ] debet i Oh, we ' re simple Barnard maidens, But we ' ve noticed frequently That a certain word is used by folks Of high and low degree. — Oh, from Sophocles to Sandow, From T. Roosevelt down to Shaw, We say, They ' re all so clever ! And it ' s needless to say more. Chorus : Everybody ' s clever as can be Don ' t you know — They ' re a bright and sparkling lot You must agree, don ' t you see? If you want to seem intelligent And complimentary, too, Why you say a thing is clever, And your words you never rue. Refrain : Oh, from N. Murray Butler down to G. Bernard Shaw, Everybody ' s clever as can be ! II When a thief breaks in a house at night, And steals the silverware, We say, He is a clever thief! (As though cleverness were rare ! ) When a girl becomes engaged To a youth who has no brains, She says, He is the cleverest thing That all this world contains ! Refrain : Oh, from A. J. Raffles down to James Hazen Hyde, Everybody ' s clever as can be ! Ill You have noticed certain people Make remarks both weird and queer. — They are trying to be clever — So we must not be severe. When we read a very foolish book That ' s quite devoid of sense, As long as it ' s thought clever, Why we say, It is immense ! Refrain : Oh, from Marie Corelli down to Mrs. Humphrey Ward, Everybody ' s clever as can be. [ ' 4 ' 1 3in lighter min Directions for Obtaining a Sweet and Beautiful Voice Stand up erect before your mirror and be- gin to draw in your breath. Continue to do so until you are blue in the face — not a blotched, but a distinct and even blue. At this point, ring for an ambulance. If you ever recover you will find that your voice has a very pleasing quality. The time I ' ve lost in ruing My watching and pursuing The smile that flits O ' er J-hns-n ' s lips Has been my mind ' s undoing. Though Seager oft hath sought me, I scorned the lore he brought me ; My only books were J-hns-n ' s looks And nothing ' s all they ' ve taught me. There was a girl followed rules word for word ; In elocution she appeared quite absurd. She held in her breath Till she strangled to death, Now her voice by the angels is heard ! When we say a person has common sense, we endow him with the rarest quality in the world. A Wail from the Hearts of the People A TRAGEDY IN ONE ACT N.B. Slang is often the most effective way of expressing emotion. — The Great Professor. I Just think what happened to our class In Economics A On Dr. M - -r- ' s day who appeared But Dr. J-hn ' s-n ! say — Wouldn ' t that jar you? Wouldn ' t that make you mad ? II He said he ' d borrowed this one day From kind ( ? ) Professor M— r- To give an unexpected quiz Which gave us marks so poor. Wouldn ' t that jar you? Wouldn ' t that make you mad? Ill O, Dr. J-hns-n, shame on you ! You tried to scare us, did ' nt you ? You tried to scare us through and through — O, Dr. J-hns-n ! Shame on you ! Does this jar you? Does this make you mad? Indeed ? When D ' s you get, just by the stack, Do you know where you must go ? You mark your D ' s in a neat row, And see the Dean — alack! Said a friend to our friend A. J. Tassin : By the way, how the time are you passin ' ? To which Algy replied In a sweet-toned aside : Oh at Barnard on voice culture I ' m gassin ' ! I ' 42 ] a pige from tl)c iiaortarboart) ttmcr Oh, children, see this Funny Picture ! Here is a Man and three funny looking Ladies. Are they crazy ? Are they going to explode ? No, dear Child, they are not going to do any of these things. Remember that this is not a Lunatic Asylum. This is the Barnard Elocution Class in Action. What is the Barnard Elocution Class ? It is a place where educated young Ladies learn to hold their breath without choking and how to make a noise like a Dying Duck and other useful Things. They also learn how to put their hands on their Floating Ribs. Did you ever know that you had a Rib just like Ivory Soap ? The educated young ladies are making queer Faces. But what matters Beauty when one has an Elocuted Voice ? Then is not the Instructor a nice Gentleman ? See how eager he looks and how hard he is working. Some day, Children, if you are good, you can take Elocution yourselves, and see all these interesting Things. [ ' 44 ] another p MMNM envs iivcorpGre-siTio Chiclets Cho cola te s Bo ftboT | Cpeci a1 rate 6 % societies. What do you see in this Picture, children ? There is a Desk and some Good Things to Eat. If you go to Barnard College when you grow up, and belong to the Barnard Union, you can have all these Nice Things to Eat. Pretty soon a great many hungry Girls will come into this Room, and then a Lady with a funny Cap on will sit down at the Desk. That will be a Barnard Union Meeting. After the Ladies have quarreled a While they will open the Zuzus and the Ice Cream. Won ' t you enjoy being Grown- up and Intellectual, Children ? [ 145 ] last mrro The old grad. returned in spirit one night to haunt the halls of Barnard. She was sur- prised to see the building adorned with a mingled drapery of mourning and gay bunting. Over the door was a great inscription : Annual Unveiling of Popular Delusions. Entering, she saw arranged in a row on a narrow elevated shelf what seemed to be large frames over the face of each of which hung a pictured veil. On a tripod before them was a glass urn filled with billets of a lead-blue color. On the right side of the urn sat a scholastic female figure with a gorgeous doctor ' s hood of yellow and white, On the left, perched on a high stool, was a little girl of six years in aca- demic robe with a green band drawn across her innocent eyes. Seated on the step in front sat the traditional figure of Mephisto, his black mus- tache rising at the corners, the suggestion of horns appearing above his brow. The College clock struck thirteen. The hour has come, said Mephisto. It has, replied the scholastic female. Mephisto touched the rim of the urn and gave it a light whirl. The leaden billets flut- tered and sank to rest. The child thrust its waxen hand into the urn and drew one forth. No. 7, a sepulcral voice sounded through the hall. The eyes of the old grad. turned towards the frame bearing that number, and on the veil she saw an enthusiastic sub-freshman describing her course to interested friends and relatives. Oh, yes, we have all our noon hours absolutely free to do whatever we want. They purposely arrange it so that nothing shall be done from twelve to one. We ' ll have fun then, that ' s certain. Shall I lift the veil ? asked Mephisto. Lift it, replied the scholastic female. He raised the veil of the popular delusion and this is what the old grad. saw : The clock in the College hall pointed to 12.10 and troops of worried, excited girls rushed up and down, all apparently under some great nervous strain compared t o which that described by Pratt was as nothing. Various snatches of hurried conversations were caught. Take a walk? What an idea! Why I ' ve got three committee meetings and a song prac- tice all appointed for 12.15 ■I ' m as empty as a last year ' s nest, but I can ' t come to lunch now. It ' 11 be a wonder if I get any lunch at all. Oh, there goes Beatrice — One girl who actually looks idle for a moment is suddenly pounced on by four others as they fly by. Oh, Mary, there ' s a class meeting in 330 right away. You must come. Mary, [ H6 ] you ' ve got to go right down to the C. S. A. meeting to make a quorum. Mary, we ' ve got to have a Junior Ball Committee meeting first for a minute or two and you simply must be there. You ' d better hurry down stairs, Mary, The tennis committee have been waiting ten minutes for you and they ' re furious. At last this turmoil fades away in the distance when the regular work begins, and one last voice is heard saying, It ' s a wonder this awful noon hour doesn ' t give us all nervous prostration as well as indigestion. Again Mephisto touched the urn and again the child drew forth a billet. No. 15, the voice cried out. The title of No. 15, written in gory letters, was Who is Crabton ? Below was a commonplace quotation from the catalogue : « Henry E. Crabton, Ph.D. Adjunct Professor of Zoology. Shall I lift the veil ? asked Mephisto again in an awe-inspiring voice. Lift it. What a sight was revealed to the astonished eyes of the old grad. ! Around a table sat what seemed to be nine tall, wide-shouldered, high-browed, deep-eyed students, their faces seamed with care, their lips set with resolution — the Student Council. But alas! they were only lifeless mechanical puppets, while below the floor was a man skillfully pulling the wires that made the puppets move and talk. Beside him was an emaciated tiger, a nice fresh beast, and together they gloated over their work with wicked joy on their cruel faces. Alas, what a revelation, sighed the old grad. But again as inevitably as fate the child drew forth a billet. No. 4, the voice announced. In the clear white light of truth was embla- zoned on the veil The Classes. Then were heard various sweet voices singing snatches of songs : You ' re the class, the good old class, the only class for me, For you are great at work and great at play, You dear old 1903 ! Better than any class still to come — Here ' s to old 1904 ! The best, the most enduring, the class of Nineteen-Five. None other ever shall us quite surpass : We work for love, for college, and for class, for 1906 ! The brightest, truest, best, the class of 1908 ! Thou ' rt better far than any class, Nineteen-Nine, O, Nineteen- Nine ! Shall I lift the veil ? asked Mephisto in triumph. Lift it, was the thrilling answer. A great mountain was seen with struggling forms all over it. Each carried a colored flag [ ' 47 ] with numerals on it ' 06, ' 05, ' 98, ' 00, ' 09, and others. Some seeming to have given up from sheer exhaustion had stuck their flags in the ground and were lying by them, some crawled painfully on hands and knees, while others had even fallen backwards down the slope. Alone at the top was one tall, slender figure surrounded by a perfect blaze of glory. Her flowing robe was of red and white, and in her hand she held a banner with the numerals 1907. Of a sud- den all the struggling maidens below gazed up- wards and in a shout of admiration they sang : There are classes and classes in Barnard, But ' 07 will always take lead. It is enough, the old grad. said, I can bear to see no more. Alas ! she was heard to murmur as she floated through the court, my time was sadly out of joint. What un- kind fate has kept me out of 1907 ? It is a sharp student who cuts well. There was once a philosopher Marvin, Whose book was not worth a farthin ' ; He said ( ' twill appall), We ' ve no minds at all : Perhaps he was speakin ' of Marvin. [ H8 ] Cl)e ortorgcopeg of Bartoug ©otableg or ctourgtong w olar latologt A. S. J. Entered Barnard in 18 — under the sign of Taurus, the Bull. The second house of the zodiac — the Clearing House — was in the ascendency. Mercury, who was rising at the time, exchanged his sandals for Orion ' s belt ; Mars tried to break a strike in the Soldier ' s Union ; and the price of milk in the Milky Way rose three cents a quart, although it was a watery season ! The Ram (predecessor of the Lamb) began to feel weak about the knees, the Sun issued false re- ports, and speculation among astronomers was rife. It is only natural that a man suffering from [ H9 ] such planetary complications should be an authority on business (other people ' s business, of course), and many matters in general. The subject of these lines is in fact essentially economical : eco- nomical in his discourses, economical of his A ' s, etc. His sole extravagances are : chalk, which he wantonly destroys in large quantities, and a particular brand of grin which he sheds on friend and foe alike. In fact he was the author of that famous epigram : One touch of Economics makes the whole world grin ! He will shortly issue a work entitled, How Robinson Crusoe influenced the Salaries of College Professors, and thus will win enduring fame. G. H. Entered Barnard in 18 — , under the sign of Aries, the Ram — hence her love of ramming, cramming, grammar and other derivatives. At the moment Jupiter and his friends began to take an interest in Homer and Virgil again, Venus aspired to a Ph.D. ; and the Twins recited Latin Grammar to each other at the dinner table. A pale salmon-pink flush, reminiscent of examination papers, spread over the sky, and eight editions of the Odes of Horace were sold out in one week. It is only natural that the object of such zodiacal circumstances must take a lively interest in the dead languages. In fact the first words that the subject of these lines ever uttered were Tandem aliquando ! And at the age of eight she could recite Virgil ' s Aeneid in toto upon request. From the praise bestowed on her in early life, she passed to the prose of her later years. It was at this point that she adopted as her motto the following: A prose by any other name would be as sweet. A peculiarity of the person under discussion is her aversion to the horse — ponies and trotters in particular. However, this dislike is overbalanced by her passionate love for the shark. G. H. is famous as a breeder of sharks, and has produced some of the finest examples of this species in existence. B. D. W. Entered Barnard in 18 — , under the sign of Leo, the Lion. The third house of the zodiac — the house of Napoleon — was in the ascendency. At the moment of his advent Jupiter became interested in Victor Hugo, Sarah Bernhardt (who was then completing her seventy-eight farewell tour) and other French celebrities ; Venus began to sprinkle her conversation with French phrases like may wee, [ 150] u tutta fay, etc., and cultivated French heels and forty-dollar bonnets ; and the Twins were re-chris- tened Alphonse and Gaston. A comet was heard to exclaim dramatically: u Oh Ciel ! as it tripped over its own tail. Leo people are always liars, socially or otherwise, and the subject ot these lines is therefore a not unfamiliar figure at the teas and other functions of the sweet girl grad. As one hears his gentle roar floating down the corridors of Barnard, one can understand at last how strongly the magic of his voice affects fair Barnardites. To his influence alone may be attributed the famous cry, Woodward ho ! which keeps trade in French books at the bookstore ever lively. W. T. B. Entered Barnard in 18 — , under the sign of Cancer, the Crab. The first house of the zodiac — the House of Subdued Mirth — was in the ascendancy. At the time Venus began to take an interest in the higher education for women ; Saturn turned over a new leaf and took up Jane Austen as his evening ' s diversion ; and it became the pastime in zodiacal society to discuss Bernard Shaw and the modern realists. A person beginning his Career under these astral influences must in the first place have a tendency to approach subjects backwards ; and, in the second place, he will suffer from indigestion at an early point in life (these two characteristics are caused by the influence of the Crab). He will assume an air of cynical and somewhat dyspeptic tolerance towards life in general and Barnard classes in particular. Not one theme but many run through the life of this man daily; yet he has bravely survived all the literary excursions and brain picnics of the Barnard girl and still remains the unrivalled (?) and Inimitable (?) B. B. H. E. C. • Entered Barnard in 18 — , under the sign of Pisces, the Fish. At the moment the fourth house of the zodiac — the House of Barnard — was in the ascendancy. Jupiter made himself chairman of the Astral Self-Government Committee ; Venus caught the Crab in a (pla)net and proceeded to dissect it in her private laboratory ; and the Twins angled (astronomers say right-angled) for worms. People beginning their career under the sign of the Fish are apt to stick to a certain line — of procedure. They are also capable of keeping folks in line. The subject of this horrorscope [I5i ] takes as much interest in the interior workings of lobsters and puppy-dogs as he does in the interior workings of Barnard ' s social life. He is now at the head of an autocratic body which will shortly be known as the Impervious Imperators or the Doughty Dictators (a vote has not yet been taken as to which title will be chosen). He exerts over this body an influence which can only be accounted for by the appearance of the heavens at the moment of his arrival. H. E. C. has published a great work entitled: What not to be at Barnard. — For sale at all news-stands. [ ' 5 ] Co tl)c l ricf I have been asked to toast the brief; But why should briefs be toasted ? They are already hot enough, For they have all been roasted. Yet all their subjects were so dry They ' d stand a generous sprinkling, And on that plea, I really think, We ' ve some excuse for drinking. Then too, the memory of past pain Is said to be a pleasure. If this be true, thought of the brief Is something we all treasure. So for their pleasant memory, Though once they brought us grief, Let ' s raise each glass and let us toast The famous Soph ' more brief. Once there was a maiden and she always queried ivhy? Her professor once inquired why her questions she did ply. To which the simple maiden made reply both soft and low: I sow my whys on w Viacres that more wise I may grow. Some people ' s college course could be declined thus : present, bray; preterite, brayed; past participle, brain. [ ' 53 ] Reminiscences of Football Days at Columbia I Hard, hard luck ! Well, I guess that we have had our share ; Grind, grind, grind, besides starvation-diet fare. ' Seen the time, Columbia ' s line ' Peared to me a vision fine Years gone by, skinned old Nassau ' s tigers six to naught ; Years since then, been skinned by squads of every sort. Now faculty Board advisory Have turned refractory. Chorus All we ' ve left is memory, but it ain ' t a bit of use to fuss. When by Old Eli ' s beef o ' ercome, old Morley said to us, Spunk up, you boys, there ' s lots of luck still in the field ; For all such blows in your life be steeled. Thanks to M-rr-y For all his worry, — All we ' ve left is memory. [ ' 54] II Shocking sight ! where are sweaters of our former days ? Green, green bags ! these are types of our present ways. Once I know The greatest blow Was to see one grieved e ' en so. Yale ' s bright blue still flaunts o ' er all their gridiron track ; Harvard ' s red still from Soldier ' s field waves back. Columbia ' s blue Presents to you The library to view. Chorus All we ' ve left is grinds, you see, but it ain ' t a bit of use to fuss. When fighting for our dear old sport, our prexy said to us, Be wise, young men ; there ' s more success in high degrees. All you need in vour life is your Ph.D ' s. Thanks to M-rr-y For all his worry, — All we ' ve left is grinds, you see. [ ' 55] ong of tl)t tftelD a? 3 xl Husky maiden In a sweater, Sporting thereon A blue letter. See her whack A tennis ball. She can play. Nor is that all. In the relay She ' s a star. No one can pitch A ball so far. ' At a jump She can ' t be beat. She can perform Most any feat ; Throwing quoits And basket-ball, Doing well In one and all. Clever, dashing, In a whirl. She ' s all right The Field-Dav Girl. £ Curtain Lecture. Sarah E. Jones, come in here. I want to talk to you. Don ' t fly into my office like a big torn-boy. Aren ' t you ever going to grow up ? Now, if you feel sufficiently squelched, I ' ll go on. I hear they ' ve elected you treasurer of the Undergraduate Association. How they ever chose anyone as irresponsible as you are, I don ' t know. Be sure to keep your accounts carefully and pay bills promptly — there ' s some good advice to begin on. You know the only reason I bother about you is because I was a great deal like you when I was a girl. When I was your age I was just as rattle- pated and light-headed as you are now. But I got over it as I grew older and I want you to do the same thing. Now, my dear, I hear you ' re in the Junior Show. I know that whole Junior class will flunk at mid-vears. I never saw anything like it in my life. The idea of spending so much time over a show. just you wait till you get your marks and then you ' ll remember me. Now go away and don ' t bother me any longer. I have a lot of work to do. [ 156] a Conftocnttal Hectare on anjt|)tng ou4tfee BY THE MELANCHOLY DANE Note : The Board of Editors vouches that every word ot this lecture was actually delivered and taken down by them verbatim and in situ. This is rather a unique affair, you know. One gets a rather distinct literary impression of dreaminess and confusion and that sort of thing. Now take Romeo and Juliet, for instance. The sentimental phenomena are isolated and society — afternoon teas and all that sort of thing — are eliminated, you know. Rationally considered it is absolutely absurd. Just imagine two young people starting out in life the way Romeo and Juliet did. Do you think they would ? Well, perhaps they would. If you want to say that anybody who shows very deep emotion is per se silly, all right. I don ' t agree with you, and I don ' t think most people would, you know. Being reasonably disembodied is a verv wholesome state of mind. Reasonably radiant sort of soul, you know, and all that. 1 don ' t think much of that sort of play ; I can ' t understand it from a spiritual or intellectual point of view, because I ' m not made that way. I simply can ' t, you know. Now take Mistashaw. He has a pretty clever way of handling the soul, but one wouldn ' t want to be Morel, you know ; he ' s bumptious and self-satisfied .... and (Absent-minded pause) Reading these plavs (sigh of relief as consciousness returns), funny as they are, and I like them my- self, one has to beware of a couple of things : (a) ? r ? j Mere incoherent ramblings. What we | (b) ? ? ? are to beware of neither I nor the others (c) ? ? ? ( ot the class have ever discovered. ) And these are really very dangerous things. Is Mistashaw a success as a dramatist ? I don ' t think he is — no really — quite. You could call him dramatic in one sense, but his people are made to fit a situation sometimes almost entirely. — Perhaps it probably wouldn ' t. L ' 57] The little Barnardamsels wondrous tales did often hear About the strange Freshmanimals and their Freshman- tics queer ; They most Barnardently desire these beasts to see and so With Freshmanticipation rilled, they all set out to go. THE ENGLI HATJE-TREe THE F«eSHi«WVKA«««W But their Freshnianimation turns to Freshmanxiety, For ' neath an Englishade-tree an alarming sight they see : ' Tis a huge Freshmanoconda with a wily, vicious leer ! Utter Freshmannihilation do the little maidens fear! But lo ! behold the Latinag, a Freshmanomaly : Half Latinsidious monster and half equine — strange to see ; Their fear and Freshmantipathy the damsels soon sub- due, And find him Latintelligent and quite a trotter, too I [ ' 58 ] Their Freshmanguish increases — a Freshmantelope appears ! In a Freshmantagonistic way his Freshmantlers he rears ! He ' s quite Mathletic, yet of strangest Freshmanatomy, For so Freshmangular a beast ne ' er did a mortal see. Alas! a Sophomorning dawns and brings with it much woe ; A painful Sophomordeal must the damsels undergo: A Historepast huge is spread, and they are forced to eat A thousand stale and antique dates — a most Barnard- uous feat ! And now a large Brefrigerator near at hand they spy ; ' • Perhaps we ' ll find Brefreshments there to soothe our pain, they cry. Alas! ' Tis empty! Not a Sophomorsel is inside ! Poor little Sophomortals ! They ' re so Sophomortiried ! g THE f Orvo vilCRTH O RuS A pleasant thing befalls the maids — ahead of them they see A lovely Juniorchard and they enter it with glee. And Oh ! the Juniorgies held ! Of them 1 fain would speak ! Such Junioriginality is really quite unique. [ «59] But hark ! An Econominous sound the damsels doth affright ! ' Tis the Economichthyosaurus and they ' re in a sorry plight ! He Seagerly approaches them and, to their joy. they find That though Econoninivorous, he ' s really not unkind ! €t)e College l ittiomvy (This may be had bound with the Mortarboard or as a supplement to Funk and Wagnall ' s Dic- tionary, and is published to meet the demand from the outside public for information as to the meanings and derivations of terms frequently heard in college circles). Basketball: an elaboration of jiu jitsu. Bear : derived from the Old Eng. to bear, to endure, to put up with; — a wild plantigrade quadruped of the genus itrsits. It belongs to the carnivorous order, but subsists mainly on daily themes and New York guide books. Among the species are the brown bear of Europe {ursus arctos), the white polar bear (ursus mariiimus), the grisly bear (ursus horribilis), and the Barnard bear (ursus litter arius). Bulletin ; a magnificent opportunity for literary aspirants to get used to seeing their names in print; — derived from the English, to bully, v.t. and the Briton tin (a metallic component of brass). This derivation can only be appreciated after long experience in undergoing dramatic criticisms at the hands of that fas- tidious sheet. Bursar : proper pronunciation, buzzer. Class-meeting : a typhoon recurring once a month with intermittent outbursts during periods of great pressure. CLOAK-ROOM : a close rival to Brooklyn Bridge in crush hours. Crush : an epidemic peculiar to college girls. It usually appears at some time during the freshman year and lasts anywhere from 20 days to 3 months. It is caused by a Junior or Senior microbe and is characterized by a lump in the throat, a feeling of heat in the face and an inability to speak. No remedy has been found for this disease. It must be allowed to run its course. Common sense, snubs and sage tea have proved ineffectual. DORMITORY : from dortnio, v.i., to sleep, — hence a dream, one of the kind that never come true. FACULTY: in old-fashioned psychology (see James), a mental power; now an institution maintained to create the impression that the acquisition of knowledge is one of the aims of a college course; only continued in American universities for the sake of appearances. Flunkey ; a lackey. Flunk : a lack. FUDGE : a kind of dark brown marble. Price 10 cts. a slab. Quarries: anywhere from 250th Street, New York, to Astoria, Long Island. Warerooms: Barnard Fudge and Stationery Exchange, Room 209 B. C. [ ' 60] Grind: an intricate storage battery of information patented 300 B.C. by Archimedes. Instructors find them useful if not strictly interesting, and always keep two or three on hand to flash in the faces of stupefied nonen- tities. They are admirable illustrations of Newton ' s Law of Inertia. Being mere machines they have the advantage of not being distracted by human interests and responsibilities. Lunch room : the place where the most popular courses at college are given. It is hoped that an extension course may soon be added. [Perhaps an intensive course (see Seager on the intensive margin) might also be desirable.] Mortarboard: a hardy annual which has survived yearly blights and attempts at reduction or complete extermina- tion at the hands of the 20th century Matthew Arnold. PlNUCHI : derivation uncertain: some etymologists take it from Anglo-Saxon, and Gaelic ouch, with reference to the feelings of the cold, gray dawn of the morning after. SoFA-PILLOW : so far and yet so near, used only by pills symbol of feathers, frivolity and femininity, abhorred by the Truly Intellectual . SYLLABUS : from Celtic silly and modem cockney ' bus for omnibus. Therefore a silly omnibus in which all the old mediaeval codgers ride without paying their fare. Student Council: [The Board of Editors merely wishes to offer the following bit of advice, amicitiae causa, in mentioning this august body : Sile, si sapis. ] Undergraduate Association : the appendix of Student Council. An operation has not yet been considered ex- pedient, but frequently recurring attacks of appendicitis will soon make it necessary. [ ' 6l ] [ i 3] Class of jStnetcen f uiftreti anti When ' Omer smote ' is bloomin ' lyre, He ' d ' eard men sing by land and sea ; An ' what he thought ' e might require, ' E went an ' took — the same as me ! Irene Bennett Adams, Mt. Kisco, N.Y. Anna Genevieve Anthony, New York City Belinda Beadle was so mild, the wild March hare in love Came out and licked her daintv hand and spoiled a new kid glove. I beseech you, be not so phlegmatic ! ' ' Amalie Louise Althaus, Bedford Park, New York City As for bidding me not to work, you might as well put the kettle on the fire and say, ' Now don ' t boil. ' Eva Fanny Auerbach, New York City Very opinionated — very. [ ' 64] Margaret Hart Bailev, New York City [udith Bernays, New York City Cora Elizabeth Bennett, Tinton Falls, N.Y. Mabel L. Boote, Yonkers, N.Y On the table spread the cloth ; Let the knives besharp and clean; Pickles get and salad both ; Let them each be fresh and Not one to startle people with green ; With small beer, good ale and wine, O, ye Gods ! how I shall dine ! thrilling ideas. ' ' [ l6 5 ] Josephine Brand, New York City Anne Carroll, Warwick, N.Y. A very gentle beast with an invulnerable conscience ! Mask her eyes. Alice Margaret Bushong, Brooklyn, N.Y. Helen Carter, New York City Ain ' t you ' shamed, you sleepy Panting time toiled after her in head ! vain. Gertrude Louise Cannon, New York City Amelia Cohen, New York City With fire in each eye, and The less men think the more papers in each hand, they talk. She raves, recites, and maddens all the land. [ 166] bra Carrington Colby, New York City Jean Disbrow, New York City After man came woman — and she has been after him ever since. Smooth as monumental ala- baster. mma Cornelia Cole, New York City Agnes Elizabeth Ernst, New York City I was not born for courts or «« Every man has in himself a great affairs ; continent of undiscovered I pay my debts, believe, and character ; say my prayers. Happy he who acts the Colum- bus of his own soul. Cara Leslie Gardiner, New York City Annie Elizabeth Goedkoop, New York City Charity is the sterilized milk of human kindness. Phylinda Gaston, Meadville, Pa. I were but little happy if I could say much. Marie Gelbach, New York City Who does the best his circum- stances allows, Does well. At sight of thee my gloomy soul cheers up, My hopes revive and gladness dawns within me. Helen Goodhart, New York City Florence Gordon, Guttenburg, N.J. [ ' 68] Lucile Grant, Stamford, N.Y. Alma Laura Hays, New York City It is so soon that I am done Deep as the sea I ' ll drown for, my book. I wonder what I was begun for. Lollie Belle Hardwick, Cleveland, Tenn. Lilian Hellin, New York City When a man turns a blessing Generally speaking a woman from his door, it falls to is — generally speaking. them as take it in. Helen Josephine Harvitt, Brooklyn, N.Y Hazel Henderson, Brooklyn, N.Y V She would not with a peremp- The weak soul, within itself tory tone unblest, Assert the nose upon her face Leans for all pleasure on an- her own. other ' s breast. [169] Beatrice Felicia Herzfeld, New York City Marguerite Baer Israel, New York City When I ' m determined, I al- ways listen toreason because it can then dome noharm. Jennie Hilborn, New York City Kathleen Elizabeth Hurty, New York City I value science — none can prize it more. There ' s many a man whose tongue might govern multi- tudes, if he could govern his tongue. Eva Jacobs, New York City A woman, if she have the misfortune to know any- thing, should conceal it as much as possible. Irma Etelka Jellenik, New York City [ 170 ] Alma Joachimson, New York City Blanche Margaret Klein, New York City Lucetta Pitney Johnson, Morristown, N.J. Irene Constance Kohn, New York City Lucile Locke, Brooklyn, N.Y. Mabel Perkins McDonald, New York City Consistency r I never changed The finest language, I believe, my mind, is chiefly made up of un- Which is and always was to live imposing words such as at ease. ' bully, ' ' gee, ' ' lands, ' ' heavens. ' ' ' Mary Elizabeth Lord, Brooklyn, N.Y. Emily Lamont MacEwan, New York City Amalia Lowenthal, Woodside, N.Y. A most acute juvenile. ' ' Eannie Moulton McLane, New York City Be a sensible girl and wear heels that are flat, And comb back your hair with- out curl ; If you don ' t pull your waist in or glance at a man, You ' 11 continue — a sensible girl. ' ' [ ' 7 ] Pierina McLaughlin, New York City Push on — keep moving. Juliet Stuart Points, Jersey City, N.J- At her command the palace learned to rise. Louise Christine Odencrantz, New York City Josephine Southworth Pratt, New Rochelle, N.Y. What novelty is worth that As headstrong as an allegory sweet monotony, where on the banks of the Nile. everything is known. Charlotte Rose Oesterlein, New York City ; So coldly wise, so deadly fair. Katherine Louise Rapp, Brooklyn, N.Y Zounds, sir ! do you pretend to direct me ? direct me in the business of office ? Do you know me, sir ? who am I ? [ 173 3 Ida C. Ray, New York City Lucille E. Rosenberg, New York City Here ' s to blue eyes, to brown eyes, to hazel eyes and ra Y ' If she had any faults she has But what are the eyes I drink j eft us b doubt . to- ay t j east j n t jj ree mont h s we No matter what the co or, O, ,1 . c j , , ' ' could not find em out. here s to the eye That laughs when I laugh and cries when I crv ! ' ' Marv Catherine Ruth Reardon, Rye, N.Y. Elizabeth Rusk, St. Joseph, Mo. A laugh is worth a hundred groans in any market. That was excellently well observed, ' say I, when I read a Passage from an Author where his Opinion agrees with mine. Ethel May Rosemon, Brooklyn, N.Y. Elsie Schachtel, New York City ? She can give yards of classic lore, Caparisons don ' t become a Do any problem you set ; young woman. But she knows the first two let- ters — no more — Of all the alphabet. [ ' 74 1 Ethel Belle Schramm, New York City Katharine Augusta Smith, Hartland, N.Y. There ' s no art can show the mind ' s construction in the face. ' ' Write me as one who loves his fellow-men. ' ' Helen Shoninger, New York City Mary Edla Tibbits, Astoria, L.I. Clara Elizabeth Smith, Woodside, N.Y. Helen Abbie Tracy, Rockville Centre, L.I. [ ' 75] Elizabeth Alden Seabury Tredwell, New York City Muriel Valentine, New York City Dorothy True, New York City Mary Barbour Walker, New York City Grace Clapperton Turnbull, East Orange, N.J. Lilian May Wardell, New York City cannot flatter — I defy the tongues of soothers. Studious to please, ashamed to fail. but not [ ' 76] Edna Major Wilkes, New York City Daisy Irene Yale, Brewster, N.Y. Hasn ' t scratched yet. Speak, art thou mute, and will not say a word ? Sophie Parsons Woodman, New York City Anne Whittemore Young, Bath Beach, L.I. It is not wealth, nor rank, nor state, When found make note of. But ' git up and git ' that makes men great. mt ftmong ur dumber Emma Howells Burchenal Clementine E. Campbell Elizabeth W. Chadwell Frida Emma Edler Marie Teresa Frame Madeline Bernheim Gans Marjorie Garrison Catherine Byrne Gibson Edna Raymond Green Blanche Hecht Mabel Emily Horan Adaline Rosella Leete Deceased. [«77] Jessie Patterson Cook, Brooklyn, N.Y. Helen Cushing Perry, New York City Pin thy faith to no man ' s Wean her love from Valen- sleeve. tine Hast thou not two eyes of thine Shakespeare — ahem, own ? ? Mrs. M. Robert Guggenheim ( Grace Bernheimer), New York City Constance Strauss, New York City Here ' s to the chaperone ! May she learn from Cupid Just enough blindness To be sweetly stupid. In truth, sir, she is pretty and honest and gentle. 0ncc mong ©ur dumber Mrs. C. Leibmann Jeanette Simon (May) Eileen Hughes Markley Katherine Townsend Marie J. A. Marrin Margaret Marie White Beulah Moritz Emma Arabella Buehler Elsie Millicent Perkins Elva Lois Porter Jessamine Bozeman Rice Leona Cecile Reiman [ ' 78] I have come with my verses ; I think I may claim It is not the first time I have tried on the same ; They were puckered in rhyme, They were wrinkled in wit, But your hearts were so large They made them a fit. [ ' 79 ] jftnts J Contributory EVA FANNY AUERBACH FANNIE MOULTON McLANE CHARLOTTE ROSE OESTEKLEIN MURIEL VALENTINE [ ' 8. ] PURSSELL MFG. CO. Maker of HIGH-QUALITY BREAD AND ROLLS DAINTY CAKES :: DELICIOUS PASTRY : : ICED CREAMS FANCY ICES FOR FINE FAMILY TRADE Perfection of the Caterer ' s Art in Weddings, Afternoon Teas and other Home Functions 916 BROADWAY COLUMBUS AVE., at 76th STREET :: SIXTH AVE., at 51st STREET Clothing Liveries Motor Garments English Haberdashery Hats Fine Shoes Leather Wicker Goods Etc. Etc. ur |£cto booklet CLOTHES THE HOUR Suggesting what to wear on various occasions, mailed on request. ESTABLISHED 1818 ntlrmrttf Ifiirntabtnti 0aui s, BROADWAY COR. TWENTY- SECOND ST. NELW YORK. ANGORA SHETLAND WAISTCOATS DRESSING GOWNS : STEAMER RUGS LUNCHEON BASKETS : FITTED BAGS JEWEL CASES ' . SILVER FLASKS : ETC. FROM THE WEST END LONDON SHOPS i Boys ' and Misses ' Sailor Suits a specialty Ladies ' Tailor Made Suits and Riding Habits Made to order only, no age n cies PETER THOMSON Naval and Merchant Tailor 1118 Walnut Street Philadelphia 14 fe 16 WEST 3:1 D STREET NEW YORK FounlainPen YOU ARE CAREFUL WHEN YOU BUY A WATCH— WHY NOT BE EQUALLY SO IN SELECTING A FOUNTAIN PEN ? BOTH SHOULD BE ACCURATE, UNFAILING, DEPENDABLE. THEN BUY WATERMAN ' S IDEAL FOR SALE BY DEALERS L. E. WATERMAN COMPANY 173 BROADWAY - NEW YORK The Bon Marche Co. Ltd. Bargains in Parisian importations of the latest Cbarvey shirt waists in linen and madras for morning wear, from Sj-S° to S -°° Lingerie Waists from $5.00 to $6o.OO Lingerie Trousseaux JT2 Madison Avenue, near 42 d Street New York City The Latest Pump For Street and Carriage Wear with Welt Soles and Military Heels Made in AH Materials. PRICE $6.00 $7.00 Strictly Bench Made Style 65 H. Jantzen Shoe Co. 242 6th Ave. - Near 16th St. - New York Hosiery Shop 230 f iftfj SUiemte Stocking Sale Some of the Prices as follows Ladies ' Pure Black Silk Stockings, 5 j .35 a pair. With Cotton Toes and Heels to make them wear better, 1.50. These are $2. 50 quality. Hand embroidered, 1.98, neat patterns ; $3.00 quality. Ladies ' Gauze Silk that can be drawn through a finger ring, $1.50. Just half value. Ladies ' Lisle Thread, openwork ankles and all up openwork ; 35 cents, or three pairs for? 1.00; 69-eent quality. Ladies ' Plain Black Gauze Lisle Thread, $1.75 per half dozen. No better quality can be had elsewhere for 50 cents per pair. We have just received the new Light Tans, in Lisle Thread and Silk, plain and em- broidered in self color. With reference we send goods on ap- proval to any part of the U. S. 3 cts. extra per pair, for mailing. Payable with money order or N. Y. draft. 23o Fifth Ave. Near 27th Street Send for Catalogue Telephone 3080 Morningside Florist for Barnard The Harlem Exchange for best Flowers 2062 Seventh Avenue Corner 123d Street New York PATEN TLD Maxine Elliott writes, I am delighted with my Pneu Form for which please find check enclosed. It stands hours to be fitted for me without one groan of fatigue. It ' s You (when your lining is inflated overit) The Pneumatic Dress Form takes your place and saves you trying on engage- ments, tiresome standing and disap- pointments. Make your own dress- es. When not in use collapse and with upright of standard pack in base (see cut). Write for circular at once. Pneu Form Company 4 65PresbyterianBldg., New York (Fifth Ave., N.W. cor. 20th St.) £ttijenc BUILDER OF Hats ♦ Coques • Bonnets 68 WEST 38TH STREET iii M MM anfc dfrmd) § tmm Coffee $ot Co. 948 BROADWAY, between 22d and 23d Streets, NEW YORK Is the highest perfection in the art of making delicious coffee. All genuine new Style French Steam Coffee Pots are stamped on the bottom. THE GENUINE FRENCH STEAM COFFEE POT HEINRICHS ' SPECIAL COFFEE 38 CENTS PER POUND, HAS NO EQUAL JOSEPH HEINRICHS, Paris, New York Coffee Pots of every description repaired and any missing parts replaced. Solid Sterling Silver-lined copper tea kettles, coffee pots and chafing dishes. ' Beautiful l eDDtng ct $7.75 up FRENCH COFFEE POTS What Wedding present could be more acceptable to a housewife than the Genuine French Steam Coffee Pot, which is sold by the Bi-Metal and French Steam Coffee Pot Company, No. 948 Broadway, between 22d and 23d sts. Coffee made in this pot, the manufacturers say, is not only better than other coffee, but is produced in one-half the time that it takes to make it in other pots. Especially for the holiday trade this firm has for sale many beautiful and exclusive designs in sterling silver-lined copper tea kettles, coffee pots and chafing dishes, any of which would be an attractive and practical adjunct to a table. or . Caterer anti Confeettoner MAIN STORE 103, 105 107 West 49th Street Telephone Calls 3740-3741 Columbus Branches Telephone Calls 300 Columbus Ave., N.W. Cor. 74th Street 364 Columbus 1 169 Madison Ave., Cor. 86th Street 348-7oth St. 44 W. 125th St., bet. Fifth Lenox Aves. 152-Harlem NEW YORK Greeting to 1907 Intercollegiate Bureau of Academic Costume CHARTERED IN 1902 Makers of the Caps, Gowns and Hoods to the American Colleges and Universities. To Barnard, Columbia, Normal College, Princeton, Bryn Mawr, Wellesley, Mt. Holyoke, Harvard, Yale, Univer sity of Chicago, Leland Stanford, and the others. Illustrated bulletin, samples, etc., upon request RICH GOWNS FOR PULPIT AND BENCH COTRELL LEONARD ALBANY, N. Y. iv WHITTIER HALL 1 2 30 AMSTERDAM AVENUE Residence Hall for Women Students of Barnard and Teachers Colleges and Columbia University :: :: FOR RATES AND PARTICULARS ADDRESS SECRETARY R W- Devoe Co s ARTISTS ' TUBE COLORS Canvas Academy Boards, Fine Brushes for Oil and Water-Color Paintings, Etc. Are Perfectly Reliable and can be had of all dealers We have just introduced a New Sketch Box — simple, inexpensive and just the thing you want. Send for descriptive circular or ask your dealer for Devoe ' s New Sketch Box. Everything in Artists ' Materials F. W. DEVOE C. T. REYNOLDS CO. Fulton and William Streets, NEW YORK 176 Randolph Street, CHICAGO Catalogue on application GEORGE M. CLARK. ESTABLISHED 1870. HARTWELL A. WILKINS. ELEVENTH AVENUE, COR. OF WEST 24TH STREET, A N FOOT OF EAST 128th STREET. New York. WE DEAL TN WOOD EXCLUSIVELY AND DELIVER AT RESIDENCES telephone, IN ANY PART OF THE CITY; 2266 Chelsea PUTTING AWAY IN CELLARS 566 harlem WITHOUT EXTRA CHARGE. DRY HICKORY FOR OPEN FIRES. VIRGINIA PINE KNOTS. NEW BEDFORD DRIFTWOOD. NORTH CAROLINA LIGHT-WOOD. VIRGINIA PINE and OAK KINDLING WOOD. GOTVNS LADIES ' TAILOR AND FURRIER 16 EAST TWENTY-EIGHTH STREET Street and Evening Gowns Exclusive Original Designs Repairing and remodeling of Furs at reasonable rates con- sistent with good workmanship. .-. Discount to students. Telephone Connection There is nothing so soothing as A MOTHER ' S KISS except Mrs. JVinslow s Soothing Syrup Millions of Mothers will tell you It soothes the child It softens the gums It allays all pain It cures Wind Colic It is the best remedy for Diarrhea It is absolutely harmless and for Sixty years has proved the best remedy for Children teething Be sure you ask for Mrs. Winslow ' ' s Soothing Syrup and take no other CORS ETS THE NEW TAPERING WAIST C. J. HOENNINGER BtamonDs JVatches Is Jexvelry Silverware Optical Goods Fine Repairing 1466 3RD Avenue, corner 8 3RD Street Telephone, 2313 79th Telephone, Riverside M. HAAS $oultrp anti ame 354 COLUMBUS AVENUE NEW YORK BETWEEN 76TH AND 77TH STREETS fltttUer ' a ©rcJjestra 56 COURT STREET BROOKLYN, New Yo rk TELEPHONE 3277 MAIN Ivory Miniatures Carbons Crayons Pastels Pack Brothers PHOTOGRAPHERS Q35 Broadway, corner 2 2d Street New York Pbone 6535 Gramercy Special KatCB to all S tulJCnt6 Cjje JSarnarti cijool for trls 151 CONVENT AVENUE G( A thoroughly graded school from kindergarten through college prepara- tory. Special preparation for Barnard and Teachers ' Colleges. Tenth Year. Send for catalogue American anD jforagn teachers ' Agency Supplies Colleges, Schools and Families with ' Profes- sors, Teachers, Tutors, and Governesses, resident or Visiting, American or Foreign. Parents aided in choice of schools. SMrs. iM. J. Young-Fulton 23 Onion Equate, |$cto $ork Cije Wtm g cf)ool for (gtris Number of students limited to 12 in each class. College preparatory and general course. Fireproof building. Thoroughly equipped. 160 and 162 W. 74th St. $cto gork establish 1S80 t ifcclp fenotnn anU patvonocto E. MIRIAM COYRIERE Teachers Agency 50 Fifth Avenue New York Eligible teachers promptly provided for Univer- sities, Colleges, Schools and Families. Teachers supplied with positions. Circulars of good schools sent to parents. School property rented and sold. Best of references furnished. jifltifiural Department Church Choirs, Festivals, Entertainments, Ora- -L torios and Musicales provided with accomplished Singers and Musicians in every department. Musical Departments of Universities, Colleges and Schools supplied with best talent from Europe and this country. Private teachers of well known talent and reputation supplied to families. Panorama of Travel, Lectures, well-known Concert Pianists, Vocalists, etc. Cimer €♦ Sanborn 248 WEST 125TH STREET NEW YORK BEAUTIFUL AND ATTRACTIVE SILVER NOV ELTIES AT MODERATE PRICES, SUITABLE AS EASTER GIFTS. Pin Cubes : : Cologne Bottles : Hat Pin Holders : Slipper Pin Cushions Picture Frames : Crown Salts Bottles Combination Match Box and Cigar Cutter 3.50 Talcum Powder Box : : : : 5.00 including various other novelties $1.00 i-50 i-75 i-75 2.00 up 2.00 A. G. SEILER CO. l3oo6£iclUrj8 anD tattoner0 Dealers in DRAWING MATERIALS, ATHLETIC GOODS, PERIODICALS, FINE PRINTING ENGRAVING 1222 AMSTERDAM AVENUE Between 120th and 121st Street NEW YORK THE BUSINESS OF The Columbia University Press Bookstore EXTENDS FROM FRANCE TO JAPAN Jftatl ©filers ffllcU promptlp Hibrarie anti fceatmtg € uW Jmpplicti LEMCKE BUECHNER West Hall :: Broadway, near 117th Street The third letter to the Barnard Girls from KINSMAN ' S C.You have found our soda all we promised. Now when you come for your favorite drink, we would be pleased to have you give our perfumes, fancy soaps and toilet articles a trial. Our candies you will find fresh and our drugs pure. Hmsman ' s The Prescription Chemist 125TH STREET - 8TH AVENUE SCHWARZ FORGER FOR HIGH-CLASS WORK, SEE Jt CLEANERS AND DYERS 1 25th STREET COLUMBUS AVENUE TELEPHONES 5376 38th Street 4225 38th Street 2119 Columbus 1682 Riverside 1437 Columbus 1437 Columbus 3288 38th Street 1546 Columbus 4329 Plaza 3210 Morningside 973 Harlem Squ 425 FIFTH AVENUE, 38th STREET ENTRANCE 1474 BROADWAY, 42d Street, opposite Times Building . 2145 BROADWAY, between 75th and 76th Streets (Astor Apartments) 2269 BROADWAY, between 8 1 st and 82d Streets .... 218 AMSTERDAM AVENUE, between 69th and 70th Streets (Sherman 190 COLUMBUS AVENUE, between 68th and 69th Streets . ' 704 EIGHTH AVENUE, between 44th and 45th Streets . 905 SEVENTH AVENUE, between 57th and 58th Streets 641 MADISON AVENUE, between 59th and 60th Streets 125th STREET and COLUMBUS AVENUE . 61 EAST 125th STREET, between Madison and 4th Avenues NEWPORT STORE, 3 TRAVERS BLOCK, adjoining Casino, Newport, K.I WORKS: 6, 8, 10, and 12 MANHATTAN STREET re) 3210 Morningside IF YOU WANT A NEAT SUBSTANTIAL LUNCH SERVED WITHOUT DELAY FOR TWENTY-FIVE CENTS COME TO Cf)e 33rrfeelep Also a la Carte ' Table d ' Hote Dinner , J5 cents Luncheon II.JO to j Dinner J.JO to J. JO n 2igt street Mrs. M. ARMSTRONG, Proprietor $arli avenue Hotel PARK (FOURTH) AVE., 32nd and 33rd STREETS. C THE PARK AVENUE is a thoroughly modern FIRE- PROOF hotel, liberally conducted, replete with all the lat- est IMPROVEMENTS and hotel appliances. Every room has direct OUTSIDE LIGHT, FREE AIR and SUN- SHINE. Rooms can be engaged singly, with bath, or en suite. tErlrptjonc rrtitcr tn Cton? Hoom C THE PARK AVENUE can be reached for one fare by electric cars from all railroad stations, ferries and steamship piers. Within easy access of the great shopping district, theatres and all places of amusement and interest. ubU)ap Station tn jfront of imtl First-Class Accommodations at Moderate Prices. Cuisine and Service Unsurpassed. REED BARNETT : PROPRIETORS Windsor Arcade Baths Tor Women Exclusively SEVEN EAST FORTY-SIXTH STREET A large, commodious, luxurious establishment, where women will find the various forms of Turkish, Russian, and Nauheim Baths, unsurpassed for renewal of energy, improvement of the complexion, and relief of rheumatism, neuralgia, etc. Expert operators for facial vibrassage, manicuring and chiropody. Hair-dressing and marcel wave, shampooing and best scalp treatment to promote the growth of hair. Attractive luncheons served. Open week-days until six p.m., and Friday evenings until ten o ' clock. E. A. MILLAR Cmbrotticrp SHIRT WAISTS MADE TO ORDER Hemming and Hemstitching A full line of Hand-embroidered Handkerchiefs Art Novelties Lingerie Pillows Trousseaux a specialty Embroidery taught 72 and 74 WEST THIRTY- EIGHTH STREET Corner Sixth Avenue, New York CHARLES A. O ' MALLEY COMPANY (INCORPORATED) Contractors and Builders Telephone 4O80 Main 44 COURT STREET BROOKLYN, N. Y. r T T t r T r r r r r r r r For Tou The Velvet (N0.557) Pencil 3 E NC I L CO, NY. VELVE ' Is quite the proper thing. It contains a LONG LASTING LEAD and UNRIVALED RED RUBBER ERASER 5o cents per dozen at your stationer ' s AMERICAN LEAD PENCIL COMPANY WASHINGTON SQUARE, NEW YORK r r r r r r t T 1 r r r r t r t r r r r r The Fotografer 1269 BROADWAY 1 162 BROADWAY 22 WEST 23rd STREET 4? 489 FULTON STREET 334 SIXTH AVENUE 4? ' Broofil n 4? xi Necklaces Telephone 5507 Morningside IKeUmag fall p armac? H. L. Oxman, Ph.G., Prop. Pharmacist and Chemist S. W. Comer AMSTERDAM AVE. i22d STREET Full line of Imported and Domestic Perfumes. Toilet Articles. Huyler ' s and Maillard ' s Candies. If you give our soda a trial you will come again. 564 FIFTH AVENUE Between 46th and 47th Streets, Opp. Windsor Arcade Shoes ( MEN For WOMEN I and CHILDREN POPULAR PRICES The Original Shoe House on Fifth Avenue Telephone 1137 — ypt i Street jflortst 1184 LEXINGTON AVE., NEW YORK Corner 80th Street of Lapus Lazuli Yellow Onyx Aventurines Amethysts Kanamara Carnelian $8.50, $12.00, to $50.00 E. W. DAYTON are Gems and Semi-Precious Stones 4 West 39TH Street ESTABLISHED 1866 TELEPHONE 1955-79111. 3. 3janss g on Successors to B. H. DeBOES CO. Furniture Carpets Upholstery 1382 Cl)itD atcnuc, ifteto gorfe Between 78th and 79th Streets Branch : 1004 MADISON AVENUE .xii Horner ' s Furniture The Standard in Quality and Style All the NeTfi Ideas ? I HIS is what our stock presents all the time, but more especially at the opening of each season, as now, when all lines are replete with the latest productions of the best exponents of high-class woodcraft. Separate floors devoted to Drawing Room and Parlor Furniture, Bedroom Furniture, Dining Room Furniture. Separate Departments devoted to Brass Bedsteads (exclusive patterns) ; also to Mis- sion, Flemish and Weathered Oak Furniture tor the library, hall or den. C prices in plain figures and the lowest possible for furniture of highest excellence. R. J. HORNER COMPANY furniture ittafecrg and Jmportcrg 61, 63, 65 WEST 23D STREET, NEW YORK xiii PHONE, 2612 38TR ST. MEEKER CO. REPAIRING OF EVERY DESCRIPTION OF BRIC-A-BRAC AND ART TREASURES ALSO TEA AND COCOA ROOM 428 FIFTH AVENUE, NEW YORK NEAR 38TH STREET HUUan SMlmau .Specialist 4.34 Fifth Avenue : 2 West jgth Street New York Telephone 6o66-38th JFactal Creatment COLD STEAM VAPOR HYDRO-VACU SCIENTIFIC MASSAGE ELECTRICAL VITALIZING, ETC. Neck, arms and hands beautified pair anU S calp Creatment SHAMPOOING MASSAGE RESTORING GREY HAIR, ETC. SINGEING ELECTRICITY JJarts LonUon MME. ANDERSON Crtmmefc iMltnerp 140 WEST TWENTY-THIRD STREET OPP. PROCTOR ' S Celepbone 590 Cfocleiea C. We wish to call particular attention to our importations from London and Paris of our latest creations in the way of Novelties in Mil- linery which we offer at most attractive prices. A SUITABLE HAT FOR STUDENTS AT $5.00 KRANICH BACH PIANOS IMPORTANT NOTICE OUR NEW SYSTEM of small par- tial payments makes it as easy for you to own a superb, highest grade in- strument as an inferior one sold by a cheap dealer or a department store. Particulars on application. arerooms 233-245 East 23d Street 16 West 125th Street N. Y. City A STRAIGHT LINE IS THE SHORTEST DISTANCE BETWEEN TWO POINTS 1 863 BROADWAY, 508 FIFTH AVE. NEW YORK. 22 OTHER RETAIL STORES. CANDIES SENT EVERYWHERE BY MAIL OR EXPRESS. DIEGES CLUST If we made it, it ' s right Official Jewelers of the Leading Colleges Schools and Associations CLASS PINS FRATERNITY PINS MEDALS, CUPS, Etc. WATCHES DIAMONDS JEWELRY Makers of the Barnard College 1007 Class Pin 25 JOHN STREET, NEW YORK orton ' 0 IStt Cream STANDARD of the WORLD USED BY EVERYBODY Depots: 305 Fourth Avenue 598 Sixth Avenue v New York 1 1 5 Park Row ) 519-521 Fulton Street Brooklyn The Little Tea Shop a. West Thirty-seventh Street Phone 404-38 LUNCHEON SERVED FROM 12-3 AFTERNOON TEA 4-6 S perialttffl[ Southern Dishes Corn Bread Waffles Ice Cream A Special Feature is made of Young Girls ' Lunch Parties and Afternoon Teas Manage MADAME De MELI MRS. GEORGE CARLTON LEE BROADWAY, AT EIGHTY-THIRD STREET jj Jij 1JW j S 7 jfe? 4 i 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 f f f f f f f f jnorjt to Stotorttsements PA(iE PA(iK II. C . r. Koch C o. a Teachers ' Agency (Mrs. M. . oung-I ulton) vii i in any Co. . • b The Veltin School . vii Andrew J. Robinson Co. c E. Miriam Coyriere vii Knox . d E. E. Sanborn . viii Bradley Studios e A. G. Seiler Co. . viii Eimer ix: Amend f Kinsman . viii C b Corsets . • g Lemcke Buechner . viii Put-coll IV Pr ' . i urseu ivi i g, l.o. . Schwarz Forger . . Vlll Brooks Brothers | The Berkeley . ix Peter Thomson ii Odell Marie ix L. E. Waterman Co. ii Windsor Arcade Baths . ix Bon Marche . ii E. A. Millar . IX H. Jantzen ii C. A. O ' Malley X reck reck . • | American Lead Pencil Co. xi Nicholas • ||| Scherer .... xi rneu form Co. • in Reldnas Hall Pharmacy . xii Eugene . ■i Arnold .... xii Jos. Heinrichs iv Mansfield xii Louis F. Mazzetti . iv E. W. Dayton xii Cotrell i ; Leonard . iv J. Janss Son xii mttier Hall . V J. Horner . xiii 17 V n irAO l r. . uevoe ix i_o. V Meeker .... . XIV L iarK i _ vv HKins V Stillman. . xiv Kaye . vi Kranich Bach . xiv Mrs. Winslow ' s Soothing Syrup vi Anderson . xiv R G Corsets vi Huyler .... . xiv C. J. Hoeninger vi Electric City Eng. Co. XV M. Haas vi Tea Shop . xvi C. Muller . vii H. J. Hoffmeir . xvi Pach Bros. . vii Dieges Clust . xvi Barnard School . vii Horton .... . xvi
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