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' J. j i HE BOCK , . 1931 B3RyN H4WC C€LLCGE Mary Summerfield Gardiner to whom The Class of 1931 Dedicates this Book Elizabeth Mongan Mary Oakford Mary Froth ingh am Board of Editors Editor- in - Ch iej Evelyn Waples Editors Helen Bell Contributors Sydney Sullivan Art Editor Barbara Kirk Assistant Art Editor Robin Kreutzberg Photographs Celia Darlington Virginia Hobart Margaret Findley The campus views are by Reinick Xeesen B usiness Board Business Manager Virginia Shryock Margaret Findley Ethel Sussman Assistants Virginia Burdick Esther Thomas Page Fire Page Six Freshman Y ear LIFE was much more exciting in the old days before we learned how to plan our work and use our Saturdays to the best advantage. That was in 1927 and Sappy and Posey Bailey were still with us, and Palache and Jo Young. In those days we still tried to get food out of Pembroke Kitchen. There was the time when we crawled in, lit on some cans, and crawled out of the darkness to find we had stolen OLD HONESTY fruit salad. It was a coincidence, we said. Angelyn did the split in our little show and all the tall handsome girls were sheiks — Pinkney and Rhys and Helen Bell, etc. It wasn ' t a very big show, they all called it a skit, but we liked it and remembered to say zebra instead of chipmunk. Freshman Night was not like any other night. Merion procured some fireworks and set them off on the faculty tennis court. I believe there was some trouble about getting out. The freshmen had to get out by the fire escape from Jameson ' s room because the door was locked. Anyway, next day found Betty Fry and C. T. in their caps and gowns in the Self-Government room. There was some real drama in Wyndham freshman year. But there was big May Day. It seemed that college was all folk-dancing and paper flowers that year. (Heh) We had gingerbread men and hot cross-buns to eat. We had to go to Gladys Lenka ' s soirees in the gym. You had to shake hands with her and then act out what her manner was, proud or affected or naive. It was the same idea as our natural dancing. And in the heat of May Day was The Apple standing over the costumes, putting in extra hours with Rebecca and disturbing even Mr. Alwyne ' s quiet depth. God bless our gracious sovereign. Miss Applebee by name, That long unto our comfort She may both rrrule and rrreign. Page Seven I CLASS OFFICERS 1927-1928 President Caroline Thompson Vice-President Elizabeth Baer Secretary Rhys Caparn SELF-GOVERNMENT ASSOCIATION Executive Board Elizabeth Baer UNDERGRADUATE ASSOCIATION Advisory Board Ethel Dyer CHRISTIAN ASSOCIATION Advisory Jlember Pauline Parker ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION Freshman Jlember . . . ■Hilda Thomas (resigned) Elinor Totten COLLEGE NEWS Assistant Editors Emily Lewis Virginia Hobart Virginia Shryock LANTERN Celia Darlington Emily Lewis SONG MISTRESS Angelyn Burrows Page Xine TOWARDS the end of freshman year, after weeks of intricate mathematical calculations, we realized that 1931 was a doomed group. The class numerals added up to 13. The omen proved only too true. Our high spirits were dampened when on Parade Night, Becky Warfield burned to death in the famous bonfire when someone flung her into it under the impression that she was a hockey stick. The error was not discovered until later. An unfortunate incident also marred Lantern Night. Miss King, back from her sabbatical in Spain, found the contrast in climate very enervating. This Dona was apt to drop off almost anywhere and on Lantern Night she had cuddled cosily up in a corner of the library roof. Miss King is a sound sleeper and it was not until 1931 gave tongue that she rose, a majestic and imposing figure in toreadoric lounging pajamas, and gave her world-famous lecture on the singing line. The darkness and the association of ideas probably account for this; 1931 would have preferred the lecture on listening quality if this had to happen, but conceded none the less that the affair only added to the evening ' s aesthetic value. Election night went off better. Dr. Fenwick was to have led a large and devoted group of Norman Thomas supporters in a parade. But after hours of waiting the parade had to be given up. Dr. Fenwick had not appeared. He was curfew and the group of disgruntled girls were about to retire when Taylor Hall was noticed to be shaking violently on its foundations. Some of us entered and discovered our brave Socialist tearing round and round the Juno on his motorcycle. He had lost control of the machine and was unable to stop hurtling about the statue. Some heroic maidens broke into the bookshop, got provisions and tossed them to the unfortunate man as he went by until he ran out of gas. When Stokowski and his orchestra and Mr. Alwyne and the choir entertained us in our pseudo-Gothic barn we felt that our luck had turned and we were deeply grateful to them for reversing the clouds to show the silver lining. But we were wrong. The last straw came when the liquor ran out at the Christmas party. We were all vexed and a committee of responsible girls headed by Caroline Thompson Page Ten called on Mrs. Manning. We gave her Christmas vacation in which to think it over but when we returned, public opinion was firm in rejecting her suspiciously in- adequate apologies. Miss Carey was roped in as a substitute because of the sympathy she had shown us in the situation. When Edna St. Vincent Millay read to us in her smart Virennet model, her expert English accent so won our hearts that we asked her to take over our enthralling Sophomore English course in Miss Donnelly ' s place. Even Miss Donnelly asked her to take Miss Donnelly ' s place. But Miss Millay wearily said that her heart was otherwhere. We were puzzled by this but decided she meant no as she never reappeared. After seeing the Duncan Dancers, 1931, always body-conscious, begged Miss Park to make Terpsichore our gracious inspiration. When she refused, 1931 took their revenge by employing the Duncan technique at the Tea Dances. This made us unpopular with the fellers but who is 1931 to surrender its ideals? The year ended in a round of social activities and hoops. We were sorry when no one in 1929, our sister class, received degrees, but we felt this was really deserved after their disgraceful stubbornness about the chapel situation. They kept right on going to chapel in Taylor long after Miss Park started holding it in Goodhart and often frightened timid professors like Miss Swindler by singing hymns and shouting Amen in the second floor classrooms at nine o ' clock. Even though by this time we saw what it would lead to, some of us thought that we might return the next year. Miss Carey thought that some of us mightn ' t and our faith in her was justified when we found that every time she thought this she was right. P. S. : Here dies The Liars ' Club, founded 1927, by Lewis. Page Eleven CLASS OFFICERS 1928-1929 President . . . . ' . . . Elizabeth Baer Vice-President Helen Bell Secretary Lois Thurston SELF-GOVERNMENT ASSOCIATION Treasurer . . ' Lois Thurston Executive Board Elizabeth Baer Marie Dixon Caroline Thompson UNDERGRADUATE ASSOCIATION Treasurer Rhys Caparn Advisory Board Helen Bell ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION Secretary Mary Frothingham Sophomore Member Elinor Totten COLLEGE NEWS Assistant Editors Jamison Bunn Virginia Hobart Virginia Shryock Business Board Mary Frothingham Dorothy Asher LANTERN Assistant Editors Celia Darlington Evelyn Waples Assistant Treasurer .... Margaret McKelvy VARSITY DRAMATICS Board Members Catherine Rieser Hilda Thomas ART CLUB Treasurer Barbara Kirk Studio Manager Ethel Sussman SONG MISTRESS Sylvia Scott Page Twelve Junior Year JUNIOR year dawned bright and clear. Now that we were Juniors we could no longer be considered too young to understand history of art. We found lots of changes to challenge our growing powers of observation. We found the dean ' s office inhabited by the Walrus and the Carpenter who in private life turned out to be only our friends Miss Carey and Miss Gardiner. We found too that we could no longer enjoy unmolested the sweet solitude of P.T. ' s garden, but we could still find a quiet haven by dropping in at Radnor to see the grads who were happy in the possession of their promised land. About this time we had lots of good resolu- tions such as passing our orals at the first attempt. Somehow we forgot those resolu- tions in the excitement over the exact interpretation of medicinal purposes only . One of us even tried to bribe the clerk at Liggett s to tell how much coca cola would really be medicinal. Then they opened the Reserve Room on Sunday afternoon so that we could induce our Sunday afternoon sleep by carefully chosen reading. Before Christmas we were allowed to enjoy the benefits of Johnnie ' s and Mary Drake ' s summer at St ckbridge. After Christmas Miss Park fled from an exam strain to an express strain. Then the freshmen cheered us up with Palpitating Pinafores and we sat on the front and smiled encouragingly at them every time the scenery fell down. Miss Carey acted as fashion arbiter for us last spring, but still the good blue jacket seemed cosy and clean and green linen overalls made us feel all light and fluffy. Page Thirteen Spring was accompanied by the first dim stirrings of the comin g horror of the unit system. We stopped celebrating Virgil ' s Bimillennium long enough to evolve sun bathing costumes so marvelous to behold, causing us to hope that the short- sightedness of Professors was more then proverbial. Finally when the heat had be- come almost too hot and we had eaten almost too much garden party punch, we rushed off to pack our trunk and buy our ticket, for of course we Let Annzie Lord put us on board S T C A the only way. And that we thought, as we leaned over the railing, is the end of that — until next year. Page Fourteen CLASS OFFICERS 1929-1930 President Lois Thurston Vice-President Marie Dixon Secretary Janet Bissell (resigned) Barbara Kirk SELF-GOVERNMENT ASSOCIATION Executive Board Elizabeth Baer Lois Thurston Marie Dixon Secretary Hilda Thomas UNDERGRADUATE ASSOCIATION Secretary . ... Caroline Thompson Advisory Board Barbara Kirk Ethel Dyer Margaret McKelvy BRYN MAWR LEAGUE Frances Robinson ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION Vice-President Elizabeth Blanchard Treasurer Mary Froth ingham COLLEGE NEWS Assistant Editor Virginia Shryock Business Board Dorothy Asher LANTERN Assistant Editors Evelyn Waples Celia Darlington Business Board Margaret McKelvy Ethel Sussman VARSITY DRAMATICS President Ethel Dyer Executive Board Mary Drake Catherine Rieser Virginia Hobart Page Fifteen President Secretary Treasurer ART CLUB Barbara Kirk Mary Oakford Ethel Sussman Treasurer FRENCH CLUB Gertrude Macatee President Vice-President SCIENCE CLUB Margaret Findley . Martha Taylor SONG MISTRESS Margaret Nuckols 2 S Page Sixteen SENIOR YEAR THOSE of us who were not killed off during the first week of 1930-31 in the Unit Racket found that it was comfortable being a senior. We also found that there was nothing left except ourselves so we stopped talking and started to toy with the idea of a job. Paul Hazard lectured and Goodhart burned up. They said it burned up, but the next morning there it was and all the children had slept through the excitement, and the next evening there was Paul Hazard in the gym. So just what did happen is mostly hearsay, but we heard say that Mr. Willoughby fought the Page Eighteen flames like a gamecock and that Mrs. Manning got (here (airly promptly. The Varsity Dramatics gave The Devil ' s Disciple wi(h Haverford and Jasper Dieter. Mr. Dieter was exciting, may we say, and everyone Celt that if we could have lived up to his standard of emdtion and that if Haverford could have done the same, and i( the play chosen had been another play chosen, and if there had been more cooperation from the student body, that the charred hall would have been filled. As it was, Merion seniors gave a dinner party (ostensibly to show the men that college women are not pampered), and trooped down to the play afterwards, looking really quite attractive in their long dresses and rouged lips, and took up two rows of seats. After that nothing happened at all, but winter fell down and then Christmas and no one can remember anything but work which is an excellent tribute to Betty Perkins, Eliza Boyd and all the other old masters, God rest their memories. Who ' d have thought that we ' d do it and like it to quote the talking pictures. A change was coming over the smoking rooms at about this time. Often the long winter evenings were spent in murdering and gammoning. Goodhart having shown it was fireproof, two Soutiens were procured for the commons room, and friendly pictures they are too. Came the Spring and the Printer. The board of editors is about to break into wails at this point. How can the college go on and 1931 — far away? Then we sang our class song about the star and Bryn Mawr and it had its usual bracing effect. Page Nineteen Page Twenty May, 1931. Art or English Examination Time: Six hours I. (a) Identify passages. (b) Compare with: Thomas Aquinas Conan Doyle Paul Fort (c) Use them in sentences. I. (c) Answered: We came to pass, — when fullest freest forms had not yet been developed, — and we come to go — man must endure their going hence even as their coming hither, — and further there were none. S tyS ' Just the Most Private Thing in the World Page Twenty-one CLASS OFFICERS 1930-1931 President Elizabeth Baer Vice-President ...... Elizabeth Mongan Secretary Barbara Kirk SELF-GOVERNMENT ASSOCIATION President Lois Thurston Vice-President Elizabeth Baer Executive Board Elizabeth Mongan UNDERGRADUATE ASSOCIATION President Helen Bell Vice-President Margaret McKelvy Chairman oj Speakers ' Bureau . . . Caroline Thompson Head Usher Ethel Dyer ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION President Mary Frothingham COLLEGE NEWS Copy Editor Virginia Shryock Business Manager Dorothy Asher LANTERN Editor-in-Chiej Evelyn WAPLES Editors Celia Darlington Bertha Faust Business Managers Ethel Sussman Sylvia Markley VARSITY PLAYERS President Ethel Dyer Executive Board Mary Drake Business Manager Margaret McKelvy ART CLUB Managers Barbara Kirk Mary Oakford Page Twenty-two President Scar Ian FRENCH CLUB Gertrude Macatee Virginia Smith P refill cut SCIENCE CLUB Margaret Findley President Business Jlanaijcr GLEE CLUB Margaret Shaughnessy Frances Tatnall SONG MISTRESS Margaret Nuckols Page Tircnty-three LIFE IS A CREAM SEPARATOR FANNY got up at seven to take her own and everyone else ' s books back to the library before eight o ' clock. She ate her fruit and vvheatena slowly and went to sit in the smoking room with a box of matches always ready while her class smoked. Nine o ' clock found Fanny lending pencils and handkerchiefs to the psychology class. At eleven one could see her hurrying to the library with milk bottles, straws and crackers for her friends and others. Eleven-fifteen and she had washed them out and returned them to the kitchen. At lunch she ordered milk to give away the cream. She never had her maraschino cherry. Two o ' clock found Fanny at the bank. At three o ' clock and four o ' clock Fanny was still at the bank. Five o ' clock and Fanny was at the A. P. It took three trips to get all the money and groceries home. She read her books in the reserve room because somebody else might want one, and she could always read something else. Fanny insisted on washing dishes. Fanny was a freshman. a -3 I EDGEWICK rose at nine minutes after nine. Sedgewick used any tooth brush on the washstand if she wasn ' t too rushed. Nine-eleven found Sedge- wick slipping into class before the door closed, with the signing-out pencil. Sedgewick read all the magazines in the book shop, there. Sedgewick signed Smith when she took books out of the Art Seminary and she kept them till she read them. She had a key and lock put on the Carola Woeshonhoffer door. Sedgewick checked every vocation. Sedgewick liked her tea. At dinner she dumped Page Twenty-four her ice cream into the marshmallow-sauce howl. Sedgewick found all the bicycles locked when she wanted to go to the movies, but Sedgewick found a key. At eight one could have seen her climbing from the bicycle into the ladies ' window of the Seville. At ten o ' clock she walked out of the Seville. There was a policeman so she had to leave the bicycle. Sedgewick had a soda at Powers and Reynolds and charged it to Mrs. Manning. Sedgewick saw every movie and got her High C ' s. Sedgewick had to thumb her way home. From eleven to twelve Sedgewick bathed. She took the stopper of her favorite tub back to her room. Sedgewick was a senior. Page Twenty-fire THE LONG RETORT S U «CM- Hof tpy .1. host write c-oop re PQB Ji- V£ £tff£spf?y 3 . HflM-- CHQOi£,s Jn kLL QooK H. Still ffeno i c- j iau. fl o c 3. REflD-i J Mrfi. . gooK- Y ? ' o y Tu.i rtflA inn. ,w n Bo. Pajc Twenty-six Lament For The Lobster Take her up tenderly, Lift her with care; Fashioned so slenderly, Young and so fair! Count her antennae — Sweet! and so many! Ammonia constantly Drips from her claws. Take her up instantly, Oh, do not pause! Scrape off the muscle From each vital part, The fair snowy muscle; Then manfully tussle To tear out her heart. Touch her not scornfully, Think of her mournfully, Gently and humanly; Noting the sex of her, Full lower decks of her: She is pure womanly. Ere her limbs frigidly Stiffen too rigidly Decently, kindly. Remove and dissect them, With care to respect them. Cutting not blindly. What ' s her exopodite, Where ' s her protopodite, Is her epipodite Under her gill? Where are they? Drowned in The sea she swam round in? Or did they get ground in Her own gastric mill? Draw them and label them, Count them and table them. Docile and dutiful; When you have done her Remember her honor: Death has left on her Only the beautiful! Take her up tenderly Lift her with care; Fashioned so slenderly, Young and so fair! Page Ticenty-seven Q Sr® How Sleep the Brave How sleep the brave who sink to rest By next day ' s quizzes unoppressed! H. C. with dewy fingers cold, Shall never deck their hallowed mould ; They care not: to them sweeter far Plain merits than High credits are. Thoughtless of honor they sleep on, Nor rouse to sound of bells at dawn; Happy in mediocrity. They dream of M., they scorn H.C. — But thither, sometimes, shall repair Passed Minus, weeping through her hair. Page Twenty nine NASHIATIONS Anyone who argues with the Dean ' s office Has to be something of a Sophist. We ' d nominate Mrs. Lyoll for the Hall of Oblivion If we didn ' t think it would utterly spoil her joy of livion Girls are advised to avoid the birdin Of the bearded Dr. Herben. Eddie King Is what they call an Art boy, we thing. G. G. ' s course of Art and the Birble Gives her students a lot of trerble. We think it ' s swell to feel the urge Of art, like Beatrice McGerge. The fact that Norton ' s aesthetic in purple Shows that she ' s G. G ' s ardent discerple. Virgil ' s Bimillenniun Was celebrated by a lot of people and not enjoyed much by any o ' ' em. Miss Donelly Talks fonnily. Miss Petts Co-ordinets. We ' ve got the hots on Doctor Watson. Now, Nahm, Come, Come! TIME Little stars above my head. How I wish I were in bed. One more page One more line, Quizzes always come on time. Page Thirty E. Blanchard, Captain H. Adams I. Benham E. Thomas E. Baer, Captain A. Burrows M. Frothingham E. Baer, Captain E. Totten On Varsity — E. M. Frothingham E. Baer A. Burrows 1927-1928 HOCKEY Won by 1928 E. Baer V. HOBART C. Reiser WATER POLO D. ASHER E. Blanchard F. Tatnall L. Sanborn E. Waples C. Thompson H. Thomas E. Totten E. Waples BASKETBALL H. Thomas K. Sappington E. Blanchard B. Humphreys Baer, E. Blanchard, B. Humphreys SWIMMING E. Bailey D. Asher M. Nuckols E. Totten E. Waples On Varsity — A. Burrows, M. Frothingham Page Thirty-one E. Blanchard, Captain E. Baer H. Adams E. Thomas 1928-1929 HOCKEY Won by 1932 E. TOTTEN E. Tatnall J. Moore E. Waples I. Benham M. Frothingham C. Reiser A. Burrows E. Totten D. Asher On Varsity — E. Blanchard, C. Reiser Substitutes — H. Adams, E. Thomas SWIMMING MEET Won by 1931 E. Thomas E. Baer M. Frothingham H. Thomas R. Levy On Varsity — E. Totten, A. Burrows, M. Frothingham, E. Thomas WATER POLO On Varsity — M. Frothingham, E. Totten, A. Burrows Substitute — D. Asher BASKETBALL E. Totten E. Baer B. Humphreys M. Dixon . Blanchard, E. Baer, E. Totten E. Blanchard, Captain J. Moore On Varsity All-Round Championship Won by 1931 E. Blanchard, Captain E. Waples M. Turner I. Moore 1929-1930 HOCKEY Won by 1933 E. Totten F. Tatnall L. Snyder E. Baer I. Benham E. Thomas E. Doak On Varsity — E. Totten, E. Blanchard, E. Thomas SWIMMING MEET Won by 1933 E. Thomas M. Frothingham R. Levy D. Asher A. Burrows D. Ferguson E. Waples On Varsity — M. FROTHINGHAM BASKETBALL Won by 1933 L. Thurston J. Moore F. Tatnall, Captain E. Thomas L. Snyder M. Frothingham M. Dixon M. Turner On Varsity — E. Baer, Captain, E. Totten FENCING K. Cone Page Thirty-two E. TOTTEN, Captain E. Baer TENNIS C. Thompson C. Griswold M. Frothingham E. MoNGAN 1930-1931 HOCKEY E. Doak M. Turner F. Tatnall E. Waples On Varsity — E. Baer, Captain, E. Totten, E. SWIMMING E. Thomas M. Frothingham On Varsity — M. Frothingham BASKETBALL M. Turner G. Macatee A. Burrows On Varsity — E. Baer, E. Totten Yellow Blazers and Insignia E. Baer E. Totten Class Blazers and Insignia E. Blanchard A. Burrows CLASS BLAZERS H. Adams V. Hobart D. Asher B. Humphreys I. Benham J. Moore E. Doak L. Snyder E. Totten, Cap a E. Baer I. Benham R. Levy F. Tatnall L. Thurston M. Findley M. Frothingham E. Thomas Thomas A. Burrows M. Findley J. Moore M. Frothingham E. Thomas H. Thomas C. Thompson L. Thurston E. Waples Page Thirty-three a.v A b.= -s;eUs X -na f of- a. fa T rv .ivl i £ -c ttnr ltk MCmiaff 1 ive. re pur IK Mjrt Ufr is comply wlw ' . J (ten +alC? a-Vaij b ' KhiTinrJ ■ ; „ v_ i -i a yr Viov y° i r£ jo ' r kiiw wrii T.-tv.nic •Jon ; S4 lv? SS S at?- ' as Page Thirty-four QUAIRIES? 1. Mr. Chad wick-Collins. 2. The Unit System. 3. What happens in Chapel. 4. Whether Mr. Alwyne is an only child. 5. What state Dr. Fenwick comes from. 6. Whether Miss Garvin is Marlene or Greta. 7. Whether the faculty read the Year Book. 8. What a week-end at Bryn Mawr is like. (or 9a: What a week-end away from Bryn Mawr is like.) Page Thirty-fire Ancient Painting Mary H. Swindler Yale University Press, New Haven, 1929 IT TOOK only a glance at this slender pamphlet to show our astute little minds that there was far too much action in it. Because of this the plot is difficult to follow. Murder succeeds murder and the accumulation of excitements only serves to obscure the author ' s thesis: That the feeding of tennis balls to babies is responsible for the wretched facilities found on the Paoli local. Her truly porno- graphic realism foreshadows the technique seen in the style of the new suburban station and this does not justify the unrhymed couplets that begin and end every paragraph and which only serve to confuse the reader. Dr. Swindler is obviously out of her depth when she takes up the cudgel in the indirect lighting versus longer skirts controversy. She joins hands with Bertram Russel in asserting that the race will eventually benefit by the increasing use on the Bryn Mawr campus of ocean sand as furniture in the girls ' rooms. In finishing we can only say that Dr. Swindler has obviously not devoted enough time to thinking out the problem with which she is confronted. Page Thirty-six I Sent A Message I sent a message to the Dean, T told her This is what I mean. I went again to her to say It would be better far my way. I said it once; I said it twice, I tried to make it sound quite nice. I went again in Senior Year; By now I had quite lost my fear. She very slightly turned her head And asked me what it was I said. I only wondered if we could Have left the bushes where they stood. Page Thirty-seven ' You Must Never Go Down to The End of The Town If You Don ' t Go Down With Me. O 1 N FEBRUARY 9th of this year a group of some five or more students were waiting in Mrs. Lyle ' s office. Some of them wanted to see Mrs. Manning; some of them Mrs. Manning wanted to see. All of them were becoming restive as the minutes slipped by and still no smug or terrified girl had opened the door and walked out. Mrs. Lyle was uncommunicative. They carried on a desul- tory conversation and hoped the one sitting nearest the door would remember that they were there first. For the ninety-ninth time they wondered why just one of the legs of the files was made of glass instead of the conventional light wood. For the ninety -ninth time they wondered what girl was in there and what they should say when they got in. The minutes passed the half-hour limit. Finally a head-professor walked in. He said he wanted to see Mrs. Manning. Mrs. Lyle said that someone was seeing her but that she thought she ' d be through in a minute. The head-pro- fessor leaned against the wall and looked at the row of unimpressed girls, with the calm expression of a thwarted head-professor. Mrs. Lyle went on typing. The girls gave long , loud sighs to prove they couldn ' t wait much longer. The head-professor walked up to Mrs. Lyle again. Will you kindly tell Mrs. Manning that I ' ll have to see her for only a minute. Mrs Lyle felt bullied. She went and knocked softly on the Dean ' s door. There was no answer. She knocked again. Again no answer. Open the door, said the head professor. Mrs. Lyle opened the door. Every one crowded in. They looked under the desk, and they looked at the ceiling. The large room was vacant. The door into the hall was slightly ajar. Mrs. Lyle, the head professor and the five girls went out of this door. Mrs. L. went straight to Miss Park. The little parade followed and grouped itself around the door. Mrs. L. knocked here and at once the cheerful voice of Mrs. Manning cried: Come in. Mrs. Lyle opened the door. Mrs. Manning was sitting by the window reading Vogue. Page Thirty-eight Silhouette in Smoke AS a child King presented certain difficulties to his family. He did not have an artist ' s fingers. He did not show an early tendency to amass wealth, and he was shy with girls. Always reticent, it was not until he became of age that they discovered in what direction his genius lay. They were surprised. They found him on the night of his twenty-first birthday experimenting with his nose and a candle, in his little night shirt in the cellar. They did not beat the boy. And in- deed it was due to the considerate treatment of his parents throughout this difficult period that he is the foremost man of his profession today. In 1913 he gave up (he stage and entered Bryn Mawr College, but the girls only served to make him retreat farther into his shell. They tell an anecdote which is doubtless exaggerated, that Miss Garbo tracked him for forty-one days on a ranch in Wyoming, and when she finally caught up with him and asked him for a lesson he diognosed her there in the desert, jiddering with confusion, under condition that she tell no one of their inter- view, which doubtless accounts for her success on the screen today. Actors and bishops never like him; he is too intelligent for them, and too diffident to hide his intelligence out of kindness. He is often unintentionally incon- siderate and will listen for hours to people who don ' t know or care what he is listen- ing about. It has been observed more than once that those who know him best like him the most. Page Thirty-nine Study Bred Tell me, where is study bred Or in the Lib., or in the bed, How begun — how nourished? It is engendered in the fear Of daily quizzes. Leisure dies In the smoker where it lies. Let us all ring leisure ' s knell, I ' ll begin it. Ding, dong, bell. Page Forty-ont The Sad Story of Mickey, The Country Cousin IT WAS the first day of spring and the girls all had on their little white socks and sometimes their little red overalls. Micky, the country cousin, coming to call for the first time, hit Bryn Mawr first at Rock arch. He didn ' t like what he saw there. Two girls stood in front of the hard wall, about a foot from it, with the tops of their heads pressed firmly against it. From this position they rotated slowly around never removing their head tops from the wall. They eyed him as they rotated. He eyed them. He tried to exchange a smile with them but his spirit flagged and he walked on instead. A little farther up the walk, two girls wer« lean- ing against a lamp-post. They sang, Oh, cavemen we look like and cavemen we act like, and cavemen we are without a doubt. Still farther along he found two girls measuring the lawn in front of the library with a ruler, and he began to get nervous. Nothing else happened for quite a while but the sight he saw on Merion green turned him pale. Over twelve full-grown women dressed in Tyrolean or Bavarian jackets and caps were playing drop the handkerchief, he thought it was drop the handkerchief, but it might have been go in and out the windows. This thing was general then. He couldn ' t remember that Ursinus was like this but then Ursinus was a coed college. The poor man didn ' t like to interrupt their little amusements by asking which hall Denbigh was, so he went to the nearest building which was Merion. He hadn ' t a chance to ring the bell because of the girls that kept running out of the door and upsetting him. They all had hard faces, he decided. He finally asked one if that was Denbigh Hall. She looked at him shrewdly. Do you want to see Miss Shryock? No, he didn ' t and said so. Then you ' re not about the Year Book, she said, and gave a sigh of relief and walked away. The kindly lad be- came tearful. The next girl who came out told him to go on in, because he could wait forever out there. He went in and put his hat on the table. It was reassur- ing to see it there, like an everyday object on a common table. After a minute one of them rushed in and picked up his hat. He tried to grab it but she told him it was elections. It didn ' t make any difference to him. It ' s all up now, he said to himself several times. Two others came in the door and slipped out of their shoes. With a run and kick, they each sent a shoe hurtling down the hall. Then they backed up and hurtled the other shoe. Then they went to get them. They talked about Buddha. Our miserable friend sat down on a corner of the sofa. Two more came in the door. He watched as one began to sidle gently around the room, her back to the wall, her arms outstretched. They talked of companionate marriage and a wave of pity swept over the man on the sofa. He hadn ' t realized it was like this with his little cousin. Now and then he asked soothingly if it were Denbigh Hall, but though they seemed to listen intelligently to him it was plain that their minds were not there. . At last he despaired of recovering his hat and walked out again, out past the romping women in Bavarian jackets, past the queer little old things measur- ing the lawn, and back through Rockefeller arch, a gentler, wiser man. Page Forty-two Composition as Explanation By Gertrude Stein Hogarlh Press 1926 Reviewed and Explained AND having seen her handwriting one sees naturally naturally clearly on obviously seessees. Sees happened naturally natural publisher poor poor dear old publisher naturally drivvel is drivvel is livel is lively is livelihood drivvel. Drivvel? livelihood. Drivvel is not drivvel. Is it it is handwriting which is hard of course but not o no never drivvel bosh bosh no. Is good good but good. Say good why not say good is very. If mistake mistaken about. Mistaken no livelihood therefore therefore and so it is good said that publisher. Debtors prisons being too full already with the nobenefitofdoubttogreatandfamouswriters — publishers. Take no chances. Benefitofdoubt such person she may be. Maybe she or maybe not but maybe. He says maybe. There is excessive danger in under- rating such a person as maybe she is. Benefitofdoubt a such person (benefitof doubt me please said that publisher) should hardly dare should not dare dare not should hardly dare not publish dareonly accept no choice but accept publisher says. Sez he. Page Forty-th ree Page Forty-Jour v.- - FACULTY PICTURES Page Forty-five In Memory of Theodore DeLaguna Page Forty-six (Alwyne) Gnmlhii Labour ProWcmii (I- ' liomislry Lnliorn OcoloKy Lnbnrntory [I Biology Liiborntnry (Giirdiriisr) Dnllo I ' liyrics Uliorntorj (Huff) Dnlton Mi- ' -- ' mI Art; Heiinissaiice Sculpture (0, C titutiounl r,nn [Fcnwickl I lii ' iniilrj Lnl torj ; Lnmn;ui3 I I nbonitorj i Dryden) Dali Blologj liflljomtorj (Gardiner) Dull] i !.. i« i ,i itorj (HiiffJ fall Hisr «ii ( An : IJ - 1 1 : ii s • : . m . ■.unl ! ' ■-ug tccture fE. S. King) I ! r Constitutional Ijw fFcnwick) i K,,K 1 Heading of Prose Authors (S. A. Kin, Miimc: 1 E Knelisli Wood Kconon Historj Italian Psychology ■Page Forty-seren Page Forty-eight Page Forty-nine Page Fifty imposition (Soul Modern l,ifr uriil TpUPIII] IVirtripl. I I J Moilcrn I ' Vendi Social Arillnii|if| ICngliso Literati Latin, Div. A I Mathematics, 1 IlioloKV (G Biology (Or Classical Archil (Mueller) ( History: 1. R. ( Italian Philoson Physics h£ Z t Rconomica M P Smith) S History: British [mpcriolisrn (W. It. ■■I Ituliaii [LoRrusso ' ■Philosophy: Lo«ic (Nairn I ' l HufT. ' rjfjri 1MB Latin: Literati Psychology: Animal Behaviour [Lciiba) Lib. 1 i ' B English: Literature of (he mhCcntu : French: Hiatormil JWl-ffnW c .. glish: Elizabethan Drama (Chew) B Mathematics: Advanced Calculus (Hedlund) C ] Hiatorv: Roman Empire (Ballou) I- j History of Art: An ol Far East l.. S. King G Page Fifty-one Page Fifty-two Page Fifty-three Page Fifty-four Senior Pictures Consummation Reprinted, by special permission, from the Lantern My life has been no more than smooth bright wings Folded against the shadow of a pool — Calm silence here has been my only tool To hatch Eternity from minute things. A drop from off each feather slips and clings; I watch the slim pale bubbles gliding cool. Watch with the white intentness of a gull Where the slow ripples carve their barren rings. But now! — With vibrant shock the radiant spear Of Beauty has transfixed my sombre being — Crimson with ecstasy it plunges sheer; — A fierce awareness tears the veil of seeing. Inchoate tenderness — a crystal spark — Melts, in the steep unmitigated dark . . . Page Fifty-six Dorothy Asher Marybel Avo Bachofer Page Fifty-seven Elizabeth Baer Elizabeth Blee Bailey Carolyn Bullock Beecher Helen Graham Bell Page Fifty-eight [sabel Hamilton Bkniiam Virginia Burdick Page Fifty-nine Angelyn Louise Burrows Anne Morris Cole Kathleen Cone Elizabeth Lawson Cook Page Sixty En in Appo Cook Celia Gause Darlington Page Sixty-one Marie Cottman Dixon Elizabeth Doak Jean Ditmars Donald Mary Polk Drake Page Sixty-two Clarisse Adele Duhreuil Ethel Chouteau Dyer Page Sixty-three Bertha Brossman Faust Donita Ferguson Margaret Dean Findley Mary Eliot Frothingham Page Sixty-four Anne Beverley George Elizabeth Purviance Gow Page Sixty-five Julia Wheeler Harris Virginia Hobart Louise Howland Miriam Frances Hyman Page Sixty-six Clara Dorothea Jenkins Marianna Duncan Jenkins Mary Joy Johnson Page Sixty-seven Ann-Marie Kennedy Barbara Kirk Robin Kreutzberg Page Sixly-eigM Ruth Levy Anne Kirkham Lord Page Sixty-nine Emily Jane Low Gertrude Paxson Macatee Sylvia Moss Markley Margaret Lee McKelvey Page Seventy Donotiiy Susan Mead Elizabeth Mongan Page Sevciily-one Alwine Jane Moore Margaret Ould Nuckols Mary Oakford Betty Thomson Overton Page Seventy-two Dorothy Pizor Frances Haswell Robinson Page Seventy-three Margaret Bride Scott Margaret Shaughnessy Mignon Sherley Virginia Florence Shryock Page Seventy-four Katherine Lena Sixt Virginia Everett Smith Page_Serenty-fiv Helen Louise Snyder Sydney Bvchanan Calhoun Sullivan Frances Swift Tatnall Ethel Picard Sussman Page Screnty-six Martha Jefferson Taylor Esther Evans Thomas PageSevciili iseveu .. ' £   3 - « HrLDA VaSzCSsinoza Thomas --• v T h Caroline Huston Thompson Katherine Thurber Lois Mather Thurston Page Seventy-eight Elinor Alice Totten Marion Humes Turner Page Seventy-nine Margaret Ruth Unangst Evelyn Alsworth Waples Mary Graham Webster Katherine Mary Winship Page Eighty Blanche Wortiiington Dorothy Miller Wright Sheema Sylvia Zeben Page Eighty-one A D D R E S S 1 9 3 1 Adams, Helen Redington Asher, Dorothy Bachofer, Marybel Ava Baer, Elizabeth Bailey, Elizabeth Blee Bateman, Ellen Edith . Beecher, Carolyn Bullock Bell, Helen Graham Benham, Isabel Hamilton Bissell, Janet Watson . . 79 Mayo Ave., Greenwich, Conn. 1858 N. 16th St., Philadelphia, Pa. . 124 Windsor St., Reading, Pa. Timonium, Md. S. Park Blvd., Shaker Heights, Cleveland, Ohio Bryn Mawr Gables, Bryn Mawr, Pa. . 1511MahantongoSt., Pottsville, Pa. 1350 Tower Road, Hubbard Woods, 111. 362 W. Church St., Elmira, N. Y. . 21 E. 66th St., New York City Blanchard, Elizabeth Arden (Mrs. Samuel Kirkland) Haverford Mansions, Haverford, Pa. Bunn, Mary Jameson (Mrs. George Buchanan) . . Rocky Mount, N. C. Burdick, Virginia Hampton, Conn. Burrows, Angelyn Louise c. ' o Mrs. W. W. Freeman, 1140 Fifth Ave., New York City Butler, Alice Eleanor (Mrs. Clement Clay Crawford) 115 E. 92nd St., New York City Caparn, Rhys Cole, Anne Morris 2534 S. 20th St., Philadelphia, Pa. Cone, Kathleen Cook, Elizabeth Lavvson Cook, Enid Appo Cowing, Marie Antoinette Curdy, Helen . Darlington, Celia Gause Colonia, N. J. 400 Highland Ave., Towson, Md. 2258 Sixth St., N. W., Washington, D. C. 33 W. 87th St., New York City, N. Y. 15 E. 56th St. Terrace, Kansas City, Mo. 41 Walker St., Cambridge, Mass. deV aux, Myrtle (Mrs. Kenneth Winslow Howard) 548 Orange St., New Haven, Conn. . 426 N. 38th St., Omaha, Neb. 134 W. Coulter St., Germantown, Philadelphia, Pa. 1049 Park Ave., New York City Stockbridge, Mass. Dixon, Marie Cottman . Doak, Elizabeth Donald, Jean Ditmars . Downing, Elizabeth Coil Page Eighty-two Drake, Mary Polk Dubreuil, Clarisse Adele Calk Dyer, Ethel Chouteau . Faust, Bertha Brossman Ferguson, Donita Findley, Margaret Dean Frothingham, Mary Eliot Fry, Lucy Howard . George, Anne Beverley Gow, Elizabeth Purviance . 447 N. E. 39th St., Miami, Fla. Esquina 2, Reparto La Sierra, clabana, Cuba . 29 Lenox Place, St. Louis, Mo. 1 L35 Belmont Ave., Wyomissing, Pa. 140 E. 46th St., New York City . 2406 Second Ave., Mtoona, Pa. . 157 Bay State Road., Boston, Mass. c o Mrs. S. M. Vauclain, Jr. Rosemont, Pa. . 1831 Monument Ave., Richmond, ' a . 1 133 W. Porphyry St., Butte, Mont. Griswold, Carolyn Howell Edgevale and Harvest Rds., Roland Park, Baltimore, Ml. Hamman, Mary Sharretts 10 Norwood Place, Guilford, Baltimore, Md. Harris, Julia Wheeler 2400 16th St., Washington, D. C. Hobart, Virginia 660 Prospect Ave., Winnetka, Tils. Hollander, Rosamond Hutzler . . . 1802 Eutaw Place, Baltimore, Md. Howland, Louise . . 100 W. University Parkway, Baltimore, Md. Howson, Elizabeth 134 Walnut Ave., Wayne, Pa. Humphreys, Blanche Barlow (Mrs. Wm. S. Gould, Jr.) 1 14 E. 90th St., New York City, N. Y. Hyman, Miriam Frances .... 6823 Ouincy St., Philadelphia, Pa. Jenkins, Clara Dorothea Jenkins, Marianna Duncan . Johnson, Mary Joy . Jones, Kathryn Fullerton (Mrs Kennedy, Ann-Marie Kirk, Barbara Kreutzberg, Robin Lewis, Emily Westwood Lord, Anne Kirkham 801 Morewood Ave. Pittsburgh, Pa 2517 Observatory Rd., Cincinnati, Ohio 6700 Crandon Ave., Chicago, Ills. Harden P. Galbraith) . St. Davids, Pa. 521 N. 38th St., Omaha, Neb. 92 Merbrook Lane, Merion, Pa. Graham St., Bethlehem, Pa. 12 Hortense Place, St. Louis, Mo. . 238 E. 68th St., New York Citv, N. Y. Lord, Katherine Anina (Mrs. Harold T. Armstrong) Park Cottage, Galmpton, near Kingsbridge, South Devon, England. Low, Emily Jane 1521 Drury Lane, Kansas City, Mo. Lowe, Margaret Coggeshall . . 22 Glenbrook Drive, Stamford, Conn. Macatee, Gertrude Paxton . . 2324 California St., Washington, D. C. Markley, Sylvia Moss 124 Market St., Sunbury, Pa. McKelvey, Margaret Lee . . .765 Park Ave., New York City, N. Y. McKinney, Elizabeth (Mrs. Gregory Mcintosh) . Ridgemere, Wycliffe, Ohio Mead, Dorothy Susan . . 1661 Crescent Place, Washington, D. C. Miller, Nancy Lee (Mrs. Christopher L. Sainty) . . Address Unknown Mongan, Elizabeth 24 Central St., Somerville, Mass. Moore, Alwine Jane 44 Laurel Rd., New Haven, Conn. Moos, Dorothy Jane Nields, Anne Nuckols, Margaret Ould Oakford, Mary Overton, Betty Thomson 221 Wvncote Rd., Jenkintown, Pa. 1401 Broome St., Wilmington, Del. 1 Kenmar Rd., Menands, Albany, N. Y. Parmure Rd., Haverford, Pa. 84 Grove St., New York Citv Page Eighty-three Parker, Pauline Stockton (Mrs. James Carey, 3rd) 4308 Rugby Road., Pinckney, Frances Craik .... 3008 Seminary Ave., Pitts, Helen Dorsey Pizor, Dorothy Rea, Marguerite Bailey Richards, Betsy Hastings (Mrs. John L. Horner, Jr.) Rieser, Catherine Lesher . Robinson, Frances Haswell Roesler, Phoebe Alice Inlay Sappington, Katherine Curtis Schomburg, Alice Dorothy . Scott, Margaret Bride . Scott, Sylvia (Baroness Serge A. Korff) Shaughnessy, Margaret Sherley, Mignon Shyrock, Virginia Florence Sixt, Katherine Lena Smith, Virginia Everett Snyder, Helen Louise Stevenson, Helen Maxwell Stiles, Alice Elizabeth Sullivan Baltimore, Md. Richmond, Va. 1031 Canton Ave., Milton, Mass. 4615 Osage Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. 107 E. Market St., York, Pa. (Address unknown) Moylan, Rose Valley, Pa. 1185 Park Ave., New York City 73 Water St., Perth Amboy, N. J. 141 Joralemon St., Brooklyn, N. Y. . 502 S. 46th St., Philadelphia, Pa. Nassau St., Princeton, N. J. 188 Concord St., Framingham, Mass. 2600 Upton St., Washington, D. C. 48 Harvey St., Germantown, Philadelphia, Pa. 1359 Shaw View Ave., East Cleveland, Ohio 24 Washington Ave., Schenectady, N. Y. 103 Jefferson St., Brookville, Pa. . 5030 Hazel Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. 203 Lynn Shore Drive, Lynn, Mass. Sydney Buchanan Calhoun 2308 Wyoming Ave., Washington, D. C. 3322 N. 16th St., Philadelphia, Pa. 1500 Rodney St., Wilmington, Del. Page, Fayette County, W. Va. Oakley Rd., Haverford, Pa. 122 W. Lanvale St., Baltimore, Md. 2500 Massachusetts Ave., Washington, D. C. . 215 E. 73rd St., New York City c o Central Hanover Bank and Trust Co., 42nd and Madison Ave., New York City, N. Y. 2110 R St., N. W., Washington, D. C. 148 Terrace Ave., Jamaica, L. I., N. Y. Parkton, Baltimore County, Md. 5406 Pine St., Philadelphia, Pa. 214 Windemere Ave., Wayne, Pa. 128 W. Lafayette Ave., Baltimore, Md. Scarborough Rd., Cleveland Heights, Ohio South Miami, Dade County, Fla. 224 Georgia Ave., Macon, Ga. . Forest Grove, Pa. Sussman, Ethel Picard . Tatnall, Frances Swift Taylor, Martha Jefferson . Thomas, Esther Evans . Thomas, Hilda Vall-Spinoza Thompson, Caroline Huston Thurber, Katherine Thurston, Lois Mather Totten, Elinor Alice Turk, Nathene Turner, Marion Humes Unangst, Margaret Ruth Waples, Evelyn Alsworth Warfield, Rebecca Evelyn Webster, Mary Graham WlDEMEYER, MAIDIE Winship, Katherine Mary Worthington, Blanche . worthington, elizabeth coleman 415 Hawthorn Rd., Roland Park, Baltimore, Md. Wright, Dorothy Miller .... 1734 DeKalb St., Norristown, Pa. Zeben, Sheema Sylvia 6132 Locust St., Philadelphia, Pa. 2914 Page Eighty-four Patronize Our Advertisers C omplimentary JT JAMES DOAK JR. COMPANY PHILADELPHIA Worsted y arns I A. Page Eighty-seven ..tfBANKS BlDrw V J Established 1832 . Philadelphia SCHOOL RINGS, EMBLEMS, CHARMS AND TROPHIES of the Better Kind THE GIFT SUGGESTION BOOK mailed upon request Illustrates and Prices Jewels, Watches, Clocks, Silver, China, Glass, Leather and Novelties from which may be selected distinctive Wedding, Birthday, Graduation and Other Gifts Read at Ease with the LITTLE SQUIRE Book Rest It makes the biggest book buoyant. Let yourself, or a friend, read and write in comfort for a lifetime. Book at any angle you prefer. Book swings 90° away at a touch. Bronze plat- ing, mahogany finish on steel. Any height from 24 ' to 40 Your bookseller or THE SQUIRE CO. IS 10 Chestnut Street Philadelphia, Penna. urroundings or charm and distinction . . . a cuisine of continental perfec= tion . . . service of the highest order . . . appealing to those who live gracefully. Accommodations by the day, month or vear. flla?ii ick Philadelphia s Smartest Hotel Locust Street at Seventeenth Page Eighty-eight A 1770 1926 OLD FORGE INN Lincoln Highway wFm ! Malvern, Pennsylvania Early American Antiques ITnHI No Reproductions Tea Room open April to November AkJUL iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii ■«- ' Jll u 1 tlll ' ltllll II Attractive Rooms for Tourists Mm inflKw 21 miles from Philadelphia 43 miles from Lancaster Phone, Bry i Mawr 675 JOHN J. McDEVITT Programs Bill Heads Tickets Letter Heads . ' N G Booklets, etc. Announcements 1145 Lancaster Ave Rosemont, Pa. Phone, Bryn Mawr 252 CONNELLY ' S The Main Line Florists SAY IT WITH FLOWERS Cash and Carry— 1 5 Per Cent Off Regular Price 1226 LANCASTER AVENUE ROSEMONT, PA. Mehl Latta, « Lumber, Coal and Building Materials ROSEMONT, PENNA. Telephone, Ardmore 2966 THE HARPER METHOD SHOP Pauline Smith 341 West Lancaster Avenue Haverford, Pa. Complete Beauty Service Bryn Mawr 840 BRYN MAWR SUPPLIES CO. Auto Supplies Radiola, Majestic Atwater Kent Records © 84M4 LANCASTER AVENUE BRYN MAWR, PA. HAVERFORD PHARMACY Henry W. Press, P.D. Prescriptions, Drugs, Gifts Haverford Avenue HAVERFORD, PA. Bell Telephones, Ardmore 122, 2424, 2425 Prompt Automobile Delivery Service Page Eighty-nine Fashion Corner . . Chestnut at Thirteenth Philadelphia Trig fashions for campus, classroom and week-end gaieties. College Inn and Tea Room Service 8 A. M. to 7:30 P. M. Daily and Sunday A LA CARTE BREAKFAST Luncheon Afternoon Tea and Dinner A la Carte and Table d ' Hote Special Rates for Transient Guests of College Students BRYN MAWR ' S DOMINATING STYLE SHOP RAFELD ' S 826 Lancaster Avenue © A Store built upon style, quality, value, superior service ideals — and the realiza- tion of the solid value of public good will. Marinello Hairdressers Cosmeticians Permanent Waving EUGENE METHOD PEACOCK BEAUTE SALON SEVILLE THEATRE BUILDING Phone 475 BRYN MAWR Page Ninety Qomplimentary Page Xinefy-one Dl KI N OWN TORE 126 Jb Eigkheervrk 7F cor yAnyoM Fashions for the woman who appreciates fashion . we study her charm and express it. THE TOWNE HOUSE 1725 SPRUCE STREET Luncheons - Dinners Reservations made for special Luncheons, Dinners and Bridge Parties Telephone, Pennypacker 9727 ANTIQUE MODERN INTERNATIONAL SHOP Arts and Crafts Lincoln Highway at Church Road ARDMORE oooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo Page Ninety-two Philadelphia ' s largest and Finest Millinery Store. Where Millinery is an Art. VYtaxine ' tDann Millinery Importer 1127 CHESTNUT STREET PHILADELPHIA MATIONALLY known for style in hats, catering to the younger set. We are now showing a complete col- lection of new Spring hats, the beret, the bicorn, the halo, the watteau, the bandeau and the novelty straws, very moderately priced. Coir pliments of The College News GOWNS— HOODS— CAPS For all Degrees Correct Outfits by the Originators of Academic Costumes in America COTRELL and LEONARD ALBANY, N. Y. College Dept. Est. 1832 G NE ' S SPECIALTY SHop 1320 CHESTNUT STREET Thresher Building — Second Floor CHARMING FROCKS FOR EVERY OCCASION Is your wardrobe in that sad condition That jails to give you social recognition? Weep not, sweet maid, for you can vent your passion 0} always being at the height ofjashion No matter how depleted are your means For you can buy the best for less at GENE ' S! Page Ninety-three J —COMPLIMENTARY- Jenk ins Arcade Building STORES AND OFFICES Pittsburgh, Pa. = ! r A Page Ninety-four -in- official Photographer for Bryn VYCawr Qollege WILLIAM SHEWELL ELLIS STUDIOS 1425 CHESTNUT STREET, PHILADELPHIA. PA. Also D U P O N T BUILDING, WILMINGTON, DELAWARE i m-. Page Ninety-five 17 Xast Xancaater ie. SMART DRESSES for Every Occasi on Tel., Ardmore 4112 COTTAGE TEA ROOM Montgomery Avenue BRYN MAWR Luncheon Tea - Dinner Special Parties Guest Rooms Phone, Bryn Mawr 362 Meet your friends at the Bryn Mawr Confectionery (Next to Seville Theatre Bldg.) THE RENDEZVOUS OF THE COLLEGE GIRL Tasty Sandwiches, Delicious Sundaes Superior Soda Service Compliments of THE LANTERN CHATTER-ON TEA HOUSE Luncheon — Afternoon Tea Dinner Open Sundays Telephone, Bryn Mawr 1185 918 OLD LANCASTER ROAD HENRY B. WALLACE Caterer and Confectioner 22 and 24 Bryn Mawr Avenue BRYN MAWR THE CHATTER BOX Special Evening and Sunday Dinners Telephone, Bryn Mawr 453 83933 LANCASTER AVENUE Philadelphia ' s Show Place of Favored Fashions EMBICK ' S For Things Worth While Suits, Coats, Dresses, Hats 1620 CHESTNUT STREET Page Ninety-six J ' Jsilll C N 6 1 45 Kg -2i6 Walnut Street, Phila. FRENCH HAIRDRESSERS Shampoo inger vv a v e s Permanent W a v e s HairCut Facial A. rid Everything (Concerning Tour Hair A new shop located at 45 Lancaster Avenue, Ardmore • ' JEANNETT ' S Bryn Mawr Flower Shop, Inc. 823 LANCASTER AVENUE Phone 570 BRYN MAWR, PA. Telephone, Bryn Mawr 63 BRINTON BROS. Fancy and Staple Groceries Orders Called For and Delivered J LANCASTER and MERION AVES. BRYN MAWR, PA. Jacques Ferber Furs Cold Dry Air Storage Vaults on Premises it 1708 WALNUT STREET PHILADELPHIA Page Ninety-seven LE CHAPEAU, Inc. LINGERIE dainty and charming at amazingly Low Prices CHAPEAUX that will enhance Milady ' s Beauty $6.00 Up 51 West Lancaster Avenue Ardmore, Pa. The Wilson Laur idry Co. BRYN MAWR, PA. Careful Handling and Qual ty Dry Cleaning a Specialty Complimentary Telephone Plaza 0210 John P. Baer Company INVESTMENT BANKERS CHARLES SARATOGA BALTIMORE D D D = D D D MEMBER BALTIMORE STOCK EXCHANGE Page Ninety-eight K_shis C J ook IS A CREDIT TO THE STAFF OUR SPE E R V I CE Individual, Pergonal Coaching Originality iri Design Organized Layout Quality beyond question Past records, of successful performance Largest and up-to-the-minute produc- tion facilities Many years Tex perience PHILADELPHIA-WEEKS ENGRAVING COMPANY (Daucattonal Department 29 NORTH SIXTH STREET PHILADELPHIA, PA. Page Xindy-nine THE BOOK OF 1931 has been printed by the WESTBROOK ublishing v ompany in a plant built and equipped for producing school and college publi- cations in a neat, prompt and eco- nomical manner. 5800 N. Mervine St. Philadelphia, Pa. Page One Hundred s fgigggj i r« = ? H«ii5£
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