Goucher College - Donnybrook Fair Yearbook (Baltimore, MD)
- Class of 1904
Page 1 of 206
Cover
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Pages 10 - 11
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Text from Pages 1 - 206 of the 1904 volume:
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gap 7st vazmz WC :13 3 , RESPECTFW13122140;sz , Mm: 2t? T ' , NW A N I $;1l', , x,fiy . I KM O I ' ' Hf, '3; t x x ,1 5 ! LASS 0F C ami6ksu ! NM! 'll TITLE A Song of Hazing A Sonnet from the Heart of 85 Alto Dale Day Amusement Night An Interruption Art Contributors Athletics Athletic Association . Baby Parade Basket-Ball Bealmear, Effie Estelle Biological Club Board of Editors Board of Trustees Books Boule' Chemical Association College Settlement College Calendar Contributors Club Dedication 149 TITLE Donnybrook Fair Ecclesia . . . Empire State Club Faculty, The Fraternities Ullustratiom Delta Gamma Alpha Phi Tau Kappa Pi Gamma Phi Beta Kappa Alpha Theta Pi Beta Phi Delta Delta Delta Freshmen Class R011 Freshmen History Freshmen Society Geological Society Glee Club Goucher, Mrs. Mary Cecilia Hackettstown Club Iowa Club Jokes and Grinds Junior Class R011 Junior History Junior Society Kalends, The Klosh Tilicum Life at the National Junior Republic Literary Contributors Mandolin Club Maryland Club Mr. Dooley on Geology Music My Favorite Play New England Club . . . New Jersey Club 116 128 18 110 104 142 10 130 108 151 127 147 103 107 TITLE Our Heads are Hollow Pennsylvania Club Philokolai Philosophical Society L Press Club Schiller-Kriinschcn Senior Class R011 Senior History Senior Society Somerset Y Sophomore Dramatics Sophomore Class R011 Sophomore History Sophomore Society Southern Club Specials Students Organization The 'TAlcestis 0f Euripidesh The Autumn of 1902 HThe Campush . The College Hospital The Dramatics Committee The Fall of 1905 The Great, Kind World The Progressive Young Man The Sale of the Effects of 1903 The Situation Title Page Titian Tints Van Meter, Dr. John B. Watts in a Name XVyoming Seminary Y. W1 C. A. PAGE 158 106 118 117 119 42 45 94 124 146 52 96 102 63 99 144 154 141 155 148 155 132 164 156 mU. OWm UOZZaxWWOO-A 132. e 25:? iv Em. magi: -cEmm. Zyxcugza 2223mm. :83an REE? QHZZiEU Eva Dointr kw: 5:3? gamma: 5:72. Mora SEE? mt; uczvgmcz, Q57 mamas. 3:53 3522:. Emmm ELSE. Hyhcxmynm ?dihmxx, :nmwzamm 355mm? imhxz ZHEErch, :3, wmmwmwmzn :smmzamm 285nm? nycizx $45914. mmnczm nszmHmi mzwgmmm 335x67 7 w w ,Wmf Literary Contributors. K EDA BRIGGS, ,03. EMILIE DOETSCH, y03 FRANCES DOIIERTY, 703. ANNA HASLUP, 703. FRANCES HOPKINS, a03. ROSALIE PENDLETON. y03. BERTHA STEVENS. 03. X 5XN K $ W W xxx ikif X w: k HELEN BROVVNE, 70+ 41M!!! u MARY BRUFF, 70+ JaggadX ANNIE COUCH, 7O4. 713; ?! i $3113: Xx xx JESSIE DUNN, 04 l PETRICHA EASLEY, 04. MARCELLA GOODKICH, 04. BEATRICE GL'NSUALUS, O4V SARA JOHNSON, yO4. VVINNIFRJCD MACGOWAN, 04. MAY BELI4E7MCINTIRE..O4. MARGARET Moxmss,W4. Licemy Etlilur. MADESIN PHILLIPS, ex- O4. GRACE TAUQUARY, cx-'O4. HELEN WAITE. 04. ' FLORENCE WALTHER. a04. s XA ,Ar CAROLYN ARONSOIIN, 705. HELEN BROWN, 05. ELIZABETH KERN, 05. FLORENCE BEILER, 06. RUBERTA TAUQUARY, 06. DR. ELEANOR L. LORD, DR. JOHN B. VAN DUSTER. lU g: Q WK x x . WW Art Contributors. 1 1 1903. ALICE BELT. EDITH POWELL. EDA BRIGGS. BERTHA STEVENS. NINA CASFARI. FLORENCE WILSON. 1904. ELSIE DELAMARTER. BEATRICE GUNSAULUS. FRANCES KERR, exJO-L WINNIFRED lVIACGOVVAN, SARA JOHNSON. Art Editor. HELEN W'AITE. 1905. KATHERINE MACCART. VERA MCCABE. JANE RAWLs, exJOS. STEPHANIE MORGAN, CLARA WAITE PERCY BLOGG. Board of Trustees. O BISHOP CYRUS D. Foss, D. Ix, LL. D., President SUMMERFIELD BALDWIN, L sze-Presz'dmi. A. ROSZEL CATHCART, BENJAMIN F. BENNETT, ,Sctrztary. Treamrcr. 1903. 1904. WILLIAM J. HOOPER. J. M. BUCKLEY, D, D., LL. D. SUMMERFIELD BALDWIN. C. H. RICHARDSON, D. D. MRS. PRISCILLA L. BENNETT. B, H. STINEMETZ. MRS. E. B. STEVENS. JOHN K. SHAW. JOHN G. HOLMES. WESLEY M. OLER. BISHOP E. R. HENDRIX, D. D., LL. D. Mlss ANNA HEUBECK. MISS CHARLOTTE S. MURDOCH. R. TYNES SMITH. ALDIS BROVVNE. 1905. XV. F. MCDOWELL, D. D., LL. D. BISHOP C. D. Foss, D. D., LL. D. HON. ROBERT E. PATTISON. JOHN F. GOUCHER, D. D., LL.D. MISS M. CLOYD BURNLEY. HON. CHARLES B. LOVE, LL. D. 1906. 1907. JOHN H. DASHIELL, D. D. LUTHER T. W'IDERMAN, D D. CHARLES W. BALDWIN, D. D. CHARLES E. HILL. A. ROSZEL CATHCART. HENRY M. Wmsox, M D. HON. JAs. E. HOOPER. R. T. MILLER. CHARLES W. SMITH, D. D. BENJAMIN F. BENNETT. MISS KATE PATTERSON. CHARLES W. SLAGLE. MISS AMY HEWES. JAMES N. GAMBLE. SARAH E. VAN DUYNH, M. D. 12 The Faculty. 1w JOHN F. COUCIIER, D. 11., LL. D., 2313 St. Paul Street, I 51551214? wi . JOHN B. VAN DIETER. 320 Forest Road, Roland Park Alzngran Professor of lfz'ble 2.71 1572glz'5l2. lnslrurlor 1'11 chlmlqgry, Ellu'rx and lawn Dean of My Farulfy. 5 WILLIAM H. HOPKINS, PH. 11., 2414 St. Paul Street, P'ofessor 0f 1.:12'1'71. A. B. and A. M , St. John's College, Mi: P11. D.. Dickinson College. HANS FRCELICHER, PH. 11., 2337 North Calvert Street, Professor of German Language zmd Literature. Ari O'ifz'rz'sm. P111 D., University of Zurich. 1883. JOSEPH S. SHEFLOE, PH. D., 2326 North Charles Street, Profemor 0f 160111117111 Laimuages. Librarian. A. B., Luther College, 1883, and A. M., 1889; University Scholar and Fellow of Johns Hopkins University, 1888-90; Ph. D., Hopkins University, 1890; Fellow by Courtesy, Johns Hopkins University, 1890-91. LILLIAN WELSH, M. D., The Arundel, Prufcswr of Plzyxz'olqu mid Ang'e'ne. M. D.. XVoman'S Medical College of Pennsylvania, 1887. CHARLES C. BLACKSHEAR, PH. D., 2412 St. Paul Street, Prqfessor uf Uzemistry. A. B.. Mercer University, 1881; University Scholar of Johns Hopkins University, 1830; 1'11. D.. Johns Hopkins University, Instructor in Chemistry, Bryn Mawr College, 1870-91. MAYNARD M. METCALF, PH. D., 2435 N. Charles Street, M'ojkssor of liz'olqgry. 1839-1893; P11. D., Johns Hopkins University. 1803. Johns 18QU; A. B., Oberlin College, 1889', Johns Hopkins University, Graduate Scholar, Fellow, Adam T. Bruce Fellow, Fellow hy Courtesv, 13 TIIADDEUS P. THOMAS. PH. D., Roland and Melrose Avenues. Normandy Heights, Profeswr 0f lfisiory and Socialqgry. A. M. P11. 13., University of Tennessee, 1883-87; Fellow, and Assistant in History, Vanderbilt University; 1891-92; Ph. D., Johns Hopkins University, 1895. LILA V. NORTH, A. B.. 318 Forest Road. Roland Park, Assocz'afe Profexmr of Greek. A. B. Bryn Mawr College, 1895: University of Leipsic, 1895-96. ARTHUR BIBBINs, PH. 8.. 2307 North Charles Street, Imlrutior in Geology and Dz'retl'or of tile letsemn. Ph. 13., Albion College, 1887. WILLIAM H. MALTBIE, PH. D., 2314 North Calvert Street. Professor of Jllatlzematz'm. A. 13., Ohio Wesleyan University, 1890; A. M., 1892; Fellow of Johns Hopkins UniversWy, 1894-93; Ph. D.. Johns Hopkins University, 1895 CHARLES W. HODELL, PH. D., 313 East Twenty-Second Street, Profrfssor of 1776 Englz'xlz Language and Liferature. A. B. De Pauw University, 1892; Ph. D., Cornell University, 1894: Fellow in English, Cornell University, 1893-94. JENNIE LOUISE WHITBREAD, PH. B.. 2110 North Calvert Street, Insirurtor in English. Ph. B. Syracuse University, 1887. GRACE PATTEN CONANT, A. M.. 125 East North Avenue, Insfructor 2'7; English A. B., Bates College. 1893; A. 11., Cornell University. 1897; Fellow of Cornell University, 1897-98; Fellow of the University of Chicago, 1898-99. ELEANOR LOUISA LORD, PH. D., 2326 North Charles Street. Assariaie Prafesxor 0f I-Iz'sfory. A. 13., Smith College, 1887, A. M., 1890. Fellow in History, Bryn Mawr College, 1888-89 and 1895-96. Instructor in History, Smith Col- lege. 1890-94. Holder of the European Fellowship of the Woman's Educational Association of Boston, and Student in History at Newn- ham College, University of Cambridge, Eng, 1894-95. Ph. D., Bryn Mawr College, 1896. Corresponding Member of the National Gen- grapical Society. CLARA LATIMER BACON, A. 13., 2316 North Calvert Street. Instrurtar 1'71 Jlelzeumiz'rs. A. B., Wellesley College, 1890. ROSINE MELLE, 15 W'est Twentieth Street, Instrmtor 1'72 Frcmlz. Student at the Colwge de France and the Sorbonne, 1887-90; Diplomeie de l'Acadt'mlie de Paris et de 11Universih5 de France. 1890; wa rded the Palmes Acadfimiques by the Minister of Public Instruction of France. 1897. 14 FANNY COOK GATES, A. M., On leave of absence. lnslrmtar m 1705223. A. 3., Northwestern University. 1894: A. M. 1895; Fellow in Mathematics, Northwestern University. 1894-95; Instructor in Mathe- matics Northwestern Academy; Holder of Bryn Mawr Scholarship. 1895-96; Fellow in Mathematics, Bryn Mawr College, 1896-97; Holder of European Fellowship of the Association of Collegiate Alumnae. 1897-98; Graduate Student in Physics. University of Gattingen. Ziirich Polytecknicum. 1897-98. FLORENCE PEEBLES, PH. D., 218 East Twenty-Third Street, sztruclar 1'71 Bz'olagy. A. B1. Woman's College of Baltimore, 1895; Holder of Bryn Mawr Scholarship. 1895-96; Fellow in Biology. Bryn Mawr. 1896-97; Graduate Student at Byrn Mawr, 1897438; Holder of the Marv E. Garrett European Fellowship and Student in the University of Munich and the University of Halls. 1898-99: Holder of the American Womaxfs Table at the Zoological Station. Naples. 1898; Ph. D.. Bryn Mawr College. 1900. JOHNETTA VAN METER, A. B,, 320 Forest Road, Roland Park, Instrucinr in German. A. 13., Woman's C011ege of Baltimore. 1894. Holder of European Fellowship of the Womants College of Baltimore and Student at the Universities of Berlin and Heidelberg, 1900701. BERTHA MAY CLARK, A. 13., 2104 Bolton Street, Laboralary Assistsz in Plzysim. A B1, Woman's College of Baltimore. 1900. Holder of Scholarship in Physics. Bryn Mawr College. 1900,01. ANNA HOFFMAN, A. B., 2131 Maryland Avenue, Laboratory Assistant in Pigvsiolagu A. B.. Womazfs College of Baltimore. 1899. ROBERT W. ROGERS, PH. D., D. D., LL. D., A'ou-residgnt l.gdm'er. Ph. D.. Lcipsic. Professor of Hebrew in Drew Theological Seminary. ANNIE HILYARD, 2704 St. Paul Street, Instrurtor in Plzyxz'ral W'aim'ng. Graduate of Madam Osterberg's Physical Training College, Kent. England. HILDA ERICKSON, 2500 St. Paul Street, Inxlructor in Pkysz'ral Training. Graduate of the Royal Central Gymnastic Institute. Stockholm, Sweden. J. ADAM HUGO, 811 North Calvert Street, Instruilar 071 the Piano. Pupil of Prof. Wilhelm Speidel; Royal Conservatory of Music. Stuttgart, Germany. ELEANOR ROSE HOSKINS, A. B., 2021 Maryland Avenue, Regz'xlrtzr. A. B., Womaxfs College of Baltimore, 1899. 15 HARRIET ALMIRA BLOGG, 2506 St. Paul Street, Assz'sltml Librarian. MRS. ALICE H. McANULTY, Glitner Hall, Lady 2'71 Charge, Glz'th' flail, fUI'714?V 0f Charley and ZEUWziy-YYIZ'WI' SZVWZX. BIRS. AXNAH F. GROVES, Fensal Hall, Lady 1'71 C71mjg'e, Fensal Hall, rorner 0f Jlarylcwa' Amway am! Twenfy- 7721'er Slreel. MRS. ANNIE H. ROBERTS, Vingolf Hall, Lady 2'11 Clmrgf. Vingolf flail, rmvmr 0f Illaryland z'Ilem? and ??wmlfy-I'bm'flz Slnwf. ADA M. C. A. HARTZELL, Alfheim Hall. . Lady in Charge, Alfheim 1771111, ramer 0f Calvert and 711137th lez'ra' Strrets, GERTRYDE E. WILLIAMS. Fensal Hall, Saniiary .Siuperzxfsor 0f MlUs. ?EORGE FILBPZRT, 2508 St. Paul Street, Gtslzz'er. FRANCES C CHILDS, 2413 North Calvert Street Assistant lfoobkezyber. GUSTAVE KAHN, 2314 North Calvert Street, Superinfendmzt 0f lfztz'ldimrx. 16 Mrs. Mary Cecilia Goucher. 0 No event in the history of our college has touched as manyhearts as the death of Mrs. Mary Cecilia Goucher, the beloved wife of our President, which occurred Friday, December nineteenth, nineteen hundred and two, at her home, Alto Dale. She was the daughter of Dr. John Fisher, originally of Cecil County, Maryland. Dr. Fisherxwas connected with the Methodist Episcopal Church and its work, and his daughter became a member of the same church at the age of eighteen. When afterwards she came into possession of her fatheris estate she used it in fur- thering the activities of the church especially its missionary enterprises. In 1877 she was united in marriage with the Rev. John Franklin Goucher, and their years together were spent in perfect companionship because of their similar tastes and aims. They traveled extensively together in Europe, Egypt, Algiers, Alaska, Mexico and Cuba. There was a beautiful fellowship in ideals existing between them, manifesting itself in harmonious Christian endeavor, particularly in their comprehensive benevolence, for they recognized their steward- ship under their Divine Master. Mrs. Goucher fully realized the necessity for womanis education in order to qualify her for womanis workethe necessity for self-development and adaptation to every sphere in which she might be placed. These ideals have become those of our college, and their realization is our constant aim. Her rare personality, so impressive and sweet, defies analysis. All those with whom she came in contact were deeply impressed by her strength of character, which was united with a gentleness growing out of loviug-kindness and broad Christian sympathy with all mankind. In her home she Was the center and guiding spirit of a loving circle, controlling it with rare tact, and dispensing a hospitality as generous as it was sincere, while in her more public rela- tions she preserved a womanhness and dignity that perfectly expressed the calm sweetness of her character. The pure light of love shown from her face, and her sunny smile, so full of hope and helpfulness, was encouragement for a days work. Her life is an inspiration to earliest endeavor for the best, the enduring things, the great truths for which Christianity stands; and, in her death we realize how persuasive was her in- fluence. We give our heartfelt sympathy to him who lived in such perfect comradeship with her, and to her daughters, our companions, who have lost a mothefs loving guidance. n tt My beloved spake, and said unto me, tRise up, my love, my fair one, and come awayH 1'11 Hlmuorg rat Effie Estelle JBeaImear, illcmhcr of tho $313155 of 1305 . Elijah Q3ttnbuzt II, 1902. Baby Parade of Nineteen-Three. tAs Reported by a Committee from NineteaneThreeJ Q BABY SHOWS ARE BECOMING VERY POPULAR IN THESE DAYS, AND MR. BRADLEY, OF ASBURY PARK FAME, IN THE TRUE SPIRIT OF ENTERPRISE, DECIDED TO ORGANIZE A SHOW IN BALTIMORE FOR 1903t BECAUSE OF THE UNPRECEDENTED NUMBER OF PROMISXNG CHILDREN WHO, HE THOUGHT, MIGHT BE PREVAILED UPON TO ENROLL. THE SUCCESS OF HIS ATTEMPT IS NOW PROVED BEYOND A DOUBT. ABERCRODIBIE. MARY As she sits in her little carriage, judicially viewing the scene around her, one would not at first discover the signs of true genius. But there is not one for whom we can more coutidently predict greatness. She loves to play with paper, pens and ink, and she serenely asserts that thC unreadable scrawls she produces are full of meaning; so we hail the illegibility with joy and watch for other signs of genius. ACKERMAN, CLAIRE As this bright baby passed by in her Carriage she charmed everybody by her cheerful giggIESeshe was so easily tickled that the mere pointing of one,s finger at her set her off, and it was quite unnecessary to say, tt Now laugh for the ladies, ClaireW 23 BAXTER, LIARTHA Such a toddler! Always stumbling along but always getting there just the same. She never could, like all the other babies, jump rope or hang by her toes from a point in mid-air, or turn somersaults backwards, or jump through the rings while riding horseback. However, she knew her alphabet better than the others, and often made bright little speeches that delighted her friends. BELT, ALICE Poor Alice! Our babies have had many tumbles in their lives, out of their high chairs or cribs, or down the back stairs, but a worse accident than any of these was Alice,s fate. It seems that one day while no one was looking, the poor, unoffending babe fell in love. It is feared that she will never recover from the shock, but will suffer from an affection of the heart all through her life. BENSONy MILLIE Little Millie was our baby, Grown up Millie is a mermaid, But shels grown so terrible fast, And we're sorry that ltis so, That we scarcely now can reconcile For a mermaidls not permitted The present with the past. Inhthis famous baby show. 24 BIXLER, ESTHER Little Essie was the picture of domestic comfort as she was Wheeled along, hugging with both arms a prettily dressed doll to Which she was talking affectionately. She makes all its clothes herself, though so young, and they always combine taste and neatness. She has been fed on con- densed milk, and it was as a consequence of this that she received a prize for her plumpness. BRIGGS, EDA W'hen a certain worthy body of men and women called tt The Faculty H came to view the parade they one and all smiled sweetly upon this promising infant. They nodded their heads and predicted that that child would amount to something in the world. In fact, although Eda is a rather unobtrusive infant, it takes no one Very long to discover that there is most decidedly tt something doing in her little brain. BROWN, ELIZABETH tAdOptedJ Have you ever sat and listened to the college babe Who talks? Oh, her tongue. it is hung, on its lubricated hinges; And it gallops, and it trots, and it canters, and it walks, Like a Texas bronco pony through a field of sorghum stalks. BUOY, HELEN Helen has been having h such a good time lately playinga little game. It is a very old game, in fact it goes all the way back to Adam and Eve, and is just for two. If you ask her perhaps she Will tell you its name. I CARIVHNE, FLORENCE Charity, charity, charity Chatterbox! By naturey ,tis true, ymfre a wonderful paradox; Lenned and foolish, grave and gay, Attired now in bright, now in sombre array, Dignitied 0r impudent, fresh as the May, Then a bit prudish, fun cast away, And a prize goes to you, were all glad to say. for the versatile whims of your infantile play. CASPARI. NINA One hesitates before saying h oo-ittle tootsie wootsie w to the child who is wheeled along by a German nurse, and in a Carriage decorated with the flag of her Fatherland. The little miss already. at the age of four, speaks in three languages, and if the spectator thought of it he might exclaim with her wondering friends: H' Du hist ein XVuudersehnW CATCHING, NANCY Little Nancy was just beginning to talk tEnglile French Italian. Greek and negro dialectl Men, women and professors, stopped to listen. attracted by her transeMasou and Dixon line accent, and she never disap- pointed them. but chattered from morning till night like a good little Georgia cracker. CRA XVFORD. THYRA She is an extremely quiet child and toddles along with much dignity beside her nurse. But her bright eyes observe everything, and for one so young she has remarkable reasoning powers, to be used in the future in the composition of ideal history papers. One cannot help but wonder whether the look of determination in her face is indicative of a present Characteristic or of one not yet developed. CULLOM, MOLLIE Of all the bright, animated babies, Mollie was the most lively. 1n vain her nurse attempted to keep her quiet long enough for inspection. One moment she was laughing, crowing and jumping in the nurses arms, and the next instant she was pulling off the patient womanls cap and tugging at her hair, her little face all lit up with life and mischief. DAVENPORT, HELEN Many are the curious fanciesland preferences of children in the line of amusements. Now Helen, though always pleasant and sociable with her little friends,is never so well satisfied as when, armed with her little shovel, she is free to leave them and gratify her great propensity for diggingW DAY, MABEL Oh, Mabel Day, oh, Mabel Day, You,ve stolen all my money away; With your billet-doux so many, YouWe extracted every penny. Oh, Mabel Day, 011, Mabel Day, You should not steal my money away. DE Box ', ELIZABETH There was a bright baby called Bess, She Was robed in a fetching blue dress; What a cunning wee maid,n The passers by said, Tojwhich the weetmaid replied Yes. 28 EAKINS, LUELLA There was a small girl named Lueller, Who never would speak to a feller; When they asked her to ride By a little boys side She lifted her voice in a beller. ENOCHS, MARTHA Before Martha was registered for the baby show she was seen by a famous New York artist, who succeeded in getting her to pose for him as a model for Hymen first, and then for both angels and cherubs. Now she is in such demand as a model that we had difficulty in securing her for the procession at all. In spite of this notoriety that she has gained Martha is just as sweet and lovable a baby as ever and made many friends in the show. FEHR, CARRIE Here is our little warbler. When Carrie opened her mouth to sing-if it was nothing more than ti Ring Around a Rosy it-all the children stopped to listen. This explains the pretty prize which she wears, and which she won by her beautiful rendering of the classic little songe t King William was King James's son, Upon a royal race he runfi etc. 30 HASLUP, ANNA Of all the joyous little babes That to the show came thronging, What one was eter so sadly mixed As absent-minded Annie? The things she needed, those she had, For one transcendent moment, But fate ordained that this should be Before those things were needed. HASLUP, RUTH Whatever there was to be done as a task, The children soon found just whom they should ask; Just who would be sure to do it all right, They never would bother ll who could ll or 4 who might? But decided on Ruth without any ado, lTwould be carefully done, as they very well knew. HENDRIX, HELEN Everyone was attracted to the carriage where this baby sat because of its wonderful color scheme. There was a rich riot of color which would have put to shame the autumn leaves,and the harmony of the whole so suited the occupant that it seemed as if a bit of the Orient had entered the show. 31 HOPKINS , FRANCES Sad to say Frances will receive no prize nor even honorable mention we fear. She was extremely naughty and would persist in taking care of all the other children, including the poor little slum children Who gathered around to witness the start. One complaint she gave voice to, and that was, that there were no little boys in the parade to love and tease. HUKILL, MARGARET Margaret has great skill in climbing, and persists in scaling everything that looks particularly difficult. With a great deal of coaxing she came down from a tree top whither she had ascended just before the parade started. This desire to be at the top is characteristic of her in every way, and the leftiness of her ambition is unusual in one so young. HYDE, JANE They had an awful time to get a good picture of Jane. The child posi- tively refused to smile at the proper moment. As she has naturally a cheerful disposition we really cannot account for this, unless, perhaps, she had accidentally swallowed some of the bitter pills With Which She sometimes favors her playmates when they are ailing. Or perhaps she missed the bouquet Which she usually wears on her little frock-she had lost it just before her picture was taken. 32 HUTCHINS7 LAURA Laura might have gotten a prize if it had not been that she failed to arrive until after all the prizes were awarded. However, this fact did not disturb the accustomed placidity of her infant spirits. JONES, CHARLOTTE Though a mere infant Charlotte has contributed Compositions and poems to many of the childrens, pages of the various papers. Her poems are always models of correctness. Here is one of her little letters to a Childrenk Cozy Corner: ll I am seven. I like to go to school and d0 Arithmetic. I have gotten as far as Long Division. Your little friend, Charlotte Jones. KELLOGG, CLARA Yes. she seems to care for playthings Less than books, And shels staid, demure, and quiet In her looks; But just wait ,till therels a frolic, Or a scheme. That the children plan fortplaying, Then, I deem, You will join with me in saying That tt things are not what they seem. 33 LAWRENCE, LOUISE Louise refused most positively to enter the ranks of baby campetitors, and no amount of coaxing could prevail upon her to change her mind. She was offered bribe after bribe, but all with no other effect than a more emphatic repetition of her decided H No! NOW The only reason she would give for this continued refusal was: it I do not want to, so I wonlt. The child evidently knows what she wants, and we think will develop into a vigorous Character. LEUTZ, SARA Sara has always been a fine, hea1thy child, and was much admired at the show. Her only ailment since she dawned upon this world of sorrow has been spells of blushing. The doctor can do nothing for her at these times, but says she will outgrow the tendency. MAGEE, LOTTIE There were some babes all in a row, Oh, Lottie Magee, Magaw! And they were happy as we all knowy Oh, Lottie Magee. Magaw! They sang and danced and laughed and ran ; They sang and danced and laughed and ran; And they all clapped their hands and cried. Lottie Magee. Magaw! But all they did could not avail, Oh, Lottie Magee, Magaw! They saw quite soon they could but fail, Oh, Lottie Magee, Magaw! You still refused to join their play, In spite of all theyld do or say, So they all clapped their hands and cried, Lottie Magee, Magaw! 34 MANN, ALLIE Allieis favorite playthings, from which all during the show she refused to be separated, were several 01d hobby horses. These she rode cleverly and with great enjoyment to herself. The one that she liked best had printed on its back h I am utterly indifferent to mezzf: MAST, OLIVE W hen exams are past, This little Mast Comes-off with colors flying; But ii I know Iill fail Is the child,s sad wail, And she fills the air with sighiug. IVIURPHY, DAISY Have you seen the Murphy babe play ball? ii W'hy, sheis an infant wonder? Says the tall athlete, ii By thunder! And ii Champion Murph they call her, one and all. 35 NORRIS, LYDA Little Lyda looked so jolly In the gay parade; And she gave a look so funny, Ophing her big eyes so widely, That the visitors smiled broadly At the little maid. N ULTON , NANCY Such a soft-voiced, gentle child! She walked along With so much grace and with such sweetness in her baby countenance that every Virginialfs heart swelled with pride as he gazed at the dignified little maiden bearing the banner of her native State. The children 1111 remembered how last year she had led the procession. PENDLETON7 ROSALIE Relatives and friends predict that Rosalie will write a book some day. We hope she will, for surely a name like hers is just suited to go on the title page of a novel. Beside this primary qualihcation Rosalie has shown an appreciation of good literature that is rather remarkable in one so young- 36 PHILP, ARINDA One of the oddest features of the procession was a light little jin-rikis sha drawn by a Japanese coolie. In it sat a bright,dark-eyed1itt1e girl With a mass of glossy black hair combed high and crowned with a golden butterfiy. The soft silks and many hued howers would have completed a Japanese idyll hadnot the small occupant, who was looking shyly about her, spoken to the cache in an accent as purely American as could be found from Maine to California. POWELL, EDITH Such a comfortable, round-faced baby! I wonder whether it was Mellinis Food or one of the others which developed that round and rosy countenance. Whenever we look at Edith we think of Sam Wellerts remark, tt Now weire ronngact and comfortable,as the father said ven he Cut :1: off his little boys head to cure him oi squintin . RICAUD, LETITIA Leta was certainly a model baby, at least that is what her doting mother told me. She had always been a shy, quiet little girl, never quarrelling With other children, never grumbling over her toys, but passing through the years of her babyhood without any of those symptoms which mark a peevish child. Her highest ambition seemed to be to avoid causing trouble to others, actually refusing to cry or even grow sick. 37 RICE, EDITH The little girl is not to blame, The fault you see is in her name; It makes all other subjects tame Compared to that of matrimony. The judge and jury she amazed, They pondered much and at her gazed: But with it all she neier was phased, She still discoursed 0f matrimony. ROBINSON, CLARA W'e heard this babe crying the other day in the show, and it sounded something like this: tt aim? M ,woi Moi. Surely this was a strange manifestation. If it had come from another baby we might have thought this unintelligible babble a form of infant pro- fanity, but coming from Clara it could have been nothing worse than a mild intimation that she was hungry. SLEASE, ANNA tl Little deeds of kindness, little acts of love. Make the world a heaven like to that above. This is the l piece that Anna always recites for company, and there is no doubt that the Child lives by it too In fact little Annais heart seems to get bigger and bigger from day to day, until we really are beginning to fear for the consequences. STEVENS, BERTHA Originality of thought and action, unspoiled by oddity, displayed itself at an early age in this baby girl. At the children's parties to which she was taken she was constantly suggesting and directing some new game, or devising a new way of playing some old one. All the children were glad when they heard that for this talent she had been awarded a prize. TALLEY, NELLIE This small maiden has a Cheerful disposition, a chirping ii air, and a busy little tongue which prattles on all occasions. Though so young she has taken music lessons, and whenever company comes delights their hearts u by playing for them her little pieces TAYLOR, HATTIE h Just a little bundle of nerve and musclef, This is what her nurse called her. The poor woman declared that after holding Hattie in her lap for fifteen minutes she was literally black and blue. Just a little bundle of nerve and muscle-but what a nice little bundle it was too! 39 TAYLOR, MARY' W'hen this little southern baby was extremely young she used to delight to play in medicines. Whether this propensity of Maryls will continue to exist it is hard to tell. One thing we do know, Mary would be welcome to slide down the cellar door or play in the back yard of any one of the Nineteen-Three babies. VVEAKLEY, NANNIE You must bow and come up forward, come up forward, Nannie dear. For youlve won a glittering medal in the baby show this year; Neler before has it been given, cis a newly thought of prize, And sis given to the baby with the brightest sparkling eyes. VVIANT, MABEL Patient and long continued training have not availed as yet in turning the thoughts of this dainty little maiden away from mere temporal honors. But as she grows older perhaps she Will lay aside the toy ribbon crown Which she now persists in wearing, and without Which she would not enter the procession. 4O WILSON, FLORENCE Florence Was the little lady of the Show No one would have dreamed of lt chucking her under the chin or of giving her a stick of candy as they did With the other Children. When one of the gentlemen, hearing that she liked to draw pictures, gave her a drawing-slate and pencil, she smiled sweetly and said: t Thank you so much, sir, for your kindness.H l' JOSEPH S. SHEFLOE. ll Oh, herels Professor Shefloe!U The children all did shout, t The only one of all the show They could not do Without. Hels their honorary member, Theyld have you understand; Till June elen from September Hels eler at their command. He leads them on to Victory, His mottols ll never fail ; And surely itls no mystery If 1903 prevail. 41 MOTTU Z i ab-riyv uLKJJo'a 7rdv-ra mini, ALICE JOSEPHINE DUNNINC. HELEN FRANCES Dolllsx'rv, EMILIIC DOETSCH, ANNA IIASLUP, K. A. 6. MABEL BAKER DAV, MARY TAYLOR, A. 1. FRANCES LYDEN HOPKINS. Officers. 0 1L H. 1b. 42 COLORS: Ereen and White. I Wiw'de 715 l7lfHEA1 I'USI'dmzZ. lEz't'ura'z'izg' Sarelaiw. brrmfmna'z'ng Serrelary. 'frmxurcr. ,Skng'eazllazi-Arms. SfzjqszIZ-atAArmy. ABERCROMBIE, MARY TAYLOR, A. A. A. ACKERMAN, SABINA CLAIRE, BAXTER, MARTHA TRAVIS, BELT, MIRIAM ALICE, II. E. ii. BENSON, AMELIA DODSON, BIXLER, ESTHER DOUGLAS, BRIGGS, EDA MAY, . BROWN, ELIZABETH ADELE, I', 41. B. BUOY, HELEN WITTER, II. B. 43. CARMINE, FLORENCE MAY, CASPARI, NINA, CATHING, NANCY HIGGTNBOTHAM, T. K. H. LR-xu 1401111 'lnyxA, 011141.011 MOLLIE LOUISE T K. II DAVENPORT, HELEN VANDLIXG, DAY, MABEL BAKER, . . DEBOW, ELIZABETH LAURA, T. K. II. DOETSCH, EMILIE, DOHERTY, HELEN FRANCES, DUNNING, ALICE JOSEPHINE, II. B. 1?. ENOCHS, MARTHA CATHING, T. K. H. FEHR, CARRIE LOUISE, K. A. 6. HASLUP, ANNA, K. A. 6. HASLUP, RUTH, K. A. e. HENDRIX, HELEN CHICK, T. K. II. HOPKINS, FRANCES LYDEN, HUTCHINs, LAURA BELLE, P. KID. B. HUKILL, MARGARET 1 IIYDE, JANE ADELAIDE, ILIFF, FLOY, JONES, CHARLOTTE ABBOTT, KELLUGG, LAURA LOUISE, LAWRENCE, ALICE LOUISE, LEUTZ, SARA EDNA MAGEE LOTTIE PEARL, MAST, OIIVE FRANCES, H B 1P b. LAMBERTON, K. A. 8, . Members. 0 43 827 Hamilton Terrace, Baltimore, Md. 1025 Jefferson Street, Easton, Pa. Garrison, N. Y. Wellsville, Pa. McDonough Md. 206 Spring Garden Street Easton, Pa. 243 N. Capitol Street, W ashington, D. C. 2104 N. Charles Street, Baltimore, Md. . Melton, Pa. 1101 McCulloh Street, Baltimore, Md. 20 S. Maple Avenue, East Orange, N. J1 357 Capitol Street, Atlanta, Ga. 820 N. Mount Street, Baltimore, Md. Cullom Place,Birmi11gham,AlaV West Pittston, Pa. Olyphant Place, Morristown, N. J. 2006 Memphis Street, Philadelphia, Pa. 733 W. Lombard Street, Baltimore, Md. 52 Kensington Avenue. Jersey City, N. J. . . . . . Bedford Iowa. Jackson, Miss. 19 S.F1fth Street Easton Pa. 2402 N. Calvert Street, Baltimore, Md. 2402 N. Calvert Street, Baltimore, Md. Norledge Place, Kansas City, Mo. 9 8th Avenue, Brooklyn 11, N. Y. Sheldon, III. 216 Reed Struct,011 City, Pa. Franklinville, Md. Newton, N. J. 1121 Highland Avenue Baltimore, Md. I 011 City,P Dover N. J. Cockeysville, Md. 2211 I Street N. W. Washington D. C. Coatesville. Pa. MURPHY, DAISY, . . NORRIS, LYDA MAY. K. A. 6. NULTON, NANCY CLARKE, K A. 8. PENDLETON, ROSALIE, A. I'. PuILP, ARDENA JANE, . POWELL, EDITH MARIA, F. ch. B. RICAYD, LETITIA EVERETT, RICE, EDITH, A. A. A. ROBINSON, CLAIRE AUGUSTA, SLEASE, ANNA MAY, K. A. e. STEVENS, BERTIIA MORTON, TALLEY, NELLIE MAY, 1'. 42. B. TAYLOR, HATTIE GREEN, TAYLOR, MARY, A. 1'. W1: AKLEY, NANNE, A. 4?. VVIANT, MABEL HUNTER, WILSON, FLORENCE MASTERS, A. I'. JOSEPH S. SHEFLOE, Ph. D., 2502 Madison Avenue, Baltimore, Md. 2500 N. Charles Street,Baltin1ore, Md. XVinchester Va. 811 S. Negle Avenue, Pittsburg, Pa. Oil Citv Pa 344 Carey Av,enue W ilkesbarre, Pa 214 E. Lafayette Avenue, Baltimore, Md- 1373 N. Stricker Street, Baltimore, Md. 1900 Bolton Street,Ba1t1more,Md. SheJidamille, Pa. 65 Grandview Ave1111e,Plai11iield, N. 454 N. 7th Street, Terre Haute, Ind. 2037 Huntingdon Street, Philadelphia, Pa Demopolis, Ala 3435 Highland Place, Avondale, Cincinnati, 0. Parkersburg, XV. Va. 120 XV. 76th Street, New York, N. Y. Honorary Member. 2326 N. Charles Street, Baltimore, Md. 44 x p f , 1 mm ,me ; Mari .1 Once upon a time there was a little girl Who went by the nickname of iiNaughty-Threef because she had contracted the habit in her early years of beating every one with Wh0111 she came in contact. She was an odd little girl in the weapons she used, for they consisted of a tennis raquet and a basket ball-imple111ents With which of course few Children have any concern. One day when Naughty-Three was playing With another little girl Who Was 7zauglziy-z'wo, they had some disagreement, whereupon Naughty-Three seized the tennis raquet which was lying near, and beat the poor child until there was hardly anything left of her. You might have thought that this would have taught the other little girl not to have anything more to do with Naughty-Three, but after awhile, When she had quite recovered, she again went over to play With Naughty-Three. This time the tennis raquet wasnlt handy, so what did Naughty- Three do but take the big basket ball and throw it at the other little girl so hard that it knocked all the breath out of her. Not long after this Naughty-Three gave a party and invited some nice, big girls. You know how children do love to dress up. 'Well, Naughty-Three found some old dresses in the attic that had belonged to a Colonial ancestress, so she had great fun getting herself up for the party in these. And her guests had a good time tooy for they loved good things to eat just as everybody does. But even on this occasion Naughty-Three showed her tendency to beat, for her party beat anything that had been given before. Most little girls are taught by their Mamas not to play With fire, but this little Naughty- Threeis Mama lived a great way off, and her guardian, named iiShef. had never told her not to, so one night in May, Naughty-Three got some big Chinese Lanterns and put candles in 45 them, and because they looked so pretty she ran all about the yard with theni. But there isntt any moral to this, because she didntt catch on tire, and nobody was annoyed. The next year, although Naughty-Three had grown a good deal, she still retained her habit of beating people. Just as she had done once before, she beat another little girl, younger than herself this time, with the tennis raquet, and later on knocked out two more little girls, one older and the other younger, by employing her other deadly weaponwthe basket ball. But as time passed on, she turned her attention for awhile to a kind of play she had never tried before; and, although it was very difficult, yet she acquired such skill that 11m sure she played it just HAs you like it.H Another year passed by and Naughty-Three was such a big girl that some thought it time to stop calling her by her nickname. But others contended that it should depend on her behavior. And sure enough, not long afterthis, Naughty-Three was again seized With an overwhelming desire a to beat somebody. So she rushed out with her big basket ball under her arm, and the first per- son she met was a big girl coming to play with her. And, though it is most shocking to relate, she knocked the big girl down and beat her. Fired by this, with a desire to do further damage, she ran on until she met another little girl. No sooner had she lain eyes on her, than, with the same ball, she laid her out and beat her too. But when her normal mood returned, she realized that she was too big for such conduct. So she turned over a new leaf then and there. About this time she was getting very romantic, and the HProfessorls Love StoryN appealed to her particularly. And, as she read it, she imagined herself all the characters, one after the other, with such vividness that when she told people she was Miss White, or Miss Goodwillie, or even the Professor himself, they were quite ready to believe her. This made her feel so proud that she gave a grand banquet one night and invited a great many older girls just to show how old she was. The banquet was a great success, and that night every one decided not to call her uNaughtyH any more. The next Fall, after a Summer of exalted meditations and ambitious yearnings, she came back to town, having grown into a tall, sedate young woman. She then gave a tea to a lot of young buds who were almost afraidto come, they had heard such tales about her beating people. But of course being now a grown-up she did not hurt them, and thenceforth she has been known as Miss Nineteen-Three, for she hasntt beaten anybody for so long that her nickname of HNaughtyl, is dropped forevere And the moral is : Thd itls perfectly true, You can beat a tattoo, Or the band, as the case may be; Yet, you,ll never defeat, Or in any way beat, The record of Nineteen-Three. 46 JUNIORS. Q MoTTo: COLORS: Tacitae agite. Gold and White. A luff y. u I V ' 1: IE! I A I I I I I l l I I I A Jif m L . I l I l J J I I II L I I t L I W I 1m IA l L I I I I L J J I I I I I II L L I J I I I J IJ Ll IW I I d A I I I I I l I Al I I J J I: A V I I; LI V J- ; I II- .I i Jr IL ' Nineteen hundred I niuetccn hundred I nineteen hundred I and four I Nineteen hundred I nineteen hundred I nineteen hundred I and four! Officers. 0 .ANNIR MARGARET COUCH, President. RUTH NICKERSON, T. K. H. . . . , . . Vz're-Prexz'denl. CARRIE MAY PROBST, Rcvardz'ng Sardary. EDITH STEVENS, A. IF. Com'emmzdz'ug Serrafary. JULIA BELLE FERGUSON, Treamrer. MA RY K ISG BRU F F, Saga:nt-aZ-Arms. NORA KATHLEEN BRUFF, Swgrmntaf-Arms. 47 Members. 0 ALEXANDER, JOSEPHINE PEARL, A. A. A. BASS, ETIIEL VINTON, BEADENKOPF, BESSIE GRAHAM, BECK, EDITH ADELAIDE, BIRD, CARRIE SHALLUS, BIRELY, 13135115 CRAMER, BROVVNE, HELEN, T. K. II. BRUFF, VIARY KING, BRUFF, NORA KATHLEEN, BITNNELL, THEORA JULIETT, CLARK, RUTH CRAWFORD, T. K. II. CONNER, BLANCHE McCAms, 11. 11,. B. . COUCH, ANNIE IVIARGARET, CROWL, ANNIE NAOMI, DELAMARTER, ELSIE, A. X. 9. DILKs, CLARA GILBERT, DINGLE, HELEN, 11. 4x B. DUNN, JESSIE lVIAY, EASLEY, PETRICHA, EBAUCH, JESSIE MAY, ELLIS, HELEN SILVER, . . ELMER, ETHEL ADDISON, K. A. 6. ENOCHS, MARV CAPERS, T. K. H. EVANS, EMILY ABIGAIL, FAUS, LAURA LEONE, FERGUSON, JULIA BELLE, FISHER, EDITH CONANT, F. CF. 13. FORCE, LYDIA MAUDE, FRIZZELL, EDNA, . GOLDING, MABEL ROBBINS, K. A. 6. GOODRICH, MARCELLA HAMILTON, A. 42. GRAHAM, ALICE PINCKNEY, A. I'. GUNSAULUS, BEATRICE HAVVLEY, A. 4D. HOFFMAN, ETHEL, T. K. H. . . HOLTZMAN, GENEVIEVE CASTLEMAN. A. tb. HOOD, MABEL DOUGLAS, A. GP. HUTCHINS, LELIA, I'. 1b. B. JOHNSON, SARA LE MAISTRE, A. A. A. KEEN, FLORENCE ROBBINS, A. it. KEMPER, XVINIFRED, 48 Des 111011105, Iowa. . . Catonsville, MD. 403 E. 22nd Street. Baltimore, Md. . V . Reynoldsville, Pa. 2013 L Chase Street, Baltimore, Md. Thurmont, Md. 1Vashington, D. C. Towson, Md. . Towson, Md. 1813 Linden Avenue Baltimore, Md. 909 R Street, N. XV.,X 1006 Ridge Avenue, Harrisburg, Pa. 778 Bushwick Avenue, Brooklyn, N. Y. 2724 N. St. Paul Street, Baltimore, Md. 110 Kalamazoo Street East Lansing, Mich. 20b .8th Street, Vi11ela11d.N.J. 2736 St. Paul Sheet, Baltimore, Md. 287 Pauleson Place, Passaic, N. J. 1312 W. 6th Street. Wilmington, Del. . Reisterstown, Md. 1521 Park Avenue, Baltimore, Md. 818 W. North Avenue, Baltimore, Md. Jackson, Miss. Reisterstown, Md. Snow Shoe Pa. 2203 Jefferson Place, Baltimore, Md. 101 Forest Avenue, Atlanta, Ga. 182 High Street, Orange, N. J. Station D, Baltimore, Md. 503 Broom Street, Wilmington, Del. 2010 Bolton Avenue, Baltimore, Md. Bir1ningham,A1a 1528 P Street, N. 113, Vashington, D. C. 2618 Prairie Avenue Chicago, Ill. 2407 Madison Avenue, Baltimore, Md- 1214 12th Street, N. W , XVashington, D. C. 1231 N. Calvert Street, Baltimore, Md. Sheldon, 111 320 E. 25th Street Baltimore, Md. 1707 W. Norris Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Vv'estport, Conn. LEAVY, ANNA, LEAVY, SARAH. LEWIS, ELLEN 1314;111:5111, LOGAN, Rosy: MARIA, MACGOWAN, WINIFRED, MACSORLEY, M13131 TRVPHENA, MANNING, HARRIET CLEVELAND. MATHEWS, MARY Z.,A. cP. MAXIM, MARY HOWE, MCIXTIRE, MAY BELLE, METZGER. ELLA ZAIDEJC, 11. B. 42 MILBURN. MARY ELEANOR. MQUKJLLAND. ELIZABETH FLETCHER, MORRISS, MARGARET SHQVE, A. 11. NICHOLSON, HELEN LOUISE. A. 4D. RUTH, T. K. H. PARRISII, MARY LOUISE, NICKEKSON, PETERS, ELIZABETH, P11111131, FLORENCE ADELLA, PROBST CARRIE MAE, OUIGG, HELEN '10w1x NSEND, RANNIE, BELLE, RHODES, EDYTH, SCOTT, ALICE BEALL, SMITH, EMMA PETERS, . SPEDDEN, EDNA RIDDLE, A. CD. SPENCER, EVELYN, STEVENS, 13111111, A. 42. 1 A. Cb. . VV'ALT1I1;R,FIOR12NCE SOPHIE, K. lb. B. VV EBB, MARY GILLESPIE, 11. VV'AITE, HELEN TURNBULL, XVEBB,C0RN1:ELIA,I. . 42. B. WILSON, CAROLINE ELIZABETH, WILSON, SELINA PENDLETON, VVYCKOFF, EDNA, ZOL'CK, REBECCA NEEL. JOHN B. VAX METER, D. D. A. 9. . A. A. A.. C1earf1e16,Pa. Cleariield, Pa. .VV ashington Street West Chester, Pa. 13 Academy Street, VVilkesbarre, Pa. Coldwater, Mich. Pocomoke City, Md. MD. Sparrows Point, Md. 1041': Ruxton, 84 Howe Avenue, Passaic, N. J. 67 Hcmpstcad Street, New London, Conn. 1006 W. 4th Street, Williamsport, Pa. 812 20th Street, N. W'., Washington, D. C. McDonough Md. 1904 Mt. Royal Terrace, Baltimore Md. A1t0011a,Pa. Sunbury, Pa. 2801 St. Paul Street, Ba1timore, Md. 69 S. Yellowspring Street, Springfield, Ohio. . . . Shroudsburg, Pa. . . . 716 N. Carey Street, Baltimore, Md. 511 Seminole Street, S. Bethlehem, Pa. 310 E. 22nd Street, Baltimore, Md. Auburn, N. J. Owings Mill Md. The VValdorf,Ba1timore Md. 2030 Eutaw Place, Baltimore, Md. 1110 Main Street, Grinnell, Iowa. 2121 N. Calvert Street, Baltimore, Md. 2313 Maryland Avenue, Baltimore, Md. 2212 Maryland Avenue, Baltimore, Md. . . . . . . Bell Buckle, Tenn. Bell Buckle, Tenn. Eastou, Md. Sligo, Md. Highstown, N. J. Glen Morris, Md. Honorary Member. 320 Forest Road, Roland Park, Md. 49 A SKETCH. CHARACTERS : STATELY JUNIOR. LITTLE BOY. JUNIOR :eKRelafz'ng a lzislory fz'clz'cz'ausly lreatedJ iiOnee upon a time41- LITTLE BOY :eHOh, yes! I love to begin iOncc upon a time.' ,, JUNIOR :aHWell, then, be quiet and listen. Once upon a time, way back in the year 1900, there were 106 little maidens gathered together from many schools, Who, travelling up the steep hill of learning, came to a place called the Woman's Collegetle LITTLE BOY :eiiWere the little girls nice?! JUNIOR :eiiOf course they were. There were only 106 of them. Though they were called 1904 girls, and some people have even dared to call them iNaughty-FourV but this was done, we believe, merely to keep the other iNaughties, in countenauceW LITTLE BOY: iiWhat does 1904 mean?H JUNIOR :--iiOh, that means that, if nothing happens to the little girls, in the year 1904 they will know enough, and wontt have to study any more.H LITTLE BOY: HOh, 0eo-oI ! EH JUNIOR 2-iiVVe11, they came to the centre of learning, and they met some friends called Juniors, who were very kind to them, and showed them how to have college class-meetings. And, after awhile, 1904 Chose a1eader,ca11ed iHer GraceR who ruled them wisely and well, and, as she needed 21 Prime Minister, they selected a Dean to help her meet her tMeteri diHiculv ties. Then 1904 took as their colors White and Gold to signify the brightness and whiteness they wished to maintain throughout their college career. H CA sound body makes a sound mindf tcf. Dr. VVelsh's lectures on hygienei so these gold and white girls occasionally turned their attention to basketball and tennis. They accepted a Challenge from the Sophomores, but, as they had been taught respect for their elders, with great courtesy they let the Sophomores Win.H LITTLE BOY1yiiXVhat are Sophomores? Is that all 1904 did?H JUNIOR :eiiSophomore is a term applied to those Who think well of themselves. Oh, yes! 1904 did lots of other things. They took their kind friends, the Juniors, for a trip down the hay 011 a lovely, great big steamer.H LITTLE BOY :eiioh, my! Wasntt that a dandy! And did the girls sit out on deck in the moonlight with their beaux?H 50 JUNIOR zetMuCh mystihedj HBeaux! I donit know What that means. 'Wetve never taken up tlmz subject.H tThen meditativelyJ iiPerhaps that comes in Course 86 in our Senior year.H LITTLE BOY : NDidn't the Sophs d0 nothiif for poor little 1904? JUNIOR :eiiOh, yes! They gave them a tea.H LITTLE BOY :eiiVVhatis a TeaP, JUNIOR :e-iiOf course you know that Indians, when they have been enemies, but finally become friends, smoke a pipe of peace to show their good feeling. Well, in college the Sopho- mores and Freshmen did the same thing, only, instead of smoking a pipe of peace, the Sophs gave the Freshies a tea. mWell. by and by, another year rolled round, and, as their former leader had left them, 1904- Chose another Helen, tnot of Troyi but a near relative of dear old Saint Nick. This year was also successful, and 1904 passed through many fiery trials. tNotably those found in laboratoryJ i, LITTLE BOY: i'VVhatis laboratoryPr, JUNIOR :eiiSh-sh-sh, little Boy! Don't mention it, but Obey Shakespeare's mandate and ithrow physictsi t0 the dogsf HVVell, these 1905L girls again played games, but they had learned many things that their predecessors had not, and, one was : Be very polite to newcomers. So again, they courteously gave up a tennis Victory, but this time to the little Freshmenf LITTLE BOY: w UDid 1904 always have to give up things. JUNIOR 2-iiOh, no! 1904 believed that iFair exchange is 110 robberyf so they defeated the little Freshies at basket-ball just to show them they could do it if they chosef LITTLE BOY : KiIs that all they did that year?H JUNIOR :eiiNo, they gave a play Which won them everlasting fach LITTLE Boy : HThatie time! What else did 1904 do. JUNIOR :-HThey gave a iPromi to the Freshmen.H LITTLE BOY :ettWhatys a PmmPH JUNIOR 2-iiVVhy, that's a place Where children are taught how to walk, but it3s a pleasant way of learning. mAnother year passed over the head of 1904, who is daily growing more learned, and at last she has attained the long hoped-for Junior year. Again she must Choose a leader, and in the strenuous work ahead of her, heart, mind and body summons A e Couch.H LITTLE Boy : HAnd is that a11?,t JUNIOR :---iiWait and see!H Q MOTTO 2 E; 76 7rp5006u. Officers. 9 LoTts BxcuTrNA COULTAS. K. A 9. , HELEN ELIZABETH BROWN, BESSIE WEBB Nnmx'r. T. K. II. GRACE OSBORN, KATIE BROUGH, EMILY FULLER SLEHMAN, A. A. A. MARY SCOTT WALLIs, tn n: mSOPHOMORES. COLORS: Yale Blue and White. I ,rmz'dmzt. l'7z'rzf- I ?midmzt . Rerordz'ng 5731'7'8ft1711h Currcspmm'mg bkw'elary. 'lhmsztrmn Sflfg'ffllZf-tlll-fll'llls. SeIjg'mmf-abArms. ADAMS, ADAMS, RUTH WESTLAKE, A. A. A. . KATHERINE, K. K1 I1. ALCOCKE, FAYETTE JOHNSTON, ALLEN, NISIELIIS MAY, AROSSOHN, CAROLYN, AMES, MARY CRETGHTON, H. B. 41. BAKER, MARY BELLE, F. Cb. B. BALDWIN, ISABEL NANCY. BARBER. HELEN, BARR, MARTHA BAIRD, A, 42. BECK, LILLIAN SARAH, BIRD, MARTHA HELEN, BURCHERDING, EDNA, 11. BOYER, MARIAN ADELIA, H. B. CD BROUGII, KATIE MAY, 11. B. BROWN, HELEN ELIZABETH, BUXTON , MARIA, CANN, JESSIE CEREANCE, COULTAS, LOTUS BERTINA, K. CULL, SARA WHITE, DISARMIT, ELLA, . EMMA, T. K. II. DICE, MARGUERITE, DEBow, DRUMMOND, MARY VVALKER, DUNAHURE, EVA JANNEY, DUNNING, FRANCES MAY, IL GARDNER, MIRTE VIOLA, GARRISON, IDA RICHARDSON, GoUCHER, ELIZABETH, A. I'. HALL, ELIZABETH MABEL, HALL, MARY ETHEL, HAUGHEY, EDITH, HOUCH, MARY ANDERSON, K. HOGUE, HOUSE, MARY J. ARLINE, 1?. B. LP. B. A Members. 0 53 808 E. Empire Street, Bloomington, 111. . . Oneonta, N. Y. 607 Traves Avenue, Shreveport, La . Portland, Pa. 1601 L111de11 Amenue Baltimore Md. 338 High Street, XVilliamsport, Pa. 3-1-12 Auchentoroly Terrace, Baltimore, Md. Dover, N. J. . . . Ripley, Tenn. 228 N. Prince Street Princeton, Ind. H011011,Kansas. 2013 E. Chase St1cet, Baltimore, Md. 638 Douglas Street, Chattanooga, T131111. 531 Pine Street, VVilliamsport, Pa- . . . . . . Hanover, Pa. Atlantic Hy1ands, N. Y. , . Martinsburg, 1V. Va. 112 Brunswick Street, Newark, N. J. 525 Orange Street, N. J. 1415 Park Ave11ue,Ba1ti111o1-e, Md . . Groxe City, Pa 2006 Memphis Street Philadelphia Pa. 1 . 1 Craxx fordsville, Ind. 1309 L Street, N. W., Washington, D. C. 607 W. North Avenue, Baltimore Md. Redford Iowa. 1311 XV 3rd Street Harrisburg, Pa 165 Godwin Street, Paterson, N. J. 2313 St. Paul Street Baltimore, Md. Williamstow11, Mass . La Motte, Md 418 E. 20th Street, Baltimore, Md. 501 Vinevil1e Place. Mac011,Ga. West Chester Pa. 2126 Arch Street Little Rock, Ark. HOUSE, CARRIE M1LLARD, HUTZLER, MABEL, KELLY, IVIARGARET EDITH, KEMPER, FREIDA SOLOMON, KENDRICK, EVA MAY, KERN, ELIZABETH, KLEINLEy MARY ESTELLE, LYNCH, MABFL KATHARINE, A. CID. MACCART, KATHARINE EMMA, MANIFOLD, MYRA Ross, P. Q. B. MCCABE, VERA NELLE, K. A B. MCLAREN, RUT11 MATILDA, A. A. A, MCCORD, MARGARET CORNELIA, MCGREGOR, NANNIE GRACE, A. A. A1 MERCER, GRACE DARLING, A. A. A. MILLER, FLORA, T. K. 11. MILLER, NOMA GOLDSBOROUGH, . . - MOORE, MARY ESTELLE, H, B. 4:. MOORE, MARY WILTBANK, 1 . MURDOCH, MARGARET FALCONER, A. I'. NICE, MARY ISADORE, NUGEUT, BESSIF WEBB T. K H O CONNOR, ADA, . . OEHM, FLORENCE MOORE, F. 1P. B. OSBORN, GRACE LAURA, PELL, ETHELVVYN ALWARD, PUTTS, MABEL, RANSOM, HARRIET HELEN, RUDDELL, GRACE, SANDS, LUELLA BETTINA, SHRIVER, HELEN BROOKS, SKINNER, VERA TAYLOR, SLATER, GERTRCDE, . SLEMAN, EMILY FULLER, A1 A. A. SMITH. ADA CLARA, SMITH ZANA, . TUELL LIAYBEILh, 1'1. B. 61: STEELE, MARIE HAWKEs, T. K. II. STEVENSON, HELEN HAMILTON, SVVADENER, JULIA LOUISE, T. K. 11. TAYLOR, NELLIE HAYES, THOMAS, ELIZABETH, 54 Maquoketa Iowa. 1801 Eutaw Place Baltimore Md. 876 N. Linden Avenue, Pittsburg, Pa. 2448 Eutaw Place, Baltimore, Md Agencv, Iowa. Winchester, Va. 1923 McCulloh Street,Ba1timore Md. 1923 N. 6th Street, Philadelphia, Pa. . 916 XV. 3rd Street, XVilliamsport, Pa. 429 XV. Market Street, York, Pa. Covington Ind. Millersville Md. 1624 McEldenv Street Baltimore Md. 212 Indiana Avenue, N. 1V., XVashington, D. Q . La Moelle, 111. 13 XV. 4th Street, Reading, Pa. 2116 E. Lafayette Avenue, Baltimore Md. 1 Selma Ala. 2738 St. Paul Street Balt1111ore,111d1 410 Cathedral Street, Baltimore, Md. . 844 XV. Lafayette Avenue, Baltimore, Md. Jackson, Miss. 1V ellsboro Pa. 1721 Linden Avenue Ba1t1111ore,Md. 1539 T Street, N. 1V.,XVashi11gton, D. C. 147 32nd Street, Newark, N. J. 1115 KY. Lam'ale Street, Baltimore, Md. . . Dorrancetown, Pa. 1500 E. Chase Street, Baltimore, Md. . Dover, N. J. 36 Broad Street, York, Pa. Dobbs Ferry, N. Y. 503 Market Street, XVarren, Pa. 3008 15th Street, Washington, D. C. Norwood, N. Y. . Wellsx 1116: Ohio. 69 Capitol Axwenue Huntingdon XV. Va. 1305 Locust Avenue, Allegheny. Pa. VVellsville, Ohio. Dayton, Ohio. Parkersburg, XV. Va. Darlington, Md. WALLIS, MARY SCOTT, VVARE, EDITH ELLEN, . WATTS, NELLIE SNOWDEN, It ct. B. VVEBB, SARA, P. 42. B. WEBSTER, ANNIE FLORENCE, A. 4?. WILSON, WILLA EDNA, H. B. Cb. VVINSOR, ANNA MABEL, YOUNG, MADGE MAY, THADDEUS P. THOMAS, Ph. D. 320 E. 20th Street, Baltimore, Md- 419 E. 22nd Street, Baltimore, Md. 1015 Harlem Avenue, Baltimore, Md. . . Bell Buckle, Tenn. 712 Putnam Avenue, Brooklyn, N. Y. . . Danbury, Conn. 781 lst Avenue, Asbury Park, N. J. Hackettstown, N. J. Honorary Member. Roland and Melrose Avenues. Baltimore, Md, 55 Elam a n? a mm 111 September, of the year nineteen hundred and one, we pitched our tents on a fleld where three other bands had already settled, each striving eagerly for honor and renown. We had hardly arrived upon the college territory before we were aware that those who called themselves Sophomores were our arch enemiesr Descending upon us unawares, all robed and masked in sombreblack, they led us captives to a granite stone building, called Bennett Hall. There. after testing our strength and numbers, set us free. Great wrath was in our hearts, and, though a grave and elderly band, by name Seniors, strove to appease our anger, we yearned for a fair contest. Thus a tennis tournament was arranged wherein Victory was ours. By thus gaining the esteem of those inimical to us, they held out the flag of truce and invited us to smoke the pipe of peace with them in that same grim hall where they had maltreated us. But, though the HProm,H as it was termed was peaceful and enjoyable to all, the slumbering fire of enmity was not so easily quenched that all did not welcome yet another contest, one in basket-ball. Great preparations were made and 21 Valiant right it was. Victory was to the Sophomores, and so were they satis- fied, leaving us to pursue our way in peace. Those who called themselves Juniors had taken us for allies, in appreciation whereof, we took them into a wondrous fair country; first, to inspect the newly built fortress of one, Dr. Thaddeus Thomas, whom we had called from the Parliament of Wise Men to be a leader and a guide unto us, thence to a spacious building-a barn-where all rejoiced in good fellowship. After having disbanded for a time, we assemliled again in September of the following year, and, as was the custom in that territory, we took upon us the name of Sophomores, resolving to make that a synonym for all that was admirable instead of tyranical. Therefore did we treat those newly come with kindness and bestow upon them gifts. A tennis tournament was now held between us and themethe newly come. They not having the courage to defy precedent, beat us. But verily were we joyful, for it presented to our honor- ary member an occasion for wondrous eloquence. Oh, unselfishness 0f the Sophomores! Such is our past. The future lies not within the field of the historian. 56 MOTTO : :lh :IF Frisch, frei, froh, fromm. FLORENCE BEILICR, ETIIIiL NICHOLSON BROVVNE, T. K. 11. MARY AGNES HOOD, '1'. K. 11. MARY RACHEL XVHALEN, LURA CORRICLL, T. 4X B. BEATA BRI'NER, CAROLINE WESTMORELAND, A. A. A. Officers. Q COLORS: Red and XVhite. Prtns'z'a'wzf. Vire-Prmz'dmzz'. Rerordz'ng' Serreiarjh Cbrrmjmazding Sermmry. Treasurer. 56739141 7ZZ-zll-A7'NIS. Scrg'ea71l-ai-A1'mx. ADAMS, MARY ELIZABETH, AKIN, AUGUSTA IIOPLEY, A. F. ARMSTRONG, MARGARETTE, ASKEVV, BERTIE CORINXE, BACKUS, MABEL LAVINIA, BALDWIN, KETURAH ESTHER, BALDWIN, LENA GRANDIN, BARTHOLOMEW, JOSEPHINE MARY. BEILER, FLORENCE, BEILER, MARY, BLANEY, STELLA MAY. BLOOM, MIRIAM LOUISE, BUSLEY, MARY E. BRADER, MARTHA LAZARUS. BRANT, CARLOTTA MAY, BROWNE, ETHEL NICHOLSON, BRUNER, BEATA, BURCHFIELD, AIDA BELLE, 1K 1P. B. BURT, CARRIE GRAVES, A. 4D. CALDWELL, HETTIE COLE, A. 4;. CARR, ETHEL LEE, P. 1b. B. CHILTON, IXA, COMER, BEVELLE BRAXTON, T. K. 111 COOPER, MARY HITCH, CORRELL, LL'RA, T. 4:. B. DAIL, ANNA WILSIE, DAME, AMELIA PAGE, K. A. 9. DAVIS, BEATRICE, DAVIS, ELSIF GASKILL A 1P DownELL, ANNIE LOVE, FELDMEYER, ETHEL WELLS, A. A. A FENDALL, LAURA STREETT, FENTON, IRENE LULA, 11. B CD. GANTT, EDITH ELIXOR, GATCH, ELIZABETH, GRAFF, LENA BURTON, A. 1?. GREENE, HELEN MARIE, ?IJNTHER, MAUDE CECIL, GUNSAULUS, MARY FREEMAN, A. in. Members. CD 58 2135 Gratz Avenue, Philadelphia, Pa, 5th Street, Des Moines, lowa. 150 Greeves Street, Kane, Pa. 1801 Bolton Street, Baltimore, Md. Franklin, N. Y. Dover, N. J. Elmira, N. Y. 1Villimantic, Conn. 498 XV. Ferry Street, Buffalo, N. Y. 498 W. Ferry Street, Buffalo, N. Y. 35 3. Duke Street, York, Pa. 416 5th Street, Brooklyn, N. Y. Philopolisy Md. . . , Nanticoke, Pa. 605 Elmwond Avenue, Buffalo, N. Y. 510 Park Avenue, Baltimore, Md. Altoona, Pa. 2014 KY. Tuscarawas Street, Canton, 0. 38 Via Firenzc, Rome, Italy. 2500 St. Paul Street, Baltimore, Md. Durham, N. C. 1614 E Jackson Street Charlestowxn 111. Birmingham, Ala. Laurel, Delaware.. Canto11,0hio. Cambridge, Md. 1110 Eden Street Baltimore, Md. 300 Cooper Street, Camden, N. J. Mount Holly, N. J. Lafayette, Ala. Annapolis, Md. . 1 1 Towson, 31d. 2208 N. Calxert Street, Baltimore, Md. Millersville, Md. 1620 John Street, Baltimore, Md. Peoria 111. Belvidere N. J, 1602 Bolton Street,Ba1t1more.Md. 2618 Praine Avenue, Chicago, 111. HANDY, GEORGE, HARDAVLAY SALLIE JACQUELINE, II 8 dz HARDHAM. SARAH1 MADuLENE, HARKNESS, HERMA MAUDE, HARRIS. EI EANOR VAN TRIES. A. P. HARRIS VERA HAY, ANNA RUGER A. F. HEILMAN, MAY ISABEL, HENDERSON, VERNA PAYNE, HILL, L015, K. A. 9. HOFFMAN, MARION, T. K. II. HOPKINS, EMILY S. HOOD, MARY AGNES, T. K. H. HVBER, LOUISE DOROTHEA, HUTCHINSON, JESS, K. A. 9. HYDE, ANNA MARY, IKIRT. GEORGELLA, JhNNINGS MARY MAUDE, JOHNSTON, MARTHA EDITH, T. K. II. KEENEY, RUTH MABEL, LAKE, MARGUERITE BRUNELLE, A. 11. LANEAR, MINA GRAY, H. B. 4?. LAWRENCE, ALICE LOUISE, LEWIS, HELEN LOUISE, LONG, MARY CORILLA, MARQUIS, MABEL M. MCDOWELL, OLIVE, MCCUBBIN, GRACE, MERRITT, LOUISE S, MILES. ALICE LUNDY, MILLER, ELLA KVUOD, MILLER. MINA JEANNETTE, MOLER, GRACE ISABEL, MUNHALL, RUTH, NORTON, RUTH M. NOWLIN, KATE, URCLVTT, NELLIE VIOLA, A. 4! ORCI'TT, SUSAN SOPHIA, PHELPS, MARY H. POWELL, M. LOUISE, I'. Ch. B1 POWELL, ISABEL, RUFF, 11111211131 N., H. B. 49. Harrodsburg, Ky. Selma Ala. Z27 Elwood Avenue, Newark N. J. . 29 Selyr Terrace, Rochester, N. Y. . Bellefonte, Pa. . . . . . Catonsville, Md. . . Easton, Pa. Kittanning, Pa. . . Greenwood, Miss. . . . . Anderson, S. C. 2407 Madison Avenue Baltimore, Md. . . . . Rutland, Md. . . . . Darby, Pa. 1300 E. Fayette Street, Baltimore, Md. Crawfordsville, Ind. Franklinville, Md. East Liverp001,0hio. . 614 Maple Avenue, Cincinnati, Ohio Birmingham Ala: . . . Monsou, Mass. 2210 Maryland Avenue, Baltimore, Md Selma, Ala. Dover, N. J. Seaside, N. Y. Birmingham Ala . Lisbon Ohio 2783 Broadway, New York N Y. 2724 St. Paul Street, Baltimore, Md. Bloomington Ill. Yorktown N. Y. . 18 Wabash Avenue Pittsburg, Pa. 18 Wabash Avenue, Pittsburg, Pa. 408 Umversity Avenue, Ithaca, N. Y. 236 Harvey Street, Germantown, Pa. . . Birmingham, Ala. 1838 W. Fayette Street, Baltimore. Md. XVestern Run, Md. Dickinson Center, N. Y. , Scotland Neck 344 Carey Avenue 111lkesba1re Pa. , . Clearlield, Pa. 10; E. Market Street. York, Pa. SANDER, IRMA, . . . . SHAVER, MARY MUMPER, . SHROPSHIRE, LILLIAN VIRGINIA, SILVER, HARRIETTE MOORE, SMALL, HELEN M. SMITH, CARRIE MAY, SMITH, JEAN MARGARET, A. 1'. . SMITH, JENNIE C. SPENCER, ESTHER JEAN, SPETTIGUE, GRACE I. . . SPROWLES, EDITH A. TAUQUARY, RUBERTA, A. 4:. TUIRKIELD, HANNAH PEARL, TOWNSEND, MAE ELIZABETH, TOWNER, ISABEL LOUISE, TULL, BEULAH KATHERINE, VAN METER, FRANCES NILHOIT, K. WALLIS, ADELAIDE BLACKWIRE, VVANNAMAKER, EMILY S. VVANNAMAKER, JENNIE A. WEAVER, JERRIE ARJYRA, VVERNTZ, AIMIE, WESTMORELAND, CAROLINE, A. A. A. WEUSTHOFF, ANNA SOPHIE, VVHALEN, MARY RACHEL, WILSON, NANCY, A. 4:. XVOOD, ELIZABETH, W'YMAN, MARY ISABEL, YOUNG, DEEPHIA, HANS FROEIJCHER, Ph. D. 936 1V. Court Street, Cincinnati, 0. Lock Haven, Pa. Atlanta Ga. - VVellsville Ohio. 1227 New York Av,e11ue XVashington D. C. Bainbridge, Pa. Birkeley, Md. Sheiiield P211 .8. Geological Surxey, Vx'ashington D C. Phillipsburg, N. J. . 1 Fra11kford,Paa1 1131 Columbine Street, Denver C01. 519 Prospect Place, Avondale, Cincinnati, Ohio. . 85 W. Union Street, Wilkesbarre. Pa, 611 Maryland Avenue, N. E., XVashington, D C- . T111115 Corner, T1111, Md. 1003 Jefferson Street, Charleston, 111. 2406 N. Charles Street, Baltimore, Md. Orangeburg, S. C. Orangeburg. S. L Ashland, Ky. A1111apolis,Md. Atlanta. Ga. 2103 Oak Street.Ba1tin10re Md. . . E111cott City, Md. 423 W. Chestnut Street, Louisville. KY. . . . . Doe R1111, Pa :1. 10 Montebello Ax enue, Baltimore, Md. Wheeling, XV. Va. 7 Honorary Member. 60 Calvert Street, Bahimore. Md. fiemmmw CMSS HES rmgek Freshman Class History. 0 Once upon a time in a little spot called Fairyland, which was in the far East. there dwelt many fairies. These fairies had formed of themselves three bands, according to the length of time they had lived in Fairyland; the first was called senior, the second junior, and the third sophomore. And all the fairies were very happy, for their kingdom was a beautiful one and their King was good and kind and a Wise ruler. Moreover, he had many advisors who did nothing but plan amusements for the fairies. One Chose books for them to read, and taught them to make pic- ture books ; another remembered funny Stories and jokes which he told over and over again to make them laugh. Still another took them for long walks over hills and valleys, and they were allowed to gather all the pretty pebbles and stones they liked. Now other fairies hearing what a beautiful place this Fairyland was, and how joyfully these three bands lived together, came here also and they formed of themselves a fourth band called Freshmen. And they were younger and stronger than any of the other hands. And the King and all his councilors loved them and gave forth a decree saying, they should not be harrassed as had other bands which had moved to Fairyland, nor should they be molested in any way. This made the sophomore fairies Very angry for they were jealous of the Freshmen, and had it in their hearts to vex them sorely, but they dared not disobey the King. 011 a certain day, soon after their arrival, the senior fairies invited all these little new fairies to a tea, where they wore their most beautiful gowns, and all the Kings fadvisors were there and welcomed them to Fairyland, and they were glad. Thither came all the sophomore band, and they marched around and 7round the Freshmen singing to them and throwing over them 61 many-colored ribbons. Then, as the Freshmen went home, they gave them gifts. They did this because they were good fairies and Wished to please the King, and because they did not wish to be banished from Fairyland. ' Now after this they received their robes, which showed they were true and loyal subjects of the fairy King, and they appeared before the council of all the fairy bands, clothed in t11en1.f1 Then were they allowed to play games on the green and were Victorious over the sopho- mores in tennis, under the big oak trees. E And time passed and they grew wiser and more and more in harmony with each other and with all the other bands, and they lived happily in Fairyland for many years. aeEAGICR, ALICE REVIER, HimmRT, LOUISE, +EDMUNDS, ANNA, A. r11, +EVANS, IDA, K. A e. FITTs, IVIARTHA EDDINS, d6FIMNCH, INA, II, B, 41 +LIENTZ, MARY ESTELLE, A. A. A. 'VMORROW, MA UDE. a6RICHARDS, FLORENCE SAEGECR. RL'SSELL, JOSEPHINE SLEIGIIT, ii Non Matriculatc. + Graduate. 63 1523 McCulloh Street, 1413 McCulloh Street, 2224 N. Calvert Street, 318 E. North Avenue, 41 Stratford Pla Baltimore, Md. Covington, Ky. Baltimore, Md. Paximosa Avenue, Easton, Pa. Baltimore, Md. 55 5. Market Street, Johnstown, N. Y. Baltimore, Md. 503 Franklin Avenue, Pittsburg, Pa. Minersville, Pa. ce, Chicago, 111. Psi Chapter of Delta Gamma Fraternity. ESTA BLISHED MAY, 1891. 0 Active Members. Seniors. FLORENCE MASTERS WILSON, ROSALIE PENDLETON. MARY TAYLOR, Juniors. ALICE PINCKNEY GRAHAM. MARGARET Suovr: MORRISS. Sophomores. ELIZABETH GodanR. MARGARET FALCONER MURDOCH. EMILY FULLER SLEMAN. Freshmen. JEAN MARGARET SMITH. ANNA RUGER HAY. MARGUERITE BRUNELLE LAKE. ELEANOR VAN TRIES HARRIS. AUGUSTA HOPLEY AKIN. Sorores in Urbe. MABEL CARTER. MARY FIELD-SADTLER. VIRGINIA CAL'GHY. MARY COLE MURDOCH. JESSIE MAUD LOEFFLER. AGNES GORDON MURDOCH. MABEL IVIEREDITH REESE, JANET GOUCHER. GERTRUDE TRESSEL RYDER uxlphw LOUISE VVEST. CATHERINE CLEVELAND 0megaL MARY CROMWELL JARRETT. EMILIE SOPHIE REINHARD. CHARLOTTE SOUTTER MURDOCH. LOUISE TELL BAKER. JOE ANNA Ross. Dimming BRANCH. ELMA ERICH, EVELYN HEWES. 66 Delta Gamma F raternity. FOUNDED 1872. 0 Roll of Chapters. ALPHA . . . . . . . . , . . . . . . . . Mount Union Coliege. ZETA . . , . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Albion College. ETA . . . . . . . . . 4 . . . . . . Buchtel College. THETA . . . . . . . . V . . . . . . University of Indiana. KAPPA . . . . . . . . . . . . . . University of Nebraska. LAMBIJA . . . A . . . . , . . University of Minnesota. XI . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . University of Michigan. RHO . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Syracuse University. SIGMA . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Northwestern University TA U . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . University of Iowa. UPSIMJN . . . . . . . . . A . . . Leland Stanford University. PHI . . . . . . . . . . . . University of Colorado CHI . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Cornell University. PSI . . . . . , . . . . . . . . . Woman's College of Baltinlore OMEGA . , . . . y . . . . . . V . . . University of Wisconsin. Alumnae Chapters. KAPPA TUETA . . . . . . . . , . . . . . . Lincoln, Nebraska. 69 Zeta Chapter of Alpha Phi Fraternity. ESTABLISHED 0 1891. Active Members. Senior. NANNE VVEA KLEY. Juniors. MARCELLA HAMILTON GOODRICH. BEATRICE HAVVLEY GUNSAULUS. GENEVIEVE CASTLEMAN HOLTZMAN. MABEL DOUGLAS HOOD. FLORENCE ROBBINS Km: 1x MARTHA BAIRD BARR. CARRIE GRAVES BURT. 4 . Sophomore MARY Z. MATHEWS. HELEN LOUISE NICHOLSON; EDNA BIDDLE SPEDDEN. EDITH STEVENS. HELEN TURNBULL WAITE. S- MABEL KATHERINE LYNCH. ANNIE FLORENCE VVEBSTER. Freshmen. HETTIE COLE CALDWELL. ELSIE GASKILL DAVIS. LEVA BURTON GRAFF. JENNIE JOHNSON WALKER A1phaL JENNIE L. WHITBREAD, mlphay RUTH ADAMS BEAR. ROSA BALDWIN. MARY FREEMAN GUNSACLUS. NELLIE VIOLA ORCUTT. RUBERTA TAUQUARY. NANCY RAY WILSON. Sorores In Urbe. MARGARET BRIA ANNA EDMUNDS. LOULIE HOOPER. N. ISABELLA STEVENS HUNNER. KATHERINE POORBAUGH. ALICE REUTER. MINNIE NEWMAN HOOPER. ADELE BENNETT SMITH. LILLIAN TOMPKINS PARSONS. 70 pang vaxA. Alpha Phi Fraternity. FOUNDED 1872. 0 Roll of Chapters. ALPHA Syracuse University. BETA Northwestern University. GAMMA , De Pauw University. DELTA , , . . . Cornell University. EPSILON Minnesota University. ZETA The VVomarfs College of Baltimore. ETA . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Boston University. THETA . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . University of Michigan. IOTA . . . . . . . . . , .' . . . . . University of Wisconsin. KAPPA . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Leland Stanford, Jr. University. LAMBDA University of California. Alumnae Chapters. MINNESOTA. SOUTHERN. NEW YORK CITY. CENTRAL NEW YORK. BOSTON. CHICAGO. 73 Alpha Chapter, Tau Kappa Pi Fraternity. FOUNDED MAY, 1892. 0 Active Members. Seniors. NANCY HIGGINBOTHAM CATHING. MOLLIE LOUISE CULLOM. ELIZABETH LAURA DEBOVV. MARTHA CATHING ENOCHS HELEN CHICK HENDRIX. Juniors. HELEN BROWNE. MARY CAPERS ENOCIIS. RUTH CRAWFORD CLARK. ETHEL HOFFMAN. RUTH NICKERSON. Sophomores. EMMA GREENWOOD DEBow. FLORA IVIILLER. JULIA LOUISE SVVADENER. LOUISE GAMBRILL. BESSIE WEBB NUGENT. 1VIARIE IIAVVKES STEELE. Freshmen. BEVELLIC BRAXTON COMER. MARION HOFFMAN. MARY AGNES HOOD. MARTHA EDITH JOHNSTON. Pledged. ETUEL NICHOLSON BRowmz. Sorores In Urbe. FLORA DODSON ADAMS. ALMA GRACE ATKINSON. ANNA HEUBECK. BLANCHE FERGUSON HARMAN. MARY JOHNS HOPPER. ANNA BERTHA MILLER. GRACE GRIFFING HOEN. GERTRUDE BITZELL KNIPP. JOHNETTA VAN METER. GRACE WOODWARD PARKER. BLANCHE FORT SANDERS. ANGELINE GRIFFINC VVOLF. CAROLINE MONTGOMERY SANDERS. 74 Zeta Chapter of Gamma Phi Beta ESTABLISHED 1893. Active Members. Seniors. ELIZABETH ADELE BROWN. LAURA B. HUTCHINS. Juniors. BLANCHE lV'XCCABE CONNERV EDITH CONANT FISHER. PIELEN DINGLE. LELIA MYRTLE HUTCHINS. MARY GT LLESPIE XVEBB. Sophomores. EDNA BORCHERDING. MYRA Ross MAMFoLu MARY BELLE BAKER. FLORENCE OEHM. Freshmen. AIDA BIRCHFIELD. ETHEL LEE CARR. Sorores In Urbe. MARY HUNTING GammaL MARY BROAD DINGLE. JESSIE GORE. MARGARET LEE. 78 Fraternity. EDITH M POWELL. NELLIE MAY TALLEY. MARY HOWE MAXIM. CORNELIA WEBB. NELLIE SNOWDEN WATTS. SARAH VVEBB. LL'RA CORRELL. LOUISE M. POWELL. ETIUCLYN PIIIPPS. FRANCES BELLE ROBBINS. JEANNETTE WILMOT Lklphax NELLIE S. WILMOT mlphay . w. FHH a 2F: Gamma Phi Beta. FOUNDED 1874. 0 Roll of Chapters. 1874 ALPHA . . . . . . . . . . . 1 . . . Syracuse University. 1882 BETA . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . University of Michigan. 1885 GAMMA . . . . . . . . . . . . . University of XVisconsin. 1887 DELTA . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Boston University. 1888 EPSILON . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Northwestern University. 1893 ZETA . . . . . . . . . . . . . The 1Voman1s College of Baltimore. 1894 ETA . . . . . . 1 . . . . . . . . University of California. 1897 THETA . . . . . . . . . 1 . . . . . University of Denver. 1901 IOTA . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . , Barnard College. Alumnae Chapters. BOSTON. 1 CHICAGO. SYRACUSE. NEW YORK. 81 Alpha Delta of Kappa Alpha Theta Fraternity. ESTABLISHED 1896. Active Members. Seniors. CARRIE LOUISE FFHR. RUTH HASLUP. ANNA HASLUP. MARGARET SEATON LAMBERTON HUKILL. ANNA LYDA NORRIS. NANCY CLARKE NULTQN ANNA MAY SLEASE. Juniors. ETHEL ADDISON ELMER. MABEL ROBBINS GOLDING. FLORENCE SOPHIA XVAIJMIER, Sophomores. LOTUS BERTINA COULTAS. MARY ANDERSON Hoccn. VERA NELL MCCABE. Freshmen. AMELIA PAGE Dunc. LOTS HILL. FRANCES NILHOIT VAN METER. JESS HUTCHINSON. Sorores in Urbe. HARRIET BAKER EWALT LMpha Deltay ETHEL HENDRICKSON halpha Deltm MARY CLARK MARDEN L-Upha Betzu. ETHEL COUNSELMAN SHARP hxlpha DeltaL CELIA DEREL MOSHER mhh. VIRGINIA BAKER NORRIS Lklpha Deltay ADELE $20140 metal ALICE POWELL BENNETT Lalpha Demo. JOSEPHINE MORRIS Lambdm EVELYN HAMILTON JOYSICS hUpha DeltaL IDA EVANS tklpha Deltm 171Nh.I, WON: ALPHA BETA DELTA EPSILON ETA IOTA KAPPA LAMBDA MU PI R110 . TAU UPSILON PHI C111 PSI OMEGA ALPHA ALPHA ALPHA ALPHA ALPHA BETA GAM MA DELTA Kappa Alpha Theta Fraternity. FOUNDED JANUARY 27, 1870. 0 Roll of Chapters. EPSILON ZETA . De Pauw University. Indiana State University. University of Illinois. Wooster University. University of Michigan. Cornell University. University of Kansas. University of Vermont. . Allegheny College. . . Albion College. University of Nebraska. Northwestern University. . . University of Minnesota. Leland Stanford, Jr. University. Syracuse University. University of Wisconsin. University of California. Swarthmore College. . . Ohio State University. The VVomalfs College of Baltimore. Brown University. Barnard College. Alumnae Chapters. CREENCASTLE. INDIANA. MINNEAPOLIS, MINNESOTA. NEW YORK. NEW YORK. CHICAGO, ILLINOIS. OAK PARK, ILLINQIS. 85 INDIANAPOLIS, INDIANA. COLUMBUS, OHIO. BURLINGTON, VERMONT. Los ANGELES, CALIFORNIA. PITTSBURG, PENNSYLVANIA. Maryland Alpha Chapter of Pi Beta Phi Fraternity. CHARTERED 1897. Active Members. Seniors. ALICE JOSEPHINE DUNNING. MIRIAM ALICE BELT. OLIVE FRANCES MAST. HELEN VVITTER BUOY. Junior. ZAIDEE METZGER. Sophomores. MARY CREIGHTON AMES FRANCES MAY DUNNING. MARION ADELIA BOYER. LILIAN SARAH BECK. MARY ESTELLE MOORE. WILLA EDNA WILSON. MAYBELLE SNELL. INA FRANCE. Freshmen. IRENE TULA FENTON. SALLIE JACQUELINE HARDAWAY. MIRIAM NEILSON RUPP. MINA GRAY LAMAR. Sorores in Urhe. ESTHER LAMB Cox Qennsylvania AlphaL ELIZABETH KENNICOTT CULVER molorado Alphay MAY LANSFIELD HELLAR. HELEN BENSON DOLL. MRS. THos. HULL a3'ennsylvania Alphay MRS. HERBERT L. GRAUL molorado Beta. MARY ELIZABETH LAMB, Qennsylvania Alphay BLANCHE GENEVIEVE REISINGER. MARY ALICE WOOD. LUCY E. MURRAY. SYLVIA E. WARE. AMY KATHARINE PEARSON. 86 12WJM . Muzax CALIFORNIA BETA COLORADO ALPHA COLORADO BETA COLUMBIA ALPHA ILLINOIS BETA ILLINOIS DELTA ILLINOIS EPSILON ILLINOIS ZETA INDIANA ALPHA INDIANA BETA INDIANA GAMMA IOWA ALPHA IOWA BETA IOWA ZETA KANSAS ALPHA . LOUISIANA ALPHA MASSACHUSETTS ALPHA MARYLAND ALPHA . MICHIGAN ALPHA MICHIGAN BETA MISSOURI ALPHA NEBRASKA BETA NEW YORK ALPHA OHIO ALPHA OHIO BETA PENNSYLVANIA ALPHA PENNSYLVANIA BETA TEXAS ALPHA VERMONT ALPHA VERMONT BETA . WISCONSIN ALPHA Pi Beta Phi Fraternity. FOUNDED 1867. 0 Roll of Chapters. 89 University of California. University of Colorado. Denver University. Columbia University. Lombard University. Knox College. Northwestern University. Illinois State University. Franklin College. University of Indiana. University of Indianapolis. Iowa Western University. Simpson College. University of Iowa, University of Kansas. Tulane University. Boston University. Womarfs College of Baltimore. Hillsdale College. University of Michigan. University of Missouri. University of Nebraska. Syracuse University. Ohio University. Ohio State University. Swarthmore College. Bucknell University. University of Texas. Middlebury College. University of Vermont. University of Wisconsin. Xi Chapter of Delta Delta Delta Fraternity. ESTABLISHED 1898. 0 Active Members. Seniors. MARY TAYLOR ABERCROMBIE. EDITH RICE. Juniors. JOSEPHINE ALEXANDER. SARA LEMAISTRE JOHNSON. SALINA PENDLETON WILSON. Sophomores. RUTH VVESTLAKE ADAMS. GRACE DARLING MERCER. NAN GRACE lVIACGREGOR. RUTH M. MCLAREN. EMILY FULLER SLEEMAN. Freshmen. ETHEL FELDMYER. CAROLINE VVESTMORELAND. Sorores in Urbe. ESTELLE R. BYRNE. ANNA HOFFMAN. LOUISE CA STAIIN. ANNA IIARRISON. NORMA V. ROUND. ADA R. XVADDINGTON. MILDRED Rum. LIDA KIRK. 9O WQIGHT, mv 6. co DETRGWTV Delta ALPHA BETA . . . . . . GAMMA . . . . . . DELTA EPSILON ZETA ETA THETA KAPPA LA MBDA MU NU OMICRON SIGMA UPSILON XI PI ALPHA GAMMA . EPSILON . ZETA THETA OMICRON SIGMA ANN ARBOR Delta Delta Fraternity. FOUNDED 1888. 0 Roll of Chapters. Alliance Chapters. 93 Boston University. St. Lawrence University. Adrian College. Simpson College. Knox College. University of Cincinnati. University of Vermont. University of Minnesota. University of Nebraska. Baker University. University of Wisconsin. University of Ohio. Syracuse University. Wesleyan University. Northwestern University. VVomalfs College of Baltimore. University of California. Massachusetts. Michigan. Illinois. Ohio. Minnesota. New York. . New York. Michigan. Members. 0 BESS BROWN. LAURA HUTCHINS. MOLLIE CULLOM. NANCY NULTON. BESS DEBOW. MARY TAYLOR. MARTHA ENOCHs. NANNE VVEAKLEY. FLORENCE WILSON. 94 HELEN BROW'NE. BLANCIIE CONNER. MARY ENOCHS. Members. BEATRICE GUNSAULUS. FLORENCE KEEN. MARGARET MORRIS. MARY Z. MATHEWS. 95 x ;W 3 Q7 JIJ 7 7 FDSCWSH M84907; e2 USFSJ rwm'fi IAPOFATUK WifTEE? LAM va MARION HOWE JEAN SMITH BEE GRAFF NANCY WILSON VERNA HENDERSON BEVELLE COMEB LURA BORRELL ETHEL BABE EVE nsT: a Pa I MTCR g 2 f. UNDERSTUDY ggwelatf. . . . gfxmgoa $$$.$3516$.. , . . , . . ykmkaimut . . . . LYKSL ...... . ?EESLQKQDK. . . . . . ., 1?EBA1J'........ RWKXQKLKM . . . Cvsbkggpkagy - Weatmkam . . . . szimi . . . . . .. . QoanmoJ. . . 3 98 419 05 Students, Organization. 0 Officers. 0 NANCY CLARKE NULTON, ALICE DUNNING. IDA GARRISON, CAROLINE XVILSON, Executive Board. NANCY CLARKE NULTON, ex-oHicio. ALICE JOSEPHINE DUNNING, ex-ofticio. 99 President Vicc- Prmideni. Secreta ry. 7 i'easurer. HELEN T. VVAITE, ,04 GRACE OSBORN, 05 Officers. 0 YEARLY. CLARA ROBINSON, . . Hixiarz'an. BLANCHE CONNOR, . . Audz'iar. HALF YEARLY. Tst Half. MARTHA BAXTER, Corresponding Secretary. CARRIE FEIIR, . Yreawrer. Executive Committee. AMELIA DOETSCH, MARTHA ENOCIIS, HELEN HENDRIX. 2nd Half. HELEN DIXGLE, . Cbrrespwzdmg Secretary. HARRIET RANSOM, Treasurer. Executive Committee. EDITH POWELL, MARGARET HUKILL. LoTTuc DIAGEE. Officers. Q MARY TAYLOR'X', . 1 bmsidwzi. GRACE OSBORX'N, . . Vz'w-Prcsidmzl. ANNIE COUCIVE . Recording Sdfftfflllj'. IVIAYBELLE MCINTIRlc, Cbrrmpmzding Serrulmja BESSIE BIRELY, , , Y?Mmrw'. OLIVE MAST. . Auditor. ANNA IIASLL'P, , . M'slorialz. KThose marked with a star are monthly ORECesf'the others a yearly offices. rm , YA-WiWom. 101 Officers. MARY TAYLOR, . . . . . . Prcsz'dwzi. NANCY N ULTON, . . . A . . Vice-Prgsz'dmi. CARRIE PROBST, . . . . Recording Secrefary. BESSIE NUGENT, . . . . Camresfmzdzbzg Secretary. NELLIE WATTS, . . . . . . Yafeasurer MARY EXOCHS, . . Cwirman 1Vamz'7zating Cbmmz'iiee. Members. FAY ALCOCKE, Louisiana. ELIZABETH ADELE BROWN, Maryland. HELEN BARBEE, Tennessee. BELLE BAKER, Maryland. MARIA BUXTON, West Virginia. MOLLIE CULLOM, Alabama. BEVEL COMER, Alabama. NANCY CATCHINQ, Georgia. ETHEL CARR, North Carolina. EVA DONAHUE, Virginia. MARTHA C. ENOCHS, Mississippi. ANNIE LOVE DOWDELL, Alabama. MARY C. ENOCHS, Mississippi ALICE EAGER, Maryland. IRENE FENTON, Maryland. LOUISE EBBERT, Kentucky. ETHEL FELDMEYER, Maryland. ALICE GRAHAM, Alabama. HELEN HENDRIX, Missouri. ELIZABETH GATCH, Maryland. MABEL HOOD, Maryland. MARY HOTTGH, Georgia. ARLINE HOUSE, Arkansas SALLIE HARDAVVAY, Alabama. GEORGE HANDY, Kentucky. ELIZABETH HALL, West Virginia. MARTHA EDITH JOHNSTON, Alabama. ELIZABETH KERN, Virginia. IVIINA LAMAR, Alabama. MARY MOORE, Alabama. NANCY NULTON, Virginia. BESSIE NUGENT, Mississippi. RUTH NORTONy Alabama. KATE NOWLIN, Maryland. ROSALIE PENDLETON, West Virginia. CARRIE PROBST. Georgia. CLARA ROBINSON, Maryland. MABELLE SNELL, West Virginia. VIRGINIA SIIROPSHIRE. Georgia. MARY TAYLOR, Alabama. NELLIE TAYLOR, West Virginia. CORNELIA WEBB, Tennessee. MARY VVEBB Tennessee. SARAH VVuBB,Te1messee. NELLIE WATTS, Maryland. ,. EMILY XVANNAMAKER, South Carolina. .; JENNIE WANNAMAKER, South Carolina. NANCY WILSON, Kentucky. CAROLINE WESTMORLAND, Georgia. 102 S: Jim i bum Officers. 0 EDNA WILSON, . . . . . . Governor. ELIZABETH HALL, . . . Cleric. RUTH M. KEENEY, . . 05721le from Jiassarlzmefls. VVINIFRED KEMPER, . . Deputy from Cmmedz'cztl. Members. Connecticut. MAYBELLJ: MCINTIRE. JOSEPHINE BARTIIOLOMEW. VVINIFRED KEMPER. EDNA XVILSON. Massachusetts. ELIZABETH HALL. RUTH KEENEY. Honorary Members. GRACE PATTEN CONANT, A. M. ELEANOR L. LORD, Ph. D. 103 BEATRICE GUNSAL'LI'S. . . mgr 0210C ELSIE DE LAMARTER . fh'xf M?U'riar. LILLIAN BECIL . . Scrum! li'arm'ar. MARGUIQRITJC DICE. . Third ll'arrior. QOI E wad sf... 7 M mi? :33 ys. M J? m ttw moo, , ,. 5 Wm, . , 8:5 w uMW mu, , f ,, u , 1am 33 ; tum. m9 1, m. w. : , L w .. 5a,, N: m U a ., xxlhxx, n, W xi k M pm. w. ,1, . aw u, 5.32134qu .13; rXrl'iURMQ , $ am , 2c: v31 Vi x 4 ; . ?:3 29: Mi. J k, 53.x, 3,. Wk H v.4? .. Ac, 1 r rl midi; ,: J .a :4, ,2 1w ,N 1.5;: 5:: x . o T1 1. O M N m J Q 12352:. 32:; a mg? , 2;: E: 52:31:; Qua 9?; 5i: ????vic; 2 333m , ,x ;.ae20: 3 2.7 $35qu x 1.5: 83; X ygfm K N n7 i his. winauxw x 112, r rail EN N.SYLVAN Officers. 0 E'DITII MARIA me'J-zLI., 01's idmzf. ELLEN BM'LAII LICXVIS. I 7w-l'I'mfa'wlf. MYRA Ross MANIFOLD, Y?Kzumnn'r. MARX .T. HOGI'l-Z, .Smrdalju Honorary Members. 0 DR. JOHN F. Gormnck, DR. JOHN B. VAN BIETER, DR. LILIAN V1 :LsH MR5. HANS FROELIC max. Officers. HELEN FRANCES DOIIERTY, . Prmia'vuf. IDA RICHARDSON GARRTSON, . . ,Skwrz'fazj'. FLO Y ILIFF. . . . . . Y7'z'mnl'm'. Members. ISABELLA NANCY BALDWIN, SARAH MAm-IIJENE HARDHAM, KETI'RAH ESTHER BALDWIN. Anne Lm'ISE LAWRENCE, HELEX ELIZABETH BROWN, DIARY 11mm: MAXIM, JESSIE YEREANCF. CANS, ETHEIAVYN ALWARD PHLL, Lou's BERTIXA CouxrAs, LFIELLA BIT HIA SANDS, BEATRICE DAVIS, GRACE ISABEL SPE'rrx'NE, ELSIE GASKU,L DAVIS. BERTIH IVIORTON ST MAHEL BAKER DAY. ELIZABETH MARION Trrrs. CLARA GILBERT DILKS, ANXA MABEL XVINsnR, JESSIE MAY DUNN, EDNA WYCKOFF, LYDIA MAI'DE FORCE, MAnGE MAY Ym'xn. HELEX MARIE GREENE, Honorary Member. EDITH SOMERVIILF, MHKKITT. 107 RUTH HAerv, MARY MATHEWS. MABEL PUTTS. GRACE Osnokx LYI'IA NORRIS. Officers. 9 l 'rmz'duzf. 1 Ya , I ??Sidziut. ?;I'V'Asfaildz'ng' Sav'pfaija leara'z'ilg' bkfi'dmj'. 7 71715117171 Officers. JOSEPHINE ALEXANDER. . . . . . . . l'rmia'enl. CARRIE M. Housxc. . . . . . . . Trmsmwr and .Skrrelany. 109 ' arktfbfnmn GLluhm Sememg enueg'vm hgmm! Officers. 0 MAmcL DAY, . . . . . . . . . . . . . . President. VVINIFRED KEMPER. . . . . . . . . . . . . . Scrrdary. MARY MAXIM, . . . . . . . . . . . . ??'mxurer. Members. 0 MABEL DAY. MARY MAXIM. ANNE CoCCH. MADCE Yot'xc. WINIFRED KEMPER. IDA GA'RRISOX. 110 VCVH fmv LII'V A 2 07 VJMVMW . 5471 .1 xdwdxkahMibym, XXXXX KZZwkvw LXZX X. Wyoming Seminary Club. 0 Officers. 0 EDITH M. POWELL, . . , . . . . . . . . . . President. HARRIET RANSOM, . . . . . . . . . . . . . Secretary. Members. G HELEN V. DAVENPORT, 03. LUELLA EAKINs, 703. EDITH M. POWELL, 034 HARRIET RANSOM, '05. M. LOUISE POWELL, !06. 111 113 ,U L CV 114 . President. Serrelary. DR. CHARLES BLACKSHEAR, . Lo'r US Cor LTAS, . 115 Geological Society. 0 ARTHI'R Bnmrxs, FRANCES HOPKINS. HARRIET MANXING, KATHERINE ADAMS, LETITIA RICA ED, 116 l 'I'KJI'de'Ilt. I 'I'rr- l Urxidyul . Mvvrdiilg' vai'z'fal'y. Unvvnsfwza'iIAg 5Prr6fmju anmrm'. PHILOSOPH CA ZTY SOCIJ Officers. 0 ARTHITR BIBBINS. FRANCES DOHERTY. FRANCES Hopklxs LETITIA RICAL'D. JESSIE DUNN. 117 Proxidwzl. V itc- Presidcm N?cordin'gr Serrdary Lbrrmjiwldz'wg .S'vrrffnml. Treasmw: .. WM W53il tan Itllulmmu WWW M' ; ' Haw: :j . ;: ., ,, ,. . ' . L H I, w . . l 3 ml 33 ' ; k1 ' y f H y; ,, I 310110: 0 ax Mk V 6'67- MW $ik zrr Officers. . 7 . N i ,2 DR. HANS LROELICHER. . . . . lb'mzdmt NJ z :5 IIELEN T. WAITE, . . kgfarding .S'wrafmy. a c I . v M ' . . ' . ' . I r g'; - FLORuNch WALLHER, . Unvmpozm'mg iSnwlmj'. d :. 1 .nl t ! l I 1 Additional Members of Executive Committee. w ROSALIE PENDLETON. W JESSIE DI'NN. L 2::- 1 118 Officers. 0 NANCY I'IIGCINBOTHAM C-Vrculxn. MARY J. Hocmc. EMILIE DOETSCH. I'IARRTLZT ALMIRA BLOUG. ROSA Ln; PENDLETQX. 119 2718 lfaHimm'r Anzafrfazu. 77113 ltallfumrz? IlKl'dfd. 7718 12:177szng Akzw. 771v S1111. lidz'im' iIH'XH'Qf lxhltVldX. W275 255:. $8. 3,,5:Fr. , 23233? SE. qu .A Fm2Uw. NmSNEigTN V53 2:35 : 5.2:rzacz Hccm. bmminwznm. mi: GEL: Sow. Zmrgx 2.3.3. 30m. :7sz 23:7 Ecizwm maaoz. 5.:3. :cEix. $3. W:m3amm 25.3.5... 25;? 23:3ch7 . GE. bmmmwnwam. :5 SwWEmcz. 509 2:5,? :xczjn $0? $8.. Contributors Officers. RUTH HASLUP, . Presidmi. HELEN BROWNE, . . Vice-President. EMMA DE Bow, Secreiary. FLORENCE WILSON, Treasurer. Executive Committee. DR. LORD, ROSALIE PENDLETON, RUTH HASLUP, BESS DE Bow, MABEL WIANT. 121 College Settlement. Officers. CAROLINE WILSON. . . . . . . . . . . President JESSIE DUNN, . . . , . . . . . . Secreim'y. GERTRIiDE SLATER, . . . . . . . . . . ??wasurer. Lawrence House Workers. DAISY MFRPHY. . . Dz'nmfm'. MARCELLA GOODRICH. . . . . . . . . ELIZABETH MORELAND, SARAH LEUTZ, . . . . . . . . . MARY PARRISH. HARRIET MANNING. . . . . . . . EDXA SPHDDEN. Locust Polnt Workers. BESSIE BJSADENKOPF. . META MAC SOR LEV. Y. W. C. A. Officers. 4D MARTHA C. EVOCiIS,19031 Rwhx'fjeuf. FRANCES DUHERTY,1993. Vim-lbcsz'dmzl. HELEN BROVVNE. 1901. Remra'z'ugr Sem'clm'y. IDA GARRISON. 1905. Carrmfimzding Sure lary. JESSIE DUNN. 1904. Irmmrer. Chairmen of Committees. 0 EDITH POWELL, 1903. Devotional. CARRIE PROBST,1904. Bible Siztdy. INA FRANCE. 1905, :Visxz'omny. MOLLIE L. CULLOM, 1903, Jkulbarslzz'p. HELEN BROVVNE,1904, liztcr-Collggiaie mzd Evangel. MARGARET MORRISS, 1904. Hand-Boofctmd Room. ALICE DUNNING. 1903, Recepiiolz. ANNIE COUCH, 1904, Muir. Somerset Y. 0 Officers. 0 RUTH HASLCP, . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Prmz'a'ent. CLAIRE ACKERMAN, . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Senior Presz'denl. ISABELLA BALDWIN, . . . . . . . . . . . . . . junior Presz'dgizf. ROSE LOGAN, . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Serrelary. JANE HYDE, . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ??eamrer. EDNA FRIZZELL, . . . . . . . . Szaberinimzden! of Literature and 137655 le-lt. ANNA HASLUBy . . . . . . . . . . Superiniendmz! of Flower 11555sz M7071; 124 Officers. RUTH HASLUP, . . . , . . President FLORENCE WALTHER, . . . . Vz're-Prcsz'denl. BELLE BAKER, . . . . . . Serretary. EVA DONAHUE, . . . . . . Ya'easurer. U L 1,7! J. ADAM H UGO, , , 7? WW 7; WE Wlallllllyflllm m wmv- 7 .xxmw mg Ry luxfrzzrlm' in :Pitmo. 'amo 331D BESS DL Bow . GLNLVILVL HOLTZVIAN JESSIE DUNN CAROLINL VVESTMORELAND. . First Sopranos. GRACL RLDDELL. 405. ETHLI FLIDMY,LR 06. E1 IA MILI LR ,06. GLNLVILVL H01 TZMAN MARCLII A GOWDRICH ,04. BLSSIL BIBBINS O6. LorIsL EBBLRT, ,06. LAIVRA FAUS, 404. ADLLAIDL WALLIS. 406. 404. Flrst Altos. JLss HUTCHINSON. aO6. BFATRICL DAVIS 06 ANNL COUCH104. CARRIL FLHR. SARAH LLAvY, 404. PAGE DAML. 406. MAL'DL MORROW. 406. BLATA BRUNLR, 406. , O3. x N p 4 m A 4 I . 4 l . L H F ,. F F . . . P; Tsidmlt. la 143mm v Jltma .5367. 179a mrm and berretary. An alllpamst. Second Sopranos. Lt RA CORREII ,06. ELIZABFTH PLTLRS, O4. JLANIL CHILDS. BL 53 DL Bow, 403. JLSSIL DUNN. ,04. BLss NUGENT. 405. LMMA Dr: Row, 405. Second Altos. MAYBLIIL MCINTIRL 404 BL SSIE BLADLNKOPF, FLOR1:NCL PIPHLR 404. LAIRA HLTCHINS, 403. MARY DIATHEXRS 404 GRACL MLRCLR, 405. 404. 091 ZCaZUGCZ 05:? Mandolin Club. FLORENCE NIAY CARMINE, '03, Prm'ia'ml. AMELIA D. BENSON. '03, lfusl'm'xs Jlmzalgmr. J. C. LEVIN. Dir M401: Mandolins : FLORENCE MAY CARMINIC, V03. AMELIA D. BENSON, '03. ADA I. RAMSAY, ex-'04. EMILY F. SLEHMAN, '03. MAY KENDRICK, '05. MARGL'ERITE B. LAKE, 'Un. MARY E. ADAMS, 'Us. ANNA EDMUNDS, VUl. ETHEL C. SHARP, '01. HELEN B. GUTMAN, Ml. FLORENCE GFTMAN, '1sz Guitars : HELEN V. DAVENPORT ' CORNELIA Wmm, '04. MARGARET BRIAN, WIL SELMA ROSENTHAL, 01. L74 Violin: MINA J. MILLER, W16. The Great, Kind World. 0 HPoor, little fellow! I should think he would be half frozen.H The speaker was a pleasant featured lady past her freshest youth, who, at the moment stepped up the curb assisting herself by leaning more heavily on the arm of her companion. One would say to himself : Hhusband and wife,H judging probably not so much by evidence that they were so, as by the lack of evidence that they were anything else. He would probably add, if his thoughts were having a holiday, in pretty good circumstancesxl although his opinion would be formed by the aid of a minimum of facts; for, besides their wraps, only their eyes were to be seenehers, in the recesses of an ermineelined hood; his, beneath the Visor of a sable capehood and cap both met by the upturned collars 0f cloaks falling from shoulders to feet. But the ladyls eyes were hazel, hence gentle; and her voice was low and sympathetic. No matter about his, they were proba- bly equal to the demands of practical life, and that is suhhcient for a man. The words were spoken just as the pavement was reached. The speaker was leaning a little forward, head lowered and face turned towards her companion ; but her glance passed him by and rested upon the shivering figure of a boy of perhaps five, in ilwoolly and mittens and With knit stockings drawn over his shoes, who was gazing in an absorbed way down Vine street. When, it is said that Franklin Square, with its fountain in winter quarters, was just across the street; and, that the Greek-temple-like Penn Bank was behind him, a Philadelphian whose hair has whitened a trifle, will need no further description of locality. The Quaker City was still wearing its Colonial garb and walking in its Colonial ways. To mention white steps and faeings, solid, lower shutters, front, side and rear, with long strap hinges and broad flat bolts and rings, through which ran white cords with tassels at their ends, all spotlessly white; green, Venetian upper shutters, gabled roofs with lldormeril windows- this is to outline the image which the name of the city, spoken or written, brought to the mind of one who knew it well. In the early morning upright churns, scoured to all the whiteness and the brightness which cedar staves and brazen hoops are capable of taking on, and with three or four shiny tin measures clustered within the dish-like cover upon a clean, fringed napkin, stood on the corners awaiting customers for milk, cream, curd. The day of the milk wagon with its clattering wheels and Clanging bell had not dawned, Whoever wanted milk must go for it. But .the baker rolled his ark-shaped barrow along the pavements, with its bunch of litalliesll swinging to one handle. Out of the ark came square loaves, round loavesy twists and buns, crisp and warm, and as each regular customer received her order the tally hearing her name was hunted out of the bunch, a file produced and a nick made in the tallyls edge. Primitive book-keeping this! Sleepers were aroused from their morning naps with the question : HBuy any cat-lish? screamed from feminine throats in a strain which took in the first, third and eighth notes of the principal chord. 132 It was not quite so characteristic of Philadelphia, to be sure; but in those days the city had its snow storms and its snow; the two are not equivalent for it still occasionally has a snow storm; but the street-cleaning brigade gets what snow the Traction Company cannot dispose of by means of its salt-trncks. Snow was not occasional then, but was on the program for the weeks between Thanksgiving and Ash-Wednesday, and it lay deep and glistening and crisp and slippery for many a day and many a week. Then it was worth one's while to own a sleigh and half a dozen strings of bells-big bells and little bells. Then youngsters felt that Kris was sober when on Christmas night he leaned a sled against the chimney side and perhaps hung a pair of many-strapped skates above it. The era of street cars had not yet arrived; the lumbering omnibus had right of way-speci- niens still survive in country towns where they serve to ply between the station and the hotel. The roofs were humpedi Along and within this hump, from door to driver, ran a strap made fast at both ends, passing out a pigeon hole in the front, crossing the drivers left knee and passing under his right foot. It served to hold the door closed and as a medium of communication be- tWeen passenger and driver. The former jerked the strap, the latter received the signal on his left knee. NOne pull for the right, two pulls for the left,H was the simple code; and boys and girls who had just begun to form a forced intimacy with Lindley Murray were bewildered in the effort to parse the sentence where the verb would not agree with its nominative; for not until after repeated efforts to reconcile the schooljwith the coach did it finally burst upon them that pull and hulls were nouns, not verbs. The broad tread 0f the low wheels of this ark on axles made slow work breaking the snow, and as soon as possible the omnibus-sleigh was substituted, gay with red body-color and gilt trimmings, and majestic with the broad dashsboard curved deep and high like a swanls neck. They were drawn by four, six, eight, twelveihorses, according to the size of the sleigh, and every strap of the harness was covered with bells. Here came a step in the evolution of rapid transit in cities. In the omnibus the fare was thrust into the drivers back-curved left hand through the pigeon hole which admitted the strap. Each passenger stepped up to the pigeon hole as best he could in a wobbling box where he could not stand upright, and passed out his fare as a con- dition precedent to the relaxing of that strap and the opening of the door. But with the sleigh no driver could both handle the ribbons and secure the fareSehence the conductor. HFare six cents; children under ten, four centsfy Think of it! A long ride on a brilliant, winter after- noon in a gorgeous sleigh, the taut air Vibrant with the music of a thousand bells and the voices of a hundred merry men and rnaiclSeall for four cents, if one had wit to linger on the happy side of ten. Our boy was not much more than half way to that sober height of life. He heard the exclamation and with the instant curiosity of childhood turned, first glanced at the speaker, then looked around for the Hpoor, little fellowf whose wretchedness she so sweetly bewailed. But no one was in sight except people, some bigger, some littler, that seemed to be as well off as himself. He knew he was a Hfellerlieall the boys called each other so; he had never cared to know why, but accepted it with the rest of the matters which had met him and for which he felt no responsibility. Littleness, however, was no element of his consciouse ness. He had a brother at home two years younger; the brother was Hlittle brotherfi he himself was Hbig brotherii and his mother called him her man, and told him he must take care of her now. Did he not carry all her bundles away to Third and Market, and did not he bring money 133 back tightly grasped in his closed hst, and his fist thrust into his pocket because he was told he must be very careful for mother would cry if it was lost? And poor, that did not fit his case as he conceived it. The room they lived in was big; it held a stove, a settee, a two-leaved dining- table, a bed with a trundle, a rocking chair. Still there was room for his velocipede, and only a couple of weeks ago there was a big tree in it with spangles all over it, and some candy in a paper bag, and some snowy-topped sponge cakes in another, and a few copper cents piled up under it on a ginger cake. Hunger he had never known except as a pleasurable anticipation, for there was always bread, often iigolden syrup, and sometimes even butter. Moreover, had he not at that very moment four of those copper cents jingling at the tips of his fingers in his left-hand mitten, and was he not waiting for the General Cadwallader that he might take a 10rdly ride all the way to Fairmount and back by Race street to the Exchange, and then by Second and Vine to this very corner again? He would as soon have recognized himself in a remark about a green monkey as in the exclamation iipoor, little fellow. Half-frozen? Of course he was cold; what could a erlleril expect standing so long on the snow and of a January day, waiting for the General Cadwallader, even if the sun did shine through the crisp air and he had thick, woollen stockings over his shoes? He never thought of pitying himself because he was cold; what else should he be in January on a corner? So after a fruitless glance around for the pitiable little fellow his thoughts reverted to the main object, and his eyes were once more bent on the horizon towards the Delaware, awaitingr the appearance of the lofty dash-board and triple-storied boot of the General Cadwallader. Not a few sleighs of the line passed but they were not for him. He had never heard Excelsior but he was feeling it all the same. Those four cents were to go to the utmost limit of money's magic power over circumstance, and that just now seemed to be the seat at the drivers side in the topmost tier of seats behind the majestic curve of the dasher 0f the General Cadwallader. Only one higher ambition occurred to himvto be the driver; but for that he must perhaps wait until he should be ten. Has it been explained that the General Cadwallader was the twelve-horse sleigh of the line? It was big, its name was big, and its last three syllables were associated in his mind with Hwalloperf and the doings of General Taylor and General Scott in a place look- ing something like a cornucopia, which the teacher pointed out on the map and called Mexico. He felt that when he should mount the coveted seat all that these names represented would in some occult way pass into himself. He did not know anything about Hconsciousness, and the slang had not yet come about; but what he felt was that on that perch he would be IT. HThere she comes ! l' He shouted the words to the listening and admiring self that shadowed the planning and actingr self. His heart fluttered and he became warm to the ends of his Very fingers and toes as the six span of horses swept around the corner four squares away and the monster dash-board followed. He had been listening in imagination to the jingle of the bells for so long that he could not tell now whether they actually made any more music present than they had done absent. Evidently the sleigh was crowded. But that was a part of his expectation; cverybady wanted to ride in the General Cadwallader. It might have occurred to him, but it never did, that so big an affair might pass him by With indifference. He did not know ihe many fine sayings on the subject of the relative greatness of mind and matter; it was no matter to him what mind was, nor did he mind what matter was; but he felt as big as that sleigh. Not stop for HIM? And with four cents in his mitten? He stepped into the street, he looked into the 134 driverls eye in a commanding way, he lifted his left hand authoritatively, and the copper cents, all four of them, slipped out of the mitten and buried themselves in the soft snow that flanked the beaten track! In a moment he realized the consequence; in a second he was able to contrast the feelings of a mortal with money in his mittens with those of the same person with money in a snow bank. But it was done to him according to his faith. The world knows its commanders. The driver had seen the signal and dared not disobey. He drew in the radiating lines, the horses threw back their heads, the traces dropped in festoons, the swingle-trees rattled, the merry jingle of the bells came to a sudden stop with a sort of final scream. But our boy, back to sleigh, was digging with his mittened hands in the snow like a squirrel for a nut. Would it wait for him? Could he find them? He dropped one mitten but he was careless of it and dug away in the snow. How it all happened he never knew. The conductor had him in his arms and was reaching him up to the driver, a dozen willing hands stretched down and grasped him, he shot past White faces and fur caps and over buffalo robes and was thrust into the seat beside the driver. A long lash flew out and cracked, the horses ducked their heads and leaned forward, the leathers tautened, the bells gave a sudden shout, the runners sent up a scream of delight, and HE glided forward not doubting for a moment the great, kind world whose goodness and gladness and glory swam beneath him and around him. V When the overwhelming feeling subsided and he could think, he remembered the lost four cents and concluded that the conductor had found them; for that distinguished personage had picked his mitten out of the snow and passed it to him. Moreover, the compassionate words of the gentle-looking lady came back to him, and he breathed a momentary wish that the Hpoor, little fellowJ1 who was half frozen could have shared this happiness with him, although he had no idea who the llpoor, little fellow, was. But later in life, when he rellected upon the matter, he concluded that she meant him, and that he was a Hpoor, little fellow to her because his happiness and her happiness were not the same. 135 Donnybrook Fair. 0 How did our year book ever come to be named Donnybrook Fair? Why did the old Irish festival have anything to do with a modern college annual? And what was Donnybrook Fair anyhow? The answers to these questions are a little vaguey it must be admitted. It may have been mere chance that hit upon such a happy title, and our alumnae tell us it was so in the main. But perhaps some thought of the miscellaneous wares, the jovial spirit, the kindly fun on the old green occurred to them also. And so our Donnybrook Fair came to be, and very dear it always is to every Womanls College student, however its intrinsic value may alter from year to year. Strong-bow. in 1174, first granted to the Baron of Bray the privilege of holding a fair, and in 1204-, King John, generous for once, gave to the Citizens of Dublin 3 grant which entitled them to hold an annual fair, lasting eight days, at Dovenabrok. Various names have been given to the old place since then, the name Donnybrook being only gradually evolved from the many ancient methods of spelling and pronunciation, of which a few examples are : Donenach- broc, Dovenalbrok, Doniburn, Donbrok, Donabrok, and hence Donnybrook. This old festival became a place where the men of those days transacted much of their busi- ness. Cattle and hides were sold or exchanged for armor, buff jerkins, bales of cloth, and so on. Jongleurs, minstrels and glemen frequented the green in large numbers, and furnished the greater part of the fun for the occasion. The shows probably supplied the place of the modern vaudeville, attracting however, all the upper classes of the age also, for in the monotony of medieval castle life, what could be more diverting that these innocent amusements? In the time of the Georges, after a period of degeneration, the fair again became very pop- ular. It is easy to imagine the haughty, beribboned young macaronis Haunting their laces and velvets on the green to the intense admiration of the rustics of the surrounding country. And we know, too, that sometimes the jest turned to earnest, and that many duels were fought there for the honor of some fair lady who would herself have scorned to set foot upon the vulgar green. Perhaps these duels really ended with the empty bravado that our modern common sense is apt to associate with them. At least, we will hope that the soil of Donnybrook Fair was never stained with the blood of these so gallant young contestants. 136 In spite of these events, and although some small effort has been made to invest it with a halo of romance and poetry, little success has been achieved in this direction. The funniest rhyme about the Fair is very far from romantic : Ah, Muse Debonair, let us haste to the Fair ! lTis Donnybrook tapsters invite; Men, horses and pigs are running such rigs, As the cockles of your heart will delight. But ah, how false what we so desire! Like Jack OtLantern gleaming in the bogs, That souce the silly traveller in the mire, Making him look like one 0L Circe,s hogs. The Lord Mayor comes with all his bums, Pulls down the tent nor eler relents, Till all the jolly blades and wenches frisky, Are forced-O sad reverse, which grieves me to rehearse, To Bridewell and water, from the Fair and whiskey. The latest form of the festival was held near Dublin, on the little Village green, surrounded by private houses which sloped down to the pretty river that has given the place its name. At the entrance of the enclosure there were always prominent different games, one of which has been described at such great length that it evidently played a very important part in the per- formance : a penny was placed on the top of a truncated cone around which a ditch was dug, and every unwary new arrival was induced to try his hand at knocking the penny off beyond the ditch with a long stick. Of course he was never successful, but each onlooker always fancied that when his turn should come he would succeed. Just behind the entrance were the tents for eating, dancing and drinking. Miserable make- shifts most of them were, put up by the village storekeepers to increase their trade. They would build the frame-work and then make the walls of old clothes, patched bedquilts, or anything which would serve to keep off the warm, wet, Irish rain. Inside, the floors were roughly boarded over, and upon the boards were the tables and benches where the meals were served. Still further back and nearer the river came the amusement tents. Of course the Dime Museum was most prominent, with its usual array of giants, dwarfs, Hottentots, bearded ladies and the various other unhappy freaks who go to make up that type of travelling show. The climax of delight came, just as in our Donnybrook it sometimes comes to-day, in the Theatre Royal, where were enacted blood-curdling tragedies and comedies, which I am sure would be compared with nothing less than HAs you like if, or T 7726 Taming of the 511732le In 1855, the city authorities closed the Fair at sunset, so avoiding all the necessary ribaldry of the later hours. From that time the Fair has fallen into a state of Uinnocuous desuetudef and it has remained for us to restore the name through its successor across the sea, to somewhat of its pristine glory and excellence. i 137 Athletics. Basket-ball. December 12th. . , . . Class :05 21?. ,06 January 22nd, . . . . . 03 2'3. 04 January 27th. . . . . H 04 2'3. ,06 Tennis. November, 1902, . . . . . Class of 05 v5. 06 Gymnasium Cup. Won by Class yOZ Field Day Points. May 12th, 1902, . . . . Class of ,03 w. ,04 139 56 29 m ? m 3 am iunwnm ammmwagm mu ga a 141 Life at the National Junior Republic. lThe movement to found the National Junior Republic originated among the Students of the Woman's CoilegeJ 0 Pay Day. 0 One of the chief aims of the founders of the National Junior Republic has been to teach its citizens the necessity and the dignity of labor. Every boy who is able to work must earn his own living; that is, he must pay for his board and lodging, his Clothing, mending and Iaun dry ; otherwise, he must, like his kindred in the larger Republic, drift into the rank of panperism, and so become liable to arrest for vagrancy. The picture here shown represents the Weekly H paying off t, of the laborers. Some have been working on the farm, some have been cutting wood, others have been doing house-work 01- cobbling shoes, or shoeing horses, and have now lined up before the superintendent to receive their wages. They usually pay their board bills and other dues while they have the money in hand. H Pay day H is 011 Saturday when the court meets, and those Who are fined for misdemeanors are thus able tohpay their fines 0n the spot. The currency is made of aluminium, and is on a par with United States money. There is a savings bank for the deposit of surplus earnings, and when a boy has been honorably dismissed from the Republic and has maintained a good character for six months in the position in which he has been placed, his savings are redeemed at their full value in United States money. ' The Summer Dining Tent. O In summer the boys live out of doors as much as possible. Sometimes a few who have especially distinguished themselves as good citizens are taken off by their military instructor on a camping party. The annexed picture shows the family group at the Republic enjoying dinner in their summer dining-room under the refreshing shade of a tine clump of oaks. The setting of the tables, waiting and dish-washing form one of the departments of labor by which the citi- zens increase their earnings; As elsewhere the dramatic muse is cultivated, and the boys have attempted both the writing and performance of plays. Their minstrels gave an'entertainment at the College on the 12th of December, the proceeds of which, including the sale of posters made by themselves, amounted to $47.50. 142 SUMMER DINING TEN Q Q PAYING OFF . . ON SATURDAY AFTERNOON. Q 143 The Alcestis of Euripides? 144 The Alcestis of Euripides. 0 Twice before in the history of VVomenls Colleges in America has a Greek play been attempted. The VVomanys College has the honor of carrying out with marked success a third play in the original Greek. According to the scholars who witnessed it, had the actors been on hand to give the initial performance in Athens, they would certainly have won the first Dionysaic prize for Euripides. After the final decision to have a play, and the selection of Alcestis, came the appoint- ment of committeeSeand here there was work for all and plenty of it. Never were costumes chosen with more care, never was the blending of colors, the adjustment of folds, the looping 0f sleeves, and the construction of wigs more accurately studied. There were Visits to art galleries and museums; libraries, costumers and even the statues of Goueher Hall were made objects of attention and research. Indeed, one of the beneficent results of the Greek play was the dissemination among the students, of knowledge concerning these neglected statues. The Greek stage and how to adapt it to a college gymnasium became the problem and night-mare of the stage committee, for somehow the stage builder could not comprehend that a mediaeval castle and a Greek palace are two entirely different things. The members of the chorus were the most industrious, cheerful, obliging, bnoyantly enthusiastic actors that ever congregated upon a stage. This was especially remarkable in View of the gymnastic exercises which they underwent in the drills. Singing, marching and gym- nasting seemed to be one of their principal recreations. Never was a chorus more sympathetica never did mortals pray more fervently, nor sing with more feeling and gustowthan these faithful Greeks. No matter if the flute did not give the right pitch-no matter if the actors could not End their notewtoward the end there was always a full burst of harmony that amply compensated for all previous defects. The only friction in the entire series of rehears- als was caused by the occasional unlocked for retreats of the chorus leader, when collisions with the chorus members were inevitable. No one, however, is to suppose that any of these slight blemishes could be detected on the public presentations. The Alcestis 0f Euripides is especially adapted to give the student an insight into the home life of the Greeks. It depicts them as a warm-hearted, lovable, affectionate people, and we see that they had very much the same joys and pleasures, the same hopes and fears that we have. The characters are intensely human, and deep grief and boisterous humor sometimes appear side by side. We come to realize that, after all, the likenesses in mankind are deep and eternal, and it is only in the superhcial customs and manners that there are differences. 145 SOPHOMORE DRAMATICS. The Taming of the Shrew? 146 My Favorite Play. 0 By Miss Junior. 0 My taste was formed early in life. From the time when I was still counted a mere child by my neighbors and schoolmates, tin short, when my nickname was Freshiel I have revelled in Shakespeare. Who has not experienced the fearful delight of forbidden sweets? which in my case took the form of reading thrilling tragedies at midnight, sitting up in bed with a huge comforter wrapped around me. Ever and anon my fearful eyes would be raised to the door in expectation of seeing, standing there on the threshold- not bloody Macbeth or the ghost of Hamlet mbut Mrs. Roberts and Mrs. Groves. HMy dear, only sudden illness or death is an excuse for lights on after hourle But it was only as I myself grew more mature, and my friends called me Miss Sophomore, that I learned to appreciate the riper genius of the great poet which, I soon realized, was unquestionably mani- fested in the matchless u Taming of the Shrew.H I became an enthusiast over the play, learned whole portions of it by heart and often, when called upon in class, would answer H I fly, Biondello,H or H Error il the bill, sir: Error iy the bill I instead of N Present. And of course I imagined vividly all the characters dreaming of the blustering Petruchio, 0f the fair Katherine, and then again of the gentle Bianco Hwhose books and instru- ments would be her companyfl until, forsooth, her gallant instructors taught her of love as well as of books. The Character of Katherine finally became so distinct and real to me that I delighted to imagine myself the shrew,--after all, such a charming and fascinating shrew. 147 I could see the dark green curtain roll back revealing a sea of faces beyond the foot- lights, and, surrounded by my sister and her lovers, walked the streets of old Padua, in a gorgeous green brocade and jewelled girdle. I could shock those lovers of Bianca until they should vow they would rather have a very devil to wife than me. But When Petruchio, my lover, should appear, how stalwart must he be 3 Bold and blustering ltis true, but so manly withal ! Any other woman would have yielded to him gladly but, alas, it was not meant that my nature should be kind, and so I was to storm and rant, while all the time my heart should want to go out to the man who could say, HKate, like the hazel twig, is straight and slender, and as brown in hue as hazel-nuts and sweeter than the kernels? But, in thought still, I yielded slowly and almost in terror to his masterful subjection. Should I not be frightened to leave gay Padua for the distant home of a lover who Hcould take it on him at the first so roundly W, YWas he mad or only shamining? Then I would soon realize that it was all a game of Nbluff, and would be almost amused at his wild wag- gery, which so confused the stuttering tailor. Could a half-starved woman still be obdurate, and was not discretion always the better part of valor? I would, of course, yield gracefully in the end. I knew it myself all the time, but it would be part of my dream that the audience should not comprehend how I had learned to love my valiant husband until I kissed him bravely upon the broad streets of Padua. Then last of all should come the wedding banquet of my sister, Bianca. The lights burn 10w, there is singing in the distancemaud each guest holds his goblet high to pledge a health to the three new brides. My eyes are almost blinded by the splendid costumes, the shine of silver doublets, and the gleam of satin cloak, among the wearers of which my bonny husband stands supreme. Quietly he orders me to tell for him, the duties of a woman toward her own, true love. How can I answer otherwise? H Such duty as the subject owes the Prince, Even such a woman oweth to her husbandft THF, DRAMATIC COMMITTEE Snows ITS DISAPPROVAL. Baptista looked like Hamlet in a suit of solemn black, Mad Katherine and Bianca looked like sisters fair and tall. Petruchio looked the audience up and down from front to back, But the best was Dr. H-del, for he never looked at all. 148 Books. 0 A good man built a library-the walls of grey stone. the roof tiled with red. He sought far and Wide for books, and he chose only the besteso there Were not many of them. When he had finished his collection he said to his children, H Choose as you think best. Then the doors Were opened and these are the books that the babes in understanding found. A valuable volume, entitled A The Knowledge of Good and Evil? Illustrated by the N Psych Babef and bound on the outside in blue and gold, but on the inside with gold and White. A complete Latin grammar with a vocabulary of 500t000,000,000 words. There is an appendix of annual jokes; the whole is charmingly bound in a bow and a SWeet smile. A German book in very large print and of rare edition. Filled with the good, the true, and the beautiful. Lately bound in red and White. A most useful volume, written in French and Italian. Artistically bound in green and white With a peculiar red band appearing periodically near the top. A general referendum, much worn at the corners on account of constant usage. H A complete Quiz Book, or Matters of General Intelligence which the Laity Ought to Know,H strongly bound, and illustrated With flunks and dry bones. The text wonder- fully full and flavored with a wit rarely equalled. A thin book with the top edge worn smooth and White-entitled AA How to Regulate the VVorIdF or AA Domestic Economy as we Practice it at Home? Bound in blue and White, and lately tied up with white satin ribbon. A long, narrow volume tto be found on the lowest shelO on the Art of Converting H2 S 03 C1 into Na4 Ph. 0r HExtracts and Solutions as Mamma makes Them.H Illustrated by the authorea choice volume for girls. A thick book,heavi1y bound, giving directions for the treatment of frog-legSvmuch sought for, and invaluable to the library. A fetching volume, recommended by J. Pierpont Morganeon AARocks, Where Found and How Obtained H-much in demand by those peeuniarily embarrassed-uniquely bound in Bal- timore City-railway transfers, and published at Sparrows Point. 149 U Love tatl Thirtyllea publication well liked but hard to obtaineoften carelessly left 011 the tennis courts. iK Great Men as I see Them, ea ponderous volume bound in Scotch plaid,eand illus- trated with trees, preference being given to the WVillaf A history, complete and authentic With an appendix of all Shakespearels plays, and hints on acting. Bound in a faded red and white. H Numbersllefor the younger children-wholesome and straightforwardly told. An original Greek document, with a terse and accurate translation. Especially suited to studious minds. An uAnethology of the Sweet Singers 0f Englam Nubound in royal purple, illustrated with Perry Pictures and punctuated with gestures. Very complete and touchingly told. liW'hat Can be Accomplished at the VVomanls College of Baltimorellea set of three of the best of the newer publications, proving conclusively the worth of W. C. B. Subjects treated-Biology, German and Physics. ii Healtliltein two volumeSethe most useful 0f books,eaud explaining many ways of doing much work H for the fun of it.H The children treated these books in many ways. Some came only to write their names in the catalogue, and passed out as 50011 as possible. These are the ones we have forgotten. Others, in eagerness, grasped the first books they saw, and spent all the days on single subjects. Narrowness was their reward. Still others,ealnbitious in unworthy things, read a few lines on every page in every book, and went forth saying they had mastered all in this great library. These were the foolish ones. But many of the children were wise daughters who chose a part of the best from all the bookSewhether that best lay in the information or the style of expression,eand after many days of diligent application, these went forth having fulfilled the plan of a good father. The Situation. Gin the Dean to each his lasses In course ninety-iive. Need the Dean to squelsh those lasses When they late arrive? Everybody has his hobby- Nane they say had he, Yet he loved to teach his lasses Quick and prompt to he. Gin the Dean to grizz those lasses One bright autumn day, ti Tell me now the situation of this verse I prayzi, Blank and blanket grew those lasses Till the learned Dean Said ti Now listen and PH tell you And straightway began. 150 h Gin a body meet a body Coming through the rye, Gin a body kiss a body, Need a body cry? I should say this situation Is extremely clear :e ' Arm-bonnd lass-her laddie whispering A'al into her ear. Gin that class to grin and giggle, More and more amused- Gin that Dean to blush and stammer7 More and more Confused: It Oh I see youive had no practice And it seems to me I shall have to give you lessons In that line, quoth he. Mr. Dooley 0n Geology, As Practised at the Womants College. 0 No, Hinnissy, I was not intoxicated yisterday. Me nose is red because it is sumburfllt. Ye see, I wint 0111 With tht geeioo-Iogical Club iv tht XVomanys Colledge down to Hawkins Pint, not knowhf what a gee-OOelogical club was until thin. A gceiooelogical club, Hinnissy, is an assocyashun got together f'r t1? purrrpose iv bhreakin' shtones au' diggixf day. No, ye are wrong; theytse not boorgl'rs nfr laborin min, they bhreak shtones ant dig clay in the intrists iv science. They paste tickets on thim; I mane the shtones, any put thim on their mantel paces, any put th' day in glass cases so tlf rain wotft wash it away, an people come manny miles to see H thim, any say Hhow intristilf. an' thin go out an' talk about goluf, ant sivin-up ant ten togplay. If ye died to-day, Hinnissy, an' was berried tin thousand years ago, some iv tht ladiny geeeoo- logical min iv to-day cud tell by th, rings in y,r teeth that ye have tin childhern, they are that smart; an, they cud tell be th, indintations iv ytr scapula scapularum-that's Dago ftr shouldher bonee-that ye are a hod carrier; an, they could lind a lead pencil frtm the head shippint clerk, an, dhraw ye as ye stand, whiskers ant all. Well annyway, as a rayspite fr,m thy cares iv business an Fr th, purpose iv injyiny a well dayserved raycreation, as me frind Hogan would say, I day- cided to accompnty thim. I wint down be the foort Mae Hennery, an, thin aboord iv a buck- eye. Whin ivery wan was aboord, th, boat begun to sail for,rds and sidewtrds at the same toime. I set down an' kept me sate for ttwas loike walking' around on tht slantingt roof iv a tinimint 151 house with a earthquake benathe it, ant a big club with a sail an, a rope tied to it to kape it frim fallint' overboord continyally swingin! for y'r head if ye did not kape it down. Be that, we was approachin' Curtis Bay, whin wan iv the profissers iv pidigogy and arka-ology stood up in th, midst iv th' idjieated girls, loike th' picture iv th' cillybrated Munyon in th, pa-apers an, lec- tured about a Injun Village thot we would visit. HTwas there? he says, Hthat they was ladint the shtrenuous loife that injooced the pote Rudyard KiplinI to write pothrey about thim in his pome iHigher Water, ant iMinnie Ha Hai H AV coorse, ivery wan was anxious to trod tht same ground that L0, the poor Indian, as Hogan calls him, trod, an' we rowed to thy place, ant do ye moind, Hinuissy, twtare nothinV but a cornfield, and they a pickilf up little black shtones in it; I belave thy profissor. however, for the place was very close to FloodYs Par-ruk, ant th' sav- age red min must a had a diVVle iv a good toime at the vowdeville, whin their wives were house clanini or out in their boats diggiif oyshters doorin the R months ant Clams the rest iv the sai- son. Thin we wint back again on the buckeye, any shtarted fIr Pint Booze. Me inner man was beginnini to object to th3 procadins, ant I was thinkiny iv gettint out an injunction rayshtrain- in' the boat from rockin, whirl we came to anchor ant the boat stopped still iv its own aceoord. Thin we had a chanst to have a grand fray lunch, ant a grand wan it was that, ant I done me jooty be it, ye may be sure. Thin it was that two iv the colledge profissers hurried to Shore to attind a meetint iv the Bourd iv Amalgumated Colledge Prohssers to discuss Lithrachoor, alf count up the cash register ant wind up the colledge clock ft the saison. We left thim to thir fate and shtarerted fir Hawkins Pint. Here again we came to anchor, ant ivery wan wint ashore to investigate the red clay bluffs any detarmine the color or whether it was a mere opti- kel illoosion. Thin after they had detarmined whin the clay was laid down an, rose up again, 152 they all came aboord again, bringirf bokays iv water lillies ant other fiowers, any samples iv clay tied up in the corner iv their poket handkerchiefs. The capteen iv th, shipeAh I there's the lad ftr yeehe shouted through his hands: HW'hat ho I me Iaddies, find the weight iv the anchor, leave the wind out iv the VViIldeSS. ant uncover the main shate, ftr we are on our way home, ahoyW an, they answered Haye, aye, sir, 31f the buckeye shtar-rted f'r home in the soft aveniny twilight ; all, th7 girls WhoYre learniny to cook be the fundamintal principles iv Chemistry, 3113 to sew buttons on their husbands shirts be triangulation, an, to patch their coats be the method iv least squares,ch11ned their Delsar-r-te voices he a Chunilf fork that was nothin, but an atin' fork, a1? sung manny songs in English any Dootch arf Frinch 21117 marmy other furrin lang- H H widges. HMe country, tis iv thee,H HIk Vise nil; Vas sallus bediten, Under the shade iv the shelteriny palms? NEs hot nik sullen sinef HMe little gipsy swate heartf an, a Frinch wan called HMarchongf an' manny colledge songs was rendered to tht Quauets taste. Be that We arrived forninst the foort wance more 31f all prepared to go home. Thin whim ivery thing was made ready Pr thy noight the eapteen says: hVVeIl, Mr. Dooley, howyd ye loike it,H he says: HWell capteen, barrint thy rockin, iv th' boat an1 me saysickness, I injoyed meselfimmensely, any I had the toime iv me Ioifefy I says, Harv I thank ye fr it, says I, chot I do. HA11y do ye loike the waterf said Hinnissy. H Sure I do, to wash y'r hands VVith,H replied Mr. Dooley. MR. DOOLEY. The Autumn of 1902. BYA SOPHOMORE. O UW011 t it be fun to haze the Freshmenw were the words on the lips of 1905 when they 7y came back to Baltimore this Fall, with all the enthusiasm of Hgay young Sophomores. For a short time we revelled in the thought of Hseeing 1906 as others saw 1153, But one day our honorary member made a speech, and everyone knows what a speech our honorary member can make. Under its influence, we saw the path of right and duty concerning the subject of hazing as it had never been seen before, and by unanimous consent determined to overcome the spurt of fun, and to follow the path so clearly marked out for us. So, next day, the Dean read in Chapel our resolution, namely, that 1905 should be courteous friends of 1906 in college life, and their honorable rivals in all sportsf, How noble and virtuous! Hazing is a relic of barbarism anyway. Whether or not 1906 had been long enough in the broadening atmosphere of the Woman's College to enable them to grasp the significance of this unprecedented, this magnanimous resolu- tion, is still a question, for rumor had it that they still vaguely expected from 1905 some forcible demonstrations toward themselves, such as had proven so unseemly in former years, and 110 assurances would calm the spirit of unrest. Whether or not 1906 was relieved, when on the day of the Senior Tea, we gave them noth- ing but songs and souvenirs, and was satisfied with their unique hazing, is also a question. But 1905, mindful of the many violent discussions in the newspapers of this great country, relative to the barbarity of any system of hazing, remains tirm in her conviction. She desires for her trophy-case, not a collection of relics of darker ages, but of precedents for a bright and glorious future, where tennis and basket-ball cups are things of the past, and generosity, self- denial and modesty are the most lauded virtues in all college life. 154 The Fall of 1905. BY A FRESHMAN. 4D No hazingethe edict had gone forth. Consternation, disgust, indignation, then rebellion among the Sophomores; all equally to no purpose, and they were forced to swallow the bitter dose and put on a brave front, which consisted of drawing up resolutions against hazing and announcing themselves friends of the Freshmen. However, the sense of duty done failed to make them happy. Hazing is too Vital a thing to be torn out of a Sophomorels life without a pang. Long custom had made the desire blaze up in their souls and burn in their very blood. As time passed and the day of the Senior Tea came nearer, a gloom settled gradually over them. They grew absent minded, forgot to study, cut classes-lost the spice of life entirely. On Friday, the day before the tea, their depression reached its climax; they wandered aim- lessly about college looking off into space with unseeing eyes, refusing to eat and ignoring their mail. At midnight that night a sleepless Sophomore conceived an idea and sprang out of bed with a jump that nearly dislocated the posters on the wall. Midway down the hall she ran into two of her Classmates gloomily pacing up and down. There was a whispered conference, short but decisive, after which they all went back to bed and to sleep. This midnight consultation resulted in a Class meeting early Saturday morningea secret meeting conducted in whispers, but every Sophomore emerged looking relieved and hastened down town with a business-like air. At the tea in the afternoon they stolidly went through their little program of presentation, marches, songs and yeHSethen disappearedewhither or Why no one knew or could find out. When they appeared at dinner that night, nonchalant, unexplainably happy and flushed, they would give no account of themselves, and we might never have known. had it not been for a little mouse found near the gymnasium, dying with fright, Who told With his last breath of dozens of fearful black-robed creatures with horrible grinning masks, Who had filed into the pest-house that afternoon, each bearing a doll, of how they had fed these dolls with nursery bottles, made them ride a donkey, do homage to a terrible monster on a throne-had hazed them unrelentingly with all the accompaniments of ghastly noises, ghostly Eames and uncanny, flick- ering torches, and that now the pest-house presented a gruesome spectacle-with the floor strewn with dollls arms and legs, bits of hair and torches, and many trampled masks. 155 The Sale of the Effects of 1903. Q Clang! Clangl Clang! Clangl The discordant notes of an auction bell vigorously wielded by a small darkey attracted our attention the morning of the tenth of June, 1903. Of course we at once pricked up our ears and gazed around us until our eyes fell upon the harming red of the conventional auction flag waving from a large, gray building on the corner of St. Paul and Twenty-third Streets. We entered the building with high expectations. Looking around, however, we were great- ly disappointed, for we were unable to distinguish any objects Which seemed to be for sale. Young women were gathered in groups mournfully discussing the loss of some highly es- teemed friend. Strong men were surreptitiously wiping away the tears from their eyes, and women were weeping outright. Suddenly we were approached by a man With an auburn beard, Who asked if we had come as bidders. He informed us that the building we were in was Goucher Hall, that the Class of 1903 had been graduated the day before, and that this day had been set apart for the public sale of the effects of the departed class. At this moment a bell rang sharply, warning the bidders to give attention to the auction- eer in the center of the pavilion under a waving palm. Our new friend informed us that the auctioneer was President Goucher. Our attention had wandered from the scene directly before us, and We were thinking what virtues must have been Vested in this class to cause such grief by its departure, when our minds were suddenly brought back to our surroundings by hearing a moan of anguish nearby. Look- ing towards the spot whence the heart-broken sound issued, we saw a tall blond man standing with hands clasped before him, a look of agony on his face, and the tears literally streaming from his eyes. Our guide whispered to us that this was Dr. Shefloe, the former honorary member of the Class of 1903. His burst of grief had been caused by the auctioning off of the iiability to entertain by dinners, mystic mazes, dramatics, etc.H The highest bidder had been Dr. Thomas, honorary member of the class of 1905. In contrast to the preceding a most comical scene was enacted before us. The auctioneer had called for bids on iithe greatest work ever done by any class in English.H Dr. Hodell and 156 Miss Conant eagerly began to bid, and it seemed as if they would never give in to each other, but at last Dr. Hodell offered to compromise with Miss Conant. This was affected by the latter KK agreeing to take skill in composition and appreciation of Chaucerf while the former contented himself with Hinterpretation 0f the drama and the novel.H We had noticed a man With a White moustache and iron grey hair, softly walking around, a benevolent smile hovering around his mouth. We were told that this was Dr. Hopkins, and just at that moment his face lighted up and we heard him excitedly bid for Hthe skill in reading Livy, Horace, Juvenal, Plautus, Tacitus, Pliny, etc.H The article was knocked down to Dr. Hopkins, upon whose face there rested a look of complete satisfaction. Finally, after an hour of lively bidding, the auctioneer began to speak in saddened tones, for he had come to the last of 1903ls salable virtues : HA full conception of all psychological and ethical problems. This was indeed, a prize, and we did not wonder when Dr. Van Meter put in his bid With eager voice, nor did we feel surprised when we saw the look of delight which beamed from his eyes when the auctioneer called out 2 HGone to Dr. Van Meter.H The sale was over. The crowd dispersed, all withsaddened faces and heavy hearts, for they had seen the last of 1903. itLoug. long may our hearts with such memories be filled, Like the vase in which roses have once been distilled; You may break, you may shatter the vase if you Will, But the scent of the roses Will cling round it still. A Song of Hazing. How well we remember, How false their intention, That day in September, ,Tis needless to mention, When to college we came. For not from their hearts did these spring. How the Sophs. looked surprised, They wouldift, icause they couldift, When they saw our large size, They didift, 'cause they shouldift, And called us Freshmen by name. And there is the gist of the thing. They wished to use might, How proudly they walked, And thought it not right, How sweetly they talked, That there should no hazing be. How kindly expounded their knowledge. Yet, in chapel were read, It was all because, By the Facultyis head, Thereid been passed some laws, Resolutions of Courtesy. iGainst hazing in t Ilhe VVomants College. 157 Our Heads are Hollow. 0 Ram it in, cram it in, College girlsi heads are hollow; Slam it in, jam it in, Still therets more to follow- Hygiene and history, Mythological mystery, Algebra, histology, Latin etymology, Botany, geometry, Greek and trigonometry Ram it in, cram it in, College girls, heads are hollow. Rap it in, tap it in, What are Profs. paid for? Bang it in, slam it in- VVhat are girls made for? Ancient archaeology, Italian philology, Prosody, psychology, Physics, sociology, Chemistry and mathematics, Rhetoric and hydrostatics. Hoax it in, coax it in, College girlsi heads are hollow. Rub it in, club it in, All there is of learning; Punch it in, crunch it in, Quench their natural yearning For the field and grassy nook, Meadow green and rippling brook; Drive such Wicked thoughts afar, Teach the girls that they are But machines to cram it in. Bangr it in, slam it in, That their heads are hollow. Scold it in, mold it in, All that they can swallow; Fold it in, hold it in, Still thereis more to follow. Faces pinched, sad and pale, Tell the same undying tale, Tell of moments robbed from sleep, Meals untasted, cramming deep, Those thve passed the furnace through,. With aching brow will tell to you How the Profs. just crammed it in, Rammed it in, jammed it in, Crunched it in, punched it in, Rubbed it in, clubbed it in, Pressed it in, caressed it in, Rapped it in and slapped it in, When their heads were hollow. The College Hospital. 9 Now P11 tell you, little maiden, If yoxfre ever feeling pale, Of a place without an equal, Which to cure can never fail. In this up-to-date hospital, In the city, Baltimore, There are cures without a number, And the doctors are galore. If itis from the blues you,re ailing, Or with woe about to die, G0 at once to Doctor Hoppyis, And youtll neier be known to sigh. Or if vouire ever troubled With atHiction of the heart, It is only our Miss Whitbread Who can lull to rest that smart. 158 Suppose ifs quiet dreaming, Or wandering of the mind; Go immediately to Doctor VVelch, About the quizzing time. Or if youire pessimistic And inclined to be blase, Have a talk with Doctor Thomas, He will smile it all away. And if you are in trouble, No matter how, at all. Go right for Doctor Shefioe, Heis always within C311. But now just let me warn you- Never make the great mistake- Of going to Doctor J. V. M. If youtre half a second late. Watts in a Name? 0 Miss Freshman came over from college one noon, threw herself into a JWorrz'ss chair, and sat in a Browne study. Her head was Akin, and she longed to run away and Hyde where Harrz's-ing trapezoids should never find her. One of two things she could do : Go to classes all afternoon Orcutt them all, and take a Nice Lang walk into the Woods. uI can Easley cut this once; Pve Dmm enough for one Dayfl She stopped to Brazier hair, then, as she was fixing her Steel Bell pin, her room-mate came run- ning PeZl-mell into the room. ll Waifs the matter? I do believe youlve been weeping and LVllalen again. DVz'anl you going to lunch? Do you Wanamaker goose of yourself.PH she cried. HPm going for a walk and would Askew to come too, if you wererYt s0 rnean,H she said Weakly. Her room-mate began per-Swadmzer to reconsider. HYoulre a dear old goose any Hauglz. Waile a jiff and Illl go with you. Will I look awful Tacke if I lVare this HoodfT, HNo no! Comer or PM go without you. Soon they were Lawyng Manifold cares behind them. They hastened their steps, Eager 'to get into the country, and soon not a House was in sight. They walked along the country Rhodes for several Miles, and at last, exhausted, sat down on a Nowlz'n sight of a Small Lake. A Young Fz'slzer Mam; was Handy, and they called out : ilHay, what luckim HOnly one Bass, but I guess Illl be Catching Moorefl . The time Spedden before they knew it, it began to grow dark. UItls lucky you brought the Fehr, said Miss Freshman. HWe Cam; take a Carr, and I think weld better, for Mrs. ............................................... will have Fills if weire late. In a short time they were in their own room again. Miss Freshman dropped on the Cowl; and her room-mate on the Davenporl, both tired, but contented. A Sonnet from the Heart 0f 85. Let me not to the suffrage of females Admit impediment; democracy Is not democracy when eler it fails To include women; itls hypocrisy I Ah, 110! there is an ever-iixed mark Towards which we all are going day by day; It is the time when womarfs little bark Through politics shall safely steer her way. Be not a fool. The unprogressive East For many years has boldly fought the cause, But since that time the votes have all increased And women very soon shall make our laws. If this be error, if your hearts unmovedy VVelll take a rising vote and have it proved 159 An Interruption. 0 Suzanne was exactly in the mood for Flick. So fine of him, her dream fairy, to prom- ise to come this evening and turn the dead dream lull into the holiday ecstacy that he always carried about him. Something ravishing was certainly preparing, she was surehehe was a minute late already, and she looked up just in time not to miss the tirst glimpse of the expecteds restless, gleeful smile through the parting of the portieres. A fiurried iiAhP, was all she had breath to remark. His advent was always most a surprise when most expected. He was in gayest festal attire. HAny ideas on a lark this drowse? HWell,H with brusque indulgence, iidorft bother. It shall be a dinner. I have the invitations. i i Invitations-oh- The gasp was not: fairly gone when there came a sudden confusion of glass and silver glitter, a luxury of color and posy and light in seductive glimmer, merged all into a sensa- tion of fragrance coming from a remote somewhereeebute HCome, come, this is no abstraction party. Can you guess it?H nGuess it, murmured Suzanne, at a loss. The crowd of illusive shadows about everywhere, they fairly brushed her arm. Fellow guests she was sure and yeteyetewhere were they? She thought she heard conversation, laughter, down the long white length of the table, but the obtrusion of the soft cloud light of the great candelabrum and the music, too, airs that were recalling and recalling another-no, not another dinner exactly. iiHungry! Oh dear, yes! 3 HYour first original remark this evening,, observed Flick, rudely. HYou did not salute your friends not remark upon the splendor of your Alma Mater in her new gown. You have seen her lovelier?H iTAh no, not lovelier, but differentVy HHave a salad? The suddenness of Flickts proposition, breaking in upon her wonder, was lost in consider-- ation of the salad itself. HTry it, ordered Flick, and, illustrating, dipped into the mixture; Suzanne followed suit. HWhy-ewhy, ith- 160 HRefreshing, something original about it, eh? HOh yes, yes IH HCrisp, good preventitive for drowsiness ? Such a lettuce setting, such a dressingIH llAh, itls-ll HConantls EnglishP, HI had really given you up altogether toenightf he remarked, with apparent relief, HSoup.H HThey aren,t serving in courses here,H Suzanne. UOh no, hit or miss at memory dinners, you know,-especially college stunts. Besides, we only stay for Freshman rationsf The cellos sallied off alone into a minor key, and heavily mudled drumsticks made lugub- rious attacks 011 a small drum, somewhere. Suzanne gazed with discomfort into the shadowed depth within the soup-bowl. The music became fervid for a moment, and then relapsed into a dirgeereluctance. ll I thinkyl-she said cautiously, disturbing with her spoon the animated bits of toast float- ing on its surface, ll I think it must be the swimming poolW u Well, I don,t care? resentfully. Some of these crusts are having a time of it, keeping their heads above waterly ll Thatys just it ! Kind of prosy sport, isxft itll, She thought her m's a w's would perish in his joy. 7: ll Well, if this is what you call HoppyIs Latin, airily, ll I don't quite seefl- But his laugh, it seemed to her, giggled the music into ragetime. ll Try an odeeexcellent cookeHorace-new manf' ll I thought I recognized it, remarked Suzanne, gravely. HAs you probably will this roast. Very nourishing, also tough slightly, but quite the thing for young growing minds. No rufHes, no sauce, only appropriate garniture 0f clemency.H The roastls accompaniment was martial music, quick, sharp pulsations that roused. H I must be at it,H determinedly shaking off the musing drowse that would oler-creep her senses. HI never would leave my Q. E. Dis this late? triumphantly, ll Itls bad form. ll Pleased to see you asserting yourself. Confidence in a math. class-thatls the exhilerating part of it, Ilve heard. Letls have an ice. HNOW cautiousJ, he urged politely, this is a daintyfl Suzanne blinked apprehensively. Curiosity incited her to investigation with her finger tip. H The flavor is captivating, really,eand so, so pungent.H HAnd goes to your head. It isnlt cold, really, such a startling ice; why its almost hot! How did they do it?U Its one of Mademoisellels Monday morning favorites,H he observed. H Recipe secret. 161 There are no imitations in the making of fervid ices. This, mydear, is but one of many delicious flavorsfl Suzanne reluctantly watched the shimmering mass melt under the persistently slackening rhythm of the music that floated away with it the iiurry of guests unseen and the sparkle of many things. Of the torrent of soft sound that, it seemed, had hastened away long ago in bash- ful retreat, only a stray Violin note or two drifted through the fading, dull rose that hovered lightly for an instant. Then there was only Flick, blinking sleepily. ii Thatethatf, he drowsed, HWhat was it? You forgonethe candalahrumfl N It was the big palm in Goucher Hall.H Suzanne was quite herself again. ii MHear, having failed in that, youtve failed in all. Why, its the Lighteitls the whole- the lighteitls-H But Flick slept. ti Amusement Night? 0 VVhatys the number of your house, Nora Em asked the teacher. ii House aint got no number, live over a paint shopli This is typical of the remarks heard 011 a Wednesday evening spent at the Lawrence House. One night a little girl came in, glorying in a new treasure, a tin-foil wateh-charm, which dangled proudly on a scanty piece of soiled, yellow ribbon. ii 0, Annie, they cried, have you got a Watch ? ii What time is it ?H called another. Annie triumphantly pulled out a ball of cloth tied to the end,eH Itts rag-time, she grinned. The workers on it Amusement Nightiy stumble on many opportunities to get a true insight into the lives of their girls and boys. Usually only a few simple and sensible things are taught during these N club nieetingsJleventilation, politeness or incidental spelling-and the teachers first idea is :to hear the ehildrenis opinions on every day affairs, while she amuses them and teaches them to amuse each other, kindly. They sometimes suggest their own games and songs or show what they have learned elsewhere by Hsaying a piece.H If one has seen the song-venders in that part of the city, selling their brilliantly-bound bookseH All you popular songs here, for five cents !yl-teach song numberedi, one can appre- ciate the delight of the little girls when a well-known song is proposed. ii Letis sing i I dreamed I was a Millionaire'W volunteers one aspiring urchin. H Oh, yes,H they all cry, ii thatls number 63.H And then, to watch them singing : some resplendant with red bows or yellow roses in their hair, and the hair so tightly braided that the pig-tails themselves fairly curl up ; others, their little ears bedecked with blue or green stones. It is a pathetic, as well as an amusing sight. This is a work that is helpful to the teacher as well as to her class. Surely it is one of the best practical applications of what she has learned in Sociology or Economics, and just as surely, she learns other lessons to take back With her to College and her life bevond. 162 $91 :ELAH. Dxrrm 553: E :5 095an 20:5 3 13min: 393-5... r; . The Progressive Young Man. You are young little girl, the young man said, But there was one girl, a Junior he knew, HAnd this is the reason I dare And he thought she would treat him kindly. it Without bringing down a storm on my head, So like many others, this young man, too, HAsk what that pin is, you wear. Rushed toward his punishment blindly. But the Freshman turned on him a look of surprise And when he asked her about her pin, That Iim sure he will never forget; The silver fork that she wore, What the' T eapot pin is, he can only surmise, The look she gave him was really a sin, For she hasntt forgiven him yet. But alas! He tried once more. Now this questioning boy met a Sophomore gay ti You are old, fair Seniorf' the young man said, By the palms in Gaucher Hall; ti And youtre of discretion rare, He should have avoided another fray, I noticed this morning a ribbon of red But he didift take caution at all. Adorning the gown you wear. tt What a funny brown pin, he cried amazed, it You are over-bold, my friend, she replied, it It looks like a piece of pie! She was haughty and cold in a minute, But the O3 S3 simply gazed Now this is a club, you must not deride ; And he left with a patient sigh. For there is a Faculty in itJ, 164 1'U AIHA. , j r :1 :1 '35, 165 ANE RAWLS A Strange Tale. W han that October with his falling leves, In Druid Hill had filled all the greves, Bifel that, in that seson on a daye, A ladye faire went ryden forth they saye. Y-falle on a morwe brighte and clere, There called for her a younge bachelere; Bifor that she shoulde teach Anatomye, They ryden out in his automobyle. A Knight ther was, and he a northy man That since the tyme of Higher Math began Had lerned angles, cubes and circles wel, And had more knowledge than our tonge can tel. A11 hye he sat upon a fiery charger, That with him on it seemed a great deal larger. He met the twain and gave them quyte a shocke, The lad ye faire gan looking for her clocke. 0 166 For very fear that she should miss hir classe, She weeped and wrung hir hands and tore the grassei Now all the tyme ther hidden, was behynde A yonge Squyer, a man of wondrous mynde, Appareled wel was he as you shall here, He wore a small round hat of gray colere, A necktie rede of fire which nought could quenche, Italian taught he, Spanish, and eek Frenche. And so these twain gan hasten back to town, And all the ladyls haire came tumblynge down; Hir hat was iiying in the monies breeze, Hir haire pins scattered ineath the passynge trees. Of spede, I guess they broke the records alle, But she got ther in tyme her classe to calle; And so bifor you all is the morale. of this mad ryde telle I no longer tale. Wild Animals I Have Known. o On all occasions trotted out Until he has grown both old and bony; 111 him you behold a standard joke, The over-worked, worn out Latin pony. T hemin Pony Persistent grinding suits the taste Of the far-famed college shark; Devouring knowledge with ravenous haste 15 her only idea of a lark. The anenovs Shark. 4 . r! x gaff'h Behold the foe of feline yowlers 'aEtth W'ho, in Glitneris rear, are night prowlers; When, from below, their strains arise, Out of the Window this bat flies. The BricK Baf- Most seals are valued for their skin, But in college the rule does not hold; The skin itself is not worth a pin, But the seal gives it value untold. The gym horse is a gentle beast Who never indulges in vicious tricks; And itho he,s jumped on, pushed and teased, This animal very seldom kicks. The Gym Horse, 167 u gig??? 99 u e; LAB. a e t x 0 We remember, we remember, The place Where we did mourn; The darkened table Where we stood Shivering, crazed, forlorn. Qlyif w J Tortured by a blow-pipe, 1,39 Strangled by bromine, Seafd and scarred by molten glass, Bleached by chlorine. ? ' x , A 7: H20 the giant guard V Ate into our marrow; Demons grinned and howled around, With shrieks our souls they,d harrow. But now our troublese over, XVe look back in affright, And merely scent the poisenous air That minds us of our night. 168 WJ 71318.5 Hoxfcone. .so lafK? ,ngggg whearJ ail; Md qu$al lll'iRlL. :2 t- What I Have Learned in College. BY A JUNIOR. 1. This course contains a careful studyof the Medi- terranean Winds. Exemption, by reading the Book of Acts, is to be advised. l 11. There was a fight in the theatre the first night Hernani was produced. 30. Let College round you out, dear children- learn the upathetic fallacy. 40. If Giotto drewa perfect circle he would doubt- less have made a perfect Freshman. 20. One yeafs study should enable you to recog- nize the German alphabet at sight. 32. The self-destructive and elusory nature of O-cclevels passion for Chaucer caused him to draw a picture of his hero in the margin, for which he re- ceived a red ilexcelleut, underscored three times. 50. llTo have livedN tthrough itl Hat all, is to have done somethingW 60. An unearthly smell may appear to be the sole contents of Room 11, yet at live Ol oiclock will emerge thirty-iive smiling Sophomores and one unwearied Prof. 169 80 The neat and orderly arrangement of someone elsels note book constitutes an important part of the work of Course 80. 95. 15. There is no grammar that I cannot learn in four hours if I am allowed to write out my lessons on my cuffs before coming to class. 39. To enjoy your favorite essay, read it; hear it read aloud; read it again; takes notes on it. 75. Requirements for anatomy: An open mind, an open heart and Ma closed system of elastic tubes. 85. 96. the history of the world is the biography of its great meuP one of the greatest of Whom We beg to believe is Dr. Van Meter. 101. There is no use in studying, no sense in taking notes, no wisdom in exams. Be happy. Look, listen, and forget what you have learned. They were strapping fine fellows in those days. No authority is infallible-not even Dr. Thomas. What we hope to see in the American History Room. ONE OF OUR CONTRIBUTED JOKES. R-th Ad-es and H-l-n Q g, in chorus: ttOh, Eda Briggs! W711at aLoVELY name you have.H tTime, 9.45 one Sunday eveningJ Find the point. COURSE 95. Deanet'lf you have never seen hair-Cloth visit a Methodist parsonage at once. That she was four score and four years old is not remarkable, but that she should have remained a widow for such a length of time is, indeed,remarkab1e! Freshman Orcutt--ttG. A. R., Who is she? Some one I ought to know about W ttVVhat, in the deviPs name, Taylor, Vcallest thou this? M41 Eh? 4i ,4 I GOLF CLUB. Slowly and silently it sneaks into oblivion. OVERHEARD IN COURSE 85. t'XVhere is that oath which has been going around the class? Miss Ferguson-tAfter Professor has been lecturing one hour on ttProtectionW HDr. Thomas, I don : quite get the gist of the argument. VVon,t you please put the whole thing in one word ? 170 Dr. ThomaSetTll just put those two plants on the buan W The following notice was recently seen on the college bulletin board: t4 At the meeting of the Ecclesia last nightethe wrong jacket was taken by mistake. XVill thetowner please exchange with Mr. Kahn? A DEFINITION. Dr. VVelsh-ttNow, if Anatomy and Biology treat of things we can see, of what does Psychology treat .W Miss DeLamarter-tpromptlw ttOh! It treats of things we can7t see. POPULAR SENTIMENT IN COURSE 60. Would that my nose were an idle promitory project- ing into the desert air. ' pmo u- gly awrun-Lwy Hun: W1 4193 uin'uuuu e . l1 ML q b This iTunious yourl fnnuor big a. mu! seumTyssz SmaDEWVS e 536 DDMPSfOF MoN-mS hep NOTBaerf SWOM? Mare: 14 ,J 71215 M133 L. Ed Swill j J 1. sub' t-A tBallad to Donnybrook Fair. 0 Book of the College, of all the Students, Book of the Faculty, one and all; Book of history, wit and prudence, Representor 0f Goucher Hall. Full of love for our Alma Mater, Full of events of interest rare; Whoever the planner, whoever the plotter, Shels always the Collegels Doouybrook Fair. So a health to Donnyls long life and glory, A health to her now and forevermore; We will always tell in song and story All of her jokes that make us Hroar. Often welre fickle, our love we squander, Many others our hearts may share; But whatever our fortune, wherever we wander, Therels always a place for Donnybrook Fair. Ier Bl-Thc editurs wish to call attention to the fact that this is a ballad re- ceived from an appreciative college student. lt doubtlees expresses their own opininn on the subject, but they would lune been, perhaps, too modest to have made such a contribution themselves. 171 Confusions. 0 There is Helen Browne of Vingolf, Helen Brown of Fensal too. If you wish to choose between them, Why then, its up to yon. There are Bruffs galore in College. Two resembling, at first view. It is hard to choose among them, But yet its up to you. There are Leavfsy Anne and Sarah, If you ask theylll answer true, But they laugh at all rash guesses, And remark, tt Its 11p to you. The last confusiotfs easy: Youlll not fail to see, I ween, Which is Chizu Takamori, XVhich is Hide Ijuin. Deanetremoving a chart with the aid of a pointerl I think some one should suggest that Miss Conant conduct her classes in a tower. The Broadening Effects of a College Education. G TO OUR ALMA IVIATER. If you lak-a us, lak we lak-a you, And we lak-a both the same, XVe lak-a say, this very dayy We lak-a change your name. 1903 CLASS MEETING. Madam President-ttl move that a committee of three be appointed to attend the devotions 0f the class. :3 HW'ho is Freshman L ttEr-why-er, 011. she is the girl that sleeps next to me in 803, 172 StrangerettDo you have any practical work in PhysiCsW SophomoreettYes, indeed! XYe are asked to solve such problems as: A man got into a boat and went down the river. How far did he go? What is the latest thing out in the College Halls? tEElectric lights. W'hy is Miss VVhitbread a revivalist? hBecause at the end of the lecture there is a great awakening? I 935 0 Colleges all are now pushed out, into the world so cool, For to the lvarsity students go. straight from the old high school. Instead of this being a sore distress, as this sad news implies, For W. C. of Baltimore ltwas a blessing in disguise. ' Fhe college buildings so complete, for anything were handy 1 And the faculty as xx ell you know oh it was simply dandy SO some one proposed to make it a place, where the weary all might come, And, from force of habit avoiding a name, they called it just H' Rest Home 1 In this resort is a doctor in charge, and chief is she above all, 13211 L165 114: BMW El? H iZtIlenh Wnoss sfiRiT 'm Boiliue BMMSTONE DDTH SWIM; Hzonaomowa? NsatacTEn, MI:- 1 Tnsnrsnn'mm . FRom oven-sxsuiu Dr. Lilian W'elsh, our great physician, gently glides IN THE GYM - . through the hall. In all directions are specialists for every single line, 1; . , -' w w . - N Among them all, P111 very sure,that many old friends 1, f; ' K youlll find. X 7,1 T .4, In the lung department is Charles Blackshear, 4 vs t ,4 And his knowledge serves him in good stead here. , ' Herels an innovation that few would dare, K n' a A For he cu res his patients With liquid air. Drs. Metcalf and Peebles will treat your throat, For frog in- the- throat is their best antidote. Long practice makes perfect so thev specialize, lhat many rare species they may recognize For all physical weakness just find Clark and Gates, For success must attend the work of these mates. Few failures will lV. C. B. record, But the saddest of these is the late Dr. Lord, In vain did they one and all of them try. Kl Y 011 should ha 0 come sooner l ' their first and last crv. ROLL CALL. Miss Cipher! treading a letter, answers cheerfullyJ ti Conley, Recitation begins, Miss Cipher is called on to recite, and mumbles iiPresent! WILY, SMILY LILIAN. Latin ProfessorettMiss S., give the principal parts of the verb to accepti. Miss S.-taside to Miss M.,l 55What is it, Bess?H Bess-ilDarned if I know. Miss S.-ttDarndif1no, darndifinare 0r darnditinor, darndii-inatun1.H Professor-t'what verb are you giving ? Miss Ss-JtDarndinno. Wily, smily Lilian, XVhen some funny thought comes oler her, Clasps her hands in glee before her, Laughing all she can. Shelll not tell you what the joke is- Cunning Lilian. ROLL CALL IN 95. LOI'RSh 00 Ale 60' Dean-itMiss ScottPl Uong pausel Miss S.-thh-er, Present!U DeanellHow did you find it out ?,i One science only can one genius tit, 80 vast is art, so narrow human wit. , FRIDAY NIGHT AT FICNSAL. HeeHthat is that belIP'i She-mlihe letter bell.H He-i'What isit forWl SheetiTo put out the Mail. Heel i011. indeed! Good night. There was an old Shefy a big fryer, those cooking grew dryer and dryer, Till he sent out a joke, 'Which they burnt up as coke, For Coal in that season wag higher. The Sorrows of Jokedom. 0 Have you ever envied the tifunny men ? Ask Thaddeus Thomas, the wise; 0h, envy them not, my gentle friend, It,s a sad, sad task you prize. How very often when they know Theyive told a witty tale, The world looks on with a look of woe And wonders if they ail. But oftener when in serious mood, Or when theere rather glum, Somebody else :11 be feeling good, Then theyire a mark for fun. But worse, far worse than all this woe Is the awfiil grief that comes, When to Donnybrook Fair 01165 forced to go, And for itis crowds make fun. Oh, envy not the ttfuuny men, Or the one who for Donnybrook Fair Must tear out jokes with the roots of her hair, To make a sad world gayer. COLLEGE PERIODICALS. REVIEW 0F REVIEWS, . . . . HIM. THE ATLANTIC MONTHLY, . 17w Bail; Tub. SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN, Dr. Blackshear. THE CRAFTS MAN . . . 87sz THE OUTLOOK, T X15 Scientific Building. THE YOUTHS COMPANION, Dr. P5612155. THE SUN, tsoni Baby Hodell. What is the most elevating experience of college life. UA ride in the Lift? Dr. Thomas-ttwhy are you absent from Economics so often ? Junior-HBecause the marginal utility of attending iGymi is rapidly increasing.H A Needed Reform. 0 Poor, pitiful outcasts! Poor, forlorn, homeless wretches, whose minds are defective, whose crimesare fiagrant, whose living has always depended on the charity of societyis higher classes-mentally, morally, physically, ruined! Yet, who is it that has stepped into the breach and provided a home for them? Philanthropists? N0. Social-settlement workers? No. Economics Profes- sors? 1V0. But such is the contagious force of labor-organiza- tion in the world today that these black sheep have banded themselves together, matched with a bold front-like the Plebs of old seceding from Rome to the suburbs of their native town-and secured a home in Ellicott City. The tri-leafed symbol, which was wont to designate the three-fold misery of their condition, they have adopted as a badge to glory in. Incorpo- ration has bound them with the name HD ditto, and their history they have had the effrontery to record in a volume called Dependants, Delinquents, Defectives. Portrait of a broai,symmetricat, weLL-roundei, LeveL-head- ed coLLege Woman. Are You Willi LEE? WWW KEMWEZZEE c: in Doubt? Ask The Lady from Kalamazoo! All Correspondents must give Full Name and Address. We desire to make this department instructive and helpful to you, dear girls, and will gladly aid in all your difficulties. Do not fear that we shall in any way betray your confidence, or answer in these columns questions which do not concern our great public, but rather, deserve a personal reply. In order to insure such a reply, however, kindly enclose a postal card. Alice Dunning:- Your questions regarding Iowa are too numerous to be answered in these columns. Books of reference may be found in the Pratt, Peabody and Congressional libraries. Helen Hendrix :- Although still at college, you are wise'in starting a linen-chest. XVhile there is life there IS hope. A set of table mats or one door mat Would make a good addition to your tablecloth and two napkins Mary Taylor:-- The following stanza may be suggestive: The habit of getting up late youlll agree, Surely goes too far when I say That she frequently breakfasts at five olclock tea, And dines ou the following day. Anna llaslup 2v- XVe rejoice, dear, that you have at last seen the point. Lyda Norrisze It is said that HBones and a sweet temper never dwell under the same roof. Therefore, we must be amiable if we wish to gain flesh. Charlotte Joneste You must find her for yourself, dear. It is abso- lutely impossible for us to keep track of Eda. Ruth Haslup:e- Alas! Poor girl, we fear you are overworked. 175 Alice Belt :- XVe advise that you join Chizu Takamorils ii Rapid Course in Japanese Conversation, as that language is somewhat difficult to acquire. Esther Bixler :- 'Our diflieulties often disappear when we confide them to numerous friends. Nancy Nulton :e For answer to your question consult Dr. C. W. Hodelllsrecent treatise, entitled l t A Modest and Lady- like Rendering of Shakespeare. Note especially the graphic description of Hamletls bias fiounce and silk- lined skirt. Lottie Magee :- Personal confidences are slipped through a transom at the risk of the owner. Mary Abercrombie :e We do not approve of the use of cosmetics of any kind. Rosalie Pendleton :- A current magazine always appears during the month indexed on its cover. Mabel Day :e It is indeed trying, dear, to have your friends con- stantly harping on your proportions. Be patient and the fad will surely die out. Hattie Taylor:- Be more deliberate, dear child. Martha Enochsi- Do not be discouraged. Gaily pictured books. col- ored pencils and curious shaped erasers will doubtless make little sister 5 studies more attractive. Margaret Hukill :- It has been proved that when walking on the head one may greatly relieve the nervous strain by conceal- inga h rat among the Titian Tints. Olive Mast:- A perfect mastery of English language can only be obtained by a perpetual contact with the dictionary. Nellie Talley :e Dignity is never out of place, and in a college gradu- ate is absolutely essential. Florence Carmine :e The choice of colors for the hat must be governed by the hue of the gown and complexion of wearer. A pretty shade of violet relieved by a touch of burnt orange would be suitable with your garnet gown. Bertha Stevens :e Originality and eccentricity are often marks of genius. Alice Mann :e A young girl should be most discrete in her choice of men friends. Is it womanly to encourage so many? Frances Hopkins 2e i If you find it dichult to make friends we advise that you take up charity work. Here they rapidly increase. Mollie Cullom 2e It is unnecessary to go into a polite spasm over every new toy. Anna Slease :e We advise that you go to bed,1ittle girl, and take a geo-o d n-i-g h-t-ls r-e-s-t. Edith Powellze In the making of a true musician work is a great factor. Donit spare your friends or be at all dis- couraged. Jane HydeZe T 0 make an effective mustard plaster, mix the mustard vigorously With the white of one egg until it froths at the mouth. Then spread it between two thicknesses of muslin before placing it on the affected patient. Frances Dohertyze It is most indiscreet to plan work ahead of time. Laura Hutchins :- Proniptness is its own reward. Daisy Murphy ze- Your question was rather vague Possibly you may find some suggestions in Campbellys Household Eco- nomics. Nancy Catching:- A good stand for a college reporter is a dressing-room. H gym 1: Hel e11 Davenport :- Thyra Crawford :e Never mind girls, if you are called l'chatter box. Talkative people are always in demand. Helen Buoy 1- The wearing of one fraternity pin of a gentleman friend is merely suggestive, but the wearing of three is conclusive. Nina Casparize At last we have found the rhyme you asked for: There was a young lady from Germany who madly delighted in harmony, She played the violin Until she grew thin, And then lived 011 egg-nog and tonic. Carrie Louise'r- A cup of hot water taken before and after each meal is said to produce a Fehr complexion. Louise Lawrenceze Gently tip the ends of the fingers with quinine. Florence Wilson :- A good tenor voice is rarely found in a. woman. careful, child, how you use it Be A. inelia Benson 2e- A tub race is excellent sport and very economical, as the tub will doubtless be of use in later life. Edith Rice:- Form your own opinions 011 current questions. Never change them Do not be influenced by mere public sentiment. Bess De Bowie W'e know of no better Oyster-Market than Balti- more, Md. Arinda Philpz- One of the noblest professions now open to women is that of a trained nurse. It requiresa patient. sympa- thetic nature. Clara Robinsonze Luella Eakins:- Helen Ellis?- We suggest the following verse: There are some girls in college TVho are so very good, They wouldn't use a pony Not even if they could; They go to gym serenely At ten most every day, And do not cram for one exam In the latter part of May. They ought to have a tablet In the Hall of Fame There should be something doiu g In honor of their name; They'll be eating angel food In another latitude; And they ought to have a tablet In the Hall of Fame. Martha Baxter :- Yes, we agree with you. true respect is never gained by jollying. Sara Leutz :: The stage is already over-crowded with young aspi- rants. Curb your desires. dear child, till your school days are over. Nannie XVeakley :- Mabel Lynch :e A formal call should not exceed twenty minutes in length, for if prolonged, drowsiness and at times deep slumber result. Eda Briggs:- In spite of the fact that Munsey has snfxcient ma- terial to carry on its publications for years to comey do not be discouraged. dear; send in your love lyrics. Emilie Doetsch :e Please write your questions in English; our knowl- edge of Greek islimited. 177 Claire A ckerman :-M Nellie Allen :- One may cultivate a musical laugh. In your case, however. it would be well to consult a specialist. Bess Brown:- Courage. dear child. Learn the art of listening; read Current literature. and bye and bye your vocabu- lary will increase. Mabel W'iant : - For your quotation see Campbellts Household Econ- omics, HFluff, the sport of murdered dirt, all-conquer- ing, insidious Fluff. 8ch' Clara Kellogg?- Fencingr has been found helpful in developing graceful outline of the figure But always keep in mind the danger of rash hinges. Annie Couchze The following may be appropriate: I knew a girl so perfect This is no dream, but true; She went to bed at half-past ten And had her light out too; She always came to breakfast At the ringing of the bell. TYas never late to dinner And always Hdiked up well. Sheill get a job next week In a museum as a freak; She ought to have a tablet In the Hall of Fame. Julia Ferguson :- Eight cents in postage is needed in order to answer your questions by mail. Helen XVaite :- Why not have regular office hours? Twenty-nine appointments in one morning certainly justify such action. A tiny sponge and celluloid note-book will be found invaluable. Petricha Easley :e For a Change or slight modification of feature apply to Jones, the costumer. Alice Graham ;.. XVe have never heard of the song I Wish I Had Some One to Love Me. TVill some of our readers enlighten us? Ethel Bass :- It is never proper for a young woman to be found on the fence. Mabel Hood :e For the exact position of the sternum consult Huxley, chapter II. Helen Nicholson:e Denominational questions are never discussed in these columns. XVinifred M acGo wan :-- It is unfortunate to hear of a young girl with artistic ability Whose time hangs heavily on her hands. Wye would suggest that by taking a contract to illustrate several periodicals you could at least occupy your mornings. Bessie Beadenkopfz- See under Ethel B, XVinifred Kemper:- Breeziness of manner should usually be avoided, as the general public is extremely susceptible to draughts. Ethel Hoffman :e A delicate perfume about oneis person is allowable. but ointments should never be used. Florence VVaIther :e Your ambition to be an advertising agent is indeed worthy. But remember that experience is needed. Sarah Leavy :- Your troubles doubtless come from over-exercise in the Hgymi Margaret Morriss 2- The H deadly fad, using ghastly, extravagant language, is quietly but rapidly passing away. Mary Maxim:e The judicious use of French phrases is permissable. Caroline Wilson :- You need more oxygen my young friend. Do try to work up some enthusiasm! Beatrice Gunsaulus:- It is well at least to appear interested in the class- room. This is often accomplished by asking intelli-' gent questions. Clara Dilks :- We find it utterly impossible to delineate your hand writing. Kindly use a type-writer in all further com- munications. 178 Helen Brown :- Retire for a few weeks to a sanitarium, darling. The ttbluesh and general mental depression are often caused by overwork. Selina XVilson:- In walking one should poise lightly on the ball of the foot, and take as few steps as possible. Rubber heels are ten cents, Genevieve Holtzman :- Do not be such a home body. Participate in general conversation. This will at least, in a measure, remove the tendency to blushing and embarrassment. Sarah Johnson:- As you have had no violent fright the gray hairs are undoubtedly due to early piety. Do not look upon this as a calamity. Mabel Golding 1- Your question is too weighty for us. linefi Ask t Caro- Edna Spedden :- Absent-mindedness and an excessively romantic nature often go hand in hand. For further details consult HLadies Home Journal, February number; Blanche Conner :- As you are the youngest in the family you will naturally fmd it diflicult to overcome childish ways. Elsie De Lamarter :-- Be extremely cautious7 dear child. A small note- book or calendar may help you in remembering dates. J osephine Alexander :e Wash the jacket in wool soap, it never shrinks a garment. Mary Milburn :e The right honorable Dr. W'ycoffs office hours are from 4 to 6 P. M. Ruth Nickerson :w Although your illness has left you thin and pale, do not resort to cosmetics. May Belle Mclntire :e It is indiscreet for a young woman to accompany her fiancee to the office of the notary public. Ruth Clark :e From your description we should judge that it would be becoming to part the hair in the centre, allow it to curl over the ears, and make one elaborate coil in the nape of the neck. The large bone hair pins make an effective finish Jessie Dunn :- No. it is not indisereet to accept jokes and drawings from the XVesleyan thlla Podrida. Lotus Coultas :- Iu regard to the filling in Dog Mikels teeth, consult Dr. Thomas. Sarah VVebb:-- Bows are no longer worn on the gloves. Grace Mercer 2e The material of which you send a sample is known as satin de soie, and is appropriate for developing a handsome evening toilette. A mere suggestion of orange and black panne velvet would be appropriate asa garuiture. Emily Sleema11:- We fear that you will not be able to see her so often. The fare to Washington is raised. Mabel XVinsorze Profanity is never excusable. Myra Manifold:- It is most indiscreet to continually eat. Frances Dunning :e To reduce the weight drink one glass of lemonade before retiring. . Flora Miller 2- A woman should precede a man in entering at Church. This rule is strictly enforced in all southern c1t1es. Florence Beiler :e See under ltBess Brown elsewhere in these columns. Mary Gunsaulus 2e- It is indeed true that ttsondiesi, are now fifteen cents. Hettie Caldwell:- We know of no safe method of removing dimples. Ethel Feldmeyer :- For a good biography of Peter Thompson see Ency- clopaedia Britianica. 179 Maude Morrow :- The quotation you asked for is: Lo all the pomp of yesterday. and not all our pomp of morrowF as you thought. Donnybrook Board :- Bathe the face in boiling water,app1y cold cream, rub well about the eyes and mouth. This is sure cure provided the wrinkles are not too deeply seated. Side Talks with Freshmen, Conducted by Mrs. Roarer. My Little Ones: At this critical period of your lives, when you are just peeping into the great world of college students, I feel that my advice will be doubly needed by you. You, who have just left home where you were NMotheris Little Sunbeamil and ' Fatheris Pet, to become a Green Freshman, know not what lies before you on the steep and slippery road to knowledge. But, confide in me, and all will be well. Pearl: Yes, darling, I agree with you, that now or never is the time to curtail your pigtail and betail your dresses. A pretty and easily arranged style of hair-dressing which I am sure would suit your sweet, baby face, is a line of pufis, beginning at the back of the pompadour and ending in the nape of the neck. It never takes more than half an hour to do your hair in this way, and. although so simple, is decidedly cunning. i Rosey: You say the Seniors snub youy and you think itls ttreal mean. Yes, no doubt you do, but, per- haps, it is your own fault. Have you never been just a wee bit self confident or felt a Hlittle too big for your Shoes? Remember, that children should be Hseen and not heard? and you will soon become popular. Dewdrop: Homesick! I expected to hear that from some of my pets. Dear child, when you are homesick do something that will suggest home and homelike things, and you will feel much happier, For instance. go ask the housekeeper to make you a cup of strong cambric tea. That will recall the pleasant dining- room, your little high chair and tray waiting patiently for your next home-coming. In this way you can dispel the clouds and call out the silver lining. Estimations of 1904 DR. VAN METJcR-HFar be it from me to criticise Our book. DR. IiOPKINSFhI shall use these jokes. n They are new. MR. BIBBINsettI could not live without my Donnybrook Fairf, THEODORE ROOSEVELT-Jwrhe executive heads which planned such a work are worthy of places among the statesmen of the nation. JOHN MITCHELL-ttThe coal strike is not to be compared to the hits in Donnybrook.H CLASS OF 1903-Wthe book is naught but Wacant hugeness! So help me Touchstone. CLASS OF 1905-ttAbsolute1y perfect! But,11eavens, we can improve. Donnybrook Fair. CLASS OF l904ettBeautifu1! Awful! UnspeakableW DR. W'ELSHeWPhis book was published at the ex- pense of the health of its editors. RUSSELL SAGlcettVVorth its weight in gold. HOW'ARD CHANLER CHRIsTYet 1 see my day is nearly over. CALVIN THoMASettI, a professional scholar, deem the book a great successW CLASS OF 1906-ttThis is the best Donnybrook Fair we have ever seen. HIRAM CORSON-JtA resemblance to Browning shown strongly in obscurity and absence of the per- sonal element. DR. FR5HLICHER-HEvery last detail carefully worked out. Ebe Womank college of JBaItI'more, JOHN FRANKLIN GOUCHER, President. THE SESSION OF 1903-1904 VVILL BEGIN ON SEPTEEIBER 14. 1903. Spring Entrance Examinations under the direction of the College Entrance Examination Board, June 15 to 20. Address the Secretary, Sub-Station 84, New York City, before May 1. FALL ENTRANCE EXAMINATIONS SEPTEMBER 14 T0 18. Examinations may be divided, provided no more than one year and the Summer recess intervene. J. THOMAS JOHNSON, No. 300 WEST BIDDLE STREET, 2000 ST. PAUL STREET, OPPOSITE RICHMOND MARKET. TELEPHONE, 663 DRUID BALTIMORE, MD. 97' 99 SW .....GROCERIES..... I carry a Full Line of the Finest Fancy and Staple Groceries, including all the Latest Table Delicacies. sf w ,r r sf 1 w I f9?! EBRILLIANT FLOUR,E0 BEST IN THE WORLD. Wfsf OUR FINE MOCHA AND JAVA COFFEE CANNOT BE EXCELLED. 0 . ' . ' . 0 . ' 9'! 9? ,r ORDERS CALLED FOR AND HOME TELEPHONE, COURTLAND 1818. DELIVERED FREE. C. 8: P. TELEPHONE, MADISON 39. Ebe CBMg iLatin School OF BALTIMORE. 7X strictly College preparatorv School for both boarding and day pupils. The largest attendance of all Schools of its class in the East. Sends more girls to College each gear than any other girls school. Thrce-fourms of its graduates have entered WomaWs College; one-fourth of WomaWs College students have prepared here. Noted for its hgglenlcallg constructed buildings, its well equipped gymnasium, and its large chem- ical and musical laboratories. Fall Term opens September 14, 1903. Entrance Examination, June 1-5, and Sept. 7-11. PR INC IPAL. l H.ARLAN UPDEGRAFE, 4X. 1V1.. O ;, ,, 7,,7,,, 7, , , 7,, , , W .77... w o BALTIMORES BEST STORE. WWJ69 HOWARD AND LEXINGTON STS. EVERYTHING FOR THE SCHOOL ROOM. !3RlyTING RND ENGRKVING A SPECIRLTY. msm DECKHZXM, LITTLE zq C0. Stationers, . . . . School anb . . . . aollege Eupplies, 63 EAST EIGHTH STREET, TELEPHONE, 24m lath STREET. TOLCH BTER EXCLIRSIONS FOR 1903. + NEW YORK. HAVE YOU SEEN THE; ANNADQLIS? N EW STEAM E I 2 Now is the Time to Make Engagements. INTERNATIONAL TRUST COMPANY OF MARYLAND, 23-27 E. Baltimore Street, sOld HAMILTON EASTER SiteJ CAPITAL, . SURPLUS, . $2,000.000.00 1,539,734.42 General Banking and Trust Company Business Transacted. SPECIAL FACILITIES FOR LADIES INCLUDING BANKING BY MAIL. SAFE DEPOSIT BOXES FOR RENT Correspondence Respectfully Solicited. TIFFANY 6Q CO, UNION SQUARE, NEW YORK. ManufacTurcrs 0T CLIHCrs Of JEWELRY, DIAMONDS and PRECIOUS STONES. SILVER WARE, Unporfers 0f PLATED WARE, DIAMONDS, WATCHES, PRECIOUS STONES, CLOCKS, CLOCKS, BIQONZES, LEIX FHER GOODS, DODCELHINS and STATION I:RV. GLASS. Silver Ware and Dlatecl Ware Facto Hes: FOREST HILL, NEWARK, N. J. DA PIS: LON DON : AVCHLIC d6 IJODCFG $66 Bis. 22I and 22lA I?CQCIU SP, WEST. C H PONOLOGY : I657 TIFFANY it YOUNG, I555-4 TIFFANY 8L CO., 259 Broadwau, New York. 550 Broadwav, New York. I54! TIFFANY, YOUNG 8L ELLIS, I56I TIFFANY 8L CO., 259-260 I'Eroadwav, New York. . 550-552 Broadwau, New York. 547 TIFFANY, VOLING 8L ELLIS, 16664903 TIFFANY av CO., 27I Broadwau, New York. Paris, France. l650 'I5IF'FRNV, REED 6Q CO., 15654903 TIFFTXNV 5; C0., Daris, France. London, England. I570-I903 TIFFANY eq CO., Union Square, New York. Cclenboncs: G. 61 p. 380, St. maul. man. 190 Gourtlanb. 30m 0111. meals; Son 8 Go. Eiamonb merchants, Sewelers anb Eilversmitbs, , 9 Eonth abarles Street, half minuh: from Isaltimor: 5t. Baltlmore. MAKERS AND PATENTEES OF THE WOMAN'S COLLEGE PIN. Telephanz 503. MARYLAND JAMES w. HUGHES, SADD BROS. Tiziiiimw f. 1 ! ER . ' 6T ER 3; No. 519 ST. PAUL STREET, 1 p PI N I RS , 4 9 BALTIMORE, MD. Plain and Fancy Cooking 3 Specialty. w . 2l6 E. BALTIMORE ST., Weddings, Receptions, Dinner: and Parties Served With Evzry Requisite. BALTIMORE, MD. ALL ORDERS PROMPTLY ATTENDED TO. Books and Stationery. Engraving and Stamping. WE HAVE DIES OF THE SEVERAL HALLS AND OF THE COLLEGE. 4, B. G. EICHELBERGER, + 308 North Charles Street. VVe furnish books for revievv t0 the NPialends. BOTH PHONES. CAPITAL. $100,000. CALVERT BANK, IN THE SHOPPING DISTRICT, SURPLUS. $20,000. Howard and Saratoga Streets. COMMERCIAL DEPARTMENT. Large and small deposits subiect l to check. SAVINGS DEPARTMENT. Deposits from 25 cents up. 3$ per cent. interest pald. We furnish szositors, Without Cost, AUXILIARY BANKS for Home Saving. SAFE DEPOSIT BOXES, $3.00 per year and upward. STORAGE VAULTS for valuables. WDEPARTMENT FOR LADIES7 EXCLUSIVE USE. Gjr: a'n'diallu invlle all sludcnls of The WOWXNS COLLEGE To make free use Of our IQECEDTKlN DOOM WllCll down Town shopping. W6 mn supplv all vour wants in the. WW 0f FINE SFKHONERV, DAINTY CORRESPOND- ENCE DNDEIQ, FASHIONRBLE liNGIQRVING. BOND 81. 00. J. W. BookselIers, Stationers, Printers. A. H. FETTING, MANUFACTURER OF Greek Letter Fraternity Jewelry; 14 and 16 ST. PAUL STREET, BALTIMORE, MD. Memorandum Package sent to any Fraternity member through the Secretary of the Chapter. Special designs and estlmates furnished on Class Pins, Medals, Rings, etc. Elrt in photograph , AT STUDIO OF $EW OUR 11 3 F St, N. W LATEST CREATION! $ WASHINGTON, D. 0. 916 Special Rates to the Students of The Woman's College. Pen and Ink Sketches similar to the Celebrated Gibson effects. HENNEGEN, BATES CO. Jewelers and Silversmiths. WWWWWWME a E E E DIAMOND IMPORTERS, . . N0. 18 East Baltinlore Street. WILBUR F. WARD, SUCCESSOR TO WARD BROS. MANUFACTURER OF $alnani22d gran 31111 gnppw Qtnmirw. 31 ETA L L I C ROOIN NG zXNIL SPOUT 1 3W 1 . STOVES, FURNACES AND RANGES. METALLIC SKYLIGHTS GLAZED WITHOUT PUTTY. Ventilating and Mill Work a Specialty. No. 20 WEST PRATT STREET, BALTIMORE, MD. GEORGE W. TALL. OTIS J. TALL. THE C. 8: P. Telephone, St. Paul 3941-Y. Western National Bank TALL BROS. OFWME Statiuuema, '4 N. ELITALV STREET. agrinteua, anranmmi, Capital, - - - - $500,000 , Surplus and Undlvlded Proflts. 425.000 Blank Book Manufacturers, 23 S. CA LVERT ST. J. G. HARVEY. Presidenl. D. FAHNESTOCK, Vlce-Presidenl. WM. MARRIOTT, Cashier. ENGRAVED CARDS AND LA SPECIALTY. WEDDING INVITATIONS BALTIMORE, MD. nus BANK WILL BE PLEASED TO RECEIVE ACCOUNTS. ; vmon.oo.o.nuunonnun.o ou ..... ou.i CEREECFINGS 1,0 .03, .0+. ,05. '06; .07. COTRELL 6 LEONARD, ; 472 to 478 Broadway, Albany,N.Y........ Q9 1 MAKEPS OI; CAPS, GOWNS AND HOODS. 99 O the VVomalfs College of Baltimore: to Bryn Mawr, CLASS CONTRACTS A f ' SPECKALTY. Barnard, VVellesley, Radcliffe, W'ells, Mt. Holyoke, GOWNS FOR THE PULPW University of Chicago, University of Michigan, University AND THE BENCH. INTERCOLLEGMTF BUREAU of North Carolina, Yale, Harvard, Princeton, Columbia, OF ACADEWC COSTUMES Johns Hopkins, University of Pennsylvania, and the others. CHARTERED 77777777777777 90 ILLUSTRATED BULLETIN, SAMPLES, Etc, UPON ..... E APPLICATION, A. F. Laxwrence Coal CO. C. 8 P. TELEPHONE 1822. GOAL AND WOOD. MD. TELEPHONE 7-.L0. Y. M. C. A. BUILDING. BALTIMORE. MD. VS$ $$$x$$$$$xwx8;'k83;$$$x83K$6X$K8$bEXinW'k3ki'5; $ $$ $8$$$$$$9: 3:$5$W XW ' Z artizti: agariraiturcv x3k$i$$ixxwk5$$$$Kw ? f LGENFPITZ STUDIO, SUCCESSOR TO CUMMINS, soxwexx 20 West Lexington Street. ikix :-'e$xv sxstV$rs$KeVeXo Special Discount to Students. x, xxxxxxxyaooaafxxxxxxxxxxxx x MaggymmxwxxxxxvxxxxxxxnxxnnxxxvgnyvgexxamxxwwcngnwmemvxxxxxVxVX$gcx -.n4Lyy.,VV;VT Representing the following well-known Comna nles: Uninn Assurance Society OF LONDON. Law Union and Brown Ins. Co. OF LONDON. New Hampshire Fire Ins.Eu. 0F MANCHESTER, N. H. State Fire Insurance En. 0F LIVERPOOL. Firemean Insurance En. 0F BALTIMORE. ......... , - TTTT ........ A. ROSZEL CATHCART. EDGAR H. DONALDSON. ESTABLISHED 1874. A. Roszel Cathcart 8: Co. L$eueral . . EXgentg-r ana 53150112174 . . No. 6 South Street, 'PHONES: C. 6: P. St. PIIII 745. nd. Courtland 2058. Baltimore, Md. IESBBAECE V 017V Every Description Placed at Lowest Current Rates. . . ALL BUSINESS lntrusted to us will Receive Prompt and Careful Attention. o o 0 YOUR BUSINESS fSOLICITED. V in nVsUVL 'LLLTIV A PATJJN'I IN L HAMBHLLLMFG. l: 15L Q' T1310? ,i, ESTABLISHED 1774. , ;4 SUPERLATIVE FLOUR Used by our Successful Housekeepers for 128 Years. C. A. GAMBRILL MFG CO. PROPRIETOR, . rBALTIMORE, MD., U. s. A. NUHTH GERMAN LLUYH STEAMSHIP EUMPANY' BALTIMORE LINE SECOND CABIN FROM BALTIMORE T0 BREMEN, On steamers sailing from Baltimore up to March 31, 1903. Steamers uRHEIN, uMAIN and liNECKAR, MINIMUM RATE Hour in roomi . . . $44.50 ALL OTHER STEAMERS. MINIMUM RATE ifour in roomi . . . $42.50 SECOND CABIN RATES FROM BREMEN TO BALTIMORE. On all steamers sailing from Bremen up to July 15, 1903. MINIMUM Hour in roomi . . . . . $50.00 ROUND TRIP RATE. Deduct 5 per cent. from combined outward and prepaid rates. Children between 1-12 years,ha1f fare; under one year, free. STEERAGE RATES. From Baltimore to Bremen . . . . . . . . . . . . $36.00 Round Trip. . . . . . . . . . . . 72.50 Prepaid from Bremen to Baltimore, . ' . . . . 36.50 Children, I to I2 years old, half of above mSteerage Rates Infants under one year Outward, $2. 00; Prepaid, $2. 00; Round Trip, $4.00. If more than one infant in a family, the others pay half fare. All rates subject to change without previous notice. A. SGHUMAGHER 81 00., General Agents No. 5. South Gay St, BALTIMORE, MD. leL A. Dickey. Vice-President. Albert H. Redford, Asst. Cashier. Chas, W. Dorsey, President. Harry M. Mason, Cashier. Manufacturers National Bank Baltimore, Md. DIRECTORS : ROBERT M. SUTTON, SOLOMON FRANK. JOHN HUBNER. WM. T. PARRISIL WM. A. DICKEY. CHARLES W. DORSEY. ELI OPPICNHEIM, GEORGE L. IRVIN. FRANK EHLEX, OLIVER RFEEDER. HARRY D. WILLIAR, G. Cum GOQDRICH. JOSEPH B. HALL, Prescription Specialist. HALUS CUCUMBER and WITCH HAZEL CREAM FOR CHAPI'EII HANDS, LIPS, ETC. HALUS CREAM DENTIFRICE Cor. Aisquith St. and North Ave., Cor. Charles and 22nd Streets, BALTIMORE. Merchant and Miners Transportation Company ;STEAMSHIP LINES: Acconunodzttimls and Cuisine Unsurpassed. J. C. WHITNEY, 2nd A. V. P. GKTraffic Manager. QUEEN 0F SEA ROUTES -BETWEEN BALTIMORE, BOSTON, PROVIDENCE, NORFOLK, NEWPORT NEWS, SAVANNAH, PHILADELPHIA. Send for Descriptive and Illustrated Folder. W. P. TURNER, Gen'l Pass. Agent. A. D. STEBBINS, General Manager. GENERAL OFFICES, 214 EAST GERMAN STREET, BALTIMORE, MD. Finest Coastwise Trips in the Worldf J.VW 5:CO. House Furnishers PUTTS FANCY CHINA NOVELTIES, i KITCHEN UTENSILS AT SPECIALLY LOW PRICES. Rich European and American Novelties. New Goods Every Day in the Year. BRILLIANT CUT GLASS, BRIC-A-BRAC, JEWELRY, FANS, Charles G Fayette Sts., BALTIMORE. CUTLERY, STERLING SILVER NOVELTIES, LAMPS AND GLOBES, STERLING AND PLATED i SILVERWARE. 1 Hotel, Restaurant, Steam- boat, College and Institution Supplies. a a 17 A1 i1 STATEMENT SHOWING THE ASSETS AND LIABILITIES OF THE MERCHANTS NATIONAL. BANK AT THE CLOSE OF BUSINESS JANUARY 3I, ASS ETS. Cash .................................. $1,165,384.99 Due from Reserve Agent 5 ,,,,,,,,,, 778,054.74 Due from other Banks and Bankers 2,427,025.65 Due from the Treasurer of the U. S 29,000.00 Demand and Collateral Loans ..... 5.356.282.11 Bills Discounted .................... 291,283.73 SeBcunrities owned other than U. S. .......................... 212,450.00 U. BS.n 2 Per Cent rBcuuds, to secure circulation 111a .................. 225,000.00 U. S. 2Per Cent. Bonds to secure deposits 10am ,,,,, 25,000.00 City of New York 3; to secure deposit, ,, 270.000.00 Five Per Cent Redemption Fu111,,1 11,250.00 Banking House and Building ...... 570,000.00 7 013.360.731.22 LIABILITI ES. Individual Deposits sub- ject to check ,,,,,,,,,, $4 049 .561. 76 Due Banks and Bankers 6 475 073. 68 Dividends Unpaid ,,,,,, 790. 00 $10,525,425. 44 Circulation ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, 225,000.00 New York City 35 Per Cent. Stock Account ,,,,,,, , , ,,,,,,,,,, 270,000.00 Capital Stock,,, 1,500,000.00 Surplus and Undwided Profits ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, 840,305.78 2.340.305.78 $13,360.73I.22 H I 903. PA'ITERSON, TEELE 6'1 DENNIS, Certified Public Accountants, NEW YORK. BOSTON. BALTIMORE. COLUMBUS. O. BALTIMORE. February 17. 1903. DOUGLAS H. THOMAS. ESQ President Merchants National Bank, Baltimore, Md. DEAR SIR'SWe hand you herewith a certified statement showing the condition of your Bank at the close of business 011 January 31. 1903 At the time of our last examination in Janllaiy, 1901 we called attention 10 the excellence of your accounting methods, and we are now pleased to report that the plesent conditions are even better than at that time. E1 ery effort appears to have been made to throw around your work all safeguards and interior checks which can be devised and we have no hesitancy in saying that we haVe never had aceessto any bank when? the results of such an effort have been 111016 sutisfactmy. VeiV truly yours, PATTERSON, TEELE A: DENNIS. Certihed Public Accountants. DOUGLAS H. THOMAS. President. WILLIAM INGLE. Cashier. J. C. WANDS. Asst. Cashier. E. S. RODGERS, T SOl'OSiS, THEFgREsTgESHOE STYLISH GIRL. - - 150 Styles of High and Low Shoes, ngh Grade 611088111851 , and Fancy Slippers, including every leather, size and width, suitable for dress, street wear and athletic pur- ' $3.50 'WYMANS CHARLES AND zlst STREETS. 1 No. 19 Lexington Street. TABLE LUXURI ES, Pure Teas and Coffees Our Specialty. ; M. S. CORNELL. GORDON DUNN. M. S. CORNELL 8: CO., MANUFACTURERS OF FINE STIFF AND SILK HATS. ONLY AUTHORIZED MAKERS OF 11 OFFICE AND FACTORY. QMWMM 1 435, 437, 439 West Broadway, 1 1 138,140. 142 PrinceStreet, SOLD EVERYWHERE 1 NEW YORK. 'SAVE 50 CENTS AWE??? Put it in the CENTRAL SAVINGS BANK, at the end of one year you will have deposited 26 DOLLARS, and it will be earning three per cent. interest. We accept deposits of 50 cents and upwards. Centrtal Savings Bank, of Baltimorte, s. E. CORNER CHARLES AND LEXINGTON STS. ROBERT K. WARING, PRESIDENT. GEORGE W. CORNER, VICEVPRESIDENT. THOMAS G. POTTS, TREASURER. ARTHUR GEORGE BROWN, COUNSELLOR. December 3lst, IQOE. Funds, $7,376,l86.7l Accounts, $l8,948. $5.951: EICCMC CGIB DiFCCT To College. , $1: le'vre a 5km chrlgm x W 1 S WP 9ir1:95e 1 . , , 4 , l, C UI DEX IOHU, over 99 mg ' gummy? . . Banquets and mitiwrg L -. . : mChesapukm ' H , '3 AWEAKPIM l hum c 2L: M3 rum ' , . 5U:3';ggg!f'm Parties. WW JOHN 'IURNBULLJi18:C0. i HOTEI PENNEPVE BAL'FIMOIQE. Importers uni Dealers in Carpets, Furniture and 7 - i EUROPEAN PLAN. . . UphOIStCry FabrICS, I EXCELLENT CUISINE. 16: 18 and 20 West Baltimore Street, ' 7 a A Rooms, $1.50 Day and Upward BALTIMORE, MD. JAMES P. A. O'CONOR, MANAGER. C. 5: P. Telephone 1283. Maryland. Courtland, le John E. Marshall. John E. Marshall 8 SomA Builders and Superintendents OFFICE IN CHAMBER OF COMMERCE BUILDING, BALTIMORE, MD. Telephone Connections. J. LEVIN 6k SON, Badieo, JTLailalng anel Habik Jnakelno, 830 N. Howard Street, BALTIMORE, MD, Parrish Brothers, Importers and Grinders SPIC. ES . . Baltimore, Md . . . . Wm. A. Marshall. C. Morgan Marshall. Say You Had 25c. Say you wanted a neat Picture Frame. Say you saw One Hundred Styles. Say they only Cost 3 Quarter. Say it was at .314 W. Lexington Street. Say it was at FRIZZELL'S Art Rooms. Say you ventured to buy one. say you like it well. Say you told your friends. SAY NO MORE. jfrisgelloo ART Rooms, 314 West hexington Stneet, BADTIMORE, MD. FOR Easter Flowers Commencemom Bouquets ...... QILJVSTQFS, ETC, . . COME TO SAMUEL F EAST 81 SONS, florists anb Eecorators, Nos. 228 and 231 N. Charles St. Established 1832. Telephones. Cakes Confectionery, Ice Creams f Fancy Boxes and Ices. Favors. Catermg in all its Branches. 701- 703- 705 W North Avenue. A T SADTIER A SONS, A AA, A. WannerAco OluthIEIHS Elna. JGXV GIBI SA ; O. 62 P.TELEPHONE1587. HOME TELEPHONE 4021. w A 208 W. Fayette St., JEXVELRAY BALTIMORE, MD. VVAkICI-IES A SILX7ERVVA1QE, Etc. A SANITARY PLUMBINGA SPECIALTY, A . x ELECTRICAL CONSTRUCTION, Opera and Fleld GIIASSBSA A i REFINISHING AND ALTERING, A 16 E- BALTIMORE STREET- A GAS AND ELECTRIC FIXTURES SAFE DEPOSIT AND TRUST CO. .- NaOF BALTIMORE CIILXRTERED IN 1864:. FULL DAID-UD CAPITAL, $600,000. SURPLUS, - - - $l,200,000. w a... mo Established for the settlement of Estates, Execution of Trusts, and for the safe-keeping of Securities and Valuables, and the Renting of Private Safes in its Indestructible Vaults. OFFICERS. MICHAEL JENKINS, President. ANDREW P. SPAMER, Assistant Secretary. H. WALTERS, Vice-President. H. H. H. LEE, 2nd Assistant Secretary. JOHX W. MARSHALL, 2nd Vice-President. FRANCIS M. DARBY, Treasurer. JOHN J. NELLIGAN, 3rd Viee-President and Sedy. GEORGE B. GAMMIE, Assistant Treasurer. GEORGE R. TUDOR. Cashier. DIRECTO.RS. Michael Jenkins, Edwin F. Abell, H. Walters, Francis White, Blanchard Randall, W'aldo Newcomer, John B. Ramsey, Norman James. John W. Marshall. V 7 r 1 W 1 P.r;.201'CK. n. P. ZOUCK. ...... .mnmmH m h thb m WHImmH-m. 5 c. 2t 1,. THONE, WALBROOK 23M. Pure. sweet and delightfully enchanting, captivate P. G. ZOUCK 8: SON, - DEALERS IN 7 : x- x-x. . .V . NVx-x-xmxwwx. 33:. ii$$fz $2$??$$$3$$ssasssasas$qva$svw$ A L And make them the favorite home instruments. CE M E NT, LI M E, Singers prefer them as zucconlpzulinlents. and st t1 ,'.bt1 121 0211?? 5123135? tliggvlfife 111T0;001f?335 u S E W E R P I P E, Second-I-iand Pianos LIMOID, HAIR, 660. Of various makes at very low prices. Accommodat- ing terms. catalogue and book of suggestions cheer- fully given. CHAS. M STIEFF E Third Street, Windsor Mill Road and Western Maryland Railroad Warerooms-9 N. Liberty St., Baltimore, Md. . q . Factories-Block of E. Lafayette Avenue, bouth 0t XVulbrook btatlon, Aiken and Lanvale Streets, ' BALTIMORE, MD. Momma Dress Trimmings, Fancy Goods, . . . NoveltiesV-u' 1.3 W. Lexington Street, BALTIMORE. MD. 0 o Banners and Flags. W. C. B. Ribbon. Class Pins. Fancu and Toilet Articles 0 Specialru. C. QUANDT, , Mary! nd, Mount 28!. Pkwes' c. a P. Madison 1274f. J. A. RITTER 8: SON, E?mmgis, 1918 Charles Street, North, BALTIMORE, MD. fThC Baltimore COSTLIIHE rs. A T. JONES 8: SON, 413 East Baltimore Street, BALTIMORE, MD. Costumes Made to Orrin and on Hire. Wigs, Bcarcis, etc. Full Dress Suits, Oxford Gowns and Caps on Hire. Manufacturers of Silk Banners and Flags. IlbracticalW 1batr Dresser and for labia: aha ! $entlemen, , ' S. E. Cor. Eutaw and Lexington Sts. BALTIMORE, MD. Schoen 8L Compang MODELEDS OI: HATS, I4 W. Lexington Street, rBALTIMOPE, MD. WORK FOR THE SUMMER OTHER STUDENTS AND TEACHERS HAVE MADE MONEY WRITING LIFE INSURANCE FOR THE FIDELITY. WHY NOT YOU ? INTELLIGENT WOMEN find our SAVINGS BANK policies easy to sell. THE FIDELITY MUTUAL LIFE INSURANCE CO. OF PHILADELPHIA. Permanent or transient positions can be secured. Careful instructions given. INCORPORATED 1878. For full particulars address C. GRAHAM, Mgr., Maryland 34 W. Va. Room 806-8 Merchants Bank Bldg.7 BALTIMORE, MD. NUNN 6 COMPANY, Booksellers m Stationers, WEDDING INVITATIONS, School, Medical, Classical RECEPTION CARDS, Keep constantly on handthe and Miscellaneous Books. AT HOME C ARDS ! Also a full line of Station- TEA CARDS, Text Books used in the 9T 9T Womarfs College of Baltimore, The Girl? Latin School, 91' 1 Johns Hopkins University and Johns Hopkins Hospital. ery, including 011 the New VISITING CARDS, and Fashionable Tints and Engraved in Latest Style. i Sizes of Fine Writing Paper. 1 E Also Monograms, Crests and Street Address Dies made to order of any style desired, KW Paper with The Woman,s College Heading W stamped to order in any color desired. l ,227 N. HOWARD STREET, Late VVith Cushing 8: CO. Balthnore, Chesapeake and Atlantic Railvay C0. RAIL AND STEAMER LINES. Reach the Garden Spots of THE EASTERN SHORE OF MARYLAND AND VIRGINIA, ALSO, WESTERN SHORE OF VIRGINIA. 0CEAN CITY, MARYLAND,,, Has no equal as an Ocean Resort. For a short run on The Bay THE CLAIBORNE TRIP. Our Illustrated Booklet will be out May 15th. Send for copy, free. T. MURDOCH, Pass. Agent, Baltimore, Md. J. S. DITCH 8x BROTHER, CONFECTIONERS AND FARMLANDS DAIRY. TELEPHONES 1 0 0 EUTAW PLACE CONFEC- TlONERS, EUTAW PLACE C. 81 P. Madison 59. 1 Md. D.1501. 0 A N D WOW 1 FARMLANDS DAIRY 0 NORTH AVENUE. CHARLES ST?EET STABLE, 0 1 AND c. 8: P. Madison 58. 0 Md-Northm-w 11, 13 dz 15 E. 218T ST. w 0 PALACE STABLES, 0 C. 8; P. Madison 57 8; 36. Md. Druid 263. BALTIIVIORE. FRESH, PURE AND DELICIOUS. BON BONS AND CHOCOLATES, FANCY BASKETS AND BOXES, SENT BY MAIL OR EXPRESS' 14 EAST BALTIMORE ST. BALTIMORE, MD. THIRD NATIONAL BANK, BALTIMORE, SOLICITS YOUR ACCOUNT. DEPOSITORY UNITED STATES, STATE AND CITY. O l: l: I C E R S : R. M.SPEDDEN, President. JOHN F. SIPPEL. Cashier. ROBT. H. SMITH, VicesPresident. A. B. CROUCH, Asst. Cashier- UNDIVIDED PROFITS: CAPITAL: $500,000. UNDIVIDED PROFITS: $115,000. DEPOSITS: $3,000,000! C. F. LEVIN, INSTRUCTOR OF MANDOLIN, GUITAR AND BANJO, DIRECTOR OF THE WOMANS COLLEGE MANDOLIN CLUB. STUDIO, 331 NORTH UEIARLES ST.. BALTIMORE, MD. CLARK 8E STEVENS, The Linen Store, LACE, EMBROIDERIES, TOILET ARTI- CLES, LINENS, WHITE GOODS, AND HANDKERCHIEFS. 212 NORTH CHARLES STREETL BALTIMORE, MD. A liEIVIA'RIiABLE INSTALLAXTION. Mr. JAMES E. HEWES, the lighting and heating engineer and contractor of Baltimore, is installing a lighting and heating plant for the Woman's College of Baltimore, which will greatly add to the comfort and wel- fare of the students, and will prove a great economy in the items of heat and light. An ornamental power house and laundry combined has been erected, in Which electricity will be generated and conducted in under-ground conduits to the severallbuildings of the College. The exhaust steam from the engines will be carried in underground steam pipes to the various buildings, thus utilizing an otherwise wasted product and effecting great economy. A remarkable feature of this installation is the fact that steam will be carried for a distance of over two thousand feet under ground. Another interesting feature of this installation is the fact that the first Steam Turbine Electric Generator installed in Baltimore will be installed here. In instaIIations of this description, savings in expenditures of over 50 per cent. have been effected for factories, colleges and industrial enterprises. Dangers from fire are greatly lessened owing to the fact that the heating plants of all the buildings will be dispensed with. JAMES E. HEVVES. ELECTRIC LIGHTING AND HEATING ENGINEER AND CONTRACTOR, PLANS AND SPECIFICATIONS. 1019 N. UILKRLES STREET, BAVLTILVIORE. Canton Blue and White Chino, DARNELL 8t BECKMAN. Teakwood, Decorative Brass, And Curios from the Orient. N ' + Y . Sanders 85 George, l SltlllOIlerS, Ellgllll BIS: Pllnlels, Gold Medallion China, . . 924 Arch Street, PHILADELPHIA. h OMMENCEMENT INVITATIONS, l .,, DANCE PROGRAMS, 1 MENUS, AND COLLEGE STATIONERY A SPECIALTY. E IMPORTERS, :17: No. 26 EAST LOMBARD STREET, BALTIMORE, MD. Write for specimens and prices before ordering. BENJAMIN F. BENNETT, Builder of the College Buildings. ma . hair! $2.1: 1,223,255,.25; 1a. 2 VIE, $312.1. 1 2:23 L .1 2.323. :3 : ytultlrsic, . ..x..al, . 3272i 3 iii: .1: :kah .4 n, uiva-y. ..
Are you trying to find old school friends, old classmates, fellow servicemen or shipmates? Do you want to see past girlfriends or boyfriends? Relive homecoming, prom, graduation, and other moments on campus captured in yearbook pictures. Revisit your fraternity or sorority and see familiar places. See members of old school clubs and relive old times. Start your search today!
Looking for old family members and relatives? Do you want to find pictures of parents or grandparents when they were in school? Want to find out what hairstyle was popular in the 1920s? E-Yearbook.com has a wealth of genealogy information spanning over a century for many schools with full text search. Use our online Genealogy Resource to uncover history quickly!
Are you planning a reunion and need assistance? E-Yearbook.com can help you with scanning and providing access to yearbook images for promotional materials and activities. We can provide you with an electronic version of your yearbook that can assist you with reunion planning. E-Yearbook.com will also publish the yearbook images online for people to share and enjoy.