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m ' • -co i 3 2 a c 3 o Ef? -- s - g BO • = 5b Ctl C. y ' CLr,- - - THE SYNAPSIS NINETEEN THIRTY-ONE VOLUME VII T ' lih ished by THE JUNIOR CLASS OF THE PHILADELPHIA COLLEGE OF OSTEOPATHY PHILADELPHIA, PENNA. Dedication To The Memory of Our Beloved Dr. J. Ivan Dufur 1877-1930 The gayesx fioiirs trip h ' ghtly bv AnA leave the faintest trace But the deep, deep trac that sorrow wears Time never can eface. It is with the greatest sincerity that we may say to know him was to love him. Each one of us reaHzes a personal loss in the passing of a dynamic personality hidden in a dignified and mild-mannered gentleman and scholar. To find a man who gave more of his undivided interests to promoting Osteopathy, to per- petrating enduring friendships, and to manifesting a responsibility of intrinsic depth and sincerity for the numerous needs of human- ity, would be an illimitable task. It is with great sorrow that we realize the VII. Volume of Synapsis cannot be shared and enjoyed by Dr. Dufur, the little General, originator of this annual ex- pression of college activities. The College and Profession. FOREWORD The law of worthy life is fundamentally the law of strife. It is only through labor, painful effort by grim energy and resolute courage that we move on to better things. Theodore Roosevelt We turn the pages of life to another chapter in the history of our College and Profession. We shall not eulogize the achievements of the past, but rather concentrate our efforts on the symbolizing of a certain and steady progress which we can not fail to recognize when we consider the youth of our Philosophy. It is our pious hope that this publication may parallel the precocity of Osteopathy ' s meteoric ascension and that it may be an inspiration to our successors to avoid the eroding sameness that marks the gradual defeat of even a worthy cause. ' S0 CONTENTS t College Classes Organizations Alumnae Athletics Hospital Humor Advertisements ' m COLLEGE W That tower of strength luhich stands joresquare To all the winds that blow. Spring in the world! And all things made new. Earth has not anything to show more fair; Dull would be he oj soul who could pass bv A sight so touching in its majesty. Oh for a seat in some poetic noo}{ Just hid with trees and spar ling vjith a hroo oard of T)irectors Henry H. Savage President RussEL DuANE, EsQ Vice-President Edgar O. Holden Sec. and Treas. GusTAVE C. Aberle George L. Markand Francis J. Smith C. D. B. Balbirnie Charles L. Morris Alfred P. Post Qhemistry Jl boratory We can honestly boast of one of the most modern and completely equipped laboratories in this city, supervised by a staff of thoroughly trained and experienced chemists. Many interesting and absorbing hours have been spent in this department of our College, and it is our hope that the facilities this laboratory presents will prove an inspiration to those who follow us and are afforded the opportunity to persue there the secrets of the most intricate and interesting of sciences. May the many unsolved mysteries that the world is waiting to learn someday be disclosed therein. This laboratory contains two hundred and twenty-five lockers and will accom- modate one hundred students at one session. T) is section laboratory Curtains are here raised to divulge the secrets of human anatomy to the under ' classes. This modern laboratory harbors twenty ' cight tables and will accommodate one hundred and forty students. It is equipped with a refrigeration plant that will preserve thirtyfive cadavera. A recent addition to this department is equipment for brain dissection wherein a splendid practical objective is obtained of the most intricate of cellular structures, the human brain. The lighting and ventilation on this floor are such that the student is virtually as well equipped as a surgeon to perform his ex ' ploratory work. In addition, the hygiene of the laboratory is under the supervision of Gilbert A. Gavin, whose clever methods of embalming preserves the subjects under examination in a manner least offensive to the student. The Qlinic One need only visit this section of the college on a clinic day to appreciate the significance of an architecturally obscured haven for the physically incompetent. The clientele of the clinic have so far surpassed the expectations of our builders that we wonder how large an addition to our out-patient department will be necessary five years hence. At the present time there are thirty-seven treating rooms each equipped with an osteopathic table and stool. In these rooms approximately one hundred and fifty pa- tients are treated and examined in one day by student or practicing doctors. The clinical organization consists of the departments of Osteopathy, Neurology, Physical-Therapy, Pediatrics, Cardio-Respiratory, Genito-Urinary, Dermatology, Proct- ology, Obstetrics and Gynecology, Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat, and Podiatrics. Amphitheatre We feel a note of seriousness as we reflect upon the shrine of the skillful surgeon. It is here that many lives have been preserved and born and where we hope in the years to come that few will be lost. The refreshing cleanliness of scrupulously polished metal-work and azure-tinted wells are replaced by the necessity of resorting to two-tone effects. Even a cursory glance at this spacious and scientifically conceived operating pit suggests surgery con- ducted with utmost efficiency and circumspect asepsis. The Amphitheatre will seat two hundred and fifty spectators, each of whom has an unobstructed view of the procedures below. EDGAR O. HOLDEN, A.B., D.O. Sigma Phi Epsilon, Iota Tau Sigma Central High School, Philadelphia A.B. University of Pennsylvania, 1916 D.O. Phila. College of Osteopathy, 1922 Dr. Holden made his entry to the Philadelphia College of Osteopathy as head of the Department of Biologic Sciences. This was by no means the extent of his teaching ability for he could aptly substitute in any of the other Departments. During the World War he answered the call to arms and acted as Sergeant-Major in the 538th Engineers A. E. F., at the close of the war he continued his career at the College and received his degree in 1922. The Board of Directors elected Dr. Holden to the responsible position as Dean of the College in 1924 upon the resignation of a worthy predecessor, Dr. Flack. Dr. Holden ' s officiation as Dean of the College can scarcely be paralleled, for it was through his diligent and diplomatic efforts that the glorious edifice which now stands, bearing the name of Osteopathy was started and completed. Too much can not be said of Dr. Holden ' s administration and in view of his past accomplishments we look with eager anticipation to the continuance of a brilliant advancement, through the medium of a far-sighted, intellectual, professional teacher and scholar. 20 EDGAR O. HOLDEN. A.B., D.O. - ' (ffh C. D. B. BALBIRNIE, Ph.G., D.O. Professor of Therapeutics JOHN H. BAILEY, Ph.G., D.O. Professor of Special Osteopathic Therapeutics CHARLES W. BARBER, D.O. Professor of Psychiatry PETER H. BREARLEY, DO. Professor of Osteopathic Technique 23 WALTER F. CLAYTON, Ph.D., M.D. Professor of Special Pathology EUGE NE COFFEE, D.O. Professor of Jurisprudence • ' EDWARD G. DREW, D.O. Professor of Obstetrics and Gynecology and Clinical Professor of Surgery IRA W. DREW, D.O. Professor of Pediatrics HERBERT V. DURKEE, D.O. Professor of Histology RUSSELL C. ERB, B.S., M.S. Professor of Chemistry 26 H. WALTER EVANS, D.O. Professor of Clinical Obstetrics and Gynecology RALPH L. FISCHER, D.O. Professor of Physical Diagnosis, Cardio-Vascular and Respiratory Diseases ARTHUR M. FLACK, DO. Professor of Osteopathy and Pathology WM. OTIS GALBREATH, D.O. Professor of Ophthalmology and Otolaryngology 28 EDWARD A. GREEN, D.O. Professor of Physiology and Descriptive Anatomy FREDERICK A. LONG, D.O. Professor of Principles of Osteopathy m CHARLES J. MUTTART, D.O. Frojes or of Gastro-Eyiterology and Protology WILLIAM S, NICHOLL, D.O. Professor of Principles of Osteopathy D. S. B. PENNOCK, M.D., D.O. Professor of Surgery SARAH H. RUPP, D.O. Professor of ' N.eurO ' Anatomy 31 C. HADDON SODEN, D.O. Professor of Osteopathic Technique C. PAUL SNYDER, D.O. Professor of Special Otologic Therapeutics 32 H. WILLARD STERRETT, D.O. Professor of Cenito-Urinarx Diseases FOSTER C. TRUE, D.O. Professor of Clinical Osteopathy and Assistant Professor of Surgery 33 zAmo?ig the Jaculty WM ' mo7ig the Jaculty Associate ' Professors Ruth E. Tinley, D.O., Associate Professor of Pediatrics Paul T. Lloyd, D.O., Associate Professor of Preventive Medicine and Lecturer on Roentgenology George S. Rothmeyer, D.O., Associate Professor of Anatomy, Osteopathy and Lecturer on Gastro-enterology James B. Eldon, D.O., Associate in Osteopathic Technique George H. Tinges, D.O., A-.ssociate in Oto-Laryngology Harmon M. Kiser, D.O., Associate in Therapeutics and Instructor in Surgery George L. Lewis, D.O., Associate in Clinical Osteopathy and Demonstrator of Anatomy Edwin H. Cressman, D.O., Associate in Histology and Demonstrator of Dermatology Enrique Vergara, D.O., Associate in Bacteriology and Demonstrator of Pathology William J. Nairn, A.B., M.A., Associate in Biology and Instructor i7T Embryology Ernest A. Johnson, D.O., Associate in Physical Diagnosis James W. Day, D.O., Associate in Bacteriology and Hygiene Harry C. Hessdorfer, D.O., Associate in Clinical Osteopathy Assistant T rofessors Wilbur P. Lutz, D.O., Assistant Professor of Physical Diagnosis William J. Furey, D.O., Assistant Professor of Osteopathic Technique Carlton Street, D.O., Assistant Professor of Obstetrics and Gynecology Joseph F. Py, Assistant Professor of Bacteriology Ruth H. Win ant, D.O., Assistant Professor of Therapeutics J. Earnest Leuzinger, D.O., Assistant Professor of Oto-Laryngology Joseph F. Smith, D.O., Assistant Professor of Heurology and Phychiatry Howard Stoertz, B.S., Assistant Professor of Chemistry Marion A. Dick, D.O., Assistant Professor of Therapeutics Lester R. Mellot, D.O., Assistant in Anatomy and Oto-Laryngology James M. Eaton, D.O., Assistant in Bacteriology W. Dale Jamison, B.S., Assistant in Chemistry Herman G. Hartman, B.S., Assistant in Chemistry Arthur M. Flack, A.B., Assistant in Chemistry Benjamin Gross. D.O., Assistant in Proctology Meyer Cohen, D.O., Assistant in Clinical Osteopathy Richard Ammerman, D.O., Assistant in Obstetrics Carl J. Isman, D.O., Assistant in Obstetrics Donald K. Acton, D O., Assistant in Obstetrics Helen B. Conway, D.O., Assistant in Clinical Osteopathy Ralph B. Secor, D.O., Assistant in Clinical Osteopathy Gl.adys Clayton, A.M., Assistant in Pathology Harold O. Lyman, D.O., Assistant in Pediatrics Lillian Barton Scott, D.O., Assistant in Therapeutics 36 Demonstrators William D. Champion, D.O., Demonstrator oj Osteopathic Technique D. E. Stombaugh, D.O., Demonstrator of Osteopathic Technique Harry A. Stegman, D.O., Demonstrator of Osteopathic Technique Francis E. Gruber, D.O., Demonstrator of Anatoiny and Instructor of Obstetrics Herman Kohn, D.O., Demonstrator of Anatomy Otterbein Dressler, D.O., Demonstrator of Pathology J. Rowland Dey, D.O., Demoristrator of Pediatrics Leo C. Wagner, D.O., Demonstrator of Pediatrics Instructors Julius B. Apatoff, D.O., Instructor in Anatomy and Physical Diagnosis Robert McDaniel, D.O., Instructor of Principles of Osteopathy H. Mahlon Gehman, D.O., Instructor in Therapeutics and Assistant in Surgery Antonio Abeyta, D.O., Instructor in Oto-Laryngolo gy Jean L. Sheperla, D.O., Instructor in Oto-Laryngology Elizabeth A. Toomey, D.O., Instructor in Oto-Laryngology Carl Fischer, D.O., Instructor in Pediatrics Earle H. Gedney, D.O., Instructor in Anatomy and Clinical Osteopathy Kenneth A, Scott, A.B., Instructor in Biology Guy W. Merryman, D.O., B.S., Instructor in Chemistry John A. Whitehouse, D.O. Instructor in Clinical Osteopathy William Baldwin, Jr., B.A., M.A., Instructor in Physics John J. McHenry, D.O., Instructor in Osteopathic Technique lAlma y)(Cater Hail, Alma Mater, dear. To thee o i.r love declare; To us he ever near. Through all the years. Help us th truth to see; Teach ixs staunch sons to he. Striving continually, P. C. O. for thee. V hen we depart from thee. Serving where need we see, Strengthen our loyalty. Our trust in thee. Guide us in all aright; Give us through wisdom, sight; Grant us to ever fight, P. C. O. for thee. And when our wor complete. Our course on earth is ceased, judge us thy sons and mete Our tas well done. Increase from day to day. Daughters and sons, we pray. To serve and live for thee, P. C. O. for thee. CLASSES Qreetings to the Qlass of igsi If there has been any one certain thing about medical education during the past ten years it is that no one has been entirely satisfied with it. In comparable sense the disposition of the osteopathic curriculum to respond to various temptations and im- portunities has stirred up criticisms and led to reforms. But in general the proclivity of osteopathic teaching has remained sanely and advisedly along orthodox lines and with sensible regard for impeccable fundamentals. Today ' s graduate enjoys a material advantage over the young physicians of a decade ago. His profession is undubitably better and more favorably known. A forward impetus is prevalent in our current organization — the entire osteopathic domain is looking up . The essential purpose of the College curriculum is to prepare the student for a useful life in the field of practice of Osteopathy. It is neither the aim nor the design of the faculty to turn out mere cultists deaf to the postulates of logic or blind to the evolvements of science. Sentiment for things osteopathic is given wholesome encouragement in our schools, but always with deference to sound reasoning and in the light of scientific revelation. The College is mindful of its duty to the student in cultural and ethical training. The presentment and emulation of high principles and proprieties are mapped out side by side with art and science. It has been observed during the last fifteen years that preaching has given away to teaching of the fundamental osteopathic concept in our Colleges. Laboratory experiment, cadaver, and mamkin are votive offerings to nature ' s acumen, but the clinic patient will always be the most exemplary expression of osteopathic wisdom. Individual and section instruction in osteopathic mechanics and osteopathic diagnosis and technique is the most salutary innovation in the modern curriculum. The price of organized medicine ' s rejection of Andrew Taylor Still ' s teaching without investigation and is opposition to osteopathic discoveries can be measured only in terms of infinite human misery and mortality. The greatest need in Osteopathy today, and it will long continue to be of paramount consideration, is a numerical increase of general practitioners. Surgery and other specialties are at best but garnishments of old ' School practice. True osteo ' pathic art will form the keystone of tomorrow ' s therapeutic dominion while osteopathic science still holds the rationale of many of the mysterious workings of life. De. n E. O. Holden. S0 BENJAMIN F. ADAMS Atlas Club; Art Editor, Synapsis, 3 WARREN E. BALDWIN 7r « Atlas Club; Junior Prom Committee. HARLON L. BARTHOLOMEW Phi Sigma Gamma. Johnson City High School; St. Patrick ' s Academy. MARTIN S. BEEMAN Iota Tau Sigma. FRANK BERG Phi Sigma Gamma; Cheer Leader. E. CAMPBELL BERGER Phi Sigma Gamma; Cheer Leader; Orchestra Stuyvesant High School. JOSEPH M. BOWDEN Phi Sigma Gamma. Cathedral High School, Trenton; Niagara Uni- versity. GIRAUD W. CAMPBELL Phi Sigma Gamma; Vice-President of Class, 2; Drew Obstetrical Society; New York Junior Os- teopathic Society. Lynbrook High School; Jamaica High School, M.C.O. ANGUS CATHIE Phi Sigma Gamma; Class V. P. L; P. Chem. Society, 3, 4. GWYNETH CHAPMAN Kappa Psi Delta; Interfraternity Sorority Council. FOSTER D. CLARK Theta Psi; Freshman Dance Committee; Junior r :— -. Prom Committee; Interfraternity Council, 3. Jii! Windsor High School; Morse Business Collecre. EUGENIA COFFEE Lutheran Society. AGATHA P. CROCKER Axis Club; Class Secretary, 3; Nedrone Society, Secretary, 4; Junior Prom Committee. FRED B. CUSHMAN Phi Sigma Gamma; Drew Obstetrical Society. FREDERICK S. DANNIN Basketball, 1, 2; Drew Obstetrical Society; R. I. Club. Rogers High School; Butler University, Indiana. MERRITT G. DAVIS Atlas Club. Narberth High School; Episcopal Academy, B.S.; University of Pennsylvania. WILLIAM DESOTNEK Lambda Omicron Gamma; R. I. Club; Kxone, 2, Columbia University. WILLIAM A. ELLIS Phi Sigma Gamm.a; Basketball, 1, 2, 3, 4; Base- ball, 1, 2, 3, 4; Golf, 2, 3, 4; BowHng, 2, 3, 4; Ten- nis, 2; Interclass Swimming, 1, 2; Athletic Editor, Synapsis, 3; Athletic Editor, Axone, 2; Business Manager, Axone, 3, 4; Neo Honorary Society. JOHN W, FIELD Atlas Club. Wingham High School; Chicago College of Os ' teopathy. B. T. BAILEY FLACK Suf Pathologist, 4 West Philadelphia High School; University of [ Pennsylvania. CHARLES R. S. GAJEWAY Theta Psi. EDWIN A. GANTS Phi Sigma Gamma; Class Treasurer, 1 JOHN A. GLENN Newman Club. Salesianum C. H. S. EDWARD I. GOLDNER Lambda Omicron Gamma; P. Chem. Society; New York Junior Osteopathic Society, Treasurer. Boy ' s High School; C. C. N. Y. HAROLD GORHAM Iota Tau Sigma; Humor Editor, Axone, 1, 2, 3, 4; Designer of Axone; Key Associate Editor, Synapsis, 3. WILLIAM GUINAND Interfraternity Council, 4; Drew Obstetrical Society, 4; New York Junior Osteopathic Society; Iota Tau Sigma. WAYNE F. HAMMOND Dry Run High School; Altoona High School; Shippensburg State Teachers College; Gettysburg College. LEONARD HEECH Literary Editor, Axone, 1, 3 ; Editor-in-Chief, Axons, 4; P. Chetn. Society, 3, 4; Secretary, Drew Obstetrical Society; New York Junior Osteopathic Society. West High School, W. DALE JAMISON Phi Sigma Gamma; P. Chem. Society, 2, 3, 4, President; Neo Senior Society, President; Manager, Bowling, 3; Manager, Basketball, 4; Axone, 2, 3; Instructor in Chemistry. ARTHUR G. JEWELL Iota Tau Sigma; Professional Editor, Axone, 3, 4; President, Neurone Society, 4; Humor Editor, Synapsis, 3 WILBUR KELL Phi Sigma Gamma; Basketball, 1, 2. Lewistown High School. BEATRICE KRATZ Kappa Psi Delta; Basketball, 1, 2; Junior Prom Committee. West Philadelphia High School; Temple Prep. ROBERT KRING Iota Tau Sigma. Steele High School; University of Dayton. LEROY LOVELIDGE Theta Psi; Cardio- Vascular Society Germantown High School. WILLIAM D. LUMLEY Theta Psi; P. C. O. Melodians. Barrenger High School, Newark. ARTHUR J. McKELVIE Iota Tau Sigma; Track; Bowling; Class Treasurer, GEORGE L. MILLER Iota Tau Sigma; Cardio ' Vascular Society. WILLIAM MINER Iota Tau Sigma; Tennis, 1, 2, 3; Chairman, Junior Prom Committee. Rutherford High School; University of Pennsyl- DAVID W. MORRISON Phi Sigma Gamma; Photographic Editor, Synapsis, 3; P. Chem. Society; Drew Obstetrical Society. WILLIAM J. NAIRN Iota Tau Sigma; Associate Professor, P. C. O.; President, R. I; Club. Member: Brown University Club of Philadelphia; Brown University Teachers Association; New Eng- land Modern Language Teachers Association; Providence Classical High School, A.B., M.A.; Brown U ' niversity. STEPHEN G. NAYLOR Iota Tau Sigma; BowHng, 3, 4. Camp Hill High School; Dickinson College SAMUEL OTTO Lambda Omicron Gamma; Drew Obstetrical Society; Basketball, 1; New York Junior Osteopathic Society. ABRAHAM PEKOW Lambda Omicron Gamma; Basketball, 1, 2, 3; Junior Prom Committee, 3 ; Freshman Dance Com ' mittee, 1. FRANKLIN RANDOLPH Phi Sigma Gamma; Axone; Council; Junior Prom Committee. Interfraternity JAMES H. REID Iota Tau Sigma; Chairman, Freshman Dance, 1; Secretary ' , New York Junior Osteopathic Society, 2, 3; Advisory Board, 2, 3, 4. ARAM RENJILIAN RAYMOND H. RICKARDS Atlas Club; Axoyie, Associate Editor, 1; Literary Editor, 2; P. Chem. Society, 3, 4; Neo Society, Treasurer, 3, 4; Editor-in ' Chief, Synapsis, 3; Class Prophet, 4. WALTER ROHR Phi Sigma Gamma. CHARLES W. SAUTER Drew Obstetrical Society. WILLARD G. SHACKELTON Iota Tau Sigma; Class Treasurer, 3, 4; Junior Prom Committee; Neurone Society, Vice-President, 4; Manager, Basketball, 3; Bowling, 3, 4; New York Junior Osteopathic Society. JOSEPH L. SIKORSKI Phi Sigma Gamma; Newman Club, Treasurer, 2; Interfraternity Council, 4; Advertising Manager, Synapsis, 3 . Atlas Club. ROBERT R. SNOW TROY W. STRATFORD Phi Sigma Gamma; Basketball, 1, 2; Assistant Manager, Basketball, 3. HARRY A. SWEENEY Iota Tau Sigma; Newman Club. 59 SAMUEL E. TAYLOR Axom, 3 ; Drew Obstetrical Society. EDWARD R. THIELER Iota Tau Sigma; Basketball, 1; Axone, 2; Synapsis, 3; P. Chem. Society, 3, 4; Drew Obsteri- cal Society. D. DELAND TOWNER Bowling; Iota Tau Sigma; Basketball, 1 York Junior Osteopathic Society. New NORMAND W. WARBURTON Class President, 3, 4; P. Chem. Society, Vice- President, 3, 4; Junior Prom Committee; Student Council, 3, 4. New Bedford High School; Blackbun University, Illinois. ROBERT C. WARNER Iota Tau Sigma; Baseball, 1, 2, 3; Captain, 4; Basketball, 1, 2; Captain, 3, 4; Manager, Bowling, 1, 2, 3; Drew Obstetrical Society; Neurone Society, President, 3 ; Student Council, President, 4. A.B., Cornell University; Chi Psi Fraternity; Neo Senior Society; Class Vice-President, 3, 4; New York Junior Osteopathic Society. JOHN H. WATSON Iota Tau Sigma; Drew Obstetrical Athletic Editor, Synapsis, 3. Society; HAROLD M. WEBER Atlas Club; Bowling, 4. HARRY A. WEISBECKER KENNETH R. ZWICKER Atlas Club. Senior History President Norman Warburton Vice-President ROBERT Warner Secretary Gyneth Chapman Treasurer Willard Shackelton Early in the fall season of 1927, a group of individuals gathered one evening, to become acquainted, one with the other, and to meet those members of the Faculty of the Philadelphia College of Osteopathy who would guide them in the first studies which were so essential to a later understanding of subjects pertaining to diagnosis and treatment of disease. There were in this group an aggregate of one hundred and seven persons— Many with a definite idea of some day attaining the privilege of being Doctors of Osteopathy , others as is apparent from the fact that they are no longer with us, without any idea as to why they had come to Philadelphia. Be that as it may, the next few succeeding weeks found them well organized, with Harry Weisbecker, President; Angus Cathie, Vice-President; Evangeline Avery, Secretary; Edwin Gants Treasurer. In spite of the many difficulties presenting themselves in the form of various ologies , the class sponsored a dance, held at the Oak Lane Review Club, which was enjoyed by all, including the Sophomores, who, by the way, were well represented. The Sophomore year was at hand in what now seems to have been a short space of time. Under the class officers— Art German, President; Girard Campbell, Vice- President; Evangeline Avery, Secretary; Arthur McKelvie, Treasurer; the year passed rather uneventfully, with frequent stories of there soon being a new P. C. O. Direct action was ini tiated when the Board of Directors of the College called for volunteers to solicit funds for the great project. The Class of ' 31, answered this call in a manner that was surpassed by no other class in raising funds from our individual incomes as well as aiding solictors in the general campaign. Aside from a dance given us by the Class of ' 32, there were no other important events of the year. The Junior year commenced at Nineteenth and Spring Garden Streets, as had the two preceeding years. Late in the fall the College moved to its present site. How proud we were of our new home and our participation in making its construction pos- sible! Although not having the honor of being the first class to graduate from so im- pressive an edifice, we were privileged in being the first class to serve its entire term in the new clinic. It was our first opportunity to put into practical application those principles laid down by the old doctor and to see the results of applying the technique used in this, his method of therapeutics. The pleasure experienced by each of us in observing improvement in the conditions of our individual patients, and the thought that we were actually aiding some fellow-being in his struggle against on- coming disease or deformity, more than repaid us for our efforts. Time passed quickly in our new environment except for an epidemic of spring fever the only treatment for which was the Junior Prom, prescribed by Bill Miner and gratefully received by all so afflicted. Class officers for this year were: Norm Warburton, President; Bob Warner, Vice-President; Agatha Crocker, Secretary; Willard Shackehon, Treasurer. Of these, all but Agatha Crocker, who was replaced by Gwyneth Chapman, were re-elected to office during their Senior year. Our last year in preparing to depart from the halls of Alma Mater into the Realms of Practise has been spent in receiving more practical instruction in Special Clinical work and Student Interneships in the Hospital. Some have become more in- terested in one type of clinical practice than in others. Some are thinking of a general practice; others are hoping for a chance to spend a year in the Hospital as a Resident Physician. In any event all are looking forward to their graduation in June. During the year we rallied once more to the aid of our school and hospital by giving a benefit dance in October, to which all classes were invited, the results of which were gratefully received by those who manage the affairs of our institution. In saying farewell, we wish to express our gratitude to those who have so gener- ously given of our time and knowledge that we might take the torch of Osteopathy , to hold it high so all the world might see; and to thank them for all they have done so willingly to help us lay a foundation for future research and endeavor in our chosen profession. To those who follow in our footsteps may they successfully accomplish what they have undertaken. To our Classmates success in every undertaking attempted. JAMES CHRISTIAN, Class Historian. Senior T rophecy CLASS BULL-etin By QUO VADIS (Editor ' s Note- Acting under the premise that there is a reason for everything, even such a prophecy as this, editorial we discovered the propheter musing some- thing like this:) Selah, selah— even unto 1950 A. G. (after graduation). There is a great weak- ness upon me — a stuttering of lights — a cacophony of sounds assail the tender tympanic membranes of my ears, ears long persecuted by the oratory of grim visaged professors. The panhellenic conclave of antecedant prophets ring me in the irony of their ga es, pressure is being brought to bear upon me, causing me great distress and dyspnea, to say nothing of sense of fullness in the precordium. Woe is me — every exit is closed; escape is impossible; it is fate — I must look into the crystal of life and watch the future pass in review. Of course I could do nothing, so I allowed him to rave on. A cosmopolitan scene comes into view — a crowded auditorium — people of scientific mein, rapt and moved as Dr. Girard W. Campbell, Osteopathic physician par excellence, golf par 82, demonstrates the new Campbell pan for panhistorectomies, usuable in barn or kitchen surgery. A quick shift — lodge rooms with deep seated chairs and well seated Osteopaths; the tenth meeting of the Universal Cardio- Vascular Society. Officers are elected — Dr. Alphonso Merola, left ventricle — Dr. Paul Young, aortic stenosis — Dr. James C. Luker, auricular flutter. Subsequently these eminents suff er severe cardiac embarrass- ment as a movement is made to close the meeting. Presumably this is because they are unable to pick up the murmurs of approval, having forgotten their stethoscopes. Blue grass of Kentucky — Ambition now gratified. Dr. Eugenia Coffee strides complacently among the results of her work. Gone are the mountain stills (out of sight), and now the doctor ' s time is spent in trying to sell these rugged people Osteo- pathy — but it doesn ' t go down so easily. Dr. Harlon Bartholomew seems to have done a DaCosta by joining the local fire department. It seems that Bart while at P. C. O., in the hydrotherapy department, became a victim of the habit of squirting water at people. Now we see trees bending in the breeze, sloping lawns studded with buildings that hug the ground. This is the Home of the Big Muscle, the Broad Chest, the Sturdy Hamstrings, owned and operated by Dr. Benjamin F. Adams. Here special care is given to boys with much money and thick skulls. Music has its charm so Dr. Kenneth Zwicker is in charge of orchestration — here even the bony lesions move with a boop- boop-a-doop . Heart of the Sierra ' s! A pair of searchers, Drs. Frederick Dannin and William Desotnek are searching most diligently over the rocky surfaces of the mountain ridges for the home of the kidney stone. Dr. Angus Cathie, the bunion specialist, is on his feet again. He recently suf- fered a nervous breakdown after taking up eye, ear, nose and throat work as a specialty — it seems he couldn ' t make both ends meet. While Dr. James Christian has spread Osteopathy into the four corners of the world by the medium of his magnetic voice and the influence of his timely topics, nevertheless he still returns home for the week-ends. His book Osteopathy Under the Microscope, is for sale at all the leading drug stores. Sales production is en- trusted to Dr. Warren Baldwin who is very happy doing his job since it gives him his time to attend to his practice and to mind the children. Drs. Isadore Goldner and Leroy Lovelidge have also edited a book entitled Labor, the Silent Drama . The valuable data for this book was secured from the delivery of a series of 113 still births. Shades of the Sahara! Who do we see trudging among the sand dunes, shattered temples and sand burnished rums of the old world, but Drs. Berger, Otto, Bowden and Randolph. These men in the metamorphosis of life have gone archaeologic and now roll the bones of the ancient Syrians and Egyptians, even as of yore. Rah, Rochester! Dr. Leroy Conklin has entered upon the sixth year of successful operation of the v orld famed and widely renowned Conklin Charm School for Chlorotic Females , conducted under his personal and private supervision. How literary some of the old brigade seem to have become — here is Doc Kring, the boy prodigy, just finishing the Osteopathic Compend, or Meedless drugs, their actions, reactions, and the States in which they can be used. I should live so long! I see Dr. Jay Pekow, ambulatory to the last, with his office on top of the Bulova Watch Building, so that he can always be on Time. Abe says that 4 hours of sleep per night are enough for anyone and if it isn ' t, one can always sleep on a treating table. Now a laboratory; experimentation, concentration and finally success. Dr. George Miller has just synthesized green vegetables with beef steak flavors. He now hopes to grow a new low bush variety of hot roast beef sandwiches . Ton my word if it isn ' t Dr. Bailey T. Flack, Dean of the Osteopathic and Neuropathic College of Peterborrow, Pa. Bailey ' s two children are both sick with sprue, but after being treated by Dr. Harold Weber they always quaintly remark: Gee, Dr. I feel better alreadv . Invisable rays? Yes. Dr. Jimmie Reid, noted roentgenologist, is seen experiment- ing to determine if the long or the short ray is curing fibroid in the paramecium vivax today. He has recently returned from a National Convention; while there he received injuries to his right wrist, but recently has been able to slap people on the back with his left hand. Well, well — here comes Dr. Stephen Deichelman from his printers with some new literature that has just come off the press. The circular is headed by the in- scription : Paretics — benefit by my experience! Twelve hundred cases show specific cure by the new grapefruit injection method. In Dike ' s new sanatorium all conveniences are had. His latest addition is an oval turf track where all those that once played the ponies can now ride them. Drs. Mc- Kelvie and Nay lor come trotting smartly along; Steve, having a cold, wins by a nose. Dr. Leonard Heech is gaining much notoriety (pardon, I mean publicity) thru ' his charity course in Advice to Adolescents that is given to the Girl ' s High School of Rochester. What can this be. Just an operating room. Dr. Harold Gorham is having his feet lifted by the eminent plastered surgeon Dr. Jewel. After this was completed it was decided to remove said Dr. Gorham ' s vocal chords, so that he could not talk back to himself in his office. Dr. Jewel is receiving telegrams of felicitations from many and a few remonstrance from Drs. Gants, Steinberg, Gajeway, who offer in argument that the next New York Society meeting can not possibly maintain its usual Cheerio spirit without Gorham to lead their quartette. Dad of them all! Of course no one else but Dr. Charles Sauter and his nine children. Dr. Bashline of Grove City, is now calling Dr. Dale Jamison in as consultant. Also Dale, has just originated a new bloodless surgery technique for the removal of false teeth. It ' s his secret, people. 67 H K. Mulford Co., have Dr. John Glenn, syringe in hand, under contract for the disposal of their salvarsan products. Johnny in his enthusiasm is fond of saying: The children cry for it or Should Your best friend know? Sunflowers and prairie — Dr. Joe Sikorski, left Mr. duPont in Wilmington, and is now practicing in Machuska, Mich. He and Gordon are still the two big Gyn men however. Dr. Robert Snow is specializing. His specialty is making money. In his last in- terview with the Associated Press he gives full credit to his no credit plan of finance, and his ruthlessness in charging as much as possible. His exorbitant fee at the present time is $1.35 for office visit and $.25 more in the home. Success: Finally Dr. William Guinand, thru ' political influence and personal contact has had himself appointed as chief insultant in The Home for Destitute Nurses . Dr. William Miner has a new racket. He is now inspecting the immigrants at Ellis Island, for the cause of the business depression. Dr. Willard Shackleton, his able assistant, stays in the office and collects the $10.00 for a treatment. Dr. Aram Renjilian, recently bought in the east end of Long Island for the purpose of raising fancy vegetables, which he sells to the west end of Long Island; his Osteo ' pathy he divides between the east and the west ends of Long Island. An ocean liner! Dr. Robert Wilson is seen returning home from Turkey with a very discontented look on his face. It is all because Turkey has abolished poligomy and Bob was looking for variety. Ah Ravena! Dr. Walter Rohr, wealthy philanthropist has propagated a fund for propagation of non-propagating guinea pigs. This endowment also has a special clause which provides a dietician and a set of silver feeding forks for the guinea pigs at P. C. O. Disproving the old axiom that never the twain shall meet, Drs. Agatha Crocker and Gwyneth Chapman have established joint offices for the treatment of arthritic con- ditions in pensioned bartenders. Dr. Martin Beeman is doing a nice business in the care and treatment of house- maid ' s knee . The doctor is also doing very well with the house maids. A reunion — after long years of separation Dr. Foster D. Clark meets Dr. Fred Brown Cushman with a goodly shaking of hands and twirling of mustache on the part of Dr. Foster D. Clark. Before they separate the usual question arises as to which was first, the hen or the egg. Moaning low. Here is Dr. Merritt Davis newly returned from Europe where he demonstrated his saxophone anesthesia. All that is necessary is a sound proof room, and a saxophone; the anesthestist blows upon the sax vigorously and the patient during the stage of excitement butts his head against the tile wall until uncon- scious, in this manner saving much in the cost of ether. Pat. pending. Honor to whom honor is due. Much credit must be given to Dr. Beatrice Kratz for her development of first rib technique that is applicable to second ribs on the fair- way or on the green. Dr. Samuel Taylor of Chester, was the host of Dr. William Lumley, for the week-end, It seems that Bill ' s wife v as away and Bill had gone chicken-hearted . Dr. Edward Theiler, now refuses to treat more than ten patients per day as he claims that he is unaccustomed to hard work, and besides he never has more than ten patients. Drs. Wilbur Kell and Troy Stratford, while hunting in the north woods shot and fatally wounded a charley-horse, for which offence they have been sentenced to ?iO days in the College clinic. Dr. Jack Fields, just down from Canada for the day, saw the damage done by these amateur sports and rushed to render first aid with his Miller lymphatic pump, but arrived too late to save the day (pardon me) horse. Dr. Deland Towner miraculously escaped death yesterday when in his Austin he drove into the exhaust pipe of a truck thinking it was the Holland tunnel. I see money, money, everywhere! Why it comes from a course given by Drs. William Ellis and Robert Warner for the small sum of $250.00. These wide awake physicians are selling basketball training, complete in 6 weeks, to the proud plumber and brick layer who won ' t accept a wage cut. What sort of man is this? Only Dr. Harry Weisbecker who has increased his chest expansion 6 3-4 inches by blowing into his brother ' s basal metabolism machine. 69 Dr. Harry Sweeney has brought suit against Dr. David Morrison in the Court of Complaints, stating that on the first of the month in their usual monthly game of double solitaire, Dr. Morrison was guilty of fraud. Dr. Morrison counter-states that Dr. Sweeney had two ice cream sodas and was not able to detect fraud under the most obvious circumstances. Dr. William Nairn has just returned from a prolonged stay in Florida. He stayed so long that he missed much of his morning practice, but Bill claims that this is merely a residium of those days when he tarried around the hospital furnaces and he would get there just the same. Dr. Isabel Johnson, has arisen from sixth assistant to third assistant of one of the largest Osteopaths in the country. She doesn ' t care for further advancement now as her own practice keeps her so busy that she only has 6 nights to herself. Dr. Wayne Hammond is now sixth assistant and would have been iifth were it not for the fact that he broke 2 of a wealthy patients ribs and when she complained he lost his chance for promotion. Music, sweet and low! Dr. Norman Warburton has made himself famous in song by writing a touching little ballad called: Asleep in the Curve of a Sacrum . He has been trying to explain the theme of it to Irving Berlin for many weeks, but Irving only says it sounds like hot air to him. Woe is me! Dr. R. H. Rickards is still sitting and pondering where the cool zeyphers blow, at Du fur ' s. : as the result of this prophecy. 70 Senior T irectory Adams, Benjamin 107 Belleclaire Ave., Longmeadow, Mass. Baldwin, Warren 328 Madison Ave., Highland Park, Phila., Pa. Bartholomew, Harlon 12 Albert St., Johnson City, N. Y. Beeman, Martin Northport, L. I., N. Y. Berg, Frank 652 Salem St., Maiden, Mass. Berger, Edward 77 Park Ave., New York, N. Y. Bowden, Joseph 549 S. Broad St., Trenton, N. J. Campbell, Girard 268 Denton Ave., Tynbrook, L. I., N. Y. Cathie, Angus J Emerson Rd., Needham, Mass. Chapman, Gwyneth 5202 Lakewood Ave., Chicago, 111. Christian, James 269 Rutledge Ave., East Orange, N. J. Clark, Foster 31 Elm St., Windsor, Conn. Coffee, Eugenia 618 Park Ave., ColHngswood, N. J. Conklin, LeRoy 95 Warwick Ave., Rochester, N. Y. Crocker, Agatha Osterville, Mass. (Cape Cod) Cushman, Fred Ellsworth, Maine Dannin, Fred 19 R. I. Ave., Newport, R. I. Davis, Merritt 501 Concord Ave., Wilmington, Delaware Deichelmann, Stephen 27 N. Seventh St., Newark, N. J. Desotnek, William 98 Warren St., Newport, R I. Ellis, William 5051 Walnut St., Phila., Pa. Field, William Wingham, Ont., Canada Flack, Bailey 3414 Baring St., Phila., Pa. Gajeway, Charles 242 S. 45th St., Phila., Pa. Gants, Edwin 721 Broad St., Providence, R. I. Glenn, John 2114 Lancaster Ave., Wilmington, Del. Goldner, Isadore 352 E. 46th St., Brooklyn, N. Y. Gorham, Harold 18 Lynes Place, Norwalk, Conn. Guinand, William 160 N. Wycombe Ave., Lansdowne, Pa. Hammond, Wayne Spring Run, Pa. Heech, Leonard 70 Adams St., Rochester, N. Y. Jamison, W. Dale 122 Tidball Ave., Grove City, Pa. Jewell, Arthur 1 Homestead Ave., Worcester Mass. Johnson, Isabel 510 Richmond Ave., Point Pleasant, N. J. Kell, Wilbur 5115 Webster St., Phila., Pa. Krat::, Beatrice 7012 Pennsylvania Ave., Bywood, Pa. Kring, Robert 717 North Ave., Dayton, Ohio Lovelidge, LeRoy 28 E. Wister St., Phila., Pa. Luker, James 914 Hudson St., Gloucester, N. J. Lumley, William 783 Devon St., Arlington, N J. McKelvie, Arthur Kenneth Square, Pa. Merola, Alfonso 132 Burnet Ave., Syracuse, N. Y. Miller, George Newport, Monmouthshire, England Miner, William Rutherford, N. J. Morrison, David 54 Stong Ave., Pittsfield, Mass. Nairn, William James 579 Park Ave., Cranston, R. I. Naylor, Stephen 1824 Walnut St., Camp Hill, Pa. Otto, Samuel Oakland, N J. Pekow, Abraham 5 Russo Ct., Newport, R. I. Randolph, Frank 1410 Hill Ave., Wilkinsburg, Pa. Reid, James 462 Seneco Parkway, Rochester, N. Y. Renjilian, Aram .......: 98 Wooley St., Southampton, N. Y. Rickards, Raymond 1817 Washington St., Wilmington, Del. Rohr, Walter 59 Pulver Ave., Ravena, N. Y. Sauter, Charles J 17 Riverbend St., AthoL Mass. Shackelton, Willard 6 Grant St., Utica, N. Y. Sikorski, Joseph 501 S. Harrison St., Wilmington, Del. Snow, Robert 4317 Spruce St., Phila., Pa. Steinberg, Emanuel 131 Barrett St., Brooklyn, N. Y. Stratford, Troy 404 Valley St., Lewistown, Pa. Sweeney, Harry 416 Atlantic Ave., Atlantic City, N. J. Taylor, Samuel 514 E. Broad St., Chester, Pa. Thieler, Edward Ill Hoisted St., East Orange, N. J. Towner, D. Deland 8 Broad St., Middletown, N. Y. Warburton, Norman Wilson 245 Whitman St., New Bedford, Mass. Warner, Robert 207 Main St., Waitesboro, N. Y. Watson, John 1 J 1 4 Broadway, Ocean Grove, N. J. Weber, Harold 45 Saranac St., Rochester, N. Y. Weisbecker, Harry 4818 N. Camac St., Phila., Pa. Wilson, Robert 59 Richards Ave., Dover, N. J. Young, Paul Goodyear, Conn. Zwicker, Kenneth 55 Gushing St., WoUaston, Mass. 4 J. Walter Axtell Let the world slide, let ih: world J A fig for eare, end a fig for woe! If I ecn ' t pay, why I cen owe. And death makes equal the high am If you were to seek the world over, scan the planets of the universe, and sweep the corners of heaven, you would find no better natured man, no easier- going man, no less worried man, no more contented man, than J. Walter Axtell. A student of Syracuse University, Walt plays the saxophone and fiddles his way through Osteopathy. A musician to the core his sax and his rhythm are well-known to the best night clubs clear from Rochester to Atlantic City. He not only plays his way through college, but plays right into the hearts of his fellow- men. Of a keen, probing, observant mind, we are sure his jovial alacrity will prevent his ever playing into the hands of anyone trying to take advantage of his good-nature. William M. Barnhurst Our enemies have beat us to the hip. It is more worthy to leap in ourselves Than tarry till they push us. — Shakespeare. Barney is the good-natured swimming expert in our class, with a grin for every one and a spirit dat co-operates wit de brudders, especially when a subject for demonstration is badly needed by a lecturing prof. Good-natured, and with a grin did we say? Yes, but God help the man who tries to get fresh with Barney or hand him a line. For he doesn ' t argue, or controvert, or disucss, he smacks ' em. And man, what a smack! Being a husky six-footer with Herculean shoulders, and a punch like the kick of a mule, it behooves any man to look twice and think thrice before crossing Barney. His aggressive qualities are sure to go far toward making him a good physician. 74 Francis J. Beall, Jr. He was a scholar, and a ripe and good one Exceedingly wise, fair-spoken, and persuading; Lofly and sour to them that loved him not. But to those men that sought him, sweet as su. Frank A, Beidler ever defers and never demands, milingly takes the world in hi good as when God first saw, ivc It the weight of his will for Frank makes up the other member of the partnership of Beall and Seyfried ' Coming to us last year from Kirksville from whence he got his B. S. degree after studying in Syracuse University, think- ing more than he talks, and choosing his acquaintances for their qaulity rather than for their quantity, we feel that we can describe him no better than the above verse does it. We have no fears for Frank ' s future success, for his education has been a broad one — we almost forgot to mention that there is a Mrs. Beall, and while we implore pardon for not writing more about him, we refer you to the other member of his partnership for more detailed information. Milky ' s amiable disposition and pleasant ways have done much toward curbing that animosity which naturally arises toward a class treasurer when he calls upon them for necessary cash. But it doesn ' t stop with his classmates. Back m Birdsboro, where giant steel plants clang and blast furnaces roar day and night. Milky dines with prominent citizens and sups with the head council- men. In Osteopathy he is the Big Athlete. His athletic career began with track and basketball back in Birdsboro High School, and extended thru Franklin and Marshall College to our own team. We feel he is going to make the M.D. ' s quake in their boots when he goes back to the hometown to practice. Af Lawrence P. Bennett Unbounded courage at Tempering each other Alternately proclaim hi And make the doctor d compa in the VI 1 good a and the sion joined, nd great. —Add Ben is one of these iron men of whom we feel incapable to write his Epitaph. Going thru life with a physical disability that would crush many men, he is ever ready with a cheery good-natured smile and a Herculean handclasp. We are well informed that Ben and his pillow are hard to separate — either that or he uses a silent alarm-clock for we usually look around in the morning and say, where is Larry ? In spite of Ben ' s love for Morpheus he maintains a good standing in the class and more than this he took a jump way ahead of most of us by doing some splendid work in the clinic last summer. It is a wonder to us how Ben handles his patients that are left over from his summer ' s practice along with the addition of the newcomers, but it simply shows you can ' t keep a good man down. J. MES T. Berry ' Statesman, yet friend to In action faithful, and in h, Who broke no promise, ser Who gained no title, and — Pope. Jim hails from the part of Long Island where estates of bankers, lawyers, and movie actresses constitute his next door neighbors. Enlisting in U. S. Navy as Able Seaman, he soon won an appoint- ment to Midshipman in United States Naval Academy of Annapolis. This, together with his foremanship of a gang of Tree Surgeons up on Long Island, tended to develop splendid qualities as an organizer and a handler of men which were not cooled by two summers ' work as a Frigidaire installator. For Jim is Editor of our year book, a job calling for no mean ability, where one must be able to soothe his enemies and keep his friends from becoming faint hearted. Nor is he a second-rate phys- ician. But is hailed by the class as a splendid technician, and a doctor who does not confine his skill to his ten fingers. Emily E. D. Boone lore at eventide to walk alone, Down nar ow glens, o ' erhung with dewy thorn. Where fro m the long grass underneath, the snail. Jet bUck. creeps out, and sprouts his timid horn. —a Emily is our debutante, unconcerned no matter what may happen. Everyone calls her a friend, and such she is ready to be. Perhaps we might with reason, name her Diplomat for if the fairer sex entered such service Emily would long ago have been lost to P. C. O.! Her home is among the Oranges in New Jersey, but her summers have always been spent in Massachusetts. She has not yet told us which State-boards she will take. But in either State, we predict an interesting professional life for Emily E. D. Boone — unless perchance marriage interferes William D. Bradford ' So be i;Tew up, a destined work to do. And lived to do it: four long suffering years ' Ill-fate, Ill-feeling, ill-report, lived through, And tb:n he heard the hisses change to cheers. —Taylor. We can pay Bill no greater tribute than apply to him the above verse which was originally written of the Great Emancipator, Abraham Lincoln. For during his professional studies Bill has encountered all the vicissitudes of prejudice, enmity, and setbacks, that the goddess of misfortune could wish on any- one. And when short-sighted superficial men said he would never make a physi- cian, he has kept his peace and poise and proved his mettle. Bill is now one of the best loved and most highly respect- ed members of the class and he has ex- emplified the statement that tenacity of purpose will win a just reward. Earle H. Brett From toil he wins his spirit light, From busy day the peaceful night; Rich, from the yery want of wealth. In heaven ' s best treasures, peace and health. Earl is a quiet, unassuming fellow with a well earned reputation. Difficult to interpret, his friendship, once made, is of the enduring type which will always root for the under dog. When Earl first entered our College his disposition was of the iron barrier type. The strug ' gles of life had made of him a cynic. Daily contact with men with whom he became well acquainted, and the magnetism imparted to his nature from a professional brotherhood seems to have changed him from a misanthrop to a philanthrop. So that now we do not think of Earl the cynic, but of Earl the friend in need and the good fellow. RiCH.ARD W. BURGET My mind to me a kingdom is: Such present joys therein I find. That it excels all other bliss That earth affords or grows by kind. Dick is one of these fellows that a good class just couldn ' t get along with ' out. He never says much, and to the un- observant he may appear to never do much. But we who know him have learned to depend on him for taking care of little odd jobs that everyone else has fallen down on. And when we know him still better we find that his life is crammed full of just such work and we find him doing it with a willing spirit, without grumbling or complaint. Gentle of nature ard of friendly dis- position is Dick, and a man well liked throughout the College. Joseph T. Calmar It ii not slrt-nglh, but art, obtains the prize And to be sn-ift, is less than o be wise: ■T,s more by art than force of numerous strokes. Cal has secret opinions about many things but discreetly keeps them to him- self. However, he startles us when he ad ' dresses the profs with details of subjects most of us know little about. An artist to the core with the typical artistic temperament Cal is rather hard to make friends with and few of us know just how we rate in his estimation, but when we do find him inclined toward friendliness he measures up to good standards. As an indication of his ability one need only glance at the neat lettering work on all the college and hospital doors for Cal held the contract for the entire work of this character on our new in- stitution. Eugene J. Casey In acts exemplary, not only win Ourselves good names, but doth to others give Matter for virtuous deeds, by which we live. —Chapman. Another student who can win scholastic honors, without creating animosity thru competition, for his modest good-nature earns him the reputa- tion of good-fellow. Like so many stu- dents, the promising qualities of Gene were not brought out till after two years connection with the College. Since this time he has taken on new responsibilities in the capacity of Vice-President of the Junior Class and as Photographic Editor of the Synapsis. Any one who has noticed Gene dodging around the school trying to make appointments for a dozen people within the same hour can ap- preciate the earnestness with which he attacks his duties. Charlesanna Coles riminating si ht, And finds, wilh kee, BUck ' s not so black If Chick ' s fondness for giving treat- ments equals her fondness for receiving them, she ' ll have a busy future. She is firm in her purpose — we have known her to spend hours on a house call! Chick ' s College is Swarthmore and her loyalty to her alma mater is unflinching. From the University of Pennsylvania she re- ceived her Master of Arts in psychology. Charlesanna has taught in Delaware, Ohio, and Pennsylvania, and she came here with preparatory training immedi- ately appreciated by those with whom she came in contact. Chick ' s scholastic record is an enviable one — but there are those who envy her Buick even more. Chick, is Fairmount Park prettier by moonlight or noonlight? Bernard Cronan Mem is his own slur; and ihc soul that can Render an honest and a perfect man Commands all liahl. all inilucnce, all fate. Nothing to him falls early, or loo late. —Fletcher. Barney is one of the well-liked mem- bers of the class. We know that he is very serious in his work and that he was one of the ambitious members of our delegation that sacrificed a great deal of time and sleep to take a special course outside of School hours. Whether he needed this or not is a question, but we think that from his recent pertinent questions he assimilated all that was in his power. We know too that he served a hitch in the U. S. Army and this no doubt accounts for his strict attention to his work and his respect for authority. We hope that ht confines his practice to the civilian class for we would not like to lose a good doctor to the doughboys. Harry J. Davis, Jr. Heaven, firsl Uw. and this confe. Harry is our ideal of a well-rounded educational experience prior to the study of Osteopathy. Graduating from Spring- iield College, Massachussetts, where he starred in athletics, he has since held the position of Director of Physical-edu- cation, coach of track, basketball, and football at various institutions. Harry ' s interest doesn ' t stop with college ac- tivities, for he is a real sportsman. If portable fishing ponds were possible, he would be contented anywhere, and Lord help the poor fishes. Harry is a genuine friend, a real he man, a gentleman and physician of the first degree. Paul Hanna Davis Slave to no sect, who takes no private road. But looks through nature up to Nature ' s God. And knows where faith, law, morals, all began. All end, in love of God and love of man. —Pope. Paul is the only member of the Jewish fraternity in the Class of ' 32, and if he can be considered as a fair representative of the organization as a whole, we whole- heartedly become boosters for the LOG ' s. For a finer, cleaner, broader minded, intelligent chap simply does not exist. Coming from one of the most clannish peoples of the earth, yet are his views as liberal as a Darrow and his friendships as Unlirtiited as an Emerson. His profession is not being handed to him on a gilt edged platter, but is being earned by the sweat of his brow. And we who know him know that he will not be a physician of the mediocre class. Frank A. Dealy ninu able, like the sea itilt as it ope , and lca es no trac f pre cedent for poor man —Chap TAXI? Right here, and you will get there quicker, cheaper, and safer. And don ' t get fresh wit de driver or you ' ll get pasted. By whom? By Dealy, for the whole College knows his pedigree and it only remains for one to write his epitaph. For Dealy is the fiery little business manager of the Synapsis staff. And what a man he is. Where former managers of former years have come out with, a year ' book months late because they couldn ' t get the material and no one would co-operate, Dealy GETS it and Dealy MAKES em co-operate, whether they would or not. With him a thing isn ' t Good enough , it must be RIGHT and must be there on time. Sincere, frank-hearted, and honest as a dollar, never fear that he will tell you one thing and think another. Mildred Du Bell some power the giftie gie us Millie ' s voice has brought her much fame — imitation they say, is the sincerest flattery. From harboring a seemingly casual interest, Millie has come now to be counted among those who earnestly desire the D. O. Camden will soon list her among its physicians — un- less she does decide to go to Florida as she claims she contemplates doing. Mildred has traveled considerably and enjoys it, most of her summers are spent at the shore. In spare time Mil rides horseback — Can ' t you just imagine her as a successful physician bringing back the good old dayj of the family doctor, a la horse? We anticipate the day we see Dr. Du Bell trotting along a New Jersey highway in answer to some patient ' s call of distress. Thomas P. Dunleavey HoTf happy is he born or taught. That serreth not another ' s will; Whose armour is his honest thought, And simple truth his utmost skill! Tom is one of the remote members of our class if we are to judge by dis- tance from P. C. O. We have a certain amount of sympathy for members of our class such as Tom who are unable to get home over short holidays. Although we know that he longs to get back to the woods of Vermont, one would not sus- pect him of pining his heart away for maples, for Tom possesses a deep strain of infectious, good nature that crowds the blues far back into oblivion. It is easy to predict that Tom ' s future as- sociates will hold a great confidence in him for he is of the rare solid stock that invites scrupulous counsel and implicit faith. John H. Eimerbrink Our hearts, our hopes, are all with thee. Our hearts, our hopes, our prayers, our tears. Our faith triumphant o ' er our fears. Are all with thee,— are all with thee! —Longfellow. Pop is undoubtedly and undeniably, the most popular man of the class. And his popularity is not the superficial sen- sational type, but the badge of service won thru months of unthankful labor- ing and settling of unrests and dissents among we his followers. For Pop is our class president, and might truly be term- ed the Great Pacificator. Standing like Stonewall Jackson ' s wall of human flesh, he has stood the brunt of human unap- preciation and ingratitude. He has fought our battles with the faculty and given us justice. He has interceded for our transgressions and kept unmarred our fair reputation. S3 Dorothy Evans allraclire kind of grace, assurance given by looks, al comjort in a face, of Gospell bookes Francis E. Evans nd papers in each hand. d madden round (he land. Dot is married — some believe it and some don ' t — however, she does have very decided opinions about some things. This year when the Juniors went into clinic Dot suddenly acquired a lot of self-con- fidence. In fact she couldn ' t remember ever being a Freshman — but we do. She shouts loudly for Massachusetts when- ever the old Bay State needs supporters. She and Frank came all the way from Cape Cod to study Osteopathy, but Dot gravitates back whenever there ' s the least excuse. She ' ll go back there to practice — we didn ' t ask but there ' s no need to. Her hobby is the movies, and that ' s the truth. In Freshman days a movie was the only temptation strong enough to make her cut a class. We ' ll draw no comparisons at this time! Frank, another of the boys from New England, is a good student and a staunch member of the radiator club. The amount of time he spends in eating, drinking, or sleeping is negligible when exams are on. He hangs to that notebook up to the last three seconds before the proctors pass the papers, and oh boy, don ' t those exams take a wallop from his pen. We envy his tenacity. Frank does not study Osteopathy alone, for he makes a sweet little girl happy by taking her with him through college as his wife. With such combined professional and domestic co- operation we can well envy Frank his future career. C. Wallace Evarts No, (.■( the canJied tonsue lick absurd pomp. And crook the prei;nant hinges of the knee Where thrift may follorr farrning. —Shakespeare. Wally is the rosy cheeked little fellow from mid ' Pennsylvania who is quite ac ' tive on the Axone staff. We hardly feel that we can do justice to him in writing his biography, for since entering our Col- lege he has stuck rigidly to the precept that; fewer friends are safest and best. Selecting a single member of the class as his solid choice he stuck to her thru thick and thin, so that at times we, his classmates often wonder which is thick and which is thin. For aught we know he may be the Bard of Avon or the Prince of Denmark, so quiet are his as- sociations and rare his remarks. For further information see his partner. Edwin Ferren all thy him whethir gray ichy, testy, ple Ed is one of these Jolly Good Fel- lows. And he wouldn ' t need be either, for he is the best baseball pitcher Osteo- pathy ever could ask for or hope to have and thus quite indispensable. He is furthermore a big insurance man and Editor - in - Chief of the Osteopathic Digest. We feel Ed learns by the process of absorption or osmosis, for he has never been known to join the radiator Club, and surely a man who has gone through Pennington Seminary under that grand old master. Dr. Harvey Francis Green, and attained an A.B. degree at Gettysburg College has re- markable absorptive powers. His patients in clinic wait in a big long line for treat- ment, so we feel no concern about the kind of a physician he will make. 4 R. Arthur Fish Were 1 so IM Or grasp the I must be mtcs ich the pole, with my span, nth my soul: The mind ' s the standard of the man. — Walts. Art , the big man of the class from the suburbs of New York City, does not rest on the laurels of his physical greatness. Determined to be the best Osteopath in his state, he probes and investigates, quizzes and interpolates, until, to his profs he becomes an enigma and to his patients a man of wisdom. With Art, Osteopathy is the greatest science, but he does not permit it to confine his intellect. He conducted re- search in the Rockerfeller Research Laboratory in 1928, and since entering the Philadelphia College of Osteopathy, his interest in chemistry has won for him a membership in a prominent chemical society. Harry E. Friberg Harry is one of the boys from Chicago and if you ask him, he certainly can give you the dope on this Osteopathy stuff. Rudy Vallee may be a smooth singer but he has nothing on Harry in the way of smooth charm for women. The girls of the class vie with each other for first place, but Harry is impartial, giving equal attention to all. Back in Somerville, Massachussetts, we under- stand, he was also somewhat of an athlete as well as a musician. Our Col- lege certainly feels complimented in his making it his choice for the last two years, and we are certain he will con- tinue to make hosts of friends through- out his most assuredly successful pro- fessional career as easily as he has among the Class of ' 32. SG Claire Gagen The light of life, the purity of graee. The mind, the music breathing from her fa. The heart nhose softness harmonised the w And oh, that eye was in itself a soul! Everyone likes Claire, she is like a breath of spring air wafted your way. Her frankness is her sincerity and her every possession yours for the asking. Radcliffe gave her the Bachelor of Arts degree in 1928. Claire ' s major work was in Chemistry — but that is a secret. An ' other secret is that she was graduated from the Falton Praisoforte School in Boston. You ' ve probably guessed Boston is Claire ' s home. On the surface, it ap ' pears incompatible that a student doctor could and would take a southern trip in the middle of a second semester — Yet, you know Claire and so you know it is perfectly and properly done. Paul D. Gregory Thinking is i And naught of thought, Greg is one of these bold bad men who would have you think the above apophthegm describes him completely, but get acquainted with him in his studio where he talks like a philosopher over a cigarette and an empty bottle of gin, and you will find that he has a heart of gold. He does not wish to appear to study, yet one who starts with the Class of ' 32 and finds himself with it at the end of three years is not an idle student. Greg is a wizard on the piano. He doesn ' t need an instructor, never did; doesn ' t even need a piece of music. All he requires is that someone whistle the melody if he never heard it before, and he will rattle it off with all the thrills and trills of an accomplished musician. E. WiLLARD HaRTZELL The man that hail, you Ton, or Jack, And pro-res. by thumping on your back, His sense of your great merit. Is such a friend thai one had need Be very much his friend indeed To Dardon or to bear it. — Cowper. Bill is one of the husky Phi Sig athletes. Basketball, baseball, track, and football, all fascinate his fancy and profit by his efforts. Next to athletics. Bill specializes in wise cracks, most of which are given in an undertone in class, loud enough for his fellowmen to hear, but not audible to those for whom intended, which if they were, would make them unwise cracks if the victim happens to be on the platform. A fiery man is Bill, and a sportsman. At cups or at cards, not to speak of dances, he can be counted on to hold his own and to accept defeat with the same equanimity that he accepts success. Lloyd E. Hershey Satire ' s my weapon, but I ' m too discreet To run amuck, and tilt at all I meet. Cursed be the yerse, horv well so e ' er it flo That tends to make one worthy man my foe. We defy anyone to win an argument from Hersh once he starts with logical ground to work on. His ability to ex- press himself in proving his points is one that we all envy and such an ability is only gained by establishing the worth while contacts of which he can boast. Hersh arose from the mob of common bachelors last year and assumed the duti- ful seat of husband, and recently proud father. We are pleased to discover that in spite of additional responsibilities he still maintains an eagerness to retain his intimate friends. We can think of no one whose friendship has grown so rapidly nor whose view-points have ex- panded so broadly in a scant three years of new associations. LiNFORD B. Hoffman on v ,s the S ' ft of H,a ce, fairly worth the screr. HofF is a quiet, reserved, unassuming fellow, who it is rather difficult to describe more thoroughly than does the above lines by Pope. In the class you would never know more about him than just another student, who laboriously takes notes, comes to classes on time, and leaves at dismissal. However, from his sister at home we learned that he has had a great struggle to study Osteopathy, that he earned and is earning every cent of his educational training, and that he was so ambitious in his Freshman year as to practice his technique on the family poodle, curing it of a long standing case of rhinitis. We voice no doubts for the future success of such a man. u Elizabeth Keitsch chatter oyer stoney ways, In tittle sharps and trebles I bubble into eddying bays I babble on the pebbles. Beth is truly Philadelphian — Philadel- phia born, and now practicing on its poor unsuspecting populace. Beth comes in smiling in the morning and goes home smiling at night — a disposition enviable in this day and place. What is more she seems to thoroughly enjoy every minute of her time spent here. Elizabeth writes poetry now and then — much of it has appeared in P. C. O. publications. This year she was awarded a key for work on the Axone staff, Beth also lists among her hobbies music and art — from them she seems to derive miuch pleasure. In addition to the grave responsibility of occupying a seat near the front of the classroom, Beth has this year been secretary of the class records. S9 Robert Kilburn Lillle drops of water Link grains of sand Make the mighty ocean And a pleasant land. Henry E. Leavitt He goes about hi Ever had laid or As one who knows Man ' s honest wi ,rk as few and hand,— ' s good grace Bob is one of these fellows who sur- prises us by showing hidden ability at a time when it is most needed. Bob has been given many distasteful duties about school, but he always comes up smiling asking for something more to do. He en- joys doing those jobs that mean so much and go so far to render a big under- taidng complete. His work on the Axone Staff was of such a nature that he was chosen without hesitancy for a position on the Synapsis Staff as a Literary Editor, and the results of his diligent ef- forts may be found under the heading of Organizations. Work of this kind entails many interviews and altercations among fraternities and sororities so that it requires a man of Bob ' s easiness of nature to compile such writings in a manner pleasing to all. Pop ' s greatest claim to fame is his exhaustive study of those things pertain- ing to the greatest of all sciences — nerv- ous anatomy, and diseases of the nervous system. He surely keeps our profs on the jump with his pointed inquiries. Last summer, working as a traffic cop up in Massachussetts he kept the erring motorist on the jump. And there is no doubt in our minds that when he gets out in practice he will keep us all on the jump to try to emulate his income. His accomplishments have been almost unbelievable. Going to college all day, working in an American Store all eve- ning and all day Saturdays, taking care of his splendid Nev England wife, and being one of the best students in the Class besides, are attainments of which he could, but never does, boast. 90 H. Monroe Leonard Where is thy learning? Hath thy O ' er books eonsnm ' d the midnight oil? Where yet was ever found a mother Who ' d give her booby for another? Profound and erudite is our class- mate Harry. He ' s another of the boys who comes from the foot of Capitol Hill, up where they make Pennsylvania ' s laws, and there can he no doubt he too will be making laws if not history, if a love for learning has anything to do with the future greatness of a man. For seldom is Harry seen without his nose in a book, and the questions he pops to his profs often go over our heads. We are sure the profession in Harrisburg is eagerly awaiting his return to their midst, for he will not only take with him his scholarship, but a sweet and demure Mrs. Leonard whom we have already come to know and love. Charles MacDonough But h: whose inborn worth his arts commend. Of gentle soul, to human race a friend. —Pope. Bud is another one of those fellows who always seems to come through. Though rather quiet and unassuming one can tell by watching Bud that his powers of concentration are always at play, and we defy most anyone (including Dr Green,) to catch him off his guard. In School and out he has a string of friends who have all they can do to keep from imposing on his everlasting good-nature and willingness. If straight- forwardness of purpose and undivided concentration of effort are two qualities that determine a professional success, we can predict a brilliant future for Bud, whether he chooses to practice among his friends in Frankford or among total strangers. Douglas McQueen A nrf a pipe to sm oke in cold w he rid is good, a d the people a A nd weie all good fellon s togeth Edwin R. Miller ' The gentle minde by gentle deeds is kno For a man by nothing is so well bewrayed As by his manners. Like SO many other students in this College, Doug has been in restraint sini ' ply because the school does not embrace enough activities to suit his abilities, or does he bone the hours of recreation away? We envy Dougs easiness of manner and of self-possession, in fact he is to be classed as smooth. One pictures him in post-college life as mingling with what is termed the better class and of handling successfully a practice who drive up to his porte cochere in highly polished limousines. Lest we do not do justice to Dougs accomplishments, we only ask you to step into the classroom while a student is trying to speak to the class, and receive a sample of his ventriloquism. Ed comes from the beautiful British Isles, the grand old land of John Bull, on whose dominions the sun never sets. Before coming to Philadelphia he pursued his studies in Christopher College, near London. His chief delights are music and art, and surely they are appropriate and well chosen. For John Galsworthy never held an ace with Ed. His charm- ing manners, his gentle personality, and his regal command of the king ' s own English, make him the personification of The Perfect Gentleman. We Am- ericans who learned io know him, will always think more highly of Old Eng- land for her splendid representative, Ed Miller. Kenneth H. Mulkin True happiness consists nol in the muUitudc of friends, B,U in the worth md chmce. —Johnson. Ken comes from Oil City, Pennsyl- vania, where big oil men smoke wicked looking cigars, play poker with inverted diamond rings, and sleep with their boots on. He studied in Grove City College and came to us a grave and serious man. His friends are few, not from necessity, but from choice, for he chooses seldom, but well. Knowing his attributes we feel we can predict for Ken a brilliant future, for his air of gravity, his spirit of solemnity, his habits of sobriety, and his serious sanctity will surely classify him as a profound physician, with a mind which works harder than his tongue and a knov. ' ledge born of observation. From recent observation between classes we find among us a sportsman of unquench ' able spirit. Karleen Nash the neighborhood to Karleen ' s is the instructor ' s ever present help in time of need. She prompts them when words fail and will even explain a joke if occasion demands. Karleen was born in Chicago, attended schools in Wilmington and Germantown, and went a year to the Boston School of Physical Education. Last year she supplemented her training here by a year at Lake Erie College, Ohio. We cannot say too much of this girl ' s athletic ability — for example, she was a member of the varsity hockey team which played the All-American team last year. Socially and professionally, Karleen has affiliations we envy and if these mean anything we prophesy a brilliant career for this classmate. A. Earle Ostermeyer Though the mills of God grind slowly, yel tb :y grind Though with patiences he stands waiting, with exactness grinds he all. —Longfellow. We see little of Earle in extra cur- ricular activities but our understanding of his lesser fortune of working his way through a hard four years of college draws nothing but commendation. We feel that Earle could add much to our athletic standing, for it is supervision of work of this kind that opened the way for him to study Osteopathy. Due to his busy outside life, those of us who are able judge of human character by short acquaintance, feel it worth our while to enjoy his friendship and we can only predict a just reward for one who has striven so conscientiously to attain his goal. Han FORD Petri ' Tis the voice of ihe dussard We have heard him complain Thou hast worked me loo soon, — Selected. Pete is the big Cardio- Vascular man from Rochester, New York, while the class is not just as well acquainted with him as it is with some of its other mem- bers, it is rumored that he is an intimate friend of Dr. Landis of the U. of P., who contributes to the text-book bearing his name. Pete ' s accomplishments are too varied to be numerated in this brief writing, but he is famous as t he Rip Van Winkle of the Class. Whole theories have been builded and abandoned by the professors and students as to how Pete can absorb lectures while he is seemingly oblivious to what is going on in Class, but he evidently has a faculty which none of the rest of us have. M. Carman Pettapiece AnJ I Despa. ' e no hope? the sick nian !nt doctor shook his head, ok his leave with signs of ng of his fee tomorrow. Edward S. Prescott Although Carm comes from way up North in Canada. Philadelphia as- sociates thawed him out and found a warm heart beneath his crust of ice and snow. He is one of these people who is always busy, but Carm is wise in those things with which he chooses to busy himself for he knows hospital routine from beginning to end, having been night superintendent of the Pennsylvania Hos- pital and at present assisting in the De- partment of Roentgenology in our own hospital. With all his ado about every- thing Carm has had the time to make hosts of friends inside and outside of his direct fraternal connections. Bud comes from a family of Osteo- paths, and whether it can be attributed to heridity or no, those who know him must admit that he is one of the most level-headed men in the class. To those who know him least, he may sometimes appear contradictive and argumentative, but to him, a thing that isn ' t logical simply has no place in his ratiocinate. Never advance to him a theory or an argument unless it has a scientific back- ing, for even Mendel couldn ' t put one over on him. His professional bearing and diplomatic procedure will surely win for him a classical future. Barbara Redding Snfl peace she brings, rfherever she Horatio Reigner She hull ds our quiet as sh, iorms our l.re Lays the rough path of peevish Nature e And op ns in each hea rt t little heaven Whoe ' er amidst the sons. Of reason, valor, liberty, a: Displays distmguished meri Of Nature ' s own creating. ' Who is there among us who has never envied Barb her absolute poise, her calm and unassuming nature? Surely these characteristics are fundamental among the prequisites of a physician. Barb isolated herself for two years after high school in the little town of Norton, Massachusetts, attending Wheaton College. She is more or less of an athletic soul and has never been known to refuse a game of tennis or a hike. Music holds a place in her life — and we have been told Barb has talent of her own. This young woman would be a first rate traveling companion, for she has relatives in any given place. Rig is, without a dissenting voice, the best student in the class. Not only has he the best didactic comprehension of his subject, but he is the most practical physician. Going thru life with a handi- cap which would have left the average man lying by the wayside long ago, he still continues to perform wonders. A student of George Washington Uni- versity, and a Doctor of Naturopathy, Rig had a splendid groundwork for .the study of Osteopathy. His beloved avoca ' tions are literature and debatmg. A quiet unassuming manner, a conversa- tion that bespeaks a philosopher, one is made to feel, by his acquaintance, that still waters run deep and true greatness IS not ostentatious. 96 Carrol E. Richardson offin adds , n„,l. no doubt, nn, so merry. dra„i one a George S. Robinson And the heavy night hung dark The hills and waters O ' er, When a band of exiles moored their On a wild New England shore. Richie fills a place in our class that would seem empty without him. He is right at hand with a witty come-back and is the collegiate representative of the gay-spirited members of P. C. O. Al- though Richie has not been foremost in the activities of the College we under- stand that he uses his time to good ad- vantage for whoever heard of him taking re-exams? Perhaps you are wiser, Richie for not allowing outside interests to en- croach upon your most purposeful aim, for few of us can undertake many enter- prises and be successful in all. Anytime that you feel down hearted just stop and pass the time of day with Richie and he ' ll set you right again. George comes from that hardy old New England stock which made that land what she is today. His home stands in the Gateway of the North and in his veins pulsates blood of a hardy race of men. George is an Osteopath to the core. His big ambition is to be a first class obstetrician, and from the number of cases he has to his credit already it certainly looks as if he is going to be one. Back home he was the community veterenarian, but he says delivering a woman is so much more aesthetic than delivering a cow. His reputation with his Ford as The Wild Man from Borneo, makes us believe he will arrive at any destination he sets as his goal. Stanley H. Rowe Lay this into your breast! Old friends, like old swor, Still are trusted best. Charlie ' s attributes are such as to place him in that enviable . category of Golden Friendship. A ruddy grin, a pleasant disposition, and a willingness to give you the shirt off his back, makes him the class friend. Yet his powerful handclasp and the flash of his eyes when his ire is aroused, substantiates his hail- ing from the wilds of Maine where men are bold and women make love. Charlie was a champion in Track back in Heb- ron Academy and in Bates College but his scholastic ability in P. C. O. indi- cates that he cultivates the mind as well as the body. His class record is excellent, his contact with his fellow students im- peachable, and his impression as a phys- ician one that gains his patients ' pro- found respect. Eric A. Sailer Thus I steer my bark, and sail On even keel, with gentle gale. Though pleased the dolphins play, 1 mina my compass ana my way. High tribute must be paid to a student who can boast of a scholastic average such as Eric ' s. Much more than this, however, are other admirable qualities that do not escape attention, which we feel that Eric has developed as well as possessed since we have know him. Al- ways cheerful and willing to perform any duties asked of him, along with a naturally sunny disposition, wins him popularity that is of a lasting quality. Those of us who really know him have often discovered him reading material that is generally though - to be over the heads of more mature men. But these things are mere fiction to Barnacle Bill , and we often wonder how he finds time for such perusing, along with the voluminous assignments he memorizes. 98 Lloyd A. Seyfried His life WdS gentle, and the elemenli So mixed in him. that Nature might s And say to all the world, ' This was a Lloyd belongs to the inseparable duet of Seyfried and Beall , a couple of warm friends from the college of the old Master, Kirksville, Missouri. An erudite gentlemen is Lloyd, having studied pharmacy two years in the Uni- versity of Michigan and holding a B. S. degree from the Kirksville College. We of Philadelphia feel honored indeed to have him with us, for his qualities do not stop with erudition. His approach is pleasant, his manner charming, and his professional bearing such as to be a credit to his fellowmen. Few of us can boast of a disposition of such evenness or a character of such enduring quality. May we try to parallel his ideals! David Shuman Who too deep fo And thought of till went on refining, , whilt they thought of Though equal to all things, for all things Too nice for a statesman, too proud for We feel disconcerted that the above verse could not have been applied to The Philosopher in his Freshman year at P. C. O. For he was then the sum- total of despair of all those with whom he tried to argue. In dissection room or in assembly, in classroom or ampitheater, he tried to prove that what is, isn ' t, and what isn ' t, might be. As one of his fraternity brothers expressed him, Once he makes up his mind, you might as well talk to a stone wall. But a few years of mingling with a professional brother- hood has done worlds for Dave. While he yet delves deeply into all of those things related to the human family, his spirit is tempered with a sense of equili- brium, and his life with a sense of poise. 99 Robert P. Smith Life Is 1 ;« , 1 thought 10 c md all things sho Bob goes through Osteopathy with a light heart. We feel sure that if he can convey to his patients the cheerfulness and contented happiness he himself en- joys he will most surely make a great physician. At the poker table Bob is a student of human nature, a graceful loser and a modest winner. While some may have a misconception of his ability and his sincerity, we who know him best love him best, and are confident that beneath his gay surface lies a depth of soul unfathomed. And our fervent hope is that he may carry with him that joviality when the cares of a heavy prac ' tice encrouch on his even disposition. Aud a sr And wha. Helen Spence sigh to those who love : o those who hate; sky ' s above me, for every fate. Helen had not been with us long be- fore someone affectionately dubbed her Babe — and this name has survived all. Babe ' s keen thinking is an inspiration to those who know her well and we can truly say she is thoroughly sincere in this business of becoming a doctor. Helen came to us from Spring Valley, N. Y. High School where she was active in every phase of extra-curricula life. Among her past laurels are editor of the school magazine and year book and a member of the basketball and track teams. This doctor ' s hobby is bridge and she plays as a master. Well, what better means of a quiet evening at home? George B. Stineman H, knew the comic of every mdladye. Were it of hoot or colde, or moyste or drye. And where engendered and of what humour: He nas a rerrey parfii,hl practisour. —Chaucer. Stiney comes from the city where they make Pennsylvania ' s laws; back where men are men, and legislators take Osteopathic treatment after an all-night session. He is a great student, knows all the pictures in every book by heart, and has his obstetrical bag completely out- fitted with a stethoscope and a pair of forceps. Stiney ' s training has been a rigid one, for before entering Osteopathy he ran Track two years, conducted a band, and was on the Quartermaster Staff of Camp Tobyhanna and Camp Mt. Gretna two years. These, and other indications of ability, lead us to believe he will make a splendid soldier in the ranks of Osteo- pathy — perhaps a general. Harold William Stippich No longer let mc shun my part Amid the busy scenes of life. But with a warm and generous heart Stip is one of the best examples of what a few years of daily mingling with professional associates will do for a man. Coming to us from a small town in Connecticut with a boyish glee that knew no end of boasting how much more my Dad knows than your Dad, he has been cufFed and tumbled, ruffled and kicked, until the diamond of his character has begun to lose its roughness and the lustre shine forth. And we feel sure that lustre will cast abroad a beam which shall enlighten the profession to its ut- most corners and awaken in us a warm glow of admiration for Stip, our class- mate. 101 TOLBERT B. StRUSE, Jr. With grace to win, with heart to hold, With shining gifts that took all eyes. —Emerson. Tod is a Philadelphia man and a genuine credit to the Quaker City. Polished, refined, and always well dressed he came to us with a gayity and a light- ness of spirit carried over from high school days. But a year in Osteopathy found him adopting himself to the seri- ousness of the situation. A scholar too, is Tod and a gentleman of the first de- gree. His disposition sunny, his habits immaculate, and his manner pleasant, it affords us real delight to write his bio- graphy in these few lines, for we do not need to seek for works to pad it, not at- tempt to vainly hide his shortcomings. Marion van Ronk AulH Nature sn rs the lovely dears, Her noblest wo k she CI asses. 0: Her ' prentice h she t led o X man. And then she m ,de Ih lasse s, O. When in doubt as to how to spend your sabbatical year, consult Marion. She has traveled far and wide, and if travel educates one, Marion certainly be con- sidered among the best. We envy any- one who courageously lists travel among her hobbies. Athletics holds a definite place in her scheme of life — especially basketball. She played for the Lankenau School before she came here. Dr. van Ronk is a name already rec- ognized in the profession and Marion will do her best to increase its respect — of that we are v ery sure. 102 C. Raymond Watts And M the I the roll ot Ray, another Chicago man, comes originally from the New England town where the Church Fathers and the Magistrates burned the witches, A man of silent dignity, his chief attraction seems to center in his haughty poise, his indefatigable bearing, and his quiet sense of humor. A member of the trio, Watts, Leavitt, and Robinson, his scholastic ability is of like high caliber with the other two members. We are indebted to Ray for his assistance in organi2;ing a humor section in this book and we can commend him upon having a keen insight into human nature for being able to portray some of the stu ' dents with which he has held such a short acquaintance. Frank L. White noble! And the her men, sleeping I Whitey is another man that does a great deal of work without making much ado about it. He surely seems to get a great deal done, for he pays his way through Osteopathy by holding a position as Physical Director in the Wilmington Y. M. C. A., and in addi- tion to this, finds time to make a women happy, for in his Sophomore year he left the bachelor crew and became a useful citizen. A very good student, a man of high ideals, and a jolly good fellow is Whitey. If ever you want to arrange your schedule of daily living so as to get about four times as much work done as you thought was ever possible, con- sult this able gentleman. Dorothea Willgoose We nndcntood Her by her ii ht: her pure and eloquent blood Spoke in her cheeks, and so distinctly wrought. That one might almost say her body thought. —Donne. Because of lack of space it is impos- sible to express our entire appreciation of one of the hardest and most sincere workers in the College. Dot gives us great cause to wonder when we consider the responsible positions she has so suc- cessfully held during a scant three years of association with P. C. O., besides maintaining an enviable scholastic record. Taking over the editorship of the Axone Dot produced a quarterly publication that had never before been paralled, and for which we could scarcely wait to ap- pear as each quarter rolled around. We regret that through unforseen circum- stances she had to forego the editing of this Synapsis. Lest you gather that Dot ' s ability lies solely in editing just follow her around for a seven-day week and observe her associations. Always chee r- ful always obligmg and always profes- sional. Robert K. Wilson O man of silent mood, A stranger among strangers thzn, HoTf art thou since renouned the Great, the Good, Familiar as the day in homes of men! —Lowell. The profound, the inexplicable Bob . Another one of these learned gentlemen from the Chicago College. He rarely speaks, but when he does, he speaks as one with authority. We cannot say the above verse describes him as accurately as it should, for we might change the last line to read, Familiar as the day in clinic dens, for he certainly seems to be a physician in much demand as he bobs in and out of the long line of little doors downstairs, clad in formal white gown and a serious look that would do justice to a magistrate. There must have been left an unreplacable vacancy when Bob left Chicago for we could never willingly permit him to make another change, we feel his presence is an addi- tion to the intelligentsia of the Class. 104. William B. Wilson g,.da Bill is the portly, well nourished gentleman from over back of Wall Street. Somehow or other we just couldn ' t get along without Bill, with his jolly sense of humor and unquenchable good nature. Bill says, in the olden days it used to be that a fella would take a coupla of ten cent cigars out of his vest pocket and lay them on the mantle be- fore sitting down on the sofa with his girl, but nowadays the girl reaches for a Lucky and doesn ' t give a damn whether you ' re sweet or not. Bill ' s qualifications do not stop with his disposition and his sense of humor, for he is an Osteopath to the core. We know his patients will imbibe much of his joviality and receive a stimulation of the sphenopalatine ganglion psychcially if he misses the spot physically. P.AUL Howard Zea, Jr. im f„end,h,p no cold medum kn nlh m:c lovf, with one resen!menl Erratic, fanciful, changeable, excitable, generous hearted Paul. What a colorful prismic beam is his acquaintance on the drab screen of life. He knows but one consistency and that is friendship. His ideas may vascillate, his desires and am- bitions oscillate, his opinions dubitate, and his tastes alternate, but let him once choose you as his friend and you are his till the Rock of Gibralter be upset by a herring and sink into the sea. Like Huxley, he believes that error may not silence a man ' s tongue, but drives his conversations home along the line of his convictions, with mind ever open to new truths as they may be revealed to him. Wc are convinced our profession is made richer by the addition of this interesting gentleman. 105 Junior History President JOHN ElMERBRINK Vice-President Eugene Casey Secretary Beth Keitsch Treasurer Frank A. Beidi.er Back in the fall of ' 28, a group of enthusiastic truth seekers assembled at the old Osteopathic home at 18th and Spring Garden Streets, to delve into the profundities and morals of that grand science. Osteopathy. Our ranks were filled by a cosmopolitan aggregation, having representatives from twelve states, Canada, England, Ireland and France. Moreover previous college training had prepared more than forty per cent, of our group for our future profession, which perhaps accounts for the commendatory opinions of the faculty as to our ability surpassing that of heretofore enrollments. So immediately our standards were established by such just complimentation and hence our aim out of necessity had to be lofty. The onset of organization was rapid. Our class officers were elected early and their duties efficiently carried out. With such capable leaders, careful planning of our dance committee and splendid class co-operation we were able to entertain our superiors most delightfully and successfully at the Rittenhouse Hotel. Aside from this social function our talent was employed in the entertainments supplied by the Neurone Soci ' ety to further mutual good-will toward our class-mates and upperclassmen. Few of us can forget the unevenness of that dance floor in our classroom, where all our school dances too place! Fraternities and sororities appeared in the horizon of our attention early, affording many of us enjoyable rushes . Many of us are at present members of such organiza- tions for the purpose of better advancing the field of our chosen profession. Academically, our attention was constantly focused upon the necessity of learning the bare fundamentals of our science that we prepare ourselves properly to comprehend the scope of future practical work, fiowever, such drudgery was soon to pay dividends for our labors, so on and on we plugged with our high aim constantly in view, always reaping knowledge for future use. Thus, an otherwise uneventful year passed on into the Sophomorism. Our Sophomore year was in reality a continuation of the previous year insofar as scholastic responsibilities were concerned, as we were still in the throes of subjects relating to fundamentals of an even more complicated nature. However, in spite of such basic, comparatively dull engagement we were able to get an insight into wnat our persistent labors were to harvest. Reorganization brought a new group of officers to continue the work of those retiring. Our members were slightly reduced by a few who found it impossible to continue with us. The event of this year that was outstanding in our minds as well as everyone interested in the advancement of Osteopathy, was the occupancy of our new college and hospital, at 48th and Spruce Streets. This, indeed was an inspiration to us because of the facilities afforded and added to our already inspired desire to become proficient, as well as being proud of our Alma Mater. We were rightfully proud be- cause our share of the expense in construction of the new edifice was wiUingly borne by our members as evidenced by the pledges gathered from our midst. The remainder of our Sophomore year shpped by quietly while we were enjoying our new quarters. At the conception of our Junior year we were pleasingly surprised to find and glad to welcome six new members to our ranks from the Chicago College of Osteopathy. At election we unanimously retained John (Pop) Eimerbrink as our Class President. Because of his well qualified abilities to negotiate such an ofiice to the approval of all. We feel that we owe much to Pop for what he has contributed to our Class in the way of leadership and counsel, not to mention his scholastic abilities, the offices of Vice-President, Secretary and Treasurer were bestowed upon Eugene Casey, Beth Keitsch and Frank Beidler respectively. Early in the fall we followed in the footsteps of the Seniors by sponsoring a Benefit Dance, the proceeds being turned over to the Campaign Fund. Just before the Christmas holidays some of the hidden talent of the Class was whisked into the limelight when stunts given by the diflFerent Classes were exhibited in the College auditorium under direction of Dr. Hessdorfer. Field trips in Hygiene throughout our first semester also called our attention to certain matters of health and sanitation as carried out m Philadelphia, and we learned many of the schemes whereby the public is protected from the invasion of certain dangerous little creatures. Without exception our trip to the Mulford Laboratories was the most illuminating of these, while at best, we can ' t say we would be overanxious to review the trip to the Sewage Disposal Plant. Our great adventure now is being student physicians in the clinic where we are privileged to apply our knowledge of Osteopathy and watch its marvelous workings. But for those tedious hours back in the years of seemingly endless toil little could we do to guard our reputation. It almost seems that we are off on the right foot inasmuch as patients swarm to the clinic beyond capacity. May we alleviate such a condition by speeding up the discharge list to a record point. We fancy there are hidden possibilities. Stanley H. Rowe Junior T)irectory Axte!!, Walter Deposit, N. Y. Barnhurst, William ?307 Arnslie St., Phila., Pa. Beach, Orrin 869 Farmington Ave., West Hartford, Conn. Beall, Francis Syracuse, N. Y. Beidler, Frank 318 W. 2nd St., Birdsboro, Pa. Bennett, Lawrence 18 Johnson Ave., West Medford, Mass. Berry, James 46 Monell Ave., Islip, N. Y. Boone, Emily 116 Hillyer St., East Orange, N. J. Bradford, William 406 Delaware Ave., Wilmington, Delaware Brett, Earle 30 Dunbarton Rd., Woolaston, Mass. Burget, Richard 2117 11th St., Altoona, Pa. Calmar, Joseph 836 E. Edgewood Ave., Westfield, N. J. Casey, Eugene 570 Riverside Drive, Johnson, N. Y. Coles, Charlesanna 6742 Irving Ave., Merchantville, N. J. Cronan, Bernard 20 Warren St., Norwood, Mass. Davis, Harry 20 Morris St., Morristown, N. J. Davis, Paul 3 Mascot St., Dorchester, Mass. Dealy, Frank 12 1 3 W. Somerset St., Phila., Pa. DuBell, Mildred 1415 Baird Ave., Camden, N J. Dunleavey, Thomas 36 Maple Ave., Barre, Vt. Earley, John 4413 Walnut St., Phila., Pa. Eimerbrink, John 1406 S. 5 1st St., Phila., Pa. Evans, Dorothy 348 Summer St., New Bedford, Mass. Evans, Francis 348 Summer St., New Bedford, Mass. Eyarts, C. Wallace 734 Louisa St., WiUiamsport, Pa. Ferren, Edwin 3 188 Westfield Ave., Camden, N. J. Fish, Arthur 144 29th Rd., Flushing, N. Y. Friberg, Harry 99 High St., Winchester, Mass. Gagen, Claire 124 Ashmont St., Ashmont, Mass. German, Arthur 2022 Spring Garden St., Phih., Pa. Gregory, Paul Y. M. C. A., Kingston, N. Y. Hahn, Arnold 4 -21 Spruce St., Phila., Pa. Hartsell, Willard 302 Main St., Souderton, Pa. Hershey, Lloyd Ronks, Pa Hoffman, Linford 27 Laurel Rd., Yeadon, Pa. Holbrook, C. Tyler East Haven, Conn Kaiser, Walter Atlantic Highlands, N. J Keitsch, Elisabeth 602 Spring Ave., Noble, Jenkintown P. O., Pa 108 Kilburn, Robert I43 Trinity Ave., Lowville, N Y. Korten, Frank - 613 OTallon Ave., Dayton, Ky. Kruse, Charles 140 E. Chillicothe, Belief ontaine, Ohio Leavitt, Henry 1 1 Lincoln St., Stoneham, Mass. Leonard, Harry 4818 Cedar Ave., Apt. 4, Phila., Pa. MacDonough, Charles 1 101 Wakeling St., Phila., Pa. McQueen, Douglas 107 Linden Ave., Middletown, N. Y. Miller, Edwm Newport, Monmouthshire, England Mulkin, Kenneth Hampton Station, Oil City, Pa. Nash, Karleen 522 E. Gorgas Lane, Mt. Airy, Phila., Pa. O ' Rahilly, Niall 40 Herbert Park, Dublin, Ireland Oster.mayer, Earl 319 82nd St., Brooklyn, N Y. Petri, Hanford 962 N. Plymouth Ave., Rochester, N. Y. Pettapiece, Milton 30 James St., Ottawa, Ont., Canada Prescott, Edward 205 Clarke St., Syracuse, N. Y. Purse, Monro 127 Elmwood Ave., Narberth, Pa. Redding, Barbara 541 Webster Ave., New Rochelle, N. Y. Reigner, Horatio Maine St., Royersford, Pa. Richardson, Carrol 854 S. Orange Ave., Newark, N. Y. Robinson, George, S Forrest Hill Ave., Lynnfield, Center, Mass. Rowe, Stanley 36 Lake St., Auburn, Maine Sailor, Eric Bernardsville, N. J. Schlacter, Alfred 212 Park Place, Orange, N. J. Seyfried, Lloyd 3 12 E. Ann St., Ann Arbor, Michigan Shuman, David 4600 Disston St., Phila., Pa. Simon, Robert, L 318 Hall St., Orriville, Ohio Smith, Robert 324 Crafton Ave., Pitman, N. J. Spence, Helen 73 Sterling Ave., White Plains, N. Y. Stineman, George 1214 N. 15th St., Harrisburg, Pa. Stippich, Harold 50 Winthrop Terrace, Meriden, Conn. Spade, N 6 Morningside Ave., New York City, N. Y. Struce, Tolbert 675 E. Rector St., Roy, Phila., Pa. Szymanski, John 1638 Berks St., Phila. , Pa. Talmadge, Norman Morris Plains, N J. vanRonk, Marion 640 E. Chelten Ave., Germantown, Phila., Pa. Watts, Raymond 56 Appleton St., Salem, Mass. White, Frank 6 Doane St., Bradford, Mass. Willgoose, Dorothea Noyes St., Needham, Mass. Wilson, Robert 1779 Vista Del Mar, Hollywood, California Wilson, William 523 E. 29th St., Brooklyn, N. Y, Zea, Paul 1 309 Dorchester Rd., Brooklyn, N. Y. DeMelfy, F 406 S. 45th St., Phila., Pa. 109 Sophomore History President KENNETH A. ScOTT Vice-President William E. MacDougall Treasurer Henry Goldner Secretary L, LuciLE LuiNSDEN Now, let me see . . . I ' ve got to find out something about this fellow Scott. I wonder if he really deserves to pass my course. It ' s so important. I believe Til call Dr. Dressier. He ought to know Mr. Scott. He seems to be quite congenial with the students. Miss Rogers, please get me Dr. Dressier on the phone. Oh, hello. Hello, Dr. Dressier. I hope Fm not intruding on your time. I only want a minute. . . . I ' ve been looking over my reports and I can ' t quite convince myself that Mr. Scott should pass this course. He has a very good paper here, but I ' ve concluded that marks don ' t mean everything, but that effort should count for some- thing. Now for instance, Mr. McDougall, I had to ask him to sit in the front row to hold his attention. Now, Dr. Dressier, my idea of a real student is Mr. Noeling. He is so attentive, and it does my heart good to hear his answers, for I feel that he has an excellent, analytic mind and has the power of true correlation. But, I surely did have my troubles, with Miss Alleman and Mr. Adams, and Miss Bowden and Mr. Brown. They seemed to vie with each other as to who could whisper the loudest and the longest, and from all I hear you have encountered the same situation. I had some difficulty in getting the attention of the class, especially when Mr. Leedy, Mr. Tom Nicholl, Mr. Ladd, and Mr. Hilborn were rendering one of their numbers — but really Dr. Dressier, don ' t you think those dear boys should have their voices trained? But at that they sound better than they did last year when they had the piano down in the old building and couldn ' t hit the key at the beginning to start them off. And doctor, don ' t you think Miss Farrand is doing well this year considering the number of times she slept through Anatomy last year? You know, I always felt con- fident when I went in to teach the Freshman class last year, because I knew if anything happened to me Black was there as my advisor, or substitute, if necessary. Yes, yes Dr. Dressier. I ' ve noticed how attentive Mr. Black was in my class, — and so quiet, I often wondered if he were asleep. And there ' s a dear boy in the Sophomore class, who has a very high type mind as I have diagnosed from his dreams, Mr. Davis, who was so interested in the work that he dearly loved to investigate the writings of other authors who elaborated more on the nervous mechanism that Mr. Ranson. Oh, yes I remember. Ranson has taken the subject matter and boiled it down, and boiled it down, and boiled it down until every word is important. I was reading Tinley and Riley and — By the way, Mr. Paul Miller was in my office this afternoon and he has finally philosophically accepted the inevitable and concludes that Osteopathy surpasses carbon arc lamps. And doctor, do you suppose a carbon arc lamp would strengthen Mr. Toomey ' s teeth? He seems to lose them as frequently as I do my scarfs, and poor Mr. Willoughby! It just seems too bad that the Sophomores have so much fun at the expense of his derby. I hear that Mr. Steele was very successful in demonstrating to Prof. Erb the esteem of the class as signified by the salute offered in Chemistry lecture the other day. Oh just a minute, doctor. A patient has just come in. Perhaps Fd better hang up. I just meant to take a minute of your time. I hope I haven ' t interrupted. Well, goodbye my friend. Goodness me! What did I call Dr. Dressier for? . . . Oh, how do you do, Mrs. MacDonough! Come right in, this dressing room is unoccupied. Mary Stearns. Lucille Lumsden. Sophomore T irectory Adams, Everett 4614 Spruce St., Phila., Pa. Alleman, Rachel Middletown, Pa. Beach, Arnold Lakeville, N. Y. Beam, Herbert 2715 North 6th St., Harrisburg, Pa. Bowden, Alice Yaidley Rd., Yaidley, Pa. Bowers, Frederick 5316 DeLancey St., Phila., Pa. Brown, Arnold 5 3 Ocean View Ave., South Portland, Maine Champion, John 4012 Primrose Rd., Torresdale, Pa. Chapman, Eunice 10 Fairfield Ave., Holyoke, Mass. Christenson, Harold 773 Springfield Ave., Summit, N .J. Cohen, Theodore 1204 W. State St., Trenton, N. J. Coiffe, James 121 Spring St., Medford, Mass. Costello, Frank 8 Atlantic Ave., Providence, R. I. Craver, Lloyd 215 Erie St., Syracuse, N. Y. Crowley, Jeremiah, B.Ph 105 Walnut St., East Providence, R. I. Dash, Hugh 539 Franklin Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. Davis, Ralph 842 Park Place, Ocean City, N. J. Eisenhart, Marie Torresdale, Phila., Pa. Fagen, Leonard 5350 Ariington St., Phila., Pa. Farley, Louis, A.B 709 Maryland Ave., Syracuse, N. Y. Farrand, Adelaide 1250 Logan Ave., Tyrone, Pa. Flack, Arthur, A.B 3414 Baring St., Phila., Pa. Frazer, James 1 18 E. Moreland Ave., Chestnut Hill, Phila., Pa. Frizon, George 5316 DeLancey St., Phila., Pa. Garland, Earl 31 Duke St., East Greenwich, R L Garland, Leroy 52 Sackett St., Providence, R .L George, Henry 241 S. 49th St., Phila., Pa. Gerber, Solomon 1461 46th St., Brooklyn, N. Y. Goldner, Henry, A.B 2528 Edgehill Rd., Cleveland, Ohio Grimes, William 144 Willowood Drive, Dayton, Ohio Hartman, Herman, B.S 7114 Oxford St., Phila., Pa. Heaslip, Charles 99 Highbourne Rd., Toronto, Ont., Canada Hilborn, Roscoe R. F. D. No. 4, Portland, Maine Hoffman, Alfred 92 Ivy St., Newark, N. J. Howe, Harold 64 Brentwood St., Portland, Maine Joslin, Milton 35 Elm St., Webster, Mass. Kaufman, WiUiam 526 Robineau Rd., Syracuse, N. Y. Kino-, Avila 16 Osborne St., Fairfield, Maine Kurt-;, Martin 1 197 Grand Concourse, New York, N. Y. Ladd, Lincoln 48th and Osage Sts., Phila., Pa. Leedy, Richard, B.P.E 313 Falls Ave., Youngstown, Ohio Levine, Julius ' . 213 Orchard St., New Haven, Conn. Levy, Moe, B.S 1101 Myrtle Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. Lovitt, Harry Black Horse Pike, Runnemede, N. J. Lumsden, Lucile, A.B Ashland, Virginia Martin, Basil, B.S Allegheny St., Bellefonte, Pa. McCormick, Ignatius, L 7124 Hill Top Rd., Bywood, Delaware Co., Pa. McCroary, Stanton 23 Second St., Pittsfield, Mass. McDout?alI, William, B.S 575 S. Braddock Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. Miller, Paul, A.B 2221 Chew St., Allentown, Pa. Murphy, Paul 573 Woodland Terrace, Phila., Pa. Nicholl, Jane 5038 Griscom St., Phila., Pa. Nicholl, Robert 8132 Elberon Ave., Fox Chase, Phila., Pa. Nicholl, Thomas 8132 Elberon Ave., Fox Chase, Phila., Pa. Noeling, George 2658 S. 73rd St., Phila., Pa. Nordstrom, Ray Y. M .C. A., Providence, R. I. Ogden, Irving 398 Douglas Ave., Providence, R. I. O ' Sullivan, George 7 Castleton Park St., St. George, Staten Island, N. Y C. Pratt, Warren 26 Church St., Oneonta, N Y. Price, Morton, B.S 128 Lyon Place, Lynbrook, N.Y. Ramsey, Wayne 1 126 Foulknor St., Phila., Pa. Rapp, Jack 5724 Hazel Ave., Phila., Pa. Riley, Harold 432 Tyler St., Trenton, N. J. Root, Joseph -31 E. Phil-EUena St., Germantown, Pa. Rosenthal, Ellis 2 Louise Ave., Troy, N. Y. Rothman, David, Ph.G 7400 Elmwood Ave., Phila., Pa. Schantz, Lois 120 Penn. Ave., Souderton, Pa. Scott, Kenneth, A.B Greenleigh Court Apts., Merchantville, N. J. Shaw, St. Clair 4800 Walnut St., Apt. 9, Phila., Pa. Smingler, Frederick 126 S. 39th St., Phila., Pa. Smuhan, Nathan 102 N. Hermirage Ave., Trenton, N. J. Snyder, Charles 6347 Ross St., Germantown, Pa. Stearns, Mary 5 Church St., Schenectady, N. Y. Steele, Robert 122 Wilson St., Lynbrook, L. I., N. Y. Strever, Hewett 254 Hewley St., Rochester, N. Y. Surfield, Ruth Tremont, Pa. Tapper, George 508 Tortle St., Syracuse, N. Y. Toomey, Timothy 309 Chestnut St., Coatesville, Pa. Walter, J. Nelson 833 E. Main St., Clarion, Pa. Wiley, Kenneth 105 Summer St., Maiden, Mass. Williams, Howard 2 Verdun Ave., New Rochelle, N. Y. Willoughby, Hugh, A.B 928 Chateau Ave., P. H., Cincinnati, Ohio Woodhull, John 33 Fifth Ave., N. Y. City, N. Y. Young, William 27 Lenox Place, Middletown, N. Y. Zeldin, ' Benjamin 250 S. 52nd St., Phila., Pa. 116 vmf w£ Jreshman Qlass Officers President Newton C. Allen Vice-President C. Markel Becker Secretary Martha Bailey Treasurer Beverly Sparling Jreshman T irectory Adelman, Sidney 58 Conwell Ave., Somerville, Mass. Allen, Newton C, O.D., N.D 4801 Chestnut St., Phila., Pa. Alvarez, Vincent 224 Eighth Ave., Haddon Heights, N. J. Antry, Adele 5927 Chestnut St., Phila., Pa. Armstrong, Pearl 14 A St., Providence, R. I. Assaiante, John 13 East 42nd St., Sea Island City, N. J. Bailey, Martha 3716 Manayunk Ave., Wissahickon, Phila., Pa. Bailey, Mary 3716 Manayunk Ave., Wissahickon, Phila., Pa. Baker, ' Steven, N.D 5339 Arhngton St., Phila., Pa. Baldwin, Clarence 2936 N. 26th St., Phila., Pa. Barrett, Robert, Ph.G 72 Everett St., ArHngton, Mass. Bears, Don 63 Riverside Drive, Deferiet, N. Y. Beck, ' Alexander 1701 68th Ave., Phila., Pa. Beck, Russell 587 South Broadway, Meduia, Ohio Becker, C. Markel, A.B 129 N. Duke St., Lancaster, Pa. Beckman, John 7813 Seventy-Third Place, Glendale, L. I. Berwick, Thomas 78 Ellen St., New Bedford, Mass. Bi ar, Joseph 3 South St., Middletown, N. Y. Blackstone, ' Michael 1605 Easton Ave., Bethlehem, Pa. Blass, George 4611 Spruce St., Phila., Pa. Blom, Harry 706 Risley Ave., Pleasantville, N. J. Boucrhner, Edwin 101 East Sunbury St., Shamokin, Pa. Boshart, Floyd R. F. D. No. 4, LowviUe. N. Y. Butterworth, Crawford 299 N. Mountain Ave., Upper Montclair, N. J. Campbell, James 26 Royal Ave., Rockville Center., L, I. Canfield, Tom 3308 Broad Ave., Altoona, Pa. Cann, Donald, B.S 38 Grove St., Waterbury, Conn. Caverly, Fred 127 Madison Ave., Clifton, N. J. Conkhn, Roger Sugarloaf, N. Y. Cooker, John 4450 N. 19th St., Phila., Pa. Cooper, Mary Ellen 1136 Edson Ave., Johnstown, Pa. Coryell, Gordon 214 West Ave., East Rochester, N. Y. Cousineau, Jeanette 264 Mam St., Holyoke, Mass. Cram, Frank Fort Fairfield, Fort Fairfield, Maine Davis, Vera 840 Park Ave., Ocean City, N. J. DeHorsey, Albert 124 N. Scott Ave., Glenolden, Pa. Dickerman, Charles, A.B 2817 Connecticutt Ave., Washington, D. C. Fesser, Dewitt 417 Raymond St., Cherry Chase, Maryland Fifer, Louis 128 Lismore Ave., Glenside, Pa. Finn, John 461 Spring St., Newport, R. I. Francis, George 58 Rochester Ave., Scottsville, N. Y. Freeman, Sylvester 1809 South 6th St., Phila., Pa. Frey, Carl 1545 East Market St., York, Pa. Gallagher, William 19 Robinson Ave., Danbury, Conn. Gerow, Harrison 613 West 18th St., Wilmington, Delaware GifFord, Daniel 144 E. Morelant St., Phila., Pa. Glass, Edward 4817 Warrington Ave., Phila., Pa. Goudy, Robert 37 West Main St., Tremont, Pa. Green, Simon, Ph.G 601 E. Allegheny Ave., Phila., Pa. Greene, Phillip 32 Center St., Oneonta, N. Y. Griese, Stanley 16 Fourth St., South Orange, N. J. Hales, John 1611 N. Broad St., Phila., Pa. Hall, Elwyn 637 Washington St., Hachettstown, N. J. Hall, Lawrence R. D. No. 1 Box 143 A., Schnectady, N. Y. Harris, Walter 17 Warren Ave., Leicester, Mass. Hillard, Henry 812 N. Shipper St., Lancaster, Pa. Hilliard, Kirk 31 Loraine Ave., Pleasantville, N J. Hilton, William 79 Clifton Place., Jersey City, N. J. Hitchcock, William 45-30 Lowery St., Long Island City, N. Y. Hoag, Marshall 517 West 171 St., New York, N. Y. Hornbeck, Gordon 127 N. Hamilton St., Poughkeepsie, N. Y. Irwin, Horatio 308 West 91 St., New York City, N. Y. Jeffery, William 140 Tallman St., New Bedford, Mass. Jones, Ruth : 56-70 136th St., Flushing, N. Y. Kaplan, Maurice, Ph.G 2533 S. Mildred St., Phila., Pa. Karlton, George 165 Main St., Keyport, N. J. King, Alan Red Thome, Ferrily, E. York, England King, Henry Red Thorne, Ferrily, E. York, England Knodt, Oskar 168 Main St., Ossining, N. Y Knox, Mayolu 160 Austin St., Worcester, Mass Kramer, Morris, Ph.G 609 West 2nd St., Phiia., Pa Krauss, Alfred ' 340 Chestnut St., Phila., Pa Kuna, Milan 44 Milford Ave., Newark, N. J Kupzewski, Sylvester - ' J Palisade Ave., Garfield, N- J Kurtz, Barbara -- 1 Barron Ave., Johnstown, Pa Lange. Hans 4126 171st St., Flushing Long Island, N. Y Lessi , Philip 610 W. Roosevelt Blvd., Phila., Pa Lockhart, John 968 Fourth Ave., New Kerrington, Pa Machon, Cecil 24 Rena St., North Providence, R. I Martin, Leo 649 Chestnut St., Columbia, Pa. Markey, Ernest 510 W. Jackson St., York, Pa. Matteson, Reginald 1 1 19 E. Genesee St., Syracuse, N. Y. McDonnell, Edward State St., Groveton, N. H. Merkley, Edwin 71 Park Ave., New York City, N. Y. Miller, Gerard 237 Mayle St., Brooklyn, N. Y., 6? St. Cloud, Florida Morse, Edwin 43 Gould Ave., Maiden, Mass. Murdock, Maurice Prescott, Ontario, Canada Murphy, Lona 85 Ridge Rd., Yonkers, N. Y. Nemier, Gertrude R. F. D. No. 1, Lacona, N. Y. Newman, Theodore 53-12 94th St., Elmhurst, L. I., N. Y. Nikola, George 76 Central Ave., Spring Valley, N. Y. Ostroff, Nathan 323 1 N. Front St., Phila., Pa. Poglitsch, Frank, D.A., Sc.N.D 147 Lyons St., New Britain, Conn. Pohlig, WiUiam 564 Beacon Ave., Paulsboro, N. J. Porias, Joseph 2271 Morris Ave., Bronx, N. Y. Reese, Frank 305 George Ave., Parsons, Wilkes-Barre, Pa. Robinson, Dwight 1009 East 26th St., Erie, Pa. Ruch, Roy 113 S. Hawk St., Albany, N. Y Rusicka, Ernest 314 Jenkintown Rd., Elkins Park, Pa Schubert, Melvin 4722 Chestnut St., Phila., Pa. Selisker, Lewis 5845 DeLancey St., Phila., Pa. Shaw, PeaH 192 Church St., Logan, Ohio Sigal, Louis 25 1 N. Center St., Orange N. J. Sinagra, Fortunato 2305 Arctic Ave., Atlantic City, N J. Smith, Edward 38 Colton Ave., Sayville, L. L, N. Y. Smith, Stewart 39 E. Lake St., Skaneateleo, N. Y. Sobel, Julius, Ph.G 5329 Race St., Phila., Pa. Sparling, Beverly 375 Clifton Ave., Newark, N. J. Street, Harry Southampton, N. Y. Sweet, John 38 Spring St., Newport, R. L Swift, Arline 153 E. Chestnut St., Lancaster, Pa. Szalay, Stephen 93 Lakeview Ave., Clifton, N. J. Tienvieri, Tovi 4517 Regent St., Phila., Pa. Urquhart, Roderick Box 393, East Jaffrey, N. H. Van Wagener, Simon 855 E. Rittenhouse St., Phila., Pa. Vinton, Roger 1655 East Main St., Rochester, N. Y. Walker, Stephen 32 N. Sunset Ave., Dayton, Ohio Walsh, James 22 Sibley St., Providence, R. L Walsh, Jerome 501 West 13th St., Wilmington, Delaware Watkins, Robert Hop Bottom, Pa. Watson, Vernon 320 Township Line, Cheltenham, Pa. Wheeler, Kenneth 391 Beale St., Woolaston, Mass. Wilson, H. Clifford 418 Eleventh St., Niagara Falls, N. Y. Woods, Ernest 62 Milk St., Worcester, Mass. Zimmerman, John 974 Bridge St., Frankford, Phila., Pa. ' % ' Pre- Osteopathic ' Directory Andrews, Warren 168 Davis Ave., Auburn, Maine Bernstein, Leon 1422 S. 58th St., Phila., Pa. Cole, Glen 133 N. Newberry St., York, Pa. Corkum, Zenas 16 Mechanic St., Gorham, N. H. Golden, Abraham 311 Shipley St., Wilmington, Delaware Incababian, Edith 300 West Fourteenth St., Wilmington, Delaware Lenz, Frederick 119 Kenyon Ave., East Greer, vvich, R. I. Maxwell, D. Deane I82 2 Washington St., Carbondale, Pa. Mines, Julian 2618 West Somerset St., Phila., Pa. Phillips, Ralph 63 Wayne St., Carbondale, Pa. Rutberg, Leon : 3215 Diamond St., Phila., Pa. Shaw, Harry 718 N. 48th St., Phila., Pa. Troxell, Reuben 5130 Tacony St., Phila., Pa. Wilson, Herbert 47th and Pine Sts., (Garden Court Plaza, E-9) Phila., Pa. Wmton, Charles 910 South 57th St., Phila., Pa. Woodcuff, Albert 7354 W. Passyunk Ave., Phila., Pa. ORGANIZATIONS Osteopathic Jraternities at v. C. 0. Fraternity Chapter Kappa Psi Delta Beta Established 1908 Iota Tau Sigma Delta Established 1909 Phi Sigma Gamma Zeta Established 1917 Axis Club Mastoid Established 1919 Theta Psi Gamma Estabhshed.1923 Atlas Club Styloid Established 1924 Lambda Omicron Gamma Caduceus Established 1924 In Order of Establishment INTER-FRATERNITY— SORORITY COUNCIL This body of students is composed of a representative of each of the fraternities and sororities of the College. Its purpose is to deal with the problems of interest to the or- ganization and to pass upon rules governing rushing and pledging throughout the year. The Council is assisted by a Faculty governing board so that the academic standing of the prospective members of the organization may be taken into consideration before membership is permitted. Members : First Row: Clar , Deichelman, Cuinand. Second Row: Randolph, Chapman, WiHgoose, Otto. K ppa Vsi T elt a BETA CHAPTER Established November 7, 1908 SORORES IN FACULTATE Sarah W. Rupp, D.O. Marion Dick, D.O. Mary Patton Hitner, D.O. Helen Conway, D.O. Gwenyth Chapman SORORES IN COLLEGIO Class of ' 31 Beatrice Kratz Mildred DuBell Helen Spence Class of ' 32 Beth Keitsch Marion VonRonk Class of ' 33 Alice Bowden Jane Nicholl Ethel Sacrey Class of ' 34 Netha Stanton Marion Mills Barbara Kurtz Adelc Antry Lena Murphy Sacrey, Chapman, Bowden, TSficholI, Kratz, DuBell, Keitsch. Front — Spence, Murphy, Kurtz, Antry, Vayi Ron . ROLL OF CHAPTERS Alpha Chapter Los Angeles, Cal. Beta Chapter Philadelphia, Pa. Gamma Chapter Chicago, 111. Delta Chapter Des Moines, Iowa Epsilon Chapter Kirksville, Mo. 131 LAxis Qlub SORORES IN FACULTATE Elizabeth Ruth Tinley, D.O. Ruth H. Winant, D.O. Mildred Fox, D.O. Paula M. Elias, D.O. SORORES IN COLLEGIO Class o il Ag. tha Crocker Isabel Johnson Class of ' 32 Emily Boone M. Claire G. gen Charlesanna B. Coles Karleen Nash Dorothy Evans Barbara Redding Dorothea M. Willgoose Class 0 ' 33 Mary Stearns Marie Eisenhart Eunice Chapman Lucille Lumsden Rachel Alleman Adelaide Farrand Lois Shantz Class 0 ' hA Mary Ellen Cooper Vera D.wis Martha Bailey Jeannette Cousineau Mary Elizabeth Bailey Gertrude Neimer Ruth Jones M.ay ' ola Knox Aline Swift ■■Top: Cooper, Knox, Farrand Mljmis j li B iiLy Second: Alleman, Lumsden, Conxmeaii, Dains, Bailey, Sii ' i t, Eiserihart, hlcmier, Jones. Third: Croc er, Coles, Shantz, Redding, WiHgoose, Boone, Evans, Cagen, Chapmayi. ROLL OF CHAPTERS Odontoid Chapter Kirksville, Mo. Hyoid Chapter Chicago, 111. Sphenoid Chapter Des Moines, Iowa Mastoid Chapter Philadelphia, Pa. Arachnoid Chapter Boston, Mass. Ethmoid Chapter Los Angeles. Cal. 133 Iota Tau Sigma DELTA CHAPTER Founded May 21, 1903 Fratres in Facultate Edward G. Drew, D O. C. D. B. Balbirnie, Ph.G., DO. Ir,a W. Drew, D.O. William S. Nicholl, D.O. Peter H. Brearly, D.O. John H. Bailey, Ph.G., D.O. James B. Eldon, D.O. Francis J. Smith, D.O. H. Willard Sterrett, D.O. H. Walter Evans, D.O. Edgar O. Holden, A.B., D.O. Edward A. Green, A.B., DO. Established 1909 Ch.arles B. ' rber, D.O. William O. G.albre.ath, D.O. George L. Lewis, D.O. Leo C. Wagner, D.O. Donald Acton, D.O. H. Mahlon Gehman, D.O. Richard Ammerman, D.O. WiLLi.AM Champion, D.O. Earle H. Gedney, D.O. William J. Nairn, A.B., M.A. Harmon Y. Kiser, D.O. Joseph Py, D.O. Martin Beeman Harold W. Gorham William Guinand Arthur G. Jewell Robert B. Kring Frank A. Beidler Thomas P. Dunleavy Harry Davis Arthur Fish Harry E. Friberg Walter Kaiser, Jr. Lloyd Craver ROSCOE HiLBORN Richard Leedy Vincent Alvarez John Beckman, Jr. William Gallagher Stanley Griese . Fratres in CoWegio Class of ' 31 Arthur J. McKelvie George Miller William W. Miner William J. Nairn Stevon G. Naylor Class of ' 32 Charles A. Kruse Henry Leavitt Douglas McQueen Carmen Pettapiece Monroe Purse George S. Robinson Robert K. Wilson Class of ' 33 George Tapper Robert Steele Thomas Nichol Class of ' 34 John Hales Frank Reese Melvin Shubert 134. Wllard a. Shackelton Harry A. Sweeney Edward R. Theiler, Jr. Daniel Towner Robert C. Warner Eric A. Sailer Robert L. Simon David Shuman George B. Stineman Norman C. Talmage C. Raymond W.atts Nelson Walters John K. Woodhull William R. Young Edward Smith Stephen Walker James Walsh Harold Wilson MtlMP ltlt 1 .: :. % ¥ S i i i %c t First Row: Wilson. CmlLigher. J. Walsh, Rccsc. Wdltcrs, Leedy, D. Smith, ' Wal er, Hales, Bec man. Second Row: V oodhall, Leavitt, Stineman, DunJeavy, Beidler, Fish, Shuman, Watts, Simon, Hilborn. Third Row: Craver, Friberg, Shadiel ' ton, Beeman, Theiler, Guinand, Kring, Watson, ' Warner, R. Wilson, Griese. Fourth Row: Sweeney, McKelvie, Sailer, Kaiser, Davis, Reid, Jslaylor. ROLL OF CHAPTERS Alpha Chapter Kirksville, Mo. Beta Chapter Des Moines, Iowa Gamma Chapter Los Angeles, Cal. Delta Chapter Philadelphia, Pa. Epsilon Chapter Boston, Mass. Zeta Chapter Chicago, III. Eta Chapter Kansas City, Mo. T hi Sigma Qamma Edwin H. Cressman, D.O. J. Rowland Dey, D.O. George H. Tinges, D.O. Ralph Fischer, ' D.O. Arthur M. Flack, D.O. Paul T. Lloyd, D.O. Ernest Leuzinger, D.O. Frederick A. Long Ernest A. Johnson, D.O. Harry C. Hessdorfer, D.O. John J. McHenry, D.O. David S. B. Pennock, D.O., George S. Rothmeyer, D.O. Chartes H. Soden, D.O. G. Carlton Street, D.O. Harlon Bartholomew Frank Berg E. Campbell Berger Joseph Bowden Girard Campbell Angus Cathie Walter Axtell William Barnhurst Richard Burget James Eraser Joseph Root, 3rd Charles Snyder Harry Street Edwin E. Morse Wilbur J. Kuhn Raymond Schneider John R. Assiante Roger Conklin Fratres in Facilitate C. Paul Snyder, D.O. Foster C. True, D.O. Enrique Vergara, A.B., D.O. W. Dale Jamison, B.S. WiUiam Daiber, D.O. Robert White, D.O. Bruce F. Thomas, D.O. Roger M. Gregory, D.O. Harold Lyman, D.O. John A. Robertson, D.O. Wilbur P. Lutz, D.O. M.D. William C. Weisbecker, D.O. Guy W. Merryman, D.O., B.S. Lester R. Mellott, D.O. Robert C. McDaniel, D.O. William J. Furey, D.O. Class of ' 31 Fred. Cushman William Ellis W. Dale Jamison William S. Kell David Morrison Class of ' 32 C. Wallace Evarts E. Williard Hartzell Kenneth Mulkin Class of ' 33 Clarence Baldwin Ralph Hendricks Class of ' 34 Alfred L. Hoffman Simon ' Van Wagenen Russel F. Beck William L. Hitchcock Harrison H. Gerow 136 Frank Randolph William Rees Walter Rohr Joseph Sikorski Troy Stratford Edwin Gants Frank Dealy Frank Evans Tolbert Struse Ernest Markey Kenneth Wiley Augustus Keller Ernest Ruzicka James W. Campbell Martin C. Frey Henry L. Hilliard Fred C. Caverly William Pohlig First Row — Berg, Root, Snyder, Evarts, Randolph, Cushman, Gantz, Campbell. Second Row — Dealy, Cerow, Burget, Hartzell, Barnhurst, Si ors i, Stratford, Jamison. Third Row — Ellis, Frazer, Evans, Axtell, Morrison, Hitchcoc , Caverly, Kell, Bartholomew, Baldwin. Fourth Row — Strouse, Morse, Con lin, Pohlig, Frey, Hillard, Bech, Assiani. Fifth Row — Mar ey, Street, Berger, Campbell, Van ' Wagenan. ROLL OF CHAPTERS Alpha Chapter Kirksville, Mo. Beta Chapter Los Angeles, Cal. Gamma Chapter Chicago, III Delta Chapter Des Moines, Iowa Epsilon Chapter Kansas City, Mo. Eta Chapter Boston, Mass. Zeta Chapter Philadelphia, Pa. 137 Theta Tsi Founded May 1903 GAMMA CHAPTER Establish November 17, 102; Fratres in Facultate Francis E. Gruber, D.O. James W. Day, D.O. Fratres in Collegia Class of ' 31 Foster Dryden Clark Charles R. S. Gajeway LeRoy W. Lovelidge, Jr. William Deane Lumley Class of ' 32 Joseph Thomas Calmar Lin ford Biles Hoffman Robert Peckham Kilburn Harry Monroe Leonard A. Earl Ostermayer Horatio Reigner Carrol Eugene Richardson Frank Louis White Class of ' ii Harold W. Christensen Fr. ' nk Costello William Franklin Grimes Stanton John McGroary Charles Judson Heaslip Warren A. Pratt Harry Lovitt William A. Coiffe Class of ' 34 Harry Blom Floyd Clarence Boshart John Cooker John Finn George Francis Edward Glass Philip Green Lawrence Hall Kirk L. Hilliard William Hilton Horatio N. H. Irwin George C. Karlton Cecil Machon Beverley Sparling Elwin C. Hall 138 First Row : Karlton, Sparling, Glass, Hilton, Greene, Boshart, Christensen, Francis. Second Roiv: White, Coo er, }Aachon, Hoffman, Blom, Pratt, Irivin. Third Row: Leonard, Coiffe, Costello, Finn, Hilliard, Hall, Fleaslip, Ostermayer. Fourth Row: Calmar, Liimley, Clar , Lovelidge, Gaieway, Kilburn, Richardson. ROLL OF CHAPTERS Alpha Chapter Kirksville, Mo. Gamma Chapter Philadelphia, Pa. Beta Chapter Chicago, 111. 139 tlas Qlub STYLOID CHAPTER FOUNDED AT KIRKSVILLE, 1898 ESTABLISHED PHILA., 1924 FRATRES IN FACULTATE D. S. B. Pennock, M.D., DO. James Eaton, D.O. Charl es Muttart, D.O. D. E. Stombaugh, D.O. E. Jacobson, D.O. Howard Drewes, A.B., D.O. J. F. Smith, D.O. Kenneth A. Scott, A.B. Otterbein Dressier, D.O. Ralph B. Secor, A.B., D.O. FRATRES IN COLLEGIO CLASS OF 1931 Benjamin F. Adams Warren E. Baldwin James C. Christian Merritt G. Davis Stephen Deiehelman Bailey Flack William Bradford Edward Prescott James Berry John Early Earle Brett Edward Ferrin Paul Gregory Henry Goldner Louis Farley Kenneth Scott Arnold Brown William McDougalls Newton C. Allen C. Markel Becker Frank Cram Roger Vinton Kenneth Wheeler Kenneth Zwicker James Christian Robert Snow Harold Weber Robert Wilson Raymond Rickards CLASS OF 1932 Hanford Petri Stanley Rowc Harold Stippich William Wilson Paul Zea Lloyd Hershey Charles MacDonough Robert Smith CLASS OF 193 3 Lawrence Miller Ralph Davis E. H. Adams Herbert Beam Lincoln Ladd CLASS OF 1934 Stephen Ssalay Gordon Hornbeck Stewart Smith P. J. Shaw Wayne Ramsey first Row: W. Wilson, Suj?j?ich. Szdlay, Eaiiey, Brown. Ladd, Vinton. Second Row: Cram, Allen, Hornbec , Stewart, Smith, Farley, Petri. Thrrd Row: Becker, MacDonough, Zea, Scott, MacDougall, Goldner, Roiue, Brett, E. Adams. Fourth Row: Ramsey, Hershey, Prescott, Davis, Beam, Smith, Ferren, Berry. Fifth Row: Snow, Ric ards, B. Adams, Christian, F}ac , Bradford, Baldwin, Deichelman, Zwic er, R. Wilson. ROLL OF CHAPTERS Axis Chapter Kir sville, Mo. Hyoid Chapter Chicago, III. Mastoid Chapter Kansas City, Mo. Xiphoid Chapter Des Moines, Iowa Cricoid Chapter Los Angles, Cal. Styloid Chapter Philadelphia, Pa. J mbda Omicron Qamma CADUCEUS CHAPTER ESTABLISHED NOVEMBER 10, 1924. FRATRES IN FACULTATE Julius Apatoff, D.O. Herman Kohn, D.O. FRATRES IN COLLEGE CLASS OF 1931 William Desotnek Abraham Pekow Edward I. Goldner Samuel J. Otto CLASS OF 1932 Paul H. Davis CLASS OF 1933 Theodore Cohen Solomen Gerber Martin Kurtz, Julius Levine Moe Levy Morton Price Ellis A. Rosenthal David Rothman Nathan Smulian CLASS OF 1934 Sydney Adelman Michael Blackstone Simon Green Maurice Kaplan Morris Kramer Alfred Kraus Lewis Selisker Louis Sisral Julius Sobel Top Row: Selis}{er, Adleman, Siege!, Sohel, Levy, Green, Levine. Second Row: Kramer, Blac stone, Kaplan, Krauss, Smullian, Price, Rosenthal. Third Row: Krutz, Goldner, Davis, Pe ow, Otto, Rothman, Gerher, Desotne . ROLL OF CHAPTERS CADUCEUS CHAPTER Philadelphia, Pa. ASTRA CHAPTER Los Angeles, Cal. MANDIBULAR CHAPTER Des Moines, loiva To 1 Row: Hershey, Casey, V atts, Prescott, Robinson. Bottom Row: KUburn, Spence, Berry, Dealy. Synapsis Staff The Synapsis Staff consists of members of the Junior class, the editor of which is chosen by popular vote and the other members, appointed by the editor upon election. The staff of necessity is active throughout the Junior year and its one purpose is to pubhsh the annual Year Book of the College. Kilburn Taylor Evarts Heech Ruzic a Jewell Wiligoose Spence Keitsch Strever Von Ron Gorham Sacrey A. xone The Axone is the official voice of the student-body and expresses the students ' opinions and formulated ideas on collegiate activities and interests. Appearing at about two month intervals throughout the school year, it brings before the student-body scientific thought, pertinent editorials, short stories, humor and verse. This year The Axone completes its first decade of existence and looks with pride on its growth from a leaflet to a magazine befitting the institution it represents. Tojn Rovj: Alien, Scott. Bottom Row: Warhurton, Warner, Eimerhrm . Student (Council The Student Council is composed of five members, the President of each of the four classes, and an additional Senior student as President of the Organization. Its purpose is to establish a representative contact between the student- body and the College administration so that problems of students interest may be given open consideration. M ner, SI (eiirone Society Upon entering P. C. O., each student automatically becomes a member of the Neurone Society whose purpose is to stimulate good fellowship between the classes and induce and maintain a spirit of organization within the College by the inauguration of dances and other social gatherings and outings. The officers are appointed by student election. P! ' S Jamison, Ellis, ' Warner, Ric ards. A(eo Senior Honorary Society The Neo Senior Society was founded at the Philadelphia College of Osteopathy in 1924, by ten members of the Class of ' 25. The purpose of this Society is to promote student activities, interest in athletics, and a spirit of comaraderie between the students and the profession at large. The mem- bers are elected on the basis of extra curricular endeavor and personal concern in the active phases of student life. Sigma lAlpha Omicron In 1924 a non-secret, honorary fraternity was established whose purpose has always been to promote academic interest and elevate the quality of scholastic attainment among the Osteopathic student-body. Any Senior student, having attained a general average of 90 during the first three and a half years of his study, and having attended 90 per cent, of all classes is eligible. The names are voted upon by a Faculty Committee and those elected are announced at Commencement at which time these new members are presented with a gold key and a certificate. The following are the honorary students of the Sigma Alpha Omicron Society: Class o ' 2S Ch.arles W. Catt.aneo Wilbur P. Lutz Alexander Levitt Solomen E. Yoder Irma Amanda Davis Joseph Francis Py Marion A. Dick Henry S. Liebert William A. Ketner Class of ' 26 Anna Minerva Sieders Samuel Getlen Class of ' 27 H. Mahlon Gehman George S. Rothmeyer D. George Nelis James M. Eaton Class of ' 28 William F. Daiber Gladys Smiley Class of ' 29 S. Gilbert Corwin Beatrice Blawis Robert Chase McDaniels Class of ' iO Lester R. Mellott Lillian Barton Scott Henrietta Peterson N. Morton Fybish Karnig Tomajan £. Q. ' Drew Obstetrical Society The E. G. Drew Obstetrical Society Vv-as founded in 1925, to give the student- body an opportunity to gain an added knowledge in the art of Obstetrics and by so doing to foster an increased interest in this branch of the medical art. The Society was named in honor of Dr. E. G. Drew, Professor of Obstetrics and Gynecology. Monthly meetings of the Society are held, at which time, Obstetrical treatises, prepared by members, are read to the Society for the purpose of dissemination of facts relative to the art. These papers are supplemented by valuable and interesting talks by outside lecturer?. The roll call is composed of the names of those Seniors who have qualified by submitting theses on Obstetrical work and have been elected during the second semester of the Junior year on a competitive basis. Undergraduates are cordially invited to at- tend the monthly open meetings. E. G. DREW OBSTETRICAL SOCIETY Top Row: Otto, Santer, Thieler, Campbell, Cushman, Watson, DeMelfy, Morrison, Dr. Drew, Guinand, Dannin. Heech. Bottom Ro Physiological Qhemistry Society John Eimerbrink, President Frank Beidler, Vice-President O. L. Beach, Secy. Treas. Faculty Advisors Professor Russell C. Erb, B.S., M.S. Professor Howard Stoertz, B.S. Honorary Member Enrico C. Verg.ara, B.S., D.O. Active Member Angus G. Cathie, ' 31 isadore e. goldner, ' 31 Leonard G. Heech, ' 31 W. Dale Jameson, ' 31 James C. Luker, ' 31 Frank Beidler, ' 32 James Berry, ' 32 David W. Morrison, ' 31 Raymond H. Richards, ' 31 Edward R. Thieler, Jr., ' 31 Norman W. Warburton, ' 3 1 O. L. Beach, ' 32 Eugene Casey, ' 32 John Eimerbrink, ' 32 Eric Sailer, ' 32 Associate Members Arthur M. Flack, Jr., A.B H. G. Hartman, B.S. At a meeting of several members of the Class of ' 30, held May 7, 1928, the Physiological Chemical Society was formed to do original research to advance, in any way possible, the relationship of Physiological Chemistry to the Osteopathic Principles. The basis of election to the Society is an average of at least ninety during the Freshman and Sophomore years in Chemistry and in addition a personal record of interest in research in the Chemical field which is acceptable to the Society. Professors Erb and Stoertz have shown a great interest in the work carried out by the different members and their aid has been of great value in the diiferent problems that have arisen. In order to foster a greater interest in our work, and to give the members of the lower classes who are interested in Chemical research an opportunity to become more closely associated with us, we have voted to hold monthly meetings which will be open to anyone interested in our work. In addition the Society will elect, as associate mem- bers, certain of the lower classmen whose work is of such quality as to be acceptable to the Society. PHYSIOLOGICAL CHEMICAL SOCIETY Top — Stoertz, Beach., Erh, Beidler, Berry. Bottom — Sailer, Morrison, Theiler, Jamison, Wa7bwrto?i, Ric ards, Casey, Eimerhrin . Qardio- ' XJascular Society February the 2Sth, the finishing touches were appUed to the construction of a Cardio- Vascular Society. Many problems were met and overcome. Many more shall have to be met as they arise. The charter was drawn up and a plan of action mapped out. A unique feature of the organisation is, that it only has one officer, the treasurer, who will transact all business for the Society. The object of the Society is not only to stimulate the interest of the student-body in the subject under consideration, but to give to members an intensive study of clinical subject matter in general. In this respect we are indeed fortunate to have the clinical advisory board to consist of Drs. Fischer, Lloyd, and Lutz,, these being the three honor- ary members of the Society. It is a prime prerequisite that all members of the Society do extensive examining and in fact, many have had rather intensive practice in these fields already. The applicant in being judged for membership must submit a thesis, the originality of which bears more weight than does verbosity. The membership must of necessity be limited to six, less if need be. Each member must take an active part in the clinical examination, thereby requiring the group to be a small one. Before receiving the Key of the Society, each member is presented with a clinical case on which he will be expected to elicit physical signs, give a diagnosis and dif- ferential diagnosis, prognosis and suggestions as the most suitable treatment. A rea- sonable standard of correctness of same is desired. Present members are: LeRoy Lovelidge, Jr., James C. Luker, Alfonso Merola, George L. Miller and Paul Young. J. Jrancis Smith h(eurological Society Bac Row: Miller, Axtell, Eimerbrin , Seyfried, Shumav, Friherg. Middl e Row : Dealy, Hershey, Coles, Sailer, T ash, F. Evans, Watts, Spence. Front Row: van Ron , Casey, Dr. Dic , Dr. Smith, Leavitt, Evans, Robinson. OFFICERS President Leavitt Vice-President RoBlNSON Secretary D. EvANS Treasurer Casey The J. Francis Smith Neurological Society was formed near the close of the present school year by the Class of ' 32. The purpose of this Society is to stimulate interest and foster research in the various phases of neurology in its relation to the Osteopathic concept. The membership will be limited to twelve students who are to be chosen each year from the Junior Class on the basis of their interest in the work and a submitted thesis. j( theran Student Association Lutheran Student Work was begun in Philadelphia in 1909, by Dr. Frank M. Miter, then director of Public Safety under Mayor Blankenburg. His interest was centered at the University of Pennsylvania. The Lutheran Students of Philadelphia were brought together once a year at a dinner sponsored by the leaders at the U. of P. This was carried on until nine years ago when Rev. Robert H. Gearhart, Jr., became Lutheran Student Pastor. Thru his efforts, meetings held at stated times each month took the place of the annual dinner. When this proceedure was under way at Penn- sylvania, he made an attempt to have a similar group at Temple. He was moderately successful, but it was more than five years until the Lutheran Students were definitely organized there. Drexel was the next school in which Rev. Gearhart established a student group. Hahnemann has an inactive interest in the association. The last member to join in Philadelphia was our own college, P. C. O. Last year Rev. Gearhart started a group here, and luncheon meetings were held alternate Thursdays. About that time a Lutheran Student Council was formed. Two representatives from each group were chosen to make up the Council. The chairman was elected from Temple and the secretary from Osteopathy. Thru plans correlated by the council, several city wide social functions and church services have been given for the combined interest of all the Lutheran Students in Philadelphia. Though we were delayed in resuming our meetings this year the interest and enthusiasm has been most encouraging, and we look forward to the continuance of the enjoyable luncheon meetings next year. LUTHERAN STUDENT SOCIETY Bac Row: Street, Van Wegener, Friherg, White, 7 lewman, Poglitsch, Sweet, Kuna, ' Wat ins, Urguhart, Evarts. Front Row: Kurtz, Keitsch, Van Ron , DnBell, Rev. Gearhart, Kratz, Coles, Cojfee, Murphy. First Row: Deal , Fnson, Walsh, Dr. Py, Senagra, Dunleavy. Second Roiv: Si ors i, Sweeney, McCormic , Bowden, McDonnell, Martin, Kupzeus i, Cronan. Third Row: O ' SuUivan, ' Walsh, Ruzicka, Finn, O ' Rahilly, Costello, Crowley, Barrett. Fourth Row: McCroary, King, Antry, Cooper, Mcrola, Casey, Bowden, Gagen. 3 s(ewman Qlub The first Newman Club was founded in 1893 at the University of Pennsylvania, in honor of Cardinal Newman. At the present time there are more than two hundred clubs in the various universities and colleges in the United States and Canada. The purpose of this organization is to band the students of the Catholic faith together in an endeavor to further the ideals of Catholicism, to encourage scholastic achievement in the student-body, to bring about good fellowship and understanding between the students of the Catholic Faith and those of other beliefs, and to provide, in a measure, a means of social activity for the members. The Newman Club of the Philadelphia College of Osteopathy, was founded March 22, 1927, a nd numbers among its members many Alumni as well as students. Lev , Dash, Hornhec , Ostermayer, Seyfried, Campbell, Kxlburn, Prison, Con lin, Camlphell, Glass, Smith, Farley, Bears, Casey, Madison, Berg, Greene, Shac elton, Boshart, Renjilian, Bec man, Beach, McQueen, Hall, Beall, Redding, Berry, Hitchcoc , Jones, Goldner, Bizar, Reid, Shaw, Adams, Towner, O ' Sidlivan, Con lin. U (ejJO York Osteopathic Society The New York Junior Osteopathic Society was founded for the purpose of bringing those students of the Philadelphia College of Osteopathy into closer union in order to work in co-operation on legislative matters which would further the interests of those planning on practicing in New York State. Meetings are held at various intervals to maintain good fellowship and further the interests of Osteopathy. jFiVst Row: Lenz, Garland, Ogden, T ordstrom. Second Row: Sweet Costello, Garland, Bowers, Machon, Wal er. Third Row : Finn, Crowley, Dannin, Pe ow, Gants, T airn, Detsone , Scott. ' RJwde Island Society The Rhode Island Society is an organization of undergraduates coming from Rhode Island or planning to practice in that State. Its purpose is to work in cO ' ordination for improvement in legislation as regards the practice of Osteopathy in that State and also thru social activities to knit in a closer union, the members of the various classes from Rhode Island. 162 Top Row: Eimerbrin}{, Casey, Struse, P. Davis Bottom Row: Calmar, Keitsch, Ferren, Boone, Beidler. Junior ' Prom Qommittee The most outstanding social event of the year at P. C. O. is the Junior Prom. It is given annually by the Juniors in honor of the graduating class. The Committee is composed of the president of the class, a representative of each Fraternity and Sorority in the College and also a non-fraternity representative. This year an unusually successful dance was held at the Hotel Pennsylvania. Great credit is due the Committee in its eiforts to make the Prom of 1931, the best ever. ' Alumni Association of the Philadelphia Qollege of Osteopathy OFFICERS OF THE ALUMNAE ASSOCIATION President Paul T. Lloyd, D.O. First Vice-President Peter H. Brearley, D.O. Second Vice-President Donald Thorburn, D.O. Third Vice-President Helen Wilcox, D.O. Secretary Harry C. Hessdorfer, D.O. Treasurer William J. Furey, D.O. EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE Theodore W. Steigler, D.O. Howard B. Herdet, D.O. William O. Kingsbury, D.O. Paul Hatch, D.O. Ruth E. Tinley, D.O. Eugene Coffee, D.O. H. Walter Evans, D.O. George W. Gerl.ach, D.O. ' §fS 7 mm Jitter 3((en BASKETBALL Davis (Capt.) Jamison (Mgr.) Warner Purse Beidler TOOMEY Christensen hornbeck BASEBALL Warner {Capt) Robinson (Mgr.) Brown Miller Beidler Ellis Ferren E. Garland L. Garland Hartzell ToOMEY WiLLOUGHBY basketball 1930-1931 p. C. O. closed its basketball season in Camden, being nosed out by the Camden City College in the last few minutes of play. The team did not bring home all the victories we could have wished for, but it was in there, playing the game all the time. Most of the games, in which we were on the small end of the score, were lost by one or two points. The prospects for a successful season during 1931-32, are particularly bright with a large squad of eligibles that are coming up in the Freshmen Class. Warner and Ellis are the only two regulars lost to the team by graduation. THE JUNIATA GAME OSTEOPATHY, 27; JUNIATA, 24. The cleanest and neatest game of the season was played at Juniata College. In this game the team functioned like a machine displaying more team work than in any other game of the season with the scoring honors well divided. The out- standing work of the guards, Davis and Ellis held the fast scoring combination of Andrews and Given down to such an extent that one basket gave the necessary margin for vic- tory. The whole play was characterized by fast cutting of the forv;ards, Christensen and Toomey and their ability to upset the Juniata defense so that the guards were able to work up the floor and score. Purse and Beidler alternating at center were without scoring honors, but were the pivots for the offense and broke up many of the opponent ' s plays. Warner ably replaced Davis at guard when the latter left the game on fouls. Although we were almost snow-bound and had some dif- ficulty in driving home, this was the most enjoyable trip of the season. First Rovj: Jamison, Dr. St Lor, Francis, Hoag, Smith, Hartzell. Roui. Frey, Kuna, Dr. Champion, Mar ey. Second Row: Christensen, Horhec , Toomey, Beidler, Davis, Ellis, Purse, 7 li ola, Warner. basketball Schedule University of Delaware At Newark Washington College At Chestertown Juniata At Huntingdon Swarthmore At Swarthmore Moravian At Bethlehem Juniata At Home Fenn Military College At Chester Camden City College At Camden 171 baseball The prospects for this sport this year are far above those of any preceding year. For the first time in its history, P. C. O. has a home field, close enough so that the candidates will have a chance to practice vifithout being hampered. It will also be possible to schedule home games which will give the student-body a chance to see its team in action. This will tend to stimulate more interest in this truly American sport as well as an incentive to spur the team on to more worthy efforts for dear old P. C. O. There is more interest evidenced this year as seen by the large number of applicants for the team. Captain Parker is the only regular lost to the team by graduation. This leaves a hole in the keystone combination that must be filled. The mainstay of the pitching staff will again be Ferren, the Gettysburg College Alumnus who occupies the mound credibly. Red Ellis, the slugging catcher will again be holding up the former ' s curves and fast ones. There are a number of battery candidates from the lower classes trying to make the grade as batten. ' men. With the exception of second base, the infield will be in- tact again this year with the flash Captain Warner holding down the hot corner in his inimitable style. Brown, the clever shortstop, will ably guard that position of the infield, Beidler and Miller fighting it for possession of the initial sack. The latter can also serve them if called upon. In the outfield such dependable fielders as Hartzell, Toomey, E. Garland, L. Garland and Willoughby will en- deavor to hold their places. These men will all have to show their best to retain their positions against the onslaught of some of the real grave prospects that are trying out this year. CTS 15 W ' W ■ ■■ - «, - , g t_ „ Fii ' st Rou): Robinson, Hartzell, Brown, Secor, Champion. Second Roic: B!oni, Willoughhy, Brett, L. Garland, Reese. Third Roif: Francis, E. Garland, ' Warner, Fry, Milliard. baseball Schedule Haverford April 1 1 Temple April 14 Penn Military Club April 1 S Haverford April 25 Moravian Mav 2 Elizabethtown May 9 Princeton May 12 Drexel May 2 1 University of Delaware May 23 17? Track A call was issued on March 1 1 , for track candidates and great interest was shown, particularly by the Freshmen Class. Dr. Secor outlined plans for the coming season and suggested that an attempt be made to arrange a series of dual meets with Drexel, Haverford, Swarthmore and West Chester Normal. With about eight or ten candidates out for the quarter-mile the outlook for winning the City College Championship in the Penn Relays is exceedingly bright. Drexel Field at 46th and Haverford Avenue, will be used for practice and it is hoped that due to the interest shown we shall be able within the next year or two to have a complete team, satisfactorily equipped, to engage in meets throughout the State. McKelvie, one of the mainstays of the relay team assisted by Beidler, will have charge of the team and workouts will begin within the next week. Both these men have had a vast amount of experience in track and with the number of candidates expressing a desire to qualify for the team it is hoped that Osteopathy will take a place in track circles throughout the City and State. Candidates : Senior — Dr. McKelvie; Juniors — Beidler, Calmar, Rowe, Dealy; Sophomores — P. Miller, Grimes; Freshmen — Newman, Tienvieri, Hornbeck, Shaw, Coryell, Keens, Alvarez, Barrett. im Top Row. Earley, Kuna, Coryell, Barrett, Grimes. Bottom Row: Hornbech, Beidler, McKelvie, P. Miller, Calmar. 17 S Bowling Much interest was shown in bowHng this year by the under-graduate body. There was no inter-collegiate team, but rather the formation of a five team league composed of the faculty and each of the under-graduate classes. This, arrangement gave a larger number of bowlers a chance to show their skill and enjoy the matches. Many who did not join in the bowling were there to cheer their class teams on. The rivalry was keen and close right down to the last match. The Juniors were headed for a certain place at the top of the League until they were trimmed by the Seniors, in the last match by a very slender margin. In a keenly contested and bitter match these same Seniors were forced to drop a match to the Faculty. This finished the season with the Faculty holding first place. Qolf The team representing P. C. O. last year made a number of trips to neighboring colleges and played some interesting matches. The prospects for the coming season are brighter than of a year ago, with all members of last year ' s team eligible again this year. A schedule has been arranged with other colleges by Lincoln Ladd, Manager of the P. C. O. team. Of chief interest will be the matches with our own faculty. The Osteopathic expressions of Drs. Drewes, Street and Fischer at their partly manipulations of the little white fill lesioned in sand are to be anticipated with great enjoyment by the College team. Our Dean has been known to open up a bit during similar predicaments. Golf is more or less in its infancy at P. C. O. nevertheless an enjoyable season is anticipated. SCHEDULE Haverford ViLLANOVA swarthmore Moravian Matches with other neighboring colleges pending. COLLEGE TEAM Ladd Captain and Manager Hahn woodhill O ' Rahilly MacDougall Dr. Drewes Dr. Street Dr. Champion FACULTY TEAM Ellis Warner McKelvie Naylor Dr. Holden Dr. Fischer Dr. Thomas mw Tennis The Philadelphia College of Osteopathy Tennis Team will inaugurate the opening of the outdoor season against St. Joseph ' s College, with brighter prospects than they have had in the past few years. This is due to the fact that Dr. Carl Fischer, former intercollegiate titleholder, will coach the Tennis squad. In addition to this the team will have home courts conveniently located, and in excellent shape at their disposal. This is quite a step forward and will enable the team to play matches on a home ' and ' home basis, arouse more interest among the student-body and provide another source of health-giving exercise. The squad itself is composed of veterans, every member of last years varsity being eager and willing to fight for his post. This group consists of Christcn- sen, Ramsay, Goldner, Adams, Shuman and Fagan. Among the new candidates, Dickerman, Steele, Brown, Garland and Ladd show much promise. The indoor season just closed, consisted of dual matches at the Penn A. C. which ended in favor of Penn A. C. A feature of the indoor season was the broadcasting of the second tenni s match over station WCAU. The Tennis schedule follows: 1. St. Joseph ' s, April 17. 2. Drexel Institute, April 25. 3. Moravian, May 12. 4. Muhlenberg, May 20. Pending : 1. Juniata. 2. Temple University. 3. P. M. C. 4. Penna. Institute For The Deaf. 5. Haverford. Leonard R. Fagan, Captain-Manager. 178 Hospital Staff William A. Kelton, Supt., 941 Dyre St., Phila., Pa. D. S. B. Pennock, M.D., D.O., Chairman, 1813 Pine St. Attending VYiysxcians C. B. D. Balbirnib, Ph.G., D.O., 1408 Spruce Street Arthur M. Flack, D.O., 3414 Baring Street Charles J. Muttart, D.O., 1813 Pine Street Francis J. Smith, D.O., York Road and Rockland Street Ralph L. Fischer, D.O., 6112 Germantown Avenue Edward A. Green, D.O., Ardmore, Pa. Assistant Attending Physicians Charles H. Soden, D.O., Pennsylvania Building Frederick A. Long, D.O., Real Estate Trust Building Wilbur P. Lutz. D.O., 4916 Warnock Street Joseph F. Py, D.O., 659 E. Roxborough Avenue George S. Rothmeyer, D.O., 1529 W. Lehigh Avenue William C. Weisbecker, D.O., 4818 N. Camac Street Surgeons D. S. B. Pennock, M.D., D.O., Surgeon-in-Chie 1813 Pine Street Edward G. Drew, D.O 1408 Spruce Street William Otis Galbreath, D.O Land Title Building H. Willard Sterrett. D.O 1526 N. 16th Street Charles J. Muttart, D.O 1813 Pine Street H. Walter Evans, D.O 1526 N. 16th Street Foster C, True, D.O 1813 Pine Street Carlton Street, D.O 1228 W. Lehigh Avenue Francis E. Gruber, D.O 4820 Greene Street Harmon Y. Kiser, D.O 1832 Mount Vernon Street J. Ernest Leuzinger, D.O 4937 N. Mervine Street Earle Gedney, D.O 5311 Baltimore Avenue James M. Eaton, D.O 102 Copley Ro ad H. Mahlon Gehman, D.O Hospital Richard C. Ammerman, D.O 112 Rutger Avenue, Swartmore Edwin H. Cressman, D.O 1950 Elston Street Gynecologists Edward G. Drew, D.O 1408 Spruce Street D. S. B. Pennock, M.D., D.O 1813 Pine Street H. Walter Evans, D.O 1526 N. 16th Street 180 OtO ' Laryngologist William Otis Galbreath, D.O Land Title Building Assistant Oto-Laryngologists George H. Tinges, D.O 5241 Baltimore Avenue J. Ernest Leuzinger, D.O 4937 N. Mervine Street Obstetricians Edward G. Drew, DO 1408 Spruce Street H. Walter Evans, DO 1526 N. 16th Street Carlton Street, D.O 1228 W. Lehigh Avenue Francis E. Gruber, D.O 4820 Greene Street Proctologist Charles J. Muttart, D.O 1813 Pine Street Urologist H. Willard Sterrett, D.O 1526 N. 16th Street Assistant Urologist Edwin H. Cressman, D.O 1950 Elston Street Ophthalmologist William Otis Galbraeth, D.O Land Title Building Pedidtrists Ira W. Drew, D.O 4610 Wayne Avenue Ruth E. Tinley, D.O 1318 Wakehng Street Assistant Pediatrists Leo C. Wagner, D.O 23 E. LaCrosse Avenue, Lansdowne, Pa. J. Rowland Dey. DO Riverton, N J. T eurologist Joseph F. Smith, D.O 5041 Spruce Street Roentgenologist Paul T. Lloyd, D.O N. E. Cor. 48th and Spruce Streets 181 Pathologists Emanuel Jacobson, D.O., Director of Laboratories 1623 Spruce Street Joseph F, Py, D.O., Bacteriologist 659 E. Roxborough Avenue Russell C. Erb, B.S., M.S., Physiological Chemist Conshohocken, Pa. Howard Stoertz, B.S., Physical Chemist 430 W. Durham Road Assistant Pathologists Otterbein Dressler, D.O 136 S. 46th Street James M. Eaton, D.O N. E. Cor. 48th and Spruce Streets Anaesthetists Francis J. Smith, D.O York Road and Rockland Street Carlton Street, D.O 1228 W. Lehigh Avenue J. Ernest Leuzinger, D.O 4937 N. Mervine Street H. Mahlon Gehman, D.O N. E. Cor. 48th and Spruce Streets Richard C. Ammerman, D.O N. E. Cor. 48th and Spruce Streets James M. E. ton, D.O N. E. Cor. 48th and Spruce Streets Donald K. Acton Jenkintown Pharmacist C. D. B. Balbirnie, Ph.G., D.O 1408 Spruce Street Chief Resident Physician H. Mahlon Gehman, D.O. Internes for 1930-1931 George N. Coulter, D.O. A. Richard Davies, D.O. J. Wilson Hunter, D.O. Richard T. P.arker. D.O. Charles J. Karibo, D.O. Allen Z. Presbott, D.O. Karnig Tomajan, D.O. Morgan von Lohr, D.O. Superintendent of J urses Effie Dinkel. cker, R.N. Custodians of Records Phyllis W. Holden, D.O. Robert C. McDaniel, DO. Assistant Treasurer, John S. Canedy 208 Maple Avenue, Collingswood, N. J. Chief Boo eeper, Stewart H. Caldwell Top Roiv: Dr. Davies, Dr. Tomajan, Dr. Hunter, Dr. Kariho, Dr. Par er. Bottom Row : Dr. Van Lohr, Dr. Cehman, Dr. Coulter, Dr. Prescott. Internes Near the termination of the year, competitive examinations are given to those Seniors who may desire an internship in the Hospital. Not alone is the student chosen by his grade on the examination, but by his attitude while treating in the clinics, and during his Senior internship as found acceptable by a faculty com- mittee. These Physicians are put on the various services as General, Surgical, Obstetrical, and Laboratory Diagnosis, and much practical knowledge is gained in the work of these departments. One or two, showing the greatest interest in the work, may he held over as Senior Residents for the following year at the end of which time, they may take the Surgical Board Examinations. 1S3 DELIVERY ROOM HOSPITAL LOBBY Bacl{ Kuw: Miss Peeler, Miss Thompson, Miss Beigle, Mrs. McDaniels, Miss E. Dinl{elac er, Miss Thorpe, Miss Philips, Miss Sterrett, Miss Doggett. Front Row : Miss Somers, Miss Brown, Miss Meyers, Miss Teatter, Miss Stevens, Miss Rosenberger, Miss Landis Osteopathic AQirses The Nurses Training School at the Osteopathic Hospital of Philadelphia, is a three- year course. The Osteopathic Hospital is classed as a Grade A Hospital by the laws of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania. Recently the Nurses were given the privilege of the Degree of R. N. at their graduation from the Training School. At the present time there are sixteen nurses in training at the Hospital headed by Miss Dinkelacker. A PRIVATE ROOM NURSERY 186 HUMOR T , Q, 0. (Chronologically Speakmg ' igji-j2 SEPTEMBER 1 7— Registration Day: BifT Williams appointed Assistant Dean. 18 — Freshmen assigned the lateral third. 22 — Senior tries to see Dean. 29 — Senior still trying to see Dean. OCTOBER 2 — Stranger inquires for Dean. Freshman shows him into Dr. Green ' s office. 6 — Senior makes appointment to see Dean. 7 — Leavitt and Leonard charter members of Mutual Admiration Society. 1 3 Senior ' s appointment to see Dean postponed. 14 — German and Hilborn start 100-yard dash. 16 — Spence and Watts quarrel. 17 — Spence and Watts make up. 21 — Dr. Long gets to a class on time. NOVEMBER 3 — Senior still trying to see Dean. 6 — Bob Smith absent and Evarts doesn ' t realise it — in time. 17 — Senior gets another appointment to see Dean. 24 — Dr. Drew seen in corridor without boutonniere. 25 — Axone issued. 26 — Axone staff goes into a decline. DECEMBER 1 — Senior gets as far as Dean ' s secretary. 8 — Barbara Redding starts selling thermometers. 9 — Under high-pressure salesmanship the Junior Class develops a fever. 11 — Leonard declines opportunity to answer a question. 17 — Dr. Cressman laughs aloud. Freshman Class suffer from nervous shock. 18 — Dr. Rupp appears in class without cane. Borrows femur from anatomical museum. 20 — Discouraged Senior goes home for holidays without seeing Dean. JANUARY 1 — 3 50 P. C. O. students resolve to do more studying. 5 — One of Miller twins cultivates moustache for convenience of clinic patients and instructors. But which one? 8 — Junior Technique Sections begin by 8:30. 9 — Dr. Rothmeyer makes 8 o ' clock class by 8:15. 13 — Dr. Clayton discloses Wally Kaiser as his inspiration. 14 — German and Hilborn reach 50-yard mark. Both going strong. 15 — Senior expresses earnest desire for conference with Dean. 16 — Spence and Watts move seats apart. 17 — Spence and Watts together again. FEBRUARY 2 — Registration Day. Dr. McDaniels takes on additional duties as office boy. Senior starts second semester by waiting two hours for conference with Dean — in vain. 3 — Office force depleted. 4 — Dean shows college spirit by registering for correspondence course in typewriting. 9 — Book store gets new supply of books. 11 — McDaniels goes on southern cruise. 12 — Stocks go up on notebook paper. Frenzy of note-taking in Sophomore Class. 16 — Senior threatens Dean ' s secretary with T. N. T. 17 — Hershey asks a sane question. 18 — Fish answers to the point. 19 — Technique sections cast lots to see who gets German. 23 — Petri wakes up. Cause of insomnia unknown. 24 — Petri asleep again. 29 — Informal dance in hospital lobby. Dean attends. MARCH 2 — Senior writes to Dean for appointment. 9 — Marks issued. Busy sign on Dean ' s door. 1 1 — Root stands in corridor 3 minutes — only 2 co-eds speak to him. Attempts suicide. 12 — Book returned to Libe day late — no time charged Borrower faints. 13 — Note taking in Sophomore Class resumes normal curve. Average number too tired. 16 — Senior telegraphs to Dean for appointment. 17 — Friberg orders case of Palmolive soap. 18 — Dunleavy goes to slc p in Neurology. Wakes other students. 24 — Chick Coles goes on a diet. 25 — Chick Coles eating as usual again. 30 — Senior forces entrance to Dean ' s office. Dean not in today. APRIL 1 — Holbrooke celebrates his birthday. 2 — Cutting average running high. 6 — Senior sees Dean exit from office — Dean takes drink and returns to solitary confinement. 7 — Dr. Sterrett cuts 4th class in his teaching career. 10 — Kappa Psi defeats ITS in exchange of compliments. 13 — Senior patrols outside Dean ' s office in hope of seeing him. 16 — Baseball season on. Lut? holds forth in Cardio-Vas and Physical Diagnosis. 27 — Senior receives bona fide note to see Dean. 28 — Senior finds Dean cannot see him until next week at least. 30 — Synapsis staff decides to go to work. Dealy gets an ad. 31 — Dean unveils Girls Smoking Room. MAY 1 — German wins lOO-yard dash. Hilborn trips on trapezoid ridge. 4 — Dr. Flack commends Beach for reading JeUiffe and White. 8 — Senior refuses offer of conference with Dean ' s assistant and hurts Mc Daniel ' s feelings. 15 — Senior chloroforms Dean ' s secretary. But Dean is out to lunch. 18 — Senior starts final exams without desired conference with Dean. 28 — Petri still asleep. 29 — Senior goes into coma after waiting five hours to see Dean. JUNE 4 — Dean sends for Senior. Senior arrives and cannot find end of line of those waiting to see Dean. 5 — Petri wakes up to go home for summer. 6 — Senior graduated — without ever getting into see and talk with Dean. MAY 25 ' JUNE 5 — Many are called but few are chosen. We h[ominate for Oblivion Harold Stippich: For age and sophistication are essentials of professional men. Eric Sailor: For hi s horse ' laff; his supercilious attitude and his superiority complex. Chick Coles: For her all too important attitude. Frank Evans: For his constant fear of examinations. Beth Keitsch: For her overbearing personality. Harry Friberg: Because his attention is centered on Beth Keitsch and Mildred DuBell instead of taking comprehensive notes. Claire Gagen: For her European attitude. Arnold Hahn: For not being able to conceal his disappointments. The Seniors: For the incomplete and missing case histories! The Junio7 ' S Invade The Qlinic Second of February and what it meant Was the Seniors left and the Juniors went — To the cHnic. Six score patients looked around Some were white and some were brown — In the clinic. Timidly were names called out Later the Juniors began to shout — In the clinic. Patients popped up here and there Saying: Me? or Here or Where? — . In the clinic. The Juniors went to work with vim To crack a neck or pull a chin — At the clinic. Patients there to cure their ills All were tired of taking pills — Thus the clinic. Now the Juniors feel quite proud Mingling with the ailing crowd — In the clinic. Grab a glass and drink a round They are out to gain renown — In the clinic. Later you will hear them say, When asked where they learned technique so gay,- In the clinic . The Qlass of 32 in 52-Q Walter Axtell — Pianos moved for all occasions. Barnie — Is successfully establishing a practice on the children whose mother he pre- vented from drowning. They say he still maintains his specialty. Orrin L. Beach — Has returned to that overproductive profession of selling electric sun. Francis Beall — Sees his three patients daily. It is rumored that he is still playing under 90 at the club daily. Milky Beidler — Is busy treating athletic teams in his own quiet way. Larry Bennett — Struggling along with the rest of the Massachusetts practioners. Jim Berry — Editing all of the Osteopathic Literature, practices as a hobby. Emily Boone — Has proved to be a very efEcient wife, an ideal mother and is enjoying a host of friends. Bill Bradford — With the aid of his brother has established a very popular and sucessful Ear, Nose and Throat clinic. Dick Burget — The happy little country doctor who is trying ever so hard to get fame, fortune and love. Gene Casey — Appearing still as Dr. Soden ' s little mechanical man. Chick Coles — Has long since annexed the remaining degrees and has retired with the confidence that she has had a life well spent. Barnie Cronan — Has been in a sanitarium for the incurables as a result of injuries received on the platform in the name of the science of the Osteopathic lesion. Harry Davis — Has retired into the woods and the last report was that he had just finished a very profitable fishing season and also had increased the sale of pipe tobacco. Harry always did have an affinity for tobacco and its wrappers. Frank Dealy — Has been appointed as first ambulance driver for the Gomez sanitarium, which only goes to show that one can really make a college training useful. Frank A. DeMelfy — Can still be seen caring for the clinic coats at P. C. O. Millie DuBell — Is enjoying a very successful practice of friends and relatives. Tom Dunleavey — Actually had that fishing trip last year with Dr. Drew. Jack Farley — Has made a very successful trainer for the Philadelphia Quakers. After fifteen years in this capacity he has retired with the distinction of never having won a championship. It is rumored that he has accumulated a large fortune on the money he invested as the result of betting against the Quakers. We don ' t blame Jack in the least. He always did understand athletic clubs. John Eimerbrink — Besides enjoying a profitable practice he is very content to spend his Sunday afternoons with his grandchildren. Dot Evans — Has again returned to active practice, her son being a concrete example of her ability as a pediatrician. 191 Doc. Evans — Is enjoying the return of his faithful wife with him in active position. Frank has made the statement that the training Dorothy received while at P. C. O. has been used to great advantage. Wallie Evarts — Has proved himself a success after years of training under Dr. van Ronk. Ed. Ferren — Has made a great deal of money as an insurance agent. Art Fish — Still serving as a medical missionary in the West Indies. Claire Gagen — Is planning again her annual European tour. Dutch German — Has established himself further in the field of Pediatrics. Dutch always did know how to handle and produce healthy babies. Greg and Earle Brett — Have established themselves in a very productive partnership. This is the age of mergers. Arnold Hahn — Has opened up a very attractive shoe store in Providence. Willard Hartzell and Lloyd Hershey — Are successful country doctors. Lin Hoffman — Trying to make a living on the side selling medical accessories. C. Tyler Holbrook — Is doing research on epilepsy. He is using rats as his experimental animals. Holbrook ' s friends will be glad to know he is in a harmless profession. Wally Kaiser — Was just featured in last year ' s Sketch Book . They say his voice was responsible for the closure of the box office. Bessie Keitsch — Is still giving colonics in the P. C. O. clinic. Bob Kilburn — Still trying to grow a moustache. Henry Leavitt — Had a real neurological case last year. We all extend to Henry our congratulations for such a reward after twenty years of study. H. Monroe Leonard — Convalescing at Jefferson Hospital as a result of nervous ex- haustion from trying to find out what he didn ' t learn at P. C. O. Bud MacDonough — Has retired after ten years of practice. Douglas McQueen — Has proven himself not only a successful practioner, but also is a proud father of a son who is fullback on one of our eastern elevens. Ed Miller — Has retired in his own quiet manner to his English estate. Ken Mulkin — As an advocate of cabinet baths has been received with much publicity into various athletic clubs both here and abroad. Neall O ' Rahilly — Has limited his practice to men only — women being too much on his complexion. He has also received some publicity as a golf enthusiast. Earle Ostermayer — Has developed into an Obstetrician of note. Rip Petri — Having just awakened from a 20 year ' s sleep is annoyed at the changes in civihzation and is surprised to hear that the mothers are telling the story of the modem Rip Van Winkle. Carm Pettapice — Has been very successful in his practice in Canada. Carm still has his weakness for x-rays. We hope that it has not yet had its effect, but we hope that Carm still retains his ability to see thru a subject. Bud Prescott — Has established a clinic with his brother. Barb Redding — This girl deserves a lot of credit. She is carrying her ability that she demonstrated in college into fields where she can do a lot of good. Rig Reigner — Establishing himself in Florida, has done a lot in regard to neurological research. Ritchie — Head physician and cheer leader director at Upton College. Robbie — Has established a clinic whereby he can study further the reactions that women manifest under the present advancements of women suffrage. It is rumored that George is beginning to appreciate the women ' s point of view. Stan Rowe — Has been successful in his practice in Maine. Stan also has been appointed to the State Board of Examiners. He always did want to get next to the exams. Eric Sailer — We haven ' t heard much from him. Hope that he is still enjoying life in his own quiet way. Al Schlacter — Is smoking cigarettes in front of his father and mother. Lloyd Seyfried — Has opened a urinalysis laboratory. He always did meet with success in chemical combinations. Dave Shuman — Dave has been struggling along, not as you would take this perhaps, but trying to relinquish his place on the Davis Cup Team. He always was in for racquets, even while at college. Bob Smith — Has accepted a position with College Humor as a side issue. Babe Spence — Not much has been heard from Helen of late, but it is rumored that she has completed what she set out to do. However, she is remembered as always having been clever. Stiney — Stiney has opened up in Harrisburg. There always was a powerful attraction for him there even if it is his home town. Stip — We would like t o see him right up in the front of Conn. Osteopaths, but some- how he and his side kick are running a race for first place in teaching — especially in cranial nerves for which he is especially noted. Tod Struse — Has incorporated with Dr. Py in teaching Bacteriology. He has a microscope of his own. Pete Talmage — Pete has settled down and at present is worried about his son who says even less than he did. Marion Van Ronk — Marion still has things her own way. Frank White — As a physical director he is a success. Dot Willgoose — Is still editing four magazines, president of six organisations, possesses a very active mind and has completely forgotten marriage. Bill Wilson — Sparring partner for the coming world ' s champion. Paul Zea — A special delivery letter to the editor states that Zea has passed Junior technique. Mmf imi IXV S Et l.Of - AMD Ho No 5u, T,«wf, H ' . s - ' A T-fcA (Concerning the (Carr ' ied JMen The annual meeting of The Slaves of Eros was held in the P. C. O. boiler-room on the first day of April, 1931. The roll call was taken and look who answered: Axtel, Beach, Beall, Holhrook, Eimerbrink, Leavitt, Leonard, Hershey, German, White and Evans. Others were called but luckily didn ' t answer. The object of the meeting was to determine as far as possible the advantage of Freud over the unmarried state. It is impossible to state here the arguments advanced by Leavitt and Axtell, but you will have to take our word for it that they were brief and to the point. The next topic of discussion was the present state of their scholastic standing, various points were introduced — yes — they were all high and nothing to be ashamed of, but all can ' t take the roll call and bet on the football games. The next article that was discussed was that of handshaking and playing the profs. At this point in the meeting they all became very indignant as to which one was to take out Ferren. Various members were nominated, but Beach was un- animously elected. In regard to the question of stalling the Professors during their lectures many were called but Leonard and Hershey were congratulated and given gold keys on which were inscribed: To you who have served us faithfully — Your questions have been timely and impossible. At this point time was called and the doors were thrown open. It was ten o ' clock and it was the wife ' s night out — Yes with the unmarried men . Perhaps you would be interested to know that one of the babies was found missing — we all grieve with Leonard. The meeting was resumed at 11:30; Leavitt made a nomination that the subject for their next meeting be an experimental Psychoanalysis and named one of the group to be the object — but alas; poor Holbrook was so severely injured that the doctor ' s orders were a year in a sanitarium. The meeting was rudely interrupted at this point by a Ford crashing outside the window — please, don ' t get alarmed for it was only Robinson with Leavitt ' s wife. Editor ' s note: This only goes to prove that there ain ' t no good in women — or men either for that matter. Among the new members nominated we find the name of Stan Rowe. We really wish Stan all the luck in the world for they really aren ' t a bad outfit to get in with. Meeting adjourned and the married men all went home with their ever loyal wives and their howling kids. Do we envy them? Well that is the question. T opular Vote of the Qlass ' 32 Most popular male individual John Eimerbrink Most popular female individual Dorothea Willgoosc Best dressed male individual Douglas McQueen Best looking female individual Helen Spence The Politician Dutch German The Sleepiest Hanford Petri The Liveliest Frank Dealy The Smoothest Earl Brett The Best Student Horatio Reigner The Most Humorous Henry Spade The Most Cynical Eric Sailor The Best Matured Walter Axtell The Most Likely to Succeed Stan Rowe The Most Thorough Gentleman Ed Miller The Best Athlete Harry Davis The Quietest Kenneth Mulkin The Noisest Carroll Richardson The Best Singer Wally Kaiser The Best Bluffer Ed Ferrin The Best Caller-in Wally Kaiser The Handshaker Orrin Beach The Most Inquisitive Lloyd Hershey Most Popular Profs Drs. Smith and Rothmeyer Editor ' s Note: The facts that have been introduced, whether they are true or false, are not with the intent of causing any mental suffering. The section has been entirely open as far as suggestions were concerned. They have all been used in fun and hope that they will be taken as such. May you all profit by your mistakes. Acknowledgments The Staff of the 1931 Synapsis takes this page to express its deep gratitude and appreciation for the enthusiastic assistance, unswerving loyalty and co-operation which the following have rendered and who have made possible the pubhcation of this volume : Dr. E. O. Holden Mr. Sullivan, of St. Joseph ' s House Mr. Matlack, of Phila. -Weeks Engraving Co. Mr. Merin, of Merin-Baliban Studio Mr. Arthur, of David J. Molloy Co. The Student Office Dr. Robert McDaniel Dorathea Willgoose Henry Leavitt Lawrence Bennett Mr. Stewart Caldwell Richard Burget 198 lS: :.ir A D V R T I ' SM Wi I N G ' yHE firms that appear in the foUoW ' ing pages have long been associ- ated with Osteopathy and through their splendid co-operation have made possible the publication of this book. So in fu- ture years when you consider them, re- member that they are your friends and offer you an invaluable service. Qompliments of Philadelphia County Osteopathic Society President Dr. D. S. B. Pennock Wice- ' Prziid.tnl Dr. Emanuel Jacobson Secretary Dr. Ruth Brandt l reasurer Dr. Frederick A. Long Executive Board Dr. H. W. Evans Dr p. T. Lloyd Dr. G. Rothmeyer 201 DR. CURTIS H. MUNCIE AURIST Hotel Delmonico PARK AVENUE AT 59th STREET New York City Specializing in the Treatment of Deafness and its Causes Exclusively DR. CHARLES FREDERICK . ij BANDEL g|}© 303 LEXINGTON AVENUE - NEW YORK Dad, how do they catch lunatics? With face powder, rouge, beautiful dresses and pretty smiles, my son. What did the doctor say when he was late on that rush call? Hello, baby! — V isconsin Octopus. Hershey — Doctor, put that foot where it be ' longs. Dr. Rothmeyer — Yeah? If I did you wouldn ' t be able to sit down for a month. Mrs. Jimips — And what do you do? Dr. Leonard — Fm a naval surgeon. Mrs. J. — My, how you doctors do specialize nowadays. Dr. Py — Would you care to take bacteriol- ogy 7 Al Bowden — Don ' t bacilli — don ' t bacilli. Nurse — It ' s a boy! King Solomon — Curses — I wanted a girl. Nurse — Be patient, O king. There will be three more this afternoon. We have found only a small percentage of the girls of our country are working girls. Yeah, the rest are working men. She may be an osteopath ' s daughter but she ' s a pain in the neck to me. Dr. Day — Class, I have taken up with you lead poisoning and strychnine, at the next lec- ture you can count on my taking arsenic. Class — Clap, clap, Hoorah. 202 Philadelphia College of Osteopathy Admission Requirements MINIMUM REQUIREMENT For admission to the Philadelphia College of Osteopathy, the mi cepted is a standard four-year high school course or its equivalent as cf New York. The Philadelphia College of Osteopathy is registered ii of Education and maintains the standard of preliminary education set the study of Osteopathy. No entrance examinations are conducted by the College. nimuin requirement which will be ac- evaluated by the Regents of the State 1 full with the New York Department by that department for admission to METHOD OF MAKING APPLICATION Students desiring to enter the Philadelphia College of Osteopathy should make application by filing the office of the Registrar: 1. Written application for entrance upon blank which will be furnished upon request. 2. Detailed certifications of high school work. (Proper blanks furnished upon request.) QUALIFYING CERTIFICATE fficial form (obtainable on request) properly filled in by an Osteopathic Student Qualifying Certificate, based upon high school, or its equivalent, recognized by the Regents Each stu the School of last attendance, an appl: the completion of a standard four-year cf the State of New York. A certificate issued by the University of the State of New York, the Department of Public Instruction of New Jersey or the Bureau of Pre-professional and Professional Education of Pennsylvania is r equired of all matriculants of the Philadelphia College of Osteopathy. PENNSYLVANIA REQUIREMENTS For the practice of Osteopathy in the State of Pennsylvania, the preliminary requii standard four-year high school course, or its equivalent, and a year of coUegt Physics, Chemistry and Biology, or its equivalent. romplet.on ch of the The Appl: ' ill be admitted to the Philadelphia College of Osteopathy in September, 1931. now being received. Address: The Registrar PHILADELPHIA COLLEGE OF OSTEOPATHY 48th and Spruce Streets Philadelphia, Pa. 203 T ' he Hearty Qood Will of the AMERICAN OSTEOPATHIC ASSOCIATION is ' behind This Special Offer to Students X UNDERGRADUATES may secure the Journal of the A. O. A. and The Osteopathic Magazine monthly for one year, also admission to the next Annual Convention, for Two Dollars. SENIOR STUDENTS may secure the Journal and the Magazine for the rest of the College year, admission to the next Annual Convention, and a paid-up membership in the A. O. A. with Directory and all other benefits for the next fiscal year, for Two Dollars, plus the cost of The Journal and Magajine from date of payment to time of graduation. GRADUATES, remember our special First Year Terms for The Osteopathic Magazine and Osteopathic Health. When you commence practice, if you place a year ' s contract for 100 or more copies, we will send you 100 of each Free for the First Four Months. help students while in College and gradu good This offer is It the profession. During College years. The Journal is a valuable addition to the teaching in textbook, cla Don ' t Lose Time. Get in Touch with A. O. A. Special Repri Henry Leavitt, June ' 3 2. STURM Every Storm Belt is designed and made for the patient who is to wear it. They are made of perfect comfort and They afford adequate support in Ptosis, Hernia, Pregnancy, Obesity, Relaxed Sacro- iliac Articulation, Floating Kidney, High and Low Operations, etc. Katherine L. Storm, M.D. Originator, Sole Owner and Maimer 1701 Diamond St. Philadelphia Cleaning Materials In The Service of Cleanliness SANITARY EQUIPMENT e| F. W. Hoffman Co., inc. 35-37 S. FOURTH STREET 204. Compliments Of DR. H. WILLARD STERRETT A Freshman ' s Conception A senior stood on a railroad track. The train was coming fast. The train stepped oiT the railroad track To let the senior pass. Education used to be a hard old grind for four years, but now they ' ve done away with that. They have colleges. — Utah Humbug. Just think that every time I breathe somebody dies. Better try Listerine. Good morning, sir. Fm an osteopath. Don ' t let that bother you, my good fellow. Here ' s a quarter — go buy yourself a square Anyway it is cheaper to carry a violin case than to get your hair cut. Compliments Of DR. JOSEPH PY Compliments Of DR. LEO C. WAGNER Lansdowne, Pa. Congratulations Dear Son: Marriage is a wonderful institution if you find the right mate. The best advice I can give you is to compare your girl to your mother, with whom I have been so ideally happy for the last thirty years. If she can even approximate your dear mother ' s home-making, housekeeping and always even temper, you are a lucky young man, and I give yo u my blessing and advise you to grab her at once. Your loving father. P. S. — Your mother just left the room. Don ' t be a fool. Stay single. — Dartmouth Jac O ' Lantern. Heard in Obstetrics Dr. Gruber — Pettapiece, name the female internal genitalia. Pettapiece — Uterus, ovaries, fallopian tubes and prostate. Compliments Of DR. D. S. B. PENNOCK Compliments Of KAPPA PSl DELTA Heard in Comparative Therapeutics Dr. Balbernie — I wish to have your atten- tion, class, we are to discuss aphrodisiacs. When you breathe you inspire; when you do not breathe you expire. Same Hour Dr. Balbernie — discussing spermatorrhea. Small Voice — It ' s a discharge. The solid wastes are excreted through the retina. The left lung is smaller than the right one be- cause the soul is located near there. Boners Respiration is composed of two acts: first in- The spinal column is a bunch of bones down spiration and then expectoration. yo back to show feeling. Quinine is the bark of a tree; Canine is the bark of a dog. Children have hookworm in the tropical regions. Water is composed of two gins — Oxygin and Hydrogin. Oxygin is pure gin, Hydrogin is gin A thermometer is an instrument for raising and water. temperance. Compliments Or IOTA TAU SIGMA DR. ENRIQUE G. VERGARA PROCTOLOGY VEJiERIAL DISEASES 2250 N. PARK AVENUE Col. 6281 Philadelphia DR. TRAVISS D. LOCKWOOD OSTEOPATHIC PHYSICIAH 33 WEST 42nd STREET ' New York Boners — Continued In Christianity a man can only have one wife. This is called monotony. Faith is that quality which enables us to be- lieve what we know to be untrue. Michael Angelo painted the dome of the cis- turn Medonna. An epistle is the wife of an apostle. The Acropolis was the she-wolf that nursed Romeo and Juliet. A vacuum is an empty space where the Pope lives. Ambiguity means telling the truth when you don ' t mean to. A skeleton is a man with his inside out and his outside off. The letters M.D. signify mentally deficient. A phlegmatic person is one who has chronic bronchitis. — By Those Who Made Them. Gravity is what you get when you eat too much and too fast. Patient — I have an awful rumbling in my stomach. It ' s like a wagon going over a bridge. Dr. Rothmeyer — It ' s most likely that truck you ate this morning for breakfast. DR. GEORGE S. VAN RIPER OSTEOPATH 51 EAST 42 nd STREET New York DR. A HAUGAARD JENSEN OSTEOPATHIC PHTSICIAK Hotel Commodore, Suite 235-239 Vander 3-6000 New York 207 Compliments Of PHI SIGMA GAMMA Dr. Evans, while discussing the value of X ' ray diagnosis in obstetrics — We men have found this medium of great advantage during labor. Here I lie and no wonder Fm dead, For I sweetened my coffee with sugar of lead. — The Catalyst. Believe It or Not Apologies to Ripley. Dr. Rothmeyer has stated that he owes his success to a little birdie. Dr. Gruber has not had one peaceful minute while teaching Junior Obstetrics. The Class of ' 32 will be the best that PCO has ever graduated. The Pediatric Clinic has inspired all of us to be pediatricians. Harry surprised me by telling me that we were going to take our honeymoon in France. How nice. And how did he spring it on you? He said as soon as we were married, he would show me where he was wounded in the war. — Visconsin Octopus. Perh.- ps This Is True of One of Us Mother (proudly) — I wish, my son, that your father would stay home one evening to see how well you behave when he is out. Petri, coming out of a classroom at the end of any lecture — Gosh I had a h — of a dream last hour. Dr. True — Can anyone tell me what a germ- icide is? F. Evans — A German committing suicide. Compliments Of AXIS DR. JOSEPH D. TREACY OSTEOPATHIC PHTSICIAH HORN BUILDING 16th and Chestnut Street Philadelphia EARL H. GEDNEY, D.O. PHTSICIAH AHD SURGEOH By Appointment 5311 BALTIMORE AVENUE Philadelphla Granite 7539 SURGICAL mSTRUMEHrS PROFESSIOHAL BAGS GEORGE S. ROBINSON, ' 32 4642 SPRUCE STREET with National Surgical Co. DR. CHAS. E. RICHARDSON 854 S. ORANGE AVE. Newark, New Jersey DR. MORTIMER J. SULLIVAN 192 CLAREMONT AVENUE MoNTCLAiR, New Jersey DR. JOHN H. BAILEY OSTEOPATHIC PHTSICIAN special Attention Given To EAR, EYE, NOSE AND THROAT CASES Coagulation of Tonsils 1623 SPRUCE STREET Philadelphia DR. FREDERICK A. LONG DR. ARTHUR STILL HULETT GENERAL OSTEOPATHIC PRACTICE Dept. for Colon Therapy Laboratory Complete Reports Mailed 480 PARK AVE., COR. 5Sth ST. New York City Compliments Of THETA PSI Shows and Shows 50 Million Frenchmen — Clinic Mobs. Man Who Came Back — Dr. Flack. Parlor, Bedroom and Bath — Dr. True ' s Consulta- tion Room, Dr. Drew ' s Gyn, Clinic, Dr. Dick ' s Colonics. Dishonored — Amphitheatre Saturday morning. City Lights — That Junior Front Row. Naughty Flirt — Dick Burget ' s 3:30 patient. Fair Warning — Dr. Bal ' s last call for quiet. Philip Goes Forth — A Senior Graduates. Finn and Hattie — Harry and Beth. It ' s a Wise Child — Dot Willgoose. Reaching for the Moon — Trying to get an ap- pointment in Dr. Lutz ' s cHnic. And then there is the Osteopath that will argue about medicine. Orchestra Se.at I sat ... it seemed for years . . . And watched his back . . . His ears . . . So snugly fitted To his head . . . that knack Of running fingers through his hair That made mine ache . . . and where The shears had flitted On his neck . . . I longed to press my lips I felt a wreck. From measuring with my eye His shoulders — beams of strength And said ... at last have I Found IT . . . and when at length His face was turned . . . I sighed . . . I nearly died! ! ! ! And o ' er my face there coursed a blush Oh, dear . . . ' Twas he . . . whom I ' d divorced . . . Last vear! ! ! —Life Compliments Of ATLAS Reniiniscing PERSONS AND THINGS WE WELL REMEMBER First person who paid for pictures two minutes after class announcement . . . C. Coles . . . Last person, five months late. ... All girls, paid, photographed, en- graved before 50 per cent, of the men. . . . The ladies, God bless them. . . . Selling the picture idea to the Seniors. . . . The Tuxedo Reaction. . . . The parties who had pictures which pulled their faces into the cap . . . who moved . . . who did not recognize themselves. . . . Lost proofs . . . missing proofs . . . please return proofs. . . . The student who missed appointments three times with no apologies. . . . The indoor go lfer who didn ' t have time to return his proofs ... a few others likewise ... a few bonafide. . . . The cheap humor from the side lines and windows during group photos . . . funny how such cheap, time worn wise cracks with Floradora com- plexions can make college students laugh. . . . Watch the Birdie with whiskers, but still good for a laugh. . . . The bird who must test Trolley Car reflexes when every- one is set for the picture. . . . The people who show up late for appointments who otherwise would not mind leaving early. . . . That elusive tennis team. . . . The sun which caught eyes at the wrong time. . . . Chasing around with four appointments in five minutes and meeting someone who wanted to chin. . . . Being thought to be act- ing high hat, when you just couldn ' t stop. . . . The party who thought you were there just for the picture. ... All the graft we were supposed to make, including visits to Europe, Argentina, New Cars, glad rags, etc., . . . we ' re still doing business at the old stand. . . . The criticism of some who would not aid . . . also help from those who would (There is a silver lining) .... Temperamental artists ... Ed Ferren ' s lifts to town ... up and down stairs, ten times in ten minutes. . . . The party who figured the group an Art picture. . . . The Axone dust throwing to cover up a two months ' error ... the common query, When will the book be out? . . . The New York trip ... up and down elevators . . . wonderful reception by most of those visited. . . . Trying to borrow a typewriter. . . . Licking 264 stamps at the Post Office. . . . Aid from the office in many ways. . . . Wonder if the PBX thought we were a pest? . . . Lurking around corners to waylay faculty members. . . . The un- solicited salesman for the picture. ... The party who inks other people ' s pictures. . Picture grabbing when a picture came into the room. . . . The white haired boy who insisted m reading all mail via shoulder . . . inspecting all pictures and passing them around. . . . The time the photographer ' s alarm clock failed to go off. . . . Seniors trying to look dignified in cap and gown. . . . Which side the tassel? . . . Suggestions to Chic Sale, Pictures will be hung in outdoor phone booths this year (Senior Comment). . . . The guy who ordered pictures and remembered to forget about it. . . . Editors who live on fourth floors. ... The fellow who asked could he help. It ' s a great life if you don ' t weaken. We weakened a little. We ' re glad that the book is out and that you are enjoying it. Great experience. Took plenty of time. Sorry about the toes tread on in our efforts. We did the best that we could. Good luck to the 19?2 Staff and may your associations be as pleasant as ours. Compliments Of LAMBDA OMICRON GAMMA Dr. Luti, in diagnosis class — What is it that 1st Junior — Are you going to the cardio- breaks out around the mouth in a typical case of vascular clinic this afternoon? lobar pneumonia? 2nd Junior — No. I ' m tired of those organ Stinie — A moustache. recitals. Sig— How are all the little pigs down on the Claire Gagen—Td Hke to see the captain of farm? ' ' ' ' ' P- Atlas — Fine. And how are all the little pledges at your house? Sailor — He ' s forward, Miss. Claire — I don ' t care. This is a pleasure trip. Safety First I saw the doctor you told me to see. Did you tell him I sent you? Yes, I did. What did he say? He asked me to pay in advance. — Capper ' s ' Wee ly. When a man devotes himself to intellectual pursuits, it sometimes leads to distinction, when a girl tries it, it merely leads to extinction. Error Some women are so careless they will leave anything about for the maid to pick up, as is shown by one in St. Louis who names her maid as co-respondent. WALLY AND MARION Oh! Do you think you can? Then students shouldn ' t have cars in P. C. O. Compliments Of NEWMAN CLUB DR. ROBERT C. McDANIEL osrEOPArmc phtsiciah 7360 N. TWENTY-FIRST ST. Philadelphia Waverly 5313 By Appointment Daily and Eveningx Allegheny 9300 Except lliiirsday First Lady — Been in the ' ospital, eh? Was yer osteopathic or medical? Second Lady — Watcher mean? First — Well was yer ill when yer went in and they made yer well, or was yer well when yer went in and they made yer ill? Thanks to Dr. Gedney Farmer — An ' ' ow be Lawyer Barnes doin ' , doctor? Doctor — Poor fellow. He ' s lying at death ' s door. Farmer — There ' s grit for ' ee — at death ' s door an ' still lyin ' ! Young Lady (just operated on for appendici tis) — Oh, doctor, will the scar show? Doctor — Not if you are careful. Art. Fish wants to know if Peyers Patches, in the small intestines, are for blow-outs. Dr . Thomas Rankin Thorburn HOTEL BUCKINGHAM 101 WEST 57th street New York City Circle 2357 And then we have Spade and his poles to con- sider. Speaking of Spade — Did you know that he has planned to practice in the North Pole because of its attraction. Student — Is it possible to identify T. B. bacil- lus without making slides and staining them? Dr. Day — Well you can ' t very well catch them in a sieve, can you? Nurse, sa id the amorous patient, I ' m in love with you, I don ' t want to get well. Cheer up, you won ' t, she assured him. The doctor ' s in love with me, too, and he saw you kiss me this morning. Dr. H. Van Arsdale Hillman OSTEOPATHIC PHYSICIAH 200 CENTRAL PARK SOUTH New York Circle 4470 DR . FRANK P. DOBBINS 551 FIFTH AVENUE New York City Dr. Lawrence S. Robertson 551 FIFTH AVENUE New York City Holland House, Forest Hills Long Island Compliments Of LUTHERAN STUDENTS ' LEAGUE Berry — How ' d you know he went to college? ' ' Sweet Young Thing — Look at his teeth. Cronan — Where will we go? She — Let ' s go look in windows. Cronan — Don ' t be silly. Nobody goes to bed this early. Bowden — I ' ve got three kings. Dealy — Good for you! I ' ve got three aces. The doctor was calling the class roll rather haphazardly one Monday morning. Each mem ' ber of the class responded with thj usual here. The name Kaiser was called. No one answered. Finally the doctor said, If Kaiser hasn ' t any friends in this class, aren ' t there at least some fraternity brothers? Dr. Balbernie: Phenol is specific for coagulat- ing Protein: At least it tries to be specific ' DR. EDWARD G. DREW SURGERY, OBSTETRICS AND CONSULTATION 1408 Spruce Street Philadelphia IS THAT GIRL POPULAR? Is that girl popular? Say that girl is as hard to meet as the last payment on a fur coat. In the old days women used to lean over a back fence to learn the latest scandal. Now they lean over a tabloid. She: Your lips are all covered with lip stick! Golf Enthusiast: Then I ' ll have to kiss you again — I always replace my divots! Her Father: You want to wed my daughter? My answer depends on your financial position. Prospective Son-in-Law: ' What a coincidence! My financial position depends on your answer! Now a days the sport of kings is trying to stay on the throne. EDWARD A. GREEN, D.O. 20 W. MONTGOMERY AVENUE Ardmore Pennsylvania DR. THEODORE 1 J. BERGER 77 PARK AVENUE New York City H. Y. KISER, D.O. 1832 MT VERNON ST. Philadelphia Poplar 19 21 By Appointment DR. CARLTON STREET OSTEOPATHIC PHTSICIA7S[ AJiD SURGEOH 1228 W. LEHIGH AVE. Phil.adelphia By Appointment H. WALTER EVANS, D.O. 1526 N. 16th street Philadelphia Pettapiece — How do you do? I ' ve heard so Beach — Doctor, what would you advise me to much about you. read after I graduate? She— But you ' ll have a hard time proving Dr. Soden— The ' Help Wanted ' column. anything. Some people complain they don ' t knov how Him— You look like a sensible girl. Let ' s get to pass the time when a rainy day keeps them married. indoors. Personally, we usually spend it looking TT . xT u- J • T ' ■ui for a pair of rubbers. Her — Nothing doing. I m just as sensible as ' I look. — Western Osteopath. — Judge. ARTHUR M. FLACK, D.O. HEUROLOGIST 3il4 BARING STREET Philadelphia DR. O. J. SNYDER 11 WITHERSPOON BUILDING Phil.adelphia Pennypacker 1385 DR. EMANUEL JACOBSON consuirAHT Philadelphia Try and Get It 1. A barrel of dough. 2. A swell car. 3. Ahpasia for the question, When will the book be out? 4. Daily apopintments at the C. V. CHnic. 5. An osteopathic examiner when you need one. 6. A treatment from another Junior. 7. The seat next to Watts. 8. The clocks all set with the bell. 9. Ventilation in the room. 10. The loan of a car. 11. Quiet from the Soph ' s changing classes. 12. A locker. 13. A seat in the last row of the Auditorium. 14. A seat in the front row of the Amphi- theatre. 15. Money for pictures. 16. Co-operation from some. 17. The pot with a four flush. 18. Good liquor. DR. LILLA LANCEY OSTEOPATHIC PHYSJCIAX PERRY BUILDING 1530 Chestnut Street Philadelphia Office Phone, Rit. 9210 DR. RUTH H. WINANT 1711 SPRUCE STREET Philadelphia B%i Appointment Pennypacker 5879 POINTS THAT MAY OR MAY NOT BE USEFUL To make a complete neurological examination It takes from eight to ten hours and five sheets of paper. A professional school must receive instructions in The Modern Way of Teaching. What would the Junior lectures amount to if this plan be adopted? We all should try commuting — then we could abolish the eight o ' clock class. What the clinic needs is better ventilation. Why doesn ' t somebody establish a free cardio- vascular clinic? Don ' t get the idea that this Junior year is hard, wait till you hit the State Boards. Do you know the theories for pregnancy? In the spring a young man ' s fancy turns lands him in the traffic court. Ruth Elizabeth TInley, D.O. 1318 WAKELING STREET Phil.adelphia Jefferson 2972 216 IRA WALTON DREW, D.O. PEDiArmcs 5929 WAYNE AVENUE Philadelphia DR. FRANCIS J. SMITH AHAESTHETIST OSTEOPATHIC HOSPITAL OF PHILADELPHIA Residence, 328 Woodlawn Avenue Glenside, Penna, DR. EUGENE M. COFFEE DR. EUGENIA COFFEE OSTEOPATHIC PHYSICIAKS DR. PETER H. BREARLEY OSTEOPATHIC PHTSICIAN Philadelphia 910 FOX BUILDING 1612 MARKET STREET Office Hours: 9 A. M. to 4 P. M. Daily Except Wednesday Or By Appointment WM. OTIS GALBREATH, D.O. EYE, EAR, HOSE. THROAT EXCLUSIVELY 414 LAND TITLE BLDG. Philadelphia Dr. Foster Cogswell True Philadelphia Haddon Heights, N. J. DR. SARAH W. RUPP 1201 CHESTNUT STREET Philadelphia Phone, Rit. 2919 DR. A. D. CAMPBELL OSTEOPATHIST GRADUATE A. S. O. 1898 1524 CHESTNUT STREET WEIGHTMAN BUILDING Philadelphia Penna. mp: Q en III - o S Q Or c OS Ji T3 t- O O 1 ■a c 2; Ml bo to lis 1s 1 L i oj f- Ills Q CO Sit- ' 2= i; 1 = 1 ce 3 4-; s a u e Tie 1 Q en Q si 6 SB C I- 2 j= ' . 5 111 =3 Sec ■a 3 0, -, -a ■c -i to M ' ?3 « c8 3 - ■£ t; Q Q ■Q en H m l; S . 3 . O I- c t; Q O ■!- tl o :? w en s o Is ■elf = «en s 3 ? OJ S 3 ■- ffi.2£ IS i ' 3 CC 3 o o 00 q q q „ = 218 DR. J. F. SMITH HEUROLOClSr DR. MARION A. DICK osrEOPArmc physiciah 5041 SPRUCE STREET Philadelphia Penna. DR. J. ERNEST LEUZINGER EAR. HOSE AND THROAT Philadelphia Michigan 2514 WE WONDER Just which of the 365 days of the year Helen and Ray will celebrate their anniversary. Where Claire will spend her summer. When Pop Eimerbrink will be president of the United States. If there is anyone who has not heard about Dr. Leavitt ' s case of Pachymeningitis. Why Dick Burget likes his seat in the Junior room. What makes Frank Beidler, blush at the men- tion of the I. T. S. Banquet. When Dot Willgoose will be herself. If Dr. Flack means all he says. Where Dr. Hessdorfer gets his patience? When and why did Wally Kaiser reform. Why Stinie and Dot never find time to take notes. Dr. Sm.ith: Do you all understand the func- tion of the cystic duct? Fish: I still don ' t see how matter can go up and down the same tube under sphincter con- trol. PORTRAITS m THIS BOOK WERE MADE BT MERIN-BALIBAN STUDIOS 1010 CHESTNUT STREET WE SPECIALIZE IN SCHOOL AND COLLEGE ANNUALS Special Discount Given All Students WHITE COATS AND TROUSERS FURNISHED BY LINEN SERVICE CO. WE RENT WASHABLE WORK GARMENTS TO DOCTORS AND NURSES 309 NORTH 37th STREET Phone, Baring 3144 Philadelphia PATRONIZE THE BRETER DEALER PHILADELPHIA— NEW YORK— NEWARK— WASHINGTON— HARRISBURG The term all wool, a yard wide is the hall-mark of quality in fabrics. But it is known that there are different grades of wool and still the term all wool, a yard wide could be truthfully applied to all, even to the inferior grades made over from wool which has been renewed. It is the quality that counts. It is equally true of Printing — quality of paper, of typography, of workmanship. Quality Printing, as we do it, costs no more and is definitely superior. ST. gTosbph ' s house A Complete Printing Institution i6th St, 6e Allegheny Ave. Printers of Synapsis Sajous ' s Analytic Cyclopedia of Practical Medicine Charles E. deM. Sajous, M.D., L.L.D., Sc.D. Founder and First Editor Edited by George ' Siorris Piersol M.D. Projcssar of Med icine, Cr„duale School of Medicine, University of Pennsyhanio; Physician to the Philadelphia General, the Methodist and Presbyterian Hospitals, Philadelphia, etc. And Over 100 Contributors FEATURES Ist. Alphabetical Arrangement. 2d. Instant reference through a Desk Index of 4.50 pages, 50,000 references. 3d. Authoritative Editors and Contributors from all parts of the world. 4th. Medicine, Surgery and Specialties covered in a practical manner. .5th. Research Work facilitated by plan and Index. 6th. Individual Atypical Clinical Cases. Eight Royal Octavo Volumes, each containing over 800 double column pages. Thin paper Format. Illustrated with Text Photo and Half-tone Engravings and Full-page Color Plates. Extra Cloth, ?80.00, net. Separate Desk Index Volume Free. Revised by Periodical Supplements. F. A. DAVIS COMPANY 1914-16 Cherry Street, Philadelphia COLLABORATORS J. M. Anders W. Wayne Babcock Anthony Bassler R. J. Behan A. J. Bell P. Brooke Bland H. Childs Carpenter Joseph Collins Judson Dala nd John B. Deaver F. X. Dercum Leonard Freeman R. Max Goepp S. S. Greenbaum J. P. Crozcr Griffith Frank C. Hammond Howard F. Hansen Chevalier Jackson Edward Jackson Henry D. Jump W. W. Keen Norman P. Henry Frederick W. Marlow Rudolph Matas Alexander McPhedran Robert T. Morris M. E. Rchfuss W, Egbert Robertson Jay F. Schamberg Oscar M. Schloss S. Solis-Cohen And Scycnty-sevf Associate Ed: ther K hlS C OooK IS A CREDIT TO THE STAFF OUR SPECIALIZEK SERVICE Indivrftoa!!, Pergonal I .oacfalBg OrigimUJty in De tjiu Orga led l.i_ om .S Quality lH )iind [ncstiou Past reconit. of ucf ' e fnl Jterformance Largest attd UJi-to-the-BUtlute produc lion facilities Many jcire ' «tI«Tie - ' PHILADELPHIA-WEEKS ENGRAVING COMPANY tot MCa ionn U ' eparliiienl 29 NORTH SIXTH STREET essage 1 1 lE gratefully acknowledge the sup ' port g iven this issue of the SyN ' APSIS by those who reserved space for professional cards and advertisements. May we suggest that our readers keep these friends of the Synapsis in mind? Without them the issue would be im- possible. ' Autographs Name Address m • Autographs Name Address iUhuii
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