Smith College - Smith College Yearbook (Northampton, MA)
- Class of 1900
Page 1 of 140
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 140 of the 1900 volume:
“
dwid V ju vo W I hfiryRulh PitKmi CArinnn y SAMUEL WARD COMPANY Printers and Stationers Dedication To tne Class of Nineteen Hundred tnese records are affectionately dedicated in inernory of our comradeship along tr e pleasant Ways fH£ f ACUITY DeniaYnm C Blc«lc JtMusQ J. EoertTT Brcudu.RiJ) Miliar F Qan«tv3.Ti).Q C rtxL£. A . Hubbard , AJVl. CWWs DHaien D. EhaaWH J.Caarriotnsk. AWi A. JordanAM- Sen a berensoT) Alfred P. DeWAQ JcVnl Sudani. TVD CWrles F.Ew eiick.ft.Q Jfenry ACT M Ur,AM. frank A.VUot«rmar,.?lvD. Ludella L ck Hetuij L. Moore, R .D. Irvmq F.WooJ ,Hlft,Bn ilha Cj.Si.t ftO Harri H. Cjardin«r,AlYl E|i2abtft Hamcom,fl).D Ma.ru T Brewster, M.O. Ma-r E.8 H rd,A.B Alan T Katy J .arao_rete. Bernkobt tWnorPCush.n AM. De me Duvjo- Harris H.nliltUr.ft.O. jipuy N NilltamS- KoLttiaWut Louise Ba.vlLn AqYlfcS YV| ocCtc. Brww hcrtnte. btco 3 Maru Emma. 1 1 odcjeTT Ka.tV aT Titi Bri a Ane ' ito. 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TKautv lU { Wwnoifli T « fr | Wni E Wtulw,Vs AWic Gract Tnit Btal Ucujst Ir tr J Ut.t JtTn tiTTu|ts Etta- Ma InderweoA UTaxe-TaulkTur nJa. r J )telt AsVrten Ward jHaro Al ce VDtaoer Ca.ro)i|n tV)e tct Nobel Eaofcr NftwUr fcM KMmifjeA Wlhttc Mo u Shto r )ktlc4 Tlottno. hlKiti fiances Mary K)hi1c Tlcrtnce A k n Mflfej Mum Klcott Whller fc TW 1U 3kr AU C|«i nt WW |(UH ftimir VdVif E)i abtTV YW HtUv BM W«aK Carton SttabeJ Wurbte-r £vol Cornelia bsttv Ma H Tat Lord DW K fkW.W Wa.uj EblVr JoJtbr SmlHiha) Y l et JW . Uuvit. Tomii IWntc Cora, tohite. £||zaktt (L Mitn Past i ember iiv Mabel Clare Almy, Mar) ' Vernon Anthony, Jessie Mabel Austin, Lila Pryor Babcock, Mabel Anne Baker, Anna Frances Barnes, Eva Barr, Elizabeth Louise Barrett, Alice Earle Barrows, Katharine Moore Barrows. Edith Herman Barry, Lou Rena Bates, Alice Taylor Beardsley, Elizabeth Clerc Beers, Edith Mary Beyer, Cora Emma Blanchard, Anna Herbert Bradford, Elizabeth Bradley, Alice Margaret Brannon, May Elizabeth Brush, Ella Wonson Burnham, Elizabeth Clarke Burt, Harriet Perkins Butler, Henrietta Woodworth Carey, Elizabeth Louise Carpenter, Louise Hoyt Carter, Myra Wilcox Case, Isabel Stillman Chapin, Laura Elizabeth Clancy, Nellie Mae Clapp, Katharine Eliza Darrin, Eleanor Schureman Davidson, Nonie Eleanor Dement, Isabel Noyes Denison, Nellie Downing, Anna Lamson DuBois, 32 Louise Dunkerson, Ethelwyn Eaton, Caroline Simmons Eddy, Grace Judson Edwards, Emma Louise Eells, Blanche Annie Davis Elmer, Mary Genevieve Eshbaugh, Alice Elizabeth Fassett, Emma Laura Felch, PThel Fernald, Bertha May Ferris, Leila Alberta Field, Mildred Ellen Ford, Anne Louise Forsyth, Lucy Chapman Foster, Florence Mable Freeman, ■Mary Genevieve Gilligan, Mariella Grant, Vivian Griswold, Elizabeth Fambro Hall, Edna May Hancock, Josephine Harvey, Susan Lydia Hayward, Mathilda Luella Heidrich, Margaret Chalmers Holbrook, Edith Estelle Holman, Edith Tracy Hosmer, Margaret Anne Hughes, Alice Mezibah James, Edith I )aisy Jenkins, Elizabeth Howe Keniston, Lulu Manville kimberly, Gertrude Emma Knox, Emilie Margaret Kruesi, Margaret beach, Martha I lenrietta beach, Emma Hates Locke, Elizabeth Eliot Marvin, Maude Pauline Mavnard, Anna Colton McClintock, Juliet Daisy McGaughey, Alice Louise Meserve, Gertrude Louise Norris, Lucy Dwight Orne, Christiana Maria Park, Helen Livingston Parker, Ann Dixon Paschall, Agnes Patton, Emma Jane Cook Robinson, Grace Chamberlin Sargent, Ethel Sayles, Eugenie Schlesinger, Millie Turner Sheldon, Harriet Ella Smith, Margaret Elizabeth Smith. Theodosia Weld Smith, Edna Washington Soule, Louise Marguerite Spann, Gertrude Rossiter Sperry, Charlotte Melville Stillings, Mary Walker Stillings, Rachel Mary Studley, lulia Elizabeth Sullivan, Lena Lewis Swasev, Marion Brooks Swasey, Grace Fuller Swift, Edith Eunice Sylvester, Louise Taylor, ( ' ornelia Pierce Tcarse. Laura Stiles Thayer, Marion Farwell ' looker, Marion Towne, Alice Eddy Treat, fosephine Guthrie Watson. Margaret Weil, Dolly Louise Whittlesey. Frances Sophia Wilcox. Amy Atwater Woodworth. Mary Dallas Worthington, Mary Louise Wright, Anna Wilson Wyman. Deo 33 Pamelia Skilton Adams Ruth Albright . Agnes Maria Armstrong Ella Mabel Baldwin . Alfa Curtis Barber Katherine Devereux Barker Harriet Lycinthia Barnes Stella Louise Barse Katharine Louise Barton Elsie Wright Bates Keturah Sherman Beers Meta Ellis Bentley Emily Marguerite Bigelow Mary Emma Blodgett Agnes Wingate Bragg Katharine Brigham Florence Brooks Aneita Doty Brown . Edith Imogene Brown Henrietta Thomson Brown Ruth Porter Brown . Sara Maude Brown Ethel Vryling Buffum Mabel Burroughs Irene Livingston Butler Madalene Marie Byrne Mabel Carver . 90 Longwood Ave., Brookline, Mass. 730 Ferry St., Buffalo, N.V. Sunderland, Mass. 542 Cambridge St., Allston, Mass. . South Framingham, Mass. 10 Church St., Woburn, Mass. 721 North Main St., Rockford, III. T430 Baltimore Ave., Kansas City, Mo. Framingham, Mass. Windham, Conn. 391 Warren Ave., Chicago, 111. 1040 Park Place, Brooklyn, N.Y. . 73 Pleasant St., Marlboro ' , Mass. 510 Monroe St., Chicago, 111. . 91 Grove St., Bangor, Me. 525 Cass St., Milwaukee, Wis. 335 West 55th St., New York City. 9 West 129th St., New York City. Northbridge, Mass. 450 Ellicott St., Buffalo, N.Y. Claremont, N.H. Hudson, Mass. Winchester, N.H. 257 Elm St., Oberlin, (). 25 Monroe St., Brooklyn, N.Y. 234 Kellogg St., Syracuse, N.Y. 216 Court St., Binghamton, N.Y. 34 Ada May Chandler . Madeline Melissa Chase Mary Sybil Conant Sara Josephine Cook . Helen Coolidge Frances Maria Cox Otelia Cromwell Frances Walkley Cumming Lucy Elizabeth Day . Mary Louise Deane . Cora Estella Delabarre Amy Kliot Dickerman Harriet Martha Dillon Miriam Drummoncl Dole Madeleine Xabriskie Doty Cora Inis Dowling Grace Dunham . Adelaide Susan Dwight Jennie Florence Edgcomb Charlotte Eggleston . Stella Rennie Eldred . Martha Elizabeth Ellis Edith Madeleine Elwell Edith Wellington Emerson Emma I hiding Emery Julia Dike Fay . Faith Avery Fischer . Ethel Norcross Fish . Katharine ( )gden Flet her Laurel Louisa Fletcher Annie I ouise A. Foster Eva Cornelia Foster . Minnie Winchell Foster Mabel Loring Freeman Mary Agnes Gage Helen ( lager Aimee Paula Gallert . Etta Booth ( rarretson Maitlia Dal ell Gilchrist New Brit i8 ton. Williamsburg, Mass. 614 North 7th St., St. Joseph, Mo. . North lladley, Mass. Holley, N.Y. 4752 Kimbark Ave., Chicago, III. 242 Maple St., Holyoke, Mass. 1439 Pierce Place, Washington, D.C. Plantsville, Conn. Hopedale, Mass. Fast Windsor Hill, Conn. Conway, Mass. 140 Cottage St., New Haven, Conn. . Amherst, Mass. . 122 Court St., Bangor, Me. 128 West 73d St., New York City. Nunda, N.Y. 2 Hawthorne Ave., Minneapolis, Minn. . Montpelier, Vt. 243 Bowdoin St., Dorchester, Mass. lorough of Richmond, New York City. Gardner, III. . West Newton, Mass. 106 Highland St., Springfield, Mass. 15 Inman St., Cambridge, Mass. 15 Forster St., Somerville, Mass. 175 Beech St., Holyoke. Mass. 808 Michigan St., Wheaton, 111. 204 Essex St., Boston, Mass. . Amherst, Mass. 320 Ka t Ohio St., Indianapolis, Ind. . ( Mlmnw.i, Iowa. 1014 Greenwood Blvd., Evanston, III. 12 Ellington Ave., Rockville, ( ' nun. ; Ripley St., Worcester, Mass. 62 Fast Haverhill St., Lawrence, Mass. . 67 Hoffman Ave., Columbus, I . 31 University Road, Brookline, Mass. Buffalo, N.Y. 701 First St., Evansville, Ind. 35 Gertrude Ella Gladwin Ella Louise Glennie . Eliza Jane Goodsell . Harriet Louise Goodwin Louise Annette E. Goodwin Cornelia Brownell Gould Julia Marguerite Gray Julia Adaline Greene. Caroline King Grier . Katharine Charlotte Griggs Bertha Wendell Groesbeck Mary Elizabeth Hancock Mary Capen Harris . Minnie Mildred Harris Mabel Winifred Hartsuff Anna Catherine Haskins Gertrude Mead Henry Clara Emily Heywood Annie Perry Hincks . Alma Hoegh Ruth Madeline Holden Edith Gray Hollis . Lucinda Mary-Belle Holt Frances Cruft Howe . Aloysia Mary Hove . Harriet Foley Huffman Sylvia Sage Hyde Helen Mary Janney . Marie Emilie M. Jones Mina Mahala Kerr . Helen Constance Kerruish Caroline King . Cornelia Amey Kingman Fanny Hubbard Kingsley Ella Kirkley Clara Louise Kneeland Mary Everett Ladd . Carolyn Lauter . Faith Robinson Leavens 520 West Adams St., Chicago, 111. 39 Franklin St., Northampton, Mass. 742 North Ave., Bridgeport, Conn. 880 Asylum Ave., Hartford, Conn. 66 N. Maple St., Florence, Mass. 47 Abbot St., Andover, Mass. 1532 Spruce Place, Minneapolis, Minn. . Amherst, Mass. 404 Monroe St., Peoria, 111. Terryville, Conn. .313 State St., Albany, N.Y. . 141 2 Elk St., Franklin, Pa. Milford, Mass. . Waynesville, O. Pullman Building, Chicago, 111. 547 State St., Meadville, Pa. 45 Pleasant St., Amherst, Mass. 240 Linden St., Holyoke, Mass. 65 Bartlett St., Andover, Mass. 20 Second Ave. S., Minneapolis, Minn. 66 West 83d St., New York City. . Hingham, Mass. . 723 Congress St., Portland, Me. . 307 W. 82d St., New York City. 60 Summer St., Dover, N.H. 303 West End Ave., New York City. Ware, Mass. 40 Oak Grove St., Minneapolis, Minn. . Lafeuil le Hall, Kansas City, Mo. . Landisburg, Pa. . 1014 Euclid Ave., Cleveland, O. . 200 De Witt St., Syracuse, N.Y. . 327 Broad St., Providence, R.I. . 141 Union St., Springfield, Mass. 1 105 Jefferson St., Toledo, O. 26 Lee St., Worcester, Mass. Lancaster, N.H. 608 E. 13th St., Indianapolis, Ind. 152 Broadway, Norwich, Conn. 36 Winifred Claxton Leeming Alida King Leese Dorcas Floyd Leese . Anna Beatrice Levi . Ora Mabelle Lewis Emily Pauline Locke Bertha Miriam Loheed Clara Denison I.oomis Lucy Kloise Lord Mary Tate Lord Katharine Hart Lyman Margaret Hyde Lyman Frances Henrietta Lynch Lorraine Trivett Mabie Emogene Mahony Mary Stapler Malone . Alice May Maloney . Olive Louise Mann . Caroline Marmon Charlotte Lowry Marsh Elizabeth Porter Meier Virginia Walker Mellen Margaret Ellen Merrill Ann Gordon Merritt . Mabel Milham . Leslie Mitchell . Marguerite Morehead Monfort Edith Dale Monson . Grace Harlow Moore Margaret Cecilia Morris Annie Stevens Morrison Mildred Morse Alice Morton Lucy Adelaide Munroe Anna Grace Newell . Helen Ober Edna Louise Palmer Grace Parker Julia Bayles Paton 490 4th St., Brooklyn, N.Y. Western Promenade, Portland, Me. Western Promenade, Portland, Me. . The Berkeley, Buffalo, N.Y. South Lancaster, Mass. . 21 Sparhawk St., Brighton, Mass. . 24 Newton St., Brockton, Mass. 32 Park Ave., New York City. 87 West St., Northampton, Ma s. 4857 Creenwood Ave., Chicago, 111. Care of Lyman Kliel Drug Co., Minneapolis, Minn. 200 Ashland Boulevard, Chicago, 111. 420 South Market St., Canton, (). Summit, N.J. 273 State Street K., Columbus, O. 507 Washington St., Wilmington, Del. Easthampton, Mass . 12 Prospect St., Florence, Mass. 970 N. Delaware St., Indianapolis, End. 52(1 St. and 15th Ave., Brooklyn, N.Y. 11 Broadway, New York City. ( () Fisher Ave., Newton Highlands, Mass. Cumberland Centre, Me. 350 Main St., Danbury, Conn. 1615 St. Anthony Ave., St. Paul, Minn. 508 First Ave. S., St. Cloud, Minn. 918 Foraker Ave., Cincinnati, O. 1 Hillhouse Ave., New Haven, Conn. 75 Elm St., Worcester. Mass. 12 Houghton St., North Adams, Mas-. . 411 Canal St., Lawrence, Mass. 138 Water St., Clinton, M;i . 49 Vandeventer Place, St. Louis, Mo. 2 Clayton St., Worcester, Mass. . East Pembroke, N.Y. 384 Front St., Chicopee, Mass. . Northborough, Mass. 325 S. Union St., Burlington, Vt. 64 S. Clinton St., East t Grange, N.J. ;; Leonora Merrill Paxton Florence Ethel Peirce Florence Gertrude Perkins Mabel Kingsley Perkins Marion Alice Perkins Mary Ruth Perkins . Phebe Tomkins Persons Beatrice Pickett Edith Gray Pope Helen Potter Ida Marguerite Prager Kate Fairbanks Puffer Nelle Faragher Quirk Edith Mary Ramage . Anna Laura Ramsey . Maude Beatrice Randall Mary Alice Read Edith May Reid Elizabeth Revell Helen Dorothy Richards Georgia Isabel Robotham Bessie Storrs Rogers . Harriette Mumford Ross Grace Louise Russell Cornelia Salmon Sarah Watson Sanderson Bertha Sanford . Loucasta Frances Sargent Mary Buell Sayles Fanny Scott Helen Barnes Shattuck Clara Louise Shaw Sybil Shaw- Laura Abbie Shedd . Edith Dudley Sheldon Florence Ethelyn Shepard:- Clara Eliza Sherman . Agnes Elizabeth Slocum Anna Jaffray Smith . Bertha Isabel Smith . Elizabeth Hight Smith . Princeton, Ind. i 7 Belmont St., Lowell, Mass. . Lebanon, N.H. 265 Elm St., Northampton, Mass. 407 Washington Ave., Brooklyn, N.Y. East YValpole, Mass. 117 Elm St., Montclair, N.J. 61 Paradise St., Northampton, Mass. 1 75 Oak Place, New Haven, Conn. . 222 W. 23d St., New York City. . 1073 Boylston St., Boston, Mass. Saxonville, Mass. 1920 Vine Place, Minneapolis, Min n. • 2 33 Walnut St., Holyoke, Mass. 5475 Cabanne Ave., St. Louis, Mo. . Hudson, Mass. Bellows Falls, Vt. 863 President St., Brooklyn, N.Y. 2S Greenwood Boulevard, Evanston, 111. 2033 Green St., Philadelphia, Pa. 24 Green St., Northampton, Mass. 38 Mansfield St., New Haven, Conn. Cambridge Springs, Pa. Mountain Ave., Montclair, N.J. 719 Bushnell St., Beloit, Wis. Greenfield, Mass. 427 Quincy St., Brooklyn, N.Y. 49 Prospect Ave., Revere, Mass. 4 Clairmont Ave., Montclair, N.J. 311 Jefferson St., La Porte, Ind. 17 Orange St., Nashua, N.H. Great Barrington, Mass. 60 Warren Ave., Woburn, Mass. 4515 Drexel Boulevard, Chicago, 111. Girard College, Philadelphia, Pa. Athol, Mass. 248 County St., New Bedford, Mass. 424 Walnut St., Newtonville, Mass. 640 Madison Ave., New York City. Ridgeway, Winchester, Mass. . Amherst, Mass. 38 Evelyn Wilson Smith Marion Hinsdale Smith Myra Smit h Helen Burnham Stevens Mabel Stevenson I [elen Bruce Story Helen Ruth Stout Cora Elizabeth Sweeney Edith Symonds Mary Waterworth Taggart Carrie Wayland Taylor Lucy Clark Thayer Annie Louise Torrey Mary Ellery Trask Marion Grace True Ethel Louise Tryner Alice Jenney Tufts Etta May Underwood Margaret Vanderbilt Mary Esther Walton Grace Faulkner Ward Helen Ashton Ward Mary Alice Weaver Carolyn Weston Mabel Eager Wheeler Ethel Winifred Whitcomb Mary Sheafer Whitcomb Florence Cora White Frances Mary White . Florence Whitin Elizabeth Fay Whitney Florence Allen Whitney Ena Vinal Wilder Mary Clement Wilder Mary Elinor Wiley Emma Jane Winchester Marion Wolcott Winkler Elizabeth Wood Helen Ethel Wright . Carolyn Schubert Wurster 12 Broadway, New York City. Hadley, Mass. . 803 Summit Ave., Seattle, Wash. Stoneham, Mass. 5514 Hays St., Pittsburg, Pa. Dryad ' s Green, Northampton, Mass. 61 Lancaster St., Albany, N.Y. 15 Westfield St.. W. Springfield, Mass. 2204 Prair ie Ave., Chicago, 111. 319 West 75th St., New York City. 4220 Washington Boulevard, St. Louis, Mo. Hadley, Mass. 689 Main Street, Worcester, Mass. 495 Chestnut St., Springfield, Mass. . Yarmouth, Me. 141 2 North Main St., Bloomington, 111. . 503 Broadway, S. Boston, Mass. Longmeadow, Mass. 39 Monroe Place, Brooklyn, N.Y. 131 Wayne St. E., Fort Wayne, Ind. 210 Ocean St., Lynn, Mass. •So Crescenl Ave., Newton Centre, Mass. 9 Sanderson Ave., Northampton, Mass. Dalton, Mass . Pawlet, Vt. 61 Durant St., Lowell, Mass. id Stale St., Room 38, boston, Mass. 91 Summer St., Waltham, Mass. Walton, N.Y. Northbridge, Mass. Soo Whitney Ave., New Haven, Conn. 30 William St.. Worcester, Mass. Madison. N.J. 53 Fairmont Ave., Newton, Mass. 150 Main St., Amherst, Mass. 57 Court St., Westfield, Mass. 131 nth St.. Milwaukee. is. . [ohnstown, A . 230 Oneida St., Milwaukee, Wis. 170 Rodney St., Brooklyn, N.Y, 39 %Ml4 P l iiW ] M T -p Glee Clab Harriette M. Ross, 1900 Keturah S. Beers, 1900 l ' i 1 irence J. Smyth, 1901 Keturah S. Beers, 1900. Edna I.. Palmer, 1900. Harriette M. Ross, 1900. pirst Sopranos Genevieve King, 1901. Ethel Lane, 1901 . Ednah C. Lane, 1902. S ?eor;d Soprar;o5 Leader. Manager. Treasurer. Winifred E. Santee, 1902. Virginia B. Tolar, 1902. Dorothy A. Young, 1902. Mary S. Whitcomb, 1900. Mary B. Curtis, 1901. Selma E. Altheimer, 1902. Daisy F. Burt, 1901. Gertrude F. Hall, 1901. E. Louise Woodbury, 1902. pirst pitos Katharine ( ' . Griggs, 1900. Lucy M. Ellsworth, 1901. Edith T. Johnson, 1902. Frances ( ' . Buffington, 1901 Florence J. Smyth, 1901. Florence E. Cloxton, 1902. Florence L. Yerxa, 1901. $e ;09d pitos Mary E. Walton, 1900. Gertrude I.. Champion, 1902. Leal M. hales, [901. Clara I.. Lmst, 1902. 43 BANJO CLUB Edith W. Emerson, 1900 . Marguerite M. Monfort, 1900 . BaQJea urines Leader. Manager. Edith I. Brown, 1900. Marguerite M. Monfort, 1900. Beatrice Pickett, 1900. Lucilla S. Damon, 1901. Lena L. Swasey, 1901. Bessie Benedict, 1902. S ?co9d Banjos Sara M. Brown, 1900. Mary V. Booth, 1902. Henrietta C. Hill, 1902. Qciitars Edith W. Kmerson, 1900. Mabel I.. Fitzgerald, 1901. Julia 1 ' . Fay, 1900. Pauline M. Garey, 1901. Emma W. Durkee, 1901. Helen 1 ' . Manning, 1902. (T)a9doli9S Helen Gager, 1900. Constance Charnley, 1901. Maida Pcirce, 1902. 45 Ruth M. Huntington, ' 99 M. Louise Caldwell, 1901 Leader. Manager. pirst fflatydoliqs Ruth M. Huntington, ' 99. Helen M. Janney, 1900. Nina L. Almirall, 1901. Helen L. Harsha, 1901. Helen Shoemaker, 1901. Carolyn H. Childs, 1902. Elizabeth Hasbrouck, 1902. Elizabeth H. Macniel, 1902. S ?coq j T atydoliQS Mary T. Lord, 1900. Matilda L. Heidrich, 1901 Mary F. Barrett, 1901. Hannah G. Johnson, 1901. M. Louise Caldwell, 1901. Mary H. Sayles, 1901. Susan Watkins, 1902. Alma Hoegh, 1900. Emogene Mahony, 1900. (Juitars l iolii}s Grace Hurley, 1902. Ethel Barnes, 1902. Ethel F. Fernald, 1902. Agnes C. Inglis, 190: jHarpist L. Louisa Fletcher, 1900. 46 c Z 3 x. o ° I o U S u HARRIETTE MUMFORD ROSS, Leader. KETURAH SHERMAN BEERS. KATHARINE CHARLOTTE GRIGGS. WINIFRED CLAXTON LEEMING. EDNA LOUISE PALMER. MARY ESTHER WALTON. MARY SHEAFER WHITCOMB. former (Timbers RUTH ALBRLGHT. CAROLINE SIMMONS EDDY. FLORENCE MABLE FREEMAN. 4S Oi£) 9 A President for first semester Editor Chairman of Executive Committee President for second semester . Editor Chairman of Executive Committee Winifred Claxton Leeming. Florence Whitin. Elizabeth Porter Meier. Bertha Wendell Groesbeck. Mary Buell Sayles. Annie Perry Hincks. S ?i}ior T T b r5 Stella Louise Barse. Sara Maude Brown. Laurel Louisa Fletcher. Harriet Louise Goodwin. Julia Marguerite Gray. Bertha Wendell Groesbeck. Annie Perry Hincks. Frances Cruft Howe. Clara Louise Kneeland. Winifred Claxton Leeming. Emily Pauline Locke. Feb.-Oct., ' 98. Oct., ' 98-Feb., ' 99. Feb.-June, ' 99. Corresponding Secretary Treasurer Executive Officer Vice-President Corresponding Secretary Recording Secretary Treasurer Executive Officer Vice-President Recording Secretary Mary Tate Lord. Lorraine Trivett Mabie. Caroline Marmon. Charlotte Lowry Marsh. Elizabeth Porter Meier. Leonora Merrill Paxto ' n. Anna Laura Ramsey. Grace Louise Russell. Mary Buell Sayles. Helen Ruth Stout. Florence Whitin. Elizabeth Porter Meier. Caroline Marmon. Bertha Wendell Groesbeck. Emily Pauline Locke. Lorraine Trivett Mamie. Harriet Louise Goodwin. Annie Perry Hincks. Caroi im Marmon. Caroline Marmon. Julia Margi i rite Gray. 51 President for first semester Editor Chairman of Executive Committee President for second semester Editor Chairman of Executive Committee Senior (7 ern,b ?r5 Katharine Brigham. Marion Wolcott Winkler. Fr-ances Henrietta Lynch. Sarah Watson Sanderson. Helen Dorothy Richards. Helen Coolidge. Harriet Lycinthia Barnes. Katharine Brigham. Florence Brooks. Helen Coolidge. Charlotte Eggleston. Cornelia Brownell Gould. Alma Hoegh. Lucinda Mary-Belle Holt. Helen Mary Janney. Marion Faith Robinson Leavens. Bertha Miriam Loheed. Frances Henrietta Lynch. Kate Fairbanks Puffer. Helen Dorothy Richards. Sarah Watson Sanderson. Evelyn Wilson Smith. Florence Allen Whitney. Mary Clement Wilder. Wolcott Winkler. Feb.-June, ' 98. Treasurer Sept., ' 98-Feb., ' 99. Vice-President Secretary . Treasurer . Feb.-June, ' 99. Vice-President Secretary . Katharine Brigham. Mary Clement Wilder. Charlotte Eggleston. Florence Allen Whitney. Katharine Brigham. Frances Henrietta Lynch. 53 President for first semester On the Executive Committee President for second semester Vice-president for second semester Chairman of Executive Committee Elizabeth Fay Whitney. Faith Robinson Leavens, Chairman. Ella Mabel Baldwin. Ora Mabelle Lewis. Frances Cruft Howe. Ai.ida Kim; Leese. Ella Mabel Baldwin. Florence Brooks. Aneita Doty Brown. Edith Madeleine Elwell. Bertha Wendell Groesbeck Frances Cruft Howe. Faith Robinson Leavens. Florence 5 ?i}ior (Timbers Winifred Claxtoii I .eeminj Alida King Leese. Ora Mabelle Lewis. Emily Pauline Locke. Charlotte Lowry Marsh. Anna Grace Newell. Edna Louise Palmer. Allen Whitney. Mary ( Sept., ' 98— Feb., ' 99. Secretary Treasurer . On lie Executive Committet Feb.— June, ' 99. Secretary . Treasurer . On t ie Executive Committet 55 ;. Julia Bayles Paton. Marion Alice Perkins. Phebe Tomkins Persons. Bertha Isabel Smith. Evelyn Wilson Smith. Margaret Vanderbilt. Elizabeth Fay Whitney, lenient Wilder. . Charlotte Lowry Marsh. Faith Robinson Leavens. Berth Wendell Groesbi k. Phebe Tomkins Persons. Julia Bayles Paton. Elizabeth Fa Whitney. Emu v Pauline I ocki . ( )ka Mai;i 1 ik Lewis. LF President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer Executive Committee Virginia Walker Mellen. Helen Constance Kerruish. Keturah Sherman Beers. Clara Louise Kneeland. The Officers and Charlotte Eggleston. S ?9ior (T)efn.b ?rs Ella Mabel Baldwin. Keturah Sherman Beers. Katharine Brigham. Mary Emma Blodgett. Otelia Cromwell. Frances Walkley Cummings. Charlotte Eggleston. Faith Avery Fischer. Eliza Jane Goodsell. Harriet Louise Goodwin. Julia Marguerite Gray. Caroline King Grier. Minnie Mildred Harris. Annie Perry Hincks. Mina Mahala Kerr. Helen Constance Kerruish. Clara Louise Kneeland. Dorcas Floyd Leese. Virginia Walker Mellen. Kate Fairbanks Puffer. Helen Dorothy Richards. Bessie Storrs Rogers. Mary Buell Sayles. Florence Ethelyn Shepardson. Etta May Underwood. Helen Ashton Ward. 56 CoqO n Secretary Treasurer Carolyn Lauter. Marion Auch Perkins. Senior (T ?mb ?rs Stella Louise Barse. Frances Henrietta Lynch. Keturah Sherman Beers. Mary Stapler Malone. Cora Estella Delabarre. Ann Gordon Merritt. Carolyn Lauter. Marion Alice Perkins. Mary Tate Lord. Anna Laura Ramsey. Carolyn Schubert Wurster. 57 Secretary and Treasurer for first semester On the Executive Committee . Mary Louise Deane. Meta Ellis Bentley, Chairman. Lucy Ei.oise Lord. Minnie Winchell Foster. Secretary and Treasurer for second semester On the Executive Committee . Mary Louise Deane. Meta Ellis Bentley, Chairman. Sara Cook. Senior (Tubers Katherine I )evereux Barker. Meta Ellis Bentley. Sara Josephine Cook. Lucy Elizabeth Day. Mary Louise Deane. Jennie Florence Edgcomb. Minnie Winchell Foster. Minnie Mildred Harris. Mina Mahala Kerr. Fanny Hubbard Kingsley. Lucy Eloise Lord. Alice May Maloney. Anna (affray Smith. Feb.— June, ' 99. Secretary and Treasurer On the Executive Committee Alice May Maloney. Fanny Hubbard Kingsley. 5S X 2 L. Vice-President . Chairman of Executive Committee 1 [elen Ethel Wright. Kate Fairbanks Puffer 5 ?9ior (Timbers Charlotte Eggleston. Minnie Winchel] Foster. Mina Mahala Kerr. Clara Louise Kneeland. Margaret Cecilia Morris. Kate Fairbanks Puffer. Helen Ethel VVrieht. 59 Vice-President On the Executive Committee Nominating Committee . Katharine Hart Lyman. Katharine Hart Lyman. Helen Ethel Wright. Edith Imogene Brown. Mina Mahala Kerr. Senior T e n.bers Alfa Curtis Barber. Edith Imogene Brown. Emma Darling Emery. Mina Mahala Kerr. Katharine Hart Lyman. Margaret Cecilia Morris. Mabel Kingsley Perkins. Helen Ethel Wright. 60 Vice-President . Executive Board Mary Buell Sayles. Eliza Jane Goodsell. Stella Louise Barse. Helen Coolidge. Ethel Norcross Fish. Eliza Jane Goodsell. Emily Pauline Locke. Seizor (Timbers Bessie Storrs Rogers. ( trace Louise Russell. Mary Buell Sayles. Florence Whitin. Florence Allen Whitney. ' 98- ' 9o. Secretary and Treasurer Executive Board Florence Whitin. Ethel Norcross Fish. 6 i Secretary Executive Officer Helen Bruce Story. Mary Ruth Perkins. Senior f( ef( bev$ Keturah Sherman Beers. Edith Imogene Brown. Mabel Carver. Adelaide Susan Dvvight. Faith Avery Fischer. Clara Denison Loom is. Margaret Hyde Lyman. Mary Stapler Malone. Mary Ruth Perkins. Edith May Reid. Helen Barnes Shattuck. Sybil Shaw. Helen Bruce Story. Annie Louise Torrey. Mary Esther Walton. Helen Ashton Ward. ( ' hair in n Secretary Carolyn Weston. Emily Pauline Locke Timbers Ruth Albright. Harriet Lycinthia Barnes. Madeleine Zabriskie Doty. Harriet Louise Goodwin. Cornelia Brownell Gould. Frances Cruft Howe. I Ielen Mary Janney. Caroline King. Winifred Claxton Leeming. Emily Pauline Locke. Mary Tate Lord. Caroline Marmon. Elizabeth Porter Meier. Alice Morton. Carolyn Weston. Ena Yinal Wilder. 63 Secretary and Treasurer On the Executive Committee Keturah Sherman Beers. Keturah Sherman Beers. Harriette Mumford Ross. Mvra Smith. Seizor (T emb ?rs Keturah Sherman Beers. Anna Beatrice Levi. Madeline Melissa Chase. Mary Ruth Perkins. Frances Maria Cox. Harriette Mumford Ross. Julia Pike Fay. Edith Dudley Sheldon. Aloysia Mary Hoye. Myra Smith. ' 98- ' 99. Secretary and Treasurer On the Executive Committee Keturah Sherman Beers. Keturah Sherman Beers. Harriette Mumford Ross. 64 Chairman . Grace Louise Russei i . S ?n ior (T) ?mb(?rs Bertha Wendell Groesbeck. Winifred Claxton Leeming. Grace Louise Russell. ( !arolyn Weston. 6s President Bkrtha Wkndei.l Groesbeck. 5 ?9ior Qour cjllors Cornelia Brownell Gould. Bertha Wendell Groesbeck. Annie Perry Hincks. Elizabeth Porter Meier. Frances Cruft Howe. Soptyornore ovgeillors Bertha Wendell Groesbeck. Frances Cruft Howe. Junior Qoo eillors Elizabeth Porter Meier. Bertha Wendell Groesbeck. Frances Cruft Howe. 66 Chafe Cook Corny ' ( ; w ld Katie O ' Barton. Evy () ' Foster. Martie ( ' rflchrist. Corny O ' Gould. Carrie ( ) ' Grier. Almy O ' Hoegh. Segior (Hinders Helen ( I ' Jannev. Carrie O ' King. Emmy ( ) ' Locke. Carrie ( ) ' Marmon. Allie ( I ' Morton. Edie ) ' Symonds. 67 ,(,8 000  00 o ° C 000....«)0 President Ena Vinai. Wilder. (Members Elizabeth Louise Barrett. Katharine Louise Barton. Helen Coolidge. Alma Hoegh. Frances Cruft Howe. Helen Mary Janney. Mary Tate Lord. Elizabeth Porter Meier. Alice Morton. Bertha Isabel Smith. Carolyn Weston. Ena Vinal Wilder. fiS KUTtt o lLSRlC T 171RaiCToLVCinTrtl7I B??Rr?C5 KJlT !flRIRe o fifllGKfln ev iocoKneLifl°F05Teft Juim T J B6 f€RiTt° GRTDJ btKrnfcv aiQciipeRQtt beck L0fflifllfle o TKJVeTT A7lGie L€OUOR AeKKiLL P XTO tU111B£Tft°Rt f£LL HtltH STQ lT apTEKB c£ 69 Motto : Didcc est desipere in loco. - Irbiter elegantiarum Agnes Elizabeth Slocum. El atytiae Florence Brooks. Annie Perry Hincks. Faith Robinson Leavens. Winifred Claxton Leeming. Alida King Leese. Virginia Walker Mellen. Sarah Watson Sanderson. Agnes Elizabeth Slocum. Margaret Vanderbilt. Carolyn Schubert Wurster. 70 EDITORS CAROLINE MARMON, Editor-in-Ctvef. CHARLOTTE LOWRY MARSH, Literary Editor. SARAH WATSON SANDERSON, Contributors ' Club, MARY BUELL SRYLES, Editor ' s Table. EMILY PAULINE LOCKE, AlUnjqae Departrqeqt. ANNIE PERRY HINCKS, About College. MARY CLEMENT WILDER, Maqaging Editor. LEONORA MERRILL PAXTON, Business Manager. Second Vice-President . Senior Representative Dorcas Floyd Leese. Auda King Leese. Freshman Representatit ' 96- ' 97 Carolyn Weston. Secretary Treasurer Sophomore Representatizu ' 97- ' 98 Elizabeth Revell. Dorcas Floyd Leese. Alice Morton. First I ' ice-President Junior Representative ' 98- ' 99 Dorcas Floyd Leese. Anna Jaffkay Smith. V- [affray Smith, 1900. 1900 — 15A. Captains. Ellen Emerson, 1901. Margery Ferriss, 1902. Points for the Flag, Class Work. 1901 — 16J 1902 Jessie Ames, 1903. 1903— 16 Points for the Cup, Class Work and Indiv idual Work. [900 — 42.5. lQr.n FIRST 1900. place. 1901. 1902. PLACE. PLACE. Serpentine Ladder. Inclined Ladder. Vault over Uox. Running High Jump. Jumping between Double Booms One-half Horizontal Stand. Sprinting. Climbing Ropes for Speed. Stretch forward Bend. Vault over 1 Corse. Prone Toe Lean. Prone Side Palling. I le.n e hanging. Climbing Ropes for Form. Balance Beams. Prone Iviny holding. Basket Throwing. Swing Jump. 1 90 1 — 41. Apparatus Work. SE () D PLACE. 1902 — 51 Balance Beams. Stretch forward Rend. Basket Throwing. 27 points. SECOND PLACE. SECOND PLACE. IIea e hanging. Vault over BOX. Prone lying holding. Swim; jump. One-half Horizontal stand. Serpen! ine Ladder. Climbing Ropes for Speed. Climbing Ropes for Form. Inclined Ladder. Running 1 1 i h Jump. Vault over 1 Lorse. Jumping between Double Boom: Prone Toe Lean. Prone Side Palling. Sprinting. 25 points. 38 points. 1900 Competitors in Apparatus and Floor Work. Stella Eldred, Second Place, Basket Throwing. A LIMA Leese. First Place, One-half Horizontal Stand. Second Place, Stretch forward Bend, Dorcas Leese. Edith Monson. Ruth Perkins. Phi be Persons. 1900 Kim ham Beers. Mm 01 Brown, Maui- 1, Carver. STELl Li Hutu. M mm ha Ellis, a 1 1 1 1 Leese, JAFFRA1 Smith, First Place, Serpentine Ladder. 11 ' Inclined Ladder. Vault over Box. jumping between Double Booms. M Al .Mil I V ANIlKHISll.T. C unit W ' l STON, First Place, Running ILl;1i Jump. Sprinting. Competitors in Marching. tFFRAl Sm llll, ( i ni l. Ann Ramsay. Maudi Rand mi.. M M ION ' I ' Kll . 1 10 , m; 1 1 VAND1 R 10 I 1. Carol Weston. 1 LORKNCi White. I ll Mil 1 1 .1 1 se. I Nil Ml , SI)N. Mildred Morse. 1: in Perkins. Phi hi Persons. 7.1 President ........ Vice-President ....... President of Missionary Society .... Needlework Guild ...... Chairman of General Prayer-meeting Committee, Chairman of Class Prayer-meeting Com mi tec . Florence Allen Whitney. Grace Louise Russell. Mabel Milham. Marguerite Morehead Monfort. Mary Sheafer Whitcomb, Bertha Wendell Groesbeck. ' 96- ' 97 General Prayer-meeting Committee Class Prayer-meeting Committee Florence Ali en Whitney. Mary Sheafer Whitcomb.  97- 98 General Prayer-meeting Committee Class Prayer-meeting Committee . Treasurer ..... Lena Lewis Swasey. Mary Sheafer Whitcomb. Grace Louise Russell. ' 98 ' 99 General Prayer-meeting Committee Class Prayer-meeting Committee Recording Secretary . Corresponding Secretary Students ' Exchange Grace Louise Russell. Florence Whitin. 1 1 rkii.i Louise ( i odw iv Sarah Watson Sanderson. Alida Kim; I. Kim. 75 MEMBERSHIP CARD OF THE CHRISTIAN UNION Article II, Any member of the college will be welcomed to its fellowship who desires that the Christ -life shall be deepened in herself as well as in the college. President . . Grace Louise Russell. Senior H)ember5 Harriet Lycinthia Barnes. Meta Ellis Bentley. Mary Emma Blodgett. Agnes AVingate Bragg. Florence Brooks. Sara Maude Brown. Mabel Carver. Madeline Melissa Chase. Sara Josephine Cook. Frances Maria Cox. Frances Walkley Cummings. Mary Louise Deane. Adelaide Susan Dwight. Faith Avery Fischer. Katharine Ogden Fletcher. Annie Louise A. Foster. Mary Agnes Gage. Eliza Jane Goodsell. Harriet Louise Goodwin. Katharine Charlotte Griggs. Bertha Wendell Groesbeck. Clara Emily Heywood. Annie Perry Hincks. Mina Mahala Kerr. Clara Louise Kneeland. Faith Robinson Leavens. Bertha Miriam Loheed. Clara Denison Loom is. 76 Katharine Hart Lyman. Charlotte Lowry Marsh. Virginia Walker Mellen. Mabel Milham. Marguerite Morehead Monfort. G race Harlow Moore. Florence Ethel Peirce. Mary Ruth Perkins. Phebe Tomkins Persons. Edith ( rray Pope. Anna Laura Ramsey. Maude Beatrice Randall. Edith Mary Reid. Helen Dorothy Richards. Grace Louise Russell. Sarah Watson Sanderson. Bertha Sanford. Loucasta Frances Sargent. Mary Buell Sayles. Marion Wolcott Clara Louise Shaw. Edith Dudley Sheldon. Florence Ethelyn Shepardson. Clara Eliza Sherman. Elizabeth Hight Smith. Evelyn Wilson Smith. Ma bel Stevenson. Helen Bruce Story. Helen Ruth Stout. Mary Waterworth Taggart. Margaret Vanderbilt. Mary Esther Walton. 1 lelen Ashton Ward. Ethel Winifred Whitcomb. Mary Sheafer Whitcomb. Florence Whitin. Florence Allen Whitney. Mary Clement Wilder. Mary Elinor Wiley. Winkler. 77 President Maijei, Milham. S ?9ior Ruth Albright. Harriet Lycinthia Barnes. Meta Ellis Bentley. Agnes Wingate Bragg. Florence Brooks. Aneita Doty Brown. Edith Imogene Brown. Sara Maude Brown. Mabel Carver. Madeline Melissa Chase. Frances Walkley Cummings. Adelaide Susan Dwight. Annie Louise Foster. Eliza Jane Goodsell. Timbers Katharine Charlotte Criggs. Bertha Wendell Groesbeck. Annie Perry Hincks. Cornelia Amey Kingman. Clara Louise Kneeland. Carolyn Lauter. Faith Robinson Leavens. Clara Denison Loom is. Katharine Hart Lyman. Margaret Hyde Lyman. Lorraine Trivett Mabie. Emogene Mahony. Llizabeth Porter Meier. Virginia Walker Mellen. 78 Mabel Milham. Florence Ethel Peirce. Mary Ruth Perkins. Anna Laura Ramsey. Maude Beatrice Randall. Mary Alice Read. Edith May Reid. Helen Dorothy Richards. Grace Louise Russell. Bertha Sanford. Mary Buell Sayles. Edith Dudley Sheldon. Florence Ethelyn Shepardson. ( lira Eliza Sherman. Anna Jaffray Smith. Evelyn Wilson Smith. Helen Bruce Story. Mabel Stevenson. Mary Waterworth Taggart. Annie Louise Torrey. Mary Esther Walton. Helen Ashton Ward. Ethel Winifred Whitcomb. Mary Sheafer Whitcomb. Frances Mary White. Florence Whitin. Florence Allen Whitney. Mary Clement Wilder. Secretary . Assistant Treasurer ' 97 ' 98 Elizabeth Porter Meier. Agnes Patton. Vice-President . Secretary . Assistant Treasurer ' 98 ' 99 Mary Buell Sayles. Elizabeth Porter Meier. AciN ' FS l ' .VI Hi . 79 Moasje Dramatic Donna Diana . A Fair Barbarian Money The Heir-at-Law ' 96- ' 97 Alpha and Phi Kappa Psi Wallace House Lawrence House Morris House November 7. November 18. February 24. May 5. The Hunchback A Scrap of Paper The Wheel of Love . Fanchon the Cricket ' 97- ' 98 Tertium Quid Olla Podrida Dickinson House Sarin Ganok . December 15. March 2. March 23. June 1. A Russian Honeymoon The Belle ' s Stratagem Esmeralda ' 98- ' 99 Wallace House Lawrence House Morris House November 16. February 18. March 22. For Haifa Million A Husband to Order Lovers of Romance . The Critic Ralph Roister Doister ' 99- J 900 Washburn and Wesley Dickinson House . Sarin Ganok Tertium Ouid November 22. I K ember 6. March 14. April 25. Si Officers of tf)e Class ' 96 ' 97 President, Frances Cruet Howe. Vice-President, Agnes Patton. Secretary, Elizabeth Louise Barrett. Treasurer, Carolyn SCHUBERT Wurster. ' 97- ' 98 President, Bertha Wendell Groesbeck. Vice-President, Caroline King. Secretary, Lorraine Trivett MABIE. Treasurer, Mary CLEMEN! Wilder. ' 98 ' 99 President, ELIZABETH PORTER Meier. Vice-President, Sarah Watson Sanderson. Secretary, FLORENCE ALLEN WHITNEY. Treasurer, Leonora Merrill Paxton. ' 99- J 900 President, Cornelia BROWNELL GOULD. Vice-President, Ca r man W ES ION. Secretary, Alida Kino Leese. Treasure)-, LAURA ABBIE SHEDD. Freshman Class History HEN you really think of it, it does seem a pretty long time since the September day when we first landed, three hundred strong, at the old wooden station. Some of us had brought mothers to settle us ; some were in tow of friendly Seniors whom we had known in the world outside as simple human beings, but who now as upper-class girls were invested with a sudden and awful dignity, till we trembled to think of old familiarities; some were revelling or trying to revel in pure independence; and all were feeling somewhat excited and vastly important. Do you remember with what interest we looked at the Dewey House and College Hall tower, and how we wondered at the indifference of the Sophomores and held the Faculty in mortal fear and the Seniors in reverence? We devoted ourselves with zeal to arranging our brand new pillows and setting all our family photographs on our desks and discussing with our roommates just how we should hang our pictures. In connection with this business of getting unpacked, 1900 first showed its spirit of strong common sense and quiet independence. Other tamer classes had been in the habit of leaving their rooms in confusion to attend recitations the first day of college. With a true womanly love of order that must have touched the President ' s heart, we went right on arranging our photographs and fishnets. Hut when he pointed out the Faculty ' s disappointment, we accepted the conventional programme with our usual courtesy. Nineteen hundred has had much good luck and our first stroke was in coming in a fine apple year, while the farmers did not as yet lurk behind stone walls for us. What a solace it was ! We munched them comfortably while we walked the back campus and had a bag conveniently near while we dog-eared Titus Livy and struggled to pierce the impenetrabilities of Solid Geometry. We were still finding in them balm for occasional homesick twinges when our first class meeting came off. That first class meeting ! Now that class unity, which that day seemed a vision never to be realized, is long established and a matter of course, who of us would forget the splendid fury of that afternoon? The child is father of the man in classes as well as in individuals, and 1900 showed that day the fighting blood that has won us many a victory. Each on her separate chair we stood and hurled anathemas at all our neighbors with tragic zeal ; till studious upper- class girls fled from the Hatfield and the Washburn in despair to the uttermost parts of the campus. Poor calm things that we are nowadays; do you suppose we could yell like that again if we tried? It takes considerable stretch of imagination to carry us back to the lime when we considered the Sophomore Reception a really exciting event — the only dance in college S5 when you had to wear gloves, we were impressively told. We all went, and wore our graduating dresses of the June before, and were properly impressed. We stood rather in awe of the Sophomores — had they not lived through two sieges of exams? — and we were decently respectful and told each partner that we thought college was simply great and we hadn ' t been really homesick yet. We drank a great deal of lemonade, and admired the crowd from the gallery, and thought the remarkable arrangement by which we were made to dance all waltzes or all two-steps, rather queer, but very college-y. Meanwhile we were fast getting acclimated, and acquainted, too, though we were such an awful lot. We explored Northampton and unravelled the mysteries of Cres- cent street and discovered the Meadows and Old Hadley and Titan ' s Pier. As for the time we spent inside College Hall, we found Bible i and Livy and Old English didn ' t offer a very wide field for original genius. However, there was English 2, in which the Dear Departed discovered literary celebrities in large numbers every Thursday and Fri- day afternoon at two. Some of us rashly buried ourselves in English History. Others plunged deep into the mysteries of English 4 and talked gravely of Tactile Values and the Significant, until 1900 ' s gift for overwhelming the Faculty suddenly developed, and English 4 was left an arid waste. What Freshman history would be complete without a reference to that most joyous of times, our first vacation ? What vigorous appreciation of our families college had developed in us ! How rejoiced we were when we couldn ' t possibly walk through the halls without tearing our skirts on the trunks, and the voice of the baggageman was heard on all sides ! We were especially favored with a driving snow-storm to start out in, so that all the trains were hours late. We settled ourselves comfortably and ate oranges and grew very sociable and reached home at most unholy hours. When we came back, our first Mid-years stared us in the face. When we finally had to grapple with them, we were a little surprised to find them rather ordinary after all. To be sure we had then to solve the horrible problem, Is it our moral duty to attend an optional examination? But our common sense again came to the rescue and whispered that the days of asceti- cism and self-martyrdom are past. For some days we pressed in swarms around the Faculty bulletin board and feared to catch the Faculty ' s eye ; but before long we were pinching ourselves to make sure we had really survived the ordeal. Perhaps we could not have borne it so well if we hadn ' t been enjoying a few diversions. For those were the happy days of hitching. In that time Freshmen and Sopho- mores went in search of the sport in well-organized squads, and even upper-class girls were seen to indulge, in sedate couples and trios. It rends our hearts to think that those that come after us can never know the joy of panting up Elm street in the middle of the road after a swift-running pung, or the bliss of the triumphant leap that lands one on it. These pleasures belong only to the past. For a little while we pursued the inno- cent pastime in happy freedom ; then — We never knew exactly what happened. 86 Perhaps some girl happened upon a pung whose driver was delivering sliced ham. Rumor soon had it that a Smith girl had been seen riding surrounded by slaughtered swine. The newspapers pictured the scene in lurid colors and we were gently told that such conduct was not maidenly. We were mercifully spared a Freshman victory in basket ball. But while we waved our purple banners and loudly sang our praises, and stood wedged in, hot and excited, between the iron railing and the row back, and cheered our gallant team, and felt mighty proud of the good fight they made, all of a sudden we realized that we were the class of 1900, and were glad of it. The defeat that day left us with a new class spirit, a real class unity. After that our first spring term happened. We idled as much as we dared, and cultivated our powers of bluffing. We found Paradise and the back campus very alluring, and certain profound papers on Chaucer; The Man and His Work and The Influence of Democracy on Art and Literature suffered in consequence. We tramped all afternoon, and got up before breakfast to play tennis. Then there was a tournament, and we won the championship away from the Seniors, and were prouder of ourselves than ever. Altogether we were ready to vote spring term one of the nicest things that could possibly happen, and there we weren ' t far wrong. At last came Commencement. Many of us stayed over to enjoy the spectacle and took in it a pleasant, impersonal, detached interest that we can never feel again. We were overwhelmed with admiration for The Merchant of Venice and were ready to scale the opera house fire-escape for another sight. On Ivy Day we hung around the out- skirts of the procession and took snap-shots of Shylock and the Ivy Orator and the Junior Ushers. We stared at the crowd of fathers and aunts, and watched the little groups of Seniors curiously. We wondered what their feelings were and couldn ' t possibly imagine, and ignorance was bliss. We felt very sorry for them and very sorry for us, that they were actually Alums ; and we tried very hard, and not very successfully, to realize that we were Freshmen no longer. Helen Dorothy Richards. S7 CO en O 2 £ O I Q. O (J) Sophomore Class History HE authorities of the college would probably call this a Second Class History, but I leave that ignominious title for your own application, — sub rosa, please, — and insist upon calling it the Sophomore Class History. Probably we have never felt, collectively or individually, as necessary to the college as we did in the early fall of 1897, when all but a few of our original class assembled in Northampton. Now we had a class to look over, to admonish, to watch in a semi-kindly, semi-satiric way. Now we could repeat the time-honored jests which were this year attached to 1901. Every member of the class, I am sure, felt a delightful air of proprietorship in everything, from the nebulous railway station to Kingsley ' s drug store. This air of proprietorship in collegians has not always met with encouragement from the citizens of Northampton, but willy-nilly it was a very large and attractive part of our Sophomore outfit. The zest with which we grasped the onerous social burdens of our Sophomore year made the weight absurdly small. Of course our reception to the Freshmen was an unexampled success from the Freshman standpoint — let any present-day Junior dare to contradict this statement. We characterized the affair as rather good, don ' t you know. Mountain Day we scattered to the four winds, a process easier in and about North- ampton than elsewhere, as the campus alone always furnishes winds blowing in four different directions at once. Some of us were so blase and had had such a number of Mountain Days that we stayed at home, assuring our Freshman friends, with an air of superiority bordering on the Olympian, that we had some work to do. We were already preparing for the Sophomore-Senior entertainment, and at this time expected to have Irving and Terry or Major McKinley as entertainers. The com- mittee neglected to inform me which or who. It was the fall of ' 97 that the golf club was started by the college and the fever got its strongest hold on the glorious class of 1900. Even in its infant days the club found some of its most ardent supporters in the class which was to furnish champions in lone- somes, and in foursomes, mixed and unmixed. The fall days fled all too swiftly, and with winter we had the Freshmen pretty well broken in. On the whole our treatment of the Freshmen merits great praise. We were kind but firm, encouraging but judicious, and superior extremely. A class has never had more valuable upbringing than 1901, and if they ever go wrong it is certainly not our fault. 89 o Mid-years? N ell, why recall them? Any one who wants to will find plenty of time to do so in the next year. The Basket-Bali game ! Now, there is something we can all be very, very proud of forever and a day. The game itself is somebody else ' s story. Of pluck and skill com- bined I should say 1900 was an example of surpassing completeness. I am sure we all sang better than ever before or since. The gymnasium was handsomer, the crowd more enthusiastic. As an unprejudiced observer I can say it was the greatest game on record. Ninety-eight supported us loyally as ever, and was then as always up to date. After the Easter holidays the Senior entertainment came off. It was screamingly funny, whether it was meant to be or not, and it is an indisputable fact that many young women went home with their ideas and tastes in dress utterly changed. If each Senior did not enjoy it her sense of humor must have been deficient or her seat behind a post. This social load off our collective mind, the next was decorating for the Junior Promenade. Wasn ' t it pretty, didn ' t the class do well, and wasn ' t it fun ! Even winding ground pine had a decided excitement about it, and driving out before breakfast to gather the ubiquitous green stuff was a most inexpensive and entrancing way of being healthy and happy. If there is any joy equal to the discovery of a handsome rug or chair, and the instant appropriation of the same for decorating purposes, I ' ve yet to experience it. The morning after was a bit appalling. The gymnasium to be cleared before 9 A.M., is rather a large order and if the class had not been brawny as well as brainy, the powers might have found more cause for arbitration. When June came the class were all sorry, I think, that a very delightful year was at an end, but we might well be proud of our success as hostesses and of the- jaunty air with which we carried off our social duties. On the whole, in all modesty, I must state that even as Sophomores we were about as fine, hearty, and handsome a class as ever were members of the college. Even squeezed into transept seats, our grace and amiability were noticeable, and when listened to in English 5 (b or a) or History 3, we were world-astounding. And now ere we come to Junior year let us spend a moment in reflection and we shall all find in 1900 a shining example of a splendid Sophomore class. Cornelia Brownell Gould. t X en o Junior Class History OVV were come the days when we wrapped ourselves about with dignity and a high seriousness, as with a cloak, and took unto ourselves a purpose in life. For Juniorhood was upon us. The transept seats, wherein in former days we flattened our knees and were miserable, knew us no more. Freed from the trammels of 5 (both a and b), we ranged from cover to cover of the catalogue, tasting the joys of free will a nd the elective system. Course cards of amazing dimensions, with sinister little squares on them marked Grade, had no longer any terrors for us. They were become an old story, and we now wished neither to fold them nor to write in this space. In those first days there came to us, straight from nervous prostration and the Klon- dike, one who has proved an ornament both to the History department and to the golf links — a kindly, gregarious spirit, who has remained with us in peace even unto the present. But there was another who abode with us a briefer space, and then passed from our midst. Peace to his memory, poor man ! May he somewhere, sometime, find some nice little boys to instruct in the Development of the Fssay. Truly we accomplished many things in our Junior year, constructively, and alas, destructively, too. Can 1 force my reluctant pen t o one more sad theme, the Sartor course, which died the death at our hands, and is now no more ? Think, oh think of Gargantua and Don Quixote, and all those dear, big, musty, improper books ! But to turn to more cheerful themes — in December our Councillors ascertained the wishes of the student body and of the Faculty on the subject of holding a Christmas sale, and the wishes of the two bodies were not, so to speak, identical. Then our trusty Councillors said one to another, Come, let us reason together. When is a fur not a fair? Whereupon there ensued such keen and subtle argument as proved beyond a doubt the practical value of a course in Jevon ' s Logic and Barbara, celarent — At last a solution was reached. When it ' s a Donation Tarty, proclaimed the Council in triumph. It has been said, What ' s in a name? As we munched the inevitable cream walnuts and fudge, bought penwipers and pillows, laughed over the Minstrels in their modest, long linen dusters, or partook of rarebit at the sign of the long car . we realized that where the Faculty are concerned, there is a deal, a very great deal, in a name. Junior Mid years were uneventful, save lor that curious pedagogic vagary, the Eng- 93 lish 13 exam, the first one on record. Not knowing the mysterious inner workings of the Faculty mind, we could hardly be expected to answer with certitude the first ques- tion, What is the purpose of this examination? It seemed probable, though, that it was designed chiefly for the entertainment of the instructor, so we wrote our papers in a vein of lightsome pleasantry. It is always well to meet the Faculty half way in their little jokes. The class of ' 99, among other noteworthy deeds (of which so much has been said, and on the whole so well said, that I need not here elaborate them), established the Junior Party precedent. We looked upon it and saw that it was a goodly precedent, and one which it would be well to perpetuate, — if the Powers permitted. We therefore voted that we too would have a Junior Party, and have one we did accordingly. We sang one another ' s praises with tremendous enthusiasm ; we played games and partook of frappe (when it came) ; and we felt thrills of loyalty to the class that never blundered run- ning up and down our spinal columns. And do we not all remember that magnificent and costly stage setting (to wit, one down comforter, and one shaky step-ladder labelled Ye leafy oak-tree ), to say nothing of the imposing sofa- pillow coils of the Green Dragon, and the pointed way he remarked to the shrinking maiden, Does your mother know you ' re out? The traditional two Glee Club concerts were reduced to one this year, you remem- ber, and on that we fondly set our hopes. To how many anxious little Freshmen did we not condescendingly promise such of our tickets as we ourselves didn ' t need ! How delightful it was, to be sure, not to have to depend on upper-class girls any more ! So we went in smiling confidence to the drawing. And then the slips gave out before the Juniors drew at all ! It was reported that the committee remained in their respective rooms for several days thereafter, lest assassins from the Junior class fall on them and rend them limb from limb. The warm May days brought with them the Junior Prom and the Junior-Senior Party. If we should take the masculine point of view in looking back on the former occa- sion, our most vivid memory would doubtless be the all-pervading trained gown and a continuous sound of rending cloth. From our own point of view, we recall with pride the prettiness of that festive scene, and the astounding fact that it didn ' t rain. And do you remember how those stupid men couldn ' t be made to understand the inviolable character of the dance engagements, strolling back unconcernedly a quarter of an hour late for dances you took particular pains to get for them early in the fall? As for the Junior-Senior Party, it is chiefly noteworthy as the occasion when the Purple Cow first took unto herself bodily shape and comeliness, cavorting daintily in paint and water- color paper. And so we come to June and to President McKinley ' s visit, with the quite inci- dental graduation of ' 99. The Junior Ushers scratched their hands and sun-burned their 94 noses in the good cause, sending in wagon-loads of laurel for the chain. They arrayed themselves in fine linen and ushered at Dramatics very demurely. As for their Herculean efforts on the famous occasion when the Chief Executive bowed his way into College Hall in august speechlessness — the work of the Broadway Squad is as nothing to it. Presently, almost before we knew it, Commencement was over, and the mantle of Seniorhood had fallen upon our shoulders. Do you remember the queer feeling you had the morning after Class Supper, when you said very impressively to the reflection in your mirror, Susanna Jenkins, you ' re a Senior, a Smith College Senior. ' In our memory, those days of last June are just a pleasant medley of ivy and Fair Smith, Japanese lanterns and the Kipling Lullaby, sheep-skin, roses, and white gowns. But that was Commencement from the outside. How Commencement feels from the inside is — well, another story. Charlotte Lowry Marsh. 95 X -a LU Q. . z O O Senior Class History jAPPY indeed is that class which has no history, and happier still the historian ! For how is one to recall in fortunate phrasings all the thousand and one tiny incidents which have helped stem the tide, or move mountains, during these last glorious nine months? And how much harder is it to describe the many great achievements which have been the results of the numerous small labors and indi vidua! acts, but which have represented to us all, in the end, the main occasions of our Senior year ' . After all, it is not so much the things we have done as the way we have felt that makes this last year so hard to describe. Each fall when we returned it was difficult to realize that we had moved up one place, and must accordingly change our mental attitudes from the duly humble, pleased- to-be-allowed-to-live expression of the newcomers, to the haughty serenity known only to upper classmen. But last fall it was hardest of all to suddenly assume the place of honor, and realize that at last we had arrived. Fortunately some trusty friends in Ninety-nine were back to show us the true and only way to lead out of chapel, and we followed meekly in their footsteps. Still, for some unknown reason there has been a most unprecedented amount of coyness shown in regard to occupying the first two seats. Were they left vacant for manner -or humility or what? It was a sort of continuous going-to-jerusalem stunt, and those who finally were forced to lead out wore an expression of haughty toleran ce, amused resignation, or bored indifference, all intended to convey the idea that it was not by their own choice they were doing it, but merely another case of the first being last and the last first. Then came our various class meetings, when we became really started as the Senior class, and there was a great distribution of many offices ; and finally came the great dramatics class meeting. Had not the committee labored and toiled, sitting individually and collectively at the feet of many faculties, treasuring up gems of thought concerning tiie suitability of Asiatic, Persian, and Hindoostani plays for a scholarly performance at Commencement? Had they not, in icy fright, dared the President in his office, timidly sug- gesting amended and modernized settings of all the remaining ungiven plays of Shake- speare, until by some sending of Heaven to reward Nineteen Hundred for its trials in the past, the gracious ruler of all things collegiate was moved to permit the long-denied Twelfth Night? I think it must have been the suggestion of one of the committee that if we were allowed to present Romeo and Juliet the difficulty of the lighting might be obviated by having it done behind a genteel flowerpot, that caused him to think that could 97 such a thing be arranged, we might manage Twelfth Night without its being roystering and bibulous, and we might even induce Sir Toby to wear a blue ribbon and sign the pledge in the second act. Fortune certainly has dealt kindly with us this year. At Thanksgiving, when we were about to be cut off in the midst of our days, and only allowed vacation enough to think how unhappy we were, by the beautiful concerted movement of many of us, large napping petitions were sent about, and as a result of the noble jollying of our good Council, we were given the usual two days, and were caught up to the bosoms of our families. From Thanksgiving to the holidays, and from then to the examinations, was as a watch in the night, especially one in which you had permission to sit up, and before we knew it we stood at the very door of Mid-years. In this time our altitude was so character- istic that many of us were forced to moralize over the change since the far-off days when we were young. As Freshmen, did we not creep about the halls bearing mighty tomes ; did we not listen breathless to the suppressed sobs of Seniors over their Psych examination, till finally we fled panic-stricken to our rooms to study, seven around one permitted light, till the wee small hours, at last emerging from the fray untouched but exhausted? Then in our Sophomore year the motto was Frighten not Freshmen, and in order to dispel the gloom that continually hangs over that period of anxiety we sat in easy groups doing fancy work, and reading aloud the Duchess, with an air of pleasant grace, till it was time to sally forth to the little conquests of strength so dear to the President ' s heart. As Juniors, this broadening spirit expanded even further, and the exams frankly bored us. It was such a useless bother, and really annoying in the extreme, to put so much time on things that were much better forgotten, and we chafed visibly. But Senior year — ah, with a serene and sickly suavity we rose above all small trials of the flesh, and as for exams, we did not condescend to notice them even with a sweet downward smile, but with our head in the clouds of blissful abstraction quite neglected to go to them. The winter term promised to be of usual serenity ; skating and supper parties, inter- spersed with plays and faculty functions, and a nice gymnasium exhibition or two thrown in. But a fourth year of this palled upon us, and with joy we hailed the appear- ance of the pest among us. A measles pest is not to be sniffed at ; it is not hard to get, apparently ; nor, except in unusual cases, hard to have. A general and not unwonted sleepiness may be sufficient to induce symptoms, and in many cases a hair brush has been efficient in producing a speedy and ominous rash, while those whose thoughts turned toward opera and the drama coughed darkly in corners till seized upon by kindly friends and hurried off to their families in the metropolis. Many people may have had measles, but I fear that many, also, cured their symptoms in short order at home. Still, it made an admirable excuse till it was time to begin the general spring 98 heat-down to get ordered home early. The few weeks before Easter vacation we fell with joy upon the necks of the few remaining members of the class who floated aimlessly about the campus in the intervals when they were not seeing off friends with shattered nervous systems. The last of April, when we returned to the good old soggy campus, with the Hubbard House crocuses, and the winter ' s crop of hairpins on the path, instead of the snow, and a general pervading odor of spring and grass seed in the air, then we showed ourselves as full fledged Seniors, and resolutely put all work behind us, sleeping peacefully through Sacred Cow, and blinking aimlessly in the new library while vainly attempting to prepare thoughtful papers worthy of the Senior class. We left undone those things that we ought to have done, and religiously did all the things we had not previously done, so that there was much health in us when we came to the end. The meadows assumed their proper degree of golden haze, and the hills the time-honored purple, so that we wheeled and tramped and picnicked for the last times with the sense of making the most of what we yet might spend. All through the year, and especially the last, there has been the feeling of class unity — a sort of drawing together, and standing shoulder to shoulder. This has been growing since Freshman year, when the different little sets began to join together. It was a firmly established fact by Commencement of Junior year, when we realized that the next time would be our own. As the dreaded last times began we clung to each other, and could not refrain from giving each other little pats just for the sake of comradeship, and as we come to the end we look around at the faces of our best friends, and think, not of the classrooms, nor the dances, nor the collegiate times, but of the evening talks, the tramps and rides, and the hundred little times that were so good, and that can never be forgotten because of their associations with the finest girls in the world, and then we wish we might hear once more the all-familiar words : Will the members of the Senior class please remain ? Winifred Claxton Leeming. n Odt for Washington ' s tiirthdcuj One builded strong foundations in the deep, The stones whereof were lives of nol)le men, While far within sat Liberty enshrined. Storms of oppression that had lain asleep Wakened and hurled their force of lashing wind On the new walls. The master-builder then, Prophet and seer, sent into the dark night A distant-reaching faith that sought for sight Of mysteries that in the future lay, Transcending little bounds of time and space. What vision was vouchsafed him, who shall say? They work with God who found a mighty race. In all these latter years, Sunny with hope or dim with falling tears, Behold what towers of freedom we have reared Out of grand living, just and true and brave, To front the eastern and the western wave And stem the rushing tide of tyranny. A young, high-hearted nation, wisely feared, The world ' s apostle of true liberty, Stands in the forefront of unresting time. O master-builder with the faith sublime, We that have builded later come to thee Humbly this day of thy nativity. In all that we have done, we pray thee tell, I lave we done well ? Once in our land our fellow-men were slaves, With souls like ours endued, Yet crushed with unjust chains of servitude Into brute life that deadens and depraves Man ' s truest manhood. Their weak, fainting cry Of stilled agony Went not unheard of noble-hearted men. Great armies fought and bled and women wept Hot, hopeless, patient tears for those that slept: And the pitiless war tempest onward swept To its conclusion. Peace crept back again And stole into our hearts with a great calm. Then rose a mighty psalm That swelled from east to west, from shore to shore, The gratitude of freedmen to the brave. O well-loved land, no man shall be a slave Through all thy length and breadth forevermore 1 Our nation ' s father, lo, we come to thee Humbly this day of thy nativity. In all that we have done, we pray thee tell, Have we done well? Sawest thou our gray ships cross the sea Sternly and silently So little time ago, and come again? They that were struggling then, Hopeless, against a mighty tyranny, Now lift their heads and are forever free. Let the clear trumpets sound All the wide world around One glorious clarion of liberty. Let there be noble peace, Let the good-will increase That shall make one the brotherhood of man; And what our great and true Wisely and bravely do Shall be one thought in that mysterious plan By which God builds his great eternity Out of the tissue of the passing years. In glorious disproof of all our fears. Our nation ' s father, lo, we come to thee Humbly thi day of thy nativity. In all that we have done, we pray thee tell. Have we done well? Charlotte Lowry Marsh. Pantomime CAST The Elderly Female The Senorita The Green Dragon The Infanta The Lady ' s Man . Sophy The Princess The Prince of Knowledge Pages An elderly female, known to fame, Sat on a throne one day ; She had no more than daughters four, And to them she was heard to say : My daughters dear, come, list ye now, — ' Tis time your life began ; So haste to the quest of all that ' s best, — Go hunt the wily man. He may be brave, he may be bold, But his intellect must shine ; I warn you, now, you must not bow To the purely masculine. Now take you each a chaperone ; Without one never be ; Be quite correct, be circumspect, And do be womanly. And then she kissed them all around, And bade each one farewell. As she turned round, with grief pro- found, A crystal tear-drop fell. Marie Emilie M. Jones. Caroline Marmon. Alice Morton. Helen Coolidge. Katharine Brigham. Edith Svmonds. Bertha Wendell Groesbeck. Emily Pauline Locke. Peasants. Then gat the Senorita forth With her glance of emerald hue ; And she looked about with a cynical pout, For she saw no man in view. And up the hill and down the dale She took her trembling way, With many a fright at the darkling night, But never a knight in the day. Full many an inch and foot she trod, — Full many a rod and mile : When behold ! a Green Dragon with a vacuous flagon, And a lunch-belated smile. She cried, Disperse, you horrid beast ! And sat her dow n and wept. The Green Dragon he spied her and hun- grily eyed her As he gracefully nearer crept. Madame, he said, what brings you here ? Does your mother know you ' re out? I came on a quest at my ma ' s behest, But ' tis time to turn about. With never a sauce of mayonnaise He gobbled her up with glee. She rolled her eye to the azure sky And expired suddenly. Then toddled the Infanta forth In her regal cheese-cloth gown; With her innocent prattle and childish rattle She fared across the down. (Baby talk ad lib.) From the vaulted courts of a naughty king There rode a lady ' s man. Ah, goo ! she cried, as the dude she spied, I ' ll det him if I tan ! Quoth the gallant fop, My pretty maid, Come, ride a block with me. It ' s naughty to hitch, said the little witch, But I dess it ' s womanly. Now, gentle reader, bear with me While I a moral state : Ride not away with a courtier gay, But choose a loftier fate. Then gat the namesake Sophy forth With confidence sublime That without a doubt it would all come out As she wished, in course of time. But her over-confidence led to woe, As you shall shortly see : For she learned too late, ' twasn ' t safe to wait If she ' d beat her sisters three. She had many valises and dress-suit cases, With gowns for tea and toast ; For of her fine raiment and mental attain- ment She was inclined to boast. As she strutted down a village street (It was the first of May) She saw on the pleasaunce a few handsome peasants Merrily dancing away. And now she dons a fresh costume, And smooths her yellow hair. And while she disported and wildly ca- vorted, — Perceive her sister fair, Toiling along with noble mien, A very goddess she ! With mind mature and purpose sure, She hies her o ' er the lea. She walked and walked with head erect And faultless pose of limb ; No hardship this for the cultured miss. For she ' d elected gym. Fall out ! she cried, as a tree she spied With seemingly curious fruit. °3 But she ' d learned in college to recognize knowledge, And her acumen none could dispute. With a start she descried the dragon ' s green hide At the foot of the leafy oak-tree. Not a whit dismayed, this doughty maid Drew her fountain-pen with glee. My pen is mightier than a sword, I know thy weakest place. With courageous stride she leaped to his side And planted her pen in his face. (Stage direction, Man the rib stuhls, etc.) With joyful effusion the princess he greeted, And kissed her on forehead and cheek. Her quest it was ended — hand in hand they descended, And the wedding came off in a week. Then over the hills and far away - They cantered hard and fast ; Though weary the way, their hearts were gay, And they reached home at last. The elderly female known to fame Answered their knock at the door, And with tenderest blessings, ecstatic ca- ressings, Pronounced her the best of the four. The moral of this tale is clear, Too clear for explanation, And so we believe it expedient to leave it To your imagination. U M lOOO Junior Frolic, March I, 1899. 1 ,1 . I 11., — -Ij..-, - 1 ,.,.. . . Kiih. I III nil, ■ill! ill il mil .III. ■Ill III ,.,l.i 1 I In hi II Il llll III I M ,l„ i: iii! i III! Kali! . 1,..,- I..i ■V 1 i 11,11 1 1 l I I - il, III i -, I I : I ,„| iiriiL il n i. i - Ill n i • Willi nun :k I ' M Mm. . |,i Sun, ili. I l.i li. II I. ., , i ..I, I . .■i- ,. ...I.,,,. I I II. M I.,llr.,, Slllllll in ' I K l li . |i Ii Mill I...HI 1  . ,,l •! -I. . . ili. iilu.ii ,1. 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' ll II- Illcll «■Mill II l|I ! I I •, ■' I ' In ' Mini ,...i . III, I- ' I I mil, ,1 Ii I, , hi I ii ' i. ii, I ttli-r., .-■■ll.iv., i H..I VI .. in i. I I ' . Hi : . I ' lM I I ll ' ll.MI.ll., Mil. 1.. II llll Grind C3ongs Our team in basket-ball we ' ll sing Whose glory bright has shone ; For they did make the biggest score That Smith has ever known. With Weston as our captain tall And subs who faithful play, What wonder that they got the ball And won so well that day? Chorus. No fun at them we ' re poking, They know we ' re only joking; For they ' re all right, They ' re out of sight, Whose wrath we ' re now provoking. Oh, Southwick Six, you are such bricks It gives me joy to name you. Of honors you possess a score, The class is proud to claim you. Whene ' er we want a thing to go We can count on you to steer it ; For Nineteen Hundred knows that you Are brimful of class spirit. Chorus. Grace Russell is a little thing, So neat and dear and cunning, But she can be a hustler, too, And then she keeps you running. Her histrionic talent, too, By some is thought so great That they decided by a vote The Voice Club was her fate. Chorus. No fun at her we ' re poking, She knows we ' re only joking; For she ' s all right, She ' s out of sight, Whose wrath we ' re now provoking. It gives us greatest pleasure To have here the wondrous Weston. You ' ve heard of her? oh. surely, yes — Our basket-ball team captain. She has a failing here and there, Her memory is not long, But her virtues are too numerous To celebrate in song. Chorus. There ' s Bess Revell in Plymouth Hall — A gad- about is she — She jollies the faculty, one and all, She ' s a veritable f. t. d. Her dress-suit case is always packed, So there ' ll be no delay In case she should decide it would Be fun to go away. Chorus. Oh, Emily Locke, we cannot tell What we would do without you. We ' ve considered and concluded We like everything about you. When as a man you stalk about You cause our hearts to llutter, 107 For a specimen who was genuine Would fail to do it better. Chorus. There ' s Corny Gould who ' s known to fame For many and divers reasons, And everything she undertakes With humor bright she seasons. To prove how far her fame has spread It will suffice to mention How Dickie Davis in the war O ' erwhelmed her with attention. Chorus. There ' s a person who hoards money, And who makes such dread demands Of Dollars Three and Pay at once, That we quake at her commands. And if she weren ' t so small and meek We ' d be afraid to see That Paxton child entrusted With such powers of tyranny. Chorus. If some fine morn in chapel You should chance to make a racket, You ' ll probably receive a squelch From some one we call Becket. But you ' ll not mind, you ' ll feel quite proud That you ' ve received attention From one who ' s so accomplished That her name we ' re proud to mention. Chorus. Now let us sing of Frances Howe Whose virtues are so numerous That Hechtenberg besieges her With invitations humorous. She was our Freshman President, And safely did she guide us, And we are mighty glad to see Her smiling here beside us. Chorus. Dear Laura Shedd, we sing to you, The damsel bright and witty. Your zeal and ardor are well known When working on committee. The Lawrence Llouse just dote on you ; That feeling share the class, For we all know ' twere hard to find A girl you don ' t surpass. Chorus. There ' s Charlotte Marsh, of whom we boast ; Our thanks let ' s shower upon her. Her Ode on George ' s Natal Day Has covered her with honor. She is a gifted poetess, With a mind like ancient sages ; Her poems are a great delight And grace the Monthly ' s pages. Chorus. Young Helen Janney is a maid Whose mood is always merry. She ' s manager of mandolins, In plays she ' s quite the fairy. She loves athletics out of doors, — Except, perhaps, just tennis, — Her greatest stunt is hockey, or A-knocking into Dennis. Chorus. Oh, Carol King, is there anything That we can do for you ? For we love you well, and we wish to tell 1 08 That our hearts to you are true. The only advice we have to give We offer without shrinking — It is that we deplore the time You ' re known to waste in prinking. Chorus. There ' s H. L. Barnes — she ' s very tall, She probably thinks she ' s stately ; Whene ' er she meets that creature man, She smiles upon him greatly. No matter if the man be small, She puts him through his paces, She even makes the Faculty Convey her dress-suit cases. Chorus. If you would find a brilliant maid, Then hunt up Winifred Leeming; With clever thoughts and nonsense rhymes Her brain is always teeming. She coins her words to suit herself, Of English she is chary. To understand her language queer You need a dictionary. Chorus. We cannot get along without Miss Ora Mabelle Lewis; Whenever there ' s hard work to do, This maiden in the stew is. She mounts to heights on ladders tall, Is great on decorations ; but sometimes when the work goes wrong She mutters imprecations. Chorus. For royal purple we, of course, Must everywhere are noted. But there ' s another color, too, To which we are devoted : We are so very fond of Brown, One sample won ' t suffice ; To get along with less than five We can ' t at any price. Chorus. And for Vice-president we have A charming maid called Sally, Whose mighty brain and intellect And slender size don ' t tally. We feared, she grew so very slim, She ' d wear away and vanish, And so ' way down to southern isles We ' re forced this maid to banish. Chorus. Carrie Marmon is a maid Who shines so bright in History That how she finds her answers pat To others is a mystery. You ' re never solemn when she ' s near Her laugh is so contagious, Her elocution ' s unsurpassed — Indeed, it ' s most outrageous. Chorus. On campus grounds there is a House Known by the name of Hubbard, And maidens fine of every sort They keep within this cupboard. Indeed, they are so very grand, To tell you of their station And our affection for them all Would take until vacation. Chorus. 109 We ' re very fond of Florence Brooks, Her dimples are so cunning, — Now don ' t be vexed, my dear, you know That we are only funning. These dimples are so very large That everybody knows them. Turn now and look at Florence Brooks, And see how well she shows them. Chorus. To Helen Richards now we sing — Her fame has spread through College. The Faculty in wonder stand, One head should hold such knowledge. We made her class historian, When but a freshman nighty ; Who knows what honors she will gain When grown a senior mighty ? Chorus. It ' s very true that, as a class, To trots we ' re not addicted ; Ponies and horses and the like On us are not inflicted. But if you ' d know what in this line Will bring us no reproaches, It ' s Dorcas Leese and Jaffray Smith, Our fine and splendid coaches. Chorus. We ' re glad to welcome to our ranks So many new recruits ; We hope that they are thriving here And all have taken roots. We ' ve grown so very fond of them, It is a perfect wonder How for two long and dreary years We could have lived asunder. Chorus. Wednesday Evening, May io, 1899. 5o n T ittee Chairman .... Bertha Wendell Groesbeck. Music. — Harriet Lycinthia Barnes, Mabel Eager Wheeler, Harriette Mumford Ross. Refreshments. — Cornelia Brownell Gould, Julia Marguerite Gray, Eva Cornelia Foster. Programmes. — Mary Clement Wilder, Laura Abbie Shedd, Gertrude Ella Gladwin. Tickets. — Alma Hoegh, Mary Ruth Perkins, Madeleine Zabriskie Doty. Ushers. — Gertrude Ella Gladwin. U5l7 ?rs Gertrude Ella Gladwin Amy Eliot Dickerman. Madeleine Zabriskie Doty. Leslie Mitchell. Mildred Morse. Bessie Storrs Rogers. Head Usher. Carrie Wayland Taylor. Marion Grace True. Mabel Eager Wheeler. Mary Sheafer Whitcomb. Florence Whitin. Elizabeth Wood. Frau Kapp. Miss Jordan. Miss Knox. Doctor Brewster. Mrs. Geome W. Cable. patrotyesses Mrs. William T. Ganong. Mrs. J. Everett Brady. Mrs. Gerald Stanley Lee. Mrs. Roland Cotton Smith. Mrs. John Tappan Stoddard. Janior Senior Entertainment ommitt Winifred Claxton Leeming . . . Chairman. Annie Terry Hincks. Alice Morton. Frances Henrietta Lynch. Fanny Scott. Laura Abbie Shedd .... Chair nan. Alida King Leese. Marie Emilie M. Jones. Souu(?9ir$ Emily Pauline Locke .... Chair nan. Elizabeth Fay Whitney. Caroline King. Committee 09 Seniors Florence Allen Whitney. Lorraine Trivett Mabie. Preliminary Dramatics Committee Winifred Claxton Leeming . . . Chairman. Cornelia Brownell Could. Lorraine Trivett Mabie. Emily Pauline Locke. Leonora Merrill Paxton. [ i3 Junior Ushers Ruth Albright. Harriet Lycinthia Barnes. Elizabeth Louise Barrett. Stella Louise Barse. Katharine Louise Barton. Katharine Brigham. Florence Brooks. Helen Coolidge. Eva Cornelia Foster. Harriet Louise Goodwin. Cornelia Brownell Gould. Julia Marguerite Gray. Caroline King Grier. Ben ha Wendell Groesbeck. Annie Perry Hincks. Alma Hoegh. Frances Cruft Howe. Helen Mary Janney. Caroline King. Winifred Claxton Leeming. Alida King Leese. Dorcas Floyd Leese. Emily Pauline Locke. Mary Tate Lord. Frances Henrietta Lynch. Lorraine Trivett Mabie. Caroline Marmon. Charlotte Lowry Marsh. Elizabeth Porter Meier. Alice Morton. Leonora Merrill Paxton. Elizabeth Revell. Helen Dorothy Richards. Harriette Mumford Ross. Grace Louise Russell. Sirah Watson Sanderson. Mary Buell Sayles. Laura Abbie Shedd. Anna J affray Smith. Bertha Isabel Smith. Evelyn Wilson Smith. Helen Ruth Stout. Edith Symonds. Carolyn Weston. Florence Allen Whitney. Ena Vinal Wilder. Mary Clement Wilder. Marion Wolcott Winkler. 114 Senior Committees Qlass pips Madeleine Zabriskie Doty. Charlotte Eggleston. CJass Bool( Mary Ruth Perkins. Laurel Louisa Fletcher. Harriet Louise Goodwin. Mary Tate Lord. Photographs Alma Hoegh. Cornelia Amey Kingman. Ora Mabelle Lewis. FJally 5o9?s Helen Ruth Stout. Leslie Mitchell. Helen Mary Janney. luy 80915 Florence Brooks. Helen Ruth Stout. luy Day (T)cJ$k Llarriette Mu 111 ford Ross. Mary Sheafer Whitcomb. Campus Amy Eliot Dickerman. Agnes Wingate Bragg. Ethel Norcross Fish. •15 Ord ?r r) (T)arx;r;iQC5 Ena Vinal Wilder. Anna Laura Ramsey. Helen Coolidge. Pr ?5 ?9 t 5 Elizabeth Revell. Ruth Albright. Grace Parker. pritytii} Evelyn Wilson Smith. Katharine Hart Lyman. Edith Symonds. Caroline King Grier. QofTiffletyceme t Orator Harriet Lycinthia Barnes. Lorraine Trivett Mabie. CJass Sapper Mary Clement Wilder. Alice Morton. Marion Grace True. 116 •i7 Ivy Oration THE VALUE OF THE COLLEGE LIFE MONG the many wise sayings of Wordsworth there is one, an unobtrusive little line in no way remarkable for poetic quality, which every college-bred reader of the Prelude must have marked. Wordsworth has been discours- ing on the subject of education, and comes at last to the mention of knowl- edge — to the definition of the only knowledge which he believes to be rightly honored with that name — Knowledge not purchased by the loss of power. It is of this power — of the power which Wordsworth exalts above knowledge — that I wish to speak this morning: a power larger than intellectual power and inclusive of it, as the whole man is larger than and includes his mind. How shall I define it? It is the total capacity to deal with life, to organize out of its manifold experiences a complete individual being, capable of effective activity. The building up of this great central power, on which all lesser powers depend, seems to me the supreme end of edu- cation. I am endeavoring gracefully to avoid, you see, that eternally recurring academic question, Is character or activity the true end of life ? — since I cannot conceive of a strong and good character failing to express itself in effective and benevolent activity, nor of effective and benevolent activity proceeding otherwise than from a strong and good char- acter. Furthermore, 1 am leaving entirely to one side the various practical ends which, from necessity or choice, individual educators or students set before themselves; for the reason that they are various, while I am seeking to get at the universal common end toward which, whether consciously or not, all of us alike are working. The enthusiastic specialist and the aspirant after culture of the all-round variety mix, after all, outside work hours, in the same life, form friendships after the same fashion, deal with the same problems, and are moulded by the same influences. However absorbing his work may be to the worker, he fails of being a thoroughly sane and well-ordered human being unless he clearly sees that it is only a part, though a very important part, of life. Thus I ask you to lay aside for the moment all thought of the various preparations for specific tasks offered by the college, and to consider with me some of the ways in which life in the 118 college world fits one for the larger life of a larger world — aids in the building up of the power to deal with its problems, and to organize an efficient individuality out of its com- plexities. There in one misconception of the college life — by no means a common one, I fancy, and yet, when it exists, a serious one — which I would gladly remove at the out- set. The college world is emphatically not a simple world — a world of cloistered calm, and studious silence, and serene wide spaces for meditation. It is, in Wordsworth ' s phrase, used of his own Alma Mater but equally applicable to ours, a living part of a live whole, an organic part of the exceedingly complex whole of our modern world. It is this very complexity which makes life in this college world at once so profoundly difficult and so peculiarl y valuable an experience. On the one hand a thousand conflict- ing interests and ambitions are constantly luring the student to forget that supremely important end of the whole educational process, growth in power ; while on the other hand, with the resistance of these tendencies, with the steady control of complicated conditions and the intelligent direction of individual energies among them, comes a sort of power which can never come where conditions are simple and all one ' s life is plotted out for one. That misdirections of energy result, with mistakes and failures innumer- able, — often deepest where to the outward eye success is most complete, — all this is inev- itable. But did all her ways lie clear before the college girl from the outset, were she compelled to make no perplexing choices and to grapple with no bewilderingly difficult problems, how much better fitted to make such choices and to grapple with such problems would she be at the end than she was at the beginning? There are two great essentials of that power of dealing with life which I defined a little while ago — self-knowledge and the knowledge of human nature. The great value of the college life, to my mind, is the way in which it forces upon every participant in it some knowledge at least of these two great realities. If, looking back over her four- years ' course, the new-made graduate can feel that despite her many mistakes and failures and follies she has laid firm hold on the first of these two essentials, the knowledge of self, — has come to understand, once for all, her own powers, limitations, and capacities, -and has begun to grasp the meaning of the second, — to understand something of the richness and fulness and marvellousness of human nature, — then she has reason to be profoundly grateful for all the experiences that have forced upon her the knowledge of these things. For forced upon her it is. Especially difficult, well-nigh impossible, indeed, is il 119 for her to avoid self-knowledge. The many-sidedness of the college life compels her to test her abilities and character on all sides. Continual comparison of herself with others of the same age but of widely different natures and attainments reveals unsuspected weaknesses and unguessed strength. Then, too, she is seldom left to her own observa- tions and conclusions on herself. Nothing is more characteristic of the college life than its frankness. Most of us are furnished by our friends, before we leave it, with all needed material from which to construct that view of oursels as ithers see us, which is so im- portant a part of the total knowledge of self. There is much, too, to be learned from the good-humored banter of comrades, for elements of serious criticism are soon detected under the friendly fun. The last trace of sentimentality and conceit — supposing her to have been originally afflicted with those dread diseases — are laughed out of her long before the end of her senior year ; and a good, healthy, vigorous sense of humor is laughed in. No quality of mind is more appreciated in the world to-day than this same sense of humor ; and not the least valuable contribution of the college life to the power of the individual is the ability to see things in that sort of proportion and perspective which humor — true humor, the chosen companion of sanity and mental poise — gives. The growing knowledge of self alone furnishes ample opportunity for its exercise — if, as has been said, the final test of a sense of humor is the ability to laugh at one ' s self. Without such a sense of humor, on the other hand, thorough self-knowledge cannot exist, for on it does the instinctive perception of the true relation of the self to the outer world, a relation which no philosophical theory satisfactorily explains, depend. But the sense of humor does not come alone to bless the newly self-enlightened individual. Sanity and mental poise, as I have said, are its almost inseparable compan- ions ; and with them comes courage. One ' s self is seldom an altogether pleasant person to look in the eye ; but the deed once done, — though few of us can claim full credit for it, — we have dared to face that greatest of miseries, our own weakness, and should be ready, like Teufelsdrockh, to shake off base fear forever. Thus self-knowledge brings self-command — perhaps the most difficult of all forms of command ; certainly an abso- lute essential of every other form. So much for the knowledge of self which the college life teaches. The knowledge of human nature — of course at best a knowledge of the first rudiments only of that vast subject — is not forced upon the student with quite the same rigor; yet certain peculiar opportunities for its study are offered. Our college community is indeed in one way singularly undiversified : we are all young, we are all of the same sex, we are all interested in things intellectual, we form but one social class. Yet within these limits what variety prevails ! Every type of character, every kind of ability, every degree and variety of culture, every form of prejudice and provincialism to be found in the outside world is represented here. Again, the members of the college world have altogether exceptional opportunities for coming to know one another. The exigencies of the campus house system, the labors of committees and societies, the interests of class-work, draw together girls of the most diverse kinds. Somehow they manage to work with and to learn from one another ; and each comes to realize that the world would be a very queer place, and life quite unliveable, were her fellow-beings mere duplicates of herself. Thus she learns the value of adaptability, the necessity for organization and its practical workings ; and these are lessons of immense importance in the modern world, where the complex inter- relations between individuals and groups of men are recognized as they have never been before. But there is another gain from the knowledge of human nature, as much greater than this practical one as poetry is greater than prose, yet harder to define, as the things of the heart are always harder to define than the things of the head. Of a value hardly to be exaggerated is that broadening of the sympathies which all true knowledge of others brings. Every time that we lay hold on the central principle of another ' s being, see the world through his eyes, and grapple with his problems, the limits of our own beings miraculously expand and we feel ourselves of a sudden larger and richer and stronger. Nor is this all; for the peculiar virtue of genuine sympathy, as distinguished from the sentimental and enfeebling thing falsely so called, is that it impels to action ; it furnishes the only real basis for vital and helpful work. Without it no one can posses in its fulness that power of dealing with life which is essential to the full-grown citizen of the world. Have 1 attributed too great a share in the building up of this power to the college life ? It is a most imperfect life ; no one sees more clearly than do we who have lived it its absurdities and immaturities, its narrowness, its provincialisms. Hut in its essential soundness and sanity and helpfulness we all believe; and above all, in the promise of power which it holds out to all who live it in a spirit of earnestness. 121 £ Hg: Ivy Day €xuoscs s 122 Senior Dramatics Committee KETURAH SHERMAN BEERS. FLORENCE ALLEN WHITNEY. FAITH ROBINSON LEAVENS. JULIA MARGUERITE GRAY. LAUREL LOUISA FLETCHER. ELIZABETH PORTER MEIER. ' -!3 V A ft SA ATI fl uHhA i 5 S i n V Thursday, June 14, Dress Rehearsal Friday, June 15, and Saturday, June 16 ' Tw elfth JVigbt THE ACADEMY OF MUSIC, 7.30 P.M. CAST Orsino, Duke of Illyria Emogene Mahony. Sebastian, brother to Viola Bessie Storrs Rogers. Antonio, a sea captain, friend to Sebastian Mary Louise Deane. A sea captain, friend to Viola Clara Denison Loomis. Valentine) .-. ,, ., ,- ,, nl f Ethel Norcross Fish. „ . V Gentlemen attending on the Duke .....{.. „ _.__ Curio J I Madeleine Zarriskie Doty. Sir Toby Belch, uncle to Olivia Cornelia Brownell Gould. Sir Andrew Aguecheek Bertha Wendell Groesbeck. Malvolio, steward to Olivia Mabel Winifred Hartsuff. Fabian 1 c , „ v . f Eva Cornelia Foster. .-,, Servants to Olivia ........ rT ,, „ Clown J Harrietts Mumford Ross. Olivia, a rich countess ......... Alma Hoegh. Viola, sister to Sebastian Eliza Jane Goodsell. Maria, Olivia ' s waiting woman Helen Mary Janney. Priest Annie Louise Torrey. Page s. Lords. Ladies. Julia Adaline Greene. Katharine Brigham. Stella Louise Barse. Frances Henrietta Lynch. Mildred Morse. Margaret Hyde Lyman. Officers. Carolyn Weston. Anna Laura Ramsey. 1st. — Fanny Scott. Mary Clement Wilder. Grace Louise Russell. 2d. — Marie Emilie Jones. Musicians. Helen Ruth Stout. Mabel Carver. Edith Wellington Emerson. Bertha Isabel Smith. Helen Ashton Ward. Julia Pike Lay. Torch Bearers. Sailors. Marguerite Morehead Monfort. Caroline King. Edith Gray Pope. Helen Gager. Ann Merritt. Lucy Eloise Lord. Mabel Eager Wheeler. Marion Grace True. Margaret Vanderbilt. Beatrice Pickett. Ena Vinal Wilder. Phebe Tomkins Persons. Stella Rennie Eldred. Elizabeth Fay Whitney. Alida King Leese. Mary Tate Lord. Carolyn Schubert Wurster. Virginia Walker Mellen. Elizabeth Porter Meier, Chairman. Julia Marguerite Gray, Business Manager. Laurel Louisa Fletcher, Costumes. Keturah Sherman Beers, Music. Florence Allen Whitney, Advisory Member. Faith Robinson Leavens, Stage Manager. 124 Senior Class Prayer Meeting . . Music Hall . Leader, Florence Ai.i.en Whitney. 9.30 A.M. Baccalaureate Exercises . . . First Congregational Church . 4.00 P.M. Sermon by President L. Clark Seelye. Vesper Service Assembly all 7.00 P.M. •25 Chapel Ivy Exercises Senior Promenade Concert President ' s Recefi ion 9.00 A.M. 10.00 A.M. 7.00 P.M. 8.00-10.00 P.M. 126 CoNWimi Q mm. Commencement Exercises . . . Assembly Hall . . 10.00 A.M. Orator, Hamilton Wright Mabie, LL.D. Collation ...... A hi nun, ' Gymnasium . 12.00 M. Society Reunions . ...... 4.00-6.00 P.M. Class Supper ..... Alumna Gymnasium. Pini From The Big Four. ' ' ' ' Tune, Susan Brown. But best of all there ' s fair Smith College, With social life? Oh, yes, of course. We ' re skilled in every kind of knowledge. Play basket ball ? Our teams are great. In deep research none us excel. And can we act? Oh, you should see ! For even in a Shakespeare play, There ' s none as good as we. Chorus. Fair maid from Smith, fair maid from Smith, You truly are a queen ; Fair maid from Smith, fair maid from Smith, Your equal ne ' er was seen. Fair maid from Smith, fair maid from Smith, For you our voices sound ; Our Alma Mater ' s praise we ' ll sing Through all the world around. Here ' s to old Smith College, drink her down, Here ' s to old Smith College, drink her down, Here ' s to old Smith College, For ' tis there you get your knowledge, Drink her down, drink her down, Drink her down, down, down. 128 a y . - W$3m ■HP llll§!lae ■a Klip %pp llllllt HI Mm mm, 1 ■Ira ■Hi
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