Smith College - Smith College Yearbook (Northampton, MA)

 - Class of 1903

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Smith College - Smith College Yearbook (Northampton, MA) online collection, 1903 Edition, Cover
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Text from Pages 1 - 188 of the 1903 volume:

c h - fo . Ct)r Class of jl tnetem $?unDtxD anD (Etjrer Dedicates this Book In Honor and Love ®o JfDrrsiDnu ii. Clarfcr Arrive The Book of the Class Nineteen Hundred Three Smith College NORTHAMPTON: MASSACHUSETTS 3l5oarD of CDitors Anna Theresa K. i t c h e 1 Elizabeth Strong Ruth Stephens Baker Bertha Louise Johnson M a b 1 e Cynthia W i 1 s n B u s i i e s Ma n a ger Ch air m a n D r a iv i n g s L i t e r a r v Photograph f Published June: Nineteen Hundred Three Dedication Title Page Contents The Faculty The Class Former Members . Officers of the Class Societies Alpha Phi Kappa Psi Biological Philosophical Greek Club Oriental Club Colloquium Physics Club La Societe Francaise Der deutsche Verein Mathematical Club Telescopium Voice Club Current Events Club Novel Club Blue Pencil A. O. 11 Orangemen Army and Navy Club College Clef Club The Council The S. C. A. C. W The Missionary Society 2 5 7 9 5 43 45 47 49 5 1 5 2 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 6S 66 67 68 69 7 ' 7- ' 7 3 8 SMITH COLLEGE.M903 PAGE The Monthly Board ..... 75 The Students ' Building .... 76 Athletics ...... 77 Freshman Basketball Team 79 Sophomore Basketball Team 81 The G. and F. A. 82 Competitive Drill 83 Golf 84 Tennis 85 Musical Clubs 87 Glee Club 88 Mandolin Club 89 Banjo Club 90 Chapel Choir 91 Committees 93 Sophomore Decorating Committee 94 Junior-Senior Entertainment 95 Junior Promenade ..... 97 Junior Ushers ..... 99 Preliminary Dramatics Committee 100 Senior Dramatics Committee IOI Senior Committees ..... 102 Senior Week i°5 Dramatics 107 Baccalaureate Sunday 108 Ivy Day . • 109 Ivy Song 1 10 Ivy Oration 1 1 1 Commencement ll 5 Class Supper 116 Freshman History JI 7 Sophomore History 119 Junior History 1 22 Senior History 124 Verse 128 Songs for Basketball Games and Rallies 140 House Dramatics 144 Photographs 146 CIjc jfacultj) Rev. HENRY M. TYLER, A. M G R E E K Rev. IRVING F. WOOD, A. M., B. D. BENJAMIN C. BLODGETT, Mus D Biblical Literature Musical Director HARRY NORMAN GARDINER.A. M. ANNA A. CUTLER. Ph. I). Philosophy Philosophy ARTHUR H. PIERCE, Ph.D. Philosophy MARY A. JORDAN, A. M English LOUISA S. CHEEVER, A.M. English OLIVE RUMSEV, A.M. English 10 M ELIZABETH J. CZARNOMSKA English Literature GRACE A. HUBBARD, A.M. ELIZABETH I). II.WM.OM. Hh 1) English Literaturi English Literature i HARLES I). HAZEN, Ph.D. ALFRED P. DENNIS, Ph.D. ST. GEORGE L. SIOUSSAT Ph.D. I llSTOR 1 1 is mm H ISTORV JOHN K ERE I I BR i . Ph. D. Latin K I EANOR P. CI SHING, M M I HIM Mils HARRI1 r R. C( BB, i Mathematics 1 1 WILLIAM L. GANONG, PH.D. Botany HARRIS II. WILDER, Ph.D. Zu I LI . FRANK A. WATERMAN, Ph. D Physics JOHN 1 . STODDARD, I j h. D. Chemistry MARY L. BYRD, A. M. Astronomy CHARLES F. EMERICK, Ph.D. Political Economy LUDELLA L. PECK Eloi IT ION ERNST II. MENSEL, Ph. D. Germ in MARY L BENT( N, A. B. Latin 12 BERTHE VINCEN5 I ii ( ii MAR1 EAS I ' M . A. Ii. Registrar [ENNE I I I. LEE, A. B. ENGl I si i II. I- VBEI.LE Will. I VMS I i ■ i ( ii SEND BEKENSON I ' m SICAI DlRECI ii i i i i; ki n . i; I History EMIL NORCRI (SS, A M. Latin IAK I BKEW - I l-.K. Ml) l ' ll SI I ' I I ' .. % CAROLINE ' 1 Ml I I ill ■ I i I I I S I I I K 13 J l Gladys Franksford Aldrich Wolmrn, Mass. v v. Helen Eva Allen Amherst, Mass. Mvka LeonAkd Allen East Freetown. Mass. Jessie Ames 333 Andover St. Lowell, Mass. Lucia Matilda Bailey Montpelier, ' t. Marcia Curtis Bailey Machias, Maine Ruth Stephens Baker Ellen Cray Barbour Virginia Bartle Plymouth, Mass. 217 Farmington Ave. 377 Broadway Hartford, Conn. New York, N. V. 16 M u l i; W ' ,1 I I BLANI M K I 58 School St. Montpelier, Vt. Ann lii 1 1 Bogi 1 836 I ' nion St Brooklyn, . Y. Makv Ki hel Bates Caroline van Hook Bean Eva May Beckek Webster, .Mass. [616 191I1 St. 34 Irving St. ashington, D. C. Worcester. Mass. Gertrude Roxana Beecher Sara Elizabeth Beecher Sarah L01 ise Bingham 123 Columbia Heights 220 1 avenport Ave. Dale St. Brooklyn, N. Y. New 1 la veil, Conn. Dedham, Mass it Boies Hudson, Mich 17 Myktie May Booker Brunswick, Me. Clara Louise Bradford i i Plymouth St. Montclair, N.J. Alice Bookw alter Toledo, la. Lillian - Alice Bradley 5 i 5 State St. Springfield, Mass. M r Alice Bertha Bowman 46 Edgewood Ave. New Haven, Conn. Alice Hannah Breckenridge Ware, Mass. V Lucy Hayes Breckinridge Washington, D. C. Maud Flora Brioham Winchester, N. H. 18 Helen Elizabeth Broadhead Fulton, 111. Bessie Norton Brockwav Margaret Louise Buchwalter i 6 Chape! St. 33 1 5 Reading Road Hartford, Conn. Cincinnati. Ohio Alice Butterfield Brattleboro, Vt. Jennie Carberry 7 Sunnyside St. I [yde Park, Mass.  Mail BERN IDE 1 1 1. KNE 212 St. John ' s Place Brooklyn, X. Y. Rom 1 i am 111 C kit 1 1 1; I ' n idgev at 1 , ' t. 19 Mary Dorothea Burnham 27 South Main St. Rutland, Vt. RODERICKA CANFIELD Vngell St. Providence. R. I. Katherini Waller Carson 1 | 10 ( linch We K now ille, Tenn Helen Richmond Carter 22 Atlantic St. Lynn, Mass. Edith Culberston Clarke Ironton, Ohio V Harriet Beeree Collin Fayette ville, N. V. Harriet Sumner Clark Shannock, R. I. Alice Benson Clark 613 Central Ave. Dover, N. H. Fannie Fletcher Clement 275 Warren St. Roxbury, Mass. Theresa Jean Cochrane Groton, Vt. Esther Conant 1937 Dorchester Ave. Dorchester, Mass. 20 Marion Masurv Conant Shirley, Mass. Margaret Cooper Cook 5 14 Fulton St. Troy, N. Y. Nellie Cunningham Washington, I). C. Elaine Cowan Pittsburg, Pa. Gertrude Freeman Curtis White Plains. N. Y. ft Helen Creelman Cairo, 111. I Mary Is vbel Curtis 35 Douglas Place Chicago, 111. El EN Williams Davison Theresa Rose Der in 1 ESSIl I o ni 40 Lexington St. 127 Oak St. Summit, 1 New Britain, Conn. Clinton. Mass 21 i M Ada Florence Dow Littleton, N. H. Edith Allen Drake 230 E. Chestnut St. Canton, 111. Emily Fulles Drew Kingston, Mass. Annie Elizabeth Di 42 Central St. Fitchburg, Mass. Florence Prouty Dunton Florence [mogeneDurflinger Spencer, Mass. London, Ohio Maude Barrows Dutton 930 West End Ave. New York, N. Y. Lora Genevieve Dyer Plainfield, Mass. 22 Annie Thaxter Eaton 324 West 83d St. New York, N. Y Annie Jones Ellis 307 Old Bergen Road Jersey City, X. J. f Edith Mary Everett Champlain, N. Y. Blanc he Erwin Malone, X. Y. I Marquerite Alelaide Fabens Marblehead, Mass. Alice Grosvenor Fessenden Stamford, Conn, ( ,1 1 IRGIE LOUISE I ' ll 1 11 Hillsboro, 1 23 Marion Evans 562 Washington Boulevard Chicago, 111. £ M AKIon Fairb vnks 24 Western A e. St. Johnsbury, ' t. I ' . Dl 1 11 Fishek 1 1 .1 I asl Ave Elmira, N Maviua Fiske ( irafton, Mass. KS§ Bertha Carrie Folsom 220 Ash St. Manchester, N. H. V Klara Elisabeth Frank Painesville. Ohio Louise Freeman Paulina Freeman Elizabeth Rollins Frost 1 53 Linden St. 1 53 Linden St. Dover, N. H. Everett, Mass. Everett, Mass. -Wv % AROLVN MALBONE FUL] i.EK Grace Pierpont Filler Maude Louise Furbi mi 48 So. 8th Ave. P. O. Pox 869 69 Horton St. Mount Vernon, N. Y. New Haven, Conn. Lewiston, Maine 24 _ Theodora Annette Gerould 7 Franklin St. Northampton, Mass. Rebecca Janet Gilfillan 400 Tenth Ave., S.E. Minneapolis, Minn. Xfc. Sara Louise Gesner 16 First Ave. Nyack, N. V. I I I 1 .EN J i: GOODSPEED Fitchburg, Mass, f Grace Gilbert 1601 Fast First St. Duluth, Mich. Grace ( Gordon [acksom tile, III. Stephanie Grani Marjorii I . K Kin Maude Greeni 1 Tuckerman St. The Torrington ;S Da) St. Worcester, Mass 38 1 c Commonwealth A e Boston, Mass. Fitchburg, Mass 25 «F Elizabeth Jean Greenough Deerfield, Mass. Mabel Juliet Haberstroh South Frarningham, Mass. Blanche Guy Hardy Ashburnham, Mass. Isabel Hooker Grier 404 Monroe St. Peoria, III. Laura Winifred Hager South Deerfield, Mass. Alice Crane Haskins 64 Massasoit St. Northampton, Mass. Mabel Emma Griffith 40 Jewett Place Utica, N. V. May Hammond 222 Elm St. Northampton, Mass. Della Almira Hastings Palmer, Mass. 26 ' W- r ■ Fann I [. M [NGS Lucy Webb Hastings Helen Hamilti in 1 1 a m h Hamilton, Bermuda Hamilton, Bermuda 416 Brook St. Providence. R. I. AiUA AGNES Heink Maky Will 1 ING Hl KOK Edi in Naomi I In 1 12 Monroe St. 567 St. Paul St. j H ' Maple Ave. Northampton, Mass. Burlington. Vt. Oak Park, 111 Helen Fairbanks Hill Mabel Anna Hili Susan Lel an u Him 305 Nesmith St. 14 Chestnut St. 18 Riplej St Lowell. Mass Ubany, N N Worcester, Mass 27 ■ - Anna Charlotte Holden 63 Spring St. Springfield, Mass. Florence Harriet Howe Box 631 Concord, Mass. Maud Ella Hurlburt 19 Jackson St. Palmyra, N. Y. Ethel Hutchinson 7 Fairfax St. Dorchester, Mass. Elisabeth Antoinette Irwin 936 St. Marks Ave. Brooklyn, N. Y. €!i Elizabeth Jack 500 Massachusetts Ave. Peoria, 111. Alice ElineTheodora Johnson Bertha Louise Johnson 666 N. Hoyne Ave. 18 Rockland St. Chicago, 111. Taunton, Mass. Beulah Winn Johnson Newburyport, Mass. 28 - Ella Boynton Kaisek 87 Brookfield St. Cleveland, Ohio Ethel Savory Keep New York, N. Y. Sarah Thorndike Keniston Plymouth, X. II. Si san Pratt Kennedy 33 Prospect Park. Wesl Brooklyn, X.Y. Anna Theres Kitchel 297 Ogden Ave. Milwaukee, Wis. Elsie Maud King 9 1 High St. Lawrence, Mass. £ « Bessie Adei 1 Knight 3322 Calumel Chicago, III. 29 Rose Adei i Kinsman 69 Florida St. Springfield, Mass. K mi rine Knox Condersport, Pa Charlotte Louise Kreinheder 30 Glenwood Ave. Buffalo, N. V. Mary Ann Laraisie H Lilian Eliel Lauferty Hotel Mountfort Boston, Mass. Blanche Lacriat 1049 Beacon St. Brookline, Mass. Grace Howe Legate 2io}4 High St. Newburyport, Mass. Frances Temple Lawrence North Brooktield, Mass. Esther Louise Little Towanda, Pa. 30 Alice Emily Leavens 105 Pembroke St. Boston, Mass. Marie Roberta Lockhart 617 Richmond Ave. Buffalo, N. Y. Georgia Elizabei h Lyon 297 Broadway Chicopee Falls, Mass. ( 1 her] ne Mai Kenzi e 10 Rhode Island Ave. Newport, R. I. 1 1 W ' iiik omb MacIntyre 1 10 Bower St. Roxbury, Mass. Ill u 1 11 M v M ( OMBER 300 Elm St. Northampton, Mass. Margaret Sargent Luni Nellie Lutz Clara Ji lia Lynch 120 Hutchings St. 3337 Lafayette Ave. 420 South Market St. Boston. Mass. St. Louis, Mo. Canton, ( )hio Marion Ai 1 en M a k 25 South Fourth St Aurora, 111. Graci Beatrici M u 1 1 i ) Margaret St. Springfield, Mass 31 Ruth Emma Manley Brockton, Mass. Bessie Mark Herkimer, N. Y Anna Harris Marsh Boonton, N. J. Caroline Elizabeth Marsh Boonton, N. J. Winifred Marsh Forest Grove, Ore. Sarah Elizabeth Mathews 8 i Arthur Ave. Minneapolis, Minn. Laura Adelaide Matthews Portsmouth, N. H. Helen Flora McAfee 94 York Square New Haven, Conn. Jane Frances McCarroll 758 St. Marks Ave. Brooklyn, N. Y. 32 Marion Hii.i. McClench i 12 Sumner Ave. Springfield, Mass. ( ' l KA M( 1 OWELL 436 E. State St. Sharon, Pa. Margaret Wilson McCut hen Plainfield, N. J. ( A I HARINE MARGARE1 Mil Mill I S35 Willoughby Ave. Brooklyn, N. Y. Emma Esther Miller Long Green, Md. ALU E M I KIMIN Killam ' s Point Branford, Conn. 33 Nettie M I) iugali 302 Summer St. Buffalo, X. V. Ri.na 1 ' ai 1 iNt. Moore 22 Kensington A e. Northampton, Mass. Ann 11 M w Ml i;i; w Fort Leavenworth, Kan Madeleine Newell Lexington, Mass. Loella Newhall 343 Chatham St. Lynn, Mass. Ada Isabel Norton 86 Edwards St. Hartford, Conn. Mary Ethel Now ell i So Belmont Ave. Fall River, Mass. V- Marie ( (ller 300 Amber St Pittsburg, Pa. Maybelle Rosamond Packard Stella Emily Packard 10 drove St. 368 Lake St. Skelton, Conn. Oak Park, 111. Edna Owsley 408 East Erie St. Chicago, 111. Alice Page Hyde Park. Vt. 34 CARLO ' ] I A PARKEK 22 I I 2th St. Poi tland, ( re. Li ( Persis 1 ' akki.k 24 Wendell St. Cambridge. Mass. BEULAH |i ISEPHINE P()1 rs 1630 Neil Ave ( iluml His, ( )liici ( 1 i; a Hoi mes Phillips 4 ' 1 Northampton Ave Springfield, M.i Sarah Ethel Pool E a At (,i si Porter 1.AIK POS 1 72 J iln son St. Williamsburg, Mass 16 Newbury St Lynn. Mass. Boston, Mass. I h 1 1 Marguerite Prescoti Frances Margari i Purtili Foxboro, Miss 93 Lunenburg St F iti hburg, Mass, 35 p Beatrice Putnam 150 Chestnut St. Chelsea, Mass. Alma Ethel Reed 185 Glenway St. Dorchester, Mass. Helen Robinson Sioux City, Iowa O Eleanor Chester Putnam Salt Lake City, Utah Almeda Frances Reed Fitchbunr, Mass. Florence Maria Rumsev 7 North St. Batavia, N. Y. 36 ■ Isabel Poland Rankin 516 Commonwealth Ave. Boston, Mass. Florence Emily Ripley 65 Buckingham St. Springfield, Mass. Elizabeth Lincoln Russell 37 Arch St. New Bedford, Mass. Margarita Safford ioo Chestnut St. West Newton, Mass. Ella fi isephine Si ovii i i Seneca, Kan. Vim i, rURA Sinn MAK] R 109 East St. Vlassillon. ( hio Elizabeth Seaver Sampson Duxbury, Mass. Lois Mitchell Sum 1 1 k 124 Winter St. Norwood, Mass. M u i i 1 1 i Skinner oburn, Mass Peak 1. Smith SANBORN Laconia, N. II. Louise Morrill Shati u k 124 Winter St. N01 wood, Mass. i [i 1 M w S i 1 rii I I. union Place Mini- Minn. 37 Bridget Katharine Smith i i 7 Stackpole St. Lowell. Mass. r Helen Snook Kalamazoo, M ich Leolyn Sea er Smi i ii Skelton, Conn. Ellen Spring Franklinville, N. Y f Marion Moffit Smith 53 Jefferson Ave. Brooklyn, X. V. Edith Louise St. John Bowling ( ireen, Ohio Edla Sherry Stee LE Emma Hawley Stek LING Ernesta Marion Stevens I 30c) Wood St. 21 S3 Broadway 1 23 East 74th St. Wilkinsburg, Pa. New York. N. Y. New York, N. Y. 38 ■ %f Kith Hartwell Stevens 15 5th St. Chelsea, Mass. .1.1 i:l. 1 11 S 1 Ki)N(, 82 Brookfield St. Cleveland, Ohio En Susie Si ewak 1 Athol. Mass. Elizabeth Catharine Stiles Ra hel Soule Sto kbridge 7 Parker St. F reeport, Maine Newton Centre, Mass [• ' .HI I 11 in 111 i; SUFFREN 68 Buckingham Kci.nl Brooklyn, N V 39 F N I 1. Resor S I i; AR 1 2350 Auburn Ave. Cincinnati, Ohio I ii 1 en Louise Stoi i 44th X Locust Sts. Kansas City, Mo [KM T l M M.I li Gilead, Ohio Margaret Williams Thacher 69 Alleghany St. Koxburv, Mass. Anna Bigelow Treat 283 Pleasant St. Milwaukee. Wis. Kate Tindall 2103 California Ave. Washington. I). C. Bertha Presi on Trull 629 Main St. Woburn, Mass. Elizabeth Whittier Torrey 1 So Harvard St. Dorchester, Mass. Florence Louise Tullock 620 Chestnut St. Leavenworth, Kan. An nil Dyer Tuttle 70C) [rving Ave. Syracuse, N. Y. Elizabeth Hubbard Viles Margaret Hamilton Wagenhals Lincoln St. Fort Wayne, Ind. Waltham. Mass. 40 1213 K n.-ik Ave. I [ouston, Texas Eliza Ax.nl; Ward Brookfield, Mass. Alice Willard Warner Wethersfield, Conn. Ella Warren 300 N. Elizabeth St. Peoria, 111 Ai.k 1; Mary Webber 6S7 Washington St. Brighton, Mass Marie Louise Weeden Wakefield, R. I. Elizabeth Howard Westwood Bertha Kingsburv Whippli 4008 Delmai Boulevard Fitzwilliam, N II St. Louis, Mo. Is i; [ CAI DWE1 1 WlGH I New ton Centre, Mass 41 Florence Wilbur 131 Niagara St. Providence, R. I. T 1 M Euith Louise Wymax 23 Sagamore St. Lynn, Mass. Mabel Cynthia Wilson Palatka, Fla. Alta Zens 608 Century Bldg. Kansas Citv, Mo. Laura Brown Woodbury 61 Commercial St. Lynn, Mass. dMfcfe Inez Field Damon Music School, 58 High St. Northampton, Mass. Margaret Holmes Clark Ware, Mass. 42 SENIOR CLASS BOOK, 43 Jformcr jftlcmbrrs Florence Olcott Avery Abigail Wilson Bates Mabel Irene Benedict Ethel Birch Julia Lewis Bishop Mina Ethel Blanchard Julia Wylie Bright Harriet Irene Brown Anne Stan wood Bullen Elsie Burke Sophia Lord Burnham Gertrude Deland Burr Florence Elizabeth Burrows Anna Welsh Burt M r.i i. Sara CARPENTER Rebecca Dickinson Carr I essi e Stuart Carter Ruth Ethel Chew Annie Louise Comey I Iarriet Adele Comings Florence Kate Crafts Sara Letitia Crawford Mary Ashby CURTIS Marion Dana [eannette Bonner Davison Elizabeth Lippincott Dean l ' l ' ll EL M [RIAM 1 )EERING rozella deering Mabel Eleanor Dick Helen Lea Douglas Maude Harris Douglas YTettie Antoinette DuBois | r i.i a Harris EDSON Bessie Kellogg Faulkner Margaret French Carrie Addie Gauthier Pauline Geballe Ruth Wilcox George Mary Elizabeth Adele Gilpin Isabel Clethra Gilson Carrie .Maria Goodwin Florence Louise Gould Mabelle Retta Gray Roberta Francina Griffith Maud Hammond Sara Ellen I 1ark.nf.s-. Mary Harriman Edith May Harwood Marion Louise Hasey Clara Douglas Hilger Grace Headley Grace Holbrook Natalie Frances IIoi.ni x 1 1 elen Treat I Iowell Charlotte Bertha Irving Alice Hall Jones Mary Frances Jones Louise Wilkeson Kelton Florence Meachem Kenyon Edith Larabee Lewis Alice Theresa Lyman ROSETTA DEWART MaCNAUGHTAN Estelle Mannheimer Virginia Man son Katharine Emily Merrill Edith Almira M ersereau Elizabeth Gertrude Nelson Grace Lestin Neweli Emma Rankin I. ii. i. i n Arnold RAYMOND 44 SMITH COLLEGE 1903 Georgia Willis Read Dorothea Richardson Bertha May Rosenfeld Florence Emily Ross Louise Sawyer Grace Louise Scofield Mary French Sherman Grace Elizabeth Simis Hayena Tilden Stephens Luella Wilson Stewart Elizabeth Hodges Stone Lilla Emma Stone Florence Davol Strong Li la To WAR Evelyn Trull Annie Katharine Varney Anna Grace Warren- Mildred Howell Warren- Alice Lorraine Weed Lily Regina Weil Marjorie Wetherbee Irene Taft Wheelock Marguerite Avis Whitcomb Anna Elizabeth Wilbur Lucy Patten Winton EsTELLA ALBRA WOOD Sit iit rm or iii m .lli.i TJr.ll-.r (ToDQ ' .li.lM SENIOR CLASS BOOKj 45 Officers of tljc Class P r e s i dent. Vice-Pres i e n t r e t a r y . T r e n s it r e r II i storian j rrsljman V rai H e l en Treat H o w eli. C L A R A L o V I S E B RADFORD Lucy P a t t e n W into n Clara I) o u . las H i i. g e r M A R G A R E T H A M I L T O N W A G V. N II A I. S P r c S l d e l t 1 ' ice- ' re s i e n 1 Secretary T r e a s ur e r . Historian s opl)oinorr l rar Mar in n E v a n s Isabel Poland R a n k i n G F. RTR U D E R X A X A B E B C II E R E LIZA B E T II C A T II E R I X E S T I I. E S E I. I. E X G R A V B A R 1! () U R President Vice-President S • c i e l a r y T r e ( s r e i Historian jj ' umor Pear Virgin] a Bartle C a R lot t a Park E r M A R ( ' , A R I T A S A I- F R D (i R A C E I ' I E R P O N T F II II R Esther C o n a n t President Vice-President S i ' i ret ' i r y Treasurer. 1 1 i s t 1 1 r i an.  rnior Prar Jessie Ames Bessie A d e l e Knight f a x x i l f l b t c ii i. r c i. i m 1 n i k a t e t indal i Edith Naomi 11ml A lpj;a Senior ffirns F I R S T S E M E S T E R P V C S 1 J Cllt, F A X X Y H A S T I X G S E x (• c ii tive f i c e r , A x a G ii a r l o t t e Hoi. d e x •. ' ; ' tor, A x x a T ii e r e s a K i t c ii b i. S E C i) X I) S E M E S T E R ' ' (• .V i ( Clll, B E S S I E A I) E I. E K X I G II T E x e cut i v ■ ffi c ■ r , G e r t r u d e R o x a x a B e e c h e r Editor , L u c v V e b b Hastings rntor rmbrrs Ruth Stephens Baker Gertrude Roxana Beecher Lucy Haves Breckinridge Helen Elizabeth Broadhead Maude Barrows Dutton Grace Gilbert Fanny Hastings Lucy Webb Hastings Anxa Charlotte Holden Bertha Louise Johnson Anna ' I ' m ERES KlTCHEL I ' .i sie Adele Knight Margaret Wilson McCutchen Nettie Mel ougall Clara McDowell [SABEL Poland Rankin Margarita SAFFORD Elizabeth Strong Lula Waldo Alice Willard Warner Marie Bo dish Weedi n A i t Zens 49 % Pt 3k.appa $st Senior fficri ' 6 F I R S T S E M E S T E R P r e s i J cut, E S T H E R Co x a N T E 1 l tor, M A K V Don T H E A H V R N H A M SECOND SEMESTER P r e s i il cut, C I. A R A J U I. I A L V X C II I: d i I r , E I. I. E X G R A Y B A R 1! V R Senior iBrmbrrs Jessie Ames Ellen Gray Barbour Clara Louise Bradford Mary DOROTHEA BuRNHAM Esther Conant Annie Thaxter Eaton Marion Evans Klara Elisabeth Prank Susan Leland Hill i .11 Thorndike Keniston Si ' sax I ' rait Kennedy I ' i r Julia Lynch I I i i en Flora McAfee Jane Frances McCarroll Ada Isabel Norton Marie Oller Eva Augusta Porter Elizabeth Seaver Sampson Ruth I [artwell Stevens Fannie R esor Stewart Elizabeth Cath erini Sti Margaret II vmii T( in Wagenhal 51 Officers FIRST SEMESTER President, Elizabeth Strong Vice-President, Laura Post Chairman Executive Committee, Fannie Resor Stewart SECOND SEMESTER President, Fannie Resor Stewart Vice-President, Annie Dyer Tuttle Chairman Executive Committee, Clara Iulia Lynch Mentor Members Myrtie May Booker Helen Elizabeth Broadhead Clara Louise Bradford Elizabeth Lippencott Dean- Maude Barrows Dutton Lora Genevieve Dyer Maude Louise Furbush Alice Crane Haskins Ll cv Webb Hastings Susan Leland Hill Anna Charlotte Holden Susan Pratt Kennedy Marie Bessie Adele Knight Grace Howe Legate Clara Julia Lynch Clara McDowell Marie Oller Laura Post Helen Marguerite Prescott Eleanor Chester Putnam Ena Susie Stewart Fannie Resor Stewart Elizabeth Strong Annie Dyer Tuttle Louise Weeden 52 Officers P r e - s i ' I ent, K i. a r a E i. i s a b e t 11 F r a n k 1 ic e - P r e s i d ent, G r a c e P i e r p o n t F u l l e r ■ s • ' c r e a r r , R r t ii S t e p ii e n s H a k b r 7 ' r e a s u r e r , E a Susi b S t e w a r t Lucia Matilda Bailey Ruth Stephens Baker ii Boies Helen Williams Davison Ada Florence Dow Klaka Elisabeth Frank Grace Pierpont Fuller Grace Gilbert Fanny Hastings Elizabeth Antoinette Irwin Sarah Thorndike Keniston Anna THERESA K ITCHEL Gra ce I [owe Leg ui Lilian Eliel Lauferty Esther Louise Little Clara Julia Lynch Marion Allen Mack Anna Harris Marsh Margaret Wilson McCutchen Ada [sabel Norton Carlotta Parker Eva Augusta Porter i iii en m vrguerite prescott Elizabeth Seavek Sampson Bridget Katharine Smith Edith de Charny Suffren Margaret Hamilton Wagenhals i H i Willard Warner 53 Officers Cha i r m a n E x e c it t i v e Co m m itte e, F i r s i S e m e s l c r Annie T h a x t e r E a t o n S e c r e t a r y a n d T r e a s u r c r , F i r s I S e m e s t e r M A B e l Ann a H i l l Cha i r in a u E x e cutiv c Co m m itte e, S e c o n d S e m e s I e r L U C V H A V IC S B RECKINRIDGE rnior Mtmbtvti Helen Eva Allen Anna Tefft Bogue Lucy Hayes Breckinridge Annie Thaxter Eaton Alice Crane Haskins Helen Fairbanks Hill Mabel Anna Hill Eleanor Chester Putnam Rachel Soule Stockbridge Anna Bigelow Treat Margaret Hamilton Wagenhals Edith Louise Wyman 54 rntor Officers E x e c u tive ( f i c e r , A x x a T h e r e s a Kit c h e i. S e c r e t ar y . C i. a r a II o i. m e s I ' ii i l lips senior Members Virginia Bartle Clara Louise Bradford Lucy Hayes Breckinridge Margaret Louise Buchwalter Mary Dorothea Burnham Margaret Cooper Cook Mary Esabel Curtis Theodora Annette Gerould Lucy Webb Hastings Mary Whiting Hickok Axxa Charlotte Holden Axxa Theresa Kitchel Bessie Adele Knight Blanche Lauriat Anna Harris Marsh X ETTIE McDoUGALL Ada [sabel Norton Clara I [olm es Phili ips A i hi: May .Smith Elizabeth Strom; Alice Willard Warner 55 IW? - — — I I -=- — - -_. -■ XJ — Mo Officers Secretary, Margaret Cooper Cook Treasurer, Alice Emily L e a yens Senior Members Alice Hannah Breckenridge Alice Butterfield Roma Blanche Carpenter Margaret Cooper Cook Alice Emily Leavens Anna Harris Marsh Edith de Charny Suffren Kate Tindall Ella Warren 56 Officers P r C S l J cut, (i R A C E Pi E R P O X T FULLE R V ice- I ' r c s i J cut. M a k g a r e t Coo P E R C o K Mentor gprmbn Margaret Cooper Cook Ada Florence Dow Lora Genevieve I )yer Annie Jones Ellis Grace Pierpont Fuller Susan Pratt Kennedy Helen Flora McAfee Margaret Wilson McCutchen Lucy Persis Parker Elizabeth Seaver Sampson Edith de Charny Suffren Alice Willard Warner 57 fe rmor fftcrrs P r e s i d e n t , Isabel Poland Rankin Vice-President, Esther C o n a n t Senior SBrmbrrs Jessie Ames Esther Conant Elizabeth Rollins Frost Grace Gilbert Fanny Hastings Lucy Hastings Susan Pratt Kennedy Margaret Wilson McCutchen Xettie McDougall Ada Isabel Norton Isabel Poland Rankin Emma Hawley Sterling Ernesta Marion Stevens Annie Dyer Tuttle Laura Brown Woodbury Alta Zens 58 Qzxktsckt 3Xerjem_ fe mtor oMftcrrs FIRST S E M E S T E R ' v c s i dent, S u s a n L e i. and 1 1 i i. i. I ' ice- I ' r e s i d cut, E d L a S i e k r v S t e e l e S E C O X I) S E M E S T E R P v c S i d cut. R I N A M A U n E (1 R E E N E I ' ' ' C - I ' r C S i d cut, H A R R I E T S V M N E R C I. A R K Mentor iBrmbrrs Sara Elizabeth Beech e r A i ice Bertha Bowman I [arriet Sumner Clark Maude Barrows Dutton I in a Maude Greene Susan Leland Hill Edla Sperry Steele A i i Zens 59 Officers ice- P r e s id e nt , Grace Pierpont Fuller S e c r e t ar y , E n a Susie Stewart T r e a s it r e r , Bert ii a W h i f p l e Mentor tBrmbns Alice Butterfield Annie Jones Ellis Grace Pierpont Fuller Laura Winifred Hager Della Almira Hastings Elsie Maude King Florence Maria Rumsey Ena Susie Stewart 60 Cijca ccpflym fe rmor Members Alice Bookwalter Lora Genevieve Dyer Maude Louise Purbush Laura Winifred Hager Esther Louise Little Elizabeth Lincoln Russell Florence Louise Tullock Mabel Cynthia Wilson 61 Officers V i c e - P r e s i cut, B i. a x c ii e L a u k i a t Mentor rmbcrs; Jessie Ames Ruth Stephens Baker Caroline van Hook Beax Alice Arabella Blanchard Margaret Louise Buchwalter Alice Butterfield Annie Thaxter Eaton Marion Evans Edith Naomi Hill Susan Pratt Kennedy Blanche Lauriat .Margaret Wilson McCutchen Edna Owsley Clara Holmes Phillips Alice Willard Warner Alta Zens 62 ferntor Officers Pre s i d cut, A n n i 1-: M a v M u r r a y Treasurer, Georgia Elizabeth Lyon Mentor tBrmbrrs mary dorothea burnham Alice Butterfield Elaine Cowan Grace Gordon Ethel Hutchinson Bertha Louise Johnson Clara Julia Lynch Georgia Elizabeth Lyon Annie May Murray Clara Holmes Phillips 1 1 elen Louise Stout Alt a Zens 63 Jmith College umi am Officer© C ha i r in an, K i. a r a E lisabeth F r a x k Secretary, M a b e l C v n t h i a Wilson bT cmbrrs Gertrude Roxana Beecher Clara Louise Bradford Margaret Louise Buchwalter Annie Thaxter Eaton Marion Evans Klara Elisabeth Frank Rebecca Janet Gilfillan Susan Pratt Kennedy Jane Frances McCarroll Ruth Hartwell Stevens Fannie Resor Stewart Elizabeth Catherine Stiles Alice May Smith Helen Snook Marie Louise Weeden Mabel Cynthia Wilson 64 Ellen Gray Barhouk Lucy Hayes Breckinridge Mary Dorothea Burnham Esther Conant Maude Barrows Dutton Klara Elisabeth Frank Lucy Webb Hastings Edith Naomi Hill Anna Charlotte Holden Anna Theresa Kitciiel Helen Flora McAfee Marie Oller Eva Augusta Porter Elizabeth Seaver Sampson Ernesta Marion Stevens Helen Louise Stout Marie Louise Weeden Elizabeth Howard Westwood Alta Zens 65 Chafe Cook, Clissy O ' Lynch Cantor SlBimbfrs Rutie McBakek Mame O ' Bates Fax O ' Clement Haysie O ' Breckinridge Fan Fitz-Hastixgs Loocv McHastixgs AXXIE O ' HOLDEX Clissy O ' Lynch Clary McDowell Izzie McRankin Meetie McSafford Lizzie Fitz-Strong Mag O ' Wagenhals Lulie O ' Waldo 66 KANCEME P r e s i d cut, G e r t r u d e H e e c h e k l hat r in a ; E x e c it t i v e , E i. i z a r, e t ii S t i i. e s fe rnior tBnnbrrs J HSSIK Amks Gertrude Beecher Esther Conant Florence Dunton Marion Evans Susan Kennedy Frances McCarroll Alice Smith Elizabeth Stiles 67 THE Aniyiy and Navy CLub pernor SBrmbrrs Lucy Hayes Breckinridge Alice Grosyenor Fessenden Clara McDowell Ann ie May Murray 68 Vice-President, M a k j o r i e G r a y lEircttttbr Committfr A I. I C E I I ' T T E R F I E L 1 I x e z Field I) a m o n Ellex Gray Barbour Eva .May Becker Bessie Norton Brockway Ai ice Butterfield Jennie Carherry Inez Field Damon Mayida Fiske Elizabeth Rollins Frost Marjorie Gray Blanche Guy Hardy HELEN Hamilton Hatch Helen Fairbanks Hill Bertha Louise Johnson termor nnbrrs Bel - la n Winn Johnson Nellie Lutz Georgia Elizabeth Lyon Emma Esther Miller Alice MURPHY Axxie May Murray M a d i •: l e i x e Newell Clara Holmes Phillips Helen Robinson Helen Louise Stout Elizabeth Whittier Torrey Florence Louise Tullock Ella Warren Florence Wilbur 69 SENIOR CLASS BOOK 71 Pre s i d e n t , C i. a r a Louts e B r a d p o k d Mentor Councillors Jessie Ames Virginia Bartle Clara Louise Bradford Panny Hastings [Junior Councillors Virginia Bartle Clara Louise Bradford Marion Evans opbomorc Councillors Clara Louise Bradford Marion Evans Jrrfibman Councillor I I E I. E N T R E AT 1 1 o w I I I 72 SMITH COLLEGE 1903 C!)e mttlj College association for Christian Work 1900 1901 T r e (i s it r e r , Helen Flora McAfee 1901 . 1902 S c c r e t ar y , A l i c e W i l l a r d Warner Correspond i n g S e c r e t a r y , Elizabeth Strong 1902 1903 President, Alice Willard Warner Vice-President, Marie Louise W e e d e n iiflrmijcrsbip Committee C It airman, . . Marie Louise W e e d e n KeltfftDtie :§ crbiee Committee Chairman. . Mary Dorothea B u r n h a m Sible tuUp Committee Chairman, . . Margaret Cooper Cook Consumers ' League President, . . Anna Theresa K i t c h e l h jMrr7 TWMKm r-%mx rsi 1901 i 1902 1 ' t c . ' - P r e s i e n t , Anna Charlott k H o l d k n T r e a s ur er , Ada Is a b e l Norton 1902 1903 President, Ada I s a  e L NORT N C fe a t r w (2 n o j M i s s i o n S t u d y ( ' I a s s e s . G R a c e G o r d o n StuUrnt Uolunteer A i i c l BOOKWAL T B R 73 SENIOR CLASS BOOK 75 Smitb College flQontbl? 1903 CDttors E d it or-in-C h i e f M a u d e B a r r o v s Dutt o n L i t e r a r y E ditor E v a A u g u s t a P o k t e r S k e t c h li i i 1 1 r F a n n v H a s t i x g s •. ' i I a r ' s T n hie K . a r a E l i s a b e t ii F r a x k M a a g ; g E ( ; o r M a r g a r e t H a milt o x W a g e x ii a i. s Assistant Managing Editor A x x a T ii e r e s a K i t c ii e l About College Ii ditor II e l e x V . r a M c A f e e . 1 m n (f E ditor V. i. i z a b e t ii S e a v e r S a m p s o n T r c a s u r e r L u c v W e b b Has t i x g s B it s i ii c s s M ti ii a g r r H e r t ii a L oris E J H x s N Jfetuoents utlomg Committee Chairman, Marion Evans Mentor Members Margaret Louise Buchwalter Annie Thaxter Eaton Marion Evans Fannie Resor Stewart 76 SENIOR CLASS BOOK. 79 jfresljman jSasktball Ceam Captain, J i: s s i E A M E s foomcs uarDo Gertrude Beecher [essie Ames Fannie Clement Anna Kitchel Persis Parker Laura Post Centres! Ruth Stevens Mabel Benedict Marion Evans Kate Tindall 1001 Co.kIko Mary Lewis Helen Kitchel 1902 bis. 1903 Saturday, March 3 i . i qoo Score iq-io SENIOR CLASS BOOK. 8J Jfeopliomovc jSasfeetball Ccam ( ' (( ' ( i II , J E S S 1 E A M h s Gertrude Beecher Jessie Ames Fannie Clement Anna Kitchel Persis Parker Marion Evans Crntrve Mabel Benedict Jessie Carter Kate Tindall 1003 tie. 1904 Saturday March 23 kjoi Score 3 1 -8 q «. fa % Officers from 1903 Representativ e freshman Pear I essie Ames S e c r e t a r y T r e a s u r e r R e f r e s e n t at i v e §opI)omorr Pear I e s s i e Stuart Carter S u sax Pratt Kenned y Jessie Ames 3funtar Pear First Vic e-P resident Gertrude R o x a n a B e e c h e r R c presentative Jessie Ames Ch a i r in a n Te n n i s C ' o m m itte e M a r i o n Evans Chairman Boat Committee Anna K i t c h e l Mentor Pear Second Vice-President Gertrude R o x a n a B e e c h e r Representative Jessie Ames 82 riPcTrriVE DRILL 1900 — Captains Jaffray Smith, igoo Ellen Emerson, 1901 Margery F-erriss, 1902 Jessie Ames, 1903 Points for the Flag. Class Work. 1900, 1 5 . ' , 1901, 16.49 1902, 13 1903. 16.51 Points for the Cup. Class and Individual ' Work. 1900, 42. 1 , 1901, 41 1902, 5] 1 001 — Captains Ellen Emerson, 1901 Margery Ferriss, 1902 Jessie Ames, 1903 Emma Dill, 1904 Points for the Flag Class Work. iQOi, 18J 1902, 14I 1903, 16; 1904, t6y Points for the Cup. Class and Individual Work. 1901, 46 1 1902, 28| ' 903. 59J 1902— Captains Margery Ferriss, 1902 Fanny Clement, 1903 Emma Dill, 1904 Edna Capen, 1905 Points for the Flag. Class Work. 1902, 1 5 J I 1903. 16; ' 904, i6J 1905, 17I Points fcr the Cup. Class and Individual ' Work. ' 9° 2 . 42H l 9°3- 43 i T „ iyo4. 52J 1903— Captains Fanny Clement, 1903 Edna Capen, 1905 Florence Nesmith, 1904 Elsie Elliott, 1906 Points for the Flag. Class ' Work. 1903. 17 1904. i6j 1905. 1 4 I [906, 1 6 I Points for the Cup. Class and Individual ' Work. ' 9°3. 37 ' 9°4. 43- ' 905. 47; 1903 tfolf (Tram 1S99 Fanny Hastings Susan Pratt Kennedy Fanny Hastings Gertrude Roxana Beecher Fanny Hastings Ellen Gray Barbour Fanny Hastings Gertrude Roxana Beecher 1900 1901 1902 Lucy Webb Hastings Alice Emily Leavens Ellen Gray Barbour Alice Emily Leavens Evelyn Trull Elizabeth Howard Westwood Marion Evans Ellen Gray Barbour 84 ioitsiim its €l)a piom ) p 1900 Singles Doubles Agnes Patton, kjoi Agnes Patton, Marion Aldrich, I9 ° r 1901 Singles Doubles .Marion ALDRICH, 1902 ( Marion Aldrich, Katharine Holmes, IQ0 ' 1902 Si 11 ' ' Irs Marion Aldrich, IQ02 85 •hbp t lcc Club . (• ( ; ( e r . R U T H H A R T W E L L vS T E V E N S. I 903 .1 a il a g r r . F I. R E N C E P R O U T Y D U N T O N, I 903 T r e i( s it r e r . A n n i e M a y W r i g h t. 1904 first Sopranos Eva May Becker, 1903 Roma Blanche Carpenter. 1903 Jennie Frances McCarroll, 1903 fuLiE Edna Capen, 1905 Charlotte Goldsmith Chase, 1905 Katharine de la Vergne, 1905 Alice Venelia Hatch. 1903 Louise Thornton, 1905 Alice ButterfieLD, 1903 Florence Prouty Dunton, 1903 Marion Evans, 1903 § rront) opranoe Pearl Smith Sanborn, 1903 .Mary Lois Hollister, 1905 Annie Marion King, 1905 first Utos Margaret Linton Hotchkiss. 1904 Mabel McKeighan, 1904 Alice Berry Wright, 1904 Annie May Wright, 1904 Jennie Peers, 1905 Lor a Wright, 1905 Bertha May Macomber, 1903 Ruth Hartwell Steyens. 1903 Isabel Caldwell Wight, 1903 rronfc 3lt06 Marion Lazell Clapp, 1904 Mary Peabody Colburn, 1904 Ruth Tracy Bigelow, 1905 88 HJUmboIm Club . ( ' (I i c r , M A R G A R I T A S A F I- R I), i goj M a 11 a ii e r . E D 1 T n M a y x a r d K i d d e r, 1904 first ittantooltnc Fannie Resor Stewart, 1903 Alice Morgan Wright, 1904 Edith Maynard Kidder, 1904 Ruth Robinson Blodgett, 1905 Elizabeth Washburn Mason. 1904 Bertha Phelps Brooks, 1905 Margaret Beauvois Mendel, 1904 Helen Clarissa Cross. 1905 M rion Kici-: Prouty, i 904 rronfi itlantjolinc Gertrude Roxana Beecher, 1903 Margaret Clarissa Estabrook, 1904 Susan Pratt Kennedy, 1903 Kathryn Louise Irwin, 1905 Elizabeth Pinlev Barnard, 1904 Helen Bradford Pratt. 1905 (Suttars Jessie Ames, 1903 Clara Julia Lynch, 1903 Anna Charlotte Holden, 1903 Elizabeth Catherine Stiles, 1903 Sarah Thorndike Keniston, 1903 Natalie Stanton. 1904 luolino Margarita Safford, 1903 Bessie Pendleton Benson, 1904 MTrllo Metta Iosephine Holloway, [904 anjo Club L e a d er , A l m a Ethel R e e d, 1903 M a 11 a g e r , Harriet S u m n e r Cl a r k, 1903 •BanicurincB Virginia Bartle, 1903 Emilie Creighton, 1904 Harriet Sumner Clark, 1903 Una Marie Winchester, 1904 Alma Ethel Reed, 1903 Elizabeth Freeman, 1905 Gertrude Elizabeth Douglas, 1904 §etonU -Banioe Mary Ethel Bates, 1903 Helen Chase Marble, 1904 Ella Josephine Scoville, 1903 Alice Robson, 1904 Florence Emilie Lovett, 1904 Jtrst ittnnUoItns Loltise Freeman, 1903 Margaret Watson, 1904 Florence Homer Snow, 1904 Ruby Edna Hendrick, 1904 Marion Hill McClench, 1903 Stella Emily Packard, 1903 Elizabeth Abbott Parker, 1904 cSuttare Louise Dodge, 1905 Cathleen Alberta Sherman, Katherine Cole Noyes, 1905 Jennie Peers, 1905 1904 SENIOR CLASS BOOK 91 Cljapel Ci)otr Leader, Alice Butterfield Jessie Ames Eva May Becker Alice Butterfield Helen Creelman Inez Field Damon Florence Prouty Dunton Marjorie Gray Susan Pratt Kennedy Alice Theresa Lyman, ex-1903 Bertha May Macombee Eleanor Chester Putnam Mary French Sherman, ex-1903 Marie Louise Wei-: den Isabel Caldwell Wight Committees 94 SMITH COLLEGE 1903 opljomore Becorattng Committee for tije junior romena e Jessie Ames Ruth Stephens Baker Ellen Gray Barbour Caroline van Hook Bean Gertrude Roxana Beecher Mabel Irene Benedict Clara Louise Bradford Lucy Hayes Breckinridge Harriet Irene Brown- Margaret Louise Buchwalter Jessie Stuart Carter Harriet Sumner Clark Fannie Fletcher Clement Esther Conant Mabel Eleanor Dick Florence Prouty Dunton Marion Evans Klara Elisabeth Frank Margaret French Grace Gilbert Rebecca Janet Gilfillan Mary Elizabeth A. Gilpin Fanny Hastings Lucy Webb Hastings Anna Charlotte Holden Sarah Thorn-dike Keniston Susan Pratt Kennedy Florence Meachem Kenyon Anna Theresa Kitchel Bessie Adele Knight Charlotte Louise Kreinheder Blanche Lauriat Alice Emily Leavens Clara Julia Lynch Helen Flora McAfee Xettie McDougall Ada Isabel Norton- Alice Page Carlotta Parker Lucy Persis Parker Laura Post Isabel Poland Rankin- Florence Emily Ross Margarita Safford Ruth Hartwell Stevens Fannie Resor Stewart Elizabeth Catherine Stiles Helen Louise Stout Elizabeth Strong Marie Louise YVeeden SENIOR CLASS BOOK 95 Junior - Mentor entertainment Committees (Entertainment C h a i r m an, Sarah Thordik e K e n i s t o n Lucy Hayes Breckinridge Ernesta Marion Stevens Grace Howe Legate Alta Zens Urfrrslnnents Chairman, M a r g a r e t W i l i. i a m s Thach e r Ella Warren Elizabeth Axtoixette Irwin fexnturnirs ( ' Ji a i r m a a, A x x a T ii E r e s a KlTC h e e Bertha Prestox Trull Clara Holmes Phillips Eva Augusta Porter Grace Gilbert Maude Barrows Duttox 3intottattcms Chairman, Lili a x E l i e l Lad f e r t v Alice Arabella Blanchard Helen Williams Davison Bessie Boies Jessie Doane Marion Allen Mack Frances Margaret Purtill Rena Pauline Moore £BustC C Ii a i r in ii ii , Flo r e n c e P r o u t y D u n t o n Marion Hill McClench Alma Ethel Reed Koma Blanche Carpenter SENIOR CLASS BOOK t 97 Cbc Junior iJromenabc MAY 14, 1902 Committees G e ii e r a I ( ' li a i r m a ii . F a n n y Hastings Programs C ha i r m an , An c e W i l l a r d W a k n e r Caroline van Hook Bean Edna Owsley Clara Julia Lynch Gladys Franksford Aldrich C h a i r m an , A n n a ' J ' e f f t Bogue Jane Frances McCarroll Eva May Becker Alio-; Butterfield 3Inmtationo ( ' i r in n ii , F a n n i ii R esor S t 1-; wart Marguerite Adelaide Pabens Laura Post floor ( ' h a i r in n ii, M a r if L o u i s E V E E D E N Sara Louise Gesner Edith Naomi Hill Edla Sperry Steele Alice Grosvenor Fessenden Mabel Emma Griffith KrfrcBbmmtc C ha i r in a n . M a i e B e r n a d e t t e B y r n e Mary Whiting Hickok Marcia Curtis Bailey Frances Temple Lawrence ( 6l)crs Anna Charlotte Holden Edith Louise Wyman Nettie McDougall Marie Roberta Lockhart Marcia Curtis Bailey Helen Elizabeth Broadhead Mary Ann Larabie Maud Melina Skinner Klara ELISABETH Frank BEATRICE Putnam Clara Julia Lynch Caroline van Hook Bean Alice Willard Warner IJatvonrooro M rs. Si: i ' . i. vi. Mrs. Berry Mrs. BARTLE Miss Jordan Mrs. Blanchard Miss Czarnomska Mrs. Fletcher Miss Bebenson Mrs. Williams Doctor Brewster Mrs. O ' Neill Miss Eastman SENIOR CLASS BOOK 99 junior (Uteris Jessie Ames Ruth Stephens Baker Ellen Gray Barbour Gertrude Roxana Beecher Clara Louise Bradford Margaret Louise Buchwalter Mary Dorothea Burnham Rodericka Canfield Helen Richmond Carter Fannie Fletcher Clement Theresa Jean Cochrane Maude Barrows Dutton Annie Thaxter Eaton Marion Evans Rebecca Janet Gilfillan Grace Pierpont Fuller Grace Gordon Isabel Hooker Grier Fanny Hastings Lucy Webb Hastings Ethel Hutchinson Sarah Thorndike Keniston Susan Pratt Kennedy Rose Adele Kinsman Anna Theresa Kitchel Virgini Bessie Adele Knight Blanche Lauriat Margaret Wilson McCutchen Alice Page Helen Marguerite Prescott Isabel Poland Rankin Margarita Safford Lois Mitchell Shattuck Louise Morrill Shattuck Alice May Smith Ruth Hartwell Stevens Elizabeth Catherine Stiles Edith de Charny Suffren Kate Tindall Mabel Cynthia Wilson Laura Brown Woodbury Alta Zens Elizabeth Strong Lucy Hayes Breckinridge Ada Isabel Norton Lula Waldo Emma Hawley Sterling Alice Arabella Blanchard Florence Prouty Dunton Carlotta Parker a Bartle 100 SMITH COLLEGE 1903 reiimtnarp Bramattcs Committee Chairman, Margaret Wilson McCutchen Lucy Haves Breckinridge Lucy Wer-b Hastings Ada Isabel Norton Alta Zens Junior Bramatus Committee G e n era! ( ' h a i r m an . . F a x n v H a s t i n g s .4 dvi s or y .17 e in her. . . Esther Co x a x t Chairman Committee  Costumes Rebecca Janet G i l f i l l a x Chairman Committee on Musii F LO R E N C E P R o u t y D u x T o x B it s i n e s s M a n a g e r . . . G R A C E P 1 E R P x t F u i. L E R S t a g e M a u a ger . . . A D A I s A B E i. X o r t o x Ssmb ' Conunittfrs CoBtumcB Anna Theresa Kitchel Helen Marguerite Prkscott Edith de Charny Sufpren Ruth Hartwell Stevens Ethel Hutchinson iflucic Margarita Safford A s s i s t a ii I ' • ii s i n e s s Man i El I. A V A R R E X Assistants to S t a g e M a n a g e r L U ( ' v W E I ' . B H AST! N G S A L I C E ( i R O S V E X O R F E s s E N I) E X 101 102 SMITH COLLEGER 1903 Junior Committees Senior j]ms C h a i r in a it , Grace Howe Legate Elizabeth Jack Edith Louise Wyman Class -Boob Chairman, Anna Theresa K i t c h e l Elizabeth Strong Ruth Stephens Baker Bertha Louise Johnson Mabel Cynthia Wilson ))botog;raj)I)6 C h airman, Isabel Pol a n d Rankin Rodericka Canfield Marcia Curtis Bailey Clara Holmes Phillips Kallp onpi C h airman, Ruth Hart well Stevens Alice Butterfield Jane Frances McCarroll 3fap § ong; Chairman, Ruth Hartwell Stevens Klara Elisabeth Frank Anna Tefft Bogue Ellen Gray Barbour Campus C h a i r m an, Laura Post Charlotte Louise Kreinheder Grace Gordon Harriet Sumner Clark ©rUcr in Rarrjjmg: Chairman, Fannie R e s o r Stewart Mary Isabel Curtis Edna Owsley Helen Fairbanks Hill Blanche Lauriat Helen Hamilton Hatch SENIOR CLASS BOOK 103 |]vrcrnt6 C h a i r m an , Netti e M c D o u g a l l Clara McDowell Marie Oller Alice Arabella Blanchard |Jnntincr. Chairman, Gertrude R o x a n a B e e c h e r Sarah Thorndike Kenistox Alice Page Carlotta Parker Georgia Elizabeth Lyon Commencement 0rator C h a i r m an , Annie T h a x t e r E a to Clara Julia Lynch ' Klara Elisabeth Frank Clase Supper C h a i r in an , A x x i e Dyer T u t t i. e Marie Louise Weeden Grace Gilbert Susan Leland Hill Alice May Smith Ethel Hutchinson 3fap HDap Cievctscc ( ' ll il i Y III a II , B E S S I E A D E L E K X I G II T Rose Adele Kinsman Maude Barrows Dutton Ada Isabel Norton Margaret Louise Buchwalter entor Wttk Hope ' s labour ' s iLost The Academy of Music, 7.30 P. M. Thursday, June i , Dress Rehearsal; Friday, June 19, Saturday, June 20 Cast Ferdinand, King of Navarre BlRON Lords attending on the Princess of France Long.wille Lords attending on the King DUMAIN Bo vi- 1 1 Mercadet I Don Adriano db Arm ado, a fantastical Spaniard Siu Nathaniel, a curate HoLOFERNES, a schoolmasti r hi 1 i,. a constable Costard, a clown Moth, page to Armado A Forester Princess of France Rosaline | Maria Ladies attending on the Princess (Catherine ) Jaquenetta, a country wench First Lord .... i i elen creelman Alfa Zens Clara Holmes Phillips Susan Pratt Kennedy 1 Pearl Smith Sanborn 1 Blanche Lauriat ( ' IROLINE VAN Hook B] Georgie Louise Field Margaret Cooper Cook Eva May Becker M irion Evans M IRGARITA SAFFORD RlNA Mai DE GrI 1 N 1 Margaret Louise Buchwalter J 1 -si 1 Ami s An mi JoNE£ El 1 IS Annie Thaxter Ha roN M 1 1.1 1 rRUDB ROXANA BEBCHER 107 108 SMITH COLLEGER 1903 i actalaurcate Jsmntoaj) JUNE 21 Senior Class JJraper jittcrttng; Music Hall .......... 9.30 A.M. Leader, Alice Y i l l a r d W a r x e k 5acralaurratc Cifrrtcro Sermon by President L Clarke S e e l y e 4.00 P M Assembly Hall . . . . . . . 7 00 p m. M$ ©ap MONDAY, JUNE 2 2 Chapel Services Ivy Exercises Society Reunions Art Reception Promenade Concert Presidem ' s Reception 9.00 A.M. IO.OO A.M. 4.OO-6.OO l ' .M. 4.00-6.00 P.M. 7.OO l ' .M. 8.00-IO.OO P.M. 109 110 SMITH COLLEGER 1903 3top £ ong Summer and sun on the glad old earth, Sing for the ivy green — Come, join in our melody, join in our mirth, Sing for the ivy green — We ' er sealing our loyalty here today, With hearts that are true and voices gay, For Alma Mater we ' ll love alway: Sing for the ivy green! Break we the sod with loyal will, Sing for the ivy green — And the love that our hearts must cherish still, Sing for the ivy green — Out from the whispering leaves shall shine, Alma Mater, to pledge us thine; So a song we ' ll sing for the ivy vine, Sing for the ivy green ! Ellen Gray Barbour SENIOR CLASS BOOK, 111 3lbp ©ration IN the playing of a game or the directing of an enterprise the essential requirement for any degree (if perfection is a keen sense of pro- portion. When in the game, we ask ourselves, shall we put forth our greatest strength, or what points in our enterprise demand the most careful forethought and attention!- ' And so it is with our lite, call it work or play we shall come to our highest perfection only as we look upon it in the truest possible perspective. Vet this principle is one very little recognized in proportion to its importance; one which we are constantly violating by erroneous habits of thought and bv the careless use of words and phrases which call erro- neous ideas into being. Such a phrase is College Life, used not only by those intimately connecte 1 with collegiate institutions, but employed by everybody, every- where when speaking of college. This phrase most likely grew out of the effort to give expression to the difference between the activities and relationships in a college community and those existing in the commu- nities in which we ordinarily live. If this were the only importance of this phrase, we might censure it as an unfortunate necessity and let it pass. But the scope of its influence does not end here. From conveying the idea of difference, it has come to convey the idea of a great an 1 dispro- portionate importance. And it is this idea that we would stigmatize as erroneous, because it distorts the perspective of life by exalting four short years to a co-ordinate value. What life is, in its physical sense, is one of the unsolved problems of the universe. but if we lo ik al it in the broad and evcrv-day use of the term, embracing experience and conduct, we shall see that it is marked bv certain characteristics, the most noteworthy of which is its continuity. From the first to the seventh age of man it is a continuous performance. Outside of the miraculous instances mentioned in the Bible, there is no historical record where, for one individual, lift. ' has ever Stopped and begun again. Indeed, in the belief of most mentoday.it never Stopped. Perhaps it never even had a beginning. Experiences may come and go, leaving their rec  rd behind them, bul I hat p wer on which they fall, which absorbs them, moulds them and reproduces them in action, is not strengthened or impaire 1 by their passage. It defies time and change and all the forces of nature, even death itself. 112 SMITH COLLEGE 1903 Life, the active side of life, is also complex. Vast and varied are the interwoven experiences which are its food, crossed and re-crossed the aims and purposes which may be called its nerves, many-sided and multiform the conduct which is its expression. Our life is not like a soldier in a huge battalion of marching men, rubbing only against those whose faces are set in the same direction as his, who march to the same time with steps of the same length ; — it is like an individual on the corner of Broadway and Wall Street, jostled by people of every sort and condition, going in every direction at every imaginable rate of speed. And out of this complexity arises growth. As each new experience comes into a life, that life changes, it grows, it expands and becomes more capable of accepting and dealing with the next. The disappointments of childhood have little influence upon one ' s life, because that life is not capable of appropriating the whole of them or of turning them to account ; but the disappointments of after years have a wonderful power to deepen and strengthen and enlarge. And what is it that continues, that receives and assimilates these experiences, that is capable of culture and growth? It is the hidden core of life, its very power and heart ; that which consisteth not in the abundance of the things which a man possesseth ; that which is more than meat and raiment ; the possession of which outweighs in value the possession of the whole world. It is a power independent of all experiences, which yet can assimilate them, can appropriate them to itself, and can be moulded by them. It is that into which flow all the forces of the past and from which flows the directive force of the present and future. Individuality is a part of it. Character is a part of it. But what it is itself, in nature and essence, will still remain like itself a hidden mystery. Such, then, are a few of the attributes which, coupled with the word College , is used to designate the major portion of these four years. And College , — What is College? You will notice that, with reference to the individual, college covers nine months out of each of four successive years. College, then, is not continuous. I know you will object that, although college does not actually cover the other three months of each year, still its influence extends over the whole. Of course that is so to some extent; but so does the influence of home and many another relationship extend over the nine months of actual college residence. Only such influences are more subtle and therefore less apparent to the eye. The immediate influences engendered by college conditions stop abruptly at the end of each college year. And when, at the beginning of the next they again SENIOR CLASS BOOK U3 come into play, these conditions have undergone an artificial change which, though slight, is not the result of a gradual growth. And in between such stages a different set of influences has been at work. Moreover, constant connection with many of these influences is kept up to a greater or less degree all through the college years, and they form generally the deepest influences those years can bring. Home tics, with their anxieties, joys and sorrows, strike far deeper into the .roots of life than does the election to a society or the worry of an examination. The influence too of our former years is upon vis. The individuality they have stamped, the character they have helped to form, — all this determines the attitude we will take to the conditions that college presents. And the coming years as well, the situations in which they are likely to put us, the relationships they will probably bring us, the activities they will de- mand of us, — the years to come cast their shadow upon us while we arc at college and determine in some degree our conduct here. So, as college is not continuous, neither is it fundamental. Nor are the conditions of a college community complex. One feels here like the soldier in the battalion; everything runs along parallel lines. Most of the people we meet are of the same age. All are, with reference to college, pursuing the same ends in the same way ; their activities arc governed by the same rules; their thoughts are trained along the same lines; their standards of college judgment are practically the same. The only essential differences that one meets arise from individuality and bias bred of early training, and the influence of college is far more likely to level such individuality to a common type than to increase and strengthen it. It is probably because of this congeniality that one makes such good friends. There is here, therefore, little chance for real experience. The influences that can be traced to college, great and good as they arc, arc such as arise out of study and friendship and unity of purpose; the three things that arc found in college to the best advantage, because they arc freed from all possible incumbrances and interferences. That these influences are very valuable in our life-growth will be seen a little later when a few of the most important are enumerated. Hut the college years themselves do not contain any marked growth, except we certainly hope along intellectual lines. Great growth may come during these college years through the experiences of trial or sorrow, but such are not due to causes of college origin. Without being continuous or fundamental, without complexity or inherent growth, college does not possess the attributes of a life. Nor does it possess the essentials. College stands for a set of physical and intellectual conditions wholly external to the individual. It is no hidden 114 SMITH COLLEGE 1903 power. Whatever power or individuality these conditions may have is given them by the lives of those who come into contact with them ; but withdraw the individuals and the college is dead. It is a set of corporate activities that flow from many individual lives. It has no power in itself, nor has it life. These conditions were in existence before the individual was born and they will continue to exist after she has severed connection with them forever. The life of the individual was a power before it ever felt any of the influences of college conditions and will be a power after it has separated itself from them entirely. What, then, is the relation between the two 5 These two independent streams, one of hidden vital power, and one of physical conditions, come into touch with each other at certain periods. What is the result? On the side of the college, the conditions may undergo some alteration as the result of the life that has been connected with them. ( )n the side of the life, these conditions are experiences through which life has passed, which have left their influence on the hidden power and have contributed to its development and growth. Through its studies, college has deepened and broadened life by giving to the individual the power and inclination to think, and by opening her eyes to see things in their true perspective. It has enriched and strengthened life through the friendships the individual has here formed, through the enthusiasm that has come to her out of the unity of college aims. And it has brought much more into her life in ways so subtle that she may not perhaps recognize its presence for some time to come. But when all is said, when we have rendered to our col- lege the acknowledgment of the gratitude we owe, even while we yet stand under the shadow of her mighty strength, we are forced to confess that college is a set of experiences, that it is not a life. Is this a sad confession? Do we feel that these four years have, after all, been in vain? I think not. I think that they must assume a deeper significance for the future, if we recognize in them an integral part of our life, than if we think of them as an entirely separate existence into which we have journeyed and that is, though from it we have brought some few- treasures, but a memory, over which time will east film after film until it remains with us only as the faint shadow of a dream. These years are our eternal inheritance, not distorting life by standing out in the glare of a false dignity, but blending their shadow and their sunlight, their glory and their strength in the beauty of That untravelled world whose margin fades Forever and forever. Margaret Wilson McCutchen. SENIOR CLASS BOOKj 115 Commencement Bap Tuesday, June 23 Commencement Crcrcioce College Hall ..... 10.00 a m. Orator, Bliss Perry, L. II. D. ' Collation Alumna; Gymnasium . 12.00 m. Slummx fleeting; Chemistry Hall . . 4.00-6.00 p.m. C 1.166 Supper Students ' Building y.oo p.m. 116 SMITH COLLEGER 1903 Class Supper Tuesday, June 23, Students ' Building, 7.00 P. M. The time when men sit down to that nourishment which is called supper. — Love ' s Labour ' s Lost, Act I, Scene i. «r LUCY HAYES BRECKINRIDGE, Toastmistress I. The College and The Faculty Ruth Stephens Baker How hast thou purchased this experience? Bv my pennv of observation. — Act III , Scene 1 . Freshman Class History Margaret Hamilton Wagenhals II. Butterflies and Bookworms Elizabeth Jack The epithets are sweetly varied. — Act IV, Scene 2. Sophomore Class History Ellen Gray Barbour III. Senior Dramatics Helen Flora McAfee Full merrily hath this career been run. — Act IV, Scene 2. Junior Class History Esther Conant IV. The Wise and The Foolish Lucy Webb Hastings At Christmas I no more desire a rose Than wish a snow in May ' s newfangled mirth; But like of each thing that in season grows. — Act I, Scene I. Senior Class History Edith Naomi Hill V. The Class of 1903 Marion Evans Nor shines the silver moon one half so bri ght. — Act IV, Scene j. SENIOR CLASS BOOK. 117 jjreshman Class $tstoq JUST between you and me and the door-knob we must have seemed a rather ordinary class at the beginning of us. When in the fall of eighteen ninety-nine we entered Smith College, we showed no striking characteristics of any kind, — we were not remarkably large nor remarkably small, we were not even distinguished by an 1 ' unprecedented spell of weather. ' ' There was the usual number of subdued and hopeless freshmen, the usual number of fond and anxious parents; there was the usual bewilderment about registration and course cards; the usual amount of weeping, the usual amount of rain. Neither was our first appearance as a class, at the Freshman Frolic, in any way extraordinary. It is enough to say that we conducted our- selves as new-made freshmen sin mid. Towed about by friendly upper class girls, we admired everything from the Gymnasium to the Glee Club singing; when asked how we liked college we replied from our three days ' experience, timidly yet enthusiastically, that we thought it was just lovely, and we listened with shy pleasure to the song which informed us that we were as green as we could be. Yes, we were model freshmen. At our first class meeting, however, we showed a little more individ- uality. To be sure we got all balled Up in I ' arlimentarv law, and found some difficulty in disentangling ourselves, to the huge delight of the grind- hunting sophomores, but here for the first time we displayed that ab- sorbed interest in the concerns of our class, that intense earnestness and determination on the part of every member, which have always character- ized our class meetings and made them so lively and entertaining. At the Sophomore Reception even the sophomores acknowledged that we behaved like little ladies. We expressed our pleasure at the arrange ments they had made to entertain us, their little jests at our expense we received with courteous appreciation, and we displayed such deftness and moderation in our removal of the decorations that it was hard to understand how the gaping mouths of over three hundred Memorabilias had been tilled. 118 SMITH COLLEGE 1903 Having thus favorably impressed our fellow students, we settled down to win the hearts of the higher powers. How we derived the pleas- ing consciousness I know not, but before Christmas we were able to assure each other with becoming modesty that the faculty liked our class. ( )ur first experience of the sportive joys of Mid-years was a little wearing, but not overwhelming. Some of our comrades indeed fell from the ranks, shot to the heart by some deadly missile from the office, but the majority of us bound up our wounds and charged gallantly on, not too badly disabled to furnish our fair share of noise and enthusiasm to the rally on Washington ' s Birthday, or to win the banner in the Gvmnastic drill. And now 1 come to a part of our history in which I shall have to make use of the hitherto unknown word defeat. In our basketball game with the sophomores we were beaten, — that is the bare fact of the case. But shall we be content to accept the bare fact, — we, who all through our college course have been trained to look behind facts to their significance, to see things in their connections, to judge events in relation to their attendant circumstances? Perish the thought! To us, fresh from the aforesaid training that day when our team fighting against the discouraging con- sciousness that the game was going against them, pushed up a score the highest hut one that had ever been made by a freshman team, — to us, 1 repeat, that day will always be one of the brightest gems in the well-filled jewelry box of i ;o . And now, to descend from arms and the hero to softer themes, I come to spring term,-- spring term when all the world is young and all the trees are green, when the voice of the June bug is heard in the land, when we all go about brazenly wearing in our hair next year ' s supply of apples for the Campus houses. But how can I describe in Carter ' s Koal Black Ink on Bridgman ' s theme paper what should be written in tints of the rainbow on the petals of roses ' I can do no better than take the words of that dear old standby in the long ago days of required elocution: Have you seen ' air apple orchard in the spring, in the spring, Our college apple orchard in the spring? If you have nut. then you know not. in the spring, Half the beauty, wonder, glory of the spring. And if you have, why then you forget that you were ever homesick or blue or worried, and say goodbye to Freshman year, glad from the bottom of your heart for the three years still ahead. Margaret Hamilton Wagenhals. SENIOR CLASS BOOK. 119 Sophomore Class History Go to the English Department. ' The English Department has already made three con- tradictory statements upon the subject! We can ' t get at the English Department. ' The English Department doesn ' t know anything about it, or if it does, it won ' t tell. Somehow or other we got our course-cards made out — Bible, and 3b, and the elusive English 5 — and found time to pull ourselves together and make sure that we were producing the correct effect upon the fresh- men. We ourselves had been reasonably fresh the year before, and now that we were sophomores we didn ' t mind admitting it. In our new role. however, we made up our collective mind to combine dignity with enter- prise, and impress those freshmen with the fact that after all size was not everything. Those freshmen! There is no denying that in some respects 1004 was a class of infant prodigies. Something or other possibly the attraction of gravitation assisted an enormous number of their prep-school com- positions into the Monthly; and the newspapers announced confidently that the average height of the Smith College freshman was six feet. They started out well by ornamenting faculty seats in chapel, and by inviting I n-( nnineiit members of that body to OCCUpy the floor. As to us we became gradually and painfully aware that we were quite beneath their notice. They were so offended at not being allowed to take part-in Fair Smith ' s twenty-fifth anniversary that most of them went home at the time in high dudgeon. We, on the contrary, arrayed ourselves in the hard-won produce of Wash Lady ' s Lane, and made Northampton for once really attractive. But the freshmen returned in time to attend their first ball. Nol withstanding their disappointment when they discovered on this occasion that the grinds that we had been collecting for weeks were not to appear in the Monthly, they had the time of their young lives, and listened awe |20 SMITH COLLEGE 1903 struck to the strains of Die Wacht am Rhein, realizing that after all there was a difference between sophomores and freshmen. Having gotten the Freshmen off our minds, and having assured President Seelye that we could look after the college perfectly well while he was away, we proceeded to distinguish ourselves generally. The faculty were so impressed with our Bible papers as to demand personal interviews with the authors. We showed a fiendish ingenuity in eluding the knife of the vivisector, which towards Mid-years became epidemic in our midst; and at Mid-years them- selves we displayed such a wealth of imagination and such a brilliant inventive genius that our dazed instructors marked us — as far as we know — D all around. The rally was only another opportunity for us to show what stuff we were made of. It goes without saying that we had the best songs. Class spirit ran high, and its demonstrations were so striking that we finally became the envied of all by eliciting from those in authority a gratifying and appreciative remonstrance. But the climax of our glory came at the Great Game. The decorating committee did, to be sure, find themselves hampered by the resolution that had apparently passed the 1904 class meeting: that each detail of our green and yellow decorations should be faithfully reproduced upon the opposite wall in purple and red. They were finally outwitted; but in another matter it did look as if they were coming out on top. With unprecedented foresight they had appointed a committee to make sure that the faculty should wear nothing but purple; and certain weaker brethren had reluctantly succumbed. But in the solemn hush preceding the taking of the annual portrait of our feet and ankles, in walked our Dean having rendered himself adorable with a large rosette and streamers of green. From that hour our victory was assured. Invoking the aid of the mighty Jabberwock, on whom we have never yet seen cause to go back, we rushed into the arena, and after politely yielding the first basket to the little strangers — six feet tall, — we proceeded once again to im- press iyo4 with the fact that it is quality and not gymnasium weight that tells. At the close of the first half we generously expurgated our songs so as not to wound the sensibilities of the under dog, and therefore may SENIOR CLASS BOOK 12J_ be pardoned the smile in which we indulged when our friend, the enemy, not being quite sure what had hit her, burst out dispairingly, Oh, who will bury 1003? No one offered to undertake it and we ourselves merely remarked, It ' s waste of time to try and beat the Sophomores. That made 1904 mad and she retorted, Arrah, go on! you ' re only fooling. They knew this must be clever and original for it was just what 1902 had said the year before. But we had an answer ready even for this, and later dem- onstrated triumphantly that we had more than one point in common with General Washington. We looked for great things from spring term; and we got them at the rare moments when neither the faculty nor the weather bureau was interfering. The drill was a pretty fair beginning. The freshmen decided they would like the banner. We were getting to consider those fresh- men fairly endurable since the little episode of the Game, but we didn ' t love them quite enough to let them go on imagining that they could do everything that we had done in freshman year. So after much cogi- tation as to whether it would be really seemly for us to take both the cup and the banner, we decided that as njoi was the tree on which the fruit 1 our heart hung, we would let them have the banner as a parting sou- venir, and keep the cup ourselves. This adjustment seemed to satisfy all immediately concerned. But life was not all beer and skittles even in spring term. The very skirs were mourning the departure of igoi, and it began to he murmured that bathing suits would henceforth he de rigeur for recitations. Again, tin faculty, recognizing at last that literary genius which has always been the distinguishing mark of 1903, woke up in the night and cried for more Bible papers. We rebelled. We had but just received back our estimate ii David ' s poetical ability and the results of our investigation concern- ing the Messianic Hope, carefully annotated with the doctrinal views of the English Department, and the Bible Department ' s comments on our literary style. But we supposed that of course it would be useless to try and persuade the faculty that we didn ' t write so very well after all, and meekly ted the insatiable maw that ironically named itself Elective Themes with mathematical hut ambiguous analyses dealing with St. Paul ' s 122 SMITH COLLEGE 1903 power as a letter writer. Then the madness of despair assailed us, and we cut lunch daily, and at the door of the persuasive English Department put in practice our well-trained faculties of standing in line — that one definate principle discoverable beneath the vagaries of our institutional life. The Department was scornful. Write a Bible paper? Whatever had put it into our heads that we had to write a Bible paper? Hadn ' t the faculty anything to do but read our Bible papers? What was a Bible paper, anyway? Get along with us! Well, it was too bad about the Old Literaries. Another blight that descended upon us was the knowledge that we might do nothing to prove our affection for the Seniors. But though 1902 feted them to the best of i ts ability, ushered their guests and carried their well-earned laurel chain for them, they knew well enough who their friends were. We worked off our heart-ache on the Prom decorations, and like- wise our awful grief at the awful blow we were obliged to inflict on 1904, by reason of the request made us to voluntarily decide that it was beneath the dignity of 1903 to rough-house the freshman picture. But the clouds, literal and figurative, soon vanished before the dazzl- ing rays of the exam-week searchlight. Dear old faculty! As ever they were better than their word. With a child-like clutching at the joys of the present, we had elected to undergo our 3b examination at Mid-years. But though we hated to trouble the faculty by begging for another, we found that they had read our inmost thoughts. So a beautiful warm day was selected, and we entered joyfully into the spirit of the little twenty-minute ceremony, congratulating ourselves that we had said such choice things in our Mid-years papers. — The faculty are no doubt a justifiable institution, but at times they are a little uncertain in their movements. It is supposed to be the duty of the Sophomore historian to write the obituary of the Seniors. But why? We shall never forget 190 1. How could we forget Dramatics, and the glance of Petruchio ' s eye, or that angelic snowy throng of Ivy Day, kodak-plagued? We gathered their daisies and bade them goodbye — and hard it was just as we were really learning to appreciate them! And then we realized that we were doomed to follow them ere long — were we not now upper-class girls ? Ellen Gray Barbour. SENIOR CLASS BOOKji 123 Junior Class j tstorp YES, nodded the Jabberwock as he curled his tail into a figure three on the grass, there was practically nothing that that class couldn ' t do. At this the dusty little creature flung down its lion- skin jacket from the apple-bough over the speaker ' s head, (for the day was a warm one), the Mare squatted down near by, and the Unicorn stopped poking holes in the ground with his forehead. The Jabber- woek was older than the others — had seen a bit of life — and they loved to hear him tell of his youth. Where were we? At Fytte the Third, promptly replied the Owl —he was all agog for the story. To be sure, to be sure, murmured the Jabberwock, gazing off over Paradise then presently as turning he saw sympathetic tears in the little Owl ' s eyes, many ' s the tale I ' ve told you, young people, of how I used to swing gaily in the Gymnasium, championing successfully game after game of ' Odds ' against ' Evens, ' while my heart swelled with the noble praise sung up to me on the rafters. That you know was line, hut of all good times give me back those of Fytte the Third, enthu- siastically completed the Hare, jumping up. Sit down, Bunny, re- plied his senior, Don ' t be erushy! To begin with the elass had a regular ' blow-out ' in the Gymna- sium along in February, that year, over which, of course, I was asked to preside. There were lion-tamers, rope-daneers, snake-charmers, and many other attractions. Doughnuts and eider were consumed in amaz- ing readiness, fret ' libations to everyone. It was strictly a family affair, just myself and the elass but we had a dandy time. No one can doubt the success of our parties, for in the springtime the elass gave another. Of course it was in the Gymnasium, but you would never have guessed it. Say rather in a Caterer ' s heaven, lor all around the walls hung 24 SMITH COLLEGE 1903 draperies of green and white, so suggestive I could almost smell the may- onnaise. My! but I had hard work keeping away from the trimmings! In the afternoon they played a lively game on the back Campus where the ladies by slight of hand slipped pink cards under tables, immediately receiving in return ices for self and partner, above board. There was no prize, indeed I forget who won. Anyway, the name of the game begins with an ' S ' . A sell, suggested the Unicorn. M-m, mused the Jabberwock, longer than that. Whereupon he took out his diary and ran his eye over sundry initials in the margin of the fly-leaf— B. P., A. O. H., G. D. and others. What ' s that? interrupted the Owl, flying down to where a sheet o f paper lay on the grass, Why, it ' s Grandpa Lion, said he, picking it up, while the others crowded around him. Fell out of my coat-tail pocket. I was about to have it framed, said the Jabberwock. He gave it to me as a parting present, — his senior picture, you know, he added, carefully brushing it off and replacing it in his coat-tail pocket. He was a fine bird, too, that year; I remember what a fine time he and I had together at a little dance once. But I mustn ' t forget to tell you how my class went to see Miss Jordan. Here the Unicorn chuckled, for he appreciated the inference. Yes, they went to see her, because she had told them they must write argument papers, and they wanted to know which side of the argu- ment to take, and get to know her better at the same time. So they took their luncheon and went early. Oh! she had scribbled notes to most of them, so they felt very informal and not in the least afraid of staying some little while there. They had a very nice time, and someone took their pictures, though I have never seen the proofs. It makes me very proud to think how fond the faculty are of that class. There was a certain Psychologist who took great interest in them. One day he told them that for a long time he had been noting something strange about them. Their sense of humor at times seemed sadly lack- ing; at others unwontedly acute. The Hare looked fearfully shocked. Brace up and be an Emblem; it ' ll come out all right, assured the Unicorn kindly. SENIOR CLASS BOOK 125 Oh, it was all right after the trials, continued the Jabberwock. Trials! echoed the rest. Yes, the professor told them that they suffered from internal psycho- logical disturbances, and that they must go on trial and be examined. It took nearly a week. After one or two had been investigated and dis- missed I found out that they were changing into Seniors! Whee-u! said the Owl, shivering. ' ' Arc you a Senior? ' was on the breeze from morning to night, continued the Jabberwock. ' No, but 1 shall be after tomorrow at eleven, if I ' m lucky, ' was the common reply. ( )n the whole they got safely through, although some, seemingly well conditioned, were placed on lower grade than those of more puny fame — Don ' t be funny, Jab! cut in the Hare getting it back at him, re- member you ' re a Senior bird now. Tut-tut, and he raised one ear. More than that, laughed he of the Green, I ' m everything one can be in college. And though the others thought him frank to say so, they couldn ' t deny it. Esther Conant 126 SMITH COLLEGE jt 1903 Mentor Class l tstorp WELL, we have been and gone and done it, and now four grand years of college are over, according to that costly bit of parchment we received this morning. We are inclined to think that this last has been the best of all the game, therefore we insist on being seniors, the seniors, for just one night more. I suppose Senior History really began with our first class meeting, and if I were so inclined I might make a neat topical outline of the events of the year. But being opposed to topical outlines, for obvious reasons, I am going to browse along with the Jabberwock at my own sweet will. When we came back last fall things were not as they used to be on the Campus. Out there where our perfectly good tennis courts used to be, was a thing, a structure, a building — nay more — a Students ' Building. Do you — can you — realize that you have lived to see your fairs, your vaudevilles, and your money actually converted into brick and stone, and called the Students ' Building? It is the real, real thing, all wool and a yard wide — just about. There was a time in the fall when wild rumors were afloat. The impressionable and the pessimistic had visions of a desolate Campus, and cold, empty buildings; everybody having departed in a half congealed condition to the bosom of her family. Some may have preferred the thoughts of home without coal, to those of college with none, but we, the Seniors, cried, No, we will have our Senior year intact, and one brave little band of fourteen struggled along with what coal they could buy with their pocket money. At times we recited in rooms at a temper- ature of forty degrees, but after all we didn ' t mind particularly, and the Economics class was greatly indebted to that strike as a never-failing fund of illustration for every known problem in Economics. Soon came the meeting at which we discussed dramatics, and here my pen fails me. Never can I hope to do justice to the scintillating SENIOR CLASS BOOK 127 wit, the knock-down arguments, and the thoroughly Parliamentary char- acter of that meeting. The question was a momentous one. Should we, or should we not, repeat? The solution was 1903 repeat? Perish the thought! We will take the one and the only remaining Shakespeare play, — Loves Labour ' s Lost — the play that Mr. Young and the faculty have thrown at seniors for years, and we will do it so well that those other classes will be green with envy. We will therefore elect an invincible committee and all will be well. Do we regret our decision? Well far be it from us to boast, -but we have seen what we have seen. All too soon .Mid-years were upon us. We were told to make it a jolly, sportive week. Unfortunately it rained Otherwise who can doubt that we would have frolicked out in the bright sunshine from dawn till dark? There were two great days, in one week, and the first was Washing- ton ' s Birthday. We had a grand rally for our last one and we showed the rest of the college how we had grown wise with years. Did we stand up and get pushed? Indeed and we didn ' t. We sat comfortably on our tiers of seats and sang down to the others: Seniors are far above you, Seniors are first In work, and play, ami song. We had reserved seats lor Everyfreshman, which we approved of in spite of the horrified discussions as to the sacrilegous tendency of the college which soon came. As to the game in the afternoon. They say Seniors need never dream of winning. Ahem ! We always do the winning, the winning, flic winning. Those who know say that [903 has the best senior team they ever saw. We congratulate them on their perspicacity. Hardly had the other classes recovered their composure when they were allowed to sec- us exhibit our prize drilling. We were few in number, but select, and determined to win out or drop gym, both if possible. I believe that some strange, envious under-class girl was heard to remark, Hum, the scum of the class. At this preposterous statement one of the scum replied pointedly, and with some wit, Yes, scum usually comes out on top. Ha, Ha, cried the class, never did you speak a truer m SMITH COLLEGE 1903 word. And the scum was carried in a, mighty wave of triumph around the gym. Presumably every senior class has its trials with the front seats in chapel, but never class before had our excuse. No longer do rows of admiring freshmen flank our jaunty exit, for they have risen in the world. As for the choir, never a glimpse can we get of our young friends without craning our necks most painfully and most ungracefully. Thus it was that the front rows were almost always unoccupied. But one morning after Mid-years all was changed. The front rows were filled to overflowing by some of our brightest stars. People were shaking them frantically by the hand. What was there left for these girls to go into? Nothing my friends, but this history, where they are saluted as benefactors of the college at large. Because, forsooth, the A ' s shall be D ' s, and the D ' s shall be A ' s, and the system of marking shall be no more hid. We knew we should get into the heart of the office by hook, or by Crook. And so the days slipped by until concert time came and another glorious success for 1903. Meanwhile our dramatics was a kind of under- current to everything. The committee went around looking as wise as owls, — (not red). People, hoards of people, sauntered carelessly in and out of the Students ' Building, which we were dedicating, and it was sur- prising to see what an interest the other classes took in the architecture of the building about this time ; apparently none of them had noticed it before. Finally in a theoretically short class-meeting we, too, were made wi se, although the mobs were still to be chosen. Trying trials those were, but in due time damsels short and beautiful and willowy and husky walked among us. We half expected the office to call April Fool on us when we de- parted on April first, for how that so-called long winter term could be gone was a question that any one of us would have cheerfully flunked in an exam. When we came back just a little time ago, figuratively wrapped up in commencement clothes, we knew we were on the home stretch. And now why linger on this our most beautiful spring term? The grass has been greener than ever before, and we all know why. The sun has shone brighter for 1903, and the heavens have wept only occasionally when SENIOR CLASS BOOK 129 thinking of our departure. We have done everything with all cur might, hoping that in some mysterious way this thing called commencement might never come. But now, even 1903 can put it off no longer. We should be content. Everybody has been crazy about us since the day when the sophomores tried to identify themselves with our freshman picture, and failed, to this moment when we know that every under-class girl in college is dying to be here with us, and when even our energetic Junior Ushers must leave 1903 alone in its glory. We used to sing a song when we were freshmen. The arithmetic won ' t bear exam- ination when sung now, but the sentiment is the same as ever. This one class of 1903 Equals as you must sec All of the rest combined. And they do see, all those who must live without us next year. We must try not to make it hard for 1904, and 1905, and 1906. They would be like us if they could. ' Neath a bushel must we hide our light. We must keep it dark And yet when all is all is said and done, here by ourselves, we know, We ' ve made our mark. We 1 an ' l keep it dark, Glory to 1903. Edith Naomi lln.i. Ttvse 132 SMITH COLLEGE J903 ©He for asinngton ' s Btrtljtiap w I ELDER of every nation, Thou whose breath Out of Oppression ' s dust still quickeneth New peoples for Thy pleasure, Thine today Be thanks for him who set us on our way, Bearing his crown of praise undimmed to death ! Still doth he love the folk He rescued from the yoke, Inspire the virile line on whom his mantle fell; They, with its might endued, Faced sudden needs, pursued Long purposes; throtigh such, God guides our country well. Stern sons of war, calm-browed men of peace Their chieftan ' s joy have hastened forth to claim. And one by one, strong from their sharp release, Three martyrs, coronalled in crimson flame, Have sought him in that star Where kings and heroes are, Leaving the benediction of a reverend name. Unto the first of them that bore the blood-red crown, That soul of many sorrows, spoke the father of our land: How hath thy hand Weilded the power thou hast today laid down? ' Our free-born state lay whelmed in blood and tears, Thou father of the nation; I warred for her we love past threats and fears, Strove for her honor many bitter years, With sword and supplication : Now, smitten as to death, her struggles cease. Ay, thorns for victor crown and gall for wine Hath this bruised land of thine. ' Peace, peace! ' they cry. God knows there is no peace! The sword indeed is sheathed; the grevious wounds remain. Shall this be all in vain? SENIOR CLASS BOOK 133 Answered he who bore his crown of praise undimmed to death. Ceasing not his labor with his mortal breath, She shall not die; Yet must her peace be wrought out of strong pain, - Her honor from the knowledge of her stain; And Miserere must prelude her triumph-cry. Once more a sanguine aureole burned its way Up through the night of space: Father, I ruled them but a day, And could not turn them from their evil way, So soon, so soon one raised his hand to slay — May God vouchsafe him grace! The old wounds heal not, novel factions rise; Contentious voices clamor to the skies. God pity this, our race! Then answered he whose pure and righteous fame Shall not decrease, — Seeing the glory shine beyond the shame, Hearing through strife the promise of great peace; Fear not; God shall not fail the folk He set His hand to save; He hath not freed his people to bring them to the grave! At dawning of the century To grace a nation ' s jubilee Cometh a well-loved chief; From all the land They throng to press his hand. Suddenly over the joyance shivers a sound of pain ; He is slain, is slain! Silent are envy and slander, fled is lust of gain, And a nation, bowed with a sudden mighty grief Pleads for his life in vain. ' I ' u the star of heroes and kings. Where the nation ' s father stands, A heart-felt grieving For a sister ' s bereaving Swells up from many lands, But all through the star of heroes and kings, On its paths I vivid air, Sweep long flashings of luminous wings, Circling everywhere, For unto the star of lurm-s and kings A mailed angel escort brings One more to whom is given to wear Tin ' crimson crownal fair. 134 SMITH COLLEGE 1903 Render thine account, O steward,. of the trust that hath been thine! These my people, hast thou cared for them. Thought and fought and toiled and dared for them, Only in their glory sought to shine? Hearkning even to thy people ' s will, father of our nation, I have left their hands untrammelled, to work out their own salvation, Curbing still the indignation that would rush on war too blindly; Yet have they proved themselves unkindly. For their greed of gold is great, Great their scorn and spite and hate, White and Black and Jew and Gentile, met within one liberal gate. Fain to be both just and lenient, have I let them go astray? They who hastened to the succor of a land less blest than they, Hath the earlier selfless spirit of their conflict passed away? Light-won triumph, hath it nourished thirst for blood and lust for war? Doth thy gift, the pride of freedom, urge their self-will on too far? Judgment, Sire, who sittest ever in the calm of this sure star! Answered he who day by day Laid down his life, as one that ransometh A soul beloved, our freedom ' s price to pay. His crown of praise borne on undimmed to death: ' Friend, hadst thou ruled less well, thou wert not slain; Thy hand, both firm and gentle on the rein, Hath wrought with power such as brute minds disdain. Such could not see the State ' s long-riven soul Under thy touch grow whole; Calm and contained, thy mien to them did speak A passive heart and weak; They knew not, he who rules his spirit well Must needs have first subdued the hosts of Hell! Nay, more; behold, thy death a nation frees From soulless lives and eyes all earthward turned; Devoutly have thy stricken people mourned Amid the moaning of their many seas; They have not vet arisen from their knees. Grieve not for them, a strong and worthy hand Doth guide thy land, And urge her onward toward that Destiny Thou didst foresee ! SENIOR CLASS BOOK. 135 Now is she waking from her primal sleep To learn the meaning of the former day; Her prophets cry from deep to girdling deep, ' The night hath passed away! Awake! ' they cry, O, ransomed land thine is a mission high, Such destiny as nation hath not known since time began; To shape the dream of centuries, the Brotherhood of Man! Nor do they cry in vain, Spoke the sire again, Our nation shall ascend all heights of time, Not without pain — Ever more eagerly she seems to climb, And ever draws she nearer that sublime Nation of nations, glorious grown and free, God ' s final purpose for our earth shall be Enwrought in thee! Lo, in thy veins the blood of every race. On thy vast plains an ample dwelling-place. And boundless promise in thy glorious face! For perfect manhood here shall be combined Of them of every land; Each race shall yield her best; best body, spirit, mind; Best heart and head and hand; Aye, all that prophets see but dare not say, And ever}- hidden thing That poets sing, Within thy gracious borders God shall find, Nation of nations, in that blessed day For which all peoples pray! Wielder of every nation, Thou whose breath True life in all Thy people quiekeneth, Our humble-hearted thanks to Thee we pay For him whose name we honor here today; For him whose crown of praise Thy hand Preserved undimmed to death! Ellen Gray Barbour 136 SMITH COLLEGE 1903 Styere tlje jtttgljtp est I am the ocean, cold and gray, And I roll from shore to shore, Breaking upon the silent beach Now and evermore. 1 am the ocean green and hungry, I am the mighty deep; I roll o ' er endless sandy bottom. And endless watch 1 keep . To the world a merciless face I show, Yet gentle and kind the breast Of the rolling, tossing ocean wave Down where the mighty rest. 1 am the rocky mountain-pass And I cut the hills in twain, Sundering height from sister-height, Once and yet again. 1 am the valley, cold and sterile. I am the grim defile, I wind ' mid endless barren ranges, ' Mid endless gloom the while. To the world a rugged face I show, Ye gentle and kind the breast Of the valley set among sentinel-hills Down where the mighty rest. I am the world of sea and desert, I am the world of woe. Wandering on through realms of space As the aeons go. 1 am the green and hungry ocean, I am the grim defile, 1 am the desert silent and burning, I am — through an endless while. To men a pitiless face I show, Yet gentle and kind my breast. For I am the mother of all at last, Down where the mighty rest. Lilian Eliel Lauferty SENIOR CLASS BOOK 137 a Ballati of tJ)e JSarlep Oh, the fields of Crumsheithe are fair and fine, Tall blows the barley, Lying so green in the glad sunshine; Where the wind is swaying the barley. And the heir of Crumsheithe fair to see, Tall blows the barley, Is wooing a maid of low degree; And the wind breathes low in the barley. Then out spoke his father angrily, Tall blows the barley, ' Give up thy lowly-born love! said he; Whistles the wind through the barley. ' Or it shall be that tomorrow morn, Tall blows the barley, ' I will not pay the barley-corn; And the wind cries shrill in the barley. ' Then the barley-corn thou need ' st not pay, Tall blows the barley, ' For mine own dear love is mine for aye. And the wind sweeps strong o ' er the barley And so it was that on rental day, Tall blows the barley. That the fields f Crumsheithe passed away; And the sad wind siejis in the barl. lie led his love In a COttage low, Tall blows the barley. He kissed her lips and her brow of snow: And the wind sint s sweet in the barley. 138 SMITH COLLEGE 1903 For the fields of Crumsheithe fair and fine, Tall blows the barley, I care not a barley-corn, sweetheart mine; And the glad wind laughs in the barley. And the old lord looked from his castle-door, Tall blows the barley. Over the fields that were his no more, And the wind moans low in the barley. But the fields so fair he did not see, Tall blows the barley, God help me, I ' ve lost my son! quoth he; And the wind sobs deep in the barley. Oh! the fields of Crumsheithe are fair and fine, Tall blows the barley, Lying so green in the glad sunshine, Where the wind is swaying the barley. Margaret Hamilton Wagenhals (genius to Her 5poet Thou canst not be the child of solitude, For thou must break thy bread and share thy meat With him, thy brother. Barred is all retreat. Thou canst not gather berries for thy food And dwell a dreamy hermit in the wood, Among the hurrying throng of anxious feet; Thy sotd must wander on Life ' s dusty street, Thy cowl, that of the human brotherhood. Behold the giver of thy power is God, Half thine inheritance he gave thee when I kissed thy brow. When thy path is trod He will demand thy perfect portion. Then Know this thy answer. — Here thy gift, Oh Lord, And here what, as a man, I earned with men. Maude Barrows Dutton SENIOR CLASS BOOK 139 Baffcrtril So long, so long since the summer died, And tine last warm wind went home! I ought to be happy here, 1 know. Under the great white smother of snow; The peach-bud isn ' t allowed inside, Shivers out there where the wind sweeps wide, Under the cloudy dome — But I want to hear the robin sing, Mother Earth, is it almost spring? Mother dearest, you can ' t have guessed What I ' m saving up for you. You ' ll see my brown into green unfold And soon a wonderful star of gold Will come shining out of the green! Your breast Is warm, and of course you know best What daffodils ought to do! But I ' m certain 1 heard the robin sing! Mother, isn ' t it almost spring? Just supposing I came up now, Would you really lie vexed with me? Would you really try to look cross and frown If you saw me slip out of this coat of brown? And I ' m not quite sure that I know just how, Oh, its something you never would allow, But 1 do so want to lie free ' And I ' m sure if 1 came the robin would sing, ()h Mother Earth, it must be spring: Ellex Gray Barbour fflV inspiration The ceaseless striving toward the things that count, The wish for all that noble is or great, The longing for the power that men call Fame, To reap success before it is too late, 1 strive for these not for my self alone, I care not to lie famous, to lie wise, Save as your vision spurs me on, and 1 Dare all to read approval in your eyes. Ki.aka Elisabe in Frank HO SMITH COLLEGE 1903 Ctitotn 3Sootij From his deep eyes into the world looked out The pain and woe of all the tragedy That lives in Shakespeare ' s many-peopled realm; He bore their sorrows on his tender soul, — The sorrows of them all, but not the sins. He wrote in flames again upon the age The genius that in by-gone years had lived; And yet through years that gave to Art his life, He lived and loved, not Actor, but a Man; Nay, more; unselfish, courteous, true, and kind, He lived — a Gentleman. Anna Theresa Kitchel at Close of Bap The day is done. The sun, in all its farewell radiance bright, Has kissed the rugged mountain-tops good-night, And slowly, slowly vanished from my sight; For day is done. The twilight comes. With tender step, and slowly lingering feet, She comes from far off valleys, dim and sweet, To sing a lullaby through lane and street, Thus twilight comes. Across the hills, She throws the purple shadows, one by one, Then covers every field, and flower, and stone, Until the world no longer seems my own. Within the hills. Where she has trod, The blossoms all are wrapped in slumber deep; The little birds have closed their eyes in sleep, And from the heavens the stars a vigil keep. Where she has trod. Eva Augusta Porter SENIOR CLASS BOOK 141 $oppj 3Soats When the sun hangs low in the heavens, And the shadows of evening creep, A poppy-boat fleet comes sailing To the shore of the sea of sleep, — From the island of dreams comes sailing To the shore of the sea of sleep. And down the long lane of slumber. When night falls dewey and sweet, The souls of the sleepy children Come running with eager feet, — The little white souls of the children Come running with eager feet. And down to the shore they hasten, And a poppy-boat waits for each. To bear it away to the island The day-world never can reach, — To the beautiful far-away island The day-world never can reach. For those that are early, poppies All crimson and scarlet wait, But faded and brown the flowers Of the little souls that are late, — All withered and drooping the flowers Of the little souls that are late. Oh, be the boat brown and withered Or a crimson-dyed cup of light. I fain would sail with the children To the island of dreams tonight, — With the pure little scuds of the children To the island of dreams tonight. Come, lead me. Spirit of Slumber, With the mystical eyes and deep, Down to the poppy-boats rocking By the shore of the sea of sleep, ' I ' o the poppy-boats dreamily rocking By the shore of the sea of sleep. Margaret Hamilton Wagenhals 142 SMITH COLLEGE 1903 Cf)e jHaster of tfje gta totnti I hold the lash of the winds in my grip, The long, gray, ruthless lash, That swings the doom of many a ship, And the luck of the sailor rash. I shun the shores of the captive land, I must ride where the sky is free, For I guide the tameless winds with my hand, The winds of the open sea. I drive the clouds before the blast, And the waters leap at my call, For the future I care not, nor for the past, Nor where my hand doth fall. To roam forever at will is life; To laugh with the heart of the sea, To rouse the waves to a fierce, mad strife, This is joy to me. Helen Flora McAfee wtgs for 33asfcetlmll amrs anti halites TUNE Fair Harvard The days have Bped by and the years have rolled o ' er, And we ' ve come to be Juniors a1 lasi ; Aiirl we wonder wherever the time has all gone, Those many bright days that arc past. And we think with delight of those mad Freshman hours. Of the freaks and the pranks we outgrew; lluw we ever survived all that Bible and Lit., [s a wonder that ' s every day new. But we ' re safe in the harbor of Junior delights, Willi a whole precious year yet in rtore; We don ' t envy the Seniors one wee hi tic bit, Who must feel that so - ' nm ' twill be o ' er. Then listen, dear Freshmen, and hearken ye Sophs, I or what we arc telling is i rue: 1903 is the class, jolly Junior ' s the year! We wish just such a bright one to you.! ilftCulCP [Tune, (limn Morning, Carrie ( ;niiil morning, Freshmen, lluw do you l i. tin- morning; Been dreaming about you For several years. ■■ ii ' in. i mi i alking, We i hink you ' re corking Wit Ii one except ion, mi ha i- mi peers. | Tune, Coon, Coon, • !oon I Nineteen foui Don ' t you wish your color would fade Nineteen four? We like a lighter shade : mti l. we ' d a sk j ii just once mi ire I inr n i green look bet ter than The purple ol 1904? [Tune, Good-bye, Doi.i.y ] Good-bye, Seniors, you must leave us, Though ' twill break your hearts to go, College still can run with. nit you, I hi lugh you may not t hink it mi. Si ill we grieve t see you leave us, For good sports you ' ve been anil true. Good-bye, Seniors, don ' t forget us. Good-bye, 1902. [Tune, We ' re Civimzed - Chorus] We ie 1903; yes, 1903, Ihi- finest ever. Surpassing clever, Undying fame imc- with your name. And it always will he just the same. (Ail whoop.) We ' re Hill. ,, yes, 1903, All classes lear us, None can come near us, We ' re 1903, oh don ' t you see? t Faster) None surpass The perfect class of 1903. TUNE : Chorus of Strike up the Band Cheer for our team, Freshtnen aren ' t in it , a e high the green, We ' re sure to win it. To 1903 We ' ll loyal be, We ' ll never flinch, for e very inch We ' re Sophomores! Freshmen, play haul, I )on ' t -lop for crying, No one ' - debarrei I l least from t tying To win t he game ; Bui you ' ll exclaim ' Tis waste of tune to try to heat I he Sophomore 144 SMITH COLLEGE 1903 TUNE : Mary had a William Goat There was a class called 1903, 1903, 1903, There was a class called 1903, Who played at basketball. Whoop te doodle doodle doo, doodle doo, doodle doo. Whoop te doodle doodle doo, They played at basketball. And they had a ripping team, ripping team, ripping team, And they had a ripping team. The captain she was James. It hoop te doodle doodle doo, doodle doo, doodle doo, Whoop te doodle doodle doo. The captain she was James. The other guards were Marion, Marion, Marion, The other guards were Marion, And great Kitchel, too. Whoop te doodle doodle doo, doodle doo, doodle doo, Whoop te doodle doodle doo, And great Kitchel, too. In the center, Benny, Jess, Benny, Jess, Benny, Jess, In the center, Benny. Jess, And Tindall jumped like fun. Whoop te d lie doodle doo, doodle doo, doodle doo. Whoop te doodle doodle doo. And Tindall jumped like fun. Then the homes were Beecher fine, Beecher fine, Beecher fine. Then the homes were Beecher fine, Parker, too, and Clement. Whoop te doodle d He doo, doodle doo, doodle doo, Whoop te doodle doodle doo, Parker, too, and Clement. Where are the poor Freshies now, Freshies now, Freshies now. Where are the poor Freshies now? Blessing 1903. Whoop te doodle doodle doo, doodle doo, doodle doo. Whoop te doodle doodle doo, Blessing 1903. TUNE : Blooming Lize — Continued 1905, Pretty near the finest class alive! Daring, Tearing, Everybody staring, Noblv do you thrive, 1905! To win the game you need not madly strive, All will still be lauding, All applauding, 1905. 1904— Not so much but what you might be more; Stately, Lately, Condescending greatly, Thinking all adore 1904. Prods, indeed, you reckon by the score; But your purple beast, dear, Cover up at least, dear, 1904. 1903. 1903 ' s the only class for me! Merry, Very, Athletic, literary; Act? Oh, you should see! 1903. Her love ' s labor lost can never be — Brighter than the sun, girls. She ' s the only one, girls. 1903. 1903 JfleUlcp [Tune, El Capitan ] Oh, we are 1903, Just notice our independent air. Our team in the game ' s beyond compare. Come match us if you dare! [Tune, Stars and Stripes ] For James is our captain so fine. And she leads us to sure victory. And our glory shall never decline, For we ' ll TUNE : Blooming Lize 1906 Needn ' t think that all that ' s red is bricks. Sighing, Crying, Homesick — nearly dying. What an awful mix! 1906. Now ' -, the time to drop such infant tricks. But you won ' t be to blame, dear, At the game dear, 1906. [Tune, Tramp, Tramp, Thamp ] Play, play, play in the gymnasium, Beat, beat, beat the Freshman team. For we play a game that ' s fair, And the college all will stare, When they see the rattling play of [Tune, Finiculi, Finicula ] Naught-three, naught-three, class of 1903, Where e ' er we come we make things hum, We ' re sure to beat where e ' er we play. Good people all please notice this. The way we play today. SENIOR CLASS BOOK 145 I Turn . I mi ■ if K m. id I Invincible in splendor, The glory of the flock, lui champion and defender, Behold the Jabberwock! lie knows we ' ll never shame him, Ami chortles in hi.« glee, Whene ' er he hears us name him, The pride of 1903. Then wave your banners all ye will, O Nineteen- two, We fear there is no hope for you, hope for you, For the green shall wave and again victorious be. So Rah! Rah! Kali! for Nineteen three! That we should happy be there ' s nunc that blame- 1 ' that blames! For have we not for Captain .lames. Captain James7 And the whole line team, just the finest ever seen . 1 in one and all they wear the green! In class room we are gloriou - n.l likewise in I he gym, I n basketball v ictorious, Ami all i- ilile in him, Oh L ' nicorn ami Lion, In vim we take no si nek. The bird we ha e oui eye mi. 1 1 i- i he Jabberwock ! ( h loyally ami proudly We wave the grand old green, Ami loyally ami loudly We sing where ' er i- seen I nvmrilile in splendor Ami chorl 1 1 1 1 lt in In- glee, The Jabberwock, Defender Ami Pride of 1903! TUNE : Tramp, Tramp, Tramp Vou have left us, mill . Inn we ' re thinking still of you, Tim ' you ' ve sought your happy homes so far awaj ; So we ' ll try in sing your praise, since its all that we can do, How we wish that you were with us here today! 1901 just hear us singing! Yours in heart we ' ll ever he, ii ' l where ' er the green we raise you will hear us shout your praise, Ami you ' ll glory in the lame of 1903! TUNE : My Ann Eliza (id in 02 03 Though we are only Freshmen, Find mat h a task. Yet t here ' s one 111 I le | ill ' s! ion We ' ,1 hkc to ask: linn i you think even Sophomores Have to agree, Naught-nought, Naught-one, and Naught twi Equals Naught I hree? Sn let us sing again That which seems very plain, IL iugh ii may give you pain, lis 1 1 tie you ' ll find, This one class of Nineteen three Equals, as you must see, ll of the rcsl i I, inc. I TUNE : There ' s a Tavern in the Town I heir w.-i .i class called Ninety ■. Ninety-nine, Who waved the green mice mi a nine, mi .a time. In basketball she battled with the red, inl though Inn Freshmen, si I ahead Now aga in ' he green is soaring, m. I i he lion red is roaring. Ainl again i he basketball is high in air, in ail You are with us, inn. ); ami n ' - proud of you we are, As we see the ilear old yellow waving Inch I ' m- from basketball to I, ivy you are certainly a star, Ami we ' ll love you ami defend you till we die! ( ' ho. 1905, jus! hear us singing! etc. TUNE: Boola Chorus oh, 1903, dear 1903, The lie-i class Smith has ever seen! ( ih. 1903, oh 1903, We sing to you ami to your green! Noil arc a- fine as fine can he. Ami proud of you are we, So give three cheers for dear old Smith, inl i hree t imes three for 1903. 1903, 1903, 1903, 1903, i hi will ni ' i cr fiml her equal. 1903, 1903, Rah! Rah! Rahl ( h. Smith College, ( ih. Smith College, t Ih, Smith College, ( Hi. Smith College, Give t luce cheers for old Smith College, And three more for 1903. oh. 111(13. dear 1903, Thy praises always shall we tell, i Hi. I ' m:;, oh, 1903, 1 n e erj i hing you ' In si i well Youi basketball team ' - far (he best, Ami i hat ' s no men ' we cheer I he learn and dear old Smith. Ami give three good cheers I ' m 1903. Cho 146 SMITH COLLEGER 1903 TUNE : Boola Chorus — ( ' horus Oh, 1903, dear 1903. Thru wave your banners with a will, There are no stars upon I he green, For of star.- the class has got its fill. George Washington might safely say, The brightest stars are they. Sci give three cheers for t lie stars and stripes And three for the stars of 1903— Cho. Oh, 1903, dear 1903. It ' s mighty proud we are of yon; Oh, 190.-). oh, 1905. Your loyal friend we ' ll be and true. (hid numbers lucky are they say, We ' ve proved it ' s quite that way. So give three cheers for the luck of the odds, May it grow even better every day, 1905, 1905, 1905, 1905, You will never find her equal. 1905, 1905, Hah! Hah! Rah! etc.— Cho. TUNE : Dinah Seniors, we give you greeting, Your time tip coach is fleeting! 1 k out. or else the Sophs we ' ll soon he heating. Here ' s to Noughty-nought ! Juniors, we love you madly, We would be like you gladly. And hope that we will not disgrace you sadly! Here ' s to Nineteen-i ' Sophomores, you ' d better fear u- Though you don ' ! like to hear us! In class or in the gym you can ' t come near us! Here ' s to Nineteen-two. Freshmen, there ' s nought can quell us 1 Can anybody tell us If there is any class that can excel us? Here ' s to Nineteen-three! TUNE : Little Cotton Dolly i mcc there wa- a Freshman class That entered old Smith College. Naughts -i hree! ciil I here purposely to get What ' s called by some folks knowledge. Naughty-three! When she ' d been there just a month She found she ' d made her mark, All the faculty observed That each girl was a shark! Bright m every si udy, Ever ready lor a lark ' Naughty-three. CHOR1 - Rah! Rah! now sei her praises ringing. Make the hills around prolong the sound. Send her up a cheer, girls, let all join m the singing, Naughty-three ' s the best that e ' er ' U be found. Rah! Hah ' ' now fill her up a bumper, Drink to her a health that ' s full and free. For Naughty-three ' s a daisy. You ' ll never find her la . She ' s the only class for me ' TUNE : When Johnny Comes Marching Home Come sin e to the class that of all is best. Hurrah, hurrah! Ye girls of the north, south, east and west. Hurrah, hurrah! Come, wave your banners all about. n.l with your whole hearts gladly shout. Glory and praise forever to 1903! You may look if you will o ' er the whole whle world. Hurrah, hurrah! You ' ll find at the top is our green unfurled. Hurrah, hurrah! lis surely true she ' s of classes queen, So wave aloft all your banners green, Glory and praise forever to 190.3! She ' s hist in work and she ' s first in play, Hurrah, hurrah ' We love her better from day to day, 1 1 ui rah. hurrah! Through all out life she will stand our friend. So shout, ye girls, till your life shall end, (dory and praise forever to 1903! TUNE : Whistling Rufus There once was a class called Ninety-nine, A very great class were they; And because we know they are so hue To them we sing today! They wore the best color ever seen. The best in the whole wide world. nd to Ninety-nine and to their green We wave our green unfurled! Oh. Ninety-nine! oh class so line! Oh, Ninety-nine! our green was thine! Oh, Ninety-nine! oh. Ninety-nine! Oh, Ninety Ninety. Ninety. Ninety-nine! There is a class called Nineteen-one, A very great class are they. A class full of energy, go and fun; To t hem we sing today ' They wear the yellow, bright and clean, And brilliant as the sun! We love it because it goes with green, And because it ' s N incteen-one! Oh. Nineteen-one. oh, glorious sun That lights the college, oh. Nineteen-one. Oh, Nineteen-one. oh. Nineteen-one. Oh. Nineteen. Nineteen. Nineteen, Nineteen-one. ,,i| there i- a class called Nineteen-three, The very best class are they; So with voices glad and tic To t hem we sing today! We love the yellow, bright and fair We wave to Nineteen-one. But the green we ' ll -til! (ling high in air Till all our life is done! i ih Ninety-nine, we think thee fine! t ih. Nineteen-one ' s out gl us sun! But Nineteen-three. here ' s love to thee. In Nineteen, Nineteen, Nineteen. Nineteen- ' ' . SENIOR CLASS BOOK. 147 TUNE : And The Band On A year or so past there arrived at old Smith Kittle Naughty-three. She made a sensation unparallelled quite, I. it i le Naughty-1 hree. The Sophomores were mad and the Juniors were glad, And the Senior- turned purple to see That the faculty pet and ' lie choicest one ye1 Was young Naughty-three! We made a sensation, we ' re making it still. Dear old Nineteen-three. We ' re the finest that ever came over the pike. Dear old Nineteen-three! I ' ll- ' Juniors they fear us, the Seniors they love us, The Freshmen they faint when they see What a tearing, old daring, old corking old class Is our Nineteen-three! House Bvamattcs For Half a Million 1 A Hundred to ( )rdcr I 1 Li ers i f Ri imance ' The Critic Ralph Roister Doister 1S99 — 1900 Washburn and Wesley Mouses Dickinson House Sarm Ganok Tertium )uid ' To Serve for Meat and Fee ' La Bataille des Dames ' White Apr nis ' Engaged 1900— 1901 Tyler 1 louse Morris 1 louse Lawrence House Wallace House ' The Cricket on the Hearth ' ' Fanchon the Critic Lad} of Lyons ' The Sevres Cup 1901 — 1902 Sarm Ganok Albrighl House Tertium Quid Dickinson House The l.i nil i if Braunfels The Rivals llio Rose anil I he Ring ' Trelawny of the Wells ' 1902— 1903 Washburn and Tenney Nouses Wallace 1 louse Law rence 1 louse Tyler House 149 ELM STREET HAVEN HOUSE PRESIDENTS HOUSE AND ART GALLERY SEELYE HALL COLLEGE II A 1 I MUSK HALL Mill II I I a Al.HRir.il I in IUSE WASHBURN HOUSE . X GYMNASIUM DICKINSON ' HOUSE I ) h H ' l-.V MOTS E A. I t- • fc7 i i m — d «Uu riMir ' ' . ' TTrr M H u s 3 _ M jfW Miss ssai ™ m mmm BARD HOI i ( 111 Nil -. I l: IH ' ll.DlXC. KDRBKS LIBRARY IBSERVA rORY INTERIOR OF GYMNASIUM, 1 902-I OO3B ASKKTB A I.I. GAME ■1 ■ Wm 1 ■■■ fl 4VH - Ei - = T B - 4 ' •S f •— . Si fc2f ' BP ' ffl ' fc III Bil I I I ' kliiK OF I III ' . I.IHK RY IN I T K I ' )R i II | || | illAI ' l.l Wallace nous}-; PARADISE MOaRIS HOUSE REAR OF AR ' l GALLERY AM) PRESIDENTS HOUSE HATFIELD HOUSE LYMAN PLANT HOUSE AND BOTANICAL GARDENS LAWRENCE II 01 I SjMkL TYLER HOUSE -t: - ■■■ ■■■■ H REAR OF COLLEGE HALL TUNE: Pop Goes the Weasel Darkness follows in my wake I ' m the prince of night, When they think I ' m coming round ( hit goes the light 1 In these days of honor codes Few the names I write. For at ten or thereabouts — Out goes the light ! When they dance within the Gym Later than is right. I ' m the one they must obey. And out goes the light ! I ' m the one that breaks them up All their meetings bright — What care I how much the) beg Out goes the light ! or I I go,} s MASCOT ADVERTISEMENTS 161 TIFFANY CO. UNION SQUARE, NEW YORK CHRONOLOGY Manufacturers of Jewelry, Silver Ware, Plated Ware 1837 TIFFANY YOUNG 259 Broadway New York Watches, Clocks, Leather Goods 1841 Stationery TIFFANY, YOUNG ELLIS 259-260 Broadway New York 1847 TIFFANY, YOUNG ELLIS 271 Broadway New York ff 1850 TIFFANY, REED CO Paris France Cutters of 1853-54 TIFFANY COMPANY 550 Broadway New York Diamonds and Precious Stones 1861 TIFFANY COMPANY 550-552 Broadway New York 1868- 1903 TIFFANY COMPANY Paris France if 1868 -1903 TIFFANY COMPANY London England Importers of 1870 -1903 TIFFANY COMPANY Union Square New York Diamonds, Precious Stones, Clocks Bronzes, Porcelains, and Glass Silver Ware and Plated Ware Factories FOREST HILL, NEWARK, N . J . PARIS, Avenue de L ' Opera 36 Bis LONDON, 221 and 22iA Regent St., West £62 ADVERTISEMENTS ESTABLISHED ij6g KINGS LEY ' S THE PRESCRIPTION STORE 140 Main Street, Northampton, Massachusetts A g e n c v fo r Richard Hudnut ' s Toilet Articles Roger Gallet ' s Extracts and Soaps Huyler ' s New York Candies Henry Wenz ' s Chocolates Reputation Chocolates The Largest Stock of Toilet Articles at Very Reasonable Prices PRESCRIPTIONS A SPECIALTY COPELAND ' S BAZAAR Always in Stock a Large and Choice Variety of LACES, GLOVES, RIBBONS, FANS and NOVELTIES, as well as FLAGS, BANNERS and PILLOWS MADE TO ORDER Also Everything in STAMPED GOODS and EMBROIDERY MATERIAL E. P. COPELAND 104 MAIN STREET, NORTHAMPTON, MASS ADVERTISEMENTS 163 STERLING SILVER — FRENCH GREY FINISH Mailed on receipt of price, $2.00 FRANK E . DAVIS MANUFACTURING JEWELER NORTHAMPTON, MASSACHUSETTS GREENE BICKNELL Toppers £ Bottomers Exclusive Agents tor Hanan, Walk- Over and Qj-ieen Quality Shoes. 1 5 X Main S t R E e t , Nor t h a i p t o n II c pay express on mail orders to all parts of the United States 164 ADVERTISEMENTS BR IDG MAN ' S B K SHOP THE COMPLIMENTS OF S. E. BR1DGMAN CO. TO THE CLASS OF IQOJ, SMITH COLLEGE We trust they will bear away pleasant memories of the four years of student life in Northampton. They will be missed by us. The city is a lonely place in vacation with the college houses closed. May the incoming class be as gracious as the class of 1903 and remember The College Book Store at 108 Main Street ' 9° 3 A. McCALLUM CO. 12 3 THIRD YEAR OF THE BIG STORE THE PEOPLE ' S PROGRESSIVE STORE W K A K E A L W A V S A T T HE F R O N f If If Handsome Garments and fine Dress Goods will increase your happiness we are positive that your search will end here If The QUALITY of our Goods in all departments is in the A class Tf Are you in need of distinctive Millinery? You will find it here Do you need anything in way of SUITS, CLOAKS COATS? We carry complete lines of Outer Garments and finely Tailored Clothing for Women, Misses and Children If Everything in Silks, Linings, Velvets and Laces Tf The finest Domestic Cottons and latest importations of Linens from Ireland and Germany If CARPET WEAVINGS from Lowell and Philadelphia, Highest grades of Axminsters, Brussels and Royal Wiltons If We are headquarters for fine grades of Stationery, Books, Pictures, Cameras and Camera Supplies If Largest Furniture Department in the city If Entire basement filled with Crockery and Kitchen Utensils If Boys ' Clothing, Trunks and Bags. We are agents for Dorothy Dodd Shoes for Women A. McCALLUM CO. ADVERTISEMENTS 165 Northampton ? Amherst Street Railway C ompany Cars connect at Amherst with South Hadley Cars over the Notch Cars up the Connecticut Valley through Hatfield and Old Deerfield to Greenfield VOU will find what you wish in the DRUG LINE served in a prompt and precise manner, at a proper price, at the store of COBURN GRAVES OPPOSITE COURT HOUSE THE Student Fountain Pen Fully Guaranteed, $1.50 College Stationery of all kinds. Writing Paper by the pound. Golf and Tennis Goods. Card Engraving a specialty EDWIN H. BANISTER Northampton, Massachusetts FELIX TARDIFF Dealer in Antique Furniture Furniture repairing of every description Window Boxes and Bookcases made to order. Furniture packed for shipping 21 GOTHIC STREET, Rear Fitts Block N O R T H A M P T O N SPOOL SILK Corticelli Silk had its origin in Florence, only three miles from Smith College. The first Corticelli Silk was made in 1838, and the business has steadily increased until today the Corticelli Silk Mills are the Greatest Silk Thread Works in the World. The factories are located in Florence, Leeds, and Havden- ville. Visitors are always welcome and Smith students will find a tri-p through the mills both decidedly i nteresting and very in- structive. Do you know how silk is made ? Come out to Florence some afternoon and let us show you. CORTICELLI SILK MILLS, FLORENCE, MASS. TOO STRONG TO BREAK 166 ADVERTISEMENTS [The richest College Ices and Soda, served in our new ice cream parlor. HEALY LADIES ' HATTER A g e n t Jo r HUYLER ' S CANDIES Hats for all occasions FRANK A. BRANDLE College Pharmacy Opp. Academy of Music 319 High Street, Holvoke, Mass. G. N. LUCE Winthrop Hotel Hotel Hamilton Meriden, Conn. Holyoke, Mass. LADIES ' TAILOR The Norwood Hotel 259 Main Street AMERICAN PLAN Northampton, Mass. C. H. Bowker Co. Proprietors Northampton, Mass. Tours for Dry Goods, Notions CHARLES BECKMANN and Small Wares Fine Candies and Ice Cream S. E. Eambie ? Company Northampton, Massachusetts 249 Main Street, Northampton, Mass. CHARLES HALL Importer and Retailer Springfield, mass. Invites inspection of lines of Foreign and Domestic Goods for his Spring Opening which includes the following: Belt Buckles, Cut Glass, Silver Novelties, Leather Goods, Umbrellas, Tiffany and Bohemian Glass, Rockwood Pottery. A large assortment of Brass Goods in Jardinieres, Trays, Roman Candelabra, Candlesticks, Banares, and Persian Brass in variety of shapes, and many other beautiful articles for graduation gifts. ADVERTISEMENTS 167 A R T I S T I C DELICATE PURE BOSTON CHOCOLATES Made In 545 Atlantic Avenue, BOSTON Ask for them at Northampton Ask for them at home T|fiy prepaid mail direct on receipt of retail price, in attractive packages, if not obtainable from dealers S breve, Crump Low Company JEWELERS: 147 Tremom Street, Cor. West, Boston Fine Stationery, Dies, Seals, Monograms, etc., Umbrellas and Parasols. Wedding Gifts in China, Crystal, Silverware etc. Makers of Phi Kappa Psi, V. O. X., French Society Musical Society, Telescopiun, Deutche Verein and other Society and Class Pins. Fine Jewelry Repairing CORRESPONDENCE SOLICITED 1 H I C O MPI.I M E N T S () F IVilson Cypress Company P A L A T K A FLORIDA 168 ADVERTISEMENTS Boy den j Dining Parlor Special Attention Given to College Catering 177 Main Strf.et, Northampton, Mass. CARDS: TICKETS: PROGRAMS Promptly and Well Done Book and Magazine Work a Specialty Gazette Printing Co, 14 Gothic Street, NORTHAMPTON, MASS. C. M. Brewster, Proprietor Wi lliams House Livery Stable Williamsburg, Massachusetts The Compliments of George H. Morrill Co. PRINTING INKS George H. Morrill Edmund J. Shattuck George H. Morrill, Jr. Frank T. Morrill BOSTON NEW YORK CHICAGO SAN FRANCISCO ADVERTISEMENTS 169 CHARLES N. FITTS We have a complete stock of Furniture, Rugs, Draperies, etc. of the Latest Patterns and Finish AT SPECIAL RATES TO STUDENTS F. W. ROBERTS Jeweler Optician Stationer Engraver Music and Musical Merchandise, Pianos, Organs, Violins, Guitars, Mandolins, Banjos, etc., For Sale and to Rent Most Complete Line of Music in the City 197 MAIN STREET Rose$, Carnation and Liliej of the Valley EVERY DAY IN THE YEAR ALL OTHER FLOWERS IN THEIR SEASON H . W. FIELD Opposite Academy of Music NORTHAMPTON, MASS. STUDENTS ' FOOTWEAR Light, Dainty, Dressy Shoes in Patent and Enamel Leathers STREET SHOES in Kid and Calf, Light and Heavy Soles Agents for the Knickerbocker and Patrician Shoes The Northampton Shoe Company 8 8 MAIN STREET, OPPOSITE COURT HOUSE 170 ADVERTISEMENTS IT IS A GOOD POLICY TO LEAVE A FEW THINGS UNSAID. We therefore merely hint at the service we can render all who prize style, finish, workmanship in their printing if D. S. RAMSAY Dry Goods and Notio?is The BRYANT PRESS 25? Main St., Northampton, Mass. FLORENCE, MASSACHUSETTS T ' e le p bone I 05 -J R. F. ARMSTRONG R . M . GUILFORD Dress Suits, Prince Alberts and other kinds of suits for rent for plays. H. P. Mannish Gloves for women. The newest patterns and styles in Neckwear. New styles in Collars 80 MAIN ST., Lamkin Building At ROSS ' S 221 Main Street, Northampton, Mass. Fine Groceries, Table Delicacies Fruits and Confectionery HERMAN BUCHHOLZ COSTUMER and DECORATOR 275 Main Street, Springfield, Mass. Costumes for Theatrical Performances, Operas and Tableau. Decorations Furnished for Halls and Buildings. Telephone Connection Boarding, Eivery, Hack and Feed Stable OPPOSITE UNION STATION Connected by Telephone A. PARKS Florist 239 MAIN STREET Northampton, Mass. Cocoa chocolates tHE A RE TH 5 ESf A5Kf° p r ' Use no other GROCERS EVERYWHERE ADVERTISEMENTS 171 The Bridge Teachers ' Agency C. A. SCOTT CO., Proprietors Office: 2 A BEACON STREET, BOSTON College, Academic, and High School Work a specialty. Agency Manual and application blank tree on application Just a little Ad ' to make you think of MANDELL ' S Northampton ' s Busiest Shoe Store GEO. H. LUCIA We make a specialty of Picture and Framej and do framing in all its brandies. Oval, circle and odd-sliaped frames, etc. Passepartout Sup- plies, Artists ' Materials, Pens, Pencils, Tablets Inks, and General School Supplies 229 Main Street, Northampton, Mass. The HAMPTON NORTHAMPTON, MASS. All Modern Improvements Steam Heated Elevator, Electric Lights BARRY YF.LVERTON, Proprietors Northampton Empire Laundry WHITE SKIRTS, SHIRT WAISTS COLLARS, CUFFS, Etc. STUDENTS ' WORK SPE 1 l I Telephone 173-4 first-Class Work 24 Court Street E. £. Emerson Company 267 Main Street, Northampton, Mass. Wholesale and Retail Dealers in Paper Hang- ings, Paints, Oils, Glass, etc. Decorating and Frescoing a Specialty Studio HIGH GRADE PHOTOGRAPHY 102 Main Street Northampton A. A. Packard W. (i. in ,11 Meekins Packard £j Wheat Dry Goons and House Furnishings 355-359 Main St., SPRINGFIELD F. H. WARRKN Livery, Hack f Feeding Stable 295 Ml IX STREET Telephone T p-J Home Call 172 ADVERTISEMENTS KNOWLTON BROS Photograph Studio First-Class Photography 143 MAIN STREET Platinum Photos a specialty in Sepia and Black tones. Also views of Smith College Buildings £5 Grounds, and of Northampton and vicinity Printers Designers Stationers METCALF CO. NEAR CITY HALL Northampton, Mass. College JVork a Specialty. Our Samples are numerous. Telephone S chill aire s Photographic Studio Society, Class, Group and Dramatic Work a specialty. Prompt attention given to Students J. SCHILLAIRE Northampton, Mass. A 142 Main Street, DEUL ' S STABLE No. 8 CENTER STREET GREEN DRAGON 260 MAIN STREET College Banners, Pillows, Hangings Order Work a Specialty DREKA Fine Stationery and Engraving House 1121 Chestnut Street Philadelphia College Invitations Dance Programmes Fraternity Menus Engravings for Annuals Book Plates Visiting Cards Reception and Wedding Invitations Monogram and Fraternity Stationery HERALDRY GENEALOGY COATS OF ARMS PAINTED FOR FRAMING ADVERTISEMENTS 173 Photographs SANDS BRADY 333 Westminster Street, PROVIDENCE, R. I. Class Photographers 9 ° 3 Stationery for all social functions Wedding Invitations Wedding Announcements Visiting Cards Dinner Cards Dance Cards Fine Correspondence Papers THE CORRECT FORMS HERALDRY THE BAILEY, BANKS BIDDLE CO. PHILAD E LPH I A A BASSLTTLCO PRINTERS  PVBUSHERS Smith College Arohi vpq


Suggestions in the Smith College - Smith College Yearbook (Northampton, MA) collection:

Smith College - Smith College Yearbook (Northampton, MA) online collection, 1900 Edition, Page 1

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Smith College - Smith College Yearbook (Northampton, MA) online collection, 1901 Edition, Page 1

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Smith College - Smith College Yearbook (Northampton, MA) online collection, 1902 Edition, Page 1

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Smith College - Smith College Yearbook (Northampton, MA) online collection, 1904 Edition, Page 1

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Smith College - Smith College Yearbook (Northampton, MA) online collection, 1905 Edition, Page 1

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Smith College - Smith College Yearbook (Northampton, MA) online collection, 1906 Edition, Page 1

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