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Sis. ILji jj Cla0H look 1322 oC CjUjJc ■€ -tjcj£juJL- w $ r Ollaaa look 1922 It ?rwmu0 Ik fublisbrn fag tbr (Elass of 1922 EH221 Or A V 0  - uJU S— - _Av w clnqfe 3n grateful mugmttuu of tuljat slje l)aH m ant in all of UH during our four full rullcgr gears, Jlje Qllaafl of 1922 Inutuglu, oputratra ti|t0 buuk. !k m r J% w ® sfc QJahlp nf (Emttenla President Emeritus L. Clark Seelye Frontispiece Dedication ...... 5 Board of Trustees ..... 8 President William Allan Neilson 10 Administrative Officers 11 Faculty of Instruction 12 The Class . 23 Former Members 109 The Other Classes 111 Smith College Council 118 House of Representatives 120 Smith College Association for Christian Work 122 Student Advisors 124 Delegations 125 Freshman Year . 127 Sophomore Year 133 Junior Year 135 Senior Year 143 Verse 157 Publications 167 Organizations and Clubs 173 Musical Organizations 211 Athletics . 217 Wit, Humor and Mirtf 231 b =5g[ y w g f ofe ®rUHt?PB Charles H. Allen, LL.D. . Ruth Bowles Baldwin, A.B. H. Clifford Gallagher Helen F. Greene, A.M. John A. Houston, M.D. Frederic Marshall Jones, A.B. Thomas W. Lamont, A.B. . Samuel W. McCall, LL.D. . George B. McCallum, A.B. Elizabeth Cutter Morrow, A.B. Paul J. Sachs, A.B. . George Stanley Stevenson, A.M. Helen Rand Thayer, A.B. . Marguerite Milton Wells, B.L. Lowell, Massachusetts Brooklyn, New York Dorchester, Massachusetts Boston, Massachusetts Northampton, Massachusetts Springfield, Massachusetts . New York, New York Winchester, Massachusetts Northampton, Massachusetts . Englewood, New Jersey Cambridge, Massachusetts Hartford, Connecticut Portsmouth, New Hampshire Minneapolis, Minnesota Ik mrn ®r Jfo I FACULTY William Allan Neilson, Ph.D., LL.D. President A.M. University of Edinburgh 1891; A.M. Harvard 1896; Ph.D. 1898. Teacher in Scotland; in Toronto, Canada, 1893-1895. Associate Professor at Bryn Mawr 1898-1900. Instructor at Harvard 1900-1904. Adjunct Professor of English 1904-1905. Professor 1905-1906 at Columbia University. Professor of English at Harvard 1906-1917. Exchange Professor at the University of Paris 1914- 1915. Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, American Polk Lore Society. Modern Language Association of America. Scottish Text So- ciety. English Association. President of the New England Association of Teachers of English 1911-1912. Scottish History Society of North America 1911-1912. President of Smith College since 1917. w g f gfe Abmmtsirattb? UDfftrrra Ada Louise Comstock, A.M., LlTT.D., Dean Florence Gilman. M.D. College Physician Susan Rose Benedict, Ph.D. Dean of Class of 1922 Amy Louise Barbour, Ph.D. Dean of Class of 1923 George Bliss McCallum, A.B. Treasurer Mary Belle McElwain, Ph.D. Dean of Class of 1924 Picture omitted by request. ck Mary Merrow Cook, B.S. Dean of Class of 1925 Gifford Clark, A.M. Registrar msE s£ 11 w @ [ a1 © 3Farultg of Jlnatrurtum Dwight W. 1 ryon : Studied art in Paris under J. de Chevreuse, C. Daubigny and A. Guillemerdt, and at l ' Ecole des Beaux Arts. Member of the National In- stitution of Arts and Letters of the Amer- ican Water Color Society. 3 Dwight W. Tryon, N.A. Professor of Art Alfred Vance Churchill, A.M. Professor of Art Harriet W. Bigelow, Ph.D. Professor of Astronomy Alfred Vance Churchill: A.M. Ober- lin College 1898. Student Koniglische Hochschule, Berlin, University of Leipsig and Academie Julien, Pans 1887-1890. Director of Art Department Iowa College 1891-1893. Instructor at St. Louis Sec- ondary and Normal Schools 1893-1897. Professor of Fine Arts Teachers College 1897-1904. Student at University of Paris 1904-1906. Harriet W. Bigelow: A.B. Smith 1896. Ph.D. at University of Michigan. Irving Francis Wood: A.B. Hamihon College 1885. Instructor at Jaffa College, Ceylon, 1885-1889. B.D. Yale 1892, Ph.D. University of Chicago 1903, D.D. Hamilton 1915. Professor in Biblical Lit- erature and Ethics, University of Chicago 1893. Robert Seneca Smith: A.B. Yale 1903. A.M. 1905, B.D. Yale School of Relig- ion 1906. Assistant pastor at the First Congregational Church at Montclair, New Jersey, 1906-1911. Pastor at the First Congregational Church at Poughkeepsie, N. Y., 1911-1917. Smith College since 1917. William Francis Ganong: A.B. Uni- versity of New Brunswick 1884, A.M. 1886 Harvard. A. B. 1889, Ph.D. Uni- versity of Munich !894, Ph.D. (adeun- dum) University of New Brunswick 1898. Assistant Instructor of Botany at Harvard 1887-1893, Professor of Botany and Di- rector of the Botanical Gardens at Smith 1893. Irving Francis Wood, Ph.D., D.D. Prof, of Biblical Literature Robert Seneca Smith, A.M., B.D. Prof, of Biblical Literature William Francis Ganong, Ph.D. Professor of Botany Si Ja 12 w tSSEHJD H. Edwards Wells, Ph.D. Professor of Chemistry F. Stuart Chapin, Ph.D. Professor of Economics and Sociology Elizabeth Deering Hanscom, Ph.D. Professor of English H. Edward Wells: B.S. Middlebury 1894. A.M. 1895. Ph.D. University of Leipsig 1894. Assistant in Chemistry Mid- dlebury College 1894-1895. Associated with Professor W. O. Alevater, Wesleyan University, in Food Investigation 1898- 1901. Assistant Professor in Chemistry Alleshany College 1902-1903. Professor of Chemistry 1903-1907. Professor of Chemistry Washington and Jefferson Col- lege 1907-1910. Captain of Chemical Service, U. S. A. 1918-1919. Instructor in Chemistry at Harvard 1919-1920. F. Stuart Chapin: B.S. Columbia 1909. A.M. 1910. Ph.D. 1911. Instructor of Economics at Wellesley 1911-1912. In- structor of Economics and Sociology 1912- 1914. Assistant Professor 1915-1917. Director of the Hampshire Branch of the Massachusetts Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children. Secretary of the Hampshire County Chapter of the Ameri- can Red Cross. Member of the American Sociology Society, American Association for Labor Legislation. Elizabeth Deering Hanscom: A.B. Bos- ton University. Ph.D. Yale. Smith since 1894. Herbert Vaughan Abbott: A.B. Am- herst 1885. Assistant Instructor in Eng- lish at Harvard 1894-1898. Instructor in the Horace Mann School and Teachers College, Columbia University 1898-1904. Adjunct Professor of English Teachers College 1904-1905. Smith since 1905. Richard Ashley Rice: A.B. Williams 1899. A.M. Harvard 1913. 1899-1909 engaged in teaching at the Lawrenceville School, in graduate study and teaching at Harvard, in teaching at the United States Naval Academy and in study in England and the University of Paris. 1909-1916 Assistant and Associate Professor in Eng- lish at the Indiana University. Smith 1916. Albert Schinz: A.B. at the University of Neuchatel 1888. A.M. 1889 at the University of Berlin. 1892-1893, 1894 Ph.D. at Tubingen, University of Paris 1894-1896. Instructor in Philosophy at Neuchatel 18%- 1897. Instructor in French at the University of Minnesota 1898. Bryn Mawr 1899-1913. Smith since 1913. Herbert Vaughan Abbott, A.B. Professor of English Richard Ashley Rice, A.M. Professor of English Albert Schinz, Ph.D. Professor of French h 35 nrosra ; A 13 w M2 r Louise Delpit, Licenciee es Lettres Professor of French William John Miller, Ph.D. Professor of Geology Ernst Heinrich Mensel, Ph.D., Litt.D. Professor of German Louise Delpit: Brevet Simple, Brevet Superior, Licenciee es Lettres, Paris. Pro- fessor in the College de Valence 1896- 1898. Teacher in the Brearly School, New York, 1900-1904. Teacher in the Baldwin School Bryn Mawr 1904-1908. Smith since 1908. William John Miller: B.C. College of the Pacific 1900. M.S. 1902. Graduate Student in Geology Stanford University 1900-1901. Instructor in Geology and Chemistry at the College of the Pacific 1901-1903. Fellow in Johns Hopkins University 1904. Ph.D. 1905. Professor in Geology Hamilton College 1905-1914. Connected with the Maryland Survey 1904-1905. Connected with the U. S. Geological Survey Summer 1905-1906. Member of the Staff of the New York Geological Survey since 1906. Smith since 1914. Ernst Heinrich Mensel: A.B. Carthage College, Illinois 1887. Graduate student at the University of Michigan. Ph.D. 1896. Professor in Carthage College 1887-1892. Instructor in German in the University of Michigan 1892-1898. As- sistant Professor 1898-1901. Carl F. A. Lange: A.B. at the Uni- versity of Michigan 1894. Assistant in German at Harvard 1898-1899. A.M. Harvard 1899. Student at the University of Michigan 1899-1900. Instructor at the University of Michigan 1900-1905. Ph.D. University of Michigan 1903. Everett Kimball: A.B. Amherst 1896. Ph.D. Harvard 1896-1898. Instructor ir. History at the Englewood School for Boys 1896-1898. Instructor in the Worcester High School 1898-1901. Graduate Stu- dent at Harvard 1901-1904. Assistant in Harvard and Radcliffe 1902-1903. In- structor at Wellesley 1903-1904. Carl F. A. Lange, Ph.D. Professor of German Everett Kimball, Ph.D. Professor of Government Julia Harwood Caverno. Smith A.B., A.M. Smith since 1895. Julia Harwood Caverno, A.M. Professor of Creek Ik VZ lMTTi V, 14 J w § m f Sidney N. Deane. Ph.D. Professor of Creelf John Spencer Bassett, Ph.D. LL.D. Professor of History Sidney Bradshaw Fay, Ph.D. Professor of History Sidney N. Deane: A.B. Yale 1902. Graduate Student at Yale 1902-1904. 1904-1905 Student in School at Athens. 1905-1906 Graduate Student at Yale. 1909-1912 in the Classical Department of the Boston Museum of Fine Arts. John Spencer Bassett: A.B. Trinity College, North Carolina 1888. Ph.D. Johns Hopkins 1894. Professor in His- tory at Trinity College, North Carolina 1898-1906. Lecturer at Yale 1897-1908, at New York University 1909. Officer in the American Historical Association. Sidney Bradshaw Fay: A. B. Harvard 1896. Ph.D. 1900. 1898 at the Univer- sity of Paris, 1899 at the University of Berlin. T eaching Fellow at Harvard University 1900-1902. Assistant Professor of History at Dartmouth 1902-1910. Pro- fessor 1910-1914. Member of the Amer- ican Historical Association. Annie Heloise Abel: A.B. at the Uni- versity of Kansas 1898. Manuscript Reader in History and Political Science at Cornell University 1900-1901. Bulkley Fellow in History at Yale 1903-1905. Ph.D. 1905. Instructor of History at Wells College 1905-1906. Instructor of History at Goucher College, Baltimore 1906-1908. Associate Professor 1908- 1914. Professor at Head of the Depart- ment of American History 1914-1915. Historian of the Indian Office 1913. John C. Hildt: A.B. Johns Hopkins 1903. University Scholar at Johns Hop- kins 1903-1904. Johns Hopkins 1906, Ph.D. William Dodge Gray: A.B. University of Kansas 1900. Principal of the Public Schools in Sprinsdale, Arkansas, 1900- 1902. Graduate Student at Cornell 1902- 1903. A.M. Cornell 1903. Instructor of Roman History at the Peekskill Military Academy 1903-1904. Fellow at Cornell University and Assistant Instructor 1905- 1907. Ph.D. Cornell 1907. Annie Heloise Abel, Ph.D. Professor of History John C. Hildt, Ph.D. Professor of Historv William Dodge Gray, Ph.D. Professor of History ik = §e Or 15 A V Jf ® sfc Joel Ernest Goldthwait, B.S., M.D., F.A.C.S., D.S.M., C.M.G. Joel Ernest Goldthwait: B.S. Massa- chusetts Agricultural College 1885. M.D. Harvard Medical School 1890. Assist- ant Surgeon in The Children ' s Hospital, Boston 1900-1902. Chief of the Ortho- pedic Clinic at the Carney Hospital, Bos- ton 1898-1907. In the Orthopedic De- partment at the Massachusetts General Hospital 1904-1908. Consulting Ortho- pedic Surgeon to several hospitals in and about Boston. President of the American Orthopedic Association 1900. Fellow at the American College of Surgeons 1913. D.S.M. 1919. C.M.G. Commander of the Order of St. Michael and St. George 1918. Eleanor Philbrook Cushing, A.M. Professor of Mathematics J. Everett Brady, Ph.D. Professor of Latin Florence Alden Gragg, Ph.D. Professor of Latin J. Everett Brady: A.B. at the Univer- sity of North Carolina 1881. Post Grad- uate at the University of Leipsig, Gottin- gen, Paris, Athens and Heidelberg 1882- 1888. Ph.D. in Sanscrit Classics and Ancient History at Heidelberg 1888. Florence Aldsn Gragg: A.B. Radcliffe 1899. A.M. 1906. Ph.D. 1908. Teacher at Vassar 1908-1909. Eleanor Philbrook Cushing: A.B. Smith 1879. A.M. 1882. Harriet Redfield Cobb: Smith A.B., A.M. 1891. Henry Dike Sleeper: A.B. Harvard 1887. Hartford Theological Seminary 1891. Student of Music at Worcester, Hartford, Chicago, Philadelphia and Lon- don. Ordained as Congregational minis- ter 1891. Instructor in Music at Beloit College, Wisconsin 1891-1894. Professor of Music Georgetown College, Kentucky 1894-1895. Instructor of Music at Uni- versity of Wisconsin 1895-1898. Organ- ist at First Congregalional Church, Madi- son 1895-1898, Union Church, Worcester, Mass., 1899-1902, Fourth Congregational Church, Hartford, 1902-1904. Fellow of American Guild of Organists. Harriet Redfield Cobb, A.M. Professor of Mathematics Henry Dike Sleeper, F.A.G.O. Professor of Music Ik 0H221© 1G 73 w ® f 5] @r Robert E. S. Olmsted, A.B. Professor of Music Rebecca Wilder Holmes Professor of Music Rcbert E. S. Olmsted: A.B. Amherst 1893. Student at the College of Music, New York City. Teacher of Music in New York and Hartford 1896-1907. Teacher in the Broad Street Conserva- tory, Philadelphia 1901-1902. Director of Church Choirs. Arthur Ware Locke: A.B. Harvard 1905. A. M. 1915. 1907-1909 Travel- ing Fellow of Harvard. Graduate Student in Piano and Composition in Berlin 1909. Instructor of Music in Brown University 1910-191 1. Professor of Music at Wash- burn College, Topeka, Kansas, 1911-1914. Assistant Professor of Piano and Theory at the University of Wisconsin 1914-1915. Has done research in Music History at Harvard. Roy Dickinson Welch: Artist ' s Diploma in Music at the University School of Music at Ann Aibor 1907. A.B. University of Michigan 1909. Instructor in the Piano Department University School of Music Ann Arbor 1907-1910. Student of Josef Lhevinne, Berlin 1910-1912. Instructor of History, Analysis of Music and Compo- sition in the University School Music at Ann Arbor 1912-1914. Harry Norman Gardiner: A.B. Am- herst 1878. A.M. 1885. Union Theo- logical Seminary 1882. Leipsig Univer- sity in 1884. Heide.berg 1884. Teachers Academy, Green Falls, New York 1878- 1879. Instructor of Psychology 1891- 1892. Smith since 1884. Arthur Ware Locke, A.M. Professor of Music Anna Alice Cutler: A.B. Smith. Ph.D. Yale in 1896. Instructor in the Depart- ment of Philosophy at Rockford College, Illinois 1892-1893. Instructor in Logic 1895; in English 1897-1899; in Philoso- phy 1899-1902. Assistant Professor 1905. Roy Dickinson Welch, A.B. Professor of Music Harry Norman Gardiner, A.M. Professor of Philosophy Anna Alice Cutler, Ph.D. Professor of Psychology EVi g |HIM l r A V JJ David Camp Rogers, Ph.D. Professor of Psychology Frank Allan Waterman, Ph.D. Professor of Physics S ftMZte r David Camp Rogers: A.B. Princeton 1899. Hartford Theological Seminary 1899-1901. A.M. Harvard 1902. Ph.D. 1903. Assistant in Philosophy at Har- vard 1902-1903. Assistant and Instruc- tor in Social Ethics 1903-1909. Assistant in Applied Psychology 1908-1909 at Har- vard. Assistant Professor of Psychology at the University of Kansas 1904-1914. Frank Allan Waterman: A.B. Prince- ton 1888. Ph.D. Princeton 1896. In- structor of Physics 1891-1892. Profes- sor 1892-1893, at Purdue University, La- fayette, Indiana. Instructor in Physics at Princeton 1893-1897. Fellow of the A. A. A. S. Member American Physics Society. Societe Francaise de Physique. Caroline Brown Bourland: A.B. Smith 1893. Ph.D. Bryn Mawr 1902. Student at the Sorbonne and College de France 1897-1898. Fellow in Romance Lan- guages Bryn Mawr 1898-1899. Gradu- ate Student and Fellow in 1899-1900. Holder of the Mary E. Garrett European Fellowship and Sludent in Romance Lan- guages in Madrid, Spain 1900-1901. Harris Hawthorne Wilder: A.B. Am- herst 1886. Ph.D. University of Frei- burg. Baden 1891. Member of the American Society of Naturalists, Ameri- can Society of Zoology, Boston Society of Natural History. Fellow of the Amer- ican Academy of Arts and Sciences. Caroline Brown Bourland, Ph.D. Professor of Spanish Harris Hawlhorne Wilde Ph.D. Professor of Zoology William Allan Neilson, Ph.D., LL.D. Ruth Goulding Wood, Ph.D. Amv Louise Barbour, Ph.D. Mary Belle McElwain, Ph.D. Susan Rose Benedict, Ph.D. Esther Lowenthal, Ph.D. Laura Adella Bliss, A.M.. A.C.M. Ellen Parmelee Cook, A.M. . Julia Warner Snow, Ph.D. . Emma Bates, Mus.B. . Elizabeth Spaulding Mason, A.B. Louisa Sewall Cheever, A.M. Mary Breese Fuller, A.M. . Frances Grace Smith. Ph.D. Josef Wiehr, Ph.D. Margaret Bradshaw, Ph. I). . Aida Agnes Heine, A.M. Marv Louise Foster, Ph.D. . Inez ' Whipple Wilder, A.M. . Wilson Townsend Moog Mus.B., F.A Harvey Gates Townsend, Ph.D. . G.O. . Professor of English . Professor of Mathematics Professor of Greek Professor of Latin Professor of Mathematics Professor of Economics and Sociology Associate Professor of Music Associate Professor of Chemistry Associate Professor of Botany Associate Professor of Music Associate Professor of Chemistry Associate Professor of English Language and Literature . Associate Professor of History . Associate Professor of Botany . Associate Professor of German Associate Professor of English Language and Literature . Associate Professor of Geology Associate Professor of Chemistry . Associate Professor of Zoology Associate Professor of Music Associate Professor of Education r A IS w vJ) f[M3te Mary Delia Lewis, A.M. Osmond T. Robert, B. es L. Margaret Rooke Associate Professo f English Language and Literature Associate Professor of French Language and Literature Associate Professor of Italian Language and Literature . Associate Professor of Physics . Associate Professor of Zoology ssociate Professor of Chemistry Associate Professor of Art Associate Professor of Latin Associate Professor of Philosophy and Psychology Associate Professor of English Language and Tjit ( ' i i iii ' t 1 Robert Withington, Ph.D., O. A. Chevalier de l ' Ordre de la Couronne (Beige) Associate Professor of English Language and Literature Associate Professor of English Language and Arthur Taber Jones. Ph.D. . Howard Mason Parshley, Sc l Jessie Yereance ( ' ami, Ph.D. Beulah Strong P. Warren Wright, Ph.D. . ICdna Aston Shea rer, 1 ' h. I i. . Paul Robert Lieder, l h. 1 . . Howard Rollin Tatch, Ph.D. Chase Going Woodhouse, A.M. . Clara Willoughby Davidson, A.M. Stanley Alden, A. it. Walter Squire, A.M. Mary Lilias Richardson, A.M. I. aura Sophronia Clark, A.M. Milcn [sabelle Williams Sarah Hook Hamilton . Susan Miller Rambo. Ph.D. . Mary Merrow Cook, B.S. Ilchn Ashhurst Choate, Ph.D. Myra Melissa Sampson, A.M. Blanche Goode .... Laura Hatch, Ph.D. Samuel A. Eliot, Jr., A.B. Katharine Shepherd Woodward, A.B. Esther Ellen Dale .... Rose Frances Egan, A.M. . Grace Hazard Conkling ' , B.L. Clarence Kennedy, A.M. liny Richard Denslow, B.S., A.M. Elizabeth M. Whitmore, A.M. I ' M ward James Woodhouse, LL.B. Alice Cleasnn .... Julius Drachsler A.M. . Emily Ledyard Shields, Ph.D. Eleanor Shipley Duckett. Ph.S. . Elizabeth Andros Foster, Ph.D. . Elizabeth Avery, Ph.D. . Elizabeth Faith Genung, M.S. A. . James Huntlev Sinclair, Ph.D. . Clifford H. Riedell .... Florence Farnham Olmsted . Mary Ella Williams Anna Adele Chenot, A.M. Margaret Lewis Bailey, Ph.D. . Emmett Reid Dunn, Ph.D. . Louise E. W. Adams, Ph.D. . Dan T. Gorokhoff .... Catherine Elizabeth Koch, A.M.. M.L Madeleine Barthelemy, Certificate d ' Aptitude . Charles Albert Case James Leavitt Stoddard, A.B., M.D Albeit Pages, Licencie es Lettres Margaret Brackenbury Crook. A.B, Lizbeth R. Laughton. A.B. . Cesar Bar.ia, Doctor en Derecho Florence McArdle, A.M. Sidney R. Packard. Ph.D. . Thames Ross Williamson. A.M. Robert Merrill Dewey, B.S. . A. Mortimer Erskine. Ph.D. . Amy K. McMaster, A.M. Hannah Louisa Billings. A.M. Lucy Lord Barrangon, A.M. . Abbie Mabel O ' Keefe, M.D. . Literature Associate Professor of Economics and Sociology Associate Professor of Biblical Literature Associate Professor of English Language and Literature . Associate Professor Music Assistant Professor of Latin Assistant Professor of Chemistry . Assistant Professor of French Assistant Professor of Music Assistant Professor of Mathematics Assistant Professor of French and Dean of the Class of 1925 . Assistant Professor of Botanv . Assistant Professor of Zoology . Assistant Professor Music . Assistant Professor of Geologv Assistant Professor of English Language and Literature and of Spoken English Assistant Professor of English Language and Literature Assistant Professor of Music Assistant Professor of English Language and Literature Assistant Professor of English Language and Literature . Assistant Professor of Art Assistant Professor of Chemistry Assistant Professor of Art . Assistant Professor of Government Assistant Professor of Music Assistant Professor of Economics and Sociology Assistant Professor of Latin Assistant Professor of Latin • Assistant Professor of Spanish Assistant Professor of English and of Spoken English . Assistant Professor of Botany Assistant Professor of Philosophy and Psychology . Assistant Professor of Art Assistant Professor of Music Assistant Professor of Music Assistant Professor of French Assistant Professor of German and English . Assistant Professor of Zoology Assistant Professor of Latin . Assistant Professor of Choral Music . Assistant Professor of Botany Assistant Professor of French Assistant Professor of Music Assistant Professor of Chemistry . Assistant Professor of French Assistant Professor of Biblical Literature Assistant Professor of Spoken English . Assistant Professor of Spanish . Assistant Professor of Hygiene and Physical Education . Assistant Professor of History Assistant Professor of Economics and Sociology Ass ; stant Professor of English Language and Literature and of Spoken English Assistant Professor of Chemistry Assistant Professor of Economics and Sociology Instructor in Physics Instructor in History of Art . Instructor in Hygiene rk A 19 Vr D fBfe A.B. Gladys Amelia Anslow, A.M. Amanda Lee Norris Susan Raymond, A.B. Eunice Elizabeth Chace, A.M. Helen Joy Sleeper ' . A.M. Louise Smith, A.M. C. Pauline Burt, A.M. . Constance Kilham Greene . Elizabeth Frances Rogers, I ' h.I) Eleanor Ferguson Rambo, Ph.D. . Louise Bourgoin, Licenciee es Lettre K. Frances Scott, Ph.B., M.D. Edith Hamilton. A.M. . Ella Lauchner Smith, A.M. . Mildred Hurnette Porter, A.M Vera Marie Gushee, M.S. Helen McGregor Noyes, A.B. Mina Stein Kirstein. A.B. Abba Wlllard Bowen, Myrtle V. Jordan, A.B Harriette Dilla, Ph.D., LL.B. Lucile Marsh, A.D. Helen Bocher. A.B. Lilian Mary Lane, Ph.D. Mary J. Garber, A.M. . Rebecca Haight .... Margaret Pauline Roesel, A.M. . Germaine Ferio, Licenciee es Lettres Anacleta Candida Vezzetti . Anna Hobbet, A.B. .... Sara Bache-Wig. M.S. . Dorothy Louise Merchant, A.M. . Helene Cattanes Licenciee es Lettre Mira Bigelow Wilson, A.B., B.D. . Marine Dinan, Licenciee es Lettres Eleanor Hall Ayres, A.M. Alice Margaret Holden, A.M. Mag-delaine Pellet, A.B. Margaret M. Sherwood, Ph.D. Ruth Doggett Kennedy, A.B. Dorothy Sears Ainsworth, A.B. . bby Snow Belden, A.B. Ruth Wendell Cooper, A.B. . Willard Thorp, A.M. . Harriet MeWilliams Parsons, Ph.D Edith Harrison Morrill, A.M. Margaret Gale Scott, A.M. . Cora Beale Key, A.M. . Margaret Cameron. A.M. Constance McLaughlin Green, A.B. Florence N. Schott, M.S. Prank Edward Dow Evelyn Harwood Scholi, A.B. Esther Purrington, A.B. Sadie Rae Myers, A.B. . Bernice Nelke .... Helen Pittman, A.B. Anna Polowetzki .... Elizabeth Kimball, A.M. Hazel M. Leach .... Marguerite McKee, A.B. Olive Morrill, A.B Frances Holden, A.B. . Ethel Cook Eliot .... Sylvia Spencer Welch . William James Short . ] nstructo li . Instructor in Physics Instructor in Hygiene and Physical Education Instructor in Astronomy . Instructor in Zoology Instructor in Music . Instructor in Zoology Instructor in Chemistry • in Hygiene and Physical Education . Instructor in History Instructor in Greek and Latin Instructor in French . Instructor in Hygiene Instructor in English structor in Economics and Sociology . Instructor in Physics Instructor in Astronomy . Instructor in English . Instructor in English Instructor in French Instructor in Hygiene and Physical Education Instructor in Economics and Sociology Instructor in Spoken English Instructor in Hygiene and Physical Education . Instructor in English Instructor in Spoken English Instructor in Music . Instructor in History Instructor in French Instructor in Italian . Instructor in Geology Instructor in Botany . Instructor in Geology Instructor in French Instructor in Biblical Literature Instructor in French Instructor in French . Instructor in Government Instructor in French Instructor in French tor in Economics and Sociology Instructor in Hygiene and Physical Education Instructor in Hygiene and Physical Education Instructor in Spoken English Instructor in Spoken English Instructor in Astronomy . Instructor in English . Instructor in History in Philosophy and Psychology Instructor in French . Instructor in English Instructor in Chemistry Assistant in Music Assistant in Astronomy Assistant in Geology . Assistant in Philosophy and Psychology Assistant in Hygiene and Physical Education Assistant and Curator in Zoology Reader in Art Museum Assistant in Art Curator in Art Reader in History Demonstrator in Chemistry Demonstrator in Philosophy and Psychology . Reader in English . Reader in Music . Lecturer in Music Instruc Instructo tk m yr A 20 The • Class w ® frSte Hannah Silberman Abraham 644 Morris Street Albany, N. Y. M. Cornelia Ahl 130 Hawley Street Binghamton, New York Katherine Grier Adam 5219 Granada Street Los Angeles, California Janice Katherine Aldridge Lyncroft New Rochelle, New York L Marjorie Bradford Adams 91 Gansevoort Street Little Falls, New York Elizabeth Alexander 204 College Avenue Beaver, Pennsylvania r A A 24 w gf r Mildred Isabel Alfred 546 First Street Brooklyn, New York Ann Axtell 119 North 32nd Avenue Omaha, Nebraska Pauline Ames North Easton, Massachusetts Doris Palmer Babson Riverside, Illinois Jane Bogert Arms Lowell, Massachusetts Eleanor Bachman Jenkintown, Pennsylvania tk fTOS I A w [ili] Esther Colette Baehr 2049 East 96th Street Cleveland, Ohio Alice Mildred Ball 28 Forest Street Whitinsville, Massachusetts Beatrice Bacc 840 Riverdale Street West Springfield, Massachusetts Annette Jenks Bardwell 3321 Second Avenue Minneapolis, Minnesota Mayme Holden Bahin 516 South Union Street Natchez, Massachusetts Hilda Barnes 519 East Tenth Avenue Tarentum, Pennsylvania tk gBKZa w Ja 26 w SOl r Ruth Houghton Barnes 28 Coyle Street Portland, Maine Madeleine Elizabeth Baxter 356 South Main Street Woonsocket, Rhode Island Elizabeth Wendell Barry Milton Point Rye, New York Dorothy Alice Bedworth Round Hill Springfield, Massachusetts Dorothy Bartruff 473 Evergreen Avenue Brooklyn, New York Ruth Bemis Old Orchard Road Chestnut Hill, Massachusetts tk s. vmm n A 27 w fiiinte Doris Benedict 124 Highland Avenue Waterbury, Connecticut Marguerite Berc 1 56 Grant Avenue Jersey City, New Jersey Kathryn Stuart Bennett 319 Stuart Avenue Kalamazoo, Michigan Margaret Bergan 75 Harrison Avenue Northampton, Massachusetts Dorothy Benson 108 Woodlawn Road, Roland Park Baltimore, Maryland = § Harriet Bergtold 1 1 59 Race Street Denver, Colorado ®r Jk 2S w g f Ol (g Esther Ann Berryman 303 Lincoln Avenue Charleroi, Pennsylvania Marion Louise Billings Canton, Massachusetts Ruth Beveridce 1801 North Pennsylvania Street Indianapolis, Indiana Elizabeth Seelye Bixler Exeter, New Hampshire Joanna Woolverton Beyer Alexandria, Pennsylvania Louise Blaisdell South Road Portsmouth, New Hampshire !k g flimi] r 2!) A w Esa] (g Gertrude Louise Blatchford 19 Lincoln Street Framingham, Massachusetts Beth Bohning 2226 Hemphill Street Fort Worth, Texas Eunice Blauvelt Port Byron, New York Dorothy Curtis Bourne 2 Kensington Avenue Bradford, Massachusetts Ethel Theresa Boas 10 West 88th Street New York City, New York Priscilla Alden Boyce 233 North Chestnut Street Lansing, Michigan k IMZH A 30 w g f ofe Constance Boyer 38 Fletcher Street Winchester, Massachusetts Mary Elizabeth Bridcers 1306 Hillsboro Street Raleigh, North Carolina Clara Louise Bozovsky 539 Washington Avenue Dunkirk, New York Eleanor Louise Brinsmade c o 450 Riverside Drive New York City, New York Ernestine Elizabeth Bradford 10 West 16th Street Indianapolis, Indiana Elizabeth H. Brooke Howe House Framingham, Massachusetts L g jlffiZll Or 31 2 w $ r Frona Marguerite Brooks 1105 West California Avenue Uibana, Illinois Lois Eleanor Brown Lewiston, New York Leona Anna Brophel Leicester, New York Dorothy Lee Bryan 2508 Sixth Avenue Fort Worth, Texas Katherine Mary Brosnahan 24 Pine Street Bellows Falls, Vermont Dorris Louise Bryant I 788 Beacon Street Brookline, Massachusetts L BUZH A w g ft te Miriam Buncher 14 Greenwood Lane Waltham, Massachusetts Beatrice Marie Byram 220 Ridgewood Avenue Glen Ridge, New Jersey Zillah Marion Burke 130 Longwood Avenue Brookline, Massachusetts Elizabeth Kannally Byrne 859 Watertown Avenue Waterbury, Connecticut Charlotte Josephine Butler 10 Addison Street Arlington, Massachusetts Laura White Cabot Woodstock, Vermont !k WTE ? 5 33 w g fLM3] (5 Elizabeth MacDonald Cairns 19 Park Lane Jamaica Plain, Massachusetts Helen Brownell Carroll Minneapolis, Minnesota +% T Vera Iydelle Call 79 High Street Meriden, Connecticut Alice Baldwin Chapman 446 Park Place Bridgeport, Connecticut Sarah Staples Campbell Cherryfield, Maine k Dorothy Jane Chapple 206 Clark Avenue Billings, Montana M v ! 34 i w g fta Dorothy Edwards Chase 177 Redington Street Swampscott, Massachusetts Anna Margaret Claney 717 Junior Terrace Chicago, Illinois Eleanor Child 12 Lexington Avenue Greenwich, Connecticut Carita Louise Clark 16 Occum Ridge Hanover, New Hampshire Eleanor Carroll Chilton Charleston, West Virginia Catherine Mitchell Clark 321 Fourth Avenue St. Cloud, Minnesota L mrzw ? Ja V JJ sa] Dorothy Florence Clark 7003 Euclid Avenue Cleveland, Ohio Sarah Mason Clarke 128 Henry Street Brooklyn, New York Eleanor Gaither Clark 1110 Michigan Avenue Evanston, Illinois Florence Laura Cohen 1114 Union Street Schenectady, New York Evelyn Osborn Clarke 140 Procter Boulevard Utica, New York Martha Cole 63 Manchester Street Nashua, New Hampshire !k ®[ffl221® r 36 a w E Helen Virginia Conklin 210 East Sixth Street Hutchinson. Kansas Mary Carter Coolidge R. F. D. 39 Barre, Massachusetts Isabel Conklin 139 Broadmead, Princeton, New Jersey Ruth Anne. Cooper 2409 Grandview Avenue Walnut Hills, Cincinnati, Ohio Margaret Coogan 32 Plainfield Street Hartford, Connecticut Hilda Juanita Couch 46 South Broadway Nyack-on-Hudson, New York L rosra 3£ A w M r Adelaide Jackson Cozzens Locust Valley Long Island, New York Phyllis H. Creasey 80 Prospect Street East Orange, New Jersey Elizabeth Crain Camp Gaillard Panama Canal Zone Marion Crozier 945 East 53d Street Chicago, Illinois Marjorie Lyle Crandall 283 Fellsway East Maiden, Massachusetts Dorothy Crydenwise Richfield Springs, New York , vmm v, 3S Jk w g f o] g Margaret Anne Cullinan Shadyside Houston, Texas Janet Danforth 56 Lexington Avenue Buffalo, New York Helen Cunningham 71 Hodge Avenue Buffalo, New York Lucile M. Darton 379 Temple Street Haven, Connecticut Mary Elizabeth Daily Warren, Massachusetts Flora Mildred Davidson Bethany, Connecticut !k nroana 3 A 39 w gglMiffe Martha Davidson Springfield, Massachusetts Florence Ruth Denison 1502 Wilder Avenue Honolulu, T. H. Annette Davis 81 1 North Ninth Street St. Joseph, Missouri Mary Dickson 521 Grand Avenue Dayton, Ohio Helen Stiles DeGroat 61 Railroad Street Cortland, New York Gertrude Priscilla Dimick 25 Elmgrove Avenue Providence, Rhode Island !k eiD 40 A w 01 7= Ruth Dimick 25 Elmgrove Avenue Providence, Rhode Island Edith De Lamater Donnell Northport, Long Island New York Gladys Dingledine 821 Main Street Harrisonburg, Virginia Elizabeth Donnell Northport, Long Island New York Jane Dinsmore Baker Place, East Walnut Hills Cincinnati, Ohio Charlotte Dorian 329 Washington Street Middletown, Connecticut LY gfTO I 41 A w ssSte r HULDAH SoUTHWICK DORON 133 Essex Street Bangor, Maine Dorothy H. Dreyfus 230 West 107th Street New York City, New York Marion Downey Box 989 Waterbury, Connecticut Nell Clarice Driggs Ogden, Utah rk Berenice Edna Dreyfus 418 Central Park West New York City, New York Faith Dudgeon 28 Fort Street Fairhaven, Massachusetts 3 @EfflZ2I© r A 42 w gj fL fe Flora Edythe Durrell Stratton, Maine Ruth Eckhart Auburn, Indiana Edelweiss Waldron Dyer 19 Chester Street Allston, Massachusetts Elinor Eltinge The Davenport Hotel Spokane, Washington Barbara Eaton 15 Trinity Street Claremont, New Hampshire Marguerite R. Ely Hamburg, Connecticut §,mzB 43 J w g fla Lily Hortense Emerson 319 Abercorn Street Savannah, Georgia Gladys Jane Fee 1500 President Street Brooklyn, New York Eleanor M. Evans 3445 North Pennsylvania Street Indianapolis, Indiana Gertrude L. Ferguson 202 Market Street Amsterdam, New York Ellen L. Ewing Bryn Mawr, Pennsylvania Ruth Dakin Ferguson 23 Linden Place New Rochelle, New York g[ 44 A V w fta Katherine Marie Fischer Port Chester, New York Doris Flather 8 Berkley Street Nashua, New Hampshire Myrtle Adele Fish 420 Chestnut Street Roselle Park, New Jersey Margaret Angel ina Ford 255 Peeples Street Atlanta, Georgia Caroline Warren Fisher 260 Franklin Street Newton, Massachusetts Dorothy Foresman 515 Essex Road Kenilworth, Illinois uk ■i 45 A w Ag fi nol © Emily Foresman 5 I 5 Essex Road Kenilworth, Illinois Elinor French 14 Argyle Street Rochester, New York Margaret Miller Franks 225 Maple Avenue, Rockville Center Long Island, New York Elizabeth Prescott French 222 Belmont Street Fall River, Massachusetts Zena Colaer Friedman 10 Hawthorn Street Stamford, Connecticut Helen Wentworth French 20 School Street Andover, Massachusetts k en2 46 A a w g ftioafe Edith Copland Fuller 109 Barnard Avenue Watertown, Massachusetts Grace Marie Gafford Wymore, Nebraska Helen Elizabeth Fyke 237 South Poplar Street Centralia, Illinois Louise Marie Garbe 98 Hamilton Avenue New Brighton, New York Margaret Louise Gabel 250 West 91st Street New York City, New York Frances E. Gates Woodstock South Belhngham, Washington BHZSI 47 A w A QO) Esther Pratt Gaylord 76 Rogers Street Branford, Connecticut Hanna Gichner 3220 Highland Avenue Cleveland Park District of Columbia ' •■Katherine Fuller Gaylord 143 Holabird Avenue Winsted, Connecticut Virginia Manson Giles Weston, Massachusetts Elsye Geisenbercer 900 Main Street Natchez, Mississippi Dorothy Katherine Gleason 200 Prospect Street Northampton, Massachusetts L L J 48 w A@ s?te Elizabeth Goldbeck Sag Harbor Long Island, New York Marie Goudy 48 North Walnut Street East Orange, New Jersey Rosalie Gordon 2405 West End Avenue Nashville, Tennessee Charlotte Day Gower 841 South Greenwood Avenue Kankakee, Illinois Sophie Reiter Gordon Brookfield, Pennsylvania Helen Grant Faribault, Minnesota ik fTO l A 49 w f oj g Evelyn Gray 658 Longfellow Avenue Detroit, Michigan Catherine Virginia Grigsby 22 Orange Road Montclair, New Jersey Ruth Green 526 West I 13th Street New York City, New York Rosanna Augusta Grout 107 Day Street Fitchburg, Massachusetts Elizabeth Hord Greer 1443 North Meridian Street Indianapolis, Indiana Ruth Guggenheim 315 Beach Avenue Rochester, New York L g Mreng t - 2, 50 w @ f™te Frances Carlton Guild 15 West Walnut Avenue Merchantsville, New Jersey Ardelia Ripley Hall 181 Edwards Street New Haven, Connecticut Adelaide Lormore Guion 159 Oakleigh Road Newton, Massachusetts Dorothy Hall 43 Upland Road Quincy, Massachusetts Margaret Hackett Bolton, Massachusetts Helen Hall 4600 Maryland Avenue St. Louis, Missouri b g[TO221 51 V JJ g ftg g Frances Helen Haven Harmon 313 Ten Eyck Street Watertown, New York Isabel Westcott Harper 36 Mercer Street Princeton, New Jersey Gertrude Harney 57 Breed Street Lynn, Massachusetts Gladys Harriman North Wilmington, Massachusetts Helen Harper 35 South Professor Street Oberhn, Ohio Ruth Harrington 51 Brattle Street Cambridge, Massachusetts !k iTOsra J 52 w ?§ %M2fe 7r Alice Trowbridge Harris 9 Doden Lane Flushing, New York Doris van Cott Harrison Haworth, New Jersey ' Sfr Edith Bedell Harris 20 North Mountain Avenue Montclair, New Jersey Mary Hale Harts 2123 Bancroft Street Washington, D. C. ik Barbara Wyndham Harrison Whitestone, New York Beatrice Botsford Harvey 2100 Calumet Avenue Chicago, Illinois § Mwm , r y 53 w M$ f Helen Eleonore Harvey New Prague, Minnesota Katherine Kezia Hasson 200 Hunter Avenue Kansas City, Missouri Jane Harwood Kansas City, Missouri Virginia Hatfield 400 Wallace Place Covington, Kentucky !k Frances Knowles Haskell Ardsley Park Ardsley-on-Hudson, New York Frances Atkinson Hause 22nd Street and Bellevue Road Harnsburg, Pennsylvania IWTB ? v 2 54 w g f afe r Helen Marion Hauser 186 Franklin Street Bloomfield, New Jersey Sophie Henker 1395 Alta Vista Street Dubuque, Iowa Grace Lillian Havey 43 Mendum Street Roslindale, Massachusetts Dorothea Lucia Higbie 1300 Hyde Park Chicago, Illinois Margaret Hays 25 Darwin Street Rochester, New York Marion Strong Hillhouse Willimantic, Connecticut Ik GH221 55 A w r Elizabeth Morse Hilliard Northboro, Massachusetts Marcarette Hines 305 West Main Street Carbondale, Illinois Marion Himmelsbach 382 Elmwood Avenue Buffalo, New York Margaret Randolph Hitchcock The Fall Field Proffit, Virginia Winifred Charlotte Hine Fishers Island, New York Arline Beryl Hoeson 1 06 Lmsley Avenue Meriden, Connecticut p 5 2i 9. EH221 Or J a 56 w A@ f Ofe Julia Porter Hodcdon 1000 Hill Street Hannibal, Missouri Winifred Louise Hope 135 Monroe Street Ridgewood, New Jersey Dorothy Hogan 2320 Sheridan Circle Washington, D. C. Constance Hopkins Barnstable, Massachusetts Janette Lincoln Holmes 301 Summit Avenue Wayne, Pennsylvania Margaret Elizabeth Hopkins 9314 Mile Avenue Cleveland, Ohio k gS1221 r $ 57 w =5® l@r Katherine Houghton I 1 Manchester Road Brookhne, Massachusetts Elizabeth Portia Hubbard 107 High Street Middletown, Connecticut Katherine Eleanor Howland Conway, Massachusetts Margaret McCalmont Humphrey 140 Carmel Street Kalamazoo, Michigan Eleanor Patricia Hoyt 15 Seminary Street Auburn, New York Grace Genan Humrich 507 Walnut Street Roselle Park, New Jersey D IMTE 58 w i§S@!r Marion Frances Hunt 58 Kellogg Street Waterbury, Connecticut Mae Edith Incalls Windham, Vermont Mary Frances Hunt 804 Con ley Avenue Columbia, Missouri Esther Irving 77 Westford Avenue Springfield, Massachusetts k Marie Baltz Hutchincs 305 Llandrillo Road Cynwyd, Pennsylvania Ruth Elizabeth Irwin Cataumet, Massachusetts . mTE Jk 59 w =ggs li5Eite jr Elizabeth C. Ives 15 Park Row New York City, New York Alice Child Jenckes 46 Fruit Street Worcester, Massachusetts Harriet Jacobus Great Neck Long Island, New Yc Dorothy A. Jenks c o Col. J. C. Jenks, U. S. Inf. The War Dept., Washington, D. C. Erika Caroline Jauch 24 Montmorenci Street Springfield, Massachusetts Josephine Jenks 1200 Marshall Building Cleveland, Ohio Ik ygfros i •sy y 60 w g f fe Dorothy Bucknam Johnson 24 Sidlaw Road Brookline, Massachusetts Frances Johnson Hinckley Road Milton, Massachusetts Dorothy Lucretia Johnson Manassas, Virginia Ruth Kerr Johnson Greenville Road Dallas, Texas Florence Ruth Johnson West Hartford, Connecticut Anne H. Johnston 10 Rue de l ' Elysee Paris, France k Rroanaft f A 61 w fL ) @p Helen Elizabeth Johnston 494 Jefferson Avenue Brooklyn, New York Margaret Murray Jones 201 East 37th Street Kansas City, Missouri Esther Bradford Jones 9100 Dexter Boulevard Detroit, Michigan Charlotte Ruth Joshel Geneva, Illinois Lucy Van Dusen Jones New Hartford, Connecticut Mary Proal Judson Deep River, Connecticut E = £[ 62 A w § 5m3 r Ruth Edith Katsh 41 St. Nicholas Terrace New York City, New York Helen Tracy Kellogg 54 West Fifth Street Oswego, New York Edna Frances Kaufmann 19 West 87th Street New York City, New York Frances Watrous Kelsey Branford, Connecticut Edna Mae Keeler 1116 Neilson Avenue Far Rockaway, New York Margaret Kemp 108 Mt. Vernon Street West Roxbury, Massachusetts ik = g[ w 63 A w =vg)GIII]@7= Rachel Pamelia Keniston Plymouth, New Hampshire Hazel King 101 Western Avenue Gloucester, Massachusetts Margie Atwood Kennedy 36 Pleasant Street Dorchester, Massachusetts Madelyn Rose Kingsbury 29 Pearl Street Holyoke, Massachusetts Mary M. Kerrigan 8 Harbor Street Clinton, Massachusetts Louise Kingsley 47 North Street Binghamton, New York k rmm v? A 64 w g fta g Constance Kline 2589 Euclid Boulevard Cleveland, Ohio Julia West Kreis 211 East Franklin Street Wheaton, Illinois Catherine Knowles 314 Washington Street Monroe, Michigan Kathryn Kryder 36 Highland Avenue Akron, Ohio Margaret Gilmore Kreglow Palmerton, Pennsylvania Dorothy Helen Kudlich 119 West 57th Street New York City, New York Ik g ro i Of Jk 65 ■w i $m3® r R. Lucille Kyte 186 West Lawrence Street Albany, New York Marion Elizabeth Lakin 1575 Virginia Street Charleston, West Virginia Katherine Crandell Lacey Sixteenth Infantry Camp Dix, New Jersey Anna-May Lande 315 Madison Avenue Elmira, New York Freda Helen Ladd 20 Franklin Street Barre, Vermont Ellen Mary Lane 27 Edgewood Street Hartford, Connecticut s. wwm -t A 66 w g fBte Ilda Lancdon 316 South 51st Street Omaha, Nebraska Edna Camp Lawrence 421 West Price Street Germantown, Pennsylvania Naomi Laucheimer Far Rockaway Long Island, New York Helen Lawton Tiverton, Rhode Island Evelyn Grace Lawley 55 Chestnut Street Florence, Massachusetts Marion Constance Leary Turners Falls, Massachusetts Ik t A 67 V JJ g fEnate r Lois Thelma Ledbetter Oaklawn Michigan City, Indiana Helen Schuyler Leeminc 94 Eighth Avenue Brooklyn, New York Barbara Lee 31 Abbot Street Beverly, Massachusetts Mildred Edith Leeper Glenfield, Pennsylvania Elma Lee Box 643 Detroit, Michigan Madeline Leonard Wetmore Avenue Winsted, Connecticut [ 68 w g fL te Florence Henrietta Leopold 48 East 80th Street New York City, New York Emma A. Lincoln 1 13 Hancock Street Brooklyn, New York Marjory Sylvia Lewis Marion, Connecticut Julia Armour Lincoln 49 Garden Street Hartford, Connecticut Louise Lieber 3502 Central Avenue Indianapolis, Indiana Elizabeth Lipse i 312 Park Road LaGrange, Illinoi: L rpmq r Jfa 69 w g f afe Anne Niven McLean Lockhead 1202 North Pennsylvania Street Indianapolis, Indiana Mary Dorothy Long 1 1 Mawhinney Street Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania Ella Loeb 5112 Westminster Place St. Louis, Missouri Mildred Hartwell Lovejoy 1 02 Lenox Street West Newton, Massachusetts Evelyn Loetscher 230 Alpine Street Dubuque, Iowa Camilla Marcia Low 575 Ridgewood Road Maplewood, New Jersey ck QffiZ S? 70 A w g f ofe Rae Gloss Lowenthal 630 Linden Avenue Newport, Kentucky Nancy R. McCullough Bellevue Park Harrisburg, Pennsylvania Barbara Lufkin Concord, Massachusetts Barbara McKay 2311 Grandview Avenue Cincinnati, Ohio Kathryn Isobel Lyman Hilo Hawaii T. H. Dorothy Walker MacDonald 1858 Carroll Street Brooklyn, New York = = g[ A w m3 t Jean MacDonald 547 West Sixth Street Erie, Pennsylvania Nellie O. MacLachlan 7150 Penn Avenue Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania Marcia Almeda MacDonald West Milford, New Jersey Margaret Churchill MacLean 211 Main Street Cohoes, New York Charlotte MacDougall Naval Observatory Washington, D. C. Jean Matilda MacTarnaghan Nunda, New York 72 A w $ r Katherine Leeds Macomber 23 Prince Street West Newton, Massachusetts Marian Howe Mann West Medway, Massachusetts Helen Marie Main Wayne, Nebraska Elizabeth C. Marmon 1119 North Delaware Street Indianapolis, Indiana Margaret West Mann 1 1 7 Green Bay Road Lake Forest, Illinois Harriet Hall Marsh 400 West 153rd Street New York City, New York ik WTT Jh w g fj 51 @? Elisabeth Marshall 42 Lake Avenue Melrose, Massachusetts Mildred Arlene Mason 281 Barrington Street Rochester, New York Catherine Caroline Marx 541 Evanswood Place Cincinnati, Ohio Jane Kirkman Massie Hotel Albion, 900 Cathedral Street Baltimore, Maryland Guida Harvey Marx Vista Terrace, East Walnut Hills Cincinnati, Ohio Marjorie Maxwell I 12 Elmer Avenue Schenectady, New York 3 IWT i J; 74 A w A@ fM5te jr Sylvia Roslyn Meltzer 1352 Fairfield Avenue Bridgeport, Connecticut Eleanor Miller Sandy Spring, Maryland Katherine Merrill 362 Hope Street Providence, Rhode Island Elvira Miller 209 Hearne Avenue Cincinnati, Ohio Carolyn Hicks Metcalf Winthrop, Massachusetts Katherine McClure Miller 420 Wisconsin Avenue Oak Park, Illinois g lnnEna W 75 Jk w g f g Katherine Marie Miller 2306 Hoagland Avenue Fori Wayne, Indiana Mary Beekman Mills Calumet, Michigan Louise Viola Miller Tower Ridge Hastmgs-on-Hudson, New York Helen Marita Moore 309 Fifth Street Lorain, Ohio k Margaret McClure Miller 325 C S. W. Street Ardmore, Oklahoma Marjorie Morrison Iron River, Michigan wmrn } Jk 76 w M fr Esther Louise Moss 160 Pine Street Lockport, New York Ruth Moss Murray 155 South Lake Avenue Albany, New York Margaret Estelle Moulton 180 State Street Portland, Maine Elizabeth Uriel Neilon 53 Henry Street Fitchburg, Massachusetts Catherine Gabrielle Murray 100 Waldemar Avenue Winthrop, Massachusetts Evelyn Eleanor Nelson Granville, New York L s. wmm n 77 A w =v@ |csa| ©r Ruth-Alice Norman 630 Park Avenue New York Cily, New York Edith Powers O ' Neill 64 South Allen Street Albany, New York Dorothea Elizabeth Nourse 7 Marston Way Worcester, Massachusetts Helen Cecilia O ' Reilly 57 Washington Avenue New Rochelle, New York Ruth Amelia Ockerman 99 Oak Street Binehamton, New York Mabelle Blanche Orleman 101 Chevy Chase Drive Chevy Chase, D. C. mrzv? A 78 w g f ofe Anna Rhoda Orme Wayne, Pennsylvania Janice Harinc Ozias Quakertown, Pennsylvania WlLLA ORR 1026 South Jefferson Avenue Saginaw, Michigan Lucille Page 56 Laurel Streel Melrose, Massachuselts Virginia Woodhull Otto Sayville, New York Mary Elizabeth Parks Hurricane Mills, Tennessee L s magna 3? 79 JA w g fS) @r Elizabeth Patek 435 Kenwood Boulevard Milwaukee, Wisconsin Dorothy Howard Peirce 1037 Old Orchard Dayton, Ohio Mary Patterson 1115 New Pear Street Vineland, New Jersey Margaret Gilmore Pendleton 344 West 72nd Street New York City, New ork Katherine Peek 846 Main Street East Aurora, New Yc Anna Margaret Pennypacker 255 King ' s Highway East Haddonfield, New Jersey k Or SO £ w A@ f fc Olga Eaton Perkins 77 Fairfield Street Springfield, Massachusetts Ethel Brinton Phillips Pomeroy, Pennsylvania Joyce Petterson Princeton, Minnesota Virginia Bellaurie Place Caledonia, New York Eleanor Burrell Phillips Peterborough, New Hampshire Mary Gladys Platner 23 Grand Street Oneonta, New York !k 01122 Or SI A w g tsfe Mary Barr Polk 3700 Grand Avenue Des Moines, Iowa Achsa Louise Powell 1018 37th Avenue N. Seattle, Washington Anne Pollitt 137 West Ninth Street Erie, Pennsylvania Grace Elizabeth Preble 240 Fifth Avenue New York City, New York Lillian Hall Potter Portland, Connecticut Dorothy Prescott 340 School Street Webster, Massachusetts tk IMTZV? 82 d w g f ote Katherine Dahlcreu Prickett Valley Falls, New York Violet Constance Ramsey 90 Undercliff Road Montclair, New Jersey Mildred Purdy 2217 Newkirk Avenue Brooklyn, New York Katherine Huse Ranney 85 Payson Avenue Rockland, Massachusetts Jane Quinby Hotel Gotham New York City, New York Eleanor Rau Central Avenue Lawrence, Long Island, New York L BH2H A w § X nw Margaret Elizabeth Rawley Brazil, Indiana Virginia Reed 812 West Drive, Woodruff Place Indianapolis, Indiana Hope Rawson 78 Medway Street Providence, Rhode Island Mathilde Rehm 2201 Burnet Avenue Cincinnati, Ohio Emily Reed 35 Riverview Road Brighton, Massachusetts Judith Howard Relf 512 Holly Avenue St. Paul, Minnesota rk M22© 84 A a w g f ate Phyllis Rice 418 North Tenth Street Nebraska City, Nebraska Ruth Hannah Richards 515 First Avenue East Hutchinson, Kansas Irma Jeanette Rich 43 Donaldson Avenue Rutherford, New Jersey Alice Mildred Richardson 109 Bedford Street New Bedford, Massachusetts ik Gerda Cornell Richards 374 June Street Fall River, Massachusetts Irene Fletcher Richardson 19 Van Dien Avenue Ridgewood, New Jersey I ®r A 85 w g f l p Beth Steler Ripley 926 Lafayette Street Denver, Colorado Ruth Jeannette Robeson 18 Portsmouth Ten ace Rochester, New York Sara Dean Roberts 1918 N Street Washington, D. C. Alice Robinson 470 West 144th Street New York City, New York Ik Louise Robertson 1710 Dupont Avenue South Minneapolis, Minnesota Marion Louise Robinson 1470 Beacon Street Brookline, Massachusetts EffiZZl r jZ 86 w § %M3 r Anceline Martha Rogers 50 Lathrop Street West Springfield, Massachusetts Margaret Julia Romer 27 West 11th Street New York City, New York Grace Luene Rogers 742 Fourth Avenue Troy, New York Aimee Rosenbercer 450 Riverside Drive New York City, New York Olivia Mae Rocers 357 Main Street Gloucester, Massachusetts MATHILDE Ruce 79 South Prospect Street Millers Falls, Massachusetts fTOS l A 87 w ? 3m3 r Anna Marie Ryan Thorold, Ontario, Canada Dorothea Helen Sanjiyan Springfield, Massachusetts Katherine Anna Ryan 664 Chestnut Street Springfield, Massachusetts Vivian Savacool 161 River Road Manchester, New Hampshire Katherine Hamlin Sanford 34 Willow Street Waterbury, Connecticut Ruth Evelyn Scheibler 327 Alexander Street Greensburg, Pennsylvania !k wmrn v, s w g l ofe ; r Paula Jeanette Schlegel 729 Western Avenue Davenport, Iowa IONE E. ScHOLL Grandview Terrace Tenafly, New Jersey Margaret Schneider Bartow, Florida Gertrude Marion Schwartz 14 Westbourne Parkway Hartford, Connecticut Caroline Eleanor Schofield 193 Hazel Avenue Highland Park, Illinois Eleanor Virginia Scofield Morenci, Michigan ck GUZ 89 Jk w g f Ol @A Abigail Farwell Scott 974 Pleasant Street Worcester, Massachusetts Alice Darrow Shaw 7 Webster Street Middleboro, Massachusetts Elizabeth McConway Scoville 83 Third Avenue Northampton, Massachusetts Blanche Burckhardt Shaw 1306 Park Avenue Indianapolis, Indiana Estelle Ann Scroggie 45 Tremont Street New London, Connecticut Gladys Mary Shea 247 Central Street Manchester, New Hampshire Ik ITOCT r 90 J w fta Anna Toole Sheedy 3 Forestdale Road Worcester, Massachusetts Louise Charlotte Silber Highland Park, Illinois Ellen Elizabeth Sheehan 22 Fulton Street Fitchburg, Massachusetts Celia Helen Silberman 668 Madison Avenue Albany, New York Lenore Danbrook Shimer 427 Avenue C Bethlehem, Pennsylvania Helena Nettie Silberstein 2328 East Third Street Duluth, Minnesota L rom a 91 w g ftMal Elsie Juel Silver 421 Albany Avenue Hartford, Connecticut Catherine Smith 3616 Holmes Street Kansas City, Missouri Louise Margaret Skinner 60 Harrison Avenue Northampton, Massachusetts Elizabeth F. Smith 1520 Market Avenue North Canton, Ohio Muriel Slawson 7 Lyo n Place White Plains, New York Harriet Maria Smith 31 Pleasant Street Leicester, Massachusetts k jSH nnreng § = A 92 w g fciiclfe Helen Amy Smith 52 Church Street White Plains, New York Mary Katherine Smith Rushford, Minnesota Helen Atkinson Smith 1116 Westover Avenue Norfolk, Virginia Nathalie Smith Howland Court New Bedford, Massachusetts Helen Dana Smith South Side Charleston, West Virginia Pearl Lucile Smith Granby, Massachusetts !k wmm j, Jk w g f p Alice Davenport Snyder 107 West Main Street Norwalk, Ohio Marion Parker Stacey 1312 Church Street Evanston, Illinois Maxine Fullmer Spengler 2019 East First Street Duluth, Minnesota Bernadette Stack 1 5 Cottage Place Utica, New York Isabel Skillman Stabler 3017 Cambridge Place Washington, D. C. Mary Elizabeth Stanton 1 5 Thomas Street Springfield, Massachusetts k = ®[ 94 d w feUife Dorothy Jean Staples 43 Longfellow Terrace Springfield, Massachusetts Eleanor Muncer Steele 426 Main Street Herkimer, New York Helen Stearns 417 Eagle Street Dunkirk, New York Regine Johanna Steinberger 105 Congress Street Bradford, Pennsylvania Elizabeth S. Stedman 1503 Greenleaf Avenue Chicago, Illinois Helen Vail Stenger 757 Franklin Street Denver, Colorado k D § mimw A V Jf g f aj g Thalia Stetson 134 South Main Street Middleboro, Massachusetts E. Frances Stilwell 700 North McKean Street Butler, Pennsylvania Carolyn Mathilda Stewart 2 Kay Street Newport, Rhode Island Sadye Natalie Stone 390 Belmont Street Brockton, Massachusetts Ethelinda Stewart Webster, Massachusetts Marabeth Storrs 360 Farmington Avenue Hartford, Connecticut k 96 A w fLM21 (5 Margaret Storrs 315 Whitney Avenue New Haven, Connecticut Mabel Thelma Studebaker 426 East Tenth Street Erie, Pennsylvania Claire Strauss 5317 University Avenue Chicago, Illinois Helen Irene Sullivan 3520 Holmes Street Kansas City, Missouri Elizabeth Stuckslager Lisbon, Iowa Mary Tehan Sullivan 16 Washington Street Westneld, Massachusetts !k i§JBIffiZ2g r Ja 97 w no Marian Adele Swayze 73 Forest Street Stamford, Connecticut Janice Louise Taggart 42 North Prospect Street Burlington, Vermont Virginia Louise Swift 14 Clyfton Street Plymouth, Massachusetts Louise Taggart 142 Chambers Street Newburgh, New York Dorothy Grace Swisher 443 Hudson Avenue Newark, Ohio Miriam Taggart Newbury, Vermont Ik enm© A 98 w Tsg jilEil gjr Dorothy Merrill Taylor Hackettstown, New Jersey Eugenie Terek Washington Depot, Connecticut Helen Campbell Taylor Lake Forest, Illinois Olivia Billings Terrell Riverhead Long Island, New York Julie Bulkley Taylor 455 West Seventh Street Plainfield, New Jersey Eva Sofie Thompson 149 Williamson Avenue Bloomfield, New Jersey E [ffi22] ®r Ja 99 ¥ S JtM r Marian Lowell Thorndike Riverdale-on-Hudson New York Elizabeth Howard Tillinchast Hope Valley, Rhode Island Sara Eleanore Thorp 326 Maple Avenue Edgewood, Pennsylvania Margaret Frances Toan 865 West Exchange Street Akron, Ohio Margaret Tjldsley Spuyten Duyvil, New York Marian Louise Townsend 1464 Cohassett Avenue Lakewood, Ohio BUS 100 A w m r Susan Francis Tracy 444 Greenleaf Avenue Glencoe, Illinois Margaret Northcote Tucker Skaneateles, New York Darthea Hebard Trickev 16 Pilgrim Road Waban, Massachusetts Bessie Tulloch 423 Elizabeth Street Odgensburg, New York Anna McCobb Trott 982 High Street Bath, Maine Elizabeth M. Tuttle 222 College Street Middletown, Connecticut k D QHZ2I 101 Ja w g ft fe Charlotte Alice Twichell Mapleton, North Dakota Lois May Velde 702 South Fourth Street Pekin, Illinois Frances Isabel Upham Portsmouth, New Hampshire Helen Wakefield 2328 First Avenue Spokane, Washington Ik Frances Sacket deValin Cape Vincent, New York Jeanette Hale Wales 1236 North Pennsylvania Street Indianapolis, Indiana wmm v? A Krj w g f g Anne Louise Walsh 300 Roseville Avenue Newark, New Jersey Virginia Ward 232 Morris Avenue Grand Rapids, Michigan Beatrice L. Walton 78 Elm Avenue Flushing, New York Elisabeth Violet Wark 450 East 16th Street Brooklyn, New York k Margaret Henshaw Ward 127 Centre Street Milton, Massachusetts Marian Watkins 209 Chestnut Street New Bedford, Massachusetts IMTB Ja 1 1 13 w g fsfc Polly Dillingham Weaver 520 16th Avenue Spokane, Washington Una Vircinia Whitehurst 58 Woodland Avenue Summit, New Jersey Marion Ethel White North Stonington, Connecticut Jean Whiting 373 Parkside Avenue Brooklyn, New York Helen Margaret Whitehill Spink Arms Apartments Indianapolis, Indiana Gertrude Rees Whitmore 240 Prospect Avenue Mount Vernon, New York Lk s roara 3 J 104 w g fLa Marion Helen Whittemore 24 Crescent Street Newport, New Hampshire Dorothy Grace Williams 171 Mullin Street Watertown, New York Florence Caroline Wilder R. F. D. Box 70 Sterling Junction, Massachusetts Jessie Macdonald Wilson 64 Brattle Road Princeton, New Jersey Myrna Wilderson Latonia, Ohio June Wilson 1044 Whittle Avenue Olney, Illinois tk QH221 105 £a - w g f afe Laura Elizabeth Wilson 9 North 16th Street East Orange, New Jersey Greta Wood Webster Avenue Bangor, Maine Katharine Winchester Fairfield, Connecticut Aileen Woodman 8 Trafalgar Place, Montreal Province of Quebec, Canada Gertrude Windisch 210 Glenmary Avenue Cincinnati, Ohio Elizabeth Allen Woodson Georgetown, Kentucky = g[ A Kit; w flg Clarice Runyan Younc 343 Fairmounl Avenue Jersey City, New Jersey Myra J. Zeiser 82 Carey Avenue Wiikes-Barre, Pennsylvania Miriam Noble Zabriskie Maplewood, New Jersey Esther Ziskind 75 Gales Street Lowell, Massachusetts Constance Louise Zonne 910 Mount Curve Minneapolis, Minnesota 0HZ21 W A : w $ 3 r 3wx n iKnnberfl Aaron, Bernice Constance Acer, Charlotte Peck Acuff, Elizabeth Cooper Admas, Emily Marion Adams, Rachel Townsend Allen, Beatrice Sterling Allen, Ruth Emily Anderson, Marjone Mohala Annett, Ruth Raymond Armstrong, Adelaide Williams Atkinson, Helen Faris Babbitt, Lelia Phinette Backus, Georgia Alden Bame, Pauline Millerton Barchus, Iona Barker, Maud Frances Barrett, Virginia Bernice Bartlett, Hilda Elizabeth Bartlett, Natalie Bassett, Margaret Byrd Begg, Margaret Louise Beiderbecke, Gretchen Seiffert Bellows, Marjone Harlow Benjamin, Alice Julie Benninghoff, Mary Leola Benson, Caroline Ruth Blodgett, Ruth Emily Bower, Ada Louise Bradish, Rachel Hall Breed, Mary Paulding Brenner, Lucille Claire Breuer, Camilla Brooks, Dorothy Eleanor Brown, Margaret Kinghorn Bryson, Grace Louise Burgess, Viola Elizabeth Burner, Florence Anderson Buttolph, Dorothy Meriam Cady, Florence Louise Canfield, Catherine Flavia Carlile, Dorothea Carlson, Marguerite Eleanore Carroll, Jean Mcintosh Cary, Catharine Jennie Center, Dorothy Louise Chaffee, Edith Chalmers, Ruth Stirling Chapman, Dorothy Child, Janet Humphreyville Clark, Caroline Bayard Clark, Thalia Clifford, Nora Margaret Cohn, Marjorie Betty Coleman, Harriet Loomis Collier, Helen Adam Collins, Margaret Ruth Coon, Marion Reba Cooper, Harriet Frances Corwin, Madeleine Cottrell, Gundneda Culley, Charlotte Davis, Florens Raymer Denison, Emma Frances Dent, Elizabeth Haralson Dinwidde, Emily Bledsoe Dodge, Winifred Marianne Dorsey, Margaret Banks Driver, Margaret Elsie Ducey, Elizabeth Carney Dulley, Dorothy Wood Duffield, Susan Cornelia Duncan, Elizabeth Allen Ehrlich, Dorothy Olive Faries, Marie Louise Weightman Faucett, Rachel Fuller Fenn, Margaretta Elizabeth Ferguson, Dorothy Montague Fisher, Constance Graeme Fitz-Hugh, Virginia Foster, Ellen Frances Foster, Virginia Fowler, Adda Florence Foxon, Fern Iola France, Helen Holford Frye, Zola Lorena Geiger, Jeanne Glasgow, Helen Jean Goldberg, Carolyn Jesse Goltman, Hannah Louise Goodall, Eleanor Josephine Goodhue, Elizabe:h Goodwin, Evelyn Addie Gorton, Margaret Greer, Esther Belle Griswold, Emily Kimball Guettel, Stella Helen Guntzer, Germaine Agatha Hager, Madeleine Hall, Marjorie Hamblin, Marion Laurette Hamilton, Christabel Giles Hanan, Ethel Hanan, Virginia Hanson, Edna M. Harmon, Helen Harrison, Elizabeth Haskins, Polly Burr Hay, Dorothy Henricksen, Mildred Kathryn Hillyer, Marion Hirshkeimer, Dora Janice Hiss, Mildred Cushin Hitchcock, Deborah Victoria Hixson, Marie Elizabeth Holmes, Elizabeth Blodgett Hoyt, Maud Adelaide Hunt, Marion Juliet Jeffrey, Eloise Selling Johnesse, Adaline Emily Johnson, Maybelle Maude Jordan, Irene Crosby Kahn, Marjorie Ruth Kapff, Eleanore Antoinette Kellogg, Irene Kondolf, Louise Huntington Lamont, Wilhelmina Helena Landman, Bessie Langley, Marcia Lauter, Elfreda Elizabeth D g I F 111!) Jk w § ftM!3 f Leckie, Jeanette Katherme Leiter, Hazel Belle Lewis, Ruth Anne Llewellyn, Elizabeth Mary Lockhart, Roberta Louise Lohman, Anna Elsa Lovell, Ruth Lyon, Katharine Louise McArdle, Marion Evelyn McCarthy, Rita Louise McFadden, Athena Roberta McLeary, Elthea McNair, Elizabeth Mabry, Hope Maher, Marjone Louise Maley, Jocelyn Malnek, Janet Matthews, Eleanor Patricia Merrill, Charlotte Snow Metcalfe, Louise Learned Meyer, Catherine Marie Miller, Margaret Elizabeth Miller, Martha Grace Minnock, Mary Dorothea Mitchell, Alice Catharine Mitchell, Frances Mitchell, Margaret MacKenzie Molloy, Anne Shirley Montgomery, Grace Elizabeth Morris, Virginia Thacher Mosely, Helen Norton Moses, Margaret Moss, Hedwig Mulliken, Katherme Freeman Munce, Lucy Mary Mvers, Isabel Grace Naftel, Lucy Price Neely, Helen Northam, Neola Elizabeth Nourse, Evelyn Oberman, Maud Elizabeth O ' Leary, Helen Owen Olson, Eleanor Helen Olwin, Virginia Ruth Paine, Virginia Parker, Helen Wilson Parks, Eleanor Chapin Patterson, Marjorie Geraldine Patton, Adele Cults Pegram, Jean Forsythe Perkins, Annette Pittenger, Minerva Caroline Pudrith, Adele Louise Pye, Helen Elizabeth Randle, Dorothy Davies Ranney, Judith Rehm, Wilhelmine Anna Reid, Ruth Rice, Katherine Field Rihbany, Marguerite Rose Ringwalt, Elizabeth Hetherton Roberts, Dorothy Allen Roberts, Margaret Clark Robertson, Eva Ruth Schachner, Rosalie Claire Scheuer, Alice Clare Schloss, Ruth Schurman, Catherine Forrest Seaver, Elizabeth Seelye, Rebecca Seidman, Lynette Sheffield, Katharine Ray Shoemaker, Mary Harriett Sipe, Helen Catharine Smith, Bodiene Smith, Eleanor Pinney Smith, Gladys Louise Smith, Stella Marguerite Snow, Ina Mabel Spe ncer, Rowena Mumford Steer, Dariel Frances Stimson, Christine Stowell, Marion Hubbard Taber, Marie Taff, Imelda Agnes Thoman, Candace Thompson, Helen Louise Thompson, Jane Estelle Tredway, Mary Leslie Wadsworth, Dorothy Wakefield, Florence Mabel Walters, Harriette Ward, Esther Marian Wardwell, Regina Warren, Peace Eldridge Webb, Elizabeth Hope Webb, Louise Graham Weekes, Estelle Weil, Janice White, Frances Elizabeth Weiting, Kathryn Boshart Williams. Mildred Ruth Willis, Altana Barnum Wilson, Sarah Irma Winter, Pauline Winton, Margaret Ayrault Wolfenden, Lorna Maire Wolverton, Harriet Crosby Woods, Frances Elizabeth Zuraw, Anna Harriet [ W IK) A iffl m w § S f ®a 1923 22 ' s thought itself near perfection In every collegiate direction. We felt college never Could be quite so clever When our class should sever Connection. But we leave without any temerity In view of this absolute verity: We leave an alarming- Ly able and charming And wholly disarming Posterity. To describe 23 ' s fascination Would be quite a year ' s occupation. Your wholly superior Ex — and — interior Preclude deterior- Ation. 9, vm n JL 112 w g f ofe . ymm v, J 113 i|[|]]@7= ©0 1924 To all the world we will wager that few have seen Such a remarkable sister as you have been. It ' s hard to pick out what in you we most adored, But in the first place, you see, we both boast a Ward. They are what kept us from being iniquitous. You ' ve been dramatic, athletic, ubiquitous ; One of the greatest of pleasures you ' ve brung to us Was when you spurned ' 21 and then sung to us! Your sensible faces have been most inspiring; Your patience at taking advice was untiring. All in all, ' 24, you ' re what we long to be — So we subscribe ourselves Yours to eternity. k s rosra A 114 w j r k A 115 w § ftM2fe rf So 1925 Four years have slipped away, It seems the other day That we were Freshmen too, And looking much like you. One ' s breathless at the thought Of knowledge we ' ve been taught — It gives one ' s heart a turn At things you ' ll have to learn. When you reach Senior year There ' ll be more Freshmen here — Love them, you can ' t contrive, As we ' ve loved you — Twenty-five. D s vmm 116 w MS r i§,m2K 117 A w g fEgife g mttlj QlnUrge (Eounrtl Eleanor Miller President Eleanor Miller (Eounctl ifflmbrrH Eleanor Miller Eleanor Hoyt SENIOR YEAR Frona Brooks Jeannette Wales Alice Jenckes JUNIOR YEAR Harriet Wolverton (Resigned) Margaret Ward Virginia Conklin Isabel Conklin SOPHOMORE YEAR Eleanor Miller Eleanor Hoyt FRESHMAN YEAR Charlotte MacDougall rk = § ®r IV.) A w § RM f IfOUH? of SSeprpfientattbra WfCutrs Camilla Low President Laura Cabot Vice-President Catherine Smith Member of Judicial Board Camilla Low BmiBP of Steprpflentattupa Junior Year Jane Arms Doris Babson Esther Baehr Ruth Barnes Dorothy Bedworth Elizabeth Bixler Constance Boyer Camilla Breuer Vera Call Dorothy Chapman Virginia Conklin Margaret Cullinan Gladys Dingledine Charlotte Dorian Dorothy Dreyfuss Sarah Freedman Esther Gaylord Ruth Joshel Ruth Katsh Helen Leeming Camilla Low Elizabeth Lipsey Katherine Miller Marie Miller Janice Ozias Alice Robinson Pearl Smith Marion Stacey Julie Taylor Marion White Una Whitehurst Jessie Wilson Katherine Winchester Aileen Woodman Clarice Young EH22 A 1 20 w g f fe Sjouhp af jBeptesetttaittipa Senior Year Jane Arms Doris Babson Dorothy Bartruff Dorothy Bedworth Louise Blaisdell Beatrice Byram Laura Cabot Dorothy Chase Mary Coolidge Phyllis Creasey Lucile Darton Mary Dixon Edith Donnell Huldah Doran Margaret Ford Elizabeth French Helen French Ruth Guggenheim Dorothy Hall Helen Harper Ruth Harrington Barbara Harrison Margaret Hinckley Janette Holmes Dorothy Jenks Ruth Johnson Esther Jones Margaret Kemp Katherine Lacey Evelyn Lawley Marion Leary Helen Leeming Emma Lincoln Mary Long Camilla Low Dorothy MacDonald Jean MacDonald Nellie MacLachlan Elizabeth Marmon Barbara McKay Ruth Murray Emily Reed Mathilde Rehm Katherine Sanford Catherine Smith Marion Swayze Julie Taylor Susan Tracey Bessie Tulloch Jean Whiting Marion Whittemore Katherine Winchester Elizabeth Woodson E vmm n A 121 A© fta Aufinrtattmt fur OIlinBitatt Hlork Eleanor Hoyt Senior Officers Eleanor Hoyt . Thalia Stetson President Vice-President Junior Officers Camilla Low . Margaret Kreglow Eleanor Hoyt . Treasurer Chairman of Extension Department . Chairman of World Fellowship Sophomore Year Margaret Ward Secretary ik Student Volunteers Rhoda Orm Elizabeth Cairns Margaret Ward Evelyn Gray Eleanor Hoyt mTB V7 122 A w ig f fe S. C. A. C. W. Cabinet (H. A. (E. W. (Eabutrt CHAIRMEN OF DEPARTMENTS AND COMMITTEES Religious Service and Bible Study World Fellowship Social Committee Publicity .... Head Representative Community Service Association President of Student Volunteers Margaret Ward Alice Chapman Isabel Stabler Evelyn Gray Catherine Smith Miriam Buncher Elizabeth Cairns k (HZ2I 123 J w MR t g tutottt Abtoera Hannah Abraham Marjorie Adams Cornelia Ahl Mildred Alfred Pauline Ames Jane Arms Mildred Ball Eleanor Bachman Esther Baehr Ruth Barnes Madeleine Baxter Dorothy Bedworth Doris Benedict Harriet Bergtold Joanna Beyer Elizabeth Bixler Beth Bohning Dorothy Bourne Priscilla Boyce Constance Boyer Ernestine Bradford Prona Brooks Katherine Brosnahan Lois Brown Dorris Bryant Miriam Buncher Charlotte Butler Beatrice Byram Laura Cabot Elizabeth Cairns Vera Call Alice Chapman Dorothy Chase Eleanor Child Carita Clark Evelyn Clarke Sarah M. Clarke Isabel Conklin Virginia Conklin Ruth Cooper Hilda Couch Adelaide Cozzens Marjorie Crandell Phyllis Creasey Dorothy Crydenwise Margaret Cullinan Helen Cunningham Flora Davidson Florence Denison Helen DeGroat Mary Dickson Priscilla Dimick Ruth Dimick Gladys Dingledine Jane Dinsmore Edith Donnell Elizabeth Donnell Charlotte Dorian Huldah Doron Marion Downey Faith Dudgeon Barbara Eaton Eleanor Evans Ruth Ferguson Caroline Fisher Doris Flather Margaret Ford Margaret Franks Elinor French Edith Fuller Helen Fyke Margaret Gabel Grace Gafford Esther Gaylord Katherine Gaylord Virginia Giles Dorothy Gleason Sophie Gordon Charlotte Gower Evelyn Gray Elizabeth Greer Ruth Guggenheim Frances Guild Ardelia Hall Helen Hall Frances Harmon Isabel Harper Barbara Harrison Doris Harrison Katharine Hasson Frances Hause Sophie Henker Marion Hillhouse Marion Himmelsbach Margarette Hines Margaret Hitchcock A. Beryl Hobson Dorothy Hogan Margaret Hopkins Katherine Howland Eleanor Hoyt Margaret Humphrey Marion Hunt Mary Frances Hunt Esther Irving Ruth Irwin Harriet Jacobus Erika Jauch Alice Jenckes Dorothy Jenks Josephine Jenks Frances Johnson Ruth K. Johnson Anne Johnston Esther Jones Margaret Jones Ruth Joshel Helen Kellogg Margaret Kemp Rachel Keniston Hazel King Louise Kingsley Catherine Knowles Margaret Kreglow Dorothy Kudlich Katherine Lacey Ilda Langdon Lois Ledbetter Helen Leeming Louise Lieber Elizabeth Lipsey Anne Lochhead Evelyn Loetscher Camilla Low Kathryn Lyman Nancy McCullough Athena McFadden Barbara McKay Dorothy Mac-Donald Marcia MacDonald Charlotte MacDougall Nellie MacLachlan Margaret MacLean Katherine Macomber Jean MacTarnaghan Harriet Marsh Mildred Mason Jane Massie Sylvia Meltzer Katherine Merrill Elvira Miller Eleanor Miller Katherine Miller Katherine McC. Miller Louise Miller Margaret Miller Marjorie Morrison Esther Moss Margaret E. Moulton Catherine Murray Elizabeth Neilon Evelyn Nelson Ruth Alice Norman Dorothea Nourse Helen O ' Reilly Mabelle Orleman Rhode Orme Willa Orr Janice Ozias Elizabeth Patek Katherine Peek Margaret Pendleton Anna Pennypacker Eleanor Phillips Gladys Platner Achsa Powell Eleanor Rau Hope Rawson Emily Reed Virginia Reed Matilde Rehm Wilhelmine Rehm Irma Rich Gerda Richards Alice Richardson Sara Dean Roberts Ruth Robeson Alice Robinson G. Luene Rogers Olivia Rogers Anna Ryan Dorothea Sanjiyan Margaret Schneider Caroline Schofield Alice Shaw Ellen Sheehan Helena Silberstein Muriel Slawson Catherine Smith Harriet Smith Helen Amy Smith Pearl Smith Alice Snyder Maxine Spengler Marion Stacey Isabel Stabler Bernadette Stack Helen Stearns Eleanor Steele Dariel Steer Thalia Stetson Marabeth Storrs Margaret Storrs Claire Strauss Marian Swayze I meld a Taff Janice Taggart Louisa Taggart Julie Taylor Marian Thorndike Susan Tracy Dorothea Trickey Anna Trott Margaret Tucker Bessie Tulloch Frances Upham Frances deValin Jeanette Wales Beatrice Walton Margaret Ward Virginia Ward Marian Watkitis Pollv Weaver Helen Whitehill Una Whitehurst Jean Whiting Gertrude Whitmore Marion Whittemore Florence Wilder Katherine AVin Chester Jessie Wilson Gertrude Windisch Harriet Wolverton Greta Wood Aileen Woodman Elizabeth Woodson Clarice Young Miriam Zabriskie 3ox § tittont0 Entering uritlj Aduattrpfc § tatt tng Harriet Bergtold Constance Boyer Alice Chapman Dorothy Chase Carita Clark Isabel Conklin Elizabeth Crain Dorothy Crydenwise Helen DeGroat Marion Downey K. Marie Fischer Charlotte Gower Margaret Hackett Eleanor Hoyt Dorothy Jenks Ruth Katsh Margaret Kreglow Naomi Laucheimer Elizabeth Lipsey Esther Moss Rhode Orme Luene Rogers Isabel Stabler Margaret Ward rk WTT Q? Ja vi w s $m3 r Marjone Adams Elizabeth Alexander Harriet Bergtold Constance Boyer Elizabeth Brooke Frona Brooks Miriam Buncher Laura Cabot Alice Chapman Carita Clark Virginia Conklin Helen DeGroat Florence Denison Ruth Dimick Jane Dinsmore Elizabeth Cairns Evelyn Gray Jeanne Geiger tlb?r Say BrlrgateH Edith Donnell Huldah Doron Eleanor Evans Katherine Gaylord Virginia Giles Edith Harris Polly Haskins Eleanor Hoyt Alice Jenckes Frances Johnson Anne Johnston Margaret Jones Margaret Kreglow Florence Leopold Camilla Low Charlotte MacDougall Harriet Marsh Eleanor Miller Katharine Marie Miller Esther Moss Rhoda Orme Anna Pennypacker Ruth Robeson Matilde Ruge Catherine Smith Isabel Stabler Margaret Storrs Thalia Stetson F ranees Upham Margaret Ward Marion Whittemore 1? b Malm b Sfbgatra Eleanor Hoyt Camilla Low Janice Ozias Eleanor Steele Margaret Ward BBEZZ r A SHMAN YEA w § ftM2fe jj- ifosljman f par Charlotte MacDougall OFFICERS President Ch arlotte MacDougall Vice-President ...... Harriet Wolverton Treasurer ....... . Laura Cabot Secretary ....... Beatrice Harvey Song Leader ....... Constance Boyer Assistant Song Leader ..... . Jean Whiting CHAIRMEN OF COMMITTEES ' Ruth Beveridge Motto . Doris Flather Song Elizabeth Donnell RALLY DAY Decorations — Lois Brown Ribbons- -Marion Thorndike Class Color — Red Class Anima I — Lion l l r 1-2 A w g Sfc J$l • - jfcg MlB? 6 ? HP , P r «M 4b • . iJ8r ■% ? ■■pi, - IMB MM HH H (ttlasfi ijtstnrij, iFrealjman fear In the beginning there was the Flu (without men- tion of which no history can hope to be complete) , and its sister, Quarantine. Shall we lightly forget the latter ' s reign under which our first impression-ful months were spent? Far be it from us, aside from the taboo on shopping (which was good for the purse), and on week-ends in the world at large (which was good for the health), to regret said quarantine which gave us the earliest weeks of our grand entry in which to get acquainted with our incarcerated fellow-flu-avoiders, rather than with our all-too-pressing books. And who would not consider farming — a remunerative and companionable pastime — preferable to a more normal life spent in the breathless pursuit of Hygiene II, Latin (or Greek) and other concomitants of Freshman life? Never having been to a Freshman Frolic, we shed no tears at its postponement, although when the ban was finally lifted we frolicked with the greater abandon. And the one-way traffic system which developed in Seelye and elsewhere to avoid Congestion, Confusion and Contagion, was a memory to cherish in the afterdays when subsequent normalcy brought the impassable jam on the stairs and in the noteroom. And then, as some one has put it, War and quarantine were both really off ; we became for a fleeting hour, the equals of all men, including the academically- gowned Faculty. She who had no white skirt borrowed one, and joined the cele- bration Parade, with a chilly thrill running Marathons up and down her spine, and a feeling that she was E Pluribus Unam in the general rejoicing. Before we had become really accustomed to the music of flapping galoshes, and to fur-coated figures of our friends, Christmas vacation descended upon us, and we upon our relatives. Again the flu spectrally appeared and prolonged our vacation five days beyond its sched- uled close. We returned — and upon our young and unsophisticated minds the burden of approaching Mid - Years weighed not wisely but too well. Most of us survived the ordeal, however, soothed by Organ Vespers and good skating. r A 120 w =v® liIEi1 (ajr We had heard, vaguely, of an affair known as Sophomore Reception, whither, clad in full splendor of evening dress, the Sophomores and Freshmen repaired to shake hands with the Dean. But ' 2 1 , hostesses ever-resourceful and original, de- cided that the wilds of Paradise were more conducive to enjoyment than the mazes of the gym, and thereupon instituted the Ice Carnival, decreeing the boat-house as the place to meet the Deans and class presidents formally ; and, afterwards on the pond, the rest of the Sophomore and Freshman classes informally. Warmish weather produced puddles here and there upon the ice, and the ice creaked ominously ever and anon beneath so many feet — but amid the magic of food and the flash of skates all minor matters were lost sight of. Ensued a period of dullness, when the weather was as a rule unspeakable and dispositions in proportion. The tedium was pleasantly broken, however, by Rally Day. We were impressed by the multitude of white clothes and class ribbons no less than by the Faculty in full array — for, as aforementioned, we had seen the academic robes, but this was our first glimpse of Ourselves, all 777 of us, Smith ' s largest entering class, in massed numbers ! We sat through the morning program with one eye on the speaker and the other on the nearest exit, calculating our chances of being able to reach the gym, through all the swarm of girls and guests, in time to get a front-rank place for the rally. Once there, we sang, diffidently but with our wonted enthusiasm, our first class song. And in the afternoon ours was inordinate pride in being Evens, as we cheered the invincible and superior basketball of our valiant sister class. Then came Spring Vacation, in the midst of weeks of slush, and when, spring- clad ourselves, we returned to Hamp, an indefinable, inexplicable, but wholly delightful metamorphosis took place. It did not burst upon us full-fledged — it came shyly (as we had come shyly some months before!) and with faint green and blue mists and blushes. And its name was Spring. Then we knew what people had meant when they had said, Oh, yes, this is all very nice — but wait till you see Spring in Hamp — it ' s different from and more beautiful than any- thing else in the world! We had thought these were mere maundenngs — but now we knew, and we revelled in it and life became an acute pleasure. Step-sings we swarmed to and tried (with no success!) to outdo our loftily superior Sophomore friends. Most of us decided not to help 1919 into the wide, wide world — for that same world was call- ing us too. And with a hectic bound we left our last Final, and boarded the next train for Home, scarcely realizing that we had been away and grown-up ( !) for nine months. Forth we went, broadcast, with plans for next year buzzing in our heads, and a spring- time memory of college in our hearts. Harriet Bergtold Ik BM 130 dk s T liliiite jr opljnmarp f par (Sfitrpra President, Eleanor Miller Vice-President, Jeanette Wales Secretary, Marion Himmelsbach Treasurer, Catherine Smith Song Leader, Elizabeth Bridgers Assistant Song Leader, Elizabeth Donnell Treasurer of Fund, Harriet Wolverton Eleanor Miller Chairmen of Committees sophomore ice carnival General Chairman, Laura Cabot Invitations, Margaret Gabel Music, Phyllis Creasey Entertainment, Charlotte MacDougall Decorations, Sara Dean Roberts Refreshments, Alice Jenckes Costumes, Pauline Ames Grind Bool(, Anne Johnston 1920 Commencement Rose Committee, Charlotte MacDougall Push Committee, Katherine Murray !k Buza 132 w (SUms piston}, g ' npljnmnrp f ?ar As Freshmen we had been happy nobodies with innumerable upper classmen to show us how we ought to behave, and to patronize us generally. But now at last we were Sophomores and we could assume some of the dignity and wisdom that had seemed so unattainable the year before. Growing into a Sophomore is like going into your ' teens. In one great leap you jump from infancy into life. As we stepped off the train ready for our second year of college life we were full of the importance of this new exis:ence that had been thrust on us. Our suitcases were loaded down with the things that only experience and never a Freshman Bible can teach you to bring. We wanted to find our new sisters and give them lots of advice and be superior and kind to them in payment of old scores. We wanted to hug everyone we saw and tell them all what a wonderful place Smith was for fear they ' d forgotten over the vacation. We were happy and independent as only Sophomores can be. It took us very few scrambling hours to get settled and to put on the sport clothes which were such an impressive sign of our sophistication. And off we went, chattering our way down Main Street in search of blotters and desk calendars and ferns (which experience had not taught us to leave alone). We shouted to each other bromidically that it was great to be back. And indeed, it was! The next morning, Freshmen in hand, we trotted off to hear the welcome and the good advice of the President and found at chapel that we were to have the great joy of pointing out the Faculty on the platform to our young charges. This was a treat quite new to us and we made the most of it. President Neilson encouraged us in our good resolutions for the year by reminding us that we had no war to attract our attention outside of all-sufficient Northampton. This year was to be nothing but plain sailing and steady work (though we all privately sent up a little prayer that there be no quarantine to enforce it). Our ambitions were further fired by our honor roll which was read in chapel some weeks later. With such possi- bilities how could we fail to make ourselves the highest class in college? This, reckoning with the chosen brains of the Freshman class! However, we soon found there were more than good resolutions in the world. It took us a while to realize our liberty, but when we did grasp the situation there was not a trial sign posted that 1922 didn ' t put her name on. In 1920s Dramatic Association we found much opportunity for displaying our talents. The fall production called upon us for fairies, slaves, and duelling poets, while later in the spring we furnished a court with dazzling beauties and a black-browed villain. Then there were departmental clubs which urged us to join and those papers which we weren ' t already helping to edit soon discovered our value and offered us positions. So highly prized were we that the Monthly broke all precedent and put three of our number on the board. After the first great burst of energy stored up by a year of watching upper classmen play with the toys we wanted we calmed down a bit and looked beyond our own precious vigorous class. We took time to sing some Even songs at the Fall Field Day which was added for the first time to the business of autumn, and to pat our sister class on the back when she came off victorious. We hoped we would be athletes too when we grew up. fTO l Of A 133 w m!R S Then came Armistice Day. After the splendid swaying mass of enthusiasm that we had been a part of just a year before we were a bit afraid to face the crowded John M. Greene for fear it could not do justice to the occasion again. But gradually the war songs uncovered the emotion which had been hidden for a year under little things. And there were poems read to us in great quietness by the President. He chose all our favorites and read them as well as we had hoped to hear them. So we thanked him to ourselves and decided that perhaps there were other ways to celebrate than the one we chose last year. There was the Fund, of course, over and around everything. There were continual debates as to the economic possibilities of one nickel which Sue paid Jane for blacking her shoes and Jane paid back to Sue for a sandwich. Each claimed it as going towards her pledge and everyone be- came involved in the tangle. During Christmas vacation we tackled all our millionaire friends to extract a few stray pennies from their pockets. Our Christmas presents from the Dean — the four million dollar bags — we flaunted in everyone ' s faces. Our Ice Carnival was inducement enough to bring us back from this vacation filled not en- tirely with raising money. Here we played with our younger sisters (some of us clumsily enough) and showed them some of the joys that Alice would have had, had her Wonderland been Paradise. And in the end we gave ourselves to advertise the Fund and haunted the movies afterwards to find out how well we skated on a movie screen. Then mid-years followed, this year not such an unalloyed mass of dates and conjugations. Experience had taught us that a judicious mixture of breakfast parties and movies (alas, there was no longer the Municipal Theatre!) along with the other necessities of life was advisable. We tried to teach the Fresh- men that Livy was better for a little fresh air and that drivers of delivery wagons are surprisingly agreeable about hitches, but it was of no avail. Live and learn, we sighed happily as we kicked our way through the snow and over the hill to the fruit farm. With exams safely behind us we turned all our attention to Rally Day. It was exciting enough the first time we saw it. We never suspected that anything half as exhilarating nor half as packed full of college existed. We had been proud to see ourselves enough a part of Smith to sit in white and red in the gallery of John M. Greene in the morning and to cheer outside the gym in the afternoon. But this year we were part of it all. We got tickets to everything and even contributed our share to the evening with a bewildering orchestra and a musical comedy from which Nobody soon became immortal. Winter was soon over and the snow began to melt and the ivy grew green over the brick. On the Libe the bunches of wistaria grew full and perfumed. The President ' s new house which had been such a ' pleasant place for chatter and exploring was shut to the outsider and only a lucky few were given a last glimpse over it with Allan as a careful guide. We began thinking of bats and sings, our ardor nothing dampened by ceaseless outpourings from heaven. But all too soon these also were things of the past and Commencement had come with its burden of Sophomore cares, — and Sophomore sorrows. For after all what class can ever take the place of those superior beings who first smiled at us across the gym floor at Frolic and told us they ' d give us advice, but never bothered us with anything but friendship? We haunted the Academy to glimpse the happy painted faces of the cavaliers of Verona and on Saturday night we serenaded until we were hoarse and the curtain shut us away from the festive supper party on the stage. Then there was the marvel of illumination night with a full moon and the elm trees swinging soft bubbles of light. A close rival to this was Mr. McCallum ' s garden party. This was only for the lucky few (or were they unlucky?) who were graduating, but the rest of us could watch the lights from the far shore and hear Miss Dale ' s voice across the water. So while Commencement seemed a happy time we were glad it was not too near for us. The past gave us the pleasant memories of gaielies and soberness and beauties only recognized with the half-knowledge of adolescence. Next year we would be Juniors — upper classmen. We would be happy, yes. But after all there was something in the first joyful realization of ourselves that we would not find again. Still, as long as we could not be Sophomores again, we were ready to try the next year to see what it would bring. ANNE H. JOHNSTON. rk m A a 134 J J NIOD YEA w © n fe dhmtnr f far Harriet Wolverton Virginia Conklin Officers President — Harriet Wolverton Virginia Conklin Vice-President — Eleanor Hoyt Secretary — Virginia Conklin Treasurer — Katherine Murray Song Leader — Elizabeth Donnell Assistant Song Leader — Jean Whiting Chairman of Fund — Harriet Wolverton Chairmen of Committees rally day Decorations — Helen Carroll Ribbons — Miriam Zabriskie Stunt — Isabel Conklin JUNIOR FROLIC General Chairman — Charlotte MacDougall Stunk — Clarice Young Invitations — Margaret Jones Refreshments — Dorothy Benson Decorations — Edith Donnell Resigned C S W Jk 136 w g fsfe ilmrior (Olaflfi ijifitnry When Twenty-Two returned to pass The talked-of Junior year, She found herself the only really — Happy person here: The freshmen all were homesick ; The seniors all were blue From chorusing The last, last time With everything they ' d do. The sophomores were too busy Being Taken In, and Trying, To perch upon their Reputations And attempt high flying . . . But Twenty-Two was running things And if she missed Surprise, At least she knew that she was very Charming, although wise. She found her young advisees And then got to the bottom Of what they needed, when, and how- And then, I think, forgot ' em. She took her midyears gracefully, And from their bended knees Her teachers gave her thanks with five Phi Beta Kappa keys. On Rally Day she stood beneath Her lion in the gym. And tried to roar (to Twenty-One) As best befitted him, But, overcome by sentiment, And love, and deep respect, She dropped her voice into the lilting Darky dialect. But in the afternoon, at eighty Minutes after one, She out-basketballed the haughty team Of Nineteen Twenty-One. And then her voice, from dulcet tones, Regained its self-possession, And screeched to celebrate the third Odd Jefeat in succession ! [ffl221 A 137 w g f a] ©r And, later in the evening, When the crowds filled John M. Greene She danced, and sang, and acted out A tragic Hamlet Scene. She Frolic-ed all one evening. With ponderous dignity — (Remember, Twenty-Two ' s the largest Class you ' ll ever see!) And several lonely guests sat in The balcony — and five Or six, who weren ' t invited, were Allowed to leave alive . . . And what they saw was our ancestress, Good Sophia Smith, Inquiring of a medium What we were busy with. To which the medium responded In eleven (?) acts, And plainly showed Sophia all The crude, unvarnished facts. And she, from off the balcony (Attached to fire ropes) Sang, with an angel chorus, Of her disappointed hopes. And of the loss of Womanly, To gain Dramatic Style . . . (The angels traced it back to S. A. Eliot ' s Greek profile!) Then Twenty-Two with lollypops Her Junior Frolic ended, And said that it was quite as nice As any she ' d attended. One warmish evening, Twenty-Two With plainly-breaking hearts Relieved the Seniors of the Steps (In three harmonious parts.) And then when Spring its sparkling course Along the walks had run out, She packed her trunk and dressed in white, And ushered Twenty-One out. (At least, in all past Class Books This is what the Juniors do — And ' though I can ' t remember, I Suppose that we did, too.) Eleanor Carroll Chilton. 1 Ij$ jf f T siji .1- 1 k • ■• l«-- - Hg { ' rk iSQESa® ■va 138 V ), O g f fe W 3luntor fJrDtmmane Jeanette Wales ..... General Chairman Laura Cabot ...... Head Usher Floor Committees Alice Jenckes, Chairman Virginia Conklin Catherine Smith Elizabeth Greer Helen Stenger Program Committee Dorothy Bryan, Chairman Annette Bardwell Helen Carroll Eleanor Phillips Music Committee Phyllis Creasey, Chairman Constance Boyer Katherine Gaylord Edith Donnell Katherine Peek Invitation Committee Una Whitehurst, Chairman Pauline Ames Margaret Jones Margaret Cullinan Caroline Schofield Frances deValin Refreshment Committee Dorothy Chase Margaret Gabel Marion Himmelsbach Theatre Frances Johnson, Chairman E .y gl Mm,M ito ' 111 mTB ? 139 w Marjorie Adams Janice Aldridge Elizabeth Alexander Mildred Alfred Pauline Ames Jane Arms Ann Axtell Doris Babson Esther Baehr Beatrice Bagg Mildred Ball Annette Bardwell Hilda Barnes Elizabeth Barry Dorothy Bedworth Ruth Bemis Doris Benedict Kathryn Bennett Dorothy Benson Harriet Bergtold Ruth Bsveridge Elizabeth Bixler Louise Blaisdell Beth Bohnmg Dorothy Bourne Constance Boyer Ernestine Bradford Elizabeth Bridgers Frona Brooks Lois Brown Miriam Buncher Zilla Burke Elizabeth Byrne Laura Cabot Elizabeth Cairns Helen Carroll Alice Chapman Dorothy Chase Eleanor Child Eleanor Chilton Anna Claney Carita Clark Catherine Clark Eleanor Clark Virginia Conklin Isabel Conklin Hilda Couch Adelaide Cozzens Elizabeth Crain Phyllis Creasey Dorothy Crydenwise Margaret Cullinan Helen Cunningham Janet Dan forth Lucile Darton Flora Davidson Helen DeGroat Florence Denison Mary Dickson Priscilla Dimick Ruth Dimick Junior laljfra Sk Jane Dinsmore Edith Donnell Elizabeth Donnell Charlotte Dorian Huldah Doron Berenice Dreyfus Faith Dudgeon Barbara Eaton Lily Emerson Eleanor Evans Ellen Ewing Ruth Ferguson Katherine Fischer Myrtle Fish Doris Flather Margaret Franks Edith Fuller Helen Fyke Margaret Gabel Esther Gaylord Katherine Gaylord Elsye Geisenberger Hanna Gichner Virginia Giles Charlotte Gower Elizabeth Greer Ardelia Hall Dorothy Hall Frances Harmon Gladys Harriman Edith Harris Jane Harwood Frances Haskell Virginia Hatfield Frances Hause Helen Hauser Dorothy Higbie Elizabeth Hilliard Marion Himmelsbach Marguerite Hines Janette Holmes Constance Hopkins Katherine Houghton Katherine Howland Eleanor Hoyt Elizabeth Hubbard Margaret Humphrey Mary Frances Hunt Marie Hutchings Esther Irving Ruth Irwin Alice Jenckes Dorothy Jenks Dorothy Johnson Frances Johnson Ruth Johnson Anne Johnston Margaret Jones Ruth Joshel Ruth Katsh Helen Kellogg Margaret Kemp Rachel Keniston Louise Kingsley Margaret Kreglow Julia Kreis Kathryn Kryder Ruth Kyte Naomi Laucheimer Helen Lawton Thelma Ledbetter Barbara Lee Helen Leeming Mildred Leeper Florence Leopold Louise Lieber Julia Lincoln Elizabeth Lipsey Mildred Lovejoy Evelyn Loetscher Camilla Low Kathryn Lyman Nancy McCullough Athena McFadden Barbara McKay Dorothy MacDonald Marcia MacDonald Charlotte MacDougall Nellie MacLachlan Jean MacTarnaghan Katherine Macomber Hel en Main Elizabeth Marmon Harriet Marsh Mildred Mason Jane Massie Eleanor Miller Katherine Miller Marie Miller Marjorie Morrison Esther Moss Catherine Murray Ruth Alice Norman Helen O ' Reilly Rhoda Orme Willa Orr Virginia Otto Janice Ozias Elizabeth Patek Katherine Peek Dorothy Peirce Margaret Pendleton Anna Pennypacker Eleanor Phillips Mary Platner Grace Preble Katherine Pnckett Mildred Purdy Jane Quinby Violet Ramsay Eleanor Rau Virginia Reed Mathilde Rehm Judith Relf Irma Rich Ruth Richards Alice Richardson Dean Roberts Louise Robertson Ruth Robeson Mathilde Ruge Katherine Sanford Dorothy Sanjiyan Margaret Schneider Caroline Schoneld Eleanor Sconeld Abigail Scott Anna Sheedy Louise Silber Helena Silberstein Catherine Smith Harriet Smith Helen Amy Smith Helen Atkinson Smith Helen Dana Smith Nathalie Smith Pearl Smith Maxine Spengler Isabel Stabler Marion Stacey Bernadette Stack Helen Stearns Helen Stenger Thalia Stetson Marabeth Storrs Margaret Storrs Claire Strauss Mary Sullivan Marian Swayze Dorothy Swisher Janice Taggart Louise Taggart Marian Thorndike Margaret Tildsley Elizabeth Tillinghast Louise Townsend Darthea Trickey Elizabeth Tulloch Frances Upham Frances deValin Jeanette Wales Beatrice Walton Margaret Ward Virginia Ward Polly Weaver Una Whitehurst Jean Whiting Marion A hitlemore Katharine Winchester Greta Wood Clarice Young Miriam Zabriskie Constance Zonne A 141 JlNIODfROUC 1 . Prologue — Sophia Smith, Angels, and Spiritualistic Seance West Street and Arnold 2. Chapel Any Morning Albright, Baldwin, Henshaw, 26 Bedford and Leuba Club 3. The Death of Lord Jeff and the Modest College Girls Haven, Elm Street and Hatfield House 4. Dr. Goldthwaite ' s Dress Reforms and Hat Parking at Beckmann ' s Washburn, Hubbard and Wallace 5. Dramatics at Smith . . . Tyler, Morris, Lawrence and Dickinson 6. Clubs in College ....... Belmont and Green 7. A Busy Morning on Main Street . . Clark, Dewey, Chapin, Tucker 8. Graduation . . Northrop, Gillett, 41 Elm Street and Tenney House w g fB1 @r § nttflr Wear Jeannette Wales ©ffinra President, Jeannette Wales Vice-President, Margaret Ward Secretary, Caroline Schofield Treasurer, Greta Wood Historian, Clarice Young Song Leader, Elizabeth Donnell Assistant Song Leader, Jean Whiting Committees senior PINS Chairman, Ruth Katsh Huldah Doron Caroline Fisher Eleanor Evans Miriam Zabriskie CAPS AND GOWNS Chairman, Marian Swayze Marjorie Adams Jane Harwood Mayme Bahin Ethel Stewart Laura Wilson Rally Day Committees chairmen Decorations — Jane Quinby Ribbons — Marion Stacey S tunt — Jean Whiting Shorv — Dorothy MacDonald k t l©r a 144 w M r Qllaaa SjtBtnry, g ntnr § mv ' , : ,. nOf rgS Vi SIH CV.i hs . N SiTvi £ §t ?m fi I ' 22 came back to Hamp for her fourth and last year, (why bring this up so early?) looking just as young as the youngest of ' 25. Girls seemed to her to be getting more and more frivolous all the time — no such sedate and impressive upperclassmen as there used to be; but at this point ' 22 suddenly realized that she constituted the college dig- nity, and surreptitiously pulled her tweed skirt lower, tilted her felt hat at a more conservative angle, slipped on her bone- rimmed glasses, and frowned at the hatless who wandered gaily below Beckmann ' s. She took the least awe-inspiring of her advisees to Frolic, and after the nerve-racking search for and capture of friends, acquaintances, and surprised strangers, she settled back and thoroughly enjoyed herself, feeling her duty well done. What did it matter if other escorts had filled two cards? She had obtained the signature of the Senior Class President, and the sense of achievement which comes to all autograph collectors was hers. After years of happy criticism, ' 22 suddenly discovered that she had nothing more to say. The worm had turned and the Faculty had given her a cut system. On principle she attended all the football games and cut all her classes before and after Mountain Day just to see how it would feel. Someone reminded her that these cuts counted double, and she realized with pain that the new and longed-for reform wasn ' t quite as free and simple as it had seemed at first. However, it marked a step forward in civilization, she reflected sagely. To the college soon came the exciting news that the beauty and brains of Smith in conjunction with the youth and valor of Dartmouth were to decide the fate of Soviet Russia. Upheld by this added dignity accorded her sex, ' 22 pledged her last $10.50 to the fund with pride, putting sternly from her, visions of the two Senior pins that had to be bought. Although the four million dollars !k mrB V? Jh a 145 r v Jr S]( for which she had toi led would not build a swimming pool in her college generation, or house her in that mysterious thing: — a quadrangle, at least she could be a mermaid in the Senior play which would immortalize Paradise, and could run, plaster-dusted over the creaky scaffolding of the new dormitories. Later she was much disappointed to learn that a fish tail would be too expensive, but soon consoled herself with the idea that she could be a beautiful statue in the Winter ' s Tale. The full gravity of her position burst upon her when she listened, in growing discouragement, to the qualities needed for any career and realized that none of these were hers. She filled out the Appointment Bureau slip (or rather slips) witS laborious care, searching vainly in her memory for any possible information to write proudly after Academic Honors if employers did not appreciate her. As next (o the last resort there was always Father ' s Office; and as the last resort — well, you know what the song says about reunions and Prom men, and he had been writing ever since. After painstaking efforts to surprise Miss Benedict with a birthday party, an idea still fondly cherished long after the anniversary had passed, she decided to change it to a Christmas party, and, amid the holiday atmosphere and general gaiety, tried to impress the guest of honor with a small part of what she meant to her class. Having begun to fortify herself a year before, ' 22 simply would not let herself think of any activity or occasion as being her last. Did not every speaker 1 say that college was simply a preparation for the wild, wild world? Nevertheless she fell with tooth and nail upon any of the poor unfortunates who mentioned that they would be glad to leave, and she wept a silent and private tear whenever she thought what she would be without college, and what college would be without her! When commencement really came she was too busy to think that she was being rapidly changed into that most remote creature, an alumna. Her only worries were whether she would secure those evasive rooms; and whether the family understood all the funny hits at the step sings. The question of attaching her mortar board to her bobbed hair was an added trouble and she was highly incensed when her facetious father suggested the infantile black chin elastic. She loved the impressive President ' s Reception, yet some insurgent feeling tempted her to change her high-heeled slippers for her dear old muddy saddle shoes, rush after Georgia Coyle and shouting ' 76, and get the full joy and fatigue of the evening. Not until ' 22 started dismantling and realized that nothing could be left because the room was hers no longer, did she feel that she was really going, and that college days were over. CLARICE YOUNG, ' 22. MM ! B 7 Jk 1-IG VJ ; v® [BEq yvp (ttnmmtttwa fnr (Enmntnirrntent iExrrrtara Ivy Day Committee Charlotte Gower, Chairman Isabel Conklin Huldah Doron Marion Downey Eleanor Evans Margaret Kreglow Elisabeth Marshall Ivt Song Committee Harriet Bergtold, Chairman Adelaide Cozzens Alice Shaw Margaret Kreglow Blanche Shaw Clarice Young Commencement Orator Ruth Joshel, Chairman Carita Clark Mildred Williams Commencement Printing Margaret Jones, Chairman Doris Babson Helen Fyke Beth Bohning Ann Scroggie Ruth Dimick Darthea Trickey Class Supper Committee Margaret Gabel, Chairman Dorothy Chase Achsa L. Powell Virginia Giles Elizabeth Marmon Mary Dailey Louise Lieber C M ■igJ Mfl T .M to ;. U Q Si WTE 7= a 147 r s fllnafe ? Senior SramattrH QIommttt H General Chairman . Business Manager . Assistant Business Manager Secretary Call Boys tk Laura W. Cabot Katharine Lyman . Carita Clark Elizabeth Lipsey Ruth Dimick, Dorothea Nourse Costumes Chairman, Gladys Harriman Elizabeth Greer Virginia Reed Frances Haskell Margaret Tucker Scenery Chairman, Dean Roberts Harriet Bergtold Margaret Franks Doris Flather Elizabeth Scoville Aileen Woodman Staging Chairman, Clarice Young Hilda Couch Music Chairman, Phyllis Creasy Constance Boyer Bernadette Stack Or JZ 3 4.S w ik g f fe A Hintpr ' a ©air Leontes Camillo Antigonus Cleomenes Dion . polixenes Florizel Archidamus Mariner Old Shepherd Clown Autolycus . The Shepherd ' s A Gaoler . The Captain The Chief Judge A Lord Another Lord Hermione Perdita Paulina Emilia Mo psa Dorcas A Lady Servant Helen Amy Smith Eleanor Brinsmade Mildred Purdy . Louise Silber . Julia Lincoln Harriet Marsh Anne Johnston Helen Carroll Helen Dana Smith Isabel Conkhn Jane Dinsmore Zena C. Freedman Frances Upham Elizabeth Lipsey Ann Scroggie Dorothy Swisher Jean Whiting Eleanor Thor;-e Mary Dickson . Lois Brown Frances H. H. Harmcn Celia Silberman Katharine Peek Ruth Kerr Johnson Constance Boyer fTO l A 140 MM [NC M T ■w g fBte ©ia ' ( aDji2Kyl|P i?Qh Sunday, June Eighteenth Baccalaureate Exercises in Assembly Hall, 11 a. m. Address by President Neilson Organ Vespers in John M. Greene Hall, 8 p. m. Organist, Mrs. Conniston ik = g Of 152 A w k g f Ol (g iMft urn G i,} ' 1 ' ' ' '  ' ' ' ' ..W iiiii.K.DF Ivy Day Monday, June Nineteenth Ivy Exercises on the Campus . . . . . 1 a. m. Ivy Exercises in John M. Greene Hall . . . 1 1 a. m. Society Reunions . . . . . . . 2 p. m. Closing Concert . . . . . . 3 p. m. Art Exhibition 4-6 p. m. College Sing 7 p. m. President ' s Reception in the Library . . .8-10 p.m. bbez© A y. w § $ ® r Jug rntg Our hopes have flamed like your autumn leaves When the skies have been clear and cold. Like you, we have weathered winters of doubt. Bereft of forgotten gold. Spring has brought to us courage each year, As your glossy leaves unfurled. Now the summer sun shines graciously — We stand at the door of the world. We would add to your wealth before we go, In remembrance of years now fled — - Then we turn to go out to the larger life, And, as we look ahead, We see ourselves a part of the world, A bit of the whole at last. So we add to the whole ourselves and our vine, In token of future and past. Elisabeth Marshall. ik m w s ir 4 w =v@ (ilS3| @r COMMENCEMENT Tuesday, June Twentieth John M. Greene Hall 10.30 a.m. Address by Samuel McLoid Crothers Alumnae Meeting .... Class Supper in Alumnae Gymnasium 4.00-6.00 p. m. 7.00 p.m. rk gHE2 r 1 55 Jk w g f fc Cs ©a 3 j nm L Toastmistress, Isabel Conklin The Faculty . The Past and Present The Future . Dramatics Roll Call . Barbara McKay Camilla Low Naomi Laucheimer Jean Whiting Margaret Cullinan s@BEE22® A 156 VEDSE w flag Or poppies flaring in the wheat. I ' ll love you if you ' ll find the three Who make me I — and rule the child. And play philanderer to the girl, And love the woman silently; And if you ' ll seldom be discreet. And sometimes (watch my eyes!) be wild And tell me things you couldn ' t mean. And if, on every moon-crossed night, You ' ll lift the shades, and dim the light, And turn sardonically polite, And help me act a tragic scene Oh, if you act it very well I ' ll love you. Maybe. Who can tell? Eleanor Chilton. Stye riaaarH (Srinfor Scissor-r-rs to grind! Scissor-rs to grind! His bell jangles harshly; he shuffles along — His pack and his lathe are strapped on behind, And creak, as he wearily drags out his song — Ombr-rellas to mend! Ombr-rellas to mend! He snarls out the words with malevolent whine, He frightens the children ; they fly round the bend And hide in the tangle of clematis vine. His back, it is crooked; his step, it is slow; His eyes, in the shade of his hat ' s tattered brim. Are lit with a sullen fanatical glow, As he peers through the twilight so somber and dim. ©fje % tv QHjapel The shadows of dusk creep out, stealthy and gray; A star glitters over the hill like a spark. The sound of his slow-ringing bell dies away Down the road, and he vanishes into the dark. Barbara McKay. Love hovered in the chapel of my heart, Unhonored spark — ■Found dim devices not yet understood. And candlesticks of rude, unpolished wood Whose slim, pale tapers scorned his every art To bright the dark. At last one taper caught — a trembling glow That frailly seemed To warm the roof-beams of so chill a shrine, Or help those legends to divine — But since it flickered out new meanings grow I had not dreamed. Dorothy Benson. A 3Fattrii Ocean, Ocean, calling me, Savage voice, and strong. To what beauties will you lead If I go along? Tossing up your beckoning spray, Urging me to roam; If I go away with you. Will you bring me home? Charlotte Dorian. ck gram© A Kill w g f O] @r Jlndt an ppps fpaterimy ' H PromtHP When the night is dim and misty and the moon seems far away, And the coon ' s laugh echoes softly through the trees, From a distant shadowy glade, just before the break o ' day. Comes a haunting smoky smell upon the breeze. There the shadows of the Red-Men come a-steal- ing one by one, And they build a phantom camp-fire in the night, Then they smoke their long-stemmed peace-pipes, and they dream of battles won Sitting silent in ;he fitful flickering light. And wherever they have gathered, from the phantom ashes cold There will grow some pallid pipe-shaped little flowers — And you ' ll know that there the Red-Men ' s ghosts have hovered as of old Round the ghostly fire in the dark and silent hours. The sky is low. Yesterday ' s flowery promise Is dead. There ' s sadness in the naked shivering trees Whose withered arms bear up the droop- ing sky. Yesterday promised Resurrection; hazy dawns; Cowbells in fragrant pastures; Warm mossy stones; and toadstools; Damp mud with pale green shoots; Swollen bubbling streamlets; and pools With innocent gaze; Lazy days; Green things; and breezes That know how to play — But Yesterday ' s promise is dead. It is smothered under the snow. nmtpt Elisabeth Marshall. Entile Can you go away For a while? I can never say Whether your smile is sweeter When it ' s smiled — Or just remembered. Helen Harvey. The poignant scent of Fall rides on the wind — A gold and crimson sunset, when the day Will linger for a moment more, and say Again the beauty of noon, then leave behind In passing, an ache and yearning that can find Solace, for tomorrow will display A different face, as lovely in its way And yesterday has made the world less blind. The poignant scent of Fall! The glory of Spiing Is in its better-sweet — of youth, that vies Moment with moment — of tomorrow, that transcends. The sweetness of the grape is in the sting Of aged wine. Fall does not tell of ends. For only as the Phoenix-bird it dies. Ruth Alice Norman, !k EH221 r ](vl A w S ongB Alma Mattt Words by Henrietta Sperry, 1910 Music by H. D. Sleeper To you, O Alma Mater, Oh, Mother great and true. From all your loyal children Comes up the song anew. Where swings the red sun upward, Where sinks he down to rest. Are hearts that backward turning Still find you first and best. And gladly singing to you always Our loyal hearts with joy shall fill; Oh, fairest, fairest Alma Mater You hold and claim us still! You gave us dreams unnumbered And life we had not known. And now, oh Alma Mater, We give you back your own. For memories, for friendships That bless each passing day, Our toil unsought we render. Our debt unasked we pay. Ik iflatr § mitl| Words by Regina Catherine Crandall, 1890 Fair Smith, our praise to thee we render, O dearest college halls, Bright hours that live in mem ' ry tender. Are wing ' d within thy walls. O ' er thy walks the elms are bowing. Alma Mater, Winds mid branches softly blowing. Ivy ' round thy towers growing, Alma Mater. Tho ' time may prove the pleasure fleeting. No hour is spent in vain ; True hearts behold the future meeting. Our friendship cannot wane. Of thy care forgetful never, Alma Mater, Bound by ties that naught can sever. Still to thee returning ever, Alma Mater. And while the hills with purple shadows Eternal vigil keep Above the happy river meadows In golden haze asleep, May thy children thee addressing, Alma Mater, Still with grateful praise unceasing Speak with loyal hearts thy blessing, Alma Mater. Ii mnato to JJreHttottt Wilson Tune: Bonnie Dundee There ' s a bonnie Scotch laddie we ' ve lov ' d from the start. And we pledge our allegiance, he ' s won all our hearts; We will follow his leading beyond and away, For we lo ' ed him forever and ever and aye. Then come one and all. We ' ll raise such a cheer That it will ring far and wide many a year And aftertimes waken an echo to say, Oh, they lo ' ed him forever and ever and aye. 19X9 ftutndrg Tune: My Bonnie My nightgowns have lost all their ribbons. My petticoats own not a string; And so dear old Smith College Laundry, Tonight ' tis to you that we sing. CHORUS Bring back, bring back, oh bring back my laundry to me, to me! Laundry, laundry, — oh, bring back my remnants to me! israzzi® = 7 a 162 w m!3 r You sure have made sieves of my stockings- My shirtwaists are hanging in tags; Before the spring season is over I ' ll come to the step sings in rags! UaskethaU £ mtg Tune: Tim Rooney Come sing to 1920, Her victories are plenty, She is the team the Evens all adore! With cheers, ye t reshmen, greet her Now Nineteen ' s come to meet her, We ' ll just watch the score! 1920 Angle Horma All the little angle worms that wiggled on the walk H ave all gone away! They ' re either in their holes Or stickin ' to your soles All dried and gray! If they are in Heaven and St. Gregory wants To make his joke he ' ll vow That all the little angles that wiggled on the walk Are angels now! ! ! Skinnay Tune: Sweetheart Skinnay! Skinnay! Skinnay! Yoo-hoo! Come on over and play! What are you doing today? I feel so happy and gay — Yoo-hoo-hoo-hoo! ! We can ' t fuss like the Seniors, Sporting ' round with gardenias, But we ' ll hide in the grotto And this be our mottoo: Yoo-hoo, yoo-hoo, yoo-hoo! t aue f mi fljeard % ICatpHt T8?wb Tune: By Jingo Have you heard the latest news? Guaranteed to cure those blues? Ta da, da da da ad da da, umpa, umpa, umpa, umpa. No, it ' s not that spring is near, But they say she ' s really here — Tra la, la la la la la la, Tweet tweet tweet tweet, tweet tweet tweet twee, How we ' ve hated, the Lord only knows, Waiting for those wintry snows To disappear. But now that Spring is here We can have that long-postponed step-sing — Celebrate poor resurrected spring, You can sport that Easter hat Without fear and more than that, We ' ll throw in Paradise our old galoshes And those threadbare mackintoshes. And now at last you ' ll have your Prom — Tho ' goodness knows where you will get him from — And you know there ' s a chance that at last there ' s be After all this sloppy, slushy weather, A Prom that ' s almost sunshiny! 1921 iijapaitteaa SUufb We ' re so happy — oh, so happy! Yes, everybody feels sumpin ' in the air, Spring- fever ' s gwine ter git yuh If yuh don ' t have a care! Oh, de Springtime — our step-sing time! Now de Seniors are a-sittin ' they got such an air, One might think that they ' d always been there! Oh, hear them warbles! ! My how that Senior class can sing! Hm-hm — such warbles! ! We ' ve never heard the like before this Spring, So we ' re all a-gwine ter come, rain or shine. And hear that warbling so divine, For we have waited three years for this spring, That ' s why we ' re oh, so happy, oh, so happy, Now the Seniors are a-sittin ' they have got such an air One would think that they ' d always been there! Uramlrga Tune: Til-ivilloiv On the steps of old Student s ' the Seniors all sat Wearing Bramleys, just Bramleys, just Bram- leys. They were all dressed alike, both the lean and the fat. In their Bramleys, their Bramleys, their Bram- leys. Oh, we are struck dumb, ' 21, by the spell Of the blue and the gray and the henna as well. And so all we can say is just, My, ain ' t they swell, Them Bramleys, them Bramleys, them Bram- leys! g fnga w Jk 163 vjr g Sfe GJ00M? 1? iFag Seniors all think that they are quite bright, Because all their courses come in the night, Toodle de Fay, toodle de Patch, With a Kimball and Gardiner ump-ump — Bye and Bye We ' ll get ours bye and bye — ' Cause we ' ll have a Seminar too, bye and bye! IGaat £ muj to 1921 Aged Seniors, always I ' ve respected your superiority, But somehow it seems that you ' ve neglected to consider such as me — But now that Logic ' s through, and I ' m a Senior, too. It ' s plain as plain can be There ' s nothing left for you to do except move over And make some room for me! ! 1922 ' s £ iep-§ img Samson and Delilah My Heart at Thy Dear Voice I. These steps, which daily use Have made common to thousands, Have tonight for us a meaning, Have tonight for us a meaning. Three years have slipped away, Years that we cannot stay, — Days that we have lived together, Days that we have lived together. Now must we let them pass With the closing day But the memories you leave us We forever will hold — Joyous memories untold. CHORUS. As we take these steps, our love bringing Once again of you we ' re singing And from these steps That you now leave us Long may our song Ring out and greet you Ring out — ring out — and greet you. II. As you have done before We now take this our trust As the gathering shadows deepen, As the gathering shadows deepen, And loud the echoes ring While now our song we sing, Bidding other echoes waken, Bidding other echoes waken. So may you hear the call Of another spring Just as next year from afar You will hear ' 22 Singing ever of you. CHORUS. As we take these steps, echoes ringing Once again of you we ' re singing, Oh, once again Of you we ' re singing Whom we soon — Whom we soon must follow Farewell, farewell — we follow. III. Now ' 21 go forth, We would not strive to keep you, Though our hea rts be sad at parting, Though our hearts be sad at parting, The gift of friendship true, The joy in knowing you In our faith we ' ll cherish always, In our faith we ' ll cherish always. So let us gladly sing, This our last song to you, And although we long to keep you Our great love to tell, — We must bid you farewell. CHORUS. As we take these steps, our love bringing Once again of you we ' re singing Oh, once again, of you we ' re singing Who all too soon — who all too soon, must leave us. Farewell, farewell, we follow. jFrraljman iFrolir-Snptral £ nng Tune: Humming One day I got a letter from my advisor, She sent a little book, sure to make me wiser, She said I was to be Her friend and advisee And that she ' d answer my questions. CHORUS So I wrote her, What color should I wear? How near is Amherst? How do you do your hair? Mother says shirtwaists don ' t become me But she is sure you ' ll like me in a middy. I want to live in an invitation house — Is Biolog a nice one? Can you tell me what ' s meant when a girl is ' on tent ' ? I always thought camping was fun! When I got off the train no porter seemed to be there, Some girls with badges white were all that I could see there. One took my bag away, But I held on till I could say, Do you charge more than a quarter? S) IMT% - d 104 w MtM lf CHORUS Then she asked me just where I ' d like to go; I said quickly, Oh, tel l me, do you know, Is President Neilson ' s house on our way? Can ' t I call now and get it all done today? Freshman Bibles must be very scarce, She asked me if I ' d lend her mine. And I said, T ' ve no new — We thought Mother ' s would do — I hope it ' s the right college kind! Soon I was asked to write all my life ' s short history ; What a teacher said to me will always be a mystery — ■She said, Your name is Rice — are you Any relative of Mr. Rice, too? I said, Why, yes, he ' s my father! CHORUS I leaned over and asked a girl by me What denomination she though; that I could be; First I decided to put American, But it might be I should have written Freshman. he was scornful and wore a Bramley dress — Made me feel far, far from bright — For she said, You ' re all wrong, It ' s the Church you belong. So St. John ' s was all I could write. I went to chapel early to get a front seat. On the platform sat parents queer but sweet; They sat up straight and stared hard at me, While in black robes sang loudly the faculty. I went to class — ' twas far above my head — Teacher saw me puzzled and said, This is Ethics in here. I exclaimed, Oh, my dear! I thought it was Spanish instead. CHORUS ' 25, we ' re singing now to you, ' 25, we ' ve seen what you can do. We like your looks, saddle-shoes, felt-hats gay, And if you ' ll let us, with you we want to play. But you ' ve one fault that ' s very grave indeed — Freshmen should all make mistakes! ' 25 makes so few That ' twas all we could do To sing this short song on your breaks. eTi|F £ n«g for Sallg Sag Tune: April Showers ' 25, such conduct does astound us! In the days when we were mere Freshmen Every single night you could have found us Stretched between the sheets at stroke of ten! But ' 25 stays up half the night And never has to put out her light. We ' re not complaining — we wouldn ' t change The way you are, altho ' the things you do Se m just a little strange. There ' s no denying we ' re getting old, We ' re way behind times, so we ' ve b en told. But if you ever are a senior, with us you will agree, The freshmen aren ' t quite what they used ;o b;! Our sister-class we find in mystery shrouded, We can ' t see quite what she is about. When she ' s here she keeps our minds all clouded — Of Cassandra she could tell, no doubi. Oh, ' 24, we appreciate The fact that you are so up-to-date; We leave the siyles and the fads to you, For when it comes to wearing knxkers You outshine poor ' 22. There ' s no denying, we ' re getting old, We ' re way behind limes, so we are told; But if you ever are a senior, with us you will agree, The sophomores aren ' t quite what they used to be! ' 23, we find it hard expressing In this song a tone of deep respect. But we feel most humble when addressing Women of such massive intellect! Soon there won ' t be any front row lights Instead you will have gloating Oxfordites. They ' ll flock each morning off to the Libe And soon be buried deep within the stacks Such knowledge to imbibe. There ' s no denying we ' re getting old. We ' re way behind times, so we are told. But tho ' we ' ll soon be old alumnae With us you will agree, The front-row lights aren ' t what they used to be! The time is coming soon when we ' ll be parted — No more Rally Days on which to sing! Tho ' we know that we ' ll be broken-hearted In our day you ' ll grant we ' ve had our fling. We entered college the largest class, Now we ' re a sadder but wiser mass. We ' ve taught the college a thing or two; We raised four million dollars and we leave it all to you. There ' s no denying, we ' re getting old, We ' re way behind times, so we are told. But when next year we ' re old alumnae With us you will agree The seniors aren ' t quite what they used to be! tk = 1111 ®r L65 PUBLICATI w g f fe Editor-in-Chief Dorothy Benson Business Manager Virginia Hatfield Advertising Manager Marian Watkins Editors Julia Lincoln Adelaide Cozzens Margaret Tildsley Eleanor Chilton QHZ21 168 A w g fEHI ffirrklij ffioarii Senior Year Margaret Storrs Willa Orr . Harriet Bergtold (Resigned) Hanna Gichner Helen Fyke . Janice Ozias . Ruth Alice Norman Editor-in-Chief . Nervs Editor Associate News Editor . Managing Editor . Business Manager Dramatic Critic Junior Year Assistant Nervs Editors Harriet Bergtold Barbara McKay Hanna Gichner Wilhelmina Rehm Miriam Taggart Assistant Managing Editors Helen Fyke Esther Gaylord Assistant Business Managers Janice Ozias Greta Wood Sophomore Year Assistant Managing Editors Marjorie Crandall Esther Gaylord Helen Fyke Harriet Wolverton Assistant Business Manager Barbara McKay Margaret Schneider Margaret Storrs 1111} Ja 169 w =v® fi5icite Jr Prraa Snard President Dorothy Cryderrwise Eleanor Rau News Editor — Polly Weaver Ik Helen Carroll Carita Clark Eleanor Clark Hilda Couch Janet Danforth Elizabeth Donnell Marie Fischer Elsye Geisenberger Members 1922 Katharine Howland Katharine Lacey Ruth Katsch Anna Pennypacker Blanche Shaw Louise Silber Isabel Stabler Claire Strauss Margaret Schneider Resigned. ss rragrai 3f Ja 170 w =v@ [iIEite jr H l r ■R Hfl . ifl  ' f j 1 - f ' A B j jJ :-|PPP - T B H (Eampufi (Eat Laura Cabot Eleanor Chilton Elizabeth Donnell Anne Johnston Anna Pennypacker Margaret Tucker Sk pmrB V? 171 w m m - (Elaaa look Inarb Ediior-in-Chief Assistant Editor Business Manager . Assistant Business Manager Advertising Manager Art Editor . Assistant Art Editor Literary Editor Photograph Editor . Assistant Photograph Editor Jol(es and Cartoons Editor Boards and Clubs Editor . Senior Pictures Editor Barbara McKay Frances Harmon Helen DeGroat Mildred Leeper Jane Dinsmore Doris Flather Margaret Franks Harriet Bergtold Nancy McCullough . Helen Fyke Jean Whiting Abigail Scott Beatrice Walton ik 172 A Z , ' 2. 3 ;z 4 2.5 ole. £or CAC.V TFICER TOR A.A.MEI Nominate Tor president fecrelary A OF w fESS Laura Cabot S mttlj (ttnlbge Atljlettr AaBflrtatfnn Senior Officers Laura Cabot, Vice-President Representatives Tennis — Alice Jenckes Hockey — Margaret Ward Crew — Helen Dana Smith Basketball — Caroline Schofield Cricket — Dorothy Chase Chairman of Outing Committee — Harriet Marsh Junior Officers Laura Cabot, President Representatives Club House Manager — Una Whitehurst Boat House Manager — Margaret Jones Sophomore Officers Margaret Jones, Secretary Alice Chapman, Treasurer h. = §) r J 174 DRAMATICS ty Olllte Lois Brown mttl) ffnllnjr Sramattr Aasoriatian Director Lois Brown Chairman of Scenery Margaret Franks Head of Student Coaches Jean Whiting Business Manager Eleanor Child Dramaturgy Marian Thorndike mmrE , fa 170 w =vSg |[SS3| ©r ®lj? Sramatir AHfioriatian rnxb 1922 Some wise person was once heard to say that: Personalities were either made or broken at college. Smith aims to do the former and the Dramatic Association is one of the most important organizations in helping to achieve this aim. In the Dramatic Association, personalities are brought out and trained, not only to the benefit of the individual but also to the pleasure and delight of the entire college. I 922 has been well represented in the Association for the past three years and has now a total number of one hundred and ten members. To trace our Dramatic career from the beginning, we must go back to the middle of February, 1920. Our careers were as yet not very clearly defined. We were, as the Seniors probably said, Just Sophomores. We were as yet unini- tiated in the charm of the gay white lights of the student stage. Many of us, however, have a vague remembrance of the Pity, fear, terror, reaction which we had when we first braved the three-minute trials. We felt that more depended upon those try-outs than we dared to confess. Moreover, from that very moment, when the daring members of ' 22 took courage in hand and stepped forth to test their fates with the judges, the class has done more than justice to itself in the dramatic line. ik hhs 2 it: w $ r Workshop plays, Rally Day Shows, and joint productions with Amherst, all have aided in making the D. A. plays more finished and successful. The first few members of 1922 to be initiated to the above-mentioned white lights made their bow to the college along with the first bow of the Dramatic Asso- ciation. None of their parts were majors, but Zena Freedman, Anne Johnston, Isabel Conklin, Dorothy Bedworth and Lois Brown felt highly flattered to be allowed to be seen, if only slightly heard. Some of them continued in the following spring production of Monsieur Beaucaire, with reinforcements. Then in the Fall of 1921 unexpected talent burst forth in What Every Woman Knows, in which Naomi Lauchheimer and Jane Dinsmore took their places in the front rank, followed in Fielding ' s Tom Thumb, the Great, by Jean Whiting, Camilla Low, Helen Amy Smith and Helen Dana Smith. Eleanor Chilton as the heroine of Shaw ' s The Man of Destiny added new laurels to her previous accomplishments in Shavian roles in the Alpha and Phi Kappa open plays. In the spring, The Ideal Husband gave Barbara McKay her opportunity, in which she distinguished herself as the hero, ably directed by Anne Johnston. The aim of the Association is to express itself not in acting alone, but in all possible fields of dramatic art. As a result we have in ' 22 not only actors of note, but scene designers, costume designers and coaches. Anne Johnston, Mildred Purdy and Lois Brown have produced various plays of the Association. Mildred Purdy has taken charge of costuming the productions at the Academy of Music for the k lis A w § 5 r past year with extraordinary artistic success, while Margaret Franks with the aid of Louise Kingsley has contributed to the increasing artistic progress of the productions by her beautifully designed and carefully executed sets. Her feeling for atmos- phere in the settings is unusually keen and her work has brought much flattering comment from the college. Early in the fall came the performance in Students ' Building of two more plays. The Pretty Sabine Women was a satiric farce. In Aria da Capo Lois Brown again distinguished herself. The enthusiastic appreciation of the audience, faculty and students at the last D. A. production, a bill of three one-act plays — Torches, from the Harvard 47 Workshop; Shaw ' s The Lady of Dark Sonnets and Philip Moeller ' s Helena ' s Husband, shows that under the direction of 1922 the D. A. has moved steadily forward and has taken more than ever before a vital role in college activities. A further interesting advance in dramatic activity has been made in the co- operation of the D. A. with the Amherst College Masquers. Zena Freedman, Helen Carroll and Lois Brown have taken part in Amherst plays in the past two years and have compared creditably with the Amherst actors. The artistic char- acter of the plays chosen and the experience to be gained in acting with men under the extremely able coaching of Mr. Glass of the Amherst faculty has made this co-operation well worth while. Mr. Eliot ' s workshop has continued to draw heavily from all of the acting and producing material of 1922. This year so far there has been but one produc- tion, in which Florence Leopold ' s work as Falstaff in a scene from Henry IV coached by Jean Whiting, deserves especial mention. 1922 on Rally Day won her reputation for cleverness and enthusiasm in Sophomore year with the famous musical comedy — Book and Lyrics by Eleanor Chilton and Anne Johnston ; music by Phyllis Creasy ; starring Jean Whiting and Elizabeth Lipsey. Last year appeared Eleanor Chilton ' s clever burlesque of the mediaeval romance with a large and proficient cast. There is, of course, much ahead of us in the dramatic world of college for the rest of the year from the Rally Day Show to A Winter ' s Tale ; and we can only prophesy on the basis of past experience that ' 22 will continue to uphold her well- won reputation for dramatic talent. rk igf lizzi tej r 179 fa CUIBSSSOCITKS v Jr g) Sfe 1 ' El. ' H BK ' . ' itn Tvrrf flljt leta iKappa Charlotte Gower Julia Kreis Junior Year Alice Richardson Margaret Kreglow Willa Orr Annette J. Bardwell Alice B. Chapman Carita L. Clark Helen V. Conklin Isabel Conklin Marjorie L. Crandall Mary E. Dailey Flora M. Davidson Jane Dinsmore Myrtle A. Fish Virginia M. Giles Evelyn Gray Isabel W. Harper Frances A. Hause Elizabeth M. Hilliard Senior Year Winifred L. Hope Katherine E. Howland Ruth E. Irwin Alice C. Jenckes Margaret Kemp Ilda Langdon Emma A. Lincoln Camilla M. Low Kathryn I. Lyman Nancy R. McCullough Jane K. Massie Eleanor Miller Janice H. Ozias Katharine Peek Margaret G. Pendleton aaza Or Hope Rawson Gertrude M. Schwartz Anna T. Sheedy Helen D. Smith Helen Stearns Louise Taggart Miriam Taggart Helen C. Taylor Marian L. Thorndike Elizabeth H. Tillinghast Frances I. Upham Beatrice L. Walton Margaret H. Ward Jessie M. Wilson Clarice R. Young Ja 1S1 A w S Jr Alplja Officers Laura Cabot Janice Taggart Barbara McKay . Thalia Stetson Huldah Doron Elizabeth Barry Lois Brown Laura Cabot Helen Carroll Adelaide Cozzens Eleanor Chilton Phyllis Creasey Margaret Cullinan Edith Donnell Elizabeth Donnell Huldah Doron Margaret Franks FIRST SEMESTER SECOND SEMESTER Members President . Senior Executive Editor President . Senior Executive Margaret Gabel Margaret Humphrey Anne Johnston Julia Lincoln Elizabeth Lipsey Barbara McKay Eleanor Miller Katherine Marie Miller Mildred Purdy Eleanor Rau Thalia Stetson Janice Taggart Margaret Tildsley IMZTI V? d 183 ; % w g f te f Kappa fat Isabel Conklin Jane Dinsmore Harriet Bergtold . Frona Brooks Helen Dana Smith Dorothy Crydenwise Frona Brooks Dorothy Benson Harriet Bergtold Isabel Conklin Dorothy Crydenwise Jane Dinsmore Zena C. Freedman Katherine Gaylord Eleanor Hoyt Julia Kreis Margaret Kreglow Naomi Lauchheimer Officers FIRST SEMESTER SECOND SEMESTER Members President . Senior Executive Editor President . Senior Executive Editor Camilla Low Charlotte MacDougall Athena McFadden Mabelle Orleman Gladys Platner Alice Shaw Helen Dana Smith Helen A. Smith Margaret Storrs Mary Sullivan Jean Whiting Harriet Wolverton CI arice Young Left College rk [11221 ? y is. - , w g ft 5K ? SDi PHILOSOPHICAL CLUB Officers Janice Ozias Anna Pennypacker President Secretary Members Charlotte Gower Emma Lincoln Janice Ozias Anna Pennypacker Elizabeth Tillinghast Ik dHH W 1S6 w A® f fe r e m@ )mea Helen DeGroat Margaret Bassett Dorothy Bedworth Laura Cabot Flora Davidson Helen DeGroat Mary Dickson Gladys Dingledine Marion Downey Eleanor Evans Officers Members Dorothy Jenks Charlotte Gower Alice Jenckes Anne Johnston Ruth Joshel Margaret Kreglow Rae Lowenthal Harriet Marsh Jane K. Massie Esther L. Moss President Edith O ' Neill Ethel Phillips Mathilde Rehm Marguerite Rhibany Marian Swayze Margaret Tildsley Frances Upham Greta Wood Aileen Woodman Intercollegiate Debate, 1920 Margaret Kreglow Dorothy Bedworth Frances Upham Marguerite Rhibany Intercollegiate Debate, 1921 Frances Upham Smith-Dartmouth Debate, 1922 Jane K. Massie Mary Dickson Frances Upham Esther L. Moss Mathilde Intercollegiate Debate, 1922 Rehm Mary Dickson Resigned BUZH fa 187 w § $ r t r DFI POLITY CLUB Officers Katherine Lacey Isabel Conklin First Semester President Second Semester President jane Arms Frona Brooks Elizabeth Crain Gladys Dingledine Lily Emerson Elinor French Hanna Gichner Members Catherine Grigsby Elizabeth Hilliard Frances Johnson Ruth Joshel Katherine Lacey Ella Loeb Hope Rawson Emily Reed Gertrude Schwartz Anna Sheedy Harriet Smith Anna Trott H22I® a ]88 w ig f fe C fiA- £ ZC Ct ( 2 Officers Ruth Katsch Ruth Joshel President Vice-President Members Doris Bryant Vera Call Dorothy Crydenwise Ruth Dimick Eleanor Evans Myrtle Fish Ruth Guggenheim Virginia Hatfield Beryl Hobson Katherine Howland Ruth Joshel Ruth Katsh Edna Kaufman Helen O ' Reilly Lillian H. Potter Emily Reed Virginia Reed !k romm 1S9 A w gftgg J aJociefejrdncaise Mi Officers Slawson ....... President Members {Catherine Adam Constance Boyer Helen Carroll Marjone Crandall Marion Crozier Dorothy Crydenwise Lucile Darton Elinor Eltinge Ruth Ferguson Margaret Gabel Margaret Hackett Alice Jenckes Esther Jones Barbara Lee Charlotte MacDougall Dorothea Nourse Mabelle Orleman Margaret Pendleton Katherine Ranney Muriel Slawson Louise Silber Claire Strauss Louise Taggart Marian Thorndike Darthea Trickey Elizabeth Tuttle Una Whitehurst Clarice Young k IWTZ} ? 190 A w g filnafe Virginia Giles Marion Downey . Officers Vice-President Secretary Marion Downey Faith Dudgeon Virginia Giles Marjorie Crandall Katherine Brosnahan Members Grace Humrich Elizabeth Nielon Katherine Ryan Ellen Sheehan Ik imMi r 191 J a w g f aj g ILrTQICOLOQE Officers M anon Thorndike • Vice-President M EMBERS Marion Billings Charlotte MacDougall Carita Clark Elvira Miller Ruth Green Gerda Richards Margaret Hopkins Eugenie Terek Ellen Lane Marian Thorndike k RIM l t 7 V.vl £ w =gg) liH€il @J lL jlL j} 1jLm Officers Charlotte Gower President Charlotte Gower Margaret Hopkins Members Beatrice Walton Dorothy Jenks Willa Orr !k imrav? 193 A w g f o] ORJENTAbSoCIETY Officers Ruth Barnes President Members Ruth Barnes Zena C. Freedman Elizabeth Cairns Camilla Low Dorothy Crydenwise Jean MacTarnaghan Flora Davidson Janice Ozias Beatrice Walton D wmm v? 104 w T® [i5Eite jr ih®h® StibhJ r ° K SH$ Mathilde Rehm . Katharine Winchester Officers Members President Vice-President Hilda Barnes Margaret Bergan Priscilla Dimick Gladys Dingledine Ruth Ferguson Sophie Gordon Charlotte Gower Frances Guild Isabel Harper Mae Ingalls Helen Kellogg Louise Kingsley Mildred Leeper Katherme Macomber Nancy McCullough Associate Mildred Alfred Elizabeth Cairns Jane Dinsmore K. Marie Miller Eleanor Phillips Katherine Prickett Hope Rawson Mathilde Rehm Ruth Richards Alice Robinson Katherine Sanford Margaret Schneider Celia Silberman Frances Stillwell Margaret Toan Katharine Winchester Gertrude Windisch Miriam Zabriskie Members Dorothy Sanjiyan Ruth Ockerman Anna Pennypacker Olivia Rogers Resigned rk IMTB %r, Jfn a 19£ w SmiM r COLLOQUIUM He Officers President Members Alice Chapman Mary Dailey Virginia Giles Dorothy Gleason Helen Harper Barbara Harrison Frances Hause Julia Hodgdon Dorothy Hogan Winifred Hope Constance Hopkins Frances Kelsey Ilda Langdon Evelyn Lawley Nancy McCullough Caroline Schofield Mabel Studebaker Olivia Terrell Margaret Toan Jeanette Wales Dorothy Williams Jessie Wilson Marion White ITO l 196 A w $ r Marguerite Hines Marion Downey . Officers President Vice-President Members Mildred Alfred Evelyn Clark Marion Downey Margarette Hines Julia Hodgdon Katherine Howland Ruth Irwin Katherine Peek Mabel Studebaker Olivia Terrell Elizabeth Tillinghast fros i Or 197 Jk w g) fs B l6 Mathematics Officers Alice Richardson . . Vice-President Anne Lockhead . Secretary Carita Clark Members Treasurer Frona Brooks Margaret Kreglow Laura Cabot Anne Lockhead Canta Clark Kathryn Lyman Frances Guild Jean MacTarnaghan Frances Hause Willa Orr Ruth Irwin Alice Richardson Rachel Keniston Mary K. Smith !k [TOS l 19S 2 w Tjg figEil igar TELESCOPIUM Annette Bardwell Officers President Annette Bardwell Edith Harris Esther Jones Anne Lockhead Resigned Members Jean MacTarnaghan Jane Massie Louise Miller Dorothea Sanjiyan ik g ig = 109 A w =v@ lilicite jr Vox Club Helen Carroll Officers President Members Annette Bardwell Dorothy Bedworth Lois Brown Helen Carroll Florence Cohen Isabel Conklin Zena C. Freedman Elsye Geisenberger Elizabeth Ives Harriet Marsh Catherine Murray Eleanor Rau Luene Rogers Helen A. Smith Ik T§flm2 lit H t JZ w M r Phyllis Creasey Bernadette Stack Clara Bozovsky Constance Boyer Phyllis Creasey Edith Donnell Officers Members . President Vice-President Huldah Doron Margaret Humphrey Bernadette Stack Associate Members Margaret Kreglow Thalia Stetson agggp F 2(M Sfo © flinclfe Studio Club Margaret Franks Officers President Members Elizabeth Bridgers Carita Clark Mary Dickson Doris Flather Margaret Franks Frances Guild Doris Harrison Gladys Harriman Harriet Jacobus Josephine Jenks Sara D. Roberts Katherine Sanford Elizabeth Scoville Dorothy Taylor Helen Taylor ik V2- wmzi , 202 A w 5m! Q foG® f9 Q® t tf Ele Chiltc Officers President Members Katherine Adam Dorothy Benson Eleanor Chilton Sarah Clarke Adelaide Cozzens Anne Johnston Julia Lincoln Athena McFadden Barbara McKay Margaret Storrs Margaret Tildsley Clarice Young Resigned ik rros i r 20.3 Jfa w s ftM r SPECTATOR Officers Esther Gaylord ....... President Members Laura Cabot Esther Gaylord Anne Johnston Margaret Kreglow Camilla Low Barbara McKay Eleanor Miller Janice Ozias Sara Dean Roberts Margaret Ward [ffiZ21© 1204 A w safe C j%£ iT v5(irs Jane Dinsmore Officers President Members Annette Bardwell Dorothy Bryan Eleanor Chilton Jane Dinsmore Charlotte MacDougall Eleanor Phillips Helen D. Smith Frances de Valin Jeanette Wales Una Whitehurst Jean Whiting Harriet Wolverton Y Resigned D fTOS l 205 A w gf fe Onlookers ■Officers Pauline Ames Members President Pauline Ames Margaret Jones Virginia Conklin Ruth Johnson Barbara Eaton Elizabeth Lipsey Doris Flather Mildred Mason Marion Himmelsbach Ruth Robeson Alice Jenckes Caroline Schofield IWTB r 206 w § fiM3® F (£ti®s ci 6sy 3$tf ®£ Granddaughters Pauline Ames Elizabeth Bixler Frona Brooks Helen DeGroat Adelaide Guion Mary Harts Winifred L. Hope Elizabeth Hubbard Margaret Humphrey Charlotte MacDougall Elizabeth M. Scoville Margaret Tildsley Marian Thorndike Jeanette Wales Margaret Ward Katharine Winchester eia 207 A w g f l © k M221 A w g fesnite ik BH221 A 209 ZT7Q jd musical yr f ofe Wthkh K s ($in Club Janice Taggart . . Business Manager Doris Babson Barbara Lee Elizabeth Barry Julia Lincoln Marguerite Berg Katherine Miller Elizabeth Brook Ruth Murray Miriam Buncher Rhoda Orme Carita Clark Margaret Pendleton Ruth Dimick Alice Robertson Myrtle Fish Mathilde Ruge Margaret Franks Ruth Scheibler Helen Fyke Harriet Smith Katherine Gaylord Mary Sullivan Beryl Hobson Katherine Winchester Margaret Humphrey Harriet Wolverton Lucille Kyte Clarice Young Margaret Kreglow Miriam Zabriskie t 1 5= A 212 w g iB) B vl • BF i ' v ■J i I ' ™ _M 1 • ' ▼ m W ' vfe xvfl fHanitaitn (Slab Helen Carroll Leader Elizabeth Barry Helen Carroll Margaret Ruth Collins Eleanor Clark Phyllis Creasey Lucile Darton Helen French Louise Taggart Edith Fuller Edith Harris Louise Kingsley Violet Ramsey Irma Rich Anna Sheedy Marabeth Storrs k [ffiZSl r d a w © ffiOcIfe -A ■T: I r ■B 2H K s. r • jLr or m J 5S Bar w L Hf fc 31 j« W B v H V - i 3? ' l€fl LfJ ■4 i i y L — 1 ©rrif ira Edith Donnell Helen Hauser Marion Himmelsbach Winifred Hine Mabelle Orleman Elizabeth Patek Joyce Petterson Emily Reed Alice Robinson Eleanor Scofield Alice Shaw Anna Sheedy Louise Silber Bernadette Stack Thalia Stetson Janice Taggart Frances Upham Katherine Winchester g[ffi221 ) A 214 w g f ol ©? k (Etjair First Soprano Leaders Darthea Trickey {Catherine Miller Second Soprano Leaders Elizabeth Brooke Beatrice Bagg Mildred Ball Madeleine Baxter Marguerite Berg Harriet Bergtold Elizabeth Bixler Dorothy Bourne Elizabeth Brooke Frona Brooks Elizabeth Cairns Helen Carroll Adelaide Cozzens Eleanor Clark Flora Davidson Jane Dinsmore Huldah Doron Ruth Ferguson Myrtle Fish Helen French Edith Fuller Esther Gaylord Catherine Grigsby Ardelia Hall Dorothy Hall Frances Harmon Edith Harris Doris Harrison Elizabeth Hilliard Beryl Hobson Katharine Howland Eleanor Hoyt Dorothy B. Johnson Helen Johnston Rachel Kenniston Louise Kingsley Thelma Ledbetter Kathryn Lyman Barbara McKay Helen Main Katherine Miller Mabelle Orleman Virginia Otto Lucile Page Beatrice Bagg Grace E. Preble Katherine Prickett Irene Richardson Alice Richardson Dorothea Sanjiyan Elizabeth Scoville Louise Skinner Helen A. Smith Helen D. Smith Nathalie Smith Pearl Smith Thalia Stetson Janice Taggart Miriam Taggart Bessie Tulloch Una Whitehurst Jean Whiting Marion Whittemore Florence Wilder Katharine Winchester Gertrude Windisch @BH221 ■sr Ja 2li ATHLETIC 5 w =@ ( El gjr g g tomt?rB Eleanor Miller Elizabeth Lipsey Laura Cabot BBSa w r Basketball $wlb lag Saturday, May 2 1 , 1 92 1 Points Won by 1 922 First Teams 5 Cricket . 10 Archery Baseball Second Teams 6 Basketball 6 3 Cricket 3 Third Teams Hockey 2 Te D ITOga r 4% 219 w =v@ ( a1 ©r 1922 Unttbrns of % AU-g mitl? laakrtball ufcam Alice Chapman, 1921, 1922 Eleanor Miller, 1920, 1921, 1922 Elizabeth Lipsey, 1921, 1922 Dorothy Peirce, 1922 Mildred Mason, 1 922 Ruth Robeson, 1 922 Caroline Schofield, 1921, 1922 Forwards Dorothy Peirce Margaret Humphrey Caroline Schofield Senior Basketball Team Captain, Elizabeth Lipsey Centers Ruth Robeson Eleanor Miller Alice Chapman Guards Elizabeth Lipsey Mildred Mason Pauline Amos Senior Substitute Basketball Team Captain, Catherine Murray Forwards Centers Ruth Harrington Catherine Murray Annette Bardwell Dorothy Higbie Dean Roberts Elizabeth Brooke Guards Harriet Bergtold Frances deValin Eleanor Phillips Ik QHZ21 J?a 220 w g f gfe Forwards Dorothy Peirce Margaret Humphrey Caroline Schofield Junior First Team Captain, Elizabeth Lipsey Centers Ruth Robeson Eleanor Miller Alice Chapman Guards Elizabeth Lipsey Frances deValin Elizabeth Hubbard Forwards Margaret Humphrey Dorothy Peirce Caroline Schofield Sophomore Basketball Team Captain, Mildred Mason Centers Ruth Robeson Eleanor Miller Alice Chapman Guards Elizabeth Lipsey Mildred Mason Frances deValin Forwards Eleanor Bachman Elizabeth Ringwalt Katherine Yeomans Freshman Basketball Team Captain, Susan Duffield Centers Eleanor Miller Alice Chapman Susan Duffield Guards Elizabeth Hubbard Mildred Mason Frances deValin rk BUZSl 221 w g f ofe Mt mbrra of AU-S ' mttlj ijnrkeg ufcam Pauline Ames, 1920, 1921 Catherine Murray, 1920, 1921 Junior Hockey Team Captain, Catherine Murray Forwards Catherine Murray Caroline Fisher Half Backs Una Whitehurst Pauline Ames Doris Flather Claire Strauss Marabeth Storrs Jeannette Wales Full Bac s and Goal Margaret Ward Dean Roberts Anna Pennypacker Sophomore Hockey Team Captain, Catherine Murray Forwards Margaret Schneider Catherine Murray Pauline Ames Doris Flather Caroline Fisher Of A w g SH ©r Half Backs Elizabeth Hubbard Hilda Couch Jeannette Wales Full Backs and Coal Charlotte MacDougall Dean Roberts Anna Pennypacker Freshman Hockey Team Captain, Margaret Ward Forwards Margaret Schneider Frances Johnson Pauline Ames Doris Flather Caroline Fisher Half Backs Ruth Guggenheim Hilda Couch Margaret Ward Full Backs and Goal Charlotte MacDougall Dean Roberts Anna Pennypacker !k gjlTOS Or Jk w M3® r 1922 iMmtorH of AU- rmif? lafirbaU Harriet Bergtold, 1920 Dorothy Higbie, 1921 Alice Jenckes, 1 92 1 Una Whitehurst, 192 Junior Baseball Team Captain, Dorothy Higbie Marjone Adams Beatrice Bagg Elizabeth Brooke Miriam Buncher Dorothy Higbie Alice Jenckes Harriet Marsh Dorothea Sanjiyan Beatrice Walton fc @ 0BE2 224 d w g fESEIfe Sophomore Baseball Team Captain, Harriet Bergtold Harriet Bergtold Miriam Buncher Harriet Marsh Marjorie Morrison Wilhelmina Rehm Claire Strauss Beatrice Walton Una Whitehurst Margaret Winton Freshman Baseball Team Maude Barker Harriet Bergtold Alice Brack.ett Jane Dinsmore Captain, Maude Barker Dorothy Higbie Elizabeth Lipsey Marjorie Morrison Wilhelmina Rehm Margaret Winton rk mwE r A w § %B 1922 iEnnbrrs nf AU-§ mtttj (Srtrkrt Dorothy Chase, 1920, 1921 Ruth Katsh, 1921 Marjorie Morrison, 1 92 1 Mathilde Rehm, 1920, 1921 Junior Cricket Team Captain, Dorothy Chase Frona Brooks Dorothy Chase Hilda Couch Marjorie Crandall Helen Hall Harriet Jacobus Ruth Katsh Marjorie Morrison Katherine Prickett Mathilde Rehm Pearl Smith tk S nnrena gf 226 A A w Tjg liljEite jr Sophomore Cricket Team Captain, Dorothy Chase Frona Brooks Dorothy Chase Marjorie Crandall Helen Hall Harriet Jacobus Kathenne Prickett Mathilde Rehm Irma Rich Ellen Sheehan Pearl Smith Marion Watkins Freshman Cricket Team Captain, Dorothy Chase Frona Brooks Dorothy Bedworth Dorothy Chase Helen Hall Irma Rich Ellen Sheehan Marion Watkins Harriet Jacobus Ruth Katsh Ellen Lane Virginia Paine !k =35 nraara 3i= d w JMM 8 mttlj (Mleg? Sntntfl (Seams First Team Alice Chapman Alice Jenckes Second Team Dorothea Nourse Pauline Ames Third Team Marabeth Storrs Eleanor Bachman !k asas 22S a w t p r 1922 (UrtittB Junior Year Captain, Kathryn Lyman Cox, Anne Johnston Cox, Frona Brooks Edith Donnell Huldah Doron Helen Dana Smith Jane Quinby Margaret Hackett Achsa Powell Alice Jenckes Cox, L ox, Louise N-ingsley Kinesh Harriet Bergtold Esther Gaylord Eleanor Hoyt Katharine Macomber ■. 1922 Member of All-Smith Crew Jane Quinby El 1 !k MZB A 229 w g f ol POSSIBLE POINTS 10 (gymnasium iExljibtttfltt Saturday, March 18, 1922 Won by 1922 EVENT Marching Total for Cup (Won by 1922) ? M2 POINTS WON BY 1922 9.0 Total for Banner (Won by 1922) 26.25 30 (Carried from above) 26.25 20 Somersault on Boom . 18.02 20 Flank Vault on Horse 15.15 20 Oblique Vault on Box 18.30 20 Swing Jump with Two Ropes 17.00 20 Stride Vault on Buck 18.35 20 Serpentine Window Ladders 19.00 20 Fence Vault on Boom 19.20 20 Face Vault on Box . 16.40 20 Rope Climbing with Transferrins ' 18.60 186.27 Ja 230 WIT, HUMOR AND MIRTH w g frSte Two students peering in campus house where there is evidnce of great excitement and social functioning: Peg to Jane — Who ' re all (hose strangers? Mrs. Bradshaw (emerging from doorway — Why that ' s a Faculty Reception, young lady, that ' s why they look so strange. OF ' If knock knees and bow legs wont keep a girl from wearing knickers, what chance has modesty? Probable editors of Cassandra : What ho? said the vague Mrs. Brown. Dlxie M ,n er and Dixie Dutm Do you know you ' re the talk of the town? Linda Belanger and Peg Hinckley. Why, what have I done,  j ohn and H ;i da Conkling. My sweet honey bun? £ddie Niquette and Mrs . B Never mind, said the vague Mrs. Brown. Mr. Patch and the Foresmans. Does this sound like Vachel Lindsay to you? Abb ' C Belden and Minna - Herr Neilson-in-Law and Margie Ward. 1st — Did you get any mail? 2nd — No, my mother is visiting me now. k D TOSS! 4k w g fBte HE2I ®r 2:::! A w =y® [ a1 ©r 5AY IT WITH MUSIC Or @ 0EE2 §? A 234 w g f E E EFO E J. C. gives an informal lecture to Zoo. ' 21 as she fills new Dunne fountain pen. The following was of peculiar interest to Mr. Dunn, then crossing the threshold. This is the famous Dunn; it only drinks once a year, but when it does, oh baby! Liz — How can I keep my toes from going to sleep? Lippy — Don ' t let them turn in. John puts Bee out of Music Hall for the ninth Sunday night in suc- cession. Bee (kittenishly) — Won ' t you bo sorry next year, John, when you won ' t have me to put out? John (philosophically) — Well — I ' ve been through it before. AFTE£; Mr. Lieder (in English 311. at 10.30 A. M., after nine girls have left the class) — Perhaps it u would convenience the class more if I had a I U ) v rv- — C 1 train caller here in the future. B fl UAt OrCiC YStem At 10.39 A. M.: lo22. QZ2 All that period was decadent; in fact there was quite a movement on foot of child suicide. At 10.49 A. M.: Now I have just one minute left, and I ' ll give it to you in a second. 1822 Jff , 1... _orl AS we: imagine ouc pc.or-A ' MAN APPEALS TO OUB FRIENDS Mr. Fay — What do you think of Czecho- slovakia? Student — It ' s hard to say. Mr. Withington (at Moliere celebration) — I ' d rather bust the crown than crown the bust of Moliere. Modern Poetry. Scene: Northampton Station. Bell (dramatically) — See the box cars jerking by a mile long, the smoke like brick red dust, quadrangles of crimson sputter from the smoke stacks, whistles shrieking, bells shrieking — Dumbell — Ah, yes — it sounds so like a poem of Eric Stahlberg ' s! ik ptos i r 23i Ja w i Q r 2 mzTi i r 236 A a w § X U r QIalpniiar. 1921-1922 September 27 Registration. 28 Classes Began. October 1 Freshman Frolic. 4 First Meeting of the S. C. A. C. W. Eleanor Hoyt, 1922, President, spoke. 7 Lecture by Sir William Mitchell- Ram- say. Subject, Wanderings of an Archaeologist in Greek Lands. 8 Walter Hampden played in: The Ser- vant in the House, and The Mer- chant of Venice. 12 Mountain Day. 15 Lecture by William Beebe. Subject: The Life in the Jungle. 19 1922 Show for the benefit of the Four Million Dollar Fund. 20 First Meeting of the House of Represen- tatives. 21 First Meeting of the Smith College Branch of the League of Women Vot- ers. 24 Lecture by Helen Fraser. Subject: Poli- tics and Personalities in Britain. 26 Faculty Recital. Mr. Locke, Mr. Case, Mr. Moog, Miss Bliss, Miss Holmes, Miss Gleason, Miss Haight. 28 Lecture by Agnes Repplier. Subject: The Courageous Reader. 29 Field Day. Morning and afternoon meet- ings of the New England Classical As- sociation. 30 Discussion Meeting: The Christian Measuring Stick. November 2 First Concert of the Smith Colege Con- cert Course. New York Philharmonic Orchestra. 4 Concert by John McCormack for the ben- efit of the Four Million Dollar Fund. 6 Discussion meeting. Subject: College Here and There. Speakers: Daisy Yen Tsung-Tsung Nyi, Vong-Kyih Nyi. 9 Student Mass Meeting for discussion of Disarmament. Dramatics Association Production: Aria da Capo, and The Sabine Women. Faculty Recital: Arthur W. Locke, Pianist. 10 Illustrated lecture in French. Speaker: M. Arnold van Gennep, Professeur d ' Ethographie of Paris. Subject: Les Costumes des Provinces de France. II Armistice Day Celebration. Speaker: President Meiklejohn of Amherst Col- lege. Armistice Day Celebration by the Northampton Post of the American Legion. 13 Discussion meeting. Subject: Fitting Ourselves into Politics. Speaker: Lucia Norton, 1923. 15 First meeting of the training class for Girl Scout leaders. Instructor: Miss Kat h- erine Dabney. 16 First meeting of the Senior Class. Speak- er: Miss Helen Wright, Director of the Appointment Bureau. First Concert of the Smith College chamber music course. The Letz Quartet. Freshmen Song Trials. 20 Discussion meeting. Speaker: Camilla Low, 1922. 24 Thanksgiving Day. Basketball game. Yale versus Harvard (so-called). 25 Lecture by Mr. Alfred Zimmern of Uni- versity College, Wales. Subject: The Present European Situation. 27 Discussion meeting. Subject: Unpaid Debts. Speaker: Virginia Moore, 1924. 29 Faculty Recital. Miss Rebecca Haisht, ' cellist, assisted by Mr. Moos, Miss Flobray, Mrs. Olmsted, Miss Gleason. 30 Christmas Sale. Dramatics Association: Helena ' s Husband, Torches, The Dark Lady of the Sonnets. December 1 Illustrated lecture by Miss Annie J. Can- non of Harvard College observatory. Subject: Modern Excursions into An- cient Star Fields. 2 Vocational Conference. 4 Discussion meeting. Subject: Is Social Service Worth While. Speaker: Jane Arms, 1922. 6 Lecture by Miss Cicely C. Warner of the English Women ' s Hockey Team. Subject: Hockey. 7 Concert by Ossip Gabrilowitsch, pianist. 9 Lecture by Mr. Henry Eichheim. Sub- ject: The Comparative Development of Oriental and Occidental Music. Smith-Dartmouth Debate. Resolved: That the United States should recognize the present Soviet Government in Russia. Lecture by Don Ramon del Valle-Inclan. Subject: Spanish Literature. Concert by the Letz Quartet assisted by Paul Kefer, ' cellist. 10 13 14 . msm v, Ja w g f al ©r 16 17 17 Conecrt by the Smith College Glee Club assisted by Mary Tanner Fairchild, vio- linist, and Wilson T. Moog, organist. 20 Beginning of the Christmas Recess. January 1922 6 Opening of College. 1 I Faculty Recital. Miss Bates, Miss Ham- ilton, Mr. Olmsted. Lecture by John A. Lomax. Subject: Cowboy Songs. Motion Pictures. Subject: The Manu- facture of Sugar. Lecture by Sir Phillip Gibbs. Tercentenary Celebration of the birth of Moliere. I. Malade Imaginaire, in French. II. Crowning of the bust of Moliere. Ode, by Grace Hazard Conkling, read by Eleanor Chilton. III. The Cheats of Scapin. Joint Concert of the Harvard Glee Club and the Smith College Oratorio Chorus. Meeting of Student Volunteers. Speakers: Edith Leach, 1923, Eleanor Hoy t, 1922, Sarah Riggs, 1923. Concert by Louise Homer for the benefit of the Vassar Fund. Lecture by Professor Arthur Pope of Harvard University. Subject: A Few Examples of Fine Pictorial Design. Sophomore Carnival. Examinations began. 21 24 25 27 28 30 February 4 Meeting of the Connecticut Valley section of the American Chemical Association. Speaker: Dr. W. T. Bovie of Harvard University. Subject: The Chemical and Physical Organization of Proto- plasm. 8 Concert by Pablo Casals. 10 Beginning of the second semester. Lecture by Carl Sandburo. Lecture in English by M. Julien Champenoix. Subject: The State of Franco- American Uni- versity Relations and a Short Summary of the Educational Movement in France. 10 The Northampton Amateurs presented: The Gentleman Dancing Master. 1 I Recital of Dancing and Music by Miss Theresa Duncan and Mr. Richard Hans Barth. 13 Beginning of the week of Prayer. Ser- vices conducted by Dr. William P. Merrill of Brick Presbyterian Church, N. Y. C. 18 Mrs. Thomas G. Winter spoke on the Disarmament Conference. Song recital by Miss Edith Bennett. Conference of the Alumnae Council. 20 Lecture by Miss Caroline Yale, Princi- pal of ;he Clark School. Subject: Teaching the Deaf. 21 Faculty Recital by Miss Williams. 22 Washington ' s Birthday Commemoration Exercises. Commemoration Ode by Sarah Riggs, 1923; oration by Dwight Whitney Morrow, LL.B. Rally in the Gymnasium. Junior-Senior Basketball game. Seniors victorious. ' 22, ' 23, ' 24 Show for the benefit of the Four Million Dollar Fund. 24 Lecture by Professor John Livingston Lowes of Harvard University. Subject: The Bird and the Daemon and Other Supernatural Matters ; a Chapter in the History of the Ancient Mariner. 25 Freshman-Sophomore Basketball game. Sophomores victorious. Motion piclures accompanied by a lecture by Miss Mad- eleine Z. Doty, 1900. Subject: Japa- nese Life. 27 Lecture by M. Bernard Fay. Subject: The So-Called Anglo-Franco Con- flict. March 1 Lecture by Professor Joseph Redlich of the University of Vienna. Subject: Democracy and Republicanism in Cen- tral Europe. Dramatics Association Mass Meeting. Concert by the Smith College Symphony Orchestra, Miss Holmes, leader. 2 Concert by the Hampton Institute Quartet. 3 Lecture by M. Paul de Schweinitz. Lec- ture by Professor Joseph Redlich. 8 The Church Conference. Junior Frolic. Concert by the Letz Quartet, assisted by Mr. Locke. 9 Beginning of the exhibition of Spring- Flowering Bulbs at the Lyman Plant House. Lecture by M. Henri Chamard of the Sorbonne. Subject: The Ter- centenary of La Fontaine. Address by M. Guillaume Fatio of the University of Geneva. Subject: The University of Geneva Summer School for the Study of International Affairs. Lecture by Miss Rose Schneiderman, President of the Women ' s Trade Union League. Subject: Trade Unionism, A Force in Democracy. Lecture by Professor Ashley H. Thorndike of Co- lumbia University. Subject: Scholar- ship in the Victorian Era. Freshman-Sophomore Basketball game. 1924 victorious. Dramatics Association Presentation : The Dragon. 10 II k tS®M$$ 23S r a w ® fl!sa) 13 Lecture by Mrs. Tracy B. Griswold. Sub- ject: Daily Vacation Bible Schools, a Summer Program of Religious Edu- cation and Americanization. Lecture by Professor Christian Gauss of Prince- ton University. Subject: Journalism 14 Informal Talk by Miss Tousley of the Charity Organizations Society of New York. Subject: Social Work. ' 15 Dramatic Association Mass Meeting. Concert by the Boston Symphony Or- chestra. Soloist, Miss Goode. 16 Lecture by Dr. C. E. Winslow, Profes- son of Public Health, Yale School of Medicine. Subject: The International Red Cross at Work. Lecture, Miss Ada Fitts, Director of Spe- cial Classes, Boston Public Schools. Subject: Classes for Retarded Chil- dren. 18 Annual Gymnasium Drill. Banner and Cup awarded to 1922. Barnard-Smith Debate. Resolved: That the United States Grant the Philippines Immediate Independence. 20 Sonata Recital by Mrs. F. S. Coolidge, pianist, and Mr. Hugo Kortschak, violinist. 22 Beginning of the Spring Recess. April 6 College reopened. 7 Concert by Jascha Heifetz, violinist. 10 Lecture by Mr. S. K. Ratcliffe. Subject: The Crisis in India. I I Lecture by Vachel Lindsay. 12 Lecture by Miss MacMaster. Subject: The Immediate Economic Causes of the Distress in Austria. Faculty Recital. Charles Albert Case, Tenor. 13 Lecture in French by Professor Andre Morize of Harvard University. Sub- ject: Brillat-Savarin and the Culinary Art in France. Pavlowa. 14 Recital of Folk Dances by the Misses Peronne and Constance Arntzenius. 15 Illustrated lecture by Miss Bertha Hazard. Subject: The Oberammergau Passion Play. 18 19 20 24 26 28 Sonata Recital by Mrs. F. S. Coolidge and Mr. William Willicke, ' Cellist. Lecture in Italian by Professor L. P. de Castelvechio of the University of Bir- mingham. Subject: Carducci and His Contempories. Lecture in Italian by Professor de Cas- telvechio. Concert by Arthur Middleton, baritone. Lecture in Italian by Professor de Cas- telvechio. Lecture in English by Professor de Cas- telvechio. Subject: Universities of Italy. Shakespeare Week Celebration began. Mass meeting of the Dramatics Associa- tion. Lecture by Professor Wilbur L. Cross of Yale Old University. rid New. Subject: Novels, 29 Glee Club presented H. M. S. Pinafore. May 3 Dramatics Association presentation of: If I Were King. 4 Meeting of the League of Women Voters. Speaker: Wolcott Stuart, 1921. Sub- ject: The Pan-American Conference of Women at Baltimore. 10 Concert by the Amherst Glee Club and Smith Oratorio Chorus. 17 Junior Promenade. 20 Field Day. 24 Float Day. 25 Presentation of Plays by the Smith Col- lege Workship. 30 Memorial Day. June 2-13 Final Examinations. 15-17 Senior Dramatics: A Winter ' s Tale. 18 Baccalaureate Sermon. 19 Ivy Day. Meeting of the Alumnae Association. Reception by the President and the Faculty. 20 Commencement Exercises. Alumnae Assembly. Class Supper. rk ras Of A 239 w 0M$ r 3n iUnttnriam Sorntljra Olarlylr Stella Wrtm (Surttel iFrancpa ijattsp g firo i A :40 . The Board of the I 922 Class Book wishes to express its appreciation of the assistance of its advisor, Professor William Francis Ganong, and also wishes to thank the following for their active support and co-operation: Janet Bannard Ellen Ewing Lavinia Fyke Elsye Geisenberger Ruth Guggenheim Mildred Mason Eleanor Rau Nathalie Smith IF ' D OD 3 o INDEX Alberts, E 24 Armchair, The 5 Bailey, Banks Biddle Co. ... 5 Baker, Walter, Co., Ltd. ... 27 Beckmann ' s 29 Belanger, Miss 7 Belkin, Mitchell 15 Berry, James 14 Bicknell, H. E 23 Bistany, S 18 Blum, Julius 20 Bon Marche, The 27 Boston Fruit Store 32 Boyden ' s 4 Brandle, Frank A 23 Bridgman Lyman 31 Brigham Co 16 Buchholz Son 7 Butler Ullman 19 Cahill, Julia B 24 Central Grocery 9 Charles, Inc 10 Childs, Thomas S 32 City Taxicab Co 30 Clark Coal Co 16 Coburn Graves 18 Coe Shop, David C 7 College Blouse Mending Shop . 1 3 College Shoe Repair Shop ... 14 College Shoe Shining Parlors . . 23 College Taxi Co., The . . . . 21 Copeland ' s 26 Copper Kettle, The 17 Dewhurst, O. T 25 Draper Hotel 12 Electric Shoe Repair Co. . . . 25 Elms Restaurant, The .... 8 Fitts, C. N 19 Fleming ' s Shoe Shop 30 Forbes Wallace 31 Foster-Farrar Co 32 Gare, E J. Son 27 Gazette Printing Co 18 Gleason Bros 24 Goldman, H 27 Green Dragon, The 14 Hall, Charles, Inc 18 Hampshire Bookshop 17 Hampshire County Trust Co. . . 19 Harlow, Geo. F 18 Harngan Press 33 Hill Brothers 21 Hotel Garage, The 13 Howard-Wesson Co 33 Jensen ' s 21 Kimball Cary Co 22 Kingsley 32 Lambie, J. E. Co 9 LaMontagne, A. J 7 LaMontagne Boot Shop . . . . 19 Laythe Shoe Co., G. W. . . . 24 Luce, George N 25 Mary Marguerite, The .... 9 Metcalf Printing Publishing Co. . 29 Mother ' s Cupboard 18 McCallum, A. Co 28 Niquette ' s 14 Northampton Electric Lighting Co. 1 Northampton Garage Co. ... 32 Northampton Hosiery Co. ... 24 Northfield Hotel, The .... 6 Ono, T. Co 25 Otis Elevator Co., The .... 11 Paddock Tailoring Co 24 Park Co., Inc., The 13 Pierce, J. Hugh 12 Pinehurst Riding School .... 26 Plaza Theatre 8 Plymouth Inn 6 Private Estate Coffee Co. ... 28 Raysel ' s 33 Richard ' s Co., R. J 20 Schultz 13 Sockut, Samuel 17 Stahlberg, Eric 18 Steiger Co., Albert 5 Sutherland, Miss R. L 17 Sweetheart Tea House . . . . 19 Taylor ' s Music House .... 8 Tiffany Co 3 Todd, T. H 29 Trebla 6 Warren Watt 29 Welch, William E 20 Wiswell, H. A 17 Wood, Arthur P 30 Tiffany Co. Jewelry and Silverware Noted for Design Quality and Workmanship Mail Inquiries Given Prompt Attention Fifth Avenue 37- Street NewYork DnnnnnnaannnnnannDDnnnnDnnDnnnDDDDnacGannannnnDDDn I BOYDEN ' S I D □ D D DDDDDDnnDannnnnnnnDnnnnannnnDnnnnnnDnnDnDDannDnnDa DnannnnnnannnnDnnnnnnnnnnnDannnnnnnnDDDDDnnnnnnDDa □ □ □ D a D D a a □ a a D D a D D a D a D □ a a D D a □ D □ □ D □ □ a D D D D a D D a D DODDDDDODnaoaaoaaaonaDDDQaoaQOoaDDDDaDDQaananDDDnQ □□□□□□□□QQQnaDnoannnoaanoaananDDDDGnnnoQGannQQDQon I BOYDEN ' S I a a DDnnnnnDnnnnnnnnnnDnnnnDnnDDnnDDDDnnnnnnDnnDnnnnna rjjr Silversmiths MJ Jr Stationers FRATERNITY r y hAN Dhhl PLAQUES. EMBLEMS, illhl ' JU U Pf. MEDALS. ETC. RINGS, SEALS, f2 M L Jeweler. M I ft OF THE CHARMS. Hr Sflvcrsmiths MJ BETTER KIND PHILADELPHIA THE GIFT BOOK, Mailed upon request Illustrating and Pricing Graduation and other Gifts The ARMCHAIR Tea and Guest House CORNER CRESCENT AND ELM On the Approved List Service a la Carte Hours: 8 A. M. - 1 P. M. Our fashions are neither more nor less than what they appear to be — the best — and our prices are always the lowest at which such apparel can be sold. Distinction of design, merit of material, and the truth and originality that reside in Creative Art — these elements alone account for the prestige of our fashions. Character, dignity and good taste — most women ever seek these qualities in the clothes they choose. It is to such women that our apparel appeals quickly and convincingly. Albert Xna,n (ftnmpany SPRINGFIELD, MASS. JUgmnutlj Jmt Northampton, Massachusetts HOTEL ACCOMMODATIONS which are attractive and comfortable. Adjoining Smith College Campus. Rooms single or en suite, with or without private bath. N?to (ttnlomal ®ea Unnm JUST OPENED IN THE MAIN HOTEL Excellent well-planned meals in a dainty, artistic setting. Meals served from 7 a. m. to 10 p. m. Arrangements made for private parties. Open Sundays. John B. Hyatt, Manager. ttbe IHoctbfielD EAST NORTHFIELD, MASS. OPEN ALL THE YEAR A home-like house, combining comfort, pleasing service, and attractive menus. On the Smith Col- lege approved list ' ' and for many years a resort for Smith faculty and students: Golf, Tennis, and Croquet on grounds. Tobogganing, Snowihoeing, Skiing and other WINTER SPORTS in season 34 miles from Northampton on White Mountain Motor Route, or Boston and Maine R. R. Ambert G. Moody, E. Everett Martin, Manager. Asst. Manager. Fine Chocolates Choice Bonbons TREBLA ' S Sweets 6 Fruits NORTHAMPTON 265 Main Street MAKERS— RETAILERS Crispy Candies Fancy Fruit Baskets The David C. Coe Shop IMPORTERS VICUNA JACKETS NOVELTY SWEATERS SILK AND LISLE HOSE SPORT HOSE FOULARD HANDKERCHIEFS FOULARD TIES SCARVES THE COE BUILDING TWENTY -SIX VERNON STREET SPRINGFIELD, MASSACHUSETTS GO TO Miss Belanger FOR Shampoos Marcelling Manicuring or Face Massage 277 Main Street H. Buchholz Son Theatrical, Historical and Masquerade Costumiers Pageants and School Productions a Specialty Wigs, Beards, Make-ups, Etc. 33 LYMAN ST. SPRINGFIELD, MASS. A. J. LaMontagne Distinctive Decorator and Painter 267 Main St. Northampton Telephone, 146-W TAYLOR ' S MUSIC HOUSE 98 PLEASANT ST. We carry the largest stock of Victor Talking Machines and Records in the City Students ' Victor Machines $25.00 - $35.00 - $50.00 Ukuleles, Ukulele Banjos, Mandores TAYLOR ' S MUSIC HOUSE 98 PLEASANT STREET Plaza Theatre NORTHAMPTON, MASS. Pick o ' the World Photoplays From Famous Producers presenting America ' s Greatest Plays Program Changed Daily except Mondays and Tuesdays FREDERICK P. BELMONT, Mgr. Ike El ■« ms NORTHAMPTON ' S POPULAR RESTAURANT CONVENIENT FOR COLLEGE STUDENTS AND GUESTS Let us convince you that we serve Best Quality Food at Moderate Prices G. HARVEY BLISS J. E. LAMBIE CO. 92 MAIN STREET, NORTHAMPTON, MASS. We Specialize in the Following Merchandise: Imported and Domestic Trimmings. Fancy Silks and Dress Goods. Ribbons and Laces. Veilings, Kid and Fabric Gloves, Hosiery. Silk and Fine Nainsook Undergarments. Curtains, Cur- tain Materials and Curtains Made to Order. Couch Covers, Cretonnes and Drapery Materials. Silk and Lingerie Blouses. AGENTS IN THIS CITY FOR BETTY WALES DRESSES You d be surprised AT The lowness of our prices Our large supply of stock Our courtesy to customers TRY US! THE Central Grocery The Mary Marguerite Tea Room and Food Shop LUNCHEONS AND SUPPERS SERVED Hours: 1 1.00 to 6.30 TWENTY-ONE STATE STREET Gowns Suits Coats Skirts Blouses M.T. WxTLGry of DisK-acti on S i £ ct7 nS ' M building J llio €igfxty JVine ridge S ' treeir Sprin cffietcL How many times have you wished to press a shirt waist, etc., for a party? Oh! for a Universal Electric Traveler ' s Iron with velvet bag, weight only 3 1 . lbs. Or to add a couple more waves to that coiffeur? Oh! for a Universal Electric Curler. Now for the studying which takes many long hours. Oh! for an Electric Study Lamp. See them at Our Store. NORTHAMPTON ELECTRIC LIGHTING CO. 10 COMPLIMENTS OF The Otis Elevator Company Guests Jrom 48 States Praise the Draper Ifcotel NORTHAMPTON, MASSACHUSETTS WILLIAM M. KIMBALL, PROP. WALL PAPER, PAINTS PICTURE CLASS ETC. We Paint Students ' Furniture J. HUGH PIERCE 186 Main Street NORTHAMPTON, MASS. 12 Authorized Dealers Present Prices Lowest Ever F. O. B. NORTHAMPTON Sedan $708.99 Coupelet 641.31 Touring, Starter and Dem. Rims . Roadster, Starter and Dem. Rims $498.65 468.46 Why Not Benefit by These Prices? For Genuine Ford Parts, First Quality Tires and Accessories GO TO 24 Center Street Telephone 470 For Service and Repairs — TRY — HOTEL GARAGE Rear 203 Main St. Tel. 187 CHASE MOTOR CO. Our New Art Room at 263 Main Street, adjoining our Optical Shop, is a place of rare interest and beauty — a treasure house of fine pictures, framed and unf ramed ; art goods charmingly unique, together with a most noteworthy display of the different sort of greeting cards for all occasions. The Park Company, Inc. 257 Main Street Northampton, Massachusetts THE COLLEGE Blouse and Mending Shop 28 CENTER STREET The Shop where you find everything that ' s new and smart in blouses EXCLUSIVE Dressmaking, Mending, Repairing, Altering, French Dry Cleaning, Steaming and Pressing Manicuring Facial Massage SCHULTZ Hair Dressing and Shampooing 13 Gifts That Last You will find that we have a complete line of gifts in jewelry for college girls. Our stock of Smith Seal Rings and Pins is complete BERRY ' S Jewelers 161 MAIN STREET Next to Western Union NORTHAMPTON 207 MAIN STREET A Gift Shop of Distinction N IQUETTE ' S The College Drug Store NORTHAMPTON, MASSACHUSETTS CAMERAS AND SUPPLIES Mail Us Your Films Agency for PAGE SHAW CHOCOLATES College Shoe Repair Shop Tony Rabskey, Prop. Goodyear System Repairing 33 State Street Northampton, Mass. 14 Telephone 1 753 Mitchell Belkin 241 MAIN STREET, NORTHAMPTON, MASS. STUDIOS AT 72 and 465 MAIN STREET, SPRINGFIELD, MASS. Official Photographer to Smith, 1922 Amherst College Photographer to Olio, 1923 imperial EatPH to Utornta We are experts in developing and printing your films. Free developing of films to students. 15 1 . If. 1 rtgljam Gkmpatr? Springfield, Mass. Specializing in Smart Apparel and Furs for the College Girl Make Briglia ill ' s Your Meeting Plaee Whenever In Springfield William A. Clark Coal Co. Coal 202 Main Street Telbphonbs] 1170 16 YOUR ACCOUNT IS ALWAYS GOOD AT The Hampshire Bookshop Send back for B o o l( s Antiques Copper Kettle 45 State Street Samuel Sockut Tailor and Furrier Ladies ' Suits, Coats and Skirts Made to Order Ladies ' and Gents ' Garments Remodeled to the Latest Designs and Fashions Steam and Dry Cleaning and Pressing Done al Reasonable Prices WORK CALLED FOR AND DELIVERED Telephone 1685-M Center Street Northampton, Mass. Near Main Street HARPER METHOD MISS R. L. SUTHERLAND 78 Main St. Bement Bleb Scalp Treatment, Shampooing Manicuring, Facial Massage and Marcel W I S W E LL The Druggist 82 MAIN STREET NORTHAMPTON, MASS. 17 40 STATE STREET Tea-Room Service from 9 A. M. to 7 P. M. on Week-Days Dinner and Supper on Sundays ERIC STAHLBERG McCLELLAN STUDIO — NORTHAMPTON MASSACHUSETTS ©dental Sbop S. BISTANY Fancy Work Imported Goods Turkish Rugs 239 MAIN STREET Telephone I 1 72-W Northampton, Mass. A GOOD PLACE TO BUY YOU R Desks, Chairs and Tables G. F. HARLOW ' S 19 Center St. The Tea Room at Hall ' s Luncheon served from Twelve to Two Afternoon Tea from Three to Five Waffles and Syrup a specialty Cosy Corner especially in favor with college girls CHARLES HALL, Inc. The Hall Building CARA NOME and JONTEEL (ErramH, JFfarp Pmutora, Sains, iEtr. Liggett ' s Candies Coon ' s Ice Cream Coburn Graves Opp. Court House The Rexall Store NORTHAMPTON, MASS. Ofertt? Printing (Eo. 14 GOTHIC STREET PRINTING OF ALL KINDS mitlj d ra H as well as may always feel free to write or wire flowers and expect the very best that we can give. lutbr lUman Flowers The Woman THE WOMAN IS THE ECONOMIST — W HICH IS A WORD MEANING, ORIGINAL HOUSEKEEPER. THE BEST HOUSEKEEPER U S ES A CHECK BOOK AND HAS HER ACCOUNT WITH THE Hampshire County Trust Company LaMontagne Boot Shop Near the Post Office Style — Quality — at Prices thai please It Pays to Pay Cash 21 PLEASANT STREET NORTHAMPTON - MASSACHUSETTS SHELBURNE FALLS, MASS. Sweetheart Specialties: Fried Chicken and Waffles. Waffles and Maple Syrup. Pure Maple Sugar Products Open until 8 o ' clock every day May 24th to Oct. 26th ALICE BROWN MOHAWK TRAIL Thirty Years ' Experience Selling Students ' Room Furnishings We Solicit your Business At 137 MAIN STREET NORTHAMPTON, MASS. C. N. FITTS 19 Blum ' s Ready-to-Wear Shop ALWAYS SELECTED AS THE IDEAL SHOP FOR COLLECE GIRLS ' APPAREL Our ready-to-wear is noted for its beauty of material and its certainty of long wear. At present we are specializing in TWEED DRESSES AND SUITS. We invite each col- lege student to inspect our fine Tweed material and make an early selection. A perfect fit guar- anteed in every case. JULIUS BLUM 259 MAIN STREET Proprietor NORTHAMPTON, MASS. Distinctive Jewelry Avoidance of the commonplace distinguishes our stock R. J. RICHARDS COMPANY Northampton ' s Finest Jewelry Shop WILLIAM E. WELCH Travelers ' Insurance Co. THIRD NATIONAL BANK BUILDING Springfield, Massachusetts 20 QUALITY SERVICE We have any kind of a car for anywhere, at any time THE COLLEGE TAXI CO. WILLIAM G. MAHER Telephone 80 EFFICIENCY RELIABILITY 315 Main Street Springfield, Mass. 22 Pratt Street Hartford, Conn. Makers and Retailers of Fine Candies Hill Brothers 118 MAIN STREET Ye Olde Tyme Rugs Window Draperies Couch Covers Burlap Cretonnes Floss Fingering Yarns Down Pillows Sport Coats Umbrellas RELIABLE MERCHANDISE AT REASONABLE PRICES Established 1 88 1 Incorporated 1 896 Kimball Cary Company Hard and Soft COALS of best quality Office: 2 Main Street, Northampton, Mass. 22 All through their College Course and for Many Years After the Smith College Girls Deal With Us They ' re wide awake, up-to-date and refined. They want the best, they know what it is, and they soon see that they can depend on us to supply it. And the result is their patronage while here, and mail orders from all over the world after they leaVe Alma Mater. We, like the college, stay with and serve them as the years pass. Footwear - Hosiery - Wool Goods - Novelties H. E. BICKNELL 158 MAIN STREET NORTHAMPTON, MASS. h . i _ , V k i t J i Philip Karkanedes 233 Main Street Northampton, Mass. College Shoe Shine and Hat Cleaning Parlor Hats Dyed Shoes Dyed Postal Cards, Magazines Frank A. Brandle COLLEGE PHARMACY 271 - Main Street - 271 Agents for Hurler ' s Candies 23 G. W. Laythe Shoe Company Shoes and Hosiery of Distinction and Character DRAPER HOTEL BLOCK Tel. 571-M Pabinrk tailoring QI0. Cleaners - and - Dyers Suits Made to Order. All Kinds of Fancy Alterations 14 Masonic St. Northampton, Mass. Just Around the Corner of Main St. — Telephones — 7 Pearl St., 413-W R. R. Station, 153-W P. Gleason, 413-R Gleason Bros. P. P. GLEASON, PROP. Freight Forwarders LONG DISTANCE TRANSFER BY AUTO TRUCK Light and Heavy Trucking Contracting, Cement, Mortar, Sand Furniture and Piano Moving OFFICE: 7 PEARL STREET NORTHAMPTON MASSACHUSETTS PARADISE HOSIERY MADE IN THE PARADISE OF AMERICA Sillf, F U H Fashioned BY Northampton Hosiery Company NORTHAMPTON, MASS. We are Headquarters for Everything in - - - (Eorrpct (Eolleg? ifaatuiear E. ALBERTS 241 MAIN STREET The Shoe Store Nearest the Campus Julia B. Cahill WOMAN ' S WEAR Blouses - Corsets - Bandeaux Underwear - Hosiery 24 Compliments of To Ota© Company DEALERS IN PAN! 1 ' S! 1 ' :iiira Telephone 1253-W 14 CENTER STREET George N. Luce Ladies ' Tailor 111 MAIN STREET NORTHAMPTON MASSACHUSETTS Telephone Connection Electric Shoe Repair Co. 15 MASONIC STREET NORTHAMPTON MASSACHUSETTS OUR SHOP IS CONVENIENT TO YOU We are centrally located ; those little adjustments that your glasses occa- sionally need are only matters of a few minutes ' work. We pride ourselves that our interest in you does NOT end with your original purchase. Prescription work, mail and tele- graph orders are finished same day received. dee ror rourscit - ney t re Scarcely Notlceabl 0 ' OPTICIANS to your President ' s family and the majority of the Faculty, Heads of Houses and Students. Imitation and real Tortoise Shell our specialty. O. T. DEWHURST REGISTERED OPTOMETRISTS AND PRESCRIPTION OPTICIANS 201 MAIN ST., opposite City Hall Tel. 1 84-W 25 Pinehurst Riding School W. H. LAW, Prop. % Riding Lessons TlS Given with the f if ■TiJ Best of F SCHOOL - ' yel? HORSES r --jJSs k- Horses Boarded by Week or Month Ride for Pleasure 45 and 47 GOTHIC STREET (Rear) Telephone 813-M Copeland ' s Fancy Goods Shop FURNISHES A LARGE AND CHOICE ASSORTMENT OF High-class Wools, for Knitting and Crochet- ing. Also a complete line of Stamped Goods and Embroidery Materials of every descrip- tion. Class and Society Designs, a Spe- cialty. Art Novelties, Ribbons, Laces, Etc. COPELAND ' S Mail Orders Receive Prompt and Careful Attention 04 MAIN STREET :: :: :: NORTHAMPTON 26 Eversharp Pencils LeBceuf Pens in Colors E. J. GARE S SON 112 MAIN STREET NORTHAMPTON, MASS. H. GOLDMAN Eaites utaUnr ano 3 xxx n Special Order on New Fur Coats Remodeling and Repairing Phone 868-m 217 MAIN STREET COMPLIMENTS OF Bon Ifcarcbe 27 BAKER ' S Sweet Chocolate ..■jsidv-i 1 r. if BAKER ' S ■. CARACAS. SWEET CHOCOLATE ! : I ' - i -J Delicious Flavor Absolute Purity High Quality Sweet Chocolate is very sustaining, as it contains more nourishment than the same amount of beef. WALTER BAKER CO. LTD. Established 1780 DORCHESTER, MASS. IHK HOI NOAKIES OK QUALITY Smttb College Private Estate Coffee Co. ESTABLISHED 1851 21-23-25 Fulton St. NE I tli I A. McCallum Company A Sppartntwt $ tan Uiljai IHakea (ftnllnjp iFitrmsljttujH a £ pprialttj For years this store has stood for quality and service Specializing in all the needed COLLEGE SUPPLIES also Suits, Coats, Dresses, Blouses and Millinery A (Earntal JnuitaUmt is iExlenorn to ou to JMakr ©ur § totv f nur tarp A. McCALLUM and COMPANY 28 JSeckmann ' s takes this opportunity to extend to every member of the graduating Senior class, a host of sincere congratulations ; we hope you will always remember the happy days spent at Smith ; we know you will always think of the happy hours you spent at Beckmann ' s. And no matter what course the future may have in store for you; no matter what clime or time, whether in some far-off land or in the uttermost parts of this good old U. S. A., remember, too, that BECKMANN ' S will always be ready to extend to you the same service and attention that helped to make your days at Smith such happy ones. HIGH QUALITY RIGHT PRICES QUICK SERVICE — Three sound reasons why you should give us your PRINTING iErtralf Printing $c Publishing (En. line. - Printers of the Smith College Monthly Northampton, Mass. w— — w WARREN WATT Everything Electrical 1 79 Main St., Northampton Telephone 1 26 Todd ' s We want you to feel at home in our store at all times. We are always happy to welcome back the upperclassmen, who have been trad- ing here for several years; and, in like man- ner, we are pleased to have the new girls who have just entered college, feel that Todd ' s Store endeavors to have goods in stock which will appeal to every girlish whim. Attractive and novel goods at rea- sonable prices is our aim in business. Our Students ' Furnishing Department will convince you that this is accomplished. Cre- tonne draperies, novelty pillows and couch covers made to order at all times. Prompt delivery service. — Free telephone for town calls. 29 Rare Conceptions of Modern Artistry To her who would find in a watch that perfect union of beauty and accuracy, we offer rare masterpieces of the modern watchmaker ' s art — Wristlets hand-chased in green and white and yellow gold ; wristlets brilliant with full-cut diamonds or charming in unadorned simplicity — All rich with that elegance which graces only the products of the highest artistry. In our wide selection of women ' s wristlets will be found the means of gratifying each feminine taste. Particularly attractive, we believe, is our distinctive showing of Gruen Wrist watches for women — made by the famous Gruen Guild of Watchmakers. ARTHUR P. WOOD The Jewel Store of Northampton - also - The Watch and Clock Hospital 197 MAIN STREET Tel. 1307-M OPP. CITY HALL GIRLS ! WHAT ' S THAT TAXI NUMBER? Why It ' s 96-W of Course City Taxicab Co. DRAPER HOTEL BUILDING Cars for All Occasions E. Sarazin, Prop. Man to Grocery Clerk: — Have you anything in the shape of bananas? Clerk: — Nothing except cucumbers. Most Exclusive Models in LADIES ' PUMPS and OXFORDS ARE FOUND AT Dfomtng ' B Bi ot Bi}op 211 MAIN STREET 30 jforbes Wallace SPRINGFIELD, MASSACHUSETTS A STORE that stands among the finest institu- tions in the community — a store with policies, ideals and initiative that place it on a standard with the most famous stores in the country BRIDGMAN LYMAN NORTHAMPTON, MASS. Extend Greetings to the Class of 22, and thank them for their patronage SEND US YOUR MAIL ORDERS FOR V l TT H Class Books, Song- Books, Banners and Pennants, Stationery, Verse Ana anything else in the Book ana Stationery Line 31 Thomas S. Childs INCORPORATED 273-279 HIGH STREET HOLYOKE Smart Styles. Shoes and Hosiery of Quality and Fashion Moderately priced. Mail Orders carefully filled. 1Ringsle ' 8 Sod a Fountain and Luncheonette Nothing like it in all New England for Beauty Convenience and Service Candies of Excellence — The Correct — Golf Clubs and Balls, Tennis Rackets, Balls and Nets at Foster-Farrar Co. 162 Main Street Northampton, Mass. NORTHAMPTON GARAGE CO. Cadillac and Dodge Agents Telephones, 582-8240 Next to Post Office Cadillac Cars to Rent By Day or Hour STORAGE, REPAIRS AND ACCESSORIES 65 PLEASANT STREET Northampton, Mass. You will never regret trading at the BOSTON Fruit Store M. GIUFFRE CO. The Pioneer Fruit House of Northampton Telephone 370 235 MAIN STREET 32 The Academy Is Opposite Raysels The Sport Shop of IRa eele SHOWING Exclusive Creations — of New Things from the Old World, English Golf Sweaters English Hosiery Tweed Suits Sport Dresses Top Coats Tailored Waists IRa sels 33 Howard-Wesson Co. WORCESTER, MASS. Engravers for the Class Book Harrigan Press WORCESTER, MASS. Printers of the Class Book 34
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