Smith College - Smith College Yearbook (Northampton, MA) - Class of 1925 Page 1 of 284
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n cr a D mttfj doling? (Elaaa Sook 1925 (Elafifi iHfltto Jhthlislieft by il)f Glass of 1U25 £] al n CT I] CT Uto tl|r ffflrmoru, of 1L (ftlark £ ??{$? a aa our first Prratornt, laib tljp founbattuna of tljia (Hollpgp, pn- bnuipb it witlj trabiiiona, anb ppraontfipb ita tbrala. CEt|tja book ia bpbiratpb by tl?p Jiftipth. CElaaa n a TJ a n [J SablF of Qlmttents Dedication Board of Trustees The Faculty The Class Freshman Year . Sophomore Year . Junior Year . Senior Year Commencement Week Other Classes Organizations Dramatics Publications Music Societies and Clubs Athletics Verse Nonsense Advertisements . 5 10 11 27 109 113 117 125 129 139 147 159 165 171 176 207 225 236 2 i:; n m D Hi CJ D D n a n a a — i _□ al n a D LT ®rttstrra Ruth Bowles Baldwin, A.B New York City Anne McClallan Chapin, A.B. . . Springfield, Massachusetts Ada Louise Comstock, A.M., Litt.D., LL.D., L.H.D. Cambridge, Massachusetts Henry Emerson Fosdick, A.M., D.D. . . New York City John A. Houston, M.D. . . . Northampton, Massachusetts Frederic Marshall Jones, A.B., S.B. Springfield, Massachusetts Thomas William Lamont, A.B. . George Bliss McCallum, A.B. Elizabeth Cutter Morrow, A.B. John E. Oldham, A.M. Paul J. Sachs, A.B. George S. Stevenson, A.M. . Marguerite Milton Wells, B.L. New York City Northampton, Massachusetts Englewood, New Jersey . Boston, Massachusetts Cambridge, Massachusetts . Hartford, Connecticut Minneapolis, Minnesota n a 10 r k V_]K X-J iu PRESIDENT NEILSON □ m CJ n [J Abmtmatrattbe ©ffirera FRANCES FENTON BERNARD, LAURA W. L. SCALES. B.L. Ph.D. Warden Deun FLORENCE MEREDITH, B.S., M.D. College Physician JEAN CLARK CAHOON, A.M. . aistrar ..i ORG! P U MSB HYDE. AH.. LI. n. Cont roll, r GEORGE BLISS M( CA1 I UM, A B. 7 ' ( u « n al i:: □ Q D CJ MARY MERROW COOK, B.S. Dean of the Class of 1925 SUZAN ROSE BENEDICT, Ph.D. Dean of the Class of 1926 MIRA BIGELOW WILSON, A.B., B.D. Dean of the Class of 192? SARA HINCKS, A.M. Dean of the Class of 192S n Q 14 n nco CT D CT Jffarultu nf 3natrurttmt J. Everett Brady, Ph.D. Professor of Latin Language and Litrrut ill r William Francis Ganong, Ph.D. Professor of Botany Harris Hawthorne Wilder, Ph.D. Professor of Zoology Frank Allan Waterman, Ph.D. Professor of Physics Irving Francis Wood, Ph.D.. D.I). Professor of Biblical Literaturt Ernst Henrich Mensel, i ' h.D.. I.itt.D. Profi MOT ' Qi r ituin ir LanQUBQi I tiini l.it Hi ' lit I n nl 16 □ a D CJ Julia Harwood Carverno, A.M. Professor of Greek Language and Literature Alfred Vance Churchill, A.M. Professor of Art Elizabeth Deering Hanscom, Ph.D. Professor of English John Spencer Bassett, Ph.D., LL.D. Professor of History Anna Alice Cutler, Ph.D. Professor of Philosophii Robert E. S. Olmsted, A.B. Professor of Music n n. 16 ID cr D cr Harriet W. Bigelow, Ph.D. Professor of Astronomy Herbert Vaughan Abbott, A.B. Professor of English Caroline Brown Bourland, Ph.D. Professor of Spanish Language ond Lit rat ure Everett Kimball, Ph.D. Professor of Government Albert Schinz, Ph.D., O.A. ■; ofeseor of French Language and Literatun Carl F. A. Lange, Ph.D. ..,,, ,,i (,« i ma Language i and Literatures n Qi 17 U □ u lt Louise Delpit, Concours Certificat Lettres, O.A. Professor of French Language and Literature Sidney Norton Deane, Ph.D. Professor of Greek Language and Literature David Camp Rogers, Ph.D. Professor of Psychology Harriet Redfield Cobb, A.M. Professor of Mathematics Sidney Bradshaw Fay, Ph.D. Professor of History Joel Ernest Goldthwait, B.S., M.D., F.A.C.S., D.S.M., C.M.G. Professor of Hygiene and Physical Education n Q 18 D as or D cr Richard Ashley Rice, A.M. Professor of English John C. Hildt, Ph.D. Professor of History Florence Alden Gragg, Ph.D. Professor of Latin Language and Literature Rebecca Wilder Holmes I ' ro lessor of Music Robert Seneca Smith, A.M., B.I). Professor of BibUeal IAU rature Amy Louise Barbour, Ph.D. Prof s$90i of On k Langvagi . U( i l! HI i n [Ql 111 n a cr Mary Belle McElwain, Ph.D. Professor of Latin Language and Literature Suzan Rose Benedict, Ph.D. Professor of Mathematics William Dodge Gray, Ph.D. Professor of History Arthur Ware Locke, A.M. Professor of Music H. Edward Wells, Ph.D. Professor of Chemistry Roy Dickinson Welch, A.B. Professor of Music n □L 20 D D D W Osmond T. Robert, B. es L. Professor of French Language and Li( nil U if Wilson Townsend Moog, Mus.B., F.A.G.O. Professor of Music Frank H. Hankins, Ph.D. Professor of Economics ami Sociology Harvey Gates Townsend, Ph.D. Prof ssot of Education William Orton, M.A., M.Sc. rofeaaoi oj Economics Sociology Edna Astor Shearer, Ph.D. Pro i soot  ' J ' fi Uosoph i n olJ LM □ u D n Florence Meredith, B.S., M.D. Professor of Hygiene and Physical Education Meyric R. Rogers, M.Arch. Professor of Art Agnes Low Rogers, Ph.D. Professor of Education and Psychology Samuel Ralph Harlow, A.M. Professor of Biblical Literature Harry Elmer Barnes, Ph.D. Professor of Economics and Sociology Howard Rollin Patch, Ph.D., Litt.D. Professor of English n a 22 □ as LT D n Dickinson Miller, Ph.D., Sc.D., D.D. Professor of Philosophy Henry M. Tyler, D.D. . Eleanor Philbrook dishing, A.M. Mary Augusta Jordan, A.M., I..H.D Harry Norman Gardiner, A.M. . Ruth Goulding Wood, Ph.D. Esther Lowenthal, Ph.D. . Inez Whipple Wilder, A.M. Ellen Parmelee Cook, A.M. Julia Warner Snow. Ph.D. Elizabeth Spaulding Mason, A.M. Louisa Sewall Cheever. A.M. Frances Grace Smith, Ph.D. Josef Wiehr, Ph.D. . Margaret Bradshaw, Ph.D. Aida Agnes Heine, A.M. Mary Louise Foster, Ph.D. Mary Delia Lewis, A.M. Margaret Rooke, M.A.. Oxon. Arthur Taber Jones. Ph.D. Howard Madison Parsbley. Sc.D. Jessie Yereance ( ' ami, Ph.D. F. Warren Wright, Ph.D. . Paul Robert Lied... Ph.D. . Robert Withington, Ph.D., O.A. Chase Going Woodhouse, A.M. . Clara Willoughby Davidson, A.M. Stanley Aldcn. A.M. . Susan Miller Kamho, Ph.D. Grace Hazard Conkling, H.L. Edward James W Ihouse, l.L.lf. Elizabeth Avery, Ph.D. Emily Ledyard Shields, Ph.D. Eleanor Shipley Duckett, Ph.D.. D.I Margaret Brackenbury Crook, is. A. Abbie Mabel O ' Keefe, M.D. Vincent Guilloton, Agreg£ de L ' Universit Werner Josten .... Richard Donovan, Mum. it., F.A.G.O II. den Uabelle Williams. O.A. . Professor Emeritus of Greek Language and Literature Professor Emeritus of Mathematics . Professor Emeritus of English Professor of Philosophy Associate Professoi Associate Professor Professor of Mathematics Professor of Economics arid Sociology Professor- of .o. ' loev Associate Professor of Chemistry Associate Professor of Botany Associate Professor of Chemistry Associate Professor f English Language and Literature Associate Professor of Botany Associate Professor of German Language and Literature Associate Professor of English Language and Literature . Associate Professor of I. Associate Professor of Chemistry English Language and Literature Italian Language and Literature Associate Professor of Physics Associate Professor of ZoSlogy Associate Professor of Chemistry Associate Professor- of Latin Language and Literature Associate Professor- of English Language and Literature Associate Professor of English Language and Literature Associate Professor- of Economics and Sociology Associate Professor of Biblical Literature Associate Professor of English Language and Literature Associate Professor of Mathematics te Professor of English Language and Literature . Associate Professor of Government Associate Professor of Spoken English A ociate Professor of Latin Language and Literature Associate Professor- of Latin Language and Literature Associate Professor of Biblical Literature Associate Professor of Hygiene Associate Professor of French Language and Literature Associate Prof ISOI Associate Professor ol Associate Professor of French Language and Literature n nl 28 □ a U CJ Mary Merrow Cook, B.S. ..... Associate Professor of French Language and Literature Helen Ashurst Choate, Ph.D Associate Professor of Botany Myra Melissa Sampson, A.M Associate Professor of Zoology Katharine Shepherd Woodward, A.B. . . Associate Professor of English Language and Literature Sidney R. Packard, Ph.D Associate Professor of History Esther Cloudman Dunn, Ph.D. . . . Associate Professor of English Language and Literature Aline de Villele. Agregee es Lettres . . Associate Professor of French Language and Literature Mary Lillias Richardson, A.M. .... Assistant Professor of Latin Language and Literature Laura Sophronia Clark, A.M Assistant Professor of Chemistry Sarah Hook Hamilton ........... Assistant Professor of Music Samuel A. Eliot. Jr., A.B. ..... Assistant Professor of English and Spoken English Rose Frances Egan, A.M. ..... Assistant Professor of English Language and Literature Clarence Kennedy, Ph.D. ........... Assistant Professor of Art Roy Richard Denslow, A.M. ......... Assistant Professor of Chemistry Elizabeth Andros Foster, Ph.D. . . . Assistant Professor of Spanish Language and Literature Elizabeth Faith Genung, M.S. A. ......... Assistant Professor of Botany Clifford H. Riedell ............ Assistant Professor of Art Florence Farnham Olmsted .......... Assistant Professor of Music Anna Adele Chenot, A.M. ..... Assistant Professor of French Language and Literature Margaret Lewis Bailey, Ph.D. ...... Assistant Professor of English and of German Emmett Reid Dunn, Ph.D. .......... Assistant Professor of Zoology Ivan T. Gorokhoff .......... Assistant Professor of Choral Music Catherine Elizabeth Koch, A.M., M.L.D. ........ Assistant Professor of Botany Lizbeth R. Laughton, A.B. ........ Assistant Professor of Spoken English K. Frances Scott, Ph.D., M.D. ............ Assistant Physician Cesar Barja, Doctor en Derecho . . . Assistant Professor of Spanish Language and Literature Florence McArdle, A.M. ..... Assistant Professor of Hygiene and Physical Education Robert Merrill Dewey, B.S. ........ Assistant Professor of Spoken English Margaret Louise Farrand, A.B. .......... Director of Press Board Abba Willard Bowen, A.B. .... Assistant Professor of French Language and Literature Lucile Marsh, A.B. .......... Assistant Professor of Spoken English Lilian Mary Lane, Ph.B. ..... Assistant Professor of English Language and Literature Mary J. Garber, A.M. ......... Assistant Professor of Spoken English Alice Margaret Holden, Ph.D. ......... Assistant Professor of Government Elliott M Grant. Ph.D. ..... Assistant Professor of French Language and Literature Paul Hansell ........... Assistant Professor of Spoken English Sarah Hincks, A.M. ...... Assistant Professor of English Language and Literature Margaret Wooster, Ph.D. .......... Assistant Professor of Psychology Helene Cattanes, Docteur d ' Universite . . Assistant Professor of French Language and Literature Mira Bigelow Wilson, A.B., B.D. ...... Assistant Professor of Biblical Literature Elsa P.utler Grove, A.M. ....... Assistant Professor of Economics and Sociology Marcus L. Hansen, Ph.D. Anne B. G. Hart. A.M. Frances E. Cheney L. Mary Moench. A. P.., M.D. Naomi Bevard Abbie Loveland Tuller, Ph.D. Antony Constans, A.B., LL.B. John Woods Duke Solon Robinson Assistant Professor Licencie es Let. Assistant Professor . Assistant Professor of History of English Language and Literature Assistant Professor of Education Assistant Physician Assistant Professor of Music Assistant Professor of Education of French Language and Literature Assistant Professor of Music Assistant Professor of Music Hannah Louisa Billings, A.M. .......... Assistant Professor of Physics Gladys Amelia Anslow. Ph.D. .......... Assistant Professor of Physics Louise Bourgoin, Licenciee es Lettres . . Assistant Professor of French Language and Literature Mina Stein Kirstein, A.M. ..... Assistant Professor of English Language and Literature Margaret Gale Scott, A.M. ........... Assistant Professor of History Priscilla Fairfield, Ph.D. .......... Assistant Professor of Astronomy Leah C. Thomas ...... Assistant Professor of Hygiene and Physical Education Homer Guy Bishop, Ph.D. ......... Assistant Professor of Psychology Julius Seelye Bixler, Ph.D. Assistant Professor of Biblical Literature Vera Lee Brown, Ph.D Assistant Professor of History Yvonne Imbault-Huart, Agregation Premiere Partie, O.A. Assistant Professor of French Language and Literature Oliver Waterman Larkin, A.M Assistant Professor of Art Howard Augustus Meyerhoff, A.M Assistant Professor of Geology Marie Milliette Assistant Professor of Music Katherine Pardee, A.B., M.D. ............ Assistant Physician Postley Sinclair ............. Assistant Professor of Music n □. 24 □ lt D d Lucy Lord Barrangon, A.M Vera Marie Cushce, M.S. Anacleta Candida Vezzetti Sara Bache-Wiig, M.S. Dorothy Louise Merchant, . Abby Snow Belden, A.H. Ruth Wendell Cooper, A.H Kdith Harrison Morrill, A Newton Arvin, A.M. Frances Hotkin, A.M. . Eleanor Clifton, A.li. . Clayton M. Hall, Ph.D. Margaret Kincaid Bishop. Frances C. Mclnnes, A.li. Adela M. Pond, A.li. . (Catherine Wendell Townse Dorcas Brigham, A.H. E. Frances Stilwell, A.M. babel F. Smith. Ph.D. Madelein Guilloton, Liccnc Marian Rubins, A.M. . Harriet Howe, A.li. Vera A. Sickels, U.S. . Mary Evelyn Clark, M.A. Elizabeth Virginia Nagy, Marion Downey, A.li. . Leona C. (label. A.li. . Dora Neill Raymond, I ' h.L Helen J. I ' eirce, A.B. Margaret H. Peoples, A.M. Isabel Westeott Harper, A.l Helen Frances Small, A.H. Helen E. Howarth, A.li. Harriet F Clover . Ruth M. Agnew, M.A. . Eileen li. Hughes, B.A. Arnold Richard Janser Louise Kingsley, A.H. . Lois T. S locum, A.H. . Heat rice Newhall, A.H., li.! Edith Burnett, U.S. Constance Pauline Hurt, A. Ralph de Someri Child . A .lane (). Dorscy, A.M. . Pierre de L. Dupont, I ' ,, eg Bess M. Eversull, Ph.D. Natalie M. Gilford, M.Ed. Ruth M. Home. M.A. . Vera Koehrlng, A.M. . Marine Leland, A.H. II:. .el Marie l.,,sh. Ph.D. Ruth E Spence, A.H. . Ruth H. Willian, A.li. Rosie Nelson, A.li. Doris Sllbert, A.H. Dorothy A Hunt. A.H. Marie H. Bralnerd, A.B Virginia White Jamei I Elizabeth Kimball, A.M. Elizabeth Bhand Allison, a Gertrude Leary Ethel Louise Lyman Dor,, thy Wolff DoUgblS, A.I Marian li. King Rebt eca I .e i ' i Francis Powell George Dahl Ph.D. M h I) d. A h.D Lett A.M In Instructor in the History of Art Instructor in Astronomy Instructor in Italian Language and Literature . Instructor in Botany Instructor in Geology nstructor in Hygiene and Physical Education Instructor in Spoken English nstructor in English Language and Literature nstructor in English Language and Literature Instructor in Psychology nstructor in Hygiene and Physical Education nstructor in Latin Language and Literature Instructor in Psychology nstructor in Hygiene and Physical Education Instructor in Geology nstructor in Hygiene and Physical Education Instructor in Botany . Instructor in Zoology . Instructor in Geology nstructor in French Language and Literature Instructor in Economics and Sociology Instructor in Chemistry Instructor in Spok en English Instructor in Philosophy Instructor in Philosophy Instructor in Physics Instructor in History Instructor in History itructor in Spanish Language and Literature Instructor in French . Instructor in Zoology . Instructor in Zoology Instructor in Astronomy nstructor in Hygiene and Physical Education nstructor in English Language and Literature nstructor in English Language and Literature Instructor in Music Instructor in Geology Instructor in Astronomy nstructor in Spanish Language and Literature nstructor in Hygiene and Physical Education Instructor in Chemistry Instructor in Spoken I Instructor in Spoken English nstructor in French Language and Literature Instructor in Mathematics nstructor in Greek Language anil Literature Instructor in Economics and Sociology . Instructor in Zoology nstructor in French language and Literature Instructor in Astronomy Instructor in Psychology Instructor in Music Assistant in (,. Assistant in Music Assistant in Assistant in Psychology i ' :.nt in Bducat 1011 Museum Assistant Curator il Secretary to the Department ol Librarian in tin Department ol Reader ill Economics and BOCiolog) Secretarial Assistant In Psycholog) . Secretarial Assistant In Psycholog) Lecturer in Spoken English | ii |na Profeasoi of Biblical Literature JD a L . ' . D a U CJ I] EL 26 D u D CJ Suzanne D. Ackerman 1010 Grand Avenue Asbury Park. N. J. Priscilla H. Alden 11 Newbury Street Brockton, Mass. Agnes Hope Adams 5 Cross Street Medford, Mass. S. Elizabeth Allen 3 Clifton Avenue Salem. Mass. Dorothy Albeck 76 Warrington Place East Orange. N. J. Dorothy S. Allott 215 East 62nd Street New York City n a 28 n m w D [J Jane G. Anawalt 1201 North Topeka Avenue Wichita, Kansas Impi Arvo 93 Pine Street Gardner, Mass. Hilda H. Anderson 1513 Druid Hill Avenue Baltimore, Md. Eugenia V. Asmann 17 Alameda Apts. Cincinnati, Ohio Marcaret Arnstein Dobbi Ferry, N. Y. Katherine L. Atwater 10 Oakwood Itvantu i |.p. i htontclair, N. J. n Q 29 n CT D n Adelaide Avery 1150 Northampton Road Holyoke, Mass. Carol L. Baker 970 Elm Street New Haven, Conn. Phyllis Bagg 840 Riverdale West Springfield, Mass. Helen U. Baker Greenwich, New York Ruth W. Bagley Westport, Conn. Jane H. Baker 97 Maple Place Dedham, Mass. n a 30 D CT D D Vera A. Baker Oneonta, N. Y. Elizabeth R. Barrett Dutch Riclk-.- Road Beaver, Pa. Lucy Barnard Rochelle Park New Rochelle, N. Y. Mary S. Barry 1G40 Chicago Avenue Evanston, III Margaret Barnes 818 Cherry Street Saginaw, Mich. M MtiK Louise Barstow ■jiit Ba] sir. . i Springfield, Mi n ol 31 D CT D CJ Alice Batchelder 11 Massachusetts Avenue Worcester, Mass. Elizabeth C. Beadle 1312 Park Avenue Baltimore, Md. Christine E. Baumann 279 Linden Street Winnetka, III. Caroline D. Bear Wilmington, N. C. Geraldine B. Beach 1577 Wyoming Avenue Wilkes Barre, Pa. Caroline C. Bedell 435 Wyckoff Avenue Ithaca, N. Y. n a 32 □ cr Rebecca Almeda Beeman Chittenanco, N. Y. Susan Silliman Bennett 76 Evcrit Street New Haven, Conn. Helen May Benedict 149 Fifth Avenue Roselle, N. J. Jeanette Ruth Berman 574 Elm Street New Haven. Conn. Alice Bennett 147 Willow Btreel Brooklyn, N. Y. 1 m Hi Kin m n 801 Lincoln Awenua Chftl lii ' ul. I ' :i. n ol n CT U [J Grace Hirsch Bickart 6 Hobson Street Stamford, Conn. Eunice Putnam Blake c o A. W. Putnam 18 Tremont Street Boston, Mass. Catherine C. Bissell 629 South Main Street Geneva, N. Y. Bettina Blodgett 57 Walnut Street Framingham, Mass. Catherine Blake Olde Fieldstone Weston, Mass. Virginia Hahn Blunt 240 Ashmont Street Boston, Mass. n a 34 D CT n n Frances Bolton 61 Division Street New Haven, Conn. Doris Ruberta Booth 63 Stratfield Road Bridgeport, Conn. Marion Bond Hraintree, Mass. Helen Booth 188 Gibbs Street Newton Center, Mass. Marjokie Helen Boomer 15 Hewlett Street Waterbury, Conn. FRANCE8E Rai BOI HFKl.n Swrrl ltri.il I Harvard, n a n □ n LT Clarice Gertrude Bowers 130 Euclid Avenue Waterbury, Conn. Margaret Stewart Bradley 850 Lincoln Way E. Mishawaka, Ind. Caroline Ava Boyer 84 Elm Street Waterville, Me. Kathf.rine Cunneen Brady 547 Highland Avenue Fall River, Mass. Lois Marjorie Boynton Pine Orchard, Conn. Leila Dyckman Brady 29 Fielding Court South Orange, N. J. n a 36 D CT D LT Lucy Eleanor Briggs Riverdale-on- Hudson New York City Margaret Wood Brinton 414 South Carlisle Street Philadelphia, Pa. Lydia Brigham 7X Bowdoil) Street Springfield, Mass. Elizabeth H. Brodex 820 Suffolk Street Baltimore, Mil. Dorothy Morse Brimicombe 1840E Lake Avenue Cleveland, Ohio Makv Elizabeth Brower 887 Baal Main Btreel Uloomaburg, Pa n ol 87 □ CT D nr Anne Kruesi Brown 3 Glenwood Boulevard Schenectady, N. Y. Katherine Brownell 618 West 187th Street New York City Elizabeth Chapman Brown 76 Florida Street Springfield, Mass. Isobel Ramsey Buckley 112 Montague Street Brooklyn. N. Y. Priscilla Scott Brown 56 Beaver Road Sew ' ckley, Pa. Mildred Buffington 1908 Humboldt Avenue S. Minneapolis, Minn. n Q 38 □ a U LT Ruth Bugbee 31 Oak Grove Avenue Springfield, Mass. Anne Edith Burgess 286 Suffolk Street Holyoke. Katherine Anna Bulkley 530 Skokie Road Glencoe, III. Ida Jarvis Burgess 2300 Wetherbee Street Fort Worth, T Eleanor Harriet Burckhardt 130 Kinsey Avenue Mt. Auburn, Cincinnati, oliii Doris Gene d i Bi sua 117 Summer Street Barre, I n Q_ 39 □ a n D Margaret Elizabeth Burn ham Falmouth Foreside Portland, Me. Ca therine Seymour Calhoun 50 Forest Street Hartford, Conn. Elsie McColm Butler 242 State Street Flushing-, L. I. Margaret Glynn Callahan 4816 Kenwood Avenue Chicago, 111. Mabel Cahoon 612 North Kentucky Avenue Roswell, N. M. Josephine Florence Cannon 2235 Harcourt Drive Cleveland, Ohio n a 40 n Q n LT Eleanor Folsom Carr Swan Road Winchester, Mass. Betty Charls 232 19th Street N. W. Canton, Ohio Margery Cary Richfield Springs, N. Y. Edna Marie Charlton 28 Sagamore Road lironxvillc, N. Y. Sarah Evelyn Chandler ro Sooih Park Boulevard Cleveland, Ohio Josephine Chovey Madison. N. J, n ol ZZTT il □ is 5T D D Barbara Ellen Churchill 247 Adams Street Milton, Mass. Katiierine Ellen Clarkson 237 Lexington Avenue Passaic, N. J. Eunice Ellen Clapp 755 Whitney Avenue New Haven, Conn. Betty Louise Coates Center Street Fairfield, Conn. Gladys Clark 4 Morgan Terrace New Bedford, Mass. Carolyn A. S. Cochran 234 Loma Drive Los Angeles, Cal. n a 42 n Q D LT Cornelia Rogerson Cochrane 88 Green Street Hudson, N. Y. Margaret Gerry Cook 157 North Broad Street Trenton, N. J. Katherine Morgan Cogswell 30 Davis Avenue Rockville, Conn. Mary Adah Coolidge 2339 Delamere Drive Cleveland, Ohio Katherine Alice Connell 29 Charlotte Street Dorchester, Mass. Esther Jeanbtte Coon Harwood Farms Kast Rochester, N. Y. n ol 13 D Hi n Q CJ Alice Virginia Cooper 150 East 93rd Street New York City Virginia Deighton Cosby 8 Madison Street Westfield, Mass. Frances Alden Copeland 205 Elm Street Northampton, Mass. Cheryl Aileen Crawford 10G Hamilton Avenue Akron, Ohio Frances Lena Copp 128 Trenton Street Pawtucket, R. I. Mary Elizabeth Crawford 2105 Abington Road Cleveland, Ohio n EL 44 n 31 LT n [J Helen Curtis 16 Thornton Park Winthroji. Mass. Constance MacLeod Davidge 1G3 Chapin Strict Iiiru hamton, N. Y. Aire Osborne Curwen Villa Nova, Pa. Anna Elizabeth Davis Hotel Slu-lt in 49th Street and Lexington Avenue New Y ' ork City Anna Elizabeth Dai.i im.i r 7 Linnaean Street Cambridge, Mass. Cornelia Harsi n Dean 16 Beach tvenue Larchi ' . N X n ol u a U [J Margaret Dewey 500 Groveland Avenue Minneapolis, Minn. Marian Donahue 1852 Rosalind Avenue Cleveland, Ohio Elisabeth Carver Dilts 12 Fairfield Street Montclair, N. J. Frances Sue Dorris c o Ruth Fitzsimons 1125 Maple Avenue Evanston, 111. Miriam Priscilla Dionne 114 Palm Street Nashua, N. H. Anna Margaret Doyle 193 Highland Street Worcester, Mass. n ol 46 n u u LT Florence Drake 618 West 24th Street Kearney, Neb. Rose Marie Dyson 33 Wheeler Street Winsted, Conn. Lillian Amelia Duberg Collinsville, Conn. Margaret Alexander Elliott Woodland Road Pittsburg, Pa. Dorothy Woodwobth Dunning East Park Avenue Vineland, N. J. Faith Newbrook Ki v 874 Elmwood Avenue Buffalo. N. Y. n ol 17 □ u u or 1 1 ■i ... ■..„■' ...■Helen Virginia Emery 3 Stetson Street Lexington, Mass. Barbara Estabrook 37 Beechcroft Road Newton. Mass. Justine Bulkley Entz 14 Manhattan Avenue New Rochelle. N. Y. Elizabeth McBurney Eulass 301 Silver Street Lebanon, Ohio Beatrice Esler 795 East 8th Street Brooklyn, N. Y. Pauline Seavey Fairbanks 5 Ohio Street Bangor, Me. n o. 48 n lt D — i Hanna Faterson Elizabeth Fitzgerald 5216 5th Avenue Pittsburgh, Pa. Louise Featherstone 2106 Nebraska Street Sioux City, la. Elizabeth Alberta Flanagan 249 West 11th Street New York City Merl Eugenia Fisk 282 Dwisrhl Streel New Haven, Conn, Virginia FOLSOM 11187 Elm Manchester, N. H. n Q 19 n ID CJ n n Margaret Ellsworth Foote Hotel Cairo Washington, D. C. Frances Stratton French Concord, Mass. Helen Alese Forbes 76 Soldiers Place Buffalo, N. Y. Eleanor Hayes Fuller 12 St. Paul Street Cambridge, Mass. Mary Foss 220 Newbury Street Boston, Mass. Lavinia Minerva Fyke 237 South Poplar Street Centralia, 111. n □_ 50 13 CF n n Edith Goldsborough Gaff Moylan Delaware Co., Pa. Clarace Eaton Galt 63 Vandevanter Place St. Louis, Mo. Sylvia Howard Gaines Clark Road Lynnfield, Mass. Alice Hartley Garlichs 101 South 17th Street St. Joseph, Mo. Beatrice Gordon Gale 5646 Kimbark Avenue ChicagOi 111. Helen Margaret Geiger 608 North .1 sn-.-.-i i acoma, Wash. n n. .-.l 13 CT U LT Mary Foster Gerould 36 Occom Ridge Hanover, N. H. Eleanor Gilchrist 254 Broad Street Sewickley, Pa. Grace Gibson Cazenovia, N. Y. Dorothy Gile Hanover, N. H. Elizabeth Liscomb Gifford 112 North Broadway Tarrytown, N. Y. Ethel Lillian Gillis 61 Pelham Road Rochester, N. Y. n □. 52 □ D D D Frieda Merrill Goodenough Ledyard, Conn. Elizabeth Kimball Gould 18 Norwood Street Winchester, Mass. Dorothy Brooks Gordon IX Greendale Avenue Mt. Vernon, N. Y. Barbara Grant 131 Lockwood Avenue New RocheUe. N. Y. Ruth Gordon 2 Woodville Street Boston (19). Mass. Eleanor Moi ' lton Grant ■) Brmttla Road Syracuse, N. Y. n ol n lt D n Kathleen Hall Grant 816 South Main Street Geneva, N. Y. Marian Bernice Guild 5218 Oak Street Kansas City, Mo. Janet Esperance Greenburgh 718 West 178th Street New York City Marian Lois Hagler Lakota, N. D. Elizabeth Reeve Greenwood 239 Cumberland Street Brooklyn, N. Y. Sarah Crockett Hague 416 Commonwealth Avenue Boston, Mass. n a 54 JJL □ cr u CJ Eleanor Hall 53 Highland Avenue Haverhill, Mass. Beulah Minerva Hanson 219 Elm Street Northampton, Mass. Mary Elizabeth Hamilton 1321 North Meridian Street Indianapolis, Ind. Doris Burnap Harmon Suffield, Conn. Ruth Avis Hamilton 29 Wellington Streel Athol, M;jss. Martha Harper 889 Liberty street Memlville. Pi _□ a □ a D IT Lucelia Clark Harrington Collinsville, Conn. Elizabeth K. Hartman 132 28th Street Newport News, Va. Virginia Hart 388 Hart Street New Britain, Conn. Helen Hartzell 667 Downing Street Denver, Colo. Virginia Vennard Hart 291 North River Road Manchester, N. H. Doris Lenfest Hassell Houlton, Me. n □_ 56 n US LT n IT Mayme Starr Hastings Tahlequah. Okla. Hilda Apthorpe Heath 249 Chestnut Hill Avenue Brighton, Mass. Elizabeth Bartles Hawke 111 Main Street Flemington, N. J. Mezella Margaret Heath 108 PrOBpecl Street Warren. Pa. i: ima Aubert Heap r 7ii WiBBahickon Avenue Germantown, Philadelphia, Pa. Marjorie Rosalie Hedw u i 1907 Knox Avenue Minneapolis, Minn _□ nl B7 n 31 CJ n [J Helen May Heffernan 23 Maple Street Bristol, Conn. Frances E. Higginbotham 5002 Swiss Avenue Dallas, Texas Ruth Hene 2 Pinehurst Avenue New York City Elizabeth Newman Hildreth Southampton, N. Y. Cecelia Lisner Herstein 3807 Park Heights Avenue Baltimore, Md. Doris Hill 1139 Sheridan Road Evanston, 111. n □_ 58 □ CT D [J Julia Potter Himmilsbach 3X2 Elmwood Avenue Huffalo, N. Y. Helen Marshall Hitchcock 41 Woodrow Street, West Hartford, Conn. Ruth Hirschman 318 2nd Avenue Salt Lake City, Utah Gladys Margaret Holmes 3 Stewart Avenue Sioux City. la. Constance Willyne Hirschy 269 South Kirst Avenue K.-is! Duluth. Minn. Abbey Fuller Hooker Avon Road Schenectady, N. Y. n ol □ a TD LT Martha Hooker 359 Pleasant Street Belmont, Mass. Kathryn Hourihan 430 Lovell Street Worcester, Mass. Katherine Hough 1331 Liberty Street Franklin, Pa. Martha Parsons Houser 199 Marlborough Street Boston, Mass. Constance Houghton Arlington, Mass. Louise Hortense Hovde 1917 Arlington Avenue Des Moines, la. n EL 60 u IT m LT Margaret Arabella Howard 62 West Street Northampton, Mass. Eustis Hill Hundley 645 Westover Road Kansas City, Mo. Hilda Lyman Hulbert 202 Monument Street Groton, Conn. Virginia Hunt 502 West Prairie Avenue Decatur, III. Katherine T. Humphries 217 West Lafayette Avenue Baltimore, M l. Josephini ii izbl Hurst 506 Second Avenue Anbury Park, N. J n ol 81 13 CT D LT JUDELLE MACGREGOR HUSTON Oaks-Cloister, Lehman Lane Germantown, Philadelphia, Pa. Kathryn James 114 The Fenway Boston, Mass. Mary Bird Huston 418 Hamilton Street Evanston, 111. Dorothy Vaughan Jealous 18 Dean Road Brookline, Mass. Gertrude Anne Illing 47 Cleveland Terrace East Orange, N. J. Caroline Schuyler Jenkins 112 Waverley Place Schenectady, N. Y. n a 62 u w lt D CJ Martha Haraden Jennings 6012 Greene Street Germantown, Philadelphia, Pa. Helen Treadway Johnson Wellesley Street Weston, Mass. Helen Fairfield Jillson 19 Montague Street Turners F ' alls, Mass. Kathryn May Johnson 122 Washington Street Maiden, Masi. Sara Elizabeth Jobson 42 Forest Road Ridgewood, N. J. Catherine BUSHNELL Jones :iii Ledges Road Newton Center, Mass. n ol 63 □ CT U IT Mary Joslin 14 Wildwood Street Winchester, Mass. Babette Suzanne Kafka 231 Canner Street New Haven, Conn. k | Elizabeth Judkins 2576 Wellington Road Cleveland, Ohio Vieno Mary Kajander 121 Depot Street Fitchburg, Mass. Alice Colby Judson 1108 East 53rd Street Chicago, 111. Ruth Kayton De Renne Apartments Savannah, Ga. n □_ 64 D 1 LT U CJ Miriam Estella Keck 417 South Ridgeland Avenue Oak Park, 111. Marion Frances Kenney 337 Laurel Street Hartford, Conn. Elizabeth Keith 6421 Kentucky Avenue Pittsburgh, Pa. Edna Frederica Kiesewetter 117-19 9th Avenue, College Point, L. I., N. Y. Elizabeth Dorsey Kennedy 2945 Fairmont Boulevard Cleveland, Ohio Let a Kirk Garnett, Kan. n ol □ u LJ LT Georgianna Kline 2589 Euclid Boulevard Cleveland. Ohio Anne Heilig Kohler Catasauqua, Pa. Arline Emma Knight 65 Washington Street Hudson, Mass. Elizabeth May Kreider Hill Farms Annville, Pa. Grania O ' Malley Knott 16 East 78th Street New York City Ruth Eleanor Krick 1406 Nineteenth Avenue Altoona, Pa. n a 66 D lt D cr Harriet Kuhn 506 Prospect Place Cincinnati, Ohio Doris Adeline Latimer 33 Farmington Avenue Waterbury, Conn. Elizabeth Barnum Lane 27 Edgewood Street Hartford, Conn. Edna Lillian Laurin 169 Park View Avenue Lowell, Mass. Harriet Page Lane 22 ArlinKton Street Cambridge, Mass. Ej i INOR l ' .i ii I. w i HER rj;i Loetul sii..t DubuqiUi la. n Q. 67 TJ I LT D LT Marion Brady Leonard 382 Winthrop Avenue New Haven, Conn. Dorothy Elaine Libaire 400 West 151st Street New York City Anne Barbey Lewis 112 East 73rd Street New York City Terice Janet Liebeskind 10 West 84th Street New York City iA Isabel Jenkins Lewis c o Clifford Lewis, Harts Hill Whiteboro, N. Y. Ruth Annette Lilly 2123 West 20th Street Los Angeles, Cal. n Q 68 □ lt D w Helen Burnham Lincoln 124 Hillyer Street East Orange. N. J. Jessie Bross Lloyd 455 Birch Street Winnetka, III. Margaret Stair Linley Azusa, Cal. Elinor Gerstley Loeb ir.io Oxford Street Philadelphia, I ' a. Sally Linley Azusa. Cal. Elizabeth Bennett L ORING 168 Beacon Str.-rt Boat oil M n aL 69 □ LT D LT Helen Loomis Low Maplewood, N. J. Eleanor L yd all 280 Main Street Manchester, Conn. Lillian Launcey Lowenthal 350 Hearne Avenue Cincinnati, Ohio Carolyn Isabelle Lyle Palmetto Hotel Detroit, Mich. Eleanor Van Dusen Lucas 4028 Walnut Street Philadelphia, Pa. Harriet Martha McAvoy Phoenixville, Pa. lW _□ a 70 □ lt u LT Ruth Elaine McBarron 634 West End Avenue -N ' t W York City Elizabeth W. McClellan 1 Orchard Street Andover, Mass. VIRGINIA LUCRETIA McCALMONT 1504 Liberty Street Franklin, Pa. Genevieve McEldowney Bretton Hall New York City Merle Frances McCarthy 88 Church Street North Adams, Muss. i.ci ise McGregor r. echmonl Park N.-w RocheUe, NY. n [a 71 □ CT U d Bernice Marilla McIlhenny Wayne and Johnson Streets Germantown, Pa. Dorothy McKinnon 25 Broad Street New York City Ruth Elizabeth McKeown 23 Faxton Street Utica, N. Y. Ellen Francelia Macomber 47 Lafayette Street St. Johnsbury, Vt. Mildred McKinley 1117 Princeton Avenue Thornburg, Pa. Grace Miriam Magee Cairo, 111. n Q. 72 n n LT T3 CJ riELEN MAGUIRE 17 Stratford Road Melrose, Mass. Louise Marion Shippan Point Stamford, Conn. Mary Elizabeth Mangan 31 Bridge Street Northampton, Mass. Mary-Eleanor Marsh St. Paul ' s School Garden City, L. I., N. Y. Josephine Margaret Mannion 111 Walker Street Concord, N. H. Anne FROTHINGHAM Mason :(1 Grace Court Brooklyn, N. V. n ol 7;{ □ Q U [J Eleanor Mason 629 Sheridan Road Waukegan, 111. Frances Blanchard Means 44 Forest Street Hartford, Conn. Esther Reed Mason Pawlet. Vt. Carolyn Melchers Owosso, Mich. Betty May 373 Washington Street Boston Mass. Perchik Melik 407 Marlborough Street Boston. Mass. n a 74 n Q D LT Florence Virginia Meling North Shore Hotel Evanston, III. Dorothy Canning Miller 47 South Fullerton Avenue Montclair, N. J. Elisabeth Wightman Mellon 401 North Negley Avenue Pittsburgh, Pa. Helen Sterling Moor 2270 Glenwood Avenue Toledo. Ohio Doris Exilda Merriam 121 River Streel lilackinton, Mass. iiki.en Frances Mob in ii, 82nd Avenue, N. Seattle, W n ol □ CT n n Florence Eloise Morford 316-A Munroe Street Brooklyn, N. Y. Virginia Scott Mueller 2344 Roxboro Road Cleveland, Ohio Elisabeth Reeve Morrow Englewood. N. J. Helen Jeannette Munz 5 Rockwell Terrace Norwich, Conn. Annette Becket Morse 11 Oxford Apartments Houston, Texas Dorothy Murfitt Milton Street Readville, Mass. n EL 76 D a n LT Agnes Murray 58 Thorn Street Sewickley, Pa. Serena Olmstead Nii.es 8 Abbott Street Nashua, N. H. Ruth Murray 1718 LoRan Avenue Minneapolis. Minn. Ruth Edwards Norton 507 Ashland Avenue Buffalo. N. Y. Nora Catherine Nelson llio South nth Street Si. Joseph, Mo. Dorothy O ' Bru n 1012 Seminole Avenue Detroit, Mi. ii n ol 77 n CT D cr Mary Elizabeth O ' Donnell 103 Crescent Street Northampton, Mass. Mary Octavia Orlady Jamestown, N. D. Lillian E MMA O ' Leary 4331 Drexel Boulevard Chicago, III. Esther Page 22 Everett Avenue Winchester, Mass. Dorothy Ordway 371 Main Street Winchester, Mass. Pauline Stevens Page 7212 Thomas Boulevard Pittsburgh, Pa. n a 78 u m LT D d Alice Helen Paine 81 Carroll Street New liedford. Mass. Elizabeth Parkhurst Tlfi 21st Street. A Moline, III. Margaret Elizabeth Pantzer 2025 North 6th Street Sheboygan, Wis. Marjorie Ethel Parsons 488 Madison Street Brooklyn, N. Y. Louva Brockway Parker Centerbrook, Conn. Dorothy Comfort PARTRIDGE l l ' i Ashland Avenue St. Paul. Minn. n nl T9 n u n n Helen Andrew Patch 31 Eastern Point Road Gloucester, Mass. Elizabeth Watt Paul 31 Garfield Avenue Carbondale, Pa. Lucille May Patten 225 Upham Street Melrose. Mass. Marjorie Cynthia Peabody 71 Charles Street Fitehburg, Mass. Elizabeth Ann Patterson 2915 Washington Boulevard Indianapolis, Ind. Vivian Stearns Peeling Bourne, Mass. n a 80 n Si CJ n — i u Rebecca Weaver Petrikin 1137 New Street Bethlehem, Pa. Dorothy Pickard 214 Greenwood Boulevard Evanston, 111. Katherine Mary Phealan 110 Maple Street Athol. Mass. Elizabeth Rogers Poole South Shore Country Club Chicago, III. Cbcile Octavia Phillips L8 East :)7th Street New York City Eleanor Frances Pote 80 Spruce Streel Portland, M _D D. SI T3 1 lt n [J Olive Elizabeth Potter Forestville, Conn. Irene Anna Rachdorf 307 Ashland Street North Adams, Mass. Evelyn Priscilla Preis 225 West 86th Street New York City Mary Elizabeth Ramsey Atchison, Kan. Barbara Bulkeley Priest Littleton, Mass. Marjorie Rankin 34 Carruth Street Dorchester, Mass. n Q 82 n 13 D D Cornelia Ethel Ranney 3016 Chadburne Road Cleveland, Ohio Marguerite Mary Rebboli 7 Glendale Street Worcester, Mass. Marion Morrell Rauers 201 East 37th Street Savannah, Ga. Mary Elizabeth Reiber 351 North Main Street Butler, Pa. Agnes Reagan Schenectady, N. Y. Hi i.f.n Paine Reinh i •j n Fairgreen Avenue youngatown, ohm n ol n Hi LT n it Frances Resnik 131 Oakland Street Springfield, Mass. Helen Rice 834 West 7th Street Plainfield, N. J. Mary Quarters Rhodes 6101 Jackson Street Pittsburgh, Pa. Madeleine Winsor Rice 621 Summer Street Manchester, N. H. Elizabeth Griffiths Rice P2 Gates Avenue Brooklyn, N. Y. Muriel Rich 17 Harley Street Boston (24), Mass. _□ Q 84 □ CT D CJ Elsie Goodrich Riley 22 Jewett Street Northampton, Mass. Margaret Robinson 713 Centre Street Bethlehem. Pa. Elizabeth Anne Robinson c o Detroit Golf Club, Detroit, Mich. Virginia Robinson 818 Riverside Avenue Evansville. I ml. Elinor Blake Robinson 18 Forest Avenue Cranford, N. J. Ellen .Josephine ROGERS lMh Naval District Balboa. Canal Zone n ol □ a D LT Marie Agnes Rolland 2305 Genesee Street Utica, N. Y. Marie Rose 272 West 90th Street New York City May Gillespie Rommel 4601 North Broad Street Philadelphia, Pa. Gladys Herrick Ross Parmley Apartments Summit, N. J. Catherine Ann Rose 2471 West 41st Street Cleveland, Ohio Mary James Rossen 132 Lorraine Avenue Upper Montclair, N. J. n Q 86 □ CT D LT Muriel Barbara Rothschild 15 East 72nd Street New York City Eleanor de Forest Rust 417 West 120th Street New York City Zella Ruth Ruslander 41 St. James Place Buffalo, N. Y. r I Alice Welsh Sailer 1718 Spruce Street Philadelphia, Pa. Nell Ford Russell Hotel Willard, 252 West 70th Street New York City Sylvia Agnes scakamki.i.i 21ii Ifontrosa Avenue Rutherford, N. .). ■n ol ST n lt D CJ Georgiana Bishop Schaub 748 West North Street Decatur, 111. Margaret Grey Scott 144 Greenwood Boulevard Evanston, 111. Marie-Louise Schmauk 275 East 15th Street Brooklyn, N. Y. Emilie Sears Webster, Mass. Jeannette Barbara Scott 54 Fanshaw Avenue Yonkers, N. Y. Katherine Sears 15 Circuit Road Chestnut Hill, Mass. n a n i:t D LT Mary Ferguson Sebring 11k West Linn Street Bellefonte, Pa. Lenore Seymour 121 Virginia Avenue St. Paul, Minn. Ruth Seinfel 1535 President Street Brooklyn. Mass. Wilma L. Shannon 234 Canterbury Road Rochester. N. Y. Josephine Setze ••The HUl Augusta, Ga. Olive Gertrude Sharret 50 I l.tt (i.-l.l Place Richmond, N. Y. n 51 n CT T2 n Katherine Edwards Sheldon 18 West Walton Place Chicago, 111. Helene Marie Shincel 327 East Main Street Waterbury, Conn. Ethel May Sherman 152 Spruce Street Turlington. Vt. Jane Howe Shoemaker Route 9 Bridgeton, N. J. Catherine Bevans Shimer 7 Linden Place Warwick, N. Y. Edith Showers 122 East 4th Street Corning, N. Y. n n. 90 n CT D CJ Sophie Shulman 91 Warrenton Avenue Hartford, Conn. Lillian Rosalind Silver 132 Mansfield Street Hartford, Conn. Lucille Shyev 450 Audubon Avenue New York City Mary Carter Sloan 5545 PershinK Avenue St. Louis, Mo. Erna Pauline Sik.veks us Long Hill Street Springfield, Mass. i ..I si a llu nm;iit Smith ... ili Downing Street Piqua, Ohio n nl n H U LT Charlotte Rutherford Smith Palisado Avenue Windsor, Conn. Helen Hungerford Smith 75 Brunswick Street Rochester, N. Y. Clara Nye Smith 56 Fairmont Avenue Newton, Mass. Lois Katherine Smith 17 Myrtle Avenue Troy, N. Y. Dorothy Brewster Smith 710 Bluff Street Glencoe, 111. Shirley Smith 216 Avenue A Bayonne. N. J. n a 92 □ CJ u lt Margaret Sparhawk 335 South Union Street Burlington, Vt. Dorothea Isabelle Spieth 3390 Ingleside Road Cleveland, Ohio Helen Gertrude Sparks 1216 Elizabeth Boulevard Fori Worth, Texas Muriel Stevenson 434 Lafayette Street New York City Catherine Louise Spkm i r 606 Franklin Avenue Ridgewood, N. J. Alice Lbnor S toweli Elmira, N 1 n n 93 n Q n CJ Jeannette Strodthoff 309 South Oxford Avenue Los Angeles, Cat. Margaret Stxjrges 476 West 143rd Street New York City Beatrice Gertrude Stuart 551 West 157th Street New York City Dorothy Lancaster Tait Northvale, N. J. Eleanor Dow Stubbs 510 Center Street Newton, Mass. Eunice Pauline Tait 6 Maplewood Terrace Springfield, Mass. n a 94 u 1, LT n cr Kathryn Taylor 520 Hamilton Road South Orange, N. J. Virginia Boyer Thieme 816 West Berry Street Fort Wayne, Ind. Rose Ida Teitz 11 Powell Avenue Newport, R. I. Kathleen Tildsley Spuyten Duyvil New York City Nancy Mepora Templeton •171 Willow Street Waterbury, Conn. Joskphine Hancock Tompkins - i 28th Street, N.W. Washington, l . C. n ol 95 T3 a U cr Elizabeth Towle 151 Salisbury Road Brookline, Mass. Edith Mary Trussell Newtonville, Mass. Ruth Estelle Townsend 1464 Cohassett Avenue Lakewood, Ohio Marion Chatt erley Turner 600 East 19th Street Brooklyn, N. Y. Irene Abigail Trafford 15 Belleclair Avenue Longmeadow, Mass. Gwendolyn Underhill 45 Monadnock Road Chestnut Hill, Mass. n a 96 D III D [J Natalie V. Van Ulm L26 Clark Road Hrookline. Mass. Elizabeth Crandall Wales 162 Cedar Street Emilewood, N. J. Carolyn Van der Veer North Branch, N. J. Dorothea Eunice Walker 138 Willow Street Walerbury, Coon. Louise Torrey Van Voast mi Hank in Avenue Schenectady, N. V. M i; Louise W u i ici 809 North Elnwood Avenue Oak Park, III n 51 ' . ' 7 □ n D LT Anna Teresa Walsh 70 Hubbard Street Middletown, Conn. Jeanette D. B. Walton Ventnor, N. J. Isabella Woods Walsh 12 Valentine Street West Newton, Mass. Elizabeth M. Wanamaker 172 Mason Street Greenwich, Conn. Constance Clara Walter 405 Palace Avenue Santa Fe. N. M. Elizabeth Walcott Ward 127 Centre Street Milton, Mass. n m 98 [M LT n LT Katherine Julia Warren Hotel Georgian Terrace Atlanta, Ga. Frances Lord West 43 South St. Albans Street St. Paul, Minn. Elizabeth Watson (i l 14th Avenue Paterson, N. J. Katherine Westbrook 1145 Dean Street Brooklyn, N. Y. Elizabeth Georgia Webb 600 North Euclid Avenue Oak Park, III. Dorothy Elizabeth Westfall rlubbard ' a Lane Wheeling. W. Va. D Ol 99 □ CT D CJ Charlotte Amelia Wetherell 216 Eighth Street Providence, R. I. Anne Harriet Whyte 218 North James Street Rome, N. Y. Eunice Wheeler 12 Chestnut Street Worcester, Mass. Janet Elizabeth Wilcox 24 Summit Avenue North Adams, Mass. Katherine Dey Whitney 48 Forest Street Hartford, Conn. Clara Knyphen Williams 3 Cherry Heights Lyons, N. Y. n D. 100 13 IT rj n Elizabkth T. Williams SB Fair Oaks Park Needham. Mass. Mildred Foshay Williams 7 Clinton Avenue Maplewood, N. J. Elizabeth Torrey Williams Barre, Mass. Virginia Neeb Williams East Aurora, N. Y. Lucy Half. Williams :iii Norfolk Road Chestnut Hill. Mass. Frances Charloi i e Wn son Buena Vista Road Santa F -, N. M. n ol Hil n a n CT Carrie Ernestine Wiltse 808 James Street Syracuse, N. Y. Muriel Wise 1950 Commenwealth Avenue Brighton, Mass. Dorothy Chaffee Winslow 59 Hebron Street Hartford, Conn. Isabel Wisner Beaver Road Sewickley, Pa. Jean Gregg Wise 215 Sargent Avenue Joplin, Mo. Lettie Robinson Witherspoon 1355 Third Street Louisville, Ky. n a 102 n I. LT D CJ Nancy Woehnert 132 Park Street liuffalo, N. Y. Bernice Helen Wright 634 Campbell Avenue Long Branch, N. J. Dorothy Whiting Woodruff Orange, Conn. Mary Boardman Wright IITj Midland Avenue St. Davids. Pa. Linda Woodworth 26 Norfolk Road Arlington. Mass. Rosalind Wright 237 East Delaware Place Chicago, 111 n ol L03 D CT U D Hazel Sara Writer 7 Geneva Street Worcester, Mass. Helen Phillips Wulbern 49 South Battery Charleston, S. C. 3n jlfemnrtam iSutl| Suttball n a 104 □ [J □ [J ifarmer MtmbnB Madeleine Abbott Ruth Adams Helen Spencer Allen Marian Mead Allen Elizabeth Converse Anable Frances McNeil Angier Charlotte Ashworth Virginia Babbitt Marion Ellen Ball Lucy Bartlett Ruth Bates Florieda Burton Batson Priscilla Alden Beach Helen Frances Bennett Josephine Marie Benz Gertrude Kemper Best Gladys Jane Bidwell Josephine Bigger Henrietta Bingham Elizabeth Blaisdell Elizabeth Marie Boeckeler Mary Townsend Bradley Mary Teresa Brega Gratia Constance Britcher Madeline Louise Broderick Eula Elizabeth Brown Dorothy Taylor Bruce Emily Thecla Brumder Miriam Lois Burdett Lucy Lloyd Burkam Dorothy Duffield Burnham Margaret Burr Kathryn Butters Ray Beatrice Calvert Helen Myrtle Carpenter Helen Ethelynd Chandler Frances Eloise Chapman Catherine Elizabeth Chipman Geraldine Clark Virginia Murray Cobb Lois Bigelow Cochran Helen Crosby Eugenie Crosby Marie Isabel Crosier Dorothy Bailey Crouse Dorothy Susan Cullen Marie Constance Curran Gertrude Cuscaden Dorothy Damon Isabel Olive Davenport Darthea Davis Margaret Day Mary Deal Laura Dean Nancy Hume Derr Mary Frances Dickson Roxane Hedwig DisseJ Martha Alice Dorman Dorothy Edna Dreyfus Doris Martha Dudley Doris Dunning Mary Willis Dyer Helen Bigelow Emery Winifred Glidden Evans Bern ice Lewis Faunce Florence Elizabeth Forth Dorothy Jane Frank Dorothy Alberta Fuller Mary Virginia Gable Mary Louise Gasser Helen Thornton Geer Evelyn Louise Gildersleeve Elizabeth Irene Goody Dorothy Gray Ruth Margaret Griffin Helvie Elina Haahti Helen Hahn Katharine Hall Virginia Wright Hall Margaret Sidford Hamp Hester Hanson Jeannette Bell Harris Frances Montana Harvey Grace Hazeltine Eleanor Hedges Sarah Josephine Hellen Helen Frances Henry Lucy Fitzhugh Hoblitzelle Margaret Hoffman Elizabeth Louise Hoiles Sabra Wyman Hood Marcelle Dewitt Hull Grace Hurewitz Lucille Malvina Israel Evelyn Pearl Johnson Florrella Beatie Johnson Henrietta Johnson Katherine Barbara Johnson Eleanor Reed Kambour Gertrude Kendig Juliet Kind Elinor Stannard Knothe Anne Lockwood Lackey Elizabeth Lane Margaret Louise Laney Dorothea Edith Lazear Katharine Ege Lee Lucille Levy Rachel Lothrop Naomi Lucretia Loucks Mary-Eleanor MacBurney Mildred McDonald Dorothy Knowlton Mclntyre (Catharine Gilman MacKenty Margaret Tennant McMillan lla .el Alexandria MacPhail Evelyn Florence Maffitt Marie Caroline Major Giovanna Mancini Charlotte Eleanor Mason n ol 106 □ u D CJ Hilda Clara Max Frances Elizabeth Mead Frances Jeanetta Milburn Paulina Clara Miller Elisabeth Frederica Millett Harriett Whitney Mirick Margaret Elizabeth Mitchell Gertrude Montgomery Martha Hamilton Montgomery Frances Gladys Morton Katherine Mott Isabel Bedell Munroe Caroline Newman Virginia Fearn Newman Lillian Jeannette Niman Althea Noble Lucia Potter Nowell Alma Elizabeth O ' Brien Helen Bruce Page Emma Conant Payson Mayzie-Wills Penn Gladys Russell Peters Eleanor Poppenhusen Helen Malcolm Pratt Laura Gardner Provost Evelyn Bird Queen Sarah Katherine Ramsey Helen Elizabeth Redding Annabel Reid Marcelline Reyburn Mary Reynolds Edah Esther Rhodes Mary Belle Risley Mary Ritchie Jeanne Marget Robeson Frank Elizabeth Robinson Amy Stuart Roe Alma Xcelsiore Rosen Augusta Rosenthal Helen Jean Ross Verna Mary Ross Lillian Carolyn Rulnick Elizabeth Tyson Russell Helen Burseley Sargent Irene Louise Schmidt Katrina Roosevelt Schuyler Florence Selman Hester Tinslow Shelden Emma Louise Shepherd {Caroline Elizabeth Simon Eleanor Randolph Smith Ethel Florence Smith Julia Edmonds Smith Maizie Bewley Smith Virginia Bland Sohlberg Sara Jane Spahr Miriam Lenore Spectorsky Ada Mildred Spencer Margaret Mansfield Sprout Constance Eleanor Stanley • Marjorie Edna Stenson Josephine Dorothy Stewart Sarah Helen Streeter Elizabeth Grace Strong- Emily MacKenzie Sturges Katheryn Talbot Ruth Edwards Tester Alice Elizabeth Thompson Constance Thompson Janet Isobel Thomson Katherine Van Wagenen Trowbridge Helen Agnes Tullock Marian Aline Van Vleck Mary Eloise Vilas Anne Townsend Walden Harriet Pittman Walker Marion Wallace Sidonia Wallis Margaret Munson Ward Helen Amy Waterhouse Jessie Bennett Williams Maidee Sara Williams Edith Louisa Wilson Frances Wood 3n Mtmxtrxmn n □_ 106 n a HI D n n ol 11)7 13 CT D IZL iFr Bljtttatt f rar HELEN SARGENT ELIZABETH WEBB Officers Class President Helen Sargent Elizabeth Webb Vice-President Elizabeth Webb Secretary Jean Wise Treasurer- Elizabeth Ward Song Leader Lavinia Fyke Assistant Song Leader Ruth Tester Chairmen of Committees Ring and Pin Elizabeth Russell Motto Judelle Huston Rally Day Decorations Isabella Walsh Ribbons Martha Houser Class Color Yellow Class Animal Caterpillar : Resigned n □. 110 u TIG CJ I] n (Class ijtBtflry— iftrrBljman |[ear Modesty is one of the numerous virtues of 1925, but not even it can prevent us from admitting that we were distinguished from the beginning. In a material way, we were the largest class that had ever entered by examination. And in a spiritual way, we were, if not the freshest freshmen in the history of the college, at least remarkable for our pep. As for adapting ourselves, we really did it beautifully, after the initial sinking feeling at the sight of our roommate and the house. From the morning of that first crowded chapel, with the President ' s kind and twinkling welcome, we knew that we should like college. Of course, there were ordeals still ahead of us. The doctor ' s office stabbed us, by way of welcome, and a certain new instructor, whose dignity was only exceeded by his youth, took brutish delight in telling us that our native tongue was unintelligible to the culti- vated English-speaking world. At Frolic we almost ruined a perfectly good pair of shoes getting on an intimate footing with some two thousand girls we had never met before and should not know when we met again. But we were thrilled at the number of celebs who had scribbled their nicknames on our cards; and when the annual Glee Club song told us our only fault was not making enough mistakes, we felt that life was positively too wonderful. In the meantime, education threaded its precarious way with us, beset on every side by bats, teas, movies, plays, and freshman parties. Entertained rather than disciplined, we took our turn at entertaining the upperclassmen when the whole five hundred and ninety-nine (with few exceptions) made fools of our- selves at song trials. Our first official action was the election of class officers, at a large and heated meeting in December. We hailed our off-campus president, as freshmen should: with unity, coherence, and emphasis, — even the Weekly speaks of cheers now and then during the evening. Long papers came on, yet life seemed to us good, on the whole. Upperclass- men groaned about classes in Gill, — but what did we care? The jaunt from gym and back to Seelye simply developed our quadriceps femoris for hockey and bas- ketball, in which we took a vital interest. They also found the new cut rule diffi- cult. But we knew that we had eighteen cuts a semester, (or was it nine? perhaps twenty-seven) and that the authorities expected us to take three week- ends. So we did as we were expected and should even have exceeded their expec- tations if we had been properly encouraged. But what worried the upperclassmen most of all was the ten o ' clock rule. And it did seem wrong that we should have to hide our lights, under a bushel or any other contraption. A mass meeting in December resulted in the discarding of the old rule that John had tried for thirty years to enforce, in favor of unlimited study, — (no games allowed, except soli- taire, and possibly chess with one ' s roommate). Having given ourselves this Christmas present, we were all in the mood for the season and welcomed the glistening snow and the dark blue afternoons, upon which the yellow lights of the shot) windows shone out so merrily, We loved the grinds, the full joyous vespers, and the serenading, especially our glimpse of President Seelye; and were surprised to find ourselves so moved by a Christmas denatured, with no Christmas Day, and no family. Our eagerness for the real thing grew to the bursting point, until in an ecstatic Frenzy we threw our belong- ings into a trunk and went HOME. n ol in □ t=n ra lt After vacation it was altogether different: a cold and stern necessity hung in the air, making us wish that we had listened sooner to the President ' s advice. Life was one darned book after another, — and sometimes sixty darned people after one book. Sophomore Carnival broke the monotony, but even that could not hide the approaching doom. We saw the handwriting on the wall — I hereby pledge my word . . . — knew that it was too late for mortal aid : the Judgment had come. And yet we had not been idle all semester : we had learned many things that they did not ask us for on the examinations, such as how to chant, the price of desks, when to send flowers, how often to clean saddle-strap shoes, the nature of the grotto, and of the Plaza balcony, the true value of a nickel, and the ulterior meanings of rose-bud, chrysanthemum and the Grecian Urn. All useless, alas, in the hour of trial! But not even mid-years can last forever, and soon we were celebrating the birth of Washington, in a way which would probably have surprised him not a little. The stunts were overpoweringly clever, especially the Spoken English take-off and the library operetta, in which beautiful music was fearfully and wonderfully joined to the immortal words, Someone sneaked it out and never signed the card. Inspired by such genius, we became original and gave the first and only all-freshman party in recent college history, — festivities which included Betty Boomer ' s orchestra and clogging by Nancy Templeton. Mean- while, perceiving that we were still allowed to live after what we had done at mid-years, we went in for a perfect orgy of trying out, and were ready to begin on Alpha and Phi Kappa when vacation set in. After vacation, luckily, we were absorbed by our first real dance, fussing Glee Club in the old way, with the per- formance of Pinafore in the evening. Later, we had the excitement of running for our sister class at their much more important party, — but that is ahead of the story. The most startling feature of the spring was a mysterious booklet, which came out of nowhere to cast the first stone at our innocent freshman acceptance of college. Cassandra awed us by her audacity. We were not, however, likewise awed at the athletic ability of the upper- classmen, and proceeded to beat all our betters in hockey. How we had grown in importance, from the lost prep school seniors who had come to Smith in the fall! We were almost sophomores, capable of giving bats and teas, and of putting our friends to bed when it was good for them. We had our side of the rectangle at step-sings, and delighted every one with Standing in the need of prayer. And only we could enjoy the sen- iors ' singing with true aesthetic detachment. The weather was beautiful all spring, but the last weeks were hot, with honors for keep- ing them so divided between the sun and the faculty. Finally it was over, and the fun was just beginning, when the authorities sent us home. In this they acted ill-advisedly, for it is said Hamp would not be consoled, and the heavens wept for seven days and seven nights after we left. Jessie Bross Lloyd. Q - i — ' zzr 112 D CT U D Swptjomnr? fear VIRGINIA McCALMONT Officers President Virginia McCalmont Vice-President Martha Houser Secretary Mary Wallace Treasurer Dorothy Dunning Song Leader Lavinia Fyke Assistant Song Leader Marjorie Boomer Chairmen of Committees Sophmore Carnival General Chairman, Mary Sloan Invitations, Ruth McBarron Music, Marjorie Boomer Entertainment, Martha Houser Refreshments, Lavinia Fyke Decorations, Elizabeth Webb Rally Day Stunt, Florence Meling Decorations, Frances Wilson Ribbons, Mary Reynolds Frances French 1923 Commencement Decorations, Frances Wilson Rose Committee, Margaret Hamp Push Committee, Miriam Keck MARTHA HOUSER n Resigned □_ 114 □ m U LT (ttlaas MtBtnnj— Suipljomore $ ?ar We were carefree young things in 1922, not yet broken by the seminars of senior year, nor hysterical over husband-hunting. Whatever criticisms were levelled at us we blithely waved aside with the excuse that, after all, we were passing through a trying transition period. That silenced our bitterest enemies. For in the spring the flapper had gone clean out of fashion, leaving us but a brief summer to acquire a necessary hauteur and charm. We must let down out- skirts and lower our voices and draw back our hair in the demure chignon of our grandmothers and fasten at least three buckles of our galoshes as an out- ward and visible sign of an inward and spiritual grace. After a losing struggle, cavalier abandon had surrendered to maiden prudence. No one knows why we did not yield whole-heartedly to femininity predi- cated by obscurity. Perhaps fate had already marked us for fame, a fame achieved at our Sophomore Carnival. Such a night as that was, dismal rain that poured in rivers down our necks, shivering ushers, sodden skaters, reluc- tant guests. Came a crunching and an ominous hush — the ice was cracking. What a scoop for Press Board: SMITH SOPHOMORES SUBMERGED- SELF-POSSESSED PUPILS PERISH IN PARADISE POND. But, trained in the ways of honesty, they reported the more prosaic news that the ice held and the carnival continued. The accident of weather had brought us before the public eye, but our own ability furthered our meteoric career. The Preside nt ' s praise, good sports. went to our heads like wine. And, in a mad moment of ambition we conceived the idea of a stunt that brought down the house on Rally Day, It was Orphans of the Storm, set to a haunting air that pursued us through our college life. Gilbert and Sullivan would have claimed with pride, inspired bits of the libretto, which began with the condensed characterization of the Orphans: One is blind and both are dumb; Their father is a drunken bum. None will forget the moment when one of the Orphans reached for high E and missed, hut Weekly Board shook its col- lective head wisely and par- doned it with a quotation: Ah, hut a man ' s reach must exceed his grasp, or what ' s a heaven for? When we are alumna ' at a reunion, we will shout with laughter as we recall the guillo- tine and the coach and four and the flapping hats of the Or- phans. 1 y ' ' pm | n ol 115 □ ft LT U [J Close on that triumph came athletic victories to prove us a versatile class. As I remember it, long rows of silver cups shone on the 1925 trophy shelves as testimony to our prowess. But our successes may have been more in anticipation than in realization. Those of us with a taste for more ornamental sports took to roller-skating. We felt we made a really pretty picture coasting past the Library, our pleated skirts flying and ribbons in our hair. Since we were to be proved morons in the next months it was gratifying to know ourselves beautiful morons, — that was all that mattered. We had never posed as scholars; it would have been quite useless. But we did consider our- selves a quick and clever class. But no, the Intelligence tests exposed us as im- beciles, at least in the eyes of the Administration, for it was a sophomore who insisted that Charlie Chaplin write the Cid, and that Lima was the capitol of Bean. Of course, that answer was written tongue in cheek, but the faculty shook their heads over our appalling lack of information and the varied answers to the question, How many cubic inches are there in a box three inches long, by two inches deep, by four inches wide? — a relatively simple arithmetical problem, as even we admitted. But intelligence tests are faulty things at best, and besides that we were quite sure we were all suffering from headaches on that particular day and so did badly by ourselves. All year the seniors said of us, They ' re riding for a fall, and their predic- tion came true only a month before college closed. The upperclassmen rejoiced that they could point their fingers in derision and damn us with the adjective sophomoric. For at sings was discovered our inability to carry a tune. It was a congenital weakness and incurable. Whatever voices we boasted of were trained to travel the lonely solo path. We grew rather maudlin about the whole matter of sings. What was the sense in writing a clever song only to make a laughing stock of ourselves by our rendering of it? And so we ended our second year, not without the usual frenzy over exam- inations. At last we could burn our gym suits and shoes, if we felt in so extrava- gant a mood. A chosen few stayed for Push Committee, and in the bustle and con- fusion of commencement, first realized what a leisurely life they had been leading all sophomore year. Little did they suspect how we would be harried by worries and responsibilities our Junior Year. Genevieve McEldowney. n a 116 n a D CJ dluntnr fear MARTHA HOUSER FRANCES WILSON Officers President . Vice-President Secretary . Treasurer . Song Leader Assistant Song Leader Martha Houser Frances Wilson Martha Hooker Eleanor Lucas Lavinia Fyke Barbara Grant Chairmen of Committees Community Chest, Ruth McBarron Rally Day Shoiv, Virginia McCalmont Decollations, Elinor Robinson Junior Frolic General Chairman, Lavinia Fyke Refreshments, Caroline Jenkins Stunts, Elizabeth Robinson Police, Marjorie Boomer Invitations, Pauline Page Costumes and Staging, Jessie Lloyd n a 118 □ CT 13 LT (Elaaa Ijtatnrg— iltmtnr ffcar Junior year is undoubtedly the best year, as the Freshman Bible and literature of that nature assured us it would be. One is indeed an upperclassman then; the seniors and juniors who overawed us when we were freshmen and sophomores have gone their several ways, and we can relax at last. Academically also, junior year is a great relief. By that time we have rid ourselves of freshman conditions and sopho- more requirements ; no longer need we contemplate the dreary reaches of geologic time ; while the gymnasium has lost for us its gloomy sig- nificance and has become merely a place in which to have a Prom. The class of 1925 had other more specific reasons for enjoying its junior year. We were sweepingly successful at athletics, winning basketball game upon basketball game, and archery contest upon tennis tournament ; so that an unprecedented number of S sweaters were awarded, and cups and medals inundated us. To prove that we are a thoroughly well-balanced class, we produced not only quantities of athletes, but also eight Junior Phi Beta Kappas. And that scanty and highly selected group, the Dean ' s List, is largely incorporated from our number. Before going home for spring vacation, we elected our Council President and Head of Judicial Board, as well as several Council mem- bers and the Editor of Monthly. It is curious how one ' s respect for these dignified offices diminishes as they are filled by one ' s friends. On returning from spring vacation we had the Junior Prom, to a running accompaniment of the old joke about the thirteenth man I asked to Prom has just gone back on me, which was as usual applicable. Then we had a Frolic and distinguished ourselves by nost barbaric treatment of the uninvited sophomores w h o W e r e unfortunate enough to break in. As a result the class of 1926 petitioned not to be obliged em 1 j ' i nl I L9 □ LT U n to have a Frolic ; at least, that is our version of the current tale that it was forbidden to them by the authorities. Throughout the spring, if you could call it that, we courageously had Step Sings, which were well attended, in spite of cyclone and blizzard and driving rain. We passed our final examinations with the ease acquired by practice, and the more popular members of our class received Senior Pins. The next few days left us with a confused impression of a great many fathers and mothers, and our senior friends in caps and gowns looking unfamiliar and somewhat dazed. We took the steps from them to a very dolorous chant, but the solemnity of the occasion was soon relaxed by the stunts that followed. Finally, in large garden hats and summer dresses, we carried the ivy-chain; there was mud undei ' foot and fog overhead and we felt rather foolish to be so arrayed in weather which demanded rubbers and raincoats. Sfl 5(! 3p If! Sp We hope it won ' t rain on our Ivy Day. Eleanor Gilchrist. n a 120 D CT D dluninr iFrnltr Banttij IFair lt Cover Design Jordan, Emerson, Cushing Advertisements . . Northrop, Gillett, Albright, Baldwin, Tenney What the Well Dressed Man Will Wear, Tyler, Morris, Lawrence, 26 Green Art ...... Dickinson, Hubbard, Washburn Theatre Hall of Fame Caricatures Back Cover Design Belmont Avenue Talbot, Capen, Faunce Chapin, Dewey, Hatfield, Wallace Haven, Sessions. Elm Street I _□ ol 12] □ CT D D n a 122 ID LT D D 3lnnt0r ' ' - ' -♦ ' ' ' - • • ' •■ • V,- 1 ■•- ' ate i JCS3 • ••  - (. ™y Mahpra HELEN LOW Head Usher Suzanne Ackerman Priscilla Alden Sarah Elizabeth Allen Margaret Arnstein Impi Arvo Katherine Atwater Phyllis Bagg Ruth Bagley Carol Baker Margaret Barnes Elizabeth Barrett Mary Barry Caroline Bedell Catherine Blake Virginia Blunt Frances Bolton Marion Bond Doris Booth Helen Booth Francese Bothfeld Caroline Boyer Leila Brady Elizabeth Brodel Elizabeth Brown Priscilla Brown Katharine Brownell Ida Burgess Dorothy Burnham Margaret Burnham Catharine Calhoun Josephine Cannon Margery Cary Josephine Chovey Barbara Churchill Eunice Clapp Gladys Clark Katherine Clarkson Jeanette Coon Frances Copeland Virginia Cosby Cheryl Crawford Mary Crawford Helen Curtis Alice Curwen Anna Dallinger Constance Dayidgc Anna Davis Cornelia Dean Miriam Dlonne Marian Donahue Anna Doyle Florence Drake Dorothy Dreyfus Lillian Duberg Dorothy Dunning Rose Dyson Justine Entz Elizabeth Eulass Pauline Fairbanks Hanna Faterson Merl Fisk Elizabeth Fitzgerald E. Alberta Flanagan Virginia Folsom Margaret Foote Frances French Eleanor Fuller Edith Gaff Beatrice Gale Clarace Gait Alice Garlichs Helen Geiger Mary Gerould Grace Gibson Eleanor Gilchrist Dorothy Gile Frieda Goodenough Dorothy Gordon Elizabeth Gould Eleanor Grant Kathleen II. Grant Janei Greenburgh Eleanor Hall I ' eulah Hanson Doris Harmon Elizabeth Hartman Doris Hassell Marjorie Hedwall Helen Heffernan Ruth Hene Elizabeth Hildreth Julia Himmelsbach Helen HitchcOCl Martha Hooker Constance Houghton Martha HoiIBer Louise Horde Margaret Howard Hilda Hull.. I Eustis Hundlej Josephine Hurst Mary Huston Kathjyri James Helen JUlaon Helen Johnson Catherine Jom Mary Joslin Elizabeth Judkins Alice Judson Vieno Kajander Miriam Keck Elizabeth Keith Edna Kiesewetter Leta Kirk Anne Kohler R. Eleanor Kriek Elizabeth Lane Edna Laurin Marian Leonard Dorothy Libaire Helen Lincoln Margaret Linley Jessie Lloyd Helen Low Eleanor Lucas Carolyn Lyle Martha McAvoy Louise McGregor Ruth E. McKeown Grace Magee Mary Mangan Josephine Blannion Louise Marion Mary-Eleanor Marsh Esther Mason Prances Means Carolyn Melche rs Perchik Melik Dorothy Miller Helen Moor Eloise Morford Elisabeth Morrow Virginia Mueller Isabel Munroe Nora Nelson Mary O ' Donnell Dorothy Ordway Esther Page Pauline I ' age Alice Paine Elisabeth Parkhursl Helen Patch Rebecca Petrlkin Dorothy Plckard Eleanor Pote Olive Potter Irene Kachdorf Marjorie Rankin Prances Raanik Elisabeth Rice Elsie Riley Elinor Robinson Elizabeth Robinson Margaret Robinson Marie Rolland Nell Russell Eleanor Rust Alice Sailor Georgiana Schaub Louise Schmauk Katharine Sears Marv Sebring Ruth Seinfel Josephine Setze Wilma Shannon Catherine Shimer Helene Shincel Lucille Shyev Etna Sievers Mary Sloan Augusta Smith Dorothy Smith Shirley Smith Catherine Spencer Beatrice Stuart Eleanor Stubbs Margaret Sturges Eunice Tail Kathleen Tildaley Josephine Tompkins Elizabeth Towle Ruth Townsend Irene TrnlTord Natalie Van Ulm Elizabeth Wales Dorothea Walker Elizabeth Wanamaker Elizabeth Ward Planet ' s West Charlotte Wethcrcll Eunice Wheeler Janet WilCOX Clara Williams Elisabeth T. Williams Mildred Williams Prances Wilson Dorothy Winslow Wiener Let tie Witherspoon Woebu.lt Linda Woodworth Boardman Wright _D o. 123 n U LT iluntnr flnmtntato General Chairman Refreshments Chairman Head Usher . Elizabeth Poole Katherine Bulkley Grania Knott Floor Committee Chairman, Frances Wilson Mabel Cahoon Kathleen Grant Constance Davidge Genevieve McEldowney Invitations Committee Chairman, Barbara Churchill Anne Brown Virginia Mueller Emma Heap Elizabeth Wales Eleanor Lucas Elizabeth Ward Theater Committee Chairman, Ruth McBarron Isobel Buckley Grania Knott Music Committee Chairman, Elizabeth Webb Marjorie Boomer Cornelia Dean Chaperone Committee Chairman, Beatrice Gale Irene Trafford Carol Baker Leta Kirk Tea Dance Committee Chairman, Barbara Grant Pauline Page Program Committee Chairman, Josephine Cannon Gladys Ross Catherine Jones Elizabeth Ann Patterson ELIZABETH POOLE Chairman n Q. 124 n a a LT Sinter i?ar Officers President Martha Hooker Vice-President Martha McAvoy Secretary Anne Brown Treasurer Josephine Cannon Song Leader Lavinia Fyke Assistant Song Leader Marjorie Boomer MARTHA HOOKER Chairman of Committees Rally Day Ribbons, Josephine Cannon Rally in Gymnasium, Decorations, Justine Entz Dorothy Pickard Show, Nancy Templeton Basketball Game, Marjorie Boomer Senior Pins Chairman, Louise Hovde Dorothy Allott Natalie Van Ulm Mary Orlady Fiftieth Anniversary Birthday Gift Chairman of Undergraduate Committee Frances Wilson Chairman of Senior Committee, Elizabeth Webb Nancy Templeton Dorothy Miller Virginia Thieme Elisabeth Morrow Executive Finance Committee Chairman, Josephine Cannon Louise Hovde Margaret Arnstein Elinor Robinson Martha Hooker martha mcavoy n a 126 ID cr u on On September 23, 1924, the seniors bustled officiously into John M. Greene, advisees in hand, and sat down authoritatively in the front row seats. As a matter of fact, however, they felt unnaturally unauthoritative. College had grown beyond their recognition during the sum- mer: the new gymnasium and music hall had been completed, the names of various old build- ings had been changed, the new dean sat in- stalled upon the platform. The naive question- ing of their advisees made them a bit uneasy. Their sharpened intuition enabled them to answer the question, Is Mrs. Bernard nice? in the superlative, but as to the dimensions of the new gym . . . Fortunately three years ' experience with inexplicable quiz questions had taught them not to be abashed; they lowered the carrying quality of their Spoken English voices and re- plied: You mustn ' t talk at chapel. To be spared future embarrassment they investigated the matter at their earliest oppor- tunity, and their naivete and delight at the embodiment of their three-year-long hopes made the occasion one of great pathos. A tear coursing down each fur- rowed cheek (of those of them, that is, who had not been incapacitated by their arduous struggle for existence) plunged into the brine. In a few weeks after the opening of college, they dropped their cares and responsibilities for Mountain Day, and most of them managed to present the semblance of youthful alacrity. Some of them seized the belated occasion to walk the range at last; a few of the class, however, were in a state of such pitiable lassitude that they dared only ride around and around the environs in a street car. On October 12, the college suffered a severe loss in the death of President Seelye. The class of 1925, which had known him for three years, had come to regard him as the moral and spiritual guardian of the college, and they felt a new sobering responsibility in maintaining the high standards which he had taught. Before fall was over, preparations began to be made for the departure of the seniors. The Grecourt gates were dedicated, and 1925 was told that these gates should symbolize their exodus from their college and their spectacular entrance into the world, with their overpowering accumulation of charm and intel- ligence. At election time they showed their knowledge of politics and govern- ment and their qualifications for the vote by helping to make the Northampton campaign a fittingly brilliant one; they mounted soap-boxes, betted heavily, waved torches and cheered. And to signalize its new and mature role, the college was allowed to stay out until eleven o ' clock to wait for the election returns! Suddenly the world was startled by the appea ranee of two phenomena which indicated the extreme Significance of the year L924-1925, One was the plague which was introduced into the college by two members of the senior class. The n ol n CT D n notoriety was gratifying, — but what if Smith, and especially its senior repre- sentatives, should be wiped out? The entire college realized its importance to hu- manity, and rushed en masse to the town doctors for vaccination; and numerous veterans were able to go to Cambridge and assure Harvard and Dartmouth that they were still able to illuminate society. The second omen was the eclipse of the sun. Agog with scientific zeal, the college rose at dawn, donned costumes, correct scientifically though not aesthetically, braved the cold and travelled to Connecti- cut, where the officially astronomical members made careful records of the dura- tion length, shadow bands and the appearance of the corona. One fact only was omitted from the archives, — the cause of the eclipse, — and this shall now be duly registered : by processes of induction and deduction, by mathematical calculations and by translations of Chinese astrology, it has been discovered that it heralded the graduation of the class of 1925. On Rally Day the class broke its collective chrysalis and made its debut. For three years it had been the college caterpillar, and crawled its tortuous way in the realms of knowledge ploddingly, unassumingly, but voraciously withal; now it had acquired knowledge to the bursting point, — it had become a butterfly! Henceforth it should do nothing but flit from pleasure to pleasure. In such a frivolous spirit, the seniors entered into the Junior Promenade and quite outdid their rivals. During the spring term they discovered manifold pleasures: they rode, motored or walked in the country, they ate heartily, they frequented Para- dise, and they accepted the merited adulation of the underclassmen with modesty. Commencement came at last; they had a feeling of compunction about leaving Northampton and tried to flunk their finals, — but it was no use, — they had become too clever. And since they had been chosen to celebrate the fiftieth anniversary they might as well comply graciously. So they made the occasion a highly suc- cessful one: they were witty in the Ivy oration, dramatic in the play, attentive at Baccalaureate, pathetic and dignified at commencement, and charming all the time. No wonder their parents swelled with pride, the alumnae with reminis- cences, and the rest of the callege with awe. They felt a trifle sad themselves, but they looked forward to the warm reception which the world was undoubtedly pre- pared to extend to such a prodigious class. Helen Treadway Johnson. n a 128 A % WM C.LSP£-rN|CErR_ . □ CT D [J {fantamuti (Enmmtttre General Chairman Cheryl Crawford General Executive Margaret Arnstein Composer Dorothy Smith Chairman of Scenery Isabella Walsh (flammrcmtwnt flag Gtammittw General Chairman Cheryl Crawford Dramaturgy Grania Knott Business Manager Margaret Barnes Chairman of Lighting Kathleen Tildsley Chairman of Costuming Emma Heap Chairman of Publicity Justine Entz Chairman of Properties Elsie Butler Chairman of Staging Frances Wilson _□ Q 130 n lt n LT f ultwrntBB, Idjnlitrr nf QDrrau Prince . Jeannette Strodthoff Members of the Cast Virginia V. Hart Eleanor Loeb Louise Hovde Florence Meling Kustis Hundley Georgiana Schaub n ol 13] n CT U LT % HK e 6 r. Saturday, June Thirteenth Ivy Exercises on the Campus Ivy Exercises in John M. Greene Hall Society Reunions . Closing Concert College Sing . Dramatics Glee Club Concert Circling Years of Smith 10.00 A. M. 11.00 A. M. 4.00 p. m. 3.15 p. m. 6.30 P. M. 7.15 P. M. 8.30 P. M. 9.30 P. M LlD Q 132 □ nco Q U LT Sunday, June Fourteenth Baccalaureate Exercises in Sage Hall, 11 a. m. Address by President Neilson Reception Given by President and Mrs. Neilson, 3 p. m. Organ Vespers in John M. Greene Hall, 5 p. m. Smith College Symphony Orchestra, 8.15 p. m. Organ Music, 9.30 p. m. n 51 L33 ID m m lt commencement! Monday, June Fifteenth John M. Greene Hall 10.30 a. m. Address by Ada Louise Comstock Fiftieth Anniversary Party Class Supper in Alumnae Gymnasium . 2.30 P. M. . 6.00 P. M. n a 134 □ CT TJ CJ MONDAY, JUNE FIFTEENTH Alumnae Gymnasium, 6 p. m. Toastmistres8 Mary Sloan n □_ 135 m m ra LT Juy Say ong April rain cast silver shadows Like a web across the grass, By a pool the young white birches Saw their slimness in a glass. What have we to do with shadows? Shadows pass. May flung clouds of apple blossoms Down in every hollow glade, Violet, primrose, pale arbutus Through the woods and meadows strayed ; And we turned to watch the pageant. Blossoms fade. Now the year is at its high tide, Longer here we may not stay, All the wide, white roads are calling, Calling, calling us away; Broken are the bonds that held us Yesterday. Grow then, sturdy little ivy, In the warm earth spread apace, Token to the ones that follow That we looked on learning ' s face And have touched the hem of beauty, In this place. Words by Frances Dorris n o. 136 □ 15 LT D cr QlnmrntttFr on (Hoxnnmxttmmt ExmtsrB Ivy Day Committee Elisabeth Morrow, Chairman Frances French Alice Judson Frances Higginbotham Marjorie Rankin Catharine Jones Elizabeth Robinson Ivy Song Committee Margaret Linley, Chairman Frances Dorris Sally Linley Mary Gerould Elizabeth Robinson Harriet Lane Dorothy Smith Commencement Printing Elinor Robinson | Doris Booth Chairman Helen Booth Katherine Cogswell Eloise Morford Barbara Priest Mildred Williams Lettie Witherspoon Ruth Mc Barron Commencement Orator Frances Wilson, Chairman Elisabeth Morrow Class Supper Committee Beatrice Gale, Chairman Marjorie Boomer Helen Low Martha Houser Eloise Morford Leta Kirk Lettie Witherspoon Committee on Order of Marching Dorothy Allott, Chairman Carol Baker Martha Hooker Constance Hirschy Helen Low Elizabeth Allen Eunice Clapp Dorothy (iilc Julia II immelsbarh Cap and Gown Committee Margaret Arnstein, Chairman Virginia Hunt Elizabeth Lane Pauline Page Edith Showers Josephine Tompkins n • EtosIgMd [a i:{- THE OTHER CLASSES fcfi K □ CT U D 00 1926 We met you when you entered here, And, ages older by a year, We led you round collegiate land With stern and sophomoric hand. We felt a solemn urge to pass Our wealth of wisdom to your class. Next year we came to realize You had indeed grown very wise ; Your subtle ways and strength of arm Caused us delight and some alarm. And now we will prognosticate That when you come to graduate You ' ll find it very hard to do. Our last words are, that we do, too. _□ izr 140 □ ' J u n n ol 1 11 □ (J D LT So 192? Searching all our fouryears through, Last advice we pass to you ; That each of you herself comport Both as a student and a sport. Bluff your teachers to a man, Learn your lessons when you can, And fill the Monthly with good stuff So Class Book Board will have enough. Don ' t neglect the joys of gym, Don ' t forget to learn to swim, Play all games and win them too Make the Odds all proud of you. Thus, dear sisters, goes our verse, Keen, incisive, vigorous, terse, Unspoiled by that laborious study Which makes the intellect grow muddy. n EL 142 D If CJ n n n ol 1 13 □ CT D n Gin B2B Before we even knew you, ' 28, Exams and horoscopes pronounced you great. We pictured you with glasses on your nose, Eschewing men and moving picture shows. But it has been our very glad surprise To find that you are young as well as wise, And handle cuts and week-ends in a way That proves to us you must know how to play ; And what is more — these bursts of girlish joy Come quite unmixed with Registrar ' s Alloy ; For still in all your work you scintillate. Our love and admiration, ' 28! n a 144 n CT ID [J n ol i I.-, ■Tf BfcBlhfaU u CT n El CTT MARY WALLACE President of Council MARY SLOAN Chairman of Judicial Hoard FRESHMAN YEAR Helen Sargent Elizabeth Webb - SOPHOMORE YEAR Virginia McCalmont Elizabeth Ward JUNIOR YEAR Martha Houser Miriam Keck Mary Wallace SENIOR YEAR Lavinia Fyke Dorothy O ' Brien Martha Hooker Mary Sloan Genevieve McEldowney Nancy Templet mi Mary Wallace n ol i ■. n CT n LT i§amr nf Kppreanttattfafi DOROTHY O ' BRIEN President of the House Senior Year Elizabeth Barrett Mary Berryman Eleanor Briggs Edna Charlton Josephine Chovey Betty Coates Virginia Cosby Anna Dallinger Cornelia Dean Margaret Foote Helen Geiger Mary Gerould HOUSE PRESIDENTS Dorothy Gile Virginia Hart Katherine Humphries Kathryn James Leta Kirk Vieno Kajander Margaret Linley Esther Mason Virginia Mueller Agnes Murray Esther Page Barbara Priest Elizabeth Robinson Alice Sailor Louise Schmauk Sylvia Scaramelli Jeannette Scott Ruth Seinfel Erna Sievers Eunice Tait Josephine Tompkins Elizabeth T. Williams Mildred Williams Phyllis Bagg Elizabeth Brodel Josephine Cannon Virginia Folsom Barbara Grant REPRESENTATIVES Kathryn Hourihan Elizabeth Judkins Louise McGregor Merle McCarthy Dorothy Smith Elizabeth Wanamaker Frances Wilson Isobel Wisner Dorothy Winslow n □. 150 D IS lt D cr Frances Bothfeld Margaret Bradley Anne Brown Katherine Clarkson Eunice Blake Doris Booth Elsie Butler- Mabel Cahoon Josephine Cannon Eunice Clapp Margaret Dewey Pauline Fairbanks Margaret Hamp Anna Davis Rose Dyson Margaret Hamp Josephine Benz Elizabeth Blaisdell Marjorie Boomer Mary Brower Josephine Cannon Marion Dionne Junior Year house presidents Cheryl Crawford Margaret Foote Freida Goodenough Vieno Kajander REPRESENTATIVES Julia Himmelsbach Martha Houser Helen Jillson Elizabeth Judkins Leta Kirk Elizabeth Lane Helen Low Frances Means Serena Niles Sophomore Year house presidents Katherine Johnson Irene Rachdorff Marjorie Rankin REPRESENTATIVES Frances Harvey Julia Himmelsbach Virginia Hunt Elizabeth Judkins Martha Jennings Genevieve McEldowney Ruth Lilly Ruth Seinfel Mary Sloan Elizabeth Webb Dorothy O ' Brien Eleanor Poppenhusen Irene Rachdorff Marjorie Rankin Margaret Scott Louise Van Voast Elizabeth Wales Constance Walter Helen Wulbern Dorothea Walker Janet Wilcox Letty Witherspoon Elizabeth Parkhurst Nell Russell Margaret Robinson Louise Schmauk Mary Wallace Eunice Wheeler n ol L51 □ lt u LT Aasnnattnn fnr Christian Unrk LAVINIA FYKE Lavinia Fyke Virginia Mueller . President Vice-President Frances Wilson Frances Harvey Katherine Bulkley Lavinia Fyke . Elizabeth Webb Josephine Cannon (Eatrittet iKrmbprs Junior Year . Treasurer . Social Service . Social Service Head of Representatives Social Activities Discussions Elisabeth Morrow Sophomore Year . Secretary Left College n o. 152 □ m LT n n  . tt. A. (C. M. (Babbitt Chairmen of Departments and Committees Dorothy Gordon Eloise Morford Virginia Thieme Helen Low Dorothy Dunning Pauline Page . Religious Servict s Deputations Social Service Silver Bay Leader Missions and Student Volunteers Publicity • Uc-.il- ned n ol L53 □ a D LT filter lag BdrgatrB 1922 Anne Brown Frances Harvey Margaret Robinson Marie-Louise Schmauk 1923 Christine Baumann Caroline Bedell Katherine Bulkley Margery Cary Dorothy Dunning Lavinia Fyke Miriam Keck Helen Low Esther Mason Elinor Robinson Wilma Shannon Elizabeth Wales Mary Wallace Elizabeth Ward Elizabeth T. Williams 1924 Margaret Arnstein Leila Brady Dorothy Burnham Josephine Cannon Anna Dallinger Frances French Lavinia Fyke Dorothy Gordon Elizabeth Gould Kathleen Grant Julia Himmelsbach Martha Hooker Catharine Jones Alice Judson Elizabeth Keith Elizabeth Lane Jessie Lloyd Helen Low Helen Moor Eloise Morford Virginia Mueller Pauline Page Nell Russell Mary Sebring Josephine Tompkins Mary Wallace Elizabeth Webb Mildred Williams Katherine Whitney Lettie Witherspoon iht tauapolts iplegatra HELEN LOW Katherine Bulkley Josephine Cannon Lois Cochran Dorothy Dunning Helvi Haati Martha Hooker Georgiana Schaub Louise Schmauk n a 154 n u u [J n □_ i r.. r wa 1 1 u u u u  tubntt Ai imams, 1924-1925 Suzanne Ackerman Dorothy Dunning Babette Kafka Eleanor Pote Hope Adams Rose Dyson Vieno Kajander Olive Potter Dorothy A ' beck Justine Entz Ruth Kayton Barbara Priest S. Elizabeth Allen Elizabeth Eulass Miriam Keck Irene Racbdorf Margaret Arnstein Winifred Evans Elizabeth Keith Ethel Ranney Impi Arvo Pauline Fairbanl s Edna Kiesewetter Mary Rhodes Katharine Atwater Hanna Faterson Arline Knight Elisabeth Rice Carol Baker Merl Fisk Grania Knott Helen Rice Jane Baker Elizabeth Fitzgerald Anne Kohler Elinor Robinson Lucy Barnard Alberta Flanagan Eleanor Krick Elizabeth Robinson Margaret Barnes Mary Foss Elizabeth Lane Margaret Robinson Elizabeth Barrett Frances French Harriet Lane Ellen Rogers Mary Barry Lavinia Fyke Isabel Lewis Mary Rossen Marie Barstow Edith Gaff Terice Liebeskind Nell Ford Russell Caroline Bear Clarace Gait Margaret Linley Eleanor Rust Caroline Bedell Alice Garlichs Sally Linley Alice Sailor Rebecca Beeman Helen Geiger Jessie Lloyd Sylvia Sca -amelli Catherine Blake Mary Gerould Elinor Loeb Georgiana Schaub Eunice Blake Frieda Goodenou gh Elizabeth Loring Mary Sebring Virginia Blunt Dorothy Gordon Helen Low Ruth Seinfel Frances Bolton Kathleen Grant Eleanor Lucas Wilma Shannon Marjorie Boomer Marian Hagler Carolyn Lyle Ethel Sherman Francese Bothfeld Eleanor Hall Ruth McBarron Helene Shincel Caroline Boyer Beulah Hanson Virginia McCalmont Augusta Smith Lois Boynton Virginia Hart Louise McGregor Dorothy Smith Margaret Bradley Elizabeth Hartm; in Bernice Mcllhenny Lois Smith Mary Bradley Helen Hartzell Ruth McKeown Shirley Smith Elizabeth ISrodel Doris Hassell Grace Magee Beatrice Stuart Anne Brown Emma Heap Josephine Mannion Margaret Sturges Katherine Brownell Ruth Hene Louise Marion Dorothy Tait Katherine Bulkley Cecelia Herstein Mary-Eleanor Marsh Eunice Tait Eleanor Burckhardt Elizabeth Hildreth Esther Mason Virginia Thieme Ida Burgess Doris Hill Frances Means Kathleen Tildsley Elsie Butler Helen Hitchcock Carolyn Melchers Josephine Tompkins Mabel Cahoon Maltha Hooker Dorothy Miller Elizabeth Towle Catharine Calhoun Constance Houghton Helen Moot Irene Trafford Josephine Cannon Martha Houser Virginia Mueller Marion Turner Helen Carpenter Hilda Hulbert Helen Munz Natalie Van Ulm Barbara Churchill Katherine Humphries Nora Nelson Dorothea Walker Eunice Clapp Eustis Hundley Dorothy O ' Brien Mary Wallace Gladys Clark Virginia Hunt Dorothy Ordway Elizabeth Ward Betty Coates Judelle MaeG. Huston Esther Page Elizabeth Webb Lois Cochran Kathryn James Pauline Page Charlotte Wetherell Frances Copp Dorothy Jealous Alice Paine Eunice Wheeler Mary Crawford Caroline Jenkins Margaret Pantzer Clara Williams Alice Curwen Martha Jennings Louva Parker Lucy H. Williams Anna Dallinger Helen Jillson Elizabeth Parkhurst Mildred Williams Constance Davidge Helen Johnson Helen Patch Frances Wilson Cornelia Dean Kathryn Johnsor Elizabeth Patterson Ernestine Wiltse Miriam Dionne Catharine Jones Marjorie Peabody Dorothy Winslow Marian Donahue Mary Joslin Katharine Phealan Jean Wise Martha Dorman Elizabeth Judkins Dorothy Pickard Lettie Witherspoon Lillian Duberg Alice Judson Eleanor Poppenhusen Mary Wright n n i i 156 TJ n u lt Debating (Enunril Martha McAvoy Sylvia Scaramelli Frances Wilson . Catherine Jones Kathleen Tildsley Margaret Arnstein Martha McAvoy Josephine Cannon . President . Secretary-Treasurer Chairman of Intercollegiate Debatt . Chairman of Social Committee Chairman of Publicity Junior Year . Secretary-Treasun r . Chairman of Social Committee Chairman of Publicity n Odd-Even Debate, 1923 Margaret Arnstein, Alternate Betty Coates, Speaki r Caroline Bedell, Speaker Helen Johnson, Alternate Katherine Bulkley, Speaker Sylvia Scaramelli, Alternate Williams-Smitii Debate, 1924 Martha McAvoy, Speaker Sylvia Scaramelli, Speaker Frances Wilson, Coach Amherst-Smith Debate, 1924 Bernice Mcllhenny, Speaker Frances Wilson, Coach Intercollegiate Debate, 1924 Catherine Jones, Coach Intercollegiate Debate. 1925 Martha McAvoy, Cm, eh Dartmouth-Smith Debate, 1925 Eunice Blake, Speaker Catherine Jones, Coach Sylvia Scaramelli, Coach D_ L57 we — m « m um ii — iii m iii I MMKaMMIMIlJ n i CT D [J Sramatira Aaaflnatton (ftnmtril Senior Year Cheryl Crawford . Producing Director Margaret Barnes Chairmen of Committees Business Manager Margaret Linley . Staging Emma Heap . . Costumes Grania Knott . Dramaturgy Kathleen Tildsley Lighting Justine Entz Publicity Elsie Butler Junior Year . Properties Anna Dallinger . . . Secretary Frances Wilson . ...... Head of Publicity n Q 160 n n m ra Sramattrfi The class of 1925 has proved itself beyond question a patron of the arts, if only in its devotion to the drama. Not content to trust our reputation for histrionic merit, as have other classes, to a gifted but jaded few, we have rallied in numbers to assist in the fashioning of our dramatic history. Names have shown with meteoric brilliance from time to time, only to drop into oblivion ; as if, content with hav- ing given their share of talent to our stage, their owners had chosen other less temperamental paths. Class presidents, athletes, Phi Betes have trodden our boards under obscurer names, wherein they have not only shown their versatility, but given us the spectacle of a practical application of the arts as a preparation for life. But, in addition to this loyal support from other fields, we can claim as many and as brilliant extra-curricular professionals in the drama as in any of our other pre-eminent interests. When the spring of our freshman year gave us an opportunity to develop our latent talents, we early showed ourselves eager for the- atrical fame. In the first production of the spring, the success of The Dragon rested largely on members of our class. The names of Anna Dallinger and Elinor Loeb, since familiar to campus theatregoers, appeared in the cast. Virginia McCalmont, besides presaging our brilliant future in her excellent performance, gave still another illus- tration of the native strength of the class backbone in her determina- tion to go through with the part, though she was borne to the infirm- ary from the stage door at the close of the play ! Our first mark in the history of producing was here set faintly in the persons of Fran- ces Bolton and Jessie Lloyd, who served on committees, obscurely of course, — but still an achievement for freshmen. The size of the cast for Were King gave twenty-nine more freshmen an intimate connection with the smell of grease paint and the nervous thrill of apprehension that precedes the entrance of a mob. It is significant that the names of Blake, Crawford. Tester, Foss, Wanamaker and Rannev thus early appeared on college play bills. But it was in the following year that our distinct acting person- alities began to emerge from the mobs of our dramatic infancy. The first production of the fall gave prominence to Kathleen Tildsley and Ruth Tester in a charmingly performed scene from the Romancers. On the same evening, Lucy Barnard, Grania Knott and Adelaide Avery made their successful debuts as characters in Masefield ' s Locked Chest. Large casts have for four years favored the ambition of our class. Several more of us skipped and sighed and sang ourselves before the footlights in the Workshop production of Scorpio. And we felt that we were growing up indeed, when Grania Knott, a mere sophomore, held the stage alone with a member of the Faculty in Li mo Hen us. n ol 16] n 11® cr D cr Having created a reputation of a sort, we found it impossible to let pass an opportunity for presuming on it. So we duly appeared, a trifle perfunctorily it must be admitted, in The Scarecrow. But we were merely reserving our forces for the successes of the spring. Our parts in the Chinese Lantern showed a growing maturity and confi- dence which found a sustained level in the acting of Cheryl Crawford, as the hero of one of the most popularly received plays the Association has ever produced, The Marriage of Convenience. It was during this spring that Gloria Mundi, of psychopathic fame, proved Grania Knott ' s versatility, — among other things. Up to this moment of our dramatic career our role had been one of pleasant dependence. No one had expected too much of us. If we achieved distinction, we were greeted with the lollypops of a delight- ed applause and were patted on the heads for being good girls. If we attained something less than mediocrity, it was put down to the score of our inexperience. But from the start of our junior year, we were expected to stand or fall on our own merits. We had, until now, ap- peared for the sake of appearing. The first plays of the small pro- duction found Anna Dallinger, Grania Knott and Cheryl Crawford assuming this harsh responsibility as the respective coaches of Deir- dre, The Knave of Hearts, and Beauty and the Jacobin. Our novitiate over, and the task before us of fashioning a dramatic tradition for others, less experienced than ourselves, we found mere personal achievement losing its importance in the larger scope of artistic excel- lence. We were proud of our share in the brave experiment of Jeanne D ' Arc, as we showed by recklessly swelling the numbers of its un- wieldy cast. Foremost among its elements of success, was the acting of Grania Knott as D ' Alencon in which she showed her appreciation of the high level of the theme by a subtle commingling of reality and idealism as at once lover and champion of an idea. We were trained to an ideal and innured to probable disappoint- ment, when, in the spring of our junior year, we received from 1924 the sole responsibility for the dramatic excellence of the college. Not quite sure of our ground, we tested our footing in the first set of plays which included a successful attempt at sophistication with Grania Knott as the leading lady, in Molnar ' s A Matter of Husbands; and a venture upon the more difficult ground of Kemp ' s Boccaccio ' s Untold Tale, which was sincere if not quite convincing. In Shakuntalah we tried our first independent experiment. In an attempt to transcend the narrower type of drama which merely offers a vehicle for the good acting of individuals, we tried to make this an expression of a more comprehensive art, in which the action of the characters should be only in proportion to a pattern of theme, sound and color, so that the completed production should form an aesthetic unity. To this end we departed from the tradition of a pro- fessionally set stage, for the spring production, to the precincts of the President ' s garden, which afforded an appropriate setting for the rich and fantastic grouping of the play. Barbara Grant, as King Dushyanta, moved powerfully as a romantic and colorful center through its exotic scenes. Dorothy Pickard, Eunice Blake, and Doro- n EL 162 □ m m thy Libaire gave it harmony in their confident and mature interpreta- tion of the character parts of Mudhavya, Father Kanva, and Gau- tami. In the fall of our senior year we paused and took breath. The first set of plays belonged primarily to the juniors. But we showed a continued interest in our dramatic career, even though it was draw- ing to a close. Cheryl Crawford played the title role in Sudermann ' s Teja, and Florence Melling startled and delighted us by proving her- self as capable in the part of the Bagdad merchant Ali, in Hudson ' s Pearl of Dawn, as in the delicate and sophisticated feminine parts we had come to consider primarily hers. The class has justified its long and universal interest in the drama in its most recent production, The Faithful, by John Masefield. In this, the ideal for which ShakuntalaJi served as an apprenticeship, was realized as a successful actuality. The rhythm of the play pro- gressed with an ever-accelerating intensity, unbroken by uncrafts- manlike slips in acting or stage management. Eunice Blake, Cheryl Crawford, and Grania Knott reached the height of their dramatic interpretation in the parts of Lords Kira, Kurano, and Asano, in which the excellence of their acting was so genuine that it merged in the general harmony of the whole. It is hoped that, departing from this basis of achievement as a standard, we shall show the results of our long and intensive training in a brilliant production in June. It is particularly to Cheryl Crawford, as competent and far- visioning director of the Dramatic Association, that we owe our deter- mination to accomplish something of artistic integrity in the face of occasional failure and frequent distrust, born of the fact that experi- ment of this sort is still in an early stage of development. It is to her, too, that we owe the success of ambitious performances under limited conditions. Only with her dauntless confidence and deter- mination could plays of the scope of ShakuntalaJi and The Faithful have been made convincing in the domestic and over-familiar settings of campus and the Students ' Building stage. LT n o. 168 I I N e.g. . n Q D lt Hilda Hulbert Clara Williams Editorial Staff Editor-in-Chief Lucy Barnard Literary Editors Frances Dorris Sally Linley Eleanor Gilchrist Business Board Business Manager Margaret Barnes Assistant Business Managers Katharine Brownell Marian Hagler Junior Year Literary Editors Hilda Hulbert Clara Williams Assistant Business Managers Katharine Brownell Anne Brown Margaret Barnes Anne Brown Carol Baker Lucy Barnard Anne Brown n Sophomore Year Assistant Business Managers Katharine Brownell Marian Hagler D. 16G D CT I] n Ruth Seinfel Elizabeth Keith . Wilma Shannon Dorothy Winslow Impi Arvo . Clarace Gait Elizabeth Barrett Frances Bolton Helen Hitchcock Eunice Blake Ellen Rogers Elizabeth Keith l kly Snari . Editor-in-Chief Associate Editor News Editor Managing Editor Business Manager Circulation Manager Assistant News Editors . Art Critic Dramatic Critic Music Critic Junior Year Assistant News Editors Wilma Shannon Ruth Seinfel n Assistavit Managing Editors •Christine Baumann Mabel Cahoon Lettie Witherspoon Mildred Buffington Emma Heap Dorothy Winslow Assistant Business Managers Art Critic Margaret Arnstein Phyllis Bagg Caroline Boyer Elizabeth Brodel Frances Harvey Music Critic Lucille Shyev Sally Linley Sophomore Year Assistant Neivs Editors Assistant Managing Editors Caroline Bedell Mildred Buffington Jessie Lloyd Mary Wallace Music Critic Harriet Lane • Resigned 0: 167 D CT U fr fifi Snarft Miriam Keck Georgiana Schaub Isobel Wisner Lucy Barnard Mary Barry Caroline Bedell Katharine Brownell Elsie Butler Betty Coates Pauline Fairbanks Louise Hovde Caroline Jenkins . President News Editor Senior Executive Members Miriam Keck Harriet Lane Jessie Lloyd Ruth McBarron Georgiana Schaub Katherine Sheldon Mary Wallace Charlotte Wetherell Katherine Whitney Isobel Wisner Resigned n Q. 168 n Hi lt n LT (Eampaa (Eat Dorothy Dunning J Eleanor Gilchrist ' Business Manager Business Board Isobel Buckley . Wilma Shannon Catherine Spencer Isabella Walsh Lucy Barnard Dorothy Dunning Eleanor Gilchrist Margaret Hamp Art Editors Members Jessie Lloyd Genevieve McEldowney Catherine Spencer Nancy Templeton Isabella Walsh Resigned n 51 1 69 □ 1% nr D m (Elaas lonk loarfc Wilma Shannon Margaret Linley Isobel Buckley . Margaret Arnstein Catherine Spencer Frances French . Kathleen Tildsley Elizabeth Lane . Isabel Lewis Alice Judson Nancy Templeton . Editor-in-Chief Assistant Editor Business Manager Assistant Business Manager Art Editor Clubs and Lists Editor Board Pictures Editor . Senior Pictures Literary Editor Snap-Shot Editor Nonsense Editor n a 170 CLS c crr-ijj- n Q U L7 GDrrljrfitra Priscilla Alden Caroline Bedell Alice Judson Jessie Lloyd Louise McGregor Eunice Wheeler Linda Woodworth n n 172 □ D u CT gln (Blub Elizabeth Robinson Harriet Lane Members Priscilla Alden Marie Barstow Lucy Briggs Elizabeth Brown Eula Brown Katherine Bulkley Josephine Cannon Eunice Clapp Katherine Clarkson Dorothy Dunning Sylvia Gaines Mary Gerould Barbara Grant Virginia Hall Margaret Hamp Beulah Hanson Emma Heap Julia Himmelsbach Constance Houghton Virginia Hunt Martha Jennings Sara Jobson Leta Kirk Elizabeth Lane Lefl College Hi ' sik ' ni ' il Leader . Secretary Harriet Lane Marion Leonard Margaret Linley Helen Low Virginia McCalmont Louise McGregor Carolyn Melchers Helen Redding Mary Reynolds Mary Risley Elizabeth Robinson Ellen Rogers Helen Sargent Shirley Smith Dorothea Spieth Mildred Spencer Lillian Silver Nancv Templeton Ruth Tester Dorothea Walker Charlotte Wetherell Eunice Wheeler Lucy Williams. Mildred Williams n D it:: n CT D CT Marjorie Boomer iManbnlm (Elub Members Priscilla Alden Virginia Blunt Marjorie Boomer Caroline Cochran Constance Houghton Leader Louise Hovde Sara Jobson Edna Laurin Helen Patch Nancy Templeton Resigned n a 174 □ Q D CJ (Sljmr I ' hyllis Bagg Elizabeth Barrett Mary Harry Susan Ik ' nnett Catherine Blake Marion Bond Marjorie Hoiimfr Doris liooth Helen Booth Clarice Iiowers Carolyn lioyer {Catherine Brady Lucy Briggs Margaret Brinton Elizabeth Brown {Catherine Bulk Icy Eleanor Burkhardl Elsie Butler Josephine Cannon Eunice Clapp [Catherine Clarkson Caroline Cockran Katherlne Cogswell Margaret Cook Frances Copp Alice Cm-wen Anna Dallinger Constance Davidge Cornelia llean Prances Dorris Rose Dyson Faith Ely Elizabeth Eulass Frances French Lavinia Fyke Mary Gerould Dorothy Gile Dorothy Gordon Elizabeth Gould Barbara Grant Kathleen Grant Beulah Hanson Martha Harper Emma Heap Prances Higginbotham Julia Hininielsliaeb Helen Hitchcock Maltha Hooker Constance Houghton Louise Hovde Hilda Hulbert Josephine Bui i Kathryn James C iMi. i i II. ' Jones Elisabeth Keith Edna Kiesewettor I. eta Kirk t li ii - Knight Grania Knott Anne Kohler Elizabeth Dane Harriet Lane Edna Laurin Marion Leonard Helen Lincoln Margaret Linley Sally Linley Helen Low Ruth McKeown Ellen Macomber Helen Maguire Josephine Maiiiiion Florence Moling Helen Moor Elisabeth Morrow Virginia Mueller Pauline Page Alice Paine Margaret Pantzer Marjorie Parsons Vivian Peeling Elizabeth Poole olive Potter Barbara Priest Mai i Rhodes Elsie Riley Elinor Robinson Elizabeth Robinson Ellen Rogers Mary Rossen Eleanor Rust Sylvia Scaramelli Marie-Louise Schmauk Mary Sebrinc Wilma Shannon Heli ne Shincel M.ny Sloan Dorothea Spieth Heal lice Stuart Josephine Tompkins Carolyn Van der Veer Dorothea Walker Elizabeth Ward Elizabeth Webb Prances West Charlotte Wetherell Kun ice Wheeler Lucy Williams Mildred Williams Virginia Williams Prances Wilson isobel Wiener Lettie Witherspoon Dorothy WoodrutT Mary Wrinht n nl 175 r j jy rh j l MLUfcR, ' 13 ID QT n n pft fota Kappa Caroline Bedell Merl Fisk Mary Gerould Elizabeth Keith Junior Year Terice Liebeskind Grace Magee Ruth Seinfel Josephine Tompkins Senior Year Agnes Hope Adams Margaret Arnstein Phyllis Bagg Carol Louise Baker Marie Louise Barstow Elizabeth Huntington Brodel Katherine Brownell Isobel Ramsay Buckley Anna Elizabeth Dallinger Dorothy Woodworth Dunning Ruth Avis Hamilton Doris Hill Catharine Bushnell Jones Miriam Estella Keck Leta Kirk Elizabeth Barnum Lane Harriet Page Lane Margaret Stair Linley Jessie Bross Lloyd Harriet Martha McAvoy Ruth Elaine McBarron Elizabeth Walcott McClellan Bernice Marilla Mcllhenny Mary Elizabeth Mangan Carolyn Melchers Louva Brockway Parker Rebecca Weaver Petrikin Dene Anna Rachdorf Mary Elizabeth Ramsey Marie Agnes Rolland Margaret Grey Scott Catherine Bevans Shinier Erna Pauline Sievers Mary Carter Sloan Catherine Louise Spencer Dorothy Lancaster Tait Marion Chatterly Turner Charlotte Amelia Wetherell D nl 177 h T 1 DT n lt Aljjrlja President, First Semester Entertainment Committee Caroline Bedell Anna Dallinger Priscilla Alden Adelaide Avery Caroline Bedell Anna Dallinger Frances Dorris Mary Gerould Eleanor Gilchrist Hilda Hulbert Caroline Jenkins Miriam Keck Harriet Lane Margaret Linley Jessie Lloyd Members Ruth McBarron Florence Meling Elisabeth Morrow Dorothy Pickard Ethel Ranney Elizabeth Robinson Alma Rosen Helen Sargent Ruth Seinfel Dorothy B. Smith Catherine Spencer Jeannette Strodthoff Nancy Templeton Isabella Walsh n Left College Q 17 ' .) % □ a CJ n LT it Kappa fat President, First Semester Senior Executive Editor Lucy Barnard Eunice Blake Eula Brown Elsie Butler Cheryl Crawford Mary Foss Grania Knott Dorothy Libaire Sally Linley Virginia McCalmont Genevieve McEldowney Louise McGregor Dorothy Miller Genevieve McEldowney . Virginia McCalmont . Clara Williams Members Cecile Phillips Elinor Robinson Virginia Robinson Wilma Shannon Mary Sloan Margaret Sturges Ruth Tester Kathleen Tildsley Elizabeth Wanamaker Eunice Wheeler Clara Williams Frances Wilson Linda Woodwortb n ♦ Left College Q IM □ CT n D Members Margaret Arnstein Mary Barry Alice Bennett Eunice Blake Isobel Buckley Katherine Bulkley Ida Burgess Mabel Cahoon Margaret Callahan Josephine Cannon Barbara Churchill Mary E. Crawford Constance Davidge Cornelia Dean Pauline Fairbanks Mary Foss Frances French Clarace Gait Elizabeth Gould Julia Himmelsbach Martha Hooker Virginia Hunt Josephine Hurst Judelle Huston Dorothy Jealous Caroline Jenkins Catharine Jones Mary Joslin Alice Judson Vieno Kajander Anne Kohler Helen Low Martha McAvoy Ruth McBarron Bernice Mcllhenny Elizabeth Mellon Virginia Mueller Esther Page Elizabeth Poole Mary Ramsey Alice Sailor Sylvia Scaramelli Wilma Shannon Kathleen Tildsley Josephine Tompkins Elizabeth Towle Marjorie Rankin Elizabeth Wanamaker Mildred Williams Lettie Witherspoon Linda Woodworth n D. 182 n a D Officers President . Vice-President . Secretary-Treasurer Members Margaret Barnes Katharine Brownell Jeanette Coon Helen Curtis Frances French Grace Gibson Martha Hooker Sylvia Scaramelli . Helen Low Dorothv Winslow Jessie Lloyd Helen Low Irene Rachdorf Sylvia Scaramelli Kathleen Tildsley Natalie Van Ulm Anne Whyte Dorothy Winslow n □. U is:: □ u D LT MILWWEAL SOCIETY d-LS President . Vice-President Caroline Bedell Susan Bennett Isobel Buckley Elsie Butler Catharine Calhoun Catherine Chipman Eunice Clapp Miriam Dionne Martha Dorman Frances Dorris Justine Entz Hanna Faterson Lavinia Fyke Edith Gaff Mary Gerould Ruth Hamilton Doris Hill Caroline Jenkins Officers Members Dorothy Pickard . Irene Trafforcl Miriam Keck Juliet Kind Eleanor Krick Margaret Linley Jessie Lloyd Ruth McBarron Virginia McCalmont Elizabeth Parkhurst Cecile Phillips Dorothy Pickard Irene Rachdorf Ruth Seinfel Wilma Shannon Dorothy Smith Muriel Stevenson Irene Trafford Mary Wallace Elizabeth Ward Charlotte Wetherell Resigned Left College n a 184 n CT U IT President . Officer Dorothy Tait Members Miriam Dionne Louva Parker Dorothy Pickard Emilie Sears Dorothy Tait Janet Wilcox Nancy Woehnert n ol is:. □ CT I] LT Officers President . Secretary (1923-1924) Louva Parker Dorothea Walker Members Katherine Connell Louva Parker Dorothea Walker n 0. 186 □ a n T)Cfi«jj V o 11 il 11 President . Vice-President Isobel Buckley Alice Curwen Dorothy Dunning Ruth Hamilton Lucelia Harrington Katharine Hough Florelle Johnson ♦Elizabeth Keith Edna Kiesewetter Officers Members Lois Smith Elizabeth Lane Harriet Kuhn Elizabeth Lane Esther Mason Martha McAvoy Mary O ' Donnell Ruth Seinfel Lois Smith Marion Turner Charlotte Wetherell Resigned ••Left College n a 1ST n a D [J j cfvi«-t.e FMTAnriH 1 MAI President Secretary Treasurer Officers Elizabeth Parkhurst . Mary Mangan . Elizabeth Lane Members Hope Adams Katherine Clarkson Margaret G. Cook Dorothy Dunning Hanna Faterson Virginia Folsom Lucelia Harrington Katharine Hough Elizabeth Lane Doris Latimer Martha McAvoy Mary Mangan Elizabeth Parkhurst Eleanor Rust Jeannette Strodthoff Kathryn Taylor Resigned n a. 188 n u D n COLLO Officers President Secretary Martha McAvoy Josephine Mannion Josephine Bentz Eunice Clapp Dorothy Dunning Lavinia Fyke Janet Greenburgh Members Dorothy Gray Edna Kiesewetter Arline Knight Josephine Mannion Esther Mason Martha McAvoy Resinned ••Left College n ol L89 n a D LT Officer President . • Hope Adams Members Hope Adams Doris Latimer Mary Berryman Jessie Lloyd Cheryl Crawford Elinor Loeb Mary Gerould Frances Milburne Eleanor Krick Margaret Pantzer Elizabeth Lane Eleanor Poppenhusen Katherine Whitney Resigned Left College £3 Q 190 □ CT D LT BWtmmAl SMEW Officers President . Vice-President Alice Curwen Eunice Clapp Members Margaret Arnstein Caroline Bedell Rebecca Beeman Elizabeth Brodel Anne Brown Eunice Clapp Mary Elizabeth Crawford Alice Curwen Dorothy Dunning Kathleen Grant Janet Greenburgh Beulah Hanson Edna Kiesewetter Marion Leonard Nora Nelson Dorothy O ' Brien Mary O ' Donnell Eleanor Poppenhusen Edith Showers Lois Smith Marion Turner Elizabeth Torrev Williams Lucy Williams n Left ColU ' t ' e ol 19] □ u D d Officers President . Vice-President . Senior Executive Members Jane Baker Mary Barry Susan Bennett Caroline Boyer Lydia Brigham Barbara Churchill Gladys Clark Margaret Cook Alice Curwen Cornelia Dean Dorothy Dreyfus Rose Dyson Merl Fisk Elizabeth Fitzgerald Alice Garlichs Emma Heap Josephine Tompkins Emma Heap . Gladys Clark Frances Higginbotham Caroline Jenkins Mary Joslin Vieno Kajander Elizabeth Keith Dorothy Libaire Grace Magee Ruth McBarron Bernice Mcllhenny Elizabeth Mellon Katherine Sears Ruth Seinfel Charlotte Smith Eleanor Stubbs Josephine Tompkins Charlotte Wetherell Left College n □_ :zr 192 D m D LT SPAMISH CW3 Officers Active President Secretary-Treasurer Vera Baker Francese Bothfeld Katherine Cogswell Florence Drake Rose Dyson Members Lillian Lowenthal Francese Bothfeld Vieno Ka.jander Lillian Lowenthal Helen Maguire Doris Merriam Augusta Smith n ol L93 D CT U LT Officer President . Erna Sievers Members Elizabeth Erodel Genevieve McEldowney Dorothy Burnham Elsie Riley Isabel Davenport Marie Rose Lillian Duberg Lillian Rulnick Rose Dyson Erna Sievers Beulah Hanson Ruth Townsend Kathryn Johnson Edith Trussell Marian Leonard Charlotte Wetherell Muriel Wise Left College Resigned n Q 194 D LT D D President Officer Alice Garlichs Mary Barry Rebecca Beeman Alice Garlichs Doris Hassell Helen Heffernan Members Vieno Kajander Mary Reynolds Sylvia Scaramelli Emilie Sears Augusta Smith Dorothea Walker • Left College S3 nl i ■D CT D [J President Treasurer Officers Georgiana Schaub Impi Arvo Members Impi Arvo Catherine Blake Marion Bond Clarice Bowers Anne Burgess Mary Coolidge Doris Lattimer Edna Laurin Eleanor Mason Georgiana Schaub n o. 196 n CT n D MUM CLOB Officers President .... Vice-President . Secretary-Treasurer . Chairman of Entertainment . Irene Trafford . Susan Bennett Dorothea Spieth Mildred Buffington Mkmhkks Susan Bennett Katharine Browned Mildred Buffington Frances Dorris Hanna Faterson Elizabeth Gifford Elizabeth Gould Celia Herstein Eleanor Lydall Olive Sharrett Dorothea Spieth Kut h Townsend Abbv Trafford n ol 197 n lt D CJ CLEF Officers President . ... • . Dorothy Smith Vice-President . . Eunice Wheeler Treasurer . . . . Members Ellen Rogers Caroline Bedell Margaret Pantzer Hilda Hulbert Ellen Rogers Sally Linley Dorothy Smith Marie Major Dorothea Walker Louise McGregor Eunice Wheeler Resigned Left College n a 198 n a El D Zl LT m £Z -N President . Vice-President Officers Dorothy Pickard Marian Leonard Members Adelaide Avery Eleanor Lawther Lucy Barnard Marian Leonard Eunice Blake Dorothy Libaire Cheryl Crawford Florence Meling Marian Hagler Dorothy Pickard M artha Hooker Margaret Sturges Kathryn James Ruth Tester Crania Knott Rosalind Wright ••Left College Rcdiened n nl 199 n CJ D n )Tudio Clue President Treasurer Officers Margaret Sturges Justine Entz Phyllis Bagg Lydia Brigham Elizabeth Brodel Eugenie Crosby Justine Entz Eleanor Fuller Helen Hitchcock Members Josephine Hurst Helen Kendrick Dorothy Miller Eloise Morford Marguerite Rebboli Elinor Robinson Margaret Sturges Isabella Walsh Left College n a 200 □ CT n CT . m MWWM l ff IHIIIIIMUUilUIIIIIIIIIIIIIII,. ' ' . ' , mtMMw M M m H H M immimMm ' muMiitciiiiiiiiii. : ih.. ue Pencil President Secretary Officers . Frances Dorris Eleanor Gilchrist Members Phyllis Bagg Lucy Barnard Margaret Brinton Frances Dorris Eleanor Gilchrist Helen Hitchcock Hilda Hulberl Anne Lackey Harriet Lane Margaret Linley Sally Linley Jessie Lloyd Genevieve McEldowney Cecile Phillips Miriam Spectorsky W ' ilma Shannon Clara Williams • Left College n nl 20] D 3 CT n n President . Secretary . Senior Executive Officers Elizabeth Keith Nora Nelson Catharine Calhoun Members Frances Bolton Catharine Calhoun Eunice Clapp Virginia Cosby Anna Dallinger Lillian Duberg Dorothy Dunning Alberta Flanagan Helen Forbes Eleanor Fuller Lavinia Fyke Grace Gibson Dorothy Gordon Martha Hooker Elizabeth Keith Miriam Keck Carolyn Van der Elizabeth Lane Helen Low Grace Magee Perchik Melik Nora Nelson Olive Potter Lillian Rulnick Nell Russell Mary Sebring Helene Shincel Eleanor Stubbs Virginia Thieme Mary Wallace Elizabeth Webb Jean Wise Lettie Witherspoon Veer  Left College Resigned n n 202 n a D n GRAND-DAUGHTER Lucy Barnard Caroline Bedell Eunice Blake Bettina Blodgett Elizabeth Brodel Anne Brown Cornelia Cochrane Dorothy Dunning Clarace Gait Dorothy Gray Helen Hartzell Catharine Jones Harriet Lane Elizabeth Torrey Helen Lincoln Jessie Lloyd Louise Marion Elisabeth Morrow Dorothy Ordway Helen Patch Marjorie Rankin Mary Rossen Jane Shoemaker Margaret Sparhawk Kathleen Tildsley Elizabeth Ward Eunice Wheeler Williams n Q 203 n [j U w n CL 204 U Q u D n ol 205 □ a n T3 U n Q 206 CL:3Pfc-WCfc-«.- D n LT n n MARY SLOAN g mith (Unll p Atl lriir Aaanriation Senior Officers Mary Sloan Vice-President Representatives Banket ball Virginia Hunt Hockey Virginia Thieme Crew Virginia Blunt Swimwiing Lucy Barnard Eleanor Lucas Archery Catharine Jones Outing Club Anne Brown Junior Officers Mary Sloan ' • 8td( nt Representatives Baseball Katherine Trowbridge Margaret Hamp Cricket Eleanor Rust Sophomore Officers ■Virginia McCalmont Mary Sloan Ruth McBarron Archery Edna Kieseweth r Boat-House Manager Lois Cochran ( ' lub-House Managi r Dorothv Pickard ' ' ( a sun r Seen tary n Resinned d1 209 T2 UJ TJ n 1925 Hfontora of All -g mttl) laskrtball ®ram Edith Gaff, 1925 Virginia Hunt, 1925 Georgianna Kline, 1924 Anne Lewis, 1925 Eleanor Lucas, 1925 Bernice Mcllhenny, 1924, 1925 Elizabeth Poole, 1924 Nancy Templeton, 1924, 1925 Senior Basketball Team Captain, Nancy Templeton Forwards Centers Guards Anne Lewis Virginia Hunt Katherine Bulkley Bernice Mcllhenny Eleanor Lucas Edith Gaff Elizabeth Poole Nancy Templeton Georgianna Kline Junior Team Captain, Nancy Templeton Centers Virginia Hunt Eleanor Lucas Nancy Templeton Elizabeth Ward Forwards Barbara Churchill Anne Lewis Bernice Mcllhenny Elizabeth Poole Guards Marjorie Boomer Katherine Bulkley Edith Gaff Georgianna Kline n □_ 210 n a a cr Sophomore Team Captain, Nancy Templeton Forwards Anne Lewis Bernice Mcllhenny Elizabeth Poole Centers Eleanor Lucas Lenore Seymour Nancy Templeton Guards Edith Gaff Georgianna Kline Helen Sargent Forwards Florieda Batson Mary Dickson Emma Heap Freshman Team Captain, Nancy Templeton Centers Nancy Templeton Lenore Seymour Elizabeth Ward Guards Edith Gaff Georgianna Kline Marceline Reyburn n ol 211 n LJ U lt IQ25 Hkmbmi nf AU-§ mttlj Sjnrknj Ukam Barbara Churchill, 1924 Eleanor Lucas, 1924 Martha Houser, 1922, 1923 Virginia McCalmont, 1922 Virginia Hunt, 1923, 1924 Bernice Mcllhenny, 1923, 1924 Eleanor Rust, 1923 Senior Year Captain, Virginia Hunt Forwards Katherine Bulkley Virginia Hunt Barbara Churchill Martha Houser Alice Judson Bernice Mcllhenny Helen Patch Half-Backs Eleanor Rust Full-Backs Eleanor Lucas Elizabeth Poole Virginia Thieme n Q 212 □ en ra lt Junior Year Captain, Virginia Hunt Forwards Katherine Bulkley Alice Judson Virginia Hunt Jessie Lloyd Bernice Mcllhenny Half -Backs Eleanor Lucas Elizabeth Poole Eleanor Rust Full-Backs Dorothy Dunning Martha Houser Virginia Thieme Sophomore Year Captain, Virginia McCalmont Forwards Babette Kafka Helen Patch Jessie Lloyd Virginia Thieme Elizabeth Ward Half -Backs Barbara Churchill Virginia McCalmont Catherine Spencer Full-Backs Dorothy Dunning Martha Houser Margaret McMillan Freshman Year Captain, Virginia McCalmont Forwards Katherine Hough Alice Judson Babette Kafka Ruth Norton Lucy Williams Half -Backs Barbara Churchill Virginia McCalmont Catherine Spencer Full-Backa Dorothy Dunning Martha Houser Margaret McMillan El [51 t== :zr 218 li T cr D d 1925 fMember nf AU-g mitlj laarball Gfcam Jane Baker Catherine Blake Frances French Arline Knight Jane Baker, 1923, 1924 Junior Team Captain, Jane Baker Mary Rossen Catherine Shinier Helene Shincel Eleanor Stubbs Katherine Talbot n Jane Baker Catherine Blake Virginia Blunt Gladys Clark Sophomore Year Captain, Jane Baker Catherine Shinier Helene Shincel Sarah Streeter Katherine Talbot Katherine Trowbridge am 214 u m en ra Freshman Year Captain, Margaret Hamp Jane Baker Margaret Hamp Catherine Blake Mary Ritchie Katherine Bulkley Catherine Shimer Elizabeth Fitzgei ald Katherine Trowbridge Mary Wallace 1925 iMnttbrr nf AU-S mtih SrnntH ufeam Eugenie Crosby First Team Eugenie Crosby Lois Smith Second Team Alice Bennett Elizabeth Greenwood Third Team Dorothy Dunning Margaret Elliott • l.lr Colleee [J ill lal n n u D n 1925 ifemhrrs of AU- mitlj (Ertrkrt Gkam Elizabeth Keith, 1923 Elizabeth Lane, 1923 Margaret Robinson, 1923 Eleanor Rust, 1923 Sophomore Year Captain, Eleanor Rust Elizabeth Brbdel Anna Dallinger Lillian Duberg Pauline Fairbanks Merl Fisk Elizabeth Keith Elizabeth B. Lane Eleanor Parkhurst Margaret Robinson Eleanor Rust Lucille Shyev Freshman Year Captain, Eleanor Rust Elizabeth Brodel Eula Brown Alice Curwen Merl Fisk Helen Hitchcock Elizabeth Keith Elizabeth B. Lane Margaret Linley Doris Merriam Margaret Robinson Eleanor Rust □_ 216 ID a u n BZ5Mtn btt of AU-g mitlj Arrljpry ©ram Josephine Hurst, 1924 Junior Year Captain, Catharine Jones Lois Boynton Catharine Jones Josephine Hurst Margaret Ward Sophomore Year Captain, Catharine Jones Elsie Butler Josephine Hurst Mary Crawford Catharine Jones Freshman Year Captain, Catharine Jones Elsie Butler Catharine Jones Mary Crawford Mary Sebring D ol -M7 □ CT Tj D 1025 ifflrmbrr nf All- tmth £n w Alice Curwen Carol Baker Beatrice Stuart Junior Yeae Captain, Virginia Blunt Cox, Virginia Blunt Anne Whyte Alice Curwen n Cox, Caroline Bedell Eloise Morford Frances Copeland Helen Curtis Helen Geiger Cox, Marian Donahue Eleanor Pote Hilda Anderson Eunice Clapp Dorothy Jealous Cox, Dorothy Winslow Esther Mason Elizabeth Lane Sylvia Scaramelli Mary Sloan Q 218 n Hi CJ D D Helen Sargent Virginia Thieme 1025 ilembrra of AU- mitl? Swrn ®pam Katherine Atwater Virginia Blunt Frances Copeland Beatrice Stuart Senior Team Captain, Frances Copeland Jane Baker Frances Copeland Catherine Blake Frances Copp Virginia Blunt Mary Crawford Marjorie Boomer Janet Greenburgh Helen Booth Eloise Morford Beatrice Stuart Substitutes Katherine Atwater Elizabeth Parkhurst Irene Rachdorf n Left College ol □ CT D cr m V, I I I I I I I I 1925 ffitfe Okiarba Eunice Blake Virginia Blunt Helen Booth Babette Kafka Helene Shincel 1925 g hrimmtng ®pam Virginia Blunt Josephine Cannon Carolyn Cochran Dorothy Dunning Babette Kafka Eloise Morford Helen Rice Helen Wulbern n a 220 n 13 U LT iFlnat lag May 26, 1924 Total Score 1924—77.66 Points 1925—71.7 Points •Patjeaut Down Through the Ages 1. Rome 9. America Columbus 2, Egypt Id. Pocahontas and Captain .John • . Spain — Vasca de Gama Smith 4. Italy 1 1. The Pilgrims 5. Switzerland The Story of 12. The Boston T a Party William Tell 13. Washington Crossing the Delaware 6. Germany —Martin Luther ] I. The Westward Movement 7. Kranee —The French Revolution 15. The Whiskey Rebellion 8. Napoleon 16. Finale n ol 221 □ 1 lt D n Game Archery Baseball Hockey 3fel Bag May 24, 1924 Won by the Class of 1924 Score Players 119-110 1924-1925 26-6 1925-1926 2-1 1924-1925 Winner 1924 1926 1924 Total Number of Points 1924—26 1925—18 1926—16 n ol 222 □ CT D CJ n Hi •22: n % cr n CJ n a 224 iPBffTWCTTCHHJHa BB j. m.fr ■wiAniimumuR KiAuaw nii ■[ D CT TJ n JUNIOR STEP SONG WORDS BY HILDA HULBERT MUSIC BY DOROTHY SMITH fe55£ r J J- J 4-+ — | [-J.-J J J; M 5 = II i| r i J J f ' r f +J — w 1 1 r i W ' j l.TradiTiona of oar Alma. MaTer OTanJ arte -I one seTcnejOne in spirit are her childreh TjSo £. jB -it we wnoVe live J tocr«TKer here Mor closely sti I) a -e DoanJjA bond of comradeship rias. drawn 3- I n« grana ur of tradition blinds Our eyes wiTn danlincr liantj From you alone we da -© To Take 1 ne 1 -1 J 1 J J . l j j j j-| .- 1 i -— -4 ' — -f — J — J-J — «l — J- 1 f-f— r — f— ,1-1-1 i J2. r r 1 1 Mr M a ? i years may intervene; One The loyally, (he love. One The memVy dear, More firm out hearts arounj. On us toqethev fell the light , With us you sought the truth, torch that turns so Wright. In humbleness we take your plaoe Who Know and love you well, ifcyn J- T J J i r i , i i Refrain:- y r r r t Ti — c — T ' T f f tar ■f y s: — ft— r f t r o -f j -fM- f4 T r Bi ■t iqfc 1 The happiness of four brief years That pass so Quickly here We sadly let you go at la t, We And you who leave us know The strength and weakness of our youth. Through you lnepasT has reached us now, As you bid usTarewell. rfc — °n — | — fj — r fj r J- Jj-j u. 1 J J j j r? .1 1 sli j 1 ym by ! al r j. tijrT-jT. 1 EjT p— ■r r [ V ii 11 i ' now that only thus Tha dearest thing you have T qive Can ever Come to us. n a 226 □ LT u lt Commemoration Ode No longer now from quiet midnight sky Does flaming death flash down : No longer now from countryside and town Are marching thousands driven forth to die ; For we are done with war : the cannon cease ; Only the endless silence of the slain. And wasted lands and broken lives remain ; And through that silence is heard again The age-old cry for peace. Peace! And there is no peace, For out of greed and fear and hate What peace can come? The asking is too late. A war long growing in distrust and greed Yields its black fruit, and in a nation ' s need Is reaped a harvest desolate. We are afraid, as once we were afraid ; For though we send our alms across the sea, A careless dole for human misery. The hand of trust and friendliness is stayed ; And so we wait. Oh Washington, strong spirit and serene! How would it grieve your mighty soul to know The land you lived for changed and fallen so. To see the souls of men grown dull and mean. Give us your courage ! Give us eyes to see, And wills to do the right, unchecked by fear; Make us to hold the brotherhood of man more dear Than any nation ' s brief supremacy. Give us your courage, that we may not wait And reach our wakening too late. Roused by a signal dread ; When on our ears shall break once more the tread Of marching feet, And once again we mourn a million dead, And every country road and village street Runs red. Frances Downs. Realization You showed me first your wind-tossed hair. An elf had blown a red leaf there. Your golden mermaid ' s eyes were fair — So when I found your leaden soul, I did not care. RlTii Mi ' Hahuon. Tribute I envy you that you should have a trust in me 1 cannot fill ; the muted beauty of your thought is singing in me still. Cbcili Phillips. Dishes She washes them swiftly in a soap bubble spatter, Daintily the teacups, swimmingly the platter ; Numerically, glasses and the ordinary plates. In sixes and eights, sixes and eights ; A bit of wine flavor in a silver spoon. Some froth on the cake cutter curved like the moon ; And latterly the scorch on the agate pan With the peak of a witch and the stoop of a man. She twists it with a flourish, the tow-headed mop. And compresses her lips as she scoops up the slop. Cbcile Phillips. Litany Today, for certain reasons unavoidable, I must go down the wood-road that we walked Together in November of last year. I have a fear of traveling alone That perilous pathway through a burning world. May I pass safely onward through the blue Of smoky autumn clinging to the hills, And may I not be choked By bitter odor of the charring year. From blaze of bittersweet, from smouldering sumach flame Oh. Lord, deliver me! Sally Lin ley. Poem A moon, more like a feather than a moon. Was spilling silver in a careless way Upon a pine tree, where it stood blue-grey In shadows from the hill. A world so still The thought of you came like a rushing wind. Untying shadows that had lain half pinned To earth, and bruising through the evening air, Which lay as quiet as a grey-eyed pool. Wrapped in soft shadows, purple-tinged and cool. Almost I thought I had forgotten you ; I had supposed a feather moon was quite Enough. You came ; and everywhere the night Drew by, and framed a background for your face. Slip of a thing, you swayed beneath those trees Whose branches only stir for stoutest breeze, And I. who hold no faith in phantom ghost. Watched your slim lingers push aside the veil Of clinging memory, and saw you, frail As breath of summer wind, stand clearly there. Wing of a bird against the iiuivering leaf. Falls no more lightly than your glance, as brief As drifting flakes of winter ' s snow. You smiled 1 think and. stir of wind, were gone. While over sky a passing cloud was drawn. That dipped the world in sudden velvet dark. NOW, 1 have always fear lest I shall see A leather moon spill silver on a tree. C IROLINl ,H skins. n nl 227 u 13 D n With Footlights Between Marionettes pulled by strings Are we. You who watch us, You foolish tense faces, Will it make your breath come fast To see a wooden Pyramus Call through the wall to a wooden Thisbe? Does the kiss on the carved lips of a puppet Mean more to you than life? Then why are you here ? You are cold and weary white With the passing of night That has torn a thousand fires from your eyes. You have conquered flesh, it ' s true, But your soul has conquered you, And tonight an actor lives, a poet dies. Fame you see heaped at your feet. And you hear the steady beat Of applause, unstinting audiences give. You are perfect, then, tonight, But are other goals in sight ? When an actor dies, what is there left to live ? Margaret Brinton. Night Piece First Grief Be not afraid, dear love, of this the night ; All nights have ending, every dawn is sure. Think not that with one snuffing of the light Day dies forever. Worlds and suns endure. Because your eyes can see no color where The dark has dimmed the garden into gray, Are roses duller, or the scarlet flare Of wind-blown poppies cooler than by day? The world is all unchanged and will again Gleam golden to the sun. Nor will these hours When darkness veils all color, and your pain Gathers the incandescence of white flowers, Be all ungrateful to remember when The night is gone and day relumed again. Dorothy Tait. Coquette Had you a satin cloak, all stiff With gold embroidery, and clasped Tight with golden link, you ' d cry For royal ermine. — Had you pearls, Diamonds would be the only way To win your quick capriciousness. Oh, if you held the sun itself, Its heat would tire you, and you ' d ask A cooler, safer toy, — the jmoon. I doubt if you could ever know Quite, why, when you demand my love, I offer only poetry. Margaret Brinton. What is stirring there, down beside the river, In the long still hours that come before the dawn ; Surely I saw the parted branches quiver, Surely, ere a twig is broken — follow on! Dew hangs still and heavy on the hedges. Dew lies cold and grey upon the grass ; Stop ! What path leads among those ledges ? Can these be footprints where we pass ? rocky Follow ! Follow ! For down beside the river He comes to drink, the goat god. Pan, before the night is gone ; Break through dripping hedges, in the forest deeper, Hasten, the dawn comes swiftly, follow on ! Swiftly pursue, but there is one still swifter, Here at the water ' s edge you must pause and wait ; Heard you a twig crack far across the river? Was that a mocking laugh, for mortals come too late ? Eerie and still stand the reeds across the river, Knee-deep in star gleams they wait till night is gone ; And no passing night wind wakes a single shiver, As they wait in the darkness where the river ripples on. Frances Dorris. Autumn Autumn is a stately woman, Tall, full-breasted, dark of hair : Low her voice, and sweet with wind-song, Red her lips and passing fair. Autumn goes bedecked so gaily, — Gleaming yellow is her gown ; Blood-red ruby, tawny topaz Glitter in her hair so brown. But her eyes are sad with brooding. Though bright smile her red lips part ; — Rippling laugh is but concealing Dread foreboding in her heart. Ruth Seinfel. Cinquain I know Where shadows steal, After the sun goes down. They creep in search of bygone days Once loved. Caroline Jenkins. n a 228 □ CT I] [J Triad Peace will come slowly on the folded wings of time, When memory sleeps. I saw old Thomas sitting in the sun, spreading his horny hands out like a dial To where the sunlight creeps; Feeling the hours as they pass on file; Muttering thickly, whimpering awhile ; Then nodding pertly with his crooked smile. Dreaming over the watch he keeps. Young Thomas has a touch of the sublime Strength in the sower, God-like when he reaps. They brought him home blinded from the war, His face afire with an inner light, His heart benumbed. A sickening sight To see him fumbling at tasks he loved before. Young Thomas ' wife is a wild, painted creature. Light-hearted and laughing, whistling scraps of song. She scolds and teases, and jollys him along, Shrugs her shoulders when everything goes wrong. I came upon her, — starch-white, and sharp Ol fea- ture — The lamplight sputtered about her, she was star- ing Straight through the circle where the lamp was flaring, And the look in her eyes was hunted-wise, Tortured past all caring. But her lips were parted, and she was singing A gay old song like a thin coin ringing. She greeted me. strangely peaceful in her bearing And shook out the lettuces that she had been pre- paring. Ckcu.k Phillips. Fortune Peter will be handsome, extravagant and clever. Yet he swinged his chunky porridge bowl as clumsily as ever. Peter ; young imperious, haughty a bit, and proud ; Hut when he capsized on the stair he wept aloud. This isn ' t human frailty, or some star-throbbing jest, That Peter goes through childhood insulted, like the rest, Obliged to bow to door steps, to smirk and nod at sticks. To be polite to gaiter snakes and his own flying bricks? Oh, Peter, running, laughing with a dreamless wit, Dust, there between roar very toes; it gets the best of it. Cbcilb o. Phillips. The Princess Passes Hefore you rode across my path, I was very merry, Queen of the country side, brown as a berry ; I ' d gossip with the neighbors to pass the time of day, And lie to my lover just to see what he ' d say. Hut you rode across my path, fair and dazzling white, Fairest of princesses in the world ' s sight ; And what cared you to gossip who had the state to guide ? And you always spoke truth to the prince at your side. ! after you rode out of sight, I tried to change my way ; 1 never told a lie and I worked all day ; But the neighbors tried to make me come and sit. And my lover left me for a lass with more wit. Helen Johnson. Written in Sands Past midnight, — And the curving horn of the wind Tilts, as the forlorn light flares higher In a lantern held tight in the trembling, thinned hands Of a watchman alone on the night-drowned beach. Plow, master of the wind, blow ! Put rough lips to your strident horn again. Watch the man slow-circling Round and round on the sands. Heating with his hands at your shrill empti- ness. A last sound of the horn.— so! And his flickering, ill-smelling lamp is out. Hut you will let him lie then ' . Half-buried in the in-coming tide. And with death ' s wet breath already stirring his hair I Near morning, — Ami the first warning lingers of the sun Reach down and stroke a naked-breasted beach. The tide is out. the sands smooth, — All but near where a giant boulder stands. Sentinel over this wide desolation. Hire, under its sheltering face. Are footprints, — Uncertain and worried like those of a hound in chase Put oir his scent , footprints leading to nowhere, following each other Round and round. otAHOAVJR Hkinton. n nl l ' :i □ u I] CJ Horace, Book 1, 25 You shun me like a little faun, (Chloe, stay!) Like the faun that trembling fears Every rustle that it hears, Startled, leaps away. For leaves, that flash and quiver, take Terror ' s part ; Small green lizards in the sun, Glitter as they dart and run, Rouse the timid heart. But I have not a tiger ' s way, Manner rough ; Do not seek your mother so, Chloe, follow where I go — You are old enough. Lucy Barnard. Afterward Now death has taken you, And to your quiet room I come to wonder that you lie so still ; There was much I had to say, But words are unavailing ; Even to the last I knew you would work your will. I had thought to watch with you. But the heavy silence grows Thick with thronging ghosts ; I cannot stay, Lest this quiet room should be On a sudden clamorous, I softly close the door and come away. Frances Dorris. Night Watch The wind is moving through the night Softly, restlessly, Stirring shadows where they hide by every hedge and tree ; The candle flame goes flickering, But you do not see. Yesterday I wept for you. But yesterday is past ; Now I sit and watch and know That soft and merciful and slow, Death will come at last. Death will come like waters Dark and cool and deep, Rising, slowly rising through your sleep. Do not move so restlessly. Do not struggle so ! Nothing more can hurt you now, You will never know When the healing waters rise, Cool and dark and slow. Sleep ! I would not have you waken — It is better so. Frances DoRRts. Whim That round-faced pool, so curiously still Tonight, has worn a restless look all day, And shadow fingers stretching from the hill Have drenched all color in a sodden grey. I passed this morning when a wisp of child Was poking one bare, stubby toe, beneath A wave, then shrieking in amazed and wild Surprise to feel the crisply sharpened teeth Of cold bite through the skin. I hurried by. For though each scream was even more a laugh, I had a silly whim perhaps one cry Might sound quite different from the rest. I half Turned back one time in make-believe concern, (It was just make-believe, you understand) But there was nothing over there to learn ; The child had gone, and pulsing wind had fanned The ripples into nervous rings. Tonight There is a deadness in that grey-faced pond ; Wind voices shriek from trees as if in fright. I wonder what it is they see beyond This heavy dark. I have been guided here Again by some strange fantasy, no doubt ; Fool to be tampering with an idle fear ; What black ! I wish the moon would venture out. Caroline Jekins. The Agnostic The tang of sweet geranium, The smell of charred wood on my thumb, A funny smirch like black on birch Across my cheek : David is red and soapy sleek. Mildred is starched, and ruffled and glum ; But I ' m too dirty to go to church. (And anyhow I went last week). Cecile Phillips. The Difference Your thoughts Are stiff brown cat tails. Unyielding to the wind; And mine Are cool gray clouds, Caught in a pool. Turned upside down, And blown away. Caroline Jenkins. Etching All truly lovely things are black and white Words that sing on a printed page, Bare trees against a wintry hill, Your hair where it leaves your neck. Sally Linley. n a 230 u L7J U D (Enllrgr 8 mtg0 Br I ' KV if Alma Mater Words by Henrietta Sperry. 10 Music by H. D. Sleeper To you, O Alma Mater, O mother great and true, From all your loyal children Comes up the Bong anew. Where awinga the red sun upward. Where sinks he down to rest. Are hearts that backward turning Still And you Brat and beet. Chorus And gladly singing to you always Our loyal hearts with joy shall till ; O fairest, fairest Alma Mater, You hold and elaim us still. Cheer the Team as it comes on the floor. It ' s the team that will roll up the score ; The guards tret the ball every time And they pass it along the line. The centers then pass it with vim To the homes who will always put it in, • And the Odds will be true to the end. To the team of ' 25 and Captain Nancy. Tune : Skinny-ma-rinky-dinky-doo. Here ' s to Nancy Templeton Captain of our team. Twenty-five ! Here ' s to all our players nine Cheer them all along the line. Twenty-live ! While you ' re running and you ' re passing and you ' re shooting on the floor. We will swing our feet above you, just to help you raise the score. So! Cheer with all the pep you know For the team that has the go. Twenty-five ! Rally Day Song, 1922 Tune: Leave Me With a Smili Haughty, imposing, sedate and dignified. Learned, sage scholars, just full of undue pride ; That ' s what we thought you. Dear Seniors, yes for long. ' Ere we came to college And found that we were wrong. Chorus For your poise, your pep And your famous rep. Seniors, we love you. .lust because you ' re peaches. You true friendship teach us. Seniors we love you. Always we ' ll admire You who us inspire With an ardor new. l ' is a great sensation Of deep adoration That we have for you. You gave us dreams unnumbered. And life we had not known, And now. 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. Though we have known you for much less than a year. We ' ve liked Smith better- -well, just because you ' re here. Vnd when you leave us. we ' ll be so verj blue. No one can ever take the place of 1982. Choi m n □_ 231 □ li LT D [J Last Step Song, 1923 Tune: Where My Caravan Has Rested For two years our hearts have rested In your keeping, ' 23. Thoughts are cherished there Of your spirit rare. Soon to be a guiding memory ; Smiling as we part, To shield a mournful heart, Farewell, sister class, farewell. You have been our inspiration, Your high standards can not fade. Nothing can efface The glory of your place, Told so feebly in our serenade. Smiling as we part To shield a mournful heart. Farewell, sister class, farewell. Tune: Emetine Oh, ' 23, please hear our plea, When you graduate don ' t stay away. Start all over in the freshman class. Oh, please! Just try. You ' d never have to study, or crack a single book, If you repeated courses, or subjects that you took ; You ' ll find this dear old place will be even more like heaven. Oh, ' 23, come back as ' 27. Tune: It Ain ' t Gonna Rain No More Since we ' ve been in college here We ' ve praised each Senior class. But youth must have its fling, you know We ' ve found true love at last. Oh, ' 25 is all upset, You say we are to blame. You say that we have no respect, But — we love you just the same. Oh, some may sing about a ring. But you don ' t have to weep, Before you all the men will fall — But look before you leap. Oh, there never were such seniors As 1924— Though you may think you ' re pretty good — We think you ' re even more. Oh, we won ' t weep for ' 24, But rather ' 28, Think what a lot they ' re going to miss Because they ' ll come too late. Oh, there never were such seniors As 1924. Of course you can see you ' re pretty good, You ' re the class we all adore. Tune: Standin ' in the Need of Prayer We ' ve begun our finals on this day, oh Lord, Standin ' in the need of prayer. Oh, won ' t you make ' em different from our mid- years, Lord, This will be our only prayer. It ' s me — it ' s me — it ' s me, oh Lord, Standin ' in the need of prayer, It ' s not my roommate, but it ' s me, oh Lord, Offerin ' up you this here prayer. Tune: That ' s Where My Money Goes That ' s where my money goes, To buy collegiate clothes. We must have everything From sandals to hats of leghorn. When the exhibits come, Off to Plym Inn we run. Too bad — That ' s where my money It ' s sad — That ' s where my money Yes, Dad — That ' s where my money goes. Tune: Ain ' t Nature Grand? We love to see you sitting there. Ain ' t nature grand? We ' re standing up but we don ' t care. Don ' t we look grand? For we ' re doing something new. Looking Seniors down on you, But we can ' t forget who ' s who, You look so grand. We wonder if it took you long, To sing like that. We often wonder why it is We sharp or flat. Your songs are interspersed with wit, No wonder they make such a hit — With us it ' s just the opposite, Ain ' t Seniors Grand? Tune : Scale We cannot always keep a tune: We won ' t disgrace ourselves in June; In order that we may not fail We thought we ' d practice on the scale. Do, re, mi, fa, sol, la, te, do — Do, te, la, sol, fa, mi, re, do. Tune : Marcheta Mosquito, mosquito, I still hear you buzzing Around me again and again ; I still feel the sting of Your last kiss upon me, Since then all my life has been pain, All life is madness with you here, mosquito, Each night finds me swatting at you. You ' re driving me crazy, I hate you, mosquito, I loathe you, mosquito, I do. n Qi ST 232 □ n u Tune: When Frannie Donees With Me We love dat Senior class — holy gee. Dere as svell as can be, Ve copies dere manners — ve copies dere style, Golly — ve copies dem all of de vhilc. Oh, de Seniors — de Seniors, Vat vill we do when dere gone? Inspirin ' to look at, — dat ' s vat ve all mean, De trills dat ve ' ve gotten in old John M. Greene Ven down in de front row dem Seniors ve ' ve seen. Dat svell Senior class. Tune: He Hugged and He Kissed Her in the Moonlight She chewed it and she chewed it and the flavor It lasted all next day. I asked her if she ' d park it as a favor, But she chewed it anyway ! Doggone that — chewing gum ! A fair young girl, once came to Smith, With figure quite petite-o. But soon she fell for Trebla ' s cakes and Mary Marguerite-o. And now, my friends, two years have passed, Same girl, but sad to say-o, She has grown stout ! Her hips stick out! And she is quite passe-o. The class of 1925 Has crawled its way along. Through three long years of work and play And soon we will be gone. Our reputation steadily has grown, Though we have decreased in size. Anil very, very soon, we ' ll leave our old cocoon. And, then we ' ll all be butterflies. Tune: Sunday School Is Over Now our Prom is over, And we can play no more. We ' re sorry, we ' re sorry, But we can play no more. We ' ve had our childish pleasures, We ' ve had our girlish fun, But now they must stop, When finals have begun. Tune: London Bridge In Falling Down ' So put away your roller skates. Tennis balls, playing cards, Get your books and pencils And — we ' ll meet in the l.ibe. Hut-when our exams are over. Then we are going home. Hurrah I Hurrah ! For We are going home. u Oh, if you were a Freshman and driving a Ford, With no one to gossip about it ; Would you run to report of your own sweet ac- cord ? Well, maybe you would but we doubt it. Oh, if you were a Sophomore, and fussing at Prom, With never a Junior to scent it. Would you say, do not come when you tele- graphed Tom? Well, maybe you would but we doubt it. Oh, if you were a Senior, with an average of C, And no one to murmur about it. Would you give up Dramatics to try for a B? Well, maybe you would but we doubt it. Oh, if you were a Junior, who slept much too long. With no one to warn you about it. Would you miss out on breakfast to practice a song ? Well, maybe you would but we doubt it. Oh, next year if we ' re all on the Dean ' s list, en masse. With no one to worry about it, Will we firmly refuse to be absent from class I Well, maybe you would but we doubt it. Freshman Frolic, 1924 Tunes: Just Like a Gypsy and What ' ll I Do? Patiently waiting we ' ve struggled our three years through. Counting the moments until we ran play with you. Keeling that Freshmen all need advice Wandering, squandering Your time by Paradise. And — we thought that maybe on some of these autumn nights You ' d be enthralled by the glittering Calvin lights. We even thought that we ' d be good advisors to you, Helping you to see that in years to be Dreams would come true. BUT— What ' ll we do since your Intelligence has scared us blue, what ' ll We do? What ' ll we do with such a chosen few. t. to. what ' ll we do 7 What ' ll we do with infant prodigiee, who don ' t Feel strange and new | What ' ll we do 7 foi there li nothing we ean d foi you, what ' ll we dot D 283 n CT D [J Tune: Reuben, Reuben, I ' ve Been Thinking Green and fresh as early onions We do our work with might and vim. Yes, we are the striving Freshmen, Our motto is to Sink or Swim. With a pair of water wings And a life preserving suit, We will swim to be Sophomores Office of a good repute. When at last we are Sophomores, Oh, how confident we ' ll be. We ' ll throw away our water wings And dive into the Junior sea. Then we ' ll swim for Senior Island, The best island of them all. The dog paddle will be too slow then We will try the racing crawl. When at last we are Seniors, And our troubles past and dim. We will say to all green Freshmen You must either sink or swim. Tune: One Little, Two Little, Three Little Injuns One little, two little, three little telegrams Four little, five little, six little telegrams Seven little, eight little, nine little telegrams Her tenth prom man can ' t come ! ! ! Rally Day Song, 1925 Tune: Oh, Joseph Every year on Rally Day The seniors their respects do pay To underclassmen who sit round and grin. Waiting with anticipation For the coming proclamation. Of either their merit or their sin. Freshmen long have trembled, Now since you ' re assembled, We will praise and also haze you — Ho ! Freshmen, oh Freshmen, don ' t look so beguiled, It ' s been six months since one of you has smiled, We really won ' t offend you, Indeed we will commend you. You treat us with due humbleness That can ' t be said for another class. A mask ball was given — it was quite a fete. But don ' t forget, though debs — you ' re ' 28. Just ' cause mid-years now are over Don ' t think college is just clover, Think it out before it is too late. Every year on Rally Day The seniors their respects do pay To their respective baby sister class. We had that same thrill in our youth, We were praised and flattered forsooth, But our privilege other years surpass. We sing approbation, After our migration. You will miss your praising sister — Ho ! Sophomores, oh Sophomores, you innocent things. You ' re old enough to leave our apron strings. To bring up such a big mob Was really quite a stiff job ; We hope that you appreciate The troubles that we ' ve had of late. And then came your party, your carnival so cold. You must admit you were a trifle bold ; Thermometer said just zero, You made us feel like ten below, By transferring us to an Iceland floe. Every year on Rally Day The seniors their respects do pay To that prospective, substitutive horde. Who look on with expectation Waiting for our graduation So they ' ll be the dominating lord. Now we ' ll tell a secret. But please don ' t repeat it, You are worthy and deserving — Ho ! Juniors, oh Juniors, you ' re lucky ' tis true, Our eyes with jealousy we cast on you, The new gymnasium lures you, It certainly assures you That you will need no curtained roads Between your promenade abodes. And now may we ask you, since it ' s almost spring, To leave some songs for ' 25 to sing. You sign up for every one That ' s been in print since the year one, Do you wonder that we chose this thing? Every year on Rally Day After their respects they pay The seniors introspect their learned throng. After four years hibernation Gleaning bits of information On all things from classics to Mah Jongg ! Girlish timidation Forbids intimation Of our glory or our story — So ! Seniors, we ' re Seniors, for us all is wrong, We ' ve had hard luck throughout our four years long ; At carnival it rained hard. And poured at junior promenade, And now we cannot even shine At our own graduating time. We stand here decrepit and worn out and gray, We ' re old and we must step out of your way — May 50 anniversaries Keep us fresh in your memories, This is the end. We have no more to say. £3 a 234 n D d 0tj? jmtligljt n SPRING DANCE Things are seldom what they seem. Compensations! (By 1925) Less hair — more rings! More dignity — less spring! Less future — more past! Home food — no hash! ' 25 goes out — Rally Day ' ll come in, A chance for some other class to win! The Rain Song We ' ve had a little cloud burst To our Junior Promenade That ' s stayed with us always, It came without delay, Through four years of our best and worst It dribbled down into the sod It ' s crowned our biggest days. And made the ground like clay. Favored us at Mountain Day, Our carnival on ice Was tended by one cloud burst gay Which made it very nice. Now, oh little cloud burst, We are to graduate, Tell us all the very worst Before it is too late. Have you the least intention Of letting us all go Without your intervention, Oh! Would you treat us so? See any barber See left hand of half senior class. □. 236 □ CT TD [J An If for Younger Generations If you can learn to know your Skeat by heart, Your Patch and Neilson, Kittredge and your Root, Say them from first to last, from end to start, And Medieval history to boot; If you can see the vast iniquity Of all things up to date, and recognize How pusillanimous are you and me, Boethius — how very, very wise. If you can understand of final c ' s How vital — and know the whyfore, when, and why; Recite upon the source of all of these With hot scholastic fervor in your eye; If you can learn to scorn the bobbed of head, Their mannish mannerisms and their ways, And cultivate monastic airs instead, In imitation of ye goode olde dayes; If you can lay aside your point of view, The better to absorb what ' s said in class, There may in time be slender hope for you, You may conceivably expect to pass. But, ponder this — the essence of your power Lies not in knowing facts nor seeing light, But reproducing these within one hour; Before you learn your Chaucer learn to write! A la Small-Pox Scare Arm or leg? Arm or leg? Which have you chosen? Not one leaves this town, they said, (Groans — from two thousand.) In went the fair brigade, Calm, noble, unafraid. One by one they were marred and made Safe, for Northampton! Better forego a dance Proudly, each showed her scar, Than take the slightest chance! Whether ' twas near or far, Don ' t crowd! What ' s your rush? they said Then from pleasures no longer barred To the two-thousandth! Out, limped two thousand! Revelation I thought she was a genius, I thought she was a grind, I thought she did some research work, I thought she was that kind. I soon was disillusioned; My theory was absurd. She was a cross-word puzzle fiend A-looking for a word. •With apologies to the twenty-three omitted! Conflict Wigglcy, wiggley little tooth. This dentistry is poor, forsooth! How I wish I were not hire! Hockey mars the best career! But rather than appear in doubt, Boldly— I will take it OUT I Significant Sayings For ten o ' clock rule: Mum is the word. What a whale of a difference a blue card makes. Student ' s prayer after Browning exam: .May my name be I ' ippa. n ol 231 T H □ n D n a 238 □ CT m n cr Flip Verse (With apologies to Edna St. Vincent Millay) I knew my lesson Monday, Recited it to you; I did not know it Tuesday, So much is true. Why you come complaining, Is more than, I can see; I failed Tuesday — yes, But what is that to me? Safe up in the brilliant A ' s the ugly students be, But come and see my pretty scholar clinging to a D. The Calvin — it has lured me, I ' ve left my work undone, But, ah, my grinds and oh, my profs, I ' ve had a lot of fun. I cannot study in the Libe There ' s such a lot of noise; I cannot study in my room With walls festooned with boys; I cannot study on the roof — It has an awful slope — Or even in the kitchenette, It reeks of ivory soap; I solved the problem splendidly Quite early in the fall, I just enjoy existing here And don ' t study at all! Cross Word Puzzles She never cuts her classes, She never goes away, And yet she never passes, It really doesn ' t pay. Excelsior Or, If One Believed All One Heard. Nobody loves a fat man. Does that apply to us? We weigh 195 pounds, Is it really much too much? No matter how hard we diet, We still are plump, ' tis true; How simply wonderful it must be To have a bone show through! I wish that girl in back of me, Who kicks her gay tattoo; Would only try to realize The seat ' s made of bamboo! n □_ 239 □ 1 w D [J n a 240 □ en ra LT The Board is very grateful to the following members of the College, who, through their assistance and interest have aided mate- rially in bringing this book to its completion: Caroline Bedell Carolyn Cochran Justine Entz Frances Gait Sally Goodell Barbara Grant Marian Hagler Doris Harmon Josephine Hurst Caroline Jenkins Lucia Jordan Laura Kimball Dorothy Miller Elizabeth S. Parnell Marguerite Rebboli Elinor Robinson Mary Sebring Isabella Walsh Letty Witherspoon Border and cover designs by Josephine Hurst. n o. 2 11 INDEX Armchair, The 10 Baker, Walter Co., Ltd. ... 10 Belanger, Celia M 16 Bicknell, H. E 13 Boston Fruit Store 23 Boyden ' s 4 Bridgeman Lyman 15 Brigham, D. H 14 Brill Brothers 9 Buchholtz, H. Son 16 Burgess, M. V 13 Butler Ullman 18 Childs, Thomas 13 Clapp Clapp 19 College Studio 24 College Taxi Co 24 Copeland ' s 14 Cotrell Leonard 17 Davis, Frank E 19 Dewhurst, 0. T 25 Fleming ' s Shoe Shop 15 Fleming, Thomas 11 Forbes Wallace 5 Fox, G. Co : 8 Frank Bros 6 Gazette Printing Co 18 Green Dragon, The 6 Hall, Charles, Inc 25 Hampshire Bookshop, Inc. . . . 19 Hampshire County Trust . . . . 16 Hickson, Inc 21 Hill Brothers 11 Howard-Wesson Co 26 Howe, A. M 16 Jackson ' s 22 Keever ' s Garage 16 Kingsley ' s 5 Kresge Co 20 Lambie, J. E. Co 24 Luce, George N 17 McCallum ' s 17 McCutcheon, James Co. ... 6 Manse, The 17 Mary Marguerite, The 21 Merriam Co., G. C 11 Metcalf Printing Publishing Co. . 8 Miller, 1 7 Neylon Dailey 11 Northampton Buick, Inc 15 Northampton Electric Lighting Co. 18 Ono, T. Co 20 Paddock Tailoring Co 23 Parson ' s Electric Shop 18 Peacock Shop, The 8 Pierce, J. H 18 Plymouth Garage 10 Plymouth Inn 22 Eidge Shop 18 Schultz 9 Solby Montague 8 Stahlberg, Eric 12 Steiger, Albert Co 11 Tiffany Co 3 Todd 20 Trebla 23 Walsh, E. H 8 Warren Watt 20 Wells, T. F 8 Wild Rose Tea Room 20 TlFFANY Co. Jewelers Silversmiths Stationers An Incomparable Stock Mail Inquiries Given Prompt Attention Fifth Avenue 37- Street NewYork The Home of Good Food Where you will be sure to meet your friends whether students or alumnae 196 - 200 MAIN STREET NORTHAMPTON - MASSACHUSETTS Springfield ' s Fashion Store It is the daily fashion study, fashion buying, fashion presentation of this store which gives it the fashion au- thority for which it is distinguished. FORBES WALLACE SPRINGFIELD, MASSACHUSETTS Kingsley ' s, Inc. THE ATTRACTIVE STORE The best of all places for college girls to (jet everything then desire Candies Ice Cream Luncheon Sodas Toilet Articles Imported Perfumes Established 1855 Reg. U.S. Fbt. Off C ( The Greatest Treasure House of Linens in America JAMES McCUTCHEON COMPANY Fifth Avenue, Mew York PALM BEACH SOUTHAMPTON MAGNOLIA THE GREEN DRAGON 227 MAIN STREET A Gift Shop of Distinction fifth Avenue Boot Shop Between 47 ifc and 48 h Streets. New York Footwear of quality invariably correct The Phantom Slipper Style When your imagination pictures the originality of Style . . . the charm of Beauty . . . the wear of Quality . . . then must memory flush . . . J. Milter Slippers! I. MILLER Beautiful Shoes NEW YORK BROOKLYN CHICAGO HIGH QUALITY RIGHT PRICES QUICK SERVICE — Three sound reasons why you should give us your PRINTING Metcalf Printing Publishing Co. INC. - Printers of the Smith College Monthly NORTHAMPTON, MASS. Solby - Montague Co. SHOES - and - HOSIERY 213 Main Street Northampton Mass. Fox Special Pure Silk Hose — Especially rein- forced at wearing, points. In all the newest and most favored shades. $1.95 a pair d. 3fax $c (En. Mail orders carefully filled The Peacock Shop GOWNS - - HATS SWEATERS SCARES - NOVELTIES 26 Bedford Terrace Northampton - Massachusetts We carry a Choice line of Imported and Domestic Groceries and Delicacies The Central Grocery J. F. WELLS, Prop. 221 MAIN ST. NORTHAMPTON Dry Cleaning, Dyeing and Pressing FINE LAUNDERER E. H. Walsh 23 GREEN AVENUE TEL. 1382-M Next to New Gym Scalp Treatment Shampooing Marcel That Stays Facials Manicuring Oil Permanent Waving Water Waving SHULTZ, Inc. 223 MAIN STREET The Women ' s Shop Here we have assembled a complete array of sports wear for college girls. Every needed wearable for sports wear can be ordered by mail. Just state particulars. 1619 BROADWAY NEW YORK Our Service to the Alumnae Customers TEA ROOM GRILLE Arm Chair Steak and Chicken Dinners Special Arrangements for Clubs and Parties Guest Rooms Available 187 ELM STREET TEL. 1289-M NORTHAMPTON, MASS. Seniors ! Make your arrangements early for your car to be taken care of after your Spring Vacation Plymouth Garage PHONE 1440 Masonic Street Northampton Mass. 10 Albert Steiger Company A Store of Specialty Shops Springfield, Mass. That note of individuality, that finesse, is so easily effected if you choose your apparel here. Everything is carefully selected for the college girl — from the smart but always favored sports apparel to the most charm- ing of evening gowns. Visit our Specialty Shops whenever you happen to be in Springfield. Compliments of Thomas F. Fleming 12 Crafts Avenue SHOES - and - HOSIERY Whatever Your Question Be it the pronunciation of vitamin or marquisette ! or soviet, the spelling of ;i puzzling work the mean- ing of overhead, novocaine, etc., this Supreme Authority WEBSTER ' S NEW INTERNATIONAL DICTIONARY contains an accurate, final answer. 107.000 Words. 2700 Pages. 6000 Illustrations, Reg- ular and India Paper Editions. Write for speci- men pages, prices, etc. FREE Pocket Dtap U you name this paper. G. C. Merriam Co., Springfield, Mass. HILL BROTHERS 118 MAIN STREET YE OLD TYME RUGS WINDOW DRAPERIES COUCH COVERS BURLAP CRETONNES FLCSS FINGERING YARNS DOWN PILLOWS SPORT COATS UMBRELLAS Neylon - Dailey FRENCH DRY CLEANSER AND DYER FANCY DRY CLEANING A SPECIALTY HAND LAUNDRY Quick Service Our Mo. to 18 Crafts Ave. Northampton Tel. 2172 Massachusetts 1 1 ERIC STAHLBERG The Studio Northampton The Eclipse as seen from the Chemistry Building, January 24th, 1925, photographed by Eric Stahlberg. 12 White House Inn 105 Elm Street Northampton Massachusetts Open All Year Guest House and Tea Room MRS. M. V. BURGESS Phone 22 1 Sl(ill in Manufacture Correctness in Style Economy in Price Make our shoes worthy the atten tion of every Smith Student and graduate See them at our Northampton Shoppe, 2 Green Street, Plymouth Inn, Northampton, Mass. CHILDS ,1 nc. 273-379 High St. Hol : foke, Mass. The Store Where You Get Your Gym Shoes For Twenty-Five Years We have sold shoes to the girls of Smith College, while they were here and after they left Alma Mater. We send shoes all over the country to the girls •who left college years ago and those who left but last year. We send them ANYWHERE on approval, and we suited the girls so well while they were here that they KNOW what we can do, and keep in touch with us year after year. Shoes, Hosiery, Silk Scarfs, Wool Gloves and Mufflers. You ' ll always fine) the old prompt service at Bicknell ' s. H. E. BICKNELL, NORTHAMPTON, MASS. 158 Main St., opposite Draper Hotel 13 D. H. Brigham Company SPRINGFIELD, MASSACHUSETTS Specializing in Smart Apparel and Furs for the College Girl Make Brigham ' s Your Meeting Place Whenever in Springfield Copeland ' s Fancy Goods Shop FURNISHES A LARGE AND CHOICE ASSORTMENT OF High-class Wools for Knitting and Crocheting. Also a complete line of stamped Goods and Embroidery materials of every description. Class and Society Designs a Specialty. Art Novelties, Ribbons, Laces, etc. COPELAND ' S Mail Orders Receive Prompt and Careful Attention 227 Main St. Northampton BUICK When better automobiles are built, Buick will build them. Northampton Buick INCORPORATED Cor. Pearl and Pleasant Sts. Phone 456 Northampton Most Exclusive Models in Ladies ' Pumps and Oxfords are found at Fleming ' s Shoe Shop 189 Main Street Northampton Massachusetts BRIDGMAN k LYMAN NORTHAMPTON, MASS. Extend Greetings to the Class of ' 25 and Thank Them for Their Patronage Send Us Your Mail Orders for CLASS BOOKS, SONG BOOKS, BANNERS AND PENNANTS, STATIONERY, VERSE SMITH AND ANYTHING ELSE IN THE BOOK AND STATIONERY LINE 15 Are you saying this year Good-bye, Smith Farewell, Northampton- Then why not start now or any time in the years to come a Savings Account. Something to keep you in touch with Smith and Northampton. We wanted your account while at col- lege, we want your account while away. THE WHITE BANK Hampshire County Trust Co. Northampton, Massachusetts Celia M. Belanger HAIRDRESSER 277 MAIN STREET - NORTHAMPTON, MASS. PERMOIL WAVING SYSTEM Oil Treatment for Permanent Wave Specializing in Marcel Waving Telephone 688-W H. Buchholz Son Theatrical, Historical and Masquerade Costumiers Pageant and School Productions a Specialty Wigs, Beards, Makeup, Etc. 33 LYMAN ST. SURINGFIELD, MASS. FUN and FACTS CHARACTER described from your HAND- WRITING. My analysis will show whether or not you are affectionate selfish jealous impulsive conceited original conscientious stubborn cultured and give many other characteristics. Know your friends. Send letter in ink on plain paper, one dollar and stamp to A. M. HOWE, Graphologist 22 MAPLE ST. GEORGETOWN, MASS. The Keevers Co. GARAGE - and - RADIO OPP. CITY HALL TEL. 1086-W Demonstration Every Evening 16 The Manse 54 Prospect Street Northampton - Mass. Good Food Homelike Atmosphere Table d ' Hote or a la Carte Service Rooms for Transient Guests George N. Luce LADIES ' TAILOR 277 MAIN ST. NORTHAMPTON, MASS. Telephone Connection Cotrell Leonard Albany, N. Y. MAKERS OF COLLEGE GOWNS - HOODS - CAPS McCallum A Department Store That Makes College Furnishings a Specialty 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 Cordial Invitation is Extended to You to Make Our Store Your Store McCALLUM WALL PAPER - PAINTS PICTURE GLASS, ETC. J. Hugh Pierce 186 MAIN ST. NORTHAMPTON, MASS. Ridge Shop WOMEN ' S SPORTS WEAR Northampton, Mass- Smith College and Butler k Ullman They are institutions in old Hamp. — You will always know just where to find them. WIRE US FOR FLOWERS FLOWERS DO YOUR STUDYING BY PROPER LIGHTING We Prescribe a Study Lamp with the Proper Sized Bulb. Let Us Fill Your Prescription Northampton Electric Lighting Co, 189 MAIN STREET Appliances Radio ajpBjs Hi kiMim JVTrni MAIN STREET PHONE JQ7W Northampton , Mass. Lamps Repairs Gazette Printing Co. 14 Gothic Street PRINTING OF ALL KINDS 18 . . . THE PLACE . . . to gel your eats for bats and kitchenette breakfasts Chops - Steaks - Frankfurters - Crean Pickles - Olives - Cheese CLAPP CLAPP 147 MAIN STREET Your Account is Always Good at The Hampshire Bookshop Send bacl( for books Davis ' Jewelry Store is known all over the world through Smith College Girls They find it a unique, beautiful and useful store while they are here, and the more they travel, the farther they go from Alma Mater, the more evidence they find that there are few stores of its kind. That ' s why our mail order business is so large among the graduates of the famous college. At home or dbroad- -let us serve uoi ' . FRANK E. DAVIS Je weler and Optician . Northampton, Mass. Over a quarter of a century ' s business iy Todd ' s Daylight Store INTERIOR DECORATION 126 Main Street Reasonable Prices Delivery Service Wild Rose Tea Room 417 MAIN STREET Woman ' s Shop Bldg. SERVICE 11.30 A. M. TO 5 P. M. 71 SUMNER AVENUE SERVICE 11.30 A. M. TO 7.20 P. M. SPRINGFIELD Compliments of T. ONO CO. Dealers in JAPANESE AND CHINESE GOODS 192 MAIN ST. NORTHAMPTON, MASS. w — w WARREN WATT Everything Electrical 179 MAIN ST. NORTHAMPTON Telephone 126 S. S. Kresge Co. 5-10-25 Cent Store Cameo Records Party Favors Stationery 20 Around the Clock of Fashion ' s Day In our drawing-rooms the great assemblage of outer attire for the well-dressed woman goes around the clock of the daily activities. Here is the field coat for the morning walk ; the boulevard wrap for the afternoon and the evening mantle, like a pair of butterfly ' s wings, for the social hour. The demure little morning frock; the sleek silken afternoon dress and the velvet evening gown of deep luxuriousness, complete the day ' s program. 667 - 669 BOYLSTON ST., BOSTON NEW YORK BUFFALO PARIS The Mary Marguerite Tea Room 21 STATE STREET AND The Coffee House 40 STATE STREET To ye Seniors and Sophomores, Jun- iors and Freshmen — let us serve you Luncheons and Teas and Dinners. When you ' ve joined the Alumnae — let us mail you Fudge Cake and Brownies. WHEN IN TOWN — STOP IN — and be refreshed with a Dainty Luncheon or Afternoon Tea Folks Say We Have the Best Ice Cream in Town Jackson ' s 281 High St. 362 Main St. Holyoke Springfield HOME MADE CANDIES OUR SPECIALTY When you come back to Northampton stay at The Plymouth Inn 31 WEST STREET TELEPHONE 420 22 Fine Chocolates Choice Bonbons Confection and Luncheon Shop Ice Cream and Ices Compliments of the Boston Fruit Store 23 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. Silks 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 WILLIAM G. MAHER E. M. MALONEY COLLEGE TAXI CO. PHONE 80 Touring Cars - Sedans - Busses Best of Cars, Service and Drivers OFFICE — 188 MAIN ST. NORTHAMPTON, MASSACHUSETTS NEXT TO BOYDEN ' S COLLEGE STUDIO Modern Photographer Portrait designs to bring out your likeness. We use modern artificial lights as in modern picture studios. OFFICIAL PHOTOGRAPHER 1924 M. A. C. Shorthorn Magazine 1924 Williston Log 1926 M. A. C. Index 241 MAIN ST. NORTHAMPTON Telephone 1970 24 — Our Shop is convenient to You — We are centrally located; those little adjustments that your glasses occasionally 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 rvorl(, mail and telegraph orders are finished same day received. 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 Telephone 184-W Smith College students are partic- ularly invited to try the home-like luncheons served in our Tea Room on the third floor. The Hall store is also noted for its unusual dis- play of gifts for all occasions. CHARLES HALL INCORPORATED The Hall Building Springfield Massachusetts 25
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