Swarthmore College - Halcyon Yearbook (Swarthmore, PA) - Class of 1912 Page 1 of 276
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fje altpon of 1912 VOLUME XXVII utilisfjcti Map, 1911 ...tip... )t Junior Clasig ...of... g tDartf)morc College rolosue As one, -wko -wearied by liis soul s unrest. And by tbe vain turmoil tbat we call lite. Enters at noon a forest cool and dim. And resting in tbe solace or its snade. Forgets tbe beat and ardor of tbe figbt. Hears nougbt but cbeerful murmurings of tbe brook, Tbe wild sweet notes of wood birds, and o er all. Feels tbe calm pulsing of tbe forest s beart ; So you, if by miscbance, you may bave lost Your joy in life and faitb in buman kind. May enter now tbe pages of our book. It may be you will find your solace tbere. For in it neitber grief, nor pain, nor care. Have found a place ; and if it sbo-w to you Tbe true proportions of tbis motley lire And give you faitb to smile and strive again, iVe bave not -worked in vam. eto opte, tbj !E:f]oustt£ X6at Hinb Wis to tijc TSniiiersie, Wo aul iilartin Pearson UbtS til tf)c IjoiiSE lip tlK siic of tl)c roaB, aiib IS a fricnb to man. }t taff Anna D. White, Anne S. Haixes, Editor-in-Chief : Thomas E. Tatloe. Associate Editors: Staff: Horace C. Jenkins. LAxntENCE p. Shaeples, Edith X. Swayne, JIaktha Willets, ViLLiAM ' W. Price, Elisabeth H. Baktlett. Artists : Ei anor Kittenhodse (head artist), Charles G. Thatcher, Walter L. Lukens, Mabel Stiner. Business Manager: Assistant Business Manager: William K. Hoyt. Eugene E. Ayres, Jr. 8 Xnse ZTb Gumption ' T ommoh sense is tbe ability? to detect values —to I now a big tbing from a little one. Il ' b ratber possess common sense tban to bave sir befirees from rinit CoUeQe, ®ifor . ttbougb a quotation from wbom II fmow not, 11 beartil agree. ' TTo tbat long line of Swartbmore students, from tbc first ora uattno class, in 1873, wbo bave stn ie witb me tbe true, tbe beautiful, ant) tbe goob in tbe noblest literature of tbe worlb, m cordial Greetings. ' TTbe mountaineer calls bacl to bis fellows later upon tbe roa : ' lit is olorious upon tbese beicjbts-let notbintj aunt ou nor Msbearten ou! So, from tbe beic3bt of )ears, one ma cbeer tbe i ounoer comrabes on, v Htb tfirowning ' s promise: be best is et to be! .U . ;? , ei (Ibe Xibrart? Chimes %om ma ? tbese mtgbtv bells peal fortb, Xonci tbrow tbeir voices on tbe atr, HnJ) celebrate tbrougb tar=oft pears Ibe class wbose noble name tbe ? bear ; Xong mag tbe i m arh tbe rolling bours Mitb ntellow music vil5 anC sweet, HnD solemn barmonies tbat surge ® ' er college bill an5 village street ! Soft will tbeir mellow ecboes fall Hmong tbe booftisb aisles below, Soft will tbe? toll tbe precious bours Jf or eager bearts tbat come ant go. Soft will tbe? soun for blm wbo reaDs anC) weigbs tbe wor55 of ancient sage, HnC softly blen tbeir barmonies Mttb ever? welUloveD poet ' s page. ' ( A ' .-y xi LA. z JZ.-Ju - _ yY : Jackson Taylor, Jr., ' 03 IvA A. Appleby, ' 13 SWARTHMORE SPIRIT. Words by JACKSON TAYLOR, Jr., ' 02. Music by IVA A. APPLEBY, ' 13. m -- N- 1 -- N- -- Loud let it ring to the Sing - ing the deeds of hsr Hope of the brave days be -N- skies Swartlimore ' s the name that is dear to us all And men, ' Tis the spir - it she bred that has won us the fight. And we ' ll fore, Faith that th ' glo - ry will grow with the years, -:r- - - itzti m Chorus. =1= Gar -net ' s the col - or she flies., cheer her a- gain aud a - gain.. Bright-er and bright -er, Swarth- more. m Our hearts are true to SwartI more, Swarth - more, Swartli - more, II -- - -H 1 1 1 1 1 M-. iS- -8- -f- J il l ' iiiiig tic; lilziti § -- — P Ev - er her fame we ' ll strive for, Ev - er her name we ' ll praise: And in the years here - aft In IE 11 i — ;e dark or sun ny ways, Onr hearts will turn to Swarth =fit zf=Eztz: z?:=bz3: more —A- and — y- col lege -A days. 311 311 %-t - — p :t=t=t:: Swarthmore Spirit.— 2. -T,, - • — I 1 «  - liH SWARTHMORE FOREVER. Music arranged by IVA A. APPLEBY, ' 13. Words by JOHN RUSSELL HAYES, ' 88. 5= =i; . 3_ EE3HE -t: f ' 1. O Swartbmore, Swartbmore, ev - ' ry son and dangh - ter loves thy glo - ry; SVe sound tby fame, be ■2. O Swarthmore, Swartbmore, strong the links of love that fond -ly bind us; At thy dear side, O 3. O Swartbmore. Swartbmore, through the years that sun - der and that sev - er. We ' ll cling to thee in -—■=Si=ai —  • — F=l i — r fe — F=l — fe- EEEME :t== :q= :t=t= =1= It iti It it mit E :t=p: mi lov - edname, in cheer and song true and tried, thou shalt for - ev mem - o - ry for - ev - er and and sto er find for - ev ry- us. er. With cour - age high and On field and track, in Through years of sun - shine hon class and or clear, No and hall, We of storm Our r - iEii=t::=ti=t=Ei =ss= , p = - - - name of all an - swer glad lov - al hearts shall is half so dear As Al ly to the call Of Al still beat warm For Al wt - - (ft)t — — i- 8 ! i; — H 1 — r — ' =t = ma Ma - ter ma Ma - ter ma Ma - ter -•- -•■P P 1 c_ 1 SE lE 10 ev - er, O Swarth - more for - ev - er : ev - er, O Swarth - more for - ev - er ! ev - er, O Swarth - more for - ev - er ! m )t Jfacultp PREXi ' Joseph Swain, li K, B.L., M.S., LL.D. University of Indiana, 1883; President of Swarthmore, from 1902. Elizabeth Powell Bond, Dean Emeritus, (I li K, A.M., Hon. Swarthmore College, 1897 ; Dean of Swarthmore, 1886-1906. Henrietta Josephine Meeteer, A.B., Ph.D. In- diana University, 1901 ; Dean of Swarthmore, from 1906. Arthur Beardsley, Emer- itus Professor of Engineer- ing, C.E., Ph.D. Rensselaer 17 ' ' hue. TUUTl ' EU Polytechnic Institute, 1687 ; Professor of Engineering, Swarth- naore College, 1872-1898. William Hyde Appleton, Emeritus Profesesor of Greek. (I ' BK, A.B., A.M., LL.B., Ph.D., Harvard University, 1864; Professor of Greek Language, Swarthmore College, 1872-1909. Susan J. Cunningham, Emeritus Professor of Mathematics and Astronomy. Sc.D., Vassar College; Instructor, 1869-72, and Professor of Mathematics, 1872-1906, Swarthmore College. Spencer Trottek, M.D., University of Pennsylvania, 1883 ; Professor of Biology and Geology, Swarthmore Col- lege from 1888. George Arthur Hoadley, A ' .. ., A.M., C.E., ScD., Union College, 1874; Professor of Physics, Swarth- more College, from 1888. William Isaac Hull, (P B A ' , B 6 II, A.B., Ph.D., Johns Hopkins University, 1889; Professor of His- tory, Swarthmore C ' ollege, from 1892. Jesse Herman Holmes, B K, B.S., Ph.D., Univer- sity of Nebraska, 1884; Professor of History of Ke- ligion and Philosophy, Swarthmore College, from 1899. MUGGav ' 18 Benjamin Franklin Battin, (! li K, K W, Ph.D., Swartlimore Col- lege, 1892; Professor of German, Swartlimore College, from 1902. IsABELLE Bronk, ' y A, Pli.B., Ph.D., Illinois University, 1893; Pro- fessor of French, Swartlimore CoUege, from 1902. Gellert Alleman, B.Sc, Ph.D., Pennsylvania College, 1893 ; Profes- sor of Chemistry, Swartlimore College, from 1902. Paul Martin Pearson, A.M., Litt.D., Baker University, 1891 ; Pro- fessor of Public Speaking, Swarthmore College, from 1904. John Anthony Miller, ' .:, A.M., Ph.D., Indiana University, 1890; Pro- fessor of Mathematics and Astronomy, Swarthmore College, from 1906. George Frederick Blessing, .1 ' A ' , ' £ , B.M.E., M.E., Ph.D., Kentucky Univer- sity, 1897 ; Professor of Mechanical Engineering, Swarthmore College, from 1908. Harold Clarke Goddard, A.M., Ph.D., Amherst College, 1900; Professor of Eng- lish, Swarthmore College, from 1909. ! P11 GODDARD AND UIS GIRLS 19 Walter Dennison, A.M., Ph.D., Universit} ' of Michigan, 1893; Professor of Greek and Latin, Swarthmore College, from 1910. Edwin Faitver, A.B., M.D., Oberlin College, 1899; Professor of Hygiene and Physical Education, Swarthmore College, from 1909. John Eussell Hayes, I U A ' , A.B., LL.B., Swarthmore College, 1888; Li- brarian, Swarthmore College, from 1906. William Albert Alexander, I F J, A.B., Indiana University, 1901 ; Swarth- more College, from 1905. Lewis Fussell, B.S., M.S., E.E., Ph.D., Swarthmore College, 1902; As- sistant Professor of Electrical Engineer- ing, Swarthmore College, from 1909. Walter Ross Marriott, I E, A.B., A.M., Valparaiso College, 1903; In- structor and Professor of Mathematics, Swarthmore College, from 1906. EoY Bennett Pace, (P K I. A.B., A.M., Eichmond College, 1897 ; Assistant Professor of English, Swarthmore College, from 1909. 20 J. Russell Smith, J i ' , B.S., Ph.D., University of Penusylvania ; Lecturer in Economics; Swarthmore College, from 1908. Esther Everett Lape, A.B., Wellesley College, 1905; Instructor in English, Swarthmore College, from 1908. Scott Nearing, B.S., Ph.D., University of Pennsylvania, 1905; Acting Instructor in Eco- nomics, Swarthmore College, from 1908. Frank D. Watson, B.S., University of Penn- sylvania, 1905 ; Acting Instructor in Economics, Swarthmore College, from 1908. H. Lee Ward, A.B., Ph.D., Yale University, 1906; Instructor in Chemistry, Swarthmore College, from 1909. Miriam Lee Earley, Northwestern Univer- sity, 1897; Instructor in Public Speaking, Swarthmore College, from 1907. Elizabeth Fisher Eead, B.L., A.M., Smith College, 1896; Eeader (1908-10), Instructor (from 1910) of English, Swarthmore College. loLA Kay Eastburn, B.S., A.M., Swarthmore College, 1897 ; Acting In- structor in German, Swarthmore College, 1909-10. 21 ' THE GRIZZLY BEAR ' Louis Newton Robinson, B K, J ) ' , A.B., Swartlimore College, 1905 ; As- sistant Professor of Economics, Swartlimore College, from 1908. Samuel Copeland Palmer, J T, A.B., A.M., Swartlmiore College, 1895; Acting Assistant Professor of Biology, Swartlimore College, 1909-1910. George William Lewis, M.E., M.M.E., Cor- nell Universit) ' , 1908 ; Assistant Professor of Mechanical Engineering, Swartlimore College, from 1910. Scott Barrett Lilly, B.S., C.E., Michigan Agricultural College, 1907 ; Assistant Profes- sor of Civil Engineering, Swarthmore College, from 1910. M. Elizabeth Bates, Boston School of Gym- nastics, 1893 ; Director of Physical Education of the Women, Swarthmore College, from ' ' ° - 1903. Edward Bbiggs Eawson, B.S., Pd.M., Ph.D., Massachusetts Agri- cultural College, 1881 ; Lecturer in Education, Swarthmore College, from 1908. Joseph Stubbs Walton, Ph.D., University of Pennsylvania, 1896; Lecturer in Education, Swarthmore College, from 1906. 22 ' SPAEROW PACE ' ' THE WHITE LILY ' J. Howard Redfield, S.B., Haverford College, 1899; Acting Instructor in French, Swartlnuore College, from 1910. S. L. MiLLAKD Rosenberg, A.M., Pli.l)., University of Pennsylvania, 1907; Instructor in French and Spanish, Swarthmore College, from 1909. Howard Garrett Potter, Instructor in Engineering, Swarthmore College, from ' 1910. Thomas Walker Gilkyson, J T, A.M., LL.B., Swarthmore College, 1901; In- structor in Law, Swarthmore College, from 1910. Henry Baur, LL.B., University of Pennsylvania, 1910; Instructor in Argu- mentation and Debate, Swarthmore Col- lege, from 1910. Guy Blandin Colburn, ( ' K ' [• ' , A.M., Ph.D., Brown University, 1904; Instructor in Greek and Latin, Swarthmore College, from 1910. Walter Frank Rittman, C.E., A.M., Ohio Northern Univer- sity, 1905; Lecturer in Industrial Chemistry, Swarthmore Col- lege, from 1909. 23 ' ' SOCIETY ' ' WARD TAV ' ' POTT Thomas Jay Spkoul, K W, A.B., Swartlimore College, 1909 ; Assistant in Chemistry. Herman Pritchakd, I K, B.S., Swartlimore College, 1908 ; Assistant in Mathematics. John Pitman, A.B., Swarthmore College, 1910 ; Assistant in Mathematics. 24 Henry Lawrence Beecher, I - h, B.S., Swarthmore College, 1910 ; Assistant in Engineering. Joseph Frank Gaskill, ' - ' A r, B.S., Swarthmore College, 1910; Assistant in Engineering. Mary Aldefer, Secretary to the President. Chester Roberts, Su])er- inteudent. Elizabeth Hoopes Ba- ker, Director of the Dietary Department. ' ' CAROLINE ' 25 jemuts Qfticcr FIRST SEMEISTER pREsioENT Wallace Darnauu VicE-PRES. Joseph H.Willi ts Secretary Mabel Whitehead Treasurer Wmitmer Atkinson SECOND SEIMEISTEIR President Raymond Denv orth VicE-PREs. G. Earl Miller Secretary Elizabeth White Treasurer Enmor Roberts ersionalia of tf)e Clasisi of 1911 Anna B. Allen, Scliagliticoke, N. Y., English. ' ' Quietness reigns. ' ' Prepared at Easton Union School ; member of Somerville Literary Society ; member of College Settlement ; member of Consumers ' League; member of Glee Club (IV); member of College Equal Suffrage League; eligible for. William W. Cocks Prize; Assistant in tlie Department of Public Speaking (IV). F. Wliitmer Atkinson, Moorestown, N. J., Electrical Engineering. Your face, my tliane,.is as booh; Where men may read strange matters. ' ' Prepared at Moorestown Friends ' High School; member Delphic Literary Society; Joseph Leidy Scientific Society; Vice President Class (III— 1) ; Treasurer (IV— 1) ; Glee Club (I); Assistant Manager 1911 Circus; Class Basketball Team (III, IV); Class Football Team (I, II); Varsity Football Squad (III, IV); Varsity Lacrosse Team (III, IV); member of T. H. D. and T. A..0.. Edith H. Baker, K K F, Philadelphia, Pa., Philosophy. ' ' The. joy of youth and health her eyes displayed And ease of heart Her very loolc conveyed. ' Prepared at Friends ' Central School; member of Somerville Literary Society; member of Friends ' Central Club; member of Class Basketball Team (II); substitute for Varsity Basketball Team (II); member of Junior Dance Committee; member of }T I 11; Peanut Girl for Circus (II, III, IV). 28 Etiiel Hannaia Barnard, Westtown, Pa., Germaii. ' ' For never saw I mien or face In which more plainly I conld trace Benignity and home-bred sense. Prepared at West Chester Normal School; member of Somerville Literary Society; member of Consumers ' League; Speaker in Freshman-Sophomore Oratorical Contest. John A. Barnard, Westtown, Pa., Electrical Engineering. A man u;itJiout guile or deceit. Prepared at West Chester High School; member of Delphic Literary Society; member of Joseph Leidy Scientific Society; Secretary of Wireless Club;- member of T. A. 0. Lenore Mildred Bartow, Swarthmore, Pa., English. lite fair, the chaste, the inexpressive she. Prepared at Windber High School; member of Somerville Literary Society; assisted in Girls ' Glee Club Concert (III); Second Prize in William C. Cocks Declamation Contest (IV); member of Girls ' Glee Club (IV). Zelma J. Bartow, Swarthmore, Pa., French. ' ' Serene, and resolute, and still, And calm, and self -possessed. Prepared at Windber High School ; member of Somerville Literary Society ; member of Somerville Finance Committee ; took part in William C. Cocks Declamation Contest (IV); member of Girls ' Glee Club (IV). Laura Allen Boram, Markleville, Indiana, Philosophy. ' ' For she ivas just and friend to virtuous love, And passed much time in truly virtuous deed. Prepared at Anderson High School ; Freshman at Butler College ; member of Somerville Literary Society ; member of Joseph Leidy Scientific Society. 29 George Ernest Bougiiton, K 2 , Tuxedo Park, N. Y., Civil Engineering The life of my college days is flecled u-itli the cheery light Of cigars I burned to Friendship and Pleasure and Work and Fight. Prepared at Saint Paul ' s School; member of Basketball Team (II, III, IV, V); Captain (IV); member of Football Team (IV, V); Baseball Team (III, IV, V); member of Ye Monks ; member of Book and Key. Annabelle Boyle, fJ B 0. Coatesville, Pa., French. ' Each jealous of the other, as the stung Are of the adder. Which of them slmll I taJce Prepared at Coatesville High School; member of Somerville Literary Society; member of Cast of Somerville Play (III); member of Glee Club (I, II, III, TV) ; member of Glee Club Quartet (II, III) ; College Eeception Committee (III) ; mem- ber of Junior Hockey Team (III); member of riK; member of It I n ; Peanut Girl at Circus (II, III, IV). L. Ethel Boyt, Secane, Pa., French. ' ' Much mirth and no madness, All good and iw badness. Prepared at Swarthmore High School; member of Somerville Literary Society; member of Joseph Leidy Scientific Society; member of Class Hockey Team (IV). Louis J. Bradford, Boyce, Va., Mechanical Engineering. Perhaps he Tcnoios as much as he thinls he does. Prepared at Friends ' Seminary, N. Y; member of Delphic Literary Society, Treasurer (IV — 1) ; member of Joseph Leidy Scientific Society; member of Class Basketball Team (II, III, IV); member of Track Team (I, II, III, IV), Captain (III); member of Glee Club (IV). 30 Emma Getz Brooks, Chester, Pa., . French. All humble ivortJi she strove to raise, Would not be praised, yet loved to praise. Prepared at Cliester High School; holder of Sproul Scholarship from Chester High School; member of Somerville Literary Society. Margaret Broomell, A ' . d, Baltmiore, Md., English. Let others hail the limiig sun. Prepared at Friends ' School, Baltimore; member of Somerville Literary Society, Vice President (III — 2); Secretary of College Settlement Association (III); meml er of Women ' s Extemiwraneous Speaking Team (II); Class Secretary (I— 1) ; member of Executive Board of Student Government (III — 1, IV— 1) ; member 1911 Halcyon Staff; member of r I K. Elizabeth Weeks Cadwallader, A ' A F, Yardley, Pa., French. If I chance to talk a little n ' hile, forgive me. Prepared at George School; I. V. Williamson Scholarship; member of Somerville Literary Society; member of Girls ' Glee Club (I, II); member of Sophomore-Freshman Reception Committee; member of Junior-Freshman Reception Committee; Class Secretary (II— 2) ; Cast of Junior Somerville Play; member of Class Day Committee (IV); member of A A S; mem- ber of n I n. Edna Carpenter, Mount Vernon, N. Y., Chemistry. Framed in the prodigality of nature. Prepared at Friends ' Seminary; member of Somerville Literary Society, Librarian (IV); member of Joseph Leidy Scien- tific Society, Secretary (IV); member of Varsity Hocliey Team; Captain of Class Basketball Team (IV). Gladys Coker, Hartsville, S. C, Latin. ' ' Reason masters every sense. ' ' Prepared at Welsh Neck High School; member of Somerville Literary Society, Censor (II— 2) ; member of Glee Club (I, II, III, IV) ; member of Fhwnix Board ; member of the Equal Suffrage League ; member of Consumers ' League ; member of 31 Y. W. C. A.; Chairman of Somerville Day Committee (IV); Class Tennis Team; President of the Women ' s Student Govern- ment Association (IV — 2) ; member of n 2 X. Benjamin W. Collins, Swartlimore, Pa., Chemistry. Most Wameless he, centered in the sphere of common duties. Prepai-ed at Swarthmore High School; member of Eunoniian Literary Society, Secretary (II — 2), President (IV — 1) ; member of Lacrosse Teams (II, III); member 1911 Halcyon Staff; T. A. 0. Eaymoud Keeuan Deuworth, (P K ¥, Williamsport, Pa., Economics. ' ' A lord to a lord, a man to a man, Stuffed with all honorahle virtues. ' ' Prepared at State Normal School, West Chester, Pa.; member of Class Football Team (I); substitute on Varsity Football Team (III, IV) ; member of Track Team (I, III) ; Vice President of Athletic Association (IV) ; member of College Debate Team (I, III, IV), Captain (IV); member of Debate Board (III, IV), President (III); First Prize, Extemporaneous Speak- ing Contest (I); Third Prize, Potter Debate (I, III), First Prize (IV); member of Eunomian Literary Society, Secretary (III — 1), President (IV — 2) ; Delegate to Rochester Convention of Student Volunteer Movement (III) ; Secretary of Y. M. C. A. (IV); member of Student Government Committee (III — 2, IV— 2), President (IV — 2); Vice President of Class 1912 (I— 1), President (1—2); President of Class of 1911 (IV— 2). Charles Albert (Tod) Eherle, K 1 ' , Philadelphia, Pa., Civil Engineering. Trust, me ' tis a clay above your scorning, With God ' s image stamped upon it, and God ' s kindling breath within. Prepared at Central High School and Pennington Seminary; member of Football Team (I, III, IV), Captain (IV) ; mem- ber of Basketball Team (II, III) ; member Baseball Team (II, III, IV) ; member of Track Team (I, II, III, IV) ; holder of College Eecords in 220-Yard and 120-Yard Hurdle; holder of Freshman Record in 120-Yard Hurdle; tied for College Record in 100-Yard Dash; member of Glee Club; member of T. H. D. 32 Susannah Marie Gregg, Pennville, Indiana, Public Speaking. am sometimes gay, hut I am never sad. Prepared at Pennville High School; member of Somerville Literary Society; member of Somerville Play Cast (III); eligible for Andrew C. Pearson Prize (II); eligible for William W. Cocks Prize (III); Treasurer of Women ' s Student Gov- ernment Association (IV — 2). Thomas Heston Hall, Jr., J ] ' , Swartlnnore, Pa., Chemical Engineering ' ' Peace dwells not here — this rugged face Betrays no spirit of repose. ' ' Prepared at Swarthmore Preparatory School; Class President (II — 1) ; Class Vice President (I — 1) ; Editor-in-Chief of the 1911 Halcyon; member of the Phcenix Staff (II) ; member of Varsity Lacrosse Team (I, II, III), Captain of Varsity Laei ' osse Team (III); President of Swarthmore College Athletic Association (IV); member of Eunomian Literary Society; member of Joseph Leidy Scientific Society ; member of ' ' Perkeo Verein ' ' ; memlier of T. H. D. ; member of ' ' Book and Key. ' ' Elizabeth A. Hallock, Brooklyn, N. Y., What she undertool- to do she did. Mathematics. Prepared at Friends ' Seminary; Teacher in Chappaqua Mountain Institute and Principal of Friends ' Select School, Media, Pa.; member of Somerville Literary Society; member of Joseph Leidy Scientific Society; member of Mathematical and Astro- nomical Club, Secretary (III — 1), President (III — 2); member of Class Hockey Team (I, II, III, IV); member of Class Basketball Teams (I, II, III, IV); member of Varsity Basketball Team (II, III); member of Varsity Hockey Team (IV). Adele Bower Hammond, Boonton, N. J., Her feet l-eep time to the gay beatings of her heart. German. Prepared at B oonton High School ; Treasurer of Class in 190S ; Assistant Librarian of Somerville Literary Society in 1910; Treasurer of Somerville Literary Society (IV — 1) ; member of Class Hockey Team aiid Class Gymnasium Team (HI, IV); member of N if Eating Club; member of Halcyon Staff (III). 33 Margaret Vail Harned, B (I , Jersey City, N. J., German. On one she smiled, and he was blessed. ' Prepared at Jersey City High School; member of Somerville Literary Society; member of Girls ' Glee Club (I); member of Cast of Somerville Day Play (III) ; member of E I IT. Louisa Anne Harvey, Moorestown, N. J., Philosophy. ' ' We tell thee things and know they ' re safe with thee. ' ' Prepared at Friends ' High School, Moorestown ; member of Somerville Literary Society ; member of Joseph Leidy Scien- tific Society; member of Consumers ' League; member of College Settlement Association; member of Equal Suffrage League; member of Class Basketball Teams (I, III). Elsie Haviland, Brooklyn, N. Y., History. A peach with the sunny side up. Prepared . at Brooklyn Friends ' School and Friends ' Seminary, New York City; member of Somerville Literary Society; member of Class Hockey Team (I, II, III, IV) ; member of Class Basketball Team (I, II) ; member of Sophomore Oratorical Team; member of Glee Club; member of Junior-Freshman Eeception Committee. Anna Marie Heller, Philadelphia, Pa., German. If you wish to be valued, male yourself scarce. Prepared at the Philadelphia High School; member of Somerville Literary Society; member of Class Basketball Team (I, II); member of Class Hockey Team (I, II, III); member of Varsity Hockey Squad (III). Kussel Alger Henry, Tower City, Pa., Civil Engineering. Amhitio7i should he made of sterner stuff. Prepared at Tower City High School; member of Football Team (III); Manager of Track Team (III). 34 Helen Alberta Herr, Strasburg, Pa., Chemistry. ' ' Timid and stepping fast, WitJi modest eyes doiuneast. Prepared at the Gii-ls ' Latin Scliool, Baltimore, Md. ; entered Soijhomore Class fi-oni Goucher College, Baltimore; member of Somerville Literary Society; member of Joseph Leidy Scientific Society. Henry Lawrence Hess, J } ' , Philadelphia, Pa., Mechanical Engineering. ' ' Never to taste the pleasures of this world, Never to be infected with delight, Nor conversant luith ease and idleness. ' ' Prepared at Friends ' Central School; member of Class Dance Committee (II — 1), (II — 2); member of Perkeo Verein (III, IV), President (IV); member of Track and Relay Teams (I, II, III, IV), Captain (IV). Sarah Gilpin Heyburn, A ' K F, Spokane, Washington, German. ' ' And if so fair, from vanity as free. As firm in friendship and as fond in love. Prepared at Spokane High School; member of Somerville Literary Society. Anna Heydt, Lehighton, Pa., Latin. Slight is the sulyject, but not so the praise. Prepared at Keystone State Normal School ; member of Somerville Literary Society ; Assistant Somerville Librarian (II, III) ; member of Class Gymnasium Teams (III, IV) ; member of Class Hockey Team (IV) ; member of Varsity Hockey Team (IV); Deborah Fisher Wharton Scholar (III). William W. Hill, Jr., Markham, Pa., Chemistry. Beauty is a frail good. Prepared at Swarthmore Preparatory School; member of Delphic Literary Society; member of Varsity Baseball Team (II, III) ; member of Scrub Basketball Team (III) ; member of Varsity Basketball Team (IV) ; member of Sophomore Ora- torical Team; Treasurer of Class (III — 1) ; Vice President of Class (III — 2). 35 Jane Frances Hoag, Sayville, N. Y., English. How green you are, and fresh, in this old ' world. Prepared at Sayville High Scliool; member of Somerville Literary Society; Censor of Somerville (IV — 1) ; member of College Settlement Association; member of Glee Club (I, II); member of 1911 Halcyon Staff; member of Executive Board of Student Government (IV — 2) ; member of Joseph Leidy Scientiiie Society. Elizabeth Dunlap Hutchinson, Hempstead, N. Y., History. ' ' She hath a way to chase despair, To heal all grief, to cure all care. Prepared at Friends ' Academy, Locust Valley, N. Y. ; member of Somerville Literary Society; member of Glee Club (I, II); Treasurer of Women ' s Athletic Association (IV); member of Class Hockey Team (I, II, III, IV), Captain (IV); member of Varsity Hockey Team (II, III, IV); member of Class Gymnasium Teams (I, II, III, IV), Captain (IV); member of Varsity Gymnasium Teams (III, IV), Captain (IV); member of Class Basketball Team (III) ; Class Secretary (III — 2). Arthur D. Latimer, Shenandoah, Iowa, Mathematics. Be silent and. pnss for a pUilo.sopher. Prepared at Shenandoah High School; Freshman at University of Nebraska (1907-1908); Graduate of Western Normal College (1909); member of Joseph Leidy Scientific Society; member of Mathematical and Astronomical Club, President (IV — 2) ; member of Delphic Literary Society, Secretary (IV — 2) ; in the Annual Oratorical Contest (III) ; member of Y. M. C. A. Emma D. Marshall, 7 2 ' , Tyndell, Pa. Public Speaking. Wit she hath, ivithout desire To male liiown how much she hath. Prepared at Swarthmore Preparatory School; member of Somerville Literary Society, Corresponding Secretary (IV); member of Athletic Coimeil (III, IV) ; Treasurer of Athletic Association (III) ; Captain of Class Gymnasium Team (III) ; member of Student Government Executive Board (III— 2), President (IV— 1) ; President of Y. W. C. A. (IV— 2). 36 Florence Turner Micliener, Northbrook, Pa., Latin. ' ' Her air, her manners, all who saw admired Courteous, though coy and gentle, though retired. ' ' Prepared at West Chester High School; member of Somerville Literary Society. Glenn Earle Briinenmiller, Kokomo, Indiana, Chemistry. ' Iliose eyes! Deep wells of thought and lindly earnestness. Prepared at Koliomo High School; member of Joseph Leidy Scientific Society; member of Delphic Literary Society, Presi- dent (IV — 2) ; member of Debate Squad (III — 2) ; eligible for William W. Cocks Declamation Contest (IV) ; member of Track Team (III); member of Hoosier State Club, President (III); member of Y. M. C. A.; member of Casts of The Knight of the Burning Pesite and of Trelawney of the Wells ; Vice President of Class (IV — 2); member of Student Executive Committee (IV— 2) ; member of Glee Club (I, II, III, IV), Leader (IV); Secretary of S. C. A. A. (IV). Harry L. Miller, A ' I, Swarthmore, Pa., Civil Engineering. ' ' A star Whose ' Worth ' s miknown, altho ' its height lie taken. Prepared at Bloomington High School and Swarthmore High School; member of all Class Teams; member of Football Team (III, IV); member of Lacrosse Team (II, III, IV); Manager of Third Annual Circus member of T. H. D. ; member of ' ' Book and Key. ' ' Harold Hutclieon Millar, .Y ' , Philadelphia, Pa., Mechanical Engineering. The majority of men are perfect; tal-e me, for example. Prepared at Leal ' s School, Plainfield, N. J., and Stevens ' Institute; member of Scrub Lacrosse Team (I, II, III, IV). Helen Roderfield Parker, A ' K F, Swarthmore, Pa., French. 0 Solitude, where are the charms that sages have seen on thy face? Prepared at Swarthmore Preparatory School; member of Somerville Literary Society; member of n I n. 37 Edna Walter Passmore, Oxford, Pa., German. Perfect tranquility is the general tenor of my life. Graduate of West Chester High School (1907); member of Girls ' Glee Club (1907-1908, 1908-1909); member of Somerville Literary Society. E. Bussell Perkins, J T, Moorestown, N. J., Economics. With teachers he will ntver disagree; If they ' ll recite — Great goodness, why should he? Prepared at MoorestoTrn Friends ' High School; Vice President of Class (I — 2), President (III — 2); member of Eunomian Literary Society, Treasurer (II — 2, III — 1) ; member of 1911 Halcyon Staff; Captain of Freshman Football Team; Captain of Senior Basketball Team; member of Varsity Football Team (III, IV); Manager of Football Team (IV); member of Scrub Basketball Team (III, IV); member of Varsity Lacrosse Team (I, II, III, IV), Captain (IV); member of T. H. D.; member of Book and Key ; in College Oratorical Contest (IV). Albert Merritt Pitcher, K ¥, New York, N. Y., Chemistry. ' Though a laugh is allowaile, a horse-laugh is abominable. Prepared at Swarthmore Prep. School; member of all Class Teams; member of Scrub Baseball Team (II); member of Scrub Football Team (IV); Manager of Basketball Team (IV). Dorothy Macdowell Plack, Philadelphia, Pa., English. G iileless simplicity marl ' s her its aim. Prepared at Girls ' High School, Philadelphia; member of Somerville Literary Society; member of Class Hockey Team (II — 1) ; member of Cast of Junior Play (III) ; Arolon Reading Prize (III — 2) ; Treasurer of Student Government (IV — 1) ; niember of Consumers ' League. 38 Angeline Johnson Power, 1 ' , Philadelphia, Pa., . Philosophy. ' ' Lord, make me good — And if at first you don ' t succeed, Try, try again. ' ' Prepared at Prjends ' Central School, Philadelphia; member of Somerville Literary Society, Censor (III — 1) ; member of n I IT; member cf r I K. Elizabeth Evans Price, JJ 1 Plymouth Meeting, Pa., Latin. ' ' There comes the lady — oli, so light of foot Will ne ' er wear oiit the everlasting flint. Prepared at Friends ' Central School; I. V. Williamson Scholar; Class Treasm ' er (I — 1) ; member of Student Government Executive Committee (IV — 1) ; member of Somerville Literary Society, Censor (III — 2); member of Girls ' Glee Club (I, II, III, IV), Business Manager (II), Leader (IV) ; President of College Settlement Association (III) ; member of Equal Suffrage League, Vice President (III, IV) ; member of Class Reception Committees (II, III) ; member of College Reception Commit- tee (I); member of Halcyon Staff; member of n I H; member of A A 2. Emmor Eoherts, J F, Moorestown, N. J., Economics. Our soids religiously confirm thy ipords. He loved a maiden wondrous fair. Prepared jMoorestown Friends ' High School; President of Class (III), Treasurer (IV — 2); Assistant Business Manager of 1911 Halcyon ; member of Delphic Literary Society ; member of Joseph Leicly Scientific Society, Vice President (IV) ; member of Varsity Lacrosse Team (III), Manager (IV); member of Student Government Executive Committee (III, IV — 1) ; Head of Department of Instruction Y. M. C. A. ; member of ' ' Book and Key. ' ' Arthur S. Eobinson, 1 A ' , Wilmington, Del., Mechanical Engineering. I ' m hut a stranger here; Heaven is my home. ' ' Prepared at Wilmington Friends ' School; member of Perkeo Verein ; member of Phoenix Staff (II); President of Class (II — 2); Manager of 1911 Halcyon; member of Student Government Committee (III — 1). 39 Eiitli C. Sharp, Eiverton, N. J., English. ' ' She is aeiisiile, vivacious and firm-textured, Mather than soft and sentimental. ' ' Prepared at Friends ' Ceutral School; member of Somerville Literary Society, Censor (II — 1), President (IV — 1) ; member of Equal Suffrage League; member of Class Gymnasium Teams; member of 1911 Halcyon Staff; member of Phcenix Staff (III); member of Glee Club (I, II, III, IV), Leader (III); member of Student Government Executive Board (III— 1, 2), (IV— 1, 2), Vice President (III— 1) ; member of A A 2. Finley Hall Shiland, Cambridge, N. Y., Mechanical Engineering. ' ' Virtue when it is concealed is worthless. ' ' Prepared at Cambridge High School; Wesleyan University (ex-1909). Therese D. Spackman, A ' A 6, Eiverton, N. J., English. Always ohliging and without offense, And fancied for her gay imperlinence. Prepared at Friends ' Central School; member of Somerville Literary Society; member of 1910 Halcyon Staff; member of Class Gymnasium Team (I, II, III); Member of Varsity Hockey Team (IV); member of Fhcenix Staff (II); member of Class Hockey Teams (I, II, III, IV) ; member of A A S. Alice Mulford Stover, fl B (1 , Moorestown, N. J., German. ' ' Soft as the dawn of turtle-dove, Gentle as air when zephyr blows. ' ' Prepared at George School, Pa.; member of Somerville Literary Society; member of Glee Club (I); member of Glee Club Quartet (I) ; Winner of Freshman Gymnastic Contest (I) ; member of Class Hockey Team (I, II, III) ; member of Class Basketball Team (I) ; member of Class Gymnasium Team (I, II, III) ; member of r 1 K. 40 G-race E. Tucker, West Chester, Pa., History. Neat, hilt not finical; Sage, tiit not cynical. Prepared at West Chester High School; member of Somerville Literary Society; member of Executive Board of Studeut Government (IV— 1, 2). William Eussell Tylor, Easton, Md., Chemistry. He things too much: such men are dangerous. Prepared at George School; member of Delphic Literary Soe:et; , Recording Secretary (III); member of Debate Teams (I, III) ; member of Debate Board (IV) ; Winner Second Prize in Potter Prize Speaking Contest (III) ; Winner Third Prize in College Oratorical Contest (I) ; Winner First Prize (IV) ; member of Oratorical Team (I, IV) ; Winner First Place in Intercollegiate Oratorical Contest (IV) ; Manager of Glee Clnb (IV) ; member of Y. M. C. A. Euth Verlenden, Darby, Pa., German. There is none lile her — none! Prepared at Swarthmore Prep. School; member of Somerville Literary Society, Censor (II — 1), Vice President (III — 1), President (IV — 2) ; member of Equal Suffrage League, Secretary (II), President (III) ; member of Joseph Leidy Scientific Society, Secretary (III); member of College Settlement, President (IV); member of Glee Club (II, III, IV), Manager (III); Class Secretary ' (III — 2); member of Girls ' Extemporaneous Team (III), Winner of Third Prize; Winner of Declamation Contest (IV) ; member of Halcyon Staff 1911 ; member of 11 I 11 ; member of A A 2. Elizabeth M. Washburn, Farm School, Pa., Chemistry. Is she Unci as she is fair? Prepared at Doylestown High School and Hartford, Conn., High School; member of Somerville Literary Society; member of .Joseph Leidy Scientific Society; member of Consumers ' League; member of Equal Suffrage League; member of Class Hockey Team (11, III, IV), Varsity Squad (IV). 41 James Aloysius Watson, 2 ' A ' , Moores, Pa., Chemical Engineering. He Cometh unto you with a tale which holdeth children from play, and old men from the chimney corner. Prepared at Chester High School; member of Delphie Literary Society; member of Joseph LeicTy Scientific Society; mem- ber of Class Oratorical Tea ms (I, II) ; Class Treasurer (II — 2) ; member of Glee Club (I, II, IV) ; member of 1911 Halcyox Staff ; member of Junior Dance Committee ; Chairman Social Committee Y. M. C. A ; member of ' ' Book and Key. ' ' Ellwood Zavitz Way, St. Thomas, Ontario, Can., Electrical Engineering. Why should a man desire in any -way To vary from the common race of men? Prepared at St. Thomas Collegiate Institute and Sinclair College; member of Delphic Literary Society; member of Joseph Leidy Scientific Society. Elizabeth White, A A ' F, Atlantic City, N. J., English. Those that govern most make the least noise. Prepared at Atlantic City High School; member of Somerville Literary Society; member of Girls ' Glee Club (I, II, III, IV); member of Class Reception Committee (II); Cast of Junior SomerviUe Play; member of 1911 Halcyon Staff; mem- ber of Executive Board of Student Government (IV — 2); Class Secretary (IV — 2); member of A A 2; member of II I IT. Mabelle G. Aliitehead, Trenton, N. J., Latin. She has a tongue with a tang. Prepared at Trenton High School; member of Somerville Literary Society; member of Class Hockey Team (II, III, IV); member of Class Gymnasium Team (II, III, IV); Secretary of Class (IV — 1). Conrad Augustus Wiekham, A ' I, Philadelphia, Pa., Civil Engineering. A merry fellow, taking delight in song and hooks, and friends, and nature. Prepared at Central High School; member of Football Team (I, II, IV, V); member of Baseball Team (III, IV, V), Captain (IV); Class President (II— 1) ; member of Glee Club; member of Ye Monks ; member of Book and Key. 42 Rata E. Willitt, Mayville, N. Y., ' German. Good company and good discourse are the very sinews of virtue. Pr epared at Mayville High Sehool (1906); member of Somerville Literary Society. Joseph Henry Willits, Ward, Pa., Economics. IVisdom and worth were all he Ixad. Prepared at Media High School; uieniber of Delphic Literary Society, President (IV — 1) ; member of Track Team; member of College Debating Team (II, III, IV) ; President Debating Board (IV) ; College Oratorical Contest (III) ; Editor of Phosnix. Katharine Reinoehl Witmeyer, A ' A ' F, Lebanon, Pa,, French. And then her looT{S — Oh, where ' s the heart so wise, Could, unbewildered, meet those matcMess eyes? Prepared at Lebanon High School; member of Somerville Literary Society; member of Sophomore-Freshman Eeception Committee; member of College Keception Committee (11); member of n I n ; Peanut Girl for Circus (II, III, IV). Elizabeth Clarke Yocum, Norristown, Pa., German. Fair, strong, arm ' d, but to he won by force. Prepared at Norristown High School and Friends ' Central, Philadelphia; member of Somerville Litera ry Society; Secretary (11), Vice President (III) and President (IV) of Athletic Association; member of Athletic Council (II, III, IV); member of Class Basketball Teams (I, II, III, IV), Captain (I, II, III, IV) ; member of Varsity Basketball Team (I, II, III, IV), Captain (IV); member of Class Hockey Teams (I, II, III, IV); member of Varsity Hockey Team (II, III, IV), Captain (IV) ; member of Class Gymnasium Team (II, III, IV) ; member of Varsity Gymnasium Team (II, III, IV) ; member of Phoenix Staff (III); member of Consumers ' League; member of H I 11; member of A A 2. 43 CxiHemtos; of 1911 EicHARD Peter Abele, a T, Jane Wbtheeby Baker, n 2, Bessie Bew, n B , Clyde L. Blanchabd, Helen Leigh Blanton, Ethel Webb Borneau, Lewis H. Buck, K 1, Samuel J. Bunting, Jr., Blanche V. Burt, Eaymond W. Cain, K S, Dorothea M. Carter, K A 9, Mary G. Coepman, Lew Wallace ' Daenall, Leila Enders, Harold E. Ennis, K 2, Pauline Ruby Fay, Helen F. Fisher, Katherine D. Fleming, George Dock Fussell, Anna Elizabeth Gilkyson, K a e, Jay Campbell Gilmore, K 2, Anna Bassett Griscom, K a e, Grace Mary Griscom, k K r, Ealph Elavood Hallock, K S, Ealph Eldridge Harcourt, K 2, Edward Byron Harold, t K ' P, Gertrude Walter Hoopes, K A 0, Frances M. Hoyt, Anna Bstella James, William Lancaster Perkins, a T, Isaac Busby Jones, ifi 2 K, Virginia Drysdale Keeney, Alfred Egberts Jamison, William Roberts Krusb, Charles Raymond Levis, Edward B. Luckie, John McAllister, Andrew James McCluue, 2 K, E. Cordelia McPherson, L. Bleav MacPherson, Lydia Jeannette Mather, Mary Denn Morgan, Henry Tyson Moore, Sara T. Muxen, n B , Edward Carl Nehls, Jr., Carmen Maria Ortiz, Helen Paul, Morris Charles Eath, a T, Elizabeth Richards, Jessie T. Richards, II B , Edith Millicent Eichardson, Ernest Marion Roberts, a T, Mary Evelyn Schuler, Laura D. Servoss, Frances Emily Shields, Mary F. Shaw, Cecile Emmorine Smith, Gladys K. Smith, Herschel Gaston Smith, Percy Maltby Smith, Florence Elizabeth Smedley, K AG, Charles Edward Springer, Ronald Sheepshanks Sproat, Helen B. Strong, Robert W. B. Terrell, K i ' , Mary Louise Ueie, Marion Catherine Watters, n 2, Otto Wilman Wickham, K 2, Alice Emily Wood, Harry Wardle Yerkbs. K 2. 44 F IRST SUMESTEIR Presidcnt ViCE-PRES StCRETAFfY RlC MRD H MuRFIT Samuel E Phipps Alexandra Rogers Harold S Roberts Horace C Jenkins Thomas R Taylor Phebe Lukens Charles A Colli. iHemtiersi of tfje €la of 1912 Eugeue Edward Aja ' es, Jr., Chester,. Pa. Amy Baker, A ' . d, A bright physics and chemistry mark, A conies and calculus shark, An author, a dreamer. At tennis a screamer, And plays and sings like a lark. (But not like a real hearty, robust, cheerful lark. I think that lark had the pip.) Philadelphia, Pa. She comes into a messy room — things waltz into their places; She smiles a very radiant smile — people unbend their faces; She talks and studies just enough — and then goes off to bed; She goes home over Sunday — and Don, he — well, nufE said! 46 Elisabeth Hallowell Bartlett, K A T, Baltimore, Md. No, I don ' t want to cut Glee Club again, and I have right much work to do, so I just guess I ' 11 stay home this time. Thee sees, there ' s so much going on this week ; this is the only chance I ' ll have to get any work done and it does pile up so! Eun along and ask somebody else. Oh, no, you won ' t miss me. I know you ' ll have a good time. Good-by. Bartie is awfully unfortunate in having both remarkable social propensities and a persevering conscience. She has an awfully hard time, for somehow, people will insist upon asking her to go places. The funny part of it is, that she never seems to be in a hurry, but that may be on account of her w ' onderful stride. If you hear a shriek from her room, followed by, Hush, Martha! don ' t Ijlanie lUartha for it. Be.ssie Bew, li ([ , Heleji Leigh Blanton, There once was a girl named Bess Bew, Her visits to college were few, — Things outside, you know. Take up one ' s time so. Specially if ' twere a man that one knew. Philadelphia, Pa. Helen is going to make a perfect angel sometime. She has already made rapid advance up- ward from the Class of 1911 to 191 ' 2. With her real, 14-karat, self-luminous halo of glory, and her graceful motions naturally fitted for flying, she can recite soothingly to St. Peter when the crowd of Swarthmoreans at the Gate get on his nerves. But at present we prefer to see Helen eat- ing warmed-up Campbell ' s Soup in the Day-Students ' Room. P. S. — Judging from the Blue Bird, Helen would also make good fire down below. 47 Swai ' thmore. Pa. Alice Marie Bolton, Philadelphia, Pa. Fay Burger, lu her room beside the heater, By the smelly, red-liot gas stove, Sits the cold and sleepy Alice, Sits the lazy, chilly Alice. Fiercely do her friends assail her, Saying, ' ' Oh, thou hnmorons woman, Tell ns of some funny story. Stir us up to careless laughter. ' ' But the maiden only ans vers, ' ' Chase yourselves, and let me slumber. ' ' Madeleine Brown, Swarthmore, Pa. Say, Avhen are you coming down to see me? Can ' t you come to lunch next Tuesday? (The answer is always, Yes, for invitations to Brown ' s are worth accepting.) In between Madeleine brings up young spreads and entertains a few guests for lunch in Eoom 316, while the rest of the hall goes to onion hash with a groan. Philadelphia, Pa. Fay has been more fortunate than the majority of ns in having been given an excellent op- portunity for showing that progressive spirit and ability to rise above circumstances that we all have, in the potential. When she came here, an innocent child, she was thrown into the midst of that ' 13 gang. With true 1912 spirit she carried off her position with dignity until such time as it seemed fitting for her to take her proper place with us. 49 Charles Aaron Collins, Moorestown, N. J. x nna Washington Detweiler, Oh! Charlie came to our town, And he was wondrous dumb ; But he jumped into athletics Just to try to get some fun. And when he found he played lacrosse, And basketball besides. He got along remarkably, And now he ' s wondrous wise. Reading, Pa. Freshman j-ear Anna decided to major in German and entered a few courses with Dr. Battin. At the end of the year he asked for a year ' s absence for study in Berlin, secretly hoping he could catch up with her. Patiently she waited, toying now and then with Dr. Newport. And now — Dr. B. has returned — aber, ach Himmel, nun ist Anna in der Universitat von Penn ein Deutsch course getaking. Wilmer C. Dutton, I K, Chester, Pa. otherwise known as the Ah-ven-noo Boy, or Mutton. A ladies ' man from the words go to gone. He looks innocent, guileless, but long is the string of broken hearts he has left be- hind him. He is not a brilliant student, nor yet an athlete, but — well, don ' t you think he has pretty hair? 50 Donald Eenwick FergTison, A ' 2 , Philadelphia, Pa. ' ' Good morning, Fergie. ' ' Hi! ' ' Not grumpy tliis morning, I see. ' ' Nope, feeling fine; training season over, and a big party ar Hamilton Court to-night. Be- sides, I just killed an organic exam. You ought to see the pull I ' ve got with Doc. now. I thought you ' d be grouchy. I heard you almost had a fight this morning. ' ' I ' ve gotten over that ; but say, did you see what that guy did. He deliberately ran up against a girl; absolutely no reason why he should, don ' t you know. Just knocked up against her, like that, you know. I ' d of pasted him one if there hadn ' t been women around. Some of these fellows around here make me sick ; not an atom of geutlemanliness about them, don ' t you know. I ' d like to get my hands on some of ' em. You going? Well, so long. Avis Loraine Fitch, A ' K F, Flushing, N. Y. Loraine comes patter, patter out of the dining room. ' ' I can ' t see why they still insist on giving us fried scrapple three times a week. I ' m going to the pie Shop and get out of this pretty reasonable, I guess. Girls, our digestions will be simply ruined if we have to live on this much longer, and we had fried mush for breakfast besides. She puts back one stray lock, putting it in place with her head tipped a little to one side and her bright brown eyes shining. Those pink cheeks haven ' t been living on fried diet all their days! Clara Elizabeth Frazee, 7 1 ' . Baltimore, Md. Fourth-hour bell rings and down the hall comes a smmd. As it approaches vigorous girls shiver and shrink back pale and unstrung. Doors and windows slam shut, the hall lights go out, a pall of gloom and pain descends upon Third West. It is Clara singing, I ' ve Been Working on the Railroad. 51 Claude Francis Gilchrist, l K ' ' , Marion, Ind. This liaudsonie young lad is called Gilly; He combs his hair like a Willy. He loves to play ball, And sing best of all. And oh! how silly is Gilly. Marion DufSeld Grau, Swartlimore, Pa. Marion looks quiet and easy-going, but she really is moft particular. She is, as Miss Lape de- fines it, metriculous ( . c, scrupulous to a degree of fussiness). There are two things that Marion is particularly fussy about: Ducky ' s views on religion (you see she is an Orthodox Christian) and the jjronunciation of her last name. Margaret Elizabeth Green, Tabulated Summary of M. E. G. Eyes — brown or black. (a) Soinber when calm (% total time). (b) Increased diameter and emit sparks when excited (% total time). Figure — attractively chubby. Sounds — 1. Articulate speech. (a) Common or habitual — e. g.. just grand!!! — accompanied by eye-sparks (see above). (b) Transitory — e. g., spells of extreme seriousness. 2. Inarticulate. Squeals in history. Chief Product — Fudge, made in five minutes from any borrowed materials — world-wide fame. 53 Bartow, Fla. Robert Wright Hackman, Womelsdorf, Pa. Happy Heine — the dumb Dutchman. He looks as bright as Flick ' s hair, but wait until you see him with one of his father ' s Lucy Grey ' s in his mouth, trying to let Wells ' s explana- tion of some reaction take root in his brain. You ' d swear then that there was no place for it to take root. And yet he ' s a lot like Vic in a good many ways. Anne Slioemaker Haines, A ' K F, Swartlimore, Pa. ' ' I ' m sure I don ' t see why you say I should do it — lots of people would be better than I. If I came up this evening it will only be the fifth time I ' ve been home and back to college to-day. But go on — I don ' t mind. ' ' That ' s Anne for you. She ' s always ready and capable to help auyone out with anything. Those who know one half that Anne does — and those people are few — wonder how she accomplishes it and keeps that monotonous row of A ' s in the office. Eleanor Halsev, Swartlimore, Pa. Eleanor has reappeared on our horizon, after two years ' absence, as a star of the first mag- nitude. Competent authorities have prophesied that she will eclipse Dr. Goddard, Mr. Hayes and Julia Marlowe in their respective branches ' within a short time. At present she sits on the first row in English Poetry and commands Dr. G. ' s wonder and respect when she speaketh. 54 William Darrach Halsey, Swarthmore, Pa. Anna May Haslett, Helping helpless hams Ahyays after A ' s. Learning little, but local lectures, Spectacular sprinter in spring; Envied, emulous, enslaved, engineer; Yapping Yankee yearning to yeomandry. John Ernest Hartman, d) I K, Hard-hitting, howling happiness, Another anxiety to Alleman. Raising rows round Wharton, Teasing the table, Meaning to marry Mary, ' Audsome as ' Arry, Never new nor never old. Philadelphia, Pa. My, what an appetite she has! Indeed, her capacity for books seems unlimited. You dare not put a book in front of her, for in less than five minutes she will have absorbed its entire contents, leaving you nothing but the cover. We are sorry that Swarthmore is unable to satisfy Anna ' s craving, and that she must spend her summers in the Philadelphia library assimilating all that is within its walls. 55 Dillsburg, Pa. Mildred Grace Hoadley, A ' . d, Swarthmore, Pa. Drama in Two Acts. Dramatis Persona, M. G. H. Scene — College Dining Eoom. Act I. {Enter our vice president ' s daughter, haughty tread, nose and chin uplifted, seats her- self uith quiet dignity.) — Fresh! Fresh! Hnllo, Miclsie. Mildred {freezing stare). — Were you speaking to me? Act II. {Enter Mids, u-altBes across the room and drops into a cluiir, smiles disturb her freclcles.) Mids. — Hullo, People. Aren ' t you glad to see me? Yes, you aren ' t. Do you know what that red and white pole down town is? Belie of barbarism. Don ' t smile, it might crack your face. Who bought that candy? Ah, ha! The plot thickens, as the gardener remarked as he looked at the lawn. William King Hoyt, Saratoga Springs, N. Y. Oh! Hoyt is the king of them all, He makes some others look small; For he can take hold. And get this book sold; But his head has grown larger since fall. Bill ' s our manager, and the whole staff is willing to back him with every cent they own against any previous or future manager. He ' s there! Horace C. Jenkins, Jingling, jaunty, jabbering, joking, Eagerly earnest, envy envoking. Nice and not naughty. Nasty? No never! Kareful, koncise, kurious and klever. Interesting infant; imp idiotic. Naturely nimble, Nature ' s narcotic. Silly and sober, sensitive, sappy — Here is a lad that makes us all happy. 57 Gwynedd, Pa. Florence Manning Lippincott, Woodstown, N. J. Florence is a very polite person, and she expects the same measure of courtesj ' from her friends. If one forgets to say, Excuse me, to her she is offended. She doesn ' t mind being injured, but she does hate not to have the wound healed by an apology. Cornelia Lillian Lounsbury, Cornelia is a dainty elf, Her voice is soft and low; Her major is in History, And Hull is her hero. She hardly ever laughs at all, Unless it ' s at a joke. The Horace at the Junior Dance Had both his eardrums broke: Plainfielcl, N. As Bread she made an awful hit, And when she fell doven stairs; The Y. W. C. A. and Temperance League Have weighed her down with cares. Always with a wan, sad smile. She greets you in the hall; She ' s wasting rapidly away, Yet is cheerful through it all. J. Phebe Lukens, K K F, Swartkmore, Pa. There ' s a springiness in her springness when she springs, And a elinginess in her clingness when she clings. But the springiness in her springness. And the elinginess in her clingness. Is nothing to her singiness when she sings. 58 Walter Lee Lukens, J T, Swartlimore, Pa. Is this not a handsome boy? Yes, it is not. If his father had only kept his face from warp- ing when he was a baby, he might have some claim to the beauty prize; but alas! his father wasn ' t watchful. And see how he wabbles when he walks ! Did you reall} ' think he was a duck, little girl? No, he ' s only a bird of a lacrosse player. See the pretty dimple in his left cheek. That means he can paint and draw. I have honestly seen him draw water. Wasn ' t that a funny joke. Heleu Crawford Islavv, 7 B (P, Swarthmore, Pa. Come right in. Excuse me if I keep on sewing. Study? Oh, yes, I ought to, but I ' d rather embroider. I quite forgot to go to Gym yesterday. I got so interested, but I ' m sure it will be all right. Oh, isn ' t College grand! I just think everything is beautiful and everybody is so nice. The dearest girl is coming to see me this afternoon! I just wish you could meet her; couldn ' t you wait just a teenie little speck of a while? Edith May Martin, Norristown, Pa. ' I ' 11 do that little stunt. Edith has a singular fondness for this expression. Her pet aversion is the French department. She sits in abject terror while Monsieur Eedfield peers over his glasses and singles out his victim. The words Mademoiselle Martin, voulez vous continuer s ' il vous plait, ' ' sound as the crack of doom in her ears. A parting shot, Did anybody mention the Smock family? We wonder wherein lies the attraction. 59 Florence Mereditla, Long Brancli, N. J. ' ' Oh, I ' m just dead tired after the dance, onty I must go to town to take my books into Leary ' s. I haven ' t any money, you know. I piled twenty-five books into one suit case and then I couldn ' t lift it. Guess I ' ll carry some in my arms. And my hair ' s such a sight, this morn- ing. Didn ' t have time to curl it last night, you know. Good-by. James Elsworth Mitchell, A ' 1 ' , Millville, N. J. Hello there, Jimmy; gotten over your danc e last night? Yes, Beau; and I sure did have some time. That dame I had was a pippin. Dance? Gee! she could dance. I could ' ' drop ' ' all night with her. Ah, Beau ! when that old violin would start in, and she ' d sail along — wheel Some class to that dame of yours, too. She ' s a swell ' ' dropper. ' ' Got tome life to it. It makes me tired to see some of these couples go mooning along, as if the only thing they wanted was a hugging match. People like that ought to go off in tome dark corner and do it right; don ' t you think so? ' ' Gome on, and walk down town. ' ' No, I ' ve got a bunch of work to do. I owe Louis three reports, and he ' s going to kick me a-h — out of his course, if I don ' t hand them in before Monday. Before you go, though, you liaven ' t got a Fat-im-a about your person, have you? Thanks. So long! Richard Henrj Murfit, J i , Somerton, Pa. Any Sunday night: Where were you all morning, Dick? ' ' Downtown. ' ' Vic ' s? ' Down at church. ' ' ' Where ' ve you been all afternoon? ' Out walking. ' ' ' Didn ' t see you around for supper. At the pieshop? ' Huh, only had seven cents. Was down at Parker ' s. ' ' jater, in bed (coniidentialty) : ' Say, Dick, you aren ' t engaged, are you? ' Ha! Ha! You old fool. Trying to kid me? But anyhow the dog don ' t bark at me now. 61 Mary Eliza Osgood, A ' . d, Mary, Mary, quite contrary. What makes you freeze me so — When I offer a swap from a good okl top? For you aren ' t bad looking, you know. Hammontou, N. J. Mai-y, Mary, quite contrary, What makes you say you ' re starved? The dinner was good, as goes college food, — Was it T. E. Taylor that carved? Samuel E ' astbiirn Phipps, J Y Ward, Pa. Samuel ' s up and left us. We ' re sorry that he ' s gone ; He was so handy ' round the house When we needed something done. tajtel jh ' ■13 ' KSBra Hnife. ' ' A L . ' - ' . H Hh 4 H ff H Mattie Helen Pressey, Philadelphia, Pa. Pier funny little giggle. With the wrinkle on her nose, Her softly gliding walk, And her outward turning toes. Her gently flowing talk, And the neatness of her clothes. Make her very well known To everyone she knows. 62 William Webb Price, Moyland, Pa. Z — Buzz-z-z-z. What! lawn mowers in January? No, just a little device of the barber to relieve Bill of some of his ' ' high grass. ' ' Because he had such hair he eouldn ' t wear a Garnet cap in his Freshman year, and consequently he was made to feel that college was a cold, cold lump of ice with tacks in it. But it has thawed out lately and Bill seems to be interested in watching it melt. I hope it doesn ' t drown him. Judging from the work he has done for this book, his initials should stand for Writer, Wit, Poet. Mary Ramsey, Swartlimore, Pa. You ' d never suspect Mary of being the backbone of various sewing circles and dances among college girls, village girls and the always doubtful mixture. She looks so innocent, and her voice is so soft that she gives the impression of being happy to take everything as she finds it and to ask for no more. If her personality were more frivolous we should be tempted to call her a social butterfly ; but, as it is, even now, after an acquaintance of three years, we scarcely have the face to accuse her of it. Walter A. Eeinliard, Chester, Pa. Now Reiny there is under-grown. And maybe under-brained. Some swear he doesn ' t know enough To come in if it rained. But Walter goes his own sweet way. And does it without vim. Some people doubt he lives, but oh! The difference to him. 63 Marco Gulio Eicaurte, Oh! Marco is an Irishmau, Who comes from Eeuaclor ; And what he knows about the girls Would fill a book or more. Riobamba, Ecuador. He brings them up to every game, And at their side does prance. He even sent red roses To Liz. Bartlett at our dance. Eleanor Augusta Rittenhouse, li ! , Moutclair, N. J. Gee, girls, have you heard the latest? Wiufield has eloped with a French actress! Who ' s Winfield? Why, don ' t you know; he ' s a man of mine. Say, you ' re there with your flowers! Oh, that ' s the kind Winfield rsed to send me — and Algernon, too — only now he ' s dead. Winfield sent me those pink ones I wore to the dance the other night. Wasn ' t he dear? Say, let ' s have this room a regular Bohemia, and stock up with p-etzels and have Peg flay her tanjo and sing — two strings off, but that makes no dift ' erence ! ' ' Byrou T. Roberts, J Y Moorestowu, N. J. Oh ! he ' s from the New Jersey border, Where mosquitoes made him their larder. His clothes are so neat, And his manners so sweet, He ' s an animate ' ' Eules of Order. ' ' 65 Harold Stine Eoberts, Moorestown, N. J. Now isn ' t this a learnecl-looking man! Well, he is, anyway. Ask him to look away while I tell you something, for he ' s a very modest youth, and I wouldn ' t want him to hear me. He can speak Latin, French, German and I don ' t know what else — ever ' thing but love, I think. He and Jenkins get up in their room and within an hour will have the floor so littei ' ed up with Greek noiuis, German verbs, French adjectives, Italian pronouns, Spanish adverbs, Esperanto exclamations and (perhaps) Latin slang, that you can ' t find a space big enough to hold even a good, solid, ex- pressive, English ' ' D . ' ' Preston T. Roberts, J ] ' , Moorestowu, X. J. No, little girl, that ' s not a mattress. It ' s only Preston ' s hair. Don ' t be frightened — it wouldn ' t even hurt a pat of butter. But isn ' t Pres. an ugly man ! No wonder they sent him away from home. He doesn ' t phase us, though, because we ' ve seen Weaver and Halsey. In fact, we sort of like to have him around for some reason. He ' s just like mama ' s scrubbing board — a plain, old thing, but something that gets work done, and that we wouldn ' t want to do without. Alexandra Beatrice Eogers. fl li I , Corry, Pa. Prepared for Fun; Junior member of the Verlenden-Eogers-Appleby Combination for Corner- ing College Capacity for Craziness ; First Prize in Friend-Winning Contest ; President of the Eoughhouse Club ; Chief Patroness of Booth ' s Pie Shop ; Vice President Emeritus of W. S. G. A. ; Leading Lady in Fake Dramatic Club ; Organizer of Society for Promotion of Inebria- tion Among College Women; Awarded Good-Fellow Medal (I, II, III). 66 Anna Mullin Eogers, West Chester, Pa. Don ' t you think you had better hurry, Ann? Why? Well, the train leaves in five hours, and I don ' t want to see you miss it. Now five minutes is ample time for most of us to catch a train, but not so for Ann. If she should ever be ready and catch the traic by mistake at the last minute, she would leave undone half the things she meant to do. .Tolm Sliee Rush, Jr., Concordville, Pa. Oh, here ' s to you, .Johnny-wanny ; we all stand firm by you; You ' re a poor benighted loafer, but your heart is good and true. So here ' s to you, Johnny-wanny, with your happy, tuneful ways. You aren ' t a shining mark at all, Ijut you brighten up our days. Anna Yardley Satterthwaite, Yardle ' , Pa. Wanted — To fill a responsible position. Some one who can do expert typewriting and cook- ing, is a good student, a hard worker, honest, sober and eonscieiitious ; popular with the powers and with a cheery disposition. Apj% to Dep ' t of College Spirit, Swarthmore College. [Only applicant, Anna Satterthwaite.] 67 Austin Allan Scott, Nickname: Iron Jaw. Habitat: Chemistry Lab. Best trait: Keeping quiet. Aim in life: Not able to discover any. Wilmington, Del. Temperament: Even. Noted for: Coming from Delaware College. Needs most: A good jarring up. Greenhill, Pa. Dr. Allemau. Sluirples. Laurence Price Sharpies, A } ' , Dramatis Persons. Members of the organic class. Scene: Organic Laboratory. Organic class at work. {Enter Doc. Alleman.) — Thunder !!! What ' re you making, Sharpies? Laurie. — ' ' Why — a — some — a some stuff from last week. ' ' J?0P.— Well, what is it? Lmirie. — A — a — I put some alcohol and some gray powder, barium something, together and — a — something else and filtered. ' ' Doc— DID WHAT? ! ? ! ? ! Laurie. — Hey, Ayres, what AM I making? (A general confusion follows.) Doc. (to horcUng assemUy). — Gray powder, barium some- thing or other and something else, ' ' and then ' ' what am I doing ' ' to Ayres. Whew! !!!!!! Helen Sliinn, Atlantic City, N. J. (Enter Helen, with that ligkt-hrown sweater thro ion carelessly around her shoulders.)— girls, the dancing in the gym has been perfectly great, and Mids Hoadley and I have dropping until we ' re nearly dead. Now, I ' ve got to go back to my room and rig up some way to keep Apple out. You know he came to visit me the other night, and believe me, he won ' t come again if I know anything about it. ' ' 69 Carolyn Hallowell Smedley, A ' . 0, Hollywood, Cal. [Editor ' s Note. — Miss Smedley has, at our request, mailed us the facts concerning herself, which we print below.] She is rather below the average height, dre.SEes stylishly and has a good figure. She takes no interest in things around her. She does not expect to remain at college much longer, as her parents are disgusted with the grade of her work. She has flunked Latin and French, and has been re- quested by Dr. Miller to retire from Astronomy, because she held back the class. Miss Bates has conditioned her for incorrigible inability. She has been up before the executive committee for night walking. She has few friends and no ability. [Editor ' s Second Note. — As this goes to print we learn that Miss Smedley ' s letter is totally unreliable, as she is suffering from an acute attack of auto-deprecation.] Charles Alfred Smith, A ' - ' , Pleasing Peg puritanically. Unweary, upright, unassuming, Deploringly dawdling dumb. Sings sentimental suffusions sunnily. Modestly, may be morbidly, moral; Impolite, impatient, impetuous. Tolerably tender. Typically truthful; Has horrid hair to hoe. Philadelphia, Pa. Mahel Lydia Stiner, 17 0, Kennett Square, Pa. Girls, listen. I do think you ought to try to pay your dues. I ' ve been trying to get these class dues for three months, I do believe. Won ' t you pay; please? And then there ' s that Student Government assessment. You know we each had to pay for that. Yes, it ' s ten cents. I hate to bother you so much for money, but they ' re both for a good cause. Really, I ' ll not trouble you again. (With a smile, in a soft voice.) Thanks, ever so much. (Leaves, quietly shutting the door.) 70 Joseph Durbin Stites, (1 1 l , Williamstown, Pa. This liandsome young fellow ' s called Stites; His face would put out the lights. When Doe. Weaver and Joe Want to go to a show, They pick out a place where there ' s tights. Raymond Clarke Storb, « A ' ¥, There, little Dutch, don ' t cry. You still have Loraine, you know, And your Pottstown days. And bachelor ways, Are things of the long ago. So there, little Dutch, don ' t cry. Pottstown, Pa. There, little Dutch, don ' t cry. Don ' t care if they tease you so. You blush so red. At anything said. Of Fitchy who likes you, I know. So there, little Dutch, don ' t cry. Ida Dorothy Strode, I 0, West Chester, Pa. Say, Dot, don ' t you have time to make candy this afternoon? ' Deed, I don ' t. I have to go to the laboratory till five o ' clock. Come on and cut! You go every day of the week. ' ' No, I have my mind made up, and you can ' t change it. I ' m going to work. So ofE to the Stiff, and when finals are over and grades come out, Dot ' s strength of mind has its reward. 71 Edith Neal Swayne, West Chester, Pa. I ' 11 tell yovi everything I can, There ' s too much to relate. I heard a very striking girl, Talk in a deep debate. ' ' Who are you, striking girl, ' ' ' You look so very strong. ' ' ' My name is Edith Swayne, ' I said. she said ; ' And I ' m here to right the wrong. ' Thomas Eothwell Taylor, K , Swarthmore, Pa. Got any dope ready for the Halcyon meeting Monday night? You haven ' t? Well get to work. We ' ve got to have a good meeting. Me? Well I haven ' t very much myself. You see I had t(i write most of that Phoenix this month. I ' ve a few of those little tricks with quick end- ings and some What made and Why is — with somebody ' s name on the end. You know what I mean. Darn it, I love those things. By the way, have you seen anything of my girl? I want to see her before the game starts. Charles Garrett Thatcher, d ' 2 ' A , Swarthmore, Pa. Whenever you are all mixed up and f eelin ' sick o ' men. Just go to old Charles Scarrett and he ' ll fix you up again. You ' d think him just a slow old cuss, with no chance at all for fame. But he ' s mighty tine to have around, he ' s always just the same. 73 Edith Freeman Tracy, IS I , Glyndon, Md. Sbe was just ready to start for the train— her hundred-trip ticket in her hand — when I paused and bade her tell the story of her life. She adjusted her chic Parisian hat and began: ' ' I am from the country — born and raised on a farm. When I landed here I certainly was a rare freshman, but I ' ve learned a great deal since — believe me. Are you fond of study? No, indeed, but take it from me I ' ve been working this year. Do you like society? But with a dazzling smile she apologized and hurried off — leaving me charmed with her sweet face and pleasant way; but she does use slang. Natalie Sudler Turner, Asbury Park, N. J. the write-up seeks and including: Natalie is not one of those insipid personalities that Jane Austin member of the Halcyon staff avoids. You can slam her about anything. Slamming other people — firmly and not gently. Borrowing — anything in Parrish. Talking — (no comment necessary). Jollying — ask Dr. Goddard, he ' ll tell you Miss Turner has unusually bright ideas. Cutting — Everything from collection to cake. Fussing — the poor masculine members of her table. Cooking — fudge to cream chicken with borrowed or stolen materials. Take your choice, and if you also want some real good fun, don ' t forget not likely to.) Natalie. (You ' re Evalynn Walker, Media, Pa. The junior who is just beginning to wear her hair up, who does her Wednesday ' s lessons on ilonday and her Thursday ' s lessons on Tuesday, who doesn ' t care for dances but has a good time at them all the same, who insists upon grace before feeds, and who never loafs except when she is eating her lunch and then she reads; who always carries her books in a little suit case, the space inside of which is almost filled with her lunch (honest). 74 Helen Motz Weaver, Aldan, Pa. Have you ever heard of Aldan? Have you ever seen a fair, diminutive maiden, staggering down the asplialtum loaded with two suit cases and a white muff? Well, that is Helen, bound for the illustrious city above mentioned. Is there a man at the bottom of it, we wonder, or is it just a simple case of starvation? Warren Wallace Weaver, ' ! I K, Winning winsome women. Eating enormously everywhere. Attempting automobilism. Valued vagary vagabond. Ever evading erudition, Raising rough riots ' round room. Philadelphia, Pa. Herman Elliott Wells, Nottingham, Pa. Say, Ellicut, got j ' our mechanics done? ' ' Great balls of fire, no ! I read it over, but Professor Lilly will wait awhile for those prob- lems, methinks. Sit down, though, and maybe we can worry ' em out together. I ' 11 see if Charley Smith has any extra chairs, if not I ' ll take one anyway. Take this one. I ' ve got some pears in the closet there if j ' ou want any. No? All right. I sorter like the things myself. Hi, there, Hollow! What can I do for you? Nothing? Well, don ' t go away mad and swear you haven ' t been here. What do you think of this picture I drew for surveying? Pi ' etty classy, ain ' t her? As soon as I get that pretty little title up there in the off corner it will be a bird, as sure as the divil made little oysters. The boss ' 11 give me an A in that yet. ' ' 75 Anne Deborah White, A . 6, Lansdowne, Pa. A Toast. Come fill up a bumper of lemonade, And drink with us now to the health of a maid, Who is jolly and clever and literar-ee, And works for us all like the famed busy bee. Trenton, N. J. Martha Willets, A ' A ' T, Captain of 1912 Hockey Team; President of the Woman ' s Suffrage League, anything that requires some one that has energy and is willing to use it. Why! I don ' t think thee ought to say things like that about me. People won ' t have the faintest idea of whom thee ' s talking. Yes, they will, Martha, it ' ll be labeled. We can ' t afford to take any chances on thy missing the point. 76 €x=ilembers; of 1912 George T. Ashton, EuTH Naomi Ayers, Gertrude M. Bartel, Caroline Edith Bunting, M. ' .RY Lois Bye. Phillip Jackscn Carpenter, K f, Ir en Hamilton Case, i| ' z K, Malel L. Ci-iapin, Louise ICnickeroccker Clement, Kelen S. Ccckran, James Z. Coltcn, Salcme B. Ccrle, DCRCTHY HeISTER CCESCN, Margery I. Day, RAY MC D K. Denwcrth, K +, ' Walter White Dillistin, 2 K, Minnie Bradpcbd Endicott, Frederick Erbinger, MiLPCRD G. Farley, K 2, Vaskti Louise Garey, Thaddeus E. Goldsborough, Lydia Eeece Green, K A e, Grace A. Gunderson, Annie L. Harvey, Mary L. Heckel, Albert Wareield Hoopes, i K -V, Katherine S. Klemm, Victor Hugo Lane, Margaret K. McMichael, EuTH L. McNeil, Sallie S. McSparran, Alice Elisabeth Mastin, K A 0, Grace Merrill, Margaret Lightfoct Price, Mary S. Pusey, Mary S. Eamsey, B n, Benjamin Satterthwaite, Jr., Laura D. Schull, FiNLEY H. ShILAND, Helen Moore Spackman, B n, Thomas Hastings Travilla, a T, William Eussell Tylor, Yensie Winifred Vibbert, Vernon Ecse Waddell, K A 0, Inez Mora Washburne, Edith W. Watson, Amy Weaver, Bertha Weaver, Marion C. Zimmerman. Deceased. 77 M PRESIDENT JA5J.SCH0CK VICE PRESIDENT ALBERT BAKER SEC R E TARY ANNA OPPEN LAN DER TREASURER ALDEN B.JONES PRESIDENT VICE-PRESIDENT SECRETARY TREASURER J.SVAN 5YCKEL KENNeIh FARMER IVA APPLEBY J AS MONAGHAN. tfi.-R. opf)omore Clasisi Katherine Elsie Anders, German, Fairview Village, Pa. IVA Adele Appleby, History, Wilmington, Del. Rose Foster Avery, Swarthmore, Pa. Arthur Underwood Ayees, Economics, Chester, Pa. Albert Brewer Baker, at, Mechanical Engineering, Mt. Washington, Md. William Mark Bittle, Civil Engineering, Swarthmore, Pa. jMary Ferris Blackburn, History, Baltimore, Md. Lillian Boyt, French, Seeane, Pa. William Holmes Brown, Civil Engineering, Leesburg, Ya. Fay Burger, ■History, Philadelphia, Pa. J. Augustus Cadwallader, K ' f Economics, Yardley, Pa. Ruth Anna Carlisle, Latin, West Grove, Pa. Sara Mildred Chandler, English, Oxford, Pa. Margaret Clifford, French, Swarthmore, Pa. Marion Coles, English, Merchautville, N. J. Russell Mahlon Cook, Civil Engineering, Salem, Ohio. Mary Anne Cordingly, History, Philadelphia, Pa. Walter Edwin Cox, A T Economics, Malvern, Pa. Helen Watson Davis, Latin, Shiloh, N. .J. Roy Welty Delaplaine, K S Elect rical Engineering, Waynesboro, Pa. Josephine House Dennison, German, Reading, Pa. Juanita May Downes, Greel ' , Chester, Pa. David Tully Dunning, I 2 K, Mechanical Engineering, Sussex, N. ,J. Kenneth Vernon Farmer, 4 2 K, Electrical Engineering , Newark, Ohio. Esther Kathryn Fell, K A e, French, Philadelphia, Pa. Edward Flick, Biology, Ol lahoma City, Okla. E. Josephine Foster, k K r, English, Trenton, N. J. Alice Pitman Garwood, English, Swarthmore, Pa. Louis Fred Gieg, K 2, Chemistry, Millville, N. J. Dorothy May Gill, History, Philadelphia, Pa. 79 William Henry Gillam, Jr., AT, Electrical Engineering, Langhorne, Pa. Francis Eiidolph Goehring, K S, Mechanical Engineering, Philadelphia, Pa. Grace Winter Greene, English, Dover, Del. Virginia Preston Griest, English, Lititz, Pa. Marguerite Hallowell, English, Ivyland, Pa. Margaret Buefington Hawkins, K A 9, Media, Pa. Emma Knox Hawthorne, English, Norristown, Pa. Grace Raymond Helmick, French, Helena, Mont. Edward West Hollingsworth, Civil Engineering, Bel Air, Md. Tacy Paul Hough, Biology, Ambler, Pa. Elizabeth Eachus Jackson, n B , PiiUic Speaking, Lansdowne, Pa. Elizabeth Keller, K A G, : Fhilosophy, Morton, Pa. William Vernon Kerns, Civil Engineering , Moline, 111. Edith Mary Kinnard, Mathematics, ' . Pendleton, Ind. Boswitha Agnes Kudlich German, New York, N. Y. Louise Makie Lawton, English, Skaneateles, N. Y. Lloyd Downs Lewis, English, Pendleton, Ind. Margaret Hoar Livingston, German, LansdoAvne, Pa. William Penn Lukens, Electric d Engineering, Woodlyn, Pa. Helen May McConaghy, n 2 English, Morton, Pa. Francis Miller MacDowell, Civil Engineering, Phoenicia, N. Y. Letitia McHose, n 2, Latin, . ' . ' Reading, Pa. Henry Lee Messner, K •j ' , English, Roaring Branch, Pa. Esther Midler, Economics, . Brooklyn, N. Y. James Monaghan, 2d, Biology, Philadelphia, Pa. Mary Wallace Mullen, 2d, French, Claymont, Del. Elizabeth Biggins Oliver, English, ' . . . ' Philadelphia, Pa. Anna Pauline Katharine Oppenlander, English, Philadelphia, Pa. Rebecca Tyler Osler, English, ' .. ' .■Pensauken, N. J. Francis Willard Pancoast, Mechanical Engineering, Swarthmore, Pa. J. Arthur Pancoast, Economics, Merchantville, N. J. Paul Benton Passmore, Civil Engineering, Butte, Mont. Anita Peck, English, Riverside, Conn. 80 Dorothy Phillips, k K F, English, Philaclelphia, Pa. Eakle Stanton Philips, ■i ' K 1-, Economics, Keunett Square, Pa. Elizabeth Johnson Phillips, Frcncli, Waterf orcl, Va. Mart Elizabeth Pidgeox, English, WadesviUe, Va. John Stewart Reid, a Y Electrical Engineering, Philadelphia, Pa. Wallace Wiltberger Rex, Civil Engineering, Churchville, Pa. James Jacob Schock, K 2 Mathematics, Okmulgee, Okla. Earle Raudenbush Seaman, Civil Engineering, Reading, Pa. Adaline Semple, n 2 English., Wilniingtou, Del. Martha Adeline Sharples, Latin, West Chester, Pa. Charles Carll Sheppard, Chemistry, Bridgetou, N. J. Anna Caroline Shoemakir, n B i| ' French, Philadelphia, Pa. Lillian Simons, K A 6, History, Swarthmore, Pa. James Russell Snyder, Mechanical Engineering , : Swarthmore, Pa. Marian Redpield Stearne, Mathematics, Philadelphia, Pa. Charles Pratt Stiles, K 2, Civil Engineering , Camden, N. J. CrECRGE Edmund Tar3LE, Economics, Martinsville, 111. Newton Tarble, K t, Economics, Martinsville, 111. Helen Tatman, German, Milford, Del. Harry Coleman Tily, I K t Electrical Engineering, Cynwyd, Pa. James Stephens Van Syckel, AT, Economics, . . Trenton, N. J. Donald Harpertson Van Trump, I ' K t Mechanical Engineering, Edge Moor, Del. Ellen Watson, English, Weiser, Idaho. Joseph Shalcross Webb, Meclianical Engineering, Sharon Hill, Pa. Mary Welsh, FuUic Stealing Rockville, Md. Clarence Jasper Weyant Civil Engineering, Fort Montgomery, N. .! . Helen .Josephine White, n 2 Biology, Lansdowne, Pa. Catherine Boyd Williams, k A e French, Philadelphia, Pa. Martha May Williams, 2, Latin, Sellersville, Pa. WiLLAED Fell Williams, 2 K, Civil Engineering, Wilmington, Del. Anna Worrell, German, Ogden, Pa. Katharine Lower Weay, French, Bellwood, Pa. Fred Garfield Young, Economics, West Chester, Pa. 81 Cxjilembersi of 1913 Pauline Makguekite Bailey, Elizabeth Babeett, Ethel Atwood Bates, Marion Beadenkopf, Elizabeth Boyer, Harper Vaughan Bressler, Elsie Anna Cummins, Sara Palmer Eastburne, Warren Elliot, K -f, Alfred Nathan Evans, 2 K, Norman Louis Force, 2 K, Warrex Earle Gatchell, Hattie Arline Good, Catherine Sarah Gutelius, Julie M. Hathaway, Eba M. Heritage, Ethel Mae Hickson, Deceased. Marguerite Stewart Hinchman, Ernest Richard Holt, Margaret Fries Hough, Charlotte Frisch Jacobs, Marie Brathwell Jacobs, Alden Bliss Jones, Alistee Boss Jones, Emma Deborah Kinsey, Clement Biddle Lewis, A T, Laurie Agnes McDonald, Charles Webb Major, K 2, Abner Thompson Mitchell, A T, Perin Jones Myers, Elsie Bradfield Smock, Ealph Benedict Vernon, K i ' , Gerald Boss Wakefield, Cornelia Needles Walker. 82 FRESHMEN PRESIDENT LE ROY DURBOROW VICE-PRESIDENT GEORGE W.GRIEST SECRETARY CONSTANCE BALL TREASURER WM. O. SOYARS ®[E(£(0)[K1[D) EMESTEI PRESIDENT WRU5SELL GREEN ICE-PRESIDENT OLIVER D. 5HEPARD. SECRETARY GERTRUDE K. WOOD TREASURER JOHN W. RAYMON OND Jfresifjman Clasis; Couvse Bfiviser Mary Jenkins Anderson, Dr. Holmes, Philadelphia, Pa. Julia Foster Avery, Dr. Hoadley, Swarthmore, Pa. Marion Emma Baker, n B , Dr. Miller, Lansdowue, Pa. Constance Calhoun Ball, k a 0, Dr. Hull, Lansdowne, Pa. Harold Calhoun Baxter Dr. Blessing, Philadelphia, Pa. Marie Safford Bender,. Dr. Dennison, Swarthmore, Pa. Edith Shakpless Blackburn, Dr. Dennison, Baltimore, Md. Eked Denard Blumhard, 1 S K , ' Dr. Hoadley, Philadelphia, Pa. Jane Eaymond Boudart, Dr. Trotter, Chester, Pa. William Harvey Gibson Bkadfield, K 2, Dr. Miller, Barnesville, Ohio. Paul Babcock Browning, AT, Dr. Blessing, Brooklyn, N. Y. EoEERT Stanton Browning, AT, Dr. Miller, Brooklyn, N. Y. Alice Lucie Bucher Dr. Battiii, Wilmington, Del. Howard Mahlon Buckman, Dr. Dennison, Trenton, N. J. Sarah Angeline Burns, Dr. Goddard, West CarroUton, Ohio. Raymond Taylor Bye, , Dr. Alleman, Germantown, Pa. Marjorie Tatnall Caldwell, K A 9, Dr. Dennison, Philadelphia, Pa. Wharton Barker Carroll, Dr. Miller, Philadelphia, Pa. Lucy Merritt Carvin, Miss Meeteer, Wilmington, Del. Edavard Leonard Caum, Dr. Trotter, Honolulu, Hawaii. Mary Walton Coles, - Dr. Goddard, Moorestown, K. J. Bessie Coles Collins, Dr. Miller, Moorestown, N. J. Harold Levi Collins, Dr. Trotter, Moorestown, N. J. John Joseph Coogan, K S, Dr. Blessing, Philadelphia, Pa. VValter Aloysius Coogan, K 2, Dr. Blessing, Philadelphia, Pa. 85 Archibald Allison Condo, K 2, Dr. Alleman, Howard, Pa. Ed Cos, Dr. Alleman, Richmond, Ind. Helen Coolbaugh Decker, Dr. Still, East Stroudsburg, Pa. Marcus Earl Delaxy, S K, Dr. Blessing, Lexington, Ky. Mary Anna Dalton, Dr. Battiii, Chester, Pa. Anna Emmelina Dana, ; Dr. Miller, Jenks, Pa. LeEoy Durborow, J S K, Dr. Boadley, Oxford, Pa. Beulah Thomas Elliott, Dr. Battin, West Liberty, Iowa. Nellie Eose Farley, Dr. Goddard, Bellingham, Wash. Marain Murdock Faust, Dr. Goddard, Swarthmore, Pa. Dorothea Fitch, K K r, Prof. Pearson, Flushing, N. Y. Aubrey Edward Eos, Dr. Blessing, Cadiz, Ohio. Justice Pitman Garwood, Dr. Blessing, Swarthmore, Pa. Blanche Gerhart, Dr. Miller, Quakertown, Pa. Marjorie Malvin Gideon, K a 6 Dr. Hull, ' . Philadelphia, Pa. Euth Carhart Gifpord, Dr. Hull, North East, Md. Dorothea Gillette, Dr. Miller, Bath Beach, N. Y. Herman Donald Gillis, Dr. Hoadley, Butte, Mont. Frank Weeder Githens, Dr. Alleman, Millville, N. J. .John Horace Githens, Dr. Alleman, Millville, N. J. Malcolm Mackenzie Green, i 2 K Mr. Robinson, Chester, Pa. Washington Eussel Green, Dr. Swain, Trenton, N. J. George Whittier Griest, K +, Dr. Miller, Lancaster, Pa. Mary Thornton Haines, Dr. Battin, Atlantic City, N. J. Marian Lloyd PIallowell, Dr. Holmes, Philadelphia, Pa. Eussel Harrison H.altom, K i:, Dr. Miller, Worthington, Ind. Edith Eoberts Harper, Dr. Holmes, Germantown, Pa. Anna Ethel Hart, Dr. Holmes, Lansdowne, Pa. Elizabeth Miller Hause, IT B , Dr. Hull, West Chester, Pa. Katharine Faith Herrman , n 2, Dr. Battin, Washington, D. C. Sara Dorothy Hill, n s, Dr. Miller, West Chester, Pa. Charles Boone Houston, K + , Mr. Bobinson, Chester, Pa. Egbert Haviland Hull, Dr. Hidl, Cortland, N. Y. 86 Harold Albeetson Jackson, S K, Mr. Eobinson, Brooklyn, N. Y. Caleb Heyburn Jones, Mr. Sobinsoii, Warcl, Pa. William Tennet Jordan, Dr. Trotter, Warner, N. H. Ethel Mullen Keech, Dr. Hull, West Chester, Pa. DiCRANOUKi Kultjdjian, Dr. Goddard, Marsovan, Tnrkey. Mary Buchanan Laird, Frof. Pearson, Chester, Pa. Victoria Clothier Leslie, K K r, Dr. Holmes, Swarthmore, Pa. Eleanor Ashton Lewis, K a e, Dr. Battin, Madison, Me. Ealph Linton, Dr. Allemaii, Moorestown, N. J. Nanct Irene Loucks, Prof. Pearson, Scottdale, Pa. Edwin Adams Lucas, Dr. Miller, Elgin, 111. Mary W. Lukens, Mr. Sedfield, Woodlyn, Pa. Emma Dallas Lungren, Dr. Miller, Swarthmore, Pa. Maurice McNulley Lutz, k 2, Dr. Blessing, Waynesboro, Pa. Lela Alice Lynam,. Dr. Dennison, Newport, Del. Florence Speakman MacFarland, Dr. Holmes West Chester, Pa. James Bernard McGovern, Dr. Alleman, Cleveland, Ohio. Norman Leroy McKissick, K + Dr. Hoadley, West Chester, Pa. W. Christie MacLeod, Dr. Holmes, Philadelphia, Pa. Margaret Barber Marr, Tl B f , Prof. Pearson, Swarthmore, Pa. Euth Marietta Marshall Dr. Battin, Kennett Square, Pa. John Joseph Matthews, 2 K Dr. Blessing, Brooklyn, N. Y. Harry A. Mazer, Dr. Blessing, Philadelphia, Pa. Joel Miller Melick, i T Dr. Trotter, Media, Pa. Florence Caroline Miller, Dr. Battin, Philadelphia, Pa. Elizabeth Deitz Morton, n 2, Dr. Miller, Palmyra, N. J. Edwin Randall Murch, 2 K, Dr. Alleman, Glen Ridge, N. J. Albert Roy Ogden, at, Dr. Dennison, Detroit, Mich. RCGER Bacon Owings Dr. Hoadley, Simpsonville, Md. Laura Elizabeth Parry, K K r, Dr. Holmes, Langhorne, Pa. Jean Scarlett Pennock, K a e, Dr. Trotter, Kennett Square, Pa. Gilbert Richard Phillips, Dr. Blessing, Mahanoy City, Pa. Marian Marshall Pierce, .Dr. Hv2l, West Chester, Pa. 87 Edna Postlethwaite, Dr. Dennison, Sewiekley, Pa. Ella Holstein Potts, Dr. Trotter, Norristown, Pa. Makian Annie Praed, Dr. Battiii, Plainiield, N. J. Grace Mat Prickitt, Dr. Bedfield, Swarthmore, Pa. John William Eaymond, K t, Dr. Blessing, Brooklyn, N. Y. Marguerite Reeves, K k r, Dr. Hull, Trenton, N. J. Mart Carter Roberts, . . . Dr. Miller, Norristown, Pa. Clayton Taylor Rogers, i t, Dr. Hoadley Asheville, N. C. Mart Wilson Ross, Mr. Bedfield, Moorestown, N. J. Edith Dudlet Ruddeedw, Prof. Pearson, Moorestown, N. J. Jacob Trachtenberg Schless, Dr. Blessing, Philadelphia, Pa. Mart Emma Schmidt, ri 2 Dr. Miller, Philailelphia, Pa. Oliver Shepard, at Dr. Blessing, Mt. Washington, Md. Caroline Shoemaker, n B , Mr. Bedfield, Philadelphia, Pa. Rachel Comelt Shoemaker, K K r, Dr. Dennismi, Philadelphia, Pa. Frances Emma Smith, Prof. Pear.ion, ■Chatham, Pa. Marian Ruth Smith, Dr. Goddnrd, Royersf ord. Pa. Mary Anna Smith, Dr. Holmes, Newtown, Pa. Stephen Gregory Sokolofsky Dr. Blessing, Philadelphia, Pa. William Oglesby ' Soyars, Dr. Trotter, Hopkiusville, Ky. Anna Marguerite Spackman, n B t , Dr. BuU, Coatesville, Pa. Martha Travilla Speakman, K a O, Dr. Holmes, Swarthmore, Pa. Anna Paul Kirk Stapler Dr. Holmes, Abington, Pa. Albert Robert Strang, K 1, Dr. Hoadley, Pleasantville, N. J. Carolyn Lucy Stratton, Dr. Miller, E. Chattanooga, Teun. John Rowan Sweeney, Dr. Alleman, Chester, Pa. Mary Conrow Thomas, Dr. Holmes, Cinnaminfon, N. J. Miriam Helen Van Horn, . Dr. Trotter, Plainfield, N. J. Mart Patience Walton, Dr. Swain, Swarthmore, Pa. Hershel Corson Ware, Dr. Alleman, Millville, N. J. Mildred Storm Warner, Dr. Goddard, Philadelphia, Pa. Charles Jackson Waters, y, Dr. Blessing, Mt. Washington, Md. Verna Martha Wat, Dr. Goddard, Port Matilda, Pa. Sarah Holmes WEBSTEft, John Jeremiah Werner, Mabel Amelia Werner, John Comlt White, Edith Egberts Williams, Florence Ruth Wilson, Gertrude King Wood, K K r, Frederick Houston Worrell William Alexander Worth, Iv +, .Prof. Pearson, .Dr. Miller, . Dr. Baitiii, . . . .Dr. Blessing, . .Prof. Pearson, .Dr. Dennison ' , . Dr. Batlin, . . , .Mr. Itoliinson, .Dr. Blessing, . Merchantville, N. J. . Fogelsville, Pa. . Wilmington, Del. . Laiifdowne, Pa. . Norristown, Pa. . Cliester, Pa. . Trenton, N. J. . Swarthmore, Pa. .Coatesville, Pa. 89 r J _: ■' ■W : 1- - 1 iV ' . V w P- mr m i Chapter of tbe appa igma Jfraterttitp Founded at the University of Virginia, 1S67. Fraternity Organ : — Caduceus. Fraternity Colors: — Scarlet, White and Emerald. Fraternity Flower: — Lily of the Valley. Annual Banquet of tlie Chapter was held at the Bellevue-Stratford, January 14, 1911. Charles A. Eeerle, George E. Boughtox, James E. Mitchell, Donald R. Ferguson, Louis F. Gieg, Francis E. Goehring, Gibson Bradfield, Archibald Condo, John Coogan, ■Valtek CoogAN, MDCCCCXI. MDCCCCXII. MDCCCCXIII. James J. Shock. MDCCCCXIV. P2 Hakry L. Miller, Conrad A. Wickham. Charles A. Smith, Thomas E. Taylor. Roy W. Delaplaine, Charles P. Stiles, EUSSELL HALTOM, Edwin Lucas, Maurice Lutz, Albert Strang. Eappa igma Cfjapter Eoll Beta, University of Alabama, 1899 Gamma, Lovdsiana State University, 1887 Delta, Davidson CoHege, 1890 Zeta, University of Virginia, 1867 Eta, RancTolpli-Maeon, 1885 Theta, Cnmberland University, 1887 Iota, Southwestern University, 1886 Kappa, Vanderbilt University, 1876 Lambda, University of Tennessee, 1879 Nu, William and Mary College, ■1890 Xi, University of Arkansas, 1891 Pi, Swarthmore College, 1888 Sigma, Tulane University, 1888 Tau, University of Texas, 1884 Upsilon, Hampden-Sidney College, 1883 Phi, Southwestern Presbyterian University, 1882 Chi, Purdue University, 1885 Psi, University of Maine, 1886 Omega, University of the South, 1881 Eta-Prime, Trinity College, N. C, 1893 Alpha- Alpha, University of Maryland, 1897 Alpha-Beta, Mercer University, 1891 Alpha-Gamma, University of Illinois, 1891 Alpha-Delta, Pennsylvania State College, 1892 Alpha-Epsilon, University of Pennsylvania, 1891 Alpha-Zeta, University of Michigan, 1892 Alpha-Eta, George Washington University, 1896 Alpha-Theta, Southwestern Baptist University, 1892 Alpha-Kappa, Cornell University, 1892 Alpha-Lambda, University of Vermont, 1893 Alpha-Mu, University of North Carolina, 1893 Alpha-Nu, Wofford College, 1893 Alpha-Pi, Wabash College, 1895 Alpha-Eho, Bowdoin College, . 1895 Alpha-Sigma, Ohio State University, 1895 Alpha-Tau, Georgia School of Technology, 1895 Alpha-Phi, Bucknell University, 1896 Alpha-Chi, Lake Forest University, 1896 Alpha-Psi, University of Nebraska, 1897 Alpha-Upsilon, Millsaps College, 1895 Alpha-Omega, William Jewell College 1897 Beta- Alpha, Brown University, 1898 Beta-Beta, Richmond College, 1898 Beta-Gamma, Missouri State University, 1898 Beta-Delta, Washington and Jefferson College, 1898 Beta-Epsilon, University of Wisconsin, 1898 Beta-Zeta, Leland Stanford, Jr., University, 1899 Beta-Eta, Alabama Polytechnic Institute, 1900 Beta-Theta, University of Indiana, 1900 Beta-Iota, Lehigh University, 1900 Beta-Kappa, New Hampshire College, 1901 Beta-Lameda, University of Georgia, 1901 Beta-Mu, University of Minnesota, 1901 Beta-Nd, Kentucky State College, 1901 Bbta-Omiceon, University of Denver, 1902 Beta-Pi, Dickinson College, 1902 Beta-Eho, University of Iowa, 1902 Beta- Sigma, Washington University, 1902 94 Beta-Tau, Baker University, 1903 Gamma- Beta-Xi, University of California, 1901 Gamma- Beta-Phi, Case School of Applied Science, 1903 Gamma- Beta-Chi, Missonri School of Mines, 1903 Gamma- Beta-Psi, University of Washington, 1903 Gamma- Beta-Upsilon, North Carolina A. and M. College, 1904 Gamma- Beta-Omega, Colorado College, 1904 Gamma- Mu, Washington and Lee University, 1904 Gamma- Gamma- Alpha, University of Oregon, 1904 Gamma- Gamma-Beta, University of Chicago, 1904 Gamma- Gamma-Gamma, Colorado School of Mines, 1904 Delta, Massachusetts State College, 1904 Epsilon, Dartmouth College, 1905 Zeta, New York University, 1905 Eta, Harvard University, 1905 Theta, University of Idaho, 1905 Iota, Syracuse University, 1906 Kappa, University of Oklahoma, 1906 Mu, Washington State College, 1908 Nu, Washburn College, 1908 -Xi, Dennison University, 1911 Alumni Cfjaptersi Boston, Mass. Bqffalo, N. T. Ithaca, N. Y. New- York, N. Y. Philadelphia, Pa. SCEANTON, Pa. Danville, Va. ' LYNCHBLTtG, Va. Newport News, Va. Norfolk, Va. Richmond, Va. Washington, D. C. Concord, N. C. Durham, N. C. Kingston, N. C. Wilmington, N. C. Atlanta, Ga. Birmingham, Ala. Mobile, Ala. Montgomery, Ala. Savannah, Ga. Chattanooga, Tenn. Covington, Tenn. Jackson, Tenn. Memphis, Tenn, Nashville, Tenn. Columbus, Ohio. Louisville, Ky. Pittsburg, Pa. Chicago, III. Danville, III. Indianapolis, Ind. Milwaukee, Wis. Port Smith, Ark. 95 Kansas City, Mo. Little Rock, Ark. Pine Bluff, Ark. St. Louis, Mo. Jackson, Miss. New Orleans, La. RusTON, La. Texaekana, Texas-Ark. ViCKSBURG, Miss. Waco, Texas. Yazoo City, Miss. Denver, Colo. Salt Lake City, Utah. Los Angeles, Cal. San Francisco, Cal. Portland, Ore. Seattle, Wash. ennsiplbania l appa Cijapter ot tbe t)i appa i Jfraternitp Founded at Washington and Jefferson College, 1852. Fraternity Organ: — The ShicXd. Fraternity Colors: — Lavender and Pinl: Fraternity ' Floayer: — Sweet Pea. The annual banquet of the Chapter was held at the Bellevue-Stratford, January 7, 1911. Raymond Keenan Denavorth. Eay ' moxd Clark Store, J. Augustus Cadwallader, Earle Stanton Phillips, Donald Harpertson Van Trump, George AVhittier Griest, Charles Boone Huston, MDCCCCX. Joseph Franklin Gaskill. MDCCCCXI. MDCCCCXII. MDCCCCXIII. MDCCCCXIV. William Alexander AVorth. 96 Albert Merritt Pitcher. Claude Francis Gilchrist. Henry Lee Messner, Harry Coleman Tily, Newton Tarble. Norman Leboy McKissick, John William Raymond, Jr., 33()i mappa 33 1 Chapter EoU Pa. Alpha, Washington and Jefferson, 185 Va. Alpha, University of Virginia, 1853 Pa. Beta, Allegheny College, 18.5.5 Va. Beta, Washington and Lee University, 1855 Pa. Gamma, Biicknell University, 1855 Pa. Epsilox, Gettysburg College, 1855 Miss. Alpha, University of Mississippi, 1857 Pa. Zeta, Dickinson College, 1858 Pa. Eta, Franklin and Marshall College, I860 O. Alpha, Oliio Wesley an University, 1861 III. Alpha, Northwestern University, 1861 Ind. Alpha, De -Pauw University, 1865 O. Beta, Wittenbnrg College, 1866 Ia. Alpha, University of Iowa, 1867 Pa. Theta, Lafayette College, 1869 N. Y. Alpha, Cornell University, 186!) Ind. Beta, University of Indiana, 1869 Kan. Alpha, University of Kansas, 1876 Pa. Iota, University of Pennsylvania, 1877 O. Delta, Ohio State University, 1880 Md. Alpha, Johns Hopkins University, 1880 Wis. Gamma, Beloit College, 1881 N. Y. Beta, Syracuse Universitj , 1884 N. Y. Epsilon, Colgate University, 1887 Minn. Beta, University of Minnesota, 1888 Pa. Kappa, Sw arthmore College, 1889 W. Va. Alpha, University of West Virginia, 1890 Cal. Beta, Leland Stanford, Jr., University, 1891 N. Y. Gamma, Columbia University, 1892 N. Y. Zeta, Brooklyn Polytechnic, 1893 III. Beta, Unix-ersitj ' of Chicago, 189-t Mich. Alpha, University of Michigan, 1894 Neb. Alpha, University of Nebraska, 1895 Mass. Alpha, Amherst College, 1895 N. H. ALPH.A, Dartmouth College, 1896 Cal. Gamma, University of California, 1896 Wis. Alpha, University of Wisconsin, 1896 Ind. Delta, Purdue University, 1901 Tenn. Delta, Vanderbilt University, 1901 E. I. Alpha, Brown University, 1902 Texas Alph.a, University of Texas, 1904 III. Delta, University of Illinois, 1904 0. Epsilon, Case School of Applied Science, 1906 Mo. Alpha, University of Missour-i, .1908 98 Alumni Clui Harvard. Alumni si ociationsi Baltimore, Philadelphia, Pittsburg, Meadville, Newark, New York, Buffalo, Washington, Cleveland, Springfield, BUCTRUS, Indianapolis, Anderson, Chicago, Minneapolis, Denver, Portland, San Francisco, Toledo, Columbus, Cincinnati, Omaha, Boston, Seattle, Johnstown, Duluth, Easton, Lancaster, Kansas City. 99 Ixjartijmore Cjjapter of tbc Selta %siilon Jfraternitp Pounded at Williams College, 1S34. Fraternity Organ: — Delta Vpsilon Quarterly. Fraternity Colors: — Old Gold and Peacocl: Blue. Fraternity FL0 1:R: — Garnet Carnation. Chapter Organ: — Triangle. The annual banquet of the Chapter was held at the Bellevue-Stratford January 28, 1911. Thomas Heston Hall, Edward Edssell Perkins, Walter Lee Lukens, Richard Henry ' Mdrfit, Albert B. Baker, John S. Keid, Paul Babcock Browning, Robert Stanton Browning, Joel Miller Melick, MDCCCOXI. MDCCCCXII. Byron T. Roberts. MDCCCCXIII Walter E. Cox. MDCCCCXIV. Oliver Day Shepard. 100 Henry Lawrence Hess, Emmor Roberts. Lawrence Price Sharples, Preston T. Roberts, James Stephens Van Syckel, William Henry Gillam, Albert Eoy Ogdbn, Clayton Taylor Rogers, Charles Jackson Waters, I McCiLL I tUBRASKf 1 TORONTO cHlCA o E.A.WRIGHT, PHILA. Belta %gilon Williams College, 1S34 Union College, 1838 Hamilton College, 1847 Amlierst College, 1847 Adelbert College, 1847 Colby University, 185 University of Rochester, 1852 Middlebury College, 1856 Bowdoin College, 1857 Eutgers College, 1858 Brown University, 1860 Colgate University, 1865 University of the City of Nen- York, 1865 University of Miami, 1868 Cornell University, 1869 Marietta College, 1870 Syracuse University, 1873 University of Michigan, 1876 Northvs ' estern University, 1880 Harvard University, 1880 Chapter a oU LIuiversity of Wisconsin, 1885 Lafayette College, 1885 Columbia University, 1885 Lehigh University, 1885 Tufts College, 1886 De Pauw University, 1887 University of Pennsylvania, 1888 University of California, 1896 Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1891 Swarthmore College, 1894 Leland Stanford, Jr., University, 1896 University of California 1896 McGill University, 1898 LTniversity of Nebraska. 1898 University of Toronto, 1890 University of Chicago, 1901 University of Ohio, 1904 University of Illinois, 1905 University of Washington, 1910 New York, Chicago, New England, Minnesota, Buffalo, Indiana, Peninsular, duluth-superior, Utah, MiLAA ' AUKEE, Alumni ggotiationd Harvard Graduate Schools, Montreal, Omaha, Rhode Island, Oxford University, Philadelphia, Cleveland, . Maine, Colorado, Albany, Chesapeake, California, Western Canada, Trenton, Montana, PuGET Sound, 102 3Pi)i Chapter ot the {)i igma Eappa Jftraternitp Founded at Massachusetts Agiicultiu-al College, 1873. Fkaternitt Organ: — The Signet. Fraternity Colors: — Silver and Magenta Bed. Fraternity Flower: — Sed Carnation. The annual banquet of the Chapter was held at the Bellevue-Stratford, March 4, 1911. EassELL A. Henry, WiLMER 0. Button, J. Ernest Hartman, David Tully Dunning, WiLLARD F. Williams, Fred Denard Blumhard, M. Earl Delany, LeRoy Durborow, Malcolm M. Green, MDCCCCX. H. Lawrence Beecher. MDCCCCXI. James A. Watson. MDCGCCXII. Joseph D. Stites. MDCCCCXIII. MDCCCCIV. 103 Arthur Eobinson, Charles Garrett Thatcher, Warren Wallace Weaver, Kenneth V. Farmer, Herbert L. Blumhard. Harold A. Jackson, John Joseph Mathews, E. Randall Murch, Max E. Stockton. f)i igma appa Cfjapter Eoll Alpha, Massaelnisetts Agricultural College, 1873 Beta, Union University, 1888 Gamma, Cornell University, 1889 Delta, West Virginia University, 1891 Epsilon , Yale University, 1893 Zeta, College of the City of New York, 1896 Eta, University of Maryland, 1897 Theta, Columbia University, 1897 Iota, Stevens Institute of Technology, 1899 Kappa, Pennsylvania State College, 1899 Lambda, George Washington University, 1899 Mu, University of Pennsylvania, 1900 Nu, Lehigh University, 1901 Xi, Saint Lawrence University, 1902 Omicron, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1902 Pi, Franklin and Marshall College, 1903 Sigma, Saint John ' s College, 1903 Rho, Queen ' s University, Ontario, 1903 Tau, Dartmouth College, 1905 Upsilon, Brown University, 1906 Phi, Swarthmore College, 1906 Chi, Williams College, 1906 Psi, University of Virginia, 1907 Omega, University of California, Berkeley, 1909 105 Ipfja peta Chapter of appa Ipba l fieta Jfraternitp rounded at De Pauw University, 1870. Fraternity Magazine: — Kappa Alpha Theta (Quarterly). Fraternity Colors: — Gold and Blacl. Fraternity Flower: — Gold and Blade Pansy. Annie Hilborn, Hannah Clothier Hull, Frances Morgan Swain, Ellen Williams Battin, Therese Dorrance Spackman, Amy Baker, Carolyn Hallowell Smbdley, Esther Kathryn Fell, Elizabeth Keller, Constance L. Ball, Marjorie JIalvine Eose Gideon, Jean Scarlett Pennock, Ellen Atkinson Jenkins, Anna Atkinson Sellers, Annie Shoemaker Hawke, Sarah Wood Passmgre, MDCCCCXI MDCCCCXII. Anna Deborah White. MDCCCCXIII. Lillian Simons. MDCCCCXIV. 106 Marguerite Campion, Juliet Crosset Kent, Katharine Andrews Gay. Margaret Broomell. Mary Eliza Osgood, Mildred Grace Hoadley, Margaret Bufeington Hawkins, Catherine Boyd Williams, Marjorie Tatnall Caldwell, Eleanor Ashton Lewis, Martha Travilla Speakman. TIFFANY CO. mappa mpfja fteta Cfjapter I oll Alpha, De Pauw University, 1870 Beta, Indiana State University, 1870 Delta, University of Illinois, 1875 Epsilon, Wooster University, 1875 Eta, University of Micliigan, 1879 Iota, Cornell University, 1881 Kappa, University of Kansas, 1881 Lambda, University of Vermont, 1881 Mu, Allegheny College, 1881 Omega, University of California, 1887 Eho, University of Nebraska, 1887 Tau, Northwestern University, 1887 Upsilon, University of i Iinnesota, 1889 Phi, Stanford University, 1889 Chi, Syracuse University, 1889 Psi, University of Wisconsin, 1890 Alpha-Beta, Swarthmore College, : 1891 Alpha-Gamma, Ohio State University, 18912 Alpha-Delta, Woman ' s College of Baltimore, 1896 Alpha-Epsilon, Brown University, 1898 Alpha-Zeta, Barnard College, 1898 Alpha-Eta, Vanderbilt University, 1904 Alpha-Theta, Texas University, 1904 Sigma, Toronto University, 1905 Gamma, Butler College, 1906 Alpha-Kappa, Adelphi College, 1907 Alpha-Iota, Washington University, 1908 Alpha-Lambda, University of Washington, 1908 Alpha-Mu, University of Missouri, 1909 Alpha-N u, Montana State University, 1909 Alpha-OmicrcSn, University of Oklahoma, 1909 Alpha-Xi, Oregon State University, 1909 Alumnae Cfjapterg Green CASTLE, Ind. Minneapolis, Minn. Neav York City, N. Y. Chicago, III. Columbus, Ohio. Indianapolis, Ind. Burlington, Vt. Philadelphia, Pa. Los Angeles, Cal. Pittsburg, Pa. Cleveland, Ohio. Syracuse, N. Y. Kansas City, Mo. 108 Seattle, Wash. ToPEKA, Kan. Denver, Col. St. Louis, Mo. Lincoln, Neb. San Francisco, Cal, ennsiplljania Ipfja Chapter of the $i peta $6i jFraternitj Founded at Monmouth College, III., 18G7 Fraternity Organ: — The Arrow (Quarterly). Fraternity Colors: — Wine and Silver Bhie. Fraternity Flower: — Wine Carnation. Anna Belle Boyle, Helen Crawford Marr, Mary Stuart Ramsey, Alexandra Beatrice Eogers, Elizabeth Eachus Jackson, Marion Baker, Elizabeth Hause, MDCCCCXI. Alice Mulfoed Stover. MDCCCGXir. Ida Dorothy Strode. MDCOCCXIII. MDCCCCXIV. Anna Spackman. 109 Margaret Vail Harned, Edith Tracey, Eleanor Augusta Eittenhouse, Mabel Lydia Stiner, Anna Caroline Shoemaker. Margaret Marr, Caroline Shoemaker, i Peta $f)i Cfjapter EoU I.v. Alpha, Iowa Weslej ' an Universit} ' , 1868 III. Beta, Lombard Universit} ' , 1873 Kan. Alpha, Kansas University, 1873 Ia. Beta, Simpson College, 1874 lA. Zeta, Iowa State University, 1882 III. Delta, Knox College, lS8i Col. Alpha, University of Colorado, 1885 Col. Beta, Denver University, , 1885 Mich. Alpha, Hillsdale College, 1887 Mich. Beta, University of Michigan, 188S IND. Alpha, Franklin, 1888 0. Alpha, Ohio State University, 1889 Columbia Alpha, Colnmbia University 1889 , La. Alpha, Tulane University, 1891 Pa. Alpha, Swarthmore College, 1892 Vt. Alpha, Middlebury College, 1893 Ind. Beta, University of Indiana, 1893 Wis. Alpha, University of Wisconsin, 1894 0. Beta, Ohio State University, 1894 Pa. Beta, Bucknell University, 1895 III. Epsilon, Northwestern University,. 1894 Neb. Beta, University of Nebraska, 1895 N. Y. Alpha, Syracuse University, 1896 Mass. Alpha, Boston University, 1896 Md. Alph.a, Women ' s College of Baltimore, 1897 iND. Gamma, University of Indianapolis, 1897 III. Zeta, University of Illinois. 1898 Vt. Beta, University of Vermont, 1898 Mo. Alpha, University of Missouri, 1899 Cal. Beta, University of California, 1900 Tex. Alpha, University of Texas, 1902 Pa. Gamma, Dickinson College, 1903 N. Y. Beta, Barnard College, 1904 Cal. Alpha, Leland Stanford, Jr., University, 1905 Ia. Gamma, Iowa State College, 1906 Minn. Alpha, University of Minnesota, 1906 Mo. Beta, Washington University, 1907 Wash. Alpha, University of Washington, 1907 Ontario Alpha, Toronto University, 1908 Arkansas Alpha, LTniversity of Arkansas, 1909 Ohio Gamma, Wooster University, 1910 Oklahoma Alpha, Oklahoma University, 1910 Wyoming Alpha, Wyoming University, 1910 111 Alumnae CIuIjs Washington, D. C. Philadelphia, Pa. Pittsburg, Pa. Lewisbltrg, Pa. jS ' EW York City, N. Y. Syracuse, N. Y. Boston, Mass. Baltimore, Md. Columbus, O. Clevelak d, O. Athens, O. Chicago, III. Galesburg, III. Carthage, III. Indianapolis, Ind. Franklin, Ind. Detroit, Mich. Los Angeles, Cal. Berkeley, Cal. Hillsdale, Mich. Minneapolis, Minn. Des Moines, Ia. Burlington, Ia. Mt. Pleasant, Ia. Indianola, Ia. Ames, Ia. Iowa City, Ia. Kansas City, Mo. St. Joseph, Mo. St. Louis, Mo. Lincoln, Neb. Council Bluffs, Ia. Lawrence, Kan. New Orleans, La. Denver, Col. Boulder, Col. Seattle, Wash. Madison, Wis. Alumnae sssiociationsi Washington, D. C. Creston, Ia. Laavkence, Kan. BlANSAS City, Mo. New York City. Lincoln, Neb. Boston, Mass. Burlington, Vt. Athens, O. New Orleans, La. Frankford, Ind. Indianapolis, Ind. Chicago, III. Galesburg, III. Detroit, Mich. Syracuse, N. Y. Baltimore, Md. Columbus, 0. Los Angeles, Cal. Topeka, Kan. Philadelphia, Pa. Des Moines, Ia. Mt. Pleasant, Ia. Indianola, Ia. Ames, Ia. St. Louis, Mo. St. Joseph, Mo. Boulder, Col. 112 ?Peta 3ota Cijapter of tlx Eappa Eappa amma Jfraternitp Founded at Mouiiiouth College, IllinoiEi, 1870. Fraternity Organ: — The Key. Fraternity Colors: — Light and Dark Blue. Fraternity Flower : — Fleur-de-tis. The annual luucheou of the Chapter was held at the Marlborough-Blenheini, May 13, 1911. Helen Lukens, Frances Jones, Edith Harriet Baker, Elizabeth Weeks Cadwallader, Elizabeth White, Elisabeth Hallowell Bartlett, Avis Loraine Fitch, Eliza Josephine Foster, Dorothea Fitch, Laura Elizabeth Parry, Victoria Clothier Lesley, MDCCCCX. Edna Clayton Jones. MDCCCCXI. MDCCCCXII. Martha Willets. MDCCCCXIII. Martha Adeline Sharples. MDCCCCXIV. Hallie Hulburt Douglass, Martha E. Blessing. Helen Roderfield Parker, Sarah Gilpin Heyburn, Katharine Eeinoeiil Witmeyer. Anne Shoemaker Haines, Phebe Lukexs, Dorothy Phillips, Marguerite Beeves, Rachel Comly Shoemaker, Gertrude King Wood. 113 55SH 1 ■- - ' • . ' 1 pk j I H Wjm ; ' ;3i B v H H H Hi ■B «t H I B HivV iS BHB H| V| |p fl ' B lB 1 ■:W- •:- vr ? J mS [ J S I ksSm ' —- Kk B K H ■r W-V,: : :- M|y n ■ifl IP t %i t - y W ,4 ' H L mjSt . ILr W B k ' L. .5 : , l 1 H ' k ! ST lk-:i! appa appa ( amma Chapter 3 oll Phi, Boston Ilniversity, 18S2 Beta-Epsilox, Barnard College, 1891 Beta-Sigma, Adelphi College, N. Y., 1896 Psi, Cornell University, 1883 Beta-Tau, Syracuse University, 1883 Beta- Alpha, University of Pennsylvania, 1890 Beta-Iota, Swarthmore College, 1893 Gammo-Eho, Allegheny College, 1888 Beta-Upsilon, West Virginia University, 1906 Lameda, Buchtel College, 1877 Beta-Gamma, Wooster University, 1876 Beta-Nu, Ohio State University, . ' 1888 Beta-Delta, University of Michigan, 1890 Xi, Adrian College 1882 Kappa, Hillsdale College 1880 Delta, Indiana State University, 1873 Iota, De Pauw University, 1875 Mu, Butler College, 1878 Eta, University of Wisconsin, 1875 Beta-Lambda. University of Illinois, 1900 Upsilon, Northwestern University, 1882 Epsilon, Illinois Wesleyan, 1874 Chi, University of Minnesota, 1882 Beta-Zeta, Iowa State University, 1875 Theta, Missouri State University, 1881 Sigma, Nebraska State University, 1883 Omega, Kansas State University, 1880 Beta-Mu, Colorado State University, 1902 Beta-Xi, Texas State University, 1892 Beta-Omicron, Tulane University, 1902 Pi, University of California, 1902 Beta-Eta, Leland Stanford, Jr., University, 1904 Beta-Pi, University of Washington, 1905 Beta-Phi, University of Montana. 1909 Beta-Chi, University of Kentucky, 1910 Alumnae sisiociationsi Boston. Ne v York. Buffalo. Beta Iota. Syracuse. Philadelphia, Meadville. Pittsburg. Columbus. Cleveland. Akron. Adrian. Bloomington, Ind. Indianapolis. Iota. Bloomington, III. Chicago. Madison. Milwaukee. Iowa City. St. Louis. Columbia, Mo. Minnesota. Des Moines. Lincoln. Washington State. Pl Los Angeles. New Orleans. Texas. Denver. Kansas City. 115 I §5 isma Faunded at Swartbmore College, 1905. Emma Dora Marshall, MDCCCCXI. Elizabeth Evans Price. MDCCCCXII. Clara Frazee. Angeline Johnson Power, Helen May McConaghy, Letitia McHose, Katharine Herrmann, Sarah Dorothy Hill, MDCCCCXIII. Mary Welsh. MDCCCCXIV. Helen Josephine White, Adeline Semple, Elizabeth Deitz Morton, Mart E. Schmidt. 116 i)i peta Eappa Cpsiilon Chapter of enngplbania Founded at William and Mary College, December 5, 1776. Fraternity Colors: — Blue and Pink. President: Vice President: Secretary and Treasurer : Caroline E. Hall, ' 78. George E. Ellsler, ' 90. Helen B. S. Bbinton, ' 95 Executive Committee: Caroline E. Hall, ' 78, George E. Ellsler, ' 90, J. Carroll Hayes, ' 89, Abby Mary Hall Egberts, ' 90. EoLAND G. Kent, ' 95, Gbartcr IRcmbcrs Edward H. Magill (Brown University Chapter), William Hyde Appleton (Harvard Chapter). jfratres in ffacultatc William Hyde Appleton (Harvard Chapter), Harold Clarke Goddard (Amherst Chapter). Benjamin F. Battin (Swarthmore Chapter), John Eussel Hayes (Svi ' arthmore Chapter), Elizabeth Powell Bond (Svparthmore Chapter), Jesse H. Holmes (Nebraska University Chapter), Isabelle Beonk (Swarthmore Chapter), William I. Hull (Swarthmore Chapter), Guy Blandin Colburn (Brown University Chapter), Louis N. Eobinson (Swarthmore Chapter), Walter Dennison (Michigan University Chapter), S. L. Millard Eosenburg (Univ. of Penna. Chapter), Joseph Swain (Swarthmore Chapter). Monorarg embcve Elizabeth Powell Bond, William W. Birdsall, Howard M. Jenkins, William P. Potter, Joseph Swain, Franklin Spencer Edmunds. Class ot 1910 Anna F. Campbell, Gurdon B. Jones, Eoger F. Gephakt, Jean H. Walker. Class ot 1911 Anna Heydt, Benjamin Kibson, Alice Mulpord Stover. Deceased. 118 poofe anb llep — Senior S ocietp Joseph Henry Willits, .Thomas Heston Hall. IDembers Lew Wallace Darnall, Hakry Lynn Miller, Edward Russell Perkins, Emmor Roberts, James Aloysids Watson. Deceased. 120 UrclCM riiJlM. 3Pi igma €U Oreanized 1907. A committee of young women chosen annually from the iueoming Senior Class, whose object is the furthering of student responsibility toward the best interests of the college. The members are elected with reference to character, scholarship and loyalty to Swarthmore. MDCCCCXI.. Anna Allen, Ann. Heydt, Gladys Coker, t Elizabeth Richards. Anna D. White, MjUitha Willets, CjVROLYN Smedley, MDCCCCXII. Anna Haslitt, Mabel Stiner, Eleanor Eittenhouse,. Edith Swayne.. tEx-1911. 121 m Ipja micron 1911 F. Whitmek Atkinson, John A. Baknakd, Harold H. Millar, Benjamin W. Collins. 1913 J. Arthur Pancoast, Earle E. Seaman, Fred G. Young, Joseph S. Webb, Holmes D. Brown. 1914 Roger B. Owings, Gilbert R. Phillips. 122 fcaartfjmore College iiranci) of tljc intercollegiate goung ilen ' si Cfjrisitian s;s;ociation Organized in 1910. gouns  omen ' si Cljrisitian ggociation of toartfjmore College ©fflcers Year of 1910-1911. President: Chakles A. Smith. Vice President: James J. Schock. Secretary: Raymond K. Denworth. Treasurer: George E. Tarble. Year of 1911-1912. President: Henry L. Messner. Vice President: William K. Hoyt. Secretary: Harold S. Egberts. Treasii,rer: Edwin A. Lucas. The Association was organized February, 1911. Its pur- pose is to unite tlie women students in close religious fellow- ship, to promote tlie groAvth of character and to carry on active Christian work. ©fficcrs £cconS Scmcstci, 1911 President: Emma Marshall, 1911. Vice President: Mildred Hoadley, 1912. Secretary: Letitia McHose, 1913. Treasurer: Helen Shinn, 1912. Chairman of Beligious Meeting Department: Mabel L. Stiner, 1912. Chairman of Social Service Department: Josephine Foster, 1913. 123 m ■Mm 1 2 1 f a 1 1 ? 9f 1 - , % f 4 m s V V ' li ilen ' si (ee Club Leader: Glen Earl Millek. Manager: W. Russell Tylor. Director: EoY Bennett Pace. VioUnisi: Earle Stanton Philips. Charles Alfred Smith, James A. Watson, Claude F. Gilchrist, James Stephens Van Syckel, Edwin E. Murch, G. Earl Miller, Charles A. Eberle, First Tenors: Albert Eobert Strang, W. EussELL Green, Second Tenors: Newton Edward Tarble, William D. Halsey, First Bassos: John William Raymond, Jr., Charles A. Collins, Second Bassos: David Tully Dunning, Gilbert Richard Phillips, Edward Cox. John Joseph Matthews, Charles C. Sheppard. Harold S. Roberts. Lawrence E. Sharples, W. Russell Tylor. 125 gouns Woman ' g (glee Club Director : EoT B. Pace. Leader: Elizabeth E. Price. Assistant Leader: IvA A. Appleby. Manager: Nan Oppenlaxder. Assistant Manager: Rebecca T. Osler. Lenore Bartow, Alice Bucher, IvA A. Appleby, Elisabeth Bartlett, Anna Allen, Zelma Bartow, Gladys Coker, Plcrence Miller, First Sopranos: E. Kathryn Fell, Elizabeth B. Oliver, Mildred Hoadley Reeecca T. Osler, Phebe Lukens, Ruth Verlenden, Second Sopranos : Anna Belle Boyle, Margaret Clifford, Josephine Foster, Helen Marr, First A Hos : Marion Coles, Carolyn Smedley, Mary Osgood, Mabel Stiner, Ruth Sharp, Edith Sway ne, Second Altos: Elizabeth Morton, . Elizabeth Price, Nan Oppenlander, Dorothy Phillips, Accompanist : IvA A. Appleby. Mary Walton, Mabel Werner. Martha Sharples, Elizabeth White. Edith Williams, Elsie Haviland. Mary ' Schmidt. 126 Jloosiier tate Club Eoss Marriott, 1907. Herman Pritchard, 1908. Harry Lynn Miller, 1911. Glenn Earl Miller, 1911. Claud F. Gilchrist, 1912 Lloyd Lewis, 1913. EUSSEL Haltcm, 1914. Ed. Cox, 1914. 127 Motto: tEm ?|ungrp Bebilsi All our cares i t, one great point comhlne the husiness of our lives, that is, to dine. Albert B. Baker, Harry Gillam, Henry Messner, llis Satanic Majesty: Tod Eberle. Wielder of the Gloivinij Fork: Harry L. Miller. Giiardiau of the Scarlet Eobes: E. Eussell Perkins. Keeper of the Witches ' Hair: F. Whitmer Atkinson. Trustees : T. Jay Sproul, D. H. Van Trump. Henry S. Farson, Frank D ' Olier, George B. Nevvbold, Andrew R. Taylor, Raymond T. Bevan, Richard P. Abele, Ben Pollock, Fred. Geig, Rot Delaplaine, Jack Reid, D. H. Van Trump, Devils in jfleeb Directors : Thomas H. Hall, Jr., Roy Delaplaine. 5)cvil6 at Xargc James B. Williams, Randolph T. Zane, Arthur Eastburn, Gharles Pike, Ralph E. Harcourt, 1. B. Jones, Jake Vernon, Tony Weller. Rudie Goehring, Earl Seaman, Jake Schock. 2)ev il Celestial IRcprcsentative Bird T. Baldavin. 128 ge ilonfesi of tfje Placfe Cotol Fe Frio?-: Conrad Wickham. Conrad Wickham, Donald Ferguson, (Monk of the Pilgrimages) Egbert Crews, Albert Strang, Joe Melick, Frank Gripfin, John Johnson, Walter Eittman, Te Scribe: Eaymond Store. Te Father Abbot: T. E. Taylor. Ye Senesclmis: Claude Gilchrist, George Boughton. Te Chanter: Charles Smith. Te Monies: T. E. Taylor, George Boughten, Lawrence Beecher, Frank Gaskill, (Friar of the High Tabernacle) Te Friars: George Griest, John Eaymond, Te Monies Doing Penance Abroad: James Stone, Samuel Phipps, Herman Pritchard, 129 Charles Smith, Eichabd Murfit, (Friar of the Golden Bowl) Claude Gilchrist, Ernest Hartman, Preston Egberts. Laurence Sharples, Eaymond Store, James McGovern, Maurice Lutz. Earle Wynn, Chris Bockius, Hastings Travilla. IBelta Iplja isma AI Established 1896. D Elizabeth W. Cadwalladee, ' 11, E Elizabeth E. Pkice, 11, L EuTH C. Sharp, ' 11, T Theresb D. Spaceman, ' 11, A EuTH Verlenden, ' 11, Elizabeth White, ' 11, li Elizabeth Yocum, ' 11, P Amy Baker, ' 12 S Alice Bolton, ' 12, A Anne S. Haines, ' 12 Mary E. Osgood, ' 12, I Eleanor A. Eittenhouse, ' 12, G IvA A. Appleby, ' 13, M Nan Oppenladder, ' 13, A Ellen Watson, ' 13. 130 Bammalota Ikappa ¥ ? x m Elisabeth Hallowell Bartlett, ' 12, Anna 3elle Boyle, ' 11, Mart Ferris Blackburn, ' 13, Margaret Broomell, ' 11, Marion Coles, ' 13, Esther Kathryn Fell, ' 13, Avis Loraine Fitch, ' 12, Clara Elizabeth Frazee, ' 12, E. Josephine Foster, ' 13, Angeline Johnson Powers, ' 11, Alexander Rogers, ' 12, Carolyn Hallowel Smedlet, ' 12, Alice Stover, ' 11, Martha Willets, ' 12, Catherine Boyd Williams, ' 13. 131 !E1 unbLt i ou cein and VyU ou cjix ' c McLnon Banner Doro Viett.rvtc Har on HaTlo ue1 VKtorxa. Leslexj Tre ( e VoUCKS ) tcuenU eevjes ' Rd.c ve SK6eTt {er Constance Ball Ldith lz lackburn MaRJORIC GlDEOfN ' Lleanore Lewis Margaret Marp, iEAN nE.NNOCK lIdna Rdstlethwaite Ella Potts Caroline: Shoemaker Anna Spackman Martha Speakman Anna Stapler Edith Williams Gertrude a ood Mascot-Winkie Flower- Lettuce; ftoenix taff VOLUME XXX Editor-in-Chief : Joseph H. Willits. Associate Editor: William K. Hoyt. Business Manager: Lawrence P. Sharples. Thomas R. Tatlok, Local Erlitors: AxxE S. Haixes. Advertising 21anager: Walter E. Cox. Vistribtitioii Manager: William O. Soyars. Alumni Editor: William H. Thatcher, ' 00, Swarthmore, Pa. 132 . , ;: 1 mn. Cunomian literarp ocietp ©fficers First Semester Second Semester President : Benjamin W. Collins : Raymond K. Denworth. William K. Hoyt; Vice President : Thomas H. Haj l. Secretary : Charles A. Smith; Walter L. Lukens. Treasurer : Laltrence p. SriARPLrs ; James Monaghan. First Semester Thomas H. Hall; Alden Jones; T. R. Taylor, Allister Jones, James Monaghan, George Tarble, Censor: Second Semester Henry Messner. Benjamin W. Collins, William K. Hoy ' t, LAtTRiNCE P. ShARPLES, Alden Jones, Allister Jones, Harry Gillam, William O. Soyars, Edwin Lucas, William A. Worth, IDembers Eaymoxd K. Denworth. Thomas H. Hall, 1912 Walter L. Lukens, Charles A. Smith, 1013 Wallace Eex, George Tarble, Henry Messner, 1914 Charles Houston, Joel Melick, John White, 137 Librarian ; George Tarbi e. Library Committee : W. 0. Scyars, Edwin Lucas, Lloyd Lewis, Henry Messner. E. Russell Perkins. T. R. Taylor. Rot Delaplaine, James Monaghan. Lloyd Lewis. W. H. Gibson Bradfield, Robert Browning. ©elpijic Eiterarp otittp ifivst Semester Joseph H. Willits. Emmor Eoderts. Eugene E. Ayres. Preston T. Eoberts. Louis J. Bradford. H. Elliott Wells. F. Wither Atkinson, John A. BARN.utD, Louis J. Bradford, William W. Hill, Eltjene E. Aybes, Jr., Charles A. Collins, Horace C. Jenkins, Arthur V. Ayres, F. Willard Pancoast, Howard M. Buckman, Raymond T. Bye, Harold L. Collins, ©fflcevs President: Vice President: Becorcling Secretary : Corresponding Secretary : Treasurer : TAbrariaii : SeccnJ Semcstcc G. Earle Miller. Horace C. Jenkins. Arthur D. Latimer. Wm. W. Price. H. Elliott Wells. Washington Eussell Green. iDembers 1911 Arthur D. Latimer, G. Earle Miller, Emmor Egberts, Herschel G. Smith, 1912 William W. Price, Byron T. Egberts, Harold S. Egberts, 1913 J. Arthur Pancoast, James J. Schock, J. Eltssell Snyt)er, 1914: Ed. Cgx, Washington Russell Green, C. Hettburn Jones, 139 Wm. Eussell Tylor, Ellwood Z. Way, Joseph H. Willits. Preston T. Egberts, H. Elliott Wells. Charles P. Stiles, Fred. G. Young. Ealph Linton, Albert Egy Ogden, Clayton T. Eogers. omerbille i iterarp ocietp Founded 1871. Motto: — Suaviter in Modo, Fortiter in Be. First Semester Second Semester President : Color: — White. Society Paper : — ' ' Fhrenaskia. ' ' ©fficers First Semester Second Semester EuTH C. Sharp, 1911; EuTH Verlenden, 1911. Vice President: Anne S. Haines, 1912; Anna M. Haslett, 1912. Secording Secretary : Rebecca T. Osler, 1913; Nan Oppenlander, 1913. Corresponding Secretary : Emma D. Marshall, 1911 ; Elis. beth H. Bartlett, 1912. Assistant Corresponding Secretary: Amy Baker, 1912, Nan Oppenlander, 1913. Elizabeth H. Bartlett, 1912, Treasurer: Adele D. Hammond, 1911 ; Marian R. Stearne, 1913. Assistant Treasurer: Mary E. Pidgeon, 1913; IvA A. Appleby, 1913. Librarian : Edna Carpenter, 1911; Edna Carpenter, 1911; Library Committee: Marion Coles, 1913, Marion Coles, 1913, Margaret Green, 1912, Margaret Green, 1912, Censors : Alexandra Rogers, 1912, Mary F. Blackburn, 1913, Jane E. Hoag, 1911, Elizabeth B. Oliver, 1913, IvA Appleby, 1913, Rebecca T. Osler, 1913. Members 1911 Anna Allen, Anna Belle Boyle, Edith Baker, Ethel Barnard, Zelma Bartow, Laura Boram, Emma Brooks, Maragaret Broomell, Ethel Boyt, Elsie Cadwallader, Gladys Coker, Susannah. Gregg, Elizabeth Hallock, Adele Hammond, Louisa Harvei ' , Anna Heydt, Elsie Haviland, Margaret Harned, Sarah Heyburn, Jane Hoag, Elizabeth Hutchinson, Elizabeth Hallock, Emma Marshall, Florence Michenor, Helen Parker, Dorothy Plack, Edna Passmore, Elizabeth Price, 140 Angeline Powers, EuTH Sharp, Therese Spaceman, Amy Baker, Elisabeth Bartlett, Helen Blanton, Alice Bolton, Madeline Brown, Anna Detweiler, LoRAiNE Fitch, Clara Prazee, Marion Graw, Anne Haines, IvA Appleby, Elsie Anders, Rose Avert, Fay Burger, Mary Blackburn, Lillian Boyt, EuTH Carlisle, Margaret Clifford, Mary Cordingly. Mildred Chandler, Marion Coles, Helen Davis, Josephine Dennison, Juanita Downes, Mary J. Anderson, Julia F. Avery, Marie Bender, Grace Tucker, Ruth Verlenden, Elizabeth Washburn, Anna Hazlett, Anne Heller, Mildred Hoadley, Florence Lippincott, Cornelia Lounsbury, Phebe Lukens, Helen Marr, Edith Martin, Florence Meridith, Kathryn Fell, Josephine Foster, Dorothy Gill, Alice Garwood, Grace Green, Virginia Geeist, Marguerite Hallowell, Emma Hawthorne, Grace Helmick, Tacy Hough, Margaret Hawkins, Elizabeth Jackson, Elizabeth Keller, Edith Kinnard, Marjorie Caldwell, Lucy Carvin, Beulah Elliott, 1912 Elizabeth White, Mabel Whitehead, Katharine Witmeyer, Mart Osgood, Mattie Pressey, Mary Ramsey, Eleanor Eittenhouse, Anna Rogers, Alexandra Rogers, Ida Strode, Anna Satterthwaite, Helen Shinn, 1913 1914 ROSWITHA KuDLICH, Louise Lawton, Margaret Livingston, Helen McConaght, Letitia McHose, Mart Mullen, Esther Middler, Anna Oppenlander, Rebecca Osler, Elizabeth B. Oliver, Dorothy Phillips, ' Anita Peck, Elizabeth Phillips, Mary Pidgeon, Dorothea Gillette, Mat Haines, Edith Harper, Rata Willit, Elizabeth C. Yocum. Caroltn Smedlet, Alice Stover, Mabel Stiner, Edith Swayne, Natalie Turner, Edith Tract, Helen Weaver, Martha Willets, Anna White. Marion Stearne, Adaline Semple, Martha Sharples, Anna Shoemaker, Helen Tatman, EvALTN Walker, Catherine Williams, Ellen Watson, Mart Welsh, Helen White, Martha Williams, Anna Worrell, Katherine Wray. Elizabeth Morton, Ruth Marshall, Mabel Werner. 141 Josiepi) %t t Scientific otittp President : Joseph H. Willits. Vice President : Emmok Roberts. Secretary : Edna Carpenter. IDembers Bird T. Baldwin, Benjamin F. Battin, Charles H. Bedell, Henry M. Binkert, Arthur T. Collins, Ezra T. Cresson, Jr., George B. Ckesson, Edith M. Douglas, Elizabeth B. Hall, George A. Hoadlet, Jessie L. Hoopes, Mrs. Geo. A. Hoadley, Carrie B. Kilgore, W. E. McDONOUGH, Ross W. Marriott, Henrietta J, Meeteer, John A. Miller, Mary E. North, Herman Pritchard, Harold Potter, George Roberts, Jay Sproul, Spencer Trotter, H. L. Ward. 1911 F. Whitmer Atkinson, Laura Boram, Louis J. Bradford, Lenore Bartow, John Barnard, Ethel Boyt, George Boughton, Zelma J. Bartow, Edna Carpenter, Deceased. Gladys Coker, Wallace Darnall, Elizabeth A. Hallock, Thomas H. Hall, Jr., Louisa A. Harvey, Russell Henry, Elizabeth D. Hutchinson, Jane F. Hoag, Helen Herr, Lawrence Hess, Arthur D. Latimer, Harold Millar, Glen B. Miller, Harry Miller, Russel Perkins, Elizabeth Richards, Emmor Roberts, Jr., Arthur Robinson, Ruth C. Sharp, Herschel G. Smith, Russel Tylor, EuTH Verlenden, Elwood Z. Way, Joseph H. Willets, James Watson, Elizabeth Washburn. 142 Eugene Edmond Ayres, Jr., Elisabeth H. Baktlett, Avis Loraine Fitch, Clara Elizabeth Frazer, 2 Claude Gilchrist, Mildred Hoadlet, Cornelia L. Lounsburt, Bykon T. Egberts, Harold S. Eoberts, Anna Y. Satterthwaite, Austin Scott. Mabel L. Stiner, Helen Shinn, Edith N. Swayne, H. Elliott Wells, Martha Willets, 1913 K. Elsie Anders, IvA A. Appleby, Mary F. Blackburn, Fat Burger, E. Josephine Foster, Virginia Griest, - Ernest Hartman, Alden Jones, Allister Jones, Roswitha Kudlich, Edith Kinnard, Francis M. MacDowell, Henry Messner, Mary Mullen, Nan Oppenlander, Elizabeth Phillips, Adeline Semple, Marian Stearne, James Schock, Charles Shepard, Newton Tarble, Anna Worrell, Joseph Webb. 1914 W. H. G. Bradfield, Raymond Bye, Paul Browning, Harold Collins, Aubrey Fox, Edith Harper, H. A. Jackson, William Kerns, Maurice Lutz, H. A. Mazer, John Matthews, Norman McKissick, Joel Melick, Roger Owixgs, Gilbert Phillips, Clayton Rogers, William Sot.uis, Jackson Waters. 143 iflen ' s atfjletics toartfjmore College tljlctic association Organized May 31, 1888. Motto: Mens saiia in corpore saiw. ©fflcers, 1910=1911 President, Thos. H. Hall, Jr. Vice President, Raymond Denworth. atblctic Council Thos. H. Hall, President A. A. Dr. Edwin Fauver, Physical Director. Charles A. Eberle, Foothall Captain. E. EussELL Perkins, Foothall Manager and Lacrosse Captain. Frank Gaskill, Baseball Captain. Claude Gilchrist, Baseball Manager. Emmor Roberts, Lacrosse Manager. C ' HAS. A. Smith, Basl-etball Captain. Laurence P. Sharpless, Assistant Track Manager. 145 Treasurer, Preston Roberts. Secretary, Earl Miller. Albert M. Pitcher, Basketball Manager. H. Lawrence Hess. Track Captain. William Halsey, Tracl: Manager. Eugene E. Ayers, Tennis Manager. Raymond Store, Assistant Football Manager. Thos. R. Taylor, Assistant Baseball Manager. Chas. Thatcher, Assistant Lacrosse Manager. James Mitchell, Assistant Basletball Manager. Jfootball i fci AST fall ' s team was not one of those world ' s champion teams of 1906 or 1907 that could make Lafa- Bl yette and Ursinns feel like prep schools, and could hinnble the University of Pennsylvania. It did 0 not have the capital invested in it. The nucleus was not a squad of hired stars — it was green men beqiieathed us by that year of No Football. But Coach Brooke and Captain Eberle built iip a team by the end of the year that Swarthmore was proud of. They had some bad games — alumni turned on them — and they had a stony row to hoe. Biit they hoed it. Those last games were not walkovers, but they were victories. And if you were here Bucknell Night you know how Swarthmore felt toward her football team. Captain Gieg will have eight old men for his team next year, and everyone of them plaj ' clean football. 146 jfootball Ztam Season 1910 Coach : Geokge H. Brooke. Left Half-iack: G. E. BOUGHTON. Left End: E. R. Perkins. Left Tackle: L. F. Gieg. Left Guard: J. McGOVERN. Fidl-hack: H. L. Miller. Quarter-lyacli : Delany. Center : T . E. Ferguson, 1912. Substitutes : Manager : Russell Perkins. Bight Half -hack: C. A. Eberle (Captain). Bight End: E. W. Delaplaine. Eight Tackle: M. LuTZ. DUBBOROW. Might Guard: H. L. Messner. E. Haltom. IRcsult of ScbeOulc Oct. 1 — Lebanon Valley at Swarthmore 8— Lafayette at Easton 16 — Eutgers at New Brunswick . 22 — Delaware at Swarthmore 29 — Lehigh at South Bethlehem Nov. 5 — Ursinus at Swarthmore 12 — Stevens at Hoboken 19 — Bucknell at Swarthmore s. 47 Opp. 6 6 21 27 15 8 6 26 23 18 148 XADIBS and gentlemen, it gives me great pleasure to iutroduce to yon Swarthmore ' s latest debutant. In 1909 we made her acquaintance. In 1910 she makes her formal bow to our society. Allow me to present our baseball team. We welcome her gladly into the restricted circle of Swarthmore fa- vorites and pray for her brilliant future, for she possesses that attraction which claims our hearts and renders us henceforth her slave. Like the true Swarthmorean that she is, on her first trip she has captivated the gaUant South. Her society for the coming year is in great demand there, not only by those who have met her, but by those who know her fame. Near home her success has been even greater. On bended Imee before her shrine are the pick of our northern 400. Proud Pennsylvania herself bows in respect, for never has Shultz had such a batting on Franklin Field. The lesser lights in numbers crave her slightest favor. Doubtless jow are surprised that one so young should achieve such wonderful, such complete success. Let me refer you to her excellent sponsor. Coach Weymouth, a good fello v, a rare gentleman and a wonderful coach with all ; and to her loyal and devoted servants, the members of her retinue. Let us M ' ish her Godspeed and future prosperity. 149 .A. S , .-: _ l „C. Catclwr: C. A. WiCKHAM (Captain). Third Base: C. F. GiLCHEIST, 1912 C. A. Eberle, Xfne TUP First Base: L. F. GiEG. Pitcher: N. Tarble. Outfield: F. G-ASKILL, Suhstitutes : pagetiall Ceam Season 1910 Clarence A. Weymouth, Coach. Conrad A. Wickham, Captain. Philip T. Sharples, Manager. Charles 6. Hodge, Chairman Aih!eiic Committee. Gecrge a. Hoadley, Cluiirmaii Facidty Committee. Claude F. Gilchrist, Assistant Manager. Second Base: G. F. BOUGHTON. Shortstop : T. Jay Sproul. Albert Baker. J. Johnson, G. Taeble, W. W. Hill. 150 IReeult ot ScbcDules S.Op. March 23 — Rutgers at Swarthmore 4 2 April 23- 28 — Washington College at Chestertown, Md.... 4 6 27- 29— Catholic University at Washington, D. C. . . 2 5 SO- SO — Catholic University at Washington, D. C. . . 3 7 May 4- 31 — Washington and Lee at Lexington, Va 7 7- April 1 — Washington and Lee at Lexington, Va 4 1 11- 2 — Mt. St. Mary ' s College at Emmetsbiirg, Md. 4 10 14- 9— St. Johns at Swarthmore 9 1 27- 13 — Delaware College at Swarthmore 9 5 June 4- 16 — University of Pennsylvania at Philadelphia 2 5 7- 151 S.Op. -Pratt Institute at Brooklyn 4 -Ursimis at Swarthmore 2 -Albright at Meyerstown 3 1 -Seton Hall at South Orange 4 S -Lehigh at South Bethlehem 9 3 -Washington at Swarthmore 6 1 -Marjdand A. C. at Baltimore 4 8 -Eastern University at Swarthmore 9 6 -Temple College at Swarthmore 12 -Franklin and Marshall at Swarthmore 8 2 Hatxo t € CHl ITH but five of the previous year ' s twelve lacrosse men in college, and with a brand new coach I I I and coaching ' system being tried out, Swarthmore troiinced Johns Hopkins 16 to 3, ran off with J J the United States championship and came within two points of being champions of America. That is the story of last spring. But this year there are nine of that championship team ready for business, the ex-captain among them. Coach Whitehead, who produced that championship team, is down again from Canada, and about thirty-five men are making each other hustle for positions on the team. Now if you cannot see that Hopkins banner trodden in the dust and the American championship rest- ing with Captain Perkins and his men, you must have dust in your eyes. 153 lacrosisie ®eam Season 1910 Point ; Chris Bockius. First Defense: F. Seaman. Third Attach: E. EOBERTS. Outside Some: E. Russell Perkins. John A. White, Manager. Goal: F. Whitmer Atkinson. Second Defense: Harry L. Miller. Center: Thomas H. Hall, Jr. (Captain). Second Attacl-: H. T. Moore. Cover Point : W. L. LUKENS, 1912. T}iird Defense: C. A. Collins, 1912. First Attack: B. W. Collins. A. B. Baker. Inside Home: P. Egberts, 1912. IResults ot Scbc ule s. April 16— Mt. Washington Clnb 4 21— Harvard 11 23 — Carlisle Indians 5 30 — Stevens 8 Opp. S. 5 May 7 — Lehigh 9 7 14— Hopkins 16 .5 28 — Hopkins Alumni 6 2 June 7 — Toronto 4 Opp. 4 3 4 5 154 IPasfeettjall mo apologies for this team. They trounced everything in sight — and Pennsylvania was particularly visible. Every man on the team was a star — this counted for a good bit. But if you could have seen them in the second half of the Penn State game — four points behind and everybody feeling kind of funny — then a goal was shot, the crowd started to cheer, and the team caught the spirit. It went through every man. Up and down the floor at lightning speed they went. Tooth and nail they went at it. State was dumbfounded. And when the bell rang, and State recovered, they found their half of the score nine points shy. This thing happened every game. The spirit Avould run from man to man like wildfire, and no team could stop them. Penn was helpless before them. That ' s what made our basketball team. It was a squad of spirited stars who played an absolutely clean game, 156 asiketijall eant Season 19U Coach : Manager : Yates. Albert M. Pitchee. Forwards: Guards: James E. Mitchell, 1912. C. A. Smith, 1912 (Captain). G. E. Boughton, F. Gieg. Center : C. F. Gilchrist, 1912. Substitutes : A. E. Baker, McKissick, W. W. Hill. Eeferee : G. P. Cartweight. IReeults of Scbc5ulc S. Opp. Carlisle Indians at Swarthmore 37 24 Brooklyn Polytechnic at Swarthmore 38 14 Army at West Point 27 25 Washington and Lee at Swarthmore 60 26 Baltimore Medical College at Baltimore 27 38 Navy at Annapolis 28 34 Pratt Institute at Brooklyn 45 13 Lehigh at South Bethlehem 26 19 State College at Swarthmore 35 24 Lehigh at Swarthmore 35 30 University of Pennsylvania at Philadeljihia 23 16 New York University at New York 27 28 157 Jan. 10. Jan. 13. Jan. 21. Feb. 2. Feb. 3. Feb. 4. Feb. 8. Feb. 11. Feb. 16. Feb. 18. Feb. 21. Mar. 4. tKracfe The track record of one meet won, one tied and two lost does not sound good: but in reality the team has never been heard from before like last year. A track coach was procured, a n d while Mr. Palmer was on the field there was no rest for the weary. Every afternoon, every man was out working- in dead earnest. And as a result records were broken right and left. The relay team won a wonderful race at the Penn relays, lowering the record from 3.30| to 3.28|. Captain Bradford lowered Baker ' s half-mile record to 1.57 4-5. Lewis broke the freshman mile record, and Phipps raised his last year ' s vault of eleven feet . by six inches. As would be expected, our own class took honors at the Phoenix ciip sports with lots and lots to spare. The medal for the man doing the most phenomenal work of the day went to Gilchrist — at least the honor went to him — the medal has not been heard from. The spring prospects could not be brighter, and Captain Hess shoiild turn out an excellent team. Every good man is back, except Lewis : Eberle may hurdle for us, and a couple of promising Freshmen are running around the field with their neglige breeches on. 158 $f)oenix Cup Sports; 120-Yarcl Hurdle, 1 Gilchrist, 2 MUEFIT, 3 Van Trump, 4 L. Sharples. Won by 1912. Score 56yo Points Second, 1913. Score 291 2 Points Third, 1910. Score 25 Points Fourth, 1911. Score 16 Points 17 2-5 sec. 220-Yard Hurdle, 2S 3-5 sec. 1 MURFIT, 2 Gilchrist, 3 Van Trump, 4 Pitman. 440-Yard Dash, . . . 1 BR-iDFOBD, 2 Lewis, 3 MURFIT, 4 Kerns. .58 1-5 sec. Shot Put, 1 Gilchrist, 2 Phipps, 3 Messner, 4 McConner. .32 ft. Two-Mile Eun, 1 USILTON, 2 Miller, 3 B. Egberts, 4 L. Sharples. .11 min. 27 sec. One-Mile Eun, 1 Lewis, 2 Kerns, 3 Denworth, 4 P. Egberts. .4 niin. 57 sec. 100-Yard Dash, . 1 Hess, 2 MURFIT, 3 Halset, 4 Lamb. .10 1-5 sec. Tied. 220-Yard Dash, . 1 Hess, 2 MuRFIT, 3 Halset, 4 Gillam, .23-1-5 sec. 159 1-Yard Dash, . . . 1 Bkadpord, 2 Lewis, 3 USILTON, 4 Daknell. .2 niin. 10 see. Broad Jump, . . 1 Store, 2 Lamb, 20 ft. 3 Brown, 4 Hartman. High Jump, 1 Gilchrist, 2 Messner, ] 3 P. Sharples, i ' 4 Brown, ] a A. Baker, j ' ■' ' ' • .5 ft. 2 in. Tied. IRcsult of iRieete Indoor. Feb. 5, 1910— Mile Relay. At Washington, D. C. Swarth- more vs. University of Virginia. Won by Swarthmore. March 18, 1910 — Trenton Booster. Fordham vs. Swarthmore. Won by Swarthmore. Time, 2 min. 48 4-5 see. Outdoor. April 23, 1910 — At S-n-arthmore. Swarthmore vs. Lafayette. Seore, Swarthmore, 42 ; Lafayette, 54. April 30, 1910— U. of P. Relays. Class I. Swarthmore, 1st. 3 min. 28 2-5 sec. Lafayette, 2d. Pratt Inst., 3d. May 7, 1910 — At Swarthmore. Swarthmore vs. Villa Nova. Score, Swarthmore, 71; Villa Nova, 25. May 14, 1910 — At Carlisle. Carlisle vs. Swarthmore. Score, Carlisle, 78%; Swarthmore, 25%. May 25, 1910 — At South Bethlehem. Lehigh vs. Swarthmore. Score, Lehigh, 52 ; Swarthmore, 52. May 28, 1910 — Pennsylvania Intercollegiates. Swarthmore Second with 25 points. 160 )h)artf)more College racfe l ecorbsi Event Name 100-Yard Dash, F. B. Terrell, 220-Yard Dash, F. B. Terrell and C. A. Eberle, 4;40-Yard Run, Geo. Henrie, Half-Mile Eun, L. Bradford, Mile Eun, , E. J. Baker, Two-Mile Eun, E. J. Baker, Mile Walk P. Parrish, Two-Mile Bicycle, N. H. Manuakee, 120- Yard Hurdle G. A. Eberle, 220-Yard Hurdle, C. A. Eberle, Pole Vault, . S. E. Phipps, High Jump, . . ' I. D. Webster, Broad Jump, F. L. Thomas, Putting Sh ot, W. F. Kriieger, Hammer Throw, E, W. MaxT xll, Hurling Discus, W. E. MaeDonough, Mile Eelat, Gillam, Lewis, Hess, Bradford, Class Time ' 05, 9 4-5 see. ' 05, 22 1-5 sec. ' 11, 22 1-5 see. ' 08, 49 4-5 sec. ' 11, 1 min. 57 4-5 sec. ' 07, 4 min. 31 2-5 sec. ' 07, 10 min. 14 2-5 sec. ' 96 7 min. 10 2-5 see. ' 02, 5 min. 1 sec. ' 11, 15 3-5 see. ' 11, 25 2-5 sec. ' 12, 11 ft. 7 in. ' 89, 5 ft. 11% in. ' 98, 21 ft. 9 in. ' 09, 46 ft. 51 0 in. ' 06, 138 ft. 6 in. ' 07, 108 ft. 10 in. ' 10, 3 min. 28 2-5 sec. 161 toattfjmore jFre fjman l racfe i ecorbg Event Name 100-Yard Dash, T. B. Terrell, 220-Yaed Dash, F. B. Terrell, 440-Yard Eun, Sherman L. Garrison, Halp-Mile Eun, L.J. Bradford, Mn,E Eun, C. B. Lewis, Two-Mile Eun, H. W. Knight, Jr., Mile Walk, W. H. Lippincott, Two-Mile Bicycle, W. H. Mannakee, 120-Yard Hurdle, C. A. Eberle, 220-Yaed Hurdle, W. G. Crowell, Pole Vault, S. E. Phipps, High Jump, E. M. Eoberts, Broad Jump, F. B. Terrell, Shot Put, W. F. Krueger, Hammer Throw, W. F. Krueger, Hurling Discus, W. E. MacDonough, Class Time ' 05, 9 4-5 sec. ' 0.5, 22 1-5 sec. ' 10, 51 3-5 see. ' 11, 2 min. 3 sec. ' 13, 4 min. 32 1-5 sec. ' 05, 10 min. 38 see. ' 99, 7 min. 33 3-5 sec. ' 02, 5 min. 1 see. ' 11, 16 3-5 sec. ' 06, 27 sec. ' 12, 11 ft. ' 11, ' . 5 ft. Sy in. ' 05, 21 ft. 2% in. ' 09, 40 ft. li o in. ' 09, 120 ft. ' 07, 108 ft. 10 in. s 162 l earersi of tfje ' ' ' ' 3footbaU S R. W. Delaplaine, G. E. BODGHTON, D. Ferguson, 1912, L. DURBOROW, L. Bradford, 11. GiLLAM, C. A. WiCKHAM, R. Haltom, E. Delaney, R. A. Henry, E. R. Perkins, M. LuTZ, H. L. Miller, H. L. Messner, L. F. GiEG, 0. A. Eberle, JTvach ' ' S ' N. Tarble, J. McGOVERN. G. A. Eberle, H. L. Hess, J. SCHOCK, S. E. Phipps, 1912, R. W. Deleplaine, R. Store, 1912. W. Atkinson, W. LUKENS, 1912, J. White, Manager, G. E. BOUGHTON, J. Mitchell, 1912, C. WiCKHAM, L. F. GiEG, C. A. Eberle, Xacro66e S B. W. Collins, H. L. Miller, T. H. Hall, E. R. Perkins, F. Seaman, H. Moore, :Ba8ftctbal[ S E. Roberts, P. Roberts, 1912, C. A. Collins, 1912. c. A. Eberle, L. Beecher, Manager, C. A. Smith, L. F. Gieg, C. Baseball S F. Gilchrist, 1912, G. E. BoUGHTON, N. Tarble, A. B. Baker, W . W. Hill, C. F. Gilchrist, 1912, F. Gaskill, T. J. Sproul, p. T. Sharples, G. Tarble. 163 goung Womtn ' ttjletic s gotiation President: Elizabeth C. Yocum, ' 11. Treasurer : Elizabeth Hutchinson, ' 11. ©fHccrs Vice President: Alexandra Rogers, ' 12. Assistant Treasurer: Amy Baker, ' 12. Athletic Council: Emma D. Marshall, ' 11, Elizabeth Yocum, ' 11, Elizabeth Hutchinson, ' 11, Martha Willets, ' 12, M. Elizabeth Bates. 164 Secretary : Martha Willets, ' 12. Treasurer of Cunningham Field Fund: Dorothy Phillips, ' 18. Alexandra Rogers, ' 12, Amy Baker, ' 12, Dorothy Phillips, ' 13, Edna Carpenter, ' 11, (gpmnasititg— eagion of 1911 Elizabeth D. Hutchinson, ' 11, Emma D. Marshall, ' 11, Varsity. Therese D. Spackman, ' 11, Edith N. Swayne, ' 12, Mabelle Whitehead, ' 11, Martha Willets, ' 12, Elizabeth C. Yocum, ' 11, Dorothy Phillips, ' 13, Substitutes. Amy Baker, Ruth C. Sharp, Helen Shinn. Class Xleams Marian E. Stearne, ' 13. Edith R. Williams, ' 14. 1911 Elizabeth D. Hutchinson (Captain), Alice M. Stover, Mabelle G. Whitehead (Ass ' t Captain), Ruth C. Sharp, Elizabeth C. Yocum, Therese D. Spackman, 1912 Helen Shinn (Captain), Edith N. Swayne (Ass ' t Captain), Amy Baker, Martha Willets, - Anna Hey ' dt, Emma D. Marshall, Carolyn H. Smedley, Eleanor Halsey, Clara E. Frazee, Florence Meredith. 1913 Marian R. Stearne (Captain), E. Kathryn Fell, Dorothy Phillips (Ass ' t Captain), Mary F. Blackburn, IvA A. Appleby, Edith M. Kinnard, Elizabeth J. Phillips, -Adaline Semple. 1914 Edith R. Williams, (Captain), Florence C. Miller, Beulah T. Elliot (Ass ' t Captain), Eleanor A. Lewis, Alice L. Bucher, Martha T. Speakman, A. Caroline Shoemaker, Blanche C4erhart. Winners. First Place, Elizabeth C. Yocum, ' 11. Second Place, Therese D. Spackman, ' 11, Dorothy Phillips, ' 13. ©Bmnasium Gontcet Winners. Third Place, Edith E. Williams, ' 14. Alice L. Bucher, ' 14 Helen Shinn, ' 12. Elizabeth D. Hutchinson, ' 11. Fourth Place, Elizabeth J. Phillips, ' 13. Class Baiilcing. Seniors, 570; Freshman, .526; Juniors, 500; Sophomores, 488. Jfresbman ©Bmnasium Contest Winners. First Place, Edith R. Williams. Second Place, Beulah T. Elliot. Third Place, Alice L. Bucher. 165 Season ot 1910 (;lass Basketball Matches for Class Championship axd Banner. Won by 1911. DarsitB Harriet W. Sheppard, ' 09, Bight Forward. Elsie Fenton, ' 10 (Captain), Left Foru-ard. Elizabeth C. Yocum, ' 11 (Assistant Captain), Center. Elizabeth A. Hallock, ' 11, Left Guard. Varsity Substitutes: Pkiscilla Goodwyn, ' 10, Mart Blackburn, ' 13, Elizabeth Keller Elizabeth Eichards, ' 11, Center Forward. Alexandra B. Eogers, ' 11, Center Guard. Ethel M. Albertson, ' 10, Bight Guard. ' 13. 1910 Class TCeams 1012 Elsie Fenton (Captains, Bight Foru-ard. Amy Baker, Bight Fornard, Marie Sellers, Left Foru-ard. Amy Weaver, Left Forward. Priscilla C. Goodwyn, Center. Carolyn Smedley, Center. HeCen M. Maynard, Center Fonuard. Clara E. Frazee (Captain), Center Forward. Mary L. Hallowell, Center Chiard. Martha Willets, Center Ckuird. Ethel M. Albertson, Bight Guard. Mary Osgood, Bight Guard. Helen Lukens, Left Guard. Alexandra B. Eogers, Left Guard. 9l Edna Carpenter, Bight Forward. Louisa A. Harvey, Left Forward. Elizabeth C. Yocum (Captain), Center. Elizabeth Hutchinson, Center Forward. Margaret Broomell (Ass ' t Capt.), Center Gu ird. Elizabeth A. Hallock, Bight Guard. Elizabeth Eichards, Left Guard. 1913 Mart Blackburn (Captain), Bight Forward. Elizabeth Keller, Left Forward. Elsie Smock, Center. Tact Hough, Center Foru-ard. Helen White, Center Guard. Ethel M. Hickson (Ass ' t Capt.), Bight Guard. Emma Kinsey, Left Guard. ■Deceased. 166 Season of 1010 Class Hockey Matches foe Cup and Banner. Won by 1911. Scores Class Games AA on Class Games Won 1911 6 1913 4 1912 ; 1 1914 2 IFjocftev (Barnes witb ®utsi e Zcame S. Opp. Oct. 28 — Freshmen vs. Friends ' Central School 4 2 Nov. 2 — Varsity vs. Gennantown Plockey Club (II) ' . . 9 4 Nov. 11 — Freshmen vs. Friends ' Central School 6 2 WarsttB Elizabeth Hutchinson, ' 11, Goal. Elizabeth C. Yocum, ' 11 (Captain), Center Half-baclc. Edna Carpenter, ' 11, Left FuU-hacl-. Marion Coles, ' 13, Jliglit Wing. Elizabeth A. Hallock, ' 11, Might Full-bad-. Elizabeth Keller, ' 13, Eight Inside. Alexandra B. Rogers, ' 12 (Assistant Captain), heft Half-back. Therese Spackman, ' 11, Center Forward. Anna Heydt, ' 11, Sight Half -bad ' :. Martha Willets, ' 12, Left Inside. Iva Appleby, ' 13, Biglit Inside. Substitutes : Martha Sharples, ' 13, Forward. Rebecca T. Oslee, ' 13, Fall-bad ' . Marguerite Hallowell, ' 13, Half-bade. Louise Lawton, ' 13, Goal. 167 Class treams 1911 Mabelle G. Whitehead, Left Wing. Elsie Haviland, Left Inside. Theeese D. Spaceman, Center. Ethel Boyt, Eight Inside. Adele B. Hammond, Eight Wing. Anna Heydt, Left Half-bacl. Elizabeth Washbukn, Eight Ealf-bacl: Elizabeth C. Yocum, Center Ealf-hacl Edna C ' akpenter, Left Full-bacl-. Elizabeth A. Hallock, Eight Full-bacl-. Elizabeth Hutchinson (Captain), Goal. 1913 IvA Appleby (Captain), Left Wing. Martha Sharples, Left Inside. Anna Oppenlauder, Center. Elizabeth Phillips, Eight Inside. Catherine Williams, Eight Wing. Marguerite Hallowell, Left Half-bafl;. Elizabeth Keller, Center BaJf-bacl: Marion Coles, Eight Half-bacl-. Marian Stearne, Left Full-bacl-. Eebecca T. Osler, Eight Full-bacl. Louise La ' vton, Goal. 1912 Alice M. Stover, Left Wing. Clara E. Frazee, Left Inside. Martha Willets (Captain), Center. Amy Baker (Ass ' t Capt.), Eight Inside. Helen Shinn, Eight Wing. Margaret Green, Left Half-bacl-. Carolyn Smedley, Eight Half-back. Alexandra B. Eogers, Center Half-bacl: Cornelia Lounsbltry, Left Full-bacl: Edith N. Swayne, Eight Fvll-bacl-. Anna M. Heller, Goal. 1914: Caroline Shoemaker, Left Wing. Blanche Gerhart, Left Inside. Marie Bender (Captain), Center. Maby Schmidt, Eight Inside. Edith Williams, Eight Wing. Victoria Lesley, Left Half-bacl: Beulah Elliot, Center Half-bacl-. Eleanor Lewis, Bight Half-bacl: JuLLA Avery, Left Full-bacl-. May Haines, Eight Full-bacl:. Anna Dana, Goal. 168 COLLEGE Fume! ions M mmmtm t S££j jfounbersi ' 3iap Committee in Charge: Frank Gaskill, ' 10, Chief Marshal. Wallace Darnall, ' 11, Chairman. Alexandra Rogers, ' 12, Secretary. Order of Exercises: The National Anthem. Opening remarks by the Chairman, Isaac H. Clothier. Address by the Honorable Edwin S. Stuart, William Penn, the Founder of Pennsylvania. Address by Harrison S. IMorris, Esq., The Art Work of Benjamin West. Tableaux portraying the life and art of Benjamin West. Reception to the guests of honor and tea served for the guests in the library. A lacrosse game on AVhittier Field. 170 Mthatt poarb Dr. Paul M. Pearson, Dr. Benjamin F. Battin, Dr. John A. Miller. Joseph H. Willits, ' 11, President. William K. Hoyt, ' 12, Secretary. Eatmond K. Denworth, ' 11, Cap ' t of Squad. W. Russell Ttlor, ' 11, Treasurer. Zbe potter Ertemporaneoue 5)ebatc October 27, 1910. Raymond T. Bte, ' 14, W. Russell Ttlor, ' 11, Emmoe Roberts, ' 11, W. Russell Green, ' 11, W. K. HoTT, ' 12, Raymond K. Denworth, ' 11, Joseph H. Willits, ' 11, William 0. Sotars, ' 14. First Place: Raymond K. Denworth. Second Place: Joseph H. Willits. Third Place: W. Russell Green. JUDGES. Prof. Walter Dennison, Prof. Guy Colbuen, Henry Bauer. Bintb 2111111131 Acclamation Contest tor tbc Unuiiam ' mn. CocTis IPrljCS December 2, 1910. ' ' Little Sister, Leonoee Bartow, ' 11. ' ' Eizpah, Zelma Bartow, ' 11. The Famine, Edith Neal Swayne, ' 12. One of Bob ' s Tramps, Ruth Verlenden, ' 11. ' ' For Dear Old Tale, G. Earl Miller, ' 11. His Mother ' s Sermon, Anna B. Allen, ' 11. First Place; Ruth Verlenden. Second Place: Leonore Bartow. JUDGES. . Mrs. Winifred .J. Wright, ' 05; Grace M. xwell, ' 07; Elsie Love, ' 07. annual ©ratorfcal Contest for tbe 2)elta ' Clpsilon iPrtsc March 14, 1911. Wendell Phillips, the Abolitionist, The Hebrew People, A. Roy Odgen, ' 14. E. Russell Perkins, ' 11. ' ' Modern Slavery, Edith N. Swayne, ' 12. ' ' Patriotism, a National Deficit, W. Russell Tylor, ' 11. ' ' Anti-Sectionalism, William 0. Sotars, ' 14. ' ' The Commercial Statesman, W. K. Hoyt, ' 12. First Place: W. R. Tylor. Second Place: W. K. Hoyt. Third Place: A. R. Odgen. JUDGES. W, A. Alexander, Prof. Jesse H. Holmes, Dr. Guy B. Colburn. 171 Eayjiond T. Bye Joseph H. Willits, Capt. W. EussELL Green affiimativc S ebatc ilcam Hcsolvcd: That our legislation should be shaped toward the gradual abaudomneut of the protective tariff. W. EussELL Green, ' 14, Eaymond T. Bye, ' 14, Joseph H. Willits, ' 11. February 23, 1911, Swarthmore vs. Eutgers, at Swai-thmore. WON BY RUTGERS. Hutgers Team: Perdinan-d S. Schenck, ' 11, William V. Becker, ' 11, Valentine B. Havens, ' 12. February 2.5, 1911, Swarthmore r«. Trinity, at Durham, N. C. WON BY SWARTHMORE. Trinity College Team: E. G. Cherry, W. A. Cade. March 3, 1911, Swarthmore rs. Franklin and llarshall, at Lancaster. WON BY franklin AND MARSHALL. Franldin and Marshall Team : J. Andrew Frantz, ' 13, J. N. Aiken, George N. Kemp, ' 11, Edward H. Heffn, ' 11, 172 J. A. Cadwallader E. K. Denwortii, ( ' (( ) . A. E. Ogden IMcflativc 2)ebate Jleaiii Sesolved: That our legislation slioiild be shaped toward the gradual abandonment of the protective tariff. ' Albert Rot Ogden, ' 14, Tracy S. Voorhees, ' 11, F. C. Dose, ' 14, J. Augustus Cadwallader, ' 13, February 23, SxYartlimore vs. Rutgers, at New Brunswick, N. J. WON BY RUTGERS. Sutgers Team: Jacob Chobricher, ' 13, March 3, 1911, Swarthmore vs. State College, at Swarthniore. WON BY swarthmore. State College Team: E. H. Siegler, ' 11, 173 Raymond K. Denworth, ' 11. -DuMoxT F. Elmendorf, ' 11. J. A. Kinney, ' 12. i:fie Clasisi of Mintttm I en PRESENTS tE tje i;empest UNDER DIRECTION OP MIRIAM LEE EARLEY West Cami us Monday, June 6tli Five O ' clock Dramatis Person e Alonzo, King of Naples Frederick J. Blatz Sebastian, his brother . N. Earl Wynn Prospero, the right Duke of Milan. .Gurdon B. Jones Antonio, his brother, the usurping Duke of Milan Prentiss A. Myrick Ferdinand, son to the King of Naples. . .Guy C. Carr GoNZALO, an honest old counsellor. . . Frank Gaskill Adri ust I ( James G. Lamh Francisco ) Lords - j j jj pitman Caliban, a savage and deformed slave William L. Jenkins Trinculo, a jester George C. Corson Stephano, a drunken butler James A. Stone Boatswain Chris Bockius j Frederick W. Seaman I Philip T. Sharpies Miranda, daughter of Prospero . . PriscUla C. Goodivyn Ariel, an airy spirit Marie Sellers Iris J j 3Iiriam W. Hines Ceres I Spirits Anna F. Campbell Juno j I Anna B. Griscom Attendants Representing Rainbow: Bertha B. Hepworth, Virginia D. Keeney, Irvana M. Wood, May Beatrice Dunlevy, Helen Lukens. Nymphs : Estlier Barnes, Sara K. Kirk, Mary L. Hal- loivell, Hazel Brown, Martha E. Soyars, Jean H. Walker. Reapers : Elsie Fenton, Louise K. Corkran, Grace F. Lee, Hattie K. Pentz, Ethel M. Alhertson, Beidah R. Green. Demons: Conrad A. Wickham, Edward W. Fell, Samuel J. Bunting, Jr., E. Montgomery Marr. Gnomes: Andrew Pearson, Leon Pearson, Robert Holmes, Herman Holmes. Musicians: Helen C. Maynard, Annie S. Pollitt, Riley A. Bressler, Adele B. Hammond, ' 11, Martha A. Sharpies, ' 13, Earle S. Philips, ' 13, Mr. Samuel Rogers. Scene : An Enchanted Isle. Committee : Anna F. Campbell, George D. Fussell. 175 i ineteentJ) Annual Oratorical Contesit of tije enn= sJplbania SntercoUegiate Oratorical Mnion Ursinus College, March 17, 1911. ' ' The New Patriotism, ' ' Edavard F. Eomig, Trankliu aud JIarshall. The White Slave Traffic, William F. Dannehower, Jr., Lafayette. A Plea for the Workingman, Ernest E. Quay, Ursinus. The Knockers, C. McLean Davis, Gettysburg. ' ' Idols vs. Ideals, ' ' Paul H. Krau.ss, Muhlenburg. Patriotism, a National Deficit, W. Eussell Tylor, Swarthmore. First Place: W. Eussell Tylor, Swarthmore. Second Place: P. H. Krauss, Muhlenburg. JUDGES. Eev. Edward Yates Hill, D.D., Philadelphia. Hon. William H. Berry, Chester. President Isaac Sharpless, LL.D., Haverford. lading IRen ' s Ertcmpornncous Speahinci Contest March 20, 1911. H. Elliott Wells, ' 12. Walter L. Lukens, ' 12, W. Eussell Green, ' 14. Joseph H. Willits, ' 11, A. Eoy Odgen, ' 14, Eaymond T. Bye, ' 14. First Place: .Joseph H. Willits, ' 11. Second Place: W. Eussell Green, ' 14. Third Place: EoY Odgen, ' 14. Ijjoung TOIlomcn ' 9 lErtemporaneous Spealiing Contest Beulah Elliott, ' 14, Marguerite Eeeves, ' 14, Cornelia Lounsbury, ' 12, EuTH Verlenden, ' 11, Martha Willets, ' 12. Anna D. White, ' 12, First Place: Cornelia Lounsbury, ' 12. Second Place: Euth Verlenden, ' 11. Third Place: Beulah Elliott, ' 14. 176 Eeba Osler, ' 13, Committeesi for i eception ElCHARD MURFIT, Alexandra Eogers, Charles Collins, Jake Schock, Nan Oppenlandek, Donald Van Trump, Juniors to ffrcebmen Edith Swatne, Raymond Store, Eleanor Rittenhouse, Sopboniorc5 to ffrcsbmcn Eliz vbeth Keller, Stephens Van Syckel, Josephine Foster, James Mitchell, Martha Willets. Willard Williams, Martha Williams. College 3 eception Senior Sopbomorc Harry A. Miller, Margaret Harned, Henry Messner, Kathryn Fell. Junior Lawrence P. Sharples, Elisabeth H. Bartlett, Oliver Shepard, JFrcsbman Gertrude K. Wood. 1911 2)ance First Dance: Angeline Powers, Elizabeth Hutchinson, A. Robinson, Albert Pitcher, B. Collins. Second Dance: Thomas Hall, Anna Allen, Tod Eberle, Elizabeth White, Harry Miller. Donald Ferguson, Mary Osgood, 1912 ®ance Harold Roberts, Elisabeth Bartlett, Charles Thatcher, Mabel Stiner. 177 extracts; from nterbietD iuitf) ppie Tes, sir, I ' m Apparition C. B. Nun, called Appie outside the classroom. No relation to Dr. Appleton, though I ' m very fond of that photograph of him standing on the station roof in Collection Hall. I was recommended to come here by your President, just to see that everything is running smoothly, you know. I met him in the Catty Combs. What were my first unpressions ? Look here, young man, if you ' re one of those muck- raking, mud-sling- ing Phcenix — oh, Er-Olun-Traws ? Old rival of mine — rather cut me out, but I ' ll turn my other molar- bone. Well, yes, I was r ather disappointed at first. Joseph had mentioned the dome. I got off the train and looked around, then blinked my laehr •mals. Off to the left Avas a thing as shinj ' as Dr. Hoadley ' s head and the color of Euth Sharp ' s hair. (Tes, I ' ve learned the names of a few of the leading characters.) I looked up a wide, straight path to a long, gray fniild- ing on top of the hill with three humps on it, and 178 a black keg placed square on the top of the x ' ight side, labeled 1914 in white. I supposed the meaning to be that the class is tanked. I followed the path, since it seemed to be the only direction you coiTld go, climbed several flights of stairs (placed there, I ' ve since learned, to give stu- dents an appetite for potatoes) and pushed open the door at the top. I will omit a description of the odor that greeted me. as books of poems have been written on the subject. I staggered onto a leather bench and moaned. It slid me off promptly and remarked : I am the Pet. If you ' re not waiting for some one to go into the dining room, get off! A door was open from which came the mixed sounds of a feeding poiiltry yard and a ladies ' afternoon tea. I stepped inside. Shades of Prexy, it was raining water, snow- ing bread and hailing chocolates in there ! It was really a pretty sight to see how adept those young men were in catching food in their mouths. Sud- denly they all began hissing and there was a silence that jarred the small bones of my ear. A voice on the other side of the room — I think it was a colored man — said : ' ' The ' e ' 11 be a regula meetin ' ob dee men ' s glee clul) in Some ' ville Hall tu-night at seben-thuty. Everyone laughed and tinkled their glasses, and a lady at the end of the room looked worried. My first night was a pleasant one. I picked up sev- eral souvenirs for my memory book, including Therese Spackman ' s watch, the logical outlines of three Fresh- men, Ruth Verlenden ' s soap and Clara Prazee ' s long, blue coat. Before breakfast I took a walk and met an active little lady with blonde, Grecian hair on the Campus. She slammed her heels together and shouted : Arms - vipwards - stretch - sideways - fling - with - outward - turning - of -palms - and - deep- breathing - one - two - three-ee - four. Louder, louder, I can ' t hear j ou at all. That sounded queer to me and I lied. I tried to go upstairs, but girls were hurling themselves down like a keg rush. Each would stop by the bulletin board a minute and sort of pat an- other one, remarking, I didn ' t get up till the grace bell, and I never hurried so in my life, and then walk slowly into the dining room. Well, I didn ' t go into breakfast that morning, but I did attend Collection, as Joseph had particiilarly requested me to. I felt it to be a very beautiful occa- sion — all those fresh young faces meeting with the Dean, Dr. IToadley, Dr. Battin, Mr. Alexander and the chairs on the platform. First we had an inspir- ing hymn about A pair a dice, a pair a dice, who does not long for rest? I was pleased to note the tense fervor and spirit with which all sang, pouring out their very souls in the words until a lad — Steve, by name — in the back of the room hit a soaring note that made even Miss Cunninghaai ' s picture frown in 179 pain. A very handsome gentleman next read let- ters from the Founders of the College on Their Im- pressions from Below of the Twenty-Ninth of Last Eleventh jMonth. After announcements that the Y. I I. C. A., the Equal Suffrage League and the Aero Club wdidd hold meetings at 7.15 in Collection Hall the students were dismissed. I will not try to tell you of many more of the sights that have interested me. Among the things of which your College may be justly proud I might mention the beautiful pictures hung along the stairways, the ham-omelette carpet on Collection platform, Kuss Per- kins ' piano legs as displayed in basketball clothes, your efficient cut system, in which, as I understand it, tlie number of cuts varies directly as the nerve of the individual and inversely as the gullibility of the pro- fessor, the nine bells and one whistle which rent the air space between 6.45 and 7.45 a. m., and the corn- meal muffins for breakfast IMonday and Thursday mornings. Only a word of advice and criticism. Watch with care the growth of your latest eating club — the Con- sumers ' League — or it will engulf you alive. Preserve the harmony, the unity, of j our college at all costs. Do not allow the Y. M. C. A. and the Y. W. C. A. to meet on a dark night in the Alumni Eoom. Keep the Monks and Devils apart, unless Miss Lukens and Father Time are there to separate them. Keep the G. I. K., D. A. S., P. I. G., T. G., T. M., D. B. D. and M. I. K. s in a card catalog-ne and do not mix them on the shelves. And above all, my boy, oh, take warn- ing, keep Miss Baker out of the Biology Lab. tE ij e op mh % onj A boy was cleaning out his desk in Old South Wharton and he found a little grimy quarter. What, said he, .shall I do with this little grimy quarter? I will go to town and buy a little pony. As he was coming home, Michael ' s gate was down and the pony would not .jump over. He went a lit- tle fui ' ther and he met Michael. Michael : So he said to 180 ' Mike, Mike, beat the pony; Pony won ' t .jump over gate; And I won ' t pass my exam, to-morrow. But Michael would not. He went a little further and he met Doc Alleman. So he said: Doc, Doc, swear at l Iike; Mike won ' t beat pony; Pony won ' t jumj) over gate; And I won ' t pass my exams, to-morrow. But Doc Alleman would not ! He went a l ittle fur- ther and he met Dean Meeteer. So he said : Dean, Dean, smile at Doc; Doc won ' t swear at Mike; Mike won ' t heat pony ; Pony won ' t jump over gate; And I won ' t pass my exam, to-morrow. But the Dean would not ! He went a little further and he met Tod Eberle. So he said: ' ' Tod, Tod, fuss Dean ; Dean won ' t smile at Doc ; Doc won ' t swear at Mike; IMike won ' t heat pon.y; Pony won ' t .jumj) over gate; And I won ' t pass my exam, to-morrow. But Tod would not. He went a little further and he met Nan. So he said : Nan, Nan, sing to Tod; Tod won ' t fuss Dean ; Dean won ' t smile at Doc; Doc won ' t swear at Mike ; Mike won ' t beat pony; Pony won ' t jump over gate; And I won ' t pass my exam, to-morrow. ' ' But Nan would not. He went a little further and he met Iva. So he said : Iva, Iva, play for Nan; Nan won ' t sing to Tod; Tod won ' t fuss Dean ; Dean won ' t smile at Doc ; Doc won ' t swear at Mike; Mike won ' t beat pony ; Pony won ' t jump over gate; And I won ' t pass my exam, to-morrow. But Iva said, If you will buy a copy of Lucky ' 13 7 will play for Nan to sing. And he said he ■would. And as soon as the boy handed out the neces- sary cash — ■Iva began to playf or Nan ; Nan began to sing to Tod; Tod began to fuss the Dean; Dean began to smile at Doc; Doc began to swear at Mike ; Mike began to beat the pony ; The pony in a fright jumped over the gate ; And so the boy passed his exam, the next day. 181 Jfauna antr Jflora of tDartijmore The Series Dance is a serpeut closety allied to the beaiix-constrictor. It lias the power of charming its prey with its enticing appearance until they are power- less to Avithdraw. It almost captnred and destroyed Bryan and has eaten alive one active drama. It appears spasmodically upon Saturday night, hunts mercilessly for a few hours and creeps away into its lair earlj ' Sunday morning. For further information concerning its habits see Helen Parker. The Last Breakfast Bell is the most obnoxious of a large family of annoying pests that invade our bed- rooms early in the day. It is closely related to the bedbug. Its sting is peculiarly penetrating, and acts as a violent stimulant, or, more rarely, as a narcotic. The Novel Course is a new germ, introduced, like so many other nuisances, by the English sparrow. It produces a painful disease, attacking the cerebral tissues and causing acute inflammation, fever and cold feet. Foi ' tunately constant exercise and an antidote of thyme will generallj ' tide the patient over the crisis. Fussing is a showy flower closely related to Love- in-the-Mist. It springs np all over the Campus with the advent of warm weather. It seldom bears fruit and has no known use, but because of its odd forms it arouses general interest. Some horticulturists claim that it spoils the beauty of the green sward, and are vainly trying to eradicate it. Genius is a common Aveed, introdixced from Wil- mington, which has .Just begim to gain a foothold here. It buds early in the year of 1913 and makes rank growth before it can be eradicated by the Faculty. It is most vigorous on the Ivy and the Open Lander, where it is characteristically green and fresh, bear- ing abundant fruit, but traces have been found in other locations, though the groA -th elsewhere is gen- erally spindling and recumbent. Mabel Stiner (in zoological lab.)- working on, Edith? Edith Swayne — I ' m on a bat. - What ai ' e you Dr. Hohnes forever 1 ' ' Jenkins — Not yet Is there anything we have known 182 jfetjruarp Otf) Special to Br-Omh-Traws One of the most popular social events of the sea- son was the supper given by the smart set of Swarth- more, the proceeds to be devoted to the advancement of coeducation among the obscure peoples of foreign tables. Between courses, the guests enjoyed a novel and exciting game just introduced from Paris, the pur- pose of which is to hit without aim an unknown mark with spheres of dampened paper, globules of bread or pits of cherries. Merriment ran riot, even the patron- ess enjoying the receipt of a lump of sugar iipon her head. Miss Georgiana Boughton, one of the most charm- ing debutantes of this season, was introduced by Mrs. Lukens, under whose patronage so many young jDeo- ple have entered society. This charming bud created quite a sensation, and was surrounded by a circle of admirers during the entire evening. Miss Kudlich, one of the most popular of the younger set, was brought iu bv Jlr. Wickham. Gaskill — The alarm clock went off. Trumpie (sleepily) — Good! I hope it never comes back. Perhaps the most vivacious group was that gathered at Miss Verlenden ' s table, where a delightful cold lunch was served. Miss Verlenden, whose name is so well Imown in society eolmnns, with that naive gayety for which she is famous, distributed favors among her guests with a lavish hand. At the table of one of the patronesses were Miss Cadwallader and Mr. Watson. Unfortunatelj Mr. Watson was forced to leave town early on business, but Miss Cadwallader, with that attractive vivacity for which she is well kno vn, ablj bridged over the gap. Miss Wray was present in a black velvet gown of the latest slimeess cut, lightened here and there by touches of rare old Valenciennes lace. Miss Francis Willard Pancoast was prominent in a close-fitting suit of slender cut, completed by a man- nish linen waist, with stiff linen collar and black neck- tie. Her hair was arranged simply and becomingly, with the part a trifle on the left side. Miss Early — What do you have to-day, Miss Kellar? Betty— A cold. 183 letter from resiibent tuain to IBr. oaUtp At the Time op the Former ' s Leave op Absence. Dear George : While I am on shipboai ' d I will utilize some of my spare time in jotting clown for you some of your duties. I cannot remember them all, but here are a few of your ex-officio ones : I. Lending money to broke professors. II. Passing the plate for various causes. III. Seeing that the Clothiers fill it. IV. Playing tennis and walking. (a) With Dr. jMiller for sport. (h) With the others for diplomacy. V. Procuring universal cooperation. (It is sometimes necessary to do this with an ax.) Among your official duties are the following: I. Interviewing students. (a) Denworth (because you have to). (b) Eberle (because he is used to it). (c) Delaplaine (because he likes it). II. Soft soaping. (a) Glad handing the Glad Handei ' s. ( ) To act as if you knew a student from a gardener or a Avaitress. III. Writing letters to everyone, from Isaac to par- ents who are afraid Willie has caught cold. IV. Officiating over college affairs. (a) Hot air to alumni and friends. ( ) With parents. (1) Look wise and talk highbrow. (2) Pose as a prominent Quaker church worker. (Keep Ducky in the background.) V. Raising the standard. Watch this carefully, for alumni often take it into their heads to stop around with their little foot rules. These are only a few of your duties; Miss Alderfer can probably tell you the rest. One more word of advice — don ' t hesitate to give the stiidents and i rofessors h . They thrive on it. It is the Freshmen ' s and Dr. Alleman ' s chief delight. Besides it gets rid of your surplus steam; you won ' t have to lick Anthony. Take it oi;t on such roughnecks as the Monks or Devils. Above all, keep your opera glass on the coin. With best regards to Alec, and John Miller, and wishing you a pleasant presidentship, I am Yours sincerely, Joe Swain. 184 acts; And eastward from that land where dwell the sons of Belial is a land flowing with milk and honey. And the name of that land is called Pair-ish, for it was there that the king of that country appointed an altar. And Har-Per, one of the daughters of the land, did evil in the sight of the king, even defiled she the robe of the high priestess — and it came to pass on the seventeenth day after her sinning that a great darkness fell npon that land. And an angel of the Lord, enveloped in a cloud,- ' and carrying in his hand a long staff, appeared unto the people, ciying: ' ' Turn out your lights : the gas house is on fire. ' ' And immediately a great terror fell upon the women, and they seized what garments thej ' might lay their hand upon, and gat them to the city of refuge whose name is called Al-cove, crying aloud upon the name of the Lord. Another reading is : Garlic and glucose. - Heb., A place for the maling of matclies. Obscure, may be heard. A meeting place of two persons. And presently came unto them a messenger from the high priestess, saying that the king was angry because of their much speaking, yet they ceased not to wail and pray. And it came to pass that a second messenger ar- rived, saying: Verily it is the truth that she has said unto you. The high priestess is indeed wroth and desires ycu to return to your homes, and bind up your hair, and don your garments. Then spake Nat Ali, she who speaks not after the manner of w omen, and said : Aw gwan, she ' s kiddin us! And straightway all of the women fell upon the ground and were smit- ten with an ague. II And it came to pass that, in the day of rejoicing, ' ' a great multitude assembled in the plain called Camp-Us, to do honor to their king. And the people said, Lo, we will make a .joyful noise unto our lord with timbrels ' • and the voices of ■' ■Or, a long tongued person. March 2. ' The Circus Band. 185 Oui ' young meu and maidens. And immediately there arose a tiimiilt of great rejoicing. And they went forth to meet him, and brought him in honor ' to his hoiise, and praised him. Then one of the wise men said unto hmi, Seest thou not, Iving, how thy servants have Avaxed lean with labor and long fasting? And the king looked upon them and saw that it was so, and sorrow was strong in his heart. And he blessed the people, say- A milk Ti-aaon. ing, ' ' Behold I will command that a feast be prepared unto you and I will set aside a day in which ye shall neither labor nor do any work. And the people rejoiced, crying: Hip-Hip! Hip- Hip! Ilip-Hip! after the manner of that tribe. Thus it was brought about as it was spoken by the prophet : ' ' The return of a king shall be as a sweet savor in the mouths of his people. ttiartbmore f alfe Have you heard the questions the gossips ask Of the students out at Swartlmiore? They say they ' re i;p to many a prank And their questions, I know, reach a score. Now these are the things that they want to know, And perhaps you ' ll clear up the dark. They say : ' ' Why under the sun does Jack Reid ? And what does make Ruth Sharp? What sad event made Constance Ball? Where is it Anna Haslitt? What marvelous load does Thomas Hall? Does Laura Parry ' cause she ' s itf And Mary A. Cordingiy ' s willing to tell What ' twas that made Marian Stearn. Did you see John Rush when Kathryn Pell? If you didn ' t jaiu ' ve something to learn. They say that fright it turned John White, It may have turned Grace Green; They say that Trude Wood have come if she could, But she was nowhere to be seen. To see Edward Caum made Annabelle Boyle, And Rose Avery bit of strength lost : And Helen Herr dignity had to quite spoil To hear Wharton Carroll across. ' ' And all this was caused by the slip of a foot, At least that is what they all say; If you don ' t know how to stand on your feet, There is hope and an E. Z. Way. 186 tDartijmore Ipfjatiet A is for Asplialtnni Dowu the Campus green. It, never knew a poster Of the Class 1913. Ambling Asphaltum. B is for College Bells That always make ns hurry ; We always dress upon the stair, The training table ' s snclt. a worry! Bothersome Bells. E we get for flunk marks, ' Bout that we ' ve small to say; Just wait until jjou get one — ' Twill be a bitter day. Endless E ' s. F is for the Faculty, Who pile us high with work; When they were studes in college. Did they really never shirk? Fibbing Faculty. C is for the Campus That stretches to the track. And after it has reached it It turns and stretches back. Curious Campus. D is for the Dances We ' re having in the Gym. You ought to see the fussers Go at it with a vim. Dusty Dances. G is for gymnastics, To keep us well and strong; And if we never cut it We ' ll live just twice as long. Gymnastics, Gee ! H is for Professor Hayes, Swarthmore ' s famous bard; We wish he ' d look more cheerful. And not take it quite so hard. Hilarious Hayes. 187 I is for Infirmary, Where they put us when we ' re sick; And for the sake of good beef steak We stick and stick and stick. Infirmary Ills. J is for our Jumpers, Which are our pride and joy; They ' re not so bad when on a girl ; But oh! when on a boy! Jaunty Jumpers. K is for those fiendish Kats We have iip in the lab; They never had Miss Bates ' gym., The way their muscles flab. Kept Kats. L is for the Library, Where fussing is no more; Cupid shivers on the steps. And Hayes he shuts the door. Loveless Library. M is for Doc Miller, Bless his dear old heart; If ever you are down and out He ' ll help you get a start. Marvelous Miller. N is for New Wharton, Where we neither smoke nor chew; If there weren ' t locks upon the doors, Whatever would we do ! Neighborly New Wharton. is for Observatory, Which once was Prexy ' s home; Inside there is a telescope. But outside there ' s a dome. Obstrusive Observatory. P is for the college Pet, It ' s been there many a year; The girls still hate to pass it; What is it that they fear? Perilous Pet. ft is for the quiet hour We have in Parrish Hall ; At 3 A. M. it ' s very still. But before that, not at all. Questionable Quiet. E. is for recitation. Which makes us grunt and puff; In some we are quite honest, But most are on the bluft ' . Eotten Recitation, 188 S is for the whole darn Staff That wrote this booli for you; Don ' t criticise the work too hard ' Till you have read it through. Sterling- Staff. T is for our water Tank. It is a lovely sight, Since naughty. Freshmen boys Painted it one night. Tasty Tank. TJ is for U people For whom the work was done ; It took a heap of thinking, But it was lots of fun. Uninitiated U. V is for the Varsity; In every game we play We always show a noble front And always win the day. Valiant Varsitys. X, Y and Z are all the things That we by chance have missed ; We ' ll leave them for the next j ear ' s staff To gather in a list. Bisitant College Cune She was a pretty college girl, In scarlet evening cloak; Her cheeks were rose, her hair was dusk, Her eyes would gods evoke. They sat out on the campus In a starry night in June, And silently they listened To a distant college tune. They would graduate to-morrow After four long years of joy; And they both felt very tearful. This Senior girl and boy. Her lower lip was trembling. He stilled it pretty soon; Then silently they listened To a distant college tune. 189 Jake anb 3 nhit at tfje ZMt You must imagiue that while this dialogue is tak- ing place Jake and Rudie are rolling around in their chairs convulsed with laughter; Jake with both hands over his stomach rocking to and fro, while, Eudie bends over his plate shaking all over. The rest of the people at the table, when they are not too weak with laughter, engage themselves in throwing bread, etc., at the offenders. Rudie — Jake, why is a clown like your glass of water ? ' ' Jake — Because he ' s a ' tiunbler ' ? Rudie — No, because he can ' spring ' well. Jake — Well, I ' m glad I ' pumped ' that out of you. Rudie— You saw it then, did jouV Jake — ' ' I saucer. ' ' Rudie— Oh! ' salt ' that joke down! Jake— Where, in the ' cellar ' ? Rudie— Yea, you ' d ' butter. ' Jake — Here, you ' re too vin-eager ' to make a joke. Rudie— Oh, that ' s ' oil ' right. Jake — ' ' Well, ' ladle ' some more out then. ' ' Rudie — Wait a minute, and I ' ll ' fork ' another out. Jake — When you get it, ' pitcher ' over. Rudie — You know I can do those in my sleep. Yes, even when I ' nap-I-kin. ' Jake— ' ' Tea Jiee, tea-hee. ' ' Rudie — I thought your ' cocoa ' -nut was too ' milk-j ' to see that. Jake— Well, it did make me ' cof ' -fee. Rudie — ' ' Oh, put some ' pepper ' in these puns. ' ' Jake — That ' s ' mustard ' (most hard) to do. Rudie — That ' s a ' chair ' ful one. By this time Jake is rolling in agony and holding up his napkin ring he groans, Oh, ring off! Natalie — Dr. Goddard, would you rather marry Dr. Goddard — I am rendered ill by the argiunents Goneril or Regan? of these radical suffragists. Dr. G. (between spasms of giggling) — He! he! Ruth V. (repentant) — Do you s ' pose he means I I ' d wish — hee! hee ! — I — (gurgle) were a ilormon. make him sick? 190 Wl o m th Mi Xufeens;? Who kissed Miss Lukens ? ' ' I, Pions Phipps, With my rosy lips, I kissed Miss Lukens. ' ' Who smoothed her hair? I, Wary Ware, I didn ' t care, I smoothed her hair. Who saw her cry? ' I, Biggity Bye, With my eagle eye, I saw her cry. ' ' Who washed her face I, Polite Pace, I did it with grace, I washed her face. Who caught her tears? I, Friendly Fox, In my collar box, I caught her tears. Who told the Dean? I, Grieving Green, Although it was mean, I told the Dean. Who heard her call? I, Helpful Hall, Right through the wall, I heard her call. Who got the blame ? Me, Delaplaine, Dey tink I ' m insane, So I got the blame. And so she was kissed, Though they say that Phipps missed. 191 Co=ebiication A Fresh he was aud he made his vow (Even as you and I) That he had uo use for a girl uohow; We told him that he ' d see differently now. But the Fresh he spoke of them all as ' ' cow ' ' (Even as you and I). A Soph he is and his roll he spends (Even as you and I) ; Notes and candy and flowers he sends, And all his bad habits he carefiilly mends, All for the sake of one of those hens (Even as you and I). And it isn ' t the laugh and it isn ' t the ehaft That sting ' s like a bumble bee; It ' s the coming to see what an ass he had been. When the damsels smiled on the Freshman green. And the darned fool didn ' t see. How do you make a Halcyon ? They look so easy when they ' re done? Well, first you must elect a staff; Two to work, the rest to laugh. Then you schedvUe clubs and classes; Collect good slams on lads and lasses; Ring in the dear old cherry tree ; A picture of the library. Dig from your poetic brain Verse that limps as if in pain. Some alleged funny, others slush — This ' ' Good-by-dear-old-Swarthmore ' ' mush. Let some sparkling- efforts be Directed at the Faculty. Get some ads to pay the cost, Else your dod-blamed book is lost. Print it, and to the vulgar horde Disperse it, and then thank the Lord That you have filled your Halcyon, That looks so easy when it ' s done. We love our Doctor Fussel — His figure is so trim. We love to see his pretty face. And watch his toofies swim. 192 Jflunfeeb We entered together as Freshmen, And roomed together, you see ; We played on the team together. And made one fraternity; We majored in engineering. As pilgrims we weren ' t so slow; But he ' s to the bad in his studies, And they say that he must go. The nights that we raided the kitchen. Just taking whatever we could ! The nights that we stole Durnall ' s chickens, And cooked them down in the wood! The nights that we lay on the campus, A-singing soft and low ; And now he ' s been dropped out of English, And they say that he must go. I remember the night when together. Disguised from our heads to our toes. We drove every Sophomore from Wharton By dexterous use of the hose. I remember I sprained my ankle. And he carried me home through the snow ; But now he ' s flunked out in his Conies, And they sav that he must go. Why can ' t they keep him a little, And give him another show ? If only Prexj ' could see him — Could know the man that I know ! I guess you think he deserves it, And perhaps you are right ; but oh ! We wanted to finish together. And now, good Lord ! he must go. 193 mcnbrnentsi to tf)e Constitution of tf)e Wiomtn ' tubent ( ofaernment sisiociation Rules and Regulations. 1911 Yonng- women students must not climb the water tank unless attended by a ehaperone approved by the Dean. Young women students are forbidden to converse with young men on the west or north sides of the water tank. Requirements for a ehaperone are as follows: (1) She shall have graduated nine years previ- ously from Swarthmore College. (2) She shall know how to knit or crochet. (3) She shall wear no unnecessary ornaments or additions to her hair. (■±) She must not be able to walk from Parrish to the station in less than ten minutes. (Try- outs superintended by Miss Baker.) Students are requested not to practice declamation during morning Collection. Silent stucty writing or conversation in low tones only is permitted. Walks through the Crum woods miist be made in groups of not less than one, or not more than one and a boy. Classes are forbidden to hold picnics on the Wal- lingford bridge, in Walton ' s coal bin or in the library tower. Sleep-walking on the ledge is prohibited. Young women students who confiscate property while asleep are requested to return it during their waking hours. Only Preslunen and Sophomores with a general average of less than C are required to sleep on the roof. Young women students may under no circum- stances look on, over, or at the west campus or any object that may be superinposed thereon. Students are forbidden to count the chimes dur- ing Dr. Hull ' s classes. All young women students are urged to come in out of the woods during liea y rain or sleet storms or when the thermometer registers 10° C. at 8 p. m. Young women may not coast or toboggan on the observatory dome unless they have a special letter from parent or guardian assuming all responsibility. Young women may not dance on the campus with the young men during outdoor social hour unless pro- vided with overshoes appi ' oved by the Dean. 194 ®f)ep ' re Banting on tfje Campus; in tf)e Ciaening; ' What makes the Dean ' s brow look so grave? Said Fresh ou parade. Thej ' re dancing on the campus now. The sportive Junior said. Oh! They ' re waltzing in the girl ' s gym.; you can hear the music play. Ben Battin is a-beating time, for Prexj ' is away; They cannot rest with twice a week; they do it every day. They ' re dancing on the campus in the evening. ' ' Tell me, does Tloadle.y give a hoot ? ' ' Said Fre.sli on parade. Not so that you could notice it, The snappy Junior said. And Fauver does not mind it, if you get to bed by nine ; Ducky has not come to one, but still he thinks they ' re fine ; But Robbie, he is shocked to death; he thinks they ' re serving wine. While they ' re dancing on the campus in the evening. ' ' Wiiat is that merry burst of sound ' ? Said Fresh on parade. That is the Clothier orchestra, The wise guy Junior said. Morris endowed the music, garnet uniforms and all. They have classes for beginners up in old Collection Hall; And Miss Lukens and Prof. Hayes will lead the grand Commencement Ball ; Oh! They ' re dancing on the campus in the evening. The Clothier Orchestra 195 polosiesi to aifie Ask me no more; when I for long have scanned The verses in the Phanix and have tried To find some thonght there, and have been denied- Impaired my brain in vain to understand; Ask me no more. Ask me no more; when I have gone with you Each evening to the city for a term, Then at exam time hear in accents firm The Faculty- predict I won ' t get through ; Ask me no more. Ask me no more ; when I with you have fed At luncheon on the hash of old Swarthmore, And foolishly have passed my plate for more, Then find a hair from some one ' s lovely head; Ask me no more. W tx{ ears on i eabg When Pearson reads. Doc Trotter frowns, And says, We hear more foolish sounds From whistles to a cat ' s last waul. But honest that ' s the worst of all. It ' s funny we can ' t talk in peace Without this imitation Keith ' s, When Pearson reads. ' ' When Pearson reads, the students all Unite in Avonder in the hall ; And Ducky seems to go insane ; While Hull and Battin grin in pain. But Pearson ' s class sit back in peace; They love this imitation Keith ' s, When Pearson reads. ]96 Consiigtencp Said the student : ' ' This world is a mess, But when I ' m through college, I guess I will change the whole raft that is now run by graft And my presence the couutry will bless. (And he dropped in his ballot for personal reasons.) Said he, The masses don ' t think, They follow the bosses and blink At the most lurid facts, overlooking the cracks. And in comfortable ignorance sink. (Then he turned to his neighbor, who had been try- ing to get his attention, and said: Aw, don ' t talk to me about college reform. I guess we ' re all right. ) Said another, This front hall ' s a mess; If I were a man, I just guess I ' d clear off the Pet, and the girls I would let Disentangle themselves from the press. (Then she went into the post office with a mob of girls and stayed until the mail was ou.t.) Said she, This Duckie ' s a pill! The beliefs he advances would kill My pious old parents, and his talk never warrants That it should be charged on my bill. (So she cheated in Bible exam, and so proved Duckie ' s bad influence.) t tfje Lecture She had studied all day without ceasing. She went to a lecture each night, Where — She nodded her head in approval And shaded her eyes from the light. The lecturer may have been splendid. He may have been wrong or been right; But— She nodded her head in approval. And shaded her eves from the light. And after he said his conclusion. And everyone else said good night; Still- She nodded her head — in approval, And shaded her eyes from the light. 197 Acting IBrama ' ' The Chocolate Soldier Horace Tilman The Girl and the Kaiser, Eleanor Lewis and Dr. Battin ' ' The Echo . . . . il.vRTHA Williams — Bunnie Welsh ' ' The Three Twins ' White and the Brownings The Man from Home Earl Milijer ' ' The Girl of My Dreams Phebe Lukens ' ' The Girl from the Golden West Nell Watson The Aviator Bradfield The Concert Jack Coogan (in quiet hour) ' ' Baby Mine E.vrl Phillips The Impostor . Appie Nobody ' s Widow (er) Dr. Hoadu y The Fortune Hunter Er-Omh-Traws (stung) The Imijortance of Being Earnest, (by) Doc Fauver ' ' The Gamblers Passmore and Gillis The Little Minister Bye ' ' The Country Boy Rus. Haltom ' ' The Slim Princess Katherine Wray Madame Butterfly Elisabeth Bartlett The Blue Bird Sparrow Pace ' ' The Trouble Makers . . The Six Weeks Committee ' ' The Chorus Lady Elizabeth Jackson Hip, Hip, Hooray After Bucknell Game ' ' The Music Master Iva Appleby The Pink Lady Button The Round Up The Six Weeks Club I Wonder Why Parrish isn ' t ventilated. Professor Robinson looks like that. Soyars talks. Redfield doesn ' t smoke. Miss IMeeteer hasn ' t noticed Katherine ' s switch. Biology students don ' t care for oatmeal. The Seniors never wear caps and gowns. Little drops of garlic, Little grains of paste, Make our Sunday ice cream, And that awful taste. Heard in Acting Drama Gladys (impassioned) — Take my hand. Tylor (turning to Miss Early)— Shall I take it? 198 NLATH THE SHRO£ If Ferguson gets hungry While waiting for more pears, He drinks the juice from Out the dish, And doesn ' t put on airs. There was a Hessie woed a Kate; He was an awful kidder. He thought of Edith all the time, Consider, Kate, consider. 199 If You Hear Watson at 8.45 A brassy sound Plirniming Lenore Eagtime Your door knob Nothius - It ' s c You ' re mistaken. He doesn ' t come till 9.00. 1911. Rosenberg. Probably Zelma. Coogan. Appie. I Hardlv Third Hall New South Wharton. Ode to the Dear Old Crum Roll on, red Crimi, roll ou ! In all your colored filtliiness Roll on! What though you smell of H-.S? What though the dye has killed the fish? What though you canuot wash a dish? What tliough to swim we kind of wish? Don ' t give a hoot ! Roll on! Miss Early (illustrating gestures in declamation) — If a thing is horrible we force it back with one hand — so ; and if it is very horrible we recoil, piitting up both hands. Birdie Flick (aside)— And if it ' s still more horrible we call a policeman. Overheard at Dr. Miller ' s George (a new gardener) — Is this the conserva- tory? Eva (the maid) — Yes. this is where they keep the astronomy. ' ' Toady was smiling in the hall. Smiling with all his might ; He did his very best to make His features gay and bright ; And that was very odd, because No Peggy was in sight. Edna is not very small. ] Iaybelle is not very tall ; Apart they almost never go. Because they fit together so. 200 Sing a song of several scents, Breakfast is quite nigh ; Eleven nice smooth little eggs We ' re about to try. When the eggs are opened, The chicks begin to sing — Guess I ' ll go and study — No, thanks, not anything. Come, come, let ' s look, have I any mail? Yes, joy, that I have ! Three without fail. Notice from Miss Bates, bill for my lunch, And one for my wife ; what a sickly bunch ! A dillar, a dollar, A ten o ' clock scholar. What makes Tom Hall so late ? He used to get up at six o ' clock. But now he doesn ' t budge till eight. Prof. Pace (very much enthused) — This line in Chaucer is incorrect, for have we any pi ' oof of the existence of orchestras in biblical times? Soyars — ' ' Oh, yes, sir ! for we read of Moses lead- ing the band of Israelites. Dean — Would you mind telling me what time it is, Grace? Grace tielmick (feeling for her watch, suddenly remembering) — Oh, Gosh! I ' ve hocked it. I sought in vain for an asj-mtote. Ho ! My Tangent ! The curve is long. A savage surd sprang at my throat. The cosine uttered his fearsome note, And the integral muttered, I ' ve got your goat, ' ' Out from infinity. Dr. Rosenberg — Do you expect to espouse the stage, IMiss Coker? 201 □® May 3. 1911 Halcyon appeal ' s like a green plague. Devoured — indigestible. 4. Effect of yesterday still felt. Table ques- tion discussed. A and B. Weaver to the fore. r I K ' s safely pin seven Freshmen. Miss Bronk roused. May 5. 1912 Halcyon staff elected. Book and Key gives annual show. 6. We all got up at 3 a. m. And we don ' t give a . 7. Invasion of old maids — Teachers ' Confer- ence. 11. Anna White and Mary Osgood sport pansies. 13. Freshmen girls give circus — finest show on earth. 15. Bahny spring day. Increased enrollment in campustry. 17. Sophomore picnic. Class gets even with Dr. Pearson and Miss Early for declama- tion. 18. First 1912 Halcyon meeting. Girls help Halley look for his tail on the fire escape. 202 ilay 19. Girls ' auction sale. 21. Cornelia falls downstairs witli a dull sicken- ina- thud. 23. Steve announces Preslimeu girls ' class meet- ijig. 25. Women ' s Student Government Association elections to time of 0 Sister, Won ' t You Help ile to Pray. ' ' Emma Marshall pronounces the benediction. 26. Worms Osgood, Rittenhouse and Haines make their slimy appearance. 27. Eastern College of Virginia, 6 ; Swarth- more, 9. May 27. Marshall-Gregg Recital. 28. Anna Campbell, Jean Walker, Roger Gep- hart and Gurdon Jones form P B K cjuartette. Johns Hopltins Alumni, 3 ; Swarthmore, 6. 30. The beginning of the end. Everyone ' s fin- ish in sight. 31. Large bunch of assorted girls try to drown their woes in Prep. pool. Bathing suits and ehaperones at a premium. Priseilla and Guy practice strenuously. June 1. Frank superintends Senior practice. 2. More Roberts ' s go J T Faculty-Senior baseball game. Proxy stars on first base. Gray-cheek suit gets there by hard running. Collection cuts and athletics weed out about half the class of 1909. 3. Exit Freshmen. Natalie begins Mary Smith ' s education — tells her how Miss Meeteer and Father Time fuss by east elevator. Jean Walker gives Seniors big blow-out. 4. Class of 1912 ably fill the dining room while Seniors are at Prexy ' s luncheon, Juniors feed along Crum, and Freshmen are in happy homes. 203 June 5. Baccalaureate. Juniors and Sophs stung on sentiments. Rain flustrates fussers. June 1912 puts in some hard work in damp daisy fields. Last collection — eyes remarkably dry. Class Day. Sophomores get still busier; even Juniors say results are best ever. Corson makes things luun. Pauline Fay announces her engagement. Tempest rages from 5 to 7. Tin thunder terrifies the timid. 1910 Pres. Caliban wins admiration. Mr. Booth makes a young fortune. 6. Evening — Fusser ' s Paradise. Gym steps crowded. Campus illuminated. Party in Delphic Room — guests arrive and depart through window ' s. 7. Alumni Day — Lums flock. Chimes dedi- cated and go off at 12. Reunions of ' 90, ' 95, ' 08. Baseball — Franklin and IMarshall. Lacrosse — Toronto beat us 5-2 owing to mumps attacking our team. 8. Packing, good-byes, Commencement and the end. Sept. 19. Football men and rushing autos on the job. 204 Sept. 20. General return. Promiscuous osculation on Asphaltum. New pets, new seats, new stumps. 21. Same old red, white and blue cards and green Freshmen. Upper clas.smen display unprecedented kind- ness to Freshmen. 21. Miss Meeteer and Edith Harper in molasses contest. Sophs re-Freshed. Freshmen ' s busy night. 22. First Collection. Miss Lape attends and smiles. Soyars sells Phcenix. Sept. 23. Veiled atmosphere of excitement and specu- lation. 24. Keg rush and many minor rushes. Old girls to new dance. 25. Meeting seats not posted — slim attendance. Y. M. C. A. hatched. s : 26. A few great minds indulge in study. Ruth V. dreams of the Stiff ' s toes and drops Human Anatomy. 27. Nan and Iva awaken Freshmen by falling through their door. 29. Freshmen girls have two feeds. Both un- sportsmanlike (see Sophs). 205 Sept. 30. Prexy ' s lawn-warming and first extemp. speech. Girls everywhere, boys ten deep around ice cream stands. Punch bowl presented. UE ' CffEM- Oct. 1. Beat Lebanon Valley 47-0 owing to Iva ' s new song. 3. Rex goes to sleep in Physics. 4. Prexy in Collection, All yonng men inter- ested in Y. W. C. A. meet in Collection Hall at 7.15. 5. Picnic invitations fall maunalike from heaven. Toady IMiller as Gabriel with his tin band. Freshmen boys in Avillowy ties. Oct. 6. No ties at all. 7. Exit ilr. and Mrs. Prexy amidst cheers and rice. Airships and bnggy jokes alternated on screen for two hours with comments by lecturer. 8. Last of Prexy in form of large red mottoes. Promptly sent home to mother. Lafayette, 6; Swarthmore, 0. 9. Gas house conflagration. Tin band called out. Father Tempus fugits. Parrish plunged in darkness and candle grease. 10. Prexy and live Clothier exchange Marconi remarks on Lafayette game. 11. Newt. Tarble sing-s. 12. Penu comes out for practice, while Laura Boram fusses. 13. Yoiithful Niagara from Fourth East tank down back stairs rivals in interest the Dean ' s tea served with boys. Dr. Fauver explains the art of betting. 206 Oct. 14. More mystery — li. A ' , wire rings. Paul Browning soils the Criim. Stone seats appear by Asphaltiim, offering secluded nook to weary fussers. ■CJ- - ' 15. Louis absent from Collection, but held re- ception in alcove. Second West jjarty — Ruth as Hayes and Matilda for a change. Chorus girls in rare hobbles. Eutgers, 21 ; Swarthmore, 6. 16. Joe Willits spills collection plate in church. Oct. 17. Joe brings candy to the table. Disappointed Duffers picnic on the Croco- dile. Memory JMan mesmerizes maidens. 18. Fha ' uix out — Tod buys a new hat. Russell ' s Rules of Order in every box. -1 23 L.il Pl£j«7Yfe ' ; 207 Oct. 19. Mary Osgood receives roses for her birth- day. Russell Henry and Nell walk out of the din- ing room together. Everyone smiles but the Dean. Ice cream loses its bearing and appears at lunch. 20. Freshmen boys swim ditches and climb the pump. 21. Mass meeting to create entlrasiasm. Jake pumps out the noise. 22. Temperance man even dries up the clouds. Delaware, 0; Swartlunore, 27. 23. Walking parties infest neighboring coun- try. 24. Girls try to join Boys ' Glee Club. Abigail rescued with difficulty from Helen White and Rocky ' s closet door. 25. Dr. Dennison gives a talk on hair-dressing. 26. Dr. Hull introduces us to the ancient gentle- men on the walls of Collection. 27. Emmor in Extemp. Contest, Let us — let us — let us — let us ! ! Somebody pass Emmor the salad dressing! 28. Oh, you flossy, fuzzy Worms! Even the Dean smiles. Oct. 29. Founders tui ' n over three times in their graves. Governor Stuart and very de- licious eats in the Library chief attrac- tions. Guests kneel before marvelous tableaux. Lehigh beaten 15-8. Hallowe ' en Dance and Worm Show in Gjnii. 30. Sophs rob Doss Fitch of Jack Raymond in singing. The horrid things ! 31. Doggy runs from table to table at lunch and gets barked at by excitable Freshmen. Nov. 1. Anna Heydt doesn ' t know her Latin. 2. Hip, hip, for the hockey team. Beat Man- heim 9-4. Freshmen boys tote baggage to the station. Ask Jean and Crum about that jar of pickled cats in Biol. Lab. Second great fire of the season. Brave young men risk their lives in the flames back of Wharton. 3. Snow and teas. 4. Mr. Marriot reads the Bible in Collection and Mr. Hayes dances at Soph-Fresh Re- ception in GjTn! Rival reception by Dunmiy of some class in east alcove. 208 Nov. 5. Ursiuiis, 6 ; Swartluiiore, 0. 6. Neariug cranks up the Y. M. C. A. 7. Slim Princess vs. Melba. Berry elected by one vote in the PhoBiiix Room. Suffragettes quelled with difficulty. S. New pie shop all the rage. 9. Margaret Broomell tries to come to Junior class meeting-. Wonder why ' ? Seniors draw for first dance. 10. Joe Webb finds collar button in the soup. It ' s nice when one can spot something- useful. N l A iVov. 11. Den falls down stairs into Ruth ' s arms. Cagery arrives for the Blue Bird. 12. Stephens, 0; Swarthmore, 26. Four tables dance at Women ' s Club. 13. Bird manna in the package room for Spar- row Pace. 14. Cornelia and Dolly try to leave the dining room simultaneously. 15. Cat haunts Geology class. Dr. Trotter says it ' s a wholesome smell. 16. Sophs discover small hole in Collection where Freshmen ought to be. Attendance and plates smashed. Crum wheeled downstairs in a wheelbarrow. 17. Connie coos to pigeons in Collection. 209 Nov. 17. Faculty show off well against a brown back- ground. 18. Why is the Bluebird blue, Bill? Good— Night— Tod? 19. Big day— Bucknell game, 22-18— hip, hip! Gym decorated in evening by others be- sides Freshmen (Doc Fauver notwith- standing) . Some one kindly takes a Brownie camera snapshot of the Freshmen. 21. Carload of fresh pickled cats. Boys enjoy watching girls in eternal fire drill. ' 23. Ice cream slips up and hits lunch. Miss Baker, we ' ll remember thee kindly. Chocolate, too ! Thanksgivings ! Dec. 1. Coeducational roughhouse during exec. meeting. P. 0. raid and water fight. George Boughton distinguishes himself in bucket brigade. 2. Declamation contest. 3. Juniors begin to haunt Otto Sarony. 4. Belles not ringing — Jay Sproul late to breakfast. 6. Snow. Rocky and others bark the shins of pedestrians on Asphaltum. Dec. 6. Monklings exposed to bitter weather. 7. Sledding (afternoon function) with young men at 5.30 a. m. Apple haunts Parrish. Appie cornered in Edith Swayne ' s room. Madonna turns her face to the wall. Steps add interest to tobogganing on As- phaltum. 210 Dec. 9. Miss La Follette in her Women ' s suffrage lecture moves George Tarble so deeply that he falls off his chair. Dog kennels appear in library. 10. Skating. Dance of the Twenty in Girls ' Gym. (I K W dance at Spring Haven. 11. Sunday — College Settlement dolls don flossy garments at the expense of mortal souls. 12. Gym. floor not recovered from Sat. Miss Bates waxed (pun) wrothy. 13. Sleighing parties bromidic. 15. Monks give as satisfactory a performance as Miss Lukens and the Devils will per- mit. 16. Jimior-Fresh reception — more dancing. Laurie Sharpies finally decides two can live on $2,103 a year. Let ' s watch ' em. 17. Foulke lectures to Dr. Miller and one or two others. J } ' dance — Spring Haven. K I dance — Women ' s Club. Informal dance — Rose Valley. 19. A little more noise at dinner in honor of Xmas. Ruth V. answers ad. for unattached female partner for dance. College dance for dolls and fiissers. 20. Merry Xmas ! Jan. 3. Er-Omh-Traws is here and it ' s here to stay. K A 6 dance. 4. New doors to Collection. Women ' s Student Government elections. 5. Y. M. C. A. Social and Pie Eating Contest in Men ' s Gym. 6. Soph girls make feeble attempt to lock three Freshmen in one room. Brave mob make rescue. 7. Torchlight parade in honor of new W. S. G. Pres. 8. Walter Cox washed his hair. 9. Blood- red numerals deface Tank. Fools ' names like their faces, etc. Our manager entertains us. Yum, yum ! 211 Jan. 10. Basketball boycotted — Didcty lias to hire a secretary to handle his mail from the ladies. Indians, 24; Swarthmore, 37. Price, $0.25 and worth it. 11 12. 1914 on Tank. Ruth V. forgets to go to German. Steve hunting for lost chord in Collection. 14. Night of the Bnrning Pretzel. Several new terms of endearment added to our vocabu- laries. Jan. 16. MacLeod tied in bed with Kipling while Linton visits his table. Cast pose for photographers. 17. Rudy selling ferry tickets at reduced rates. 18. Girls of Bachelor Hall entertain. 19. Emmor Roberts and 188 other s tudents are promised a swimming pool. 20. Sophomore Show — nuff said! 21. Sophs and Preshies .join in singing Alma Mater on the Campus at 3 a. m. Sopho- mores start it — noble College spirit ! Army, 27 ; Swarthmore, 30. 23. Exams begin. Father Time thinks there has been a washout on the line. 24. Juniors draw for dance. 25. Freshman loses his voice at lunch. 27. Visitors at Ruth Verlenden ' s table. Joe sends congratulations from the pie shop by phone. Feb. 1. Dr. Trotter misses Collection. 3. Dr. Miller in Collection (quoting some one) : The successful men are not A. stiidents. ' ' Dick sits up. 5. Y. W. C. A. started with much discussion. 6. Newt, upsets backward at lunch. Smearcase for lunch. 8. Mr. Pace kicks a dog out of Eng. 4. Others have gone the same way. 212 Feb. 9. Mr. Hayes complain.s that the candy boxes left in the lilirary are empty. First biweekly mix-up meal, beats circus. 10. French lecture by ' SI. Cons to intelligent- looking audience. Junior dance best ever. Elisabeth Bartlett sports American Beauties. 11. Six- weeks ' Probation Club formed. Cold bread instead of hot rolls for break- fast. Margaret Broomell misses the 10.03 in spite of Pud and all 2d West. Feb. 13. Faculty noticeable in Collection. 14. Hearts are trump. 15. Beulah Eliot extemporates to eight boys on ' ' Does college fit a woman for marriage 1 ' ' ] Iarguerite Reeves pledged Kappa. 16. State game, 25-37 — hot stuff. Hill hero. Soyars gets eloquent. 17. Junior play, The Hour Glass, in Somer- ville to amuse twelve Freshmen. IS. Er-Omh-Traws posters melt off the As- phaltum. Perfectly good paste wasted. 19. Tom and Mary enjoy a pleasant supper. Jake goes visiting. 20. K. Fell gives way to her feelings at lunch. 21. Penn game, 23-16. 22. General roughhouse and cherry paper nap- kins in George ' s memory. n 1 dance. 23. More mix-up meals. Rutgers outargues Swarthmore on same side of the same question : ' ' Resolved, If you take three steps toward that wall you will be gradually approaching it. 24. Panama lecture. Circus posters. 25. A ' 2 dance at Spring Haven. 213 Feb. 26. In the spring the fusser ' s fancies lightly turn to thoughts of Media. 27. Willits gives instructive talk on the laziness of the South and the poverty of the De- bate Team. Mass meeting to prepare welcome for Mrs. Swain and myself. Storb suggests a good dinner. 28. Soyars sleeps in the Library. Dr. Trotter takes minute scientific observations of the dormant specimen. Mar. 1. Women ' s Student Government elections. Gladys Coker president. Miss Meeteer cuts Topography. 2. Prexy arrives at 11.05 p. m. Students cooperate in welcoming him and pro- ducing music sweeter than Europe ' s. Midnight Collections — Joe makes a happy suggestion — boys hunt for vacation. Prexy wears a smile that won ' t come off. 3. Vacation postponed, but everybody gives professors a chance to recite. Swarthmore talkers defeat State. n B dance. 4. Girls ' Glee Club. 5. The birds had sung for an hour or two The sun to the zenith had soared ' Twas Sunday morning in Parrish Hall And still she sliunbered and . 6. Prexy keeps Paul Browning waiting in Col- lection. Fatted calf and other celebrations for din- ner. Oberammergau lecture by Dr. Battin. 7. Strenuous circus advertising in Collection. Cadwallader vs. Denworth. Prexy wears garnet carnation and white rose. 214 Mar. 8. Kenneth Farmer visits Miss Winder in Sec- ond West. 9. Earl Miller, as my aunt, Mrs. Pancoast, visits Wharton — interrupts Preston ' s ' phone call. Boys will be boys ! 10. Lucky ' 13 appears in book form. The Circus and What Follows. 11. Free-silver-tongued orator William Jennings Bryan speaks. 12. Second Timothy 2-15. 14. Mr. Nearing- causes excitement by his close shave. F I K ' s nab seven Freshmen for bed-making purposes. Senior girls demon- strate in Gym. Oratorical contest; Tylor first. Mr. Sharpies gives us $50,000. Sounds good. 15. We love Haverford musicals and good feel- ing, but oh, our empty wallets ! Freshmen Gym. Contest. 16. ' Twas a chillv dav for Willie. Mar. 17. 18. 19. 20. 21. 99 23. Senior picture at 1 p. m. We ' re forced to realize at lunch that some people are Seniors, after all. The wearing of the green is Pat-ronized. College reception. Boys Glee Club. First day for three weeks that anyone has had time to study. Early she rose in the morning. The sun had not yet rose. She strolled midst the herbs and the dewy grass And saturated her . Boys ' extemp. and girls ' prelim. Warm weather. Girls ' extemp. Weather more so. Girls ' Gym. Contest. Yennie first — so sur- prised ! Delaware, 0; Swarthmore, 11. That Promised Day has come. 215 TREN TON T IMES OFriCE OWEN MOON 1 HE CHIME s CERTIFICATL OF CERTIFlCAlt OF MEMBERSHIP b-VV- (-R-T-H-M-o-R.£ SW RTHIVIORE 1 SWARTHrAoRE ' IFTS TOR S ARTHfY10T E, 216 I)lSCOirtRtRS OF THE OT TriH. A LC o VES 217 CtRTlP|C« TE MEI BERSHIP OOOD BOY UEAGUE MY HUMOR OOS SIDE 13 ' ON THE. OTHE.R you CAft ' T 3 1 HOWARD [JOHNSON : BANQUET . CHMRMAN ALUMNI bflNQUE-T I ' Socj tot ' o I ' 0 2 to 3 ' 0 4 ' 0 3 ' 0 7 ' OS ■10 •I I BROOKE FOOTBALL MACHINE PAT SEPT. ' 04 fiVlORt — Z-7 HWE gFORD-6 sWre— 2.7 JJ MYETT£ -O SVIORE — 14 COfWSl-L- O SMORE.— 4- PE.NN — - O 218 =r3] FOOTBALL ' ■• ' HWeRrORD 5Wfll?rHf10RE I 219 t p r -a V n -t- fe 3 J- - 220 epilogue Tne evening glo v fades into tender gray. And purple skado-svs fill tke dog ' -wood s bloom ; One clear wnite star snines faintly in tne west ; 1 he air is nusned, and all the woods are mute. But hark ! From out their depths the vesper note Of a lone -woodthrush stays the coming night. And pours upon the silence such a song As strikes the keynote of our faith and hope For this our hook ; and so, farewell. THE WONDERFUL SERV- ICE WHICH THE AUTO- CAR COMMERCIAL MOTOR VEHICLES ARE GIV- ING IS ATTESTED BY BUSI- NESS CONCERNS WHO HAVE ADOPTED THEM— REACHING NEW SUBURBAN FIELDS- ADVANCING CITY TRADE BY THEIR USE. OoiitinuouS £f f iciency Guaranteed ONE OF THE AUTOCAR COMMERCIAL MOTOR VEHICLES OWNED BY STRAWBRIDGE Sl CLOTHIER USED IN THEIR SUBURBAN DELIVERY SERVICE USED IN EVERY LINE OF BUSINESS The Autocar Company Factory, Ardmore, Pa. PHILADELPHIA 23D AND MARKET STREETS ESTABLISHED 1897 NEW YORK 428-430 W. 19TH STREET BOSTON BEACON ST.— COMMONWEALTH AVE. 223 Junior bbertisiements; Name. Tod P bekle Don Ferguson LoRAiNE Fitch Will IIoyt Horace Jenkins Cornelia Lounsbi ' RY Dick Murfit Mary Osgood Alex Rogers ' Carolyn Smedley Charles Smith Edith Swayne Edith Tracy Natalie Turner Label. A Serial Story DeLong Victrnla The IiiviiiciOle Junior Bon Ami Life Buoy Bull Durham The Girl with the Wrigley Eyes U-all-no Everwear Justrite None Such Chiclets Bromo-Selzer Trade Mark. There ' s a reason Built, — not stuffed Speaks 3.50 woi ' ds per niinute Silent, ilnstless Always shining It floats Strongest huilt car in the world The flavor lasts The best that cnn be produced Built for business The brush that holds its bristles Once used, always used Have you a little f a i r y in your home ? 28 delicious sur- prises Use. Entertainment for young and old Hot-air pump Talking and fuss- ing machine Saves your money .A. snappy, deli- cious relish Steam roller Euterpiise food chopper Eye tonic Keeley cure Getting results For general use Scholars ' compan- ion Styles for every occasion Unknown Directions. No honing, no grinding Close valve when not in use Free .sample on re- quest Illustrated pam- phlet on request Keep in a cool, dry place Do uot roll or bend Add hot water and serve Handle with care Avoid imitations Will act promptly if not hurried Not inflammable Be your own l oss Ready to serve Keep tightly corked Testimonial. Guiiraiiteed till 1921 10% oversize You can ' t keep house without it Strong, steady suc- tion Very refre-hing The smallest, light- est and easiest to load .-Vnyone can run this machine W ' ondeifnl a p pe- lizer Fresh, ] u re and wholesome Higher t li an the Alps in quality 99i% genuine Takes the prizes Won ' t crack or fade Crisp and highly flavored Reference. Class of Kill. Baker Co., Lim. Ask the man who w n s one. Er-Omh-Tra vs. -M. Rosey. Win. I. Hull. Village — phone or call. T. R. T. Many sick souls. Registrar ' s office. Address sup- plied on ap- plication. Swarthmore College. Popular Opinion. Dr. Goddard. In answering advertisements kindly mention Er- ' Omh- ' Traws. 224 THE ROSE GARDEN Plautcil by Iteuii ElisahctJi I ' oivfll Bonti. « itli ROSES funiisliea by If interested write to Robert Pyle, ' 97 President, wlio will send to Halcyon readers, without cliarge, copies of tlieir reliable little booklet, Hoir to iwrfur Hoses, ' ' I (EAST OF PARRISH HALL) THE CONARD . JONES CO. WEST GROVE, PA. ID 225 DOMINIC 1302 WALNUT STREET Young Women ' s Newest Suitings to Order $45.00 AND MORE ORDER TO-DAY VERANTI ' S, Tailors 1302 Walnut Street DOMINIC VERANTI PHILADELPHIA B. J. riC ' LVaiNE 11% T HE business manager assures us that there will be ' an increase of over ii% in the circulation of the Halcyon for the season of 191 1, and that 11% of the graduating class might be expected to visit Buck Hill Falls during the coming season. This will be ' ( more than were there last season. Booklets telling of automobile routes to Buck Hill, of the rates for 191 1, of II cottages and more for rent, of the golf, of the birds, etc., are now ready for distribution. Mention the Halcyon. BUCK HILL FALLS CO., 1024 Race St., Philadelphia, Pa. ALLEN A. KERR JOSEPH F. ODO.N ' NELL iHp als. (Cups aiii iiraphips far all rujttta (Elaas. JFratfrnitii au fforiirttg Sings aiili 5i 3 Sraigns vmUs fstimatrs furuiaiif il on application The Allen A. Kerr Co. 1004 Chestnut Street Philadelphia, Pa. Peter Thomson aailor 14 and 16 W. Thirty-third St. New York, N. Y. 1 1 18 Walnut Street Philadelphia. Pa. 226 LOGAN TRUST COMPANY OF PHILADELPHIA 1431 CHESTNUT STREET Capital, $500,000 (Full Paid) Surplus and Undivided Profits, $190,000 E invite the opening of Regu- lar and Savings Accounts by all persons of acknowledged character and standing. An exact amount is not required OFFICERS ROWLAND COMLY, President HUGH McILVAlN, 1st V.-Prest. WALTER H. LIPPINCOTT, 2d V.-Prest. WILLIAM BRADWAY, Trust Officer Treasurer and Secretary DIRECTORS J. GIBSON McILVAIN DAVID L. LUKENS CHARLES M. BIDDLE FRANK H. WOOD HUGH McILVAIN WALTER H. LIPPINCOTT CHARLES A. LONGSTRETH ALFRED H. LIPPINCOTT EDMUND WEBSTER CHARLES MAJOR E. LAWRENCE FELL ROWLAND COMLY WILLIAM BRADWAY GEORGE M. BUNTING WALTER CLOTHIER Fineberg Bros. We also do cleaning, dye- ing, scouring, repairing and pressing at tlie lowest rates. Highest price paid for cast- off clothing and shoes. ShirerBldg. Swarthmore, Pa Strath Haven Inn S vartninore, Pa. Open May 6tk to November 1st. Transient rate, $3.00 per day Weekly rate on application. Special Dining Room for Banquets and Luncneons. Dancing every Wednesday and Sat- urday Nigkts. Phone, S-wartKniore No. 9 en «n o a. cc oo- UJ uJ J— 3 S a: •-: «0 V3 o UJ 228 229 1 ■5- ■si: •5 I ilO ii | [ THE FAMOUS Stein-Block Smart Clothes THE FAMOUS Hart, Schaffner Marx Clothing FOR MEN AND YOUNG MEN THE EQUAT. OF CUSl OM-MADE CLOTHING The two strongest lines of Men ' s Clothing in America SOLD IN PHILADELPHIA EXCLUSIVELY BY Strawbridge Clothier 5- 4- 4- • 4- 3- 3- 3- 4- Oil I I O ll iloli I 5ifiiJ i$ fciii$i4$ j;j i$ii$iJj( ' ii$ i4itt iiiS 4 i i$ 4 !iti;;iif ii i-JiiliiijSii : i;jfiiii: 4 ;|ii.-i!ii;fii;j4i;ji;5 fc ' j4i.Jii|i;|iiii!ii, ijiij4i| i;j.ii$ii.j4ifii.J i|ii:fitJ i t$ii|ii.Jj4ii f i ' i$ ' i$ii. vJii| i?i ilfiiiit i.lfi;Jfii j.fii.Jii$ii|i 230 Delaware County ' s Leading Daily Newspaper Issued every afternoon and delivered by carriers to nearly every home in Chester and throughout Delaware County JOHN A. WALLACE WM. C. SPROUL CHAS . R. LONG Editors and Proprielors VEBSTER ' S NKVJ INTERNATIONAL DICTIONARY The Only New unabridged dictionary ia many years. Contains the pith and essence of an au- thoritative library. Covers every field of knowledge. An Encyclopedia in a single book. The Only dictionary with the iVeii- Di- vided Page. A ' ' Stroke of Genius. 400,000 Words Defined. 2700 Pages. 6000 Illustrations. Cost $400,000. E  1 SS °st yourself on , this most re- markable sin- gle volume. Write for sample pTgeB full par- ticulars, etc. Mama this paper and we will Bend FREE I sat of Pocket Maps. G. C. Merriam Co. Springfield, Mass., V. S. A. Your College Education is Incomplete Without Good Reading Here ' s the secret. Read the PHOENIX. You can ' t afford to miss it when it costs but Si.oo a year. We print every thing that ' s fit to print and give you a spicy paper that ' s an education in itself. DO IT NOW! BE SENSIBLE. DONT BE EXTRAVAGANT! SUBSCRIBE TO THE PHOENIX . ' Tainiita r tiiirin: 116 5. 17 ts STREET .i SECOND ' T If you see a Picture or Diploma framed to your liking, look on the back and see if this seal is not there. 231 FRANKLIN PRINTING COMPANY EXPERTS IN THREE-COLOR PROCESS WORK, DUOGRAPHS, ETC. 514, 516, 518, 520 and 522 LUDLOW STREET PHILADELPHIA u We are particularly well equipped for college and school work. Our plant is thoroughly modern, consisting of 32 presses, from the small jobber to the large rotary, type- setting machines, and automatic folding machines : thus we are able to handle work from the manuscript to the finished book entirely in our own establishment. Our Company is composed of five former Swarthmore men who thoroughly understand your requirements, and our proof-readers are well known for their accuracy. We desire your trade, and will give your work prompt and careful attention. COLLEGE AND SCHOOL PRINTING 232 CJ . in (0 X I- q: k (0 z a Z lU Ul I H bl Q 1 lU 233 E. A. WRIGHT College Engraver, Printer and Stationer 1108 Chestnut Street Philadelphia Commencement Invitations Dance Invitations and Programs Menus, Fraternity Inserts and Stationery Class Pins, Visiting Cards Wedding Announcements and Invitations Samples cheerfully sent on request 1837 ROBERT SHOEMAKER CO N. E. COR. FOURTH AND RACE STS. PHILADELPHIA 1911 Manufacturers of Strictly PURE POWDERED DRUGS AND SPICES The best crude goods only are used, and each article prepared in our own mills with the most scrupulous care. Crushed, ground, and finely powdered drugs to meet the requirements of the best edu- cated, conscientious pharmacist. LUCCA CREAM OLIVE OIL Having for the past forty years been importing our olive oil, we have had opportunities, by correspondence as -w ell as a personal visit, to ascertain the best source to obtain our supply, and for the above time have imported from the same producer, and it has al ways been satisfactory. There are four grades of table oil imported; we import only the oil known as CREAM. which is the highest grade. Our oil is Guaranteed by Robert Shoemaker Co., under the Food and Drugs Act, June 30, 1906, No. 1006. ....Imported by.... ROBERT SHOEMAKER CO.. Pkiladelpkia, Pa. 234 ....Waterproof Paper Bags.... WEST JERSEY BAG CO. Manufacturers of OPEN MOUTH AND BATES ' VALVE BAGS FOR CEMENT LIME AND PLASTER FRONT AND ELM STREETS, CAMDEN, NEW JERSEY PLATE GLASS WINDOW GLASS Skylignt and Floor Glass Rollea Catnearal, Beautiful Tints EmDossea, Enamelea ana Colorea Cilass A. Full Line ol Stoclc ana Plain Winaow ' Olass Every V anety for Arctutects ana Builders Use A Full Line of Glaziers Diamonds BENJAMIN H. SHOEMAKER 205-207-209-211 North Fourth Street . Philadelphia COLBURN ' S DSF MUSTARD King of Condiments COLBURN ' S « BEL SPICES The Secret of Good Cooking THE A. COLBURN COMPANY PHILADELPHIA, U. S. A. Althouse s Foreign Tours Select and Inclusive— First-Class Travel Throughout Tours to the Mediterranean and to the Northern Ports of Europe, Norway and the North Cape Around the World Axenstrasse, Lake I-.tieerne. STEAMSHIP TICKETS— AU Principal Lines ALTHOUSE TOURS CO. 1336 WALNUT STREET PHILADELPHIA V ictor D. Shirer DRUGGIST A rull line or souvenirs, college cnina -ware, pennants, novelties, ana all kinds or goods tnat good drug stores sell no ' wadays. Tlie best 01 every kind. Exclusive agency for tke candies that make Philadelpkia known everywhere as makers or tke test — in packages from five cents to five dollars. CHOCOLATES and CONFECTIONS ESTABLISHED 18f2 An Exquisite ift — Pink of Perfection - Package - Chocolates or Confections. 236 Exclusive Styles and Fabrics Oak Hall affords an enormous assortment of exclusively tailored, exclusively patterned cloth- ing. It is just the place where discriminating college men will find what they want. Oak Hall clothing is being worn on nearly every college campus in the East. Direct to you at Manufacturer ' s prices. No Retailer ' s profits. Wanamaker Brown Market at Sixth Philadelphia The Largest College Engraving House in the World The Chas. H. Elliott Company Works : 1 7th Street and Lehigh Avenue Philadelphia, Pa. Commencement Invitations Class Day Programs and Class Pins Wedding Invitations and Calling Cards PHOTOGRAVURE Dance Programs and Invitations Menus Leather Dance Cases and Covers Fraternity and Class Inserts For Annuals Fraternity and Class Stationery ONE PRICE RUG HOUSE We invite your inspection of our stock of Oriental Rugs which has been largely added to by Mr. Graham ' s personal purchases in the Orient during the summer. Our carpetings, in addition to the regular standard grades, include many new and exclusive patterns. fl Orders taken for Aubusson and Hand Tufted Rugs in any special design and color. Our stock of linoleums, etc., contains the choicest designs. JOHN W. GRAHAM CO. 1 708 CHESTNUT STREET PHILADELPHIA, PA. GILBERT BACON LEADING PHOTOGRAPHERS GROUPING AND FLASHLIGHTS A SPECIALTY SPECIAL RATES TO STUDENTS 1030 Chestnut Street, Philadelphia No connection with any other firm. 237 JACOB REED ' S SONS Smart Clothes for Young Men CLOTHING, FURNISHINGS, HATS, FUR GARMENTS, AUTO WEAR, UNIFORMS JACOB REED ' S SONS 1424-1426 Chestnut Street, Philadelphia Good Bread was never made from poor flour. DANIEL WEBSTER makes bread about which there can be no question. Philadelphia Distributers : ALFRED LOV RY BROTHER Frank H. Stewart Electric Companj -9iS ' ELECTRICAL SUPPLIES FOR EVERY PURPOSE 35 North Seventh Street, Philadelphia An Improved Eye Glass SPRING ARM ADJUSTABLE TO ALL ANGLES IhgfSMimeBurnerCd, 1720 Chestnut Street oTVIanufacturers 238 Manufacturers of Pure Ice Cream and Candy posis:arb ' si 60 7 EDGMONT AVENUE 3 I 4 MARKET STREET CHESTER PENNSYLVANIA H. D. REESE Dealer in the finest quality of Beef, Veal, Mutton, Lamb and Smoked Meats 1203 FILBERT STREET PHILADELPHIA Bell Phone : Filb-rt 29-49 Keystone Phone : Race 253 CHARLES RILEY CATERER OF THE ROOSEVELT 2027 CHESTNUT STREET College Engraving and Printing BEST WORK REASONABLE PRICES WALTER H. JENKINS Successor lo Friends ' Book Association 140 N. 15th STREET PHONE REAL ESTATE INSURANCE HENRY S. WALTON SWARTHMORE, PA. Opposite Station NOTARY PUBLIC INVESTMENTS gle£ t)p 0vti t iva 402 E. FOURTH ST. CHESTER, PA. PHILADELPHIA Bell Phone-W. J. Oglesby 570 W 239 BAILEY, BANKS BIDDLE CO. Makers of the Official Seal Pin, Swarthmore College I4-KT. GOLD, $3.00 SILVER-GILT. $1.00 OLLEGE Organizations contemplating the purchase of Emblems are invited to write for - ' designs, samples and prices. With the workshops on the premises, this Company is en- abled to furnish emblems of the b st grade of workmanship and finish at the lowest prices consistent wilh work of this high quality. COLLEGE AND SCHOOL EMBLEMS an Illustrated Catalogue, mailed free on request 1218-20-22 Chestnut Street PHILADELPHIA Our store is the representative one for Clothes For the College and Preparatory Trade PYLE, INNES BARBIERI College Tailors 15 Walnut Street PHILADELPHIA Wm. K. Ottey Hakry Humpton F. A. PiNKF.KTON OF WEST CHESTER, PA. Furnishes Music for Daaces, Receptions and Social Events Your patronage solicited Telephone Connections Bell Phone 1 9D A Leading Advertising Medium tKfte itlorton Cfjronicle GEORGE E. WHITAKER, Proprietor Commercial $rintins Students Work a Specialty MORTON. PA. Local Telephone 585 Special Rates to Travelers enngplbania ?|otel Pennsylvania Ave. and Market St. CHESTER, PA. EDMUND OLIVER, Proprietor THE FISK TEACHERS ' AGENCY 156 FIFTH AVE., NEW YORK CITY Other offices in Boston, Chicago, Denver, Los Angeles, etc. H. E. Cfocker W. D. Kerr P. V. Huyssoon E. H. Soliuyler Mgfs. Especially serviceable to college gradu- ates by reason of large patronage among the better class of high schools and pri- vate schools. Send for circulars. 240 nll f —T i l |( || r= i || ' l ' i Swarthmore Preparatory School An excellent institution, supervised by Friends, for mental, moral and phys- ical development. Individual attention is given each pupil by a large and com- petent corps of instructors. The co-educational plan has proven a great success. Pupils are thoroughly prepared for College, Technical School or Business. Athletics are considered part of the course. The curriculum has met the approval of many leading educators. The school is admirably situated, being only thirty minutes from Philadel- phia. The school buildings and cottages are built of stone and are new and modern in every respect. Athletics are encouraged, and there are ample facilities for indoor and out- door sports. Up-to-date gymnasium, bowling alleys and swimming pool. Athletic field for baseball, running, etc. HJ ■Tuition and Board, oo. Year Book on request. ARTHUR H. TOMLINSON Headmaster SWARTHMORE, PA. o] | ( I OC Z) ]|(=)|[E ' |[ l 241 GEORGE SCHOOL of¥ tfror Friends. Thorough College Preparation. Beautiful grounds. 227 acres. New g.vmuii- sium, large athletic fields. Healthful location between New York ami Philadelphia. For catalog, address JOSEPH S. WALTON, Ph.D., Principal, George School P. O., Bucks County, Pennsylvania. FRIENDS SCHOOL Fourtn ana West Streets WILMINGTON, DELA VARE For Illustrated Catalog, Address HERSCHEL A. NORRIS, A. M., Principal EASTMAN POUGHKEEPSIE, N. Y. Prepares young men and women for positions of trust ana responsiDility, and assists ttiem to PAYING POSITIONS Comprenensive courses or study. Lib- eral policy. Faculty or specialists, btrong lecture course. Ideal location. Excellent record of 48 years. More tkan 50,000 alumni. Prospectus and Cialendar may be bad upon application. Address Clement C. Gaines, M.A., LL.D. President POUGHKEEPSIE, N. Y. 242 Montgomery, Clothier Tyler 133 South Fourth Street Philadelphia Members New York and Philadelphia Stock Exchanges Investment Securities Deposits Received Subject to Check DON ' T WORRY About Finding a Position as Teacher Next Year REGISTER NOW WITH TillC Albany Teachers ' Agency Twenty years of successful experience in bringing together Good Teachers and Good Schools Ask for Bulletin 20 and see for yourself ALBANY TEACHERS ' AGENCY 81 Chapel Street, Albany, N. Y. Security Trust and Safe Deposit Company MARKET . SIXTH STREETS WILMINGTON, DEL. Capital, $600,000 Surplus, $600,000 Executes Trusts of every description Offers best facilities for Banlting ALLOWS INTEREST ON DEPOSITS Accounts solicited Correspondence invited OFFICERS BENJAMIN NIELDS, President JAMES B. CLARKSDN, VIce-Presiilent JOHN S. ROSSELL, Secretary anil T. 0. L. SCOTT TOWNSEND. Treasurer 243 JOHN S. BIOREN E. CLARENCE MILLER HENRY D. WIEAND WALTER H. LIPPINCOTT EDWARD C. DALE BELL TELEPHONE-LOMBARD 7-23 KEYSTONE TELEPHONE-MAIN 26-40 ESTABLISHED 1865 BIOREN CO. 314 CHESTNUT STREET PHILADELPHIA Buy Issues of Railroad, Public Service Corporation and Car Trust Securities Deal in Investment Bonds Transact a Genera! Banking Business Buy and Sell Stock Exchange Securities on Commission in all Markets Correspondence Solicited 244 Franklin National Bank INCORPORATED 1900 BROAD AND CHESTNUT STS. Philadelphia, Pa. ♦ OFFICERS J. E. JIcAllistek, Pres ' t. E. P. Passmoke, Cashier. J. A. Harris, Jr., Vice-Pres ' t. L. H. Shrigley, Ass ' t Cashier, T. W. Hardt, Ass ' t Cashier. FOREIGN EXCHANGE DEPARTMENT Wm. Weight, Jlanager. Capital, $1,000,000 Surplus and Undivided Profits, $2,800,000 Capital $100,000 Surplus $300,000 Deposits $800,000 m H ::Sii£jM Through up-to-date conservatism and. adher- ence to sound principles — First National Bank of Media Has grown to rank forty - tKird strongest among the national banks of the United States 245 -tn i Mm l ip— rni — ) r :=i (. l o i 1825 1911 1 he Pennsylvania Fire Insurance Co. INCORPORATED 1825 CHARTER PERPETUAL OFFICERS R. Dale Benson, President Jonn L. Thompson, Vice-President Hampton L. Warner, Asst. Secretary W. Gardner Cro vell, Secretary nV illiam J. Dawson, Sec. Ag ' ency Dept. CAPITAL. - - $750,000.00 ASSETS, - - 7,517,393.56 SURPLUS. - - 2.226,500.85 Office : 508-510 Walnut Street, Pkiladelpkia, Pa. d ( i q i ) ][ i|[ 3orr:3|[S i|f — l o i 5] [d 24(3 Vi Cf)egter Countp ru t Company WEST CHESTER, PA. ORGANIZED 1900 Capital, $250,000.00 WE EXECUTE TRUSTS OF ALL KINDS A GENERAL BANKING BUSINESS TRANSACTED INVESTMENTS SOLD RENTS AND INCOMES COLLECTED Correspondence Snfaiteb J. E. RAMSEY, President WM. H. GIBBONS, Vice-President WM. P. SHARPLESS, Trust Officer L. K. STUBBS, Vice-President Treasurer ELBERT N. PUSEY, Asst. Trust Officer Asst. Treasurer ALFRED P. REID, Solicitor K IS IS 247 II L tE fje toartftmore i ational panfe = Safe Deposit Boxes in burglar proof vault for rent. 3% interest paid in savings fund de- partment. Your banking business cordially solicited. Open for business at 8 A. M. KDWARD B. TEMPLE, Prest. CHAS. D. JOYCE, V.-Prest C. PERCY WEBSTER, Cashier DIRECTORS ' EDW. B. TEMPLE THOMAS S. SAFFORD J. EVERTON RAMSEY CHAS. D. JOYCE CLARENCE W. SCOTT CHAS. PAXSON Hon. ' WM. P. POTTER C. PERCY WEBSTER JOSEPH SWAIN Hon. -WM. C. SPROUL 2i8
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