Wellesley College - Legenda Yearbook (Wellesley, MA) - Class of 1890 Page 1 of 282
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51 8 Cei epda publist ed f v} )ua y by tt?e Senior QIass of U ellesley 5olle e published by ttje QIass of ' 90 FRANK WOOD PRINTER 352 Washington Street BOSTON EDCTOJ MV STAVr f AT T ED] TOP- 1 ' .n •■Arid win 9 larger liberty, FrorT precedent to preceder t. DEDICATED to tt e SPIRIT OF PROGRESS by th e CLASS OF ' 90 Ir siricere gratitude for tt e ber efits of receipt evolUtior , ar d with buoyar t h ope for th e future of Alrria Aater ' s iristitUtior s. Preface INCE the publication of the precedent Legenda by ' 89, there has been notable increase in the collegiate spirit and enterprise of Wellesley- The development is goodly to see. Oftentimes Wellesley ' s intense individuality has laid her open to the charge of nar- rowness, so that it is with sincerely hearty congratulations we recognize her new departure in the broad field of college interests. Perhaps no better sign of the times can be oflered than the brief, but truly successful, history ot the reorganized societies, Phi Sigma and Zeta Alpha. A year ago they had but their names, a background of reminiscence, and a future of ideals. To-day, yith only the year ' s slight experi- ence, their influence and success are assured, and their future is even more hopeful in the promise of developing true fraternity feeling, and a fine womanhood as its upholder. Material evidence of their real prosperity may be found any da ■in Society Hall. While the Class of 90 has, without doubt, taken to itself much pride in the regeneration of the Greek-letter Societies, ' 91 has done the College a desirable and lasting service in empha- sizing college unity, rather than class distinction, bv the adoption of the ' 90 pin as a design for the College badge. Other proof of the change from individual to more general interests is not wanting. The institution of the College cheer, the organization of the College Glee and Banjo Clubs, and the hearty student support of the Prelude editors, mark a signal advance. In the publication of the Legexda, also, the editors have more t han once been honestly gratified by the appreciative co-operation of the College at large. It has served to make the work simpler, and. we believe the result will be more enjoyable. There is evolution in the making of college publications as in all things else, and we trust we are not untlulv priding ourselves in the thought that this year ' s Le(;exda evidences the universal truth. Certainly there has been enough of progress within the college walls to show its character in the college annual. The novel features and the beauty of the hook will be recognized, we believe, without our comment. It is a matter of most cordial satisfaction to us, as it must be to many others, that dragons in persona are no longer a feature of the institution. To the discrimination and suc- cess of ' S9, we feel that this emancipation is in a measure due, and accordingly render our warmest thanks with whatever of annual fruit 89 may find sprung up from the lusty seed she sowed. In all sinceritv we hope that we have not violated the confidence reposed in us ; that we have in no wise periled to future classes the privilege we have enjoyed ; and that the judgment we have exercised has been at all times sound and kindly, never prudish. From many members of the Class of ' 90 the editors have received valued assistance. In particular we desire to recognize the work of Miss Martha Pike Conant, Z A, quondam associate editor, and the aid of Miss Charlotte E. Halsey, A. S., Miss Mabel Doolittle, and Mi.ss Sarah M. Rock, S. S. ( ONTENTS AD ERTISKMKXTS ASSOCIATIONS Christiiin Association .... Welleslcv Colleg e Chiipul Fund Association at: ILETICS .... Gvmnasium .... Tennis Association Boating .... ' go Hai ' t; and Hounds Cluh Tricycle Club Bicvcle Association . CLIBS — MISCELLAXEOUS Xorunibcija Operetta . Matinee, Fair Barbarian ' Matinee, Rice Pudding The Ishinaelites . Sodales Peregrinantes The Woman ' s Board . Whoop It Up The Literary Society for the Ad Humbugs F3 Anti Club . Societv for the Development of Canterburv Swinkers . The Muse ' s . The Mewses I. F Waban .... Fort Orange Octagon Club GESTA WELLESLEIAKl ' M GRINDS vancement of Character bv Contest LITERARY A Visit . • . . . Welleslev Ways . Stone Hall Speaks for Itself History of Waban Diary of Xorumbega . Freeman ' s Action Wood Cottage Short Course in the Eliot . The Census-Taker Visits Simpson Man House of Commons . Tree Day .... Anglo-Saxon Fragment wHo Says? .... The Faculty in the Gymnasium Song of the Junior History Xote-Book Tupelo Soliloquy of the Senior Mathematician Jingle Psychological Valentine . On Miss Literarilv .... PAGE 99 100 101 102 104 104 104 107 lo; 10c| 1 10 no no 4 114 nS 1 19 120 ■34 136 137 13S 139 140 141 1 2 144 145 .46 ' 47 14S ' 49 150 5 ' ' 5 ' 5- ' ' 54 ' 54 OFFICERS OF GO ' ERNMENT AND INSTRUC- TION II Board of Trustees and Visitors 12 Faculty and College Officers 13 OiUiANIZATIONS OF CLASSES AND ALUMNAE. 19 .Vlumn Association ....... 21 Gratluate Students 23 Class of ' S9 25 ' 90 Editorial .27 Class of ' 90 30 In Meinuriam 35 ' 91 Editorial 37 Class of 91 . 39 Sylvanus 43 ' 92 Editorial .......... 45 Class of ' 92 47 Spriner Song . 51 ' 93 Editorial ■• - 53 Class of ' 93 56 Moral Jingles 61 Club of ' cf± 6t, Special Editorial 65 Special Organization 67 PUBLICATIONS — WELLESLEV 121 SER ' ITORS — NOTED iS SOCIETIES Art Si Art Societv S3 Sketching Ctub 85 Bread Winners 85 Academy of Class(room)ic . rt S6 Dramatic axd Literary 73 Shakespeare Societv ■• 75 Phi Sigma . 77 Zeta Alpha .......... 79 Music. L S7 Beethoven Society SS . Welleslcy College Glee Glub S9 Wellesley College Banjo Cluli 90 ' 90 Glee Club ......... 90 ' 91 Glee Club 91 Zeta Alpha Qiiartette ....... 91 Phi Sigma Sextette ........ 92 Phi Sigma Banjo Club ....... 92 Freeman Banjo Club 93 Try-ear-ian Sodalitv ........ 94 Scientific ' 95 Microscopic and Scientific Societv ..... 97 Zoological Club ......... 98 Botanical Club 9S ii d ' I • fficeiis 0f 3 0t;eiinment and Jnstrtuctien f gO Rl) OF JjRUSTEES. Noah Porter, D.D.. LL.D. Nathaniel G. Clark. D.D., LL.D. Howard Crosby. D.D., LL.D. . Pauline A. Durant William F. Warren, S.T.D., LL.D. Alvah Hovey, D.D., LL.D., Randolph S. Foster, S.T.D.. LL.D John Hall. D.D. . William H. Willcox. D.D., LL.D. Dwight L. Moody Elisiia S. Converse William Clafun, LL.D. Mary B. Claflin . RuFus S. Frost Amos W. Stetson Martha W. Wilkinson Hannah B. Goodwin . William S. Houghton Alexander McKenzie, D.D. Eustace C. Fitz . Lilian Horsford . Alice Freeman Palmer, Ph.D., L H Horace E. Scudder, B.A. . Marion Pelton Guild, B.A. Helen A. Shafer, M.A. Ex-Presidciit of Vale Unh ' ersity. DE.NT Emeritus of the Board. . Secretary of the A. B. C. F. M. President c f the Bo.m d. Ne-v i ' ork. Vice-President. IVeilesley, Mass. Secretary .and Treasurer. President of Boston Uiiiz ' ersity. ■President of Neivton Theological Seminary. . Bishop of M. E. Church, Boston. Chancellor of the University of New York. . Maiden, Mass. . Norlhfield, Mass. Maiden, Mass. . Boston, Ma ' s. Boston, Mass. Chelsea, Mass. . Boston, Mass. Cambridge, Mass. Boston, Mass. Boston, Mass. Cambridge, A ass. Boston. A ass. Cambridge, A ass. Camb idge , Ala ss . Cambridge, A ass. Boston, A ass. . President of Welleslcy Collate. goaRD OF Visitors. Eben N. Horsfokd. M.A Cambridge, Mass. Pkesident of the Board. 1590. Borden P. Bowne, LL.D Prof Philosophy, Boston University. Francis A. Walker, Ph.D., LL D President Alass. Institntc of Technology. Edward G. Porter, M.A. ........ Lexington, Alass. Lyman Abbott, D.D Nexv Tork. Ellen H. McKenzie Cambridge, Mass. HELEN ALMIRA SHAFER. M.A.. Oberlin. President. yiSTORY OF ?1RT. Elizabeth Harriet Uenio .... Florence Bigelovv. B.A.. Wellesley College Hannah Bradbury Goodwin Professor of Germtin nid History of An. Instructor. Lecturer. gOTflNY. Susan Maria Hallowell. M.A.. Colby University Clara Eaton Cummings Grace Emily Cooley Maude Gilchrist .... Jennie Cutler Newcomb Professor. Associate Professor. Instructor. Instructor. Assistant in Botanical Laboratories. ( HEMISTRY. Charlotte Fitch Roberts. B.A.. Wellesley ' College Marion Marsh, B.A.. Wellesley College Marion Metcalf, B.A., Wellesley- College Mary Marl Fuller .... Associate Professor. Instructor. Instructor. Assistant in Chemical Laboratories, LEG EN DA. Marv Adams Currier . Cora Elizabeth Everett LOCUTION. Professor. Assistant. Prench. ♦Rosalie See. B.S.. Universite de France. Atademie de Paris ........... Professor. jAdeline Pelissier. B.S.. Academie de Paris . . . Instructor. Amelie Tow.mier. B.E.. Academie de Be.saii(;on . . . Instructor. Valentine Tow.mier. B.E.. Academie de Besaucjon . . Instructor. ( EOLOGY. William Harmon Niles. Ph.B.. M.A.. Weslevan Uni- versity .......... Marion Metcalf. B.A.. Welleslev College .... Head of Defartinent. Instructor. ( ERMSN. Carla Wenckebach Bertha Cordemann ........ Marie Eggers ......... MaRGARETHE MiJLLER Professor of German and Pedagogics. Instructor. Instructor. Instructor. ( REEK. Angie Clara Chapin. B.A.. Michigan University . . Professor. Annie Sybil Montague. M.A.. Wellesley College . . Instructor. Mary Whiton Calkins. M.A.. Smith College . . . Instructor. Katherixe May- Edwards. B.A.. Cornell University . Instructor. IJlSTORY. K. therine Ellis Coman. Ph.B.. Michigan University Mary ' Alice Knox. B.A.. Elmira College . . . . Mary Elizabeth Burroughs Roberts. Ph.B.. M.S.. Cor- nell University ......... Marcia Kimball Kendall . Professor of History and Political Economy. Instructor. Instructor. Instructor. Abroad on leave of absence. Actinj? Professor. H LEGENDA. bSTIN Frances Ellen Lord ....... Luci. Fidelia Cl. rke Emily Josephine Clarke. B.A.. Welleslev College . Sarah Lilian Burling ame. B.A.. Welleslev College Addie Belle Hawes. B.A.. Oberlin ... Professor. Instructor. Instructor. Instructor. Instructor. l NGLISH blTERaiURB. Louise Manning Hodgkins. M.A. , Lawrence College Katherine Lee Bates. B.A.. Welleslev College . ViDA DuTTON Scudder. M.A.. Smith College Sophie Jewett ........ Sus. NNE Fenimore Tyndale, M.A.. Dnirv College . William Ja.mes Rolfe. Ph.D.. A.M.. Amherst. Lit. D Amherst. A.M., Hon.. Harvard .... Professor. Associate Professor. Instructor. Instructor. Instructor. Lecturer on .S iakcs ' enrc. rvjaiHEMaTics. Ellen Hayes, B.A.. Oberlin Ev. Chandler. B.A.. Michigan University . Ellen Louise Burrell. B.A., Welleslev College . Ann. Van Vleck. ISLA.. Weslejan Universitv Ellen Fitz Pendleton, B.A.. Welleslev College Sarah Woodman Paul. B.A.. Welleslev College . Professor. Associate Professor. Instructor. Instructor. Instructor. histructor. Philosophy. Anne Eugenia Morgan, M.A.. Oberlin Mary Sophia Case, B.A., Michigan University . Marion McGregor Noyes ..... EsTELLE May Hurll, B.A.. Welleslev College . Professor. Instructor in Psycfiology. Instructor in Logic. Instructor in Etitics. Physics. Sarah Frances Whiting tALMA Eveleth Aum.ack, M.A.. Welleslev College Margaret Eliza Maltisv, B.A.. Oberlin Harriet Jane Buckley ...... Abroiid on le:ive of absence. t . hsent. Profes ' ior of PJiysics and Pfiysical Astronomy. Instructor. Instructor. Assistant in Pliysical Laboratories. LEG END A. iF(HETORIC aND THE NGLISH LaNGUaGE. Margaret Elizabeth Strati on. M.A.. Obeilin. Ralza Morse Manly, M.A. . Wesleyan University Margaret P. Sherwood, B.A.. Vassar College . Mary Patterson Manly ..... Pro essoy. Instructor. Instructor. Assistant. 2 00L0GY. Mary Alice Wilcox JEvelyn Barrows, B.S., Welleslev College . Caroline Augusta Woodman. A.M., Vassar, S.B. sachusetts Institute Technology Albert Pitts Morse Mas- Professor. Instructor. Instructor in Physiology. Assistant in Zoolo rical Laboratories. Officers. Anna Maria McCoy (resigned) Harrietta Wallace Tuttle Agnes Godell Mary Caswell Catherine Ayer Ransom Abby Cora Jackson Harriet Hawes Lydia Boker Godfrey. Ph.B Lucile Eaton Hill Mary Anna Wood Fredonia Whiting Case Carrie M. Tory . Frances Louise Morton Anna Stedm, n Newman Louise Anne Dennison Elizabeth Juliette Hurd Rachel Taylor Speakman. M. D., Woman ' s Medical College, Philadelphia, and Cleveland Homeopathic College, Ohio .... Emilie Jones Barker, M.D., New York Medical College and Hospital for Women Boston University. Abroad on leave of absence. Acting Professor. Secretary. Assistant to the President. Secretary to the President. Secretary to the President. Cashier. Assistant Cashier. Librarian. Superintendent of the Catalogue Department and Lect- urer oti Bibliography. Director of the Gymnasium. Physical Examiner, Department of Physical Culture. Superintendent Domestic Department, Alain Hall. Housekeeper. .Superintendent op Culinary Department. Superintendent of Norumbega Cottage. Superintendent of Freeman Cottage. Superintendent Wood Cottage. Resident Physician and Lecturer on Hygiene. Resident Physician and Superintendent of the Eliot. i6 gCHOOL OF (VIUSIC. JiNiis Welch Hill Frank Eugene Morse EiMiLV Josephine Hurd George William Bemis Marietta Ruth Sherman ' Mary Eliza O ' Brion . Estelle Taylor Andrews Isabelle Moore Kimball Harry Benson- Emma Susan Howe WiLLiA Thomas Stovall Minnie Adaline Stowell Professor of Music, ami Director of the School of Music. Teacher oj Vocal Culture. Teacher of Piano. Teacher of Guitar. Teacher of Violin. Teacher of Piano. Teacher of Piano. Teacher of Piano. Teacher of Tonic Sol-Fa and Sight-Singing. Teacher of Vocal Culture. Organist, and Teacher of Piano and Harmony. Teacher of Piano. Number of students. io6. gCHOOL OF RT. Ida Bothe Harriet Ide Coman Agnes Hastings . ( Director of the School of Art. I Dravjing and Painting from Life Model. Dra-ving from Antique and Life. ' Dra-ii ' ing from Antique, Water-color Painting. Number of students, 22. j5o V i i8 Jiipe. IlMn Irj Tit Fof Jat t Ul ' . tl llTl; Ku-is.. TV)|lf.W1l(, 111, T.i ' I ' t ilia tlVt,«Tt,TL - -■' 1(5.! ot 1)1 1. I omtj-eo-mtfi if anizatiens ©f t lumnge and glasses 19 flLUMNSE SSOCmilON. Organized by Classes of ' 79 and 80 JUNE 23. 1880 present Officers. Mrs. Winnifred Edgerton Merrill, S;, Z A Mrs. Sarah Woodman Paul, ' Si, $ S . Mrs. Susan Maine Silver. ' 86 . . . Miss M.msel Rosamond Wing. ' 87, S. S. Miss Florence Bigelow, ' 84, S. S. President. Vice-Preside?! t. Corresponding Secretary. Recording Secretary. Treasurer. Number of members, 4S4. (jRaiDUaTE gTUlDENTS. Dole, Dorothy Lees Jordan, Nellie B. . Magone, Sarah Louise, S. S. McClun, Caroline H. OVERSTREET, ELIZABETH MAY Winchcncion. Mass. .... Bates College, Alfred, Me. 26 Elizabeth Street, Ogdensburg, X. Y. Eureka College, West Liberty. la. Franklin College, Franklin. Ind. Wood. Stone Hal Wood. College. College. 23 Tadina sti l fadinf 24 COLORS: RED AND ECRU. FLOWER: TULIP. (t lass of ' 89 Dole, Dorothy Lees Magone, S. rah Louise, S. S. (Jradijat( s. Winchendon, Mass. .... 26 Elizabeth Street, Ogdensburg, N. Y. Wood. Wood. Abbott. Ruth Elizabeth. A. S Andrews. Grace Groff, Sarah H. Holmes, Helen Weston HoRTON, Katharine Eloise, Z A James, Edith Myra, Z A Lane, Katharine J. Mitchell, Jane Potter . Paton, Ethel, S. S. . Pleasants, Emma Shaw, S. Quint, Katharine Mordantt, S. SouLE, Florence Evelyn, ' ZA Stone, Is. belle Storer, Helen Amanda. Z A Sturges, Edith Thalheimer, Elsie, S . Westcott, Charlotte piftl? Years. Wakefield, Mass Wood. The Palermo, 125 East 57th Street, New York . . Wood. 63 West LTpsal Street. Germantown. Pa. . . . Wood. Plymouth, Mass. ....... Wood. Windsor Locks, Conn. ...... Wood. Care Superintendent Public Schools, Omaha, Neb. . Freeman. 65 Crawford Street, Roxburv. Mass. . . . Wood. Haverhill, Mass. ....... Wood. 41 Chestnut Street, East Orange, N. J. . . . Norumbega. Pottsv ille, Schuylkill County, Pa Norumbega. AUston, Mass. . ' Wood. 25 HarrLson Avenue, Taunton, Mass. . . . Wood. 3352 Indiana Avenue, Chicago, 111. .... Wood. 115 High Street, Akron, O Norumbega. Oak Park, Cook County, 111. ..... Simpson. Avondale, Cincinnati, O. . . . . . . Wood. 4 Beach Avenue, Auburn, N. Y. . . . . Freeman. 25 26 7he WeLLE5LEY-(20LLEGE ' 90. 85. — Origin of ' 90 ; Coxdition of Community : Foi.ki.and and Bookland ; Sac and Soc ; Xatcre of New Tenants. 87. — Duodectma Ciiarta ; Clstoms. 88. — Civilization : Dissensions. 89. — Taxation ; Strained Relations. 90. — General Prosperity The Beginning of the End : Oath of Fealty. BooKIao - 86. The name ' 90 is of Arabic origin, and the Class to which the appeUation was appHed existed in its essential character long before the Matriculation. At the OricJiQ time of the domestication of this estate the township in which they settled was fully of ' 90- organized, and presided over by a tun-gemot and a tun-gerefa, possessing powers regulated and directed by a statute code traditionally derived from the customs of the ancient Frankish moot. The land was divided into Folkland and Bookland, and polKlapd there is abundant documentary evidence concerning the transfer of lands, especially n Ji,i- in the case of grants made by charter, by which Folkland was turned into free a alodial Bookland. As freemen ' 90 held grants of sac and soc — a privilege attained g at the cost of the sacs and socs of a now obsolete class of tenants-in-chief registered gQ(. in Domesdav as ' SS. The character of the iiovx stitdentes was marked by a prepon- derance of uncurbed elocitv, which was exercised mainly with a view to the turther- ance of their own interests. The previous holders naturally resented this attitude, and regarded the new-comers as Upstarts. 87. The duodecima charta was the first great public act of the Class after it had realized its own identity. It was based on the charta of ' 89, I. ; in the main Duodeeima following the arrangement of that famous document, but evidences a higher stage of Ql arta. civilization on the part of its framers. It was ratified by order of the Hundred Court, and entered in the archives as VI. Freeman, c. 4. 27 Upstarts. LEGEND A. In accordance with the venerable customs of the township, ' 90 elected repre- sentatives for the supervision of their agricultural interests. At stated festivals the whole community assembled to participate in certain rites attendant upon the plant- ing of a tree, symbolic of their status. On these occasions the Class observed the established precedent, and appeared in the assembly wearing liveries characteristic of their definitive traits. Their costumes varied at different epochs ; those most promi- nent in history being the garb of royal maidens, the plumage of Minerva ' s birds, the apparel of a meek and quiet spirit, and the raiment of communal consummation. 88. As ' 90 became wedded to her adopted abode, historians mention a higher degree of cultivation, as shown bv their attention to the art of minstrelsv. It is a fact, _. ... 5 . . . . . . . Ciuihzatiorj. however, that thev never attained distinguished rank in this pursuit. The cause may, perhaps, be assigned to a succession of pett) ' civil v ' ars, the most notable of which was that known as the Crew-war. Notwithstanding the drawbacks of these internal dissensions, it is remarkable to note the perseverance of this class in the fos- Dissepsiorj. tering of aesthetic amenities. Of peculiar interest is the record of a great celebration, in the spring of their third vear in the township, on which occasion brilliant social and decorative abilities vere displayed. 89. At this period their political and economic condition must have been one of great prosperity, since thev were able to collect, as tonnage and poundage, a large oaxatiop. quasi-voluntary tax. A part of this tax, together with the scutage for that fiscal 3 ' ear, thev are said to have remitted to a Mongolian tribe. Great stress is laid on this act in the Pipe Rolls. However, ' 90 seems to have been unable to maintain existence without causing oppression or exciting malignity, into which latter evil the Class now fell. For some length of time the relations of the community were uneasy and 5trained strained, owing to ' 90 ' s attributed attempts to gain class privilege and class isolation. I i latior s. 90. The next mention of ' 90 in the records would seem to indicate that a portion of their history was lost to posterity, for they are described in the Rolls as 51? occupying a position of more lofty honor and dignity than the preceding entry would t ? ?0 ' Q ' ? seem to warrant. This advance may be explained by the fact that a new leader had. ' ? ' . ' ;• aroused in them nobler ideals of internal administration and foreign relations, and that the older generations, to whose adverse presence their early troublous history seems partially due, had vanished from the land. No more fitting evidence of this could be cited than the oath of fealty taken under the new leader, who was chosen to hold this preeminent position through life. ' ' The oath welded ' 90 in a compact and perpetual union to further the beneficent action of the indiv ' idual in the cause of the universal. 28 LEGEND A. (glossary. Alodial. — Freehold land. BooKLAND. — Freehold bv charter. FoLKLAND.— Public land. Matriculation. — Ceremony of installation to a proscribed rank. Moot. — Meeting. Poundage. — See Tonnage. Scut AGE. — Comitated service, p.aynient in lieu of bearing arms. Sac and Soc. — Jurisdiction. Tonnage and Poundage. — Annual t.Tx on imports. TuN-GEMOT. — Town meeting. TuN-GEREFA. — Town-reeve, who with four best men represented township in hundred-court. Universal. — Undefined freehold. Upstarts. — Race kindred to the Heavv-Villeins. 29 COLORS: LILAC AND GOLD. FLOWER: HELIOTROPE. ? lass of ' 90 . Officers. AxGiE Lacey Peck . President. Abbie Ei.iz. beth Wiggin ..... Vice-President. K. THERINE Morse ....... Recor4iiig Secreta ry. S. RAH Jane Freeman ...... Corresponding Secretary. Alice Gray Bothwell ...... Treasurer. Ruth Eastman Morrill ) u- j ■...... Histoyians. Mary Lucasta Fish • Margaret Josei ' Hine Holley .... Factotnm. Rose Juli.v Sears Anne Lucy Bosworth . . . . . Excciitire Committee. Emeline Pl. ce Hayward ' jHo orary fTlembers. Prof. Henry Dru.vimond. Hon. Chauncey M. Depew. Andrews, Elvira Kingsbury Arnold, Anna Louise Aumack, Luella Bacon, Clara L., i Baldwin, . lice Gary, ■! ' 1 Barrows, Mary, Z A fT)emb(?rs. Shelburne, Mass. .... 57 Providence Street. Worcester. Mass. Toms River. N.J. Abingdon. Knox Count . 111. 113 Auburn Street. Camliridxeport. Mass. Frveburtr. Me. ..... Stone Hall. College. College. Freeman. Freeman. Norumbega. 30 LEGENDA. Bass. S. Lena Bock, Sarah Malinda, S. S. BoswoRTH, Anne Lucy, - BoTiiwELL, Alice Gray, Z A Brackett, Grace Mason, S. S Bray, Ella Williams, A. S. Brooks, Lillian Carter . Brown, Emily Frances, M. S. Brown, Lena Hill, Z A Brown, Mary Mabel Burgess. Anne . Child, Susan Wade . Clark, Helen MacGregor, 4 ' Clougii, Xellora Harriet coddington, gertrude louisa Cogswell, Mary A., A. S. Conant, Martha Pike, Z A •Cook, Bessie Lesquereux, Z A Crane. Maud H., S. S. Curtis, Mabel Gair, il ' - Damon, Ruth Stockbridge Dean, Rosa, S Dempsey, Helen Anne, - Doolittle. Mabel . Dransfield, Mary ' Louise Dresser, Caroline M., - Dunlap, Kent Rolla, S. S. Field, Helen Blanche. A. S Fish, Mary ' Lucasta, Z A FisHEL, Lillian H., - . Fitch, Mary ' Vinia . Eraser, Georgine Zetelle Freeman, Sarah Jane Glover, Ethel Adelia, S. S. Godfrey-, Mabel I-ee, 1 - Gowans, Emily Camilla, i) Greenbank, Charlotte Eliza Hale, Nettie Jane . Halsey ' , Charlotte Elizabeth, A. S. Hamilton, Anna May- Hardy, Henrietta E. Hathaw. y ' , Evangeline. L S Havxes, Lillian L., I . H. lo:! West State Street. Plainfieki. X. J. Linden Avenue, Roxbury. Mass. Woonsocket. R. I. 156 Elm Street. Albany- X- Y. Brookline. Mass. . Yarmouth Port. Mass. . Woburn. Mass. Johnstown. N. J. . Woburn. Mass. Peabody. Mass. Portland. Me. Xew Hampton. X Norwich Town. Ct. 214 Stuart Avenue, Kalamazoo, Mich. Ostrom Avenue. Syracuse, N. Y. Lake Village. N. H. . Greenfield. Mass. .... Springfield. Mass. Homer, N. Y. 106 Huntington Avenue. Boston. Mas: Plymouth. Ma.ss. .... Exeter. N. H. 171 Franklin Street. Cleveland. O. Schuylerville. N. Y. . Rochester, N. Y. . Castine. Me. .... Virden. Ill 14 Sonierset Avenue. Taunton. Mass. Brunswick. Me. .... Babylon, Long Island. N. Y. Hillsdale. Xorwalk, Conn. . Calvin Avenue. Waverly, Md. Lee Tweedy Co., 86 Worth Street. 1303 CtSt., N. W.. Washington. D. C Milford, Mass. .... 129 North Street, Buffalo, N. Y. West Wareham. Mass. Weston. Vt 3 North Church Street. Schenectady. N. Y Wakefield. Mass. .... Arlington. Mass. .... Woodfords. Me. .... 5 Irving Place, 2d Street. Troy. N. Y. New Mrs York Citv Xorumbega. College. Xorumbega. Freeman. Stone Hall. College. College. Simpson. Waban. Stone Hall. College. Freeman. Wood. Simptson. Simpson. Stone Hall. Freeman. Waban. Wood. Wood. Wood. College. Wood. Norumbega. Norumbega. Wood. Townsend. Wood. Eliot. Norumbega. Eliot. Eliot. -ood. Wood. Freeman. Wood. Eliot. Eliot. Eliot. Eliot. Norumbega. Freeman. Norumbega. 31 LEGEND A. Hayward. Emeline Place, 2 HiCKOK. Gennie, M, S. . Hitch. Marv French, M. S HoLLEY, Margaret Josephine Jenks, Anna B., A. S. Karslake, Christine Knapp. Fannie Agnes, A. S. Landerburn, Mary 0. E., l S Leonard, Florence Edith Linscott, Annie May-, A. S. Lord, Annie L. Luther, Edith Mary, A. S. Manson, Mabel Augusta, S Mason, Elizabeth Browning, Z A May, Florence Edith, i: McIvER, Jennie Bond, Z A McNary, Sarah Jane, S Miller, Mary- S. Mitchell. Annie Maria, M. i MODERWELL, MarY V. Morrill, Lucia, S. S. Morrill, Ruth Eastman, S.I Morse, Katherine, Z A Noble, Caroline E. . Norton, Alice Mabel, S. S. Olsson, Annie M. . Orton, Mary Jennings, S. S. Palen, Frances Parker, Etta R., A. S. . Parker, Helen A. . Peck, Angie Lacey, 2 . Pierce, Grac e A. Richardson, Alice Marion Rosa, Cornelia Irene Sears, Rose Julia, J 2 Sherwin, Belle, Z A Sinclair, Isabelle Aiken, A. S. Smith, Annie Manson, - Smith. Bertha E., M. S. . Strong, Ruth Gage SwEETSER, JOSEPHA VIRGINIA, A. S Swift, Louise Bradford, S. S. Taft, Mary Field, Z A . Tribune Building, New York. N. Y. Morrisville, Vt. New Bedfbid, Mass. Selma, Ala. .... Norwich, N. Y. . Mass, a. Pa 111. 65 Clinton Avenue, Albany. N. Y Sitka. Alaska Hazleton, Pa. Abington, Mass. . 136 West Newton Street, Boston, Ipswich. Mass. 1420 Chestnut Street, Philadelphi: Portsmouth, N. H. Herndon. Va. Barre, Mass. 925 Main Street, Worcester, Mass Riverside. Paterson, N.J. Adrian, Mich. Hinsdale, N. H. . 2920 Groveland Avenue. Chicago, Conway Centre, N. H. Conway Centre, N. H. North Haverhill, N. H. 33 Main Street, Springfield, Mass. 209 Pleasant Street, Bennington, Vt. 14 Trowbridge Street, Cambridge, Mass. 104 Twentieth Street, Columbus, O. 2130 Camac Street, Philadelphia, Pa. 35 West Cedar Street, Boston. Mass. Fitzwilliam. N. H. Warren. O. . EastJartVey. N. H. Woburn, Mass. Woodlawn Park, Chicago, 111. Stockbridge, Mass. 1324 Euclid Avenue, Cleveland. O. Free Institute, Worcester. Mass Bedford. Mass. Blue Hills, Hartford, Ct. . Ashtabula, O. . . . Wakefield. Mass. . 39 Henry Street, Detroit, Mich. Stafford Springs, Conn. . Norumbega. . Eliot. . Wood. . Freeman. . Stone Hall. Freeman. . Norumbega. Mrs. Spear. . Stone Hall. College. . Stone Hall. College. . Eliot. . ' Norumbega. Norumbega. Norumbega. . Eliot. . Eliot. . Eliot. Norumbega. Mrs. Townsend. Mrs. Townsend. . Norumbega. . Wood. . Wood. Freeman. Freeman. . Wood. College. Freeman. . Mrs. Spear. . Stone Hall. College. . Freeman. . Eliot. . Wood. . Wood. Norumbega. . Mrs. Hagar. Simpson. . Eliot. College. . Norumbega. 32 LEG EN DA. Tyler, Mary Noyes, A. S. Wade, Clare L., S. S. Wallace, Ida May . Warrex, Edith H., A. S. Weiss, Mollie . WiGGiN, Abbie Elizabeth, 1 2 WooDiN, Mary Eastman . Yardley, Mary Martin . Young, Mary ' P., S. S. Total. loi. Tylersville. Ct 43S Dearborn Street, Helena, Mont. Wakefield, Mass 900 Hoyt Street. East Saginaw, Mich. Honesdale, Pa. .... 25 6th Street, Haverhill. Mass. . Amherst, Mass. ... Lock Haven, Pa. .... 1535 Fourth Ave., Louisville, Kj. Simpson. Wood. Eliot. Eliot. Wood. Eliot. College. Eliot. Norumbega. pormer (T|(?nfi?r5 of ' 90. Apgar, Genevieve Baker, Elizabeth Buckley, H. ttie J. BuGBEE, Fannie Theresa Butler, Jennie . Cory, Jennie May Caton, Annie Bertha Chase, Edith M. Chenault, Shirley . Cilley, Grace Thurber Clark, Alice Luella Clements, Emma Conner, Julia Atterbury Deming, Grace . Dewey ' , Grace E. Emerson, Emma Wilson Fairfield, Alice L, Farnsworth, Charlotte E. French, Mary ' Louise Gage, Hattie N. George, L. Maud Goddard, Martha F Godfrey, Alice E. Greeley, Jennie E Hallock, Lily H. Hast, Lizette D. Hawes, Mabel C. Hodges, Edna Cornelia 1S7 Greenwich Street, New York. X. Y. Latrobe, Pa. Arlington, Va. Worcester. Mass. Carbondale, Pa. 33 Hawthorne Avenue, Cleveland, O. Plymouth, Mass. Hanover, N. H. 106 West Broadway, Louisville, Ky. Rockland, Knox County. Me. Des Moines, la. Wellesley, Mass. New Albany, Ind. Geneseo, 111. Owasso, Mich. Haverhill. Mass. Watkins, Col. Westboro, Mass. 2S Outhwaite Street. Cleveland. O. 135 Orange Street. Manchester. N. H. Milford, N. H. 34 High Street. Worcester, Mass. Wakefield, Mass. 15 Trumbuli Street. New Haven, Ct. 62 Neal Street. Portland, Me. Louisville, Ky. Burlington, Vt. Helena, Mont. 33 LEGEND A. Hills, Julia HoLBROOK, Agnes S. Jack, Emma R. . Jenkins, Addie Louise Lane, Lora Wedgwood LoMORE, Mary E. MODERWELL, MaTTIE E. Newell, Ada Lena . Parker, Grace Ann Percy, Ethel Pekry, Ida Belle Phillips, Mary J. Robertson, Josephine C Robertson, Lida Root, Lily F. . Scott, Mary K. Smith, Anna Clara Sperry, Louise Abbie Spicer, Helen E. Standish, Bessie H. Strobridge, M. Mabel Taylor, Kate . Taylor, Mary L. Van Eps, Grace Isabelle Webster, Mary Lurena . Whitlock, Mary Blanche Wilford, Mary Gertrude Wolf, Mary Roberta Total. 56. Muskegon. Mich. Marengo, la. Hazleton, Pa. Woodville, Mass. Exeter, N. H. Seneca Falls, N. Y. 2920 Groveland Avenue. Chicago. 111. 15 West Avenue, Pawtucket, R. I. 1022 Main Street, Worcester. Mass. Chatham, N. Y. Wakefield, Mass. Oneida, N. Y. Albion, N. Y. Died. 1S89. Skaneateles, Onondaga County. N. Y. 1210 Euclid Avenue, Cleveland, O. Parsons, Pa. Watertown. Conn. Westerly. R. I. West Randolph, Vt. Yonkers, N. Y. Wheelersburg, O. Locust and Broadway, St. Louis, Mo. Schenectady, N. Y. 68 Ohio Street, Bangor, Me. 133 Arlington Street, Cleveland. O. Batavia, N. Y. Gettysburg, Pa. 34 %n IHcinovinm. LIDA ROBERTSON OF THE CLASS OF ' 90 WELLESLEY. DIED FEBRUARY 9, 1889. 35 Ct apti r II INET-YONESTSTICS. Cesso9 )( . — 5l?eory of T)otor poree. rK« T}., fi,n i«o „.,o :„ u„. ,■T fU„ t..,i„„t ,..:ii 1 , „l, „:.,„,l „ „i rratufn. In these davs of careful and persistent scientific investigation, all treatises on scientific subjects are liable to constant corrections and additions. The editors of the Legenda take pleasure in being able to insert here the most recent observations on Ninet-yonestatics. A number of reliable authorities on the subject have reported their inability to detect or induce charges of egotistic ambition in the green protoplasmic structure mentioned in this lecture. The statement is on the whole so well supported, that it is generally believed the previous deductions from experiments in Ninet-yonestatics were false, and the theory is now advanced that this body of protoplasm never held ambitious charges, but is possessed of a remarkable property not unlike magnetism. — the nature of which property scientists have not yet discovered. ( I ) I IS proportional to JN X i ■( 2 ) I is proportional to -r 37 ■?sgK= L£ ? S : Qt apt r 111 ( mET-YONESraTICS. Cesso9 III. — Stpeory of (T)otor Force. 167. By the lessons in Chapter I. the student will have obtained some elementary notions upon the existence and magnitude of certain definite qualities peculiar to bodies from the very nature of their particles. In the present lesson, which is both one of the hardest and one of the most important to the beginner, and which she must therefore study the more carefully, the laws which concern the existence of atnbitious qualities and their magnitude are more fully explained. That part of the science of ambition which deals with the deportment of egoistic particles in relation to other particles, is called Nixet-yonestatics. We shall begin by discussing first the simple laws of ambitious force which were brought to light in Chapter I., by simple experimental means. 168. First Law of Ninet-yonestatics. — Ambitious cJiat-ges of similar signs repel one anot ier, hut ambitious charges of opposite signs attract one another. The fundamental facts expressed in this law were fullv explained in Lesson I. Though familiar to the student, and apparently simple, these facts require for their complete explanation the aid of advanced experi- mental analysis. 169. Second Law of Ninet-yonestatics. — -The force exerted between tivo charges of ambition (supposing them to be collected at points, or on two small spheres) is directly propor- tional to their product., and inversely proportiotial to the square of the distance between them. This law, discovered by Merman, and called Merman ' s Law, was briefly alluded to (see Loci page) in the record of observations made. We have seen that a similar law held good for forces exerted between two magnet poles, placed opposite each other in a lecture room ; one pole, X, repelling the other, F, with an intensity equal to the products of their known forces. This was a signal instance, since the force produced was so great as to render apparent a marked efl ' ect on pole F ; namely, to incapacitate it for action, in causing its removal from tjie field of Foixe. Merman expressed this law in the following symbolic manner — ( I ) I is proportional to N X F. ( 2 ) I is proportional to -p 37 LEG EN DA. 170. Ambition created by indiiction. — We have now learned how two charged bodies niav attract one another. It has been found that ambition of one sign will induce that of opposite sign in a body. For this experiment we take the apparatus shown in Fig. 3, Chapter I., consisting of a long, open-mouthed vessel of clay, charged with altruistic ambition, and a piotoplasmic struct- ure colored by chlorophyl. The presence of the altruistic ambition of the clay vessel near this green body is found to induce ambition in the body. The outer surface of the protoplasmic struct- ure is discovered to be charged with altruistic ambition, which is evidenced by the attraction to it of small bits of pink and white protoplasm. As the body is connected with the earth by any con- ductor, as a racket, the altruistic ambition is discharged, and the presence of egoistic ambition is detected by the repulsion of these lilac and gold lumps of clay, which have already been charged with ambition of the same sign (see Loci page) . It appears, then, that ambition of one sign induces in any body ambition of the opposite sign : . «., ambition of both sfgns is induced in the body to be charged; the altruistic charge remains on the surface, the egoistic being driven to the interior; when the surface charge is dissipated by connection with the earth, the charge witliin difllises itself through the whole bod} ' . In further illustration of this eftect a second experiment may be cited. The green protoplasmic structure is not connected with the earth, but is suspended from a blue and gold convex surface by this delicate, insulating thread of fancy, colored by sarcasm. hen the thread is set in motion curious effects are observed ; the tinkling of small bells is audible, and a particolored figure in cap and [The Editors regret that the MS. of this interesting and instructive lecture here ends abruptly.] TtL.. { j fir,... .j rt; oij i| i f,,, Xjtt, u,t. (k.fc V Scfir i (,f 38 COLOR: GREEN. FLOWER: FERN. ass of ' 91 ♦ Officers. Sar. Elizabeth Stewart President. Bertha Lebus ........ Vice-President. F. May West ........ Recording Secretary. Ellen Juliette Wall ...... Corresponding Secretary. Elizabeth Guild Hoyt ...... Treasurer. Clara H. Look First Historian. Maria Baldwin Second Historian. Grace Jackson Factotum. Alma E. Beale Marian W. Perrin ■. . . . . Executive Committee. Margaret Ellen Hazen jio orary T emb(?rs. Pres. Helen A. Shafer. Hon. John D. Long. Dr. Charles S. Robinson. Alden, Mae Louise, 2 Alexander, M. Adelaide Arnold, Alice G., Z A Avery, Myrtilla, Z A Bailey, Esther, 2 . A. S. fT emb rs. Camden, Me. .... Wobiirn, Mass 7 Harvard Street, Worcester, Mass. Katonah, Westchester County. N. Y. Arlington, Mass. .... College. Stone Hall. Wood. College. Norumbega. 39 LEGEND A. Baldwin, Maria, S. S. Banta, Effie .... Barker, Bertha I. . Barnes, Lillian Corbett. 2 Batt, a. Laura Beale, Al.ma Emerson Bl. keslee, Eliz. beth Mary, Z A Blood, Mariana Williamson, 4 - Brooks, Henrietta St. Barbe, } ' . Burr, Lillian .... Carter. Mary Walker, Z A . Clement, Alice Shillaber, J 2 Craig, Eliz. beth Crawford, Mary M. Cum.mings, Gr- ce Mayland . CusHMAN. Susan L. . Daxielson, Louise Whitmore Danielson, Mary Louise Darling, Grace L., A. S. Dean, Florence Dudley, Theodora Woodford Duncan, Grace L. . Durflinger, Annie Laurie East.man, Grace, 2 Eldridge, Emily- Louise . Emerson, Clara Eliza Fanning, Grace Merritt Winthr Ford, Jennie Hilton Frost, Mabel .... Gleason, Katherine Florence Gregory ' , E. Helena Hall. Flora Appleton . Hallam, D.msy . . . . Hannum, Louise Harlow, Sarah Havens, M. S. Hartwell, Rachel Rutherford, 1 2 Hawes, Bertha Lee Hazeltine, Mary ' Emogene, 4 2 Hazlewood, Charlotte Williams, M. S Hazen, Margaret Ellen Hodgdon, Bertha Hoyt, Elizabeth Guild, Z A . Jackson, Alice Rebecca, 2 . •J- M H. 526 Third Street, N. W., Washington 144 St. James Place, Brooklyn, N. Y. 5 Lexington Avenue, Cambridge, Ma! 33 Exchange Street, Binghamton, N. Concord, Mass. Schaghticoke, N. Y. Spencer, Mass. Auburndale, Mass. South Sudburj, Mass. Croton, N. Y. 21 Park Street, Montclair, ] Newton Centre, Mass. . Columbia, O. Bloomfield, N. J. . 72 Garfield Avenue, Wobur Lakeville, Mass. . Windsor Locks. Conn. Danielsonville, Conn. . 227 Court Street, Keene, N. Exeter, N. H. Madison, Conn. . no Seymour Street. Syraci London, O. . Wellesley. Mass. . Milford, Mass. Beloit, Wis. . Tarrytown, N. Y. Brockton, Mass. . Belmont, Mass. Natick, Mass. 29 Ann Street, Providence, East Marshfield, Mass. Centralia, 111. Buffalo, N. Y. Menhani, N. J. Watertown, Mass. Burlington, Vt. 7 Allen Street, Jamestown, N. Y, 7 Park Street, Lynn, Mass. St. Johnsbury, Vt. 66 Middle Street, Portsmouth, N. H. 13 Humboldt Avenue, Providence, R One Elm, Allegheny City, Pa. . D. C. e, N. Y R. I Freeman. College. Village. Wood. College. Stone Hall. Wood. Freeman. Stone Hall. College. College. College. College. College. College. Stone Hall. Wood. College. College. Eliot. Simpson. Freeman. College. Home. College. Eliot. Freeman. College. Norumbega. College. College. Freeman. College. Stone Hall. Eliot. College. Simpson. College. Stone Hall. Norumbega. Simpson. College. College. 40 LEG EN DA. Jackson, Grace . Jones, Harriet Louise Jones, Lizzie Lee Kyle, Theodora, Z A Lebus, Bertha, Z A Lewis, Mary Elizabeth . Look, Clara Helen, S. S. Meader. Emily L, Z A Miller, Charlotte Elizaheth, S MoRss, Minnie Adams MoTHERSHEAD. AmY MoRRIS, Z A Newcomb, May D., ! 2 Page, May . Palmer, Bertha, S. S. Parker, Marion F. , S Pendleton, Fannie Thompson Perkins, Caroline Bright Perrin, Marian Williams, Z A Perrine, Cora Belle Pew, Blanche . Pierce, Carrie F. Pierce, Helen Adelaide, S. S. Plympton, Bessie H. Pope, Louise Porter, Mabel A. Puffer, Isabel, J 2 . Puffer. Linda Dana, - Redfield, Josephine Reed, Mary Bushnell Reed. Sallie, S. S. . Roberts. Sara M., Z A Robertson, Josephine C. Sawin, Harriette F. Saxtox, Louise Grant, Z A Scribner. Bessie Blanche Sibley. Charlotte Thorndike, Z Spalding. Margarita. S. S. Sprague. Grace E. W. SquiRES. Emma M., S. S. . Sternberg, Amalia A. B. Stevens. Alice A., S. S. . Stewart. Sara Elizabeth. Z A Stockwell, Netta A. S. 55 Brackenridge Street. Fort W.iyne. Ind Orangeville, O. . Brockton, Ma.ss. .... 64 Court Street. Plattsbiirgh, N. Y. Cvnthiana, Ky. 233 North Fountain Avenue, Springfield, O 1105 3d Avenue, Louisville, K_v. 84 Clav Street. Central Falls. R. L Ballston Centre, N. Y. 3 Sargent Street, Dorchester, Mass. 515 Orchard Street, Chicago, 111. 37 Seelev Avenue, Chicago, 111. Leavenworth, Kan. 105 Mt. Vernon Street, Boston, Mass Welleslev Hills, Mass. 35 School Street, Westerly, R. I. 95 Weir Street, Taunton, Mass. 255 Alexander Street, Rochester, N. Y Centralia, 111. .... Gloucester, Mass. South Deerfield, Mass. Franklin Furnace, N. J. 127 Herkimer Street, Brooklyn, N. Y, 53 Fifth Avenue, Cleveland, O. . 1071 Main Street, Bridgeport, Conn. Elm Place, Avon, N. Y. Elm Place, Avon, N. Y. Chicago, 111. .... II Hayes Street, Norwich, N. Y. 32 West Second Street, Portsmouth, Germantown, Philadelphia, Pa. . Albion, N. Y 22 Trowbridge Street, Cambridge, M; Mt. Pleasant, Washington, D. C. New Hampton, N. H. . Belfast, Me 601 M Street, N. W., Washington, D. I Bulfinch Street, Boston, Mass. . Cortland, N. Y West Hartford. Conn. Windsor, Vt. .... Gloversville, N. Y. . . . 1008 Case Avenue. Cleveland, O. O. C. College. College. College. College. College. College. Norumbega. College. Eliot. College. Wood. Wood. Norumbega. Waban . College. College. Freeman . College. College. College. Village. Freeman. Freeman. College. College. College. Freeman. College. College. College. College. Freeman. Norumbega. Eliot. Wood. College. College. Stone Hall. Freeman. Stone Hall. Waban. Freeman. 41 LEGEND A. Stuart. Genevieve . Sykes, Mabei, Taylor, Maud Marion. Z A Taylor. S. M., Z A . Thomson. Grace Fitzhugh. ! Todd. Millie Rosalind. 1i 2 TuELL. Harriet. A. S. Upham. Lucia Frances Wall. Ellen Juliette. Z A Wardwell. Mary Elizabeth, Weatherlow, Jane Knight West. F. May. Z A . White. Lucy B. . WiLKINS. Le v. nna . Woodford. Fannie L.. 4 ' S WooLFOLK. Ada S.. S Wray, Gertrude Wallace Wrenn, Margaret, 2 Total, 109. S. S Richmond. Me. .... 17 Waverly Place, Chicago, 111. . 491 Classon Avenue, Brooklyn, N. Y 220 Highland Avenue, Orange, N. Y. Ashbourne. Pa. .... Fayetteville, N. Y. Milton, Mass 14 George Street, Worcester, Mass. Du Qiioin, 111 Berlin Falls, N. H. . S9 State Street, Seneca Falls, N. Y. 200 North George Street, Rome, N. Y Cazenovia, N. Y. ... 1005 B Street, N. W., Washington, D West Winsted, Conn. . S08 Chicago Avenue, Evanston, 111 Belhvood, Blair County, Pa. 85 Dearborn Street, Chicago, III. . C. Freeman. College. Waban. College. College. Stone Hall. Stone Hall. Village. College. College. College. College. Wood. Wood. Norumbega. Wood. College. College. 42 LEG EX DA. U ritter? for tf e Qla$5 of ' 90. ' Old Uncle Ned. ' YLVANUS has measured the Junior Class ; Resistance was di ' eadfully low. O ' er Wheatstone ' s Bridge she never could pass To the place where she wanted to go. Chorus. — Lay down the racket and the oar, Seize the electroscope once more : There ' s no more rest for the Junior Class, Sylvanus Thompson has the floor. They ' ve fastened her in an induction coil. The telegraph ticks at her side ; At electric units they ' re making her toil, Her threats aiid tears are defied. Chorus. — Lav down, etc. 43 44 LEG END A. St e Joliloquy of r iss o. ' 92. HE soft winds of the summer kiss me gently where I lie, And those breezes bear thought backward to a time not long passed by. When the corridors were classic that mv climbing footsteps trod, And I spurned the stairs behind me in the spiral upward plod ; For my feet have never faltered in the fast and furious race, — They perhaps have left the tokens that my path most surely trace. ' How I hauled men ' s hearts in with thein on that festive holiday, When in daintv clover colors danced I round the pole of May ' All along my course I ' ve chosen for my own peculiar sign, Lightly tripping, winning Terpsv out of all the tuneful nine. Through the dullest days I ' ve danced it with a Ijuoyant ho)iJiomie That goes far to gild the future with a glow right fair to see. Ah thou pink-tipped little clover, canst thou aught to come foretell ' i ' Twas my Faculty that gave thee, and thou know ' st she loves me well. After such a marked approval, sure it cannot be at last She will frown on me, her fondling, or inform me I ' ve not passed ! No I ' tis nonsense even to name it — what thou hast been thou wilt be. Token of mv days in college, days of fun and jollity ; And the da3 ' s that chase each other, as all days are wont to do, Can bring nothing sad or noxious to a mind that loves the new. Spite of all the physical perils that beset my future path, I shall shine, without the study that reduces to a lath. Manv weeks, perchance, may pass first ; well, I am content to wait, — Noblest maiden need not hurrv for to choose herself a mate. Witness mv serenest condilct, calm and ' cool as evening blue. Ere I hail th ' honorable member, happy, since of ' 92. ■No man may attain to knowledge, ere he taste of folly ' s cheer, Is the very newest reading of the name I bear this year. And there cannot fail to follow, glory, grace, and power galore For one who so apt has acted the audacious Sop io-more. 4S LEGENDA. Yet I would not have men fancy, that hi pranks I ' m Simon piu ' e ; Nor, for all mv drowsy seeming, have not trouble to endure. When a-crew ' s to me such sorrow, just because my blood is blue. And 1 can ' t in silence suffer that the folk of ' 92 Float a boat on Waban ' s water rowed bv maids with ruddier lilood. Yet I ' m calm, — I veil my anguish, quell my tears ' swift, salty flood. Dream I still, poor faded clover, of the future ' s goodly store, — Dream of Germans, Junior glories, of the life that I adore. Now the low beams strike the tree-trunks ; they bid maidens hasten home, Lest the bogy in the skirts and yellow tennis shoes should come, Unto whom this spot is sacred ' twixt the hours of seven and four ; . But when next I come, a Junior, him, nor any, I ' ll fear more. 46 COLORS: CLOVER-PINK AND WHITE. FLOWER: CLOVER. d} ass of ' 92 Officers. Bessie Greenman ....... President. Ermina Ferris ....... Vice-President. Eleanor B. Green ....... Recording Secretary. Kate M. Ward ....... Corresponding .Secretary. Margaret W. Hardon Treasurer. Candace C. Stimson First Historian. Cornelia E. Green ...... Second Historian. Clara A. Belfield 1 c- . y , nr c- ..... . Factotums. Jennie M. Furber M. Alice Emerson Gertrude P. Spalding ..... Executive Committee. Flora A. Randolph ) (T)ember5. Atkinson. Mary Janny . Ayres, Mary- Stevens Baker, Blanche Bigelow, 4 2 Balch, Harriet Elizabeth Bancroft, Edith Bates, Mary- Williamson, S. S. Belfield, Clara Ann Bray, Harriet Whitlock Briggs, Emily Elizabeth Lahaska, Buck ' s County. Pa. Care Rev. O. A. Houghton, Elmira. N. Y 68 G Street. South Boston, Mass. 136 Warburton Avenue, Yonkers, N. Y. Reading. Mass. ..... 161 Genesee Street. Auburn, N. Y. . 573S Washington Avenue, Chicago, IH. Matawan, Monmouth County, N. J. . 15 Cortland Street, New York, N. Y. Stone HaU. Stone HalL College. College. Stone Hall. College. College. College. Freeman. 47 LEGENDA. Brooks, Abigail Antoinette Brown, Mary Louise, Z A Brice, Elinor Kimball, f S Bruce, Helen Elizabeth Buck, Clara Fay Burt, Clara Maria, Z A Carrier, Media Kate Cattell, Henrietta Maillar Chambers. Helen Froth Chase. Henrietta Helen Clark. Mabel . Clay, Blanche Louise Clough, Ongola Coburn, Harriet Morton Converse, Florence, S. S. Cook. Helen McKeehan . Coulter, Annie May Courser. Alice Berth. . Crawford. Lilian Moore Gushing, Mary Gertrude, I Cushing, May Porter Davidson, Janet Eliza, Z A De Lashmutt, Inez . DeVou, Mary Ruth. Dodge, Virginia R.. 1 . Dow, Lucy Jane Dransfield, Alice Walbridg Eastman. Mary Reed Elliott, Katherine Reed Emerson. Dora B., Z A . Emerson, Mary- Alice, S. S. Emerson, Mary Josephine Ewing, Eva Ferris, Ermina . Fiske, Ellen Ware . Freeman. Madeleine Horten FuRBER, Jennie Mayhew Galpin, Elizabeth Lovell Glover, Mabel Stanley Green, Cornelia Elizabeth, Green, Eleanor Burges, S. S Green, Louise Kossuth . Green.man, Bessie E, S. s. s Mich La Pa. 34S Franklin Avenue, Cleveland. O. 12 Broadway, New York. N. Y. 360 Ferrj Street. Maiden, Mass. (Satara, West India). Braintree, Mass. 20 Prospect Street. Fall River. Mass. Plainfield, N. J. . . . Corfu, Gen. County. N. Y. DeerHeld, N. J. . Newtown, Pa. Lyndon. Caledonia County, Vt. Terryville, Conn. . Milton, Mass. 214 Stuart Avenue, Kalamazoo. Milford, Mass. 33 Brytania Street, New Orlean 524 Walnut Street. Pliiladelphia Clinton, Mass. i6 Summer Street, Dover, N. H 99 Austin Street, Worcester, Mass 4 East Brookline Street. Boston Quechee. Vt. 752 Madison Avenue. Albany, N Portland, Oregon 1311 Delaware Avenue, Wilmingi Oak Park. 111. Milford. N. H. . 14 Myrtle Hill Park. Rochester Wellesley. Mass. . S22 Bird Street. Hannibal, Mo. Rockford, 111. Reading, Mass. Stoneham, Mass. Pass Christian, Miss. . Denver, Col. Wellesley Hills, Mass. New London, Conn. . 446 Shawmut Avenue. Boston, Mass. Jefferson. Ohio 1303 Second Street. N. W., Wash 14 yohn Street. Providence, R. I 14 John Street, Providence, R. I Box 392 Plainfield, N. J. Mystic Bridge, Conn. . ton. Del Mas Y. ingti n. D C. College. Waban. College. Stone Hall. College. Stone Hall. College. Stone Hall. College. Stone Hall. Stone Hall. Stone Hall. College. College. College. College. College. College. College. College. College. Freeman. Freeman. Stone Hall. College. Stone Hall. College. Village. Freeman. Freeman. Stone Hall. College. Wood. Stone Hall. College. College. College. Wood. Wood. College. College. College. College. 48 LEGENDA. Gruber, Grace Edith GUFFEY, PaULETTA Hand, Charlotte, Z A . Hardon, Margaxt, S. S. . Harvvood, Harriet Diantha . Hawley, Mary Augusta . Henderson, Annie May . Hill, Helen Bassett HoLCOMBE, Bessie Belle Holmax, Anna Ervia Colburn Holmes, Mary Elizabeth Hutchinson, Maud . Jacobus, Sarah Miranda Jones, Alice Mabel . Kenney, Jenny Raphael Lance, Frances Cornelia Lauder, Margaret . Leavitt. Blanche LiBBEY, Vinnietta June . Little, Eliza .... Long, Edith Grier . Longley, Geraldine Buffington Lytle, Amelia .... Maddocks, Caroline Shaw Marsh, Florence M. ud . McAlarney ' , Emma Lenore McArthur, Jane Eliza . McCaulley, Marth. G. nse . McDuffee. Mabel McLean. Mary Hollands Merchant, Clarinda Miller, Isabelle Youngs Mirick, Henrietta Amelia, A. S. Moffatt, Ethelwyn Fleming Myrick, Florence Hannah Nathan, Grace N. . Newcomb. Miriam Wickwire . Xew.man. Alice .... Newton. Cora Belle Northey. Isabelle . P. RKES, Evelyn Emm. Patterson, Mary Stevens Everett, Mass. ...... Greensburg. Westmoreland County, Vt. 315 We.st Washington Avenue, Scranton, Pa Newton, Mass. .... Bennington, Vt. .... 25 Myrtle Street, Manchester, N, H Leicester Street, Worcester, Mass. 119, 35th Street, Chicago, 111, 254 Acushnet Avenue, New Bedford, Mass, Hotel Batchelder, Cottage and Batchelder St Boston, Mass, , , , , , Mystic Bridge, Conn, , , . . , 34 Gardner Street, Chelsea, Mass. 159 North Griffin Avenue, Los Angeles, Cal. 15 Claremont Street, West Somerville, Mass. 237 Pine Street, Philadelphia, Pa. 93 Dana Street, Wilkesbarre, Pa. South Norwalk, Conn. South Manchester, Conn. . 1645 Wilson Avenue, Cleveland, O. 33 North Bend Street. Pawtucket, R. Dayton, Middlesex County, N, J, 19 Crown Street, Worcester, Mass. Princeton, N. J. . 31 School Street, Auburn. Me. . Lewiston, Niagara County, N. Y. 219 North Second Street, Harrisbur; Biddeford. Me 811 West Street, Wilmington, Del. Bradford, Vt 141 Sixteenth Street, West Troy, N. Nassau, Rensselaer County, N, Y. Stamford, Conn. .... Gilbertsville, Otsego County, N. Y. Prospect Square, Cumberland, Md. 218 Orchard Street, Elizabeth, N.J. Ft. Chestnut Street, St. Paul. Minn. 8 Wyman Street, Worcester. Mass. Wellesley College. Mass. 41 Seventh Street, Dubuque. la, Greenbush. Plymouth, Mass. 4 Remsen Place, Rochester, N, Y, 74 Beaver Avenue, Allegheny, Pa. reets Y. College. College. College. College. College. Stone Hall. College. College. College. Stone Hall. College. Freeman. Stone Hall. Stone Hall. College. Stone Hall. College. College. Freeman. College, Stone Hall. Stone Hall. Norumbega. Stone Hall. Eliot. College. College. College. Eliot. Freeman. Freeman. College. College. Stone Hall. Stone Hall. Freeman. Simpson. Norumbega. Stone Hall. College. Eliot. College. 49 LEGEND A. Peavey, Lilian Bell Pelton, Garnet Isabelle, Z. A. Penniman, Sarah Ella . Pierce, Alice Goddard . PuLLEN, Nettie Garrett Randolph, Flora Albertine Randolph. Marion Fitz . Rickey, Grace Gertrude, A. RowELL, Lucy Agnes Schleicher, Eleanor Shaw, Agnes Morton Simpson, Ellen Josephine Smith, Cora Ellen . Smith. Gertrude Bushnell. Z. A. Smith, Mary Ellen . Smith, Mary Louise Spalding, Gertrude Parker. S. S Sp.vulding, Edna Cecilia Stanton. Theresa Burleigh Stilvvell, Helen Martha Stimson, Candace Catherine Straight, Maude Wheeler Strong, Elizabeth Grier Thayer, Josephine Tho.vison, Edith Parker ToMLiNsoN, Annie Bennett Underwood, Grace Hawley Walton. Clara Ann, S W. RD, Clara Elizabeth Ward, Kate Morgan, Z. A. Ware, Maud Warren Warfield, Eva Louise Webber, Maria Gilbert . Wilkinson, Anna Reed, S. S. Williams, Sarah P. . Winegar, Anna L. . Wing, Florence Annette Woodbury, Mabel Bl. nche WooDiN. Gertrude Lee . Wright. Mary Swift Total. 135. Rochester. N. H. . Dedham, Mass. 474 Broadway, Lawrence. Mass West Newton, Mass. Paris, Ky. .... Alford Centre. N. Y. . 185 East Front Street, Plainfield Athot Centre, Mass. Waterville. Oneida County, N. Y Lock Box 28, Ciiero, Tex. . Wobiirn, Mass. Wyandotte, Kan. . Townline, Vt. . . . ■26S3 Washington Street, Roxbu Waterbury Centre, Washington Pekin, 111 ' .... 26 Townsend Street. Syracuse, N St. Johns, Mich. . Centre Sandwich, X. H. 17 Central A ' enue, Dayton, O 24 East 33d Street, New York, 324 Oak Park Avenue, Oak Par Flatbush, Long Island, N. Y. Milford, Mass. 66 Nassau Street, New York, N Birmingham, Conn. Kansas City, Mo. 83 Arlington Street, Cleveland, Vernon. N. Y. 27 Hillside Avenue. Montclair, 5$ Grove Street. Bangor, Me Brockton, Mass. . Adams Nervine Asylum, Jama ica 92 Bowen Street, Providence, R 125 Clinton Avenue, Albany. N. South Butler, N. Y. . Lexington, Mass. Box 40, HoUiston, Mass. Amherst, Mass. Germantown. Philadelphia, Pa. y, Mass. County, Vt. N.J. Y. N. Y. 111. Y. O. N.J. . Plain, Mass. I. . Y. . College. Stone Hall. College. College. College. College. Stone Hall. Eliot. Eliot. College. College. College. College. College. Stone Hall. College. College. College. College. Stone Hall. Waban. College. College. College. College. Stone Hall. Waban. College. Simpson. College. College. College. Stone Hall. College. Freeman. Simpson. Village. College. College. College. 50 LEG END A. Sprii)! Sor}( . AY the fields all bright In the sun ' s white lijjht, And the grasses rustling, swaying In the soft, sweet air Floating everywhere. That would have been a iDreeze but didn ' t quite dare ; And the world was all repaying Spring ' s delaying. And the grass grew tall, But above it all, Just above it shyly peeping, There were two blue eyes. Blue as springtime skies. And two that were brown, of the deep brown guise Of the daisy-hearts now keeping Watcii unsleeping. And who could have known That the flowers had blown. Had there been no eyes in the grasses ; And where was the need Of the meadow ' s weed. Or the air that is almost a breeze, indeed, As it blows the buttercup masses And then passes. Yes ! the grass grew green, But who could have seen That springtime banners were blazing? For a daisy said. With a toss of her head. That the blue eves looked at the brown instead, And the brown in the blue were gazing. - ' ' Twas amazing 1 52 yEaUTENPHILONO EME; OR, J lUR TVTHREE. Dramatis perso ae. NG Nina Tythree, alias Una Ni.mity ) ,, ( } HER Maids ■Addie Vance. J ( Mrs. Alma Fostering Her Three Sons . gCENE I. rV]RS. POSTERING ' S gOUDOIR. Mrs. F ' . (wcari y) : The five hundredth applicant ! Show her in, Addie. ( Enter iiia Tvthrcc ZL ' if i basket of hooks. I You have come in answer to my advertisement? What is ' our name . ' N. : Xina Tvthree. Mrs. F. : What a remarkable name ! Excuse me, but are vou French or Irish ? N. {htdi naiif v) : ' Xeitherl or, on the whole, both, and much more besides. Fm cos- mopolitan. But I have another name — mv pet name. I wonder if anyone will care to call me by it here. ' Mrs. F. : What is it, mv dear. . : It ' s Una Ximity. Mrs. F. : Well, that ' s English, at all events. Your recommendations are satisfactorj-, but I never depend wholly on those things, so I must ask you a few questions. But, bless me ! vou ' ve brought your luggage already. JV. : These, ma ' am, are mv inseparable companions. I never travel without them. Mrs. F. : Well, literary taste in a young person is a good thing if not carried too far. What have you there . For I warn vou I can ' t tolerate anything so transient as life, or intoxicat- ing as punch. JV. : This, ma ' am, will b e, I ' m sure, as you like it: it was written in a country church- j-ard ; this acts homa-opathically against pride and prejudice, and this is a valuable collection of 53 LEG END A. prose works by Jones. I have also my Travellers ' Guide, by Gulliver, and — and one other book, not quite so stronglv recommended ; but it is my favorite. Mrs. F. : What is that? JV. : It ' s — it ' s a novel by ' ictor Hugo. j rs. F. : French I I insist on knowing the title. IV. : ' 93. jlfrs. F.: Well, everyone has some pet folly, and I ' m thankful this is no worse. We must be a little more business-like, however. You know the functions of your position. ' N. : What are those, ma ' am. ' JSIrs. F. : Such innocence moves me to tears I You are to tend the door, vou know. Addie Vance, who has already been with me a year, and who let you in, will show you about it. N. : I guess I don ' t need any showing ; and I don ' t believe she could do it, anyway. Mrs. F. : Are you satisfied with your perquisites. ' Half an acre of ground, four crackers a day, imlimited innocence, and $350 per year; it is more than I have been accustomed to allow. And you don ' t have to wash any plates, as all the maids before you have done. N. ■It is more than enough, ma ' am. Only, if an interchange co?. d he elTected, I would be willing to change some of the land for more crackers ; and the innocence I could spare entirely without missing it. 3 rs. F. : Impossible! Then there is one other thing : you must agree to get on nicely with Addie, and to preserve at the same time a lively affection and an immense respect toward my sons — my eldest and my others, Sophroniscus and Junius. JV. : Certainlv, unless they get in my way. I am not very fond of children. Mrs. F. : So much the better. You are siu ' e you can guard yourself against becoming crushed? N. : Behind the door, ma ' am? J rs. F. {aside): Delightful innocence! {Aloud.) Conisider yourself engaged on trial. gCENE 11. ( ORRIDOR IN JV[RS. POSTERINCS ' S IjOUSE. Mrs. F. {entering from farther end): I must put a stop to this! I hear nothing but the door-bell from morning till night. My sons go out merely for the sake of coming in again. {She discovers her eldest son seated on a sofa beside Nina., and -Matches them unobserved., the bell meantime ringing- frantically.) Her eldest : My dear child, did y ou never feel an inward strife — a yearning which could find relief onlv in communion ith another? 54 LEG END A. N. : No, indeed; why should I? My dolls are not stuffed with sawdust: thcv are the nicest little Japanese skeletons ; and my brother will never leave me and go to Scotland. Rut Mr. Junius is ringing. {She goes to the door, and is concealed by it for a moment, during which time these words are heard.) Oh, thank you. Mr. Junius: it s ever so kind of vou to take me to the party, and I ' ll certainly go. But I really don ' t care to kiss you. (Junius passes her tvith dejected air, and seats himself beside his brother Sophroniscns attempts to enter. Nina shuts the door i?i his face, but opens it at a sign from Mrs. - ) V. .• Oh, thank you, Mr. Sophroniscns, for these beautiful flowers! But if you try any of those tricks, you know, I must throw cold water on you. {Sophroniscns joins his brothers.) Ad. V. {enters, singing) . JV. : Oh, my dear, how long since I have seen you ! Come, sit down before the mirror with me, and let ' s read this new novel together — it ' s Olney ' s latest. To think that there was a time when I didn ' t love you I That was befoi e I knew vou for a twin soul, — a part of mvself. Don ' t you wish those bothersome creatures would go awav and leave us to ourselves. ' Ad. V. : Ye — e — s. Do vou know, I ' ve often been mistaken for Mr. Sophroniscns. JV. : How odd ! Don ' t you worry, dear ; you ' re not a bit like him. The youths : Fair these m;uds are, and unanimous; that ' s plain. But responsive — not much ! Mrs. F. {coming forward) : Thank Fortune! My sons are safe, and I need not look for another maid. So long as it is not directed toward those of a class above her, I can overlook a little excess of affection. And she is so {here her voice is broken with emotion, so that it is im- possible to tell whether the next word is •discreet or ••conceited ) .... that I need have no fears of its ever e.xtending above herself. 55 MOTTO yvojdi Kaipov COLORS: GOLD AND WHITE. FLOWER: PANSY. lass of ' 93 Officers. Elizabeth R. Kellogg President. L. Elizabeth White ...... Vice-President. Del. rue K. Howe ... ... Recording Secretary. Harriet L. Dutcher ...... Corresponding Secretary. Fannie H. Boltwood ...... Treasurer. Drusilla R. Douglas t u- ., ■..... Historians. Mary E. Dillingham ) Rose I. Fancher 1 e- ,..... pactotums. Louise Macdonald Mary E. Hazard -i Marion Mitchell Executive Committee. Mary McPhersonJ | 07ora y T ember. Mary E. B. Roberts. Allard, Elizabeth L. Allen, Rosa N. Anderson, Bertha F. Andrews, Kate F. . Arvine, Marion R. . Baker, Elizabeth Y. fT embers. Fianiingham Centre, Mass. ..... Stone HalL Bean.s Corner, Me. ....... College. 25 Stiles Street, Elizabeth, N. J Stone Hall. Sevmour, Ind. ........ College. 15 Hamilton Park, New Brighton, Staten Island, N. Y. Stone Hall. Revere. Mass. ........ College. 56 LEG END A. Backer, Minnie E. . Baird, Minnie L. Barber, Alice M. Barker, Mary L. Barkwell, Faith E. Beecher, Elizabeth Benson, Clara M. . Benson, Sarah S. C. W. Bigelow, Gertrude . BoLTwooD, Fanny H. Bradbury, Marion E. Brainerd, Helen K. Brown, Mary Louise Brush, Bertha De F. Burgess, Anne Prince Burgess, Julia S. Burr, Helen L. Gary, Nettie A. Chester, Charlotte E. Cook, Fay . CooLiDGE, Florence G. Coombs, Alice G. Cornell, Laura Electa Damon, Agnes W. Davis, Grace E. Dennis, Mary C. Dewing, Sarah E. . Deyo, Jennie M. Dillingham, Mary E. Doe, Alice M. . Doolittle, Margaret C Douglas, Drusilla R. Dutcher, Harriet L. Eager, Helen Gertrude Ely, Grace D. . Evelith, Caroline S. Fackenthal, Katherine Fancher. Rosa Iantha Feeny, Mildred FiNNiGAN, Annette . Flournoy, Ethel M. Fogg, Emily Foley, Emily Howard 54 Bellevue Avenue. Melrose, Mass. Lee, Mass Ansonia. Conn. .... Pittsfield, Mass 202 Sawtell Avenue, Cleveland, O. 1S3 Genesee Street, Auburn. N. Y. East Carne. Mass. Gambler, O. Natick. Mass. 77 Wall Street. New Haven. Con Melrose, Mass. 39 Ferris Street, St. Albans, Vt. Johnstown, N. Y. 14 Trumble Street, New Haven, Conn Portland. Me. Silver Creek. N. Y. Melrose. Mass. Ehria, O Albion, N. Y. . . . Ledro, Wash. South Framingham. Mass . Charles River Village, Mass. 216 Walton Street, Denver, Col. 20 Broadway, Arlington. Mass. Lowell, Mass. 30 Central Avenue, Newark, N. J Revere. Mass. East Saginaw. Mich. Honolulu, Sandwich Islands 1406 Perrv Street, Davenport, la Gambier, O. Lexington, Ky. 181 South Main Street, St. Alban Newton, Mass. Frederick, Ind. Windsor Locks, Conn. 38 South 4th Street, Easton, Penn. 88 Morton Street. Brooklyn, N. Y. Stapleton. Staten Island, N. Y. . 102 West S4th Street. New York, N. Y I North Fort Street, Los Angeles, Cal 1922 Barry Avenue, Chicago, 111. ' . Walnut Hills, Cincinnati, O. College. Village. College. College. College. Freeman. College. College. Stone Hall. College. College. College. Simpson. Freeman. College. College. College. College. College. Stone Hall. Natick. Village. College. College. College. College. College. College. Stone Hall. College. College. College. College. College. College. College. College. College. College. College. College. College. 57 LEG END A. Foster, Winifred S. Frear. Caroline Gale, Hattie Wheeler Gill, Kittie E. Greene. Julia M. Green, Laura C. Ham, Emily H. Harris, Annette Hartvvell, Lucy Hastings, Theodora M. Hayes, Mabel A. Hazard, Mary E. Hill, Mary B. . HoFFER, Mary E. Howe, Delarue Kipling HoYT, Emily L Irish, Charlotte D. Jones, Helen Jones, Laura H. Kellogg, Elizabeth R. Kneen, Maria A. Larned, Mary C. Lemer, May LiBBY, Fanny L. Lincoln, Mary U. Lord, Kate F. . Lutz, Marian C. Lucas, Frances H. . MacDonald, Louise Mann, Carrie A. Mason, Helen Raymond McFetridge, Eleanor G McPherson, Mary . Meyer, Winifred Moore, Annie K. MosHER, Clelia D. . Munroe, Florence L. Newman, Caroline N. Nye, Lula B. Pennington, Lydia O. Perry, Elizabeth Phelps, Mabelle A. Pond, Nannie M. Norway, Me. ..... 1461 loth Avenue, East Oakland, Cal. West Mechvay, Mass. . Wilbraham, Mass. 173S N Street, Washington, D. C. Granville, O. .... Dover, N. H Amherst, Mass. .... 139 West 2d Street. Yellow Springs, O. Wellesley Hills, Mass. 122 Washington Street, Maiden, Mass. 19 Alston Street, Dorchester, Mass. Adams House, Boston, Mass. 24 West 2d Street, Harrisburg, Pa. Roselle, N. J Portsmouth. N. H. New Castle, Pa 15 Lawrence Street, Chelsea, Mass. 18 Park Street, Newark. N. J. Avondale, Cincinnati, O. Woodstock, Vt. .... Woonsocket, R. L 213 South Front Street, Harrisburg, Pa. Richmond, Me. .... 22 May Street, Worcester, Mass. 433 Willard Street. Burlington, Vt. 325 Logan Street. Lincoln. 111. . 1S6 Limestone Street, Lexington, Ky. Putnam, Conn. .... 48 Lebanon Street, Maiden, Mass. 37 Messenger Street, St. Albans, Vt. Greenville, Pa. .... Council Bluffs, la. . . . 10 West Slh Street, Canton, O. . Mamaroneck, N. Y. . Albany, N. Y 43 Warren Street. Woburn. Mass. S28 Sprague Street, Shreveport, La. Wellesley Hills, Mass. 1733 Euclid Avenue, Cle eland, O. Worcester, Mass. Wilbraham, Mass. Woonsocket. R. L College. College. College. College. Stone Hall. Stone Hall. College. College. College. College. College. Norumbega. College. Stone Hall. College. Stone Hall. College. College. Freeman. Stone Hall. Stone Hall. College. College. College. College. Stone Hall. College. Stone Hall. College. College. Stone Hall. College. College. College. Freeman. Stons Hall. College. College. College. Village. Stone Hall. 5S LEG EN DA. Pruden, Esther Hall Reed, Alice M. Reid, Julia F. . DE ROCHEMONT, SaDIE H Rogers, Florenxe S. Ruddle, Elinor F. . Russell, Mary R. . Sanford, Alice I. ScANDLiN, Mabel E. Severance, Maud E. SiMONDS, LiLLA J. SiMRALL, Josephine P. Sims, J. Isabelle Slater, Ora W. L. . Smith, Adelaide Somes, Emily G. Spencer, Clarissa H. Spinning, Mary E. . Stiles, Edith F. Tayler. Lila Temple, Elizabeth C. Thompson, Annie L. Tifft, Julia A. . TooKER, Mary R. Tone, Florence M. . TowNE, Harriet B. . Trebein, Elizabeth A. Trundle, Mary Ella West, Emma E. Whipple, Laura L. White, Edith . Williams, Alice E. Woods, Ida E. . Young, Mary W. 34 Marlboro Street. Chelsea. Ma.ss Northfield, Mass. Belmont. San Mateo County, Cal. Portsmouth, N. H. . . . 3oBrainard Street, New London. Conn. Mauch Chunk, Pa. Wellesley, Mass. .... Torrington, Conn. Grafton, Mass. .... Bennington Center, Vt. 729 Cambridge St., Cambridge, Mass Covington, Ky. .... 42 Spruce Street, Newark, N.J. . 9116th Street, N. W., Washington, D Boone, la. .... . Danielsville. Conn. 1633 North 15th Street, Philadelphia, 1457 North Clark Street, Chicago, III St Stevens Street, Lowell, Mass. 14014 14th Street, N. W. , Washington Granville, N. Y. . Winooski, Vt. .... Titusville, Pa 2S Evergreen Place, East Orange. N Bergen, N. Y. . Drewsville. N. H. . . . Trebein Station. O. . . . Paris, Kv. ..... Haverstraw, N. Y. . . . 34 Florence Street, Maiden, Mass. iS Concord Avenue, Cambridge. Mass Peacham, Vt. .... Natick, Mass. .... Mittineague, Mass. C. Pa. . D. College. College. College. Stone Hall. College. Stone Hall. Stone Hall. Village. Stone Hall. College. Freeman. College. College. College. College. Stone Hall. Freeman. College. College. College. College. College. Stone Hall. College. Stone Hall. College. College. Stone Hall. Stone Hall. Freeman. Eliot. Stone Hall. Fiftt? Yt ars. Allen, Louise . Blodgett, Grace E. Campbell, Alice P. Clough, Bertha H. Drake, Helen P. Corey, Pa Templeton, Worcester County, Mass. Mt. Vernon, N. H. .• . . 2420 Michigan Avenue, Chicago, 111. 517 Pine Street, Manchester, N. H. College. College. College. Stone Hall. Stone Hall. 59 LEGEND A. Fuller, Mary E. HippEN, Ella E. Houghton, Ella S. Houghton, Stella I Johnson, Mabel Jones, Ethel A. Keith, Bettie . LooMis, Jennie . Mitchell, Marion Pavey, Mary S. Stewart, Emily ' Total, 143. Highland Street, West Newton, Mass 331 South 4th Street, Pekin. 111. Delevan, 111. Delevan, III. 2S Newton Street, Marlboro, Mass. South Charleston, O. . Selma, Ala. . Windsor. Conn. . Newburgh, N. Y. Washington C. H., O. 381 Harvard Street, Cambridge, Mass College. College. College. College. Freeman. College. College. College. Wood. College. Stone Hal 60 LEGEND A. r oral Jipi les. HERE is a simple rule of life Each child should bear in mind : That the last bell at ten o ' clock Her snug in bed should find ; And that she ne ' er vith noisy talk Annoy her teachers kind. W ' e hope each child has now received, And studied faithfully, The printed rules regarding all That should avoided be, And that she for her model takes The noble Faculty. And when, her lessons all well learned, She seeks the open air. And sees the .Seniors dignified, Their faces marked with care, Retm-ning from the village store. To studv to repair, — Think not the many paper bags Which in their hands you see. Hold candy, peanuts, or the like Of such frivolity : ' Tis Pearline, soap, and other things For stern necessity. 6i r- ' w: o a-i-Xtll m,ow-h-f ihoYe- . ; b of ' 9A Adelaide Miller . Catherine Collins Sarah Hickenlooper Blanche Arter Officers. Chainnan, Secretary mid Treasurer. Historian. Factotum. Allen. Roberta Zimmerman Arter. Alice Arter. Frances Blanche AsHBROOK. Mary Eliza . Collins. Catherine Ross Cutler. Sarah Elizabeth Edwards. Louise Libby . Emerson, Marion Breck Grenell. Grace E. . Hallam. Florence Mary Hickenlooper. Sarah S.mith Knapp. Anna Adele Lamme, Georgia Marot. Mary Louise Miller. Adelaide Otis, Grace Lilian . Parmenter. Ester . Spicer. Sarah Dickenson Sturgess. Mary Matthews TovvNSEND, Ellen Dutton Wilcox. Marion Newell WiNTON, Katharine May T)(?mb9rs. Navy Yard, Wa, ihington, D. C. . 39 Sibley Street, Cleveland, O. . 39 Sibley Street, Cleveland, O. . Cynthiana, Ky. ..... 1559 Garrard Street, Covington, Ky. 386 Washington Street, Dorchester, Mass 116 Free Street, Portland, Me. . Methuen, Mass. ..... 193 Charlotte Avenue. Detroit, Mich. Centralia, Marion County, 111. . 116 Dayton Street. Cincinnati. O. North Attleboro, Mass. I ozeman. Montana .... Dayton, O. ..... . 626 Greenup Street, Covington, Ky. Scituate, Mass. ..... 545 loth Avenue, Clinton, Mass. New London, Mass. .... Oak Park, Cook County, 111. 2S6 Dixwell Avenue, New Haven, Conn. Medford, Mass. , Scranton, Pa. . . College. College. College. College. College. College. College. College. College. College. Freeman. College. College. College. Freeman. College. College. College. Simpson. College. Stone Hall. College. 63 (f M ' r — - 41 ?m mBimQiM ;; ' fe 64 gpECmL gTUDENTS. Doca Tieijts FJelatii to a Qrisis i 6 ) r Qareer. jHistorie arjd Ce e dary. HEN in the course of human events it becomes necessary for one organization to dissolve the conditional bands which have connected them with another, and to assume among the Powers of the community the separate and equal station to which the Laws of Xature (Survival of the Fittest; Selective Faculty) entitle them, — we, appealing to justice for the rectitude of our intentions, do in the Name, and by the Authority of good People of this Society, solemnly publish and declare that this Organization is, and of Right ought to be, a Free and Independent Body. [Signed.] Speciala Robespierrp: Hancock. There was muttered revolution ' Mongst the hoary Special band ; Stern defiance marked the faces Once so eruditely bland. Qiiiet corners heard deep plottings; Low they whispered, each to each ; And tlie discontent waxed greater As each Special said her speech. We can do it ! We must do it I As we stand, life ' s but a grind ; There ' s no pleasure for the Special, ' ith her rank thus imdefined. 6S LEGEND A. Let us, in a proclamation. Sue that bodv known to fame As the Academic Council, For a station and a name. Let us shout throughout the College, Far and wide let ring the tones, ' We renounce the time-worn figure Likening us to rolling stones. ' So thev waited for the signal Which their leader bold should make, When, with one loud cry for freedom, Thev should from their thralldom break As the fickle fire crackers On the fourth of each Julv, Burn with promise of explosion But to fizzle out and die, — .So the Special revolution Faded, fiickered, ceased to be ; In their archives it lies buried : Sav we to it, R. I. P. 66 COLOR: BLUE. FLOWER: CARNRTION. pecial Organization Cora L. Stewart . Charlotte Joy Allen 1 Margaret L. Ingalls Mary Ward Lyon . Belle Morgan JL BEL I. Jenkins Anna M. McCague } Grace R. Curtis LiLU M. Hutchins . Florence Newman Alice M. Lord Grace R. Curtis M. Emily Cobb I Officers. Preside? . Vice-Presidents. Recording Secretary. Corresponding Secretary Treasurer. Historians. Factotum, Executive Committee, J Adams, Anne M. Allen, Charlotte Joy, Z A Ames, Edith Morison Ayer. Flora H. Barkley, Isabelle L. Bergen, Bessie B. Bliss, Fannie B. Brackett, Blanche E. Brigham, Id. C. T ember5. 28 Oread Street, Worcester, Mass. 173 Main Street, Worcester. Mass. 214 Ogden Avenue, RiogeLind. 111. Litchfield, Me. Ma ' s ■ille, Kv. Red Bank. N. J. Carthage, Mo, Stoneham, Mass. 52 Church Street, Hartford, Conn. College. Wood. College. Village. College. College. Stone Hall. Stone Hall. Village. 67 LEG EN DA. Brewster, Bessie Buckley, Mary Turner Buckingham, Florence BusHNELL. Emma Helen Butler. Elizabeth b. Cobb, M. Emily, A. S. CoDwisE, Beatrice L. Coxover, Anna S. . Coi ' eland, Isabelle T. Crocker, Lillian S. Curtis, Grace Redman, 4 J; Davidson, Elizabeth G. Dennen, Clara Rollins DuNLAP, Mary De Lacey Ferguson, Margaret C. Fisher, Katherine P. Fletcher. Edith Foster, Nancy, S. S. Foster, Mary Adele Frost, Carrie Grey, Z A Galpin. Jennie L. Gay, Inez L. H. LL, Mabelle Stanley Harkness, Mary L. . Hedger, Caroline . Helmer, Clara S., Z A Hollander, Alice Maud Holmes, Eugenie A. Hubbard, Carrie M. Hutchins, Lulu M. . Ingalls, Margaret L , S. Jenkins, Mabel . Klingenhagen, Anna M. Lord, Alice M. Look, Susan Avery Lum, Susan May Lyon, Mary Ward, tS Marot, Emma Blanche Martin, Henrietta E. Mason, Maud, ZA . McCague, Anna N. . McCague, Ly ' dia S. . Merritt. Katherine Mt. Jackson, Pa. . Delhi, N. Y. ... 204 Court Street, Flint, Mich. Chattanooga, Tenn. Wellesley. Mass. . 37 Church Street, Buffalo, N. Y. Wellesley, Hills, Mass. Red Bank, N. J. . 32 Summer Street, Maiden, Masi Melrose. Mass. io5 Huntington Avenue, Boston 753 Madison Avenue, Albany, N West Newton, Mass. Danville, K_y. Orleans, N. Y. . 3668 Pine Street. St. Louis, Mo. Council Bluffs, la. Pittsburg, Pa. 61 Parade Street. Providence, R. Emporia. Kan. Ashtabula, O. . . . Milford, Mass. 125 Main Street, Haverhill, Mass Fairfield, la. ... iS Jennings Avenue, Cleveland, 24 Aldine Square, Chicago, III. Prospect Hill, Somerville, Mass. Orange, Mass. Saxton ' s River, Vt. 34 Lake Street, Auburn, Me. 408 Gray Street, Louisville, K_y. Kitterv. Me. Plymouth, Mass. . 27 Wilniot Street, Portland, Me. 1 105 3d Street, Louisville, Ky. Chatham, N. J. . New Britain, Conn. Dayton, O 140 Addison Street, Chelsea, Mas Arlington, Mass. . 936 North 24th Street, Omaha. Neb 936 North 24th Street, Omaha, Neb 1183d Street, Jackson, Mich. Mass Y. O. Village. ' illage. ' illage. Village. Dapa Hall. Village. Stone Hall. College. College. Stone Hall. Village. Village Stone Hall. College. Village. Village. College. College. Stone Hall. Village. College. Village. Village. College. Stone Hall. College. Stone Hall. Village. Village. Village. Village. Village. Norumhega. Stone Hall. Stone Hall. College. Village. Waban. College. College. Village. 68 LEG END A. Morgan, Liny Isabelle . Morse, Elizabeth E. Newcomb. Marietta Eaton Newman. Florence, A. S. Noble, Mary E. Nye, Gertrude, H., S. S Osborne. Grace A. , OsBORN. Mary ' G. . S. S. Phelps, Minerva Park Porter, Mary Qihncv Pratt, Mary B. RAUCHENBUSH. EiMMA Sanders, Ida Blanche Sanderson. Fannie A. Seward. Cora J. Sheldon. E. Louise SiMoNDS. Eva L. Smallev. S. Emily- . Stewart, Cor. L.. Z A Stone. Mabel Jones Strong. Caroline. A. S. Teele, Addie C. Thompson. Effie Thorn. Sophie Lord. S Thorpe. Anna M. Van Slyke. Minnie . Vaughan. Caroline . Watson. Joe Shipley ' Whipple. Nellie Louise White. M. Gertrude Whitney ' . Amy Augusta, ZA Wilson, Bertha Lee, M. S. Wilson. Kate E., M. S. . Wines, Emma Stansbury ' Witwer, Mary ' H. Total, 87. Hyde Park, III Ashland, Mass 9 Gates Street, Worcester, Mass. Wellesley, Mass 4737 Lake Avenue, Chicago, 111. South Natick, Mass. .... 120 Washington Avenue, Council Dluffs, I Warren. R. I Richmond, Kv. ..... Beloit, Wis. Wellesley Hills, Mass. Ongole, India ..... loSi Superior Street, Cleveland, O. Littleton, Mass Guilford, Conn. ..... Hotel Bellevue. Beacon Street, Boston 14 Willow Place, Yonkers, N. Y. 7 Daniel Street, Salem, Mass. Auburndale, Mass. .... S50 Main Street, Worcester, Mass. 225 West Park Street, Portland, Or. . 33 Curtis Street, West Somerville, Mass. Kingston, N. Y. . Wallingford, Conn. .... Fort Miller. N. Y Kingston, N. Y Richmond. Ind. ..... Emporia. Kan. ..... 17 Wendall Avenue, Pittstield, Mass. . Owasso, Mich. ..... 139 Oak Street, Binghamton, ' N. Y. . Danielsonville, Conn. .... 14 South Russell Street, Worcester. Mass Springfield, III. ..... iSo 2d Avenue, Cedar Rapids, la. College. Village. Simpson. Norurabega. College. College. ' illage. Village. Village. Stone Hall. Stone Hall. College. Village. College. Village. Village. College. College. Village. College. Stone Hall. Village. College. College. Simpson. College. College. Village. Stone Hall. Stone Hall. Village. Village. Village. 69 70 -1 u a. X (J (jHRISTiaN f[S50CmTI0N. Marion Metcalf, ' So President. Grace Andrews, ' Scj ....■■ist Vice-President. ,,,.„, f 2d Vice-President. Mary Vinia Fitch, 90 r-i ■, tj- ■r- I Chairman of Missionary Lommtttee. Charlotte Joy Allen, Sp. Lena Hill Brown, ' 90 Alice Greene Arnold, ' 91 Linda Dana Puffer, ' 91 Elsie Talheimer, ' 89 . Louise Bradford Swift, ' 90 Emma Maude SquiRES, ' 91 . Mary Alice Knox f jd Vice-President. y Chairman of Temperance Committee. c4ih Vice-President. Chairman of Committee of General I Missionary Work. Recording Secrcfaiy. Corresponding Secretary. Treasurer. Chairman of Reception Committee. Chairman of Indian Committee. Chairman of Deiwtional Committee. Membership, 550. 71 Wellesley (Jollege (jHaPEL PUNt) ssocmiioN. officers. Carolyn E. Noble, ' 90 . . . . . • Chaivmaii. Marion Frances Parker, 91 .... Recording Secretary. Helen Weston Holmes, 89 Corresponding Secretary. Carolyn Strong, Sp Treasurer. Board of Directors. •89 Helen Weston Holmes. Chairman. Sarah Hogate Groff. Florence Evelyn Soule. ' 90 Caroline E. Noble, Chairman. Gennie Hickok. Ruth Gage Strong. •91 Marion Frances Parker, Chairman. Elizabeth Mary Blakeslee. Amy Mothershead. •92 Ermina Ferris, Chairman. Clara Maria Burt. Kate Morgan Ward. ' 93 Fannie Haskins Boltwood. Chairman. Mary- McPherson. Mildred Ferney. •94 Mary Alice Arter, Chairman. Roberta Zimmerman Allen. Mary- Mathews Sturgess. SPECIALS. Carolyn Strong, Chairman. Sophia Lord Thorn. Cora Lydia Stewart. 72 ■©cieties J iiamatic and jfiteifaii : 73 6) © : : mm w 74 gHaKESPESRE gOCIETY ORGA ' IZED 1877 LoLisE Bradford Swift, 90 Ethel Adelia Glover, ' 90 Sallie Reed, ' yi Ethel Patox, ' S9 . Maria Baldwin, ' 91 . Officers. Presidetit. ' ice- President. Recording Secretary. Corresponding Secretary. Treasurer. T ember5. in facultatc. Louise Manning Hodgkins. Ethel Paton. Emma Shaw Pleasants. •89 Katharine Mordantt Quint. Clare Lyon Wade. ' 90 Sarah Malixda Bock. Grace Mason Brackett. 1SL UD H. Crane. Kent Rolla Dunlap. Ethel Adeli.v Glover. Lucia Morrill. Ruth Eastman Morrill. Alice Mabel Norton. Mary Jennings Ortox. Louise Bradford Swift. Mary Porterfield Young. 75 LEG EN DA. ' 91 Maria Baldwin. Clara Helen Look. Charlotte Elizabeth Miller. Bertha Palmer. Helen Adelaide Pierce. Sallie Reed. Emma Maud SqiuRES. Margarita Spalding. Alice A. Stevens. Mary Elizabeth Wardwell. ' 92 Mary Williamson Bates. Florence Converse. Alice W ' albridge Dransfield. Mary Alice Emerson. Cornelia Elizabeth Green. Eleanor Burgess Green. Margaret Hardon. Gertrude Parker Spalding. Candace Catherine Stimson. Anna Reed Wilkinson. Nancy Foster. Margaret Lucy Ingalls. SPECIALS. Sophia Lord Thorn. Gertrude Hoktense Nye. Mary G. Osborn. 76 t ORGANIZED 1876. REORGANIZED 1889. Officers. M. BEL Gair Curtis. ' 90 Henrietta St. B. rbe Brooks, ' gi Rose Julia Sears. ' 90 Mari. n. Willi.mison Blood. ' 91 Linda Dana Puffer, 91 LiLLi.vN Corbett Barnes. ' 91 1 Ad. .Swallow Woolfolk. ' 91 ) President. Vice-President. Recording Secretary. Corresfoudiiig Secretary. Treasurer. Marshals. Katherine Lee Bates. M. rion M. rsh. IHembers. IN FACULTATE. M. RioN Metcalf. Anna Sybil Montague. Mrs. Sarah Wood.man Paul. H.VTTiE J. Buckley. ' 89 Elsie Talheimer. Clara Latimer Bacon. Alice Cary Baldwin. Anne Lucy Bosworth. Helen MacGregor Clarke. Mabel Gair Curtis. Ros. Dean. Helen Anne Dempsey. C. ROLiNE Muzzy Dresser. Lillian Henrietta Fishel. Mary Vinia Fitch. Mabel Lee Godfrey. •90 E.mily Camilla Gow. ns. Lillian Louise Haynes. Emeline Place Ha -ward. Mar ' Delia E. Landerburn. Mabel Augusta Manson. Florence Edith May ' . Sarah Jane McXary. Angie Lacey Peck. Rose Julia Sears. Annie M.vnson Smith. Abbie Elizabeth Wiggin. 77 LEGEND A. •91 Mae Louise Alden. Esther Bailey. Lillian Corbett Barnes. Mariana Williamson Blood. Henrietta St. Barbe Brooks. Alice Siiillaber Cle ment. Grace Eastman. Rachel Rutherford Hartwell. L RY Emogene Hazeltine. Alice Rebecca Jackson. M. Y Douglas Newcomb. Marion Frances Parker. Isabel Puffer. Linda Dana Puffer. Millie Rosaline Todd. Grace Fitzburgh Thomson. F.VNNiE Louise Woodford. Ada Swallow Woolfolk. Margaret Wrenn. •92 Bl.vnche Bigelow B. ker. Elinor Kimball Bruce. Mary Gertrude Gushing. Virginia R. Dodge. Marion Fitz Randolph. Clara Anne Walton. •93 Marion Mitchell. Grace Redman Curtis. SPECIALS. Mary Ward Lyon. •Resigned. 78 Z A ORGANIZED 1876 REORGANIZED 1889. Officers. Belle Sherwin, ' 90 Theodora Kyle. 91 Lena Hill Brown, ' 90 Sara Elizabeth Stewart Mary Field Taft, ' 90 Mary B. rrows, ' 90 ( Flora May West, ' 91 i 91 President. Vice-President. Recording Secretary. Corresponding Secretary. Treasurer. Marshals. T ember5. Ellen Louise Burrell. EsTELLE May Hurll. IN FACULTATE. Charlotte Fitch Roberts. Harriette Wallace Tuttle. Katherine Eloise Horton. Edith Mira James. ' 89 Florence Evelyn Soule. Helen Amanda Storer. •90 RL ry B. rrows. Alice Gray- Bothwell. Lena Hill Brown. Martha Pike Conant. Bessie LEsquEREUx Cook. Mary Field Taft. 79 Mary Lucasta Fish. Elizabeth Browning Mason. Jennie Bond McIver. Katherine Morse. Belle Sherwin. LEGENDA. •91 Alice Greene Arnold. Myrtilla Avery. Elizabeth Mary Blakeslee. Mary Walker Carter. Elizabeth Guild Hoyt. Theodora Kyle. Bertha Lebus. Emily Isabel Meader. Amy Mothershead. Marion Williams Perrin. Sara Matlock Roberts. Louise Grant Saxton. Charlotte Thorndike Libby. Sara Elizabeth Stewart. Maud Marion Taylor. Sue M. Taylor. Ellen Juliet Wall. F. May West. ' 92 Mary Louise Brown. Clara Maria Burt. J. NET Davidson. Dora Bay Emerson. Charlotte Hand. Garnet Isabel Pelton. Gertrude Bushnell Smith. Kate Morgan Ward. Charlotte Joy Allen. Carrie Grant Frost. Clara Seymour Helmer. Maud Mason. Cora Lydia Stewart. Amy Augusta Whitney. So • _g • ©Gieties Ft Si ,3 ■Unka Fhila- ESTABLISHED 1889. Officers Edith Mary Luther. ' 90 Florence Newman, Sp. Annie May Linscott, ' 90 Carolyn Strong. Sp. Mary Noyes Tyler, ' 90 Ruth Elizabeth Abbott, ' S9 President. Vice-President. Recording Secretary. Corresponding Secretary, Treasurer. Keeper. Prof. Anton Springer. Leipsic. Mr. a. W. Stetson, Boston. T embers. HONORARY. Ida Bothe. Prof. E. N. Horsford, Cambridge. Mr. Martin Brimmer, Boston. Evely-n Barrows. Sarah Lilian Burlingame. Harriet Ide Coman. IN FACULTATE. Elizabeth Harriet Denio. Anne Eugenia Morgan. Florence Bigklow. Ruth Elizabeth Abbott. S3 LEGEND A. ' 90 Ella Williams Bray. May Anna Cogswell. Helen Blanch Field. Charlotte Elizaheth IIalsey. Anna Belle Jenks. France-s Agnes Knapp. Edith Hubbard Warren. Annie May Linscott. Edith M. ry Luther. Etta Richardson Parker. Isabelle Aiken Sinclair. Josepha Virginia Sweetser. Mary Noyes Tyler. Mary Adelaide Alexander. Grace Lincoln Darling. Elizabeth Plympton. Harriet Emily Tuell. Bessie Belle Holcomb. Mary Josephine Emerson. •92 Henrietta Amelia Mirick. Florence Myrick. ' 93 Blanch M. rot. Mary Emily Cobb. Ellen Isabelle Jordan. Grace Gertrude Rickey. SPECIALS. Florence Newman. Elizabeth Overstreif. Carolyn Strong. S4 gKETCHING (JlUB. Edith M. Luther. Sarah M. Bock. Ethel Patox. Anna R. Wilkinson. T|emb i?rs. Alice Mabel Norton. ISABELLE SiNCL. 1R. Grace Thompson. Margaret Hardox. gRESiD Winners. MOTTO: ■■NOTHING BUT SIT AND SIT. AND ERT AND EAT. ' For Officers and Me.mbers, see Cl. ss List of ' 93. SS Cat)EMY OF (5La5S(ROOM)IC RT. Profit- Reeking gcHoob. T embers. All belonging to the Scientific Departments. FIELD OF WORK: LABORATORY NOTE-BOOKS. pLEaSURE-gEEKIMG gCHOOL. r ember5. Martha P. Conant, ' 90. Carol Dresser, ' 90. E. Browning Mason, go. Florence E. May, ' 90. Marion V. Perrin. 91. Alice R. Jackson. ' 91. Louise Brown, ' 92. Mary Lyon, Sp. Caroline Hedger, Sp. S6 ©cieties ♦ ♦ -. ... u si usical ,U 4 S7 gEETHOVEN gOCIETY. Offiei rs. Prof. Junius W. Hill Florence E. Soule Anne L. Bosworth Charlotte J. Allen Carrie G. Frost E. Blanche Marot Mabel J. Stone i Annie L. Durflinger i Edith M. James . Director. President. Vice-President. Treasurer. Recording Secretary. Corresponding Secretary. Factotums. Accompanist. Membership, 85. 88 Wellesley ( ollege (Jlee (Jlub. Anne Bosworth. ' 90 President. Marion Perrin, ' 91 ..... . Mnuager. Prof. Junius W. Hill ..... Director. M. BEL J. Stone ....... Accompanist. FIRST SOPRANOS. Sarah H. Groff, ' 89. E. Louise Sheldon, 92. Anne Bosworth, ' 90. Carrie G. Frost. Sp. second sopranos. Florence G. Soule, ' 89. Lena H. Brown, ' 90. Mary W. Lyon, Sp. Lydia McC. gue, Sp. FIRST ALTOS. Annie L. Durflinger. ' yi. Nettie G. Pullen. ' 92. Emma L. McAlarney, ' 92. • Grace E. Grenell, 94. SECOND ALTOS. Marion W. Perrin, ' 91. Marion C. Lutz. 93. Blanche Marot, ' 93. Mary L. Marot, ' 94. Wellesley (Jollege gaN30 (Jlub. Sara M. Roberts, ' 91 Maud Foster, Sp. Leader, Afiijiairer. Mae L. Aluen, ' 91. Mariana W. Blood, ' gi. Virginia R. Dodge, ' 92. Sue M. Taylor, ' gi. S. Lena Bass, ' 90. Mary E. Fuller, ' 92. Louise Pope, ' 91. Margaret Hardon, 92 M. Louise Brown, ' 92. Emily H. Foley, ' 93. FIRST BANJOS. SECOND BANJOS. Sarah Williams, ' 92. Sara M. Roberts, ' gi. Garnet Isabel Felton, ' 90. Katherine p. Fisher, Sp. Maud Hutchinson, ' 93. Alice Reed, ' 93. Christine Karslake, ' go. Millie R. Todd, ' gi. Maud Foster, Sp. Grace Underwood, ' g2. Mary B. Hill, ' g4. mandolin. Annie L. Durflinger, ' 91 ' 90 ( LEE (JlUB. Helen Anne Dempsey. Henrietta E. Hardy. Lena H. Brown . Anne L. Bosworth. Gertrude Coddington. FIRST SOPRANOS. Lena II. Brown. SECOND SOPRANOS. Nellora Clough. FIRST ALTOS. Grace M. Brackett. SECOND ALTOS. Anna M. Hamilton. Leader. Cornelia I. Rosa. Mary V. Fitch. Annie M. Mitchell. Susan W. Child. 90 ' 91 (Jlee (Jlub. F. May West Accompauist. Alice S. Clement. FIRST SOPRANOS. Bertha I. Barker. Esther Bailey. Marl xa W. Blood. Lucy B. White. SECOND SOPRANOS. Grace M. Cummings. FIRST ALTOS. Annie L. Durflinger. SECOND ALTOS. Elizabeth G. Hoyt. Mabel Frost. Louise Pope. MvRTiLLA Avery. Z A Quartette. Helen A. Storer, ' Sg Accompanist. FIRST SOPRANO. Carrie Gray Frost, Sp. SECOND SOPRANO. Lena Hill Brown, ' 90. first alto. Florence Evelyn Soule, ' 89. second alto. Marion Williams Perrin, ' 91. 91 $ gEXTETTE. Anne L. Bosworth, ' 90 Leader. first sopranos. Anne L. Bosworth, 90. Alice S. Clement, ' 91. SECOND SOPRANOS. Esther Bailey, 91. Mary W. Lyon, Sp. Mariana V. Blood, ' 91. Mabel G. Curtis, ' 90. gaN O (JlUB. Mariana Blood, 91 ..... . Leader. BANJOS. Mariana Blood, ' 91. Mae Alden, ' 91. Carol M. Dresser, ' 90. Virginia Dodge, ' 92. GUITARS. Lilian Fishel, ' 90. Anne L. Bosworth, ' 90. Millie Todd, ' 91. 92 MaU H. Hulciiinsen, L cAdet . L«uise re  e • 93 TRY-ESR-mN gODHLITY. POUNDED 1886. ORaTORIO T ENGEREO: JOHN ONES. Pitcher .......... Mary Barro s. INSTRUMENT • • TUNING FORK. Striker. .......... Annie M. Ssiith. INSTRUMENT ■■TIN PAN-I. First Base-mail Ruth E. Morrii.l. INSTRUMENT ■■VIOLIN VON TEUFEL. Too-base Hitler E. Browning Mason. INSTRUMENT ■■HUMAN VOICE, VIA COMB. Catcher of Tune Kent Dunlap. INSTRUMENT • ■INHUMAN VOICE. Short Stop Florence E. May. INSTRUMENT • ■GOOD JUDGME NT. DUTY TO DECIDE WHEN IT IS WISE TO STOP. Umpire LuciA Morrill. INSTRUMENT ■■ALARM-CLOCK. DUTY TO CALL TIME. lctim Carrie F. Pierce, ' 91. INSTRUMENTS • ■OLD SHOES AND LANGUAGE. 94 ©Gieties -@- -® cientific 95 96 {V]lCR05C0PICaL nut) gCIENTIFIC gOCIETY. ESTABLISHED 1877. Officers. Lucia F. Clarke Gennie Hickok, ' 90 Maude Gilchrist . Grace E. Cooley . Charlotte W. Hazlewood. ' yi President. Vice-President. Recording Secretary. Corresp07tdiHg Secretary. Treasurer. r e nbers. Evelyn F. Barrows. Grace E. Cooley. Laura A. Jones. IN FACULTATE. Sarah F. Whiting. Lucia F. Clarke. Maude Gilchrist. Jennie C. Newcomb. Emily Brown. Gennie Hickok. Annie Mitchell. •90 Evangeline Hathaway. Mary F. Hitch. Bertha Smith. L ry Grey. ' 91 Charlotte W. Hazlewood. Sarah Harlow. Elizabeth Balch. Helen Chambers. ViNNIETTA LiBBV. ' 92 Helen Bruce. Inez De Lashmutt. Miriam Newcomb. Kate E. Wilson. SPECIALS. Bertha Wilson. OOLOGICSL (JlUB. 1859-90. T e Tiber5l7ip. Students of the Zoological Department. INFORMAL. WITHOUT ORGANIZATION OBJECT: TO STUDY THE FAUNA OF WELLESLEY. gOTSNICaL (Jlub T e T)berst;)ip. Students of Botany Department. FORMED 1884 WITHOUT ORGANIZATION. OBJECT: DISCUSSION OF BOTANICAL NEWS. 9S thleties :o -M- 99 (jYMNaSIUM. LuciLE Eaton Hill j I. Anna Wood . Director. Examiner. I CLECTIC gySTEM. Dr. Sargent ' s Anthropometric Measurements. Delsarte System. LviGs Swedish System. Original Work. Work of ( ollege ( lhsses. lestJ7eti(;. Sanitary. ' 93 ILITARY Drill. Di .mb-bell Drill. Indian Clvbs. Chest-weights. India.v Clubs. Vaulting and Leaping. Use of Special Apparatus. Special Work. ' 92 ' 91 •90 Delsarte Relaxing Exercises. Special Work — Elective. First Lessons in Running Jump. Preliminary Exercises in Grace, Dancing, etc. Chest-weights and Special Apparatus. Harmonic Delsarte Exercises. Normal Training. f BpipEfii sSMmmm Organized 1385 Offi(;ers 1889-90. Esther Bailey. ' 91 Anna R. Wilkinson. ' 92 M. Louise Brown, ' 93 Josephine Thayer, ' 92 Alice Maud Hollander, Sp. Marion F. Parker, ' 91 President. Vice-Presidetit. Treasurer and Secretary. £. eeut z ' e Committee. TouRNaMENT 1555- 59. Doubles Sinuflcs ?t7ampioi7sl7ip 1888-89. . . M. L. Pearsons. ' 89. and E. C. Thayer, 89. . . E. C. Thayer, ' S9. First Doubles .... Esther B.mley . ' 91, and Alice S. Clement, ' 91. Second Doubles . . . Hattie Coburn, ' 92, and Josephine Th. yer. First Singles .... Esther Bailey ' , ' 91. Second Singles . . . Anna R. Wilkinson, ' 92. . ( t ampior St ip 1889-90. Singles Esther Bailey, 91. PRIZES. First Singles .... Esther Bailey, ' 91. Second Singles . . . Josephine Thayer, ' 92 lOI ' 90 Qrevju. goal pRINOESS. Alice Mabel Norton. Captuin. Carol M. Dresser, Stroke. Cornells I. Rosa. Lillian H. Fishel. Helen A. Dempsey. Mabel G. Curtis. SUBSTITUTES. Lillian L. Haynes. Mary W. Moderwell. Louise B. Swift. Henrietta E. Hardy. Edith M. Luther. ' 91 ($reu . goal pEa (Symph. Marion W. Perrin, Captain. Marian F. Parker, Stroke. Alice S. Clement. Louise G. Saxton. Mariana Blood. SUBSTITUTES. L BEL Frost. Sara Elizabeth Stewart. Sue M. Taylor. Lucy B. White. Esther Bailey. MvRTiLLA Avery. LEG EN DA. ' 92 Qreo . goal Nettie G. Pullen. Captain. Alice W. Dransfield, Stroke. Virginia R. Dodge. Mary S. Patterson. Emma L. McAlarney. La Verite. Florence A. Wing. Clara A. Belfield. M. Josephine Emerson. M. Louise Brown. Maid W. W. re. Mary G. Gushing. SUBSTITUTES. Elinor K. Bruce. Anna R. Wilkinson. gOHT Special Qreuu. CIndinb. Charlotte Joy Allen. Captain. C-4RRIE Gray Frost, Stroke. Maud Mason. Alice Maud Hollander. • Susan Avery Look. Clara Seymour Helmer. . Florence Buckingham. Emma Blanche Marot. Edith M. Ames. Lydia S. McC. gue. SUBSTITUTES. Mary Dunlap. 103 ' 90 VjRRK SNt) IjOUNDS ( LUB. M. E. K. Kendall Mary Barrows. Sarah M. Bock. Helen MacG. Clark. Kent R. Dunlap. Mary Moderwell. Etta R. Parker. T ember5. Starter. S. Lena Bass. Emily F. Brown. Martha P. Conant. Anna May Hamilton. Mary J. Orton. Cornelia I. Rosa. Tricycle (Jlub. Hembers. Ruth E. Abbott, ' 89. Dorothy L. Dole. ' Sg. Helen W. Holmes, ' 89. Edith M. James, ' 89. S. Louise Magone, ' 89. Ethel Paton, ' 89. Florence E. Soule, ' 89. Helen A. Storer. ' 89. Grace Andrews, 89. Sarah H Groff, ' 89. Katharine E. Horton, ' 89. K. THARiNE J. Lane, ' 89. Jennie P. Mitchell, 89. Emm. S. Pleasants, ' 89. IsABELLE Stone, ' 89. Edith Sturges, ' 89. Elsie Thalheimer. ' 89. ;iCYCLE ?1S50CI?1TI0N. officers. Mary L. Dransfield. ' go Bicycle President. Execiitife Committee. T e T ber5. Mary- L. Dransfield, ' 90. Bicycle. 104 isGcllaneeus (ylubs loS . ' VcxnHA ' J?o ' P S. ■' sega . ' lElPS.miAiVtt Sea.. V S f l . lli ll . too tKrvaUt. Vv.i t t.K .w (A .-Borrow!.. tToee .,,. ..-.. -- -- XTSfv-lei. . Xil -ut . BttftTVu HoWa,rA.. c n. A trt ttix-S ' i-lor. - . X S. PUa. C i t i. ®O.Mton - -- A Xi ' BoSi« ' 0 ' -tk. Al.Oor So-t-Lw , -.-___„-_. _, - JJ . JVtwmO-rv. 3Jen2 al,tJ _ . . _ _ _ i: 3, M.c.4.on.. SonivG. Inei. . _ X.TTo..!|t . f ' K ' -t ' ' JVl. ' P i. ,.j. 5)olortS , . .Jl.il : AtocterwtU. JVt arg-uert O. . cio-u Jiter B-f olarts IlI V Hc-uwArd. Ma..cl.s. - - - - - 1 C - H. 1,0. k Larva 5-er. . -tTB-i ' -- ' - ' ■- JiiuSiC.Q.1 .DLrcctor . . , H A S ta,-LT. 106 fT at T)ee 4 The paiR gaRBHRmN. WOOD COTTAGE, DECEMBER 16, 1889. Qast of Qtjaraeters. Captain Francis Barold Mr. Burmiston . Mr. Poppleton . Mr. Martin Basset Jack Lady Theobald . Miss Belinda Basset OCT.WIA Lucia Gaston Mary Ann . DOBSOS . A. M. Norton. H. . . Dempsey. F. Palen. I. Stone. C. J. Allen. Alice Arnold. Jennie Mitchel. Camilla Gowans. Ada Woolfolk. AL BEL Glover. S. J. Freeman. [T atiQee John Richards Dr. Th v. ite Mrs. Richards L RION . Ellen O ' Shaugh: JHE I ICE pUDlDIMG. FREEMAN COTTAGE. FEBRUARY 17, 1890. Qast of ?f7ara ;ters. C. B. Perkins. M. L. Godfrey. Flora Hall Genevieve Stuart. Cornelia Rosa. 107 loS gODSLES pEREGRINSNTES. profectj: Kal, decembee. mdooolxxxix. F. Ellena Lord. Duce. LiELLA Almack. M. Josephina Holley. A. Cary Baldwin. M. Eliza Noble. S. Abalena Bass. A. Lacey Peck. M. Mabella Brown. B. Eliza Smith. A. Taia Hamilton. J. Virginia Sweetser. Evangelina Hathaway. I. Maia Wallace. OD. ' VLES PEREGRINANTES quinto decimo quoque die convenire solent. Propositum est, iisu exercit;itioneque, latine loqiiendi, et facultatem suis quasque literas sonis enunci- andi. et calliditatein celeritatemque verborum in sententias disponendorum, et vocabulo- nim copiam acquirere; deniquc quandani Latinte lingua; scientiam consequi. Grata est Sodalibus h;tc exercitatio, operibus cottidianis absolutis, relaxationem animi jiicundam prrebens. Sodales. in itineribus per urbes Itali:c principes, multa de nioribus legibiisque populo- rum antiquorum et bujus retatis discunt : itaque delectationem, baud minus quani fructum ex illis peregrinationibus, qua; niiscent utile dulci, adapta ' sunt. 109 l - IaR yi uoa.T 5L . ' tWtf «fc a lLi- -ntT ol ii t. wWTt U ' WO ,;. rV o it CrC .wfot L - L ' tT it L.«c. Jo  T« M Rot«.ftt . Vl, . WRW.rt. T N AKj Wt.it. Whoop It Qp. MOTTO: GA IT GEONG WESENDE. ' Son of the Daisy Noble Kid . P. D. Archer Pretty Birdie Shepherd Peradventure Parvenu Fleur de Lis Barley-Hall A. Africanus Kid Princess of the Fortress. Prime Minister. Chancellor of the ExcHEcyjER. Minister of Foreign Affairs. Master of the Rolls. Poet Laureate. Charge D ' affaires. ALLIED HIGHLANDERS. Friendly Head Chief. Spirited Prophetess of Prick-y-Ditch. Bitter Cum Claw. }Q bi+erar Society for +I79 d )c ncemGn-t- of Sincerity. Lilian Corbett Barnes, Dora Bay- Emerson, ' 92. Bertha Palmer, ' 91. Maud M. Taylor, ' 91. Emma M. StyjiRES, ' 91. 91. Alma Emerson Beale, 91. Maud Mason, Sp. Carrie M. Pierce, ' 91. Alice A. Stevens, ' 91. Amy Augusta Whitney, Sp. C .s) ' cSh r zr - f-- s ' ' € f- I «. 4 Hu lfu t t 1 - ' Ji i .-eaBK -aji ' iii ' -JJ , ' ■■,AM. yjrr j=: . QCU-Scl J?A ' Vi fl-z,i_ Ti t ' ' - -f Lid it h Whiff (Qc cldide nil lei ' , tjo S £ 1j n I a e O rjiu ' d 1 1 - dry (1 . J)fe,)iimc. ori25leTii DeecKcr. t: d S ' } ifp COLOR: BLACK. FLOWER: NIGHT-BLOOMING CEREUS. e o HIGH EXECUTIONERS Mary W. Bates. Clara A. Walton. Edith M. Ames. Florence Converse. Mary E. Fuller. ORGANIZED FEBRUARY. ISGO. commander of the faithful. Louise Bradford Swift. grand viziers. Maud W. Straight. Eleanor B. Green. Margaret W. Hardon. lord keeper of the archives. Helen G. Pierce. ROYAL SCRIBE. Alice W. Dransfield. lord chancellor of the exchequer. EsiiLY ' Fogg. seneschal. Helen M. Cook. royal midget. Bettie Keith. chroniclers. Grace F. Thomson. Anna R. Wilkinson. tolerable honorables. Alice R. Jackson. Mys. Tery. disappointed member. Cornelia E. Green. 113 .0 .0- xl ' 0 eOelopmenf • of . (T MOTTO To me also was given, if not Victory, yet the consciousness of Battle, and the resolve to persevere therein while life or faculty is left. T embersJ?ip. Mary Jennings Orton . . Wielder of the Hammer of Rhetoric. Belle Sherwin linger of Epithets. PROSPECTIVE MEMBER. Oi ' R Mutual Friend. The (JaNTERBURY gWINKERS. Florence Buckingham. Mary L. Fish. Nettie J. Hale. Charlotte E. Halsey. A. May Hamilton. Sadie Harlow. Gennie Hickok. Mabel A. Manson. Florence Marsh. Sadie McNary. Annie M. Mitchell. Evelyn E. Parkes. Agnes Rovvell. Ro.se J. Sears. Ida M. Wallace. Gertrude White. Alice E. Williams. A. Elizabeth Wiggin. 4 «..---•• T UA Manson JVSwEptBEr RJ.Sears A MMilche H-Q-Scribner AEWilUs MRYardley L Ahqwe AlWiggin p B 9 - iJgJr )f Jjov re I r 7 r ..„ EJ .til 1 Marrori Foi j, ■j ' -{- • i - Cv .-.f. ii6 I. F. officers. Susie M. Lum Emma E. West . Marion N. ' Wilcox Elizabeth L. Allard. Roberta Z. Allen. Bertha I. Anderson. Marion Arvine. Emma L. Barnes. Gertrude Bigelow. Elizabeth Bryant. Charlotte E. Chester. Fay Cook. S. die H. de Rochemont. Alice M. Doe. Julia M. Green. Laura C. Green. Carrie T. Hardwick. Delarue K. Home. Carrie M. Hubb. rd. Susan D. Huntlxgton. Charlotte D. Irish. Maria Kneen. T embers. President. Vice-President. Secretary and Treasurer. Mary C. Larned. Susie M. Lum. Marian C. Lutz. Louise McDonald. Eleanor G. McFetridge. Florence L. Monroe. Maud Nias. Bertha Pierce. Nannie M. Pond. Eleanor F. Ruddle. Ida B. Sanders. Alice Sanford. M. ud Severance. Clarissa Spencer. Mary R. Tooker. h. rriet b. towne. Emma E. West. Marion N. Wilcox. Mary- N. Young. 117 1 -. r, £.. ■O-rM c«, t- -- ' - -tJJt5 c, d c) - ' ;ir , t j n u;c|t 2 ' . Cm C|o j a--t u fJO Govv ' 2 ' ic?7 Acv LAj ' i r- ' . k Tow ' + {0(i)3a iite5 0.+ afM- rca, ? ' Ot-I Dr- wit 1 y; ' .j. ' i ti. ' .C ? f iiV ' , i-hin uJiK fH. S jJ VV-fl- yii uj) nofi, o o) 4 sr] i-mn Wv - H T- Lrueline Sisscn oe wet. AiiCE Cny fletKwEll. Z. Janet E.Udvid on. ZA. ChrisJjneKdjr laAc Before the Heg-r ra Mary HdlsadsMc, Lc ira Oai ' insia MercliiriJ ' ., Li cy £. Snij tl . EHzdltth Ci ' kf 5 7) i7h After ruHcg. ra- ng r ember5. Gertrude P. Spalding. Eleanor Burgess Green. Emily Fogg. Bertha De Forest Brush. Emily Howard Foley. Bettie Keith. Edith White. Cornelia E. Green. TfHE pRELUt)E. PUBLISHED WEEKLY BY THE STUDENTS- Mary D. E. Lauderburn. ' 90. Sarah M. Bock, ' 90. Mary Barrows. ' 90. ditors. Edith S. Tufts, ' 84. Emily I. Meader. ' 91. Theodora Kyle. ' 91. Mary- W. Bates. ' 92. The Legends. PUBLISHED YEARLY BY THE SENIOR CLASS Editorial Staff, 1890. Belle Sherwin. Z A . Elizabeth Brownixg Mason, Z A Mary Vinia Fitch, S Sarah Jane McNary, S Edith Mary Luther. A. S. Alice Cary Baldwin, - LITERARY EDITORS. ART EDITORS. BUSINESS MANAGERS. Editor-iti-Chief. Associaie-Bdifor. Ruth Eastman Morrill, S. S. Louise Bradford Swift. S. S. Alice Mabel Norton, S. S. Jane Bond McIver, Z A The $ I EBouNt). Editors. Helen MacGregor Clarke, ' 90, February 2Sth. Esther Bailey, ' 91, April 19th. A. Elizabeth Wiggin. ' 90. Apri) 12th. Rachael R. Hartwell, ' 91. May 30th. The T ue gLUE. ORGAN OF ZETA ALPHA, Issued i; ovEMBER, 15S9. Editors. Emily I. Meader, ' 91. Alice Greene Arnold. ' 91. Issued rv aRCH, 1590. Editors. Mary Walker Carter. ' 91. Sara Elizabeth Stewart, ' 91. M. Louise Brown. ' 92. ( OLLEGE (JaLENiDflR. PUBLISHED YEARLY New and Enlarged Edition, 1890. The ( orth mericsn I eview. PUBLISHED BIENNIALLY CIRCULATION. 650. ditors. The Heads of Departments. AIM : fl THOROUGH AND IMPARTIAL DISCUSSION OF COLLEGE TOPICS. The paPYROGRHPHIC pROGRESSOR; Or, The Purple paRaaoN. PUBLISHED ALL TOO FREQUENTLY, AIM : TO TEACH DECIPHERATION OF MANUSCRIPT, AND FURTHER THE CAUSE OF EDUCATION. 12.? : m 124 ]|iteiiai[ -ffi - -ffih 125 w i fefl ; -■1 w „ U i a-i my • ' 1 ' J A ' ks sU ' ll ' ' -V C-OTTIITIO ' if is ire. •p-i-ir]-a W: Visit B(?i9§ a Qolloqijial DescriptioQ of U ellesley Qollei e as see by Sypieal l isitor5 [) ([Ipar e of 39 Offiee-§irl. goENE . . . Interior of Wellesley (Jollege. Time .... 10.15 on a 3une morning. ROM the avenue is heard a rumble of wheels. The coach reaches the porte coc iere, anil the tiery steeds are brought to a stop. ENTER YOUNG MAN. Young Man (Jo door-gt ' r ) : • ' ! would like to be shown over the College, if any of the young ladies are at liberty. Door-girl: Yes, sir. Please take a seat in the reception room. ENTER YOUNG GIRL. Young Girl : • ' V ' oidd it be too much trouble if — that is — I — could I see a part of the building, this morn- ing.= Door-girl : Please walk into the reception room, and I ' ll see. ENTER GENIAL PAPA IX BREEZY FASHION. Genial Papa : Good-morning. Rather warm this morning. Now, I ' d like to be shown around a little this morning and see the place. My daughter has just grad — Door-girl : Yes, sir. Walk in this wav, please. 127 LEGENDA. ENTER, IXqUIRINGLV, MAIDEN LADY. Maicieft Lady : Will you just see if the President is at home? Tell her it ' s Miss Simons, from Comstock. ( S ie yollo ' il ' s the others into the reception room. Exit Joor-girl tliroiigii open door to office. Teleplio ie heard ri?!oi i; ' in office. Rrring rrring., rrring at interva s of f-.vo seconds.) Voice from Office: Hello! Telegram? Wait a minute. Ready. ' •Why — have — you — not — written? Yes, I have that. Wrote — Saturday — and Tuesday. — Have — decided — Wait a minute. Girls, keep still a minute till I get this. Have decided — to — forgive — you. — Heaven — bless — you, — my darling. Jennie, look up Miss Blank in the schedule book, please, while I copy oft this love letter. My ! I ' m glad I ' ve got a chance to deliver it. Second Voice (at large telephone : But we must have that butter to-night. Hello. — Yes, this is Wellesley College. Butter, I said. Hello ! — Is this Cheeseman Co. ? ENTER OKFlCE-(;iRI,. ( I ' oung an springs to his feet hat and cane in hand. Genial Papa also rises and grasps the office-girF s hand cordially. I ' onng Girl stands xvaiting ' silently xchile Maiden Lady steps forzcard and asks) : Is this the President? Office-girl {momentarily overpovoered ., bnt recovering herself): I shall be glad to show you over the building if vou will come this way. ( They proceed down the corridor toivard the library, office-girl zvalking betzveen Genial Papa and Young Man., -while Maiden Lady and Young Girl follow close behind.) Yoting Man: You see, I had a friend here last year, and being on my way to New Haven, I thought I ' d just stop oft ' . Office-girl : What class was your friend in? Young Man : She was a Junior last year. She would have graduated this year, but — Office-girl (tactfully hastening to cover his evident embarrasstnent) : Why, then she ' s a member of our class. Genial Papa: Now isn ' t it pleasant to meet people who know people you know? You may know my daughter next year. She ' s coming as a Special. Can ' t spare her more than one year, you know. I ' m coming out to see the President sometime during the summer about her entrance in the fall. Office-girl: Then she hasn ' t applied yet? Genial Papa : Oh, no 1 Not yet. Maiden Lady {condescendingly to Young Girl): Are you thinking of coming to Wellesley, sometime, when you are prepared? 128 LEGEND A. I ' oi ng- Girl: Ycs ' m. V c just giaduatecl from Franklin Academy. I was the valedic- torian of mv class. J aide?t Lady: I shall probably take a special course as a teacher, taking up History as a branch of studv in which I am much interested. ( TIicv reach the library and stand in the doorzvav . ' ) Office-girl : This is the library, endowed by Professor Horsford. Do you care to go in.- Chorus: Oh, yes! ■( Thev descend the steps.) Office-girl {turning to the right) : This is a portrait of Professor Horsford. ] ' oice {from dark a cove on right): There are those boxes of newspaper strips, the white edges which we mend books with. We have twelve boxes full now that the girls have cut oft ' , so we ' ll throw away three of them and begin to fill a new one. You might begin to dust now. This stiff brush is for the corners, and this one for the wood-work : and here are two cloths, this rough one to dust the books with, and this one to wipe off the shelves. Be very careful not to get them mixed. Voice A ' o. 2 {tnecklv) : Yes ' m. {The visitors pass on.) Young lan : How manv ' olumes are there in this library? Office-girl : Thirty-four thou- sand. Here is an old Dutch closet which contains many valuable books and other curiosities. I fear the libra- rian is too busy to open it this morning, however. Genial Papa : Is that bust at the end of the librarv, i n the vindow, Daniel Webster.? Office-girl : Xo ; that is Martin Luther. Here is the Rossetta stone. Young Girl {eagerly): Oh! In memorv of Dante Gabriel Rossetti ? Office-girl: No, — that is — {hesitatingly), why, — it ' s that one that thev found, — vou know, — in — Young Girl : Oh, yes ! Why, of course. Office-girl : You see, we have electric lights in the library, also in the reading room and the Faculty parlor. 1:9 LEG EN DA. Maiden Lady : Yes : thej ' re talking of introducing tliem in Comstocl . {T ' iev reach the door.) Officc-girJ : ' These are the boat-crew banners. Young Man : Are those the ones they use on Float Day, when they give a concert out in the middle of the lake? Office-girl : Yes, but the concert is given near the shore. 2 ' oii ig Man : Oh, is it. My chum was out here last year to the Float, and he said it was very mistv and rainw and he judged from the volume of sound that the girls were about half-way across the lake. ( Tliev proceed. ) Office-girl : This is the reading room. Here are placed the daily and weekly news- papers, and the Gertrude Library, containing books for Bible study. ( Thev turn to the statue of Diana.) Vonng Girl ; ' ' Why ! the deer ' s foot is broken ! Office-girl : ' ' Yes ; that was done by one of the officers of the College, in lifting oH some of the students ' books which were placed on the pedestal. ( Thev reach the door of the Facility parlor.) Office-girl : This is the Faculty parlor, fitted up for the Faculty by Professor Horsford, in the name of the Class of ' 86. ( 7 ' he z ' isitors seat tliemselves in the cushioned chairs, prepared to rest.) Genial Papa : What is that picture . ' Office-girl : It is called Knowledge is Power. ' It was presented to the students, and is kindly taken care of for us by the Faculty. The students never enter here. jMaiden Lady : This frescoing recalls to my mind the ceiling in the parlor of the hotel in Comstock. That is a lighter and more cheerful room than this, however. Office-girl (szvcetlv) ' ■Now if you will come this way, please. ( Thev proceed upstairs to the chapel. The organ is being used vigorously., and loud thumps from the internal media nisni are interspersed among the chords.) Maiden Lady: I suppose your study hours extend through the greater part of the dav, and that you are recjuired to preserve quiet at such times. Office-girl : Yes. The students are expected to be coniparativeh- quiet. No banjo-plav- ing is allowed, as it disturbs those who are trying to study. ( The organ szcells louder and louder., and the thumps increase in vigor.) Office-girl : ' • This is the chapel. Some one is evidently practicing on the organ. Young Lan : Is attendance at chapel compulsory.? Office-girl : Yes; but then it needn ' t be, for all of us love to go to chapel. LEG EN DA. ( They ivalk out to the second floor ce?itre and downstairs to the Jirst Jioor.) Toiaig- Girl {paiisiiiff in front of Ellen Robbitis ' fainting, Only a Mullein : ' ' What a lovelv stalk of mignonette ! ( Office-girl, with infinite tact, refrains fron corrections.) {At the door of the Browning Room. ' ) ( Young Man has been left behind, studying the statue of Niobe.) Office-girl : This is the Browning Room, fitted up in honor of Mrs. Browning. Chorus: What a beautiful room! Maiden Ladv : Did the students paint the frieze. ' Toung Man {entering breath- lessly) : Why, what ' s this.? Toung Girl {explaining): This is the Brown Room, fitted up in honor of Deacon Brown. I sup- pose I know who he is, but I can ' t quite think. Office-girl {controlling lie r self , and stepping back to young man): •■This is the Browning Room, fitted up in honor of Mrs. Browning. {I ' omig Girl turns scarlet.) Office-girl : That is a bust of iSIrs. Browning. Genial Papa {turning to bust of the young Ccesar Augustus): ••And this, I suppose, is Mr. Browning. Maiden Ladv {looking at statue of Reading Girl): This is Mrs. Browning in her youth, is it not. ' ( Office-girl is occupied during these questions by a mighty effort at self-control.) Office-girl: Perhaps you would like to go up to the fifth floor.? We will take the elevator. {Young Girl stops to read notices on dining-room bulletin-hoard.) Young Girl: - ' Students are again reminded of the necessity of being present at domestic o V promptly. A word to the wise is sufficient. ( The rest wait at the elevator door, and to occupy the time read snatches from different notices posted there. ) Young Man: Unexcused absences from chapel. Please see me immediately. {His eye travels down the long columns of na??ies.) Young Man : Why, I thought you said you loved to go to chapel. 131 LEG END A. Office-girl : We do. There ' s Div name down for Sunday, and I was there, and in my own row, too. Tliere, it ' s crossed off now ! ( Elevator descends in a rlieii matic fashioiu and a JiootJi-Iike voice is Jieard sayiti tragically : Cassiiis is aweary of the world ; Hated by one he loves; braved by ( Elevator stops suddenly about t-MO feet from tlie floor. A second voice exclaims): It ' s shtuck, Charles. I can ' t move it wan bit ; yez ' U have to git out. ' ' ( T ic door is pushed open, and a manly Jignrc steps fort . Russet kid g ' loz ' es and a silver-lieaded cane are tlie Jinisliing tonclies to an impressive toilet. The figure disappears into Domestic Hall, quoting ' ) : It is a deed in fashion. Elevator-girl : Yez can ' t go up ; it ' s shtuck. Ojffce-girl {turning a vay): Would you like to visit the Art Building? Chorus : ' ' Yes I ( They retrace their steps to the front door, and proceed to the Art Huilding.) {Sounds of fve finger exercises float up from the lakeside.) MaideJi Lady {in alarm): Why, it tiiundersl Office-girl : No ; I think that is the pianos in Music Hall. ( They try the side door of the Art Building and fnd it locked ; they ring several times, but receiving no response descend to the back basement door. ) Office-girl : There is a poem which lias been much appreciated by the art students, in con- • nection with their entrance at this door. It is this : In early days, when DeathV cold hand From man all joys had stripped. All tliat remained of earthly forms Had place within the crypt. Now ' dead ' Art ' s beck ' ning finger points, And we, as they of yore, With spirits ripe for martyrdom, Enter the basement door. ( They reach the floor above. ) Office-girl : These doors all have a use, though thev mav seem numerous. Perhaps we had better go through into ART GALLERY. the gallery first. Here is our celebrated Schreyer, the ' Bedouin Chief- 132 LEGENDA. Voiiiig Girl : My ! isn ' t lie fierce? It makes me think of a poem in my old scliool reader. (A go)ig is JicarJ. ) Chorus : Wliat is tliat ? Office-girl : That is the bell for the 10.5 recitation. ( Genial Papa a ml Yoiiiig Man pull out their watches. ToiDig Girl looks anxiottslv at a B. d- A. time-table. ) I ' out g Girl : I can ' t seem to find an thing abont Welleslev on this time-table. Do vou know when the next train leaves ? Office-girl : ' At 11.07. The coach is just startinjf from the College. Young Girl : Do you think I can catch it if I hurrv. ' (Genial Papa, Young Man, and I ' oung Girl bid fareivell lastilv, and make frantic efforts to find their -May out. At last, heated and breathless, thev reach the top of the kill. The coach is just passing, but after much scrambling and shouting thev succeed in over- taking it. ) Maiden Lady: It is so pleasant and romantic out here that I think I will eat my lunch under this tree. I (condescendingly ) am pleased to ha e met you. Perhaps some day when I am attending the College I may return your kindness by assisting vou with vour studies. Good- morning. Office-girl smiles and retires, saving, •• Thank vou. 133 LEGEND A. U ellesley U ays. HEX AS Aurora daunces up the sky, Full soone the booming bell is hearde to ring ; And merrie maydens chapel hvarde doe hy, Bearing their instruments for studying. And never late, and never lingering. Though mazie mudd-holes make them almost mad, Their bootfull zeall to everie swincke they bring. Of raine, of snowe, they never were ydrad, Xor ever to take cutts from chapell were they lad. And often, when brimfull of busie care, They flee to th ' restaurante to ease their voe. And two p. M. doth find them eating there. To Bible straightway they unmurmuring goe ; Lest kindling consciences should pricke them soe That wounded they would be both sore and deepe. The doctoin- then woidd pills on them hestoe. And they on Sunday would stay home and sleepe ; For such a luckless chance would make them waill and weepe. But after Sunday, recreation day Bids them arise and leave their drousie bonre : With faithfuU hast her call they doe obay, And feateously with friskes fill everie houre. Through all t he dav they know nor stound nor stoure ; And when the drouping night enfolds them round, The ' clothe them faire and fine as fresshest flowre, And gather them to list to music ' s sound, — And if a man they see, with bliss their hearts doe bound. 134 J u X H M m O K U K U, M Q Z P o a: o h, O ? — yci ' s Tree. — Main Building founded 1S75 — Long ' fellow ' s Pond. — Music Hall, founded iSSi. — Tupelo. — Eng:ine House. —Stone Hall, founded iSSi. — Greenhouse. — Farmhouse. — Barns. — Waban Bridge. — Mrs. Durant ' s Estate. — Waban. —Eliot, founded 1SS6. — Simpson, founded 1SS2. — Wood, founded 1SS9. — FreeiTian, founded iSSS. , — Xorumbesja, founded 1SS6, , — Art Buikiin , founded 1SS9. — Rhododendrons. — Gymnasium. — Is this the Lake? — Rest Cure. — Two-below. — This is not the College. — Good walking. Splinters. ' — Some more. — Some more. — ' The Creamery. gTONE yaLL gPE KS FOR ITSELF. 11 I ELLO : Will vou give me the time? I am Stone Hall. S.io? All right. You are 1 1 Legenda.- I don ' t understand you. I am Stone Hall. What do you want.? The - changes here this year. ' Oh yes! Our fire-escapes are the latest. The State Fire Commissioners ordered the fire-ladders put up, and the College Commissioners placed a shoot outside Inspector Blank ' s door. The shoot cannot be used while the ladder is there, and neither can be removed without an order from the Fire Commissioners. So the shoot is useless. ' Precisely. You want to know the result of the new system of domestic work ? In the first place it suggested the possibilitv of a morning nap, and pro(kiced a petition for a 7.15 breakfast. Who objected . ' The ambitious Freshman scorned such efleminacy, and longed to eat their oatmeal at six A. M. What happened. ' The Freshmen and the Faculty got excited, stiuck up a partnership, and war was proclaimed. But ' 91 came to the rescue, and a peaceable compromise was effected. Time has cooled the Freshman ' s scholastic ardor, and it is said that members of ' 93 are sometimes late to a 7.15 breakfast. The Freshmen have found time to form a society, rivaling the Shakespeare in wit and wisdom. I leave it to your knowledge of the class to decide whether I. F. stand for Immature Fledglings, or for Independent Freshmen, or for Inimitably Fresh. From my experience I should say Other calamities this year : There were two consecutive Sundays of fine skating, followed bv two consecutive Mondays of unmitigated thaw : moral, be good and you will be happy, but you won ' t have any kind of a time. The I. Fs. celebrated the end of the mid-years Iw instituting a new veil. (The electric bells have rung at all hours of the day and night.) But in spite of these few drawbacks, and the lurid tons of essay-paper which have entered mv door through the medium of the mail-bag, people seem to like me, partly because of the choice specimens botanical and otherwise which find shelter here, partly because of the sumptuous .Sunday deserts, and partly because of Saturday evening fires of drift-wood : and my children sang on the winter sleigh-rides, — Stone Hall, room for all, How we love our dear Stone Hall. yiSTORY OF WaBSN. pi. (ie9(?ral Qo ditioi?. I. Political. a. Form of goveniment. Oligarchical republic. b. Classes. 1. Faculty (governiug party). 2. Students (idle aristocracy). 3. Populace. a. Georgia. b. Mike. II. Industrl l. a. Industries favored by government. b. Labor equally distributed. Carried on by domestic system. III. Amusements. a. Physical. Athletics.. b. Intellectual. 1. Whist. 2. Ripples. T.. Afternoon teas. B. pri gpal ue tj. I. Wars. a. History of most important. 1. Against China. a. Participants. Governing Party ' .v. Aristocracy. b. Result. Spirit of China completely broken. 2. Against Turkey. a. Participants. Governing Party :•.?. .Sunday Turkey. b. Result. Turkey utterh ' subdued. 3. Over debatable ground. a. Ground — Wellesley Mud. b. Cause of war — Overshoes. c. Participants. Owners of overshoes (Aristocracy). II. Reforms. Punctuality at meals, chapel, etc., intro- duced. III. McGlNTV. a. Immediate effect. Pains. b. Lasting results. 1. Closer union of classes. 2. Spirit of adventure aroused. IV. La Grippe. Complete demoralization. ' . Mid-years. a. Gloom. b. Idle aristocracy forced to labor. c. Period of apathy. d. Renewed cheerfulness. JHE DiSRY of ( ORUMBEGa. UGUST, 1SS9. — Durinij the summer ' s quiet I have been thuikiug, — a thhig hiipossible hulug tevmtime, — aud I have conckided to keep a journal. Amiel kept a journal, and so tlid Marie Bashkirtsefl . Both became famous, and it was the journals that did it. I already have fame. Through Professor Horsford, my name is almost a household word throughout the land. But that is having greatness thrust upon me. I should like to acquire some more for myself. Yes, I shall keep a journal, and begin immediately. September, 18S9. — I have a new neighbor on the hill. Wood has come to live near me. I always thought she would, though it took her a long time to make up her mind. In spite of the tales to the contrary, the ' 90 girls under my care seem calm, peaceable, and civil withal. I do not understand. Perhaps their true pugnacity and aggressiveness will appear later. This is doubtless a wile to lull me into quiet. Having the President under my roof is certainly a pleasure. I am sure of that. But those girls! Well, we shall see. October, 18S9. — The quiet has continued, broken only by the festivity of our Hallowe ' en party. The number of our guests, the pretty costumes of the girls, and the fun over the fortune- telling tricks, I shall never forget. What a rest and inspiration such an occasion is ! November, 1SS9. — Thanksgiving, reminding me of my many blessings, has come and gone. My dinner party was a large one, but enjoyable, too. After dinner the young folks did im- promptu charades, to their delight and my pleasure. December, 1SS9. — The house has been lonely enough since my fomily went away. To-night I can harcllv write for sleepiness (they always say that in journals). I have made good resolutions enough to last fifteen years instead of one. One thing I am resolved upon, — we must have some better weather ; and another, — I shall never listen to disparaging tales again. January, 1890. — Examinations are over, and at last we can talk about something else. But discussing our woes has become a habit. Since we can no longer look forward we look back- ward, appreciatively, and exclaim, - ' Oh, how thirsty I was! ' ' February, 1890. — We had a serenade last night. Such things come less often than I wish. In spite of the rain, in spite of the fact that it was not our turn to entertain, the serenade was verv pleasant. But oh ! what do people make journals out of. ' ' March, 1890. — We are getting so busy with our Pepita, that really I must lay aside all literary work. After all, a life like mine is too l: usy for such an ambitious undertaking. 138 Preemsn ' s ?[ction, (Jhemicsl snl) Otherwise. 1559-90. Experimer t. Objeruatior). Qor elu iOQ. FALL TERM. 1. Add 25 Splinters of Wood toF. Treat with hospitality. 2. 9 Freshman minds digested in high spirits. 3. Crackers 4- Hiitpin 4- Lamp. 4. Take 9 Freshmen ; mix intimately with 3 U C G ' s. 5. Take several lire-escapes -j- girls ad. lib. Let a Har ' ard man remain standing on board walk. Gilt edges on creamery precipitated i. Reaction of wood on F is Barbarous after a few months ' standing. 2. Chee! chee! 3. Not the odor of a Christian home. ' 4. Mixture effervesces violently. but Fair. 2. Violent ebullition from F-F and a few blue fumes. 3. Much gas generated. 4. Freshmen made to feel at home. 5. Many monkey-like figures sublimated 5. Harvard man goes away edified, on cold walls of house. Combustion feared. 1. Prepare cautiously i Rice Fdg. Pro- tect from alteration, as the mixture is liable to explode. 2. Take 50 girls. Start them for chapel (slowly) at S.30 A. M. 3. Jan. 21. Keep stream of girls slowly passing over i lumpy lawn. 4. Carefully pulverize assorted girls with pestle of college dining room until ner -es are clearly visible. Dissolve. Leave standing: in F. WINTER TERM. 1. No visible change. 2. They reach chapel at S.15. 3. Muddy precipitate on front door-mat. 4. Around nerves as nucleus the crystals of recuperation form. Ebullition of good spirits. Rest accomplishes its charitable work. 1. Experiment succeeds after careful manipulation of apparatus. 2. Although F bell is changed, girls remain independent variables. 3. Incipient grass reduced. 4. F known as an excellent reviving agent. 1. Take several Seniors late to break- fast, chapel, bed. Shake well. 2. Fifty girls -f- assorted mottoes. Stir occasionally. 3. Let F remain standing from April 10 to June 24. Test for unknown precipitates. SPRING TERM. I. No visible change. 2. Observations forbidden 3. Slight ebullition, and certain heavy precipitates thrown down. 2. The latter state worse than the first. 3. It is impossible to represent action that takes place by any intelligible equa- tion. ■39 U ood Cotta( e. OURNSL OF a yOUNG RISTOCRaT. EPTEMBER 13. — I began my career to-day. I went over to Freeman and looked around. Everything in order, and so beautiful. Freeman is a great success. I am . I don ' t know what. Freeman has been in existence a year and a half, and I only for one day. It is abominable ! Ah ! if I had only begun a year and a half ago, I should have been famous to-day. . September 14. — The first rug came to-day. Fancy living this long without rugs ! September 18. — The hardest thing to bear is to be continually disappointed in the things about us. To find a tallow candle where one had expected to find a student lamp I But these constant shocks have produced in me a sort of indifference. No matter what is passing, I take no notice now. I put my head out of the door only to go over to the College. September 2i. — 1 am jealous, — jealous of Freeman. She does not seem at all new. Next week I will work so hard. You shall see I I am resolved to be a great success. September 26. — I have been reading. My books are all on the floor, and 1 must wait till the bookcases come before arranging them. Oh, time ! time is required for everything 1 October 4. — A dustpan came to-day. I am radiantly, triumphantly happy 1 October 39. — To-day we had our first dinner here. Nothing is ever so good in realit as in anticipation. December 16. — We gave a play to-day, — The Fair Barbarian. It was good, but we will do better next time. January 8. — Came back to-day. Everything so changed! The parlors are tinted, only they put the green ceiling in the blue room. .Such a thing never happened at Freeman. It makes one wild with rage ! February 10. — We had a house-warming to-day. Portieres and hall lamps were put up for the occasion Waban came and looked at the curtains in the reception room. Did you do that by yourself. Yes. Well, I am satisfied with it, very well satisfied. At last I am what I have so long wished to be. I have wished for it so long that I scarcely believe it now to be true. February 20. — The andirons came to-day. Norumbega admires them very much, and says they are finer than anything of Freeman ' s. Norumbega has the true artist ' s soul. February 24. — To-day Waban told me that Norumbega said I was the gilt-edged creamery. I deserve the compliment, but it is expressed like a bourgeoise. 140 LEGEND A. March io. — The bancjuet to the Pierians was given to-night. I was absolutely beautiful ; in short, I was a success. March 21. — Everybody is sick! Headache, sore throat, weariness, pharyngitis, laryngitis, catarrh I Oh ! it is horrible ! March 21. — There is in my appearance a certain languor; my eyes are large, my cheeks less rounded. Next week I am to begin a course of treatment. I am to take a complete rest, and attend only to the demands of the dressmaker and dentist. V[ gHORT (gOURSE IN THE LIOT. proposition 11 . — 5l?eori m. If seventeen Seniors are sitiialcd in tlircc parallel p anes, and if in the same planes are five fnniors, four Sop ioniores, and one Freslinian : — . — Since tJie Seniors are equaled bv nothing ( Ax ) and also the under-class girls = O approxi}nately (Ax), nothing could be desired the Eliot. II. — If the Seniors be made pass from the 0° to go degrees, thev may be considered a vanishing quantity, and the resulting function multiplied by T 2 months, ivill become five Seniors, fojir funiors, and one Sophomore. I. — On Xovember 3d, as a base, construct the figure P — XUT.S. The Eliot was = to the P— XUTS. ]3ut the Muses are the Eliot. The Muses are a whole; the Eliot considered xvith reference to the other college build- ings is a part, and a L ' hole is greater than a part. No-M it -eas obzlons the Me ' iVses zvere the Muses. Reductio ad absurdum. And perception papers were the Mewses. Theory of Limits. The locus of all students equally distant from the end of a paper is a room, in which the inhabitants are = to the paper and similarly placed. HI LEGEM DA. But Washington ' s Birthdav is perception papers. Washington never told a — Sli ! Postulate Washington ' s Birthday = candy made -|- play given. However, the candy is a vanishing quantitv, and ve need not consider it. .Since the observed data show that the play came to naught : we may regard o as the limit of the plav. , However, as a plav could be desired. Prop. H., things equal to the same thing are equal to each other .•. o could be desired. But nothing is the Eliot. This is evident on the face .•. we do not write out the proof. .-. Since a whole is greater tlian any of its parts nothing could be desired the Eliot. n t7 n II. — The student can easily work this out for himself by referring to Props. I., II., and III. Corollary. — If a recitation he cut t v a stm ciit, tlic rcsiiltiitg cgnatiott Dtav t e ex-, pressed in the J ' oi-ni .Student — Recitation = o. .Scholium. — If the expressions ( 3 and (4 are not quite clear substitute, too much for, in place of the sign (Jensus-T ker Visits giMPsoN. IMPSOX was sitting half-asleep on her hill one afternoon, when a census-taker came to make her a professional visit. His visit was somewhat I ' esented at first, but by means of suavity and a few leading questions, he soon won the full confi- dence of Miss Simpson ' s trusting heart. • ' Your name, madam.- said the census-taker. ' Miss W. C. .Simpson, she replied. Are you married, or single. ' ' A spinster, sir (dropping a tear). What family have you. ' Miss Simpson related the names, ages, and rank of her twenty adopted daughters. 142 LEGEND A. What is vour business, madam r I am embellishing my daughters with the pearls of wisdom from the ' shells which are open to few, ' she answered, with poetic feeling. Not without hesitation the census-taker ventured the next question. Have you amassed property since the last census. Indeed, said she ; let me show you the tone of our new piano ; and she lightlv touched the opening chords of Boulanger, which had just arrived at Simpson. The census-taker glanced through his books to see if Miss Simpson ' s finances warranted the purcliase of a piano, as he feared she was recorded as impoverished. jSIadam (severely), are you in debt for that instrument. ' With resentment Miss Simpson made explanation that a reading had paid for her piano. The census-taker apologized, but determined to exercise his pi erogative. Fixing his professional eye on Miss Simpson, he said, Recount as briefly as possible the chief of this year ' s events. Miss Simpson complacently settled herself, and began: In September I adopted mv children, and ve spent the month becoming acquainted. It was in October that we became con- vinced of our social obligations, and celebrated !Miss Clark ' s birthday with a reception. Miss Simpson paused to enjoy the pleasures of reminiscence : after a moment she went on, cheerfully : About this time we had fearful misgivings concerning the future, and we resolved to let the magic rites of Hallowe ' en determine our destinies. So when October 30th came we descended, one by one, at midnight, into the ghostlv gloom of the crypt, and there beheld the spectre who could unfold the tale we longed to know. A-a-ah ! — Miss Simpson showed signs of another poetic flight. The census-taker, not unalarmed, hastened to bring her back to earth with the remark, — How did you spend Thanksgiving. ' O, on Thanksgiving Day we had Mrs. John Adams and other ladies of the Revolution to dine with us. They are charming ladies, ai ' e they not. ' The census-taker made a frantic guess, said they were tr -r charming, and asked, ' hat was that fire vou had some time in February . ' A look of horror came over Miss Simpson ' s face. Indeed, sir, we did have a fire. It was at dead of night, and had not mv daughters fought valiantly, we might to-day be in ashes. She wiped the tears from her sweet, faded eyes, sa -ing that after such a brave deed as this, mention of other facts would seem trivial, but she was glad to have met the census-taker. At which suggestion that experienced individual took leave. 143 LEGENBA. (nap. p Sale of tt e BiolO(5ieal Departme9t. WHERE hae ve gone, — the morn is late, — • Mv merry son, come tell me hither? Ye were my only, son and ye ' re gone, And I wot I hae not anither. He went to Wellesley — to Junior Prom, O fond mither. ••And whatten kin ' o ' wark had ye there to make, My merry son, come tell me hither? With your spandy suit and 3 ' our tall new hat, And I wot ye hae not anither. He wended his way along Tupelo, O fond mither. And what did ye then at the water-head. My merry son, come tell me hither? Did ye to some lassie coy gie up your heart? And I wot they hae mony anither. He was caught bv Z06I., Course I., for a moth, O fond mither. Where shall I find ye, to mak your mend, My merry son, come tell me hither? And where shall I gang to mak your mend? And I wot I hae not anither. Main Building, fourth floor — in a box labeled MAN, O fond mither. 144 IjOUSE OF (JOMMONS. MARCH IS. 1890. Order of Debate. CIOTICES OF CV OTIONS. gUESTIONS. Order of the Day. Amendment to the address introduced by Rt. Hon. John Morley, New-Castle-on-Tyne Seconded by Mr. Labouchere. Rt. Hon. Sir M. Hicks-Be. ch, Bristol Mr. T. M. Healy, Londondeirv, South Rt. Hon. J. Chamberl.mn, West Birminghaii Mr. Jesse Collings, Birmingham Mr. Justin McCarthy. North Longford Mr. Henry ' Labouchere, Northampton Rt. Hon. A. J. Balfour. Chief Secretary Mr. John Dillon. East Mayo Mr. T. H. rrington, Dublin Harbor . M. Rqyis of Hartington, Rossendale Rt. Hon. W. E. Gladstone, Midlothian Rt. Hon. Lord R. H. S. Churchill, Paddington Mr. C. S. Parnell, Cork City . Rt. Hon. W. H. Smith, Strand . Liberal Conservative Parnellite . Union Liberal Union Liberal Parnellite . Liberal For Ireland Parnellite . Parnellite . Union Liberal Liberal Conservative Parnellite . Conservative MENGMBNT pUT.- Division. f]l330URNMENT. -fjYE BND X o Vote. (r ?ms aboijt (Tlemb(?rs. B. Sherwin. K. B. Merritt. E. W. Bray. A. G. Bothwell. M. E. Osborne. C. L. Stewart. E. Overstreet. A. Bosworth. S. L. Bass. S. J. McNary. M. L. Godfrey. A. L. Peck. E. A. Glo ' er. M. -W. Lyon. M. J. Orton. Lord H. rtington ' s prominent characteristic is a benevolent neutrality which is almost angelic. Mr. McCarthy is a ditficvdt man to describe, and more so to imagine. Give it to ' em hot. Randy I Mr. Cha.mberlain has a much better heart than his detractors, and a much weaker head than his admirers give him credit for. In a melancholy monotone Mr. Dillon voices the most violent utterances. Half Mr. Parnell ' s success is due to his wonderful gift of silence. Sir M. Hicks-Beach is not entirely obtuse, and he is generally obedient. ' 45 Tree Day QIass of ' 90. lODERN r aSQUES. Address of Welcome by the Princess Ida . . . . . Angie Lacey Peck. Oration by the Lady Psyche Ethel Adelia Glover. Ode by the Court Poet Sarah Jane McNary. (Responses led by Chief Minstrel, Lena Hill Brown.) Address to the Undergraduates by the Lady Blanche . . Mary Jennings Orton. Ceremony at the Tree ' President of ' 90, Angie Lacey Peck. 1. Class of ' go. HERALD. M. BEL Gair Curtis. Camilla Gowans. Mary D. E. Lauderburx. Emeline Place Hayward.- Carol M. Dresser. Lucia Morrill. S. Lena Bass. QIass of 92. Presentation of Spade QIass of ' 93. Or. tion . Reception of Spade ....... Florence Converse. Marian C. Lutz. Caroline N. Newman. mistress of ceremonies- Caroline T. Hardwick. May Lemur Bettie Keith. 146 LEGEND A. f v) f r)( o- 3xoT) pra( me9t:. W ILD ofer ' aban, ' from west wind blaw, Snaw fell and sl vt, shovelfuls down ; Hardened on Est Hill the half-melted crust. Loud lawfied the Ladys- then, Giggled inn g-liefulnis. Inn earnest tons asked of the leader, Sculon we slidan down slipper - height? Waes thaet a Welsly-wif worthy of trust I Gebad them ful boldly, bac held tliem na wiiit. Costing is cyn ; cwom on, mine cempas, ' ' Hwaet ! we habban no handsleds ! Hasten the harder, mine heroes, to hawl down Dustpans for deeds, damages fear not. Those waeron thrage when things were sum I Stretway they seated them, eall on their dustpans. Steering waes skilful, son they reached bottom. Hwizzed they a lang hwile, tired not a hwit ; Under the monleoht micel mirth had they. . Sumtimes a dustpan snapped ; they stopped not for that : On went the glor_v-game, girls went on. Forth then from Wel-halla frowned all the gods. Jealous of joj-, and jawed them unmerciful ; Laid tribute on them, handle tax called it, Harping on handles hurled from the dustpans. Then there vaes wo on earth, when ways were strewn With fragments, and fines were laid. No mann may work hwaet his wierd ' has forbidden. Lo ! on their leader came largest wo : Bill for three dustpans waes brought inn against her, Thrittig pennies apiece, — pious frawd, Which made to fatten the fund of the chapel : Made ninety, mad also made them. M7 LEG EN DA. Then they ceased fram their costing, the brave ones, And campus ceased to be covered witli snaw. And streamas rose, striking the Est Hill. Other things also rose, as for innstance the fund, — And ire of ninet_v, — and price of dustpans, — Till in the spring sjDrang 1 This was probubly near Xorumbega. 2 Much investigation has been given to this interesting tribe. They seem to have been a branch of the Girls, mentioned hiter in the poem, and to have been a sister race with the Gents. = Cyn means what is proper or suitable; etiquette. Cempas were warriors or heroes. ■These would seem to be a peculiar kind of shield. The fact that the word is found in no other piece of literature remaining to us, gives a check to philological investigation, while it adds to the value of this fragment. Thrage signifies times. ' See Note 2. 8 Wierd has reference to fate. Who gsYS? I understand — I take it — Put on your skates. ' •Is there any other point to notice. ' Isn ' t it pitiful. ' I don ' t see how it ' s possible — Yes, certainly — very good. Lift your moral centre. The Zeta Alpha smile. Is the amoeba, then, immortal. ' Es thut mir sehr leid. The democratic ideal — the motif. Side lights from history- 14S 7he pacuLTY m the ( ymnssium. fi I e T a ridable l9Sta9Ge of tl e Deuotioi} of t )e lL (?llesley paeulty to i Q StiJde9ts. gpEOiab if EPORT BY HN YB-WITNESS. ISTORY has seldom witnessed such unswervuig devotion, such untiring loyalty and zeal, as has been this winter displayed by the Faculty of VVellesley College for the students. Those residents of the Main Building whose duty, as well as privilege,, it is to relax their bodies, eke their minds, in the Gvmnasium, had unintentionally conveyed the erroneous idea that Gym was considered bv them a bore, — something to be as severely let alone as was consistent with undiscovered aljsence. This idea having once seized upon the Faculty, so weighed upon their minds that it became necessary to take immediate steps for their relief. A council being called bv the Director of the Gymnasium, the members of this body nobly resolved to immolate themselves upon the altar of a good example. Here they voluntarily assumed a burden like that which seeminglv rested heavy upon the shoulders of the students. Accordingly for twelve nights thev arraved themselves in suitable garments, and repaired to the gymnasium. In order to serve as a complete example, they courageously took upon them- selves the work of all four classes. For the sake of the Freshmen, with heads erect and sternums high, thev wearilv marched aroimd and aroimd the great black circle. Exhorted by the leader, they struggled bravely with Indian clubs, thinking tenderly, meanwhile, of the Juniors and Soph- mores, in whose interests thev were laboring. In their ardor and zeal, disregarding the dust upon the floor, thev willinglv laid themselves down and reflected earnestly upon the exceeding heaviness of their heads, and of all the members of their bodies. But not half the proof of devotion can be told in this brief space. For the sake of the students the Faculty labored and toiled, yet doing it gladly, in the cause of love. And who shall measure their reward. ' Certes, not one who has borne an interested part in their heroism and their sacrifice ; not one who reluctantly puts to Legenda test this molecule of her compounded information. 149 LEGEM DA. %0T) ! of )({ Junior j i tory ( ote-bool(. AlK — I WENT TO THE ANIMAL FaIR. ' u NCIVILIZED Junior mind, For this hour I long have pined, To show to you bhss vou liave hitherto missed, And pleasures to which you ' ve been blind. Let me show you my neat little list — It is free from each sentence-like twist, And each cause and event of progressing intent I carefully tabulate-late-late. Uncivilized Junior mind, Your bumps are ill defined ; And chaos I see where there ought to be Tabulations of every kind. Beneath my guiding eye A wonderful change you ' ll spy ; The Junior shall hear throughout the whole year An orderly history. Guizot was an orderly man. With a carefully classified plan To trace each nation in all creation. The ages dark to span. The Roman Empire ' s fall, The Goths and Vandals all. Great Charlemagne ' s hopes, The rise of the popes, The rights of baron and thrall. In his pages you ' ll find all these. With more to instruct and please ; And you ' ll note ' em each day, in a tabular way, With capital As and Bs. 150 LEGEND A. Make ready 3 ' our vague little i)ate Concisely my words to state, From the barbarous age to the very last page, And the rise of the third Estate. No notebook shall be late — Guizot shall rule your fate ; And the temporal power that rose in an hour You ' ll carefullv tabulate-late-late. Supelo— p U ellesIey dlee. ' NuT-HKOwN Maid. II thou, Tupehj ! thou hast a certain magic charm; (.)h thou, Tupelo! thou hast a magic charm. A magic charm is thine, love ; The charmer there is mine, love. Oh thou, Tupelo ! thou hast a certain magic charm ; Oh thou, Tupelo ! thou hast a magic ch; larm. Oh thou, Tupelo ! thou hast the lake, and moon, and stars. The moon and stars are thine, love ; The son that ' s there is mine, love. Oh thou, Tupelo ! thou hast a rustic bench or two. A rustic bench is thine, love ; The rustic on it mine, love. Oh thou, Tupelo ! thou hast a gentle, balmy air. The balmy air is thine, love ; The wealthy heir is mine, love. 151 LEGENDA. Soliloquy of tl e Senior (Hatl ematigaQ. ON THE PONDEROUS TOME FROM WHICH SHE CONS HER LESSON. H. distinctly I remember, in the bright days of September, How I longed to see Oppolzer, and to con its pages o ' er ; How I glowed with aspirations to affect determinations Of all orbits in creation — this my longing evermore. Now Oppolzer seems gigantic, and it almost makes me frantic, As with weary arms I bear it to the College o ' er and o ' er ; And the wild approximations made in my determinations, Have sent mv comet oft where comet never went before. And I ' m lost in declinations, planetary aberrations, And the foul approximations which Math, never made of yore : Till my mind, once mathematic, has lost all its glow ecstatic, And in wanderings erratic finds no rest forevermore. Ji9(?le. The class that goes out wIilmi the decades meet, Is wise, and brilliant, and good, and discreet. ' So ' s fame is known to all ; ' 90 brings with her no fall. But unless the way they ' re classed Change ere ten more years have passed. College precedent will fail — What can ' 00 e ' er avail . •52 N t)l)RE55 TO ? HEERS of Ki vi, ki vi, ki vippi, ki vi, ki vi, ki vi for Wellesley I heard in the distance as tlie speaker rises. • ' ' Tis with emotion that I rise to address this assembly, whose hearts must have been stirred bv yonder intellisjent outburst of lo ' al enthusiasm 1 We who have watched the progress of this institution from its early days, have watched a steady growth in demand as yell as supply. I iiave the honor to present to vou a new and urgent need ; to vit, the establishment of a Nursery and Institution for the IMind, to be used as a Psycho- logical laboratory. All those who have suBered under Mr. Dewej ' s dispensation will read their past experiences into my simple plea. It is a deed of charity, and as such will, I know, appeal to you. But, I hear some cold-hearted miser proclaiming this a piece of senseless extravagance. ' Other more pressing needs are felt. More cottages to accumulate — I would say accommodate the hungry horde of starv-ing intellects clamoring at our portals ; an extra plank to the board walk ; and, above all, an india-rubber attachment to the Chapel. ' ' Sly dear sir. Economy heiself pleads my cause ! Let me explain. We have no y in college infant Freshmen by the score, — the best pos- sible material for observing the slow growth of apperceptive organs. I regret to say there are also manv blind among us, in all stages, — the hopelessly blind, the ignorantly blind, and the willfully blind. Is it not the tjuest, the noblest econom ' to utilize this ma- terial. ' ' Shall Wellesley sanction an innovation? ' our conservative friends will inquire. Although this would be an innovation in Wellesley ' s policy, ' tis tiine such an innovation were made. ' The ninteenth century is an age of progress (R. JSI. M.) The evolution (jf education strides toward the scientific method ; and shall not this method be applied to the ' .Science of Sciences ' . ' But all other arguments sink into the background of consciousness as we reflect how the present system militates against the moral stamina of the students. Our proposed equipment will strike a deathblow at the root of this evil. A student steps into the Laboratory, observes his blind, or infant specimen, returns rich in accurate scientific information ' as to what a two-year-old child will do with a piece of candy. ' Contrast this with our present system. — vague, time-devouring, insincere! Xeed I. in the presence of such a cultured audience, urge further this grand reform. ' ' The cause of science, the demands of morality, the fame of our Institution, cry for it! 153 LEG EN DA. f psyet olo ieal l alei tipe. XLY a girl, with her earnest eyes, And her firm lips set with a purpose true ; But her intuitions are clear and wise. Her thinking has always an end in view : The highest creative imagination Is hers, not mechanical combination. Her memory is a servant fine ; From her permanent self the idea divides. Her perception is rapid ; the local sign Shows her the spot where her pencil hides. She reads herself into all relation, Which she learns by constant redintegration. Deep feelings are hid in the girl ' s true heart ; May they widen enough to take me in ! May they deeper grow as the years depart. Be clearlv defined in life ' s busy din ; Be intense enough in each situation To prevent immediate translation ! Oq f( ss Citerarity. FOR WHOSE SAKE DUELS ARE FOUGHT. There is a girl in our house. And she does know a pile Of Browning, Shelley, Keats, and Pope, But most of all — Carlyle. And when this maiden comes to dine Her retinue among. In sentiments of lofty lore She wags her nimble tongue. 1 54 ; ; (Bef a IXfdkfkiatum c c 155 Sale Of Love. Call back yesterday ; bid Time return, Sept. Sept. Sept. Sept. [6. 23- -7- Sept. 28. Sept. 30. EPTEMBER 12. Fall Term begins at S a. m., Thursday. The New Student, in the quiet of College Beautiful, longs sadly after the wiles of the world. Sister students, who ha e suftered likewise the year before, incited bv fellow-love, de- vise pleasant diversions. Sept. 14. In the dusk of evening strains of music strike upon her ear. The intention was to enliven, but the effect proveil rather a deploring dump. Sept. 16. Being the Sabbath day, the thoughts of the New Student are directed to the text God is Love, for serious contemplation. The name of the dav, Flower Sunday, she decides to be a case of euphonism for Shower Sunday, judging from the copious showers of heis and Nature ' s tears. Freshman Serenade to Sophomores. An unprecedented expression of gratitude. Advanced Freshmen Social. Thus this little part dissolves itself, according to ethical laws, into the Universal Whole, — ' 93. First meeting of the Art Society. Lotus Glee Club Concert. Opening of Society Hall. An opening vista, wide in scope, Revealing gladsome hours to view Of mirth, borne in on winged hope, Of friendships tried and proven true. First meeting of Shakespeare Society (Mid-summer Night ' s Dream). First meeting of Zeta Alpha Society. .Sophomore and Special reception to the New Student. ' here the New Student, infatuated by this culmination of Sophomoric attention and special supe rvision, eagerly (but wisely) ranks herself a V ' ellesle • maid, and pledges (but rashly) her devotion to her beguiling elders. German in Gymnasium Hall. 156 LEGEND A. IpplieatioQ. Mv belovL ' tl, tpiiituallv speaking, the Sophomore is Charity, the result of higher education of women; the New Student, the sinner returned to wisdom ' s ways, to find them ways of pleasantness and patlis of peace. Sale II. . ♦ ♦ Of ( oNcoRiD. Peace ruh-s the day ; where reason rules the mind, Oct. 2. Opening of Tennis Tournament. Oct. 5. First meeting of Phi Sigma Society. ' 93 Class Social. Oct. 7. Memorial Service. Oct. II. Senior Social. Drama, Ninety Adventures of Junia : or, Junior Adventures of ' 90. If some painful past experiences are brought into contrast with present agreeable ones, we have a feeling of gladness. Oc t. 13. Class elections of ' 90, ' 91, and ' 93. In the class Annuals it is recorded that, on such occasions, it was customary, when peace had been so established, to choose unanimously and wisely one leader from them all who, by her superior merits, was especially qualified to hold high office. Oct. 12. Meeting of Art Society. Oct. 14. The Seniors attempt to progress still further on the path toward Concord, but are hin- dered by storms. Monday evening, a concert by Beethoven Qiiartet. Oct. 16. The Juniors endeavor, through music, to manifest to their President their extreme satis- faction and amity ; but the atmospiieric media, because of its dampness, fails to convey from souls to soul the element of harmony. I.S7 LEGENDA. Oct. 19. Lecture by Mr. Lawtoii on The Oracle of Delphi. Meeting of Zeta Alpha Society. Oct. 21. If it were wise to go or not? That seemed to be the question Perplexing that expectant lot For Concord bound, and Lexington. Three times by clouds defeated? No! So off in drizzling rain thej got; But homeward wended, weary, oh ! In sooth, they were the Conquered lot. Oct. 23. Dedication of the Farnsvvorth School of Art. Oct. 25. Meeting of Shakespeare Society. (All ' s Well.) Meeting of Phi Sigma Society. Oct. 28. Concert by Frau Steiniger Clark. Partridge ' s studio painted. It happened that the artist and ' 90 were agreed on the idea, but in the realization some- what digressed. Oct. 31. Hallowe ' en. Did you meet your fate. ' Yes, Charles. LEGEND A. Ipplieatioi). !Mv beloved, the peace-preserving class-member is the unity of spirit. The various obstacles are the opposing -forces of evil. Concord is the reconciliation of the two. Sale III. ♦ ♦ ♦ Of (?oot) iNSPiRaiioN aND Lofty spmaiioN. ' Es I si ein gross Ergetzen, Sich in den Geist der Zeiten in verseizen. Nov. 2. ' 91 Social. Meeting of Art Society. Nov. 4. Organ recital. Nov. 6. Lecture on The Primitive Church by Dr. Calkins. No ' . 7. 10.15 P- ' - Kee-Gr-n aspires to be a corridor teacher, and accordingly luidergoes the metamorphosis. Unexpectedly meeting a kindred spirit, she finds the chilly atmos- phere uncongenial, and decides with a brevity somewhat uncharacteristic, to return to her proper sphere and lodging. Nov. S. Hygiene lecture, according to the printed schedule. Sudden descent of an uneasy skeleton, mysteriously resurrected for the purpose of enhancing the interest of the hearers by the Anschauungs Method of instruction ; tiot according to printed schedule. Nov. 9. The Hounds would hunt the Wellesley Hares, which have for so long been unmolested ; but the weather is not propitious. Meeting of Zeta Alpha Society. The good A and the proper B climb Jacob ' s ladder ; but fortunately Jacob does not dream of it. Nov. II. Lecture on The Alps and their Structure, by Prof. Niles. IS9 LEG END A. Nov. 13. The Hounds still held at bay by the weather. Lecture on Origen, by Dr. Calkins. Lecture on Results of Recent French Elections, by Professor Cohn. Nov. 14. Mab finds her centre of gravity through a hole ; the Physics Class lose theirs upon the whole. Nov. 16. Lecture by Professor Palmer — Homer. Play at Waban — the modern version of Shakespeare. Meeting of Phi Sigma Society. Nov. iS. Concert by Mrs. Allen and Miss Edmands. Nov. 19. The Hounds become desperate and break loose. The Hares double on their track ; the Hounds lose scent, become disgusted, and are housed for the winter. NoA ' . 20. Lecture upon Chrysostom, by Dr. Calkins. Nov. 23. Special Social. Meeting of Art Society. Nov. 25. Lecture bv Dr. Amelia B. Edwards, the Egyptologist. Nov. 27. (g7 r-fh ' - -.; ' g2 : We offer our sincere congratulations. ' j : Thanks! ' You are welcome. ' Nov. 30. Lecture upon Lyric Poetry, by Professor Chapin. Meeting of Shakespeare Society. (King John.) Meeting of Zeta Alpha Society. Apparent. ippliGatiorj. 160 Sale 11 . ♦ . ♦ Of the pLEasuRES of this World ' ■' ■Haste thee, nympk, ' and hriiig zuiih thee yest and youthful jollity. ' ' Dec. Dec. Dec. So she brings, with quickening pace, For Chapel Fund, life-pictured grace In Tableaux D ' Art, which show the more The rythmic beauty of classic lore. 7. fleeting of Phi Sigma Society. Scientific exhibition of Microscopical Society. Shakespeare Festival. In Shakespeare ' s world we live again : Romeo steals his pilgrim kiss; Kate, the Shrew, works havoc then ; In such a moonlit night as this, Jessica plights once more her love. Dromios twain dance o ' er the floor, Blind old Gobbo and his dish of dove, Qiieen Macbeth and many more. With a Hey Nonny, Nonny, OI Hey Nonny, Nonny! ' One poor soul becomes perverted, Sabbath worship cannot gain her; Worldly wiles her mind diverted, Total depravity enchains her. 161 LEG EX DA. Dec. 14. Christmas Masque, bv Juniois, for Freshmen. Dec. 16. Five o ' clock tea at Wood. Learned maids turn dramatic tlien. And play the Fair Barbarian. Beethoven Concert. Since Musik ist der Schiissel zum Herzen. In song tlie longed-for d.iv wheels round. Dec. iS. Fall term closes. All lost. Sale I . With hurry, skurry, laughter, and Scherzen, Away they scatter, homeward bound! Oh joy I ' -We ' ll sing and dance without ceasing Oh bliss! ' ' All d.iy to-morrow we ' ll sleep. lppli(;atioo. Of Tf iBULaiioM aND ?1ngui5h. Das ist im hehcn hasslick eingericlitet, Dass hei den Rosen gleich die Dornen stehen, Jax. y. A certain noble ladv suflered manv injuries from a tyrannical king, hight Januarius, who suddenly broke in upon her joyous life, subdued her vith la mighty grippe, and led her into intellectual captivitv. Mockingly he contrasted her lot to surrountl- Jax. 13. ing free women. A band, rich in musical talent, The Beacon Orchestral Club, he brought before her. Again she heard the tramp of the oncoming troop, famed for Jan. 17. its gvmnastic faculties. This she never saw, but was left to battle with the torments of her imagination, magnifying the opportunity which she was missing. She was once or twice released from her tribulations (Jan. iS. Professor Chapin ' s lecture on Greek Drama ; Meeting of Zeta Alpha Society ; Meeting of Art Society. 162 LEG END A. Jan. 25. Meeting of Phi Sigma Society ; Meeting of Microscopical Society : Shakespeare Society — Coriolanus) , only that they may be redoubled. Jan. 34. The king summoned the lady before his Council of Academic judges, accusing her of attempts to desert. But by the mercy of the judges, she was shorth ' released from suspen« ' o«. The tyrant, enraged with this amelioration, led her before a more heartless Board of Examiners, where she sat from day to day in sore perplexity and uncertainty of mind. Between the sessions of her labors there was no cessa- tion. She was forced to turn from a grinding-machine literary productions of every length and description. One day the machine was clogged. Her strength was well Tax. 2S. nigli spent. The bell struck the hour of setting sun, when all her appointed tasks were to be done. With a desperate twist she worked out a bulky manuscript Jax. 29. entitled, A Paper on Perception. She sunk exhausted then into a troubled sleep. ' Sensation. • ' Attention. It was her last eflbrt. The tribunal became human and yeary at length, and next Jax. 30. day pronounced the exainination satisfactory. (J- n- 27. They eyen try to make amends, and prepare for her a Senior Reception.) The king, obliged to depart to a distant part of his country for a year, granted a day of rest and devotion (Da ' of Prayer for Colleges; Mrs. Freeman Palmer ' s address to Senior Class). Thus temporarily the lady was released from her slavish condition. ippliGatior?. My beloved, the lad - is the himian soul ; the tyrant, spiritus ? ial : the Council are tlie good means which sometimes foil the evil and reward the patient. 163 Sale l l. ♦ . ♦ Of iF(EFORMaTioN nut) ( HaNGE IN EVERaL Tilings. jy 1 do not ' lit OH a sober habit. Wear prayer-books in my pocket, look denturelv, — Nay, more, zvhile grace is saying, hood mine eyes Thus zvitk my hat, and sigh and say ' Amen, — SiGNIOR BaSSANIO. Feb. I. Lecture by Prof. Allen : •• Euripides and Aristophanes. Feu. 3. Domino German in Gymnasium. Lecture by Jvlrs. Jenness Miller. Reform properly begins outwardly. Feb. 8. Sophomore Social. Howelis ' Comedy, Albany Station. Meeting of Art Society. Meeting of Zeta Alpha Society. Feb. 10. Student Concert. Feb. 13. Students ' Registry Blanks. Feb. 14. College cries first published. Airs. Felton Guild on Practical Idealism. Feu. I V Sleeting of Phi Sigma .Society. Feb. 17. Rice Pudding ; Freeman. Lecture by Miss Hodgkins : Shakespeare ' s Claim upon the Student of To-day. Change of salute ; a ribbon shop gone mad. Feb. iS. Inward i-eform begins on Ash Wednesday. Feb. 20. Address by Dr. Claflin on Christian Education. Reform in the weather ; first sleigh-ride of the season. Feb. 32. Washington ' s Birthday. Feb. 24. Reception to the Juniors. Feb. 26. Sister Dora reforms, and sleeps without her nightcap. Feb. 27. Constitutional History Class reforms, and makes a volunteer recitation, headed by A. Lacey P., who passes her judgment upon the U. S. Government. Feb. 28. Sophomore crew elections. Aristocracy vs. Democracy. IppliqatiOQ. My beloved, it is a good thing to reform. 164 Sale l ll. . . ♦ Of the XTRaORDINaRIES. Mar. I. Meeting of jMicroscopical Societv. Meeting of Art Societv. Meeting of Zeta Alplia Society. Mar. 2. No Carol to sing at cliapel ; the bird needs rest, and lias roosted for Sunday. Mar. 3. A dancing party in Gymnasium Hall. Lecture in evening, • ' • The Greek Theatre, by Prof. Wliite. Mau. 4. Bible lecture, Messianic Prophecy, by Dr. Briggs. Mar. s. Prelude Editors procure a book on Punctuation. Umbrella Xights at the Eliot. Mar. 6. Talk by Dr. Phillips Brooks. Mar. 7. CiLook: On time 1 Where ' s Maid Marion .= Mar. S. Perfume party at Waban. M. R. 9. ' 92 sits !M.uch to H.eavily upon ' 90 A.t six o ' clock in the M.orN.ing. •■Sleep on, my love, in thy snug bed. Never to be disquieted. Thoughts of Seniors may fill thy head. But not their pins thy cushion red. Mar. 10. Xorumbega sings Pepita. Zeta Alpha dinner for Pierian Sodality. ' ' ,; Concert in the evening by Pierian Sodality, inider the auspices of Zeta Alpha. Mar. II. Miss H-nn-m unifies the diverse: the Psychologists of ' 90 iniiversally edified. Mar. 14. An elucidation on Scriptural text : German physician in great perplexity ; He saiz (the temperance patient) dat he yould rather die dan take de alcoholic stutl ' , because it vould itijure lieez Jiealth. Mar. 15. Debate on the Irish Question in Parliament. Mr. Speaker — Sir ' . Mr. Morley ' s a pretty big man! Lord Randolph Churchill -j- bis tall hat = one Eton boy. Mr. Chamberlain shines in the glory of his parliamentary experience, one eyeglass and an orchid. 165 LEG EN DA. The amiable Mr. Smith caps the cHmax by his conciHatory attempts. Mar. 17. Faculty reception to Sophomores. Mar. 22. Latin lecture by Miss Lord. Informal reception at Wood Cottage to Phi Sigma. Meeting of Zeta Alpha Society. Meeting of Art Society. Meeting of Shakespeare Society (Sonnets). Meeting of Microscopical Society. Mar. 24. Plav, A Scrap of Paper, by ' 91 for ' 92. Concert by Carl Faelten. Mar. 27. Winter Term closes. T oralizir) 5 abbreviated. Sale l III. • • • Of Tsi f ESTRmL Dust. a .s are stnhhorii tilings. April S. Spring Term opens. A cold and slow-acting mixture of vacation precipitates and acidulous room-mates. Aprii. 12. Lecture bv Prof M. N. Morgan in Latin Literature. Open meeting of Phi .Sigma Society. Aprii. 14. Reception to Miss Bothe. Concert by Miss O ' Brion, assisted by Messrs. David Kuntz and Leo Schulz. April 15. Lecture on Isaiah by Professor Harper. The leader of ' 93 rebukes the pilgrims for their slothful progress, giving the backsliders opportunity to desist from the ascent toward the mountain-top. April 17. G. H. T. At it agin, in contrary sense. April iS. Anniversary chartering of regenerated Greek letter Societies. Celebrated by petition for Students ' Council. Granted. 166 LEG EN DA. April 19. Lecture by Miss Lord: ' Horace. Meeting of Phi Sigma Society. April 31. Reading by Professor Murdock : Julius Cffisar. April 24. Fifteenth day passed without rain in year 1890. , ' ■[-Exhibition Drill in Gymnasium. April 25. j April 26. Dr. George .Shinn on Brook Farm and Early Communism. Meeting of Zeta Alpha Society. Meeting of Microscopical Society. Meeting of Art Society. April 28. Concert by College Glee and Banjo Clubs. pplieatior). !Mv beloved, this arid chronicle is man ' s ordinary lot. Sale I . Of the PlFTH r vjONTH. (jy, with alle thy floures and thy greetie Welcome he thou, f aire, fresshe May. ' L Y ]May 3. The erste day, it saith in bookes elde. The King of Love his open court hath helde; And so, for love that in our hertes dwelte. And syn for other maydens we han felte. At even to the chapel wenden we, To learn of Students ' Aid Society. A learned man in lore political. Who highte Mr. Edward Everett Hale, Hath come to telle the maydens as hem liste About the party hight Nationaliste. (And Zeta Alpha, eke, hath met this night.) 167 LEGEND A. Mav Mav ic May I May I May I Anotiier, one who loves his tellow-nian. And doeth for hun as much as ever he can, A piteous tale of lands across the sea These maydens told: George Kennan highte he. On another nighte Some scores of maydes, all happv, faire, and brighte, To divers places gaylv hem betook, And some, perchance, thro ' microscopes to look, And some to daunce and have a social chat, And some to put hir votes into the hat, That officers for Phi Sigma be chosen. Concert bv Liica Fumagelli. Open meeting of .Shakespeare Society (Merchant of Venice). The felawe of abstinence ben attemperannce, that holdeth the meem in alle thynges, to the intent, therefore, that these maydens han a good understanding of hir dutee in this mattere, that is to seyn, in the mattere of attemperannce, a most worthy Christian gentleman who highte Neal Dow, hath told him hir dutee and hir pleasannce. May 24. M. Y 26. May On this night the Society Zeta Alpha hath come with merry herte. to Society Hall, to hold pleasannt discoui ' se. And all the chapelle gan to ring With noise and swetenesse of the songe. But it had be a blessed thynge of Heaven. For soothe was never heard so sweete a Steven, May 30. Jimior Promenade. ■When that the moneth of May Is comen, and that we here the foules synge, And that the floures ginnen for to sprynge, Fairwel to boke and to devocioun ! Than walken we wher softly beams the moon, And all the air is loud with music scheene. So faire a sight, in soothe, is seldom seene. To microscope once more some maydens wenden. And with Phi Sigma shall my tale enden. 16S Sale . Of the gEauTY of a P ithful rvjiNti. ' W 7! ' 7voH- and mould the -woman to the fuller day. In a certain land, great grief prevailed concerning the loss of a beautiful and noble lady, who had been the light of her countrymen. No one could explain her dis- appearance, but it was commonly believed that she had been surreptitiously stolen, there having been many suitors for her hand. When she no longer walked in their midst, her people quickly began to sicken and fade away. The emperor be- came alarmed at this, and cast about to find some remedy. A number of maidens he summoned to his court, that they might daily be instructed to emulate this beloved lady, and thus achieve her end. Masters many, who had observed this lady ' s code of life, vvere brought before this assembly to expound her laws. June 2. To criticise, in works of all men, the Master Mabie taught them was their function, but with generous, intelligent spirit. Nature ' s sympatiiy unloused the tongues of the JrxE 6. most eloquent, and (on Tree Day) they burst forth in passionate appeal to their Qiieen, and summoned all beauty, art, wit, and grace to join them in their pledge as servitors to the court and followers of their greater benefactress. Beauty and wisdom they might have, yet the masters told them the Lady of the kingdom had a greater power. Strength they must have on land and sea, so maritime skill was aimed for then. ' ' Bob Cooke became their watchword, raw meat their diet, early hours Ti ' NE 7. their law, and Noah ' s Arks their daily destiny. A trial of their nautical perfection JlN ' E 9. occurred before the court, and found them not wanting. Other trials in music, art, June 14. science, and examinations on various themes, tested their progress. One senior band June 11-20. stood approved and ready. June 14. The little body of Truthseekers, in lieu of their near separation, met to bind them- JuNE 20. selves in closer fellowship under the sign Z A. The senior maids convened, in con- vivial mood, to supper, and to listen to a prophecy of ' 90 ' s glorious future. June 22. A final exhortation, a Baccalaureate sermon by Dr. Tucker. June 33. On the following dav a great celebration was held in the court of the Emperor, and the news spread far and near of the approaching entry of the senior maidens into the world ' s service. On the morrow the commencement step toward the end was taken. 169 LEGEND A. June 24. Armed with the Emperor ' s signet in mystic B.A., B.S., they passed down the aisles through the throngs of visitors, who wondered, as they went, at their steady, unfaltering step, and the steadfast gaze in their radiant eves ; but onlv a fe v specta - tors could see in the distance afore the long file, a beautiful vision of a woman fair and stately, graciously beckoning while the maidens followed on, on, on, till lost to view. IppliQatior). My beloved, the beautiful Lady is the ideal for which the world grieves. Anyone may be the disciples summoned to the court of wisdom to learn how to find iier. ' - cr .1 : I ' i 170 0 - (pinds ■m- -m- 171 ?1PR0P05? go ' s President : Ami but herself admits no parallel. Editor-in-Chief : • ' Bold, quick, ingenious, forward, capable. I pant for the wild and woolU ' West, Where no other girl e ' er goes. There will my heart take up its rest, And bloom like a prairie rose. LATER. I ' ve decided to go to the cottony South, To the rich, warm, torrid zone ; At the Mississippi ' s opaline mouth. Address Miss L. M-g-n-. C-n-nt. ' go: 1 Marv and Martha just gone along, -rt-ii. ' go : ) To ring that charming bell. P. G. ' s ■' • O sir ! I must not tell my age. ' ' J -d-rzc ' - , ' go ■• ' Easy, affable, familiar, friendly. K-ll-gff, ' gj : ' Tis she ; I ken the manner of her gait. There was a tall man of BuflVdo, Who made no pretences shallow ; To the best of her kind He made up his mind, And of Welleslev he chose one not callow. — G-zc- is, ' go. 173 LEG END A. Thrives against hope, and, in the rudest scene, Storms I)ut enHven its unfading green ; Exuberant is the shadow it supplies. — ' Sg ' s Tree. D--7I, ' gi : ' -Of manners gentle, of atlections mild. ' ■' ■Mistcr-r Stnhbs : Words of learned length and thundering sound. To those who know thee not, no words can paint: And those who know thee, know all words are faint. — M-y, ' po. O, I am a charming Wellesley girl. And my brain with thought is big : I ' m a Senior bright, and a Phi Sigmite, And everything else but a dig. — C-rt-s, ' go. L--k, ' gi : Thou canst not teach me to forget. W-gg-n., ' go: You are yoked with a lamb. Listen, mv children, and you shall hear Of a ride that proved to be rather dear. — A Waban Episode. M-s-n, ' go: Unseen at church. B-ldtc-n, ' gi : ' am not gamiisome. . . . Given too much to allicholy and musing. ' • Nothing lovelier can be found In woman, than to study household good. — - -, ' go. L-n-, ' Sg : ' •• Pleased with a rattle, tickled with a straw. ' g2 : No quarrel, but a slight contention. -;V-«, ' go: She had a pensive beauty: yet not sad. She was in logic a great critic, Profoundlv skilled in :malytic. — M-s-?t, Spec. M-tch-ll. ' 8g: Flashes of merriment, that were wont to set the t:d)lc on a roar. 174 LEGEND A. ■B-c-ii, ' go: ' A Case of Redintes ratioii. — It seems like, Miss , I remember something in Freshman Ethics. Clov tiie hungry edge of appetite By bare imagination of a feast. — Greek Letter Societies. A Senior Section Book: And those are punished most who most obey. Br-ffgs., ' g2 : ' ' As merry as the day is long. G-dfr-y. ' go: My business brooks naught of dalliance. Specials: We must be free or die. Oh ! ' tis an easie thing To write and sing. — I -tc i, ' go. S -rzv-n. ' go: ' For I am nothing if not critical. f - -df-rd ' gi : We call it only pretty Fannie ' s way. She is piettv to walk with, And witty to talk with. And ]3lcasant, too, to think on. — PI- -s-nts, ' 8g. B-ck-)ig i- i, Spec: O that this too, too solid flesh would melt. The Prelude harrows Our friend M. B-rr-ws, As she works on it day by day. There came a grim failure, And sought to assail her, But she chased the black booger away. Dr-ss-r, ' go: She chanted snatches of old tunes, as one incapable of her o-vn distress. S. T-vl-r. ' gi : • ' This letter will make a contemplative idiot of me. . . . Sealed in yain. I -rs-, ' go : The fair, the chaste, and unexpressiye she. H-m-lt-ii ' go: A turn for punning. LEGENDA. Zoiil. I.: Holds the eel of science by the tail. Wood Cottage: I ' ll not to bed to-night. There was a maid in our town, Anil she was wondrous wise ; There ne ' er was rule of order known To which she coidd not rise. — B-tlnc-U. ' go. The gravity and stillness of your youth The world hath noted. — 1 2. D- -11. ' go: Though vanquished, she could argue still. Her cogitative foculties immersed In cogibunditv of cogitation. — Dr-itsf- -Id. ' go. Jl ' -st, ' gj : Chanting faint hymns to the cold, fruitless moon. .Mc-v-r, ' go : ' ' How various her employments. jVo. J, Noru7iibega : Leave this keen encounter of our wits. I have my share of common sense, But no imagination. — C- -k, ' go. B-szi ' -i-t i, ' go: Pray, write me a poem, ma ' am. My flowers, my cabbages, my commonplace. But fragrant, and, what ' s more, productive beans. — A. Sin-tk, ' go. Whom folly pleases, and whose follies please. To beguile many, and be beguiled by one. — N-rt-n., ' go. There ' s a language in her eve, her cheek, her lip ; Nay, her foot speaks. — T-fl, ' go. ' What do you read, my lord ? ' ' Words, words, words. ' — L-r i-d, ' gj. 176 LEG EN DA. She is a good one, and her worthhiess Does challenge much respect. — H-ls-y, ' go. Legenda Editor ( before I : Devise, wit 1 write, pen ! for I am for whole volumes in folio. Legenda Editors ( after ) : • ' Wretched unidea ' d girls. • ' Sore labor ' s bath. Ciiief nourisher In life ' s feast. — C .X-zciii-n, ' gj. G. Sm-t iy )2 : ' • This honest creature doubtless sees and knows more, much more, than slie unfolds. What is the news i ' the court. ' Our Mutual Friend. — P-lm-r ' gi. Hath thy toil O ' er books consumed the midnight oil. ' - — Er-s-r. ' go. The best of all ways To lengthen our days. Is to steal a few hours from the night, mv dear I — M-ns-n, ' go. Junior Physics, Light : I ' gin to be awearv of the sun. R-S-. ' go : • ' Thy transports moderate. L- -d-rb-ni. ' go : ' ' Her disposition slie inherits, which makes fair gifts fairer. Cheered up iierself with ends of verse. And sayings of philosophers. — Gr- -nb-iik, ' go. Welleslcy College : ■' Far from gav cities and the ways of men. St-zc-rt. S tc ' c.: ■• With as little a web as tills, will 1 ensnare as great a fly as Cassio. Rhetoric : • ' The wihhiess of those compositions which go liy tlie name of essays. — {See Gemtng ' s Rhetoric, page 141.) LEG END A. F-tch ' go, H-?ii- f-?2, ' go: A niern twain: true tViendsliip in each paid. Vo. JJ2 : ' • This must be tiie music of the spears. Tli-rn, Spec: Tiiat hccillessne.ss of all around. McN-r-. ' go: Wild heap of wit. St-zc-rt, ' gj : When Cii ' sar savs ' Do this, ' it is performeil. Ah ! distinctly I remember, it vas in the chill December, And each cuticle and member was ith inHuenza sore. — Iiijlitetiza Sufferers. Ir. D-ly: ' • The general favorite, as the general friend. •• ' Twas a liand White, delicate, dimpled, warm, languid, and bland, — Szv- -ts-r, ' go. Psvchology Papers: My perceptions reel. Rare compound of odditv, frolic, and fun ; Who relished a joke, and rejoiced in a pim. — P-rr- . ' gi. B-lf- -Id. ' g2 : ' • An inviting eve; and vet, methinks, right modest. B-rii-s, ' gi : She coude songes make, and wel endite. B. Sm-tli. ' go : I have an exposition of sleep come upon me. Sylvan us, Jr.: •• A harmless, necessary cat. C!-rk-. ' go: A naturalized guardian angel, she I JM-tcIi-ll, ' go : Being troubled with a raging tooth, I could not sleep. ' ii-rs-n, ' g2 : ' ■Noble, wise, judicious, best knowing the needs of the season. ' py ; ' ■Sweet is the infant ' s waking smile. ' go ' s Renic7nbrance of Freshman Days : My salad davs — hen I was green in judgment. ' go ' s Parl ameitt : ' Twill be recorded for a precedent. 178 LEG EN DA. There once was a tom-cod all shinev, Who was ta ' en from his home in the brin ; When (haw n b ' Miss H-dg-r, Thev all did allege her, To be a rare artist from Chinv. Though I am not splenetive and rash, Yet have I in me something dangerous. — C. M-ll-r. ' gi. Szv-ft. go : Mv train are men of choice and rarest parts. N. B. Where law has once raised an admonishing hand, There liberty cares not to go ; The voice of the dragon has ceased in the land. But the sound of the grinding is low. 179 I So imujmjimmv ' i -m- Ira la la la, Ira la la la. Tra la la la, h la la, W £ L L E 3 L E 1. Welles - lej. pat-ron-ize. pat-roa-ize, pat-ros-ize, alltliosewho ad-ver-tise here is the ' 90 Le- gen - da. iSi lS2 Index to Iidvertisers. Acid Phosphate. Rumford Cheijiicai Works Apothecaries. Brigham, M.C. . Clapp Son, Otis Cooper, J. K. Perry, Charles W. Artists ' Materials. DeWitt, Joseph E. iii Houghton A: Dutton . xl Meade, Dodge Co, , Ixix Pope, Frank ]. . lix Wadsworth, Howland A: Co. Xlvii Books. Houghton, Mifflin • Co. . Iv Lothrop Co., D. . . xxxiv Boots and Shoes. Broad, Jr., H. xxiii Jameson Co., S. C. . Lamkin Co., G. xiv vi Miller, Edmund V. . Ixiv Moselev Co., T. E. xxii Pratt ' Underwood . iii Tuttle Co., H. H. . Iviil Catering. Dooliny, James . Ivi Fessenden, Mrs. Anne xl Tufts, William . xiii China. Bri j s, Richard Ivii Cloaks. Plutnnier Co., Geo. A. . Springer Bros, CONFECTIONEKV. Bailey, J. B. . . . DeKl ' yn ' s .... Crackers. F. A. Kennedv Co. Draperies. Butler Co., Wm. S. Hartley ct Co., H. A. McCreery Co., James Dressmaking. Robinson, Rachel A. Stockman, M . . . Dry Goods. Beal, HijtCf ins A: Henderson Hovev Co., C. F. . Randall, R.H. . Express, Adams Express Co. . American Express Co. Ixvi Ixv ixi XXXH - xxvi Xll xxxvi ixviii F ' all River Line. Palmer, L. H Ixiv Fancy Goods and Trimmings. Allen, Geo. E. .... xxiii States, E.J xlvi Stevens t Co., John J, . . Iii Flowers. Doyle, Wm.E xli Tailby Son, J. . . . . . xi Furniture. Derby Kilmer Desk Co. . iv Keeler iS: Co. .... xxix Paine ' s Furniture Co. . . ii Furs. Jackson, Joseph A. . . . xlv Gloves. Shepard, Xorwell Co. . . lix Groceries. Clark, A. B xliii Shattuck, F. W Ixvii Gymnasium and Athletic Goods. Partridge Co., Horace Hotels. xliv Bailey ' s Hotel . Hotel Bcllevue . xxxi . XXVIII Grand Union Hotel . Iviii Hotel St. Marc . United States Hotel . XXV Insurance. Cambridge Mutual Fire Ins. Co. North British Mercantile Ins. Co. .... Jewelry. Bailey, Banks Biddle . Shreve, Crump Low Co. Stowell Co., A. . . . Lighting. Thomson-Houston Electric Co. HoUings Co., R. . . . Livery. Bigelow, Jr., Abraham Mag.vzine. Demorest, W. Jennings Millinery. XXXVIl xliv liv XXX xvii Bouquet Burr tV Co., Henry M. Butler Co., Wm. S. Grace, Mrs. J.J. Rothschild, J. Wetheren, Geo. M. Ix xlix X Ixvi xvi xxxix Mowers, Reapers, etc. Aultman, Miller it Co. . . Ix Music. Boston Music Co. . . . Ixii Ditson Co., Oliver . . . Ixv Miles it Thompson . . . xxii Schmidt, Arthur P. . . . viii Opticians. Lloyd, A.J. .... xxxii Marshall, E. M iv Paints and Varnish. Collins Pain and Varnish Works vii Murphy tt Co .xxiv Photographers. Partridge, W. H. , . . xlvi Ritz, E nest F x Seaver, Jr., C xxvi Photographic Supplies. Boardman, A. F. . . . Ixii Photogravures. Boston Photogravure Co. . opposite vi Pianos and Organs. Estey ORgan and Piano . . Ix.v Everett Piano .... xxxviii Arakelvan, |. J. . Mudge Son, Alfred Wood, Frank Produce. Chessman vt Co., Geo. H. . Schools. Bartholomew School . Boston Commercial College Classical School for Girls . Miss Mittleberger and Miss Blakemore Mrs. E. B. Mead Riverside School Wellesley School Young Ladies ' Institute Stationery. Crane, Z. A M. W. . Teachers ' Agencies. Fisk Co., Everett O. N. E. Bureau of Education L ndekweak. Bates, C F erris Bros. Robinson, Rachel A. XXIX xlviii Ixjii hi. xlii XXVH li xlix Ixiii . xxxiv XVI xxxix xliii xxxii LEG EN DA. THREE OF (II MANI CHOICE BARGAINS. NUMBER ONE. Tliis pretty Desk is solid quaiiered oak, selected, thor- oughly well made through- out, antique finish, brass trimmings and guards around top. Spacious compartments, drawers, and pigeon-holes in- side. One wide drawer out- side; large shelf beneath for papers, or as a foot-rest. THE PRICE IS $10.00. NUMBER TWO. A good Game Table is an indispensable adjunct in ev- ery house. Here is one in richly grained solid oak, with hinged top, made to lock down automatically when in use, and capable, folded, of stowing away in the space behind a door or sofa. It is rigid and firm as a rock, and will last an ordinary lifetime. NUMBER THREE. TABLE OF CONTENTS. The cabinet. 1st. The top shelf for a French clock or vase. 2d. Under this a wide, deep recess. with bevelled mirror at back. 3d. A large, square closet, with lock and key. th. Beneath this a drawer. The writing-desk. ist. Automatic metal hangers to sup- port lid when desk is open. 2d. Deep com- partment below, four pigeon-holes, and wide shelf above. 3d. Dust-proof finish throughout. 4th. Just a good size; ready always for immediate use. THE BOOKCASE. 1st. Books are handy when writing. 2. Weight all at bottom, giving strength and rigidity to the whole. 3d. Three wide shelves for fifty or sixty volumes. 4th. Rod for curtain to save dust, dirt, and fading. Ask yourself if this Cabinet- Secretary Bookcase is not worth $45. ' Well, our price is $15.00. On receipt of 10 cents we will mail our catalogue, containing 260 Engravings. PAINE ' S FURNITURE CO. 48 CANAL ST., South Side Boatoi i Uaise Depot. LEG EN DA. For • Fine • Footwear No. 3 Clarlc ' s Blocl , WHERE YOU WILL FIND THE LARGEST AND NICEST STOCK OF BOOTS AND SHOES IN NATICK. No. 3 Clark ' s Block. Natlck, Mass. JOSEPH E. De X ITT, T aQijfaGturer of PlGlUT Fr3rT S, a d Dealer ir) FINE STATIONERY, ARTIST MATERIALS, AND STATUARY, 14 Main Street, Natick, Mass. LEGEND A. EYES. I wish to announce that I have provided myself with a complete set of Aiidemair ' s test lenses. With these valuable aids, and the thirty years ' experience in Optical Science. I am prepared to examine EYES and fit glasses by the latest and most approved methods. NO CHARGE for examination. A Full Line of Watches, Clocks, jewelry, Silverware, Optical Goods. Etc., constantly on hand. REPAIRING OF ALL KINDS. 3 CLARK ' S Block, Natick A promising Senior remarks that she has no time for fiction wlien advised to read the College regulations. Derby X lmer Desk ( OMP iNy, NIANUKACTURERS Business Desks Office Furniture. Roll Top Desks suitable for small Offices and Home use. SALESROO.MS : 93 CAUSEWAY STREE1 BOSTON, Orr. LOWELL DEPOT. Send ' . ' for ■.• Catalogue. LEGENDA. The Wellesley School, 2027 CHESTNUT STREET, PHILADELPHIA. MISS CORDELIA BRITTINGHAM, PRINCIPAL. Established and i}iai}itaiiied under tlic direction of tlie Wellesley College Faculty. TJie teacliers are Wellesley College graduates. Has Preparatory, Academic, Graiiiviar, Primary, and Musical Departments. Re- ceives a limited miniher of boarding pupils. Pupils prepared here are admitted -vithout further examination to Wellesley College. The School is under the care of Dr. J. R. Miller and Ho)i. fohft Wanamaker. For circular and information, address y. R. MILLER. ).D., IS34 Chestnut Street. Pliiltidclpliiii. . B FOR FINE MILLINERY VISIT Georgk M. Wethern, 21 and 23 TEMPLE PLACE. Strictly First -Class Goods at Popular Prices. All the Latest Novelties in Fine Millinery :ire shown on our counters as soon as in Paris, London, or Berlin markets. YOUR I ' A ' rnON. ;E IS RESPECTFULLY SOLICITED. GEORGE M. WETHERN. I.EGENDA. G. LAMKIN CO. 28 TREMONT ROW, BOSTON, MANUFACTURERS AND DEALERS IN FINE-5-BOOT5,-i-5HOES-s-aNL)-t-5LIPPER5 ONE PROFIT SAVED BY PURCHASING OF THE MANUFACTURERS. BOOTS AND SHOES MADE TO MEASURE. WELLESLEY STUDENTS are entitled to a discount OF TEN PER CENT FROM REGULAR PRICES. PaCTORY AT rvjlLFOREi, ( ONN. J. B. BAILEY, Qopf etioper, AFTER TWO YEARS ' ABSENCE, HAS RETURNED TO THE OLD STAND, ISTo. 4S Tx EST STK.EET, . . . BOSTON:, nv[jPLSS. LOVERS OF HIS FINE CANDIES CAN FIND THEM THERE ONLY. £diMm Pen Drawrng and Relief-Plate Engraving from Photograph. T Hf IE ABOVE RELIEF-PLATE AND THE HALF-TONE ON THE REVERSE PAGE ILLUSTRATE TWO METHODS OF PHOTO- ENGRAVING. THE PLATES CAN BE PRINTED WITH TYPE, IN AN ORDINARY PRINTING-PRESS. COLLEGE VIEWS AND INDIVIDUAL OR GROUP PORTRAITS REPRODUCED BY THE PHOTO-TYPE PROCESS, WE HAVE EXCELLENT FACILITIES FOR THE COMPLETE PRODUCTION OF COLLEGE PUBLICATIONS. BOSTON PH()T()GRA ' rRE CO., 27 BOYLSTON ST. Half-Tone Engrav.ig iii.iu _ ' direct from Photograph. D05TON PHOTOQRflYURE C2., 2T BOVL-STOIS ST. LEGEND A. LEWIS COLLINS. President. ARTHUR J. ELWANG, Secretary. BENNETT H. YOUNG, Vice-President. STUART R. YOUNG, Treasurer. Collins Paint and Varnish Works, :, i ir. Ataimfacfurers of all grades of PAINTS AND VARNISHES FOR EVERY USE. OFFiees AT New York, Philadelphia, St. Louis, Chicago, and Minneapohs. CORRESPONDENCE SOLICITED. LEG EN DA. ARTHUR P. SCHMIDT, 15 West street, BOSTON, mass. MUSIC PUBLISHER SOLE AGENT IN THE UNITED STATES FOR Henry Litolff. Braunschweig; Edwix Ashdown. London; The Vienna Conservatory Edition of Classical Pianoforte Music; The Lute and The Choir Editions of Sacred Music in octavo form; the Edition Chanot. Celebrated Compositions tor the Violin, etc. Schmidt ' s Graded Catalogue for Teachers ' Use. Catalogue of Organ Music, Catalogue of Part Songs, Anthems, etc.. in octavo form. Catalogue of Music for the ' ioli , etc. SEIUNTT F ' ES.EIE: CJI=OISr jfii.I=E=LIC.fls.TIOKr. If my editions cannot be found at your regular dealer ' s, send direct to me, where all orders will receive prompt and careful attention, and favorable rates of discounts. SELEeTIO MS PO-R TEAeME-RS A NTD SE V I Al AKI ES MADE A SPEEIALTy, NEW PUBLICATIONS. THE AMERICAN ORGAN JOURNAL, By J. M. Coward, Selections and Arrangements from the works of the best classi- cal and modern composers. 2 vols., scarlet cloth; each, $2.00. MANUEL GARCL , SCHOOL OF SINGIXG, FOR THE MEDIUM VOICE. 50 cents. 100 ORIGINAL DAILY EXERCISES FOR THE PI. NO. FORTE. By Edm. Neupert. Op. 57. Introduced in many Conservatories. 75 cents. SUPPLEMENTARY EXERCISES, CHANTS AND CHOR- ALS, to the Elements of Harmony. By Stephen X. Emekv. 50 cents. PREPARATORY SCHOOL TO THE WELLTEMPERED CLAVICHORD, and other larger works of ]. S. Bach. By Conrad Kchner. $1.00. CHAS. E. TINNEY ' S VOCAL METHOD. $1.00. 24 SHORT MELODIOUS STUDIES FOR THE PIANO- FORTE, By A, D. TcKNER, Op. .;o. Bk. )., $1.50; Bk.. II., $1,2;, H, V, WOLZOGOGEN ' S GUIDE througli the Music of Wai;- ner ' s ' Ring of the Niblelungen. 50 cents. THE GRIEG ALBUM, containing Op. 3, Op. 6, Op. 12, Op. 19. The most favorite pieces of this well-known composer, with portrait and autograph. $1.50. FERD. SIEBER, AGILITY. Op. 136. 30 Short Vocalises. High, Medium, Low, Each, 75 cents, 12 .MELODIOUS STUDIES, of medium difficulty. Hy H, V. NiciioLL. Op, 26. $1.50. DICT10N. RY OF MUSICAL TERMS AND ELEMENTS OF MUSIC. By Edw, M. Lott and O. B, Brow.n, IBostora: jPLpiT iXJR. F. SCM:]V[IIDT. LEG END A. I t;)etorie Jo ' ' ?- Air — Comin ' thro ' the Rye. ' 1. Don ' t you love to write an essay? Yes, I know you do. Oh ! an essay is but pastime — Bliss to such as you. 2. Here ' s debating, joy forever, — Trains the female mind; Gives precision, prunes, and prisms, Grace of e erv kind. To be continned. Classical School poi Gii ls, 1961 MADISON AVENUE, NEW YORK. S FEIC I Ps-L. COTUPiSE I IST COLLEGE EI E FjPs.I .zPlTIO KT, FITTING FOR ALL COLLEGES OPEN TO WOMEN. Kxperience in this work has s iven the Princip;ils knowledge of the training required tor a successful entrance into College. Pupils fitted in the School are now in Wellesley, Smith, Vassar, Oberlin, and Barnard. Also, a GI jOlDXJjPlTIN:G COLrP2.SE, Embracing advanced study in Languages, Science, and Literature. Excellent advantages in Art and Music. CATALOGUE, with terms, description of courses, etc., sent on application. MISS NORTH AND MISS BARNES, Principals. LEGEND A. . M HENRY M. BURR CO. Fa l7ioQak)le Olilliner y, 490 Washington Street, BOSTON. ■PHDTDGRAPHIC ARTIST, NO. 58 Temple Place, BOSTON. LEGENDA. THE merieap xpress 5o T)pa9y, AT WELLESLEY, MASS. Is the only Company that has offices East and North of Boston, or West and North of Wor- cester in New England, Canada, and the Provinces, and, therefore, is tlie only one that can send or receive trunivs, or other shipments, at one charge. 5170 pmerieai} xpress Qompar y Is the only Compan which runs over the Boston and Alban and New Yorl Central Rail- roads to points in the West, Nortliwest, and .Southwest. Therefore, Sf e pmerieai7 xpress QDrnpa y Can serve a large majority of the pupil and patrons of Wellesley College better than any other. • RATES AS LOW AS THE LOWEST! TIME BETTER THAN THE BEST! Special Trains West of Albany which run fiaster than passenger trains. LEGEND A. Beal, Higgins Henderson DRY GOODS, SILKS, WOOLENS, LINENS, COTTONS, FLANNELS, EMBROIDERIES, LACES, HOSIERY, GLOVES, RIBBONS. LADIES ' AND GENTS ' UNDER- WEAR, HANDKERCHIEFS, CORSETS, Etc. UMBRELLAS AND PARASOLS, SMALL WARES. BLACK AND xMOURNING GOODS OF E ERV DESCUIPTIOX. MAIL ORDERS SOLICITED AND PROMPTLY FILLED. OUR PRICES ARE ALWAYS THE LOWEST. Washington Street, corner Temple Place, Boston. LEGEM DA. Adams Express Company. NEW ENGLAND DIVISION. We desire to call attention to the fact that we have opened an office and established a delivery to our patrons in Wellesley. Our lines extend in every direction, — East, West, North, and South. Trains with our Special Messengers accompanying, leave Wellesley for Boston at 6.53, S.15, 1 1.07, A. M. ; 1-55. 3-39. 5-36 P- M. Leave Boston for Wellesley and the West at 6.45. 9.15, 10.00, 10.55 • ' - i- i-30 ' 3-45 ' .v.io i ' - M- OFFICE AT KARB ' S SHOE STORE. All orders intrusted to our care will receive prompt and faithful attention. Rates as low as b_v any responsible Company, and will be furnished by the Agent at Wellesley, or by Edward Sands, Route Agent, Boston. WALDO ADAMS, Manager, Boston. C. S. SPENCER, Supt., Bridgeport. F. N. BASSETT, Agent. WILLIAM TUFTS, CATERER AND CONFECTIONER. ODD FELLOWS ' BUILDING, 513 Tremont Street, ... . . Boston, Mass. TE;n_E:i=i :o:isrE: 134. LEGENDA. Colored Shoes. WE CARRY IN STOCK ?1ll the Different gnaDEs LawN Tennis hoes, LA.ROE VARIETY. ALSO OXFORD TIES FOR STREET WEAR, OUR OWN IVTA-KE. HZNGrLISM: Ax jPLLPillSTG- IBOOXS jPl S. C. JAMESON CO. IS Winter Street. ABRAHAM BIGELOW, JR. Hack, Livery, Boarding and Sale Stable First-cLass Horses aNd carriages to Let. CAREFUL DRIVERS PROVIDED. Barges, Wagonettes, Landaus and Hacks furnished for Parties. Passengers conveyed to and from the Station of B. A. R. R. AI_L ORDERS PROMPTLY FILLED. BiGELOW ' S Livery, Central St., Wellesle . LBGENDA. RHETORIC song-Continued. 3. It will widen your horizon, Broaden all your views. Make you lively, wide awaken. All vour vagueness fuse. 4. I have subjects comprehensive. Nature, and the like, Savonarola, Work Domestic, Canada, Woman ' s Rights. To he continued. BATBS ' ( 9aisfs, • ( 9l7ifG • Dfesses • and • Sacfe, For Ladies, Misses and Children, made to order, a Specialty. JERSEY KNIT UNDERGARMENTS. IN SILK, JAEGER WOOL AND GAUZE. Special Importation of EMBROIDERIES at greatly reduced prices. C. BATES (up one flight 1, 47 WINTER STREET. M. c. bfjigHaivi. Druggist. No. 5 Wilson House block. SUMMER STREET. N AT ICK, iV| ASS. LEGEND A. Boston, New Iork, and Chicago Teachers ' Agencies. EVERETT O. FISK CO., Managers, 7 TREMONT PLACE. BOSTON. CLINTON PLACE, NEW YORK. 106 WABASH AVENUE, CHICAGO. jHlcjeiuc i i:jffls.3srxjjPs.L i=-is.e,e;. Mrs. J. J. GRACE, LCA «• fflODE ffllLLINBI Y StOI E, No. 26 Temple Place, Boston. MOURNING GOODS ALWAYS ON HAND AND ORDERS TAKEN AT RESIDENCES. LEGENDA. Mightv Jove launches nn thundL-rbolt at the- Pliaeton of to-day, proudly circling the world with his fiery steeds, drawing the triumphant CHARIOT OF THE LAMP. Wherever civilization dwells, tliere the HOLLINGS PATENT EXTENSION LAMP shines supreme. Absolutely safe, and the finest illuminator of tlie aj;e. As a reading-Jamp it stands unequaled. ARTIFICIAL LIGHTING, in all its branches, is our exclusive business. Fixtures for Gas, Oil, and Electricity, e= We cannot be undersold by any dealer in goods of the same quALiTY of material, workmanship, and design. Manv inexperi- enced buyers are deceived by cheap imitations. Our goods are sterling metal; our prices low. Examine both and be convinced. A fine assortment of Brass and Wroutrht Iron Fenders, Fire Set?, and Andirons, and other goods in this line, especially adapted FOR StIDENT.s ' use. R. HOLLINGS CO., Manufacturers and Importers, 547 Washington Street, Boston, next Adams House. LEG END A. KENNEDY ' S HAND-MADE m n uiv MAKE A DELIGHTFUL LUNCH. Nothing better with Cheese, — a custom which is fast becoming popular. These goods are made entirely bv hand, and from carefully selected material. We manufacture a complete line of Plain and Fancv Biscuit, including over 300 different varieties. F, fl, KENNEDY CD, Cambrldgeport, Mass, ChicagD, 111, LEGENDA. TiredBt ram HORSFORD ' S ACID PHOSPHATE, Prepared according to the directions of Prof. E. N. Horsfokd. This preparation is a brain food. It increases the capacity for mentai labor and acts as a general tonic and vitalizer. It rests the tired brain and imparts thereto new life and energy. Dr. D. P. McClvre, Ratitoul, III., says : Very beneficial to streng:tht.-n the intellect. Dr. O. C. Stol ' t, Sj ' racuse, N. V., savs : I gave it to one patient who was unable to transact the most ordinary business, because his brain was ' tired and confused ' upon tfte least mental exertion. Immediate benefit and ultimate recoverv followed. Dr. Chas. T. Mitchell, Canandaigua, X. Y., says : I recommend it as a restorative in all cases where the nervous system has been reduced below the normal standard by ovenvork, as found in brain workers, professional men, teachers, stuilents, etc. Dr. F. W. Lytle, Lebanon, III., says : I have personally used it with marked advantage when overworked, and the nervous system much depressed. Dr. K. V. Robertson, Cleveland, O., says : Can cordially recommend it as a brain and ner ' e tonic. Descriptive pamphlet free on application to Rumford Chemical Works, Providence, R. I. IIEWARE OF SUBSTITUTES AND IMITATIONS. CAUTION . — Be sure the word ' Horsford ' s is printed on the label. All others are spurious. Never sold in bulk, G. H. CHESSMAN. J. M. SULLIVAN. GEO. H. CHESSMAN CO., (Successors to Hiland, Chessman A: Co.) GENERAL COMMISSION FRODUCE DEi LERS, 21 South Side Faneuil Hall Market, BOSTON. LEG EN DA. ■Hotel Saint Marc, 39th Street and Fifth Avenue. -A.]v[EK.iCjPs.:iNr jPlI id ei:jk.oi==EjPln: fljPlN . J. A. MUTTE-R, PROPRIETOR. LEGBNDA. SPRINGER BROTHERS, Importers, Manufacturers, Wholesale ond Retail Dealers in Ladies ' Fashionat)le Cloaks, 500 WASHINGTON STREET. CORNER BEDFORD. Carriage Entranee, lO aoU 112 Bedford Street. Latest Styles, Choicest Designs, ami Newest Fabrics in JACKETS, WRAPS, CAPES, etc., for Traveling and for Street Wear, always on display. (Discount to Students.) J. TjPlILBY SON, FLORISTS, OPPOSITE RAILROAD STATION, W ELLESLEV Cut Flowers and Plants of the choicest varieties constantlv on hand. looses, arrjatiops, Cilies of tf?e Ualley, l ioli?ts, ( lisl primroses it) tf?eir Seasorj. Bulbs ' f) Uarii ty. Floral designs for all occasions, arranged at shortest notice. Orders b_v mail or otherwise promptly attended to. Flowers carefully packed and forwarded to all parts of the United States and Canada. LEGENDA. Successors to ARTHUR P. SCHMIDT : CO. ' S Retail Department, Publishers, Importers, ;ind Dealers in Foreign ♦ and v American •:- Sheet v Music. Special Depot for Publications of Breitkopf Hartel, Litolff, Peters, Angerier, SCHIRMER, NoVELLO, EtC. MAIL ORDERS AND SELECTIONS FOR TEACHERS ATTENDED TO WITH SPECIAL CARE. F lease Send for Catalogue. 13 West Street, Boston, Mass. T. E. MOSELEY Co. 469 Washington Street, Boston, DEALERS IN BOOTS AND SHOES. A LARGE ASSORTMENT OF WALKING BOOTS AND SHOES FOR YOUNG LADIES. Slippers and Oxford Ties in Black, Bronze, and all colors of Suede or Ooze Kid for evening wear. Tennis Shoes in great variety. Prices reasonable. DISCOUNT TO FACULTY AND STUDENTS OF WELLESLEY COLLEGE. LEG EN DA. RHETORIC SONG--C0NCLUOEO. 5. Thus you ' ll learn to wield the hammer. Mighty hammer. Thought. Rhetoric is its mightier handle; Thought without it, nought. H. BROAD, JR, BOOT AND SHOE I EBAII ER-. All work neatly and promptly done at reasonable prices. Shop corner ' Blossonn and Washington Streets, Wellesley. (JeORGE . flLLEN, 12 WINTER STREET, BOSTON. Trimmings. Buttons, Laces, Gloves, Yarns Corsets and Fancy Goods. LEGEND A. Murphy Company, MANUFACTURERS OF FINE VARNISHES, Newark - Boston - Cleveland St. Louis - Chicago TrtE OLD UNlTEO STATES rfOTEL, OF BOSTON has maintained its RESPECTABILITY AND EXCELLENCE. Originally the largest Hotel in Boston, it has been twice enlarged years ago, by the extensive wings on Kingston and Lincoln Streets, named respectively Oregon and Texas. During the past five years it has been under the management of Mr. TILLY HAYNES, of Springfield, Mass. who has completely renovated, enlarged and improved the prop- erty, and last year added still another hundred rooms, by building across from Texas to Oregon. Think of a Hotel from Texas to Oregon, and you will understand why this notice is written, which is to say that the UNITED STATES recommends itself for its quiet, orderly management, and the notable character of its guests, its numerous public rooms and grand old parlors, broad halls and numerous stairways, while none of its 500 Guest Rooms are above the fourth floor. These, with its very central location, its most excellent table, and moderate charges, recommend it to all who have once shared its hospitality. LEG EN DA. She was dreamily scanning tlie bulletin-board, when suddenly she read, ' • Undergraduates cut and made to order! It was a shock to find this heretofore vaguely-felt truth published so conspicuously. But she recovered when she saw that hhe had misinterpreted the sensations from the word - ' Undergarments. She had read herself into them too much. Ppot;l;)( eary, O West Central Street, Naticlc, Masss physicians ' pkescriptions accl ' ratelv and honestly compounded. C. SEAVER, Jr., Portrait • and • Landscape • Photographer, WEST NEWTON, MASS. LEGEND A. IVJISS iy[lTTLEBERGER (g) (g ® ® rv ISS gL KEMORE ' S SCHOOL, 1020 PROSPECT STREET, CLEVELAND, OHIO. New Building and Fine Equipment. All Departments under Specialists. College Preparation a feature. Certificate accepted by Wellesley, Smith, Vassar, and Cleveland Colleges. Circulars on application LEGEND A. HOTEL BELLEVUE. BEACON STREET, BOSTON. EUROPEAN PLAN. A quiet hotel, with a cafe of rare exxellence, situated on Beacon Hill, near tlie State House, and convenient to all the large stores and places of amusement. S. R. SMITH, Manager. LEGEND A. ' 90 ' 5 CameQt for Jyl aOUS- I once had a sweet little cat, dears, — The prettiest cat in the world : His fur was so yellow and white, dears, And his tail was so charminsjlv curled. To be continued. KEELER COMPANY, IP1T«RC m ilraOLSTI ;t Cabinet and Upholstered Work MADE TO ORDER. WASHINGTON AND ELM STREETS, BOSTON. studies and libraries furnished. Branch at Bar Harbor. Factory at East Cambridge. J. J. ARAKELYAN, Printer, 148 and 150 Pearl Street, Boston. Mr. Arakehan, who represents this firm, is one of the enterprising printers of Boston. In 1SS3 he htunched into the venture which has since met with much material success under his man- agement. There already have been printed in his establishment a goodly number of standard works, and for several years he has had the contract for the Boston Directory. An extensive order, executed several times for Jordan, Marsh Co. by Mr. Arakelvan, vas a large illustrated cata- logue, the number printed being 100,000 copies at each issue. Messrs. Jordan, Slarsh Co. wrote, concerning the work : You printed our Fall and Winter Catalogue in a verv satisfactory manner. The quality as well as promptness of the work was better than we ever had before. He may safely be trusted with all classes of printing, for his presses are of the latest and most approved kind. Publishers of Books. Catalogues, Periodicals, etc., illustrated or otherwise, yill find it to their advantage to consult him. LEGENDA. The Thomson- Houston Electric Co. MANUrACTCRER OF ELECTRICAL APPARATUS INCANDESCENT LIGHTING BY DIRECT AND ALTERNATE CURRENTS. ELECTRIC ARC LIGHTING. Series Incandescent Lighting on Arc Light Circuits. Street Lighting by Incandescent Lamps. Transmission of Power for Statiimary Work. Electrical Street Car Propulsion. THE THOMSON-HOUSTON ELECTRIC CO. 620 Atlantic Avenite. Boston Mass. 148 Michigan Avenue. Chicago, III. Wall and Loyd Streets, Atlanta, Ga. 40J-405 Sibley Street, St. Paul, Minn. LEG EN DA. BjOlILEY ' S hotel, SOUTH NATICK. MASS. te - . O well known as the Oldtown of Mrs. Stowe ' s book, and histoiicallv as the scene of J _ the labors of Eliot, the apostle to the Indians, has been thoroughly repaired, painted, and refurnished, and is now open t(j the public. This Hotel is on the line of the Boston Albany Railroad, three quarters of an hour ' s ride from Boston, and is connected bv wav of stage to Wellesle - College, passing the beautiful estate of H. H. Hunnevvell. Guests are conveyed at meal lioLU ' s to and from the College free of charge, by coach. A good Liverv is connected with the house, and good Fishing, Boating, Bathing, and other recreations are at the command of guests. A. Bailey, of Bailey ' s Boston Express, the proprietor, is thoroughly acquainted with all the details of the business, and will leave nothing undone that will conduce to the health, comfort, and convenience of the guests. PROPRIETOR. LEGENDA. •90 ' S LAMENT FOR S Y LV ANUS--C0NTINOED. But I lost my poor little cat, dears. As one day on the fourth floor he played: I cried and I called him by name, dears. But I never could find where he strayed. To he continued. LISEIEirS, IBTO. Andrew J. Lloyd, OPTICIAN. 323 WASHINGTON STREET, Opposite Head of Milk Street, and 103 BOYLSTON STREET, near Arlington Street, IBOSTOISr, 1XLS S,S,. RACHEL A. ROBINSON, • • DRESS-MAKING • • Art Embroidery, Designing, Stamping, Dress -Reform Garments, Jenness Miller Dresses and Divided Skirts. No. 5 HAMILTON PLACE, BOSTON. LEG EN DA. YOUNG LADIES ' INSTITUTE, WINDSOR, CONN. A HoPTie Scl ool for Girls of all ages. Its pupils are received at Wellesley or Smith College without examination. This school offers the advantages of healthful location, home comforts, and excellent teachers, each a specialist in her own deprntment. Terms, $350 a year. For circulars address the Principal. TEACHERS, 1889-90. JULIA T. WILLIAMS, Principal. LIZZIE A. FR. NCIS, Associate Principal. ELLEN G. MEANS, B.A., Latin and Greek. MARIE DE LA NIEPCE, French. SARAH W. HAKES, German. ROSALIE PALMIE, Drawing and Painting. EMILY R. LEONARD, Piano, Harmony, and Vocal Culture. CLARA W. MORSE, Piano. M. ' iRY L. BEEMAN. Violin. ANNA C. WALTER, Elocution. KATE C. POMEROY, Primary Department and Penmanship. LEGEND A. DKEKA Fine Stationery and Engraving House, 1121 Chestnut Street, Philadelphia. Commencement, Class Day, Fraternity, Reception and Wedding Invitations, Programmes, Banquet Menus, etc. Steel Plate Work for Fraternities and College Annuals. Fine Stationery with Fraternity or Class Badge, Mono- gram, etc. Visiting Card Plate Engraved for One Dollar. 100 Cards from the Plate for One Dollar. All work is executed in the establishment under our personal supt-rvision, and only in the best manner. Unequalled facilities and long: practical experience enable us to produce the newest styles and most artistic effects, while our reputation is a guar- antee of the quality of the productions of this house. Desi rns, Samples and Prices sent on application. BOOKS BY JULIA A. EASTMAN. Miss Eastman lia a large circle of young admirers. She carries off the palm as a writer of schnol-liff stories. Her style is characterized hv i|uick inovumcnts, sparkling expression, and incisive knowledge of human nature. — Bos ton Book Bnlletin. Kitty Kent S Troubles. i2mo, illustrated, $1.25. The heroine ' s experiences are just such as countless oilier girls must meet with, and therein lies the charm of the storv. Striking for the Right, i mo, illustrated, $1.25. A story illustrating the necessity of kindness to animals. The pupils of the Eastford Hiiih School form a humane society which does a noble work. A premium of $i ,000 was awarded the author for this MS. Short Comings and Long Goings, lamo, illustrated, $1.25. The ups and downs of wide-awake hoy-and-girl-Ufe in a countrv hnint-, bi-iL;litl ' und iiatur:ill - told. Schooldays of Beulah Romney. i2mo, illustrated, $1.25. A dozen gay schoolgirls find in the counsel of a true Christian woman the aid ;ind encouragement thev most need in their girlish trials and difficulties. Young Rick. i2nio, z full-page illustrations by Sol. Eytinge. Jr.. $1.25. Young Rick was a genuine boy, mischievous and motherless. Aunt Leshia foimtl it no easv task to look after him, but in the end, her kindness and good sense made a man of him. The Romneys of Ridgemont. i2mo. illustrated, $1.25. A story of the New England hills; of sugaring and haymow con- lerenees, :ind olil-fashifined pii iiic--, ;md Lr( d times gencrallv, Sixch as young and old enjoy reading about. BOOKS BY KATHARINE LEE BATES. Sunshine. Oblong . mo, beautifully illustrated by V. L. Taylor, ),z, cts. This exquisite prize pnem is the very embodiment of spring sunshine, and may well put all voung readers in good humor, like tlie little lass with the laughing lip, of whom it tells. Santa Claus Riddle. A Poem. Square i2mo, illustrated in colors, paper, .v ? ct . Goody Santa Claus. A Poem. Square i2mo, illustnitetl. ] LipL-r, zx, cts. Two poems for children, so bright and dainty that older people will also be charmed by them. Wedd i ng-Day Book. Edited by Katharine Lee Bates, with original illustrations by Geo. F. Barnes. Cloth, square 24mo, $1.25 ; white parchment, $1.50; uiorocco. $ .00; satin, $4.00. Every-day blanks for autographs. The prettiest imaginable gift for a bride. D. LOTH ROP COMPANY publish choice books on History, Biography, and General Literature. Send for a catalogue of 2,000 select hooks, free; also, for Illustrated Prospectus of the Lothrop Magazines. THE LOTHROP MAGAZINES. Wide Awake. Only $2.40 w ' car ; 20 cts. a number. The brightest of the young people ' s magazines. Herbert D.Ward ' s great serial, The Ne eni lr .it Aniiover, will have a charm for college-girl readers ; Jessie Benton Fremont ' s Will and Way Stories are thoroughly stimulating ; and Sail ie Joy ' bite ' s ;ible p:H)ers on Business Openings for Girls and Young Women, ' bristle with practical suggestions. The Pansy. ' nly $i.cxi a year. Edited by Pansy, author of the popular Pansy books. New serial by Margaret Sidney. Our Little Men and Women. Only $1.00 a year. For beginners, so, large type and easy sentences. 75 ull-page pictures. Baby land. Jnly 50 cts. a year. Baby ' s nwn magazine, dainty and bewitching as batiy himself. D. LOTHROP COMPANY, 364-366 Washington St., opp. Bromfield, Boston. LEG EX DA. Nortli British and Mercantile Insurance Coiiiijany OF LONDON AND EDINBURGH. United States Brancli, 54 William Street, New York. NEW YORK BOARD OF MANAGEMENT. SOLON HUMPHREYS, Esi ,, Chairman. (e. d. morgan a CO.) J. J. ASTOR, Esi . H. V. BARNES, Esq. CHAS. H. COSTER, Est . DAVID DOWS, Jr., Esc( (drEXEL, morgan Ji CO.) (DAVID DOWS, JR.. CO.) JACOB WENDELL, Esi , CHAS. EZRA WHITE, Esq. (JACOB WENDELL iv CO.) SAM. P. BLAGDEN, Manager. WM. A. FRANCIS. Assistant Manager. ROBT. H. WASS, General Agent. WM. R. ECKER, .Assistant General Agent. H. M. JACKSON, Secretary Boston Branch Office, 48 Kilby Street. F. H. Stevens, Resident Secretary. LEGENDA. ' 90 ' S LAMENT FOR SYLVANUS-CONTINUED. 3. I found my poor little cat, dears. As I passed by the Zoo. Lab. one day. Alas! he is terribly changed, dears, — For his pretty fur ' s all shorn away. To be coHiinucd. Ladies in need of a good Dressmaker can find sucli at 795 Washington Street, Room i, Boston, near Albany Depot. Prices, from $iJ.oo to $iS.oo. Good fitting and good styles. Come early in the season. M. STOCKMAN. C. F. HOVEV CO. HAVE A LARGE ASSORTMENT OF DRESS GOODS, SUITABLE FOR sr=R.ii rG jPs.n d s Cjnv[]v[H:K. tj(7EjPlk.. LADIES ' UNDERGARMENTS MADE TO ORDER. 33 Summer Street and 42 Avon Street, BOSTON. LEGENDA. BAILEY, BANKS BIDDLE, Gold and Silver Smiths STATIONERS, CHESTNUT AND TWELFTH STREETS, PHILADELPHIA. MAKERS OF CLASS=RINGS, PINS and FINE STATIONERY FOR WELLESLEY, VASSAR, AND OGONTZ. desig:ns, estimates, akjd samples, op« reqi ' EST. LEGEND A. THE EVERETT PIANO IS UNEQUALED IN TONE. TOUCH. WORKMANSHIP AND DURABILITY. WAREROOM, i8o TR EMQN T STREET, BOSTON. The Everett Piano was the choice of Miinroe ' s School of Oratory; Society Hall. Wellesley College, H. O. Johnson, ist tenor of Ruggles Street Qiiartette; Rev. Charles Parkhurst. editor of Zion ' s Herald. We will on request mail names of persons who have bought Everett Pianos in your vicinity. LEGEND A. J. ROTHSCHILD 32 TEMPLE PLACE, BOSTON. NEW YORK; 56 and 58 West Fourteenth Street. PARIS: 26 Rue d ' Enghien. IMPORTER AND DESIGNER OF FRENCH MILLINERY. The Very Latest Novelties of the Season CAN ALWAYS BE FOUND AT OUR ESTABLISHMENTS NEW ENGLAND BUREAU OF EDUCATION, HIRAM ORCUTT, Manager, 3 Somerset St., Boston. ESPECIALLY TO THE STUDENTS AND GRADUATES OF WELLESLEY COLLEGE. DO YOU WANT A position in :i Priin:iry, Intermcdiiitc, Grammar, High School, Academy ov Seminary? OR As a Specialist in Sciences, Languages, Music or Art? OR — As Governess in a Family, in the West, South, or in New Eng- land ? Register now in the New England Bureau of Education. It is never too late to register, as there is no j:eek and hardly a day in the year, when teachers are not called for at this office. CIRCULARS AND FORMS SENT FREE. This Bureau is the oldest in New England, and has gained a national reputation. Its facilities are unsurpassed, while its charges are low. Wellesley Graduates are very popular as candidates zvith our patrons, and many of them are already in our field at zuork. TESTI7UYONIKLS : From Supt. A. P. Stone, Springfield, Mass.: Ve have ob- tained several teachers from the New England Bureau of Educa- tion for the schools of this city, all of whom have proved highly satisfactory. We have always found there a list of well-educated and experienced teachers to select from, and the representations made to us concerning the candidates have been in every case full, relial le and true. Much time has been saved by seeking teachers through the Bureau. From Dr. T. J. Morgan, Supt. of Indian Affairs, Washington, D.C. Hiram Orcl ' tt, LL.D. : I have had considerable deal- ings with your Bureau during the last two years, both in securing teachers for important places, and in securing positions for teachers. I have been surprised and gratified at the intelligence, good sense and skill displayed in your management. You have established a claim to the gratitude of teachers and school officers. 1 wish yOu abundant success in your important, difficult and delicate work. LEG EN DA. ' 90 ' S LAMENT FOR S Y L VAN US-Concluded. 4. The department lias done for m ' cat, dears ; I can ' t love him quite so well now, — ■For he ' s all bottled up in vile spirits; But to hate the department, I vow. MRS, ANNE FESSENDENj WELLESLEY, MASS. IE5™yR NTi MEALS AT ALL HOURS. CATERING. PARTIES SUPPLIED AT SHORT NOTICE. ICES, CAKES, ETC., ALWAYS ON HAND. HOUGHTON AND DUTTON, IMPORTERS AND RETAILERS OF FINE t CHINS ♦ FOR LDECORailONS, WE CARRY NOTHING BUT GOODS FROM THE BEST MAKERS. Our Line of Artists ' Materials and Stationery Is ver ' compkte, and our prices are very low. We engrave Copper Plate in first-class style, and print from it 50 cards on three-ply wedding stock for Sgc. fiOUQHTON AND DUTTON, TREMONT AND BEACON STREETS. xl LEGEND A. 43 43 Wm. E. Doyle, S XXBi, 43 TREMONT STREET, BOSTON, MASS. THE LARGEST AND FINEST COLLECTION OF CHOICE ROSES, AND OTHER FLOWERS. IN THE CITY. Decorations for Weddings, P.irties, etc., a specialty. Conservatories in Cambridge (formerly Hovey ' s) contain the largest collection of decorative plants in New England. Orders by Express, Mail, or Telephone promptly executed. WM. E. DOYLE, 43 tremont street. CONNECTED BY TELEPHONE. 43 43 xli LEGENDA. Boston Commercial College, 639 Washington Street, corner Boylston, Boston, Mass William H. Moriarty, Principal. LIST OF STUDIES: SHORT-HAND, GRAMMAR, TYPE-WRITING, COMPOSITION, BOOK-KEEPING, CORRESPONDENCE, COMMERCIAL LAW, LANGUAGES, ARITHMETIC, MATHEMATICS, Etc. SHORT-HAND. r U T D CH J K G F V TH Til S Z SH ZH L R M N NO W Y H i I ( ( )) jjr ' r Sliort-liaiid has now become almost an essential part of a general, and particularly of a feminine education. It is worthy of study for its own sake and as an elegant accomplishment, as well as because it aHbrds a respectable and pleasant means of gaining a livelihood. Short-hand is the leading specialty at the Boston Commercial College, where it may be studied by regular daily attendance, or by private lessons. Full information will be furnished on the subject to all who apply in person or by mail to the Principal. xlii LEGEXDA. Wanted: English translation of Dewev. Wanted : Midnight oil. Wanted : Transom decorations impervious to light. W. NTED : Puckle ' s Comic Selections. A. B. CLjPlRK, DEALER IN Choice Groceries at Low Prices, Canned Goods in Variety, Good Assortment of Kennedy ' s Goods, Nuts and Confectionery. Difterent kinds of Fruits in their seasons. Goods fresh and Warranted to give ' satisfaction. All orders will receive prompt attention. A. B. Clark, Grant ' s Block, Washington St., Wellesley, Mass. I ll ' U IDI O ruin their health WJMm Vfl I n Li O and beauty by iM wearing some bad fitting corset— 1 BE SURE TO BUY FERRIS ODD SENSE CORSET WAISTS. HOUSANDSNOWINUSE. JScpiI tor Health, Keo- noniy and Ketiuty. Buttons at fnmt in- stead of Clasps. Ring Buckle at hip for Ho e siippurtere. Tape-fastened But- tons — ifonV pull off. Cord -Edge Button Holes— (frtJi ' df ' dfO ' K FIT ALL ACE - InfantB to Adults. j| Sold by LeadiiiK yRETAILERS jr every Miieri . Send for Circular, FERRIS BROS., Manufacturers, 341 BROADWAY, NEW YORK. MARSHALL FIELD . CO., CHICAGO, WHOLESALE WESTEH.N AUENTS. HEALTH AND BEAUTY. Mrs. Annie Jenness Miller sav that Personal Beauty and Grace, in either man or woman, are ele- ments of power. Over a million sensible women and children have worn the Ferris Good Sense Cor- bet Waist, and these Corsets are r;ipidly ijrowina; in favor amon all intelliijent women. The ' Good Sense ' Corset Waist is made to conform to the natural A aH v ' of the human form as God made it ' , and is not made after French patterns. Good health and good looks nat- urally follow when women and children obey Nature ' s laws. The demand for Ferris ' Good Sense Waist is now so universal that everv leading ' retail store in the United States has them for sale, but some unprincipled dealers offer inferior imitations because they can thus make a larger profit. If you want the best for your money be sure vour Corset is stamped Good Sense. SENSIBLE WOMEN allwantFERKls ' GOOD SENSE CORSET WAISTS. THOUSANDS , NOW IN USE. ■vpvBcAt for Health, l-:co- - nomy and Beauty. BUTTONSat frontin- Btead of Clasps, RuJG Buckle at hip for Hojie supporters. Tape-fastened Bat- tons— -. « ' ( jnill off. Cord - Edge Button Holes — iront iceiir out, FIT ALL AGE - Infants to Adults. Sold by Leading RETAILERS every wliere. Send for Circular, FERRIS BROS., Manufaoturers. 34t BROADWAY, New York. MARSHALL FIELD CO., CHICAGO HUULE ALE WESTERN AtiENTS. xliii LEGEND A. SHREVE, CRUMP LOW CO. 432 Washington Street, Boston. DIAMONDS, GEMS, WATCHES, JEWELRY, SILVERWARE. Agents for the Celebrated Gorham Plated Ware. parasols and umbrellas. OUR ENGRAVING AND STATIONERY DEPARTMENT Supply e%-er_v variety of Engraving and Printing. Offer a choice stoclc and the latest ideas in shapes and tints of Note Paper. MONOGRAMS, CRESTS, ADDRESS AND AUTOGRAPH DIES Stamped in Cameo and with Shadows, trulv novel in effects. Indian Clubs, Dumb Bells, Chest Weights, Gymnasiimi and Rowint; Suits. Silk Belts (College Colors). Tennis Caps, Fencing, . rchery, Croquet. Popular nacKeis. HORACE PARTRIDGE CO. MAKERS AND IMPORTERS OF Fine Lav n Tennis, s -s - - Gynnnasiunn and Athletic Goods. Champion (new) Eclipse . Peerless Standard Practice No 10 . 5x- .5 ■$5.00 4.00 4.00 3.00 2.50 2.00 1.50 1. 00 A copy of our Illustrated Catalogue sent free on application. HORACE PARTRIDGE CO. WASH. j 97 AND 499 To.N Streft. Boston. xliv LEG EN DA. THE VERY BEST FUR GOODS Seal Ulsters. The full length, thorough winter garment. Seal Sacques. 40 to 45 inches lone, genteel and comfortable. The young Ladies ' Seal Coat. 28 to 34 inches long, new and popular slvle. Seal Jackets. 23 to 26 inches long, close fitting and jaunty. We have these garments in stock, and also make to measure any style from specially selected skins. Fur-lined Circulars. The very fashionable Shoulder Capes, For Summer and Autumn wear, in Seal, Lynx, AsTR- citAN ' , Sable. Monkey, and Black M. rtin. Confined exclusively to the best and uniformly reliable furs, and our manufacture being of the most thorough workmanship, we have no hesitation in assuring purchasers of supplying their wants with the fullest satisfaction. JOS. A. JACKSON, 412 WASHINGTON STREET, - - - BOSTON. xK- LEG EN DA. 92- We do not strike for shorter hours ; ony$ are short enough. What Ave wish to do is to cut our last two years. Why should we not graduate with the Seniors. ' Are we not Ninetv too. ' PHOTOGRAPHER, 2832 WASHINQTON SXRKET, . . BOSTON HlQHL NDS. 19 Harvard Street, Brookline. 18 Blue Hill Avenue, Roxbury. Welleslev Studio, Wnshinartnn Street, near Depot. Open Monday, Tuesday, and Wednesday of every week, from Oct. ist to July ist. Class Photographer to Wellesley College koh i SS9 and ' iS90. STATES ' Embroidery apd papery U orl Store, 145 TREiVEONT Street, Boston, (BETWEEN TEMPLE PLACE AND WEST STREET), ALL KINDS OF FANCY SILKS, PLUSHES, LINENS, Etc. FRINGES, ORNAMENTS, CORDS, AND TASSELS. MAIL ORDERS PROMPTLY ATTENDED TO. xlvi LEGEND A. Artists Materials SPECIAL RATES TO STUDENTS. COLORS of all kinds: CANVAS; DRAWIXG PAPERS: MA TERIALS for CHIXA PAIXTIXG. and CRATOX and CHARCOAL DRAWTXG: FIXE BRUSHES: TAPESTRl ' COLORS: EASELS: SKETCH-BOXES: SKETCHLNG-SEATS and UMBRELLAS: STUDIES of all kinds. ALSO A FULL LIXE OF DRAFTING INSTRUMENTS. M adsworth, Howland Co, Manufacturers of Fine Colors and Artists ' Supplies, 82 and S4 WASHIXGTOX STREET, BOSTOX: 263 and 265 WABASH AVEXUE, CHICAGO. xlvii LEG EN DA. Established 1830. Alfred Mudge h. Son, PRINTERS, No. 24 Franklin Street, BOSTON. xlviii LEG EN DA. •89. What ' 89 girl called for JBcbr Hicbt at her Promenade? Consistency is an excellent thing in woman. I IVERSIDE gCBOOL, AUBLIRNDALE, MASS. Miss DELIA T. SMITH, F-rinoipal. Special course in preparation for Wellesley College, in charge of graduates of the College. Advanced course of study in Languages, History, and Literature. Superior advantages in Music and Art. Number of boarding pupils limited to twenty. No day scholars. Ninth school year will begin October 2, 1890. THE BOUQUET Paris T illi9ery, 134 TREMONT STREET, NEAR WINTER, BOSTON. Mourning Goods a Specialty. Orders taken at Residence. xlix LEGEND A. De KLYN ' S, 39 AND 41 EUCLID AVENUE, CLEVELAND, OHIO. FRESH, DELICIOUS CANDIES, Put up in I, 2 , ;ind 5 pound Boxes. Sent by mail or express Lo :inv part of tlie I ' nited States, Price, So cents per pound. FINE CHOCOLATES. BON-BONS, CARAMELS, CREAM PEPPERMINTS. MARRON ' S GLACES A SPECIALTY, LEG EN DA. HILLSIDE, NORWALK, CONNECTICUT. Mrs. Mead ' s School for Girls and Young Ladies ■Reopens October the 2d, 1890. College Preparatory and Academic Departments. Graduates admitted to Wellesley on Certificate. Fine courses in Mathematics, Latin, Science, History, and Literature. Extended and thorough instruction by artists and specialists in Instrumental and Vocal Music. Art, Modern Languages, Physical Culture and Elocution. CIRCULARS SENT ON APPLICATION. LEG EN DA. ' 90. When we were Freshmen we said. We will work and mould woman to the fuller day. We soon found that the day was already too full. J. E. COOieEK., pi armagst, Eliot Street, South Natiek. Drugs, Medicine.s and Toilet Articles, Sponges, Brushes, Perfumery, Etc. Physicians ' Prescriptions a Specialty. OHN 3. gTEVENS (JO., 39 Winter Street, Boston. dealers in Ladies ' Furnishing Goods, Novelties in Neckwear, HANDKERCHIEFS, RUFFLINGS, LACES, EMBROIDERIES, UNDERWEAR, AND CORSETS lii LEG EN DA. GEO. A. PLUMMER CO. IMPORTERS AND RETAILERS OF Ladies ' , Misses ' and Children ' s Cloaks, Suits, Tea Gowns, Jersey Waists, Boys ' Clothing. 531 and 533 WASHINGTON STREET, BOSTON. liii LEGE NBA. HEADQUARTERS FANS, FANCY JEWELRY, HAIR ORNAMENTS. ALL THE LATEST FOREIGN NOVELTIES. A. Stowell Company, 24 WINTER STREET. liv LEG EN DA. American Statesmen, BIOGRAPHIES OF MEN CONSPICUOUS IN THE POLITICAL HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES. Edited by John T. Morse, Jr. II. III. IV. V. VI. VII. VIII. IX. X. XI, JOHN UINCY ADAMS. By John T. Morse, Jk. XII, ALEXANDER HAMILTON. By Henry Cabot XIII Lodge. XIV. yOH.V C. CALHOUN. By Dr. H. voN HoLST. XV, ANDREW JACKSON. By Prnf. Vm. G. Sumner. XVII, yOH.Y R.i.VDOLP H. By Henry Ad. ms. X ' III JAMES MONROE. By Pres. D. C. Oilman. THOMAS JEFFERSO.Y. By John T. Morse, Jr. XIX DA.VIEL WEBSTER. By Henry Cabot Lodge. XX, ALBERT GALLATIN. By John Austin Stevens. XXII JAMES MADISON. By Sydney Howard Gay. XXIII, JOHN ADAMS. By John T. Morse, Jr. JOHN MARSHALL. By Allan B. Magruder. SAMUEL ADAMS. By James K. Hosmer. THOMAS H. BENTON. By Theodore Roosevelt. —XVI. HENRY CLAY. By Carl Schurz. PAURICK HENRY. By MosES CoiT Tyler. GOUVER.NEUR MORRIS. By Theodore Roose- velt. MARTl.V VAN BUREN. By Edward M. Shepard. —XXI. GEORGE WASHINGTON. By H. C. Lodge. , BENJAMIN FRANKLIN. By John T. Morse, Jn. JOHN JA Y. By George Pellew.. Professor Goldwin Smith, speaking of the series of American Statesmen in The Nineteenth Century., says: It seems to us a very vaUiatrle series. It furnishes a history of American politics in the attractive and impressive form of biography. (Other volumes in preparation.) Each volume. i6nio, cloth, gilt top, $1.25. American Men of Letters. a series of biographies of distinguished a.merican authors. Edited by Charles Dudley Warner. II. III. IV. WASHINGTON IRVING. By Charles Dudley ' I. VARNER. .VOAH WEBSTER. By Horace E. Scudder. VII. HE.VRY D. THOREAU. By Frank B. Sanborn. VIII. GEORGE RIPLEY. By Octavius Brooks Froth- IX. INGHAM. I X. JAMES FENIMORE COOPER. By Prof. T. R. LoUNSBURV. XI. MARGARET FULLER OSSOLI. By T. W. Hig- ginson. RALPH WALDO EMERSON. By O. W. Holmes. EDGAR ALL.iN POE. By G. E. Woodberry. NATHANIEL PARKER WILLIS. By H. A. Beers. BENJAMIN FRANKLIN. By John Bach McMas- ter. WILLIAM CULLEN BRYANT. By John BiGELow. Logically compact in structure and development, scholarly and readable in thought and style, and withal pervaded by a lofty ethical spirit, they mark a most decided advance in modern English prose, and bid fair to settle many a literary question that has hitherto defied the wisdom of the wisest. — The Itidepcndent. (Other volumes in preparation.) Each volume, with portrait, i6mo, gilt top, $1.25. For sale by Booksellers. Sent, post-paid, on receipt of price by the Publishers-, HOUGHTON, MIFFLIN AND COMPANY, Boston, Mass. Iv LEGEND A. 5or7(? of : ) i, 5iri i7. ' Tis the voice of the siren — I hear her comphiiii. My tricks and my wiles I have used all in vain; For ' 90 has triumphed — my spirit is crushed, And soon will my song in cold silence be hushed. To be Continued. BARTHOLOMEW Gnglish and (@IjASsigal Sghool poi Gii ls, Third and Lawrence Streets, Cincinnati, Ohio. (FOUNDED IN 1875.) Guarantees thorough preparation for any College open to Women. Full Classical and Scientific Courses of Study, witli Modern Languages for those who do not intend to take a College Course. PUPILS PREPARED FOR WELLESLEY, ADMITTED BY CERTIFICATE. For full information send for catalogue. D 00 LING . . . • 11 AND 13 TEMPLE PLACE, ( aferer and ( onfectionef. Thoroughly first-class restaurant in the centre of the Shopping district. Moderate prices. Mr. Dooling has leased Hotel Wellesley for a term of years, and will endea ' or to maintain the high standard of excellence achieved last season under his management. hi LEGENDA. ESTABLISHED 17QS. TH I OLDEST CHINA AND GLASS ESTABLISHMENT l M AME-RICA. Ladies and gentlemen visiting Boston are respectfullv invited to inspect the beautiful collection of China and Glass which the subscriber is displaying. His Brilliant Crr Glass is not excelled in the world. The Chix. has been personallv selected from the best factories in Europe and India. The entire building is occupied for the sale of China and Glass, and the upper floors are easilv reached bv passenger elevator. -RieHA-RB B-RIGGS, Corner School and W.ashixgtox Streets, Boston. Ivii LEG EN DA. V. D. Gaurisox, ]Man:iger. n 600 rooms at $1.00 per day and upwards. European Plan. First class Restaurant, Dining-rooms, Caf , and Lunch Counter, a la carte, ?X moderate prices. Guests ' Baggage to and from Grand Central Dei ' ot free. Travelers arriving via Grand Central Depot ' save Carriage-Hire and Baggage Express by stopping at the Grand Union. ROR YOUNG L-T DIES. Ve offee a Discount to all Welleslev College Students. Our stock is complete in all the leading and most desirable styles for Tennis, Yachting and Gymnasium; also, for Seashore and Country. IN BOTH MEDIUM AND FINE GRADES. HEXRY H. TUTTLE AND CON4PANY, 43 Washington Street, Boston. Iviii LEGEND A. SONG OF THE SIREN-Continued. The sonometer clangs out its resonant woe, The overtones wail as they swaj to and fro ; The nodes and the segments are hopelessly mixed, The phoneidoscope ' s disk is with horror transfixed. To be continued. 5 f epard. floruyell 9 Qd. Desire to call attention to the beautiful line of Suede and Glace KID GLOVES, of their own importation, which they are offering on their retail counters in 5 to 10 Hook Lacing and 4 to 30 Button Mousquetaii-e, in all the newest colorings to match dress goods and ribbons. Of course being first-class goods they are warranted, and fitted at the counters by expert help. Shep. rd, Xorwell Co.. Winter Sireet. ART GOODS. A CHOICE COLLECTION OF THE Latest ■Etchino-s. ■Picture • Framins;, • Artists ' • .Materials. • Studies • and • Novelties. Send for Catalogue, Kraniv T- Pof-e, 36 West Street, near Treinont Street, Boston. NEVER BUCK AGAINST THE BUCKEYE! Nor Monkey ' W ltta a Bnzz Sa-w. when Don Quixote of old attacked the imaginary The Buckeve Knocks Out All Competitors. •ARMERS. take the word of no agent, but investigate and settle for yourself the question which make of ' Har -esting Machine will best suit your requirements. If you find that the famous BUCKEYE ( ELEVATOR,) ' banner or FRAMELESS) BINDER IS STRONGER, LIGHTER, LIGHTIR DRAFT, EASIER RUNNING AND MORE DURABLE than any other, then buy the Huckeye. If your investigations prove the chiim that THE FRAME OF THE BUCKEYE IS STRONGER THAN ANY OTHER; If you timl that THE BUCKEYE KNOTTER HAS GREATER CAPACITY AND ADAPTABILITY THAN ANY OTHER; If y i asccrt.iui that THE BUCKEYE HAS THE BEST CUTTING APPARATUS, and that it has MORE GOOD POINTS THAN ANY OTHER BINDER (and yo i will find that this is true), then we ask you to purchase it, guaranteeing that IT WILL GIVE MORE COMPLETE SATISFACTION THAN ANY OTHER when in active service. AULTMAN, MILLER CO,, AKRON, 0. Mr. Lee. Why, Addie, you needn ' t cry about it I 1 only said Mrs. Allen was a verv well-informed woman, and I wished you ' would follow her example. ' Mrs. Lee. Yes, and last week vou said vou wished I could manage to look as stylish as Mrs. Allen, — and she makes all her own clothes. But she has what I haven ' t. Mr. Lee. What is that? MK ' i. Lee. Well, she gets all of her information from the Magazine they take. 1 admit that she knows all that is goin, on, and is bright and entertaining in conversation ; but I could do as well as she docs if I had the same source of information. She lent me the last number of her Magazine lately, and I learned more in one hour ' s reading about various social matters and the topics of the day, than I would pick up in a month by mv occasional chats with friends. It certainly covers every topic of interest, from the news of the day down to the details of housekeeping; and everything is so beautifully illus- trated, too. Every time Mamie goes over tn the Aliens ' she comes back and teases me to get vou to take Demorest ' s Kainilv Mag.azine, as the stories are so good. Kven the boys watch for it every month, as a place is found for them also in its pages ; and Mr. Allen swears by it. It is really wonderful how it suits every member of the family. Mr. Lee. Well, perhaps I had better send for a Specimen Copy; for if it is anything like what you say it is, it will amuse and instruct the whole of us. Mrs. Lee. I see that W. Jennings Demorest, the publisher, 15 East 14th Street, Xe Copy for 10 cents; so we can ' t lose anything, as each number contains a Pattern Order, choose, and in any size — which alone makes each copy worth 30 cents; and I just want a jacket pattern like Mrs. Allen ' s. The su scription price is only $2.00 a year; and 1 must say I can ' t see how they can pnblish so elegant a magazine for so little mone y. York, is offering to send a Specimen ' entitling the holder to anv Pattern she may i sub- LEG EN DA. Artistic Hangings. We shall be glad, at all times, to submit designs and samples of interior decorative hangings; to pre- pare plans and estimates for draperies in single rooms, apartments, dwelling houses, halls, and churches. We furnish the best church pew-cushion that can be made. Scarfs, Table Covers, Piano Covers, Lambrequins, Panels, always in stock. JAMES McCREERY CO., Broadway and llth Street, NEW YORK. Ixi LEGBXDA. SONG OF THE SIREN-Concludeo. 3. The tuning-f ' oi ' k vibrates and shuddeis with grief: The bow-string has snapped in its cries for relief; The organ-pipes stand in dumb wonder around, For ' 90 has conquered old Tvndall on Sound. A pleasurable and profitable pastime is the reading of music at sight. . . THE . . Circulating Library of Music OF THE Boston Music Company, AT 28 WEST STREET, BOSTON. Offers an opportunity to do this at a small expense. The Library contains music of all kinds, classical and popular, for Piano Solo and Duet, Two Pianos, Four and Eight Hands, Piano and Violin, and Trios and Quartets. A circular giving terms and other particulars mailed on application. A. P. BOARDNdAN 8a Co., pl7ofo|rapl7ic Supplies, sAmateur ©uffifs, DeOelopin and printing, 54 BROMFIELD STREET, BOSTON. HEADqUARTERS FOR THE Kodal aijd jHauuHeye Deteetiue Cameras. FREE INSTRUCTION GIVEN TO LADIES IN ALL SPECIAL DISCOUNTS GIVEN TO THE STUDENTS BRANCHES OF PHOTOGRAPHY. OF WELLESLEY. Ixii LEG EN DA. T AT IPQ ' ' pi ' efei ' to use a nicf quality of iJ - ' stationery for their correspondence, should inquire for Crane s Ladies ' Note Papers and Envelopes to match (the old and reliable line). These goods are presented in Superjine and Extra Sitpcrfne Brands, the latter being unsurpassed in Purity, Tone and Beautiful Soft Finish by even the finest foreign productions. Sold by all Stationers, in a variety of tints and surfaces. Manufactured and supplied to the trade only by Z. W. M. CRANE. Dalton, Mass., U. S. A. BEST WORK. FULL COUNT. LOWEST PRICES. PROMPT DELIVERY. FRANK WOOD, PRINTER, No. 352 Washington Street, BOSTON. SPECIAL ATTENTION PAID TO WORK FOR SCHOOLS AND COLLEGES. Ixiii LEGEND A. FALL RIVER LINE, THE GREAT Business and Pleasure Route BETWEEN BOSTON and NEW YORK. THE SUPERB STEAMERS Puritan, Pilgrim, Providence, Old Colony, Are in commission this Summer. These vessels are the finest of their class in the world. A DOUBLE DAILY SERVICE Is Operated — two Steamers in each direction eveiy week-dav, and one on Sunday. • SPLENDID • BANDS • AND • ORCHESTRAS • Accompany these Steamers, and A GRAND CONCERT Is given on board each, every evening-. This is the onlv Sound Line possessing this delightful feature. The Steamers of this Line have long been celebrated for the excellence of THEIR cuisine. Meals served a la carte. LONG WATER ROUTE I SHORT RAIL RIDE ' FULL NIGHT ' S REST ' Drawing-Room Cars on Express Trains running between Boston and Fall River, in connection with steamers. Trains coimccting with steamers at Fall River leave Boston from Old Colony Station at 6 and 7 i ' . m. week-days; 7 p. m. Sundays. Returning. — Steamers leave New York, from Pier 2S, North River, at 5.30 and 6.15 P. M. week-davs; 5.3a p. m. Sundavs. Con- nection by Annex boat from Brooklyn, 5 p. m., Jersey City 4 p. m., daily. L. II. PALMER, Agent, j. R. KENDRICK, Gen ' l Mgr., 3 Old State House, Boston. Boston. GEO. L. CONNOR, Gen ' l Pass. Agt. Miller ' s Reform Boot (Patented in the United States The Reform Boot, a combination of ease and comfort, is the Annihilator of Corns, Bunions Ingrowins ' Nails, and tlie various feet distortions. It can be worn new without the least discomfort ; and needs but a trial to convince one of its merits. WARRANTED HAND-MADE Please Call or Send for Circular. EDMUND W. MILLER, Si HAMILTOX PLACE, Opposite Park Street, BOSTON, MASS. A Choice HelectioH of Boots, , Shoes and Slippers, always in ' Stock. .„ (Please mention this book.) Ixiv LEGEND A. Small Cousin (to a Wellesley Senior) : Say, M , will voii be a Bachelor ' s button next June? Sophomore (to her Rhetoric teacher) : been thinking; I ' ve been studying. ■I haven ' t The Canvas Lawn Coverings, also the Foreign Rugs and Draperies, used for the Junior promenade, are furnished by H. A. HARTLEY c : CO., 95 to 105 Washington Street, 20 and 22 Brattle Square. Autumn Leaves, Winter Wreaths, Spring Blossoms, Summer Flowers, • • 01= 7VIUSIC • • Gmerson ' s • NeW « Resbonses. Jf ' f-; ° ' iion § • 4+armony. ( ' « -; $ ' - f -). y l. o. Emerson, just 01 Qiiartet and Chorus 1 • exactly the book that will suit you for Choirs; 74 short pieces of sacred music of the best character, this winter ' s Singing- Classes. Also, an appropriate and good such as vour choir needs. book for High Scnools. li ' fPemberance • Trusade. (35c-, $3-60 dozen), by 1 ' 1 r V L. O. Emerson and Edwin Moore. Earnest, refined, elevated poetry and nuisic, which will be most welcome to the best classes of temperance workers. Adopt, without fear, for Graded Schools, our Son 5 . Manual, f ' • ° ' - 1 ' ° ' - ' ° ' ' ' TV ' ' ; ' ■= $4.20 doz.; or Book 3, soc, $4.80 doz.) Admirably adapted to the different ages of school life, with plain instructions and best of music. Select for practice in your Singing Society one of our noble and beautiful CANTATAS (send for list), or the easy Oratorio, EMMANUEI. ($1), by Trowbridge; or for Fairs and Festivals, the peculiarly nice, pretty and easy DAIRY MAIDS ' SUPPER (20c., $i.So do ..); by Lewis; or for the children, Macy ' s new STRANGE VISITORS, or A MEETING OF THE NATIONS (30c., $3 doz.); or the KINGDOM OF MOTHER GOOSE (25c., $2.28 doz.), by Mrs. Boardman. Any book mailed for retail price. OLIVER DITSON COMPANY, Boston. Ixv LEG END A. William S. Butler Co. IMPORTERS, JOBBERS AND RETAILERS IN JKillinFPg • 0ooiis, • l osiprg, • (JIobFS, SMALL WARES, CROCKERY, BRIC-A-BRAC. Upl;)olstery pabrics, Caee Qijrtaii s, 1 (55, portieres, Ete. GO TO 08 TREIvlQNT STREET, BOSTON. Ixvi LEGENDA. JOSEPH W. COOK, President. INCORPOK ATED 1833. ALFRED L. BARBOUR, Sectctaiy Cambridge • Mutual • Fire • Insurance • Company, CAMBRIDGEPORT, MASS. Insures Dwellings and Contents, and the Safer Class of Business Buildings. Pays 70 per cent Dividend on Five-vear Policies. 50 ■' Three ' • 40 all others. HOME OFFICE : AT THEIR NEW BUILDING, 675 MAIN STREET, CORNER INMAN STREET, CAMDKIDGEPORT FRESH FRUIT. ■WAFERS. SARDINES, HAM — Devilled, , ALL KINDS OF Canned Fruits, 1 . . SHATTUCK, TURKEY— Boxed, TONGUE, UNEQUALLED CONFECTIONERY. CRACKERS, KETCHUP. Ixvii WELLESLEY. LEGEND A. It was in a review in History of Civilization. Stie desired to abreviate; Iience, for Organization and Development of tlie Churcli. slie wrote : — History Churcli. 1. Organ. 2. Devel. Moral: Truth will out. DRV • AND ' FANCY • GOODS, • HOSIERY, GLOVES, CORSETS, TRIMMINGS, ETC. C P) can sell Cotton Underwear at lower prices than can be bought in this vicinity, as we make all our goods, using good material and workmanship, paying a fair price for the same. If you wish garments made to order, we will guarantee satisfaction as to price and quality. •R. H. •Randall, 11 West Central Street, NaticK. Use SAPODONE for the Teeth. Sapodone is the trade name for a liquid, saponaceous dentifrice which is giving perfect satisfaction to those who use it. It contains no injurious ingredients or substance, the use of which the most exacting dentist could not fully approve. It cleanses the teeth and sweetens the breath, and leaves a cool, refreshing sensation in the mouth. We desire to call your attention to this preparation, and invite you to give it a trial. Directions for Use. — First wet the brush, then add a small quantity of Sapodone and apply to the teeth in the usual manner. Sapodone is put up in two sizes : 2-ounce vial, price 35 cents ; 3}-ounce vial, price 50 cents. MANUFACTURED ONLY BY Otis Clapr Son, 10 Park Square, BOSTON. 307 Westminster Street, PROVIDENCE. Ixviii LEG END A. Meade, Dodge Co. DEALERS IN A A m. 9 A i TCil A i A ART STUDIES, Decorative Goods of All Kinds. PICTURE FRAMING AVe make a specialtv of this Department, as our line of Mouldings is large and prices verv reasonable. Picture Mats of all kinds. STATIONERY. We carry a line of Plain Stationery at very low prices. We solicit a share of patronage. NO. 4 Park Street, Boston. Mass. Ixix LEGENDA. HSTEV ORGANS AND PIANOS. THE ESTEg PIA NO. FLIl_l_y WAHKAAITEt). 159 Tremont Street, .... Boston. Ixx
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