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mmmBmm mmm Press of The F. A. Bassette Company Springfield, Mass. THIS BOOK IS DEDICATED TO Co Cllcu fit} enlileton Instructor in Mathematics at Welleslev College, 1888-1897 Secretary of Welleslev College, 1897-1901 Dean of Welleslev College, 1901- A STRAIN of music — slipping forth as soft, From shepherd ' s pipe, as thistle-down that blows Across a field of thyme — ' twas this that rose To greet you in the far-off land where Dream Eludes the Dreamer many a time and oft ; Among those pine-trees, see her bright hair gleam! Yet when pursued, forsooth, she is not there, But through the wood she flits, and Dreamer long Shall follow, never find. So fled the song That we would sing you, though with piteous plaint We sought the tricksy shepherd, and the air Was full of half-heard music, sweet and faint. But if the humbler shepherd, whom we heard Piping most mad and rollicking of lays Can make you smile, why, all the weary days We spent in toiling through the brambles tall Will not have been in vain. For every word We wrought to give you pleasure, — that was all. THE LEGENDA Crgriiba lioarb E d i t o r - i II - c h i c j MAUDE D E A R .1 .? 5 c i ate F, d 1 t o )■SIBYL P. A Js; E R L i 1 c r a r y Editors NATALIE ATKINSON SMITH EDITH HOWE STEARNS INEZ JOSEPHINE GARDNER ELSIE APPEL .1 r t E d i t o r - i II - c Ji i c f MARION ELIZABETH F E N T O N Assistant Art Editors M A R Y G I N E RILEY R O W E N A CAMPBELL B 11 s i n c s s Editor- i ii - c Ii i c j ELIZABETH CALDWELL T A Y L O R Assistant B it s i ii c s s Editors JESSIE ADAMS M A R V I N , 5; ; ; .W r a;; MAUDE STANTON JESSUP lO WELLESLEY COLLEGE Contntta Title Page Dedication Legenda Board . The Board of Trustees The Faculty The Senior Class The Junior Class The Sophomore Class The Freshman Class . Graduate Students Special Students The Alumna; Association College Organizations Societies College Publications Musical Clubs Other Cutbs The Vassar-Wellesley Debate Athletics .... Nineteen-Four Dramatics . The Grind Department PAGE 3 5 9 II 14 24 I 73 87 107 130 130 131 133 149 157 161 165 17s 177 183 THE LEGENDA 1 1 33oaiti of Cru0ttC0 William L a w r e n c e, D. D. Bishop of Eastern Massachusetts PresiJciii of the Board Alexander M c K e x z i e , D . D . Cambridge President Emeritus Mrs. Henry F . D u r a n t Wellesley Secretary A L p H e u s H . H a R D Y , R. A. Boston Treasurer William C l a f l i n , L L . D . Newtonville William F . W a r r e n , S .T. D. , L L. D. President of Boston University William H . W i l l c o x , D. D. , L L . D. Maiden Lilian Horsford Farlow Cambridge Edwin Hale Abbot, M. A. Cambridge Louise McCoy N o r t h , M . A . New York City A D A L I N E E M E R s o X T H o M p s o N, B . A . Rockford, 111. Sarah E. Whitin Whitinsville Henry E. Cobb, M. A. Newton Andrew Fiske.PIi.D. Boston William H. Lincoln Brookline Winifred Edgertox Merrill, Ph.D. Albany, N. Y. Rowland G . H a z a r o , M . A . Peace Dale, R. L 12 WELLESLEY COLLEGE Anson Phelps Stokes, Jr.. M. A. Samuel B . C a p e x , M . A . , L L . D . Joseph L. Colby Cornelia Warren Herbert J. Wells Caroline Hazard, M. A . , L i 1 1 . D . {ex officio) New Haven, Conn. Jamaica Plain Newton Centre Waltham Kingston, R. I. Wellesley College THE LEGENDA 13 En IHemotiam PRESIDENT OF WELLESLEY COLLEGE 1882 -1887 DIED: DECEMBER 6, 1 902 atnvU S2 tnrfertiarl) PROFESSOR OF GERMAN LANGUAGE AND LITERATURE WELLESLEY COLLEGE 1884 - 1902 DIED: DECEMBER 29, 1 902 H WELLESLEY COLLEGE ©fftcers of (S obernmcnt auD instruction Caroline Hazard , M.A., Litt.D. President Susan Maria Hallowell.M.A. Emeritus Professor of Botany Sarah Frances Whiting Professor of Physics and Physical Astronomv M A R Y Alice W i l l c o x , Ph. B. Professor of Zoology Katharine C o m a n , P li . B . Professor of Political Economy and Political and Social Science Angie Clara Chapin.M.A. Professor of (7reek Language and Literature Ellen H a y e s , B . A . Professor of A p filled Mathematics William Harmon N i l e s , B . S . , P h . B . , M . .A . Professor of Geology Katharine Lee Bates, M. A. Professor of English Literature Charlotte Fitch Roberts, Ph.D. Professor of Chemistry Alice Van Vechten Brown Clara Bertram Kimball Professor of Art ♦Abroad for the Sabbatical vear. THE LEGENDA ij Mary Whiton Calkins, M. A. Professor of Philosophy and Psychology Ellen Louise Burrell.B.A. Professor of Pure Mathematics Hamilton Crawford Macdougall, Mus. Doc. Professor of Music Elizabeth Kimball Kendall, LL.B.,M. A. Professor of History AdelixeBelleHawes.M.A. Professor of Latin Language and Literature C L A R A E a T O N C U M M I N G S Associate Professor of Cryptogamic Botany Eva Chandler, B. a. Associate Professor of Mathematics Mary Sophia Case,B.A. Associate Professor of Psychology and History of Philosophy ViDA Button Scudder.M.A. Associate Professor of English Literature Annme Sybil Montague, M. A. Associate Professor of Greek Katharine May E d w a r d s , P h . D . Associate Professor of Greek and Comparative Philology tS O P H I E C H A N T A L H A R T , M . A . Associate Professor of Rhetoric jGRACEEMILYCoOLEV.Ph.D. Associate Professor of Botany Margarethe Muller Associate Professor of German Absent for the Sabbatical year. t Absent on leave. i6 WELLESLEY COLLEGE Sophie Jewett Associate Professor of English l.ilcnititre Charlotte A l m i r a B r a g g , B . S . Associate Professor of Chemistry Margaret Pollock Sherwood, Ph.D. Associate Professor of English Literature H E L E N E Alexandrine S c ii a e y s Associate Professor of French Adelaide Imogen L o c k i; , B . . . , B . S . T . Associate Professor of Biblical History on the Helen Day Gould Foundation Caroline May Breyfogle,B.A. Associate Professor of Biblical History on the Helen Day Gould Foundation Ellen Fitz Pendleton, M. A. Dean Associate Professor of Mathematics Helen Abbot M e r r i l l , P Ii . 1) . Associate J rofessor of Mathematics M A R I n N Elizabeth Hubbard, B . S . Associate Professor of Zoology A L I c E W A L t o N , P li . D . Associate Professor of Latin and Arclucology Eleanor A c h e s o n M c C u l l o c h G a m b l e , P li . D . Associate Professor of Psychology Anna Jane M c K e a g , P h . D . Associate Professor of Pedagogy Alice Vinton W a i t e , M . A . Associate Professor of English Emily Greene B a l c h , B . A . Associate Professor of Economics Absent on leave THE LEGENDA 17 Margaret Hastings Jackson lustructor in Italian ami French Elizabeth Fi, orette Fisher, B.S. Instructor in Geology and Mineralogy MalvinaBennett.B.S. Instructor in Elocution Mary B o w e x , P h . D . Instructor in English Literature Caroline Rebecca Fletcher, M. A. Instructor in Latin Martha Gause McCaulley,M.A. Instructor in English Henry Cutter Holt Instructor in History of Architecture Grace Evangeline Davis, B. A. lustructor in Physics Grace Langford, B.S. Instructor in Physics Laura Emma Lockwood.PIi.D. Instructor in English J u L I a S w I F T O R V I s , B . A . Instructor in History Florence Jackson, M. A. Instructor in Chemistry Mary Alice Bowers, M. A. Instructor in Zoology Frieda Reuther Instructor in German Eliza Hall Kendrick, Ph.D Instructor in Biblical History Berthe CARON.Lic. esL. Instructor in French i8 WELLESLEY COLLEGE Frances Melville Perry, M. A. Instructor in English Lydie Caron, Lic.esL. Instructor in French Margaret Clay Ferguson, Ph.D. Instructor in Botany Martha Hale Shackford.PIi.D. Instructor in English Literature R O X a N A H a Y W A R D V I V I A N , P ll . D . Instructor in Mathematics Ethel Dench Puffer, Ph.D. Instructor in PJiilosophy Caroline Jewell Cook,B.A.,LL.B. Instructor in Business Methods Charles Lowell Young, B. A. Instructor in English Literature Kathrrine Bates, Pli.B. Instructor in English Marie Am alia Solano Instructor in Spanish Edith Souther T u f t s , M . A . Rcgistr tr ; Instructor in Greek Alice Wilson W i l c o x , B . A . Instructor in Zoology Mariana Cogswell, B . A . Instructor in Latin Edna Virginia Moffett,M.A. Instructor in Histoiy Josephine B u r n h a .m , P li . B . Instructor in English Miriam Hath a way, B . A . Instructor in Mathematics THE LEGENDA 19 Else S t o e b e r Instritclor in German Helene Julie Raich e Instructor in French William Rankin, B. A. Instructor in the History of Italiiin Pointing Everett Kimball Instructor in American History Hermine Caroline Stueven Instructor in German Henry Saxton Adams, B. A. S. Instructor in Botany Mathilde Louise Laigle Instructor in French ■-K a t h a r I n e Lord, B . A . Instructor in English Johanna Marie Louise P i r s c h e r , P h . M Instructor in German Hedwig Sophie Schaefer,B.A. Instructor in German Edith Winthrop Mend all Taylor, B. A. Instructor in EnglisJi Abbie Howe Turner Instructor in Zoology O N e R A Amelia M e r r i t t , M . S c . Instructor in Zoology Grace Chamberlain Instructor in Elocntion Frederick Spaulding DeLue, M.D Instructor in Zoology Pauline Wight Brig ham Instructor in English Resigned in November, 1908 20 WELLESLEY COLLEGE Mary Marion Fuller Assistant ill Chemistry Laboratories Albert Pitts Morse Curator of Zoology Mnscnm and Assistant in Zoology Laboratories Marcia Currier McIntire.B.A. Assistant in Aliisic Elizabeth Wheeler Manwaring,B.A. Assistant in English and English Literature Edith Harriet Moore, B. A. Assistant in Art Annie Brown Philbrick, B.A. Assistant in Chemistry Laboratories Ann Rebecca Torrence,B.A. Assistant in Botany Laboratories Carrie Maude Holt, B.A. Assistant in Zoology Laboratories Emily Josephine H ii r d Instructor in Pianoforte AIary Ad a line Stowell Instructor in Pianoforte Jennie Preston Daniell Instructor in Violin Charles Herbert Woodbury, B.S. Instructor in Drawing Edith Estelle Torrey Instructor in Vocal Music HarrietHawes Librarian Emeritus Caroline Frances Pierce, B.A. Librarian ; Instructor in Bibliography Henrietta St.Barbe Brooks, B.S. Assistant Librarian THE LEGENDA 2 I Etheldred Abbot,B.A.,R.L.S. Curator of Art Library and Collections L I L L A W E E D , B . A . Assistant in the Library E M I L I E Jones B a r k e r , M . D . Resident Physician and Superintendent of the Eliot Evelyn Barrett Sherrard,B.A. Resident Health Officer and Lecturer on Physiology and Hygiene Edward E. Bancroft, M.A., M.D. Consulting Physician Lucille Eaton Hill Director of Physical Training Harriet Noves Randall Instructor in Swedish Gymnastics and Physical Examiner Mary Caswell Secretary to the President Mary F r a z e r S m i t h , B . A . Secretary to the Dean Marie Louise Stock well, B.A. ' Assistant to Secretaries Edith Caroline Young , B.A. Assistant to the Registrar George Gould Cashier Bertha L y d i a Caswell Assistant Cashier and Purchasing Agent Charlotte Scott Whiton Pitrveyor AnnaStedmanNewman Superintendent of Norunibega Cottage Louise Anne Dennison Superintendent of Freeman Cottage WELLESLEY COLLEGE Elizabeth Whiting Siipcriiilcitdcut of Fiskc Cottage Annie Ma n d e l l Superintendent of Waban Cottage Mary Elizabeth Cook Superintendent of Wood Cottage Mary Staples Bacon Superintendent of Simpson Cottage Olive Davis, B.S. Superintendent of Wilder Hall and Noansett House ; Lecturei on Domestic Science Lydia vSduthard.B.A. Assistant to Superintendent of Wilder Hall 1 Fellow Hetty vShepard Wheeler, B. A. Fellow in Music Frances Hall Rousmaniere.B.A. Felloiv in Phyehology ami Assistant in Mathematics Mabel Blanche Woodbury, B. A. Felloiv in Psychology Mary Campbell Bliss, B. A. Felloiv in Botany 24 WELLESLEY COLLEGE Color, Violet Mentor Class Flower, Violet Motto, Scrogal Cbfcr ig04 Wellesley igo4 Wellesley Rah rah rah Rah rah rah Wellesley ©fficrre AnneOrr Elsie Appel. Faith Talcott. Caroline C. Soutter MaudeJessup . President Vice-President Recording Secretary Corresponding Secretary Treasurer Anna Scott Elizabeth Taylor Mary P. Follett JFattotiime Lucy Proctor Jane Lennox THE LEGENDA ail t ie Wotln ' e a fe tage anD all t )t ai?cn ana Womrn mcrrl)? piapers; — William Shakespeare 26 WELLESLEY COLLEGE ADVANCE NOTICE The Gallant Adventures of 1904 THE GREATEST PLAY OF THE MODERN STAGE! ff a THE WORLD 99 THE LARGEST AND MOST COMPLETELY FURNISHED THEATRE IN EXISTENCE HAS SECURED AT GREAT EXPENSE AND TROUBLE THIS TRULY MAGNIFICENT PRODUCTION. THELEGENDA 27 This play is perfectly fitted for the perusal of the Young Person, and yet, by the range and depth of its experience, it holds spellbound the Sage and Veneral)le. It is a brilliant and ingenious combination of the Romantic, the Poetic, the Musical, the Tragic, the Humorous, and the Problem drama. Its Management has been Brilliant and Successful ! THE ORGANIZATION of its wonderfully gifted cast has marked an epoch in American Dramatic History ! It has had a Phenomenal Run of Four Years in THE Eastern Metropolis of Wellesley ! 28 WELLESLEY COLLEGE Among Reasons for its unprecedented success may be noticed Its Admirably Trained Chorus DISPLAYING ALL TYPES OF BEAUTY AND PLEASING VARIETY OF COSTUME Its All Star Cast WITH Specialties of Every Description INCLUDING ACROBATIC PERFORMANCES EXHIBITIONS OF MUSCULAR STRENGTH SONGS, CLASSICAL AND POPULAR!! GRACEFUL DANCING 0 EVERY VARIETY!! WITTY MONOLOGUES, DIALOGUES AND M U LT RO LOGU ES !!!!! POWER OF KEEPING THE CENTRE OF THE STAGE ON ALL OCCASIONS AND OF BEING POPULAR AT ONCE WITH THE PIT, THE GALLERY AND THE BOXES THELEGENDA 29 The attention of the audience is called to the magnificent scenery, designed for the convenience of this particular cast. It is of immense size, although the fact that it can be encircled by an able-bodied policeman in forty-eight hours, — at a rapid gait, — fully provides for the safety of the company. The massive and beautiful buildings, including every known variety of architecture, (some specimens still under dispute); the luxuriant foliage, particularly that of the silver-leafed maple; the lake completely furnished with light winds, soft breezes, whispering zephyrs, sparkling ripples, gentle waves and danc- ing waters for the benefit of all crew songs, combine to place it far ahead of the scenery of any other known dramatic production. These attractions have united to make THE GALLANT ADVENTURES OF 1904 BY FAR THE MOST SUCCESSFUL PLAY EVER PRESENTED IN WELLESLEY ! It is confidently expected that its tremendous success will be repeated On the Stage of the World ' ' !! The management, thinking that some description of this brilliant dramatic suc- cess would be of interest to an impatient and expectant audience, present the follow- ing account of the first-night performance in Wellesley. Owing to the magnitude of the task, it does not pretend adequately to cover the subject, but merely to give some idea of the scope of the drama, and to call attention to its special features. It does, however, modestly claim the virtue of complete impartiality. 30 WELLESLEY COLLEGE THE PLAV PROPER IS PRECEDED BV A CURTAIN RAISER The scene is laid in the Wellesley station. As the curtain rises, a representative college girl chorus is discovered. The members are clad in all the composite athletic, social, moral and intellectual virtties, and carry small blue books entitled Directions to Wellesley College — How to find your class-room — How to distinguish 3 ' our instructor from a Freshman — Forty-seven different ways of shaking hands with the President, etc., (annotated key, explanatory notes, maps and diagrams attached). Crowd of cabmen is seen in the rear, restraining their champing steeds. Opening chorus. WELLESLEV COLLEOE AIR: Mr. Doolev. We are from Wellesley College and we know it is the best. Come all together — whoop it up — it ' s far above the rest. We ' re clever as they make them, and we ' re strong and sporting too. We know we are the best of all, the wearers of the Blue! CHORUS OK CABIVIEN O Wellesley College, O Wellesley College! It only costs you ten cents to get there. O Wellesley College, O Wellesley College! You must admit that that ' s a moderate fare. THELEGENDA 31 This song is followed by one of the great mechanical achievements of the piece, the entrance of a real train. This train is provided by the Boston Albany Co., founded and maintained for the particular benefit of Wellesley. As it stops, a second chorus emerges, dressed in varying shades of blue and green, each bearing a large 3 ' ellow suit- case. The first chorus hastily adjust smiles of welcome, and the two unite in a very clever step dance, in which the suitcases are exchanged for the blue books, ending with A GREAT ACROBATIC FEAT! Never before presented on any Stage !! Each Cabman driving away fourteen people in a Carriage Built for two ! ! ! Curtain descends to the chorus O Wellesley College, O Wellesley College! It only costs you ten cents to get there. O Wellesley College, O Wellesley College! You must admit that that ' s a moderate fare. At this point, the audience was already endeavoring to pick out the stars in the coming performance. Some very clever guesses were made, but the actual perform- ance was found tt abound in var5 ' ing roles of prominence, not suspected at first sight. Some slight confusion was caused in the box-office, bv the mothers of various members of the cast, each demanding that her daughter have the best-located, best-lighted, larg- est, and most airy dressing-room in the theatre, on penalty of her immediate withdrawal from the company. They were finally appeased, however, by the mingled suavity and firmness of the stage manager, E. Pitz-Fendulum [office on left of lobb) south exit, P. O. Box Toooqooo4ooo. Connection by telephone, megaphone, gramaphone, graph- ophone (all known companies), cable and telegraph (ordinary, wireless and mental). Information on every known subject. Office hours day and night]. The orchestra inter- prets feelingly The Wearing of the Green as the curtain rises on ACT I. The playstead is discovered, a large, green, open space, the lake on one side, a sloping bank on the other, effectively decorated with golf-capes, walking skirts, and rain- coats of many colors. Here the entire company takes part in an 32 WELLESLEY COLLEGE ASTONISHING EXHIBITION Of Strength and Skill INCLUDING GOLF, TENNIS, BASKETBALL, TETHER BALL, LACROSSE, DISCUS THROWING, RUNNING, HURDLING, VAULTING, ROWING IN WHICH ' Various Artists introduce their Specialties THIS IS FOLLOWED BY A Grand Climacic Feature ENTITLED Freshman Elections IN WHICH THE WHOLE CAST TAKE PARTS OF VARYING PROMINENCE ACCORDING TO DEGREE OF MUSCU- LAR ABILITY, POWER OF CATCHING THE PUBLIC EYE, AND ABILITY TO TALK LONGEST AND LOUDEST. THELEGENDA 33 The dignity, and reserve, with which this highly exciting feature was managed, place it far above all similar attempts by other companies. It culminates in a GRAND SOLO SONG AND DANCE Performed in the Centre ot the Stage by Premiere Danseuse and winning the hearty applause of the audience The chief performer was repeatedly called to the footlights and showered with bunches of violets. The stage was now hastily cleared for the next turn, Jln Entirely Original Feature ! A Play iioithin a Play I Monsieur Beaucaire It has since been discovered by the management that a similar device was attempt- ed by an obscure dramatist of the sixteenth century, W. Shakespeare by name, but that in its total lack of popular elements and up-to-date dramatic construction it pales before this splendid triumph of the modern stage. Members of rival casts present in the audience are observed to turn pale with envy, but are overlooked in the general enthusiasm of the audience who burst spontaneously into song 34 WELLESLEY COLLEGE SONQ Dowi:i Wliere tlie Cliarles Rivei ' P lows Down, down, down, where the Charles River flows, flows, flows, There is the very best college as every one knows, knows, knows. Its name it is Wellesley, A name we adore; It has lots of spirit, You couldn ' t want more, And the flower of it all Is our bold 1904 — Down where the Charles River flows. The progress of the entire act is marked by the same masterly interpretation of part and range of dramatic incident as is the first part. It finds a worthy culmination in The Grand Scenic and Dramatic Divertisement OF Tree Day! The brilliancy and beauty of this spectacle was a complete surprise to the audi- ence, although speculation had been rife as to its nature. The Costumes in their Delicacy of Colorinc , and Classic Purity of outline, the Ethereal Grace and Surpassing Beauty of both Chorus and Star Performers, formed a whole of such perfection as to disarm the most hostile crhtcism. THE LEGENDA 35 In connection with this was presented THE CAPTURE OF THE SPADE! A Perilous and Daring Feat Never before presented on the Boards ! PARTICIPATED IN BY PROMINENT MEMBERS OE THE CAST AND ACCOMPLISHED WITH THE MOST BRILLIANT SUCCESS! The Strategic Skill, The Unparalled Daring, The Modest Dignity and Sweetness evinced in this striking feature aroused the strongest enthu- siasm of the audience ! At the climax of this exciting feature, a sudden and violent uproar was lieard in the wings, mingled with loud cries for the manager. For some time, the house was in great confusion, but the uproar was finally nuelled, and the intruders were hastily ejected by the ushers. Upon inquiry, it was learned that they were members of an inferior company, who had once acted in the theatre, but who had been driven from the centre of the stage by the arrival of the 1904 company. Frenzied by the success of their rivals, they were weakly endeavoring to enlist the management upon their side, in the futile attempt to reinstate themselves in the ])ublic eye. Upon learning who they were, the members of the acting cast generously took up a donation to admit them to The Home for Passe and Retired Actors. At the end of this act, the Curtain fell amid shouts of applause; the entire com- pany received repeated curtain calls, and the audience waited in breathless expectation, the remainder of the play. N. B. — It is requested that, in future, members of the audience will keep their seats and not crowd about tlie stage door, and besie.ge the dressing-rooms of the princi- l.ial performers. It was noticeable, at the initial performance, that such conduct often seriously delayed the progress of the piece, and greatly inconvenienced the actors. 36 WELLESLEY COLLEGE Considerations of time and space, prevent an adequate treatinent of this Dramatic Masterpiece. The Wellesley Theatre however assures the patrons of the World, that ACTS II AND III OF i i The Gallant Adventures of 1904 ' ' CONTINUE TO PRESENT EVER -VARYING ATTRACTIONS WITH UNVARYING SUCCESS Among the Features to be Particularly Noticed Is that Redoubted Achievement, The Winning of the All Around Athletic Championship. In this feature are introduced some splendid individual turns and brilliant work, of the Chorus. A sympathetic interpreta- tion of every known variety of Yell and Cheer follows, culminating in A Spontaneous Vocal Ballet To the Air of UNDER THE BAMBOO TREE If you want to see How a cup should he won, Just come down to old Wellesley ; Nineteen Four will be glad To show how it ' s done. Under the maple tree Her rivals were strong. But her courage was up And soon it was plain to see That it would not be long Before that bright cup Stood under the maple tree. This feature has been attempted by other companies, but has either been a com- plete failure, or been carried through with noticeably less dash and completeness. THE LEGENDA 37 Another Point of Interest and Beauty WAS A TERPSICHOREAN FANTASY RESPLENDENT IN SCARLET AND BLACK REPRESENTING WISE FOOLS And pictorially impressing upon the audience the ancient truth that The Fool thinketh he is a Wise Man BUT The Wise Man knovveth himself to be a Fool. It was observed at this point, that certain members of the audience had not yet outgrown the trying habit of audibly prophesying to their neighbors the nature of forthcoming features of the play. It is hoped that the discovery in this case that their prognostications were totally incorrect, will in future prevent them from indulging in this annoying practice. The ne.xt Point of Attraction was a Solemn and Imposing Spectacular Feature The Mystic Burning of Forensics This Ceremony surpassing in its Impressing Dignity the Tragic Drama of the Ancients, serves to illustrate the astonishing versatility of the company, who pass with easy grace from lively to severe. A second attempt to cUm the lustre of this perfonnance was as unsuccessful as the first. An inferior company of strolling players, piqued by the splendid organization and management of the drama in progress, attempted in the lobby, out of view of the members of the 1904 company, a burlesque upon this feature of dignity and beauty. This attempt, however, was either ignored or frowned down upon liy members of the audience, and the mountebanks shamefacedly left the theatre 38 WELLESLEY COLLEGE Encouraged by former success, the management boldly forsake all dramatic tra- dition and, with the success due fearless imitative, repeat IN ACTS II AND III The Original Device of Act I Presenting Three More Plays THE LAND OF HEART ' S DESIRE A GLIMPSE OF PARADISE WIMEN IS KITTLE CATTLE The entire cast contribute to the success of this innovation, and by skillful co- operation make possible a piece of difficult dramatic business. A BALLET BT THE ENTIRE COMPANY RADIANT IN FILMY WHITE AND FLUFFY PARASOLS OF VIOLET made a fitting close to Act III. Although one enthusiastic member of the audience was heard to admire audibly the beauty of the blue umbrellas, it is thought that there was general appreciation of the delicate color symbolism, signifying that The Members of thk Cast of The Gallant Adventures of 1904 ARE, AS IS ALL TRUE GREATNESS, TRULY MODEST! THE SPLENDOR OF ACT IV of this brilliant drama literally outshines all description. Let it suffice to say that it fulfilled everv glowing expectation, and that at its close it was unhesitatingly pro- claimed The Greatest Flay that had ever adorned the hoards of The JFellesley Theatre ! (N. B. Owing to tlie despair of the management of ever being able to secure an- other drama as successful as this, it is feared that, after June, iqo4, the Wellesley Theatre will be obliged to sus])end business.) THE LEGEND A 39 C|)f CIa60 of 1 904 Margaret Louise Abbott Fryeburg, Maine Ruth B . Abbott Ourav, Colorado S . Louise Adams Care of B. Nugent Brother Saint Louis, Missouri Bessie W. Allen tM Riverpomt, Rhode Island ; ' avO. 40 WELLESLEY COLLEGE i ' ' Sarah W. Anderson Constantinople, Turkey Elsie Appel 1527 Broadway Indianapolis, Indiana E L T A M . Armstrong 125 North Eleventh Street Cedar Rapids, Iowa Maud H. Arnold 41 Waldo Street Pawtucket, Rhode Island Sibyl Baker 1728 Columbia Road Washington, District of Columbia Eleanor M. Bennett 80 Lancaster Street Albany, New York .3 -S? i i .!« • : M l ' :m Sim ' mm Ml • ; V THE LEGENDA 41 Bessie Birtwell 731 Seventh Street, S. E. Washington, District of Cokimbia Emily O . B o y n t o x 36 West Fiftieth Street New York, New York Jane C. Breese East Downin town, Pennsylvania .v: V Martha N Brooks 55 Essex Avenue Gloucester, Massachusetts Emily Sophie Brown Stafford Springs, Connecticut WW ' MA Jane L . B u R b a n k Saco, Maine ..V -■• 42 WELLESLEY COLLEGE Carrie M . B u r d i t t Pittsford, Vermont Ada M.Burt Si Fulton Street New York, New York Cora L.Butler 2636 Osage Street Saint Louis, Missouri R o w E N A Campbell 227 Angell Street y L I c E D . C H a p M a n Elvria, Ohio Eleanor Clark . K Providence, Rhode Island ' -t! i ' ■Haverford, Pennsjdvania ■THE LEGENDA 43 Grace B.Clark 77 Johnson Park Buffalo, New York M A R V Elizabeth C o l m a 125 Pleasant Street ArlinCTton, Massachusetts Florence V . Cook 15 Board of Trade Buffalo, New York . Grace G.Crocker T,2 Lee Street Cambridge, Massachusetts Ruth C.Crosby 8 Pearl Street Fitchburg, Massachusetts i % ■y ?. ! if m G R a C E L . D A N F O R T H 428 Norwood Avenue Buffalo, New York 44 WELLESLEY COLLEGE Josephine Danielson Danielson, Connecticut Anna E . Darby Kokomo, Indiana Mary E . D a ■' i d s o n 1630 Washington Avenue Scranton, Pennsylvania I ' L o R E N c E Denny 1 2 16 Ninth Avenue Seattle, Washington Maude Dewar 2835 Sheridan Road Chicago, Illinois ! T H E L B . D o A K 1502 North Fifteenth Street Philadelphia, Pennsylvania s % i mt THE LEGENDA 45 Daisy G.Dutcher Hopedale, Massachusetts Caroline B. Early 944 North Main Street Rockford, lUinois Alice B . Eastman Townsend, Massachusetts Mary P . Eaton 232 President Street Brooklyn, New York Pauline Egelston 157 South Main Street Gloversville, New York ' ■SMS 5 ?, i :TS ,« , skzB) v - i i E. Rebecca Ellis Guilford, Maine .•.■i , %- 46 WELLESLEY COLLEGE Emily B. Etzensperger 35 East Street Ml lyS ' j North Attleboro, Massachusetts I ti i Marion E . F e n t o n i? ' Mi ' . A ' 2q Yale Street Springfield, Massachusetts Fanny Field n 24 Vine Street ' - ■J) Denver, Colorado - - s i; ' '  s « i- Claudia G . F i n k Punxsutawnev, Pennsvlvania j .-v.«T Vil UbvA M Y R A B . F I S H B A C K y£A V« A D D I E E . Flanders 84 Burke Street Brookins s, South Dakota (S- - l | Nashua, New Hamijshire •?.. . ' . THE LEGENDA 47 Mary P. Follett 94 Hoffman Avenue Columbus, Ohio Louise B. Foster 259 Essex Street Beverly, Massacluisetts Edith Fox 631 Bums Avenue Wj ' oming, Ohio Helen G.Fox Milton Mills, New Hampshire A . Mildred Franklin Morgantown, West ' ir ?inia Martha G . Freeman 143 West Main Street Plymouth, Pennsylvania 48 WELLESLEY COLLEGE Florence H. Fremmer 375 Haverhill Street Lawrence, Massachusetts Inez J. Gardner West Stoughton, Massachusetts Laura E. Gerber 6329 Burbidge Street Germantown, Pennsylvania Norma L. Gilchrist Laurens, Iowa Gladys Gladding 103 South Broad Street Norwich, New York Grace Gladding 103 South Broad Street Norwich, New York I 7 H, ' T .MA THE LEGENDA 49 Jessie B.Goff 68 Prospect Street Fall River, Massachusetts Clara L.Green 32 Broadhead Avenue Jamestown, New York Helen J. H alley Rapid City, South Dakota Eleanor M . Ham iM o n d Silver Creek, New York i ' ' % Ruth S . Hart 50 Buckingham Avenue Waterburv, Connecticut (. l A R I s s a S . Hastings 207 Pine Street Holvoke, Massachusetts 5° WELLESLEY COLLEGE ♦ Flora H. Heinz Terrace Heights Davenport, Iowa Evelyn E. Hewitt 30 Crown Street Meriden, Connecticut Florence H. Hewitt Portsmouth, New Hampshire Nina M.Hill Aver, Massachusetts Grace M. Houghton 10 Claremont Street Worcester, Massachusetts Louise Hunter 5125 Jefferson Avenue Cliicago, Ilhnoi fi . . - ..A m ,v • THE LEGENDA 51 Ruth L . Huntington Milton, Massachusetts ' ■m S Laura M . H u s s e y 2244 Grove Street Denver, Colorado (1§)§ Florence W. Hutsinpillar 45 North Fifth Street Ironton, Ohio Maude S.Jessup 317 Main Street Penn Yan, New York ' -rr-fi T :}: Marion C.Johansen 9 Highlands Avenue Natick, Massachusetts Beulaii P.Johnson q8 AVest Central Street Natick, Massachusetts $m. ' m WELLESLEY COLLEGE 1 % Je ANNETTE S. Kelly 1 20 Cliveden Avenue Germantown, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Marian Kinney Claremont, California Ida W . Kitchen 449 Locust Avenue Germantown, Philadelphia, Pennsyh-ania Stella Kohn 634 Eighteenth Street Rock Island, Illinois EsTELLA C. Kramer 1 1 5 I Logan Avenue Denver, Colorado Janet M. Lambie 1027 Locust Street Allegheny, Pennsylvania ' J % ; i t m tv i i Jr THE LEGENDA 53 . ■Alice R . L a w s o n 2 1 Addison Street « ? M A R J o R I E Lee Hotel Balmoral New York, New York Gertrude Lewis Castine, Maine t ' J t : Ruth P , Lincoln 92 East Main Street Norwich, New York - ' tj Catherine L. Linn Hotel Albert Denver, Colorado  ' ' J Elizabeth Lord Stow, Massachusetts =V 54 WELLESLEY COLLEGE £ Annie V . Luff 620 North Oak Park Avenue Oak Park, Illinois Gertrude Lukens Oxford, New Jersey Ruth Lyon Redlands, California Annie B.McClure Paris, Bourbon County, Kentucky li L E A N O R W . M A C D O N A L D I 20 Broadway Care of Kountze Brothers New York, New York Lilian A . McDonald 73 S West Monroe Street Chicago, Illinois mm ' i HIM •7 k ' -i ' -J ' At fa % Iff THE LEGENDA 55 Jennie E. McKearin Proctor, Vermont Margaret M c L e o d 415 Burns Avenue Wyoming, Ohio Ethel M. McTaggart 35 Somerset Street Worcester, Massachusetts Katharine H . M a c y 1015 Eighth Avenue Grinnell, Iowa Sarah F. Marsh 155 Center Street Danvers, Massachusetts ■' i - . i I i T E S S I E A . M A R ' I X Meadville, Pennsylvania At V 56 WELLESLEY COLLEGE Eleanor P . Monroe 330 Gowen Avenue Mount Airy, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Ethel I.Moody 32 Winnemay Street Natick, Massachusetts Clara S . M_;o r e 7 Soldiers Place Buffalo, New York Julie M.Morrow 17 West Eighty-fourth Street New York, New York A K n I E H . Newton 126 Huntington Place Mount Auburn, Cincinnati, Ohio Elsie D. Newton 126 Huntington Place Mount Auburn, Cincinnati, Ohio i 1 i ' i ' y- f, , THE LEGENDA 57 TuSANELDA NuSBICKEL 65 Broad Street Lyons, New York Mary L.N y e Welleslev, Massachusetts Adele Ogden Welleslev, Massachusetts A N N E D . O R R 306 Sherman Avenue Allegheny, Pennsylvania Emily O s b o r n 4737 Kimbark Avenue Chicago, Illinois Helen E.Peck Peace Dale, Rhode Island ' it i f M 1 WELLESLEY COLLEGE ff A L I C E B . P H I L L I P S 362 South Franklin Street Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania Mabel T . Pierce 1389 Harrison Street Oakland, California 1 M Y R A F . P I N N E Y Valparaiso, Indiana Bertha D. Platt 32 Grove Hill New Britain, Connecticut Br- T ms: } Marion E. Potter 185 South Eleventh Street Newark, New Jersey T u c Y B . Proctor 33 Prospect Avenue Revere, Massachusetts M0 r. j- THE LEGENDA 59 Marian L . Proctor ; Prospect Avenue Revere, Massachusetts Sarah H.Prouty Brookfield, Massachusetts Nora E . P r y s e Beattvville, Kentucky- Helen L . u a l e Silver Creek, New York Mary G . Riley I7S4 S Street, N. W., Washington. District of Columl)ia Elsie L. Ring Ambler, Pennsvlvania ' T C 1 J i - ■r . 6o WELLESLEY COLLEGE Jeannette Risdon Ravenna, Ohio 4 W . Helen Rollins Ellsworth, Maine l-] L L A L . S A W V E R West Bovlston, Massachusetts Martha S c h e n c k 3015 Homer Boulevard . ' -■♦ ' ■it; - r- Denver, Colorado i rV, ' i? - A Sue F . S c H o o L F I E L D Danville, Virginia Anna M.Scott 6214 ' ayne Avenue Gerniantown, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania m THE LEGENDA 61 - K A T H E R I N E E . Sheridan Washington Street Wellesley Hills, Massachusetts Grace P . .Sherwood 128 West Twelfth Street New York, Mew York Grace W vS I M p s o N 1149 Wahiut Street Newton Highlands, Massachusetts Natalie A . Smith 55 Elliot Street Watertown, Massachusetts Florence B.Snow 41 Nixon Avenue New Dorchester, Massachusetts Caroline C. So utter 846 First Avenue Cedar Rapids, Iowa ' •LS fX % ' - ' --V V ' - ] 62 WELLESLEY COLLEGE 1 Edith H.Stearns feiiF ' - M 248 Home Avenue V Oak Park, Illinois J ' is? .5v Madeleine Steele 1525 Pearl Street Denver, Colorado mm Margaret 0. Stevens Clinton. Connecticut Alice W. Stockwell 23 Orkney Road Brookline, Massachusetts :i Faith H . T a l c o t t Talcottville, Connecticut Mary D.Tate 71 Chestnut Avenue Waterbury, Connecticut THE LEGENDA 63 Edna L. Taylor 627 Walnut Street McKeesport, Pennsylvania Elizabeth C. Taylor Rochester, New York Bertha J.Thayer 31 Sterling Street West Newton, Massachusetts Helen M.Thomas 1204 Eleventh Avenue Greely, Colorado Marion L Townsend 16 Pearl Street Glens Falls, New York Minnie H Troy g2 Vernon Street Worcester, Massachusetts % Hi: ' ' . ■' • t-ii if3 : 64 WELLESLEY COLLEGE Ella Tuttle 173 Great Plain Avenue Needham, Massachusetts Ss '  c. ?iJ Julia G.Tyler William and Mary College Williamsburg. Virginia Ethel L . V a u g h a x 628 Orville Avenue Kansas City, Kansas Helen L.Wales ' Am . km am Stoughton, Massachusetts . ' ' } ' ' 1- ' Gertrude M. W.are S. Eleanor Warner Montrose, Pennsvlvania Hingham, Massachusetts . ' ' ' ' } ' y j THE LEGENDA 65 Bertha S. Watson Long Hill, Connecticut Caroline L . ■e a t ii e r b e e 198 Broadway Bangor, Maine Margaret D . ' Webber 89 Lothrop Street Beverlv, Massachusetts F R A N CIS M . W E B S T E R I 2 Maple Street Auburn, New York 1 ' - 1. I Z A B E T H B . W E L T Y 612 East Grove Street Bloomington, Illinois H A R R I E T P) W H I T A K E R Tyngsborough. Massachusetts 1 .■.;i , - .- 66 WELLESLEY COLLEGE M I x ' N IE L . W H I) L E A X 26 Kellogg ' Street Westfield , Massachusetts Z o R A P . W I L K I X s Middleton, Massachusetti ' 1 . ' ' ' . Grace Woodbury 33 Summer Street Dorchester, Massachusetts v ' ' Ruth V.P.Young 801 Market Street Williamsjiort, Pennsylvania -mmf THELEGENDA 67 E n I T H L . B I. A X c 11 A R D 25 Dover Street Brockton. Mass. Helen E . C h . . i b e u l a i n 4,3 Hawkins Street Boston, Mass. J E N NM E R . L E . N O X 88 Prospect Avenue Milwaukee, Wis. M A K Y ( ) . M I L L E R 2y West Fourth Street Mt. Vernon, N. Y. W . Carey Noble Montclair New Jersey E U P n E M I A P. W O R T H I N G T O N 165 Pawlington Avenue Trov, N. Y. 68 WELLESLEY COLLEGE fin tmoitam DIED: FEBRUARY 6, 1 90 1 ' Knbcn maiftens aucb as Ibcstcr Mc Ubcir place 5c cannot well supply, Uboiigb vc ainonii a tbousanj tvv; IClitb vain cntcavcr. THE LEGENDA 69 jFormrr tul)nU0. 1904 Allen, Sara T. AuTEN, Sarah P. Babbitt, Helen Barret, Pansy E. Bartlett, Marv E. Beach, Bernardine Beemer, Alma G. Bergman, Edith B. Brown, Alice vS. Butler, Annie Chase, Helen B. Coleman, Leila Mc( -: CousE, Elizabeth A. • Crawford, Muriel B. Curtis, Grace F. Davis, Marion L. DiEHL, Edith I DWARDs, Hannah M Emery, Miriam A. -Evans, Florence F. Farnham, Grace Clare •Fernald, Josephine H. s5 Fowler, Charlotte S. Gano, Allene GiBBs, Natalie K. Haley, Adelaide Dartmouth, Mass. Princeville, 111. 415 Commeroial Trust Building, Jersey City, N. J. 3S6 Case Avenue, Cleveland, Ohio 1 1 Rocklifif Street, Woodfords, Maine iiQ Prospect Street, East Orange, N. J. Ridgemont, Yonkers, N. Y. 17 Jefferson Street, Freeport, 111. SiQ North Main Street, Rockford, 111. Wellesley, Mass. Brooklyn Terrace North Adams, Mass. 4552 Lake Avenue, Chicago, 111. Hamburg, Sussex County, N. J. Webster, Mass. Madison, N. J. 2oq Shurtleff Street, Chelsea, Mass. Brewster, N. Y. T32 West 12th Avenue, Emporia, Kan. 51 Glenbyron Avenue, Nyack, N. Y. 5qi Broadway, Everett, Mass. Linden Street, Wellesley, Mass. Needham, Mass. 205 Whaley Avenue, New Haven, Conn. Dallas, Texas 25 Slater Avenue, Norwich, Conn. Saco, Maine 70 WELLESLEY COLLEGE Hamblet, Ruth H. Harris, Jane Miller S Hasbrouck, Louise S. Haves, Jennie A. -:-v Heaford, Ethel V. jHili., Lucia C. •liiLi., M. Elizabeth - ' HiLLMAN, Elizabeth G. HiNKLEY, Laura E. iHowe, Esther L. •Hyde, Ethel (L S, tNGHAM, Marion A. Johnson, Alice M. ■Sn Jones, Katherine Keen. Mary B. Kilbourne, Henrietta Knight, Altav J. Kramer, Car(h,y U. Lamb, I ' lorence C. Lamb. Lnuisi: Lank, Susan ! . Latham, lM)rrn I L Long, Bertha M. Long, Susie M. Lynde, Alta E. McCoy, Margaret E. McMahonr, Florence E. J Marshall, Alicic L Martin, Anna M. iT ' Mav, Maude R. Moodie, Helen Y. - Miller, Anastasia I 20 Feileral Street, Salem, Mass. Bellefonte, Pa: 108 Crescent Park, Ogdensburg, N. Y. Gonic, N. H. 3634 Vernon Avenue, Chicago, IlL 59 Broad Street, Westfield, Mass. 508 Crawford Street, Boone, Iowa 13 1 8 Chicago Avenue, Evanston, IlL 217 Freeman Avenue, Luverne, Minn. West Coxsackie, N. Y. 171 Hancock Street, Cambridge, Mass. 1413 Arch Street, Allegheny, Pa. 38 Summer Street, St. Johnsbury, Vt. New St. Charles Hotel, New Orleans, La. Delaware, Ohio 927 .Su])erior Street, Racine, Wis. Cleveland, N. Y. I 151 Logan . ' venue, Denver, Colo. Lawrence Avenue, Charlotte, Mich. Hadley, Mass. Care of U. R. Holbrook, Pucbhi, Colo. 320 East Lawrence A -cnue, Charlotte, Midi. 36 Clinton Street, Penn Yan, N. Y. 244 Main Street, Melrose, Mass. 317 East Mulberry Street, Lancaster, Ohio J 4 Jefferson Street, Worcester, Mass. 150 Newtonville Avenue, Newton, Mass. 268 Highland Avenue, Fall River, Mass. 514 Washington Avenue, Scranton, Pa. 222 West Jefferson Street, Dayton, Ohio Versailles, Kv. THE LEGENDA 7 ' MuRKLAXD, Ethel S. 64 Johnson Street, Lynn, Mass. ■, Neal, Minnie E. 2 Fairmont Street, Lawrence, Mass. NiLES, Emma F. Norwood, Mass. Packard, Emma S. 100 Prospect Street, Brockton, Mass. ■- T.Parsgns, Florence R. 1228 Corona Street, Denver, Colo.  Patrick, Cordelia D. 24 Woodland Park, Chicago, 111. - .q Poole, Eldora M. Sharon, Mass. ' Raeder, Louise 1745 Asbury Avenue, Evanston, 111. i Renard, -Helen 4463 Westminster Place, St. Louis, Mo. -T ' Rhodes, Louise u Hillside Avenue, Winsted, Conn. .Richards, Gertrude A. 1932 Green Street, Philadelphia, Pa. ' Riker, Sara S. 83 Lincoln Park, Newark, N. J. « Ripley. Olive P. 84 Johnson Avenue, Newark, N. J. RoBSON, Olive Wellesley Hills, Mass. ••Ross, Gertrude C. 819 Park Avenue, Beloit, Wis. Russell, Julia 81 Surrey Street, Brighton, Mass. Sanford, Alice I. West Torrington, Conn. C Scudder, S. Agnes Linden, Md.  Sheldon, Alice P. Peace Dale, R. I. Sperry, Elizabeth Mount Vernon, Ohio Walker, Mary Elizabeth Westboro, Mass. Weatiierbee, Emma E. 85 Burncoat Street, Worcester, Mass. Westcott, Hester Hopedale, Mass. Whitsett, Winnifred Carthage, Mo. • Willis, Elsie Lakeville, Mass. Windram, Muriel E. Willis, Mass. Died THELEGENDA 73 3inuor Cla00 President LOUISE P. GREENE V i c e - P r c s i d c II i ELIZABETH L e B . M A R S T O N R c c o r d i n p_ Secretary JOSEPHINE DIBBLE Corresponding Secretary OLIVE LEE CHAPMAN Treasurer MABEL A. SEAGRAVE dcEtutitoE Committee AbbieCondit Edith M. Kingsbury Maria L. Dowd j¥lvs. BooIcp s l tc i)S on J inctccu JFilic 1 HEARD somewan say, remarked Mrs. Hennessey, that th ' cla-a-as iv Nineteen Foive was th ' most remar-r-rkahle ela-a-as th ' college had i ' er seen. ' Twas a Junior that told ye, said Mrs. Dooley. How did ye know it? asked Mrs. Hennessey. To follow th ' method iv my freind Sherlie Holmes, t ' was this way I dejuced th ' fact. First, th ' cla-a-as iv Ninteeen Foi -e thinks it is re-mar-r-rkable. Second, nawbody else does. Thir-r-rd, it seems t ' be betther for-r-m t ' use th ' pronunciation Rcnayc ' nce thin Rinnyzawnce; though I prefer the latther, ' tis so Frinchy. Considheriii ' all these facts, ye will see at once whv 1 knew ' twas a Junior that told ye that. But, said Mrs. Hennessey, phwat does th ' Rinnyzawnce have t ' do wid it? Th ' Rinnyzawnce, replied Mrs. Dooley, was th ' time whin conthractors was puttin ' up new tiniments at a remar-r-rkable rate. Durin ' th ' Dar-r-rk Ages, people had been li dn ' in cells like th ' rooms on first floor College Hall, only not cjuite so bad. 1 niver continded that th ' like iv thim cud be found in anny age iv th ' wurrld. 1 think wan shud be presarved in alcohol fr future ginerashins. But this fall, whin me eye lit wid pride an ' joy, an ' me bosom heaved (I had a THE LEGENDA 75 cold) — as I ga-a-iized upon th ' corpulent for-rm iv th ' Noanitt squattin ' upon its wooded lawn, I said to mesilf, ' Tis th ' Rinnyzawnce! ' But I don ' t see, said l lrs. Hennessey, phwat that has t ' do wid Nine- teen ] ' ' oi -c. I will not throul)le, replied Mrs. Dooley, t ' thrace tli ' perfictly obvayous conniction between th ' two. But t ' discuss th ' startlin ' career iv Nineteen Foive. Ye think ' tis remar-r-rkable? Yis, said Mrs. Hennessey, I do. Well, so do I, said Mrs. Dooley, Remar-r-rkable because a few convin- shins iv th ' College shtill totter feebly upon their foundashins. College Hall shtill wa-a-aves in th ' breeze, an ' th ' Dean is shtill Deanin ' . An ' yet an insig- nificant rimnent iv Nineteen Foive goes slinkin ' about th ' classic halls; not more thin half th ' faculty have retired to th ' chief glory iv Northampton, which is not Smith ' s College, an ' no public munlhcr has bean done. Ye may note, Mrs. Hin- nessey, that I am makin ' a noble eft ' rt t ' comb ixthra syll-bles out iv me jiure but too aysil ' intill ' -g ' -ble English. In th ' coorse i ' time, 1 may, wid constant practice, be able to subshtitute, almost widout physical ex irshin, tli ' name iv th ' domistic veg ' t ' ble iv commerce, which is a green subst ' nce, growin ' in cans, much favored be heads iv houses who have lost tli ' sinsation iv taste, apparentlv iv chimical nature, an ' ispicially fitted f ' r th ' ])alatc iv tli ' gintle liilly-goat, f ' r tli ' past part ' - c ' ]ile iv th ' ' crl) ' to lie. ' Tliin, if Hi -in gi ' es me a longer ter-r-rm iv life thin is ginir-lly here our porsliin, I li()])c t ' say wid a modest air, upon me ditli-bed, ' Ayether I must rayco -er or nycther th ' cla-a-s iv Nineteen Foive nor th ' New Heatin ' Pla-a-ant nor th ' Pathron Saint iv College Hall luncheons, who needs shtirrin ' uji occasion ' Uy f ' r I think she ' s absent-minded, will be able t ' get the worrds iv lielp an ' comfort, iv well-earned pra-aise or gentle admonishin, which they have come to rely upon. ' Whin did ye advise th ' cla-a-as iv Nineteen Foive? asked Mrs. Hennessey. Mrs. Hinnessey, replied Mrs. Dooley, fr ' m th ' time that modhest, shrink- in ' cla-a-as insinuated itsilf into th ' college grounds, melted silently into its hovels in th ' village, me eye was upon thim. ' Here, ' says I t ' mesilf, ' is a timid flow ' ret which needs, ' I says, ' t ' be dhragged, though aginst its will, ' I says, ' into th ' cold Ijath iv fa-a-ame. Some day, ' says I, ' they will thank me f ' r it, ' says I, ' though it 76 WELLESLEY COLLEGE br-r-reaks me hear-r-rt t ' wipe th ' look iv cherubic unconsciousness, iv ques- tionin ' child-like innosince fr ' m their young fa-a-ces, ' I says, ' an ' arrange in its pla-a-ace th ' expreshun with which they are now clothed, th ' bored an ' cynical shmile, the broodin ' brow, lined with cares, though phwat ' tis lined wid on th ' inside I can not say — paddin ' t ' judge fr ' m such iv their recitashuns as I have heard. ' So, wid me accustomed humility, I reshtrained mesilf wid difficulty fr ' m knockin ' thim down an ' sthampin ' on thim, whin, be night an ' be day, be bands iv twinty, be platoons an ' be hordes they put t ' me, in me bran ' new, patent lither, hand-sewed Soph ' more dignity, not quite broke in yit, an ' hur-r-rtin ' me cor-r-ms most hijis, th ' old, old quistion — ' twill be somewan ' s theme in glory — ' Are ye a Freshman? ' ' Are ye sure ye know th ' wa-a-ay t ' Tupelo? ' ' Sh ' ll I show ye how to get t ' th ' Dean ' s office? ' Phwat did ye do t ' thim? asked Mrs. Hennessey. Most iv thim was only maimed, replied Mrs. Dooley, an ' th ' rest lingered a good while. I was a Soph ' more thin. Now I have lost me spir ' t, an ' reply to sich quistions, ' No, not yit — Are you? ' ' I think p ' rhaps be consultin ' me ma-a-ap I c ' n find out. ' ' Th ' Dean ' s office? Who ' s th ' Dean? I thought Misther E. Or ' n Perkins had sole char-rge iv th ' gr-rounds. ' But, t ' deal justly an ' imparsh ' Uy wid Nineteen Foive, I do not think anny cla-a-as has come widin long distance shot iv thim in th ' matther iv that broad an ' plisint way t ' learnin ' — curios ' ty. In thim th ' thrait grew to such remar- r-rkable diminshins that room cud not be shpared f ' r such unniscssssssry things as math ' matical diminstra-ashins, details concer-r-rnin ' th ' lowly cricket an ' th ' blithe grasshopper, or th ' thrite an ' wearyin ' comma, capital an ' parrygraft. This, though by Tree Day a lar-r-rge extinshin, more ginirous than that iv Nor ' mbega, had been — bean, I mane — added, be ordher iv th ' Acadimic Council and Trustees, t ' th ' cra-a-aniums iv th ' intire cla-a-as. These they used t ' shtow awa-a-ay th ' fir-r-rm convicshin concer-r-rnin ' playin ' car-r-rds that, t ' me horror, seemed at that time t ' be their chief subjic iv thought. Phwat kind iv homes, Mrs. Hin- nessey, kin they have come fr ' m? Lasht year, their growth wint on along th ' sa-a-ame line. Another cranial extinshin ' in the sha-a-ape iv a cupo-o-o-la was added to prevint ixplosions iv hot air. A double share iv athlitics was required THELEGENDA 77 by th ' Acadimic Council, as it was feared that anny mintal iffort might be dis- asthmus, an ' this pra-a-actice resulted in their winnin ' th ' all-round champeen- ship. That was th ' la-a-ast shtraw, an ' another cranial addishin bein ' impossible, th ' shtrain began t ' tell on thim, an ' be Tree Day it was plain t ' all that their minds were seryously afficted. We will dhraw th ' veil iv char ' ty over this pain- ful scene. Besides, I have threated it fully befure. This vear-r-r, their curios ' ty bein ' some what satisfied, I have sthrong hopes that th ' extinshins will be onniscccccccery, f ' r a coorse in English XV wud chasten th ' pride iv annythin ' human. ' Tis th ' most pra-a-actical coorse in college, Mrs. Hinnessev, an ' I think more attinshin shud be paid t ' ut in th ' Cat ' log, wid a notice somethin ' like this: — ' English 15 — A coorse warranted to remove all self- isteem widin two weeks afther takin ' . ' Haughty orathors wid enlarged skulls who wint in in Siptimber come out in June wid a disinclinashin to speak onless they are shpoken to, an ' thin say nawthin ' onniscccccery. Oh, ' twill be rare trainin ' f ' r Nineteen Foive! Thin, there ' s philosophy, too, that gives ye that gone feeling in yeer head. That ' ll be good f ' r thim. Did ye ivir have ut yerself ? asked Mrs. H. Th ' quistion is too personal, said IMrs. Doole -. 1 was speakin ' iv Nineteen Foive. THE LEGENDA 79 nszo gssz Cla00 of 1905 Abbott, Marie L. Allen, Mary B. Baker, Winifred C. Ball, Edith Preble Bartlett, Hazel A . Beck, Florence E. Bishop, Mabel BosTwicK, Juliette C. Bradford, Ruth P. Breck, M. Alice Brooks, Rachel B. Brown, Helen L. Brown, Isabel C. Bruce, Clara H. Brunquist, Hattie L. Buchanan, Alice V. g6 Joralemon Street, Brooklyn, N. Y. 41 Sagamore Street, Lynn, Mass. Wellesley Hills, Mass. 214 Windemere Avenue, Wayne, Pa. Thomson, Ga. 213 Forster Street, Harrishnrg, Pa. 899 Myrtle Avenue, Bridgeport, Conn. 307 Court Street, Janesville, Wis. 22 Carson Street, Dorchester, Mass. 605 Washington Avenue, Scranton, Pa. Amlierst, Mass. 27 Elm Street, Penacook, N. H. 84 Pleasant Street, Woburn, Mass. 72 Woodland Street, Worcester, Mass. 8 Holden Street, Attleboro, Mass. 1023 South 2gth Street, Omaha, Neb. 8o WELLESLEY COLLEGE Button, Helen R. Calhoun, Emma M. Camp, Elizabeth L. Cantieny, Florence Champney, Bessie C. Chapman, Olive L. Chase, Clara S. Chipman, Ruth L. Clause. Alice E. Cole, Elizabeth Collier, Maude W. CoNDiT, Abbie H. Conway, Marion Cook, Helen I). CouiLLARD, Ada S. Cowan, Lena L. Crane, Henrietta M. Crosby, Ruth vS. Curry, Rachel CuRTiss, Lucy S. Cushing, Katharina B. Daniels, Helen L. Darling, Blanche M. Dewey, Olive C. Dibble, Josephine Oilman, Clara A. DowD, Maria L. Eaton, Gertrude F. Eaton, Jane S. 6350 Germantown Avenue, Philadelphia, Pa. 23 West Willis Avenue, Detroit, Mich. Seymour, Conn. 1306 2d Avenue South, Minneapolis, Minn 874 Case Avenue, Cleveland, Ohio 102 1 gth Avenue, East Oakland, Cal. 21 Fuller Street, Brockton, Mass. Hotel Hamilton, Brockton, Mass. 37 Thorn Street, Sewickley, Pa. g6o Boyden Road, Columbus, Ohio Kinderhook, N. Y. 34 Lincoln Street, East Orange, N. J. Lansdowne. Pa. 100 Park Street, Montclair, N. J. 330 West 85th Street, New York, N. Y 40 Highland Avenue, Waterljury, Conn. Montclair, N. J. 590 High Street, West Medford, Mass. 1308 Judson Avenue, Evanston, 111. Warren, Conn. Magoun Avenue, Medford, Mass. Douglas Road, Glen Ridge, N. J. West Hartford, Conn. Toulon, 111. Marshall, Mich. 51 High Street, Geneva, N. Y. 76 Berkeley Avenue, Orange, N.J. North Bend, Neb., R. F. D. R. I. Care of Rev. Russell Eaton, Urbana, Ohio THE LEGENDA 8i ECKMAN, JeANNETTE EisENBERG, Lucy Ellison, Ida L. Emerson, Mabel E. Farmer, Helena E. D. Felmly, Amy Field, Mary Fisher, Gertrude H. Fisher, Grace E. Folger, Ethel H. Foss, Harriet A. Francisco, Ruth E. French, Luna K. Fulton, Elizabeth Gage, Nina D. Gallup, M. Berenice Gibbs, Esther P. Gillespie, Mary H. Gilpin, Caroline E. Glancy, Anna Estelle Goodman, Myrtle S. Gordon, Mable R. Green, Clara B. Greene, Louise P. Greene, Ruth Grover, Bessie C. Gurlitz, Amy L. Hainer, Julia Hall, Edith R. 1509 Giliiin Avenue, Wilmington, Del. 842 Clinton Avenue, South, Rochester, N. Y. 1 03 8 Euclid Avenue, Cleveland, Ohio 109 South Broadway, Lawrence, Mass. 267 Orange Road, Montclair, N. J. 116 Orchard Street, Newark, N. J. Denistable Road, Nashua, N. H. 154 Pleasant Street, Attleboro, Mass. 154 Pleasant Street, Attleboro, Mass. 29 Summit Road, Medford, Mass. Wakefield, N. H. Caldwell, N. J. Wellesley Hills, Mass. 15 Central Park, West, New York, N. Y. 22 West 47th Street, New York, N. Y. Marshall, Mich. 108 West Main vStreet, Norwalk, Ohio 5226 Westminster Place, Pittsburg, Pa. Newfoundland, Wayne County, Pa. S3 Cushing Street, Waltham, Mass. Room So Union Block, Seattle, Wash. Brackenbury Lane, Beverly, Mass. 605 Christian Street, Shreveport, La. 17 Bernice Avenue, Woonsocket, R. L Waterford, N. Y 73 Bay Street, Glens Falls, N. Y. 109 Clark Street, Brooklyn, N. Y. Aurora, Neb. 587 Lafayette Avenue, Brooklyn, N. Y. 82 WELLESLEY COLLEGE Hall, Jessie D. Halsev, Bess C. Hamblen, Anna W. Hamilton, Corinne F. Hardison, Matie L. Hardman, Elisabeth Haulenbeek, Ruth HiBBARD, Laura A. HiLLERY, Cora M. HoGAN, Cora J. HoLDEN, Elizabeth S. HoLLicK, Eleanor A. Holmes, Edna D. HoNEYMAN, Maud L. HoUGriTON, CeCILE F. Hubbs, Nellie A. Humphrey, Flora L. Humphrey, Grace C. Hunter, Bonnie M. Jacobs, May L. Jefferis, Helen LaD Johnson, Grace A. Johnston, Helen M. JuDKiNs, Frances M. Kast, Bessie E. Kellogg, Elizabeth Kelly, Mary E. Kimball, Crete M. rS2o Princess Street, Wilmington, N. C. North Paterson, N. J. East Lexington, Mass. 532 Morris Avenue, Elizal)eth, N. J. Abbott Road, Wellesley Hills, Mass. 47 Montana Street. North Adams, Mass. Walton, Delaware County, N. Y. 271 Oakwood Boulevard, Chicago, 111. 207 Sigourney Street, Hartford, Conn. 4560 Pine Street, St. Louis, Mo. 222 Cumberland Street, Portland, Maine New Brighton, Staten Island, N. Y. 162 Clifton Avenue, Campello, Mass. 54 Grove Street, Plainfield, N. J. ig Oak Avenue, Worcester, Mass. 364 Jefferson Avenue, Brooklyn, N. Y. 265 West Main Street, New Britain, Conn. 725 South 7th Street, Springfield, Mass. 5125 Jefferson Avenue. Chicago, 111. 253 Collins Street, Hartford, Conn. 220 Windermere Avenue, W ayne, Pa. 156 West Canton Street, Boston, Mass. 603 Washington Street, Wellesley, Mass. Cragin P. O., Chicago, 111. 133 1 Susfjuehanna Street, Harrisburg, Pa. 64 Court Street, Plattsburg, N. Y. Saltsburg, Pa. The Jenkinson, Rochester, N. Y. THELEGENDA 8, ! KiNGSBURV, I DiTH M. 589 Beacon Street, Boston, Mass. Knight, Sally G. S73 West Ferry Street, Buffalo, N. Y. Knowlton, Edith J. 6223 Lawnton Street, Roxborough, Philadelphia, Pa. Knowlton, Jessie L. West Acton, Mass. Knox, Antoinette Conklin, N. Y. Knox, Grace D. 14 Chestnut Street, Auburn, N. Y. Leonard, Elizabeth E. 569 East 51st Street, Chicago, 111. Little, Eva F. Burlington, Iowa Little, Margaret Colton, Cal. LbDwicK, Eugenie Mississippi Glass Co., Main and Angelica Streets, St. Louis, Mo. Loos, Louise M. 132 Salem Avenue, Dayton, Ohio Lovejoy, Mary E. 64 Broad Street, Lynn, Mass. McCague, Eliza J. 409 Morewood Avenue, Pittsburg, Pa. McCague, M. Katharine 409 Morewood Avenue, Pittsliurg, Pa. McCuRDY, Lena J. 206 Washington Avenue, Wyoming, Ohio McIntyre, J. Louise Hillside Street, Milton, Mass. Mackie, Mary M. 47 Lansing Street, Utica, N. Y. Mainhardt, Florence 13 12 Cherry Street, Kansas City, Mo. Manchester, Ellen R. 13 Newport Avenue, Newport, R. I. Marston, Elizabeth LeB. 12 10 Ash Street, San Diego, Cal. Martin, F ' lorence A. 268 Highland Avenue, Fall River, Mass. Maxwell, Janet 372 Castle Street, Geneva, N. Y. Miller, Emma H. 309 East 7th Street, Plainfield, N. J. MiLLiKEN, Marie H. 305 Winebiddle Avenue, Pittsburg, Pa. Moody, Lallie J. Sylvan, Texas Morrow, Marie J. 17 West S4th Street, New York, N. Y. Morse, Ethel A. 9 Whittemore Street, West Roxbury, Mass. Muzzy, Adrienne F. 47 Prospect Place, Bristol, Conn. H WELLESLEY COLLEGE Nelson, Carolyn P. Nevin, Olive A. Newhall, Eliza B. Noble, Katharine N. Norton, Helen R. Orvis, Edna M. Parlin, Marion L. Pflaum, Rachel W. Philipps, Mary O. Phipps, Gertrude E. Pinkham, Annie W. Potter, Helen F. PoYNTER, Juliet J. Quirk, Anna M. Reed, Sally A. Reynolds, Roby Jessie Richardson, Mary C. RicKER. Ethel A. Risley, Florence Robertson, Helen L. de Rochemont, Ruth Rockwell, Julia C. Rollins, Harriet Ryan, Bertha E. Sawyer, Helen A. ScANLiN, Marguerite K. Seagrave, Mabel A. Seward, Marie L. Warrenton, Va. 6i8 Aiken Avenue, Pittsburg, Pa. 74 Broad Street, Lynn, Mass. Easthampton, Mass. 411 Main Street, Burlington, Vt. Equinox House, Manchester, Vt. 4 Lincoln Street, Natick, Mass. 441 Maple Avenue, Edgewood, Pittsburg, Pa. Welsh Hills, Newark, Ohio 31 Vinson Street, Dorchester, Mass. 79 Winthrop Avenue, Wollaston, Mass. 834 North East Street, Indianapolis, Ind. Shelbyville, Ky. 8 Court Street, Natick, Mass. Verona, N. J. 217 Seymour Street, Syracuse, N. Y. Castine, Maine 19 Boyd Street, Newton, Mass. Winchester, Mass. Ridley Park, Delaware County, Pa. Portsmouth, N. H. East Windsor Hill, Conn. Ellsworth, Maine 218 Wyoming Street, Syracuse, N. Y. Littleton, Mass. 1024 West Lehigh Avenue, Philadelphia, Pa. Occidental Hotel, Seattle, Wash. 73 Cottage Street, Melrose, Mass. THE LEGENDA  5 SiLLCOX, Georgin ' a W. Small, Frances C. Smith, Agnes H. Smith, Olive B. W. Spence, R. Ethel Squier, Cora B. Stansfield, Marian Steane, Jessie S. Stearns, Alice A. Stoddard, Abbie O. Stone, Isabelle Strohm, Edna P. Sullivan, Ethel V. Z. Summv, Edna Sykes, Maia R. Thomas, Helen Thomas, Laura P. Thrall, Miriam H. Towns END, Marv E. Tucker, Bessie H. Tufts, Hilda A. Tyler, Alma G. Venn, M. Florence Walcott, Ruth A. Waldo, Bertha Watson, Helen Waxham, Ethel P. Welsh, Laura A. Joy Street, New Brighton, N. Y. Addison, Maine 8 Mellen Street, Cambridge, Mass. 203 2d Street, Jeannette, Pa. Rockland, Mass. 233 Lincoln Street, Worcester, Mass. 15 Walker Avenue, Troy, N. Y. 2Q Collins Street, Hartford, Conn. Centre Lovell, i Liine 120 High Street, Belfast, Maine Needham, Mass. 702 vSouth Richard Street, Joliet, 111. Montclair, N. J. 1935 Oakdale Avenue, Chicago, 111. 26 Cherry Street, North Adams, Mass. 40 Mather Street, Dorchester, Mass. O. S. U. Grounds, Columbus, Ohio 71 Dwight Street, New Haven, Conn. 432 Westminster Street, Elizabeth, N. J. Wellesley, Mass. Wolfville, Nova Scotia Exeter, N. H. 911 Oak Street, Indianapolis, Ind. 260 Main Street, Hudson, Mass. 1S34 5th Avenue, Troy, N. Y. Weymouth, Mass. I go I East Colfax Avenue, Denver, Colo. 26 Blossom Street. Welleslev, Mass. 86 WELLESLEY COLLEGE Wells, Emily P. Wells, Gladys Wenner, Blanche H. Wentz, Zella Williams, Gertrude E. Wilson, Kate G. WoLFsoN, Flora J. Wood, Agnes R. Woodruff, Florence Woodward, Sarah J. Young, Anna M. Zimmermann, Juliet P. Kingston, R. I. Melbourne, Fla. Pacific Hotel, Ogden, Utah Aurora, Neb. 4 Orne Street, Worcester, Mass. i(;7 Ewing Avenue, Station A, Dallas, Texas 3032 Ferra Avenue, Kansas City, Mo. Milbank, S. D. 300 Richard Street, Joliet, 111. 172 North Main Street, Concord, N. H. 37 Crescent Avenue, Newton Centre, Mass. New Bedford, Mass. THELEGENDA 87 )opI)omort CIa06 President T, O U I vS E MARION B O S W O R T H Vice - Preside n t MARY J . G I D L E Y Recording S e c r c t a r y ELLEN COPE Corresponding S e c r et a r y MARION STEPHEN vS ON T r e a s ii r e r RUTH L . GOODWIN € ;ecatt )t Committee Sara E . E u s t i s Georgia Harrison Alice C. Ames JFactotnme H. I GUISE Curtis Emma Danforth S8 WELLESLEY COLLEGE ffc?oxu t|)t lucrt f a got its i ame IN the High and Far-OfF Times, O Best Beloved, there were no peo- ple on this earth, only flowers, lots and lots of flowers who lived in a Great Big Beautiful Garden, called Wellesley Garden. It was a very large Garden and most ' ceptionally handsome, because you see, Best Beloved, the beautiful flowers wouldn ' t have cared to live in it, if it had not been very nice indeed. And such flowers — Big-Crim- son-Hot-House-Roses and Modest-But-Self- Respecting- Violets (you must not forget the Modesty, Best Beloved, because t iey never did), and Gorgeous-Yellow-Pansies with their Green, Green Leaves. Now all these beautiful flowers lived together very happily in the Great Big Garden, only sometimes the Modest-But-Self-Respecting- Violet used to get a little lonely, because you know, Best Beloved, when three are playing together, sometimes one gets a little left out. Now the Big- Crimson-Hot-House-Rose and the Gorgeous-Yellow-Pansy with the Green, Green Leaves, were both bright and dashing flowers, not a bit like the Modest-But-Self-Respecting-Violet ( you must not forget the Modesty, Best Beloved), and so they did not care so much for her as for each other. So sometimes the Violet used to be very lonely indeed and she would wander ofl- ' to the gates of the Garden, looking out into the Great, Wide, Unknown Place and wishing for another flower to come and live in the Garden and be her own dear play-mate. One day, she was very ' ceptionally lonely, for the Big-Crimson-Hot-House- THELEGENDA 89 Rose had said with great ' ceptionally chilling emphasis, It is my im- pression, my dear quiet but quite sophisticated Violet, that there is, at times, a most overwhelming redundancy, and that two is an ample suffi- ciency. Therefore I shall seriously devote myself to our golden-hearted friend (and by this. Best Beloved, she meant the Pansy), and will per- manently be regardless of your future career. This is the way Big- Crimson-Hot-House-Roses always talk. So the Violet was very lonely, indeed she felt so very badly th;it she didn ' t at first notice a New-Little-White-Little-Flower growing up right beside her, till she heard a wee little voice say, Are you a New Little Flower, too? (and by this, O Best Beloved, she meant what they call a Freshman in Colleges). That is the way that New Little Flowers always talk. Oh, said the Modest-But-Self-Respecting-Violet very politely, for you see the Violet was a very polite flower indeed, You must be my own very dear play-mate. What is your name? But the New-Little- White-Little-Flower was very shy, and it only hung its pretty head and would not tell its name. This pleased the Violet very much, tor you remember, O Best Beloved, that the Violet was very Modest and did not like bright, dashing flowers like the Big- Crimson-Hot-House-Rose and the Gorgeous-Yellow-Pansy with the Green, Green Leaves. So she said, Come with me, dear New-Little- White-Little-Flower, and I will be your friend all the time you live in the Garden with the flowers. Then she led her to where the Big- Crimson-Hot-House-Rose was playing with the Gorgeous-Yellow-Pansy, and the Rose was very nice to the New-Little-White-Little-Flower, 90 WELLESLEY COLLEGE THIS i.s a i)icture of the garden where the Flowers used to play. The black figure at the left is the Modest-But-Self-Respect- ing-Violet. — You see how very shrinking and modest she is; in fact, you can hardiy see her at all. But a Violet is so hard to draw that I thought I couldn ' t get both sides alike. The white fig- ure in the middle is the New-Little-White-Little-Flower— You see she is very modest, too. That is why the Violet liked her, you remember. The two small figures in the mii.ldle are the Big-Crim- son-Hot-House-Rose, and the Gorgeous-Yellow-Pansy with the Green, !reen Leaves. It was very hard to make them distinct. Below the bie picture you see the little one? Those are roses peeping over the wall of the Gartfen. 1 think thej- re very pretty roses, don ' t you? I wish I could i aint them crimson, but they won ' t let me use paint, so you ' ll just ha e to imagine that they ' re red. 92 WELLESLEY COLLEGE because, you see, she was the oldest flower in the Garden, and the oldest must always be nice to the youngest, Best Beloved. But the Pansy was jealous of the New-Little-Flower and wasn ' t nice to her at all. But they could never Hnd out her name, for when they asked her she always hung her head and said she hadn ' t any name. One day there was a big celebration in the Garden and each of the flowers danced for all the other flowers, which was a tnost ' ceptionally pretty sight. The Big-Crimson-Hot-House-Rose dressed up in her very most velvety petals and the Gorgeous-Yellow-Pansy put on her Greenest, Greenest Leaves, and the Modest-But-Self-Respecting-Violet put on her most fluffy violet gown, but the New-Little- White-Little-Flower, Best Beloved, was the very prettiest of them all. She came tripping down to meet them in the most ' ceptionally beautiful, light blue gown with little bright flecks all over it like the sky when the stars have all come out. And she danced, Best Beloved, such a ' witching little dance, so that you felt you were in Fairyland just to see her. And when the New-Little- Flower danced by the Big-Crimson-Hot-House-Rose, her dress was so bright that the rose color was reflected in it, the most lovely ' witching rose; and when she danced by the Modest-But-Self-Respecting-Violet, the violet color spread all over her dress; and when she danced by the Gorgeous-Yellow-Pansy, the yellow shone on her like a fleece of gold. So that she wasn ' t a New-Little-White-Little-Flower any more, but a beautiful, tinted flower. Best Beloved, like all sweet peas are that you see to-day. And the Big-Crimson-Hot-House-Rose and the Modest-But- Self-Respecting-Violet and the Gorgeous-Yellow-Pansy with the Green, Green Leaves, all knelt down before her and said, You are not the New-Little-White-Little- Flower any more, but you are our beautiful THELEGENDA 93 Sweet-Prism-Dancer-from-the-Stars. But this was too long a name to call her every day, Best Beloved, so they called her Sweet-Pea, just for short. So now when you see a beautiful little flower. Best Beloved, with quite ' ceptionally ' squisite colors you will know that it is the Sweet- Prism-Dancer-of-the-Stars, and that is how the Sweet-Pea got its name. I 94 WELLESLEY COLLEGE IF you were a Little White Flower, That felt new and scared and small, When the big red Roses peered scornfull - Over the garden wall, And the giddy, bright Pansies looked ' stonished. And giggled, and said, Oh, no! When you asked, Will you kindly tell me If this is the way to go? Why, then. You see. You ' d be glad as you could be, If the Modest Young Violet said to you, Come on and play with me! If you were a little new F reshman, And awfully homesick, too. And were scared to death by the Seniors, And matched the Wellesley blue. And felt sure that Math would floor you. That Hygiene and English you ' d flunk. And you wished to goodness you ' d stayed at home And never liad packed your trunk Why, then, You see. You ' d be glad as you could be If a comf ' rt ' ble Junior should say to you, A common-sense Junior should say to you, An unreverend Junior should say to you, Come up and have some Tea! THE LEGENDA 95 HONOR BEFORE HONORS CIa06 of 1906 Abbott, Bonnie E. Adams, Josephine G. Ambrose, Clara E. Ames, Alice C. Andress, Grace Arnold, Laura Ashley, Kate W. Ayer, Harriet Babbitt, Edith D. Bai ' rd, Helen E. Ball, Mary H. Batty, Vena S. Bauman, Sarah S Berst, Ruth S. 109 Sacramento Avenue, Chicago, 111. Fryeburg, Maine South Byfield, Mass. 303 Putnam Avenue, Brooklyn, N. Y. Ridgway, Pa. Manchester-by-the-Sea, Mass. 5 Main Street Park, Maiden, Mass. 431 Main Street, Fitchburg, Mass. Akron, Ohio 201 East Water Street, Lock Haven, Pa. 14 Grant Street, Utica, N. Y. 399 Turner Street, Allentown, Pa. 709 Brown ' s Avenue, Erie, Pa. 96 WELLESLEY COLLEGE Bishop, Lucy C. BoswELL, Mary E. BoswoRTH, Louise M. BowTON, Henrietta P. BowERSocK, Margery Bradburn, Lotta R. Brooks, Lillian M. Burdick, Mabel A. Burlingame, Alice A. Cadwell, Mary Lee Callaway, Emilie H. Carey, Nellie G. Carlisle, Marion H. Carroll, Alice Carson, Marie A. Chandler, Isabelle Chase, Alice D. Chase, Annie G. Clark, Eva H. Clarke, Polly J. Connor, Elizabeth Coops, Myrtle F. Cope, Ellen Copeland, Katharine T. Copp, Florence A. 117 Marston Avenue, Eau Claire, Wis. 644 North 3 2d Street, Philadelphia, Pa. 623 Highland Avenue, Elgin, 111. 649 Pearl Street, Elizabeth, N. J. Lawrence, Kan. Woodlawn, Housatonic, Mass. 604 Pleasant Street, Worcester, Mass. 4 Harrison Street, Stapleton, L. L, N. Y. 52 Fountain Street, Worcester, Mass. 311 Altantic Avenue, Atlantic City, N. J. Westfield, N. J. 3918 Prairie Avenue, Chicago, 111. 61 Howe Avenue, Passaic, N. J. 403 Union Street, Nashville, Tenn. W oodlawn Inn, Pittsfield, Mass. Macoml), 111. Derry, N. H. 21 Fuller Street, Brockton, Mass. Sandwich, Mass. Middleboro, Mass. 1 1 16 9th Street, Des Moines, Iowa 33 White Street, Taunton, Mass. West Chester, Pa. 16 Fenno Street, Roxbury, Mass. Wolfeboro, N. H. THE LEGENDA 97 Crowl, Corin ' xa cummings, evaire h. Cummins, Anna M. Curtis, H. Louise Curtis, Mary F. Daley, Leoi.ine M. Danforth, Emma Dayton, Caroline W. Deane, Lotta L. DeBow, Emma G. De Lano, Louise C. Dickey, Frances R. . Dickinson, Alice H. Dickinson, Anna L. DoDSON, Florence E. Dow, Barbara R. Duncan, Grace E. Dwight, Laura M. Eckert, Bertha M. Edwards, Helen M. Ela, Helen H. Elliot, Helen J. Emerson, Mary E. Enos, Grace E. Eustis, Sarah E. Sterling, IlL iqS Metropolitan Avenue, Roslindale, Mass. Conneaut, Ohio SI I W. 8th Street, Plainfield, N. J. Westminster Depot, Mass. Menominee, Mich. 428 Norwf)oil Avenue, Buffalo, N. Y, 3020 Blaisdale Avenue, Minneapolis, Minn. 181 Temple Street, Fredonia, N. Y. 989 North sth Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Allegan, Mich. Oxford, Chester County, Pa. Oxford, Mass. 273 Main Street, Fitchburg, Mass. 3344 Rhodes Avenue, Chicago, 111. Sandwich, Mass. 131 West 3d Street, Duluth, Minn. 113 Chene Street, Detroit, Mich. 146 Magazine Street, Cambridge, Mass. 32 East Walnut Street, Titusville, Pa. 1006 Main Street, Grand Junction, Colo. Grafton, Mass. College Hill, Ohio 841 Washington Avenue, Denver, Colo. University Heights, New York, N. Y. 98 WELLESLEY COLLEGE Everett, Bernice J. E ' ERETT, Ethel M. EvERiTT, Elizabeth C. Farrar, Eleanor E. Fleming, Mary Flickinger, Edith FooTE, Florence R. Foster, Bertha F. Foster, Myra Fox, Estella C. Francis, J. Gertrude Freeman, Emily F ' . Gatch, Louise Gerhard, Charlotte GiDLEY, Mary J. GiLBREATH, OlIVE M. Gillespie, Amy H. GoDDARD, Elizabeth GOODALE, EmILIE E. GooDSPEED, Mary I Goodwin, Ruth L. Gould, Nell M. Graefe, Helen C Greene, Olive Franklin Falls, N. H. Franklin Falls, N. H. 842 Capital Avenue, North, Indianajiolis, Ind. Abington, Mass. Walton, N. Y. 916 4th Avenue, Council Bluffs, Iowa 28 Wannalancit Street, Lowell. Mass. 4 Hough Street, Dover, N. H. 1 107 West Sears Street, Denison, Texas L. Box 1525, Bradford, Pa. 81 Wolnirn Street, Reading, Mass. Wakefield, Mass. 2023 Kalorama Avenue, Washington, D. C. 1824 Longfellow BouL, St. Louis, Mo. North Dartmouth, Mass. La Plata, Mo. Copperhill, Polk County, Tenn. 205 East gth Street, Plainfield, N. J. 13 Mt. Auburn Street, Cambridge, Mass. St. Albans, Vt. 22 Boynton Street, Worcester, Mass. 339 Durrell Avenue, Wyoming, Ohio Columbus Avenue, Sandusky, Ohio 176 Beacon Street, Brookline, Mass. THE LEGENDA 99 Grimes, Zillah C. Grover, Alice M. GuiON, Connie M. GuRNEY, L. Antoinette Hadden, Alice H. Harper, Mary E. Harris, Dasa E. Harrison, Georgia Hartwell, Lottie H. T. Hatch, Grace E. Hawkridge, E. Winifred Heber, Alice E. Henderson, Grace S. Herold, P lorence Higman, Bertha Holder, Bertha L. Holmes, Lucy A. Holt, Carolyn R. Hughes, Martha J. Hunter, Olive Hutchinson, Ida James, Elsa D, Jenkins, Ruth L. Jennings, Florence B Jones, Catharine B. Knoxville, Pittsburg, Pa. i6 Grover Street, Lynn, Mass. 313 East 9th Street, Charlotte, N. C. 782 Ellis Street, San Francisco, Cal. 1670 Lexington Avenue, Cleveland, Ohio Otego, Otsego County, N. Y. Caldwell, Essex County, N. J, 38 Holland Avenue, Westfield, Mass. 145 West Willis Avenue, Detroit, Mich. 92 Beach Street, Maiden, Mass. 1003 Bonnie Brae Street, Los Angeles, Cal. r 28 North Rayen Avenue, Youngstown, Ohio 75 Congress Street, Newark, N. J. St. Joseph, Mich. 12 Park Street, West Lynn, Mass. 2424 Lydia Avenue, Kansas City, Mo. Berlin, N. H. 130 South Front Street, Wheeling, W. Va. 5125 Jefferson Avenue, Chicago, 111. 1207 Mulberry Street, Muscatine, Iowa 1105 Delaware Avenue, Buffalo, N. Y. Barre, Mass. 49 North 2d West Street, Salt Lake City, Utah Westgrave, Pa. lOO WELLESLEY COLLEGE Jordan, Ethel Keiser, Edith R. Kennedy, Helen L. KiLBORN, Myra C. Knox, Carrie L. Kraus, Florence E. KuEHNLE, Bertha L. Lape, Esther E. Legg, Jessie E. Lewis, Winifred Lincoln, Mildred F. Littlefield, Grace G. Locke, Ellen C. LoKER, L. Gertrude Long, Julia J. McAlpine, J. Irene McClelland, Myrtle G. McCoRMiCK, Florence H. McGregor, Janetta G. McHenry, Mary B. MacKinnon, Ella C. MacLellan, Edna L. McLennan, Alice McManus, Katharine R. MacMichael, Ethelwyn S. 419 North Court Street, Ottumwa, Iowa 1530 Mineral Spring Road, Reading, Pa. West New Brighton, Staten Island, N. Y. 353 Edgewood Avenue, New Haven, Conn. Vinton, Iowa 1340 Franklin Street, Philadelphia, Pa. 137 Livingston Avenue, New Brunswick, N. J. 6715 Lansdowne Avenue, Philadelphia, Pa. Adams, Jefferson County, N. Y. Rochester, Mass. 44 Heath Street, Somerville, Mass. Oguncjuit, Maine East Lexington, Mass. Cochituate, Mass. Avenue P and E. igth Street, Flatbush, N. Y. 16 Dennison Avenue, South Framingham, Mass. Findlay, Ohio 155 loth Street, Station A, Dallas, Texas 33 Allen Street, New Bedford, Mass. Jefferson, Ohio 626 Richmond Avenue, Buffalo, N. Y. 105 Park Street, Bridgeport, Conn. 3105 Calumet Avenue, Chicago, III. 14 Cochituate Street, Natick, Mass. 824 Sandusky Street, Allegheny, Pa. THE LEGENDA lOI MacMurray, Jessie A. Macomber, Bessie P. MacQueen, Alice E. Maltbv, Laura C. Mapes, Lucy Care of Marcy, Ida C. Marquand, Fannie E. Mather, M. Alice Mayxard, Elsie DeR. Meehan, Cecile R. Megee, Florence C. MiDDLETOx, Eliza E. Miller, Elizabeth M. MoFFETT, Clara L. Montgomery, Hazel G. Moore, Edna Moore, Elizabeth J, Morgan, Anna H. Morgan, Ethel G. Morrison, Ione P. Morrison, Lola M. MouLTON, Mary E. MuRRELL, Theresa Neal, Mary H. Nickelson, Mary E. Webster City, Iowa 9 West Britannia Street, Taunton, Mass. 19 South Twelfth Street, Philadelphia, Pa. 503 East Fifth Street, Jamestown, N. Y. Bonaventure Hotel, Independence Avenue, Kansas Citv, Mo. 448 West Second Street, Superior, Wis. 392 South Columbus Avenue, Mt. Vernon, N. Y. 112 Fort Hill Avenue, Lowell, Mas s. Erieville, N. Y. 1116 Pennsylvania Avenue, East St. Louis, 111. 4809 Baltimore Avenue, Philadelpiha, Pa. 205 South Austin Avenue, Oak Park, 111. Oxford, N. Y. 945 Grand Traverse Street, Flint, Mich. 16 Nevada Block, San Francisco, Cal. 829 Kensington Avenue, Plainfield. N. J. 1403 Sherman Avenue, Evanston, 111. New London, Conn. 108 Lake Terrace, Ocean Grove, N. J. 32 Seventh East Street, Salt Lake City, Utah 61 High Street, Newton, N. J. 704 Central Avenue, Dover, N. H. 2015 East Eighth Street, Kansas City, Mo. 45 North Fifth Street, Newark, Ohio Adams, N. Y. 102 WELLESLEY COLLEGE Ogden, Elizabeth G. Ohr, Lucetta T. Osgood, Bertha J. Parker, Ida R. Perkins, Mae A. PiLi.sBURY, Helen C. PiNKiiAM, S. Isabella PiTKiN, Elsie F. Pitman, Charlotte E. Porter, Helen B. Reber, Edna M. Reefy, Bessie C. Robinson, Clara M. RoLPH, Alice McC. St. George, Hilda C. St. John, Amelia Sampson, Claire Samuel, Sadie M. .Sargent, Ethel C. ScAM.viAN, Edith Schaefer, Sarah A. O. Schermerhorn, Helen Schwarz, Esther E. Scruggs, Theodora Segar, Helen 5 Mulberry Street, Middletown, N. Y. 1838 North Delaware Street, Indianapolis, Ind. Verona, Oneida County, N. Y. 807 .Washington Street, Dorchester, Mass. igy Douglas Avenue, St. John, N, B., Canada 73 Prospect Avenue, Milwaukee, Wis. 64 Nahant Avenue, Lynn, Mass. 234 East Avenue, Oak Park, 111. Laconia, N. H. 88 Elm Street, Montclair, N. J. 125 Union .Street, Wheaton, 111. 324 West 3d .Street, Elvria, Ohio Fort Edward, Washington Countv, N. Y. 230 Central Avenue, Fredonia, N. Y. 35 Lorillard Place, New York, N. Y. 51 West Maine .Street, Port Jervis, N. Y. 8 Bow Street, Taunton, Mass. 301 Oxford Street, Rochester, N. Y. Northborough. Mass. Saco, Maine 21 West Tulpehocken .Street, Germantown, Pa. 232 South 41st Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Highland Park, 111. 1500 McGavock Street, Nashville, Tenn. 6 Elm Street, Westerlv, R. I. THE LEGENDA 103 Seher, Amelia C. Seibert, Gertrude Serrat, Mary L. Shimer, Alma E. Shorrock, Edith L. Singleton, Caroline B Smalley, Ethel C. Smedley, Annette K. Smith, Lillian P. SoGY, Elizabeth F. Stearn, Mollie Steele, Catherine L. Stephens, Jean P. Stephenson, Marion Stiles, N. May Stimson, Eleanor K. Stoddart, Mary M. Stratton, Annie L. Sturtevant, Annie R. Sturtevant, Ethel G. Sturtevant, Faith B. Sylvester, Louise E. Tansom, Mary B. Taylor, Vera Thomas, Charlotte R. no Montclair Avenue, Newark, N. J. loi Newark Avenue, Bloomfield, N. J. 45 Crescent Avenue, Maiden, Mass. 135 West Maine Street, Middletown, N. Y. Westport, Mass. 1805 California Avenue, St. Louis, Mo. Bound Brook, N. J. 222 South Avenue, Bradford, Pa. Carmi, 111. 2905 Campbell Street, Kansas City, Mo. 1030 Case Avenue, Cleveland, Ohio 1525 Pearl Street, Denver, Colo. 629 East i8th Street, Minneapolis, Minn. 300 Stuyvesant Avenue, Brooklvn, N. Y. 18 Church Street, Great Barrington, Mass. 123 West 7th Street, Plainfield, N. J. 1393 East Main Street, Columhus, Ohio (iorhani, H. H. 18 Elliot Street, Cambridge, Mass. 749 Myrtle Avenue, Bridgejwrt, Conn. 832 Wilson Avenue, Ravenswood, Chicago, 111. 306 Webster Avenue, Scranton, Pa. Box 17 A, Middletown, Conn. Stre tor, 111. Wister Street, Germantown, Philadelphia. Pa I04 WELLESLEY COLLEGE Thompson, Ina G. Todd, Rhoda H. ToLLES, Edith M. Trovillo, Bessie Tryon, Dorothy Tucker, Emma G. TuTTLE, Florence P. Tyler, Ray M. VoLLAND, LeLIA Wagman, Grace M. Waldron, Mabel B. Walmsley, Alice F. Walrad, Anna Ware, Gertrude K. Warren, Jessie R. Watkins, Mary E. Wells, Helen M. T. Wheeler, Genevieve Wheeler, Gladys Whitaker, Catherine C. White, Helen L. Whiting, Ruth E. Whitney, Edith L. 202 School Street, Somerville, Mass. 47 East 2gth Street, New York, N. Y. ii6 Fairview Avenue, Naugatuck, Conn. Abingdon, Knox County, 111. Rumford, R. I. Wellesley, Mass. South Acton, Mass. 2560 Jefferson Avenue, Ogden, Utah 145 Madison Avenue, Grand Rapids, Mich. 44 Maple Avenue, Saratoga, N. Y. 38 Bering Street, Portland, Maine 119 Marston Avenue, Eau Claire, Wis. 13 Lincoln Avenue, Cortland, N. Y. 116 West Wayne Avenue, Wayne, Pa. iiS6 Courtland Hill, Bridgeport, Conn. Campbell, Steuben County, N. Y. WellsviUe, Ohio II 56 gth Street, Des Moines, Iowa Concord, Mass. Tyngsborough, Mass. 6 Gray Street, Portland, Maine 163 Halabird Avenue, Winsted, Conn. South Ashburnham, Mass. THE LEGENDA 105 WicKHAM, Marie C. Williams, Helen M. Williams, Ora M. Wilson, Bessie P. WooDARD, Ethel A. Yeates, M. Elizabeth Mattituck, Long Island, N. Y. Worcester, Mass. 112 Babcock Street, Brookline, Mass. 36 Washington Street, Beverly, Mass. Richmond, Ind. 319 West Main Street, Norwich, Conn. Arri VED Septe MBER 15 1903. IN Good Health AND Spi RITS An Infant D t:GHTER TO M RS. A. M ATER THE LEGENDA 109 5Sal)p Book BABY ' S HAIR September 18 — Baby is not read at all. Sweet P, being taken in to see her a moment, said at once — Why, Mamma! She ' s gween! September ig — Violet, Pansy and Sweet P were all taken in to see Baby. She gur- gled and smiled. When they sang some of their kindergarten songs to her, she clapped her little hands. She is so cunning ! I lO WELLESLEY COLLEGE -- i=u p— J = r September 20 — Baby was christened today, and behaved remarkably well. She seemed to V)e asleep most of the time. Grandma sent loads of flowers. We had such a hard time choosing her name, but I think we have finally hit upon a very good one — Freischa Severn. September 21 — Today Baby began to take notice. tWELLKSLET OLLECE. ftlcHI ' axa tunc wtLitaiCT Record maoe ai. the examination for admiSGion by English Rhetoric, Greek Gramaiar Corriposu ion. Prose Composition, Litpralure, A-J AjiabaBis, History Roman, (s i rf ' Iliad, i, Grecian, MinimiiRi, Engliih. Unitee States, French: Maxijrum, Algebra iuu. MiniiDUDi A, GeocLet-rj SiiM . Min-.Ts-n e. Latin: Prose ConpoBiiion, ' V. - German: Caesar, Mir.: rum A Cicero, HiniKum E. Vfrfiil, Chemistry, PKysics, Zoolcgy, L of Secretary THE LEGENDA III Wr ' hJii iiji ' ii ■■Mt . BABY ' S BASSINET We have a lovely new nursery fitted up in the very end of the east wing, as far as possible from the children ' s playroom. It is so pretty, that Violet begged to have her crib moved in there too. She is delighted with Baby. September 22 — Baby was out today in her go-cart. Violet objected to letting her use the old one. She said that every Baby that came. I promised she should have it for her dolls, but really, it is such a pretty little thing that I hate to throw it aside. Besides, Violet must learn to give up to the Baby, though she really has been very good to her. I 12 WELLESLEY COLLEGE September 23 — Baby is very quiet and lias not j ' et disturbed us by any yelling. She is an unusually large child and quiet as slie is seems almost to fill the house. September 25 — Godmother came to see Baby today, and Bal y did not make any fuss at all. She was as sweet as could be. All the children kept very quiet. Violet is very polite now. As Godmother left the room one day, she told Daughter that she should rise when older people did. The child has never forgotten it. She has instructed Pansy and Sweet P rigorously in their manners, so that Godmother thinks my children very polite now. September 26 — The children all clamored to have Batiy taken in her go-cart to the bani, where they love to play. She seemed very much pleased, though I think at first she was rather frightened. When the children started to play hide-and-seek, there seemed absolutely no place to put Baby where she would not be in the way. They were always tumbling over her. Sweet P ' s dignity was quite injured because Baby put her little hand out to her and said Ba-bee, quite distinctly. .Sweet P was very angry. She said, HowwidBaby! Sweet P ;ioi a baby any more! Sweet P a bid dirl now! THE LEGEND A 1 1 October 12 — Violet played with the Baby a long time toda5 but Baljv got cross and hungry as the afternoon waned and her bedtime drew near. I jjresume Violet S(jueezed her a little — unintentionally, of course. No ' EMBER I — Sweet P is jealous of the Baby, I think. She slapped her several times last week. Baby has a little temper of her own, evidenth , for she slapped back very promptly. I hope she is not going to take after Pansy in her disposition. Pansy is so hard to manage I think she has made me more trouble than the other two children put together. November 28 — Sweet P wanted to amoose Babv bv her own little self today, so I left them ([uite alone in the playroom, as I was busy. From the sounds I heard as I passed the door, they seemed to be enjoving themselves hugely. When I went in. Baby had both her little hands full of Sweet P ' s namesakes, and her tiny feet were waving in the air. Sweet P was quite ready to go to bed early. She said, as I tucked her in, 0 Mamma, Sweet P so tired! Her is such a bit baby! I do hope that thev will get along better than the rest of the children have. Pansy is alwavs _ 4- WELLESLEY COLLEGE snatcliint, ' Sweel P ' s playthings, ami Violet is inclincil to lic sliort-tciiij c ' rc(l with Pansy, who hates above all thinj s to be bossed by any one. DivCKMiiivU 7 — Pansy seems very devoted to the Baby. Perha])s the feeling of re- s])onsibility may improve her disposition. Today she took care of Baby all the after- noon, and really exerted herself to make her laugh and crow. Baby sat on her afghan and watched Pansy do her little kindergarten plays with great delight. , p THE LEGEND A 5 CIa0S of 1 907 Abercrombie, Esther G. vox AcH, Katharixe F. AcKERLV, Jennie B. Ad VMS, Bessie C. Adams, Olive L. Ai ' ken, Jean N. Alexander, Elizabeth M. Alexander, Mary B. W. Allex, Barbara Allen, Margaret P. 8 1 Providence Street, Worcester, Mass. i6i8 Park Avenue, Davenport, Iowa Northport, L. I. 408 North Main Street, Natick. Mass. 819 Marquette Building, Chicago, III. 151 South Centre Street, Bethlehem, Pa. 406 East Maiden Street, Washington, Pa. Clinton Avenue, New Brighton, N. Y. South McAlester, Indian Territory 30 Bowery Street, Akron, Ohio 1 i6 WELLESLEY COLLEGE Allen ' , Theresa A. Alley, Elisabeth B. Ash, Geneva L. Barbour, Esther H. Barklage, Edith A. Bascom, Louise R. Batchelder, Helen G. Bates, Helen W. Beale, Olive M. Bean, Josephine O. Beardslev, Eleanor M Bechtel, Gladys H. Bennett, Helen E. Bent, Addie H. Bentley, Helen E. Berry, Marian W. Besse, Florence F. Bickkord, Annie E. Biddle, Marie BiLLYARD, Louise Birge, Marguerite BixBY, Emma S. Blackmar, Helen M. Blaisdell, Ruth J. Bowman, Grace D. South McAlester, Indian Territory 320 Chestnut Street, West Newton, Mass. 1 21 5 Jackson Street, Anderson, Ind. 12 EUery Street, Cambridge, Mass. 5130 Morgan Street, St. Louis, Mo. 38 West 5th South Street, Salt Lake City, Utah Hillside, Ameshury, Mass. Braintree, Mass. Hanover, Mass. 746 7th Street, Buffalo, X. Y. 3621 Walnut Street, Kansas City, Mo. 303 Ridgewood Avenue, Minneapolis, Minn. 1757 D Avenue, Cedar Rapids, Iowa 4 Marion Terrace, Brookline, Mass. Pulaski, N. Y. 486 Norfolk Street, Dorchester, Mass. 29 Ingersoll Grove, Springfield, Mass. 120 West Main Street, Lock Haven, Pa. Fountain Springs, Pa. Church Street, Wellesley, Mass. 98 Bellevue Avenue, Bristol. Conn. 13 Portland Place, St. Louis, Mo. I 7 19 Park Avenue, Minneapolis, Minn. Manchester-by-the-Sea, Mass. 1875 Roscoe Street, Chicago, 111. THE LEGENDA 117 BoxRUD, Helen M. Boyle, Helen Bradfield, Maude C. Bradt, Alice H. Brady, Catherine E. Brenxeman, Mariana H. Brenneman. Mary E. Bridgens, Elizabeth L. Briggs, Marion E. Brown, Hattie Browne, Eva G. Browne, Lillian Bruner, Marian E. Bryant, Florence G. bucher, rosana BuEHLER, Emma A. Burr, Minnie Burton, Sybil Buzby, Ella H. Cabell, Clara W. Cain, Ruth Callaway, Grace Campbell, Elsie Carothers, Ruth A. Carter, Caroline L. 57 6th East Street, Salt Lake City, Utah Manchester-by-the-Sea, Mass. Barnesville, Belmont County, Ohio 428 Westford Street, Lowell, Mass. 22 George Street, Norwood, Mass. Arroyo, Hancock County, W. Va. 321 Walnut Street, Harrisburg, Pa. 326 West Church Street, Lock Haven, Pa. Newton, Bucks County, Pa. 53 Duncan Avenue, Jersey City. N. J. 1225 Watchung Avenue, Plainfield, N. J. 58 Central Street, Bradford, Mass. 27 Arch Street, Akron, Ohio East Hartford, Conn. 516 5th Avenue, Altoona, Pa. 122 Monmouth Street, Newark, N. J. 9372 Longwood Avenue, Chicago, 111. 731 East Market Street, Janesville, Ohio 45 East Central Avenue, Moorestown, N. |. Rowland Hall, Salt Lake City, Utah 13 16 Kansas Avenue, Atchison, Kan. 691 Piedmont Avenue, Atlanta, Ga. Old Short Hills, Millbum, N. J. 146 South Fairmont Avenue, Pittsburg, Pa. Haverhill, Mass. ii8 WELLESLEY COLLEGE Castle, Elizabeth M. 6io Colonial Avenue, Norfolk, Va. Cate, Gertrude C. 176 Seaver Street, Roxbury, Mass. Clark, Florence Shannock, R. I. Clark, Lida 52 Washington Park, Newtonville, Mass. Clement, Laura 300 South Eastern Avenue, Joliet, III. CoBURN, Amy 23 Oread Place, Worcester, Mass. Cole, Marion L. 861 President Street, Brooklyn, N. Y. Collins, Anna G. 76 Howe Street, Wellesley, Mass. Comfort, Marian C. Cuernavaca, East de Morelos, Mexico Cooke, Jessie P. 679 Greene Avenue, Brooklyn, N. Y. CooMBE, Mary E. 1930 Bigelow Avenue, Mt. Auburn, Cincinnati, Ohio Couch, Caroline A., 19 Walnut Street, Taunton, Mass. Crane, Daphne 8 Ashland Street, Worcester, Mass. Crane, Elizabeth W. 92 Lincoln Avenue, Newark, N. J. Crawford, Annie L. 1901 Mt. Vernon Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Crawford, Marian Montclair, N. J. Dakin, Margaret 90 Pond Street, Natick, Mass. Davies, Grace M. 2322 North Broad Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Davis, Eleanor M. 20 Grove Street, Spencer, Mass. Dietz, Marjorie 21 North Vine Street, Hazleton, Pa. Dill, Helen B. 460 Commonwealth Avenue, Newton Centre, Mass. Dodge, Esther M. 2 Elm Street, Westerly, R. I. Doonan, Rose L. Wellesley, Mass. Doten, Gladys 235 State Street, Portland, Maine Douglas, Al.mira H. 105 12th Street, Troy, N. Y. THE LEGENDA 119 Downey, Helen M. DuNGAN, Margaret E. Dunham, Edith M. DusTiN, Helen C. Dyer, Bertha W. Eaton, F. Louisa Edwards, Marian Rhrhart, Lila M. Ellison, Edith Emerson, Ruth N. Engel, Florence L. Fellows, Gladys E. Fenwick, Jennie F. Fiske, Marie E. Flaccus, Alice C. Flewelling, Florence L. Foster, Pauline Fox, Anna E. Freiler, Florence J. French, Helen S. French, Ruth D. Frick, Geraldine R. Fricke, Eleanor F. Garford, Louise E. Garson, Hilda W. 52 Piedmont Street, Worcester, Mass. 3232 North i6tli Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Jewett Avenue, West New Brighton, Staten Island, N. Y. 28 Middle Street, Gloucester, Mass. Holliston, Mass. 73 Bartlet Street, Andover, Mass. Kinsley, Kan. Jamestown, Pa. 4100 Spruce Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Station K, Cincinnati, Ohio 6 Concord Street, Natick, Mass. Orono, Maine University, Maine Eastport, Maine 20 Winnemay Street, Natick, Mass. 1128 Penn Avenue, Pittsburg, Pa. Needham, Mass. Ellsworth, Maine 501 Wabash Avenue, Kansas City, Mo. 653 Douglas Avenue, Elgin, 111. Chandler Street, Lexington, Mass. Milford, N. H. 417 South 43d Street, West Philadelphia, Pa. 1903 Tioga Street, Philadeljiliia, Pa. Washington Avenue, Elyria, Ohio 270 East Avenue, Rochester, N. Y. I 20 WELLESLEY COLLEGE Gilbert, Carrie F. GiLMORE, Helen M. GoDDARD. Helen M. Gold, Caroline L. Goodman, Julia M. GooDNOW, Grace GooD NOw, Hazel M. Goodrich, Nellie H. Grifi ' in, Clara A. Guise, Helen L. Hague, Abrie S. Hague, Mary R. Hall, Alice M. Hall, Annie E. Hanna, Alice M. Hanson. Madeline McC. Harding, Anna T. Hardy, Mary J. H RTZ, Elizabeth Harvey, Alice G. Hastings, Minnie K. Hawkins, Helen M. Hayes, Julia P. Hazelton, Blanche M. 41 Court Street, Plattslmrgh, N. Y. 192 Pine Street, Springfield, Mass. I 516 Cora Avenue, St. Louis. Mo. 1500 21I Avenue, Soutli, Minneapolis, Minn. 115 Luillow Street, Hamilton, Ohio Wellesley, Mass. East Jaffrey, N. H. 2004 Green Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Si I The Rookery. Chicago, 111. 201 East Luna Street, Findlay, Ohio Gorham, Maine Gorliam, Maine West Acton, Mass. Bridgton, Maine Monmouth, 111. 4637 Greenwood Avenue. Chicago, 111. Penn and ALliott Streets. Frankford, Philadelphia, Pa. Winterport, Waldo County. Maine 531 iqth Street, Rock Island, 111. 51 Winder Street, Detroit, Mich. 6q Elm Street, Hartford, Conn. Lancaster, Mass. 15 South Elm Street, Waterbury, Conn. I Vine Street, Amesburv, Mass. THE LEGENDA 12 1 Hazi.ett, Mary I. Healey, Frances Healy, Bertha V. Heath, Margaret A. Heber, Jessie E. Helmboldt, Henrietta E. Henderson, Nellie M. Hendrie, Mabel L. Herrick, Grace Hersey, Ethel L. Hewlings, Genevieve W. Hill, Avis W. Hill, Jean McC. Hooper, Ethel S. Houghton, Ellen M. Houghton, Harriet M. HOVEY, SiLA M. Howard, Leantha B. HoYT, Clara R. Hull, Ethel M. Hunt, Lillian Mabel HuTCHiNS. Helen W. Hutchins, Mary S. Hyde, Lydia W. West Kortright, N. Y. Hamplon Falls, N. H. 304 Central Street, Manchester, N. H. 360 Warren Avenue, Chicago, 111. 1003 Bonnie Brae Street, Los Angeles, Cal. S Walter Street, Roslindale, Mass. 240 West Main Street, Norwich, Conn. P. O. Box 194, Stamford, Conn. 15 Herrick Street. Winchester, Mass. Drawer E, Hingham, Mass. 238 East 53d Street, Chicago, 111. 827 Main Street, Wobum, Mass. 5502 Margaretta Street, Pittsburg, Pa. II Union Street, Manchester-by-the-Sea, Mass. Littleton Common, Mass. 202 Main Street, Hudson, Mass. 108 Houston Avenue, Muskegon, Mich. Box 346, Hallowell, Maine 172 North Street, Stamford, Conn. Baltic, Conn. 400 Oak Street, South East, Minneapolis, Minn. 37 Mt. Vernon Street, North Cambridge, Mass. 37 Mt. Vernon Street, North Cambridge, Mass. Welleslev Hills, Mass. 122 WELLESLEY COLLEGE Hyndman, Ruth Irwin, Constance Jackson, Florence E. Johnson, Carrie P. Kasson, Margaret C. Kellogg, Sara L. Kenworthy, Ada L. Kimball, Grace L. Kimball, Laura L. King, Ethel King, Grace C. Kingsbury, Alberta B. Knowles, Helen S. Knox, Leil a C. Ladd, Margaret Lang, Helena S. Lathrope, Eunice Leavitt, Mildred Leonard, Mildred A. Lermit, Geraldine R. Levy, Theresa Lewis, Evanelle Lines, Louise S. Logan, Marjorie S. LooMis, Vera 324 Mills Avenue, Wyoming, Ohio I 5 Lake Avenue, Yonkers, N. Y. 306 Porter Avenue, Warren, Ohio 69 Thomas Park, South Boston, Mass. 20 East Fulton Street, Gloversville, N. Y. Ridley Park, Delaware County, Pa. Lipton Terrace, Green Lane, Roxborough, Philadelphia, Pa. 404 South 4 2d Street, West Philadelphia, Pa. t6 Winter Street, Woburn, Mass. 225 4th Avenue, New York, N. Y. Ellsworth, Maine Needham, Mass. Ridley Park, Delaware County, Pa. Conklin, N. Y. Minneapolis, Minn. 6342 Drexel Road, Overlook, Philadelphia, Pa. 1630 Jefferson Avenue, Scranton, Pa. 57 North Avenue, Natick, Mass. 105 Summer Street, Boston, Mass. 4556 Lake Avenue, Chicago, 111. 709 East Washington Street, Bloomington, 111. Clarinda, Iowa 413 Perry Avenue, Peoria, 111. 430 South 2d Street, Springfield, 111. 16 North Main Street, St. Albans, Vt. THE LEGENDA I2J LoRENZ, Helex B. LovELL, Rhodica J. Ludlow, Hattie McCansey, Elcy T. McCrum, Helena D. McDouGALL, Mary McKellar, Marguerite B. McMan ' us, Rose R. MacKinnon, Flora I. Mallory, Laura H. Margerum, Elizabeth M. Marks, Helen G. Maxwell, Mary D. May, Mary B. Medlar, Reba N. Mitchell, Mabel M. Mitchell, Sarah B. Moore, Harriet Moore, Louise More, Betty T. Morrill, Helen T. Morse, Helen B. Morse, Mary H. Moseley, Mary G. Murphy, Mary A. Shamokin, Pa. Spencer, Mass. Monroe, Wis. Union City, Mich. 41 Centre Street, Oneonta, N. Y. Alpine Place, W. H., Cincinnati, Ohio 4841 Pulaski Avenue, Germantown, Pa. 14 Cochituate Street, Natick, Mass. 626 Richmond Avenue, Buffalo, N. Y. Mystic, Conn. Bustleton, Philadelphia, Pa. I Rowley Street, Rochester, N. Y. 5908 Wayne Avenue, Germantown, Pa. Gould, R. L 1622 WiUington Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Weedsport, N. Y. 713 South 4th Street, Martin ' s Ferry, Ohio St. Clair, Mich. 1044 igth Street, Des Moines, Iowa 242 Montgomery Street, Newburgh, N. Y. 208 North vSummit Street, Dayton, Ohio 32 Northern Avenue, New Dorchester, Mass. 932 North Main Street, Brockton, Mass. Oakland Avenue, Needham, Mass. 23 Summer Street, Taunton, Mass. 124 WELLESLEY COLLEGE Neely, Mary R. Newell, Helen A. NicKERSoN, Roma S. Noble, Hebe H. NoRRis, Janet M. Noyes, Helen G. NoYES, Margaret E. O ' Connor, May OsBORN, Mae Owen, Gertrude J. Page, Mary R. Palmer, Lilian N. Parker, Gladys Pastene, Teresa E. M. Patchin, Mary A. Perry, Alice C. Phraner, Olive Pickett, Marie Pierce, Hazel E. PiNNEY, Jean E. Platt, Louise F. Plummer, Florence P. PoMEROY, Ethel M. Post, Jessie Potter, Lena R. 1225 Ridge Avenue, Evanston, IlL 38 Summer Street, Hyde Park, Mass. 6 Temjjle Street, Springfield, Mass. 1504 Market Street, San Francisco, Cal. La Moille, Bureau County, 111. Williamstown, Mass. 136 Warren Street, Newton Centre. Mass. 615 1 8th .Street, Rock Island, 111. 4737 Kimbark Avenue, Chicago, 111. 551 North Street, Pittsfield, Mass. Proctor, Vt. Tenafly, N. J. Parker Place, Atchison, Kan. 56 Lyndhurst Street, Dorchester, Mass. Chardon, Ohio North Wilbraham, Mass. 319 Fulton Street, Jamaica, Long Island, N. Y. 24 Pleasant Street, Portsmouth, N. H. 1389 Harrison Street, Oakland, Cal. 835 3d Avenue, Cedar Rapids, Iowa 32 Grove Hill, New Britain, Conn. Dixon, 111. 164 Sargeant Street, Hartford, Conn. 175 Van Dyke Avenue, Detroit, Mich. 16 Elm Street, Fitchburg, Mass. THE LEGENDA 125 Price, Fanny A. Prichard, Eunice G. Proctor, Katharine W. Prouty, Geraldine S. Pryor, Naoma M. Rand, Adelaide A. Raymond, Alice P. Reed, Helen F. Renard, Blanche Roberts, Alice W. Roberts, May Rogers, Ada Rogers, Mildred M. Rossington, Alice Russell, Jean U. Russell, Mabelle M Rust. Louise B. Sanborn, Alice D. Sanderson, Ruth G. Sawyer, Mina Scott, Adeline M. Searcy, Edith L. Shaw, Caroline N. Sherman, Frances E. Shull, Mary M. Westerly, R. I. 239 Upland Road, North Camltridge, Mass. Wyncote, Pa. Spencer. Mass. 1325 Greenwood Street, Pueblo, Colo. 399 Xewtonville Avenue, Newtonville, Mass. 29 Mansfield Street, Allston, Mass. loo ' est State Street, Sharon, Pa. 4463 Westminster Place, St. Louis, Mo. Moorestown, N. J. 126 High Street, Bristol, Conn. 816 Glen wood Avenue, Youngst own, Ohio 36 Hale Street, Beverly, Mass. 914 Monroe Street, Topeka, Kan. 650 Harrison Avenue. Scranton, Pa. 331 Wilder Street, Lowell, Mass. 118 New Street, New Brunswick. N. J. 23 Grove Street, Wellesley, Mass. Bridgewater, Mass. Ovington A ' enue, Bay Ridge, Brooklyn, N. Y. 56 Bayard Lane, Princeton, N. J. Waco, Madison Countv, Kv. 227 South Professor Street, Oberlin, Oliio 3 Warden Street, Worcester. Mass. New Bloomfield, Perry County, Pa. 126 WELLESLEY COLLEGE Shupp, Mary R. SiLLiMAN, Henrietta Simmons, Sara I. Smith, Katharine A. Smith, Marion E. Smith, Mildred E. Smith, Olive A. SoMERS, May Spicer, Mollie Stark, May S. Stevens, Ruth F. Stickney, Alice O. .Stone, Mabel A. Storey, Dorothy H. Strong, Marguerite Strout, Letty a. Stuart, Theresa C Stubbins, Una Studley, Marian H. Sulzbacker, Rita Sutton, Florence J. SwANTON, Bertha M. Sweet, Marion E. Taber, Mary Tapley, Margaret Woodside, West Philadelphia, Pa. Toulon, Stark County, 111. 194 Joralemon Street, Brooklyn, N. Y. 1 1 23 Broadway, New York, N. Y. 142 Webster Street, Maiden, Mass. 175 Washington Street, Weymouth, Mass. 13 Sailly Avenue, Plattsburgh, N. Y. 2022 Webster Street, Omaha, Neb. 204 West 8 1 St Street, New York, N. Y. 214 Mathilda Street, Pittsburg, Pa. 53 Price Street, Waterbury, (?onn. 599 School Street, Lowell, Mass. 15 Liberty Street, Waltham, Mass. 437 6th Street, Brooklyn, N. Y. 2528 Indiana Avenue, Chicago, 111. 39 F ' iske Street, Waltham, Mass. 31 Emmons Place, New Britain, Conn. 1500 Charleston Street, Mattoon, 111. Market Street, Rockland, Maine 70 East 4th Street, Chillicothe, Ohio Lestershire, N. Y. 236 Park View Avenue, Lowell, Mass. 22 Howard Street, Maiden, Mass. 78 South Street, Aub urn, N. Y. 24 Otis Street, Newtonville, Mass. THE LEGENDA 127 Tasker, Madge S. Thayer, Maud P. Thomas, Ethel M. TiLLOTSOx, Jeax R. Timberlake, Mellie G. Titus, Alice F. ToBEY, Katharine H. TuTTLE, Gladys M. Tuttle, Maude M. Van Cott, Pearl Van Dervoort, Winifred F. Van Noorden, Flora R. Volquardsen, Annie M. Wackenhuth, Elsa Waldo. Elizabeth Walworth, Florence E. Wanamaker, Netta L. Warner. M. Louise Warren, Marie J. Washburn, Genevieve Watson, Esther M. Watt, Ethel H. Watterworth, Kathleen W. Weaver, Florence C. Weaver, Katherine 35 Gushing Street, Dover, N. H. 77 Somerset Avenue, Taunton, Mass. 93 Granite Street, Quincy, Mass. 327 South River Street, Wilkesbarre, Pa. Philhps, Maine 17 Breed Street, Lynn, Mass. 39 Chestnut Street, Oneonta, N. Y. Nampa, Idaho 185 Lewis Street, Lynn, Mass. 169 East I St Street, Salt Lake City, Utah 184 Goundry Street, North Tonawanda, N. Y. 32 Howland Street, Roxbury, Mass. Parker Avenue, Newport, R. I. 57 Freeman Street, Newark, N. J. 1834 5tl) Avenue, Troy, N. Y. 931 Center Street, Newton Centre, Mass. 530 Oak Street, Syracuse, N. Y. 24 Harvard Avenue, Waltham, Mass. Geneseo, N. Y. Hunter ' s Park, Duluth, Minn. Newtown, Bucks Co., Pa. 12 Cottage Street, WeHesley, Mass. 31 West 5th Street, Duluth, Minn. 198 West Avenue, Lockport, N. Y. 13 Beech Street, Gloversville, N. Y. 128 WELLESLEY COLLEGE Weaver, Mildred Wheeler, Mary P. White, Frances B. White, Ruth Whiting, Lavinia I. Whitney, Marion E. Wilbur, Nina G. Wilcox, Julia B. Williams, Mabel A. Winger, Ruth Witherell, Nina O. WiTTE, Mabel Wolfe, Carolyn Wood, Edith H. Wood, Helen M. Wood, Helen P. Wrigley, Abby L. 198 West Avenue, Lockport, N. Y. 390 Park Place, Bridgeport, Conn. 5 S])ring Street, Taunton, Mass. 616 Humboldt A ' enue, Kansas City, Mo. 246 Oak Street, Holyoke, Mass. 127 North Main Street, Gloversville, N. Y. Dark Harbor, Islesboro, Maine 115 Boulevard, Summit, N. J. Silver Lane, Conn. 342 South Limestone Street, Springfield, Ohio Chicago, 111. 425 East State Street, Trenton, N, J. 1438 Franklin Street, Denver, Colo. 234 Walnut Aveiuie, Wayne, Pa. 12 Highland Street, Portsmouth, N. H. 112 South Main Street, Middleboro, Mass. High Street, F remont, Ohio THELEGENDA 129 1908 Cooper, Mabel 776 Summit Avenue, St. Paul, Minn. GiLKEY, M. BEi. E. 199 Church Street, Oshkosh, Wis. Gregory, Abby W. 124 Grove Street, East Orange, N. J. Kent, Ruth D. 32 Ashland Street, Taunton, Mass. MiLLiK, N, Louise A. [ 21 Mahoning Avenue, Warren, Ohio QuESTROM, Thetis Y. 210 Pleasant Street, Maiden, Mass. Sm.vll, H. rriet S. 711 Mesa Avenue, El Paso, Texas Spitz, May Santa Fe, New Mexico Ward, Edith O. i8g Park Avenue, Warren, Ohio White, Gertrude R. 113 Georgia Avenue, Omaha, Neb. Williams, Lucile 2067 4th Street, San Diego, Cal. 13° WELLESLEY COLLEGE (graduates Baker, Alice L. Bliss, Mary C. Cady, H. M. Caldwell, M. Grace Dailey, Mary Olive Davis, Grace E. Eldridge, Lulu G. Greenwood, Helen E. Hanna, Genevieve C. Hewitt, Julia A. W. Maxwell, Anne NiCKERSON, MaRJORIE L. NoRCROss, Mrs. Helen W. Pierce, Harriet R. Rousmanier, Frances H. Taylor, Mabel G. Wales, Hortense Wheeler, Hetty Shepard Woodbury, Mabel B. Hyattsville, Md. lo Allen Street, Newburyport, Mass. Mansfield, Mass. 641 Washington Street, Wellesley, Mass. Decatur, Ind. Wellesley, Mass. Neponset, 111. Worcester, Mags. 582 East Main Street, Bradford, Pa. R. F. D. No. I, Norwich, Conn. Fremont, Neb. Eliot Street, Milton, Mass. Wellesley Hills, Mass. 8 Parkman Street, Westboro, Mass. 66 Chestnut Street, Boston, Mass. Alliance, Ohio 880 Huntington Avenue, Boston, Mass. 390 Park Place, Bridgeport, Conn Holliston, Mass. specials BowEN, Vera C. Buchanan, Jessie Edson, Edith L. Hicks, Florence HoGE, Virginia R. B. Hood, Helen G. Hyde, Harriet N. Matheson, Winifred Mosenfelder, Blanche Okada, Mitsu Peckham, Elizabeth B. Perkins, Emma G. Phelps, Jessamine C. Wilson, Janet R. 39 Erie Street, Buffalo, N. Y. 77 Nonotuck Street, Holyoke, Mass. 680 St. Nicholas Avenue, New York, N. Y. 93 Pleasant Street, Arlington, Mass. 414 West Oak, Louisville, Ky. Wellesley Hills, Mass. 785 Boston Avenue, Bridgeport, Conn. 115 West Beattie Street, Helena, Mont. 808 20th Street, Rock Island, 111. Atagoshitamochi Shiba, Tokyo, Japan East Northport, Maine 34 Cottage Street, Wellesley, Mass. 277 Linden Street, Holyoke, Mass. 220 West 34th Street, New York, N. Y. THE LEGENDA ' 3 ' Wi)t Wtlltelt Shitnnaf association President Elva Hulburd Young, ' g6 44 Dorcliester Street, Springfield, Mass. Vice-President Mrs. Frank B . T o w n e , ' 84 Holyoke, Mass. Recording Secretary Florence S. M. Crofut, ' 97 25 North Beacon Street, Hartford, Conn. Corresponding Secretary Lucy Jane Dow, ' 92 30 Arch Street, Springfield, Mass. T r e a s u r e r Mary E . Holmes, ' 92 Mount Holyoke College, South Hadley, Mass. 112 WELLESLEY COLLEGE Cl)c l ellcslcj) ailumuac 9;$sottattou THE first meeting of graduates of Wellesley College for the formation of an Alumnas Association was held on June 23, 1880. In 1886 the Association was organized under its present consti- tution in the desire of extending the helpful associations of student life and in the hope of aiding in the strengthening and upbuilding of the College to the end that her usefulness may continually increase. From small beginnings the Association has grown to a membership of 2,300. The possession of the Bachelor ' s or Master ' s degree from Wellesley constitutes one a member of the Association without further formalities, since the payment of the annual fee is voluntary. The Association aims by its publications to keep alumna. ' in touch with the College, and in all ways possible to serve the interests of Wellesley. Once in two years an alumna is elected to represent the Association on the College Board of Trustees for a term of six years. The work of the AlumucE Association was one of the strongest forces in removing the College debt, and since then the income fund has supplied a revenue of two thousand dollars annually. The laistorical committee preserves material dealing with College events for reference and future interest. Through the efforts of the Alumnae, funds have been raised for memorials to President Shafer, Mrs. Alice Freeman Palmer and Professor Wenckebach. 134 WELLESLEY COLLEGE 1 (tuJjfut (gotiemmmt as0ociatton President Florence W . H u t s i n p i l l a r , ' 04 Vice-President Louise Hunter, ' 04 Secretary Juliet J. Poynter, ' 05 Treasurer Sara A . Reed, ' 05 THE LEGEND A 135 £rrcuti )r SoarU FaithH.Talcott HelenD.Cook Ethel G. Sturtevant .Slittteorp Committee Marian Kinney EdithJ.Knowlton AnneD.Orr OliveHunter Mabel E.Emerson Catharine L.Steele jFacttltp JflemberB of tbc §tulient-jFacuItp Committee SitnUcnt JRcmfiere of tfte §ituTient=jFaeiiltp Committee StnUcnt IJreeilientB of CoIIep ' Janets Cora L. Butler President of College Hall EsTELLE C. Kramer President of Stone Hall Claudia Fink President of Wilder Hall Ruth Huntington President of Wood Cottage Mildred Franklin President of Freeman Cottage Eleanor Macdonald President of Norumbega Cottage Florence Cantieny President of Simpson Cottage M. Louise Abbot President of Fiske Cottage Minnie Whole an President of the Eliot Ethel Doak President of the Noanett Olive Phraner President of Waban Cottage ij6 WELLESLEY COLLEGE Cljc tuDcnt (S obcrumcnt Slssociatiou ALTHOUGH we can scarcely speak of the history of an organization which has existed for onlv two years, never theless we can give a short account of its beginnings and early days. For some time there had been at Wellesley College a feeling that the students should in some sense govern themselves. This belief led in i8qq to the establishment of a system of proctoring to enforce rules, but this plan did not meet the need ; the students lacked the loyalty to proctors and student heads of government which alone could make such a system a success. At last, in the fall of iQoo, Mary Leavens and a few other long-suffering members of the College Hall Council held a meeting. After discussing the matter among themselves and later with re]ircsentative girls from the -arious campus houses, they decided to propose to a mass meeting of students that we ask for Student Government. On March 6, igoi, now known as Student Government Day, this meeting was called, the vote taken, and a committee api)ointed to draw up a Constitution. Soon afterwards an agreement was entered into by students, faculty and trustees, whereby the students were given the power to govern themselves in all matters not academic and not expressly withheld. The Constitution, which was adopted shortly after, ]irovided for three de- partments, a legislative, executive, and judicial, the whole Association being the legislative body and appelate court, and the Executive Board the executive power and lower court. This Executive Board, which is composed of the President, ' ' ice-Presi(lent, Secretary and Treasurer, and a member from each of the three upper classes, has for its duty the enforcing of all rules and the judging of viola- tions of these rules. If a student should consider the decision of this Board un- just, it is possible for her to appeal to the whole Association, hut up to the present time, no such an appeal has been made. There is also an Advisory Committee, composed of ten rhembers, two from each class and two from the Association-at- large, whose dutv it is to advise with and to assist the Executive Board. Besides these two Boards there is almost no machinery of government. It has always been considered that the simpler the form of government the easier it is to govern, and for that reason the number of standing committees has been kept as low as possible. THE LEGENDA ly But to come back to the history. In the spring of 1901 came the enthusiastic election of Frances Hughes and Anna Khngenhagen as President and Vice-Presi- dent of the Association. At that time the custom originated of having all the girls by classes follow the President around College Hall, from the South door to the North, singing college songs and giving class cheers. At the North door, Frances Hughes, Mary Leavens and several members of the faculty spoke to the students of their new privileges and responsibilities, emphasizing then, as we have done ever since, the necessity for individual responsibilit} ' . That first year was one of experiments ; there were no precedents ; everything was untried, but the support of the girls made the year a great success. Last year the experiments wliich had been started began to be proved, and affairs soon fell into natural courses. Under the direction of Kate Lord and Louise Allen, Student Government came near to realizing its ideal. This third year is a critical period in many ways. The girls are beginning to take Student Government as a matter of course and therefore to lose much of their first fever of enthusisam, though they still keep the real, deep, appreciative interest. Then, too, all the Freshmen are in the village where they are removed from the direct and constant influence of the upper class girls. But nevertheless, the year starts out well. The trustees have given us an office in 27B College Hall, for which we have long been petitioning; and several of the Seniors and Juniors, seeing how useful they can be in the village, have gone to live with the Vice-Presi- dent at the Noanett and to the Inn. With the conditions, on the whole favorable, then, we feel that if each girl will but recognize her individual responsibility. Student Government will be a greater success than ever in this, 1904 ' s Senior year. 138 WELLESLEY COLLEGE C!)ri0tian dissociation €)fficcriEi P r e s i d e n t Mary P. Eaton, ' 04 Vice-President Adele Ogden, ' 04 R e c o r d i n t, ' 5 e c r c t a r y Faith B . S t l- r t e v a n t , ' 06 Correspond i n g Sec r c t a r y [•Elizabeth C . Taylor, ' 04 T r c a s u r c r Mabel E Emerson, ' 05 THE LEGENDA 139 itliBBionarp Committee Caroline M . B r e y f o y l e , Chairman Eleanor P. Monroe Eugenie Lodwick Connie M. Guion KeltstouB ffleetmsB Committee Edna V . M o f f a t t . . . . Chairman Bessie W . Allen Ethel R. Doak Juliet J . P o y n t e r Emma H . Miller Gertrude J. Owen Jficmberfibip Committee A D e L E G D e N Chairman Helen A . Merrill, F a c itlt y ] I ember S . Louise Adams Sally A. Reed Mary A . P a t c h i n CorreBponBcnec Committee Elizabeth C . Taylor. . . . Chairman Grace Langford, Faculty M ember Jessie B. Goff Olive L. Chapman Sarah E. Eustis I40 WELLESLEY COLLEGE Stblc lituSp Committee C A R o L 1 N E C . S o u T T E R . . . . Chairman Eliza H . K e n d r i c k , Faculty M c in b c r Faith H. Talcott Helen D. Cook Esther M . Watson ;ffit66ion :§ ' tuUp Committee A N N I E V . L u F F C h a i r III a II Anna T . M c K e a g , F a c ii 1 1 y M c m b c r Martha N . Brooks N I N A D . G a G E Florence C. Megee Social Committee A N n e D . O R R Chairman Charlotte F . Roberts, Faculty M c m b c r Jane C. Breese Alice E. Clause Crete M . Kimball Marion Stephenson tSencral aiU Committee F L o r E N c e E . B E c K Chair m a ii Margaret C . Ferguson, Faculty Me m b e r Mary L . Nye Georgina Sillcox B L A N C H E W E N N E R THELEGENDA 141 Cl)r Cljristian iSssortatiou of Wtllt k College THE rise and growth of any organization is, as a rule, due to some need wliich must be supplied, and so it was in the case of the Christian Association of ' ellesley College. As it was the great desire of Wellesley ' s founder that, through the C(_illege, young women should be prepared for the best and highest Christian service, from the very beginning the college has been engaged in different branches of Christian work. E xmi in the first year a mission- ary in India was supported. During the early years, too, considerable extension work, as it is now called, was done. In South Xatick, where at the time there were large factories, a vSaturday E -ening Club was fomied among the factory girls, whom many of the students taught sewing, history and literature. At Charles River Milage, also, there were factories and among these people the students worked through a Sunday School in which .Mr. Durant was greatly interested. In the College itself there were two distinct organizations, the Missionarv Society and the Temperance Association, each with its own officers and each working independently of the other. There hiixe always l:)een, also, Thursday evening meetings which for many years were mider the direction of the college and were always led by members of the faculty. It was while .Mice Freeman Palmer was president of the college that it seemed t(j both faculty and students that these several organizations should be co-ordi- nated and to an extent combined, each gi -ing up its independence and taking its place as part of a greater whole. Acconlingh- a committee was appointed to draw u]) the constitvition of the body which is now the Christian Association. For some time, practically the same work was done, but all under the name of the H2 WELLESLEY COLLEGE Christian Association; in a few years, however, the factories at South Natick and Charles River Village were abandoned and the need for extension work there ceased. Instead, the Association took up mission work among the Mormons, sup- porting a missionary in Utah for five years. For a time also, a city missionary in New York, an alumna of the college, was supported. But with the organization of the college Settlements Association it seemed best to give city work into its care. The same has been the case with the temperance work which was two years ago given over entirely to the Somerset Y, the college branch of the Women ' s Christian Temperance Union. So that at present of the five departments with which the Christian Associa- tion started, there remain but two; the missionary work, which has been very flourishing in its growth, and the Thursday evening meetings. The chairmen of the committees on these two branches are members of the faculty, as was also the president of the Association until 1894. Besides these two committees there are now many others — the Bible Study Committee, which organizes the Sunday Bible classes throughout the college ; the Mission Study Committee, which has charge of the classes for the study of missions and missionaries; the Social Com- mittee, in whose care are the various receptions given during the year; the General Aid Committtee, which has several branches of work — the book-exchange, the bureau of employment, the collecting of clothing for the poor and other work of this kind; and the Membership Committee, under whose supervision is all the summer correspondence, the work of meeting the freshmen in the fall, and the canvassing of the college for new members of the Association. It is easy to see from this how great has been the growth and development during the years since the Christian Association was organized, In the last year the membership reached 6 1 1 and the receipts and expenditures of the Associa- tion were $1671.05, of which $1300 went to missions. THE LEGENDA 43 Yet in the midst of such material prosperity the great aim of the Association is higher than even the doing of good works, and is rather that through the Association there may come to each of its members a truer and a richer Christian fellowship, and a deeper determination to devote to the service of Christ all that the college may give. 144 WELLESLEY COLLEGE B?cUc0lc CoUcQC Cl)apttr of tl)c College fttlrtnrnt Ss0ociatton JJrtBtirnt Emily Sophie B r o w n , ' 04 ©tec prcsilrnta b ' a cult V Miss E m i l v G . B a l c h ,S c II i o r Eleanor P. Monroe 7 o r M A R V H . (i 1 L L E s P I E .S o p li o III o r e Ray M . T y l e r F r e s . ' Ill a n ! ; S T H E R A B E R C R O M B I E ccrttcirp anil Crcaenrrr ] ■A 1 T H B . S T U R T E V AN T , ' o6 Librarian Annie V . Luff, ' 04 THE LEGENDA 145 Cljc Cou5umcv s Ecaguc of Wdk ltp College PrcBiHrnt A N N I E V . Luff rtrrtarp anil Crfaenrrr R u T II B . Abbot r Crrratitic Commifttr F a cult y .1 c ni h c r Miss Emily G . B a l c h ,1 c III h c r from i q o 4 Marion E . F e n t o n .1 c 111 h c r r o in i q o 5 Mabel A . S e a g r a ' e .1 ( ' III b c r f r o in i q o 6 Ethel G . S t u r t e v a n t T46 WELLESLEY COLLEGE Somerset g President Cora L. Butler Secretary and Treasurer Edith Fox Member of General Aid Co m in i 1 1 e e of Christian A s s o c i a t i o n Georgina Sillcox tutient l olunteer ilanli Clara H. Bruce, ' 05, Leader Nina D . Gage, ' 05 Lottie H. Hartwell, ' 06 THE LEGENDA 147 Wijt BSarnstualloma - ;• (• 5 i d c u t Ruth S . Hart, ' 04 I ' i c c - P r c s i J c II t Bessie H a l s e y , ' 05 T r c a s II r c r R o B Y Jessie Reynolds, ' 05 S e c r c t a r y Charlotte R. Thomas, ' 06 C II s t o d i a II Connie G u i o n , ' 06 Ethel B. Doak Myra Fishback Mary L. Nye Nina D. Gage Emily G. Balch Mary W. Calkins Ruth B. Abbott Martha N. Brooks E. Sophie Brown Alice D. Chapman Helen L. Brown Elizabeth L. Camp Abbie H. Condit Helen E. Bainl Vena Battv Cl)e agora €)lticer0 Adei.e Ogdkx Vice-Presideut Recording Secretary Corresponding Secretary Treasurer Scrgeant-al-Arms President Helen L. Brown EsTELLE C. Kramer 1 t „ ..•. t-« ITT TT [ h. ecittn ' c Florence W. Hutsinpillar Y ,■Abbie H. Condit J Ruth B. Abbott Custodian Fanny Field Editor of •• Tlir Agora C omimttee iH c in b c r ■Jn JFatnltatr Frances Roiismanicrc y Ann Rebecca Torrencc Claee of 1904 Florence W. Hutsinpillar Estelle C. Kramer Mary L. Nye Adele Osjdcn ClasB of 1905 Helen L Daniels Xina D. Gage Esther Gibbs Claeg of 1906 Louise M. Boswcirth Mary Jessie Gidlej ' Caroline W. Dayton Catharine Jones 150 Katharine Coman Miriam Hatha wa Ethel B. Doak Mary P. Eaton Fanny Field Mvra Fishback Li 11 a Weed Elizabeth C. Taylor Mary Kelly Hilda Tufts Agnes Wood Rhoda Todd Ray Tyler A ■S( St St H H ' mIi p S mm T 1 ■H i? ; ' ' n ' :: B ' ■spM fli mil H r iy i tfril H H 1 1 | H mi i ■i -— M Marion- E. Potter Mabel E. Emersox Georgina W. Sillcox Beulah p. Johnsox aiplja ls.appa Cljt CfBccvs Daisy G Dutcher ' ice-President Recording Secretary o ' -respoiiding Sec ' y Treasurer President Isabel Brown Caroline R. Fletcher S. Louise Adams Margaret L. Abbott Custodian Executive Committee Mary Moulton, Ruth Goodwin Factotums jm c in b c r )2S Margaret Louise Abbott S. Louise Adams Isabel C. Brown Mabel E. Emerson f n f acoltatc Class of IS99 Florence Dadman Claee of 1903 ClaBB of 1904 Daisy G. Dutcher Beulah P. Johnson Class of 1905 Ellen R. Manchester Georgina W. Sillcox Florence A. Rislev Agnes H. Smith Angle Clara Chapin Caroline R. Fletcher Alice Louise Baker Adeline Belle Hawes Marcia Mclntyre Marjorie Louise Nickerson Class of 1906 Ruth L. Goodwin Ethel Jordan Marv Alice Mather Marion E. Potter Ethel P. Waxham Mary E. Moulton 1.51 Eleanor Clark Annie Luff Cora L. Butler Annie L. MontaEfiie Sarah Anderson Eleanor Bennett Cora Butler Rowena Campbell Edith P. Ball Alice Clause Maria L. Dowd Marv H. Gillespie Alice C. Ames Claire Sampson l)t igma JFraternttp ALPHA CHAPTER €)fflCCV0 Annie B. McClurk I ' icc-f ' resident Reeonihig Secreleiry Corrcspouding Sercetary Presideul Sarah Anderson Treasurer Marv Gillespie i „„ ,., . Alice Clause ; iH c m b c r 3rn lataltatr Katharine Lee Bates Liiuist ' Brooks Eleanor Clark Marjorie Lee Jane Lennox Annie V. LuiT Sldeociatr Jilcmber Vida n. Scudder ClaBB of 1904 ( icrtrude Lukens Annie B. McClure Clara S. More Helen Rollins ClasB of 1905 Amy Gurlitz Bessie Halsey Esther E. Lape Eliza McCague Blanche Wenner Clase of 1906 Helen Schennerhi rn Helen Segar 152 Bessie W. Man waring, ' 02 Sue Schoolfield Ruth Van P. Young Marie H. Milliken Juliet J. Poynter Helen Robertson Harriet Rollins Elizabeth Sooy Ethel G. Sturtevant Ruth L. Huntington Kate Wilson Alice W. Stockwell Maud H. Arnold Ellen F. Pendleton Edith S. Tufts Bessie W. Allen Maud H. Arnold Ruth S. Hart Olive L. Chapman Helen D. Cook Ida L. Ellison Jessie D. Hall Marion H. Carlisle Laura M. Dwight Helen M. Edwards Elsie Goddard IjaKcspcare octetp f)fficerjs Bessie W. Allen Vice-President Recording Secretary Corresponding Secretary Correspor, Treasurer President Bonnie Hunter Custodian of House Gertrude K. Ware r- , ,, x:. r I r actollt))ls Elsie Pitkin I jH c in l3 c r ?i •Jn Jatttltatc Sophie Jewett Margaret Sherwood Sarah F. Whiting Eleanor A. McC. Gamble Class of 1904 Louise Hunter Ida W. Kitchen Ruth L. Huntington Mary G. Riley Jeannette S. Kelly Madeleine Steele Clagg of 1905 Bonnie Hunter Elizabeth LeB. Marston Crete M. Kimball Carolyn P. Nelson Florence H. McCormick Helen R. Norton Emma H. Miller Edna V. Summy Class of 1906 Connie M. Guion Elsie F. Pitkin Eliza H. Kendrick Marv Bowen Alice W. Stockwell Louise Sylvester Kate Wilson Sarah Woodward Martha J. Hughes Olive Hunter Edna Moore Caroline B. Singleton C. Louise Steele Marion Stephenson Charlotte R. Thomas Gertrude K. Ware 153 Cau %m Cpstlon € fficerj3 Sibyl Baker PresiJcnl Florence Vedder Cook Vice-President EiviMA May Calhoun Julia G. Tyler Corresponding Secretary Ada S. Couillard Abbie H. Newton Recording Secretary Roby Jessie Reynolds f Lilian A. McDonald Treasurer Caroline C. Soutter ifR e m b t r j3 3rn Jatnltate Margart ' the MuUer Ethel IX-nch Pufft-r 3l6Bntiate iflember Hamilton C. Macdougall Claee of 1902 Hetty Shepard Wheeler €1366 of 1904 Ruth Chadwick Crosby Abbie How Newton - - - ■Delight Newton Alice Van Vechten Brown Margaret Hastings Jackson Elta Mae Armstrong Sibyl Baker Florence Vedder Cook Emma May Calhoun Ada S. Couillard Laura Alandis Hiljbard Alice D. Chase Helen Jaques Elliott Emily Freeman Marion Elizabeth Fenton Elsi Lilian A. Macdonald Emily Osborn Cla66 of 1905 Helen M. Johnston Edith J. Knowlton Margaret Little Cla6B of 1906 Alice Heber Ella C. MacKinnon Laura Maltby 154 Keeper of House Assistant Keepers Editor oj Iris Evelyn B. Sherrard Caroline C. Soutter Julia Gardiner Tyler Roby Jessie Reynolds Ruth de Rochemont Mabel Waldron Helen White Ora Williams Zeta aipl)a € fficcrgi Ellen F. Burrell, ' So Martha G. McCaiilley. Class of 1904 Elsie Appel Grace B. Clark Elizabeth Colman Anna E. Darby Bessie C. Champney Jane S. Eaton Mary H. Ball Nellie G. Carey H. Louise Curtis Mary P. Follelt Gladys Gladding Grace Gladding Marian Kinnev Ruth Lyon Jessie A. Marvin Eleanor P. Monroe Bertha D. Piatt Class of 1905 Flora L. Humphrey Sara A. Reed Class of 1906 Sara E. Eustis Florence C. Megee Esther E. Schwarz Marslials Marv p. Follett President Ei.siE Appel Vice-President Jane S. Eaiox Mary D. Tate Recording Secretary Olive B. W. Smith Elsie L. Ring Corresponding Secretary Bertha D. Platt Eleanor P. Monroe Treasurer Gladys Gladding jH c in b c r fn f acttltatc Eliza I. Newkirk, ' oo Charl(itte F. RoVierts. ' So Class of 1899 Helen M. Cady { Editors of the ' •True Bin Martha H. Shackford, ' g6 Elsie L, Ring Marv n. Tate Olive B. W. Smith Eleanor K. Stimsnn Lelia Volland Genevieve Wheeler 155 CJje Wtlk lt iiHasajtnc Editor-! It - C Ii i e f C I. A R A Stanton More, ' 04 A s s c i a i c Editor Natalie Atkinson Smith. ' 04 Business Manager Annie V. Luff, ' 04 Assist a n t B u s i n c s s Managers Edith Fox, ' 04 Cora B u t i, e r , ' 04 Literary Editors Eleanor W.Macdonald, ' o4 Margaret Webber, ' 04 Ethel W a x h a m , ' 05 ,4 a m n a Editor Miss Roxanna H. Vivian 158 C|)e l£egenlia iloarli E d i t r - i n - C h i e j Maude D e w a r Associate Editor Sibyl Baker Literary Editors Natalie Atkinson Smith Inez Josephine Gardner Edith Howe Stearns Elsie Appel Art Editor-in-Chief Marion Elizabeth Fenton Assistant Art Editors Mary Gin e Riley Rowena Campbell Business M a n a g c r Elizabeth Caldwell Taylor Assistant B ii s i n e s s Managers Maude Stanton JJe ssup Jessie Adams Marvin, Statistician 159 College i etos iSoaili E d i t . r - i It -Chief Carolyn P e y t u n Nelson, ' 05 Associate Editor Helen Rich Norton, ' 05 L i t c r a r y Edit o r s Esther B.Chase Miss Roxanna Vivian Ellen R . M a n r h e s t e r , ' 05 Mabel R . S e a g r a v e , ' 05 Advisory Editor Natalie Atkinson Smith, ' 04 Bus i n ess Manage r Annie V . Luff Assistant B n s i n e s s Managers CoraL. Butler EdithFox 160 ff m Musical Clubs I -ff (glee Club Bertha D . P i. a t t , ' 04 Annie B . M c C l u r e , ' 04 Leader President First Soprano Bertha D. Platt, ' 04 Grace W. Simpson, ' 04 Annie B. McClure, ' 04 Ora M. Williams, ' 06 Second Soprano Eleanor Beardsley, ' 07 Olive A. Nevin, ' 05 Helen L. Daniels. ' 05 Florence B. Snow, ' 04 First Alto Olive L. Chapman, ' 05 Florence Jackson, ' 07 Elizabeth Colman, ' 04 Esther P. Gibbs, ' 05 Second Alto Adele Ogden, ' 04 Maude Tuttle, ' 06 Isabelle Pinkham, ' 05 Edith Ward, ' 07 162 jflantioltn Club Leader President Secretary Emily Sophie Brown, ' 04 EsTELi. E Kramer, ' 04 Nellie A. Hubbs, ' 05 First M a n d o I i n Margery Bowersock, ' 06 Helen Dustin, ' 07 Helen Hutchins, ' 07 Second Mandolin Lillian A. McDonald, ' 04 Estelle Kramer, ' 04 Emma Danforth. ' 06 Third Mandolin Maude Jessup, ' 04 Mandola Violin Viola Nellie A. Hubbs, ' 05 E. Sophie Brown, ' 04 Bessie Allen, ' 05 Banjos Geraldine S. Prouty, ' 07 Carrie M. Burditt, ' 04 Guitars Tusanelda Nusbickel, ' 04 Gladys Wells, ' 05 Eliza McCague, ' 05 163 ©rcljcstra E. Sophie Brown, ' 04 Alice Chase, ' 06 L c a li c r Bust n c s s Ma n a g c r First ' i I i tt E. Sophie Browx, ' 04 Second ' 1 « I i 11 Alice Chase, ' 06 1 ' i o I a Ji ' i.iET P. Zimmerman, ' 05 Piccolo-jliile Maude JessiTp, ' 04 Piano Pauline Egei.ston. ' 04 1G4 (Btijn Club! ' Ibr I hilosopli Clulr P r c s i J c II t Louise Hunter, ' 04 V i c c - P r c s i d c 11 I Miss Mary W. Calkins Secretary a n d T r c a s n r e r Helen Cooke, ' 05 U)() THELEGENDA 167 $IIItancf jFrancai0e ' r c s i d c II t Eleanor W. Macdonald Vice-President Gladys M. Wells Secretar y Maude W. Collier T r e a s u r c r Helen LaD. Jefferis A dv I s o r y Bon r d LydieCaron EthelSullivan L A l L I E J . Moody i68 WELLESLEY COLLEGE )Ottt|)rni CIul) Julia T v l k r Sue Schoolfield L A L L I E Moody M Y R A Foster P r c s i d c n t V i c e -P r c s i d c ii t Secretary T r c a s u r c r I n F a c III t a t c Edna V. Moffatt Louise Bascom Mariana Brenneman Alice Carroll Elizabeth Castle Grace Calloway Myra Foster Clara Greene Connie Guion Jessie Hall Virginia Hoge M e m b e r s Annie Bruce McClure Florence McCormick Lallie Moody Carolyn Nelson Juliet Poynter Nora Pryse vSuE Schoolfield Theodosia Scruggs Julia Tyler Katherine Wilson THE LEGENDA 169 IjUaticIpIjia Club Eleanor P . M o n r o e , ' 04 President HelenJefferis Vice-President Charlotte R . Thomas S c c r e t a r y a n d T r c a s u r e 1 Me m he r s Edith M. Ball Mary E. Boswell Marion E. Briggs Eleanor Clark Marion Conway Annie L. Crawford Grace M. Danes Emma De Bow Ethel M. Doak Margaret Dungan Edith Ellison Geraldine Prick Eleanor F. Fricke Laura E. Gerber Nellie H. Goodrich Anna T. Harding Helen L. Jefferis Sara L. Kellogg Jeannette S. Kelly Ada L. Kenworth Grace L. Kimball Ida W. Kitchen Helen L. Knowles Edith J. Knowlton Florence E. Kraus Esther E. Lape Helena L. Lang Elizabeth M. Margerum Mary D. Maxwell Florence C. Megee Margarite B. McKellar Alice E. McQueen Eleanor P. Monroe Katherine W. Proctor Elsie L. Ring Helen L. Robertson Marguerite Scanlin Sarah A. O. Schaefer Helen Schermerhorn Anna M. Scott Mary R. Shupp Charlotte R. Thomas Caroline B. Thompson Gertrude K. Ware Esther M. Watson Lilla M. Weed Edith TL Wood lyo WELLESLEY COLLEGE CoIoraJjo CM E s T E L L E K R A M E R President Ethel P . W a x h a m Secretary and Treasurer M e ni b e r s Ruth Abbott, ' 04 Hazel Ela, ' 06 Grace Enos, ' 06 Fanny Field, ' 04 Laura Hussey, ' 04 Estelle Kramer, ' 04 Catharine Linn, ' 04 Naoma Pryor, ' 07 Martha Schenck, ' 04 Madeleine Steele, ' 04 Louise Steele, ' 06 Elizabeth Taylor, ' 04 Helen Thomas, ' 04 Marie Warken, ' 07 Ethel P. Waxham, ' 05 Carolyn Wolfe, ' 06 THE LEGENDA 171 Mo ' ift MMti Club Maud H . Arnold President Miss Hazard Miss Willcox fflemberB Miss Pendleton Miss Peckham Bessie Allen RowENA Campbell 1904 Maud Arnold Helen Peck Louise Greene 1905 Emily Wells Ellen Manchester Helen Segar 1906 Dorothy Tryon Florence Clark Esther Dodge 1907 Anna Volquardson Mary May Fanny Price Anne D . O r r , ' 04 Jane C. Breese, ' 04 R o w E N A Campbell, ' 04 Ruth vS . Hart, ' 04 President V icc-Presidc)it S e c r c t a r y T r c a s u r e r M e m b e r Olive A. Nevin, ' oe; Elizabeth LeB. Marston, ' 05 S. Gertrude Knight, ' os Edith P. Ball, ' 05 Absent Member Mary M. Leet, ' o 172 ir ©atrrs F .-V N N Y Field ' 04 Helen Rollins, ' 04 Elsie A p p e l , ' 04 Elizabeth C o l m a x , ' 04 Maria Do w d , ' 05 Clara Belle Green ' 05 Anna P . T a t u m , ' 05 Mabel S e a g r a v e , ' 05 Marian B o s w o r t h , ' c6 Alice Carroll, ' 06 F i c in a u S i m f I c 5 i III o 11 Apple Pic Cold Pic 1) e iL ' berry P i e Green Goo s cherry Pie Sweet Potato Pie Soldi Berry Pie Presidential Pie Carrot Pie 173 •74 WELLESLEY COLLEGE Sibyl Baker Maude Dewar Ruth Spencer Hart J E ANNETTE SaGE KeLLY Clara Stanton More Julia Gardiner Tyler SCRIBBL Head Ethel P. W a x h a m H F a c II 1 1 a t c Laura E. Lockwood Carrie Holt Students Alice Louise Baker Sibyl Baker Mary Lee Cadwell Jessie Gidley Ruth Haulenbeek Winifred Hawkridge Laura A l a x d i s H i b b a r d Clara Stanton More Claire Sampson Natalie A.Smith Ray M. Tyler Ethel P . Wa x h a m 175 17 WELLESLEY COLLEGE VASSAR COLLEGE, APRIL 25, 1903 Kcsohed: That, economically, it is not advantageous to the United States to possess territory in the Tropics. Aflarmative— Vassar Speakers Siibstittiics 1. Katharine M. Morgan, ' 0,5 i. Charlotte L. Rudyard, ' 04 2. Jeannette S. Taylor, ' 04 2. Helen E. True, ' 04 3. Susannah J. McMurphy, ' 03 Negative— Wellesley Speakers Substitutes 1. Effie a. White, ' 03 i. Florence Hutsinpillar, ' 04 2. Ethel B. Doak, ' 04 2. Sibyl Baker, ' 04 ■. Marian Kinney, ' 04 3. Fajth H. Talcott, ' 04 r® pftutttit Committee May V. Landis, ' 03, i ' hainnau ■■Katharine R. Page, ' 03 Clara S. More, ' 04 - ■Bessie C. Halsey, ' 05 Kate I. Lord, ' 03, Ex-ofjicio 178 WELLESLEY COLLEGE Wtlkslt College Mjlttic a[00ociatiott Fanny Field, ' 04 Grace G. Crocker, ' 04 Edith M. Kingsbury Bessie C. Halsey P r c s i d c II I V ice- P r c s i d c n i S c c r c t a r y Treasurer E X c c n I i V e Bo a r d Jane C. Breese, ' 04 Maria Dowd, ' 05 Sarah J. Woodward, ' 05 Mary E. Bowers, Faculty Heads of Sports Jeannette Risdon Rowena Campbell Ida W. Kitchen Grace Clarke Rachel W. Pflaum Ethel Z. Sullivan Lilian A. McDonald Head of Rowing Head of Basketball Head of Tennis Head of Running Head of Hockey Head of Shot Putting Head of Golf tParsttj) iSaskt iSall Cram, 19024903 Katharine K n o d e l , ' 03 Fonuards Jessie A. Marvin, ' o,; Gladys Wheeler, ' 06 Jane C. Breese, ' 04, Siihslitiite Center RowENA Campbell, ' 04 Nell Gould, ' 06, Substitute Guards Katharine Knodel, ' 03 Sarah J. Woodward, ' 05 Anne D. Orr, ' 04, Substitute 179 1904 ilaskt iSaU Jane C. Breese, Captain Forwards Jane C. Breese Jessie A. Marvin Fanny Field, Substitute Center Rowena Campbell Eleanor Clark, Substitute Anne D. Orr Guards Emily Osborn, Substitute 180 Edith Fox 1904 CreVD Faith H. Talcott A DELE Ogden Lilian A. McDonald Sarah F. Marsh, (7) Mary P. Follett, (6) Elizabeth Colman, (5) Captain C ox s w a i n Stroke Ruth C. Crosby, (4) Ethel B. Doak, (3) Faith H. Talcott, (2) Jeannette Risdon, Bow Substitutes Grace G. Crocker, (i) Gertrude Lukens, (2) Ruth Huntington, (3) Daisy G. Dutcher, (4) 181 f??% 1904 ofhcp Ccam Mabel L.Pierce Capiat n Goal Elizabeth Couse Full Backs Martha N. Brooks Ethel B. Doak Half Backs Madeleine vSteele AnnaM.Scott Mabel L.Pierce Forivards MarjorieLee GraceGladuing MaryP. FoLLETT ElsieL.Ring Bessie W. Allen Substitutes Bertha Wa tson FlorenceHewitt Ruth Huntington Helen Chamberlain 182 Rmrttcn-Four Hramntics 1 84 WELLESLEY COLLEGE jWoustcur iSeaucaire Drama in Four Acts from the Original of BOOTH TARKINGTON March 23, igoi CAST The Duke of Winterset The Marquis de Mirepoix Sir Hugh Guilford Beau Nash Monsieur Beaucaire Mr. Molyneux Mr. Bantison Captain Badger Captain Rohrer 1 Fran 01 s, servant of Beaucaire ) Prince Henri de Beaqjolais Page Lady Mary Carlisle Lady Rellerton Lady Marlborough Ladies of the Court Servants: Anne Orr, Lilian McDonald Florence Cook, Sara Riker Bertha Platt Louise Hunter Ida Kitchen Eleanor Clark Sibyl Baker Clara More Ruth Hart Elizabeth Colman Jeannette Kelly Rowena Campbell Eleanor Monroe Bernardine Beach Adele Ogden Julia Tyler [Grace Clark Maude Dewar [ Louise Hasbrouck THE LEGENDA ? Cl)e itanti of 3|earts ' Bestre Drama in One Act by W. B. YEATS May 24, igo2 Maurteen Bruin Bridget Bruin Shawn Bruin Maire Bruin . Father Hart A. Fairy Child CAST Elizabeth Colman Jeannette Kelly Clara More Sibyl Baker Grace Clark Maude Dewar The Song was sung by Annie Bruce McClure. The Music of the Violin was played by Emily Sophie Brown. H ■■F ■W ni W B t S ' j.. , B ' i tayn HK tt S I K fl ' J v BCfe ' k) 1 l K ' ' 1 Jfl . B I HmP I n f 1 ' H. 1 ■TTT S K PJIHgF? 1 BH BT i m v iUpill HyH ■BPi ■' ■Ip r ' vfl H bCi K -Aitff 4 i ' r A ■Hi 1 ■■■H I HE - ■i 1 H 1 a (glimpse of aratitse D r a m a i n T h r c c Acts by JOSEPH J. DILLEY December 15, 1902 CAST Adolphus Dove Henri Beaudesert Frank Bellamy . Tatjes . Constable Pope . Laura Bellamy EUPHEMIA SpECKLEY Susan . Eleanor Macdonald Sibyl Baker Clara More ZORA WiLKINS Sarah Marsh Eleanor Bennett Mary Nye Tusanelda Nusbickel 186 THE LEGENDA .87 Drama in Three Acts by CLARA STANTON MORE, 1904 May 23, 1903 Duke del Abisbel Master John Upton The Bailiff of Sutton Farms Sir Harry Percy . Lord Castleton Lady Barbara Brockton Mistress Elizabeth Lacy The Duchess of Marlborough Lady Julia Montgomery Footmen .... CAST Bertha Platt Clara More Ruth Hart Jeannette Kelly Florence Cook Sibyl Baker Maude Dewar Eleanor Macdonald Julia Tyler Tusanelda Nusbickel Florence Cook i88 WELLESLEY COLLEGE Wi)t mior la June, 1904 n n J) I90 WELLESLEY COLLEGE %iic is one J)cmnltion grlnO (©nnl 0 THE VAMPIRE OF THli I.EGKXDA BOARD A fool there was. and she made a pome Even as you and I, For an Ear and a Mouth and a Printed Page — (They called it The Public and her The Rage ), But the Fool had arrived at a driveling age, (Even as you and I), And the words she ' d string and the adverbs she ' d sling, And the intricate rhythms in which she ' d sing, And the horrible rhymes that she gave the thing Would honestly make you cry! Her hair was not more sunny than her heart. — Catherine Linn. Tag . nd Tag-On (meeting each other in the hall, simultaneously): My dear! My better half! LATEST REMARKS OF OUR GREAT PHILOSPHER— M. ARNOLD That ' s one less thing for you not to know. Far be it from so. You can grind me on my immaturity, or my youngness, or anything you like, but don ' t grind me on my being fat! (We won ' t). Laughter holding both his sides. — Ruth Lyon. (Elje IXeal SDiarv of a liral i?rf9l)man September 15. Me and ma come to Welsly today. I never see so meny trunks in my life. I have got a lovly room in the villidge the villidge is one thing andthe collidge is anuther I like the villidge the best. You dont get lost as offen in the villidge. Ma says I want you should keep a diry cause I think it will be good for your spellin and grammer. THE LEGENDA 19 I says I can spell and gram all rite aint I gone threw high school and been vallydiktorian of mv class. But she says just the same I want you to keep a diry so I am goin to. September i6. I am goin to have a desk and a morris chair. I think they are awful nice. My roomate is not very nice her name is Arethusa Jones and she thinks shes sum I am goin to call her fatty cause she is awful thin and I hope it will make her mad. You just wait Fatty and you ' ll see. I took a exam today. It was awful easy, Histry. I think I am goin to have a good time at collidge. September 17. I dont gess I am neither. Ma has gone home today. Very rainy. She got me a chafin dish before she went they are awful nice. I got a letter from the deen to see her in offis hours. ' It was so rainy I thot I wouldnt go but Fatty says I guess it will be kind of green if you dont so I did and she said your preperashin is abomnable. I never see such spellin and punkcherashin unless you improve I shall take away the certifitcate from your school I do not like the deen and I shall not call on her agen. September 18. Still rainy. Fatty cryed all night she is nicer then I thot at first. September 19. A sofmore come and ast me to go to the christian assosh I cant spell that word recepshin and I went sumbudy put their foot thro my graduashin dress. September 20. Went to church. Fatty bawled all day. Made fuge in the evenin it was kind of sticky but awful nice. September 21. Went to call on the deen agen I think she is just mean I wish ma was here shed tell her whats what I guess. Just you wait, old deen, and youl see. September 22. I want to go home. September 23. Went to call on the deen agen no I dont. September 24. I like math you do not have to spell mutch. September 25. Got called on in math no I dont. September 26. My impresshins of Welsly is a theem we have to write in Inglish I. I think I will write some here and then coppy them maybe Fatty will coppy them and fix the spellin. I think collidge hall is awful big and the lake is awful nice and the fakulty parler is a nice place to sit in and the teachers dont look mutch and the seniors think theyre sum they look like big flappin black crows and I dont think the deen is nice and the girls are awful nice and if it wasnt for the writein and spellin I shood just love collidge. Went to barnswallos recepshin tonight I felt as if I was a konvict bein herded up under a letter. _i92 WELLESLEY COLLEGE September 27. Wrote to ma today ast her to send me a big dikshinary. I dont think I will keep this diry any more cause I dont see that it makes my spellin and grammer enny better and it takes a lot of time but maybe they will teach us to spell in Inglish I. I hope so. Little jinny Hiss is a studious soul, A studious soul is she. She calls for her books And her door she then hooks, And begins to make fudge merrilee. ' ' Tis better to have loved and lost Than never to have loved at all. — Alice Cliapiiiaii. To See young Claudia at her Work, you Knew She ' d Never Try to Shirk; The Most Unpleasant Things She ' d Do. if but the Faculty Asked her To. — Claudia Fitik. an are not Sbarl?s tbat Sfttntillatc ! ' A diller, a dollar, a bright science scholar, On what can you have fed? Last week you starred in Physics 5, Today your health has fled. — Rebecca Ellis. ' Mankind has virtues, a plentiful store; Some few mortals get two or more. But one has them all — why, the gods adore My brother! — Grace Dan forth. ART JOINS HANDS WITH SCIENCE Solicitous Sophomore: And who is your instructor in Biology? Knowing Freshm. n; Oh, we have Miss Thompson most of the time, but Professor Macdougall comes in to assist quite often. THE LEGEND A 193 jfit t llcsfions in Science Q. What is a frog? A. A frog is a little green animal with a croak. Q. What is a croak? .4. A croak is a noise; the frog has more of it at night. Q. What use is a frog? -4. Xo. I. Xo use. No. II. On second thoughts, a frog is useful to biology. Q. What is to biology? 4. To cut up frogs. Present, I biology; Past, I biologized; More Past, I have biolo- gizen. 0. Is it comme il faiit to biology? .4. Oh, quite! The first families do it. 0. Who are some of the first families? .4. The Hutsinpillars are a first family. Florence Hutsinpillar biologies. 0. What effect does it have upon Florence Hutsinpillar? .4. A peculiar one; it makes her buy flowers. Q. Does it have any other effect on her? .4. Yes, it makes her buy more flowers. Q. What connection has flowers with cutting up frogs? 4. No one can imagine. 0. What does Florence Hutsinpillar do with the flowers? .4. That is just the question! P. S. We tried to make this into a poem, but Hutsinpillar is very tr ' ing in poetrv. B IRunning Shirt Gatbcrs no iftfcrobcs 194 WELLESLEY COLLEGE ' Oh, that this too, too solid flesh would melt! — Florence Cook. ' There is a Theory some Deny, That Myra once was Three Foot High, And a Little Boy was Terrible Strong And he Stretched her out to ' Leven Foot long. — Mvra Fishbach. ' For dignity composed and high exploit. — 5. Louise Adams. SUGGESTION FOR A GREEK CHORUS By AiiniE Fl. nders Alaas, alass, I know a lass Who studies Greek and Latin. Alaas, alass, Our Sport is fast, And greatly given to battin ' . Instructor: Your rank. Miss Freshett? Miss F.: Unconditional. Instructor: Miss Greene? Miss G.: On probation in French. ' Sis a ' Umec ffrcsbnian tbat Iknows ber own IRanh! THE LEGENDA 195 ' I do but sin.u; because I must, And pipe bvit as the linnets may. — Grace Simpson. Ruth Abbot (naivelv): Do thev make shoes lari;er than fives? To the Secretary of the Class of i(jo4 — I wish to offer my resignation as factotum to the Class of 1904. I have neither the time nor the interest to give to it. Yours truly, Gl. dys Gladding. Chf ong of tlK «3aitmrr She thought she saw a course in Freneln O ' er which she ' d grown quite lean ; She looked again and found it was The office of the Dean. ' I am ashamed, in here, she said, So often to be seen. She thought she saw an English theme. All written, by her bed. She looked again and found it was A plot within her head. ' Poor thing, she said, poor, silly thing. It ' s waiting to be read. From Gloucester comes Lengthy, the fancy skijjper. To win great renown as the Wellesley ' star dipper. ' — Alice Laivson. JSlce c? are tbe JBusv;, for STbcB Sball ©btain more JBustncss 196 WELLE SLEY COLLEGE mong tije BSoolis Extracts from The Home Letters of a Self-made Shark Dear Mamma: I can ' t think of anything to say. L. and J. are laughing at me, but they don ' t under- stand my motives. Yours lovingly, Gr. ce. Dear Mother: I am well. I can not write more, as I have to copy my hygiene notes. With much love, Gr. ce. My dear Mamma: I enjoy Bible very much, but there is one thing I want to ask you. Why should the Israelites have gotten so excited, just because Saul chopped up the yoke his oxen wore and sent it around? I asked my roommate and she laughed so I don ' t dare ask m} teacher. Your affectionate daughter, Grace M. Houghton. JUST OUT! WcUesley Magazine for December. A new serial, Roommates I Have Had. by Z. P. Wilkins, begun in this number. Works of D. G. Dutcher, i2mo., cloth, $0.75 per vol. In six volumes, set $3.50. Vol. I. How to Get Acquainted with the Botany Facult} ' . Vol. II. How to Know the Mushrooms. Vol. III. Mice I Have Known in Rooms I Have Lived In. Vol. IV. A Critical Study of the Snake. Vol. V. Economy Made Easy. Vol. VI. Thirty-five Wednesday- Evenings in Stone Hall Parlor. THELEGENDA 197 Uliisi as plavcd over the Sofa Pilloiv, by Helen Wales; cloth, fi.50. It sets Hoyle and Cavendish on the shelf as authorities, says the Neiv York Sun. We recommend it to all whist lovers. The Wellesley Saturday and Sunday: Its Hard Facts, by Martha Freeman, is ex- pected to appear at the end of this month. Miss Freeman feels it her duty to correct the world ' s erroneous supposition that Saturday night at Wellesley consists always of a theatre party or a ball. The Last Word in Etiquette, by E. S. Brown. Macmillan Sons. $1.50. An excellent work on the manners of polite society. We quote one of the meatiest bits: The proper way to greet a faculty-hostess: Grasp her warmly by the hand, as she stoops to greet vou; salute her fondlv on the cheek, and flee. New Dishes for the Epicure, by Elizabeth Welty. G. Bell Sons. $3.50. A collec- tion of tidbits from the popular works of this well-known writer. Her recipes are notable for their hygienic quality, and the carefulness with which they have been chosen. Miss Welty has spent much time and trouble in their selection. r ;r Gates of Silence, ivith Interludes of Song, bj C. L. Butler. One of the most touching bits in this book of lyrics from a well-trained hand is that quoted below. It needs no comment. To Nineteen Five I brought thee late a fading flower. Not so much loving thee, _ As in the fond hope that my gift Might prompt and proper be ; But thou thy no e did ' st straight upturn And send ' st it back to me ; Since when the blush has dyed my cheek. To think thou could ' st scorn ME. There ain ' t no use that I can see For all this fuss and flurry. This world belongs to God an ' me, An ' I can let Him worry. — Fa)t Field. _i9« WELLESLEY COLLEGE Our Wish foh Her Days, that need borrow No part of their good morrow From a fore-spent niijht of sorrow: Days, that in spite f)f darkness, by the light. Of a clear mind are day all night. Life, that dares send A challenge to his end. And when it comes, say, ' Welcome friend. ' Wc wish her store ( )f worth may leave her poor Of riches; and we wish — no more. {Eftf ][0rfrrDfnt My Child, behold the Pre-ccd-ent; The Ha-lo ' round its Head was lent And placed there by St. Faculty. This Won-drous Spec-ta-cle we see Upon a high white Ped-est-al, But ' tis not pushed against the Wall. Ah, no! Upon its Votive Shrine Are burned all Fond Hopes — yours am ' On whose Ful-fill-ment we are bent. Ah, child! Bow down to Pre-ced-ent! ' All felt behind the singer stood A sweet and gracious womanhood. — Brucie McClure. THE LEGENDA 199 ' But light as any wind that blows, So fleetly did she stir, The flowers she touched on dipt and rose. And turned to look at her. — Bessie ir. Allen. ' To grind or not to grind, — that is the question: Whether ' tis easier for the time to sufi er The curious questions of outraged instructors. Or to take arms against a sea of troubles, And simply- cut and end them. — Margaret MeLeod. Louise and Helen were a Pair Who acted Kindly Everywhere. They studied Hard, as Good as Gold, They Always did What They were Told. — Foster and Fox. ' What care I how bright I be ? Seven cuts I know ' 11 flunk me. If seven won ' t, then fourteen shall. For I ' m a woolly Western gal. — Laura flussey. Zbe mags of tbe H iot are IPaet iflnOing ®ut 200 WELLESLEY COLLEGE ti)is fe)trnuiou6 iLife I saw C. More a-rushing by With a sailor hat cocked over her eye. I said, Are any of the family dead? But she was merely trying to I. Interview a. President Hazard. b. Dean Pendleton. c . The lady in the bookstore. d. And Mr. E. Oren Perkins, then II. See o. A hypothetical Sophomore with a hypothetical story. h. A Junior who was once accused, wrongly as it proved, of writing a poem. c. An alumna who 1. Looked kind-hearted. 2. Was not lit ' ry, therefore 3. Might be induced to contribute a leader, a thing which (a.) Nobody was ever seen reading, but ib.) Is required by Precedent, and (c.) Generally fills up a good deal of space; afterwards III. a. Go down to Shattuck ' s. b. Write 1 . A forty-page philosophy paper. 2. A mere bagatelle for English 16, which (a.) Need not be more than thirty-seven pages, and (b.) Can be anything from an ode to an epic poem; c. Learn a difficult lesson in Italian I. All in one hour and twenty-three minutes — Do you wonder she looks worried? THE LEGENDA 20 1 Her Manners were Correct and Nice; She Never Asked for Ice Cream Twice. Still, when she Tried to Misbehave, Oh, how Much Trouble Ruthie Gave! — Ritth Hmiiiu ton. Translating, went from bad to worse, Made epigrams, atteinpted verse. — Helen Chamberlain. Freshm. n (to Senior in front of Dean ' s door): Will you let me stand here by you so you can point out the teachers to me as they go by? I want to get to know them. ' Never grow thy shadow less, Never fail thy cheerfulness. — Annie Luff. Let there be room to eat And order taken that there want no meat. — Jessie Marvin. DIRGE OF PHYSICS I. We have looked but do not find them- Not a Physics book is there! But E. Hewitt 5 is sitting In the never-vacant chair. ?Ibe JEarlB Sbarh Catcbes tbc aBooh 202 WELLESLEY COLLEGE Beulah Johnson — A cardinal with a sweet song, Who would have guessed it! May her voice be heard more often in the Halls of Fame than it has been in the Halls of Welleslev- Sis Greengirl cut her Hygiene Class. Sing Bones, sing Bores, sing Blackboard wall ' ' For why should I go there, she said, ' With all my prep school lore in head? I am a very nifty lass, I ' ll never go at all. She told the Corridors her pranks, Sing Fools, sing Flunks, sing Freslimeuee ! At mid-years said her lecturer, As she a flunk note sent to her — ' I ' ll .give vou yet another chance To go a-cutting me. A lady so richly clad as she, Beautiful exceedingly. — Mabel Pierce. Of Trees, you say, there are just Reams- This one all Fresh-men use for Themes. It stands by the Ob-serv-a-tory ; Its looks are quite another story, Which you ' ll make use of many times. With every well-known word it rhymes. You may this Oak to a Tent compare, Or to a Spec-tre with Waving Hair, To an Um-brel-la, or, a-gain. Less tritely, to a Set-ting Hen. Of all Con-ven-ient Things you ' ll see The Most Con-ven-ient is the Tree. T H E L E G E N D A 203 ' With leaden foot Time creeps along When Mabel is away; With her, nor plaintive was the song, Nor tedious was the day. — Florence Denny. A pretty face is well, and this is well, To have a dame indoors, that trims us up, And keeps us tight. — Marjorie Lee. TO MARION TOWNSEND How many nights can our Marion grind? Saturday, Sunday, Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, Saturday, Sunday, Monday. Doing is activity, and he will still be doing. — .Maude Jessup. I never have crushes, only violent likes — V. L. ' s yovi might call them for short. — .Ada Burt. High attempts have never shame. — Marian Kiiniey. I ' ve seventeen papers due tomorrow, and haven ' t touched one yet! Wear the Walk- Over Shoe. — Eleanor Macdonald. 204 WELLESLEY COLLEGE Cute little Edith Stearns am I, When you get to know me I ' m not so shy. Why, sometimes I talk quite a lot, But to my teachers, I do not, ' Cause I ' m so shy I lose my tongue. I love to be called cute and young, And hear folks say, Her cunning tricks! Now, ain ' t I cute? I ' m only six. The telephone really is the greatest convenience in college. — Chris Hastings. ' Music! O how faint, how weak. Language fades before thy spell. — Pauline Egelston. Nina Hill, so People Said, Just Simply Loved to go to Bed. IN PHILOSOPHY What fault have you to find with Berkeley ' s argument here, Miss Butler? ' I simply can ' t understand what he means. Berkeley can hardly be blamed for that. Miss Butler. Freshman: I suppose we have chapel about half-past nine? Junior: Oh, no; at half-past eight. Freshman: I do not see how I can possibly attend; I never rise till half-past eight. THELEGENDA 205 Wifat tl)c atoful Conscqurncrs iJ Hf 15c Item in Chafing Dish Permit ' Wood alcohol is not to be used in the lamp. ' College Xeii ' s, our esteemed contemporary, publishes the following free press: Girls, are we not thoughtlessly extravagant? The other night I was at a fudge party where pure alcohol was used in the chafing dish. Of course, I need not say that the girl who gave the party was of an enormously wealthy family, but the example made me shudder. If we can not keep the campus free from papers, and if our behavior in the village is disgrace- ful, let us be careful not to put temptation in the wav of our weaker sisters. 1904. A week later, this item appears, with startling red and blue headlines, in the X ' cw York Journal: ANNIE McNAMERTY SAYS THAT ALCOHOL DID IT! Lovely Wellesley Girl Confesses ! Not a Dry Eye in the Court Room I Before a crowded court room, the lovely weeping Annie McXamerty, a fair Wellesley student, told how she was led into the awful crime of forgerv. It appeared from her story that, though her allowance of S500 a month was ample, with economy, for ordinary needs, she was forced to pay such a fabulous price for the fuel of her chafing dish that forgery seemed her only alternative. Chafing dishes, said the charming Annie, are an absolute necessity at Wellesley, especially at College Hall, where overeating is not encouraged by the bill-of-fare. The judge, in charging the jury, could hardly speak for tears. Remember, said he, that although the accused has erred, her temptation was great, and I consider inore culpable the combine which forced the unfortunate girl to buy fuel beyond her means. Gentlemen of the jury, they are the guilty ones! See extra edition for detailed account of the trial. At about the same time, the following appears in the Boston Transcript: The evidence seems conclusive that bribery has been successfully used by the Pure Alcohol Manufacturing Chemical Trust. It is certainly true that the Wellesley faculty have forbidden all other spirits to be used in the college. We wonder how much Wellesley got? 2o6 WELLESLEY COLLEGE There was a young lady said Why — faiic Burbaiik. Freshman (rushing wildly through corridors of College Hall): Has anybody seen Doctor Hunter? I must find her. I want to get permission to go to Boston. She talked of ' Art ' and ' Philistine. ' — Grace Clark. FOUND OX GENERAL liUI,l l ' :TIN BOARD Grayce Woodbury will hold office hours, by appointment, in 29 Freeman, for the purpose of imparting a full and modest account of the experiences, at home and abroad, of a ineinber of 1904. We hope there will be many applicants. Grayce is undergoing a second year of re-Morse, and needs cheering up. ACCIDENTS WILL HAPPEN IN THE BEST-REGULATED FAMILIES Abbie: Thank Heaven, I don ' t look it. Elsie D.: Oh, yes; I ' m a Duranter ' s sister. Instructor: There is a Miss Danielson in the class, isn ' t there? Jo (eagerly): Oh, I am me! THELEGENDA 207 ' Give me my scallop-shell of quiet. — Olive Miller. ' The lona; and the short of it. — Franklin and Leicts. E ' en the slight harebell raised its head Elastic from her airv tread. — Anna Scott. Don ' t cry, little girl, don ' t cry! Your health is a wreck, I know, And your mood is blue And your back aches, too. And your mind went long ago. But this strenuous life will soon pass by — Don ' t cr} little girl, don ' t cry! —Helen llalley. Eleanor Hammond is the sole possessor of the secret — whose ashes repose in the great urns in front of College Hall. Ask her. You may be able to fool a Freshman, but ycju can ' t fool her. To be slow in words is a woman ' s only virtue. —Molly Nye. Drawling and Stretching and Fainting in Coils. — Marion Fenton. 2o8 WELLESLEY COLLEGE Scene: Economics Library. Fifty or so students comfortablv ensconced in various corners of the spacious apart- ment. Heavy silence reigns. Then E. M. B. (in thrilling whisper): I do wish these instructors wouldn ' t give so many references outside the library! Here are at least ten references to Ibid, and I can ' t find him anvwhere in the index. To mourn a mischief that is past and gone, Is the best way to draw new mischief on. — Estcllc Kramer. Bear with me, good boy, I ' m much forgetful. — Mary Rilcv- I can not tell what the dickens his name is. — Christine Johaiiscii. Out upon it — I have loved Three whole days together, And am like to love three more If it be fair weather. — Lilian McDonald. Freshm. n (at Christian Association Reception): Won ' t you put down your class, too. Miss Jones? Nineteen Hundred and Six (proudly signing herself 1905): Oh, certainly! I ' m a Sophomore. THELEGENDA 209 GLEANINGS FROM ENGLISH XV ' hat did vou think •uu added tu the debate, Miss More? ' I thoiighl I added a iluor speech! ' So I supposed. Why do you always adopt that dancing position on the phitlorm — that left foot forward tioint? Ah I Miss Smith! You were oratorical, epigrammatic, very indifferent, somewhat startling, and I doubt if your logic would hold. Really, Miss Nye, you assume a most tragic air — is it necess ' rv under the circum- st ' nces? ' You have too prepossessing an appearance. Miss Lord, to warrant so shy a manner. ' Please do not sit on the piano while you are debating, Miss Pinney. Why be so very plaintive. Miss Raker? Miss Stearns! Y(.)U were interesting, as usual; sound sense, as usual; I ' cry incoherent, as usual; cxlrciiicly bad form, as usual! Spare tbc 1Ro an Spoil tbc CbilC ' 2IO WELLESLEY COLLEGE They thought they heard an orator, Who spoke in strident tone ; They looked again, and saw that on The platform stood a cone. Unless you leave at once, they said, You ' ll be talking there alone. — Stella Kohu. A wild Bohemian was she. — Martlia Sciiciick. ' There are no youths like the Gloucester youths, my friend. — Pativ Brooks. M. RiON Proctor: We refer you to one of the laws of Faculty legislation: No undergraduate shall con- verse with the man who brings her horse from the stable, unless said man be over forty years of age and wear working clothes. This rule has not been retained by the Student Government Association, but there can be no possible harm in following it. THE EVER-COURTEOUS FRESHMAN De. r Miss Brown: Please come and see me in office-hours as posted. Very truly, C. MATH. My dear Miss M.- th: I regret very much that on account of a previous engagement I am not able to accept your very kind invitation. Sorrowfully, GREENIE BROWN. THE LEGENDA 2 I I III-: irriQui-n ' TE of dixixg-out There was a maid of 1905, A jolly Junior she, Who went to Norumbega (She invited herself) to tea. She didn ' t like the salad, And her hostess thought it pour; But they ate a goodly portion, Then bolted for the door. They wildh ' rushed to Wilder And found there was a place ; So they ate auollicr supper — How did they have the face? All will be as She says. -Bertha I ' lalt. ' Don ' t understand a word you ' re saying; 3 ' ou ' re talking over my head. — Ida Kitclu F.vculty: And so, by breaking the ice, they came to a better understanding. Our Bess was Very Meek and Mild; She Softly Spoke. She Sweetly Smiled. — .4. B. Eastman. 212 WELLESLEY COLLEGE 3it is HumorrD That Laura Hussey attended psychology class several times last year. That Ada May Bust. That Ora Boynton has ei,y;ht new doubles in 1904. That Daisy Dutcher went to bed before three several times last term. That Marjorie Webber expects to attend chajjel on May first. That Marion Townsend won ' t get her degree if she persists in neglecting her academic duties for social and athletic pursuits. That Florence Fremmer has accepted a position to teach boxing at Posse Gymnasium next year. That Helen Wales does not spend Sunday in the Chemistry Building. Wt s?far on ooD Suthontv That Denver girls visit San Francisco often, it is so near. That horseshoes don ' t bring good luck, but it is too bad to waste one. That if you want to get along in the world you have to fight for your rights. We refer you to Bertha Watson. That Ora Boynton didn ' t miss a dav at chapel last year. That Sally Marsh and Florence Snow expect to spend a whole week in Wellesley before long. That Lucy Proctor at (jne time thcjught quite seriously of majoring in German. That Bible stvidv is not compulsory at Dartmouth. For reference call on Addie Flanders. That Zora Wilkins is making an effort to overcome her disinclination to cheer at elections and on similar occasions of rejoicing. THE LEGENDA •3 We rejoice to say that it was before an audience drawn from her own class that Edith Fox first gave that famous selection of hers beginning, June-bug flies around in June, Lightning-bug in Mav. Few who heard will ever forget that night when, with Cora Butler at the piano, Edith was urged by masters of learning to sing this song before our beloved Dean. We learn on good authority that Edith has contracted an engagement to present this same song at the Metropolitan this winter. iSallaD bv janrt iBcClrllan Lambir [Fovmd in 2004 in the ruins of Freeman Cottage, and supposed to have been written a hundred years earlier. Along with it were a collection of border tales which antiquarians conjecture were once the fringe of a rug.] Last night there were fu ' four of us, Tonight there ' ll be but three — Little Mildred and Katy Lewis And Becky Ellis and me. A Senior ' s asked me to College Hall To go with her to tea. When our foursome flock sups together tonight. One lamby ' ll missing be. O little did Becky ' s star-gazing mind Think we ' d sae soon parted be, Or Mildred, wailing her last flunk note, A sairer sorrow see. We four hae lived our college life Close taegither at sleep and dine, And now I am leaving the three alone, I may have to staj ' until nine. 214 WELLESLEY COLLEGE Love, sweetness, goodness in her person shined. — Elsie Delight. ' I ' m not particular, but I do like to have my bathtub to myself. — Mary Follctt. And in mj heart Lie there what hidden woman ' s fears there will — We ' ll have a swashing and a martial outside. — Kiillt ] ' oiiiii . See tall, athletic Carrie B.! A bigger girl you ne ' er did see. Our Carrie ' s very versatile; She ' ll play whist for a little while ' And then a Little Comfort takes. And for herself shirt waists she makes. With dish and spoon one hungry night, She went for food for our delight — We don ' t blame her: the plans of mice And girls can ' t always break the ice. — Carrie Ihtrdiit. I have met many suits nf cluthes, but few men. — liUa .Iriiistrmii . Gertrude Ware is one of those characters so easily shaken from their determinations. The other night, when half dreaming, she heard her roommate asking, You asleep, Gertrude? No, she answered sleepily. You are asleep, asserted the first girl. On the instant, Hengham crawled out of bed and turned on the light to see if I ' m asleep or not, she said. IN BIBLE IV. Instructor (for the fourth time): Miss SmithI Miss Smith (in semi-comatose state): Come in! Cbc IHIlbcels of tbe acaCiemfc Council Siove Slowlg 3But tbcfi Crueb ExcecOing Small THE LEGENDA 215 ' By heav ' n, I can not flatter. — Elsie Ring. Her lamp goeth not out by night. — Je i}iic McKcariii. O fcmina! Semper miitabiles! How is our Eleanor changed! In Freshman year she would say, Oh, no; I haven ' t any dances for Freshmen; I ' m saving them for upper-class girls. And now! It is not everyone who is requested to take English i6. — Ethel Moodv. NO HOPE FOR THE POOR OR THE AGED Helen Peck (in Chaucer exam., describing Garden in Roinaiiiit of the Rose): Outside the wall were gathered all the vices — Envy, Wrath, Old Age and Poverty. Here in her hair The painter plays the spider, and hath woven A golden mesh to entrap the hearts of men. — P lsie Appel. RUTH LINCOLN There is a young lady named Ruth Who — we promise you this is the truth! — Knows the Bible so well That she ' s able to tell The names and contents of each book! 2i6 WELLESLEY COLLEGE Silly Sayrah here you see, Just as sweet as she can be. Says she, This grind is very silly, And I bet I know who wrote it. — Sara 1 1 Anderson. Jessie Goff, in June, 1904: I have finished my course, I have kept the Faith. She pined in thought. And with a green and yellow melancholy She sat. — M. E. Coleman. ' Oh, this learning! What a thing it is! — Eit plieniia ' ort!iint;lou. Oh, the years we waste And the tears we waste. And the work of our head and hand, To give to professors who do not know The lit ' r ' y tastes our families show. And so do not understand. — fulic Morrow. ' A college joke to cure the dumps. — Aliee Stoekwell. lit is a long IHiflbt tbat bas no Sawn THELEGENDA 217 (Elir ong of thr lirmr I. With fingers wearj and cramp ' d. With eyehds heav} ' and red, A student sat in kimona loose Wishing that she were dead. Write! write! write! She tore sheets from her pad by the ream, And ever thro ' all the hours of the night She droned the song of the theme. IT. Think! think! think! While the cock is crowing aloof! And write write, write! Till the stars shine thro ' the roof! It ' s oh! to be a shark! Or with the fortunate mix Whose cards a Failed will never mark Because of English 6! III. Think! think! think! Till the brain begins to swim. Write! write! write! Till the eyes are heavy and dim ! Noun and adverb and verb, Verb and adverb and noun, Till over my papers I fall asleep. Yet, dreaming, still write things down! 2i8 WELLESLEY COLLEGE IV. O teacher, with orders hard, Do you think you are doing right? It is not genius you ' re bringing out — You ' re wasting electric light!!! Write! write! write! Hours never were longer, I deem, As I make at once with double stroke A flunk as well as a theme! V. With fingers weary and cramp ' d. With eyelids heav} ' and red, A student sat in kimona loose Wishing that she were dead. Write! write! write! She tore sheets from her pad by the ream ! And ever through all the hours of the night She droned the song of the theme. Cbcnics arc Xong and IHuibt ie jfleeting CHOICE BITS FROM OUR BUSINESS MANAGER ' S CORRESPONDENCE Employment Bure. u, Wellesley, Mass. Goiilemen: I want in each college community a keen, energetic young man of pleasant personality and good address, a chap who is willing to work but who has in his makeup something above the drudgery of ordinary canvassing, for such things as books, cooking utensils and other evils which college men working their way through seem to fall heir to. Perhaps a man who is not taking an active mole-skin and jersey part in athletics would have more time to devote to a business which deserves and will well repay very earnest effort. I shall be pleased to correspond further with you or with the young man whom you may elect. Faithfully yours, lOHN SMITH, Manager. jfaint Ibeart IRevcr Won Jfair IIHlageg THE LEGENDA 219 THE M. J. RAREBLANK COMPANY, CHICAGO, ST. LOUIS, NEW ORLEANS, NEW YORK, MONTREAL General Cablk Address Vaseline Boston, May 28, 190, . Elizabeth C. Taylor, Wellesley College, Wellesley, Mass. Dear Madam: Replying to your communication in regard to a donation for the benefit of your society, we beg to advise that we are not making anj ' outright donations at the present time. The only assistance we can offer you is included in the following proposition, and it is one by which many Churches and other societies are greatly increasing their revenue : We will redeem at one cent each, all of the oval fronts taken from cartons containing our Oval Fairy Soap, or the Gold circles taken from cartons containing M. J. Rareblank ' s (Uvccriuc Tar Soap up to i.ooo in all, which you may send to us here within sixty days from date, carriage prepaid. Fairy Soap is a pure, white floating soap, unequalled for the toilet and bath and fine laundry purposes. It is oval in shape, and each cake is packed and wrapped in a separate carton. Rareblank ' s Glycerine I ' ar Soap soothes, heals, and keeps the skin soft and velvety. It cuts dirt like magic, while its antiseptic properties render it the most healthful soap made. It instantl} produces a rich creamy lather in hard or soft water. Invaluable for shampooing and toilet purposes. Either of these soaps can be procured by you through your retail or wholesale merchant, or sold by you to other friends of your cause at quite a handsome profit, with additional available income from the fronts of the cartons, as above mentioned. Otherwise, you could solicit your friends, all of whom use some brand of soap, to purchase Oval Fairy, or Rare- blank ' s Glycerine Tar Soaps, as an officer of the society or manager of the enterprise, and in this way save you all of the trouble in regard to same, except mailing the fronts to us. In this offer o have an opportunity to secure practicall}- a donation of $10.00 at little expense and no trovible to you. Yours truly, M. J. RAREBLANK CO. IHflbcn lovclv woman stoops for moncB. 2lnf tries to mahe XegenOas pag, Ht comes to be— well, more tban funtiB, tto get sucb letters cverv Oa . 220 WELLESLEY COLLEGE I know, myself, a Man — which is a proud and 3 ' et a wretched thing. — Wise Abbott. And still the} ' gazed, and still the wonder grew, That one small head could carry all she knew. — Eleanor Monroe. ' For if she will, she will, you may depend on ' t, And if she won ' t, she won ' t, so there ' s an end on ' t. — Heloi Rollins. And like the brook ' s low song her voice, A song that could not die. — Grace Gladding. Had She not Hated to Forgive, She Would have been Too Good to Live. — Carey Noble. Nineteen Hundred . nd Three (when 1Q05 won the cup): How mightily sometimes we make us comforts of our losses. Of all wild beasts preserve me from a tyrant, And of all tame — a flatterer. — Jeannctte Risdon. THE LEGENDA 22 I TO MADELEINE STEELE ' Her eyes the glow-worm lend thee, The shooting stars attend thee; And the elves, also. Whose little eyes glow, Like the sparks of fire, befriend thee. Still did the notions throng About his eloquent tongue, Nor could his ink flow faster than his wit. — Minnie W ' holean. Faculty-rushing, Sophomore-hushing, all-Freshmen-crushing Senior. — Ruth Ilarl. - c .- -t (X dl - f i- 222 WELLESLEY COLLEGE Ever-Polite Freshman (to Miss Hazard): I beg pardon — I don ' t vmderstand the name? tirtje IrgcnDa IBoara My Child, the Awful War-ning here Draws from your Eye the Lim-pid Tear. (Jb-serve the Fren-zied Creat-ure there Who Scrib-bles, Scrib-bles everywhere ; And there Another, Shrieking Loud, Flies from a Mad and Threat-en-ing Crowd ; While Yon-der, see, An-other pleads For Gold, with which to meet her needs. Sad-dest of all, that Va-cant Fool Who Va-pid Jokes must Sadly Drool. Ah, Child! Avoid her Awful Fate, And Never, Never Scintill-ate! The life of woman is full of woe! Toiling on and on and on. — Mary Talc. lectures are ILoiui aiiD Clnic is not ffleetfnci NINETEEN HUNDRED AND SEVEN APPROVES Freshman (meeting Senior on campus): How grand you look in your cap and gown! I do think caps and gowns are the cutest things! THE LEGENDA 22 ' OH, THE REASONING BRAIN OF JUNIORS! [Elisabeth Hardman stands by the Lit. ' II classroom lookint; at the schedule-card on the door.] Chorus from within: Come in, Elisabeth; this is your class. Elis. beth (turning away and stalking down the corridor): I know it, but it doesn ' t sav so on the card. Sophomore Friend (to Freshman walking to village): My dear, that was a Senior, and you didn ' t get off the walk for her. Freshm. n: How on earth am I to know who the Seniors are when they all look like perfect babes? A smooth and steadfast mind. Gentle thoughts and calm desires. — Gertrude Luketis. WHY THIS COURTESY? Nina Hill (to friend who has just come out of the bookstore ): Oh, let ' s see vour David Copperfield. Isn ' t it pretty? You ' re going down to the village, aren ' t you? Don ' t you want me to take vour book over to Stone? Friend (an hour later): Well, Nina, what are you doing? Nin. : Reading David Copperfield for Lit. VI. — been reading it for the past hour. (!!) ' He that still may see your cheeks, Where all rareness still reposes. Is a fool if e ' er he seeks Other lilies, other roses. — Ella Tutllc. 224 WELLESLEY COLLEGE Motto adopted by the Legenda Board as beiny; truly inspiring, and recommended pessimistically to all fellow-sufferers: There is another and a better world. What pace is this thy tonj ' ue keeps? — Julia Tyler. Freshman (to Senior in front of Dean ' s door): Are you the Dean? ' Girl: No! Freshman: Well, never mind; I guess you ' ll do just as well. ' Do but look on her hair! It is bright As Love ' s star when it riseth! — Eleanor Warner. Precise Proper Particular Periodic Punctual — FJla Sai ' Tcr. Cbc 1Hlne © ' cloch JBcll anC the Encilisb Cabinet •Matt for no CCbcme THE LEGENDA 225 ' In small proportions we just beauties see, And in short measures, life may perfect be. — Alice Phillips. TEARFUL TUNE OF THE TACTLESS Breaks, breaks, breaks! Ah, ye tactful, pity me! I would that my tongue wouldn ' t utter The thoughts that arise in me! Classmate: Oh, Minnie, don ' t give yourself away like that! Minnie Troy; I hope there ' 11 be someone else to give me awa} ' when the time comes. She was a miller ' s daughter. And dwelt beside the m ill. Deep was the flow of the water, But she was deeper still!! — Helen Quale. There ' s no art To find the mind ' s construction in the face. — Helen M . Thomas. 1903 — Never did mockers waste more idle breath. An echo from the past. What time is it on that clock ? — Dutchy Renard. 226 WELLESLEY COLLEGE Do you like Peter Thomson suits? Anyway, a bird in the hand is worth two in the biisch. — Elkabcth Ta vlor. ttbe Shabbiest Shirt bas a Silften Xininci ' Ittle Babee Jane are I ; I are dess awfoo fat. But I are a big class ossifer — Now what you sink of zat! — lane Lennox. d)f C ' lruator The Useful El-e-vat-or, now To you, Dear Children, makes its Bow. ' Tis an Ac-com-mod-a-ting Beast, And it Ac-commo-dates the Least As sweetly as it does the Great. It does with Patience El-e-vate Your thoughts and you to the Fourth Floor; All Wicked Haste it does Deplore. And to instil Sweet Patience strives. IVIy Child, had you Nine Fe-line Lives You ' d better — not read Kant and Pa-tei — But watch the Low-lv El-e-va-tor. You diffy Ikey Pin-wheel, with a bat in your belfry; you look as if you ' d eaten a canary, could eat a boiled owl. Drunk and disorderly old socks! (See F. M. Webster ' s Dictionary of the English Slanguage, ' ul. IL, p. 20.) THE LEGEND A --27 a QTrff SPav Cpir ' jf it tbc jfirst We iimst wake and gn forth early, very early, niiimmate dear! Tumorruw is the Tree-day at which we first appear, And the Sophomores are hunting on the Hill and in the .t lade, But they will not find, howe ' er they seek, that mighty little spade. They have trimmed a cutleaf maple with a lot of purple crape, They think they ' ve got our song and cheer and color in good shape, But we ' ve fooled them on the maple and we ' ve .got another Aide. And what is best of all the rest, we ' ve got that little spade. JF t tbc Second You must wake and call me early, call me early, roommate dear. Tomorrow ' 11 be the funniest day of all our mad career; We must finish up our costumes and hasten out to find If the Freshmen have got any fine new notions in their mind. Thev are talking now of playing cards — we have their Mistress ' name, And a dress or two. a cheer and song (though they may not be the same), And we know the tree and motto, so all that ' s left to do Is to tinkle forth in cap and bells of black and scarlet hue. JfBt tbc Cbird Y(_iu nuist wake ami call me early, call me early, roommate dear. Tomorrow ' 11 be the wildest time of all our Junior year; Tomorrow I will leave at eight and travel all the day. For we ' ll bum forensics, roommate, about a mile away. There ' ll be Sophomores a-lurking in the bushes all around. There ' ll be bated whispers stirring, and we ' ll start at every scjund. And we ' ll don our sheets and pillowslips and candles we will light. And we ' ll burn our dull forensics ' neath the murky pall of night. jfBt tbc ffourtb If you ' re waking, call me early, call me early, roommate dear. Tomorrow ' 11 be the Tree-day of our grand old Senior year. We ' ll burn no more forensics, purple parasols are past. But we ' ll walk in sober cap and gown — this Tree-day is the last. [Bell tolls.] The Legeiula Buanl wishes it to be distinctly umierstoud that il does not think this is an e:jic, but according to Prec- eil nt (see page 198) a Legeiula should have an epic and this is the nearest we can cunie to it. 228 WELLESLEY COLLEGE TO j, S. K. Jane, jane, you ' re not at all the same! When first vou came to Wellesley you were shy. But the English faculty With their bean and nec ' ss ' ry, Have fired a frantic frenzy in your eye! Freshman days, you were content to gaze ; As Sophomore you had begun to call; But all your Junior year It was most distinctly clear That you fairly Irmi in 4 Stone Hall. CHORUS Oh, the English facultee Are the finest facultee That ever could be found in fair Welleslev ' ' The Eternal Feminine. — Sue Sclioolficld. ' A look that ' s fastened to the ground, A tongue chained up without a sound. — Katharine Sheridan A ICE GIRL Had Laura not such plaintive tones. You might have thought that she Was just about as nice a girl As anywhere you ' d see. — Laura Gcrbcr. a ffountaln iPcn in tbe Ibanb is wortb a;wentB=Cbrec in tbe ©eneral ©ffice THE LEGENDA I have pills To cure all ills. — Edna Tavlor. Then she would talk — Ye gods, how she would talk! — Marv Davidson. ■From a Boston newspaper, May 28, 1903. W E L L E S E Y THEATRICALS! Tomorrow, on the Wellesley grounds, Ben Jonson will present his play of the Sad Shepherd. It is understood that it is through Miss Bates of the Literature Department that Welleslev has the rare fortune of securing Mr. jonson. TOlbo Steals g moteg Steals Crasb ! Skill ' d in the ogle of a roguish eye. — .Aune Darby. Earth has not anything to show more fair. — Grace Slicrivood. Mother (to Freshman daughter): Yes, I think I will go in with you, too; I want to look at the Dean. WELLESLEY COLLEGE What means a separation between two friends so true, Pacific and Atlantic arc both intensely bhic. — Crocker ami Scott. Freshman Mathematics — a mighty maze but not without a plan. Junior (])sycholciL;y exam imminent): ()li, dear! I can ' t visualize my auditory sensations. ' Ci6 JBcttcr to bavc Cut too IBucb Chan IHcvcr to have Cut at ail ! A PAGR FROM THE COR RFSPOXnENrE OF THE LEGENDA ROARI) 777 Green Avenue, Fordville, Tenn., 8-iS- ' o3- Miss Ei.iz. betii Wei.lesley: Assuming that you are interested in things literary, I have mailed to you, under another cover, a copy of our booklet, The Successful Advertising. Trust the same will interest yrni. As this is a business letter, perhaps I may be pardoned for the liberty I have taken. Trust, however, that I have not went too far, as Billy Baxter says. I am interested in Wellesley as a college — perhaps it ' s because mv home city, F ordville, has been so well represented there — no, it ' s the college, its rei resentatives, customs, manners, etc. To my mind, it ' s Wellesley, Vassar, Smith. It ' s the uncertainty of certain things that makes certain things very uncertain. Wonder if I could purchase a copy of your annual when it appears? Sorry that we could not co-operate with you on -our annual, but trust that you will soon have the problem solved. And — I would certainly like to proctire a copy. Wonder if you are accjuainted with any of the Fordville Wellesley .girls. I am wander- ing; this is a business letter. Trust vou will pardon the libcrt ' I have taken, and wishing the igo4 Leap Year Annual Hoard every success, beg to remain. Yours very truly, CLARENCE C. YOUTH. P. S. From the iip-hill, down-hill and on-the-level effect of this letter, fancy I need practice on the level. — C. C. Y. THELEGENDA 23 1 She oft left college Freshman year, BvLt later, from some hidden fear. Of raging Torrents, she did stay At home in Stone, day after day. —Bcriha Thav, ' He is a fool who thinks, by force or skill. To turn the current of that woman ' s will. —Ethel Doak. IN WHICH HARRIET WHITTAKER TELLS A STORY Down in Lowell, began Harriet. At that moment a confused babble of tongues filled the room. In Lowell once, started Harriet again. A tumult of sounds shook the ceiling. I knew some people in Lowell once, reiterated Harriet calmly. Where, Harriet, where? screamed a dozen voices. In Lowell, said Harriet. Then the proctor came. Xooft after Bour aicobol atiD tbe ffu cie will Xool? after tltself ' It was that fatal and perfidious bark. Built in the eclipse and rigged with curses dark. — igo4 Crew Boat. ' Happy, hap Jy, happy small! None but the short. None but the short. None but the short enjoy the tall. — Emily Etsertspert er 232 WELLESLEY COLLEGE ConfiJifntial Calbs bv tBacgarrt S Ianglfv Carrie Soutter: I am sorry to hear that you are tired of staying at home. I think every girl should delight in housekeeping. No, I do not know of any school desiring a French teacher; I will have to refer you to a Teachers ' Agency. M. P. F.: You are making a mistake, my dear, in not regarding everyone as brother or sister. It would be a great help to you, and make you far less retiring in your conversation, I am sure. Try it for a while. Bessie Birtwell: Yes, I know what a burden you labor under in not being able to concentrate your attention. You can cultivate this gradually, however. Try to take copious notes in your classes; this will help you. And then, too, you will be more apt to gain something from your work. Clar. Green : I am afraid, from what you write, that the girl who lives across the way ivas justified in saying what she did. You must remember that all of us can not play all the time, and loud laughing and talking are very annoying if one has work to do. Ruth Crosby: You are working too hard, I am sure, or you would never have written me such a pessi- mistic letter. Take things easier, child; make the most of the pleasures of your college life, and, above all, be cheerful. Adele Ogden: I would advise you to buy your household articles in Xatick, There are some very good hardware stores there, and I have heard that the clerks are unusually pleasant and anxious to please. Good luck to you, my dear; there is nothing dearer than a young house- keeper! Flora Heine: I can not tell you what course of action you should pursue with regard to your future career until you give me more definite particulars r egarding your family. You have not as yet told me how long your younger sister wears her dresses, or the color of your older sister ' s eyes. Caroline Early: It was all very well to be a tom-boy when you were a little girl, but now you are growing up. Remember, that a woman with a deep voice, a masculine stride and a slap-dash manner is never attractive. THELEGENDA 233 ' Stop not. unthinkingly, every friend yovi meet To spin your wordv fabric in the street. —PoUv llvdc BIBLE IV. ' Sleep, that knits up the ravell ' d sleeve of care Balm of hurt minds, sweet Nature ' s second course. A VERSATILE GIRL— S. BAKER You ' d hardly think one of my age Could speak in public on the stage; But T declaim in accents loud Before a large, admiring crowd. I think I am very versatile. And your opinions not worth while Unless you ' ll sa} you think so, too. My disposition ' s very blue At present, for I ' ve wrote a book. With sonic assistance, and I look Most anxious ' cavise I want to find How all vou folks will take your grind. 1 I thought she was a Cherub Until — alas! alack! I saw deep worr - cross her face, And she roared out, O Whack! — Mary Eaton. ' Our desks are so full of a number of things, I ' m sure we should all be as busy as kings. 2.H WELLESLEY COLLEGE Za liolurna Hi, there. Kdwena! We ' re terrible fond of you. You ' re lots of fun As away you run To a basketball game or two. And your recitations in Bible IV., They just waked us up, that ' s true- Oh, you can bet, Rowena, my pet. We ' re terrible fond of vou! A MODEST (URL When brains were being passed around You drew more than your share. Likewise when eyes were given out You got a handsome pair; And with these gifts, pray how do vou Preserve that modest air? — Marion Potter. THE ELOCUTIONIST I love to climb on the platform And see all the people stare, When, with clear, ringing tones. Or most plaintive of moans, I thrill the expectant air. — Myra Pinuey. I now do plainly see, This busy world and I shall ne ' er agree. — Tusaiiclda Nusbickel. THELEGENDA 235 TO THE EDITOR I want to write to Maude Dewar — She is the nicest thing! I want to write to Maude Dewar; Though absent, still she is not far From all our hearts — her praises are The ones we most do sing. I want to write to Maude Dewar — She is the nicest thing! In her attire doth show her wit, It doth so well become her; For every season she hath dresses fit — For Winter, fspring and Summer. — Eleanor Clark. There is a great athlete named Crocker Whom we thought kept her heart in a locker. But Cupid, in May, Sped an arrow her way. And since, it ' s been all up with Crocker! (Siuestione JFall Hlihe upon tbe iprcparcO an6 upon tbc ' Ilnprcpate THE LATE MISS HEWITT First Angel: When St. Peter blows the trumpet, who from 1904 will be present? Second Angel: Florence Hewitt won ' t. First Angel: What! Taken the elevator down? Second Angel: Oh, no! She will come, but as usual she will be late. 36 WELLESLEY COLLEGE ' The earth her sober inn And quiet pilsjrimage. — Helen Proitty. CLASS SECRET ' RY FAITH TALCOTT Coine all ye people with one voice. And listen to the praise Of Faith, our Corking Secret ' rv Through many stormv days. She is so calm, she is so cool, Her head it is so clear, That hot class orators retire To seats far in the rear. There is a girl in our class Who ' s winsome, dear, and gay. If we told you how we love her, There ' d be nothing left to say. — Emily Osborn. I will not waste another hour To gain an idiot ' s praise. — The I.cgoida Board. Ht fs IRever too Earlg to EnD THE LEGENDA 237 CJ)c itegenlia iSoarli Wishes to acknowledge with sincere gratitude its obli- gation to Florence Hewitt and Clara Staxtox More, for their aid to the Literary Editors; to Julia Gardiner Tyler, for her aid to the Art Editors; to Gertrude Lukexs, for her aid to the Business Managers; and to all others who by advice or practical service have helped us to complete this volume. Further we wish to express our deep appreciation to Dean Pendleton for her aid and encouragement and for the privilege of dedicating to her our Book. 238 WELLESLEY COLLEGE Sftntuort AND now, having brouglit you thus far, we wouhl leave you to your meditations with hut a wortl of exphination as to tlie )Hiri)0se which has i,niiile l our work. In commcniHni!; our Liccwinda to -ou, wi ' would roniincnd not so nuiih tlic liook itself as I he i(U-al we ha ' e liail lor oui pattern. We ha ' e made a dellnite attempt to create a I.icgknda that sluiuld meet the demands of the tmder-,L;raduatc liody and at the same time he of interest and x-ahie to the alumna ' and friends of the college. Ovu ' aim has been to comjjile a book that should be, jirimarily, a Memorabilia for the Class of 1904; secondarily, a ) ' iiir liiH k representa- tive t)f Wellesley College in her various jihases. If in your opinion we have accomplished our purpose in the volume, we give it over to you with glad hearts, realizing to the full our limitations, and asking your most kinil criticism of all wherein we have failed to please you. ADVERTISEMENTS Salurdiiy. Scpk-iiihcr 20. 7:30 P. M., Christian Association Reception. C. H. center. Sunday. Scptciubcr 21. Flower Sunday, 1 1 A. M.. Sermon by Rev. Edward C. Noyes of West Newton. 7 P.M., Vespers with special music. TIFFANY COMPT UNION SQLTARE NEW YORK CITY sr r signs anti LADIES ' GOLD WATCHES CEstiniatrg for Neat little Open- Face Watches, TifFany fraternity p injs Company Movements, in i8-karat gold cases, especiallv adapted for Misses, $25, $40, Clagji litngjs $45, $50, upward. Ciip0 and pinis GOLD CHATELAINE €ropl)ic0 for WATCH PINS portj3 $6.50 to $35.00. nh precious stones, trom $12 to $400. SiMALL SILVER WATCHES Suitable for Misses. Open face. $10, $13, $17, $20, upward. ntjitadons to SILVER CHATELAINE PINS Commrnrnnrnt Upwards from $2 to $7. eiTicisrg, 2Dinnrrs, rtr. iKraloic Cngramugs Cufs lv- PholOi }-apl!S sent uf on rt-quest liJ5oofe laiatrs, rtr. CorrcBponUrnte ijntaitcli DIAMOND A iND GEM MERCHANTS GOLD AND SILVERSMITHS AND DEALERS z A RTISTIC MERCHANDISE Ionday, September 22. 7:30 P. M.. Freshman Concert. Tuesday, September 2.3. Senior Tuesday, igo formally entered chapel in cap and gown. 4 ADVERTISEMENTS Saturday, Sepieinbcr 27. 7:30 P M., First Bamswallows dance. Sunday. September 28. 1 1 A. M., Sermon by Rev, Edward C. Moore of Harvard University. 7 P.. M. Vespers with special music. iflrs. iflrati ' s cljool HILLSIDE, NORWALK, CONNECTICUT THOROUGH PR£:PARATI0N FOR WELLESLEY, AND ALL LEADING COLLEGES FOR WOMEN INDIVIDUAL TUTORING, WHEN DESIRED. WELL-APPOINTED BUILDINGS, BEAUTIFUL LOCATIONS AND GROUNDS, WITH OPPOR- TUNITY FOR OUT-DOOR GAMES AND A HAPPY HOME LIFE ACADEMIC AND SPECIAL COURSES For Catalogues apply to Mrs. M. E. Mead. loWEfS Our Microscopes, Microtomes, Laboratory Glass j ware, Chemical Apparatus, Chemicals, Photo I Lenses and Stiutters, Field Glasses, Projection I Apparatus, Photo-Micro Cameras are used by I the leading Lab- _ oratories and [ Gover ' nt Dep ' ts H Round ttie World | SCOPES Catalogs ' Free Bausch Lomb Opt. Co. Rochester. X. Y. I New York Chicago Boston Frankfurt. G ' yj AT THE SHUMAN CORNER ILatiics ' anti Coats MADE BY MEN TAILORS WAISTS, NEGLIGEES, UNDERWEAR, NECKWEAR, GLOVES, HOSIERY, CORSETS AND SHOES A. SHUMAN CO. WASHINGTON AND SUMMER STREETS BOSTON Wednesday, October i. 4:15 P. M., Second meeting S. G. Association. College news amendments accepted. Friday, October 3. 4:15 P. M., Address in C. H. chapel, Miss Godfrey; How to use our Library. Saturday, October 4. Society initiations. ADVERTISEMENTS 5 Sundav, October . ii A. [., Surmon by Rev. Paul Van Dyke of Princeton, N. J. 7 P. M., Vesper service, address by Dr. Julia Bisscll. Mondny, October 6. 4-5:. o P. M.. Reception to Dr. Bissell in S. H. Parlor TDitplfldke Dyke is only four years old, but he knows a good thing when he sees it. The other morning at breakfast, his mother, as usual, returned thanks for the food. Dyke cried, Amen ! Pass me the Mapl-Flake. And when his mother said she had none, he very indignantly asked, Why did vou return thanks, then ? Price, 15 cents For sale at all Grocers HYGIENIC FOOD CO. BATTLE CREEK, MICH. The LIVERPOOL AND LONDON AND GLOBE Insurance Co. Boston Office 27 KiLBY Street  y FIRE LOSSES PAID IN THE UNITED STATES DURING FIFTY- SIX YEARS — OVER NINETY MILLIONS OF DOLLARS Wednesday, October S. 4:15 P. M., Miss Hazard addressed the members of the class of 1906 and all other new students, C. H. chapel. Friday, October 10. Organization of Maine Club. ADVERTISEMENTS Saturday, October ii. 4-6 P. M. Reception, 1903 to 1906, Senior Parlor. 4:15 P. M. Miss Whiting lectured on the new comet. P. L. R. The F. A. Bassette Company SPRINGFIELD, MASSACHUSETTS 5 rotiuccrs of ti)t cijoiccst gratic 3llustrateti IBoofxQ aub Catalogut© ' The en J is to huild ii ' ell ' X7T Careful attention to arrangement and to skillful VLL, execution our specialty, ( lality higher this year than last. All done in our own establishment — pr ' mting, binding, designing, illustrating, plate-making Sunday .October 12. Sermon by Rev. Henry S. Nash of Cambrid.sje Theological School. 7 P. M. ' Musical vespers. Monday. October 13. 8-10 P.M., Miss Hazard received in her home the members of the Faculty and the Trustees. ADVERTISEMENTS Tuesday. Oclober 14. 4-5:30 P. M., President Hazard and Dean Pendleton At Home to the Senior class and the new students. MEYER, JONASSON CO. CLOAK HOUSE Boylsto)i lUiil ' Trc iiont Streets Masomic Temple BOSTON Broadway i Twelfth St. NEW YORK Sixth y Liberty Sts. PITTSBURG Succees in Xltc Consists in 2)otng Common tibings tlncommonlB TUIlcll. — john d. rockefeller H ami ni will lie agreeably AVE you ever noticed hnw well such a rnmmnii thing as a DIXON PEN- CIL was matle 7 Only the straightest-grained cedar, the strongest glue and the purest Graiihite are used; then when all is finished it is stamped with pure gold. The success of the DIXON COMPANY is largely owing to the fact that every step taken in i making and perfecting their AMERICAN GRAPHITE PENCILS wa ' taken uncommonly well. They have a quality that i.s entirely their uwn, ami when you try them you will at once see their sui erinrity (iver tho.se of other niake. Ask for thera at the Coll e g e Book Store urprisecl both at theirbeauty and merit. Joseph DixOnCrUCIBLeCo., Jersey City, N.J. JOHN A. MORGAN CO, pbarmacists Shattuck Building Wellesley, Mass. At the President ' s and Dean ' s Reception Usher, to Frcshiiian. — I beg pardon, will you tell me your name I will introduce you to Miss Pendleton. Frcsliinan. Oh, I ' re spoken to Miss Pendleton before; she ' 11 remember me. Wednesday, October 15. Southern Club elects new members. Ohio Club elects ofhcers. President Hazard and Dean Pendleton At Home to Seniors and new students. ADVERTISEMENTS Tluirsday, L clobcr i6. President Hazard and Dean Pendleton At Home to Seniors and new students. 7:15 P. IVI., Regular weekly meeting of Christian Association, devoted to business and reception of new members. C.F. HOVEY CO. Importers Retailers of DRY GOODS 33 Summer Street 42 Avon Street BOSTON, MASS. Photographs IN THE Newest Most Artistic Styles AT THE NOT MAN Studios jS-f Boylston Street and 3 Park Street, BOSTON ALSO 1286 Massachusetts Ave. CAMBRIDGE, MASS. Special Rates to Wellesley Students BOSTON ALBANY R. R. ( N. r. C. H. R. R. R. Co. Lessee ) The Trunk Line of New England, forming the connecting Hnk between Boston and the West through the magnificent region known as the Berkshire Hills. CIt has an excellenl: train service between Boston and the West, via Albany and the New York Central, and between Boston and New York. ia Springfield. T The latest designs of Pullman Sleeping and Parlor Cars L on all through trains between Boston and the West. Dining Cars on all important trains. c For particulars call on any Boston Albany ticket agent, or address A. S. HANSON, Ge?i. Pass ' r Agt. New South Station, BOSTON J. L. WHITE, City Pasir Agt. 366 Washington Street, BOSTON Friday, October ry. 4 15 P. M., 1904 elected Junior officers. Sunday, October 19. 11. A. M., Sermon by Rev. S. T. McPherson uf Sumerville, Mass. 7 P. M., Vespers. ADVERTISEMENTS y Tuesday, October 21. President Hazard At Home to members of Faculty and the Senior class. Wednesday, October 22. 4-15 P.M., 1904 Class meeting, L. R. II. 4:, o-6 P.M., Southern Club reception to new members. The Original Specialty Cloak House GEO. E. PLUMMER CO. 531-535 Washington Street, Boston Branches : New York, Springfield, Worcester, New Haven, Hartfiinl. MANUFACTURERa AND RETAILERS OP IVomen s Misses ' and Children s Apparel TELEPHONE— SEVEN TWENTY ONE— OXFOUD Shreve Crump and L,ow Co. Gold and Silversmiths Designs submitted for Class Work in Gold, Silver and Stationery. Official makers of the Wellesley Seal Pin, Crests, Monograms and Engraving Correspondence Solicited 147 Tremont Street Boston John P. Squire Sons Wholesale Dealers in PORK, LARD HAMS and BACON 21, 23 and 25 Faneuil Hall Market Telephone, 52 Richmond BoSTON H. SILVERMAN Ladies Tailor and i Habit - Maker ft-i ' II East 30th Street .Vear hiftli Avenue NEW YORK Telephone 65S Madison Square The only maker of the H. Silver.vian Safety Riding Skirt ; Patented for its safety and being absolutely perfect fitting Special Discount to Students Holden ' s Studio 20 North Avenue Natick Class rates to any Senior Connected by Telephone Tickets All Theatres HERRICK Phone 2329, 2330 and 2331 Copley Square BOSTON S.V.urday, October 25. 7:30 P. M., Regular meeting of the Agora, Zeta Alhpa, Phi Sigma. Tuesday, October 26. 11 A.M., Sermon by President Wm. D. Hyde of Bowdoin College. 7 P.M., Musical vespeis. lO ADVERTISEMENTS I !otiday, October 27. Meeting of Philaik-lphia Club. Regular meeting it the Tau Zeta Epsilon. Tuesday. Oclohcr 2fy. 7-15 P M., Meeting of Debating Club. 7:30 P.M., Meeting of Ohio Club. 7 :3o-9:3o P.M. Miss Hazard At Home to members of Faculty and Senior class. LADIES! ; ' M. } ' . ALLEN, D.D.S. Tnii L. TKsi ' , i Most Correct Stvi-Es ix MILLINERY 155 Newbury Street t ' .AN- . I. AVS BE lOirXD M Boston, Mass. The BOUQUET 134 Trernont St. Wc make a specialty of Mourning Goods. Orders taken at Residence. Liberal Discount to College Students. The SENIOR CLASS PHOTOGRAPHER of WELLESLEY, ipoj, ivas CHARLES W. HEARN 394 Boylston St. Boston, Mass. SPECIAL RATES TO WELLESLEY — IN PLATINUM, BOTH PLAIN iff SEPIA Wednciday. Oclober ig. 4:15 P. M., 1903-190.) Basketball game. Score 3-2 in favor of 1903. Thursday, October 30. 4:15 P. M., 1905-1906 Basketball game. Score 6-4 in favor of 1905. ADVERTISEMENTS I I l-nday, October 31. 4:15 P. M., 1904-1Q06 Baskftball game. Score 6-5 in favor of 1904. 7:30 P. .M.. Hal- lowe ' en celebration in College Hovises. HAAS BROS. 25-27-29 WEST 31 ST STREET, NEW YORK Ladies ' Tailors, Di ' essmakers a?id Shirtmakers SPECIAL DISCOUNT TO STUDENTS dfrmmi mfrirmi Liberty and Nassau Streets. 31st Annual Statement, January ist, 1903. Cash Capital, . - - - $1,000,000.00 Reserve for all Liabilities, - - 4,623,295.8S Net Surplus, - - - 4,695.850.88 TOTAL ASSETS. - $10,319,176.76 AGENCIES Throughout the United States. Freshmen Registration Time:- Date Sept. 17, 1903. Miss Eli.en F. Pendleton, Welleslet College, Welleslet, Mass. Meet my daughter eis:ht-twenty to-night. Boston and .Albany. J. S. BLANK. fOj mcTitSt Saturday, November 1. 7:30 P. M., Hurdy-gurdy dance in Bam. Program meeting of Alpha Kappa Chi. Sunday, November 2. 11 A. M., Sermon by Rt. Rev. Win. N. MacVickar, Bishop Coadjutor of Rhode Island. 7 P. M., Vespers. ADVERTISEMENTS MLiiiday. Xovciiilwr 3. Tuesday, November 4. P. M. Field Day. 7 13 7:30—9 President Hazard Concert in C At Home. H. chapel. Daumenthu Quartette of New York DO YOU KNOW T iat the best way to secure a position as teacher is to registc)- in the ALBANY TEACHERS ' AGENCY Clf you do not know this, please send for our Illustrated Booklet and see what is said of this Agency by some of the teachers who have secured positions through its aid. These letters are selected from hundreds which we recei ' C each year, and they show that we secure positions in public schools of every grade, in private schools and academies, in normal schools and colleges CWe have been especially successful in finding positions for inexperienced teachers, and are always glad to en- roll the names of young men and women who are just about to graduate from college or normal school. No agency in the country has done more for such teachers than ours, and we can undoubtedly be of service to you if you are qualified to do good work. We shall be glad to hear from you and will use our best efforts in your behalf if you give us the opportunity. HARLAN P. FRENCH, Proprietor, 81 Chapel Street, Albany, N. Y. Sd m-: feM ' ' „„,.;« AN ACCURATE KNOWLEDGE of OT (tru-iuiiing those o moit recent origin), noted people, geographical terms, persons and places m ficlion, and many other subjects may be obtained by con- sulting the recently enlarged WEBSTER ' S INTERNATIONAL DICTIONARY The One Great Authority iif the Government, the Courts, the Schools, and the English- speaking W orld, G et the Best Let Us Send You Free A Test In Pronunciation Also an Illustrated Pamphlet. G. C.MERRIAM GO,, Publishers, Springfield, Mass., U.S. A. J. T.ilLBT SON jFlorists Flowers ami Plants nf the choicest varieties for all occasions Palms, etc., to let for Decorations. Flowers carefully packe I and forwarded by mail or express to all parts of the TJnited States and Canada. Orders by mail or otherwise promptly attended to. Connected by Telephone, WELLESLEY; Opp. R.R. station jrELLESLET NEWS ST.iND Boston Daily Papers, Magazines, PERioniCALS, Stationery, Etc. Orrlcrs taken for books of all kinds. A liberal discount allowed. H. L. FLAGG Waban Block Wednesday, November 5. 4:15 P Friday, November 7. 4:15 P. M. M., 1904 class meeting. Meeting of Student Government Association. ADVERTISEMENTS Saturday. November 8. 3:20 P. M., Address by Pres ident Eliot of Harvard University in C. H. chapel. Pro- gram meeting of Shakespeare Society. Beware of dangerous counterfeits or substitutes. rhe genuine Lablache Face Powder bears the signature of Ben Levy in red ink across the label ot the box. Siii ' day, Xovember 9. 1 1 A. M., Sermon by Rev. Samuel L. Cathcart. 7 P. M.. Musical vespers. Monday, November 10. 7 130 P. M., Lecture by Mr. Thumaryer on La France Historique et Pittoresque. 4 ADVERTISEMENTS Tuesday November ii. 7:30 P. M., Meeting of tlic Debating Club in C. H. chapel. Meeting of Science Ckib m P. L. R. Xf You Have Talent for ORAWirNO Cut tins iHit — iii.iil it with a l c s ' aiiip .iml re- reive uui Free Sample Lesson with tenns.irxl -U nortriits of well-knonn ilhistratiifi- ' K. TE . School of Caricature ' 84 ' WorlaB,dg.. NewYork •X In- ■WATER COLOR iiD ' lerthepersiiii.il liirec- ti.m (if li ' lwin II. Kiefer, a stnilent rf Benjamin Constant. Jean Paul Laurens ami C a z in. Send sLiiiip f.ir |i.;rticu- l.r-; N. Y. School O ' Water Color, 84 and 85 World Eldg.pNew Yoik. DEYO Maker of Gowns Fancy Tailor Gowns, Dinner, Carriage, Reception and Evening Gowns MISSES ' GOWNS MADE TO ORDER 40 West 34th Street, New York. The Intercollegiate Bureau of Academic Costume Chartered 1902 by the Regents of the University of the State of New York. COTRELL LEONARD ALBANY, N. Y. Makers of the Caps Goivns and Hoods To Wellesley College, Radcliffe, Boston University, Mt. Holyoke, Bryn Mawr, Wells, Mills, Harvard, Tufts, Yale, Princeton, Cornell, Univ. of Pa., Brown, Univ. of Chicago, Univ. of Minn., Univ. of Neb., Univ. of Cal., Univ. of the South, Tulane and all the others. RICH GOWNS FOR THE PULPIT AND BENCH Wednesday, November 12. 1904 class meeting. Thursday, November 13. Meeting of the Southem Club. ADVERTISEMENTS Saturday, November 15. Sophomore Rt ' ception at the Barn. Meeting of Scribblers ' CUib. Sunday, November 16. 11 A. M., Sermon by Rev. Harris G. Hale of Brookline. 7 P. M., Vesper MRS. N. W. CONANT DRESSMAKING 101 Crafts Street, Newtonville J. H. McNamee Company Binds any kind of a hook ill any style you wish aiut at reasonable rates. Harvard Square, - Cambridge, Mass. C. M McKECHNIE CO. Caterers Alattufacturers of he Creafr, Sherbets Fruppee. Telephone 5-4 10 Main Street, - Natick, Mass. jewelers and Opticians HOLIDAY GIFTS Estabhshcd i86,S. - NaTICK, MaSS. BO.STL)N AND VU ' INITV BOSTON, Kit TreniDiit St.. next In Keith ' .-,. BRllDKIJNE. 27 Hni-v. i..|, Street. NEWTONVILLE, Opposite K. K. .Stati.m. ROXBURY, 2832 Washington Street, PHOTOGRAPHER AND FRAME MAKEIl Telfphone Conneclions. No .Stfiirs to Ctimti. W. U. I ' . HTHIUGt: Special Rates to IVellesley College Students Photographing College Groups and Room Interiors a Specialty. . . . Also a large assortment of Tree Day, Society and Play Photographs in Stock Monday, November 17. 7:30 P. M., Lecture by Miss Fannie Edgar Thomas on French Composers at Home. Tuesday, November 18. 4:15 P. M., Basketball .gatne between College Hall and Wood Cotta.ge. i6 ADVERTISEMENTS Saturday, ' ovciubcr 22. 3:20 P. M., Address by Miss Helen G. Eager to students expecting to teach or seek other employment on leaving college. 7:30 P. M., Bamswallows. The Glee Club presents the operetta, Love and Whist. ARTISTIC BOSTON DELICATE PURE CHOCOLATES Packed in Attractive Boxes MADE BY WWJTI SaJkx 545 Atlantic Avenue BOSTON I.XCORPORATED Chas. A. Hoyle Portrait Photographer 368 Boylston Street Boston THIS SEASON We are showinR many Novelties in r Maini ta -niik tw ' l White Cheviot Shirt  Waists Choicest Patterns Latest Styles And a large variety of imported fabrics at our usual low prices. William H. Brine Company I Treniont Street, Boston Sunday. November 23. 1 1 A. M., Sermon by President Faimce of Brown Uni ersity. 7 P. M., Vesper service with special music. ADVERTISEMENTS 17 ' I ' licsday, Xovciiibcr 25. 7:30 ]] ' ednesday. November 26. i P. M., Meeting of Division A of Debating Cluli 2:30 P. M.. College closed for Thanksgiving recess. FINE CHINA W GLASS THE undersigned invite attention to their exhibit in this line which includes the best productions of the Potter ' s and Glass-maker ' s Art, and gleaned by visits every season by our buyers to the best makers in Great Britain, France, Germany, Austria and America. ::;:;;:::: Visitors will find Students ' Requisites such as Lamps. Toilet Sets, Cuspidors, Vases. Wedgewood Souvenir Plates and Pitchers tBo.ston views). Harvard Seals on Trays. Umbrellas and Cane Holders. Rich Cut Glass Pieces, Plant Pots. Punch Bowls, as well as a large display of choice Bric-a-Brac for Wedding Gifts in Art Pottery Rooms. Lamp Department. Gallery Floor. J ones, McDuffee Stratton Co. I 20 Franklin, Corner Federal Wholesale and Retail (Seven Floors) Street cars marked Federal Street may be taken from either railway station to the dour. ODD THINGS If you want something different in College Emblems, Class Pins, Badges, Flags, Stationery, write or call at 15 School Street, Boston : : : : : : : : : BENT BUSH TELEPHONE BOSTON 472 G. F. CONLY : PORTRAITS IN SEPIA Mr. J. H. C. EvANOFF, a London operator well known to Welleslev Students, will make all sittings 320 BOYLSTON STREET, BOSTON : Opposite Arlington Street TELEPHONE 9U9- 4 : BACK BAY ELEVATOR Friday, November 28. i P. M., College opened after Thanksgiving recess. Saturday, November 29. Pro ;ram meetings of all Societies. ADVERTISEMENTS Sunday, November 30. 1 1 A. M., Sermon by Rev. Anson Phelps Stokes. ]r., of Yale. fonday. December i. 8:30 P. M.. Concert in College Hall chapel. THE ALTON ' S ENGINEER IP you AS ' I s 11 TO HAVE A NICE HALF- TONE ENGHAVING, 4! x:i INCHES, OP THE ABOVE PICTURE, SEND FOUH CENTS IN STA.MPS TO QEO. J. CHARLTON. GSXERAL PASSEXGER AGENT, CHICAGO dc ALTOX PAIL % ' AY, CHICAGO, ILI.,. T6e D. s. McDonald co. 131 TREMONT STREET, BOSTON A DELIGHTFUL PLACE TO LUNCH WHEN IN THE CITY PASTRY CATERERS CONFECTIONS THE ff ORTHT SPRINGFIELD, MASSACHUSETTS EUROPEAN PLAN attractive Cafe for LaDte SERVICE FIRST CL.ASS V. I . I. KI.MHAI.I,. M uiEK Every Wellesley Girl ctp ' g mh . . . AND . . . Every Wellesley Graduate who has a Home . . . SHOULD SUBSUHIBK TO . . . THE BOSTON COOKING SCHOOL MAGAZINE BOSTON, Massachusetts 10 CENTS A COPY. % .00 A VE. R. Send a postal for a sample copj . MIDYEAR EXAM. BIBLE II. Quote from Hosea Well informed 19-0.5. And there abideth Faith. Hnjie and Charity, but the greatest of these is Charity. Tuesday, December 2. 7:30 P. M., Meeting of Division B of the Debating Club. Sunday, December 7. 11 A. M., Sermon by President Henry Hopkins of Williams College. ADVERTISEMENTS ' 9 Monday, December S. Lecture by Professor Ritchie of Ycrkcs Observatory, on the subject, Astronomical Observations. PETER THOMSON Merchant Tailor LADIES ' SAILOR SUITS A SPECIALTl Ladies Tailor-made Dresses, Riding Habits I I I 8 Walnut Street PHILADELPHIA, PA. 14-16 West 33d Street NEW YORK CITY Cassius M. Hall, Grocer Nuts, Candy, Jellies, Crackers, Pre- serves, Figs, Olives, Dates, Pickles, Prunes, Wood Alcohol Goods delivered free at all College buildings Washington Street Wellesley, Mass. Opposite Wellesley Inn The IVJTSIDE INN SOUTH SUDBURY, MASS. Oldest and most historic tavern in America; immortalized by Longfellow ' s Tales of a Wayside Inn. Twenty miles from Boston, onas fine a road as there is. With old original fireplaces and charming wood fires; water unsurpassed; surrounded by a beautiful country. Permanent guests desired. Rates reasonable. Stable accommodation. Open throughout the year. E. R. LEMON, Landlord Tuesday, December 10. Freshman elections. Saturday. December 13. Doll Show in the interest of the College Settlement Chapter. swallows. A dance. Sunday. December 14. 1 1 A. M., Sennon by President Angell of the University of Michigan. 7:30 P. M.. Bam- 7:00 P.M., Christ- mas vespers. Monday, December 15, Monday, December 15. Tuesday. December 16. Thursday, December i{ Thursday, January 8. Saturday. January 10. Sunday, January 11. Junior play; A Glimpse of Paradise. 7:30 P. M., Organ concert in Houghton Memorial chapel by Mr. Edwin H. Lemare. 7:30 P. M., Meeting of Division B of the Debating Club. . 12:30 P. M., College closes for the Christmas vacation. I P. M., College opens after Christmas vacation. 3 P. M., Lecture by Professor Farnham of Yale University on the Coal Strike. I A.M., Sermon by Rev. William D. Lawrence, Bishop of Eastern Massachusetts. 7 P.M., Memorial service for Professor Wenckebach. Monday, January 12. 3-6 P. M., Shakespeare Society — At Home. 7:30 P. M., Meeting of Scribblers ' Club. Saturday, January 17. 3:20 P. M., Lecture by Professor Henry S. Bamswallows play, Place aux Dames. Sunday, January, iS 11 A. M., Sermon by Mr. Robert E. Speer. Graves of Yale University. 7:30 P.M., 20 ADVERTISEMENTS .yfnnday, January g. 7:. o P. M.. Cunccrt by thr Bckher String Ouarlt-t. I ' liursday. January 20. 7:30 P. M., Meeting of Division A of the Debating Club. €mma l iUart cljool TROY, N. Y. Collrgr ]|Drfparatorv nnli (Srnrial CoursEg CERTIFICATE ADMITS TO WELLESLEY, VASSAR, SMITH, MOUNT HOLYOKE COLLEGES and CORNELL UNIVERSITY FINE FIRE-PROOF BUILDINGS GOLF, HOCKEY, BASKETBALL ANNE I.KACH. Pbincipat. L ' PAGE ' S MUCILAGE. No Kumminy: to clog nerk of bottle — No st diiut nt— ill iiol spui! iku- discolor tlie liii st I v T Full ::J-4Miii -c hottic, ■( . aKo h.iir-|iitilM, ]Miil«««V ' «|tH. Russia Cement Co.£, ' ass.M ' f £ LE PAGE S PHOTO PASTE and LEPAGE ' S GLUE STRONGEST F. DIEHL SON DEALERS IN Coal Wood Hav and Grain WELLESLEY, MASS. Telephone No. 16-4. ©utiinc for JFixsljman Cljrmc — Subject — THE WELLESLEY MAGAZINE and COLLEGE NEWS WE SHOULD TAKE THKM BOTH Because:- A. They contain articles of real literary value. B. They save us the trouble of writing a diary, because: — 1. They tell all items of interest. 2. They express our own thoughts. C. We can send them home instead of letters, luciiii.se: — 1. It would save time. 2. It pleases our families. D. They are unusually cheap. E. It is our duty. Friday, January 23. 4:15 P. M., Meeting of Student Govcrnmunt .Association. Saturday. January 24. Regular meetings of all Societies. ADVERTISEMENTS 2 1 Sunday, ' January 25 1 1 A. M.. Sermon by Dr. William R. Richards { Xcu N ' urk 7 1 ' , M.. Vespers witli special music. Charles E. Shattuck The IVelleslcy Grocer ESTABLISHED 1875 FINE MILLINERY And latest styles in Ladies ' neckware. Also a good line ot Ribbons H. W. MURRAY 2 HOME Insurance Co. of New York OFFICE, ' i . 5h CEDAR STREKT Cash Capital, I3, 000, 000 FJRE, LIGHTNING, AND WINDSTORM Insurance JOHN H. WASHBURN, President ELBRIDGK G. SNOW, Vice-President Frederic C. Buswei.l, Second Vice-President E ' MANUEL H. A. CoRREA, Third Vice-Pre -ident Areunah M. Burtis, Secretary William H. Cheney, Secretary Henry J. Ferris, Assistant Secrel. iv ' PREFERRED STOCK ' ' Brand of Teas, Coffees, Spices, Canned Goods and Fancy Groceries The Highest Grade of Goods Packed MARTIN L. HALL COMPANY BOSTON, MASS. Alonday. January 2(1. T?,o P. M.. Lecture to the Latin Department by Professor AViuton lluwardon Glimpses of Roman Life through Inscription. ADVERTISEMENTS 23 Wedne sday, January 28. Mid-year examinations begin. 4-6 P. M., Sophomore class social at the Shakespeare Society House. ne BOOKSTORE JUST RECEIVED Ximitet) lEMtion of bcmc lPa 0 Come at once if you want one ot these rare curiosities. 3=pat)0 Drawino paper All Art students are required to have these. After this large order is sold, no more can be procured. ]fountain =pen llnf? We do not keep this luxury. Please do not ask for it — hurts our feelings. bosc wbo wisb to or er Bool s for next car should do so directly. We require at least a year to get them, as some have to be ordered in Boston. Iff l?ou are ire come and rest in our large and commodious ladies ' parlor. Our extensive force o± salesladies will be glad to show you goods at any time. Sunday, February i. 11 . . M.. Sermon by Dr. Henry Van Dyke of Princeton. 7:00 P. M., Vespers, Mission- ary address by Rev. Mr. Puddefoot. Monday, February 2. 7:30 P. M., Concert by the Adamowski Trio. Saturday, Feburary 7. Mid-year examinations end. 7:30 P. M., Bamswallows. Children ' s dance. Sunday, February . 1 1 A. M., Sermon by Dr Erdman of Philadelphia. 7 P. M, Vespers. Address by Presi- dent Pritchard. Monday, February g. Lecture by Mr. Sidney Le ' on the subject of foreign influences on Shakespeare. Tuesday, February 10. Meeting of Division A of the Debating Club. Saturday, February 14. 3:20 P. M., Address on Domestic Science by Miss Olive Davis. At the Agora House, a Consumer ' s League address. 4 ADVERTISEMENTS Sunday, hebriiary 15. 11 A. M., Sermon by Dr. George W. Shinn of Newton. Thursday, February 19. 7:30 P. M., Memorial service for Mr. Durant. DEPARTMENT OF ENGRAILING The Bailey, Banks Biddle Company Wedding Invitations, Wedding x niioiincements, Dinner Invitations, Fea Cards, Dance Cards, Visiting Cards Productions of the engravers ' and paper-makers ' liighest art, coupled with Society ' s latest decreed tonus PHILADELPHIA G. L. A BELL, Photographer STUDIOS: If ELLESLET AND NEEDHAM, MASS. Framing, Passepartouts, Glass for Frames DUPLICATES OF MANY PHOTO GRAPHS IN THIS BOOK MAY BE OBTAINED AT OUR S 1 U D I O Developing and Print ' nig for the Amateur: Amateur Supplies Salurdav. Frhnturv ; . Rece]ition at the As;oi-a House. 7:30 P. M., First Glee ami Mamlolin Club concert. Suudciv. I- ' chrn irv 3. ' 11 A. M.. Sermon by Dr. McDowell of New York. 7 P. M., ' espers with special music. ADVERTISEMENTS -5 Moihiay. February 23. An exhibition of Arts and Crafts works at the Phi Sigma House. Lecture by Mrs. Dennett on y isthetics and Ethies. 7:;,o P. M., Glee and MandoHn Chibs concert. r WalnutHillScho ol Riley,Pebbles Co. NATICK, MASS. IVholesale i Retail Dealers in BOOTS, SHOES Gf RUBBERS  r 1 Middlesex Avenue A College Preparatory School for Girls. Fifteen acres of Beautiful Grounds. Two miles west of Wellesley College. II. LUSTRATEn CATALOGUE. West (j B.£if A. Depot NATICK, MASS. Excluivvc Agents for JVelkdes and Natick for PATRICIAN LaFRANCE Gf  r E. P. REED CO., Rochester, N.r. SPECIALS Miss Conant Miss Bigelow SIZES, I TO 8. WIDTHS, A A TO EE P R I N C I P .-I L a REPAIR DEPART M E N T Hand Sewed tsf Custom Work a Specialty HALL HANCOCK Women ' s Hatters and Furriers Boston Agents for Knox Hats FfTJ.V REPAIRED ALTERED Hall y Hancock Building 41 8-420 Washington St., Bosto The Fisk Teachers ' Agencies Boston, Massachusetts, 4 Ashburton Place New York, 156 Fifth Avenue Minneapolis, 414 Century Building Portland, Ore., 80 Thiid Street Washington, D.C, 1505 Penn. Ave. Denver, Cui.., 553 Cooper Building San Francisco, Cal., 420 Panott Bidg. Chicago, 203 Michigan Boulevard Spokane, Wash., 622 Hyde Block. Los Angeles, Cal., 525 Stlmson Block REGISTRATION FORMS SENT TO TEACHERS ON APPLICATION Saturday, February 2S. Junior class social at the Barn. Program meeting of the Agora. 26 ADVERTISEMENTS Monday, March 2. Colonial Ball of the Zeta Alpha Society. 7:30 P. M., Reading of Monsieur Bcaucaire by Mr. Leland Powers. KONTOFF : Ladies ' Tailor Tailor-made Costumes for Street Wear, Calling and Golf. Also Jackets and Ulsters RIDING HABITS a specialty. Workmanship and fit guaranteed. Reasonable prices 437 BoYLSTON Street Boston, Mass. SHATTUCK JONES, Established 1850 OCEAN, LAKE AND RIVER FISH Fresh Salmon and Trout Specialties No. 128 Faneuil Hall Market : : BOSTON, MASS. TELEPHONE 775 RICHMOND J. PERLIS CO. ELM PARK Fashionable Ladies ' HOTEL Tailors and Furriers WELLESLEr HILLS Cofi% ' enient for ComTnemement Guests Furs altered and repaired at reasonable prices J. Bursteen ALL OUR FUR fVORK IS DONE ON THE PREMISES u idies ' Tailor and Practical I urrier. Walking Suits SUITS MADE TO ORDER PERFECT FIT IfARRANTED 480 B03 MODERATE I ' RICE.S ■Iston Street : : Tel. 1344-3 Back Bay Boston, Massachusetts Tuesday, March 3. 4:15 P. M., 1905 Class meeting. Saturday, March 7. 3:20 P. M., Lecture by Miss Olive Davis on Domestic Science. Alpha Kappa Chi at Home. 7:30 P. M., Bamswallows; Alice in Wonderland. ADVERTISEMENTS 27 Sunday, March 8. 11 A.M., Sermon by Rev. Donald S. Macka} ' of New York. 7. P.M., Vespers. Reports of Lawrence Convention. The Largest rUlv S10K.ri  Boston EDW. KAKAS S3 SONS No. 162 Tremont Street Next to Keith ' s Theatre Special Discount to Students GUSTAVUS J. ESSELEN {Successor to MRS. J. C. WHITE) Artists ' Materials, School Supplies Pyrographic Outfits, P ' atinura Point.- and Materials for Wood Burning. Water Color Frames, Fancy Boxes, Etc.. to Decorate. Passepartout Materials, Souvenir Mailing Cards and Albums. Christmas, Easter and Birthday Cards, Valentines, Calendars, Etc. WATERMAN ' S IDEAL FOUNTAIN PEN 19 BROMFIELD ST. BOSTON, MASS. NEW YORK BOSTON CALCIUM LIGHT CO. 02 Utica Street, BOSTON, M A S S . TELEPHONE: Oxford 6jj PURE OXYGEN GAS FOR MEDICAL USE CALCIUM LIGHT ILLUMINATION a WITH BEAUTIFUL COLORED EFFECTS a for Commencements, Tableaux, Vivants, Lawn Parties Serenades, River Ex ' cursions, Indoor ts Outdoor Shows, Etc. MAUGUS PRINTING CO. ( INCORPORATED) Printing and Publishing Particular Attention Given to COLLEGE WORK WELLESLEY HILLS : MASS. GEO. P. RAYMOND CO. COSTUME PARLORS Telephone and Mail Orders Receive Careful Attention telephone OXFORD 145 2 Boylston Place BOSTON, MASS. w 25 b- R B 27 TEMPLE F. R PLACE, 3 3 ' S WEST Confectioner f Caterer Ladies ' i£ Gentlemen s CAFE [_Caterers for Lunch, Dinner and Evening Parties at Short Notice and Reasonable Prices Telephone: jj Oxford Monday, March 9. Alpha Kappa Chi at Home. Wednesday. March 1 1 . Sophomore class social at the Alpha Kappa Chi House. 28 ADVERTISEMENTS Friday. March 13. 4:15 P. M., Meeting of Student Government Association. Saturday, March 14. 3:20 P. M., Lecture on Domestic Science by Miss Olive Davis. 7:30 P. M., Open meet- ing of the Agora Society. MISS WHITE CORDIALLY INVITES YOU TO IN- SPECT THE LATEST NOVELTIES IN SPRING AND SUMMER MILLINERY ONE HUNDRED FORTY-NINE A TREMONT STREET, CORNER WEST STREET LAWRENCE BUILDING, ROOM THREE WELLESLEY CAFE Orders for Ice Creams BARBO BROS. DEALERS IN FRUIT and CANDY and Cake for Receptions; also Birthday Cakes, Home-made Jellies, Pre- serves and Candies. MISS M. E. CAMPBELL Grove Street, Wellesley Sunday, March 15. Services in Houghton Memorial Chapel. 7 P. M., Vespers. Arldress by Mr. Da is Willard of the Children ' s Home in New York City. Monday, March 16. 7:30 P.M., Lecture by Mr. Leopold Mabillcau, L ' edueation nouvelle des jcunes filles franfaises. Wednesday, March 18. 4:15 P. M., 1904 class meeting. Election of Magazine Board. Saturday, March 21. 3:20 P.M., Lecture on Domestic Science, by Miss Olive Davis. 7:30 P. M., Barn- swallows. Program meeting of Tau Zeta Epsilon, Zeta Alpha, and Phi Sigma Societies. Sunday, March 22. 11 A. M., Sermon by Rev. Edward S. Lines of New Haven, Conn. 7 P. M., Lenten vespers. 23. Masr|uerade of the Shakespeare Society. 50 P. M. Concert by the Pierian Sodality of The .Vrt of Play-Writing. Regular 7:30 P. M., Monday, March Harvard. Wednesday, March 25. Lecture by Prof. George P. Baker of Harvard on meeting of the Agora Society. Friday, March 27. College closes for Easter holidays. Wednesday, April 8. College opens after Easter holidays Saturday, April 11. 3:20 P. M., Address by Mrs. Sharp who conducts a Mission School in Siberia. Alpha Kappa Chi dance. Sunday, April 12. 11 A. M., Sermon by Rev. Lyman Abbott, D.D. 7 P. M., Easter vespers. Monday, April 13. Lecture by Prof. Edward C. Moore of Harvard on Formation of the New Testament Canon. Tuesday, April 14. 7:45 P. M., Meeting of Debating Clubs. Friday, April 17. 1904 class meeting. Election of Legenda Board. Saturday, April iS. 7:30 P. M., The Dennison Dramatic Club in Twelfth Night at the Barn. Sunday, April ig. 11 A. M., Sermon by Dean Hodges. 7:30 P. M., Address by Rev. Daniel Courtois, D.D. Monday, April 20. 7:45 P. M., Lecture by Dr. Cary N. Calkins of Columbia University. Friday, April 24. Lecture by Prof. Anna A. Cutler before the Philosophy Club. Regular meeting of the Alpha Kappa Chi. Saturday, April 25. Vassar- Wellesley Debate at Vassar. Sunday, April 26. 11 A. M.. Sermon by Prof. Francis Brown of the Union Theological Seminary of New York. Tuesday, April 28. Student Government Election. Wednesday, April 29. Lecture by Miss Peabody. Friday, May 1. 4:15 P. M., Children ' s Revels. 7 P. M., Singing on Chapel steps. ADVERTISEMENTS 29 Saliiniay. May 2. Regular nn-t-ting of Shakespeare, Agora, Plii Sigma ami Zeta Al] ha Societies Sunday, May 7,. Services in Honghtun Memorial Chapel. M. Sullivan Company Cojstumcns 732 WASHINGTON STREET, BOSTON WE have the largest and most complete line ot Costumes that can be found in this state or elsewhere, consisting ol Historical and Fancy Dress for Masquerades, Private Theaticals, Operas, Recitations, Tableau.x, Fairy Tales, Parties and Minstrel Shows. Also supply competent men for making up. Our long and extensive experience places us in a position to confidentially assert that we can be safoly reli ed on, and every order placed with us will be carried out with the most careful minuteness of detail and accuracy. It will alwavs be our ambition to excell in our work, and give the best service at Reasonable Prices. Costumes designed and made to order. :::::::::: WHITE FOR ESTIMATES All Aboard ' ' THOMAS B. GRIFFIN (for tourteen years driver of the College Coach) may be found at the station on the arrival ot all trains. Alum- na ' carried at same rates as undergraduates. Boston Albany trip tickets to Bos- ton, twenty cents. Order box at the north door of College Hall. Post Office Address Box 7- WELLESLEY MASSACHUSETTS . fonday. May 4. 3-6 P. M., Agora dance at the Bam. 7 130 P. M., in College Hall Chapel. Lecture hv Professor Conian on Contract Labor in Hawaii. Wednesday. May 6. 4:15 P.M.. 1904 class meeting. Election of Senior president. Saturday, May g. 7 1.30 P. M., Bamswallows. A Japanese Girl, presented by inembers of the class of 1905. Sunday, May 10. 11 A. M.. Sermon Vjy Rev. Albert j. Lj-man, D.D., of Brooklyn. 7:30P.M., Address by Mrs. Ballington Booth. fonday, May 11. 3-6 P. M., Phi Sigma Shirt-Waist dance at the Bam. 7:30 P. M., Recital in College Hall Chapel by the students of the Elocution Departinent. Saturday, May 16. 3:20 P. M., Teacher ' s Registry meeting. Address hv Miss McKeag. 7:30 P. M., Tau Zeta Epsilon Studio Reception. .Sunday, May 17. 11 A. M., Sermon by Rev. James Grant of Watertown. 7:30 P. M., Address by Dr. Newman of South- End House of Boston. Saturday, May 23. 7 :3o P. M., Barnswallow Play presented by- members of the Jimior class. Sunday. May 24. 11 A. M., Sermon by Rev. AVilliam R. Huntington. D.D.. of Grace Church, New York City. 7 P. M., Vespers with special mu.sic. Monday, May 25. 3 P. M.. At the Barn, a play by the Wellesley Chapter of the College Settlement Association. 7:30 P. M., A lecture by Mr. Curtis Guild ' . Tuesday, May 26. 4-6 P. M., An exhibition of ptipils ' work at the Art Building. Wednesday, May 27. 4:30 P. M., An organ recital in Houghton Memorial Chapel. Friday, May 29. 4:15 P. M., Presentation of Everyman on the College campiis. S P. M.. Presentation of The Sad Shepherd, on the College campus. Saturday, May 30. Decoration Day. .Sunday, May 31. 11 A. M., Sermon by Rev. Alexander McKenzie of Canibrid,ge. 7 P. M., Vesper service. Monday. June i. 7:30 P. M., Platform dance of the Tau Zeta Epsilon Society. Tuesday, ' June 2. 4:15 P. M., A piano recital, in College Hall chapel, by Mr. Clarence Hamilton. Wednesday, June 3. 4:30 P. M., An organ recital in Houghton Memorial Chapel. Thursday, June 4. 1904 Forensic Burning. Friday, June 5. Tree Day. Saturday, June 6. 7:30-9:30 P. M., Phi Sigma Promenade Concert. Sunday June 7. 11 A. M., Sermon by Rev. Charles Cuthbcrt Hall, President of the Union Theological Semi- nary. 7 P. M., Address by President Hall 3° ADVERTISEMENTS Monday, Jimc S. 7,-6 P.M., Cotillion at Zeta Alpha House. Christening ni Freshman class boat and contest for the Hunnewell Challenge cup. Wednesdav. ' Time lo. Examinations begin. M. J. CONANT W. S. VINCENT M. J. CoNANT Company Commission Dealers in Butter, Cheese, Eggs and Beans 2 1 and 22 So. Market St. 27 Chatham St. Boston, Massachusetts Connecticut. Wallingford, 23 Academy St. The Phelps School for Girls Now maybe vou think there ' s some grind in tl Or a joke which must need? make you grin; But it ' s simply inserted to till up the space — And so once again you ' re let in. lis poem, COLLEGE PREPARATORY AND SPECIAL COURSES Address Miss SAHA S. PHELPS KELSEY The Old Archway i Holidays i BOOKSTORE m s L One of Boston s ' ■' ■Literarv Landmark i i All the new popular and standard books can be bought cheap here, and countless bargains can be had in all departments of literature. Wellesley girls are invited to come in and feel free to look over our stock. A faithful pen ' s ehe noblest gift ol all. The spoon feed so regulates th: flow of inli in TideaiT DeWOLFE, FISKE CO. Proprietors 365 Washington St. BOSTON that it is faithful to the last drop. W ' e Liive a lieautiful gift certificate for thi.-.e will- wish to make a present of the pen in a novel way. Write to us about it. For sale at all dealers, but be- ware of imitations. L. E. Waterman Co. Mala Office.173 Broadway.NewVorL. 8 School S ' .. Boston. 138 Montgomery St.. San Francisco. ■' Thursday, June ii. Senior Social. Reception to the Junior class by the Seniors. Saturday, June 13. 7:30 P. M., Dress rehearsal of the Senior play, ' ' The Foresters, at Tupelo. ADVERTISEMENTS Sunday, June 14. 11 A.M., Sermon by Rcw Frudcrick Palmer of Andover. 7 P.M.A ' espers with special music. Tuesday, ' June 16. Float. Wednesday, June 17. 4 P. M., and 7 P. M., Presentation of As You Like It by the Shakespeare Society. June examinations end. ADVERTISEMENTS Friday, June 19. 7:30 P. M., Scmur Dramatics. Saturday. June 20. 4 P. M., Garden Party. Farnsworth Art Buildings. 7:30 P. M., Singing on Chapel steps. Fine Groceries : Eaton Taylor 60 COLLEGE HALL Choice line of Chewing Gum just arrived, of delicious flavor and crispness! The staff of life is Pickles! Pickles! Pickles! You can not aft ' ord to miss our last importation Forsythe ' s H. J ANTZEN Waist and 24; 2 6th Avenue Suit Specialties Near 16th Street NEW YORK NECKWEAR Ladies ' Patent GLOVES, BELTS l eathcr Piwip Very l.atest Styles Alwajs on Hand With heavy and flat LOWEST PRICES John For sy t he n soles for street and THE WAIST HOUSE 865 Broadway New York Style 65 Mall Orders Promptly Attended to SEND FOR CATALOGUE Sunday, June 21. 11 A.M., Baccalaureate Sermon by music. Dr. George S. Gordon. 7 P. M., Vespers with special ADVERTISEMENTS Motiday,Jiinc 22. 3 P.M., Glee and Mandolin Club concert. 4:30 P. M., Tree Day dances. 7 . 30 P. M., College concert. WELLESLEY INN Washington Street, Opposite Church The place to dine when in Wellesley W ellesley I?tn Corporatio n - Cunard Line BOSTON TO LIVERPOOL via ( U E E N S T O W N The magnificent new Twin-scicvv Passenger .Steanislnii Saxunia and IvERNiA, ' 100 feet lung. Fast, remarkably steady. Spacious prome- nades. Passage about seven days. All first and second saloon rooms located upper decks amidsliip. Perfect ventilation. Table unsurpas.sed. Caronia, 19,000 tons Carpathia, 3 555 tons Saxonia, 14,280 tons Ultonia, 10,000 tons Ivernia, 14,1 50 tons Aurania, 8,000 tons Early reservations recommended. Kound-trip Discounts. Third class, low rates. Ivernia and Saxonia fitted vk ' ith Marconi ' s System of Wireless Telegraphy. MEDITERRANEAN SERVICE frotn New York AlKAM A Cakfathia Carrying cabin and third-class passi ngers for Gibraltar, Algiers, Naples, Palermo, Venice, Trieste, and Kiume. Unrivalled accommodation. Special rate sheets on application. A Cunarder from New York every Saturday. Rates, plans, etc., 12(1 State Street. Boston. ALEXANDER MARTIN. Agent Wt% n ®nion Cclcsvapl) Compaup 61 i cto CnglauD Cclcpljonc Compau]) LARGEST IN THE WORLD FULLY EOUIPPED WIRES NEVER OUT OF ORDER ! ! ! PROMPT DELIVERY Two Do-zcn Messenger Boys akcays •wdittug to deliver Messages Only takes tico and one-half hours to reach destination in day time provided it conies from Boston or vicinity. No night delivery as everyone needs eight hours ' sleep. Get rich quick by using these lines for payments have to he made ONLY at BOTH ends Patronize us for it pleases your Yale Harvard friends. They can often get you in I 2 hours, if it is not Feb. 22 or Float Day Tiie.Sihiv ' Jniie 2t,. ii A. M.. Commencement exercises, Houghton Memorial Chapel. Orator, Richard Watson Gikler. Wednesday, J line 24. 5 P. M., Senior class supper. Alumna; Day. 3fntiejr to titjertisementsi Abell, G. L. Albany Teachers ' Agency Allen, Wm. Y. Bailey, Banks Biddle Co. Baker, Winthrop M. Barbo Bros. Bassette, F. A. Co. Bausch Lomb Bent Bush Boston Albany R. R. Boston Cooking School Magazine Boston New York Calcium Light Co. Bouquet, The Brine, Wni. H. Co. Bursteen, J. Butler, Wm. S. Co. Cafe, Wellesley Chicago Alton R. R. Conant, M. J. Co. Conant, Mrs. N. W. Conly, C. F. Cotrell Leonard DeWolfe, Fiske Co. Deyo, H. E. Diehl Son Dixon Crucible Co. Elm Park Hotel Esselin, G. J. Fisk Teachers ' Agency Flagg, H. L. Forsythe, John German American Insurance Co. Griffin, Thos. B. Haas Bros. Hall, Cassius M. Hall Hancock Hall, Martin Co. Heam, Chas. W. Herrick Holden ' s Studio Home Insurance Co. Hotel Worthy Hoyle, Chas. A. Hovey Co. Hygenic Food Co. PAGE PAGE 24 Iron Mountain Route 31 12 Jantzen, H. 32 10 Jones, McDuffee Stratton Co. 17 24 Kakas, Edw. Sons 27 16 Kantoff 26 28 Lablanche Face Powder 13 6 Le Page Glue 20 4 Liverpool London Insurance Co. 5 17 Lowney, Walter C. 4 8 Maugus Printing Co. 27 18 McDonald Co. 18 27 McKechnie Co. 15 10 McNamie Co. IS 16 Mead, Mrs. 4 26 Merriam, G. C. Co. 12 II Meyer, Jonasson Co. 7 28 Morgan Co. 7 18 Murray, H. W. 21 30 New York School of Caricature 14 IS Notman Photo. 8 17 Partridge, W. H. IS 14 Pedis, J. Co. 26 30 Phelps School for Girls 30 14 Plummer Co. 9 20 Raymond, Geo. P. Co. 27 7 Riley, Pebbles Co. 25 26 Shattuck, Chas. E. 21 27 Shattuck Jones 26 25 Shreve Crump Low 9 12 Shuman Co. 4 32 Silverman, H. 9 II Squire, John P. 9 28 Sullivan, M. Co. 28 II Tailby Son 12 19 Thomson, Peter 19 25 Tiffany Co. 3 21 Walnut Hill School 25 10 Washburn Co. IS 9 Waterman Ideal Fountain Pen 30 9 Wayside Inn 19 21 Weber ' s Cafe 27 18 Wellesley Magazine and News 20 16 Williard, Emma— School 20 8 S White, Catharine 28 S v W ■!i.j; ' : -:.■: ■v-i i , • .;. ; ' ) - • fv: m:- i ■m 4 ' ' ? Vi i l ' M__„ ...
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GENEALOGY ARCHIVE
REUNION PLANNING
Are you trying to find old school friends, old classmates, fellow servicemen or shipmates? Do you want to see past girlfriends or boyfriends? Relive homecoming, prom, graduation, and other moments on campus captured in yearbook pictures. Revisit your fraternity or sorority and see familiar places. See members of old school clubs and relive old times. Start your search today!
Looking for old family members and relatives? Do you want to find pictures of parents or grandparents when they were in school? Want to find out what hairstyle was popular in the 1920s? E-Yearbook.com has a wealth of genealogy information spanning over a century for many schools with full text search. Use our online Genealogy Resource to uncover history quickly!
Are you planning a reunion and need assistance? E-Yearbook.com can help you with scanning and providing access to yearbook images for promotional materials and activities. We can provide you with an electronic version of your yearbook that can assist you with reunion planning. E-Yearbook.com will also publish the yearbook images online for people to share and enjoy.