Wellesley College - Legenda Yearbook (Wellesley, MA)

 - Class of 1905

Page 1 of 290

 

Wellesley College -  Legenda Yearbook (Wellesley, MA) online collection, 1905 Edition, Cover
Cover



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Text from Pages 1 - 290 of the 1905 volume:

L E G E N D A M C M V L 1 n It t HEl VY [TTKB Pfi.ai VI - Issot itit ' - Editor Es i in k I b in ri Lape Literary Edit ) I . il ISS Syi.vkstkk J ' tsi rill 1 1 )llii:i I Kl III II M I.KMII Claka ( ita- 1 Art Editor in ChieJ ' Ml V I Aim K EV1 N Assistant Art Editors |l 1 1 A Km hUH 1 S kaii |. Woornv VKD Itl 1 It Ht Kill III MUNI Rnsinrss Managers Geokgin a Sn.co. II VKKIET KOSS l.MA TYLKM b U PUBLISHED BY THE SENIOR CLASS F W E I. I. E S I. E Y CO I. I. E (, E pOR contributions, literary and artistic, and for assist- ance in the work of compilation rendered by many members of the Class of 1905, The Legenda Board makes grateful acknowledgment. Dedicated to the Faculty of Jf ' ellesley College by the Class of Nineteen Hundred and Five syyBHassgs jsg ssrjjayOEltl WELLESLEY COLLEGE LEGENDA Contents Title Page Dedication Prologue Board of Trustees Faculty Student Government Association Christian Association Class Lists Alumn E Association Grinds and Nonsense Dormitories . Societies College Publications Musical Clubs Other Clubs Miscellaneous Organizations Athletics .... Dramatics .... Epilogue .... Advertisements 3 7 9 11 14 26 28 39 128 131 189 197 205 209 213 224 231 235 240 243 [10] Board of Trustees President of the Board William Lawrence, D.D. Bishop of Eastern Massachusetts P r e s i d e n t E m e r i t u s Alexander McKenzie, D.D Cambridge Secret a r y Mrs. Henry F. Durant Wellesley T r e a s u r e r Alphaeus H. Hardy, B.A. Boston [11] WELLESLEY COLLKGE LEGENDA William Claflin, LL.D. Newtonville William F . Warren, S . T . D . , LL.D. President of Boston University William H. Willcox, D.D., LL.D. Maiden Lilian H o r s f o r d F a r l o w Edwin Hale Abbot, M . A . Louise McCoy North, M.A. Adaline Emerson Thompson Sarah E. Whitin Henry E. Cobb, M.A. Andrew Fiske, Ph.D. William H. Lincoln Winifred Edgerton Merrill Rowland G. Hazard, M.A. Cambridge Cambridge New York City B. A. Rockford, 111. Whitinsville Newton Boston Brookline Ph. D. Albany, N. Y. Peace Dale, R. I. Anson Phelps Stokes, Jr., M.A. New Haven, Conn. Samuel B. Capen, M.A Joseph L. Colby Cornelia Warren Herbert J. Wells Caroline Hazard, M.A., Litt.D. (ex-officio) Wellesley College LL.D. Jamaica Plain Newton Centre Waltham Kingston, R. I. 1 2 W ELLESLET COLLEGE L E G E N I) A Faculty Caroline Hazard, M . A. , L i tt . D . President Susan Maria Hallo well, M . A . Emeritus Professor of Botany Sarah Frances Whiting Professor of Physics and P iysieal Astronomy Mary Alice Willcox, Ph.D. Professor of Zoology Katharine Ellis Co man, Ph.B. Professor of Political Economy and Political and Social Science Angie Clara Chapin, M.A. Professor of Greek Language and Literature Ellen Hayes, B.A. Professor of Applied Mathematics William Harmon Niles, B. S. , Ph.B., M.A., LL.D. 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 Mary Whiton Calkins, M.A. Professor of Philosophy and Psychology I 14 ] W E L L E S L E Y COLLEGE LEGE N I) A Ellen Louise Burrell, B.A. Professor of Pure Mathematics Hamilton Crawford Macdougall, Mus. Doc. Professor of Music Elizabeth Kimball Kendall, L L . B . , Professor of History Adeline Belle Hawes, M.A. Professor of Latin Language and Literature C l a r a Eaton Cummings Hunnewell Professor of Botany Margarethe M u l l e r Professor of German Helen e Alexandrine Schaeys Professor of French Eva Chandler, B.A. Associate Professor of Mathematics Mary Sophia Case, B.A. Associate Professor of Psychology and History of Philosophy Vida Dutton Scudder, M.A. Associate Professor of English Literature Annie Sybil Montague, M.A. Associate Professor of Greek Katharine May Edwards, Ph.D. Associate Professor of Greek and Comparative Philology Sophie Chant a l Hart, M . A . Associate Professor of Rhetoric M. A. Absent on leave. [ 15 J WELI ESLEY COLLEGE LEG E N D A Sophie Jewett Associate Professor of English Literature Charlotte Almira Bragg, B.S. Associate Professor of Chemistry Margaret Pollock Sherwood, Ph.D. Associate Professor of English Literature Adelaide Imogen Locke, B . A . , 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 Elllen Fitz Pendleton, M.A. Dean Associate Professor of A la t hematics Helen Abbot Merrill, Ph.D. Associate Professor of Mathematics Marion Elizabeth Hubbard, B.S. Associate Professor of Zoology Alice Walton, Ph.D. Associate Professor of Latin and Archaology Eleanor Acheson McCulloch Gamble, Ph.D, Associate Professor of Psychology Anna Jane McKeag, Ph.D. Associate Professor of Pedagogy Alice V i n t o n W a i t e , M . A . Associate Professor of English [ 16 ] WELLESLEY COLLEGE LEGENDA ' Emily Greene Balch, B.A. Associate Professor of Economics Margaret Hastings Jackson Associate Professor of Italian and Curator of the Frances Taylor Pearsons Plimpton Library of Italian Literature Therese Colin, Ph.D. Associate Professor of French Margaret Clay Ferguson, Ph.D. Associate Professor of Botany Clarence Grant Hamilton, M . A . Associate Professor of Music Elizabeth Florette Fisher, B.S. I nstructor in Geology and Almeralogy tMALViNA Bennett, B.S. Instructor in Elocution Mary B o w e n , Ph.D. Instructor in English Literature Caroline Rebecca Fletcher, M . A . Instructor in Latin Martha Gause McCaulley, M.A. Instructor in English Grace Evangeline Davis, B.A. Instructor in Physics Grace Langford, B.S. Instructor in Physics Laura Emma Lock wood, Ph.D. Instructor in English Absent on le;i e. t Absent on leave for the first semester. 117] WELLESLEY COLLEGE LEGENDA J u l i a Swift Orvis, B.A. Instructor in History tFLORENCE Jackson, M.A. Instructor in Chemistry IMary Alice Bowers, M.A. Instructor in Zoology Frieda Reuther Instructor in German Eliza Hall Kendrick, Ph.D. Instructor in Biblical History Berthe Caron, Lie. es L. Instructor in French Frances Melville Perry, M.A. Instructor in English Lydie Caron, Lie. esL. Instructor in French Martha Hale Shackford, Ph.D Instructor in English Literature Roxana Hay ward Vivian, Ph.D. Instructor in Mathematics Ethel Dench Puffer, Ph.D. Instructor in Philosophy Charles Lowell Young, B.A. Instructor in English Literature Edith Souther Tufts, M.A. Registrar and Instructor in Greek Absent on leave. t Withdrew November, 1904. [ 18 ] [w ...i _ r ' W-M ' ' Β ; Β ' ' β€’β–  β–  β–  - WELLESLEY COLLEGE LEGENDA Alice Wilson Wilcox, B . A . Instructor in Zoology Mariana Cogswell, B . A . Instructor in Latin Edna Virginia M o f f e t t , M . A . Instructor in History Josephine May Burnham, Ph.B. Instructor in English Miriam Hathaway, B . A . Instructor in Mathematics Else Stoeber Instructor in German William Rankin, B.A. Instructor in History of Italian Painting Her mine Caroline Stueven Instructor in German Henry Saxton Adams, B.A.S. Instructor in Botany Johanna Marie Louise Pirscher, Ph.M. Instructor in German Hedwig Sophie Schaefer, B.A. Instructor in German Edith Winthrop Mendall Taylor, B.A Instructor in English Grace Chamberlain Instructor in Elocution Pauline Wight Brigham, B.A. Instructor in English [ 19 ] WELLESLEY COLLEGE LEGENDA Kate Watkins Tibbals, Ph.D. Instructor in English Literature James Elbert Cutler, Ph.D. Instructor in Economics Bert Hodge Hill, M.A. Instructor in Greek Sculpture Caroline Strong, B.A. Instructor in English Edith Harriet Moore, B.A. Instructor in Art Natalie Mary Wipplinger, Ph.D. Instructor in German George Arthur Goodell, M.A. Instructor in Chemistry Mabel Louise Robinson Instructor in Zoology Carmen Solano Instructor in Spanish Valentine Julie Puthod Instructor in French John Higginson Cabot, 2d, Ph.D. Instructor in History Mary Marian Fuller Assistant in Chemistry Laboratories Albert Pitts Morse Curator of Zoology Museum and Assistant in Zoology Laboratories [ 20 ] W E L L E S L E Y C O L L E Ci E LEGEND A Annie B r o v Philbrick, B . A . Assistant in Chemistry Laboratories Ann Rebecca T o r r e n c e , B . A . Assistant in Botany Laboratories Carrie Maude Holt, B . A . Assistant in Zoology Laboratories Hetty Shepard V heeler, B.A. Assistant in Music Mary Campbell Bliss, M . A . Assistant in Botany Clare Macllelen Howard, M . A . Assistant in English Emma Rebecca Ellis, B.A. Assistant in Physics Mabel Minerva Young, M . A . Assistant in Mathematics Julia Anna H a y n e s , B.A. Assistant in Zoology Emily Josephine Hurd Instructor in Pianoforte Jennie Preston Daniell Instructor in I iolin Charles Herbert Woodbury Instructor in Drawing Edith Estelle Torre y Instructor in I ocal Music [ 21 ] B. S WELLESLEY COLLEGE LEGENDA Sarah Adams Bond, M.D. Lecturer in Hygiene Samuel Arthur King, M.A. Lecturer in English Robert Archey Woods, B.A. Lecturer in Economics William James, M.D. Ph. et Lift. D., LL.D., Lecturer in Philosophy Harriet Hawes Librarian Emeritus Caroline Frances Pierce, B.A. Librarian Henrietta St. Barbe Brooks, B.S. Assistant Librarian Lilla Weed, B.A. Assistant in the Library Emilie Jones Barker, M.D. College Physician and Superintendent of the Eliot Evelyn Barrett Sherrard, B.A. Resident Health Officer and Lecturer on Physiology and Hygiene Edward Erastus Bancroft, M.A., M.D Consulting Physician Lucille Eaton Hill Director of Physical Training Harriet Noyes Randall Instructor in Sicedish Gymnastics and Physical Examiner Mary Caswell Secretary to the President [ 22 ] WELLESLEY COLLEGE LEGENDA Mary F r a z e r Smith, B.A. Secretary to the Dean Adele Ogden, B.A. Assistant Registrar George Gould Cashier Bertha Lydia Caswell Assistant Cashier and Purchasing Agent Charlotte Scott Whiton Purveyor Anna Stedman Newman Superintendent of Norumbega Cottage Louise Anne Dennison Superintendent of Freeman Cottage Elizabeth Phebe Whiting Superintendent of Fiske Cottage Annie Sanders Mandell Superintendent of If ' ahan Cottage Mary Elizabeth Cook Superintendent of Hood Cottage Olive Davis, B.S. Superintendent of Halls of Residence ; Lecturer on Domestic Science Lydia Southard, B.A. Assistant Superintendent of Wilder Hall Mary Elida Rust Assistant Superintendent of Noanett House [ 23 ] WELLESLEY COLLEGE LEGENDA Mary S n o w Assistant Superintendent of Pomeroy Hall Helen Will ard Lyman, B.A. Assistant Superintendent of Cazenove Hall Florence Curtis Breed, B.A. Assistant Superintendent of Simpson Cottage hello iv s Ethel Bowman, B.A. Fellow in Philosophy Alice Maria Ottley, B.A. Pel loiv in Botany Emerson Oren Perkins Superintendent of Buildings Frederick Dutton Woods, B.S. Superintendent of Grounds [21] Student Government Association P r e s i d e n t Juliet Jameson Poynter, 1905 Vice President Helen Dodd Cook, 19 05 Secretar _v Sarah E. Eustis, 1906 Treasurer Olive Hunter, 1906 Joint Committee Florence Besse, 1907 Juliet J. Poynter, 1905 Sally A. Reed, 1905 [ 26 ] :k : ' Β«: !sa: :say8S iΒ«MΒ MΒ«aimaMMM8W8s: M β–  : MWiawttΒ wΒ y wmΒ«awiftiwft iiflWftBe ki;;M?TM? aM8SftSaM W ELLESLEY COLLEGE LEGENPA Debating Clubs Mary H . Gillespie, 1905 , Chairman Executive Board Lucy Eisenberg, 19 5 Ruth Goodwin, 1906 Mary Alexander, 1907 Advisory Committee Helen Norton, 19 05 Blanch Wenner, 1905 Connie Guion, 1906 Ethel Sturtevant, 1906 Clara Cabell, 1907 Florence P l u m m e r , 1907 College at Large Rachel Pflaum, 1905 Florence Besse, 1906 Student Committee Student Presidents of College Houses Ellen R. Manchester, ' 05 President of College Hall Nina Gage, ' 05 President of Stone Hall Clara S. Chase, 05 President of Wilder Hall Ruth HANLENBECK, ' 05 President of Wood Cottage Anna CUMMINGS, ' 06 President of Freeman Cottage AGNES Wood, ' 05 President of Norumbega Cottage DOROTHY Tryon, ' 06 President of Simpson Cottage Mary Richardson, ' 05 President of Fiske Cottage BESSIE Kast, ' 05 President of Eliot Cottage [ 27 ] Christian Association Officers Presiden t Mabel Elizabeth Emerson, 1905 Vice P r e s i dent Sally Allen Reed, 19 5 Record i n g Secret a r y Emma Bixby, 1907 Corresponding Secretary Olive Greene, 1906 [ 28 ] IS fi s a WEL LESLEY COLLEGE LEGEND! Treasurer Clara Griffin, 1907 C h a i r m an of Missionary Co m m i t t e e Eliza J. Kendrick C h a i r m an of General Aid Co m m i t t e e Faith B . Sturtevant, 1906 C h a i r m an Co m m i t t c c on Religious M e e t i n g s Edith S. Tufts C h a i r m an of M i s s i o n a r y Stud y C o m in i t t e e Lottie H. T. Hart well, 1906 C h a i r m an of Bible Study Co m m i t t e e Emma H . Miller, 1905 C h a i r m an of Al e in b e r ship Co m m i t t e e Sally A. Reed, 19 05 C h a i r m an of Social Co m m i t t e e Connie Guion, 19 06 Chairman of Correspondence Committee Olive Greene, 1906 [ 29 ] WELLESLEY COLLEGE LEGENDA General Secretary Elvira Slack, 1902 Miss Eliza Missionary Committee H . KENDR1CK . . . . Chairman F a c u I t v Eugenie Lodwick, 1905 Myra C. Kilborn, 1906 Frances Healey, 1907 Nina D. Gage, 19 05 Membership Committee Sally A. Reed, 1905 Chairman Miss Edna V. Moffett, Faculty Jeanette Eckmann, 1905 Sally E. Eustis, 1906 Florence F. Besse, 19 07 General Aid Committee Faith B. Sturtevant, 1906 . . . Chairman Miss Caroline R. Fletcher, Faculty Harriet A. Foss, 1905 Emma Danforth, 1906 Ruth D. French, 1907 Religious Meetings Committee Miss Edith S . Tufts Chairman Faculty Helen R. Norton, 1905 Abbie H. Condit, 1905 Mary A. Patchin, 1906 Gertrude C. Cate, 19 07 [ 30 ] WELLESLEY COLLEGE LEGENDA Social Committee Connie M . Guion, 1906 Chairman Miss Ellen F. Pendleton, Faculty Helen L. Robertson, 19 5 Elizabeth Goddard, 1906 Gertrude Francis, 1906 Marguerite B. McKellar, 190 7 Correspondence Committee Olive Greene, 1906 Chairman Miss Elizabeth F. Fisher, Faculty Eliza J. McCagne, 19 05 Elizabeth Connor, 190 6 Daphne Crane, 1907 Bible Study Committee Emma H . Miller, 1905 Chairman Miss Eleanor A. McC. Gamble, Faculty Hilda A. Tufts, 1905 Marion Stephenson, 19 06 Helen M. Goddard, 1907 Mission Study Committee Lottie H . T . Hartwell, 1906 . . Chairman Miss Helen A. Merrill, Faculty Lucy S. Curtiss, 1905 Clara H. Bruce, 1905 Florence P. Plummer, 1907 [ 31 ] CM:JM-:M:;i t i::y);:LiΒ°:M7? ' ' ' ' tΒ° M Β° 5 5 ' WEI. LESLEY COLLEGE LEGENDA 1905 ' s freshman diry 3ov7oqv7oK5aELLESLEY sed we oughter keep a diry but we -|=Β sed we didn ' t want two, cauz we dident want ter f f 1W ghaS make folks envious, the sops sed no-body would 121 SVfi ast ter rede it no-how and welleslev would ferget Β£ ==,==s=| about it. gi ggMggfa ggtrig but we sed if welleslev would stick in sum more higeen insted of math we would keep one. wel- leslev sed we had got ter keep it any-how and we wouldent get no more higeen ter it neither, but she wouldent ast ter rede it fer a year, she ' ll ferget it by then β€” welleslev always fergets every-thing but mid-years and finals, so we ' ll write jest what We want ter. wellesley sez we ar e the best children she ever see if we dident go along with Naughty fore, coming so close along with Naughty fore makes us Naughty. Sept. 18-1901. rainier an time, went to school and pretty ner got er lickin ' for writing tail-namelast. Seed a bunch of uther fellows outside a door, went up and stood with em. gosh stood ther four hours. ticket-Woman ast me what I wanted with the dean any-how β€” sed nuthin perticlar and she sont me home. Heard lot of gush about red tape, didn ' t see none, saw a lot of red tarns tho. Sept. 22-1901. brite and fair. Never rains Sundays so Fellows can ' t go to church. Folks said this wuz our Sunday and the Preachers name wuz Green, then they laffed. Didn ' see nuthing funny ' bout that. Oct. 16-1901. sophs sed ter-day they wuz goin ' to teach Us to play basket-ball, when they wuz as ole as Us they sed they could play and sed ez Naughty five must learn. So we wint down to the lake feeld and peeled off Our bath- robes and got redy. ' now, ' sed they i jest play esy-like and kind of naturel and dont exhert yer-selfs ter git the ball in the baskit. we sed we never wanted ter over-wuk our-selfs no-how. so we jest begun a little passin ' the ball eround ter practis and ' fore we knewed [ 32 ] W E L I. ESLEI COLLEGE LEGE N I) A it, Our ball wuz in the baskit. and ' fore we knewed it, it wuz ther ergin. gosh ! ? : , yer ough ter hev seed the sophs their eyes wuz jest bugging out and wuz as big as hen-eggs, er bigger, then they looked foolish, then Mad. We learned ter plav pretty well that first da y with a score of 12-0 er favoring US. Oct 17-1901 Beet in basket-ball terday with the juniors. Oct 18 1 901 Beet in basket-ball ter-day with the seenyors. Oct 19 1 90 1 nuthin perticlar happened ter day β€” got beet in tennis en golf. Dec 14 1 901 gosh!?! β€” we hed fun terday β€” hed er big mass meetin this evenin in Chemistry Bilding. Naughty fore en sum L ' thers wuz ther. they wuz very excited-like en hed sum idea uf callin ' us out for a little game of baskit snow-ball β€” but we wuz two busy ter notis thim. reckon sum uf thim wuz pretty rich fer they broke er few winder-peekers tryin ter ask us perlitely fer er game, we wuz two busy and went on dieting our president and Ezective plank. Dec 1 8-1 901 No-body wint ter sleep in bible terday β€” guess why ? ther wu .n ' t env school. They aint none fer 3 weeks. Bully ! ? ! Feb 2-1902 nuthin perticlar β€” kind uf hede-achey. mid- years begun. April 1902. spekin-match n School terday. talkin match ' tween vassar and Wellesley. WE never talked none, guess why ? we wazn ' t ' lowed nere ther. vassar, she hot-aired and Wel- lesley she hot-aired and Naughty-five set on the ventilators in Sicology Lab to help keep the hot-air in the chapel under-neth wher the spekin ' wuz goin ' on. the jedging techer jedged the priz ter vassar seying guests 1 ) June 6-1902. tree-plantin-day terday. hed sum spekin this aft-noon and Naughty Two red over Our diary. Sed we wuz learnin ter spell sum, ' specially My Deer, but it seemed like all our Math hed taugh US wuz thet Naughty Five ' s numerals wuz the biggest in college. Jine 15-1902 gosh ! ? ! Xams ov.er. passed in most every- thing, terday 1 tried on my tarn I got last September, too small by 2 sizes. [ 33 ] ymMaMMMB WELLESLEY COLLEGE LEGENDA Chronicles of 1905 SOW a Leader from the South judged the Sopho- i mores at that time. N | J 2 And they gathered themselves together A in one Center place saying : Let us greet unto o o THpTBfi Tl ourselves the Freshmen ; let us take unto our- gktg$β„’%3β„’ggβ„’{ selves some patronizing; and the children of Nineteen Five spake what was in their hearts and heads on the first days. | 3 And it came to pass that a child of Nineteen Six cried unto one of Nineteen Five because she knew not the place of Miss Whiting. Cfl 4 And the Soul of the Nineteen Five waxed strong within her as she conducted the begging one to Miss Whiton ' s door. I]] c, And aga in another child ot Nineteen Six grew strong within her, and made fit to ask one Nineteen Five where the Bible office should be. Cfl 6. Then the One of Nineteen Five grew brave and tall, and answered loftily, β€” β€’J 7. The Bibliography Laboratory stands situated in Room A. ]J X. Behold the feeling of the class waxed strong within it, and it came to pass that a Prom, was given, ]J 9. And to the younger sisters of the Tribe of Wellesley. C| 10. And the class was well pleased, and did what was good in the sight of the Freshmen. fl 1 1. Then the Freshmen assembled themselves together and said to one another, Let us choose a President to judge us all our Freshmen days. tji2. And the Sophomores were well pleased with the idea, and souglit to do what they might in helping the Freshmen. But the younger Sisters of the tribe of Wellesley said, [ 34 ] WELLBSLET COLLEGE LEGENDA CJ i j. Fear not; we are able to keep that which is com- mitted unto our care. CJ 14. And said, CJ t 5. Will ye go out by the door, or will ve choose the transom ? CJ 16. And the Sophomores said, CJ 17. It is well with the transom, β€” and went out. CJ 18. But the Sophomores did what was evil in the sight of the College, and the College knew them no more for a brief while. For it came to pass in this way : CJ 1 9. The reeling tor excelling grew in the hearts of the Sopho- mores, and when the Heating Plant saw its completion at hand the Sophomores ' hearts waxed strong with glory, and dared to climb the dizzy heights, and, CJ 20. Behold ! A Green flag floated over the Red and Pink one, β€” and Nineteen Three grew sad, and pined awav ; and the Dean saw her sadness and advised Nineteen Five to lower her flag a tenth of a cubit or so. CJ 21. And the children of Nineteen Five again did what was evil in the sight of the College, and the College delivered them over unto the scorn-leashed hand of the Freshmen for a few weeks ; CJ 22. For again had courage and wit waxed strong in the class, and sought to discover the mysteries of Tree Day. CJ23. And it came to pass that the thin veil before the face of the mysteries was rent in twain, and Nineteen Five looked, β€” CJ 24 And knew, β€” CJ25. And fell. Selah. CJ 26. And it came to pass when the days of bondage to the Freshmen were over that the angel of Nineteen Five visited the class and whispered Operetta. CJ 27. And the class knew her own desire, and produced The Japanese Girl ; and it was good in the sight of the College. CJ 28. And the days of the class in the sight of the College were many, and they numbered twelve score davs and ten : and Nineteen Six reigned in her stead. [ 35 ] Why the Subject Interests Definition of Terms Common Facts Special Issue WELLESLEY COLLEGE LEGENDA Resolved : Nineteen Five ' s Junior Year was a Howling Success Brief HE subject chosen is one of intrinsic interest to the Class of 1 906, to the college at large, and to the world in general. To 1906, because she would like a new recipe tor fun ; to the college at large, because she would like some key bv which to ex- plain 1905 ' s conduct ; and to the world in general, because she would like to know what to expect from the College next year. The word Junior is the comparative form of the Latin junceus, meaning to be made of rushe (r) s and rushing. The c is now an abscolete form, better replaced by the direct instrument of seeing, the i, zsjunieus. The synonym {ox junceus is sport a β€” (sports !). The facts admitted by both sides are: (1) 1905 has come safely and gracefully through her Junior year, though assailed by sharks, whales, and lobsters; and (2) her roll is still large. ' The exact point at issue is a commendatory exclamation point J Briefer The Junior Class history is written in Kant (o) s and Kent (o) s β€” the o ' s being usually pronounced in private. Pater was a very popular man among the Juniors, and is often found in their records as a reference in financial difficulties. 3 1. And not made in College Hall, either, z. For ref. inquire of one of its members. 3. See Treasurer. [ 36 ] MP!praΒ« WELLESLEY COLLEGE L, E G E N D A The Juniors established an Incubator for the furtherance ot Sister class crushes, bv giving a big crush called a co-til-ion 4 , suggesting a snooze and a yawn. The next stage in the small Sister ' s education was marked by a play given by 1905, in order to teach 1907 how to pronounce two-syllabled words β€” Cholmondely, for instance. The education of small Sister being nearly accomplished, 1905 grew more thoughtful of herself, and modestly decided to retire from public life, and consign to the flames all such bold, brave bundles as forensics. And oft in the stilly night, Ere Sophomore wit could follow, The Juniors stole from sight. Burned logic in their hollow. 5 Briefest Therefore, since 1905 has failed in no part to fulfill the Latin derivation of her name 6 , and since she is just about to own a gown of Worth 7 , we contend 1905 ' s Junior year was a howling success. 4. Pronounced yawn. 5. Ref. 1006. Made up of rushing ' , etc. 7. X0.64 Boulevard, Hansman, Paris. [ 37 ] WELLESLEY COLLEGE LEGENDA Sono; of 1905 ' s Departure B Y the Shores of Waban Waters, By the rippling, dancing wavelets, At the doorway of her College, In a pleasant autumn morning, 1905 stood long and waited. All the air was full of freshness, β€” Only she stood sad and lonely, Clad now in her honors new; While her sisters all around her Talked of what next year would bring. She was sad, yet when the future Showed her honors and degrees, Then a strange peace came upon her, And she rose to speak her going,- β€” Speak in farewells ; speak in this wise : I am going, Alma Mater, On a long and distant journey To the portals of the Real World ; To the Regions of the Worth While. But these Sisters leave behind me; In your watch and ward I leave them. See that never fear molests them ; Never want for love nor knowledge, In the Home of Nineteen Five. [ 38 ] Class of 1905 Colors, Green and Gold Flower, Yellow Pansy Tree, Magnolia Motto, i ' .z -ii -poeOzv Carolyn Pay ton Nelson President Louise Phillips Greene Vice President Josephine Dibble Recording Secretary Olive Chapman Corresponding Secretary ALMA TYLER Treasurer Executive Committee Maria D o w d Eugenia Lodwick Laura Welch Factotums Emma Calhoun Luna French [ 39 ] 1 -. Marie Louise Abbott, 96 Joralemen Street Brooklyn, New York Mary Bruce Allen 127 Langlev Road Newton Centre, Massachusetts Winifred Cornelia Baker Wellesley Hills, Massachusetts Edith Preble Ball 214 Windermere Avenue Wayne, Pennsylvania %Β Hazel A. Bartlett 834 N. East Street Indianapolis, Indiana [ 40 ] :β– : Florence Emery Beck 213 Forster Street Harrisburg, Pennsylvania Juliette Coryell Bos t wick 307 Court Street Janesville, Wisconsin Ruth Perkins Bradford 22 Carson Street Dorchester, Massachusetts $ M ary Alice Breck 1371 Capouse Avenue Scranton, Pennsylvania Rachel Bancroft Brooks Amherst, Massachusetts [41] Helen Lucretia Brown 27 Elm Street Penacook, New Hampshire Isabel Cars well Brown 84 Pleasant Street Woburn, Massachusetts Clara Harding Bruce 72 Woodland Street Worcester, Massachusetts i K Hattie Louise Brunquist 8 Holden Street Attleboro, Massachusetts Emma May Calhoun Welleslev Hills, Massachusetts [ 42 ] Elizabeth Lewis Camp Seymour, Connecticut V Florence Cantieny 3327 Elliot Avenue, South Minneapolis, Minnesota Bessie Coe Champney 87-t Case Avenue Cleveland, Ohio Olive Lee Chapman 1021 9th Avenue East Oakland, California Clara Seaman Chase 21 Fuller Street Brockton, Massachusetts i [ 43 ] Alice Elizabeth Clause 27 Thorn Street Sewickley, Pennsylvania Elizabeth Cole 960 Bryden Road Columbus, Ohio Maude Winifred Collier Kinderhoolc, New York Abbie Harrison Condit 34 Lincoln Street East Orange, New Jersey Marion Conway Lansdowne, Pennsylvania [44 1 Helen Dodd Cook 100 Park Street, Montclair, New Jersev -β–  ; Ada St urges Couillard 330 West 85th Street New York, New York Lena Laight Cowan 134 Highland Avenue Waterburv, Connecticut Henrietta Mead Crane 38 Church Street Montclair, New Jersey Ruth Susan Crosby 590 High Street West Medford, Massachusetts [ 45 ] Rachel Currey 1308 Jmlson Avenue Evanston, Illinois Lucy Sackett Curtiss Warren, Connecticut Katharine Bullard Cushing 16 Magoun Avenue Medford, Massachusetts Helen Louise Daniels Douglas Road Glen Ridge, New Jersey Blanche- Mildred Darling West Hartford, Connecticut t 46 ] Emma G . DeBow 989 North 5th Street Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Olive Cornelia Dewey Toulon, Illinois 1 Josephine Dibble Marshall, Michigan Clara Ada Dilman 51 High Street Geneva, New York Maria Louise Dowd 76 Berkeley Avenue Orange, New Jersey 147 1 Gertrude Francena Eaton North Bend, Nebraska, R. F. D. No. 1. Jane Sprague Eaton Bridgewater, Massachusetts Jeannette Eckman 1509 Gilpin Avenue Wilmington, Delaware Lucy Eisenberg 842 Clinton Avenue, South Rochester, New York Ida Leek. Ellison 1038 Euclid Avenue Cleveland, Ohio [ 48 ] Mabel Elizabeth Emerson 109 South Broadway Lawrence, Massachusetts Helena Elizabeth Damai Farmer 267 Orange Road Montclair, New Jersey Amy Roberta Felmly 116 Orchard Street Newark, New Jersey Gertrude Horton Fisher 154 Pleasant Street Attleboro, Massachusetts Grace Ellen Fisher 154 Pleasant Street Attleboro, Massachusetts - [ 40 ] Ethel How land Folger 29 Summit Road Medford, Massachusetts Harriet Angeline Foss Erving, Massachusetts Ruth Edna Francisco Caldwell, New Jersey Luna Knight French Wellesley Hills, Massachusetts v Elizabeth Fulton 15 Central Park, West New York, New York [ 50 ] Nina Diadamia Gage 22 West 47th Street New York, New York Mary Berenice Gallup 302 High Street Marshall. Michigan Charlotte Gerhard 1824 Longfellow Boulevard St. Louis, Missouri Esther Preston Gibbs 108 West Main Street Norwalk, Ohio r-$ Mary H a n n a Gillespie 5226 Westminster Place Pittshurg, Pennsylvania - [ 51 4r Caroline Emma Gilpin Newfoundland, Wavne County, Pennsylvania fa - m Anna Estelle Glancy 53 dishing Street, Waltham, Massachusetts Myrtle S . Goodman Walla Walla, Washington w Mabel R. Gordon Brackenburv Lane Beverley, Massachusetts r V Clara Belle Green 605 Christian Street Shreveport, Louisiana [ 52 ] Louise Phillips Greene 222 Oneida Street Utica, New York Ruth Greene Waterford, New York Bessie Charlotte Grove r 73 Bav Street Glens Falls, New York 49 Jessie Dalziel Hall 820 Princess Street Wilmington, North Carolina W Bess Cadmus Halsey North Paterson, New Jersey [ 53 ] 3 Anna Wellington Hamblen The Empire, 33 Magazine Street Cambridge, Massachusetts Corinne Florence Hamilton 532 Morris Avenue Elizabeth, New Jersey Elizabeth Hard man 47 Montana Street North Adams, Massachusetts Ruth Haulenbeek Walton, Delaware County, New ork Bertha Higman St. Joseph, Michigan r 54 ] Cora Maud Hillery 207 Sigournev Street Hartford, Connecticut Cora Jefferson Hogan 4569 Pine Street St. Louis, Missouri n Β Elizabeth Sumner Holden 222 Cumberland Street Portland, Maine Lost, Strayed, or Stolen Eleanor Adeline Hollick. New Brighton, Staten Island, New York Edna Darling Holmes 162 Clifton Avenue Campello, Massachusetts Β« 4 [ 55 ] % Maud Louise Honey man 54 Grove Street Plainfield, New Jersey Cecile Florence Houghton 19 Oak Avenue Worcester, Massachusetts Nellie Adele Hubbs 364 Jefferson Avenue Brooklyn, New York Flora Louise Humphrey 265 West Main Street New Britain, Connecticut Grace Caroline Humphrey 725 South 7th Street Springfield, Illinois [ 56 ] Bonnie M . Hunter 5125 Jefferson Avenue Chicago, Illinois Ida Hutchinson 1207 Mulberry Street Muscatine, Iowa Helen La Dora Jeffries 22G Windermere Avenue Wavne, Pennsylvania Grace Alice Johnson 156 West Canton Street Boston, Massachusetts Helen M. Johnston 603 Washington Street Welleslev, Massachusetts T5k $ [ 57 1 Frances M . J u d r i n s Cragin P. O., Chicago, Illinois Bessie Edna Kast 1331 Susquehanna Street Harrisburg, Pennsylvania Elizabeth Kellogg C 4 Court Street Plattsburg, New York Mary E. Kelly Saltsburg, Pennsylvania - Crete Morton Kimball 870 Winthrop Avenue Chicago, Illinois [ 58 Edith Maude Kingsbury 589 Beacon Street Boston, Massachusetts Sally Gertrude Knight 573 West Ferry Street Buffalo, New York Edith Jennings Knowlton Haddon Heights, New Jersey Jessie Louise Knowlton West Acton, Massachusetts Antoinette Knox Conklin, New York f ' [ 59 Grace Darling Knox 1-t Chestnut Street Auburn, New York Esther Everett Lape 6715 Lansdowne Avenue Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Elizabeth E. Leonard 569 East 51st Street Chicago, Illinois Eva Fay Little 515 South 10th Street Burlington, Iowa Eugenie Lodwick Mississippi Glass Company, Main and Angelica Streets St. Louis, Missouri [ 60 ] Louise Mayers Loos 455 Arcade Flats Davton, Ohio Mary E . L o v e j o y 64 Broad Street Lvnn, Massachusetts Eliza Jane M c C a g u e 409 Morewood Avenue Pittsburg, Pennsylvania M A R V K A T H A R 1 X E M C C A G U E 40 ' . t Morewood Avenue Pittsburg, Pennsylvania __, Florence Hale M cCormick 155 10th Street, Station A Dallas, Texas [ 61 ] Lena J. McCurdy 922 Riverside Evansville, Indiana Jennie Louise McIntyre Hillside Street Milton, Massachusetts Mary M . Mack ie 47 Lansing Street Utica, New York Florence Mainhardt 1312 Cherry Street Kansas City, Missouri Ellen Russell Manchester 13 Newport Avenue Newport, Rhode Island [ 62 ] Elizabeth Le Breton Marston 1210 Ash Street San Diesjo, California Florence A. Martin 268 Highland Avenue Fall River, Massachusetts 1r$ Janet Maxwell 372 Castle Street Geneva, New York Emma Harper Miller 309 East 7th Street Plainrlekl, New Jersey Marie Hammond Milliken 305 Winebiddle Avenue Pittsburg, Pennsylvania W [ 63 ] Lallie Joe Moody Paris, Texas Marie Janet Morrow 17 West 84th Street New York, New York Ethel A. Morse 9 Whittemore Street West Roxbury, Massachusetts A d r i e n n e Florence Muzzy 47 Prospect Place Bristol, Connecticut Carolyn Pay ton Nelson Warrenton. Virginia [ 64 ] Olive Adair Nevin 618 Aiken Avenue Pittsburg, Pennsylvania ' Eliza B . N e w h a l l F Β w 74 Broad Street J Lynn, Massachusetts Katharine Northrop Noble Easthampton, Massachusetts i Helen Rich Norton 411 Main Street Burlington, Vermont fc Edna May O r v i s Equinox House _M Manchester, Vermont Wittulr.tw ii. t 65 ] Rachel Witter Pflaum 441 Maple Avenue Edgewood Park, Pittsburg, Pennsylvania Mary O o l a i t a Philipps Welsh Hills Newark, Ohio Helen C. Pillsbury 73 Prospect Avenue Milwaukee, Wisconsin Annie Woodbury Pinkham 79 Winthrop Avenue Wollaston, Massachusetts Isabella G. Pinkham 64 Nahant Street Lynn, Massachusetts [ 66 ] Helen Frances Potter 834 North East Street Indianapolis, Indiana Juliet Jameson Poynter Shelbvville, Kentucky r Annie May Quirk 8 Court Street Natick, Massachusetts Sally Allen Reed Clinton, New York Mary Cleaves Richardson Castine, Maine 1 67 ] Ethel A dele Ricker 19 Boyd Street Newton, Massachusetts Β«t ' Helen Louise Robertson Ridley Park Delaware Countv, Pennsylvania Ruth d e R o c h e m o n t Portsmouth, New Hampshire Julia Charlton Rockwell East Windsor Hill, Connecticut Harriet Rollins Ellsworth, Maine 1 68 ] Bertha E . Ryan 218 Wyoming Street Syracuse, New York Helen Angelia Sawyer Littleton, Massachusetts β– 4T. Marguerite Kitchenman S c a n l i n 1024 West Lehigh Avenue Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Q Mabel Alexandria Seagrave 1818 Jefferson Street Toledo, Ohio Marie Louise Seward Marengo, Illinois [ 69 ] Georgina Washinton Sill cox Jav Street New Brighton, New York Frances Clyde Small Addison, Maine B JO 1 Agnes Hussey Smith 8 Mellen Street Cambridge, Massachusetts Olive Branum Smith 203 2d Street Jeannette, Pennsylvania $ Ethel Rose Spence Rockland, Massachusetts 1 7 1 Cora B . S q u i e r 2i ' A Lincoln Street Worcester, Massachusetts Marian Stansfield 1116 Park. Avenue Bridgeport, Connecticut Jessie Sybella Stean e 29 Collins Street Hartford, Connecticut Alice Alberta Stearns Center Lovell, Maine Abbie Otis Stoddard 120 Hia;h Street Belfast, Maine [ 71 ] 19 s Edna Pearl Strohm 702 South Richard Street Joliet, Illinois Ethel Van Zandt Sullivan Montclair, New Jersey Edna S u m m y 1935 Oakdale Avenue Chicago, Illinois Maria Robinson Sykes 26 Cherry Street North Adams, Massachusetts Louise Emma Sylvester 306 Webster Street Scranton, Pennsylvania 1 7 2 1 Helen Thomas 40 Mather Street Dorchester, Massachusetts Laura P. Thomas O. S. U. Grounds Columbus, Ohio Miriam Hunt Thrall 71 Dwight Street New Haven, Connecticut M a r v Evelyn T o w n s e n d 432 Westminster Street Elizabeth, New Jersey Bessie Holmes Tucker Welleslev, Massachusetts 1 73 ] Hilda Alford Tufts Wolfville, Nova Scotia Alma Gertrude Tyler Exeter, New Hampshire Β« Marguerite Florence Venn ; - 1 PI 911 Edison Avenue Indianapolis, Indiana ft Ruth Alice Walcott 260 Main Street Hudson, Massachusetts Bertha Waldo 1834 5th Avenue Troy, New York [ 74 Helen Watson Weymouth, Massachusetts %s Ethel P . W a x h a m 1901 Colfax Avenue Denver, Colorado L a i r a A . Welch 5108 Hibbard Avenue Chicago, Illinois Emily Potter Wells Kingston. Rhode Island Gladys Wells Melbourne, Florida 1 75 ] Blanche Howard Wenner Ogden, Utah Zella Wentz Aurora, Nebraska Gertrude Edith Williams 4 Orne Street Worcester, Massachusetts Kate Georgia Wilson 197 Ewing Avenue, Station A Dallas, Texas Flora Janet Wolfson 3032 Flora Avenue Kansas City, Missouri 7 li Agnes Rollit Wood Milbank, South Dakota e% Florence Woodruff 300 Rickard Street Joliet, Illinois 1 Sarah Jones Woodward 172 North Main Street Concord, New Hampshire Anna M . Young 37 Crescent Avenue Newton Centre, Massachusetts Juliet Pauline Zimmerman New Bedford, Massachusetts [ 77 ] WELLESLEY COLLEGE LEGENDA Mabel Bishop 849 Myrtle Avenue Bridgeport, Connecticut Ruth L. C h i p m a n Hotel Hamilton Brockton, Massachusetts Charlotte Y. Gardner 81 Edgewood Place Cleveland, Ohio Amy L . G u R l i t z 109 Clark Street Brooklyn, New York Mattie L. Hardison Wellesley Hills, Massachusetts Evelyn E. Hewitt Meriden, Connecticut Laura A. Hibbard 271 Oakwood Boulevard Chicago, Illinois 1 78 ] ' y sssP 3 ' 1 W E E I, E S I. E Y COH E Ci E I. E G E N I) A May L. Jacobs 253 Collins Street Hartford, Connecticut Carrie L. Knox Gertrlde Lewis Margaret Little Margaret M c C o y 317 Mulberry Hil Mary N e a l 45 North 5th Street Vinton, Iowa Castine, Maine Colton, California Lancaster, Ohio Newark, Ohio Ethel F. Reed 28 Norwood Street I 79 ] Portland, Maine WELLESLEY COLLEGE LEGENDA R. Jessie Reynolds 217 Seymour Street Syracuse, New York Florence B . Risley Winchester, Massachusetts Edith Rothermel 438 Kenilworth Avenue Oak Park, Illinois Isabelle Stone Needham, Massachusetts Mary Strachan 424 North Weber Street Colorado Springs, Colorado Bess Trovillo Abingdon, Illinois Vera Turner Colfax, Iowa [ 80 ] WELLESLET COLLEGE E E G E N I A 3ht iHnnonam iEary Hmusr i ittklry Dirii Smmbrr. 13D3 | SI I W E L L E S LEY C L L E G E L E G E N I) A Former Members May J. Baker Helen E. Behrens Florence Bement Louise Billyard F anny W. Bixby H. Perlee Bouton Lotta R. Bradburn Ethel M. Brown Alberta S. Brownell Helen M. Bullis Mona Caverly Polly J. Clark Evelyn Crosby Helen G. Daniel Anna M. Diegel Nellie F. Dieter Anna F. Earle Lucy F. Evans Mary Field Hazel French Grace W. Goodnow Grace G. Graham Mary Gray Julia Hainer ♦Deceased. Amelia D. Harvey Laura Herman Mary L. Hinckley Alice M. Hogan Julia Holder Katherine C. Hough Elsa D. James Clare M. Jaquith Edna L. Johnson Nellie I. Keene Sarah Kierstede Irma H. Lavin Mary M. Leet Mabel G. Low Edith R. MacDonald Harriet E. McGill Jeanette G. McGregor Mary B. McHenry Grace Macmillan Irene G. Mame Agnes E. Maynard Edith Mary Elizabeth E. Miller Elizabeth M. Miller [ 82 ] BOiSOOOFL.n JIOyOOO WELLESLEY COLLEGE LEGENDA Elsie D. Miller Hazel G. Montgomery Edith Moore Elizabeth J. Moore Martha L. Morgan Eliza Newhall Janet R. Pease Alice C. Perley Gertrude E. Phipps Helen B. Porter Lucretia E. Prendergast Edna Purdon Gertrude H. Raftery Clara May Robinson Elsie Rogers Alice G. Smith Marguerite B. Smith Mabel F. Spofford Margaret A. Suppes Jessie M. Sylvester Marion Talbot Anna P. Tatum Grace Van Deusen Grace M. Wagman Helen Wagner Helen R. Waples Anne P. Wells Helen M. T. Wells Helen K. West Alice D. Whalen t 83 ] SEOfClS liMSMii WELI,ESLEY COLLEGE LEGENDA II AIL to the bright class who yearly advances, Hon ' ring and blessing their poplar benign; Wat ' ring the tree from a pitcher that glances As it is eagerly passed down the line. Heav ' n send it leaves of blue, Earth lend it silver hue. While its glad rootlets and stemlets do grow, How cultured you must feel, A turnip for your seal. Cling to your herbage, do, Nor let it go. Blue are the days filled with midyears and flunk notes, Blue are the books that your knowledge half fills. Blue is your banner that, dismal and drear, floats Over the wrecks caused by athletic ills. Then may your honors grow, Till they shall surely show Something of worth for your college and you. And, as your honor ' s good, β€” Though oft misunderstood, β€” May success with you go, Whate ' er you do. 1 84 P r e s i d e a t Louise Steele V i c c P r c s i d e n t Nell Carey Recording Secretar v Sadie Samuel Correspond i n g S e c r e t a r y Olive Greene T r c a s it r e r Lillian Brooks Executive Committee Helen Baird Georgia Harrison- Helen S e c. a r Factotums Louise Curtis Helen White [ 8 5 ] W ELLESLEY CO L L E G E LEG E N D A Class of 1900 Abbott, Bonnie E. Adams, Josephine G. Ambrose, Clara Evelyn Ames, Alice C. Arnold, Laura Ayer, Harriet Babbitt, Edith D. Baird, Helen E. Bali., Mary H. Batty, Vena S. Bauman, Sarah S. Bement, Florence Hemenway Berst, Ruth S. Bishop, Lucy C. Boswell, Mary E. Bouton, H. Per Lee Bowersock, Margery Bowman, Grace D. Bradburn, Lotta R. Briscoe, Marian E. Brooks, Lillian M. 109 Sacramento Avenue, Chicago, 111. Fryeburg, Maine Park Hill, Yonkers, N. Y. 303 Putman Avenue, Brooklyn, N. Y. Ridgway, Pa. 5 Main Street Park, Maiden, Mass. 431 Main Street, Fitchburg, Mass. 459 East Market Street, Akron, Ohio 201 East Water Street, Lockhaven, Pa. 14 Grant Street, Utica.JM. Y. 399 Turner Street, Allentown, Pa. Chambers, Westland Ave., Boston, Mass. 709 Browns Avenue, Erie, Pa. 117 Marston Avenue, Eu Claire, Wis. 644 North 32d Street, Philadelphia, Pa. 649 Pearl Street, Elizabeth, N. J. Lawrence, Kansas 1895 Roscoe Street, Chicago, 111. Housatonic, Mass. Port Gibson, Miss. 604 Pleasant Street, Worcester, Mass. [ 86 ] t WW . W E I. I. E S L EI COLLEGE LEGEN I) A Brownell, Alberta S. Burdick, Mabel G. BuRLINGAME, ALICE A. Bush, Katherine S. Cadwell, Mary Lee Callaway, Emily H. Carey, Nellie G. Carlisle, Marion H. Carroll, Alice Carson, Mary A. Chandler, Isabelle Chase, Alice D. Chase, Annie G. Clark, Polly J. Comfort, Marion C. Connor, Elizabeth Coops, Myrtle F. Copeland, Katharine T. Copp, Florence A. Crowl, Corinna Cummins, Anna M. Curtis, Harriet Louise Curtis, Mary F. Daley, Leoline Marie 244 Winter Street, Fall River, Mass. 4 Harrison Street, Stapleton, S. I., N. Y. 52 Fountain Street, Worcester, Mass. 644 Campbell Avenue, West Haven, Conn. 311 Atlantic Avenue, Atlantic City, N. J. Westfield, N. J. 3918 Prairie Avenue, Chicago, 111. 01 Howe Avenue, Passaic, N. J- 403 Union Street, Nashville, Tenn. Woodlawn Inn, Pittsfield, Mass. Macomb, 111. Deny, N. H. 21 Fuller Street, Brockton, Mass. Middleboro, Mass. Cuernavaca, East de Morelos, Mexico 1116 9th Street, Des Moines, Iowa 33 White Street, Taunton, Mass. 16 Fenno Street, Roxburv, Mass. Wolfeboro, N. H. Sterling, 111. Conneant, ( )hio 511 West 8th Street, Plainfield, N. J. Westminster Depot, Mass. Menominee, Mich. [ 87 ] WELLESLEY COLLEGE LEGENDA Danforth, Emma Dayton, Caroline W. De Lano, Louise C. Dickey, Frances R. Dickinson, Alice H. Dickinson, Anna L. Dodson, Florence E. Duncan, Grace Ella Dwight, Laura Morse Eckert, Bertha M. Edwards, Helen Mary Elliot, Helen J. Emerson, Mary E. Enos, Grace Ethel Eustis, Sarah Elise Everett, Bernice J. Everett, Ethel M. Everitt, Elizabeth C. Farrar, Eleanor E. Fleming, Mary Flickinger, Edith Foote, Florence R. Foster, Bertha F. Foster, Myra 428 Norwood Avenue, Buffalo, N. Y. 2020 Blaisdell Avenue, Minneapolis, Minn. Allegan, Mich. Oxford, Pa. Oxford, Mass. 273 Main Street, Fitchburg, Mass. 3344 Rhodes Avenue, Chicago, 111. 131 West 3d Street, Duluth, Minn. 113 Chene Street, Detroit, Mich. 14G Magazine Street, Cambridge, Mass. 32 East Walnut Street, Titusville, Conn. Grafton, Mass. Station K, Cincinnati, Ohio 841 Washington Avenue, Denver, Col. University Heights, New York, N. Y. 11 Pleasant Street, Franklin Falls, N. H. 11 Pleasant Street, Franklin Falls, N. H. 842 Capital Avenue, North, Indianapolis, Ind. Abington, Mass. 18 Park Street, Walton, N. Y. 916 4th Avenue, Council Bluffs, Iowa 28 Wannalancit Street, Lowell, Mass. 4 Hough Street, Dover, N. H. 1107 West Sears Street, Denison, Texas [ 88 ] W E T-LESLEY C O L L E G E LEGEND A Francis, J. Gertrude Freeland, Emily R. Freeman, Emily F. Gatch, Louise Gidley, Mary Jessie GlLBREATH, OLIVE M. Goddard, Elizabeth goodale, emilie Goodspeed, Mary I. Goodwin, Ruth Louise Graefe, Helen Claire Green, Olive Grimes, Zillah Evelyn Grover, Alice M. Guion, Connie M. Guise, Helen Louise Hall, Alice M. Harper, Mary E. Harris, Dasa E. Harrison, Georgia Hartwell, Lottie H. T. Hartz, Elizabeth Hatch, Grace E. Hawkridge, Winifred 81 Woburn Street, Reading, Mass. Bowmanville, Ontario, Can. Wakefield, Mass. 2023 Kalorama Avenue, Washington, D. C. North Dartmouth, Mass. La Plata, Mo. 205 East 9th Street, Plainfield, N. J. 10 Chatham Street, Worcester, Mass. St. Albans, N ' t. 22 Bovnton Street, Worcester, Mass. Columbus Avenue, Sandusky, Ohio Los Angeles, Cal. Knoxville, Pittsburg, Pa. 16 Grover Street, Lvnn, Mass. 313 East 9th Street, Charlotte, N. C. 201 East Lima Street, Findlav, Ohio West Acton, Mass. 1008 North Court Street, Ottumwa, Iowa Otego, N. Y. Caldwell, N. J. 38 Holland Avenue, Westfield, Mass. 531 19th Street, Rock Island, 111. 145 West Willis Avenue, Detroit, Mich. 02 Beach Street, Maiden, Mass. [ 89 ] WELLESLEY COLLEGE LEGENDA Heber, Alice E. 1003 Bonnie Brae Street, Los Angeles, Cal. Henderson, Grace S. 128 North Raven Avenue, Youngstown, Ohio Herold, Florence 75 Congress Street, Newark, N. J. Hewlings, Genevieve Walgrave 238 East 53d Street, Chicago, 111. Holmes, Lucy A. Holt, Carolyn R. Hughes, Martha J. Hunter, Olive James, Elsa D. Jaquith, Claire M. Jenkins, Ruth L. 2424 Lydia Avenue, Kansas City, Mo. Berlin, N. H. 43 North Huron Street, Wheeling, W. Va. 5125 Jefferson Avenue, Chicago, 111. 1105 Delaware Avenue, Buffalo, N. Y. 72 High Street, Woburn, Mass. Barre, Mass. Jennings, Florence B. 49 North 2d West Street, Salt Lake City, Utah Jones, Catherine B. Jordan, Ethel Keiser, Edith R. Kennedy, Helen L. Kilborn, Myra C. Kraus, Florence E. Kuehnle, Bertha L. Legg, Jessie E. Lermit, Geraldine R. Lewis, Winifred Lincoln, Mildred F. Littlefield, Grace G. Westgrove, Pa. 419 North Court Street, Ottumwa, Iowa 1530 Mineral Spring Road, Reading, Pa. West New Brighton, N. Y. 353 Edgewood Avenue, New Haven, Conn. 1340 Franklin Street, Philadelphia, Pa. 137 Livingston Avenue, New Brunswick, N. J. Adams, Jefferson County, N. Y. 5119 Jefferson Avenue, Chicago, 111. Rochester, Mass. 44 Heath Street, Somerville, Mass. Ogunquit, Maine 1 90 ] W E L L E SLEY COLL E GE LE G E N I) A Loker, L. Gertrude Cochituate, Mass. McAlpine, J. Irene 16 Dennison Avenue, South Framingham, Mass. 314 West Lincoln Street, Findlay, Ohio 33 Allen Street, New Bedford, Mass. 626 Richmond Avenue, Buffalo, N. Y. 3105 Calumet Avenue, Chicago, 111. 14 Cochituate Street, Natick, Mass. 12 Monitor Street, Ben Avon, Pa. McQueen, Alice E. 25 North St. Bernard Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Maco.mber, Bessie P. 9 West Britannia Street, Taunton, Mass. Mapes, Lucy 1543 Admiral Building, Kansas City, Mo. Marcy, Ida Carolyn 448 West 2d Street, Superior, Wis. MARQUAND, Fanny E. 392 South Columbus Avenue, Mt. Vernon, N. Y. McClelland, M. Glenn McGregor, Janetta G. MacKunion, Ella C. McLennan, Alice McManus, Katherine R. MacMichael, Ethelwyn S. Mather, M. Alice Maynard, Elsie De R. Megee, Florence C. Miller, Elizabeth M. Moore, Edna Moore, Elizabeth J. Morgan, Ethel G. Morrison, Gertrude Morrison, Ione P. Morrison, Lola M. Moulton, .Mary E. 112 Fort Hill Avenue, Lowell, Mass. Erieville, N. Y. 4009 Baltimore Avenue, Philadelphia, Pa. Oxford, N. Y. 829 Kensington Avenue, Plainfield, N. J. 1403 Sherman Avenue, Evanston, 111. 108 Lake Terrace, Ocean Grove, N. J. 22 South Main Street, Sharon, Pa. 32, 7 East Street, Salt Lake City, Utah 61 High Street, Newton, N. J. 704 Central Avenue, Dover, N. H. [ 91 ] W E LLESLET COLLEGE LEGEND A Murrell, Theresa M. Nickelson, Mary E. Ogden, Elizabeth G. 2015 East 8th Street, Kansas City, Mo. Adams, N. Y. 5 Mulberry Street, Middletown, N. J. Ohr, LuCETTA Taylor 1838 North Delaware Street, Indianapolis, Ind. Osgood, Bertha Jeannette Verona, N. Y. Parker, Ida R. 807 Washington Street, New Dorchester, Mass. Chardon, Ohio 197 Douglas Avenue, St. John, N. B., Canada 9 Richardson Avenue, Wakefield, Mass. 31 Vinson Street, Dorchester, Mass. 234 East Avenue, Oak Park, 111. 208 Pleasant Street, Laconia, N. H 88 Elm Street, Montclair, N. J. 125 Union Street, Wheaton, 111. 69 Elm Street, Mechanic Falls, Maine 421 North 21st Street, St. Joseph, Mo. Fort Edward, N. Y. 230 Central Avenue, Fredonia, N. Y. 35 Loullard Place, New York 8 Bow Street, Taunton, Mass. 301 Oxford Street, Rochester, N. Y. Northborough, Mass. Schaefer, Sarah A. O. 21 West Tulpehocken Street, Germantown, P a . Schwarz, Esther E. Highland Park, 111. [ 92 ] Patchin, Mary A. Perkins, Mae A. Perley, Alice C. Phipps, Gertrude E. Pitkin, Elsie Frances Pitman, Charlotte Porter, Helen B. Reber, E. Myrtle Reed, Ethel F. Rhoades, Edith Moss Robinson, Clara May Rolph, Alice M. St. George, Hilda C. Sampson, Claire Samuel, Sadie M. Sargent, Ethel C. W E L L E S L E Y COLLEGE LEGENDA Scruggs, Theodora Segar, Helen Seibert, Gertrude Serrat, Mary L. Shi.mer, Alma E. Singleton, Caroline B. Smalley, Ethel C. Smedley, Annette H. Smith, Lillian P. Sooy, Elizabeth Stearn, .Mollie Steele, C. Louise Stephenson, Marion Stimson, Eleanor K. Sturtevant, Annie R. Sturtevant, Ethel G. Sturtevant, Faith B. Tanson, Mary B. Tatum, Anna P. Taylor, Vera Thomas, Charlotte R. Todd, Rhoda H. Tolles, Edith M. Tryon, Dorothy 1500 McGavock Street, Nashville, Term. 6 Elm Street, Westerly, R. I. 101 Newark Avenue, Bloom field, N. J. 45 Crescent Avenue, Maiden, Mass. 135 West Main Street, Middletown, N. Y. 721 Aubert Avenue, St. Louis. Mo. High Street, Bound Brook, N. J. 222 South Avenue, Bradford, Pa. Carmi, 111. 2005 Campbell Street, Kansas City, Mo, 1030 Case Avenue, Cleveland, Ohio 1525 Pearl Street, Denver, Colo. 300 Stuyvesant Avenue, Brooklyn, N. Y. 123 West 7th Street, Plainfield, N. J. 18 Eliot Street, Cambridge, Mass. 740 Myrtle Avenue, Bridgeport, Conn. 832 Wilson Avenue, Chicago, 111. Box 17a, Middletown, Conn. Fallsington, Pa. 204 West Park Street, Streator, 111. Wister Street, Germantown, Pa. 47 East 29th Street, New York Cit y 1 10 Fairview Avenue, Naugatuck, Conn. Rumford, R. I. 103] WELLESLEY COLLEGE I, E G E N I) A Tucker, Emma G. Tuttle, Florence P. Tuttle, Maude M. Tyler, Ray M. Wagman, Grace M. Waldron, Mabel B. Walmsley, Alice F. VValrad, Anna Ware, G. Katrina Warren, Jessie R. Watkins, Mary E. Wells, Helen M. J. Wheeler, Genevieve Wheeler, Gladys Whitaker, Catherine C White, Helen L. Whiting, Ruth William, Helen M. Wilson, Bessie P. Yeates, M. Elizabeth Young, Helen M. 2418 15 Belair Avenue, Wellesley, Mass. South Acton, Mass. 185 Lewis Street, Lynn, Mass. 2560 Jefferson Avenue, Ogden, Utah 142 Lake Avenue, Saratoga Springs, N. Y. 38 Deering Street, Portland, Maine 2613 Elizabeth Avenue, Zion City, 111. 13 Lincoln Avenue, Cortland, N. Y. 116 West Wayne Avenue, Wavne, Pa. 186 Courtland Hill, Bridgeport, Conn. Campbell, N. Y. Wellsville, Ohio 1156 Ninth Street, Des Moines, Iowa Concord, Mass. Tyngsborough, Mass. 6 Gray Street, Portland, Maine Winsted, Conn. Station A, Worcester, Mass. 36 Washington Street, Beverly, Mass. 319 West Main Street, Norwich, Conn. Ashland Avenue, Walnut Hills, Cincinnati, Ohio [ 94 ] HUHfi U6%y H29@H 2 β€ž _ , ? !MP=Β«i yMi MSMZMSls My W ELLE S L E Y COT. LEGE LEGEND A I 1 hem (Another of Mr. Kipling ' s.) IfiV T was in October, 1903, that I discovered Castle- W q Red-and-Green, and Them. Exploring the roads |g| of Welleslev in my brand-new automobile, β€” a |4tΒ§ Vim beauty, too, Dignitas Juniora make, β€” I happened Β§2Β§Β§2!I2iΒ§2Β§ ' nto t ' le ast ' e grounds, and saw it looming there, big and imposing and Red-and-Green. Traces of childish presence led me first to look for Them. Here lay an open book with crumpled leaves, where They had been amusing Themselves with the strangest pictures : uninteresting spidery things, and blocks and sticks drawn anyhow. There reposed a tin pan and spoon, with the rich brown compound of childish mud-pie still moist upon them. Nav, later, I sometimes caught the gleam of sunshine and flowing hair at a window, or saw an edge ot bright- colored garment disappearing around the corner of the long Castle halls. By and by a Beautiful Lady invited me in and talked to me about Them. She said They were amused at my automobile, and so I spent long autumn afternoons tinkering and repairing it before the Castle windows, in hope to lure them forth. For a long time I had no response save that I knew They were watching me : I could hear laughter at my very elbow. Sometimes They played games among the shadows, and once I heard Them counting out β€” One, two, Three, four, Five, six, Seven ! All good CΒ£ -dren Go to Heaven. The good old rhyme ! I joined in with my hearty voice, but a sudden hush fell, and Thev scattered quieth . [ 95 ] WELLESLEY COLLEGE LEGENDA I discovered at last that it was Syx who drove Them off. Svx, my lively fox terrier, was a good creature, but possessed of a piercingly shrill bark. She was always at my heels, or at my wheels it I went per auto, and she grew particularly vigorous when we drew near Castle-Red-and-Green. I know that once They barred the gates and played a game ot choosing a leader. Syx barked in vain outside the Castle that day. Afterwards I always tried to leave her home. Among the many devices 1 tried, I found one word that They would heed, though still hidden from view. If I patiently whispered Siss-ter Cla-as, I might win at last a shy chartling mockery of Siss-ter Cla-as from Them. At one time, sitting afar in the auto, I watched Them act a little play in the Barn. They were bewitching, it I could but have come nearer. The sweet voices and graceful figures were all dim. And though at the end of the dainty pagaent They promptly vanished at sight of me, a murmured Siss-ter Cla-as floated over to me. Did you think I could go no further? 1 won my way com- pletely, for by June They came to me of Their own accord. They danced on the green, and sang, β€” what delicate posies They were ! β€” and when They were tired They drew near in the dusk. 1 felt the pressure of little fingers, and a warm breath whispered the magic word. They let me know Their secrets that day, and now They are no riddle to me. 96 ] P r e s i d e n t Olive Smith V ice P r e s i d c n t Madeline Hanson R e c o r d i n g S e c r e t a r y Vera Loom is Corresponding Sec r e t a r y Caroline Gilbert T r e a s u r e r Roma Nickerson Executive Committee Gertrude Cate Helen Goddard Clara Griffin Factotums Helen Hutchins Netta Wana maker t 97 ] ElODO J OOyOiSSg OISlOlI WELLESLEY COLLEGE LEGENDA Class of 1907 Abercrombie, Esther G. Adams, Bessie C. Adams, Olive Lida Aiken, Jean N. 81 Providence Street, Worcester, Mass. 408 North Main Street, Natick, Mass. 5477 Cornell Avenue, Chicago, 111. 151 South Centre Street, Bethlehem, Pa. Alexander, Elizabeth Margaret 406 E. Maiden St., Washington, Pa Alexander, Mary B. W. Allen, Barbara Allen, Theresa Austin Ash, Geneva L. Barbour, Esther H. Barki.age, Edith A. Bates, Helen W. Bauman, Eva Clare Bean, Josephine O. Bent, Adelaide H. Bentley, Helen E. Berry, Marian Wells Besse, Florence F. Bickford, Anna E. Biddle, A. Marie M. Billyard, Louise Clinton Avenue, New Brighton, N. Y. South McAlester, Indian Territory South McAlester, Indian Territory 1215 Jackson Street, Anderson, Ind. 12 Ellery Street, Cambridge, Mass. 5139 Morgan Stree t, St. Louis, Mo. River Street, Braintree, Mass. 185 Bellflower Avenue, Cleveland, Ohio Osborne House, Hornellsville, N. Y. 4 Marion Terrace, Brookline, Mass. Pulasky, N. Y. 486 Norfolk Street, Dorchester, Mass. 29 Ingersoll Grove, Springfield, Mass. 120 West Main Street, Lock Haven, Pa. Fountain Springs, Pa. Wellesley, Mass. [ 98 ] W ELLESLEY C O E L E G E LEGENDA Birge, Marguerite Bixbv, Emma S. Bosworth, Louise M. Boxrud, Helen M. Boyle, Helen Braastad, Florence F. Bradfield, Maude C. Bradt, Alice H. Brady, Katherine E. Bridgens, Elizabeth L. Brown, Hattie Bruner, Marion E. bucher, rosana Burton, Sybil Hi by, Ella H. Cahell, Clara W. Carothers, Ruth A Carter, Caroline L. Castle, Elizabeth M. Cate, Gertrude C. Clark, Lida Clement, Laura Coburx, Amy Cole, Marian L. 98 Bellevue Avenue, Bristol, Conn. 13 Portland Place, St. Louis, Mo. 623 Highland Avenue, Elgin, 111. 57 6th East Street, Salt Lake City, Utah Manchester-bv-the-Sea, Mass. Ishpeming, Mich. Barnesville, Ohio 158 Westford Street, Lowell, Mass. 22 George Street, Norwood, Mass. 326 West Church Street, Lock Haven, Pa. 53 Duncan Avenue, Jersev City, N. J. 27 Arch Street, Akron, Ohio 516 5th Avenue, Altoona, Pa. 731 East Market Street, Zanesville, Ohio 45 East Central Avenue, Moorestown, N. J. Rowland Hall, Salt Lake City, Utah 146 South Fairmount Avenue, Pittsburg, Pa. 24 Arlington Street, Haverhill, Mass. 610 Colonial Avenue, Norfolk, Va. 176 Seaver Street, Roxbury, Mass. 52 Washington Park, Newtonville, Mass. 300 South Eastern Avenue, Joliet, 111. 23 Oread Place, Worcester, Mass- 861 President Street, Brooklvn, N. Y. [ 99 ] WELLESLET COLLEGE L E G E N D A Collins, Anna G. 43 Cottage Street, Wellesley Hills, Mass. Condit, Elisabeth 1010 19th Street, Des Moines, Iowa Coombe, Mary E. 1930 Bigelow Ave., Mt. Auburn, Cincinnati, Ohio Crane, Daphne Crane, Elizabeth Ward 8 Ashland Street, Worcester, Mass. 92 Lincoln Avenue, Newark, N. J. Crawford, Anne Lothrop 1914 Mt. Vernon Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Crawford, Marian Darin, Margaret Davies, Grace M. Dietz, Marjorie Montclair, N. J. 90 Pond Street, Natick, Mass. 2322 North Broad Street, Philadelphia, Pa. 21 North Vine Street, Hazleton, Pa. Dill, Helen Baker 460 Commonwealth Avenue, Newton Centre, Mass. Doonan, Rose L. Wellesley, Mass. Doten, Gladys 235 State Street, Portland, Maine Douglas, Almira H. 105 12th Street, Troy, N. Y. Duncan, Margaret Elizabeth 3232 North 16th St., Philadelphia, Pa. Dunham, Edith M. Jewett Ave., W. New Brighton, Staten Island, N. Y. Dustin, Helen Cary Dyer, Bertha W. Eaton, F. Louise Eaton, Mildred Lois Edwards, Marion Ellison, Edith Emerson, Ruth N. Engel, Florence Lovilla 28 Middle Street, Gloucester, Mass. Holliston, Mass. 73 Bartlett Street, Andover, Mass. 847 College Avenue, Beloit, Wis. Kinslev, Kan. 4100 Spruce Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Station R, Cincinnati, Ohio 6 Concord Street, Natick, Mass. [ 100 ] W E L L E S L E Y COL L E G E LEGENDA Fellows, Gladys E. Fiske, Marie Elizabeth Flaccus, Alice Caroline Flewellixg, Florence Louise Foster, Paulene Fox, Anna E. French, Helen S. French, Ruth D. Frick, Geraldine Garford, Louise E. Garson, Hilda K. Gilbert, Caroline Frances Gillespie, Amy Heywood Gilmore, Helen Mar Goddard, Helen Miles Goodman, Julia M. Goodnow, Grace W. Goodnow, H. M. Goodrich, Nellie Harper Green, Elizabeth Livonia Griffin, Clara Adelaide Hague, Mary R. Halkett, Adelaide Bruce Hanson, Madeleine Orono, Maine 26 Winnemav Street, Natick, Mass. 1128 Perm Avenue, Pittsburg, Pa. Grant Street, Needham, Mass. Ellsworth, Maine 501 Wabash Avenue, Kansas Citv, Mo. 50 Hancock Street, Lexington, Mass. Milford, N. H. 417 South 43d Street, West Philadelphia, Pa. 509 Washington Avenue, Elvria, Ohio 270 East Avenue, Rochester, N. Y. 41 Court Street, Plattsburg, N. Y. Care J. D. Lyons, Monticello, N. Y. 192 Pine Street, Springfield, Mass. 1516 Cora Avenue, St. Louis, Mo. 115 Ludlow Street, Hamilton, Ohio Wellesley, Mass. East Jaffrey, N. H. 2004 Green Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Raymond, Ohio 1922 Orrington Avenue, Evanston, 111. Gorham, Maine 315 East Ridley Avenue, Ridley Park, Pa. 4637 Greenwood Avenue, Chicago, 111. [ 101] WELLESLEY COLLEGE LEGE N I) A Harding, Anna T. Perm and Arrott Streets, Frankfort, Philadelphia, Pa. Hardy, Josephine M. Harvey, Alice G. Hastings, Minnie Katharine Hayes, Julia Percell Hazelton, Blanche M. Heai.ey, Frances Healy, Bertha V. Heath, Margaret A. Heber, Jessie E. Helmbolt, Henrietta E. Hendrie, Mabel L. Herrick, Grace Hersey, Ethel Lane Hill, Avis Wheeler Winter port, Maine 51 Winder Street, Detroit, Mich. 69 Elm Street, Hartford, Conn- 15 South Elm Street, Waterburv, Conn. 1 Vine Street, Amesbury, Mass. Hampton Falls, N. H. 304 Central Street, Manchester, N. H. 360 Warren Avenue, Chicago, 111. 1003 Bonnie Brae Street, Los Angeles, Cal. 8 Walter Street, Roslindale, Mass. Fairfield Avenue, Stamford, Conn. 15 Herrick Street, Winchester, Mass. South Street, Hingham, Mass. 827 Main Street, Waban, Mass. Hooper, Ethel Sheldon 11 Union Street, Manchester-by-the-Sea, Mass. Houghton, Ellen M. Houghton, Harriet M. Howard, Leantha Bloom Hoyt, Clara R. Hull, Ethel Mason Hunt, Lillian Mabel Hutchins, Helen N. Hutchins, Mary S. Littleton Common, Mass. 202 Main Street, Hudson, Mass. 641 Washington Street, Wellesley, Mass. 172 North Street, Stamford, Conn. Baltic, Conn. 4371 Laclede Avenue, St. Louis, Mo. 37 Mt. Vernon Street, Cambridge, Mass. 37 Mt. Vernon Street, Cambridge, Mass. [ 102 ] W E E E E vS I, E Y CO L L E G E LEGENDA Welleslev Hills, Mass. 324 Mills Avenue, Wyoming, Ohio 15 Lake Avenue, Yonkers, N. Y. 69 Thomas Park, South Boston, Mass. 20 East Fulton Street, Gloversville, N. Y. Ridlev Park, Delaware Count} ' , Pa. Kennworthy, Ada L. Lepton Ter., Green Lane, Roxborough, Phil., Pa. Kimball, Grace L. 404 South 42d Street, West Philadelphia, Pa. Hyde, Lydia W. Hvndman, Ruth Irwin, Constance Johnson, Carolyn P. Kasson, Margaret C Kellogg, Sara L. Kimball, Laura L. King, Ethel King, Grace C. Kingsbury, Alberta B. Knowles, Helen S. Knox, Leila C. Lang, Helena S. Lathrope, Eunice Leonard, Mildred A. Levy, Theresa Lines, Louise S. Locke, Ellen C. Long, Julia P. Loomis, Vera Lovell, Rhodica J Ludlow, Hattie 10 Winter Street, Woburn, Mass. 2 West 88th Street, New York City Ellsworth, Maine Needham, Mass. Ridlev Park, Pa. Conklin, Broome County, N. Y. 6342 Drexel Road, Philadelphia, Pa. 1630 Jefferson Avenue, Scranton, Pa. 483 Beacon Street, Boston, Mass. 709 East Washington Street, Bloomington, 111. 413 Perry Avenue, Peoria, 111. East Lexington, Mass. The Touraine, 23 Clinton Street, Brooklyn, N. Y. 16 North Main Street, St. Albans, Vt. Spencer, Mass. Monroe, Wis. [ 103 ] WELLESLEY COLLEGE L E G E N I) A McCausey, Elcey McCrum, Helena D. McDougall, Mary MacKellar, Marguerite B MacKinnon, Flora I. McManus, Rose R. Margerum, Elizabeth M. Marks, Helen G. Marvin, Gertrude L. Medlar, Reba N. Mitchell, Mabel M. Mitchell, Sarah B. Moore, Harriet Moore, Louise S. Morgan, Martha L. Morrill, Helen T. Morse, Helen Benx Moseley, Mary G. Murphy, Mary Adele Neely, Ruth M. Newell, Helen A. Nickerson, Roma S. Norris, Janet M. Noyes, Helen G. Union City, Mich. 41 Centre Street, Oneonta, N. Y. Alpine Place, Walnut Hills, Cincinnati, Ohio 4841 Pulaski Avenue, Gennantovvn, Pa. 626 Richmond Avenue, Buffalo, N. Y. 14 Cochituate Street, Natick, Mass. Bustleton, Philadelphia, Pa. 1 Rowley Street, Rochester, N. Y. Port Adams, Newport, R. I. 626 North Wellington Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Weedsport, N. Y. Martin ' s Ferry, Ohio St. Clair, Mich. 1044 19th Street, Des Moines, Iowa 100 Mt. Vernon Street, Fitchburg, Mass. 208 North Summit Street, Dayton, Ohio 32 Northern Avenue, New Dorchester, Mass. Oakland Avenue, Needham, Mass. 23 Summer Street, Taunton, Mass. 1225 Ridge Avenue, Evanston, 111. 38 Summer Street, Hyde Park, Mass. 175 Maple Street, Springfield, Mass. La Moille, Bureau County, 111. Williamstown, Mass. 1 10 4] ooooyoo L; Β£IIIll 6 B Vfl ST r i r ; r r T: : β–  ' ji Hy) WBMlfiVffl W ELLESLEY COLLEGE LEGENDA Noyes, Margaret Elizabeth 136 Warren St., Newton Centre, Mass. O ' Connor, May Osborn, Mae Owen, Gertrude Jeanette Page, Mary Reynolds Palmer, Lilian N. Pastene, Teresa E. M. Patchen, Mary A. Perry, Alice Cutler Phraner, Olive Pinney, Jean E. Platt, Louise F. Plummer, Florence P. Pomeroy, Ethel M. Potter, Lena Raye Prichard, Eunice G. Proctor, Katherine W. Prouty, Geraldine S. Rand, Adelaide A. Raymond, Alice Percival 615 18th Street, Rock Island, 111. β– 4737 Kimbark Avenue, Chicago, 111. 114 East Street, Pittsfield, Mass. Proctor, Vermont Tenafly. N. J. 56 Lyndhurst Street, Dorchester, Mass. Chardon, Ohio North VVilbraham, Mass. 319 Fulton Street, Jamaica, N. Y. 835 Third Avenue. Cedar Rapids, Iowa 32 Grove Hill, New Britain, Conn. Dixon, 111. 164 Sargent Street, Hartford, Conn. 156 Elm Street, Fitchburg, Mass. 72 Dewey Avenue, Newark, Ohio Wvncote, Pa. Spencer, Mass. 399 Newtonville Avenue, Newtonville, Mass. 29 Mansfield Street, Allston, Mass. Reed, Edith L. Reed, Helen F. Renard, Blanche Roberts, Alice W. 314 Union Street, Southeast, Minneapolis, Minn. 100 West State Street, Sharon, Pa. 4463 Westminster Place, St. Louis, Mo. Moorestown, N. J. 1 10 5] W ELLESLEY COLLEGE LEGENDA Roberts, May Rogers, Ada M. Rogers, Mildred M. Rossington, Alice Russell, Jeax D. Russell, Mabel M. Rust, Louise B. St. Johx, Amelia Sanderson, Ruth G. Sawyer, Nina Searcy, Edith L. Searle, Helen E. Shaw, Caroline N. Shearon, Viola Y. Sherman, Frances E. Shonock, Edith L. Shull, Mary M. ,Shupp, Mary R. Simmons, S. Isabel Small, Harriet Smith, Marion E. Smith, Mildred E. Smith, Olive A. Somers, May 126 High Street, Bristol, Conn. 816 Glenwood Avenue, Youngstown, Ohio 36 Hale Street, Beverly, Mass. 914 Monroe Street, Topeka, Kansas 650 Harrison Avenue, Scranton, Pa. 331 Wilder Street, Lowell, Mass. 118 New Street, New Brunswick, N. J. 51 West Main Street, Port Jervis, N. Y. 23 Grove Street, Welleslev, Mass. Ovington Avenue, Bay Ridge, Brooklyn, N. Y. Waco, Kentucky Babylon, N. Y. 227 South Professor Street, Oberlin, Ohio Le Mars, Iowa 3 Warden Street, Worcester, Mass. Westport, Mass. New Bloomfield, Perry County, Pa. Woodside, West Philadelphia, Pa. 194 Joralemon Street, Brooklyn, N. Y. 711 Mesa Avenue, El Paso, Texas 142 Webster Street, Maiden, Mass. 175 Washington Street, Weymouth, Mass. 13 Sailley Avenue, Plattsburg, N. Y. 2323 Harney Street, Omaha, Neb. [106 ] V E 1, L E S L E Y CO L LEGE LEGENDA Spicer, Mollie Stanley, Harriet E. Stark, May S. Stevens, Ruth F. Stickney, Alice O. Stoddart, Mary M. Stone, Mabel A. Storey, Dorothy H. Strout, Letty A. Stubbins, Una Studley, Marian H. SULZBACHER, RlTA Sutton, Florence J. Swanton, Bertha M. Sweet, Marion E. Taber, Mary Tapley, Margaret Tasker, Madge S. Thayer, Maud P. Tillotson, Jean A. Titus, Alice F. Tobey, Katherine H. Tuttle, Gladys M. Vanderwoort, Winifred Dexter, Jefferson County, N. Y. Wichita, Kansas 214 Matilda Street, Pittsburg, Pa. 53 Price Street, Waterburv, Conn. 599 School Street, Lowell, Mass. 1393 East Main Street, Columbus, Ohio 15 Liberty Street, Waltham, Mass. β– 437 Gth Street, Brooklyn, N. Y. 39 Ffske Street, Waltham, Mass. 1500 Charlestown Street, Mattoon, 111. 105 Market Street, Rockland, Mass. 70 East 4th Street, Chillicothe, Ohio Lestershire, N. Y. 236 Park View Avenue, Lowell, Mass. 22 Howard Street, Maiden, Mass. 78 South Street, Auburn, N. Y. 24 Otis Street, Newtonville, Mass. 35 Cushing Street, Dover, N. H. 77 Somerset Avenue, Taunton, Mass. 327 River Street, Wilkes Barre, Pa. 17 Breed Street, Lynn, Mass. 39 Chestnut Street, Oneonta, N. Y. Nampa, Idaho 184 Goundrv St., North Tonawanda, N. Y. [10 7] W E L, E E SLEY COLLEGE LEGEND! volquardson, anna m. Wackenhutt, Elsa Waldo, Elisabeth Wanamaker, Netta L. Warner, M. Louise Warren, Marie J. Washburn, Genevieve Watson, Esther M. Watt, Ethel H. Weaver, Florence C. Weaver, Katherine Weaver, Mildred White, Frances B. White, Ruth Whiting, Lavinia I. Whitney, Marion E. Williams, Mabel A. Williams, Ora M. Willis, Elsie Witherell, Nina O. Witte, Mabel Wood, Helen M. Wood, Helen P. Wric-ley, Abby L. Parker Avenue, Newport, R. I. 57 Freeman Street, Newark, N. J. 1834 5th Avenue, Troy, N. Y. 530 Oak Street, Syracuse, N. Y. 11 Wellington Street, Waltham, Mass. Geneseo, Livingston County, N. Y. Hunter ' s Park, Duluth, Minn. Newtown, Bucks County, Pa. 12 Cottage Street, Wellesley, Mass. 198 West Avenue, Lockport, N. Y. 13 Beech Street, Gloversville, N. Y. 198 West Avenue, Lockport, N. Y. 5 Spring Street, Taunton, Mass. 616 East 36th Street, Kansas City, Mo. 246 Oak Street, Holyoke, Mass. 127 North Main Street, Gloversville, N. Y. Silver Lane, Conn. 112 Babcock Street, Brookline, Mass. Lakeville, Mass. Hyd e Park Hotel, Chicago, 111. 425 East State Street, Trenton, N. J. 12 Highland Street, Portsmouth, N. H. 112 South Main Street, Middleboro, Mass. High Street, Fremont, Ohio [ 10 8] WELLESLET COLLEGE LEGE N D A ere, Mttle Dirl, Don ' t Kwy (For ve Fweshmen) Don ' t kwy ! Some day oo ' ll be a dreat, bid dirl, An ' wear a cap an ' gown, An ' scare ve ozzer Fweshmen wiv Vat awful Senior fwown. Oo ' ll go to theatres, parties, balls, An ' mawwv some voting man ! He ' ll take you to Niagwa Falls, Pwovided vat he can. Ve Seniors onct was Fweshmen, just As young an ' queer as you ; Though now vey is ve upper cwust, Vey made mistakes β€” a few ! Wen work is hard and teachers stern, An ' all ve woild looks blue, Wemember, ' ittle Fweshmen turn, In time, to Seniors, too. Don ' t kwy ! [109 ] von Ach, Katherine, ' 08 Alden, Isabel Allen, Grace Bromley Ames, Helen Anderson, Willye Andrews, Elizabeth Ashley, Susie B. Ayers, Edith E. Baily, Edna H. Baird, Betsey Coe Balderston, Jane C. Barber, Edith Louise Bard, Bertha A. Barnes, Marion Barrow, Sue Barry, Ruth H. Bartlett, Edee M. Bascom, Louise R. Batchelder, Helen G. Batchelor, Harriet Mae Bates, Marjorie T. 1618 Park Avenue, Davenport, Iowa 15 Hillside Avenue, Summit, N. J. 320 Chestnut Street, Morristown, N. J. 9 Terrell Street, Worcester, Mass. Nee Kittrick, Cal. New Bethlehem, Clarion County, Pa. Hackettstown, N. J. Ossipee, N. H. Gallatin Avenue, Uniontown, Pa. 459 East Market Street, Akron, Ohio Colora, Md. Bernardston, Mass. G7 North Street, Gloversville, N. Y. 95 Russell Street, Waltham, Mass. 379 South Broadway, Lexington, Ky. 53 Oakland Street, Melrose, Mass. 26 Putnam Street, Buffalo, N. Y. Highlands, N. C. Hillside, Amesburv, Mass. 826 West 7th Street, Plainfield, N. J. 270 Main Street, Athol, Mass. [ 1 lo | W KLLESLEY COLLEGE LEG E N I) A Becker Edith Wexdt 260 Richmond Avenue, Buffalo, N. Y. BENTON, Anne G. 3000 South Humboldt Avenue, Minneapolis, Minn. Bicklen, Alma L. Bingham, Elizabeth H. Bishop. Dorothea Bixby, Fanny VV. Blackwood, Edna Berntce Balke, Laura D. Balsl, Henrietta M. Bowden, Mabel J. Boyce, Harriet L. Boynton, Lucy F. Brockett, Lucia G. Brown, Gladys A. Browne, Eva G. Brenneman, Mariana H. Br ' enneman, Mary E. Bruen, Edna M. Bryant, Florence G. Buffum, Jessie M. Baurrg, Marguerite H. 10G Polk Street, Burlington, Iowa 661 Richmond Avenue, Buffalo, N. Y. 117 Marston Avenue, Eau Claire, Wis. 505 Ocean Avenue, Long Beach, Cal. 4 Fav Street, Westboro, Mass. 401 East Ridge Street, Marquette, Mich. Riverhead, L. I. South Egremont, Mass. South Lincoln, Mass. 7 Walling Court, Davenport, Iowa 164 North Avenue, Battle Creek, Mich. Welleslev Hills, Mass. 1225 Watchung Avenue, Plainfield, N. J. Arrovo, W. Va. 321 Walnut Street, Harrisburg. Pa. Emerson, Iowa 953 Main Street, East Hartford, Conn. Abington, Mass. Needham, Mass. Burt, Mabel H. Hotel Normandie, Broadway and 38th St., N. Y. Citv Bush, Katherine L. 644 Campbell Avenue, West Haven, Conn. Byram, Bertha S. North Attleboro, Mass. lill] fsmm BGE GGBGmgSGBB mmm WELLESLEY COLLEGE LEGENDA Cain, Ruth C. Caldwell, Elva A. Cameron, Jessie M. Campbell, Elsie Carpenter, Ruth Carr, Bertha M. Carson, Vera E. Carter, Isabel H. Case, Florence L. Caton, Marion L. Chandler, Helen L. Church, Helen Clare Clark, Allene Clark, Florence Cole, Mabel S. Cook, Olive Cooper, Helen Cooper, Mabel Cottle, Agnes E. Couch, Caroline Crane, Maie Cummings, Helen Mariette Curtis, Helen Curtis, Leah Tower 1316 Kansas Avenue, Atchison, Kansas 8 Eastern Avenue, Woburn, Mass. Peace Dale, R. I. Old Short Hills, Millburn, N. J. 1314 Hinman Avenue, Evanston, 111. R. F. D. 1, East Georgia, Vt. 363 Field Avenue, Detroit, Mich. 131 North Street, Bath, Maine 382 Jefferson Avenue, Brooklyn, N. Y. Foxboro, Mass. East Woodstock, Conn. Duluth, Minn. 390 Richmond Avenue, Buffalo, N. Y. Shannock, R. I. Great Kills, L. I., N. Y. 235 Greenwood Boulevard, Evanston, 111. Ellsmore Hotel, Kansas City, Mo. 776 Summit Avenue, St. Paul, Minn. 14 Highland Street, Woburn, Mass. 19 Walnut Street, Taunton, Mass. 8 Ashland Street, Worcester, Mass. Woodsville, N. H. 25 Quincv Street, North Adams, Mass. 25 Quincy Street, North Adams, Mass. [112] W E L L E S L E Y COLLEGE LEGENDA Curtis, Perxei.ia J. Daley, Mary Wood Dana, Acnes Sanborn Daum, Elizabeth R. David, Leila Estella Davies, Hesta Rogers Davis, Ada Ellen Davis, Frances Eunice Denfeld, Margaret Denison, Katherine Dewar, Helen Dodson, Helen McVey Dodsworth, Mary Louise Draper, Ada Winifred Drouet, Lillian Drimmoxd, Lucille Drummond, Marguerite A. Duling, Emma Matilda Dulude, Corinne R. Dunn, Harriett A. Durell, Marian Durfee, Pauline E. Earle, Marion G. Elsmore, Annie 905 North Van Buren Street, Topeka, Kansas 146 Bay Street, Stapleton, L. I., N. Y. 67 Medway Street, Providence, R. I. 513 North Court Street, Ottumwa, Iowa Marshalltovvn, Iowa 2322 North Broad Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Harlan, Iowa Welleslev Hills, Mass. Hunter ' s Park, Duluth, Minn. 66 D eering Street, Portland, Maine ' ,β€’42 Michigan Avenue, Evanston, 111. 4210 Prairie Avenue, Chicago, 111. Box 123, Huntsville, Ala. Sidney, Iowa 66 Walnut Street, Somerville, Mass. 1224 2d Street, Louisville, Kv. Oakwood Place, Eau Claire, Wis. 1854 North 17th Street, Philadelphia, Pa. 217 Elin Street, Woonsocket, R. I. 373 La Fayette Avenue, Buffalo, N. Y. Lawrenceville, N. J. 81 Sedgwick Street, Jamaica Plain, Mass. 5 Albion Street, Lawrence, Mass. 15 North 21st Street, East Orange, N. J. [113 Bgagaiaoia gyy ggaeE a sioo yaoa WELLESLEY COLLEGE I, E G E N D A Ely, Florence Elizabeth Erwin, Margaret Eustes, Helen Frances Evans, Rachel R. Farr, Margaret Farrar, Alice Whitney Farwell, Helen Margaret Fellows, Lillian Bradford Ferbstein, Fannie Fiske, Georcianna Keith 56 Broad Street, Westfield, Mass. 87 Linden Avenue, Jersey City, N. J. University Heights, New York, N. Y. Mount Holly, N. J. Wenonah, N. J. Abington, Mass. Wellesley Hills, Mass. 150 Union Street, Bangor, Maine 271 West Market Street, Akron, Ohio Grafton, Mass. Fitzpatrick, Aurelia Blassinganne 2724 Independ. Ave., Kan. City, Mo. Flanders, Miriam N. Eletcher, Euretta F. Fordham, Alice S. French, Ruth Fricke, Eleanor Friedman, Renea M. Fuller, Dorothy R. Fuller, Ernestine W. Gibson, Mary Gifford, Alice C. Gifford, Almira Gifford, Louise Jean Gilbert, Amy Phillips 211 Haverhill Street, Lawrence, Mass. 276 Main Street, Claremont, N. H. Southampton, N. J. Grandville, Mich. 193 Tioga Street, Philadelphia, Pa. 1081 Case Avenue, Cleveland, Ohio 135 Povest Avenue, Evanston, 111. Wyalunsing, Pa. 415 State Street, Albany, N. Y. Falmouth, Mass. 560 County Street, New Bedford, Mass. Swansea Centre, Mass. 221 Gaskill Street, Woonsocket, R. I. 1 1 4 WELLESLEY COLLEGE LEGE N I) A Gladding, Gertrude 103 South Broad Street, Norwich, N. Y. Gold, Caroline Luella 1500 Second Ave., South, Minneapolis, Minn. Gold, Mary Sydney Gordon, Elizabeth Grant, Ethel Vale Gray, Marie Adele Grumwood, Elsie Rosamond Griffin. Alice Louise Saint James, Minn. 2719 Jackson Street, Sioux City, Iowa 6 Harrison Street, Taunton, Mass. Wellesley, Mass. 184 Jackson Street, Lawrence, Mass. 74 Dexter Street, Providence, R. I. Grout, Ethel Maude 170 Wildwood Avenue, Upper Montclair, N. J. Grunewald, Martha 738 Sedgwick Street, Chicago, III. Gurlitz Christina 109 Clark Street, Brooklyn, N. Y. Habicht, Marguerite Elizabeth 73 Russell St., New Bedford, Mass. Hall, Jane Sprent Hamlin, Geordie H. Hancock, Dorothy Hanna, Alice Merrideth Hardenburgh, Helen H. 820 Princess Street, Wilmington, N. C. Gorham, N. H. Franklin Falls, N. H. Monmouth, 111. 9 Elmwood Avenue, North Adams, Mass. Harrison, Theodora Frederich 261 Winvah St., New Rochelle, N. Y. Harter, Anna Cameron Hartwell, Helen T. Harvey, Mary Evelyn Hathaway, Emily Newton Hazard, Dorothy Beach Haven, Pa. 77 Parade Street, Providence, R. I. 35 Cresent Place, Brockton, Mass. 138 Water Street, Warren, R. I. Box 2, Syracuse, N. Y. Hazeltine, Katharine Schenck 10 Jefferson Place, Montclair, N. J. [115] WELI.ESLEY COLLEGE LEGENDA Heath, Hortense 167 Woodward Street, Newton Highlands, Mass. Heatley, Margaret Hecker, Alice Estelle Henry, Eliza Georgia Herbert, Josie Belle Hicks, Belle B. Hollett, Eloise Holmes, Sarah Elliott Hopkins, Alice Chase Hoska, Imogene Happy Howe, Ethel Christine Howell, Lucy E. Howes, Lilla Victoria Howland, Susan Dale Hubbard, Charlotte Hubley, Edna Mildred Huff, Maud Eynand Hunter, Florence I. 242 Sprague Street, Fall River, Mass. 2850 Russel Avenue, St. Louis, Mo. Littleton, N. H. 673 Putnam Avenue, Brooklyn, N. Y. 98 Hillman Street, New Bedford, Mass. 84 La Salle Street, Chicago, 111. 310 30th Avenue, South, Seattle, Wash. 530 Ward Street, Newton Centre, Mass. 410 North D Street, Tacoma, Wash. West Boylston, Worcester, Mass. 1402 West 7th Street, Los Angeles, Cal. 214 Water Street, Skowhegan, Maine Willsevville, N. Y. 2804 Jennings Street, Sioux City, Iowa 118 Paine Street, Worcester, Mass. 55 Bartlett Street, Winter Hill, Som., Mass. 254 South 4th Street, Fulton, N. Y. Huntington, Annie Elderkin 240 West 76th St., New York, N. Y. Hutchinson, Bertha May Jackson, Avis Brownson Jameson, Ethel May Jenison, Louise Isabel Jewell, Jeannette Emma Lexington, Mass. 3701 Chestnut Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Highlandville, Mass. 45 Cottage Street, Wellesley, Mass. 1421 Binney Street, Washington, D. C. [116] W E LLESLET COLLEGE LEGEND A Johxstox, Minnie Elise Jones, Margaret Fuller Jones, Nellie Lucretia Judson, Helen Sheldon Keiser, Martha K. L. Kennard, Mary H. Kent, Margaret Keyser, Helen A. Killars, Jennie J. Kingman, Bessie R. Prince ' s Bay, Richmond Borough, N. Y. 1175 East Broad Street, Columbus, Ohio Merrimack, N. H. Vernon, N. Y. Thomas, Jefferson County, Ala. 98 Main Street, Winsted, Conn. 1 Pine Street, Exeter, N. H. 445 South West Temple, Salt Lake City, Utah Bay View Avenue, Stonington, Conn. 34 Winthrop Street, Brockton, Mass. Knowlton, Evelyn Mason Box 98, South Essex, Mass. La Pierre, Hattie Frances 588 Huron Avenue, Cambridge, Mass. Laughton, Lizbeth R. Howard Seminary, West Bridgewater, Mass. 57 North Avenue, Natick, Mass. 11(36 Hancock Street, Quincy, Mass. 709 East Washington Street, Bloomington, 111. Clarinda, Iowa P. O. Box 344, Media, Pa. Eliot Street, Milton, Mass. 1020 Prospect Street, Cleveland, Ohio 1015 Logan Avenue, Denver, Colo. Jamestown, Colo. May wood, N. J. Birmingham, Hunt County, Pa. [117] Leavitt, Mildred B. Lesher, Olive N. Levy, Selina Lewis, Evanelle Little, Eleanor H. Littlefield, Estella Eliza Lockwood, Dorothea S. Londoner, Ruth F. Love, Roma L. Lydecker, Nathalie MacChesney, Edna WELLESLEY COLLEGE LEGEND! IVIcCarroll, Mary E. McFarlaxd, Helen M. McGarry, Virginia McGlashax, Ruth McIntosh, Berdina 23 W. McLean, Lorna W. McMillin, Elizabeth I. Mandeville, Adelaide A. Manley, Martha Mann, Gertrude L. Markey, Susan M. Marvin, Gertrude L. Mason, Ida L. Mason, Marion L. Matthews, Kate T. Maxson, Julia W. Maxwell, Mary D. May, Jessie F. May, Mary B. Maynard, Glyde Meldrum, Claribel Merrill, Helex Bruce Meyis, Gertrude Aleliffe Meyers, Marguerite 285 Lincoln Avenue, Orange, N. J. Hyde Park, Vt. Grafton, Mass. Hawthorne Road, Wellesley Hills, Mass. Corydon St., Bradford, McKean Co., Pa. Simsbury, Conn. 54 Holbroolc Street, North Adams, Mass. Webster, Monroe County, N. Y. 137 3d Street, Long Island City, N. Y. 50 Grove Street, Milford, Mass. Frederick, Md. Fort Douglas, Utah 935 North 40th Avenue, Chicago, 111. Highland Park, 111. Palmer, Mass. 37 Elm Street, Westerly, R. I. 5908 Wayne Avenue, Germantown, Pa. 674 Madison Avenue, Albany, N. Y. Gould, R. I. 40 Cedar Street, Oneonta, N. Y. 16G Lancaster Avenue, Buffalo, N. Y. 38 Main Street, Peabody, Mass. 30 Pleasant Street, Fitchburg, Mass. 341 West 48th Street, New York [118] W E I. LESLEY COLLEGE LEGEN I) A Miller, Florence Lillian Milliken, Ruth May Mills, Margaret Moore, Emily Comfort Morrill, Edith Hanson Morse, Frances Lela Morse, Mary Helena Moulton, Olive Hazel Newbold, Inez R. Newell, Isabel J. Niles, Elizabeth Noble, Hebe H. Noyes, Francena Louise O ' Brien, Katherine E. Olds, Mave C. Owen, Marie Louise Parker, Edith Putnam Patrick, Susan Jeanette Paul, Harriet Catherine Payne, Margaret 114 Beach Street, Cleveland, Ohio 91 Summer Street, Lawrence, Mass. 523 Hancock Street, Wollaston, Mass. St. Clair, Mich. 208 Summit Street, Dayton, Ohio 262 8th Street, Troy, N. Y. 932 North Main Street, Brockton, Mass. Springvale, Maine Long Branch Citv, N. J. 1821 North 21st Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Ill Brigham Street, Salt Lake City, Utah 1812 Pine Street, San Francisco, Cal. 27 Granville Street, Dorchester, Mass. Milford, N. H. 55 South C Street, Tacoma, Wash. 634 North 40th Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Rochester, 111. 233 Washington Avenue, Elvria, Ohio 49 Western Promenade, Auburn, Maine 251 Nott Avenue, Long Island City, N. Y. Perot, Elizabeth Valentine 260 West Walnut Lane, Germantown, Pa. Perry, Clara Elizabeth 4 Margin Street, Westerlev, R. I. Perry, Jeanne H. 20 Nassau Street, New York City Peterson, Adeline 556 Breckenridge Street, Buffalo, N. Y. [119] WELLESLEY COLLEGE EEGENDA Peterson, Ethel Vivian 2609 Seneca Street, St. Joseph, Mo. Peterson, Margaret Lewers Honolulu, Hawaiian Islands Pfeiffer, Genevieve F. 521 East Colfax Avenue, Denver, Colo. PlERSON, RUTH Ogden Washington Street, Wellesley Hills, Mass. Piper, Eleanor 55 Langdon Street, Cambridge, Mass. Poor. Alice Perry 28 Church Street, Belfast, Maine Pope, Dorothy 132 Chiswich Road, Boulevard Station, Boston, Mass. Porter, Mary Fleming Powers, Mary Lucena Pratt, Margaret Price, Fanney A. Questrom, Thetis G. Raeder, Ruth Weir Rawn, Isabel N. Raymond, Constance M. Raymond, Mary F. Raze, Ava J. Roberts, Henrietta W. Robertson, Harriett May Robertson, Lucile Robinson, Arabelle Robinson, Mildred A. Rollins, Persis Root, Mary B. 210 Spruce Street, Clearfield, Pa. 278 Main Street, Randolph, Mass. 4299b Cook Avenue, St. Louis, Mo. 124 Main Street, Westerly, R. I. 78 High Street, Newburyport, Mass. 64 West Ross Street, Wilkes Barre, Pa. 445 East Orange Street, Lancaster, Pa. Lawrenceville, N. J. 35 Clinton Place, Jamaica, L. I. Loyalton, Cal. 117 Danforth Street, Portland, Maine 913 Beacon Street, Los Angeles, Cal. Wolcott, N. Y. 600 East 36th Street, Kansas City, Mo. 132 Church Street, Waltham, Mass. 932 West Monroe Street, Chicago, 111. 62 Washington Street, Monroe, Mich. [12 0] j gfffigfglggffll BJ WELLESLEY COLLEGE LEGENDA RoSENBAlM, ALICE H. Ross, Vivian E. Sampson, Maude E. Sanborn, Alice D. Sanborn, Amy E. Sanders, Luretta G. Sanderson, Mary B. Savil le, Gerna Sawyer, Caroline G. Schneider, Etta M. Schopperle, H. Katherine Scott, Bertha Scott, Katherine H. Seccombe, Margaret Semler, Frida Shonk, Emily W. Sillcox, Cecilia M. Simpson, Edith Sims, Mary S. Skinner, Helen C. Smith, Blanche H. Smith, Florence M Smith, Jeanette C. Smith, Marion E. 1431 Locust Street, Allegheny, Pa. Gorham, N. H. Waterville, Maine 118 New Street, New Brunswick, N. J. Gonic, N. H. 107 Boston Boulevard, Detroit, Mich. Bridgewater, Mass. 33 Saville Avenue, Quincv, Mass. 69 Washington Street, Maiden, Mass. 234 West 10th Street, Fremont, Neb. 63 Grove Street, Oil City, Pa. 302 Shelby Street, Frankfort, Ky. 4731 Bayard Street, Pittsburg, Pa. West Hill, Peterboro, N. H. Corcoran Manor, Mt. Vernon, N. Y. Hotel Westminster, Coplev Square, Boston, Mass. Joy Street, New Brighton, N. Y. Box 765, San Antonio, Texas Simsburv, Conn. 59 Baltimore Street, Lynn, Mass. 125 Princeton Avenue, Providence, R. I. 1318 North 7th Street, Harrisburg, Pa. 1303 North Market Street, Canton, Ohio 214 South Elmwood Avenue, Oak Park, 111. [121] W EL LESLEY COLLEGE LEGENDA Smith, Marion R. Snow, Anna J. Soffel, Sadie M. Sommer, Laurie E. Spencer, Effie M. Spitz, May Stephenson, Ruth Stern, Julia A. Stone, Gertrude A. Strong, Marguerite Suppes, Florence A. Swett, Grace B. Swissler, Edna Perel Tatum, Lucy R. Temple, Teneriffe E. Terry, Hettie G. Thomas, Eunice J. Thompson, Grace A. Thompson, Helen Tilford, Ella M. TlMBERLAKE, MeLLIE G. Toppan, Marion H. tourtellat, mabel w. Town, Mildred 4 Addison Street, New London, Conn. 203 2d Street, Jeanette, Pa. 16 Greenbush Street, Pittsburg, Pa. 128 Delaware Avenue, Tonawanda, N. Y. 40 Church Street, Ware, Mass. 189 Palace Avenue, Santa Fe, New Mexico 300 Stuyvesant Avenue, Brooklyn, N. Y. 149 Farwell Avenue, Milwaukee, Wis. Springfield, Vt. Wellesley, Mass. 132 East Bridge Street, Elyria, Ohio 29 Wadsworth Avenue, Waltham, Mass. 455 Congress Street, Chicago, 111. Fallsington, Pa. Winter Street, Watertown, Mass. Riverhead, N. J. 11 Marble Street, Roxbury, Mass. Palmer, Mass. 3(3 College Avenue, Medford, Mass. 232 East College Street, Louisville, Ky. Phillips, Maine 42 Kent Street, Newburyport, Mass. 40 Sycamore Street, Providence, R. I. 5 West Street, New London, Conn. [12 2] W ELLE S L E Y COLLEGE E E G E N I) A TOWNSEND, LAL ' RA S. Trask, Caroline B. Tyler, Agnes R. Usher, Ethel M. Valentine, Anne E. Van Skiver, Hazel B. Wagner, Mary G. Wallace, Helen M. Walmsley, Evelyn M. Walworth, Florence E. Ware, Caroline A. Warren, Ruth E. Waterhouse, Eleanor Julia Waugh, Marian Webster, E. Genevieve Weiskopf, Annalee Werdenhoff, Beate West, Eva McK. Weston, Lucie C. Whitacre, Elizabeth White, Mae K. Whiting, Mary B. Wilbur, Nina G. Williams, Marguerite L. 815 Mesa Avenue, El Paso, Texas Bradley Block, Los Angeles, Cal. 41 Burns Avenue, Wyoming, Ohio 261 West 44th Street, New York City 224 Sciots Street, Urbana, Ohio 109 Sixth Street, Streator, 111. 348 Prospect Avenue, Buffalo, N. Y. 241 East Orange Street, Lancaster, Pa. 2613 Elizabeth Avenue, Zion City, 111. 931 Centre Street, Newton Centre, Mass. North Grafton, Mass. Townsend, Mass. Honolulu, Hawaiian Islands 97 Vaughan Street, Portland, Maine East 426 Highland Avenue, Spokane, Wash. 1514 Nicollet Avenue, Minneapolis, Minn. 400 Irving Avenue, North, Minneapolis, Minn. 104 Maple Avenue, Hannibal, Mo. 3255 Vernon Avenue, Chicago, 111. 19 Morse Avenue, Cleveland, Ohio Manchester, Kv. 163 Halabird Avenue, Winsted, Conn. Dark Harbor, Maine 51 Cushing Street, Dover, N. H. [12 3 WELLESLEY COLLEGE EEGENDA Wilson, Jessie P. Wise, Edith Woodbury, Louise D. Woodson, Elizabeth F. Wright, Marion 1 D. Wright, Stella H. Wye, Lillian F. Yeoman, Esthera T. Young, Elsie S. 93 Woodside Avenue, Ridgewood, N. J. 62 Prince Street, West Newton, Mass. Foxboro, Mass Owensboro, Ky. 214 Garfield Place, Brooklyn, N. Y. 289 Chelmsford Street, Lowell, Mass. Highland Avenue, Needham, Mass. 312 Macon Street, Brooklyn, N. Y. Exeter, N. H. [124 Brown, Alice C. Buckley, Beulah Cook, Gertrude N. Neely, Clara G. Noss, Mary T. Pinnell, Mary L. Taft, Mary E. 19 Franklin Street, Westfield, Mass. Stromsburg, Neb. 59 Woodland Road, Woonsocket, R. I. 1225 Ridge Avenue, Evanston, 111. California, Pa. 1910 North New Jersey Street, Indianapolis, Ind. Swansey, N. Y. [125] Β₯WWWWWWWWWWWWWW W E E E E SLKY CO I. I. E ( E LEGENDA Graduate Students Bow max, Ethel BOYNTON, Lt ' CASTA Cook, Grace L. Damon, Alice B. Gardiner, Elizareth Hewitt, Julia A. W. Kl.INCiKNHAGEN, ANNA M. Pitney, Ethel W. Russell, Cora J. Slack, Elvira J. Wheeler, Hetty S. Young, Mabel M. 355 Broadway, Somerville, Mass. 44 Pleasant Street, Bradford, Mass. Wellesley, Mass. Welleslev, Mass. R. F. D. I., Norwich, Conn. Wellesley, Mass. Wellesley Hills, Mass. 50 Pleasant Street, Concord, N. H. Bethel, Conn. 390 Park Place, Bridgeport, Conn. Cil ' Wellington Street, Worcester, Mass. [126] W E I. T. E S E E Y CO L L E (1 E EEC E N I) A Specials Jessie W. Berry Marv Bryan Jessie Buchanan Mary Dennison Edith L Edson Agnes Garland Helen G. Hood Mitsu Ok ado Jessamine C. Phelps Iowa Falls, Iowa 1 52 South Jefferson Street, Springfield, Mo. 77 Nonotuck Street, Holyoke, Mass. 680 St. Nicholas Avenue, New York City 1 (S Pleasant Street, Gloucester, Mass. Wellesley Hills, Mass. Shiba, Tokyo, Japan 277 Linden Street, Holyoke, Mass. [127] WELLESLEY COLLEGE LEGENDA Alumnae Association Officers P r e s i d e n t Mrs. Ada Wing Meade, 87 ice President Miss Alice W. Hunt, ' 95 Recording Secretary Miss Helen M . Capron, ' 98 Corresponding Secretary Miss Lilian B. Muier, ' 88 T r e a s a r e r Miss Mary K. Conyngton, ' 94 [128] ' . - 4 WELLESLEY COLLEGE LEGEND! ' T HIS little book was written, friends, To give you pleasure, and to lend A touch of tun to college days, By the Legenda Board. And may you find herein, my friend, Jov and laughter without end ; And may you never, never be By the Legenda Bored. [130] W E I. I E SLEY COLLEGE LEGENDA Grinds I ' m a giddv butterfly, Everybody knows. It seems as if I ' d fly away Upon my frisky bows. -Helen Jeffries. Sit down, Coxswain; that ' s a good girl. β€” Luna French. Put down 6, and carry 2, β€” um, urn, um, um, um, um. Gee ! but this is hard to do, β€” um, um, um, um, um, um. You can think, and think, and think, ' Till your brain is numb. I don ' t care what the teacher says, I can ' t do this sum ! β€” Crete Kimball. When write themes I ' ll swear. Willyer? How? So I will swear. Let ' s hear ver. Dog on ' t. β€” Lena Jane McCurdy. All in Her Baby Brain I lie in my cradle sinking On booful Berkleian themes : Are we weally cognizant matter, Or only twansient dweams ? β€” Amy Felmly. [131 ] W ELI.ESLEY COLLEGE E E G E N D A I. Half a line, half a line, Half a line onward ; All in the dead of night, Worked the theme writer. Forward, my aching head ; Give me some thoughts, she said. In the throes of despair, Worked the theme writer. II. June bugs to right of her, ' Skeeters to left of her, Black bugs behind her, Buzzed all and sputtered. What though her fingers sore, Cry to her pen, No more! While all the ' skeeters there Slip up and bite ' er ? III. Pages to right of her, Pages to left of her, Pages in front of her, As it grew lighter. Putting the last black dot, Up from her chair she got, Walked to her little cot, All that was left of her, β€” Left of the writer. Laugh for the ladies. -Bessie Tuekc [13 2] W ELLESLET COLLEGE LEGENDA There was a young lady named Abbott, Who early acquired the habit Of going to town In a good-looking gown, For the theatre craze she did have it. β€” Marie Abbott. If no one ever marries me, β€” And I don ' t see why they should, For I trv not to be pretty, And I ' m never very good, β€” If no one ever marries me, I sha ' n ' t mind verv much ; I ' ll buy a Plate in the Greek, And Hegel in the Dutch. β€” Blanche Jf ' enner. Bay Day Whed the birds begid to sig, Adt we dow that idt is Sprig, We cub oudt. Then we shed our widter coats, Cease to buffle up our throats, Laugh adt shout. Od the grass we sit all day, Watching little idseeks play, Glad ad free, ' Till the damp gets in our bones ; Thed we cry, with paidful groans, Oh deah Be ! Why id the world hadn ' t I sedse enough To put od by coadt ? [13 3] WELLESLEY COLLEGE LEGENDA Senior on South Porch with very young guest: You see we have a fine view from here, including the paint mill. Three hours later, very young guest (to friend on train) : Bah Jove, those Welleslev girls have the queerest slang. Call the sunset a ' paint mill, ' you know. I didn ' t know what thev meant at first. Ha ! ha ! I built thee late a lily tower, As much for pleasing thee As fastening a hope that then Thou shouldst not sooty be. But thou thereon didst only look, And turnedst in scorn to me, Since when it stands and blooms alone, In sad humility. Cazenove He thought he saw a building new, With only the floors done. He looked again and saw a girl Upon the fifth floor run. What are you doing there, fair maid ? Choosing my next year ' s room, she said. These are Jokes of Freshmen I. Freshman: The architecture of Pomeroy is extremely chaste, isn ' t it? ' Nother Freshman : Yes. Do you know who chased it ? II. Freshman : We are studying phosphorescence in Chem. I. ' Nother Freshman (absent-mindedly): Phwas fiir Essens, did you say ? [ 134 ] W ELLESLEY COLLEGE EEGENDA With Messrs. Hering, Locke Co. Would you like to know how a purplish green Appears in the glimmering dusk ? Would you like to know how to discriminate quick Between onion, garlic, and musk ? Would you like to know how the long, ether waves Waft up our tra-las to Heaven ? Would you like to be sure you ' re a hazy dream ? Then just take Philosophy Seven. There is an Inn-stitution in the town, in the town, Where I have often sat me down, sat me down, To treat my friends with laughter free. And had it all charged up to me. Chorus Fare thee well, for thou must leave me, Loss of cash doth surely grieve me, But remember that the best of friends must part, must part. Adieu, adieu, my cash, adieu, adieu, adieu ; I fain would keep my clutch on you, clutch on you. I hand you out for cake, and ice, and tea, But know my friends think well of me. Christmas Vespers There was a young maid in the choir, Who wanted her suitor to spy her, So she peeped as she knelt ; Can you guess how she felt, When she saw the whole audience eve her ? ' ' Tis as easy as lying. β€” Hygiene. [13 5] W E L LESLEY CO L L E G E LEGENDA Fables From Critics The Strong Girl There was once a girl who had Opinions. She was the Strong Girl. Sometimes she was a Dangerous Menace to Convention, and sometimes she was not mannerly, but she was always Strong. It was in the Blood even more than in the way her Mother dressed Her. Where did she get the opinions, do you aslc ? Whv, if she Didn ' t have a View just when It was needed in the Hall or in S. G. Meeting, she Made it Up. That is why she was the Strong Girl. She wasn ' t one of the dumb, driven cattle, the books tell about; she led. Sometimes people said, Why does the Strong Girl have a different View to-day from the one she had yesterday ? That was a Verv Sillv question. Everybody knows that to be Strong, one Can only keep a View ' till Somebody Else gets it, too. Then it is Common, like the Measles, and should be Shook as soon as possible for Something new. The Way to be a strong girl is always to Pile in before the Rush at the Bargain Counter, and make a lurch at the View which makes the best show. But vou must never mind Criticism on the part of the Faculty, or looks askance from the Students. The Strong Girl has a mission, only she must be in at the Start. Moral: The Strong Girl catches the View. Oh, nonsense ! If I cut Math., And a Senior cuts me, Who cuts the worsest, I or she ? The Executive Girl She was called an Executive Girl. She liked it. When she was but a Foolish Freshman she developed an Adoration for a Senior of Executive Ability. She resolved to become like her, and She Did. It was not Hard, because she kept her Eyes open, and learned how to do It. First, she became Executive in Appearance. Her model wore a Linen Collar and Stiff Shirtwaist, so she Got one. But it Choked her so that the Doctor [13 6] W E L E E S L E Y COLL E GE LEGE N I) A urged her to have her Eves examined and her Ankles treated. She did Neither, but got a Larger Collar. She then offered to canvass for her Class Boat, the Concert Fund, and Many Other Enterprises. So she became Known. At Election Time the people from whom she had col- lected Much Money remembered Her. Thev said: She is Executive. We want her. ' So she received an Office. She held Office Hours. She was in the Public Eye. Soon her bread of Existence was spread two inches thick with Committee meetings. She was the Man behind the Gun in everything, from a Pi Eta ' s spread to a Kneisel concert. Others might trv things; she not only tried them, but Executed them after the Trial. She realized her golden Visions of her own Name in Large, Black Type, scattered decorativelv over printed ballots. She decided she would accept any office that had its Picture on the front page of College News. Student Government seized upon her, and Christian Association gave her a Committee. College Settlement demanded Her; the S. P. C. L. B., and the H. E. H. D.,+ needed Her. So it went. She had no time to Waste or to Study. Then Midyears stole upon her. The next week she received an Envelope containing a sickly-looking slip of ultra marine Paper. She had been planning the Fireworks for the June celebration. Under the Cir- cumstances she decided to Countermand the Order. She sent out tickets of Resignation to fourteen committees, and did the Disappearing Act ; and, wonder of wonders, the world wagged on without Her. Moral: Don ' t count your Offices, though thev are Catched. The Typical Girl She was Young. She was Misguided. She entered Wellesley, cher- ishing in her Guileless Heart one All-animating Purpose, β€” she would be the Typical College Girl. In her Innocence she knew not the Chameleon Career which awaited her, the Reportorial Telescopes watching her from Afar, and the Busy Pencils jotting down her Every Phase, Else would her Fond Hope have perished. But no one came to Warn her. Quickly the Monster Publicity clutched her, and her Career closed in Upon her. Her All-animating Purpose was fulfilled. She was the Typical S. P. C. L. B. β€” Society for Prevention of Cruelty to Legenda Boards. t H. E. H. D.β€” Home for Expelled and Hungry Dog [137] WELLESLEY COLLEGE LEGENDA Girl. Cruelly she was hurried from Press to Press. She was made to smile beneath glaring, yellow Journal Headlines, to crouch among Our Girls in the Timid Type of Home Companions, to parade in countless costumes among the Columns of Unclassic Literature. The Genial Ath- lete ; the Witty, Social Hit, courted by counts ; the Spectacled Boston- bagged Student: the Good-fellow with brace of Pistols; the Sylvan Sylph with scythe in hand, etc. Role after role she was called upon to Take in the Twinkling of an Eve, in the Crashing of a Press. At times she stopped in her Careening Course, and, clutching her discussed and Distorted Brow, cried out for Rest and Quiet ; but in Vain. The ever-watchful Monster noted her Lung Expansion and her Mood, and in the Sunday Issue she appeared as Buxom, but Blase, β€” the latest Tem- perament developed by the Up-to-date College Girl. There was a young ladv of Worcester, Who owned a belligerent rorcester. To her grief and surprise, He pecked out both her eyes, And she can ' t see so well as she yorcester. You never miss the ink until the pen runs dry. The Problem Girl Once Upon a Time there entered one of those Institutions which are vulgarly known as Knowledge Factories, a Girl whose Ambition in Life was to attain the Three D ' s. She wanted to be considered Deep, Dreamy, and Different. She had the Highly Poetical, Strictly Esthetical, Fever, and she had It Bad. She started Right In to distribute those You Little Know What Is Passing In My Wonderful Mind sort of glances, and Every one who received one felt so Uncomfortable, thev thought It would Be Best to let Her Alone. So they did. She went in Heavily for English, and all her Themes were Read in Class, because they were so Delightfully Obscure. They furnished fine f 138 ] Food for Discussion, and even the Teacher Herself didn ' t Know the Answer. The Girl Did, but She Wouldn ' t Tell. She would go into a Trance just about the Time Anv one was going to Ask Her; and the Plain-Speaking Plodders thought Perhaps she was Planning Another Puz- zle, so they Didn ' t Have the Heart to Butt In. The Little Wav She Had About Her made Quite a Hit for a While ; but One Day when she was Balancing Herself on the Edge of the Skv- light, just to See How It Felt, the Health Officer Saw Her. The Health was a Practical Person. She had Her Own Ideas about Balance, and the Next Dav She Sent Word to the Girl ' s Parents that the Sanitarium was six miles Farther On. And what ' s the moral of that ? She thought ' twas hieroglyphics, A-staring from the page. She looked again, and saw it was A Bible paper, sage. ' Til surely flunk that girl, she said; Such writing makes me rage. English A, and B, and C ; English 1, and 2, and 3 ; English D, and F, and E, β€” English to infinity. β€” Jeannette Eckman. Note on College Hall Luncheons If there ' s anything you ' d like, prav don ' t hesitate to mention it. We place, absolutely, no restrictions on students in that respect. Little Miss Miller sat at the tiller, Steering the college in Spain. Along came a committee or ten, more ' s the pity, And she towed them away in her train. β€” Emma Miller. [139] yy Β u s 3 M 8Β§uiSfMΒ§i Β«U W E L I, ESL EY COLLEGE L E Cx E N D A Ev ' rv night mv clothes I fold, And learn my lessons, as I ' m told ; And ev ' ry day that I am good, I get a cheerful, happv mood. The girl that is not clean and neat, With lots of manners, good and sweet, Is not like me, I ' m sure of that ; They ' ll never mix her up with Pat. β– Olive Dewey. Sing a song of rihbon bows, Tying every curl On every single little head Of every little girl. Big and black, and flapping wild, And seventy times seven, You ' d think a flock of noisy crows Had lighted down from Heaven ! Scene : β€” Soph, room in C. H. Two Sophs, studying, two Freshmen talking. Finally : First Freshman. β€” Sh ! We mustn ' t talk in here. These girls want to s tudy. Second Freshman. β€” No. If we are going to talk, let ' s go to the library. There is a young lady named Brooks, Who simply adores lit ' ry books; And the ladies who teach ' em, She oft doth beseech ' em To let her just bask in their looks. β€” Rachel Brooks. [ 1 4 [14 1] W ELLESLEY COLLEGE LEGENDA She dresses, ave, so clean and neat, Baith decent and genteel ; And then there ' s something in her gait Gars onv dress look weel. β€” Helen Robertson. Love, lassie, love, Creates such a dizziness Winna ' let a bright girl Keep about her business. β€” Eva Little. J. Birdie, J. Birdie, come kiss me good-night, Your papers ain ' t done, and vour problems ain ' t right ; But it ' s three o ' clock now, and vour eves are shut tight, J. Birdie, J. Birdie, please put out the light. β€”Jessie D. Hall. It would talk. Lord, how it talked ! β€” Laura Welch. For the Safety of the Public The life boat is a chubbv thing, It sits upon the lea. To save a girl you run and call Herr Ellis mit his kev. He runs along the wooded bank, A boy is at his heels With oars to row, and oar-locks, too, ' Neath which he bravely reels. She dashes out upon the lake ! The waters churn and swirl. She staunchly speeds upon her quest, - But where, oh where ' s the girl ? [ 142 ] V E E LESLEY CO L L E (IE LEGE N D A Condensed Catalogue of Courses A S for Astronomv, Course energetic. Marble observat ' rv,β€” Awful aesthetic ! B is for Bible ; It ' s quite hard in College. You simply can ' t work in YourSundavschool knowledge. C is for Chemistry ; Lab. is a dream. Learn to turn sulphur fumes Into ice cream. [143] tiMMmzum mMm W E L I. E S L E Y COLLEGE LEGENDA T? is for English, Our means of expression Said to be useful In any profession. U1 D S for Debates, Argumentation ; Herculean efforts, Annihilation ! is for French, Learn to hot air. Don ' t dig to get it ; Assume savoir aire. 1144] WELLESLEY COLLEGE LEGENDA f ' S for Geology, Taken, ' tis said, Because there ' s no Lab. fee Looming ahead. LJ is for Hvgiene ; Whv should we dread it ? Books shaken from a bag Face up one ' s credit. I ' S for Italian ; Read to vour aunty, In classical Spaggli, Complete works of Dante. [ 1 β€’] 5 WELLESLEY COLLEGE LEGENDA J ' S for judgment, You always should use In taking a course Which professor to choose. K is for Kant, Which nobody can. Don ' t let this discourage you If you ' ve began. L is for Latin Translation in Rhythm, Though some of the feet Seem to have rheumatism. AND [146] W E I. I, E S L, E Y COLLE G E LEGEN I) A L is for Lit., Popular ever, Because vou get ' ' culture Without being clever. M S Mathematics, To Freshmen most dear Been ground on so often We ' ll just slur it here. N is for Notes To be taken in class, But easily copied From some other lass. [147] MMMMMMM MMM i n ,8MΒ 8M gaMBagftM ' Mg MMMgMBBMSMgff WELLES LEY COLLEGE LEGENDA f S Ornithology, Study of bird. Leading to actions Entirely absurd. ) is for Physics ; Why work and be lonely ? Avoid old school doses, External use only. -i Q ' S for Quarternions ; What ' s that? say you. Well, it ' s the only subject Beginning with Q. [14 8] W E E LESLEY CO L E E G E LEGENDA R is for reading ; ' Tisn ' t taught here. Should have been learned In some previous year. ' ' S for Psychology, β€” Experimental. Be sure that you ' re Patient and gentle. T is for Themes Both longer and shorter ; You never complete them As soon as vou ought-ter. [ 149] tf tf Bg gg gH tf Β w tt B 9fa BrtF WELLESLEY COLLEGE LEGENDA U, V and W , Y and l_j The great sticking points In the alphabet be. With a wave of the hand, And a graceful adieu, We leave further rhymes On these letters to you. I lcindo ' like jest a-loaferin ' ' roun When the green gits back in the trees ; Jest a-potterin ' roun ' as I durn please, Wen the green, you know, gits back in the trees. β€” Ida Ellison. Extract from a Bible notebook : And the soldiers of Solomon ' s fighting army were all armed with weapons of warfare. Adept at achievement ; Ability, an art ; Adores alliteration β€” . Esthetics all apart. β€” Josephine Dibble. [ISO] WE L LESLEY COLLEGE LEGENDA Always time to go to town, Always time to play ; Always time to plan a gown ; No time to work to-day. β€” A. Gushing. Alice C. (pensively) : Wouldn ' t it be grand, Olive, to be graduated ' cum laude . ' ' Olive Chapman: I ' d be perfectly satisfied to be graduated ' cum clause. ' Clara and ' Lizbeth, and Janet and Grace, Striding along at a vig ' rous pace, Each with Peters ' in the front of her waist ; Each with a smile on her innocent face. Her studie was but litel on the Bible. β€” Bertha Ryan. The stars of midnight shall be dear to her. β€” Katherine Noble. Where is the economy of Nature that two such prodigies should walk this sphere at one and the same time ? β€” hahelle Stone and Edna Holmes. Where do you live, my pretty maid ? Three hundred thirty, sir, she said, West Eighty-fifth Street. Then the maid Left me to wonder what town she ' d said. β€” Ada Couillard. On with the rush ! There are Freshmen still in college. β€” Bess Halsey. [ 151 ] WELLESLEY COLLEGE LEGEND A Who β€” Who is it runs the Hospital With patients large and quarters small, Where measles rage and mumps withal, In Wellesley ? Who has a cupboard on the wall, With little pills in bottles tall, And never seems to fret at all, In Wellesley ? Who rustles gently down the hall In answer to a ' ' hurry call, And cheers the fainting hearts of all In Wellesley ? β€” and Who? Who at the Barn in Freshman year, Gave 1905 its first real cheer, And made us buy our boat so dear, In Wellesley ? Who urged us on as Sophs so gay, And never paused a single day, Until we bore the cup away, In Wellesley ? Who stands by us thro ' thick and thin, Although the College rubs it in, And says she ' s always partial been, In Wellesley ? Slow of speech, and swift of pen. β€” Ruth Haulenbeek. [ 152] WELLESLEY COLLEGE LEGENDA Gladys is a cheerv child. And dearly loves to talk Of slimy snakes and allegates That creep, and crawl, or walk. β€” Gladys I ' I ells. Why Juniors are Jolly Specimen questions from a quiz in Psychology I. 1. Which tastes louder to you, a pink dress or an ice-cold bath ? 2. Is c sharp as salty and as fragrant as d flat? 3. Analyze your consciousness β€” (a) When suspended by the heels from the fourth floor railing, College Hall Center. (b.) When drinking carbolic (diluted). 4. Explain from the point of view, first, of a sentimentalist, then of an epicurean, your knowledge of the fact that you are three feet from the window, and two hundred miles from home. 5. State the opposing theories of Schmalzgesicht and Schimmelkopf with regard to the color of the tails of the microbes inhabiting the fluid of the inner eye, and criticize both. 6. Can you think of any question on any subject that could not properly be asked on this paper ? and if so, why not ? The Marvelous Adventures of Punkey Dolims The room was full of the fumes of sulphur ; I knew that Punkey Dohms was in her most concentrated condition. Sit down, she said, and waved me to a waste-paper basket. What are you working at? I ventured to ask, as she tore her handkerchief to bits in an abstracted way. I will tell you later, she muttered, with a frown. Suddenly she rose, and putting a cake of Peter ' s in the pocket of her raincoat, she beckoned me to follow her. I knew she had a clue, but [153] si a a jsMsiMM BgBafflBBaBjfimsgMI WE L LESLEY COLLEGE LEGENDA dared not ask what it was. She walked rapidly, head erect, arms down- ward fling. In front of Shattuck ' s she stopped. Do you hear anything? she asked. Yes, I replied. I hear the paper in Noanett ; yes, and a faint sigh from the pink shades in College Hall chapel. Punkev shrugged her shoulders. Do vou hear anything up Central Street, she asked. There ' s a train up by Fiske coming from Natick, and some one up by the schoolhouse running to catch it. What is she saying ? asked Punkey, patiently. We will have time enough for dinner after the theatre. I only want oyster stew and chocolate ice cream. Punkey smiled. There ' s an ' illigible ' waiting now at Huntington Avenue. She stood a moment more gazing at the thirteenth olive on the left hand side of the seventh bottle in Shattuck ' s front window. Silence reigns up past Dana Hall. That is the way we go, said she, and we started. At every corner we paused, and always Plunkey took the silent road. The stillness palled on me, and I began to have a strange feeling of awe. Suddenly, in the distance, we saw a tiny, black dot. Listen! said Punkev; and drawing an inverted megaphone from the front of her waist, she placed it at her ear. ' Tis he, she said. In that car is a young man on his way to Wellesley. How do vou know ? I asked, meekly. I hear him beating a nervous tattoo with his feet. Taking a nibble of Peter ' s, and sharing with me, Punkey sat down to wait for the car, and at last explained the case to me. The College has made provision for ' unexpected fiances. They have heard that a young man is on his way to see one of the girls. They know that she doesn ' t expect him, because she has been writing to him all dav, and mailed the letter this afternoon. Now what they want to find out is whether he is her fiance or not. He ' s on this next electric, as I have demonstrated. We must get on it and find out before we reach the lodge. [154] WELLESLEY COLLEGE L E G E N D A Are we to ask the voung man ? I said, blushing at the mere thought of such temerity. ' ' What a child you are, remarked Plunkev, frankly. Of course not. Don ' t you know we ' re not to speak to strange young men unless they ' re accompanied by a chaperone ? But it ' s easy enough. I ' ll just tell you one thing, β€” when gentle May Marry particularly loves a thing ; she calls it a ' buglein. ' As we boarded the car we at once noticed the voung man, who, with a nervous air, was craning his eyes for a first glimpse of the Wellesley lily. Punkev nudged me ; then suddenly turning to me she said, in a loud voice, You are mv dippy Buglein. The young man started and thrilled. Do you really mean it, May ? he murmured. Then realizing what he had done, he gazed steadfastly at the towers of Pomeroy, which were just heaving in sight. He can call Sunday evening, all right, whispered Punkev, non- chalentlv. For her was lever have at her beddes head, β€’ Twenty bokes, clothed in black or red, Of Aristotle, and his philosophic ; Than robes riche, or fiddle, or sautrie, But all be that she was a philosophre. β€” Edna Orvis. Under the spreading red oak tree The college chapel stands, And ' round about results we see Of horticultural plans ; And the prickles on the straggling shrubs Supply true art ' s demands. All in the Family. In Bible III MiSS B. : Miss Pinkham, who was the first woman convert? Mrss Pinkham : Lydia. [155] W ELLESLET COLLEGE LEGENDA Freed from Restriction (Respectfully dedicated to the late lamented Barbara Frietchie) 1. Up from the campus where robins sing, Clear on a morning, late in Spring, 2. The cluster of buildings of Wellesley stand, β€” The fairest spot in this fair land. 3. ' Round about them woodlands sweep, Maple and oak tree, foliaged deep, 4. Greeting the eyes of those who wake On the green hills mirrored in the lake. 5. On that lovely morn in early June, The robins seemed to be out of tune 6. To the ears of the troubled Wellesley world, For into their midst a bomb was hurled. 7. Pages and pages of sparkling grinds, And pages of ads. of various kinds, 8. The Legenda Board was loath to lose ; But then monitors said, sternly, Choose ! 9. Then rose the Class of 1905, Bound the Legenda should survive. 10. Into the meeting the monitors came, Determined her willful spirit to tame, 11. Entered the meeting, and at the door Came face to face with their plans once more. 12. Choose ! Dark frowns hung on their brow. Shall grinds or ' ads. ' this book endow ? 13. Now ' ads. ' are not the things that sell, And financially the grinds don ' t tell. 14. So, clasping the threatened plans closer still, 1905 replied with a will, [156] V E 1. E E S I, E Y COLLEGE LEGENDA 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 20. 21. 22. 23. 24. 25. ' ' Level to dust this weary head, But spare our Welleslev hook ! she said. A shade of repentance, a touch of regret, Came to the monitors, so beset ; Thev thought a method might be tried, And by it each faction satisfied. Write, if you will, your grinds, they said, But, seeking for ' ads., ' send an agent instead. All the spring, in Wellesley town, Monitors marched up and down. All the spring the Legenda grew, Under hardships not a few ; Tended and fostered, so they tell, By the faithful Board who loved it well. Unmolested by any commands Sent to them by the monitors ' hands. The work of 1905 is o ' er, And the monitors trouble the book no more. Honor to her, and let a tear Fall for her sake on the monitors ' bier ; And may no monitors ever frown Again on the book of Welleslev town. Week out, week in, I cannot grin ; My bluest day is Monday. I have spent my smiles, And all my wiles, At Cambridge on a Sunday, -Edith Knoivlton. [157] WELLESLEY COLLEGE LEGENDA REFUSED RESCUE! Plunged to certain Death in Loyalty to College Gasping, with wild eyes and streaming hair, Miss A. C. Loyal, a popular and charming Wellesley Senior, chose death to life, purchased by a shattered edict. At 2.00 P. M. Miss Loyal, in a carefully appointed after- noon costume of light summer fabric, pushed her boat from the shore and paddled idly into the open. A few moments later a wild shriek rang out, and Miss Loyal was struggling in the black waters of Lake Waban. It is thought that the boat was overturned by her effort to capture a whirligig beetle, β€” a diversion to which Miss Loval was devoted. Her friends who witnessed the tragedy wrung their hands in speechless agony and stood rooted to the spot. But help was at hand ! Two youths, paddling nearby in canoes, came darting to the rescue. Between them they lifted Miss Loyal from the water, and had almost effected her rescue, when she recoiled suddenly from the canoe, and hurled herself backward into the water, mut- tering as she sank, No student is allowed to use or enter a canoe on the lake, or on adjoining waters, under any circumstances whatsoever. And as the dark waves closed over her, the listeners on the shore caught the echoing gasp, Under any circumstances whatsoever. Why this rush and flurry ? Why this cry and hue ? Helen has a hundred things In one brief hour to do. β€” Helen Norton. Good Knijjht Silence reigns ! The stars shine bright, When like a cyclone comes the Knight. Silence fled ! The stars took fright, Looked down to see cyclonic Knight. Then smiled and twinkled in delight, For Gertrude was cyclonic Knight. [158] WELLESLEY COLLEGE LEGENDA Legenda Board Though this may be play to you, ' Tis death to us. 6 A. M. I. Whack, whack, whack, In the cold, gray morn I hear. ' Tis the sweepers knocking the brushes Down the corridors drear. II. Whack, whack, whack, And I sigh, half dreamly, ' Tis well that my tongue does not utter The thoughts that arise in me. III. O, well for the sound, sound sleepers Who hear not the nerve-racking din ; O, well that the doors of old C. H. Are too hard to ever cave in. IV. Whack, whack, whack, At the foot of my door, ah, me ! The sweet, pleasant dreams of the night that is gone, Will never come back to me. As if her whole vocation Were endless imitation. β€” Sa y Reed. I 159 ] WELLESLEY COLLEGE LEGENDA Flunk Notices No reckoning made, but sent to my account with all my imperfec- tions on my head. You are old, Miss Milliken, said Freshmen lass, And I ' m sure you must be very bright ; And yet you incessantly stay out of class : Do you think, at your age, it is right? In my youth, said Marie, I don ' t mind telling you, I did think a cut an abuse ; But now I have cut, and still sail calmly through, My philosophy is, What ' s the use? 1. If Hazel Bartlett disturbs three rooms by playing golf in her apart- ments : and if Helen Potter keeps five girls busy closing their transoms while she reads Greek ; and if Florence Venn gives the girls in the room below a headache by dancing a clog dance every evening, β€” what per cent of a house will say, Those girls are too noisy for college ? 2. If a frog is sitting on a log in a bog, and Ruth Chipman has just climbed a fence into the bog, where will the frog be to-morrow ? A week from to-morrow? How will he be? Why? (Prove by figures and drawings.) Always early at the crew, First one down at breakfast, too ; Papers done before they ' re due ; Hair so neat it makes you blue ; Boy callers not a few. Papa ' s (?) is the diamond new? How old is Anna ? β€” Anna Hamblen. [160] WELLESLEY COLLEGE LEGENDA Students are Not Expected to Walk Alone in the Evening (Rule S. G. Association) Ever since I came to Welleslev (which was many years ago) I ' ve been timid in the evening, and ' twas this that made me so. Oh, the carriage fares I squander getting home from College Hall, When I haven ' t anv comrade and the dusk begins to fall ! For the bad man ' s out at nighttime, and you mustn ' t walk alone, Or he ' ll catch you in the shadows down by Music Hall and Stone. Every year his deeds are different ; rumor spreads them far and wide : He is full of strange devices, and the slyest man to hide. For sometimes he lurks behind us, to surprise us unawares, Or, again, he climbs on ladders tall, and through our windows stares. He ' s chased us down by Simpson, and the Barn, and up the road ; Why, we never once stop running ' till we ' re safe in our abode ! Will he never leave our campus so that we may stroll in peace ? Must we evermore be guarded by a score of brave police ? I am sick of wearing armor, paying fares, and being scared (And I never once have seen him, though I always go prepared). I wish he ' d take a year at Smith, or Vassar, or Brvn Mawr ; He ' s been at Wellesley long enough to get to be a bore. There was a young lady named Ruth, Who was a great shark, forsooth ! Though it raised her wrath To be called onein Math., Indeed, it was nearly the truth. β€” Ruth de Rochemont. You may charge me with murder, or want of sense (We are all of us weak at times); But the slightest approach to a false pretence, Was never among my crimes. β€” Florence Cantieny. [161] MSSHMMMaVSrararsraM! WELLESLEY COLLEGE LEGENDA I am a bright and versatile young maid ; My fiction puts all others in the shade. I can warn you, if you ' re wise, Don ' t believe my bloomin ' lies, Or you ' ll be taken in, I ' m sore afraid. β€” Amy Gurlitz. Advice to Freshmen : Don ' t take the last train home ; it belongs to the B. A. R. R. Company. Whin they ' re more like something they niver will be. β€” Sophomores. I don ' t agree with you at all, She says, in accents bland. And if you gently tell her that She always takes that stand. I don ' t agree with you at all, She answers quite severe. β€” Lucy Eisenberg. If I should read the bulletin board Every day but one, And be very conscientious In all my work and fun, And should neglect the bulletin board Just one single time, Need the wrath of all the powers Against me then combine ? You may pound the gavel, You may stamp galore, But you can ' t make Miriam Leave the floor. β€” Miriam Thrall. 1162] W E L L E SLEY COLLEGE LEGENDA Her diligence in learning is onlv exceeded by her diligence in praying. β€” Antoinette Knox. There was a young lady named Foss, Who was made most exceedingly cross ; For she slept in a class, And they made the poor lass Write up reams and reams of her loss. β€” Harriet Foss. Heating Plant Chimney Whence and what art thou, execrable shape ? Wanted : Position in Biblical Department. β€” Gertrude Eaton. There was a young lady ' named Brown, Wast sehr fond of gay Boston town, She went shopping with glee, But her language, you see, To the face of each cleric brought a frown ; For this is what she said : β€” My dear, hast any blue serge? If so, wils ' t get it with haste? Must take it nach house zu finish new clo. ' Bitte eilen vous. Q. E.D. β€” Helen Brown. ' Gin a body meet a Fisher Coming through the hall, Would a body that same Fisher, Grace or Gertrude call ? I love to dote on things I like. Esther Lape. β€” [163] WELLESLEY COLLEGE LEGENDA There was a pussy lived in college, Blinked her eyes and took in knowledge, β€” Did it very quietly ; A strictlv proper pussy, she. β€” Jane Eaton. Roly, poly, polar bear! Smiling on us from her lair ; Always friendly, as it were, Nice young polar bear. β€” Louise Loos. Ella Vat or There was a staid creature in college, Who raised us to heights of great knowledge; But she ' s got a new dress, With a spark more or less, And is now a bit fast, we acknowledge. 1903 ' 04 ' 05 ? β€” Ted Sum my. I ' m fond of play and basket-ball, 1 study when I can ; But I have learned to concentrate My study most on man. β€” Eleanor Hollick. Between the roll and reciting, When the work is beginning once more , Comes a pause in the class operations ; Louise Greene swings open the door. In the midst of examinations She comes like a breath of fresh air ; Though she ' d quite forgot the appointment, She was smiling and debonair. [ 164 ] W ELLESLEY COLLEGE LEGENDA Students ' Handbook, Wellesley College Published hy the LEGBNDA Board Realizing the disadvantages which the Freshmen undergo on being plunged into the new sphere of college life, we offer this little pamphlet of college customs and etiquette. We trust that not only the Freshman, but even such exalted beings as the Juniors, may read and profit thereby. All information is alphabetically arranged. Advisors. Every student needs a guide, philosopher, and friend, and these are thoughtfully provided during the first few days of college. It is good form to call upon vour advisor not later than two weeks after your electives are chosen. Bulletin Boards. These are handv little devices for the enlightenment of the College at large. Thev are from three to six feet square, as the sands of the sea in number, and are conveniently and cosily placed in all the nooks of College Hall. Thev should be consulted daily. Buy a map of bulletin boards at the book store. With practice you can accomplish the round in three hours. Cuts. These are of two kinds, β€” social and academic. Avoid the former, when possible, but use a judicious allowance of the latter; otherwise vour instructor will non-credit you. Dormitories. Imposing structures scattered over the campus, light mouse color or variagated in appearance. In this connection we would suggest that instead of the customary christening spoon, an application for one of these dormitories would be a suitable present for your infant sister. Eats. The substance of things hoped for. A bond to unite all classes ; a bribe to pacify all proctors. Families. Usually the appendages of Freshmen or Seniors. Some come with families, some achieve families, and some have families thrust upon them. Grads. Supernumeraries. [165] W E E E E S E E Y COLLEGE L E G E N D A Holidays. Slight pauses in the strenuous life, when all work is dropped and we spend the careless hours Packing laundry, ( botanical, Tramping on trips β€’? zoological, ( economical, Shopping, Working in the Public Library, Attending three teas, two committee meetings, and a dance, and a concert in the evening. Infant Child. A term of endearment popular at college. Try it on your favorite Faculty, and observe the effect. Kiss (obsolete). To greet your friend, grasp her firmly by both shoulders and draw her violently toward you, at the same time burying your nose in her neck, and rubbing her right ear tenderly with your left cheek. Lake. Scintillating surface to south of College Hall. In regard to use, see Faculty legislation. Minister (two species). Local and peregrinal. Local usually found in sparsely settled communities; peregrinal thrive among densely populated benches. Elevator bulletin board best guide to their use. Noanett. Dormitory built for the accommodation of Freshmen and the entertainment of Seniors. Organizations. Little social circles, ranging in si ze and importance, from Pie Eaters to the Maine Club. Formed for every purpose under the sun, and actually accomplishing a few of their aims. β€’ Posters. Chaste decorative bits, especially suited to Noanett walls, ' The more colors the merrier, the fewer the better glare. Questions. Forms of speech much in vogue during first weeks of col- lege life. Usually addressed to Faculty or Seniors. A few much in use this year : β€” Will the Dean show me how to work the blackboard on the second floor? Is the big marble woman Mrs. Wellesley ? Can I change my elective from Math, to Art ? [166] W ELLESLEY COLLEGE LEGENDA Rig it of If ay. The divine prerogative of Faculty and Seniors. If necessarv, infringe upon the privileges of a Faculty. She will forgive you ; but a Senior, β€” never ! Societies. Conglomerate bunches of undifferentiate, typical cells. Vespers. Once a welcome time for music and meditation ; now degen- erated into a season of social chatter. Yesterday. The time when you ought to have done what you ' re going to let slide to-morrow. I don ' t feel well. I was so sick last night I had to go to bed. β€” Kate If ilson. A word of caution now in time, perhaps t ' were wise to state : To over act, perchance you ' ve heard, is apt to spoil that art. To study hard, to do too much, to sit up very late. Doth dim that beauty of your eyes, a paleness t ' will impart. β€” Aimer Tyler. Thy lips are stars of morning, Thine eyes are crimson flowers. β€” Revised Version, I . Pinkham. Mistress Mary, not contrary, How do your violets bloom ? They ' re placed each night in the ice box tight, Do you treat him with such chill gloom ? β€”Mary Kelly. One vast, substantial smile. β€” Sarah II oodivard . Query : Why is it that just because one is small, one is supposed to be frivo- lous? -Ethel P. IVaxlu. [167] .M MlJM i; J:M Β« -iΒ i ' i i Β«i:!M; M;.MJ ;M!-M; ?-M;;iaHM 7 ::itf;;wi iΒ«( j;Β«;; Milp WELLESLEY COLLEGE LEGENBA The March of the Magi Once, last year, passing down the hall, Queer noises did my soul appall With fiendish, fearful din. One girl did grunt, and two did groan, Another made a piteous moan ; While one was squealing all alone Piercingly high and thin. Did they await some fearful fate, So loud to mourn and ululate ? I could not understand. But hear the explanation neat; The imitation is complete : The groans are for the camels ' feet Upon the desert sand. The squeak portrays the guiding star That can be seen (and heard) afar ; Those heavy grunts the wise men are (Old men with shaking knees). ' Twas thus interpretation came From one who understood the game. They did an organ piece, by name The March of the Magees. Where Have We Heard These Before? To make this a little plainer, I ' ll give vou the word in the Hebrew. The snowstorm was so blinding that we were only a few feet from where we were, and yet we couldn ' t get back. Now, 1905! Take page 20 with until page 28. 1 168] mMM sM r.m aBE@ yyssSL iyygsgΒ£gsgyoyss6ssigats80 WELLESLEY COLLE G K I.EGEN I) A Cutest little Mamie, Everybody knows; We know what to call her With her dinkv little bows. Looking ' round the classroom, Eyes so shiny bright, Makes us think that Mamie Must ' ve studied hard all night. β€” Mamie Lovejoy. Du bist wie eine German, So fair und musikal ; Wir look dich on und wunder Comes stealing liber all. β€” Margaret Little. To a Lady Who Laughs This lady is so fond of sleeping, You ' ll never find her vigils keeping; And jolly old Bess, You alwav may guess, Isn ' t wasting her precious time weeping. β€” Elizabeth Leonard. The Unintentional Shark There was once a girl who made beautiful faces. She could look like a monkev, or a whale, or a humming bird, just as well as not. Her friends loved to watch her do these tricks. One day, however, they lost Eliza- beth, and there was a new shark running around the campus, and they said, ' ' Where is Elizabeth ? and ' ' Who is the new campus shark? And they found that Elizabeth had forgotten and made a shark face instead of a whale face, and could not unmake it. Moral: Do not be a shark or vour friends will lose vou. β€” Elizabeth Camp. [169] iaE jg i SSM2iai2 Si Β§J 8OfJ0Ef WELLESLEY COLLEGE LEGENDA Dull products of a scoffer ' s pen. ( Whose point of view ?) β€” Grinds. With a sturdy stride And a manly air, She treads the campus Everywhere. She cures your aches And heals your ills, With common sense And sugar pills. β€” Mabel Bishop. At college I get up at five, Before the milkmen do arrive. I work on papers, texts, review, For weeks and weeks before they ' re due. β€” Lena Coivan. Unthinking, idle, wild and young, I laughed and danced, and talked and sung. β€” Olive Nevin. Physics Instructor : When a balloonist wishes to ascend he throws out the sand bags. Now, Miss Emerson, when he wants to descend what does he do ? Miss Emerson (triumphantly) : He pulls ' em in! I can write like a streak, I ' m of good report, And up to the scratch on things I ort. β€” Elisabeth Ha rdm a n . Before. β€” No grape that ' s kindly ripe could be So round, so plump, so soft as she. After. β€” No towering pine in forest fair, With her in thinness can compare. β€” Helena Farmer. t J 70] [We are offering free samples of our Weu.esi.ey Magazine ami College News. From these, friends and possible contributors may get some clue to the sort of work most in vogue. All contributions for either paper should be sent to the Editors of the Legenda.] Hbe tXHcllcslcv Hbacui inc CONTENTS PAGE On the Verse Forms of Walt Whitman . . . X. Y., 188- . . 1 MOONRISE IN THE LAND OF THE MIDNIGHT SUN . 3 Notwithstanding (A Sonnet) . . . Patricia Grubbs . . 4 Johnny-boy ' s Rocking Horse (Story) . . . Maxine Wrigley . . 4 Editorial Overestimating the Intellectual Ideal . ...... 7 Slip Sheets Grandfather ...... ...... 21 When Millv said ' yes ' 23 Midnight on Peguin 26 Book Reviews Whoop-de-doo (Outlook) 28 Poetic Twiggs (Little, Brown Co.) . 32 Alumn. e Notes 33 Collece Calendar ...... ...... 37 idol xx.β€” IDeccmbcr 1005.β€” no. 13. Entered at the Post-Office in Wellesley, Mass., as second-class matter [171 COLLEGE X AEW3 THE JUNIOR PROM. Never was College Hall more at- tractive than it appeared in its gala dress last Saturday night, on the occasion of the Junior Prom. The palms gleamed their greenest, and the electric lights, sparkling from every swaying wire, vied in brilliancy with the pennants which, suspended from the railings above, flaunted their gav colors in the face of the night air. The four corners of center were piled with gay pillows, the angles skillfully concealed by potted maiden- hair fern and Harvard banners. From behind a cluster of Japanese screens the college orchestra discoursed a medley of sweet sounds. The corri- dors were thronged with daintily gowned maidens and stalwart men. By special permission the revelry continued far into the night, and it was long after eleven before the last guest disappeared, and for another year, 190- ' s Junior Prom, became but a pleasant memory. THE MANDERILLO CONCERT On Monday night some of the music lovers of our community en- joyed a rare treat. Through the kindness of a friend of the College, Senor Manderillo, the noted jews- harpist, gave a recital in Billings Hall. Fully a third of the students were able to attend, and enjoyed Senor M. ' s interpretations to the full. His rendering of Oh, don ' t you re- member Sweet Alice, Ben Bolt, was especially pleasing. It is hoped that upon the occasion of Senor M. ' s next visit to Wellesley, College Hall Chapel will be connected with Billings by telephone, in order that the entire College may enjoy the privilege of listening to this wonder- ful artist. EDITORIAL The editor has been noting with grief the growing tendency among college girls to disregard the rights of others. The forms in which this tendency manifests itself are as nu- merous as they are shocking. One sta rtling example may serve to illus- trate and to awaken the dormant pulse of courtesy, at present riding at anchor in a sea of self-complacency. Girls have actually been seen to pos- sess themselves of seats in public vehicles of conveyance without wait- ing for the custodian of said vehicle to express a desire for their presence. And yet we are members of a, culti- vated community ! Can we not each do her little part to eradicate [172] THE WELLESLEY MAGAZINE the evil and elevate the etiquette of our beloved Alma Mater? FREE PRESS The writer wishes to make a little plea for the spirit of individualism. It should be omnipresent, and should solve, should it not, every question ? As, for instance, the recent matters of interrupting Faculty in the privacy of their rooms, and of permitting the Freshman to enter the elevator with- out waiting for the Senior. Now the spirit of individualism is twofold : altruistic, perhaps, as it applies to the externalities of our college life : such as removing trash from the campus ; and egoistic as it relates to the government of one ' s own taste, to the end of making of one ' s room the aesthetic environment that should surround every true woman of education and culture. Then there is the matter of chapel attend- ance, for which we are each one responsible. Can we not from now until June have as many every morn- ing as we have had this last week? Lastly, the spirit of individualism as related to the daily performance of tasks by which the final ' cram is rendered unnecessary. Can we not infuse into our methods of work more of the university spirit, and place Wellesley where it should stand, among the foremost women ' s col- leges in the land ? In closing, the writer wishes to urge a more general use of our free press columns ; and can we not have in place of petty complaints and ex- positions, some bit of description, some scientific note of general in- terest ? SOCIETY NOTES The regular program meeting of Alpha Kappa Chi was held on Saturday night. Bedelia, Ethel Waxham Paper on the Early Roman Nutmeg Grater, Mabel Emerson Scenes from Uncle Tom ' s Cabin done into Attic dialect, Florence Risley At the regular meeting of Society Tau Zeta Epsilon, held on Saturday night, the following program was given : β€” Chopsticks ( duet), I 3 , T T 1 e Little I Helen Johnston The Pre Raphaelite Movement as seen in Gibson, Edith Knowlton The Eternal Question, Model, Laura Hibbard At a regular meeting of the Phi Sigma Society the following program was ren- dered: β€” I. Maetterlink ' s Conception of Candle Light : Marie Milliken II. The Social Value of Marriage β€” a study from Ibsen, Blanche Wenner III. The Interrelations Mysticism and Social Ethics, Olive Nevin At a regular meeting of the Shakespeare Society the following program was given : β€” I. How Far is Shakespeare Indebted to Paul Liecester Ford for his conception of Lear (Paper I , Edna Summy II. Dramatic Representations : (Sctncs from Midsummer Night ' s Dream) Titania . . Sarah Woodward Nick Bottom . . Emma Miller The Duke . . . Louise Loos Puck Helen Cook A regular meeting of the Agora Society was held on Saturday evening. The fol- lowing program was as follows: β€” I (Paper). Roosevelt ' s Attitude To- wards Rough Riding in its Relation to Trusts. II. Impromptu Debate. Resolved, That the architecture of the Wellesley heating plant is an unjusti- fiable imitation of the Bunker Hill Mon- ument. [173] THE WELLESLEV MAGAZINE The regular monthly meeting of the Zeta Alpha Society was held last week. Program Author ' s Reading from Lovey Mary, Alice Hegan Rice Study of Russian Habits and Customs, Olive Smith COLLEGE NOTES The Philadelphia Club was enter- tained by three of the members, β€” none of whom were present, β€” last Friday evening. Scenes from Rip Van Winkle were presented and met with great favor. At 3.20 on Saturday afternoon in College Hall Chapel, the eminent scientist, Professor , of Ox- ford, will give an illustrated lecture entitled Hypothesis Explaining the presence of Dark Spots Found on the Ears of Tadpoles Inhabiting the Red Sea. Last Thursday, the birthday of our Heating Plant was celebrated immediately after chapel, when rep- resentatives from each class bearing their respective colors, climbed to the top of the chimney. On reaching the eminence each brave girl sent forth her cheer into the circumam- bient air, and descended to terra firma amid the plaudits of her admiring classmates. A Swell Affair SOPHOMORE RECEPTION Come to us for estimates Class of ' 07 Pon DRAGON FOR d ' s Extract FLIES AND TADPOLES ZOOLOGY STUDENTS u nee da R est Recommended b t the department BIBLE I V. NAME BLOWN N THE BOTTLE Absolutely Pure t 174 ] WELLESLEY COLLEGE LEGENDA [Special to Wellesley College Legenda, November 24] The Century Company has at press a unique work on Polite Society at Home and Abroad, by Mary Gillespie. It should be seen in every home. Extracts HOME MANNERS 1. The tongue is a little member, but it should be jealously guarded. If husband and wife differ in opinion, argue politely and indefinitely, if necessary; neither need yield the point. ON THE STREET 1. A lady never flirts on the street. 2. Never cut a person, but if you desire to discontinue acquaintance, merely turn your head. 3. A gentleman should always remove his glove when shaking hands with a lady. He should carry her bundles, if he walks along with her; and, permit me to say, a husband should always carry the baby. WEDDING CUSTOMS 1. Before the wedding comes the betrothal. This is a halcyon period when two hearts are drawn closer together. One must never sneer at love. 2. Kissing the bride after the ceremony is fast going out of fashion, since it is a dreadful ordeal for a young and timid bride. Green and white make a good color scheme for a church wedding. This may be charmingly carried out in daisies and ferns. Emily Wells, β€” for so they say, β€” On starting home one summer ' s day, Descried some clothes that were not packed, But gone were trunks, alas, alack ! Emily now, β€” for so they say, β€” Soon hustled on those clothes so gay. All big around, yet with a smile She traveled home with harmless guile. 1175] WELLESLEY COLLEGE EPS LI E N I A When alcohol is getting low, It cannot daunt my spirits gay ; With gasoline I cook my fudge : Say, did you ever try that way? When time is short and wigs are scarce, My energy has saved the day ; I rise at five and fly to town : Say, did you ever do that way ? β€” Julia Rockwell. Now, do not think of Nina Gage As very much athletic, ' Though once she did play basket-ball, And got a crutch pathetic. β€” Nina D. Gage. [With the proper apologies to Mr. Daniel Deever] What is that fiendish noise out there? said Grind-holding-her-head. It ' s concert night ; I ' ll have to rush, her giddy roommate said. There ' s lots of time and lots of seats, said Grind-holding-her-head. But don ' t you hear the Freshman tramp ? the giddy roommate said. They are comin ' with their suitors, and they won ' t turn out for you ; All the front seats will be taken, β€” and they mean to keep them, too. They ' ll be talkin ' while the music plays, and laughin ' when its through, For they ' re Freshmen at a concert in the evenin. ' Why don ' t you tell them to shut up? said Grind-holding-her-head. I tried it once, I tried it once, the giddy roommate said. Why don ' t you grab the frontmost seats? said Grind-holding-her-head. They get in there by 7 P. M., the giddy roommate said. They ' re a-wearin ' their best dresses, and a-flirtin ' with their guests, And you cannot hope to shame them or to bow their haughty crests. They must have their little joksies and enjoy their little jests, For they ' re Freshmen at a concert in the evenin ' . [17 6] WELLESLEY COLLEGE LEGENDA I 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 io Wellesley Mathematics is for me, lonely and sad, Who sit here and scribble to make other folks glad. is a couple, blissful and blind, Which seeks the famed magic of Tupelo kind. are forensics, hateful and long, Which take all vour brains and then are all wrong. is fortitude, trusted and true ; You ' ll need it a-plenty ere mid-years are through. is a bill, noble, but rare, If seen twice as often, no one would care. is the hour, fragrant with flowers, Ere which it is wicked to go out-of-doors. is the hour after which it ' s denied To roam unattended, or single to ride. are the hours we should sleep every night ; Sometimes we do, and sometimes not β€” quite. are the players on a team of baseball, And fine were the nine that won for Stone Hall. cents is the price of a ride to the ville, If you sit on the seat, or stand on the thill. I ' m so asthetic It ' s reallv pathetic, The lack in others, I know ; My fake wood fire With its flame of red rag, My musical talent, And Browning gag, Artistic instincts show. β€” Agnes It ood. [177] WELLESLEY COLLEGE LEGENDA Concerning a Tree Day Hat It is in Louise ' s closet, hanging up by the arms. Please bring it down nicely concealed (perhaps dress-suit case) promptly at 7.00 A. M. I will try to be there. β€”Sarah J. If. P. S. Don ' t tip it for it may leak. It has a little already. Wanted Wanted : With two papers due, A written lesson right in view, Four books to read for Lit. and a debate, When you must read McGiffert through, And elocute a piece or two, Wanted, then, extensions if you ' re late. Wanted : When it ' s getting late, The elevator with its freight Is snailing upward toward the second floor ; When the maid looks calmly down, Regardless of your wrathful frown, Wanted, room to squeeze inside the door. Wanted : When the second gong Is ringing loud and ringing long, While your neighbor ' s slippers shuffle down the hall When you ' d love to sleep some more, And breakfast seems an awful bore, Wanted : Time to just forget it all. I ' m so queer that when I thinks ' bout myself I ' m, β€” I ' m sometimes near feared. β€” Helen Daniels. So they went their way, and the dog went after them. β€” Night Watchmen. [178 W E LLESLET COLIEGE LEGENDA Hogan Muzzy ' e β€” The New Store. An Education in Itself FOR SALE Choice assortment of crackers, pure alcohol, sausages, pickled limes, Packer ' s tar soap, and delicacies of all kinds. TO RENT Bathing suits, yachts, baited rat-traps, sewing machines, evening coats and dishpans, by the week, day or meal . Open at all hours. Alice as a Freshman Retired at 4 A. M. As Soph she went at 2, because She needed sleep ! Ahem ! Her Junior eyes were full of sand, Lights out, my dear, at ten ; And Senior year she was so tired Nine was her bedtime then. Now what under the sun will make Alumna Alice keep awake ? β€” Alice Breei. Fire in each eye and papers in each hand, They rave, recite, and madden ' round the land. β€” Debate Clubs. She thought upon the porch she saw A man clasp her friend ' s hand ; She looked again β€” O, could it be, A suitor new and grand ! What are you doing, my pretty maid ? ' Engaging a cab for to-night, she said. [ 179] W E L I E S L E Y CO L L E G E L E G E NBA Use of the Tenses by Marion Conway INDICATIVE MODE I debate. I have made a floor speech. I debated. I had made a floor speech. I shall debate. I shall have made a floor speech. SUBJUNCTIVE MODE If I say to the critic. If I said to the critic. If I should say to the critic. If the critic has said to me. If the critic had said to me. If the critic should have said to me. POTENTIAL MODE (Always omitted.) Advice to Girls Having heard how manv girls are giving up their hopes of a college education because of limited means, I should like to quote from certain varied experiences of myself and my friends to show how a girl may, with the most genteel ease, put herself through college. I commenced by buying a few crackers, and selling them for the reason- able profit of two per cent. This business, while not enormous, had gratifying results, and led to the remarkable discovery which was the basis of my present fortune. One night I was awakened by the sound of mice, which, attracted by the dainties, were gnawing busily. It occurred to me that everything must have its use in the world, and accordingly I wrote the next day to a Boston tannery for figures on mice skins. I was offered ten cents a dozen for all skins I could furnish. Being a person of astute business sense, I then went to the college authorities and asked for a contract to clear the grounds of rodents; the college to pay me three cents a dozen for all killed. I have at present an elaborate system of traps throughout the college and neighbor- ing country. Agents attend to the work for me, and I have an income sufficient for my college expenses. [ 180 ] W E I. I. E S L E Y COLLEGE E E G E N D A I do not wish vou to suppose from what I am going to tell you of mv past experience that I am in any way remarkable. What I have clone could be achieved bv any girl of ordinary ability and the proper spirit of industry. During mv Freshman vear I incurred heavy debts, which I resolved to pay off without appealing to mv already heavily-burdened parents. I looked around me for occupation, and was at once impressed by the number of girls who were struggling unaided to remove hygiene conditions. Having passed all my tests in hygiene and a severe physical examination, I found no diffi- culty in obtaining permission to tutor my less fortunate classmates. I pur- chased a human body, took three baths a day, and declared myself ready to receive pupils. I soon had a large and lucrative class, every member of which removed her condition at the termination of my tutelage. My expenses were very light : 1 human body ...... $1.15 2 dozen Turkish towels ..... 5.00 Total $(3.15 This left me a surplus of $798.59, which allowed me to pay mv debts and send a neat little nest egg to my proud parents. My parents were poor but honest, and did not see their way clear to paving mv college expenses. Being of a firm and unyielding disposition I was not daunted by trifles, and gathering together what ready money I had β€” about $4.39 β€” I entered college, determined to become self-supporting. On looking about me it seemed that the greatest need of the College was avail- able chaperons. I engaged two respectable middle-aged women, and rented them to the other girls for the nominal sum of ten cents an hour. At the end of my Sophomore vear all my debts were paid and I was living in luxury ; and at the end of my college career I graduated cum laude and $100,000. If you did your sums like me, little girl, You might git a chance to sit ' cross from Miss . β€” Henrietta Cr [18 1] W E L I. E S L E Y COLLEGE LEGENDA ' ' And so do my sisters, and my cousins, and my aunts. β€” Marie Morrow. 1. She made a sunshine in a shadie place. β€” Florence McCormick. 2. There, little girl, don ' t cry. β€” Emmy Lou Calhoun. 3. If every little girl will write postal cards instead of letters, with the cents thus saved the Christian Association will be enabled to provide badges for all those who return early in the fall to welcome Freshmen, and remove conditions. (Extract from Address of Welcome) β€” Mabel Emerson. 4. Three Hunters came riding out of the west, And each class pawed the air as to who ' d get the best. So they all made a grab ; 1904 got the wise, 1900 the sedate, 1905 took the prize. β€” Bonnie Hunter. 5. said Mrs. Jones, gently laying an egg in the basket. (Extract from Eng. VI. theme) β€” Carolyn Nelson. Out upon it, I have loved Three whole days together ; And am like to love three more, If it prove fair weather. β€” Mary Mackie. Serenely full, the epicure would say; Fate cannot harm me, β€” I have dined to-day. β€” Florence Risley. [182] W E L L E S L E Y COLLEGE L E G E N D A Have no fear, 1905 ; Reed is put- ting the shot. -E y The Noise Once there was an awful noise. No one knew what made the noise. Then the House President said, We will punish the noise by punishing everybody in the house who can make a noise. So she knocked at every door, and everybody inside yelled, Come in and eat a cough drop. Then when everybody yelled that, the House President knew they could make a noise, so she said, Come into the hall. And when they were in the hall she stripped everybody of their Student Government privileges, and it hurt everybody very badly. But there was one door where she heard no noise when she knocked, and she said, This is out. So she walked in to find some cough drops her own self, and when she walked in a girl sat there. The girl was Ruth Bradford. She smiled, and pointed to the cough drops, and the House President forgot to eat any, she was so surprised, and she gave the quiet girl all the privileges she had taken from the other girls. Moral: Always have cough drops in your room. [183] My days are swifter than a weaver ' s shuttle. β€” Georgina Sillcox. Vile the pun ! The wretch, β€” who punned it ? Same old villian Condit, Condit. She hammers on thro ' stony ways, At Greek verhs and at Latin ; And who would once suspect that Bess Is sometimes found a-battin ' ? β€” Bessie hast. Hame, hame, hame, O hame, fain wad I be ! β€” Edith Kingsbury. To Those About to Take English 15 Copy these adjectives under the proper headings. When writing your criticism of the debate say, My mother told me to take this one, and count out. The results will be astonishingly pat, both to yourself and to your instructor (if she reads your criticism; if not, it ' s good practice anyway). I) elivery Argument coherent compact successful lit ' ry diffuse well arranged clear careful firm dull nifty assured stylish pleasing lifeless condescending hesitating didactic vivacious monotonous funny tiresome cheerful persuasive uneven entertaining affected aggressive interestin flimsy useless unique vital strong trivial erratic superficial too general convincing fallacious weighty [184 3 =Β© I I W 1 ; β€’Β ' . ' ?! ' l 10 IP If any little yiri cm solve this puzzle and send her answers to the Legends before | Β«ily th, 1905 she will receive full instructions from Esther Gibbs on how to make a pan of fudge, or cook a Christmas dinner. The answers are the names of your little friends. [ 185] WELLESLEY COELECE LEGENDA Miss ' n ' ry Miss Lodwick This ladv has very small feet, And hands which are likewise most sweet ; If she ' s out, they say, Gene, Wherever ' ve you been ? The miss ' n ' ry Committee must meet. Model for Class Sonjj ' Directions for using: fill out the blanks with the proper sentiments :tnd numerals: never mind the meter.) I. loval β€” daughter ; loving mater. Chorus Naughty, naught true, II. β€” ever ; blue, β€” never. forward, β€” brave ; rescue, β€” save. Chorus III. β€” strife, β€” world ; banner, β€” furled. Chorus [186] AV E L L E .S L E Y COLLEGE L E G E N I) A Now, reallv, all prejudice aside, ar ' n ' t we the finest class in college ? β€” 1905. ' Tisn ' t fair. β€” 1906. Sister Class. β€”1907. We ' re going to be in Cazenove after Christmas. β€”1908. Personification of procrastination. β€” Bertha Ryan. Neat, sweet, handsome and fair; She is a daisy the bovs all declare. β€”Edith Ball. To a Rug Four walls and various chairs My heart leaps up when I behold A rainbow in the sky, β€” But these creations on the plan Of color charts, whose red began Where blue left off, and where the gold Of Diamond dye, Works subtly in, β€” ah, then I can Feel Art ' s flood-tide, and then I know How paltry was the real rainbow. Fling out the banner; let it float. β€” Mabel Seagrave. Perfect repose. β€” Clara Bruce. [187] WELLESLEI COLLEGE LEGEND! ' ' First in war, first in peace, first in the hearts of her countrvmen. β€” Juliet Poynter. Contentment Little 1 ask ; my wants are few, I only ask a single room, β€” A very small, lone room, would do, That 1 may call my own ; And close at hand is such a one, Across the hall, that fronts the sun. I care not much for gold or land, Give me a dollar here and there ; A portly ticket book on hand, And luck to keep it there. I only ask that father send A little more than I can spend. Ain ' t I noble? Ain ' t I a wonder? β€” Rachel Pflaum. The grinders cease because they are few. [1SS] PHOTO BY ABELL STONE HALL 3 : ' 5 T PHOTO BY ABELL POMEROV HALL PHOTO BY ABELL NORUMBEGA COTTAGE PHOTO BY ABELL SIMPSON COTTAGE PHOTO BY ABEIL FREE M A N C O T T A G E PHOTO BY ABELL V I E I) E R II A I. E PHOTO BY ABELL E L IO T C UTTA G E PMOTO BY ABELL N O A X E T T PHOTO BY ABELL 1- I S K E C OTT A (i E PHOTO BY ABELL V ( i D CO T T A G E ' A f e ] r β–  !Β The Agora Officers A II H I K C N D I T II E L E N L. II It ( W N E S T II E K I ' . (.1 II Ii S II E I. E N L. D A X I E I. S ELIZA It E T II L. CA M P II K I. E X K . I! A 1 It D H A It R J E I FUSS R A V T Y I- E R 1 1 a r d i u . - ( ' O II d I II . P r e s i dent Pre s i d e it I S Β«β–  r r e I a r y S e -β€’ ; ' e f ( ' V T r i ' a s ii r e r n ( -u t - .-I r in s C It S I O d I ' I e A y o ra I- i 1 1 β€’! G. Ralch M vin W. Calki ks k i ll l ] N I- UO.MA.N I lii i n I. Brown I-.ii a in in L. Camp AlUtll Cii.M ' l I llii EN L. Da.nii is Helen E. H urd Vl NA S. f ' .A l I .i pi 1st M ll ' isw OUTII Β vkoi ine Dai roN M K [ON Bkuner ( .ii i ki de Cati l a itjoii 1 1 Die rz -. i e c a t i i e C Β i i i t t 1 A I I II S T l [{ I E V N I Members In Facilitate M I HI AM II A I II A Em i ii Moore Adele Ogden CLASS OF 1896 Edith Riioades CLASS OF 190fi Josephine Dibbi e Hakkiei A. Foss Nina Gage Esther Gibus Agnes R, Wood CLASS l lUOli Maim Jessie Gidley Georgia 1 1 ah k ison Catherine It. Jon i b t . i M E LlTTLEFIELD Ann Rebe CA Toh i i.m A i k i V. Wai II ' Li i. la W i. i D Nellie lltims Maim Ki.ii Rachel W. I ' i i u m I I I IDA Tl I I ' S F vim S rr k ri. wi Klioii I ' ODD R A Ty lek CLASS OF 1907 iii 1 in dustin Ruth French Clara Grim in Git All Roma FIeukk k N K K bRSON [19 8 Alpha Kappa Clii Officers GEORGINA W . SILLCOX, 1905 President ELLEN R. MANCHESTER, 1905 Vice President LUCY C. BISHOP, 1906 Recording Secretary ETHEL M. EVERETT, 1906 Corresponding Secretary M.ALICE MATHER, 1906 Treasurer BERNICE J. EVERETT, 1906 Custodian of the House HELEN PORTER WOOD, 1907 First Factotum MARGUERITE B|IRGE, 1907 Second Factotum Miss Chapin Executive Committee Ethel P. Waxham, 1905 Florence Risley, 1905 Members Angie Clara Chapin Caroline R. Fletcher In Facilitate Adelaide Belle Hawes Alice Walton Isabel C. Brown Rachel E. Cukrey Mabel E. Emerson CLASS OF 1905 Ellen R. Manchester Florence A. Risley Georgina W. Sillcox Agnes H. Smith Ethel P. Waxham Lucy C. Bishop Ethel M. Everett Bernice J. Everett Marian W. Berry Marguerite Birge CLASS OF 1906 Ruth L. Goodwin Winifred E. Hawkridge Rita Holt CLASS OF 1907 Avis Hill Man [ON Smith Ethel Jordan Mary Alice Mather Mary E. Moulton Helen Porter Wood [199] Phi Sigma Fraternity Alpha Chapter Officers ALICE CLAUSE, 1905 ELIZA J. McCAGUE, 1905 ESTHER LAPE, 1905 M A R I E II. M ILL! K EN, 1905 HELEN L. ROBERTSON, 1905 Ma r s h a I s E L 1 V. A B E T H S O O Y P r e s i d e u t Vice President Recording S e c r e t a r y Corresponding Secretary T r e a s u r e ' r ALICE A M E S Members In Facilitate CLASS OF 1879 Annie S. Montague CLASS OF 1880 Katheiiine Lee Bates CLASS OF 1891 Henrietta St. B. Brooks CLASS OF 1899 Kate St. Tibhals Edith P. Ball Alice G. Clause Maria L. Dowd Mary H. Gillespie Amy L. Guklitz Bessie Halsi Alice C. Ames Claire Sampson Marie Biddle Clara Cabell Mar kin Edwards Helen Goddakd Associate Member Vida D. Scudder CLASS OF 11)05 Sally Gertrude Knight Esther Late Eliza J. M (. ' ague Katharine M. McCague Marie 1 1. M illiken Mary Ni w CLASS OF 1096 Helen SEGAR Elizabeth Sooy CLASS OF 1907 Laura Kimball Marguerite MacKellar Alice Rossington Adeline Scott Olive A. Nevin Juliet J . Povnti r Helen L. Robertson Harriet Rollins Blanche Wenner Ethel Sturtevant Winifred Vanderwoort Genevieve Washburn Rt ' TH White [200] Shakespeare Society ELIZABETH LE B . MARSTON HELEN R. NORTON HELEN M. EDWARDS IDA L . ELLISON E M M A II . M I L L E R MARTHA J. HUGHES Vice Recording ' Correspon ding C u s t β–  J i Pre s i d e n t P r e s i d β–  n t S e c r e t a r y SecretaT y T r f a s it r e r ' o f Jfo it s e Members Mary Bowen Eleanor A. McC. Gamble SOI ' HIE JEWETT CLASS OF 1900 Ethel Bauman In Facilitate Eliza H. Kendrick Ellen F. Pendleton Margaret Sherwood CLASS OF 1902 Anna Klingenhagen Edith S. Tufts Sarah F. Whiting Mabel M. Young CLASS OF 1903 Eugenia Foster Olive L. Chapman Helen D. Cook Ida L. Ellison- Jessie D. Hall Bonnie Hunter Crete M. Kimball Marion II. Carlisle Laura M. Dwigut Helen M. Edwards Elsie Goddard Connie M. GuiOM CLASS OF 11X15 Louise M. Loos Florence H. McCormick Emma II. Miller Elizabeth Le B. Marston Carolyn P. Nelson CLASS OF 1906 Martha J. Hughes Olive Hunter Edna Moore Elsie F. Pitkin- Caroline B. Singleton Helen R. Norton Edna V. Summy Louise Sylvester Kate G. Wilson Sarah F. Woodward C. Louise Steele Marion Stephenson Charlotte R.Thomas G. Katrina Ware Sibyl Burton Edith Ellison Caroline F. Gilbert CLASS OF 1907 Madeline Hanson Olive A. Smith Dorothy Storey Margaret Tapley [ 201 ] Tau Zeta Epsilon Officers HELEN M.J O II N ST O N LAURA A. HIBBARD ADA S. COUILLARD MARGARET LITTLE R.JESSIE REYNOLDS HELEN L . WHITE Vic e Record i Β g Corresponding A s s i s t a Hi K ALICE McLENNAN E M MA M . CALHOUN Kt e p e r i of P r e s i dent President Secretar y S f c r e t a r y T r e a s n r e ' r the House MABEL B . W A L D R O N Editor of the 1 r i s ' Alice U. V. Brown Mariana Cogswell Margaret Jackson Members In Facilitate Margakethe Miller Ethel D. Puffer Associate Member Hamilton C. Macdougall Evelyn B. Sherrakd Hetty S. Wheeler CLASS OF 185(8 Cora Russell CLASS OF 1901 Anne K. Edwards Emma M, Calhoun Ada S. Couillard Laura A. Hibbard Helen M.Johnston Alice D. Chase Helen L Elliot Emily F. Freeman Alice M. Grover Esther H. Bakhour Josephine O. Bean Gladys Doten Jessie Heber CLASS OF 1906 Edith J. Knowlton Carrie L. Knox Margaret Little Lallie J. Moody CLASS OF Iit06 Alice E. Heber Alice MacLennan Ella C. MacKinnon Helen Porter CLASS OF l!ti)7 Vera Loom is Flora 1. MacKinnon Sarah B. Mitchell R.Jessie Reynolds Ruth de Rochemont Ethel V. Z. Sullivan Mabel B. Waldron Helen L. White Oka M. Williams Ruth Neely Helen A Newell Florence P. Plummer [202] Zeta Alpha OLIVE B. V. SMITH SARAH A. REED FLORA J . HUMPHREY BESSIEC. CHAMPNEY JANE EATON Marshals FLORENCE MEGEE GENEVIEV Officers President Vice President Corresponding Secretary Recording Secretary T r e a s u r e r E WHEELER Editors of t h ESTHER SCHWARZ True Blue ELEANOR STIMSON Members In Facilitate Ellen F. Rurrell, 1SS0 Charlotte F. Roberts, iSSo Martha H. Shackford, 1S96 Martha G. McCaulley, 1S92 CLASS OF 1899 Grace L.Cook Florence Breed CLASS OF 1905 Bessie Coe Champnev Jane S. Eaton Flora L. Humphrey Mollif. Ball Florence Bement Alice Carroll Nell Carey Mary B. W. Alexander Geneva L. Ash Maude Bradfield IIllln Jeffris Sally A. Reed CLASS OF 19n ; Louise Curtis Sara Eustis Olive Gii.hkeath Florence Mec.ee CLASS OF I ' m: Mary McDougall Mae Osborne ( li e B. W. Smith Maia R. Sykes Esther Schwarz Eleanor K. Stimson Genevieve Wheeler Louise Platt Netta Wanamaker [203] PHOTO BY ABELL PUBLICATIONS i m: imu . m m r - ! The Wellesley Magazine Editor-in- C kief Lena J. McCurdy, 1905 Associate Editor Ellen Russell Manchester, 19 05 Literary Editors Esther E. Lape, 1905 Ethel P . W a x h a m , 1905 Claire Sampson, 1906 Business Manager Helen R. Norton, 19 05 Assistant B u s i n e s s M a n a g e r s Elizabeth L . Camp, 1905 Gertrude Francis, 190 (3 [206] Legenda Board E d i to r - i n - C h i e f Rachel Pflaum Associate Editor Esther Lape L i t e r a Josephine Dibble Clara Greene Editors Ruth Haulenbeek Louise Sylvester A r t E d I t o r s Olive N e v i n , Editor-in-Chief Ruth de Roche m o x t Julia Rockwell Sarah Woodward B u s i n e s s AI a n a g e r Georgina Sillcox Assistant Business AI a n a g e r s Harriet Foss Alma Tyler f 2 7 ] The College News Editor-in-Ch i e f Mary Jessie Gidley, 1906 Associate E d i t o r Sadie M . Samuel, 1906 L i t e r a r y Editors Mary Lee Cad well, 1906 Winifred E. Hawkridge, 19 06 Marie Warren, 1907 Business Manager Helen R. Norton, 1905 Assistant Business Manager s Elizabeth L. Camp, 1905 Gertrude Francis, 190 6 [208] ' ! rhe Choir Choi r master Hamilton C. Macdougall Chorister Olive A. Nevin Assistant Chorister L i h r a r i a n Gertrude Owen Florence Cantieny First Soprano J. Legg O. A. Nevin L. Weed (substitute) H. Wheeler (substitute) Second Soprano E. P. GIBBS E. Goddard H. M. Houghton Alto M. C. KlLBURN E. C. Locke A. Ogden (substitute) . [210] S. Chandler M. Collier H. McJ. Dodson H. Foss H. Daniels M. Duncan E. Flickinger E. Camp B. Darling B. Gallup Helen M. T. Wells O. Williams K. Wilson G. Owen E. J. Wackenhuth I. Pinkham H. M. Wood Glee Club Leader ' Olive A . Nevin, 1905 President Esther P. Gibbs, 1905 First Soprano Isabelle Chandler, 1906 Lucile Drummond, 1908 Jessie Legg, 1906 Olive A. Nevin, 1905 Ora M. Williams, 1906 First Alto Sue Barrow, 1908 Gladys Brown, 1908 Olive Chapman, 1905 Helen Daniels, 1905 Gertrude Knight, 1905 Second Soprano Alice Clause, 1905 Helen Eliot, 1906 Esther P. Gibbs, 1905 Marion Stevenson, 1906 Maud Tuttle, 1906 Second Alto Betsey Baird, 1908 Mae Batchelor, 1908 Bernice Gallup, 1905 Isabella Pinkham, 1905 Katherine Scott, 1908 [211] Mandolin Club Officers Leader Eliza J. McCague Presiden t Nellie A. Hubbs, Secretary Emma Danforth, Members First M a n d o I i n Margery Bowersock, 1906 Helen G. Dustin, 1907 Helen Hutchins, 1907 Stella B. Wright, 1908 Second M a n d o I i n Emma Danforth, 1906 Nellie A. Hubbs, 1905 Marguerite L. Williams, 1908 Af a n d o I a Gladys M. Tuttle, 1907 [212] , 1905 1905 1906 Guitars Marie Biddle, 1907 Myrtle Goodman, 1905 Eliza McCague, 1905 Gladys Wells, 1905 Third Mandolin Florence Case, 1908 Helena S. Lang, 1907 Viola Eleanor Farrar tftfp P r e s i d c n t Louise Sylvester ice President Miss Calkins Secretary and Treasure r Marion Carlisle Ada Couillard Helen Cook Katherine Cushing Emma De Bow Jeannette Eckman Lucy Eisenberg Estelle Glancy Elisabeth Hardman 19 5 Laura Hibbaru Edna Holmes Helen Hood Helen Johnston Bessie Kast Sally G. Knight Antoinette Knox Katherine Macy Rachel Pflaum Marion Carlisle M. Jessie Gidley 19 6 Dasa Harris Winifred Hawkridce Lottie Hartwell [ 214 ] P r e s i d e n t Ethel P . W a x h a m Mem1)ers In Facilitate Dr. Lock wood Carrie Holt 19 5 Laura Hibrard Ruth Haulenbeek Ethel Waxham Mary Lee Cadvvell Jessie Gidley Winifred Hawkridce 190 6 Claire Sampson Sadie Samuel Ray Tyler 190 7 Clara Griffin Maud Thayer Marie Warren [215] President Ruth de Roche mont, 1905 Vice Pies i d e n t Esther Schwarz, 1906 Secretary Florence McCormick, 1905 Treasurer Lottie H. T. Hart well, 1906 Advisory Bo a r d Maude Collier, 1905 Georgina W. Sillcox, 1905 Gladys Wells, 1905 [216] Officers MARGARET LITTLE II E L E.N J 1INSTON FLORENCE CANTIENY EDITH KINGSBURY FRAl LEIN STOBER President V i c e P r e s i dent S i ' c r e t a r y Tr e a s u r e r Advisory M e m b e r Members Margarethe Muller Else Stoeber Hekmine C. Stueyen HeDWIG S. SCHAEFER Friede Reuther Natalie Wipplinger Eva F. Little, 1905 Olive Lee Chapman, 1905 C. Louise Steele, 1906 Bess Trovillo, 1906 M. Alice Breck, 1905 Claire Graefe, 1906 Helen Segar, 1906 Ruth Louise Goodwin, 1906 Irene McAlpine, 1906 Geneva L. Ash, 1907 Esther G. Abercrombie, 1907 Frances E. Sherman, 1907 Alice F. Titus, 1907 Florenh e A. Martin, 1905 Faith B. Sturteyant, 1906 Mary E. Kelly, 1905 Olive Greene, 1906 Anna M. Cummins, 1906 Helena E. D. Farmer, 1905 Charlotte Gerhard, 1 . 5 Florence Mainhardt, 1905 Cora M. Hillery, 1905 Helen Marie Johnston, 1905 Edith M. Tolles, 1906 Margaret Little, 1905 Rachel M. Brooks, 1905 Ida Leek Ellison, 1905 Carolyn Peyton Nelson, 1905 Nina Diadamia Gage, 1905 Edith M. Kingshl ' ry, 1905 Louise E. Sylvester, 1905 Florence Cantieny, 1905 Lucy Eisenberg, 1905 Mabel B. Waldron, 1906 Corinna Crowl, 1906 Mar) I ' .kl 1 e Allen, 1905 Grace Choline Humphrey, 1905 Elizaketh Le B. Marston, 1905 im UDE Haley, 1905 Gladys Wells, 1905 Edith J. Knowlton, 1905 Mollie S. Steakn, 1906 Carrie L. Knox, 1905 Alice Rolph, 1906 Marie Louise Abbott, 1905 Florence Bement, 1906 Helen B. Porter, 1906 Ruth Greene, 1905 Anna W. Pinkham, 1905 Helen Boyle, 1907 Louise Caroline De Lano, 1006 Cora Jeanette Russell, 1S9S Florence E. Dodson, 1906 Hilda C St. George, 1906 Edith Flickinger, 1906 Sarah A. O. Schaefer, 1906 Elsa Wackenhuth, 1907 Dorothy ' Pope, 1908 Gertrude Curtis Cate, 1907 Jane Sprague Eaton, 1905 Luna K. French, 1905 Esther E. Schwarz, 1006 Ethel Winch Putney, G. Winifred Cornelia Baker, 1905 Grace Herkick, 1907 May Louise Serrat, 1906 Alice Avis Burling am e, 1906 Grace E. Enos, 1906 Mary H. Ball, 1906 Sarah S. Bauman, 1906 [217] LOUISE M. LOOS IDA L . ELLISON, MARY A . PATCHIN LENA J. McCURDY P r e s i d t- a t V ice Pre s i dent S e c r e t a r y Treasurer Members Caroline M. Brevfogle Mary S. Case Bessie Champnev Elizabeth Cole Jane Eaton Ida Ellison CLASS OF 1905 Charlotte Gardner Esther Gibbs Louise Loos Lena McCurdy Mary Neal Mary Philipps Laura Thomas Helen Baikd Anna Cummins Mary Emerson CLASS OF 1906 Helen Graeke Grace Henderson Glen McClelland Mollie Stearn Mary Stoddart Helen Wells Margaret Allen Maude Bradfield Marian Bkunnrr Sybil Burton Mary Coombe Ruth Emerson I.nl ISE GARFORD CLASS OF 1907 Julia Goodman Helen Guise Ruth Hyndman Mary McDougal Sarah Mitchell Helen Morrill Mary Patchin Eunice Prichard Ada Rogers Caroline Shaw Rita Sulzbacher Abbie Wringley Betsey Baird Eva Bauman 1- ann y ferbstein Ren a Friedman Elizabeth Green Margaret Jones CLASS OF 1908 Dorothea Lockwood Florence Miller Edith Morrill Susan Patrick Jeannette Smith Florence Suppes Ruth Tyler Anne Valentine Elizabeth Whitacre Helen Young [ 218 ] Officers President Abbie O. Stoddard Y i c e President Alice A. Stearns Secretary Ethel Foster Reed Treasurer Frances C. Small Mary Alice Bowers E. Rebecca Ellis Susan M. Hallowell Josephine G. Adams Isabel H. Carter Katherine Denison Gladys Doten Gladys E. Fellows Lillian B. Fellows Pauline Foster Mary Russell Hague M. Josephine Hardy Elizabeth S. Holden Leantha B. Howard Members Faculty Laura E. Lockwood Harriet W. Randall Students Lilla Victoria Howes Grace C. King Gertrude Lewis Grace G. Littlefield Olive H. Moulton H. Catherine Paul Alice P. Poor Ethel Foster Reed Mary C. Richardson Henrietta VV. Roberts Harriet Rollins Charlotte F. Roberts Charlotte Whiton Maud E. Sampson Frances C. Small Anna J. Snow Alice A. Stearns Abbie O. Stoddard Nellie G. Timberlake Mabel B. Waldron Marian Waugh Nina Gertrude Wilbur Helen L. White [219] President Lallie Joe Moody Vice President Clara Belle Green Secretary Alice Carroll Treasure r Theodora Scruggs F a cult v Miss Moffett Mem Sue Barrow Louise R. Bascom Marianna Breneman Marion Briscoe Alice Carroll Mary Louise Dodsworth Lucille Drummond Myra Foster Clara B. Green Connie Guion Jessie D. Hall Jane Sprunt Hall bers Florence McCormick Susan McMarkey Lallie Joe Moody Carolyn Nelson Juliet Poynter Bertha Scott Theodora Scruggs Edith L. Searcy Edith Simpson Ella Mary Tilford Katharine Wilson Elizabeth F. Woodson [220] Presiden t Helen La D. Jefferis Vice President Florence C . M e g e e Secretar y a n d T r e a s u r e r Helena Lang Members Edith P. Ball Florence Bement Marion Conway Annie L. Crawford Grace M. Davies Hester R. Davies Emma G. De Bow Emma M. Duling Margaret Duncan- Edith Ellison Geraldine Frick Eleanor F. Fricke Nellie H. Goodrich Adelaide B. Halkett Anna G. Harding Avis B. Jackson Helen La D. Jefferis Sara L. Kellog Ada L. Kenworthv Grace L. Kimball Helen L. Knowles Edith J. Knowlton Florence E. Kraus Esther E. Lape Helena L. Lang Eleanor H. Little Elizabeth Margerum Mary D. Maxwell Reba N. Medlar Florence C. Megee Marguerite B. MacKellar Alice E. McQueen J. Isabel Newell M rie L. Owen- Katharine Proctor Helen L. Robertson Marguerite Scanlin Sarah A. O. Shaefer Mary R. Shupp Charlotte R. Thomas Gertrude K. Ware Lilla M. Weed [221 ] Presiden t Ethel P. Waxham V ice P r e s i d e n t Louise Steele Secretary Grace Enos Grace Enos Ada Davis Ruth Londoner Genevieve Pfeiffer Louise Steele Mary Strachan Marie Warren Ethel Waxham 222] Members Miss Hazard Miss Pendleton Miss Willcox 1 9 5 Louise Greene Ellen Manchester Emily Wells 1 9 G Helen Segar Dorothy Tryon 1 9 7 Florence Clark Fanny Price Mary May Anna Volquardson 19 8 Gertrude Cook Amy Gilbert CORRINNE DULUDE JULIA MAXON Elizabeth Perry [223] M} Consumers 19 5 Presiden t Olive Nevin Vice President Edith Ball Treasurer Beth Marston Chief Cook and Bottle IV ash e r Gertrude Knight WW Lucette Ohr Esther Schwarz 19 6 First Member ELSIE GODDARD Second Member BESS Sooy Pie Eaters Pie in a n Mabel Seagrave Third Member Fourth Member Simple Maria S i m o n D O W D 19 5 Clara Greene Marion Bosworth Sallie Eustis Marie Milliken 19 6 Alice Carroll Anna Tatum Helen Segar [224] Amy Gurlitz Jessie Hall Elsa James Gertrude Knight Eliza McCague Katharine McCague Emma Miller Edith Moore Carolyn Nelson F N Molly Hepburn Ball Anna Lois Dickinson Esther Ewing Schwarz Genevieve Wheeler Ora Mae Williams G t-- ,1 1 Β ft β€’β€’- Vv| sw v [225 Members Amy Coburn Ruth de Rochemont Helen Elliot Ethel Folger Laura Hibbard Ella McKinnon Marie Morrow Olive Nevin Jessie Steane Sarah Woodward [226] Inter-Club Debate SENIOR-SOPHOMORE vs. JUNIOR-FRESHMAN COLLEGE HALL CHAPEL, WELLESLEY COLLEGE May 30, 1904, 3 o ' clock p. M. Question : Resolrt ' ti, That railway pooling should be permitted in the United States A f f i r m a t i v e Catherine Jones, 1906 Bonnie Abbott, 1906 Marian Kinney, 1901 Negative Blanche Wenner, 1905 Lucy Curtiss, 1905 Florence Plum.mer, 1907 Order of Rebuttals Catherine Jones, 1906 Lucy Curtiss, 1905 Bonnie Abbott, 1906 Florence Plum.mer, 1907 Marian Kinney, 1904 Blanche Wenner, 1905 C h a i r m a n Mr. Macdougall Mr. Grossman Judges Miss Perry IV inning Team Junior-Freshman Mr. Foster [227] Barn Swallows President Sally Gertrude Knight, ' 05 ice President Mary H. Ball, ' 06 Treasurer Helen E. Baird, ' 06 Secretary Daphne Crane, ' 07 Custodian Connie Guion, ' 06 [228] MMxmmmm WELLESLET COLLEGE LEGEND A College Settlement Association P r e s i d e n t Elizabeth Goddard, 19 6 lice P r e s i dent s Helen A. Merrill, Faculty Ethel W a x h a m , 19 5 Mary P a t c h i n , 19 6 Dorothy Storey, 1907 Ruth Carpenter, 1908 Secretary a n d I r e ti s u r e r Olive Gilbreath, 1906 L i b r a r i a n Helen L. Brown, 1905 Somerset Y P r e s i d e n t Mary ( ) o l a i t a Philipps, 1905 Secret a r y a n d T r e a s it r e r Harriet A . F o s s , 1905 At ember of General A i d C o in m i t t e e Marion Stevenson, 19 06 [ 229 ] WEI-LESLEY COLLEGE LEGENDA Student Volunteer Band Leader Nina D. Gage, 1905 Secretary Minnie Hastings, 1907 Jessie W. Berry, G. Lottie Hartwell, 1906 Clara B. Bruce, 1905 Louise Jenison, 1908 Juliet Zimmerman, 1905 Consumers ' League Officers President Hilda Tufts, 1905 Secretary and Treasurer E l izabeth Hard man, 1905 Executive Committee Faculty Member Miss Calkins 19 5 Member Gladys Wells 19 6 Member Amelia St. John 19 7 Member Anne Crawford [230] WELLESLEY COLLEGE LEGENDA Athletic Association Officers P r e s i d e n t Sarah J. Woodward, 19 05 lice President Edith M . Kingsbury, 1905 Secretary Mary H. Ball, 1906 Treasurer Catherine B. Jones, 190 6 Executive Board Maria Dowd, 1905 Marguerite B. McKellar, 1907 Gladys Wells, 1905 Advisory Co m m i t t e e Emma S. Bixby, 1907 Bess C. Halsey, 1905 Heads of Sports Eleanor A. Hollick, 1905 Head of Basket Ball Helen L. Brown, 1905 Head of Golf Olive B. W. Smith, 1905 Head of Hockey Gladys Wells, 1905 Head of Rowing Cora J. Hogan, 1905 Head of Running Ethel V. Z. Sullivan, 1905 Head of Shot Put Marguerite B. MacKellar, 1907 Head of Tennis [231] - - β–  rqsr r β€’n TT ' ' 1905 Basket-Bail Captain Mabel Bishop Marie Abbott Clara Bruce Clara Chase Alice Clause MarTa Dowd Amy Felmley Nina Gage Bernice Gallup Eleanor Hollick Mary Kelly Gertrude Knight Bertha Ryan Abbie Stoddard Laura Thomas Helen Watson Agnes Wood Sarah Woodward [232] 1905 Crew Captain Maria D o w d Stroke Juliet Poynter Anna Hamblen, 7 Edith Kingsbury, G Eva Little, 5 Clara Bruce, 4 Eleanor Hollick, 3 Rachel Pflaum, 2 Bow Gladys Wells Substitutes Florence Cantieny Jessie Hall [233] 1905 Hockey C a p t a i n Rachel Pflau.m Florence Woodruff Ruth Haulenbeek Ruth Chipman Laura Welch Ida Ellison Mary Lovejoy Jessie Hall Evelyn Townsend Marie Seward Harriet Foss Louise Green Elizabeth Marston Luna French Vera Turner Grace Johnson Olive Smith [234] Lord Chuinlev Given December 7, 1903 CAST Lady Adeline WlNTERBOTTOM Adam Butteryvorth Eleanor Jessie . Blink Blunk Lord Chumley Hugh Butterworh Gasper Le Sage . Miranda Meg Tommy Tucker . Chairm of Commit t Juliet Zimmerman Sarah Woodward Ruth Haulenbeek Elizabeth Marston Marie Milliken Florence Risley Helen Daniels MarTa Dowd Lena McCurdy Luna French Clara Greene Gertrude Knight Blanche Wenner 2 36] A Japanese Girl CAST OF CHARACTERS O. Hama San O. Kitre San O. Kayo San Chaya . Nora Twin . Olive Nevin I. PlNKHAM E. GlBBS Olive Chapman Alice Clause Dora Twin ........ Marion Talbot Miss Minerva Knowall ..... Helen Daniels CHORUS β€” Japanese Girl Chairman of Committee, Rachel Pflaum [ 237 ] i .u s ftv Β° ,! Zobeida cast of characters Zobeida Olive Nevin Maimonne Alice Clause Badura ........ Isabella Pinkham Sadie ......... Olive Chapman Amine ......... Esther Gibbs Chairman of Committee, Amy Gt ' RLITZ [ 238 ] .vahs .. r T HE time has come, the walrus said, To talk of many things, β€” Of shoes, and ships, and sealing-wax, Of cabbages and kings. ADVERTISEMENTS Are constantly showing the Latest Parisian Styles and Novelties in Fine French Neckwear, Silk and Leather Girdles, Stylish Walking Suits, Covert Coats, Silk Blouses, Evening Gowns and Wraps, Afternoon Gowns, and Simple, Stylish Shirt Waist Dresses, Fine French Millinery, Fine Furs ADVERTISEMENTS Ladies ' Tailor and Habit Maker SMYTHE 383 BOYLSTON STREET, BOSTON, MASS. TOP COATS . . . Latest Styles, Newest Materials STREET COSTUMES . . . Newest Shades β€” Smartly Made RIDING HABITS . . . Side Saddle or astride, made smart, strong and sate AUTO COATS . . . Dust proof and proper Materials EVENING COATS AND WRAPS . . . Beautiful new Models DRESSMAKING . . . Of Every Description at very reasonable rates SEE MY MODELS 8 SCHOOL STREXT, BOSTON Fine China and Glass ' THE undersigned invite attention to their ex- hihit 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 ;is Lamps, Toilet Sets. Cuspidors, Vases, Wedg- wood SOUVENIR PLATES and Pitchers (Boston views), Umbrella Holders, Rich Cut Glass Pieces, Plant Pots, Chocolate Sets, as well as a large display of choice Bric.a.Rrac for WEDDING GIFTS in ART POTTERY ROOMS. Lamp Department Gallery Floor. Dealers, Hotels, Clubs, and Families will find an extensive exhibit to choose from and at lowest values. Jones, McDuffee Stratton Co. 120 Franklin, corner Federal Streets, Boston Wholesale and Retail. (Seven Floors) Street cars marked Federal Street may be taken from either railway station to the door ADVERTISEMENTS 5 W. H. DAVIS CO. EAST INDIA HOUSE Importers of Silks, Satins, Wools, and Cottons for Gowns. Java Cottons and Indian Hangings. Eastern Embroideries and Gauzes. Hammocks manufactured from Indian Aloes; particularly desirable on account of the beautiful colors and durability. Decorative Silks and Cottons in figures and plain colors. Heavy Tapestries and Brocades for Draperies and Furniture Coverings. Agents of Liberty Co., London, England. 373 BOTLSTON STREET, BOSTON KONTOFF Ladies ' Tailor J. TAILBT SON TLOHISTS ri.OWERS and Plants of the choicest varieties for A all occasions. Palms, etc., to let for Decorations. Flowers carefully packed and forwarded by mail or ex- press to all parts of the United States and Canada. Orders by mail or otherwise promptly attended to. WELLESLEV: Opposite Railroad Station Connected by Telephone, 44-2 Tailor-made Costumes for Street Wear, Calling and Golf. Also Jackets and Ulsters. Riding Habits a Specialty. Workmanship and Fit Guaranteed. Reasonable Prices BARBO BROS. DEALERS IN FRUIT and CANDY 437 BOYLSTON ST. BOSTON, MASS. ADVERTISEMENTS ROCK RID GE HALL A School for Bovs at Wellesley Hills, Massachusetts BEFORE graduating from the preparatory school, a young man about to enter college, professional school, or business, should be set free from all care concerning certain fundamentals of educa- tion. He must be able to write a fair hand, to spell correctly, to perform all simple mathemati- cal calculations, and to use the English language accurate!) β€” all without a hesitating thought. He should have an extended knowledge of at least one highly inflected, ancient language, if not for its own sake, certainly because of the help this knowledge will prove all through his life in teaching the cor- rect use of his own language. He should know, at least, the most prominent facts in the histories of the great nations. He should be familiar with the foundations of modern Chemistry, Physics, and Physiography. And he should be able to read with ease both French and German. At Rock Ridge Hall, a boy regularly takes the following course of studies : β€” English 4, Latin 4, History 4, Algebra 2, Mechanic Arts 2, Physiography 1, the first year he is in the Junior Class. English 4, Latin 4, French 4, Geometry 2, Mechanic Arts 2, Physiology 1, the second year he is in the Junior Class. English 4, Latin 4, French 4, German 4, Physics 1, the first year he is in the Middle Class. English 4, Latin 4, Algebra 4, Chemistry 4, French 1, the second year he is in the Middle Class. German 5, History 4, Geometry 4, Physics 3, Chemistry 1, the year he is in the Senior Class. The figures following the studies indicate the periods per week devoted to each. A student of good standing who adds Greek to his studies of the last three years, probably will not have too much work, and certainly will add greatly to his education. There are three other courses β€” fitting for scientific or professional school, college, and business, respectively. The first of these requires three years, the second -1, and the third, or business course, any number of years from one to five, or six, even, depending on the amount of time the student can give to his preparation. There is a Preparatory Class for boys not quite fitted to enter the Junior Class. The studies of the Preparatory Class are Declamation, with especial attention to subject-matter and delivery ; English Composition, with especial attention to spelling and handwriting ; Arithmetic , History of the United States and England, Geography, and Drawing. This school especially welcomes boys whose parents wish for them a school life which is fuller and richer than that of the public schools, yet one far more carefully directed than that of the colleges. Such a school life is advisable both for the boy who is to be sent to one of the larger colleges, with its complete freedom, and for the boy who is to go into business with its complete restraint. A pamphlet describing the school, and illustrated with photographic reproductions, will be sent on application. GEORGE RANTOUL WHITE, Ph. D Principal Christian Association Reception. September 19, 1003, 7.30 p. m. Flower Sunday. September 20, 1903. Artistic Delicate Pure For Fine Trade BOSTON CHOCOLATES BOSTON (incorporated) ADVERTISEMENTS MEYER JONASSON CO. Bovlston and Tremont Streets Boston CLOAK HOUSE NEW YORK AND PITTSBURG PARTRIDGE BOSTON AND VICINITY Photographer and Frame Maker Telephone Connections No Stairs to Climb W. H. PARTRIDGE BOSTON, i ( Tremont Street, next to Keith ' s BROOKL1NE, 27 Harvard Street NEWTONVIELE, Opposite R. R. Station ROXBURY, 2S32 Washington Street Special Rates to JVellesley College Students Photographing College Groups and Room Interiors a Specialty ALSO A LARGE ASSORTMENT OF TREE DAY, SOCIETY AND PLAY PHOTOGRAPHS in Stack Special Rates to Students and their Friends F DIEHL SON DEALERS IN Coal, Wood, Hav, Grain WELLESLEY, MASS. Tel phone No. i i Holder? s Studio 20 NORTH AVENUE NATICK MASS. Class rates to any Senior Connected by Telephone Academic Work Began. September 22, 1903. H. SILVERMAN Ladies ' Tailor and Habit-Maker 1 1 East 30th Street, New York War Fifth Avenue Telephone 65S Madison Square The only maker of the H. Silverman Safety Riding Skirt; Patented for its safety and being absolutely perfect fitting. Also a new Cross Saddle Skirt Special Discount to Students tLmma Vvillard School TROY, N . Y . (Cnllrgr Preparatory aufi Qjritrral (Snururs CERTIFICATE ADMITS TO WELLESLEY, VASSAR, SMITH MOUNT HOLYOKE COLLEGES and CORNELL UNIVERSITY fine fire-proof buildings Golf, Hockey, Basketball ANNE LEACH, Principal ADVERTISEMENTS 11 First Barnswallows. September 26, 1903, 7.30 p. m. Freshman Concert. September 28, 1903, 7.30 p. m. First Student Government Meeting. September 29, 1903, -1.15 p. m. President and Dean ' s Receptions. October 6-8, 1903, 4-6 p. m. Barnswallow Play, Copy. October 17, 1903, 7.30 p. m. Elocution Recital. October 26, 1903, 7.30 p. M. H. H. CARTER CO. Stationers and Engravers No. 5 SOMERSET STREET, near Beacon (Whole Building) Stamping and Engraving done on the premises. Disco unt to Wellesley Stu- dents 20 per cent. John A. M.o? ga?i Co. Pharmacists SHATTUCK BUILDING WELLESLEY . . MASS. Retail Store, 416 Washington Street, Boston ADVERTISEMENTS 13 New York and Boston Calcium Light Co. 102 UTICA STREET BOSTON .... MASS. TELEPHONE, OXFORD 673 Pure Ox vgen Gas for Medical Use Calcium Light Illumination WITH BEAUTIFUL COLORED EFFECTS for Commencements, Tableaux Vivants, Lawn Parties, Serenades, River Excursions, In- door and Outdoor Shows, Etc. Maugus Printing Co. (INCORPORATED) Printing and Publishing o o Particular Attention Given to COLLEGE WORK Welleslev Square, WELLESLEY, Mass. Geo. P. Raymond Co. Costume Parlor Telephone and Mail Orders receive Special Attention 2 Boylston Place, Boston, Mass. Telephone, Oxford 145 The Intercollegiate Bureau of Academic Costume Chartered 1902 by the Regents of the University of the State of New York Cottrell Leonard ALBANY, N. Y. Caps , Gown$ and Hood$ Makers to Welleslev, ' 92, ' 93, ' 94, ' 95, ' 96, ' 97, ' 98, ' 99, 1900, 1901, 1902, 1903, 1904 and 1905. To Radclifte, Bvrn Mawr, Mount Holvoke, Harvard, Yale, Princeton, Cornell, Univ. of Pa., Brown, Tufts, Colum- bia, Stanford, Nebraska, Tulane, Univ. of the South, and all the others RICH GOICNS for the HIGHER ' DEGREES for PULPIT and BEXCH Illustrated Bulletin and Samples on application 14 ADVERTISE M E N T S Reading by Prof. S. H. Clark, Chicago University. October 31, 1903, 3.20 p. m. College Settlement Reception to the Freshman Class. November 2, 1903, 4-6 p. m. College Concert. November 2, 1903, 7.30 p. m. Barnswallows. November 7, 1903, 7.30 p. m. Lemare Recital, Houghton Memorial Chapel. November 16, 1903, 7.30 p. M. HAAS BROS. 25-27-29 West 31ST Street NEW YORK Ladies ' Tailors Dressmakers and Shirtmakers SPECIAL DISCOUNT TO STUDENTS High Class Millinery Flowers, Foliage and Ribbons in the Latest Shades. Also a Good Line of Ladies ' Fine Neckwear H. W. MURRAY, Wellesley Sq. wellesley Shreve, Crump Low Co. Gold and Silversmiths Class and Society Pins made from Special Designs. Sole makers of the Official Seal Pin Crests Alonograms Engraving 147 Tremont Street, Boston T Β£ - . I a jM 7 toj .J Field Day. November 16, 1903, 9.00 a. m. Charles E. Shattuck The WELLESLEY ODD THINGS GROCER... If you want something dif- ferent in College Emblems, ESTABLISHED 1875 Class Pins, Badges, Flags, Stationery, write or call at 15 School Street .. Boston THE WORTHY BENT BUSH SPRINGFIELD . . . MASSACHUSETTS TELEPHONE, BOSTON 472 E IIRO P E A N P L A N Attrarttlif (Β£afr fur ICafiirs SERVICE FIRST CLASS WM. M. KIMBALL, Manager 16 ADVERTISEMENTS PETER THOMSON Merchant Tailor LADIES ' SAILOR SUITS A SPECIALTY Ladies ' Tailor-made Dresses ; Riding Habits 1 1 i 8 Walnut Street PHILADELPHIA, PA. 14-16 West 33d Street NEW YORK CITY M. Sullivan Co. iLaatmntrs 732 Washington Street, Boston WE have the largest and most complete line of Costumes that can be found in this state or elsewhere, consisting of Histor- ical and Fancy Dress for Masquerades, Private Theatricals, Operas, Recitations, Tableaux, 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 safely relied on, and every order placed with us will be carried out with the most careful minute- ness of detail and accuracy. It will always be our ambition to excel in our work, and give the best service at Reasonable Prices. Costumes designed and made to order. :::::: WRITE FOR ESTIMATES Elm Park Hotel JIELLESLEV HILLS M A S S.J C H U S E T TS Convenient for Commencement Guests tVellcsley News Stand Stationery and Variety Store Subscriptions received for all magazines H. L. Flagc WELLESLEY, MASS. ADVERTISEMENTS 17 The Fisk Teachers ' Agency BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS 4 ASHBURTON PLACE New York, 156 Fifth Avenue Washington, D. C, 1505 Penn. Ave. Chicago, 203 Michigan Boulevard Minneapolis, 414 Century Building Denver, Col., 533 Cooper Building Spokane, Wash., 622 Hyde Block Portland, Ore., 80 Third Street San Francisco, Cal., 420 Parrott Bldg. Los Angeles, Cal., 525 Stimson Block REGISTRATION FORMS SENT TO TEACHERS ON APPLICATION The Largest FUR STORE in Boston Edw. Kakas Sons No. 162 TREMONT ST. BOSTON ' Next to Keith ' s Theatre Special Discount to Students The Old Archway BOOKSTORE One 0 Boston ' s Literary Landmarks A LL the new popular and standard hooks can be bought cheap here, and countless bargains can be had in all departments of literature. Welles- ley girls are invited to come in and feel free to look over our stock. DeH o fe,Fiske Co. Proprietors 365 Washington St., BOSTON T II E HOME Insurance Co. of New York Office, No. 56 CEDAR STREET Cash Capital $3,000,000 Insures against loss or damage from fire, lightning, wind storms and tor- nodoes. Insurance on personal effects of Tourists and temporary sojourners anywhere in the United States, Canada, or Mexico. ELHRIDGE G. SNOW, President Emanuel H. A. Correa, Vice President Frederic C. Buswell, Vice President Henry J. Ferris, As.i. Secretary Areunah M. Burtxs, Secretary William II. Cheney, Secretary Clarence A. Ludlum, Asst, Secretary w (J w K H Β«! S O o Β« o z w f ranft Q oo , (l)i (Uto 2S, Coffcge (ftnnuafs, Cafafogues f C crg Β©escripfton, iotf6 Office anfc 0Torfts6op af 352 OJJasOmgfon JJfreef, QBosfon, (ttlasB. ADVERTISEMENTS j. PERLIS CO. Fashionable Ladies ' Tailors Furriers 132 BOYLSTON STREET BOSTON, MASS. Furs altered and repaired at reason- able prices ALL OCR FUR WORK IS DONE ON THE PREMISES SUITS MADE TO ORDER PERFECT FIT WARRANTED A CHOICE and CAREFULLY Selected STOCK of BOOKS at Butterfield ' s Book Shop 59 Bromfield Street BOSTON Basement of the Paddock Building Telephone, Main 3792 C. F. Hovey Co. Importers Retalers of DRY GOODS 33 SUMMER STREET 42 AVON STREET BOSTON MASS. Mrs. Mead ' s School FOR GIRLS HILLSIDE, NORWALK, Connecticut WELL-APPOINTED BUILDINGS, IDEAL LOCATION, HAPPY HOME LIFE . . . THOROUGH PREPARATION FOR WELLESLEY and OTHER COLLEGES CERTIFICATE ACCEPTED BY LEAD- ING COLLEGES FOR WOMEN For Circulars Address MRS. M. E. MEAD 20 ADVERTISEMENTS Shattuck Jones ESTABLISHED 1S50 Ocean, Lake and River FISH Fresh Salmon Trout Specialties 128 Faneuil Hall Market boston, mass. Telephone, 775 Richmond Women ' s Hats for all occasions Agents for KNOX HATS FURS OF EVERY DESCRIPTION 10 per cent Discount to College Girls wc Hall Hancock 418 420 Washington St. BOSTON, MASS. Three doors from Summer Street, North IF YOU HAVE TALENT FOR DRAWING Cut this out β€” mail it with a 2c. stamp and receive our -free Sample Lesson with terms and 20 portraits of well- known illustrators. New York School of Caricature 84 World Building, New York A new course of instruction in WATER COLOR under the personal direction of Edwin H. Kiefer, a student of Benjamin Con- stant, Jean Paul Laurens and Cazin. Send stamp for particulars. New York School of Water Color 84 and 85 World Building, New York TheRecently Enlarged Edition oj WEBSTER ' S INTERNATIONAL DICTIONARY CONTAINS 25,000 NEW WORDS, Etc. New Gazetteer of the World New Biographical Dictionary New Plates. KW0 Quarto Pages. 5000 Illustration . Should be in Every Home, School, and Office Also Webster ' s Collegiate Dictionary with 1100 pages. 1400 illustrations. Size: 7x10x2 8 in. A Special Thin Paper Edition just issued, printed from same plates as remilar edition. It has limp covers and round corners. Size: S xhigxl ' i in. FREE, A Test in Pronunciation, instructive and entertaining. Also illustrated paraphilia. G. 6 C. MERRIAM CO.. Publishers, Springfield, Miss. ADVERTISEMENTS Barnswallows. November 21, 1903, 7.30 p. M. Sophomore Reception. November 28, 1903, 4.00, G.00 and 7.30-9.30 p. M. Junior Play. December 7, 1903, 2.30 p. M. Barnswallows. December 12, 1903, 7.30 p. m. College Concert. January 18, 1904, 7.30 p. m. Barnswallows. January 23, 1904, 7.30 p. m. SHOES FOR FALL NOW READY Our $3.00 and $3.50 Shoes are al- ways the newest in design, and are not excelled in style or wearing qualities by any shoe of similar price Thayer, Rogers Norton Under Park St. Church, Boston Sexton ' s Pharmacy OPPOSITE POST OFFICE WELLESLEY Tabard Inn Library Public Telephone H. L. Lawrence S? Co . . Poultry . . J.6 Faneuil Hall Market Boston, Mass. Barnswallows. February 6, 190-4, 7.30 p. M. College Concert. February 8, 1904, 7.30 p. m. Glee Club Concerts. February 20 and 22, 1904, 7.30 p. m. Colonial Ball. February 29, 1904, 3-6 p. m. Barnswallows. March 5, 1904, 7.30 p. m. College Concert. March 7, 1904, 7.30 p. m. Barnswallows. March 19, 1904, 7.30 p. m. Bailev, Banks Biddle Company . . . Philadelphia DESIGNER AND MANUFACTURERS OF CLASS PINS BADGES STICK PINS CLASS RINGS CLASS STATIONERY Designs and estimates of cost mailed on request No obligation is incurred Β£ IjWMlS College Concert. March 21, 1904, 7.30 p. m. College Concert. April 11, 190-4, 7.30 p. i. Shakespeare Masquerade. April 16, 1904, 7.30 p. m. at THE Shuman Corner Ladies ' Suits Coats MADE BY MEN TAILORS Waists, Negligees, Underwear Neckwear, Gloves, Hosiery Corsets and Shoes As a men ' s garment house, we afford ladies the advantage of men ' s handiwork, so thoroughly es- sential in the perfection of fit, finish and contour A. SHUMAN cl CO. Washington and Summer Streets BOSTON WM. Y. ALLEN, D.D.S. 155 Newbury Street Boston, Mass. IVellesley Banners Pillows, Souvenirs MRS. H. E. CURRIER 10 GROVE ST.. WELLESLEY 24 ADVERTISEMENTS AMERICAS MOST POPULAR RAILWAY m CHICAGO ALTON PERFECT PASSENGER SERVICE BETWEEN CHICAGO KANSAS CITY, CHICAGO β€” ST.LOUU, CHICAGO PEORIA. ST.LOUIS β€” KANSAS CITY. THROUGH rULLMAN SERVICE BETWEEN CHICAGO AND HOT SPRINGS. Ark.. DEN VER.Colo, TEXAS. FLORIDA. UTAH. CALIFORNIA Β OREGON. IF YOU ARE CONTEMPLATING A TRIP, ANY POR- TION OF WHICH CAN BE HADE OVER THE CHICAGO A- ALTON, IT WILL. PAY VOLT TO WRITE TO THE UNDER- SIGNED FOR RATES, MAPS, TIME-TABLES, ETC. Geo. J. Charlton. general passenger agent, Chicago, III. Cross-Country Boots There is ;i vast deal of walking to be done in and about the College. If you would walk with comf o r t , dress the feet right. We have certain shoes made in nature ' s shapes by a prominent man ufacturerof men ' s shoes, which will let every joint and toe do the work nature intended. Made of best materials, and car- ried in a variety of widths, at a uniform price of $3.00 ADAMS Wellesley Square Ticket ; All Theatre HERRICK Phone 2329, 2330 and 233 1 Copley Square BOSTON Gustavus J. Esse I en (Successor to MRS. J. C. WHITE) Artists ' Materials, School Supplies Pyrographic Outfits, Platinum Points and Materials for Wood Burning, Water Color Frames, Fancy Boxes, Etc., to Decorate. Passepartout Materials. Souvenir Mailing Cards a nd Albums. Christinas, Easter and Birthday Cards, Valentines, Calendars, Etc. WATERMAN ' S IDEAL FOUNTAIN PEN 19 Bromfield St., Boston, Mass. Phi Sigma Shirt Waist Dance. April 25, 1904, 3-6 p. m. ' ' PREFERRED STOCK ' ' Brand of Teas, Coffees, Spices, Canned Goods and Fancy Groceries The Highest Grade of Goods Packed MARTIN L. HALL COMPANY BOSTON, MASS. Alpha Kappa Chi Dance. April 30, 1904, 7.30 p. M. John P. Squire Sons Wholesale Dealers in PORK, LARD HAMS and BACON s 2i, 23 25 Faneuil Hall Market BOSTON, MASS. Telephone, 52 Richmond WAYSIDE INN SOUTH SUDBURY, MASS. Oldest anil most historic tavern in America; immor- talized by Longfellow ' s Tales of a Wayside Inn. Twenty miles from Bosto n, on as fine a road as there is. With old original fireplaces and charming wood fires; water unsurpassed; surrounded by a beautiful country. Permanent guests desired. Kates reason- able. Stable accommodation. Open throughout the year. Long distance telephone. Twelve miles from Welleslcy College. E. R. LEMON, Landlord Wallburg Sherry O. WALLBL ' KC W. A. SIIEKRV Painters and Decorators 13G Harrison Avenue Boston The Master Builders Association, 164 Devonshire St. Telephone, Oxford 2ss PHOTO BY AGELL May Day, 1904. β–  joy that in our Members 1- something that doth live, That nature yet remembers What was so fugitive. DO YOU KNOW That the best way to secure a position as teacher is to register in the ALBANY TEACHER ' S 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 selec- ted from hundreds which we receive each year, and they show that we secure positions in public schools of everv grade, in private schools and academies, in normal schools and colleges. CYVe have been especially successful in rinding positions for in- experienced teachers, and are always glad to enroll 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. Agora Military Dance. May 9, 1904, 3-6 p. m. G. L. ABELL .... Photographer WELLESLEY, MASS. Framing, Passepartouts, Glass for Frames SAFETY MAILING ENVELOPES DUPLICATES OF MANY PHOTOGRAPHS IN THIS BOOK MAY BE OBTAINED AT OUR STUDIO S Developing and Printing for the Amateur Forensic Burning. June 3, 1904. Our Microscopes, Microtomes, Laboratory Glassware, Chemical Apparatus, Chem- icals, Photo Lenses and Shutters, Field Glasses, Projection Apparatus, Photo- Micro Cameras are used by the leading Laboratories and Government Depart mints Round the World. Send for Catalogs. BAUSCHcHOMBOPT.CO. ROCHESTER.N.Y. F. A. Coolidge Co. DEALERS IX Meats, Provisions, Etc. TAYLOR ' S BLOCK WELLESLEY, MASS. Joseph F. Carew Limestone Freestone and Marble GERARD STREET, BOSTON Mister Builders, 166 Devonshire St. Tree Day. June 4, 1904, 3.30 p. m. THE Walnut Hill School Chas. A. Hoyle NATICK, MASS. β–Ί?Β« PORTRAIT A College Preparatory School for Girls. Two miles from Wellesley College. Fifteen acres of beautiful grounds. Thorough training in all preparatory studies. Illustrated Catalogue Sent. Photographer Ok 368 Boylston St. CHARLOTTE H. CONANT, B.A. FLORENCE BIGELOW, M.A. Boston Principals ADVERTISEMENTS y- β–  ;. , ' . P O M E R Y HALL ANGUS Mac DONALD ...BUILDER... 161 Devonshire Street Boston, Mass. Beware of dangerous counterfeits or substitutes. The genuine LABLACHE FACE POWDER hears the signa. ture of Ben Levy in red ink across the lahel of the box. Tau Zeta Epsilox Platform Dance. June 4, 1904, 7.30 p. m. Float. June 14, 1904, 7.00 p. m.


Suggestions in the Wellesley College - Legenda Yearbook (Wellesley, MA) collection:

Wellesley College -  Legenda Yearbook (Wellesley, MA) online collection, 1902 Edition, Page 1

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Wellesley College -  Legenda Yearbook (Wellesley, MA) online collection, 1903 Edition, Page 1

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Wellesley College -  Legenda Yearbook (Wellesley, MA) online collection, 1904 Edition, Page 1

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Wellesley College -  Legenda Yearbook (Wellesley, MA) online collection, 1906 Edition, Page 1

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Wellesley College -  Legenda Yearbook (Wellesley, MA) online collection, 1907 Edition, Page 1

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Wellesley College -  Legenda Yearbook (Wellesley, MA) online collection, 1908 Edition, Page 1

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