Wellesley College - Legenda Yearbook (Wellesley, MA)

 - Class of 1926

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Wellesley College -  Legenda Yearbook (Wellesley, MA) online collection, 1926 Edition, Cover
Cover



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Text from Pages 1 - 310 of the 1926 volume:

.■ ... . TOble of Contents Faculty and Administration Campus Views The Class .... Specimens of English Composition Organizations Dramatics . . „- Publications .... Music .... Athletics . . .- ' -. Societies .... Directory of Classes Advertisements PAGE 5 19 25 121 175 193 199 205 211 225 239 271 Ad minis trattntt . ...I ; 1 - an ..; , J ; v . ; • ' :. _• . • ' ' ill :jl,J • k m S |;1 ff ' Li] U..!a! i I • i • • v , : . l - -•• r . rrr .... !... ...........  -,-,-•.-%: v r: .!; .. gsc ' . i , j l ;.-: I = •• UT ' ife ' j fe J f ' ;•■, ;;J3..! .V -- ■• ' • ■ , ' f -:-: poarb of rufiteea Officers; EDWIN FARNHAM GREENE, President of the Board Boston, Mass. GEORGE HOWE DAVENPORT, Vice President Boston, Mass. CANDACE CATHERINE STIMSON, Secretary New York, N. Y iWember of tfje Poaro WILLIAM FAIRFIELD WARREN Brookline, Mass. LILIAN HORSFORD FARLOW Cambridge, Mass. LOUISE McCOY NORTH Madison, N. J. ANDREW FISKE Boston, Mass. GEORGE EDWIN HORR Newton Centre, Mass. WILLIAM EDWARDS HUNTINGTON Newton Centre, Mass. CAROLINE HAZARD Peace Dale, R. I. GEORGE HERBERT PALMER . Cambridge, Mass. PAUL HENRY HANUS Cambrindge, Mass. ALICE UPTON PEARMAIN Boston, Mass. BELLE SHERWIN Willoughby, 0. JESSIE CLAIRE McDONALD Washington, D. C. GRACE GOODNOW CROCKER Cambridge, Mass. CHARLES LEWIS SLATTERY r Boston, Mass. WILLIAM MORTON WHEELER Boston, Mass. ROBERT GRAY DODGE Boston, Mass. HUGH WALKER OGDEN Brooklint, Mass. ALME SEIPP HAY Winnetka, III. SARAH WHITTELSEY WALDEN New Haven, Conn. FREDERIC HAINES CURTIS Boston, Mass. JAMES DEAN Brookline, Mass. CLIFTON HOWARD DWINNELL West Newton, Mass. ELLEN FITZ PENDLETON (ex offico) Wellesley, Mass. LEWIS KENNEDY MORSE (ex-offico) Boston, Mass. Treasurer of Wellesley College [6] (Officers of bmtmfitratton ELLEN FITZ PENDLETON, M.A., Litt.D., LL.D President ALICE VINTON WAITE, M. A Dean, Professor of English Language and Literature EDITH SOUTHER TUFTS, M.A Dean of Residence EDWARD ERASTUS BANCROFT, M.A., M.D Consulting Physician MARY CASWELL Secretary to the President MARY FRAZER SMITH, B.A College Recorder FRANCES LOUISE KNAPP, M.A., Secretary to the Board of Administration and Dean of Freshmen EVELYN AMELIA MUNROE, B. A Assistant Treasurer CHARLOTTE SCOTT WHITON Purveyor HELEN WILLARD LYMAN, B.A Head of Cazenove Hall HARRIET LESTER Head of Shafer Hall EFFIE JANE BUELL Head of Pomeroy Hall CHARLOTTE HENDERSON CHADDERON Head of Claflin Hall ELIZABETH BURROUGHS WHEELER Head of Eliot House KATHARINE HARRIS Head of Little House ALICE LILLIAN McGREGOR Head of Tower Court HARRIET H ATTON MAYNARD Head of the Elms MARTHA FAY CLARKE Head of Horton and Halloivell Houses MARY HUBBARD MORSE RICHARDSON Head of the Homestead JESSIE ANN ENGLES Head of Crofton House and Ridgeway Refectory JOSEFA VICTORIA RANTZIA STALLKNECHT Head of Clinton House VIOLA FLORENCE SNYDER Head of Washington House AD ALINE FOOTE HAWLEY, B.A. Head of the Birches ELVIRA GENEVIEVE BRANDAU Head of the Wood House HELEN SEYMOUR CLIFTON Head of Noanett House [7] iiiitv$ of brntntetration ( Continued) CHARLOTTE MARY HASSETT Head of Dower House BELLE MORGAN WARDWELL, B.S Head of Beebe Hall CARRIE IRISH Head of Stone Hall ETHEL ISABELLA FOSTER Head of Freeman House MARY GILMAN AHLERS, B.A Head of Wilder Hall MARY CROSS EWING, B.A Head of Norumbega House CARLYN MAY LOOMIS Head of Fiske House LAURA PARKER FURBER, B.A .Head of Leighton House MARY HALE YOUNG, B.A Head of Toivnsend House MARY FISHER DEKRUIF, M.D. Assistant Physician and Instructor in Hygiene and Physical Education ELIZABETH LOUISE BROYLES, M.D Resident Physician MARION FRANCES EATON COOKE, B.A Head of Webb House FLORENCE IRENE TUCKER, B.A Assistant to the Purveyor ESSIE MAY VAN LEUVAN DECKER Comptroller JESSIE RICHARD ADAMS Manager of the Information Bureau AVA CLOSE MINSHER Manager of the Post Office GRACE ETHEL ARTHUR, B.A Secretarial Assistant in the President ' s Office EUGENIA BUSHNELL BROWN, B.A Assistant Secretary to the President KATHLEEN ELLIOTT, B.A Assistant Recorder DORIS ELIZABETH HUBBARD, B.S Secretary to the Dean FLORENCE JACKSON, B.S., M.A Associate in the Bureau of Occupations EDITH ADAMS, B.A iss ' stant to the Dean of Residence WENDELL HOWARD KAYSER, B.S Business Manager FREDERICK DUTTON WOODS, B.S Superintendent of Grounds WILFORD PRIEST HOOPER, B.S Superintendent of College Buildings TS] ©fftcers of instruction Absent on leave. f Absent on Sabbatical leave. + Appointed for first semester only. § Appointed for second semester only. grt Professor ALICE VAN VECHTEN BROWN Associate Professor MYRTILLA AVERY , B.L.S., M.A. Lecturers ELIZA NEWKIRK ROGERS, M.A. HARRIET BOYD HAWES+ M.A., L.H.D. Instructor HELEN MARION WOODRUFF, M.A. Assistant AGNES ANNE ABBOT Secretary of the Museum CELIA HOWARD HERSEY, B.A. Museum Assistant ALICE CHURCHILL MOORE gtetronomp Professor JOHN CHARLES DUNCANf, Ph. D. Assistant Professor LEAH BROWN ALLEN , M.A. Instructor LOIS TRIPP SLOCUM, M.A. Assistants MARGARET KENDALL HOLBROOK, B.A. HELEN MAUDE MITCHELL, B.A. Custodian KATHARINE BULLARD DUNCAN [9] Ptfalical. isrtorp, Utteratnre anti interpretation Professor ELIZA HALL KENDRICK, Ph. D. Associate Professor OLIVE DUTCHER, M.A., B.D. Assistant Professors MURIEL STRIEBERT CURTIS, B.A., B.D. LOUISE PETTIBONE SMITH, Ph.D. SEAL THOMPSON, M.A. GORDON BOIT WELLMAN, Th.D. Instructor MOSES BAILEY, M.A., S.T.M. IPotanp Professors MARGARET CLAY FERGUSON, Ph.D. HOWARD EDWARD PULLING, Ph.D. Associate Professors LETIT1A MORRIS SNOW, PH.D. MARY CAMPBELL BLISS, PH.D. ALICE MARIA OTTLEY , PH.D. Assistant Professors HELEN ISABEL DAVIS, B.A. MARY LOUISE SAWYER, PH.D. MARGARET HEATLEY MOSSf, M.A. Instructors HELEN STILLWELL THOMAS, M.A. EMILY MARY BARTLETT, PH.D. BEULAH PEARL ENNIS, PH.D. Assistant PRISCILLA PRESBREY, B.A. Laboratory Assistants IRMGARD BERGER, L.A. JULIA WILLIAMS JAMES, B.A. Secretary and Custodian LOIS IRENE WEBSTER, B.S. [ 10] Cfjemtstfrp Professor HELEN SOMERSBY FRENCH, PH.D. Associate Professors CHARLOTTE ALMIRA BRAGG, B.S. MARY AMERMAN GRIGGS, PH.D. RUTH JOHNSTIN , M.A. Instructor HELEN THAYER JONES, PH.D. Assistants HULDA ELIZABETH ACLY, B.A. ELIZABETH LORD COBB, B.A. ANNE DAVENPORT CALDWELL, B.A. (Economic anti H octalogp Professors JANE ISABEL NEWELLf, PH.D. HENRY RAYMOND MUSSEY, PH.D. Associate Professor ELIZABETH DONNAN, B.A. Instructors DAVIDSON RANKIN McBRIDE, B.A. LAWRENCE SMITH, M.A. WALTER BUCKINGHAM SMITH, M.A. MARJORIE CLAIRE WARRENS§, B.A. Graduate Assistants ELEANOR KATHERINE CARTER, B.A. SELMA ROGERS, M.B.A. Cbucation Professors ARTHUR ORLO NORTONf, M.A. ANNA JANE McKEAG, PH.D., LL.D. Lecturers MATILDA REMY, B.S. in ED. ARTHUR HERBERT WILDE, PH.D. LESLIE OLIN CUMMINGS :, M.A., ED.D. BANCROFT BEATLEY§, M.A., ED.D. ABIGAIL ADAMS ELIOT, B.A. Assistants GRACE ALLERTON ANDREWS, M.A. MILDRED NUTTER FROST, M.A. FRANCES MARIE BURLINGAME, ED.M [ 11 ] iEnrjltBlj 1. iEnttltalj IGanguage anb IGitrraturp Professors VIDA DUTTON SCUDDER, M.A., L.H.D. MARGARET POLLOCK SHERWOOD , PH..D., L.H.D. ALICE VINTON WAITEf, M. A. MARTHA HALE SHACKFORD, PH.D. LAURA EMMA LOCKWOOD, PH.D. Associate Professors CHARLES LOWELL YOUNG, B.A. MARTHA PIKE CONANT, PH.D. ALICE IDA PERRY WOOD, PH.D. LAURA HIBBARD LOOMIS, PH.D. HELEN SARD HUGHES, PH.D. ELIZABETH WHEELER MANWARING, PH.D. Assistant Professors ANNIE KIMBALL TUELL, PH.D. KATHARINE CANBY BALDERSTON, PH.D. EDWARD CHARLES EHRENSPERGER, PH.D. Visiting Professor HELEN DARISHIRE, M.A. Assistant ALFARATA BOWDOIN HILTON, B.A. Graduate Assistant PHYLLIS BROOKS BARTLETT, B.A. 2. lEngltalf (Urnnpnaition Professor SOPHIE CHANTAL HART, M.A. Associate Professors AGNES FRANCIS PERKINS, M.A. JOSEPHINE HARDING BATCHELDER, M.A. HELEN SARD HUGHES, PH.D. ALFRED DWIGHT SHEFFIELD , M.A. ELIZABETH WHEELER MANWARING, PH.D. Assistant Professor BERTHA MONICA STEARNS, M.A. [ 12 ] Instructors EDITH CHRISTINA JOHNSON, M.A. DOROTHY LOUD BROWN, B.A. ELIZABETH LOIS MANN, M.A. HELEN DRUSILLA LOCKWOOD, M.A. RUTH ELIZABETH HILLYAR, M.A. Jfrettch Associate Professors HENRIETTA ANDRIEU, AGREGEE DE LTTNIVERSITE MARGUERITE MESPOULET, AGREGEE DE LTTNIVERSITE Assistant Professor RUTH ELVIRA CLARK, Litt.D. Instructors DOROTHY WARNER DENNIS, B.A., Dipl.E.U RENEE JARDIN, Lie. Es Let., Lie. En. D MARJORIE LOUISE HENRY, M.A. LUCIENNE FOUBERT CHAMBERLIN, C.S. (Partie Francaise) FRANCOISE RUET, Lie. Es Let., M.A. OLGA PAULINE LONGI, M.A. eologp anti eograpf)j Professor ELIZABETH FLORETTE FISHER, B.S. Associate Professor MARY JEAN LANIER, PH.D. Assistant Professor MARGARET TERRELL PARKER, M.A. Instructor KENNETH KNIGHT LANDES, PH.D. Laboratory Assistant LOUISE PHILLIPPS HOLDEN, B.A. German Professors NATALIE WIPPLINGER, PH.D. Assistant Professor EDDA TILLE, PH.D. Assistant ELIZABETH BIEWEND [ 13] (greek Professor KATHARINE MAY EDWARDS, PH.D. Instructor ANITA ELIZABETH KLEIN, M.A. I igtorp Professors JULIA SWIFT ORVIS, PH.D. MABEL ELISABETH HODDER, PH.D. Associate Professors EDNA VIRGINIA MOFFETT , PH.D. BARNETTE MILLER , PH.D. EDWARD ELY CURTIS, PH.D. Assistant Professors JUDITH BLOW WILLIAMS, PH.D. LOUISE OVERACKER, PH.D. Lecturer J. A. C. FAGGINGER— AURER, PH.D. Instructor WALDO EMERSON PALMER, B.A. Upgtene and pbpsftcal lEtmcatton Professors MABEL LOUISE CUMMINGS, B.S. WILLIAM SKARSTROM, M.D. EUGENE CLARENCE HOWE, PH.D. Resident Physician ELIZABETH LOUISE BROYLES, M.D. Assistant Physician MARY FISHER DeKRUIF, M.D. Lecturer ERNST HERMANN Instructors MARGARET JOHNSON CARLOTTE GENEVIEVE MacEWAN, B.S. FANNY GARRISON, B.A. HELEN MARY THOMPSON JOSEPHINE LANGWORTHY RATHBONE, M.A. VIVIAN COLLINS WALKER, M.A. ELEANOR CLIFTON, M.A. [14] Assistants ANNIE CHAPMAN STEDMAN ELIZABETH CHARLOTTE REARICK, BA. Recorder ALICE IRENE MANDELL, PH.B. Librarian AGNES EMMA DODGE Secretary ANNA ELIZABETH ANDERSON Special Ilecturer£ WALTER ADAMS BRADFORD, D.M.D. Lecturer on Oral Hygiene JOSEPH WILLIAM COURTNEY, M.D. Lecturer on the Hygiene of the Nervous System FOSTER STANDISH KELLOGG, M.D. Lecturer on Pel-vie Hygiene WALTER B. LANCASTER, M.D. Lecturer on Visual Hygiene ANDREW ROY MacAUSLAND, M.D. Lecturer on Orthopedics WILLIAM EMERSON PREBLE, B.A., M.D. Lecturer on Internal Medicine HAROLD GRANT TOBEY, M.D. Lecturer on Oto-Laryngology HARVEY PARKER TOWLE, M.D. Lecturer on the Hygiene of the Skin Staltan Professor MARGARET HASTINGS JACKSONt Instructor ADELE VACCHELLI, B.A. I 15 j Hatin Professor ALICE WALTON, PH.D. Assistant Professors CAROLINE REBECCA FLETCHER, M.A. ANNA BERTHA MILLER, PH.D Instructor ANITA ELIZABETH KLEIN, M.A. iifflatfjemattc? Professors HELEN ABBOT MERRILL, PH.D. ROXANE HAYWARD VIVIAN , PH.D. CLARA ELIZA SMITH, PH.D. Associate Professor MABEL MINERVA YOUNG, PH.D. Assistant Professors LENNIE PHOEBE COPELAND, PH.D. MARY CURTIS GRAUSTEIN, PH.D. Instructors MARION ELIZABETH STARK, M.A. ETHEL LOUISE ANDERTON, PH.D. Assistant JESSIE ESTHER COMEGYS, B.A. Professors HAMILTON CRAWFORD MACDOUGALL, MUS.D. CLARENCE GRANT HAMILTON, M.A. Instructors EMILY JOSEPHINE HURD ALBERT THOMAS FOSTER BLANCHE FRANCIS BROCKLEBANK HELEN JOY SLEEPER, M.A., MUS.B. CARL WEBSTER EDITH BULLARD ALFRED HENRY MEYER, MUS.B., B.A. JEAN EVELYN WILDER, B.A. Assistant NAOMA REBECCA THOMAS, B.A. L 16] Professors MARY WHITON CALKINSf, M.A., Litt.D., LL.D. ELEANOR ACHESON McCULLOCH GAMBLE, PH.D. THOMAS HAYES PROCTER, PH.D. Assistant Professors MICHAEL JACOB ZIGLER, PH.D. FLORA ISABEL MacKINNON, PH.D. Special Lecturer A. N. WHITEHEAD, F.R.S. Reader in Philosophy GRACE ALLERTON ANDREWS, M.A. Assistants INEZ TERESS COHEN§, B.A. ANNA MATHIESSEN, B. A. HELEN HOOD TAPLIN REGINA STOLZt, B.A. fjpsstcs Professor LOUISE SHERWOOD McDOWELLf, PH.D. Associate Professors GRACE EVANGELINE DAVIS, M.A. FRANCES LOWATER, PH.D. LUCY WILSON, PH.D. Lecturer HOWARD EDWARD PULLING, Prof, of Botany Instructors HILDA LYDIA BEGEMAN, M.A. ALICE HALL ARMSTRONG, M.A. Custodian HELEN FAY PORTER, B.A. eatimg anfc Speaking Assistant Professors ELIZABETH PARKER HUNT, M.A. EDITH MARGARET SMAILL Instructors EDITH WINIFRED MOSES, M.A. RUTH AIKMAN DAMON, M.A. [ 17] Professor ALICE HUNTINGTON BUSHEE, M.A. Assistant Professor ADA MAY COE, M.A. Instructor ANITA DE OYARZABAL Hoologp anb $f)j £tologp Professors MARIAN ELIZABETH HUBBARD, B.S. JULIA ELEANOR MOODY, PH.D. Associate Professor ALICE MIDDLETON BORING , PH.D. Assistant Professor MARGARET ALGER HAYDEN, PH.D. Instructors GLADYS KATHRYN McCOSH, M.S. JANET AGNES WILLIAMSON, M.A. ELIZABETH MACNAUGHTON, M.D. MARJORIE BOYD, B.S. HELEN BROWN AVERY, M.A. MARION FREEMAN LEWIS, B.A. ANNE STONE MINOT, PH.D. Curator ALBERT PITTS MORSE Assistant JEAN MILLETT WALKER, M.A. Laboratory Assistants FLORENCE LOUISE GUTSTAFSON, B.S. MILDRED SMITH, B.A. Custodian KATHLEEN MILLICENT LEAVITT [ 18] 5.  ■ t X fc ...01 amp ua... MR. WALTER HAMPDEN Honorary Member Dr. ELEANOR ACHESON McCULLOCH GAMBLE Honorary Member from the Faculty EVELYN ABRAHAM 72 West Craig- Street, Dniontown, Pa. FRANCES ADAMS 20 Stratford Terrace, Springfield, Mass. ELIZABETH C. ADAMS Willsboro, N. Y. HANNAH M. ADAMS 43 Berkeley Avenue, Lowell, Mass. Photographs by Gustave Lorey [28] PHYLLIS W. ALBERT 2735 Baker Place, Walnut Hills Cincinnati, O. DOROTHY S. ANDERSON 102 Avon Road, Narbeth, Pa. RUTH L. ALLEN 72 Pleasant Street, Brunswick, Me. DOROTHY E. ARNOLD 3125 — 38th Street, N. W. Washington, D. C. [29] Photographs by Gustave Loeey ELIZABETH I. ASTROM 14 Chestnut Street, E. Orange, N. J. CONSTANCE BAILEY 371 Howard Street, Cambridge, Mass. ELIZABETH G. BABTISTE 750 Ocean Avenue, Brooklyn, N. Y RUTH 3V1. BAKER Perry, N. Y. Photographs by Gustave Lorey [30] CHARLOTTE A. BANTA 217 Alden Avenue, New Haven, Conn. HELEN P. BASSETT 1716 Newkirk Avenue, Brooklyn, N. Y. REBECCA BARRETT S8 B?.con Street, Winchester, Mass. FRANCES G. BATES 30 Pleasant Street, Plymouth, Mass. [31 ] Photographs by Gustave Lorey EDITH BECKETT 510 Dayton Street, Hamilton, O. ELIZABETH D. BENNETT 80 Prescott Street, Newtonville, Mass. HARRIETTS T. BELLAH 4 South Sth Street, Newark, N. J. RUTH H. BENNETT 150 West 6th Street, Oswego, N. Y. Photograplis by Gustave Lorey [ 32 ] JEAN M. BENTLET 1187 Edison Avenue, Detroit, Mich. CONSTANCE BISHOP 120 Park Avenue, Schenectady, N. Y. MABEL BERRY 40 Laurel Street, Carbondale, Pa. RUTH H. BLOCK 164 West 79th Street, New York City [33] Photographs by Gustave Lorey LILIAN A. BOKER 3917 Riverside Avenue, Cleveland, O. ESTHER BRADISH Natick, Mass. GIZELLA F. BOKOR 2433 Edgehill Road, Cleveland Hts., O. ANNA M. BRENEMAN 140 East Chestnut Street, Lancaster, Pa. Photographs by Gustave Lorey [34] ELINOR W. BRENNAN 542 Gregory Avenue, West Orange, N. J. ISABELLE BRONK 6325 Ross Street, Philadelphia, Pa. STATIA BRILL, Jamesburg, N. J. LORNA C. BROWN 622 West Hortter Street Germantown, Pa. [35] Photographs by Gustave Lorey MARIAN V. BROWN Mavshfield, Mass. DOROTHY BRUCE 1717 Gione Avenue, Richmond, Va. MARY C. BROWN 1048 East 4th Street, Vinton, la. MARGARET A. BUEHLER 135 Bellevue Avenue, Upper Montclair, N. J. Photographs by Gustave Lorey [36] BARBARA BULLARD Wellesley, Mass. JOAN BURNHAM 15 Bracebridge Road, Newton Center, Mass. HELEN E. BULLARD 415 Mygatt Avenue, Duluth, Minn. DOROTHY L. BUTLER 36 Overlook Road, Summit, N. J. I. V J Photographs by Gustave Lorey MARY T. BUTLER 144 Brinkerhoff Street, Plattsburg, N. Y. DOROTHY E. BUTTS 124 Academy Street, Poughkeepsie, N. Y. ROBERTA B. BUTLER 509 West Ormsby Avenue. Louisville, Ky. ALICE J. CALDWELL 130 Summit Avenue, Mt. Vernon, N. Y. Photographs by Gustave Lorey [38] RUTH A. CANTILLON 2625 Park Avenue, Minneapolis, Minn. KATE CARNS 2 East 56th Street, New York City JANET CARNOCHAN Hingham, Mass. FLORENCE E. CARPENTER 76 Newton Street, Norwich, Conn. [39] Photographs by Gustave Lorey CATHERINE A. CARR Maple Hill, Jamestown, R. I. ALICE M. CARTER J81 Danforth Street, Portland, Me. CLARA L. CARSTENS Apartado 137 Monterey, N. L. Mex. ELIZABETH CARTER 3 81 Danforth Street, Portland, Me. Photographs by Gustave Lorey [40] MARION H. CARTER 23 Claapin Street, Chicopee, Mass. MARY M. P. CATLETT Gloucester, Va. MARY A. CARTER 1046 Liberty Street, Franklin, Pa. CORNELIA E. CATLIN 1110 Farming-ton Avenue, West Hartford, Conn. [41 ] Photographs by Gustave Lorey MARIE D. CHALFANT 1309 Sheridan Avenue, Pittsburgh, Pa. PAULINE W. CHOBOT 1515 Gallatin Street, Washington, D. C. REBECCA CHALMERS 22 Maple Street, Framing-ham, Mass. ANNA C. CLEAVELAND 805 - 19th Street, Rock Island, 111. Photographs by Gustave Lorey [42] MARION CLEVELAND 114 Lancaster Street, Albany, N. Y. CATHERINE COFFIN 120 High Street, Newburyport, Mass. ALICE K. COBB 138 Glen Avenue, Mt. Vernon, N. T. JEAN COLLINS 7080 Lanewood Ave., Hollywood, Cal. [43] Photographs by Gustave Lorey KATHARINE A. CONANT 11 Church Street, St. Johnsburg-, Vt. ELEANOR N. COOPER 128 E. Dudley Avenue, TVestfield, N. J. KATHRYN CONNOR Marshfleld, Wis. JANET P. COOPER 62 Caroline Street, Ogdensburg-, N. Y. Photographs by Custave Lorey [44] LOUISE R. CORN 1919 Chatburn Ct., Fort Worth, Tex. VIOLET A. DANIELSON 497 Boylston Street, Brookline, Mass. ? :: t fll BL H ' H ii SBk: KATHERINE DAMON 24 Main Street, W., Waterloo, N. Y. DOROTHEA DE LONG 675 Delaware Avenue, Buffalo, N. T. [45] Photographs by Gustave Lorey CHARLOTTE F. DENNY 3530 Harney Street, Omaha, Neb. MARY S. DE VAUSNEY 220 Roseville Avenue, Newark, N. J. MIRIAM H. DETTELBACH 2S06 Monument Avenue, Richmond, Va. GRACE R. DICKINSON 36 Lafayette Drive, Port Chester, N. Y. Photographs by Gustave Lorey [46] DOROTHY M. DODD 27 State Street, East Orange, N. J. ALICE W. DOLE 24 W. Emerson Street, Melrose, Mass. ELIZABETH B. DODDS 218 Hill Street, Xenia, O. ELIZABETH N. DONOVAN 15 Paul Street, Newton Center, Mass. [47] Photographs by Gustave Lorey KATHERINB DRAKE 1005 West 6th Street, Austin, Tex. DOROTHY W. DRIGOS 100 Connecticut Boulevard, East Hartford, Conn. RUTH L. DRAKE 249 North Washington Street, Delaware, O. ELIZABETH W. EAST 11 Robinwood Avenue, Boston, Mass. Photographs by Gustave Lorey [48] HELEN C. EBERSBACH Lincoln Hill, Pomeroy, O. ANNA A. EMERY 284 Kenilworth Avenue, Elmhurst, 111. MADELEINE EDWARDS 42 Woodland Avenue, Glen Ridge, N. J. RUTH M. ERB 1338 Main Street, Buffalo, N. T. [49] Photographs by Gustave Lorey LOUISE M. ERNST 2540 Fairmont Boulevard, Cleveland Heights, O. ADELAIDE I. EWING !131 Armstrong Street, Honolulu, T. H. BARBARA ESTES 715 AVestford Street, Lowell, Mass. ANNE E. FAIRCHILD 636 Shepard Avenue, Milwaukee, Wis. Photographs by Gustave Lorey [50] DOROTHY FISHEL 6 Wedgewood Apts., Nashville, Tenn. WINIFRED E. FLETCHER 219 Oak Street, Butler, Pa. ELSIE C. FLEISCHNER 290 Vista Avenue, Northampton, Mass. HELEN L. FLUHRER 75 Elm Street, Oneonta, N. Y. [51 ] Photographs by Gustave Lokey EMILY B. FRAME 450 Douglass Street, Reading - Pa. GERTRUDE A. FRANKLIN 5 Woodland Road, Andover, Mass. MILDRED J. FRANK 3850 North 17th Street, Philadelphia, Pa. MYRTLE A. FREIBERG 85 Central Avenue, Orange, N. J. Photographs bx Gustave Lorey [52] LILLIAN G. FRITZ 102 Arnold Street, New Bedford, Mass. MARJORY T. GABRIEL Holman Street, Shrewsbury, Mars. MILDRED E. FROSTHOLM 10 Tomer Street, Worcester, Mass. EUGENIA M. GAGE 314 Poplar Street, Warren, Pa. [53] Photographs by Gustave Lorey KATHERINE P. GAGE Suffield School, Suffield, Conn. CAROLINE G. GARDINER 32 Larch Street, Providence, R. I. MILDRED E. GALE 114 Williams Street, Groton, N. Y. CAROLINE T. GAY Bay Park Country Club, E. Roekaway, N. Y. Photographs by Gustave Lorey [54] J. LUCILLE GENUNG 708 South 1st Street, Evansville, Incl. CONSTANCE S. GILBERT The Rectory, Sharon, Conn. WINIFRED K. GIFFEN Acushnet P. O., New Bedford, Mass. CHRISTINA M. GILLESPIE Wentworth Hall, Exeter, N. H. [55] Photographs by Gustave Lorey BEATRICE L. GOFP Wellesl ey, Mass. LYNDA I. GOODSELL American Bible House, Stamboul, 142 Constantinople, Turkey JULIA G. GOODMAN 222 Babcock Street, Brookline, Mass AGNES C. GRAHAM 1422 South 3rd Street, Louisville, Ky. Photographs by Gustave Lorey [56] REBECCA GRAHAM 91 Coolidge Street, Brookline, Mass. ROSE GREENBERGER 4 Laurel Hill Avenue, Norwich, Conn. RUTH L. GRAHAM 85 Emily Street, Crafton Sta. : Pittsburgh, Pa. GRACE M. GRIFFIN Hotel Buckminster, Boston, Mass. [57] Photographs by Gustave Lorey MARY H. GROVE R 1442 Belmont Street, Washington, D. C. HARRIET D. HAGGERSON 1706 State Street, Menominee, Mich. INA S. GWTN Scarsdale, N. T, PAULINE M. HALD 276 Dwig-ht Street, New Haven, Conn. Photographs by Gustave Lofey [58] EMILY B. HALSTED Milton Point, Rye, N. Y. DOROTHY HAMMOND Mattapoisett, Mass. HELEN L. HAMILTON 1016 Beacon Street, Newton Center, Mass. NINA M HAMMOND $39 6th Avenue, Troy, N. Y. [59] Photographs by Gustave Lorey HELEN C. HARBURGER 2375 Roxboro Road, Cleveland, O. JEANETTE N. HARRIS 101 East 49th Street. Savannah, Ga. DOROTHY HARCOURT 244 Langdon Avenue, Mt Vernon, N. Y. REBEKAH HARTE 28 West Elm Street, New Haven, Conn. Photographs by Gustave Lorey [60] KATHARINE N. HARTMAN 237 North 5th Street, Reading ' , Pa. ELIZABETH G. HAYWARD 2919 Jackson Boulevard, Sioux City, la. ELIZABETH W. HARVEY 114 The Fenway, Boston. Mass. MARGARET D. HAZEL 37 Hodg-e Avenue, Buffalo, N. T. [61 ] Photographs by Gustave Lokey MARION L. HEMINWAY 71 East 3rd Street, Corning ' , N. Y. ALICE C. HILL 284 Dean Road, Brookline, Mass. ALICE I. HICKEY Lehigh University, Bethlehem, Pa. DOROTHY HIRSHBERG 64 Yerndale Street, Brookline, Mass. Photographs by Gustave Lorey [62] MARY P. HOFFMAN 621 Broad Street, E. .Weymouth, Mass. GERTRUDE M. HOLMES 100 Orange Avenue, Irving-ton, N. J. RUTH HOFFMAN 603 Hoffman Street, Elmira, N. Y. GERTRUDE R. HOSKIN 1302 Sheridan Road, Menominee, Mich. [63] Plwtograplis by Gustave Lorey ELIZABETH W. HOWE Hampton Institute, Hampton, Va. DOROTHY HUNTING 7 Strathallan Pk., Rochester, N. Y. EMILY E. HULICK 138 Parker Avenue, Easton, Pa. KATHARINE HUSSEY 19 Lenwood Street, Cliftondale, Mass. Photographs by Gustave Lorey [64] CAROLINE G. JOHNSON 1709 M Street., N. W., Washington, D. C. JANET L. JOHNSTON 250 South 1st Street, Philadelphia, Pa. MARY F. JOHNSON 326 Clinton Street, Brooklyn, N. Y. CHRISTIANA O. JONES 1S28 I Street, N. W., Washington, D. C. [65] Photographs by Gustave Lokev HELEN W. JONES Hotel Glaslyn, Atlantic City, N. J. MARGARET KEISTER 1526 North 2nd Street, Harrisburg, Pa. GERTRUDE JOY 440 West 8th Street, Plainfield, N. J. ELIZABETH W. H. KELLER 510 Monroe Avenue, Scranton, Pa. Photographs by Gusta e Lorey [66] ELIZABETH KIP 210 Aycrigg ' Avenue, Passaic, N. J. CAROLYN I. KITTINGER 234 Depew Avenue, Buffalo, N. Y. ELIZABETH M. KIPP Oak Hill Road, Ossining, N. Y. ANNE H. KNIGHT 1319 Quarrier Street, Charleston, W. Va. r 67] Photographs by Gustave Lorey ANNA HELEN LAND 180 Washington Street Norwich, Conn. DOROTHY M. LATHROP 126 Gates Avenue, Brooklyn, N. Y. MARGARET LANE 19 Oxford Street, Cambridge, Mass. MARTHA LAUBACH Cambridge, N. Y. Photographs by Gustave Lorey [68 1 DOROTHE M. LEONARD 4641 Malder Street, Chicago, 111. SEGRID E. LINDBECK Lake Shore Farms, Fluvanna, N . Y. HELEN C. LEVINE 100 Overlook Road, New Rochelle, N. Y. CHARLOTTE LINDEMAN 885 Summit Avenue, Milwaukee, Wis. [69] Photographs by Gustave Lorey ISABEL LINSCOTT 15 Lincoln Avenue, AVollaston, Mass. MARY P. LITTLE 510 North King- Street, Xenia, O. FANNY S. LISTER 13929 Lake Avenue, Lakewood, O. JEANNE B. LLOYD 423 Denniston Avenue, Pittsburgh, Pa. Photographs by Gustave Lorey [70] JEAN G. LOBBETT 45 West Avenue, Rochester, N. Y-. ELEANOR LOOMIS North East, Pa. ELIZABETH P. LOCKWOOD 601 East 1st Street, Tucson, Ariz. EMELINE LOUD 11 Church Street, Hopkinton, Mass. [71 ] Photographs by Gustave Lorey EMILY LOVELL 212 2nd St., S. E., Mason City, la. REBECCA LUTHER 46 Summit Avenue, Buffalo, N. Y. MARION B. LOWERRE 347 Amity Street, Flushing-, N. Y. EMELINE H. LYNCH 135 Main Street, Olyphant, Pa. Photographs by Gustave Lorey [72] HARRIET LYON Shirley Center, Mass. MARGARET A. McGEE 2005 Jerome Place, Helena, Mont. CATHERINE McGEARY Bernardsville, N. J. anna s. molester 3917 Cliff Road, Birmingham, Ala. [ 73} Photographs by Gustave Lorey MART MALLORY New Milford, Conn. KATHARINE M. MARSH Woodland Road, Pittsburgh, Pa. KATHARINE MARSH Strickland Road, Cos Cob, Conn. MARTHA W. MARSHALL 63 Hawthorne Place, Montclair, N. J. Photographs by Gustave Lorey [74] HELENE T. MARTIN 3201 N. Front St., Harrisburg, Pa. MIRIAM A. MARTING 1108 South 6th Street, Ironton, O. SALLIE L. MARTIN 825 Drew Street, Lake Charles, La. AUGUSTA F. MASON 1320 Niazuma Ave., Birmingham, Ala. [75] Photographs by Gustave Lorey RUTH G. MASON 1517 East 67th Place, Chicago, 111. CLARA A. MEAD 11 Elm Street, Dobbs Ferry, N. Y. ELIZABETH I. MAXON Berlin, N. Y. ELIZABETH W. MEADE Ashton, Ind. Photographs by Gustave Lgrey 176} HULDAH R. MEANS 421 Woodland Avenue, Akron, O. DOROTHY MEIER 177 State Street, Framing-ham, Mass. MARJORIE C. MEEHAN 315 St. Paul Street, Brookline, Mass. KATHARINE C. MENZIE 167 Seneca Parkway, Rochester, N. Y. [ 77} Photographs by Gustave Lokey MARGARET L. MESMER 38 Linwood Avenue, Buffalo, N. Y. INEZ T. MICHELSON SOI West End Avenue, New York City LOUISE A. MICHELBACHER 205 West 88th Street, New York City KATHARINE S. MILLER 40 Augustine Street, Rochester, N. Y. Photographs by Gustave Lokey [78] NANCY I. MILLER 424 Maple Avenue, Edgewood, Pittsburgh, Pa. CONTENT MINER 276 Blackstone Boulevard, Providence, R. I. MARY H. MILLS 5250 Market Street, Philadelphia, Pa. HELEN I. MINER 2641 East Jefferson Avenue Detroit, Mich. [79] Photographs by Gustave Lorey DARREL E. MORROW 740 Irving ' Avenue Swissvale, Pittsburgh, Pa. BEATRICE F. MOSHIER 245 Vassar Street, Rochester, N. Y. HELEN MORTON 1374 Bryden Road, Columbus, O. ELEANOR C. T. MOSS Johnsville, Pa. Photographs by Gustave Lorey [80] ' a 2 ..:, t t ' ® i fc Am . ' ' ■ - -1 l m BPI ' : . ' ■ . . ■ 1 ji fh ■ IB jfl V r- YONE MURAYAMA 14 Yachigashiramachi, Hakodato, Japan EDITH M. NICHOLS 508 June Street, Fall River, Mass. TERUKO NAKAMURA R. F. D. 1, Holden, Mass. RACHEL A. NILES 74 Lincoln Avenue, Carbondale, Pa. [81] Photographs by Gustave LoitEY LUCILLE C. NORRIS Drawer 257, Houston, Tex. ELEANOR B. NOYES 33 Pleasant Street, Leicester, Mass. E. L. AMABEL NORTH 59 Rhode Island Avenue, Newport, R. I. MARY A. NUSS 19 N. Franklin Street, Wilkes Barre, Pa. Photographs by Gustave Lorey [82] FRANCES E. OCKERMAN 99 Main Street, Binghamton, N. Y. JULIA S. OLDER 56 Highland Street, West Hartford, Conn. KATHARINE A. OGDEN Golf Club Road, Nashville, Tenn. ALICE M. OLLENDORF West Medway, Mass. r 83 ] Photographs by Gustave Lorry MARGARET OVERINGTON 4606 Leipen Street, Philadelphia, Pa. MARION V. PARK 455 Main Street, Stoneham, Mass. HELEN C. PAGE 440 East 3rd Street, Williamsport, Pa. ELIZABPJTH P. PARKINSON 315 South Holbrook Street, Fort Scott, Kas. Photographs bx Gustave Lorey [34] RUTH D. PARLIN 128 East Walnut Lane, Germantown, Pa. MIRIAM D. PELLETT 520 Broadway, Patterson, X. J. ALTHEA J. PEASE 1463 Beacon Street, Brookline, Mass. CATHARINE L. PENNIMAX 5588 Chamberlain Ave., St. Louis, Mo. [85] Photographs by Gustave Lorey CATHERINE M. PFINGST Valley Koad, Oak Lane, Philadelphia, Pa. PHYLLIS B. PIMM 1017 Farming-ton Avenue West Hartford, Conn. FLORENCE E. PHILLIPS 988 Memorial Drive, Cambridge, Mass. LYDIA POPE 41 Indian Hill Road, Winnetka, 111. Photographs by Gustave Lorey [86] RUTH F. POWERS Hamburg, N. T. JEWEL, M. PRATT 5100 East Jefferson Avenue, Detroit, Mich. ADELINE F. PRATT 9 Prospect Avenue, Montclair, N. J. RUTH B. PRESCOTT !12 Park Avenue, East Orange, N. J. [87] Photographs by Gustave Lorey ,■ ■Kgtra P 2 Sk % ' ■ -- :; K! M g KATHARINE L. PRIEST New Hartford, Conn. ELEANOR A. RATHBURN 20 Green Village Road, Madison, N. J. JANE QUACKENBUSH 1317 North Tejon Street Colorado Springs, Colo. ELIZABETH REBMANN McCallum Street and Allen Lane, Mt. Airy, Philadelphia, Pa. Photographs by Gustave Lorey [88] KATHERINE M. REEVE 417 Garfield Ave., Syracuse, N. T. ANNE REVERE 432 Grove Street, Westfield, N. J. RUTH REINHART 119 Harwich Road, Springfield Branch Media, Pa. MARTHA C. RICH 756 Seyburn Ave., Detroit, Mich. [89] Photographs by Gustave Lorey UNA H. RITCHIE Viper, Ky. RUTH I. ROBBINS 89 Dorset Road, Waban, Mass MART W. RITTENHOUSB 7310 Park Avenue, South, St. Petersburg, Fla. RUTH LOIS ROBERTSON Clendenin, W. Va. Photographs by Gustave Lorey BESSIE ROGERS 57 Charlotte Street, Dorchester, Mass. ANNE W. ROLLER 2011 Monument Avenue, Richmond, Va. ELIZABETH M. ROGERS 5620 Rippey Street, Pittsburgh, Pa. HARRIET L. ROSEWATER Hotel Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pa. [91] Photographs by Gustave Lorey ALICE SACHS Benton Ave., Woodmere, N. T. MIRIAM G. SCHAUB 4449 Beacon Street, Chicago, 111. : HP a jy r?i - In ■ ■ ■ ' 1 ■ «0, 1 ■  — uaWwwjBg ' ja , ; , , ;; RUTH M. SAMUELS 7 West Market Street, Bethlehem, Pa. HANNAH L. SCHMITT 2206 Jefferson Avenue, Toledo, O. Photographs by Gustave Lorey [92] SUZANNE SCHOENBERGER Fenway Hall Hotel, Cleveland, O. KATHLEEN W. SCUDDER 253 Livingston Avenue New Brunswick, N. J. MARION L. SCOTT 31 Church Street, White Plains, N. T. SUSAN K. SEARLE 31 East 49th Street, New York City [93 ] Photographs by Gustave Lorey ETHEL, SEAVER Woodland Lodge, Oakmont, Pa. ELEANOR C. SHATTUCK Jaffrey, N. H. WINIFRED SHARPE Chambersburg-, Pa. MARGARET C. SHAY 37S New Boston Road, Fall River, Mass. Photoprap!;s by Gustave Lorey [94] LUCY A. SHEA 266 Main Street, Nashua, N. H. MARY F. SIME 720 West 180th Street, New York City EUNICE R. SLLSBY Lyndonville, Vt. ELOISE C. SMITH 137 Washington Street, Norwich, Conn. [95] Photographs by Gustave Lokey ARLINE B. SKIDMORE 68 West 34th Street, Bayonne, N. J. M. PRISCILLA SMITH 85 Richardson Road Melrose Highlands, Mass. H. ELIZABETH SMITH 3161 Oak Road, Cleveland Heights, O. SYBIL G. SMITH 43 Abbott Road, Wellesley Hills, Mass. Photographs by Gustave Lorey [96] ROSALIE M. SMYTHE The Chatham, Kansas City, Mo. KATHARINE SONNEBORN 2420 Entane Place, Baltimore, Md. FRANCES S. SNYDER 133 Columbus Street, Elyria, O. MARGARET SPENCER Merriman Road, Akron, O. [97] Photographs by Gustave Lorey RACHEL SPENCER Lancaster Avenue, Lunenburg, Mass. DORIS K. STEVENSON Maple Road, East Aurora, N. Y. ELEANOR R. STACY 31 Grenada Terrace, Springfield, Mass. GRACE A. STIX 751 Greenwood Ave., Cincinnati, O. Photographs by Gustave Lorey [98] NELLE B. STOGSDALL 1075 Riverside Drive, South Bend, Ind. CAROLYN P. STDHLER Monticello, la. HELEN STOUT 683 Stuyvesant Avenue, Irvington, N. J. RUTH M. SULLIVAN 243 Paulison Avenue, Passaic, N. J. [99] Photographs by Gustave Lorey ELIZABETH SURR 520 D Street, San Bernardino, Cal. BARBARA E. SWEENY 815 North 41st Street, Philadelphia, Pa. WINIFRED A. SUTHERLAND 1154 Madison Avenue, Albany, N. Y. MABEL E. SWETT 180 Franklin Street, Newton, Mass. Photographs by Gustave Lorey [ UO] LUCY L. SYLVESTER 4 Gloucester Street, Boston, Mass. EDITH H. TARBELL 3 Walnut Avenue, Cambridge, Mass. LOUISE D. TALMAGE 104 Pierrepont St., Brooklyn, N. Y. KATHARINE L. TAYLOR 51 Rockledg-e Road, Newton Highlands, Mass. [ 101 ] Photographs by Gustave Loeey CHARLOTTE D. THERASSON 112 West 72nd Street, New York City ALICE THOMPSON 222 Lancaster St., Albany, N. Y. VIRGINIA L. THOMAS Winter Park, Fla. DORTHY BELLE THORPE 4 Ashford Ct., Allston Mass. Photographs by Gustave Lorey [ 102 ] LELIA S. TIMBERMAN 91 Hamilton Avenue, Columbus, O. FRANCES TRIMBLE 5801 5th Avenue, Pittsburgh, Pa. KATHERINE F. TRACY 136 Wallace Avenue, Buffalo, N. Y. SILKA S. ULLIAN 1238 Longfellow Avenue, Detroit, Mich. [ 103] Photographs by Gustave Lorey • ' • ' ' ' ' ■ ■m K cr ' ' : %.: ;■■. %J v. - s ' •;■■;(.; T K ' w , 1 •.•W wl AMY F. VAILL 33 Seneca Place, Upper Montclair, N. J. CONSTANCE VBLDE !1 S. 4th Street, Pekin, 111. DEBORAH L. VAILL, 61 Elmwoq ' 4, Avenue, Waterbury, Conn. A. ELIZABETH WADHA1IS 72 North Franklin Street Wilkes- Barre, Pa. Photographs by Gustave Lorey [104] ROSELLE C. WALL 1S32 Makiki Street, Honolulu, I. H. RUTH T. WALLACE 506 Broadway, Saratoga Springs, N. Y. HELEN L. WALLACE 172 Fredonia Avenue, Peoria, 111. LYDIA B. WALSH Oradell, N. J. 105 ] Photographs by Gustave Lorey KATHRYN WARD 1146 Cedar Avenue, Long- Beach, Cal. DOROTHY A. WATERMAN 4 Gardner Street, Allston, Mass WINIFRED L. WARREN 2544 Homer Mannoakd, Honolulu, I. H. JANET B. WATTLES 6 Colonial Circle, Buffalo, N. Y, Photographs by Gustave Lorey [ 106] VIRGINIA W. WEAKLEY 1442 Belmont Street, Washington, D. C. ELEANOR C. WEBSTER Channel Road, South Portland, Me. MAY A. WEBER 225 North Arlington Avenue East Orange, N. J. RUTH P. WEINBERG 390 West End Avenue, New York City [ 107] Photographs by Gustave Lorey VIRGINIA WELLINGTON 36 Pleasant Street, Arlington, Mass. E. JANE WHIGHAM 1)59 Delaware Avenue, Wilson, Pa. VIRGINIA M. WHARTON Belmont Apartments, Wilmington, Del. WIDIPRED M. WHITE SI Johns Rectory, Ogdensburg, N. Y. Photographs by Gustave Lorey r 108] KATHERINE WHITEHEAD 1734 I St., Washing-ton, D. C. ANNA G. WILCOX 115 Daris Avenue West New Brighton, N. Y. RUTH H. WILD 4522 North Robey Street, Chicago, 111. HELEN WILCOX 658 Colony Street, Meriden, Conn. [ 109] Plwtographs by Gustave Lorey NANETTE WILE 603 E. Main Street, Lexington, Ky. DORIS E. WILSON 34 13th Street, Lowell, Mass. HOPE WILMARTH 79 Glenwood Street, Maiden, Mass. HELEN R. WILSON 4 Crystal Avenue, Derry, N. H. Photographs by Gustave Lorey [110] MARJORIE G. WILSON 396 Ward Street, Newton Center, Mass. ELEANOR C. WOLFE 41 West 70th Street, New York, N. Y. KATHRYN R. WILT 112 S. Beaver Street, York, Pa. MARGARET C. WOOD 317 West Decatur Street, Decatur, 111. [ HI ] Photographs by Gustave Lobey JEAN WOOL VERTON 124 West State Street, Trenton, N. J. Abbtttonal Member EVELYxNT COLE Rome, Ga. ARPINE MARDIGUIAN Constantinople, Turkey [ 112] Sovmtx ffltmbm of 1926 ARMSTRONG, HARRIET, H 119 E. Dudley Ave., Westfield, N. J. BARNES, HELEN M 292 Central St., Saugus, Mass. BEERMAN, SADIE M 42 Bradstreet Ave., Revere, Mass. BEHRENS, EDITH 272 W. 90th St., New York, N. Y. BOOTH, MARGARET S 331 Cambridge Ave., Milwaukee, Wis. BOWMAN, EUNICE P 228 Alden Ave., Westville, Conn. BREEN, CAROLYN L 192 Parkway, Winchester, Mass. BUCHMAN, DOROTHY M. E 629 3rd Ave. N., Troy, N. Y. BURRELL, ANNE P 603 Garden St., Little Falls, N. Y. BURTON, ALICE B Wellesley, Mass. CASPARI, FLORENCE L 4060 Westminster PL, St. Louis, Mo. CHASE, MARJORIE 2189 Northampton St., Holyoke, Mass. CHILDS, DOROTHY Litchfield, Conn. CIRCLE, GRACE 174 71st St., Brooklyn, N. Y. COMISKEY, M. ESTHER Wellesley, Mass. COOK, NINAH MAY H 5339 Knox St., Germantown, Pa. COVILLE, MARION W 138 W. Main St., Oneida, N. Y. DALTON, MADOLON L 72 Addington Rd., Brookline, Mass. DANNER, LOIS E 47 Walnut St., Montclair, N. J. DINSMORE, DOROTHY M 27 State St., East Orange, N. j. EARLY, EDNA 93 Washington St., Newton Lower Falls, Mass. EASTON, KATE V. A Louden Rd., Albany, N. Y. EBY, HELEN I Newport, Pa. FARQUHAR, ELIZABETH J 125 Stratford Ave., Garden City, N. Y. FELDMAN, LILLIAN C 34 Gardner St., Chelsea, Mass. FISTER, HORTENSE 17 Walnut St., Milford, Mass. GREEN, MARY H 204 St. Clair St., Portland, Ore. GUCKER, CAROLINE F 3420 Hamilton St., Philadelphia, Pa. GUNNISON, ELSA 79 Argyle St., Brooklyn, N. Y. [113] HACKENHEIMER, RUTH M 676 Lafayette Ave., Buffalo, N. Y. HALL, DOROTHY M 985 Farmington Ave., West Hartford, Conn. HALL, MIRIAM A Hampden, Me. HAMM, MARIE J 671 Cable Ave., St. Paul, Minn. HAMM, THEODORA E 671 Cable Ave., St. Paul, Minn. HARTMANN, DOROTHY M 755 Lincoln Ave., Winnetka, 111. HERRING, IMOGENE H Amarillo, Tex. HONNOLD, MARY J 7220 Sheridan Rd., Chicago, II!. HOWARD, MARION C 32 Buena Vista Drive, Hastings-on-Hudson, N. Y. HOWELL, KATHERINE 76 N. Crest Rd., Chattanoga, Tenn. HOWLAND, M. GLADYS 16 Beeching St., Worcester, Mass. HUNNER, ISABELLA S 2305 St. Paul St., Baltimore, Md. JUDGE, ELEANOR 306 Highland Ave., Waterbury, Conn. KIERNAN, ISOBEL 22 E. 47th St., New York, N. Y. KOHN, IRMA E 1428 Ansel Rd., Cleveland, O. LADD, T. MARION Exeter School, Slocurn, R. I. LITCHFORD, ANN 909 W. Grace St., Richmond, Va. LOESER, DOROTHEA F 105 McKinley Ave., New Haven, Conn. LOGEMAN, CHARLOTTE H 595 Park PI., Milwaukee, Wis. McCANDLESS, ELIZABETH L Leiiiia St, Honolulu, Hawaii xMARTIN, MARY LEE 110 33rd Ave. N, Nashville, Tenn. MAYER, SUSAN T 129 E. 69th St., New York, N. Y. MEAN Y, HELEN Ridge St, Greenwich, Conn. MESSER, ELLEN C 1236 Federal Ave, Seattle, Wash. MOENCH, HENRIETTA A 100 Main St, Towanda, N. Y. MOORE, GRACE M 108 S. Surrey Pi, Atlantic City, N. J. MOTT-SMITH, CONSTANCE T 1 Bedford Rd, Schenectady, N. Y. MUNROE, MARION H 5503 Baywood St, Pittsburgh, Pa. NATHAN, ELIZABETH K 530 Woodland Ave, Plainfield, N. J. NORTON, RUTH V 524 Elm St, Reading, Pa. OLEVSON, DOROTHY R 146 Prospect St, Providence, R. I. PALMER, SYBIL C 142 Broad St, Norwich, Conn. [114] PEYDEN, STELLA A 515 Lovett Blvd., Houston, Tex. PERRY, ELEANOR G Wellesley, Mass. PRATT, DRUSILLA M 86 Aherfoyle Rd., Highland Park, New Rochelle, N. Y. PROCTOR, MARY H 2500 Observatory Rd., Cincinnati, O. PUTNAM, MARCIA L 149 Owen Ave., Detroit, Mich. RAY, ROSALIND H 59 N. Arlington Ave., East Orange, N. J. ROBBINS, ELIZABETH P 114 Somerset St., Bangor, Me. RODRIGUEZ, REGALADA P. O. Box 256, San Juan, P. R. SABINE, HELEN M 560 E. Philadelphia Ave., Detroit, Mich. SCHEFFLER, JUNE A 8 Stockton St., Princeton, N. J. SHAFER, FLORENCE .15 E. Downing St., Denver, Colo. SHERWIN, ELEANOR M 885 Park Ave., New York, N. Y. SHOFF, ELIZABETH C 110 Freeport Rd., Tarentum, Pa. SHORTT, ELEANOR 4528 Ross Ave., Dallas, Tex. SIMPSON, MARGARET H 31 Highland Ave., Bangor, Me. SIMS, EDITH E 22 Schofield Ave., Webster, Mass. SINDELAR, RUTH 1 328 Sanford Ave., Flushing, L. I. SORGE, RUTH A 4235 Avery Ave., Detroit, Mich. STILZ, ELEANOR E 228 Harvey St., Germantown, Pa. STRAIGHT, VIRGINIA H 20 Prospect Ave., Montclair, N. J. TAYLOR, HENRIETTA N 5 Plaza St., Brooklyn, N. Y. THOMAS, ELEANOR H 346 Park St., Upper Montclair, N. J. THOMPSON, MARJORIE 1083 Farmington Ave., West Hartford, Conn. TORRENCE, MARY ELIZABETH Conestoga Rd., Berwyn, Pa. TROUP, EVELYN 40 W. Balcom St., Buffalo, N. Y. WATKINS, HILDA G Honolulu, Hawaii WATSON, ALICE M Mt. Hermon, Mass. WELLS, E. FRANCES 156 Albany Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. WENTWORTH, MARY E 5805 5th Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. WHITE, DOROTHY C 5525 Dunmoyle St., Pittsburgh, Pa. WHITING, ELIZABETH D Pine Orchard, Conn. WICKERSHAM, RUTH 237 Poplar Ave., Woodbury, N. J. WILKINS, PHYLLIS C Presque Isle, Me. WOODLING, EDWINA 302 Prospect Ave., Cranford, N. J. WOOLDRIDGE, LAURA D ' ORSAY 1619 Louisiana St., Little Rock, Ark. r H5 J Class of 1926 3fa 1923 Officers H. Elizabeth Smith Virgina Wellington Lorna Brown Elizabeth Howe Mary Mills Elizabeth Anderson Nina May Cook Phyllis Pimm Theodora Ham Helen Bassett Mabel Swett Virginia Thomas 1 ( ■ President Vice President Recording Secretary Corresponding Secretary Treasurer Executive Board Factotums Song Leader [116] Class of 1926 M 1924 Officers Phyllis B. Pimm Rebecca Chalmers Dorothy Butler Charlotte F. Denny Marion B. Lowerre Mayr H. Mills Mabel E. Swett Virginia Wellington Helen Scudder Helen Bassett ' Lorna C. Brown . . . President Vice President Recording Secretary Corresponding Secretary Treasurer Executive Board Factotums Song Leader i 117] Class of 1926 Helen P. Bassett Lorna C. Brown . Man ' W. Rittenhouse Caroline G. Johnson Marion B. Lowerre Marjory T. Gabriel Catharine M. PfingstA F. Katherine Tracy ' Suzanne Schoenberger Augusta F. Mason Fanny S. Lister 3n 1925 Officers President Vice President Recording Secretary Corresponding Secretary Treasurer Executive Board Factotums Song Leader [ 118] Elizabeth Howe Suzanne Schoenberger Frances G. Bates Marjory T. Gabriel Ruth B. Prescott Caroline G. Johnson Margaret Overington Mabel E. Swett Mary H. Grover j Darrel E. Morrow I (£ias of 1926 3ta 1926 Officers P resident Vice President Recording Secretary Corresponding Secretary Treasurer Executive Board Factotums [ 119] Commencement program JUNE PLAY JUNE 18 GARDEN PARTY JUNE 19 JUNE PLAY JUNE 19 BACCALAUREATE SUNDAY JUNE 20 SPEAKER, REV. RICHARD ROBERTS OF MONTREAL PRESIDENT ' S RECEPTION JUNE 21 COMMENCEMENT JUNE 22 SPEAKER, PROF. CHAUNCEY TINKER OF YALE CLASS SUPPER , JUNE 22 MIDNIGHT STEP SINGING JUNE 22 ALUMNAE DAY JUNE 23 r 1201 § pprim£KB of iEttijltaif (Eompnfltttim H cfjotce collection culleb from tfje literature of ttje ages; to trace tfje progress; of fjuman tfjougfjt anb expression iprofuselp Sllustrateb anb nnoteb [ 121 ] jflebtebal Chronicle of Jfrestfjman Siti ' sbta It befell in the days of Uther Pendragon when he was king, and so reigned, that there was a mighty people come unto the land. Then stood the realm in great jeop- ardy, for this was a lusty company of four hundred and thirty goodly knights, young, but great in prowess and in deeds of marvel. At the same time there came into the land a wondrous beast, The Blue Dragon, of which, peradventure, ye have cognizance, or have heard in many tales. And such was the strange nature of this beast that it devoured not the good folk of the land but was instead eaten of by the fellowship of the land. Yet mysteriously this beast throve and is strong in life today. The young knights, fresh and unproven in battle, thought only of worship they might win in combat. They dressed their shields to the giants of the land, so eager were they for fame and prowess. Here may I say with him who Chronicled the deeds of Arthur that often have I seen the old proved knights rebuked and slain by them that were but young beginners. for me forthynketh that those young and lusty knights [122] iri iii offered defeat to the proved and valiant knights in that mighty battle, hight The Fresh- man-Sophomore Debate. For prize, the victors did gain a shimmering vessel of finest silver, covered with mystic writ, and lined with purest gold. Now the knights who were proven and of high repute were sore displeased that the tender knights, new in arms, had made them fall. And Field Day, when there was a great tournament, with trials at arms and jousting, these knights fought valiantly to regain their honor, and though the blood fell from them fast, they did battle to the uttermost. They did then deal such buffets that the young knights, hight Freshmen, were unhorsed and defeated. So the trophies went all, I ween, to the old knights, hight Sophomores. It befell in that marvelous year that many minstrels and magicians came to the court to bring cheer, and there was merry welcome. The great bard of the snow-white North came then, hight Robert Frost, and the seer of the mighty monastery at New Haven, hight William Rose Benet. From far off shores came the fabulous maiden, la belle Cecile Sorel. The young knights made merry in the ways of chivalry, and per- adventure, many were the scenes- — played at court — by the seasoned knights and some- times the new ones. A scene of great cheer was the Crimson Coconut, and when the snow covered the ground and the knights joined the ladies in the great hall, divers players gave the Wasp, The Twelve-Pound Look, Will O ' the Wisp. But the mer- riest of all was Treasure Island, which the mighty performed. Now it befell in this marvelous year that men talked in divers tongues. For some did use the language of the Norwegians, and others talked a strange talk, hight Esper- anto. But this was a year when the power of talking was of great import, for the noblest knights of the land went forth in verbal combat, hight debate, against the Knights from the land of Smith — who were unhorsed and defeated, but our knights suffered buffeting and defeat from the people of Vassar. Men do remember these knights that they were courteous, true and faithful ; others that they suffered many defeats and yet flourished. Yet me thynkyth I remember them for their apparel, which was passing strange. For their skirts fell [ 123] around their ankles, and some let their hair grow long; for they thought that no man would ever cut their tresses short. Little did these young Knights know as time has proved. On their feet they wore sandals of leather thongs and in divers bright colors: red, green, purple and blue. These sandals hight King Tut, and they were marvelous strange. But this was a year of marvels, as men often have told. Now these new comers to the land, the lusty knights of the number of four hundred and thirty, were free in spirit, and right glad were they when the governance was changed and made free by the destruction of the stinking beast, hight Daytime Registration. Stress _ [124] That time was perdy a time of wonders and great portent for there was set aside a company whose chief thought was minstrelsy, for as some knights dare all for love, and yet others think honor the only worship, yet these put above all the sound of the lute and the harp — and this company hight the Music Club. [ 125] year — the greatest miracle of all — of — bad — weather. When the lusty spring was comen in, came too a noble knight, and each lady thought not of her faithful knight but of this new one. And he was marvelous fair, and of surpassing beauty and he hight the Singing Highwayman. So though a plague fell on the country round about, the deadly blight hight Scarlet Fever, the young and lusty knights thought naught of it — so much were their minds full of the beauty of the strange knight. The greatest miracle of this year shall ever be remembered in men ' s minds, perdy. Knights who are young today put no faith in the miracles of that year, but the Knights who still live unslain from among the four hundred and thirty tell over and over that there was in that — hight Two — gym — cuts — on — account F 126 ] Freshmav Foolishness n jftlisK $epp ' g opijmore §tav at Wtllt lty Sept. 21 Did this day arrive back at Wellesley and straightway to the Dean of Residence, who at length did procure me a room, for which mark of regard, I, as a hitherto homeless sophomore, felt duly grateful. In the line at the Cashier ' s Office did meet with my former room-mate, who told me how the Homestead is made larger by many rooms and kitchenettes of like size, to accommodate the unwanted numbers who do seek a B. A. in the year 1926, and moreover, how that the Barn is become a dormitory splendid like unto Tower Court with rocking-chairs on the piazza, at which news I marvelled much. Oct. 15 This Saturday morning to Reading and Speaking, where the class did try for an hour to stand on one foot gracefully and say, Come down to Kew in lilac time, ah — h — h, without breathing from the outlying ribs with a Southern accent. I already begin to observe my superiority over upperclassmen untrained in speech and the art of carrying sixteen and o ne-half hours sophomore year each time that I have occasion in conversation to remark, Aha, so you want to see Dinah, do you? Like- wise is my memory becoming full, strong and elastic from my efforts to recall, for the purpose of a report, the precise twenty minutes of my daily practice. Nov.- 3 Went today to see the members of 1926 con- tinue their good record as athletes by winning third place in Field Day. The freshmen did least of all distinguish themselves, who took only fourth place. Tonight did play many games at Mah-Jong, remain- ing East Wind for six hands. Then until late at my bead-bag for mother for Christmas, and so to bed. [ 129] Nov. 25 Awaked at four this morning by unearthly shrieks of the Power House whistle, and from the window saw the western sky ablaze and heard much clamor of engines and of men. Relieved when I did learn at breakfast that not Tower Court nor the unfinished Alumnae Building had burned to the ground, but only the carpenter shop by the lake. Met with a friend, who did inform me that had the wind been in another direction, the building in another situation, and the flames less soon discovered, the fire might have spread over the entire college and have proved serious. Dec. 1 This morning saw a freshman wearing a large and circular green button, who informed me that she was forced by my class to wear it, and did further offer to teach me the words of Alma Mater, but 1 had an appointment for a marcel. Thence to the library to finish a theme, attacking the statement in the Nation that we are a languid generation. I feel right hotly in this matter, having read four Free Presses on the subject in the last News. Wellesley, deeply stirred as a body by this infamous charge, tonight did debate with a men ' s college for the first time and was beaten by Bates on the subject of recognition of Russia. Dec. 5 Went this evening to the dedication of the Alumnae Building and the concert there by the Boston Symphony Orchestra, and observed that the ventilators under the seats did make a tremendous racket. Jan. 30 Alas, the college is again in quarantine because two students did catch the scarlet fever while at home in vacation. This morning betimes to the Infirmary with all my friends for permission to leave the village of Wellesley after midyears, but was forbidden to go to Dartmouth, even upon pledging my honor not once to enter a crowded church during my absence. Tonight heard tell of an inspired girl who did receive permission to go to Hanover, New Hampshire, a remote village with a quan- tity of fresh air and no necessary association with small children. To my own chamber to weep upon my Bible notes. Feb. 8 After my 9.40 to the vill., where I found that commutation tickets have advanced from two thirty-one a book to two seventy-eight. Thence, very low, to the book-store, and there did spend the rest of my allowance upon a required book for [ 130 Reading and Speaking. Do hold it great injustice to be forced to pay a whole dollar and a quarter for such a volume and cannot survive so heavy an exaction save by own- ing my copy in common with the five other sophomores on our corridor. Feb. 17 This day in the snow to show my class spirit at the Winter Carnival, and ' 26 for once did win. This languid generation does at present dis- cuss, beside the prehistoric village senior question, exceeding great plans for inter-collegiate athletics, a Wellesley Club in Boston, and new stencils with holes that really fit the Wellesley note- book. Such battles of words, despite the favor- able reception of the Bok Peace Plan, do seem to point toward what the student body might be- come if ever moved to the depths by some really stupendous moral issue. April 11 Coming out from town did meet with seven of my best friends with their hair bobbed. Am sorely perplexed with thought of the exceeding pains I underwent in letting mine grow out that I might be in the fashion. April 26 This evening took my brave purple-tasselled program and my freshman to Alumnae Hall, where the sophomores did at last hold a prom, to acquaint the freshmen with the people they have known since last November. I noted the deal of applause wherewith was greeted the announcement of late permission until ten-thirty. May 31 Tree Day. Home and to bed greatly troubled in mind for that the sopho- mores at last step-singing this night might not, for forcible hindrance, move up to the junior steps. Do fear this is an unfavorable omen for that new and easily corrected Bible exam, wherein one does fail if one answers not the first question correctly. I can only hope that my year as a down-trodden sophomore is come to a fair end. [ 131 ] 3 Map 3t WtlhfAt? With fl Critical opfmtore (With Apologies to Dick Steele and the Literary Supplement) Of all annoyances that I have ever tolerated there is none that affects my temper so much as to find, on waking, that the mattress has slipped off from the cot. I cannot see a cot, even masked with chintz and cushions, without feeling contempt for it as a niggardly half slice of bed. But when it is dishevelled, its physiognomy resembling billows, its sagging springs and wooden shanks discovered, the mattress half on the floor, and myself entangled in the whole, it is impossible to describe the helpless rage that rises from such a prospect. A dismantled cot, to one who lies upon it, is, I think, the most monstrous creation of the space-saving fanatics of the present day. I retired early last night, and, my sleep having been restless, after the excitement of the previous day ' s examination, I dreamed that an elephant covered with gelatin 132 1 paper had taken the place of the moon, and that Milton ' s fallen angels were hanging airily on to the parachute of the Shenandoah, so that my mattress was in an unusually precarious position. What was my dismay, when I found, after I had extricated myself, that the half-past seven bell had already rung and that it was not my roommate ' s snore which had set me slipping a few inches further some minutes before. And so, not of my own accord, but rather by virtue of the Unconquerable and Eternal Forces of Gravity, I got out of the wrong side of the bed. My choler was indeed increased when my room-mate came in a few moments later and put on a raucous jazz record, in which the saxophone, mugient as a wounded bull, bellowed syncopated chromatics. Partly to account for the lack of taste I show for popular music, and partly because I find it too difficult to play, I have always fostered the belief that I had a sensitive ear. Indeed is it not Tully who says: Excusare viti a virtutes facimus — To excuse our vices we make them virtues? It was then, I fear with a rather ungracious manner that I flounced out of the room to advance upon my On the way down to Founders Hall, I was con- strained to walk upon the boardwalk. Then it occurred to me that when I had become famous I should be- queath to the College an extra board for the board- walks, so that two persons, be they students or faculty, might ambulate comfortably without imminent danger of knocking each other (attracted by gravity), or of pitching into the grassy slope or the macadam road. I noticed, too, on the cement walk, the great number of hairpins that were scattered about — humped wire hairpins, bone hairpins, some new, some rusty. Indeed, were I a freshman in these parts, I might well trace my way to class by a path of hairpins. I recall, more- over, that last year one teacher, prompted by an aes- thetic desire to make the college beautiful, urged students to weed out the hairpins from the path. To such a degree was this word to the wise sufficient that twice a day public-spirited girls would return home with handfuls, picked like the red bush-berries on the way from class. [ 133 ] Chapel having just started, I felt the urge to enter. But strengthened by a fear of being conspicuous by my presence, a hatred for hymns, and the philosophic disbelief which I had acquired from Descartes and Hume, I proceeded, stopping only before the tree that blooms with the strange fruit of placards, outside the Administration Build- ing. By the time chapel was out the players in Music Hall were starting. Through the open windows came a blur of sound. Above the wheeze of an organ, the scrape of a violin, the nasal tang of staccato scales, Grainger ' s Country Gardens, the ever popular Prelude, and the loathsome Liszt Liebestraume, blurted forth their conglom- eration of sound on pianos that, the Music Department solemnly assured us, were changed every three years. But words alone can not assure one of the youth of a n k 5 it ' -= L=r J i S pianoforte ; its action betrays its submission to the toll of years. As the music poured out, I thought that some day I should draw a picture of Music Hall with such crooked lines around it as the cartoonists use to show that an object quivers. For the rest of the morning I progressed from class to class, my interest waxing or waning according as I was awakened from my usual lethargy by being called upon to recite, or when I was permitted calmly to observe the discomfiture or pleasure of other virgins going through the same process. It always annoys me to be called upon, disturbs, as it were, my train of thought and the sketching in my note-book, for I feel that, having prepared my lesson, my task is done, and that whether I speak or not should be a matter of my own volition. However, never having been able to find anyone who agreed with me in regard to this particularity, I presume that I must either change my view or my instructors. [134] Filling the time with like observations I waded into the Slough of Classes until my eleven-forty, and then I wallowed in it. I know of no evil under the sun so great as that of eleven-forty classes, and yet there is no evil more common. There is a plastic quality about classes of that period that gives each minute the durability that Darwin attributes to the Biblical Seven Days. Hunger, as the philosopher La Mettrie tells us, plays great havoc with our materialistic anatomies, making for ferocity, blunting the intelligence, and transferring the desires of the soul to those of the flesh. Psychologists have assured us, moreover, that our lack of attention is only natural, since the greater the attention we give to one object, the less is our awareness of all others. And was it not Byron, indeed, who said, The tocsin of the soul, the dinner-bell ! However strident may be the modulations of the bell from the original key, there is indeed a music about it, more harmonious to my ears than that of the angels. We reached the dining-hall at twelve thirty-three and had the good fortune to be waited upon by twelve fifty-three. Monday ' s broth has, to be sure, a significancy of its own, especially when it is served on Wednesday ; indeed its flavor is not a little added to. And Tuesday ' s biscuit ! Nay, but our mess of pottage is always a veritable review of reviews, transcribed from the originality of a week ' s menu. Here indeed are relics of the past, antiquities, in sooth. The redeeming feature was hard sauce on the dessert which, being last, left me with a more lyrical impression of my repast. Without time for proper digestion, which is, Professor MacDougall tells us, an essential for high-level attention, I hurried to my one-forty class, not a little troubled by the expectation of a roll-call. To those unacquainted with this technicality let me I 135] say that a roll-call is the spy-glass of faculty, who are capable of an odd humor that gives them an inclination to discover whether the monstrous lessons they are guilty of assigning, have been faithfully perused. It has been a common observation of mine that whenever I neglect to prepare a lesson, a roll-call is inevitable — forsooth, my intui- tion is like the weather-cock which, as says Horace, de immenti tempestati admonet. Indeed, it has been a matter of conscience with me whether it were just for me thus to shamelessly add to the confusion of so large a number of wenches by not preparing my lessons, and therefore assuring the class of a roll-call. I speculated somewhat as to the advisability of handing in a blank page or nothing at all, but came finally to the decision that to contribute further to the instructor ' s store of fuel was useless. In the middle of the period a contagion of yawning forced the Professor to suggest that the apertures be allowed to admit more air. Imme diately we put on our coats. The Professor, not being in a position to appreciate the draught, seemed surprised. The News was of little excellence that week, so that I confined my attention to opening and shutting my note-book, the clasps of which make a sound curiously resembling that of a popgun, the thunder of which contributed not a little to the distraction of the class. The remaining hours of the afternoon and evening were spent in preparing, with more or less diligence, for the morrow ' s lessons. At twelve-thirty o ' clock, however, I indulged in a game of bridge that so sharpened my wits that I was enabled to bring my studies to an end at two o ' clock. Nevertheless, I could not help reflecting how endless is the task of the student, and how unbending the will of the teacher. But Plutarch says very finely that a man should not allow himself to hate even his enemies, because, says he, if you indulge this passion on some occasions, it will rise of itself in others. And I might here observe that this is likewise related to us who, driven up the stony path to knowledge, must be ever driven by the whip of the master until we reach the top — somehow. [ 136] ®fje Sumor J9ear of 9 Jfflto= Victorian JWatben To find how it feels to be a junior, what titilating thrills and joyous new experi- ences await one who has reached that advanced stage of civilization, was the task I set myself that year at Wellesley. Yet when I returned to dear Alma Mater I found it much the same except that in this garden of girls there were many new buds, who were Our Little Sisters, and I missed the flower faces of a number of my classmates, so many of whom had entered into the holy bonds of matrimony. Even into this sequestered nook soon came rumblings of the great world outside. The country, of which we are a small though yet important unit, was choosing a new president. So within our campus arose groups of Republican, Democratic, yes, even LaFollette partisans. On November first great Bedlam itself was let loose in all its confusion under the pretext of a grand political rally. All the men who would be president were there to tell us their virtues, albeit the illustrious candidates bore sur- prising resemblance to some girls I have seen within the confines of the campus. On the night of the election itself as many as were enthusiastic stayed up until late in the night, after eleven, in point of fact, awaiting the reports as given out at fair and beloved Alumnae Hall. [139] Not a full month had passed in which to recuperate from this excitement when fire, the red demon, the remorseless scourge, blazed itself into the peaceful darkness of the night of the firemen ' s ball. I was awakened from my beauty sleeep by much excite- ment, for it was said that Cazenove Hall was burning down. The building looked undamaged, although it smoked awfully. Shockingly many were the young ladies whose attire was no more than they were accustomed to wear to fire drills, which, as is well known, is embarrassingly scant when worn out of doors. Christmas vacation soon came and went. The parting from dear Wellesley seemed mercifully short, but we were cheered by the thought that barely two weeks away came mid-year examinations, which our dear teachers have always told us we ought to hail with delight. In the midst of our examinations the sun went into eclipse. However seemingly, it could not bear entirely to hide its face from Wellesley, and so those who really passionately desired to view the uncommon phenomenon of a total eclipse rose at an unheard-of early hour, and venturing into the noxious night air, travelled by train all the way to New London in the State of Connecticut. Neverthe- less the girls were so loath to give up this day as a holiday from mid-year examinations that they went so far as to petition against it. At last came the great day of JUNIOR PROM for which I have endured two and a half weary years of college — and all ! did I not feel well repaid for the effort. So gay were the dresses, so good looking the men, and the hall itself such a spectacle to admire that it is said that one fair maiden fainted at the very beauty of it all. Well might we quote Byron with slight modifications: There was a sound of revelry by night, And our Alumnae Hall had gathered then Her Juniors for their promenade, and bright The lights shone on the Juniors and their men. Five hundred hearts beat happily; and when Music arose with its so rythmic swell, Keen eyes outside looked in, then looked again, And all went merry as a marriage bell, And all too soon late midnight strikes the closing knell. ' ' r Hoi But after a week of classes had served to calm us we were all greatly shaken by earthquake. To think that New England, where there have been no tremors recorded for decades, should tremble in an earthquake just while we are going to college! Some unfortunates, however, missed the thrilling experience accompanied, it is true, by a few minutes of acute terror. Those who were dancing in Alumnae Hall knew no disturbance, not even one so slight as might be caused by the jogging of a freight train. That spring witnessed what is ruefully whispered was the last original operetta that Wellesley is ever to give. Well was it entitled A Knight in Poverty, for all Wellesley maidens were working hard and diligently for money. Every one of us felt the unquestioned need of raising money for the sake of a beauteous and commodious new dormitory. It is even murmured, although I can not vouch how truly, that one ingenious damsel offered to swallow a gold fish if she were promised remuneration for the feat. Food, soap, can openers, etc., were all sold to swell the fast growing fund. But even if it were semi-centennial year for the college it was Junior for the illustrious class of 1926. From our midst were selected the all college officers, which had always heretofore seemed so far above us. We held a class meeting that was actually well attended to elect our honorable senior officers and honorary member. The latter highly valued distinction we withheld from the Prince of Wales. Only a very [141] small committee knew the results, so secret were they kept that none might know whom the hand of fate had, by means of fragile bits of paper, pointed out for the privileges and duties of leadership. On May Day night a conveyance commonly called a police patrol drove up to the assembled multitudes at Step Singing. You can well imagine the perturbation of the guiltless maidens, but it proved to be only a hoax ingeniously devised to make impressive our announcement of officers. Tree Day, however, while it lacked its usual splendour, gained in simplicity and old-fashioned charm, two virtues which have been too much overlooked by our generation, I fear. Much, in- cluding the beauteous complexities of Tree Day, had to be foregone in order that the Pageant might be a thing of beauty and a joy forever. Ah, that I might worthily describe that wondrous galaxy of resplendent scenes. But there are not enough adjectives in the language, nor yet enough nouns, pronouns, verbs, adverbs, prepositions, conjunctions and interjections. Suffice it to say that some favoured member of our class were honored with the priceless privilege of appearing in its seven performances. Then, too, there was the day set aside as a holiday for the fiftieth anniversary celebration. Never before have I seen, or ever expect to see, such a gorgeous array of academic gowns and so many distinguished people at one time. Only selected students were given the privelege of going into the chapel to hear the eloquence of the worthy college presidents there assembled. Many, however, crowded into Billings to hear by the miracle of radio what went on so close by, yet so inaccessibly. At last in the midst of burning heat and fiendish final examinations the period of Jolly Juniorship came to an end. ' Twas with regret I closed this episode of my life, for there went one year and when comes such another? [142] Mentor fSear Petng tfje f ournal of n WiUxaMUva — September 2S to 3fune 22 Sept. 28, Mon. Arrived at college for the first time at a reasonable date, not being urged back early on account of Math 101 or other required courses. Very strange sensation ! Evaded, thereby the annual foot test of C. A. Reception, and the coinciding struggle to remember the last name of the girl you were going to double with Sophomore year. Rumors current to the effect that the big laugh of the year is the class of 1926 in Cap and Gown. The El Table has moved into the Ad. Sept. 29, Tues. Classes began despite my constant prayer that they should be delayed, and with all their customary vigor and sprightliness. Have already experi- mented with the reputedly invaluable Mr. Fayre of the Art Dept. (Senior Art), and found him as advertised. Oct. 7, Wed. The new wing on Tower Court has begun to beguile the leisure hours of the present occupants of Tower Court. Lots of remnants of College Hall are being dug up almost daily, as reminders to the younger set of the great value of alertness in fire drills. Much could be said of the desirability of leaving relics to educate the succeeding generations. Where would we be if no one had discovered the Indian arrowheads on the Campus? Ignorant little Flappers! Oct. 8, Thurs. It seems some youths from Oxford are coming all the way to Wellesley to prove that the male is mightier than the female. May the best man win I Oct. 12, Tues. Have decided that all that is really necessary as a pererequisite to the History of Music course is a thorough groundwork in arithmetic. Oct. 20, Wed. I guess we showed the opposite sex where we stand on a debate. I do hope nobody ' s feelings were hurt. It was very impressive — all the internationalism and everything. [147] Oct. 23, Sat. The first of this season ' s Conferences is being held at Mt. Holyoke. They are discussing smoking and I certainly hope every one will be very discreet and courteous. Oct, 31, Sun. A terrible discussion all over the college has been raging about whether to smoke or not to smoke and where and why or how. Nov. 10, Tues. Our interested and well meaning Faculty don ' t seem to think it ' s quite nice for Wellesley girls to smoke. Miss Pendleton says she doesn ' t trust our aesthetic judgment on account of having seen someone powder, etc., in Alumnae Hall last year. I shall always sit under the balcony from now on. Nov. 12, Thurs. We ' re having a little conference of our own just now, and every one who lives in Claflin has had to distribute herself about and sleep once again on the Semi-Centennial cots. It will be lovely to get together again. Nov. 13, Fri. Barn informal occurred to-nite. I think amateur theatricals are just lovely. I just remembered that Field Day happened on the 7th, but there weren ' t enough Senior present to include it among the important data of the year. Nov. 23, Tues. The Irish Hockey Team seems to have beaten us fairly thoroughly, but they patted us on the heads and said we were nice children, so everything is all right. Dec. 11-12, Sat. Sun. Princeton Conference on the World Court when we got a chance to tell Mr. Coolidge how we thought this country ' s foreign policy ought to be conducted. (P. S. We seem to have had lots more influence than ever I thought! Didn ' t the Congress go right ahead after the way we spoke to them and ratify the World Court). Jan. 6, Wed. There ' s something too ironic about stepping off the Midnight into an exam, schedule. All exam schedules are awful and the whole period is fraught with anguish for me, so let us draw a veil at this point. [ 148] Jan. 10, Sun. The Charleston craze, which attacked the college lightly before vacation, has returned in a more virulent form. The safety of some of the older build- ings is in grave question. You ' d think the earthquake last year would have scared people enough. Jan. 23, Sat. There was a light snow storm recently, so there was a Winter Car- nival, and our little Sophomore sisters won it, which is really almost the same as though we ' d won it ourselves. Yarting has been introduced as a new sport in Wellesley. You place yourself in a tray perched atop Tower Court Hill, and pray. Someone usually picks you up at the bottom, and returns with you on the tray, as the Trojan boys used to do. This sport had best be practised in season when the Infirmary is not already overcrowded with grippe and what not. Feb. 4 Thurs. We ' re in a BLIZZARD, also exams.!!!!!! Feb. 9, Tues. It seems the house mothers in the village thought the Freshmen ought to be allowed to get a square meal once a week, and so on Saturday we are to be granted permission to return to Wellesley on the 7 :30 Train. Feb. 12 Fri. The dread reckoning.. I didn ' t know there were as many A ' s in Wellesley as all my friends seem to have gotten. Personally I like loyalty to the good old-fashioned standards — one credit more than is absolutely required by the Dean and her staff. I guess there ' ll be quite a few who wont be in classes Mon. or later. Feb. 15 Mon. We have indulged in the First of The Lectures For Seniors Only, and have come away with a feeling that James was just a regular feller, — and nature is very, very wonderful. Feb 18 Thurs. The Legenda Board had its picture taken on the Chapel steps. It is said the hymn tunes met considerable virgin soil as they assailed the ears of the bright little group. [149] March 6 Sat. The expression So ' s your old man was formally buried on this memorable occasion. No flowers by request. Mar. 10 Wed. Miss Pendelton has been living in her new residence, the erst- while Guest House, ever since Christmas vacation. March 20 Sat. Intercollegiate Debate, all about whether or not we shall be allowed to say what we really think, or not. I think it ' s so much nicer to have people be perfectly frank and outspoken with you, even though they are sometimes rather crude. I don ' t see how any one can take the other side. April 13 Tues. Have been wearing my Cap and Gown lately and people are tripping you up with hoops to show that Spring is on the way. It didn ' t come one minute too soon for my radio boots either. April 25 Sun. Every one is working on final papers already too. That shows how serious seniors really are at heart. May 1 Sat. May Day. Running down Tower Court Hill is a test of age. May 8 Sat. Now ' s the time that it really is worth while being a Senior — pro- viding you can afford a flivver and don ' t run out of gas too far from Wellesley. May 17 Mon. The seniors in the Quad are frequently seen plucking pansies, a Senior Privilege. June 4 Fri. Float night, not very different from usual but very pretty, and the mosquitoes less virulent than usual. June 5 Sat. Tree Day, Last Step — Singing Awfully Tragic. How brief is our day of glory, if any. June 10 Thurs. The gathering of the clans, also of considerable heat. Papa thinks Wellesley is pretty enough, but why don ' t they have an eighteen hole golf course ? June 19 Sat. Garden Party. So many parents about you can hardly call your soul your own. June 22 Tues. Commencement. Very solemn for three hours. Class supper, and no one ran around table that we hadn ' t had all fixed up before. A great achievement. [150] -FeTS -bte.nT Pr o blems Scale, f nm i S 00  M rr {loijs 1 . The Pi ii an of Senior Art. fead of Crew ©xflibber poofe of Cnsli t) erse Shall I, gaining, in despair Diet on a ruinous fare To make small my form by care ' Cause the others tiny are? Be it worth such great denials, Be it worth such mighty trials, All my appetites to oppose Just to wear my room mate ' s clothes? When I consider how my cash is spent, Ere half the days in this long month have flown, And that one dollar which is all I own Can ' t pay the bills which many will present, I do not weep great tears and large, I buy just what I want and say Please Charge. A sweet disorder in the dress Will soon become an awful mess. [ 158 1 ODE TO PRO Stern daughter of the voice of deans, O PRO ! If in that state you ' ve been, You ' ve learned that too much flunking means To take a cut becomes a deadly sin. THE LINE OF SIGHS One more unfortunate Wearied to death, Rashly importunate Wasting her breath, Knocking people and system She ought to think fine, Tho ' loudly she hissed ' em, She still stood in line. 1 wandered lonely as a freshman That walks and walks on hot fall days, When all at once I saw a sign This road to Mary Hemenway. I trudged along and sadly thought How many shoes must now be bought. r lo ] i§ omiet3 Heard melodies are sweet but those unheard, — Save through a pane of glass — are nought but pane. Oh would I were at Junior Prom again! — Instead of shivering out here with the herd ! What men or gods are these? what maidens loth Who smiling pass down the receiving line, Who dance and strut and preen their feathers fine And think themselves in love, or loved, or both? Where are the fuller joys of yesteryear? — The man-sized passions, — the maturer glow That we exhibited twelve months ago? It ' s strange how different time makes things appear: For those in there seem sham grown-up and staid, — Like children just pretending Promenade! Oft have I ambled through museums in town, Past many a Greek or Syrian frieze have walked, And round and around King Thothmes have I stalked Chewing my pencil with a puzzled frown, — To think a king could look like such a clown. With learned art-curators have I talked But ever by the same question been balked : How such things could be held in such renown? But out at Wellesley ' tis a different case For, seated in the dim Art Lecture Room, I draw new inspiration from the air. — Art ' s ART — due to the genius of the place As long as he draws pictures from the gloom Just so long shall I rave, — and he be Fair! [ 160] Jfamtitar ©uotattona A Compendium of Useful and Familiar Quotations from Bartlett. With Note: Chaucer — Go, little booke ! go, my little tragedie! 1926 Legenda Board. The life so short, the craft so long to lerne, Th ' assay so hard, so sharpe the conquering. To be a B. A. Up rose the sonne, and up rose Emelie.. Hockey training. His study was but litel on the Bible. A naughty sophomore. Heywood — Better to give than to take. Semi-Centennial Fund. Shakespeare — A kind Of excellent dumb discourse. Bluffing Fill all thy bones with aches. Gym . Misery acquaints a man with strange bedfellows. Freshman roommates. Is she not passing fair? Low C. We have some salt of youth in us. Even now. I cannot tell what the dickens his name is. C. A. Freshman reception. The cunning livery of hell. New gym costumes. [ 161 ] Shakespeare — I ' ll speak in a monstrous little voice. Reading and Speaking. How far that little candle throws his beams. 25 watt. Let us make an honorable retreat. ' 26 on Field Day. And thereby hangs a tale. Judiciary Cases. Eating the bitter bread of banishment. Suspension. Old father antic the law. Gray Book. Young — Tired nature ' s sweet restorer, balmy sleep. 7.15-7.30 A. M. De Montaigne — Man in sooth is a marvelous, vain, fickle and unstable Subject. Ask any junior. Hippocrates — Life is short, and the art long. Especially senior. Swift — A college joke to cure the dumps. Adonais. Smith — Everything is sweetened by risk. Railroad bridge. Butler — Really and truly — I ' ve nothing to wear. Tea Dancing. Huxley — The great end of life is not knowledge but action. Charleston triumphant. Milne — A man ' s best things are nearest him, Lie close about his feet. Galoshes. Tennyson — Break, break, break. Brok e. [ 162] Tennyson — The golden guess Is morning-star to the full round of truth. Class discussion. Browning — At the midnight, in the silence of the sleeptime. Fire-drill. W ordsworth — I wandered lonely as a cloud. Saturday afternoon in the library. I think of thee with many fears. For what may be thy lot in future years. Sentiments of Bureau of Occupations. Ten thousand saw I at a glance. Yale-Harvard game. Forty feeding like one. Late lunch. And she is thoroughly forlorn. Western Union — Broke collar bone. Sorry. Bill. That calmed her, cheered and fortified. Cake in the laundry case. ' Oh, tempt me not! ' she faintly sighed. I ' ve had 3000 calories. Bliss was it in that dawn to be alive. But more so to be asleep. My heart leaps up when I behold Father ' s name on the dotted line. Keats — Heard melodies are sweet, but those unheard are sweeter. Choir. Morris — Toil is the law of life and its best fruit. We ought to know it. Emerson — By necessity, by proclivity, and by delight, we all quote. Amen. But no more. L 163 $oetrp Unstfjacfeleb JIM ' S DICTUM ON THE HERMES OF PRAXITELES. If I had a picture like that I ' d Put it in the furnace. Who painted it? Some of these new painters you read about I ' ll bet. Why a picture like that ain ' t Even decent. I ' ll tell you what I ' d do If I had a picture like that. EXPULSION Slim White Camel Between Ivory-pale Digits; In-drawn Breath Then Garnet lips Relaxed • Gray-blue Smoke In Opalescent Spheroids Ah! [164] [JUuatraltng tljr 4Mb? nnb Jmpnrtanre of ttj? (Enlgum] WELLESLEY WEAKLY MURDER WITH INTENT TO KILL CAMPUS SCANDAL. Wellesley, April 1st. A beautiful young cat was found dead last night in the zoology ice box. The officers of the inquest have been unable to ascertain directly the cause of the death, except that it was by violence, apoplexy or chicken pox. Finger prints and claw marks point inclusively to a suspected criminal, an elderly gentleman of suspicious habits. Relatives of the dead cat, amid sobs, state the circumstances (cont. page 9, col. 13) FOR SALE— A splendid 1903 model, chintz upholstered, hairpin equipped Ford. Inquire within. MISS PEORIA BEST FIGURE IN OLYMPICS MESSAGE TO WELLESLEY. - Guest House, Nov. 6. Sitting cosily esconsed on a sofa next to Miss Peoria, America ' s champion ski-eater, the WEAKLY reporter received a mes- sage to be transmitted as a sacred trust to aspiring seniors. I keep my figure, ' ' gen- erously said Miss Peoria,, by a constant internal application of dill pickles, gher- kins, and sweet chocolate, and also by the {cont. page 97, col. l) pHOKER — guaranteed to do its work quietly and effectively. Last owner efficiently deceased. See M. E. ROBBERY The second in a series of curious rob- beries occurred last evening. There has been no clue to the missing link, sought for so long a time, and now a second link has disappeared. Mr. A. Z. Whqu- (cont. page 33, col. 33.) BILLYBOY ' S COLYUM We often wonder — now isn ' t that hu- man nature the world over that we should wonder, and if we do, that we should -do it often — well — anyway, we were wondering at the Different Sorts of Cuff Pins one finds at Wellesley. In the crowded Movie trolley to Wellesley Hills, we often ruminate jovially on Cuff Pins in general, and we gaze speculatively at those Wellesley ones in particular, which are. all that we can see of the Multitudes of Strap-Clinging Damsels who cling so. {Cont. if there is space next time, if not well ) SITUATION WANTED By Bureau of Occupations for 429 young hopefuls. One member of the present senior class is reported en- gaged and therefore off papa ' s hands. [ 165] Zablt Walk of W. C. ft. {With apologies to Mr. Shaw and his friend.) The cold gray chill of dawn. A pleasantly appointed breakfast table laid for eight. One girl, slightly frenzied in appearance, facing a running frieze of manilla cards around a water glass. Enter the gentleman, bright and early in hope of table conversation, inoffensive and eager as to manner. Gentleman biographer seats himself next to the distraught female, a W ellesley College Senior. W. C. S. (in conjunction with corn flakes) 1066 — Norman Conquest. G. B. Good morning. Pleasant day, I ' m sure. W. C. S. (eyes glued on cards). Uh . . . 1066 . . . Norman Conquest . . . G. B. (eager for opening). Indeed, and what do you think of the Norman influence on present Anglo-American civilization ? W. C. S. (absently). Don ' t think. Have a quiz at 8.40. G. B. But surely your opinion in this matter would be of utmost value, and the pub- lication of such would add infinitely to contemporary scholarship. W. C. S. (pushing back chair and collecting cards). ' Scuse. Gotta study. 1066 Norman Conquest . . . G. B. sits sadly alone, skinning bananas. Silence reigns — only the little noises of sunrise — a faint cheep, cheep on bare boughs; the dainty overhead scuffle of twin mules. In the ominous silence, the great clock ticks assuredly the minutes that were gone forever three hours and sixty-nine seconds ago. Voice (from height of one foot eleven inches above G. B. ' s head as seated). Cococoffee- ormilk. G. B. (starting brightly). Beg pardon? Voice (con exasperation). Cococoffeeormilk. G. B. (saddened by sudden truth). Tea, please. Time passes in silence. G. B. ages visibly. Bell rings. Sudden commotion. Doors slammed. Squeak of slid-down-banisters. Thundering herd enters dining room. Ten shining morning faces make for table of G. B. — three unaccompanied by stockings, four buttoning buttons down back, six staggering blindly through masses of forelock. [ 166] G. B. (hope still springing eternal). Young ladies — W. C. S. Sugar . . . Pin me up, will you . . . the would-be cream, please . . . My dear, tonight at the Copley — Sugar, please . . . Can ' t do it ; simply rushed to death. . . She ' s a fiend. . . Cold ; I hate hot cereal. . . What an idiot. . . SUGAR, plea — aa — se. G. B. — Total annihilation under table. [167] Wi)t jWobern interpretation of tfje ptfck But since the people did not know the art of casting metal at that time, the so- called ' calf was probably a piece of metal without any definite shape. The last line of the song is a toast to the successful career of Yahweh. On his way home fr om the battle, Sisera stops at the house of Jael, where she kills him with the tent pole violating the laws of hospitality. Then when the news is brot to Sisera ' s mother, she rents her clothes and tramples on her fine carpet. Thou shalt not seeth a child in its mother ' s milk. The Sumerians shaved and talked in monosyllables. Leah had watery eyes but was married with a veil on so that Isaac could not see her; Leah was probably a tribe. In the case of Jeremiah, however, he swallowed a roll, thereby gaining wisdom. A Psalmist is a poet who writes in poery. He hated the golden calves because they were not the pure and elevated affection of a spouse for her husband. He (Elijah) first preached monology. Jeremiah might not marry as a family would distract him from his preaching. No better confusion is clear. The name Yahweh may be a family name. Elijah is for the most part a myth. But he must have had a strong personality to have had such an influence. Moses ' experience with the burning bush is an example of the way he found the spark of true religion. Moses is supposed to have received the twelve commandments. The people lived by grazing. There were no human sacrifices in the Hebrew religion, and the Canaanites were very lax in this respect. The idols of the Canaanites of course showed no signs of human life. ' ' [ 168] rci)atc rt at WtUt ltp By Race and Coast. First Edition 8000 A. D. There have recently been unearthed some astounding art discoveries in what seems to have been a small community called Wellesley, Mass. Gaspero believes that the Mass refers to the church ceremony, but we believe this conjecture is far from the truth because no remains of religious art have been found. Marbell, trying evidently to be humorous, argues from the nature of the figures, that there must have been a kindergarten school at Wellesley. Stored at the time of some air raid (for what other reason would these precious works be packed away in the dark cellar of a dungeon?) they have been miraculously preserved to us. From these remains we gain an adequate idea of a very unusual art, an art that immediately arrests our attention because it is unlike any other the world has ever known. It must have been executed by artists who were under no necessity to bow to the traditions of the day: entirely original and unlimited in conception is the work of these radicals. We agree with Hamlet when he writes of them: Their work is challenging, to say the least. Unlike every other art that has ever existed, this Wellesley Art neither follows classical models nor observes nature. It must have startled the world with its exotic figures. One would like to know more about the ikongraphy from which these artists worked. Surely it was one of their own choosing. We know very little about this school. It is mentioned in no texts of the time. Who its leader was, we can only conjecture. As in the case of the Chinese artists, only initials were signed on the drawings. (On this ground, Marbell argues for a close connection between the Chinese and Wellesley schools, but we fail to see it.) One thing, however, we can state with absolute certainty: the Wellesley 203 school was divided into two distinct sections, 203-A, and 203-B. In the next chapter we shall discuss more fully the question: did 203-A break away from 203-B, or was the cleavage just the opposite? And what is even more important: were A artists ever in the B section, or vice versa? It is pretty well agreed that B must have been the later section of this school, for more of the B members were in the A section than the A in the B. [169] Figure 1 is an illustration of the characteristic work of this school. It is called, Falling for the 12.45. It represents several figures who are evidently in a great hurry. They are running down a steep incline. Note the splendid binding-line of the composition from the door-way down the incline to the top of the archaic convey- ance below. The artist understood the principle of horizontal and vertical lines: the fallen figure has horizontal lines, while the running figure is given diagonal lines which make it more active. What the hieroglyphics 12.45 meant is not known. It may be the vehicle which is departing; more likely it is some kind of athletic training in which they excelled. There is much vigor shown in the composition. Figure 1 [ 170] Figure 2 is called Hoop-rolling. We are in even more uncertainty as to what it means. Was it some kind of cruel torture in which the victim becomes hopelessly wound up in his sackcloth and stumbles over the disc or hoop he is rolling? This was for a long time accepted as the explanation, but we have a better one. In an old daily journal called the Boston American we find this statement: The lucky girl who first reaches the chapel is the first to get married. There is no doubt, then, that hoop- rolling was some archaic wedding-march. The brides run down the hill to their lovers waiting at the chapel gates; the hoop is symbolic of the wedding-ring. (Note that it is the same shape.) The lines are free and sweeping, the gesture correct. The flowing lines of the drapery are typical of the wedding gowns of the time. Figure 2 [171] 1926 g tattettc AFTER BABSON Most typical of W ellesley — Helen Bassett Most popular — Elizabeth Howe Helen Bassett Most impressive — H. Elizabeth Smith Most intelligent — Margaret Overington Best-all-around — Helen Basset Most famous — H. Elizabeth Smith Louise Corn Most personality — Elizabeth Smith Ruth Sullivan Best disposition — Katherine Menzie E. L. Amabel North Most tactful — Elizabeth Howe Noisiest — Katherine Modisette Marsh Haughtiest — Elizabeth Wadhams Tardiest — Eleanor Loomis Funniest — Elizabeth Donovan Frances Bates Busiest — Elizabeth Donovan Faculty Pest — Elizabeth Rogers Most educated — Ruth Reinhart Most highbrow — Ruth Reinhart Most sophisticated — Suzanne Schoenberger Helen Fluhrer Most temperamental — Mary Frances Hoffman Most disillusioning — Mary Frances Johnson Inez Michelson Biggest scrapper — Virginia Wellington Most radical — Miriam Marting Most attractive — Katherine McGeary Prettiest — Phyllis Pimm Most beautiful — Suzanne Schoenberger Best dresser — Suzanne Schoenberger Most past — Louise Ernst Most future — H. Elizabeth Smith Most engaged — Phyllis Pimm Most ?nasculine— Ruth Weinberg Most feminine — Augusta Mason Most S. S. G. — Gertrude Franklin Florence Phillips Most athletic — Virginia Wellington Most sentimental — Jewel Pratt Winifred Giffen Most confirmed Prom Trotter — Louise Corn Biggest conscience — Rebecca Chalmers Most artistic — Eloise Smith Most enthusiastic — Hope Wilmarth Most collegiate — Virginia We llington Rebecca Barrett [172] Hegenba ' $ ©ton Vott Most typical of Wellesley — Quarantines Most popular — Railroad Bridge Most Impressive — Ad. Building Best-all-around — Lake path Most personality — Adonais Most famous — The fire Noisiest — Quiet Hours Most helpful — Mr. Fair Faculty Pest — The smoking question Biggest bluff — The gray book Most temperamental — College clocks Most disillusioning — Dean Waite Most alert — Saturday 11.40 ' s Most radical — The infirmary Most attractive — Copley Plaza Most past — College Hall Most engaged — Tupelo Least engaged — Wellesley Alumnae. N.B. — Statistics prove it. Most athletic — Tower Court Elevator Most sentimental — Last step — singing Most confirmed prom trot — Charleston Biggest conscience — The night watchman Most artistic — Power House Most enthusiastic — Senior Prommer ' s Most collegiate — The Alumnae Most highbrow — Legenda [ 173] To Alma Mater ANNE BARRETT HUGHES Mrs. FLORA SMEALLIE WARD fa Moderato rrf fiJ ' hj-. j Jm J i i- | n a (J ' ifpT f ?pF P -p ? r r p p f p n f ■i ( To Al- ma Ma - ter, We Ilesley ' s daughters, All to - geth - er join and sing-. ( Thro ' all her wealth of wood and wa - ters, Let your hap- pyvoic-es ring. 2 (We ' ll sing her prais - es now and ev - er, Blessed fount of truth and love, ' ' Our heart s de - vo - tion,may it nev- er Faithless or un-wor-thy prove tnnip f m = mf 9=va ; r ?=£ 3e=£ =t iv ' llnFtlt i i ■ i i J do £ 5 r p- r ' r P  H In ev - ' ry chang - ing mood we love her, Love her tow ' rs and woods and We ' ll give our lives and hopes to serve her, Humblest, high est, no -blest f m mm $ m ¥=m f w i i w. fa =e= Mr UJMJ I Wf- Uj tet r pf p r fff r r P r p. pp f lake, Oh,changeful sky, bend blue a - bove her ' . Wake, ye birds, your chorus wake! all; A stain-less name we will pre - serve he r. Answ er to her ev- ' ry call. S ! $ Sf5 gB! « = Copyright. Used by permission. Wtllt ltp College ( obernment £JsSoctatton OFFICERS H. Elizabeth Smith, 1926 . Helen P. Bassett, 1926 Nelle B. Stogsdall, 1926 Helen D. Jones, 1927 Louise Barrows, 1927 Helen L. Stecher, 1927 Mabel F. Bourguignon, 1927 Elizabeth Paschal President Vice President Chairman of Judiciary Secretary Treasurer Advertising Manager Recorder of Points General Secretary [176] student Mtmbtxa of HfuMciarp Nelle B. Stogsdall, 1926, Chairman H. Elizabeth Smith, 1926, (Ex-Officio) Rebecca Barrett, 1926, (Ex-Officio) Helen M. Bassett, 1926, (Ex-Officio) Ruth M. Samuels, 1926, (Ex-Officio) F. Katherine Tracy, 1926 Margaret Bush, 1928 Dorothy G. Mason, 1927 Margaret Ward, 1929 Jfacultp fflzmbtxti of STubiciarp Miss Ellen F. Pendleton Mrs. Mary G. Ahlers Miss Dorothy W. Dennis Miss Mary J. Lanier £ tubent Mtmbtvti of Senate H. Elizabeth Smith, 1926 Rebecca Barrett, 1926 Louise Barrows, 1927 Helen P. Bassett, 1926 Helen D. Jones, 1927 Doris C. Miller, 1928 Nelle B. Stogsdall, 1926 Anne Bell Wickham, 1929 Jfacultp fflzmbttti of Senate Miss Ellen F. Pendleton Miss Helen I. Davis Miss Mary A. Griggs Miss Adelaide P. Dutcher Mrs. Mary C. Ewing [177] 2|ou£e of Eepresentatibes Ruth H. Bennett Mary T. Butler Clara L. Carstens Lynda I. Goodsell Elizabeth W. Harvey Fanny S. Lister Rebecca Barrett, 1926 Speaker 1926 Martha W. Marshall Inez T. Michelsen Eleanor C. Webster Catharine M. Pfingst Jane Quackenbush Ann Revere Una H. Ritchie Marion L. Scott Eunice R. Silsby Margaret Spencer Katherine F. Tracy Eleanor C. Webster Elizabeth Boyd Rosalie Drake Hermene H. Eisenman Mary D. Graff Alice H. Green Margaret L. Groben 1927 Elizabeth Henry Helen M. Jones Eleanor Leach Eleanor V. A. Moak Marjorie Pancoast Louise M. Reuther Nancy Southworth Jean S. Spence Anna B. Trull Dorothy L. Wegener Dorothy Williams Louise M. Wilson Helen H. Atwill Jeannette Bailey Martha H. Biehle Elizabeth D. Farrar Frances L. Hamilton 1928 Angela M. Higgins Florence M. Hollis Sally M. Loomis Elisabeth P. Marquis Anne T. Peloubet Mary H. Peregrine Margaret M. Sedgewkk Eleanor Street Constance M. Twichell Catharine Usher Elizabeth S. Woodward Stella F. Brewster Molly C. Danforth 1929 Natalie M. Jova Margaret F. Moore Eleanor K. Wheeler Zella T. Wheeler [178] tillage Pernor Elizabeth G. Hayward Katherine M. Reeve Frances S. Snyder Helen C. Ebersbach Martha C. Rich . Caroline Gay Mary T. Butler Mary W. Rittenhouse D. Ruth Parlin . Constance Bailey Fanny S. Lister Jean Bentley Madeleine Edwards Helen P. Bassett Janet P. Cooper Katherine B. Whitehead Lucy L. Sylvester Louise D. Talmadge 1 1 Abbott St. . 9 Appleby Rd. 18 Belair Rd. Birches Clinton Crofton . Eliot . Elms Leighton Little Noanett Townsend 7 Waban St. Washington 599 Washington St. 626 Washington St. 629 Washington St. Webb [179] ouse regtbente ' Council Gertrude P. Hoskin, 1926 . Anna A. Emery, 1926 Kathryn Ward, 1926 . Dorothy B. Bolte, 1927 Harriet I. Hastings, 1927 Ruth M. Samuels, 1926 Jane W. Shurmer, 1927 Margaret Keister, 1926 Huldah R. Means, 1926 Isabel Linscott, 1926 Elizabeth W. H. Keller, 1926 Inez Michelsen, 1926 . Catharine M. Pfingst, 1926 Elizabeth Ruhnka, 1926 . Beebe Cazenove Claflin Dower Fiske Freeman Homestead Norumbega Pomeroy Shafer . Stone Tower Wilder Wood [180] Elizabeth Kipp Fire Chief [ 181] Christian ftSoctatton Rebecca Chalmers, 1926 Mary W. Rittenhouse, 1926 Martha H. Biehle, 1928 Frances Seaver, 1927 Marion E. Fowler,, 1927 Mr. Moses Bailey Miss Ada M. Coe Constance S. Gilbert, 1926 Edith I. Damon, 1927 Gertrude Herrick, 1927 Katherine Graves, 1927 Helen Stout, 1926 Lynda I. Goodsell, 1926 Ethel Marie Hende rson, 1927 Mary F. Lichliter, 1927 Miss Louise Heydrick Hope Wilmarth Dorothv Ross President Vice President Secretary Treasurer . ■ Undergraduate Representative Chairman, Religious Meetings Department Chairman, World Fellowship Department Chairman, Membership Department Chairman, General Aid Department Chairman, Community Service Department Chairman, Social Department Chairman, Religious Education Department Chairman, Conference Department Chairman, Publicity Department . Chairman, Week of Prayer Committee General Secretary Chairman of Deputations Chairman, Student Industrial Committee [182] Sfntercolle gtate (Eommtmitp £§ ertuce gtestoctatton Dorothy Butts, 1926 President Mary Broderick, 1927 . . . . . . . . . ... Vice President Mary Atwater, 1927 Secretary Sally Loomis, 1928 ............. Treasurer Katharine Damon, 1926 . . . . . . . . . Business Manager Helen Stout, 1926 ......... Junior Month Representative Faculty Member • ■ • lst semester, Jane I. Newell ( 2nd semester, Marjorie Warren SUelleslep g tufc ent ' s; tb octetj Miss Abbie L. Paige (53 Greenough St., Brookline) President Miss Jessie C. McDonald Vice President Miss Ruby Wills (Walnut Hill School, Natick) Secretary Miss Mary Caswell (Wellesley College, Wellesley) Treasurer Miss Evelyn A. Munroe .......... Treasurer-Auditor OTHER DIRECTORS Alice Upton Pearmain (Mrs. Summer B.) Alice Campbell Wilson (Mrs. Fred A.) Miss Martha P. Conant STUDENT COMMITTEE Mabel E. Swett, 1926: Chairman, lst semester Elizabeth D. Swan, 1927 Katherine B. Whitehead, 1926 Harriet L. Hardy [183] ©etmttns Club Ruth M. Sullivan, 1926 Elisabeth C. Adams, 1926 Frances H. Furber, 1927 Sarah E. Finch, 1927 Alice Rue, 1928 . Florence Hollis, 1928 President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer Business Manager Chairman Material Committee [184] ikfjetmle of ©etmteg 1922-1923 Freshman-Sophomore Debate: Resolved, that Wellesley should establish a Sum- mer School similar to the Bryn Mawr Industrial School. Won by Affirmative, 1926 Ruth Block Elizabeth Smith Ruth Sullivan Intercollegiate Debate : Resolved, that the United States Government should own and control the coal mines. Affirmative, won from Smith Elizabeth Pascal, ' 24 Eleanor Brown, ' 24 Marion Johnson, ' 23 Negative, lost to Vassar Elizabeth Smith, ' 26 Louise Child, ' 24 Elizabeth Buethe, ' 24 1923-1924 Freshman-Sophomore Debate: Resolved, that Wellesley should have intercol- legiate athletics. Won by Affirmative, 1926 Ruth Block Julia Older Rosalie Smythe Intercollegiate Debate : Resolved, that the United States should join the League of Nations. Affirmative, won from Barnard Elizabeth Smith, ' 26 Elizabeth Adams, ' 26 Negative, lost to Radcliffe Ruth Sullivan, ' 26 . Ines Catron, ' 25 [185] ikfjebule of Betrnte 1924-1925 Dartmouth-Wellesley Debate : Resolved that capital punishment should be abolished. Affirmative Lost to Dartmouth Elizabeth Adams, ' 26 Ines Catron, ' 25 Ruth Block, ' 26 Intercollegiate Debate : Resolved, that a system exclusively of public schools would better fulfill the purpose of education than the present system. Affirmative Won From Vassar Eva Freeman, ' 25 Ruth Sullivan, ' 26 Negative Won From Smith Elizabeth Smith, ' 26 Julia Older, ' 26 1925-1926 Oxford-Wellesley Debate : Resolved, that the growth and activities of the Socialist Movement are detrimental to social progress. Affirmative J. S. Wedderburn H. H. Bernays H. V. Lloyd- Jones Negative Elizabeth Adams, ' 26 Julia Older, ' 26 Ruth Sullivan, ' 26 Won.bv Wellesley Intercollegiate Debate: Resolved, that all laws restricting freedom of speech be repealed. Affirmative : Wellesley Negative: Mt. Holyoke At Wellesley Affirmative: Bates Women ' s College Negative : Wellesley At Bates [186] Jfarum Helene Martin, 1926 President Edith Jonas, 1927 Secretary Marion Loizeaux, 1927 ......... Treasurer (EnHmnpnlttan (ftlub Yone Murayama, 1926 ......... President Teruko Nakamura, 1926 ........ Vice President Dorothy R. Erdmann, 1927 ........ Secretary Harriet E. Harwood, 1927 ........ Treasurer (Etrntln (Haatellano Clara L. Carstens, 1926 ......... President Mildred E. Frostholm, 1926 Vice President Harriet 1. Hastings, 1927 ....... Secretary-Treasurer Alltanr? JFrattraiae Rosalie M. Smythe, 1926 President Katherine Drake, 1926 ........ Vice President Janet Pinney, 1927 .......... Secretary Edith Jonas, 1927 .......... Treasurer (Eolnrafca (ftluh Jane Quackenbush, 1926 ......... President Frances A. Cohen, 1927 ....... Secretary-Treasurer ittuutPHiita (Hhtfa Helen Bullard, 1926 ' . . President Sarah E. Finch, 1927 .......... Vice President Leona Bayly, 1928 ........ Secretary-Treasurer Soutljprn (Elub Anne Knight, 1926 . . . . . . . . . . President Dorothy Reed, 1928 ........ Secretary-Treasurer Mary Elizabeth Turner, 1927 . . . . Head of Supper Committee [187] $Jn ffltta Happa Cta Chapter of Jffla sadbusette OFFICERS SOPHIE CHANTAL HART President MARY BOWEN BRAINARD (Mrs.) Vice President CAROLINE R. FLETCHER Secretary RUBY WILLIS Treasurer IN FACULTATE H. ELIZABETH ACLY, B. A Wellesley, 1924 KATHARINE C. BALDERSTON, Ph. D Wellesley, 1916 EDWARD E. BANCROFT, M. A., M. D Amherst, 1883 MARY C. BLISS, Ph. D Wellesley, 1924 ALICE H. BUSHEE, M. A Mt. Holyoke, 1918 ANNE D. CALDWELL, B. A Wellesley, 1924 MARY W. CALKINS, Litt. D., LI. D Smith, 1911 MARY S. CASE, B. A University of Michigan, 1908 INEZ T. COHEN, B. A Wellesley, 1921 MARTHA P. CONANT, Ph. D Wellesley, 1911 LENNIE P. COPELAND, Ph. D , University of Maine, 1923 MARY L. COURTNEY, B. A Boston University, 1909 LESLIE O. CUMMINGS, M. A., Ed. D Harvard, 1910 ELIZABETH DONNAN, B. A Cornell, 1907 KATHERINE M. EDWARDS, Ph. D Cornell, 1888 EDWARD C. EHRENSPERGER Harvard, 1915 CAROLINE O. FLETCHER, M. A Wellesley, 1919 HELEN S. FRENCH, Ph. D Wellesley, 1907 ELEANOR A. McC. GAMBLE, Ph. D Wellesley, 1907 MARY C. GRAUSTEIN, Ph. D Wellesley, 1920 CLARENCE G. HAMILTON, M. A Brown, 1888 SOPHIE C. HART, M. A Radcliffe, 1914 [188] EiiiNSI HARRIET BOYD HAWES, Litt. D Smith, 1911 ALFARATA B. HILTON, B. A Wellesley, 1922 MABEL E. HODDER, Ph. D Syracuse, 1889 ELIZA H. KENDRICK Ph. D Wellesley, 1907 ANITA E. KLEIN, M. ' A Grinnell, 1908 MARY J. LANIER, Ph. D Chicago, 1909 HELEN D. LOCKWOOD, M. A Vassar, 1912 LAURA E. LOCKWOOD, Ph. D University of Kansas, 1891 LAURA H. LOOMIS, Ph. D Wellesley, 1919 LOUISE C. McDOWELL, Ph. D Wellesley, 1910 CHARLOTTE G. MacEWAN, B. S University of Wisconsin, 1921 ELIZABETH W .MANWARING, Ph. D Wellesley, 1924 HELEN A. MERRILL, Ph. D Wellesley, 1907 ALFRED H. MEYER, Mus. B Oberlin, 1913 A. BERTHA MILLER, Ph. D Goucher, 1917 JULIA E. MOODY, Ph. D Mt. Holyoke, 1918 HENRY RAYMOND MUSSEY, Ph. D Beloit, 1910 JANE I. NEWELL, Ph. D Wellesley, 1907 LOUISE OVERACKER, Ph. D Leland Sanford, 1915 MARGARET T. PARKER, M. A University of Chicago, 1915 ELLEN F. PENDLETON, Litt. D. LI. D Wellesley, 1906 PRISCILLA PRESBREY, B. A Wellesley, 1923 VIDA D. SCUDDER, M. A., L. H. D Smith, 1915 MARTHA H. SHACKFORD, Ph. D Wellesley, 1907 MARGARET P. SHERWOOD, Ph. D Vassar, 1899 HELEN J. SLEEPER, M. A Wellesley, 1915 CLARA E. SMITH, Ph. D Mt. Holyoke, 1918 WALTER B. SMITH, M. A Oberlin, 1917 LAETITIA M. SNOW, Ph. D Goucher, 1905 MARION E. STARK, M. A Brown, 1915 BERTHA M. STEARNS, M. A University of Illinois, 1917 SEAL THOMPSON, M. A University of Chicago, 1914 ANNIE K. TUELL, Ph. D Wellesley, 1925 ROXANA H. VIVIAN, Ph. D Wellesley, 1907 ALICE V. WAITE, M. A Smith, 1915 VIVIAN C. WALKER, M. A Wellesley, 1921 ALICE WALTON, Ph. D Smith, 1915 JUDITH B. WILLIAMS, Ph. D Vassar, 1912 LUCY WILSON, Ph. D Johns Hopkins, 1917 ALICE I. P. WOOD, Ph. D Wellesley, 1919 MABEL M. YOUNG, Ph. D Wellesley, 1920 [189] •ptri Peta Eappa 1926 Hannah M. Adams Constance Bishop Dorothy Bruce Katharine R. Conant Marion H. Carter Katharine Drake Elizabeth W. East Winifred E. Fletchei Dorothy Hammond Nina M. Hammond Marjorie C. Meehan Helen Miner E. L. Amabel North Margaret Overington Althea J. Pease Ruth Reinhart Alice Sachs Edith H. Tarbell F. Katharine Tracy Winifred L. Warren [190] 1926 Burant cfjolar Appofntd in 1925 f Appointed in 1926 Hannah Mabel Adams Constance Bishop t Dorothy Bruce Mary Turner Butler Alice Mayo Carter Elizabeth Carter Marion Hovey Carter Katherine Robinson Conant Katherine Drake Winifred Elizabeth Fletcher t Constance Starr Gilbert Nina Marie Hammond Marjorie Clara Meehan Emily Lilian Amabel North Margaret Overington Ruth Reinhart Alice Sachs t Mary Wood Rittenhouse Edith Hale Tarbell F. Katherine Tracy t [191] 1926 Wttttgkv College g ef)nlarS Appointed in 1925 t Appointed in 1926 Dorothy Emma Arnold Constance Bailey Harriet Tatnall Bellah Constance Bishop Lilian Adele Boker Gizella Frances Bokor Lorna Conwell Brown Marian Viola Brown Dorothy L. Butler f Janet Carnochan f Clara Louise Carstens Rebecca Chalmers Alice Knoche Cobb Charlotte Foresman Denny Grace Raymond Dickinson Elizabeth Nichols Donovan Elizabeth Woodruff East Winifred Elizabeth Fletcher Constance Gilbert t Christine M. Gillepsie f Beatrice L. Goff f Harriet Dorothy Haggerson Dorothy Hammond Margaret Carroll Wood Helen Warrington Jones Margaret Lane Catherine McGeary f Katharine Marsh Elizabeth Louise Maxon Clara Antoinette Mead Elizabeth W. Meade t Content Miner Helen Isabel Miner Julia Stodel Older Althea Julia Pease Miriam Pellett t Ruth Brownell Prescott Mary Rittenhouse t Alice Sachs Miriam Grace Schaub Margaret Clifford Shay Helen Elizabeth Smith Margaret Spencer f Frances Katherine Tracy ; Winifred Louise Warren Janet Blanche Wattles Winifred Morris White [192] ... Iramatirs .. parustoalloto Association OFFICERS Gertrude Joy, 1926 . Ellen E. Bartlett, 1927 Maida L. Randall, 1927 Margaret McCarthy, 1928 Mabel E. Swett, 1926 Dorothy Harcourt, 1926 . Frances E. Ockerman, 1926 Alice Farny, 1927 Helen C. Levine, 1926 Hannah Schmitt, 1926 Katharine Graves, 1927 . Eleanor Baton, 1927 : Katharine Litchfield, 1927 JUNIOR Katha President Vice President Treasurer Secretary Business Manager Chairman, Costume Committee Chairman, Make-Up Committee Chairman, Properties Committee Chairman, Scenery Committee Chairman, Music Committee Chairman, Ushering Committee Chairman, Lighting Committee Chairman, Publicity Committee PROMENADE COMMITTEE rine P. Litchfield, Chairman Caroline G. Johnson Katharine M. Marsh SENIOR PROMENADE COMMITTEE Phyllis Pimm, Chairman Helen Morton Mary F. Sirne Alice J. Thompson Jane Whigham [194] parnstoallotos; 1922-1923 Freshman year, when the Barnswallows really lived in the Barn, we used to buy rush seats and sit on the floor in not too good clothes. Under such conditions, we saw The Crimson Cocoanut by Ian Hay, with Priscilla Cowper, 25, as Mr. Nitro Glycer- inski, the Wellesley Chauve-Souris ; and, for the Fall-play night, three one-act minor parts; the Wellesley Chauve-Souris; and, for the Fall-play night, three one-act p lays: Barrie ' s The Twelve Pound Look, The W asp, a Russian play presenting Nora Cleveland, 23, as Irma Melipoff ; and Will O ' the Wisp, a 47 Workshop play by Doris Halman. In March, the men of the faculty gave unforgettable scenes from Treasure Island. Operetta, The Singing Highwayman, with Carol Perrin in the lead, was a great success. Tree Day, was held on the Guest House Lawn, which made a beautiful Garden of Dreams for Sylvia (Freshman Mistress, Helen Basset), and Puck (Helen Scudder, Receiver of the Spade). 1923-1924 Sophomore year we had more opportunity to show both our dramatic and our literary talent. Kitty McGeary made a charming heroine in Pomander Walk, the first Fall Play to be presented in Alumnae Hall. Harriet Lyon wrote the plot for Operetta, Exit the Villain; and, for Spring Pliscoda, she dramatized The Two Mari- onettes, which, with dancing created by Mary Frances Hoffman, won first prize because of its originality and artistic presentation. r 195 ] 1924-1925 Junior year was a year of glorious achievement for Barnswallows. October in formals included Stuart Walker ' s Six Who Pass While The Lentils Boil; Poems in Pantomine by Austin Dobson ; and two original plays: The Clarion Call, by Marion Klein, ' 25 ; and The End of The Feud, by Una Ritchie, 26. Fall Play was The Yellow Jacket, a Chinese Play by George Haselton and Benrino. Lois Marshall, 26, was leading lady in Operetta, The Knight in Poverty, by Mary Louise Robinson, 25. Carol Perrin shone, as usual, in the title-role of this gay, twelfth-century romance. A charming Float Night presented the Quest of the Holy Grail. Tree Day for Semi- centennial year revived the simple procession, songs and speeches of the first Tree Day, in 1877. By far the most important event of Barnswallow ' s year was the presentation of the Semi-Centennial Pageant, The Winged Soul, by Marie Warren Poster, 07. THE WINGED SOUL PROLOGUE A Greek Portico. Philosopher and Disciple. Procession of Gods and Goddesses. FIRST EPISODE The Beauty of the Arts The Bridge of Waking Dreams. Dreams and Artisans. Dante ' s Vision of the Death of Beatrice by Rossetti. A wood near Stratford. Shakespeare and some of his characters. Keat ' s Ode on a Grecian Urn. Wotan ' s Farewell to Brunhilde, by Delitz. The Bridge of Imagination. The Lovers. SECOND EPISODE The Beauty of Knowledge. A Chinese Junk. The First use of Geometry, by the Egyptians. Galileo. A Dance of the Constellations. Sir Isaac Newton. The Torch of Knowledge. A Fresco. THIRD EPISODE The Beauty of the Spirit. Scene I. The First Crusade. Peter the Hermit and Knights. Scene II. The Standards. Scene III. A Stained Glass Window. Scene I. Scene II. Scene III. Scene IV. Scene V. Scene. VI. Scene I. Scene II. Scene III. Scene IV. Scene V. Scene VI. [196] O H J J W H on O U w M H fa O w u Q 1925-1926 At Barn Informals this year, three plays were presented; Lord Dunsany ' s Golden Doom; Maurthin Dondo ' s The Pie and the Tart, and Horns of the Moon, by Eloise Smith, 26, winner of Barnswallow ' s prize competition for the best one-act play, with Suzanne Shoenburger, 26, as White Flower. In December, Barnswallow, gave The Cradle Song by G. Marting de Sierra. C 198 ] fubliratinna Janet B. Wattles, 1926 Harriet Lyon, 1926 Alice K. Cobb, 1926 . Katherine S. Miller, 1926 Harriet Rosewater, 1926 Elizabeth Hardham, 1927 Sara W. Lewis, 1927 Eleanor Lindsay, 1927 Jane Richardson, 1927 JHetog 2Boarb Editor-in-Chief Managing Editor Associate Editor Assistant Editors 200 ] J2eto£ ptoarb Reporters Louise C. Hudson, 1927 Eleanor Reynolds, 1927 Louisa Wilson, 1927 Jeannette Bailey, 1928 Sally Lomis, 1928 Anne Peloubet, 1928 Cornelia Spalckhaver, 1928 Eloise Wilson, 1928 Assistant Reporters Dorothy Alexander, 1929 Helen Lyman, 1929 Ruth Cantillon, 1926 Jean Lobbett, 1926 Miriam Pellett, 1926 Business Manager Advertising Manager Circulation Manager Assistant Business Managers Marion Hunsicker, 1927 Matilda Milne, 1928 Margaret Surre, 1927 Jean Poindexter, 1928 Margaret Ayer, 1927 Doris Rich, 1928 Kate Cams, 1926 Ruth Mason, 1926 ILitttaxy Supplement Editor-in-Chief Ruth Reinhart, 1926 Associate Editors Elizabeth Surr, 1926 Eleanor Moak, 1927 Elsbeth Thexton, 1928 I 201 ] $ress poarb Edith C. Johnson, Director Boston Papers: Mary C. Bostwick, 1927 Grace R. Dickinson, 1926 Georgia F. Hodges, 1927 . Alice I. Hickey, 1926 Louise A. Michelbacher, 1926 Ruth Reinhart, 1926 Margaret C. Shay, 1926 . Outside Papers: Kate Cains, 1926 Juliet Danziger, 1927 Dorothy Dunham, 1927 Margaret Lamkin, 1928 . Katherine Wolff, 1927 Alice Hickey, 1926, President Boston Transcript Boston American . Boston Herald Boston Traveler Sunday Globe Boston Globe Christian Science Monitor Boston Post Brooklyn Daily Eagle C iicayo Tribune Springfield Republican Ne w Haven Co urier Worcester Gazette Cleveland Plain Dealer Neiv York World Providence Journal Kansas City Journal Post St. Louis Globe-Democrat Buffalo Courier [202] Hegenba poarb Julia S. Older, 1926 . Marion B. Lowerre, 1926 Ruth M. Erb, 1926 . Katherine Drake, 1926 Hannah M. Adams, 1926 ] Kate Cams, 1926 V Ruth G. Mason, 1926 Assistant Art Editors Edith Beckett, 1926 Mary P. Little, 1926 Elizabeth Rebmann, 1926 Pauline W. Chobot, 1926 Helen I. Miner, 1926 . Assistant Business Managers Editor-in-Chief Business Manager Art Editor Assistant Editor-in-Chief Associate Editors Marion L. Scott, 1926 Barbara E. Sweeny, 1926 Circulation Manager Photograph Manager- Advertising Manager Secretarial Board Gladys L. DeLangie, 1927, Chairman Marie Hatch, 1927 Beatrice Tear, 1927 Rhoda Mickey, 1927 [203 ] Scribbler Prof. Laura E. Lockwood, Head Mary C. Brown, 1926 Judith Stern, 1927 Ruth E. Campbell, 1927 Lucy Sylvester, 1926 Katherine Gage, 1926 Janet B. Wattles, 1926 Ellen D. Gordon, 1927 Dorothy Williams, 1927 Eloise Smith, 1926 Kathryn Wiehe, 1929 Alfarata Hilton, 1922 Ella T. Simpers, 1924 Phyllis Bartlett, 1925 | 204 Wtlk hp Cfjotr Hamilton C. Macdougail Florence E. Carpenter, 1926 Louise Hall, 1927 Lelia S. Timberman, 1926 Margaret Bixler, 1927 Choir Director Chorister Assistant Chorister Librarian Assistant Librarian [ 2U6 ] Cfjotr jfHember3 First Sopranos Frances Adams, 1926 Mary R. Atwater, 1927 Lydia J. Creighton, 1927 Edith I. Damon, 1927 Elizabeth N. Donovan, 1926 Adelaide P. Dutcher, 1927 Adelaide I. Ewing, 1926 Marie E. Fritzinger, 1927 Helen M. Gray, 1928 Marion L. Heminway, 1926 Marion V. Park, 1926 Elizabeth P. Parkinson, 1926 Mary Parsons, 1928 A. Justine Smith, 1927 M. Priscilla Smith, 1926 Sybil G. Smith, 1927 Second Sopranos Elizabeth Auryansen, 1927 Florence E. Carpenter, 1926 Mary I. DeWolff, 1929 Sarah W. Franklin, 1927 Louise W. Gates, 1928 Mabel C. Hiscock, 1929 Pauline Jones, 1929 C. Marguerite McLenahan, 1927 D. Ruth Parlin, 1926 Anna K. Rogers, 1927 Anne W. Roller, 1926 Anna D. Strong, 1927 Dorothy Williams, 1927 Helen AVood, 1928 Aln Cornelia E. Catlin, 1926 Marie D. Chalfant, 1926 Katherine Damon, 1926 Susan E. Echols, 1929 Pauline Florsheim, 1928 Lydia A. Francis, 1929 Lillian G. Fritz, 1926 Mary Elizabeth Louise Hall, 1927 Geraldine L. Ham, 1927 Katherine E. Hobbie, 1928 Fanny S. Lister, 1926 Ellen Jane Lorenz, 1929 Lindsey E. S. Papps, 1928 Hannah L. Schmitt, 1926 Turner, 1926 | 207] fi ellegleg College i£ pmpf)onp ©rdfjesttra Albert T. Foster Dorothy Hammond, 1926 Dorothy Hammond, 1926 G. Virginia Allen, 1927 Conductor Student-Conductor President Secretary -Treasurer [208 ] ellesrtep (ee Club Jean LWd ........... President Dorothy Wegener .......... Leader Lelia Timberman Treasurer Margaret Bixler . . Accompanist De Maris Davis . . Librarian [209] The Soul o!? the Charleston OFFICERS Virginia Wellington, 1926 Kathleen W. Scudder, 1926 Harriet L. Clarke, 1927 DeMaris R. Davis, 1928 Ruth Foljambe, 1927 . Prudence W. Wallis, 192.S . President j First J ice-President ) President of Outing Club Second Vice- President Secretary Treasurer Custodian [212] Ultfjletic s octatton The year 1925-26 has brought to the Athletic Association more changes in policy and gym costume, more feature events, more enthusiasm and more bills to pay than any preceding year. In addition to the regular program of past years there were many unusual happenings which should not be lost to posterity. The fall season opened a trial year for the new system of seasonal sports. Each sport, with certain exceptions, is to be played formally during only one season, either spring or fall; and beginning with 1929, each girl is to plan her schedule so that she takes both a team sport and an individual sport. That is, roughly, the explanation of the system. It was installed partly to increase the enrollment in the team sports which are felt to give valuable ideas of sportsmanship and co-operation with others not gained from an individual sport. The plan has been successful in carrying out this idea and our young athletes have become versed in team-work as well as skillful with golf clubs or tennis racquet. Field Day closed the first lap of the year. Even this regular event proved unique when three classes tied for first place. Having passed a fall season which was full of surprises, Wellesley ' s athletes found no tranquility in a normal indoor season. For the first time, out-door winter sports were offered as a substitute for indoor gym. In addition to the formal in- struction in skiing, snowshoeing and skating, the Outing Club offered inter-class ice-hockey games and an Ice Carnival with masks and castumes. An important phase of the indoor season was the new interest in indoor baseball and basketball, due in part to the infusion of young blood — the sophomores were allowed to play as a class for the first time. There were, also, the Monday night clogging classes, the tumbling classes, and Wednesday night swimming, sponsored by the Outing Club. Of the feature events of the year, the Irish Hockey game was, perhaps, the most exciting. Field Hockey became the byword of the fall sports season, because of the match with the Irish players, and because Wellesley was selected as the battleground of the American Field Hockey Tournament on account of the excellence of the playing fields. The Tournament offered, in the All-America-all-Ireland game, the oppor- tunity of seeing the best hockey we have in America. The Athletic Association, not to be outdone by College Government, held a conference in the spring. Wellesley, as president of the Eastern Section of the Athletic Conferences of American College Women, entertained delegates from the eastern colleges. Such are the high-lights of the year. It is a real loss that many of the ingenious strategems devised by the Athletic Association for the bewilderment of its members should go untold. But for one, the picture of those early morning hockey breakfasts will not be soon forgotten. Virginia Wellington, President. ft 213 J 2|eab£ of Sports Mildred E. Frostholm, 1926 Dorothy Bruce, 1926 Frances G. Bates, 1926 Virginia S. Thomas, 1926 Anne Revere, 1926 Althea J. Pease, 1926 . Eleanor N. Cooper, 1926 Lilian A. Boker, 1926 Rachel A. Niles, 1926 Elizabeth D. Bennett, 1926 Archery Baseball Basketball Crew . Golf- Hockey Riding Tennis . Track Volley Ball [214] Elizabeth Adams Dorothy Arnold rcfjerp 1926 Mildred Frostholm, {W) Beatrice Moshier Barbara Estes, (W) [215] baseball 1926 Dorothy Fishel, (Capt.) Rebecca Barrett Jane Whigam Fanny S. Lister Caroline Johnson Dorothy Bruce Martha Lauhach [216] Basketball 1926 Frances Bates, (Capt.), W Lucille Genung Lorna Brown, W Margaret Lane Rebecca Chalmers, W Mary Mills, W Louise Ta madge 2 7 1 Creto 1926 Virginia S. Thomas (Bow) (Capt.) Kathleen W. Scudder, 2 Adeline F. Pratt, 3 Doris K. Stevenson, 4 Anne E. Fairchild, 5 Miriam D. Pellett, 6 Adelaide I. Ewing, 7 H. Elizabeth Smith (Stroke) Marion B. Lowerre (Cox) [218] 1926 Winifred E. Fletcher, (Capt.) Anne Revere, W Katherine M. Marsh, W Ruth F. Weinberg, W Substitutes Winifred A. Sutherland Phyllis B. Pimm [219] J ocfeep 1926 R. W. Louise M. Ernst R. I. Dorothy L. Butler C. F. Harriet Lyon L. I. Joan Burnham L. W, Elizabeth M. Kipp (Cdpt.) R. H. Mary F. Johnson C. H. Ruth M. Samuels L. H. Ruth H. Wild R. F. Constance S. Gilbert L. F. Virginia Wellington, W G. Althea J. Pease, W Substitutes Roberta Butler Alice Caldwell Aipine Mardiguian Rachel Spencer [220] Kathryn Connor Eleanor N. Cooper, W Katharine Hartman Etbing 1926 Elise C. Fleischner, (Capt.), W Margaret Overington Substitutes Edith Tarhell Emilv Hulick [221 ] ennts 1926 Ruth Erb (Capt.), W Susan Earle, W Rebecca Luther Doris Wilson Lilian Boker, W 222] ®rack 1926 Rachel Niles, Head Statia Brill Katherine M. Reeve Katherine Damon, W Amy F. Vaill L 223 ] Elizabeth D. Bennett, W Mabel Berry Isabelle Bronk Eollep Hall 1926 Christina M. Gillespie, W Amabel North, W Marjorie G. Wilson, (Capt.), W [224] OFFICERS Dorothy L. Butler, 1926 Elizabeth N. Donovan, 1926 Elisabeth I. Astrom, 1926 Margaret P. Surre, 1927 Helen W. Jones, 1926 Frances Seaver, 1927 Frances G. Bates, 1926 Margaret J. Ellis, 1927 Elisabeth C. Adams, 1926 Margaret Jeffrey, 1927 Rosalie Drake, 1927 . President Vice President Secretary Assistant Secretary Treasurer Assistant Treasurer Purveyor Assistant Purveyor Keeper of the House Assistant Keeper of the House Keeper of the Records [ 226 ] 3ht Jfacultate Mary W. Calkins Mary Caswell Helen S. French Celia Hersey Frances L. Knapp Mary J. Lanier Laura E. Lockwood Julia S. Orvis Alice M. Ottley Seal Thompson Judith Williams Alice V. Waite l onorarp ffltmbtxx Mr. and Mrs. Phillips Bradlej ' Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Farnham Greene General John J. Pershing Mr. and Mrs. Thomas H. Procter 1926 Elizabeth C. Adams Elisabeth I. Astrom Frances G. Bates Dorothy L. Butler Mary T. Butler Elizabeth N. Donovan Constance S. Gilbert Lynda Goodsell Margaret Hazel Helen W. Jones Elizabeth C. Addoms Elinor G. Blinn Mary B. Broderick Rosalie Drake Margaret J. Ellis Alice Farny Frances H. Furber Hope Wilmarth 1927 Fanny Lister Katharine M. Reeve Ruth M. Samuels Kathleen W. Scudder H. Elizabeth Smith M. Priscilla Smith Dorothy-Belle Thorpe Katherine Tracy Janet Wattles Virginia Wellington Mary D. Graff Gertrude Herrick Margaret Jeffrey Frances Seaver Judith C. Stern Helen M. Stovel Margaret P. Surre [227] i£ octetp lpfja l appa Cftt OFFICERS Evelyn Abraham, 1926 Edith Beckett, 1926 . Elizabeth Surr, 1926 . Margaret A. Buehler, 1926 . Katherine C. Menzie, 1926 A. Elizabeth Wadhams, 1927 Louise D. Hunter, 1927 Ruth Foljambe, 1927 . Alice I. Hickey, 1926 . President Chairman, Society Presidents Vice President Recording Secretary Corresponding Secretary Treasurer Custodian First Factotum ■Second Factotum Editor of the Scroll [ 228 ] 3n facilitate Katherine E. Balderston Dorothy W. Dennis Caroline R. Fletcher Clarence G. Hamilton Elizabeth P. Hunt Antoinette B. P. Metcalf Agnes F. Perkins Muriel S. ' Curtis Adeline B. Hawes onotarp ffitmbtvn Margaret Anglin Baker Mrs. Clarence G. Hamilton 1926 Evelyn Abraham Elizabeth G. Babtiste Constance Bailey Charlotte A. Banta Edith Beckett Constance Bishop Elinor W. Brennan Mary C. Brown Margaret A. Buehler Katherine Drake Adelaide Ewing Christina Gillespie Alice I. Hickey Rebecca Luther Katherine C. Menzie Content Miner Elizabeth Surr Louise D. Talmadge A. Elizabeth Wadhams Helen Wilcox 1927 Elizabeth Auryansen Katherine Carman Josephine Chandler Ruth Foljambe Elizabeth Hardham Louise D. Hunter Marion Koehler Mary Elizabeth Ladd Sarah Lewis Lois Marshall Katherine Overbeck Anna K. Rogers Elizabeth Swan Virginia Thompson [229] $f)i tgma Jfratermtp — lpf)a Chapter OFFICERS Dorothea DeLong, 1926 Mary Mallory, 1926 . Darrel E. Morrow, 1926 . Frances E Radley, 1927 Alice M. Carter, 1926 Lilian A. Boker, 1926 Lilian A. Boker, 1926 D. Ruth Parlin, 1926 Helen C. Ebersbach, 1926 . Katharine P. Litchfield, 1927 Dorothy G. Mason, 1927 President Vice President Recording Secretary Corresponding Secretary Treasurer . Head of Work Custodian of the House Assistant Housekeeper Librarian First Marshal Second Marshal [230] Katherine Lee Bates 3n .facilitate Elizabeth W. Manwaring Josephine H. Batchelder Vida Dutton Scudder Honorary Members Mr. and Mrs. Galen Stone Helen P. Bassett Jean Bentley Lilian A. Boker Alice M. Carter Elizabeth Carter Louise R. Corn Dorothea DeLong Helen Ebersbach Rebecca Graham Ina Gwyn 9tegoriate jfflember Caroline Hazard 1926 Harriet Lyon Catherine McGeary Mary Mallory Darrel E. Morrow- Ruth Parlin Miriam Pellett Ruth Powers Ruth B. Prescott Frances S. Snyder Ruth M. Sullivan Eleanor Wolfe 1927 Eleanor Delano Dorothy Dick Jean Eshleman Gladys Howland Helen D. Jones Margaret Kidde Katherine Litchfield Elizabeth Lynah Dorothy Mason Eloise Minish Frances Radley Jane Richardson Mary Tilford Sarah Withrow [231] fjafeegpeare £ octetp OFFICERS Agnes C. Graham, 1926 ......... President Nancy I. Miller, 1926 . ■ Vice President M. Eleanor Baton, 1927 ....... Recording Secretary Helen Stout, 1926 ....... Corresponding Secretary Mary B. Creveling, 1927 ......... Treasurer Dorothy Hunting, 1926 ....... Keeper of the House [232] 3n jfacultate Eleanor Acheson McCulloch Gamble Sophie Chantal Hart Eliza Hall Kendrick Louise Sherwood McDowell Ellen Fitz Pendleton Margaret Pollock Sherwood Edith Souther Tufts Mabel Minerva Young 1926 Dorothy E. Butts Evelyn Cole Kathryn Connor Janet P. Cooper Caroline T. Gay Agnes C. Graham Elizabeth W. Harvey Mary Frances Hoffman Dorothy Hunting Anna McLester Augusta F. Mason Nancy I. Miller Catherine Pfingst Phyllis B. Pimm Suzanne Schoenberger Helen Stout Alice Thompson Lelia Timberman Katherine Whitehead Anna F. Wilcox 1927 Eleanor Baton Mary Bostwick Mary B. Creveling Virginia Edwards Hermene Eisenman Ernestine Fantl Sarita Fajardo Sarah Finch Rose Lobenstine Ruth Moak Helen Powers Isabelle Robert Elizabeth Selig Frances Tiebout [233] octetp tEati Zeta €p£tlon OFFICERS Hannah L. Schmitt, 1926 Eunice R. Silsby, 1926 May A. Weber, 1926 Elizabeth M. Kipp, 1926 Lucy A. Shea, 1926 Mary Frances Johnson, 1926 Arline Skidmore, 1926 E. Ruth Sonnekalb, 1927 Dorothy L. Wegener, 1927 Florence E. Carpenter, 1926 President Vice President Recording Secretary Corresponding Secretary . . Treasurer Head of JVork Keeper of the House Assistant Keepers of the House Editor of the Iris [234] 3n Jfacultate Alice V. Brown Helen Davis Mabel E. Hodder Margaret H. Jackson Laura A. Loomis Flora I. McKinnon Hamilton C. Macdougall Alice I. P. Wood 1926 Barbara Bullard Ruth Cantillon Florence Carpenter Clara Carstens Pauline Chobot Anna Emery Ruth Erb Ruth Graham Lucille Genung Gertrude Hoskin Mary Frances Johnson Elizabeth Kipp Marion Lowerre Jean Lobbett Inez Michelson Ruth Reinhart Hannah Schmitt Lucy Shea Arline Skidmore Eunice Silsby Kathryn Ward May Weber 1927 Virginia Allen Mary Atwater Margaret Ayer Louise Barrows Janet Baxter Elizabeth Flanders Marion Hunsicker Eleanor Moak Maida Randall Ruth Sonnekalb Dorothy Wegener Marion Williamson Louise K. Hall [235] ocietp Heta lpf)a OFFICERS Katharine Marsh, 1926 Mary H. Grover, 1926 Mary F. Sime, 1926 . Margaret Overington, 1926 Dorothy Dunham, 1927 Lorna C. Brown, 1926 Elizabeth Rebmann, 1926 Georgia F. Hodges, 1927 Constance Velde, 1926 Sarah W. Franklin, 1927 Ellen E. Bartlett, 1927 Helen E. Holmes, 1927 President Vice President Recording Secretary Corresponding Secretary Treasurer Head of Work Custodian Assistant Custodian Editor of the Annual Assistant Editor of the Annual First Marshal Second Marshal r 236 J 3n Jfacultate Eleanor K. Carter Martha Pike Conant Rebecca Barrett Lorna C. Brown Helen Bullard Marion Cleveland Eleanor N. Cooper Mary H. Grover Elizabeth W. Howe Christiana O. Jones Martha Laubach Katharine Marsh Eugenia B. Brown Martha Hale Shackford Belle M. Ward well 1926 Huldah R. Means Mary Mills Margaret Overington Althea Pease Elizabeth Rebmann Martha Rich Mary F. Sime Winifred A. Sutherland Virginia Thomas Constance Velde Winifred M. White 1927 Hazel Baarman Ellen Bartlett Margaret Bixler Dorothy Dunham Marion Fowler Sarah Franklin Ethel M. Henderson Georgia Hodges Helen Holmes Elizabeth Hood Louise Hudson Virginia Pendleton Celeste Pope Elizabeth Ruhnka [237] [ 238] ♦ ♦ ♦ ltmtorg (Ela00?0 of 192? — 1928 — 1923 239] Class of 1927 OFFICERS RUTH EVELYN CAMPBELL President HERMENE H. EISENMAN Vice President ELLEN DOUGLAS GORDON .... Recording Secretary LOUISE D. HUNTER Corresponding Secretary ELIZABETH F LANDERS . ...... Treasurer HARRIET L. CLARKE KATHARINE GRAVES Executive Board NANCY SOUTHWORTH ) KATE K. JOHNSON j . . . . . . . Factotum A. JUSTINE SMITH J LOUISE HALL Song Leader [240] Clastf of 1927 ADAMS, ELEANOR 78 Westminster St., Springfield, Mass. ADDOMS, ELIZABETH C 290 McDonough St., Brooklyn, N. Y. ALLEN, G. VIRGINIA 8 Woodbridge Ave., Chatham, N. Y. ALLERTON, LOIS A 16 Midland Ave., White Plains, N. Y. ANDERSON, DOROTHY S 102 Avon Road, Narberth, Pa. ATWATER, MARY R 53 Woodlawn Ave., Wellesley Hills, Mass. AUERT, RUTH W 315 Herkimer Rd., Utica, N. Y. AURYANSEN, ELIZABETH 15 Gaylord Ave., Jamaica, N. Y. AYER, MARGARET R. F. D. 3 Willoughby, O. BAARMAN, HAZEL B 636 Parkwood St., Grand Rapids, Mich. BABB, WINIFRED 624 Summit Ave., Wilwaukee, Wise. BARROWS, LOUISE H Lake Shore Drive Hotel, Chicago, 111. BARTHMAN, PHYLLIS B 505 West End Ave., New York, N. Y. BARTLETT, ELLEN E 219 Butler Ave., Providence, R. I. BATON, M. ELEANOR 326 Graham St., Pittsburgh, Pa. BAUME, FRANCES E 26 Kearny St., Newark, N. J. BAXTER JANET H 309 Westminster Rd., Brooklyn, N. Y. BEARDSLEE, ELEANOR F 310 Prospect Ave., Cranford, N. J. BEATON, DOROTHY E 14 Adams St., Brockton, Mass. BELKNAP, HILDA F 14A Atkinson St., Bellows Falls, Vt. BENJAMIN, CHARLOTTE M 103 Mystic St., West Medford, Mass. BERNHEIM, ALICE 1 31 W. 85th St., New York, N. Y. BERNSTEIN, MILDRED J 225 W. 86th St., New York, N. Y. BIXLER, MARGARET 9 First Ter., Easton, Pa. BLAIR, SYLVIA 12 Northampton Rd., Amherst, Mass. BLINN, ELINOR G 33 Tuscan Rd., Maplewood, N. J. BOHMFALK, GERTRUDE E 128 E. 45th St., New York, N. Y. BOLTE, DOROTHY B. 5906 Ventnor Ave., Atlantic City, N. J. BOSTWICK, MARY C 47 Sagamore Rd., Bronxville, N. Y. BOURGUIGNON, MABEL F 236 State St., Flushing, N. Y. BOWMAN, ETHEL M 18 Walker Rd., Swampscott, Mass. BOYD, ELIZABETH 29 Orchard St., Portland, Me. BRADLEY, E. JEANETTE Dobbs Ferry, N. Y. BRECKENBRIDGE, HARRIET A 181 Green St., Woodbridge, N. J. BRODERICK, MARY B 325 Woodlawn Ave., Kirkwood, Mo. BROWN, HENRIETTA 402 Delavan St., Lincoln, 111. BULLEY, BERNICE M 220 Sheridan Rd., Kenilworth, 111. BURGESS, LOUISE 41 Fifth Ave., New York, N. Y. BURY, HARRIET C 1062 West 8th St., Erie, Pa. [241] CAMPBELL, RUTH ELIZABETH Berryville, Va. CAMPBELL, RUTH EVELYN 210-212 Grant St., Pittsburgh, Pa. CARMAN, KATHARINE W 933 Michigan Ave., Evanstown, 111. CHADWICK, FRANCES M Harrowgate Lane, Philadelphia, Pa. CHANDLER, JOSEPHINE 300 Riverside Drive, New York, N. Y. CHANDONNET, M. LEONIE 156 Brook St., Manchester, N. H. CHURCH, DOROTHY C 124 Leroy St., Binghampton, N. Y. CLARKE, DORRIS 186 West Rock Ave., New Haven, Conn. CLARKE, HARRIET L Wickliffe-on-Lake, O. CLAXTON, HARRIET L 148 Migeon Ave., Torrington, Conn. COHN, FRANCES A 3136 E. 7th St., Denver, Colo. COMINS, ALICE B 287 St. James Ave., Springfield, Mass. COOPER, DOROTHY E 6138 University Ave., Chicago, 111. COPLAND, MARJORIE 5105 Drexel Blvd., Chicago, 111. CORWITH, ADELAIDE F Southampton, N. Y. CRANE, ISABELLA C , 403 Washington St., Quincy, Mass. CREIGHTON, LYDIA J 8 S. Maple Ave., East Orange, N. J. CREVELING, MARY B 4 Miles Dickerson Rd., Nashville, Tenn. VAN DAELL, MARGARET Swarthmore, Pa. DAMON, EDITH 1 24 Main St., W. Waterloo, N. Y. DANE, CHARLOTTE, 1 18 Wheatland Ave., Dorchester, Mass. DANZIGER, JULIET 285 Central Park West, New York, N. Y. DAVIS, ALICE B 95 Van Houten Ave., Passaic, N. J. DAVIS, LUCY 398 Main St., Portland, Conn. DE LANGIE, GLADYS L 37 Catherine St., Newport, R. I. DELANO, ELEANOR H P. O. Box 176 Vineyard Haven, Mass. DICE, MIRIAM E 90 Kuder Ave., Akron, O. DICK, DOROTHY A 5540 Delmar Blvd., St. Louis, Mo. DINAN, DOROTHY V 803 Onondaga Ave., Syracuse, N. Y. DODD, DOROTHY 47 Crosby Rd., Chestnut Hill, Mass. DOLAN, ELEANOR E 390 Huron Ave., Cambridge, Mass. DRAKE, ROSALIE 2200 R St., N. W., Washington, D. C. DUNHAM, DOROTHY 115 Broadview Ave., New Rochelle, N. Y. DURAND, JANET C 117 Homestead Ave., Collingswood, N. J. DUTCHER, ADELAIDE P 35 Linwood Ave., Newton, N. J. EDGERTON, WINIFRED M Langhorne, Pa. EDWARDS, M. VIRGINIA 675 Multnomah St., Portland, Ore. EISENMAN, HERMENE H 130 Thorndike St., Brookline, Mass. ELLIS, MARGARET J. 3220 Warren Ave., Chicago, 111. ERDMANN, DOROTHY R , 458 9th St., Brooklyn, N. Y. ESHLEMAN, JEAN H. 116 Richmond Ave., Buffalo, N. Y. [242] FAILING, ELSIE G 70 Mohawk St., Fort Plain, N. Y. FAIRBANKS, MARGARET 125 Pennington Ave., Passaic, N. J. FAJARDO, SARITA G 40 Watchung Ave., Upper Montclair, N. J. FANTL, ERNESTINE M 41 W. 82nd St., New York, N. Y. FARNY, ALICE Craftsman Farms, Morris Plains, N. J. FARRAND, LAURA J 49 Lincoln Pk., Newark, N. J. FARRELL, GRACE G 37 Wellesley Pk., Dorchester, Mass. FELDMAN, ELEANOR J 1111 Park Ave., New York, N. Y. FILBERT, ESTHER 898 Park Ave., New York, N. Y. FINCH, SARAH E 103 Devonshire Apts., Duluth, Minn. FLAGG, ELIZABETH S 22 School St., Andover, Mass. FLANDERS, ELIZABETH 93 W. Emerson St., Melrose, Mass. FOLJAMBE, RUTH 78 Robinwood Ave., Jamaica Plain, Mass. FOWLER, MARION E 1078 Homewood Drive, Cleveland, O. FRACKELTON, C. ELIZABETH 2353 Woodmere Drive, Cleveland Heights, O. FRANKEL, VERA 260 Riverside Drive, New York, N. Y. FRANKLIN, SARAH W 96 Greenacre Ave., Longmeadow, Mass. FREEMAN, BERTHA C 25 Orange Heights Ave., West Orange, N. J. FRITZINGER, MARIE E 215 Rector St., Perth Amboy, N. J. FRYE, RUTH L 24 Winter St., Plymouth, N. H. FULD, DORIS S 375 W. End Ave., New York, N. Y. FULLER, KATHARINE 11 Great Plain Ave., Wellesley, Mass. FURBER, FRANCES H ... 73 Marshall St., Watertown, Mass. GARRETT, E. DORIS 242 Washington Ave., Chelsea, Mass. GOLDBERG, LUCILLE L 3925 Redbud Ave., Cincinnati, O. GOOD, DOROTHY 134 Parkwood Blvd., Schenectady, N. Y. GOODALE, MARY 41 Jordan Ave., Wakefield, Mass. GORDON, ELLEN DOUGLAS 2523 Stuart Ave., Richmond, Va. GORHAM, ELEANOR M 703 Kenmore PL, Brooklyn, N. Y. GRAEF, DOROTHY 1 650 E. 164th St., New York, N. Y. GRAFF, MARY D West Hill Lane, Wyoming, Cincinnati, O. GRASER, VIOLET C 127 Merbrook Lane, Merion, Pa. GRAUEL, ELIZABETH 148 Trafalgar St., Rochester, N. Y. GRAVES, KATHARINE Forrest St. and Ridge Rd., Concord, N. H. GREEN, ALICE H 210 W. 70th St., New York, N. Y. GROBEN, MARGARET L 54 Highland Ave., Buffalo, N. Y. GUMMO, VIVIAN S 26 S. Fairview St., Lock Haven, Pa. GUTMANN, BERNICE L 1021 Redway Ave., Cincinnati, O. GUYE, PAULINE L 32 E. 64th St., New York, N. Y. HACK, RACHEL Proctor, Vt. HALL, LOUISE 20 Gray St., Cambridge, Mass. HALL, LOUISE K 231 High St., Macon, Ga. [243] HAM, GERALDINE L Canton Ave., Milton, Mass. HANNA, NORA P 63 Upper Leeson St., Dublin, Ireland HANSEN, JEAN E 201 Wayne Ave., Easton, Pa. HARDHAM, ELIZABETH C 559 Highland Ave., Newark, N. J. HARPER ROSALIND Gladstone, N. J. HARRIMAN, LOUISE 778 Main St., Laconia, N. H. HARWOOD, HARRIET E Bennington, Vt. HASTINGS, HARRIET I Fajardo, P. R. HATCH, MARIE V. L 5 Harbor Lane, New Rochelle, N. Y. HAVEN, ELIZABETH H 14 Elm St., Morristown, N. J. HENDERSON, ETHEL M 5100 Ward Pkway, Kansas City, Mo. HENDERSON, NORMA M 46 Princeton Rd., Fitchburg, Mass. HENRY, ELIZABETH .86 Nonantum St., Newton, Mass. HERRICK, GERTRUDE 741 Linden Ave., Oak Park, 111. HETTINGER, DOROTHEA A 2 W. Home PL, Irvington, N. Y. HILLYER, MARJORIE L 1143 Dean St., Brooklyn, N. Y. HIRSCH, MARJORIE R 321 W. 92nd St., New York, N. Y. HITCH, SARAH 16 Anthony St., New Bedford, Mass. HODGES, GEORGIA F Olathe, Kas. HOLBERT, GRACE P Warick, N. Y. HOLLIS, MARION Randolph, Vt. HOLMES, HELEN E 1616 Broome St., Wilmington, Del. HOLT, PHYLLIS 70 Oak Ridge Ave., Summit, N. J. HOOD, ELIZABETH M 171 Prospect St., East Orange, N. J. HOSLEY, ELEANOR M 46 Waban Ave., Waban, Mass. HOPKINS, MARIAN L 343 E. 17th St., Brooklyn, N. Y. HOPKINS, ELEANOR C 107 Washington Ave., Cambridge, Mass. HOWLAND, M. GLADYS Holman St., Shrewsbury, Mass. HUDSON, LOUISE C 675 E. 18th St., Patterson, N. J. HUNSICKER, MARION R 140 N. 8th St., Allentown, Pa. HUNTER, LOUISE D 52 Orchard St., Greenfield, Mass. HUTHSTEINER, ELVIRE R 2509 Montana St., El Paso, Tex. INGRAM, HARRIET W 2111 State St., Nashville, Tenn. INNES, HELEN S 27 W. 72nd St., New York, N. Y. JACKSON, CHRISTINE 1802 S. Sarson St., Tulsa Okl. JACKSON, HELEN G 1308 Waucoma St., Birmingham, Ala. JACKSON, MARGARET A 52 W. Main St., Westboro, Mass. JANSEN, ELSIE B 1909 19th St., Washington, D. C. JAY, ELIZABETH B 84 Leslie St., Newark, N. J. JEFFREY, MARGARET 162 Lafayette Ave., Hawthorne, N. J. JOHNSON, KATE K 504 Stewart Bldg., Houston, Tex. JONAS, EDITH 129 Joralemon St., Brooklyn, N. Y. [244] JONES, F. NATALIE Billerica, Mass. JONES, HELEN D 17903 Canterbury Rd., Cleveland, O. JONES, HELEN M 1951 Indianola Ave., Kingston, Pa. JOSLIN, HELEN B 134 Stratford St., West Roxbury, Mass. KAUFMANN, HELEN H 970 Park Ave., New York, N. Y. KENNY, A. BEATRICE 230 Plane St., Newark, N. J. KERNER, GERTRUDE M 173 Mayflower Ave., New Rochelle, N. Y. KIAM, DOROTHY T 29 E. 64th St., New York, N. Y. KIDDE, MARGARET 80 Elm St., Montclair, N. J. KNIGHT, MARTHA G 176 Park Ave., Arlington Heights, Mass. KNOBLOCK, MARY GRACE 661 Edison Ave., Detroit, Mich. KOEHLER, MARIAN H 5348 Magnolia Ave., Chicago, III. KRENTZMAN, ELLA M 123 Winthrop Ter., Meriden, Conn. LADD, MARY ELIZABETH 9 High St., Bar Harbor, Me. LANE, ROSAMOND 19 Oxford St., Cambridge, Mass. LAWRENCE, RUTH L 45 Schurz Ave., Jackson Heights, N. Y. LEACH, ELEANOR 534 Post Rd., Fairfield Conn. LEWIS, SARA W 375 S. Pacific Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. LICHLITER, MARY F 1793 Franklin Ave., Columbus, O. LIEBENTHAL, CLAUDIA S 2104 Stearns Rd., Cleveland, O. LINDSAY, ELEANOR 29 Claremont Ave., New York, N. Y. LITCHFIELD, KATHARINE P 38 Marshall Ave., Akron, O. LOBENSTINE, ROSE H 1155 Park Ave., New York, N. Y. LOIZEAUX, MARION C 685 Academy St., New York, N. Y. LOVELAND, GRACE L 19 O ' Connell Ave., Wellesley, Mass. LYMAN, DIANTHA S 32 N. Main St., Sharon, Mass. LYNAH, ELIZABETH B Shippan Point, Stamford, Conn. McGILVREY, LOUISE 238 E. Main St., Kent, O. MacKERRACKER, ISABEL N 33 Chapman Ave., Waterbury, Conn. MACKINNON, FRANCES D 709 Dixwell Rd., Shanghai, China McLENAHAN, C. MARGEURITE 500 Greenfield Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. MALTBIE, MARY LOUISE 300 Long Ave., Hamburg, N. Y. MANSFIELD, CONSTANCE 89 Linden St., Allston, Mass. MARDIGUIAN, ARPINE Yeni-Tcharshi, Mahmond-Pasha, Stamboul, Constantinople, Turkey MARSHALL, M. LOIS 740 Park PI., Niagara Falls, N. Y. MARTIN, MABEL G 288 Washington PI., Flushing, N. Y. MASON, DOROTHY G 194 Highland Ave., Akron, O. MASON, RUTH V 141 Joralemon St., Brooklyn, N. Y. MAXWELL, ELIZABETH D 612 McLish Ave., Ardmore, Okl. MAYER, CATHERINE L 5609 Darlington Rd., Pittsburgh, Pa. METLER, ALTHEA M 690 Delavan Ave., Buffalo, N. Y. L 245 D MICKEY, RHODA M 817 N. 17th St., Harrisburg, Pa. MILLS, FLORENCE D 19 Avalon Ave., Jamaica, N. Y. MINER, GENEVIEVE F 265 Scotland Ave., Detroit, Mich. MINISH, ELOISE K 121 4th St., Frankfort, Ky. MITCHELL, ELIZABETH H Woodstock, Vt. MOAK, ELEANOR V. A 360 Park PL, Brooklyn, N. Y. MOAK, RUTH S 360 Park PL, Brooklyn, N. Y. MOORE, KATHARINE B 93 Prospect St., Berlin, N. H. MORSE, MARY E 193 Pond St., Natick, Mass. MOSS, EVELYN L 36 Sachen St., Lynn, Mass. MOSS, THELMA A 47 Adams St., Somerville, Mass. MYERS, CHARITY R 16 Midland Ave., White Plains, N. Y. NEAL, MARY E 823 Michigan Ave., Evanston, 111. NELSON, ELEANOR C 113 Winthrop St., Augusta, Me. NELSON, NATALIE B 76 Arlington St., Haverhill, Mass. NEWBORG, FRANCES 50 E. 52nd St., New York, N. Y. NORD, GLADYS L 117 E. 6th St., Jamestown, N. Y. NYE, RUTH E 166 N. Lincoln Blvd., Buffalo, N. Y. OBERDORFER, DORIS S 429 Vista Ave., Portland, Ore. O ' BRIEN, KATHARINE L 7 Garden St., Potsdam, N. Y. OSBORNE, DOLORES L 125 Jason St., Arlington, Mass. OVERBECK, CATHERINE L Campbell Court Hotel, Portland, Ore. OWEN, AMEY E 15 Linden St., Whitinsville, Mass. PALMER, HELEN M Helena, Mont. PANCOAST, MARJORIE 4810 Davenport St., Omaha, Neb. PEARL, ELIZABETH A 729 N. Oak Ave., Oak Park, 111. PEASE, FLORENCE M c. o. E. N. Johnson, Glenside, Pa. PENDLETON, VIRGINIA Leavittsburg Rd., Warren, O. PIKE, BARBARA 65 Church St., Winchester, Mass. PINNEY, JANET 120 W. 58th St., New York, N. Y. PIPER, CAROL S 52 Chandler Ave., Detroit, Mich. PLATT, ELIZABETH J 945 Lincoln Ave., St. Paul, Minn. POPE, J. CELESTE E. 812 Syringa Rd., Spokane, Wash. POWERS, HELEN C 237 Wayland Ave., Providence, R. x. PROBYN, HELEN M 238 Fort Washington Ave., New York, N. Y. RADLEY, FRANCES E 101 Barker Ave., Peoria, 111. RANDALL, MAIDA L 1049 Michigan Ave., Evanston, 111. RATHBURNE, CONSTANCE 7 Maple Ave., Westerly, R. I. REED, ESTHER P Grafton, Mass. REUTHER, LOUISE M 218 Stilz Ave., Louisville, Ky. REYNOLDS, ELEANOR P 284 Mt. Prospect Ave., Newark, N. J. RICHARDSON, JANE S 250 Union St., Jersey City, N. J. [246] RICHTER, MARTHA Hughes St. Sta. A., New Haven, Conn. ROBERT, ISABELLE D 5240 Washington Blvd., St. Louis, Mo. ROBERTS, CATHARINE C 901 Highland Ave., Johnstown, Pa. ROGERS, ANNA K Hancock, N. Y. ROSENBERG, LILLIAN 53 Howard St., Chelsea, Mass. ROSEMOND, EDNA 160 Riverside Drive, New York, N. Y. RUHNKA, ELIZABETH K 4816 Webster St., Omaha, Neb. RUNYON, JEAN W 937 Rahway Rd., Plainfield, N. Y. RUSS, NATALIE 38 Salton Stall Rd., Haverhill, Mass. SAVILLE, MARION 31 Milton St., North Andover, Mass. SAWIN, HELEN 74 Wabash Ave., Maltoon, Ind. SCHAFER, MADELEINE 25 W. 85th St., New York, N. Y. SCHANTZ, GERTRUDE M 202 Schantz Ave., Dayton, O. SEAMAN, EVELYN K 97 Lincoln Ave., Mineola, N. Y. SEAVER, FRANCES 44 2nd St., Malone, N. Y. SELIG, ELIZABETH G 709 S. Crescent Ave., Cincinnati, O. SHARPE, WINIFRED Chambersburg, Pa. SHATTUCK, KATHARINE 34 Woodland Rd., Maplewood, N. J. SHURMER, JANE W 2709 Southington Rd., Cleveland, O. SIFF, ELSIE 2213 Loretta PI., Far Rockaway, N. Y. SILVERNAIL, MARGARET H 100 Prospect St., Gloversville, N. Y. SMITH A. JUSTINE Brookside, Dobbs Ferry, N. Y. SMITH, FLORENCE E 1426 Forest Ave., Evanston, 111. SMITH, GARETTA P St. James, N. Y. SMITH, JULIA H 557 Wyoming Ave., Wyoming, Pa. SMITH, SYBIL G 43 Abbot Rd., Wellesley Hills, Mass. SONNEKALB, E. RUTH 8 Primrose PL, Summit, N. J. SOUTHWORTH, NANCY 314 Highland Ave., Syracuse, N. Y. SPENCE, JEAN C 53 Kenwood Ave., Worcester, Mass. STANTON, CONSTANCE S 4421 Central Ave., Indianapolis, Ind. STANTON, F. ALMA 161 Valley Rd., Montclair, N. J. STECHER, HELEN L 18135 W. Clifton Rd., Lakewood, O. STEERE, DOROTHY O Chepacket, R. I. STERN, JUDITH C 236 W. 54th St., Kansas City, Mo STINNESS, MARY M 354 Broad St., Central Falls, R. I. STOVEL, HELEN M 48 Watchung Ave., Upper Montclair, N. J. STRASBERGER, ADELE F 929 Albermarle Rd., Brooklyn, N. Y. STREETER, PRISCILLA 20 Lincoln Ave., Wollaston, Mass. STRONG, ANNA D 12 Melton Manor, Chapin Pkway, Buffalo, N. Y. SURRE,MARGARET P 811 Liberty St., Erie, Pa. SWAN, ELIZABETH D 175 Medway St., Providence, R. I. TALLEY, MARY ALICE 1000 S. 7th St., Terre Haute, Ind. [247] TAYLOR, FRANCES F 222 Carrington Ave., Woonsocket, R. I. TAYLOR, MARION V 103 Waverly PL, New York, N. Y. TEAR, BEATRICE E 5232 Greenwood Ave., Chicago, 111. TEMPLE, ISABELLE F 820 Oak St., Chattanooga, Tenn. THOMPSON, VIRGINIA L 25 S. Broad St., Ridgeway, Pa. TIEBOUT, FRANCES E 101 St. James PL, Brooklyn, N. Y. TILFORD, MARY E 159 Crescent Ave., Louisville, Ky. TRACY, DELIA E 345 Winthrop Ave., New Haven, Conn. TRANT, AMALIE L 1095 W. Main St., New Britain, Conn. TRULL, ANNA B 1238 Waverly PL, Elizabeth, N. J. TULLOCK, CHRISTINE F 3 Edgehill Rd., New Haven, Conn. TURRELL, CORNELIA H Smithtown Branch, N. Y. TURRELL, VIRGINIA Smithtown Branch, N. Y. UNGERMAN, RUTH A 2100 Morris Ave., Birmingham, Ala. UPJOHN, RHODA 344 Springdale Ave., East Orange, N. J. VAILL, DEBORAH L 61 Elmwood Ave., Waterbury, Conn. VINSON, HELEN R 2039 Cornell Rd., Cleveland, O. VIVIAN, ETHEL H 39 Florentine Gardens, Springfield, Mass. WADHAMS, A. ELIZABETH 72 N. Franklin St., Wilkes-Barre, Pa. WARFIELD, MARGARET I Strathaven Inn, Swarthmore, Pa. WARREN, MARION Grafton, Mass. WAUGH, ELIZABETH S 350 Roumford Rd., Mt. Airy, Philadelphia, Pa. WEATHERHEAD BLANCHE 6 Crescent St., Southbridge, Mass. WEBBER, LYDIA R 297 Main St., Lewiston, Me. WEGENER, DOROTHY L 1300 N. State St., Chicago, 111. WEIL, EMMA LEE 208 S. Lawrence St., Montgomery, Ala. WEIL, SARAH L 262 S. Ashland Ave., Lexington, Ky. WEISS, ETTA M 11 Hawthorne Ave., Troy, N. Y. WENGOROVIUS, ANITA W 1291 Dean St., Brooklyn, N. Y. WESTON, GLADYS D 201 Prospect St., East Orange, N. J. WHEELER, PRISCILLA M 215 Crocker Ave., Piedmont, Cal. WHINERY, MILDRED A 35 Detroit St., Hammond, Ind. WILKINS, MARY HELEN Los Angeles, Cal. WILLIAMS, DOROTHY 40 S. Munn Ave., East Orange, N. J. WILLIAMS, DOROTHY W c.o. Dr. W. E. Caldwell, 59 E. 54th St., New York, N. Y. WILLIAMSON, MARION 1 406 W. Chicago Blvd., Tecumseh, Mich. WILLIS, KATHARINE C 215 Prospect Ave., New Brighton, N. Y. WILSON, ESTHER M 57 Laurel St., Putnam, Conn. WILSON, LOUISE M Changshu Ku, China WITHROW SARAH 2923 Reading Rd., Cincinnati, O. WITT, KATHRO L 110 Josephine Ave., Detroit, Mich. WOLFF, KATHARINE A 29 W. 89th St., New York, N. Y. WURST, ESTHER 564 Lafayette Ave., Buffalo, N. Y. E 248 ] Class of 1928 OFFICERS ANNA S. HAYWARD H. CORNELIA SPALCKHAVER MARTHA H. COOPER JEANNETTE BAILEY HELEN DYSON ... DeMARIS R. DAVIS DORIS C. MILLER KATHARINE G. SLOCUM MARY M. LAMONT ] ELSBETH THEXTON J HELEN II . ATWILL President Vice-President Recording Secretary Corresponding Secretary Treasurer Executive Board Factotums Song Leader F 249 ] Class of 1928 ABBOTT, HELEN I 1625 Tibbits Avenue, Troy, N. Y. ACOMB, FRANCES D 517 Center Avenue, Lake Bluff, 111. ADAMS, JULIA R 903 E. Terrace St., Chattanooga, Tenn. ADAMS, KATHARINE H 3006 W. Coulter St., Germantown, Pa. ADKINS, BERTHA S 619 Park St., Salisbury, Md. ALDREDGE, GERTRUDE T 5500 Swiss Ave., Dallas, Tex. ALLEN, BARBARA 119 Briggs Rd., Brookline, Mass., ALLEN, GLORIA L 1520 Parkway Drive, Lakewood, O. ALLEN, RUTH Y Sheridan St., Williamsport, Pa. ARCHER, HELEN E 27 W. Raymond St., Hartford, Conn. ATWILL, HELEN H 164 Ocean St., Lynn, Mass. AUSTIN, DOROTHY M , 24 Hiss Rest, Tuckahoe, N. Y. AZBELL, PAULINE M 4109 B St., Little Rock, Ark. BACON, DOROTHY R 69 Maple St., Springfield, Mass. BAER, LILLIAN 247 N. 6th St., Reading, Pa. BAILEY, JEANNETTE 365 Highland Ave., Wollaston, Mass. BALLIN, MARJORIE 6 Orchard PI., New Rochelle, N. Y. BARE, WINONA B 503 W. Orange St., Lancaster, Pa. BARNARD, ELSIE Norwell, Mass. BARNES, ELIZABETH E 157 High St., Bristol, Conn. B ARRES, JEANETTE 946 Linden St., Bethlehem, Pa. BARRINGER, CATHERINE P 108 Lenox Rd., Schenectady, N. Y. BARRINGER, MARY P 108 Lenox Rd., Schenectady, N. Y. BATES, ALICE H 706 Auburn Ave., Buffalo, N. Y. BAYLY, LEONA B c.o. John W. Bayly, 902 Tribune Bldg., Tampa, Fla. BEHREND, RUTH ...1738 Pine St., Philadelphia, Pa. BENNETT, EUNICE M 271 Merrick Rd., Rockville Center, N. Y. BENNETT, LUCIA B Richmond, Ky. BEST, GRETCHEN L 627 Ripley St., Davenport, la. BIEHLE, MARTHA H 2817 S. Kingshighway, St. Louis, Mo. BILLMAN, BARBARA 106 N. 4th St., Reading, Pa. BILSKY, CHARLOTTE J 654 Highland Ave., Fall River, Mass. BOLIN, JANE M 23 Grand Ave., Poughkee.psie, N. Y. BRANDON, ELIZABETH B 1096 Van Dyke Ave., Detroit, Mich. BRIGGS, ESTHER C Billerica, Mass. BROWN, ELIZABETH 10 Norwood St., Winchester, Mass. BROWN, RUTH ALEXA Cobb Ave., White Plains, N. Y. BROWN, RUTH ALLISON 7341 Monticello St., Pittsburgh, Pa. [250] Class of 1928 — Continued BROWN, VIRGINIA T 819 N. Main St., Rockford, 111. BRUCH, MARCIA L 1815 Chicago Ave., Evanston, 111. BRYANT, MARY P 258 Ridgewood Ave., Glen Ridge, N. J. BUDLONG, BARBARA S 2120 Harlem Ave., Rockford, 111. BULLEN, MARGARET S Greenwood Rd., Shreveport, La. BUSH, MARGARET 1175 Park Ave., New York, N. Y. BUTLER, I. ESTELLE 275 Pawling Ave., Troy, N. Y. BUTTS, MARION V 124 Academy St., Poughkeepsie, N. Y. CAPLAN, ADELINE 81 Morning St., Portland, Me. CARRIER, MARY JANE 5076 Westminster PL, St. Louis, Mo. CARSPECKEN, MARGARET 245 Grand St., Morgantown, W. Va. CARTINHOUR, ELEANOR 1 Arsenal St., Cambridge, Mass. CASE, ELEANOR L Unionville, Conn. CASE, ELIZABETH M 90 Windham St., Willimantic, Conn. CASEY, DORIS H 172 Park St., Montclair, N. J. CATLETT, FANNY B Gloucester, Va. CAULFIELD, JEAN J 16 Holland Ter., Montclair, N. J. CAVEN, GENEVIEVE S 79 Hooker Ave., Poughkeepsie, N. Y. CAVIS, MURIEL Bristol, N. H. CHALFANT, JANE D 506 N. Church St., West Chester, Pa. CHAMBERLIN, ELIZABETH B 7 Lowell Rd., Concord, Mass. CHAMBERLIN, MARGARET W 7 Lowell Rd., Concord, Mass. CHASE, BARBARA P. O. Box 317, Windsor, Conn. CHISHOLM, E. ESTHER 40 Floyd St., Winthrop, Mass. CLARKE, RACHEL E 1823 Phelps PI., Washington, D. C. COBB, MARY K 112 Riverside Drive, New York, N. Y. COFFIN, MADELYN A 7 Doane Ave., Providence, R. I. COLDWELL, HELEN N The Elms, Goffe ' s Falls, N. H. COLE, DOROTHY 1102 Spencer Ave., Marion, Ind. COLE, RUTH M 73 Jefferson St., Salamanca, N. Y. COLLINS, ELIZABETH 378 Bacon St., Waltham, Mass. COLLINS, EVELYN J 84 Salisbury Rd., Brookline, Mass. COLLINS, M. BARNARD 200 Boulevard, Summit, N. J. COOLEY, ELIZABETH L 2409 7th Ave., Peoria, 111. COOPER, MARTHA H 1115 N. Negley Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. CORLEY, A. PRUDENCE 4331 Avondale Ave., Dallas, Tex. CRAFTS, ELLEN C 74 Coyle St., Portland, Me. CRANFILL, MONA MAI 6515 Oram Ave., Dallas, Tex. CURTISS, ELIZABETH 93 Myrtle St., Shelton, Conn. CUTLER, ELIZABETH 429 School St., Athol, Mass. [251] Class of 1928 — Continued DAILEY, BARBARA 269 Market St., Campello, Mass. DAIRE, VIRGINIA A 208 1st St., New Brunswick, N. J. DECKER, MARGARET H 23 Adams St.,, Brockport, N. Y. DEPPELER, ANTOINETTE G 10 East 85th St., New York, N. Y. VAN DERNOOT, HELEN B 420 West End Ave., New York, N. Y. DAVIS, ANNA ELIZABETH 525 Meixell St., Easton, Pa. DAVIS, DE MARIS R Homewood Apts., Baltimore, Md. DAVIS, HELEN L 415 Ridgeland Ave., Waukegan, 111. DICKSON, HELEN B 58 S. Fullerton Ave., Montclair, N. J. DOLE, MARY 312 W. Court St., Paris, 111. DOLLIVER, DOROTHY R 44 Riverview Rd., Brighton, Mass. DOW, GERALDINE 17 Ibis St., Forest Hills, N. Y. DRAFTS, HELEN H Hendersonville, N. C. DU BOIS CHRISTINE 29 Maple Ave., Ellenville, N. Y. DUGAN, AGNES M 120 Lancaster St., Albany, N. Y. DUNN, ADELAIDE A 29 Magnolia Ave., Larchmont, N. Y. DUNNELL, MARION L 387 Windsor Ave., Hartford, Conn. DYER, ALICIA L 75 South St., Freehold, N. J. DYSON, HELEN 309 W. Diamond Ave., Hazelton, Pa. EASTMAN, ELAINE F Woodstock, Vt. EASTMAN, KATHARINE 17 Upsal St., Philadelphia, Pa. EATON, DOROTHY P 7150 Penn. Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. EDDY, LOUISE P 49 Fairfax St., West Newton, Mass. ELIASON, S. LOUISE New Castle, Del. ELSAS, HELEN E Biltmore Hotel, Atlanta, Ga. EMERSON, CLARA L 87 S. Cliff St., Ansonia, Conn. ENGLISH, ABBIE L 71 Bentley Ave., Jersey City, N. J. ENTREKIN, ALICE Swarthmore, Pa. EPLER, EMMA D 827 N. 5th St., Reading, Pa. EXSTEIN, BEATRICE 650 West End Ave., New York, N. Y. FAIRBAIRN, MARGARET M 18 Upland Rd., Wellesley, Mass. FAIRFIELD, MARION 5 N. Park St., Hanover, N. H. FARRAR, ELIZABETH D 421 E. 18th St., Brooklyn, N. Y. FAULKNER, ANNE 1 1500 Madison St., Lynchburg, Va. FENN, LUCILLE H 315 Trainer St., Ridley Park, Pa. FERGER, M. DORIS 53 Watchung Ave., Montclair, N. J. FERGUSON, PRISCILLA 9 Deering St., Portland, .Me. FINSTERWALD, MAXINE F 1239 Chicago Blvd., Detroit, Mich. FISCH, GRACE C 550 48th St., Brooklyn, N. Y. FISHWICK, RUTH 197 Ridgewood Ave., Glen Ridge, N. J. [ 252 ] Class of 1928 — Continued FISKE, RUTH E St. Matthews, Ky. FLORSHEIM, PAULINE 1422 Spring St., Little Rock, Ark. FOLLMER, ELSIE E Hartsdale, N. Y. FORMAN, KATHRYN S Woodmere, N. Y. FOWLER, LOUISE L 241 Prospect Ave., Waterloo, La. FREELAND, ELIZABETH V St. Michael ' s Rectory, Anniston, Ala. FULLER, MARJORIE 305 Summer St., Stamford, Conn. GALLAGHER, IRENE W 167 Hunnewell Ave., Newton, Mass. GATES LOUISE W 215 Washington St., Wellesley Hills, Mass. GERWIG, ANNA M 901 Kirkpatrick Ave., Braddock, Pa. GESCHEIDT, JULIETTE Cottage Ave., Mt. Vernon, N. Y. GIBSON JEAN F 61 Brinkerhoff Ave., Mansfield, O. GLANZ, SADIE 35 Imlay St., Hartford, Conn GLUCK, EDITH Hotel Hamilton, W. 73rd St., New York, N. Y. GNADE, MARGARET F 128 Willis St., Oil City, Pa. GORHAM, ELEANOR S 11 Vassar St., Leominster, Mass. GRAHAM, RUTH W 68 Lincoln Ave., Amherst, Mass. GRATER, BERNICE P 24 Columbia Blvd., Waterbury, Conn. GRAY, HELEN M 1441 Kemble St., Utica, N. Y. GREEN, DOROTHY L 1897 Windermere St., East Cleveland. O. GRIESMAN, MARIAN C 19 Besch Ave., Albany, N. Y. HACK, MARGARET T 435 Barry Ave., Chicago, 111. HAINES, ALICE S 1431 Union St., Brooklyn, N. Y. HALL, MARGARET 467 Hanover St., Manchester, N. H. HAMILTON, FRANCES L 439 W. Kirby Ave., Detroit, Mich. HAMILTON, MARY T 918 Franklin St., Wilmington, Del. HARDY, HARRIET L 15 Pomeroy Ave., Madison, N. J. HART, MARY 3 Ravenscliffe Ave., Hamilton, Ont. Can. HARTMAN, FRANCES A Franklin and Marshall Academy, Lancaster, Pa. HAWKINS, ELIZABETH 1130 Wendell Ave., Schenectady, N. Y. HAWLEY, SARAH E 2970 Coleridge Rd., Cleveland Heights, O. HAWORTH, DOROTHY L 112 Slater Ave., Providence, R. I. HAYWARD, ANNA S 2919 Jackson Blvd., Sioux City, la. HAZELTON, HELEN F 10 Livermore Rd., Wellesley Hills, Mass. HEBBERD, ALICE D 209 S. 10th St., La Crosse, Wis. HEFFERAN, HELEN 6631 Harvard Ave., Chicago, 111. HELLMAN, MARGARET F 311 W. 71st St., New York, N. Y. HEREM, VIRGINIA L 1254 Lake Shore Drive, Chicago, 111. HESSELMAN, WINIFRED So. 1st St., Bayside, N. Y. HIGGINS, ANGELA M 761 Avenue A, Bayonne, N. J. [253] Class of 1928 — Continued HIGHT, GRACE H Swan Rd., Winchester, Mass. HIRSCH, ROBINA L 37 High St., East Dedham, Mass. HOBBIE, KATHERINE E 175 Morgan St., Tonawanda, N. Y. HOCH, JANET McLean Hospital, Waverly, Mass. HODEL, FLORENCE 397 Wyoming Ave., Maplewood, N. J. HOLLIS, FLORENCE M 2227 N. 18th St., Philadelphia, Pa. HOLLISTER, RUTH S 16 Stratford Rd., Schenectady, N. Y. HOOVER. KATHARINE S 721 N. Broad St., Elizabeth, N. J. HOTCHKISS, SALLY S 51 Gulf St., Milford, Conn HUGET, ELIZABETH 769 St. Mark ' s Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. HUGHES, DOROTHY G. . . 9 Duryea Rd., Upper Montclair, N. J. HURRELL, RUTH L 170 Ridgewood Ave., Glen Ridge, N. J. JARMAN, ATTIE V 3528 West End Ave., Nashville, Tenn. JEWETT, FRANCES L 273 Woodland Rd., Ravinia, 111. JONES, HELEN E 837 Wyoming Ave., Kingston, Pa. JONES, MARION A 232 Linden Ave., Oak Park, 111. KING, GRACE F 19 Dolphin Ave., Winthrop, Mass. KIRKWOOD, FLORENCE H 53 Union St., Montclair, N. J. KLEIN, EVELYN L 130 Longfellow Ave., Detroit, Mich. KLUNE, MILDRED F 20 Melbourne PL, Buffalo, N. Y. KRUG, HELEN A 3316 Woolworth Ave., Omaha, Neb. LABBE, PAULINE J 9 Lovewell Rd., Wellesley, Mass. LAMKIN, BESSIE MARGARET 1025 S. 26th St., Birmingham, Ala. LAMONT, MARY M 224 Ballantine Parkway, Newark, N. J. LAMONT, PHOEBE E 224 Ballantine Parkway, Newark, N. J. LAWRENCE, CONSTANCE L 546 Washington St., Wellesley, Mass. LECHER HELEN M 183 W. River St., Wilkes Barre, Pa. LEE, GRACE 144 Hancock St., Auburndale, Mass. LEFFINGWELL, JANE 325 Union St., Hackensack, N. J. LELAND, DOROTHY E 1315 S. 21st St., Lincoln, 111. LEVINGS, ELEANOR E 420 W. Court St., Paris, 111. LEVY, RUTH H 148 Esplanade, Mount Vernon, N. Y. LODER, EDITH 421 State Rd., Cynwyd, Pa. LOETSCHER, HELEN M 98 Mercer St., Princeton, N. J. LOOMIS, SALLY M 223 E. Crawford St., Elkhart, Ind. LOVE, LOLA M P. O. Box 712, Asheville, N. C. McCARTY, MARGARET 124 Dorchester Rd., Buffalo, N. Y. MacCLOSKEY, KATHARINE 1301 Inverness Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. McCLURE, ANNA K 429 Franklin Ave., Vandergrift, Pa. McCOY, MARGARET T 341 Weston Rd., Wellesley, Mass. [254] Eii n8sr Class of 1928 — Continued McDOWELL, AMOR ET W Clover St., Brighton, Rochester, N. Y. McGAW, MARGARET S 75 Pineywoods Ave., Springfield, Mass. McJENNETT, MARGARET J Neal Gate St., Greenbush, Mass. MACON, MARGARET B 25 South St., New York, N. Y. MADDOCKS, GWENDOLYN 3 Woodside Rd., Winchester, Mass. MANN, SUSAN H High St., Ashland, Mass. MARSHEL, CHARLOTTE R 37 Milford Ave., Newark, N. J. MARCUS, ROMAYNE 745 N. Webster Ave., Scranton, Pa. MARCUSE, ROSALIE 2213 Monument Ave., Richmond, Va. MARCY D. ELIZABETH 1173 Chestnut St., Newton Upper Falls, Mass. MARKSON, HARRIET F 11 Neal St., Portland, Me. MARQUIS, ELIZABETH P. O. Box 67, Montrose, N. Y. MARSHALL, JANET M 54 Ethelbert Ave., Ridgewood, N. J. MARTIN, JANE L Fort Amador, Panama Canal Zone MARX, JEANNE C 4353 McPherson Ave., St. Louis, Mo. MASON, HARRIET B 157 Proctor Blvd., Utica, N. Y. MATHESON, ANNE F 720 Atkinson, Detroit, Mich. MAYNARD, BARBARA R South Sudbury, Mass. MERRIT, MARGARET L 204 Somerset St., Bound Brook, N. J. MILDE, GERTRUDE A 1132 Forest Rd., Lakewood, O. MILLER, DORIS C 59 Burlington Ave., Detroit, Mich. MILLIGAN, ELEANOR C 14 Kane Ave., Larchmont, N. Y. MILLIKIN ELEANOR 311 S. 2nd St., Hamilton, O. MILLS, MARY L 2472 Observatory Rd., Cincinnati, O. MILNE, MATILDA L. V Condit Ter., West Orange, N. J. MILNOR, MARIAN P 356 Bryant Ave., Clifton, Cincinnati, O. MOORE, DOROTHY A 80 East Main St., Johnstown, N. Y. MOORE, LYDIA E 500s Bryan St., Dallas, Tex. MORRISON, FRANCES P Linwood, Mass. MOSES, EDNA F 137 Prospect St., Gloversville, N. Y. MOSES, MARJORIE G Framingham, Mass. MUDGE, RACHEL M East Wallingford, Vt. MUIR, ELIZABETH 63 Early St., Morristown, N. J. MURRAY, MURIEL c. o. Miss Mary A. Greene, Croton-on-Hudson, N. Y. NICHOLS, B. DOROTHY 522 S. Main St., Woonsocket, R. I. NOBLE, THEODORA L 98 Court St., Westfield, Mass. NOYES, ELIZABETH B 14 Crystal St., Newton Center, Mass. OWSLEY, MARGARET 81 S. Hamilton St., Poughkeepsie, N. Y. PAGE, HELEN J 5491 1st St., Westfield, N. J. PANCOAST, HELEN A 4810 Davenport St., Omaha, Neb. [255] Class of 1928 — Continued PAPPS, LINDSEY E. S 171 Ridgewood Ave., Glen Ridge, N. J. PARKS, KATHARINE E 148 Forest Park Ave., Springfield, Mass. PARSONS, HARRIET C Algonquin Hotel, New York, N. Y. PATTON, SARAH C 5744 Solway St., Pittsburgh, Pa. PEASE, CONSTANCE B 32 Cone St., Hartford, Conn. PEEK, ELIZABETH B 520 Broadway, Paterson,, N. J. PELOUBET, ANNE T 15 Hillside Ave., Glen Ridge, N. J. PEREGRINE, MARY H Platonian Aprs., Marion, Ind. PETIT, HELEN R 540 Ocean Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. PFALZGRAF, M. BEATRICE 32 Woodland Rd., Maplewood, N. J. PHILLIPS, ELSIE M Southwest Harbor, Me. PICKENS, MARJORIE 1831 California St., Washington, D. C. PINDAR, JEAN P 960 Park Ave., Woodcliffe-on-Hudson, N. Y. PLUMMER, RUTH M Hotel Kimball, Springfield, Mass. POINDEXTER, JEAN 25 Ledyard Rd., Hartford, Conn. POMEROY, RUTH N 3 Burton St., Springfield, Mass. PORTER, ANNE F 422 Roland Ave., Baltimore, Md. PRESS, TENA 222 Eastern Promenade, Portland, Me. PUGH, ANNE V 501 Hamilton Rd., Thornburg, Pittsburgh, Pa., RADOVSKY, EVELYN R 1191 Highland Ave., Fall River, Mass. REED, DOROTHY Naval Base, Norfolk, Va. REW, ADA K 217 Dempster St., Evanston, 111. REW, THERESA 217 Dempster St., Evanston, 111. RICH, DORIS E 57 Landseer St., West Roxbury, Mass. RICKER, MARGARET H 6 Winter St., St. Johnsbury, Vt. RILEY, CONSTANCE B Hilltop, Plainfield, N. J. RILEY, FRANCES F 447 Rugby Rd., Brooklyn, N. Y. ROBERTS, SARA N .1640 E. Parkway, Louisville, Ky. ROCKAFELLOW, GWENDOLYN G Hotel Berkely, New York, N. Y. ROCKHOLD, ELOISE 50 High St., Glen Ridge, N. J. ROLLINS, HARRIET 208 Newbury St., Brockton, Mass. ROPER, VIRGINIA B 735 Yarmouth St., Norfolk, Va. ROSENBERG, BEATRICE 397 Springfield Ave., Newark, N. J. RUE, ALICE W 28 Dudley Ave., Lansdowne, Pa. RUSSELL, JULIE S 15 Hunter St., Glens Falls, N. Y. SANFORD, ELEANOR W Shelbyville, Ky. SAWYER, ANNE F 1847 Laurel Ave., St. Paul, Minn. SCARBOROUGH, MARIAN S 6412 Germantown Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. SCHULTZ, ESTHER 3632 Linwood Ave., Cincinnati, O. SCHWENK, ELIZABETH G 12 Park PL, Brattleboro, Vt. [256] Class of 1928 — Continued SCOBORIA, MARJORIE B ..Adams St., Chelmsford, Mass. SCOTT, FRANCES V Weldon, N. C. SEDGEWICK, MARGARET M 262 Prince Arthur St., W. Montreal, Canada SEGAL, HARRIET 1 205 Babcock St., Brookline, Mass. SELLING, LOUISE G 709 S. Crescent Ave., Cincinnati, O. SEWARD, PHOEBE S 108 Laurel Ave., Binghamton, N. Y. SHARP, ELEANOR E 81 Linwood Ave., Buffalo, N. Y. SHAW, LUCY H 1903 Center Ave., Bath City, Mich. SHELLING, KATHERINE E 113 N. Market St., Troy, N. Y. SIFF, MIRIAM 2213 Loretta PL, Far Rockaway, N. Y. SINCERBEAUX, HELEN F 118 Audley St., Kew Gardens, N. Y. SLOCUM, KATHARINE G 108 Bloomfield Ave., Hartford, Conn. SNYDER, HELEN 902 Prairie Ave., Cleburne, Tex. SOLENBERGER, HELEN H 851 S. Lincoln St., Springfield, 111. SOLLMANN, MARY A 14327 Superior Rd., Cleveland, O. SPALCKHAVER, H. CORNELIA 334 Bedford Rd., Pleasantville, N. Y. SPERBER, ESTELLE M 272 W. 90th St., New York, N. Y. STAPLES, BARBARA F 8 Green St., Biddleford, Me. STEERS, HELEN G 45 Bryant Ave., White Plains, N. Y. STEINERT, KATHRYN L 366 Olney St., Providence, R. I. STERNBERGE R, EMELIA 715 Summit Ave., Greensboro, N. C. STONE, JEAN S 34 Carver Rd., Newton Highlands, Mass. STONE, VIRGINIA 133 Winthrop St., Taunton, Mass. STORER, FLORENCE T 619 Howe St., Pittsburgh, Pa. STREET, B. ELEANOR 666 Chester Ave., Moorestown, N. J. STROBACH, PORTIA P 202 N. Naches Ave., Yakinia, Wash. STUNTZNER, MYRTLE A. 30 Bullard St., Norwood, Mass. SUTTERLIN, ETHLYN M 2144 Barringer Ave., Louisville, Ky. SWARTZEL, MARY HELEN 4360 Center Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. TAYLOR, MADELINE 57 Rockledge Rd., Newton Highlands, Mass. TERWILLIGER, KATHARINE T 23 Center St., Ellenville, N. Y. THEXTON, ELSBETH Highland Park, Lake Wales, Fla. THOMAS, ELIZABETH R 922 N. St. Clair St., Pittsburgh, Pa. THOMAS, EVELYN 555 N. 11th St., Muskogee, Okl. THUN, HILDEGRADE E 22 Reading Blvd., Wyomissing, Pa. TILTON, EMILY K 28 Waban Ave., Waban, Mass. TOWER, LOUISE W 233 McKinley Ave., New Haven, Conn. TOWNSEND, ESTHEL R 4010 Rawlins St., Dallas, Tex. TRIGGS, JANE J 1122 Lake Ave., Wilmette, 111. TRUITT, EUGENE B 6124 Walnut St., Kansas City, Mo, [257] Class of 1928 — Continued TRUMAN, ANNA L 61 Parade St., Providence, R. I. TUCKER, BLANCHE E Norcross Hill, Baldwinsville, Mass. TWICHELL, CONSTANCE M 93 Forest St., New Britain, Conn. ULMANN, EUGENIE 55 W. 74th St., New York, N. Y. USHER, CATHARINE 271 Huron Ave., Cambridge, Mass. VAN ORDEN, EDITH P 63 Fairmont Ave., Chatham, N. J. WALDEN, SARAH S 210 S. Conan St., New Haven, Conn. WALKER, ALICE W 75 Downing St., Brooklyn, N. Y. WALLIS, PRUDENCE W King Rd., Malvern, Pa. WALTER, ELIZABETH S 9 Grandview Ave., Stamford, Conn. WASSERMAN, KATHERINE E Wissahickon Ave., and Hortter St., Germantown, Pa. WATT, ELEANOR L 477 William St., East Orange, N. J. WEBBER, DOROTHY P 297 Main St., Lewiston, Me. WEEKS, BEATRICE H 19 Chevy St., Brockton, Mass. WEEKS, ISABEL C 122 Philadelphia Ave., West Pittston, Pa. WENTWORTH, PRISCILLA 39 Hillside Rd., Watertown, Mass. WHITAKER, LOIS H 40 Quincy St., North Adams, Mass. WHITNEY, ELIZABETH A Enfield St., Enfield, Conn. WILDER, ALICE 523 East Ave., Newark, N. Y. WILLEY, MARGARET M 326 Washington St., Wellesley Hills, Mass. WILLIAMS, DOROTHY F. Camden, N. J. WILLIAMS, LOUISE T. ..... 1512 Gaines St., Little Rock, Ark. WILLIAMS, MILDRED E 79 Washington Ave., Waltham, Mass. WILLIAMS, SARAH M 6215 Washington Ave; St. Louis, Mo. WILSON, ELOISE H 3035 Fairmount Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. WILSON, MIRIAM S 15 Horton St., Newburyport, Mass. WINSPEARE, HARRIET E 452 W. Maple Ave., Newark, N. J. WINTERS, MARGARET M 112 Cohasset St., Pittsburgh, Pa. WOLF, CAROLINE R 1731 State St., New Orleans, La. WOLF, GRACE 1555 Carr Ave., Memphis, Tenn. WOOD, GRACE L 30 Nelson Ave., Cooperstown, N. Y. WOOD, HELEN 329 Hathaway Lane, Wynnewood, Pa. WOODWARD, ELIZABETH S 670 Chester Ave., Moorestown, N. J. WORTH, MARY R West Chester, Pa. YOUNG, MARJORIE 33 Chestniit St., Stoneham, Mass. ZIEGLER, ELIZABETH C 6307 Bartlett St., Pittsburgh, Pa. ZIEGLER, RUTH E 580 Walnut St., Newtonville, Mass. [ 258 ] Class of 1929 OFFICERS VIRGINIA ONDERDONK President KATHERINE V. CAST Vice President DOROTHY S. ALEXANDER Recording Secretary PEGGY McDIARMID Corresponding Secretary ALICE L. ABBOTT Treasurer ALICE DENNETT GERALDINE BADENOCK V Executive Board AGNES TALBOT JANE JONES | V ....... . Factotums ELIZABETH NASH ) ROSEMARY WYMAN . . . .... Song Leader 259 J Class of 1929 AARONS, MATILDA .681 Prospect Ave., Milwaukee, Wis. ABBOTT, ALICE L 60 Berkley PL, Buffalo, N. Y. ABBOTT, DORCAS 57 Parker St., Watertown, Mass. ABBOTT, KATHERINE 27 Nahant PI., Lynn, Mass. ADAMS, CORRILLA C Greenwich, Conn. ADAMS, MARGARET E Hartsdale Ave., Hartsdale, N. Y. ALBIN, KATHRYN E. D 3286 De Sota Ave., Cleveland Heights, O. ALDEN, ELIZABETH 67 Hopkins PI., Longmeadow, Mass. ALEXANDER, DOROTHY S 423 W. 120th St., New York, N. Y. ALLEN, LYDIA L 231 Poplar Ave., Woodbury, N. J. ALLEN, PAMELIA 56 Addington Rd., Brookline, Mass. ALTHAM, HELEN 252 High St., Fall River, Mass. ANDERSON, ELINOR H 272 Van Courtland Park Ave., Yonkers, N. Y. ANGUS, ISABEL S 8 Crooke Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. APPEL, MARION B 681 Glenwood Ave., Avondale, Cincinnati, O. ARNDT, GRETEL 750 Emerson St., Denver, Colo. ARTHUR, BARBARA Orchard Park, N. Y. AUGUR, CLAIRE 89 Mt. Pleasant St., New Bedford, Mass. AULTMAN, ANITA B 20 Fort Benjamin Harrison, Ind. AUSTIN, PHYLLIS A. E Seaview Ave., Beach Bluff, Mass. AUTEN, DOROTHY 474 Greenwood Ave., Trenton, N. J. BACON, ANNETTE L 675 Delaware Ave., Buffalo, N. Y. BADENOCH, GERALDINE 28 Whittlesey Ave., East Orange, N. J. BAKER, ESTHER M 868 Great Plain Ave., Needham, Mass. BALLARD, EDITH E .201 Summit Ave., Syracuse, N. Y. BALTZELL, RUTH J 392 Clinton Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. BANCROFT, LELIA A 44 Neal St., Portland, Me. BANKSON, FRANCES W 403 Berkley Rd., Haverford, Pa. BANNON, PERSIS Bannon PI., Portsmouth, O. BARLEY, FLORENCE E 133 E. Scribner Ave., DuBois, Pa. BARTHMAN, FLORENCE G 1045 Park Ave., New York, N. Y. BARTLETT, ELIZABETH 8 Parkway Hanover, N. H. BEAN, FRANCES F c. o. Mr. D. W. Eipper, Turner Falls, Mass. BEERS, HELEN RUTH 87 Ford Ave., Oneonta, N. Y. BEERS, JOSEPHINE W 63 Fair St., Guilford, Conn. BENDER, ELEANOR 108 S. Lake Ave., Albany, N. Y. BENNETT, ALICE R 272 Linden St., Holyoke, Mass. BENTON, HELEN D Green St., Vergennes, Vt. [ 260 ] Class of 1929 — Continued BERG, ROSALIE H Apt. 9 E. 1530 Locust St., Philadelphia, Pa. BETTS, BARBARA B Spring Ave., Troy, N. Y. BIELBY, HELEN J 319 Norwood Ave., Buffalo, N. Y. BIRD, MARGARET C 1056 N. Market St., Wichita, Kan. BLACKFORD, MARY ALLEN 212 Fayette St., Staunton, Va. BOATNER, ANNA C 1516 Pine St., New Orleans, La. BOOTH, MARY 331 Cambridge Ave., Milwaukee, Wis. BOTTIGHEIMER, ERNA 632 Forest Ave., Cincinnati, O. BOUILLON, ELIZABETH M 119 New Litchfield St., Torrington, Conn. BOULEE, BERNICE A 12609 Phillips St., East Cleveland, O. BOURNE, BARBARA 6 Symmes Rd., Winchester, Mass. BRADLEY, JANE C B radley Hill, Lee, Mass. BRADNER, EDITH Saunderstown, R. I. BRADY, MARY ELIZABETH 94 Silver Lake Rd., Tomkinsville, N. Y. BRADY, GERTRUDE M 2510 Euclid Blvd., Cleveland, O. BRESSLER, MARY H 202 Hathaway Pk., Lebanon, Pa. BREWSTER, STELLA F 143 State St., Portland, Me. BROCKELMAN, HELENA C 76 Charier St., Fitchburg, Mass. BROWNING, GERTRUDE P Mountain Lakes, N. J. BRUSH, RUTH S North St., Greenwich, Conn. BUDISH, ELIZABETH 34 S. Lenox St., Worcester, Mass. BURDICK, ELIZABETH R Duvall Ave. Lawina Rd., Baltimore, Md. CAMISA, VIVIAN M 52 Overbrook Rd., Ridgewood, N. J. CAMPS, VIVIENNE M 1785 Bedford Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. CANNON, M. ELIZABETH Andover, N. Y. CARLOW, ANNA T 36 Notre Dame St., Hudson Falls, N. Y. CARLTON, HARRIET H Maplewood Ter., Haverhill, Mass. CARNS, SUE 2 E. 56th St., New York, N. Y. CASHMAN, MARGARET E 212 High St., Newburyport, Mass. CASSELMAN, LOUISE C 731 N. 4th St., Reading, Pa. CAST, KATHERINE V 1841 Rosemont Rd., Cleveland, O. CHAPIN, HARRIET A 35 Fairview St., Waterbury, Conn. CHEW, FLORENCE B 205 E. Market St., Xenia, O. CHIDSEY, JANE L 321 Pierce St., Easton, Pa. CLACK, ELEANOR D 299 Park Ave., New York, N. Y. CLARK, DOROTHY A 302 Norwood Ave., Edgewood, R. I. CLARK, RUTH A Delaware St., Laurelton, N. Y. CLAYTON, FLORENCE E Yardly Rd., R. F. D. 2, Morrisville, Pa. COBB, ELIZABETH H Denmark, Me. COHN, KATHERINE R 10838 Deering Ave., Cleveland, O. COLLIER, ELSIE 21 Green St., Gardner, Mass. [261 ] Class of 1929 — Continued COLWELL, ADELAIDE S 68 Longfellow Rd., Wellesley Hills, Mass CONKLIN, M. ELIZABETH 32 Woodland Ave., East Orange, N. |. CONNALLY, MARY 3080 Beechwood Blvd., Pittsburgh, Pa. COOKE, EUNICE 248 Pine St., Lowell, Mass. COOPER, RUTH S 356 W. 145th St., New York, N. Y. CORLEY, M. EUGENIA 4331 Avondale Ave., Dallas, Tex. CORNELL, EMILY B 876 Park Ave., New York, N. Y. COXEN, NATALIE 71 Bracewell Ave., South Adams, Mass. COYNE, MARY FRANCES 1824 Pittston Ave., Scranton, Pa. CRAIG, ELEANOR F 357 Claremont Ave., Montclair, N. J. CREIGHTON, HARRIET B 113 Williams St., Newark, N. J. CROSBY, MARTHA B 252 Edgewood St., Hartford, Conn CROSS, ANITA E 28 Claflin St., Milford, Mass. CURTIS, HELEN 161 W. 54th St., New York, N. Y. CUTTER, MERYLE R 46 Rockledge Rd., Newton Highlands, Mass. DANFORTH, MOLLY C 129 Windsor Ave., Buffalo, N. Y. DANIELL, MARGARET S 89 Third St., Laurium, Mich. DAUGHERTY, ELIZABETH F 6114 Callery St., Pittsburgh, Pa. DAVIS, MARGARET 22 Waltham St., Cumberland Mills, Me. DECKER, MARIAN C 849 Maryland Ave., Syracuse, N. Y. DeLAN EY, SARA T 137 LaClede Ave., Youngstown O. DELICATE, HARRIET G 229 4th St., Edwardsville, 111. DENNETT, ALICE 125 E. 39th St., New York, N. Y. DeWOLF, MARY 1 67 E. Kirby Ave., Detroit, Mich. DICKERMAN, ESTHER , 29 Allston St., Allston, Mass. DIFFENBAUGH, ELLEN F. 1027 Woods Ave., Lancaster, Pa DOCKERY, MARGARET A 14 Midland Ave., Montclair, N. J. DONHAM, DOROTHY E 41 Douglas Rd., Glen Ridge, N. J. DONNELL, BARBARA 37 Park St., Danvers, Mass. DOOGUE, ELEANOR H 24 Vanderbilt Rd., Hartford, Conn. DOOLITTLE, MARION 5643 Swiss Ave., Dallas, Tex. DOUTY, BLANCHE F 331 Harrison Ave., Elkins Park, Pa. DUFFY, MARION C 521 Lowell St., Lawrence, Mass. DULING, EMMA M Bryn Athyn, Pa. DUNHAM, AMELIA K 3011 Vernon PI., Cincinnati, O. DUNLAP, ANNA C 500 W. 33rd St., Baltimore, Md. DUTCHER, HORTENSE C 35 Linwood Ave., Newton, N. J. DUTTON, GENEVIEVE L 416 W. 4th St., Coffeyville, Kas. ECHOLS, SUSAN E 13 Kenilworth St., Boston, Mass. ECKHARDT, MARIE M 24 Grove Ave., Shelton, Conn. EDGECOMB, BERYL 98 West End Ave., Binghamton, N. Y. [ 262 ] Class of 1929 — Continued EKEN, CATHERINE H Midwood Ter., Madison, N. J. ELLIS, ELISABETH 1 1913 5th Ave., Troy, N. Y. ENGLAND, ROSE 186 Wendell Ave., Pittsfield, Mass. ERNST, RUTH C 2540 Fairmont Blvd., Cleveland Heights, O. EVANS, EUGENIA A 9914 Longwood Drive, Chicago, 111. EVERETT, BARBARA 56 Beacon St., Concord, N. H. FALCONER, KATHERINE E 32 Prospect St., Jamestown, N. Y. FALLON, ELIZABETH L 1211 Emerson St., N. W., Washington, D. C. FEARY, GRACE 153 S. Kake Ave., Albany, N. Y. FINK, HELEN C 775 Bird Ave., Buffalo, N. Y. FISHER, MARION C 29 Bradwood St., Boston, Mass. FISK, NANCY H Stafford Springs, Conn. FLEISCHMANN, RUTH J 345 W. 88th St., New York, N. Y. FLINT, DOROTHY 289 Highland Ave., West Newton, Mass. FOSNOT, MARY G. 17 E. 3rd St., Lewistown, Pa. FOSTER, JOSEPHINE C N. Main St. R. F. D. 62A, Stratford, Conn. FOULKROD, MARIE 3910 Chestnut St., Philadelphia, Pa. FRANC, HELEN M , 120 W. 70th St., New York, N. Y. FRANCIS, LYDIA A 1623 W. Westmoreland St., Philadelphia, Pa. FREIBERG, MYRTLE 85 Central Ave., Orange, N. J. FRYE, MARGARET B. 35 Court St., Buffalo, N. Y. FULD, SELMA 272 W. 90th St., New York, N. Y. GATES, ALICE A 215 Washington St., Wellesley Hills, Mass. GEDDES, JANET B 102 Clinton Ave., Montclair, N. J. GIBBS, VIRGINIA S 1412 Avenue O, Huntsville, Tex. GIFFORD, EDNA M 3708 Maplewood Ave., Dallas, Tex. GILMORE, MARY A East Hill, Warsaw, N. Y. GOEHST, EMILY A 2618 Lake View Ave., Chicago, 111. GOFF, JEAN H Longvale Rd., Bronxville, N. Y. GOLDMAN, FLORENCE E 91 Fremont St., Bridgeport, Conn. GORFINKLE, THELMA 78 Salisbury Rd M Bropkline Mass. GOULD, VIRGINIA 404 Riverside Drive, New ' York, N. Y. GRABILL, OLIVE C 16 Aldworth St., Jamaica Plain, Mass. GRAVER, PHYLLIS 10338 Seely Ave.,, Chicago, 111. GREEN, ELEANOR B 2101 N. Albania St., Indianapolis, Ind. GRIES, MARY F 227 Ridgewood Aye., Daytton, O. GUEST, ELIZABETH C Apt. 29, 1127 W. Grace, St,., Richmond, Va. GUTMAN, NANNETTE S 54 Englewood Ave Brpokfine, Mass. HAINES, ELIZABETH J 2322 Ashmead PL, Washjngton, D. C. HALL, MARTHA A 1723 N. Leahy St., Pawhuska, Okl. HALLE, MARY S 2981 Berkshire Rd., Cleveland Heights, O. [ 263 ] « Class of 1929 — Continued HAM, HELENE E 4 Grant PI., Mount Vernon, 111. HAMILTON, MARGARET T Ambassador Hotel, Chicago, 111. HAMLIN, MARGARET T Great Meadows, N. J. HARMAN, VERONA 1000 Bryden Rd., Columbus, O. HARRIS, IMOGENE W 424 Cedar St., Marquette, Mich. HARRIS, JEAN H 1179 Elmwood Ave., Buffalo, N. Y. HARRISON, ELIZABETH M Greene, N. Y. HARROLD, HELEN S 550 Orange St., Macon, Ga. HARSH, HELEN C 528 Devon PI., Toledo O. HARTSHORN, MILDRED 15 Claremont Ave., New York, N. Y. HARWOOD, LOIS B 270 Linwood Ave., Newtonville, Mass. HASKINS, DOROTHY M 420 Wynnewood Rd., Pelham Manor, N. Y. HASTINGS, KATHERINE Sylvan Hills, Hollidaysburg, Pa. HASTINGS, RUTH K Fajardo, P. R. HAYDEN, DOROTHY 1 Greenleaf St., Springfield, Mass. HAYS, JEAN E 161 Lancaster Ave., Buffalo, N. Y. HAYWARD, ELINOR 20 Highland Ter., Brockton, Mass. HAYWARD, RACHEL D 1000 S. Main St., Findlay, O. HELLER, MURIEL L 126 Oxford Rd., Newton Center, Mass. HENDERSON, ANTOINETTE ' . ' . 36 Park St., Walton, N. Y. HENNING, MARY S 2737 Cathedral Ave., Washington, D. C. HENNINGER, JEAN 715 Aiken Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. HERRICK, LOUISE I Kenwood, Oneida, N. Y. HESS, CAROL B 616 Ponce de Leon Ave., Atlanta, Ga. HEYDT, ELLEN H 34 Melrose PI., Montclair, N. J. HIROOKA, YAYE Tosabou-dori Neshu-ku, Osaka, Japan HIRSHBERG, JANET S 546 Kenwood Blvd., Milwaukee, Wise. HISCOCK, MABELLE C Wilton, Me. HISEY, ELIZABETH R 215 E. 33rd St., Indianapolis, Ind. HOFFMAN, EDITH J 1776 Noble Ave., Bridgeport, Conn. HOFFMAN, JEANETTE J 159 W. 84th St., New York, N. Y. HOLDEN, ROXANA 30 Grove St., Auburndale, Mass. HOLINGER, ALICE E 617 Fullerton Pkway, Chicago, 111. HOLMES, RUTH C tfatonal, N. Y. HOLT, RUTH H 53 Florentine Gardens, Springfield, Mass. HOPKINS, BARBARA 20 W. Beach St., Flushing, N. Y. HORMELL, MARY E 15 Potter St., Brunswick, Me. HORTON, MIRIAM L. . . 17711 Hamilton Rd., Detroit, Mich. HOYT, ELEANOR Laurel Beach, Milford, Conn. HUBBARD, KATHARINE E 408 N. Main St., Sand Springs, Okl. HULL, CHARLOTTE E Stockbridge, Mass. [264] Class of 1929 — Continued HUNTINGTON, FRANCES 2341 East Hill Ave., Cincinnati, O. HURLBUTT, MARCIA S 203 Grove St., Wellesley, Mass. HUSE, BETTY L 450 Riverside Drive, New York, N. Y. HUTCHINS, MARY W 208 Main St., Towanda, Pa. ILIFF, CYNTHIA W The Old Homestead, Spring Garden St., Ambler, Pa. JAMES, BETHEVA R Mountain Lakes, N. J. JABES, THALIA P 4 Common St., Scituate, Mass. JARVIS, ELEANOR T Park St., Tenafly, N. J. JEWETT, MARIAN E South Deerfield, Mass. JOHNSON, DOROTHY F 10 Whittier Rd., Wellesley Hills, Mass. JOHNSON, THEODATE 2171 Overlook Rd., Cleveland, O. JOHNSON, DOROTHY H 110 Fairmount Ave., Chatham, N. J. JONES, E. LILIAN Billerica, Mass. JONES, JANE 126 S. Steubin St., Chanute, Kas. JONES, JEANNETTE V 435 Riverside Drive, New York, N. Y. JONES, PAULINE 52 N. Adams St., Manchester, N. H. JORDAN, LOUISE Mineville, N. Y. JOVA, NATALIE M 231 Liberty St., Newburgh, N. Y. KAUFFMAN, FLORENCE L 228 Vine Ave., Highland Park, 111. KAUZMANN, J. ELSIE 100 Hamilton Ave., New Rochelle, N. Y. KEBBE, ELIZABETH C Hanover, Mass. KELLOGG, EWART R 119 Caroline St., Saratoga Springs, N. Y. KELLOUGH, HELEN V 1601 S. Madison Ave., Tulsa, Okl. KENDIG, AGNES E 5328 Boynton St., Germantown, Pa. KERNER, MARGIE A 1011 Harmon PL, Minneapolis, Minn. KHOURY, EDITH 538 54th St., Brooklyn, N. Y. KIMBALL, KATHARINE 331 Waverly St., Belmont, Mass. KING, JEAN M 97 Mass. Ave., Arlington, Mass. KINGSLEY, FRANCES J 321 St. Davids Ave., Wayne, Pa. KIRK, DORIS 49 Claremont Ave., New York, N. Y. KIRKBRIDE, ESTHER L 2439 Scortwood Ave., Toledo, O. KLEIN, HELEN 3881 Reading Rd., Cincinnati, O. KNUDSON, ELIZABETH 87 Beach St., Mamaroneck, N. Y. KOEHLER, MIRIAM M 30 Atherton St., Roxbury, Mass. KOHN, JEAN 1442 Cherokee Rd., Louisville, Ky. KROLIK, MARGARET L 5155 Second Blvd., Detroit, Mich. KRUGER, LILLIAN 727 Broadway, South Boston, Mass. KUHN, DORIS H 739 Lawrence Ave., Detroit, Mich. KURTZ, DOROTHY A 202 Fairview Ave., Connellsville, Pa. LAFFERTY, MARGARET D 327 Amber St., Pittsburg, Pa. LAKE, MARY E 29 Auburn St., Concord, N. H. [265] Class of 1929 — Continued LAMBERT, GERTRUDE L 176 Merriam Ave., Leominster, Mass. LANGE, LOUISE A 4234 Redbud PI., Avondale, Cincinnati, O. LANSBURGH, BARBARA R 815 Park Ave., New York, N. Y. LAWRENCE, LUCY M 4 Stoughton PI., Dorchester, Mass. LEDERMAN, JANE S 1444 Rosewood Ave., Louisville Ky. LEHMAN, ANNETTE 740 West End Ave., New York, N. Y. LEVY, DOROTHY F 1420 Cherokee Rd., Louisville, Ky. LEWIS, VIRGINIA 401 S. Dallas Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. LINCOLN, ELIZABETH H Elkhorn, W. Va. LINDEMANN, EDNA A 221 Ward Ave., Stapleton, N. Y. LISTER, MILDRED E 65 Franklin St., Providence, R. I. LOBDELL, KATHARINE 1 130 Brinkerhoff St., Plattsburgh, N. Y. LOCKE, GERTRUDE 1 62 Ash St., Auburndale, Mass. LORENZ, ELLEN JANE 390 W. First St., Dayton, O. LOVETTE, LOIS B 408 N. Main St., Greenville, Tenn. LYMAN, HELEN D 32 N. Main St., Sharon, Mass. LYNAH, HARIE G Shippan Point, Stamford, Conn. MacCARTHY, MARGARET 124 Dorchester Rd., Buffalo, N. Y. McCONNELL, MARGARET F 218 W. Market St., Urbana, O. McCULLOUGH, ELIZABETH H 116 E. 39th St., New York, N. Y. McDIARMID, PEGGY 614 Evanswood PI., Cincinnati, O. MacDONALD, MIRIAM F 9 Edgemon Rd., Quincy, Mass. MACHETTE, ANNA H Y. W. C. A., Spake and Adler Sts., Pittsburgh, Pa, McINTOSH, ANNIE L Isle of Hope, Savannah Ga. MacMILLAN, DOROTHY 220 McLennan Ave., Syracuse, N. Y. McNEISH, MARION S 10 Pleasant! St., Leicester, Mass. MADISON, MARY F 2289 Grandview Ave., Cleveland Heights, O. MAGOWAN, ELIZABETH H 10 Burnett Ter., Maplewood, 111. MARKLEY, JEAN 777 Burr Ave., Winnetha, 111. MARKS, EDNA L 8 Colonial St., Charleston, S. C. MARSH, JULIA Strickland Rd., Cos Cob, Conn. MARSHALL, MARY L 129 Grasmere St., Newton, Mass. MARTIN, CAROL 585 Rahway Ave., Woodbridge, N. J. MARTIN, LOIS T 1525 Waverly St., Palo Alto, Cal. MASTERS, JOY 970 Center St., Newton Center, Mass. MATLOCK, JESSICA Perremond Apts., Denver, Colo. MATTHEWS, JANET S 1812 F Street, Lincoln, Neb. MAXWELL, F. JANE 704 Jefferson Ave., Washington, Pa. MAY, ISABEL F 257 Monroe St., Brooklyn, N. Y. MEAD, THEODORA H 11 Elm St., Dobbs Ferry, N. Y. MEAD, MABEL C 3312 35th St., N. W., Washington, D. C. [ 266 ] Class of 1929 — Continued MEERKOFF, HELEN 508 Aldine Ave., Chicago, 111. MELENDY, ADELAIDE B 56 Grove St., Tarrytown, N. Y. MERRIAM, JOSEPHINE L 363 Nuton St., Framingham, Mass. MERRILL, MARGARET H 9 W. Melrose St., Chevy Chase, Md. MEYER, ALENE W 8 Hobart St., Bronxville, N. Y. MEYER, ANNE 64 Parkman St., Brookline, Mass. MEYER, GLADYS 549 Riverside Drive, New York, N. Y. MILLER, MARGARET C 547 Lake Ave., Rochester, N. Y. MITCHELL, BEATRICE 5701 Hazel Ave., West Philadelphia, Pa. MITCHELL, LINDA E Tequesquite Ranch, Albert, N. M. MITCHELL, VIRGINIA L Knollwood, Woodbury, N. J. MORSE, ELEANOR 1219 E. 31st St., Kansas City, Mo. MOLD, LUCILLE A 16 Primrose Ave., Mount Vernon, N. Y. MONAHAN, JULIA L 964 Myrtle Ave., Bridgeport, Conn. MOON, LUCY ANN Eau Clair, Wis. MOORE, MARGARET E 722 Riverside Ave., St. Clair, Wis. MOORE, MARY ELIZABETH 9130 115th St., Richmond Hill, N. Y. MORGAN, DOROTHY L . 15 Edgewood Rd., East Orange, N. J. MORSE, SUZANNE 1130 Ocean Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. MOSS, EMILY E 21 Colonial Circle, Buffalo, N. Y. MULLEN, EDNA M 64 Highland Ter., Brockton, Mass. MULLEN, RUTH F. 7 Crown St., Stafford Springs, Conn. MURPHY, MARY J 102 N. Arlington Ave., East Orange, N. J. MURRAY, ROSEMARY M 2226 15th St., Troy, N. Y. NAMACK, ELIZABETH B 48 E. Hight St., Ballston Springs, N Y. NASH, ELIZABETH 904 Grant Ave., Plainfield, N. J. NEILL, LOUISE Second Ave., Albany, Ala. NEUBRAND, ESTHER E Philipse Manor, North Tarrytown, N. Y. NEWMAN, IVY 6450 Cecil Ave., St. Louis, Mo. NICHOLSON, ELSIE Dallas Country Club, Dallas, Tex. NOBLE, ADELAIDE 118 Plymouth Ave., Buffalo, N. Y. NORTON, ALICE E Church St., Gotham, N. Y. O ' DAY, ANNA F 9 O ' Connel Ave., Wellesley, Mass. O ' GORMAN, PATRICIA E 325 Fullerton PI., Chicago, 111. ONDERDONK, VIRGINIA 405 Lake Ave., Highland Park, 111. OVERHOLSER, ELIZABETH F 309 N. 9th St., Reading, Pa. PALMER, CLARA E 142 Broad St., Norwich, Conn. PALMER, GRACE W 38 Hollywood St., Worcester, Mass. PARKER, E. CATHERINE 872 Nela View Ave., Cleveland Heights, O. PARKE, ANNIE E. Asheboro, N. C. PATTON, JESSICA F 6 Adams Rd., Schenectady, N. Y. C 267 ] Class of 1929 — Continued PEARL, RUTH B 401 Hawthorne Rd., Baltimore, Md. PEASE, BARBARA Pouder House Rd., Groton, Mass. PIERSEN, JANE G 815 Ridge Ter., Evanston, 111. PINKUS, ELENORE G 135 E. 74th St., New York, N. Y. DU PONT, ROSINA H R. F. D. 7, Johnstown, Pa. POWELL, GRACE 1096 Peachtree Xvet, Atlanta, Ga. POWELL, NANCY 26 W. 9th St., ' New York, N. Y. POWERS, MARY H 517 Park Place , Milwaukee, Wis. PRATT, MARTHA L 86 Aberfoyle Rd., Highland Park, New Rochelle, N. Y. RANIE, DORIS J 211 N. Maple Ave., East Orange, N. J. REDDAN, NANCY M 126 W. State St., Trenton, N. J. REED, ANNA M 726 Summerlea St., Pittsburgh, Pa. REUSS, EMMIE 653 Maryland Ave., Milwaukee, Wis. REYNOLDS, SARAH J. 21 Cobb Rd.. Mountain Lakes, N. J. RICHARDS, ELIZABETH P 739 Lincoln Ave., Winnetka, 111. RICHMOND, MARY 41 Cooke St., Providence, R. I. RIKER, LOIS LONG Statesville, N. C. ROBINSON, MARY C 5021 Sunset Drive, Kansas City, Mo. ROCKWOOD, EMILY Riverdale-on-Hudson, N. Y. ROGERS, ELEANOR Palmer Hall, Fitchburg, Mass. ROGERS, MARY ANNE 67 Jefferson Ave., Columbus, Ohio ROLLINS, BARBARA 108 Marion St., Brookline, Mass. ROMAN, JEANETTE Hotel Touraine, Delaware Ave., Buffalo, N. Y. ROOS, MARGARET 42 Portland Place, St. Louis, Mo. ROSENWALD, JANET SeaCliff, L. I., N. Y. ROWLEY, BESSIE A Pennsylvania Hotel, New York, N. Y. RUSSEL, CELIA A Gotham, Me. RUSSELL, MARGARET M 2929 E. Overlook Rd., Cleveland Heights, O. RYNEHART, VIRGINIA 3702 Ave. J., Brooklyn, N. Y. SALZER, CHARLOTTE 3577 Reading Rd., Cincinnati, O. SCHEINER, LOUISE M 47 Circuit Rd., New Rochelle, N. Y. SCOTT, HELEN J 2932 Urwiler Ave., Cincinnati, O. SCOTT, JEANNETTE E 1039 E. Broad St., Columbus, O. SEIBERLICH, MARION 2424 Dupont Ave., S., Minneapolis, Minn. SERRELL, KATHERINE M Pearl River, N. Y. SEVERSON, ELIZA T Windermere Hotel, St. Louis, Mo. SEYMOUR, GERTRUDE M 8 Irvington St., Boston, Mass. SHAFFNER, LURA M 110 Oxford St., Cambridge, Mass. SHAPIRO, DOROTHY B 22 Alton St., Brookline, Mass. SHEDD, VIRGINIA 72 Hamilton Ave., Columbus, O. SHEPHERD, SUSAN M 528 S. Huron St., Cheboygan, Mich. 26S ] Class of 1929 — Continued SHERWIN, VERA S 149 Roseville Ave., Newark, N. J. SHINEMAN, MILDRED 9 Walnut St., Canajoharie, N. Y. SHIPWAY, HELEN W 13 Pitt St., Charleston, S. C. SHUGG, DOROTHY F 857 Great Plain Ave., Needham, Mass. SHURMER, ELIZABETH T 2709 Southington Rd., Shaker Heights, Cleveland, O. SMITH, ADELAIDE M 59 Main St., Westfield, N. Y. SMITH, CONSTANCE C 1190 E. Broad St., Columbus, O. SMITH, EDITH 1573 Wyandotte Ave., Lakewood, O. SMITH, ELEANOR N 173 Edwards St., New Haven, Conn. SMITH ,MARY ALICE 900 East End Ave., Wilkinsburg, Pa. SMITH, SARAH A. G 535 Church Lane, Germantown, Pa. SMYTH, THELMA S 347 W. 71st St., New York, N. Y. SMITH, MARY ALICE 900 East End Ave., Wilkinsburg, Pa. SNEDEKER, MARGARET T 429 Washington Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. SNYDER, ADA 902 Prairie Ave., Cleburne, Tex. SONDER, MARY E 428 W. Main St., Greenfield, Ind. SPENCER, HELEN G 84 Walker St., Newtonville, Mass. SPRAGUE, EOLINE Lucknow Farm, South Noxwalk, Conn. SPROAT, MARY E 170 Auburn St., Auburndale, Mass. SQUIRES, ALOISE B 41 2nd St., Lynbrook, N. Y. STACEY, MARGARET L Windsor, Vt. STANTON G. ISABELLE 32 Parrott St., Lynn, Mass. STANTON, MARY A 38 Elm St., Westerly, R. I. STAUFFER, JOSEPHINE 2238 N. Park Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. STEVENS, MARGARET L 5th St. and Broadway, Mayville, Ky. STONE, ELIZABETH M 14254 Superior Rd., Cleveland Heights, O. STORER, ELIZABETH W 105 Meridian St., Melrose, Mass. STRAUSS, NELLIE M Maywood, Lexington Rd., Louisville, Ky. STURGIS, EMILY E 150 Oxford St., Chevy Chase, Md. TALBOT, AGNES 8625 162nd St., Jamaica, N. Y. TAP LIN, RUTH ADELINE 7 Babcock St., Brookline, Mass. TAYLOR, ESTELLE Station Park, Harrison, N. Y. TAYLOR, FERRELL 93 5th St., Stamford, Conn. THEILBAR, FRANCES C 246 Keystone Ave., River Forest, 111. THUNN, MARGARET 34 Aubrey Rd., Upper Montclair, N. J. TOMEC, HELEN M 845 Berkeley Ave., Trenton, N. J. TONKONOGY, GERTRUDE 1384 Union St., Brooklyn, N. Y. TOWNSEND, EMMA J 64 Royal Rd., Bangor, Me. TREPP, JEAN C 12 Emerson St., East Orange, N. J. TRIMBLE, FRANCES 5801 5th Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. VEATCH, PRUDENCE M 157 Huntingdon Ave., Buffalo, N. Y. [269] Class of 1929 — Continued VYE, DOROTHY J 260 Sofford St., Wollaston, Mass. WAGNER, H. CATHERINE Dobbs Ferry, N. Y. WAITT, LUCY M 2915 Jackson St., Sioux City, la. WALKER, ELIZABETH N 30 Elm Rock Rd., Bronxville, N. Y. WALKER, F. ELIZABETH 104 Avon Rd., Schenectady, N. Y. WALLOE, ASTRID L 343 Pect St., New Haven, Conn. WAPLES, DOROTHEA H 214 Windermere Ave., Wayne, Pa. WARD, ALICE E Summer St., Lynnfield Center, Mass. WARD, MARGARET M 2352 S. Overlrook Rd., Cleveland, O. WARD, MARGERY, F 150 Essex St., Lynn, Mass. WATERBURY, HELEN C 110 Main St., Whitesboro, N. Y. WATSON, LEOLA Marion, Mass. WEBB, ELEANOR A Lakewood, N. J. WELDON, RUTH L 207 Holly St., Cranford, N. J. WELLS, CAROLYN H 290 E. Sidney Ave., Mount Vernon, N. Y. WEMPLE, LUISITA 106 W. 69th St., New York, N. Y. WHEELER, ELEANOR K 215 Crocker Ave., Piedmont, Cal. WHEELER, MARY M 215 Crocker Ave., Piedmont, Cal. WHEELER, ZELLA T 76 E. Housatonic St., Pittsfield, Mass. WHEDDEN, HELEN L 436 Washington St., Wellesley Hills, Mass. WHITE, GLADYS E 630 Central Ave., Wilmette, 111. WHITE, JANE E Sherburne, Vt. WHITMAN CAROL G .640 Hill Rd., Winnetka, 111. WHITTREDGE, RUTH 62 Baltimore St., Lynn, Mass. WICKHAM S. ANNE BELLE 2765 Lancashire Rd., Cleveland, O. WIEHE, KATHRYN E 110 Morningside Drive, New York, N. Y. WILDEY, HARRIET L Stafford Springs, Conn. WILLIAMS, RUTH D 23 Fair Oaks Ave., Newtonville, Mass. WINSLOW, HELEN A 24 Farleton Rd., Newton Center, Mass. WINSTON, NANETTE E 2 W. 89th St., New York, N. Y. WISHART, DOROTHY 219 Fisher Ave., White Plains, N. Y. WOLBACH, ALICE 2340 Lincoln Park West, Chicago, 111. WOLTERS, HELENE C 2326 Liloa Rise, Honolulu, T. H. WOOD, HARRIET 88 Kingsboro Ave., Gloversville, N. Y. WRIGHT, HILDA M 32 Hillside Rd., Watertown, Mass. WRIGHT, LUCY L 1234 Union St., Schenectady, N. Y. WYMAN, MARY F 3612 Newark St., Washington, D. C. WYMAN, ROSEMARY 15 Winnetaska Rd., Waban, Mass. YOUNG, MILDRED J 18 W. 74th St., New York,N. Y. ZABRISKIE, MARION B Oradelle, N. J. [ 270] INDEX « Page A Friend 289 Anne P. Ryan 278 Barnswallows Association . . 290 B. L. Kartt . 290 Blue Dragon 277 Brooks Bros 277 Cassie M. Sergeant .... 288 Charles W. Homeyer Co. 277 Chickering Sons .... 273 Classes 291 Clement Drug Co 278 Cloyes 288 College Annual Corporation . 274 Cotrell and Leonard . . . 281 Davis 276 Decorated Metal Mfg. Co. . 290 Dill Collins 279 Dr. Copeland Merrill ... 281 Dr. Dwight R. Clement . . 278 Dr. Stanley Hall 282 Dwinell Wright Co 278 Ernest Forsberg 287 Fraser 281 Geo. T. Johnson Co 281 Gingerbread Tea Room . . . 287 Gustave Lorey 280 Hathaway House 285 Hayden Costume Co 282 H. F. Staples Co 284 H. L. Lawrence Co 285 H. W. Murray Shop ... . 282 James E. Lee 287 Jones, McDuffee and Stratton . 276 J. W. Bishop Co 284 Henry Kelly Sons .... 289 Page Locke, Stevens Corporation . 283 Lake Waban Laundry Co. . . 287 Lewis-Mears Co 285 L. G. Balfour Co. . . . .276 Marinello Shop 290 Matthews Construction Co. . 283 Montgomery-Frost Co. . . . 290 Morandi-Proctor Co 288 Morrison Gift Shop .... 278 Morrison ' s 287 Norida Vanity 275 Novelty Shop 278 Old Natick Inn 290 Roman 282 Royal Fruit Store 282 Sat-ten Shoppe 285 Shattuck Jones 287 Shreve, Crump Low Co. . 279 Slattery Co 285 S. S. Pierce Co 277 Straithsmorth Inn .... 282 Sturtevant Haley .... 275 Sue Rice 282 Sunshine Biscuits 281 The Hat Shop 278 Tiffany Co 273 Van Schuyler ' s 287 Walnut Hill School .... 281 Ward ' s 282 Wellesley College Bookstore . 281 Wellesley College News . . . 288 Wellesley Inn 273 Wellesley National Bank . . 284 Wilbar ' s 287 Winslow Bros, and Smith Co. 286 272 1 1 Tiffany Co. Jewelers Silversmiths Stationers Quality- Ideals Wail Inquiries Given Prompt Attention Fifth Avenue 37-Street New York i i WI Uesilcp 3fan :llesley, mass. PIANOFORTES CHICKERING, MARSHALL WENDELL, BREWSTER AND THE AMP1CO (Umf bl t fvtlT A sSmra LU1 fCHEON, TEA AND DINNER Rooms i o r Private Tea and Dancing Parties Te lephone Wellesley 180 v 4.p 1 1 t t i una ex, , 395 BOYLSTON ST., I BOSTON 273 CHARLES L. WILLARD, President Cover Designs Submitted College Annual Corporation PRINTING PLATE MAKING w BINDING New York This Book by us complete 505 FIFTH AVENUE 274 Cannot Spill Not A Sifter anitie jor Loose Powder Tilled with Loose Powder 3utOxnnot Spill Double Contains Loose Powder and Rouge Cake $2.00 Carry your Favorite Loose Powder in a Norida Vanitie! Cannot spill— easy to refill. A dainty case, gilt or silver, filled with Fleur Sauvage (Wildflower) Poudre At All Drug and Department Stores Established 1826 Incorporated 1891 STURTEVANT HALEY BEEF AND SUPPLY CO. Slaughterers of Fancy Corn Fed Cattle Manufacturers of Prime Oleo Oils, Stearine and Tallow Dealers in LAMB, PORK AND VEAL, HANS, BACON, LARD, ETC. HOTELS, INSTITUTIONS AND STEAMSHIPS SUPPLIED 38 AND 40 FANEUIL HALL MARKET, BOSTON Abbatoir, 52 Somerville Ave., Somerville 275 T AV1S DRY GOODS Hosiery Draperies Lamps Gloves Cretonnes Pottery Underwear Sunfast Silks Victrolas Toilet Goods Everfast Cottons Furniture Mail orders promptly and carefully attended to. Reunion require- ments cheerfully estimated and promptly executed. E. A. DAVIS COMPANY (Holman Block) 579-581 WASHINGTON STREET WELLESLEY, MASS. WE were the originators of Open Stock (buy only the pieces you wish) Dinnerware. On the premises we keep in reserve 10,000 bins of dishes in order that you may keep your china matched. You may buy from Open Stock ONE piece to replace a broken dish, A SMALL SET for a breakfast alcove, A FULL DINNER SET of a hundred pieces, or A THOUSAND PIECES for the requirements of Wel- lesley College, a college which we supply by the way. Jones, McDuffee Stratton Corporation Franklin Hawley Streets, Boston China and Glass since 1810 Fraternity, College and Class Jewelry Commencement Announce- ments and Invitations Official Jeweler to the Classes of 1927 and 1928 and Official Jeweler to the Alumnae Association of Wellesley College L. G. BALFOUR COMPANY Manufacturing Jewelers k Stationers ATTLEBORO, MASS. ASK ANY COLLEGE GREEK 276 PERFUMERY AND TOILET ARTICLES The largest and most complete line in New England LIONCEAU Toilet Specialties Le Temps Des Fleurs, French Perfume Le Temps Des Fleurs, Toilet Water CONFECTIONERY In Unlimited Variety Unsurpassed for quality, purity and deliciousness. A descriptive list sent on request. S. So Pierce Co- Boston Brookline Recent Books on Music Common Sense of Music- Spaeth $2.25 Wagnerian Romance-Hall 2.75 Music and Mind-Trotter 3.50 A Music Critic ' s Holiday- Newman 3.00 Ope ' ra Guyed-Levy 2.00 ESTACLIOHCO 1010 w gAw MADISON AVENUE COR. FORTY-FOURTH STREET NEW you.; Useful Gifts Wedding Outfits Haberdashery Etc. BOSTON PALM BEACH NEWPORT TTLE BUILDING PLAZ Mm iragott MISS SNOW CHARLES W. HOMEYER CO. 458 BOYLSTON STREET BOSTON, MASS. 60 Central Street WELLESLEY, MASS. 277 White House Hp TEA COFFEE None better fm at any ' Price! The Flavor is Roasted In! DWINELL-WRIGHT COMPANY— Boston Chicago Portsmouth, Va. THE CLEMENT DRUG CO. Waban Block COLLEGE PHARMACY Davis Block Wellesley Mass. CHINA-GIFTS-NOVELTIES We Specialize in Linens and Embroideries LENDING LIBRARY Furniture for Rent Opposite Bank Wellesley Square Dr. D wight R. Clement Dentist THE WABAN WELLESLEY SQUARE Morrison Gift Shop The Gift Shop Charming 24 Grove St. Wellesley Square Hotel Waban Block The HAT SHOP Sport and Dress Hats Hats made to order Waban Building Up One Flight TEL. WEL 0501 RESIDENCE TEL WEL. 0729 W ANNE P. RYAN ' S IBratrtg hnpjm Marcel waving a specialty 572 Washington St. Wellesley Sq. WELLESLEY, MASS. 278 YOU are cordially invited to visit our shop whenever you are in Boston. You will find many things of interest. We have gift suggestions to please all tastes at prices to please all purses. SHREVE. CRUMP LOW COMPANY Founded 1800 Jewelry, Silverware, Watches, Stationery LocJ e- Stevens Corporation A-l Plumbing Goods 100 Warrenton Street (Opposite Eliot St. Garage) BOSTON MASS. Visit our showroom if you wish to select or inspect fixtures of merit and stability. Gl HE PAPER used in this book is one of the STANDARD GRADES particularly suitable for School and College Annuals. Manufactured by DILL COLLINS COMPANY Distributed by MARQUARDT, BLAKE DECKER INC. 155 Spring Street New York City Compliments of A FRIEND 279 GUSTAVE LOREY OFFICIAL PHOTOGRAPHER For Class of 1920-21-23-25-26 Attractivg ' Portraiture at Reasonable ' Prices jor College Anuuals EJHJHJHJZJHJHJEJHJHJHJErafHIEJnraJHJHraiZI All photographs in this book are from reproductions made by this studio. Duplicate photographs may be had at any time. THE STUDIOS 91 STATE STREET, ALBANY, 3V£ Y. (360 Broadway, Saratoga Springs, N. Y.) 280 The Geo. T. Johnson Co. THE ATLAS MILLS Makers Sanitary Paper Products 78 High St. Boston, Mass. FRASER The Florist 65 Linden Street Wellesley Telephone 597 Father: My boy, your studies are costing me a lot of money. Son : I know, Dad, and I don ' t study very hard, either. — Weekly Telegraph (London) Life Cotrell 8C Leonard Albany, N. Y. makers of Caps - Gowns - Hoods Class contracts, a specialty Intercollegiate Bureau of Academic Costume Dr. COPELAND MERRILL Dentist Waban Block Tel. 0937 Wellesley Square Fresh and Crisp WELLESLEY ALUMNAE Are invited to place orders with the College Bookstore for Wel- lesley Publications and Supplies Books by Wellesley Authors, New Seal in Bronze, Stationery, View Books Photographs, Cards, Agency for Corona Typewriters WELLESLEY COLLEGE BOOKSTORE Wellesley, Mass. THE WALNUT HILL SCHOOL A College Preparatory School for Girls Two miles from Wellesley Forty-six acres of ground Outdoor sports Careful Preparation Under Compe- tent Teachers for College Work MISS FLORENCE BIGELOW, Principal 281 DR. STANLEY E. HALL Dentist Waban Block Wellesley Square Tel. Wellesley 0566 Tel. Wellesley 4844 THE ROYAL FRUIT STORE J. K. GEORGAS Choicest Foreign and Domestic Fruits, Vegetable and Fancy Groceries SPECIALTIES Jellies, Shrimp, Figs, Cheese, all kinds, Pickles, Teas and Coffees, Fancy crackers, Bacon, Prepared Cocoa, Nuts, Shelled and Unshelled, Fresh Roasted Peanuts Courteous and Prompt Aattention Given All Orders — Free Delivery (Where car stops) ROMAN PERMANENT WAVING Marcel Waving Shingle Bob Telephone Back Bay 4831 565 Boylston St. Boston, Mass. SUE RICE STUDIO y Photographs 24 Grove St. Tel. 0430 Next Hotel Waban, Wellesley Hayden Costume Co. Costumes for the Amateur Stage Plays, Operas, Carnivals, Masquerades, etc. 786 WASHINGTON STREET BOSTON, MASS J. M. VINE, Prop. Tel. Beach 3145 trattamnittt} Jtoti ROCKPORT, MASS. Situated directly on the rocks at the extreme end of Cape Ann. HAVE YOUR STATIONERY ENGRAVED With Monogram, Class or College Seal Invitations Menus Dance Orders Shop With Comfort at BOSTON We have the breezy spirit of the springtime — and have woven it into the refreshing new spring styles which are await- ing your inspec- tion at our shop ' ' says the little mil- liner. «ES to - r Shop OPPOSITE WELLESLEY INN 282 MATTHEWS CONSTRUCTION COMPANY, Inc. GENERAL CONTRACTORS PRINCETON, NEW JERSEY AND 285 MADISON AVENUE, NEW YORK, N. Y. Specialists in Collegiate Gothic Construction and Country Estate Development Sr-lssfe Wir ' i m mmmM® £ Graduate College Group and Cleveland Memorial Tower At Princeton, N. J. Messrs. Cram and Ferguson, Archt ' s 283 J. W. BISHOP Co. Builders Boston Worcester New York Providence New Bedford Student Alumnae Building — Claffin Hall — Addition to Li- brary—Alpha Kappa Chi House. Alterations to Homestead House — The Barn — President ' s House — Guest House. COMPLIMENTS OF The Wellesley National Bank STAPLES FLOOR WAX arEJHJErZJHmiHJHJEJHJiUHJZJZJEJe Used Exclusively at WELLESLEY COLLEGE For Many Years yHJETHJEJHJEJEJHJHJEJEJHJEJEJHJH H. F. STAPLES. CO. MEDFORD, MASS. 284 Hathaway House Ji. Co-operative {Bookshop 103 CENTRAL STREET WELLESLEY Books of literary distinction Prints, Rhyme Sheets Lending Library Matters have reached the breaking point, snorted Old Man Kyle, when our barbers ask us if we want a girlish bob. — Life. Luncheon « ea « Dinner SAT-TEN SHOPPE 48 CENTRAL STREET WELLESLEY. MASS. CHOPS STEAKS SALADS SANDWICHES (Box Luncheons Telephone 1233 LEWIS-MEARS CO. Wholesale Butter, Cheese and Eggs 33 South Market St. Boston, Mass. OFFICERS L. E. James, Pres. C. H. Marble, Vice Pres. C. V. Lewis, Treas. N. E. Lewis, Sec ' y DIRECTORS L. E. James C. H. Marble C. V. Lewis N. E. Lewis C. A. McAuliffe H. L. Lawrence Co, Established 1844 Poultry and Provisions £ 46-48 Faneuil Hall Market BOSTON, MASS. Fashions in Good Taste involve two important principles — our choosing authentic, accept- able fashions — your choosing from these fashions, clothes individually becoming. Or, to put it differently — suppl- menting your own style instinct with the wider knowledge of Slat- tery specialists. And for more than half a century, Slattery has enjoyed a more than local reputation for the good taste and economy of its authentic fash- ions. I ' JShM f BOSTON WELLESLEY 285 SHEEP LEATHER For Shoe Manufacture Law and Roller Leather Novelties for Special Lines of Trade Cable Address WINSLOW BOSTON Lieber ' s A-l and A. B. C. 4th 5th Editions Established 1776 1831 Smith Winslow 1852 Geo. Winslow Sons Lyman Smith ' s Sons 1860 1890 Winslow Bros. Lyman Smith ' s Sons Co. 1901 Inc. Under Mass. Laws y fjw ±Jyr4 . (y( tsmim vut I ' MMfJW €. crneeh, vaM and Jied Szeatnw 9uMed IVmi NORWOOD, MASS. 286 WELLESLEY BOOTERY Riding Boots Tan $15 and $23 Black Boston Worcester New Bedford Dress and Sport Footwear for the college girl Hosiery to match all shoes 6 Wilbar ' s 6 All Styles All Styles 85 Summer St. 455 Washington ' St. JAMES E. LEE Wellesly Sauare Phone 0136-1440 Gingerbread Tea Room Luncheon and Tea MORRISON ' S CHOCOLATES AND BONBONS 172 Tremont Street, Boston over Deerfoot Shop 555 Washington St. WELLESLEY, MASS. IV 7 E will do your laundry W work and Dry Cleaning and please you. We will also do Dry Cleaning for the folks at home. Dry Cleaning comes to us from every state in the Union, Parcels Post — try us ! The Lake Waban Laundry The College Laundry On the College Grounds Tel. Wellesley 727 Catering Tel. W-1560 Ice Cream . Confections Luncheons Shattuck Jones INCORPORATED FISH AT WHOLESALE 154 ATLANTIC AVENUE BOSTON Tel. 1345-M ERNEST FORSBERG Watchmaker and Jeweler Fine Swiss and American Watch and Clock Repairing Central Block, Wellesley Mass. Opp. Blue Dragon 287 a The Little White Shop yy Cassie M. Sargent 56 Central St. Tel:. W-0499M Wellesley, Mass. Headquarters for Hemstitching, Buttons Made to Order, Button- holes, Plaiting, All Kinds of Stitching Dyeing, Cleansing and Remodeling ALL WOEK GUARANTEED Tel. 0889-M CLOYES Dry Goods, Hosiery, Underwear, Furnishings, Small Wares, etc. 557 Washington Street Wellesley, Mass. Quality Service Compliments of Morandi-Proctor Company 88 Washington Street Boston, Mass. Dealers in Kitchen Apparatus China, Glass and Silverware. The Wellesley College News 288 Compliments of HENRY KELLY SONS, Inc. 413-419 WEST FOURTEENTH STREET NEW YORK CITY FROM A FRIEND 289 Special Prices and Special Attention given to all work brought by stud- ents and facultv of Wellesley Col- lege. Tkerefore We Aik Your Patronage B. L. KARTT Tailor, Furrier and Cleanser Wellesley Square, Opp. Post Office Tel. Wellesley 0217-M MONTGOMERY-FROST COMPANY OPTICIANS THREE SHOPS 496 Boylston St. 40 Bromfield St. 101 Massachusetts Avenue Cor. Newbury Street BOSTON, MASS. Compliments of Barnswallows Compliments of Decorated Metal Mfg. Co., Inc. Brooklyn, N. Y. And do you ever lose yourself in your work? Yes. What is your work? Exploring Central Africa. Life. MARINELLO SHOP GRACE TAYLOR, Prop. Ji fBeauly Jlid for Every tN ed Nestle Lanoil Permanent Waving Phone: Wellesley 0442-W Over Clement ' s Drug Store Wellesley Square Old Natick Inn Rooms, Single or in Suite Private Baths European and American Plan Transients Accommodated GARAGES 290 ssJ lp se (JJnmjtlimentB of 5ty (fltasarH of IQ27 1929 291 Autographs


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

Wellesley College -  Legenda Yearbook (Wellesley, MA) online collection, 1923 Edition, Page 1

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Wellesley College -  Legenda Yearbook (Wellesley, MA) online collection, 1924 Edition, Page 1

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Wellesley College -  Legenda Yearbook (Wellesley, MA) online collection, 1925 Edition, Page 1

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Wellesley College -  Legenda Yearbook (Wellesley, MA) online collection, 1927 Edition, Page 1

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Wellesley College -  Legenda Yearbook (Wellesley, MA) online collection, 1928 Edition, Page 1

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Wellesley College -  Legenda Yearbook (Wellesley, MA) online collection, 1929 Edition, Page 1

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