CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS

Vol. XIII. No. 30 Ithaca, N. Y., May 3, 1911 Price 10 Cents

Cornelliana. pages of athletic pictures and a large by others, now he must serve others. number of pages showing different This was a point which some college A society organized early in the phases of undergraduate life. The men failed to appreciate, said Mr. year by the men of the University in- price of the regular edition is $2.00 Taylor. He classed common sense, terested in the advancement of teach- and of the edition de luxe $3.00. The character and integrity as the three ing as a profession has obtained a books are delivered express prepaid essentials for success. His address charter from Phi Delta Kappa, a pro- for fifty cents in addition to these might have been summarized as a fessional educational fraternity of an prices. A. H. Colcord, 503 East Buf- group of business maxims. He illus- honorary nature. The charter mem- falo street, Ithaca, is the business trated his points by interesting in- bers of the society are Professor manager of the publication. cidents from life. George P. Bristol, Professor Charles A senior class smoker was held at DeGarmo, Professor G. M. Whipple, George W. Perkins, the financier, the new home of the Cosmopolitan W. S. Foster, C. H. Williams, A. S. and Dr. W. J. Schieffelin, one of the Club Friday night. The forty-five Edwards, Leonard Goodenough, M. E. leading philanthropists and social seniors in the club entertained their Penney, A. H. Matthewson, E. A. Doll workers of New York City, will classmates in fine style. Victor B. and Henry Mayer. speak before the undergraduates of the University on May 11 on the Buencamino of the Philippines was Three Cornell undergraduates have work of the Laity League of New "stunt master." Besides the mem- won prizes for French composition of- York City. The purpose of the ad- bers of the class who took part in the fered by the Society of French Pro- dresses will be to interest the men of program, Graduate Manager Scott fessors of America. J. B. Clarke '12 the University in the work of the gave a talk on athletic management. won the "prix d'honneur," a medal for league. The German contingent of the club excellence in translation and also the The second number of The Cornell furnished refreshments. first prize for theme writing. C. J. Chemist has just been published. It Charles W. Wason '76, who has al- Buttery '12 took the third prize for contains a reprint of a paper read be- ready given $100 toward the Sibley translation and J. F. Klein '12 re- fore the American Chemical Society gig, has written Dean Smith that he ceived a mention in theme writing. by M. J. Brown on "Chemistry in will give half of the $260 still needed Clarke is the West Indian negro China," accounts of the January and if the undergraduates will raise the whose article in the Era stirred up the February meetings of the Cornell other half before the end of the term. recent discussion about the admission section, parts of a report by Dean The Sibley men are making a great of colored women to Sage College. Hull on the chemistry and physics effort to collect the $130 needed to The Cadet Band gave the first of a departments, and an explanation and take advantage of Mr. Wason's offer. series of concerts on the steps of outline of the course leading to the The University Orchestra, fifty Sage College Wednesday afternoon new degree in chemistry. strong, under the direction of George of last week. A large audience seated F. H. Kroger, who has charge of L. Coleman '95, gave two very suc- on the grass to the west of the college the wireless telegraphy plant at the cessful concerts last week, one in Ith- listened to the program of six num- University, lectured on "The Develop- aca and one in Buffalo. The program bers. ment of Wireless Telegraphy and Its included the overture to William Tell, Subscriptions for the 1912 Cornel- Limitations" before the Ithaca Sec- which was so heartily applauded by lian have been taken during the past tion of the American Institute of Elec- the Buffalo audience that an encore, week and already over 600 copies trical Engineers Friday evening. McDowell's To a Wild Rose, arranged have been signed for. This year the Sibley Dome was nearly filled on for string orchestra, was given; a number of books ordered will depend Monday afternoon of last week by minuet by Beethoven and Schubert's entirely on the advance sale. It is men from the technical colleges of the unfinished symphony. There were expected that the books will be ready University to listen to Frederick W. vocal solos by P. L. Catalano Ίl and for distribution next week. This Taylor's talk on "Success." For con- Dr. F. C. Busch '95. year's Cornellian is dedicated to the siderably over an hour Mr. Taylor Dr. Issa Tanimura, an honorary memory of Goldwin Smith. The us- held the attention of his audience with fellow in the College of Agriculture, ual space is devoted to statistics, fra- good sound business advice. He said has been appointed by the govern- ternities and clubs, honorary societies, that at graduation from college a ment of Japan a special commissioner debate, publications, athletics and great change comes into a man's life. of agriculture to investigate the live- pictures. There are over twenty Before this time he has been served stock industry in this country. 354 CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS of the Board of Trustees, and the Faculty. "It should be noted that the Com- mittee is so constituted and its powers so circumscribed as to minimize the danger of indiscreet action or unwar- ranted interference in matters that should necessarily be confined to the local body having them under con- sideration."

MINING ENGINEERING.

A New Course to Be Established in Sibley College. So many inquiries are received from persons wishing to take a course in mining engineering that it has been decided to establish such a course in Sibley College. Practically all work given in the best mining en- gineering courses of the country is al- TO OBTAIN ALUMNI OPINION. tion with respect thereto as the Board ready duplicated in Cornell Univer- of Governors may direct." sity, and hence no new subjects will MEMORANDUM. need to be added to the already estab- A Committee on University Affairs in the lished University curriculum. New York Cornell Club. "In conformity with this report the Because of the very great import- There has been established in the following Committee was appointed, ance of the practical, as well as the Cornell University Club of New York to be known as the 'Committee on theoretical work of mining and met- a Committee on University Affairs, University Affairs': E. A. de Lima, allurgy, summer work in mining dis- whose purpose is indicated in the fol- Bert Hanson, Roger Lewis, W. W. tricts will be provided for. lowing report and memorandum: Ricker, R. H. Wilson. Since much of the work of this Report of a Special Committee of The underlying purpose of this ac- course naturally falls in the depart- the Cornell University Club of New tion is to enlist the interest of the ments of geology and chemistry and York, adopted by the Board of Gov- Alumni in all matters affecting the in the College of Civil Engineering, ernors : welfare of the University, and to pro- it has been deemed wise by President "That there be established a Com- vide means for their discussion lead- Schurman to appoint an advisory com- mittee to be known as 'The Committee ing to an expression of Alumni opin- mittee to take general charge of the on University Affairs' to be composed ion. course. This committee includes: of five members of the Club elected by "There are matters constantly aris- Professor D. S. Kimball, chairman; the Board of Governors on nomina- ing in every department of Univer- Professors H. Ries, L. M. Dennis, E. tion of the President of the Club. sity activity on which Alumni opinion E. Haskell, R. C. Carpenter, H. Diede- "This Committee to have authority should be concentrated, and it is be- richs, C. F. Hirshfeld, and A. W. to ask for and to receive suggestions lieved that this can be done more ef- Smith. from the Alumni, from members of fectively and rationally by means of the Board of Trustees of the Univer- the proposed plan, rather than by the Dean L. Kelsey to Go to China. sity, and from others who may be usual method of individual expression. Dean L. Kelsey '08, who since his interested in the University regarding "It is likely that those having in graduation has been secretary of the any matters that may arise affecting charge the governing and shaping of Cornell University Christian Assoc- the welfare of the University. That the University will welcome Alumni iation, has resigned that position to such matters shall be investigated in opinion thus formulated, and consider accept the secretaryship of the new a preliminary way by the Committee it as helpful in aiding them to de- Y. M. C. A. at Hankow, China. Mr. on University Affairs, and if in their termine the matters under considera- Kelsey and M'rs. Kelsey, who was judgment any such question should be tion. formerly Miss Mary Reynolds Preston properly brought to the attention of "It is hoped that all matters which '09, will go to China in the fall. A the Board of Governors, this shall be should properly be considered by the new secretary for the Christian As- done in the form of a report accom- Alumni will be brought to the atten- sociation has not yet been chosen. panied by all available facts. tion of this Committee in order that It is thought probable that Mr. Kel- "On the authorization by the Board a full and orderly discussion may be sey's successor will not be a" Cornell of Governors this Committee shall had. To this end, the Committee graduate but will be a man experi-. proceed further to fully investigate holds itself ready to receive sugges- enced in Y. M. C. A. work. any such matter and to take such ac- tions from the Alumni, the members During Mr. Kelsey's administration CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS 355

convinced that his picture represents the rule in life rather than the ex- ception. "I should not quarrel with the real- ists if they did nothing but present the truth about life. But they go further. The present to us the worst side of life alone, and that grossly ex- aggerated. We are taken into the vil- est parts of the slums and introduced to its worst characters; when taken into higher life we are introduced to its most unworthy members. "One turns with relief to a man who can smile, to a man who can laugh heartily. He lets us smile through our tears. Do you think that Tiny Tim in the 'Christmas Carol' ever really recovered and became a jolly boy? That Scrooge reformed and became as generous as Andrew great progress has been made by the Brown, of Buffalo, "The Menace of Carnegie? Of course not! Scrooge association along both religious and Degeneracy;" Edward Mowbray Tut- lived on an old miser and Tiny Tim social lines. There has been a marked tle of Brooklyn, "A Plea for Person- died in agony. increase in the Bible study depart- ality." "Our American literature is still ment, the enrollment last year being Mr. Wolfson's winning oration was in its very infancy. It will be what over 1,000. Interest in missions has in part as follows: we make it. We have our slums, we increased and Cornell men have taken "There has grown up among a great have our degenerates. We have our an active part in this line of endeavor. many Americans a tendency to turn for criminals, from the petty grafter in The old debt has been raised during their literature to the Continent. The the state legislature to the cold-blood- Mr. Kelsey's term and pool and bil- authors they select are for the most ed murderer. Shall we therefore liard tables have been installed in part of the modern French and Rus- whine and snivel and wail over the Barnes Hall. sian school known as realists. Some sad pass to which the world has come? The Y. M. C. A. at Hankow is one have gone so far as to abandon com- Are we to reform drunkards and mur- of forty-nine which the foreign de- pletely our English and American au- derers by arousing in the breasts of partment under the direction of John thors, taking their entire diet from their fellow beings a profound dis- R. Mott '88, intends to place in various Europe. The view of the realists gust for them? Are we to better the parts of the world. may be stated briefly: The writer world by acting on the presumption should observe nature very carefully, that ultimate unhappiness is inevit- THE WOODFORD PRIZE. and then give to us an exact repre- able? A thousand times no! There sentation of what he sees. His duty is a value in Utopias. What matter Won by George Morris Wolfson of New is to depict persons and scenes as they it if they are unattainable? York City. exist, be they beautiful or ugly, at- "Let us then, adopt a different George Morris Wolfson of New tractive or repulsive. Zola, whom one standard, and remember this when we York City, a senior in the College might call the ultra-realist, says: Ί write books, lest our literature fail of Arts and Sciences, was unanimous- do not hesitate at the brutalities of in accomplishing the only worthy pur- ly awarded the Woodford prize as the truth.' pose for which it can exist." result of the contest held in the Arm- "The other point of view has been ory Friday night. The subject of the variously called romanticism and ideal- OBITUARY. successful oration was 'Optimism in ism. I call it optimism. Men of this R. B. KUEHNS '07. Literature." Harley N. Crosby '96, type are Stevenson, Dickens, Holmes Romeo Benvenuto Kuehns died on Jervis Langdon '97 and Professor A. and Mark Twain. The theory of these Sunday, April 23, in New York City, W. Boesche were the judges. The men is that the author is not to point after a brief attack of pneumonia. other speakers and their subjects to everything he sees. Although con- Burial was at Milwaukee. Kuehns were as follows: Alfred Warren scious of the existence of a dark side was twenty-seven years old. He en- Eames, jr., of California, "The of life as well as a bright side, he tered Cornell in 1904, after studying Pacific Coast and Asiatic Immigra- must use a discriminating eye. He is for a time at the University of Wis- tion;" Charles Roland Hugins, of to disregard the ugly, and show us the consin, and graduated in 1907 with the Binghamton, "The Meaning of Col- beautiful. Realizing that man is po- degree of M. E. Ever since his grad- lege Spirit;" Edward Morgan St. tentially good and the world potenti- uation he had been employed by the John, of Ithaca, "Wanted—A Man ally happy, he is to paint man at his Niles-Bemerit-Pond Company. He Who Understands;" Gay Harbin best and happiest. He is to leave us was a member of Seal and Serpent. 356 CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS

Taylor flied out. Woodle stole second. Bard got a scratch , advancing Woodle to third, and Carter scored Woodle and Bard with a liner over first. Carter was down between home and third on White's grounder to short, but White reached second on the play and Sterrett's hit over third sent him home with the winning run. The score: CORNELL a.b. r. h. p.o. a. e. Magner, s.s. 4 0 1 3 3 0 Clute, lb 4 0 0 8 0 0 0,'Connell, r.f 3 0 0 0 0 0 Mahoney, l.f 3 10 2 0 1 Dauenhauer, 3b .. 3 1 0 2 3 0 McCormick, c 3 0 0 6 3 0 Thomas, c.f 3 0 0 0 0 0 Thompson 2b. ... 4 0 1 2 3 2 Nisbet, p 2 0 0 1 2 0 Butler 1 0 0 0 0 0 Hightower 1 0 1 0 0 0 Isett 1 0 0 0 0 0 Totals 32 2 3 24 14 3

PRINCETON a,b. r. h. p.o. a. e. A NEW VIEW OF THE COLLEGE OF AGRICULTURE. VETERINARY COLLEGE BUILDINGS Bard, If 3 1 3 6 0 1 Carter, r.f 2 1 1 1 0.0 IN THE FOREGROUND. White, s.s 4 0 0 1 2 0 Sterrett, lb 3 0 1 11 1 0 Prescott, 2b 4 0 1 1 2 3 ATHLETICS. In both of these games Carvajal started the pitching and was taken Parker, c.f 4 0 0 0 0 0 Reed to Be Head Football Coach. Worthington, 3b .. 3 0 1 0 1 1 out after getting into difficulties. Woodle, p 3 1 0 2 2 1 Official announcement has just been When the season opened Carvajal Taylor, c 3 0 1 5 0 0 made that Daniel A. Reed '98 will looked like the mainstay of the pitch- again be the head coach of the foot- ing staff, but in the games thus far Totals, 29 3 8 27 8 6 ball team next season. A. Ή. Hutch- he has shown a lack of control of the Cornell 02000000 0—2 inson '09 and John Newhall '06 will Princeton 0 0003000 *—3 ball. Nisbet and Hightower have had Two base hit—Magner. Struck out be Coach Reed's assistants. B. J. the bulk of the pitching to do. Not —By Nisbet 5, by Woodle 4. Bases O'Rourke '09 has also been asked to much has yet been seen of Burkart on balls—Off Nisbet 2, off Woodle 2. , but he has not yet been heard and Krogstad, both sophomores. Left on bases—Princeton 6, Cornell 7. from. This is the same staff that plays—Woodle and Sterrett, Howard, the regular , Reed had last fall. Light spring prac- Nisbet and Dauenhauer. Wild pitches who sprained an ankle in the Lehigh —Woodle 2. Hit by —Sterrett, tice is still held every afternoon on game, is expected to resume play this Mahoney. Passed ball—McCormick. Alumni Field under the direction of week, and there may be a shift in the Stolen bases—Bard 2, Carter, Woodle, Captain Munk. O'Connell, Mahoney, Dauenhauer. team. Dauenhauer, at third, has been Sacrifice hits—Bard, White, Nisbet. Baseball. fielding and batting well, and so has Umpires—Bedford and Steinberg. A decided slump in batting when Thomas, who took Dauenhauer's place CORNELL 8, COLUMBIA 3. the varsity nine faced Pitcher Woodle in center field. A special game was arranged with at Princeton last Saturday was the PRINCETON 3, CORNELL 2. Columbia to take the place of the one cause of the Cornell team's first de- Lack of hitting was the cause of which was prevented by rain. It was feat since the home season opened. It Cornell's defeat by Princeton at held on South Field at Columbia Uni- was the second defeat by a college Princeton on Saturday. Nisbet versity last Friday. Cornell had little team this year out of eight games pitched a good game' and thedifficulty in winning by a score of 8 played. The only hits were made by Cornell team fielded well, but to 3. Carvajal began the contest and Magner, Thompson and Hightower. a bunch of hits in the fifth inning pitched four innings, during which The experience may be a good thing gave Princeton three runs and thethree hits, four bases on balls and the for the men who had previously been game. Cornell scored two in the sec- hitting of a batsman with a pitched doing the heavy batting and none of ond when Mahoney reached first on ball enabled Columbia to score three whom was able to solve the delivery of an , Dauenhauer walked, a wild runs. Hightower pitched the last five the Princeton pitcher. pitch advanced each man a base and innings for Cornell and di<} not allow In the other games of the week, a wild throw by Woodle let both men Columbia a hit. The Cornell team with Bucknell and Columbia, it was cross the plate. Woodle started succeeded in bunching hits an4 tak- the work of Cornell at the bat that Princeton's fifth inning with a ing advantage of Columbia errirs in enabled the team to win easy victories. grounder to Thompson, who missed it. the second and eighth innings,, scor- CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS 357 ing three runs each time. The score: Mahoney had the honor of making yard dash and 120-yard hurdles, but CORNELL a.b. r. h. p.o. a. e. the first of the season on none of them was placed. Magner, s.s 2 0 0 1 3 0 Percy Field with a drive to the club- Pennsylvania was Cornell's only op- Clute, lb 4 0 0 6 1 1 house in the fourth inning. His three- ponent in the four-mile relay race, O'Connell, r.f 4 0 0 110 bagger in the seventh hit the right and her team was just good enough Butler, l.f. 4 3 1 2 0 0 Dauenhauer, 3b. .. 3 1 0 3 1 0 field fence. to lead the Cornell runners up to the last mile of the race. Hunger of Cor- McCormick, c 3 2 2 9 3 0 The score: Thomas, c.f 4 1 1 4 0 0 nell and Boyle of Pennsylvania started Thompson, 2b 4 1 2 0 1 0 CORNELL a.b r. h. p.o. a. e. the race. The Pennsylvania man fin- Magner, s.s 3 1 0 3 3 2 Carvajal, p 2 0 0 1 1 0 ished his mile in 4 minutes 313-5 Hightower, p 2 0 2 0 0 0 Clute, lb 3 1 3 8 1 0 O'Connell, r.f 3 0 1 2-0 0 seconds, leading the Cornellian by 55 Totals 32 8 8 27 11 1 Mahoney, l.f 5 2 2 2 0 0 yards when Putnam and Wδlle took COLUMBIA a.b. r. h. p.o. a. e. Dauenhauer, 3b. .. 4 2 2 0 3 0 up the race. McCormick, c 4 0 0 10 1 0 Hastings, l.f 3 0 0 0 0 0 Wδlle added 25 yards to the lead of Sanders, s.s 3 1 0 4 3 2 Thomas, c.f 4 2 2 1 1 1 Osterhout, c.f. ... 3 0 1 0 0 0 Thompson, 2b. ... 4 0 2 1 4 0 55 which he had received and finished Jones, r.f 4 0 0 0 0 0 Carvajal, p 1 0 0 0 1 1 his mile in 4 minutes 28 3-5 seconds, Menhennick, 2b. .. 3 1 0 0 1 2 Nisbet, p 1 0 0 0 1 0 touching off Levering. Berna took up Shibley, lb 3 0 0 13 1 0 Butler * 1 0 1 the race for Cornell, 80 yards behind Maloy, c. 4 0 1 10 1 1 this opponent. Levering increased Gretch, 3b 1 1 0 0 1 1 Totals 33 8 13 27 15 4 Ulrich, p 1 0 1 0 2 0 * Batted for Carvajal in the sixth. the Pennsylvania lead 20 yards more, Rothwell, p 1 0 0 0 4 0 but he overestimated his strength, and BUCKNELL a.b. r. h. p.o. a. e. on the last lap Berna cut down the Totals 26 3 3 27 13 6 Loveland, s.s 4 0 2 0 1 0 O'Brien, 2b ..3 1 0 3 2 0 distance at every stride until he was Cornell 03010103 0—8 only 15 yards behind. Jones relieved Columbia 00210000 0—3 Logan, c.f 4 1 2 4 1 0 Two base hit—Thompson. Three O'Leary, c 3 2 1 7 1 0 Berna and Paull went in the last mile base hits—Thomas, Osterhout. First Zehner, lb 3 0 0 6 1 0 for Pennsylvania. Jones cut five —Off Carvajal 4, off Daniels, p, 3 0 0 1 5 0 yards off the Quaker's lead and ran Hightower 1, off Ulrich 3, off Roth- Hagan, p 1 0 0 0 0 0 Raftery, 3b 4 0 0 0 0 0 ten yards behind him until the third well 2. Struck out—By Hightower 9, lap, when he let out and came up to by Ulrich 6, by Rothwell 1. Left on Campbell, l.f 4 0 1 3 0 0 bases—Cornell 6, Columbia4. Double Colson, r.f 4 0 0 0 0 0 PaulPs shoulders. When the bell rang plays—Sanders and Shibley, Sanders, for the last lap, Paull sprinted, but Totals 33 4 6 24 11 0 Shibleyand Maloy, Thompson, Magner Jones stayed with him and on the.back Bucknell 01000300 0—4 and Clute. Wild pitches—Ulrich 2. stretch of the last quarter he pulled Hit by pitcher, Sanders, by Carvajal. Cornell 00011240 *—8 away from the Pennsylvanian and Stolen bases—Magner, Thompson 2. Two base hits—O'Leary, Campbell. Sacrifice hits—Clute, Dauenhauer 2, Three base hits—Mahoney, Thomas. finished 20 yards in the lead. Jones's MbCormick, Ulrich, Shibley. Time— Home run—Mahoney. First base on time for the mile was 4 minutes 22 2:35. Umpire—Kennedy. balls—Off Carvajal 2, off Daniels 3, off and 4-5 seconds. Hagan 1. Struck out —By Carvajal CORNELL 8, BUCKNELL 4. The mile relay was anybody's race 5, by Nisbet 2, by Daniels 2, by Hagan Heavy hitting won the Bucknell 2. Left on bases—Cornell 8, Bucknell until the last quarter. Chicago won game on Percy Field last week Tues- 5. —Logan, O'Brien and first place and Michigan second in day. Owing to a fielding error by O'Leary. Wild pitch, Daniels. Passed this event. the Cornell pitcher in the sixth inning, ball, O'Leary. Hit by Pitcher—Mag- ner by Daniels, O'Leary by Carvajal. Rowing. when the bases were full, the visitors Stolen bases—Magner, Clute 2, Dau- Crew men have been taking advan- scored three runs, making their score enhauer 2, Thomas, Thompson, Love- tage of quiet water on the lake to 4 to Cornell's 2. When Cornell went land. Sacrifice hits—O'Connell, Car- get in some much needed long rows. to bat right after that, Dauenhauer vajal. Umpire—Steinberg. Nearly every day now it is possible led off with a single to right field, for the varsity and freshman crews Cornell's New Relay Record, Thomas beat out a bunt to left, and to row to Crowbar Point. Several then he and Dauenhauer made a Cornell won the four-mile college re- days last week Distler, who had been double steal. At that moment two lay championship at the University rowing at No. 6, stroked the varsity runs were needed to tie the score, of Pennsylvania's annual carnival of shell. Distler stroked the junior var- there were two men on bases, and relay races and field sports at Phila- sity eight and the varsity four last two were out, McCormick and Thomp- delphia Saturday, snatching the vic- season. Bowen was put back in the son having retired on flies. Butler tory from Pennsylvania on the stroke seat the last of the week. went in to bat for Carvajal and lobbed stretch and establishing a new Amer- the ball into right field, bringing in ican record of 17 minutes 55 seconds. Another bleacher at Percy Field both base runners and tying the score. The mile relay team finished third in has been provided by placing the lower In the seventh, singles by Clute, one of the fastest races of the meet. section of the big steel stand on the Dauenhauer and Thompson and triples Gordon B. Dukes ΊO tied for first in west side of the baseball diamond, by Mahoney and Thomas netted four the pole vault at 12 feet 3 inches along the third base line. runs. Nisbet took CarvajaPs place as with Gardner of Yale and Murphy of pitcher and Bucknell also changed Illinois. Cornell had thirteen men en- The freshman nine defeated Cook , and there were no more runs. tered in the field events and the 100- Academy Saturday, 3 to 2. S58 CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS

new ones are springing up every year. UNIVERSITY CALENDAR. That almost one-third of all the men WEDNESDAY, MAY 3. at Cornell are members of fraternities Y. W. C. A.—Regular mid-week may be a surprise to some alumni. meeting. Barnes Hall, 7:15 p. m. The growth in the number of frater- Agassiz Club Talk—Mr. J. T. Lloyd. SUBSCRIPTION—$3.00 Per Y r. nities shows simply that undergradu- The Marsh. McGraw Hall, South ates are co-operating to get away Wing, 7:30 p. m. The public is cordi- Published by the Cornell Alumni News ally invited. Publishing Company. John L. Senior, from the rooming and boarding house. President, Woodford Patterson, Secretary American Chemical Society, Cor- and Treasurer. Office: 110 North Tioga Practically all the advantages of fra- nell Section—Judge Irvine. Expert Street, Ithaca, N. Y. Published weekly during the college ternity life may be had by any group Testimony. Morse Hall, Lecture year and monthly in July and August, of men willing to assume the respon- Room No. 1, 8 p. m. forty issues annually. Issue No. 1 is published the first Wednesday of the sibility of taking a house. With care- THURSDAY, MAY 4. college year, in October, and weekly pub- Sanitary Science and Public Health lication (numbered consecutively) con- ful financing, the margin which would tinues through Commencement week. Is- Lecture — Professor Ogden. The sue No. 40, the final one of the year, is otherwise go to various landladies as Problems of Sewerage. Goldwin published the last Wednesday in August profit goes into a fund for the event- and contains a complete index of the Smith Hall, Room A, 12 m. entire volume. ual purchase of the house. Baseball—Pennsylvania State Col- Single copies, ten cents each. Foreign lege vs. Cornell. Percy Field, 3:30 p. postage, 40 cents per year. Subscriptions A senior class smoker has been payable in advance. m. Admission 50c. Reserved seats Should a subscriber desire to discon- held in the Cosmopolitan Club house. 25c. Season tickets good for admis- tinue his subscription, notice to that ef- fect should be sent in before its expira- Every time an event of this kind is sion. tion. Otherwise it is assumed that a Music Festival — Lyric Opera continuance of the subscription is de- held on the hill instead of downtown sired. it makes one think how much better "Faust." Sage Chapel, 8:15 p. m. Checks, drafts and orders should be FRIDAY, MAY 5. made payable to the Cornell Alumni things would be if there were a place News. for such gatherings where a few men Music Festival—Popular Concert, All correspondence should be address- Boston Festival Orchestra, Mr. Emil ed— need not be tempted to drink too CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS, Mollenhauer, Conductor. Soloists, Ithaca. N. Ύ. much. Mme. Florence Mulford, Contralto; Mr. Eric Dudley, Baritone; Senor A. The action of the Cornell Univer- Torello, Contra Basso. Sage Chapel,

WOODFORD PATTERSON, sity Club of New York in establishing 3 p. m. Editor. a "Committee on University Affairs" Baseball—Dartmouth College vs. Cornell. Percy Field, 3:30 p. m. Ad- R. W. KELLOGG, is a matter of interest to all alumni. mission 50c. Reserved seats 25c. Assistant Editor. Similar action might be taken by Season tickets good for admission. JAMES B. WALKER, JR., other associations without disadvan- Intercollege Baseball—College of Business Manager. tage to the University. One of the Civil Engineering vs. Veterinary Col- . ROYAL K. BAKER, best governed universities in the lege. College of Arts and Sciences vs. country is Harvard, and at Harvard College of Agriculture. Playground, Assistant Business Manager. 5 p. m. there is a complete machinery for en- Music Festival—Popular Concert. abling the university's alumni to ac- Soloists, Miss Bertha Kinzel, So- Entered as Second-Class Matter at Ithaca, N. Y quaint themselves with any matter prano; Mr. Evan Williams, Tenor. affecting the institution and to make Sage Chapel 8:15 p. m. Ithaca, N. Y., May 3, 1911. such recommendation respecting the SATURDAY, MAY 6. Agassiz Club Field Trip—Leader, Director Bailey of the College of matter as they may see fit to make. Mr. Needham. Subject, Lake Plank- Agriculture has declined the office of By means of visiting committees ton. McGraw Hall, North Wing, 2 p. the Board of Overseers — a board m. Commissioner of Agriculture of the Baseball—Dartmouth College vs. State of New York and apparently elected by the alumni—exercises an important influence for good on ad- Cornell. Percy Field, 2 p. m. Roch- has convinced Governor Dix that he ester High School vs. Cornell Fresh- will not accept the appointment. We ministration and instruction. The men, Percy Field, 4 p. m. Admission* sympathize with Governor Dix, but new committee in New York may to both events 50c. Reserved seats learn some of the difficulties of ad- 25c. Season tickets good for admis- believe that Professor Bailey is too sion. useful where he is to be spared. And ministering a university and may get a great many valuable hints for its Tennis—Columbia University vs. we cannot see that his transfer to Cornell. Time and place to be an- Albany would be a promotion. own future usefulness by reading ex- nounced later. President Eliot's book "University Music Festival—Symphony Con- According to the figures in Presi- Administration." cert, Boston Festival Orchestra, Mr. dent Schurman's statement about the Emil Mollenhauer, Conductor. Solo- ists, Mr. Johnston, Organist; Mr. comparative scholastic standing of Professor Nathaniel Schmidt is to Carl Webster, Violinist. Sage Chapel, fraternity and non-fraternity men, address the Society of Comparative 3 p. m. Pierne's "Children's Cru- published last week, 1048 of the 3587 Theology and Philosophy, Friday, sade." Sage Chapel, 8:15 p. m. male undergraduates at Ithaca are May 12, on "The Crisis in the Catholic SUNDAY, MAY 7. , members of fraternities. There are Church and Its Present Opportunity." Sage Chapel—The Rt. Rey. Ethel- forty so-called fraternities at Cornell bert Talbot, D.D. Episcopalian. Bis- with an average membership of about hop of Bethlehem, South Bethlehem, Alumni days are Tuesday, June 20, Pa. Morning service at 11 o'clώck. twenty-five men each. Apparently and Wednesday, June 21. Afternoon service at 3:15 o'clock. CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS 35ί>

CLASS REUNIONS. T. C, POWER. Hehna, Mont, Pr*$. HERBERT G.OGDEN.EJEV97 1908, I P. BAKER, VlceJ>κsident Attorney and Counsellor at Law Oh Saturday, May 6, at the Cor- a H. RUSSt Jr., '03, Cmbi*. nell University Club, 65 Park ave- Patents and Patent Causes nue, corner of Thirty-eighth street, BISMARCK BANK 2 RECTOR ST., NEW YORK New York City, there will be a 1908 dinner which every New York man BISMARCK, N. D of that class is expected to attend. Issues certificates of deposit, drawing 5 percent interest per annum. Interest pay- CORNELL LIVERY There is a lot of reunion talk now, able semi-annually. and it looks as if there would be a big EDWARD P. SAYRE, Prop. Depository for the State of North Da- turnout. But even the men who will kota, County of Burleigh and City of Bis- 208 South Cayuga St. not be able to go to Ithaca in June marck. want to get together somewhere this Correspondence invited. BELL PHONE 55 ITHACA PHONE 363 spring, and the Cornell Club seems to be a fitting place to foregather. So do not forget Saturday, May 6. The MANY VISITORS price will be one dollar. Huyler's Candies GIBSON, TOWNSEND, TO NEW YORK VANDERVEER, BURNS. are at a loss to find a quiet, first-class Ithaca Agency at Christiance-Dudlβy Pharmacy. hotel where they can be free from ALUMNI ASSOCIATIONS. the crowds and disagreeable asso- Chicago. ciations of the down-town places. The annual banquet of the Cornell University Association of Chicago The Hotel Endicott Buttήck & Frawley was held at the University Club, Sat- meets their requirements. llβ Eββt State Street urday, April 22. It proved to be the Address Hotel Endicott, Manhattan Square,. most successful dinner ever held by New York City. Full Dress Suits and Tuxedos. the Association. Professor Catterall Booklet and map Neta York City mailed upon request was present as the guest of honor, other speakers being the Rev. Dean Lang's Palace Garage. W. T. Sumner, the Dartmouth man, Absolutely Fire Proof. and Hugh Jennings '04. Maurice Con- nolly '97 acted as toastmaster, and Oldsmobile Regal Frank S. Porter '00 presided. The music, under the charge of Erskine P. Chalmers Maxwell Wilder '05, was, as usual, most de- lightful, and brought forward for the Oakland Automobiles first time a new Cornell song, words by Angus S. Hibbard, the Harvard man, and dedicated to the Cornell men SEE OUR EXHIBIT AT THE ELKS' FAIR. of Chicago. The song is bound to be- J. B. Lang Engine and Garage Co. come popular, and the words are given 117-121 East Qreen Street, West of Star Theatre below: CORNELL. (Tune, "My Hero.11 Words by Angus S. Hibbard.) Quickest and Best Way Cornell, hark to our singing to thee, ίackawanπa Cornell, between Cornell, voices are singing to wish Railroad thee well, NEW YORK and ITHACA Cornell, fair as the weather When all thy sons are gathered to- SLEEPING CARS BOTH WAYS EVERY DAY. gether, Ready to yell—Cornell—Cornell, FAST SERVICE. NO EXCESS FARES We are singing Cornell, Cornell. E.J. Bϋf U. N. Y

Ginseng growers from all parts of East Hillians Should Order Their Coal From the the state attended the annual meet- ing of the New York State Ginseng EASand Tno t askHIL horses toL hau lCOA the heavyL load s uYARDp the hill. S GOOD COAL AND GOOD Growers Association at the College of Bell phone-SOS ) SERVICE. Agriculture last week. Γfchac* phone-7 FRANKLIN C. CORNELL. RJIΛDBRS WILL PL*Aβl MBHTIOH TH1 ALUM NI NKWI WHIN WKITIN TO 360 CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS

Faculty Appointments. Central New York. These men are J. G. White & Co. Inc. At a special meeting of the Ex- the leaders in Bible study in their sev- ecutive Committee of the Board of eral institutions. An intercollegiate Engineers, Contractors Trustees Thursday afternoon, ap- "sociable" wsa held on Friday even- ing. The sessions on Saturday dealt 48-49 Exchange Place - NEW YORK pointments to the instructing staff for next year were made. Following is primarily with the technical side of Chicago, 111. San Francisco, Cal. the list of promotions and of new ap- the Bible Study department, taking Engineering Construction * pointees : up such questions as the methods of E. P. Andrews '95, assistant pro- enrolling students in Bible classes, and Operation of fessor of archaeology and curator of the choosing and training of leaders, JBlectric Railways, Electric Lighting the museum of casts. summer conferences, etc. The topic Syβtemβ. Hydraulic and Steam Power F. K. Richtmyer '04, assistant pro- for the afternoon was "Faculty Co- Plants, Water Works, Gas Works, Irri- operation." Clayton S. Cooper, Bible gation Systems, etc. fessor of physics. Lew D. Fallis, lecturer in oratory. Study Secretary of the International Reports made for Financial Institu- G. I. Dale '10, instructor in the Committee, and J. W. Pontius, a vis- tions and Investors Romance languages and literatures; iting secretary, spoke on this subject, and some of the Cornell faculty mem- London Correspondent: C. W. Bennett, instructor in chemis- try; C. K. Carpenter '07, instructor in bers present expressed their opinions J. G. WHITE & CO. as to the willingness of faculties to Cloak Lane, Cannon St., E. C. experimental engineering. R. H. McLean '11, assistant in an- help in the work. cient and modern European history; The topic for the Saturday evening L. M. McDermott, assistant in poli- session was fraternity Bible study, tics; R. W. Hamlet Ίl, assistant in J. E. Bennett, president of the senior economics and finance; G. E. Thomp- class, presiding. Director L. H. Bailey R. A. Heggie & Bro.Co. son, assistant in physics; R. C. Low- spoke on the literary and educational ary Ίl, W. J. O'Brien '10 and F. E. value of Bible study and the fine op- 135 Ea«t State St., Mute*. Carruth, assistants in chemistry; A. portunity that a congenial group of Olsson, assistant in paleontology; Dr. men, such as is formed by the mem- Edgar W. Phillips, assistant medical bers of one fraternity, have of getting JEWELERS examiner; G. H. Brown Ίl, assistant together for such study. Mr. Cooper in oratory; H. E. Griffith Ίl, assist- then spoke on the great interest which and makers of special Cor- ant in economics. fraternity men throughout the country nell goods. Watches and have been taking in organized Bible diamonds a specialty. The proctor, Lieutenant Theodore H. Twesten, was also reappointed. study, a number of colleges having Bible classes in every fraternity house Bible Study Institute. in the college during the past year. THE KIRK IN SYRACUSE. There have been classes in eighteen An exquisitely appointed and perfectly con- A very successful Bible Study In- ducted restaurant for gentlemen. stitute was conducted by the Cornell fraternities at Cornell this year, and Have on draught Imported Wtϊrzburger University Christian Association on the men have been very much inter- Hofbrdu, Pilsner, Bass Ale and Piel Bros, pσyβn* Consumers' Brew Co. Lager Beer. April 14, 15 and 16. There were sev- ested in them. Most of them have enteen delegates from eight colleges in taken up Professor Jenks's book on O'Connor & Wittner. Ertablkhed 1865-

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WILL PUUII irtNTIOW THE ALUMNI NSWS WHEN WBIΠNG TO ΛDVBBTI8SBB. CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS 361

"The Social and Political Significance LEGAL DIRECTORY. John Chatillon & Sons of the Life and Teaching's of Jesus." Sunday morning Professor A. R. BOSTON, MASS. 8M3 CUFF ST.. NEW YORK CΠΎ Mann of the College of Agriculture JAMES P. MAGENIS, talked to the delegates and the lead- Attorney at Law. Manufacturers of 801-804 Tremont Building. ers in the Cornell Association on "The Objectives of Bible Study," BUFFALO, N. Y. HARxίY L. NUESE '06, Spring Scales pointing out the opportunity the Bible Attorney at Law. study leader has to influence the lives Specialty, Recovery and Adjustment of for weighing, assorting, counting, mul- Claims in Western New York, tiplying, estimating, measuring, of men. Mr. Cooper gave an illus- 612-613 Mutual Life Building. testing and for various trated lecture Sunday evening on "Bible Study Around the World," de- CLEVELAND, OHIO. other purposes. HERBERT W. BELL '94, scribing his travels during the last Attorney and Counselor at Law, UR information regarding1 vacancies two years. He spent seven months in 1106-7-8 Williamson Building. O comes direct from School Authorities India, Ceylon, China, Japan and Ko- to whom we PERSONALLY RECOM- CLEVELAND, OHIO. MEND teachers. Our new card index en- rea, organizing Bible study work ables us to find at once the right teacher CURT B. MUELLER, '05, A. B., LL. B. for each place. We use a rapid fire rifle, among students. He said that stud- M. P. L. not a shotgun. Register now for posi- Patents and Patent Causes, tion or promotion. ents in those countries were so eager Century Building. THE THURSTON TEACHERS' AGENCY to take up the study that the great 623 S. Wabash Ave., Chicago, 111. NEW YORK CITY. problem was not to enroll men but to DON R. ALMY, A. B. '97 LL. B. '98. Specialty, Trials in Courts of Records. obtain competent leaders to conduct 68 William Street. the classes. Associated with OLNBY (Harvard '64) & We Write Insurance COM STOCK (Princeton '79). ALL KINDS Lacrosse. NEW YORK CITY. Ithaca Realty Co. Regular lacrosse practice has been CHARLES A. TAUSSIG, held every afternoon during th<ί past A. B. '02, LL. B. Harvard, '05. 107 Noith Tioga Street. 220 Broadway. week in preparation for the games Telephone 3885 Cortland. General Practice with Columbia and the Crescent Ath- PHILADELPHIA, PA. letic Club in New York and Brooklyn BiϋNJAMIN O. FRICK '02, Attorney at Law, on Friday and Saturday of this week. 1335 Land Title Bldg., Broad and Chest- The team has shown some improve- nut Streets. ment as the result of the strenuous 'Phone, Spruce 2471. work which Coach Hunter has exacted ROCHESTER, N. Y. since the Rochester game. SIMON L. ADLER, Be sure your ticket reads Attorney and Counselor at Law. Soccer Football. 227-229 Granite Building. via the Although Harvard needed to defeat SYRACUSE, N. Y~ Cornell in soccer Saturday afternoon FOWLER, CROUCH & VANN, Attorneys and Counselors at Law. at Alumni Field, to clinch the cham- 504-506 Dillaye Memorial Bldg. A. P. FOWLER '91 L. C. CROUCH '89 pionship, the Crimson team was un- IRVING D. VANN, Yale '97 Lehigh Valley able to score after two hours of play- ing. The game consisted of halves WASHINGTON, D. C. THEODORE K. BRYANT, '97, '98, each 45 minutes in length. In addi- M. P. L., G. W. U. '08 U. S. and Foreign patents and Trade- Railroad. tion to this, Cornell consented to two Marks. extra periods of 15 minutes each. 308-9-10 Ouray Bldg. The excellent work of Stephenson, the Cornell goal tender, was largely re- WASHINGTON, D. C. DELBERT H. DECKER '84. sponsible for Harvard's inability to Patent Law, 900 F St., N. W. score. The game was the last of the Trade-Marks, Labels, Coyprights. Cornell soccer season. The Cornell team: Stephenson, goal; Birkhahn, Urband, Son & Co. left back Collado, right back Wilson, THE ALHAMBRA GRILL left half; Towers, center half; Bishop, Triest, right half; Dodge, left out- 113 N. Aurora St. Tailors side forward; Hayes, Sonnenfeld, left A restaurant (or ladies and gentlemen inside forward; Davis, center for- ITHACA J. B. HERSON. Propr***.

Revised Tariff of Ratts at the Yates HOTEL LENOX Syracuse, N Y.—Beginning Sept. 1, 1910 Boylston and Exeter Streets, Boston, AMERICAN PLAN RATES Rooms, Without Bath $3 OO and upward per day Rooms With Bath $3.50 and upward per day Cornell Headquarters in Boston 75 Sample Rooms $3.00 and $4.00 per day EUROPEAN PLAN RATES Hotel Taft, New Haven, Ccnn. Opening January, 1912. Rooms, Without Bath.... $1.00 and upward per day Rooms, With Bath $1.50 and upward per day RIADΪRβ WILL PLKΛ I MENTION THB ALUMNI NEWS WMΠNβ TO ADVERTISERS. 362 CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS ward; Borges, right inside forward; Alumni Notes. Tillou, right outside forward. CHACON AS '89, C. E.—John F. Hayford, di- Tennis, rector of the college of engineering of Delicious candies and hot or cold A victory over Lafayette and a de- Northwestern University, was on drinks will always be found here. feat by Princeton were the results April 20 elected to membership in the 217-104-208 East State Street of the tennis team's trip last week. National Academy of Sciences. Im- At Easton on Friday the team made mediately after his graduation Mr. easy work of the Lafayette men, tak- Hayford was appointed a computer in ing every match. Princeton won the the United States Coast and Geodetic four singles and one of the doubles. Survey. In 1895-98 he was an instruc- Bickford Bros. & Co. The Cornell team is composed of G. tor in civil engineering at Cornell. He H. Holton Ίl, J. C. Hoagland Ίl, T. was appointed in 1898 expert Com- Fine Furniture, Draperies M. Cummings '12 and E. T. Pfau Ί2. puterLand geodesist in the Survey, Intercollege Athletics. and he later became inspector of geo- and Decorations. The annual intercollege track meet detic work and chief of the computing will be held on Friday, May 19. The division. He resigned in 1908 to be- 81 East Avenue, Rochester, N. Y. College of Agriculture now leads in come the first director of the college of the intercollege race with 31 points. engineering at Northwestern Univer- Sibley is second and Civil Engineer- sity. ing third. Last year Sibley won first '96, B. S.—Mrs. Mary Rogers place in the track meet. Besides the Miller is beginning a six months' tour meet, the baseball series and the inter- of the west, intending to visit several college boat race will count in the leading universities and colleges, in- final standing for the year. cluding Illinois, Chicago, Iowa, Mich- John Hoyle has finished the gig for igan, Nebraska, California and Stan- the crew of the College of Agriculture ford. and the boat is in use. The money for '96, Ph. B.; '00, Ph. D.—President the gig was raised by the undergradu- Charles H. Rammelkamp of Illinois ates of the college. Sparkling' Apple Juice College, Jacksonville, 111., has just an- NON-ALCOHOLIC About fifty Cornell men connected nounced the completion of an endow- Just the beverage to serve at Banquets, with the legislature and the various ment fund of $150,000 for the college. Club and Home gatherings. The pure juice of finest apples with all state departments at Albany met last The beginning of this fund was made their delicate flavor unchanged. week at a dinner given by Assembly- three years ago, when Andrew Car- man Gottfried H. Wende of Buffalo. negie offered, through Frank H. Van- Sparkling and Effervescent yet positively non-alcoholic. Served ice It was decided to form an association derlip, who is an honorary alumnus of cold it will make a decided hit. the college, to give $75,000 if an equal of Cornell men among the legislators At all first-class groceries, druggists, and state officers. Mr. Wende was amount could be raised. Illinois Col- hotels, cafes and clubs. chosen president and Frederick D. Col- lege was established in 1829, and Dr. American Fruit Product Co. son '97, state law librarian, secre- Rammelkamp has been its president tary. since 1905. During the past five Rochester, N. Y.

j^ Hotel Cumberland »raSb&, Broadway at 54th Street NEW YORK p§SδQH|IBHHI[ ' Neai 50th St. Subway Station and 53rd St. Elevated UUP^flJU^H^^M ' 'Broadway *' cars from Grand Central Depot pass the door HBgB Kept by a College Man ppfii l^n^y^^tt Headquarters for College Men te|ί«i! l^gWBM Special Rates for College Teams SiflSlllii Neal τtieatres» ShoP8 *"*Centra l Park The Seneca Camera Illpifll^ New, and Strictly Fireproof THE BEST FOR ALL. ΠSΪMJHBB Rates Reasonable. $2.30 with bath Send for Special Student's Proposition. aHHBH|||||t SEND FOR BOOKLET sKfe JHMBMΞB^ HARRY P. STIMSON. Mgp^jr^Wr Formerfy with Hotd Imperial Seneca Camera Mfg. Co., Φ^t*^ Ten Mmuteβ Walk to Twenty Theatres Rochester, N. Y. HEADQUARTERS for CORNELL MEN Largest Independent Camera Makers in the World. BBABBB8 WILL ΓIΛAMM MENTION TOT ALtΓMWI KWWB WKJPΓ WBΓΓHTO TO APVKBTISBRS. CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS 363

LAW BUSINESS IN ITHACA years he has added a quarter of a million dollars to the college's en- Promptly and carefully attended to The Onondaga dowment. SYRACUSE, N. Y. George S. Tarbell '97, M. E.—George L. Weller's ad- Attorney and Notary Public, dress is now in care of the National Trust Company Building, Ithaca Veneer Products Company, Mishawa- 0: ka, Ind. '00, M. E.—The Rochester Railway Eighth Year & Light Company has created the of- SHELDON COURT fice of assistant to the general man- Private Ί)ormitory ager, and Henry W. Peck, assistant electrical engineer of the company, Adjoining Cornell University Cam- has been advanced to the new post. pus. Practically fire-proof. Equip- Mr. Peck went to Rochester in 1907 ment the best. An ideal home for from Baltimore, where he was assist- college students. Prices very ant superintendent of the Consoli- moderate. Catalogue on request. dated Gas, Electric Light & Power A. R. CONGDON, M«r., Company. ITHACA. Όβ, M. E.—Announcement is made of the marriage of Miss Minnie Brown and I. Seeley Jones on April See The New Styles 19 at the Church of the Good Shep- herd, Chicago. E. B. Wagner '06 at- The Quality that SeBs tended as best man. Mr. and Mrs. Look at die Shoe, in OUT window Jones will live at 5875 Southport ave- Fireproof. European Plan. 138 EAST nue, Chicago. HERRON STATE STREET Direction of '08, M. E.—Mrs. Jeptha Putnam FREDERICK^. ROCKWELL C. H. HOWES ART GALLERY Bruce announces the marriage of her daughter, Annette Hortense, to John Proprietor Athletic Photographer; for all Palliser Dods on April 25 at Chelsea, THE TEN EYCK Cornell Teams, etc. Albany, N. Y

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READERS WILL PLKA8B MBNTJOH TH1 ALUM NI NEWS WHBN WHITING TO ADVERTISERS 364 CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS

Mass. 3VLr. and Mrs. Dods will be at Commission and has charge of the ιnιiιιιιιτnιnιιιniiιιιiιnmmmuunnιιnmuHiιuiumιιu»n g home after September 1 at 1225 East maintenance and oiling of all roads in * Better Stenographic * Fifty-second street, Chicago. one of the three districts into which p Service '09, M. E.—Ray C. Thompson is Maryland is divided. His headquar- ters for the working season is at Did you ever notice that your head of a department in the Union stenographer does better work Carbide Company's works. His ad- Easton, Md. early in the day than she does dress is 920 Niagara avenue, Niagara toward night? '10, LL. B.—C. J. Toan is engaged This is probably the reason: At Falls, N. Y. in the practice of law with office in the tip of each finger, close to the '09, LL. B.—William Harris has the German Insurance Building, surface, is a sensitive nerve Rochester, N. Y. terminal. opened an office for the general prac- Now, the constant pounding that tice of law at Rooms 320-322 Union ΊO, C. E.—H. R. Standiford is a is necessary to get action from the Building, Newark, N. J. draftsman in the Pencoyd plant of the stiff, heavy keys of the ordinary typewriter soon tires her out. You '10, C. E.—Julius Zieget has been American Bridge company. His ad- can overcome this daily "three- promoted to the position of engineer dress is 130 Sumac street, Wissa- o'clock fatigue" by taking inspector of the Maryland State Roads hickon, Philadelphia Pa. advaxitage of Monarch Light Touch The Monarch has an exclusive type-bar construction, which re- sponds to the slightest pressure of A Malted Wheat Flake for the fingers and makes possible a maximum degree of efficiency. Breakfast. Compare the Monarch with any other typewriter and note the difference. FORCE is good for those suffering from indigestion] and Send for Monarch constipation. Literature Learn the reasons for Monarch su periority. Then try the Monarch, to the end that you may know that Did you ever suddenly run across a decision or a point of law and say, Γll Monarch merit rests in the machine Λself, not merely in what we tell you remember that ? Of course you have! But could you remember the about it. point or location when you needed it ? Hardly ever! IF YOU HAD USED A WILLIAMSONS Common-Place and Brief Book (THE LAWYER'S INDEX RERUM) you would have noted the location and it would have been ready for your use at once. The most valuable part of the book lies in the carefully and thoroughly prepared Representatives Wanted Index of Over One Thousand Titles and Subjects. Local representatives wanted every- where, also a few more dealers for large Printed on fine quality of linen ledger paper. Bound leather back and corners. 300 territories. Write for details and at- Όages, 8x9. $3.00. tractive terms. 1000 Pages, bound leather, Russia ends and bands, $5.00 The Monarch Typewriter Company EXPRESS PAID D. A. KEMPER Local Representative, Williamson Law Book Company, No. 2 Circle, ROCHESTER, N. Y. Ithaca. "IF IT IS A LAW BOOK WE SELL IT." 13 tiiiiHiiimiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii iniiHΠHimnmilllHHHIIinili t I?

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