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CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS

Vol. XIII. No. 32 Ithaca, N. V., May 17, 1911 Price 10 Cents

Cornelliana. ley. Besides the track and baseball the governor general of the province teams, there were the editorial boards of Diarbekir, Asiatic Turkey, is to Announcement is made of the award of the Daily Princetonian and the enter the College of Agriculture in the of three prizes for literary composi- Tiger, who were the guests respec- fall. He is a graduate of Robert Col- tion.. The Barnes Shakespeare Prize tively of the Sun and the Widow. lege, Constantinople, and will take a of $50 has been awarded to Fred S. The track team was quartered in the special course at Cornell. The Otto- Kleinman of Brooklyn for an essay Theta Delta Chi house and the base- man embassy at Washington has been entitled "Shakespeare's Fools and ball team in the Alpha Delta Phi making arangements for his stay in Clowns." George S. Barnum of Lock- house while in Ithaca. The special this country. train arrived in time for the editorial port was the successful contestant A new method for the selection of visitors to see most of the Savage for the Corson French Prize, a gold cheer leaders has been adopted. One Club show at the Lyceum, and after ϊήedal of the value of $50. His sub- junior from each fraternity, ten non- that they were entertained at a ject was "A Comparison of the 'Phe- fraternity men appointed by the pres- smoker given by the Savage Club, djre' of Racine, the Ήippolytus' of ident of the junior class, and as many with the co-operation of the Sun and Euripides and the 'Phaedra' of Sen- more non-fraternity men as wish to do the Widow, at the Dutch Kitchen. On eca." A similar medal, the Corson so, are to enter a competition. After Saturday morning the annual base- Browning Prize, was awarded to Mel- trials in the Armory under the direc- ball games between the Princetonian vin G. Crowell of Belfast, who wrote tion of L. P. Ward Ίl, head cheer and the Sun and between the Tiger on "Browning's Treatment of Exter- leader, the number will be cut to thirty and the Widow were played on the nal Nature." men. These men will lead the cheer- playground, in attire too grotesque ing at the remaining baseball games Dr. A. F. Zahm '92 delivered the for description. The Sun got one this spring, and in the fall the junior last Sigma Xi lecture of the year in run and the Princetonian got a large and senior classes will choose twenty Rockefeller hall Monday night on number. The Widow, with a pitcher of the men as cheer leaders for 1911- "Progress in Aeronautics." Dr. Zahm who could wind up with one arm and 12. is a member of the faculty of the pitch with the other, managed to get Catholic University of America in six runs to the Tiger's five, or some- At the annual meeting o'f the Cos- Washington, D. C, and is secretary of thing like that. On Saturday evening mopolitan Club last week the fol- the Washington Aeronautical Society. the Cornell editors gave their guests lowing officers were elected for the To a very good house the Savage a dinner. coming year: President, J. C. Faure, Club, Friday evening, presented an Transvaal; first vice-president, K. Y. amusing skit entitled "The Savages Seniors gathered on the steps of Char, China; second vice-president, in Sweitzerland," which gave several Goldwin Smith Hall Monday evening Nagaatsu Kurado, Japan; recording members of the club an opportunity for the first senior singing of the secretary, Carlos Locsin y Lacson, to shine in their specialties. The year. The leader is W. E. Hawke, Philippine Islands; corresponding sec- piece was written by F. D. Burnet and leader of the glee club. Monday, retary, W. J. McKay, ; was full of funny lines and amusing Tuesday and Thursday nights have assistant corresponding secretary, C. situations. A party of busted stud- been chosen for senior singing, which H. Ballou, United States; alumni sec- ents get up a tour to Sweitzerland will start promptly at 7:30 o'clock and retary, Zoong D. Liu, China; treas- and appear there as wandering last for an hour. Caps and gowns urer, Professor F. A. Barnes, United players. Burnet as a professor, J. S. are not to be worn. States; assistant treasurer, George S. Fassett, jr., as the leader of the stu- Troop F, 3d United States Cavalry, Hopp, United States. dents, L. P. Ward as a "shorthorn," which has been patrolling the Mexican The local branch of the American and E. D. Ham as a landlady's daugh- border since January with headquar- Society of Mechanical Engineers has ter, got most of the laughs. There ters at Candelaria, Presidio county, elected the following officers: Presi- was a lot of good music by Messrs. Texas, has two Cornellians with it. dent, F. E. Yoakum '12, Los Angeles; Torrance, Emmert, Ulbricht and Frank A. Barton, 3d Cavalry, M. E. vice-president, George W. Curtiss '12, Branin and good dancing by Tewkes- '91, who was commandant of ca- Tarrytown; treasurer, S. D. Mills '13, bury and Crane. dets at Cornell from 1904 to 1908. Summit, N. J.; secretary, L. B. Zim- A large number of Princeton men The surgeon with the troop is First merman '14. were entertained in Ithaca on Satur- Lieutenant John R. Bradley, Medical "Workmen's Compensation and Em- day. They arrived on Friday night Reserve Corps, M. D. '07. ployers' Liability" was the subject on by special train over the Lehigh Val- Haldoon Bey, son of Galib Pacha, which Professor Alfred Hayes of the 378 CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS

College of Law addressed the Cornell DEATH OF A. H. R. FRASER. Socialist Club Friday night. Pro- fessor Hayes pointed out existing Librarian of the College of Law Passes faults in the liability laws and told of Away—End of a ^Useful Life. attempts that had been made to eradi- Alexander Hugh Ross Fraser, li- cate them. , brarian of the College of Law, died One of the largest lecture audiences on Tuesday afternoon, May 9, at his of the year heard addresses given by home in Cascadilla Place. Mr. Fraser George W. Perkins and William J. had been suffering for the last three Schieffelin of New York City in Sib- years from Addison's disease, a mal- ley E)ome last Thursday on "College ady which is almost always fatal. Men in Social Work in Large Cities." For several months past he had been President Schurman introduced the failing rapidly, but despite his serious speakers. Mr. Perkins's speech was a condition he had attended to his du- review of the commercial growth of ties with his wonted regularity. the country during the last century, Four days before his death, while he and his point was that co-operation was at work in the library, he had a was beginning to take the place of sinking spell. He went home unassist- competition. He called the present ed, and fell to the floor unconscious age a "get-together age." Mr. Schief- as soon as he reached home. He ral- felin said that in any town there was lied, however, and was able to go to plenty of opportunity for social ser- bed without help. He retained con- vice. He urged the members of the sciousness till his death. The body senior class that expect to locate in was taken to his boyhood home in New York to communicate with a Cor- Nova Scotia. nell committee which was recently Mr. Fraser was born at Port Hood, organized to direct any Cornell man Cape Breton, Canada, on February 5, A CHARACTERISTIC PICTURE OF MR. who may wish to do social service 1866. In 1892 he graduated from the FRASER. work. Dalhousie with the degree his work not only dignifies and exalts During the week there will be on of LL.B. He had been librarian of his office but makes himself indis- exhibition on the third floor of the the since July 1, pensable in the world. Men go to him for aid and counsel, he becomes dairy building drawings by students of 1893. He lived with his sister in Cascadilla Place. His mother and a the universal helper and friend. His the department of drawing of the community rely on him as they rely College of Agriculture and a collection brother still live in Port Hood. on the great forces of nature—heat of paintings and sketches by Profes- On Thursday at 11 o'clock a short and sunshine and the wealth and memorial meeting was held in Board- beauty of spring and autumn. And sor W. C. Baker. The exhibition will his opulent service, like the infinite be open from 10 a. m. to 5 p. m. man Hall, and the building was closed beneficence of nature, men take for daily. for the rest of the day. Practically all granted as a part, of the order the faculty and students of the col- of the universe. When the hand of James Oliver Winslow, of Ithaca, has lege were present at the meeting. death rudely stops it, we realize for been elected life secretary and Irvine spoke of the loss the col- the first time its immense value, and Wyllys Hawkes, jr., of Phoenix, repre- also its beauty, its graciousness, and lege had suffered. He said that it was its sublime unselfishness. sentative of the class of 1911 on the owing to Mr. Fraser that the college's Cornellian Council. Winslow, who is Are not these our felings when we library was, in point of usefulness, recall the services rendered to this a son of the late Dr. John Winslow of one of the great law libraries of the University by the great librarian Ithaca, was this year editor-in-chief of world. Professor Crane spoke of the whose loss we now mourn? We can- not adequately voice all that is in our the Sun. He is a member of Beta Theta qualities which made Mr. Fraser a Pi, , , hearts. But every teacher and student great librarian—his love of collecting of law in this College for nearly two Ycnan and the Savage Club. Hawkes books, his scholarship and wide range decades was helped in his work by this is business manager of the Widow of information, and his eagerness quiet, modest, wonder-working librar- and is chairman of the Alumni Pledge to put his collection at the ser- ian. He knew how to build up a great Committee. He is a member of collection of books; the world was his vice of others. President Schurman market; and if the University funds Sphinx Head. spoke as follows: were inadequate he spent of his own modest salary. Somehow or other he With the May issue of the Cornell Mr. Fraser was an excellent librar- was determined to have here for our Civil Engineer, the 1910-11 board ian. No man in this University filled use a model library of the law; and closed its term of office. The following his post with higher fidelity, with1 he succeeded; and that library is his board will get out the June issue and rarer distinction, or with larger suc- monument. cess. Like the great Apostle his mot- •But that was not all. For Mr. continue the work next year: Editor- to was: "This one thing I do." And Fraser was a scholar as well as a in-chief, Carl Crandall '12, of Ithaca; that is the type of man the modern collector. And I believe I voice the managing editor, A. W. Krause '12, of world especially needs. The men who sentiments of this entire Faculty Binghamton; business manager, P. L. want to do everything except their when I say that in guiding students in own job soon find themselves with the use of books he rendered incόjtn- Maher '12, of Utica; advertising man- nothing to do. But the man who parable service as a teacher. Nothitig ager, H. E. Doyle '13, of Richmond, throws himself heart and soul into was too much trouble for him if only CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS 379 he £ould help one of these students. Senior Society Elections. Other men might have fixed hours of labφr. But Mr. Fraser was in this The senior societies have announced building, working for you, and help- the following elections from the class ing you, from early morning till late of 1912: at night,; and friendly warnings and SPHINX HEAD. official prohibitions alike failed to re- George Clinton Andrews, jr., Tarry- press his' self-sacrificing zeal in the town. Theta Delta Chi. Business man- service of others. There was no man ager of the Sun. John Calvin Barker, Evanston, 111. in our academic community who sur- Theta Delta Chi. Chairman of Widow passed him, there is none who would Board. ^ pretend to equal him, in unselfish and Tell Schirnding Berna, Ithaca. Track tireless devotion to duty and helpful Ernest Fletcher Bowen, Bellows Falls, service. Vt. Delta Tau Delta. Stroke of varsity eight. President of class. And he was never a man of robust Carl Victor Burger, Maryville, Tenn. health. He was handicapped with Phi Kappa Psi. Widow board. poor eyesight. He knew the meaning James Irving Clarke, Saratoga Springs. Delta Chi. Sun board. of untoward circumstances. The Foster Meldrum Coffin, Brooklyn. Psi wonder of it is, and the glory of it Upsilon. Editor-in-chief of the Sun. is, that he triumphed over adversity, James Leo Collins, Pittsburg, Pa. Cap- that he overcame obstacles well nigh tain of wrestling team. Curtis Delano, Newton, Mass. Delta insuperable and, strong noble man as Upsilon. Varsity eleven. he was, served us all, helped us all, Richard Leech Elton, Canandaigua. and made us all his debtors and de- Captain of basketball team. Clinton Brooks Ferguson, Middletown. pendents. Varsity eight. We cannot describe the feelings with Harold Flack, New Rochelle. Beta SELLING THE "CORNELLIAN." Theta Pi. Track team. Editor-in-chief which we now lament his death. Our of the Cornellian. hearts are sad. The rest is silence. William Edward Irish, Denver, Col. the election of Arthur Gordon '04, Only we shall always think of our Phi Gamma Delta. Basket ball man- friend as one of the noblest and best ager. assistant professor of Romance lan- Walter Otto Kruse, Davenport, Iowa. guages and literatures. of men. . Varsity eight. The following tribute to Mr. Fras- Hugh John MacWilliams, Wilmington, Del. . The Masque. er's memory was written for the Sun Sophomore president of class. Lee Clement Mahoney, Los Angeles, Sunday Night Club. by Professor Woodruff: Cal. Varsity nine. "In true nobility of character, it William Edward Munk, Indianapolis. The Sunday Night Club, an organiz- Delta Kappa Epsilon. Captain of var- has never been my privilege to know sity eleven. ation which meets at various fra- Thomas Edgar Murrell, St. Louis, Mo. ternity houses on alternate Sunday personally a man superior to Mr. Delta Tau Delta. Widow board. Fraser. Although he was not an Frank Hugh O'Rourke, Syracuse. Var- evenings to listen to talks by mem- sity eleven. alumnus of Cornell no one of our Karl Edwin Pfeiffer, Scarsdale. Delta bers of the faculty, has elected the Upsilon. following members from the junior graduates surpassed, and I doubt if Herbert Nathan Putnam, Fredonia. few ever equalled him in the measure Phi Gamma Delta. Track team. class: C. S. Abbott, G. S. Andrews, Joseph Pierce Ripley, Oak Park, 111. of devotion and self sacrifice he gave Beta Theta Pi. Navy manager. jr., J. C. Barker, E. F. Bowen, F. M. Howard Andrew Starret, Detroit, Mich. Coffin, S. H. Crounse, W. G. Distler, to the University day after day with- Delta Kappa Epsilon. Business manager out rest during his eighteen years of of The Masque. T. Douglas, J. S. Fassett, jr., K. W. Ernest Harold Teagle, Hudson, O. service. Beta Theta Pi. Varsity eleven. Gass, G. G. Goetz, R. T. Isett, H. J. Malcolm Dennison Vail, Highland MacWilliams, P. D. McCarthy, A. C. "To this service he bought a pro- Park, 111. Beta Theta Pi. Captain of found knowledge of legal bibliography, hockey team. Miller, W. E. Munk, H. N. Putnam, George Blackman Wakeley, Orange, N. H. A. Starrett, A. M. Thompson, M. a wide culture in the humanities, and J. Theta Xi. Varsity eight. Charles Porter Weekes, jr., Arlington, D. Vail, J. B. Walker, jr., G. L. Wal- rare business acumen. Our law li- N. J. Delta Kappa Epsilon. Varsity brary, which is only second to that of eleven. ter, jr., R. D. Weary, C. P. Weekes. Harvard among the law school librar- . Clinton Seth Abbott, Blasdell, N. Y. Janus. ies, is in its completeness a monument . Varsity nine. to his labors for Cornell. Alan Husted Colcord, Brooklyn. Delta Janus, a newly organized secret so- Chi. Business manager of the Cornellian. "He was unsparing of his sincere Silas Hilton Crounse, jr., Oak Park, 111. ciety whose members profess particu- Alpha Delta Phi. Football manager. sympathy, unusual intellectual gifts, Walter George Distler, , Md. lar interest in public speaking and Alpha Delta Phi. Varsity eight. literature, has announced the follow- and financial support to every worthy Jacob Sloat Fassett, jr., Elmira. man or project that came to him for Kappa Alpha. The Masque. ing charter members: Elmer Eugene Charles Emery Finney, jr., Los Ange- Barker, James Eugene Bennett, Leon aid. Never was he weary of well-do- les, Cal. Zeta Psi. Freshman manager, ing even in his last days when his baseball and football. Ransom Brooks, James Leo Collins, Karl William Gass, Pittsburg, Pa. physical strength had waned to the Kappa Sigma. Varsity eleven. Widow David Elder, John Elbert Gladstone, board. Halsey Knapp, Carl Edwin Ladd, vanishing." George Gustav Goetz, Milwaukee, Wis. Chi Psi. Freshman track manager. Stanley Platt Lovell, Remsen Bleeck- Henry Wililam Grant, Boston, Mass. Last Friday's organ recital at Sage . Baseball manager. er Ostrander, Ephraim Laurence Chapel was devoted to American Jay Harry Letsche, jr., Pittsburg, Pa. Palmer, Raleigh Schuyler Rife, Alvah Kappa Sigma. Manager of musical clubs. composers. Mr. Johnston played Karl Dravo Pettit, Allegheny, Pa. Chi Dale Riley, Lewis Herbert Schwartz, Phi. Glee club. James H. Rogers's sonata in E minor William Whitmer Slaymaker, Phila- Earl Simonson, David Earl Snyder, and pieces by Dudley Buck, Ralph delphia, Pa. Chi Phi. Track team. James Arthur Sourwine, Julius Mal- James Blaine Walker, jr., New York Kinder, Frank Frysinger, Will C. City. Zeta Psi. Business manager of colm Strelitz, Howard Gilbert Wilson, Macfarlane, Ethelbert Nevin and the ALUMNI NEWS. James Oliver Winslow, Lewis Edwin Mark Andrews. Quill and Dagger also announced Neff. 380 CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS

ATHLETICS. what looked like a perfectly easy fly tower allowed only six hits and had and then muffed it. Had he caught such good support that the visitors Rowing. it, would have ended right had a man on third only twice. Cor- Cornell's varsity crew this season there and Cornell would have won. nell got two runs in the second. will probably be one of the lightest But a man came in from second on Dauenhauer and Thomas had both among the colleges. The present aver- the misplay, and a minute later Cap- singled and reached third and second age of the men is 169 pounds and there tain White's three-bagger brought in respectively, and a neat bunt toward is a possibility of this being reduced to another run and tied the score. But- first by Howard enabled them both 165 pounds before the intercollegiate ler himself ended the inning by catch- to score. In the fifth O'Connell's regatta at Poughkeepsie. The range ing a difficult fly. In the tenth, with triple and Butler's single brought in in the weights of the men is not so only one man out and one run needed a third run. In the eighth Howard very great this year. Lum, who to win, O'Connell hit for three bases walked, stole second and went on to weighs 178 pounds, is the heaviest and was allowed by the man coaching third when the catcher's throw man in the boat and Bates at 156 at third to try to reach home. He bounded off his shoulder, and scored pounds in the lightest. Harvard's av- was put out there easily. Princeton when the pitcher muffed Hightower's erage at present is said to be 183 had the bases full with only one man high fly. Howard's batting was per- pounds. out in the eleventh, but a double play fect. In four trips to the plate he The varsity crew leaves tonight for by Magner and Howard ended the in- had one hit, one sacrifice and two Princeton, where, on Saturday, ning without a run. The score: bases on balls. He stole second every Princeton and Yale will be met on time he reached first. In the sixth CORNELL AB R H PO A E Carnegie Lake. During the past Magner, ss 5 2 2 4 8 2 inning Cornell made a pretty double week the weather has been favorable Clute, lb 6 2 2 19 1 0 play that could not be scored. With for practice on the lake. O'Connell, rf 5 1 2 2 0 0 one out, Muskovitch hit over center Butler, If 6 1 3 2 0 1 for two bases. Collins hit to Dauen- Baseball. Dauenhauer, 2b .. 5 1 1 3 3 2 Thomas, cf '6 1 2 0 0 0 hauer, who threw Muskovitch out at This week the nine will play three McCormick, c 6 1 1 7 2 0 the plate. Then the umpire got busy games out of town, meeting Dart- Howard, 3b 5 0 0 2 4 0 at the plate with his little whisk mouth, Williams and Pennsylvania on Nisbet, p, 2 0 0 0 7 0 broom and did not see Abbott whip their home grounds. If the team can Hightower, p 2 0 0 0 3 0 *Mahoney 0 0 0 0 0 0 the ball to Magner, who caught Col- hit as hard as it did in the Prince- lins at second. The score: ton game and can correct some of the Totals 48 9 13 39 28 5 CORNELL AB R H PO A E faults of fielding and base running * Batted for Nisbet in the eighth. Magner, ss 3 0 0 3 8 0 which prevented a victory in that con- Clute, lb 4 0 0 13 2 1 test, there is some hope of its making PRINCETON .. AB R H PO A E O'Connell, rf 4 1 1 2 0 0 Bard, If 7 0 2 1 1 0 Butler, If 4 0 1 0 0 0 a good showing for the remainder of De Vito, rf 6 3 1 1 2 1 Dauenhauer, 2b .. 3 1 1 1 4 0 the season. S. B. White, ss ... 7 1 2 3 5 0 Thomas, cf 4 1 1 0 0 0 PRINCETON 9, CORNELL 9. Sterritt, lb 6 0 3 13 3 1 Abbott, c 4 0 0 7 2 0 When darkness settled over Percy Prescott, 2b 4 2 0 4 6 0 Howard, 3b 1 1 1 1 0 1 Parker, cf 6 1 2 3 1 0 Hightower, p 4 0 0 0 10 Field last Saturday, the Princeton Worthington, 3b .. 5 1 1 2 1 0 and Cornell baseball teams were just Taylor, c 3 0 1 6 3 1 Totals 31 4 5 27 17 2 finishing the thirteenth inning, and Lackey, c 3 1 1 5 0 0 the score was a tie at nine runs each. S. V. White, p 3 0 0 0 1 0 COLGATE AB R H PO A E Woodle, p 2 0 0 1 1 0 Jones, lb 4 0 0 8 0 0 So the game was called. It had been McLaughlin, rf .. 3 0 1 2 0 0 full of excitement, with heavy hitting Totals 52 9 13 39 24 3 Kingston, 2b 4 0 10 2 1 and loose fielding on both sides. Cor- Muskovitch, ss ... 4 0 1 2 2 1 nell started off by getting a lead of 4 Princeton .. 100005002100 0—9 Collins, cf 4 0 1 1 0 0 Cornell ....220000040100 0—9 Hammond, 3b 4 0 1 0 1 1 to 1 in the first two innings. Prince- Two base hits—S. B. White, Worth- Ellis, If 3 0 1 4 0 1 ton hit for six bases and five runs in ington, Lackey. Three base hits— Leonard, c 3 0 0 7 0 1 the sixth and got a lead of two. In S. B. White, Magner, O'Connell 2. Perrin, p 3 0 0 0 3 1 the eighth Cornell hit for six bases Sacrifice hits— O'Connell, Prescott. Stolen bases—Clute, Butler, Thomas, Totals 32 0 6 24 8 6 and four runs and had a lead of two. Howard, De Vito, Prescott. First Colgate 00000000 0—0 Then Princeton tied the score, and base on balls—Off Nisbet 2, off High- Cornell 0 2 0 0 10 0 1 *—4 after that each team got another run. tower 1, off Woodle 3. Struck out Nisbet and White pitched for eight —By Nisbet 4, by Hightower 2, by Two base hit—Muskovitch. Three White 5, by Woodle 4. Left on bases base hit—O'Connell. Sacrifice hit— innings, and then Hightower and —Princeton 9, Cornell 6. Double Howard. Stolen bases — Magner, Woodle took their places. Only three plays—Parker and Prescott; High- Clute, Butler, Thomas, Howard 3, hits were made off Nisbet up to the tower, Clute and McCormick; Mag- McLaughlin. First base on balls- fifth inning, when Princeton gathered ner and Howard. Passed ball— Off Hightower 1, off Perrin 5. Struck Lackey. Hit by pitcher—Mahoney by out—By Hightower 6, by Perrin 6. four. Cornell made ten hits off White. White, Woodle by Hightower, Dauen- Left on bases—Cornell 9, CJolgate 6. Cornell had several chances to win hauer by Woodle. Time—3:13. Um- Double play—Dauenhauer, Magner the game in the ninth and tenth in- pires—Sternberg and Adams. and Clute. Time—-1:45. Umpire— nings. In the ninth, when Cornell CORNELL 4, COLGATE 0. Sternberg. ^ was two runs ahead and two Prince- Colgate was shut out in a rather Alumni days are Tuesday, June 2fL ton men were out, Butler waited for listless game last Wednesday. High- and Wednesday, June 21. CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS 381

Track. The track team won with unexpect- ed easeΉn the dual meet with Prince- von, held on Percy Field last Satur- day. The score was 79 1-2 to 37 1-2 in favor of Cornell. Last year Prince- ton won by a score of 60 to 57. Princeton this year has already de- feated Yale. Cornell men won first place in ten of the thirteen events. All the places in the two mile run were taken by Cornellians, Berna al- lowing Crandall and Hunger to finish ahead of him. In the broad jump, too, all the points went to Cornell. Ford's time in the 220-yard dash equals the Cornell record, which was made by Frank Sears in 1901. MacArthur set a new Cornell record in the quarter- mile, two-fifths of a second under W. G. Warren's record of 49 4-5, made in 1903. Stibolt's victory over Cap- tain Dwight in the high hurdles was a surprise. In the low hurdles he had a slight lead when he cleared the last hurdle, but Dwight beat him in JOHN F. MOAKLEY'S NEW HOME. the sprint to the tape. In the distance runs the Cornell entries had things The above picture shows tlie house ting the Cornell track team up amon^ pretty much their own way. The sum- which Coach Moakley has built. It is the leaders. When he was asked if mary: situated on a very desirable lot which a picture of the house might be pub- is bounded on the west by University lished, Mr. Moakley requested that Shot Put—Won by Kanzler, Cor- Place and on the east by Stewart the following letter be printed at the nell, 43 feet 1 inch; Bissell, Princeton, avenue, and faces the former street, same time: second, 41 feet 9 inches; Mac Gregor, with a fine view of the lake and the Editor of the Cornell Alumni News: Princeton, third, 40 feet 9 inches. valley. This house had its inception Kindly extend to the alumni my sin- 100 Yard Dash—Won by Cooke, Princeton; Ford, Cornell, second; in the Moakley House Fund, which cere thanks for their generosity in Bennett, Cornell, third. Time, 10 1-5 was started at a mass meeting of making it possible for me to build my seconds. undergraduates held after the track home. 120 Yard High Hurdles—Won by victory of 1906, and to which members I would like to thank each alumnus Stibolt, Cornell; Dwight, Princeton, of many classes contributed. It was personally, but it is impossible for me second; Dell, Princeton, third. Time, 15 4-5 seconds. intended to be a testimonial of ap- to obtain a complete list of the con- One Mile Run—Won by Jones, Cor- preciation of Moakley's work in put- tributors. JOHN F. MOAKLEY. nell; Howell, Princeton, second; Finch, Cornell, third. Time, 4 min- utes 311-5 seconds. Mac Arthur, Cornell, third. Time Saturday morning will be the Spring 21 3-5 seconds. Day proper. For the past month the High Jump—Won by Bamment, Hammer Throw—Won by Ban- various colleges, classes and clubs Princeton, 5 feet 9 inches; Wells, nister, Cornell, 143 feet 7 1-4 inches Cornell, second, 5 feet 8 inches; Chal- Ellsworth, Princeton, second, 137 feet have been preparing shows, which will lis and DeYoe, Cornell, and Simmons 11 inches; Speers, Princeton, third, be given in the morning for the benefit and Fox, Princeton, tied for third at 137 feet 2 1-2 inches. of athletics. There will be a parade 5 feet 7 inches. Broad Jump—Won by Nixon, Cor- of the talent, as usual. This year the 440 Yard Run—Won by MacAr- nell, 21 feet 10 1-2 inches; Whinery, thur, Cornell; Bennett, Cornell, sec- Cornell, second, 21 feet 7 inches; El- shows will be longer than in the past ond; Sawyer, Princeton, third. Time, senbast, Cornell, third, 21 feet 3 1-2 and an effort will be made to give the 49 2-5 seconds. inches. public a little more for its money than Two Mile Run—Won by Crandall, Pole Vault—Won by Everingham, it has generally got on Spring Day. Cornell; Hunger, Cornell, second; Cornell, 11 feet 9 inches; d'Autremont, Berna, Cornell, third. Time, 9 min- Cornell, and Bennett, Princeton, tied Some punster devised the word utes 58 seconds. for second place at 11 feet 6 inches. "Hel-pus" as the name for the 1911 Half-Mile Run—Won by Putnam, o Spring Day. In advertising the event Cornell; Jones, Cornell, second; Mc- Kinney, Princeton, third. Time, 2 Spring-Navy Day. posters have been used showing a cat minutes 3-5 second. With Spring Day and Navy Day with horns. The Yale baseball game 220 Yard Low Hurdles—Won by combined this year on Saturday, May will be played at Percy Field early in Dwight, Princeton; Stibolt, Cornell, 27, a large crowd is expected in Ithaca. the afternoon and will be followed by second; McKrell, Cornell, third. Time, the Harvard-Cornell regatta. The 25 1-5 seconds. The festivities are to commence on 220 Yard Dash—Won by Ford, Friday evening with a concert by the final race of the intercollege series Cornell; Cooke, Princeton, second; musical clubs in the Lyceum Theater. also will be held. 382 CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS

dropping the word 'agriculture' be- CLASS REUNIONS. cause it is 'agriculture'," he said. 1891. "The work in agriculture will not be William C. Boyrer '91 is arranging lessened. We have arrived at a point for a baseball game between '91 and in our development where the degree another class holding its reunion the which we are conferring does not SUBSCRIPTION—$3 00 Per Yew. coming June, to be played on the represent all the phases of our work Published by the Cornell Alumni News Playground Wednesday afternoon, and where it is necessary either to Publishing Company: John L. Senior, June 21. President, Woodfόrd Batter son, Secretary give separate degrees for home eco- and Treasurer. Office: ' 110 North Tioga The class is planning to issue a Street, Ithaca, N. Y.' nomics, rural art, rural education and souvenir book in commemoration of Published weekly during the college the like, or to give one degree to cover year, and monthly in July and August, its 20-year reunion that will be forty issues annually. Issue No. 1 is anything taught in the college. Since published the first Wednesday of the worthy the occasion. Already men college year, in October, and weekly pub- nearly all our instruction is scientific, lication (numbered consecutively) con- are signifying their intention of com- tinues through Commencement week. Is- it was thought that the degree of sue No. 40, the final one of the year, is ing back. published the last Wednesday in August Bachelor of Science would best cover and contains a complete index of the everything. The Faculty's recom- 1901. entire volume. Single copies, ten cents each. Foreign mendation to the Trustees is in line To the Members of the Class of postage, 40 cents per year. Subscriptions with the general tendency of agricul- 1901: The committee appointed re- payable in advance. Should a subscriber desire to discon- tural colleges in all parts of the cently to perfect plans for the Re- tinue his subscription, notice to that ef- fect should be sent in before its expira- country. Out of forty-two agricul- union of the Class is hard at work. tion. Otherwise it is assumed that a tural colleges, I know of twenty-nine Shortly after June 1st, announcement continuance of the subscription is de- sired. which are now conferring the Bache- in detail of the program of entertain- Checks, drafts and orders should be made payable to the Cornell Alumni lor of Science degree. In the early ment and arrangements for securing News. days of this University that degree accommodations for those who desire All correspondence should be address- ed— was given for work in agriculture. rooms will be made. Provision has CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS, Ithaca. N. Y. Later a change was made to Bache- been made for securing costumes upon lor of the Science of Agriculture and arrival in Ithaca. then to Bachelor of Science in Agri- In the meantime, each one who con- culture. The present degree has no templates attending the reunion WOODFORD PATTERSON, historical standard and no historical Editor. should make all reasonable effort to value." create interest and enthusiasm among R. W. KELLOGG, members of the class. Let every man Assistant Editor. During his eighteen years of de- JAMES B. WALKER, JR., who is planning to go to Ithaca make Business Manager. voted service at Cornell, Mr. Fraser a personal appeal to three or four made the here one of the ROYAL K. BAKER, others whom he particularly would be Assistant Business Manager. best in the world. His skill as a col- pleased to have with him at the Re- lector amounted to genius. To a re- union. If each of us is able to prevail markable knowledge of the literature upon two, or even one other to attend, Bntβrcd as Second-Clasβ Matter at Ithaca, N. T of the law he added a sagacity that it will ensure the success of the Re- made him the shrewdest of buyers. union and result in a better "good Ithaca, N. Y., May 17, 1911. And he was no less eager to add to time" for all. the University's collection of law JAMES O'MALLEY, books than he was to make it of the President. greatest possible daily service. He A change is contemplated in the de- 1906. gree conferred by the College of Ag- was in the library early and late and If you did not answer the first call, riculture, the University Faculty last his learning and information were al- as most of you did not, this means week having adopted a resolution ask- ways at the service of the students. ing the Board of Trustees to change He semed to know by instinct what you. Please indicate at once whether the degree from Bachelor of Science books a student needed. The grad- you are coming or not. All arange- in Agriculture to Bachelor of Science. uates of the Cornell law school almost ments are being made here for you. The University Faculty adopted the from its beginning have learned not Induce as many as possible to come. resolution at the request of the Facul- only to admire Mr. Fraser's talents CHARLES H. TUCK. but to recognize the self-sacrificing ty of the College of Agriculture. Women's Club of New York. Director Bailey, in speaking of the zeal with which he put his time and ability at their service. On Saturday, May 13, the Cornell proposed change, explained that the Women's Club of New York held a degree of Bachelor of Science would A. Dale Riley '12, of Wellsville, O., meeting at the home of Miss Mary C. more nearly express the aim of the won the Congress declamation medal Lane, Flushing, L. I. Reports were college, which, he says, should not be Friday night. He had "Happiness and given concerning the location of considered a professional or technical Liberty" as the subject of his decla- Prudence Risley Hall. Miss Stebbins college, and would accord more closely mation. told about the progress made in form- to the curriculum. He said that the ing the Bureau of Occupations. college was using agricultural and Not less than a hundred and fifty country life subjects as a means of men expect to go on the senior class Alumni days are Tuesday, Jurie 20, education. "There is no thought of boat ride to Sheldrake next Saturday. and Wednesday, June 21. CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS 383

UNIVERSITY CALENDAR, T. G POWER. Helena. Λ/βnt. Pn . HERBERTαθGDEN,E£,*97 WEDNESDAY, MAY 17. L P. BAKER. Vlcβ^Ktiiaύ Attorney and Counsellor at Law Inlercollege Baseball—College of a H. RUSS. Jr.. '03, Cmh». Arts' and Sciences vs. College of Patents and Patent Causes Architecture. Playground, 5 p. m. Y. W. , C. A.—Regular mid-week BISMARCK BANK 2 RECTOR ST.. NEW YORK meeting. , 7:15 p. m. Agassiz Club Talk—Mr. E. Nelson. BISMARCK, N. D. Fungi. McGraw Hall, South Wing, Issues certificates of deposit, drawing 5 7:30 p. m. The public is cordially percent interest per annum. Interest pay- CORNELL LIVERY invited. able semi-annually. Arts and Sciences Lecture—Pro- EDWARD P. SAYRE, Prop. fessor John A. Lomax of the Univer- Depository for the State of North Da- kota, County of Burleigh and City of Bis- 208 South Cayuga St. sity of Texas. Cow Boy Songs. marck. Goldwin Smith Hall, Room B, 8 p. m. Correspondence invited. BELL PHONE 55 ITHACA PHOKE 3βS THURSDAY, MAY 18. Sanitary Science and Public Health Lecture—Professor C. A. Martin. Tenement House Planning with Refer- ence to Public Health. Goldwin MANY VISITORS Smith Hall, Room A, 12 m. Popular Lectures on Greek Sculp- TO NEW YORK Huyler's Candies ture—Professor Andrews. XII. Phi- are at a loss to find a quiet, first-class Ithaca Agency at Chrίstiance-Dudl y dias. Goldwin Smith Hall, Museum Pharmacy. of Casts, 5 p. m. hotel where they can be free from Intercollege Baseball—College of the crowds and disagreeable asso- Law vs. Veterinary College. Play- ciations of the down town places. ground, 5 p. m. C. IJ. C. A.—Regular mid-week meeting. Barnes Hall, 7:15 p. m. The Hotel Endicott Buttricfζ & Frawley FRIDAY, MAY 19. meets their requirements. 118 Eaβt State Street Organ Recital—Sage ^napel, 5 p. Address Hotel Endicott, Square,. m. New York City. Full Dress Suits and Tuxedos. Intercollege Baseball — Graduate School vs. Department of Chemistry. and map Nev York City mcAltd upon request College of Agriculture vs. College of Mechanical Engineering. Playground, Lang's Palace Garage. 5 p. m. The Eighty-Six Memorial Compe- Absolutely Fire Proof. tition—The Armory, 8 p. m. SATURDAY, MAY 20. Oldsmobile Regal Agassiz Club Field Trip—-Leader, Professor Comstock. Subject, Spi- ders. McGraw Hall, North Wing, 2 p. Chalmers Maxwell m. Freshman Baseball—Lafayette High Oakland Automobiles School vs. Cornell Freshmen. Percy Field, 3 p. m. Admission 25c. Tennis—University of Michigan vs. Cornell. Time and place to be an- SEE OUR EXHIBIT AT THE ELKS' FAIR. nounced later. SUNDAY, MAY 21. J. B. Lang Engine and Garage Co. —The Rev. Harry Em- 117-121 East Qreen Street, - - West of Star Theatre erson Fosdick. First Baptist Church, Montclair, N. J. Morning service at 11 o'clock. Afternoon service at 3:15 o'clock. Quickest and Best Way High Praise for Alfred Sze. lackawaππa between According to the Peking correspond- ent of the New York Herald, a large Railroad share of the burden of fighting the NEW YORK and ITHACA recent outbreak of the plague in China fell upon a Chinese graduate of SLEEPING CARS BOTH WAYS EVERY -DAY. Cornell, S. K. Alfred Sze, A. B. '01, A. M. '02. The Herald last Sunday FAST SERVICE. NO EXCESS FARES printed a letter telling of the struggle E.J. Q™*ke.U*.D.P.A. . ... - Btti kN. V which the progressive party of China, t led by young men of Western educa- tion, had in overcoming native super- East Hillians Should Order Their Coal From the stition and prejudice and employing modern scientific methods for fighting EAST HILL COAL YARDS and not ask horses to haul the heavy loads up the hill. the plague. GOOD COAL AND GOOD SERVICB. After speaking of what Dr. Wu FRANKLIN C. CORNELL. RβADKRS WILL PLtAfll MENTION TH» λίUUNl KtWI WHIN WRITINβ TO ^ 384 CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS

Lien-teh, a young physician who was the Russians. He 'made good/ and educated at Emmanuel College, Cam- he has continued to do so since he was J G. White & Co. Inc. bridge, accomplished as the leader of called to high place in the Foreign Engineers, Contractors the medical forces in the field, the Office at Peking." writer says that Dr. Wu is the first Speaking then of Dr. Wu, Mr. Sze, 4S-49 Exchange Place - NEW YORK to give credit to others, who, from their and Dr. W. W. Yen, a graduate of Chicago, 111. San Francisco, Cal. posts in the central government at the University of Virginia and now Peking, made the success of his work a councillor of the foreign office, who Engineering Construction possible. "The first of these is Deputy was associated with Mr. Sze, he adds: and Operation of Vice-President S. K. Alfred Sze, of "Many others, too, deserve credit for the Wai-wu-pu [foreign office], into valuable service. But as upon the Mectric Railways, Electric Lighting βy temβ. Hydraulic and Steam Power whose hands, because of his familiar- shoulders of these three was placed PUiits, Water Works, Gas Works, Irri- ity with the Manchurian situation, the responsibility of shaping the gation Syβtemβ, etc. was placed the direction of the govern- plague campaign, so to them belongs ment's efforts. In applying the meth- the major credit for its success. Reports made for Financial Institu- ods they knew must be applied these They grasped their opportunity. If tions and Investors officials encountered many obstacles. China is wise enough to learn the London Correspondent: The crucial test came over the vital larger lesson involved in the record of J. G. WHITE & CO. question of the disposition of unbur- their success, the friends of reform Cloak Lane, Cannon St., E. C. ied coffins and of the ever increasing will have cause for much rejoicing." number of corpses for which there were no coffins. The whole tradition of Athletic Notes. this land was against cremation. Yet In the opening match of the Cor- these corpses had to be burned, and nell golf team, which was played R. A. Heggie & Bro.Co they were burned by authority given against Williams at Troy on May 6, by the Wai-wu-pu itself." Cornell won by a score of 5 to 4. The correspondent says further: Eighteen hole matches over a nine hole 135 East State SL,Miftcm. "On the roll of high officials of the course were played. Paul Wilder and Chinese government a son of Cornell T. V. Ely did all the scoring for Cor- stands recorded as Shih Chao-Chi. nell. JEWELERS His American friends will remember Columbia defeated Cornell at ten- and makers of special Cor- him as Mr. Alfred Sze. Of the nis, 4 to 2, on the Faculty courts or* nell goods. Watches and younger generation of men educated May 6. diamonds a specialty. in the United States he has risen Although the freshman track team, highest and his rise has been by in a meet with the Pennsylvania imerit. Upon his return to China his freshmen at Philadelphia Saturdayr' THE KIRK IN SYRACUSE. first posts were in connection with won only four first places, they made An exquisitely appointed and perfectly COD- railways. Then he was selected for 57 points to Pennsylvania's 60. Cor- . . ducted restaurant for gentlemen. the onerous and important post of nell men were second in eleven events* Hare ©π draught Imported Wiϊrzburger Taotai at Harbin, where he was called ofbrfu, Pilsner, Bass Ale and Piel Bros. One of the best showings of the meet yan* Consumers' Brew Co. Lager Beer. upon to handle the many intricate was in the broad jump, in which Fane questions growing out of conflict with O'Connor & Wittner. Established 1865. of Cornell cleared 22 feet 3 1-2 inches.

Wherever You May Be —Wherever You May Go YOU WILL ALWAYS FIND Bell Universal Service LONG LONG , DISTANCE , DISΓANCE TELEPHONE Bell Long Distance Service is Preeminent TELEPHONE BELL LOCAL SERVICE IS UN EQUALED Have You a Bell Telephone? NEW YORK TELEPHONE COMPANY BELL SYSTEM

MΛDlft WILL TIΛAMM ifSNTIOM THX ALUMNI NEWS WHBN WBΓΠNO TO ADVBBTIBlBβ. CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS 385

John Chatiϊlon & Sons Alumni Notes. LEGAL DIRECTORY. '81, Ph. B.—Miss Josephine Bal- BOSTON, MASS. 9M9 dlFF ST, NEW YORK CΠΎ lard Hoyt, daughter of William Bal- JAMES P. MAGENIS, Manufacturers of lard Hoyt '81, of Buffalo, was married Attorney at Law. on May 11 to Mr. Lester Frederick 801-804 Tremont Building. Gilbert. The Governor and Mrs. BUFFALO, N. Y. Dix were among the guests. HARKY L,. NUESE '06, Spring Scales Attorney at Law. '86, B. S. A.—Thomas L. Brunk is Specialty, Recovery and Adjustment of for weighing, assorting, counting, mul- Claims in Western New York, tiplying, estimating, measuring, practicing medicine in Joplin, Mis- 612-613 Mutual Life Building. testing and for various souri. He took his degree in medicine at the Harvey Medical College, Chi- CLEVELAND, OHIO. other purposes. HERBERT W. BELL '94, cago, in 1898. Previous to that time Attorney and Counselor at Law, he had been professor of botany and 1106-7-8 Williamson Building. UR information regarding vacancies O comes direct from School Authorities horticulture in the Texas Agricultural to whom we PERSONALLY RECOM- and Mechanical College and the Mary- NEW YORK CITY. MEND teachers. Our new card index en- DON R. ALMY, A. B. '97 LL. B. '98. ables us to find at once the right teacher land State Agricultural College, and Specialty, Trials in Courts of Records. for each place. We use a rapid fire rifle, teacher of chemistry and physics in 68 William Street. not a shotgun. Register now for posi- Associated with OLNEY (Harvard '64) & tion or promotion. the Jefferson High School, Chicago. COM STOCK (Princeton '79). THE THURSTON TEACHERS' AGENCY 623 S. Wabash Ave., Chicago, 111. '91, B. S.—The California Alumni NEW YORK CITY. Weekly says that Dr. R. O. Moody, CHARLES A. TAUSSIG, of the department of anatomy of the A. B. Ό2, LL. B. Harvard, '05. We Write Insurance 220 Broadway. University of California, will be ab- Telephone 3885 Cortland. General Practice ALL KINDS sent on leave till next Christmas. He plans to spend the summer in Eng- PHILADELPHIA, PA. Ithaca Realty Co. BENJAMIN O. FRICK '02, land, where the relatives of Mrs. Attorney at Law, 107 Noith Tioga Street. Moody (Agnes Mary Claypole, M. S., 1335 Land Title Bldg., Broad and Chest- nut Streets. '94) have their home. He will visit 'Phone, Spruce 2471. important medical schools and hospi- tals in England and Scotland. After- ROCHESTER, N. Y. wards he hopes to visit similar insti- SIMON L. ADLER, tutions on the continent. Attorney and Counselor at Law. 227-229 Granite Building. WASHINGTON, D. C. THEODORE K. BRYANT, '97, '98, Be sure your ticket reads M. P. L., G. W. U. '08 U. S. and Foreign Patents and Trade- Marks. via the LYCEU M 308-9-10 Our ay Bldg. WASHINGTON, D. C. DELBERT H. DECKER '84. SATURDAY AFTERNOON Patent Law, Lehigh Valley 900 F St., N. W. AND NIGHT Trade-Marks, Labels, Coyprights Railroad May 20 Powerful Dramatization of the Powerful Novel GRA USTARK Smith & Rorapaugh BY George B. McCutcheon TAILORS Utband, Son & Co. THE MOST FASCINATING 420 Eddy Next to Campus Gate Tailors ROMANCE OF YEARS.

ITHACA Presented by a Cast of New York Revised Tariff of Rates at the Yates Players and Produced in a Lavish Syracuse, N. Y.—Beginning Sept. 1, 1910 and Elaborate Manner. AMERICAN PLAN RATES THE ALHAMBRA GRILL Rooms, Without Bath $3.00 and upward per day _ _. . _. _ Rooms, Witti Bath $3.50 and upward per day //3 N. Aurora St. Prices 25c to $ 41.50 75 Sample Rooms $3.00 and $4.00 per day EUROPEAN PLAN RATES A restaurant for ladies and gentlemen Rooms, Without Bath $1.00 and upward per day Rooms, With Bath ...$1.50 and upward per day J. B. HERSON. Proprfeo* MULDBKβ WILL ΨIΛAMM lOSlΓΓION TOT ALUMNI NSW8 VΓWtϋ WBΓΠKΘ TO ADVERTISERS. 386 CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS

'91, M. E.~-Leave of absence has 2403 North Union avenue, Tacoma, 9 been granted by "the board of trustees Wash. CHACON A S of Worcester Polytechnic Institute to '98, M. E.—W. W. Macon has been Delicious candies and hot or cold Professor Harold B. Smith for a appointed one of the editors of The drinks wiϋ always be found here. period of two years. About one year Iron Age, to give special attention to will be spent in travel. The second the engineering side of the design and 217-104-208 East State Street. year will be spent in special resident operation of industrial engineering study at Berlin and Zurich, «and in establishments. He remains with the investigation of as many Euro- Metal Worker as consulting editor. Shirt Maker pean educational institutions as pos- The Iron Age headquarters are at sible. This leave of absence follows 239 West Thirty-ninth street, New fifteen consecutive years of active York. Prices work on the part of Professor Smith '98, M. E.—Harry D. Campbell is $1.50 to $3.00 as head of the electrical engineering with the Hill Clutch Company, Cleve- department of tlie institute. land, O. Fit and Workmanship the Best '91, LL. B.—J. Boardman Scovell '99, B. S.—The address of Burgess Write for samples and has moved from Buffalo to Niagara Shank is now 526 Linden street, Ann measurement blanks Falls, in which city he has opened law Arbor, Mich. CLARENCE E. HEAD offices in the Elderfield Hartshorn '99, M. E.—E. C. Loetscher is vice- 210 E.Seneca St. Ithaca, N.Y. Building.. president of the Loetscher-Ryan Mfg. '95, M. E.—Professor C. C. Thomas, Co., hardware manufacturers, Du- of the engineering school of the Uni- buque, Iowa. versity of Wisconsin, has been ap- '00; '03, M. D.—William J. Ziporkes pointed the university's delegate to has removed his office to 247 Audu- the one hundredth anniversary of the bon avenue, New York City. foundation of the University of Bres- '00, B. S. A.—The address of A. lau next August. Woodward Stephens is Mooresburg, '96, Ph. B.; '04, Ph. D.—The latest Pa. addition announced for D. C. Heath Sparkling Apple Juice ΌO, M. E.—A. S. Blanchard's ad- NON-ALCOHOLIC & Co.'s series of English classics is dress is 132 North Fourth street, Just the beverage to serve at Banquets, Stevenson's "Treasure Island," edit- Reading, Pa. He is assistant general Club and Home gatherings. ed by C. R. Gaston of the Richmond manager of the Birdsboro Steel The pure juice of finest apples with all Hill High School, New York. Mr. Foundry & Machine Company, Birds- their delicate flavor unchanged. Gaston has already edited in this ser- boro, Pa. Sparkling and Effervescent ies Ruskin's "Sesame and Lilies." Όl, M. E.—Willis H. Carrier is yet positively non-alcoholic. Served ice '96, Ph. B.—R. P. Kelly is instructor chief of the engineering department cold it will make a decided hit. At all first-class groceries, druggists, in mathematics in the Tacoma High of the Buffalo Forge Company. His hotels, cafes and clubs. School and is acting as supervisor of wife was Mass Clair Seymour Όl. physical training in the public Their home is at 1350 Amherst street, American Fruit Product Co. schools of the city. His address is Buffalo, N. Y. Rochester, N. Y.

Hotel Cumberland Broadway at 54th Street NEW YORK Neat 50th St. Subway Station and 53rd St. Elevated ' 'Broadway *' can from Grand Central Depot pass the door Kept by a College Man Headquarters for College Men Special Rates for College Teams Neai Theatres, Shops ω»d Central Park New, and Strictly Fireproof The Seneca Camera Rates Reasonable. $2.50 with bath THE BEST FOR ALL. SEND FOR BOOKLET Send for Special Student's Proposition. HARRY P. STIMSON, Formerly with Hotel Imperial Seneca Camera Mfg. Co., Ten Mmuteβ Walk to Twenty Theatres Rochester, N. Y HEADQUARTERS for CORNELL MEN Largest Independent Camera* Makers in the World. MHMTXOH TH* AlSϋULTKl HΠKWΛ CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS 387

LAW BUSINESS IN ITHACA '01, A. B.—Mary A. Phillips has Promptly and carefully attended to been appointed teacher of English in The Onondaga the Geneseo, N. Y., State Normal SYRACUSE, N. Y. George S. Tarbell School. Attorney, and Notary Public, '01, M. E.—Henry R. Cobleigh has Trust Company Building, Ithaca resigned as mechanical editor of The Iron Age, which position he has held for the last seven years, to take charge Eighth Year of the advertising and publicity of the International Steam Pump Com- SHELDON COURT pany, 115 Broadway, New York City. 'Private ^Dormitory '02, Ph. D.—Professor E. E. Hall, Adjoining Cam- of the department of physics of the pus. Practically fire-proof. Equip- University of California, will sail on ment the best. An ideal home for June 7 from Montreal for Glasgow. college students. Prices very He will spend the summer and fall in moderate. Catalogue on request. England and Scotland. A. R. CONGDON. M«r., '03, A. B.—E. C. Wixom is princi- ITHACA. pal of the high school at Winchester, Mass. 03, A. B.—Frank R. Blair is sales manager with Patterson, Gottfried See The New Styles & Hunter, 211 Center street, New The Quality that Sells York City. Look t the Shoe* in our window '03, M. E.—H.P.Moran is associated Fireproof. European Plan. 138 EAST as engineer with Frederick L. Cran- STATE STREET Direction of HERRON ford, contractor, 177 Montague street, Brooklyn, N. Y. FREDERICK W. ROCKWELL Proprietor C. H. HOWES ART GALLERY '03, M. E.—Mrs. James Joseph Athletic Photographer; for all Alexandre has sent out invitations THE TEN EYCK Cornell Teams, etc. for the marriage ceremony of her Albany, N. Y daughter, Leonie, to Francis Jenkins Studio, 138 and 140 East State Street Bell Phone ------Ithaca Danforth. The ceremony will take place on Saturday afternoon, May 27, at St. John's Episcopal Church, Stamford, Conn. Do You Use Press '03, M. E.—Judson H. Boughton has succeeded the late Henry C. Scott Clippings? as head of the National Light & Im- provement Company, a large corpor- It will more than pay you to secure our extensive service covering all ation with head offices in St. Louis subjects, trade and personal, and get engaged in the financing, construction systematic reading of all papers and and operation of various public utility periodicals, here and abroad, at min- corporations located throughout the imum cost. Why miss taking ad- Southwest. Mr. Boughton is also vantage for obtaining the best possi- ble service in your line? president of the Citizens' Railway Our service is taken by all progress- Company of Waco, Texas, vice-pres- ive business men, publishers, authors, ident and general manager of the Hotel Rochester, collectors,etc, and is the card index Waco Gas and Electric Company, for securing what you need, as every Rochester, N. Y. article of interest is at your daily com- vice-president of a large realty con- mand. cern and a director in an important Win. D. Horstmann, Mgr Write for terms, or send your or- engineering and contracting company der for 100 clippings at $5 or 1,000 of St. Louis. clippings at $35. Special rates quoted National Hotel Co., Props. for large orders. '04, C. E.—A daughter was born Geo. W. Sweeney, Prest The Manhattan Press Clipping Bureau TO THE ALUMNI: Cambridge Building, 334 5th Ave., When you are in need of clothes, cor. 33d St. no matter where you are, a postal Arthur Cassot, Proprietor, will bring samples. European Plan Established in 1888. New York City. H. Goldenberg, Ithaca. Rooms $1.50 per day and up.

KEΛDBRS WILL PLKAβl MBNTTO* THI ALUMNI NEWS WHIN WBΓΠNO TO ΛDVSBΠSBBg. 388 CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS

on May 10 to Mr. and Mrs. William ter Service is now on duty aboard the L. Bowman of New York City. Mrs. revenue cutter Apache, Baltimore, Bowman is a daughter of John C. Md. Wait '82, well known as an expert '05—Stanton G. Smith is supervisor in engineering jurisprudence. Mr. of the Tusayan National Forest. His Bowman, who was the national fenc- address is Williams, Arizona. ing champion, is still fencing as a member of the New York Athletic '06, M. E.—H. A. Temple is with the Club teams. This spring he was a mem- Seattle Electric Company, Seattle, ber of the teams winning the national Wash. team championships both in foils and '06, A. B.—H. F. Schnirel is pro- dueling swords, duplicating the same fessor of Germanic languages in ιιιnnιtιinyιιnHiιniiιιm»iiιιiiiimιiiiiB»ni«wι w feat that was accomplished last year Maryville College, Maryville, Tenn. for the first time in the history of fencing in this country. '07, D. V. M.—William S. Newman's Unlike Any Other address is in care of Dr. R. H. Tracy, '04, B. S. A.—Archibald Stone is One secret of Monarch superiority 222 North Main street, Bismarck, lies in the wonderful Responsive- manager of the Willowmoor Farms, N. D. ness of its key action. In no other Redmond, Washington. '07, M. E.—Harold S. Krauter is in typewriter in "the world do the '04, A. B.—The address of Ernest G. the steam engineering department of keys so readily yield to the slightest Atkin is 21 Conant Hall, Cambridge, touch of the finger. the Illinois Steel Company at South - That -is why the - Monarch is- Mass. He holds one of the Austin Chicago, 111. scholarships for teachers in the Har- easier to operate than any other '07, M. E.—George Kleppisch is now writing machine. vard graduate school of arts and at Ottawa, Canada, with Westing- sciences, house, Church, Kerr & Co. 'Q5—Robert W. Hunter is in the '07, M. E.-—O. E. Hilmer is sales Monarch offices of the Southern Railway Com- engineer with A. D. Granger & Co., pany, Washington, D. C. power plant contracting work, 90 '05—H. F. Plumer has moved from West street, New York. Light Touch Lake Forest, 111., to 138 .North St. '08, Sp. M. E.—Ralph M. West is That is why it wards off fatigue James street, Waukegan, 111. H. F. inspector in the water and heating de- and saves nerve-strain on the part Plumer, jr., was born on March 26. of the stenographer. In conse- partments of the Chicago Suburban quence, her work is cleaner-cut, '06, M. E.—Lieutenant H. F. John- Light & Power Company, Oak Park, more accurate, more rapid and son of the United States Revenue Cut- 111. greater in quantity than it is pos- sible to obtain with any other writing machine. For these reasons you need a HO TE L LENOX Monarch in your office. And Boylston and Exeter Streets, Boston, every day without it means actual money-loss to you besides. Cornell Headquarters in Boston Send for Monarch Hotel Taft, New Haven, Conn, Opening January, 1912 Literature Learn the many reasons for Monarch superiority. Then try the Monarch, and be convinced that Monarch merit rests in the machine itself, not merely in what we tell you about it. Representatives Wanted Local representatives wanted every- where, also a few more dealers for large territories. Write for details and A Malted Wheat Flake for attractive terms. The Monarch Typewriter Company Breakfast. D. A. KEMPER Local Representative. No. 2 Circle. It can be eaten with fresh or canned fruits and with THREE O'CLOCK Ithaca. milk or cream, as desired. IFAT.GUE ιιιιιιιιtιιιmιιιιιιιιιιiHiιιιιιnιmiι»iMuιnmmιn»ιιιιnιιιιnιnmιuιιuff^

THIS SPACE RESERVED FOR THE IROQUOIS BREWING CO., BUFFALO, N Y.

RJCADSR8 TILL PLΛAM MBKTIOlf TH ALUM NX NBWβ WHEN WRITING TO ΛDVBRTIβKR .