CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS

VOL. XXXIV No. 32. ITHACA, , JUNE 9, 193z PRICE IX CENTS

Commencement Outdoors madge P. Delafield, Jr., Chappaqua, Hunter Honored DeLancey F. Eckert, Buffalo, Edwin J. Schoellkopf Field Will be Scene of Graduation Fitzpatrick, Oswego, James W. Oppen- Splendid Matches Staged as Tribute to Exercises—Class Day Ceremony heimer, Buffalo, Charles A. Storke, Recently Injured Cornellian who is on Quadrangle Santa Barbara, Cal., Robert C. Trier, Jr., Star Tennis Player Ithaca, John H. Walker, Pittsfield, Mass., Harry T. Welty, Jr., Yonkers, and Commencement exercises this year will In tribute to Francis T. Hunter Ί6, Robert McC. Wilson, Jr., Montclair, N.J. be held on Schoellkopf Field for the first former Davis Cup Star, brilliant tennis Class officers are: president, Lewis F. time in the history of the University. matches were played on the courts of the Hartman, Mansfield, O.; secretary, Wil- The exercises are being moved from New Rochelle Tennis Club on May i./\. liam C. Agnew, Rochester, treasurer, Bailey Hall at the insistence of students Hans Nusslein, professional champion of Roger M. Bechstein, Pelham Manor. who, for several years, have been agitat- Germany, defeated William T. Tilden II, ing for outdoor exercises to accommodate 6-3, 3-6, ix-8. Tilden and Hunter have parents and friends who wish to attend. been a famous doubles team for many A public address system will be installed DRAMATIC CLUB READY years. in the Crescent, where spectators will be FOR SENIOR WEEK These matches, staged by outstanding seated. In the event of rain, the exercises The Dramatic Club will present two stars of the tennis world, were played as a will be held in Bailey Hall. performances of John L. Balderston's testimonial of admiration to their com- President Farrand will deliver the romantic drama Berkeley Square in rade who was injured recently in an commencement address and confer the Willard Straight Theatre on Friday and automobile accident. degrees. The provisional list includes 765 Saturday evenings of Senior Week. More than i,xoo spectators were pres- baccalaureate and 2.2.0 advanced degrees. Berkeley Square was a success on the ent. Dr. Charles Oglivy, brother-in-law Last year 92.5 degrees were conferred. professional stage both in London and of Hunter, and the specialist under whose The Senior Week program, preceding New York. In New York the leading care his seriously injured leg is making Commencement on Monday, June xo, part, that of Peter Standish, was played splendid progress, was present. Dr. will be marked by the absence of tradi- by Leslie Howard. New York critics Oglivy was busy most of the evening tional baseball games of past years. were unanimous in calling it a charming answering many solicitous inquiries Class reunions will be held Friday and and moving play. about the tennis star, and it was good Saturday, June 17 and 18. Twenty-one The play, which was suggested by the news to his many friends when Dr. classes are scheduled to return, headed unfinished novel by Henry James called Oglivy was heard to say, "Don't worry, by '71, back for its sixtieth reunion. The A Sense of the Past, is about a modern I'll have Frank Hunter back on the annual Alumni Rally will be staged in young man oppressed by the rush and court" . . . and when that day comes the Bailey Hall Saturday evening under the noise of the twentieth century, who falls world of sport will again turn out in leadership of '15. Herbert H. Johnston so deeply in love with the past that he tribute to see that never-to-be-forgotten '15 of Buffalo is class reunion chairman. succeeds in breaking down the barriers powerful forehand stroke, for which Saturday will also be marked by the of time and finds himself transported to Francis T. Hunter is internationally annual meeting of the Alumni Corpora- Eighteenth Century England, the England famous. tion. of sedan chairs and Dr. Johnson, of Rey- Hunter has frequently been seen on the The baccalaureate services will be held nolds and Gainsborough. His reactions indoor courts of the Drill Hall in exhibi- in Bailey Hall Sunday. The Rev. Dr. to this new environment are first comic tion matches with Tilden. Frank Gavin of the General Theological and finally pathetic. The whole fantastic Seminary, New York, will preach the idea is handled with such deftness and sermon. imagination that the spectator forgets DELTA SIGMA RHO ELECTS the unreality of the thing. Class Day exercises will be held Sunday Delta Sigma Rho, national honorary evening at the portico of Goldwin Smith In the cast will be Jack W. Curvin '32., oratorical society, has elected to mem- Hall. Senior singing will conclude the William G. McCollom '33, William B. bership John E. Estabrook '3X, Fayette- evening's program. Kuder '33, Elton P. Huyck '33, Elizabeth ville, Bernice M. Hopkins '31, Burling- Participants will include Joseph M. Paine '33, Sarah E. Hinman '33, Dorothy y ham, Stanley J. Mayer y., Forest Hills, Youmans, Ithaca, chairman; John H. C. Buckingham '34, Virginia M. Little Morris H. Traub '31, Brooklyn, Herbert Walker, Pittsfield, Mass., class historian; '31, Bessie Snyder '34, Aline Dubin '35, H. Blau '32., New Rochelle, and Harriet John L. Niles, New York, class orator; Mary L. Leonard '34, Solomon Lifschitz John E. Estabrook, Fayetteville, class '32., Arthur J. Horvitch '31, J. Hollis A. McNinch '32., Ithaca. poet; Bruce Boyce, Superior, Neb., junior Malone '31, and Clara S. Robin '32.. custodian of the pipe; and Miles R. Berkeley Square will be produced under Stevens, Lakewood, Ohio, senior cus- the direction of Prof. Alexander M. IN The Scientific Monthly for June todian of the pipe. Drummond Ί2.-Ί5, Grad., and Robert J. Professor Cecil H. Desch, Baker lecturer, The Class Day committee, in addition Harper '31. writes on "Metals in the Use of Man." to the chairman, Youmans, includes Seats for the two performances may be Richard S. Uhrbrock, formerly of Cor- William C. Agnew, Rochester, Horace obtained at the main desk, Willard nell, writes on "The Popular Usage of H. Chandler, Maplewood, N. J., Tall- Straight Hall. the Terms Instinct and Instinctive." THE CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS

runs crossing the plate. Cornell errors SCHOOL ATHLETES COMPETE ATHLETICS gave Syracuse another run in the eighth. Schoolboy athletes of New York State The box scores: were guests of the Athletic Association June 4 at the ninth annual New York COLGATE (1) State Public High School Athletic As- AB R H PO A E POUGHKEEPSIE LANES sociation track and tennis championships. Brooks, rf 4 0 1 I 0 0 The crews resumed training last week Conroy, If 4 0 0 Z 1 0 Section 1, comprising schools in the for the annual regatta of the Intercol- Litster, c z 0 I 4 1 1 lower Hudson River valley, won with 30 Hubbell, c z 0 0 0 0 legiate Rowing Association on the Hud- 3 points. The Long Island district was Cotrell, d 0 Z 1 0 0 4 second with 19% points. Victory for a son River at Poughkeepsie, June IO. Anderson, ss 4 0 O z 4 z Coach Wray plans no major changes in Feminella, 3b 4 0 I 0 I I New Rochelle High School quartet in the eights, although the boating of the Bridge, ib 3 0 Z 9 0 0 the 880-yard relay clinched the meet for Weed, zb 1 O I I junior varsity may be readjusted before 3 3 the valley squad. LaFlamme, p 1 0 I z 0 0 the squad leaves for Poughkeepsie about Wadlow, p 0 0 O 0 Z I Two State scholastic records were June ii. a-OΉara 0 0 O 0 O 0 broken. Smuckler of Gloversville tossed Columbia is already in training on the Hagin, p 0 0 O 0 O 0 the iz-pound shot put 54 feet 5*^ inches, breaking the old mark of 49 feet 1 inch. Hudson and the California and Syracuse Totals 31 1 8 17 10 6 squads were scheduled to arrive this The New Rochelle relay team clipped week. CORNELL (10) two seconds off the old record by nego- AB R H PO A E tiating the distance in 1131.4. As a result of the drawings for lanes, Williams, cf 413x00 the Cornell eights will be well out in the Draney, ib 3 1 1 9 o o In tennis, Joseph Stubbs of Kenmore middle of the river in two of the races. In Payne, ss 5 1 1 4 7 o defeated Herbert Glynn of Southampton, the four-mile varsity race, Cornell will Smith, If 3 o 2. 3 o o 6-4, 4-6, 6-z, for the singles title, and Kappler, rf 4 2. o z o o Edward Ketcham and Fred Lichtward of row in No. 5 lane, numbering outward Hatkoff, 3b 5 1 o 3 1 1 from the west shore. The Red junior Pasto, c 4 1 1 1 o o Great Neck defeated Jack Tobin and varsity will row in No. 2. lane and the Frost, zb 4 z 2. 3 o o Clarence Dickinson of Owego, 6-0, 6-4, freshman eight in No. 5. Whiskeman, p 311010 for the doubles championship. The lanes: Totals J5 10 11 17 10 1 14 GOING TO INTERCOLLEGIATES Varsity: Syracuse, No. 1; California, a—batted for Wadlow in 8th. No. 2.; Washington, No. 3; M.I.T., No. Fourteen athletes will represent Cornell Cornell 011 2.00 15 o—10 at the annual championship track and 4; Cornell, No. 5; Navy, No. 6;Columbia, Colgate 000 010 00 o— i field meet of the I.C.A.A.A.A. at No. 7, and Pennsylvania, No. 8. Two-base hit: Feminella. Three-base hits: Berkeley, Cal., in July. The squad, now Junior varsity: Syracuse, No. 1; Cor- Cottrcll, Payne. Bases on balls: Off Whiske- in training, will leave Ithaca June 19, nell, No. 2.; Navy, No. 3; M.I.T., No. 4; man 1, off LaFlamme 3, off Wadlow 1, off Hagin z. Hits: Off LaFlamme in 7 inning 11 joining more than zoo other Eastern col- California, No. 5, and Columbia, No. 6. and 10 runs, off Wadlow in 1 inning o and o lege athletes en route. Freshman: California, No. 1; M.I.T., runs, off Hagin in 1 inning o and o runs. Cornell was allotted 14 places on the No. 1; Navy, No. 3; Syracuse, No. 4; Losing pitcher: LaFlamme. Umpires: Stevater Eastern team. The allotments were based Cornell, No. 5; Washington, No. 6; and Killmurray. Time of game: z:i5 on entries in past championships which, Columbia, No. 7, and Pennsylvania, CORNELL (3) until this year, have been held in the No. 8. AB R H PO A E East. Draney, ib 4 o 1 4 1 o NINE WINS AND LOSES Payne, ss 4 o o z z 1 Captain Schoenfeld heads the squad. The baseball team closed its season by Smith, If 401300 Coach John F. Moakley, now com- playing two games away from home and Williams, cf 3 1 1 4 o o pleting his thirty-third year at Cornell, Kappler, rf 3 1 o 1 o o is in charge of the squad. Captain Schoen- breaking even. The nine defeated Col- Hatkoff, 3b 4 o 1 1 o o gate, 10-1, at Hamilton June 1 and lost to Pasto, c 4 1 1 6 o o feld is entered in the shot put and discus Syracuse, 5-3, at Syracuse June 4. Frost, zb 3 o o z 1 o throw. Ellis, hammer thrower, Belloff, Cornell reached three Colgate pitchers Sereysky, p 3 o 1 1 o o pole vaulter, and Martin, miler, winners a-Flumerfelt 1 o o o o o for 11 hits in winning over the Maroon. of points in last year's meet, are also on Williams led the attack with three hits Totals 33 3 6 14 4 i the squad. Others include Hardy and and Smith and Frost each hit safely twice. Kane, sophomore sprinters who placed in SYRACUSE (5) the indoor intercollegiates last March; Six Colgate errors contributed to Cor- AB R H PO A E nell's scoring. Fahey, If 3 1 1 1 o o Haidt, high jumper; Burns, broad jum- Whiskeman pitched for Cornell and Bock, ss 4 z z o z o per; Proctor, pole vaulter; Kellogg, two- allowed eight scattered hits. Cramer, cf 413500 miler; Rosenthal, quarter-miler; Mangan, Skokowsky, zb 4 o o 1 1 o miler; and Hart and Bennet, hurdlers. Against Syracuse, Cornell gained an Frank, ib 4 1 z 6 o o early lead by scoring three runs in the Lipetz, rf 4 o 1 z o o second inning, but the Orange rallied to Maister, 3b 4 o o z 1 o CHEMISTRY GROUP NAMED score one in the third and then sew up the Chapman, c 4 o o 10 o 1 Kiffney, p 300000 The administration of the Department game by tallying three runs in the fifth. of Chemistry will be assumed by a com- Kiίfney of Syracuse struck out 10 Cornell Totals 34 5 9 2-7 4 1 mittee of Faculty members when Pro- batters and limited the hits to six. a-batted for Sereysky in 9th. fessor Louis M. Dennis, head of the Sereysky struck out five for Cornell and Cornell 030 000 00 o— 3 department since 1903, retires this month. gave up nine hits. Syracuse 001 030 01 o— 5 The committee will consist of Profes- A single by Williams, a base on balls to Runs batted in: Sereysky, Cramer z, Fahey, sors Jacob Papish, Ph.D. '2.1, John R. Kappler, an error by Chapman, Orange Frank. Two-base hits: Cramer, Bock. Three- base hit: Cramer. Home run: Fahey. Stolen Johnson, and Fred H. Rhodes, Ph.D. '14. catcher, and hits by Pasto and Sereysky bases: Williams, Kappler. Left on bases: scored Cornell's three runs. A single by Cornell 5, Syracuse 5. Bases on balls: off Bock and Cramer's triple scored the first Sereysky 1, off Kiffney z. Struck out: by IN The Classical Journal for June Pro- Orange run. In the fifth, Fahey opened Sereysky 5, by Kiffney 10. Hit by pitcher: by fessor Lane Cooper's translation of Kiffney (Williams). Wild pitch: Kiffney. with a home run, Bock and Cramer Umpires: Peterbaugh and Higgins. Time of Aristotle's Rhetoric is reviewed by doubled, and Frank singled, with three game: 1:48. Francis P. Donnelly. THE CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS 405

ANDERSON STAR IN DISCUS THROW RECENT PUBLICATIONS John F. Anderson '2.9, former track In The Columns for June Arnold Paine JUST LOOKING captain and football star, won the discus '30 continues his serial on "No Victory AROUND throw at the annual New York Athletic Without Defeat." Dr. John J. Elson '2.2. Club games at Travers Island June 4, reviews the Love Rimes of Petrarch with a toss of 161 feet 7 inches. translated by Professor Morris Bishop "\Y7"ELL' ^ SEE t^le New Y°rk Stock Anderson is training for the coming '13. Philip Freund '2.9 reviews V. J. W Exchange officials all stepped out Olympic games. His winning heave McGill, A Philosopher Meets a Novelist. Saturday and put a staff of boys in bettered the Olympic record. Back in In The Cornell Countryman for May charge," said Emil, the philosophical 19x8, representing the at Esther Warren '2.9 and Stanley W. War- Janitor, resting his broom in the Pro- % Amsterdam, Anderson finished fourth in ren τη describe "A Visit to the Philip- fessor's office. "It wasn't a bad idea, the discus. pines." Wilbert C. Hopper, M.S. '30, either; it says that stocks made a pro- discusses'' Feeding a City with Perishable Joseph R. Mangan '34, milcr and half- nounced recovery, with an apparent Produce." Bradley O. Gormel '31 writes miler on this year's track team, finished return of public confidence. on "Danforth Fellowship Experiences." second to Bullwinkle of the New York "Of course, the idea has been goin' Athletic Club in a special three-quarter In Science for May τrj Professor Virgil around a good deal. Last year some mile run. Nordell of New York Univer- Snyder, '90-92. Grad., writes an obituary Western city officials walked out and sity was third. The winning time was of the late Professor John W. Young, installed the Boy Scouts. The Mayor-for- 3:03.2.. ^ A.M. '01, Ph.D. '04, of Dartmouth. a-Day and the Chief-of-Police-for-a-Day In The Journal of Geology for April- had their pictures syndicated all over the REUNION CHAIRMEN NOTE May Professor Heinrich Ries and Thomas the country. And they did very good, too; L. Watson, Elements of Economic Geol- everything run along just as bad as ever. It is earnestly requested that all re- ogy is reviewed by J. T. McC. union chairmen turn in their stories and '' It sounds to me like the scheme might In Harper's for February Professor take ahold everywhere. Sometime you'll pictures at the Alumni Office before noon Homer A. Watt '06 contributes a skit en- walk into a barbershop and find it run by on Monday, the 2.0th. The issue under titled "Science and Sensibility" to The the Barbers-for-a-Day from the orphan date of the 2.3d is the last weekly issue Lion's Mouth. Professor Charles A. asylum. Those boys has got to learn to of the year, and stories not in shape on Beard, '99-Όo Grad., writes the leading handle a razor some time. And maybe Monday must of necessity be held over article, entitled "Our Confusion Over some day you'll get on a train to go to until the July issue. National Defense." A comment on New York and you'll find a little girl this by Charles Francis Adams, secretary takin' tickets and the engineerΊl be AWARDED NICARAGUAN MEDAL of the Navy, appears in the May Har- settin' up on a dictionary to handle the per's, with a rejoinder by Dr. Beard. throttle." Lieutenant Kenneth D. Nichols '32., Cleveland, Ohio, a graduate of the In The English Journal for June Pro- "And maybe," contributed the Pro- United States Military Academy who is fessor Raymond F. Howes '2.4 of Wash- fessor, "some day the fifth-graders will studying engineering, has been awarded ington University reviews B. L. Jefferson be Janitors-for-a-Day and actually get and others, Freshman Rhetoric and Prac- the medal of merit of the Republic of this office properly cleaned out. Or even, tice Book and Lewis W. Smith and Nicaragua for his services during the perhaps-, the Boy Scouts will be enlighten- Harold F. Watson, Writing for Freshmen. Managua earthquake in 1930. ing the world as Professors-for-a-Day.'' In The Journal of the Patent Office for "By gosh that's right!" agreed Emil. December, 1931, Curt B. Muller '05 had '' I was thinkin' of it the other way round, THE CORNELL FEDERATION of Womens an article entitled "Ethics vs. Avarici- that the Professors might be put in as Clubs will hold its annual meeting on ousness." Boy-Scouts-for-a-Day. Saturday, June 18, at 1.30 p.m. in the In The Vassar Quarterly for May Pro- He opened the window and spat his Drill Hall, this year, and not, as formerly fessor Abbie F. Potts Kindred is reviewed quid, doing irreparable damage to the in Risley Recreation Hall. by Barbara Swain. Professor's reputation. RUNDSCHAUER

A FAMILIAR SCENE THAT MAY BE REVISITED BY ALUMNI DURING REUNIONS 4o6 THE CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS

The Present Depression Even larger amounts of capital were defaulted on $750,000,000 worth of bonds. (Continued from page 401) invested in railroads, which were often A cut of 10 per cent in railway wages in built in advance of traffic and beyond the 1877 was followed by strikes, riotous twenty cents a pound to ten. In New frontier of settlement. Between 1865 and outbreaks, and the destruction of prop- York 130 firms had failed by the 1873 t^ie railway mileage was doubled. erty. It was estimated in October of that middle of April. In May every bank It is difficult today to understand how year that in the previous twenty months in the United States suspended specie the builders could have hoped that these there had been a shrinkage of 15 per cent payments. Over six hundred banks railways would develop traffic or earn in the capital employed in mercantile failed, the discredited bank notes de- expenses. business. preciated in value, and prices shrank to In the cities, factories, docks, and By 1878, however, the depression had a hard-money level. When foreign in- buildings were being constructed on an run its course, the necessary liquidation vestors asked for the repayment of their unprecedented scale. There was in all had been completed, and the country loans, some of the states repudiated their these ways an enormous absorption of had entered upon a sew period of pros- bonds and others delayed their interest circulating capital in fixed forms, many perity. The great investment in railroads payments. Several of the western states of which were not immediately remuner- and other property improvements, pre- declared a moratorium on private debts. ative. The equipment for future produc- mature though they were, had furnished The government revenues fell off and tion along certain lines was increasing the country with excellent transportation Congress, called in extra session, voted at a more rapid rate than the demand. facilities and industrial plants, and these $10,000,000 in Treasury notes to meet It has been estimated that in the eight now contributed to the production of the emergency. years preceding 1873 the capital invested new wealth. After 1879 the standard of The crises of 1837 was followed by a in the United States was equal to the living was raised, without straining the prolonged depression. Factories and cost of the Civil War. resources of the country, to levels which workshops, organized on a boom basis, Not only was much of this expansion would have been regarded as extravagant closed when the demand fell off. Thou- unwise and premature, but it was unfor- and wasteful in 1873. sands of operatives were discharged, and tunately attended by fradulent practices. In describing the crisis of 1893, it is the cities were filled with the unem- These were the days of Erie and Credit scarcely necessary to recount the now ployed. Poorhouses everywhere were Mobilier, of the "salary grab" law by familiar cycle of good times, overexpan- crowded. Several commission houses Congress, of whisky frauds, of the in- sion, panic, and depression. I may, how- were broken into by the unemployed, famous Tweed ring, and of other scan- ever, mention one or two factors not and the food riots were ended only by dals. It was a period of unbridled indi- hitherto emphasized. The first of these the promise of the merchants to give vidualism and of great opportunity, in was the great overproduction of farm flour to the poor. It was estimated that which speculative excesses were re- products, especially of wheat, and the nine-tenths of all the eastern factories strained neither by an informed public consequent fall in prices. The rapid settle- were closed, while the reduction in the opinion nor by a high business morality. ment of the public domain and the intro- number of clerks in mercantile establish- Waste and extravagance, stimulated by duction of improved farm machinery re- ments and banks still further swelled the an inflated currency, were seen on every sulted in the production of crops beyond group of the unemployed. hand. Conservatism in business and the capacity of the domestic market to This crises of 1837 was one of the most economy in private expenditure were dis- absorb, and whose export glutted the severe and far-reaching in our history, regarded in favor of so-called progressive world-markets. Corn was so cheap that and the depression did not come to an methods. It was at this time that the it was burned for fuel in many places, end until 1841. By that time, however, phrase "frenzied finance" was added to and wheat was left unharvested or fed to the effects of the earlier excesses had the American vocabulary. the stock. The agricultural overproduc- been overcome, weak institutions had In September, 1873, the bubble of tion and consequent depression adversely been weeded out, and the necessary re- speculative enterprise and inflated credit affected the railroads, banks, manufac- adjustments to new conditions of trans- burst, and a severe crisis occurred. The tures, and business in general. portation and trade effected. Upon the immediate occasion of the crash was the A second feature making for malad- firm foundation thus laid the natural failure of the banking house of Jay justment was the rapid exploitation of buoyancy of the people soon built up a Cooke and Company, which was heavily our mineral resources and the develop- more enduring structure of prosperity involved in the financing of the Northern ment of our great iron and steel indus- than any the country had yet seen. So Pacific Railroad, but an end must soon tries. It was during this period that Jay great was the economic development have come to the speculative expansion Gould discovered that pig-iron produc- that the fifteen-year period after 1842. has in any case. The news of the failure pre- tion was the barometer of trade, but the usually been referred to as the "golden cipitated a panic in Wall Street. Securities fluctuations of the barometer unhappily age" of our history. were dumped on the market in large introduced new elements of industrial The crises of 1873 was the result of a amounts and sold for what they would instability. too rapid and too uneven expansion. bring. Prices fell disastrously and many Still a third factor was the currency This time there was an over-investment brokerage houses and banks failed. The disturbances, brought about by the efforts in farms and railroads. The Homestead Stock Exchange closed for ten days. A of Congress to force unneeded amounts Act, which gave to each settler a free run on the banks started and the eastern of silver upon the country, and resulting banks suspended specie payments for farm of 160 acres, proved an irresistible in inflation, export of gold, and distrust. forty days. Commodity prices fell, but attraction and drew thousands of farmers The development before 1893 had been buying power fell faster. In the single onto the western plains. These pioneers uneven and extreme, and the panic of year 1873 over five thousand failures that year had long been brewing. It was anxious to improve their new farms, occurred with liabilities of $150,000,000. borrowed from eastern capitalists, mort- attended by banking and commercial Factories, furnaces, and mills shut down, failures, railroad bankruptcies, falling gaging their lands to them. But many of railroad building stopped, business houses prices, reduced earnings, wage cuts, un- them borrowed for equipment and im- were closed, and three million men were employment, strikes, distress, and unrest. provement more than their farms could thrown out of work. A depression ensued A depression followed which continued earn, and they frequently defaulted on which lasted for half a decade. until 1896, after which a revival of pros- interest and principal. For years "a The inevitable period of liquidation perity occurred which carried the nation mortgage" was a synonym for and readjustment was severe and pro- to the highest standards of living yet an unprofitable investment. tracted. By the end of 1875 railroads had enjoyed. THE CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS 407

What shall we say of the crisis of 1919 York State, recreates scenes in their lives, and the subsequent depression? We are tries to single out the qualities they re- now in the trough and experiencing the BOOKS spectively bequeathed to her, and muses pains of liquidation and readjustment ii about hexself as a product of this blend- but no one familiar with past panics can ing of so many and such varied natures. doubt that the cycle will again run its A BOOK OF PLAYS What binds the past and future in this course and that we shall once more Cornell University Plays. Selected and dream enjoy a greater prosperity. This is the Edited by Alexander M. Drummond, Of flesh and blood and bone? What is lesson of history. Ί1-15 Grad., Director of the University the spell Theater. New York. Samuel French. Evoking beauty in a human form, Re-shaping life by laws, inviolable FRESHMAN CAMP MOVED 1932.. 19.3 cm., pp. γ'ήi, 2.31. Price, $2..50. Of love and duty, ere the random curse TO LARGER QUARTERS The University Theatre has now been Shall well nigh mar what yet is hardly Because accommodations at Lisle have in operation for many years and has made? been outgrown, the annual freshman proved itself from both the cultural and In the management of her rhymes and camp next fall will be conducted at Camp the entertainment point of view a highly meters Miss Potts exhibits notable skill. Lawrence Cory on Keuka Lake. The useful institution. And by no means the There is music in her lines; there is sub- camp will be held under the auspices of least important plays given have been stance in her thought. Her book is well the United Religious Work September some of those written by members of our own community. Ten of the best of these worth reading, and leads us to hope for 2.1 to 2.5. more. The new camp is the property of the now appear in a worthy form under the Rochester Y.M.C.A. and provides un- able editorship of the director of the usual facilities for land and water sports. Theatre. Howard B. Ortner Ί8, basketball coach, The plays selected are '' The Soul of a THE CLUBS I is expected to take charge of athletics. Professor" by the late Professor Martin The camp is conducted each year for W. Sampson; "Traffic Signals" by Pro- I::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: sub-freshmen. It is planned this year to fessor Alexander M. Drummond; "Black replace formal discussions by Faculty Velvet" by Philip Freund '19; "A Man CAYUGA COUNTY members on phases of student life at Should Have a Wife" by Lisa Rembova Louis C. Boochever '12., director of Cornell with informal group gatherings. (Elisabeth Rauschenbusch '2.5); "The public information, was the speaker at The committee in charge includes Devil Comes to Town" by Aristide the meeting on May 2.6. The group met Thomas A. Weaver, Jr. '34, Rochester, d'Angelo '2.3; "Sharp Practices" by John for dinner at the Chamber of Commerce camp director; Edward W. Carson '33, B. Emperor '2.6; "Yeah, Variety" by Building. Blinn S. Cushman '93 presided. George Fass '19; "The Love-You Clock" Lansdowne, Pa., Morgan Sibbett '33, Allen K. Strong '14, who rowed on the by De Elbert Keenan 'xx; "The Farce of Provo, Utah, Herbert N. Woodward '33, crew in 192.4, talked of rowing conditions. Master Trouble-Tete" by Hyman Yude- Winnetka, 111., Lindley C. Kent '34, witz '2.8; and "Wonder-Dark Epilogue" CLEVELAND WOMEN Syracuse, Kenneth L. Davis '35, Oneonta, by Sidney S. Kirschner '18. At a meeting on May 10 the officers of Edward A. Robinson '35, Washington, D. C, Ralph W. Smith '35, Poughkeep- Here we have, then, an agreeable va- the past year were reelected: president, sie, and Harry C. Youman, Jr., '35, riety together with many acute observa- Mrs. Edwin G. Pierce (Lewette B. Pol- Jersey City, N. J. tions on society. The themes may be lock) '14; vice-president, Mrs. Henry F. roughly described as (1) the struggle of Cook (Mary A. Franz) '2.5 corresponding a professor to do justice to both his secretary, Mrs. Willard Beahan (Bessie HACKSTAFF HEADS HALL students and himself; CO a satire on O. De Witt) '78; recording secretary, Donald F. Hackstaff '33, Huntington, society, ending in tragedy; (3) a passage Mrs. Charles S. Mills (Evelyn Ross) '2.5; has been elected president of Willard in the life of a blind musician; (4) a love- treasurer, Mrs. Edward MacLennan Straight Hall, succeeding Miles R. story in a make-up room; (5) superstition (Rika M. Gillette) '14; social chairman, Stevens '31, Lakewood, Ohio. Florence aiding crime; (6) a swindler gets his Gilberta G. Torrey, Grad. H. Gordon '34, Lowville, was elected medicine; (7) a scene in the life of a secretary, succeeding Charlotte A. Dow- a hoofer, his wife, and a slicker; (8) an PHILADELPHIA rie '34, Brooklyn. idyl of Columbine and Pierrot; (9) the The annual golf outing was held May subjugation of a turbulent nature; (10) 2.4, at the Cedar Brook Country Club. NEW CHIMEMASTERS NAMED an aspect of death. The plays are spirited; The Dartmouth alumni in Philadelphia there are many opportunities for striking Elections to the chimes staff have been were the Club's guests. dramatic and scenic effects which are made for the year 1932.-33. Thomas Drans- The medal play for the Bowen Cup well utilized. We predict that these plays field 3d '34, was elected head chime- was won by Walter W. Buckley Ί6. He will be widely read and often acted. master. Charles B. Howard '35 and Ben- will retain possession of the cup for the jamin G. Oren '35 were named to fill next year. POETRY IN ANCESTRY assistant posts. At the same time it was The next get-together of the Dart- Kindred. By Abbie Findlay Potts '06, mouth and Cornell alumni will be on decided that Thomas B. Martin '34, will Ph.D. '1.0. New York. Macmillan. 1932.. June 10, at the Merion Country Club. remain on the staff. zo cm., pp. vi, 151. Price, $1.50. This is the work of a true poet, whose PITTSBURGH WOMEN MILITARY GROUP ELECTS mind ranges over the scenes of a life in The May meeting was held at the Pi Tau Pi Sigma, national honorary which her ancestors figure and help to Twentieth Century Club. New officers Signal Corps Fraternity, held elections shape her being. It is a modest epic of were elected for the coming year: presi- and installations of officers in Willard heredity—lacking perhaps the sweep dent, Mrs. Thomas G. Ferguson (Irene Straight Hall recently. Those elected, all and largeness of treatment of a vast Davis) '2.1; vice-president, Mrs. P. H. seniors, are as follows: president, An- drama of evolution, but dealing in a fine Curry (Cecilia B. O'Neill) '98; secretary, thony J. Strozinski; vice president, J. and charming manner with one phase of Mrs. William R. King (Marion A. Mc- Robert Rogers, Jr.; secretary, Morell the subject and a highly important one. Whinney) V4. Mrs. Matthew F. Mc- Vrooman, Jr.; treasurer, P. F. Sweeny; The author thinks of her Scotch, Irish, Mullin (Isa Belle Hanford) '03 was con- George W. Luther, Jr., historian. and Dutch ancestors in eastern New tinued as treasurer. [Continued on page 410 THE CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS

CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS A few days of care-free relaxation and REDUCED RAILROAD FARES ITHACA, NEW YORK the tapping of fountains of sentimental OFFERED FOR REUNIONERS FOUNDED IQQ8 interest are urgent necessities at the pre- INCORPORATED 1926 Alumni returning to Ithaca for the sent time. We hope the alumni who are reunion and Commencement activities Published for the Cornell Alumni able to do so will Count up the psychic are reminded to take advantage of the Corporation by the Cornell Alumni News return from their investment of time and reduced railroad fares. The dates of the Publishing Corporation. money as Carefully as they do the moder- reunions are Friday and Saturday, June 17 Published weekly during the college year ate expense. arid monthly in July and August: thirty-five and 18. June 19 is Baccalaureate Sunday, issues annually. Issue No. 1 is published in and the year will be brought to a close September. Weekly publication ends the last MEDICAL COLLEGE with the Commencement exercises on week in June. Issue No. 35 is published in CONFERS SIXTY DEGREES the morning of Monday, June 2.0. August and is followed by an index of the en- tire volume, which will be mailed on request. At the Medical College Commence- All alumni and members of their Subscription price $4.00 a year, payable in ad- ment on June 4 the following were ad- families, whether or not their classes are vance. Foreign postage 55 cents a year extra. Single mitted to the degree of M.D.: scheduled for reunion, are eligible for the copies twelve cents each. Should a subscriber desire to discontinue his Orrίn E. Anderson, Philip Ashman, Thomas reduced rates. When transportation to subscription, a notice to that effect should be R. Austin, Rudolf F. Bachmann, Charles J. Ithaca is purchased, full fare will be paid, sent in before its expiration. Otherwise it is Baker, Vincent H. Bleaker, William T. but a "convention certificate" must be Bivings, Jr., Raymond Gettinger, Daniel F. assumed that a continuance is desired. secured from the local railroad office. Checks and orders should be payable to Brophy, Charles K. Bogoshian, May A. Bor- Cornell Alumni News. Cash at risk of sender. quist, Daniel J. Bradley, Frederic S. Carr, John When that certificate is presented at the Correspondence should be addressed— G. Conncll, William A. Cooper, Charles H. Drill Hall in Ithaca, return transporta- Cornell Alumni News, Ithaca, N. Y. Cornish, Jesse P. Eddy, 3d, Marion Fairfield, tion will be sold at half price. Havelock F. Fraser, Constance Friess, William Editor-in-Chief ) n ^T C RoBERT WARREN SAILOR C. Goldwin, Donald C. Griffin, Harriet L. A particularly attractive rate is avail- Business Manager 1 °7 Hardy, Michael J. Hogan, Alan L. Jacobs, Leif Circulation Manager ELIZABETH V. SULLIVAN able for those alumni who cannot leave Jacobson, Carl C. Janowsky, Herbert M. Jones, Managing Editor HARRY G. STUTZ '07 their home towns until Friday noon. The Merrill E. Joss, Edmund N. Joyner, 3d, Mar- Asst.Mng. Editor JANE MCK. URQUHART '13 garet M. Klumpp, Henry C. Lawson, Joseph H. rate applies to those who are coming Associate Editors Marvin, Jack Masur, William B. McDonough, from the territory generally bounded by CLARK S. NORTHUP '93 FOSTER M. COFFIN '12. Harold R. Meyers, Jr., Walter Modell, Marjory Chicago, Albany, New York, and WILLIAM J. WATERS '2.7 MORRIS G. BISHOP '13 J. Nelson, Lincoln Rahman, Salvatore Rainone, Washington. The railroads are offering MILTON S. GOULD '30 MARGUERITE L. COFFIN Mary D. Ridgway, Harry M. Rose, Max Officers of the Corporation: R. W. Sailor, Rosen, Robert E. Rothenberg, Dorothy K. a special weekend rate, with a 45 per Pres.; A. J. Whinery, Vice-Pres.; H. G. Stutz, Scheidell, Abbey D. Seley, Howard P. Serrell, cent reduction from the usual round trip Sec; R. W. Sailor, Treas.; W. L. Todd and Thomas E. Shaffer, Stephen H. Sherman, fare. Alumni taking advantage of this H.E.Babcock, Directors Office: 113 East Green Thomas D. Slagle, Frank A. Spellman, Jr., special rate should consult their local Street, Ithaca, N. Y. Albert N. Stevenson, Jr., Joseph M. Swindt, Joseph A. Tamerin, Ynez C. Tyler, John P. ticket offices. Member Intercollegiate Alumni Extension Service West, Jr., Hernam E. Wirth, Alexander Wolf, Alumni planning to be back are urged Printed by The Cayuga Press Benjamin Zimmerman, Seymour Zucker. to send advance notice, either to their Entered as Second Class Matter at Ithaca, N. Y. The following named students, mem- class officers, or to the Alumni Represen- bers of the R.O.T.C, received commis- tative in Ithaca. But every one can be ITHACA, N. Y. JUNE 9, 1931 sions as first lieutenants of the Medical assured of accommodations, whether or Reserve Corps of the U. S. Army: Jesse P. not it is feasible to send word ahead of THE PSYCHIC RETURN Eddy, 3d, Donald C. Griffin, Herman E. time. FROM A REUNION Wirth. Λ\77E HAVE ALLUDED to the new features The presentation of the Manual of NOTICE TO SUBSCRIBERS W of the coming reunions. The in- Surgical Anatomy, made by the Surgeon- The Alumni News will not be pub- vitations of the Faculties of the several General of the Army to the Student at- lished next week, as the schedule calls for colleges and larger departments to their taining the highest military standing in the omission of the issue for Reunion own alumni to return to meet their old the R.O.T.C, went to Herman Edwin Week. The next number, due to come out friends of the instructing staffs and the Wirth. on the 2.3d, will, in all probability, be a alumni body on Friday afternoon are op- The following prizes and honors were day or two late as the issue will be held portunities that no alumnus should over- conferred: open for the detailed news of Commence- look. The John Metcalfe Polk Memorial Prizes: ment and the Poughkeepsie races. Herein lies the true spirit of reunion, 1. Harold R. Meyers, Jr., 2.. Rudolf again to associate, even though briefly, F. Bachmann, 3. Charles K. Bogoshian. in intimate contact with former students The Whiting Prices for Efficiency in DR. EUGENE F. BRADFORD, director of and teachers whose common bond is the Otology: 1. Jesse P. Eddy, 3d, 2.. Rudolf F. admissions, has been brooding over a real basis of an education. Bachmann. phrase in a letter of recommendation. From the present returns it is apparent The William M. Polk Prices in Gynec- The writer (a Cornell A.B.) says of the that general business conditions are not ology: 1. Robert E. Rothenberg. 2.. Abbey candidate: "I know nothing of her going to cast a shadow on the reunions in D. Seley. 3. Henry C. Lawson. scholastic ability. I only know that Miss a very noticeable way. Perhaps no new The Gustav Seeligman Prizes in Obstetrics: R. is exactly the sort of undergraduate high records for attendance will be set up. 1. Marion Fairfield. 2.. Abbey D. Seley. that Cornell well needs." This distinc- Records, however, are comparatively The Alfred Moritz Michaelis Prizjs for tion, thinks Dr. Bradford, is well cal- unimportant. If reunions maintain a high Efficiency in General Medicine: Raymond culated to take the Faculty down a peg. quality, the quantitative and statistical Gettinger. aspects of them can be left to take care of The Alfred Michaelis Prize for Efficiency in A SUCCESSION of warm days in late May themselves. General Medicine: Raymond Gettinger. turned the thoughts of the students back The entire community seems to be The Kennedy Prize for Efficiency in Neur- to their amphibian ancestry. The nearby desirous of cooperating: Faculty, local ology: Harold R. Meyers, Jr. pools were filled with swimming bodies, alumni, the University officially, the The Honor Roll: 1. Harold R. Meyers, and the rims were lined with baskers. railroads with their low rates, and Nature Jr. 2.. Rudolf F. Bachmann. 3. Charles K. Now the Beebe Lake Pool is officially herself, who has never offered greater Bogoshian. 4. Merrill E. Joss. 5. Robert opened, under the superintendence of the inducements to prospective reunions. E. Rothenberg. 6. Herbert M. Jones. Athletic Association. THE CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS 409

I:::::::::::::::::::::::::::;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::- THE WEEK ON THE CAMPUS

ASEBALL, it is said, is losing a good A MOST SHOCKING and dreadful ac- PREVALENT head-shaking and beard- deal of its old compelling power. cident on May 30, took the life of Miss wagging about the lawlessness of our B No longer do the students attend its Betty Mills '33, of Ithaca, daughter of undergraduates reminds me of a speech of contests in a reverent mass. Frank the late Professor Adelbert P. Mills, who Andrew D. White to the Syracuse alumni Merriwell, who cleared the bases with a was for many years professor of Civil on May X9, 191Z, reported in The Alumni home run in the ninth, winning the game engineering. Miss Mills was driving to News of June 12.. Said Dr. White: for dear old Asterisk, became the idol of Ithaca with her mother and brother, "Student conduct [sixty years ago] was the school. If he should repeat his feat after attending the brother's commence- worse than any tiling we now know. today, the lads of old Asterisk would ment exercises in Mercersburg Academy, Among typical events proving this was never find out about it. Mercersburg, Pa. The car, a light sedan, the great riot in which President Edward IN COMPENSATION, softball has become left the road; Miss Mills, who was Everett and the British Ambassador the game of the day. Softball, a develop- driving, was pinned under the steering- found themselves at a Harvard Com- ment of indoor baseball, requires a ball wheel, and was burned to death before mencement, and the riotous proceedings somewhat larger than the standard base- she could be extricated. in the College commons made famous by ball and considerably lighter. It also THE WOMEN'S Athletic Association is the blinding of the historian Prescott. At requires a bat, a fielder's glove for catcher going to publish an annual booklet con- the University of Virginia one professor and first base, a lot half the the size of a taining an outline of the year's sports, was brutally murdered on the college baseball diamond, and nothing besides. with illustrations. These will be pre- campus, and a member of the faculty felt SOFTBALL FOR SOFTIES, you sneer. Why sented to the seniors before graduation, obliged to protect his own life by shoot- no, you are a little unjust. Softball stands and to other members of the W.A.A. next ing a student in the classroom. ... In about where baseball did in its early days, fall. The editor is Gertrude E. Murray '34 one of our best New York colleges, under before the time of masks, mitts, spit-ball of Rockaway Beach, and the photo- what were considered most excellent deliveries, and science. You have to be grapher Ada E. Buck' 3 5 of Elizabeth, N.J. moral influences, a cannon was pur- good to play base-ball nowadays, but any posely exploded in one of the build- CRIME NEWS of the week: Two Ithaca inconsiderable frosh in a fraternity house ings, endangering the lives of pro- boys, aged 17 and 19, are found to have can play softball. Playing baseball, he fessors and students, and, metaphorically conducted a crime wave of their own. would be helpless at bat, waving vainly speaking, blowing the president of the They broke into the gun lockers at the at ins, outs, and drops. But in softball, college out of his office. At Yale one Drill Hall during the spring vacation, everyone has a chance at the larger, student was murdered on the college and made off with two large Browning lighter, slower projectile, which must be campus by a student, another was maimed machine guns with tripods, nine Spring- delivered underhand by the pitcher. for life by a student in one of the college field army rifles, and three target pistols. Hence the games are full of hits, runs, buildings, and another, a tutor, who gave They then entered the Treman, King action, excitement. And of course the instruction to my own class, was knocked Company warehouses and stole a large special incidental charms of baseball senseless on one of the college walks by a quantity of ammunition and a motor remain unchanged, the drama on the club in the hands of one of my class- boat. Next they visited an auto store and bases, the running and sliding, the in- mates. ... In those days many tutors took eight five-gallon cans of lubricating cessant yelling of partisan opinion from at Yale made provision of extra windows oil. Then they equipped themselves, in the fielders, the perpetual battle of to replace those that might be broken by Ken's Toggery Shop on Eddy Street, righteousness against the Umpire. students who might harbor some grudge. with two traveling bags and a large Just after my time, two town roughs THE SPRING WARFARE of the softballers amount of clothing. Finally they carried were killed by students, in the streets of rose to its climax on Saturday afternoon, off some lighting equipment for motor- New Haven. ... I myself saw at a col- with a memorable battle between Sigma boats from Johnson's Boathouse. Ap- lege in excellent standing, in this State, Alpha Mu and Alpha Zeta. Sigma parently they were planning a well- one professor, an excellent clergyman, Alpha Mu won, by a score of somewhere dressed piratical cruise on Cayuga Lake. driven out of a room through the panel of around 16 to 10. An audience of about They sawed off one of the machine-gun a door, with books, boots, and spittoons two hundred was held spellbound. The barrels, and tried out the weapon without thrown at his head, and I saw ,more than University Club was out in force, in much success; the rifle ammunition did once, snowballs and bottles hurled at the rocking-chairs. It was a fast and stirring not work very well. They are said to be head of the highly respected president of game, full of emotion. Now when you are good boys and do not smoke or drink. the college. ... It is also historic that inclined to deplore the passing of the old Neither Prohibition nor Moscow is a very eminent president of a college type of informal, unorganized sport for implicated. deservedly boasting excellent religious sport's sake, let me adjure you to come PROFESSOR GUY B. MUCHMORE of the control,—a doctor of divinity and after- and watch a game of softball. Department of Public Speaking has ward a bishop—was, by a student strata- GOOD OLD NO. 7, the train on the bought the splendid old estate known as gem, imprisoned by the police of an Lehigh Valley that leaves New York at the Boody Place, just outside Geneva. It American city in an insane asylum. A 5:30 p.m., Daylight Saving Time, and will be recognized by most travelers by professor in one of the most excellent arrives in Ithaca about midnight, has automobile from Ithaca west. It is the universities of those days told me that been restored to the schedule after a lapse fine mansion with wide four-pillared he. ... had received a token of student of a few weeks. For those who must miss porch standing on a knoll looking across ill-will in the shape of a paving stone Friday afternoon of reunions, this train the lake to Geneva. Professor Muchmore through his window, which narrowly will insure a full weekend in spite of will continue his service to the University missed the cradle of his child." business engagements. for the present. M.G.B. THE CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS

The Clubs ::::::::::::"::::::::"::"::::":":::""":::::::::::.":::::":::::::"::::::":::::::::::::::::::: Texas, where Mrs. Averill was a promi- nent club woman. She was one of the (Continued from page 407) OBITUARIES Mrs. Ferguson was appointed as dele- organizers and first president of the gate for the meeting of the Federation Women's Association of the College of Mines and Arts, and a past president of of Cornell Women's Clubs, to be held at WILLIAM BRYANT THROOP '77, until the College Woman's Club and of the Ithaca on June 18. his retirement in 1^1.1. general superin- Woman's Club. Her husband survives The Club has had a particularly good tendent of the Quincy, Omaha and Kan- her. year, meeting each month. sas City Railroad, died on April 30 at ANNA MARIA CRANS (MRS. GEORGE) Galesburg, 111. He was eighty-three HOLMES '99 died in Monticello, N.Y., on VETERINARY PUBLICATIONS years old. He received the degree of November 14, 1930, of pneumonia. She The report of the State Veterinary Col- B.C.E. All of his business life was asso- was born in Dwaarkill, N. Y., on July i, lege for the year ending June 30, 1931, ciated with railroading. He was for forty 1870, the daughter of George and Mar- includes the following articles and mono- years with the Chicago, Burlington and garet Smith Crans. She received the de- graphs: "Torsion in the Gravid Uterus Quincy Railroad, advancing through the gree of B.S, Her home was in Dairy land, in a Cat" by Professor Hadley C. Stephen- grades of roadmaster and division super- N. Y. intendent on several divisions to general son '19 and James D. Sweet '32., with LESTER HARTRAUFT WILLIAMSON *OI, superintendent of the Lines West of the comment by Professor Emeritus Walter supervisor of official testing at the Divi- Mississippi, and then to the superintend- L. Williams; "nembutal" by Hadley C. sion of Animal Husbandry, College of Stephenson and Professor Howard J. ency he held at the time of his retirement. Agriculture, at the University of Cali- Milks '04; "Some Diseases of the Ab- His wife and a daughter, Mrs. R. E. fornia, died on May 30, 1931, at his home domen" by Professor Milks; "The Elder, survive him; also Henry G. in San Mateo, Calif., of tuberculosis. He Diagnosis and Control of Mastitis" by Throop '05, a nephew, and Ronald N. took two years of special agriculture. Professor Denny H. Udall '01 and Seth Thoop '35, a grandnephew. His wife, Mrs. Jessie Williamson, a son, D. Johnson '2.9; "Some Factors that DE VOE PELL HODSON '77, city judge Wayne, and two daughters, Mrs. Wil- Influence the Agglutination Test for of Buffalo from 1908 to 1914 and State liam Barr and Miss Muriel Williamson, Bang Abortion Disease in Cattle" by Dr. Public Service Commissioner from 1914 survive him. Clifford H. Milks '30; "Agglutinins in to 1919, died in Penn Yan, N. Y., on May CHARLES NORMAN CROSS '06, professor Extracts Prepared from the Tissues of 15. He was born in Ithaca on March IT,, of engineering at Stanford, died on Jan- Guinea Pigs Infected with Brucella 1856, the son of Horatio and Harriet Pell uary 8, of heart disease. He was born at Abortus" by William M. Thomson Ί6 Hodson. He took a year of science. Fol- Eagle, N. Y., on April 9, 1879,tne son °f and Dr. Harriet M. Thomson '31; "The lowing his retirement from public life Norman D. and Harriet Beckwith Cross. Elimination of Brucella Abortus from the he practiced law in Buffalo as a member of He received the degree of M.E. He had Genital Tract of Unbred Heifers During the firm of Hodson and Webster. He is been on the faculty at Stanford since his Estrum" by William M. Thomson; "The survived by his wife. graduation. Isolation of Brucella Abortus from a THOMAS FRANCIS LILLIS '83 died in J. DENNISON HARTMAN '03 died on Human Fetus: a Discussion of Its Gono- Chicago on March 31, 1931. He was born May 2.0. He was born on May 15, 1880, tropic Character" by Dr. Charles M. in on March 10, i86x, the son of the son of former Congressman and Mrs. Carpenter '17 and Dr. Ruth A. Boak 'zj; Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Lillis. He took Jesse Hartman of Pennsylvania. He re- "Bacterium Abortus Infection in the six years of civil engineering. His home ceived the degree of M.E. His home was Fowl," part ii, by Professors Herbert L. was in Oxford, N. Y. in Hollidaysburg, Pa. Gilman ' 17 and Earl L. Bruneit '2.3 '' The FRANK GODFREY RAICHLE '86, until his SIDNEY ARTHUR ELLENBOGEN '08, for- Persistence of Pasteurella Avicida in the retirement in 19x0 engaged in the manu- Blood and Organs of Fowls with Spon- merly with the Metric Shirt Company in facturing and wholesale jewelry business Paterson, N. J., died on March 16. He re- taneous Fowl Cholera" by John M. in Buffalo, died on February 18 of heart Hendrickson, M.S. 'x5, and Kenneth F. ceived the degree of M.E. He was born diease. He was born in Buffalo on July 4, on December 13, 1885. Hubert '2.8; "The Transmission of Fowl 1863. He received the degree of M.E. and Pox by Mosquitoes" by Professors was a member of Alpha Delta Phi. He is ROBERT SIMPSON JONES, 2.D, '33, a junior in agriculture, died at the Cornell In- Robert Matheson '06, Earl L. Brunett, survived by his wife, Mrs. Grace Lyons firmary on May 2.9, of pneumonia. He and Arthur L. Brody '2.8; "The Distribu- Raichle, and two sons, Frank G., Jr., was born in Jenkintown, Pa., on Decem- tion of Acid-Fast Bacteria in Soils" and Joseph L. Raichle. by Dr. Carl A. Frey '30 and Professor ber 2.6, 1909, the son of Mr. and Mrs. William A. Hagan, M.S. '17; "The Con- PHILIP JACKSON DARLINGTON '91, presi- Joseph L. Jones. He attended the Penn stituents of the Blood and Serum of the ident of the Comtor Company in Charter School in Philadelphia. At Cor- Lactating and non-Lactating Cow" by Waltham, Mass., died on January 15, of nell he was a member of Delta Upsilon, Professor Charles E. Hayden '14, Jesse a heart attack. He was born in Philadel- Red Key, and Quill and Dagger, and was phia in 1869, the son of Franklin and Sampson '30, and William T. Miller M.S. manager of freshman lacrosse and assist- Mary Jackson Darlington. He took two '2.9; "A Study of Milk Fever" by Profes- ant manager of the Musical Clubs. years of engineering at Cornell, receiving sor Hayden and Jesse Sampson. the degree of M.E. He was a member of MARY ELIZABETH MILLS '33, a junior Sigma Xi. He is survived by his wife, in the Arts College, was fatally burned IN The Journal of Economic Entom- Mrs. Rebecca Mattson Darlington. in an automobile accident near Towanda, ology for April Professor Glenn W. BLANCHE EDNA MOORE (MRS. ALFRED Pa., on May 30. She was born in Ithaca Herrick '96 and Grace H. Griswold Ί8 P.)AVERILL '95, died in Toledo, Ohio, on June 1, 19CXL, the daughter of the late have an article on "Fumigation of the on October 19, following an operation. Professor Adelbert P. and of Grace Corn- Immature Stages of Clothes Moths and She was born in Bryan, Ohio, on October stock Mills. She attended the Ithaca Carpet Beetles with a Mixture of Ethy- 6, 1872., the daughter of William H. and High School. She was a member of the lene Dichloride and Carbon Tetrach- Nellie F. Moore. She received the degree Dramatic Club. She is survived by her loride." of A.B. and was a member of Delta mother and a brother. Her father at the THE Journal of Adult Education for Gamma and The Asteroids. She was time of his death in France in 1918 was April includes a review of Russell Lord married in 1899 to Alfred P. Averill. a member of the Faculty of the Civil Ίo, Men of Earth. They had lived since 1904 in El Paso, Engineering College. THE CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS 411

and money involved in treating motor '2.1 BS—Milo F. Winchester is a teacher fuels to an obsolete unwarranted color of vocational agriculture in Highland, THE ALUMNI and sulphur specification and the gospel N. Y. He has an eight-year-old son, M. of economic conservation. . . He is the Follett, Jr., and a daughter, Alice, who holder of over one hundred patents, is four. '72. BS—The address of Delmar M. chiefly relating to petroleum technology, '2.3 BS—Sydney S. Brooke's address is Darrin is now 2.8 Main Street, Addison, and the author of about one hundred and now 75 Spruce Street, Lakewood, N. J. N. Y. He is continuing the practice of fifty articles published in technical or He is a poultryman. law, and has been a referee in bankruptcy scientific organs." He is now research '2.4 AB, '2.7 MD—Robert M. Lintz has since 1901. director of the Universal Oil Products '94-5 Gr—William E. Mott is this year moved his office to 36 Plaza Street, Company, with which he became con- Brooklyn. retiring from the directorship of the nected in 1917. College of Engineering of the Carnegie '2.4 AB—Dorothea E. Johannsen ex- Institute of Technology at Pittsburgh, '17 BS—Dun bar M. Hinrichs is vice- pects to spend the summer in Europe. chiefly because of the illness of his wife. president of the General Exchange Insur- Next year she plans to return to Skidmore He was the guest of honor at a recent ance Corporation, a General Motors sub- College, where she is assistant professor dinner given by President Thomas S. sidiary, at the General Motors Building of psychology. She lives at 106 Caroline Baker of the Institute. in New York. He has recently fixed up Street, Saratoga Springs '06 ME; '06 ME—Bill Foote '35 and an old farmhouse as a summer home at '2.5 AB—Henry G. Friedlander is an Jack Todd '35, who are rowing 2. and 5 Essex, Conn. attorney at 1841 Broadway, New York. on the freshman boat, are the sons, re- '17 ME—H. Wallace Caldwell is in the 'Z5 BS—A son, Franklin Daniel, was spectively, of Edward T. Foote '06 and real estate business at 77 West Washing- born on April 9 to Mr. and Mrs. Augustus John W. Todd '06. Both boys also re- ton Street, Chicago. He lives at 3500 L. Sahler. Mrs. Sahler was Marion E. ceived their numerals in football. Sheridan Road. Schoonmaker '15. They have another son, James Howard, who is two. Their Ίz AB—At the Second Pennsylvania Ί8, 'zi WA—L. Allen Osborne, Jr., home is in Accord, N. Y. Petroleum and Natural Gas Conference recently became vice-president and treas- '2.5 BS—Mr. and Mrs. S. Webster held at Pennsylvania State College on urer of the Waterbury Clock Company Marvin of Bayport, Long Island, N. Y., May ii Gustav EgloίF '12. read a paper in Waterbury, Conn. He lives at 16 Birch on "The Changing Picture of Motor have announced the engagement of their Brook Road, Bronxville, N. Y. Fuels from Pennsylvania Crude." Mineral daughter, Vera, to Paul E. Spahn '2.5. Industries for May includes a portrait of '19 AB—Bernard J. Shepard is a lawyer Spahn is a heating sales engineer with Dr. EgloίF. Of him a writer says: "As an at 2.2.5 Broadway, New York. He lives the Patchogue, N. Y., branch of the authority on cracking he is preeminent. at 32.70 Bedford Avenue, Brooklyn. A W. A. Case and Son Manufacturing Com- . . . For over fifteen years Dr. EglofT daughter, Nina Joy, was born on May 2.. pany. His address is Z72. East Main Street. has preached the value of cracked gaso- He has also a three-year old son, Lionel '15 AB—Harry Starfield is teaching at line in motor fuel, the waste of chemicals Marshall. the John Adams High School in Ozone

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Open Day and Night E. D. BUTTON '99 WM. H. MORRISON '90 President Secy, and Treas. THE CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS

Park, N. Y. He lives at 2.16 Arlington 2.437 Central Park Avenue, Evanston, 111. 350 Avenue, Brooklyn. He recently returned Perkins is practicing architecture, and rooms from a half year's trip abroad, where he Mrs. Perkins is helping a professor of spent some time with Raymond E. Crist, Northwestern University with a book on $2.50 '2.7-8 Grad., who is taking graduate American government. up work at the University of Zurich, and '28 CE—James E. Hubbell is with contemplates working as a geologist in Johnson and Higgins, Inc., brokers in Russia. Starfield writes that also teaching Chicago. His address is 1134 North at the John Adams Hign School are Street, Chicago. Jayne Disbrow, A.B., '2.1, and George '2.8 ME—Clyde H. Harrison is with Cornell Alumni invariably stay W. Sullivan, Jr., B.S. '26. the General Electric Company in Sche- at the Powers Hotel when '26 ME—Ward S. Patterson is an engi- nectady. in Rochester neer with the Combustion Engineering '2.8 ME—Alfred H. Burr is with the Corporation at 200 Madison Avenue, American Hard Rubber Company. He is New York. He was recently appointed a in charge of the engineering department first lieutenant in the ordnance depart- dealing with all phases of the manufac- ment of the Organized Reserves. Patterson ture of hard rubber products. The work writes that Leonard J. Marshall, M.E. involves seeking ways for eliminating '26, is working for the same company; waste, improving processes, and develop- that Samuel C. Otto, M.E. '26, has been ing new methods and products. He lives married some time; and that Edwin A. at 3710 Ninety-fourth Street, Jackson Adey, Jr., '26, E.E. '2.7, is married and Heights, N. Y. is working for the Western Electric '28 ME—Walter H. Bunke is with the Company. New Jersey Bell Telephone Company at '26 AB, '28 AM, '31 PhD; '2.9—Fred- 540 Broad Street, Newark. He is studying J. Dall,Jr., Inc. erick R. Hirsh, Jr., is doing research telephone transmission and the econom- Building Construction in x-ray spectroscopy in the Physics ics of electrical engineering. He lives at Department at Cornell. Mrs. Hirsh, who 15 Norwood Avenue, Upper Montclair, was Adeline Nordendahl, is taking work N.J. Ithaca in home economics. They live at 604 '2.8 ME—Bruce S. Cornell is with the Mitchell Street. New York Telephone Company at 140 N.Y. '2.6 AB—Elizabeth D. Quirk is teach- West Street, New York. He lives at 530 ing general science at the Benjamin North Maple Avenue, Ridgewood, N.J. Franklin High School in Yonkers, N. Y. '28 ME—Albert R. Galusha is in She lives at 208 Centre Avenue, New charge of designing special tools and Rochelle, N. Y. apparatus for dial telephone equipment for the New Jersey Bell Telephone Com- '26 ME—Mrs. Paul Denison Sexton of pany. Syracuse, N. Y., has announced the en- '28 ME—Robert D. Hobbie is in charge gagement of her daughter, Aurel Hart, J. DALL, JR ., Ί 6 Telephone of the survey of foreign wire installation to C. Travis Brown '2.6. Miss Sexton President 2.3 69 graduated from Syracuse last June, where for the New Jersey Bell Telephone Com- she was a member of Delta Gamma. pany. He lives at 86 Heller Parkway, Brown is with the L. C. Smith Company Newark. in Syracuse. '28 AB—William S. Farrell for the past year has been vice-consul at Addis Ababa, ESTABROOK & CO. '17 AB; '27 AB—A son, Samuel S. Ethiopia. The year after leaving college Evans, 3d, was born on January 30 to he took post-graduate work at George- Members of New York and Samuel S. Evans, Jr., '2.7 and Mrs. town University. In December, 1929, he Boston Stock Exchanges Evans (Ella M. Behrer '2.7). They live at was appointed a foreign service officer 7 Meredith Road, Overbrook, Phila- Sound Investments with the Department of State, and as- delphia. signed as vice-consul to Mexico City, Investment Counsel and '2.7 ME—Reed V. Bontecou has become From November, 1930, to March, 1931, Supervision associated with Goodbody and Company he attended the State Department For- as joint manager of their Albany, N. Y., eign Service School. ROGER H. WILLIAMS '95 Resident Partner New York Office office at 488 Broadway. The company are '28, '29 BS—Edgar O. Cheney is in the 40 WALL STREET members of the New York and Phila- central credit department at the main delphia Stock Exchanges, and the New office of the Manufacturers' Trust Com- York Curb. pany in New York. He was married in '2.7 AB—Mr. Frank Lawrence of Mad- 1930 to Nancy Henrietta Bull. They have ison, Wiέc, has announced the engage- an infant daughter, Nancy Warren. They Quality Service ment of his daughter, Dorothy, to live at 3715 Eighty-third Street, Jackson Charles L. Kades '2.7. Miss Lawrence is Heights, Long Island, N. Y. a graduate of the University of Wisconsin '29 ME—Theodore C. Ohart, who is a and is now on the faculty of New York mechanical engineer with the General E. H. Wanzer University. Kades, who has graduated Electric Company, on April 19 presented The Qrocer from the Harvard Law School, is now a a paper before the Schenectady section of lawyer with the firm of Hawkins, Dela- the American Society of Mechanical field and Longfellow in New York. Engineers, on "The Ideal Engineering Aurora and State Streets '2.8 AB; '30, '31 AB—Margery Blair Curriculum." On May 6, at Sibley Col- '2.8 and Lawrence Perkins '30 were mar- lege, to a group of seniors, graduate ried on January 1. They are living at students, and professors, he spoke on THE CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS

4 * Some Problems in Refrigeration.'' Ohart has been for the past year working on SHELDON COURT refrigeration development, in the manu- Private Dormitory for Men facturing processes division of the Works Students at Cornell laboratory. He lives at 133 Sixth Street, OPPOSITE THE Rentals $200 to $250 for the Scotia, N. Y. He writes that Elmer D. NEW WALDORF- College Year Spicer, M.E. Ίx, is assistant works ASTORIA Write for Catalogue and Diagram manager; that Hillel Poritsky, A.B. 'xo, of the Available Rooms for the Ph.D. '2.7, is in the general engineering College Year 1932.-33 department, and that Ernest L. Thearle, A. R. CONGDON MGR. M.E. '2.3, is with the research laboratory. Ithaca, N.Y. '2.9 ME—Robinson C. Glazebrook is wmofTH hydraulic engineer for Fairbanks, Morse at 40 «td Lexington NEWVORK and Company in Beloit, Wise. His mail- ing address is 2.02.2. P Street, Washington. '2.9 ME—Ranald M. Garrison is with li%HEN the Shelton R. A. HEGGIE & BRO. CO. the Houston, Tex., Lighting and Power Company. He is doing technical work opened (7 years ago) we began with the plant betterment department, and testing and repairing mechanical catering to college men and Fraternity instruments. His address is P.O. Drawer 7, Corpus Christi, Tex. women. Gradually their patron- Jewelers '2.9 ME—Charles E. Huddles ton is in the time study department of the United age has increased; we feel safe States Aluminum Company, which is ITHACA NEW YORK engaged in manufacturing aluminum in asserting that more students furniture. Huddleston's address is 559 Lafayette Avenue, Buffalo. and alumni make the Shelton '2.9 PhD—Theodore G. Kennard is a research fellow in chemical spectroscopy their New York home than any at Claremont College. He lives at 117 East Hemphill, Noyes CS, Co. Seventh Street, Claremont, Calif. He has club or other hotel. One reason Members of New York Stock Exchange a year-old daughter, Kathryn Rose. for this is the free recreational Ithaca Savings Bank Building '2.9—Raymond C. Poulsen was* married Ithaca, N.Y. on May 7 to Hilda Kocher. Their address features plus a desire to serve on is 134 Bunker Hill Avenue, Water bury, Jansen Noyes Ίo Stanton Griffis Ίo Conn. He is with M. J. Daly and Sons, the part of Shelton employees. L. M. Blancke Ί5 Inc. Arthur Treman Ί3 '19 AB, '31 LLB—Irving I. Plotkin is Room rates have been greatly Manager Ithaca Office now engaged in the general practice of law, as a member of the firm of Sweetgall reduced. Rates from $50.00 Direct Private Wire to New York and Plotkin at Suite 613, Chrysler Build- Office and 34 Other Cities ing, New York. per month upward. A room '19 AB; '30 AB—Ethel W. Cor win '2.9 and Gorton J. Youngs '30 were married from $2.50 daily. on May 13. Their address is 48 Hill Street, Bloomfield, N.J. THE NEW YORK HOSPITAL School of Nurs- ing, reorganized in association with Cornell '30 ME—Rodney F. Lauer '30 was University, offers an exceptional professional married on April 13, to Amanda Louise preparation in nursing. For bulletin apply Brunhouse, the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Director of Nursing Frederick Brunhouse of York, Pa. Lauer 1300 York Avenue New York City is with the York Ice Machinery Company. '30 BS—Frankie B. Culpepper is a member of the nature study staff in the educational department of the Newark MERCERSBURG ACADEMY Museum in Newark, N. J. She lives at 116 Offers a thorough physical, mental and moral Clark Street, Hillside, N. J. training for college or business. Under Christ- '30 PhD.—Alton Gabriel is now with Club features (free to guests) ian masters from the great universities. Located the Bureau of Mines in New Brunswick, are as follows: Swimming in the Cumberland Valley. New gymnasium. N.J. Equipment modern. Write for catalogue. pool; completely equipped BOYD EDWARDS, D.D., S.T.D., Head Master '30 EE—H. Pearson Muller is a special Mercersburg, Pennsylvania studies engineer with the New Jersey gymnasium; game rooms for Bell Telephone Company. His address is bridge and backgammon; 153 Franklin Street, Bloomfield, N. J. A daughter, Joan Dolores, was born on roof garden and solarium. April 30. Restaurant and cafeteria "ITHACA" '30 ME—Edward R. Bose is now with the United Cork Companies in Lynd- service at reasonable prices. ENGWING (hi hurst, N. J. He was formerly with the York Ice Machinery Company. His ad- uildingίZ3 N.TicgaSfreet dress is 145 Ridge Road, Rutherford, N.J. THE CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS

'31 PhD—A very George is with the United Color and Pigment Company in between Newark, N. J. He is living at the Y.M. C.A. at 135 Madison Avenue, Elizabeth, ITHACA fr'NEW YORK N.J. '31 LLB—Mr. and Mrs. Henry Louis Morgan of Syracuse, N. Y., have an- nounced the engagement of their daugh- ter, Virginia Ward, to Harley A. Lanning '31. Miss Morgan graduated from Syra- cuse in 192.8. The wedding will take place late this summer. Lanning is with the law firm of Van Duser and Liebschutz in Rochester. '31 MS—Gladys A. Malin is farming in Simms, Mont. '31 AB—Benjamin Hertzberg has been attending the Harvard Graduate School of Business Administration. He is now living at 2.62. Central Park West, New York. Popular day and night flyers on dependable schedules with '31 AB—Mary V. North is teaching in singular Lackawanna equipment, sun-parlor-observation cars, in- dividual seat coaches, buffet lounge cars and drawing room sleepers. Endicott, N. Y. She lives at xx4 Lincoln Daily Service—Standard Time Avenue. Her permanent address is VL ITHACA to NEW YORK NEW YORK to ITHACA Lv. 10.05 p.m.—12.25 p.m. 5 Lv. 8.30 p.m.—10.00 a.m. Park Avenue, Perry, N. Y. Ar. 5.30 a.m.— 7.12 p.m. Ar.L6.55 a.m.— 4.50 p.m. '31 PhD—Fred T. Mitchell is associate Through parlor car service in 12.25 p.m. train Ithaca to professor of education and director of New York, Monday, June 20th For tickets, reservations, etc., apply to J. L. Homer, Asst. General student teaching in arts and sciences at Passenger Agent, 500 Fifth Avenue, New York or C. F. Feltham, Divi- sion Passenger Agent, 856 Broad St., Newark, N. J. the Michigan State College. HARRY B. COOK, CityJPassenger Agent '31 AB—Bernard Le Witt is assistant 222 East State Street Ithaca, New York manager of the Plainville, Conn., Strand Theatre. He lives at 71 Russell Street, New Britain, Conn. LACKAWANNA '31 AB—Mr. and Mrs. C. Royal Johnson have just announced the mar- riage of their daughter, Thelma A. Johnson '31, to Harold E. Jones, on November 7, 1930. Mr. and Mrs. Jones are living at 315 College Avenue. He is proprietor of the Radio Den on South Aurora Street. '31 AB—Lenore M. Tobias is private secretary to Al Boasberg, a writer for the movies and radio. She lives at 374 Norwood Avenue, West End, N. J. '31 AB—Jeanne M. Harris is working CORNELL MEN in Scranton, Pa., and living at 82.9 Mad- ison Avenue. P. Antonelli Ί9 '31 BS—Evelyn N. Fineman is student supervisor at Macy's new restaurant in G. W. Bacon '92 New York. She lives in Sunnyside, N. Y. G. H. Davis .... '92 MAILING ADDRESSES U. S. Nagler....Ί8 '95—Bernhard Hoffman, Room xoo8, H. V. Oberg '29 60 East Forty-second Street, New York. '04—Olin Derr, Comlear Bay Club, H. E. Roberts Ί8-f 19 Keeseville, N. Y. '05—Henry E. Paine, Box 831, Blaine, W. N. Rodger . . '27 Wash. Edgar A. Rogers '22 Ό-j—Charles F. MagofBn, 680 Lafay- ette Avenue, Buffalo. H. R. Sherman . . '22 '08—Mary Rebecca Thayer, Oakland, W. M. White ... '08 Md. '09—Lawrence Bennett, R.D. 43, Box 115, Nor walk, Conn. Ίi—J. Franklin Bradley, 12.2.5 Garvin Place, Louisville, Ky. '12.—Edward L. Bernays, 1 Wall Street, New York.—Alfred J. Doyle, 338 East Twenty-sixth Street, Brooklyn. THE CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS 415

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CORNELL SOCIETY BARNES HALL ITHACA, N.Y. 416 THE CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS

'13—Charles Weiss, 706 North Wash- ington Street, Valparaiso, Ind. PROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY '2.3—Harry L. Brittain, 1Z9 West Patrick Street, Frederick, Md.—Robert */CORNELL ALUMNI H. Carpenter, 833 Glencoe Avenue, Highland Park, 111.—John D. Lyons, Jr., iozz Mountain Avenue, Tucson, Ariz.— Herman F. Spahn, 19 William Street, Mount Vernon, N. Y.—Thomas Telfer, NEW YORK CITY BALTIMORE, MD. Claremont Country Club, Oakland, Calif. MARTIN H. OFFINGER, E.E. '99 WHITMAN, REQUARDT & SMITH '2.4—Abraham E. Gold, 300 Press Building, Binghamton, N. Y. Treasurer and Manager Water Supply, Sewerage, Structural 'Z5—Henry J. Angelbeck, 318 High- Van Wagoner-Linn Construction Co. Valuations of Public Utilities, Reports, land Avenue, Upper Montclair, N. J.— Electric Construction Plans, and General Consulting Practice. Harold F. Kneen, Box 683, care of Lincoln 143 East 17th Street Ezra B. Whitman, C.E. '01 Electric Company, Cleveland.—Robert Phone Lexington 52.17 G. J. Requardt, C.E. '09 P. Mason, Sunnyside, 45-36 Thirty-ninth B. L. Smith, C.E. '14 Place, Long Island City, N. Y. REAL ESTATE & INSURANCE Baltimore Trust Building 'z6—Norman H. McLain, Apartment Leasing, Selling, and Mortgage Loans ITHACA, N. Y. 1, 385 Morris Street, Albany, N. Y.— BAUMEISTER AND BAUMEISTER Edgar W. Van Voris, care of P. C. Dugan 5ZZ Fifth Ave. GEORGE S. TARBELL Ph.B. '91—LL.B. '94 Farms, Altamont, N. Y.—Harwood Phone Murray Hill 2.-3816 Warriner, 316 Forest Drive, Cedar Rapids, Ithaca Trust Building Charles Baumeister Ί8, 'zo Iowa. Attorney and Counselor at Law Philip Baumeister, Columbia '14 '2.7—Bernard Aronson, 1016 Fifth Ithaca Real Estate Rented, Sold, Managed Fred Baumeister, Columbia '14 Avenue, New York.—Samuel C. Osborne, P. W. WOOD & SON 300 East zioth Street, Euclid Village, Delaware Registration and P. O. Wood '08 Ohio.—Francis P. Roberts, ZZ53 Mount Incorporators Company View Place, S. E., Washington.—Mrs. Insurance Inquiries as to Delaware Corporation Frank T. Schumann (May F. Moyer), 136 Registrations have the personal attention 316-318 Savings Bank Bldg. Main Street, Quakertown, Pa.—Philip at New York office of S. Van Blarcom, 30 Filbert Street, Forty KENOSHA, WIS. Fort, Pa.—Robert F. Weichsel, 4Z05 JOHN T. McGOVERN Όo, President MACWHYTE COMPANY Lakeside Drive, Dallas, Texas. izz E. 42-nd Street Phone 9867 '2.8—Israel Gerberg, 17x4 East Eight- Manufacturers Wire and Wire Rope eenth Street, Brooklyn.—H. Victor E. H. FAILE & CO. Streamline and Round Tie Rods Grohmann, Pine Terrace, Demarest, N. J. for Airplanes Engineers —Frederick C. Wood, 772.8 North Ash- Jessel S. Whyte, M.E. '13, Vice-President Industrial buildings designed land Avenue, Chicago.—Thomas P. R. B. Whyte, M.E. '13, Gen. Supt. Heating, Ventilating,Electrical equipment Wyman, Jr., 1Z34 North State Street, Chicago. Industrial power plants TULSA, OKLAHOMA Construction management '2.9—Edward C. Collins, Z05 Wall HERBERT D. MASON, LL.B.Όo Street, Bethlehem, Pa.—Thane R. Hal- E. H. FAILE, M.E. '06 Attorney and Counselor at Law stead, Room 1549, 10 South La Salle 441 Lexington Ave., Tel. Murray Hill 773 6 18th Floor, Philtower Building Street, Chicago.—H. Malcolm Hay, East Brady, Pa.—William W. Keefer, Jr., MASON, WILLIAMS & LYNCH THE BALLOU PRESS 106 South East Street, Coudersport, Pa.— CHAS. A. BALLOU, JR. '2.1 WASHINGTON, D. C. John H. Priedeman, Z052. East Ninetieth street, Cleveland.—Mrs. Ksenia P. Printers to Lawyers THEODORE K. BRYANT '97, '98 Beetem(Ksenia A. Proskouriakoff), Trot- 69 Beekman St. Tel. Beekman 8785 Master Patent Law, G. W. U. '08 ter Apartments, Maryville, Tenn.— Patents and Trade Marks Exclusively Clyde A. Reynolds, care of W. H. Hart, 309-314 Victor Building R.F.D. z, Poughkeepsie, N. Y. FRANK S BACHE Inc '30—Robert E. Alexander, Z34 BETTER BUILDING Marguerita Lane, Pasadena, Calif.—Ida Construction Work of Every Description E. Auch, 19 Bowers Road, Caldwell, N. in Westchester County and Lower J.—Everςtt E. Burdge, 40 Lake Avenue, 1715 G Street, N. W. Connecticut Red Bank, N. J.—Roland E. Davis, }/2 block west State War and Navy Bldg. F. S. BACHE '13 Wequetonsing Hotel, Wequetonsing, 94 Lake Street White Plains, N. Y. BREAKFAST, LUNCHEON & DINNER Mich.—Robert W. Waring, care of M. RUTH CLEVES JUSTUS Ί6 W. Kellogg Company, Danforth Avenue, F. L. CARLISLE & CO. INC. Jersey City, N. J. WESTCHESTER COUNTY '31—Charles A. Brown, 817 West 15 BROAD STREET Apartments Business Properties Anglaize Street, Wapakoneta, Ohio.—H. NEW YORK Country Homes Chain Store Locations Glenn Herb, Apartment 603, 8945 Agnes Avenue, Detroit.—Sally L. Mende, ostenberd WALTER S. WING '07 RLβaltij Co.Inc. O Bloomingdale Hospital, White Plains, N. Y —Mary G. Staebell, Akron, N. Y. 60 E. L. O. ROSTENBERG, A.B. 'z6 Pres. —Edna A. Stephany, 4 Tread well Avenue, 13 Orawaupum St. White Plains, N. Y. 42nd Lynbrook, Long Island, N. Y. St. Tel. White Plains 802.0-8011 '3Z—Clayton D. Root, Jr., Crown Member Westchester County Realty Board N.Y.C. and Real Estate Board at New York Point, Ind. Pamous Bascom Hall, located on the crest of "The Hill," at the University of Wisconsin in Madison BUICK PREFERRED BY THE ALUMNI OF WISCONSIN

Buick invariably leads whenever any group of field for Buick reliability performance notable men are checked with reference to car and dependability. ownership in Buick's price class. If you have not yet become a Buick owner, may Consider, for example, the alumni of Wisconsin. we suggest that you visit your local Buick dealer Impartial figures, recently arrived at, show that and see the big, roomy, luxurious Buick Eights 21 per cent of all the readers of the Wisconsin on display there. Alumni Magazine own Buicks . . . that the second There are 26 models from which to select the car car comparable to Buick in price has a showing best suited to your own and your family's require- of only 8V2 per cent . . . that Buick tops even the ments. The prices range from $935 to $2055, lowest priced car! f. o. b. Flint, Michigan. These impressive figures* substantiate Buick's record among the alumni of all colleges and uni- * The Graduate Group, Inc., certifies the accuracy of these facts about versities, and add greater emphasis to the nation- the ownership of Buicks by graduates of Wisconsin and other colleges wide preference among all motorists in Buick's and universities.

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