VOL. XXXIII No. ΊΛ. [PRICE TWELVE CENTS] MARCH 19, 1931

CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS

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Dr. Eugene F. Bradford, Director of Admissions, Appointed Registrar Also

Lehigh Wrestlers Win Intercollegi- ate Championships—Cornell Places Second

Cornell Defeats Yale in I ndoor Meet —Basketball Team Wins From Dartmouth

'Πflftffnnnτnnmftmnn Lehigh Valley Train Service CORNELL SPRING RECESS TO

NEW YORK CAMP OTTER For Boys In the Woods of Ontario 2.2.nd Season R. C. HϋBBARD '24, Director 205 Ithaca Road, Ithaca, N. Y. E. B. WHITE, '21, Assistant 116 East 8th Street, N.Y.

R. A. HEGGIE & BRO. CO. (Pennsylvania Station—Convenient to all Parts of City) Special Trains—Friday, March 27th Fraternity Lv. Ithaca *12:30 Noon... *4:00 P.M **ll:00 P.M. Ar. Newark 6:55JP.M 10:15 P.M 6:41 A.M. Ar. New YorkΊ(Penn. Sta.). . 7:25 P.M 10:45 P.M 7:15»A.M. Jewelers "Parlor , Coaches and Dining . **Club Car, Sleeping Cars and Coaches, ready for occupancy at 9 P.M. Special Sleeping Cars for Ladies.

Special Train—Saturday, March 28th ITHACA NEW YORK Lv. Ithaca 12:30 P.M. Ar. Newark 6:55 P.M. Ar. New York (Penn. Sta.) 7:25 P.M. Parlor Cars, Dining Car, Coaches. Lehigh Valley trains take you to the heart of New York. PENNSYLVANIA STATION, convenient to all parts of the City. To Philadelphia, Baltimore & Washington SHELDON COURT Special Trains Private Dormitory Friday Saturday For Men Students at Cornell March 27th March 28th Lv. Ithaca 12:30 P.M .12:30 P.M. Rentals $200 to $250 for the Ar. Philadelphia (Rdg. Terml.) 7:49 P.M 7:49 P.M. College Year Ar. Baltimore (Mt. Royal B.&O.) 10:04 P.M 10:04 P.M. Ar. Washington (B.&O.) 11:05 P.M 11:05 P.M. Write for Catalogue and Diagram of Available Rooms for College Parlor Cars, Dining Car and Coaches. Year 1931-32. SPECIAL TRAINS FROM NEW YORK Sunday, April 5th A. R. CONGDON, MGR. Ithaca, N. Y. Lv. New York (Penn. Sta.).. . *4:15 P.M *11:25 P.M.. **11:55 P.M. Lv. Newark 4:40 P.M 11:50 P.M Ar. Ithaca 10:59 P.M 7:00 A.M 7:10 A.M. *Parlor Cars, Dining Car and Coaches. **Club Car, Sleeping Cars and Coaches. Special Sleeping Cars for Ladies. From Washington, Baltimore & Philadelphia Special Train—Sunday, April 5th EMIL A. KOHM Lv. Washington (B.&.O.) 7:00 P.M. Successor to Lv. Baltimore (Gamden Sta. B.&.O.) 7:49 P.M. Lv. Philadelphia (Reading Terminal) 11:00 P.M. KOHM AND BRUNNE Ar. Ithaca 7:00 A.M. Tailors for Cornellians Through sleepers from Washington, Baltimore and Philadelphia to Ithaca. Open for occupancy at Philadelphia, 10:00 P.M. Everywhere Additional Special Trains to Rochester, Buffalo and . Also convenient regular service to all points. See special folder for EAST STATE ST. ITHACA details. Prompt reservation of Pullman accomodations suggested. Phone City Ticket Office 2306-7, or station, 2697. ALFRED KITTLER Division Passenger Agent "ITHACA" ENGRAVING G* Lehigh Yiillo%v Railroad The Route of the Diamond Librae Building 123 N.Tio^a Street

Subscription price $4 per year. Entered as second class matter, Ithaca, N.Y. Published weekly during the college year and monthly in July and August POSTMASTER: Return postage guaranteed. Use form 3578 for undeliverable copies. CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS

VOL. XXXIII No. ΊΛ. ITHACA, NEW YORK, MARCH 19, 1931 PRICE 12. CENTS

Housing Aims Explained principle, the Board has deferred making State Aids Colleges available specific plots for the two fra- ternities and has proposed a further Trustees' Attitude Not Hostile to Fraternities, More than $z ooo ooo Appropriated for Work study of all the land neccessary for the y y —Vice-Chairman Answers Sun in Colleges of Agriculture and Home consummation of the broader plan. Criticism Economics Mr. White's letter follows: The attitude of the Board of Trustees '' I have read the editorial in The Sun New York State will provide more toward fraternities, questioned editorial- of February 18, entitled 'Glimpses into than $1,000,000 this year for the sup- ly by The Cornell Daily Sun after publi- the Future,' commenting upon the recent port of two colleges of the University, cation of a report on housing plans for action of the Board of Trustees of the according to Dean Albert R. Mann '04. men students, has been clarified by J. Du University in connection with housing The College of Agriculture funds will Pratt White '90, vice-chairman of the of men students. total more than $1,750,000; those of Board, in a letter to the Sun. "The Sun seems to have misunder- College of Home Economics $300,000. Referring to an editorial published stood somewhat the intention of the Board The 1931 State budget provides $500,- February 28 and captioned, "Glimpses so far as the matter concerns the frater- 000 for the erection of a new building to into the Future," Mr. White's letter nities, and if that misunderstanding pre- house the Departments of Agricultural states that The Sun '' seems to have mis- vails generally in the undergraduate Economics, Farm Management, and understood somewhat the intention of body, I think it is unfortunate. Rural Social Organization. Last year an the Board so far as the matter [of housing] "There is nothing in the attitude of appropriation of $100,000 was made concerns the fraternities. . . There is the Committee, and, so far as I know,in available for the construction of the nothing in the attitude of the Committee the attitude of the Board in the slightest foundation for this building. and, so far as I know, in the attitude of degree hostile to the fraternities, nor the Board in the slightest degree hostile was there any intention in the Com- A special appropriation of $985,000 is to the fraternities, nor was there any in- mittee's report to convey any such also made available for the construction tention in the Committee's report to con- thought of hostility. of a new building for the College of Home Economics, and bids will be vey any such thought of hostility." "Quite the contrary, I believe, pre- opened in April. An appropriation of The Board, after receiving a report vails in the mind of every member of the $100,000 made last year will become from a special committee concerning the Board. My own view is, and so far as I available for the construction of new offer of Psi Upsilon and Sigma Phi to in- know it is shared by every member of barns and for small buildings at an ex- corporate units for their memberships in the Committee and of the Board, that the perimentation farm operated by the the dormitory system, decided that the fraternities should be encouraged and College of Agriculture on Long Island. organized housing of all men students fostered. at the University, both fraternity and "The use of the phrase Organized The net increase for personal services non-fraternity, is an ideal toward which housing' in the committee's report was in the College of Agriculture has been the University should strive. intended to refer to facilities offered to placed at $85,900. Of this increase, The Sun, commenting editorially, students and the proper maintenance and $60,100 will go to the University for said: "It means that the administration operation of such facilities, rather than accessory instruction furnished State has definitely committed itself to a policy to the social side of the students' lives. College students in the endowed colleges. that within a comparatively short time "Furthermore, so far as the studies The operating fund has been increased will revolutionize the housing arrange- have now progressed, I have seen no evi- by $30,465, not including two special ments at Cornell University. dence of any thought to force on the appropriations, one of $76,000 for the "The development is one that frater- students the use of such facilities, but further development of soil classification nities cannot afford to overlook. It means rather an invitation, which might be and utilization studies and another of that unless they keep an eye to windward availed of by the fraternities as units and $6O,OQD for the purchase of a foundation they will possess their houses with no by non-fraternity students as individuals, of livestock for the Department of Ani- students to fill them. Those fraternities to join in well considered groupings that mal Husbandry. who are now building or who plan to eventually might care for the whole The item for personal services for the build in the near future will do well to student body in locations convenient to College of Home Economics has been in- put in sleeping quarters which can be its work and in structures safe, sanitary, creased $54,570, of which $43,000 will readily converted to other uses as the comfortable, and pleasant. go to the University. The rest of the fund University calls into the dormitories an "It would be unfortunate if the will pay salary increases and provide increasing number of men. . . thought got abroad that the Board was new staff positions. General operating "The fraternities will be chary of a viewing with an unfavorable eye the op- expenses have been provided for to the plan that means their eventual ruin, but portunity offered by the fraternities extent of an increase of $8,560. that has nothing to offer them in the through self-selection of their members An item of $10,500 has also been in- meantime if they announce their willing- and through the influence of their tradi- cluded in the budget for making perma- ness to cooperate." tions and pride and standing, to make nent the unit in parent education which The Board failed to take action on the undergraduate life at Cornell well ordered for the past six years has been supported proposal of Psi Upsilon and Sigma Phi. and profitable and congenial." by special grants from the Laura Spell- Although it has accepted such a plan in Yours sincerely, J. Du PRATT WHITE '90. man Rockefeller Memorial Foundation. THE CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS

Lorenzo of Penn State, the second time inches of Schoenfeld's toss of the weight ATHLETICS he lost to the Pennsylvanian this year. for second place. Clark of Columbia, the eventual Cornell captured seven first places. champion, eliminated Roess on a deci- The freshman mile relay team scored a sion. Penny defeated Billings of Princeton WRESTLERS SECOND IN CHAMPIONSHIPS decisive victory *over the Colgate year- and Lundin threw Pearce of Penn State ling quartet. The wrestling team lost the champion- with a body and bar hold in 6:2.9. FIELD EVENTS ship of the Eastern Intercollegiate The summaries: 35-pound weight throw: won by Schoenfeld, Wrestling Association to Lehigh at New Cornell, 49 feet 8 J4 inches; second, Ellis, 118-pound class: Bigwood, Yale, defeated Cornell, 49 feet 5 }/$ inches; third, McElwain, Haven March 13 and 14. Lehigh, cham- Finkelman, Pennsylvania, decision. Time ad- Yale, 45 feet 1 3^ inches. pion in 19x8 and 192.9, won with 30 vantage, 4:52.. 16-pound shot put: won by Schoenfeld, 12.6-pound class: Beyland, Cornell, threw points and captured three individual Cornell, 46 feet 9 % inches; second, Uihlein, Engle, Lehigh, half-nelson and bar hold. titles. Yale, 41 feet 4% inches; third, Gordon, Cornell Time, 1:33 (first overtime period). 41 feet 10% inches. Cornell was second with τx points, 135-pound class: Shaw, Lehigh, threw Running broad jump: won by Williams, Relyea, Columbia, half-nelson and body hold. with Beyland and Penny winning' the Cornell, 2.2. feet 4 % inches; second, Burns, Time, 5 \γ-. final bouts in the 12.6-pound and 175- Cornell, 1.2. feet 3 % inches; third, Richardson, pound classes. 145-pound class: Seal, Lehigh, threw Loren- Yale, 2.O feet 11 ^ inches. zo, Penn State, inside crotch and head hold. Running high jump: won by Ebelhare Cor- Columbia, with one individual cham- Time, 1:11. nell, 5 feet 10 % inches; second, tie among pion, placed third with 14 points. Yale, 155-pound class: Clark, Columbia, defeated Haidt and Hoppenstedt, Cornell, and Craw- winning two titles, was fourth with 13, Reynolds, Syracuse, decision. Time advantage, ford and Richardson, Yale, 5 feet 9 inches. 1:38. Poel vault:won by Colyer, Cornell, 13 feet; Syracuse fifth with 11, Pennsylvania 165-pound class: Peck, Lehigh, threw second, tie among Belloff, Cornell, and Lee, sixth with 6, Penn State seventh with 5, Hooker, Princeton, bar and chancery hold. Morton, and Squires, Yale, 12. feet 6 inches. and Princeton eighth with 4. Time, f.sfi (second overtime period). 175-pound class: Penny, Cornell, threw Beyland reversed an earlier decision in TRACK EVENTS Shanker, Lehigh, cradle hold. Time, 9:42.. 75-yard dash: won by MacDonald, Yale; his final round match with Captain Heavyweight class: Rotan, Yale, defeated second, Boyd, Yale; third, Meinig, Cornell. Engle of Lehigh, throwing him with a Lundin, Cornell, decision. Time advantage, Time, 0:07 y$. 6:30. half-nelson and bar hold in 1:33 of the 440-yard dash: won by Talcott, Yale; second first overtime period. In the Cornell- TRACK TEAM DEFEATS YALE Ingham, Yale; third, Proctor, Cornell. Time, Lehigh dual meet at Ithaca earlier in the The track team, strong in the distance 0:52. Vs season, Engle won on a time advantage. 880-yard run: won by Sumner, Yale; second, runs and field events, defeated Yale, 61 Eckert, Cornell; third, Mangan, Cornell. Penny finished the season undefeated, to 5Z, in their eighth annual indoor Time, 2.:o2.. and in the final round threw Shanker of track meet in the Drill Hall March 14. Mile run: won by Martin, Cornell; second, Lehigh, a man he had defeated in the It was Cornell's sixth victory in the series Finch, Cornell; third, Mulligan, Cornell. Time, 4:2.4 Y$ (new dual meet record, bettering dual meet by a time advantage. Penny Martin, Cornell miler, turned in the 4:32. yί by Smith, Yale, 19^7, and new Drill scored the fall in the final minute of the most brilliant performance, stepping the Hall record, bettering 4:2.6 % by Jung, Michi- bout, pinning Shanker with a cradle distance in 4:2.4^5 for a new dual meet gan, 19x6). hold in 9:2.4. and Drill Hall record. He led two team- Two-mile run: won by Ranney, Cornell; second, Crosby, Cornell; third, Kellogg, Cor- Cornell's other finalist, Lundin, heavy- mates to the tape by 150 yards. Cornell nell. Time, 9:41 y$. weight, lost to Rotan of Yale, the also swept the two-mile run, with Mile relay: won by Yale (Beardsley, Smith, runner-up last year, by a time advantage Ranney finishing xoo yards ahead and Ingham, Talcott); second, Cornell(Proctor, of 6:36. In the bout for second place, coming within four seconds of the dual Hauserman, Rosenthal, Corlett). Time, 3136 yζ 75-yard high hurdles: won by DeVoe, Yale; Lundin lost for the third time in two year meet record. second, Brereton, Yale; third, Hart, Cornell. to Hirshberg of Lehigh. The winners in all the events won Time, 0:09 y$. Cornell went into the final round with easily, Yale showing its greatest strength 75-yard low hurdles: won by Fates, Yale; in the dash, hurdles, and middle distances second, Wright, Yale; third, Hart, Cornell. a lead in points scored by falls in the pre- Time, 0:08 y . liminary and semifinal rounds, but Le- The meet lacked the excitement of close s high placed five men, three of them finishes. Cornell clinched the victory DARTMOUTH BEATEN eventually winning titles. when Colyer won the pole vault at 13 The basketball team finished its season by defeating Dartmouth, 19 to 2.7, Six of Cornell's eight entries won feet. Yale captured the relay when Cor- in an Eastern Intercollegiate Basketball their first round matches. nell's first runner, Proctor, dropped his baton. League game at Hanover March 14. The Raycraft was thrown by Stout of Colyer tried for a new dual meet victory gave Cornell fourth place with Princeton in the 118-pound class. Bey- record of 13 feet 8 inches, the mark he four victories and six defeats. Last year land advanced to the semi-final round by cleared to share with Berlinger of Penn- Cornell finished in sixth place with default of Schantz of Pennsylvaniz. sylvania the championship of the I.C.A. three victories and seven defeats. Butterworth, 135-pound entry, elimi- A.A.A., but failed. Columbia won the champiohsnip of nated Barry of Syracuse in a close bout, Martin's performance in the mile was the league for the second consecutive and Captain Lipschitz scored a decision outstanding. French of Yale set the pace year, finishing the ten-game season un- over Kinseler of Columbia. for the first two laps, but Martin took defeated. The standing of the teams: In the 155-pound class, Roess scored a command at the start of the third lap W L close decision over Rauch of Lehigh. and gradually drew away from the field. Columbia 10 o Hessney, Cornell 165-pounder, was He covered the half mile in 2.:n. Yale 6 4 thrown by Hooker of Princeton. Penny Ranney likewise had little trouble in Dartmouth 6 4 started by throwing Boyd of Pennsyl- the two-mile run, although Bryan of Cornell 4 6 vania, and Lundin also scored a fall, Yale remained a step behind throughout Pennsylvania 3 7 pinning Smith of Syracuse. the first mile. Ranney's pace was so fast, Princeton 1 9 In the semi-finals, Beyland added a however, that Bryan was unable to Against Dartmouth, Cornell, trailing point by throwing Amster of Columbia finish, and Crosby and Kellogg ran into by one point, 14 to 13, at the end of the with a half-nelson and bar lock in 61x5, second and third places in the final laps. first half, staged a rally at the start of but Butterworth was beaten by Shaw of Schoenfeld of Cornell led in individual the final period and quickly ran up a lead, Lehigh, the eventual winner, on a de- scoring by winning the weight throw with Lipinski, HatkofFj and Schreuder cision. Captain Lipschitz was thrown by and the shot put. Ellis came within four starring in the attack. THE CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS 163

With a six-point lead, with only a few WRAY SIGNS FOR FIVE YEARS keepsie. The freshmen placed second to minutes left to play, Cornell coasted in, James Wray's contract as rowing Yale with Princeton third, defeated Dartmouth scoring on a long shot by coach has been extended five years to in- Syracuse, and placed second at Pough- Myllykangas and Magee and Picken clude the 1935 season. keepsie. registering fouls to come within two points of tying the score. Wray, one-time- Harvard coach and former single sculls champion of Aus- The line-ups: tralia, came to Cornell in the fall of JUST LOOKING Cornell (19) 19x6. A year later, his one-year contract AROUND G F P was extended three years. Lipinski, If 419 Zahn, If o 1 1 Since he took charge of rowing, Wray has turned out better crews each year, HE WETS," we read, "are governed Hatkoff, rf 4 2. 10 by their appetites." Schreuder, c 2. 2. 6 and in 1930, Cornell regained its suprem- T Donovan, lg 000 acy in intercollegiate circles by winning Then we all shudder. It must be Murphy, rg o 3 3 the varsity and junior varsity races at dreadful to be governed by one's appetite. Poughkeepsie and placing second in the To be sure, all over the continent of Torals 10 9 2.9 freshman event. Europe you say to your friend who enters the dining room, "Bon appetit, buon Dartmouth Wray began his coaching career at Harvard in 1906, continuing until 1915. appetito, guten Appetit." You deliber- G F ately wish that he may be governed by 2. 1 During that time, Harvard varsity crews Magee, If his appetite, and the lustier the appetite McCall, If 1 1 won eight races from their major rival, Burch, If 0 Yale, but in competition with Cornell the better. Smart, rf crews coached by the late Charles E. Whereas around here the only thing Myllykangas, rf Courtney, the Crimson won only two custom prescribes as a pre-dinner cere- Biesel, rf major races. mony is a moment of prayer. Mackey, c Even the drinkers refer to their pota- Prince, c After leaving Harvard Wray continued to coach boat clubs. He came to Cornell tions as Healths. Zimmerman, c On the Continent, then, you feel safe Picken, lg from the Arundel Club of Baltimore. in assuming that the dinner will be a Kramer, rg The record of Cornell's crews coached Britten, rg good one. Your only concern is lest the by Wray: eater have not the appetite to do it In 192.7, the varsity placed third to Totals 11 5 2.7 justice. Yale and Princeton, lost to Harvard, and But to him who is about to consume FENCERS WIN AND LOSE placed fifth at Poughkeepsie. The junior an American dinner we can only say Princeton fencers defeated Cornell and varsity placed second to Yale, with "Good luck;" "Good health;" or pray. Hamilton in a triangular meet at Clinton Princeton third, and finished fifth and The verb " to dine" has become stilted, March 14. Cornell defeated Hamilton, last at Poughkeepsie. The freshmen nearly archaic. We draw rio line between 10 to 7, in the other competition. The placed third to Princeton and Yale, de- "essen" and "fressen." "'When do we scores of the other matches were: Prince-' feated Harvard, and placed fourth at eat?" is our national cry. ton 11, Hamilton 5, and Princeton 11, Poughkeepsie. The dining car is our culinary heaven. Cornell 6. In 19x8, the varsity placed second tQ Something to look at besides the food, a In the Princeton match, Cornell won Harvard with M.I.T. third, placed loud vibration to keep the gastric juices only two of the nine foils matches, second to Yale with Princeton third, de- aslosh, and bituminous coal dust for Gravino and Scileppi each taking one feated Syracuse, and placed fourth at pepper. Our horror of appetite is part of bout. Berumen and Jose Martinez- Poughkeepsie. The junior varsity de- our ascetic tradition. Whatever we want Zorrilla each won one bout with both feated Harvard and M.I.T., placed second very much must be bad for us. epee and saber for Cornell's other four to Yale with Princeton third, defeated Wets, are you governed by your appe- points. Syracuse, and placed second at Pough- tites? Bon appetit, buon appetito, guten In the Hamilton match, Cornell won keepsie. The freshmen placed second to Appetit. six of the foils matches, lost the saber Harvard with M.I.T. third, finished Better be governed by appetite than third to Princeton and Yale, defeated bile. RUNDSCHAUER bouts, 3 to 1, and captured the epee Syracuse, and placed second at Pough- division bouts, 3 to 1, with Martinez- keepsie. Zorrilla winning two bouts. IN SCIENCE for February 13 Professor In 192.9, the varsity defeated M.I.T. William A. Riley, Ph.D. '03, of the Uni- and Harvard, placed second to Yale with POLO TEAM WINS versity of Minnesota writes on "Some Princeton third, defeated Syracuse, and Prese/it-Day Problems of Zoology Teach- The R.O.T.C. Polo and Riding Club failed to finish when the shell cracked in ing." It was his address as vice-president team defeated the West Point officers in the Poughkeepsie race. The junior varsity and chairman of Section F of the A. A. an indoor polo game, 7 to 6, at West placed third to Harvard and M.I.T., A. S. at Cleveland on December 31. Dr. Point March 14. It was Cornell's second placed third to Yale and Princeton, de- Leland O. Howard '77, A History of victory in elimination games for the feated Syracuse, and won the Pough- Applied Entomology (Somewhat Anec- Class D indoor polo championship. keepsie event. The freshmen defeated dotal) is reviewed _by Thomas D. A. Cornell started by scoring three goals Harvard, won from Yale and Princeton, Cockerell. In the issue for February zo is in the first chukker, but in the second defeated Syracuse, and placed second at printed the address on "A Botanical period the officers tied the score at 6-all. Poughkeepsie. Problem" delivered at Cleveland Decem- Cornell scored the winning goal in an Last year the varsity placed second to ber 31 by Professor Margaret C. Ferguson overtime period. Yale with Princeton third, defeated '99, Ph.D. '01, of Wellesley as retiring Captain Graydon, back, led the Cornell Syracuse and Harvard, and won the president of the Botanical Society of attack with four goals, Baldwin, No. 1, Poughkeepsie four-mile race. The junior America. Dr. Vernon L. Kellogg, '91-1 getting two, and Hertz, No. x, one. varsity placed third behind Yale and Grad., permanent secretary of the Lieutenant Conrad, West Point back, Princeton, defeated Harvard and Syra- National Research Council, writes on scored five of his team's six goals. cuse, and captured first place at Pough- "Herbert Hoover and Science." THE CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS

The women sit before their crude looms and weave beautiful blankets, evolving BOOKS the pattern from their thought as they OBITUARIES

I:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: weave. They are said to do the most beautiful weaving anywhere in the world A GREAT TRIBE outside of southern Asia. EDWIN F. CHURCH '76 The Navajo Indians. By Dane Coolidge The book is rich in the ancient legends, Edwin Fayette Church died in Charles- and Mary Roberts Coolidge '80. Boston. songs, and religious ceremonies of the ton, S. C, on February 10, of Bright's Houghton Mifflin Co. 1930.1.2..6 cm., pp. tribe. Their chants, dances, and elaborate Disease. He was born in Bath, N. Y., on x, 316. X9 illustrations. Price, $4. rituals designed to propitiate the gods January 4,1855. He received the degree of The Navajos are probably the most and scare away devils, to ask for rain and B.M.E. He was a member of the Mechan- interesting as well as the largest and most good crops, medical treatment of all ail- ical Engineering Association and the virile tribe of Indians in this country. ments from bad dreams to paralysis, are Orchestra. After some years as a mechan- Of very particular interest, therefore, to all so complicated and strange and yet so ical engineer, he was until his retirement the student of ethnology, history,, and full of weird beauty that white people in 1906 engaged in the wall paper business Indian lore and to the traveler in the seldom acquire a comprehension of them, in Elmira. His wife, Mrs. Alberta Burling Southwest is Mr. and Mrs. Coolidge's but at the skill and power of Church, and a son, E. Fayette Church, new book. memory that have made possible their Jr., survive him. The story of the Navajos' origin and retention by the tribe generation after early history shows a once powerful generation. One shaman studied six years BENJAMIN S. COTTRELL '97 people reduced by hardship and conflict before he was considered competent to Benjamin Stanton Cottrell, general with neighboring tribes to a small conduct his first ceremony; even then he manager of the humidifying department remnant which fled for refuge to the was not perfect. of the Parks-Cramer Company, died in Jamestown, R. I., on September 2.4, of Canyon de Chelly in Arizona. There, for A careful study of the health, educa- nephritis. He was born in Jamestown on a century, they increased in numbers and tion, and progress of the Navajos, espec- the son power. ially regarding the influences of the ever- September 15, 1873, of Frederick N. and Ellen Tucker Cottrell. He received The long story of Government control, changing Government policies and the degree of M.E. and was a member of of their confinement to a reservation of agencies, is, until very recent years, a Alpha Tau Omega. He served for several land as barren and impossible of cultiva- most disheartening story. But at last years as Representative from Jamestown tion, or of offering subsistence of any there seems to be on the part of Father kind, as can be found anywhere in the Washington a beginning of real under- in the Rhode Island House of Repre- United States; of inefficiency, stupidity, standing of the needs of the people and sentatives. His wife, Mrs. Agnes Hey- and worse, on the part of the Indian some efficiency in satisfying them. wood Cottrell, survives him. bureaus and the like in Washington; of BOOKS AND MAGAZINE ARTICLES WILLIAM G. GORDON '99 struggle, of almost starvation at times, In The Botanical Gazette for December William Gordon Gordon, since 1913 and yet of patient effort on the part of the Homer C. Thompson, Premature Seeding associated with the Canadian General Indian much of the time to adapt himself of Celery and Julian C. Miller, M.S. '2.6, Electric Company, Ltd., died on May 13 to the demands of the White Man; all A Study of Some Factors Affecting Seed- in Toronto, of pneumonia, at the age of this informing and deeply interesting Stalk Development in Cabbage are re- fifty-two. He received the degree of M.E. story produces the impression of a people viewed by Charles A. Shull. altogether unlike the ordinary conception He was a member of Kappa Sigma and In The Journal of Modern History for a University Scholar. of the American Indian. "The Navajos March F. J. C. Hearnshaw, editor, The have, to an exceptional degree, the Social and Political Ideas of Some Great MRS. VICTORIA JONAS CONLON 'X6 qualities required for survival—courage French Thinkers of the Age of Reason is Victoria H. Jonas (Mrs. Lawrence H.) and hardihood from ages of nomadic reviewed by Professor Carl Becker. Conlon died on December 30, 192.9, in warrior ancestors; humour among them- In Current History for March Dr. Towanda, Pa., of septicemia. She was selves and tolerance toward the vagaries Charles A. Beard, '99-Ό0 Grad., writes born in Leigh, Nebr., on December 30, of white people; a rare appreciation of on "Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes." 1903, the daughter of Thomas and Emilie beauty expressed in chants, sand-paint- Professor Guerlac, as usual, writes on Brook Jonas. She received the degree of ings and handicraft. They readily adapt events in France and Belgium and Pro- B.S. and was a member of Phi Kappa themselves to new situations if they see a fessor Eloise Ellery, Ph.D. '02., of Vassar Phi. She was married in 192.6 to Lawrence reason for doing so." on events in Italy, Spain, and Portugal. H. Conlon '2.3, who survives her, with In spite of all difficulties they have in- In The American Political Science Re- two daughters and her parents. creased until today there are nearly 50,000 view for February Professor Robert E. of them. Cushman writes on'' Constitutional Law Several chapters treat of their life and in 19x9-30." Professor Robert C. Brooks, ALEXIS BABINE DEAD customs, their unique family and prop- Ph.D. '03, Civic Training in Switzerland erty usages, the status of the women, is reviewed by J. M. Vincent. Professor Russian litterateur Sewed Cornell as Library and the industries. Sheepraising and Thomas V. Smith and Leonard D. White, Expert ond Cataloguer weaving occupy the women; raising and Chicago: an Experiment in Social Science trading horses, the men. The semi- Research is reviewed by Wilson Gee. Alexis Vasilievich Babine, whose ashes nomadic life of the Navajos is due partly In The Journal of Physical Chemistry were lately laid to rest at Ithaca among to their nature, partly to their occupation for March Professor Wilder D. Bancroft, the hills he loved, died on May 12., 1930, —sheep must have ever-changing pastur- George A. Scherer, M.S. '2.8, and at a sanitarium near Washington. Born age, and there is in this dry and sandy Lawrence P. Gould 'x9 write on "The at Elatma, Russia, on March 2.2., 1866, country little upon which even sheep can Hypothetical Potassium Polyiodides.'' the son of a Volga fisherman, it was not subsist. Esther C. Farnham '2.7, discusses "Car- till he was through with the local The Navajos have a rare appreciation borundum Fractionating Columns.'' Pro- schools and had won a scholarship for of beauty, and what is still more remark- fessor Bancroft reviews Bernard JafFe, study in St. Petersburg that he learned able, a gift for expressing it; an inborn Crucibles, George P. Thomson, The Wave of an American university where a boy gift, for their beautiful designs of color Mechanics of Free Electrons, and W. might earn an education by self-help. and form come out of their own minds. Frankenburger and F. Duerr, Katalyse. Then, in 1888, he turned up at Cornell THE CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS z65

with a capital- of fifteen dollars and a The Corporation is a holding company DIRECT RELIEF WORK slight knowledge of Elizabethan English. whose operations according to Time may Cornellians last week played impor- Happily the University Library needed a be divided into five groups: The Solvay tant roles in providing drought sufferers cataloguer for its Russian books, and he Process Division, producing ash and in Southern States with staple foods and was soon discovered and set to work. caustic soda; The General Chemical clothing. County agricultural agents in He proved a treasure not to be let go, and Division, making sulphuric acid, nitric New York State have been gathering worked his way to his A.B. in 1892. and acid, hydrochloric acid, acetic acid, and supplies for shipment to the drought- his A.M. in 1894, finding then the means related products; The Barrett Division, stricken areas in cooperation with the for a winter of study in Paris. Returning primarily dealing in coal tar products in- Red Cross. in 1895 to Cornell he was kept busy on cluding Tar via; The National Aniline The work has been under the direction the catalogue of the President White and Chemical Division, making dyestuffs of Lloyd R. Simons Ίi, county agent Library until 1897 there opened a librari- and the Atmospheric Nitrogen Division, leader in the extension service of the anship at the University of Indiana. making synthetic nitrogen. College of Agriculture, assisted by Earl Thence in 1898 he was called to Stanford A. Flansburgh '15, assistant county agent as associate librarian and remained there NORTON MAKES SULPHUR leader. till in 1902. he entered the service of the Eugene L. Norton '01 is president of The work of the two men has been Library of Congress, charged soon with the Freeport Texas Company, second praised by Governor and John the care of its Russian Division and sent largest producer of sulphur in the country Barton Payne, head of the Red Cross. to Russia and Siberia for important pur- which recently bought control of the County farm and home bureaus have chases in this field. Cuban-American Manganese Corpora- been assisting in gathering supplies for Always an admirer of American ideals, tion, acquiring thousands of acres of shipment. he had from his first years here been at manganese ore land in Cuba. By a new work on a history of this country for process which Freeport Texas has de- STINE ADJUDGED BEST Russian readers, and in 1910 he returned veloped for treating manganese it will FOR 94 DEBATE PRIZE to Russia to publish his book, whose be able to sell the product at a price low two volumes have since been in use in Clyde S. Stine '31, Pine Grove, Pa., enough to compete against the Russian won the thirty-seventh annual '94 Mem- the Russian schools; and he remained to product, the greatest competitor. spend with his aging parents their last orial Debate Prize March 10. The subject Mr. Norton received the degree of A.B. years, becoming imperial school inspec- was: " Is disregard of law for the purpose He started his own investment firm in tor for northern Russia, where a territory of nullification harmful to society?" Baltimore, and later helped Frank larger than the whole of France was The rules governing the contest were Andrew Munsey form the Munsey Trust under his charge. There he was found by changed this year to permit each con- Company which subsequently consoli- the War and by the successive revolu- testant his choice of the affirmative or dated with the Baltimore Trust Company tions, and in the general anarchy of 1917 negative side, to give his reasons, and to of which Mr. Norton became president. was busied as a teacher of English and present his own rebuttal. Only one of French at the University of Saratoff. the six contestants, Harold A. Lehrman With the Communist regime he had no SONGS UNDER THE MAY MOON '31, New York, chose the negative. sympathy, but (in his own words) BY A. W. S. '78 The other contestants were Christopher ''went through the bloody excesses of In the seventies, when most of the W. Wilson '31, Brooklyn, Jonathan W. Bolshevism, with all the discomfitures students lived in the town, almost every Curvin '31, Medina, Louis M. Bernstein and horrors of starvation, cold, the student group included singers. They '32., Utica, and Jacob Blinkoff '31, cholera and diseases in general"; but, sang in their rooms and at public meet- Buffalo. though he "lived through five most in- ings; in fact they sang all through the teresting years of constant starvation, year on every possible occasion just for MORGENTHAU BUSY risk of imprisonment and wanton execu- the love of singing. Henry M. Morgenthau '13, conser- tion," he was glad at the first opportu- Then, when spring came, and robins vation commissioner of New York State, nity to escape back to America in 192.2., and bluebirds and orioles stirred human and Deputy Commissioner Carl E. Ladd where till 192.7 he again found employ- emotions with their love songs at dawn '12. are planning a complete reorganiza- ment in the libraries of Cornell, then re- and twilight, student groups would go tion of the Fish and Game Division of the returning to the Library of Congress as forth under the May moon, when pale Department of Conservation. head of its Slavic Division. A careful leaves were half grown, to walk the The Fish and Game Division is re- scholar, quiet but warm-hearted, a lover streets with measured tread singing the sponsible for the protection of wild life. of out-of-doors and a great rider and while the good songs of those days. Encouragement of the growth of phea- hunter, he will long be remembered with The favorite streets were those that sants by private individuals and more affection by all who knew him well. bordered the open sides of DeWitt Park. rapid progress in a reforestation program G. L. B. '81 Moonlight, and leaf shadows, and are now being considered. songs of young, fresh voices. The emo- tional appeal of this combination of NICHOLS HEADS ALLIED WATER SALE APPROVED sensations of beauty was so poignant CHEMICAL CORPORATION that the memory—for one at least—has Legislative approval has been given the bill permitting Cornell University Charles W. Nichols '99 has been ap- endured through more than fifty years. to sell water to the village of Forest pointed acting chairman of the Allied But now students live chiefly on the Home. The bill has-been sent to Govern- Chemical and Dye Corporation, of which Hill, and this beautiful custom can never or Roosevelt for his signature. The he has been a director since 192.8. He be revived. And yet—spring still comes, measure, introduced and sponsored by succeeds Orlando F. Weber, who is on young men still sing, moonlight still Assemblyman James R. Robinson Ίo, indefinite leave of absence. Nichols in streams through growing leaves. Why amends the Education Law. 192.1 became president of the Nichols not establish a new custom; why not Copper Company, and previously had pace the Quadrangle under the May been associated with his father, Dr. moon singing in groups that are wont to IN The Technology Record for March William H. Nichols, who in 192.0 helped sing together? It would be a serenade to Dr. Charles A. Beard and William Beard, form the Allied Corporation, in many of Alma Mater. It would add a new and The American Leviathan is reviewed by their chemical plants. charming tradition to Cornell. J. Rhyne Killian, Jr. THE CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS

CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS Pfann '14, former football captain; Miss Marie Reith 'xi, former president of the ITHACA, NEW YORK THE GLUBS I Club; and Fred W. Scheidenhelm '05. FOUNDED 1899 INCORPORATED 1926 :: j: John A. Rodgers Ί8 led the singing, with Mrs. George R. Pfann (Betty T. Wyckoff) BUFFALO '2.7 at the piano. Published for the Cornell Alumni The Club held its annual banquet at Corporation by the Cornell Alumni News the Hotel Buffalo on February 2.7. Presi- SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA WOMEN Publishing Corporation. dent Farrand and Professor Bristow The Club met for luncheon on Febru- Published weekly during the college year Adams were speakers. Guests of honor ary 18 at the Arcade Tea Room in Los and monthly in July and August: thirty-five from Ithaca were Carlos A. Martinez '05 Angeles. Following a short business issues annually. Issue No. 1 is published in and his two sons, Cristobal '32. and Jose September. Weekly publication ends the last meeting, the members attended "What week in June. Issue No. 35 is published in '33, of football and fencing fame. The Every Woman Knows" at the Pasadena August and is followed by an index of the en- boys gave a fencing exhibition. A male Community Playhouse. tire volume, which will be mailed on request. quartet from the Buffalo Broadcasting Subscription price $4.00 a year, payable In ad- Corporation gave selections, and the WESTFIELD, N. J. vance. Foreign postage 35 cents a year extra. Single orchestra of Charles G. Seelbach '19 The Club held a smoker at the Mason- copies twelve cents each. furnished additional entertainment. ic Temple on March 6, with fifty members Should a subscriber desire to discontinue his and twenty-five boys from the senior subscription, a notice to that effect should be Arthur L. Jones '06, W. Morgan Ken- sent in before its expiration. Otherwise it is dall Ίo, and Robert J. Lansdowne Ί3 class at the Westfield High School. assumed that a continuance is desired. were elected to the Board of Directors of Andrew J. Whinery Ίo was the principal Checks and orders should be payable to the club for a term of three years. speaker. Others on the program were G. Cornell Alumni News. Cash at risk of sender. Gilson Terriberry '15, president of the Correspondence should be addressed— BUFFALO WOMEN Lackawanna Cornell Club, Walter F. Cornell Alumni News, Ithaca, N. Y. The Club held its February meeting at Beyer, Minnesota '12., president of the the Park Lane on February 2.7. President College Men's Club of Westfield, and g } Farrand and Professor Bristow Adams Albert M. Lamberton '08, president of Circulation Manager . WM. HORTON were honor guests at a tea. Miss Hilda L. Managing Editor HARRY G. STUTZ '07 Cornell Club. Harold F. Welch Ίo enter- Asst.M'n'g. Editor JANE McK. URQUHART '13 Goltz Ίi was in charge of the program. tained with stunts, and singing was pro- The Club entertained at a benefit Associate Editors vided by both the Cornell alumni and the CLARK S. NORTHUP '93 FOSTER M. COFFIN '12. dinner on March 9 for all members and High School boys. Motion pictures were WILLIAM J. WATERS '2.7 MORRIS G. BISHOP '13 their friends. Mrs Charles M. Cormack shown, sent down from the Alumni MARGUERITE L. COFFIN (Vilma Vigert) '19, president of the Club, Office in Ithaca. Talbot M. Malcolm Ί8, Officers of the Corporation: R. W. Sailor, has outlined an interesting schedule for vice-president of the Club, presided. Pres.; W. J. Norton, Vice-Pres.; H. G. Stutz, earning money for the Scholarship Fund. Sec; R. W. Sailor, Treas.; W. L. Todd and The next meeting will be a dinner H.E.Babcock, Directors. Office: 113 East Green some time in May. Street, Ithaca, N. Y. CHICAGO President Farrand was the principal Member of Intercollegi iiate Alumni Extension Servicc speaker at the annual banquet, held at PROFESSOR BECKER WILL the University Club on February 2.8. LECTURE AT YALE I'rinted by'The Cayuga Press With him on the program were Colonel The Storrs Lectures at Yale, which Entered as Second Class Matter at Ithaca, N. Y. Robert Isham Randolph '07, President of the Chicago Association of Commerce, deal with fundamental problems of law and jurisprudence, will be given by Pro- ITHACA, N.Y. , MARCH 19, 1931 and representatives from other college alumni groups in Chicago: R. L. White, fessor Carl L. Becker on April 2.7-30. University of Pennsylvania '13, L. E. The general title will be '' The Heavenly City of the Eighteenth Century," under DR. E. F. BRADFORD Leverone, Dartmouth '04, and Ralph A. which Professor Becker will discuss NAMED NEW REGISTRAR Bard, Princeton '06. William H. Mc- Caully '08 was toastmaster and Robert Climates of Opinion,'''' Laws of Nature Dr. Eugene F. Bradford, director of W. Breckenridge '2.3 was chairman of and of Nature's God," "History Teach- admissions since 1918, has been appointed the committee. ing by Example," and "The Uses of registrar by the Trustees to succeed the Posterity." The lectures will deal with late David F. Hoy '91. QUEENS-NASSAU eighteenth century ideas of natural law. Dr. Bradford will handle the affairs of The Club met at the Homestead Hotel, Professor Becker is this year president both offices, with George D. Haupin Ί6 Kew Gardens, on March 7, for one of the of the American Historical Association. as assistant registrar. Haupin has been in most successful dinners ever held. In He is the author of numerous books, charge of the registrar's office since the view of the steps now being taken to among which are "Beginnings of the death of Mr. Hoy in December. organize alumni in other parts of Long American People," "Eve of the Revolu- Island, the Club changed its name at tion," "The Declaration of Independence Dr. Bradford organized the office of this meeting to the Cornell Club of —A Study in the History of Political director of admissions when he came to Queens County. The alumni of Nassau Ideas," and "The Spirit of '76." Cornell from Syracuse University. He County are being reorganized. The Storrs Foundation was established graduated from Bowdoin in 1912. and William L. Savacool '04, president of in 1889 through the gift of the Misses E. took his Ph.D. degree at Harvard in 19x7. the Club, as toastmaster introduced as T. and M. A. Robinson in memory of speakers Dr. Mary M. Crawford '04, their great-uncle, Hon. William L. Alumni Trustee; Fred J. Biele '09, presi- Storrs, Yale 1814, at one time chief jus- RECENT LECTURES dent of the Associated Cornell Aoumni tice of the Supreme Court of Connecticut March 9. Dr. John Nolen, Fellow Clubs of Long Island; Dr. Gustave J. and a professor in the Yale Law School. "Basic Wants Satisfied by a Regional Noback Ί6, professor of anatomy at Among those who have given lectures Plan." New York University; William J. Russell on this Foundation are Sir Frederick Max Montor in a selection from Ibsen's '13, executive vice-president of the Cham- Pollock, Roscoe Pound, Benjamin N. "The Pretenders" in English, and in ber of Commerce of the Borough of Cardozo, Moorfield Storey, Sir Paul HebbeΓs "Gyges und Sein Ring" in Queens; Peter J. Farrell Ί2., member of Vinogradoff, and Sir William S. Holds- German. Gold win Smith Foundation. the New York Legislature; George R. worth. THE CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS

:;;;;!;::;;;:: :;;";;"ϊίί:ίii^ THE WEEK ON THE CAMPUS :::::::::::::::::::::::::::^ HE JUNIOR SMOKER was dedicated to The present plans call for a presentation Kirkland of Randolph, authorizes the Colonel Joe Beacham '97, who, in of the Bach B-minor Mass and other expense of $xo,ooo by the Agricultural This four years as commandant of the programs, from June 18 to 2.0. College in investigating the use of elec- R.O.T.C, has made a very deep impres- tric power in rural communities. The bill THE ART GALLERY is showing an ex- sion upon the life of our Campus. Pro- would provide for studies in the econo- hibit of the work of Frank Brangwyn, fessor Herman Diedrichs'97, of the Col- mical use of electricity on the farms; the the eminent English artist, with both lege of Engineering, the chief speaker, college extension service would be called reproductions and originals. told how the application of science has upon to give instruction in the use and altered athletics since the simple nineties HOWARD S. ROSS '96, Canadian eco- maintenance of electric service and equip- when athletes would run and jump art- nomist, was here last week, talking be- ment. Governor Roosevelt is said to be lessly and instinctively, like lambs in fore the Liberal Club on '' World Unrest in favor of the bill. the Springtide. "There is no over-em- and a Proposed Cure."His cure is a THE FARMING POPULATION is being phasis on sports at Cornell," he said. luminous and simple idea; briefly that buoyed up by the thought of natural gas, "Other institutions have good reasons money, instead of representing gold, as you may remember from last week's for upsetting the apple cart at present, should represent work. "The basis of issue. Farmers all over the county have and might have done well to have taken the dollar should be one hour of adult leased their gas and oil rights to enter- such action twenty years ago. But here labor. . . Work, as a basis of value, prising salesmen. A test well in South we have no barnstorming tours, nor would mean the abolition of interest, Lansing is boring steadily, but so far post-season games. For Cornell has al- profit, taxes, and rent of the land. It hasn't discovered anything sensational. ways given first place to the student, and would bring about a new order of things The important fields are those around and then comes the athlete." in which the two good features of capi- Corning and those twenty miles south, talism—private property and individual near Tioga, just over the Pennsylvania MARTINELLI, the Metropolitan Opera initiative—would be preserved. . . The line. The darling of fortune there is Ben tenor, gave the fourth of the University vast amounts spent for advertising, H. Meaker, farmer, who has been offered Music Series concerts in Bailey Hall. It bookkeeping, practice of law, and bank- over a million dollars in royalty rights. was an evening of bel canto, done in the ing might be diverted for food, clothing, Meaker is a Danby boy; his sister, Mrs. best Italian tradition. The program con- and shelter, the fundamental necessities Mame E. Crance, is the wife of an Ithaca sisted largely of old favorites, Puccini, of life." Bizet, Tosti, Leoncavallo. Some slight blacksmith. nasal elevation was to be observed in ANOTHER DELIGHTFUL evening (you I AM SORRY there isn't any more news. certain sections of the audience, which might just as well know it, nothing found the lack of musical sophistication much has happened during the week) I NOTICE that a Rochester -attorney has not compensated by the glad gusto of was the lecture on "Audible Light" turned up a copy of John Howison's the rendering. Well, the intellectuals given before Sigma Xi by John B. Taylor Sketches of Upper Canada and the United could study the French, Italian, and of the General Electric Company. He States, Edinburgh, 182.1. He thus des- German on the program. And they could displayed an "electrical eye," which can cribes a tavern in Waterloo: "The bar certainly get some pleasure from the perceive the light waves invisible to the room was large and commodious and full specimens of English verse which, in the human eye and which translates them of Yankee loungers. There were 15 or 16 guise of translations, cast a lurid light into sound waves. Thus the eye roared large chairs in the apartment, but I on the originals. It seems strange that at a match, hummed at a neon lamp, could not procure one for my own ac- this rendering of the stricken heart brayed at an incandescent lamp, screeched commodation, although five or six persons failed to bring Carmen promptly to heel: like a fire siren at a dynamo, hooted at a only were seated. But each of these indi- pocket flashlight, and snarled, laughed, viduals occupied three or four chairs. "Night and day in darkness abiding, and squealed at light filtered between the He sat upon one, laid his legs upon I the truth, Carmen, am confiding; teeth of two combs. Mr. Taylor con- another, whirled around a third, and Its loved odor did I inhale cluded by producing his sensorium asin- perhaps chewed the paint from the back And wildly called thee without avail. orum, a black box containing an electric of a fourth." ' —M.G.B. eye, an electric ear, an electric finger, and ' 'My love itself I cursed and hated, an electric tongue. The lecturer rubbed COMING EVENTS And moaning alas! I repeated, the electric finger on his coat sleeve, and By what dark law that fatal day the loud-speaker growled. "This fabric FRIDAY, MARCH ZO Saw I her form cursing my way ? is a little rough," remarked Mr. Taylor. Cornell Dramatic Club. "The Second So saying, he rubbed the finger on his Man". University Theatre, 8:15 p.m. 4 Then alone myself I detested, cheek, and to his apparent chagrin the SATURDAY, MARCH 2.1 And naught else this heart interested, loud-speaker uttered a shriek of agony. Cornell Dramatic Club. "The Second Naught else it felt but one desire, The electrical tongue expressed in sound Man". University Theatre, 8:15 p.m. One sole desire did it retain: the taste of various foods. When thrust SUNDAY, MARCH 2.2. Carmen, beloved, to see thee again." into the juicy interior of a lemon, the Sage Chapel Service at 11 o'clock. Dr. PERHAPS you heard the Westminster box "reflected the feelings of the injured Shailer Mathews, Dean of the Divinity Choir, which has just been giving a fruit in a wail which rose high above the School, University of Chicago. series of concerts in the South. Did you cruel laughter of the hard-hearted audi- ence." know that the Choir's headquarters are HAROLD A. LEHRMAN '31, New York, in Ithaca? Dr. John Finley Williamson, Two BILLS of interest to the University has been elected president of the Sage the Director, is now planning a three- have been introduced in the Legislature. Philosophy Club. Anthony J. Cortee day music festival on Schoellkopf Field. One would appropriate $2.0,647 for the '31, Dunkirk, was named vice-president It will be considerably more pretentious development of agronomy experiments. and Robert H. Hartman '31, New York, than the similar affair held last year. The other, introduced by Senator L. G. secretary. z68 THE CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS

ADDRESSES NEEDED FOR Esterly, William L. '89-91 P. Shive, Roland P. '91-93 M. Fancher, Leon L. '89-91 LL.B. Smith, Harvey D. '91-96 Ph.B. MANY MISSING ALUMNI Garrison, Emerson B. '87 M. Smith, John H. '91-98 B.S. '96 G. Of the 47,395 living Cornell alumni, Goodwin, Frederick C. '87-89 C. Stine, Charles R. '91-96 C.E. Jackson, William S. '87-89 Arch. there are several hundred for whom the Webber, Daniel S. '93-94 Law. Lachicotte, Walter B. '87-88, '90-92. M.E. (Continued in next issue) Alumni Office at the University has no Lewis, John T. '87-91 B.S. Arch. addresses. As has already been announced Meech, Robert O. '87-91 A.B. '91 G. a new issue of the Alumni Directory is Newbrook, William G. '87-91 B.L. Pellett, Sarah F. '90-91 A.M. now in preparation, and it is planned to Plumb, Chester R. '87-89 O. send the book to press this spring. Spaulding, Myra L. '87 A. THE ALUMNI Sterardon, William A. '87 Law. The Alumni News is glad to cooperate Thomas, George H. '87-89 Arch. in publishing the following list of alumni Zimmerman, Edmund F. '87-88 M. for whom addresses are desired. Other '74—Charles R. Stoughton is treasurer lists will follow in succeeding weeks. Class of 18'92 of the Riverside Water Company in Readers are urged to send all possible Allison, William '90 Law. Turners Falls, Mass. He is also secretary information to Gilbert M. Weeks '2.5, Ames, Frank L. '88-90 L. of the Crocker Institutions for Savings, Brewster, Anna R. '88-91 O. of which he has been a trustee since 1889, Editor, 1931 Alumni Directory, Morrill Canal, Carlos J. '88-92. M.E. Hall. Here is the first instalment: Consalus, Arthur D. '88 O. and an auditor since 1892.. Da Cruz, Henrique B. '88-90 M. '88 BS—Dr. Charles L. Parsons of Class of 1884 de Souza, Epaminindas A. '88-92. B.S. Agr. Dewsnap, Samuel B. '88-91 M. Arch. Washington has been appointed business Coimbra, Anastacio R. de A. '80-85 M. Dickens, Charles W. '88-90 Law. Goodman, Maurice H. '80-81 C. manager of the American Chemical So- French, Mortimer H. '89 Law. Kellogg, Mrs. Edward L. (Lucretia Taber) ciety, of which he has been secretary Gridley, Willis T. '89-91 LL.B. •80-82. A. Hardie, William H. '89 Law. since 1907. He is the first incumbent of Smith, John C. '80-82., '88 O. B s S L Hisey, Williajn N. '89-92. LL.B. this position, recently created. Van Ostrand, Byron D. "80-84 " Holden, Frank '88 M. Hurd, William D. '88-89 Law- '89 BS—Clarence H. Lee is secretary of Class of 1888 Lewis, Harry S. '88-90 Med. Prep. the Fidelity Savings and Loan Associa- Cooling, William L. '84-87 C. c Lyons, Frank, '88-89 tion at 558 South Spring Street, Los Crittenden, Fred K. '84-86 C. McNeal, Alfred F. '88-91 O. Farling, Montgomery '84-85, '86-87 Agr. Price, Robert E. '88 M. Angeles. Hampton, Willis H. '84-88 M.E.E.E. '89. Smith, Hayden H. '88 O. '90 BS; Όo, '99 BS—William M. Irish Heath, Harry E. '84-85 M. Smith, Leonard J. '88-92. E. Hislop, James '86-87 C. Sullivan, John F. '88 Pharm. '90, president of the Atlantic Refining Jones, Julio '84-85 C. Thayer, George L. '90-91 M.E. Company, and Walter C. Teagle Όo, Kinkaid, Charles F. '84-85 M. von Bachelle, Otto '88 M. president of the Standard Oil Company Maddocks, William '84-87 M. Walter, Guy T. '90-91 Law. Maxwell, William S. '84 C. White, Hubert L. '89-91 LL.B. of New Jersey, were among the leaders Stephens, George W. '84-86 M. Widger, Clark W. '88-81 C. of the petroleum industry who attended an emergency meeting of the American Class of 1889 Class of 1893 Petroleum Institute's general marketing Abbott, Minnie De E. '85-86 O. Albro, Henry F. '90-91, '93 LL.B. Chamberlin, Jessie C. '85-87 O. Ballard, Walter A. '89-90 M. committee on March 2, to formulate a Goetter, Sidney J. '85-88 O. Bertholf, Charles H. '89-91 M. policy respecting the Federal Trade Com- Hampton, Willis H. '84-88 M.E.E.E. '89. Browd, Paul K. '89-91 M.E.E.E. mittee's recent action in withdrawing Jewett, Frank H. '85-86 M. Clark, Henry, Jr., '89-90 C. McDowell"", Jame' s ]H. '85-86 O. Earle, Henry C. '89-93 M.E. its approval of eighteen rules of the Insti- Mantz, Charles '85-87 C. Frost, Frank L. '89 O. tute's marketing code and rewriting two Mason, Carlisle, Jr., '85-86 M. Goda, Kanemaro '89-90 Arch. of the three remaining rules. Morse, Edmund H. '85-86 P. Graham, Alexander R. '91-94 LL.B. '93, LL.M Norton, Wadsworth W. '86-88 O. Harvey, George R. '89-93 M.E., G. '90—James L. Callanan is vice-presi- Ogliastri de Figueroa, Victor M. '85-86 C. Heinrich, Christoph '89-91 M. Pattison, Jere '85-86 C. Kraus, George A. '89-93 M.E.E.E. dent of the Carolina, Greenville and Peck, Guy W. '85-86 C. Murphy, Charles E. '93 C. '89-93 Ph.B. Northern Railway, and general manager Sharpe, William V. '85-87 Agr. Oura, Hajime '91-94 LL.B. '93, LL.M. of the Mexican National Iron and Steel Sherwood, Bertha M. '85 S-L. Peticolas, Sherman G. '89-91 M. Smith, Harry L. '87-89 LL.B. Rider, Frederick J. '89-9 C. Company. His address is 100 Hamilton Van Benschoten, James '87-89 LL.B. Shields, Samuel S. '89-90 M. Place, New York. Stevens, Julian J. '91-91 Law. Class of 18go Tsuji, Ottokichi '89 Arch. '93 ME—Bancroft Gherardi has been Brown, Wallace N. '86 Agr. Wagner, George F. '90-93 M.E.E.E. elected president of the American Stand- Ward, Fred K. '89 Arch. Brun, Clement B. '87-90 B.S. Arch. ards Society. In the standardization Dunn, Thomas C. '86-89 M., Law. Ehle, Louis C. '86-90 B.L. Class of 1896 activities of this organization more than Gleason, Hiram N. '86-87 C. Bishop, William W. '91-93 M. two thousand representatives of some Howell, William G. '86-89 M. Cnadee, Frederick G. '91-94 M. five hundred national trade, technical, Ives, Paul D. '86-87 M. Chiba, Kozo '91-93 O. and governmental groups are engaged. McCormick, Robert C. '86 C. Ellis, John B. '91-93 P. McMurray, Albert H. '86-88 O. Fields, Frederick R. '91 M. For some years Gherardi has been vice- Richards, Harry O. '88 Law. Fitzpatrick, James R. '93-94 Law. president and chief engineer of the Root, Joseph H. '86-90 B.S. Gregg, Walter C. '91 Law. American Telephone and Telegraph Com- Stevenson, Hugh W. '86-87 O. Hale, Robert M. '91-94 M. pany. Takemura, Matsugu '89-91 LL.B. '90, LL.M. Jenny, Isaac H. '91-93 M. Thompson, David P. '86-87 O. Keane, Thomas M. '93-96 LL.B. '95 ME—Hugh T. Brown is manager Walker, Clark A. '87 C. Keyser, Matthew B. '91-96 M. Warren, John L. H. '86-87 C. Lawton, Mary A. '91-95, -97-98 Ph.B. of the Southern Public Utilities Com- West, John A., Jr. ,'86-90 M.E.E.E. McCord, Robert H. '93-94 Law. pany, in Elkin, N. C. Williams, John A. '86-90 O. McKnight, Fred W. '93-95 Law. Young, Charles M. '86-88 M., O. McMillan, Morton K. '91, '94, '96 O. '99 BS—Walker C. Teagle is a member Malone, Francis E. '91-93 O. of the advisory board of the third Inter- Class of 1891 Manchester, William H. '93-94 Law. national Coal Conference, which is to Barnett, David G. '87-88 O. Okada, Heita '91-94 M. Clark, William C. '87 O. Rae, George '95-96 M.E. be held at the Carnegie Institute of Emerson, Hugh R. '87-88 O. Robinson, Jay F. '91 O. Technology, Pittsburgh, in November. THE CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS

Ό6 AB—Carlton P. Johnson was will be conducted by the Buffalo Museum chosen Master at a recent election of the of Science, in cooperation with the Atlas Lodge of Free and Accepted Masons State Museum, at Allegany Park from He has held the various subordinate July 8 to August irj. offices in the lodge during the past five Ί8, '2.0 BS—George C. Baldwin is with years. He is in the real estate business. the Public Service Company of Northern His address is 8 Gramatan Trail, Bronx- Illinois, at Room 1335, 72. West Adams ville, N. Y. Street, Chicago. He lives at 409 Bronson '05-06 Gr—The Bethlehem Steel Com- Avenue, Highland Park, 111. pany has appointed Elbert A. Gibbs one Ί8, '2.0 AB; '2.1 AB—Peter P. Miller of the three new vice-presidents of its Ί8 and Mrs. Miller (Sara E. Speer '2.1) recently acquired subsidiary, the McClin- live at 1841 Central Parkway, Schenec- tic-Marshall Corporation. He will be in tady, N. Y. They have three children, charge of operations. Peter Paul, Jr., aged eight, Elizabeth '07 CE—Henry W. Maynard is mana- Speer, who is five, and Robert Speer, ger of the industrial accounting depart- who was born last March. ment of the Herbert F. French Company, '19—Howard W. Gager is with the F you think you have public accountants and auditors at 100 Me Wane Iron Pipe Company in Dallas, I shirt troubles there's Summer Street, Boston. He was formerly Texas. nothing new ahout that with the Gillette Safety Razor Company. '19 CE—Yu Chi Mar '19 was married '07 ME—Eduardo P. Gas ton is vice- this fall. He is a sanitary engineer with —Adam had'em. And the president of Daniel, Inc., at 814 Metro- the Nationalist Government in Nanking. Garden of Eden was no politan Building, Havana, Cuba. '2.0—Leon Swirbul is vice-president of bed of roses the day he '09—William C. Johnston last year be- the Aircraft Engineering Cor- came wholesale manager of the Boule- poration at Baldwin, Long Island, N. Y. found his best Sunday vard Garage Company in Albany, Mar- He lives at 64 Lanier Lane, Bzy Shore, shirt in the salad. mon distributors. He was formerly with Long Island. If Adam were alive to- the Marmon Motor Car Company. He '2.1 AB—Donald C. Fabel is in charge lives at Apartment 12.-N, 6 South Lake of the department of mechanical engi- day he would have a Avenue. neering at Fenn College in Cleveland. drawerful of pet shirts. '09 MME—Melvern F. Thomas is a He lives at Z411 Edgerton Road, Univer- member of the firm of Finn, Thomas and sity Heights, Cleveland. And, if they happened to Wardell, consulting engineers at ΊΛ.^ '2.1 AB—Donna R. Calkins on January be Hibby Ayer Shirts, College Street, Toronto. 14 was elected assistant cashier of the you can be sure that they Ίo AB—John C. von Glahn has moved Exchange Bank in Oakfield, N. Y. would be right—right in his offices for the general practice of law '2.1—William H. Gardner, Jr., is with to 1 Wall Street, New York. the Gardner Propellor Works in Forest size—right in sleeve '12. LLB—Francis P. Cuccia lives at Park, 111. He lives at 304 North Oak length—and right in 87x4 Ninety-seventh Street, Woodhaven, Park Avenue, Oak Park, 111. every other way. Long Island, N. Y. A son was born on '2.1, '2.3 AB—Henry B. Glathe is with February 14. He has four other boys and the Felters Company, Inc., at 300 Fourth a girl. Avenue, New York. He lives at 475 ΊiME—Charles E. Finney, Jr., is Fairway Road, Ridge wood, N. J. manager of the Paso Tex Refinery. His '2.2.—Arthur Y. Wilson is secretary of Wearers of Hibby Ayer address is zo Cumberland Circle, El Paso, the Youngs town, Ohio, Builders' Ex- Shirts have no shirt tales Texas. * change, and editor of The Youngstown '13 BS—Frank B. Cornell is district Builders' News. He lives at 2.39 Fiargreen to tell. The best features sales manager of the Harbison-Walker Avenue. of a custom shirt— Refractories Company, with offices in the '2.2. CE—A son, John Rogers, was born Building, Detroit. on February 8 to Mr. and Mrs. Howard thorough pre-shrinking '13 Sp—Gould J. Little is agency super- E. Whitney. They live in Safe Harbor, visor of the Farmers and Traders Life Pa. Whitney is in charge of the con- and any sleeve length— Insurance Company, at 158 Glencoe struction of a 2.55,000-h.p. hydro-electric are now available in the Road, Columbus, Ohio. plant on the Susquehanna River. Ί4—Mr. and Mrs. William Parkinson '2.2.—Frederic F. White is president of stotk shirts you buy from have announced the marriage of their the Old Mission Packing Corporation in daughter, Caroline, to Harold E. Smith North San Diego, Calif. He lives at 41x0 '14 on February 2.8, in Warren town, Va. Ingalls Street, San Diego. They are living in Warrenton. '13 BS—Richard B. Farnham is teach- '15 BS, Ί6 MLD—Lucian C. Bareham ing floriculture at Rutgers. P. S. No extra charge. is teaching drawing and music at Mer- '2,3 ME—Carew Sheldon is with the cersburg Academy in Mercersburg, Pa. Nesbitt Electric Manufacturing Company See page 271 Ί6 BS—Arlington E. Smith is in the Ltd., at 2.56 Richmond Street, West, lake marine department of the Vacuum Toronto. Oil Company, at 59 East Van Buren '13 EE—Charles H. Churchill is vice- Street, Chicago. president and general manager of the Ί6-18 Sp—William P. Alexander will Cortland County Traction Company, be a member of the faculty of the Alle- part of the Niagara-Hudson Power Cor- gany School of Natural History which poration System. He was formrly general TEL. MURRAY HILL 2-2O42 i7o THE CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS

manager and director of the Port Henry pany, Koppers Building, Pittsburgh. He Avenue, Over brook, Philadelphia. Mc- Light, Heat and Power Company. He is lives at 2.30 McKee Place. Hugh is a contract engineer with M. and a director of the Cortland Chamber of '2.6 CE—Fritz A. Koerner is civil engi- J. B. McHugh. Commerce and a trustee of the Cortland neer with the Kalman Steel Company of '2.7 AB—Stanley R. Noble is in the Savings Bank. He lives on West Homer New York. He was married in August publishing business. His address is 441 Road. to Florence McLaughlin of Brooklyn. North Broadway, Yonkers, N. Y. He 'z4—Harold M. Charlap is with the They are living there at 681 Ocean writes that he, Ambrose Ryder '13, Sun Life Assurance Company of Canada, Avenue. Arthur L. Nash '2.7, and Earl C. Clark 'x9 are playing on the Hudson Valley hockey at 1410 Walnut Street, Philadelphia. He '2.6 AB, '2.9 MD—Adelaide Romaine team. lives at 32.5 West Durham Road. completed her interneship at Bellevue \/\ EE—Carl C. Brown is with Tefft Hospital on January 1, and is leaving for '2.7 AB—Elizabeth Rose is teaching at and Company at 5 Nassau Street, New Vienna, where she will do graduate work. the Seward Park High School in New York. He lives at 62.8 East Seventeenth Her home address is 1x4 East Fortieth York and at the Theodore Roosevelt Street, Brooklyn. Street, New York. Evening High School. She lives at 305 East Mount Eden Avenue, Bronx, New '2.4 ME—Vernon H. Springford is with '2.6 AB—Richard C. Wads worth is a York. senior at the University of Rochester Servel, Inc., in Evansville, Ind. He lives 'z7 EE—Samuel C. Osborne on November Medical School. He lives at 1x56 Mount at 801 South Norman Avenue. 1 was promoted to the position of engi- Hope Avenue, Rochester, N. Y. ^5 ME—Anderson H. Chensult is with neer in charge of control equipment with the Ethyl Gasoline Corporation in De- '2.6 AB—James Wotherspoon is a buyer the Lincoln Electric Company in Cleve- troit. He lives at 150 West Eyelid Avenue. with L. Bamberger and Company in land. His address is 2.938 East i^tά Street. Newark, N. J. He lives at 515 West '2.5, '2.6 BLA—Walter J. Hamilton '90 '2.7 AB—Elizabeth M. Michael is in Seventh Street, Plainfield, N. J. has announced the engagement of his the banking business in Washington. daughter, Margaret Brainard, to Paul B. '27 ME—Warren A. Beh has resigned Her address is 1660 Harvard Street. Meserve '2.5. from the Liquidometer Corporation to '2.7 AB—Reuben Shefkowitz is practic- become manager of the machine control '2.6—George R. Ferguson is a repre- ing law. His address is 32.2.5 Ninety-third division of the Du Pont Cellophane sentative in Australia of the Texaco Oil Street, Jackson Heights, Long Island, Company at 2. Park Avenue, New York. Company. His permanent address is 56 New York. He lives on Maple Circle, Northport, Myette Avenue, Rutherford, N. J. '2.7 ME—Charles F. Wagner has re- Long Island, N. Y. signed from the Motor Car Com- '2.6 AB, '30 MD—David Soloway is an '2.7 ME; '2.7 BS—A son, Arthur Comber pany and is now in the investment bank- interne at the Knickerbocker Hospital, Jr., was born on September 8 to Arthur ing business with the Detroit-Guardian 70 Convent Avenue, New York. C. McHugh '2.7 and Mrs. McHugh Company in the Penobscot Building, '2.6 BChem—Suydam F. Busfield is (Ruth V. O'Connor '2.7). They live at Detroit. He lives at the Parkhurst Apart- with the Edison Storage Battery Com- the Drexel Apartments, 6309 Over brook ments, 1130 Parker Avenue.

LANGS PALACE GARAGE 117-133 East Green Street Ithaca, New York

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Open Day and Night E. D. BUTTON '99 WM. H. MORRISON '90 President Secy, and Treas. THE CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS 2.71

'2.7 CE—The address of Willard S. C. '2.8—Harlow Hyde, Jr., is with the Thiel is now care of Cia. de Cimento, road department of the Indiana State Caixa Postal 2.947, Sao Paulo, Brazil. He Highway Commission. is chief engineer of the Brazilian Port- '2.8 CE—Granger L. Kammerer is in land Cement Company, at present en- the plant department of the New York gaged in enlarging the plant to increase Telephone Company, at 199 Fulton production from 1,000 to 3,303 barrels per Avenue, Hempstead. He lives at 87-19 twenty-four hours, and remodeling and Elderts Lane, Woodhaven, N. Y. White modernizing the entire structure. '2.8 AB—Joseph W. Stanley left the Broadcloth '17 ME—H. Elmer Wheeler has been Model sales department of the Associated Oil Collar for the past eighteen months combustion Company in October, and is now asso- Attached engineer at the refinery in Anuba, Dutch ciated with his brother in Stanley Bros, West Indies, of the Pan-American Petrol- and Company, manufacturers' represen- eum Corporation. tatives in Mexico of the Sun Maid Raisin HIBBY'S '2.7 BS—Robert L. Zentgraf and his Growers' Association, the F. J. Stokes White BROADCLOTH Shirts wife have moved to their new home at Machinery Company, the Victor Chemi- cal Company, W. W. Butler, Inc., the 12.6 Grymes Hill Rpad, Staten Island, Pre-shrunk N. Y. He is a manufacturer of surface- National Biscuit Company, the Arm- coated papers and jobbing bookbinders' strong Packing Company, R. J. Roesling supplies. and Company, the Service Equipment Any Company, and the American Fruit Sleeve Length '2.7 BS—Dorothy P. Bucklin was mar- Growers, Inc. They also manufacture ried recently to William Paul Raftis. baking powder and cleansers. Stanley's They live at 33 Park Street, Owego, N.Y. Collar Attached address is Guerrero 144, Mexico, D. F. or '17 AB, '2.9 LLB; '2.8 AB, '30 LLB— Ί8, '2.9 EE—Millard F. Thomas is Neckband Warren M. Caro is engaged in the general with the Standard Oil Company of New practice of law with Hirsh, Newman, York at Soerabaia, Java, Dutch East Mailed Parcel Post Reass and Becker at 100 Broadway, New Indies. York. He writes that Edward M. Brand- Prepaid and Insured '2.8—Gilbert H. Wehmann is with on Receipt of Your riss 'i8 is serving his clerkship with the Brown Bros., Harriman and Company at same firm. Caro lives at 177 Eastern Check or Money Order 59 Wall Street, New York. He lives at 48 Parkway, Brooklyn. Morton Avenue, East Rockaway, Long '17 BS—Mrs. Herbert G. Cornstock Island, N. Y. Date_ (Ruth Boies '17) is home demonstration '2.8 AB; '30 AB—Robert P. Ludlum Dear Hibby: agent of Yates County, N. Y. Her ad- '30 has been granted a fellowship in Enclosed find $ -. Please dress is Ί.OΊ. Liberty Street, Penn Yan. American history at Cornell. For the send me White Broadcloth '17—Mr. and Mrs. Calvin Fentress of past seven months he has been man- Shirts. aging editor of The Gazette-News in Hubbard Woods, 111., have announced the Collar Neck marriage of their daughter Emily Gary to LeRoy, N. Y. Mrs. Ludlum was Ruth Attached GRADE Band Robert B. Stocking '2.7 on December iη. A. Smith Ί8. They are living in Ithaca. 3 Number one for $ 6.75 Stocking is the son of the late Professor '2.8—Oscar P. Vatet during the 3 Twenty-one for $ 8.2.5 William A. Stocking, Jr., '98 and Mrs. last year has been traveling in the 3 Special for $10.50 Harriet Bliss Stocking '98. Far East. 3 Super for $15.00 f '17 EE—Phillips B. Hoyt is a produc- 2.8 AB—Mrs. Arthur Markewich tion engineer with the Ingersoll-Rand (May Elish '2.8) is teaching English in //r χ Please send Company, working on power house Brooklyn, and is working for her A.M. me colored equipment and locomotive oil engines. in education at New York University. samples. His address is 609 Morris Street, Phillips- She lives at 376 East Eighteenth Street, burg, N. J. A son, Phillips B., zd, was Brooklyn. born on December 4. '2.8 AB—Irving Feinstein is in his SIZE second year of medicine at the American CHEST '17 DVM—Harold C. Parker is a NECK College in Beirut, Syria. SIZE veterinarian in Hillsdale, N. Y. COLLAR WAIST Ί8 BS—Rachel A. Merritt is teaching SLEEVE '17—Carlton W. Rowand is practicing HEIGHT homemaking in the Alexandria Bay, LENGTH law with offices in the First Camden N. Y. High School. She lives at 52. YOKE WEIGHT National Bank Building, Camden, N. J. 3 Walton Street. '18 AB, '30 LLB—Melvin J. Koestler Ί8 AB—Max Werner is starting his was married on March 1 to Elsa M. third year of medicine in St. Louis. Weschler, Wellesley '30, daughter of '2.8 AB—Verna L. Enderly is teaching Mr. and Mrs. J. Charles Weschler of English in the Kerhonkson, N. Y., High New York. They are living at 571 Grant Name — School. She lives in Accord, N. Y. Avenue East, Roselle Park, N. J. Koest- Address '2.8 ME—Alexander Rose is with the ler was admitted to the New Jersey Bar City State- in February and is now associated in the Fuller Lehigh Company in Atlanta, Ga. practice of law with his ϊather, with '2.8 ME—Enloe McClain since gradua- offices in the Hersh Tower Building, tion has been with the Ohio Public Elizabeth, N. J. He writes that also ad- Service Company. After eight months in mitted to the New Jersey Bar were How- Warren, Ohio, as results engineer in the ΔYERΛ NIXON ard Engel, A.B. '2.8, Norman N. Popper, steam generating plant he was in October ^*6EAST46'ST A.B. '2.8, and Joseph Weintraub, A.B. transferred to Mansfield, Ohio, engineer NEW YORK, N.Y. 'x8, LL.B. '30. in the electric distribution department. T£L. MURRAY HILL 2-2O42 172- THE CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS

'2.9 PhD—Hubert J. Sloan is instructor and first assistant in poultry husbandry at the University of Illinois. '2.9; '30 AB—Mr. and Mrs. Victor Yakhontoff of New York have an- nounced the engagement of their daugh- ter, Olga Yakhontoff '30, to Albert H. Orthmann 'z^. '19 DVM—Alexander Gow, Jr., is an assistant in the livestock sanitary labora- tory of the University of Maryland at College Park, Md. His address is P. O. Box 83. '2.9 ME—Alan C. Mattison is a produc- tion engineer at the Mattison Machinery te between Works. His address is 1631 National Avenue, Rockford, 111. ITHACA fr'NEW YORK '19—-James E. Coker is a supervisor with the du Pont Viscoloid Company in x OPULAR flyers on dependable schedules and with typical Leominster, Mass. He lives at 12. Hall Lackawanna features, observation parlor car individual seat Street. coaches, buffet-lounge car and drawing room sleepers. '2.9 AB—Ruth S. Bamberger is starting Daily Service—Eastern Standard Time her second year studying under a fellow- ITHACA TO NEW YORK NEW YORK TO ITHACA Lv. 10.05 P.M. Lv. 12.15 P M. Lv. 9-30 P.M. Lv. 10.00 A.M. ship at the Training School for Jewish Ar. 6.45 A.M. Ar. 7.30 P.M. Ar. 6.55 A.M. Ar. 4.32 P.M. Social Work. She lives at 113 Fremont Fβr Tkkits end r$strvatUm apply ft /. L. Rβrntr, Atst. Gin'L Pats. Aymt, ziz W. 42nd St., N*w York orj. G. Braj, Όiv Pan. Agmt, ,2 Clinton St., Ntwark, N. J. Street, Harrison, N. Y. H. B. COOK, Ticket Agent '19 BS; '30 BS—Doris L. Ills ton '30 200 EAST STATE STREET ITHACA, NEW YORK and Emil W. Joebchen '2.9 were married on September 2.0 in Jamestown, N. Y. Ί9—John M. Montgomery is with the LACKAWANNA Remington Rand Business Service, Inc., at 465 Washington Street, Buffalo. He lives at 15 Shepard Avenue, Kenmore, New York. '19—Herbert L. Shapiro is with Simons, Blauner and Company, brokers at 70 Wall Street, New York. He lives at 50 Lincoln Road, Brooklyn. Boston Providence '2.9 AB—Rosalie F. Cohen is a home Hemphill, Noyes <3& Co. teacher with the New York State Com- ESTABROOK & CO. Members of New York Stock Exchange mission for the Blind, with headquarters, Members of New York and Boston at 80 Center Street, New York. Ithaca Savings Bank Building '2.9—Frank A. Clary, Jr., is attending Stock Exchanges Ithaca, N. Y. the Massachusetts Institute of Techno- Sound Investments logy. His home address is 86 Spring Lane, Janscn Noyes *io Stan ton Griffis Ίo Englewood, New Jersey. L. M. Blancke Ί5 '2.9—Helen E. Hastings is a dental ROGER H. WILLIAMS '95 hygienist with the public school system Arthur Treman '2.3, in Syracuse, N. Y. Her permanent ad- Resident Partner New York Office Manager Ithaca Office dress is 2.2.5 Central Street, Watertown, 40 Wall Street Direct Private Wire to New York New York. Office and 49 Other Cities '30 BS—Arthur C. Stevens is on the Newark Albany front office staff of the Hotel Fort Sum- ter in Charleston, S. C. '30 DVM—Lincoln E. Field is assis- tant veterinarian with Dr. Irving O. Denman Ίo in Middletown, N. Y. His HARRIS AND FULLER address is Box 2.70. Quality Service Members New|York Stock Exchange no BROADWAY NEW YORK MERCERSBURG ACADEMY E. H. WANZER BALTIMORE PHILADELPHIA Offers a thorough physical, mental and moral training for college or business. Under Christ- The Grocer Accounts Carried on ian masters from the great universities. Located Conservative Margin in the Cumberland Valley. New gymnasium. Equipment modern. Write for catalogue. Aurora and State Streets CLARENCE R. NIMS ARTHUR V. NIMS '13 BOYD EDWARDS, D.D., S.T.D., Head-Master BENJAMIN JACOBSON LESLIE A. HARTLEY Mercersburg, Peήnsylvannia PROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY GET of CORNELL ALUMNI IT NEW YORK CITY BALTIMORE, MD. MARTIN H. OFFINGER, E.E. '99 WHITMAN, REQUARDT & SMITH AT Treasurer and Manager Water Supply, Sewerage, Structural Van Wagoner—Linn Construction Co. Valuations of Public Utilities, Reports, Electric Construction Plans, and General Consulting Practice. Ezra B. Whitman, C.E. Όi 143 East Tjύv Street G. J. Requardt, C.E. Ό9 B. L. Smith, C.E. '14 Phone Lexington 512.7 Baltimore Trust Building

ROTHSCHILDS REAL ESTATE & INSURANCE ITHACA, N. Y. Leasing, Selling, and Mortgage Loans GEORGE S. TARBELL PH.B. '91—LL.B. '94 BAUMEISTER AND BAUMEISTER Ithaca Trust Building 511 Fifth Ave. Attorney and Counselor at Law Ithaca Real Estate Phone Murray Hill 3816 Rented, Sold, and Managed ITHACA'S Charles Baumeister Ί8, '2.0 Philip Baumeister, Columbia '14 Fred Baumeister, Columbia '14 P. W. WOOD & SON FOREMOST P. O. Wood Ό8 Insurance DEPARTMENT Delaware Registration and 316-318 Savings Bank Bldg. STORE Incorporators Company Inquiries as to Delaware Corporation KENOSHA, wis. Registrations have the personal attention at New York office of MACWHYTE COMPANY JOHN T. McGOVERN 00, President Manufacturers Wire and Wire Rope 31 Nassau Street Phone Rector 9867 Streamline and Round Tie Rods for Airplanes Jessel S. Whytc, M.E. '13, Vice-President R. B. Whyte, M.E. '13, Gen. Supt. E. H. FAILE & CO. Flowers Engineers TULSA, OKLAHOMA Industrial buildings designed Heating, Ventilating, Electrical equipment HERBERT D. MASON, LL.B. Όo By Wire Industrial power plants Attorney and Counselor at Law Construction management 18th Floor, Philtower Building E. H. FAILE, M.E. '06 MASOB, WILLIAMS & LYNCH delivered promptly 441 Lexington Ave. Tel. Murray Hill 7736 to any address in WASHINGTON, D. C. the civilized world THEODORE K. BRYANT '97, '98 THE BALLOU PRESS Master Patent Law, G. W. U. '08 CHAS. A. BALLOU, JR. '2.1 Patents and Trade Marks Exclusively "Say it with Flowers" 309-314 Victor Building Printers to Lawyers Beekman St. Tel. Beekman 8785 Every event is an occasion for flowers 1819 G Street, N.W. FRANKS BACHEM9 One block west State War and Navy Bldg. LUNCHEON AND DINNER BETTER BUILDING RUTH L. CLEVES Ί6 Construction Work of Every Description in Westchester County and Lower Connecticut WESTCHESTER COUNTY F. S. BACHE '13 The Bool Floral Business Properties Company, Inc. 94 Lake Street White Plains, N. Y. Country Homes Chain Store Locations Rosteriberg •'The House of Universal Service" EVealtij Co.Inc. o Ithaca, New York F. L. CARLISLE & CO. INC. L. O. ROSTENBERG AB Ί.6 Pres. 2.3 Orawaupum St. Depot Plaza 15 BROAD STREET White Plains, N. Y. Pleasantville, N. Y. Member Westchester County Realty Board NEW YORK and Real Estate Board of New York Andrew D. White's Autobiography One thousand copies of the $3.00 edition have been sold

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