CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS

Vol. XIII. No. 35 Ithaca, N. V., June 7, 1911 Price 10 Cents

dents of the state. Non-residents will of next week. The usual Block Week Cornelliana. pay a tuition fee of $25. The an- grinding is on in earnest. The Cornell Chapter of Phi Beta nouncement of the school may now be Kappa has elected five graduate stu- The Cornell Veterinarian is the obtained from Director Bristol of the name of a new publication which has dents to membership: George Irving Summer Session or from the College just made its appearance. The paper Dale, Ida Langdon, Bertha C. Pierce, of Agriculture. John Raymond Tuttle, and Wesley D. is to be published semi-annually by a Zinnecker; also two additional sen- With the interclass races on Beebe board composed of members of the iors: Austin P. Evans and Helen Lake Friday, the rowing season for faculty and students of the Veter- Olga Shollenberger. Sage College crews was finished. The inary College. Under a new system of military seniors won the championship, defeat- Dean H. C. Price, M. S. A., '99, and administration which will become op- ing the juniors in a preliminary race Professor W. R. Lazenby, B. Ag., '74, and the freshmen in the final. The erative on July 1, Brigadier-General of the college of agriculture of Ohio course was a quarter of a mile in Walter S. Schuyler is assigned to the State University, will be absent on length and the crews are said to have command of the brigade post at Fort leave next year, the former for Riley, Kansas. General Schuyler is rowed it in less than two minutes. study in one of the German uni- a son of the late George W. Schuyler At senior singing one night last versities and the latter for travel of Ithaca, the first treasurer of Cor- week a quartette of seniors appeared and the study of forestry in Europe nell University, and was professor in grimy overalls while the familiar and South America. of military science and tactics at Cor- song "I've Been Workin' on the Rail- Horation Burt Williams, A. B., M. nell in 1883-86 and 1896-98. road" was sung. D., lately assistant in physiology in The Cosmopolitan Club gave a fare- The Rev. Charles Talcott Ogden, the Medical Col- well banquet to its seniors and other honorary canon of St. Luke's Epis- lege at New York, has been appoint- copal Cathedral at Albany, and fath- departing members at its house Sat- ed associate professor in the depart- urday night. There were nearly 100 er of Professor Henry N. Ogden '89, ment of physiology of Columbia Uni- died on May 28 at the age of 75 present. Professor Fred A. Barnes versity. He is spending the summer years. was the toastmaster. After the ban- in Europe visiting several labora- quet had been served Professor About forty pictures are now hung tories and arranging for the purchase Barnes called on Tomas Mapua Ίl, in White Hall at the first annual ex- of apparatus for electrocardio- of the Philippines, for a "stunt." hibition of the Cornell Art Associa- graphic and other work. Then various seniors spoke for their tion. Six water colors by the young The Delta Tau Delta fraternity colonies. K. Y. Char '12, of China, artist I. G. Olinsky and two portraits gave up its house to the Pennsylvania made the farewell address to the sen- by Richard Andrew arrived last baseball team last week. iors and Alan C. Towers 11, of Ur- week. Five more paintings by Jonas uguay, spoke for the class of 1911. Lie have also been hung. Charles For the coming year, the Law Dr. C. W. Heizer gave an interesting Walter Stetson, the American artist, School Association has elected the fol- talk on the place a college graduate has sent six paintings for the exhi- lowing officers: President, F. P. Murphy '12, Stamford; vice-president, should fill in the civic and religious bition. These have not yet arrived. life of his community. Professor E. P. Williams '13, New York City; Karl D. Pettit of Pittsburg, Pa., secretary, F. W. Rugge '12, Hoboken, Frank A. Fetter, one of the founders has been elected business manager of of the club and one of its most active N. J.; treasurer, E. S. Tucker '12, the 1912 Class Book. He is a member Athens, Pa. members, made the last address of of Chi Phi. Ross W. Kellogg, of Sen- the evening. To fill vacancies, the Minor Sports eca Falls, has been elected editor-in- Council has made the following elec- It is reported that Detroit hotel chief of the book. This is the first men have an option on the Hoysradt tions to managerships: Assistant year that the Class Book editor has manager of swimming, H. H. Allport, property at the southeast corner of been chosen by competition. Cayuga and Seneca streets, opposite Chicago, 111., a member of Sigma Phi; Instruction in most of the depart- asisstant manager of association foot- the Clinton House, and plan to build ments of the University ceased at 1 a large hotel there. ball, George G. Goetz, Milwaukee, o'clock Saturday. The final examin- Wis., a member of Chi Psi; assistant Tuition in the new summer school ations for the second term started manager of cricket, R. P. Kennedy, in agriculture is to be free to resi- Monday and will last until the middle Buffalo, a member of Zodiac. 414 CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS

GIFT OF A MONO-RAIL CAR.

Presented to the University by the Railway Appliances Association. A valuable gift was made to the University recently for the depart- ment of physics, and it is highly prized by the department both for itself and because this University was selected to receive it. The gift is a working model of the Brennan mono- rail car, about forty inches long. The car carries two heavy flywheels, or gyroscopes, which are so mounted as to keep the car always in equilibrium, even when running on a single rail or cable, and however the load on the car may be shifted. The model was built by the Cen- tral Scientific Company of Chicago HOME OF THE NEW CORNELL CHAPTER OF PHI KAPPA SIGMA. and was shown at the exhibition of railway appliances held at the Coli- year. He expects to remain in this year. Professor Dann's position as seum in Chicago last March, during country and continue his study of head of the department will be taken the convention of the Railway Appli- oratory. for the term by the University organ- ances Association. A vote was taken Professor Prescott will go abroad ist, Edward Johnston. by the members of the Association in October and will spend the year in who were present at the convention to Italy and France. Chapter of Phi Kappa Sigma Established decide to what university or techni- Professor Dexter S. Kimball of Sib- Here. cal school the model should be pre- ley College will be absent during the sented, and Cornell received a major- first term. He is now in California Cerberus, a local society which was ity of the votes cast The model has with his family, but will return to founded in 1904, has just been grant- been set up in Rockefeller Hall. It take charge of the manual training ed a charter in the national frater- forms a very interesting addition to instruction in the Summer Session. nity Phi Kappa Sigma. .The initia- the apparatus already possessed by After the Summer Session he will re- tion of the charter members and the University for illustrating the turn to the Pacific Coast, where he the installation ceremonies for the principle of the gyroscope and its ap- will probably remain for the first establishment of the new chapter pliances. term. were held on Friday, June 2, During the first term Professor H. at the new Cerberus Lodge at 712 To Be Absent Next Year. A. Sill of the department of history Thurston avenue, across the gorge from the Hydraulic Laboratory. Several members of the Faculty will be abroad. Professor Sill ex- will be absent from the University pects to spend the term in study in Phi Kappa Sigma was founded in next year on sabbatical leave. Pro- Greece and Italy. 1850 at the University of Pennsyl- fessor J. A. Winans of the depart- Professor Vladimir Karapetoff of vania and has chapters at the follow- ment of oratory and Professor F. C. the department of electrical engineer- ing institutions: University of Prescott of the department of Eng- ing of Sibley College will also be Pennsylvania, Washington and Jef- lish will be away for the whole year. away from the University during the ferson College, Dickinson College, Professor Winans's absence brings first term. He will be employed by Franklin and Marshall College, Uni- several temporary changes in the de- J. G. White & Co. versity of Virginia, Columbia Univer- sity, Tulane University, University of partment of which he is the head. During the second term Professor Professor George A. Everett will be Illinois, Randolph-Macon College, Herman Diederfchs of Sibley College Northwestern University, Richmond the acting head of the department. and Professor George Lincoln Burr Mr. Smiley Blanton, who has been College, Pennsylvania State College, of the department of history will also Washington and Lee University, Uni- an instructor in the department for be on sabbatical leave. Neither of several years, has refused promotion versity of West Virginia, University them has announced his plans. Pro- of Maine, Armour Institute of Tech- and will go to New York, where he fessor Burr said he thought he would will continue the study of medicine. nology, University of Maryland, Uni- not make definite plans but would let versity of Wisconsin, Vanderbilt Uni- Mr. Blanton's place will be filled by each day take care of itself. Mr. Lew D. Fallis, a graduate of the versity, University of Alabama, University of Washington and the Professor Hollis E. Dann of the de- University of California, Massachu- Curry School of Expression in Bos- partment of music will be abroad dur- setts Institute of , Technology, ton. Professor Winans has not yet ing the second term. For this reason Georgia School of Technology, Pur- fully completed his plans for the there will be no music festival next due University, University Of Michi- CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS 415 gan, and Cor- nell "University. Twenty-five charter members were initiated in the Cornell chapter of Phi Kappa Sigma. The new chapter is known as the Alpha Rho chapter of the fraternity.

On the Tennessee Faculty. The 1911-12 University of Tennes- see Register, just issued, shows the following Cornell men on the faculty: '98, H. S. Morgan, B. S. A., Pro- fessor of Zoology and Entomology, and Director of the Tennessee Agri- cultural Experiment Station. '01, R. M. Ogden, B. S., Ph. D., Professor of Philosophy and Psycho- logy. '99, L. P. Shanks, A. M., Ph. D., Associate Professor of Romance Languages. '96, J. S. Switzer, M. E., Associate VIEW OF SPRING DAY CROWD ON THE PLAYGROUND. Professor of Experimental Engineer- ing. Civil Service Commis- the middle of June of this year, it is '00, G. M. Bentley, B. S. A., M. A., sion, at Washington, D. C. In general, suggested that persons interested com- State Entomologist. the methods of procedure in filling this municate with the United States Civil position will be similar to those of an Service Commission, at Washington, D. C., at an early date. The entrance Wanted—A Soil Scientist. educational institution, whose board salary for this position is $3,000 per There is a vacancy in the Bureau of of trustees or governing officers desire annum.—Science. Soils, United States Department of to fill professional or technical posi- Agriculture, at Washington, D. C., for tions. The qualifications and fitness the position of soil scientist in the lab- will be determined by an impartial Spring Day Cleared $2,800. oratory of physical and chemical in- board of scientists. As the selection Spring Day netted the Athletic As- vestigations. The government is en- for this position will be made about sociation about $2,800 this year. The deavoring to secure the best qualified man available for this work and has no particular individual in view. The position requires a high order of scientific training, equivalent to that required by the leading American uni- versities for a professorship in physi- cal chemistry. As the work will also be largely administrative in character, a wide and successful experience in an executive capacity is very essential. A broad field exists for scientific work of a high grade and for original re- search and investigation which offers rare opportunities for the making of a reputation and for a career in the public service. It is customary to publish the results of investigations in government publications with the name of the scientist making the study or investigation. Those persons who are qualified and who wish to be considered for this position are invited to submit for considera- tion a statement of their qualifications, references to their published works, and other pertinent material to the " BARKERS " FOR THE ARCHITECTS' SPRING DAY SHOW. 416 CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS exact amount cannot yet be ascer- G. E. Kent Graduate Manager. ATHLETICS. tained, but the gross receipts were George Ervin Kent, of Dayton, Baseball. $3,625 and it is thought that the ex- Ohio, has been engaged by the Ath- By hi£ work in recent games penses will not exceed $800. The letic Council as Graduate Manager of Charles Robert Hightower, of Col- amount made this year is over $1,100 Athletics for next year. During the lins, Colorado, has proved himself to in excess of the profits of any pre- past year Mr. Kent has been assist- be as good an all-around pitcher as vious Spring Day. The sale of gen- ant to the acting graduate manager, any on the Cornell staff. Without eral admissions brought in the largest John H. Scott. He is a graduate of dispraise of Nisbet, who has pitched amount, $1,134. On the programs good ball this season and who seemed $414 was realized. The three shows a few Weeks ago to be the best which made the most money were of the lot, it must be said that High- Minor Sports, $327; Arts and tower has surpassed him. He won Sciences, $214; Freshmen, $137.50. the first Williams game, prevented Toys and candy brought in $184 and a defeat by Princeton, won the Yale ice cream and lemonade, $131. game and last week went in when the team was facing defeat by Pennsyl- Poughkτepsie Regatta. vania and by his pitching and bat- Tuesday, June 27, is the date of the ting obtained a victory. Hightower intercollegiate regatta at Pough- is a hitter and a reliable fielder, and keepsie. The Cornell University Ath- in these respects he clearly excels letic Association expects to receive its Nisbet. allotment of seats in the observation CORNELL 6, PENN 5. train this week. Mail orders for tick- In a twelve-inning contest on Mem- ets will be received at the athletic of- orial Day at Percy Field Cornell de- fice and filled in the order of receipt feated Pennsylvania, winning the sec- if they are accompanied with remit- ond of a series of four games. Twice tance of $2.50 for each seat. This the score was tied. As in the Yale is the regular price and is fixed by G. E. KENT. game, it was a hit by O'Connell that the West Shore Railroad Company. brought in the winning run. High- Ten cents should be included in each Sibley College of the class of 1910. tower was the hero of . He order to cover the cost of registry. In his senior year he was manager of took up the pitching when the team Checks, drafts or money orders the Musical Clubs. He is a member was in a bad hole, and on his first should be made payable to Cornell of Theta Delta Chi and . time at bat he made a hit that was University Athletic Association. His appointment was announced good for three runs. after a meeting of the Athletic Coun- Nisbet started the game, but he cil last week. Assistant Managers Elected. walked off the field in the second in- Professor Herman Diederichs ning after a series of hits had scored Elections to several assistant man- tendered his resignation as faculty agerships were made by the Athletic three men. Hightower took up the member of the Council and track ad- burden with nobody out and a man Council last week. The following viser, and the resignation was ac- sophomores were elected: on third, and Penn got only one more cepted. run in that inning. In Cornell's time Assistant manager of track, Don- It was voted by the Council to use at bat, with two out, McCormick ald Pettit Beardsley, Elmira; Psi funds of the association for partly re- singled, Thompson was hit by a Upsilon. modeling the barn which stands on pitched ball and Howard was passed, Assistant manager of baseball, the new addition to Alumni Field and filling the bases. Hightower doubled William Orr Lidgate, Paanilo, putting lockers and shower baths in to the clubhouse, bringing in three Hawaii; Chi Phi. the building. Such improvements in runs. From then on he pitched a splen- Assistant manager of freshman the building as the association ex- did game, giving Penn only five hits track, William Algernon More, Buf- pects to make will fit it for use as a in ten innings and striking out eleven falo; Delta Tau Delta. temporary training house. They will batters. Cornell tied the score at Assistant manager of freshman not realize all the possibilities there 4 runs each by the help of errors in baseball, William Henry Tourison, are in the building, such as were the seventh inning. In the eleventh Philadelphia; Phi Delta Theta. indicated in an article in the ALUM- an error by Thompson and two Assistant business manager of the NI NEWS of April 26. singles enabled Penn to get a sixth Masque, Tristan Antell, Brooklyn. score, but Cornell, not the least bit Assistant stage manager of the Professor E. W. Olmsted and As- discouraged, came right back in the Masque, Edward Haynes, Brooklyn; sistant Professor Arthur Gordon have same inning and tied it up again. Kappa Sigma. just completed a Spanish grammar Mahoney drew a base on balls, Thom- Assitsant property manager of the which is to be published by Henry as, batting for Thompson, advanced Masque, Henry Webb Lormor, Dry- Holt & Company. It is a book of more him a base and Howard brought him den; Phi Gamma Delta. than 500 pages. home with a clean rap to center. In CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS 417 the twelfth only three batters faced hit to the outfield. Hightower pitched broken up after the race at Phila- Hightower and two of them struck seven innings and Nisbet took his delphia, but most of the men out. For Cornell Captain Magner place. Hightower was strong at most are reporting daily at the boathouse led off with a, single and stole second, times, but Wililams took advantage for practice in fours as varsity sub- Clute tried to sacrifice but was safe, of his moments of wildness. In the stitutes. About the middle of last and O'Connell clouted the ball to the first inning he hit Brown, who scored week the varsity eight began its clubhouse and Magner scored. So did on Magner's error. In the fifth training for the long four-mile pull at Clute, but his run did not count. The Brown was passed and Mills was safe Poughkeepsie. They had a complete Pennsylvania team brought three on Dauenhauer's error, and Dodd rest on Monday, and some of them pitchers and used them all—Clark for scored both with a hit to left field. needed it after the Princeton-Yale three innings, Marshall for five and Two singles and a double brought in and Harvard races. On Tuesday Mr. Imlay for four. The score: a fourth run in the seventh inning. Courtney sent the eight out on the In the eighth Nisbet hit a batter and lake, but he did not follow them, and CORNELL AB R H PO A E Magner, ss 6 1 2 3 4 0 was found for three singles, but he told them to take it easy and go Clute, Ib 6 0 2 11 2 0 sharp fielding held Williams to only as they pleased. So they larked along O'Connell, cf . ... 6 0 1 3 1 0 one more run. The score: the west shore, and the only speed Butler, If 5 0 0 0 0 0 trial they had was reported by one Mahoney, rf ..... 3 1 0 3 1 1 CORNELL AB R H PO A E McCormick, c .... 5 1 2 13 2 0 Magner, ss 4 01011 of the cottagers, who heard a loud Thompson, 2b 2 2 1 2 1 1 Clute, Ib 3 00720 chorus of quacks and looked up to Thomas, If 1 0 1 0 0 0 O'Connell, cf 4 02210 see the crew racing with his flock of Dauenhauer, 2b . . 0 0 0 0 0 0 Butler, If 3 0 0 1 1 0 ducklings. Howard, 3b 3 1 1 1 1 0 Mahoney, rf 3 01300 Nisbet, p 0 0 0 0 0 0 McCormick, c .... 4 0 0 10 1 0 Hightower, p .... 5 0 1 0 2 0 Dauenhauer, 2b . . 3 00321 Lacrosse. Howard, 3b 3 00110 In its final game the lacrosse team Totals 42 6 10 36 14 2 Hightower, p .... 2 00030 Nisbet, p 0 00000 defeated Hobart at Geneva last week PENNSYLVANIA AB R H PO A E Tuesday by a score of 9 to 5. The Coryell, cf 6 0 0 2 0 0 * Thompson 1 00000 Smith, If 5 0 3 2 1 0 xThomas 1 00000 teams played about equally in the first McNabb, Ib 6 0 1 8 3 0 **Keller 1 00000 half, which ended with a score of 4 to Donovan, ss 5 0 0 3 4 0 Totals 32 0 4 27 12 2 4. In the second period the Cornell Aldendeifer, 2b . . 5 1 1 3 2 1 men showed much improvement both King, 3b 4 2 1 2 1 2 *Batted for Hightower in the seventh, Cozens, c. 5 1 2 9 2 1 xBatted for Butler in the ninth. in defensive and aggressive play. The Thayer, rf 5 1 2 2 0 0 **Batted for Mahoney in the ninth. victory puts Cornell in second place WILLIAMS AB R H PO A E Clark, p 1 0 0 1 0 0 in the northern division of the inter- Otis, If 5 01000 Marshall, p 2 0 0 0 0 0 collegiate lacrosse league. Imlay, p 2 0 0 1 0 0 Brown, ss 3 20121 Mills, 3b 4 11220 Totals 46 δ 10 33*13 4 Shons, cf 4 11300 Putnam Elected Captain. *None out when winning run was Dodd, 2b 5 02001 Herbert Nathan Putnam, of Fre- scored. Ainslie, rf 5 02000 Penn 040000000010—5 Lewis, c 4 1 2 12 1 0 donia, a junior in the College of Ar- Cornell 03000010001 1—6 Trumbull, Ib 3 00710 chitecture, was elected captain of the Two base hits—Hightower, McCor- Davis, p 3 01200 1911-12 track team at a meeting of mick, O'Connell, McNabb. Three base track men held Sunday morning. hit—Thayer. Sacrifice hit—Howard, Totals 36 5 10 27 6 2 stolen bases—Magner 2, Clute, Smith. Williams ..100 020 11 0—5 Putnam has been a member of the First base on balls—Off Clark 2, off Cornell ....000 000 00 0—0 track team for the past two years. Imlay 1, off Hightower 2. Struck out Two base hit—Ainslie. Three He won his "C" on the 1910 cross- base hit—Magner. Sacrifice hit— —By Nisbet 1, by Hightower 11, by country team, finishing twelfth, the Clark 1, by Marshall 6, by Imlay 3. Trumbull. Stolen bases—Magner, Passed ball—Cozens. Hit by pitcher O'Connell, Mahoney, Mills 2. First fourth of the Cornell point winners. —Thompson by Clark twice. Double base on balls—off Hightower 4. Struck He was a member of the four-mile in- plays—Donovan, McNabb and King; out—by Davis 10, by Hightower 7, by door relay team which broke the Nisbet 2. Left on bases—Williams Donovan unassisted. Time—3 hours. world's record at Buffalo on March Umpire—Bedford. 11, Cornell 6. Hit by pitcher—Brown by Hightower, Lewis by Nisbet, Clute 3. Here he ran against Paull, of WILLIAMS 5, CORNELL 0. by Davis. Time—2 hours. Umpire Pennsylvania. Paull started with a The nine had hope of winning the —Bedford. lead of ten yards, and Putnam cut second Williams game at Percy Field Rowing. this down during the mile and finish- on Saturday, but they were almost The Cornell crews will leave Ithaca ed qven. He was also on the four- totally unable to hit Davis, the cap- on June 13 for The Oaks, their quar- mile relay team ^which set a new able Williams pitcher, and were shut ters on the Hudson opposite Pough- American record in the Pennsylvania out by a score of 5 to 0. Only two keepsie. That will give them just relay games. He won the half- Cornell men reached third base and about two weeks for final practice be- mile in the Pennsylvania and Prince- only three others got as far as fore the big regatta. ton dual meets and finished second to second. Of the four hits made off No change has been made in the Jones in that event at the intercol- Davis only one, Magner's three-bag- varsity eight since the race with Har- legiates. Putnam is a member of ger in the fifth inning, was a clean vard. The junior varsity eight was Phi Gamma Delta and Sphinx Head. 418 CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS

A Harvard publication could make respect and admiration of us all. no more agreeable threat than to say Rarely do groups of young men that the Crimson crews will keep "show up" better than groups coming from Cornell. Why these things are after our crews till they have an even so we may not pretend to know, and chance of outrowing us and will then if anyone possesses the explanation it take several of those chances. We will be received with pleasure; but it SUBSCRIPTION—$3.00 Per Year. is both curious and inspiring to note Published by the Cornell Alumni News hope this means that our friends the Publishing Company. John L. Senior, what a high standard of youthful man- President, Woodford Patterson, Secretary Harvard crews will continue to come hood Cornell maintains and how her and Treasurer. Office: 110 North Tioga to Ithaca for many, many years. men respond to any test from athletics Street, Ithaca, N. Y. • Published weekly during the college to the summons for personal bravery. year and monthly in July and August, PLEASANT WORDS FROM BOSTON. The late James McNeiΓ Whistler, forty issues annually. Issue No. 1 is with his eccentric generosity, was at published the first Wednesday of the " VICTORIOUS BY LAND AND BY college year, in October, and weekly pub- a dinner party at which his brother lication (numbered consecutively) con- artist, Lord Leighton, was being tinues through Commencement week. Is- eulogized for his versatility. The sue No. 40, the final one of the year, is Boston Transcript, May 29. published the last Wednesday in August How does Cornell do it? Two boat speaker had discoursed warmly of the and contains a complete index of the races, two baseball games and an in- orator, the scholar and the man, when entire volume. Whistler broke in: "Paints some, Single copies, ten cents each. Foreign tercollegiate track meet for one day's jostage, 40 cents per year. Subscriptions athletic spoils. Now are the shrines too." And so Cornell is, after all, payable in advance. none of your athlete's college. It Should a subscriber desire to discon- of victory on the Ithacan strand heap- trains men, too. tinue his subscription, notice to that ef- ed with the bays of her heroes, and fect should be sent in before its expira- the name of their alma mater a word In the words of your own hymn: tion. Otherwise it is assumed that a "Hail, all hail, Cornell!" continuance of the subscription is de- of praise on the tongues of men. On sired. Cayuga's waters the Cornell boat left "SHALL KEEP AFTER THEM." Checks, drafts and orders should be the Harvard boat two and one-half made payable to the Cornell Alumni Harvard Alumni Bulletin. News. ' lengths behind; the Cornell freshmen All correspondence should be address- had passed the buoys at the finish The defeat of the crew in the race at ed— CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS, when the Harvard freshmen had nine- Ithaca last Saturday should not have Ithaca, N. Y. teen more strokes to row; the Cornell caused surprise although it was dis- baseball team in a wrenching 'four- appointing. College boat races, what- teen-inning game won from the Yale ever they may have been, are not now WOODFORD PATTERSON, men with a score of six to five, though contests between crews made up of Editor. those stubborn sons of Eli had tied students; they are matches between R. W. KELLOGG, the game with three runs at the end professional coaches. Inasmuch as Assistant Editor. of the ninth inning. At Hanover Cornell has the best coach in the the Dartmouth freshmen were being country, it is not to be wondered at JAMES B. WALKER, JR., worsted at baseball by the Cornell that Cornell wins by far the greater Business Manager. freshmen, four to one; thus early does part of the races in which her crews ROYAL K. BAKER, the habit of victory set in with Itha- take part. Assistant Business Manager. cans, and these lads went home bear- Thirty-five years or so ago Mr. ing another sheaf of glory for the Courtnev was one of the two or three general blaze. Close at hand in the best professional oarsmen in the world, Entered as Second-Class Matter at Ithaca, N. Y. Harvard Stadium we saw Cornell's and for about twenty-five years he has track team, by the more laborious and been engaged in teaching other men less spectacular kind of victories, sur- how to row. To his own skill he has Ithaca, N. Y., June 7, 1911. pass the athletes of every other col- added what he could learn from others. lege of prominence in the East. And When he first began to coach at Cor- three new records were made by Cor- nell he taught the men to row from 40 A few changes have been made in nell men, two of them by Mr. John to 50 strokes a minute in their three- the Commencement program since it Paul Jones, who, if there were any- mile races, but after he had taken one thing in names, should have captained of his crews to England and had been was first published two weeks ago, his university boat; but he served his soundly beaten there, he,was discern- and the corrected program is printed college well on land. ing enough to change absolutely the in this number. The class secretaries' So Cornell, as they say in the Greek stroke he had been teaching and to association and the association of histories, was victorious both by land adopt the long, slow English stroke, and by sea. We feebly struggle; they the superiority of which had been football alumni are to meet on Tues- in glory shine. And though beaten, demonstrated to his complete satis- day morning instead of Wednesday and beaten badly, we can still admire faction. Since that time, fifteen years afternoon. without envy and cheer without re- ago, he has continued to use the Eng- gret. As was said in these columns lish stroke, although, like every other Such wholehearted praise as that on Saturday, next to the honor of intelligent coach, he has changed it accorded us by the Boston Transcript beating Cornell is the honor of being in non-essentials from year to year, beaten by men who play the game in order to suit the peculiarities of is rare. One reads it through the so like gentlemen, men who can gen- his crews. first time with a little doubt in his erously win and as handsomely take Mr. Wray, the Harvard coach, lacks mind, a little waiting for the para- a defeat. Singularly, there is no sting bv thirty years the experience that in being beaten by Cornell; it is as if Mr. Courtney has had. Mr. Wray graph that may spoil the effect of knew nothing about eighttoared crews it all. But no. The writer was sin- thev had all along deserved to win. Whether they come bearing the lyre when he came to Cambridge about ten cere. And his praise is the best kind to sing in joint concerts of the musi- years ago, and his own reputation as of all because it looks beyond our cal clubs or in running togs to march a professional sculler was by no accomplishment and recognizes the fleetly down the cinder paths, they means as great as Mr. Courtney's [had been thirty years before. The* as- spirit we tried to put into what come as friends, and as such they de- part. Some spirit is in that New tonishing thing is that the Harvard we did. York State college which compels the coach has done as well as he has. In CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS 419

the six years during which he has HERBERTG.OGDEN,E.E.;97 coached the Harvard crews he has won Γ. C. POWER. Helena, Mont., Pres. four victories from Yale, and has suc- J. P. BAKER, Vlce.Pτesldent Attorney and Counsellor at Law ceeded in beating regularly all the rest G. H. RUSS. Jr., '03, Cashier. of his opponents except Mr. Courtney. Patents and Patent Causes Even he has been beaten once. Mr. BISMARCK BANK 2 RECTOR ST., NEW YORK Wray is not so prejudiced that he will not learn from others, and we expect BISMARCK, N. D. him to be in a few years even a more Issues certificates of deposit, drawing 5 efficient coach than he is now. And percent interest per annum. Interest pay- CORNELL LIVERY so we give these Cornell people warn- able semi-annually. ing that we shall keep after them un- EDWARD P. SAYRE, Prop. til we know just as much about row- Depository for the State of North Da- ing as they know, and until we have an kota, County of Burleigh and City of Bis- 208 South Cayuga St. marck. even chance of defeating them every Correspondence invited. year; when that time comes, we pro- BELL PHONE 55 ITHACA PHONE 36S pose to take several of those chances. Last Saturday was a great day for Cornell athletes; they defeated Har- vard in both the university and fresh- man boat races, they won a hard- Shirt Maker fought baseball game from Yale and took first place in the intercollegiate Huyler's Candies track and field games in the Stadium. Prices Ithaca Agency at Chrlstiancβ-Dudlβy We congratulate them. It is not much, Pharmacy. if it is any, exaggeration to say that $1.50 to $3.00 Cornell today stands at the head of all the American colleges as far as ath- Fit and Workmanship the Best letics are concerned; its crews and Write for samples and track teams are the best of all, its Battήck & Frawley baseball nines are as good as any, and measurement blanks its football elevens rank among the CLARENCE E. HEAD 118 East State Street first half dozen. No other university 2 10 E. Seneca St. Ithaca, N.Y.. does so well in all branches of sport. Full Dress Suits and Tuxedos. HE SEEMED TO. Boston Traveller. The Cornell students tore Ithaca from its moss-grown roots Saturday Quickest and Best Way night and transplanted it. No one iataππa slept, and even Gov. Dix, who chose between this ill-advised time to visit in Ithaca, was pried loose from the hay and Railroad forced to extemporize on Cornell NEW YORK and ITHACA glory. As Gov. Dix is a Cornell alum- nus, perhaps the old boy rather en- joyed it, after all. SLEEPING CARS BOTH WAYS EVERY DAY. FAST SERVICE. NO EXCESS FARES. ALUMNI ASSOCIATIONS. A New World's Record. E. J. Quackenbash. D.P.A., .... Buf al , N. Y Not to be outdone by any Cornell aggregation, the Cornell Club of Phil- adelphia has decided to make a new record. They have chartered a new triple-expansion steam yacht to make the run from Philadelphia to Essing- ton for their annual feed and spring day. This cruise will, it is believed, surpass the famous voyage of the "Limping Lizzie" in 1908, when the A Last Reminder: twelve miles down the Delaware were covered in twenty minutes The at- tractions will be many. Chief among these will be baseball, the annual re- lay race, and of course there will be Keep the Co-op in mind. other things on tap. Remember the date, Bunker Hill Day, June 17, and the place, Essington, Pa.

Echoes of the Track Meet. The rule governing the awarding of the championship cup for the annual

READERS WILL PLEASE MENTION THE ALUM NI NEWS WHEN WRITING TO ADVERTISERS. 420 CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS

intercollegiate track meet reads: the way around and Jones passed him J. G. White & Co. Inc. "This cup shall be awarded to that near the finish and won in 11-5 sec- college of the Inter-Collegiate Assoc- onds under the intercollegiate record Engineers, Contractors iation of Amateur Athletes of Ameri- of 1:56, with Putnam a close second. 43-49 Exchange Place - NEW YORK ca which shall first win the annual No doubt Putnam, too, finished under the old record. Chicago, 111. San Francisco, Cal. field meeting five times, excluding ties." Nothing contained in this rule Engineering Construction warrants the assertion that the five Commencement Week Program. and Operation of victories must be scored before 1913, SUNDAY, JUNE 18. Electric Railways, Electric Lighting or 1915, or 1919, as newspapers have Afternoon. variously said. The trophy is now in 4:00—Baccalaureate Sermon, Sage Systems, Hydraulic and Steam Power Chapel. Sermon by the Rt. Plants, Water Works, Gas Works, Ir- Ithaca, having been brought by the Rev. Frederick Courtney, rigation Systems, etc. Cornell team from Boston, whither it D. D., D. C. L., of St. had been carried by the Pennsylvania James's Episcopal Church, Reports made for Financial Institu- team. It was first competed for in New York City. tions and Investors Evening. 1904, and since then Cornell' has won 7:30—Senior Singing, steps of Gold- London Correspondent: four annual meets, Pennsylvania two, win Smith Hall. J. G. WHITE & CO. Yale one and Harvard one. MONDAY, JUNE 19. Morning. Cloak Lane, Cannon St., E. C. Jones and Berna, especially the 11:00—Organ Recital in former, have been overwhelmed with by Mr. Edward Johnston, invitations to run in the colors of va- University Organist. Afternoon. rious athletic clubs this summer. 3:00—Baseball, Pennsylvania vs. Both men have announced that they Cornell, Percy Field will accept none of these invitations. Evening. Neither of them will be on exhibition. 7:30—Senior Singing, steps of Gold- R. A. Heggie & Bro.Co. win Smith Hall. Moakley tells this story: Before 9:30-—Theta Delta Chi dance and 135 East State St., Ithaca. the half-mile race was run Jones and breakfast, 15 South Avenue Putnam went to him for a last word (By Invitation). TUESDAY, JUNE 20. of advice. Both knew that Jones was Morning. JEWELERS the faster of the two. Jones, who 9:30—Class Day exercises of the had already won the mile in world's Class of 1911 in the Arm- and makers of special Cor- record time, and who seemed to be ory. nell goods. Watches and 10:00—Meeting of the Cornell Assoc- afraid of getting an overshare of iation of Class Secretaries, diamonds a specialty. glory, said: "If I see that Put can Town and Gown Club. win all right, shall I just make sure 12:00—Meeting of the Cornell Alum- of second place or shall I run to win?" ni Football Association, Town and Gown Club. THE KIRK IN SYRACUSE. Putnam broke in: "Never you mind An exquisitely appointed and perfectly con- Afternoon. ducted restaurant for gentlemen. me, John. You run to win. It doesn't 2:00—Meeting of the Federation of Have on draught Imported Wϋrzburger matter which of us gets the most Cornell Women's Clubs, Hofbr&u, Pilsner, Bass Ale and Piel Bros. points in that race as long as we get . Ryan* Consumers' Brew Co. Lager Beer. 3:00—Baseball, Varsity vs. Alumni, all we can." Putnam set the pace all O'Connor & Wittner. Ert.Wi.hed 1865. Percy Field.

Do You Talk Out Of Town? Everyone does sometime or other Bell Universal Long Distance Service gives quick connections at reasonable rates. Bell Service is Everywhere DON'T TRAVEL-TALK. New York Telephone Company Bell System.

READERS WILL PL"A.SPS MPNTTON THE ALUMNI NEWS WHEN WRITING TO ADVERTISERS. CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS 421

Evening. Afternoon. John Chatillon & Sons 6:00—Class Dinners. 2:00—Meeting of the Board of Trus- 6:30—Alumnae Banquet, Sage Gym- tees, President's office. 85-93 CLIFF ST.. NEW YORK CITY nasium. 3:00—Kappa Alpha boat ride. 8:00—Musical Clubs' Concert, Ly- Headquarters for the week will be Manufacturers of ceum Theater. Alumni at the College of Agriculture. Re- members of the clubs will turning alumni are requested to regis- assist the undergraduates. ter there and receive class buttons. Spring Scales 11:00—Senior Ball in the Armory. WEDNESDAY, JUNE 21. The Baseball Schedule. for weighing, assorting, counting, mul- Morning. (Cornell's score given first.) tiplying, estimating, measuring, 9:00—Meeting of the Board of Trus- April 7, Georgetown, 1-8. testing and for various tees, President's Office. April 8, , 2-7. other purposes. 10:00—Annual Business Meeting of April 10, Georget'n, 4-4. (10 innings.) the Associate Alumni, Col- April 11, Dartmouth, 3-1. lege of Agriculture Audi- April 12, South Orange, 3-7. UR information regarding vacancies torium. April 15, Lehigh, 5-2. O comes direct from School Authorities April 20, Trinity, 9-1. to whom we PERSONALLY RECOM- Afternoon. MEND teachers. Our new card index en- April 25, Bucknell, 8-4. ables us to find at once the right teacher 12:30—Buffet Luncheon to all Alum- April 28, Columbia, 8-3. for each place. We use a rapid fire rifle, ni. Department of home April 29, Princeton, 2-3. not a shotgun. Register now for posi- economics, College of Agri- May 4, Penn State, 4-3. tion or promotion. culture. THE THURSTON TEACHERS' AGENCY May 5, Dartmouth, 1-8. 623 S. Wabash Ave., Chicago, 111. 2:30—Cornellian Council Meeting, May 6, Dartmouth, 6-0. College of Agriculture, May 10, Colgate, 4-0. Room 302. May 13, Princeton, 9-9. (13 innings) We Write Insurance 3:00—Annual meeting of the Stock- May 18, Dartmouth, 2-3. holders of the Alumnae May 19, Williams, 5-4. (10 innings.) ALL KINDS House Association, College May 20, Penn, 2-1. of Agriculture, Room 391. 4:00 to 6:00—Reception for Seniors May 27, Yale, 6-5. (14 innings.) Ithaca Realty Co. and guests. Sage Col- May 30, Penn, 6-5. (12 innings.) 107 Noith Tioga Street. lege (By invitation). June 3, Williams, 0-5. Evening. June 17, Yale at New Haven. 6:00—Class Dinners. June 19, Penn at Ithaca. 8:15—Masque Performance, "The June 20, Alumni at Ithaca. Conspirators," Lyceum June 21, Penn at Philadelphia. Theater. 11:00—Sigma Phi dance, 1% Central Delegates from the fraternities met Avenue (By invitation). on Thursday evening of last week at THURSDAY, JUNE 22. the house to dis- Morning. cuss rushing rules for next fall. Be sure your ticket reads 9:30—Meeting of the Board of Trus- tees, President's Office. Professor Lane Cooper addressed viia the 10:00—Procession of Trustees, Facul- the Cornell chapter of Phi Beta Kap- ty members and candidates pa last week on "The Function of the for degrees will form in front of Goldwin Smith Leader in Scholarship." Hall. Lehigh Valley 10:30—Forty-Third Annual Com- Tuesday, June 20, and Wednesday, mencement in the Armory. June 21—Alumni Days. Railroad. Hotel Cumberland Broadway at 54th Street NEW YORK New 50th St. Subway Station and 53rd St. Elevated ' 'Broadway'' cars from Grand Central Depot pass the door Urband, Son & Co. Kept by a College Man Headquarters for College Men Tailors Special Rates for College Teams ITHACA Near Theatres, Shops and Central Park NeW, and Strictly Fireproof Rates Reasonable. $2.50 with bath THE ALHAMBRA GRILL SEND FOR BOOKLET HARRY P. STIMSON. / 13 N. Aurora St. Formerly with Hotel Imperial Ten Minutes Walk to Twenty Theatres A restaurant for ladies and gentlemen J. B. HERSON. Proprietor. HEADQUARTERS fa CORNELL MEN

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Alumni Notes. LEGAL DIRECTORY. Eighth Year '73—Clarence Beebe, who has been The lawyers' directory is intended to serve the SHELDON COURT convenience of Cornell professional men in var- in Hamburg, Germany, for^more than ious parts of the country. Insertion of a card in ^Private 'Dormitory a year on business, is about to re- this column carries with it a subscription to the paper. Rates on application to the Business Adjoining Cornell University Cam- turn to this country and after June 1 Manager. pus. Practically fire-proof. Equip- his address will be 132 Nassau street, ment the best. An ideal home for New York City. BOSTON, MASS. JAMES P. MAGENIS, coDege students. Prices very '94, LL, B.—Edwin P. Young has Attorney at Law. moderate. Catalogue on request. moved from Pittsburg to Towanda, 801-804 Tremont Building. Pa., where he will continue the prac- A. R. CONGDON, Mgr., BUFFALO, N. Y. ITHACA. tice of law. HAKxίY L. NUESE '06, Attorney at Law. '95, LL. B.—William P. Belden, of Specialty, Recovery and Adjustment of Claims in Western New York. Ishpeming, Mich., has been appointed 612-613 Mutual Life Building.

by Governor Osborn one% of a state commission of five to investigate mat- CLEVELAND, OHIO. HERBERT W. BELL '94, Do You Use Press ters relating to an employers' liabil- Attorney and Counselor at Law, ity law and to prepare a report to • 1106-7-8 Williamson Building. Clippings? the legislature. The Daily Mining Journal of Marquette says that he is NEW YORK CITY. It will more than pay you to secure DON R. ALMY, A. B. '97; LL. B. '98. peculiarly well qualified for the work Specialty, Trials in Courts of Records. our extensive service covering all 68 William Street , subjects, trade and personal, and get to be done because of the extensive Associated with OLNBY (Harvard '64) & systematic reading of all papers and study of the subject he has made COMSTOCK (Princeton '79). periodicals, here and abroad, at min- during the past year or more. imum cost. Why miss taking ad- NEW YORK CITY. vantage for obtaining the best possi- CHARLES A. TAUSSIG, '04, M. E.—Twin daughters, Mar- A. B. '02, LL. B. Harvard, Ό5. ble service in your line? garet Woods Imbrie and Mary 220 Broadway. Our service is taken by all progress- Telephone 3885 Cortland. General Practice ive business men, publishers, authors, Greenwood Imbrie, were born on May collectors.etc., and is the card index 22 to Mr. and Mrs. William Morris PHILADELPHIA, PA. for securing what you need, as every Imbrie, jr., of Providence, R. I. BiUNJAMIN O. FRICK '02, article of interest is at your daily com- Attorney at Law, '07, M. E.—Mr. and Mrs. Percy 1335 Land Title Bldg., Broad and Chest- mand. nut Streets. Write for terms, or send your or- Andrea of Chicago have recently an- 'Phone, Spruce 2471. der for 100 clippings at $5 or 1,000 nounced the engagement of their clippings at $35. Special rates quoted ROCHESTER, N. Y. for large orders. daughter, Vera Andrea, to Herman SIMON L. ADLER, Bartholomay. Mr. Bartholomay has Attorney and Counselor at Law. 227-229 Granite Building. The Manhattan Press Clipping recently severed his connection with Bureau the Sellers Manufacturing Company SYKACUSE, N. Y. FOWLER, CROUCH & VANN, Cambridge Building, 334 5th Ave., as assistant treasurer and has enter- Attorneys and Counselors at Law. cor. 33d St. ed the insurance field as special agent 504-506 Dillaye Memorial Bldg. •thur Cassot, Proprietor, A. P. FOWLER '91 L. C. CROUCH '89 Established in 1888. for the United States Casualty Com- IRVING D. VANN, Yale '97 New York City. pany, and handles all other lines of insurance. His business address is WASHINGTON, D. C. THEODORE K. BRYANT, '97, '98, 39 South La Salle street, Chicago. M. P. L., G. W. U. '08 U. S. and Foreign f-atents and Trade- '08, M. E.—H. L. Trube is man- Marks. ager's assistant of the American Ice 308-9-10 Ouray Bldg. Company, Philadelphia. WASHINGTON, D. C. DELBERT H. DECKER '84. '08, A. B.—Donald A. Campbell has Patent Law, recently become connected with the 900 F St., N. W. Trade-Marks, Labels, Coyprights. Robert Gair Company, manufactur- ers of paper goods, in Brooklyn. His TO THE ALUMNI: address is 170 Columbia Heights, Brooklyn, N. Y. When you are in need of clothes, no matter where you are, a postal '09, M. E.—E. A. Palmer is in the will bring samples. mechanical department of the Public The Seneca Camera Service Railway Company and lives H. Goldenberg, Ithaca. THE BEST FOR ALL. at the Y. M. C. A., Newark, N. J. '09, C. E.—W. J. McKee, jr., who Revised Tariff of Rates at the Yates Send for Special Student's Proposition. Syracuse, N. Y.—Beginning Sept. 1, 1910 resigned an instructorship in civil AMERICAN PLAN RATES Seneca Camera Mfg. Co., engineering at Cornell a year ago to Rooms,Without Bath $3.OO and upward per day Rooms, With Bath ..$3.50 and upward per day Rochester, N. Y. go to India under the Presbyterian 75 Sample Rooms.... $3.00 and $4.00 per day Largest Independent Camera Makers Board of Foreign Missions, has been EUROPEAN PLAN RATES Rooms, Without Bath $1.00 and upward per day in the World. in charge of the Rang Mahal High Rooms, With Bath $1.50 and upward per day

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School at Lahore, Punjab, India. The school was the first in this whole re- gion, being founded in 1849, and is Twelve Cents in Stamps one of the best known in India. Mr. of any country will bring you postpaid McKee has had a most successful year. There are now 800 in the main An Impression of the center and 400 in the branch school, with 38 teachers. The school is now New Cornell Coat of Arms on a business basis and is 86 per cent, self-supporting, the fees of the stu- dents and government aid meeting Done in Seven Colors on our own presses from the official dies nearly all the expense. Only sixty in our possession. cents American money is spent per child for a school year. Mr. McKee Every old Cornellian will surely want one of these. has himself drawn plans for an en- larged school, which is a necessity on account of crowded quarters. Situ- THE CORNER BOOKSTORES. ated in the midst of the picturesque ITHACA. Lahore Bazaar which Kipling has de- scribed in "Kim," the school under Mr. McKee is giving its boys an ex- ample of American "push." / DRAWING INKS I ETERNAL WRITING INK '09, C. E.—Charles Clark has mov- \ ENGROSSING INK ed from Waterloo, Iowa, to 11 Maple 1 TAURINE MUCILAGE < PHOTO MOUNTER PASTE avenue, Quebec, Canada. HIGGINS' \ DRAWING BOARD PASTE LIQUID PASTE '09, M. E.—Mr. and Mrs. William OFFICE PASTE J. Young, jr., announce the marriage VEGETABLE GLUE, ETC of their daughter, Esther Paul ARE THE FINEST AND BEST INKS AND ADHESIVES (Wells College '09) to Alfred Henry Emancipate yourself from the use of corrosive and ill-smelling inks and ad- Hutchinson, on June 2, at Clinton, hesives and adopt the Higgins* Inks and Adhesives. They will be a revela- Iowa. Mr. and Mrs. Hutchinson will tion to you, they are so sweet, clean and well put up and withal so efficient. be at home after September 1 at At Dealers Generally 2455 East Seventy-second street, Chi- CHAS. M. HIGGINS & CO., Mfrs. cago. 217 NINTH STREET BROOKLYN. N. Y. '09, A. B.—Mary Bell is head of the English department in the high school at Eureka, Cal. ITHACA TRUST COMIANY '09, M. E.—M. S. Levy is in busi- ITHACA, NEW ness in Paris, France. ASSETS TWO MILLION DOLLARS '09, C. E.—C. A. Arnold is a Courteous treatment. Every facility. wholesale grocer at Elberton, Ga. '09, C. E.—Albert Diamant's ad- dress is Box 669, Havana, Cuba. He- Lang's Palace Garage. is with the Cuban Engineering & Con- Absolutely Fire Proof. tracting Company on their contract for sewering Havana. Oldsmobile Regal '09, LL. B.—George R. Colvin is a Chalmers Maxwell

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FRANK BROTHERS /. B. Lang Engine and Garage Co. 117-121 East Qreen Street, - - West of Star Theatre Fifth Avenue Boot Shop LAW BUSINESS IN ITHACA Builders of Smart College Shoes Promptly and carefully attended to CHACON AS 224-Sth Ave New York City George S. Tarbell Delicious candies and hot or cold drinks will always be found here. Attorney and Notary Public, Trust Company Building, Ithaca 217-104-208 East State Street.

READERS WILL PLEASE MENTION THE ALUM NI NEWS WHEN WRITING TO ADVERTISERS. 424 CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS member of the Tompkins-Colvin Com- daughter, Isabel Pond, to Douglas pany, engaged in the practice of law Johnston Miller. Mr. Miller is in the ARE YOUR HOSE INSURED and the real estate business, at Spo- law office of Amos H. Stephens at 1 kane, Wash. Madison avenue, New York City. ' Ήoleprpof'' are the '09—Richard H. Gurley is assistant '10, A. B.—Margaret H. Riggs has Hose for Service. secretary of the Imperial Company, been appointed teacher of history in manufacturers of fertilizers, Norfolk, COLLEGE MEN need the comfort and the Camden, N. J., High School. Dur- wear that Holeproof gives. In Holeproof Va. ing the past year Miss Riggs was a Hose you get a combination of comfort, ΊO, M. E.—The address of Hans C. teacher in the Armitage School of style and unusual wearing qualities—every box of six pairs carries a six months' guar- Boos is changed to 763 St. Nicholas Wayne, Pa. antee against holes. avenue, New York City. ΊO, M. E.—H. L. Slauson, jr., has To be sure you get a genuine " Hole- '10, LL. B.—Mr. and Mrs. George proof" see that the trade-mark is on the changed his address from Newark, 0., toe. R. Cornwall, of Rye, N. Y., have to 513 Holmes street, Wilkinsburg, The 25 cent " Holeproof " is the world's announced the engagement of their Pa. best quarter sock. Six υairs guaranteed six months, $1.50. The extra light weight, $2.00. The mercerized, with a silky finish, $3.00. Your choice of all one color or as- sorted. "Holeproof" pure silk sox, $2.00 for a box of three pairs—guaranteed to wear three months. The genuine "Holeproof" is For Sale hy All Dealers A Malted Wheat Flake for Write for free book, Breakfast. "How to make your Feet Happy"

Starch cannot be easily digested in your stomach. The Holeproof Hosiery Co. starch in the wheat is converted into dextrine by the special 541 South Fourth St., Milwaukee cooking and malting process that is necessary to produce Are Your Sox Insured? "FORCE."

I make Clothes for the Alumni in nearly every State in the Union A. E. WHEATON Spalding's Athletic 'Practical Tailor and Cutter" 107 North Aurora St. ITHACA. K Y. Library NO 349 Official Athletic Rules of the Intercollegiate Associa- tion of Amateur Ath- letes of America. 1911 Adopted at the last meeting. The official rules that must govern all Intercollegiate Contests held by colleges, Don't Count Lock Parts Until You See Them in the Gun Ready for Action <1 All gun makers claim a simple lock but no amount of paper-talk will make a lock simple. members of the Intercollegiate Associa- 4 The gun itself must consist of the fewest possible parts—advertising cannot accomplish this. 4 We do a little advertising but this is no reason why you should buy an ITHACA—the reason tion. «I Compare our lock, set up, ready for action, with any other make—if we haven't the simplest Records of all Intercollegiate Cham- lock we'll give you the gun—let the gun talk for itself. If you see more than one hole in & hammer, look out for toggles or stirrups not shown. pionships from 1876 to date. Our hammer is all in one piece, only one hole, no toggles or stirrups attached. We use coil springs—the type adopted by Uncle Sam for Army guns-guaranteed forever. PRICE 10 CENTS. Send for beautiful catalog in colors—FREE. We make 18 different grade guns. $17.75 net to $400, list. On sale everywhere. Our little 5 H lb. 20 bore is a howling success. ITHACA GUN CO., Box 123, ITHACA. A. G. Spalding & Bros. BUFFALO NEW YORK SYRACUSE

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