VOL. XXVI, No. 7 [PRICE TWELVE CENTS] NOVEMBER 8, 1923

Football Team Conclusively Answers "Question" of the Doubtful Dartmouth Game Registration in University at Ithaca Increases Over That of Last Fall by Thirty-five Cornellian Council Takes en H H. Lyon '13 and E. G. MacArthur Ίl as Field Representatives Dartmouth Defeats Cross Country Team—Freshmen Win From Syracuse Yearlings

Published weekly during the college year and monthly in July and August at 123 West State Street, Ithaca, New York. Subscription $4.00 per year. Entered as second class matter May 2, 1900, u nder the act of March 3, 1879, at the postofϊi ce at Ithaca, New Fork. CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS

PROVIDENCE HARTFORD ]-ίemphill, Noyes CS> Co. Trustee Executor 37 Wall Street, New York ESTABROOK & CO. Investment Securities "For the purpose of accomodat- Philadelphia Albany Boston Baltimore Sound Investments Pittsburgh Lebanon Scranton Syracuse ing the citizens of the state" New York Boston Jansen Noyes ΊO Charles E. Gardner Chartered 1822 24 Broad 15 State Stan ton Griffis ΊO Harold C. Strong ROGER H. WILLIAMS, '95, Walter S. Marvin Kenneth K. Ward New York Resident Partner Clifford Hemphill SPRINGFIELD NEW BEDFORD Member of the New York Stock Exchange Farmers' Loan and Trust The Cascadilla Schools Company Ithaca GRADUATES GO TO CORNELL College Preparatory Boarding School New York Trust Company SEPTEMBER TO JUNE A High-Grade School for Boys—Small Classes—All Athletics—In- No. 8-22 William Street dividual Attention Branch: 475 Fifth Ave Special Tutoring School at 41st Street OCTOBER TO JULY Resources Over Private Instruction in any Preparatory Five Million Dollars Subject Letters of Credit Foreign Exchange Trustees F. C. Cornell Ernest Baker Cable Transfers C. D. Bostwick Guardian Our 1923-24 Catalog will appeal to that Administrator President Charles E. Treman school boy you are trying to Vice-Pres Franklin C. Cornell interest in Cornell Member Federal Reserve Bank and New York Clearing House Vice-Pres. and Sec, W. H. Storms A postal will bring it Treasurer Sherman Peer F. B. CHAMBERLIN, Director Box A, Ithaca, N. Y.

Stop Over at Bool's for Ithaca College is permitted by the Lehigh Valley Railroad on practically all Furniture tickets. Cornellians travelling between New York or Phila- delphia and Chicago can, by reason of the Lehigh Valley's service, take advantage of this without loss of additional busi- In looking over Cor- ness time, as shown by the following schedule: nell's new Chemical (Daily) (Daily) Building examine the Westward Eastward cabinet work made 8:10 P. M. Lv .New York (PENN.STA) Ar. 8:26 A. M. and installed by H. 8:40 P. M. Lv... .Philadelphia (Reading Term'l) Ar. 7:49 A. M. J. Bool Co. We are (a) 4:37 A. M. Ar Ithaca (b)Lv. 11:40 P.M. 4:53 P. M. Lv Ithaca Ar. 12:37 Noon now ready to accept 8:25 A. M. Ar Chicago (M.C.R.R.) Lv. 3:00 P. M. orders for any kind S New York to Ithaca Chicago to Ithaca cabinet work. Sleepers / Ithaca to Chicago Sleepers ! Ithaca to New York (a) Sleeper may be occupied at Ithaca until 8:00 A. M. (b) Sleeper ready for occupancy at 9:00 P. M. PENNSYLVANIA STATION—the Lehigh Valley's New York Passenger Estimates free Terminal—is in the heart of the city, convenient to everywhere. Be sure your next ticket reads via Lehigh Valley. Your stop over arrange- ment can be made with the conductor. I H. J. Bool Co. Lehigh \£dlejr Railroad Incorporated Factory? at Forest Home • The Route of the Black Diamond • Office 130-132 East Street CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS VOL. XXVI, No. 7 ITHACA, N. Y., NOVEMBER 8, 1923 PRICE 12 CENTS

LECTIONS resulted in making benefits of low prices, and yet get more recently talked to vegetable gardening en- Henry C. Stone '24 of New Brighton than usual for the volumes that it sells. thusiasts at Barnes Hall. Professor Cor- E president of the Student Council; bett's three children have attended Cor- PROPOSED east side stands for Schoell- Carl F. Wedell '24 of Buffalo, secretary; nell and one of them is now a senior in the kopf Field will provide a maximum seat- and Charles E. Cassidy '24, of Hawaii, College of Agriculture. Honolulu, treasurer. Twelve others were ing capacity of 30,000 instead of the present maximum of 12,500, and the seat JAMES M. LINDEMAN '24, of Hamilton, elected to the Council, and of the fifteen Ontario, Canada, won the prize offered chosen, eleven were athletes. that is farthest away from the field is opposite the center line, rather than off in by Professor Edward G. Lawson for the THE SAGE CHAPEL Preacher for Novem- a corner back of the goal posts. Accord- best work done by a student of the College ber 11 will be the Rev. Dr. Willard L. ing to Graduate Manager Romeyn Berry of Architecture during the summer. The Sperry, dean of the Theological Seminary '04, the press box in the Yale Bowl is as judges were Louis A. Fuertes '97 and Pro- of Harvard University. The morning far away from the play as Cornell's fessor Walter King Stone, who awarded sermon, it is announced, will bear upon farthest seat will be. the prize to Lindeman on the basis of the the significance of Armistice Day. pen sketches he made of towers that he A HALLOWE'EN fracas between freshmen had seen during his vacation. LECTURES for the week include "The and sophomores took place in the neighbor- Human Side of Mercury" by Frank C. hood of Sheldon Court, Cascadilla Hall, THE MARINE BAND, the most famous Whitmore, professor of organic chemistry and around the Baker Dorms. It seems to military band of the United States, which in Northwestern University, on Novem- have been quite impromptu, and was plays at all the official affairs in Washing- ber* 6; another lecture by Dr. Lewis L. confined solely to the Hill. ton, had a crowded house in Bailey Hall Forman in his series on "Ancient Answers on October 22, and presented a varied to Modern Problems, on November 7; QUILL AND DAGGER, senior honorary program consisting of some celebrated "The Sculptures of the North Museum/' society, initiated Otho Herron Morgan, 2d military marches as encores, but with a the first of a series of public illustrated '24, of Highland Park, Illinois, on October main program of more classical composi- lectures by Professor Eugene P. Andrews 28. Morgan is a member of the foot- tions which were played with a really '95, in the Museum of Casts on November ball squad, , Beth L'Amed, Al- artistic orchestral effect. Lieutenant 8; "The Relation of Research to Invention Djebar, and the Swimming Club, and last Santelmann, the present leader, was a and Development" by C. E. Skinner, year was acting manager of lacrosse. member of the organization at the time it was under the directorship of John Philip assistant director of engineering of the SOCCER at Cornell has an international Sousa, who wrote many of the marches Westinghouse Electric & Manufacturing aspect, and the Interfraternity League which brought fame to him and to the Company, under the auspices of the Ithaca championships are bringing out a polyglot band he led, and among which were the Section of the American Institute of array of combinations. Last year the "The National Fencibles," "High School Electrical Engineers, on November 9; and championship was won by the Filipino Cadets,'; "The Washington Post/' and "An Aspect of American Civilization" by group. This year, besides the Filipinos "The Stars and Stripes Forever." Professor Martin W. Sampson before the and the general fraternities, the Chinese Cosmopolitan Club on November 9. Club has a team in the field, as has the PERSONAL BELONGINGS of the late Belle Cosmopolitan Club. Cowdrey, who for many years occupied WEATHER RECORDS for October as re- the "mystery house" at 408 East State ported by the Station on the Hill showed Two ITALIAN BOYS registered in the 0 Street, have been auctioned in the past temperatures that ranged from 8o° to 27 . freshman class of the College of Arts and two weeks to large crowds. While many About 3}^ inches of rain fell, with a trace Sciences are credited with an enviable persons were interested in buying objects of snow on the last day of the month, just record in scholarships. Bernard and of real or historical value, many others after the heaviest wind of the month, Vincent Cioffari won first and third places were attracted by curiosity as to the be- which blew at the rate of thirty-five miles in the State scholarship examinations of longings of the aged and acquisitive re- an hour. In respect to sun-light, six days New York last June, and have since cluse. The house itself was willed to Dr. were entirely clear, ten were partly acquired other scholarships until now their Eugene Baker for use during his life- cloudy, and fifteen were cloudy. combined income from these scholarships time; afterwards it goes to the Ithaca amounts to $1,050 a year. They came to A SCHOLARSHIP just announced in the Hospital. America in the fall of 1917, and started to College of Architecture is open to students learn English in the fourth grade. During CHESS DEVOTEES at Cornell saw Lester of interior design, and pays $500 for one the six years since then they have gone Denoun, a graduate student, play nine year of study abroad. It is known as the through five years of grade school and men simultaneously at Barnes Hall re- Jackson Heights Garden Apartment four years of high school. At Cornell, cently, defeating four of them, getting draw Scholarship. in addition to the funds received from games with three, and losing only two of A TWO DAY SALE of duplicate books scholarships, they add money earned by the nine games. Denoun was recently which have been accumulated by the working at odd jobs. chess captain at New York University. Library resulted in a great interest on the THE GRID-GRAPH, a new score board for part of students and Faculty, to whom the ARCHITECTURE freshmen were recently play-by-play records of distant games, got sale was open. It is planned to have other welcomed to the College at a meeting off to a good start in the Drill Hall with sales of the same sort as the occasion may addressed by Dean Francke H. Bosworth, its tale of the football victory over Dart- arise. Willard Austen, librarian, points Jr., John A. Hartell '24 of Brooklyn, mouth, though the stentorian voice and out that such sales save the large cost of Phillips B. Nichols '24 of Buffalo, Professor the dramatic pauses of Professor Charles cataloging that would be necessary in Clarence A. Martin '88, and Louis A. L. Durham '99, who read the returns, trying to dispose of surplus books to other Fuertes '97. must be given their due share of credit. libraries, and that the University can thus LEE C. CORBETT '90, horticulturist ofthe The largest crowd ever assembled to get afford to give Cornell buyers some of the United States Department of Agriculture, such returns at Cornell was in attendance. 78 CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS

Registration Increases 35 Council Adds Two Field Men SPORT STUFF Complete Figures Show Arts and Law On- Harold H. Lyon '13 and Edward G. Mac- ly Colleges in Ithaca With Increased The game with Dartmouth at Hanover, Arthur Ίl to Work With Cornell Number Over Last Fall with respect to the setting, the atmosphere, Clubs in Campaigns for Fund and the appearance and manners of the Final registration figures for the fall teams and the crowd, came nearer to being To further its effort to increase the term, recently published, show a total of what a football game ought to be than Alumni Fund by $250,000 annually, the exactly 5,000 students in Ithaca this year, anything I have ever before seen. Cornellian Council has engaged two field as compared with 4,965 at the same time men, Harold H. Lyon '13, and Edward G. The dignified seclusion of the place, the last year, an increase of 35. It appears Mac Arthur Ίi. They will spend their beauty of the stage set around about with that all the classes except seniors have time helping local alumni clubs to organize granite hills on which all the afternoon more members this }^ear than last, but campaigns for the Alumni Fund. Start- played new lights and colors, the good only two colleges, Arts and Law, show an ing from Ithaca immediately they will taste of all the attendant ceremonies and increase in total registration over last spend from two weeks to a month in each arrangements, the good manners and fall's figures. city where a campaign is to be held this innate friendliness of the Dartmouth and Arts and Sciences leads in number winter. Cornell people, all combined to make the registered with 1,806 this year, being 105 Harold H. Lyon entered Cornell with event linger in the memory long after the more than last; Engineering has 1,310 as the Class of '08 and spent three years as a outcome of the game has been forgotten. Nerves were taut in Hanover on Satur- day. To win that game a*l Cornell men would have given their right eyes and all Dartmouth men would have mortgaged their immortal souls. But, with every heart pounding and every muscle quiver- ing for conflict, no one on either side of the field showed himself to be other than a thoroughbred and a well-mannered sports- man—before, during, and after the game. There isn't any trouble about football when games are arranged between colleges and not just between teams. Just one little touch on the other side— there was too much betting at Hanover and the fault was principally on the Cornell end. It isn't a question of morals—just one of good taste. A little, good-natured bet between friends, made and paid with a smile, adds a bit of spice, but the solicita- tion of wagers among people with whom one has no previous acquaintance is bad form and doesn't promote the good feeling HAROLD! H. LYON '13 EDWARD G. MACARTHUR Ίi that ought to surround intercollegiate athletic meetings. Public opinion has compared with 1,347 last fall; Agriculture member of that class. He returned to changed on this question with the appear- has 1,095, exactly the same number as the University in 1912 and graduated in ance of more and more professional last year at this time; the Graduate 1913, going in June to the Walter Lowney bettors over in the corner of the lobby and School numbers 436, 11 fewer than last Company of Boston, with which organiza- down the alley. Alumni of an older day fall; Architecture has 168 as compared tion he remained until 1922. From 1919 and generation might well check up on with last year's figure of 177; Law has 102, to 1922, he was assistant sales manager of this point. an increase of 22 over last year's fall the Company. Since July 1, 1923, he has registration; and Veterinary Medicine has R. B. been with the Clemans, Knight, Menard 83, or 6 fewer than last year. Company, real estate operators in Detroit, The total number of men students in NAME THREE REPRESENTATIVES Michigan. Ithaca is 3,869, and of women, 1,131. Ex- Cornell pays her respects through official Lyon has in recent years been active in cluding those registered in the Medical delegates at the inaugurations of three alumni affairs as a member of the Cornell College in New York, the registration by college presidents within one month. Clubs of Syracuse, New England, classes in Ithaca this fall is, seniors, 943; Dr. Leland O. Howard '77 represented Rochester, and Michigan. Last January juniors, 1,000; sophomores, 1,194; and Cornell University at the inauguration of he was elected a director of the Cornell freshmen 1,394. This registration com- Dr. Enoch Barton Garey as President of Club of New England and since he has pares with that of 1,025, 959, 1,114, and St. John's College, at Annapolis, on been in Detroit he has served as secretary 1,371 for these respective classes last fall, October 25. of the Cornell Club of Michigan. He is not allowing for duplication of names. Raymond A. Pearson '94, president of a member of Epsilon. In the Medical College in New York Iowa State College, represented Cornell at Edward Gaul MacArthur ' 11 opened an there are 54 seniors, 57 juniors, 68 sopho- the inauguration of Daniel Walter More- office for the practice of law in Hudson, mores, and 74 freshmen, a total of 253, of house as president of Drake University, at New York, immediately after his gradua- whom 43 are women. Des Moines, Iowa, on November 1. tion. He continued to practice law in that This makes the present total 5,253. Professor Charles A. Ellwood '96 of the city until the war, when he joined the University of Missouri will represent Navy and was commissioned ensign. After FACULTY TENNIS players downed the Cornell at the inauguration of Dr. Strat- the war, MacArthur became purchasing varsity team, winning three of the four ton Duluth Brooks as president of the agent for the Atlas Portland Cement Com- singles matches, and both of the doubles. University of Missouri on November 16. pany in New York, and last year he re- CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS 79

turned to Hudson as purchasing agent for penalties for interfering with a fair catch, the Gifford-Wood Company. ATHLETICS and several rushes took the ball well into MacArthur is widely known among Cor- Cornell territory. On the five-yard line nell men. While in college, he was captain the Red defense hurled Dartmouth back, of the varsity track team, played end on Win Dartmouth Game and a forward pass failed, Cornell re- the varsity football team, was class presi- Cornell defeated Dartmouth at Han- covering the ball. Pfann attempted a dent in his Junior year, and a prominent over last Saturday by a score of 32 to 7 punt, but Aschenbach broke through and member of various clubs and committees. in a thrilling, colorful game. Thirteen blocked it. The ball rolled toward the He is a member of and thousand persons, including thousands of sidelines, and the Dartmouth leader Sphinx Head. Dartmouth alumni, and an enthusiastic picked it up and crossed for a score before delegation of several hundred Cornell Pfann could tackle him. Dooley kicked FLACK AT BOSTON grads, saw the Big Red Team crush the goal and Dartmouth was momentarily in Harold Flack '12, executive secretary of Green under a whirlwind attack. The the lead. the Cornellian Council, was appointed by game was rated as one of the two great Came then another' 'break.'' Sundstrom President Farrand to represent Cornell contests of the day. Some critics an- kicked off again and on the first play from University at the celebration of the nounced that this was the first real test scrimmage a bad pass went over the fiftieth anniversary of the founding of Cornell had experienced since Dobie began stocky Haws head, and Kearney recovered Boston University on October 25 and 26. coaching at Ithaca. They saw in this for Cornell on the five-yard line. There Flack is the son of Arthur H. Flack, a game a "question" for Cornell. was no stopping the slashing plunges of graduate of Boston University in the Well, the team answered the question Ramsey, who on the third rush crossed for class of '73. with two touchdowns and a field goal in a touchdown. This time Sundstrom the first half, and two touchdowns and a kicked the goal. From that moment Cor- NATIONAL ACADEMY HERE field goal in the second. Dartmouth's only nell, no matter how hard pressed from The National Academy of Sciences will score came early in the second period, on time to time, was in command of the game. hold its fall meeting at Ithaca on Novem- a blocked punt and a dash for the goal- Just before the half ended Pfann, who ber 12-14. The following papers will be line by Captain Aschenbach. stood out on that field as one of the great presented by Cornellians: "The Structure In fairness to an always fighting, players of the year, ran thirty-six yards on of the Eye as an Index of Developmental courageous opponent it should be said that the famous off-tackle play, and two rushes Deficiencies," Professor Charles R. Stock- the score does not represent a fair com- made it first down on Dartmouth's ard; "Some Seasonal Variation of Vita- parison between the two elevens. In the fifteen-yard line. A pass to Ramsey made mines," Professor George W. Cavanaugh second period, and in part of the third, nine more, but a poor snap from Affeld '93; "Electrical Resistance and Thermo- Dartmouth, largely through a skilful pass- cost six yards; so Sundstrom was sent Electric Power of the Alkali Metals," Pro- ing game, forced the attack into Cornell back and he kicked a pretty placement fessor Charles C. Bidwell, Ph.D. '14; territory. There was more than one goal from the twenty-yard line. At the "Germanium," Professor Louis M. Dennis; occasion when the Red was pushed back end of the half Cornell led 15 to 7. "Halogenoids," Professor Arthur W. right under the proverbial shadow of the In the third period, after Dartmouth Browne, Ph.D. '03; "Substantive Dyes," goal posts. had made a spectacular foray close to Professor Thomas R. Briggs '09; "Re- But then the defense would tighten, Cornell's goal line, Cornell took the tarded Effectiveness of Introduced Para- some alert back would ground or intercept offensive again, and by smashes and short sites," Dr. Leland O. Howard '77; "Metal- a pass, and Pfann would kick out of runs, worked her way out of danger and lic Luster," Professor Wilder D. Bancroft; danger. finally forced the play well into Dartmouth "An Aberrant F sub 2 Ratio for the Dartmouth lacked the punch to put it territory. On his twenty-yard line Dooley Starchy-Sugary Endosperm Factor Pair over, while Cornell, on the other hand, attempted a foward pass. But he was in Maize," Professor Rollin A. Emerson '99 seized every opportunity offered and badly harried by Red forwards, and was Sp. "The Photo-Luminescence of Flames" capitalized it. Up to the last period Cor- compelled to throw a blind toss to one of Professor Edward L. Nichols '75; "The nell got inside of the Dartmouth twenty- his teammates. Kearney grabbed the ball Effect of Temperature on X-Ray Absorp- five-yard line perhaps half-a-dozen times. downing it on the twelve-yard line. Again tion Coefficients," Harry S. Read; "Resist- And every time Cornell counted, either Cornell rushed with great power, a nine^ ance Temperature Coefficients of Thin by touchdown or placement. On every yard drive by Ramsey scoring the touch- Platinum Films Obtained by Kathodic "break" or chance the Cornellians were down. Sundstrom kicked goal. Sputtering," Frederick W. Reynolds. ready. With amazing swiftness, skill, and In the final quarter another brilliant On Monday evening, under the joint power, with workmanlike precision, and off-tackle play sent Pfann twenty-seven auspices of the Academy and of Sigma Xi, the poise and confidence of a team that yards down the field. Followed a few Dr. Frank M. Chapman will deliver an knew its strength Cornell struck and made rushes, a short pass, and then Pfann on a illustrated lecture on "The Origin and good. pass from Patterson, made the most Distribution of Andean Bird Life." On Within three minutes of play Haws of spectacular play of the game, running Tuesday afternoon President and Mrs. Dartmouth, tackled by two Cornellians, twenty-two yards for a touchdown, elud- Farrand will receive the visitors at the dropped the ball on Dartmouths' twenty- ing or stiff-arming four Dartmouth President's House, and in the evening four-yard line. Quick as a flash Kneen tacklers. Slipping, sliding, going to earth there will be a subscription dinner at fell on it. Pfann skirted right tackle for only to rise again, fighting all the time, he Risley Hall. five yards, but a five-yard penalty rolled across the line for a final touchdown. PRATT AND WHITNEY MEN set Cornell back. Patterson made six A recovery by Dexter of a Dartmouth J. Carlton Ward, Jr., M.E. '14, was yards, a forward pass failed, but Pfann fumble in the last few minutes of play, a promoted during the year from plant coolly tried another, and this time Ramsey few more swift rushes, and Sundstrom had engineer to general superintendent of took the ball to the twelve-yard line. kicked a field goal from the twenty-yard works with the Pratt and Whitney Com- Then Pfann faked a forward pass and line for the last score of the game. pany, Hartford, Connecticut. In the behind fine interference tore by right Dartmouth excelled in punting, and works are the following Cornellians: tackle for a touchdown. Sundstrom gained more ground by passing than Cor- Bryant H. Blood '88, general manager; failed to kick goal. nell, but was no match for the terrific S. Jay Teller '06, chief engineer; Russell This gave Cornell the advantage of the drive of the Cornell rushing attack. B. Hurburt Ίo, assistant sales manager; "jump", but Dartmouth was by no means As usual it was a team triumph, but and John Fechnay '14, district salesman. disheartened. Kelley's fine punting, two there was plenty of fine work by in- 80 CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS dividuals. Captain Pfann was tremen- darted forward and recovered for Cornell Pfann plunged through tackle for twenty- dously effective and he was universally on Dartmouth's six-yard line. seven yards to mid-field. awarded major honors of the day for Three rushes carried Ramsey across for Ramsey gained ten yards in three leadership, skill, and brilliant offensive a touchdown. Sundstrom's kick hit the rushes. Patterson passed to Pfann on the play. Ramsey was terrific in line-smash- goal post. Score, Cornell 12; Dartmouth twenty-two-yard line. Pfann, tackled ing; Kearney and Morris were through 7 three times, kept going, and finally fell, Dartmouth repeatedly, while Sundstrom Pfann's kick went out on the Green rolling over the goal line. Sundstrom was as usual very helpful. The ends were forty-three-yard line. Dartmouth failed to kicked the goal and the score favored not especially good on covering punts, but gain and Kelley punted to the twenty- Cornell 29 to 7. they were deadly on straight defense. seven-yard line. Sundstrom kicked to the twenty-four- Captain Aschenbach, Kelley, Haws and On the famous tackle play Pfann went yard line. Hall fumbled and Dexter, play- Watkins stood out for Dartmouth. thirty-five yards down the field to Dart- ing for Henderson, recovered. Cornell The Details mouth's twenty-five yard line. Four more hammered forward eight yards to the ten- Cornell won the toss and kicked off, rushes gained ten yards. yard line. On fourth down Sundstrom Dartmouth taking the south goal. Sund- Pfann hurled a forward pass to Ramsey dropped back and kicked a goal from strom kicked to Kelley on the Dartmouth who was downed on the Green's six-yard placement. five-yard line, and he ran the ball back line. Cornell then lost five yards on a poor Aschenbach kicked to Cassidy on the twrenty yards. twenty-eight-yard line, Pfann punted to There was an exchange of punts by Sundstrom δropped back to the nine- the Green on the thirty-six-yard line. Pfann and Kelley in which Dartmouth teen-yard line and booted a kick from Dartmouth tried unsuccessfully to gain gained considerably. Haws and Kelley placement. Score, Cornell 15; Dartmouth on forward passes and was forced to punt. were tackled when they signalled for a 7 Pfann punted back again. Two more fair catch. Cornell was penalized again One pass, Dooley to Haws, failed and Green passes were incomplete. Dart- for offside and Haws carried the ball to another was completed just as the half mouth failed to make ten yards and Whet- the fifty-yard line. ended with Dartmouth on its own twenty- stone reeled off thirty yards before time was called. Haws fumbled when tackled by Kneen eight-yard line. Dartmouth Cornell and Ramsey and Cornell recovered on Second Half A Dartmouth forward pass thrown by Bjorrdmann L. E Henderson Dartmouth's twenty-five-yard line. Cor- Oberlander L. T Kearney nell rushed the ball to the fifteen-yard line Kelley on his nineteen-yard line was Diehl L. G Morris but was penalized fifteen yards for holding. broken up and Kearney seized the ball Ellis C Affeld Two forward passes, Pfann to Patterson and was downed on Dartmouth's twelve- Aschenbach (Capt.).R. G Berean yard line and Cornell ripped a hole through Hatch R. T Sundstrom and Pfann to Ramsey, carried the ball to Hagenbuckle R. E Kneen Dartmouth's ten-yard line. Pfann faked a tackle. Ramsey dodged through for a Dooley Q. E Pfann pass and went through right tackle for a touchdown. Sundstrom kicked the goal, Kelley L. H. B Cassidy touchdown behind a screen of interference. Score, Cornell 22, Dartmouth 7. Haws R. H. B Ramsey Leavitt F. B Patterson Sundstrom failed to kick the goal. Sundstrom kicked off to Dooley who Score by periods: Haws ran back the kickoff fifteen yards was thrown on the thirty-two-yard line. A Cornell 6 9 7 10—32 to the thirty-two-yard line. Kelley's punt Dartmouth forward pass and a rush gained Dartmouth o 7 o o— 7 gave Cornell the ball on its own eight- twelve yards. Ramsey intercepted a pass Touchdowns: Pfann 2, Ramsey 2; Aschen- yard line. Pfann punted and Affeld picked on Cornell's thirty-eight-yard line. bach. Fieldgoals: Sundstrom,placement2. the ball up and raced fifty yards to the Pfann punted to the Green twenty-five- Goal from touchdown, Haws, Sundstrom 2. Goal from touchdown missed, Sundstrom 2. Dartmouth ten-yard line, but the ball was yard line. A series of Dartmouth forward Substitutions: Dartmouth, Watkins for brought back and put in play on the passes and a short rush placed the ball on Hagenbuckle, Hall for Kelley, Bolles for Cornell thirty-yard line. Penalty was in- Cornell's twenty-two-yard line for first Hatch, Murphy for Leavitt, Roe for Ober- flicted for interference with a signal for a down. lander, Tulley for Bjorkman, Cubbins for Diehl, Champion for Cubbins. Cornell, fair catch. Another pass gained seven yards, but Dexter for Anderson, Raymond for Kneen, Score, end of first period: Cornell, 6; Cassidy intercepted the next one and ran Whetstone for Cassidy. Dartmouth, o. the ball back to the Red's forty-four-yard Officials: Referee, Dr. E. J. O'Brien, Dartmouth had the ball on Cornell's line. Tufts; umpire, Fred Murphy, Brown; field judge, D. W. Merriman, Geneva. Lines- eighteen-yard line as the second period Patterson fumbled and Watkins re- man, Al Maginnis, Lehigh. opened. A forward pass, Kelley to covered for Dartmouth on the forty-four- Pennsylvania Beats Freshmen Bjorkman, gained eight yards, but Dart- yard line. Kneen and Henderson pushed The freshman football team was badly mouth lost the ball on downs. back Dartmouth for losses for ten yards. beaten by the Pennsylvania freshmen on On an exchange of punts Cornell got the Patterson blocked another pass and Hall Franklin Field last Saturday, the score ball on her own twelve-yard line. punted out on Cornell's three-yard line. being 39 to o. The Cornell yearlings Dooley caught Pfann's kick on the Pfann punted and Dooley carried the ball fumbled atrociously, three Pennsylvania thirty-two-yard line. In four rushes Dart- back to the thirty-yard line. Score at touchdowns being due to loose handling of mouth reached the fifteen-yard line. the end of the third period: Cornell 22, the ball on Cornell's part. Watkins raced around left end and it Dartmouth 7. On the preceding Saturday the yearlings was first down for Dartmouth on Cornell's At the opening of the fourth period fell before the Syracuse Freshmen by a five-yard line. Dartmouth lost the ball on downs on score of 13 to o, in a game on Alumni Field. Dooley's pass to Watkins on fourth Cornell's thirty-yard line. Pfann's punt The squad, however, is promising and down with Dartmouth on the three-yard was run back fifteen yards to midfield by should contribute some valuable men to line, failed. Dooley. the varsity next year. Aschenbach blocked Pfann's attempted Watkins on the receiving end of Bolles' punt, picked up the rolling ball, and pass suffered interference and Cornell was Dartmouth Wins Cross Country dashed twelve yards for a touchdown. penalized fifteen yards. The cross country team lost to Dart- Haws kicked the goal. Score, Dartmouth, A pass, Hall to Watkins, was intercepted mouth at Hanover Saturday over a five- 7, Cornell 6. by Patterson on the Cornell three-yard mile course. The score was 36 to 69. The Sundstrom's kickoff was run to the line. Pfann punted to Dooley on the Dartmouth leaders set a terrific pace, and twenty-five-yard line by Haws. The snap thirty-three-yard line Dartmouth failed bunched their runners closely at the finish. back went over Haw's head. Kearney to gain, Cornell took the ball on downs and Three Green runners crossed the line CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS 81

before Kirby, Cornell's first point winner. said that the quality of entering classes is was the speaker at the regular weekly Nazro took individual honors. steadily improving, and pointed out that luncheon of the Cornell Club of Rochester The order of finish follows: i Nazro, alumni must make it possible for Cornell on October 24 at the Powers Hotel. * He 2 Osgood, 3 Collins, 4 Kirby (Cornell) 5 to achieve the destiny which she has every told intimately of how anthletics are ϋdall,6Winsor, 7 Glick (Cornell) 8 Πealy, right to expect. handled at Cornell, saying that it was 9 DeProsse (Cornell) 10 Smith (Cornell) 11 The President said that the University more necessary to use the brakes than the Ryder, 12 Bullen (Cornell) 13, Bernart is overcrowded with students, especially throttle, with alumni and undergraduate (Cornell) 14 Prytherch (Cornell). Time, 27 in the Colleges of Arts and Sciences, enthusiasm supplying the power, to keep minutes, 22 3-5 seconds. Engineering, and Medicine, and predicted athletics the means to the end rather than Freshmen Cross Country that arbitrary limitation of numbers would the end itself. The freshman cross country team de- be necessary. Burlington, Vermont feated the Syracuse yearling harriers at "Cornell doesn't want to be any Fourteen of the twenty Cornellians in Syracuse Saturday by a 25 to 34 score. bigger," he said; "Cornell wants to be Burlington, Vermont, met for luncheon at Carvalho, who entered from Cascadilla better. While we have not put in arbi- the Hotel Vermont on Novembers. It School, showed the way home in the fast trary limitations, we have already fixed was the first Cornell meeting held in time of 21 minutes 40 seconds for a dif- limits. No applicant with conditions can Vermont since the Endowment Campaign. ficult three-and-a-half-mile course. enter, and those who do must be of high Foster M. Coffin '12, alumni representa- Harvard Wins at Soccer standing." tive, talked informally. Plans were dis- Johnny Ross '19 and Eddie Howard '20 cussed for another meeting within the In a close and well-played game the entertained with songs and stories and the next few weeks, when an alumni club is Harvard soccer team defeated Cornell on evening closed with singing. to be organized. Alumni Field Saturday afternoon by a Preceding the dinner, Reginald E. Detroit score of 2 to 1. In the first half Cornell Marsh Ό6, with low gross score, and Her- Cornell men of Detroit have had a busy had the edge, Hulnick scoring a goal. In bert L. Trube Ό8, with low net, had won week with the regular weekly luncheon on the second half Harvard rallied and in the the golf tournament in which many mem- November 2, and with a special luncheon first fifteen minutes Tuttle and Wright bers of the Association took part. each scored a goal. in conjunction with the Dartmouth Club W^eyland Pfeiffer Ί6 was chairman of of Detroit, while the two colleges were the dinner committee and William D. Crim playing at Hanover. CLUB ACTIVITIES '16 was chairman of the entertainment At the luncheon on Friday the speaker committee. The nominating committee was Joseph Martin, former commissioner appointed by President Morse consisted of of Public Works. The Saturday celebra- Westchester County Frederick R. Slater '94, chairman, Hugh tion was held at the Board of Commerce One hundred forty Cornellians gathered E. Weatherlow 'c6, and Oscar S. Tryson Ί1. grill room, with a direct wire from Han- for the second annual dinner of the West- Pittsburgh over giving the football game play by play. chester County Cornell Alumni Associa- Robert Garland, city councilman, was tion at the Siwanoy Country Club, Mount the speaker at the regular weekly luncheon Vernon, New York, on October 26. The of the Cornell men of Pittsburgh on Friday, FACULTY NOTES Cornell Westchester Association is unique November 2. in that it is an informal organization of the Ithaca Women DR. LEWIS L. FORM AN, instructor in two Cornell clubs in the county, at Mount The Cornell Women's Club of Ithaca Latin, in one of a series of lectures which Vernon and Yonkers. Both the retiring held the first of its weekly luncheons at gives " Ancient Answers to Modern president, Raymond P. Morse '03, and his the Coffee House Wednesday, October 31, Questions" recently said that Walt Whit- successor, Dr. Walter M. McNeil, Jr., Ίo, at 12.30, with Dean Georgia L. White '96 man, sometimes known as the "good, who was unanimously elected that evening, acting as hostess. gray poet," is responsible for "shameless, said that they hoped the Association Northern New Jersey naked, modern literature." would soon include more local Cornell clubs. They mentioned specifically White The officers of the Cornell Club of PROFESSOR SAMUEL N. SPRING of the Plains, New Rochelle, and Tarrytown. Dr. Northern New Jersey for the ensuing year Forestry Department talked at the McNeill, who represented the Westchester are Sanford B. Hunt, Ό3, president; weekly freshman get-together in Barnes Association at the Buffalo Convention, Herbert A. Goertz, '17, vice-president; and Hall on "Why Dad Pays the Bills." Pro- said that he wanted to see every com- Leonard G. Aierstok, '17, secretary- fessor Spring is the author of "A Letter munity in the district represented at next treasurer. The first fall luncheon was held from a Father to his Son," published in year's convention in New York. on Friday, October 19 at the Downtown The Yale Alumni Weekly and later re- Club, Newark, with an enthusiastic group President Morse introduced Judge printed in the ALUMNI NEWS. of Cornellians present. It was voted to William L. Ransom '05 as toastmaster, who hold luncheons the third Friday of each DEXTER S. KIMBALL, dean of the Engi- promised that there would be only two month at 12.30 at the Downtown Club, in neering College, gave the third and last of speeches, one short and one long. The the Kinney Building. All Cornellians in a series of three lectures at Carnegie short one was by John T. (Terry) Mc- the vicinity of Northern New Jersey are Institute of Technology, Pittsburgh, Octo- Govern Όo, who convulsed his audience cordially invited. ber 25. The Dean's three talks were on with a satire on the House of Lords and the the subject of industrial organization. House of Commons. He also announced Rochester that on February 23 the Cornell Club of Alumni in Rochester from Cornell and DR. GEORGIA L. WHITE '96, dean of New York would sponsor an indoor inter- Colgate worked themselves into the proper women, represented Cornell at the inaugu- scholastic track meet in the Twenty- frame of friendly rivalry before the two ration of Ada Louis Comstock as the third second Regiment Armory, New York. universities met in football at Ithaca by president of Radcliffe College. President Farrand was given an ovation means of a joint luncheon on October 17 in PROFESSOR OTHON G. GUERLAC of the as he rose to speak. He spoke first of the the Cornell Club rooms at the Powers French Department was the guest of loyalty of Cornell alumni wherever he Hotel. Dr. Ethan Clark, president of the honor and principal speaker of the French meets them, and then told of conditions on Colgate Club of Rochester, spoke of the Alliance of Rochester, at a dinner given the Hill. He mentioned the opening of tradition of his College. Charles W. recently at the Century Club. Professor the new Laboratory of Chemistry and Curtis '88 spoke for Cornell. Guerlac spent the summer in France, and other improvements in the physical plant, Graduate Manager Romeyn Berry '04 spoke on her present industrial situation. CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS

storage cars, post offices, and substations. THE CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS, while OBITUARY one of the larger alumni papers of the country, is nevertheless a comparatively Published for the alumni of Cornell insignificant publication in the huge Octaviana A. P. de Mendes '79 University by the Cornell Alumni News Word has been received of the death on Publishing Company, Incorporated. volume of second-class mailing. Subscrib- Published weekly during the college year and ers who comment on the delay in their September 6, 1917, at Sao Paulo, Brazil, monthly in July and August; forty issues annually. Issue No. 1 is published the last Thursday of "weekly letter from home" will be pleased of Octaviana A. P. de Mendes, a member September. Weekly publication (numbered con- to know that the Chamber of Commerce of of the Class of 1879 in architecture. Miss secutively) ends the last week in June. Issue No. 40 is published in August and is followed by an the United States is investigating the de Mendes was a student from 1875 to index of the entire volume, which will be mailed on request. service with the intention of getting it 178. Subscription price $4.00 a year, payable in ad- improved. Henry C. Olmsted '85 vance. Foreign postage 40 cents a year extra. Single copies twelve cents each. Henry Collier Olmsted died at his home Should a subscriber desire to discontinue his subscription a notice to that effect should be sent in A CORRECTION in Binghamton, N. Y., on September 15, before its expiration. Otherwise it is assumed that a continuance of the subscription is desired. Herbert L. Fordham '94 points out that after an illness of several months. He had Checks, drafts and orders should be made pay- the conclusion of the article entitled been confined to his home for about four able to Cornell Alumni News. Correspondence should be addressed— "Recalls Old Sun Fight" which appeared weeks. Cornell Alumni News, Ithaca, N. Y. on page 58 of our issue of October 25 is Olmsted was born in Binghamton in Editor-in-Chief and ) Business Manager ) R. W. SAILOR Ό7 a mistake. The statement that Samuel 1863, a son of the late Laurel L. Olmsted, Managing Editor H. A. STEVENSON '19 S. Slater '94 was the winner of a popular one time mayor of the city, and a grand- Circulation Manager GEO. WM. HORTON ballot to determine the business manager Associate Editors son of John A. Collier, one of the leading CLARK S. NORTHUP '93 BRISTOW ADAMS of the Sun over John L. Ahem '94 is in- Broome County pioneers. He attended ROMEYN BERRY '04 FOSTER M. COFFIN '12 correct. The fact is that, as Fordham H. G. STUTZ '07 FLORENCE J. BAKER the Binghamton schools, and entered the News Committee of the Alumni Corporation points out, "Ahern won two to one." Our University in 1881, receiving the degree of W. W. Macon '98, Chairman first information came from the current A. B. and LL. B. in 1885 and 1888, N. H. Noyes '06 J. P. Dods '08 Officers of the Cornell Alumni News Publishing Sun which we understand was later respectively. He was a member of Delta Company, Incorporated; John L. Senior, President. corrected by Professor Arthur C. Howland Upsilon and Phi Beta Kappa. R. W. Sailor, Treasurer; Woodford Patterson, Sec- retary. Office. 123 West State Street, Ithaca, N. Y. '93 editor, and the father of a present Sun After passing the State bar examina- Members of Alumni Magazines, Associated Board member. tions, he began the practice of law in Printed by the Cornell Publications Printing Co. Binghamton, and in 1905 he was elected KARAPETOFF GETS AWARD City Judge, serving four years. In 1908 Entered as Second Class Matter at Ithaca, N. Y. Professor Vladimir Karapetoff, of the Douglas V. Ashley entered into partner- ITHACA, N. Y., NOVEMBER 8, 1923 School of Electrical Engineering, has been ship with him, and the law firm has since awarded a prize of four thousand francs been known as Olmsted and Ashley. DELAYS IN THE MAIL AGAIN by the Montefiore Foundation of the Mr. Olmsted was a member of the T may interest subscribers whose University of Liege, Belgium, for certain Binghamton Club, and had served for I copies of the ALUMNI NEWS are un- mechanical devices for studying the per- several years as its president, retiring only usually delayed to read the introductory formance of electrical machinery and trans- a few years ago from that office; he was al- paragraph of an article in The New York mission lines. The committee of five so a prominent member of the Broome World of last Saturday, page 22, which Belgian and five foreign members which County Bar Association. makes the following statement: made the award characterized Professor Surviving him are his widow, Mrs. "The Post Office Department's hand- Karapetoff's work as an expression of a Adelaide S. Olmsted, a sister, Mrs. May E. ling of second-class mail has made it "new idea which may lead to important Summers of Greene, N. Y., and a brother, 'increasingly difficult and to a large ex- developments in the domain of electricity." Laurel M. Olmsted of Elmira. His present devices, Professor Kara- tent impracticable' for publishers of news- Richard K. McGonigal '03 papers and magazines to distribute their petoff says, were made possible by a productions in a manner satisfactory to grant from the Heckscher Fund for Re- Richard Killen McGonigal died at the their patrons or themselves, according to search. They were developed from card- Broad Street Hospital, New York, on a report prepared at the request of the board models after their inventor had been August 11, following an operation. Merchants' Association for use by a com- told by experts that if such devices were McGonigal was born on September 21, mittee of the Chamber of Commerce of the possible they would have been invented 1880, the son of Mr. and Mrs. Daniel P. United States, which is investigating long ago. Professor Karapetoff has been McGonigal of Troy, N. Y. He prepared at mail service." working for ten years on his idea of re- the Troy High School, and entered the The article goes on to explain the presenting complicated electrical relation- Cornell Law School in 1900, receiving the reasons for the slow service as funda- ships by means of mechanical models. degree of LL. B, in 1903. He was a mentally due to the change in basis of member of Congress and the Jacob Gould paying the railroads for carrying the mails. PRIZE LISTS have been prominently dis- Schurman Debate Club. In 1916 the contracts were changed from played this year on all the official bulletin He began the practice of law in 1904 a weight basis to. a space basis. The change boards of the University, announcing the with the firm of Lindslay, Kalish, Kramer has resulted in a curtailment of service. various competitions open to Cornell and Palmer, 27 William Street, New York, In its efforts at economy, says the World, students, and as a result there has been a later becoming attorney in charge of the the department reverted to the distri- marked increase in the demand for the fidelity and surety claims department of buting Post Office system of seventy-five booklet which gives the conditions under the Globe Indemnity Company. 1 He re- years ago. which the contests are conducted. This signed the latter position in February, The ALUMNI NEWS is not blameless in is the first time in at least ten years that 1918, to accept an appointment on the the matter of delay, but where an oc- the prize list has been bulletined, and it legal staff of the special representative of casional issue will be mailed one, two, or is hoped that the competitions will attract the Secretary of War, his task having even four days late, thirty-six out of the a greater number than in recent years, been the adjustment of the claim of the annual forty will leave Ithaca on time. when two prizes, for example, had to be United States Government against the The complaints that we hear concerning awarded to the only two contestants. Government of France for ocean trans- delays of much greater duration, indicate More than forty prizes, scholarships, portation furnished during the war by the congestion in distributing postoffices, medals, cups, and other awards are offered. Army Transportation Service, the amount CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS 83

of which was thirty-eight million dollars. In his junior and senior years he was a Together these four data make up a Upon the completion of this work he member of the Mandolin Club. continuum called "space-time." Space is resumed the practice of law as a member of After graduation, Wild went to Canton distance divided by time; time is distance the firm of Barker, Donahue, Anderson where he was a teacher in the High School divided by space; distance is space multi- and Wylie, New York. At the time of his of Commerce and later with the Cleveland plied by time. These are the fundamentals death he was a member of the firm of Press. Ill health necessitated a change of of the Einstein theory. E. B. McConnell and Company, general climate and in 1918 he went to Los Finally space-time has a warp or curva- agents in New York for the Maryland Angeles, where he entered the real estate ture, which is greatest near massive bodies. Casualty Company. business and became active in the Uni- Einstein's theory accepts the laws of He is survived by his widow, Mary versity Club. gravitation as approximately correct; but Collins McGonigal, whom he married in In 1921 he toured Europe to consult whereas Newton says that the cause of the 1908, and two daughters, Mary and eminent surgeons and specialists regard- falling of a body to the earth is a drawing Elizabeth. ing his condition, then returned to Los force, Einstein says it is rather caused by Josias M. Creamer '12 Angeles. Following an extended illness the curvature of space-time together with this year, he went to Battle Creek, where the universal principle of least action, Notice has lately been received of the he underwent the operations from which which induces bodies in motion to take the death of Josias Marion Creamer on he failed to recover. shortest track. Light like moving bodies December 15, 1918, in Baltimore. is affected by the curvature of'space, but Creamer was born on December 29, owing to its great velocity the effects upon 1888, the son of Mr. and Mrs. J. G. LITERARY REVIEW its direction of motion are not so evident. Creamer, and prepared at the Baltimore These are the fundamental ideas which Polytechnic Institute, entering Sibley Einstein has combined to produce a new College in 1908. He left at the end of his The Einstein Theory conception of the universe; and these second year, and entered the employ of The Einstein Theory of Relativity. By ideas are admirably explained in MΓΛ the Crown Cork and Seal Company, a Garrett P. Serviss '72. Illustrations by Serviss's useful little book. large corporation doing an international R. D. Crandall. New York. Edwin business. After several years' service he Miles Fadman, Inc. 1923. 19 cm., pp. 96. Books and Magazine Articles was placed in charge of experimental and Price, $1. In The Cornell Countryman for October research work, and as he was endowed This is a highly successful popular Samuel Fraser, M.S. '05, discusses "Dis- with inventive genius, he produced several exposition of the difficult theory worked tribution of Fruits and Vegetables." The new ideas which were successful. out by Alfred Einstein. It has been article is illustrated. Dean Albert R. Severing his connection with that com- written to accompany and supplement the Mann '04 writes on "The Merger with the pany, he became associated with the film on the subject; but its value as an New York State Agricultural Experiment American Propeller and Manufacturing independent exposition of the theory is Station." George E. Van Allen '18 has a Company of Baltimore, which furnished evident to anyone who becomes familiar poem on "Plowing." Ann Watkins, in- most of the airplane propellers for war with its lucid and simple explanations of a structor in home economics, writes on purposes produced in this country during hypothesis by no means easy to explain. "The Value of a Beautiful Room." The the World War. Starting with the The illustrations are taken directly from letter of Dean Emeritus Roberts acknow- Canadian Government, to whom they the film itself. ledging the greetings sent on him the supplied propellers in very large numbers, The book is made up of two parts. The occasion of his ninetieth birthday is their output was doubled when the United first was written as a kind of "book of the printed, as is also one from his daughter, States entered the war, and in supplying play"; in the second, certain parts of the Mrs. Mary E. B. Roberts Coolidge '80. both countries they kept in operation exposition of the theory are further de- In Science for October 5 Dr. Vernon L. continuously, day and night, the large veloped. Kellogg, '91-2 Grad., presents a final re- plant employing about a thousand opera- The first thing to be observed in trying port on "Relief for Russian Scientists." tives. Creamer was vice-president of the to get hold of the notion of relativity is In the issue for October 19 Professor company. He was not of a robust consti- that nothing is stationary. We are George W. Stewart, Ph.D. Όo, of the tution, and under the stress of war con- traveling around the earth's axis at the University of Iowa, writes on "Physics as - ditions—the urgent calls for speed and rate of over seventeen miles a minute. The a Career." Dr. Arthur J. Tieje '04 writes more production—the nervous and physi- earth is traveling around the sun at the on "A Course in General Science." There cal strain upon him was very great, to rate of eighteen and a half miles a second. are printed also the resolutions adopted by which was added an accident in which he And the sun is rushing in a northerly the New York State Public Health Coun- sustained a broken arm. He contracted direction through space at a rate which cil on the death of Dr. Herman M. Biggs influenza during the epidemic in 1918, and does not permit much grass to grow in its '82, the debilitated condition of his system pathway. The ether used to be thought of In Bird-Lore for September-October rendered him an easy victim. Pneumonia as a fixed standard of measurement; but Louis A. Fuertes '97 has a colored frontis- developed, and he died three or four days the Michelson Morley experiment upset piece giving three varieties of bittern and later. the theory of ether, and Einstein ignores it. a green heron. Dr. Robert T. Morris '80 Surviving him are his mother, Mrs. Then it has been found that light alone writes on "Unusual Nesting Sites." Pro- J. G. Creamer, his widow, and two has absolutely independent motion. It fessor Arthur A. Allen '07 contributes an children. passes us at the rate of 186,000 miles a article on "When the Wild Ducks Fly," L. Philip Wild '14 second whether we are going or coming. illustrated by seven photographs taken by Louis Philip Wild died at a Battle Thirdly, there is no such thing as time the author. Creek sanatarium on October 18, after a independent of space or motion. A train series of major operations undergone in an of cars measuring to a passenger 1,000 feet In The Educational Review for October attempt to restore his health. long and traveling 148,000 miles per second Professor Joseph A. Leighton, Ph.D. '94, He was born on August 6, 1891 in Can- would seem to a stationary observer view- of Ohio State University, writes on ton, Ohio, and entered the College of Arts ing it sidewise to be only 600 feet long. "Liberal Education and the Social Order." and Sciences in 1910, graduating in 1914. In fact time plays the part of a fourth Stephen G. Rich, A.M. '15, discusses He was a member of , of the dimension. That is to say, to length, "The Educational Functions of School Cadet Band in his freshman and sopho- breadth, and depth we must, in order to Discipline." more years, and of the University Or- describe completely the dimensions of an In Education for October reviews ap- chestra in his freshman and junior years. object, add the rate at which it is traveling. pear of "Silas Marner" edited by Dr. C. 84 CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS

Robert Gaston '96 and "The Field of Santa Clara, suspending its public works Philosophy" by Professor Joseph A. Leigh- ALUMNI NOTES contracting business for the present. The ton '94. address remains the same, Industria 100, In The Political Science Quarterly for Havana, Cuba. '74 BCE—Francis Leon Chrisman '87 September Professor Abbott P. Usher, '01 ME—Walter G. Massey severed his sends us the following note: "Frank C. formerly of Cornell, now of Harvard, re- connection with the Massey Machine Tomlinson '74, who made the trip around views J. Morgan Rees's "Trusts in British Company on June 1 and opened on office the world with us, is a remarkable man Industry, 1914-21" and Sir R. A. S. in the Jefferson County National Bank and in splendid health. He can give Redmayne's "The British Coal Mining-In- Building, Watertown, N. Y., to act as Walter Camp a few points on keeping dustry During the War." manufacturers' representative for ma- well. Mr. Tomlinson eats only two meals chinery and equipment. His residence In The Crisis for October Florence a day, skipping his noonday lunch, and address is 412 West Ten Eyck Street. Kelley '82, under the title of "The Sterling thus avoids 'digging his grave with his Discrimination Bill," strongly condemns teeth.' He never missed a side trip on the '06 ME—Allan H. Candee recently the Sterling Education Bill. whole journey and took in every place in- moved from Milwaukee to Rochester, In the Proceedings of the Academy of cluding Bernares, the Holy City, and the N. Y., where he has a position as design- Political Science of New York for July filthiest place on earth. Hats off to Tom- ing engineer with the Gleason Works. He William L. Ransom '05 discusses "The linson! He should break all records at lives at 48 Vick Park B. Law's Delays—Causes and Remedies." Cornell and live to be over a hundred—at '06 BS—Professor Charles F. Shaw, of In The Philosophical Review for July least, let up hope so." the Department of Soil Technology, Uni- Professor Frank Thilly writes on ' 'Socio- '80 BS—Professor William Trelease versity of California, has just returned logical Jurisprudence" and also reviews spent the past summer, as he did the sum- from a six months' sabbatical leave spent Georges Davy's "Le Droit, Γldealisme et mer of 1922, in the principal botanical in Honolulu, Australia, and New Zealand. ΓExpόrience." Professor Henry W. Wright centers of Europe, in a study of types of In Australia an extended trip was made '99, of the University of Manitoba, dis- the tropical American peppers, which he by motor into the interior, to study soil cusses "The Objectivity of Moral Values." is monographing. His mailing address is and agricultural conditions as well as the Professor Eliajh Jordan, A. M. '08, of 804 South Lincoln Avenue, Urbana, 111. degree of settlement and development. A large number of soil samples was brought Butler College, reviews B. M. Laing's "A '86; '14 AB—Two Cornellians were back for further study. He writes that Study in Moral Problems." Professor active at the meeting at the American the disastrous fire in Berkeley on Septem- William K. Wright, of Dartmouth, for- Chamber of Commerce in Paris on ber 17 destroyed his home, together with merly of Cornell, reviews Lucien Levy- September 26, when Alphonse D. Weil '86 its contents, but they managed to save BruhΓs "La Mentality Primitive." Pro- presided as chairman of the committee on some of the silver and a part of Mrs. fessor Glenn R. Morrow '21, of the Uni- commerce and trade, and Henry Chalmers Shaw's clothing, as well as their car. versity of Missouri, reviews J. Alexander '14, chief of the division of foreign tariffs of Mrs. Shaw received a severe but not Gunn's "Modern French Philosophy," the Department of Commerce in Wash- serious burn. Other Cornellians burned "Economic Motives" by Zenas C. Dickin- ington, was the principal speaker. Chal- out were Wellyn B. Clark '93, principal son, and "The Field of Philosophy" by mers has been traveling through all the of the Willard School, Berkeley, Charles Professor Joseph A. Leighton, Ph.D. '94, countries of Europe for information on S. Downes '96, manager of the book de- of Ohio State University. Piofessor their respective tariffs. Edmund H. Hollands '09, of the Univer- partment of the University of California sity of Kansas, reviews Fr. Paulhan's '88-90 Grad—Professor William A. Co-op, and Walter Mulford '99, professor "Le Mensonge du Monde." Professor Withers, head of the Department of of forestry in the University of California. George H. Sabine '03, of Ohio State Uni- Chemistry in North Carolina State Col- President Emeritus Benjamin Ide Wheeler versity, reviews Pierre de Tourtoulon's lege, was recently elected president of the and Dr. Herbert J. Webber, acting dean "Philosophy in the Development of Law," Chamber of Commerce of Raleigh, N. C. of the College of Agriculture, who was translated by Martha McC. Read. Pro- '92-95 Grad—Professor Wilbur C. Ab- professor of plant breeding at Cornell for fessor Allan H. Gilbert '09, of Trinity bott, of the Department of History at a number of years, also suffered losses. College, Durham, N. C, reviews Leone Harvard, will be absent on leave for at In each case the loss included an entire Vivante's "Delia Intelligenzia nelΓ Espres- least a part of the present year. library as well as other personal effects. sione." There are summaries of articles by '97 BS, '13 AM—Eunice Stebbins is still '07 AB, Ίi AM, '12 PhD—[rving Per- Edgar H. Henderson, Orval Perry, Mabel teaching English in the Central High rine has moved his offices to 704-7 Braniff V. Wilson, Lucy S. Crawford, Woolf School, Omaha, Nebraska. Building, Oklahoma City, Okla. He is a Cohen, Anna F. Liddell, Roy S. Smyres, '97, '98 BArch—J. Kenneth Fraser is member of the firm of Perrine and Kite, and E. E. Coughlin. president of The Blackman Company, ad- geologists. In The Minnesota Alumni Weekly for vertising agents, 120 West Forty-second '07 ME—Herbert M. Douglass is super- October 18 Professor Roy G. Blakey, of Street, New York. His residence address visor of employment and employees for the University of Minnesota, formerly of is 300 Riverside Drive. the American Locomotive Company, Cornell, compares American and European '97 AB, '03 PhD—Professor George M. Dunkirk, N. Y. He writes, "In hunting universities. Many European professors, Dutcher, of Wesley an, will be a lecturer in copy for Alco, our company magazine, we he says, deplore our scant attention to history at Harvard this year. found an old diary which contained the languages, philosophy, and other classical '97 PhB—Ida L. Hull has taken a following, which is of interest to Cornel- studies, and look askance at our worship of position as new case supervisor with the lians: 'April 2d, 1887. West Wind. A new "practical" idols. Charity Organization Society of Hartford, Party Students of Sibley College Cornell In The American Journal of Sociology Conn. Miss Hull was with the Boston University under Guidance of Mr. Frank for September Professor Charles A. Ell- Family Welfare Society for fifteen years, Van Vlack, instructor Mechanical Engi- wood's "Reconstruction of Religion" is and for the past two years she has been neering, was in the Brooks Locomotive reviewed by Professor Albion W. Small, of located in Portsmouth, N. H. works this a. m.' " Douglass lives at 34 7 West Fifth Street. the University of Chicago. 99 CE; Ί6 CE—The firm of Torrance In Industrial and Engineering Chemistry and Portal, with which Chester Torrance '07 AB—Henry I. Perrine is in the bond for October Lee F. Hawley '03 reviews '99 and Robert S. Torrance '16 are as- department of West and Company, 1511 "Forest Resources of the World" by sociated, has purchased and will operate Walnut Street, Philadelphia. Raphael Zon '01 and William N. Sparhawk. the Agabama Sugar Mill at Naranjal, '09 ME—G. Vail Hartwell was married CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS 85

in June to Margaret Blache, daughter of Frankfort, N. Y., and the National Bailey announce the birth of their second Mrs. "0. C. Blache of Englewood, N. J. Homogenizer Corporation of Utica, N. Y. daughter, Loui Lloyd, on September 29. They are making their home in Engle- He lives at 733 Pleasant Street, Utica. Their mailing address is Box 112, A. and wood. '13 ME—Fred C. Cory is manager of the M. College, Miss. Ίi AB, '14 BS—J. Robert Smith is Cory Manufacturing Company, 375 West Ί6 ME—John K. Stotz is a design vice-president of the Smith Chemical and Center Street, Marion, Ohio. engineer with the Westinghouse Electric 1 Color Company of New York, manu- '13 ME—Mrs. Anna Rourke announces and Manufacturing Company; he has a facturers and importers of chemicals, the marriage of her daughter, Mae son, John Kenning, Jr., born on July 14, pigment fillers, and dry colors. He is also Genevieve, to Paul Traeger, Jr., '13 on and he lives at 820 Franklin Avenue, a captain in the United States Reserve October 6 in Brooklyn. Wilkinsburg, Pa. Corps, attached to the 77th Division, and '14 CE—Burton W. Brodt is Eastern '16 LLB—James N. Butler is engaged in his mailing address is 257 Water Street, the general practice of law as a member of New York. representative for the Timken-Detroit Axle Company, with headquarters at 625 the firm of Moore and Butler, 1512 Atlan- Ίi ME—William G. Christy Ίi, secre- West Twenty-third Street, New York; he tic Avenue, Atlantic City, N. J., of which tary of the St. Louis Section, American lives at 63 North Walnut Street, East Charles S. Moore (Swarthmore College) Society of Mechanical Engineers, formerly Orange, N. J. is senior member. Butler lives at the with St. Louis Boat and Engineering Com- Hotel Austine. '14 BChem—Byron S. Proper is man- pany, and Frank H. Schubert, district '17 ME—William Carter Bliss is as- manager of the Wheeler Condenser and ager of the department of filter paper and filtering materials of H. Reeve Angel and sistant general superintendent of the Engineering Company, announce the Scullin Steel Company, 6700 Manchester organization of the Schubert-Christy Con- Company, Inc., 7-11 Spruce Street, New York. Avenue, St. Louis. He lives at 4929 struction and Machinery Company, with Lotus Avenue. offices in the Railway Exchange Building, '15 CE—Mr. and Mrs. Henry J. Guth St. Louis. In addition to representing announce the marriage of their daughter, '17 AB—A daughter, Mary Jean, was America's leading manufacturers of power Corinne Johanna, to Arthur S. Patrick '15 born on June 5 to Mr. and Mrs. Frank S. plant equipment, the company will render on October 11 in Utica, N. Y. Mr. and Walker (Lillian V. Barber Ί7), 328 East general construction engineering service, Mrs. Patrick will be at home after Novem- Main Street, Falconer, N. Y. specializing in the design and construction ber 15 at Port Arthur, Texas. '17 ME—Mr. and Mrs. Chandler Burpee of Philadelphia announce the birth of water cooling equipment and refrigerat- ' 15 AB—Nelson E. Whitaker is treasurer of Chandler Burpee, Jr., on August 30. ing and power plants, design of special of the Wheeling Corrugating Company, Burpee is in the sales department of the machinery, process development, and Wheeling, W. Va. difficult construction wrork. David Lupton Son's Company, steel sash, '15 AB—Mr. and Mrs. Raymond V. casements, and residence windows, and '12 ME—Charles E. Finney, Jr., '12 Puff are receiving congratulations on the and Alice Margaret Yelland of San his mailing address is 825 East Stafford arrival of their second son, Henry Burling- Street, Philadelphia. Francisco were married on June 30 and ham, on September 29. They live at 14 are living at 1818 Bissell Avenue, Rich- Walnut Street, Rutherford, N. J. '17 BS—Paul A. Winchell is insurance manager with the National Aniline and mond, Calif. '15 AB—Frank A. Gerould is manager Chemical Company, 40 Rector Street, '12 AM, '15 PhD—Earle D. Ross has of the Philadelphia store of A. G. Spalding New York; his home address is 176 Elm left the North Dakota Agricultural Col- and Brothers, 1210 Chestnut Street, Avenue, Mount Vernon. lege to become associate professor of his- having been transferred from New York. tory at the Iowa State College, Ames. His residence address is 117 St. Paul's Ί8, '21 WA—Captain Walter H. Soder- '12 AB—Edgar A. Doll, who has been Road, Ardmore, Pa. holm, Ordance Department, has been as- signed to the automotive section at for four years director of the division of Ί6 AB—Dr. Daniel C. Darrow is on the Aberdeen Proving Ground, Md., where he education and classification in the New staff of the Boston City Hospital, Boston, is engaged in testing experimental auto- Jersey Department of Institutions and 18, Mass. motive material. Agencies, has become a member of the Ί6 BS—Leonard F. Hicks sailed on Ί8 AB—Grace M. Gifford is teaching Department of Psychology in Ohio State June 30 for a business tour of all countries this year in New Paltz, N. Y., and her University. of Europe; he spent most of his time in mailing address is Box 732. '12 ME—Mr. and Mrs. Guy T. Morris Scotland, England, France, Belgium, and announce the birth of a daughter, Louise Holland, returning to New York the Ί8 ME—Francisco Aubert is head of Richards, on March 21. middle of October. He is vice-president of the electrolysis department of the Mexican '12 BArch—Carl V. Burger is now in the Daniel M. Hicks, Inc., and the Hicks- Light and Power and Tramways Com- Philadelphia office of N. W. Ayer and Son, Costarino Company, Inc., dealers, im- pany, Ltd., Mexico City, Mexico. advertising agents, 308 Chestnut Street. porters, and packers of paper mill supplies, Ί8 BS—Grace H. Griswold is an in- '12—Harold P. Wood is with the 200 Fifth Avenue, New York. structor in the Department of Entomo- American Steel and Wire Company, 30 Ί6 ME—Harlowτ T. Hardinge is now logy of the College of Agriculture. Church Street, New York. located at the works of the Hardinge Com- '18 ME—Burdette K. Northrop goes '12, '13 CE—Charles T. Wanzer is pany, York, Pa. this year to Colgate as assistant professor resident engineer on hydro-electric power ' 16 ME—Announcement has been made of physics. plant construction for the Great Falls of the engagement of Virginia Morse ' 18 BS—Amy E. Van Wagenen of Kings- Power Company, Great Falls, S. C. Packard of Ventnor, N. J., to Ronald ton, N. Y., is instructing in clothing and '13 AM, Ί6 PhD—William D. Funk- Hart Ί6, of New York. millinery in Temple University, Philadel- houser, formerly head of the Cascadilla Ί6 ME—Neil A. Gorman, a member of phia. Miss Van Wagenen has been teach- School, and now head professor of zoology the firm of McDonnell and Gorman of ing for the past three years in the high at the University of Kentucky, was one of Tientsin, China, is in this country on a schools at Bath and Cuba, N. Y. two recent discoverers of important short business trip, and may be addressed Ί8 BS; Ί8 BS—Mr. and Mrs. Stacy G. Mound-Builder relics in Scott County, at his home, 139 Greenfield Street, Buffalo. Kircher (Mildred F. Hills Ί8) have Kentucky. He expects to return to China the first of changed their address to 358 South '13 CE—Winthrop T. Scarritt is vice- the year. Fourth Avenue, Mount Vernon, N. Y. president of the Pratt Chuck Company of Ί6 AB—-Mr. and Mrs. John Wendell Ί8 BS—A daughter, Edith Fredericka, 86 CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS

was born on June 22 to Mr. and Mrs. and. the offices are located at 141 Broad- daughter, Lucy Elizabeth Wolff '21, to Herbert G. Steffens of McLean, 111. way, New York. Ralph Lewis Cook of Newark Valley on '18 AB, '23 PhD—J. Walter MacKellar '20, '21 AB—Theodore M. Trousdale is October 16 at their home in Ithaca. Mr. is an instructor in English in New York a third year student in the Johns Hopkins and Mrs. Cook will reside in Newark University. His mailing address is Blau- Medical School. He resides at 606 North Valley. velt, New York. Broadway, Baltimore. '21 AB—Frances Raymond spent the Ί8, '21 ME—Robert C. Moffitt is in the '20 BS—H. Evelyn Hendryx is director summer in France, and is now teaching construction engineering department of the of girls' work in the Part Time School in French in the Lansingburgh High School, Washington Water Power Company, Newburgh, N. Y. Her address is 90 Troy, N. Y. She lives at 732 Fourth Spokane. Mail should be addressed to Beacon Street. Avenue, North. She writes that she is Box 1222. filling in her time by teaching night 7 '20—Captain Robert I. Stack has been classes at the Troy Y. W. C. A., and tak- 18 BS—Bartley E. Campbell is located transferred to Fort Ontario, Oswego, N. Y. at Lepetate, Vera Cruz, in the southern ing violin lessons at the Conservatory field oil district, in charge of the comp- '20 LLB—Mary H. Donlon is associated of Music. troller's interests in the field for the with Daniel Burke, counsellor at law, 40 '21 BS, '22 AM—Lillian F. Brotherhood Cortez and La Atlantica Companies—a Exchange Place, New York. Her residence is teaching science and floriculture in the change in location since the closing of the address is 71 Orange Street, Brooklyn. National Park Seminary, Forest Glen, Md. companies' terminals. His mailing address '21 BArch, }22 MArch—Charles M. '21 BArch—Paul W. Drake is with is La Atlantica, Apartado 483, Tampico, Stotz spent a year in New York with the Ludlow and Peabody, architects, 101 Mexico. firms of Welles Bosworth, 527 Fifth Park Avenue, New York. He lives at 45 '19, '21 WA—Audrey Letitia Mitchell of Avenue, Cass Gilbert, 244 Madison Cutler Street, Morristown, N. J. New York and Barclay Kerr Read '19 Avenue, and Delano and Aldrich, 126 '21—James Sidway is with the Robert- were married at the St. Regis Hotel on East Thirty-eighth Street. He is now son Cataract Electric Company, Mohawk October 20. William M. Read Ί8 and permanently located in Pittsburgh as an and Elmwood, Buffalo, N. Y. architectural draftsman in the office of his John P. McBean, Jr., '19 were among the '22 ME—Since his graduation, Benja- father, Edward Stotz. His home address ushers. Mr. and Mrs. Read will live in min Ozaroff has been production manager is 292 Prospect Avenue, Crafton, Pitts- Akron, Ohio. for S. Blickman, Inc., formerly of Long burgh. '19, '23 CE—Charles M. Mitchell '19 Island City, and now of Weehawken, was married on August 21 to Marie '21 BS—Katherine Tobey is teaching N. J., manufacturers of aluminum cook- Louise Beaton of New York; their present foods in the sixth, seventh, and eighth ing utensils, sheet metal specialties, and mailing address is 140 West Fifty-seventh grades of the Newburgh, N. Y., schools. hotel and restaurant equipment. His Street, New York. '21 CE—Marcus Sagal is with the home address is 1397 Myrtle Avenue, '19 AB—Announcement has been made Illinois Division of Highways, in charge of Brooklyn. of the engagement of Lo N. Lau '19 and the construction of concrete road and }22 AB—Alice K. Burchfield is teaching Dr. Ang L. Lee of Columbia University. bridges on a twelve-mile project. His in the Lafayette High School, Buffalo. mailing address is Box 591, Pittsfield, 111. } Lau is manager of the New York Branch 22 BS—Charles G. Peck is with the of the Chinese Merchants Bank, Ltd., and '21 AB—Jesse D. Stark is in his third Curtis Publishing Company, working in he lives at 67 Brooklyn Avenue, Baldwin, year at the Jefferson Medical College, the Central Ohio sales division. His mail- Long Island. Philadelphia, and is living at 910 Pine ing address is Phelps, N. Y. Street. '19 AB—Laura W. Gray is teaching '22 ME—Wiley N. Caldwell '22 and Spanish and history in the Gloversville, '21 AB—Mr. and Mrs. A. E. Schafer of Jean Marshel Clarke of Sewickley, Pa., N. Y., High School. She lives at 11 Cleveland announce the marriage of their were married on September 12. Their Fosdick Street. daughter, Kathryn, to Willard A. Kiggins, honeymoon included a trip through Can- ; i9 AM, '23 PhD—Christianna Smith Jr., on October 20. Mr. and Mrs. Kiggins ada, stopping at Banff, Lake Louise and returns to her alma mater, Mount Hol- will reside at 14 Springfield Road, Eliza- Vancouver, then going down to California yoke, this year as assistant professor of beth, N. J. for a month and back to Chicago via the zoology. '21 CE—Samuel D. Brady, Jr., is as- Grand Canyon. Until further notice their '19 AB—Harold H. Moore is cashier sistant to the president of the Brady- mailing address will be 531 Linden with Stephens and Company, bonds, 724 Warner Coal Corporation, Fairmont, W. Avenue, Oak Park, 111. South Spring Street, Los Angeles, Calif. Va. His residence address is "Zellmont," '22 ME—Robert G. Clark '22 was He lives at 2638 Portland Street. R. F. D. 1, Fairmont. married on June 22 to Margrecia V. '19 CE—Oscar J. Sewell is assistant '21 AB—Theresa A. Fox spent the Steele, and they are living at Apartment, highway engineer in charge of forty-five summer studying at the Berkshire Sum- 2, 454 Third Avenue, Salt Lake City, miles of. hard surface road construction for mer School of Art, and is now teaching in Utah. Clark is chief engineer for the the State of Illinois, and his mail address Masten Park High School, Buffalo. She Utah Oil Refining Company of Salt Lake is Box 223, Red Bud, 111. Wade Parke lives at 404 Jersey Street. City. Sewell '46 was born on May 2. '21, '22 AB—Harold J. Frank is as- J22 EE—Leo J. Dicianne is manager of '20 AB—Leslie B. Townsend is secre- sistant manager of the Nathan Frank's the Chicago office of the Wagner Electric tary-treasurer of the Ithaca Oil Company, Sons Department Store, 206-10 Ford Corporation of St. Louis. His residence Inc., distributors of Gulf products, and Street, Ogdensburg, N. Y. address is 4517 Beacon Street, Chicago. assistant manager of the Ithaca Fuel '21—Ramon O. Williams is back on J22 EE—After thirteen months on the Supply Company; the offices of both the job after a six months' period of con- test floor at the main works of the Westing- companies are located at 402 South valescing from the effects of a severe case house Electric and Manufacturing Com- Meadow Street. Townsend lives at 319 of pleuro-pneumonia. A classmate writes, pany in Pittsburgh, Monroe Herz has been North Tioga Street. "Proof of his absolute recovery is in the appointed field service engineer in the '20 BChem—Joseph Diamant, who has fact that he has found it necessary to electrical division of the New York service been with the Lloyd Winthrop Company, discard all his old shirts and collars and department of the company. His address Inc., since December, 1920, was elected replenish with size sixteen." is 2374 University Avenue, New York. treasurer of the company last June. The '21 BS—Mr. and Mrs. Adolph Wolff '22 AB—Nelson E. Cook is registered firm deals in real estate and mortgages have announced the marriage of their in the Graduate School and expects to CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS 87 receive his M. S. degree in chemistry in of Buffalo, left for Memphis, Tenn., the North Carolina State Highway Commis February. He is living at 526 Stewart last of October to see something of sion, and his mailing address is 121 East Avenue. Southern lumbering. His mailing address Peace Street, Raleigh. '22 AB—Bernice W. Mundt is teaching is 1029 Elmwood Avenue, Buffalo. '23 AB—Albert E. Conradis is a first English and mathematics in Southern '23 AB—Edith W. Parrott is teacher of year student in the Harvard Law School; College, Petersburg, Va. English in the Ithaca High School, and he lives at 79 Kirkland Street, Cambridge. '22 CE—Henry G. Brown, Jr., is with she lives at 118 West Green Street. '23 EE—Eduardo D. Luque is assistant the Dixie Construction Company, Alex- '23 AB—Harriette G. Smith has a electrical engineer with the Mexican Light ander City, Ala. position on the staff of the Social Welfare and Power Company, Ltd., Gante 20, '22 AB—Mildred F. Rowe is teaching League of Rochester, N. Y. Her home Mexico City. His mailing address is 3a French in the Ithaca High School, and is at 109 Brooklyn Street, Warsaw, N. Y. de Merida 61, Mexico City. lives at 603 East Seneca Street. '23 AB—Helen D. Smith is teaching '23 BS—Edwin A. Gauntt is county '22, '23 AB—James H. Betts is in the French and Latin in the Fort Ann, N. Y., agent for Middlesex County, N. J. traffic department of the New York High School. Her mailing address is 13 '23 BS—Gertrude C. Hicks is assistant Telephone Company, and lives at 74 DeKalb Avenue, White Plains, N. Y. manager of the Lincklaen House, Cazeno- Clinton Avenue, Newark, N. J. '23 BChem—Thomas J. Potts is a via, N. Y. '22 AB—Thelma F. Brumfield is a handkerchief salesman with James M. '23 AB—Anna K. Hoehler is assistant second year medical student in the Uni- McCutcheon and Company; he lives at manager of the Sixty-ninth Street branch versity of Virginia. Her mailing address 170 Rugby Road, Brooklyn. of The Chester Times, of Chester, Pa. Her is Box 239, University, Va. mailing address is 6056 Irving Street, ; '23 BS—Arthur J. Powers is working 22 BS—Mabel F. Bruckner is a teacher in the bacteriological and chemical labora- Philadelphia. of home economics in the Newark High tories of the Borden's Farm Products '23 ME—Samuel B. Bird is a draftsman School, Newark, Del., where seniors in Company, 802 Fulton Street, Brooklyn. with the Pusey and Jones Company, and Delaware University have their practice His residence address is 149 East Forty- he lives at Hillcroft, Wilmington, Del. He teaching. She lives at 196 West Main fourth Street, New York. is to be married on Thanksgiving Day, Street. November 29, to Lonsdale Miner, daughter '23 BS—Mrs. Gladys F. Barkley is '22 ME—John M. Cowan is in the of General Asher Miner of Wilkes-Barre. assistant home demonstration agent with advertising department of the Certain- the City Home Bureau of Rochester, N. Y. '23 BS—Sydney S. Brooke is stock teed Products Corporation, 100 East She lives at 81 South Fitzhugh Street. clerk for the United Plumbing Supply Forty-second Street, New York. Company of Brooklyn. The firm has '22 AB—Edna M. Coffin is teaching '23 AB—George A. Fryer is with the recently organized an athletic and re- English II and algebra in Butler, N. J., New York Telephone Company, and he creational department, and Brooke is and she is living at 251 Lafayette Street, lives at Apartment 6-S, 410 West End expected to supply means and facilities for Paterson, N. J. Avenue, New York. games, etc. The entire force including '22 ME—Howard R. Sherman, Jr., is '23 CE—John E. Howard is with the fifty-five men and eight women, has a rest with the New York Switch and Crossing Company, Hoboken, N. J. He lives at 14 South Munn Avenue, East Orange, N. J. '22—Godfrey Morgan has returned to the University to complete his work in electrical engineering. He has been in the transformer engineering department of the General Eelectric Company for the past year. '22 AB—Mr. and Mrs. H. L. Schloss have announced the marriage of their daughter, Adlyn, to Sydney M. Pick '22 on September 25. Mr. and Mrs. Pick are living at 10 Kearney Street, Newark, N. J. Pick has been studying at the Philadel- phia Textile Schools for the past year, and he has a position with William Loebl and Company, Inc., 251 Fourth Avenue, New York. Don't Have a Guilty Feeling '23 AB—Evelyn G. Tibbitts is an as- sistant in chemistry at Mount Holyoke Free yourself from care by re- College. ceiving twelve visits from the '23 BS—Carl H. Shiebler is farming at Little Lady in Black. Canandaigua, N. Y. His mailing address is East Street, Canandaigua. '23 BS—Dorothy Voorhees is now in r A* Texas, as nutrition worker for the Ameri- ~Wfdod) can Red Cross. Her home address is 88 North Street, Auburn, N. Y. Strand Bldg., Ithaca, N. Y. '23 AB—Irene M. Hill has been with the New York Telephone Company since / September 1. Her home address is 45 Guion Street, Pleasantville, N. Y. 12 issues for $3.00 '23 BS—John B. Hartnett, who is with the Taylor and Crate Lumber Company CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS period from three to three-thirty each day, ' 14—Thomas I. S. Boak, 19 Troy Everitt W. Lins, 521 Empire Building, during which time he has charge of the Street, Seneca Falls, N. Y.—John James Boise, Idaho. play. His home address is 1161 Bedford Munns, University Club, Chicago, 111. '21—Eleanor M. Foote, 15 Rue Montou- Avenue, Brooklyn. '15—Frank L. Hornickle, 11420 Hessler lieu, Velane, Toulouse, France.—Jeanne Road, Cleveland, Ohio.—Joseph Lax, 292 M. Griffiths, Clifton Springs Sanatirium, NEW MAILING ADDRESSES St. Johns Place, Brooklyn, N. Y.—Frank Clifton Springs, N. Y.—Thomas J. Me- '87—Dr. Edwin Sterberger, 55 West St. John, 7 Butler Place, Garden City, Fadden, 217 West Avenue, Ithaca, N. Y. Forty-ninth Street, New York. Long Island. —Mrs. M. M. Murad (Jennie Etzkowitz), '90—William M. Irish, 260 South Broad Ί6—George L. Cooper, 47 Morton 507 Ferry East, Detroit, Mich.—Curtis Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Street, New York.—Herbert A. Wichelns, T. Prout, 88 North Avenue, New Rochelle, N. Y.—Mayrant Simons, 709 East Willow '95—George J. Krebs, 53 South Center 248 North Dithridge Street, Pittsburgh, Street, Syracuse, N. Y.—Jesse D. Stark, Street, Somerset, Pa. Pa. 910 Pine Street, Philadelphia, Pa.— '96—Walter G. Pietsch, 619 Dart- '17—Lieut. Robert E. Bassler, U. S. N., Richard B. Steinmetz, 152 Lyons Avenue, mouth Place, Evanston, 111. in care of Kingsland, 814 Prospect Place, Newark, N. J. Brooklyn, N. Y.—John Haydock, 3d, 162 '03—ToΛvner K. Webster, Jr., 111 West '22—Ira M. Cohen, Furnald Hall, Westervelt Avenue, Plainfield, N. J.— Monroe Street, Chicago, 111. Columbia University, 2940 Broadway, Joseph A. Heller, Hotel St. Andrew, '04—Irving Warner, 1109 Broome Street New York.—Joseph C. Gardner, 1711 H Broadway and Seventy-second Street, Wilmington, Del. Street, Northwest, Washington, D. C.— New York.—William C. Kammerer, Jr., W. Kenneth Hayes, Box 47, Chappaqua, '05—Prentice Cushing, 131 Joralemon 764 Ardmore Avenue, Akron, Ohio. Street, Brooklyn, N. Y.—James Lynah, N. Y.—Lawrence S. Hazzard, 100 Ridge Apartment 606-C, Alden Court Manor, Ί8—H. Willard Hubbell, 4043 Powelton Drive, Yonkers, N. Y.—Harriet E. Hud- 8100 East Jefferson Avenue, Detroit, Avenue, Philadelphia, Pa.—Dorothy Me- son, 173 West First Street, Fulton, N. Y. Mich.—Clarence B. Piper, 49 Cedar Sparran, 4713 Springfield Avenue, Phila- —Carmen M. Johnson, Sage College, Road, Belmont, Mass. delphia, Pa.—Dominick P. Rotunda, Ithaca, N. Y.—Clara N. Loveland, 52 Hayes Hall, Ohio State University, Co- East Ninety-seventh Street, New York. 'c8—Henry E. Weaver, 183 Mount lumbus, Ohio.—Francis O. Underwood, Vernon Street, Ridgeίield Park, N. J. —Marvin W. Thomas, Division of High- 5525 Woodlawn Avenue, Chicago, 111. ways, CUfton Hotel Building, Ottawa, '09—Russell V. Banta, 21 Rich Avenue, '19—Harold R. Bassett, 633 East 233d 111.—Murray G. Walters, 1602 Bolton Mount Vernon, N. Y. Street, New York.—Albert J. Eckhardt, Street, Baltimore, Md. Ίo—E. Eugene Barker, 29 Shepard St., 8907 Ninety-first Street, Woodhaven, '23—Edward K. Campbell, 303 Eddy Cambridge, Mass. Long Island.—Edward E. Conroy, Box Street, Ithaca, N. Y.—D. Edward Brain- Ίi—Lafayette L. Porter, 410 Citizens 955> Spokane, Wash. ard, 7 Elm Street, Schenectady, N. Y.— Bank Building, South Bend, Ind. 72O—Orville G. Daily, 6943 Merrill Maurice Piesen, 409 College Avenue, Ji2—Cornelius H. Evans, 3d, 516 Union Avenue, Chicago, 111.—W. Littell Everitt, Ithaca, N. Y.—Martha A. Tanner, 810 Street, Hudson, N. Y. 244 Grove Avenue, Galion, Ohio.— Bush Street, San Diego, Calif.

LANG'S PALACE GARAGE 117A33 East Green Street, ITHACA, New York

We have doubled our capacity for storage and can take care of 200 cars

We have added a new Sales Display Room which approaches the metro- politan in appearence and appointments.

ERNEST D. BUTTON '99 WILLIAM H. MORRISON '90 President Sec'y and Treas. CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS

"ITHACA" TPE SENATE Solves the Problem for Alumni Rothschild ENG WING Co. A Good Restaurant MARTIN T. GIBBONS Proprietor Bros. Library Building 123 N.Tίoga Street

"Songs of Cornell" "Glee Club Songs" E. H. WANZER All the latest "stunts" and things musical The Grocer Lent's Music Store Complete Assortment gf KOHM & BRUNNE Cornell Banners, Tailors for Cornellians Quality—Service Everywhere Pennants, 222 E. State St., Ithaca Pillow Covers, Wall and R. A. Heggie & Bro. Co. NOTICE TO EMPLOYERS Table Skins at The Cornell Society of Engineers maintain a Committee of Employ- Attractive Prices ment for Cornell graduates. Em- ployers are invited to consuH this Fraternity Committee without charge when in need of Civil or Mechanical Engi- Jewelers neers, Draftsmen, Estimators, Sales Engineers, Construction Forces, etc. 19 West 44th Street, New York City Room 817—Phone Vander- bilt 2865 Ithaca New York C. M. CHUCKROW, Chairman Rothschild Bros.

The Cornell Alumni Professional Directory

BOSTON, MASS. P. W. WOOD & SON KELLEY & BECKER P. 0. Wood '08 Counselors at Law WARREN G. OGDEN, M.E. '01 366 Madison Ave. LL.B. Georgetown University, '05 Insurance CHARLES E. KELLEY, A.B. '04 Patents, Trade-Marks, Copyrights 158 East State St. NEAL DOW BECKER, LL.B. Ό5 Λ.B. '06 Patent Causes, Opinions, Titles Practice in State and Federal Courts NEW YORK CITY 68 Devonshire Street MARTIN H. OFFINGER '99 E.E. ERNEST B. COBB, A.B. 10 Treasurer and manager Certified Public Accountant DETROIT, MICH. Van Wagoner-Linn Construction Co. Telephone, Cortlandt 2976-7 Electrical Contractors 50 Church Street, New York EDWIN ACKERLY, A.B., '20 143 East 27th Street Attorney and Counselor at Law Phone Madison Square 7320 701 Penobscot Bldg. DONALD C. TAGGART, Inc. PAPER DAVID J. NELSON & CO., INC. 100 Hudson St., New York City FORT WORTH, TEXAS Audits - Systems - Taxes D. C. Taggart 16 Telephones: Cortland 1345-1346 LEE, LOMAX & WREN David J. Nelson, C.P.A. (N.Y.), A.B. Ί5 Lawyers General Practice President 506-9 Wheat Building TULSA, OKLAHOMA Attorneys for Santa Fe Lines Empire Gas & Fuel Co. HERBERT D. MASON, LL. A. '00 C. K. Lee, Cornell '89-90 P. T. Lomax, Texas '98 CHARLES A. TAUSSIG Attorney and Counslor at Law F. J. Wren, Texas 1913-14 A.B. '02, LL.B., Harvard '05 903-908 Kennedy Bldg. 220 Broadway Tel. 1905 Cortland Practice in State and Federal Courts General Practice ITHACA, N. Y. GEORGE S. TARBELL ARTHUR V. NIMS WASHINGTON, D. C. Ph.B. '91—LL.B. '94 with Ithaca Trust Building HARRIS & FULLER THEODORE K. BRYANT '97 '98 Attorney and Notary Public Members of New York Stock Master Patent Law Ό8 Real Estate Exchange Patents and Trade Marks Exclusively Sold, Rented, and Managed 120 Broadway 309-314 Victor Building CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS

Read "Concerning Cornell" HE sale of this book is continuing steady. The History chapter is attracting* the attention of the alumni. The traditions are interesting to the under-classmen. It is a story of the University well told. You will want a copy in your library. Cloth $3.50 Leather $5.00

"Cornell Rowing" Cornell Songbook $1.50 $1.75 There are many readers of the Every gathering of Cornellians "NEWS" who are interested in includes singing in its program. Cornell Rowing even though Don't sing just "for your own they never rowed. "Tar" Young wrote a story this time. Statis- amazement," help the crowd. tics occupy only a very small Know the songs well and sing. portion of the book. Buy a copy. Every little bit helps. CORNELL THE SOCIETY Morrill Hall Ithaca, N. Y.