Vol. XXIV, No. 19 [PEICE TWELVE CENTS] FEBRUARY 9, 1922

President Farrand Meets Thousands of Alumni and Others on Western Trip Dr. Preserved Smith Appointed to Fill Vacancy Left by Burr's Retirement Basketball Team to be Reorganiz- ed—Wrestling and Boxing Prospects Goods Construction of New Heating Plant and Distributing System to Start in Spring

..Published Λveeklv during the college year and monthly in July and August 'at 223 \Vest State Street, Ithaca, New York. Subscription $4.00 per year, Entered as second class matter May 2, 1900, under the act of March 3, 1879, at the postoffice at Ithaca, New York. CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS

HEMPHILL, NOYES & Co. Executor Trustee Ithaca Investment Securities 37 Wall Street, New York Trust Company Chartered 1822 Boston Philadelphia Syracuse pi Assets Over Scranton Albany Baltimore Three Million Dollars Jansen Noyes '10 Charles E. Gardner President Charles E.^Treman Stanton Griffis ΊO Vice-Pres Emmons L. Williams τ Harold C. Strong Vice-Pres Franklin C. Cornell Clifford Hemphill Farmers' Loan Vice-Pres. and Sec., W. H. Storms Treasurer Sherman Peer Member New York Stock Exchange and Trust Company ALUMNI Cascadilla School PROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY Nos. 16-22 William Street GRADUATES GO TO CORNELL Branch: 475 Fifth Ave. College Preparatory School at 41st Street A High-Grade Boarding School for Boys WASHINGTON, D. C. New York THEODORE K. BRYANT '97, '98 Summer School Master Patent Law '08 July to September, especially for Col- Patents and Trade Marks exclusively lege and University Entrance 310-313 Victor Building Examinations LONDON Special Tutoring School Private Instruction in Any Subject Letters of Credit Throughout the Year BOSTON, MASS. Foreign Exchange WARREN G. OGDEN, M.E. '01 Trustees LL.B. Georgetown University, '05 F. C. Cornell Ernest Blaker C. D. Bostwick Cable Transfers Patents, Trade-Marks, Copyrights Patent Causes, Opinions, Titles Our 1921-22 Catalog will appeal to that Practice in State and Federal Courts schoolboy you are trying to Administrator Guardian 68 Devonshire Street interest in Cornell A postal will bring it. The Cascadilla Schools Member Federal Reserve Bank and York ITHACA, N. Y. York Clearing House GEORGE S. TARBELL Ithaca, N. Y. Ithaca Trust Building Attorney and Notary Public Real Estate Sold, Rented, and Managed A HOTEL HOME

CHARLES A. TAUSSIG A.B. '02, LL.B., Harvard '05 220 Broadway Tel. 1905 Cortland CΓhe Richmond General Practice In the most interesting section of NewYork>> KELLEY & BECKER \ur rates, which compere favorably with those of wefl con- Counselors at Law /ducted hotels in smaller cities ^ towns, will appeal to 366 Madison Ave. ϊ families or persons traveling alone Guests will receive CHARLES E. KELLEY, A.B. '04 • * the personal attejitiorv gf* NEAL Dow BECKER, LL.B. '05, A.B. '06 T?αy Bαrnett

MARTIN H. OFFINGER '99 E.E. Treasurer and Manager Van Wagoner-Linn Construction Co. Electrical Contractors 143 East 27th Street Drawing Inks Phone Madison Square 7320 Eternal Writing Ink Engrossing Ink TULSA, OKLAHOMA Taurine Mucilage HERBERT D. MASON, LL.B.ΌO Biggins Drawing Board Paste Attorney and Counsellor at Law Liquid Paste 903-908 Kennedy Bldg. Office Paste Practice in State and Federal Courts Vegetable Glue, etc.

ARE THE FINEST AND BEST INKS AND ADHESIVES FORT WORTH, TEXAS Emancipate yourself from the use of corrosive and ill-smelling inks and adhesive and adopt LEE, LOMAX & WREN the Higgins inks and adheβives. They will be a revelation to you, they are so sweet, dean, and Lawyers General Practice well put up and withal so efficient. At dealers generally. 506-9 Wheat Building Attorneys for Santa Fe Lines 271 Ninth Street CHARLES M. HIGGINS & CO., Mfrs. Brooklyn, N. Y. Empire Gas & Fuel Co. Branches: Chicago, London C. K. Lee, Cornell 1889-90 P. T. Lomax Texas 1899 F. J. Wren.lTexas 1913-14 CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS VOL. XXIV, No. 19 ITHACA, N. Y., FEBRUARY 9,1922 PRICE 12 CENTS

AIN features of Junior Week are usual appellation to go with a common courses as the New York State College of the opening concert of the Musical patronymic, and have also conjectured Home Economics, with provision for a M Clubs in Bailey Hall on Wednes- whether there might be a relationship be- college dean. It is understood that the day night, followed by a number of frater- tween Preserved and "Hard-boiled" new bill provides for a New York State nity house dances; Thursday has its per- Smith. It is understood that the present School of Home Economics at Cornell formances of "Listen 'to Me," the Junior holder of the name Preserved is the eighth University, without provision for a dean, Week musical comedy, with tea dances in in direct line, and that the original holder but separating the school from the State the afternoon and more formal ,ones at received it from a grateful Puritan mother College of Agriculture. The bill has the night; Friday sees international intercol- after surviving a tempestuous voyage approval of the Trustees. legiate wrestling when McGill meets Cor- from England. OF THIRTY-THREE varsity contests since nell in the afternoon, and in the evening FEBRUARY i was moving day in the 100- the beginning of the year, including foot- the Junior Prom provides indoor exercise; block on East State Street. The dry goods ball, cross-country, soccer, basketball, and Saturday, Pennsylvania meets Cornell in store of William C. Blackmer, the haber- hockey, only four have been lost. Three hockey and basketball in the afternoon, dashery run by L. Burr Keegan, and the of these are league games in basketball, followed by the Independents' tea dance. Elite billiard parlors changed places. Mr. and the other was a single game in the With twenty-four houses entertaining, Keegan moves his store into the former soccer season. those who desire to dance continuously, abode of the cue artists at No. 140, the with forenoons out for sleep, may keep up CLOG DANCING has superseded the billiard, parlor moves to the site of the esthetic kind for the past few weeks, when the pace from Wednesday to Saturday in- Blackmer store at No. 112, and Mr. clusive. the women of the University have had the Blackmer will store his goods for a few one-hour-a-week period formerly given PROFESSOK LEROY BUENHAM of the Col- weeks until Keegan's old store at No. 128 over to the rhythmic cadences of the lege of Architecture is responsible for the is ready for his occupancy. pseudo-Greek, strenuously devoted to the decorations for the Junior Prom, as the DR. AND MRS. JACOB GOULD SCHUR- staccato buck-and-wing stuff of the Afro- result of the effective plan he used at the MAN announce the engagement of their American. inaugural dinner to Dr. and Mrs. Farrand, daughter, Barbara Rose Schurman '21, which was held in the Armory. Through LOST AND FOUND articles on the Campus to Frank Lincoln Campbell, Jr., '21, of may reach rightful owners with more the use of simple and inexpensive drap- Omaha, Nebraska. Miss Schurman is now eries he obtains an effect of richness and certitude as a result of the recent notice in China with her parents, where Dr. that the Treasurer's office is the official elegance. Instead of covering the ceiling Schurman is American minister. beams, he leaves them open but allows no repository. Heretofore, there has been light to reach above the walls, and this THE EXTENSION STAFF of the College much confusion as to whether such articles gives the impression of great height and of Agriculture held a jollification in the should be reported to the nearest building, mystery. club room of the Cornell Foresters last the dean of the college, the Superintendent Saturday night. Songs, stunts, and coffee of Grounds, the Proctor, Barnes Hall, or FISHERMEN near the lighthouse on and doughnuts around the big open fire- the Sun. Cayuga Lake have reported some good place proved so enjoyable that a plan is SENIORS IN AGRICULTURE were recently catches through the ice. Last week a under way to make these gatherings come given an opportunity by Dr. Cornelius twenty-one pound pike forty-two inches once a month for the better acquaintance Betten, vice-dean of resident instruction, long was landed. of the Extension family. to offer suggestions that might lead to im- THE GROUND HOG saw his shadow in ITHACA THEATRES, recently inspected provement which they to be desirable Ithaca on Candlemas Day, and students as a reflex of the disaster in Washington, in the curriculum. are looking forward to a continuation of are reported as being of substantial con- THE SAGE CHAPEL Preacher for Feb- the best winter sports that Cornell has had struction and fully safeguarded against ruary 12 will be the Rev. Dr. Hugh Black, for some time. Except for an untoward accidents. Presbyterian, of Union Theological Sem- thaw it is proposed to hold a winter CEMETERY SIDEWALKS of concrete are inary, New York. carnival on Beebe Lake for Junior Week promised in the "Boneyard," the burying visitors. PROFESSOR AND MRS. OLAF BRAUNER ground that lies between University and announce the engagement of their daugh- CORNELL'S SEISMOGRAPH was among Stewart avenues, and gives a favorite ter Gertrude to Hibbard F. Johnson, Jr., those in which the recording needle was short cut for students up and down the '22, of Racine, Wisconsin. thrown out of position by the earth tremor Hill. recorded, by instruments all over the PROFESSOR EMILE M. CHAMOT '91 and A REVIVAL of the Cascadilla Associa- Mrs. Chamot have returned to Ithaca country last week. It was one of the tion, made up of students in Cascadilla severest disturbances ever recorded by the after several months in Bermuda and the Dormitory, is planned for the next term. American tropics. Cornell instrument, which was one of the An informal meeting outlined the purpose few that indicated the source of the quake of the association for the advancement of PROFESSOR JACOB R. SCHRAMM of the as in the West, rather than South or the athletic and social aims of the resi- Department of Botany has been granted Southwest. dents in Cascadilla. It will affiliate with a leave of absence for work in Washington PARAGRAPHS in The Cornell Daily Sun the Independent organization. on the technical publication Botanical referring to the given name of Dr. Pre- ANOTHER BILL changing the name of Abstracts. served Smith, who comes as a lecturer to the Department of Home Economics in SEVERAL FRATERNITIES have flooded take up some of the work relinquished by the College of Agriculture has been intro- the tennis courts adjoining their houses, Professor Burr, have congratulated Dr. duced at Albany. A similar bill was in- and these improvised skating rinks are in Smith's parents on the selection of an un- troduced two years ago, to designate the use for interfraternity hockey practices. 218 CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS

CORNELL CALENDAR wins on fall with half nelson and arm lock, February 11. Basketball, Pennsyl- ATHLETICS 7 min. 25 sec. vania at Ithaca. The Drill Hall, 2.30 p. m. 135 class: Wigsten vs. Zimmerman. Hockey, Pennsylvania at Ithaca. Wigsten awarded decision, 9 min. February 13-18. Farmers' Week, Col- Basketball Prospects 145 class: Bullard vs. Ayau. Bullard lege of Agriculture. The basketball team must be reorgan- awarded decision, 9 min. February 15. Rochester, N. Y., alumni ized for the balance of the season since 158 class: Freer vs. Strack. Strack won dinner in honor of President Farrand. two veterans, James H. Porter, left for- on fall with body scissors, 5 min. 55 sec. February 17. Basketball, Yale at New ward, and Edward H. Cornish, right 175 class: Reid vs. Felthauser. Reid Haven. guard, are no longer eligible to play. The awarded decision, 9 min. Debate, Western Reserve at Buffalo. time limit ran against them after the first Heavyweight: Hanson vs. Brayton. February 18. Buffalo, N. Y., alumni term. It is considered probable that in Hanson won by default. dinner in honor of President Farrand. the reorganization Barkelew will be moved Buffalo Club of Cornell Women, lunch- up from guard to forward, and that eon in honor of President Farrand at Wedell and Capron will play guards. The President's Tour the Twentieth Century Club. The team at present is safely tied with To Boulder and Back—Meets Many Hun- Basketball, New York University at Yale at the bottom of the ladder in the dred Enthusiatic Alumni New York. Intercollegiate League race. After win- Wrestling, Penn State at State College, ning six non-league games in a row, Cor- Traveling practically without stopover Pa. nell was beaten by Columbia, Dartmouth, from the time he left New York on Sat- February 22. Basketball, Pittsburgh at and Princeton successively. Unless the urday afternoon, January 21, until the Ithaca. team manages to take a big brace it is Black Diamond pulled into Ithaca twelve February 25. Basketball, Dartmouth going to finish lower down in the league days later, President Farrand on February at Hanover. standing than Cornell teams have been 2 completed a notable alumni tour. He Track, Triangular Indoor Meet at accustomed to in a good many years. Cambridge: Cornell, Harvard, and Dart- spent most of the nights on sleeping cars, mouth. Boxing and Wrestling spoke at the annual banquets of Cornel- June 16-18. Class Reunions in Ithaca. Athletic contests are to be resumed on Hans in ten different cities, met several February 10, when the wrestling team hundred others who could not get to the PROFESSOR ORTH SUED makes its debut in a match withuMcGill banquets, attended luncheons at city A suit for damages in the sum of $5,000 University of Montreal. On Saturday clubs, chambers of commerce, at meetings brought by Miss Grace Seeley, warden of afternoon the basketball team which has of preparatory school principals, and house Sage College, against Professor Samuel P. been badly shaken in the first three league warmings of women's clubs. Letters Orth, has caused more Campus comment games, is to face Pennsylvania, champions which preceded him to Ithaca from than any other recent event in Faculty of the league for several years, and judged points along the way were all apparently circles. The suit is the outgrowth of the by the form shown so far this season, written from the same copy book, with accident last April when Professor Orth's quite likely to repeat this year. a remarkable similarity of phrasing sedan, which he was driving, plunged off Both matches are scheduled for the whether written from Philadelphia or the approach to the South Cayuga Street afternoon. The Penn game has become Omaha or Milwaukee. "Took the crowd bridge over Six-Mile Creek, turned in the one of the attractive features of Junior by storm," "magnetic personality," "are air, and alighted upside down, after a Week. Last year the Cornell five de- with him to a man," typified the reports fifteen-foot fall, in the bed of the creek. feated Penn by one point in a spectacular of all the meetings. Miss Seeley, Professor Orth, and Mrs. engagement, the only league defeat that The luncheon in New York on January Orth sustained such severe injuries that the Quakers suffered throughout the sea- ' i, when 290 women welcomed the Pres- it was at one time thought they might not son. He would be a bold prophet who ident at the luncheon of the Cornell Wo- recover. Professor Orth had an especially would predict that history will repeat it- men's Club of New York was reported in slow recovery, and has been at Atlantic self this year. the issue of the ALUMNI NEWS of January City for some time, in an effort to regain The annual university boxing and wrest- 26. That night he was the guest of the his health. ling championship games were held Jan- Cornell Club of Philadelphia at a banquet Miss Seeley's complaint alleges negli- uary 25 in the Drill Hall. As usual they at the Bellevue Stratford Hotel, "the gence on the part of Professor Orth, who were featured by a number of interesting most notable gathering of Cornell men was generally reputed to be a somewhat contests. The summary follows: ever held in the city." One hundred and twenty-five attended the dinner. The erratic driver. Boxing It is understood that trial has been seating was by classes, with fathers of Featherweight: Tinio vs. Worthington; asked in Schuyler County in the interests undergraduates, most of them non-Co r- decision to Tinio; 2 rounds. of an unprejudiced hearing. Miss Seeley's nelliaηs, well represented. Singing be- Bantamweight: Lazaros vs. Frank; attorney is from Elmira, and the lawyers tween the courses was led by Andrew R. decision to Lazaros; 3 rounds. for Professor Orth represent an Ithaca (Andy) McCown '13. Samuel B. Eckert Lightweight: Thorns vs. Reichart; de- firm. OS as toastmaster introduced, in addition cision to Thorns; 3 rounds. These are the barest facts in the case. to President Farrand, Professor William 145 class: Craighead vs. Griswold; de- Statements in favor of both complainant A. Hammond, dean of the Faculty and cision to Griswold; 2 out of 3 rounds. and defendant arise at almost any gather- chairman of the Committee on Student 158 class: McChesney vs. Slick; deci- ing at Cornell, particularly among mem- Affairs, Benjamin C. Frick '02, of Phil- sion to Slick; 2 out of 3 rounds. bers of the Facuhvy, some alleging one set adelphia, and Howard S. Seaman '09, 175 class: Becker vs. Strack; decision of circumstances, and some quite a differ- of Wilmington. Moving pictures showing to Becker; 3 rounds. ent explanation. The actual trial may be winter scenes at the University, and Heavyweight: Brooks vs. Palmer; de- delayed for some time, pending a trip glimpses of- the inauguration of President cision to Palmer; 3 rounds. which the Orths plan to Egypt. Farrand and the laying of the corner stone Wrestling of the Laboratory of Chemistry, with ten PROFESSOR JOSEPH Q. ADAMS, Ph.D. 115 class: Ackerly vs. Me Williams. or a dozen plays of the Pennsylvania foot- Ό6, lectured at Yale University on Jan- Ackerly awarded decision, 9 min. ball game on Thanksgiving Day, were a uary 25 on "Shakespeare." 125 class: Roberts vs. Halley. Roberts feature The movies went on to the next CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS 219 cities of the tour, to be shown in Chicago The crowded day was January 31, in on Monday night and in Milwaukee on SPORT STUFF St. Louis, the windup of the tour. The Tuesday. Cornell banquet at the University Club Continuing his custom of breaking at- followed an address by President Farrand Since Thanksgiving Day it has been tendance figures, the President spoke be- at a convocation hour of Washington Uni- possible to produce such steam as was fore 250 alumni in Chicago. Louis A. versity, another address at the City Club, needed to keep the machinery moving Fuertes '97 was imported from Ithaca for where the President was the guest of with one boiler. Next week the spring the special duty of acting as toastmas- honor, and a talk at a reception of the Col- season opens with all six fired up, the en- ter, a function which he performed as only lege Club of St. Louis before two hundred gine room red hot, and a group of compete Louis can. An old Savage Club member, fifty college women, most of them non- sitting on the safety valve. Little chil- he called on the talent in the audience: Cornellians. dren, timid old gentlemen, and Pro Bono Erskine Wilder '05 to sing the "Alumni The banquet attendance in St. Louis Publico will kindly step back of the ropes. Song," Lincoln N. Hall '20 to produce his was eighty-five. The guests included Dr. Cornell is about to step out—high, wide, banjo and some Southern ditties, Ralph Frederic H. Hall, chancellor of Washing- and handsome. D. Huszagh '20 to dance in soft' shoes, ton University, and several fathers of The wrestling team opens with McGill Robert A. Anderson Ί6 to perform on his undergraduates now at Cornell. George on the eleventh, the track team with Har- Hawaiian guitar, and Charles D. (Ceedy) J. Tansey '88, Alumni Trustee, officiated vard and Dartmouth at Boston on the Albright '12 to surprise the crowd with as toastmaster. Letters were read from twenty-fifth, the baseball team is being the knowledge that he was a ventriloquist the Yale and Illinois alumni clubs and a measured for two-bagger bats, and the as well as a sleight-of-hand performer. large bouquet of roses was the gift of the crews are on the machines. All the dres- Community singing was led by Roger S. Harvard Club of St. Louis. On the speak- sing rooms are crowded to the guards and Vail Ό6, the music provided by John L. ing list with President Farrand were have that complex smell of hot bodies, Dole Ί8 and his Cornell band. Chancellor Hall and Perry Post Taylor '89, liniment, leather, and disinfectants that More than a hundred Cornellians, not president of the Cornell Club of St. Louis. brings to fat old war horses the memories to mention seventeen guests, welcomed of conflict and makes them long again to President Farrand to Milwaukee. In the TRUSTEE COMMITTEE MEETS be in action. words of one enthusiastic Cornell reporter, The Committee on General Adminis- Farmers' Week brings thousands of it was "the biggest and best party ever tration of the Board of Trustees of Cor- visitors to the Hill—some in Fords, some pulled off." William H. Schuchardt '95 nell University held a regular meeting in Packards, and some on the E. C. & N. was the toastmaster, and a volunteer in Morrill Hall Saturday morning. Those One of these days some great mind will chorus sang Cornell songs. On the day of present were Chairman Van Cleef, Presi- evolve a scheme whereby, that crowd can the banquet Mr. Schuchardt gave a lunch- dent Farrand, Charles E. Cornell, Roger be lured away from Bosco, the prize bull, eon at the Milwaukee Club for the Pres- B Williams, Robert H. Treman '78, John and the patent cream separators and the ident, to which he invited the officers of L. Senior Όi, Simon H. Gage '77 and early potatoes, and can be run through a the association and several of the older James P. Hall '94. turnstile at Schoellkopf Field at four bits alumni. a head. To date, this problem has me Announcement was made of the election It was a full day in St. Paul on Wednes- stumped. Albert L. Brockway of Syracuse as presi- day, January 2 5. R. B. dent of the New York State Agricultu- From a Cornell point of view, the Twin ral society for the year 1922. While he Cities have been a bit quiet of recent In Omaha on January 26 the President holds that office Mr. Brockway is ex- years, but they proved conclusively that spoke at a banquet of both sexes, and of officio a member of the Board of Trustees. the better organized Cornell towns to the wives and husbands of Cornellians. The Preserved Smith was appointed lec- southeast could not outstrip them in toastmaster was Ernest C. Page '89, and turer in medieval history for the second showing due honor to the new leader. As John W. Towle '94 told of his visit to term of the academic year to fill the va- a direct result of the president's visit, Ithaca at the time of the inauguration on cancy caused by the retirement of Pro- steps were taken that night, after his hur- October 20. fessor Burr. ried departure for his sleeper, to effect a At luncheon that noon, at the Omaha Dr. Smith is forty-one years old and permanent alumni organization of St. Chamber of Commerce, the President a graduate of Amherst, class of Όi, and Paul and Minneapolis. spoke before three hundred of the business of Columbia, A. M. '02, Ph. D.Ό7; he The banquet table was arranged to form and professional men of the city. has also studied at the University of Ber- a huge C, with fifty-two Cornell men When the President reached Denver on lin and the Sorbonne. His wife was Miss seated around it. Professor Everett W. Friday, January 27, he was in his old Lucy H. Humphrey, of New York. He Olmsted '91, now of the University of home country. He was president of the is a member of Chi Phi, Phi Beta Kappa, Minnesota but well-known as "Ev" to University of Colorado, in Boulder thirty the American Historical Association, and generations of Cornell men in his teaching miles to the northwest, from 1914 until he the American Society of Church History. djiys at Ithaca, was toastmaster. Speeches went to France for the International He was a instructor in political science at by three alumni preceded the President's Health Board in 1917. After the Cornell Williams in 1904-6, fellow in history at address: Judge Frank M. Catlin '82, banquet at the University Club, which was Amherst in 1907-14, and lecturer in his- Judge Frank T. Wilson '81, and Professor attended by many of his non-Cornellian tory at Harvard in 1919-20. He is the George P. Conger '07. friends, the President spent Saturday in author of "A Critical Study of Luther's The President was the guest at noon at Boulder. He left for the East Sunday Table Talk" (1907) and "Life and an informal luncheon at the Minnesota noon, arriving in Kansas City on Monday, Letters of Martin Luther" (1911, second Club which was attended by President January 30. edition 1914), and has edited, in collab- Lotus D. Coffman of the University of The Kansas City banquet, held at the oration with others, "Luther's Corres- Minnesota, and by Senator James D. University Club, was preceded by a lunch- pondence and Other Contemporary Let- Denegre, who was an undergraduate at eon with the principals of the local high ters" and "Conversations with Luther." Princeton with L. Farrand of the class of schools and the president of the Board of He has also contributed to the Britanni- '88, as well as by many Cornellians. In Education. Otho C. Snyder '94 presided ca and the New International Encyclo- the afternoon President Farrand spoke at as toastmaster at the banquet, and John pedia. an assembly of 125 boys of the St. Paul C. Swift '93 gave the speech of welcome Announcement was made that the E. Academy. to the President. I. du Pont de Nemours Company had de- 220 CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS

cided to continue the Du Pont Fellowship significant moment in the poem. Virgil felt the great power of the olden love. of $750 at Cornell for the academic year signifies for him all grace of art, all serenity As soon as that high virtue smote my 1922-23. of reason, all human amenity,—all that sight, A meeting of the Agricultural College the Parthenon typifies in contradistinction which formerly had pierced me through Council was held on Saturday afternoon. from the Cathedral of the Christian. It and through Trustee George J. Tansey '88 came from is not without a pang that the poet can ere I had passed beyond my boyhood's St. Louis to attend it. give up all this, even at the moment of years, the fulfillment of his unexampled quest, round to the left I turned me with the even now when he stands at last in the trust LITERARY REVIEW presence of Beatrice/' Here is Norton's wherewith an infant to its mother runs, prose rendering: whenever terrified or in distress, Two Dante Translations I have seen ere now at the beginning of to say to Virgil: "Less now than a drachm La Divίna Commedia. The Divine the day the eastern region all rosy, while of blood remains in me that is not tremb- Comedy of Dante Alighieri: a Line-for- the rest of heaven was beautiful with fair ling; Line Translation in the Rime-Form of the clear sky; and the face of the sun rise I feel the tokens of the olden flame." Original, by Melville Best Anderson '74. shaded, so that through the tempering of But Virgil now had left us of himself Yonkers-on-Hudson, N. Y. World Book vapors the eye sustained it a long while. deprived, Virgil, my dearest father, Virgil, Company. 1921. 8vo, pp. xiv, 449. Thus within a cloud of flowers, which to whom for my salvation I had giv'n me; Special edition, Italian boards with vellum from the angelic hands was ascending, and not yet did all our ancient mother lost back, handmade , autographed, 390 falling down again within and without, a avail to keep my cheeks, though cleansed copies only, price, $20. Regular edition, lady, with olive wreath above a white veil, with dew, I2mo, in press. appeared to me, robed with the color of from turning dark again because of tears. The Divine Comedy of Dante Alighieri. living flame beneath a green mantle. And Finally, Professor Anderson's version: The Italian Text with a Translation in my spirit that now for so long a time had How often have I seen at break of day English Blank Verse and a Commentary not been broken down, trembling with The region of the East all roseate, by Courtney Langdon, Professor of Ro- amazement at her presence, without hav- And else the limpid sky in fair array, mance Languages in Brown University. ing more knowledge by the eyes, through While overshadowing mists so mitigate Cambridge. Harvard University Press. occult virtue that proceeded from her, The rising splendor that these eyes 1918-21. Large 8vo, 3 vols. Price, $15. felt the great potency of ancient love. of ours Cornellians will be much interested in Soon as upon my sight the lofty virtue Encounter it awhile with gaze se- both of these admirable translations of the smote, which already had transfixed me date,— Divine Comedy. Professor Anderson, for ere I was out of boyhood, I turned me to So in the bosom of a cloud of flowers many years head of the department of the left with the confidence with which the Flung in the air and drifting to the English in Stanford, and since 1910 pro- little child runs to his mother when he is ground fessor emeritus, was a student here in frightened, or when he is troubled, to say From the angelic hands in blossom 1870-2; and Dr. Langdon was instructor to Virgil, "Less than a drachm of blood showers, in Romance languages here from 1886 to remains to me that doth not tremble; I In veil of white, with olive fillet crowned, 1890. recognize the signals of the ancient Appeared to me a Lady in mantle We shall not presume to settle the ques- flame,"—but Virgil had left us deprived green, tion as to which is the better of these of himself; Virgil, sweetest Father, Virgil With color of living flame invested translations, both of which we regard as to whom I for my salvation gave me. Nor round. highly successful each in its own way. did all which the ancient mother [Eve] And to my spirit that so long had been Professor Langdon believes that the con- lost avail unto my cheeks, cleansed with Out of her presence, which did ever ditions and acquired associations of poetic dew, that they should not turn dark again move forms have given the qualities of blank with tears. Me to stand trembling and abasht verse the nearest position in English to Here is Langdon's rendering: of mien, those sustained by terza rima in Italian, I've seen ere now when day began to dawn, Virtue descending through her from above notwithstanding the rimes of the latter; the eastern skies all rosy, and the rest Attested, without witness of the eye, and there is certainly much to be said in adorned with beauty and serenity; The great tenacity of early love. favor of this position. Dr. Anderson ad- and then the sun rise with its face o'er- No sooner smote my sight the virtue high mits that the late Charles Eliot Norton shadowed Which had already pierct me through very strongly advised him against the in such a way that, through the tempering the breast choice of the English triple rime. To ar- of mists, the human eye could long endure Before my early boyhood had gone gue, however, that because no one had it; by, succeeded with terza rima in English, so likewise standing in a cloud of flowers, Than tp the left as trustfully I pressed failure was necessarily a foregone conclu- which rose from angel hands, and fell As to the mother does the child, sion, seemed to him a plain begging of again distraught the question. The arguments against it within and out the Car, a Lady, crowned By terror or by grief, to manifest were to him like those raised against the with a wreath of olives o'er a pure white To Virgil: "In my pulses beats no jot conquest of the Poles and the air, both veil, Of blood that does not quiver; I per- of which are now accomplished facts. appeared before me, 'neath a cloak of ceive And we believe that the labor of twen- green, The early flame beneath the ashes ty-one years now amply justifies itself. clothed with the color of a living flame. hot."— Perhaps the best way to indicate the My spirit hereupon, which for so long But gone was Virgil, leaving me to grieve, difference between the two translations a time had not been trembling in her Virgil, to me a father passing dear, is to give some specimens. In the thir- presence, Virgil from whom salvation I retrieve, tieth canto of the Purgatory there comes or felt itself all broken down with awe, Nor all that lost our ancient mother here the moment of joy at the appearance of with no more knowledge of her by mine Availed to keep my cheeks, though Beatrice mingled with anguish when Dante eyes, cleansed with dew, realizes that Virgil has left him. It is, but through a hidden virtue issuing from From being stained again with many says Mr. Anderson, "the most humanly her, a tear. CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS 221

In the nature of things, a translation in DETROIT UNION LUNCHEON rime is bound to be less literal than one in FACULTY NOTES On February 2, Cornell men in De- prose or even in blank verse. Those who troit sat at luncheon with alumni of the care greatly for literalness, therefore, will University of Michigan and the Univer- prefer Norton, or Langdon, or some other. PROFESSOR CHARLES K. BURDICK leaves sity of Minnesota. But it is certain that Professor Anderson Cornell February 16, going to New York, whence he will sail for Europe with "Mrs. has achieved a great feat, and that, in our CLEVELAND HEARS SHAW Burdick. judgment, at least, at no sacrifice of the Archer S. Shaw, associate editor of real spirit of the original. When Dante PROFESSOR WALTER KING STONE ad- The Cleveland Plain Dealer, was the guest says, dressed Sigma Delta Chi, professional at luncheon of the Cornell Club^of Cleve- Men che dramma journalism fraternity, last week on "The land at the Statler on February 2. He di sangue m' e rimaso, che non tremi, Influence of Illustrations." spoke on "What to Expect from the Wash- he is obviously using a construction which ington Conference." "Professor" Shaw will yield him a rime (dramma} with mam- PROFESSOR THOMAS L. LYON '91, with Professor Harry 0. Buckman, Ph.D. '12, crammed more facts about this momen- ma and fiamma. Anderson's "no 'jot of tous affair into the heads of the "studes" blood that does not quiver" is the sub- will issue a new book on soils next March. This is a new text, and not a revision of in twenty minutes than all the newspa- stantial equivalent of this and is suffi- pers in the country have been able to do ciently close. "Soils, Their Properties and Manage- ment" by Lyon, Fippin, and Buckman. in the last three months. More than sixty Professor Anderson has wisely not as- attended, despite the fact that it was pired to reproduce the feminine rimes of DR. JAMES B. SUMNER and Mrs. Sum- Ground Hog Day. the original, but has introduced these ner, now in Brussels, Belgium, are the Dr. Charles F. Thwing, retiring presi- rimes only occasionally. This is of course parents of a son, born about two weeks dent of Western Reserve University, will in accord with the genius of English versi- ago. speak at the luncheon on February 16. fication. PROFESSOR EDWARD A. WHITE attended The club will hold its annual banquet Some readers of Langdon will deplore on March I. William H. (Bill) Forbes the peculiar impression which the rather the meetings of the American Rose Soci- ety and the American Carnation Society Ό6 has been appointed chairman of the frequent use of the colloquial "I'll," "I've," committee on arrangements. "I'd" produces. Not that it is exactly in New Haven, Connecticut, recently. lacking in dignity; but it detracts from DR. ARTHUR A. ALLEN and Louis Agas- the stateliness and the intensity which siz Fuertes '97, as leading members of the BAKER ACCEPTS ELECTION are in evidence in the original. Tompkins County Fish and Game Club, George F. Baker, donor of the residen- Anderson has added useful though brief are urging farmers and sportsmen to pro- tial halls which bear his name and of the explanatory notes at the side of the page. vide grain for birds that are in danger of new Chemistry Laboratory, has accepted Langdon has furnished an elaborate inter- starving because of deep snow that covers his election as an honorary member of the pretative summary by way of introduc- their natural feed. Treman, King and Cornellian Council in a cordial letter to tion; that of the Purgatory, for example, Company are providing grain for this use. Harold Flack '12, secretary of the Council. fills 115 pages. Many will welcome this. President Farrand has also accepted his DEAN ALBERT R. MANN '04 is one of Both translators are to be congratulated election to a similar position. the principal speakers at the Farmers' on the completion of renderings which In his letter to Flack, Mr. Baker says, Week at Ohio State University at Colum- will certainly take their place among the in part: bus. most notable of English versions of the "I appreciate the honor conferred upon great religious epic of the Middle Ages. DEAN GEORGE G. BOGERT of the Cor- me and which I am pleased to accept. It Books and Magazine Articles nell Law School has recently returned to is a great pleasure to have the distinction Ithaca from Albany where he attended a of being associated in a class with Pres- Through some unintentional error, the conference of the Committee on Uniform ident Farrand and my dear old friend, name of the book edited by Wallace Note- State Laws. Mr. Boldt, who first interested me in Cor- stein and Prances Helen Relf which was reviewed on page 214 of last week's issue PROFESSOR HOWARD W. RILEY Όi, who nell." was printed as Commons Debates for 1620. recently returned from New York, where The proper title of the book is, of course, he studied devices for wireless telephon- NEW HEATING PLANT Commons Debates for 1629. ing, plans a concentrated campaign for Messrs. Henry R. Kent & Company of wireless telephones for farmers, so that Rutherford, N. J. as engineers, and Mes- "Typha Insects: Their Ecological Re- they may receive crop and weather re- srs. Day & Klauder of Philadelphia, Pa., lationships," a doctoral dissertation by ports, market price services, and the like, as architects, are completing plans for the Peter W. Claassen, Ph.D. Ί8, has been including musical concerts. new central heating plant and steam dis- reprinted from the Memoirs of the Ex- tributing system for the University. The periment Station. PROFESSOR HEINRICH RIES gave a lec- ture before the Buffalo Society of Natural boilers, coal and ash handling devices, and In Modern Language Notes for January Science on January 20, the subject being other machinery in the central heating Professor George L. Hamilton reviews "The Geology of New York State." plant will be installed by Messrs. Kent & Miss J. Murray's edition of "Le Chateau Company, the engineers. The Comptrol- d'Amour de Robert Grosseteste, Eveque HOWARD A. STEVENSON '19, supervisor ler of the University expects, in the near de Lincoln." of the Cornell farm study courses, has pur- future, to be ready to furnish the plans chased the house in the Bryant Tract President M. Carey Thomas '77 prints and specifications for the building to vacated by Leslie E. Card '14, who has in The Woman Citizen for November 19 contractors, so that the contract can be left Ithaca to head the poultry work at and December 3, under the titles "This awarded and the work of construction the University of Illinois. New Generation" and 'Opening Doors," commenced early in the spring. The build- her Founder's Day address at Mt. Holyoke DEAN GEORGE G. BOGERT Ό6 has been ing will consist of a steel frame with brick College. The article is illustrated by a commissioned lieutenant colonel in the facings and will be about fifty-six feet in portrait of her. In the issue of December Judge Advocate's section of the newly width and one hundred eighteen feet long. 31 "New Women in China" are described created 9όth Division; he held a similar It will be situated east of the Dwyer's by Mrs. Mary Roberts Coolidge '80. commission as judge advocate of the 78th Mill Bridge adjacent to the new siding There is likewise a portrait of the author. Division during the war. and trestle now being erected. 222 CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS

series of lectures was delivered in the sum- "Honor Societies Day" during Commence- mer of 1921 by Dean Roscoe Pound of the ment Week. The four honor societies, Phi Harvard Law School, and has just been Beta Kappa, Sigma Xi, Tau Beta Pi, and published under the title, "The Spirit of Phi Kappa Phi, united for a common din- Published for the Associate Alumni of the Common Law." The book is a not- ner, to which graduates who had been Cornell University by the Cornell Alumni members of these societies were invited to News Publishing Company, Incorporated. able contribution to problems of society and government, and sets a fine standard return, and for an address in Bailey Hall, Published weekly during the college year and monthly during the summer; forty issues annually. for future lecturers on this foundation. I at which all alumni were welcomed. It is Issue No. i is published the last Thursday of hoped this year to continue these arrange- September. Weekly publication (numbered con- have mentioned it, however, only for the secutively) continues through Commencement. purpose of quoting from the "Foreword'' ments for celebrating "Honor Societies Week. Issue No. 40 is published in August and is followed by an index of the entire volume, which by President Hopkins of Dartmouth some Day/' and perhaps to extend them some- will be mailed on request. sentences that state admirably the prob- what. It may be possible, starting with Subscription price $4-00 a year, payable in ad- this as a nucleus, to develop some organ- vance. Foreign postage 40 cents a year extra. Single lem to which I am attempting to call at- copies twelve cents each. tention : ization with broader and more inclusive Should a subscriber desire to discontinue his functions. subscription notice to that effect should be sent in "I am very sure that the contribution before its expiration. Otherwise it is assumed that of the College to its graduates ought to be J. E. CREIGHTON. a continuance of the subscription is desired. continued in some more tangible way than Checks, drafts and orders should be made pay- MELLOWES HEADS MILWAUKEE able to Cornell Alumni News. exists at present. The tendency of college At a meeting of the Cornell Alumni Correspondence should be addressed— men to seek careers outside the profes- Cornell Alumni News, Ithaca, N. Y. sions, the tendencies of the professions Association of Milwaukee on January Editor-in-Chief R. W. SAILOR Ό? themselves to become so highly specialized 27, Alfred W. Mellowes Ό6 was elected Business Manager E. P. TUTTLE Ί8 president of the organization. Managing Editor H. A. STEVENSON '19 as to necessitate the complete engrossment Circulation Manager GEO. WM. HORTON of thought of the men who follow them, NEW ENGLAND TO ELECT OFFICERS Associate Editors and the ever increasing demand of the age CLARK S. NORΊΉUP '93 BRIΘTOW ADAMS on all, requiring constantly greater inten- The Cornell Club of New England an- ROMEYN BERRY '04 H. G. STUTZ '07 sity of effort and more exclusive utiliza- nounces its annual business meeting and FOSTER M. COFFIN '12 FLORENCE J. BAKER election of officers at the Boston City Club tion of time in men who wish to do their E. P. TUTTLE Ί8 at 12:30 on February 13, in connection respective shares of the world's work, im- News Committee of the Associate Alumni: with the regular meeting of the club. The W. W. Macon '98, Chairman pose a duty upon the college which for- advance notice of the meeting promises an N. H. Noyes Ό6 J. P. Dods Ό8 merly belonged to it in no such degree, if announcement of great interest to every Officers of the Cornell Alumni News Publishing at all. Contacts with what we broadly Company, Incorporated: John L. Senior, President; Cornellian. R. W. Sailor, Treasurer; Woodford Patterson, Sec- classify as the arts and sciences are less retary. Office, 123 West State Street, Ithaca, N. Y. and less possible for men of affairs. In BOOKS AND MAGAZINE ARTICLES Printed by the Cornell Publications Printing Co. many a graduate the interest in or en- thusiasm for these which the college In The Modern Language Journal for Entered as Second Class Matter at Ithaca, N. Y. arouses is, therefore, altogether likely to January Professor Elijah C. Hills '92, of languish, or even die, for lack of susten- Indiana University, writes interestingly ITHACA, N. Y., FEBRUARY 9, 1922 ance. If the College, then, has conviction concerning the Romance names of the that its influence is worth seeking at the various cards in the pack. expense of four vital years in the forma- UNIVERSITY AND ALUMNUS tive period of life, is it not logically com- Professor Lane Cooper contributes to For some time interest has been shown The Classical Weekly for January 16 an pelled to search for some method of giving by members of the Faculty and graduates access to this influence to its graduates in article on "Translations of Aristotle's of the University in the question as to their subsequent years! .... It is pos- Poetics." the possibility of some provision that sible that something in the way of courses might assist in maintaining and fostering In The New York Medical Journal for of lectures by certain recognized leaders of the intellectual and scholarly interests of February i Dr. George E. Barnes '94 con- the world's thought, made available for alumni. There can be no doubt that the cludes his serial on "Etiology and Treat- alumni and friends of the College during most valuable thing that the University ment of High Blood Pressure, Arterial a brief period immediately following the does for its students is to give them some- Hypertension, and Arteriosclerosis." Commencement season, would be a step thing of the spirit of truth and to open up in this direction. Or it may be that some In The American Journal of Public to them new fields of interest while at the Health for January Professor Graham other device would more completely realize same time equipping them to carry on the possibilities. It at least seems clear Lusk reviews R. B. Pearson's "Fasting and develop these interests after they and Man's Correct Diet." Pearson is that the formal educational contacts be- leave the University. But, as everyone tween the College and its graduates should strong for fasting; Professor Lusk be- knows, the 'carrying on' is not an easy not stop at the end of four years, never in lieves in eating enough to keep up your matter, especially during the years im- any form to be renewed." strength. mediately following graduation. The ques- In Science for February 3 is printed the tion that has been under discussion, as yet The question is a real one, of course, Faculty resolution adopted on the retire- mainly informally, is whether there is any only on the assumption that there are ment of Professor Albert W. Smith '78. practical way in which the University can graduates who feel the need of some con- Professor Edward B. Titchener writes to assist those who have gone out from its tact with their Alma Mater that will as- say that about 25,000 marks ($150) are halls. Would it be possible to provide any sist them in maintaining and developing still needed for the completion of the bust agency for helping to maintain an intel- their scholarly interests. If that assump- of the late Wilhelm Wundt which it is lectual bond between the* University and tion may be made, as I believe it can with- desired to place in the psychological lab- those of its graduates who feel the need of out hesitation, there is no problem better oratory at Leipzig. its continued help and inspiration? worth considering. From alumni them- It is interesting to note that at Dart- selves suggestion must come as to steps "The Theocritean Element in the Works mouth College alumni lectureships have that might be possible and practicable. of William Wordsworth" by Professor lately been established by the gift of Mr. At the University a small beginning Leslie N. Broughton, Ph.D. Ίi, is re- Henry Lynn Moore, of the class of '78, looking in the direction that has been indi- viewed in The Modern Language Review •and a trustee of the College. The first cated was made by the establishment of for January by G. C. Moore Smith. CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS 223

Association, having served as president of OBITUARY the latter for several years. He was a ALUMNI NOTES Past Commander of Lafayette Command- ery No. 7, Knights Templar, Past High Albert R. Warner '87 Priest of Hudson Chapter No. 6, R. A. M., '77 BCE, '90 CE—Theodore L. Mead is Albert Rollin Warner died of pneumonia Past Master of Hudson Lodge No. 7, F. still living in Oviedo, Florida, where he on January 26 at his home in Cleveland, and A. M., and a member of Hudson is growing hybrid orchid seed in quantity Ohio. Council No. 62 and the Masonic Club. and variety to supply material for Profes- He was born in Wellington, Ohio, fifty- He was also a Grand Representative in sor Lewis Knudson's highly succesful ex- four years ago, a son of Mr. and Mrs. S. Lafayette Commandery. periments in germinating and growing these difficult subjects without the aid of S. Warner. He graduated in 1887 with He leaves his widow and two daughters, the symbiotic fungi long supposed to be the degree of B.L., and was a member of Miss Jessie Williams of Philadelphia, and indispensable. The seeds germinate and Delta Upsilon. He had been associated Miss Alice Williams, a student in Syra- grow for several months in test tubes on with the White Company of Cleveland for cuse University. nutritive agar jelly and are not removed a number of years, and was secretary and AlbertG. F. Buehler Ίl treasurer of the company until his retire- until well established with roots and ment from active business several months Albert George Frederick Buehler, who leaves. The germination thus obtained ago; at the time of his death he was a was killed in the collapse of the Knicker- often reaches one hundred per cent. The director of the company. He had also bocker Theatre in Washington on January average amateur grower gets about three been a member of the advisory board of 28, is described as the outstanding hero of plants from every million of seeds sown. the Guardian Savings and Trust Com- the disaster. The New York Herald says: The Federal quarantine absolutely bars pany, and a director of the Universal "Many brave deeds were reported by the importation of orchids, so seeds will Crane Company and the Rubay Company. rescuers. They said Buehler gave his own be their only source in the future; the He was a member of the Union Club, the life that others might live. He could have seedlings require from five to ten years' Roadside Club, the Country Club, and been taken from the debris fully an hour growth before they bloom. the Chagrin Hunt Club. before he was, but directed the rescuers '81—After forty years of service with to aid others who he declared were more Mr. Warner leaves his widow, Mrs. the Solvay Process Company as engineer, seriously hurt than he. He died after Katharine Hough Warner, a sister, Mrs. general manager, and vice-president and being taken from the building." W. R. Dean, and two brothers, S. K. chief engineer, Edward N. Trump has Buehler was born on June 5, 1890, the Warner and George B. Warner '93, of retired from active service under a retainer Wellington, Ohio. He was the uncle of son of Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Buehler of as consulting engineer, and will take up Washington, D. C., and prepared for col- Sidney S. Warner Ί8, Miss Jeannette other consulting practice. During his con- lege at the McKinley Manual Training Warner '19, and Theodore M. Warner '22. nection with the Solvay Process Company High School in Washington. He entered he was active in the beginning and de- Charles S. Williams '98 Cornell in 1907, receiving the degree of velopment of the manufacture of soda Charles Spencer Williams died of pneu- C.E. in 1911. For several years he had and its by-products, and in starting the monia on January 20 at his home in Hud- been with the Patent Office of the Depart- by-product coke ovens industry. He lives son, N. Y. ment of the Interior, and during the war at 1912 West Genessee Street, Syracuse, He was born near Rochester, N. Y., on he was a first lieutenant in the Ordnance N. Y. March 30, 1870, the son of Mr. and Mrs. Department, on duty at the plant of the '82 BLit—Mrs. Florence Kelley, secre- William B. Williams. He attended the Chalmers Motor Company, in Detroit. tary of the National Consumers' League, local public schools, then entered the He was a member of Hobasco Lodge No. is now actively engaged in getting the Brockport Normal School, graduating in 716, F. and A. M. New York Legislature to adopt the Shep- 1888 with high honors.. The following John P. Fleming '14 pard-Towner Law for the welfare and September he entered the University of hygiene of maternity and infancy, and John Paton Fleming was killed in.the Rochester, leaving at the end of his sopho- appropriate $70,000 to match Uncle Sam's Knickerbocker Theatre disaster in Wash- more year to become principal of the grade gift of $85,000 under the terms of that ington, D. C., on January 28. He had school in Hilton, N. Y. In 1891 he be- law to reduce the mortality of mothers gone to the theatre with his father, came principal of the high school in and babies in upstate New York. Her Thomas Fleming, and his sister, Miss Livonia, N. Y., remaining five years. address is Room 1102, 44 East Twenty- Mary Lee Fleming, both of whom were Then he entered Cornell, graduating in third Street, New York. 1898 with the degree of A.B. He was also killed. '87 CE—Julius von Briesen is engaged elected to Phi Beta Kappa. Fleming was born on April 14, 1889, a in railroad and highway engineering in After leaving Cornell, he accepted the son of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Fleming of Kansas City, Mo. He lives at 2600 principalship of a school in Groton, N. Y., Washington, D. C., and prepared for col- Wyandotte Street. leaving in 1901 to become superintendent lege at the Emerson Institute. In 1913 of the public schools in Chatham, N. Y. he received the degree of A.B. from George '89 CE—James S. Stone entered the Three years later he went to Hudson, N. Washington University and in the fall of engineering office of the Groton Bridge Y., as head of the public school system of that year he entered Cornell in the course Company two months after his gradua- that city, and during his term of service in arts and sciences, remaining only one tion, and has been almost continuously there he had developed one of the most year. He was a member of Alpha Beta with the American Bridge Company, in efficient school systems in the State. Phi and the Senators' Club. For some Chicago, Gary, Ind., and Ambridge, Pa. Under his direction three brick grammar time he had been assistant examiner in He is living at 516 Grimes Street, Sewick- school buildings, a high school building the Patent Office in Washington. ley, Pa., and is minister of a small Bap- with every facility and convenience, and He was a brother of Thomas Fleming, tist church there. During the war he a temporary school building were con- Jr., C.E. '05, William H. I. Fleming, B.S. spent a year in France in welfare work and structed. Arch. Ό8, and Robert F. Fleming, M.E. as Y. M. C. A. chaplain with the American Professor Williams was widely known Ίo, who survive. Expeditionary Forces. as a public educator, and was a leader in '92 BS—Elmer G. Horton is assistant many educational organizations. He was GEORGE F. BAKER is the donor of the professor of medicine in the College of prominent in the Associate Academic Prin- Dyckman property on which Columbia's Medicine, Ohio State University, in charge cipals and the Hudson Valley Teachers' new stadium will be built. of the Department of Pediatrics. He is a 224 CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS specialist in the diseases of children, and 44th, 45th, 47th, 48th, and 49th General Company, hand and electric lift trucks, is visiting physician at the Children's Assemblies of the State of Illinois, presi- load carrying trucks, and tractors. Hospital and pediatrician at the Protes- dent of the Illinois State Bar Association '12 BS—William D. Haselton is engaged tant Hospital and the St. Clair Hospital. in 1918-19, mayor of the City of Taylor- in iron ore mining with Pickands, Mather He lives at 100 West Duncan Street, ville, and assistant attorney-general of the and Company, 600 Western Reserve Build- Columbus, Ohio. State of Illinois. ing, Cleveland, Ohio. He has a daughter, '92 ME—Charles F. Camp is manager Όo BS—Mr. and Mrs. Fred M. Randall born on March 18, 1921. of the Fuller Brush Company, 601 State and their daughter, Betty, are spending '12 ME—Joe B. Chaffe, Jr., is with the Mutual Building, Worcester, Mass. the winter at their winter home, Thirty- International Permold Company, 6800 eighth and Central Avenues, St. Peters- Grant Avenue, Cleveland, Ohio. '92—Bert Houghton is operating super- burg, Fla. Randall is president and treas- intendent of the Brooklyn Edison Com- '12 ME—Oswald D. Reich is works urer of the Free M. Randall Company, manager of the Dexter Folder Company, pany, Inc., 360 Pearl Street, Brooklyn, advertising agency, of Detroit and Chi- N. Y. Pearl River, N. Y. cago. His permanent address is 1341 Vir- J '93 AB, '95 DSc—Mrs. Rufus Durand, ginia Park, Detroit. i2 BChem—Stephen Popoff received the degree of Ph.D. in 1918 from the Uni- of Canandaigua, N. Y., mother of Pro- Όi AB—James C. Otis is practicing law fessor Elias J. Durand, of the University versity of Chicago, and is now head of the in St. Paul, Minn., with offices in the analytical division of the chemistry de- of Minnesota, and grandmother of Miss Endicott Building. Anna P. Durand '23, died at her home on partment of the State University of Iowa. '02—The Rev. Dr. G. Ashton Oldham He lives at 640 Dearborn Street, Iowa January 31 at the age of eighty-eight. Her is now rector of St. Ann Church, Brooklyn, husband died in December, 1920. City, Iowa. N. Y. On January 22 he was the St. Paul's '12 BSA—Kenneth D. Rockwell is '94 CE—Clarence W. Marsh is engaged Chapel preacher at Columbia. traffic manager of the Ritter Dental Man- in consulting, designing, and construction '02 AB—A son, William Francis, Jr., ufacturing Company, Rochester, N. Y. engineering, specializing in that phase of was born on September 7 to Mr. and Mrs. the industry which includes chemical and William F. Donoghue (Mary Heughes '02), '13 ME—Joseph W. Ward is manager electrochemical processes. He is now in- 80 Jackson Street, Rochester, N. Y. of William Hamilton and Son, millers and grain merchants, Caledonia, N. Y. troducing Marsh Electrolytic Cell Bat- '03, '04 ME—Albert W. Stone is sales teries in municipalities for chlorine ster- engineer with the Walter H. Foster Com- '13 LLB—Rufus E. Bίxby resigned on ilization. "I am greatly interested," he pany, 50 Church Street, New York. He November 15 as assistant trust officer with the Union Savings Bank and Trust writes, "in the practical application of lives at 986 Kenyon Avenue, Plainfield, methods and equipment in industries to N. J. Company of Cincinnati, Ohio, and is make them more self contained, thus now located in Santa Barbara, Calif., avoiding overspecialization and conges- '04 AB, Ό6 LLB; '07 LLB—Harland B. as trust officer of the County National tion to that extent in other industries. Tibbetts '04 and George F. Lewis '07 are Bank and Trust Company of Santa There are many flagrant examples of members of the firm of Guthrie, Jerome, Barbara. economic waste in preparing things for the Rand and Kresel, which was organized on January i for the general practice of '13 BS—At a meeting of the executive market when such things can just as well committee of the board of directors of be used in a less finished state. This is law, with offices at 37 Wall Street, New York. the Guaranty Trust Company of New particularly true where electrochemical York on October 17, John E. Whinery processes can be used which turn out very '07 LLB—Albert S. Goldberg, who has was appointed assistant investment trust pure products that need no refining and been practicing law in the Bowery Bank officer of that company. Whinery began can be used in the plant without further Building for the past ten years, recently his business career with Hallgarten and treatment. Labor is saved because power changed the location of his office to Broad- Company in New York, remaining there way and Forty-second Street, and is fol- is used instead of human labor to obtain until September, 1917, when he entered the reactions direct instead of through the lowing the upward trend occasioned by the Army, receiving a commission as roundabout purely chemical methods. proximity to the theatrical clientele. second lieutenant in the Air Service. He Transportation burdens are much relieved Ό8 ME—Frank S. Brannon is with W. became associated with the Guaranty by the act of making things in a self- H. Brannon and Sons, wholesale grocers, Trust Company, in 1919, and was in the contained factory." Marsh's address is Owensboro, Ky. correspondence division of the bond de- Cos Cob, Greenwich, Conn. '09—Amos A. Barns is running the partment until the following May, when '96 ME(EE)—Howard S. Simpson is a Farmers' Supply Store and the Electrical he was transferred to the trust depart- real estate accountant and lives at 1943 Supply Store at 424 West State Street, ment. West Twentieth Street, Los Angeles, Ithaca. '14 BS—A son, Richard Stuart, was Calif. Ίo BSA—Morris C. Oldham is owner born on»December 6 to Mr. and Mrs. Ray- '96 BL—Henry M. Hart has been of the Phenix Dairy in Houston, Texas. mond R. Jansen, 74 Clinton Street, Low- located in Spokane, Wash., for the past His residence address is 4809 Walker ville, N. Y. For the past three years fifteen years, as principal of the Lewis and Avenue, Houston. Jansen has been teaching agriculture in Clark High School. He has been a mem- Ίi AB—A second son, Breckenridge, the Lowville Academy. ber of the State Board of Education for was born on November 15 to Mr. and Mrs. '14 Ί6 G; '19 AB—Mr. and Mrs. twelve years. Charles C. Marshall, 17 Arlington Avenue, Frederic Gerber of Philadelphia announce '97 AB—J. Albert Hobbie is a physic- Providence, R. I. Marshall is treasurer the engagement of their daughter, Miss ian, with offices at 600 Delaware Avenue, of the Hope Webbing Company of Provi- Marian Gerber '19 to David B. Green- Buffalo, N. Y.; his home address is 175 dence, manufacturers of narrow woven berg, '14-16 Grad., of New York. Morgan Street, Tonawanda, N. Y. His and braided fabrics. '15 AB—William F. Rienhoff, Jr., is as- twin sons, John H. Hobbie and Thomas ;ιι ME—Mr. and Mrs. Thomas S. Mac- sistant resident surgeon in the Johns C. Hobbie, are members of the class of Ewan announce the birth of their son, Hopkins Hospital, and instructor in 1925- Thomas S. MacEwan, Jr., on January surgery' in the Johns Hopkins Medical '97 LLB—Walter M. Provine is actively n; they live at 659 West Lake Street, School. He may be addressed in care of engaged in the practice of law in Taylor- Chicago, 111. MacEwan is manager of the Johns Hopkins Hospital, Baltimore, ville, 111. He has served as member of the the Chicago branch of the Cowan Truck Md. CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS 225

Ί6 BS—Donald C. Taggart is manager production manager of the Kelly-Spring- '19 CE—Samuel Kaufman is assistant of the news print department of the field Motor Truck Company, has recently engineer of construction for the United Mannie O'Meara Company, 450 Pearl been made experimental engineer of that Electric Light and Power Company, 130 Street. He was married on April 21, company. He lives at 357 Arlington East Fifteenth Street, New York. He 1917, to Miss Edith Maie Gladwin, and Avenue, Springfield, Ohio. lives at 1389 Stebbins Avenue. they have two children, Donald C., Jr., Ί8 BS—Miss Frances E. W. Searles has '19 CE—Nathan November is with the and Joan. They live at 403 Chestnut accepted a position as Home Bureau United States Coast and Geodetic Survey Street, Westfield, N. J. manager for Genesee County, N. Y., with as deck officer on board the U. S. S. Ί6 BS—A son, Paul Moore, was born headquarters in Batavia, beginning Feb- Ranger; he is stationed at San Juan, P.R. on November 25 to Mr. and Mrs. Paul ruary i. The work is similar to the ex- '19, '20 AB—Miss Nellie G. Tallman is F. Sanborne of Washington, D. C.; San- tension work she has been doing in a student nurse in the Highland Hospital, borne says from present indications the Orleans County since July, 1919, except Rochester, N. Y. boy ought to be a good cheerleader in his that in her new position she will organize Cornell days. Mrs. Sanborne was form- the work as the first Home Bureau '19 CE—Charles E. Hermann entered erly Miss Eleanore Moore of Philadelphia. manager in the county. Her new address the McCormick Theological Seminary in Sanborne is in charge of the Washington is Masonic Temple, Batavia, N. Y. Chicago last fall. '20 BS—Edward L. Plass is manager office of the Montana Flour Mills Com- Ί8 BS, '21 MD—Since last summer of the Hickory Ridge Farms, Arlington, pany and his address is 202 Munsey Lewis J. Silvers has been surgical interne N. Y. In a recent issue of the ALUMNI Building. at the Southern Pacific General Hospital, NEWS his address was erroneously given Ί6 AB—Gerald M. Tamblyn has re- San Francisco, Calif., which he says is an as Arlington, N. J. signed his position as director of physical ideal railroad hospital. He expects to go education with the Philadelphia Central to China and Japan in the summer, re- '20 BS; '20 CE—Announcement has Y. M. C. A. to accept a similar position turning in the fall to practice his pro- been made of the engagement of Miss E. with the International Committee of the fession in California. His permanent Eloise Shepard '20, of Honeoye Falls, N. Y. M. C. A. at Cairo, Egypt. His ad- address is 812 Suburban Place, New Y., to Albert O. Degling '20, of East dress after February 15 will be Y. M. York. Orange, N. J. Miss Shepard is now C. A., St. David's Building, Cairo, Egypt. teaching home economics in the Le Roy, Ί8 BS—Miss E. Mae Morris is taking N. Y., High School. For the past year Ί6 BS—Announcement has just been a violin course at the Ithaca Conservatory and a half Degling has been construction made of the engagement of Miss Marion of Music. She is living at 410 Dry den engineer with the Cuban Central Rail- Orcutt, of Ashland, Maine, to Rodolphus Road. road, and he is now with the Robbins- Kent Ί6. Kent is located at present in Ί8, '20 LLB—Announcement has been Ripley Company, engineers and con- Presque Isle, Maine. made of the engagement of Miss Ethel tractors, at Rockaway Point, Long '17 BS—William J. Wedlake '17 and McKee Sneden, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Island. Miss Gwen Howe (University of Cali- Edward F. Sneden of West New Brighton, '21—Announcement has been made of fornia '21) were married on September 3, to Malcolm Barrington Carroll Ί8, son of the engagement of Miss Dorothy Drake and are at home to their friends at 365 Mr. and Mrs. Robert Ward Carroll, also Cole of Corningr, N. Y., to J. Alden Van East Third Street, Watsonville, Calif. of West New Brighton. Carroll is prac- Campen '21, of Elmira. Van Campen is Wedlake is assistant manager of the ticing law with the firm of Rushmore, Bis- with the Steuben division of the Corning Crown Fruit and Extract Company of bee and Stern, 61 Broadway, New York, Glass Works. Watsonville. and he lives at 316 Belmont Avenue, West '21 CE—Samuel D. Brady, Jr., is '17 ME—J. Carey Othus has changed New Brighton, Staten Island. chief engineer for the Brady Coal Cor- his residence address to 212 North Ί8 AB; '19, '20 AB—The Rev. Harold poration, Fairmont, W. Va. He lives at Twenty-fifth Street, Corvallis, Ore. He P. Kaulfuss Ί8 and Miss Dorothy M. 1201 Fairmont Avenue. is instructor in mechanics and materials Harris '19 were married on October 17 at '21 BChem—Hilton G. Wood has re- in the Engineering School of Oregon St. John's Church, Ithaca, and are now - turned to the University as a graduate Agricultural College. living in Granville, N. Y., where Mr. Kaul- student and assistant in chemistry, and he '17, '19 AB—D. Roger Munsick is with fuss is in charge of Trinity Church. lives at 113 Oak Avenue, Ithaca. His the Murphy Varnish Company, Newark, Ί8, '19 ME—James E. McCune is now permanent address is changed to 59 N. J. He lives at 596 Prospect Street, with the R. R. Donnelly and Sons Com- Schuyler Avenue, Stamford, Conn. Maplewood, N. J. pany, printers, of Chicago, 111. He lives '21 BS—Since January i Earl D. Mer- '17 BS—A daughter was born on at 4628 Monticello Avenue, Chicago. rill has been farm bureau manager for November 16 to Mr. and Mrs. Roy W. Ί8—William M. Jones is with the Monroe County, N. Y., with head- Shaver (G. Marion Hess '17), 601 North Turner Construction Company, 140 quarters in Rochester. He lives at 127 James Street, Rome, N. Y. She has been Peachtree Street, Atlanta, Ga. East Avenue. named Jean Anne. Ί8 BS—Miss Esther T. Royce, formerly '21 ME—Announcement is made of '17 CE—Vincent J. Pacello is a design- manager of the Cayuga County, N. Y., the engagement of Miss Dorothy Baum- ing engineer for Elwyn E. Seelye, C.E. '04, Home Bureau is now located in Pittsfield, garten and Alvin E. West '21, both of consulting engineer, 101 Park Avenue, Mass., as Home Bureau manager for Berk- Washington, D. C. West's address is 2901 New York. He lives at 54 Travis Avenue, shire County, Mass. She may be addres- Sixteenth Street, Northwest. Port Chester, N. Y. sed in care of the Berkshire County Farm '21; '21 BS—Eugene A. Curtis '21 and '17 AB—Thomas H. Dugan is with Bureau, Pittsfield. Carol Curtis, B. S. '21, son and daughter Larkin, Rathbone and Perry, 80 Broad- Ί8—Robert H. Kimes is engaged in of Charles W. Curtis '88 and Stephanie way, New York. engineering, drafting, and designing, with Marx Curtis '88, have lately been in '17—William S. Tuttle is a salesman for office at 25 Davies Building, Dayton, Ohio. California. Eugene has received his E. M. Jennings and Company, Bridge- '19 BS—Miss Carrie M. Ward is private degree from Stanford University, and port, Conn., selling Essex, Hudson, Mer- dietitian in Dr. J. R. Williams' metabolic plans to engage in the export trade in San cer, Stevens-Duryea, and Winton Cars. ward of the Highland Hospital, Rochester, Salvador. Miss Carol has returned to His address is 48 Vine Street, Bridgeport. N. Y., where all diseases of metabolism Rochester, N. Y., and is living with her '17 ME—Edward S. Corcoran, formerly are treated. parents at 17 Melrose Street. 226 CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS

'21 BS—Caryl B. Hipson has gone to List of Cornellians Whose Addresses Are Lost Umatilla, Fla., where he is managing a citrus grove for his father, with his sister Dana, Mrs C A (Paton, Louise Belle) 01-02 A Earle, James Richard or AB Somerset Colo as housekeeper. He spent two weeks in Billings Mont Eastham, John William 09-10 G Guelph Canada Daniels, Virgil Clayton 05-06 G Oriental N C Easton, Henry Clement 02-03 Sp NYC Gainesville, attending the lectures on Datta, Dwijadas 08 MS Agr India Edel, Albert Frederick 11 M Richmond Va Davenport, Franc 94-95 O Edgar, J Buford 13-14 M West New Brighton citrus culture, and while there, he met Davenport, Leo John 15-15 C Elmira Heights several former Cornellians, among them Edgerly, Joseph Warren 73~73 Chem Davidson, James Holroyd 06-08 M Los Angeles Edinburg, Simon Herman 00-01 Med NYC Professor Lord and Dr. Turlington. He Davidson, Rose 12-13 Sp Agr NYC Edson, Hanford Wisner 08-08 G Scottsville N Y should be pleased to see any alumni who Davie, Weston Evans 15-16 M Chicago Edwards, Estelle Alice 04-05 A Hinsdale 111 Davies, Maud 02-03 Sp A Norwich Conn Edwards, Harry Thomas 11-12 Sp Agr Red Star happen to be passing through that part of Davis, Frederick John 13-14 A Owego N Y Ala Davis, Samuel 14-16 Agr NYC Egbert, Oscar Baldwin 00-04 M Rosebank N Y the country. Davis, Thomas George 02-06 Med NYC Eggleston, Trowbridge 76-76 C Denver Davίtt, John Washington 99-04 C Albany N Y Eisenstein, Isadore 15-16 Law Newark N J '21 CE—Richardson Selee is a first Davy, James Burton 16-17 A Rochester Elliott, Charles Loring 93-94 Arch NYC Dawson, Frank Raglan 74-74 S Elliott, James 76^-76 A Elliottson Pa lieutenant in the Corps of Engineers, sta- Day, Harriet E 92-93 Sp Cortland N Y Ellis, Robert Laurie 96-97 O Greenville Ga tioned at Camp Humphreys, Va. Dayton, Charles Herbert 96-9? Sp Law Ely, Prescott 78-79 H PS Cleveland Dean, Clarence W 09 ME Buffalo Elysowitz, Solomon 00-01 Med NYC Dean, Stanley Louis 14 DVM Cortland N Y Emerson, Frederick Valentine 03-04 G Baton '21 BS—Since December 27 Miss Helen Dean, William Lincoln 14-17 Agr NYC Rouge La Deane, Reginald Burton 10-10 Sp Med Canada Emerson, Hugh Reede 87-88 O Chicago 111 Glasier has been first assistant dietitian de Barros, Jose Leonal 08-08 Agr Brazil Empey, Arnold Lazier 98 LLB Cincinnati to Miss Lulu Graves, head of the dietary DeBell, Emmett Leartis 71-71 O Escondido Calif English, Burt 02 DVM Fort Des Moines Iowa DeCasky, Virginia Louise 98-98 Sp Agr English, Charles William 00-01 Sp Agr North department of the Mount Sinai Hospital, Decker, Lyall 08 ME Minneapolis Brookfield Mass Fifth Avenue and looth Street, New York. Dedlow, Carl 12-15 M S Africa Ennis, Margaret Cessford 91-92 Sp Patterson- Degnan, Katharine Helen 15 MD NYC ville N Y Miss Graves was formerly professor of De La Vergne, George Harrison 94 LLB Los Epstein, Leon 11-12 A Bklyn Angeles Erisman, Oscar 97 ME(EE) Toronto Canada dietetics at Cornell. del Castillo, Demetrio Rafael Jr 08-09 C N Y C Escoto, Chalos Jose 02-02 M Demirjian, Hagop Manaug 14-16 Agr Bklyn Estabrook, Leo Taylor 02-03 V Saratoga Springs '21 AB—Miss Frances E. Napier is in- DeMott, Henry Vroom 16 BS Agr MS Agr Me- tuchen N J Etnier, Walter Leslie 13-15 M Chicago structor in the English department of Lake Dengler, Herbert William 13-14 Agr New Bruns- Evans, William 01-02 Sp Med Westtown N Y Forest College, Lake Forest, 111. wick N J Evans, William Charles 01-05 Med Talcottville Deudney, Russell 00-03 Law Kingston N Y Conn '21 ME—Burton C. Mallory is drafts- Deutsch, Karlman 06-06 C Rockaway Beach Everett, Edward 89-91 C O Pittsburgh NY Fabbri, Remo 05-06 Sp Med NYC man and plant engineer for P. and F. Cor- Dewitt, Albert F 02-02 Law Varna N Y Fabis, Adolph Ira 12-13 G NYC Dewsnap, Samuel Brown 92 MArch NYC Face, Edward Gill 06-07 Arch NYC bin, New Britain, Conn. He lives at 99 Diaz, Arturo Jr 08-11 C Baltimore Md Fahey, Aloysius Austin 14 CE Eastport Me Forest Street, New Britain. Dickens, Charles Wellington 88-90 Law Meck- Failing, Wallace Hugh oo LLB Baldwinsville NY lenburg N Y Fairbanks, William DeForest Jr 10-10 Law Fair- Dickerson, Wilber Howard 99 ME Maine N Y banks La Dickey, Edward Soule 94~95 Law Pittsburgh Fairlamb, Stella 99~99 Sp Fairmount Pa NEW MAILING ADDRESSES Dickey, Lindsay Kearns 16-17 Sp Arts Los Fairman, Harvey Martyn 71-73 O Angeles Fairweather, Frederick Hedly 12 BArch Elmira Όi— Walter S. Crandell, 23 Ridge Dickey, Malcolm Gillespie 12 AM Columbus O NY Road, Bronxville, N. Y. Dickinson, Frank 12-13 G Stanton Nebr Fargusson, Mark 85 -85 C NYC Dickson, Bertram Thomas 15-16 G Brantford Farrell, Melissa Belle 15-16 Sp Ithaca '03—Willis R. Gregg, 37 Sycamore Canada Farrington, Mrs. Charles Lincoln (Handy, Ella Dickson, Starr Konig 03-04 Law Westfield N Y Marie) 79-81 O East Peoria 111 Avenue, Takoma Park, Md. Diesel, Henry 98-99 Med Feigin, Philip 03 ME(EE) NYC Dietrich, Arthur Max 14-17 C Jersey City N J Feinberg, Jesse 10-11 Sp Med NYC '05—Mrs. John W. Thompson (Eliza- Dillingham, Lee 95 PhB NYC Feldman, Benjamin 07-07 Med NYC Dillman, Julia Ann 08 AB Connersville Ind Feldman, Hyman Isaac 15-16 Agr NYC beth Worts), 304 West State Street, Tren- Dillon, James Canby 68-68 Agr Wilmington Del Fenn, Joseph Elliott 70-70 P Landgrove Vt ton, N. J. Dillon, Timothy J 96 LLB Glens Falls N Y Fennelly, Joseph Francis 05-09 M Freeport R I Dingens, Walter Joseph 04-06 C Buffalo Fenno, Ray Kelly 97-98 Law Union City Pa Ίo—Blaine B. Ramey, 101 Washington Dininny, Ferral Carlton Jr 68-70 O NYC Ferguson, John Scott Jr 97-97 A Pittsburgh Dobbs, Mrs George (Morrow, Clara) 98-99 A Ferguson, Karl Shackelford 03-03 C Louisville Street, Springfield, Mass. Beaver Pa Ky Dobson, Lindley 14-15 Sp Med NYC Ferguson, Willis Edwin 82-82 G '12—Frank B. Caldwell, 414 Forest Dodd, Allen Robert 12-14 G Upper Montclair Ferris, Frank William 09-09 Law Minneapolis N J Minn Avenue, Oak Park, 111. Dodd, Helm Northell 14-15 Sp Med NYC Ferris, William Alexander 00-12 M Seattle Wash Dodge, Harold William 14-15 Agr Buffalo Fetter, Reuben Henry 10 AB Ithaca '15—Clayton W. Cousens, 3166 Atlantic Doepp, Louis Ernest 90-93 M Field, George Russell 92-92 C San Francisco Road, Camden, N. J.—Harold A. Phoe- Dolan, Thomas Russell 08-09 M NYC Finkelstein, Morris Robert 02-03 Med NYC Dole, Rollin Wilbur 01 LLB Salt Lake City Utah Finkelstein, Rubin 15 BS Bklyn nix, 2505 Fulton Avenue, Davenport, Donohue, Gerald 12-13 Sp Agr NYC Finlay, Alice Elizabeth 15-15 Sp Agr NYC Donovan, John Cornelius 70-71 Agr Finney, Walter 13-15 M Ocean Park Calif Iowa. Donovan, John Henry 05-08 C Joliet 111 Fisch, Hyman 14-15 Law NYC Dor an, William Thomas 01-02 Med NYC Fischer, John Edwin 03-04 C Orange N J Ί6—Arthur X. Perry, Jr., Southern D'Oronzio, Joseph Bonora 04-06 Med NYC Fish, Arthur Carlton 94-94 P Enterprises, Inc., 169 Peachtree Street, Dorpols, Frank Lee 07-08 A Western Springs Fish, Joseph 00-01 Med NY Fisher Alvan Newell 06-07 M Chicago Atlanta, Ga. Douglas, Thomson 08-12 Law NYC Fisher Douglas Alan ι6-ι8AgrA Chicago Douglass, Kenneth Roland 15 BChem Wilming- Fisher Frederick 99-00 Sp Milwaukee ' 17—Paul J. Cavanaugh, Box 94, Wash- ton Del Fisher G P i i-i i Sp Med Kayford W Va Dove, Orville Holmes 03-04 Sp Med Kansas Fisher Jonas lo-n Sp Med NYC ington University, St. Louis, Mo.—Don- City Mo Fisher Karl William 01-02 Med Elmira N Y ald Danenhower, 52 Ashby Road, Upper Downing, Eva Frances 95-95 S Wilkes Barre Pa Fisher William Harries 12-16 Agr Ashland Ky Drey, Walter 00-01 A NYC Fitzpatrick, James Raymond 93~94 Law Cohoes Darby, Pa.—A. Vernon Jannotta, 5405 Dreyer, Louis n ME Buffalo NY Drΐsko, Mrs Milton Clarence (Downing, Minnie Fitzpatψck, Sarah Hungerford 06-07 A Albany N Y Winthrop Avenue, Chicago, 111.—James May) 97-00 Sp Hartford Conn Fleming, Judson Everett 88-90 Agr Los Angeles H. O'Leary, Y. M. C. A., Watertown, N. Druliner, Frank L 9i~93 M South Bend Ind Calif Drumm, Elizabeth Rose 00-02 A Buffalo Fleming, William Henry Irwin 08 BArch NYC Y.—Lloyd B. Seaver, Post Office Box 161, Druskin, Louis 95-99 Sp Med NYC Fletcher, George Hannibal 98-99 Med Ithaca DuBois, Crines Hardenburgh 70-70 O Los Fletcher, Harold Morgan 04-05 Sp Agr Buffalo Watertown, Conn.—Miss Fera E. Web- Angeles Fletcher, William 12-13 Sp G NYC ber, 2316 Le Conte Avenue, Berkeley, duBouchet, William 08-09 C Havana Cuba Fliegelman, David 14-14 Agr Bklyn Duckman, Jacob Howard 10-11 A NYC Floyd, Charles Wesley 70-70 S Calif. Duckworth, Willard Demarest 01-05 M NYC Fluno, Vincent Jennings 10-11 A Oakland Calif Dudukian, Benjamin Nahahed 11-12 A Fresno Focke, Eberhard Joseph 93~94 M LS Bklyn Ί8—Frank K. Steinrock, 56 Harrison Calif Follmer, Elmer Sherman 81-82 O Seattle Wash Duffy, Charles Lester 08 AB Bklyn Folz, William Henry 05-06 Sp Tuckahoe N Y Avenue, Port Richmond, N. Y.—Mrs. R. Dugger, John Alonzo 7 8-79 A Eben Ga Foote, George Wilson 01-05 M NYC H. Van Tyne (Isabelle M. Hoag), 204 Dumas, Claudio Jr 02-03 M Matanzas Cuba Foote, James Benedict 94-99 C Rome N Y Dunbar, Robert Howard 10-11 M Providence Forbes, Charles Frank 14-15 M Chicago Cayuga Street, Syracuse, N. Y. R I Forbes, Lewis Eugene 7S~77 O Seattle Wash Dunlap, Robert Bright 02-03 Law Reading Pa Ford, Charles Wesley 8r-8ι Sp Moorestown N J '19—Miss Sabina Loeb, 1811 North Dunlop, Sydney Hurbert 93~95 C San Diego Foreacre, William Nicholls 87-87 C Atlanta Ga Calif Forrer, Joseph Deyerle 96 ME(EE) Pittsburgh Seventeenth Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Dunn, Harry Keable 16-17 Law Buffalo Forrest, Gertrude Edith 05-07 Med Madison NJ Dunn, Thomas Chace 86-89 M Law NYC Fosbinder, Wallace 68-69 M N Y C '20—Percy L. Clark, Jr., 824 South Durand, Adah 01-02 A Rochester Foster, George Everett 70-72 O Hampton Va Lincoln Street, Chicago, 111.—Eduard Dutari, Aurelio Arturo 00-01 Med NYC Foster, Harry Emerson 10-10 Sp Med Oakland Dutton, Chauncey Noble 76-76 C Bound Brook Calif Fritz, Jr., Post Office Box 132, Poughkeep- N J Foster, James Byers 08-09 C Sandy Lake DuVall, Bruce Robertson 08-11 M Minto N D Foster, Mrs Luther I (White, Kate Tucker) 81-82 sie, N. Y. Dwyer, Kate Laura 82-83 O SL Akron CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS 227

Foster, Samuel Lattimore 00-10 Sp M Clinton Goldstein, Hyman 13-14 Agr NYC Hamilton, Thomas James 68-69 O Sausalito Miss Goldstein, Michael 15-16 A'Chem NYC Calif Fowler, John Edward 96-96 O Gomez-Rojas, Roberto 06-06 A Cartago Costa Hamilton, William Angus 87-89 LLB Sausalito Fox, Frank William 04-06 Med Bayonne N J Rica Fox, George Leonard 04-06 C Bridgeport Conn Calif Fox, Herman 09-1 o Agr NYC Good, Eugene John 04-05 Med NYC Hamlin, George Scoville Jr 09-10 M Rutherford Fox, Jacob 08-09 M Bklyn Goodale, Mrs W (Richardson, Frances Amelia) N J Fox, Matthew William 97-97 Law Seattle Wash 89-90 O Oakland Calif Hammond, John Beall 07-10 M Steubenville O Frame, Pemberton Pleasants 09-11 C NYC Goodall, Edwin Baker 05-06 Sp Med Ossining Hampton, Willis Herbert 84-88 ME(E) Cana- Francis, Isaac Hathaway Jr 01 ME Phila seraga N Y Franco, Antonio de Barros 90-90 G Brazil Goodall, Stella Vivian oo AB Pittsburgh Hamrick, Jesse Davis 76-77 Agr Clayton Ind Franks, Norvin Harry 14-17 M Chicago Goodfried, Joseph 04-06 Med NYC Hand, Mary Jane 83-84 N Addison N Y Free, James Fisher 16 BS Bklyn Goodman, Arthur 05-06 Med NYC Handleman, William Monroe 07-08 Med NYC Freeland, Emily Roberta 02-04 A Bowmanville Goodman, Maurice Hugo 80-81 C Hanf, Victor Hugo 12-14 M Law NYC Canada Goodrich, Henry Hillsdale Reynolds 70-70 C Hanford, Frank Ely 81-82 C Mason City Iowa Freedman, William 73-74 S Goodwin, Frederick Clarence 87-89 C Hanley, Newton 08-11 M Shamokin Pa Freeman, Herbert Stanley 12 ME AB Rochester Goray, James Philip 03-04 Sp Med Portland Ore Hanlon, Bessie Belle i2-i3SpAg Ensenore N Y Freer, Romeo Henry 94-94 Sp Agr Gordon, Henry Irving 92 LLB Rochester Hanna, Walter Jacob 04-05 C Frelίgh, Harry Kinne 12-12 Agr Romulus N Y Gordon, Jay Chester 01-02 Sp Agr Hannum, Louise 91-94 Ph D Greeley Colo French, Arthur Percy 04-04 V Bklyn Gorham, John Milton 92 LLB BL N Y C Hanzlik, Henry John (Hanzlick, Jindrich) 01-02 . French, Charlotte Catharine 90-93 L Phίla Gottlieb, Harry 06-07 Med NYC Sp M Trenton N J French, George Talbot 09-10 G Geneva N Y Gottsberger, James Banker 95-97 M Bklyn Harden, Samuel Gladney 97-98 G Blacksburg French, Mortimore Hopkins 89-89 Law Chicago Gottschalk, Lionel John 05-08 M New Orleans SC Frieberg, Nelson Rudolph 17-18 Sp M Swart- La Hardenburgh, William Gabriel 12-17 AB Jersey wood N Y « Gould, George Benjamin 76-76 Chem St Paul City N J Friedberg, Maurice 10-11 A N Y C Minn Hardie, William Henry 89-89 Law Pulaski N Y Friedman, Isaac 08-09 Sp Med Bklyn Goundrey, Harry Barnes 01-01 Arch Syracuse Hardin, Frances 89-89 Sp Fringer, Samuel Hall Tagart 02-05 M Taney- Gower, Henry George 13-14 Agr Yonkers N Y Harding, Adalbert 95-97 ME(EE) Boston Mass town Md Graessle, Verona Sophia oo-oo Sp Arts Cincin- Harding, Claude Corydon 04-06 Agr Phila Frisbie, Walter Seip 01-02 Med Meriden Conn nati O Hardy, Thomas Walter 73~74 Agr Tabernacle Frischman, Arthur 18 C AB NYC Graham, Arthur Wallace 00-01 Sp M Paisley Tenn Fritz, Emil (W) 91-91 Law Canada Hare, Walter Benjamin 12-12 Sp Agr Ithaca N Y Frochtman, Morris 10-11 Sp Med NYC Graham, Samuel Junkins 05-05 Arts NYC Harkins, William 68-72 BS BLit Chicago 111 Fromholz, Maximillian Maxwell 01-01 Law NYC Grannell, George Anthony 11-14 Sp Agr Bklyn Harris, Albert Louis 90-91 Sp Washington D C Froat, Frank Lincoln 89-89 O Grant, Frank Lincoln 06-09 M Bklyn Harris, George Burdette 07-08 Sp M Bklyn Frotscher, Oswald 69-70 Agr Grant, Jesse Root 74-77 S NYC Harrison, Clayton Tarleton 10-10 Sp M Cone- Fukala, Charlemagne Vincent 03-04 Med Newark Grant, Samuel 93~94 M Parsons Pa maugh Pa N J Grantier, Leslie Verne 01 ME Detroit Mich Harrison, George Emery 97-99 Law Saratoga Fukushima, George Takeshi 92-93 G Tokyo Grauman, Emma 04 AB NYC Springs N Y Japan Grave, Vernon DeLoss 74-75 S Richmond Ind Harrison, Gwynne Page 97~97 M Millwood Va Fuller, Clarence Taylor 95-99 A Sanborn N Y Graves, Benjamin Michener 71-75 S Kalamazoo Harrison, Samuel Bertram 13-14 Sp Agr NYC Fuller, George Arthur 93-94 M Springfield Mass Mich Hart, John Thomas 99-00 M Fuller, Helen Antoinette 77-78 O Graves, Howard Taylor 71-73 O Hartigan, Irving Cress 04-08 ME Manila P I Fung, Hing Kwai n BS Agr MS Agr PhD Can- Gray, Gordon Cameron 03-03 Med Wanbuno Hartnell, Stephen Elihu 90-92 M Detroit Mich ton China Canada Hartnett, Edward Hazard 02-03 M Jersey City Funk, Mrs Warren C (Brooks, Irene'Jessie) 13 AB Gray, Harrison 01-02 Sp Med New Haven Conn N J G Phila Green, Herman Gustave 96-97 Arch Green Bay Harvey, Daniel Robert 09-13 LLB Hempstead Gache, Caesar Thomas 05-07 M Argentine Wis Republic Green, Mary Emily 03-03 Sp Arts Seattle Wash Haskell, George Frederick 76-78 O Bklyn Gaffney, Hugh 07-09 Law Jersey City N J Green, Oliver Meakins 13-14 Sp Agr NYC Hassell, Thomas Reginald 06-07 Sp M Bowie Md Gahnkin, Valentine Gregory 16 ME New Haven Greenberg, ~Henry y_ 006 AAB Bklyn Hassler, Walton William i i-i i Sp M Dallas Tex Conn Greene, Dudle.y. Tyng 82-82 Sp Chicago 111 Hatch, Williard Treat 70-70 M Gailey, Austen n ME Baltimore Md Greene, Mrs John Philo (Jennings, Amy Jacquel- Hau, George William 06-08 G Chicago 111 Gale, Mrs Harlow (Corser, Mary Elwood) 85 B ine) 99 AB Panama N Y Haupt, John Huyler 13-17 AB NYC Lit Minneapolis Greenky, Abraham 12-13 Med NYC Haury, Antony Frederick 07-09 C M Elizabeth Galigher, Frank Lippitt 74-76 O Cairo 111 Greenwood, Rayman Grossman 13-17 M Newark N J Gamble, William Edward 09-09 Sp Agr West Havens, Charles Harrison 85-87 Sp Agr Penn Say ville NY- Gregg, Walter Cook 92-92 Law Yan NY Gannett, Herbert Ingalls 97 ME Buffalo Gregory, Julia 83-84 O Washington D C Haviland, John Russell 12-15 M Bklyn Gano, Laura 06 MS Agr Richmond Ind Greiner, Louis 17 MD NYC Hawkins, Frank 04-06 AB G Wilmington Del Garcia, Rafael 09-11 C Puerto Rico Gridley, Willis Timothy 92 O LLB Syracuse Hawley, Everett Malcolm 01-03 M Waterbury Gardiner, William Lebbeus 74-74 O Clarksville O Griffith, George Perry 08-09 M Chicago Conn Gardner, Mrs Elmer (De Rush, Stella Edna) 95~ Griffith, John Cuyler 87-88 Law Attica N Y Hayden, John Harold 98-99 M NYC 96 P Penn Yan N Y Griffiths, Mrs William Henry (Stoughton, Elisa- Hayes, John 93-97 CE Aquirre P R Gardner, Thomas Mooney 04 MME Omaha Nebr beth Alden) 06 AB Hartford Conn Hayes, Ralph Swartout 11-12 Sp A Rochester Garrison, Lysander Spofford 69-710 Dallas Tex Griffiths, William Henry 07-08 Sp Agr Hartford Gates, Elmer Hovenden 13-16 M Hartford Conn Conn Hayes, Raymond Felch 05-05 Med Geare, Randolph Edward Spencer 01-02 M Wash- Grim, Jesse 12-12 Sp Med Mt Jackson Pa Hayne, George Harvey ii-n Sp Agr Baltimore ington D C Grimm, Alfred John 07-08 Sp Law NYC Md Gelineau, Victor 05-06 C Lowell Mass Grinnont, Oscar 01-02 Sp Med Canada Hays, Harry Thomas 83-84 S-L Minneapolis George, Salem Shihadeh 16 PhD Bklyn Griswold, Charles Edwin 93-94 M Minn Gere, Mrs C F (McCaffrey, Katharine) 90-91 Sp Grossman, David 11-15 C Sag Harbor N Y Hazel, Walter Theodore 04-04 C Phila NYC Grossman, Jacob ι6BSG NYC Heal, Ethel H 05-09 AB Batavia N Y Gewertz, Maurice 06-08 Med Bklyn Grover, Arthur Lanny 04-04 Sp Vet Healey, Sumner Mansfield 91-92 M NYC Gibbons, Horace J 08-09 Sp Med NYC Grover, Joel Franklin 94-95 Law Nephi Utah Healy, Gale Sawyer 08-08 Ar C Portland Ore Gibert, Nichφlas Audinet 7i~73 C Grover, Wilfred 87-87 C Phila Heap, Morgan Griffin 00-02 M Gibney, Annie Jean 99-00 A Franklin La Grubbs, Howard Leroy 08-09 Sp Agr Ithaca Hearne, Robert Griffith 14-16 A Chicago 111 Gibson, John Gushing 95-96 Law Mansfield Pa Grubin, Herman 10-11 Sp Med Bklyn Hearne, William Lowder 98-00 M Wheeling W Gifford, Arthur Warner 83-87 Arch Baldwins- Grubnick, Max 15-17 Agr Bklyn Va ville N Y Guggenheim, Bernard 06-07 G Switzerland Heath, Daisy Winifred 97-01 Ph B G Chicago 111 Gilbert, Franklin Hamilton 05-06 M A Plymouth Guilford, Ernest Frederick 92-94 Arcίi Water- Heckel, John Thomas 13-14 Arch Barnard N Y Mass bury Conn Heflyn, Richard P 09-11 Sp Agr Wading River Gilbert, Joe 07-08 Sp Med College Station Tex Gundersen, May 04 AB Washington D C Giles, Bessie Isabel 09 LLB NYC Gurtoy, Jacob 02-05 Med NYC Heimbecker, Winifred 99-99 Med NYC Gill, Hermit Hermann 07-08 Sp Arch Chicago Guthrie, Irvin W 69-71 O Heinick, Fritz Robert Theodor 05-05 Sp Med Gill, Mable Hill 10-11 Sp Agr Albion N Y Hadjoppulos, Lazaros George 12-15 MD Turkey NYC Gill, William John 10-11 Sp Agr Albion N Y in Asia Hemming, Walter Hannibal 99-01 Med NYC Gillespie, George Maitland 06-07 Med Bklyn Haft, Henry Harris 09-10 A Bklyn Henderson, Frederick Bryant 95-97 C Weeds- Gillet, Langdon 05-07 M NYC Hager, Harry Von Lunen 09-09 Sp Ag Johns- port N Y Gilligan, Eugene Francis 19 LLB Bklyn town Pa Henderson, Harry Warner 00-02 M Law NYC Gilman, Arthur Reynolds 12-14 Agr NYC Hagopian, Dicran Sttepan 04-04 Med Turkey Henderson, Margaret 8ι-8r O Gilmore, Harry Wilson 01 CE St Louis Mo Haig, John Coville 98-98 Sp Law Edinburgh Hendrick, Philip Edward Jr 07-09 C Taftville Gilmore, Langdon Harris 69-69 S Fort Totten Scotland Conn NY Hailey, Walter 94-94 P Savanna Okla Hendrickson, Everett House 02-06 ME Louis- Ginsburg, Samuel 18 BS G Bklyn Hainer, Julius Caesar 83-85 G St Louis Mo ville Ky Glanzer, Philip 15-16 Agr NYC Haim, Leon 07-07 Sp Ag France Hendrickson, Niels Edwin 08-08 M Bklyn Glasier, Gladys Wakefield 09-10 A Newark N J Hain, Mrs Anna W (Wiles, Anna) 95-95 P Troy Heng, Yu Lan 12-13 A Hunan China Glazer, Michael Herbert 13-17 Med New Haven NY Hennell, Herman 15-16 Agr NYC Conn Haines, Charles Forman 04-06 M Ithaca Henriksen, Martha Kaspara 04-08 AB Bklyn Glenn, Mrs E D (Downing, Elizabeth) 83 BS Haines, Edward Lawrence 97-00 Sp M Schenec- Henrotin, Charles Martin 93-97 ME Hailaybury (S-L) Youngston Ohio tady N Y Canada Glidden, Jay Osborne 06-07 Sp Agr Niobe N Y Haines, Robert Wade 02-04 M Goshen N Y Henry, Carl David 09-10 G Tulsa Okla Glover, Arthur (Glugoski, Arthur) 08 ME NYC Haisler, Raymond 99-00 C Milwaukee Hepburn, Nelson William 13-14 Ph D Urbana Gluck, Isadore 01-03 C NYC Hake, Edward 73-73 S Jamaica N Y Goda, Kanemaro 89-90 Arch Tokyo Japan Haley, William Daniel 83-84 S-L Bklyn Heppert, Albert George 88-94 BL G Duluth Godding, William Clarence 13-15 V NYC Hall, Charles 77-78 O St Louis Mo Minn Godoy, Juan Carlos 06-07 Sp Argentine Re- Hall, Edwin Sawyer 05-08 LLB NYC Hequembourg, Louis Albert 06-06 A Schenec- public Hall, John Herbert 92-95 M Toronto Canada tady N Y Godoy, Raul 05-09 C Argentine Republic Hall, Roy 16-17 Law Ilion N Y Herd, Marc Allaire 11-13 Sp Syracuse N Y Goldberg, Herman 11-14 Agr NYC Hall, Thomas Jethro 01-02 Med Reinhardts N C Heriot, John Charles Alison 85-87 Sp Montreal Goldberg, Irving 09-10 C NYC Halle, Jerome Norman 03-05 M Cleveland Canada Goldberger, Louis 06-07 Med N Y C Hallock, William Henry 16-18 A NYC Herman, Max Mathews 09-10 C NYC Goldfarb, Israel 15 BS G NYC Hallock, William Nowlen 03-07 LLB Oswego Herman, Maxwell 09-10 Law Naugatuck Conn Goldfarb, Samuel Joseph 00-01 Med NYC NY Heron, Kenneth Austin 06-07 C Washington Goldfield, Bernard 10-11 Sp Med NYC Halpin, Leo (Aloysius) 02-06 MD NYC DC Goldin, Louis 10-11 Sp Med NYC Halsey, Pierson Loveridge 91-94 A Milwaukee Heroy, William Frederick 06-07 Sp Ithaca N Y Goldman, Louis Everett 14-15 A Tampico Fla Wis Herpel, Charles William 00-01 M San Antonio , Harry o8-π A NYC Halsey, Stella Lee 93~93 A Oswego N Y Tex Goldsmith, William Gray 70-73 C Hamill, Samuel 69-69 Agr Topeka Kans Herrick, Lillian Belle oo-oo Sp Elmira N Y 228 CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS

Herring, Oscar Eugene 98-98 M Cismont Va Holding, Arthur Fenwick 16-16 Sp Med NYC Jagger, Lufanna Rowland 91-93 Sp Burling- Herrington, Samuel Edgar 06-07 M Engine Miss Holliday, John Salisbury 02-03 M Wilkinsburg ton Iowa Herzenberg, Charles 98-98 Med NYC Pa Jahn, Gustave Adolph Jr 04-07 Sp Bklyn Hess, Marie Josephine 15-16 Agr Phila Holloway, Harold Euclid 96-00 ME(EE) NYC Jarvis, D (Vania) Genevieve 93-94 Sp Troy N Y Hessler, John George 10-11 Sp East Syracuse Holman, William Baker 00-01 M St Louis Mo Jarvis, Tennyson Delbert 04-04 Sp Montreal Holmes, Mrs A M C (Crans, Anna Maria) 96-99 Canada Heun, Sik Dong 00-02 M Seoul Korea BS McKeesport N Y Jayne, Ralph A 93-94 Sp Detroit Mich Hewitt, Earl Burdette 07-07 Sp V Augusta Wis Holmes, Foster 08-09 M Minneapolis Minn Jennings, Jay James 76-76 Lit Columbus O Heyman, David Melville 09-10 A NYC Holmes, James Jr 08-09 A Cincinnati O Jensen, Gerhard H 97-99 BS Evanston 111 Heyman, Nathan 11-14 C NYC Holmes, Oliver Raymond 08-10 M A Pough- Jensen, Jesse P 08-09 AM Eagle Bend Minn Hicklin, Marie 98-99 Sp A Lexington Mo keepsie N Y Jensen, Verty Martin Bertrous 02-03 Med Bklyn Hicks, William Gorgus 06-07 M Mt Vernon N Y Holmes, Webster Balkwill 03-07 ME Cincinnati Jerrmyn, John Samuel 83 Sp Penshurt Australia Hickstein, William Lux 03-07 M A PlainfieldNJ Hoisted, Milo Ernest 16-20 MD Wheaton 111 Jewell, Lyman Leander 68-68 Chem Colorado Hidden, Mrs W H (McKee, Isabel Dinwiddie) 85- Holt, Charles Lorin 90-91 C N Y C Springs Colo 86 G Cambridge Mass Holton, Frank Carey 17-18 ME Danville Va Jewett, Frank Howard 85-86 M Bklyn Higby, Edwin Barker 91-96 BS Arch MS Arch Hommel, Paul 08-09 A Cincinnati O Joachim, Joseph 12-14 Ag Brooklyn Rochester N Y Hoogland, Benjamin Townsend 14-15 A Bklyn Johnson, Albert Tilford 07-11 CE Peoria 111 Higgins, Frank (Rex) Rounsefell 92-96 AM Terre Hooker, Albert Gerard 04-05 L Falconer N Y Johnson, Mrs Bessie Penniman (Penniman, Bessie Haute Ind Hooker, Arline Burma 00-02 AB Bristol Va Morris) 93-94 O Chicago Higgins, Samuel McPherson 01-03 Sp F Negau- Hoover, Clarence Boal 04-04 G Columbus O Johnson, Clinton Watkins 00-04 LLB Niagara nee Mich Hopkins, Eugene Lester 86-87 Sp Los Angeles Falls N Y Hightower, Charles Robert 09-12 M Collins Colo Calif Johnson, Earl Russell 10-11 Law Denver Hilkowich, Abe Maurice 98-04 MD NYC Hopkins, Nelson Kerr 14-15 Ag Buffalo N Y Johnson, Frank Arthur 74-74 O Pasadena Calif Hilleary, John Francis 96-98 ME Cumberland Md Hopkins, Richard 05-06 G Nevada Iowa Johnson, George Edward 68-71 S Hillebrand, Harold Newcomb 05-06 A Washing- Hopkinson, George 01-01 Sp Med Boston Mass Johnson, James Lawrence 95-97 P Rochester ton D C Hori, Sugaya 95~97 Sp Tokyo Japan Hillebrand, Henry Thomas 86-87 L Ar Mayaguez Horn, Arthur 05-05 Med NYC Johnson, James Wood 13-17 AB Evansville Ind PR Horowicz, Bruno Sigismund 99-02 Med NYC Johnson, John William 76-78 Agr Hillenbrand, Frederick Louis 03-06 Sp Med Horowitz, Alfred Joseph 00-02 Med NYC Johnson, Marcus Rodney 04-07 M Erie Pa NYC Hortanstine, Raleigh 06-07 Sp C Abingdon Va Johnson, Ralph William 03-04 M C Cleveland O Hillman, Sidney Maurice 03-07 ME NYC Horton, Frederic Davis 96-97 O Johnson, George Keith 96-98 M Australia Hine, Charles Lonson 72-74 O Durango Mexico Horton, LeRoy 93~96 LLB Blossburg Pa Johnston, Thomas Kenneth 13-15 M NYC Hinman, Delon Marcus 82-85 O Hosea, Joseph Chase 78-79 Arch Clifton O Jones, Albert I 86-87 Sp Camlachie Canada Hirsch, Simon 98-98 Med NYC Hoshino, Junkich 02-05 M Osaka Japan Jones, Alfred Edwin 75-75 S Hirshfield, Edward 97-98 G N Y C Hosie, John William 06-10 A East Aurora N Y Jones, Anna Clotielde 96-96 Sp Hisey, William Newell 89-92 LLB Mexico City Houpt, Edgar Messouria 94~97 O NYC Jones, Clinton Irving 83-86 O Fayetteville N Y Mexico Hovespian, Hovsep Arakel 09-10 Agr Harpoot Jones, Fred Lewis 95-98 Arch Watertown N Y Hislop, James 86-87 C Brantford Canada Turkey Jones, George Francis 02-06 Sp Ag Mountville Hitchcock, Harlyn 73~74 O N Y C Howard, Mayne S 04-08 AB Franklinville N Y S C Hoag, William Richetson 87-87 G Minneapolis Howe, James Robinson Jr 98-99 Law Bklyn Jones, Hiram Thomas 74-74 Ag Minn Howell, James Russell 07-11 M Lansing Mich Jones, Julio 84-85 C Sacour TJ S of Columbia Hobart, Gladys Eliza 99-04 AB Boonville N Y Ho well, John 01-01 Law Buffalo N Y Jones, Maurice Frederic 84-84 Sp Hobby, Amos Knapp 09-10 M Richmond Hill Howes, Murray 07-10 DVM Corning N Y Jones, Newton Lewis 79-79 O Hoyt, James Wells 92-93 C O Morristown Tenn Jones, Philip Chapin 09-10 M Chicago Hochreich, David 13-14 Ag NYC Hsieh, Shengtsu 14-15 C Shanghai China Jones, William Stewart 69-69 O High Lake Pa Hodes, Louis (Levy, Louis) 16-20 MD NYC Hsu, Ming Tsai 08-09 A Ningpo China Jordan, Frank Sloat 70-70 S Englewood N J Hoefler, John Lincoln 80-82 Sp Denver Colo Hu, Gor Hsi 10-11 C Canton China Jordao, Beήvenuto 74-75 M Sao Paulo Brazil Hoefner, Ferdinand 13-17 BS Bklyn Hu, Tunfu 07-08 AB Wusieh China S A Hoehn, Charles Edward 09-13 CE Albany N Y Huang, Chun-toa 14-15 C Shanghai China Joshi, Bethuel Lucas 07-07 Ag Bombay India Hoenig, Louis John 01-04 LLB Rochester N Y Hubbard, Ralph 16-17 G Buffalo N Y Joy, Carlos Edward 07-08 A NYC Hofeller, Robert 15-17 Ag Law Buffalo N Y Huber, Frederick William 99-03 C Baltimore Md Judson, Louis Frederic 68-72 BS Sunrise Alaska Hoffman, Mrs Frederic Hamlin (Grohs, Minnie Huber, Harold Lee 09-13 M A Ithaca Kahn, Robert Johnstone 98-01 Med NYC Catherine) 75~76 S Troy Pa Huber, Jesse 94~94 Law Portland Ore Kairiiyama, Tyiichi 95-98 PhB Yokohama Japan Hofler, Leonard Franklin 04-05 Med Bklyn Hudson, Walter Cheney 86-86 Sp Ar Chicago 111 Kaiser, Francis Holmes 11-13 Law St Loui$ Mo Hofmann, John William 06-07 Med NYC Hug, Walter 07-08 Med Highwood Park N J Kalanffee, Louis Gabriel 00-01 Sp Med Hogan, Francis James 09-10 Sp Med Bridgeport Hughes, John Howard 99-00 Med Jersey City Kann, Leopold 99-99 G Vienna Austria Conn N J Kanstoroom. David Solomon 98-01 DVM Wash- Hogan, Joseph Vincent 04-30 EC Cincinnati O Hull, Anna May 02-08 Sp A Oswego N Y ington D C Hull, Chester Harrison 08-09 Sp Ag NYC Kaplan, Maurice 17-18 Ag Bklyn Hull, Henry Martin 11-12 Sp Ag NYC Kappelίe, George Louis 00-01 Med Bronxwood Hume, Fred 03-05 ME Nashville Tenn Park N Y Humphrey, Clarence John 07-09 G Ithaca Kappes, Henry Wyman 75~76 S Butte Mont Humphreys, Chester Charles 14-14 Sp C Ithaca Karaline, Anna 99-06 AB NYC Humpstone, Harold Dunmore 04-06 M Bklyn Karmany, Edward Lincoln 15-16 AChem An- Hunger, Edwin Andrew 06-11 ME NYC napolis Md Hunt, Bernard Thomas 07-08 A Albi9n N Y Karst, Alexander 97-97 M FLOWERS Hunter, Marion 97-98 AM Lanier Mich Kauffman, Joseph Herbert lo-n Sp Med NYC Hunter, Oscar Laurence 93~94 M Chicago 111 Kaufmann, Allan Lewis 13-17 AB Hunter, William Gould 08-09 M Scranton Pa Kaufmann, Louis George 15-17 A Bklyn Huntington, Louis Stuart 96-96 C Kaup, William Joseph 07-08 Sp M Montclair by WIRE Huntley, William Russel 97~98 Med Prep Buf- N J falo N Y Kaye, Harold (Kowalsky, Harold Emile) 12-14 Hurd, William Disbrow 88-89 L Watkins N Y Agr N Y C Hurley, John Patrick 03-07 CE Riga Russia Kazmann, Boris 02-02 G Russia Hurley, May me Genevieve 96-97 O Conneaut O Keane, Thomas Maurice 93-96 LLB NYC delivered promptly Hum, John Matthew 75~77 O Keeler, Coleman Clark 06-10 ME Chicago Hurst, Joseph H 91-92 P Compton Va Keener, Ashley Nixon 03-04 A NYC Hustace, Mabel Lee 06-07 Sp A New London O Keith, Arthur Rubel 01-05 AB Rome N Y to any address in Hutcheson, Louise 02-03 Med NYC Keith, William 73~79 BS Tacoma Wash Hutchinson, Harold John 04-06 A Los Angeles Kelley, Manley Spencer Jr 02-05 A Med James- the civilized world. Hutchinson, Helen Pollock 09-12 AB Trenton town N Y N J Kelliher, Mrs Alfred T (Bristol, Caroline Louise) Hutchinson, Walter LeClaire 96-99 C NYC 84-87 PhB Salem Ore Huttman, Mrs Edward (Young, Edith Adams) 07- Kellogg, Charles Potter 01-03 Arch Chicago 10 AB City Point Va Kellogg, Mrs E L (Taber, Lucretia Hathaway "Say it with Flowers" Hyatt, Edward Kenneth 05-10 CE St Louis Mo 80-82 A Phila Hyde, Armin William 11-14 LLB Milwaukee Wis Kelly, Arthur Roland 98-98 M Waterloo la Hyett, Robert Leal 98-99 Sp Ar Chicago 111 Kelly, Carl Duncan 10-10 A Chicago Hyman, Samuel Max 01-03 Med NYC Kelly, Charles Wallace 79-81 M Cleveland O Hymes, William Elias 08-15 Sp NYC Kelly, Thomas Francis 98-99 M Seattle Wash Every event is an lams, Franklin Pierce 74~74 A Waynesburg Pa Kelsey, John Henry Jr 93-94 L Illmer, Gustav Adolphus Marius 05-09 ME Balti- Kelton, Arthur Howard 69-70 Ag Columbus O more Md Kemp, William James 97-01 M High Point N C occasion for flowers. Imboden, D C Jr 09-10 Sp Ag NYC Kennedy, Edward Helling 15-16 A Albion N Y Ingalls, Owen Lovejoy 82-86 CE NYC Kennedy, Henry Robert 85-88 M Bridgewater Ingersoll, George Talcott 79~8ι M Salt Lake City Utah Kennedy, Jerome Doubleday 94-98 ME(EE) Ingham, John Cyrus 85-86 O Towanda Pa Hawthorne 111 Ingram, Mary Helen 94-94 Sp Columbus O Kennedy, John Curtis 03-07 AB Berkeley Calif Inselbuch, Samuel 14-15 Agr Bklyn Kennedy, Robert Play ford 75-75 A Isaacs, Julius 98-01 Med Bklyn Kennedy, William Garfield 02-03 A Spokane Israeli, Clara 13-13 Sp Med NYC Wash Ittmann, Hans Wilhelm 14-15 Ag Frankfort Kent, Clarence Eli 93-94 A Franklinville N Y Germany Kerner, Fritz 08-08 Sp M Vienna Austria Ivanowich, Nicholas 70-73 O NYC Kernochan, Robert William 93-93 O Ives, Paul Dunreath 86-87 M South Easton N Y Kerr, Charles Vplney 89-89 G NYC Jackson, David Henry 9S~95 C Chicago 111 Kerr, Mrs R W (Meroney, Ruth Ludle) 08-09 The Bool Floral Jackson, George 68-69 S Sp Ag Jackson, Jerome Jacob 17-19 AB NYC Ketcham, Truman John 13-15 Ag Waterbury Jackson, Mary Magdelene 15-16 Sp Ag Ithaca Conn Company, Inc. Jacobs, Frederick Henry Jr 05-07 Med Wood- Kettenring, William Carl 06-07 A Detroit Mich haven N Y Keyser, Matthew Brady 92-93 M NYC Jacobs, Sarah Adelle 11-12 Sp NYC Kidd, Nathaniel Gale 10-11 Sp Ag Decatur Ind "The House of Universal Service" Jacobs, Townsend Herbert 79-81 Arch St Paul Kidd, William Stoner 02-02 Sp Med Minn Kinder, Ella Anna 88-88 G Hollywood Calif Jacobsen, Max Samuel 17-17 Agr Bklyn King, Allan Decker 13-13 Sp Ag Middletown Ithaca, New York Jacobson, Max Harold 15-16 Agr Westwood N J Jadowitz, David 15-18 MA Westwood N J King, Henry Wilson (William) 75-77 O Worcester Jaffin, Joseph Munroe 13-17 BChem NYC Mass CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS

Let Fatima smokers tell you

FATIMA CIGARETTES TWENTY for 23c-just taste the difference. LIGGETT & MYERS TOBACCO Co.

THE SENATE " ITHACA" SHELDON COURT Solves the Problem for Alumni A fireproof, modern, private dormi- A Good Restaurant Gx tory for men students at Cornell. MARTIN T. GIBBONS Catalogue sent on request. Proprietor A. R. Congdon, Mgr., Ithaca, N. Y. Lίbraπy Building, 123 N.Tio£a Street

GOLDENBERG & SON E. H. WANZER THE Merchant Tailors The Grocer MERCERSBURG ACADEMY Successor to WANZER & HOWELL Prepares for all colleges and univer- 111 N. Aurora St., Ithaca sities. Aims at thorough scholar- ship, broad attainments, and Chris- tian manliness. Address WIILIAM MANN IRVINE, Ph.D., President Quality—Service MERCERSBURUG, PA. "Songs of Cornell" "Glee Club Songs" All the latest "stunts" and things musical NOTICE TO EMPLOYERS R. A. Heggie & Bro. Co. Lent's Music Store The Cornell Society of Engi- neers maintains a Registration Bureau. Complete records of 2,000 Cornell men are on file. Employers Fraternity may consult these records without charge. If preferred, we will re- KOHM and BRUNNE Jewelers commend a man to fill your needs. Tailors for Cornellians 165 BROADWAY NEW YORK CITY Everywhere REGISTRATION BUREAU Room 2602—-Mr. Harding 222 E. State St., Ithaca Ithaca New York Phone Cortland 4800 CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS

A Book Many~ Cornellians Are Reading

ΛS7E ARE basing this statement on our sales of the book since Christmas. You are interested in the University. You may know about conditions existing while you were in college, but that is not enough, you should know the Uni- versity better. Leather binding $5.00. Cloth binding $3.50.

An Ideal "Gift-box" of Chocolates

\Λ/E SOLD several hundred pounds of "Whitman's" candy at Christmas time. The "SHIELD" box was the one that went to people out of town. It is a dis- tinctive college package and contains only the best quality chocolates. The price is $1.50 per pound.

CORNELL CO-OPERATIVE SOCIETY cTVlORRILL HALL ITHACA, NEW YORK