Vol. XXII, No. 11 [PEICE TWELVE CENTS] December 4, 1919

Endowment Campaign to Continue Until Fund is Raised Socialist Organ Attacks Universi- ties as Capitalistic

Reports of Secretary of Faculty and Graduate School Dean

Disastrous Football Season Ends with Defeat by Penn

Published weekly during- the college year and monthly in July and August at 220 E. State Street, Ithaca, . Subscriptions $3.60 a 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 ALUMNI PROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY HEMPHILL, NOYES & Co. Executor Trustee Investment Securities , D. 0. Chartered 1822 ΐfiEODORE K. BEYANT >97, '98 37 Wall Street, New York Master Patent Law '08 Boston Philadelphia Buffalo THE FARMER'S LOAN Scranton Albany Patents and Trade Marks Exclusively Jansen Noyes '10 AND TRUST COMPANY 310-313 Victor Building Charles E. Gardner Stantcm Griffis '10 Nos. 16-22 William Street ITHACA, N. Y. Clifford Heαnphill Branch: 475 Fifth Ave. GEORGE S. TARBELL Member New York at 41st Street Ithaca Trust Building Stock Exchange Attorney and Notary Public New York Real Estate Sold, Rented and Managed LONDON PARIS

NEW YORK CITY ROMEIKE Letters of Credit CHARLES A. TAUSSIG PRESS CLIPPING Foreign Exchange A. B. '02, LL.B., Harvard '05 SERVICE 220 Broadway Tel. 1905 Cortland Cable Transfers is prepared to supply you with General Practice current information from the newφapers and magazines on Administrator Guardian MARTIN H. OFFINGER EE. '99 whatever subject may interest VAN" WAGONER-LINN CONSTRUCTION CO. you. Be it politics, be it busi- Member Federal Reserve Bank and New Electrical Contractors ness, be it science, there is mailed York Clearing House Buildings Wired to you daily just what you want to read from Anything Electrical Anywhere General Electric Mazda Lamps 3000 newspapers 1000 magazines 143 E. 27th Street PRESS CLIPPINGS are becom ing more and more a necessary The Mercersburg Academy NORTON, BIRD & WHITMAN adjunct to progressive business. Utility and Industrial Engineers Prepares for all colleges New York Chicago "If it's in the papers 501 111 W. Monroe St. and universities: Aims Cleveland we get it out" Sweetland Bldg. at thorough scholarship, Bostor ROMEIKE 88 Broad St. Munsey Bldg. broad attainments and is synonymous with press clipping Christian manliness POET WORTH, TEXAS service. ADDRESS LEE, LOMAX AND SMITH Henry Romeike, Inc. Lawyers General Practice WILLIAM MANN IRVINE, Ph.D. 506-9 Wheat Building 106-08-10 Seventh Avenue Attorneys for Santa Fe Lines President Empire Gas & Fuel Co. New York O. K. Lee, Cornell 1889-90; P. T. Lomax, MERCERSBURG, PΔ. Texas 1899; M. A. Smith, George Washington 1916

Cascadilla School At least fifty views GRADUATES GO TO CORNELL College Preparatory School Pictures of the Finger Lake Region A High-Grade Boarding School for Boys The handsomest set of photographs ever made. Summer School Original Sepia Enlargements 11x14, postpaid, each $2. July to September, especially for Col- These views are on display in many touring headquarters as far west lege and University Entrance as Chicago. They include practically every waterfall, lake, and gorge in Examinations. the region. Ithaca and vicinity has been particularly well covered. Special Tutoring School List of views gratis on request. Private Instruction in Any Subject Throughout the Year. (ftortwr 3tliara Trustees P.O.Cornell Ernest Blaker C.D.Bostwick

Our 1919-20 Catalog will appeal to that schoolboy you are trying to ITHACA TRUST COMPANY interest in Cornell ASSETS OVER THREE MILLION DOLLARS A postal will bring it. Pres., Charles E. Treman Vice-Pres., Franklin C. Cornell Vice-Pres., Emmons L. Williams Vice-Pres. and Sec, W. H. Storms A. M. Drummond, M. A., Director, Treasurer, Sherman Peer Ithaca, *Γ. Y. CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS Vol. XXII, No. 11 Ithaca, N. Y., December 4, 1919 Price 12 Cents f i sHE graduate students at «the Uni- post adopted, as a substitute for a reso- THE AVIATION CLUB mentioned laβfc I versity, reviving the old Graduate lution asking that Kreisler's engage- week has completed its organization. Its "^ Glub, have organized for the year. ment be canceled, the following resolu- official designation is "The Cornell Uni- The new president is Col. Henry E. tion offered by Lieutenant Colonel versity Flying Club." The active mem- (ί Lordly of Montreal, Canada; other offi- George G. Bogart, professor of law: Ee- bership includes, first, as charter mem- cers are Yun Huang Ho, Wuchang, solved, That the American Legion, Post bers, students who were qualified pilotβ China, and Marion E. Blake, New 22.1, recommend to the public of Ithaca or observers in the Allied air forces; and, Britain, Conn., vice-presidents; Edwina that it withdraw its patronage from the secondly, the commandant of the E. O. M. Smiley, Mansfield, Mass., secretary; Fritz Kreisler concert scheduled for De- T. C., students in the school of military E. Dorsey, Dresdon, Ohio, treasurer. cember 10, 1919." The vote in favor aeronautics, and professors giving in.- Among plans for the club's work this of this substitute motion was almost βtruction in aero-dynamics. Associate year is the proposal to have at some unanimous. membership is open to persons evincing convenient place on the campus, possi- an interest in the club and its enter- bly in Barnes Hall, a central office, where ITHACA'S EVENING NEWSPAPERS, the prises. Among immediate objects are Journal and the Daily News, beginning graduates .may meet one another and the promotion of legislation favorable with the issue of December 1, are merged whence information of interest to grad- to conumercial uses of the aeroplane and into one paper, to be known henceforth uates may be more readily disseminated. the establishment of an aviation center by the title of The Ithaca Journal-News. and training school at Cornell and Itha- FIVE MEMBERS of the Agricultural The consolidation comes about through ca. The officers of the club for the cur- Faculty, Dean Mann and Professors the sale of the News, lately acquired by rent year are Paul C. Wanser '20, of Montgomery, Burritt, Works, and Cros- Bert E. Mitchell, to Frank E. Gannett Tarrytown, president; Edgar G. Whit* by, and Professor Kimball as represen- '98, publisher of the Journal. John W. '20, of Syracuse, vice-president; H. H, tative of the engineering colleges, at- Baker remains as business manager and Kerr, jr., '21, of Evanston, 111., secre- tended the recent conference, in Chi- Harry G, Stutz '07 as managing editor. tary; ^and J. M. Fresfcm '21, of Milton, cago, of the American Association of Editorially the paper, long stanehly Ee- N. y., treasurer. Wanser and Frestoa. Land-Grant Colleges. Dean Mann was publican, promises in. the future to be are registered in Arts, the other officers appointed to the executive committee of '' independent in policy, free from any in Sίbley College. outside influence77 and "the organ of the Association and to the committee on 77 projects and correlation of research. no party, clique, faction, or individual. THE INTERCOLLEGE BASKET BALL sched- Professor Works was reappointed to the The Journal, now in its ninety-fifth year, ule, published last week, provides for committee om instruction in agriculture, km been a daily since 1873; the News twenty-eight games, beginning December home economics, and mechanic arts; and was started as a daily in 1895. 6 and ending March 9. All games will be played in the Old Armory. Professor Crosby was made secretary THE ITHACA POST OFFICE is to be en- of the committee. Professors Works larged ais soon as aai appropriation of INTERFRATERNITY BOWLING began OIL and Crosby made a report on the train- $115,000 is passed by Congress. Plans December 1. In the league this year ing of teachers under the Federal Smith- have been drawn and approve^ by the are teams from eighteen societies, divid- Hughes Act. A report of the Cornell Federal authorities for an addition thirty ed, as a matter of convenience in arrang- delegation at the conference thus brief- by sixty-eight feet on the east side of ing a schedule, into two groups of nine ly outlines the work of the Association: the present building, not on the south each. "The land grant colleges need to do as was at one time proposed. Thus the relatively much more than in the past to THE WEEK'S PUBLIC LECTURES include new part will face on Buffalo Street. 'ί The Peace Conference'' by Professor get in touch with and promote the inter- Since the erection of the existing build- Carl Becker before the Ethics Club; ests of the trades and' industries; to ing the business of the post office has "The Physiology of the Heart" bj conduct more fundamental research in grown so much that additional space is Professor Sutherland Simpson before agriculture, engineering, and home eco- greatly needed. the Sigma Xi Society; "Autores Dra- nomics; and to lay greater emphasis on maticos Modernoβ" (in Spanish) by Sr. work in rural engineering, rural social A MEETING OF CITIZENS to protest Don Eamon Perez de Ayala; "Horti- and economic problems, and the prepar- against persecution of Jews in east- culture Work in the United States De- ing of teachers for vocational subjects ern Europe was held last Sunday partment of Agriculture" by Professor in high schools." evening at the Lyceum Theater, May- or-elect Edwin C. Stewart presiding. Homer C. Thompson before the Lazjr THE ITHACA POST of the American Addressee were made by Professors Club; and "The Truth about Eussia" Legion at a recent special meeting ma- George L. Burr, Albert W. Smith, and by Count Ilya Tolstoy. terially modified a proposal to make for- W. A. Hurwitz, and by the Eev. John THE SAGE CHAPEL PREACHER for Sun- mal protest against the appearance of Eichards of the Aurora Street Methodist day, December 7, is the Eev.' Dr. Fran- Fritz Kreisler in the University concert Church; and resolutions were adopted cis J. McConn ell, Bishop of the Meth - in Bailey Hall on December 10. After a asking the Government to take some dist Episcopal Church, Denver, Colorado, long -discussion, in which alumni and appropriate action towar4 stopping the formerly president of DePauw Univer- members of the Faculty bore a part, the oppression of the Jews. sity. 122 CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS The Endowment Campaign ed Bailey Hall for the returns of the More Faculty Reports Thanksgiving game is being shown in Γinal Date is When the Fund is Raised this campaign. With a score of 7 to Activities of the University Faculty Minimum Rule Withdrawn 0 at the' first half, and the score stead- and the Graduate School The Endowment Campaign is still ily mounting against Cornell, they yell- Our second instalment of Faculty re- going strong. A letter from Missouri ed with a fervor and strength that ports includes that of the Secretary and assures us Όha+ the Committee there is could not have been surpassed had the of the Dean of the Graduate School. and will keep on '"Πίamήi- rl'ng away.'' score been reversed. The same thing Professor Hammond reports that on A chairman in another district writes was manifested on Franklin Field, and May 1 there were 385 members of the us that when he was advised of his ap- led the younger brother of a Pennsyl- University Faculty, of whom 50 were pointment as local chairman, he was vania student to say that he would like in New York. He mentions the return undetermined whether or not it would to have seen Cornell win, her students to a semester basis after a year of the be expedient to accept or decline the were so enthusiastic. three-term system, which was rejected appointment. However, his keen sense And the Cornell Alumni are putting by a/ vote of 95 to 55 , the provisions of obligation to Cornell University in- into their efforts to keep Cornell in for returning service men, including the duced him to undertake the work, and the front rank of American universi- grant of scholastic and residence credit now he feels confident that the response ties the identical kind and amount of to seniors who left not more than six r of the entire countrj cannot fail to "pep'' which animated them as under- weeks before graduation, and of six equal expectations. It is such a spirit, graduate football enthusiasts. •semester hours' credit for work done in and only this, which is making the Returns from Cincinnati Army or Navy schools, and the arrange- present campaign a success. One especially gratifying report has ment for providing a year of residence Are we going -to continue the Cam- come from Cincinnati, wiiere there are between January and September, 1919; paign? In the words of Mr. ,T. DuPratt about eighty active members in the the attempt to foster scholarship by White, chairman of the Committee, Cornell Club, and where the total to means of a Convocation and by other the answer to this is: "Don't worry date is $53,000. The campaign has means; and the rejection of the proposal about the close of the campaign; we been running actively in Cincinnati for of a regular third term as distinct from are. going to ίίght it out on. the present thirty days, but the chairman reports the long established Summer Session. line if it takes the whole of next year, that they expect to keep at it, and hope The matter which receives most at- but we must keep beating the cym- to have between sixty-five and seventy tention is that of an educational 77 bals. thousand before the close. survey, which was discussed during the The initial policy of the Committee New York Activities year. " While the Faculty -did not ar- of soliciting contributions of $5,000 and rive at any very difinite conclusions re- In New York, the committee has been upwards having been abandoned, sub- garding the scope of such a survey or increased so that it can solicit donations scriptions of any size are welcomed. the methods by which it might be con- from the 4,000 or more Oornellians in This change in policy is due to the de- ducted, it was of the opinion that any the metropolitan! district. Teams repre- sires of the alumui themselves, for general inquiry having for its object edu- senting fifty classes from 1870 to 1919 many who felt that they would like cational reconstruction should be under- have been formed to carry on the gen- very much to do something could not taken and carried out by the teaching eral canvass. The special class commit- give" $5)000, and did not wish to feel staff, as the body most conversant with tee in New York is headed by W. L. "left out." The Committee has now and interested in the University's edu- Wright '00, president of the Savage adopted a slogan -of "Something from cational aims and problems. A special Arms Company, and includes E. N. San- every Cornellian.'' committee w

from other institutions who bring to us President H. B. Hutchins of Michigan electrical sub-station operation, one who the benefit of their experience. In con- is chairman, Prof. J. W. Cunliffe of had done a lot of blacksmithing work, sequence of this continual interchange of Columbia, secretary, and H. B. Thomp- three machinists, two pipe-fitters and one views and of the migration of teachers son of Princeton, treasurer. boiler-maker. These men have all taken from one institution to another it is The newτ office of the Continental hold of their work, and with short ex- probable that no profession is more Division has been established at No. 1 perience became as proficient as any man thoroughly standardized. Rue de Fleurus, Paris, with Prof C. B. at those trades. They have all shown 'ί 2. That as regards the maintenance Vibert of Michigan and Dr. H. S. Krans loyalty to the company and cheery good and improvement of material equipment, of Columbia in charge. Dr. G. E. Mac- nature in their work which has been, however, there is in'ucli to be gained by Lean, ex-president of the University of most gratifying. a proper survey. Jowa, has been appointed director of '' 3. That the most important problem the British Division, with offices at No. WAR HONORS is to secure the best possible conditions 50 Russell Square, London. for research in all subjects, since the Campbell '18 Cited advancement of knowledge is the prime TECHNICAL TRAINING USEFUL John Wesley Campbell, jr., '18, has function of a true university and since, An interesting letter has been received received the following citation for bτav moreover, productive scholarship on the from W. C. Capron '08, mechanical ery in action: part of every member of the staff is superintendent of the Anaconda Copper "Second Lieutenant John W. Camp- essential to the highest quality of teach- Mining Company at Anaconda, Mon- bell, jr., Company B, 1st Anti-Aircraft ing. The Faculty holds that this offers tana, on the value of technical men to Machine Gun Battalion, for distinguished the most fruitful field for investigation.'' industrial plants. Capron writes that and .exceptional gallantry at Chery Char- Dean Creighton reports that the work during a strike of the men affiliated with teuve on 11 August, 1918, in the opera- of the Graduate School was seriously af- the State Metal Trades Council at tions of the American Expeditionary fected by the war and the presence of Anaconda, Butte, and Great Falls, the Forces, in testimony thereof, and as an the S. A. T. C. In the first term of strikers' places were filled with technical expression of appreciation of his valor, 1918-19 there were only 55, women and men from the various drafting rooms I award him this citation. 112 men in the Graduate School. As th;1 JOHN J. PERSHING, and laboratories, and that' the plant f normal life of the University was grad- operated normally all the time, while Commander4n-Chief.' ually resumed the total number of grad- the tonnage of ore treated constantly in- 27 March, 1919. uate students increased until by the end creased. About 350 went out on strike Campbell served in France for more of the year there were 257, somewhat less at the Anaconda plant, he states. He than a year, and has now returned to than two-thirds of that of normal writes also that F. S. Adams '05 is the University to complete his course in years. Seventy advanced degrees were superintendent of power at the Anaconda agriculture. He is a, son of Mr. aaid granted as against 81 in 1917-18 and plant, and that he has proved himself Mrs. John W. Campbell, of Warren, Pa. 109 in 1916-17. The Dean emphasizes exceptionally valuable. the importance of the work of the Grad- "The departments affected by the, OBITUARY uate School in the following words: strike included practically . all the men Allan McLane '' The experience through which the in the power houses, electrical depart- Dr. Allan McLane Hamilton, the country and the University have passed ments, including sub-stations, machine noted alienist, died, on November 23 at during the past two years lias made even shops, boiler shop, pipe shop, and black- his summer home in Great Barrington, 1 more evident than befoie tho important'.' smith shop," writes Capron. "The Mass. lie had for a long time suffered of fostering in the higher institutions of largest works being at Anaconda, and from nephritis,*- and had been living learning the spirit of research and in- due to the fact that the largest number quietly at his Country place, devoting quiry. This is seen to be necessary not of men were interested, made the situa- his time to writing and revising his merely for the sake of practical results tion more*acute. We immediately organ- published works. .Since the beginning but for the promotion of freedom and ized our technical force and sent them of cold weather his health had failed liberality of mind. The Graduate School to the power houses, sub-stations, and steadily. cannot claim to 'be the sole guardian of various shops, arid as general trouble Born in , October 6, 1848, these interests in the University. They men about the works. These men worked Dr. Hamilton was the son of Philip, are interests that are shared by all the twelve-hour 'shifts and did their work the youngest son of Alexander Hamil- colleges. But by the very terms of its in an exceptionally efficient and high- ton, his* mother being Eebecca McLane, organization it is devoted in a special class manner, and were cheery, good- daughter of Louis McLane of Dela- sense to the advancement of scholarship nature/:! and hard-working all the time. ware, one-time minister to England. and investigation, and made definitely They were adequately rewarded for their He was ..graduated, from the College of responsible for keeping alive this spirit loyalty, being paid approximately two Physicians and Surgeons in 1870, tak-* 7 within the University. ' and five-eighths times what they were ing the best two prizes of the year. In earning at their other work. It was most 1871 he was appointed a health inspec- SCHURMAN A. U. U. OFFICER interesting to me to find that so many tor for the Board of Health, and was President J. G. Schurman has been of the technical men had had special one of a small band of young doctors made vice-chairman of the trustees of training for the work we wished them who fought the smallpox epidemic of the American University Union in to do. I found that three men had 1873. He then took up the study of Europe, according to recent announce- first-class engineer's licenses—I found nervous and mental diseases and grad- ment of the reorganization of the Union. also one man with special training in ually attained a position as one of the 124 CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS greatest alienists in the country. A CENTURY LUNCHEON three present members of the Provincial Dr. Hamilton figured in some of the Ninety-four Oornellians attended the Council of Natal, and the last three most notable trials in which insanity Cornell "Century" lunch held at the mayors of Durban. In Maritzburg, the •f tLe defendant was the defence. It Hotel Statler ίin Cleveland on November only other large town in Natal, the was his testimony that was chiefly 20. The principal speaker was Dr. Paul Maritzburg Parliamentary Debating So- responsible for the conviction of Gui- F. Sutphen of the Second Presbyterian ciety is still more influential. teau, the assassin of President Gar- Church, whose subject was Americanism Bich encloses two bills showing the field; and on the other hand he protest- and the Dangers of Bolshevism. A short type of question debated in Durban. One ed against the execution of Czolgosz, talk was given by G. H. Kramer '02, is entitled, "To Allay Unrest Among the the assassin of President McKinley, de- president of the Dayton Club, a mono- Aboriginal Population" and another, claring that Czθlgosz was demented. logue by Johnny Barker '12, and a clog "To Guarantee and Protect Free Ex- He testified for the defence in the dance by (ίBunny" Morreί '15. At- pression and Assemblage." trial of Albert T. Patrick for the mur- tendance at the Cleveland luncheons, of der of Dr. Eice, declared that Harry which there had been three, had been 662d ORGAN RECITAL Thaw was a paranoiac, testified that 79, 88, and 91. The "Century" feature Sage Chapel, December 5, 1919 was intellectually was to have been an attendance of a Professor v JAMES T. QUARLES, Organist hundred or more, but the * secretary, Dr. strong, and was engaged in the Marie Passacaglia in C Minor Bach I. J. Keirr, writes that "an honest Barberi case, among other trials which Andante from Symphony in G Minor count" showed but ninety-four. created much sensation. Moβaft From 1901 to .1003 Dr. Hamilton was Eantasie. Bavanello HOLD SEB7VICE LUNCHEON professor of mental diseases in the Cor- Aαidante Apassionato Enrique Soro TMrty-eight Cornell women attended a nell Medical College, after which he Reverie Dickinson luncheon- gjvenr.on November 1 by the devoted his time to>spe©iai

early literatures of Western Europe. The Clews Parsons" and Professor Carl the problem of the professors and fundamental motif of the story reminds Becker reviews Herbert Adams Gib- teachers. Fundamentally it is the •one of the book of Job. bons's "The New Map of Asia (1900- problem of the intellectual future of It is interesting to encounter in this 1919)" (Century Co.). America. We owe to the young people •old tale of a remote world the belief, in The M. A. C. Record for November who are now thronging our colleges the which so many other nations have 21 contains aαi article on "Agricultural best inspiration and training which can shared, that the human soul after death Conditions in Greece'' by Dr. George J. be given. We owe to the future trained may inhabit a butterfly. Interesting, Bouyoueos, of the Michigan Agricultural and gifted teachers. Our duty is not too, are the premonitions which figure College, who was associated with the alone to America but to the world, for here and there. The story comes to us the ^reat universities of Europe have late Dr. Cyril G. Hopkins, M. S. '94, in in a neat dress, with appropriate vignette been sorely stricken. Our universities the study recently made of Grecian soils. illustrations. •are to train men to make them mentally From this article we quote as follows: and morally able to grapple with the "The object of this commission was to Books and Magazine Articles problems which now confront the world. study the soils of the country and then Professor Elizabeth H. Haight, Ph. D. In this service men of character and to recommend methods by which they Ό9, of Vassar has just published " The intellect, wholly devoted to the profes- could be made to produce more food. liife and Letters of James Monroe Tay- sion of teaching, are needed.'' lor," late president of Vassar College. The Commission made a general exam- The book, which is published by E. P. ination of most soils in Greece. It col- Bert S. Butler '05, G. F. Loughlin, Dutton and Company, is favorably re- lected many samples which it analyzed V. 0. Heikes, and others have in press i yiewed in The Outlook for November for nitrogen, phosphorus, potassium, a report on ' The Ore Deposits of 12. In the same number of The Out- mlagnesίum, and calcium, and conducted Utah." It is published by the U. S. look Professor Michael V. O'Shea '92, pot culture experiments and field experi- Geological Survey and forms Profes- •f the University of Wisconsin, under ments on some of the most important sional Paper No. 111. A summary of the heading "Education for Soldiers/' and extensive soil types in the country. this report by Mr. Butler will appear in. describes the generous provision which The results obtained from these various serial form in The Engineering and the State of Wisconsin is making for investigations, the knowledge acquired Mining Journal, the first instalment be- returned soldiers who wish to pursue from observations, together with advice ing printed in the issue for October 11, their studies further before going to to the farmers and recommendations to which was delayed by the strike. work. the Greek government, were published John W. O'Leary '99, president.of the in a little book which was sent free to National Metal Trades Association, in Under the caption "The College Cry nearly all the farmers in Greece. Al- Chemical and Metallurgical Engineering for Funds," The Literary Digest for though the Commission remained only for October 8 discusses '' The Relation November 8 devotes nearly two pages about a year in Greece, it did accom- of the Chemist to the Manufacturer." to the endowment fund campaign now plish much good for the agriculture of His article is the substance .of an ad- being carried on by many colleges and the country.'' Dr. Hopkins was a major dress before the Fifth Exposition of universities, including a picture of the and Dr. Bouyoueos a captain in the Eed Chemical Industries in Chicago on Cornell Endowment Fund signs carried Cross. September 22. in the parade on October 11 (see the ALUMNI NEWS for October 16, pages "The Second Book of Modern Verse," An article on '' What Is the Problem 43-41). a selection from the work of contem- of Stuttering?" by Margaret Gray poraneous poets, edited by Jessie B. Blanton and Captain Smiley Blanton, Rennold Wolf '92 contributes to The Rittenhouse, has just been published by which appeared in The Journal of Ab- Ladies' Home Journal for October a the Houghton Mifflin Company. It in- normal Psychology for February, is re- collection of witty introductions of cludes three selections from the poems printed in The Quarterly Journal of famous men in public life, under the of Thomas S. Jones, jr., '04: "In Ex- Speech Education for October. In the Mtle, "We Have With Us This Even- celsis," "Dusk at Sea," and the "Four same number Captain Blanton sum- ing." An editorial note informs us Sonnets" which were printed in the marizes, with comment, an article on that "Mr. Wolf is famous as one of ALUMNI NEWS of February 13. These "Stammering and the War-Psycho- New York's brightest raconteurs, and three selections are all from the fifth Neuroses, '' by Dr. E. Prideaux in The is generally accepted as the star intro- edition of Jones's "The Voice in the London Lancet for February 8. ducer of famous persons at public Silence.'' Miss Rittenhouse also includes In The Journal of English and Ger- dinners.'' in her anthology "The Homeland," by manic Philology for July, recently is- In the Bulletin of the American As- Dana Burnet '11. sued, Dr. Allan H. Gilbert '09, of Rice βociation of University Professors for Professor Louis C. Karpinski '01, of Institute, writes on '' Martin Bucer on October Professor Theodore de Laguna, the University of Michigan, writes in Education.'' In the same number Har- Ph. D. '01, of Bryn Mawr, publishes an The Michigan Alumnus for November on r u old N. Hillebraiid -writes a fa\ orabtle Outline of a Contributing Retiring- "Professorial Budgets." He finds that review of Professor Jorerh Q. Adams's Allowance Plan" foτ college professors. in the period 1908-18 the cost of living edition of "The Dramatic Records of This is printed in connection ^||k the in Ann Arbor increased 110 per cent, Sir. Henry Herbert,'' and Margaret L. leport of the committee on pensions and while the salaries of professors and in- Bailey '03 reviews Professor Harrison R. insurance. structors have advanced only 25-30 per Steeves's "Learned Societies and Eng- In The New Republic for November cent. Here is his eon-elusion: "The lish Literary Scholarship in Great 36 Signe Toksvig '16 writes on "EMe problem which we fa.ee is not primarily Britain and the United States." 126 CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS

oil refineries, the lard vats of the pack- versities upon the purses of the ex- ers', and of the big 'interests' in general. ploiters, the frank commitment against It largely depends for its support upon any 'radical' ideas that may arise, are a part of the plunder taken by the power- evidence of the prostitution of learning Published for the Associate Alumni of ful exploiters from the unpaid labor of and the supremacy of capital in 'edu- Cornell University by the Cornell Alumni the workers. The contributions made cation.' " News Publishing Company, Incorporated. from this . source to these institutions It would be an unwarranted reflec- Published weekly during the college year aηd monthly during the summer; forty issues guarantee that the social sciences shall tion on the intelligence of our readers annually. Issue No. 1 is published, the last be warped to harmonize with capitalist if, after printing this editorial in full, Thursday of September. ΛVeekly publication (numbered consecutively) continues through property. we should make any comment thereon. Commencement Week. Issue No. 40 is? pub- lished in August and is followed by an index "A meeting of the presidents of Har- of the entire volume, which will be mailed vard, Princeton, and Cornell Universities AN APPRECIATED OFFER on request. Subscription price $3.60 a year, payable at an intercollegiate reception recently The offer of help made in the follow- in advance. Foreign postage J{0 cents a emphasizes this. One account reads that year extra. Single copies twelve cents each. ing letter will be appreciated by all Should a subscriber desire to discontinue the university will serve as a counter- Cornellίans. It comes from the presi- his subscription notice to that effect should irritant for radicalism and the college be sent in before its expiration. Otherwise dent of a Middle Western university it is assumed that a continuance of the sub- will be modeled after the great business with which Cornell has always had scription is desired. corporations. Checks, drafts, and orders should be made close and friendly relations. The letter payable to Cornell Alumni News. '' This phase of ' the University of the was written to William O. Bates '75* Correspondence should be addressed— future' was discussed by the learned of Indianapolis. Cornell Alumni News, Ithaca, N. Y. gentlemen. The reception was given to βloomington, Indiana, Managing Editor: R. W. Sailor '07 'stimulate the endowment campaigns' of November 18, 1919. Associate Editors: the universities, a subject which dove- Clark S. Northup '93 B. S. Monroe '96 Dear Sir: H. α. Stutz '07 tails with their proposed 'future.' I take the liberty to write you to Business Manager: R. W. Sailor '' One president is reported as saying express my deep interest in the Cornell Circulation Manager: Geo. Wm. Horton that ' America would be forced to take News Committee of the Associate Alumni: drive and to offer my service. The W. W. Macon '98, Chairman up the intellectual leadership of the case is beyond the need of argument: N. H. Noyes '06 J. P. Dods '08 world.' There is no such leadership be- Officers of the Cornell Alumni News Pub- The two outstanding facts in American lishing Company, Incorporated: John L. fore these intellectual serfs. Their cur- Senior, President; R. W. Sailor, Treasurer: education just now are the enormous Woodford Patterson. Secretary. Office, 220 riculum smells of oil and lard. It is increases in the enrollments and the East State Street, Ithaca, N. Y. weighted with the merchandise of cap- dangerous inadequacy of the resources italism. There can no more be a free Printed by The Ithacan of the schools to meet the needs. It is spirit of inquiry in a university under our patriotic duty to serve the schools Entered as Second Class Matter at Ithaca, N.Y. obligations to American capitalists than as much as it was to fight the war. It there could be in colleges patronized and is our duty to reinforce a great national Ithaca, N. Y., December 4, 1919 supported by slave owners. Any facts university such as Cornell and make it or truths discovered in suclί schools equal to the best in the world. I shall WHY SUPPORT EDUCATION? would be doomed to suppression if they be glad to join you in any way I can came in conflict with the interests of Unwittingly, as is the curious custom of in this great national enterprise. capitalists and financiers. the species, The New York Call has pre- Very truly yours, sented a better argument for the support "The statement that 'the university W. F. BRYAN. of the Cornell, Princeton, and Harvard will serve as a counter-irritant for radi- endowment drives than the combined calism ' is evidence of this. In so many THE MASQUE has engaged Mr. Adrian talent of the publicity bureaus of the words it says to the ruling classes, 'We S. Perrin, of. New York as coach for the three committees. We quote in full an are here to serve you, not to find the ensuing three months. He will have gen- editorial entitled "The American Uni- truth/ Views that displease you are eral direction of the musical revue which versity/7 appearing ini the Socialist or- classified as radicalism. We're against the Masque is planning for presentation gan on November 22. If there is any radicalism. No matter whether it is in on February 12. There are at present truth in the statement that radicalism accord with facts, we're against it. So some fifty candidates for parts on the and education are opposed to each other, are you. Come across with the mazuma. program, and trials are now under way. which the Call seems to admit as freely We will provide the 'counter-irritant' if Among other features will be original as does President Schurman, then the you will pay for it and we wouldn't ask songs by Cornell undergraduates. .In work of educational institutions is laid you to contribute if we did not have the work of this sort Mr. Perrin has had out for theim with clean-cut clearness, goods. Stimulate our endowment cam- considerable experience, notably in coach- and the duty of those "capitalists" who paign. Come across. As gentlemen we ing "Listen, Lester" and "Oh! Boy." prefer American educational institutions understand each other-and we know that modeled as at present, but efficient, is the college and university must be mod- THE INTERCOLLEGE ASSOCIATION has evidently to strengthen the opposition eled after the great business corpora- added swimming to its athletic program, to radicalism by helping to support the tions. Drop a few millions in the hat.' announcing a swimimirig match in Jajϊ- universities. The Call's editorial fol- '' Nowhere in the world is there a uary. Points won in this contest wiΛ lows, verbatim. more servile and conscienceless class of count on the total score upon which" the "The American university has largely 'educators' than in the United States, college athletic banner is awarded at become a by-product of the Rockefeller and the present drive of the large uni- the end of the year. COENELL ALUMNI NEWS 127

third period Pennsylvania added an- R. Miller for Hopper, O'Gorman for May- ATHLETICS other touchdown in the same manner. nard, Ellis for Brunner, Peters for R. Miller Cornell, Trowbridge for Horrell. Hoff for Bell punted from midfield; a high kick Sutton, Mackenzie for Carry, Wilson for Pennsylvania Wins, 24-0 gave the Pennsylvania forwards plenty Hoff, Pendleton for H. Straus, Dodge for The Pennsylvania eleven defeated of time to cover. Shiverick let the Hoag, Craig . for Shuler, McLain for P. Cornell by the score of 24 to 0 in the ball drop on the twelve-yard line and Miller, Lechler for Mayer, Livingston for Mackenzie. annual Thanksgiving Day game at waited for it to come to rest. Before it Referee: McCarty, Germantown Academy. Franklin Field, Philadelphia, the vic- came to a dead stop, H. Miller came Umpire: Crowell, Swarthmore. Field judge: tors showing superiority in every crashing down the field, running into Maxwell, Swarthmore. Linesman: Marshall. branch of the game, out-playing, out- the Cornell captain from behind. Shiv- Harvard. Time of periods: Fifteen minutes. witting, and out-maneuvering their op- erick was thrown against the ball, his Review of the Football Season ponents, excelling them in short in all foot kicking it some five yards to his The Thanksgiving Day game closed of the football essentials but dogged left and putting it into play. Hopper the least successful football season since courage. The Red and Blue machine fell on it and it was Penn's first down on 1893. The team won three games, beat- was the more powerful, the more re- the eight-yard line. Cornell made a ing Oberlin by the score of 9 to 0; Wil- sourceful; it was quicker and headier. superb stand, but on the fourth down liams by 3 to 0; and Carnegie Tech by Pennsylvania knew more football, in- Light went over for a touchdown from 20 to 0. Every one of these points was dividually and collectively, than the the one-yard line, and Brunner kicked scored by Captain. Shiverick. Five de- Cornelians, who, in the opinion of fair goal.. feats are debited to Cornell, as follows: critics, acted like a team playing in Shortly afterward Brunner drop- Colgate 21, Cornell 0; Dartmouth 9,. the early stages of the season, a big, kicked a field goal from the thirty- Cornell 0; Lafayette 21, Cornell 2; Penn cumbersome, slow-moving, slow-thinking liine-yard line making the score 17 to State 21, Cornell 0; Pennsylvania 24, machine, with apparently no diversified 0. The third and last touchdown came Cornell 0. It was a case of a willing system of play. and unable to accomplish in the early minutes of the fourth team, made up at the start largely of any thing like smart execution of the quarter, on a forward pass from Bell inexperienced players, lighting doggedly plays that were attempted. to H. Miller who ran nine yards for but blindly, lunubering along from game In one thing only Cornell equalled the final score. to game without making any real her rival, sheer courage. Twice Cor- Pennsylvania made 15 first downs, progress, a team that knew little football nell held the Red and Blue for downs Cornell only 2. The Quakers made over when it started and judged by its per- inside the one-yard line. Once in the 250 yards by rushing and passing, Cor- formanices not very much more when it first period they took the ball from nell not quite 75. Penn completed finished, outclassed and beaten before it Penn on the two-foot, line and again seven of twelve passes. Cornell tried started against such powerful and bril- in the second quarter when they stopped sixteen and completed only three. In liant elevens as Colgate, Dartmouth, the smashing Penn attack on the one- kicking alone did Cornell hold her own, Lafayette, Penn State, Pennsylvania. It foot line. These two stubborn stands, Shiverick's punts averaging as many had a schedule more difficult than it with another in the third quarter when yards as Brunner, though the Cornell should have been called upon to under- Penn was held three times for downs captain was frequently hurried and take; but even so, the disappointing and on the one-yard line before Light got one kick was blocked. the outstanding feature of the season over for a touchdown, stood out as was that it made no apparent progress, The lineup and summary: bright spots on an otherwise sombre and even toward the end of the season Pennsylvania (24) Cornell (0) it was well below the standard of Cor- background, proving, as they did that Hopper Hoff though this eleven was far below the Left end nell teams not only in the four years pre- Titzel Knauss ceding the war, but of Cornell teams for standard of some of the powerful, ef- Left tackle fective, and versatile Cornell teams of Thomas H. Straus many years back of that. Left guard the past, it matched them in stubborn L. Wray Horrell Center The team was beaten by teams that determination and clean combative- Neylon P. Miller knew more football than it knew. In ness. Right guard Little \ . .• Sutton the disorganization after the war it Right tackle would have been a difficult problem to It was obvious a few minutes after H. Miller Finn the game started Ahat CO MΠ IΓS role Right end select a schedule and postulate that this Bell Shiverick against Penn wouild be the same as in Quarterback or that team could be used as a so-called J. Strauss Carry practise game. Practise games can no the Colgate, Dartmouth, Lafayette, Left halfback and Penn State contests, purely a de- Brunner Shuler longer be selected a year in advance, Right halfback fensive one. And stubbornly they Light Mayer Nevertheless the problem would probably played it, though they could not hope fullback have been less difficult had a game or to overcome the power, rhythm, dash, Score by Periods* two been played with opponents on whom and versatility of the Pennsylvania Pennsylvania 0 7 10 7—24 the varsity could try out its offensive Cornell 0 0 0 0— 0 machine. There was no scoring in the power, instead of being continually on Touchdowns: Hopper, Light, H. Miller. the defensive. first period but in the second the Penn- Goals from touchdowns: Brunner (3). Fiell sylvanians got under way and not goal: Brunner. Again, had Cornell had a veteran teaτi many minutes after play had started Substitutions: Pennsylvania, Harvey for back from the war, as had some of its Hopper caught a forward pass from Light, Graves for H. Miller, Light for Har- triumphant opponents, no better schedule vey, H. Miller for Graves, Maynard for could have been selected a-s a ladder to Bell and made a short dash for a touch- Titzel, A. Wray for Neylon, McNichol for down. Brunner kicked goal. In the Light, Wray for Bell, Brau for J. Strauss, the championship wreath; for those to 128 CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS whom it played the lowly role of doormat National Drainage Congress in Bt. ψpτe all factors in the struggle for ALUMNI NOTES Louis, the American Association of Agri- premier honors. cultural Colleges and Experiment Sta- '80—-Albert J. Cornish is a justice tions in Chicago, and other meetings ia The football committee of the Athletic of the Nebraska Supreme Court. Council seems to see no particular ad- Washington, D. C. '90—Among the seventeen men se- vantage in an. alibi. Apparently no hid- lected by President W-ilson to form '06 LLB—Morris S. Halliday is secre- den reasons, no dissensions, are or can a second industrial conference to meet tary of a joint building committee for be blamed for the unhappy result. at Washington on December 1 is Henry the erection of a ten-million-dollar joint The committee is looking forward, Maurice Robinson, of Pasadena, Calif. bank building for the Citizens Savings rather, and expects that much good will Robinson entered Cornell with the class and Trust Company and the Union Com- eome of a meeting that football alumni of 1890, but remained here only one merce National Bank, of Cleveland. are calling for the Christmias holidays, year. Last April he was appointed a Joseph P. Harris Όl is a vice-president when an organization similar to the member of the United States Shipping of the Citizens Savings and Trust Com- Baseball and the Rowing Associations Board. pany, and Charles L. Bradley '08 is a will be formed and the causes of the vice-president of each bank. The new- poor showing will be considered and '99 ME—John Prince is president of building will contain the largest bank- analyzed. Constructive criticism is looked the Prin'ee-Johnson Limestone Com- ing space in the world, and, with the for which will make it possible to use pany, and the Stewart Sand Company; exception of the Equitable Building in fco the best advantage the good material the offices of both companies are at New York, will be the largest office in sight for next year. 615 American Bank Building, Kansas building in the world., City, Mo. He has this year been elect- That the problem will tax the abilities ;07 AB—Alfred P. Howes is presi- ed president of the Engineers' Club of of these experts is generally conceded. dent of the Howes Publishing Company, Kansas City. He lives at 415 East That off-hand judgments based on a publishers of trade papers, and presi- Forty-seventh Street. study of comparative scores, or even dent of the Industries Publicity Corpo- βn the witnessing of the eight games on '02—Benjamin C. Sloat is with the ration, an advertising agency; the of- the schedule, are futile in arriving at a American International Shipbuilding fices of both concerns are at 15 Park /sound conclusion, is almost obvious. We Corporation, Hog Island, Pa. His home Row, New Yor& Howes lives at 21& believe it will be to the interests of Cor- address is Patterson, N. Y. Ridge Road, Rutherford, N. J. nell football if all suspend judgment J 03 LLB—Richard K. McGonigal, '07 ME—Fred S. Sly is business man- until the committee has had an oppor- formerly attorney in charge of the ager of the Architectural and Building tunity to review the situation and per- fidelity and surety claim department of Press, Inc., publishers of The American haps until! the results of its deliberations the Globe Indemnity Company, who re- Architect, The Building Age, and Th* bear fruit next October. We are con- signed from the Globe last February to Metal Worker, Plumber and Steam fident that the Football Association will accept an appointment on the legal Fitter. His address is 365 State St., not only discover the causes, but also staff of the special representative of the Flushing, N. Y. produce results. Secretary of War, has completed his '07 ME—John A. Ferguson received work in Washington, and has resumed Soccer Season Closes his discharge from the Army on August the practice of law as a member of the The soccer team closed, its season firm of Barker, Donahue, Anderson and 12, and is now engaged in building.in with a two-game trip at the end of Wylie. The task assigned to Mr. Mc- New York. His address is 251 Fort last week, playing a tie game with Gonigal during the war was the adjust- Washington Avenue. Haverford last Thanksgiving Day and ment of the claim of the United States '08 AB—Mr. and Mrs. Richard Brie- losing to the Pennsylvania soccer team Government against the Government of sen, of Mount Vernon, N. Y., have an- on Franklin Field last Saturday. The France for ocean transportation fur- nounced the engagement of their daugh- Haverford game ended without s<ϊore nished during the war by the Army ter, Edith Louise Becker, to Howard Lee by either team, two extra periods of Transport Service, which amounted to Snider. five minutes each failing to break the thirty-eight million dollars. '09 ME—Thomas P. Cunningham is tie. Cornell forced the play into Haver- '03 AB—George E. D. Brady, son of with the Hyatt Roller Bearing Company, ford's territory most of the time, but 1 Madison Avenue, New York. βαuld not score a goal. In the final E. L. Brady, was re-elected to the As- sembly from the first district of Buffalo, '09 AB—Louis F. Schwartz, jr., is game with Pennsylvania, Cornell was Republican. practicing law with Davieβ, Auerbach, defeated by a score of 2 to 0, the Quak- ers scoring a goal in each half. '04 AB—George H. Potter is with and Cornell, 34 Nassau St., New York. the Sprague Electric Works, 527 West His home is at 219 Centre Avenue, New Rochelle, N. Ϋ. A VOLLEY BALL LEAGUE is being Thirty-fourth. St., New York. He lives formed among the fraternities. Enough at 3 Lenox Avenue, East Orange, N. J. '09 CE--Romey,n Y. Thatcher is a teams have alτeady entered to insure '05 AB—Captain Andrew W. New- civil engineer with the Lacka wanna βome spirited contests; and a schedule berry has returned from France, and may Steel Company, Buffalo, N. Y. He lives w now in preparation. Giames will be be addressed for the present at 2441 at 20 Wellington Road. played in the Old Armory. The direction Kenilworth Road, Cleveland, Ohio. '10 OE—Major Roy Taylor returned of the league, thus -far is in the hands '06 BSA—ProfessoT Charles F. Shaw, to America in July, having spent sev- cΐ Howard, BiOrtaer, assistant in phy- of the University of California, left eral months with the General Staff >• at βfaal education. Berkeley on November 5 to attend the Tours, in charge of certain details βf CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS 129 skipping. He has since been discharged Paul Elton, was born on October 17 to plan as the City Cafeteria afc Ithaca, from the service and has returned to Mr. and Mrs. Francis E. Eogers (Mabel which they have been managing for the MB former position with the Munson L. Flumerfedt Ί5). Rogers is, manager past few years. Their home address is &fceainship Company at 82 Beaver St., of the Wayne County Farm Bureau, 1175 Highland Avenue. New York. His home address continues with headquarters at Sodus, N. Y. '16—Mrs. Alice Stelle, of Merchant- t© be 455 Greene Avenue, Brooklyn. '15 CE—James R. Rosenfeld was mar- ville, N. J., has announced the engage- >lθ ME—Frank E. Wallace is indus- ried on June 30 to Miss Bertha C. Rauh ment of her daughter, Miss Hazel A. trial management engineer for Street (University of Pittsburgh '19), daugh- Stelle, to F. Augustus Alberger, of Itha- and Finney, 171 Madison Avenue, New ter of Mr. and Mrs. Marcus Rauh, of ca. Mr. Alberger is proprietor of the York. His address is in care of Dr. E. Pittsburgh; they are living at 5621 Glenwood Hotel, a Cayuga Lake sum- W. Taylor, Queen Lane, Germantown, Northumberland Avenue, Pittsburgh. mer resort. Pa. Rosenfeld is a salesman with the Equi- '16 ME—Paul A. H. Weiss is assis- MO BArch—Horace W. Peaslee re- table Life insurance Association, with tant production engineer with the Cen- eβivod his discharge from the service offices in the Frick Building. tral Hudson Gas and Electric Company, on October 25, as captain of engineers. '15 AB—Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Dole, Poughkeepsie, N. Y. His address is 50 He has reopened his private office at jr., announce the birth of a daughter, Market Street. 1504 H Street, Washington, and a pub- Windsor Dole, on September 25. Their '16 ME—Ronald Hart has been dis- lic office, as architect of public build- home is at 4915 Woodlawn Avenue, Chi- charged from the service; his home ad- ings and grounds, at 1729 'New York cago, 111. dress is 494 Jamaica Avenue, Brook- Avenue, Washington, D. C. '15 LLB—Since receiving his dis- lyn, N. Y. Ίl ME—Walter E. Lee, who success- charge from the service, as captain of >16 BS—Miss Helen E. Saunders is fully completed his four-year term as field artillery, Robert E. Burke has re- teaching biology at The Bishop 's School, water engineer for the City of Balti- sumed the practice of law in Morristown, La Jolla, Calif. more, has again engaged in private en- N. J., with offices in the First National' '16—Ensign Lawrence T. Reinicker gineering work as an industrial engineer, Bank Building. He lives at 24 Oly- has been placed on the inactive list, and with offices at 63-64 Knickerbocker phant Drive. is now working for the Highway De- Building, Baltimore, Md. '15 ME—J. Orne Green has returned partment of the City of Baltimore. He Ίl ME—Raymond P. Heath was mar- from France, and may now be address- lives at -3319 Hartford Avenue. med on June 21 to Miss Madge Quan- ed at 530 Έa&t Sixth St., Erie, Pa. '16—Charles Barrett and Mas Edna tock Hariey, of St. Paul, Minn.; they '15 AB—First Lieutenant Norman Stevens, of San Francisco, were married are living at 28 Olyphant Park, Morris- Renne returned to the United States on in New York on November 19. Barrett town, N. J. Heath is in the engineer- September 3, and was discharged at returned to Ithaca recently for a short ing department of Marsh and McLen- Camp Dix on October 7. Renne went stay, during which he assisted in the nan, insurance brokers, of New York. to France with the 18th Infantry, 1st coaching of the varsity football team. '12 ME—Walter Stokes Fogg is radio Division, and from May, 1919, until his '16 BS, '17 MS—Francis Grant von draftsman in the U. S. Navy Yard at return, acted as aid to Brigadier Gen- M. Schleicher is chemist and director Philadelphia, engaged at present "in eral Frank Parker, of the 1st Infantry with the W. D. Wilson Printing Ink finding what made the electrical wheels Brigade. He was wounded at Soissons Company, Long Island City, N. Y. His go *round in an ex-German submarine. '' on July 20, 1918, and there received two address is 243 Nott Avenue. brigade citations. His present address His home address is 1909 Mt. Vernon '16 BS—Since his release from active is 55 West Housatonic Street, Pittsfield, St., Philadelphia. duty as lieutenant (junior grade) in Mass. '13 BArch—Fred L. Starbuck was mar- the U. S. N. R. F. last December, Leonard ried on August 14 to Miss Margaret '15 CE—Charles F. Starr is an engi- F. Hicks has been made vice-president Willard, of Chicago; their address is neer with the Genesee Bridge Company, of Daniel M. Hicks, Inc., impβrters and 344 Sixth Avenue, Clinton, Iowa. Star- of Rochester, N. Y., engaged in esti- dealers in paper mill supplies, and has buck is at present superintending the mating and designing steel structures of assisted in organizing the firm of Hicks- erection of two residences for Trow- all kinds. His address is 64 Rowley Costarino Company, Inc., packers of bridge and Aekerman, architects, of Street, Rochester. paper mill supplies, of which he has beea New York. '15 AB—Hugh C. Edmiston, jr., is elected treasurer. His address is 140 '13 AB—Thomas F. Scott is engaged in the importing business at 129 Fifth Nassau Street, New York. m farming at Bushville, 111. He is Avenue, New York; his home address is '17 BS—William B. Eastman was married and has two daughters, Erma 89 Harrison Street, East Orange, N. J. married on July 4 to Miss Dorothy Josephine, born October 18, 1917, and '15 AB—Gilbert J. Rich is an as- Louise MeOonnell, of Pierrepont Manor, Minerva Norah, born June 27, 1919. sistant professor of psychology at Drake N. Y. They are making their home at '14—Guern^et Tr Cross;-at the last University, Des Moines, Iowa. His ad- Belleville, N. Y., where Eastman is rum- •election was elected member of Assembly dress is 838 West Thirty-first Street. ning a two-hundred-acre dairy and gen- for Sullivan County on the Democratic '15 BS—Mr. and Mrs. Herman C. eral crop farm. ticket. He is practicing law at Calli- Smith (Frances DeM. Edwards Ί5) are '17 AB—John H. Hathaway was dis- G0on, N. Y. Mrs. Cross was Abbie L. running a new cafeteria at 61 State charged from the service on August 15, Dibble '13. Street, Rochester, N. Y. It is called the as a captain in the Quartermaster Corps, »14 BS, '15 MSA; '15 BS—A son, City Cafeteria, and is run on the same and is now with the Franklin Trust Com- 130 CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS paay, of New York. He lives at the 457 Broome Street, New York. His home NEW ADDRESSES Hotel. Walton, 104 West Seventieth is at 4 Howard Avenue, White Plains, '91—Miss Caroline Adsitt Slater,. Street N. Y, 308 Stewart Avenue, Ithaca, N. Y, '17 AB; '18 AB—John B. Sliman, '18 BS—Miss Isabelle M. Hoag was '95—Frank Carney, 208 South Chau- since his discharge from the Air Service, married on September 20 to Roy H. Van tauqua St., Wichita, Kans.—Dr. John has been working as a research chemist Tyne, of Syracuse, N. Y. Van Tyne V. E. Westphal, Harperley Hall, 1 W^st on dyes with the National Aniline and went to Syracuse in 1917, having been Sixty-fourth St., New York. Chemical Company, of Buffalo. He and previously engaged in mining engineer- Mrs. Sliimm (Helen L. Waters '18) are ing in Nevada. Mrs. Van Tyne has been '96—DeForθst H. Dixoii, 71 Gates. living at 242 Elmwood Avenue, Buffalo. there since her graduation, as a chemist Avenue, Montelair, N. J. with the Haleomb Steel Company. They '98—Miss Kate M. Schutt, 2042 Bed- '17 PhD—Earl A. White resigned on have an apartment at 2702 South Salina ford Avenue,- Brooklyn, N. Y. August 1 as head of the Division of Agri- Street. cultural Engineering at the University '03—Arthur R. Keller, Pleasanton_ of Illinois, to become chief of the re- '19—Paul C. Wanser received his dis- Hotel, Honolulu, T. H. charge from -the Air Service on October search bureau of the Hold Manufactur- '04—Charles R. MeSparren, 5 La. 24, and is now registered in the Uni- ing Company, of Peoria, 111., makers of Marcus Avenue, Thompson Park, Gleib caterpillar tractors. versity to complete his course in arts. Cove, N. Y.—Mrs. Edwin M. Slocombe He lives at 117 Oak Avenue. (Beatrice A. Gilson), Beppeτell, Mass. '17 AB—Miss Phyllis Rudd is en- gaged in educational work with Marshall '19 BS—Harold C. Luckstone is a '06—Robert H. Kaiowlton, 211 Cor- Field & Company, Chicago. She lives student in the New York School of nell Avenue, Swarthmore, Pa. — Har- at 514 Maple Avenue, Blue Island, 111. Secretaries. His address is 53 West vey B. Mann, 7302 Brighton Road, Beit Eighty-sixth Street. Avon, Pittsburgh, Pa. Ί8—LeRoy Ferris has severed his '08—Max W. Davis, 763 Jersey Ave.,. connection with the Packard Motor Car '19 AB—Ainsworth L. Smith is a Elizabeth, N. J.—Charles A* Haines Company, to become manager of the member of the class of 1922 at the Cor- r Waterbury Club, Waterbury, Conn. automotive department of DΌrey & nell Medical College. His address is Company, Inc., importers and exporters, 481 First St., Brooklyn. Ό9>—Professor Horace L. Jones, 135 Goldwin Smith Hall, Ithaca, N. Y.— Miss Lulu I. Neyhart, 604 East Eigh- llllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllilίlllllllljli teenth St., Paterson, N. J. '10—Lieut. Charles W. Hagen, Army 1 Supply Base, Norfolk, Ya. Ml—William M. Aitchison, 18 King St., Morristown, N. J.—Jesse A. Kings- bury, 506 Holden Avenue, Detroit, When You Weigh Mich.—Henry P. Reid, Evangelical Seminary of Mexico, 5a Nuevo Mexico 110, Mexico City, Mexico. Do It Accurately '12—Elmer Heubeck, Fifth Avenue,. Rognel Heights, Baltimore, Md.—Har- with old C. Strohm, 69 South Oxford St., Brooklyn, N. Y. ,'33-^George B. Bell, jr., 98 Aberdeen CHHTILLON SPRING SC0LES Place, Hillcrest, St. Louis Co., Mo.— Our complete line includes scales for Morris G. Bishop, 165 North Broadway, Ϋonkers, N. Y.—^Frank H. Burton, 1607 weighing, assroting, counting, multiplying, estimating, Gilpin St., Denver, Cσlo-;—Stanley J. measuring, testing, and every other purpose for which Chute, 635 Eleventh St., Brooklyn, N.. scales can be used. Y.—Edward M. Scheu, 132 Wellington. Road, Buffalo, N. Y. Only the highest grade materials, '14—Esther F. Andrus, Box 366,. assembled by skilled workmen, are employed in the Glen Cove, N. Y.—-William.. Έ. Dickin- manufacture of Chatillon Scales. son, 421 Federal Building, Salt Lake A card request will bring Catalogue C. A, 2. City, Utah.—Austin S. Hart, 2101 Adel- bert Road, Cleveland, Θhio.—Charles. JOHN ςHAίlLLONδSONS W. Lake, 1209 Root St., Flint, ϊ£ich.— Thomas T. Newbold, Box 166, Lake- ESTABLISHED 1835 hurst, N. J.—Major^ Edmund U. Rag- 85 CLIFF STREET NEW YORK GITY land, 228 West Fisher St., Salisbury, N. C.—Kenneth G. Zeiger, in care αf" W. R. Work, 604 East Third: St., Tuc-- άon, Ariz. CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS 131 A HEART TO HEART TALK

December 4, 1919. Dear Alumni . Please consider this as a personal letter. I want to have a heart to heart talk with you about selling you ^onie of my merchandise. When you were students you knew the ζiclass" of our smokers' articles. Let me tell you frankly that this year we have the largest and best assortment we have ever carried. Every article that wτe recommend must be up to our standard of merit. You run no risk. Either our goods must satisfy you or we will. OUR MAIN SUBJECT IS PIPES Let us introduce you to the following English Pipes

ΓΊl ! I M H I I I Complete assort- Umbria BBB Pipes UUINΠILL ment of the fam- UMBR1A are exceptionally fine ous Alfred Dunliill English Pipes. pipes. The wood has been properly Dunhill's have been the sensation in seasoned and smokes sweet from the the pipe world. Dunhill's are the finest start. We have sold a great many of it is possible to produce. Smoke is these pipes to students. It is not only cool and sweet from the first. All pipes sweet tasting but exceptionally classy are fitted with a loose aluminum tube looking. which keeps the stem clean. At Dun- liill prices. N~o advances. Price $3

Price $7 BENSON & English Pipes w i t h patent inner tube. Ex- ι~ Own make, imported from Eng- HEDGES ceptionally fine briar. ** land. First shipment since 1914. This is one of the best products made B B Standard Briars. bv this reliable house. Price $5 Price $6

Mention Style of Pipe (Curved or Straight) When Ordering

OTHER SUGGESTIONS

TOBACCO POUCHES. Best grade CIGARETTES. Benson & Hedges. CANDY. Page & Shaw, $1.25 a pound leather. Imported. Price $3.50 Cork tip or plain. Boxes Special Holiday Boxes, 2 pounds $2.50 5 P Un( S 7<0 CIGARETTE HOLDERS. Ivory. Priced of 100. Price $2.50 WΔΦ-P^TVΓAXΓ^ τ>τ.χrα ° J ^ ° according to size. Price $4, $5, and $6 W Js Prices slδ^uυ Plus 5% War Tax ' pilces _„ τ*lces *25 0u p CIGAR HUMIDOR. Price $10 ϋPlus7 o% w War Tax CIGARETTE CASES. Hammered Ster- EVERSHARP PENCILS at standard ling Silver. Exceptional value. Price $15 prices. Prices $1.50' up Phis 5% War Tax CIGARETTE HUMIDOR. Price $5 Plus 5% War Tax We Pay All Transportation Charges

Let us make your old class pipe for you. We have made the official class pipe from 1904 to 1918 in- clusive. We have everything for the smoker. Hoping to hear from you soon, Sincerely yours, SOL ZINBERG. University Smoke Shop—Ithaca Hotel P. S:—The Town Is Still Here Even if It Is Dry. 132 CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS

'15—Stewart Benedict, 47 Pierrβ- "Many pont St., Brooklyn, N. Y.—Robert H, Typewriters Shaler, East Greenville, Pa.—Oscar B, Zabel, 640 Magee Avenue, Rochester, In One" N. Y. '16—John W. Bateman, in care •£ R. Roberts, 807 Beverley Road, Brook- lyn, N. Y.—Captain Gerald E. Browβr, Kelly Field No. 2, San Antonio, Texa * —Leslie Brown, Montour Faϋis, N. Y. —Lieut. Arthur T. Lobdell, Beaver City, Nebr.—Corp. Clyde A. Russell, All Who Write The MacKenzie School, Monroe, N. Y, Will appreciate tho —Laurence N. Siler, 409 Eddy St., POWER OF EMPHASIS obtained by the Ithaca, N. Y.—Miss Helen Taber, 172 Interchangeable-type Feature St. James Place, Buffalo, N. Y. MULTIPLEX HAMMOND '17—Harold Baker, 1024 Radeliffβ "WRITING MACHINE77 St., Bristol, Pa.—Miss June C. Deming, You will find interest more easily created if you change from inexpressive, Box 2, Lansford, Pa.—Francis J. Fer- monotonous type to variations of style that put shades of feeling into your written words. rer, Concejal Veiga No. 18, Vibora, Note these 5 of over 365 different type-sets, including all languages, available Havana, Cuba.—Thomas R. Jones, Box on the Multiplex. ll of TwQ diffθrβnt 8ty8ty eeSS J, Eagle Pass, Texas.—Mies Rosamond. type always in the mach- Wolcott, 430 West 118th St., New York. ine-"Just Turn the Knob" —A. Miles Wright, 319 Demster St., Evanston, 111. SPECIAL TYPE-SETS FOR '18—Juan M. Bertran, P. O. Box 62, EVERY BUSINESS, EVERY Humacao, Porto Rico.—Walter L. LANGUAGE, EVERY PROFES- Johnson, jr., 5216 Liberty Avenue, SION, EVERY SCIENCE. ANY Pittsburgh, Pa.—Miss Lelia H. Lassi- TYPE MAY BE SUBSTITUTED ter, Fernald Hall, Columbia Univer- IN A FCW SECONDS. sity, New York.—Miss Josephine A* **Just turn the Knob" of your Multiplex Hammond for instant changes of style x that invest type with the vigor of inflection and emphasis. Lueder, Cazenovia Seminary, Cazenβ- No Ot&er Typewriter Can Do This! via, N. Y.—Miss Dorothy McSparrea, There are many things the Multiplex does which CANNOT be done on any other typewriter, all fully explained in a new Folder. Let us show you HOW and WHY 114 High St., New Haven, Conn.—Deaa the Multiplex stands unique in the typewriter world. Send the coupon NOW* Also—a PORTABLE Model C. Moore, 84 Mt. Pleasant Avenue, Only About 11 lbs. Newark, N. J.—Benjmian Pepper, 20$ New, light-weight, aluminum model. Full capacity. Write for special folder. Mail this COUPON now to South Baker Hall, Ithaca, N. Y.— HAMMOND TYPEWRITER CO., William Weinstein, 77 Stratford Place, 591-A East 69th St., NEW YORK CITY Newark, N. J. Gentlemen: Please send Folder to '19—Fay C. Bailey, 55 West Nine- Name tieth St., New York.—John C. Geb- Address hard, 45 North Nineteenth St., Harri - Occupation burg, Pa.—Miss Jeanette Heertje, Inquire about special^ terms to professionals. Skidmore School of Arts, Saratoga Springs, N. Y.—John H. McClure, in care of The Texas Company, Port Neches, Texas.—'Miss Mabel Pattoa, Box 173, Willsboro, N." Y.—Frank β. Drawing Inks Royee, 3944 Pine St., Philadelphia, Pa.— Eternal Writing Ink Oscar J. Sewell, 4721 Winthrop Ave- Engrossing Ink nue, Chicago, 111.—Charles H. Spencer, Taurine Mucilage jr., 719 Ambersom Avenue, Pittsburgh, Higgins' Drawing Board Paste »Pa.—Harry A. Titsink, Newark Val- Liquid Paste ley, N. Y. Office Paste Vegetable Glue, Etc. ARE THE FINEST AND BEST INKS AND ADHESIVES Emancipate yourself from the use of ^corrosive and ill-smelling inks and adhesires and adopt the Higgins inks and adhesives. They will ί>e a revelation to you, they are so sweet, clean, and well put up and withal so efficient. At Dealers Generally. CHARLES M. HIGGINS & CO.. Mfrs. 271 NINTH STREET, BROOKLYN, N. Y. Branches: Chicago, London LiVraηy Building, 123 N. Tioga Sfreei COBNELL ALUMNI NEWS Business Is Good A FULL LINE You CAN AFFOED to come to Ithaca for of Drugs, Rexall Products, that suit or Tuxedo. and Toilet Articles. Write for samples. Lang's KLINE'S PHARMACY Kohm C& Brunne Palace Garage 114 N. Aurora St., Ithaca. 220 E. State St. is situated in the center of Ithaca Jewelers 117-119 East Green Street R, A. Heggie & Bro- Co Wanzer &L Howell 136 E. State Street Ithaca, N. Y. The Grocers It is absolutely fireproof. We have a full stock of Diamonds, Jew- Open day and night. Com- elry, Art Metal Goods, etc., and Quality- - Service make things to order. modious and fully equipped. A full stock of tires and 4 'Songs of Cornell" ubes and everything in the "Glee Club Songs" All the latest "stunts" and things NOTICE TO EMPLOYERS line of sundries musical The Cornell Society of Civil Lent's Mυsic Store Engineers maintains a Registra- Ithaca, New York tion Bureau. Complete records of 2,000 Cornell men are on file. Official Automobile Employers may consult these rec- Blue Book Garage I have leased a store downtown and ords without charge. If preferred, have taken my son into partnership. we will recommend a man to fill My merchant tailoring business, con- your needs. ducted for years under the name REGISTRATION BUREAU Hyman G oldenberg 165 Broadway New York City William H. Morrison '90 will be known as Room 2601—Mr. Harding Ernest D. Button '99 Goldenberg & Son Phone Cortland 4800 111 N. Aurora St., Ithaca

The all-year-'round soft drink Satisfies the national demand for a wholesome, pure and appetizing beverage—at the soda fountain or with your meals* Bevo will more than satisfy your thirst* ANHEUSER-BUSCH ST. LOUIS It must be Ice Cold CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS

Gift Booklet

Usually at Christmas time and frequently In your den at other times we issue a booklet of our spe- cials. The Gift Booklet covers the souvenir In your den you need something to bring line and Cornell specials. You should be on back the memories of your college days. Send our mailing list. for a copy of the booklet which the Co-op, issues. You will find in it illustrations of pennants and pillows.

CORNELL CO-OP. SOCIETY MORR1LL HALL ITHACA, N. Y.

and at the Congress Hotel Chicago QA fact: At the Congress Hotel, Fatima is the best-sell- ing cigarette. More and more men who formerly smoked straight Turkish cigarettes exclusively, have adopted Fatima as their steady cigarette. For Fatima contains not too much Turkish, or too little, but "just enough" to. taste right and leave a man feeling right. FATIMA A Sensible Cigarette Fαtimα contains more Turkiikthan any other Turkish blend cigarette