CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS Vol. Xlii. No. 4 Ithaca, N. Y., October 19, 1910 Price 10 Cents

NEW FRATERNITY HOUSES.

Buildings in the Fall Creek and West Avenue Sections. New buildings and changes in old ones have altered the appearance of outlying sections of the campus. On the north bank of Fall Creek, within a hundred yards of Triphammer falls, and near the bridge, where for- merly the woods grew, are two new fraternity houses. Another frater- nity is building further down the gorge, on the south bank, on a ledge almost directly over the Ithaca Falls- The West Avenue neighborhood has undergone a change through the ex- tension of one fraternity house, the rebuilding of another and the com- pletion of the Telluride House. The extension of the Delta Kappa Epsilon house has been completed. The house has been extended east- ward for its full height to a distance of 44 feet. The width of the addi- THE SHELDON MEMORIAL AND G3LDWIN SMITH HALL. tion is 36 feet. A driveway runs through the addition at the height and it is thus made possible to divide fraternity is now well under way and of the first floor from South aveune the house when occasion may require. on Saturday the corner stone will be to a court behind the house. The The third floor has a sleeping loggia laid by the Rev. A. H. Wilson of New greater part of the addition is taken which is ample for twelve beds. In York City, vice-regent of the frater- up by a new lodge room. The addi- its exterior the house will be similar nity. The house is situated on Wil- tion provided for six new studies, six to the one which burned last winter. lard avenue, on the south bank of bedrooms, an alumni suite and The first floor will be of brick and the Fall Creek and just west of the home several other rooms. remainder of stucco. It will be of of Professor Lucien A. Wait. The The new house of Delta Upsilon, slow burning construction and divid- dining room, which will measure 20 which is almost completed, is built ed into three sections by fireproof by 40 feet, will occupy the basement on the site of the old house at South walls. and part of the first floor, being 18 and West Avenues. The old founda- North of the Delta Upsilon house feet high. The kitchens will also be tions have been used except on the the house of the in the basement. The first floor will east side where the house has been has been constructed. This is now contain a large reception hall 33 by enlarged 12 feet. The house will be complete and occupied. The house is 35 feet, a large enclosed porch fac- ready for occupancy about Christ- a model of its kind. It is built of ing the lake, a billiard room and a mas time. The basement contains yellow pressed brick and is fireproof. reception room. On the second floor the kitchen and pantry, but not the The basement contains a large din- there are to be fourteen studies, each dining room as in the former build- ing hall, kitchen and serving room accommodating two men. The third ing. That room will be on the main and the heating and ventilating plant. floor will be given over entirely to floor, and will be 42 feet long by 26 There is also a vacuum cleaning sys- dormitories. The foundations of the feet wide. Besides the dining room, tem in the house. The main floor of house, which are now completed, are on the main floor there will be a the house contains a large reception of concrete. The first story will be of chapter room and library on the hall, a living room, music room, danc- brick and the other two stories of north, a reception hall in the middle ing hall, library and guest's suite. concrete and heavy timbers. Concrete and a music room at the south of the The two upper floors &re used for will be extensively used in the con- house. The second and third floors studies and sleeping rooms. The struction and the house will be fire- will contain the studies and sleeping suite S3 stem is used, each suite con- proot. rooms. These floors are arranged in sisting of two rooms and a bath. Just across the upper Fall Creek suites and will accommodate thirty There are accommodations for about bridge two handsome houses have men. Two separate stairways lead forty men. been completed. These are for the from the basement to the top floor The new home of the Sigma Nu Alpha Chi Rho and Cerberus fra- 38 CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS

VARSITY PRACTICE ON THE PLAYGROUND. ternities. The Cerberus house has a The Work oι a Cornell Botanist During his remarks he said that Cor- fine location on the bank of the gorge, Dr. K. Miyake, Cornell Ph. D. 1902, nell had contributed more to the mor- the property fronting on Thurston now professor of botany in the Im- phology and embryology of the Con- ifers than any other institution in the avenue anή extending back over 200 perial University of Tokyo, is spend- world, through the classic work on feet to Beebe Lake. The first story of ing several weeks at Ithaca. In ad- the pines, by Margaret C. Ferguson, the house is constructed of gray sand- dition to his work at the Imperial Ph. D. 1901, who began her work at stone and the upper two stories of University he has been placed in Cornell in 1897, by the work of W. stucco work. The main entrance is charge of the investigation of the A.. Murrill, Ph. D. 1900, on the hem- at the north and across the south side diseases of ginseng in Corea. For of the house on the brink of the lock spruce, and by Dr. Miyake's this purpose the Japanese government gorge is a .wide porch. work at Cornell on the spruce. Dr. is sending him on a tour of investi- Ferguson is now professor of botany The basement is used for a dining gation around the world especially to room, kitchen and servants' quarters. at Wellesley College, and Dr. Murrill study the diseases of ginseng in the is First Assistant Director of the With the exception of a music room . From Ithaca he has and library, the entire first floor is Botanical Garden. visited the most important ginseng given over to one large room about gardens in New York state and Penn- forty feet square, in the center of University Scholarships Awarded. sylvania. From here he will go to which are two large fireplaces back to The faculty on Friday afternoon Boston, New York and Washington, back. The west half of the room will awarded University Scholarships to and in a few weeks will sail for be used as the living room and the eighteen members of the class of 1914. east half as a reception hall, but the Europe to visit England, Germany, The value of these scholarships is whole can be thrown together for France and Italy. In Italy he will $400 each. For the sixth successive dancing. The house will accommo- devote some time, at the Naples Ma- time first honors went to the Boys' date twenty-two men and could easily rine Laboratory, to investigating the High School of Brooklyn, N. Y., accommodate more, for the studies marine algae, in connection with some James Sullivan, Ph. D., principal, and sleeping rooms on the second of his instruction in the university. five of the eighteen scholarships be- and third floors are unusually large. In about a year he will return to Jap- ing awarded to graduates of this The Alpha Chi Rho house is north an by way of the Siberian railway, school. Following is the list of of the Cerberus house. It is on a thus completing a tour of the world. awards: lot 90 by 800 feet extending from This is not the first time that Dr. The Cornell Scholarships: Ethel Thurston avenue east to Beebe lake. Miyake has voyaged around the Letitia Cornell, Girls' High School, The first story is of brick and the world In 1904, after two years' Brooklyn; W. L. Felter, Ph. D., prin- second and third are of heavy timbers study in Germany following his grad- cipal. Edward Foreman Graham, and stucco. Across the north end of uation here, he returned by way of Lafayette High School, Buffalo; C. K. the house is a large living room, under the Suez Canal during the Russo- Mellen, principal. which is the dining room. There is Japanese war. The H. B. Lord Scholarships: Kurt a library of about equal size on the During his stay here Dr. Miyake Otto Klaessig and Morris Goldbaum, main floor and also a hall and a re- spoke before the Botanical Seminary Boys' High School, Brooklyn. ception room. The two upper floors on some recent investigations in The McGraw Scholarships: Myra are arranged in studies and dormi- Gymnosperms and their bearing on Bone McNicol, Morris High School, tories with accommodations for about classification. Dr. Miyake has made New York City; John H. DenMgh, twenty-four men. important contributions to this work. principal. Morris Gilbert Bisnop, CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS 39

PHOTOGRAPH BY S. L. SHELDON.

Yonkers High School; William A. RETURN OF DR. SPRAGUE. services, being wounded twice in the Edwards, A. M., principal. terrible campaign of General Grant The Sage Scholarships: Ruby C. Founder of English Department Here to in Mississippi, and being later a Madsen, Girls' High School, Brook- Lecture- President White's Statement. prisoner at Andersonville, the result lyn. Clara Wilhelmina Keopka, West- On Wednesday, Thursday and Fri- being his promotion to the colonelcy field High School; P. K. Pattison, A. day evenings, October 19-21, in Gold- of his regiment. At the close of the M., principal. win Smith Hall, Homer Baxter war his ability as a writer and speak- The Sibley Scholarships: Walter Sprague, Ph. D., will deliver a series er on literary subjects won him a Ernest Addicks, DeWitt Clinton High of lectures on Shakespeare and Mil- succession of important positions, in- School, New York City; J. L. Tild- ton. Dr. Sprague was professor of cluding the professorship of English sley, principal. Harold Slada Kins- rhetoric and oratory and English lit- literature at Cornell. The story of ley, Lafayette High School, Buffalo. erature in Cornell from 1868 to 1870, his election here throws light upon his qualities. The President White Scholarships: and has since been principal of Adel- Bleecker Marquette, Schenectady phi Academy, Brooklyn; president "There were several prominent High School; E. R. Whitney, princi- of Mills College, (California, and candidates, but it happened that just pal. Harry Zelie Harris, Olean of the University of North Dakota. at that time Professor Sprague gave High School; F. E. Emmons, A. B , To-day is the eighty-first anniversary an address on 'Milton as a Teacher' principal. of his birth. The following interest- before the annual convention of New The Horace Greeley Scholarships: ing statement about Dr. Sprague's England Teachers at Pittsfield, Mass. Merle Marion Mosher, Girls' High visit was made by Dr. Andrew D. At this convention the president and School, Brooklyn. Harold Alexander White: senior professor of Cornell were Mossman, Boys' High School, Brook- "The course of three lectures com- present. The lecture so greatly im- lyn. ing at Goldwin Smith Hall on Wed- pressed them, as well as the entire The John Stanton Gould Scholar- nesday, Thursday and Friday, Octo- audience, that Professor Sprague was ships: Alfred Latimer Potter, DeWitt ber 19, 20 and 21, is an interesting at once nominated to the position of Clinton High School, New York City. event from many points of view. Pres- full professor at the new university. Remington Rogers, Erasmus Hall ident Sprague returns for the first "This he held with great distinc- High School, Brooklyn; W. B. Gun- time to Cornell since the days when tion, his instruction in the university nison, A. M., principal. he founded the department of English being exceedingly successful and his The Stewart L. Woodford Scholar- literature here and won the respect more popular lectures drawing large ships: Harry Schindler and Louis and admiration of the whole student audiences in various parts of the Isaac Zagoren, Boys' High School, body and the public at large, by his state. One of them proved especially Brooklyn. scholarly and brilliant lectures on the attractive, it being based upon hie great epochs of English literature. imprisonment at Andersonville and Miss Judsoris Book. "The lecturer himself is an inter- entitled.'When I Was in Jail' Miss Katharine Berry Judson, A. esting personality. Having won high "From the position at Cornell n« B. 1904, is the author of "Myths and position as a scholar and the highest was called to the presidency of the Legends of the Pacific North-West," distinctions as a writer and speaker Adelphi College at Brooklyn, at a just published by A. C. McClurg & at Yale, he shortly afterward raised salary three or four times as great Co., and has presented a copy to the a company and entered the Civil War, as that whir h Jlm ri;ττi ci:f" "n'ί1J University Library. in which he rendered distinguished offer in those days; and from this t 40 CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS-

the presidency of two other institu- tions of learning, including, finally, Some of the Prizes of Life Within the Reach of the University of North Dakota. the College Man. "Although Professor Sprague is now advanced in years, the testi- A Fifteen-Minute Address, Delivered June 18, 1910, at Atlantic City, N. J., at the monials he has received for his lec- Annual Banquet of the Cornell Association of Railway and Supply Men, by ture upon the Pacific Coast, where he E. H. Sibley '80, Treasurer of the Galena Signal Oil Company has recently resided, show that he Mr. President and Fellow Cornel- but one truth in regard to our be- retains his power and brilliancy, with lians: In order to avoid being ing has been thoroughly demonstrated a maturity and ripeness gained by his misconstrued, allow me to say at by science, namely: that Dame Nature rich and wide experience. His the outset that I do not wish to im- has so constituted mankind that good lectures ought to be heard by every ply by my subject that the prizes of will, or a feeling of kindness, is a student who desires inspiration and life of which I shall speak are by any powerful tonic and is essential to our guidance from the two great masters means restricted to the college man. physical health, while ill will, or of English poetry." They are open to all who will take hatred, engenders a virulent poison the pains the winning of them de- which attacks our vital forces and Bennett Senior President mands. I merely single out the college may ultimately destroy them. James Eugene Bennett, of Youngs- man because at an early period of Second among the prizes of life town, Ohio, has been elected presi- his career he has by numerous tests to which I desire to call your atten- dent of the class of 1911. He re- shown that he possesses, among other tion is knowledge. The knowledge ceived 200 votes in the election last things, more or less of ambition, reas- to which I refer is particularly that Wednesday, and 157 were cast for oning power, memory, perseverance, which concerns man in his higher re- S. F. Nixon, 143 for L. D. Simson self-control, and ability to apply prin- lations. Fitting preparation for and 62 for C. R. Hugins. For first ciples and to deal with new combina- gaining a livelihood is, of course, as- vice-president T. R. Cox defeated C. tions. sumed. In professional and technical C. Cheyney by one vote. These other Foremost among the prizes of life courses in colleges there were until officers were elected: Second vice- I name that of character. An eagle recently few, if any, provisions made president, Miss Rhoda White; third confined within a cage, or fettered for general culture studies. Even in vice-president, Miss Alice Sisson; to a stake, or with his wings close courses devoted entirely to liberal corresponding secretary, Miss Clara bound to his body, may, during a training there are so many subjects Braymer; recording secretary, R. E. long period of time, breathe, take to be taken up that the student makes Chapman; treasurer, E. M. St. John; food, and move about, but he is not little more than a beginning in any general athletic director, L. J. Peake; living the life which he would enjoy, one branch of learning. His real edu- football director, C. N. Seagrave; or for which nature fitted him. He cation is to be acquired after he has baseball director, E. W. Thompson; mopes and pines and eats his heart left the campus and college halls. In track director, L. R. Brown; crew di- away. He longs to soar aloft into this intensely practical age there is rector, S. H. Sutton; class orator, the vast blue heights of heaven and danger that any man, no matter how Gay H. Brown; ivy orator, H. E. feel new zest and strength as he excellent his early educational ad- Griffith; class historian, D. W. Mag- speeds through the billowy waves of vantages, may become so much of a owan; class marshals, H. P. Reid, W. ether which surround him. So, too, specialist in his vocation that he may D. Carleton; sergeant-at-arms, C. M. a human being may, perchance, for neglect an avocation and thus miss Thiele; vice-sergeant-at-arms, C. H. two, three, or even four score of years much that would make for his own Cull; class poet, Miss Mildred Evans; or more, pass a mere nominal exist- full development and much that would class essayist, Miss Sarah E. Barn- ence without character, but it can- fit him for the highest social useful- holt. not truly be said that such a one has ness. I have somewhere read that a lived. Great though character is and singularly brilliant and distinguished Faculty Appointments. worthy every effort its attainment man whose life was brought to a The executive committee of the demands, yet in its nature it is so close when he was still in the morn- Board of Trustees has made the fol- simple that it may be understood by ing of his intellectual powers ex- lowing appointments: A. S. Yount, J. a child. Its principal elements are claimed during his last illness, "I M Lohr, assistants in chemistry; E. justice and kindness, the rudiments have learned many arts; would, alas, A. Filmer, assistant in physiography; of which are more or less inherent that I had learned the art of life!" S. Adler, assistant in modern Europ- in every normal human breast. Just It is this, the most important of all ean and English history; L. A. Wil- thoughts increase the mental strength. arts, the art of life, which it be- son, instructor in power engineering; Thanks to the labors of modern psy- hooves us to master. If a man does E. S. Burnett, instructor in experi- chologists, men who have now come to not know and comply with the re- mental engineering; M. R. Watson, realize as never before the profound quirements of his physical nature, E. C. Wilson, C. G. Stone, C. M. Watt, wisdom in the old aphorism " As a then if untilϋiy disaster does not A. W. de Revere, Clift Andrus, A. T. man thinketh, so is he." This body overtake him, such a one is manifest- Knight, C. J. Evans, C.-C. Rose, as- of, our. is a complex and mysterious ly a child of luck, a sport, a freak, sistants in the department of military organism, many processes of which a petted child of Fortune, whose science and tactics. still j>uzzle the diligent investigator; (Continued on page 42.) CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS 41

FOOTBALL, the second period. A feature of this UNIVERSITY CALENDAR. period was a double pass, Butler to Eyrich to Pitcher, which gained thirty WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 19. Practice Begins on New Field—Varsity yards. In the third and fourth peri- Agassiz Club—Talk by Mr. C. R. Gets Five Field Goals in Two Periods. Plunkett on "Aquatic Insects." Mc- ods the visitors were weary and the Graw Hall, South Wing, 7:30 p. m. The great event of the week in varsity scored six touchdowns. The University Lecture—"Shakespeare," football was the beginning of practice score: by Professor Homer Baxter 8prague, on the hill. The whole squad moved Ph. D. Goldwin Smith flail, Room Cornell St Bonaventure B, 8 p. m. to the playground on Monday after- Eyrich left end Roberts noon and had its work there till Fri- Munk left tackle . . Bolander THURSDAY, OCTOBER 20. Champaign . .. left guard .. . Meikle Sanitary Science and Public Health day. Everybody, from Coach Reed Seagrave center ...... Eustace —"Vital Statistics as an aid in the to the rubbers, was pleased with the Hale right guard . . Weidle Public Health Movement." W. F, change. The benefits which had been Zeller right tackle . . Kenyon Willcox, LL. D., Professor ox Politic! expected were all realized, and more. Pitcher ...... right end ...... Blehl Economy and Statistics. Goldwin The time in which football practice Butler quarterback Monos han Smith Hall, Rocm A, 12 m. Robb left halfback . Pickett Intercollege Association Football— was possible was much lengthened, Bates right halfback . Regan College of Mechanical Engineering vs. and an immediate improvement was Stimson fullback , . Fitzgerald College of Civil Engineering. Col- noticed in the physical condition and Score—Cornell, 47; St. Bonaven- lege of Agriculture vs. College of Law. spirits of the players. No incon- ture, 0. TouchdoΛvns—O'Connor, Playground, 5 p. m. Eyrich, Simson, Nichols, Bates, Wil- University Lecture—"Shakespeare," venience was found in using the Gym- son. Goals from touchdowns—Sim- by Professor Homer Baxter Sprague, nasium for dressing. Injured men son, Seagrave. Goals from field— Ph. D. Goldwin Smith Hall, Room are doing better, for the rubbers are Simson, 2; Pitcher, 2; Butler. Sub- B, 8 p. m. at the gymnasium all day now, and a stitutes—Cornell—Teagle for Eyrich, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 21. man can drop in there between classes O'Rourke for Munk, Franklin for Champaign, Blackwell for Pitcher, Intercollege Association Football in the morning and have a sprain or a Smith for Butler, O'Connor for Robb, —College of Mechanical Engineering bruise attended to. When the rub- vs. Veterinary College. College of White for O'Connor, Nichols for Civil Engineering vs. College of Arts bers were at Percy Field players Bates, Wilson for Simson. St Bona- and Sciences. Playground, 5 p. m. oftentimes went without the care they venture—Poranto for Weidle, Mc- Carthy for Poranto, Dwyer for Blehl, Organ Recital—, 5 p. needed. m. Goodman for Regan. Referee—Coon- University Lecture—"Milton," by Four scrimmages were held during ey, Princeton. Umpire—Howard, Amherst Field judge—South, Cor- Professor Homer Baxter Sprague, the week, and the tackling dummy and nell. Head linesman—Young, Cor- Ph. D. Goldwin Smith Hall, Room B, charging machine were kept moving. nell. Time—four 15 minute periods. 8 p. m. W. H. Namack '01 assisted in the SATURDAY, OCTOBER 22. coaching all the week. Baker, who The Football Schedule. Freshman Football—Wyoming Sem- was injured in the Oberlin game, was (Cornell's score given first.) inary vs. Cornell Freshmen. Percy Sept. 28. Hobart, 50-0. Field, 1:30 p. m. still on crutches, but otherwise the Oct 1. R. P. I., 24-0. Football—Vermont vs. Cornell. squad was in good shape. Oct. 8. Oberlin, 0-0. Percy Field, 3:15 p. m. Admission to Oct. 15. St. Bonaventure, 47-0. both events 75 cents. Reserved seats, CORNELL 47, ST. BONAVENTURE 0. Oct. 22. Vermont at Ithaca. steel and covered stands, 25 cents. Admission to Vermont game alone 50 St. Bonaventure did not prove to Oct. 29. Williams at Ithaca. Nov. 5. Harvard at Cambridge. cents. Season tickets good for ad- be a very strong opponent on Satur- Nov. 12. Chicago at Ithaca. mission. day, but it offered enough opposition Nov. 24. Penn at Philadelphia. Agassiz Club Field Trip—Leader, to show that the varsity eleven had Mr. C. R. Plunkett. Subject, Aquatic Day Elected Commodore. Insects. Meet at McGraw Hall, North improved since the tie game with Wing, 2 p. m. Oberlin. The interference was better, Philip Lewis Day '11, of Brisbane, Australia, has been elected Commo- SUNDAY, OCTOBER 23. the line was stronger and the team Sage Chapel—The Rev. William B. had more fight. Zeller, of last year's dore of the Navy. Day has rowed No. Wallace, D. D., Baptist. Tabernacle, freshman team, played right tackle 6 in the varsity eight for two seasons, Brooklyn, N. Y. Morning service at throughout the game and strengthen- and he pulled the same oar as a mem- 11 o'clock. Vesper service at 3:15 ed that side of the line. ber of his freshman crew. He is a o'clock. The varsity made no effort to score member of the Zodiac club and of To Attend Bryn Mawr Celebration. touchdowns during the first two . A celebration of the twenty-fifth periods, but devoted itself to getting Varsity baseball practice is held anniversary of the opening of Bryn field goals, of which five were kicked. every fair day on Alumni Field. The Mawr College will be held at Bryn Two minutes after the game began position of catcher is vacant, and Mawr, Pa., on October 21 and 22. Pitcher drop-kicked the ball over the several candidates, including Abbott, The University faculty has appointed bar from the 30-yard line. Two min- one of last season's pitchers, are be- the following persons to represent utes later Pitcher tried it again, but ing tried out for this place. on that occasion: the ball hit one of the posts. Sim- The President; Professor T. F. son next made a place kick from the The freshman football team de- Crane; Mrs. Arthur Charles Howland 35-yard line and Butler scored an- feated the Cascadilla School eleven (Emily Berry) '95, of Philadelphia, other from the 30-yard line. Another on Wednesday, 28 to 0, and on Sat- and Mrs. Frederick Vernon Coville drop-kick by Pitcher and another urday beat the team from the George (Elizabeth Boynton) '89, of Wash- place kick by Simson were made in Junior Republic 23 to 0 ington, D. C. 42 CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS

Probably a large proportion of the MR. SIBLEY'S ADDRESS. students who come to Cornell from (Continued from page 40.) New York City choose this University course conforms to no established on account of the free tuition they laws, and whose example not one i» may obtain by winning State scholar- a hundred thousand can safely fol- ships, and it is but natural that, SUBSCRIPTION—$3.00 Par Y tr. low. "Life is more than a living." He having come here, they should seek who is not satisfied with the restricted also the University scholarships, in Published by the Cornell Alumni NeVs view of the world to be obtained Publishing Company. John L. Senior, the competition for which their recent President, Woodford Patterson, Secre- while he dwells in a narrow vale be- tary and Treasurer. Office: 110 North preparation for the other contest tween high mountains must, perforce, Tioga Street, Ithaca, N. Y. gives them an advantage. Published weekly during the college climb to the summit of some of the year and monthly in July and August, forty issues annually. Issue No. 1 is ALUMNI WHO CONTRIBUTED to the lofty peaks by which he is encompass- published the first Wednesday of the ed and from that elevated standpoint college year, in October, and weekly pub- fund for the new athletic field will be lication (numbered consecutively) con- pleased to know that the few days of let his eye sweep the horizon that then tinues through Commencement week. Issue No. 40, the final one of the year, practice which the football squad has lies stretched out before him. The is published the last Wednesday in study of any natural science, even in August and contains a complete index had there have borne immediate of the entire volume. good results. The time in which prac- an amateurish sort of way, will afford Single copies, ten cents each. Foreign recreation and add materially to a postage, 40 cents per year. Subscriptions tice is possible is much longer than payable in advance. man's mental assets. Human physi- Should a subscriber desire to discon- on Percy Field, on account of the 400 tinue his subscription, notice to that ef- feet of elevation Practice continues ology and hygiene, psychology, botany fect should be sent in before its expira- and zoology are notably broadening tion. Otherwise it is assumed 'that a now till half-past six, whereas, on continuance of the subscription is de- and valuable. A knowledge of the sired. some afternoons it became too dark Checks, drafts and orders should be to practice on Percy Field at half- teachings of history, an acquaintance made payable to the Cornell Alumni with the biographies of some of the News. past five. Naturally, with some of the All correspondence should ~o address- men getting out of the classrooms so foremost leaders in thought and ac- ed— tion in our own age and former ages CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS, late as they do, the coaches are pleas- Ithaca, N. Y. will indicate what have been some ed with the extra hour. The physical of the steps in the progress of the condition of the men has improved race from savagery towards civiliza- since the change was made. One man, WOODFORD PATTERSON tion, will give us a glimpse of the Editor. who had been under weight all the grandeur of the human mind, a hint season, gained five pounds during the as to the glories it is yet to achieve, FREDERICK KUHNE first week of practice on the hill. The Business Manager. and prove an unfailing source of in- whole squad, the coaches say, seems spiration and cheer. to be in better condition. JAMES B. WALKER, JR. Rich is he in the domain of gen- Assistant Business Manager. eral and religious literature and /. P. Morgan's Gift to the Library. ethics, who, though countless treas- The University Library has receiv- Entered as Second-Class Matter at Ithaca, N. Y. ures still remain to be accumulated, ed from J. Pierpont Morgan a copy of has read and re-read till he has made the privately printed and sump- his own Homer's Iliad and Odyssey, Ithaca, N. Y., October 19, 1910 tuous catalogue of his collection of Plato's Dialogues of the trial and jewels and precious works of art, death of Socrates, a dozen of the prin- A NOTICEABLY LARGE proportion of compiled by Dr. G. C. Williamson at cipal plays of Shakespeare, Milton's the winners of University scholarships Mr. Morgan's request. Of this work Paradise Lost, Goethe's Faust, Brown- are graduates of New York and only 150 copies have been printed, all ing's Pippa Passes, Emerson's Es- Brooklyn schools. Twelve of the for private distribution. It contains says, Izaak Walton's Compleat An- eighteen scholarships, in fact, were about one hundred plates, giving, in gler, Dickens's David Copperfield, awarded this year to students whose most cases, full-size reproductions of Thackeray's Pendennis and The New- preparation was obtained in schools the works of art, comprising neck- comes, Hawthorne's Scarlet Letter, of Greater New York. This is out of laces, pendants and medallions, of George Eliot's Silas Marner, Tolstoi's all proportion to the number of New gold and silver; vases, cups, etc., of Anna Karenina, George Sand's The York City students in the entire en- rock-crystal, onyx, agate and jade; Devil's Pool, Kipling's Kim, three of rollment of the University, and it carved shrines, etc.. of boxwood, etc., Sudermann's short plays, the books λvould be interesting to know why the etc. Especially beautiful are the en- of Job, Psalms, Proverbs, the four New Yorkers do so well in the scholar- gravings of the rock-crystal objects. Gospels, the epistles of St. Paul, Bun- ship examinations. The excellence of yan's Pilgrim's Progress, James's their schools may account for it in . Professor James Morgan Hart has Varieties of Religious Experience, part, and another reason may be given the University a portrait of Drummond's Greatest Thing in the found in the State scholarships. Out himself, which was painted by J. Colin World and Ascent of Man, William of the 150 Assembly districts in the Forbes. The painting has been hung DeWitt Hyde's Self-Measurement State, each of which is entitled to a invtKe large recitation room of the and Allen's As a Man Thinketh. State scholarship, sixty-three are in department of English in Goldwin The science of sociology and espec- the four boroughs of the greater city. Smith Hall. ially that division commonly called CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS 43

civics, has to deal with some of the T. C. POWER, Helena, Mont., Pres. HERBERTG.OGDEN,E.E./97 deepest! problems that humanity is I. P. BAKER. ViccPresident called jμpon to solve. In no other G. H. RUSS, Jr., '03, Cashier Attorney and Counsellor at Law field oί effort, it seems to me, is there to be found so much that is BISMARCK BANK Patents and Patent Causes both interesting and profitable for a 2 RECTOR ST., NEW YORK man of sincerity, education and dis- BISMARCK, N. D. cernment. Issues certificates of deposit, drawing 5 per cent, interest per annum. Interest payable semi-an- A prize which in its effects is more nually. Frederick Robinson important and farreaching than those Depository for the State of North Dakota,County of Burleigh and City of Bismarck. PHOTOGRAPHER already mentioned, t nd which he will Correspondence invited. be more likel to win who has pre- For Senior Class 1910 viously gained the other two, is social E. State St., Ithaca, N. Y. service. The blessings of liberty and civilization we enjoy so abundantly ITHACA SAVINGS BANK that we are prone to esteem them lightly Lnd almost to classify them (Incorporated 1868) with the gifts of n.ture, like the air ITHACA, N. Y. DABS. we bre the or the sunshine which warms us. We1 need to arouse from • our leth r j ε nA to realize that all The best Turkish Cigarettes made. of the best things in the storehouse First National Bank Plain and Cork Tips. If your dealer of humε.nitv, e'~er, thing, in fact, of does not keep them send 25 cents excellence which now distinguishes CORNELL LIBRARY BUILDING for box oί 10 or $L2\ a 1000. the life of mankind from the exist- Capital, Surplus & Stockholders' Liability ence of the lower anim.-.ls, is due to $600,000 Dabs Cigarette Co., somebody's toil, to somebody's fore- 546 FIFTH AVE., NEW YORK thought, to somebod 's sympathy, to London, 418 Strand. Paris, 19 Ave. Victor Hugo somebody's sacrifice. We of this C. H. HOWES ART GA LI.KKY generation have entered upon an in- Athletic Photographer for all See The New Styles heritance which millions of our fel- Cornell Teams etc. low mortals in this and bygone ages The Quality that Sells have planned and labored diligently Studio. 138 and 140 East State Street Look at the Shoes in our window and nobly to produce. If we are only Bell Phone - - Ithaca consumers and not producers, then STATE STREET are we but spendthrift heirs, weak- ened, demoralized and cursed by the The College Ian treasures which we squander for self- appreciates Spilman Mixture, ish ends. When, however, we recog- the smoking tobacco "without nize thr/t we have duties toward all a bite or a regret," because it Smith & Rorapaugh our fellows and that all our acts is the best smoke in the world. should contribute to their advantage Absolutely pure natural flavor as well as to our own, then only are TAILORS we entitled to be classed with the up- building forces of civilization, to be numbered among the friends of SMOKING 9 TOBACCC 420 Eddy Next to Campus Gate )% oz. 40c; 3^ oz. 75c, y Ib. $1.65, 1 lb. hum nit', and to be admitted to the 2 $3.30. A k for free booklet " How to Smoke a pr'~"ilexes of fellowship and commun- Pipe." hor sale by Univesrsity Smoke Shops ion with the choicest spirits of all Co., and other leading dealers. the ages- The sweat shop, the slums, E. HOFFMAN COMPANY, Mf-s., Chicago child labor, yellow journalism, dem- agogism, anarchism, food adultera- Revised Tariff of Rates at the Yates Syracuse, N. Y.—Beginning Sept. 1, 1910 DIEGES & CLUST tion, commercial dishonesty, ring "IF WE MADE IT, ITS RIGHT" AMERICAN PLAN RATES rule, the corrupt political boss, saloon Rooms, \\ iτhout Bath $.300 and upward per day Official Jewelers of the Leading Colleges. Rooms, With Bath $3.50 and upward per day Schools and Associations. domination, the scourge of tubercu- 75 Sample Rooms ...$3.00 to $4.00 per day Class Pins, Fraternity Pins, Medals, Cups, losis— these are a few of the many EUROPEAN PLAN RATES etc., Watches, Diamonds, Jewelry. Rooms, Without Bath $1.00 and upward per day great evils against which the valiant Rooms, With Bath $1.50 and upward prrday 20 John Street, New York. and true in this day and generation must wage unceasing warfare. The East Hillians Should Order Their Coal From the college man, above all others, owes it to himself to be a force for civic EAST HILL COAL YARDS righteousness. Freely has he received and not ask horses to haul the heavy loads up the hill. from private benevolence and also ! GOOD COAL AND GOOD SERVICK. from the st te, °nd freely should he Bell phone-36ί Ithaca phone-755 FRANKLIN C. CORNELL.

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give in return A Galilean peasant it may be driven from the doors of J. G. White & Co. Inc. over eighteen hundred years ago stat- both. Physical health is an aid to ed tersely a profound truth which we happiness, but cannot alone produce Engineers, Contractors may do well to ponder, "Whosoever it. Rest and recreation are valuable will be chief among you, let him be assistants. A life of integrity, kind- 43-49 Exchange Place NEW YORK your servant." ness and active, congenial usefulness Chicago, 111. - San Francisco, Cal. Next in order, as a prize worthy of and progress is its best guarantor. every man's ambition, I name happi- The sights and sounds of nature, to Engineering Construction , ness, and I make bold to declare that the appreciative mind, present at- and Operation of it is within his reach, if not already tractions that are ever fresh, new actually in his grasp. Within certain and satisfying. Every honorable man Electric Eailways, Electric Lighting Systems. limits, it is a matter of philosophy will find his happiness increased if **ydraulic and Steam Power Plants, Water and choice. Not all conditions in this he be married to some woman whom Works, Gas Works, Irrigation Systems, etc. world are ideal, and a man must train Reports Made for Financial Institutions and Investorβ, he loves and who also loves him and his mind to dwell on what is bright who is possessed of those qualities and cheerful and to refuse to brood London Correspondent: which, without stopping to enumer- over what is dark and depressing. ate separately, we may designate as J. G. WHITE & CO. Let me, before I proceed further, 9 Cloak Lane, Cannon St., E. C. clear away a possible misconception. beauties of mind and beauties of Mere self-indulgence or pleasure pur- heart. A home may be and ought to sued as an end without regard to be the happiest and dearest place on OWNERS OF AUTOMOBILE^, TAKE duty is not happiness, for such pleas- earth- Worthy friends also reveal to NOTICE. ure is only a temporary gratification us the truth that there is a golden The Boston Fire Insurance Company writes obtained by robbing one's self of his age here and now. one of the best automobile fire insurance policies on the market; one that covers the machine any- best assets, and always bringing deg- I have already, in speaking of where in the United States and Canada, against radation, sorrow and evil in its train. knowledge, mentioned the desirability loss by fire, arising from any cause whatever, in- On the contrary, happiness may be of avocations. Let me here add that cluding explosion, self -ignition, lightning; with no a permanent state and its attainment some avocations afford possibilities of limit or restriction as to use and storage of gaso- calls for a respect for the rights of line. For full particulars, inquire of enjoyment which we can never ex- ITHACA REALTY COMPANY, others and imposes self-control and haust. There are fully ten thousand a recognition of the moral order. Hap- REAL ESTATE AND INSURANCE. men who have been great factors in piness is the freedom obtained by the affairs of this globe and whose escaping fjrom the tyranny of desires lives, writings or achievements can A. G. Spalding & Bros. and passions. Happiness results entertain and instruct us. In the from governing one's self in accord- vegetable kingdom over 190,000 are the largest manu- ance with the highest law. Thrice species have been discovered, while The facturers in the blessed is he whose daily companions in the animal kingdom over 600,000 are work, hope and love. Happiness world of species, each having its own interest- may exist in spite of untoward cir- ing life and peculiarities, are known Spalding cumstances. It will be found under to exist. The charms and possibilities certain conditions in the palaces of of music are infinite. New composers Official the rich or the cottages of the poor, or Trade - Mark are from time to time appearing Equipment

FOR ALL| WE HAVE IN STOCK ATHLETIC TEN DIFFERENT SLIDE RULES- SPORTS from the 5" Manheim to the 20". AND The new Duplex and Log Log Rules at $5.00, $6.00 and $8.00 are known through- PASTIMES; the favorites now and have many more graduations than the old ones. On out the world I f \/ are inter- the new Log Log ($8.00) any root or power of any quantity up to 22000 It YOU estedin II 1 UU Athletic may be determined by direct operation at one setting of the slide. Guarantee of Sport you should have a copy of the Spalding Catalogue. Quality It's a complete encyclopedia We will send this on approval to any old grad. o/WHAΓS NEW IN SPORT and is sent free on request. The Corner Bookstores, A. G. Spalding & Bros. ITHACA, NEW YORK. BUFFALO NEW YORK SYRACUSE

READERS WILL PLBASB MBNTION TH1 ALUMNI N1W8 WHIN WKITIN TO ADTMtTIβBRβ. CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS 45

whose creations we may safely LEGAL DIRECTORY. prophecy will one day be ranked with those oif Beethoven, Mozart, Handel, BOSTON, MASS. NEW \ORK CITY. Wagner, Verdi Mendelssohn, Chopin, JAMES P. MAGENIS. DAVID PAINE, Attorney at Law, Counsellor at Law, Boito, Mascagni, Puccini, and others 801-804 Tremont Building. 31 Nassau Street, who have given to posterity as well Notary Public. as to their contemporaries unfailing BOSTON, MASS. WARREN G. OGDEN Όl, NEW YORK CITY. fountains of enjoyment and inspira- Counsellor at Law, CHARLES A. TAUSSIG, Patents. A. B. '02, LL.B. Harvard, '05, tion. Architects, sculptors and paint- PHILLIPS. VAN EVEREN & FISH, 220 Broadway, ers have produced masterpieces which 53 State Street Telephone 3885 Coitland. General Practice.

are the wonder of the world and BOSTON, MASS. PHILADELPHIA, PA. which will make glad the heart of HORACE VAN EVEREN '91, BENJAMIN O. FRICK '02, Counsellor at Law, Attorney-at-Law, man as long as the human race shall 53 State Street. 1335 Land Title Bldg., Broad and Chestnut.Sts. exist. 'Phone Spruce 2471. BROOKLYN, N, Y. MARK RUDICH, LL.B. '06, ROCHESTER, N. Y. CORNELL ALUMNI NOTES. Attorney at Law. SIMON L. ADLER, '92.—William L. Dickerson an- Specialty, Collections in New York City and Attorney and Counsellor at Law. vrcinity. 227-229 Granite Building. nounces that he has opened an αffice 26 Court Street. for the general practice of law at BUFFALO, N. Y, SEATTLE, WASH. Rooms 14 and 15, Corwin Block, Mid- HARRY L. NUESE '06 ALBERT H. BEEBE Όl, dletown, N. Y., with a branch office Attorney at Law. Attorney at Law^. Specialty, Recovery and Adjustment of claims 710 Central Building? in Western New York. in Montgomery, N. Y. 612-613 Mutual Life Building, '94.—A son was born to Mr. and SYRACUSE, N. Y CLEVELAND, OHIO. FOWLER. CROUCH & VANN, Mrs. William H. Hapgood on October Attorneys and Counsellors at Law, HERBERT W. BELL '94. 504-506 Dillaye Memorial Bldg. 11 at Wallingford, Conn. Attorney and Counsellor at Law, ALBERT P. FOWLER '91. LEONARD C. CROUCH. '80 '94, A. B.—J. B. Landfield contrib- 1106-7-8 Williamson Building. IRVING D. VANN, Yale '97. uted to the August 27 number of the CLEVELAND, OHIO. WASHINGTON, D. C. Mining and Scientific Press of San CURT B. MUELLER, '05, A. B., LL. B., M,P. L, THEODORE K. BRYANT, '97, '98. M. P. L., G. W. U. '08. Francisco an article on Far Eastern Patents and Patent Causes. U. S. and Foreign Patents and Trade-Marks. politics and the mining industry. Century Bldg. 308-9-10 Ouray Bldg. '01, A. B.—John S. Gay, of Seneca NEW YORK CITY. Falls, N. Y., is the Republican can- DON R. ALMY, A. B. '97; LL. B. '98. WASHINGTON, D. C. Attorney at Law. DELBERT H. DECKER '84, didate for district attorney of Seneca Specialty. Trials in Courts of Record. Patent Law, 68 William Street. 900 F St., N. W. County. Associated with OINEY (Harvard '64) & COMSTOCK Trade-marks, Labels, Copyrights. (Princeton '79). '95.—Captain James Brady Mitch- ell is now on duty with the Coast Artillery Corps, State of New York, as instructor, lhaving been relieved from command of the 82d Company, Quickest and Best Way Coast Artillery Corps, at Fort Totten, N. Y. His present address is 12 between Fifth avenue, New York City. '96, B. S.—A daughter was born NEW YORK and ITHACA ΌΠ October 2 to Mr. and Mrs. Edward Held Wilson (Eva Capron 196) of SLEEPING CARS BOTH WAYS EVERY DAY. 21 VanBuren street, Brooklyn, N. Y. FAST SERVICE. NO EXCESS FARES. She has been named Janet. '96, Ph. B.; '00, Ph. D.—Charles H. E. J. Quackenbush, D.P.A., .... Buffalo, N. Y Rammelkamp, president of Illinois College, was recently appointed by Governor Deneen a member of the DRAWING INKS ETERNAL WRITING INK board of trustees of the State His- ENGROSSING INK torical Library of Illinois. TAURINE MUCILAGE s PHOTO MOUNTER PASTE '97, LL.B.—State Commissioner of HIGGINS' \ DRAWING BOARD PASTE I LIQUID PASTE Labor John Williams has appointed ff OFFICE PASTE Frences A. Kellor of New York to ^ VEGETABLE GLUE, ETC. the office of chief investigator in his ARE THE FINEST AND BEST INKS AND ADHESIVES department. Miss Kellor is to have Emancipate yourself from the use of corrosive and ill-smelling inks and ad- entire charge of the new bureau of hesives and adopt the Higgins' Inks and Adhesives. They will be a revela- industries and immigration created tion to you, they are so sweet, clean and well put up and withal so efficient. At Dealers Generally by the Legislature last winter. Com- Branches: missioner Williams said that he had CHAS. M. HIGGINS & CO., Mfrs. Chicago, London selected Miss Kellor because of her 217 NINTH STREET, BROOKLYN, N. Y.

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familiarity with the problems com- home address to 740 Rugby Road, John Chatiΐίon & Sons mitted to the bureau. She was ap- Brooklyn, N. Y. pointed by Governor Hughes a mem- '99, A. B.—Frederick A. Cleveland 85,-93 CLIFF ST., NEW YORK CITY ber of the state commission which in- is a graduate student in Harvard vestigated immigration in all its as- Manufacturers of University. His address is 12 Scott pects two years ago. street, Cambridge, Mass. '97, A. B.; '09, LL. B.—Herman J. '99, B. S.—W. D. Gerken has. be- Spring Scales Westwood '97 and Louis G. Monroe come a member of the faculty ©f '09 have formed a partnership for the the Peekskill Military Academy, for weighing, assorting, counting, multiply- general practice of law, with offices Peekskill, N. Y. ing, estimating, measuring, testing at the city hall in Fredonia, N. Y., '00,* B. S.—John Ihlder, late of and for various other purposes. under the firm name of Westwood & Grand Rapids, Mich., has become Monroe. Field Secretary of the National '97, M. E.—Since completing the Housing Association, with headquart- construction of the head works of ers at 105 East Twenty-second street, the Canal Canedo for the Sinaloa New York City. His home address Carr & Stoddard Land Company, Sterling C Lines has is 99 Claremont avenue. JftCr. Stoddard was formerly with Mr. Qriffin joined Nelson Rhoades, jr., and as- Όl—Edmund C. King, formerly of sociates in the purchase of the large We carry a carefully selected Toledo, Ohio, and late of Portland, property of the Almada Sugar Re- line of cloths and will be Oregon, was married on October 8 fineries Company at Navolato, Sina- pleased to see our old friends to Miss Julia Dent Grant, a daughter loa, Mexico, and is acting as assistant and also make new ones by of Ulysses S. Grant of San Diego, general manager in the development work at reasonable prices. Cal., and granddaughter of the for- of the property. mer President. The wedding cere- Corner Aurora and Seneca Streets '98, M. E.—W. W. Macon, editor mony was performed at the home of a of the Metal Worker, has changed his great-aunt of the bride, Mrs. A. H. Wood, in Adrian, Mich. Mr. and Mrs. King will be at home after December 1 in San Francisco. Όl—Among the special deputy At- torneys-General who have been named by Attorney-General Edward R. O'- Malley '91 to operate in the metro- If You Require Clothes politan elections district in connec- tion with the state supervisor of elec- that fit your figure and personalia tions in his work of detecting and and that are as good and distil prosecuting violations of the election law this fall are Walter Mo.Tat '01, tive as they can possibly be made, William W. Pellet '01 and Clarence H. Fay Όl.. Have Us Tailor Them to your individual measure, as you want them, according to the fash- Huyler's Candies

ion prevailing the day you order. Ithaca Agency at Christiance- Dudley Pharmacy $25 to $50 COPYRIGHT BY ED. V. PAICE & CO. J. WILL TREE Bookbinder 111 North Tioga Street

Largest tailors in the world o f GOOD made -to - order clothes ITHACA COLD STORAGE Price Building Chicago J. W. Hook Oar local representative will show you oar new Fall Woolens and Fashions Fruit, Produce, Butter and Eggs. and take your measure. If you don't know him, ask us his name and address 13. 115 South Tioga Street. IthacajN. Y.

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'03, £. B.; '05, LL. B.—William J. ed his address to 174 West Eighty- '09, A. B.—George S. Gleason is Warner is coaching the football team ninth street, New York. teaching in Lake Placid, N. Y. of the University of Oregon, Eugene, '07, M. E.—Henry A. Heine's ad- Ore. dress is 169 Cleveland street, Orange, '09, C. E.—The address of W. R. N. J. Ourand has been changed to 1275 '04, A. B'.—C. J. Swan's address Old Colony Building, Chicago. now is 1136 East Forty-seventh '08, C. E. —Horace S. Griswold, street, Chicago. after a course of graduate study at '09, C. E.—J. R. Haswell, Assistant the Massachusetts Institute of Tech- '05, A. B.—The address of LeGrand Drainage Engineer, United States nology in the subject of sanitary Chase is 662 Water street, Indiana, Department of Agriculture, is spend- science and public health, has be- Pa. ing his annual leave in Ithaca, and is come a member of the staff of in- registered as a special student in the '05.—Warren E. Schutt, who was struction in the department of civil College of Agriculture, where he is a Rhodes scholar at Oxford, has been engineering of the University of studying the drainage properties of appointed United States Vice- Consul California, Berkeley, Cal. soils. at Naples, Italy, and sailed from New '08, M. E.—Herbert L. Trube is '09, A. B.—Lawrence G. Bennett's York last Saturday. in the Efficiency Bureau of the Cur- address this year is 28 Winthrop Hall, '05, M. E.—A. B. Hoffman, former- tis Publishing Company, Philadelphia, ly with the Gray National Telauto- Pa. Cambridge, Mass. graph Company at St. Louis, is now '08, A. B.—Mabel Rollins has left ΊO, M. E.—The address of A. C. district manager of an office which the fashion department of the But- Hastings, jr., is 16 Maple street, the Wagner Electric Manufacturing terick Publishing Company to accept Hudson Falls, N. Y. Company of St. Louis recently opened the position of Junior Editor with ΊO, M. E.—George M. Colgate's ad- at 510 Union Trust Building, Detroit, the Pictorial Review Company. Her dress is 509 Erie avenue, Niagara Mich. home address has been changed to Falls, N. Y. '06, D. V. M.—A daughter, who has 18 Prospect avenue, Richmond Hill, Ί0 A. B.—Stanton Griffis is man- been named Doris Isabel, was born L. I. ? ager and part owner of an apple on September 7 to Dr. and Mrs. R. '09, A. B.—S. S. Bullen is a student J. Stafford of 1227 Decatur street, and pear orchard at Medford, Ore- in the Cornell University Medical gon. N. W., Washington, D. C. College and lives at 201 East Thir- '06, C. E.—Bevan Jones has chang- tieth street, New York. Ί0, B. S. A.—Morris C. Oldham's

When Arranging a Party Secure The Log Cabin Room -AT— The Brunswick Cafe A. W. MAC NEIL, Proprietor. Entirely new and original. Drop in and see it. It will please you. We also announce the opening of our Billiard and Pool Room Most completely equipped in Ithaca. New Tables. Well lighted, ίj Especial attention is given to banquet parties both large and small. Stop in any time and your wants will be catered to. Brunswick Cafe A. W. MacNeil (Formerly Zinck's.)

READERS WILL PLEASE MENTION TH1 ALUMNI NEWS WHIN WRITING TO ADVERTISERS. 48 CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS Rents collected when due. Remit- address is 619 East High street, ΊO, C. E.—F. J. Shuttleworth's ad- tances promptly made. Why worry and lose? We manage private and business Springfield, Ohio. dress is 18 Federal Building, Albany, property, investments and estates. We buy, sell and rent property. 10, M. E.—Harold W. Moffat is N. Y. If interested, write, wire or call on located at Sparrow's Point, Md. ΊO, LL. B. GEORGE S. TARBELL LAW and REAL ESTATE '10, Ph. D.—Leonard Haseman and Thomas G. Durkan is with Olney & Trust Co. Building - - - Ithaca, N. Y. Mrs. Haseman (Elosia B. Fish, A. B. Comstock, 68 William street, New York. ΊO) live at Couzins and Anthony New Edition: SONGS OF CORNELL J. L. Miner is with Powers, Kaplan streets, Columbia, Mo. Dr. Haseman Mixed Voices, Piano Accompani- is instructor in entomology in the & Rabenold, Tribune Building, New ment, containing all the late songs. University of Missouri. York. Price $1.50. Postpaid$1.65. D. B. Wyckoίf is doing editorial ΊO, B. S. A.—William H. Marcus- work for the American Law Book Lent's Music Store sen is with the Lederle Laboratories, Company, 60 Wall street, New York. 122 N. Aurora St.- 39 West Thirty-eighth street, New H. T. Edwards is with Jerome & York. Rand, 37 Wall street, New York. Shirt Maker ΊO, B. S. A.—Frank W. Messing H. M. Haverbeck is with George A. is with the Queen City Dairy Com- Blauvelt '90, 147 Nassau street, New pany, Buffalo, N. Y. York. Prices G. H. Jamison is in the New York ΊO, M. E.—Percy J. Taylor's ad- office of the State Commissioner of $1.50 to $3.00 dress is 1825 Lee avenue, Louisville, Insurance. Ky. He is with the Kentucky & Fit and Workmanship the Best E. R. Shepard is with John Scan- Indiana Bridge and Railroad Com- Write for samples and pany. Ion, Cohoes, N. Y. G. D. Webster is with Charles H. measurement blanks ΊO, C. E.—H T. Critchlow is now Knipp, Elmira, N Y. CLARENCE E. HEAD district hydrographer at Gatun, in the S. S. Rolph is with Carl Smith, 210 E. Seneca St. Ithaca, N. Y. Canal Zone. Hilo, Hawaiian Islands. Todd's Pharmacy always has been, is now and will con- tinue to be a synonym for reliability in anything a new or old student needs Aurora Street

Do You Use Press Clippings? " We make your linen live." It will more than pay you to secure our extensive service covering" all subjects, trade and personal, and get the benefit of the best and most Modern Method Laundry systematic reading of all papers and periodicals, here and abroad, at min- imum cost. Why miss taking ad- vantage for obtaining the best possi- 210 East Seneca Street ble service in your lira? Our service is taken by all progress- ive business men, publishers, authors, collectors, etc., and is the card index John Reamer, Proprietor for securing what you need, as every article of interest is at your daily command. Write for terms, or send your or- der for 100 clippings at $5 or 1,000 clippings at $35. Special rates quoted for large orders. The Manhattan Press Clipping Bureau Cambridge Building, 334 5th Ave., cor. 33d St.' Arthur Cassot, Proprietor. Established in 1888 New Yor;: City.

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