Vol. XXV, No. 6 [PRICE TWELVE CENTS] NOVEMBEB 2, 1922

Soccer Team Defeats Princeton, Last Year's Champions, 1 to 0

One Fraudulent Cornellian Safe in Penitentiary for This Year

New East Ithaca Heating Plant to Be Most Extensive in World

"Dixie"Manuscriρt Promised Cornell by Charles W Curtis '88

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

NOTICE TO EMPLOYERS HEMPHILL, NOYES &S CO The Cornell Society of Engineers 37 Wall Street, New York Trustee Executor maintains a Committee of Employ- Investment Securities ment for Cornell graduates. Em- Philadelphia Albany Boston Baltimore "For the purpose of accommodat- ployers are invited to consult this Bridgeport Syracuse Scranton Committee without charge when in Pittsburgh Los Angeles ing the citizens of the state" need of Civil or Mechanical Engi- Jansen Noyes '10 neers, Draftsmen, Estimaters, Sales Chartered 1822 Engineers, Construction Forces, Charles E. Gardner etc. 19 West 44th Street, New York Stanton Griffis ΊO City Room 817—Phone Vander- Harold C. Strong bilt 2865 Clifford Hemphill C. M. CHUCKROW, Chairman Member New York Stock Exchange Farmers' Loan and Trust Cascadilla School GRADUATES GO TO CORNELL Company Ithaca College Preparatory School A High-Grade Boarding School for Boys New York Trust Company Summer School July to September, especially for Col- lege and University Entrance No. 16-22 WilliamStreet Examinations Branch: 475 Fifth Ave. Special Tutoring School at 41st Street Assets Over Private Instruction in Any Subject Throughout the Year Three Million Dollars Letters of Credit Trustees Foreign Exchange F. C. Cornell Ernest Blaker C. D. Bostwick Cable Transfers Our 1922-23 Catalog will appeal to that President Charles E. Treman schoolboy you are trying to Adminstrator Guardian Vice-Pres Franklin C. Cornell interest in Cornell A postal will bring it. Vice-Pres. and Sec, W. H. Storms Member Federal Reserve Bank and New Treasurer. Sherman Peer The Cascadilla Schools York Clearing House Ithaca, N. Y.

Another Old Landmark Gone Stop Over at

Martin Gibbons has removed the Ithaca iron bound porch (bucket gone long ago) from over the entrance of the is permitted by the Lehigh Valley Railroad on practically all Senate. This porch has been the tickets. Cornel] ians travelling between New York or Phila- stage of many impromptu coming- delphia and Chicago can, by reason of the Lehigh Valley's outs of tragedians who have made service, take advantage of this without loss of additional a great success on the stage of life, business time, as shown by the following schedule: to say nothing of the amusement (Daily) (Daily) they have afforded the multitude in Westward Eastward the street below. Kid Kugler will 8:10 P. M. Lv New York (PENN. STA.) Ar. 8:26 A. M. 8:40 P. M. Lv. ... Philadelphia (Reading Term'l) Ar. 7:49 A. M. have to hunt up a new opera house. (a) 4:37 A. M. Ar Ithaca (b) Lv. 11:40 P. M. You delinquents will have to hurry 4:53 P. M. Lv Ithaca Ar. 12:37 Noon up and come back if you want to 8:25 A. M. Ar Chicago (M.C.R.R.) Lv. 3:00 P. M. see the few landmarks left, or visit e .jNew York to IthacItha a Chicago to Ithaca bleepersWnίn Sleepers j us up in the Forests of Stores. Fash- j Ithaca to Chicago Ithaca to New York ion still requires the wearing of (a) Sleeper may be occupied at Ithaca until 8:00 A. M. shirts. I am making them for $4.00 (b) Sleeper ready for occupancy at 9:00 P. M. up, $22.50 up for the usual half- PENNSYLVANIA STATION—the Lehigh Valley's New York Passenger dozen. Buy a postal and write for Terminal—is in the heart of the city, convenient to everywhere. samples this day. Be sure your next ticket reads via Lehigh Valley. Your stop over arrange- ment can be made with the conductor. L. C. Bement Leliig Railroad The Toggery Shop The Route of The Black Diamond Hurry up, I'll soon be Emeritus. CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS VOL. XXV, No. 6 ITHACA, N. Y., NOVEMBER 2, 1922 PRICE 12 CENTS

N AUTOMOBILE census of the of the new Chemistry Building is almost ments and the meats will be cooked as Campus, probably not wholly con- as conspicuous as the great bulk of the whole carcasses over open fires. Students Aclusive, indicates that there is one State Drill Hall. ' from the South, where they have had ex- automobile to every twenty-five students, perience in such things, are in demand in EDWIN SHEVLIN, formerly boxing in- as compared to one for every thirty-two making the preparations and in carrying structor at Cornell and now welterweight last year. Of these cars, 124 are owned by out the plans. champion of New England, spent one fraternity men, four by women, and the week in Ithaca as the guest of John J. CHEMISTRY STUDENTS held their annual rest by independents. As to makes, 117 Fallon, present boxing coach, and helped get-together in Barnes Hall on October 24. Fords, in all stages of variation and camou- to increase the interest in boxing at the Herman F. Spahn '23, of Pleasantville, flage, from the conventional sedan to the University. Coach Fallon now has about N. Y., president of the Chemistry Associa- piratic sardine-carriage; Buicks and seventy-five men under his charge. tion, presided at the meeting, which was Dodges come next in the order named. attended by more than two hundred stu- Some cars are such mongrel or hybrid THE CROSS COUNTRY CLUB is financing dents in chemistry. products of the junk heap that they are itself by the sale of tags on the Campus. beyond indentification. These figures are The proceeds of the sale are to be applied A CHEERING SECTION is an experiment presented as supplementary to those giv- in part to the purchase of trophy cups as which the Graduate Manager is trying out en by Romeyn Berry in his " Stuff" prizes to the winners of the novice and for the Columbia on November 4. of two weeks ago, and with the general freshman cross country series; in part to Section F of the east stand has been re- statement that Rym's abilities as a sending a man to look over in advance the served for male members of the Athletic statistician are only exceeded by his courses on which Cornell is scheduled to Association, from which cheering in its talents as a commentator. run; part to be held as a reserve fund sublimated form may be expected. against the possibility of sending another A GREY FOX, rare visitor from the team to England. SENIOR OFFICERS of the Student Coun- South, was recently shot at Taughannock. cil were elected October 24, on a total vote The first record of an animal of this species THE DRAMATIC CLUB began its acti- usually high. Ernest D. Leet, of James- in the neighborhood of Ithaca was of one vities of the year by presenting in the town, N. Y. editorial director of the Sun, killed at West Danby about twelve years Campus Theatre, on October 20 and 21, was elected president. Arthur B. Treman ago. three one-act plays; "Exiled" by Arthur of Ithaca was elected secretary, and Leo- THE SAGE CHAPEL Preacher for Novem- Doyle; "Out of the Night" by John Smith nard C. Hanson of Veblen, S. D. was ber 5 will be the Rev. Dr. George B. (pseudonym); and "Jilted" by Mayer chosen treasurer. Portner. Cutten, Baptist, president of Colgate THE FENCING CLUB gave a dance at the University. "ANDROCLES AND THE LION" is to be Delta Upsilon Lodge on October 26, the CHRISTOPHER ST. CLAIRE, of Mineville, presented by the Women's Dramatic Club proceeds of which are to be applied to Pa., will speak before the Current Events this term. As a preliminary, Professor providing equipment for the Club this Forum on November 5 on "The Miners Martin Sampson read the Shaw play to year, and furthering its interests in the and the Community." the prospective members of the cast. world of sport. THE STOCK JUDGING TEAM from Cornell THE C. U. C. A. is offering courses in PASSING THE HAT at the New Hamp- placed ninth among twenty colleges at its department of religious education in shire and Colgate , to provide money the National Dairy Show at St. Paul, advance of anything done in previous for sending the Band to the Dartmouth Minnesota, recently. Richard S. Baker years. These include a course for fresh- game in New York, netted slightly over '23 made the highest score of the team, men on "The Life of Christ"; "An Out- $1,000. Any remainder of the fund, after and placed fourth in individual rating. line of Old Testament History"; "Ten its purpose has been accomplished, will THE BERRY PATCH, the "colyum" of Fundamental Questions about Religion"; be used for sending scrubs to the Penn- the Sun, is having difficulty in getting con- "Vocational Problems"; "Christ in the sylvania game, and for providing mega- tributions of the right sort, if one may Life of To-day"; and "The Social Prin- phones and insignia for the cheer-leaders. ciples of Jesus." The committee on re- judge by the appeal it is making to induce THE SON of the sculptor of the statue ligious education, of which R. N. Chase the students to contribute. of Ezra Cornell is working his way in the '23, of Garden City, N. Y., is chairman, CHEER LEADERS, who have been prac- University, and among his other jobs is is arranging for a series of discussion ticing acrobatics in the Gymnasium for that of tending furnaces on South Hill. groups to be held in dormitories, frater- the past two weeks, appeared to advan- His name is Alden McNeil and he is reg nity houses, and rooming houses. tage at the Colgate game, when front and istered as a freshman in the College of back "flips" gave a snappy climax to some IGNACE PADEREWSKI will appear in Architecture; his father, Her mo n A. of the calisthenic leading. concert at Bailey Hall on November 13. McNeil, one of the foremost sculptors of THE FOLLOWING subjects have been He appears under the auspices of the the country, taught in Sibley Gpllege from announced for the Corsoή Browning Prize Ithaca Conservatory of Music, the use of 1886 to I88Q;, and is now teaching in the competition: "Browning's Portrayal of the Hill auditorium having been granted National Academy of Design in New French Life and Character"; "Browning's by the University authorities because York City. there was no suitable hall available in Interest in Science"; "The Develop- THE BEST STUDENT in New York State, Ithaca. ment of Character in Paracelsus." The if Regents' marks are a sound criterion, essays are due on April 15. A BARBECUE, of the real old-fashioned Miss Ella H. Sullivan, of Amsterdam, has THE SMOKESTACK of the new heating kind, is to be held by by the students and entered Cornell on a State scholarship. plant has superseded the Library Tower Faculty of the College of Agriculture, Miss Sullivan made an average of 98.56 as the dominant architectural feature of November 14. The viands for the feast on her college entrance certificate; she the Hill. And from West Hill the facade will be furnished by the various depart- intends to study for a career in journalism, 78 CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS

CONVENTION STATISTICS the architect responsible only for the CORNELLIANS AT CALIFORNIA An analysis of the registration figures artistic and embellishment features and Cornell had four representatives on at the alumni Convention in Pittsburgh leaving the sole charge of the develop- the program of the dedication of the two weeks ago shows that the total re- ment to the engineer. new Dairy Industry and Horticultural gistration was 393, of whom 379 were Buildings at the branch College of Agri- Cornellians. Eighteen were women. THE MANUSCRIPT OF DIXIE culture of the University of California at The oldest class represented was '72, Editor, THE ALUMNI NEWS: Davis on October 24. George W. Luce of that class winning the That article in your issue of October 5 Dean Thomas Forsyth Hunt of the hand embroidered earmuffs. Every class concerning the gift of the "original manu- California College of Agriculture, who thereafter was represented with the ex- script" of "Dixie" requires a little ex- was a member of the staff here frpm 1903 ception of '75, '76, '79, '80, '81, '84, '85, planation, as your correspondent has his to 1907, presided. He introduced Pro- and '86. First honors went to '16 with a facts a trifle mixed. fessor William H. Chandler of the Depart- representation of twenty-three members; ment of Pomology and Vice-Director of ; This is not the original manuscript and i2 was one behind with twenty-two, while Dan Emmett, the composer, who has been Research in the College of Agriculture '14 and '17 had twenty-one each. dead for many years, is not the donor. here, President Raymond A. Pearson '94, Cornellians were present from Delware, president of Iowa State College and I am the present owner of this copy and Illinois, Maryland, Massachusetts, Michi- chairman of the executive committee of I have loaned it for a year to the State gan, Missouri, New Jersey, New York, the Association of Land Grant Colleges, Historical Association of North Carolina. Ohio, Pennsylvania, West Virginia, Wis- and Professor Claude B. Hutchison, M.S. It is now in a glass case in the Hall of consin, and Washington, D. C. '13, who recently left the Department of History in the State Museum at Raleigh, Among the cities Pittsburgh naturally Plant Breeding at Cornell to become di- North Carolina, with a background of led all comers with a registration of 205. rector of the Davis branch of the Cali- some old Confederate flags that saw ser- Cleveland's figure was 22, followed by New fornia College of Agriculture. vice in the Civil War. York with 14, Ithaca with 12, and Chicago Daniel D. Emmett was born in my Director Chandler's subject was "The with 10. father's home town of Mt. Vernon, Ohio, Outlook of Agricultural Research," Presi- and in 1859, while he was with the Bryant's dent Pearson spoke on "Dairy Research ENGINEERS MEET MONDAY Minstrels, he composed this song in New and Education," and Director Hutchison The following announcement of the York. It was first sung in New York in gave an address on "The Functions of an coming annual meeting of the Cornell September, 1859. It was first some twenty Agricultural College." Society of Engineers is from W. W. Macon stanzas long, but only five of these are '98, president of the society. shown in the MS. HEATING PLANT LEADS WORLD The Cornell Society of Engineers will The original manuscript was stolen and By January 1 Cornell expects to have hold its annual meeting at the Cornell so far as I am aware has never been located. in operation the most extensive steam- University Club; 30 West Forty-fourth The copy which I have was made by heating plant in the world. It is fore- Street, New York, on the evening of Emmett many years ago, after he re- most in actual pipe mileage and also in Monday, November 6. At that time I turned to his home, when he was quite an distance from the source to the farthest expect to sing a brief but effective swan old man, at the request of my cousin, edifice served, Prudence Risley Hall, which song and it is understood that I am likely Miss Frances S. Hoey, and was left to gives about two miles of pipe from the to give way to Carroll R. Harding Ίo, me after her death in 1912. Other copies boiler house at East Ithaca. who has served the society well for several have also been written by Emmett, and The old heating plants will be abandon- years as its chief executive officer, ad- one is owned by the Ohio State Histor- ed. These include the University plant on vertising the society and collecting dues. ical Society and I believe there is also a Cascadilla Creek near the Old Armory, As you may know, the organization was copy somewhere in Boston. Another and the plant near Beebe Lake built about originally the Alumni Association of Civil cousin of mine owns Dan Emmett's old ten years ago for the College of Agricul- Engineers, but when the amalgamation of violin. With my copy now in Raleigh ture, and some individual plants, such as the engineering college took place, it there is an excellent photograph of the that in Roberts Hall. It is stated that modified its constitution and by-laws so old man as he appeared in his later years. the new equipment will be thirty per cent that Sibley College men could join with This MS copy, although not the origi- less expensive than the old. it. The result is that there is a member- nal MS, is authentic and will ultimately Four 612-horse-power boilers have been ship of over sixteen hundred and still come to Cornell with some other historical installed in the new brick building at growing. things I now have. East Ithaca, and there is space for ex- It is proposed to limit the necessary Emmett died in Mt. Vernon, O., June pansion with the physical growth of the business of electing officers to the small- 28, 1904. There is a handsome monument University. The building is 118 by 57 est number of minutes consistent with the erected to his memory bearing the in- feet, with a monitor over the firing aisle, use of the steam roller to accept the nomin- scription, "To the memory of Daniel which is about sixty feet above the operat- ating committee's slate. After that we Decatur Emmett, born 1815, died 1904, ing floor. The chimney, of radial brick, shall provide some transition features whose song Dixie-Land inspired the cour- is 225 feet high, and is the dominant verti- between the severity of the business age and devotion of the Southern people cal accent in the Cornell landscape, as session to the freedom of the social and now thrills the hearts of a reunited seen from a distance, superseding the moments of closing. These features will people." Library Tower in this respect. Two include a talk illustrated with lantern The story of how I came to loan this Buffalo fans furnish a forced draft. The photographs, by John H. Lawrence, MS to the State of North Carolina through inside coal hopper has a capacity of seven Sibley '09, of the features of the Hell Gate Colonel F. A. Olds, director of the Hall of hundred tons of barley anthracite coal, power station in New York, for which he History, is a very interesting one but much or approximately enough to operate the was largely responsible, and an argument too long to be incorporated in this letter. plant for a week. Both coal and ashes by Frederick A. Waldron, consulting I am writing this to correct the slight are handled by machinery. Coal from engineer, New York, to the effect that a inaccuracies in your news item and later, the hopper is dumped on an automatic definite tendency is now developing to when I turn this wonderful old song over weighing machine, and is carried to the give to the engineer substantially the to my Alma Mater, I will give its history furnace by bucket elevators, belts, and entire responsibility for some classes of more in detail. conveyors. It is estimated that six men modern architectural engineering under- CHARLES W. CURTIS '88 can operate the plant. takings—a movement calculated to make Rochester, N. Y. Steam leaves the building at 175 pounds CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS 79 pressure through twelve-inch steel pipes released then, he will be on parole to this in special hollow tile filled with asbesto- SPORT STUFF office for fifteen months longer, the bal- sponge insulation. The laterals which ance of his three-year term. enter the buildings are from two to four "I might also state that when he has inches in diameter, and are fitted with The annual pushball game between the served his term on this charge he will be regulating valves which reduce the pres- two underclasses was pushed under the turned over to the authorities in Kings sure to twenty-five pounds. Except cold and cynical autumn moon on Upper county to answer another charge of petit where there is gravity return, electrically Alumni Saturday night. A pushball is larceny, a warrant for which has been filed driven pumps are installed to return the just like a in shape and con- against him at the penitentiary. struction, only it is about seven feet in condensed water in each building to the "So as the case stands at the present surge tanks in the boiler house, where the diameter. Late in the afternoon the chair- man of the committee on arrangements time, nothing will be done until January, water is reheated and again converted 1923." into steam. discovered that the rubber bladder of the only pushball in the State was irremedi- ably worn out and ruined. Being a young ST. LOUIS WOMEN ORGANIZE CORNELLIANS AND ROTARIANS The most recent addition to the list of The Cornell Club of Utica took charge man of resource and decision, he collected feverishly all the old bladders in women's clubs is the Cornell Women's of the Rotary Club meeting in that city Club of St. Louis. Its officers are: presi- on October 27, with the result that the the University and proceeded to blow them up by lung power in a series of ten dent, Mrs. Edmund Fowler Brown usual Rotary meeting place with its 250 (Mary Relihan), B.L. '93, 775 Clara Ave.; chairs was not sufficiently large for the thousand consecutive pouts. The cover of the pushball was in some degree in- secretary treasurer, Mrs. Alexander S. luncheon. Romeyn Berry '04 spoke in Langsdorf '03 (Elsie Hirsch), 1205 Amherst the dual capacity of Cornell alumnus and flated when these small units were at length packed away in its interior and the Place. The first Friday of each month is president of the Rotary Club of Ithaca. the day of the regular meeting. Every A quintet of students was imported from game went on. But the boy fainted four times in the last hour of trial and it will Cornell woman in St. Louis or vicinity is the University for the occasion. Miles invited to the meetings at the College H. Bickelhaupt '03, president of the Cor- be weeks before his face shrinks back to normal and ceases to flap in the breeze. Club House and is urged to send her nell Club of Utica, presided. address to one of the officers, so that she That's the kind of future citizen the The annual dinner of the Cornell may receive monthly notices. University is training up here in the hills— Club of Utica will be held on Monday, dauntless, resourceful, and faithful unto November 27, when President Farrand complete exhaustion. He saw his duty USE MENTAL TESTS will make the principal address. and he did it even though his blood vessels Mentality tests for entering students were about to burst and his eyes to pop in use at Cornell for the past few years STUDENT COUNCIL FUNCTIONS out like grapes under pressure. have shown that freshmen entering the Ernest D. Leet, a senior from James- There is going to be a good party in College of Arts and Sciences have stood town, N. Y., who has just been elected New York on November 10, the eve of highest, with those of the College of president of the Student Council, says the football game with Dartmouth. The Engineering and the College of Archi- that he looks forward to this year as a real Dartmouth and Cornell Musical Clubs are tecture in second and third places re- beginning in student government as an going to give a joint concert at the Hotel spectively. Professor Paul J. Kruse, of influence on the undergraduate body. Pennsylvania followed by a seething Uni- the Department of Rural Education, who He says that the students are learning versity dance. There's a pleasant ad- has charge of the tests, points out that more about the Council, and see in it not vertisement about it somewhere in the definite comparisons may not be deduced a mere honorary organization, but one rear of this paper. There is nothing like from this rating because the tests them- with a purpose not merely to reflect celebrating a football victory together be- selves require knowledge of the implements student opinion, but to guide it as well. fore it happens. Whosoever gets licked of expression as well as knowledge of other The Council, he thinks, is an organization is that much ahead anyway. sorts, and arts students, for example, are for service, as expressed in its constitu- R. B. supposed to have had more practice with tion "to unite more closely undergraduate these implements. He thinks it is pro- interests and activities, to foster a closer DENNY STILL SAFE bable that, potentially, all the colleges relation between students and Faculty, Ransom L. Denny, whose history as a would rate about the same in student to the end that undergraduate affairs may fraudulent Cornellian and arrest in Octo- mentality. be directed more efficiently and with a ber, 1921, have been related in previous The Terman test, somewhat similar to wholesome cooperative spirit." issues of THE ALUMNI NEWS, is safe in the Army intelligence tests, was used this Of definite plans, he looks forward to the penitentiary at least until January, year, and the mark on the test in no wise more democracy and effectiveness in the 1923, according to a letter from the influences a student's entrance, which is appointment of student committees, and secretary of the Parole Commission of based on the usual records and examina- a larger participation in undergraduate the City of New York, from which the tions. However, the information gained duties by a larger number. He wants following is an extract: from the results is used to help the student more undergraduate interest in the pro- "This man was sentenced October 21, during his college career, and in some posed Union, made possible through the 1921, on a charge of petit larcency, ob- degree may be the basis of advice that will donation by Mrs. Willard Straight; a taining $10 from one Carlton P. Johnson keep a student from going along in the old special organization to extend real service by means of a fraudulent check. Our hap-hazard manner. One who is low in and hospitality to visiting teams; and, if investigation shows that there were many the tests, for instance, would be strongly possible, a student representative on the complaints against this man. Small advised against taking extra hours of Faculty Committee on Student Affairs. amounts and bad checks all over the University work. He says that greater interest in the country. His sentence was an indeter- Ultimately, the tests may be the basis Council is shown in the larger number of minate one with a maximum of three of some vocational guidance, and even votes cast in student elections this year years. He was allotted a number of now the statistics derived from them are then in preceding years, and ascribes some marks to earn by the members of this used in research on general educational of that interest to establishment of the Commission, which at the maximum rate problems. The tests form a record for the honor system, with which the Council is of earning per day, he will not be entitled future, not only for educational compari- directly connected, and in which students to parole consideration until he has served sons but for definite suggestions to the are taking an active part. about fifteen months, minimum time. If individual. Professor Kruse says that 80 CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS it is generaly thought that the average member of the Y. M. C. A., and of the mentality of entering students is lower OBITUARY Club. than it was twenty years ago. This may Before the family were ready to come to come about from a number of causes, B. Talworth P. Backhouse '72 America the father was appointed secre- such as a lowering of instruction efficiency tary and representative of the British Benjamin Talworth Paine Backhouse in pre-college education, or a larger pro- Foreign Bible Society for Australia, and came, with his brother, Arthur Burder, portion of the population entering the went to Melbourne instead. This and from England and entered Cornell at the universities. But at any rate, if the tests the burning of their cottage caused the beginning of the spring trimester, April are continued for twenty years, a definite brothers to leave at the end of the year, 1869, in the optional course, remaining statement can be made, and the fact of a in June, 1871, and after a few months until the close of the third college year. higher or lower mentality can then be in England they rejoined the family in He was born in Bolton, England, on proved. Melbourne. January 17, 1850, son of the Rev. Ben- In Australia, Mr. Backhouse was en- jamin and Isabella Caroline Burder Back- CHICAGO OFFICERS gaged in teaching, and for a time was house. The father was a Congregational At the annual meeting of the Cornell professor in Laurenston College, Tasmania, minister, of studious habits, liberal in University Association of Chicago, hejd and at Elstenwick, Melbourne. Having politics, and a great admirer of Cromwell; October 27, the following officers were studied engineering, and being a good the mother was of an old Essex family, elected for the coming year: president, draftsman, he took up architecture and adventurous spirit, and very desirous to Charles C. Whinery '99; vice-president, practiced that profession in Melbourne. give their six sons a broader opportunity Samuel A. Bingham '05; secretary, Lin- About 1890 he became associated with the for success by emigrating to a new country. coln Norcott Hall Ί8; treasurer, Bostford Metropolitan Board of Land and Works The family were considering coming to the B. Young '19; registrar, Frank M. White in Melbourne as inspector of works, and United States, to either Illinois or Iowa, Ίi, directors, James P. Harrold '93 and served in that capacity for many years. Newton C. Farr '09. where several of their acquaintances and friends had settled. At this time they He was married at Berwick, Victoria, happened to see in the England papers a in January, 1885, to Miss Emily AΈecket, CLEVELAND ENTERTAINS FARRAND glowing account of the new university that daughter of Hon. William Arthur Callender One hundred and fifty-odd members of Ezra Cornell had founded. The aims and and Emma Mills AΈecket. The father the Cornell Club of Cleveland turned out advantages of Cornell were fully set forth, was a member of the Legislative Council for luncheon at the Hotel Statler on Mon- especially its liberal allowance of choice of and a son of the first Chief Justice of day, October 16, when President Farrand studies, its advanced position in regard to Victoria. There were seven children of was the guest of honor. "Prexy" told the modern sciences, and the offer of this union: Nigel, Geoffrey, Herbert, the Cleveland alumni that one of the employment which, with the knowledge Isabel, Emma, Ellen, and Rita, all of whom greatest problems facing the University that Goldwin Smith, a prominent Liberal, received a college or professional school was the question of limitation of numbers. had left conservative Oxford to take a pro- education. The sons served in the World He said that the University would act fessor's chair at the new University, so War; Nigel was chaplain all through the only after the most careful consideration appealed to Talworth and his brother Palestine campaign, and is now chaplain of the situation in every detail. Arthur that they decided to leave England, on board the ship Sidney, which sunk "Bob" North and "Joe" Harris staged as soon as they could arrange to do so, and the German raider the Embden; Geoffrey a debate as to how "Joe" missed the boat enter Cornell, where they could materially served as yeoman with the heavy artillery ride at the Pittsburgh Convention. It was advance their education and at the same in France, making the supreme sacrifice a very dry debate and the club knows no time learn something of the American ways at Passchendaele; and Herbert was in the more than it did before it started. Every- of life, while awaiting the coming of the signal service, was present at the landing one of the Cleveland Club at Pittsburgh family. at Gallipoli and all through that campaign, and has the honor to be an "Anzac." He reported "one fine time." Plans are al- During the first summer vacation, was afterwards present at most of the ready under way to charter a boat and with the consent of President White, and battles in which the Australians fought take the whole Cleveland Club to Buffalo the approval of Ezra Cornell, the brothers in France. in 1923. built one of the two-story cottages in the The regular weekly luncheon on October "Grove" and the settlement there, from Our classmate, after a year of failing 12 brought out a large crowd. The lunch- which have gone out some of our most health, had a severe chill followed by eon was a final rally for the Pittsburgh noted Cornell men, was begun. (There pneumonia, from which he died on Octo- Convention. William Ganson Rose, were two cottages built in the "Grove" ber 15, 1921, in Melbourne. His life Western Reserve '01, a well known writer during the summer vacation, 1869, one by was spent on three continents, in each of and speaker of Cleveland, gave an interest- the Backhouse brothers, and the other by which he maintained an honorable and ing talk on conditions in Europe. Mr. two other '72 men, Harrison Clay Colburn upright character. E. V. W. '72 Rose has just returned to this country and Clarence Wellborne Stanton. These Julia Cessna '93 after an extended trip through fifteen cottages were building at the same time, Miss Julia Cessna died at the home of European countries including Turkey, but which was first begun or finished is her brother at Reno, Nevada, on October Greece, Russia, and all parts of Asia Minor. not now certain.) This cottage stood 5, as a result of complications from an Charles De Woody, director of the southeast of the President White house injury received in California about two Cleveland Association for Criminal Jus- and just north of the new Tower Road. It years ago. tice, was the speaker at the regular weekly had four rooms with a lean-to kitchen in Miss Cessna was born on August 10, luncheon of the Cornell Club of Cleveland the rear, and here they lived, letting 1871, the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. W. K. at the Hotel Statler on October 26. He rooms to other '72 men until it was burned Cessna, and was prepared for college at outlined the system of cooperation between on May 13, 1871. the Ithaca High School. She entered the association, the police department, and Talworth Backhouse was fitted in Mill Cornell in 1889 in the course in archi- the courts in the prosecution of criminal High School, Yorkshire, and in the Com- tecture, receiving her degree in due course. cases. Seventy-five members of the club mercial School, Bedford, England. He She continued to live in Ithaca until six were present. specialized in modern languages and the years ago, when she went to live with her sciences, and won the second prize in brother John Randolph Cessna, M.E. THE DEBATING TEAM, chosen as a re- German in the examination at the end of '93, who is a Government draftsman, and sult of try outs held October 19, includes his first trimester, and the second prize who has been stationed at Reno for many twenty-two men. in veterinary science in 1871. He was a years. The remains were cremated. CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS 81

Frank A. Roper Ί5 child-feeding, as consultant of many puted to be a powerful team, a trouncing. Frank Adams Roper died at the Packer organizations and institutions for the care If the Quakers maintain that pace, the Hospital in Sayre, Pa. on October 18, of of children, and as the originator of the Cornell-Pennsylvania game ought to be injuries received on September 10, while formulas for the feeding of children success- well worth seeing. trying to rescue his brother from the fully used in this country and Canada. The scores of the games were: Columbia attack of a Guernsey bull at his farm in At the time of his death he was con- 10; Williams 13; Dartmouth 3, Harvard Nichols, N. Y. His right leg was broken sulting physician of the Willard Parker 12; Pennsylvania 13, Navy 7. in four places, his hip was dislocated, and and Riverside Hospitals, New York; Frosh Eleven Beaten three ribs were broken. He was of splen- Holiday Farm, Rhinebeck; Christs' Hospi- The freshman eleven was no match for did physique, and recovery was expected, tal, Jersey City; and St. Joseph's Hospital, the fast and well trained Kiskiminetas but an abscess developed in the chest, and Yonkers; and was consulting pediatrist to School of Pittsburgh Saturday, the visitors blood poisoning set in. His brother is the Mount Vernon and Flushing Hospitals. winning by a score of 31 to o. still in the hospital, but is recovering. He was a member of the American Medi- Roper was born on February 15, 1893, cal Association, the Academy of Medicine, MARYLAND ELECTS OFFICERS a son of Mr, and Mrs. Frank H. Roper of the Bellevue Hospital Alumni Associa- At the recent meeting of the Cornell Owego. He prepared at the Owego Free tion, and a number of medical associations. University Alumni Association of Mary- Academy, and entered the University in land, the following officers were elected 1911, receiving the degree of B.S. in 1915. for the year; Theodore W. Hacker Ίj, The following year he took graduate work ATHLETICS president; Adrian Hughes '12, vice-presi- in animal husbandry, and received the dent; Ralph Bolgiano '09, secretary and degree of M. S. A. in 1916. He was a The Football Schedule treasurer. member of Theta Alpha. Cornell 55, St. Bonaventure 6. In 1917-18 he was an instructor in Cornell 66, Niagara o. NEXT PITTSBURGH MEETING economics at Harvard, but left to enter Cornell 68, New Hampshire 7. The Cornell University Association of the Service. For the past two years he Cornell 14, Colgate o. Western Pennsylvania will meet in the had been a food economy expert with the November 4, Columbia at Ithaca. Hotel Schenley Grill Room in Pittsburgh tariff commission in Washington, and November 11, Dartmouth at New York. on Saturday, November 4, at 8 p. M. was spending his vacation at his brothers' November 18, Albright at Ithaca. Rodney M. Cornell '09, chairman of the farm in Nichols, N. Y., when he was in- November 30, Pennsylvania at Phila- nominating committee, will present the jured. delphia. slate of officers to be elected for the ensu- He married Miss Sarah Barclay '15, who Defeat Princeton at Soccer ing year. survives him with three small children, The soccer team won an important one but three months old. ITHACA CLUB ELECTS victory Saturday, defeating Princeton by Dr. Joseph E. Winters The Cornell Club of Ithaca held its a score of 1 to o in a close and exciting organization meeting for the year on Octo- Dr. Joseph Edcel Winters, professor game on Alumni Field. As the Tigers won emeritus of diseases of children in the ber 4, when forty members gathered in the the championship last season, the only coffee house at Barnes Hall. Medical College, died at the Hotel team in the league that defeated Cornell, Paul S. Livermore '97 presided. The Vendome in Boston October 4, after a the victory of Coach Bawlf 's proteges puts long illness. evening was devoted to a consideration of them squarely in the running for this the Pittsburgh convention program, and Dr. Winters was born in Minnesink, year's honors. N. Y., on January 11, 1848, the son of the activities of the club in Ithaca. The wind at their backs, Cornell took R. Warren Sailor '07 was elected as the Joseph and Julia Ann Carpenter Winters. the offensive in the first half and at about His parents moved to Oswego, N. Y., delegate to the convention at Pittsburgh, half time a free penalty kick from the with Harold Flack '12 as alternate. Offi- while he was still a youth, and he began twenty-yard line allowed Captain Smith the study of medicine under Dr. George cers of the club were elected as follows: to score the only goal of the game. In president, Luzerne Coville '86; secretary. F. Cady of Nichols, N. Y. He went to the second half Princeton was on the offen- New York in 1869, and continued his pro- Archie M. Palmer Ί8; treasurer, Percy 0, sive but the game fighting defense kept Wood '08. fessional studies in the medical depart- the Tigers from scoring. ment of New York University, graduating in 1872. For a year following his gradua- Opponents Spring Surprises INTERCOLLEGIATE NOTES tion he was an instructor in the university, While Columbia was losing to Williams ONE GIFT to the Indiana University then becoming demonstrator of anatomy, Saturday Dartmouth was putting up a Memorial Fund should be appreciated. from which position he resigned in 1885. great fight against Harvard at Cambridge, Archie Warner, for many years band in- He became house surgeon at Bellevue and Pennsylvania figured in one of the structor and for the last five years chime- Hospital, New York, in 1873, and was great surprises of the day by defeating master at Indiana, will give his salary as successively house physican, assistant and the Navy. chimemaster for the next five years to the pathologist, and assistant to Dr. A. L. The Dartmouth line defense gave Har- fund. When it is understood that the ac- Loomis in teaching hospital diagnosis. In vard a good deal of trouble, but field goals tion of the chime is secured by levers which the summers of 1877 and 1895 he studied and an intercepted forward pass brought must be pulled hard and swiftly to make in hospitals in London and on the Con- victory to the crimson after a stubborn the proper note, it will be seen that this tinent. From 1881 to 1885 he was lecturer battle. A field goal was Dartmouth's means a real contribution. and clinical professor on diseases of only score. The Dartmouth team is VIRGINIA has a plan whereby every children in the medical department of obviously better than last year and ought alumni chapter one-fourth of whose local New York University, resigning to accept to prove a doughty opponent of Cornell alumni are paid-up members of the Alumni a similar professorship in the Cornell at the Grounds, New York, on Association (provided these number at University Medical College, which he Armistice Day. Incidentally it is worth least ten) is entitled to have one appointee held until 1919. noting that Cornell has yet to beat Dart- at the university. Such a scholarship car- He retired from active practice a year mouth on the Polo Grounds. ries with it, for non-Virginians, the re- ago, to travel for his health and since his Apparently thoroughly beaten at the mission of the tuition fee ($160) and half of return from England last June, he had end of the first half, Pennsylvania staged the university fee ($20), and for Virginians, lived at the Vendome. He was nationally a great fighting rally in the third and the remission of the university fee ($10). known as the author of monographs on fourth periods and gave the Navy, re- The scholarships are tenable for one year. 82 CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS

pointed Mr. White to the Board of Trus- tees and since that time he has devoted LITERARY REVIEW himself unceasingly to promote the welfare of the University. Cornell has become Published for the alumni of Cornell Uni- Mr. White's hobby. Scarely a week passes An Interpretation of Italy versity by the Cornel Alumni News Pub- when he does not take a sleeper to Ithaca Italy Old and New. By Elizabeth H. lishing Company, Incorporated. to spend a day or two on the Campus to Published weekly during the college year and Haight, Ph.D. '09, Professor of Latin in monthly in July and August; forty issues annually. help solve some of Cornell's problems. Vassar College. New York. E. P. Dutton Issue No. 1 is published the last Thursday of September. Weekly publication (numbered con- Three years ago he was appointed chair- and Company. 1922. 21.6 cm., pp. xii, 230. secutively) ends the last week in June. Issue No. 40 is published in August and is followed by an man of the Semi-Centennial Endowment Price, $2.50. index of the entire volume, which will be mailed Committees. He moved to Ithaca, bag on request. This is one of the most interesting re- A Pictorial Supplement is issued monthly except and baggage, in the fall of 1919 to work on cords of travel that it has been our good in July and August. this campaign. He was an inspiring fortune to come across. It is a sentimen- Subscription price $4.00 a year, payable in ad- leader and his own personal efforts in- vance. Foreign postage 40 cents a year extra. Single tal journey from start to finish, but with copies twelve cents each. stilled energy and enthusiasm in the the word sentimental used in its best Should a subscriber desire to discontinue his subscription a notice to that effect should be sent in alumni who were working in the campaign sense, and never descending to sentimen- before its expiration. Otherwise it is assumed that and his own contribution set a pace for talism. Miss Haight knows her Baedeker, a continuance of the subscription is desired. those who contributed to the fund The Checks, drafts and orders should be made pay her Italian history, her classics; but she able to Cornell Alumni News. result of this effort under Mr. White's knows also how to travel—with sensi- Correspondence should be addressed— leadership is well known. bility, openness of mind, receptivity. By Cornell Alumni News, Ithaca, N. Y. After a year's trip around the world, Mr. Editor-in-Chief R. W. SAILOR '07 training and taste a classicist, she does not Business Manager E. P. TUTTLE '18 White arrived in Ithaca last July more scorn medieval and modern Italy. The Managing Editor H. A. STEVENSON '19 full of enthusiasm for Cornell than ever, Italy of to-day is as interesting, if not so Circulation Manager GEO. WM. HORTON Associate Editors to find that he had been elected chairman great, as the Italia of Vergil; and DΆn- CLARK S. NORTHUP '93 BRISTOW ADAMS of the important Committee on Buildings nunzio claims attention as well as Catul- ROMEYN BERRY '04 WARREN E. SCHUTT '05 and Grounds of the Board of Trustees and lus, if one is to understand the Italian H. G. STUTZ '07 FOSTER M. COFFIN '12 E. P. TUTTLE '18 FLORENCE J. BAKER president of the Cornellian Council. temperament. News Committee of the Associate Alumni These are now his principal jobs for Cor- The author has traveled far and wide W. W. Macon '98, Chairman nell. Mr. White has never refused an N. H. Noyes '06 J. P. Dods '08 throughout the peninsula. She takes us opportunity to serve his Alma Mater, and Officers of the Cornell Alumni News Publishing not only to Rome and Pompeii but also to Company, Incorporated; John L. Senior, President; no alumnus has ever served her better. Sicily, and Sirmione, and to the haunts of R. W. Sailor, Treasurer; Woodford Patterson, Sec- retary. Office, 123 West State Street, Ithaca, N. Y. No Cornellian who reads what Mr. Ovid at Sulmone, and to Mantua. Every- White has written, and who has contri- where she has a keen eye for color and Member of Alumni Magazines, Associated buted to the support of Cornell through landscape and scenic beauty. But every the Semi-Centennial Endowment or the foot of the country is also a reminder of Printed by the Cornell Publications Printing Co. Cornellian Council, can escape the surge some great event, or character, or historic of pride in what has been accomplished idea. Of Sicily, for example, she says: Entered as Second Class Matter at Ithaca, N. Y. and satisfaction in his or her part in these "What an historical pageant the procession efforts. Nor can the Cornellian who has of occupants would make! Legendary ITHACA, N. Y., NOVEMBER 2, 1922 been unable to render financial assistance Cyclopes and Laestrigonians first, then to Cornell for the past few years escape a those mysterious early peoples, the Sican- feeling of sincere regret that he is not THE PRESIDENT OF THE COUNCIL ians, the Elymi, and the Sicelians, bearing numbered in the growing list of those who The first of the series of articles, "Cor- the long bronze lances now exhibited in are endeavoring to repay their debt to nell To-day and Tomorrow/' appearing the Syracuse Museum, magnificent Greek Alma Mater. in The Cornellian Council Quarterly, is on tyrants, crowned with the laurels of its way to all Cornellians. victories in the great athletic contests of The author of the first article, being FACULTY NOTES Greece, swarthy Phoenician traders, Ro- president of the Council, has modestly man empire-builders, hordes of bar- and, we assume, wisely refused to permit barian Goths, then Byzantine captains, the Quarterly to include a sketch of his life DR. LIVINGSTON FARRAND represented Christian missionaries, Saracen conquer- in a publication for which he is respon- Cornell at the inauguration, on October ors, Norman Kings and Germans, rulers sible, even though each of the succeeding 27, of Dr. Samuel P. Capen as chancellor from Provence and from Aragon, English articles will be thus enriched with a bio- of the University of Buffalo. generals and last Garibaldi and the Thou- sand, marching by in their red shirts. No graphy of the author. PROFESSOR BRISTOW ADAMS is con- wonder that after such a history, Sicily Mr. White has no connection with ducting an evening class in advertising in is bewildering in the multitudinous and THE ALUMNI NEWS that would make it the Ithaca Y. M. C. A. immodest for us to appreciate his work overwhelming impressions she makes." PRESIDENT FARRAND, in the discussion publicly. We take pleasure in presenting, The great poets, whom the author loves on medical education at the recent con- therefore, the sketch that the Quarterly is with a love which is not a pose—Catullus, vocation of the University of the State of forced to omit. Horace, Ovid, Vergil,—are well represented New York, affirmed it to be his opinion J. DuPratt White '91 is a lawyer. He in the volume, and even the reader who that a medical college was an expensive is senior member of the firm of White and knows no Latin will catch something of part of a university, and advised those Case at 14 Wall Street, New York. their spell, the quotations being translated. who have an interest in any university But he is more than a lawyer; he is a "One day and another as out on the point not to encourage its trustees to start a public-spirited citizen with wide interests. of Sirmio I lifted my eyes from Catullus' medical school. For twenty years he was secretary of both poetry to the mountains and the lake, I the New York and New Jersey Palisades PROFESSOR MARTHA VAN RENNSELAER thought oί the great Italians who had been Interstate Park Commissions and on the addressed the women of Corning, N. Y., here: Vergil, listening to Benacus rising death of George W. Perkins two years ago, on October 17, under the joint auspices of with the surf and the roar of the sea, and Mr. White became president of the New the New York State Home Bureau and naming her in the most magnificent praise York Commission. the home economics division of the Corn- of his native land that ever poet wrote. Ten years ago Governor Hughes ap- ing Women's Club. Dante on the Gothic tower, seeing his CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS 83

vision of Italy's future, Garibaldi, halted peared in print: "The Biology of Ephy- In his series on "Poor Boys Who Be- at Salo's curving bay across the lake and dra Subopaca Loew," by Chih Ping '13, came Great," Frederick Houk Law writes allowed no share in the battle of Solferino Ph.D. Ί8, reprinted from the Agricultural in The Brooklun Eagle for October 7 on but biding his time of service for his Experiment Memoirs for November; "The Ezra Cornell. country, Carducci meditating here on Effect of Transpiration on the Absorption "Standard Wiring for Electric Light Catullus and Vergil and Dante and so of Salts by Plants," by Walter Conrad and Power," by Harry C. Cushing, Jr., carrying on the great literary tradition of Mϋnscher, Ph.D. '22, reprinted from The '93, is now in its twenty-eighth year of his race, then DΆnnunzio over at Gardone American Journal of Botany for January. annual publication. It is published in recuperating from the passion for the "The Little Corner Never Conquered: New York by the author, and is a volume great War with which he had fired Italy the Story of the American Red Cross Work of some four hundred pages. and written his finest poems. Sirmio took for Belgium," by Lieutenant Colonel John In The American Historical Review for me near the heart of her greatest sons." Van Schaick, Jr., formerly Red Cross October "Hellenic History" by the late For the traveler of to-day as for Dante, Commissioner in Belgium, is a succinct, in- George W. Bostford, Ph.D. '91, is re- Vergil is still the best guide to the spirit teresting, and valuable account of the viewed by Professor William S. Ferguson, of Italy, ancient and modern. The bees, varied activities of the Red Cross in Bel- A.M. '97, Ph.D. '99, of Harvard, who the small animals, the changes of summer gium for the period between June 12,1917, also reviews Maurice Holleaux's "Rome, and winter, the pageant of war, the splen- and June 30, 1919. Of Homer Folks and la Grece et les Monarchies Hellenisti- dor of Italian tradition and history, all Dr. Farrand the author says: "For organ- ques au Hie Siecle avant J.-C. (272-205)," these are reflected in the pages of the izing ability and all that makes great ex- Paris, 1921. Professor William L. Wester- Mantuan, and these help us to understand ecutives in the field of relief, Folks and mann reviews "A Large Estate in Egypt the phenomena of the modern world. Farrand made records unsurpassed." in the Third Century B. C: a Study in "For Italy to-day Vergil is deeply true in John Ihlder Όo writes in The Survey for Economic History," by Michael Rostov- his songs of an after-war time when the July 15 on "The Government and Hous- tzeff. Professor Theodore F. Collier, people must go back to the land and make ing." Bruno Lasker reviews Kenneth L. Ph.D. '05, of Brown, reviews Gabriel it yield its fruits for the nation, the race Roberts's "Why Europe Leaves Home." Hanotaux's "Histoire de la Nation must increase, Italian unity must be Franchise." Professor Preserved Smith attained by conscious effort, and peace, A report on the fish-producing waters reviews G. Constant's "La Legation du hardly won, must be preserved." of Tompkins County by Professor George Books and Magazine Articles C. Embody, of the College of Agriculture, Cardinale Monone pres ΓEmpereur et le Concile de Trente Avril-Decembre, 1563," In The Nature-Study Review for October has just been published by the State Con- Paris, 1922. "What Really Happened at Robert W. Shufeldt '74 writes on "Con- servation Commission. More than fifty Paris," edited by Colonel House and servation and Nature-Studies in the Public streams are covered, of which about Charles Seymour, is reviewed by Christian Schools of Washington, D. C." Clara I. thirty-five are inhabited by some species Gauss. Professor Arthur C. Howland '93, Thomas '21 describes "The Yellow Lady's of trout. A specially prepared map of the University of Pennsylvania, re- Slipper." Henry N. Klein writes on "The locates each stream, indicates the preferred views Maurice DuWulf's "Philosophy and Pine." Professor W. P. Alexander, of the fish for stocking and places where fish Civilization in the Middle Ages." Pro- Buffalo Museum of Natural History, for- may be easily planted. fessor Walter C. Bronson, A.M. '90, of merly an assistant in nature-study at In School and Society for August 5 Pro- Brown, reviews the abridged edition of Cornell, publishes a poem on" The Honey fessor William C. Bagley, Ph.D. Όo, of "The Cambridge History of American Bee." Columbia, publishes "Educational Deter- Literature," and Gamaliel Bradford's minism Again: a Rejoinder to Professor In The South Atlantic Quarterly for July "American Portraits, 1875-1900." Whipple's Reply." Professor William H. Glasson '96 reviews In The Cornell Era for September 22 Walter Bagehot's "Lombard Street: a John Wendell Bailey Ί6, alumni secre- Archie M. Palmer Ί8 writes on "Your Description of the Money Market," edited tary of the Mississippi Agricultural and Friend in the Faculty," Louis E. Reed by Hartley Withers. Mechanical College, where he also grad- uated in 1915, has compiled a complete '23 discusses "Football and the Colleges." "The Elements of Radio-Telephony" by "List of Publications of the Mississippi Marvin T. Herrick '21 writes on "Cornell's Professor William C. Ballard, Jr., is an- Agricultural and Mechanical College" to Little Theatre Plays." "Soccer Side- nounced by the McGraw-Hill Book Com- December 31, and it appears in The Mis- lines" are written up by Chilson H. Leon- pany. It is a book for the average college sissippi A. and M. Alumnus for June. ard' 23. A brilliant anonymous historian course in the subject. It contains 132 contributes "A Short Course in Ithaca Frederick L. Ackerman '01 writes in the pages and sells for $1.50. History." "The ride by ox team from Journal of the American Institute of Arch- Under the title "Vicisti Loyola!" Pro- Owego to Ithaca, "says this learned person, itects for September on "The Division of fessor Preserved Smith, in The Nation for "was seventeen days, but the inhabitants Labor" July 5, reviews Thomas J. Campbell's learned to enjoy this leisurely travel. In "The Jesuits, 1534-1921." In the issue In The Modern Language Journal for truth, a remnant of the old custom still for July 12 he reviews Archibald T. October Professor Ralph H. Keniston survives in the trolley cars of to-day." Strong's "Three Studies in Shelley and an discusses "The Role of the Graduate Mayer Portner, Sp., reviews Eugene Essay on Nature in Wordsworth." School in Training of the Modern Lan- O'Neill's "Hairy Ape." guage Teacher." Dr. Samuel B. Harding, '90-1 Grad., is Dr. George F. Zook '14 writes in The Joyce Kilmer's "The Peacemaker" has the managing editor of the new "Comp- School Review for October on "The Junior been set to music by Professor Burt G. ton's Pictured Encyclopedia," which after College." Wilder. Copies may be obtained free three years of labor is now issued by F. E. In Science for July 14 Dr. Vernon L. from the Oliver Ditson Company, Boston, Compton and Company of the Garland Kellogg, '91-2 Grad., has a note on the or from Dr. Wilder, Chestnut Hill, Mass., Building, Chicago; and Mrs. Anna B. sending of Russian scientific literature to in return for ten cents in postage. Comstock '85 is one of the editors. America. Dr. David Starr Jordan '72, Myron W. Van Auken '73 is the author "Studies in Pollen, with Special Refer- under the head of "Books on Natural and of a "Ready Digest of Accident and ence to Longevity," by Harry E. Knowl- Unnatural History," reviews Dr. Bran- Health Insurance Law." The book con- ton, Ph.D. '20, has been reprinted as a ner's "How and Why Stories," Oliver P. tains digests of all Federal and Appellate thesis from the Cornell Agricultural Sta- Jenkins's "Interesting Neighbors," and A. decisions defining the words "accident" tion Memoirs for January. Waddingham Seers's "The Earth and Its and "accidental means." There are two The following theses have lately ap- Life." indices, one an alphabetical list of the 84 CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS cases referred to and the other a full '09 BSA—Stephen F. Willard, Jr., is topical index. The book is published by ALUMNI NOTES still with the Fottler Fiske Rawson Com- Matthew Bender & Company and is pany, of Boston, "trying to write a better sold at $6.50. It may be obtained of The catalog to sell more seeds to more old grads Spectator Company, New York. Van '87 PhB—At the invitation of the West- who are getting thin on top and thick at Auken has been for thirty-five years inghouse Electric Company, Francis Leon the waistline, evefyone of whom would get counsel of the Commercial Travelers' Chrisman, of Verona, N. J., gave his lec- some satisfaction out of seeing his garden Mutual Accident Association of America, ture on "A Night in the House of Com- grow if he would but try it." His home ad- and is dean of all general counsels of mons" at WJZ (Newark, N. J.) on Sun- dress is 17 Cheriton Road, Wollaston, accident and health insurance companies day evening, October 1. Mr. Chrisman Mass. was fortunate in having been present in in the United States. The book is favor- Ίo AB—Henry Calder Thorne has the Imperial Parliament when Gladstone ably reviewed in The Spectator (New opened an office at 139 East State Street, was making his great orations for the in- York) for September 14. Ithaca, for the general practice of archi- dependence of Ireland. The lecture was In The Mount Holyoke Alumnae tecture and landscaping. broadcasted to a radio audience estimated Quarterly for October Professor Ann at over two hundred thousand, for the Ίo AB—A son, Kennedy, was born on Haven Morgan '08, of Mt. Holyoke, WJZ apparatus is said to be so good that July 12 to Mr. and Mrs. R. Temple ton describes "The New Laboratory," which its broadcasting is heard as far south as the Smith, 1330 Shady Avenue, Pittsburgh, will house the five departments of botany, Panama Canal Zone, as far west as Cali- Pa. They also have a son, Templeton, geology, hygiene, physiology, and zoology, fornia, as far north as the Arctic Circle, three years old. and which it is expected will be ready for and two or three thousand miles east on use next year. Professor Mignon Talbot, Ίi BArch—Arthur B. Holmes has en- the Atlantic Ocean. Mr. Chrisman gave '01 Grad., writes on "The Department of tered into partnership with Adrian T. von the same lecture in Ithaca a number of Geology." Schmid for the general practice of archi- years ago for the benefit of the Cornell tecture, with offices at 299 Madison In Studies in Philology for October Dr. University Athletic Association. Avenue, New York. He lives at 188 Park Murray W. Bundy '12, of the department '03 AB—Guernsey J. Borst is professor Street, Montclair, N. J. of English in the University of Illinois, of education and director of the school of writes on "Plato's View of the Imagina- Ίi ME—The residence address of Mr. secretarial science of Scidmore College, tion." and Mrs. Charles C. Trump is changed to Saratoga Springs, N. Y. 806 Lodi Street, Syracuse, N. Y. Trump In The Garden Magazine for October '06 BSA—Professor Charles F. Shaw, of is vice-president of the Stumpff Una-Flow Professor Edward A. White discusses the the University of California, is planning to Engine Company, Inc., and president of problem of "Decorating Artistically with take six months' sabbatical leave in the the Hydro-Oil Engine and Pump Com- Flowers." Dr. Robert T. Morris '80 spring, and will make a trip to the Pacific pany, with offices at 401 S. A. and K. writes on "Trees That We Plant." Islands, spending six weeks in the Hawai- Building, Syracuse. Kenneth £. Roberts '08 writes in The ian Islands, two weeks in New Zealand, Ίi CE—A son, Henry P. Schmeck, Jr., Saturday Evening Post for September 16 and three months in Australia, with brief was born to Mr. and Mrs Henry P. on "The Tribulations of the Senate." visits to the Fiji Islands, and the Samoan, Schmeck on July 10 at Lockport, N. Y. Professor Oliver F. Emerson, Ph.D. '01, Cook, and Society Island groups. His Their present mail address is Box 131, of Western Reserve, contributes to The present address is 320 Hilgard Hall, Uni- Olcott, N. Y. Romanic Review for April-June, lately versity of California, Berkeley, Calif. Ίi, '12 ME—Louis Levine is with the issued, an article on "Chaucer and '07 ME—James H. Baker's residence Liberty Auto Equipment Company, Inc., Medieval Hunting." address is changed to Short Hills, N. J. auto supplies and accessories, 711 Macon In Science for October 13 is summarized His business address is 16 Church Street, Street, Brooklyn, N. Y. He lives at 1326 the paper on "Adsorption of Salts by New York. Madison Avenue, New York. Cellulose" recently read by Professor Wil- '07 LLB—Mr. and Mrs. J. Few Brown ' 11 ME—Professor Lester W. W. Mor- der D. Bancroft before the American have announced the marriage of their row, of Yale, is spending a year's leave of Chemical Society. daughter, Mrs. Nina Brown Gore, to absence as a member of the editorial staff In The University of California Chron- Winthrop Taylor '07, on September 29 in of The Railway Journal. He is married icle for October Professor Emeritus Isaac New York. and has three children, and lives at 60 Ar- Flagg, of the University of California, '07 LLB—James A. Winans is a student rendale Avenue, Great Neck, Long Island. formerly of Cornell, under the head of in Columbia University, as a guest of the '12 ME—A new salt shaker, invented by "Phrontistery," writes an Utopian edu- University, while on sabbatic leave from Harry C. Lockwood 0/ Brooklyn, has just cational romance. He also contributes a Dartmouth; he is an editor of The Quar- been placed on the market. It handles translation of a Minstrel's Song in "Per- terly Journal of Speech Education. His ad- damp salt successfully, and is known as sephone." "The Legacy of Greece," a dress is Apartment 36, 400 West 118th the twistop saltbox. volume of essays one of which is by Pro- Street, New York. fessor Zimmern, is reviewed by "Calhoun," '12, '14 LLB—Erwin C. Uihlein is vice- '07 AB—Louis W. Fehr announces the who also reviews the late Dr. Botsford's president and general manager of Eline's, removal of his law offices to the Bar Build- "Hellenic History." David Wight Prall, Inc., manufacturers of chocolate and cocoa, ing, 36 West Forty-fourth Street, New Ίi-12 Grad., reviews Richard Gummere's Port Washington Road, Milwaukee, Wis. "Seneca the Philosopher and His Modern York. His residence address is 925 Lake Drive, Message." William H. Blymer and Dr. '08 ME—Carl T. Hewitt is still metal- Milwaukee. David Starr Jordan '72 engage in friendly lurgist with the Fafnir Bearing Company, '12 ME—Alan E. Lockwood is gas en- debate over "The Isolation Plan." New Britain, Conn. gineer with the United Gas and Electric The Cornell Era for October 20 repro- '09 AB—Louis F. Schwartz, Jr., is with Engineering Corporation, 61 Broadway, duces Professor Olaf M. Brauner's recent the law firm of Davies, Auerbach and Cor- New York, at present working on the portrait of Irene Castle. It is soon to be nell, 34 Nassau Street, New York. building of a complete new water gas reproduced in colors on the cover of Town '09 CE—Romeyn Y. Thatcher has plant for the Elmira Water, Light, and and Country. There is an anonymous changed his residence address to 9 Front- Railroad Company, Elmira, N* Y. His ad- analysis of "Dobie's Tactics." Mayer enac Avenue, Buffalo, N. Y. He is civil dress is 517 West Church Street, Elmira. Portner, Sp., contributes a one-act play engineer at the Lackawanna plant of the '13 CE; '15 AB—Russell T. Kerby '13 called "The Raid." Bethlehem Steel Corporation. and Miss Regina Brunner '15 were mar- CORNELLALUMNINEWS 85

A Carnival Night in New York

The Joint Concert of the Dartmouth and Cornell Musical Clubs

followed by A Joyous and Colorful University Dance

in the

Grand Ballroom of the Hotel Pennsylvania Friday Evening, November 10th, 1922

The Eve of Armistice Day and the Annual Football Game Between Dartmouth and Cornell

The Mason-Dixon Orchestra (which for years has provided the music for the Cornell Proms) has been brought on to New York for this event.

Tickets for the Concert and Dance are $4.00 for each person and may be procured at the Cornell Club, 30 West 44th St., New York, or of the Cornell Athletic Association at Ithaca. 86 CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS

ried on July 31 at the home of the bride's wedding has not been set. Dr. Hanrahan and Chemical Company of Irvington, N. parents in Olean, N. Y. sailed for England last month. J., and is now living at 421 Doremus '13 CE—Henry Ten Hagen '13 and Miss Ί6 ME—Edward H. Carman, Jr., has Avenue, Glen Rock, N. J. Dorothy Gouinlock (Vassar College '17) gone into the real estate business with Ί8 AB—Dominick P. Rotunda has were married on September 16 in Warsaw, offices at 259 Candler Annex, Atlanta, Ga. changed his address to Apartment 4, East N. Y. Edward V. Gouinlock '23, brother Ί6 AB—W. Howard Cullinan, of The Norwich Avenue, Columbus, Ohio; he is of the bride, was best man. Mr. and Mrs. Boston Globe, reached New York early in teaching in the department of foreign Ten Hagen will make their home in War- October after a tour of eighteen countries languages of Ohio State University. saw. of Europe and points in Africa. He spent Ί8—John Shively Knight was recently '13 AB—Miss Dorothy W. Bustard is several weeks in the war area of the Near made editorial director of both The Akron teaching in the Mackenzie School, Mon- East, and was on a Greek ship off Smyrna Beacon Journal and The Springfield Sun, roe, N. Y. when the city was taken by the Turks. upon the acquisition of the latter paper by '13 ME—Sterling W. Mudge was re- His address is The Delta Tau Delta Club, owners of The Beacon Journal. His resi- cently appointed assistant head of the de- Boston, Mass. dence address is 80 North Portage Path, partment of industrial mechanical«engi- Ί6 LLB—Alex M. Hamburg, who is Akron, Ohio. neering at Pratt Institute, Brooklyn, N. Y. practicing law at 63 Watt Street, New Ί8 AB, '21 MD—Henry G. Morris He lives at 11 The Place, Brooklyn. York, is consulting tax counsel for Pren- spent a year after his graduation from the '13 ME—Jessel S. Whyte, factory man- tiss-Hall, Inc., publishers of the Federal Medical College as interne at the New ager of the Macwhyte. Company of Ken- Income Tax Service. His residence ad- York City Hospital, BlackwelFs Island, osha, Wis., has just returned from a three- dress is 1706 Union Street, Brooklyn. and is now engaged in private practice at months' business trip to the Pacific Coast, Ί6 BS—Revere J. Moore has gone to 142 Forest Avenue, Jamestown, N. Y. He visiting the logging camps in Washington, China for the Standard Oil Company of was married on April 21 to Miss Theodora Oregon, and California, and the oil fields New York, and his address is in care of the Brennan of Jamestown, and they are liv- in California. company, 11 Canton Road, Shanghai. ing at 145 McKinley Avenue, Jamestown. '13—Leon W. Slack is a member of the Ί6 BS, '17 MF—Herbert M. Stults is Ί8, '21 WA—Since last February, Hor- firm of William W. Slack and Son, archi- with Lewis and Valentine, Roslyn, Long ace H. Hendrick has been teaching science tects, 144 East State Street, Trenton, N. J. Island. and mathematics in the Warren, R. L, '14 BS—Avery C. Bacon is teaching Ί6 BChem—Howard K. Brickman is High School. He lives at 10 East George science in the Dunkirk, N. Y. High School. research and manufacturing chemist with Street, Providence. '14 AB—Thomas B. Crews, Jr., is head the Fries and Fries Company, Cincinnati, Ί8, '21 ME—Robert C. Moffitt is en- of the firm of Thomas B. Crews, Jr., and Ohio; his address is 540 West Seventh gaged in construction engineering with the Company, investment bonds, 41 Pine Street, Cincinnati. Washington Water Power Company; his Street, New York. Ί6 AB—John Phelps Harding is in the mail address is Box 1222, Spokane, Wash. '14 ME—Edwin S. Truesdell, Jr., was credit department of the Proctor and Ί8 MSA, '20 PhD—The correct address married on May 20 to Miss Amy Moore of Gamble Company, located temporarily in of Gordon P. McRostie is McDonald Col- Binghamton, N. Y. Truesdell is in the Detroit. His residence address is 2518 lege, McGill University, Montreal, Can- wholesale grocery business in Binghamton, West Grand Boulevard, Detroit. ada. and his address is 69 Walnut Street. ' 16—Chapman Ebersole is in the general Ί8, '20 BS—James J. Perley (formerly '14 BS—Charles A. Wright is studying insurance business, with the Employers' Perlzweig) has changed his address from at Harvard; he lives at 117 Avon Hill Liability Assurance Corporation, Ltd., of Freeport, Long Island, to 4213^ Cumber- Street, Cambridge, Mass. London, England; he is also a class one land Avenue, Los Angeles, Calif. '14 CE—The firm of J. A. W. Iglehart member of the Fire Underwriters' Associa- Ί8 BS—Announcement has been made and Company, investment bankers, which tion. His home address is 610 Maple of the engagement of Miss Muriel Fitch of is headed by Joseph A. W. Iglehart '14, Avenue, Cincinnati, Ohio. New York to Lorin W. Zeltner Ί 8, of 1197 moved on October 1 to their new offices at Ί6 BS—E. Milton Smith, Jr., is with Grand Concourse, New York. 102 St. Paul Street, Baltimore, Md. the American Telephone and Telegraph '19 AB—Miss Mildred Ruth Roraback '14 ME—A daughter, Jean, was born on Company, New York. '19 and Henry M. Raup, both of Kinder- September 15 to Mr. and Mrs. Mead W. Ί6 BS—Rodolphus Kent Ί6 and Miss hook, N. Y., were married on August 12 at Stone, 172 Hamilton Avenue, New Brigh- Marian Isabell Orcutt of Ashland, Maine, Richmond Hill, N. Y. They are making ton, N. Y. were married on June 3 and are living in their home in Kinderhook, where Mr. '15 ME—A son, Charles Edward, was Presque Isle, Maine. Raup has a fruit farm. born on August 12 to Mr. and Mrs. Charles '17 BS—Alfred H. Brooks is in his '19 ME—George F. Dickins has left the B. Bennett of Louisville, Ky. Bennett is second year as a student in the School of Powder Point School, Duxbury, Mass., to electrical engineer and factory superintend- Landscape Architecture of Harvard Uni- accept a position as sub-master and head ent for the James Clark, Jr., Electric Com- versity; he received the Austin Scholar- of the science department of Murdock pany of Louisville. ship of $200 last June. His Cambridge Academy, Winchendon, Mass. During the '15 BArch, '22 MArch—J. Lakin Bald- address is 43 Irving Street, and his home summer he was an instructor in equita- ridge is assistant professor of design in the is in Monroe, N. Y. tion at Camp Cobbossee, Winthrop, Me. College of Architecture; he lives at 408 '17 AB—A son, John Byron, was born '19 CE—George P. Bullard, who has Thurston Avenue, Ithaca. on August 8 to Dr. and Mrs. Herbert H. been with the McClintic-Marshall Com- '15, Ί6 BS—J. Laurence Bacon is still Davis of Omaha, Nebr. Davis is a sur- pany of Pittsburgh since his graduation, foreman of the lamp room in the glass geon and is associated with Doctors Davis, has recently been made assistant manager plant of the Whitall Tatum Company, Hull, and Davis, with offices at 1200 First of erection. Millville, N. J. he is also in charge of con- National Bank Building, Omaha. '19—Frank J. Walrath has rented his struction work. His address is 512 Colum- '17 AB—Watson G. Harding is in charge farm at Amsterdam and has moved with bia Avenue, Millville. of the development department of the his family to Ithaca, where he will reenter '15 AB—Mr. and Mrs. Blanchard Ran- druggists' rubber sundries plant of the the University to complete his under- dall of Baltimore have announced the en- Whitall Tatum Company, Keyport, N. J. graduate work, specializing in agricultural gagement of their daughter, Evelyn, to Dr. '17 BChem—Arthur L. Stern is contin- economics. He lives at 609 Mitchell Edward M. Hanrahan; the date of the uing his work with the Max Marx Color Street. CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS 87

'20 AB—Miss Anna M. Leonhardt is Ί5, chief chemist; and Hugo N. Dieder- daughter, Ruby Irene, to William H. teacher of English in the Olean, N. Y., richs'17, M.E. Ί8. Rometsch, Jr., '21 on August 23. Mr. and High School; her address is 706 Washing- '20 CE—Vincent B. Lamoureux is tak- Mrs. Rometsch spent their honeymoon in ton Street. ing graduate work in civil .engineering; he the White Mountains, and are now living '20 AB—Miss Ruth McSparran is head lives at Forest Home, Ithaca. in their new home at 5722 Chew Street, Germantown, Pa. of the English department of the Horse- '20 BS—Everett W. Lins is district '21 CE—Robert C. Kennedy is with heads, N. Y., High School. She lives at sales manager for the North American 116 Fletcher Street. Fruit Exchange, with headquarters at the New York State Highway Commis- '20 CE—Eduard Fritz, Jr., has left the 82 West Twelfth Street, New York. He sion at Rochester, N. Y. Penn Public Service Corporation, and is handled the strawberry sales for Ken- '21 BS—Miss Ella J. Day is assistant now designing engineer with the Truscon tucky last May from Pembroke, Ky., go- professor of domestic science at the Penn- Steel Company, 31 Union Square, New ing from there to Bridgman, Mich., where sylvania State College, in charge of the York. he handled the sales for Michigan. Then practice house. Her residence address is he was transferred to Grand Rapids, Mich, '20 ME—Walter A. Baer was married on Hillcrest, State College, Pa. June 14 to Miss Alice Boyle of Paterson, to handle the tonnage of the North Ameri- N. J., and they are living at 400 East can Fruit Exchange for the State of Michi- '21 ME—Wendell F. Roberts is Diesel Thirtieth Street, ^aterson. Baer is me- gan, including pears, peaches, cherries, salesman with the Worthington Pump and chanical engineer with the Weidmann Silk apples, onions, celery, potatoes, and Machinery Corporation, 115 Broadway, Dyeing Company of Paterson. cabbage. He is now located in Hunting- New York. He spent seven months at the Buffalo plant and four months at the '20 AB—Miss Ruth I. Aldrich is teach- ton, W. Va., handling the sales of all Boston plant, and is now located in the ing English in the New Rochelle, N. Y., apples controlled by the Ohio State New York office. His home address is High School; she is living at 86 Lockwood Cooperative Fruit Growers' Association 22 Theresa Place, Staten Island, N. Y. Avenue. through the Huntington office of the North American Fruit Exchange. '21 CE—Samuel D. Brady, Jr., is chief '20, '21 BChem—Augustyn T. Rynal- engineer with the Brady-Warner Coal ski is in the manufacturing department of '20 BS—Miss H. Evelyn Hendryx is Corporation, Fairmont, W. Va. His the Standard Oil Company of Indiana; teacher of homemaking in the sixth, residence address is changed to 1205 his address is 318 East Thirteenth Street, seventh, and eighth grades and the Part Casper, Wyo. Time School, Newburgh, N Y. She lives Fairmont Avenue. at 276 Liberty Street. J ;2o BChem—Chester A. Walworth is a 2i BChem—Percival H. Staub '21 and ; chemist with the Libbey-Owens Sheet 2O—Henry G. Cundell '20 and Miss Miss Dorothy Spargar, daughter of Dr. Glass Company, Charleston, W. Va. Agnes Mclntosh of Elizabeth, N. J., were and Mrs. Franklin J. Spargar, were mar- Other Cornellians with the same company married on October 7 at Grace Church, ried on August 26 and are now living at are Herbert A. Wiltse, M.E. '00, chief New York. 1782 Rosedale Avenue, Cleveland, Ohio. draftsman; William A. Gibson, M.E. '14, '21 BChem—Mr. and Mrs. Robert B. '21 AB—Frederic L. Vosburgh, last year master mechanic; Wilbur F. Brown, A.B., Scott announce the marriage of their a sophomore in the University of Pitts-

Have You Got Your Cornellian?

We have on hand Cornellians of the years, 1911, 1913, 1914, 1914-15 and 1915 at $3.00 each, plus 25j£ postage. We have Class Books of the years, 1907, 1909, 1912, 1913 and 1915 at $3.00 each, plus 25jέ postage. We have Cornellian and Class Book combined of the years 1918, 1920, at $3.00 each, plus 25jί postage. And we have a very limited number of 1921 and 1922 Cornel- lians at the regular price of $6.50 and $7.50 respectively. This will be your last opportunity to secure back numbers of the Cornellians. All unsold books will be disposed of at the end of the year.

THE CORNELL ANNUALS, INC. 209 East State Street ITHACA, N. Y. 88 CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS burgh Medical School, is now a junior in '22 EE—Dudley E. Foster is an electri- Mr. and Mrs. Mahon are at home at 506 the Cornell University Medical College; cal engineer with the Electrical Alloy Fourth street, Fairmont, W. Va. he lives at the Y. M. C. A., Brooklyn. Company, Morristown, N. J. '22 AB—Melber B. Chambers is attend- '21 BS—Mrs. James E. Knott (Deborah '22 AB—Merrill D. Lipsky is a sopho- ing the Harvard Law School; he lives at P. Cummings '21) is home demonstration more in the Cornell University Medical 21 Sacramento Street, Cambridge, Mass. agent for Newport County, R. I., and Mr. College; he lives at the Allerton House, '22 AB—Miss Marion McMillan is Knott (Rhode Island State '20) is agri- 143 East Thirty-ninth Street, New York. teaching Latin and French in the Ex- cultural agent for the county. Their '22 AB—Miss Gladys Jones is teaching celsior High School, Woodlawnr Schenec- business address is 351 Federal Building, in one of the junior High Schools of tady, N. Y. Her mail address is 1120 Newport News, Va. Baltimore; she lives at Hill Top Park, Albany Street, Schenectady. '21, '22 LLB—W. Clyde O'Brien is in Mount Washington, Md. '22 ME—Walter R. Prosch is in the the office of Hubbell, Taylor, Goodwin '22 EE; '22 EE—Mr. and Mrs. L. Wal- Cleveland sales office of the Pratt and and Mose, attorneys, 31 Exchange Street, ton Richardson (Marie-Thόrese Maurer Whitney Company, and expects soon to be Rochester, N. Y. '22) are with the General Electric Com- transferred to the factory at Hartford, pany, Schenectady, N. Y. The former is Conn. His present address is 1454 East in the department of radio design, and Ninety-second Street, Cleveland, Ohio. the latter in the department of radio re- ^22 AB—Frederick J. Schnatz is a search. Their address is 208 Union Street. member of the class of 1926 in the Univer- '22 CE—Forrest J. Brown is junior sity of Buffalo Medical College; he is also assistant engineer with the bridge depart- an instructor in anatomy there. He lives ment of the New York State Commission at 71 Locust Street. of Highways; he lives at 65 Jay Street, '22 ME—Harold A. Ball is working in Albany, N. Y. the shops of the Autocar Company, Ard- '22 BS—Miss A. Leah Gause is teaching more, Pa. He lives at 214 Windermere nature study in the Fredericksburg, Va. Avenue, Wayne, Pa. State Normal School, and supervising '22 ME—Abram Blum is taking the that subject in the grades of the Training mechanical engineering course at the School. River Works of the General Electric Com- '22 DVM—Dr. Roswell M. Monroe is pany; his address is 46 Mall Street, West practicing his profession in Bainbridge, Lynn, Mass. N. Y. '22 LLB—Samuel H. Greene is a '22 ME—Mr. John F. Phillips an- member of the law firm of Greene and Seeing nounces the marriage of his daughter, Greenbaum, 600 Women's Exchange vs. Ruth Elizabeth, to William F. Mahon, Building, Cincinnati, Ohio; he lives at Understanding Jr., '22, on September 16 in New York. 542 Hale Avenue, Avondale, Cincinnati. Can you see everything that goes on in a football game? No — but you can understand everything by reading Percy SECOND Haughton's new book, addressed to the 5,000,000 people in the stands. INTERCOLLEGIATE The strategy which makes modern football a contest of brains DANCE and speed is intelligible if you know the principles of the game. SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 11 Haughton's book contains 30 9:30 to 3:30 full pages of sharp, clear pictures of plays in actual games, snapped at the exact moment designated by the author. DELMONICOS A full page description faces GRAND BALL ROOM each picture, and all important plays are analyzed. Continuous Music 9:30 to 3:30 Your full enjoyment of football depends upon your knowledge of Featuring the game. Here is a book written r Tige Jewett's Collegians, Barbary Coast Jazz Band, specifically for you, fo the girl of Cornell (7 pieces) of Dartmouth (7 pieces) who accompanies you, and for the school boy in whom you are in- terested. Price $3.00 Subscription $5.50 Tickets at the door MARSHALL JONES COMPANY 212 SUMMER STREET, BOSTON CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS

"ITHACA ENG WING FLOWERS Rothschild Library Building, 123 N. Tίo£a Street by WIRE Bros.

delivered promptly to any address in 9 the civilized world. E. H. WANZER Complete The Grocer "Say it with Flowers" Assortment §f Successor to Wanzer & Howell Cornell Banners, Every event is an Pennants, occasion for flowers. Quality—Service Pillow Covers, Wall and Table Skins at Attractive Prices R. A. Heggie & Bro. Co. The Bool Floral Fraternity Company, Inc. Jewelers " The House of Universal Service" Rothschild Bros. Ithaca, New York

Ithaca New York Alumni Professional Directory

THE SENATE BOSTON, MASS. NEW YORK CITY Solves the Problem for Alumni WARREN G. OGDEN, M.E. Όl CHARLES A. TAUSSIG A Good Restaurant LL.B. Georgetown University, Ό5 A.B. '02, LL.B., Harvard '05 Patents, Trade-Marks, Copyrights 220 Broadway Tel. 1905 Cortland MARTIN T. GIBBONS Patent Causes, Opinions, Titles General Practice Proprietor Practice in State and Federal Courts 68 Devonshire Street KELLEY & BECKER DETROIT, MICH. Counselors at Law 366 Madison Ave. GOLDENBERG & SON EDWIN ACKERLY, A.B., '20 CHARLES E. KELLEY, A.B. '04 Attorney and Counselor at Law NEAL DOW BECKER, LL.B. '05, .B. Ό6A Merchant Tailors 701 Penobscot Bldg. 111 N. Aurora St., Ithaca FORT WORTH, TEXAS MARTIN H. OFFINGER '99 E.E. LEE, LOMAX & WREN Treasurer and Manager Lawyers General Practice Van Wagoner-Linn Construction Co. 506-9 Wheat Building Electrical Contractors Attorneys for Santa Fe Lines 143 East 27th Street Empire Gas & Fuel Co. Phone Madison Square 7320 "Songs of Cornell" C. K. Lee, Cornell '89-90 P. T. Lomax, Texas '89 "Glee Club Songs" F. J. Wren, Texas 1913-14 All the latest "stunts" and things musical ITHACA. N. Y. TULSA, OKLAHOMA Lent's Music Store GEORGE S. TARBELL HERBERT D. MASON, LL.B. '00 Ph. B. '91—L.L.B. '94 Attorney and Counsellor at Law Ithaca Trust Building Atlas Life Building Attorney and Notary Public Practice in State and Federal Courts Real Estate KOHM & BRUNNE Sold, Rented, and Managed Tailors for Cornellians WASHINGTON, D. C. P. W. WOOD & SON Everywhere THEODORE K. BRYANT '97 '98 P. 0. Wood '08 Master Patent Law '08 222 E. State St., Ithaca Insurance Patents and Trade Marks exclusively 158 East State St. 310-313 Victor Building CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS

Co-op. 1921-22 Dividend N November twentieth after we have fin- ished paying dividends we start making out checks and money orders for those who have left. We prefer to send you your dividend by money order but must have your present ad dress in order to do that. Write us at once.

Songbook $1.75, postpaid ΠΠHIS is the season when others are -^ buying songbooks and there is only one in print. Fortunately it has the Cornell songs and also many of the other popular glee club songs. The price suits, does it not?

Cornell Co-op. Society" Morrill Hall, Ithaca, N. Y.