Vol. XXII, No. 6 [PRICE TWELVE CENTS] October 30, 1919

Endowment Fund Goal Increased from Five to Ten Millions Generals Wood and Bell to Aid Cornell Campaign Alumni Consider Problems of Col- lege of Architecture Baseball C Men to Consider Coach- ing Problem on November 15 Football Team Loses to Dartmouth at the Polo Grounds

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Drawing Inks Executor Trustee HEMPHILL, NOYES & Co. Eternal Writing Ink Chartered 1822 Investment Securities Engrossing Ink 37 Wall Street, New York «««.«•;« Ό Tanrine Mucilage Philadelphia Buffalo THE FARMER'S LOAN Scranton_ , Albany Wlggin SDrawin g Board Paste Liquid Paste AND TRUST COMPANY Jansen Noyes J10 Office Paste Charles E. Gardner Vegetable Glue, Etc. Nos. 16-22 William Street Stanton Griffis '10 Branch: 475 Fifth Ave. Clifford Hemphill Member New York ABE THE FINEST AND BEST at 41st Street Stock Exchange INKS AND ADHESIVES New York

Emancipate yourself LONDON PARIS from the use of cor- rosive and ill-smelling ITHACA" inks and adheβives Letters of Credit and adopt the Higgins inks and adhesives Foreign Exchange They will be a revela- tion to you, they are Cable Transfers Libraηti Building 123 N.Tto&a Street so sweet, clean, and well put up and withal so efficient. Administratoi Guardian NOTICE TO EMPLOYERS At Dealers Generally Member Federal Reserve Bank and New The Cornell Society of Civil York Clearing House Engineers maintains a Registra- Charles M. Higgins & Co., tion Bureau. Complete records of 2,pOO Cornell men are on file. Manufacturers. Employers may consult these rec- ords without charge. If preferred, 271 NINTH ST., BROOKLYN, N. Y. Business Is Good we will recommend a man to fill Branches: CHICAGO, LONDON You CAN AFFORD to come to Ithaca for pour needs. that suit or Tuxedo. REGISTRATION BUREAU Write for samples. 30 East 42nd Street Kohm ίδ> Brunne Room 916 gJSO E. State St. Phone Murray Hill 3075 ROMEIKE PRESS CLIPPING Cascadilla School SERVICE GRADUATES GO TO CORNELL Wanzer &L Howell College Preparatory School is prepared to supply you with A High-Grade Boarding School for Boys current information from the The Grocers newspapers and magazines on Summer School whatever subject may interest Quality—Service July to September, especially for Col- you. Be it politics, ,be it busi- lege and University Entrance ness, be it science, there is mailed Examination-fit. to you daily just what you want Special Tutoring School to read from Private-Instruction in Any Subject 3000 newspapers Throughout the Year. 1000 magazines Jewelers Trustees F.C.Cornell ErnestBlaker C.D.Bostwiek PRESS CLIPPINGS are becom- ing more and more a necessary R. A. Heggie & Bro, Co, Our 1919-80 Catalog will appeal to adjunct to progressive businesses. 136 B. State Street sohoolboy you are trying to "If it's in the papers Ithaca, N. Y. interest in Cornell A postal will bring it. we get it out" We have a full stock of Diamonds, Jew- elry, Art Metal Good s, etc., and A. M; Drummond, M. A., Director, ROMEIKE make things to order. Ithaca, N. Y. is synonymous with press clipping service. Henry Romeike, Inc. ITHACA TRUST COMPANY ASSETS OVEB THREE MILLION DOLLABS 106-08-10 Seventh Avenue Prβ Charles E Treman Vice-Pre ., Franklin 0. Cornell Vίcβ-'Preβ., Bmionβ L. TOlliam Vice-Free, and Sec., W. H. Storms New York Treasurer, Sherman Peer CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS Vol. XXII, No. 6 Ithaca, N. Y., October 30, 1919 Price 12 Cents

N enthusiastic crowd filling about October 23. Of these sixty are light Mallery '21, of Owego, N. Y.; and W, half of the auditorium gathered draft horses and the remaining twenty- S. Holt '20, of Brooklyn. In the semi- A in Bailey Hall on Saturday to eight are cavalry horses for riding. All finals Eeid and Fisher defeated Mallery hear the returns from the Dartmouth are black. They come fuotm the First and Holt; and in the finals Eeid de- feated Fisher in three out of four sets game. As the bulletins were read, the Division of the United States Army, r the scores being 7-5, 4-6, 6-2, 6-3. This plays were traced in colors on a black- being among the horses both draft and is the second time that these players board. Between bulletins there was sing- mount used in the parades of that di- have met in the finals of the University ing led by Eric Dudley and music by vision in New York and Washington. tournament, and on both occasions Eeid the cadet band led by George L. Cole- They are to be kept in stables recently has come off victorious. man. The cheerleaders had an oppor- provided by the University. Instruction tunity for acrobatic practice indoors. in the care and maintenance of the LECTURES DURING THE PAST WEEK in- Meantime from Schoellkopf Field came horses and in riding begins this week, clude "A. Trip Through Phrygia and the yells of the freshmen, sometimes well to be followed by work in various forms Cappadocia" by Dr. W. T. M. Forbes suited to the news from New York. of mounted duty. before the Agassiz-Club "Present Ten- dencies of Thought in Europe" by Dr. THE SOUTHERNERS^ CLUB has been re- PROFESSOR ALBERT C. PHELPS, of the George W. Nasmyth '06 before the organized with a membership of about College of Architecture, is scheduled to Ethics Club; ''The Coming Science of thirty. The aims of the club are pri- deliver two lectures at the Metropolitan Acoustical Engineering" by 'Professor marily social, the fostering of more in- Museum of Art on January 3 and 10, Vladimir Karapetoff before the Society timate association among students from pn '' The Charm of English Gothic of Electrical Engineers; and an address the South, and to this end the provision • Architecture'' and '(The English Chap- to the freshman debate club by Presi- of dances and entertainments. Only ter House." On January 17 and 24 dent Schurmaii. On Monday and Tuesday those students are eligible to member- the lecturer will be Professor E. Ray- of this week Percy Mackaye, Harvard ship whose hoαnes are south of Mason mond Bossange, formerly of Cornell, '97, traveler and poet, gave readings, and Dixoii's Line. The president of the now of the Carnegie Institute of Tech- with comment, from his work in com- club for this year is William Douglas nology, Pittsburgh. Ellis, of Atlanta, Georgia, who is a munity drama. A BURGLARY on the night of October 22 senior in Sibley College. Miss CLARIBEL NYE, of the Depart- is reported by the Delta Upsilon Fra- ment of Domestic Science at Cornell, THE GALLERY of the Lyceum Theater ternity. The thieves made off with five lectured before the Housewives' League will henceforth be closed to men. Two gold watches, about a hundred dollars of New Orleans on October 17, on the explanations for this new policy of the in small change, a motorcycle, and a subject of breadmaking, and subse- management are offered in the local number of small articles easily picked quently acted as chairman of a commit- press. One report says that the action up, stickpins, pens, and shoes. There is § tee of judges in a bread-baking con- is taken because of the large number some reason for believing that the rob- test, in which some 1,600 women took of wctaieii in attendance at the Univer- bers were familiar with the house. It part. sity and at the Conservatory of Music, appears also that many, if not and therefore, by implication, the greater imost fraternity lodges, perhaps rooming THE ASSOCIATION OF CIVIL ENGINEERS demand among women, for gallery seats. houses as well, are left unlocked at night, has organized for the coming year. Another paper reports an outburst of so that entrance by sneak thieves is Henry John Benisch '20, of Brooklyn, roλvdyiεm on Saturday evening, October easy. Everybody therefore has again is the new president, ,and Leonard C. 18, after the Colgate game, when a com- been warned by the police to make all Urquhart '09 Faculty adviser. At the pany of comedians were received with buildings more secure against robbery. organization meeting Dean Haskell spoke catcalls and gradually increasing uproar on the re-establishment of the honor A STUDENT last week fell about forty and for the first time in several years system as it was before the war. Colonel feet off the bank of Fall Creek Gorge were pelted with fruit and eggs. "Why Henry E. Lordly '93 spoke of the great near the buildings of the Ithaca' Gun the disturbance was allowed to con- value both in colleges and among engi- Company. Since he alighted on a pile tinue has not been published. It appears neers in practice of The Cornell Civil of sawdust, his injuries were so slight that no arrests were made. Manager Engineer. that after a day or two at the Infirmary Gutstadt's declaration about the future THE CORNELL ANNUALS announce the use of the gallery is emphatic. he was able to go about his work as election of George A. Benton, jr., '19, usual. PROFESSOR WALTER F. WILLCOX has of Spencerport, N. Y., as associate busi- THE TENNIS TOURNAMENT came to an ness manager. He was a member of been reelected president of the Ithaca 'Social Service League. Other members end on October 22. As a result of the the Annuals staff before entering the preliminary matches the four men who service. of the Faculty who are on the council of the League are Professors James A. made up last year's varsity team were CAPTAIN E. J. SOUTHERN is now act- Winaiis and Frank Thilly. left to compete for this year's cham- ing quartermaster of the E. 0. T. C. pionship: Kirk M. Eeid '20, of Warren, His predecessor, Major A. T. Knight, EIGHTY-EIGHT HORSES for the use of Ohio; Leicester W. Fisher '20, of has been relieved pending discharge the Field Artillery reached Ithaca on Huguenot Park, N. Y.; William T. from the service. 62 CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS The Endowment Fund Goal Raised to Ten Million Dollars Organization is Under Way Throughout the Country—Generals Wood and Bell to Speak in the Campaign The outstanding features of the Cor- plans for the campaign were outlined dinner will be held in Chicago on nell Endowment Campaign up to date and committees are now at work in November 3. General- Leonard Wood, are: the resolution of the New York Washington. General George- Bell, jr., '94, President commj-ttee that a goal of ten million Professor Kimball on a Tour Sehurman, Professor Durham, and Chair- dollars be adopted at once; the action On October 25, Professor Dexter S. man White have accepted invitations of of the Chicago committee in setting its Kimball of the College of Mechanical the committee to speak at this affair. quota at two millions with ten per cent Engineering, addressed a Cornell dinner In connection with the Chicago cam- of the funds in hand; and the similar in Pittsburgh which was attended by paign a committee of fathers of Cor- action of the Philadelphia committee in seventy-five Cornellians from Western nellians is being formed. This * commit- setting its quota at one million. Pennsylvania. At this meeting the tee consists largely of men who are The action of the New York committee Western Pennsylvania campaign was out- fathers of students who are now in the University. in recommending the ten-million-dollar lined. Professor Kimball has just re- goal is in exact accord with President turned to Ithaca from a speaking tour Professor Kimball and Professor Dur- Schurman's statement that five million which included Cornell gatherings in the ham will be the principal speakers at dollars is needed immediately for teach- following cities, in addition to Pitts- a, Cornell dinner in Syracuse on Novem- ers' salaries and that an additional burgh: Cincinnati, Indianapolis, Kansas ber 8 at the launching of the intensive five millions is needed for general endow- City, St. Louis, Omaha, Davenport, and Syracuse campaign. ment. The New York committee is de- Peoria. Among the other meetings, one held termined that the full ten million dol- On October 23, Walter P. Cooke '91, on October 24 at Batavia, New York, was lars shall be raised in the one campaign. alternate chairman of the campaign, addressed by Professor Bristow Adams, From all quarters of the country gave a dinner at his residence in Buffalo of the College of Agriculture. This meet- enthusiastic and gratifying reports have to the thirty Cornellians who are serving ing reached Cornellians in Seneca and come in in letters and telegrams. Cor- on the Buffalo committee. Mr. Cooke Wyoming Counties and was the occasion, nellians everywhere state that they are was in direct touch with all of the execu- not only of the launching of the Endow- leaving no stones unturned in their ef- tives of the campaign in Western New ment Campaign there, but of the forma- forts to present Cornell's appeal not York. tion of an active Cornell Club represent- only to Cornellians but to all friends of Rochester's Daily Meetings ing these two counties. higher education. On Tuesday, October 28, Professor E. Some idea of the progress of the cam- Dean A. W. Smith of the College of Civil Engineering, spoke at a luncheon P. Andrews '95 spoke to the active and paign may be gained from the following enthusiastic organization of Cornellians reports of meetings: in Eochester, held at the University Club on October 23. This was attended by which already exists in Jamestown, New New York City Organizes York. the thirty-five Cornellians who are mem- Frank S. Washburn '83, chairman of bers of the teams to solicit funds in The central "committee has not yet the New York. committee, gave a dinner Eochester. . The Eochester committee made a definite report of the total to the members of his committee at the holds daily meetings at the University amount pledged, but has expressed itself University Club on Thursday, October Club during the period of the intensive to 'the effect that the results have been 23. The principal speakers were Presi- drive. highly gratifying and that they are con- dent Sehurman and J. Du "Pratt White, Professor C. L. Durham has spoken fident that the goal which has been set chairman of the Semi-Centennial En- will be reached. at Cornell luncheons and dinners at the dowment Committee. The New York following places during the present cam- campaign is well organized and the paign: Youngstown, Toledo, Louisville, THE CHICAGO LUNCHEON prospects are bright. Offices have been and Wheeling. opened at 511 Fifth Avenue and a staff Lieut. Col. Lawrence Whiting, per- is continually at work there. Whίnery Tours Pacific Coast sonnel officer on the staff of General A dinner was given in Philadelphia Andrew J. Whinery ΊO, associate di- Pershing, spoke at a Cornell luncheon at •on Friday evening, pctober 24, by J. N. rector of the campaign, has spoken at the City Club in Chicago on October 23 Pew '08, chairman *of the Philadelphia Cornell gatherings during the past month on "The Business Management of the A. E. F." committee. The principal speakers were at the following places: Duluth, Minne- Professors A. A. Young of the Eco- apolis, Spokane, Seattle, Tacoma, Port- nomics Department and George G. land, Oregon, San Francisco, Los MEETINGS OF NEW YOEK WOMEN Angeles, Salt Lake City, Denver, and Bogert '06 of the College of Law. It The Cornell Women's Club' of New Dallas. Before returning to Ithaca he was at this meeting that Pew announced York will hold afternoon meetings at will address gatherings in Tulsa, Little the Philadelphia goal as a million dol- the Women's University Club, 106 East Eock, New Orleans, Jacksonville, and lars. 52d Street, on November 8, January 10, Havana, Cuba. In Havana the meet- On -October 24, a meeting of Cor- March 13, and May 8, with the annual ing will have the support of President nellians in the city of Washington was luncheon on February 7. Miss Mabel Menocal of the Cuban Eepublic. addressed by Hon. Daniel A. Reed '98, E. Rose, secretary, may be addressed member of Congress, and Professor Generals Wood and Bell to Speak at the club or at her home, 950 Marcy Samuel P. Orth of the University. The A .big Cornelί gathering and campaign Avenue, Brooklyn. CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS Alumni Architects Confer DONALDSON '21 FINISHES SECOND being made by the librarian, Professor Consider Ways of Improving the Work Captain John O. W. Donaldson, for- Deldanov, was daily bringing to light of the College merly of the class of 1921 in civil engi- treasures among the old manuscripts, most of them being first-hand sources At the first meeting of the Alumni neering, was the second aviator to com- plete the flight from San Francisco to of information upon the history of the Conference Committee of the College of Low Countries. All these manuscripts Architecture, held in New York City \m Mineola. He made the trip in a one- seated S. E. 5 airplane. Donaldson holds •were destroyed, including a rare collec- Octo'ber 13, the need for more prac- tion of virtually every edition of the tical experience in connection with the the rank of ace in both the American and the British flying corps. Of his Bible from the earliest times of printing. work of the college was emphasized. A. Reports reaching the committee here B. Trowbridge -'90 was elected perma- exploits against the Huns the ALUMNI NEWS last year gave brief accounts from are that students are returning to the nent chairman, and George B. Cum- university, and it is the desire of the mings secretary and treasurer. All the time to time; his own story of his cap- ture by Germans and of his subsequent committee to furnish the new library as members of the committee were present, soon as possible. and it was decided that the next meet- escape was published in Harper's Maga- zine- for July, 1919. This transcon- ing should be held in Ithaca early in UNDERGRADUATE SCHOLARSHIPS November. tinental flight places him among the four who made the best actual flying time The twenty University undergraduate An executive committee was appointed between San Francisco and New York. scholarships open annually to entering by the chairman consisting of Messrs. students have been awarded to members Joannes ΌO, Shreve '02, and Trow- SCHURMAN LIBRARY TO LOUVAIN of the class of 1923. Some hundred and bridge, and Cummings ex-oίϊicio. President Schurman has written a thirty-seven competitors tried the exam- A letter from Dean Bosworth was inations held during registration week. read containing an explanation of what letter to Dr. Nicholas Murray Butler, chairman of the Committee for the Of the successful candidates fourteen are the Faculty is endeavoring to accom- women, six are men; one new scholar plish through a revised curriculum, Restoration of the Library of the Uni- versity of Louvain, offering his philo- comes from New Jersey, all the rest from after which the question of the thesis the state of New York. was taken up. It was decided that, if sophical library of several hundred The Boys' High School of Brooklyn possible, some general or typical problem volumes for shipment immediately to the Belgian university. Announcement of has lost, at least temporarily, its dis- should be chosen by the student, and tinction in having every year some of that he should be brought into contact the acceptance of the gift was made 011 its graduates among the University with some practitioner specializing in Saturday. scholars. Two years ago four winners, that problem, who might assist in In his letter of acceptance Dr. Butler last year two, were prepared at the formulating the program and judging pointed out that the destruction by the Boys' High School; this year, none. This the solution. Germans of the priceless manuscripts in year, however, students from the Girls' It was also proposed that technical the archives of the Belgian university High School of Brooklyn carry off three experts be asked to address the college had only one parallel in history. That scholarships. from time to time, including specialists was in 643 A. D., when Caliph Omar in the different fields of engineering, caused the destruction of the library at The new holders of these scholarships such as sanitation, heating, and ventila- Alexandria, with countless manuscripts are: David Edward Brainard, Central tion, electric and ' elevator equipment, dating from the times of earliest Egypt. High School, Syracuse; Cecilia Contln, etc., and specialists in certain type The library of Dr. Schurman is rated Morris High School, New York City; problems, such as schools, hospitals, etc., by scholars as one of the best of its Gertrude Diamant, as well as muralists, sculptors, and kind in this country, being especially High School, New York City; George modelers. rich in books 011 philosophy, many of Beeve Durlaiid, Goshen High School; The sentiment of the meeting was that them rare first editions that could be Stephen Albert Emery, Erasmus Hall High School, New York City; Laura Λvork in interior decoration would be of replaced βonly at great cost, even in questionable value, owing to the situa- Europe. The exact number of the books Loretta Geer, Marathon High School; tion of the college at a distance from has not been determined, but the gift Madeline Margaret Hickey, Ithaca High any large city. It was felt that work will include all of his best volumes. School; Alfreda Hill, Webster High in landscape architecture should be It is announced by the committee that School; Violet Mabel Holloway, W ad- closely united with the architectural offers of assistance in the rebuilding of leigh High School, New York City; Wil- course. the library have been made by hundreds liam Israelson, Haverstraw High School; Summer work in" offices, with the of professors and scholars in American Semma Jackson, Curtis High School, possibility of allowing credit for it in universities, many of whom studied in Staten Island; Stella Ruth Kaufman, courses requiring similar work, was pro- the Belgian university. Some of these Girls' High 'School, Brooklyn; Bertha posed. gifts are priceless books and manu- Anna Marks, Girls' High School, Brook- scripts. As soon as the offers have been lyn; Matthew Corell Pugsley, Westfield ROCHESTER CLUB MEETS classified, a list of them is to be sent High School; Sarah Fanny Simon, Wad- A luncheon for Rochester alumni was to M. Ladeuze, rector of the* University leigh High School, New York City; held at the University Club of that city of Louvain. Many gifts of money also Philip Carman Wakeley, Newark 'Acad- on October 24. Dean A. W. Smith was have been made. emy, Newark, N. J.; Gladys E. Wellar, present, and reports of the Semi- When the library was destroyed by the Utica Eree Academy; Grace Walroud centennial Endowment Campaign were Germans in 1914 it contained about West, Girls' High School, Brooklyn; given. 300,000 volumes. A new catalogue then Ruby Wheaton, Owego Free Academy; 64 COENELL ALUMNI NEWS

Mary Alexander Ziegler, Jamaica High and express the hope that in some way 658TH ORGAN RECITAL School* this present dream of horrors can be Sage Chapel, Friday, October Si- wafted away from us. The University scholarships may be Professor JAMES T. QUARLEB, Organist You suggest to my mind a multitude held through the freshman and sopho- of thoughts on this great calamity and Concert Prelude and Fugue in G more years, the tenure being dependent catastrophe but I dare not attempt to upon the maintenance of a high scholas- develop them. I am eighty-four years Menuet from fίLe Devin du Village'7 tic standing in all subjects in the course. of age, my eye-sight is almost gone and Rousseau I have not strength, even if I had the The annual value of each is two hundred time to discuss the thoughts which Chorale in B minor Franck dollars. crowd upon my mind as I compare that Elsa 's Bridal Procession from '' Lohen- beautiful past with this great panorama grin" Wagner of distress now before ,us. DR. IVHITE ON THE GERMANS Evening Chimes Wheeldon As I dictate this letter I cast my Marche Militaire Schubert The Yale Alumni Weekly, in its issue eyes out overt the campus of Cornell of October 10, prints the following letter University and I see long lines of splen- did young men sijch as we have always from the late President White to a trained here to love Germany and to ap- INTERCOLLEGIATE NOTES Yale friend, written just after the preciate what she has done for ourselves PRINCETON is making satisfactory United States 'joined the Allies, and of and for the world, and I note that they progress in her campaign for an addi- importance tfίas showing Dr. "White's are dressed in khaki uniforms on their way to military instruction having as its tional endowment of $14,000,000. Among very keen sorrow over the change from object the defense of this country from the specified needs are the following: the Germany he knew as a student and Germany. to increase salaries, $2,000,000; to endow young man to the Germany that in- Here am I who knew and loved Franz existing professorships and assistant volved the world in a defensive war Lieber, , Henry Villard and professorships, $3,000,000; to endow the Carl Bitter, thinking of men of the against its modern ambitious aggression. present day like these, and those who preceptorial system, $1,000,000; for Dr. White was a friend and fellow laid down their lives for us during the financial aid to needy students, $300,000 worker with Carl Schurz and the other Civil War, as enemies. I dare not trust for the endowment of about 200 regional leaders of the '48 German democratic myself to think longer upon it all. scholarships ($300-$600 each), $1,000,- movement and a bitter opponent of the I thank you for the kind terms of your letter and can -only indulge in 000; for a library fund, $600,000; for modern military regime which led Ger- vague hopes that all this present condi- the department of chemistry, $2,000,000 many to its punishment in the Great tion of things, involving as it is doing to develop and endow the School of War." so distressingly the whole modern world, Engineering, $3,000,000; to develop the may in some way be only a dream. School of Architecture, $350,000; to Barely at any time in my life have I I remain, with renewed thanks, been so impressed by a letter as by yours Yours faithfully, equip the astronomical observatory, of the 12th just received. The thoughts $250,000; for the extension of McCosh that it embodies have occurred to me in ANDREW D. WHITE. various forms again and again. How Hall, $250,000; for graduate fellow- often I have thought, "If only Carl ships, $375,000; to endow the religious ; C. E. SOCIETY ELECTS Schurz were now living! ' How a speech work of the university (chapel and from him or even a simple talk from At the annual meeting of the Cornell Philadelphian Society), $200,000; total, him or one of his thoughtful letters would Society of Civil Engineers, held at the have cleared the whole moral and in- $14,325,000. tellectual atmosphere which is now so Cornell Club in New York City on THE UNIVERSITY OF VIRGINIA has en- murky. Next to my own country I have October 21, the following officers were ever since my boyhood loved Germany, rolled more than 1,400 students. The and more and more as time has gone on, elected for the ensuing year: president, largest previous enrollment, that of have felt that of all things I could do Ernest A. Truran '95; first vice-presi- 1916-17, was a little over 1,100. Booms the best would be to have Germany, the dent, Charles S. Rindsfoos '06; second and laboratory space are at a premiutίn. real Germany, to which you refer, under- stood in America, and America under- vice-president, Walter L. Conwell '11; DARTMOUTH celebrated on October 20 stood in Germany. I hardly dare trust recording secretary, Fred T. Coffey '14; the 150th anniversary of the foundation myself to think upon the present con- of the college. . The chief address was dition of things. The two nations once corresponding secretary and treasurer, seemed predestined each to give the Carroll E. Harding ΊO. Harding's ad- made by Justice Wendell P. Stafford, of other what it needed and each to stir in dress is care of the Southern Pacific Co., the Supreme Court of the District of the children of the other the noblest 165 Broadway, New York. Columbia, on CίThe College, a Training thoughts. I receive letters from time to School for Public Service." time from old German friends, but I It was reported .at the meeting that dare not trust myself to answer them, the membership has just passed the COLUMBIA'S registration amounts this and I am but one out of a vast body of mark of one thousand members. After year to about 24,170, distributed as Americans who feel toward Germany as the business meeting Lieut. Col. Fred follows: Summer," 9,500 extension, toward a second mother country. W. Scheidenhelm '05 gave an interest- Think of poor, dear Professor Dr. 7,441; Columbia College, 1,698, includ- Casper Rene Gregory, so lovely, so gen- ing account of his experiences as water ing a freshman class of 602, which is the tle, throwing his life a\vay the other day supply officer of the First Army on the largest by far in the history of the Col- as a soldier, for the Germany he loved Som|me, St. Mihiel, and Argonne-Meuse lege; Teachers' College, 2,532; graduate so well. When I think over the great fronts. Germans you mention I feel as if I had colleges, 1,026; Law School, 468; Busi- known them all, and indeed many of ness, 229 Pharmacy, 461 Medicine, them I did know and love. I dare not PROFESSOR SAMUEL N. SPRING, of the 399; Mines, 151; Journalism, 115; trust myself to think upon them. What Department of Forestry, who is on Architecture, 52 unclassified, 97. Of the a dream, what a blessed dream then was my life in Germany and that of my leave of * absence until January 1, is 602 entering Columbia College, 235 family. teaching silviculture and forest law and were admitted 011 the psychological I can only thank you 'for your letter policy at the University of Missouri. tests. CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS 65

LITERARY REVIEW Dr. George F. Z ook '14 in the October Theory of Social Progress," in a recent number of The American Historical Re- number of The Scientific Monthly, is re- A Collection of Poems view publishes a review of Achille Vial- viewed by Professor James H. Leuba. Singing Places. _By Margaret Barber late 's 'ί Les Etats-Uiiis d' Amerique et Bowen '96. Boston. The Cornhill Com- Kenneth L. Eoberts '08 is the author pany. 1919. 8vo, pp. x, 48. le Conflit Europeen, 4 Aout 1914—6 of the following articles recently pub- Avril 1917" (Paris, Alcan) and Emile Here is a volume containing forty lished: "Clothes" in The Saturday Hovelaque's "Les Etats-Unis et la short poems which do their author much Evening Post for September 13 and Guerre: de la Neutralite a la Croisade." credit. In the first place Mrs. Bowen "Food for Thought" in the Post for In the same number, Professor Alfred has something to say. The thought is October 4; and "Oriental Irritants" in H. Sweet, Ph.D. '17, reviews John Brown- not profound; yet it is never overdone;- The Cosmopolitan for October. A story bill's edition of "The Coucher Book of oftentimes it is merely suggested. Sev- by him, "Pergola Preferred," appeared Furness Abbey'' Professor Louise in Collier's for October 4. eral of the poems have to do with im- ί Fargo Brown '03 reviews ' The Im- pressions and incidents of European munity of Private Property from Cap- Professor Vernon Kellogg, '91-2 Grad., travel. One of the most pleasing of these ture at Sea" by Harold Scott Quigley; writes in Science for October 10 on is the sonnet entitled ί ί At the English Professor W. C. Abbott, '92-5 Grad., "Emdl Fischer After the War," report- Craft Shop in Casa Guidi.'' There are reviews David Nichol Smith's "Char- ing some parts of a conversation with songs commemorating visits to Oxford, acters from the Histories and Memories Fischer, Ballod, and Zuntz. In the issue Weimar, Oberammergau, Paestum, Capri. of the Seventeenth Century, with an of Science for October 17 Karl M. Echoes of the war are to be found in Essay on the Character, and Historical Dallenbach, Ph.D. '13, writes on "Snow- "The Lovely Lads of Eugby" and Notes" (Oxford University Press). Eollers.' ' "Joyce Kilmer." In execution Mrs. In Mycologia for July, lately received, Bowen displays much skill. She has In The Bookman for October Professor Professor Harry M. Fitzpatrick '09 dis- good control over her rhymes. The Abbott reviews three volumes on Bol- cusses " Eostronitschkia, a New Genus rhythm usually pleases, and the style is shevism, under the title, "Looking For- of Pyrenomycetes." The editor, Dr. never forced or artificial. Even in the \vard.'' William A. Murrill '00, contributes sev- sonnet, the most difficult of all forms, In The Guide to Nature, organ of the eral short notes and articles. she acquits herself creditably. From the Agassiz Association, for September, point of view of technique the least Professor Simon H. Gage '77 writes on In The Mining and Scientific Press pleasing poem, perhaps, is "Joyce Kil- "Professor Burt Green Wilder, Cornell for October 11 and Ϊ8 Professor Louis mer, " in which the lines are so long University, 1867-1910." In the same C. Graton ΌO discusses "The Federal that the reader desires a more frequent issue Dr. L. H. Bailey's four books, Taxation of Mines," tracing the de- recurrence of the rhyme. On the other "Universal Service," "Wind and velopment of the law as it affects the hand, the author has succeeded to a Weather," "The Holy Earth," and mine-owner. high degree in making her songs really "What Is Democracy?" are favorably Professor Edward L. Nichols '75 and musical. We hope this is only the first reviewed. Horace L. Howes, Ph.D. '15, in The of a number of volumes from Mrs. Peter W. Claassen, of the Department Physical Review for October, write on Bowen's pen. In spite of the poetic "Fluorescence and Absorption of the renaissance through which, happily, we of Entomology, writes in The Scientific Monthly for August on "A Possible Uranyl Sulphates." In the same num- are passing, our real singers are all too ber Professor George W. Stewart, Ph.D. few. New Source of Supply," discussing the cattail as a food. '01, of the State University of Iowa, Books and Magazine Articles discusses "Propagation of Sound in an In the September number of City and Irregular Atmosphere.'' George I. Alden, M. M. E. '90, of State, the organ of the Baltimore Al- Worcester, Mass., has in press a book liance and Women's Civic League, Eos- Professor Bancroft's papers on "The on "The Study of Electricity by the coe C. Edmund '09 writes on "Federa- Color of Sea Water" recently published Deductive Method.'' tion and Social Service"; this is an in The Scientific American, are sum- marized in the London Sphere for Sep- The recently published book on "Fed- extract from an address at the Na- tember 13. eral Military Pensions in the United tional Conference of Social Work at States," by Professor William H. Glas- Atlantic City. In The Syracusan for September 15 son '96, of Trinity College, Durham, Professor Charles A. Ellwood '96, of Dean William L. Bray '93 of Syracuse 1ST. C., was reviewed in The American the University of Missouri, writes in discusses "The Part of the Botanist in .Historical Review for July. It was also The Psychological Bulletin for March, the World War.'' noticed in The English Historical Re- lately received, on "The Instincts in The Press Bulletin of the Philippine view for July, and was earlier in the year Social Psychology," ,and also reviews Commission of Independence for August made the subject of an extended review Professor C. H. Cooley's "Social Pro- 27 publishes a cable received on August in The Far East, published at Tokyo, cess" (Scribner), M. P. Follett's "New 19 in which General Aguinaldo is re- Japan. State" (Longmans), B. M. Anderson's ported to have denied that he intimated In The Methodist Review for Septem- "Value of Money" (Macmillan), E. S. to Captain Kenneth Eoberts that he ber-October Professor Charles Gray Bogardus' (' Essentials of Social Psy- thought the Filipinos unfit for inde- Shaw '94, of New York University, chology," and E. B. Eeuter's "Mulatto pendence. Eoberts's article on the sub- writes on "Balzac's Brutal Facts in in the United States." Professor Ell- ject appeared in The Satτirday^ Evening the Light of the New France." wood 's own paper on '' The Educational Post for July 12. 66 COENELL ALUMNI NEWS

If our wealthy men would make a commonweal through these troubled careful study of the fate of great for- waters, then there is small hope for us tunes and their effects upon the per and our descendants. sons who do not create but merely It thus becomes vitally and funda- Published for the Associate Alumni of inherit them, they would find, we feel mentally important to keep up the sup- by the Cornell Alumni sure, that they would be doing their ply of trained leaders. Military men tell News Publishing Company, Incorporated. children the greatest kindness by limit- us of the serious problem of providing Published weekly during the college year and monthly during the summer; forty issues ing their legacies in such a way that enough officers for the Army in the late annually. Issue No. 1 is published the last Thursday of September. Wockly publication the children should not thereby be emergency; the supply sometimes ran so (numbered consecutively) continues through robbed of the natural incentive to low that second lieutenants found them- Commencement Week. Issue No. 40 is pub- li hed in August and is followed by an index effort which comes from the limitation selves in command of battalions. Our of the entire volume, which will be mailed on request. of means. It is a far better use of great citizen army is in direr straits Subscription price $3.60 a year, payable money to leave it to a worthy uni- than this, for many parts of it are vir- .in advance. Foreign postage 40 cents a year extra. Single copies twelve cents each. versity than to spoil a good boy with tually commanded at this moment by Should a subscriber desire to discontinue it, and infinitely better than to leave ignorant quacks, Bolsheviki, anarchists, his subscription, notice to that effect should be sent in before its expiration. Otherwise it to a spoiled boy to dissipate. what not, whose very presence in our it is assumed that a continuance of the sub- Perhaps few of the readers, certainly Republic is a menace. ' scription is desired. l Checks, drafts, and orders should be made none of the editors, of THE CORNELL The only places hitherto discovered payable to Cornell Alumni News. ALUMNI NEWS can become contributors for the training of leaders are our Correspondence, should be addressed— Cornell Alumni News, Ithaca N. Y. on any such basis. The reasoning is centers of education, and especially our nevertheless sound, we feel, and the ap- colleges and universities. So long as Managing Editor: R. W. Sailor '07 plication of it is important to the cause these are kept at their maximum effi- Associate Editors: of education. Nearly every one of us ciency, so long will ideas have free play Clark S. Northup '93' B. S. Monroe '96 H. G. Stutz '07 knows more or less intimately some per- and truth will do its mighty regenerat- Business Manager: R. W. Sailor son whose picture is adequately drawn ing and liberalizing work. iWhen these Circulation Manager: Geo. Wm. Horton in the foregoing. If ingenuity and centers begin to < run down, when the News Committee of the Associate Alumni: ΛV. W. Macon '98, Chairman earnestness are used in the approach, it teachers are allowed to receive such N. H. Noyes '06 J. P. Dods '08 Officers of the Cornell Alumni News Pub- is possible that many large sums can small pay that they must devote part lishing Company, Incorporated: John L. be diverted from, harmful purposes and of their.energy to earning a living be- Senior, President; R. W. Sailor, Treasurer- Woodford Patterson. Secretary. Office, 220 applied to the lasting good of humanity. fore they can teach, then things begin East State Street, Ithaca, N. Y. The Government has made it possible to suffer. for a donor to give vast sums to educa- It becomes evident, then, as the Printed by The Ithacan tion at a considerable reduction in cost. Bulletin points out, that one of the first A chair can be endowed for thirty cents of patriotic duties of the present moment Entered as Second Class Matter at Ithaca, NVY. on the dollar ^ without defeating the is to safeguard the welfare of our higher Ithaca, N. Y., October, 30, 1919 obvious purpose of the provisions of the institutions of learning. Young men are income tax. An additional saving is flocking to the colleges this fall as never WHAT KIND OF LEGACY? made when the executors pay the in- before. Let us see to it that they get The following is an extract from a heritance tax. The Endowment Fund the best of teaching; for the best is speech by John O. H. Pitney to a con- Committee will gladly give details. none too good to qualify them for the ference of district chairmen of Prince- THE CUBE FOR PRESENT EVILS leadership which they will inevitably be called upon to exercise in the community ton's Endowment Fund Committee. We The Harvard Alumni Bulletin in its as soon as they are ready for it. borrow it from The Princeton Alumni issue for October 9 prints a highly per- Weekly. tinent editorial calling attention to the A REASON FOR NON-DELIVERY "A man came into my office one day, significance of the Harvard Endowment A Cornell man who had seen two a wealthy man, and wanted a will Fund campaign in connection with the years of service -in various camps in- drawn, and he wanted to tie it up so present social unrest. Its contention is forms us that at one time his copy of tight that his children and grand- that in these trying times the hope of the ALUMNI NEWS stopped coming to children could not dissipate his money, the world centers in the wisdom of its him. Subsequently he found copies in and he wanted every condition and re- leaders, its trained men. It has been the camp library. Investigation»showed striction and limitation put in it that the fashion in many quarters of late to that his weekly copy had been systemat- a, lawyer knew about, and he wanted sniff at Carlyle and his doctrine of ically diverted for the common good, it to extend just as far as the law heroes. Yet Carlyle was a pretty fair and that men of all colleges were read- allowed. And I felt like saying to judge of human naturβj and we must ing it. This may serve as an explana- him—I wish I had, and if I had known probably admit that his belief in the tion to some of our subscribers who this was coming I would have said to necessity of heroes and of trusting to failed to receive their copies regularly him: 'If, in/stead of drawing your their guidance was in accord with prin- while in the service. will, you would draw a big check for ciples of human conduct which have not Princeton, and make sure your boy greatly altered since the days of "Past DR. E. E. LOVING, head of the depart- would have a good education, you would and Present" and "Heroes and Hero- ment of physics in Richmond College, leave him a much better heritage than Worship. " If the trained men, fortified has been granted leave of absence for all this money that is tied up in this and balanced by learning and reflection, the year, and is doing special work at will.' " are unable to pilot the ship of the the University. CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS 67

MATHEMATICAL PAPERS G. L. Bontecou of Emporia, Kansas, the American Credit Indemnity Com- At the summer meeting of the Ameri- and Mrs. Lewis K. Thurlow and Miss pany. He was a member of Chi Phi. can Mathematical Society, held at the Jennie Northrup of 152 Gates Avenue, Theodore G . Hubbard '97 Brooklyn. He was a member of the University of Michigan on September Theodore Gilbert Hubbard died on Cornell Club of New York City. 2-4, the following were among the papers October 24 at Geneva, N. Y., at the presented: "Certain Types of Involu- Cyril G. Hopkins '94 age of forty-three. torial Space Transformations" (2d Professor Cyril George Hopkins, of Hubbard was the son of Mr. and Mrs. paper), by Professors Francis E. Sharpe, the University of Illinois, died of T. S. Hubbard, of Geneva. He prepared Ph.D. '07, and Virgil Snyder, '90-92 congestion of the brain complicated by at the Geneva Classical and Union Grad.; "Urn Schemata as a Basis for malaria at Gibraltar on October 6, while School, entering the College of Agri- the Development of the Theory of on his way home from Europe. He had culture at Cornell in 1893, and receiving Correlation," by Professor Henry L. spent a year in reclamation work on the the degree of B. S. in 1897. He was a Eietz, Ph.D. ;02. worn-out soils of Greece, for which work member of Bench and Board, Mermaid, he had been decorated by the King of and Aleph Samach. CLUB SERVICE LUNCHEON Greece, and was returning to his uni- Soon after his graduation he went to The Cornell Women's Club of Phila- versity work. Canada with the Fairbanks Scale Com- pany, returning to Geneva in 1907. delphia will give a luncheon on Satur- He was born near Chatfield, Minn., on day, November 1, at 1.30 p. m. at tEe July 22, 1866, the son of George Edwin Augustus M. Frederikson '08 Arcadia, to three Cornell women who and Caroline Cudney Hopkins, and Augustus M. Frederikson died of in- have returned from service in the war graduated from the South Dakota Agri- fluenza in December, 1918, at Cornwall, zone. The guests are the Misses Ballen- cultural College in 1890. He remained N. Y. tine, Loux, and McCaulley. This is the at the college for a time as an assistant Frederikson was born on January 28, regular November meeting of the club. in chemistry, then came East and studied 1886, the son of Mr. and Mrs. A. N. at Cornell, taking the degree of M. S. Frederikson, of Cornwall. He entered in 1894 and that of PhJX in 1898. He CORNELLIANS AT SOUTH BEND Cornell from the Cornwall High School continued his studies in agricultural in 1904, receiving the degree of LL. B. All the Cornell men of South Bend chemistry at Gδttiiigen in 1899-1900. in 1908. From the time of his gradua- and Mishawaka, Indiana, are members He had become connected with the Uni- tion until his death, he was associated of the University Club of South Bend. versity of Illinois in 1894 as chemist with the law firm of E. H. Barnett and There are ten in all. Two of these are of the Agricultural Experiment Station, Company, of Newburgh, N. Y., and was officers of the club, Carl L. Hibberd '11 and held this post till 1900, when he said to be one of the leading lawyers being vice-president, and Guy B. Wiser became professor of agronomy and chief of Orange County. '17, secretary. in agronomy and chemistry, In 1903, He is survived by his widow and three also, he became vice-director of the children. OBITUARY station. Terry P. Clay ΊO He was a fellow of the American Henry Gregory Northrup '74 Terry Pitkin Clay died on October 19 Association for the Advancement of at Atlantic City, N. J. Henry Gregory Northrup died on Science and a member of the American Clay was born 011 September 21, 1885, October 14, at his home, 152 Gates Chemical Society, the Association of the son of Mr. and Mrs. O. P. Clay, of Avenue, Brooklyn. After cremation, in- Official Agricultural Chemists (of which Cleveland, Ohio. He prepared at the terment was made in Ithaca. he was president in 1905-6), the Ameri- East High School, Cleveland, and entered Mr. Northrup was born in Ithaca can Society of Agronomy, Sigma Xi, Sibley College in 1906, remaining two on August 10, 1854, a son of John and Phi Lambda Upsilon, and Alpha Zeta. years. He was a member of Alpha Delta Louise Abigail Gregory Northrup. After He was the author of "Soil Fertility Phi. graduating from the Ithaca Academy, he and Permanent Agriculture'; (1910), Louise C. Lanneau, Grad. entered Cornell in the fall of 1870 in "The Story of the Soil" (1911), "The the course in civil engineering. He be- Farm That Won't Wear Out" (1913), Miss Louise Cox Lanneau, who was a came a member of Kappa Alpha and and many bulletins and articles on graduate student in chemistry in 1915-16, the Engineering Association. He took chemical and soil investigations. He had died at Ealeigh, N. C., on May 3, 1919, the degree of B. C. E. in 1874, but never won high distinction in his chosen field. of pneumonia, following an attack of practised the profession of engineering. He was the inventor of the Hopkins influenza. He first entered the employ of the condenser and distilling tube, 1898, and Miss Lanneau received the degree of Tompkins County National Bank, where the Hopkins limestone tester, 1917. B. A. at Meredith College, Ealeigh, N. he remained for six years. In 1881 he On May 11, 1893, he married Miss C., later continuing her studies at Wake went to New York and took a position Emma Matilda Stelter, of Brookings, Forest College and Cornell. At the time of her death, she was completing her with Ivison, Blakeman, Taylor and Com- S. D. pany, text-book publishers, remaining sixth year as professor of chemistry at Isaac P. Smith '94 with them until they merged into the Meredith College, and was vice-president American Book Company, when he con- Isaac Plumb Smith died on October of the North Carolina section of. the tinued in the employ of the latter, be- 7 at Albany, N. Y. He was a graduate American Chemical Society. coming cashier of the corporation. He of the Cornell Law School, and for a She leaves her parents, Dr. and Mrs. retired from business three years ago. number of years was engaged in the in- J. F. Lanneau, of Wake Forest, 'N." C., Mr. Northrup leaves three sisters, Mrs. surance business in Philadelphia, with four sisters, and a brother. 68 CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS

race after he had gone half the dis- offensive football is shown by the fact ATHLETICS tance. that Dartmouth made ten first downs To Consider Baseball Problems to two by Cornell. Both teams stuck The Penn State Game pretty close to straight football, the for- F. O. Affeld, jr., '97, captain of the The football game with Penn State ward pass being attempted but seldom '96 baseball team, has issued a call for on November 15 is viewed as the big and then with no great success. Be- all wearers of the baseball C to meet home game of the year in that house- cause of the stubborn resistance of both at the Schoellkopf Club House on Satur- parties will be held in conjunction with lines punting exchanges were frequent. day, November 15, at 9.30 a. m. it, and a considerable influx of alumni Shiverick for a time had the better of Baseball matters in general will be is expected. The game will be called at Eobertson, his Dartmouth opponent, but discussed, but especial attention will be 2.30 p. m. Reserved seats will be sold as the game proceeded the advantage at two dollars each. There is no war focused on consideration of the baseball shifted to the Dartmouth back, who had tax on this game. Alumni desiring better protection. Several of Shiverick's coach to be selected to fill the vacancy tickets should send remittances to the kicks were blocked, one of them with caused by the resignation of Dr. Sharpe. Athletic Association at once as a larger disastrous consequences. Among those who have accepted the in- crowd even than at the Colgate game vitation to attend is Hugh Jennings '04, In sum, while the game, considered is looked for, and undoubtedly all seats from the point of view of che team's whose interest in Cornell baseball has will be filled. persisted through his years of connection improvement compared to its play in the with professional baseball. Pennsylvania Game Seat Sale Colgate game and also in the develop- ment of fighting spirit in defensive play Seats at the Penn State game will be Tickets for the Thanksgiving Day was encouraging, the failure to exhibit provided for the visiting alumni. The football game with the University of any offense worth while, and the im- list of addresses of the baseball alumni Pennsylvania, at Franklin Field, will be perfect execution of such few offensive is by no means complete. Those C placed on sale about November 12 at plays as were attempted, give reason men who have failed to receive invita- the Cornell Club of Philadelphia, 1223 for apprehension as one looks ahead at tions should consider themselves welcome. Locust Street, and at the Cornell Club the November schedule, which includes of New York, 30 W. 44th Street, as well First Cross Country Race games with Lafayette, Penn State, and as at the office of the Athletic Associa- The first cross country team to be Pennsylvania. tion in Ithaca, which will send out ap- selected by Coach Moakley this fall com- plication blanks about November 6. Mail The first period of the game was a peted in an invitation intercollegiate race orders should be sent to Sehoellkopf pretty even battle with frequent ex- held under the auspices of the Syracuse Building, Ithaca, accompanied by check changes of punts. In the second period University Athletic Association at Syra- payable to the. Cornell Athletic Associa- Dartmouth had the advantage and man- cuse last Saturday. Teams from eleven tion. -Seats are $2.50 each (no war aged to reach Cornell's 15-yard line, colleges participated. The race, which tax), the same price as the other big where Mayer intercepted a forward pass was over a four-mile course, with the games of the East. There are forty and broke up the Green's drive on Cor- finish in the Syracuse stadium, was won boxes in the Cornell stands, each hold- nell's 10-yard line. Twice again during by a well balanced Princeton team, which ing ten. Box seats are $3. this period Dartmouth threatened, but scored 49 points. Syracuse, which fur- uncompleted passes plus the stubborn de- nished the individual winner, J. G. Sim- Dartmouth Wins, 9-0 fense of the Cornell line held them off. mons, finished second in the team race The Cornell football team lost to In the third period came a play, which with 78 points. M. I. T. was third with Dartmouth on the Polo Grounds, New proved fatal to Cornell. Youngstrom 107, Yale fourth with 116, Penn fifth York, last Saturday by the score of 9 drove through Cornell's left tackle and with 121, Cornell sixth with 122, Har- to 0, a touchdown jίn the third quarter blocked one of Shiverick's punts, re- vard seventh with 191, and Williams, and a field goal by Eobertson from the covering it on Cornell's 15-yard line. Coluimbia, Colgate, and Dartmouth fin- 47-yard line in the final period giving The Green's backfield then hammered ished in order. the Hanover eleven a well earned vic- the Cornell line. Eobertson made first Captain T. C. McDeπnott, the first tory after a hard fought aggressively down on three attempts against the left Cornellian to cross the line, was fourth played contest, devoid of spectacular tackle, and then Holbrook and Eobert- and J. W. Campbell of Cornell was fifth. playing by either tea m. About eighteen son fought their way through the line The third Cornell runner was G. H. thousand persons, including many alumni until Eobertson made a touchdown. He Stanton, in fifteenth place. G. D. Duryea, of both institutions, saw the game. failed to kick goal. who finished fourth for Cornell, was in Hundreds of undergraduates went down A few minutes later Youngstrom 38th position while I. H. Houston, the from Ithaca to cheer for the team. blocked another one of Shiverick's punts, last man" to qualify for Cornell, was Although the Cornell eleven fought and recovered on Cornell'.s 8-yard line. €0th. D. P. Ayers, the last Cornell entry much more effectively than in the Col- Heie the Cornell line, ably assisted by to finish, was in 72d' place. gate contest and put up a gallant re- Shuler, who backed it up splendidly, It is worth noting that the Cornell sistance, they failed, as in the Colgate gave a fine exhibition of staunch de- team was not at its full strength. L. E. and in preceding games, to show an fense. Dartmouth gained six yards in Wenz, one of the few veteran runners offense worthy of the name. Conse- three downs, but Cornell held on the on the team this year, was unable to quently Dartmouth forced the fighting one-yard line and Shiverick kicked out compete and J. L. Dickinson, who had a good share of the time and the play of danger. This superb defensive rally, been running among the leaders in trial was frequently in Cornell territory. The coming only a few minutes after they races here, was compelled ,to quit the measure of the Green's superiority in had been scored on, proved the mettle CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS 69

of the Cornell team. Shiverick's long Mrs. Kniskern was Katherine E. Selden Sick put the ball at midfield and neither ALUMNI NOTES '05. team had a chance to score after this '92 CE—William G. Atwood is acting '04 AB, ΊO PhD—Professor Floyd K. until Robertson sent over his spectacular as technical adviser to the government Richtmyer, who is absent from the Uni- field goal from the 47-yard line in the of the Kingdom of the Serbs, Croats, versity on leave, is devoting some time last period, the ball striking the cross and Slovenes. His address is in care to research in the Research Laboratory bar and bounding over. The score: of the General Electric Company, in Dartmouth (9) Cornell (0) of the American Belief Administration, Worth Ensworth Schenectady, .and is giving some lectures Left end 115 Broadway, New York. Sonnenburg Taylor at Union College. Left tackle '97—J. Walter Ackerman is chief Crisp Straus '05 ME—Walter J. Armstrong has Left guard engineer and superintendent of the Cunningham Horrell been discharged from the Army, having Center Auburn Water Works, new building a been a captain in the Explosives Division Youngstrom Miller nine-million-galloϊi slow sand filter plant. Right guard of the Ordnance Department. He is now Murphy Sutton His address is 26 Nelson Street, Auburn, manager of the pulverizer and crusher Righ tackle Threshie Wilson N. Y. department of the Jeffrey Manufactur- Right end Cannell (Oapt.) Shiverick (Capt.) '02—In The Providence Journal for ing Company, of Columbus, Ohio; he Quarterback lives at 2097 Summit Street. Robertson . Davies September 21 Clair Price has an inter- Left halfback esting article on Major Charles Welling- Eckberg Mayer '06; Ίl AB—Frank B. Elser and Right halfback ton Furlong, whose war record is thus Maximilian Elser, jr., are general man- Jordan Shuler t Fullback described: "After being rejected for ager and editor, respectively, of the Touchdown: Robertson, Dartmouth. Goal physical reasons, he succeeded in 1917 Metropolitan News Service, 432 Fifth from field: Robertson, Dartmouth. in joining the First Troop, Massa- Score by Periods Avenue, New York. The business con- Dartmouth 0 0 6 3—9 chusetts Cavalry, as a private. He was sists of the preparation of copy for Cornell 0 0 0 0—0 given the rank of captain in December, newspapers. Substitutes: Dartmouth, Merritt for Worth, 1917, and the next year was transferred Holbrook for Jordan, Schulting for Eckberg, to military intelligence and attached to '07 LLB—Mr. and Mrs. Harry G. Jordan for Merritt, Gordon for Schulting, the General Staff. In this capacity he Stutz, of Ithaca, announce the birth of Streng for Gordon, Worth for Threshie, their second son, Robert Swan Stutz, on Healy for Sonnenburg, Weld for Crisp, Watts had charge of the fitting out of the con- for Cannell, Sheppard for Cunningham. ference room aboard the S. S. George August 24. Cornell, Colvin for Ensworth, Mackenzie for Washington, which took President Wil- '07 ME—Herman Bartholomay is sec- Shuler, Hoag for Taylor, Tuttle for Mayer, retary and treasurer of the Bartholomay- Trowbridge for Horrell, Shuler for Macken- son to France. This was a job which zie, Mackenzie for Davies, Olney for Tuttle, entailed the collection of vast masses Durling Company, insurance agents and JPendleton for Straus, Davies for Olney, of evidence and maps and the arrange- bankers, of Chicago. His business ad- Cunneen for Wilson, Dodge for Kutton, ments of a lighting system which would dress is 175 West Jackson Boulevard. Krauss for Miller, Craig for Maceknzie, Liv- ingston for Davies, Wahl for Shuler. make them most available. Before this '08—Harold H. Lyon, formerly in the Referee: C. J. McCarty, Germantown. Um- assignment Furlong had compiled a set Syracuse office of the Walter M. Low- pire: F. W. Murphy, Brown. Linesman: J. of military handbooks on the Murmansk ney Company, has been transferred to A. Evans, λVilliams. Field judge: F. W. region, which are now the standard in the Boston office, as assistant sales Burleigh, Exeter. Time of periods: Fifteen minutes. the War Department. Following the manager of confectionery. His address .armistice, Major Furlong was dispatched is 427 Commercial Street, Boston. THE REGULAR ORGAN RECITALS ΛvίΠ be to Fiume and played a prominent part ΊO ME—Major George W. Blair has given this year 011 Friday afternoons at in the compilation of evidence which led been released from the service and is live o'clock. It had been planned to to President Wilson's proclamation on again associated with the Mishawaka have them on Wednesdays, but owing to the subject of the Italian claim to Woolen Manufacturing Company, Misha- the required lectures on hygiene at Fiume. He was the only American officer waka, Ind. Bailey Hall on Wednesdays and Thurs- in Fiume during the Italian develop- '10 ME—Harold D. Tompkins was days, this had to be abandoned. The ments, which led up to the Fiume discharged from the service on July 28 situation has been thoroughly canvassed, proclamation. Later he was assigned as as a first'lieutenant in the Signal Corps. and it is most unfortunate that there is military observer with the Allied and He is now living at 533 Comniunipaw no hour that is available for the entire American armies in the Balkans, an as- Avenue, Jersey City, N. J. student body. signment from which he is on his way ΊO BSA—After two years of mili- THE CORNELL ANNUALS, at a recent to Tripoli.'' board meeting, decided to issue but one tary service, Philip H. Elwood has re- '04 AB—Henry F. Vincent is with book this year, the combined Class Book sumed his duties as professor in the de- McElwain, Morse & Rogers, manufac- and Cornelliaii, such as has been their partment of horticulture at Ohio State turers of shoes and shoe store supplies, practice in 1918 and 1919. The board University. Elwood served as a captain of New York. He lives at 11 Fernwood reaffirms its intention to finish its in- of field artillery, and after the armis- Eoad, Summit, N. J. complete service record of the Uni- tice was detailed to supervise the engi- versity's deaths in service and decora- '04 ME; '05 AB—Walter H. (Pete) neering, construction, and landscape tions. It is expected that a welcome Kniskern is with the General Chemical gardening of the Argonne cemet'ery, said innovation will be made when pictures Company, 25 Broad Street, New York. to be the largest of its kind in France. of the members are substituted for the Kniskern and his family reside at 16 Ίl AB—Mr. and Mrs. Warren Pease, fraternities' rolls of chapters. Trenton Avenue, White Plains, N. Y. of Kenilworth, 111., have announced the 70 CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS engagement of their daughter, Agnes Jane Louise, on September 18, 1919. represent the Pierce-Arrow Motor Car Madeleine/ to Edwin Everitt Sheridan, They live at^1730 First Street, North- Company. Their address is 12 Place of Έvanston, 111. Sheridan is with the west, Washington, D. C. Vendόme. American Colortype Company, 1151 Eos- '15 BArch—Major Alexander C. Esch- '17 BS—Lyster M. Hethrington sailed coe Street, Chicago. weiler, jr., has been discharged from froΊn Vancouver on the Empress of' '11 AB—Raymond H. Fuller is a the service, and has resumed the prac- Asia on September 4; he has signed up junior at -the Episcopal Theological tice of architecture at 720 Goldsmith for three years' work with the /Board- School, Cambridge, Mass. His address Building, Milwaukee. of Foreign Missions of the Methodist is 36 Hawthorn Street, Cambridge. '15 BS, '16 ME—Victor H. Eies is Episcopal Church, and will be a teacher Ίl ME—Mr. and Mrs. C. Kenneth professor of botany at the Iowa State of science in the Anglo-Chinese College Getchell, 706 Huron Street, Scheneetady, Teachers College, Cedar Falls, Iowa. His at Foochow, China. announce the birth of a son, Eiehard address is 809 Eighteenth Street. '17 BS, '19 DVM—Dr. Morris Scher- Donald, on September 8. <16 LLB—Mario Lazo is now con- ago has given up his position as patholo- Ml AB, '19 PhD—J. Franklin Brad- nected with the firm of Bodell & Com- gist at the Life Extension Institute ίa ley is professor of English literature at pany, investment security brokers, 120 New York, to take charge of the depart- Sweet Briar College, Sweet Briar, Va. Broadway, New York. ment of bacteriology at the University '11 ME—Howard W. Dix was dis- '16 ME—Harold Cole is assistant to of Kentucky, Lexington, Ky. charged from the service on August 18, the distribution engineer of the Detroit Ί$ —Harold C. Kennedy has been, and has resumed his position* with the Edison Company. His address is 402 mustered out of the service, and is now firm of Emery, Varney, Blair and Lincoln Building, Detroit, Mich. working in the export department of Hoguet, practicing patent, trademark, '16 BS; '17 BS—Mr. and Mrs. Harold Butler Bros., wholesale merchants, of and copyright law. His business address E. Irish (Araminta MacDonald '17) Jersey City, N. J. He lives at 99 Mercer is 149 Broadway, New York. announce the birth of a son, Eobert Street. '12—Mr. and Mrs. Donald G. Munroe Goodwin, on September 10, at Delhi, '18 AB, '19 AM—Miss Marguerite C. announce the birth of a son, Eugene, on N. Y. Irish is purchasing engineer with Flockhart is studying English literature September 8 at Detroit. Munroe is still the Western Electric Company, 195 in the Graduate School of Columbia with the Semet-Solvay Company, Detroit. Broadway, New York. University, and is also taking a course '13 ME—Paul A. Franklin was dis- '17 BChem-^Samuel Wilson is as- under Dr. Lyman at Union Theological charged from the service on March 28, sistant professor of chemistry at Wabash Seminary. College, Crawfordsville, Ind., instructing having 'been a captain attached to the '18—Ensign Adrian F. Shannon was 53d Artillery, C. A. C. Since Mayl he in physical chemistry and food analysis. released from active 'duty in the Navy has been with the Hood Eubber Com- '17 CE—Samuel J. Leonard is in the on July 2, when the U. S. S. Houston pany, Watertown, Mass. His address department of building design of the was at San Francisco; he had been in is 34 Chauncy Street, Watertown. B. F. Goodrich Eubber Company, Akron, the service for twenty-seven months, en- '13 AB—First Lieutenant John F. Ohio. He lives at 64 Hamilton Avenue. gaged principally in convoy and trans- Farnsworth has returned from France, '17 ME—John Haydoek 3d is an port work. He is now in the Adjutant , and is now with the 51st Infantry at engineer in the production and efficiency General's office, at Madison, Wis., work- Camp Grant, 111. He was married on department of the Niles-Bement-Pond ing on the Soldier Bonus and Educa- December 31, 1917, to Miss Phillis Company, at their Plainfield, N. J., tional Laws, lately enacted by the State Craig, of Portland, Maine. plant. of Wisconsin. His home address is 255 '14 DVM—Harrison V. Baker re- '17 BS; '18 BS—Edwin Ingersoll West Ninetieth Street, New York. ceived his discharge on September 2, Kilbourne and Miss Elizabeth Alward '18—Mr. and Mrs. E. Sargent Samp- after two years of service, as a captain were married on September 11 at St. son, of Mount Vernon, N. Y., have an- in the Veterinary Corps. He has re- John's Episcopal Church, Buffalo, N. Y. nounced the engagement of their daugh- sumed the practice of veterinary medi- They sailed on September 27 for Santo ter, Gertrude Sargent Sampson, to> cine at Hamburg, N. Y. Domingo, where Kilbourne has a posi- Bertram York Kinzey. Kinzey has been '14 ME—Mason Evans, jr., has just tion with the Consuelo Sugar Company. acting as assistant professor of military been appointed credit manager of the Their address is in care of the Consuelo science and tactics at Pϊinceton; he-re- Sharon Steel Hoop Company, Sharon, Sugar Company, San Pedro de Macori, ceived his discharge from the Army on Pa.; the company's main office is in Dominican Eepublic. Kilbourne has re- October 1, as captain of field artillery, Sharon, with works in Slraron, and in cently returned from two years' service and has returned to Cornell to complete Youngstown and Lowellville, Ohio. His with the Navy. his course in the College of Agriculture. address is 238 Lora Avenue, Youngs- '17 BS—Miss A. Frances Jansen is '18—Jo H. Cable is employed in the town Ohio. a teacher of domestic art at the Madison production department of the Texas '15 LLB—William W. Dodge has re- School, Youngstown, Ohio. Her address Company, Sour Lake, Texas. turned to Mishawaka, Ind., as general is 820 Michigan Avenue. '18 DVM—Hyman W. Gardner has manager of the National Veneer Pro- '17 CE—Eiehard Parmenter and Miss opened an office at Creighton, Neb., for ducts Company, makers of Indestrueto Isabella Burrall, both of Geneva, N. Y., the practice of veterinary medicine. trunks. were married on October 27 at Trinity '18 AB—Announcement has been made '15 CE—Captain and Mrs. George L. Church, Geneva. They will make their of the marriage of Miss Sara Frances Kraft announce the birth of a daughter, home in Paris, where Parmenter will Sutherland, of Jacksonville,. Fla.,. to CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS

Elbert Parr Tuttle, of Honolulu, T. H. '19 PhD—Frank W. Douglas, who F. Wieghardt, 3210 Walbrook Avenue, The wedding took place at the Church has lately been teaching at Albion Col- Baltimore, Md. of the Epiphany, Washington, D. C., lege, has been appointed associate pro- ΊO—John A. Clark, in care of the on October 22. Tuttle is a member of fessor of chemistry at Colorado College. Hope Natural Gas Company, Clarksburg, the Washington staff of The Army and '20—John M. Messinger is attending W. Va.—Major Gilbert H. Crawford, Navy Journal, and is Washington corre- the medical school at the University of 1220 Grand Concourse, New York.— spondent for The Daily Advertiser, of Buffalo. Eussell B. Hurlburt, 29 Niles St., Hart- Honolulu. His address is 502 Evans ford, Conn.—John F. String, 376 Park '22—Barto S. Curtis has entered the Building, Washington, D. C. Mrs. Tuttle Avenue, East Orange, N. Y. is a member of the class of 1919 at course in civil engineering at Princeton Wellesley College; she has also attended University. An elder brother is also in '11—Ealph Davis, 146 Adams Avenue, Florida State College for Women and Princeton. Scranton, Pa.—Francis C. Heywood, 113 Goucher College. Pleasant St., Holyoke, Mass.—Charles C. Trump, 356 Maolis Avenue, Glen NEW ADDRESSES '18—Francis Cuming Lathrop and Eidge, N. J. Miss Elizabeth Lyon Champlin, daugh- '75—Miss Mary H. Ladd, Pendexter '12—Charles C. Bintz, 265-273 South ter of Dr. and Mrs. John Champlin, Mansion, Intervale, N. M. Fifth West St., Salt Lake City, Utah.— were married on September 4 at Christ '82—Henry P. Gushing 2275 Tudor Episcopal Church, Westerly, E. I. Alfred Bonney, jr., Hopewell Junction, Drive, Cleveland Heights, Ohio. N. Y.—Thomas O. Hussey, 104 Park ; 18—Eugene B. Sullivan is with Asso- '95—Bernard Hoffmann, Stoekbridge, Avenue, East Orange, N. J.—Thomas H. ciated Farm Papers, Fifth Avenue Build- Mass. Latimer, 512 West Fourteenth St., Wil- ing, New York. He lives at 810 Els- '97—Benjamine S. Cottrell, 1102 Old mington, Del.—Carl E. Newlander, Dairy mere Place. South Building, Boston, Mass.—Alfred Division, B. A. I., Washington, D. C. Ί8 BS—Miss June Brown is teaching G. Miles, 550 Park Avenue, New York. '13—John H. Brodt, 685 East Atwater science and history in the Earlville, N. '98—Sterling C. Lines, Scottwood St., Detroit, Mich.—Harold T. Canfield, Y., High School. Apartments, No. 308, Toledo, Ohio. 634 Madison Avenue, Pater son, N. J.— '18—Herbert C. Drescher returned '00—Captain Eussell G. Inslee, New- Thurston V. V. Ely, 390 Broadway, from France in September, after ten ton, N. J. Flushing, N. Y.—Percival S. Goan, months7 service overseas as a second Όl—Walter E. Phelps, 2731 Creston Billings, Mont.—William B. Joseph, 1201 lieutenant pilot with the 24th Aero Avenue, Bronx, New York. ΛVest Seventh St., Wilmington, Del.— Squadron, First Army. His present ad- George P. McNear, jr., Petaluma, Calif. '02—Eobert Clauson, Capiz, Capiz, P. dress is 684 St. Mark's Avenue, Brook- —Donald H. Eeeves, 351 Edgewood I.—William J. Norton, 104 Scotland lyn, N. Y. Avenue, Dayton, Ohio.—A. Lester Slo- Road, South Orange, N. J.—Harold B. '18 BS—Edwin G. Batsford is with cum, 405 Newberry Boulevard, Milwau- Stevens, Box 135, Clairton, Pa. the U. S. Geological Survey, engaged in kee, Wis.—Miss Irene E. Spindler, 111 topographical work in the Cranberry '03—Major George H. Euss, jr., 305 Oak Avenue, Ithaca, N. Y. Lake region. His present address is in Third Street, Bismarck, N. Dak. '14—Merrick V. Barnes, Bethlehem, care of the Geological Survey, Wana- '04—Harold S. Bope, 327 North Neg- N. H.—Edmund E. Bowden, 201 New kena, St. Lawrence County, N. Y. ley Avenue, Pittsburgh, Pa. York , Building, Seattle, Wash.—W. '18 BS—Franklin E. Brown is as- '05—Carl G. Allen, Williamsport, Pa. Howard Fritz, jr., Berwyn, Pa.—Gil- sistant superintendent of the ITnadilla, —Arthur G. Wylie, 240 Walnut St., bert C. Halsted, jr., 427 Washington N. Y., plant of the Nestle's Food Com- Holyoke, Mass. Avenue, Brooklyn, N. Y,—John B. pany, Inc. '06—Eobert H. Coit, 1224 North State Howell, 85 Main St., East Orange, N. J. '18—Oliver W. Holton has recently St., Chicago, 111.—Edward H. Faile, 106 —Walter E. Nussbaum, 470 North Sec- purchased the Twin Brook Farm, of 110 Highland Avenue, Larchmont, N. Y.— ond St., Lehighton, Pa.—Charles A. acres, at Middletown, N. J., and intends Fred L. Nussbaum, 2802 Wisconsin Wright, 92 Jefferson St., Perth Amboy, to devote it to the propagation of game Avenue, Northwest, Washington, D. C. N. J. and ornamental land and water fowls, '07—Lieut Col. George Euhlen, jr., specializing in ring neck pheasants. Eoom 3016, Munitions Building, Wash- '18 BS—Lester M. Cooper is senior ington, D. C. chemist with the Nestle's Food Com- '08—Boy Paulus, 295 Lafayette St., pany, Inc., at the Oneonta, N. Y., plant. New York. THE NEW SENATE 104-106 N. AUEORΔ ST. '18 BS—George L. Dawson, and Miss '09—Otto F. Breide, 201 New Orleans Koberta Snider were married on July A restaurant for men an-;. Court Building, New Orleans, La.— women on the first floor 5 at'the home of the bride's parents in Albert Diamant, Casilla de Correo 403, Geneva, N. Y. Dawson is assistant Montevideo, Uruguay.—Elias Freuden- Small dining rooms for par superintendent of the Walton, N. Y., heim, 51 Foster Avenue, Elmira, N. Y.— ties on the second floor plant of the Nestle's Food Company, Inc. Alfred H. Thatcher, in care of the Stand- A banquet hall on the third '19—Charles F. Eeavis, jr., is with ard Processing Company, Chattanooga, Home-style Cooking1 the law firm of Tolles, Hogsett, Ginn Tenn.—Edwin E. Thomas, 55 Jackson MARTIN T. GIBBONS and Morley, Williamson Building, Cleve- St., Lawrence, Mass.—Joseph B. Turner, PROPRIETOR land, Ohio. jr., 122 Front St., New York.—George 72 CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS

>15—Bobert E. Burke, National Bank Christopher Magee, 39 Lincoln Apart- Harold. Jay, 1157 Woodland Avenue, Building, Morristown, N. J.—Alvin G. ments, Youngstown, Ohio. —JLeonard Toledo, Ohio.—Walter C. Lunden, Mount Cadiz, 473 Fourteenth St., Brooklyn, N. Ochtman, jr., 369 East Buchtel Avenue, Jewett, Pa.—Lieut. Russell J. McLauch- Ύ.—Lieut. Charles M. Colyer, Central Akron, Ohio.—Louis duB. Bees, Biltmore lin, 150 Rhode Island Avenue, Highland Bridge, N. Y.-^-Thomas F. Danfόrth, 70 Avenue. Ashevillfi. N. O. Park, Mich.—Robert G. Meyler, 2715 Ellicojbt St., &ΐ$alo, .!& Ύ.—JPaul W. iSeveranee St., Los Angeles, Calif —Miss ^16—Harold Cole, 1700 David Whit- Helen βpaldihg, 1019 'Middlesex St., Penton, 566 West 162d St., New York.— ney Building, Detroit, Mich.—Harland Lowell, Mass.—John K. Stotz, 51 Afton Harry Gordon, 113 Mill St., Lock Haven, B. Cushman, 55 Caryl Avenue, Yonkers, Ave., Oaf ton, Pa.—Lieut. Gilbert M. Pa,—Charles B. Heartfleld, 264 Grand N. Y.—Julian Harvey, 404 Hubbard Taylor, 48 East Fourth St., St. Paul, St., Newburgh, N. Y.-πWalker Hill, jr., Avenue, Detroit, Mich.—Harold L. Hock, Minn.—Charles P. Tymeson, 58 East 5505 LindelΓ Boulevard, St. Louis, Mo.— 150 West Main St., Middletown, N. Y.— Main St., Johnstown, N. Y.—William S. Unger, Box 222, Duquesne, Pa.—Ken- neth B. Warner, 36 Whiting Road, ALUMNI Quincy, Mass.—Nathan G. /Westbrook, PROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY Hemlock, N. Y.—Ralph S. Whitney, Whallonsburg, N. Y. LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA '17—George T. Barton, 1411 West St., Wilmington, -Del.—Miss Amίanda K. ROY V. RHODES '01 Berls, 850 West 179th St., New York.-— Attorney and Counsellor at Law Miss June C. Deming, Elizabethtown, N. Van Nuys Building Y.—Warren G. King, 2573 Stratford Road, Shaker Heights, Cleveland, Ohio. WASHINGTON, D. 0. —Donald A. Mackenzie, P. O. Box 284, Niagara Falls, N. Y.—Donald L.. .Mal- HETHER it is a laddie or THEODORE K. BRYANT '97, '98 lery, 648 St. Mark's Avenue, Brooklyn, yy a lassie that has come N. Y.—William F. Stuckle, 61 Christo- . Master Patent Law '08 to gladden the lives of pher 'St., Montelair, N. J.—Austin W. Patents and Trade Marks Exclusively your friends let your congratula- tions be accompanied by ίlowers. Young, 605 Broadway, New York. 310-313 Victor Building We λvill make up for you the bas- ket or boquet that will be appro- '18—Edward H. Brown, 2208 Har- priate and it will be -quite trivial court Drive, Ambler Heights, Cleveland, ITHACA, N. Y. in cost. Will you call for our services ? Ohio.—John S. Coe, P. O. Box 1038, GEORGE S. TARBELL Waterbury, Conn.—Inglee B. Dewson, Flowers Telegraphed Everywhere 450 Prospect St., South Orange, N. JΓ.— Ithaca Trust Building Albert Graeser, 311 North Second St., Attorney and Notary Public Camden, N. J.—Erwin W. Jenkins, Si^- Real Estate BOOL FLORAL CO. ney Center, N. Y.—John W. Martin, Sold, Rented and Managed 215 East State St. 3138 Sheridan Road, Chicago, 111.—Miss ITHACA Bernardine V. Sehelder, 519 West 121st NEW YORK CITY St., New York.

CHARLES A. TAUSSIG A. B. '02, LL.B., Harvard ;C5 FOREST CITY LAUNDRY 220 Broadway Tel. 1905 Cortlancl General Practice E. M. MERRILL 209 NORTH AURORA STREET MARTIN H. OFFINGER EE. 799 VAίί WAGONER-LINN CONSTRUCTION CO. Electrical Contractors Buildings Wired At least fifty views Anything Electrical Anywhere General Electric Mazda Lamps Pictures of the Finger Lake Region 143 E. 27tiι Street The handsomest set of photographs ever made. Original Sepia Enlargements 11x14, postpaid, each $2. These views are on display in many touring headquarters as far west NORTON, BIRD & WHITMAN as Chicago. They include practically every waterfall, lake, and gorge in Utility and Industrial Engineers the region. Ithaca and vicinity has been particularly well cavered. New York Chicago List of views gratis on request. 501 Fifth Avenue 111 W. Monroe St. Cleveland Sweetland Bldg. Cϋortwr Snπksίnmί Jίlrara Boston Baltimore 88 Broad St. Munsey Bldg. CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS

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A Viewbook of Cornell

T the Semi-Centennial many A bought the Co-op, viewbook. They had read our ads, but per- haps we had not praised our goods enough. They bought when they E can be of service to many saw the viewbook. 'Will it be tak- because of the large stock W ing a great chance for you to trade necessary to take care of the stu- at the Co-op ? dent business. Why not take ad- vantage of this stock? If you need a slide rule, write us. Cornell Co-op. Society Ithaca, N. Y.

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