VOL. XX., No. 3 [PRICE TEN CENTS] OCTOBER 11, 1917

Buy a Liberty Bond for the Alumni Fund!

ITHAGA, NEW YORK CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS

The Farmers' Loan and Herbert G. Ogden Jas. H. Oliphant & Co. E. E., '97 Trust Company ALFRED L. NORRIS, FLOYD W. MUNDY '98 Attorney and Counsellor at Law J. NORRIS OLIPHANT Όl 16, 18, 20, 22 William St., New York Patents and Patent Causes J. J. BRYANT, jr.,'98 FRANK_L. VAN WIE Branch, 475 Fifth Ave. 120 Broadway New York Members New York Stock Exchange ί 16Pal 1 Mal1 East> s w l and Chicago Stock Exchange { 26 Old Broad Street, E. C. 2 PARIS ...... 41 Boulevard Haussman Going to Ithaca? New York Office, 61 Broadway Chicago Office, 711 The Rookery LETTERS OF CREDIT Use the "Short Line" FOREIGN* EXCHANGES between CABLE TRANSFERS Auburn (Monroe St.) and Ithaca Sheldon Court A fireproof, modern, private dor- Better Quicker Cheaper mitory for men students of Cornell Direct connections at Auburn University. (Monroe St. Station) with New Catalogue sent on request. Do You Use York Central Trains. A. R. CONGDON, MGR. ITHACA, N. Y. Press Clippings? It will more than pay you to Cascadilla School secure our extensive service cover- The Leading ing all subjects, trade and personal and get the benefit of the best and Preparatory School for Cornell most systematic reading of all Located at the edge of the University papers and periodicals, here and campus. Exceptional advantages for abroad, at minimum cost. college entrance work. Congenial living. Our service is taken by progres- Athletic training. Certificate privilege. sive business men, publishers, au- For information and catalogue address: thors, collectors, etc., and is the The Sign of W. D. Funkhouser, Principal, card index for securing what you Good Print Shop need, as every article of interest Ithaca, N. Y. is at your command. Trustees Write for terms or send your Franklin C. Cornell Ernest Blaker order for 100 clippings at $5, or Charles D. Bostwick 1,000 clippings at $35. Special rates quoted in large orders. The Manhattan SCHOOL OF THE SOLDIER Press Clipping Bureau ORDER ARMS TO RIGHT SHOULDER ARMS 320-322 Fifth Avenue Arihur Cassot, Proprietor Established in 1888

ITHACA TRUST COMPANY ASSETS OVER THREE MILLION DOLLARS COMMAND:-! RigM Shoulder 2 ARMS EXPLANATION ~ Bant «l ORDER ARMS OV 1), at Ae com. Without cljonging the mup o( (he ridit hand, olacί mud ARMS, with the ri«fct hand πύe and ftrow dw p^lΠb^rφt^hάϋdβ. bCSS upΊώΓίί Pres., MYNDERSE VANCLEEF Vice-Pres., E. L. WILLIAMS ; UKpttlo»D7acroHd»bod7U i!.2)gr>ip. cbied .1 u " Vice-Pres. and Treas., C. E. TREMAN Sec. and Γreas., W. H. STORMS ; fingen. ( E) Drop the left band by the ύde IFι». 41.

THE LACKAWANNA RAILROAD These charts (actual size 11 by 14 inches), ίackawanna operates steel electric lighted sleeping cars between New 25 in set, teach thoroughly the manual of arms and how to shoot and care for the Railroad York and Ithaca daily, leaving New York 8:30 P. M., army rifle. Their use will make you a arriving Ithaca 7 A. M., and leaving 10:00 P. M., arriving well-drilled soldier, aid you in getting a New York 7 A. M. commission, and assist you in training your men. Edited by Lieut. Col. G. S. Simonds, U.S.A. Endorsed by Gen. RAILROAD AND PULLMAN TICKETS Wood. can be purchased in advance at 1465, 1183, 237 and 84 Broadway, New York; Price Three Dollars, Postpaid 505 Fulton Street, Brooklyn; and Broad and Market Streets, Newark. Ithaca City Ticket Office - - 213 East State Street National Army School 314 East 23rd St., New York City CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS VOL. XX., No. 3 ITHACA, N. Y., OCTOBER 11, 1917 PRICE 10 CENTS

*f ^.ITTLE outward appearance of THE field officers of the R.O.T.C. this SEVERAL PAGES of the October num- J| J change marks the course of fall are: Colonel, James L. Berston '18, ber of The Cornell Countryman are de- "~ ^ University life this fall. The Yonkers; lieutenant-colonel, R. B. voted to an editorial statement, ably effects of the war are not so disturbing Stuart '18; majors, Francis C. Wilbur '18, reinforced by citation of particular as they were last spring, when students Albany; William G. Milligan '18, New cases, of the bad effect upon food pro- were leaving Ithaca by the hundreds, all York, and Hubert H. Moon '18, Burke, duction of the drafting of farmers into athletic games had been abandoned, and Va. The regimental adjutant is Cap- the National Army. The article in- instructors were finding it hard to keep tain Julian A. Sohon '18, of New York, cludes a statement by Dean Mann of the minds of students concentrated on and the supply officer is Captain Henry the College of Agriculture of Jhe inter- the work of the class room. The Uni- W. Greenberg '18, of Flushing. The ruption of important work in that col- versity has passed through that phase of battalion adjutants are First Lieutenants lege by the calling of several of its the war and has adjusted itself to the William P. Woodcock '20, Spencer, teachers into the army. How the agri- absence of many teachers and the loss Iowa; William S. Stempfle '19, Elmira, cultural war emergency work of the of many students. A walk about the and Louis Drago '19, Richmond Hill. State has been hampered by the drafting Campus and through the corridors of The captains of the companies are W. of agents of the farm bureaus is told by buildings now reveals little that is differ- H. Colvin '20, Evanston, 111.; C. E. Professor M. C. Burritt, and Professor ent from the ordinary. Perhaps the Krey '19, Washington, D. C.; T. B. George A. Works describes the effect of students appear to be younger, but that Huestis '19, Greencastle, Ind.; C. M. the draft upon the teaching of agri- may be only because one thinks that the Christian '19, Horseheads; R. G. Starke culture in the high schools. The case departure of so many upperclassmen '19, New York; R. J. LeBoeuf, jr., '19, of the individual farmer who must risk ought to make a difference in the aver- Albany; Peter Vischer '19, Brooklyn; the loss of his crops and perhaps even age age. One finds professors going W. B. Greenwood '19, Forestville, Md.; of his farm because he is called to military about their usual tasks and learns of E. L. Duffies '19, Washington, D. C.; service is presented by F. W. Wardle '14, students taking up the undergraduate W. D. Ellis '20, Atlanta, Ga.; Sherman who describes his own plight in an open activities that others dropped last spring. Trowbridge '19, Flushing; W. C. El- letter to President Wilson. The point Sophomores still hail freshmen who dridge '19, Takoma Park, D. C., and of the article is that if the farmers are walk on the grass of the Quadrangle K. M. Reid '19, Warren, Ohio. to do what the country expects of them and warn them to keep on the paths. MEN who were officers of the Cornell in augmenting the food supply they And the Co-op is just about as crowded R.O.T.C. last year and who are now in must have "help"—workers—rather as it ever was. the military service of the than advice. ONE CHANGE put into effect this fall are the colonel, W. L. Saunders '17, PROFESSOR J. C. BRADLEY of Cornell is suggestive of the war, although it was three majors, J. B. Slimm '17, L. I. and Professor Edwin C. Van Dyke of first proposed long before the war began. Shelley '17, and H. A. Holt '17; and the University of California have ex- That is the new arrangement of the drill H. C. Reed '17, D. C. McCoy '17, C. B. changed work for the current year, the hours. On five afternoons a week now, Benson '17, J. R. Schwartz '18, G. A. Cornell Countryman announces. Al- and from two o'clock to five, some part Benton, jr., '19, K. B. Champ '19, R. B. though both are general entomologists, of the Reserve Officers' Training Corps Hough, jr., '19, A. N. Volkhardt '19, Professor Van Dyke is an authority on is going through military evolutions on W. E. Lauer '19, and L. R. SchaufHer '20. the coleoptera, while Professor Bradley the Campus. On the parade ground Some of these men are on the staff of is a specialist on the hymenoptera. military instructors of the U. S. Army north of the old armory companies of THE TREASURER of the University freshmen, still in citizens' clothes and School of Military Aeronautics at Cornell. has received from Mr. William A. Dole wearing gray caps, are learning to count A PORTRAIT of Irving Porter Church of Boston, as executor of the will of Mrs. fours, change step, and march in line. '73, emeritus professor of applied me- Grace Weld (Soper) Dole, of the class In the Quadrangle on the same after- chanics and hydraulics in the College of of 1882, a check for $15 in fulfilment of a noon may be seen a sophomore company Civil Engineering, the gift of former provision of the will. This bequest was: in khaki deployed across the lawn and students, will be formally presented to "To Sage College, , charging by squads all the way from the University at noon on Friday, No- my alma mater, fifteen dollars for its Sibley to Boardman. The schedules of vember 9. The presentation will take library." the smaller colleges have been arranged place in Goldwin Smith Hall. Invita- so that their men all drill on certain tions to be present at the ceremony have FIVE MEMBERS of the senior class and afternoons. The men of the larger been sent out by a committee represent- thirty-four members of the junior class colleges are distributed through the ing the donors, of which the chairman are enrolled in the senior course of the afternoons of the week. Two or three is Captain F. W. Scheidenhelm, C.E. '06. Cornell R. O. T. C. This course leads companies drill for three hours on each The portrait is now hung at the Cornell directly to army commissions. afternoon from Monday to Friday. University Club, 65 Park Avenue, New THE Agricultural Association has There are five companies composed of York, where it may be seen until elected H. S. Sisson '18, of Sherburne, sophomores and eight of freshmen. October 17. N. Y., president for this year. 26 CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS

W. S. Holt '19 Decorated many shells coming in for anybody to try Senior Society Elections Son of B. W. Holt '90 Receives the to clear the truck off the road, so this National Service Left Only a Few French War Cross other -fellow and I crawled in a trench Members Here This Fall and waited. We huddled there for a A dispatch from Paris to the Associated The senior societies made their fall long time getting splashed by mud Press on October 3 said that the War elections from the class of 1918 on Octo- thrown by shells several times, when Cross had been awarded by the French ber 9. The two societies were greatly gas shells started to come in. Then I Government to six members of Section reduced in numbers this fall by the decided we had to go on to the post 1 of the American Field Service for absence of many seniors who had gone where we would be safer and from where transporting wounded under heavy fire into the national service. Of twenty- we could telephone back and warn the and against gas attacks. One of the six five men of the class of 1918 who ac- others. was William Stull Holt, of Brooklyn, a cepted membership in Sphinx Head last member of the class of 1919 in the Col- "We started, crawling, throwing our- spring, eighteen were in the service, selves flat, crawling on with gas masks lege of Law. leaving pnly seven for a nucleus of the on. To make a long story short, and Holt is a son of Byron Webber' Holt organization this fall. Quill and Dagger leaving out several interesting steps, we '90, a well known writer on financial took in seventeen men last spring and got to within about 100 yards of the subjects, and is twenty years old. He had only three left this fall, the other entered the College of Arts and Sciences post (a great big dug-out, almost a tun- fourteen being in the national service. nel in the hill) when I was almost buried in the fall of 1914 and transferred to the When the Sim published the lists of by a shell and a few seconds later a big College of Law a year afterward. He the newly elected members this week, gas shell went off within twenty feet of sailed for France on March 17 last as a it printed also the names of the men in me. Something hit me on the head, volunteer in the American Ambulance the national service, as follows: Field Service. He was in the Verdun putting a big dent in my helmet and raising a bump on my head. If it Sphinx Head.—]. C. Carry, H. G. section at the time of the French attack Benedict, Merrill Blanchard, W. F. there last summer. The New York hadn't been for my helmet my head would have been cracked. Courtney, W. M. Dixon, W. H. Farn- Herald of October 4, in publishing the ham, T. H. Farnsworth, J. A. Krugh, news of his decoration, published also a "As it was, I was dazed, knocked down and my gas mask knocked off. R. P. Matthiessen, P. P. Miller, W. F. letter which he had written to his parents, Place, F. C. Reavig, jr., D. A. Ruhl, R. a part of which follows: I got several breaths of the strong solu- tion right from the shell. If it hadn't E. Ryerson, W. B. Shelton, C. M. "Now for the Verdun attack. Of Speed, J. M. Watt, and L. E. Wenz. course, you know a long time ago been for the fellow with me I would Quill and Dagger.—C. S. Bailey, O. C. (August 20) that the French made a probably have cashed in because I Brewster, L. G. Brower, S. C. Doolittle, very successful attack there, taking in couldn't see, my eyes were running J. L. Eastwick, F. M. Gillies, C. M. all about ten thousand men, and, what water and burning, so was my nose and Micou, Frank Nelms, jr., H. B. Ortner, is more important, hills which had cost I could hardly breathe. The fellow with me grabbed me and led me the hundred J. D. Sauters, jr., F. T. Shiverick, C. L. the Boches hundreds of thousands of yards or so to the abri, where the doctor Thomas, J. C. Thomas, and W. H. J. lives. Woodford. 'The hardest time for us was during gave me a little stuff and where I be- the artillery preparation for the attack, came all right again except that I was a The election this fall was notable for the attack itself being so successful we little intoxicated from the gas for a while. the fact that in at least one case member- were agreeably surprised. There were I think the hardest thing I did was to go ship in Tau Beta Pi, the honorary tech- on the day of the attack only five hun- back again alone the next night. I had nical society, was counted as a recom- dred wounded in our division. We to call myself names before I got nerve mendation to a senior society. enough." would drive every other twenty-four The names of the men just elected hours, and frequently would be called follow: out on our off day. It was a routine of IN TRENCH WARFARE SECTION Sphinx Head work, throw yourself into bed, then work The following Cornell men are on Ross Garrison Bennett, New York; again. duty in the Trench Warfare Section of musical clubs; Sigma Chi. "I had a very close call with gas, the Gun Division, in the Office of the William Edward Blewett, jr., Glen which they used a lot, especially in one Chief of Ordnance, 1330 F Street, N. W., Ridge, N. J.; freshman advisory coun- little valley that formed a pocket for it. Washington, D. C.: cil; Phi Kappa Sigma. There was another American section Major John H. Barr, M.M.E., '89. Jo Harnly Cable, Lima, Ohio; mana- that came up to take over one of our Captain William A. Borden, M.E., '12. ger, musical clubs; Delta Tau Delta. many posts during the attack itself, and Captain Alfred B. Quinton, jr.,C.E.Ί2. Lee Hinchman Clark, Brooklyn; Tau luckily on this night I took one of their Captain John V. McAdam, M.E., ΌO. Beta Pi; Psi Upsilon. men to show him the road. Lieut. Sidney W. Treat, M.E., '07. Nelson Warren Cornell, Chemung; "It was just about dusk when we Lieut. Harry A. DeWitt, M.E., '09. wrestling; Huntington Club. started (my fifth trip that day) to the Lieut. Seth G. Malby, M.E., ΊO. George Turner Dibble, Lima; mana- worst post that section ever had, and we Lieut. William W.Woodruff, M.E., Ίl. ger, Annuals; captain, soccer; Alpha got, without much excitement, to within Zeta. about 1,000 yards of the post when a PROFESSOR BURR will give the first Edwin Philip Doerr, Chicago; musical big motor truck 100 yards in front got lecture of this year's series on the history clubs; Chi Psi. hit by a shell (they were coming in pretty of civilization on October 12. His sub- Lester Wells DuBois, Brooklyn; man- fast) and completely blocked the road. ject is: "The world war and its place in ager, baseball; Beta Theta Pi. I couldn't get by and there were too history." Ernest Cleveland Fortier, Washington, CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS 27

D. C.; track team; Tau Beta Pi; Delta Tau Delta. Philipp Synyer Hill, Oak Park, 111.; musical clubs; Delta Kappa Epsilon. William Rossiter Hinchman, Brook- lyn; manager, basketball; Phi Delta Theta. Howard Archibald McDonell, New York; manager, track; Psi Upsilon. Talbot Marion Malcolm, Ithaca; man- ager, freshman baseball; Sigma Phi Epsilon. Malcolm Harley Tuttle, Honolulu; Sun; Pi Kappa Alpha. Ralph Chapman VanHorn, Elmira; football; Delta Upsilon. Quill and Dagger Kenneth Ford Coffin, Somerville, N. J.; Delta Phi. Carlos Lazo, New York; manager of the Navy; Delta Upsilon. Henry Wisdom Roden, Dallas, Texas; Chi Phi. Edwin Hewes Thomas, Wilmington, Del.; freshman advisory committee; Kappa Sigma.

THIRD TRAINING CAMPS

The Adjutant-General of the Army PRESIDENT SCHURMAN AND HIS TWO YOUNGER SONS, WHO ARE IN THE ARMY has announced plans for a third series of At the President's right is George Munro Schurman '13, second lieutenant, Field Artillery, Officers' reserve officers' training camps, to start Reserve Corps, assigned to the Regular Army and now on duty at Fort Ethan Allen. Jacob Gould on January 5, 1918, and to continue for Schurman, jr., '17, is a captain in the Infantry Officers' Reserve Corps, assigned to the National three months. These camps will be Army, and is on duty at Camp Dix. Photograph Copyright 1917 by The White Studio opened to enlisted men of the regular army, National Guard, and national WITH THE 25TH ENGINEERS j and Beifeld are members of the Cornell army, and to graduates and undergrad- These Cornell men, members of the chapter of Phi Beta Kappa. uates of certain selected colleges, uni- Engineer Officers' Reserve Corps, are versities, and military schools. Cornell with the 25th U. S. Engineers, now at AT VANCOUVER is one of the universities whose students Camp Devens, Ayer, Mass.: First Lieut. In the engineer training camp at Van- are eligible. The number of college men Ralph A. Smallman, C.E., '08; First couver, Wash., are these Cornell men of admitted will be limited to 2,490. Grad- Lieut. Samuel A. Graham, C.E., Ίl; the Engineer O.R.C.: uates and undergraduates of the insti- First Lieut, Philip T. Coffey, C.E., '14, Major Charles B. Wing, C.E., '86, tutions listed must be between 21 and 31 and Second Lieut. William C. Anderson, Palo Alto, Cal, years old on January 5, 1918. They are C.E., '14. With the 301st Engineers, Major Norman B. Livermore, C.E., not eligible for admission if they did not also at Camp Devens, is first Lieut. '95, San Francisco. take the course of military training Ernest J. Weaver, C.E., '14. Lieut. Adolph Morbio, M.E., '13, San offered by their institution. Applicants Francisco. for admission must apply on blanks pro- WITH EXPORTS BOARD Lieut. Andrew W. Newberry, A.B., vided for the purpose and must forward Professor Allyn A. Young of the de- '05, San Francisco. the completed application to "the In- partment of economics, who is now structor in Military Tactics" of the in- serving as chief of the Research Division INSPECTORS OF AIRPLANES stitution from which the applicant of the Exports Administrative Board at The following Cornell men are in- graduated.' Washington, has called two members of spectors of airplanes and airplane en- the class of 1917 to the capital to be gines, Signal Service at Large, U. S. AT CAMP UPTON members of his staff. They are James Army: Warner D. Orvis, M.E., '06; The following Long Island Cornellians Herman Becker and Robert Sigmund Frederick Kύhne, M.E., Ίl; Walter H. are in the National Army at Camp Up- Beifeld, both of Chicago. To Professor Rudolph, M.E., '12, and William R. ton: Morgan King Harris, LL.B., '14; Young has been given the task of pre- Landmesser, M.E., '17. Kύhne and Lyman Warren Davison, A.B., '16; paring export rations, based on ante- Rudolph are in the office of the district James W. Andrews, A.B., '17, and bellum trade, for Latin-American coun- manager of inspection, Signal Corps, John C. Kratoville, B.Chem., '17. They tries, and the two assistants are making U. S. A., 15 Park Row, New York. were among the first called from their some interesting statistical investiga- Orvis is at the Curtiss plant in Buffalo, respective districts. tions under his direction. Both Becker where Landmesser is about to join him. 28 CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS

Many Faculty Changes A. Liddle, assistant in geology; George F. Sykes, secretary in the department Trustees' Committees Receive Resigna- H. Childs, Mary J. Fisher, and M. of home economics; D. L. Baldwin, tions and Make Appointments Caroline Chesborough, assistants in zo- secretary to the Dean of the College of Meetings were held on October 5 and ology; Joseph T. Sheridan, assistant in Agriculture. 6 by the Trustees' committee on build- anatomy; John S. Latten, assistant in ings and grounds, the Agricultural Col- histology; Ruth Rand and William T. Changes in Forestry Staff lege Council, the Veterinary College VanWagenen, assistants in histology A New Appointee—Professors Spring Council, and the committee on general and embryology; J. E. Foglesong, S. and Bentley Absent administration. D. Jackson, R. E. G. Wyckoff and A. Bernard A. Chandler has been ap- The following members of the Board M. Erskine, instructors in chemistry; pointed assistant professor of forest of Trustees were in attendance at some F. K. DuCasse, N. W. Colony, L. H. utilization in the department of forestry. or all of these meetings: President Schur- Clark, G. H. Brandes, A. J. Sherburne, He comes from the Vermont Agricultural man, and Trustees Cornell, Newman, E. D. Friderici, R. T. K. Cornwell, E. G. Experiment Station at Burlington, where VanCleef, R. H. Treman, Westervelt, Thomas, P. M. Stouffer, John W. Hayes he has been engaged in forest investiga- T. B. Wilson, Westinghouse, C. E. Tre- and Frank H. Pollard, assistants in tions. Mr. Chandler was born in New man, Williams, J. DuPratt White, chemistry. Gloucester, Maine, on December 20, Blood, Dix, Horace White, Edwards In Sibley College leaves of absence 1884, and received the degree of B.S. in and Miller; Deans Moore and Mann, for the year were granted to the fol- 1909 from the University of Maine, and and Faculty Representatives Willcox, lowing, all of whom are in the national in 1911 that of M.F. from the Yale Kimball, Comstock, Fish, Stocking and service: Forest School. Shortly after he grad- Lyon. A. W. Smith, Dean of Sibley College. uated from Yale he accepted the position Much of the time was devoted to a W. N. Barnard, professor of power of assistant state forester of Vermont, consideration of the requests to be made engineering. where he had a wide experience in many to the Legislature for the support of the C. D. Albert, professor of machine phases of forestry work. College of Agriculture and the Veterin- design. His work will be largely investigative. ary College and the maintenance of the C. W. Ham, assistant professor of During this autumn and early winter he Drill Hall for the year 1918-19. The machine design. will undertake a study of the utilization general lines of requests to be made P. G. McVetty, instructor in experi- of the Adirondack hardwoods. This were decided upon and the adjustment mental engineering. work will be done in co-operation with of details was left with the University Professor D. S. Kimball was appointed Professor Recknagel who is now on a officers. acting Dean of Sibley College during year's leave of absence from the forestry Resignations were received as follows: the absence of Dean Smith. department in order that he may act as J. W. Hebel, L. H. Boulter and D. L. Other appointments were: B. S. forester for the Empire State Forest Baldwin, instructors in English; J. C. Cushman, L. L. Richardson and R. L. Products Association. The results of Thompson, J. A. Bridgeman and M. W. Quick, instructors in experimental en- this study will be of value, not only as Bray, assistants in chemistry; L. J. gineering; R. E. Bussey, H. A. Collin, information that is much needed in Sivian, instructor in physics; H. E. H. A. Gaertner, W. L. Johnson, B. forestry work in New York State, but Hayes, instructor in civil engineering; Nirenburg and F. H. Reimer, assistants also as an immediate help to the teaching G. S. Morath and I. L. Moore, assistants in experimental engineering; C. R. of forest utilization at Cornell. in physics. Tobey, T. F. Stacey, C. E. Harrington, Ralph C. Bryant (Cornell 1900), pro- Leaves of absence for the current S. R. Irish and G. A. Worn, instructors fessor of forest utilization at the Yale academic year were granted to the fol- in machine design; R. D. Elliott and Forest School, has accepted a commission lowing who have entered the national J. B. Joyce, instructors in electrical en- as major in the Forestry Regiment, service: W. S. Foster, assistant professor gineering; D. H. Banks, assistant in known technically as the 20th Engineers. of education: E. W. Schoder, assistant electrical engineering; Dana Green, During the last summer he was with the professor of experimental hydraulics; assistant in machine shop. Cornell department of forestry and con- R. P. Anderson, assistant professor of W. K. Blodgett was appointed assist- ducted the work in forest utilization at chemistry; T. W. B. Welsh, instructor ant extension professor of farm mechanics the annual summer camp. Camp was in chemistry; H. E. Baxter, instructor in the College of Agriculture. held this year on the Frank A. Cutting in architecture. Leaves of absence were granted to tract near St. Regis Falls. At the close The following appointments were Professors Paul Work and L. A. May- of the summer work Professor Bryant made: Herman Hilmer, assistant in nard on account of military service. went to New Haven. economics; W. F. Chapman, assistant The following appointments in the Professors S. N. Spring and John in political science; H. A. Sturgis, assist- College of Agriculture were made: Bentley, jr., of the department of for- ant in statistics; R. L. Emmons, assist- Charles Chupp, instructor in plant estry, are on leave during the fall term ant in economics; C. D. Bois and Miss pathology; William A. White, instructor and will be at New Haven, Conn., where L. L. Lamphier, assistants in economics; in dairy industry; Gilbert W. Peck, they are both delivering lectures at the L. B. Hoisington, instructor in education; extension instructor in pomology; Gladys Yale Forest School. Professor Spring Mrs. Helen B. Owens, lecturer in mathe- Smith, instructor in home economics; will give lectures in forest history and matics; E. E. Smith, R. E. Billner and B. D. Wilson, instructor in soil tech- on the field of forestry. Professor Mildred Severance, instructors in physics; nology; Gertrude E. Douglass, intructor Bentley is to lecture on forest utilization, J. M. Hyatt, P. Mertz, F. Van D. Field, in botany; H. E. Gay man, instructor in taking the \vork of Professor R. C. F. H. McBerty, B. K. Northrup, Miss rural education; Hazel D. Bennett, Bryant. Both men expect to return to A. L. White, assistants in physics; R. instructor in rural education; Charles Cornell in February. CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS 29

Talk to Women Students tween men and women. Women had 723 Women Students the added advantage of greater accom- President Schurman Speaks on Suffrage, The Number Slightly Less Than at This modation in residential halls; that was College Work, and War Economy Time a Year Ago the only distinction. The number of President Schurman addressed the The number of women students regis- women students of the University in women here was likely to be about the same as last year, and that fact would tered in the University at Ithaca on Barnes Hall on September 28. In intro- October 5 was a little smaller than the ducing the President, Dr. Matzke made help the women. Several years ago the women students, not being represented number enrolled at the same time a year mention of his speech at Saratoga in ago. The figure for this fall is 723; for favor of woman suffrage. Taking that on the Sun, had wanted to know why they were not represented there. The last fall it was 737. theme as his starting point, President In the following table are shown the Schurman said that he was a firm be- answer was that it was the men's paper— they wanted to run it. But now war numbers respectively of former students liever in equal rights for women and that returned and of new students, and the his belief was based upon his experience had brought the women forward and they were represented on the Sun. The distribution of the women among col- with the women students of this Uni- leges of the University, as filed in the versity. They possessed, he said, the former attitude had been unjust and narrow, but things were now being ad- office of the Adviser of Women. It will capacity to govern themselves and to be seen that only the Veterinary College co-operate in the government of the justed and little questions were being settled. The women should not be im- and the College of Civil Engineering at University. present have enrolled no women students: The present war, President Schurman patient. went on to say, had changed the com- Cornell was not a place for dances College Old New plexion of the whole problem, and its and gaieties. Students were here for Arts 268 129 Agriculture 176 93 effects were likely to remove objections work and study. That was expected of both men and women, and students who Architecture 2 1 against suffrage for women. No longer Law 6 5 was force alone sufficient to determine did not come here for that purpose Medicine 5 3 supremacy. This war of nation with should not be permitted to enter. As a Mechanical Engineering 2 rule the women were better students Graduate School 9 10 nation might not in the end be deter- Special students 7 7 mined by soldiers at all. Even now than the men, for men were too much their part in it was comparatively a distracted by athletics and other di- Totals. 475 248 versions. Now, however, there was a small part. Military power was an im- To the early fall registration of the portant consideration, but not less im- growing suspicion that women students were allowing social diversions to claim year 1916-17 were added, in the course portant were the economical and financial of the year, 31 women who entered the resources of the warring nations, and in too much of their attention. The Fac- .ulty was asked to remedy that state of University in February and 19 in the those fields women were playing a large Medical College, so that the total en- part. They were making the food prob- affairs, but it was not for the Faculty to do that—it was for the women stu- rollment of women students for last lem theirs; they were working in fac- year was 787. tories; they were doing numberless dents themselves. Care of the health things to release men for the fighting. was most important, and a habit of Because, in the past, men have done the regular work was essential to success. Dean Smith Gets Leave actual fighting, they have the ballot; Woman's great duty at the present time, President Schurman said, was to To Work for Industrial Concern— yet only a small fraction of the men in Kimball Acting Dean of Sibley the United States are now called upon help maintain social standards. War to fight—only a low percentage of those had a tendency to brutalize men, and The Dean of Sibley College, Professor between the ages of twenty-one and women's influence must be exercised to Albert W. Smith '78, has received leave thirty. counteract that tendency. of absence from the University for the There were women who wanted to In this period of war unusual economies year 1917-18 in order that he may, serve fight, the President said, but they were were necessary. So far as the relation as consulting engineer to the Mathieson not permitted to do so. At the aviation of the individual to the government was Alkali Works at Saltville, Virginia. For school here at Cornell a woman had concerned, the question now was not several years, including the present year, offered her services. Aviation was a what the customer could afford to buy Dean Smith has given his summer vaca- field in which women had been success- with his money; it was what the nation tions to work for that company. ' The ful, as we all know, yet because our law could afford to let him buy. A war company manufactures salt products. specifies that this school shall be for economy measure which the President Its general manager is William D. men her offer had to be refused. In said he would like to see Cornell start Mount '90. Europe to-day not only did women was regulation dress for women. Some Professor Dexter S. Kimball, head want to fight—they did fight. In the one was going to start it, he said, and of the department of machine design Russian campaign this summer a regi- there was a chance for this university and industrial engineering, has been ment of women had advanced and fought to make an epoch in the age of woman. appointed acting dean of Sibley College. while men were running away. He held the office during a former ab- He had come to this belief, President THE freshman advisory committee has sence of Dean Smith. He is a graduate Schurman repeated, through his ex- organized with fifteen seniors and forty- of Stanford University and has been a perience with the women of this Uni- five juniors for house-to-house visits to member of the Sibley Faculty since 1898. versity. Here they were on an equal freshmen. He is a member of the American Society basis with men. In the work of the BISHOP TALBOT of Bethlehem, !Pa., of Mechanical Engineers and a director University no distinction was made be- will preach in Sage Chapel on October 14. of the Society of Industrial Engineers. 30 CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS

affair. So the club is asking all Cornell can be met by the jeer, "He is paid to men in New England to give the club attack Germany and if he did not he at least ten dollars each and is proposing would lose his job." Nothing could to invest the money thus obtained in happen more disastrous to university Published for the Associate Alumni Liberty Bonds. The bonds are to be education than for the opinion to be- of Cornell University by the Cornell held in the club's treasury and the come general that university teachers Alumni News Publishing Company, donors are to determine what use shall in this country, as in Germany, are Incorporated. be made of them. Here's success to the little better than the hireling defenders Published weekly during the college year and plan of the Cornell Club of New England! of the popular or government view. monthly in July and August; forty issues annually, This opinion now is far too common issue No. 1 is published the first Thursday of the THE list of days and places for the and the action of the Columbia Trustees college year in September and weekly publication holding of Cornell luncheons in various (numbered consecutively) continues through Com- will strengthen it. towns, published on page 32 of this issue, mencement Week Issue No. 40, the final one of Professor Beard is a scholar whose has not. been revised since last spring. the year, is published the last Thursday in August work is in high repute on both sides of and contains a complete index of the entire volume. Some of the Cornell clubs may be mak- the Atlantic and one of the most brilliant Subscription price $3.00 a year, payable in ad- ing different arrangements with regard young teachers at Columbia. After vance. Foreign postage 40 cents a year extra. Single to luncheons this year, and the editor copies ten cents each. years of teaching there he has decided will be grateful if secretaries of clubs Should a subscriber desire to discontinue his that the Trustees who are governing the will inform him what their luncheon subscription, notice to that effect should be sent in university "have no standing in the world before its expiration. Otherwise it is assumed that arrangements are. a continuance of the subscription is desired. of education, are reactionary and vision- less in politics and narrow and medieval Checks, drafts and orders should be made pay- THE COLUMBIA DISMISSALS able to Cornell Alumni News. in religion" and that he can wear their Correspondence should be addressed— A Letter from a Cornell Professor collar no longer. Professor John Dεwey, CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS, The Cornell Daily Sun having pub- a man of even greater reputation and Ithaca, N. Y. lished an expression of its approval of perhaps of greater power, speaks of WOODFORD PATTERSON '95, Editor. the action of the board of trustees of Professor Beard's resignation as "the ROBERT WARREN SAILOR '07, Business Manager. in dismissing two natural consequence of the degrading News Committee of the Associate Alumni: professors "for alleged disloyal utter- action of the Trustees." Under the W. W. MACON '98, Chairman ances," Professor Walter F. Willcox of cloak of patriotism they have aimed a N. H. NOYES '06 J. P. DODS '08 the Cornell University Faculty wrote heavy blow at the cause of higher educa- Officers of the Cornell Alumni News Publishing the following letter which the Sun pub- tion in America. As an alumnus of Co- Company, Incorporated: JohnL. Senior, President; lished on October 11: lumbia I feel humiliated and as a long- R. W. Sailor, Treasurer; F. H. Wingert, Assistant To the Editor of the Sun~SiR: time teacher at Cornell I cannot but Treasurer; Woodford Patterson, Secretary. Office, rejoice that, whatever provocation they 220 East State Street, Ithaca, N. Y. The question whether the Trustees of Columbia University acted wisely in may have had, our Trustees have not Printed at the shop of The Cayuga Press dropping Professors Cattell and Dana been betrayed into similar action. WALTER F. WILLCOX. Entered as Second Class Matter at Ithaca, N. Y. from the teaching staff of that institution is one about which comparative out- ITHACA, NEW YORK, OCTOBER 11, 1917 siders have no right to speak with as- Obituary surance. For years Professor Cattell James M. Belden |UY a Liberty Bond for the Alumni has been as a thorn in the side of Presi- James Mead Belden, who was a stu- Fund! The present national dent Butler and he has done many dent in Cornell University in 1868-70, campaign for the Liberty Loan things also which antagonized people died on September 14 at Syracuse, N. Y. offers Cornellians a double opportunity. outside of the governing board of that He was born at Pompey, N. Y., July 10, A Liberty Bond, turned into the Alumni institution. So, while deploring their 1852, and attended the public schools of Fund, while it gives more power to the action in his case, I am not surprised at Syracuse, where he settled after he left American defenders of the rights and it. Professor Dana is a younger and less college. He was at one time a major liberties of the free nations of the world, irritating person and I am especially in the state militia, and was for two also helps to assure to Cornell University sorry that in his case the Trustees did years a member of the Syracuse board the power to do the great part which not follow the recommendation of Presi- of education. Four sons survive him. this institution will be called upon to dent Butler and impose a milder penalty. T. W. Cady perform in the education of those who But the main question is, What effect Theodore Wood Cady of the class of must defend and make firm those rights will the action of the Trustees at Co- 1897 died at Saranac Lake, N. Y., on and liberties in the future. The Uni- lumbia have upon the future of that September 17, after a long illness. His versity must look to its alumni, more institution and of university education home was in Plattsburg, N. Y. Three than to any other class of persons, for in this country ? Upon this question years ago he went to live in Albuquerque, the support it will need. Now is an the immediate resignation of Professor New Mexico, in the hope that the change excellent time to help both the country Beard throws some light. He is not a of climate would restore his health. His and Cornell The proposed action of pro-German, as a casual reader of your wife survives him. He was a member the Cornell Club of New England, as editorial might suppose. On the con- of the Phi Sigma Kappa fraternity. told in another column of this issue, is trary, he was one of the first to urge a interesting. The club has given up its declaration of war against Germany. PROFESSOR LAURENCE PUMPELLY ,who annual banquet this year. That relieves He is unwilling to retain his position gave his summer to the American Field its members of the expense of such an because now his loyal and stirring words Service in France, has just returned. CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS 31

ANNOUNCEMENT The matter of weekly luncheons was FOOTBALL discussed and it was the unanimous CIVIL ENGINEERS Oberlin and Cornell opinion of those present that they should The regular annual meeting of the The Oberlin-Cornell football game on be continued. President North ap- Cornell Society of Civil Engineers will October 6 was the first game of the season pointed H. N. Putnam chairman of the be held on Tuesday evening, October 16, for both teams, and both teams showed luncheon committee. at Stewart's Restaurant, 30 Park Place, that they had had little practice. The C. W. Wason '76 was appointed to New York, at 6 o'clock. Dinner will be final score was 22 to 0 in favor of Cornell, collect a list of the Cornell men from served for one dollar. There is much which had scored three touchdowns and Cleveland who are now in the service important business to be transacted, a field goal. of the Government. including the election of officers, and In the Cornell line-up were Ruben- there will be a few short, interesting CHICAGO stein '20, left end; Wipperman '19, left talks. Note the change of time. The annual field day and annual meet- tackle; Swanson'20, left guard; Reuther ing of the Cornell University Associa- '20, center; Huntington '19, right guard; NEW ENGLAND tion of Chicago was held at the West- Herriman '19, right tackle; Colvin '20, In a circular letter to its members, moreland Country Club, Evanston, on right end; Carry '20, quarterback; under date of Boston, October 4, 1917, October 5. The following officers were Hoffman '18, left'halfback; VanHorn the Cornell Club of New England an- elected for the ensuing year: President, '18, right halfback; Pendleton '20, full- nounces the decision of its governing John P. Dods '08; vice-president, back. Substitutes included Minier '18, board to omit the annual banquet this Henry J. Patten '84; secretary, John for Hoffman; Nethercot '19, for Carry; year, on account of a feeling that the C. Carpenter '07; treasurer, William J. Harris '20, for Rubenstein; Miron '18, present is no time to hold such a cele- Miskella '05; registrar, M. D. Vail '12. for Huntington; Spiegelberg '18, for bration. George W. Graham '76 and S. A. Bing- Reuther; Bowker '18, for Swanson, and Having decided not to hold the ban- ham '05 were elected directors for two Trowbridge '20, for Herriman. quet, the governing board now appeals years, and P. M. Walter '98 and Tom N. The game was not worthy of extended to all Cornell men in New England, Bishop '12 for three years. comment. Only the simplest formations whether members of the club or not, to were used by either team. Most of help raise a fund of at least $5,000 with SOUTHAMPTON, L. I. Cornell's gains were made by runs around which to purchase Liberty Bonds and Friday, August 17, was set aside in the end. The field goal was kicked by thereby show that they are with the Southampton, L. L, as Cornell Night. Hoffman in the first period. The num- Government and want to aid the boys Invitations were sent to seventy Cor- ber of spectators was small. in the Army and Navy. Each Cornell nellians resident in about forty towns man in New England is asked to send within a radius of twenty miles of South- ROWING to the treasurer of the club, Mr. H. S. ampton. The weather that night was More than a hundred students have Brown, 50 Congress Street, Boston, the very bad; a heavy thunder storm pre- registered their desire to train for the sum of $10—or more if he feels that he vented many from attending. The pro- varsity and freshman crews. Some of can do so. All the money received will gram started in the Garden Theater them have already begun to row on the be invested in Liberty Bonds and will about 8:30 o'clock. H. Strycker Mills Inlet, where practice will be held while be held in the club's treasury to be dis- '17, who had charge of the arrangements, the weather permits. posed of as the contributors to the fund gave an introductory talk, and J. Carle- WORKING WITH MR. MOAKLEY may hereafter determine. The announce- ton Corwith '15 welcomed the guests to A large number of students have ac- ment is signed by Henry F. Hurlburt 75, Southampton. Three reels of Cornell cepted an invitation which Coach Moak- president, and Albert C. Blunt, jr., '07, motion pictures were shown. At 10:30 ley extended when the University re- secretary of the club. o'clock twelve couples motored to Rose's Grove Casino for supper and dancing. opened and are taking exercise under CLEVELAND his direction on the track or across The Cornell Club of Cleveland, at AT NAVAL TRAINING STATION country. He offered to give advice to its annual meeting held on September At the U. S. Naval Training Station, any who might ask for it. In this way 30, 1917, at the University Club, elected Charlotte, N. Y. (on Lake Ontario), Mr. Moakley is doing all he can to pro- directors and officers: Directors, Willard are the following Cornell men: mote the purpose of the Athletic Asso- Beahan '78, re-elected, and Herbert N. Lieutenant-Commander William B. ciation to broaden the scope of athletics Putnam '12, succeeding A. R. Warner Zimmer, A.B., '03, of Rochester, N. Y., here and provide exercise and training '87. The board of directors now con- commanding officer of the station. for as many students as possible. sists of Mr. Beahan, R. D. Grant Ό3, Ensign Harold Edwards, M.E., '14, About thirty undergraduates are un- C. W. Wason '76, W. H. Forbes '06, of Syracuse, N. Y., watch officer. dergoing the intensive training of the W. A. Bridgeman '13, Mr. Putnam, H. Assistant Surgeon (lieutenant, junior varsity cross-country squad. They are D. North '07, and I. J. Kerr '91'. The grade) Julius L. Waterman, M.D., '11, led by I. C. Dresser '19, who has been directors elected the following officers of Rochester, N. Y., medical officer. elected captain of the team for the season. for the ensuing year: President, H. D. A meeting is to be held in New York North '07, of the Ferry Cap & Set PLACES FOR COLLEGE WOMEN City in a few days to determine whether Screw Company; vice-president, R. D. A large automobile concern is offering there shall be an intercollegiate cross- Grant '03, of The Roderick D. Grant positions as draftsmen to college women. country run this fall. In any event the Company; treasurer, H. N. Putnam '12, A publishing house offers employment Cornell team is likely to have a few inter- of The James L. Stuart Company; sec- to college women. Particulars may be collegiate dual meets. Novice runs and retary, I. J. Kerr '91, 1015 Guardian obtained from the Adviser of Women, blind handicaps are to be held every Building. Cornell University, Ithaca, N. Y. week for the aspirants to the team. 32 CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS

List of Local Clubs and Cornell Alumni Luncheon Hours Delaware.—Alexander Laird, Odd Fellows New York.—Miss Sara Barclay, 174 Prospect List of Local Clubs Building, Wilmington. Park West. Brooklyn. The following list contains the names Maryland.—William G. Helfrich, 626 Equita- Philadelphia —Miss Edith Loux, 5235 Katherine and addresses of the secretaries of the ble Building, Baltimore, Md. Street. local Cornell alumni associations and Washington.—H. W. Peaslee, 1504 H Street. Pittsburgh.—Mrs. J. A. Hunter, 151 Dickson Raleigh, N. C.—R. W. Leiby, State Depart- Avenue, Ben Avon, Pa. clubs. It was compiled in the office of ment of Agriculture. *Rochester.—Miss Gwendolen English, 39 Vick the Alumni Recorder, Morrill Hall. Middle West Park A. Cleveland.—Dr. I. J. Kerr, 1015 New England Troy.—Miss Frances McTammany, 170 First St. General Organizations Building. Mohawk Valley.—Miss K. A. Don'on, 1323 THE ASSOCIATE ALUMNI OF CORNELL UNIVER- Central Ohio.—W. J. Armstrong, in care of Seymour Avenue, Utica SITY. Secretary, R. W. Sailor, Care CORNELL Jeffery Mfg. Co., Columbus. Washington—Miss Anne E. Draper, 1474 ALUMNI NEWS, Ithaca. *Akron.—L. A. Keane, 197 Spicer St. Harvard St., N. W. *THE CORNELL ASSOCIATION OF CLASS SECRE- Toledo.—W. C. Acklin, 1645 Dorr St. Worcester.—Mrs. H. B. Smith, 20 Trowbridge TARIES. Secretary, H. A. Hitchcock, 31 Morrill Dayton.—C. A. Paullin, 410 West First St. Road. Hall, Ithaca. Southern Ohio.—Max H. Thurnauer, 3891 Bay Cities of California.—Mrs. Walter Mulford, THE CORNELLIAN COUNCIL. Secretary, Harold Reading Road, Cincinnati. 1619 Spruce St., Berkeley. Flack, 27 Morrill Hall, Ithaca. *Indiana.—R. B. Rhoads, 2403 Pennsylvania St., *Changed since last publication. THE FEDERATION OF CORNELL WOMEN'S CLUBS. Indianapolis. Secretary-Treasurer, Miss Clara Howard, 27 *Wheeling, W. Va.—T. McK. Cummins, City Morrill Hall, Ithaca. Bank Building. Kentucky.—Adolph Reutlinger, 123 South Alumni Luncheons Alumni Associations Third St., Louisville. The list below is published here for New England ^Chicago.—J. C. Carpenter, Kenilworth, 111. the guidance not only of members of *New England.—A. C. Blunt, jr., 354 Congress St. Michigan.—John R. Marvin, 623 Dime Bank Building, Detroit. the associations in the cities mentioned Connecticut.—William VanKirk, The Aluminum Milwaukee.—R. C. Velguth, 127 25th St Castings Co., Fairfield. but also of Cornell men from other towns *St. Louis.—A. J. Widmer, 1013 Syndicate Trust New Haven.—Frank W. Hoyt, 161 York St. who may be able to attend any of the Building. *Springfield, Mass.—R. W. Clark, 224 Washing- Kansas City.—George F. Mosher, 310 Republic luncheons. ton Boulevard. Building New York Albany.—Every Wednesday, at 1 o'clock at the Louisiana.—E. E. Soule, 603 St. Charles St., New York City.—Foster M. Coffin, 65 Park University Club. New Orleans. Avenue. Baltimore.—Every Monday, 12:30 to 1:30 Texas.—J. L. Jacobs, care of James Stewart Co., The Cornell Society of Civil Engineers. Secre- o'clock, at the City Club, in the Munsey Building. Houston. tary, E. A. Truran, 33 Lincoln Terrace, Yonkers, Binghamton.—Every Tuesday at 12:15 o'clock St. Paul.—C. R. Vincent, Pioneer Building. in the grill room of the Chamber of Commerce, on N. Y. Minneapolis.—F. H. Perl, 405 New York Life Brooklyn.—Alan H. Colcord, 551 Second St. the twelfth floor of the Press Building. Building. *Duchess County.—P. A. Rieser, 25 South Clover Boston.—Every Thursday, 12:30 to 1:30 o'clock, Duluth.—A. T. Banning, jr., 1009 Alworth Bldg. St., Poughkeepsie. at the Quincy House. Omaha.—George B. Thummel, Omaha National Ossining.—Judge Milton C. Palmer. Buffalo.—Every Tuesday, 12:30 to 2 o'clock, at Bank Bldg. Eastern New York.—C. R. Vanneman, 555 Provi- the Hotel Iroquois, Parlor G. Rocky Mountain.—Adolph F. Zang, 709 Clark- dence St., Albany. Chicago.—Every Thursday, 12:30 o'clock, at son St., Denver. Schenectady.—C. L. Turner, Marine Engineer- the Grand Pacific Hotel. Utah.—Paul Williams, Care Oregon Short Line ing Dept., General Electric Company. Chicago Alumnae.—Third Saturday of each R. R. Co., Salt Lake City. Northern New York.—G. H. Hooker, 8 State month at 1 o'clock at the College Club, Stevens Logan.—E. G. Peterson, Logan, Utah. St., Watertown. Building. Spokane.—E. V. Price, Hutton Building Oswego County.—C. W. Linsley, 52 East Utica Cincinnati.—Last Wednesday of every month, St., Oswego. Pacific Coast 12:30, at Schuler's. Otsego County.—E. G. Rathbun, Oneonta. Seattle.—M. R. McMicken, 1630 16th Ave. Cleveland.—Every Thursday, 12 o'clock, at the Herkimer County.—F. D. Mclntosh, Little Falls. Pacific Northwest.—Frank D. Nash, 500 Bank Hotel Statler. Utica.—Charles B. Mason, 30 Genesee St., Utica. of California Building, .Tacoma, Washington. Davenport, Iowa.—The Tri-City Cornell alumni Syracuse.—Frederick E. Norton, Syracuse Portland.—H. P. Henry, Yeon Building. have luncheon every second and fourth Thursday Chamber of Commerce. *Northern California.—L. R. Goodrich, Thomas at the Davenport Commercial Club. *Seneca Falls.—M. B. Sanderson. Building, Oakland. Dayton.—First and third Saturdays of each Binghamton.—A. L. Gilmore, 1104 Press Southern California.—T. K. Gaily, 105 West month, 12:30 o'clock, at the Engineers Club. Building. Fourth St., Los Angeles. Detroit.—Every Thursday, 12:15 o'clock, at the Southern Tier.—Frederick B. Gridley, 412 Foreign and Insular Hotel Cadillac. East Second Street, Elmira, N. Y. Eastern Canada.—William H. Wardwell, 413 Indianapolis.—Every Wednesday at 12:15 o'clock Rochester.—James C. Bristol, 339 Powers New Birks Building, Montreal. at the Board of Trade Dining Room. Building. France.—A. D. Weil, 10 rue Ste. Cecile, Paris. New York.—Every Wednesday at the Machinery *Albion.—L. J. Steele, R.D. 6. Hawaii.—H. A. R. Austin, 20 Kapiolani Build- Club, 50 Church Street. Western New York.—James A. Magoffin, 804 ing, Honolulu. Philadelphia.—Luncheon and dinner every day Mutual Life Building, Buffalo. The Philippine Islands.—Abraham Gideon, City except Sunday, at the rooms of the Cornell Club of Niagara Falls.—F. L. Lovelace, 730 Main St. Hall, Manila Philadelphia, 1519 Sansom Street. Jamestown.—Albert S. Price, 406 Fenton Bldg. North China.—Y. S. Djang, Tientsin, China. Pittsburgh.—Every Friday between 12:15 and Eastern States 1:30 p. m., at the William Penn Hotel, in the Northern New Jersey.—H. E., Eberhardt, Cornell Women's Clubs "Lounge." Mountain View Terrace, Maplewood N. J. *Albany.—Miss Inez Kisselburgh, 364 Hamilton Saint Louis.—Every Thursday, 12:30 o'clock, Northeastern Pennsylvania.—Seth W. Shoe- St. at Benish Restaurant, Eighth and Olive Streets. maker, 827 Electric St., Scranton. Boston.—Mrs. H. M. Varrell, 37 Concord Schenectady.—Every Thursday noon at Glenn's *Philadelphia.—R. D. Edwards, 1519 Sansom St. Avenue, Cambridge. Restaurant, 424 State Street. Central Pennsylvania.—E. M. Teeter, Box 586, ^Buffalo.—Miss Grace Laing, 306 Bryant St. Spokane.—Every Wednesday at the University Harrisburg. Chicago —Miss Margaret Aherne, 539 Madison Club. Western Pennsylvania.-~K. W. Gass, 125 Strat- St., Gary, Indiana. Syracuse.—Every Thursday, at 12:30 o'clock, at ford Avenue, Pittsburgh Cleveland.—Miss Florence Rosenthal, 10209 The Yates. Luzerne County.—E B. Wagner, 15 North South Boulevard Wichita.—Every Saturday, at 12 o'clock, at the Franklin St., Wilkes-Barre, Pa. Ithaca.—Miss Rebecca Harris, Kelvin Place. Wichita Club. CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS 33

Associate Alumni Committees Όl, A.B.—Ralph M. Brown has been a member of the U. S. Army Ambulance Finance: J. H. Barr, chairman, 374 ALUMNI NOTES Service since May 20, 1917. The Cor- Broadway, New York; J. C. Westervelt nell Section, No. 560, is still at the and W. W. Macon. 78, B.M.E.—Robert H. Treman of Allentown camp. Educational Legislation: M. S. Halli- Ithaca has been succeeded as deputy Όl—Paul B. Mattice of Middleburgh, day, chairman, Ithaca; F. C. Robinson governor of the Federal Reserve Bank N. Y., is in the second reserve officers' and N. J. Weldgen. of New York by J. Herbert Case, vice- president of the Farmers' Loan & Trust training camp at Fort Niagara. Local Clubs: H. D. North, chairman, Company, who resigned from that com- '03, M.E.—R. C. Fenner is treasurer 2151 Scranton Road, Cleveland; Harold pany to accept the post. Mr. Treman Flack, H. A. Hitchcock, F. M. Coffin of The George Zucker Company and was elected in June, 1916, to the deputy and R. W. Sailor. manager of the company's plant in Chi- governorship, which was created at cago. His address is 2920 Carroll Avenue News: W. W. Macon, chairman, 239 that time to permit Benjamin Strong, Chicago. West Thirty-ninth Street, New York; the governor, to take an indeterminate '04, LL.B.—Charles R. McSparren of J. P. Dods and N. H. Noyes. leave of absence on account of ill health. Buffalo has resigned as counsel to the University Affairs: Woodford Patter- He took the office with the understand- New York State Tax Department to son, chairman, Ithaca; Miss Kate ing that the directors were as soon as become associated with the law firm of Gleason, J. L. Tiernon, jr., Romeyn possible to obtain a deputy governor to Morris, Plante & Saxe of New York Berry and Erskine Wilder. relieve him. In electing Mr. Case to the City. McSparren originally went to office, the directors adopted a resolution Albany to serve as deputy under Attor- requesting Mr. Treman to continue his The Associate Alumni ney General Edward R. O'Malley '91, present duties until the end of the year, of Buffalo. He was retained through Officers in view of the absence from the bank of the Democratic administrations, and President. N. H. Noyes '06, No. 1328 Delaware Pierre Jay, the reserve agent, and in after continuing for one year under Avenue, Indianapolis. consideration of the work entailed by Attorney General Woodbury was ap- Vice-Presidents. J. L. Tiernon, jr., '95, No. 619 the second Liberty Loan. He will there- White Building, Buffalo. Mrs. G. D. Crofts '05, pointed counsel to the tax department. fore remain in New York for two or No. 7 East Swan St., Buffalo. In that office he reorganized the legal Treasurer. W. W. Macon '98, No. 239 West three months more before returning to department and established a policy of Thirty-ninth St., New York. Ithaca. Mr. Treman has been a Class frequent communication with the tax Alumni Recorder. The Secretary of the Uni- A director of the Federal Reserve Bank versity, H. A. Hitchcock ΌO, Morrill Hall, Ithaca. officers and taxpayers of the munici- of New York since the federal reserve Secretary. R. W. Sailor '07, CORNELL ALUMNI palities of the State. He made several system was inaugurated in 1914. NEWS, Ithaca. thousand rulings for the guidance of the Directors '86, B.S.—Having completed the re- tax officers and of local assessors. His Term Expires in 1918 port upon the geology of Southern Cali- address in New York City is 344 West W. H. H. Hutton, jr., '91, No. 622 Second fornia for the U. S. Geological Survey Seventy-second Street. Avenue, Detroit. upon which he has been engaged for N. H. Noye3 '06, Indianapolis. '04, M.E.—F. W. Poate's address is in several years past, Robert T. Hill has W. G. Ogden Όl, No. 53 State St., Boston. care of W. H. Poate, Wickham House, opened an office for the practice of his R. W. Sailor '07, Ithaca. Stanmore, England. He is still in the E. B. Whitman Όl, No 1305 John St., Baltimore. profession of geologist at 702 Hollings- British motor machine gun service (the Term Expires in 1919 worth Building, Los Angeles, Cal. "tanks") in France. J. L. Tiernon, jr., '95, Buffalo. '89, B.L.—Charles E. Treman of W. R. Webster, jr., '90, No. 208 Brooklawn '05, A.B.—George L. Genung, who is Ithaca has been appointed by Herbert Avenue, Bridgeport, Conn. serving an unexpired term as Justice of N. J. Weldgen '05, No. 911 Wilder Building, C. Hoover, national food administrator, the Municipal Court of the City of New Rochester, N. Y. to be chairman of the state executive York, Bprough of Manhattan, Ninth J. P. Dods '08, No. 900 South Michigan Avenue, committee, which is to conduct the food Chicago. District, is the Republican-Fusion can- conservation campaign in New York E. N. Sanderson '87, No. 252 William St., didate for election for a full term of ten New York. State during the week of October 21-28. Term Expires in 1920 years. The district in which he runs The purpose of this national campaign takes in the Cornell Club of New York. Miss Kate Gleason '88, The Gleason Works, is to enlist families in the conservation Rochester, N. Y. of food products and to teach food '05, A.B.; '07, M.D.—Dr. Esther E. William Metcalf, jr., Όl, No. 410 Oliver Building, Parker of Ithaca is sailing for France Pittsburgh. economy in the household. this month to engage in Red Cross work. Dr. L. O. Howard '77, Washington. '97, LL.B.—The address of Lieut.-Col. F. C. Robinson '04, No. 3144 Passyunk Avenue, Ό5, M.E.—Herbert C. Brown has Philadelphia. Joseph W. Beacham, jr., U. S. Infantry, J. P. Harris Όl, Citizens Savings and Trust is now Headquarters 26th Division, been in the American Ambulance Field Company, Cleveland. American Expeditionary Forces, via Service since April of this year. He was Ex Officio New York. in the late Verdun campaign. Franklin Matthews '83, president of the Cor- ΌO, Ph.B.; '02, A.B.—Benjamin B. '06, M.E.—George Lawson is attend- nellian Council; Columbia University, New York. ing the second reserve officers' training H. A. Hitchcock ΌO, Alumni Recorder; Ithaca. Avery, Charles A. Taussig (A.B., Ό2), Mrs. G. D. Crofts '05, vice-president of the Almond D. Fisk, and Horace W. Palmer camp at Fort Niagara. Associate Alumni; Buffalo. (Ph.B., ΌO) have formed a partnership '06, M.E.—J. L. Elwood is now secre- Dr. V. A. Moore '87, president of the Association for the practice of law, under the firm tary and general manager of United of Class Secretaries; Ithaca. W. W. Macon, treasurer of the Associate Alumni; name of Avery, Taussig, Fisk & Palmer, Motors Service, Inc., Dime Bank Build- New York. with offices at 220 Broadway, New York. ing, Detroit. This company is a con- 34 CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS stituent of United Motors Corporation at Cornell in 1910, he went to Colorado Commerce in New York, is serving as and its function is to provide as rapidly and taught history and economics in manager of the advertising bureau in as possible a nation-wide consolidated the College High School at Greeley for the publicity department of the Liberty service for all of the constituent com- a year. Then he was assistant professor Loan Committee for the District of panies in the corporation. of history and sociology in the State New York during the campaign for the '06, B.S.A.—W. G. Brierley, chair- Teachers College of Colorado. In 1914, sale of the second issue of Liberty Bonds. man of the division of horticulture, de- after holding a fellowship and serving In the former campaign Clarke had partment of agriculture, University of as an assistant in the philosophy of edu- charge of the committee's news bureau. Minnesota, has been promoted to the cation in Teachers College, he received Ί2, M.E.—The address of Ensign rank of associate professor. He visited the degree of Ph.D. from Columbia Uni- Conant Wait, U.S.N., is now in care of Washington, D. C., and Whitesbog, versity. Since then he has been pro- the Postmaster, New York* City. fessor of secondary education in the N. J., last summer to study methods of Ί2, C.E.—Elmer Heubeck is in the George Peabody College for Teachers blueberry culture. He will begin at second company, Engineers, R. O. T. C., at Nashville, Tenn. He has published once work with the blueberry in Min- Camp American University, Washing- "The early teaching of history in New nesota, co-operating with Dr. F. V. ton, D. C. His permanent address is in York and Massachusetts" and other Coville '87, botanist of the U. S. Depart- care of J. H. Gildea, jr., Catonsville, Md. books, and has been a special collaborator ment of Agriculture, who is the pioneer He has a son, Elmer Heubeck, jr., born with the U. S. Bureau of Education. in the culture of the blueberry. September 21, 1917. He is a member of the Cornell chapter '08, M.E.—Charles A. Haines has left of Phi Beta Kappa. During his resi- '12, M.E.—Henry H. Wood, of Mat- the Provident Slate Company of Slating- dence at Nashville he was elected presi- toon, 111., has been drafted for military ton, Pa., and returned to The Emerson dent of the Tennessee history teachers' service. Company, efficiency engineers, 30 Church association. In his present office he is Ί2, LL.B.—Louis M. Cohn, first Street, New York. At present he is the successor of President W. A. Jessup lieutenant, Coast Artillery O.R.C., is assigned to the American Hard Rubber of the . now on duty with the American Expe- Company of College Point, N. Y. ditionary Force in France. '10, B.Arch.—Willis M. Rose is with '08, M.E.—Robert P. Turner was the Springfield Aircraft Corporation, Ί2, LL.B.—After receiving his com- recently promoted to the office of man- Wason Avenue, Brightwood, Spring- mission as a second lieutenant, Infantry ager of the York, Pa., plant of the Cer- field, Mass. This is a new corporation O.R.C., and just before departing from tain-teed Products Corporation. in which J. G. White '85, of New York, Salt Lake City for camp at American -'08, A.B.—Harold Wilder has com- is interested. Lake, Wash., Charles C. Bintz was mar- pleted his training in military aero- ΊO, B.Arch.—Mr. and Mrs. L. G. ried to Miss Denice Karrick of Salt nautics and has received a commission Hallberg of Evanston, 111., announce Lake City. as first lieutenant in the Aviation Sec- the birth of a daughter, Sarah Ellen, on Ί2, A.B.—Foster M. Coffin is serving tion, Signal Corps. He has been ordered September 29. as assistant to Guy Emerson, head of the to report to the commanding officer at Ίl, LL.B.—F. Chandler Mofrett of department of publicity of the Liberty Mineola. Albany, N. Y., is in the second reserve Loan Committee of the federal reserve '09, M.E.—Frederic O. Ebeling's ad- officers' training camp at Fort Niagara. district of New York. Coffin's services dress is changed from West De Pere, are loaned by the Carnegie Corporation Ίl, A.B.; '13, A.M.; Ί7, Ph.D.—E. Wis., to 1649 Jar vis Avenue, Chicago. of New York. He is assistant manager of the Gage Laurence Palmer has resumed the pro- '13, C.E.—Ernest W. Eickelberg, first Hat Works at 2241 Indiana Avenue. fessorship of botany in the Iowa State Teachers College, Cedar Falls, Iowa, lieutenant, Coast Artillery Reserve Corps '09, C.E.—Captain John R. Haswell, after spending a year at Cornell in com- has been ordered to Fort Monroe for Engineer O.R.C., was married to Miss pleting his work for the Ph.D. duty. Marion P. Frederick, daughter of Dr. '13, M.E.—George W. Rosenthal is a and Mrs. S. C. Frederick of Wilmington, Ίl, D.V.M.—Dr. Arthur W. Combs chief petty officer in the U.S.N.R.F., Del, on August 23, 1917. Haswell is is serving in France. and is stationed at the Norfolk Navy now on duty as a student officer in the Ίl, A.B.—Raymond H. Fuller has Yard. second training camp at American Uni- been commissioned a second lieutenant '13, A.B.—F. Walter Bliss of Middle- versity, Washington, D. C. He is in in the Quartermaster Corps, National burgh, N. Y., is in the second reserve the second company, engineers. Army. He is now stationed at Camp Lee, Petersburg, Virginia. officers' training camp at Fort Niagara. '09, A.B.—Lawrence G. Bennett has closed his law office in New York and has Ίl, M.E.—Charles Kenneth Getchell '13, M.E.—Benjamin Franklin Bardo gone to Washington. He is secretary and Miss Ruth N. Stephens of Scotia, was married to Miss Ethel Belle Gullie, daughter of Mr. Frederick William Henry of the Exports Council, which was created N. Y., were married at the home of the to advise the President of the United bride's sister, Mrs. George Brewster, on Gullie, at New York, on October 4. States in the enforcement of the act to August 11, 1917. Getchell is now with '13, B.S.—Elmer J. Hoffman of El- regulate trade with neutral nations. the Signal Corps at Camp Upton, Yap- mira, N. Y., is in France as a sergeant ΊO, A.B.—William Fletcher Russell hank, L. I. He went with the first five with U. S. Army Hospital No. 7 (Red has been appointed dean of the college per cent from District 23, Brooklyn. Cross Hospital No. 9), American Ex- of education of the University of Iowa. He has been with the American Loco- peditionary Forces. Dr. Russell is a son of James Earl Rus- motive Company since he graduated. '13, M.E.—Paul F. Titchener of Bing- sell '87, dean of Teachers College, Co- '12, LL.B.—James I. Clarke, adver- hamton, N. Y., has received a commis- lumbia University. After his graduation tising manager of the National Bank of sion as first lieutenant, Ordnance O.R.C. CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS 35

His address is Pelham Court, German- town, Pa. He is on duty at Frankford Arsenal. '14, M.E.—Mr. and Mrs. B. F. Grimm Cornellians are of St. Marys, W. Va., announce the birth of a son, Bruce Fulton Grimm, jr., on September 12. Making History '14, M.E.; '17, Law—Walter A. Goertz '14 and Herbert A. Goertz '17 in all Branches of are both in the 29th Division Head- quarters Troop, Camp McClellan, Annis- the Country's Service ton, Alabama. '14, M.E.—Lieut. Charles K. Bassett, Ordnance Department, U.S.R., has been The Current Volumes of assigned to duty in the office of the Chief of Ordnance. His office address is Room THE ALUMNI NEWS 606, Hool Building, Washington, D. C., and his house address is in care of Mr. tell the story of John Leavell, 3926 Fourteenth Street, Cornell's Part in the War N. W., Washington, D. C. ' '14, A.B.—Earl A. Barrett was ap- pointed instructor in Romance languages You may wish to refer to a in Cornell University last June. Owing previous issue but to the delay in appointments it was necessary for him to resign the Cornell can't find that copy instructorship for a similar one in Phillips Exeter Academy, Exeter, N. H. '14, LL.B.—Taylor James Chamber- Keep your ALUMNI NEWS in a lain of Salt Lake City has enlisted in the Utah Field Artillery, which has been mustered into the federal service and IB ordered to Linda Vista training camp BIG near San Diego, Cal. '15, A.B.—Andrew L. Smith of Al- bany, N. Y., is in the first company, BEN R.O.T.C., at Fort Niagara. '15—R. M. Wildberg is a chief petty officer in the U.S.N.R.F., and is stationed at the Norfolk Navy Yard. BINDER '15, M.E.—J. R. Davis was married to Miss Helen Pauline Bullock, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Homer D. Bullock, at and you can find it Oakfield, N. Y., on July 11. '15, M.E.—Donald H. Dew is in Ordnance Department work. His ad- The insertion of each weekly issue is a simple process, and dress is 1105 Seventeenth Street, Wash- takes but a moment. The volume will look well on a book- ington, D. C. shelf and every number is held so that '15, B.Arch.—R. E. Hoyt of Cleve- land, Ohio, is in Company F, 112th it can't be lost. Regiment, Ohio Engineers, Camp Sheri- dan, Montgomery, Alabama. Each binder holds a year of Cornell History: '15, A.B.—A. G. Ingalls is a corporal Bound in Art Vellum—Stamped in Gold in Company C, 7th New York Infantry, Spartanburg, S. C. To our subscribers $1.00 prepaid '15, M.E.—Paul N. Darrington of while the present supply lasts Baltimore has received a commission as second lieutenant in the regular army. He is at the Service School at Fort Leavenworth. Cornell Alumni News '15, A.B.—William Lambert Kleitz, Ithaca, N. Y. second lieutenant, 50th U. S. Infantry, was married to Miss Harriet Selby 36 CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS

Gillette, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. master corps, National Army. He is Edward Gillette, on August 23, at Sheri- now at Camp Dix. dan, Wyoming. '^-'-George S. Miles has a commission '15, M.E.—Howard Einstein is at the as second lieutenant and is in the machine Princeton School of Aviation, Princeton, gun company, 122d U. S. Infantry, Camp N. J. Wheeler, Georgia. '15, A.B.—Frederic F. Stoneman, 1st '17, M.E.—George L. Erwin, jr., of Lieutenant, Infantry O.R.C., General Kalamazoo, Mich., has successfully com- Headquarters, American Expeditionary pleted his training in military aero- Force in France, is "Stoney V new ad- nautics. He has received a commission dress. as first lieutenant, Aviation Section, '15, M.E.—Harold S. Norris is a sec- Signal Reserve Corps, and has been or- ond lieutenant in the Coast Artillery dered to report to the commanding and is stationed at Fort H. G. Wright, officer at Mineola. Long Island Sound. '17, B.S.—Edwin I. Kilbourne has re- '15, B.S.—M. W. Serby has left the ceived a commission as ensign in the Ochs Construction Company, Allentown, U. S. Naval Reserve and has been ordered Pa., and is general manager of the to Annapolis for four months of intensive newly organized general contracting training in the U. S. Naval Academy. firm The Wm. Serby Co., Washington,. '17, B.S.—Russell S. Beck has re- D. C. ceived a commission as ensign in the Mineral^ater '15, A.B.—Mark H. Stratton, assistant U. S. Naval Reserve. superintendent at one of the chemical '17, B.S.—Harold O. Johnson is in A HELP TO THE SOLDIER plants of Butterworth-Judson, Newark, the U. S. Naval Reserve Force and is N. J., has received a commission as serving on board Scout Patrol No. 663, The National Army School of New first lieutenant, Ordnance O. R. C. New Bedford Section, New Bedford, York City has prepared a set of charts '15, A.B.—Louis A. Love is at the base Mass. of military instruction that should hospital, Camp Lewis, American Lake, '17, B.Arch.—Albert A. Cushing was prove valuable to those who desire to see Wash. married to Miss Ruth C. Redfield of a graphic representation of the Manual '16, B.S.—Ensign Francis T. Hunter, Shortsville, N. Y., on June 28. Cushing of Arms and to have drawings and a U.S.N.R., was married to Miss Helen is employed by Stone & Webster on the detailed description of the United States D. Berry of New Rochelle, N. Y., on construction of the power house for the Army Rifle for the purpose of self-study, September 17. After a week with his Buffalo General Electric Company and in addition to the instruction given in bride at Lake Sunapee, N. H., Ensign lives at 184 Royal Avenue, Buffalo, N. Y. the training camp. Hunter reported on board the U. S. S. '17, A.B.—George J. Hecht, who — for duty. The charts should prove useful alike gave his summer vacation to volunteer to our men in the Officer's Reserve, in 16, A.B.—F. T. Madigan of Herki- work in the New York office of the mer, N. Y., is in the third company, American Field Service in France, is now the National Army or in the Home R.O.T.C., at Fort Niagara. in Washington with the Public Service Guard, as their use will enable them to '16, A.B.—Miss Juliette Courant is Reserve of the U. S. Department of more readily master the important de- teaching French in the Buckingham Labor. He has been assigned to the tails of the subjects therein treated, and Junior High School of Springfield, Mass. Boys' Working Reserve as an executive. to devote their time to more advanced Her address is 40 Dunmoreland Street. His address is Bellevue Hotel, Washing- work. The time thus gained is likely '16, B.S.; '16, M.S.A.—After spend- ton, D. C. to prove a factor indetermining the in- ing the summer on his own farm, Ben- NEW ADDRESSES dividual's value to his unit. jamin Brickman has accepted appoint- '99—j. Beaver White, 1864 Wyoming The charts were edited by Lieut. Col. ment as teacher of agriculture and ex- Avenue, Washington, D. C. G. S. Simonds, U. S. A., and are en- tension man in Badger, Roseau County, »12_- W. J. Fulton, Battery E, 16th dorsed by General Wood. They are Minnesota. He is the first person to hold the office there. F. A., Sparta, Wis. durably made to stand hard use, and '13—Clinton S. Hunt, 232 Chili may be depended upon to produce re- '17—Second Lieutenant Harold E. Avenue, Rochester, N. Y.—Charles E. Sturcken, O.R.C., is with the 48th In- sults. No better gift could be sent to Thomas, 15 Northwestern Avenue, De- the new man in the service of his country. fantry at Syracuse, N. Y. troit. 17, C.E.—Richard T. Guilbert, En- '15—J. M. Heath, 2215 South Colum- A small cut of one of the charts ap- sign, U.S.N.R., has been ordered to bine St., Denver, Col. pears in the advertisement on the in- Annapolis for four months of intensive '16—Harland B. Cushman, 55 Caryl side front cover page of this issue. There training at the U. S. Naval Academy. Avenue, Yonkers, N. Y.—Lieut. Joseph are twenty-five charts in the set, which His permanent address is 767 Ridge H. Ehlers, 151 Seymour St., Hartford, will be sent postpaid upon receipt of the Street, Newark, N. J. Conn.—W. A. Gilchrist, 508 North price. '17,' A.B.—Allan L. Kaufmann of Broadway, Oklahoma City. Toledo, Ohio, has received a commission '17—Charles F. Probes, 115^ Horner NATIONAL ARMY SCHOOL, as second lieutenant in the quarter- St., Elmira,^N. Y. 314 East 23rd St., New York City. CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS ALUMNI "Songs of Cornell" KOHM & BRUNNE PROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY "Glee Club Songs" All the latest "stunts" and things musical Tailors and Importers LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA Alumni Work a Specialty ROY V. RHODES Όl Lent's Music Store Write for samples of Imported Goods Attorney and Counsellor at Law Ithaca, New York 222 E. State St. Ithaca, N. Y Van Nuys Building The Same Old "Goldie" WASHINGTON, D. C. THEODORE K. BRYANT '97, '98, Master Patent Law Ό8 Wanzer & Howell H. GOLDENBERG Patents and Trade Marks Exclusively Merchant Tailor 310-313 Victor Building The Grocers 317 Eddy St. Ithaca ITHACA, N. Y. Samples and Measuring Charts on Application GEORGE S. TARBELL Attorney and Notary Public Real Estate Sold, Rented and Managed Jewelers

TACOMA, WASHINGTON. R. A. Heggie & Bro. Co. RAYMOND P. TARR, B.S., '98 136 E. State Street Mining Geologist , Ithaca, N. Y. Confidential Reports on Mining Prop- The cuts in the Cornell Alumni News are erties anywhere. Expert for Banking We have a full stock of Diamonds, Jew- made by the Institutions. Mining Litigation. Tax- elry, Art Metal Goods, etc., and ation. Stanley Engraving Co. 1142 Market Street. make things to order. Library Building, Tioga and Seneca Streets

NEW YORK CITY. The wearers of the Varsity "C" eat CHARLES A. TAUSSIG H. J. Bool Co. A.B. '02, LL.B., Harvard '05 Burns Family Bread 130 E. State St. 222 Broadway Tel. 1905 Cortland Furniture Manufacturers General Practice at the training tables. Why? Ask your neighbor Complete Housefurnishers JOHN R. CAUTLEY, M.E. '06 Consultant to Furniture, Rugs, Draper- PETER A. FRASSE & Co., INC. Ithaca Cold Storage ies, Window Shades, 417-421 Canal St. J. W. HOOK Wall Paper Export to England, Scandinavia, Russia and Argentina. Fruit, Produce, Butter and Eggs Estimates Free S. E. MILLER '15 113-115 S. Cayuga St. MILLER-REED Co. Builders and General Contractors Public Buildings, Churches, Residences Telegraph Your Flowers 103 Park Avenue We deliver flowers and plants bψ telegraph, anywhere in the United States, on six hours notice. BOSTON, MASS. Bool Floral Co., Ithaca, N. Y. VAN EVEREN, FISH & HILDRETH Counsellors at Law Patents, Trade Marks, Copyrights 53 State Street. HORACE VAN EVEREN, CORNELL '91 \\TE SOLICIT CORRESPONDENCE RE- FRED O. FISH, BOWDOIN '91 V V IRA L FISH, WOR. TECH '87 ALFRED H. HILDRETH, HARVARD 96 CARDING OUR EXCLUSIVE LINES: WAR KEN G. OGDEN, CORNELL Όl "Art Metal" Steel Safes and Office Equipment CHICAGO, ILL. BALTIMORE, MD. "The Noiseless" Typewriter Ill W. Monroe St. Munsey Building NORTON, BIRD & WHITMAN "Roycroft" ENGINEERS Design, Construction, Rate Surveys, Appraisals, Write for catalogues or descriptive matter and Special Investigations, of Utilities and Industrial Properties W. J. Norton '02 P. P. Bird '00 E. B. Whitman Όl (Eonter S.G. Koon '02 G. J. RequardtΌ9 N. L. MacLeod'll CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS

Sometimes you want to give something* to a friend

You will recall that last year we got out our Gift booklet and this- year we expect to have a new edition. Sold only at There will be some additions because people have inquired and sent orders for new things. We want to remind you The Co-op. now of the Cornell Shield chocolates. You can order of us by mail and you can be sure they will be fresh. The price Morrill Hall is one dollar a pound and postage paid. You might remind Ithaca, N. Y. us to send you a copy of the booklet.

FOR YOUR TOUR DRAWING INKS The Automobile Blue Book ETERNAL WRITING INK ENGROSSING INK NEW YORK CHICAGO 1 TAURINE MUCILAGE PHOTO MOUNTER PASTE Standard Road Guide of America HIGGINS DRAWING BOARD PASTE ESTABLISHED IN 1901 LIQUID PASTE Let the Blue Book Touring Bureau OFFICE PASTE assist you in planning your trips VEGETABLE GLUE, ETC. —the latest road data. JOHN P. DODS '08 - Western Mgr. ARE THE FINEST AND BEST INKS AND ADHESIVES. Emancipate yourself from the use of corrosive and ill-smelling inks and adhesives and adopt the Higgins' Inks and adhesives. They will be a revelation to you, they are so sweet, clean, and well put up and withal so efficient. Lang's At Dealers Generally Palace Garage CHAS. M. HIGGINS & CO., Mfrs. 271 NINTH STREET, BROOKLYN, N. Y. is situated in the center of Ithaca BRANCHES: CHICAGO, LONDON 117-129 East Green Street

It is absolutely fireproof. Stop Off at Ithaca Open day and night. Com- modious and fully equipped. Without Additional Expense A full stock of tires and on your next trip between New York, Philadelphia and the West. A con- tubes and everything in the venient schedule allows you a day "on The Hill" without losing any more line of sundries. business time than you would on the through trip. THE CORNELLIAN Leaves New York - 9:00 P. M. Official Automobile Leaves Philadelphia - 8:05 P. M. Blue Book Guide You can spend the day in Ithaca; then take a sleeper on The Black Diamond leaving at 4:49 P. M.; and arrive Chicago 8 o'clock next morning. liΛ&lley Railroad William H. Morrison '90 Ernest D. Button '99 "The Route of The Black Diamond"