Vouvae VI No. 14 BRYN MAWR, PA, FRIDAY, JANUARY 30, 1920 ‘Price 5 Cents “Please don’t ask me about politics first,” Acting President Taft is quoted as saying to a Chicago reporter. “I do so want to emphasize the need for the Bryn Mawr endowment fund which the Alum- nate Association is trying to raise.” Welcomed by college clubs and suf- frage leagues; photographed as “the youngest college president,” cathechised as to her political views, Miss Taft left behind her an enthusiastic Middle West when she ended her speaking tour for the Two-Million-Dollar Fund last Mon- day. Cincinnati, Chicago, St. Louis and Kansas City were the cities visited. A tea at Hotel Gibson, in Cincinnati, Saturday, January 17, was Miss Taft’s first engagement on the trip. Catharine Anderson, ’06, had charge of the ar- rangements. In Chicago she was the guest of Har- riot Houghteling, ’07. Margaret Ayer Barnes (Mrs. Cecil Barnes), 07, gave a dinner in her honor, and Marion Scott, 11, a tea. She spoke at a luncheon of Bryn Mawr Alumnae at the Fortnightly Club, Wednesday, January 21, and the next day at the College Club. She was entertained by President and Mrs. Jud- son, of the University of Chicago, and also by Professor and Mrs. James Field. Addresses Crowded Ballroom in St. Louis Ata tea given by the League of Wom- en Voters in St. Louis, on Friday, Miss Taft addressed a capacity audience in the ballroom: of Hotel Statler on the “Preparation of Women for Political Ef- fectiveness.” She also attended a lunch- eon given in her honor by the Associa- tion of Collegiate Alumnae and the Col- lege Club, and spoke at the Town Club and at Mary Institute. While in St. Louis Miss Taft was the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Gregg. Emily West- wood Lewis (Mrs. Joseph W. Lewis) en- tertained her at luncheon; Mr. and Mrs. Gregg gave a reception in her honor Friday night, and Dr. and Mrs. H. W. Loeb a dinner at the University Club. Arriving in Kansas City Miss Taft on Monday morning delivered the opening lecture at a School of Citizenship. She was the guest of honor at a luncheon of 400 given by the Association of Colle- giate Alumnae, and had dinner at the men’s Knife and Fork Club. In Kan- sas City she was the guest of Margaret Nichols Hardenbergh (Mrs. Clarence Hardenbergh), ’05. PRES. NEILSON URGES ENDOWMENT IN TALK AT PHILA. COLLEGE CLUB “The Future of the Privately Endowed College” was the subject of an address by President William A. Neilson, of Smith, before the Philadelphia College Club last Tuesday. Representatives of six colleges raising Endowments spoke afterwards, among them Gertrude Ely, 99, for Bryn Mawr. Declaring that he was not proud of the record of his sex in voting, Presi- dent Neilson emphasized the fact that colleges train women to be “politically intelligent” and as such deserve the sup- port of the nation. President Neilson was in Bryn Mawr Tuesday and Wednesday as the guest of Louise Congdon Francis (Mrs. Richard Francis), "00. Add influential Members to National Com. mittee for Endowment. Seven more prominent men and women have accepted membership on the Na- ‘| 315.08 in 1919; Victory Chair Gifts $71,585 $71,585 has been raised to date for the Victory Chair. Of this $8000 was given in the class collections for 1918; $49,- $10,820.96 in 1920, and $3449 in pledges. It will be recommended at the Alum- nae. meeting that the Victory Chair be made part of the Two Million Dollar Fund. DANCING AND VILLAGE SPORTS TO BE PROMINENT AT MAY DAY Old Morality to Be Given on Wagon; “Jepthas Daughter” on Library Steps May Day this year will combine all the beauty of past May Days with a num- ber of effective innovations. “Nothing could be more beautiful than the May Day which I saw in 1906,” Mrs. Otis Skinner, who is directing the pageant this year, told a reporter. “The campus, however, gets more beautiful every year. The ivy in the cloister is now surpass- ingly beautiful. There really is no col- lege campus like Bryn Mawr for an old English May Day.” “Robin Hood” and other plays tradi- tional to May Day will be given, ‘A ‘ Midsummer Night’s Dream” will be per- formed in the hollow, “St. George and the Dragon” in the angle of Pembroke East, the “Old Wives’ Tale” in the sec- ond hollow, and “The Masque of Flow- ers” in the cloister. An old morality, “The Nice Wanton,” will be given by the graduates, on a wagon, something not attempted here before. “Jeptha’s Daughter” will be given by the alumnae on the steps of the library. Much will be made this year of the dancing and village sports. The green about the May poles will be kept active throughout the day. Jeanette Peabody,’19, will help with the folk and Morris danc- ing. That the two classes which missed May Day on account of the war might be asked to take charge of the booth for tea, is a suggestion of Mrs. Skinner's which will be taken up by the chairman of the May Day committee and the president of the Alumnae Association. Two performances have been decided upon, but the date has not yet been set. AUTHOR OF “PARIS VISTAS”TO GO ON LECTURE TOUR Helen Davenport Gibbons (Mrs. Her- bert Gibbons), ex-’06, author of “Paris Vistas,” will deliver lectures next year on her experience abroad under the man- agement of the Pond Lyceum Bureau. Mrs. Gibbons went through the Adana massacres of 1909, lived through the Ital- ian and Balkan wars in Constantinople, and was in Paris at the time of the air raids and bombardments. In 1914 she founded the layette work in France, “Sauvons les Bebes,” distributing in three years from her studio in Paris nearly five thousand layettes. From the entry of the United States into the war Mrs. Gibbons devoted her time to the American soldiers, lectured to them and danced with them. Her chateau in St. Nazaire became the fa- mous “Little Gray Home in France.” tional Committee of the Two Million Dollar Endowment Drive. They are Mrs. Emmons Blaine, Mrs. Ira Couth Wood, and Mrs. Frank H. Scott, of Chi cago; George W. Perkins, Miss Harriett Bradford, of Stanford University. ! gan (Mrs. Shepard Morgan), T DINNER HELD IN nw YORE AND F PHILADELPHIA St. Louis Reports $15,000 in Pledges Ohio, Indiana and Michigan Organi Enthusiastic reports from a number of districts tell of preliminary events to arouse interest in the Endowment. Only one district, St. Louis, reports a spe- cific amount pledged. Philadelphia and New York have been most active in the past two weeks, Phil- adelphia giving a dinner to ex-Presi- dent Taft; New York, two dinners to get together the New York alumnae. NEW ENGLAND Professor Leuba presented the need for the Endowment Fund at a special meet- ing of the Boston Bryn Mawr Club De- cember 29. On January 5 Mrs. Slade came from New York to address a meeting called at the home of Elizabeth Higginson Jackson (Mrs. Charles Jackson), ’97, to open the campaign in New England. Margaret Graham Blaine, ’13, has ac- cepted the chairmanship for New Eng- land, Marjorie Young, '08, is chairman of publicity for New England. Sylvia Scudder Bowditch (Mrs. Ingersoll Bow- ditch), ’01, chairman’ for Massachusetts, and Elizabeth Higginson Jackson (Mrs. Charles Jackson), 97, chairman of Po- tential Donors for Boston. Headquarters are at 367 Boylston street, Boston. NEW YORK A press dinner with Acting-president Taft as speaker was given at the New York Bryn Mawr Club January 15. Miss Taft's address was quoted in newspapers all over the country, from Buffalo to Denver. One hundred and fifty Bryn Mawr alumnae attended a luncheon at the Cos- mopolitan Club January 24. Mrs. Slade, Mr. John Price Jones and Helen Daven- port Gibbons (Mrs. Herbert Gibbons). ex-'06, were among the speakers. Louise Fleischman Maclay (Mrs. A. B. Maclay),: 06, who has accepted the chairmanship for New York, Connecticut and New Jer- sey, presided. Barbara Spofford Mor- 09, chair- man of estimates for the district, gave a detailed account of the plans for work. A map was used to show the different districts with their chairmen. New names added to the personnel of the district are: Marguerite Jones, ex-'15, publicity representative; Helen Howell Moorhead (Mrs. J. J. Moorhead), '04, chairman of speakers’ bureau; Eleanor Wallace Loomis (Mrs. Henry Loomis), ’03, treasurer; Helen Annan Scribner (Mrs. Arthur Scribner), 91, chairman of Potential Donors for New York state. PHILADELPHIA Ex-President Taft was the guest of honor and principal speaker at a dinner given at the Ritz-Carlton Wednesday evening by Gertrude Ely, ‘99, chair- man of the Philadelphia branch for the Endowment. President Neilson, of Smith College; Miss Caroline F. E. Spurgeon, LL. D., representing the Fed- eration of English University Women and Caroline McCormick Slade (Mrs. F Louis Slade), ex-'96, were the other speakers. The guests, numbering about seventy-five, were friends of Bryn Mawr College, members of the faculty and a few alumnae. Recent appointments to the Philadel- phia Committee are Mary Christine Smith, "14, secretary, and Helen Wil- liams Woodall (Mrs. John Woodall), "98, treasurer. (Continued on page 5) Endowment Reaches $107,000 Contributions to the Two Million Dol- lar Endowment stand at $107,000 at the hour of going to press. Mr. Asa S. Wing,’ treasurer for the fund, reports that $69,- 000 of this amount is in cash and $38,000 in pledges. This $107,000 is exclusive of the Vic- tory Chair fund, which is in the hands of the Alumnae. ALL ALUMNAE IN PEM. WEST ON ACCOUNT OF QUARANTINE Luncheon Saturday in Pembroke— Buffet Supper in Gym. with Pres. Taft and Dean Smith Speakers With two hundred and fifty alumnae expected on the campus this week-end for their annual meeting, a serious prob- lem confronted the wardens when an influenza quarantine was declared Tues- day against students going to Phila- delphia and New York. All the alumnae, it was stated, must be put in one hall, Pembroke West, from which the undergraduates will be moved. The Pembroke dining room will also be re- served for the alumnae, the undergradu- ates left in Pembroke East taking their meals in other halls. Luncheon on Saturday will be served in Pembroke instead of in Rockefeller. Each class hopes for a large number of recruits. Those who plan to come are asked to notify Miss Martha Thomas immediately on arriving. Instead of the dinner in Pembroke Saturday night, a buffet supper will be served in the gymnasium. Acting-Pres- ident Taft will welcome the alumnae and Dean Smith will recount how the col- lege is affected by the campaign. Dr. Spurgeon’s address will be given as scheduled at 8.30 in the chapel. ALUMNAE WILL HEAR DISTRICT RE- PORTS ON WORK FOR ENDOWMENT Progress of the different districts in their work for the Endowment will be reported by the district chairmen at the Alumnae Meeting Saturday afternoon. The districts will be represented as fol- lows: New England, excluding Connecticut, Margaret Blaine, 13. New York, including Connecticut and New Jersey, Louise Fleischmann Maclay, 06. Pennsylvania, including Delaware,, Elizabeth Kirkbride, '96; Gertrude Ely, ’99, as chairman for Philadelphia, and Marion Reilly, '01, as chairman of can- vassers. District of Columbia, including Mary- land, Virginia and West Virginia, Amy Steiner, 99; E. Buckner Kirk, ’16, on pub- licity. Southern States, Julia Duke Henning (Mrs. Samuel Henning), '97. Ohio, Ruth Strong Strong, '03; Marie Wing, ‘07, state organizer; Gwendolyn Rawson, chairman for Cincinnati. Indiana, Elizabeth Adams Lewis (Mrs. F. N. Lewis), ’93. Michigan, Marianna Buffum Hill (Mrs. Perry Hill}, '01; Marjorie Green Mulock (Mrs. Edwin Mulock), '03. Illinois, including Wisconsin, Minne- sota and Iowa, Susan Follansbee Hibbard (Mrs. William Hibbard), ‘97; Grace Clark Wright (Mrs. Vernon Wright), '98 Missouri, including Arkansas, Kansas, Oklahoma and Texas, Anne Rotan Howe (Mrs. Thorndike Howe), ‘02, organizer for Texas: Anna R. Dubach ,"19, for St. Louis Editorial Staff for the ‘Aleiinis issue: Anna R. Dubach, '19, managing editor; Frederica Howell, 19; Isabel Foster, ’15, ex-officio, in Hoc Signo Vinces Today’s issue of The College News, by courtesy of the undergraduates, is edited and published by the alumnae in behalf of the Faculty Two Milion Dol- lar Campaign for Salaries. With such unity of spirit as is typified in the very printing of these words, Bryn Mawr en- ters the field to defend her standards by doubling her present endowment. It is by far the greatest undertaking which has fallen upon the college since its foundation in 1884, There is as much hazzard to be faced as in those pioneer days. Then it was a feat of creation; now it is a struggle to save the soul of the college. Bryn Mawr will cease to be Bryn Mawr if its quality of education deteriorates. President Thomas, as her life work, has made the college what it is. The college has formed the character and ability of its alumnae. The time has come when the alumnae in their turn must give in thought and time and wealth what they owe in gratitude and loyalty. The trustees of the college, the fac- ulty, the executives and the staff may all resign, severing their last connection here, but the alumnae are Bryn Mawr. They must take upon themselves the final responsibility for raising the en- dowment. The annual meeting and round table this week-end is a dedication to the task which lies ahead. Scarcely more than 250 of the 4000 who owe allegiance to Bryn Mawr will be able to be present. But by mail and personal contact each one of them will be brought into the army of women who, wherever they are, this year will show their appreciation and their loyalty to the. college. LUNCHEON GIVEN DR. SPURGEON BY FOUR WOMEN’S COLLEGES Bryn Mawr, Vassar, Smith and Bar- nard gave a luncheon at the Colony Club last Monday to welcome Dr. Caroline Spurgeon, professor of English litera- ture at the University of London and president of the Federation of Univer- sity Women of Great Britain, and Dr. Ida Smedley MacLean, professor of Science at the University of London and treasurer of the Federation, who have just arrived in this country to arouse interest in the world federation of col- lege women. Dean Gildersleeve, of Barnard, pre- sided and President Neilson, of Smith, made the address of welcome. Scribner) is chairman of the Endowment Committee on Potential Donors for New York State. 1883 S. Frances Van Kirk is new class col- lector and secretary. Her address is 1333 Pine Street, Philadelphia. Evangeline Walker Andrews (Mrs. Charles Andrews) is chairman for New Haven for the Endowment. Helen Hopkins Thom (Mrs. H. R. Thom) is at the head of a Community Service Organization in Baltimore which has recently started a community kitchen, serving hot dinners for 85 cents. Lucy Lewis is on one of the teams working to get an endowment for the Anna Howard Shaw Chair of Preven- tive Medicine at the Woman’s Medical College, Philadelphia. Gertrude Taylor Slaughter (Mrs. Moses Slaughter) has returned to this country after two years of work among the Italian refugee children. Among the honors awarded Mrs. Slaughter for her work are a brooch representing the an- cient shield of Venice, awarded her by the City of Venice; a silver medal from the Italian Red Cross, and the White Cross of Savoy, a souvenir of the Duke of Aosta’s army which protected Venice. Mrs. Slaughter has an article on D’An- nunzio and Italy in the January “At- lantic.” She has had several articles in the last year both in the “Atlantic” and the “North American Review.” 1894 Emily Martin, Professor of Mathe- matics at Mt. Holyoke College, has been appointed secretary of the Mount Holy- oke branch of the Association of Uni- versity Professors. Helen Middleton Smith (Mrs. Thomas Smith) has moved to Boston, where her husband is a professor in the Massachu- setts Institute of Technology. Emma Bailey Speer (Mrs. Robert E. Speer), is honorary chairman of New Jersey for the Endowment. 1896 Elizabeth Kirkbride is chairman for Pennsylvania and Delaware for the En- dowment. Abigail Dimon has come to Philadel- phia from Utica to be secretary for Pennsylvania and Delaware for the En- dowment. She has office hours at 1300 Spruce street. Anna Scattergood Hoag (Mrs. Clar- ence Hoag) is chairman for Pennsylva- nia. Mary Crawford Dudley (Mrs. Charles Dudley) is chairman of the sub-commit- tee on canvassers for Philadelphia and vicinity. Cora Baird Jeanes (Mrs. Henry Jeanes) is chairman of the committee on estimates for Philadelphia. Elizabeth Hopkins Johnson (Mrs. Ho- bart Johnson) is chairman for Wiscon- sin. 1897 Julia Duke Henning (Mrs. Samuel Henning) is chairman for North Caro- Sele Anein Sitios an oe ins Ebterd) ie chlicmin for filleola. bra Ste also vice chairman for Philadel cine Polisnsbee. Hibbard (Mrs. Wil- amen Wisconsin and Iowa. 1898 Elizabeth Nields Bancroft (Mrs. Wil- fred Bancroft) is chairman for Delaware for the Endowment. Alice Gannett is chairman for Cleve- land. Grace Clarke Wright (Mrs. Vaouie Wright) is chairman for Minnesota. 1899 Amy Steiner is chairman for Mary- land, District of Columbia, Virginia and West Virginia for the Endowment. Ellen Kilpatrick is vice chairman for the same district. 1900 Grace Latimer Jones has organized a new club in Indianapolis, the Crichton Club, which is similar to the contempo- rary Clubs in other cities. It has a mem- bership of 600. Cornelia Halsey Kellogg (Mrs. Fred- eric Kellogg) is chairman of Central New Jersey for the Endowment. Edith Wright is secretary and treas- urer of the Michigan Endowment Com- mittee. 1901 Sylvia Scudder Bowditch (Mrs. Inger- soll Bowditch) is chairman for Massa- chusetts for the Endowment. Marian Reilly is chairman for General Canvassing for Philadelphia and vicin- ity. Marianna Buffum Hilt-(Mrs. Perry Hill) is chairman for Michigan for the Endowment. Marion Wright Messimer (Mrs. Rob- ert Messimer) is chairman for Detroit. 1962 Anne Todd is chairman of the Endow- ment Committee on Potential Donors for Philadelphia and vicinity. Anne Rotan Howe (Mrs. Thorndike Howe) is a vice chairman of the Na- tional Committee. 1903 Anna Branson Hillyard (Mrs. Brame Hillyard) has an article in the “North American Review” for January, “I Dis- cover the New Testament.” Another article, “American Written Here,” which appeared in the London “Athenaeum,” December 19, has been reprinted in “The Living Age” for January 24. Mrs. Hill- yard is living at 20 Cliff Parade, Leigh- on-Sea, England. Ruth Strong Strong (Mrs. Samuel Strong) is chairman for Ohio for the Endowment. Gertrude Dietrich Smith (Mrs. Her- bert Knox Smith) is chairman for Hart- ford and acting chairman for Connecti- cut for the Endowment. Marjorie Green Mulock (Mrs. Edwin | Mulock) is state organizer for Michi- gan for the Endowment. 1904 Helen Howell Moorhead (Mrs. J. J. Moorhead) is chairman of the speakers’ bureau for the New York district for the Endowment. her long line of European (Continued on page 6) is of special si tuesan oer Brie wr, with fellows and her scholars among foreign women. The suggestion came to America from the university women of Great Britain, following the visit here in the autumn — of 1918, as members of the British Edu- cational Mission, of Professor Caroline Spurgeon and Professor Rose Sidgwick, and was taken up by the Committee on International Relations of the A. C, A. Pres. Thomas and Dean Taft Delegates Dean Gildersleeve, of Barnard College, chairman of the American Committee; Dean Taft, of Bryn Mawr, and President Thomas were appointed delegates to the annual conference of the Federation of University Women of Great Britain held in London in July. At one of its meet- ings President Thomas spoke on the general plan of international federation. ‘It was, therefore, agreed to form such a federation, consisting at first of the Brit- ish and American Federations, and to hold the first International Conference in the summer of 1920. Peru Women Organized The British Federation was to tdke steps to have the women of Sweden join the, International Federation and the American Committee was to approach the women of Canada. Later, in their visits to Paris and Rome, President Thomas and Dean Taft discussed plans for international co-operation with men and women especially interested in edu- cation; and during the summer also, Miss Perlenie, a graduate of Barnard College. traveling in Peru, organized twelve uni- versity women she found there into an association enthusiastic at the prospect of belonging to an international body. It is hoped that the college women of other countries in Latin America as well as the women of the Orient will also join the Federation. Hospitality to Foreign Students The aims of the Federation, apart from immediately helping to build up education in countries that have espe- cially suffered from the war, are to pro- mote the exchange of professors and students between different countries and to extend hospitality to them and to oth- er college women visiting foreign coun- tries. Headquarters are being establish- ed in New York and London and in Paris, where a hostel has been given by Mrs. Whitelaw for foreign students. First Exchange Scholar Now at Barnard The first student to be associated with the plan for the exchange scholarship is studying this year at Barnard College on the foundation established in memory of Professor Rose Sidgwick and is from the University of Birmingham, where Miss Sidgwick was Professor of Politi- cal Economy. By invitation of the American Com- mittee, Professor Spurgeon, President of the Federation of University Women of Great Britain; Dr. Cullis, chairman of the British Commission on Foreign Rela- tions, and Mrs. McLean arrived last week on a visit to the American Univer- sities. TFATHE Proteases WS ot &.€ A wast tafeesheng Prees siget Weed carcty Suil pour rented Mas Telt somge Gerth ee ee wemkl The Werten's Hema Comgiccen | frm .pee® mend tee waiek } Tree piePawe well par tea ’ te piey. | DUFING THE Voncos ANA ENDOWMENT FUND DRyive 4 - Ano la The Outs, Rat i 4 theld tere the May Queen] The Howert m the clerati ic he ‘The Little berds that sing peeerdent cm aendly Mele) has staan get. me thing stenmhe - = fatt witn oll « studees makes Severe n. |] tg erally i Oden your Weckey akiet wy dear Ané tome bo Pere the qrten Tre | ©§ -piatares “The Lavregene Egilaw Must be & Gecial belid Fer st ches om the pe pert | She weatly mast took well Balgrar gagers will tc fall of thin Beene “T mle Surely be @ git, — © *ather dear cur Mery teem the Tune Comesitres ? 1® you don't send Se re — > © send your deughter ste The eeerés all dre tarred One tencet Gat of every Tree | te destioad te {et married | | = ml EDNA FISCHEL GELLHORN (Mrs. George Gellhorn) National Chairman of the Anna Howard Shaw Memorial, graduated from Bryn Mawr, 1900, president of the Self-Government Association her Senior year and is permanent presi- dent of her class. In 1903 she was married to Dr. George Gellhorn, of St. Louis. They have three sons and a daughter, Martha, who is coming to Bryn Mawr in 1926. Mrs. Gellhorn is a director in the National American Woman Suffrage Association and chairman of the Missouri League of Women Voters. During the war she was chairman for St. Louis of the Committee for State and City Relations of the Federal 00 TO BE RAISED BY JUNE; ‘APLATE NETS CITY’S QUOTA _ What Bryn Mawr meant to Dr. Annh Howard Shaw has been recog-: nized by suffragists and other believers in education for women to the detent of $17,126 in toward a memorial to her in the Bryn Mawr Depart-, os Politics. $ memorial will be part of the $2,000,000 Endowment _ The cherished wish of the National Shaw Memorial Chairman, Edna Fischel Gellhorn (Mrs. George Gellhorn) '00, of St. Louis, to open the cam- paign with a dinner at which Ex-President Taft should be the guest of honor, — _— 4 the — of Mr. oat physician, who would not allow him make the trip. 0 of the campai un Bs Side’ vist oe sa paign was consequently deferred : one-hun ollar-a-plate luncheon in honor of Mrs, Slad. given at the St. Code Club December 17th. The guests, twenty-eight in number, included rominent suff workers and members of the Bryn Mawr Club. A spirited appeal by Mrs. Slade brought in pledges amounting ss cae gg entire quota of the St. Louis district for the Two Million un Illinois Suffrage League Endorses B. M. Memorial Backing from the National Woman Suff Association for the B Mawr Memorial will be secured, it is hoped, at their convention in Chicago, February 10-17, when a motion will be introduced to make it the official memorial of the association. The only rival project known is a memorial at the Woman’s. Medical College, Philadelphia. Valuable advance work for Bryn Mawr has been done by Mary Foulke Morrisson (Mrs. James W. Mor- risson) ’99, of Chicago, who has obtained the endorsement of the Illinois Suffrage Association for the Bryn Mawr Memorial Chair. A stirring appeal to suffragists throughout the country to honor Dr. Shaw by contributing to the Anna Howat! Shaw fund has been drawn up by Mrs. Gellhorn, and will be sent out shortly. On account of the recent appeal issued by Mrs, Catt for extra funds for ratification the Bryn: Mawr letter has been temporarily held back. A test copy sent out to the Indiana Suffrage League brought an instant and extremely. cordial reply. Edith Wyatt Author of Campaign Book “Dr. Anna Howard Shaw’s Connection with Bryn Mawr,” an attractive campaign handbook by Edith Wyatt ex-’96, will be ready by the Suffrage Convention in February. Material for this has been collected by Susan Fol- lansbee Hibbard (Mrs. William G. Hibbard) ’97, Dr. Shaw’s close friend, Food Administration. HOW PRES. THOMAS STOOD BY SUFFRAGE CAUSE TOLD BY DR. SHAW IN HER AUTOBIOGRAPHY Miss Shaw and Susan B. Anthony Visited Bryn Maur to Get Help of Miss Thomas and Miss Garrett in Making Baltimore Convention a Success—$60,000 Fund Raised by Miss Thomas to Pay Salaries of Suffrage Officers In her autobiography, “The Story of a Pioneer,” Dr. Shaw tells of the help given the suffrage cause by President Thomas of Bryn Mawr at a critical time. She writes: “One morning [Miss Anthony] said abruptly, ‘Anna, let’s go and call on Presi- dent M, Carey Thomas, of Bryn Mawr.’ “I wrote a note to Miss Thomas, telling her of Miss Anthony's desire to see her, and received an immediate reply inviting us to luncheon the following day. We found Miss Thomas deep in the work connected with her new college buildings, over which she showed us with much pride. Miss An- thony, of course, gloried in the splendid re- sults Miss Thomas had achieved, but she was, for her, strangely silent and preoccu- pied. At luncheon she said: “*Miss Thomas, your buildings are beau- tiful; your new library is a marvel, but they are not the cause of our presence here.’ “No,’ Miss Thomas said, I know you have something on your mind. I am wait- ing for you to tell me what it is. Asked Miss Thomas to Arrange : “College Night” “We want your cooperation, and that of Miss Garrett,’ began Miss Anthony, prompt- ly; ‘to make our Baltimore Convention a success. We want you to persuade the Arundel Club of Baltimore, the most fash- ionable club in the city, to give a reception to the delegates; and we want you to ar- range a college night on the programme—a great college night, with the best college speakers ever brought together.’ ' “These were large commissions for two extremely busy women, but both Miss Thomas and Miss Garrett—realizing Miss Anthony’s intense earnestness—promised to think over the suggestion and see what they could do. The next morning we received a telegram from them stating that Miss Thomas would arrange the college evening, and that Miss Garrett would reopen her Baltimore home, which she had closed, dur- ing the convention. . “‘Aunt Susan’ was overjoyed. . She knew that whatever Miss Thomas and Miss Garrett undertook would be accomplished, and rightly regarded the success of the con- vention as already assured.” (pp. 221-223.) Raised $10,000 to Pay Suffrage Salaries “One day at luncheon Miss Thomas asked me, casually: “‘By the way, how do you raise the money to carry on your work?’ “When I told her the work was wholly dependent on voluntary contributions and on the services of those who were willing to give themselves gratuitously to it, Miss Thomas was surprised. She and Miss Gar- rett asked a number of questions, and at the end of our talk they looked at each other. “‘T don’t think,’ said Miss Thomas, ‘that we have quite done our duty in this matter.’ “The next day they invited a number of us to dinner, to again discuss the situation; and they admitted that they had sat up throughout the previous night, talking the matter over and trying to find some way to help us. They had also discussed the situation with Miss Anthony, to her vast content, and had finally decided that they ‘would try to raise a fund of $60,000 to be paid in yearly instalments of $12,000 for five years—part of these annual instalments to be used as salaries for active officers.” (p. 225.) Miss Lucy Anthony, Professor Kingsbury, and Isabel Foster ’15. Several personal belongings of Miss Shaw’s have been turned over by Miss Anthony to be used in the campaign as the committee sees fit. Among them are an ermine tippet which Miss Shaw purchased in Sweden—her one luxury, which she always kept carefully wra mond crescent pin; and a twenty-dollar bill, in a piece of cloth; a dia- given her by the first woman bank president of Rochester, which Miss Shaw kept for luck. Every Woman Student Asked to Contribute Subscription blanks will be sent out to schools, colleges and universities in order to give every woman student in the country the chance to contribute. Every donor will have his or her name enrolled in a set of bound volumes to be kept on exhibition in the college library. Stickers pasted on the subscription blanks will differentiate the Anna Howard Shaw pledges from those to the general fund. Whatever is raised for the Shaw memorial will be credited toward the whole for the district. Bryn Mawr quota NATIONAL COMMITTEE Prominent men and women who have consented to serve on the National Advis- ory Committee are: Hon. William Howard Taft. President M. Carey Thomas. Miss Lucy E. Anthony. Mrs, George Bass, of Washington, D. C. Mrs. Joseph T. Bowen, of Chicago, Mrs, Henry Fawcett. Mr. Cecil Gregg, of St. Louis, Bishop John W. Hamilton, of Washing- ton, D. C. Mrs. Stanley McCormick, of New York. Mrs. N. A. McMillan, of St. Louis. Mrs. Walter McNab Miller, of St, Louis. Mary Foulke Morrisson (Mrs. James W. Morrisson) '99, of Chicago. Miss Hannah Patterson, of Pittsburgh, Caroline McCormick Slade (Mrs. F. Louis Slade) ex-’96, of New York. Katrina Ely Tiffany (Mrs. Charles Tif- fany), "97, of New York. Mrs. Grace Wilbur Trout, of Chicago. Rachel Costello Strachey (Mrs, Oliver Strachey), graduate 1908-09, of Lon- doa. DISTRICT CHAIRMEN District chairmen for the Anna Howard Shaw Fund are: New York— Katrina Ely Tiffany (Mrs. Charles Tiffany) "97. Philadelphia— Boston— Susan Walker FitzGerald (Mrs. Rich- ard FitzGerald) '93. Chicago— Mary Foulke Morrisson (Mrs. James W. Morrisson) '99. St. Louis— Edna Fischel Gellhorn (Mrs. George Gellhorn) ’00. Minneapolis— Grace Clarke Wright (Mrs. Vernon Wright) ex-'98. Indiana— Julia Landers '94. lowa— Mrs. Malcolm McBride. California— Harriet Bradford ‘15. we Pies kid, with hand worked eyelets. $18 Of a series of dress She Harper Shoe Go. WALKOVER SHOPS 1) 1022 CHESTNUT ST. i228 MARKET ST. Franklin Simon & Co. A Store of Indioidual Shops FIFTH AVENUE, 37th and 38th Sts., NEW YORK Announce an Exhibition of Advance Spring Fashions For Women and Misses at the MONTGOMERY INN Bryn Mawr, Pa. MONDAY ; TUESDAY January 26th January 27th A selection thoughtly chosen to fit the needs of the College woman Suits, Coats, Wraps, Furs Tailored Dresses, Afternoon and Evening Gowns Waists, Skirts, Shoes, Sweaters Gynasium Apparel, Sport Apparel Riding Habits, Underwear, Negligees, Etc. AT MODERATE PRICES at s. Pitteenth SE. = s - H. W. DERBY & CO. 13th Street at Sansom | Women’s Shoes and Hosiery Exclusively ii DERBY & CO: SU BN at M4 ———— ee A sure winner— sartorially—when she plays in MA ALLINSONS, Silks de Luxe the silks that inspir the fashions. The 1920 winners are: LO CLL VOILE Y WILLOW PO SEW-KIST 7 In plain colors and aw prints KUMSI-KUMSA ‘DREAM CREPE MAID NEWPORT CORD KHAKI-KOOL KLIMAX-SATIN CHINCHILLA SATIN THISLDU ROSHANARA CREPE All trade-mark nemes— H.R. MALLINSON & Co.,, Inc. “The New Silks First’; Medisoe Avenue — Sst Stead NEW YORK’ Adeline Werner Vorys Cites. Webb 1 _ Vorys), ’16, has a son, Webb I., Jr., born ‘January 12. Thalia Smith Dole (Mrs. Harold Dole); 17, has a daughter, Diana, born’ last November. j Rosalind Gatling Hawn (Mrs. Gavin Hawn), ex-’19, has a son, Richard Gat- lin Hawn, born in November. Louise Marshall Mallory (Mrs. Otto Tod Mallory), ’05, has a son, born No- vember 26. Rachel Brewer Huntington (Mrs. Ells- worth Huntington) has a son, Charles Ellsworth, born December 8. Jacqueline Morris Evans (Mrs. Ed- ward Evans), ’08, has a fifth child, Christopher, born December 31. Rose Mabon Davis (Mrs. Thomas Da- vis), 13, has a son, William Mabon Da- vis, born in December. Marguerite Mellen Dewey (Mrs. Brad- ley Dewey) has a daughter, Marguerite, born in December. Aida Barnes Parker (Mrs. Folsom Parker), ex-’13, has a daughter, born last month. Mrs. Parker’s address is Fort Jay, Governor’s Island, New York. Ethel Robinson Hyde (Mrs. L. B. Hyde), °15, has a daughter, born in November. Vera Morgan, ex-’19, has announced her engagement to Thomas Thacher, of Yarmouth Port, Mass. Mr. Thacher is a Harvard graduate and was with the in- fantry for eighteen months in France- iages Hazel Barnett, "15, was married to Mr John Russell Blackburn, November 6, at Bedford, Pa. Mary Monroe Harlan was married to Dr. Charles Bagley, Jr.. December 10, at Bel Air, Maryland. Eugenia Blount, ex-’15, was married in December to Dr. Marye Dabney, of Birmingham, Ala., where she is living at 1912 South Thirteenth street. Deaths Mr. Proudfit, father of Josephine Proudfit Montgomery (Mrs. Dudley Montgomery), ’08, died December 23. —_———— Endowment Dinner Held in New York and Philadelphia (Continued from page 1) PITTSBURGH A canvass of the Bryn Mawr women in Pittsburgh for prospective donors’ cards is in progress. The Pittsburgh commit- tee had a conference with Dr. Wheeler in December and are planning a meeting with Acting-President Taft in the spring. spring. One Bryn Mawr woman is earning money for the Endowment by taking the census. New members of the Pitts- burgh Bryn Mawr Club this year are Marie Pinney, ex-’13, who is taking a library course; Isolde Zeckwer, '15, who is an interne at Macy Hospital, and Helen Karns Champlin (Mrs. Carol Champlin), 719. OHIO—INDIANA—MICHIGAN Katherine Sergeant Angel, ’14, one of the national vice chairmen, made a trip to Cleveland, Indianapolis and Detroit to organize them as districts for the En- dowment. The personnel for these states is: OHIO—Ruth Strong Strong (Mrs. Samuel Strong), '03, chairman; Louise Hyman (Mrs. Julian Pollak); Marie Wing, ’07, state organizer; Alice Gan- nett, 98; Gwendolyn Rawson, '13, chair- man for Cincinnati; Catharine Anderson, 06, chairman for Cincinnati; Catherine Godley, ’16, organizing chairman for Cin- cinnati. INDIANA—Eliza Adams Lewis (Mrs. F. N. Lewis), ‘93, chairman; Julia Haines McDonald (Mrs. John MacDon- ald), "12, publicity chairman; Katharine Holliday Daniels (Mrs. Joseph Daniels), "18, secretary for Indiana and Indianapo- lis; Sarah Atkins Kackley (Mrs. Thomas Kackley), 94, chairman of Potential Do- Benjamin Hitz), 16, chairman for In-| dianapolis. nors; Elizabeth “Holliday Hits. Hitz at 4 4 MICHIGAN—Marianna Buffum Hill (Mrs. Perry Hill), 02, chairman; Marjo- rie Green Mulock (Mrs. Edwin Mulock),. 03, state organizer; Edith Wright, '00, secretary and treasurer; Marion Wright Messimer (Mrs. Robert Messimer), ’01. ST. LOUIS With $15,000 raised in pledges, the St.’ Louis Endowment Committee plans to unite with Smith and Washington Uni- versity in a project to raise several thou-. sand dollars by giving a representation of the Atlantic City Boardwalk the week after Easter. The same thing was given in Chicago the week before Christmas land netted about $80,000 for the chil- dren’s hospital there. A children’s play, given December 18 for the sake of publicity and to in- terest the childrea in Bryn Mawr, netted $350 in gate receipts and created a wide interest in the campaign. A tea at which Mary Foulke Morrisson (Mrs. J. W. Morrisson), '99, of Chicago, was the speaker, had been held a little earlier to interest the mothers. The $15,000 in pledges were taken in at a one hundred dollar a plate luncheon given in honor of Mrs. Slade, December 18, at the St. Louis Club. WILL SEND OUT SPEAKERS A speakers’ bureau to send out mem- bers of the faculty and alumnae to dif- ferent parts of the country to speak for the Endowment has been formed at na- tional headquarters under Maud Lowrey Jenks (Mrs. Robert Jenks), 00. SCHOOLS THE WHITE GATE STUDIOS Radnor Road, Bryn Mawr, Penna. The Studios Will Open on October 18, 1919 Pottery, Toy Making, Carving, Bookbinding, Design, Modelling " Painting, Life Classdss Preparatory and Post Grad: a aa tonal Therapy. uate work in the Crafts The Pear year is divided into two semesters Octo- ber 18, 1919, to Jan $1, 1920; F Mast oa uary $1, ebruary 2, 1920 to Vircrnta Wricut GARBER Fiorence WeiismMan Fu.tron Eighth year, 1919-1920 Phone, Bryn Mawr 685 THE SHIPLEY SCHOOL Preparatory to Bryn Mawr College BRYN MAWR, PENNSYLVANIA Principals Eleanor O. Brownell Alice G. Howland THE HARCUM ScHoo FOR GIRLS—BRYN MAWR, PA. comma ene college preparation a thorough For Girls not going a opporuuniten to For Giris desiring to specialize there are well known artists as nto college the schoo! offers to pursue studies suited to ee a Biya Mawr, ie, penmttint il college town. ‘en phia. building oa rooms with private ba: large wee. ee Waa R Brae bath nome i = MRS, Et EDITH HATCHER HARCUM, B.L. (Pupil of Leschetizky), Head of the School Miss M. G. Bartlett, Ph. D. {? ' Amsosiate Heads of Miss 8. M. Beach, Ph. D. the School Piano Instruction MARY VIRGINIA DAVID Seven years of European study with Mozxow- sxy, Josey Lutvinne and Wacer SwaYNE Head of Music Department in Mme. Marty’s School (Paris) 1913 Paris ConsERVATOIRE (SoLFiGE) and Lescuetizxy Principles Taught Cor. Franklin and Montgomery Aves. Rosemont Phone, Bryn Mowr 716 W Chestnut ith & 66 ” ee COLUMBIA GIRLS AND WOMEN . Consumers’ League Endorsement Gymnasium Suits Sport Skirts Sema and Garters COLUMBIA GYMNASIUM SUIT COMPANY Actual Makers 301 Congress St., Boston, Mass. LETIMEBAUGH 8-67 ROWNE Ea BOOKSELLERS STATIONERS. 471 FIFTH AVE. OPP, LIBRARY. L. P. HOLLANDER & CO. JESTABLISHED 1848] GOWNS, SUITS, COATS, WAISTS, and MILLINERY oth AVENUE at 46th STREET LILLA 1305 WALNUT STREET ee Walnut 1572 PARAMOUNT Blouses and Underwear New Woolen Scarfs $3.75 to $15.00 1342 Chestnut St., Phila. SESSLER’S BOOKSHOP 1314 WALNUT STREET PHILADELPHIA PICTURES BOOKS COLLEGE AND SCHOOL EMBLEMS ‘AND NOVELTIES FRATERNITY EMBLEMS, SEALS, CHARMS PLAQUES, MEDALS, ETC. of Superior Quality and Design THE HAND BOOK Iluetrated and Priced mailed upon request BAILEY, BANKS & BIDDLE CO. PHILADELPHIA STRA WBRIDGE and CLOTHIER Specialists in FASHIONABLE APPAREL FOR YOUNG WOMEN MARKET, EIGHTH and FILBERT STS. PHILADELPHIA BOOKS OF ALL PUBLISHERS Can be had at the NEW YORK DAYLIGHT BOOKSHOP 1701 CHESTNUT STREET Philadelphia MANN & DILKS 1162 CHESTNUT STREET Tyrol Wool Fall and Winter Ladies’ & Misses’ Suits 28.75 32.75 38.75 Also Top, Street and MANN & DILKS 102 CHESTNUT STREET New Styles and Colors Junior Suits 27.75 29.75 Motor Coats Velour Hats the en 1906 : ‘Elsie Biglow Barber (Mrs. St. George Barber) is one of the managers of the Annapolis Hospital... Louise Fleischmann Maclay (Mrs. A. B. Maclay) is chairman for New York. | Connecticut’and New Jersey for the En- dowment. Anna Louise Strong is leading editor- ial and special writer for the Seattle “Daily Union Record.” As a “Red Rev- olutionist” she has brought down upon herself the anger of Mayor Ole Hanson. Helen Davenport Gibbons (Mrs. Hr- bert Gibbons) is chairman for southern New Jersey. Catharine Anderson is publicity chair- man for Cincinnati. 1907 Harriot Houghteling has an illustrated article on Bryn Mawr and the New Era in the January number of Fashion-Art, a Chicago magazine. Miss Houghteling is secretary and treasurer of the Chica- go Endowment Fund Committee. \Margaret Ayer Barnes (Mrs. Cecil Barnes) is vice chairman of the Chicago Endowment Committee. Marie Wing is state organizer for Ohio for the Endowment. 1908 Olive Kelley Craig (Mrs. George Craig) is 1908’s new class collector. She and Myra Elliot Vauclain (Mrs. Jacques Vauclain) will entertain 1908 at luncheon. January 31. Mollie Kinsley Best (Mrs. William Best) has made $50 for the Endowment Fund by soliciting magazine subscrip- tions from Bryn Mawr women and their friends. She takes both new subscrip- tions and renewals. Checks and money orders may be sent to her at 1198 Bush- wick avenue, Brooklyn, N. Y. Ina Richter has completed her in- terneship at Johns Hopkins and has opened an office at 240 Stockton street, San Francisco. Caroline Schock Jones (Mrs. Chester Lloyd Jones) is in Madrid, where her husband is attached to the American Embassy. Marjorie Young has been appointed to the Massachusetts Republican State Committee. Miss Young is publicity manager for the Endowment Fund in New England. Members of 1908 working with her are Dorothy Dalzell, Madeleine Fauvre Wiles (Mrs. Thomas Wiles), Rachel Moore Warren (Mrs. Henry Warren) and Louise Pettibone Smith. Brandenstein Arnstein (Mrs. Arnstein) is publicity chairman for Northern California for the Endow- ment, Barbara Spofford Morgan (Mrs. Shep- ard Morgan) is chairman on estimates for the New York district for the En- dowment. Erma i9tt May Egan Stokes (Mrs. Stogdell Stokes) is on the Endowment publicity Committee for Philadelphia 1912 Mary Peirce is a vice chairman fot Philadelphia and vicinity for the En- dowment. Julia Haines MacDonald (Mrs. J. A. MacDonald) is Endowment publicity chairman for Indiana. Mary Gertrude Fendall has resigned as treasurer of the National Woman’s Party and gone into industrial work. i913 Margaret Blaine is chairman for the New England district for the Endow- ment. Yvonne Stoddard Hayes (Mrs. Henry Hayes) is chairman for New York state. Margaret Scruggs Caruth (Mrs. Ray- mond Caruth) is chairman for Texas. Olga Kelly is chairman for Maryland. 1914 : Katharine Williams. Hodgdas (Mrs. W. C. Hodgdon) is chairman of the New England district for the Endowment. Elizabeth Ayer is Endowment chair- | man for Boston. Alice Miller Chester (Mrs. William Chester) is chairman for Milwaukee. Mary Christine Smith is secretary of |. the Philadelphia Endowment Committee. 1915 r As a representative of a Jewish wel- fare Association, Susan Brandeis, who is] | studying law in New York, recently in- terceded in the case of a young man found guilty of robbing the mails in Brooklyn. When Miss Brandeis plead- ed that it was the boy’s first offense, the judge imposed on him a sentence of twelve days, which he had already served while waiting for trial. Miriam Rohrer has just left for a six months’ trip to China with her father. Isabel Smith is teaching sight singing at the Haverford Friends’ School. Cleora Sutch is head of the History Department in the High School at Scars- dale, N. Y Marguerite Jones is publicity repre- sentative for the New York district for the Endowment. 1916 Emilie Strauss has begun work in the New York Children’s Court for the Jew- ish Big Sisters. Mary Lee Hickman Blakely (Mrs: Charles Blakely) is organizer for Mary- land, District of Columbia, Virginia and West Virginia for the Endowment. E. Buckner Kirk is publicity chair- man for Maryland. Catharine Godley is organizing chair- man of Ohio for the Endowment. Elizabeth Holliday Hitz (Mrs. B. D. Hitz) is Endowment chairman for In- dianapolis. 1918 Sydney Belville is teaching Latin at the New Hope School, New Hope, Pa. Ruth Cheney Streeter (Mrs. Thomas Streeter) is a district captain for the New York Endowment Fund. Katharine Dufourcq is working in the MacMillan Publishine Company in New York. Cornelia Fiske will be married to Har- old B. Willis, of Boston, in the spring. Annette Gest is working for an A. M degree in Romance Languages at the University of Pennsylvania. Her courses are Spanish, Portuguese and English. Katharine Holliday Daniels (Mrs. Jo- seph Daniels) is studying for an A. M. degree in Indianapolis. She is also sec- retary of the Indianapolis Endowment Committee. Mary Safford Munford managed a ball and fashion show to raise money for a Bryn Mawr scholarship in Richmond, Va. Elizabeth Pershing is taking courses in fruit growing at Cornell. Katharine Holliday Daniels (Mrs. Jo- seph Daniels), is secretary of Indiana and Indianapolis for the Endowment. 1919 Frances Branson Keller (Mrs. Daniel Keller) is vice chairman for Philadel- phia and vicinity for the Endowment. Frederica Howell has taken a position in the publicity department of the D. Ap- pleton publishing house in New York. Eleanor Marquand and Margaret Jane- way expect to leave shortly for Santa Barbara, California. Dorothea Walton Price (Mrs. Edmund Price) is doing case work for the Char- ity Organization Society in New York. Rebecca Reinhardt has been teaching arithmetic in the lower grades in the Misses Hebb’s School in Wilmington. Kathleen Outerbridge has returned to college to finish her work for an A. B. degree. Helen Tappan is departmental secre- tary in the University Chemical Lab- oratory of Johns Hopkins. a Ag Ts ‘Rawson is chairman for} : | | cinctonel for the Endowment. Seas te hd euuniaae tor Bier. for | Corsage and Floral Baskets 04d Vedhibensd Beupicte « Spictity Potted Plants—Personal supervision on all orders 807 Lancaster Ave. FRANCIS B. HALL HABIT AND BREECHES MAKER Remodeling, Cleaning, theatrical Cesewszes Lancaster Ave., 3 Stores 840; pt geal alia Phone, Bryn Mawr 570. Ca Reon id cn Bok Dil | | Breakfasts, Luncheons, Teas and Suppers—Phone 152 9 A.M.—7 P.M. OLD LANCASTER ROAD AND BRYN MAWR AVE PHONE 758 HENRY B. WALLACE CATERER AND CONFECTIONER LUNCHEONS AND TEAS BRYN MAWR BRINTON BROTHERS FANCY AND STAPLE GROCERIES Lancaster and Merion Avenues, Bryn Mawr, Pa. Orders Delivered. We aim to please you. Programs Bill Heads Tickets Letter Heads Announcements Booklets, etc. Bryn Mawr, Pa. JOHN J. McDEVITT PRINTING 1011 Lancaster Ave. UNUSUAL GIFTS GREETING CARDS DECORATIVE TREATMENTS Will Always Be Found at THE GIFT SHOP 814 W. Lancaster Ave., Bryn Mawr, Pa. Afternoon Tea and Luncheon COTTAGE TEA ROOM Montgomery Ave., Bryn Mawr Everything dainty and delicious D. N. ROSS (Pest3, Instructor in Pharmacy and Materia Medica, and Director of the Pharmaceu- tical Laboratory at Bryn Mawr Hospital. EASTMAN’S KODAKS AND FILMS ) aaa PHILIP HARRISON WALK-OVER BOOT SHOPS Complete line of] Ladies’ Shoes and Rubbers 818 Lancaster Ave. John J. Connelly Estate The Main Line Florists 1226 LANCASTER AVE., Rosemont, Pa. Telephone, Bryn Mawr 252W WILLIAM T. McINTYRE GROCERIES, MEATS AND PROVISIONS ARDMORE, OVERBROOK, NARBERTH BRYN MAWR AVENUE Phone Connection WILLIAM L. HAYDEN Builders and H HARDWARE Paints : Oils, : Glass Cutlery Ground &_Locksmithing Lawn Mowers Repaired and Sharpened 838 Lancaster Avenue Bryn Mawr, Pa. Bryn Mawr 170 M. Doyle, M¢gr. THE FRENCH SHOP 814 LANCASTER AVE. Bryn Mawr, Pa. SMART GOWNS MADE TO ORDER DISTINCTIVE REMODELING E. M. FENNER Ice Cream, Frozen Fruits and Ices Fine and Fancy Cakes, Confections Bryn Mawr (Telephone) Ardmore The Bryn Mawr National Bank BRYN MAWR, PA, Foreign Exchange and Travelers’ Checks Sold 3 Per Cent on Saving Fund Accounts. Safe Deposit Boxes for Rent, $3, $5 and $8 per Year. ST. MARY'S LAUNDRY THE BRYN MAWR TRUST CO. CAPITAL, $250,000 DOES A GENERAL BANKING BUSINESS ALLOWS INTEREST ON DEPOSITS SAFE DEPOSIT DEPARTMENT M. M. GAFFNEY LADIES’ AND GENTS’ FURNISHINGS DRY GOODS AND NOTIONS POST OFFICE BLOCK CARS TO HIRE Buick and Paige Telephone Accessories and Agency Bryn Mawr 600 _—‘Repair Parts Electrical and Machine Work our Specialty MADDEN’S GARAGE ancaster Pike, opposite P. R. R. Station Bryn Mawr Start the new semester with a Typewriter BUY A CORONA AND TYPEWRITER SUPPLIES Through the College News Agent entitles you to an Extra Spool of Ribbon This Coupon Free crery New CORONA voc: ‘one: