le g co : fe e News ® = : VOL. XII. No.. 1. 6 BRYN MAWR_. (AND WAYNE), PA., WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 1925 PRICE, I 0 CENTS ¢ FRESHMAN RED TO BE SEEN ON CAMPUS * 1929 Smiiller Than hia Thbbe peeing Classes and has Nineteen Non-Residents ALL SECTIONS REPRESENTED Bryn Mawr welcomes the class of 1929. ._A-smaller—class-than-has-entered—for-the past three years, the Freshman class in- clude many sisters of present undergrad- uates. A list of the entering Freshmen is as follows: Olmstead Tyson Alien: tea tio Eliza- beth Bailey, Katherine Noyes _ Marian Georgie Marshall Barber, Jane - Barth, Jean Crocket Becket, Ruth Bid- dle, Frances Linsey Blayney, Doris Blu- menthal, Eliza Boyd. Elizabeth Br&dley, Jane’ Buel Bradley, Sarah Elizabeth Bradley, Lucy Mafning Brown, Marion Brown, ,Sara_ Brown, Marie Elise Bryant, , ee Swift Bryant, Victoria*Torrilhon Buel, Nancy Carr. Helen May Casteel, Barbara Channing, Frances Boardman Chisolm, Katharine - Hill Collins, Josephine Cook, Rosataond Elvira de la Roo, Esther Cross, Alexandra Dalziel, Vega, Grace Isabel De Craven Dilworth. Margaret Voorhees Doyle, Juliet Fried- berger Eshner, Caroline Virginia Fain, Susan Fitzgerald, Katherine Morris Fleischman, Elizabeth Betterton Forman, Bettie Charter Freeman, Elinor Friend. - Frances Elizabeth Fry, Marion Gallaudet. Helen Juliet Garrett, Katherine Anna Garrett, Florence Marjorie Gates, Laura Valeria Gendell, Mary Reid Gessner, Alice Louise Glover, Mary Randolph Grace, Katharine Wirt Haines, Frances Burke Haley, Catdis Irene Hall. Frances Lydia Hand, Clover Eugenia Henry, Rosalie Hirsthfelder, Ella Camp- bell Horton, Amme Louise Hubbard, Martha Rosalie Humphrey, Barbara } Humphreys, -Louisa Jay, - Marguerite sans ~~-Montgomery—Jays~ mone -Ford--Jeanes, a: Marcella Cameron Kirk, Ruth Kitchen, Mary Robinson’ Lambert, Annabel Franpton Learned, Lysbet. Wetherell Lefferts, Ellen Walsh Leffingwell, Eliza- beth Howland Linn, Jane Diehl -Lober, Eleanor Claire Lowman, Mary oie Ay . McDermott. ' - @ Ruth Dwight McVitty, Alice Katha- rine. ‘Mercer, Eccleston Moran, Louise Florence Morganstern, Elizabeth Caze- “nova Gardner Packard, Marcella © Pal- mer, Marion , Claire Parker, Mar- |" garet Newma “Patterson, Perkins. Martha Ann Pettus, ° Ella “King ° Boe bed ’ Joyce Porter, | Charlotte Mercer Purcell, CONTINUED ON PAGE 4 JUNIORS. SELECT ‘FRESH- MAN CLASS COMMITTEE . Nancy Carr, “of the Shipley School, and Alexandra Dalziel, of Balch, | 4 Irscssssciagaiy MUSIC, POLITICS AND POETRY ., PLANNED FOR LIBERAL CLUB Folk Song of India Will be Sung by Ratan Devi on October 4 Lectures on ‘foreign. affairs, conditions in Russia, labor education, music, and the theatre, are inéluded in the plans of the Liberal Club« for the coming year. The policy of last year of having speakers ,on a wide variety of subjects, not, merely. ¢zonomical and political, will be con- tinued, Madame Ratan Devi will be the first speaker of the season, coming on Wednesday, October 14, in Taylor Hall, She will give a short talk on East Indian music and then will sing Indian folk- songs, wearing native costume. Madame Devi is by birth an English woman, who lived for years in India as the wife of a seholar, Indian by birth. She. has given many recitals in the United States and England,.and has won high praise not only from musicians, such as_ Pablo Casals, the greatest living cellist, but also from poets, notably W. B. Yeats and Rabindranath Tagore. Definite engagements for lecture dates throughout the year are not all assured} but the Liberal Club is now trying to make arrangements with Anna Louise Strong, the foremost American worker in Russia today; A. J. Muste, president of the Brookwood ‘Trade Union College; Dr. Rowe, authority ‘on the Pan-Ameri-: can situation; ‘Carl Sandburg, William Beebe, famous— naturalist and author, and other lecturers. % Tentative plans are also being made, if time and circumstances permit, for more informal talks than the regular lectures, with discussion perhaps “by small groups. People of interesting experience, such as holding a job in a actory of managing a small magazine, may be in- duced to talk over after-dinner coffee. , Posters announcing lectures will be distributed as usual:) and membership cards will be placed_on doors. BRYN MAWR INVITES M. CESTRE_ “TO VISIT-AND LECTURE Sorbonne: Professor : Will. Also Take _ Over Major French Courses : a ‘¢ie invitation of ‘the’ Board of Trustees, M, Charles. Cestre, professor of American civilization at the Sorbonne, and this year official lecturer of. “the Alli- ance Francaise, will visit Bryn Mawr on the: first of November, for a francaise.” _ During this time, - Professgt | | Gestre will live on the campus and will deliver two series of lectures. There will be ‘one: public ° ew to which everyone will’ be ‘invited, consisting of six lectures in English on Edward Arlington Robin- son as interpreter. of the American spirit, the subject of his; course hg the Sorborine. At the. same time, Professor Cestre will take’ over the’ work of the classes in. | ‘major French literature, giving explica- tions de texte. This. course, _ correspond- ‘ing to the cours, fermée at the Sorborfne, | will be open ofily to‘the. students in major ee i or ‘post. major French, #0 those who have t oe : i ready © taken “major” “or ‘post ‘major ch, and perhaps to some others well fa - so a week. © two of the summer months. |ORCHESTRA SEASON TO START. ON FRIDAY, OCTOBER THE NINTH Harold: Samuel, ‘Roland Hayes, and “quinzaine | ified to attend, Pr fessor | Cestre will | : _ meet | “the graduate students in}. ATMOSPHERE OF FRIENDLINESS CHARACTERIZES SUMMER SCHOOL Varied Experiences and Trades of Students Make Range of Opinions (Specially contributed by K. Simonds, ’27) Undergraduates who leave the halls of pte mi in June to return to them in Octobe can scarcely picture to them- selves the life that goes on here’ through _ And, how should they, after all? For it ‘isa world so different in atmosphere that the very campus looks unfamiliar to the eyes of a_visiting undergraduate. obvious differences. Pembroke West, Rockefeller and Radnor closed, campus becomes a tiny circle centering oi Den- bigh green. There girls in middies and bloomers lie in the sunshine and_ talk, } unhurried, intent on the discussion. In- stead ,of formal. Senior singing in the evening, people gather in little knots about Senior- Row to sing, voices are melancholy and passionate in the darkness. Classes in Taylor Hall are not dictation, but forums, in which the students have at least as much to give as the professor; or, rather, in which the professor acts as-chairman for the dis- cussion to which each student contributes her personal: experience. No halo en- shrouds. Sénior Steps, nor does Juno elevate her classic nose at the sight of knickers and bare knees in her domain. - | think: that freedom is the keynote of the summer school. There are scarcely any restrictions, intellectual, social, or physical. The students are all free with the: independence.. of . people who earn their own living and rely on their own power to. supply their needs. This one condition alone. would make a_ striking difference between the summer and win- ter. schools. And then, anyone who has a .theory. may expound it, and, if she speaks intelligently, be sure of an intefli- gent and interested audience. In this CONTINUED ON PAGE 4 Bela Bartok Among Soloists October.9 and 10 are the dates for the: first of the twenty-nine pairs of concerts by .the Philadelphia Orehestra, on Fri- day. and Saturday afternoons. in 1925426, in the Academy of Music. A geries of ten Monday evening performances throughout the season will begin October 26. Leopold Stokowski will return, for his fourteenth year as conductor of the Orchestra, Ossip Gabrilowitsch will be the first soloist. to appear with the organization this year, at the concerts on November 13 and 14, which will repeat the program played under Fritz Scheel, with Gabrilo- witsch as soloist, twenty-five years ago. The famous pianist will play the B-flat m'nor concerto of Tschaikowsky. Harold Samuel, the English interpre- ter of Bach, and Roland Hayes, famous Negro tenor, are also on the list of artists engaged for performances. Bela Bartok, Hungarian composer and student of folksong, will play his new piano con- certo for the first time. Another Hun- ‘garian, Josef Szigeti, ‘violinist, will make | his American debut with the, Orchestra... During Mr. ‘Stokowski’s holiday in|" January, Ottino Respighi, a leader of the You have of course the superficial and | * and their |? | | WYNDHAM BOUGHT BY BRYN MAWR : President Park Announces Addition to College of Ely Property to be Occupied Next Year GOODHART HALL BEING PLANNED Se @ With great-pleasure Bryn Mawr wel- cones its old stidents returning and its new geudents, graduate and undergrad- uate, as it-enters-on the work of its forty- ‘first year with great pleasure and with great curiosity which in the family this morning can come out flat-footed and call ‘itself confidence.’ For the veterans among us, i. e., ranging down through the sophomores, a long holiday is over, spent in a hundred different combinations of toil and tranquillity, each day a law to itself,.and we are ready to begin again on the closed season when our days are pretty well set for us and our work and its results are dependent on the work and the motale of others beside ourselves. All summer we have spun separately. Now we bring our thread and weave it together into a fabric, the web of tit Bryn Mawr College year. At the end. of the year it seemed ecer- tain that two pieces of business were to keep the President within reach of the college this summer, the perplexities connected. with the admissions to the freshman class, and the building of Good- hart Hall. A nearby summer was also to make possible a first-hand impression of the Summer School during its first and second weeks. and again toward the close of the session. — A farmhouse —in-—an Adirondack valley allowed a midsummer visit to Bryn Mawr, and in the intervals of letter-writing and telegraphing became instantly an abode of holiday peace. The final outcome of the admissions situation you see scattered among you. In late July when the returns from the Board examinations came in, completing the returns from the Bryn Mawr exami- nations, we found out of every three who had passed the examinations either clear or with three or less “points of condi- tion we could admit. only two. A few rooms were given up in August by mem- bers of the older classes or students formally admitted so that it has proved finally possible to take eighty-nine into residence and to admit as non-residents “nineteen. more, a total of one hundred and eight as compared with one hundred and eighteen in 1924 and one hundred and twenty-nine in 1923. The problem of selection was exceedingly difficult for the Committee on Admissions. © That com- mittee can at. least say that it made an honest attempt to choose individuals and groups who can use to ‘the greatest ad- vantage what the college as an institu- tion has to offer, that is, those girls who are most likely to find their road to self- : development lies through the land . of - academic routine, of hard, persistent and successful mental effort in classrooms, libraries, and laboratories. Bryn Mawr has always found among her better stu- dents many of those who carried on her student activities most ably. If intellec- tual promise continues to be the first requisite for admission to this college “all-around girls,” “good citizens,” girls” with executive, athletic or artistic gifts will be as ‘surely included in the student ‘body as though they were chosen delib- eratel¥ because of those generat school recommendations. Again, everyone knows that entrance 4 CONTINUED on PAGE a Hy Elegie i peer eerie cm »for the camp-fires of August the break- the -new™~coat of cuckoo red, hats and black gown stained with candle-grease, Sarbway at nine A. M. With scared un-' finality. to. distinguish it. from a normal * e- THE COLLEGE NEWS) The College News [Founded in 1914.] i’ublished: weekly during the coll interest of Bryn Mawr College, at tie Building, Wayne Pa., and Bryn Mawr Co og in .the cet ole lege. eee Be o Managing Kditor....:..Jmnan Lons,-'26° — é ee NEWS EDITOR M. Leary, ’27 CENSOR | B. Pitney, '27 EDITORS K. Srmonps, '27 ® M, SMura, * R. RIcKaB} As: Mprarz, EDITORS 7 B. Linn, °26 427 J. Frsior, '28 .» M. Fow.ner, '28 MANAGER BUSINESS MANAGER SUBSCRIPTION "27 SON, ’2 J. Lun, H, Ty — enasaatonae : ISTANTS HK. WiLBor,, '26 N. ag al M. CRUIKSHANK, '27 A. WIL, Jonns,'26- ——P> McEwan; "28-—— ews Subscrlp $2. 50 Mailing Price, $3.00 ubscriptions may begin at any time Entered as second-class matter at the Wayne, Pa., Post Office, BONES OUT OF JOINT: There’s a wrench,and a twist for most of us when we exchange a casual effort- less summer for the winter’s application and routine. And the sensation, -as Shaw's poet discovered, is none the less real for being so foolish. As though they were bounded by the dates of the College calendar responsibili- ties “fall back on our shoulders. For these first few days the campus has the important haste of a Lexington Avenue certainty Freshmen snarl themselves in Taylor red-tape, and suffer bewildered, in the army recruit manner, through physi- cal examinations and athletic try-outs. Even in the eyes of the experienced there is weariness of beginning again, and a vague look of despair founded on noth- ing. For college—as we have often heard— is an artificial thing, with division and course of years, And it’s a shame to waste good, honest melancholy dnd ex- haustion on what is after all only our voluntary superstructure. We are walk- ing on our’own legs, but in charmed. pro-|¢ tection still, the. road we have chosen. Is this to be, these next few weeks, suffi- cient excuse for feeling our bones out of joint?’ HOME, JAMES! To. the..graywalls...of- Academia. cand. ae female-crowded cloister, you scholars return, From country club porches and the Lido, from dude ranch-houses in Wyoming and log-cabins (“hot and cold water laid on”) in Maine, from the Champs Elysees and Fifth avenue, from lover’s arms and Mother’s knee, you come. For tea and rum-soaked babas| at Rumpelmeyers you have now shirred eggs and rocks at the Inn, for the spu- moni of Venice the menu of the Roma, fast parties of Sunday morning, for the Scotch and gin of a “good party” a quiet evening’s muggle. Pull off the worldly kasha “ensemble, jackets pour le sport, Don the flowing the old Oxfords, last year’s woolen jumper; and seek the Library, where wait Martin Luther, Tristram Shandy, Beowulf, « Horace, Milton-the-Bible-and- Bacon. Armed with: fresh chewing-gum, untain pen and Dairymaid Choco- — dogfish, isda and gether. ‘sane and why? and lost, or went to hockey camp. “Gam- bling, smoking, drinking, hazing”—and always the doors close at #15! Yes, all are here; until Friday’ when the 1.08 leaves for New York And “The Ggeen Hat.” rt g BOOK REVIEW The Kenworthys, sd Margaret Wilson— Harpers. The Kenworthys iss a novel that “has guts.” gWritten crudely, in a style with- out polish or vividness, it yet achieves: a poignant reality. Without subtle or forceful characterization, with strong re- straint, the sheer speed of the story and the emotional intensity of the situations are enormous. Thg book is ‘a study. of a woman, of 4 family, of home life in con- ditions of marriage and divorce. » Emily Alden and the two ‘Kenworthy | brothers, the one whom she loved, the other whom she married, and _ her nephew, are the principal ‘actors in this tragedy of a mistaken marriage nobly endured and ‘a divorce destroying a child. It was the fortitude; patience, and gaiety of Emily which kept her faithful to her stupid, slovenly husband even whose honesty she was forced to question, and enabled her to restore the intimacy of her nephew and his father whom she loved. Dominating two-thirds of the story is the figure of this fourteen-year- vld boy, ignorant, tortured, passionate, who doubts even his paternity until he gains belief from the example of his aunt. Behind these two generations is old Mrs. Kenworthy, tired, austere, and wise. Whether or not Miss Wilson wins prizes with this book, as she got the’ Harper and Pulitzer awards for her first, The Able Mc- Laughlins, she has in this: second novel at- tained the same effect of reality. Psycho-analysis and Behaviour by Andre Tridon, Knopf. Dogs have their day, and so, occa-' sionally, does the human race. At present we are living one of its great: days. ' : Adventure is provided, less by cncieae ted seas, and primitive forest, than by the private workings of the human brain, In painting and sculpture the subject has changed from “the thing as he sees it, for the God of things as they are,” to the thing as he, an individual, interprets it omitting the question .of God alto- The enthralling matter of human emotion, human experience, is rapidly driving sunsets and plots from our poetry and prose. Andre Tridon’s book, in this heyday of humanity, is timely reading. What are these human beings anyway? Body and soul colliding for a space, or body and soul infinitely combined? How far is the collision, or combination, governed by its unknowfi past, by present circum- stances? Wherein lies its chance of progress, its security against back-slid- ing? These are general headings; later par- ticular human types are considered. Is there an explanation for the Puritan,’ the pervert, the coward? Who are the in- Finally, ‘what is the positive, the successful man? : If this proud ‘and very honest book causes any of its redders depression, or disallusion, it will mot be the fault of. its author, who chose as its motto those words of Nietzsche: “Since humanity came into being, man |has, enjoyed himself too. little. . That oe fy brethren, is our original sin.” * {haps, if I had not endured so NEW YORK OFFERS PROBLEMS TO THIRTEEN COLLEGE JUNIORS Lectures and Field Trips vie in Interest With Ferry Rides (Specially contributed by E. S. Mussel- man, 26) Seven o’clock and a loud rap on my door-ahother day of Junior Month’ was veginning. After a hurried ‘breakfast, I rushed out in the rain and took the car tor No,. 970 Madison avenue, where | was to interview a doctor &bout Mr. C. Less successful than I had anticipated, I had to bear the news to the waiting Mrs. C. that her. husband was not ill be patient, for his recovery from a frac- tured skull would be slow but infinitely easier for him if'she did her share. This may not sound difficult, but the fact that Mrs. C. only understood Sicilian dialect and that her daughter, aged 11, was very ie to translate, rade it decidedly’ com- 1eated. Rather upset about the C.’s and still wondering what | could do for them, I sought the District Office.” I was so absorbed with my thoughts that I scarce noticed the street venders urging me to buy. brilliant colored materials, or. par- take of unsavory looking snails. Once at No. 345 E. 116th street, I settled down to write in my day-book and make some definite and satisfactory plans for the C.’s. This finished { had an interview with my District Secretary, in which we dis- cussed my new.case, the S. family. Their problem was economic maladjustment and neglected bad health. Thus the morning sped along. Quarter of twelve, our usual time to begin thinking about luncheon, found me on my way to the M.’s, where I had to get Francisca and take her to the Neu- rological Institute for a mental test. Knowing Mrs. M. from former encount- ers, I realized the necessity of arriving at least one hour ahead of time. Fran- cisca, of course, had forgotten that I was coming and when in a halting mix- ture of English and Tuscan, I made Mrs. M. understand my presence, she pro- ceeded to scrub and dress her daughter. This completed, the trouble began. Fran- cisca would not go—with all the stub- borness which is inherent in a seven- year-old Italian, she refused to stir from |the--room. Mrs. -M. methods, but soon tiring of these, she firmly pushed Francisca to the head of the stairs. Here the unwilling child, still unmoved by her mother’s threats, was shoved onto the landing. Exactly forty- five minutes were consumed in’ getting her to the elevated. Gentle but forceful persuasion on every step of four steep flights left me exhausted, for all the other families in the tenement came out and hung over the banisters demanding where and why I was taking the child. Once on the elevated, Francisca be- camé extremely docile and continued so throughout the) rest of the afternoon. For two hours we waited our turn and then her test lasted over a half-hour. As a recompense for her surprisingly pa- tient behavior, I gave her a chocolate ice cream cone. This, I discovered, was a sad mistake. For once on the elevated the ice cream cone, and I had to sacrifice .a previously spotless handkerchief. Per- “ffiuch al- ready I would have enjoyed the remark of a woman next me, but in my, rather 4 wornout frame of mind, I failed” to~be |amused when I heard her say to her birorgh “The lady looks quite agi ‘sibility. The most. interesting to me enough jor the hospital and that she must tried persuasive. she made a complete mess of herself and} and “Tuberculosis” “followed by a visit to the .Altro Shop. But to list here the speakers and their subjects is an, impos- a) Dr.. Blumgart’s discussion of “Phychi- atric Problems,” Miss Hamilton’s talk on “Children’s “Problems” and finally Miss Kempshall’s national Aspect of Case Work.” Then, too, there were many field trips: The House of Refuge, an-old time home of correction for delinquent ‘boys, formed a sorry contrast with the Children’s Vil- lage, a model reformatory ‘at Dobbs Ferry, where the boys are not kept under lock and key, but entrusted with ‘self- government.. The Children’s Hospital for the feeble-minded was indeed de- pressing, but it made us realize the nec- _essity—for--removing—all_defective.. OY k PRBS viduals from the difficulties of normal community life. The Childgen’s Court was. especially of interest, b€cause’ it presented a very definite proof of im- provement through social workers who have stressed the importance of the pro- bation system: Our visit to Ellis Island was rather a disappointment. Due to the recent change in the immigration laws, theré were few families coming in at’the end of the month. Still the procedure of the immigrants. on arrival and the sleeping and dining rooms proved much better than we had anticipated. By this time you see how hopeless it is to do justice to all these places-never- theless, before I stop, I must tell you that Junior ‘Month “4s not all work and no play. Theatres, the stadium where you can hear the New York Philhar- monic for a mere pittance, the top of the busses, and even ferry rides to Staten Island, formed our varied sources of evening entertainment. There was one evening a week set aside for “home night,” which was consumed in discuss- ing the many problems that were worry- ing us. On two week-ends we visited board members. Miss Jennings enter- tained us the first week in Fairfield, Conn., and on the third Sunday we had a charming day with Mr. ane Mrs. Childs at Stamford. Almost more important than“the things you see and do, is the fact that you are seeing and doing them with thirteen other Juniors and that you always have a ready audience to hear your disappoint- ments and successes. Junior Month is a possibility for every junior at Bryn Mawr, but an actuality for only one. It is such a worth while experience that only the girl who goes can realize its infinite value. I know that I feel tre- mendously grateful to the donor of Jun- ior Month and the Charity Organization Society, which has made it possible for. my. predecessors and for me, and who will continue to make it possible for our successors. oe FULL SEASON IN STORE = FOR VARSITY HOCKEY Varsity, some of whose members have already begun practice at hockey camp, starts its outside games early in October. The schedule is: October 10—Main Line. “ 17—Philadelphia Cricket Club. 31—Germantown. November 7—Irish. - 14—Merion. _ 21—All Philadelphia. There will be no game on October 24 because of the Irish and Overseas match. @o VARSITY DRAMATICS' PLANS» Tryouts for the cast of Varsity Dra- matics’ new play, to be given on Novem- ber 20th and 2ist, will begin next ‘Men- “ ty A sa sight. Everyone is urged to try out, information on the “Inter- .— eee ‘ chestra, a. a THE. COLLEGE NEWS ; 3 8 FOUR COMPANIES TO GIVE OPERA. IN PHILADELPHIA THIS SEASON Frei and Italian Works Will be Presented in October Visits . Sevetal opera companies will give per- formances in Philadelphia “during the coming season, in addition to the regular Tuesday evening series of the Metropoli- tan Opéra Company in the. Academy of Music, Beginning its third year the Civic Opera Company will present “Gianni . Schicchi” in English for the first time in the, United States, in a double bill with “La Navarraise.” The other operas scheduled are: “Aida,” “Jewels of the Madonna,” “Cavalleria Rusticana,” “Pag- Carmen,”—“Rigoletto,” “Tosca,” “Samson and _ Delilah,’ _ “Faust,” and * “Tannhauser” (the last.two in English). The orchestra’ ‘will be made up of mem- bers of the Philadelphia Orchestra. La Scala Grand Opera, under the direction of Francesco Pelosi, will give eight performances at the Academy of Music, including a Thursday mgtinee, be- ginning Saturday evening, October 3. There will be an orchestra of fifty, a chorus of fifty, and a ballet of twenty. The repertoire is as follows: “Rigoletto,” “Trovatore;’ “Faust,” “Cavalleria Rusti- cana,’ and “Pagliacci,” “Martha,” “La Forza dél Destino,” “Aida,” and “Car- men.” Under the direction of Fortune Gallo the San Carlo Opera Company will come to the Metropolitan Opera House for a week, opening Monday, October 19. The Pavley Oukrainsky Ballet Russe will be a feature of their performances. Among the artists, engaged are Anna Fitziu, Anna Roselle, Tamaki Miura, Marie Rap- pold. With the difficulty of getting seats for the Philadelphia Orchestra concerts, the announcement of appearances’ by the “New York Symphony Society is welcome. Walter Damrosch, for forty years leader of ‘this organization, will conduct the Philadelphia performances. These will take place on Thursday evenings, No- vember “12, December 10, and February 11, at the Academy of Music. Lawrence ‘Tibbett, American singer who was the hero of an astonishing ova- tion at the Metropolitan’s performance of “Falstaff” last season, will be soloist at the first concert. : George Gershwin, composer of “Lady Be Good” and other musical comedy scores and “The Rhapsody in e e,” will appear at the second concert, play ng his “New York” concerto for piano ahd: or- The last of the series will be a Wagnerian program, including selections from “Rienzi” and “Parsifal.” Eight concerts, on Sunday evenings in the Academy of Music, are announced by the Philharmonic Society of Philade:- phia. Three of these will be appearances “of the New York Philharmonic under Mengelbérg, the Boston Symphony under Koussevitski, and the Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra conducted by Fritz Reiner. During the rest of the series the Philharmonic will be led by Leopold Sto- ‘kowski, Fritz Reiner, Alexander Smal- lens, and Hans Kindler. . PHILADELPHIA ORCHESTRA CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1 young Italian school of composers, will conduct a program of his own works and play his new piano concerto. His “Foun- ™ tains of Rome” was given here by She - La Scala Orchestra, under -Toscanini, in 1921; and his “Sinfonia Dramatica” was _ presented by Mr. Stokowski last season. ~~ "Phis season Philadelphians” will, hear for the first time the new piano with John Hays Hammond, Jr.'s, device for producing unusual tonal effects. — The ment. Mr. Hammond’s invention makes it possible to hold the tone for as much as fifty seconds, instead of the former fifteen or twenty, and to diminish and increase the sound giying the tone an orchestral quality. This result has been obtained by heightening the tension of the strings and insulating the case. The sound waves are controlled by a series of shutters, placed directly above the string and underneath the piano and operated by. a special pedal. When this is de- pressed, the sound waves are confined within the chamber, so the pianist can shade his tones at will. ah ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION s OFFERS PLANS AND BLAZERS The Athletic Association is starting the | year with hopes and ‘plans of giving | everyone, no matter “what their athletic abilify, as much pleasure as possible out of athletics. To do this it is planning a- thorough reorganization that -will-tend to leave the necessary organization of each sport to the players of that sport and reduce the work of the class cap- tains and managers by dividing the classes into larger squads, each of which will have definite times for playing when all who are able will come to play with- out being posted. Another instituttion*is the awarding of blazers with various degrees of pocket insignia; the blazers will be within the reach of even the lowest team players and it is hoped that they will gradually become a part of the regular athletic equipment of each student/ PRESIDENT PARK - SPEAKS IN CHAPEL ce Ne CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1 to college has become competitive. The change from a few years ago when the ordinary girl in school preparing herself faithfully was reasonably sure of admis- sion to college is.as sudden as itis unex- pected. Now disappointment as well as success is quite possible. Important for the colleges will be the understanding of girls, parent and school from the first that the competition is not for a chance to spend four happy semi-profitable sophomoric years, but for a foothold on the ladder of intellectual growth. You all know that I do not mean that Bryn Mawr. proposes to itself an enrollment of intellectual prigs.. But you know a no°,college of Bryn Mawr’s past -car#ac cept or keep. students who in .the brief eight-month college year will deliberately choose to serve two*masters. Learning is a hard master and a jealous one. Col- leges which prize true ‘learning and in- deed exist to extend” its ‘cause will not be really contented with any but eager seekers for their wares. In these days of pressure for a chance to learn the half- interested student can not hold her place. The graduate school numbers this year 75. There are 18 resident fellows and 40 graduate scholars. We have nine foreign scholars—three British scholars, two French, two Dutch, one German and one Swiss scholar: Mar- ion Gray, of Ayr, Scotland, M. A. Uni- versity of Edinburgh; Irene duPont Rée, of Manchester, England, B. A. Oxford University; Nellie Marian Waterson, of Eastbourne, England, B. A. and M. A. University of Birmingham, and B. Litt. University of Oxford; Suzanne Groult, of Lisieux, France, Agrégée; Jacqueline Le- Génisel, of Dinan, Erance, Licence d’Anglais, ané, A. B. Illinois Wesleyan University; Nelly Appeldoorn, of Am- sterdam, Holland, Candidata Litterarum Classicarum, -- University | Amsterdam; | Sophie Ramondt, of teteriatn: Candi- data Litterarum Humaniorum and Doc- tévanda Litterarum Humaniorum, Uni- versity of Amsterdam; Anna Marguerite Selig, of Fulda, Germany, Ph. D. Uni- versity of Cologne, and Berthe-Marie Marti, of Lausanne, Switzerland, Licence ‘Orchestra bas secured: the. rights: for the | form: and és Lettres, University of Lausanne. an eases As Ihave said, I had supposed that much of my time this summer would be spent in watching lovingly while the walls of Goodhart Hall*rose or at least while the cellar.of Gogdhart Hall was digged. But another momentous step in the mate- rial life jof the college has followed closely on the announcement at Com- mencement time that an important and we hoped a distinguished building would be , added to the. group of twenty- -five yéars ago. For, many years the alumnae of the college have hoped that at some time Bryn Mawr’s neighbor Wyndham with its beautiful and dignified house, its wide. green ‘and garden and its old trees might become the property of the college. In the early summer an imme- diate carrying out of this hope suddenly appeared feasible. rthe value of land in Bryn Mawr, the value of. Wyndham to the college if,only as a protection agdinst the closing in of our free spaces, thé loveliness of these par- ticular six acres and their ‘historic con- nection with the farm and orchards on which the college is built and the long]. and happy tradition’of the hospitality of the house to the college students and the college ideas made a feasible plan seem instantly a necessary one. And this was in spite of the fact that the college was unprepared to embark on so large a pur- chase. There were, however, many. per- sons,.to be consulted and holidays day ‘scattered them widely. The negotiations can actually be completed only at the Oc- tober meeting of the Board of Directors of the college, but I can now say that the property has been secured and that the college will take title next summer. Dur- ing this winter, the college will continue to rent the wing of Wyndham from Miss Ely for the use of the Music Department and except as tenant under restrictions of this wing it has no relation to any part of the property. As you can at once see this unexpected addition to the college land with a possibility for a Student Building site never-considered before, and the fact that we shall shortly own the quarters in which the Music Department has been, very happily housed made it’ seem in- stantly wise and indeed necessary to post- pone a final decision on plans for Good- hart Hall and the music wing until we could see how our negotiations _would end. They were not even tentatively completed until late August... Mr. Meigs’ plans for the hall and the wing originally roposed are ready in their preliminary have been presented to “Mr. Cram, the Supervising Architect of the College. On: his report they will be laid before a joint committee made up of the Buildings and Grounds Committee of the Directors and five Alumnae named by ‘the: Alumnae Board. The architects believe at least two months will be necessary for ‘the completion of specifications and the matters preliminary to building, and that it will not be worth while, or indeed pos- sible, to begin practical work before early spring. It has given me more pleasure than a president of Bryn Mawr has had for a long time to tell you today of this long- desired and suddenly realized purchase. Bryn Mawr students find themselves sur- prisingly sensitive to the look of the col- lege as the seasons pass over it and. re- member it with curious vividness after years of absence. To its noble and dig- nified beauty we have the extraordinary good fortune to be able to add something which does not need to bé developed or improved or even touched, as beautiful and tranquil as its great trees, soon to be, for each of you a part of those sharply drawn youthful memories I have spoken of. ‘And I am sorry eneugh- to couple with an announcement over which we can so rejoice the other which must be a keen if temporary disappointment, es- pecially to the senior class who we had hoped would receive their degrees against The quick increase in] courses themselves and_ Two questions lie before us, faculty and students, this year. The first, mainly a faculty matter, is the working out of the curriculum along the line indicated ~ by the decision last year. to replace the double major by the single afid allied subjects which together form one field of work, Consideration of the curriculum and of every aspect of the-academic work, graduate and undergraduate, of the col- lege is naturally a standing duty of all college faculties. But if the colleges are to take upon themselves -a more careful selection of those who are to be allowed to try their ‘minds on undergraduate and eventually. graduate work, then on the college’s side there is assuredly laid the farther duty of increasing the value of this work to the students both in the academic arrangements which gdvern work for undergraduate and graduate de- grees. We have ah opportunity to select what. we hope. are’ especially hungry sheep. We can only meet their look up by especially satisfactory feeding! The.second is, I believe, the search fora new basis of college conduct, a basis not for the individual student which is at bot- tom her own business, but for the in- dividual in her relation to our corporate body in its various aspects—that is, to all of us here this morning. And that search is mainly the business of the students and especially of the older students who have come to have a sense of the existence of a college body which is by no means merely the gumerical sum of the indi- viduals who make it up, As* Dr. Fosdick said in June, obedience, agreement, con- formity as goods in themselves have come to seem unreasonable to us. Yet conduct based on these made possible to a great degree the living together, the dealing together through all the ages of incredibly varied human beings. The incredibly varied human beings still exist (1 have a keen sense of them this morning) and doing away with the old restraints does not do away with the old problems of living together. The problems must be met in some way. : If the old regulations are cumbrous: and in- adequate let us waste no more time dis- cussing them or rearranging their details. The problems themselves stand relatively unchanged since the college began. For instance, to take the simpler ones, the Bryn Mawr. student must have not only material equipment for the hard work we demand of her—but she must have health, sleep, food and exercise; more leisure than she has must be possible, leisure which demands not only freedom from pressure, but freedom from inter- ruptions, .confusion, noise. She must learn independence of action as she learns independence of thought. She must ac- quire maturity of Viewpoint as she passes into full physical maturity, but her inde- pendence is automatically controlled by a just allowance of the same possibility to others, and by a study of the effect on the whole body of differently developed ideas of independence. How can these needs of hers be met? Not by complete individual liberty, that we are sure of in the case of our neighbor if not in our own! If the old one is*outworn what is a new basis for a discussion of these reeds ,and their solution? Dr. Fosdick pointed out in somewhat this connection that modern thinkers on morals have not fully availed themselves of the parallel offered by scientific work for the solution of the problems which concerned individual freedom and group reguiation. The person who knows ex- actly the end he has in view regulates, controls, directs his actions to obtain this end, and does it not to obey or agree or conform, but because such action is re- sult-producing. I believe that some such "basis can be found for our standing prob- lems, Let us survey ourselves, decide on the result which we as a community seek to obtain and arrange our individual con- duct to bring about what we wish for ourselves as a community. in_ the. various See nae eee THE COLLEGE NEWS . the | SPORTS SUMMER SCHOOL | * CONTINUED FROM, PAGE 1 way. the students may hear different points of view and choose for themselves? Every theory .is considered gravely, in light of personal experience—for their points of view are not -mere atti- tudes, as are so many of ours, but con- victions by which they live. And the range of points of view:in a group of people as varied as these is enormous. This tolerance of other people’s opin- ions is part, also, of the friendliness which characterizes the summer school. One feels very strongly that everyone really wants to like everyone else, and to be liked by them. There is no aloof- ness, no feeling — to. give oneself often | “and = = willirigly i is ~ cheapén oneself. Rather there is a + Fool I think, that the more and the closer the contacts one has, the more one. gains. The’ eagerness of every student to learn is to me the most. exciting thing abdut the school. They are released for a moment from the endless monotony of mechanical work, and given leisure to look about them. And they long to grasp as much of beauty and learning as they can in the brief truce. They come suddenly from the noise and the grime to the warm quiet and the golden green of the summer campus. And although they are preoccupied with the problems of labor with which ‘they will have to con- tend all their lives, they have time for other things. They study the stars which “have always before been blurred with smoke for them; they net the butterflies which never before fluttered near them; they name the flowers they never before ‘saw growing. And for those who love beauty—and so many of them. do—what could be more thrilling than to come for the first time upon Shakespeare and Marlowe and Plato, not with the com-+ monplaceness that they have for us to whom they are a set lesson, but with the sharp joy of those who discover a new world. MISS KING WORKS ON . ROMANESQUE DURING SUMMER Miss Georgiana Goddard King, Pro- . fessor of History of Art, spent the sum- ‘mer in a little shack on the New Jersey coast. During the early ok of the summer Miss King worked a great. deal at her book on Spanish Romanesque, but spent even more time on an article on a particular phase of the Romanesque. This article, on which she has been working for sev- eral years for it took close investigation and was slow to write, will probably be published sometime during the winter. Bonwit Geller & Co, Cae pr CAMPUS _TOGS in a new and complete ‘Sports Dept. Ene Flor. students—from SIX BRYN MAWR GIRLS FIND - _ EAGLESMERE INTERESTING Y. M.C. A. ‘bela is i. of Varied Points of View (Specially contributed by W. Dodd, ’26, Pres. of the Christian A ssbciation) Of the six members of the Bryn Mawr delegation to Eagles Mere, only one had ever attended a conference before. We knew that Eagles Mere differed from Silver Bay, in that small Pennsylvania and southern colleges were represented. Beyond that we did not know what we wéuld find. There were about co-educational normial schools and ‘State colleges. We lived in comfort in the two hotels near the lake. , Small discussion groups were held in the mornings on the porches of the sur- rounding’ cottages. The discussions were very informal and intensely interest- ing. The morning -aaueanbties in the “chapel were presided over by various outside speakers, among whom were: H. P. van Dusen, Judge Florence Allen, Dr. Ar- buckle, and Mr. Frederick Harris. — The day before we left, the different delegations, dressed in gypsy costumes, sang their songs for the song contest around the great camp fire. Never were there six more surprised people than 300 girls in all— when Miss Bryson, the conference leader; awarded the cup for the prize song td Bryn Mawr. The six delegates feel that there-is a great deal to be gained from Eagles Mere as well as from Silver Bay. Our personal reactions are hard to put down in black atid white, but any of us will be only too glad to talk with people who would like to know more about Eagles Mere. Rivals the beauty of Student's T doesn’t require a four- years’ exposure to well-in- formed circles hereabouts to grote the hearty sanction of a among the older stu Those who know i gut point, Man-size GripandOver- size Ink Capacity have come to depend on itin overwhelming majorities everywhere, but nowhere more than in the colleges, Good pen counters wouldn’t P be without it—stop at the near- ‘ est one. THE PARKER PEN COMPANY Factory and General Offices JANESVILLE, WIS. the Scarlet Tanager colleges; FRESHMEN ADMITTED IN 1925-4 e CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1 Grace Quimby, Catherine ‘Rea, Laura Morse Richardson, Ruth Rosenberg, Elizabeth Pittrnan Sargent, Helen Banks Schoff. Honoria Renee Minturn Scott, Antoi- nette Beaver Shallcross, Beatrice Ship- ley, Constance Sophia Speer, Carla Swan, Rebecca Lewis Thomas, Winifred Trask, Elizabeth Hazard Ufford, Joseph- ine Day Van, Buren, Ameline d’Auquetil Vauclain. Violet Wyhelen,” Margaret Whitehead, Mary Low Williams, Rebecca Louisa Wills, Helen Wolstenholme, Nancy Hooker Woodward, Hilda Emily Tylston Wright,-Roberta Matterson Werkess_ C. A. RECEPTION TO BE. ‘. HELD ON SATURDAY NIGHT Incoming Freshmen. and Graduates will be welcomed to Bryn Mawr College on Saturday night at the reception given by the Christian Association in the Gym: nasium at eight o’clock. President Park; Dean™Manning, Miss Applebee, the association presidents, and the Editor of the News will form the re- ceiving line. Winifred Dodd, siesideiie of the Chris- tian - Association, will introduce _ the speakers. There will be supper at 9.15, and dancing. — Announcing the Opening of the _ Sydenham Book Shop 225 South Sydenham Street on Monday, October fifth BOOKS Rare :: Modern Children’s Afternoon Tea and Luncheon COTTAGE TEA ROOM Montgomery Avenue. Bryn Mawr Everything Dainty and Delicious J. TRONCELLITI Practical Cleaner & Dyer Goods called .for and Delivered 939 Lancaster Ave. Bryn Mawr Wi ben in the village | Look in the window at 829 LANCASTER AVE. You will notice some Snappy Sport Hose and Sweaters Phone, Bryn Mawr 494 LUNCHEON DINNER PARTIES North Merion” Ave. Bryn Mawr, Pa. POWERS & REYNOLDS MODERN DRUG STORE : 837 Lancaster Ave. Bryn Mawr Imported Perfumes CANDY SODA , GIFTS WILLIAM L. HAYDEN |Housekeeping Hardware _ Locksmithing 838 LANCASTER AVE. Bryn Mawr - PHILIP HARRISON 826 LANCASTEFY ‘\VENUE Walk Over Shoe Shop Agent for Gotham Gold Stripe Silk Stockings. at Weruwm Lasst Dy Deine Blicke in der Ferne Stretten, Wenn Das Gesuchte Liegt Sonah! —Heine. No need to go to Philadelphia for a cozy Ladies’ Dining Room, ROMA CAFE American, Italian, French Dishes Open from 7 A, M. to 12 P. M. - John J. McDevitt F707, Tickets 8 @ Letter Heads Printing ium 1145 Lancaster Ave. Bryn Mawr, Pa. (RR EN ES at Cards and Gifts for all occasions THE GIFT SHOP. 814 Lancaster Ave. Bryn Mawr, Pa. Snider BA NISSBDD ° : fh) . Rivedaadiee Melina . Rstablished .1832 PHILADELPHIA The Quality commensurate with the importance of RINGS Charms and School Trophies Correspondence invited . THE TOGGERY SHOP 831 Paap ig avenue sweater, Poss VANITY eats UNDERWEAR . Chas. Snyder gts, Bryn Mawr 181 PHOND 158 | HENRY B. WALLACE CATERER and CONFECTIONER LUNCHBONS AND TEAS encaancened Berar Mawr and. Wayne o B v THE COLLEGE NEWS ~~ ° > Ga ¢ € : BRYN MAWR GIRLS ATTEND’ COURSE AT PRINCETON| , Professor Mischa Rostovtzeff gave a lecture course in Iranian and Greek Civ- ilization and its art in South Russia from prehistoric times to medieval and a semi- nary course for graduate students in the origins and development of the animal style in ornament, at Princeton under the auspices of the Harvard-Princeton Fine Arts Club from August 25 to September 19, Professor Rostovtzeft | taught at Wisconsin last year and is to be at Yale . this coming winter. Delphine Fitz, ’23;.Katharine Neilson, "24, and arion Lawrence, — ’23, * who taught at Wellesley last year and is to be in Rome studying this winter, attended ' the courses, oem peer tenner theptene NEWS OF INTEREST In an interview with Mr. Wilbur For- rest, of the New York Herald-Tribune, Mr.. Ford nailed articles on the door .of every academy of culture in the United y A States. He declared war: If Henry Ford were to control Ameri- can schools and: colleges as he controls his own industry the teaching of foreign languages would be completely elimi- nated. Mr. Ford beliéves there is only one language in which world. progress may become universal, and it is destined to inherit the earth. Thag is the Eng- lish language. j The polyglot League of Nations, the motor manufacturer. believes, can never accomplish much because difference in language’ promotes a_ difference in thought, ambition and method. The difference in language, Mr. Ford said, hinders science and -invention and commerce just as it hinders world peace and understanding. "When ‘industry is. run in. the English tongue, he added, it is a, different kind of industry, with another spirit, than that operated in other languages. The. type of industry which leads the world in ideas and achiévement and gives the {it would not’ in the future establish new has .become possible through the clear and forceful languagé which is’ used by the major part of: the industrial world. world what it needs is the industry which Other nations are forced to adopt it for the very gake of its usefulness, be- cause the’ world becomes increasingly full of things which must be done in English, if at all. a * Phi Beta Kappa, the honor fraternity of scholars, decided the other day that chapters in colleges which restrict lib- erty of thought and speech by such in- tolerant policies as forbidding the teach- ing of evolution, Now rises:one J. Gres- ham Machen to protest, in a letter to itself a denial of the right to free speech since it seeks to prevent the free associa- tion (into colleges) of those’ who don’t believe in evolution. AI! of which goes to prove that this is indeed, and despite everything, a Wonderful World. | | | | With iy | ) | maT ATTN Yi iN P| of his labor troubles are at an end. -The Farm Of the six and a half million farm homes in this country, only halfa million have electricity. Still, the advantages of electricity are widely known. But there is more to farm electrifica- tion than the installation heaters. Current must be brought to the farm, and that means many miles cf transmission line, supporting poles, transformers, and ad- equate generating equipment. : Slowly but surely the electrification of Amer- ican farms is taking place. As farmers learn how to use electricity, rural service lines reach out farther and farther i Six million farms to be electrified! Here is a vast and virgin field for the application of electricity, with countless opportunities for college-trained men in the technical and com- : mercial phases of this undertaking. And for the agricultural college student and others planning a future life in rural sections, it means a better, bigger, happier When rural service Hnee bring electricity to the farmer’s door, many Motors, large and small, will do the many chores of farm and farm house for a few cents per day. Electrical of‘motors, lights and nto open country. life-time now in the —_, | the New .York.Times, thaf this action is] BRINTON BROS. | FANCY and STAPLE GROCERIES Orders Called for and Delivered Lancaster and Merion Aves. B Mawr, Pa. Telephone 63 — . DAINTY - ICED SANDWICHES DRINKS « College - Tea House EVENING PARTIES BY SPECIAL “ARRANGEMENT secant vase _ JEANNETT’S | Bryn Mawr Flower Shep Cut Flowers and Plants Fresh Daily. Corsage and Floral Baskets Old-Fashioned Bouquets a Specialty Potted Plante—Personal supervision on all erdera Phone, Bryn Mawr &70 : _ - 807 Lancaster Ave. Telephone, Bryn Mawr 4&3 THE CHATTERBOX A DELIGHTFUL TEA ROOM Regular Dinners or Birthday Parties by appointment OPEN FROM 12 TO 7.80 825 LANCASTER AVENUE Bryn Mawr Massage Shop Aimee E. Kendall Hairdressing in all its branches A complete stock of toilet requisites. 839 Lancaster Ave. - et Telephone 456 Bryn Mawr « MICHAEL TALONE CLEANER AND DYER 1128 LANCASTER AVENUE » Call for and Delivery Service o& The Handcraft Shop Decorations, Linens, Rugs “Little Nature Frocks,” Toys, etc. 30 Bryn Mawr Avenue @ARBARA LEE : | and . Fairfield Outer Garments for Misses Sold Here Exclusively in Philadelphia . oe ' 1 ea, Strawbridge & Clothier a 14 ce Pe * ¢ r) bed ® . THE COLLEGE NEWS GS ES ae % ¥ IN PHILADELPHIA - - Walnut—“Old English” with George « Arliss. y A » Chestnut Sfreet Opera, House—“The Love Song.” Broad—“Come Easy, Go Easy” with Otto Kruger, : Garrick—“The City Chap.” Forrest—“Spring in Autumn.” Lyric—‘The Firebrand.” Shubert—“Rose- Marie.” ‘Adelphi—‘“Silence” with H. B. Warner. Sesqui-Centennial Grounds) — “Last Days of .Pompeii.” Fox—“The Iron ‘Horse.” Stanton—“The Gold Rush.” Forrest—“Stepping Stones” with Fred Stone and Dorothy Stone (return engage- ment). e _Garrick—‘‘Antonia” with Rambeau. 4 Marforie ? President Park will be at home to the Freshman © Class Wednesday afternoon, four o’clock. ae at her ‘house next October 7th, at. CALENDAR Wednesday, September 30. 8.45 A, M.—The work of the forty-first academic year begins. i i) 8.00 P.. Mi—Parade Night. Ps sor Saturday, October 3. Spanish for undergraduates taking old 9.00-10,30 A. M.—Examinations- in French, German, Greek, Italian and} plan Annual Language. Intelligence Test for the entering class. Sunday, October 4. ‘730° P. M.—Rev. Rufus Jones, Rgesi- dent of the Board of Trustees, will spéak in chapel. 3 Wednesday, October 7. e4,00 P.*M.—President Park’s reception to Freshmen at Pen-y-groes. - aS ae WLLLLLLLLLLLL LLL heeded / COLLEGE. producing the work. or studen's. 4 TITTLE LLL LLL LLL LLL LLL LLL _ The production of satisfactory printed matter for . college officials and students is dependent both upon facilities and upon the experience of the organization We offer an organization specializing in school ‘by a college-graduate,and and college work, headed” amply equipped to print anything needed by faculty PHILIP ATLEE LIVINGSTON Printer of the College News OFFICES IN WAYNE, ARDMORE, NARBERTH AND ‘ BALA-CYNWYD ve PRINTING s ® ° s _Concentrated ene 1 tennis. lates in summer than f . | ; give “Dep.” tee Whenever you see the sign you know vf, that the dealer’s'stoc a je For your guests Sweets after Sports 1.’ in chocolates exactly answers the call of that “empty _ feeling” that follows a round of golf, a ‘morning in the surf, ¢ a battle royal at People eat far more of Whitman’s Chocolai formerly, and for three reasons:— They have discovered that chocolates *s Chocolates carefull: protected against sneanare jobber, but direct from Whitran’s. oe they .did SALMAGUNDI Ideal companion for “rough- ing it’ out-of-doors. The handsome metal box gives protection to this popular _ assortment of Whitman’s. — = _ WHITMAN’S 4 Cate St . Bryn Mawr FAMOUS CANDIES ARE SOLD BY Bryn Mawr College Book Store, Bryn Mawr __ Bryn Mawr Confectionery, Bryn Mawr VILL LLL a Pr cea lal ‘Saturday Luncheon : Open Sunday . Chatter-On Tea House 835 Morton Road Dinner by Appointment Bryn Mawr 1185 Afternoon Tea : Cleaners and Dyers De Luxe THE MAIN LINE VALET SHOP Bernard McRory, Proprietor 2nd Floor, opposite Post Office, Bryn Mawr * Valet Service by Practical Tailers Positively No chine Pressing Ten Per Cent. Discount on All School and: .,. Coll ork Pleating ane emstitching Ladies’ Riding Suits to Measure, $40.00 and Up Breakfast Luncheons Dinners TELEPHONED, ARDMORD 1946 ‘Haverford Ave. & Station Rd. Drive — HAVERFORD STATION, P. R. R. ‘Luncheon Afternoon Tea Dinner An attractively different place for College ' people ‘THE MILESTONE. INN Italian Restaurant 845 LANCASTER AVE. Catering for Dinner and Birthday Parties “At the Ninth Milestone” Tel. Bryn Mawr 1218 LOWTHORPE SCHOOL A School of Landscape Architecture for Women TWENTY-FOURTH YEAR Courses in Landscape Design, Planting Design, Construc- tion, Horticulture and kindred subjects Estate of seventeen acres, gardens, greenhouses 36 Miles from Boston GROTON, MASSACHUSETTS oe " Phone, Bryn Mawr 166 : Phone Orders Promptly Delivered WILLIAM GROFF, P. D. PRESCRIPTIONIST Whitman Chocolates 802 Lancaster Ave. Bryn Mawr. Pa. ‘Table Delicacies Frozen Dainties .Phone, Ardmore 12 Bryn Mawr 1221 GEORGE/F. KEMPEN CATERER and CONFECTIONER 859 Lancaster Ave. 27 W. Lancaster Ave. ‘ Bryn Mawr Ardmore E. S. McCawley & Co. — Books Do you want the latest book? Are you interested in books worth . while ?) We have it or can get it. HAVERFORD AVE, Haverford, Pa. Jewelers serving a distinguished clientele for many years' Insignia, Station- ery, Wrist Watches; gifts for every occasion. ~° “ : Visitors are cordially welcomed. noe tis é :