a VOL. XX, No. 3 BRYN MAWR AND WAYNE, PA., WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 25, 1933 COLLEGE Sopyright BRYN MAWR NEWS, 1933 — PRICE 10 CENTS Freshman Class Is Biggest in 10 Years Statistics Show Average Age Is 17 Years, Youngest Ever to Enter B. M. 26 STATES ARE INCLUDED _ In. Chapel, Qctober 17 and 19, Miss Park discug#sed the statistics of this year’s freshman class. “There are 124 freshmen, a. large class as. all. would know who saw the long horseshoe of ,red lanterns on the . Friday of the Lantern ceremony. The largest class of. the. last ten years consisted of 129 students; others re- cently of 128, 127, and 125. Two years ago the freshman class was 100;-a year ago 111. Nine per cent. of the. freshmen are non-resident, compared with the 8 per cent. of the rest of the college, which is ‘non- resident. Up to last year the aver- age had been 6 per cent., and the change seems surprisingly slight, — far less than- one might have expect- ed. with the college for the non-residents remains unchanged. att The freshmen come from 26 states and from Germany and Mexico. The largest contribution is from Penn- sylvania, which sends 238 per cent. — (about its usual number) and New Yerk, which sends 20 per cent. (about its usual number). More interesting, CALENDAR W || Miss Thomas Holds Deanery Reception Nine Hundred Attend Formal Opening: of Alumnae House on Saturday CEREMONY IMPRESSES The opening of the Deanery as an Alumnae Hcuse last Saturday after- noon had. a significance understood only by those who know the tradi- tions of Bryn Mawr. As far as what actually happened is‘ concerned, nine hundred Alumnae went through the receiving line to greet Miss Thomas, Miss Park, Mrs. Slade, and Mrs” Clark. But even the undergraduates, who have not had the inestimable ad- vantage of knowing Miss. Thomas, felt .h> emotion underlying the re- turn of the Alumnae to accept the reward of their work. recognition by Miss Thomas of the Alumnae as important to-the past and future of Bryn Mawr contained not only a tribute for the Alumnae as a whole, but an individual: mean- ing for each woman there. In the eyes of the undergraduates, who have found in the college the tra- dition of .intelligent foresight, schol- arship, and loyalty which is their heritage from Miss Thomas, it is ap- parent that those women who had the good fortune to actually know her must have left college inspired with the love of Bryn Mawr which she herself felt. Miss Thomas’ gift to them of her own house is a symbol of their partnership in her love and work for Bryn Mawr. Any under- graduate who talked or listened to the Alumnae soon realized the inten- This official . sity of their gratitude for the gift. and the pride which they felt in hav-~ ing’ bvéii’ deemed worthy of it. Miss Thomas could have chosen no way of symbolizing this partnership which would have given greater pleasure or satisfaction to the Alumnae than the gift of the Deanery. The graduates, who were honored to be told by Miss Thomas, when they as- sembled to cheer her, that she misses knowing them and their ideas more than she misses any other aspect of her college work, feel proud -to re- ceive so glorious and so fittingly re- warded a tradition of working for Behemoths Loom Large in Freshman Class, Although Percentage of Smokers Is High The first few weeks. of college the freshmen are supposedly seen and not heard... Meanwhile the .Dean, the President, Dr. Wagoner, Mr. Wil- loughby, Miss Petts and all the up- perclassmen are searching warily for evidences of mental sanity and physi- zal soundness among thei? numbers. The class of 1937 has proved. really impressive, from the seven, who, ac- cording to’infiriiary reports, are over five feet ten, to the average freshman, who’ towers exactly 65.7 inches. Eleven are overweight, seventeen are underweight, but in general they are Amazons to please the physical edu- cation department. More _ postures are listed as very good than very poor, and more are classed as good than poor, while the majority are, as ever, fair in this respect. And, what is nearer to our hearts, we are assured that we shall rest in peace this year. ‘The freshmen are excellent. sleepers;..the.—majority.. of them sleep seven to nine hours per night and.a great many, eight to ten. Only two—we’ hope they don’t livé along a corridor that is Grand Cen- tral Station for frequenters of the last Paoli local from town — suffer from insomnia. After that long night’s rest, break- fast table conversations promise to progress quite happily as regards the perennial subject of operations, For only twenty-two freshmen are in full possession of, their tonsils, and only two of all one hundred twenty-fqur have dental cavities in need of repair. The percentage of smokers among the entering class is higher than us- ual: .. Seventy-four..freshmen-smoke, the majority of them approximately one to six cigaretes daily. No freshmen were rejected on ac- count of ill health, and the report of~ the freshman medical examinations, held the first two weeks of college by Dr. Wagoner, seems to promise gen- eral good health among the members of that class. In view of this report and the fact that this year the col- lege suffers no initial handicap of a nearby infantile epidemic, the pect is decidedly encouraging. The statistics of the freshman physical examinations, especially con- tributed by Miss Josephine Petts, follow: From the point of view of their backs and feet the freshman class is above average. their posture is potentially good. It is to be hopéd that this year they will learn something of the theory of movement which is, at the moment, their weak point. Three freshmen were excused by Dr. Wagoner from taking the swim- ming test. Three were unable to pass it, but only one of these is an abso- lute beginner. The distribution of the ‘freabnews in their sports this fall as as fol- lows: « Required Elective Total IS 43 6 49 Tene 6 ites 47 12 52 2 re 23 12 35 wencing ,..;.. 7 1 8 Swimming ... 5 2 7 beers 2 2 That is to say. that - under- pros- ~* Page Two e THE COLLEGE NEWS + . aa ~~ Wm THE COLLEGE NEWS (Founded in 1914) wares END Published weekly during the College Year (excepting tne. Thanksgiving, Christmas and Easter Holidays, and during examination’ ) in the interest of Bryn Mawr College at the Maguire Building, Wayne, Pa., and Bryn Mawr College. ~~ * fhe College News is fully protected by copyright. Nothing that appears in it may be reprinted either wholly or in part witheut written permission of the Editor-in-Chief. ; ne Editor-in-Chief | . Copy Editor ALLIE JONES, '34 Nancy Hart, "34, News Editor Sports Editor » J: EvizapeTH HANNAN, 34 | SaLLy Howe, °35 Editors Ciara FRANCES GRANT, °34 ELIZABETH MACKENZIE, °34 ConsTANCE Rosinson, °34 Pease PoRCHER, '36 Diana TATE-SMITH, °35 FRANCES VAN KEUREN, °35 Business Manager BarBARA Lewis, '35 GERALDINE Ruoaps, °35 Subscription Manager DorotHy KaLBacn, ‘34 Assistant : Doreen CANADAY, °36 MARGARET BEROLZH REIMER, °35 ‘SUBSCRIPTION, $2.50 MAILING PRICE, $3.00 SUBSCRIPTIONS MAY BEGIN AT ANY TIME vost Office Entered as second-class matter at the Wayne, Pa., President-Emeritus Thomas For the many students and alumnae, who attended the opening of the Deanery as an alumnae house, the occasion came as the climax to the long and glorious career of that greatest of all Bryn Mawr women—President-Emeritus Thomas. And it was not without emotion that those whose privilege it has been to know and admire her gathered to pay her tribute. Miss Thomas stands today as the embodiment of the ideals of scholarship, humanitarianism, and graceful living— ideals to which she has dedicated her life. During her many years as President she directed the college with that wisdom and foresight which have earned her a place among the great educators and leaders of the century. But, what are more important to us than her material achievements, are the ideals for which she stands and which have be- come, through her, part of the college tradition. Those of us who. came to college after Miss Thomas’ retirement have felt her presence.as an inspiring’ genius, and her standards of living and thinking have been handed down to us in the spirit of the college. Miss Thomas is, and always shall be, Bryn Mawr. The great- est tribute, therefore, that we as undergraduates can pay her is: to uphold the tradition of the college and to realize that our association with her, distant though it be, has passed on to us the responsibility of carrying a standard which she raised and bore with such eredit during her years on the campus. Literary S peakeasies The peaceful routine of the Library is once more upset by occult manifestations: ~Many~—of-our- modern authors have-heard—of Bryn Mawr’s preoccupation with emending the classics and have engaged emissaries amoug the undergraduates to remove their books from our dangerous premises. Since the thitd of October, the rate of disappear- ance of a:ttobiographies aud noyéls from the New Book Room has touched an unprecedented high; ‘and it seems possible that we are to be the victims of literary blockade. I‘ is a peculiar failing of most authors that they would rather not be read than be revised. We would not dream of deploring the intellectual sympathy and acquisitive instinct of those emissaries who are helping modern authors to protect their books from our revising pens. There can be no dowbt that such conduct is admirable. But somewhere in this vast student body, there must exist a few other literary spirits capable of feeling ‘an unifterpretive enthusiasm for a modern book. In the interests of the few, we advocate the immediate foundation of literary speakeasies, where books too precious to be left in the jeopardy of the New Book Room may be read in a more appreti e atmosphere. We feel that Bryn Mawr’s interest in Modern Literature would certainly increase, were we but allowed to read it in the lairs of the protective book- hoarders, and we humbly sue for a card of admission and a lesson in the password. The college so seldom sees a modern book these days, for few—very few—have been lefv behind by the hoarders, that we are certain a brilliant and amusing company would be assembled at the first opportunity to read them. The picture of Miss Donnelly greeting her Autobiography of Alice B, Toklas with cries of joy after a sad, long parting could not but bring a ly rie pleasure even to the heart of a hoarder. against Washington, D. C., than was News of the New York Theatres its parent,” while the great Brooks Activity continues unabated. along proper place in the leading farce of the highways and byways of Broadg- way and in spite of all the prophecies that the public would be in a col- lapsed state from over-exertion after years of inactivity, and would desert the theatre as too strenuous a diver- sion, more and more good plays ap- pear and’ more and more public springs into being. _.The, most important opening of the past week was that which brought the dear old government back into its the country. William Gaxton, Lois. M and Victor Moore appeared | yy |ioy that the Win in the Kaufman-Ryskind sequel to Of oe 1fae: whieh known At de) Atkinson, who would rather suffer death in the night from an infernal machine than do anything so plebe- ian and primitive as admit a whole- hearted liking for anything except himself, asserts that it is low comedy instead of low satire, as he calls Of Thee I Sing, and that although there is a brilliant first act, the second act gets out of hand, and “the authors get too overwrought to be funny and the satire is undisciplined.” So there you have it, and the only solution is to see it for yourselves. The cast is as cheering as ever _and we note with “a er Save sent of tp prestienl WEARY QUERY My dear, confiding Lovelorn Ed.: ‘O, tell me why my sweetie said To go away, and dropped her eyes,— There’s nothing wrong, they adver- tise: I’m not one of the “four-from-five,”’ I’m the sort of wire that’s 1 auetiat “live”; I read the odvartlaineet hooey— I use Ipana and Lifebuoy, And Pepsodent and Listerine (To me like nitroglycerine). I’m not bow-legged, not knock- kneed, — I have no unconventional creed (I. e., ve never been a Buddhist, Nor shal] I ever be a nudist); I’m not a critic of the kulak, I drink my noontime glass of Zoolak, And have my luncheon sandwich toasted | And keep myself on late news posted.. And yet, Dear Ed., I’m still lovelorn, And rue the day that I was born. What can I—under yon round sun-— Have for my sweetie further done? Unless, just as she dropped her * eyes, I should have yielded to surmise, And done as I was really fain, And stooped, and picked them up again? —Snoop-on-the-Loose. % “MATERNITY WARD BENE- FIT ENLISTS MEN’S AID”—Her- ald Tribune. O ho! What brought this on? Babies, Just Babies, or a new “we do our part’ code? “PROHIBITED ON BOARD- WALK: Sitting on Railings, Dogs, Bicycles, Baby Carriages, Persons in Bathing Suits—Coney Island Sign.” We object conscientiously! Who says we can’t sit-on persons in bath- ing suits? It’s done! Even in over- populated Coney. Sign on Pfiladelphia boarding house: “Rooms with Private or Semi-private Bath.” Three in a tub! Did I or did I not pay for a private bath? My semi- privacy must be respected, From the Help Wanted columns of the Ledger (oh, yes! we read ’em regularly): “Refined young lady wanted to interview prospects for Woodlawn Cemetery.” Let’s go, Friends, with a Cheero— THE MAD HATTER. % Jed Harris’ Green Bay Tree, with a cast’ composed of such reliable per- formers as James Dale and Lawrence Olivier, who has recently been re- claimed from the- movies which not only threatened to ruin his acting, but also gave him many raw deals. The fear that clawed at the hearts of all that have seen Mr. Harris in ac- tion. was that his love of the porno- graphic and his wandering taste at the crucial moment would make of The Green Bay Tree a horrendus piece that would. haye no. dramatic value and would lurk snarling in the lower depths. To say that Mr. Harris has done himself proud in his production and that he has shown all the artis- tic perception and taste that could be | desired would hardly be an exaggera- tion, and he has given to the stage a notable production. It has _ been called “An absorbing experience in theatre-going—an inspiring study of the disintegration of character — an excellent production that boasts both dignity and taste.” There seems lit- ‘tle more to say on the subject except that as the public applauds so the producers react and the current de- mand is for entertainment that does not have to rely upon the more un- pleasant facts or life, but can stand on its own feet and move under the seen nothing but life in all its stages —from birth, accompanied by a host of white doves; to make it all seem slightly more pleasant than it is, to Braanes and ah, eretstic all sorts power of its artistic merit. We have) ‘ting’ entertainment, but as long as people go into gales of laughter at the piece de resistance of Chie Sale et al, just so long will that tone pre- vail. : _ As for the plays which are to brave the spotlight this week—there are nine.. None of them look as if they will stampede the critics, but they will be of interest in that Blanche Yurke (Spring and Au- tumn), Fay Bainter (Move On, Sis- ter), and an number of old loves will appear. Vicki Baum’s newest work The Divine Drudge—is to be seen with Mady Christians, Tamara Geva (who has never been™in her right mind since she stopped doing those time-arresting dancés with Clifton Webb), Minor Watson, and Walt ‘Abel. It was given a try in the sum- mer stock and was not a success in any sense of the word, but it may have been revamped, Philip Truex, of Haverford and of Bryn Mawr, in the Varsity Dramat productions, is scheduled to make his stage debut in New York on Wed- nesday when The World Waits, a new and somewhat bitter diatribe about the exploring racket. by George Hummel, opens with a cast headed ‘| by Reed Brown, Jr. The future promises even more plays of merit and all the stars of many moons are dusting off their tal- plays of the past two years, and are preparing to fight for their place in the newly risen sun of the theatre. Pola Negri is lurching into town in A Trip To Pressburg, which is under the flag of the Shuberts. It tried but failed last season, and for some reason they were not satisfied with the thorough- ness of the process and are relying upon Miss Negri for the finishing touches. Rachel Crothers has a new and apparently grand play in Talent. It requires an actress who can sing and age twelve years in the three acts, and the only thing holding up the production is the scarcity of such animals. The rumor now is_ that Norma Terris will be given the part on the strength of her performance in the revival of Showboat last year. Max Gordon has the script for Dods- worth, Sidney Howard’s adaptation of the Sinclair Lewis novel, and in- tends to launch'it in the near future. He also has the great combination of Laura Hope Crews and Roland Young in Her Master’s Voice under his guidance at the moment, and is feeling very cheery about it all. Alex- ander Woollcott, who has had noth- ing but bitterness in his life as a dramatist, has collaborated with George Kaufman, who has an epi- demic of successes continually threat- ening his peace of mind, and together they have turned out The Dark Tow- er, a melodrama about the world of the theatre, which, was once known as Snake in the Grass. However, since that time symbolism has taken its place in Mr. Woollcott’s religion and the title was changed to suit his new mood. Basil Sidney, Leona Maricle, and Margalo Gilmore will be in the key spots when the curtain rises. The main concern of all of us at the moment seems to keep up with the theatre, which has been loitering in the dust for so long that all this sprinting on the turns seems hardly fair, and we are relying on more like Nancy Carroll and her school to bring a few things into town that we can ignore and so catch a little sleep from eight to twelve. Grad at Home Dean Schenck, Miss Robinson, Mrs. Keator and the Graduate Students will be at home in Radnor Hall on Wednesday afternoons throughout the winter beginning November 1. All members of the College, Faculty, Staff and Students, Graduate and Un- dergraduate, are cordially invited to these informal teas, which will be- gin at 3.30 for the benefit of people with 4 o’clock classes. No cards will be sent out. Sasee: Navy Day. The Naval Service .at Philadelphia Navy Yard has asked to have an in- \vitation given to the faculty and ¢ Br Mawr College to Yard on Navy. Day, Navy Yard will be pass ts bition j Pwned ‘Sat., Will” Rogers in ents which were not needed in the| Nils Asther. IN PHILADELPHIA Theatres Garrick: Otis Skinnéx)and Queen- ie Smith in the grand old tale of Uncle Tom’s Cabin. This is the same company which won such praise for its work during the famine last year and should be seen. Broad: Madame Alla Nazimova in Doctor Monica, a play dealing with three women, a doctor, an architect, and a servant, and their attitude to- ward life, the men they love, ‘and their work. Notable chiefly for Nazi- mova, who is a tower of strength. Walnut: Florence Reed ventures into comedy for the first time in a new play, Thoroughbred, a tale about the fashionable racing set of Long | Isfand, in which Miss Reed plays a lady owner.’ It should be excellent and very amusing. Chestnut: Ina Claire and Earle Larimore continue to do justice by the hilarious Biography and to make it one of the most amusing and polished comedies of many moons. Forrest: Max Gordon presents Gowns By Roberta, with a Kern-Har- bach score and Lyda Roberti, Ta- mara, Sidney Greenstreet, and Fay Templeton. Somehow it all sounds garbled. and not very attractive, but maybe it isn’t. Coming, October 30 : Garrick: Corinne Griffiths in De- sign For Living, with the original New York production- intact—that is, without the trifles of Lunt, Fon- tanne, and Coward, who after all, are not vitalk ,Ugh! sounds like a wake. ‘ Academiy of Music Philadelphia Orchestra. Fri., Oct. 27, at 2.30 P. M., and Sat., Oct. 28, at 320. P, MM. Alexander Smallens will conduct and Sophie Braslau will act as soloist. Program: Mozart, ; Symphony No. 41, C. Major (Jupiter). se Manion. ..... Songs of a Wayfarer PROMONOIT. 05s cascve Seythian Suite SHAWINEEY. 0.5 co ees The Fire Bird Movies Boyd: Jean Harlow does the best work of her career in Bombshell, with Lee Tracy. She plays a movie act- ress with all the trappings, and a> love for home and babies as well, and it is grand. Keith’s: Lilian Harvey, who thinks it speaks well for American men that most of them are married, makes her debut in a musical what- not—My Weakness, with Lew Ayres and Charles Butterworth. Europa: The Red Head, a remark- able French picture that one has to see to comprehend. An outstanding piece of work. Stanley: Warner -Brothers give the public no time to cool off and rush back with Footlight Parade, in which Ruby Keeler, Dick Powell and Jimmy Cagney do their part to make it a very acceptable two hours. Karlton: The Kennel Murder Case, with Jack La Rue, Helen Vinson and Mary Astor, in which Scotties and Philo Vance solve the impossible rath- er well. Stanton: The rather disappoint- ing drama about the icebergs goes on—S. O. S. Iceberg. Rod LaRocque heads the cast and it does not do the material justice. Earle: Vaudeville continues to predominate with a sad thing called Midshipman Jack flickering on. Fred Waring and his Pennsylvanians are (at the head of the bill and have al- ways attracted us. ; Local Movies Ardmore: Wed. and Thurs., Kath-_ erine Hepburn and Douglas Fair= banks, Jr., in Morning Glory. Fri. and Sat., Marlene Dietrich in Song of Songs, with Brian Aherne. Mon. and Tues., What Price Innocence, with Jean Parker. Wed. and Thurs., Kay Francis and Edward G. Robin- son in I Loved A Woman. Seville: Wed. and Thurs., Double | Harness, with Ann Harding and Wil- liam Powell. Fri. and Sat., Be Mine Tonight, with Jan Kiepura. Mon., Tues., Wed., Doctor Bull, with Will Rogers. : Wayne: Wed. and Thurs., Storm At Daybreak, with Kay Francis and Fri., Sat., Mon. and Tues., Tugboat Annie, with Wallace Beery and Marie Dressler. Wed., - “ THE COLLEGE NEWS 4 Page Three Varsity Scores Over Phila. Cricket Club Victory of 3 to 1 Obtained in Spite of Poor Teamwork ‘ and Passing SECOND TEAM WINS, 6-1 On Saturday morning, Varsity won their game with» the Philadelphia Cricket Club by a score of 3-1. ' In spite of the ‘fact that this was Varsity’s second victory, we are sorry to say that it did not measure up to our last week’s expectations. Except for a few spasmodic plunges, which resulted in quick and efficient goals, the forwards spent their time rush- ing aimlessly about the field, out of position half of the time, and letting the Yellows take the ball out from under their noses. the other half. Al- though the Cricket Club team lacked both wing players, its stickwork, pass- ing, and general offense was far su- perior to that of the Bryn Mawr team, and but for the splendid work of Smith at goal, Varsity might have |- been left far behind. .We realize, however, that the absence of Taggart and Faeth on the forward line might have been the partial cause of the general confusion and the lack of any definite plan of attack. The line-up was as follows: ae Book Shop -—Nine~— Remington portable typewriters are being sold by the College Book Shop at cost, less the rental that has been taken in on them. The Book Shop ‘must sell them in college because the Remington Com- pany will not allow them to be sold outside in view of ‘the great reduction. DAPUNE nis sss Rit ee Bishop Punter... i408 | Oe Paaeere yr Rothermel Freeman ,...... | Seer: E. Smith Goals—Phila. C.: C., Pierson, 1. Bryn Mawr, Kent, 2; Bennett,’ 1. On Monday afternoon, the second Varsity hockey team won a soggy victory over a Germantown Friends’ Alumnae Team, 6-1. The line-up was as follows: Germantown Bryn Mawr JONES Gas ToOWs es Taggart acess a tae Gimbel WEGIOS cect Ore sca Ballard 1 EO ire gS areas Stevenson OT SRR rep | FE Seneca erence Simons | WHE ices Rees as Gribbel Randall. ....... HS: Venice Daniels Hitschler ..:.:. WW eta Hemphill MAIDIOY® Soi ecus r. f. ..Van Vechten Goodman ...... ae Saree ae Jackson ORTOY isc ene: Colbron Goals — Germantown: Miller, 1; Bryn Mawr: Taggart, 3; Gimbel, 2; Dr. Broughton Surveys ~ Asia Minor Landscape "Continued from Page One tion. It has stamped out banditry and established a new system of pri- mary education to replace the old re- ligious instruction. Tourists are welcomed, but the people are still too Oriental to understand what the tourist demands. .A_ friendly local mayor is quite willing to provide a meal of eggs and curdled milk fpr a traveler, and will even himself eat out of the same bowl’ in accordance with the. best ancient rules of hospi- ‘tality, but only in one or two places did the/use of Flit show any genu- ine infiltration of Western ideas.” “The number of antiquities in Asia Minor,” Dr. Broughton declar- ed, “ruins, inscriptions, ‘old .coins — RICHARD STOCKTON GIFTS BOOKS PRINTS Ts siesiniinsataiiseeniieinsiita cia The Country Bookshop 30 Bryn Mawr Avenue is tiuly amazing.” In the course of his survey he saw the Temple of Au- gustus at Ankora, which bears the mcst important Latin inscription in existence;. the quarries of Synnadic marble, used for buildings in Rome; and the new excavations of the Ro- man market-place at Smyrna, besides many others. Hitherto the Turks ward ruins.” have been utterly unaware of the sig- nificance of their antiquities, but now the famous Roman theatre at Aspen- dus, shown in older pictures as over- grown in trees, has been cleared of vegetation and forbidden to the use of animala—which “constitutes a rev- olution in the Turkish attitude to- —— - —, From the. way you turned,out to our exhibit, and the nice things you said, we know you were pleased with the clothes we'd brought. We’re fond of them, too— wemakeaspecialty of hand-knit sweaters, ~man-tailored hats, clean-cut tweeds. And like you, we’re all for bigger and better Glamour in the evening. The next time you're in the neighborhood of our Fifth é Avenue or suburban stores we hope Philadelphia C..C. Bryn Mawr Harrington, 1. Substitutes — Bryn|| Lending Library— Bryn Mawr, you'll pay us a Visit. We’re sure to have ae pane oe ee eS Simons — Harrington for Stevenson. First Editions Pa. something excitingly new to show oa. ae ae ef Carey | Time of halves—20 minutes. PONOON vce eee G. f. < IC. CLOTHES CON a ja eee ee B tt sey ooey yew COLLEGE INN AND. TEA ROOM ra iis a Evans SERVICE. 8 A. M. TO 7.30 P. M. | a habit on the campus —a hobby at Best’s OW. Ga ee anne Bridgman Daily and Sunday | ee ern Lo a ei cet Bright |. Sen A LA CARTE BREAKFAST : Luncheon, Afternoon Tea and Dinner Pest Se Co CECELIA’S YARN | , , ss heaps . SHOP a ie Carte ang ante ae er Fifth Avenue at 35th Street Seville Arcade } GUEST ROOMS PERMANENT AND TRANSIENT GARDEN CITY MAMARONECK EAST ORANGE BROOKLINE OVERBROOK {BRYNMAWR -< PA.