a ne gage, See . ‘ fe : oes $2. aa a ti Se See ees a = : ON ey | VQip XUL No. 17 BRYN MAWR: (AND WAYNE), PA., WEDNESDAY, MARCH 2, 1927 ee PRICE, 10 CENTS > 72 4 a8 ~ dated second century, showing that the Se EL ee 38 on which Dr. William. T. Sturgis, speak- _ building character. plan of construction? lished. ~ how to, meet people in the street, and a whole, but one passage in particular is PHILOSOPHY IS A DANGER TO YOUTH Dr. Sturgis Strongly Opposed to Study of Philosophy _ for’ Young. « JAPAN - 90% 0% AGNOSTIC “Wisdom is the pbility to make right |° boices in moral issues,” was the text ing in Chapel on Sunday, February 27, based his address. Education alone is not wisdom;. it does not make people more principled or moral. In Japan, 98 per cent. of the adult populatidn literate—as compared to 90 per cent. in this country—and over 90 per cent. agnostic or atheists; for the Japanese all this education. i is dangerous, not use- ful. It is very unwise for the young and isettled person to study the ‘history of philosophy, Dr. Sturgis thinks. Only a very strong person .can touch so fluid.a subject as modern psychology or philoso- phy without risking the moral founda- tions of his life. The results are only disturbing and break down ediucaiae of is “Tn every department education teaches us to make right choices; the doctor, the banker, the lawyer, who is not trained and experienced will make many mis- takes simply because he does not know which of the alternatives facing him is right. But in the case of the physician or professional man, a mistake does not make so much difference; it does» not matter whether we die now or a few years later. Choice of Heaven or the Devil. “The building of character, however, isa matter of life and death; it isa question of. going to Heaven or going to the devil. _We need wisdom to help us make the right choices in moral issues, and the results are important because it is Eternity that is involved.” Dr. Sturgis compared the life of a man to the problem of a bridge builder. We have before us various questions: what kind of material are we going to use? What tools? What place? What The best way to learn is not by studying it up out of a book, but by watching a man who is an expert in the trade. CONTINUED ON PAGE 2 EGYPTIAN LETTERS AN OLD TESTAMENT SOURCE), Advice of Amen-en-ope to His Son Discovered. € ~ “The Scriptures are not purely Hebrew in origin,” declared Dr. Cadbury, speak- ing in Chapel on Friday morning, Feb- ruary 25. “In 1872 George Smith dis- covered a Babylonian tablet containing the story of mankind—including the his- tory of the Flood. In that day men took it as a proof that the story of the Flood was authentic; but modern sch lars think it only evidence that t Hebrews knew the old Chaldean story and made use of it. “In 1902 a book of Egyptian hiero- glyphs was discovered. This is a testi- mony of the second great source of'/i Biblica} literature of which there was no certain evidence before, though much was conjectured. This book, the Wis- dom or sayings of Amen-en-ope, was deciphered in 1922 and a reliable trans- lation into English has just been pub- Its exact age is not known, though copies of it, apparently made by school boys as an exercise, have been book must have been in great repute by that time. : “The book contains advice from a father to his son, telling him how to act, how to behave in. general. The most interesting thing in it for us is its marked connection with the Book of Proverbs; not only the literary ‘style as| taken over ‘in Proverbs 22, 1%. This}: very high and kept up by the action of ‘Banner by getting a final victory AJ a Freshman Try-outs .Try-outs for 1930 for the Edito- rial Board of the -Cou.ece. News _ will be held next week. Freshmen interested in making the board will please ‘come and see _K, Simonds, 42 5.30 to » 6, or from 7 to 7.30 next Monday. Pembroke East, from MODERN VESUVIUS “BURIES AN ARMY Volcanic Splits Show Crust of Earth to Be Only 30 Miles Thick. TAKE STRANGE. FORMS The chief interest in the study of volcanoes; we were told by Dr. Henry Washington, who addressed the college on that subject on Wednesday, February 23, is that they afford an illustration of what the earth is made of. Although they do not. go very far down—they are mere bubbles on the surface of the earth —they show several things; the earth is surrounded bya solid crust only about thirty miles thick, then a mixture of rock and iron and a central core of liquid iron. Volcanoes are the only places where the surface is not solid. The explanation of volcanoes is not very well known; they are reservoirs of lava containing gases. Under high pres- sure the masses of rock liquify and burst forth, solidifying when the ‘pres- sure is released. Their temperature is the various gases on one another. The smoke clouds that are -continually blow- ing off from some volcanoes are mostly steam, and contain sulphuric and hydro- chloric acid. Volcano Forms Cliff in Spain. Dr. Washington showed many _ inter- esting slides of various volcanoes. There is a. strange rock formation—in Spain, caused by a volcano in which the gases blew off with such force and expelled so much molten rock that a large cliff was formed. It ‘is three hundred feet high. and the same thickness, all formed of solidified lava. In: some parts of India the lava covers*the land with a layer 6000 feet thick. In another type of volcano the earth is cracked and out of the fissure the lava pours in immense floes. Stromboli, a small island near Sicily, of volcanic structure. It is a cone with a plateau at the top and has holes 20-70 feet wide. The cone is made of acids like exploded’ foam and was origi- nally very hot. From the holes foam 5 CONTINUED ON PAGE 2 ’°30 CLINCHES BASKETBALL BANNER IN FINAL WITH ’27 Victory of 33 to 12 Due to Superior Teamwork and Speed. . The Freshmen clinched the Basketball of 33-12 over the Seniors on Thursday night. 1930 started off with a rush and had ten poiftts chalked up before ’27 got its bear- ings. From then on they managed to cramp ’30’s scoring ability to some extent. Superior teamwork, passing, and speed on the part of the Freshmen gave them their obvious advantage. The Fresh- men guards were excellent and perhaps made the biggest difference. - Miller, playing forward for the Seaicrs, made the best of her few odd moments of free- dom from their watchfulness: The half ended at 16-4. Both teams were on their toes at.the beginning of the second half. Several minutes of hard struggle en- sued before either side could score, then the superior teamwork of '30 inevitably triumphed. Pitney and Capron made some beautiful baskets for the Seniors, while Johnston was really brilliant for the Freshmen. The line-up was: _1927—J. Seeley, R. Miller, 22; V. Cap- ron, 22; B. Pitney, 22211; A. pewhall, Walker, E. Morris, C. Platt.’ 1930—E. Johnston, 2222222; J. Winter, shows that while . oe Old Testament / ea M.. Dani M: aogamdle & SABBATH TENNIS, BUT NO BRIDGE President; Holds Upnlitnited Power to Make Rules « Known. |: CAN TEST FRESHMEN The Self-Government Assocfation held its next to last meeting on Mon: day, February. 28, to take up the feav resolutions that remained to be dis- cussed. First a motion was Passed giv- ing the president the power to use any means she sees fit to make the ruies known to the association—such as giv- ing the freshmen a test as is -done at Wellesley. Resolutions LI, ITI, IV and VI are to be included in.the new rules: they refer to the postinz of no- tices regarding meetings and testimony in the case of a denial of a charge. Special permission, under the new rules, may be given by Hall Presidents as well as by Senior and Junior mem- bers of the Executive Board. The questions of tennis and bridge on Sundays, ‘and victrola hours pro- voked the most discussion. It was objected that as none of the clubs in the neighborhood permit tennis to be played-on their courts on Sunday, our allowing it might arouse outside crit- icism. - C. Platt, ’27, réplied that the sum- mer school is allowed to play all Sun- day and. outside people would not dif- ierentiate, especially ‘as most of the houses from which the tennis courts can be seen are on Faculty Row. A motion was carried that no rule con- cerning tennis on Sunday. be included in the new resolutions. : e No Sunday Bridge in Public Rooms. Bridge cannot be played in the pub- lic rooms on Sunday, however, for a motion to that effect was overwhelm- ingly defeated. All the halls but Rad- nor have smoking rooms on the ground floor and very conspicuously placed, and it is feared that allowing bridge to be played on Sundays would give a bad impression to visitors. Victrolas can no longer be played on Friday afternoons, and they can- not be moved into individual rooms, with or without special permission. One more meeting next Wednesday will be necessary so that the entire body of rules may be read to the Association. It is the last chance for discussion or disapproval before the Resolutions go to. the Board of .Directors and a quorum will be necessary, so that it is important for everyone to go. J: Seeley Gives Blazers to Thirty-seven Athletes After the basketball game last Thurs- day evening, blazers were awarded by Janet Seeley, ’27, President of the Athletic Association, to all who had won them. Yellow blazers were given, first ‘and most triumphantly, to Miss Applebee and M. Buchanan (who chose a blue one!) and also to J. Seeley, S. Walker, M. Cruikshank, B. Loines, A. Bru- ere. Green blazer with woozy: F. Thay-’ er; green blazer with insignia: E. Brodie, E. Haines, M. L. Jones, E. Morris, A. Newhall, B. Pitney, E. Winchester; green blazer: H. Parker, M. Chamberlain; blue with insignia: S. Stetson, H. Tuttle; blue plain: J. Young, E. Cohoe, F. Bethel, k. R. Jones, C. Rose, M. Pettit, M. Fow- ler; insignia: Js Huddleston, FM. -Guiter- man; red blazers to A. Dalziel, B. Free- man, E. Boyd, M. E. Bryant, R. S. Bry- ant, J. Porter, M. L. Williams, Humphries, R. Wills, C. Swan. BRIDGE TOURNAMENT A new financial and social venture has been latinched on the campus. An All- college Bridge Tournament is being held for the benefit of Varsity Dramatics which has to make $200 before it can give another play. Couples are asked to sign for the tournament at a regis- tration fee of fifty. cents for each player. Matches will first be placed in the halls, after which the .winning couples from championship. This is a chance to show gone prowess ‘and at the same time assist B.] each hall will play each other for the Aria da Capo. The Players will present Aria da Capo by Edna St. Vincent Millay and gwo plays by members, on Sat- urday, March 5, in Wyndham, Ad- mission will be 50 cents. 6, a) ALWYNE AND N. Y. QUARTET TO PLAY Centenary of Beethoven's ‘ Death to Be Observed. in Concert. nnnenlitins, IS_ GREAT ENSEMBLE The last concert of the series given by the Music Department will be played? in Taylor Hall on Monday evening, March 7 at 8.15. The aftists will be-the New York String Quartet and Horace Al- wyne,, pianist. The New York String Quartet was founded in 1919 by Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Pulitzer, of New York. Mr. ‘Pulitzer, who owns The New York World, is well-known ‘as a patron of music and Drama.and in founding the quartet made the stipulation that no public appear- after the date of the foundation. In these three years the' members of the quartet played together constantly, spend- ing their summer vacations together that their work might not be interrupted, in this way laying the foundation for that most important necessity of Chamber Music playing, a fine ensemble. * In 1922 the Quartet made its public debut in Aeolian Hall, justifying in every way the hopes of its founders and taking an immediately place in the fingt rank of the great chamber music or- ance were to be made until three. years ganizations of the day. The program will include _Bethoven’s Quartet in F, Op. 18, No. 1, in memory of the centenary of Beethoven’s death (March 26, 1827), two lighter pieces for ‘quartet, an Irish Melody arranged by Frank Bridge and Percy Grainger’s de- licious Irish Reel ‘Molly on the Shore,” and the great Piano Quintet by Cesar Franck with Mr. Horace Al- wyne as pianist. VARSITY WINS BY 40-17 OVER COLLEGIATE SIX Art of Being in Proper Place and Brainwork Brings Success. Varsity downed the dark horse ‘‘Col- legiates,” 40-17 on Saturday, by judicious use of their heads in combination with their feet. They showed a big improve- ment over the last game t\yo weeks ago: this time they seemed to finction as a team and not as morg -or fless disasso- ciated individuals. Th goal of the game was made by Winter, a good omen. The play see-sawed back and forth from one end of the court to the other, neither, team seeming to have any very huge ad- vantage over the other. More practice and better co-ordination told, however, for the-ball always landed in Bryn Mawr territory eventually. Our team had the art of being placed properly. Loines made. clever use of back passes to Walker: inthe center. A oal by Towns- end, the enemy’s leading lady, ended the half at 20-9 in our favor. “Johnson, subbing for Loines, began the second half with two swift baskets. She is gifted with a wonderful eye which was in perfect working order during the game; Winter’s eye was also working well. In this half the “Collegiates” took a big brace and kept the ball down at their-end much of the time. However, Vaisity was always well in the lead and Loines, disregarding the backboard, ended the game, 40-17, with a beautiful clean basket. The line-up was: Collegiates — Townsend, 212222222; Morris, 2; Barkman, Jerkins, Murphy, Cross. Subs.—Strebigh, Hawes. Varsity—Loines, 22122222; Johnston, 222222 ; Winter, 22221222; Dean, Te Huddleston, —— litt ET SERS oe Leet TOILING AND SPINNING, JUNIORS OUTDO SOLOMON’ Unofficial Play Ha Has Virtues of Spontaneity, Enthusiasm and Comedy. CASTERS “UNDIVULGED” Thanks and coneretsiitaa are due the group of Juniors who provided the college with such excellent entertainment. Wyndham with John Hastings Turner’s amusing “The Lilies of the Field, They overcame the inadequate facilities in a in last Saturday evening comedy, truly magnificent manner, and no clearer indication of the success’ of their pro- duction can be found than the almost chuckles of the audience, plentifully punctuated by outbursts of laughter. In fact if instant respiratory treatment had not been administered to one member of the audience, a dire catas trophe would have occurred. The casting was little short of pure, genius. A committee capable of work of this calibre should certainly figure in the program. But the fact that they surround themselves with mystery gives added interest. After a zealous search, H. McKelvey was identified as the chairman, but the others still remain anonymous. Considering the lack’ of facilities, the scenery and grouping were. excellent, while in the case of the cos- continuous ttuming, these very inadequacies merely heightened. the comic element, at times aimost to the point of the grotesque. It should be admitted, however, that the costumes worn by’ M. Hupfel and M. Coss achieved truly delightful effects. 9 om CONTINUED ON PAGE ACADEMY IS COMMERCIAL AS A TEN-CENT MAGAZINE Pictures by Kroll and Birchfield Among Few Bright Spots. “A collection as commercial as _ the illustrations of a ten-cent magazine,” was the verdict of Miss Georgiana Goddard King on the present exhibition in the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts which she discussed in Chapel pn Wednesday, February 23. The only pos- sible method of approach to this chamber of horrors is to ask: why is it so bad? ’ The Academy, the first of its kind in this country, was founded in 1805 for, the purpose of encouraging the talents of local artists and of giving recognition to artistic merit. But the Academy at present looks like the result of systematic suppression of talent, with the permanent exhibition consisting of third rate copies of second rate painting and the annual exhibition on scarcely higher level; though here and there such bits of color as in the “Still Waters” of Hugh Breck- inridge or a conception like Henry Mc- Carter’s dream church, make a ripple in the dead calm of mediocrity. Work Out of Touch With Life. But the work-on the whole is both out of date and out of touch with life. This is due in part to the lack of self-respect on the part of exhibitors; take Robert Henri’ “Poncita,” for instance; a studio piece, a “bit of practice, with no more place in an exhibition than have the pianist’s morning scales on the concert platform. Be Outworn themes like the “Love Call” take one back to farthest antiquity, and still they are not new; and even. when Mr. Redfield promises “New Hope,” we find that the main street landscape belies the name. The few nudes, mostly in the act of dressing or undressing, show the dullest possible treatment of a potentially in- teresting fitld; while, as always, one en- counters disappointment in the work of artists who showed promise in previous years. Such disappointments are Chapin’s “Old Farmhand,” and Ross Braught’s in- significant landscapes. - A Few Pleasure-Giving Pictures. There are, however, a few, a very few, pleasure-giving pictures in the exhibition. Strange to say, the most remarkable of CONTINUED on PAGE < ha Pe 7 si m di BS alti SH ve : or. ? : 2 e : = < 4 . ¢ = * ’ of 2 : ° r ‘. - : a tele : ° ; 3 A aL : ? e 3 ‘ : ¥ .? “a : ee ee FO ir % ae ; & : ' . , ; ae Ls Cee ‘ ran eo) . THE COLLEGE NEWS ” ° . ; o ‘ * : ‘% r The College > News” (Founded in as Published weekly during th Coll year. in the interest of Bryn wr College at the Maguire Building, Wayne, Pa., and Bryn Mawr College. ‘Bditor-in-Chief, KaTaariNe Srmonps, '27 , nae ears ee 4 the “Medlitertaiieg: at noon,—de- serve to be shown that romance is not confined to the Romantic Peri- od of Literature and Art. Court- ships have been even known to take place in co-edticational _lniversities senate ” "The Pillar ot Salt a in these mundane United States ! IN PHILADELPHIA - Theatres. : oo Broad—Mrs. Fiske, in .Ghasts. Last} week. A great actress in a great trag- edy. Shubert—Vagabond King. ast week. Colorful and tuneful romance. Paul's itself, the beginning of the ser- we nearly died of. ecstacy. E. Sewart Provides Side-Splitting . Comedy. M. Coss_and G, Sampson, as the twins, gave very intelligent characterizations. Although, their acting could hardly,,be \WOrncider the Lilies of the Field,” at oN -éssue.) : ve THE COMMERCIAL INSTINCT That one gets more from college than an education is a truism; but on the other hand, it is often, said that one gets no practical experience that will be of value in the future. Can we’admit this, surrounded as we are by numerous and lucrative money making schemes? The Sandwich Industry alone has grown to such an extent that is is making an almost incredible percentage of profit. What college graduate would ever be reduced to begging, so” long as she could borrow the price of a loaf of bread and a jar of jam? No, instead of appealing to charity, she will open her business on some convenient corner (prefer- ably near a flight of steps), and in no time at all she will be rolling in wealth. Then, there are bridge tournaments. How useful it is to - know the inside workings of so ef- fortless a system of acquiring funds! ‘The Old Clothes Sale teaches more than» the essentials of salesmanship: ‘There is no need to purchase any of the advertised bookson that subject; you have only to conduct a sale in college, and you will lear while you earn, Are not these all practical, useful and profitable ? Judging from the pres- ent situation no college graduate will be a_ failure as a_ business woman ! f BEWARE! It seems that the really important question to ask your iiidband is not whether he. prefers blondes, but rather to what sort of animals he is addicted. A woman (we shall not say lady even though she very prob- ably may have sold things behind a counter!), I repeat, a woman in Chicago seeking a divorce from her husband, told ‘the judge “that her husband had ‘been obsessed with camels.” ‘Three years ago, she said, her husband had taken her to a cir- cus. When she finally urged him to go to see the polar bears he beat her, she charged. A sad story, a very sad story. But listen to what the consequences were: “And then he left me and went to Arabia to join the British camel corps.” A moral should and can be deduced from this moving tale. Remember Barney Google and’ that untrust- worthy mare, Spark Plug,-“ Horses, horses, horses !"— : keep your hus- band away from the zoo, we gather, is the only solution; even animal “erackers may be~ ‘dangerous ; ee 8s Be cigarette advertisements too sugges- tive. . Ales _|nothing really happens, PSurely what people are is more import- that shown people being instead of acting. But that is the very point of the play. Nothing should happen, people living carelessly, without any very Those things that we are we are shown definite point in life. do take place come about by the natural course, of events. Buf how many of us in life do -have, any definite - purpose? ant than what they do, viewed from any standpoint. Here is a slice of life, curately observed and canadian as the critic admits, - but as delightful and charming as a play can be, owing to the fact that the playwright has looked so well, and caught that indefinable some- thing of personality, that we might be looking at something that was going on in our own homes, so active a sympathy does it arouse in us. But E. H. L. did not feel the ails of the everyday in this play. Perhaps she belongs to that large number of theatergoers who do not think a play is good unless it deals with some high emo- tion, or experience, something which, at any rate, lifts us quite out and away from ourselves. These people in their theater-going have lived so long in the clouds, that they do not like the feel of good, solid earth under their feet, which is their natural footing, and with which they should have the most understanding and sympathy. But that is what we have ali the time-in-our-dailytives, they—cry, give us something different when we go to the theater. They do not appreciate the beauty in homely things, the beauty of sympathy and understanding of some- thing that they know well. I am sorry for them. E, S. IS,DULLNESS, WORTH WHILE? ur. wholesale condemnation of Daisy Mayme was. perhaps too hasty, but we still think there is something to be ‘said for such criticism. To us, and surely to almost everyone in this imperfect world, some people in the world are uninteresting; and all the footlights. in the world will never make them less so, unless st are in some: way changed S: that their problems become significant and their activities either beautiful or dramatic. Why should one prefer gaz- ing at a photograph of a dull man to gazing at the dull man himself as he sits along side one, say, in a street car? But if he were presented by a great portrait painter who could make you feeb the beauty of the aspirations of the dullest man, or at least the universality of his dullness, then the portrait would be worth while looking at. graphic reproduction. S. E. S. says that self. other hand, that we are unable to inter- est ours@Wes in the life of people with or recreated by the author’s mind so: George Kelly, however, gives us not a psychological-:portrait but a photo- | we are trying to get away from our-|- ~ But no, we are so Selfish, on the | whom v we can inno way gomnect iprrtbees of what tone to take in your letter. In face of the fact that he has wiped away ‘your tears many a time, and patted your hand, and called’ you a “brave little girl,” a formal business letter seems rather too’ cold and formal., Yet you can hardly say, “Really, ] am just dying to see you again,” or “I’m counting the hours until >|that one which is for you alone,” be- cause he would know you were just handing him a line; and if you were quite truthful, you would not be a lady. x Ok O. Ballad, of the Diurnal Round. When the morning is depressing, And weary cares my life beset; I take comfort in the blessing Of my matutinal cigarette. When the sun ha passed his zenith, And my brow-is damp with sweat From the stress of bridge, or tennith, Hail, post-meridian cigarette! Ere I start my evening reading, (Hours to spend in toil and fret) There is one thing I am needing— -My post prandial cigarette. At the last, when I’m retiring, And would a wasted day forget, I find. solace in’ acquiring A nocturnal cigarette. L’Envoi * Prince, whatever be your sorrows, There remains a comfort yet. There is still, for all tomorrows, | And forever, your matutinal, Post meridian, and post prandial, _ Your nocturnal cigarette ! * oe OF The Season of Stopped Clocks has not closed yet. We read that Big Ben him- self succumbed to the weather or what- ever it is that stops clocks, and ceased to function last week. But the British Government, realizing the importance of time in this limited universe, stationed a man in the face of the clock, to move its hands along second by second. What heroism! We feel that this man should go down in history beside the boy who’ held “ais finger in the hole in the dike. * * Ox Are you struggling to write a sonnet? Try this, it is easier. ._This new yerse form, which we have invented, is called the Sonnette, being indeed, a very little | it is exactly half a sonnet. Sonnette. At dawn to you I sing, O Maid of my desire. I woo you with my Lyre, And love plucks at the string. For all my days I'll sing your praise In lyric lays. -How truly someone has said of it “A. |sonnette is a second’s statuette.” Lot’s Wire. song; in conveying comedy without Stanley—Richard Dix in Paradise, for Two. Stanton—Tell It to the Marines. Lon Chaney and .the Devil Dogs make this excellent, Earle—Leon Errol in The Lunatic at Larye. Beautifully ‘idiotic. Arcadia—i,07 e’s Greatest Mistake, Not what you think it is. Aldine—Old lronsides. epic. Palace—The Kid Brother with Harold Lloyd. Terrifically funny. Victoria—Fuust with Emil Jannings. Last week. Sea Coming. Stanley—Lady in Ermine. Operis March 7. Stanton—Casey at the Bat. Wallace Beery, of Old Jronsides, stars in this. Aldine—John Barrymore in Don Juan with the Vitaphone. Fox—Count of Monte Cristo. Opens March 7. Revival of John Gilbert’s first success. ORCHESTRA PROGRAM The Philadelphia Orchestra will play the following program on Friday after- noon, March 4, and Saturday, March 5: Wanetn ics i eis Passacaglia Carillo- ss Concertino DeBussy .... “L’Apres-midi d'un Faune” Wagner, * : Overture and Venusberg Music From Tannhauser : Coming Music. On March 7 the New York Philahar- monic Orchestra will give a concert at the Academy of Music, playing the fol- lowing program e - On March 7 the New York Philhar- Sibelis «..c3 Overture to the “Tempest” SUPAUSS co ee Don Juan BPaniis <3... s -..+. First Symphony WEDER els cee Overture “Freischuetz” La Boheme and the first act of the Coppelia ballet will be given on Thursday evening, March 10, at the Metropolitan Opera House, by the Philadelphia Civic Opera Comany. JUNIOR PLAYERS PLEASE CONTINUED: FROM PAGE 1 Since the production was not presented as a finished work, it- would be unjust 'to judge it according to such standards. There was a wide range in the quality of the acting. from her former performances, M. Hup- fel was by far the most. finished actress of the cast. Since this was the first time in College Dramatics that she had taken a womar®s part, it was not with- out curiosity amd excitement that we watchd@l her in the role of Mrs. Rooke- Walter. Miss Hupfel, as this society- loving, modern grandmother, avoided falls, over-interpretation. One shudders to think of the result if this role had been interpreted in the manner.-of John Held, Jr. But Miss Hupfel succeeded losing As one might expect, judging: . ° , ‘ ' . @ one of the amateur’s most dangerous pit-$ CENSOR ; ; ; ‘ 27 : Adelphi—The Crown Prince. Basil wey a *) The organizers should ‘have known bil he on ee ghia esha Sidney and Mary Ellis in a foreign suc- called finished, they both showed ability. F * “EDITOR : duties in our life, such as informing our ‘ A. Bruere made an admirable hero as C. B. Ross, '2 that youth has not reached as yet) cess. dia habits Biveits Station, while greeiae pees 23 the philosophic state and that for it friends. that er Gunked, ts five-hour} Garrick—Cradle Snatchers. Last WOU a ae ae say cat ‘sccasmesible H. F, McKatvsr, '28 K.. Baton, ‘29 «| . block, or our family that,we did, but we| Raucous vulgarity. : : + aoa E. H. Linn, ‘29° : R. M, SMITm, ‘93 geometry simply does not ‘fill, the , pie Bryan Ropes, provided really side-split- hey : ee bill. have just accomplished what we consider| Chestnut Street Opera Houst—A Night tin mad ee sbatheds. were bok : CONTRIBUTING EDITOR. | ot asoeaid , : n Spain, Good ‘revue. de PE eg ab M. S. ViLvagp, '27 . the most distasteful of ‘all: we have}! M uisite and mystifyin gap in ions sce g on To oe ; Lat ; Lyric—My Maryland, Highly success- ees ies stag BUSINESS MANAGER > CORRESPONDENCE |written to oir dentist for an appoint- | ia vaslubest sashes, F. Putnam, ds Ann, the Reverend’s all- N.C, Powsan, 3T ; we ks mise ment. And not for one appointment Wisindt . GirdbhnPhitaich-.. “A thes enduring wife, possibly over-stressed the SUBSCRIPTION MANAGER _| To the Editors of the COLLEGE News: only; we have Sutlined all our free time | atrical treat that would benefit b drfbness of her role, but M. Haley's P, W. McELWaIN, 28 ; ) atrical trea at wou nefit by some peoartate fap ’ ‘ In the issue of the news of February] , ¢; ; ; Ae : rich@ brogue as Violet, the Irish maid, annrenaure ; dufing spring vacation, and have re-|redrafting.’—Public Ledger. siiie (hak tiade uo doe tay je as tn f ’ ‘ 3 i - . . t - a %. pe he 28 vi ey verte 28 : “s te quested him: to take @s much or as little Coming. color. The inane roles of the woe R. Cross, '29 me” about as completely as she could.|,. 4. wished! (That's jp lot more. than Chestnut Street—Greenwich Village ian enthusiasts, Lady Rocker and Subscription, $2.50 . Mailing Price, $3.00 Her objection to the play was that it we would do for any other man.) Follies, er Monica wwii waoullanstly interpreted by Subscription may begin at any time. was “realism undeveloped, un- Garrick—Lucky. New isles, M.S li a DP. ier” ivel “Laue ac Gein wattle kt hel; : ee As Writing to your dentist is ticklish busi- Hidad. boris Jessel pay Wa AN eit Salinger an oad respectively, Wayne, Pa., Post Office. stressed,” lacking’ a “point of view, and sess: ‘natde trom the ‘asbocikted yoe Suadee while C. Rose, as, Withers, made a per- : , ~|a definite purpose.” She objects that] : ss +k cs hentia fect butler.- In fact it would not cause (Cornelia Rose, '28, in charge of this pleasantness, there is the great problem Movies. ° us the ledst surprise if, she were taken as the model for the next advertise- ment of White House Coffee. R.'R. VOLCANIC FREAKS CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1 ward. These clouds are grey, black or white in color and come up with tremen- dous force. One volcano that had_ beer" ‘long in- of boric acid. In 1888 there was an eruption and when in 1914 the acids in the craqer were examined they were found to contain absolutely no boric acid. Kilauea Boiling Porringer. One of the most interesting volcanoes is Kilauea in the Hawaiian Islands. If you start at the seashore you will drive thirty miles before arriving at the crater which is a huge hole eight miles in dia- meter. It is filled with boiling lava like a pot of porridge, and is continually in motion, glowing intense red and cooling to a hard black rock in the cracks. Every little while it. blows up, as it did in 1890. A story is told about Kilauea, that during a-war, a division of 20,000 men was sent out and never arrived. Later another -division found them sitting where they had been killed. Even now their footprints can be seen where they walked in the hot lava. before an out- pouring killed them. Kilauea boils —up—periodically,._There was another explosion in 1924, when a column two miles high was sent into the air and with it large lumps of rock. The only active volcano in this coun- try is one in northern California. It blew up a few years ago when melting snow on the hot rock started the erup- tion and huge clouds of water vapor were blown off. Vesuvius’ last eruption was in 1906. A crater appeared which remained quiet until 1914, and then a funnel was dis- covered with smoke pouring out., In 1919 the funnel was covered by a cone ejecting lava. 3 In the Aegean Sea there 1s a strange island formation that is the remains of an old volcano that blew up about 300 B.C. Traces of houses and Greek ruins were discovered on it. A few years ago it erupted again and is now still going. The air around these islands is at a at 169 degrees, Fahrenheit; a cloud and noise, changing form every: minute, and dropping htige stones. HEAVEN OR HELL? ’ CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1 “For the. doubting Christian there is an example ‘at hand for him to study: there is one person who spent thirty years trying to build his character and clouds were always blowing off to lee- ° active was a great source for supplies” oi 1000 years before the Trojan War . temperature of 105 degrees and the water _ rushes yp from it with _ great rapidity . 's an art: what is art, if “it is not an ex- oression of beauty ‘in some form? So that if beauty is missing in the subject, jit must appear in the expression. Our contention, harsh. ian it may seem, s way it either dignity or charm. Furthermore, she made the part live. example, she lines of the. other parts with a spon- taneity equalling that of the audience, who for the most part were viewing the ‘play for the first time. V. Atmore, as the Reverend John Head, father of the twins (and by the was uncanny the way M. Coss and ‘tesembled each other, To give a specific’ laughed. at the amusing - | how to make the right choices, as no one ’ The who learned never to choose wrong. By studying the life of Jesus as it is set forth in the GoSpels, we can best learn how to guide our own. ,He was called by J. S. Mill, a great unbeliever but an equally great admirer of Christ, exempli- fier of the ‘translation of the rule of virtue from the abstract to the con- crete.’ “In the last analysis we all want to be leaders, whether in the home or in some |field of profession, literature or art. The people who lead are those who know. more : clearly than ese it “Living . Street. ‘types of Miss Benson’s. Clifford Cotton, ‘falls in love with her, a changeling of The Poor Man, and Sarah Living Alone. The plot in which they move matters little to their creator, though aJl her characters are: capable of love, adventure, or sudden death. Situation they carry within themselves; they are their own situations. They have the true paradox’ of self-conscious- ness, the combination of extraordinary knowledge of, themselves with ex- traordinary power to imagine them- selves transformed. Many of them, moreover, hurrying from imagination to reality and back again, like the Witch Alone, embarrassed by their magic and making desperate efforts to join the majority, to be a Man in the Broom-stocks are tonvenient for getting around, but awfully, con- spicuous. Goodbye, Stranger presents both these There is Lena, wandering music-hall pianist in China, strangely wis¢ and without hope, see- ing suddenly surprise and victory; and the missionary who che fairies. And there «is Daley, his wife, the contrast, who is Miss Ben- son’s yersion of America. Daley was never self-conscious except about how well she looked in her new three-piece suit and how much Mr. Diamond, the consul, admired her. But after Lena came she could not longer forget the difficulties of living with a changeling husband in the eternal obligato of her beloved Victrola or long talks ‘with the dog Josephine and her puppies (ex- quisite observation of Miss Benson’s of the way women will talk to dogs!). For’a moment. she conscious: “She had never hag, time before to know that she was alive. Now she had a long time in which to wish that she were dead.” A long time—Clifford grew Cotton had walked into an English garden one morning, fondly quarrel- ing with his American fiancee «on whether snapdragons have teeth; and returned a changeling, who. in spite of his clothes carefully modelled on the taste of a bank-clerk in.Changai, his initials C. C. C. stamped on his hand- Brown, in’ Contest. nearly a year no all “ask me aM ther” tests, all essays on prunes and patriotism, all oratorical con- tests, as a source of amusement and a trial of ingenuity. Each week. the con- test is*managed by a prominent English writer. J. G Squire, Gerald Bullett, A. A, Milne, have all been represented, The cgmpetitions are as amusing to read over as they must have been to enter. Here are a few of the propositions. “Render Three Blind Mice ‘in’ the Spenserian stanza.” “Imagine a letter from Lord Beacons- field to Queen Victoria, commenting upon Strachey’s life of her.” “Write a limerick in French. elicited one delightful specimen: Un marin naufrage de Doncastre Pour prier au milieu du desastre Repetatt, a genoux Ces mots simples et doux Scintillez, scintillez, petit astre.) “You are Shakespeare. The producer wants the balcony scene of Romeo and Juliet transferred to a night club. Make Romeo order two dry Martinis there, in 20 lines.” Milne offers:- “Write a soliloquy by an overstrung goldfish in a bowl.” “Tn ten words, make up a telegram for a young lady invited on a week-end who has suddenly been married and wants to break the news and bring her husband.” “A Jane Austen heroine has been ab- ducted by a sheik. Write her letter home to her mother.” All these have real value to arouse the ingenuity and interest of the public, and so have a social purpose far above most (This contests. Two suggestions proved to be very useful to literature. “Write a sonnet on autumn containing neither “s” “me.” “The results of this were successful: the effect of the and “i the mournfulness of the nor enforced use of “o” served to, intensify ject). /— . | have this to say to the in terms of cha u Cleanse and Mold Valaze Pasteurized Face Cream —the basis of beauty — thoroughly cleanses — moulds out “tired lgok”—unsurpassed forall normalskins and the only ‘cream that benefits an oily, pim- pled or acne-blemished skin. Keeps complexion smooth, pro- tected, healthy — an excellent make-up base. 402.(1.00),% Ib. (2.00) recommended Genus is its own reward By HELENA RUBINSTEIN International Beauty Scientist phoM a background of science. . . of thirty years in- tensive study of dermatology and its allied branches oe wisely now in the scientific care of the complexion, and you will be repaid Tavishly . . . romance .. whatever path of life you elect to tread! THREE STEPS TO BEAUTY Valaze bg and Massage Cream—particularly dry sensitive. skins, alternatin with the Pasteurized Cream every other 1 night—idea ‘ for qui¢k removal of dust and make-up.’ (75c, 1.25) American college girl: . through later life... highest success in 2. Clear and Bleach Valaze Beautifying Skinfood —the skin-clearing masterpiece— - animates, Mleaches—purifies and refines, creating an exquisite skin texture. (1.00) 3. Tone and Brace Valaze Skin-Toning Lotion— firms — tones— braces _ tissues; imparts alluring finish. (1.25) Valaze Powders—Complexion, for average or oily skins—Novena for dry skins—exquisitely fine—most subtly shaded. (1.00 to 5.00) Valaze Red Ras pberry Rouge —the original and only authentic raspberry rouge—becoming to every type. Compact or en- Creme. (1.00) —vivid, youthful—adora blondes—flattering evening tint va ren oe. PAR... - LONDON © _ THE WORLD'S FINEST COSMETICS Valaze Red. apcainn. Ronee At the better stores or direct from See 46 West 57th Street, New York Write for “Acne the bane of our youth” a reprint of a lecture ences we cae a Not Yo ‘ | for all types! Compact or en- Creme. (1.00) Valaze Lipsticks— Made on the protective base of Pasteurized Face Cream—in shades to har- monize with rouges. (50c to 1:50) Valaze Vanities—Filled with the superb Rubinstein Cosmetics— Double Compact, Midget Double Compact or Powder Sifter, in Red, or Silvered. (1.50) SOLILOQUY FOR A GOLDFISH? Saturday Review Conducts Amusing The English Saturday Review has for been running a weekly literary ompetition which.puts to shame sub- |' ning pjeces are magnificent—but not often. Here is a field. for enterprise— could you use a weekly-two guineas ? Professors Thumbed Professors’ thumbed the January . 12th issue of the Harvard Crimson nervously in the privacy of their homes, Students nodded approvingly over the:“Crime” or took violent exception to certain opinions printed therein. The reason was a new Confidential Guide to half courses -beginning in the middle gf the year. Each course was w% "A new rule at Ohio State University prevents any Womian from going to or trom an evening party with a. man: in a closed. car. Daily Nebraskan.. 4 - Le i ? % wh oe ? ‘ : a g ; ’ ‘ ° ‘ “ Se ne . % . : ~ » _ ° ® eo ‘ Me * A? e rr we ; . ; ‘ | ; . ¢ oe * . . 3 6 e is A ’ ’ i ry . ; F a : “ r; | es ve at TE COLLEGE NEWS. ..- eee: cone, a ee e ‘ ~ . = - — ' : = = = - - — — Sn ——_—___ | ce Ae es AMONG ‘NEW BOOKS deer ohic’* ~4s0 earl: “§ human identity,| “Compose a if i : oe ¢ e £ bit o rs * ’ * ‘ ‘ , B vow ; e : : ; ’ 4 . ° phe r ead » ‘ eo ha ; a? THE COLLEGE NEWS .~ es eo ne i ; ‘ — 4 8 , : ' i _ ” " e : G ; ss q 2D VAR: ae CONQUERS } Poe, E. Boyd, 999- 2111222 B,- Hump- working people who do not, Seer a inertia’”"r ne deft thief of the pillows in a “HENRY: B. Ww ATLACE” > : ; hries, @; J. Poet, Tt Fs FottOW tin ~~ —— 7a Bas rT AEA BAL BAO AEE AE PH A * “(ERT SOOTY OTY ' Powders give to the flesh the charm of cling- ing fragrance. Used in the. same COTY odeur, the Face Powder and the Taleum fogether _achieve an efféct of complete and exqui- site individuality. \ EACH ONE DOLLAR ~ The compacte in the Coty ‘shades’ and fragrances, contains an unusual quantity of powd.r in compact | bake <. f AW a wiZk DEE PE ae ae = ap: ae “Se ae —s CE DEF IE PO { a Sar teeta _ 4 OME college women add to the joys of life by Telephon- ing Home There IS a reason. Telephone Mother and Dad sonzght, then watch the clouds roll by! Number . once every week. . please! ° ‘ei oo were Recall. Great Events. Jehnin ys, Hood, jqwelers, medalists,) and \stationers - ag the corner on Chestnut and Nineteenth streets, ‘are at present holdthe an Le aceniin of their wery varied-wares in’ the College ,inn. Most interesting are the medals, copies of all. kinds of plaques and de- signs ‘that have been cast for innu- merable .great occasions in the past fifteen. years: a peace medal com- memorating the armistice, a French design, for Le Soldat Inconnu, the veda! ’ presen’ ‘ed to Coolidge, when the«Dela-|- ware shridge was’ .opened, etc. The lineaments ofall our great men and great | ‘polit cians since | 1860 are = pre- served, iw ‘immutable B: Branze Aestheti- cally," {Ke most charming of the ex- hibit’s ,are a design of a man. taming a wild: horse &nd: a French relief of a flute.:’p'ayer, ‘surprisingly set’ in polished. hut unvarnished :wood. Buti. bv far the most fascinating ate two nie ‘lals which call up, disturbing memorics: one 's a medal cast in Ger- many in June, 1915, representing on sidé’the sinking’ of the Lusitania; on the other, unsuspecting passengers buying tickets af\a Cunard ticket win- dow, Jabeled, strange anomaly, Aus- gaben Fahrkarten. Strange to say the date written underneath is three days before! the sinking took place—and the Lusitania sailed three days late! Side by side with this medal is a retalia- tory one—the old exaggerated war- time features of the Kaiser, encircled by the words, “The Foe of Freedom.” ON? For the more frivolous minded there are the arts of Princeton eating clubs and all varieties of West Point. in- signia—material for any number of imaginative romances, Also there are some really fine athletic medals, one large one cast for the Olympic stadium in Stockholm; while besides the bronze and plaster reliefs there are any number of more utilitarian articles, such as desk sets and leather goods, probably more stimulating to the buyer, if not to the reporter. IN OTHER COLLEGES New Tests or Old. Shall we keep employing the old tra- ditional test or exam in which the stu- dent writes and writes until he can write no more or shall we use instead a form of short answer test? Of course, wearied teacherswith—endlesspapers—to—correct, most of which are filled with “irrelev- ancies and meaningless generalities,” and students with a meager time limit would wélcome it, but the authorities are still doubtful. ° ‘At a recent " meeting of the American Association of Applied Science the short dent's esa ig yiekled by the short’ an- | ay r type question. 2 —The possibilit® ot making ‘a wide ‘sampling’ of informa-, tion. and judgment, 3.—Saving of time 4.—The demands of the short an- swer are more definite. 5.—Elimination of extraneous factors. 6.—Short answer questions lends itself, to standardization: 7.—The student istforted to do more in- dividual thinking and’ logical organizing, & swer. University Hatchet. (George Washington. ) coitiinsdviieinaieiianantaniaenttiiinaalineinads { Hazing Favored. The majority of freshmen at West Virginia University are strongly in favor of haziiig;’ “To be a freshman and not be under any restrictions takeg he zip out of being "a freshman,” said ne, : ; * Stanford Daily. “| + Sororities Close at 8 P. M. The doors of sorority houses at thd University of Denver will be closed and } ee re t so that fraternity men will attend their meetings. more. promptly. So Bright! It is claimed that the students of George’ Washington University will not allow even a worthy professor to put anything over on them. A class at that college recently waited some fifteen minutes for its prof. to show up. When he failed: to do so, they unanimously ex: cused themselves, The next day the prof. claimed that he had been in class because he had left his hat on the desk. When he came to class the following day, he found hats abundantly scattered over the seats but nary a student. This seems to be a case of “Present in hats but not in body.” Tomahawk (Holy Cross.) : Smoking at Stanford. Stanford women just having voted to permit. smoking on the campus, are finding that they are getting some of the same sort of unfavorable publicity as Bryn Mawr received when we acted simi- larly last year. In a recent Stanford Daily there were letters of protest from two women students accusing the Daily of being responsible, which the Daily denies. No More Dueling. Dueling with rapiers, a favorite pre- war pastime of German student fraterni- ties, has been declared unlawful by the Supreme Court of Leipzig. nn a noon wy wry > SPEND A GAY SPRING VACATION IN PINEHURST Good times are ever present during Spring at Pinehurst. Sports in the fragrant land of long-leafed pines. Nature in her happiest dress, blossom-trimmed. Companionship. Gayety, day and eve- ning. No wonder its pleasures attract ever-increasing numbers of young men and women for their Spring vacations. as College girls from-everywhere will be at Pinehurst with their “friends enjoying golf on four famous 18-hole courses, designed and personally supervised by Donald J. Ross; tennis, archery, riding, rifle and trapshooting, the races and other sports. | Special Spring tournaments for women include the Twenty- fifth Annual United North and South Amateur Golf Championship North and South Tennis Tourna- ment (men’s singles, women’s singles, men’s doubles, and mixed doubles), April 11, 12, 18, 14, 15, 16.. The Horseshow is held April 4-5. Make your reservations ‘at the Carolina, famous for ‘its tempt- ing menus and luxury of serv- ice. Modern ment. Every room has es . ’The New Holly Inn Berkshire also a and first-run = G evening. Ad- SE eeaael _—, Pinehurst, for Women, March 24, 25, 26, 28, 29; the Ninth Annual United in giving ‘and correcting“ the shoft an-. locked at 8 o’clock on Monday, evenings, | eM agwr’s collection, are now on-yiew in Aurea of Jacobus de Voragine, in Nuremberg, 1488, two Aldines of 1515, +, edition of Catullus, printed in Venice in Hound, in 1602, and the complete works '|of Julian the Apostate, in Paris, 1630. A. “numbers of ingenabets part of Bryn ° , . the stacks of the “Library. There are many ‘interesting and famous works in this. éxhibit, ‘tor exampie, the Legenda printed Lute tuis And Leican, the first Aldine 1502, Robert Ricorde’s Teaching of the Perfect Worke and Practice of. Arith- meticke, London, at the Sign of the Grey Week of- = ted 28 ». WRPNESDAY and THURSDAY “Corporal Kate” FEATURING ‘VERA REYNOLDS ————$—_____--_4- _ FRIDAY and SATURDAY ~ “Tin Hats” 4 WITH CONRAD NAGEL AND CLAIRE WINDSOR COMEDY NEWS “TRAVEL 1S THE OF ALL KNOWLEDGE” A travel program visiting erland, Italy,-Belgium and ership of university people. . first-class hotels, sightseeing in small groups, mod- Membership limited. Apply to HARRIET E. O’SHEA erate cost. AMERICAN STUDENTS NINTH SEASON 4 F. J. Haley, 599 West End Avenue, New York TRUE SOURCE ABROAD England, France, Switz- Holland -ynder the lead- Comfortable travel, _ Except its convenient blecuit form, its taste -inviting crispness, its. Nature-. given, Pd seabtanai tonic benefits. eee *That’s. one reason Carefully separated, com- pletely cleaned, perfectly shredded, and thoroughly cooked whole wheat grains — that’S all there is to Not a chance of that lead-like, loggy feeling even during early Spring—if you make a daily habit of Shredded Wheat. why this prince of whole wheat cereals graces the training tables of so “many colleges and schools. me — ‘a , i , " iy 33 ’ ’ : c 4 : “y : » 4 . ? : & oo ae Tg sae hes : ° ro oe a ee ee : ry . nf 6° ! , ot seer rHeE COLLEGE NEWS: te ge ee =e ge get tebainaitineidh seschainipeannt —_____—— ae —— = ; ; “4 eA © “ahOWRE MEDALS OF ALL saree seat mree anpicded by Ds] Tneunabals of SEVILLE’ “THEATRE rwpadne Orders Presi, ition scar unter of -George Washington | nose on KHKDS EXHIBITED AT- ANN University. In his talk to the Association! ~ Poets Sho iy aed BRYN MAWR r WILLIAM GROFF, P. D- > , se PRESCRIPTIONIST. .- Reliefs “Shown by "Jennings. ‘Hood Hie enumerated severt advantages: f.—A f own in Liorary : niuch* more. valid meastire of the sth- 2 Prégram me . Tee Pie Whitman Chocolates 803 Lancaster Ave., Bryn Mawr, Pa. + ~ Bb g jewelers Shiversmuths : SMalioners : e Established 1882 PHILADELPHIA | THE GIFT SUGGESTION mailed upon request illustrates and prices BOOK JEWELS, WATCHES, CLOCKS, SILVER, CHINA, GLASS afid NOVELTIES a from which may- be selected distinctive WEDDING, © BIRTHDAY, GRADUATION AND OTHER GIFTS MAKPRS. OP THE OFFICIAL — BRYN MAWR COLLEGE SEALS AND RINGS —— e STREET LINDER & PROPERT OPTICIAN 20th and Chestnut Streets Philadelphia JEANNETT’S BRYN MAWR FLOWER. SHOP Cut Flowers and Plants Fresh Daily Corsage and Floral Baskets ° r a Old-Fashioned Bouquets a Specialty Potted Plants Personal Supervision on All Orders Ki Phone: Bryn Mawr 570 823 Lancaster Avenue f SECSSSSSS ONE SSSSSSSOSSS OD THE HEATHER Mrs. M. M. Heath Seville Theatre Arcade Minerva Yarns, Linens, Silks, D. M, C., Sweaters, Beaded Bags, Novelty Jewelry Instructions Given M. METH,,. Pastry Shop 1008 Lancaster Avenue ICE CREAM and FANCY CAKES FRENCH and DANISH PASTRY We Deliver HIGHLAND DAIRIES Fresh Milk & Cream for Spreads 758 LANCASTER AVE. Bryn Mawr Telephone: BRYN MAWR 882 LUNCHEON, TEA, DINNER Open Sundays CHATTER-ON TEA HOUSE 835 Morton Road Telephone: Bryn Mawr 1185 _ RN |MAIN LINE VALET SHOP BERNARD J. McRORY Riding and Sport * Clothes Remodeled — and Repaired Cleaning and Dyeing - Moved to 2a FL. over GAFFNEY’S NOTION STORE . Next to Pennsylvania Railroad EXPERT: FURRIERS ——— OO" _Mopern LITERATURE '- First Eprrions THE CENTAUR BOOK SHOP 1224 Chancellor St. PHILADELPHIA JUST’ BELOW WALNUT AT 13TH —_—_—=_=£_——X—X—XK—X—_—XX*_*= i THE ; BRYN MAWR TRUST CO. CAPITAL, $250,000.00. Does a General Banking Business ° Allows Interest on Deposits DO YOU KNOW where to find a age for any oc- ‘casion—to fit aap at _ & Practical pric aS "MATTHEWS SHOP