Some items in the TriCollege Libraries Digital Collections may be under copyright. Copyright information may be available in the Rights Status field listed in this item record (below). Ultimate responsibility for assessing copyright status and for securing any necessary permission rests exclusively with the user. Please see the Reproductions and Access page for more information.
BRYN MAWR, PA., TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER. 28, 1920 _
Prine 10 Cents
: President Thomas, after a year’s ab-
sence, will open the thirty-sixth academic
year of Bryn Mawr College with a wel-
come address to the Freshmen in Chapel
tomorrow morning.
Of the entering class of over a hundred,
several members have noted parents: H.
Simkhovitch is the daughter of Dr. Vladi-
mir G. Simkhovitch, professor of Economic
History at Columbia University and
trustee of Greenwich House, social service
center, and Mrs. Mary Simkhovitch, the
noted social economist. Both her parents
are authors of books on social economic
problems.
A. J. Wise is the daughter of Rabbi
Wise, head of the Zionist movement in
New York, who represented Jewish inter-
ests at the Peace Conference. M. L.
White is the daughter of one of the direc-
tors of Bryn Mawr College.
The father of M. Angell is a member
of the Rockefeller Foundation,
Ten Freshmen have had sisters in col-
lege. R. Murray is, the sister of H. Mur-
ray Busselle ex-'02; H. Dillingham of
Louise Dillingham, '16; J. Bensberg of
Betsy Bensberg, '16; J. Gregg of Marian
Gregg, ’20; J. Prewitt of M. Prewitt,
ex-'20; M. Cooke of D. Cooke, ’22; C.
Fountain of A. Fountain, ’22; M. Palache
of J. Palache, ’22, and M. Beaudrias of
I. Beaudrias, ’23.
Of the four matriculation scholarships
available to members of the Freshman
Class, three have been awarded this year.
M. Minott, prepared by the Brearly School,
won the scholarship for the New York
State division with a grade of 83.40. A.
Shiras, from the Ethel Walker School, was
awarded the scholarship for the New Eng-
land States with a grade of 83.55. K. Van
Bibber, of the Bryn Mawr school, holds
that of the Pennsylvania division with
81.01.
No scholarship for the Western States
was given this year since no candidate
reached the required standard.
ALL-AMERICAN HOCKEY TEAM TO
TOUR ENGLAND AND SCOTLAND
For the first time in the history of Amer-
ican Hockey a team of American women
will tour England this Fall playing matches
against the English and Scotch university
women’s teams ending with matches
against the Scottish women’s team and the
All-England team. Organized by the
a Misses Cheston, of the Philadelphia
Cricket Club, in answer to a challenge
from England, the team and subs began
daily practices on September 20th. All the
league players in the Philadelphia League |
were asked to try out. Gertrude Hearne,
‘19, and Mary Morgan, '15, are trying for|
positions. While in England Miss Apple-
hee arranged the details of the tour for |
the American team and has been coaching |
the players. Before sailing matches will |
. he played against the Bryn Mawr Varsity |
and against the league club teams. The’
team colors will be cadet blue and white.
The colors of the All-England team are|
red and white.
REELERS AND WRITHERS WILL
CONFER WITH NOTED POET
Robert Frost, the New England poet,
has been secured by the Reeling and)
Writhing Club to give four or five con-|
ferences on the
The date has
decided. Members
bring own
i
art of
yet
of
writing poetry. |
been definitely
the Club who!
material eriticism,
not
their for
are eligible to conferences
| Emma
| Politics.
Endowment Totals $2,191,346.56
During the summer $91,346.56 has been
contributed to the Endowment Fund.
Since the Drive closed at Commence-
ment with $2,100,000 no effort has been
made to raise a third million, but numer-
ous gifts have been received bringing
the national total to $2,191,346.56.
Margaret G. Blaine 13, executive sec-
retary of the Alumnae Association, takes
the place of Bertha Ehlers, '09, who has
resigned and will head the Publicity Com-
mittee which is preparing for a year of
work. Miss Blaine was chairman of the
New England Committee for the Endow-
ment Drive, and during the war she was
on the War Trade Board at Washington.
The Alumnae Quarterly, beginning
January Ist, will be issued as an Alum-
nae Magazine every month. Miss Blaine
will be the editor instead of Isabel Foster,
15, editor of the Quarterly,
Nine New Foreign Scholars Enter
Bryn Mawr as Graduates
Four British scholars, three French, a
Scandinavian and the first holder of a
Spanish Scholarship enter the graduate
school this fall. Maria Luisa Garcia-
Dorado, of Sierra Morena, the Spanish
scholar, took her Licenciada, equivalent to
an M.A., in Philosophy, at the University
of Salamanca and has been studying for
a doctor's degree at the University of
Madrid. Her father is professor of law in
the University of Madrid.
Charlotte Churchill, British scholar from
the Sorbonne and Oxford, was a Red
Cross worker in devastated France during
the war and has been secretary of the
British Office of the French Red Cross.
At Oxford, she took Second-Class Hon-
ours in Honour School of English Lan-
guage and Literature and was Gilchrist
Scholar, 1916-18. Theresa Kathleen Kelly,
of Dublin, Ireland, A.B. with Honours,
University of Ireland '16, has been a civil
service employee since her graduation,
duty. From Britain also come Florence
Duncan, of London, Somerville College,
Oxford, First Class Final Honour School
of English Language and Literature, ’20,
and Mildred Tonge, of Bolton, Lancashire,
Newnam College, Cambridge, First Class
in English Tripos Part '19, and Part 2, '20.
Suzanne Chambry, of Paris, took her
Baccalaureate in Latin and Philosophy, and
License in English, diplome d’etudes su-
perieures d’anglais, She was a student at
the Sorbonne, "13-16, and assistant at the
University of Birmingham ‘16-18, and is
candidate for the Agregation in English.
Georgette Vernier, Baccalaureat in Latin
Languages and Philosophy '16-'17, was a
student at the Sorbonne '17-'20, preparing
for the License in History and Geography. |
Jean Galland took her Baccalaureat at!
Montpellier; ‘18, and = studied there
for |
| two years.
Scandinavia is represented Ruth
Maria Rehnberg, of Upsala,
She studied at the University of
"15-'17, specializing in History and
From April, "18, to the present
been assistant in the Upsala |
by
Sweden.
Upsala
she has
Library. |
/MILLICENT CAREY ELECTED 1920's.
| dent physician by
PERMANENT PRESIDENT
1920 elected its permanent class offi-
as |
‘ . 5 : | ogy,
exanuner ot income tax claims and stamp |
Choose Freshmen Committee
The Freshman committee, which has
been chosen by 1922 to run the class for
the first five weeks, is Elizabeth Price,
Ethel Walker School, Simsbury, Vt.;
Elizabeth Pearson, Germantown Friends’
School; Blanche McRae, Northrop Col-
legiate School, Minneapolis, Minn.; Vir-
ginia Miller, Abbot Academy, Andover,
Mass., and Dorothy Gardner.
Miss Gardner and Miss McRae were
presidents of student government in their
respective schools. Miss Pearson was
vice-president of her class and head of
student government.
The plan of having a Freshman com-
mittee was adopted by 1920 for 1922.
Before that time the Freshman class was
run by a temporary chairman chosen by
the Juniors.
Sixteen Changes in Personnel of
Faculty and Staff
Sixteen new members have been added to
the faculty and staff for 1920-21, to take
the place of those who are leaving. The
list of resignations includes Dr, Brooks,
associate professor in Physiology and Bio-
Chemistry; Miss Dorado, instructor in
Spanish; Miss Bezanson, instructor in So-
cial Economy and Social Research; Dr.
Derry, instructor in Political Economy;
Dr. Bye, instructor in History of Art; Dr.
Ware, instructor in History; Louise Wat-
son, '07, Business Manager; Dr. Rea, Resi-
dent Physician; Alice Hawkins, 07,
warden of Merion; Miss Geer, reader in
English Composition. Dr. Wilmer Cave
Wright, associate professor of Greek, who
is taking her sabbatical year, has been
appointed one of the directors of the
American Classical School at Athens.
Dr. Anna Baker Yeats will succeed Dr.
srooks as assistant in Physiology and Bio-
Chemistry. Dr. Yeats, A.B. Mt. Holyoke
and Ph.D. Columbia, has been assistant in
Chemistry, Barnard, instructor in Physiol-
Mt. Holyoke, and teaching fellow in
Physiology, University of Minnesota.
During the summer of 1918, she instructed
in Physiology and Hygiene in the Mt.
Holyoke course for Health Officers. Since
then she has been special investigator for
the Women’s Branch of Industrial Service,
secretary of the Chicago District Ordinance
Department and instructor of Physiology
at Wellesley.
Mr. Cyril Armstrong, of England, Uni-
Greek, and Mr, Joachin Ortega, M.A., the
lecturer in Spanish. Mr. Ortega has been
assistant professor of Roman Languages
versity of Cambridge, will be lecturer in|
in the University of Wisconsin and at the
trial Research Miss Gladys Boone,
| Final Honor School in English Language |
103146
University of Chicago. He holds the hon- |
orary position of assistant professor in|
Spanish universities.
In the department of Social and Indus- |
A.M.
and A.B. Birmingham University, will be
instructor. She was the first holder in 1920
of the Rose Sidgewick Memorial Fellow-
ship and has studied labor questions in|
England. Gwendolyn Hughes, fellow
year in Social Economy, will be statistical |
secretary for the department.
The position of business manager will |
filled by Edith Adair of
Rockefeller last that of resi-
Sands. New
Middlemore, ;
last |
he ‘09, warden
year, and
Dr.
are
Jane
English Readers Miss
wards on the
PRESIDENT THOMAS SKETCHES.
ITINERARY OF TRAVELS
Metre: Eben. ‘Yausend Miles in
Eleven Countries
Specially Contributed buted by President
Thomas
I understand that you think that the
readers of the College News may be inter-
ested in the itinerary of my travels and the
names of my traveling companions. I left
New York on the Cunard liner Aquitania
on June 30, 1919, with Dean Helen Taft
(Bryn Mawr, 1915), now Mrs. Manning.
I returned on the same steamer, reaching
New York September 17th, having been
away just one year, four months and
seventeen days, of which thirty-two and
a half were spent on the perfectly well
behaved seas: seventeen days on the At-
lantic (sixteen crossing to England and
back and one going from Tangier to
Casablanca on the Moroccan coast); eight
days on the Adriatic (going from Trieste
to Egypt and back); fourteen and a half
days on the Mediterranean (one and a
half going from Spain to North Africa and
back; six from Italy to Greece and back;
four from Athens to Crete and back; two
from Beirut, Syria, to Joppa, Palestine) ;
one day on the Aegean Sea around Salamis
to Aegina; one-half day on the English
Channel crossing to France and back.
Travels With Dean Taft
Dean Taft and I spent ten days in
London, where, as hotel rooms were im-
possible to secure, my cousins Alys Russell
(Bryn Mawr '90) and Logan Pearsall
Smith lent us their house and servants;
ten days in Paris; four days in a beautiful
villa in the Fiesole hills above Florence,
which was lent us with servants and
motors by my cousins, Mr. and Mrs. Bern-
ard Berenson. While there we motored to
Volterra and Sienna and spent two days on
the Florence galleries. Then we went to
Rome and Naples, and from Naples we
made excursions to Pompeii and Capri and
took motor the beautiful coast drive
from Sorento to Salerno after spending
one night each at Ravello and Amalfi.
When Dean Taft sailed for home at the
end of August, I was joined by Alys
Russell, and we spent fifty-one days (Sep-
hy
(Continued on Page 2)
MISS HELEN TAFT MARRIED
IN JULY AT MURRAY BAY
Acting-President Helen Taft
Mr. Frederick Johnson
Manning, Instructor of History at Yale
July 15. The wedding
Former
was married to
University,
took place at the little stone church of
Murray Bay, Canada.
On the day of the ceremony towns-
people and friends crowded the lawn
before the church, vieing with each
other for the first view of Miss Taft.
She was greeted with cheers when she
arrived in a carriage covered with a home-
} spun couvert in honor of the occasion.
Miss Edith Morgan, of New York, was
maid-of-honor, and Miss Taft's’ two
nephews were her pages. The cere-
mony was performed by the Rev. Dr.
Symionds.
The wedding breakfast was held after-
Taft lawn where Sir Lomer
Gouin made a speech in French on the
Li eleia ge |honor which had heen. conferred on
lc after C ‘ncement las ine. | tere P x an atharine
cers. alter Commencemen last une. | and Herarare, Oxtord, an at | Murray Bay. Later the bride and groom
| Millicent Carey is president; Lois Kellogg,| Forbes Liddell, "10, who has studied MT ie bn ttn whack in a nates cocks
| clee aeestieek: Masa Cladias. we as-| Oxford and been instructor in English decorated with peonies and ribben and
— . IC sition at Miss Madeira’s School and : : : . :
urer; Dorothy Smith, corresponding sec | Composit with an old tennis shoe tied behind.
} | Wellesley College. Miss Liddell is a cousin \s they boarded the boat they were
retary; Margaret Littell, recording sec- ae van
j of V. Liddell, ‘22 showered with confetti by those on the
F ary: Li ; : lass collector .
retary: Darthela Clark: cle collecte Dr. Eleanor Louisa Ward, A.B. Smith, wharf. and. were cheered and sune to
* tine ny ‘
May 29, 1921, is the date set for 1920's Ph.D. Bryn Mawr, Dean of Goucher Col- till the boat cot under way Mr. and
first reunion The second will te held levee, is warden of Rockefellar, and Mar- Mrs Manning spent their wedding trip
} . : \i} .
raduation (Cedtinued en Pant OW Mountains
a ee
Betty eo was assisting manager of
this issue.
Notice to Subscribers
The effect of the rise in the price
of paper and of labor difficulties in
the printing business has made ne-
cessary an increase in the rates of
the News. The mailing price will be
$3.00 and campus subscriptions $2.00.
It is with great regret that the News
board has accepted the resignation of
Catherine Dimeling, '21. Miss Dimeling,
who has been on the News since last
November, will be married this month.
PRESIDENT THOMAS
President Thomas occupies a position
at the helin of Bryn Mawr that the most
capable substitute can hardly fill. She
not only controls efficiently all the ma-
chinery of the ship, but understands
thoroughly the needs of her crew. Her
knowledge of the course the boat must
steer and her clear vision of the port
towards which it heads make her an in-
valuable captain, one whom the whole
ship welcomes back to guide it over the
deeps and shoals of 1920-21.
The C. A. Handbook
Baedeker is no longer alone in his glory
as guide to the traveler in foreign lands.
The committee that issued this year’s
C. A. Handbook has justly won the grati-
tude of Freshmen on their first journey
to Bryn Mawr. The all-inclusive booklet
is well arranged and interesting; it is an
addition to the library of any under-
graduate.
ALUMNAE NOTES
ex-’04, represented the
Japanese women at the International
Women’s Suffrage Convention which
was held in Geneva, Switzerland, last
June. Miss Kawai spoke at the inter-
national Y. W. C. A. conference held in
England in May.
Mrs. Joseph Lindon Smith (Corinne
Putnam, ex-'97), has published a book
“Rising Above the Ruins in France,”
which is based on her own investigation
made at the request of the French gov-
ernment.
Cynthia Wesson, ‘09, has an appoint-
ment as Instructor in Physical Training
at Wisconsin University.
Isabel Foster, ‘15, is. an
editor and feature writer on the Christian
Science Monitor.
Michi Kawai,
assistant
Catherine Arthurs, 12, is studying for
a Ph.D. at Johns Hopkins this Winter.
Annette Gest, 18, is teaching at Penn
Hall School, Chambersberg.
Mary Tyler, ‘19, is working in Phila-
delphia this Winter as an organizing sec-
cretary for the Y. W. C. A.
Anna Sanford, '20,
Dwight School, oe J
>. is teaching
is teaching at the
Virginia Park, at the
Sunset Hill a | in Kansas City
is academic head
at Devon Manor
Alice Beardwood, '17,
and teacher of History
School Marie Litzinger, *20, is
teaching there
Smith, "16, has taken Laura
‘15, place as teacher of Math-
also
Agnes PI
Branson's,
emathics at Miss Shipley’s School
a Tapa ‘this ‘summer, w e .
1) Mawr alumnae and two ufidergraduates.
Harriet Houghteling, ex-'07, was act-
ing superintendent of St.» Anthony’s: Or-
phanage in Newfoundland. Marion
Moscly | 19, and Elizabeth Fuller, 19,
were in Newfoundland investigating the
question of malnutrition of children and
working on cases. Miss Mosely studied
the subject in Boston last spring. Dr.
Grenfell said that if the work on mal-
nutrition had been done before, one-half
the professional doctors’ labor would
have been saved.
Marynia Foot, °21, and Margaret
Kinard, '22, had charge of separate vil-
lages in Labrador.
CAMPS ATTRACT B. M. WORKERS
Others Tutor; One Teaches Millinery
Of the varied positions held by under-
graduates this summer, counsellor in a
girls’ camp was most popular.
Helen James, ’21, and E. Boswell, ’21,
acted in this capacity at Camp Runoya;
Miss Boswell had charge of the dancing
and managed the camp pageant. E. Ander-
son, '22, and M. Tyler, '22, were at Asquam
and L. Reinhardt at the Lanier Camp. B.
Kellogg, ’21, was counsellor and Latin tutor
at Drumtochty and J. Fisher, ’22, coun-
sellor at Kenjockctee, where she tutored
President Thomas’s niece.
The Germantown summer school was
managed by I. Lauer, ’21, and C. Baird,
22, taught millinery in New York. H.
Murray, ’21, and C. Cameron, '22, tutored
in private families. A. Woodruff, ’22, and
E. Rhodes, ’23, took positions as gov-
ernesses.
News in Brief
Three Model School Pupils, P. Coyne,
B. Tuttle, and P. Fansler, are members of
the Freshman ClaSs.
D. Lubin, ’21, and G. Lubin, ’21, will be
non-resident scholars this year. They will
live with their mother, who has rented Otis
Skinner's house in Bryn Mawr.
The Lantern will be the name of the
Bryn Mawr undergraduate quarterly, for-
merly the Bryn Mawr Review.
nightly single sheet, The Welsh Rarebit,
will contain humorous verse and cartoons.
M. Warren, ex-’21, class hockey captain,
Sophomore and Junior year, is going to
Radcliffe College this winter.
One of the winners of the Women’s
Tennis Doubles, at Wiano, Mass., this sum-
mer, was K. Walker, '21.
A. Nicoll, ’22, was golf champion of
North Haven this summer.
C. La Boiteaux, '22, will attend Barnard
College instead of returning to Bryn
Mawr.
D. Cooke, ex-’22, is not ‘returning to
college. She will spend the winter study-
ing in Honolulu.
C, Skinner, ex-'22,
studying at the Comédie in Paris.
Skinner took part this summer
father’s movie production of Kismet.
will spend a year
Miss
in her
The Spanish trip, which was planned for
last summer, did not take place, since suit-
able accommodations could not be found.
M. Prewitt, ex-’20, is returning to col-
lege this year as a Sophomore.
SOPHOMORES LOSE MORE MEMBERS
THAN OTHER CLASSES
Twenty-one students will not return
to college this Autumn, since three mem-
bers have been dropped from 1921, seven
from 1922, and eleven from 1923.
Seniors who have left college are 1.
Ward, C. Dimeling and M. Warren. D.
Cooke, A. Dunn, K. Haworth, H. Guth-
rie, C. La Boiteaux, H. Landesman and
Mem-
Bright,
Hussey,
J. Wright are the seven Juniors
bers missing from 1923 are E.
H. Hagen, A. V. Head, M. W
I. lacobi, E. lennings, E. H
S H. Thomas, M. E. Wehr and E. D
Wheeler
Kaseberg,
ae a
Building which has been bought by the
its soldiers. The drive for the money
was organized during the’ summer, and
in the work Paces played an active
part.
as well as the Community Center, the
offices of the American Legion, the Fed-
eration of Churches, the Main Line
Citizens’ Association, and the Home
Service Section of the Red Cross. The
Center has most space, occupying six
large rooms. On the ground floor are
the office, library and reception rooms,
and upstairs are a sunny kindergarten
room and club rooms for girls and boys.
The gymnasium of the Church of the
Good Shepherd has been rented for two
afternoons and three evenings a week,
and the Center has the use of the new
grounds as a playground. There is a
basket-ball field, and the greenhouse is
to be used as a carpenter shop and play-
house.
Night school, which began on Septem-
ber 8th, is the only activity started as
yet. The classes are twice as large as
last year, with many new boys who have
just come to the country this summer
and who have no knowledge of English.
The classes are held this year on Mon-
day, Wednesday and Thursday.
Preston Starts With Fair
“Preston Painting Party, come paint
with your pennies,” is the slogan of the
outdoor fair which wil -start—aectivities
at Preston on October 2nd. All the
neighborhood is co-operating in order to
raise money to paint the outside of the
building. Fortune-telling, 10-cent straw
rides and an exhibit of school garden
products wil be among the attractions.
FIRST CHAPEL SERVICE LED BY
DR. GEORGE A, BARTON
Dr. George A. Barton, chaplain of the |
college, will preach at the first Sunday
evening service in the chapel on October
2nd, at 7.30.
Professor of Biblical History and
Semitic Languages at Bryn Mawr, Dr.
Barton was at one time director of the
American School of Oriental Research
in Palestine. He and Dr. Morris Jas-
trow are two of the greatest living au-
thorities on Oriental subjects.
Dr. Barton collaborated with Dr.
Johnston Ross in making the College
Prayer Book, and wrote many of the
most beautiful including the
special college prayer. He has also writ-
ten numerous books on archeology and
Biblical literature.
Among the other speakers who have
been secured for the year are: Dr.
Coffin, Dr. Stuart Tyson, Mr. Wilbert
Smith, international’ secretary of the
¥. M: C. A.; Mr. Jonathan C: Day, Mr.
Higginbottom, Dean Brown, of Yale;
Bishop Du Moulin, Dr. Gunsauters, Dr.
Fitch, Dr. Melish, Mr. Robert E. Speer,
and Dr. Johnston.
prayers,
RED CROSS SCHOLARS HERE
Graduate students holding Red Cross
scholarships will study at Bryn Mawr this
vear. These scholarships of the value of
$600 are being offered for the purpose of
training and preparing women for service
in Red Cross work.
Cc. A. CONFERENCE HELD AT
WHITFORD
students attended the C.
Whitford Lodge, last
Under the leadership of Dean
Smith plans for the coming year were dis-
Twenty-seven
\. Conference, at
week-end.
Among the speakers were Miss
Betty F. Biddle, president of the
Association in 1919, and Milli-
cussed
Applehee,
Christian
icent Carey,
last vear's president
The ‘work of the Community Center | |
‘will be housed in the. new Memorial
Bryn Mawr township to commemorate }
The Memorial Building will enka’
Tog and one of ‘Oasis 3919) motor-
ing. over two thousand miles through Spain
out a single breakdown. We then’ crossed
to North Africa on October 22, 1919, and
chauffeur and car about fifteen ‘hundred
miles also without accident. I spent three
weeks in Paris, including Christmas and
New Year, where Alys Russell and I were
joined by my cousin Ray Costelloe
Strachey (graduate student ‘08-’09). I
then went to Monte Carlo for three weeks
with my maid, who staid with me for the
rest of my trip, whom I had taught to
write letters on my little traveling Corona
typewriter, and was joined there later by
Ray Strachey.
Sails for Alexandria
After spending a few days in Genoa,
Milan and Venice, I sailed from Trieste
for Alexandria on February 11th with my
first cousin, Logan Pearsall Smith, who has
lived in England for the past thirty years,
during which he has become a distin-
guished man of letters. “Trivia” is per-
-haps the best known of his books. We
visited Egypt, Palestine and Syria together
and returned to Italy on April 18th, where
Professor Georgiana King (Bryn Mawr
06) met me. After visiting Pompeii again,
where by special permission we saw the
new excavations of entire streets of two-
story houses with signs and advertisements,
and the Greek temples of Paestum, we
sailed from Naples to Athens. We were in
Greece forty-five days and motored
through—_the—Pelopennesus— seeing almost
every site, temple and Bysantine church
with which we had associations. We made
an excursion to Crete on a tramp steamer
to see the Minoan excavations.
| On June 11th we returned to Genoa,
where we met Professor Lucy Donnelly
(Bryn Mawr '93) and my chauffeur with
| my Franklin car. Professor King sailed
| for Barcelona to rejoin her friends in
| Spain, where she spent last year, and Pro-
fessor Donnelly and I motored along the
Italian and French riviera from Genoa to
Marseilles through Provence, visiting all
| the mediaeval towns and Roman remains
| to Mont Dore and thence through the
| cathedral cities of Bourges, Beauvais and
Chartres to Paris and from Paris over
Amiens to. Boulogne, Folkeston and
London (ahout three thousand miles),
where I met my brother and his wife, Dr.
/and Mrs. Herry Thomas, and after another
ten days in London motored with them
forty-five days in England and Scotland
before sailing for Bryn Mawr on Septem-
ber 11th. I drove my car myself a great
part of these forty-five hundred miles. We
did not have a single tire puncture in all
this distance. I motored altogether about
eleven thousand miles in six different coun-
tries without any accident. I gave up going
to India because I found that I cared more
to spend my first long holiday on the
shores of the Mediterranean trying to un-
derstand the prehistoric, Greek, Roman and
Arabian and mediaeval civilizations that
succeeded each other there.
My trip was successful in every way.
The weather was perfect, cool and clear
without any rain. I had my motor top up
only about forty-eight hours in all during
the entire fourteen months. My traveling
companions, except my cousin, Mr. Pearsall
Smith, where all Bryn Mawr women, and I
found them such indefatigable and dis-
criminating sight-seers and such charming
and sympathetic traveling companions that
another of the many unexpected and alto-
gether delightful by-products of a Bryn
Mawr education is to produce perfect trav-
eling companions.
British Convict Ship on Exhibition
the famous old British convict
ship, is in port in Philadelphia at the
wharf at the foot of Market Street. Vis-
shown over the boat
Success,
| tors will be
with our Spanish chauffeur and car with-—
spent fifty-six days in Morocco, Algeria
and Tunis ‘motoring with a_ French:
Mee errr es en ee ia a
cae
Vel. VII, No. 1, September a8, 1920
THE COLLEGE NEWS
‘eaches School in Labrador:
in Lifeboat on Trip to Mi
- Marynia Foot Has Varied Experience
School teaching, tending the sick and
settling arguments were among the duties
of M. Foot, ’21, president of the Under-
graduate Association, who had the summer
position of “school missis” at Black Duck
Cove, Newfoundland.
For eight weeks Miss Foot lived in the
’ parlor of a very small native house and
‘had complete charge of twenty-five fam-
ilies. Five days in the week she taught
reading, writing, arithmatic and a little
catechism to twenty-nine children from the}
ages of five to fifteen, Since none of them
had ever had more than five weeks school-
ing before, they were all in the primary
grades.
Her medical work included caring for
cases of epilepsy, boils, tonsilitis and beri-
beri, besides many other simpler diseases,
with no more equipment than a kit for ad-
vanced first aid.
The living conditions among the natives
were very bad. Eleven people were crowded
into the garret of the house in which Miss
Foot lived. The diet consisted of bread
and stewed tea, with a little scalded milk
and boiled greens for variety. The boats
on the trip were so crowded that Miss
Foot had to sleep one night on the deck
and several nights in the life boats.
Record Registration at Penn
Eleven thousand students have enrolled
at the University of Pennsylvania for
1920-21. This is a record registration for
the college.
PRIZE WINNING SONG AT SILVER
BAY WRITTEN BY HELEN HILL
To knights in the days of old
Keeping vigil on mountain height,
Came a vision of Holy Grail
And a voice through the waiting night:
Follow, follow, follow the gleam;
Banners unfurled
Over the world,
Follow, follow, follow the gleam
Of the Chalice that is the Grail.
And we who would serve the King,
Keeping watch at Silver Bay
In the consecrate silence knew,
That the challenge still sounds to-day:
Follow, follow, follow the gleam,
Standards of worth
Other the earth,
Follow the gleam; follow,
gleam
Of the light that shall bring the dawn.
Heten D. Hit, ’21.
follow the
ALUMNAE PLAN CITY ATHLETICS
OFFER JIU-JITSU AMONG SPORTS
Athletic evenings for college alumnae
will be held in New York again next
Winter under the auspices of the Inter-
collegiate Alumnae Athletic Association.
The program includes horseback riding,
basketball, dancing, diving,
bowling, fencing, gymnastics, jiu-jitsu
and week-end hikes.
Graduates of women’s colleges of
recognized standing and students who
have completed two years of academic
work leading to a degree are eligible to
membership, with dues of $2a year. The
fees for the separate activities cover
maintenance cost only.
The Association asks all who would
like to receive announcements of plans
to write to Miss Jean Earl Moehle, Exe-
cutive Secretary I. A. A. A., 490 River-
side Drive, New York.
swimming,
"WINS NATIONAL ARCHERY —
CONTEST
Capturing the Women’s National
Archery Championship, Cynthia Wessen,
09, carried off bowman’s honors at the
National Archery Tournament held at
Wayne, Pa., August 24th to 27th. Cham-
pionship for the Flight Shoot and for the
Wand Shoot peonriiunnendindl went to Miss Wesson.
Theatre Magazine Reviews Ma Da
Actors and Vivid Effect faa
Praise C. Skinner ae ene E. Kimbrough
An illustrated article on the Bryn
Mawr May Day appeared in the Theatre
Magazine for July.
“Both pleasure-seekers and_ serious
students of the drama,” reads the article,
“found in the Bryn Mawr May Day this
year a noteworthy revival of Elizabethan
plays and pageantry. Not only the pic-
turesque opening procession, the crown-
ing of the May Queen and the dancing
on the green, but the eight separate plays
and masques given each in its own par-
ticular hollow of the campus, offered a
remarkable instance of the spectacular
effects which may be attained by brilliant
color and movement against a natural
background without any reliance upon
artificial lighting and scenery. The
dramatic interest moreover rivaled the
spectacular.” * * * *
Of Robin Hood the critic says: “The
peculiar success of this year’s perform-
ance lay in the graceful and convincing
characters of Robin Hood and Maid
Marian, as played by Lois Kellogg and
Elizabeth Vincent. The two excelled any
previous Robin Hood and Maid Marian,
critics at Bryn Mawr are agreed; cer-
tainly they might rival those of any per-
formance. Alan-a-Dale was _ interpreted
with engaging sincerity. And the juxta-
position, for an instant, of brilliant with
scarlet and the golden-haired Maid
Marian, in her dull green gown, was one
of the most entrancing moments of the
whole May Day.” * * * *
Cornelia Skinner, ’22, playing the part
of Sacropant in “The Old Wives’ Tale,”
is praised. “Throughout her part, Miss
Skinner managed to capture and hold
the sympathy of her audience for the
fell hero, without a single false note of
melodrama or sentimentality; and the
death scene was exceptionally well
done.” * * * *
Reviewing the Masques, the critic
“If the successful revival of the
early plays was surprising in many ways,
much more so was the transformation
of the plotless, characterless reliques of
the old court masques, by clothing their
dry bones in all the loveliness of filmy
costumes and eurythmic dancing. * * *
Among the solo dancers, it would be
hard to choose among Zella Boynton’s
‘Gallus,’ Eleanor Boswell’s ‘Prima vera’
or Helene Zinnset as the ‘North Wind’;
but with so little opportunity for dra-
matic action in any of the parts in the
two masques, Emily Kimbrough gave
quite an astonishing performance, from
a dramatic as well as a terpsichorean
view, in her interpretation of the part
of Silenus.”
“The morality play, ‘The Nice Wan-
ton,’ a ‘preaty interlude’ licensed to the
printer in 1560,” reads the criticism,
“was given by the resident graduate stu-
dents with a degree of finish and an artis-
tic completeness hardly to be expected
from the type or subject matter of the
of the play.”
says:
13th Street at Sansom
H. W. DERBY & CO.
13th Street at Sansom
Women’s Shoes and Hosiery
Exclusively
H. W. DERBY & CO.
Philadelphia
SPORTING NOTES
The first Hockey practice of the year
takes place Wednesday. The schedule
for the team is:
3.45 >
5th and 6th teams......... Wed., Thurs.
~ 4.15 and 5.00
Ist WE cceccsetie Mon., Wed., Fri.
aoe Gams... ....5.. Tues., Wed, Thurs.
eye Moa, There. Fri.
Mth téams.. <.i.0.5. ..Tues., Wed., Thurs.
Se NINE. Ce ices aa Mon., Fri.
Swimming try-outs for 1924 begin this
week. The Freshmen will be tried out
in swimming and diving in small groups
of twenty instead of the general authori-
zation which was held last year.
Mary G. McCrystal
#
LACES : : 3:3
EMBROIDERIES
NOTIONS, ETC.
®
842 Lancaster Avenue
Bryn Mawr, Pa.
SCOLUM BIA "IAEA
ace League Endorsement
Sport Skirts
Camp Fy eae a
Athletic
— Gesteen
and
COLUMBIA GYMNASIUM SUIT COMPANY
Actual Makers 301 Congress St., Boston, Mass
DRESSMAKING
Mrs. Harry Lindsay
- Warner Ave., Bryn Mawr
GOWNS SUITS
WAISTS SKIRTS
ONLY FOUR VARSITY HOCKEY
PLAYERS IN COLLEGE
The first Varsity Hockey practice of the
year will be called on Thursday, with only
four veterans of last year’s team in college.
In the forward line, C. Bickley, '21, Var-
sity captain, center forward; E. Cecil, ’21,
right wing, and A. Nicoll, ’22, left inside,
form a strong nucleus for a swift forward
line.
The defence has suffered particularly,
and a whole new backfield will have to be
built up around E. Donahue, the Junior
star. ;
PENCILS.
De eth VENUS ocr
rivals all rhe ect
work, 17 bla ol
copying.
Sessler’s Bookshop
BOOKS : PICTURES
1314 Walnut Street, Philadelphia
MONDAY
October 11
FASH
Bring It to Bryn Mawr.
Dresses
Blouses
Negligees
Sports Clothes
Franklin Simon & Co.
A Store of Individual Shops
Fifth Avenue, New York
Will Exhibit at the
MONTGOMERY INN
Bryn Mawr, Pennsylvania
Fifth Avenue |
For Young Women
Higher Quality at Lower Prices Is the Very Lat-
est Fashion— Franklin Simon & Co. were First
to Introduce It on Fifth Avenue, and are First to
Suits
Shoes
Lingerie
|
TUESDAY
October 12
IONS
Coats
Skirts
Sweaters
Riding Habits
l
————————
—— —————
THE COLLEGE NEWS
SOLD HERE ONLY
Fall and Winter
New Styles ~
New Colors
Ladies’ and Misses’
Plain Tailored Suits
27.75 34.75 38.75
Motor and Street Coats
37.75 41.75 54.75
1422 WALNUT STREET
West of Bellevue Stratford Hotel
_ Presents a Formal Display of Fashions for Fall and Winter
Introducing an extensive collection of
PARISIAN AND AMERICAN MODELS IN
Street, Afternoon and Evening Dresses, Coats, Wraps,
Tailleurs Suits, Furs and Millinery
: Love Nest Sundae
at
Whitmans
Furs Hats Soda Counter
| Phone, Walnut 1329 STRAWB RI D GE
Prices from $5.00—$25.00
ADELPHI-DISNEY
1021 Chestnut Street
Philadelphia
HATS
PANCOAST
1730 CHESTNUT STREET
PHILADELPHIA
eae
runt Gees
TERNITY EMBLEMS ~ RINGS
* CHARMS - PLAQUES
MEDALS, ETC.
of the better kind
THE GifT BOOK
Tieetrating and pricing
GRADUATION AND OTHER GIFTS
Mailed apo req see
Junior Suits Footer’s Dye Works| and CLOTHIER
The Practical School Suit 1118 Chestnut Street SPECIALISTS IN
Philadelphia, Pa.
New Fall Hats paakiaviacatlon FASHIONABLE APPAREL
i FOR YOUNG WOMEN
MANN & DIL\S Offer their lop at
1102 CHESTNUT STREET Superior Service in VOUT
ho . . MARKET, EIGHTH & FILBERT STS.
Cleaning and Dyeing PHILADELPHIA
Millinery
Exhibition
a. B. Altman & Cn.
COLLEGE INN NEW YORK
WEDNESDAY '
OCTOBER 6th
HAVE ARRANGED TO HOLD
A FASHION EXHIBIT
AT THE
MONTGOMERY INN
BRYN MAWR, PENN.
ON
WEDNESDAY, THURSDAY
AND FRIDAY
OCTOBER 6rn, 71H AND 8rn
The Selections include Frocks, Suits, Coats,
Hats, Blouses and all the essentials of dress
FOR MISSES AND YOUNG WOMEN
INSPECTION IS CORDIALLY INVITED
Be |
Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Arthur King have
a son, Samuel Arthur, Jr., born this sum-
mer. :
Alta Stevens, 09 (Mrs. Anson Cam-
eron), has a son, James, born August 28th.
“Ruth Tinker, \’15 (Mrs. Daniel P.
Morse), has a daughter, Marion, born Au-
gust 13th.
Florence Wyckoff Wilbur, "10 (Mrs.
Lloyd B. Wyckoff), has a son, Robert
Lloyd, born September Ist.
Mollie Kingsley, ‘08 (Mrs. William
Best), has a son, William Henry Best, Jr.,
born August 24th.
Rosalind Romeyn, ex-’14 (Mrs. W. Ever-
dell), has ‘a son, Romeyn Everdell, born
June 24th.
Engaged
Mary McClennen, ’21, has announced her
engagement to Bernhard Knollenberg, a
lawyer, of Boston.
Elizabeth Lanier, ’19, has announced her
engagement to Robert Hart Bolling, of
West Chester, Pa.
Kitty McCollin, ’15, has announced her
engagement to Dr. John Arnett, of Phila-
delphia.
Edith Stevens, ’20, has announced her
engagement to John P. Stevens, of Plain-
field, N. J.
Summer Weddings
Gladys Pray, ex-’15, was married on
June 8th to Horace A. Ketcham, at Pas-
saic, N. J.
Elizabeth F. Baldwin, 14, was married
on June 5th in the First Presbyterian
Church, Princeton, N. J., to Dr. Phillip
Moon Stimson, of New York. Carlotta
Wells,’12;—Margaret Blanchard, ’14, were’
among the bridesmaids.
Sarah Atherton, '13, was married in June
to Donald S. Bridgeman, of Lake Forest,
Til.
Harriet Hobbs, °18, was married
William Howard Haines at St. John’s
Church, Flushing, on June Sth.
Adeline Showell, °18, was married on
June 12th to Morton S. Titus, of Spring-
field, Ohio.
Helen Wilson, '18, was married in June
to Dr. William Merrill, of Philadelphia.
The wedding of Julia Cochran, '20, to
George Buck, took place at The Plains,
Va, on June 23rd. Alice Harrison, ’20,
was maid of honor. Elizabeth Leutkemyer,
20; Nancy Offut, ex-’20, and Margaret
France, ’19, were bridesmaids.
Miriam Rorher, ‘15, was married
June 26th to Joseph Bryan Shelby, of East
Orange, N. J.
Ellen E. Pottberg, ‘11, was married on
June 26th to the Rev. Alfred Geer Hemp-
stead, of Hampden Highlands, Maine.
Elizabeth Ayer, '14, was married in Bath,
England, on August 7th, to Henderson
Inches, of Boston, Mass.
Helen Herron Taft, '15, was married on
July 15th to Frederick Johnson Manning,
at Murray Bay, Canada.
Zella Boynton, ’20, was married on Sep-
tember 8th, at St. Bartholomew’s Church,
New York, to George Dudley, of Buffalo,
N.Y.
Dorothy Griggs was married on Septem-
ber 18th to Francis King Murray, of Cali-
fornia.
Frances Jones, ’21, was married on Sep-
tember 25th, at Columbus, Ohio, to Wil-
liam Ewing Titus. Betsy Kales, ‘21;
Grace Hendrick, ex-’'21; Barbara Scurher-
man, ex-'21; Emily Burns, ‘22, were brides-
maids.
to
on
Deaths
Mrs. John Philbrick, mother of E. Phil-
brick, '23, died this summer.
E. TAYLOR, '21, WINS RIBBONS
E. Taylor, ‘21, riding for the 3rd Divi-
sion in the Army Horse Show, at Louts-
ville, last June, won four ribbons, two in
and two the three-gaited
classes. Miss Taylor has been invited to
ride in the Madison Square Garden Horse
Show and the National Horse Show
jumping in
THE CODL
EGE NEWS
For Thirty Years
We have made a specialty of furnishing
HIGH-GRADE
COLLEGE
PRINTING
to the various educational institutions
of the country in the form of Class
Sixteen Changes in. Perso Faculty
and oe
- (Continued from Page 1)
garet Wentworth Browne ex-1900, of
Merion. Miss Browne was Bryn Mawr
Féllow of the College Settlements Asso-
ciation 1908-09, and has been. Assistant
Secretary, National Consumers’ League,
Filing Clerk, Navy Department, and Sec-
retary, Office of. Operations. =.
Margaret Montague Monroe, Psychology
Fellow last year, is demonstrator in ex-
perimental psychology, and Miss Mary
Morse, B.S. and M.S. University of Michi-
gan, demonstrator in chemistry.
Model School instructors include Monica
Healea, ’20, Science; Marthe Trotain,
French Scholar last year, French, and Miss Records, Catalogs, Programs, Circu-
Marcelia Wagner, Mathematics. lars, Etc.
Sports Managers
The sports managers on the Athletic
Board are: E. Cope, ’21, Tennis and
Water Polo; K. Woodward, 21, Swim-
ming; E. Cecil, '21, Hockey; A. Nicoli,
'22, Track; E. Anderson ’22; Apparatus;
F, Bliss, ’22, Basket-ball.
Our facilities for printing and binding
are . and we solicit your
patronage.
THE JOHN C. WINSTON COMPANY
1006-1016 ARCH STREET PHILADELPHIA
‘ a ss
3 So AED fey “4
6 55, ROR:
Sak: +S. ae
Ps:
?
ty
;
S-
sar
~
Modern Motive iMight
OUNTAINS, miles and minutes give
way before electricity, the magic mo-
tive power. Properly applied, it drives giant
locomotives across the continental divide,
tows ocean liners through the Panama Canal,
or propels huge ships.
Through good light, safe signals, and ijlumin-
ated highways, it is making travel better and
safer and also is increasing the usefulness of
transportation methods on land, sea or in
the air.
In short, electricity is revolutionizing trans-
portation, making it quicker, safer, more eco-
nomical and reliable in all sorts of weather.
And back of this development in electric
transportation, in generating and transmit-
ting apparatus as well as motive mechan-
isms, are the co-ordinated scientific, engi-
neering and manufacturing resources of the
General Electric Company, working to the
end that electricity may better
serve mankind.
rae
f
es,
a
Pessect Tete Wags Cousins
President Thomas and Dean Taft took
part in London in July, 1919, in the pre-
liminary conferences of the International
Federation of University Women which
was formally organized in London a year
later and held its first biennial meeting to
which President Thomas was one of three
. delegates from the United States. Pro-
fessor Donnelly, Miss Martha Thomas and
Miss Elizabeth Kirkbride also attended the
meetings.
President Thomas conducted a round-
table discussion at a public session on
“Next steps to be taken by University
Women,” which was taken part in by Dean
Ada Comstock, of Smith College, and all
the American women present,
Delegates were present from the United
States, Canada, France, Spain, Holland,
Belgium, Denmark, Norway, Sweden,
Czecho-Slovakia, Italy, India, Australia and
South Africa.
Equal educational opportunity and equal
pay throughout the teaching profession,
equal representation on educational boards,
equal positions in educational universities,
proper proportion of fellowships and the
same financial rewards for research work
should be the aim of the federation, ac-
cording to President Thomas.
Dean Gildersleeve, of Barnard College,
explained at the opening meeting the origin
of the federation, which, she said, was not
due to any one person. “The idea seemed
to grow in several minds at once and was
first talked of twenty years ago in Switzer-
land. Then two years ago Professor Caro-
line Spurgeon came to America, and, the
value of personal contact being realized
more than ever, we decided to act at once.”
Professor Spurgeon was elected Presi-
' dent. President Thomas was made Chair-
man of the Committee on International
Club Houses, which will be organized first
in Paris and Athens. The next biennial
meeting will be held in Geneva, if possible
at the time of the meeting of the League
of Nations.
CONVENTION OF WOMEN WORKERS
HELD AT BRYN MAWR
Six hundred members of the National
League of Women Workers held a conven-
tion at Bryn Mawr from June 9th to 13th.
The college, including the halls of resi-
dence, library, gymnasium and swimming
pool, were opened for their use.
Modern industrial problems and plans
for their solution were the subjects under
discussion at the convention. On Saturday
afternoon, June 12th, there was an open
industrial meeting at which employers and
employment managers were present, and
the delegates themselves spoke.
CALENDAR
Wednesday, September 29th
845 A.M.—Chapel. Opening of the
Thirty-sixth Academic Year. Ad-
dress by President Thomas.
8.00 P. M.—Parade Night. Starting from
Pembroke Arch.
Saturday, October 2nd
10.12 A.M.—Senior French and Yearly
Language Examination in Taylor
Hall.
10.30 A. M.—'Varsity Hockey Practice
against All-American Hockey Team
candidates.
8.00 P. M.—Christian Association Recep-
tion to the Graduates and Freshmen.
Sunday, October 3rd
6.00 P.M.— Vespers in Taylor Hall.
Speaker, C. Bickley, '21, President
of the Christian Association.
7.30 P.M.—Chapel in Taylor Hall. Ser-
mon by Dr. George A. Barton,
Chaplain of Bryn Mawr College.
Saturday, October 9th
10.12 A. M.—-Senior German and Junior
Language Examinations in Taylor
Hall.
Sunday, October 10th
7.30 P. M.—Chapel Sermon = by Dy
lohnsten, Church of the Saviour,
Philadelphia
| REALITY. OF SERVICE DiscuSssED
AT SILVER BAY.
divh Mawr Wins Song Corishet
six students, with Dean Smith as faculty |
representative, attended the Y. W. C. A:
conference at Silver Bay last June.
James '21, vice-president of the Christ-
ian Association, was the delegation
leader and A. Nicholl, "2, recreation
leader.
Service as the measure of love and the
reality of religious expression were the
chief topics of discussion at the con-
ference, and a universal desire to make
the mind of Christ the standard of all
thought and action was shown by the
trend of students’ questions. Among the
leaders of economic, industrial, and re-
ligious thought who held services or
courses were Col. Raymond Robins,
Hary Ward, Henry Sloan Coffin, Jona-
than Day, Henrietta Roeloffs and Bertha
Funk.
Using the tune of 1922’s curtain song
to Freshman Show with original words
by H. Hill ’21, the Bryn Mawr delega-
tion won the silver cup for the song con-
test. Winners of the cup for the last
three years have becn the Armenian dele-
gation, Syracuse, and Mount Holyoke.
First place in the swimming meet went
to Bryn Mawr, H. Rice, .’23, winning the
long swim and A. Smith, '23, the dash.
Other intercollegiate sports were called off
on account of the rain, but Bryn Mawr
tied Vassar in the finals of an unofficial
series of basketball games and H. Rice
’23 defeated several college champions
in tennis. A boat ride with Vassar and
an informal sing with Teachers’ College
were among the other incidents of the
conference.
For the first time, a conference news-
paper, the “Pick-up” was published. E.
Cecil ’21, was assistant editor.
The delegation was: 1921, H. James,
C. Bickley, J. Peyton, K. Walker, E.
Donnelley, M. P. Kirkland, E. Cecil, M.
Taylor, P. Ostroff, H. Hill, J. Lattimer;
1922, M. Rawson, M. Speer, P. Smith,
A. Nicoll, S. Hand, M. Kirkbride, M.
Voorhees; 1923, H. Rice, E. Rhoads, R.
McAneny, D. Meserve, A. i.
Dunbar, A. Smith.
Clement,
FRESHMEN ASSIGNED TO HALLS
One hundred and three resident Fresh-
men were registered when the NEws went
to print, rooming in the foltowing halls:
Rockefeller: E. C. Bailey, L. C.
ber, E. Briggs, H. M. Buchanan, M.
Cheston, M. S. Compton, E. A. Connor,
H. A. Dillingham, F. Fanseer, M. Fischer,
M. L. Freeman, E. Gist, R. Godefrey,
E. K. Henderson, M. E. Howe, L. W.
Howitz, K. Kalbfleisch, C. D. Lewis, V.
F. Miller, E. Molitor, M. Neville, N.
Pearce, M. Rittenhouse, M. Russell, L. M.
Sanford, M. L. Sullivan, S. Tatham, B.
Tuttle, C. Weiser, A. J. Wise, G. Wood,
M. K. Woodworth
Pembroke West: M. Beaudrias, D. Cope,
C. Fountain, J. Gregg, M. B. Hammond,
J. Lawrence, J. D. Longfellow, R. Murray,
E. B. Neilson, D. Parsons, D. Saunders,
D. Schiff, R. Simkhovitch, B. P. Tubby,
M. L. White.
Pembroke East: B, Allen, M. Angell,
L. Coffin, M. Dunham, M. L. Dunkak,
E. W. Estee, M. J. Fenley, M. Fitzgerald,
L. Ford, E. lives, S. Loewitz, M. Minott,
E. B. Nesle, E. F. Rust, M. T. Tjader,
M. L. D. West.
Denbigh: E. E. Barber, K. J. Black-
well, M. Connolly, M. O. M. Davies, A. E.
Little, M. Meneely; M. F. Mills, M. Pa-
Bar- |
A.’
A Bryn Mawr delegation of twenty- be
Cut Flowers and Plants Fresh Daily |
Corsage and Floral Baskets
Old Fashioned Bouquets » Specialty
Potted Plante—Persenal supervision on all orders
807 Lancaster Ave.
FRANCIS B. HALL
HABIT AND BREECHES
MAKER
Cinstinen hitentlanl Cabieetes
640; Lancaster ~~ tak West of Post Office,
PHONE 758
HENRY B. WALLACE
CATERER AND CONFECTIONER
LUNCHEONS AND TEAS
BRYN MAWR
BRINTON BROTHERS
FANCY AND. STAPLE GROCERIES
Lancaster and Merion Avenues,
Bryn Mawr, Pa.
Orders Delivered. We aim to please you.
Programs
Bill Heads
Tickets
Letter Heads
Announcements
Booklets, etc.
Bryn Mawr, Pa.
JOHN J. McDEVITT
UNUSUAL
GIFTS
GREETING CARDS
DECORATIVE TREATMENTS
Will Always Be Found at
THE GIFT SHOP
814 W. Lancaster Ave., Bryn Mawr, Pa.
Afternoon Tea and Luncheon
COTTAGE TEA ROOM
Montgomery Ave., Bryn Mawr
Everything dainty and delicio.s
BRYN MAWR,
D. N. ROSS (Pratmecy) * Puna
Instructor in Pharmacy and Materia
Medica, and Director of the Pharmaceu-
tical Laboratory at Bryn Mawr Hospital.
EASTMAN’S KODAKS AND FILMS
PHILIP HARRISON
WALK-OVER BOOT SHOPS
Complete line of.
Ladies’ Shoes and Rubbers
818 Lancaster Ave.
John J. Connelly Estate
The Main Line Florists
1226 LANCASTER AVE.., Rosemont, Pa.
Telephone, Bryn Mawr 252W
STORIES, MOVIE PLOTS,
lache, M. Pratt, J. K. Prewitt, E. W. Price, |
H. Scott, A. McD. Shiras, B. Tayler, E.
G. Tofft.
Merion: I. A. Armstrong, A. Bingman, |
K. Brauns, B. T. Constant, M. L. Cooke, |
P. Coyne, K. Gallway, J. T. Palmer, E.
Pearson, A. Phillips, M. G. Requa, I. A. !
Wallace
|. Radnor: J. H. Bensberg, B. B. Bordon,
'D. C. Gardner, F. P. Isham, E. Hale, B
rH. Ling, B. McRae M. F. Piatt, F. G
| Sharpe, M. V. Smith, K. Van Bibber, H
Kh. Walker,
SCENARIOS, PLAYS,
POETRY, LYRICS
We read, type, edit, remodel,
copyright, and sell
MANUSCRIPTS
Moderate rates, good oppor-
tunity
MAN PUB. CO., Suite 811
1265 Broadway, N. Y. City
SCHOOLS
Haw il P
| ano Instru tion
MARY VIRGINIA DavID
Seven of
eee
Head of Music Department in Mme. Masty’s Schee
(Paris) 1913
Paris ConsERVATOIRE (SOLF£GE) and
LESCHETIZKY Princioee Taug r
Cor. Franklin and Montgomery Aves.
Rosemont
Phone, Bryn Mowr 716 W
,
Tae HARCUM SCHOOL
_FOR GIRLS—BRYN MAWR, PA.
}
“For
Girln wanting college preparation a thorough
eelal SORT te ne? na, sion! oem
tastes and needs. /
ts in Musie andArt, |
MRS. mS, EDITH HATCHER HARCUM, B.L.
Cust of Seana", Head of the School
| Buick and Paige
DELICIOUS BANANA
UNDA ES PLITS
The Bryn Mawr Confectionery
848 Lancaster Avenue
A complete line of Home Made Candies—always fresh
Delicious Home Made Pies
WILLIAM T. McINTYRE
GROCERIES, MEATS AND
PROVISIONS
ARDMORE, OVERBROOK, NARBERTH
AND BRYN MA
BRYN MAWR AVENUE
Phone Connection
WILLIAM L. HAYDEN
Builders and Housekeeping
HARDWARE
Paints : Oils, : Glass
es Ground Locksmithing
Lawn Mowers Repaired and Sharpened
838 Lancaster Avenue Bryn Mawr, Pa.
Bryn Mawr 17" M. Doyle, Mgr.
THE <«RENCH SHOP
814 LANCASTER AVE.
Bryn Mawr, Pa.
SMART GOWNS MADE TO ORDER
DISTINCTIVE REMODELING
E. M. FENNER
Ice Cream. Frozen Fruits and Icés
Fine and Fancy Cakes, Confections
(Telephone)
Bryn Mawr Ardmere
Phone, Bryn Mawr 916 Moderate Prices
Mrs. Hattie W. Moore
Gowns and Blouses
16 Elliott Avenue
Bryn Mawr, Pa,
ST. MARY'S LAUNDRY
THE BRYN MAWR TRUST co.
CAPITAL, $250,000
DOES A GENERAL BANKING BUSINESS
ALLOWS INTEREST ON DEPOSITS
SAFE DEPOSIT DEPARTMENT
CARS TO HIRE
Telephone Accesseries i
Agency Bryn Mewr 60 Repair Parts
Electrical and Machine Work our Specialty
MADDEN’S GARAGE
ancaster Pike, eppesite P AR. R. Station. Gryn Mie
College news, September 28, 1920
Bryn Mawr College student newspaper. Merged with Haverford News, News (Bryn Mawr College); Published weekly (except holidays) during academic year.
Bryn Mawr College
1920-09-28
serial
Weekly
6 pages
digitized microfilm
North and Central America--United States--Pennsylvania--Montgomery--Bryn Mawr
Vol. 07, No. 01
College news (Bryn Mawr College : 1914) --https://tripod.brynmawr.edu/permalink/01TRI_INST/26mktb/alma991001620579...
Digitized by the Internet Archive in 2012 with funding from LYRASIS Members and Sloan Foundation.
BMC-News-vol7-no1