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The Co
Volume I. No. 17
CALENDAR |
FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 19
8 p. M—Lecture on ‘The Dawn of Art”’ by |
Dr. George Grant MacCurdy, of Yale.
SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 20
-8 p.M.—Lecture-on “Women and Eeo- |
nomics” by Mrs. Charlotte Perkins Gilman.
SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 21
First Sunday in Lent
6 p.M.—Vespers. Speaker, C. 5 urgent, '15.
- 8 p.M.—Chapel. _ Preacher, Dr. Francis
Brown, President of the Union Theological
Seminary.
MONDAY, FEBRUARY 22
Inter-class Water Polo match games begin.
WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 24
7.30—Mission and Bible clusses.
8.30—Deaconess Goodwin's class on Church
Work. :
9.30—Mid-week meeting A.
Leader, C. Dowd, "16.
THURSDAY. FEBRUARY 25
Faculty Tea to tke Graduate Students.
Denbigh.
or the CU.
FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 26
8 p.M.—Dramatic Recital by Mr. Samuel
Arthur King, for the benefit of the Belgian
relief fund.
SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 27
8.30—Address to the Graduate Club by
Professor H. A. Overstreet,
OFFICIAL NOTICE
at Easter, and those who succeed in
passing will be excused from the classes
for the remainder of the semester.
MRS. GILMAN WILL SPEAK TO
LIBERAL CLUB
On Saturday evening, at eight o'clock,
Mrs. Charlotte Perkins Gilman will lec-
ture in Taylor Hall on “Woman and Eco-
nomics.”
Gilman has been the leader and inspira-
tion of the woman’s movement in Amer- |
ica. She is the Ellen Key of American
feminism. In her books, “Woman and
Economics,” “A Man-Made World,” “The |
she has set!
_ forth her doctrines, which are now grad- |
Home,” and other works,
ually coming to be accepted by thinking
men and women, but which, at the out-
set, seemed startling, revolutionary and
dangerous.
| world poets, with Wagner.
' ophy in its fullest development,
_.. Students in the French and German |
oral tutoring classes will be examined |
| life.
For a number of years Mrs.
| He has
She has been devoting her |
energies to the cause so consistently that | phodied it in his “Parsifal.”
llege
BRYN MAWR, PA., FEBRUARY 18, 1915
PRESIDENT THOMAS SPEAKS. ON
WOMEN AND WAGNER
I have concluded to close the modern
Wagner is
the one great genius of modern times
/that has given us some idea of the mu-
sical dramas of Greece and Rome, for
he believed, like the Greeks, that popu-
lar legends-treated with all the resources
of poetry, music and acting, become the
possession of a whole people. Wagner
has done this work for our generation.
He was born in 1813, in that wonderful
period in which so many geniuses were
born or were alive. He died in 1883, at
seventy, having recreated for us many
ofthe old medizval tegends. In speak-
ing of Shelley I said that “Epipsychid-
ion” was the most wonderful of love
poems. As a poem it is the most won-
derful, but it cannot compare in emo-
tional effect to the opera of “Tristan and
Isolde.” Wagner took the wonderful
mediwval love legend and made it into
the most overwhelming love tragedy that
{ean be imagined. The greatest of medi-
eval and modern poets have tried their
hand on this legend. You will find in
“Tristan and Isolde’ Wagner's philos-
Wagner
was very much influenced by the _ phil-
osophy of Feuerbach and Schopenhauer.
“Tristan and Isolde” is permeated by
| the view that love is the complete real-
ization of life and the complete negation
of the wish to live. As we know from
Waener’s letters, “Tristan and Isolde”
represented the most intense love of his
He regarded the woman he was
in love with at that time as his inspira-
tion. In the “Ring” he has embodied
the greatest of medigval legends, the
legend of Sigurd, the Volsung, in its
Norse-form. In “Lohengrin” he has
given us the Cupid and Psyche story of
the working of human curiosity against
the prohibition of a higher being and
the ruin wrought. “Tannhauser” gives
the legend of the mediwval goddess of
love. The “Flying Dutchman” treats the
famous legend of the flying Dutchman.
taken the greatest religious
legend of the medigwval world and em-
*“Parsifal”
her word is generally regarded as im-/contains some of the most glorious. re-
portant, if not authoritative.
There will be. general discussion after | jmagine.
the lecture, and Mrs. Gilman will be glad | of our race live for us.
ligious music that our generation can
Wagener: has made the legends
We owe him,
to try to answer all questions which the as poet and as musician, an overwhelm-
audience cares to ask.
(Continued on Page 2)
News
Price 5 Cents
DR. M. P. SMITH OUTLINES VOCA-
| TIONAL CONFERENCE
_ The fourth annual Vocational Confer-
ence will be held in Taylor Hall on Satur-
day morning, March 27th, between the
hours of ten and one o'clock. There will
be short addresses, not exceeding fifteen
minutes each, by women who are actively
engaged in the business or vocation they
represent. A schedule of the order of
the speeches and the time when each will
be delivered will be posted in Taylor
Hall before the Conference, so that stu-
dents who do not wish to remain through-
out the morning may hear any speech in
which they are especially interested. The
names of the speakers will be announced
later; the subjects are as follows: and-
scape Gardening, Scientific arming, Ad-
vertising, Journalism, Law, Medicine,
Secretarial Work, Social Work, Tea-Room
and Lunch-Room Management.
The College has invited the speakers
to. lunch in Pembroke. The members of
the senior class and the graduate stud-
ents who are interested in meeting any
of the speakers are invited to coffee in
Pembroke at half-past one o’clock. Stu-
dents who wish for more detailed infor-
mation about any of the subjects. of the
Conference may arrange for short inter-
views with the speakers in the afternoon
‘by notifying the chairman of the Stu-
dents’ Employment Committee, Miss A.
Werner, Denbigh Hall, before March 27th.
The first Students’ Conference on “Vo-
cations for Women,” was suggested Sy
the committee of the Association of Col-
legiate Alumnz on Vocational Appoint-
‘ments for College Women, and was held
at Smith College in the spring of 1911.
Bryn Mawr sent’ a delegate, and repre-
sentatives met from most of the Women’s
Colleges in the East. The speeches, dis-
cussions and personal interviews proved
so helpful to students who were planning
to earn their living, or who intended to
devote some of theirtime to volunteer so-
cial work, that similar conferences have
been held regularly in most of the wo-
men's colleges since that year. Smith,
Wellesley and Mt. Holyoke have voca-
tional meetings once a month, conducted
by Miss Florence Jackson, manager of
the Bureau of Occupations in Boston.
The committee on Vocational Oppor-
tunities of the A. C. A. of which Mrs,
Martin, Dean of Women at Corneil is
chairman, has also been instrumental in
organizing Bureaus of Occupation for Wo-
(Continued on Page 3)
Managing Editor
2 : THE COLLEGE NEWS
The Colleae News
Published weekly during the college year in the
interests of Bryn Mawr College
ISABEL FOSTER, '15
Ase't Managing Editor . ADRIENNE KENYON, '15
Business Manager . ... MARY G. BRANSON, '16
Ass't Bus. Mgr. . KATHARINE BLODGETT,'17
: EDITORS
CONSTANCE M. K. APPLEBEE
CONSTANCE DOWD,'16 EMILIE STRAUSS,'16
FREDRIKA M. KELLOGG, '16
ELEANOR DULLES, '17 MARY SENIOR, "18
Office Hours: Daily, 2-3
Christian Association Library
Subscriptions may begin at any time
Subscription $1.50 Mailing Price $2.00
Entered as second-class matter September 26, 1014, at the
-post office at Bryn Mawr, Pa, under the
Act of March 3, 1879
It is seldom that Bryn Mawr hears a
sermon which appeals to the whole col-
lege as did Dr. Fitch’s this Sunday. The
sermon was typically a college one, and
made the sure appeal of that which lies
nearest to the heart. He spoke about
the good and the clever at college, quot-
ing the following poem:
“If only the good could be clever
And only the clever be good.
The world would be very much better
Than ever we thought that it could.
But, alas, it is seldom or never
The two hit it off as they should,
The good are so harsh to the clever;
The clever so rude to the good.”
A point which particularly struck
home was that service should not be
measured in quantity, but in quality, and
that our greatest social service at pres-
ent is study.
He suggested the ‘medias res,” where
the gift of the devotee, high and cour-
ageous feeling, and the gift of the
scholar, which may become mere pedan- |
try and diabolical pedantry at times, are
combined in the man of true religion and |
scholarship.
CORRESPONDENCE COLUMN
(The Editors do not hold themselves
responsible for the opinions expressed in
this column.)
Dear Editors:
In so much as we Freshmen have been
exalted against our will in many cases
to the high position of proctor, we beg
you to remember that, as in the case of
flower-girls and duchesses, a proctor is
not a proctor merely because she is
«“‘blues.”
ened by
elected, but because she is treated like
one. The very pathetic example of a
Freshman whose sad duty it is to be
proctor in a corridor full of Seniors
comes to the mind. This poor person
hour after hour heard the’ shouts of
laughter issuing forth through the open
transom of a Senior’s room, and time
after time she debated to herself whether
duty should be stronger than those
dreaded epithets “trite and presumptu-
ous.” At last when she had mustered
up all her available courage, afid with
trembling knees and shaking fingers, she
had approached the door, and had en-
treated, begged that “the Seniors-er-ah
make just a trifle-er-less noise,” we re-
gret to say that her presence was ig-
nored! Could anything be more tragic
than this? So we requested you of the
upper classes, even if you do not regard
the Freshman proctor as the personifica-
tion of law and order, at least to remem-
ber that she is taking herself most seri-
ously, and that it would be an act of
kindness, if you were to preserve this
pleasing little hallucination.
Sieaiailiacncaatie
Dear Editors:
Did someone say Bryn Mawr students
were poor sports? We should like to
introduce that person to the Class of
1916. Nothing could have shown better
clean sporting spirit than '16’s attitude
toward the mistake in the swimming
meet scores. To have enjoyed the thrills
of your first victory after two years’
hard work in athletics and then have all
your exultation dashed to the ground
would be enough to give anybody the
But ’16 was not to be disheart-
that. Their captain showed
-were
what thoroughly good sports they are
when she said to a 1917 person, “Well, |
we're pretty close rivals! Remember the |
gym meet? Never mind! We'll beat|
you yet!” sc Bay ks
ALUMNZ NOTES
Kate E. Chambers, ’11, has announced
her engagement to Laurens Hickok
Seelye. Mr. Seelye, who is finishing his
last year at the Union Theological, is the
son of the Rev. William Seelye, of North
Conway, N. H. No date has been set for
the wedding.
Katherine Page, '13, has charge of the
“Health Department” for the care of the
Belgian refugees in London. The office
of the department is at the War Refugees
Headquarters and is open from 9 to 5
daily.
Georgina Biddle, who was doing grad-
uate work at Bryn Mawr, preparatory to
entering Johns Hopkins next year, has
been obliged to give up her work owing
to slight injuries sustained from a fall
when riding.
STRIPED MUFFLERS FOR LEPERS
Many will remember the interesting
sermon The Rev. Mr. Higginbottam gave
to us about the lepers in India. These
lepers need mufflers, 12 inches wide and
2 yards long, the brighter the better.
Striped mufflers or plain are wanted, the
only restriction being, that much blue
must not be used as it is a low caste
color. These mufflers are wrapped about .
the head in the day and at night the
lepers roll themselves up in them. Please .
everyone knit mufflers and bring them to
F, Kellogg, Pem. East, when finished.
You have until the end of college to make
them.
(Continued from Page 1)
ing debt of gratitude. Everyone of you
who are now growing up and forming
your thoughts and imagination for the
rest of your life should learn to appreci-
ate Wagner’s operas. You may not like
them at first, but persevere and sud-
denly they will seem to you surprisingly
wonderful. When I was in Leipsic in
1879 the operas were given by one of the
greatest Wagner conductors in the world.
The merchants in Leipsic were rich and
could afford to bring famous singers
there and pay the prices they demanded.
But when I first heard the Wagner
operas they were absolute gibberish to
me. After about a year of hearing them
over and over again the redlization of
what Wagner was, came to me. His
music gave me my musical education
and has been one of my greatest joys.
The two great musical composers that
seem to have- influenced Wagner most
Mozart-_and . Beethoven. From
Mozart and Beethoven, love of Wagner
leads one back also to other earlier mus-
ical geniuses. Then, of course, his music
leads one forward. Any one that loves
Wagner loves, too, Strauss, Dubussy and
other modern musicians. One can read
nothing more delightful than Wagner’s
life, It shows us how much more sensi-
tive to genius we shall be when ‘women
wield more influence. Women are very
susceptible to Wagner’s genius. In his
lifetime they could not turn a deaf ear
to his music. They gave him their
money, their time and their husband’s
houses. German merchants went off on
their business trips and returned to find
Wagner in possession of their houses, .
writing his operas. Women seemed to
be overwhelmed by the great power of
his genius. Women, at the present time,
have more leisure to read and more time
to study really difficult artistic things.
They are the greatest admirers of Wag-
ner. If you look around at a Wagner
opera night. you will see that the audi-
ence is made up of appreciative and en-
tranced women who have succeeded in
bringing with them perhaps one man for
every ten women. This only shows that
women have had the leisure to under-
stand what Wagner’s music means.
Pee
THE COLLEGE NEWS
|
On Friday, February 12th, the annual |
Trophy Club reception to the Freshmen | The class in Major Philosophy is toe
was held’ in Pembroke East.. When the /tunate in the appearance in time for its |
Freshmen had arrived, Isabel Foster,|use as a text-book of Professor de La-|
President of the club, spoke to them jus wine's book, ‘Introduction to the Science
a few minutes. She mentioned the fact|of Ethics.” The book is in three parts, |
_ that this year an innovation had been | the first dealing with the scope and re- |
| PROFESSOR DE LAGUNA’S NEW
BOOK
~TROPHY CLUB RECEPTION
COLLEGE NOTES
The following changes have been made
in the caste of “Pinafore,” E. Freer, to
take the part of Ralph; K. McCollin, that
of little Buttercup, and L. Davidson is to
be the Captain. The date of the perform-
ance has been changed from May 15th to
April 27th.
made, in that the reception was not held
until the second semester, and that this
had been done for the purpose of giving
the Freshmen an opportunity to recover
lations of ethics, the field of moral judg-| Professor George Grant MacCurdy, who
ments, responsibility and freedom, and /is lecturing on “The Dawn of Art,” is
moral standards; the second containing | Assistant Professor of Archeology in
a survey of the traditional schools and | Yale. The lecture will be illustrated with
from the many parties, that they at- | theories of ethics, classical and modern; lantern slides.
tended, and the many rules that they, while the third part contains an elemen.- | Professor Dahlgren, of Princeton, spoke
’ hear at the beginning of the year. Miss tary prestntation of an evolutionary | before the Science Club. He gave a most
Foster then introduced Dean Reilly who theory of values. This part is well de- interesting account of his experiences of
gave an account of the development of ‘scribed by the author in his preface as hunting for Biplogical Specimens in Italy.
the Trophy Club, from the time when it “the first attempt at an elementary pres- | In looking for an assistant in his work, he
began as a meagre collection of lanterns entation of any of the newer phases of |met a young Italian in whom he took a
housed for safe keeping under her bed. the latter subject. Not that the theory great interest, and so later, when the
Mrs. Smith was the next speaker and she of values as such is new. It is as old occasion presented itself, he decided to
told of the career of the fictitious Maxine as ethics itself. But in recent years it visit the family of this assistant. Pro-
Raggles, who originated in a minor Latin has undergone a great development, and fessor Dahlgren and his wife arrived at
class, made brilliant recitations, and wrote one of unusual interest—a development, the little village where their coming was
for the college papers until she was however, which has remained buried in such an event, that his host apologized
finally declared non-existant by an edict; monographs and treatises — that —-are--pecause the village band was away. te
of the office. | wholly inaccessible to the undergraduate spite of the very evident poverty of their
Miss Applebee gave a sketch of her | student as well as to the educated pub- hostess they were cordially entertained,
first day at Bryn Mawr, when she alighted lic generally.” ‘so cordially, in fact, that they were afraid
from a sleeper to be met by a crowd of; The book, as a whole, is written in ato delay very long lest they should
students attired in long, full corduroy clear, unaffected and generally non-tech- | pankrupt their hostess, or die of indi-
skirt, who dragged her off to coach hoc- | nical style, is full of shrewd observations ‘gestion. The news nonchalantly offered
key from nine o'clock to one and from | and of fresh illustrations, and it is sure py a native that half the town was ill
three to six. From half-past seven until! to be welcomed by all teachers of eth-| with smallpox hastened their departure.
ten she was met by delegations of stu-|ics as a thoroughly scholarly and mod-|
dents and forced to speak on hockey. | ern handling of the subject of which it |
Mrs. Andrews (Evangeline Walker, | treats. E- C.-Wilm.—|
1893) one of the early Presidents of the |
Athletic Association had come to Phila-| (Contains ee cass)
delphia to be present at the Conference men in Boston, New York, Philadelphia, |
of Pageant Masters, she consented to / Chicago and Richmond. It has collected |
speak to the Freshmen. After telling 4 yaluable Occupational Directory of the
several amusing stories of her under-| names and addresses of women who have
graduate days, she went on to speak Of | heen successful in “other than teaching
the first May Day Pageant which she | positions.” This is kept at Smith College
a a es eat i i ete a
ns pecial information about voca-
ever lose its spontaneity and become in | tional positions. The committee has pub-
the least a perfunctory performance, it | lished a bulletin on the preparation neces-
should be abandoned. fuel for various non-teaching positions,
The reception on the whole was a great this includes length and cost of training, |
|
success and the general impression seems terms of admission, entrance, salary, etc.
i
to be that having the reception in the This may be obtained from Miss Vida
t
1915. The result of the election of class
book officers is as follows: Editor-in-
Chief, F. Hatton; Business Manager, D.
Moore; Treasurer, D. Levinson.
1918. Alice Kerr has ~been—eleeted
Cheer Leader in place of M. Winsor, who
has resigned. .
1917 WINS SWIMMING MEET; 1916 A
CLOSE SECOND
On Saturday, February 13th, the finals
of the swimming meet were held amid
deafening enthusiasm. There were sev-
eral ties, and at such points, excitement
broke all bounds, The end of the meet
was particularly thrilling as 1916 and
1917 had kept almost even through all
the events. The outcome showed the
Class of 1917 as the winners with 26
points, 1916 a close second with 25 1-3
‘second semester is a decided improve-| Hunt Francis, general secretary of the) points, 1918 third with 17 1-3 points.
ment. Association of Collegiate Alumna, 1225; In the relay race at the first meet, the
‘Spruce Street, Philadelphia, price fifty | college gy on 7 oe by 1918,
| 76 seconds, but the final relay was won
pawey ™ Se _ — a by 1917. 1916 and 1918 did most of their
oo n an investigation of the positions, scoring through “star work.” The great-
salaries and opportunities for advance-| est number of individual points was won
A meeting will be held Thursday, at ment for women with special training in by C. ~ "16, ie., 15 points. ~ Gail,
ne thiry, to discuss plans for regulat-| Home Economics and Domestic Science. |'16, and G. Flannigan, '18, tied for sec-
: 7m . wo ond with 10 points, and orga ge Al
tton, a
ing cutting. iI have been a member of this committee cane third with 9. points. J. 8
UNDERGRADUATE ASSOCIATION
MEETS THURSDAY
The Liberal Club has petitioned the since its foundation in 1909, and I shall graduate, distinguished herself. in the
Association to consider Bryn Mawr’s be very glad. to give any student any in-| fancy diving, winning 23 points. 1917, on
joining the Woman’s Peace Party of formation I may have as to openings and
America. The plan for a centralized
control of all collections of money will |
also come before the meeting for dis- | ions.
cussion.
the other hand, won mainly by all-round
‘teamwork. Mr. Bishop’s help and advice
| were much appreciated, and he was vig-
‘orously cheered before the close of the
| meet.
i
'
‘opportunities in other than teaching posi-
Marion Parris Smith.
4
Cee
CHRISTIAN ASSOCIATION COLUMN
Morning Watch.—Subject: “The Con-
formity of Our Will to God’s Will.”
Monday—Romans 12: 1-3; I Thess. 5:
18. “The Will of God.”
Tuesday—St. Luke
Kindness of His Will.”
Wednesday—Luke 20: 39-42; John 6:
30-32. “Christ’s Will.”
THE COLLEGE NEWS
Branson. Mrs. Ohol, a Hindu woman
from Bombay, will be present to talk to
Mrs. Branson’s class. o ,
A Gym Class at the — i erage gastng ar an Gale
is what a gym class is like at the | excepted) for orders
Settlement. At first utter confusion | Whitman's Candies Sold
reigns. When the whistle blows a grand |
scuffle and much shoving ensues, but |
finally two fairly straight lines of little |
F. W. PRICKITT BRYN MAWR
Is the authorized DRUGGIST to Bryn Mawr
2: 8-19. “The
Store, Lancaster Ave.
WM. H. RAMSEY & SONS
Thursday—Hebrews 13: 20-21. ‘Power - DEALERS IN
of God’s Will.” | girls appear. “Aw, teacher, I want to be | FLOUR, FE
Friday—St. Matt. 26: 37-44. “Sacrifice leader,” several voices call out at once. | » FEED AND
FANCY GROCERIES
Bryn Mawr, Pa.
of Our Will.” |When order is finally established the |
Saturday—Matt. 6: 9-10; Luke 22: 41- forty merry little girls march rapidly
43. Prayer. around the room. They make a scraggly
Sunday—Hebrews 10: 35-36. “Our Re-| windmill. Then they try their hands at. F. W. CROOK
ward, K. McC, a. wand drill. “To the left lunge!” and |.
Finance Committee.—There is still | Viola hits Minnie in the face with her TAILOR AND IMPORTER
about $200 needed to complete the wand. “Trunk forward bend!” and two Cleaning Pressing Remodeling
or three wands fall on the floor with a
budget. The active members of the AS- | crash. The drill ends with a jumping
sociation have pledged $775 and the aux-
iliary members, $100. The committee
has been collecting the second semester
dues and has sent two hundred notices
to the auxiliary members who have not
paid their dues, asking them to pay be-
fore March tst. We are also collecting
the budget pledges, and would like to
have them all in by the same date, If
anyone wishes to add anything to her
pledge, even ten cents or a quarter, the
collectors will be glad to receive it, for
in this way we may be able to complete |
the budget.
There will be a meeting of the Finance
Committee at 1.30, Thursday, in the |
Christian Association Library.
Federation Committea—If anyone)
wishes to contribute to the McCall Mis-
sion, she should send her contribution to
Mrs. Anne E. Sampson, Bryn Mawr. The
Mission is doing a great work of relief |
at the present time among the people of
France left destitute by the war. Some
recent leaflets on the Mission have been
placed on the Federation desk in the)
Christian Association Library.
/The Bible and Mission Study Classes.—
The Bible and Mission Study Classes be- |
gan last week with a large enrollment.
This is not remarkable when we consider
the interesting subjects offered by the
different leaders. Ryu Sato’s class, a
very large one, heard an interesting talk |
on education in Japan, with an exhibition
of some of the text-books used, the char-
acters of the written alphabet and a les-
son in the use of chop sticks. Helen
Taft and Agnes Grabau began their
studies of the Old and New Testaments,
while Mrs. Branson and Miss Applebee
began with introductory talks, on Medical
Missions and the Epistle of St. John re-
spectively.
The subjects for next week are as fol-
lows: “Micah,” Helen Taft; “The Gos-
pel of Christ,” A. Grabau; “God as Right-
eousness, and Love,” Miss Applebee;
“Customs of Japan,” R. Sato; “The Three
Steps of the Medical Missions,” Mrs.
+
| February
jack which sets eveybody into shrieks of
laughter. It is very different from Miss
'Applebee’s gym class, but the disorder
‘and confusion is more than excused by
the flattering enthusiasm of the forty,
happy, wriggling, frisking, little girls.
Junk Committee.—Collection of Junk on
Friday,_February.— 19th,
20th. Please turn out your
bureau drawers and find something. for
the Junkers who will carry away for you
all the useless and useful articles you can
spare, As one of our American poets has
said, “Give what you can, to some other
it may prove more useful than you know.”
|THE BRYN MAWR TRUST CO. |
CAPITAL $250,000
Does a General Banking Business
Allows Interest on Deposits
Safe Deposit Department
COLLEGE AND SCHOOL
EMBLEMS AND NOVELTIES
* Of Superior Quality and Design
THE HAND BOOK 1915
Illustrated and Priced mailed upon request
BAILEY, BANKS & BIDDLE CO.
Chestnut Street, Philadelphia
MARY G. McCRYSTAL
Successor to Ellen A. McCurdy
LACES, EMBROIDERIES, RUCHINGS,
SILK HANDKERCHIEFS AND NOTIONS |
842 Lancaster Avenue Bryn Mawr, Pa.
_ HENRY B. WALLACE
CATERER AND CONFECTIONER
Bryn Mawr, Pa.
and Saturday, .
908 Lancaster Avenue, Bryn Mawr, Pa.
THE LODGE TEA ROOM HAS
BEEN ENLARGED
845 Lancaster Avenue
The usual quick Japanese service, delicious
Salads; Scones, Sandwiches, ete.
Phone Bryn Mawr 323-Y
The Bryn Mawr National Bank
BRYN MAWR, PA.
Capital, $50,000 Surplus, $50,000
Undivided Profits, $27,141.30
Pays Interest on Time Certificates
Travelers’ Checks and Letters of Credit Sold
A Regular Banking Business Transacted
BRYN. MAWR HARDWARE CO.
HARDWARE, CUTLERY AND
HOUSE FURNISHING GOODS
Corner of Lancaster and Merion Avenues
BRYN MAWR FLOWER STORE
ALFRED H. PIKE, Proprietor
Florists to the late King Edward VII
Cut Flowers and Fresh Plants Daily
Floral Baskets and Corsages
| Phone, Bryn Mawr 570 807 Lancaster Ave.
| ‘ RYAN BROS.
AUTO TRUCKS FOR PICNICS, STRAW
RIDES, ETC,
18 People Rosemont, Pa.
Phone, Bryn Mawr 216-D
|
|
|
i
j
| Accommodate
TRUNK AND BAG REPAIRING
The Main Lines Headquarters for T,
Bags and Suit Cases of thoroughly reliable ae
ether with a fine assortment of Harness,
Sa and 8
EDWARD L. POWERS
903-905 Lancaster Ave. Bryn Mawr, Pa.
Phone 373
ECKWER’S PHILADELPHIA MUSICAL ACADEMY
Richard Zeckwer
Camille W. Zeckwer
46th SEASON
All Branches of Music and Theory Taught.
Send for Prospectus.
} Directors
Branches
1617 Spruce Street
6029 MAIN STREET, GERMANTOWN
446 S. 524d STREET, WEST PHILA.
CLASS AND PRIVATE LESSONS
Special Classes for College Students.
J. R. ZECKWER, Business Manager
College news, February 18, 1915
Bryn Mawr College student newspaper. Merged with Haverford News, News (Bryn Mawr College); Published weekly (except holidays) during academic year.
Bryn Mawr College (creator)
1915-02-18
serial
4 pages
digitized microfilm
North and Central America--United States--Pennsylvania--Montgomery--Bryn Mawr
Vol. 01, No. 17
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-vol1-no17