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SATURDAY AFTER MID-YEARS
Postposied from Last Week .
The performance of Bernard Shaw's
“Candida”, which was to have been given
in the gymnasium January 19th, is now
scheduled for February 9th, the Saturday
" “Candida” will be played by the Clifford
‘Devereux Company of New York, the pro-{"
ceeds to go through the college to war re-
lief. The performance was postponed on
account of the congestion of freight,
which made it impossible for the com-
pany to get their properties transported.
BALDWIN SCHOOL OFFERED TO.
HOUSE WORKERS ON ~
B. M. FARM
School Alumnz Will Be Allowed to
Work under College Management
The Baldwin School has offered its
building to the college to house the work-
ers next summer on the Bryn Mawr pa-
triotic farm. Five acres of garden land
directly back of the school, the kitchens,
cold storage rooms, and whole equipment
for canning will be at the college’s dis-
posal.
The—only condition of the offer, stipu-
lated by Miss Johnson, headmistress of
the school, was that Baldwin alumnz or
teachers wishing to work on the farm be
taken on the same terms as members of
the college. In this way, by allowing its
land and plant to be used under the col-
lege’s highly organized management, the
school hopes to accomplish more than if
it undertook to launch an independent
farm project.
The Food Production Committee will
accept the offer provided land for the
farm; which they are now investigating,
can be secured in or near Bryn Mawr.
The use of the school, the committee
feels, will mean efficiency in the work as
well as cool, comfortable quarters for the
workers.
MARINE BASE HOSPITAL NO. 3
VISITED BRYN MAWR SUNDAY
Philadelphia Rude, Say California Nurses
The nurses of Marine Base Hospital
No. 3, in dark blue service uniforms, with
brass insignia, who are in Philadelphia
awaiting sailing orders, visited college
last Sunday. The unit is one of five gov-
ernment base hospitals, some of which
are now in active service at the front.
The unit is composed of Californians,
and comes from Lane Hospital, the med-
ical department of Leland Stanford Uni-
versity. Miss Hogue, who spoke at Miss
Kingsbury’s tea for them on Sunday, was
head nurse at Lane Hospital.
“I had always supposed Philadelphia
to be a polite city”, said one of the nurses,
“until a clerk in a store looked at my uni-
form and said, ‘Say, what store do you
work in? I never saw that uniform
before’.”
ROSEMARY HALL MOVES TO
FLORIDA BECAUSE OF THE
COAL SHORTAGE
Rosemary Hall is moving to Miami,
Florida, to-day, to stay until April on ac-
count of an order issued by the Fuel Com-
mission of Greenwich closing all the
schools indefinitely.
The whole school is going except the
primary grades, and will live in two
apartment houses in sight of the ocean.
PERFORMANCE OF “CANDIDA” TO BE |¢
a ee A OE
In order to save coal the college, inde- |
pendently of any directions from the
Government, has adopted the following
measures:
“The gymnasium and the pool will re-
main closed during mid-years; on Satur-
days and Sundays Dalton will be only
partially heated; all college thermostats
will be set at 65, so that this will be the
maximum temperature attainable.
The problem of cutting down light in
order to save fuel has been reconsidered
and the Business Management has
should have to be only slight, it is right
to use as little light as possible. An ex-
periment will be made to see whether a
possible saving of coal cannot be accom-
plished in spite of the college lighting
system under which the steam from the
boilers used in heating is utilized as
power to run the engines for the electric
light dynamos.
The relation between the heating and
lighting systems is fully explained in a
letter from President Thomas on page
two of this issue.
The halls of residence will be lighted
just enough to walk through, and the
drawing rooms left dark except when stu-
dents are using them to entertain guests.
Light rules in the case of students leav-
ing their rooms will be rigidly enforced.
Very little if any reduction can be
made in the lights on the grounds.
NEW PLAN OF RAISING MONEY TO
BE BROUGHT BEFORE ALUMNA
Greater Publicity Advocated
The next Endowment Fund campaign
may be conducted like a commercial drive
with extensive advertising, according to a
plan to be brought before the Alumnze
Association by the Finance Committee at
the meeting next week.
The class collectors met with the Fi-
nance Committee, of which Miss Marthe
Thomas is chairman, last Saturday at the
College Club, to hear Endowment Fund
reports and to discuss future plans.
Mrs. A. H. Brooks (C. Harrington '06)
described the recent tremendous success
in raising money of the Yale Alumni As-
sociation of which her husband is presi-
dent, was due mainly to increased pub-
licity. A plan somewhat similar to
Yale's will be presented for the considera-
tion of the Alumne next Saturday.
That contributions to the next Endow-
ment Fund take the form of Liberty
Bonds or Thrift Bonds was approved by
the Finance Committee, and will be sug-
gested at the coming Alumnz meeting.
SERVICE CORPS COMMITTEES
ELECTED BY EACH CLASS
Service Corps committees have been
elected by each class to superintend the
class contributions to the Service Corps
Fund. $6000 is expected from the under-
graduates and is divided among the
classes in proportion to their membership,
the Seniors having the lowest sum to
raise and the Freshmen the largest.
The committees, with the sums as-
signed, are: 1918, L. Hodges, M. Timpson,
M. Strauss, $1020; 1919, H. Johnson, and
one representative to be elected from
each hall, $1500; 1920, M. M. Carey, M.
Littel, H. Wortman, D. Griggs, A. Harri-
son, $1410; 1921, M. Foote, W. Worcester,
E. Jay, $2085.
GERMAN weneLne NoT GRAVE
ENOUGH TO CLOSE COLLEGE
Six Cases in Infirmary
Rumors that it might be necessary
to close the college on account of the
increasing number of cases of Ger-
man measles have been officially de-
nied by Dean Taft. There are six
cases at present in the Infirmary, but
even should the number rise as high
as ten, there is nothing in the State
laws to constitute German measles
an epidemic, Dean Taft explained.
The period of quarantine in Penn-
sylvania is sixteen days.
J
CHILD ACTRESSES SCORE SUC-
CESS IN FRERES D’ARMES
War Theme ingly Presented
ia Franch Play for War Reef
“Fréres d’Armes”, a French war play
written by Mlle. Marie Antoinette Delpit
and coached by her sister, Mlle. Cecile
Delpit, formerly teacher of French at
Miss Baldwin’s school, was given in the
gymnasium last Saturday night for the
benefit of a Franco-American hospital and
the Bryn Mawr Service Corps. The cast,
composed entirely of girls, was drawn‘
mainly from schools in Bryn Mawr.
About $50 was cleared.
The charm of the child actresses and
the achievement of a reaily dramatic cli-
max raised the performance above the
level of the average amateur French play.
The acting was unusually finished for a
cast composed chiefly of children, Miss
Fi Recinds etic G Exching
“WS: Cary Individual Champion
The Sophomores, winn winning first and sec-
ond individual championships, and break-
ing three of their own records, easily
took first place in the final swimming
meet last Friday night with 58% points.
1921 came second with 28 points and 1919
third with 20%. 1918 did not enter.
Forty-seven points toward the all-around
athletic championship were piled up to
1920's credit.
Repeating their performance of last
year M. S. Cary '20 and K. Townsend '20
were the brightest individual stars, with .
23 and 22 points respectively. A. Thorn-
dike 19, breaking the record for the
plunge, with a distance of 55 ft. 7 in.
came third with 10 points.
'1921 broke the class relay record, es-
tablished last year by 1917, changing the
time from 70 2-5 sec. to 70 sec. K. Town-
send '20 broke her own records in the
68 ft. and 136 ft. front swims, doing the
shorter distance in the phenomenal time
of 13 3-5 sec. as against her 14 3-5 sec.
of last year. M. S. Cary changed her
record of 41 2-5 sec in the 136 ft. baek
swim to 41 sec.
In-marked_contrast-to the fiest-meet,
the atmosphere last Friday was charged
with excitement. The highest pitch was
reached when it was realized that the
outcome of the relay between 1919 and
(Continued on page 3, column 1.)
NORTHFIELD DELEGATION LEADS
SPECIAL VESPER SERVICE
Gladys Leuba, daughter of Professor
Leuba, and Miss Alix Dolan carrying off
the two title parts with .great success. |
Miss Leuba last spring played Joan of |
Are in the French play of that name
given by the Model School.
The plot, though somewhat shaky, bor-/
rows interest from the scene, which is}
laid in a French village, Remicourt, at the
beginning of the war. Act I shows the
village in June, 1914; Act II, after war has
been declared; and Act III as. the)
actual center of a battle. The central
figure of the story is Paul, a patriotic |
French boy, who saves an entire army |
corps from destruction by carrying a mes-
sage to its general. When his village
falls into the hands of the Germans he
boasts of what he has done and as a pun-
ishment is ordered by the German com-
mander to kill a wounded French soldier
whom he had befriended. In desperation
Paul raises his gun at the Frenchman, |
but swings suddenly about and shoots, in- |
stead, the Prussian officer. This incident,
which is the climax of the play, actually |
occurred in France at the beginning of
the war.
|
Gladys Leuba is Brother-in-Arms
Miss Dolan gave a very convincing in-
terpretation of the French boy Paul and
was well supported by Miss Leuba as Joe,
the sturdy young American, Paul’s sworn
“brother-in-arms”. Perhaps the greatest
hold upon the audience was secured by
little Miss Caroline Norton as the appeal-
ingly childish Francois, younger brother
of Paul.
COOLING DOWN IN GERMANY TOO
The Royal Theatre in Stuttgart, accord-.
ing to a dispatch to the Ledger from
Basel, Switzerland, has been closed by
order of the Governor of Wurtemberg
on account of a coal shortage. All the
other theatres in Gérmany, says the
dispatch, will be closed for the same
The Bryn Mawr delegation to the Con-
ference of the World Student Volunteer
| Movement at Northfield three weeks ago,
|M. Bacon '18, L. T. Smith '18, E. Biddle
"19, _D.Chambers.19, and M.- M. Carey
‘20, led Vespers last Sunday.
“Shirkers, workers and jerkers” are
the classes into which most. people fall,
according to M. Carey ’'20. “The best
| way to be a worker is to keep Christ's
ideals in sight always, instead of just be-
ing jerked up temporarily by good ser-
mons. We must see these ideals behind
the war or, no matter what the outcome,
the war will have been in vain”.
“A great challenge confronts each one
'of us”, said BE. Biddle ‘19 in closing. The
only possible answer -must be ‘Master, I
will follow Thee whithersoever Thou
goest’.”
FUEL ORDER CLOSES PRESS
EXAMS —f IN TIME
No “News” Durifg Mid-Years
Although not technically under the fuel
order the John C. Winston Co., which
does the college printing such as the
Calendar, Finding List, Examinations and
so on, and which prints the Tip and the
News, observed the five-day rule for pa-
triotic reasons and will close its presses
Mondays. It is said that the Bryn Mawr
examination papers came off the press
| just before Garfield's order to close went
into effect.
As a result of the five-day shut-down
is issue of the News is a day late. In
all probability, however, the News can
continue to come out on Thursday in spite
of the Monday holiday.
There will be no News during Mid-
years, the next issue coming out on Feb-
ruary 14th.
IN MEMORIAM
_ Alas, another time-honored institution
is passing away, as it becomes evident
that one can no longer drink muggle and
be patriotic. No more will the muggle
fiend bend feverishly over the fatal cup.
No more will the harassed undergraduate,
from the Senior bowed with the affairs of
the college to the Freshman with a theme
to write, find inspiration in its brown
depths. Were one a sonneteer. one might
-immortalize. it in verse:
Shall I compare thee to a cup of tea?
Thou art more tasty and more nourishing.
The future looks black, indeed; and the
years ahead seem to stretch out in an
endless void, bereft of the one original
“cup that cheers but not inebriates”.
THE IDIOT GIRL
(With Apologies)
I dwell among such trodden ways,
In the library drear—
A maid for whom there’s little joy
At this grim time of year.
i.
Surrounded by my English books,
Half hidden from the eye,
* | mournfully scan the reading list
And wish in vain to die.
When suddenly I have a thought:
To-day we have hall tea!
’'Tis Hooverized war-food, but, oh,
The difference to me!
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
The editors do not hold themselves respon-
sible for opinions expressed in this column.
Aims of the Service Corps
To the Editor of the College News:
For the benefit of those who do not
already know about the Service Corps, we
are grateful to the News for this oppor-
tunity to print again in its columns a
. brief explanation of the main war work
of the college for the year. The Service
Corps was the unanimous choice of a
mass meeting of the college community
because it combined, as no other object
did, the contribution of personal service
and of money. Moreover, though it offers
a wide field of service, it is still central-
ized enouzh to identify its workers with
Bryn Mawr College.
The aim of the Service Corps campaign
is a fund with which to support the work-
ers of the Corps. These will be individ-
uals chosen because of their previous
training and experience. They will be
placed at the disposal of relief organiza-
tions such as the Red Cross, the ¥. M.
C. A., the Friends’ Reconstruction, etc., to
be sent where most needed, and their ex-
penses will be paid out of the Fund.
Alumne already working abroad who are
in need of funds or financial support may
also draw on the Service Corps.
One of the obvious merits of this |
scheme is that it does not necessitate |
waiting until the entire sum is completed.
As soon as there is enough in the Fund
to support one worker she can enter the |
field.
The goal fixed for the college for this
academic year is $10,000. $4000 is to be
raised from the college as a whole and
~ $6000 from the classes, which means that
each individual is responsible for about
$15 apiece.
-| printed from one of my Chapel addresses
Chairman of the War C cil.
Lighting System —
a, ues January 21, 1918.
To the Editor of the College News:
The College News of January 10th
President Explains
some remarks that I made in regard to
the economical system of lighting our
college buildings and grounds. As we
have this week requested the students to
co-operate with us in cutting down our
lights, I shall be glad if the editors of the
College News will allow me to explain
our lighting system a little more fully
and incidentally to correct an abbrevi-
ated form of expression quoted from my
Chapel address.
As I said in Chapel, a certain number of
boilers in the college power house must
be kept under fire in cold weather, and it
is some of the steam generated by these
boilers that is used to run the engines
which make direct connection to our dy-
namos which furnish our electric light and
power. The exhaust from these engines
passes directly into the steam mains
which carry the steam to our buildings
for heating purposes. If this steam were
not passed through the engines it would
have to be reduced by a reducing pres-
sure regulating valve, causing consider-
able loss of heat. The engineering ques-
tion involved seems to be whether the
loss of heat in passing steam through the
engines, thus utilizing it for lighting pur-
poses, is materially greater than the loss
of heat would be were this same steam
reduced by means of a reducing pressure
regulating valve only. The Bryn Mawr
College plant is so constructed that both
the exhaust from our engines and the re-
ducing pressure regulating valve have to
be used at the same time in order to get
a sufficient amount of steam at the low
pressure we use to heat our buildings.
Our heating plant was constructed in
1902 by A. D. Houghton, a very accom-
plished contracting engineer. In 1904, Mr.
Houghton, together with our present Su-!
perintendent of Mechanical Equipment, |
Mr. John J. Foley, and Mr. William J. |
Gobel, of the firm of Frank M. Gobel, of |
New York, made a series of careful tests |
in regard to the efficiency of the different |
parts of our heating plant, including our |
lighting, copies of which were sent to all |
the members of our Directors’ Committee |
on Buildings and Grounds and to me.
Mr. Houghton’s figures were checked by |
two other engineers. On the first page |
of these tests Mr. Houghton states:
“The cost of electric lights when ex-
haust steam is used for heating is not but
a little more than the cost of heating
would have been had the plant not beem
run in connection with the electric light-
ing but used for heating simply (black
type is mine), The bases of these figures
are that your plant would have to be run |
for heating in any case and what the)
lights cost above that. From this table |
you will see that for five months, com- |
mencing with November Ist and ending |
with April ist, that the coal used for |
electric lighting above what it would have |
cost for heating only was but $412.50; |
while during the month of May, when |
heat is not needed, the cost to make
lights is $577.50.
On page 4 you will see the saving in
dollars and cents in each 24 hours se
cured in using the various economizers.
This being derived at by experiment, as
well as figuration, makes it reliable.
At the bottom of this page you will see
that had we not furnished any electric
light during this time we could have
heated the buildings for $2.47 less, or, in
other words, we furnished you with 1800
K.W. hours of electric current for lights
They t the cost of
the coal for el ting, above
| what it would have cost for heating alone,
for the five months from November 1,
mont
1903, to’ April 1, 1904 (without Rockefeller
‘Hall and the Library, which were not
then occupied), was only $412.50; where-
as for the single month of May (with its
long hours of daylight when heat was not
needed) lighting the college, as it was
then, cost $577.57.
What I said in Chapel was based on
many statements to that effect made me
by Mr. Houghton, from various tests of
our plant and of similar plants that he
had installed elsewhere, and also on the
opinion of Mr. Foley, who worked with
Mr. Houghton in the construction of the
plant and has operated it since 1909. Mr.
Foley is of the opinion that in cold
weather, when so much steam is needed
to -heat our buildings and so much elec-
tricity to run our heat fans (always a
very heavy part of our load) and our
necessary lights, that it will not reduce
the number of boilers under fire in the
power house, or the amount of coal
burned in each boiler, to cut off the com-
paratively few lights that we can cut off.
Since January 10th, however, the
country has had to face a tremendous
shortage of coal and drastic government
regulations and, consequently, people who
see all our lights burning will be apt to
misunderstand Bryn Mawr’s loyalty and
patriotism. Moreover, some people, in-
cluding the head of our Department of
Physics, believe that we can save coal by
reducing our lights. Of course, even if
by cutting down our lights we can effect
a very slight reduction in the amount of
coal used in the power house, it is clearly
our duty to save all that we can for our
Allies. It is also, of course, Bryn Mawr’s
patriotic duty to set a good example. Ac-
cordingly, the Business Office, in consulta-
tion with Mr. Foley, Professor Huff, the
wardens, and the President of the Col-
lege, has decided on the light regula-
tions announced in the College News this
morning. Mr. Foley will keep as careful
records as possible in the power house in
order to try to determine just what saving
is effected by our efforts, and as soon as
definite results are obtained they will be
published in the College News.
. M. Carey Thomas.
OPPORTUNITY TO PLAN COURSE
WITH VIEW TO VOCATION
Dungy Sine ae ization at
Expense of Culture,
Warns Dean
For the benefit of students wishing ad-
vice in planning their vocations, Miss
Butcher, of the Bureau of Occupations in
Philadelphia, will hold a series of con-
sultations here after mid-years, under the
college Appointment Bureau, Dean Taft
announced last week in Chapel.
Similar consultations last year were
given by Miss Helen Jackson, of the Bos-
ton Bureau, who is now acting as. voca-
tional adviser to the students of Welles-
ley, in order to plan their courses, when
possible, from the time they enter college.
“Although it is right that a girl should
be advised to plan her course with a view
to what she is going to do afterwards, if
she knows, it is not always possible nor
desirable that she should make up her
mind in her Freshman year”, was Dean
Taft's comment on this plan. It is rather
necessary in college to keep an open mind
—to take up some subjects for the very
‘reason that one knows nothing about
‘them, she pointed out. In America we
i have suffered somewhat from the lack of
a leisure class to uphold general educa-
the government need not’ domet olen
ous training as the determination really
to do the thing in a professional way. —
eee
ALUMNZ NOTES
. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Carrol (Marion
D. Crane ’11) have a son, born January
10th. |
‘Margery Hoffman ’11 was married on
January 9th to Mr. Ferdinand C, Smith,
of the Camp Lewis Ambulance Corps, in
Portland, Oregon.
Elizabeth Taylor ’11 (Mrs. John F. Rus-
sell), is an associate member of Legal Ad-
visory Board 153, New York City.
Jeannette Greenewald ’16 was married
on January 6th to Mr. Benjamin Gordon
of New York. :
Dorothy Hughes ’14 and Margaret Free
15 are in Washington working under the
Committee on Classification of Personnel
in the Army. This committee is under
the Adjutant-General and classifies the
men in the cantonments of the national
army and the National Guard, placing the
men where they will be of the greatest
service to the army.
Margaret Scruggs (Mrs. R. P. Caruth
ex-’13) has a daughter, Matianne W. Ca-
ruth, born last September.
Lorle Stecher ’12 has a position as a
psychologist on Randall’s Island, New
York.
YOU HAVE HEARD
MISS HELEN FRASER’S
inspiring lectures. You have wished that
your le at home could hear them;
perhaps they will since her tour covers the
entire country—you can find out by writing
to Mr. Shaw. In order that Miss Fraser’s
message may reach as many people as
possible as soon as possible, she has written
a book to which President MacCracken of
Vassar has written a foreword.
Will you help to make it known either
by ordering a copy from one of the book-
stores named below or by sending to the
Publisher for some circulars to send to your
friends?
On entering your bookstore you will
recognize Miss Fraser’s book by this cover
“WOMEN? WAR WORK
»?
12mo 16 illustrations $1.50
Foreword by President MacCracken of
Vassar.
On March 25th the Publisher will send a
check for 20% of the net sales to the College
sending in the largest number of orders;
15% to the College winning second place;
10% to each of the Colleges winning third,
fourth and fifth places. These checks to be
donated to the War Service work of the
Colleges.
Be sure to order before March 20th from
the College Book Shop or direct from the
Publisher so that your College may receive
credit for your order.
G. ARNOLD SHAW
| Publisher to the University Lecturers Association
| GRAND CENTRAL TERMINAL NEW YORK
«
~
‘THE COLLEGE NEWS |
1920 haps on with h Highest Guinan
Score
(Continued from page 1.)
1921 was to decide whether the Freshmen
or the Juniors should hold second place |
wenn arn
_ in the meet. A very close finish left the
onlookers uncertain, and it was only when
it was announced that 1920 had fouled
that the issue was decided.
Results of the meet:
-_
68 ft. st:
1 ’ ere 13 3 sec.
2 oo Appel . sec.
gE BL, so oes MACE cAb ese hane sec.
8G Hams "i a ae 16 \ sec.
68 ft. back:
BP oo oci ob haben vccvee 18 sec.
Oe a ois ks bs os cedecs das can oy
3 D. Walter ’21...... . 19% sec.
OG Te ee ooo os Seca 20 16 sec:
36 ft. front:
1K. Townsend '20...... 33 $6 sec.
2 % Gre 3 Desi heenevecccs eee 37 36 sec.
a{ i orcester '21.. . 38 sec.
Me IE “BN oii hve voce cckiss 38 sec.
136 ft. back:
Be I OD ives vice veeecwin 41sec.
2 P. Helmer '20... - 43 pec.
De oc iv ince eiecacicews 46 % sec.
MIR af iveasdiecccvccecsas 46 4 sec.
Plunge for distance
1 A. Thorndike n9., 66h. 7 mn
2 E.H. Mills '21. ceneesetses ORD Oe
© meen 8): .ss. eo Batt aie
4... PU gikk kev icae cee 51 ft, 10% in
rom 8. Cary '20 28.1
pM ee WO. ..:. 5... sce ae
{aa Bd ke ds a4 4 403 cc awks 26.5
E. Cecil '21,.. . 26.5
~ Fancy dive: te :
i 2 BN ks vee iodo cee sa 87.05
DM vccscc ccs c ices eens 35.25
Ss: x Townsend "20.20.0000... 2002.0. 30.8
4 E. Cecil '21.. eee ceecnosibecin Meee
Class $
ME NE FOO five cide ise‘ oka 70 sec
Summary of points
1919 1920 1921
ON iin ck ice cece ee ck 1% 13 1%
Ns cca cvs eb cie 6% 9 2
MN so esc octeeeccs xs 10 6
I (ii bs Vib ae csc cad ck 15 1
Plunge........ 11 es 5
Form dive.... 3 6% 1%
hick kos oes as cassis 5 5 1
MI Cosi vcd ccc econ c kt a 10
MN es hee 6 ccs 6502 ivi 20% 5844 28
As against 1920’s 47 points on the all-
around athletic champignship, 1921 made
20 and 1919, 17. As they stand now, 1920
leads with 99 points; 1919 has 71; 1921,
32, and 1918, 3.
“NO”, CLASSICAL DANCE OF JAPAN,
IN GYMNASIUM FEBRUARY 8TH
A demonstration in costume of the “Nd
mai”, the classical dance of Japan, will
be given by Miss Clara Blattner, the even-
ing of Friday, February 8th, in the gym-
nasium.
POLITICAL MANCEUVRE. ‘AND Love |
AFFAIR ENACTED IN “HAMILTON”
George Arliss Opens Here This Week
of “Hamilton”, ‘the play dealing with the
life of Alexander Hamilton, in which
George Arliss appears this week at the
Broad, has been described in an article
| published in the New York Times when
the piece opened:
“The adroit political mancuvre by
which he (Hamilton) granted to the
South the site of our national capital in
exchange for the two votes requisite to
pass a vital Treasury bill”, forms the
skeleton of the plot. With this is inter-
woven the scandalous “Reynolds affair”,
in reality separated by some seven years:
“The character of Hamilton as a man is
revealed in the dramatic exposure of his-
relations with the adventuress, Mrs. Rey-
nolds, in which he rose to the pinnacle of
patriotism, sacrificing his personal pride
and his happiness with the wife he truly
in. | loved to the power and permanence of his
work as a statesman”.
George Arliss made his first appearance
on the stage at the Blephant and Castle
Theatre, London, in 1887. His first
American tour was with Mrs. Patrick
Campbell’s company in 1901 and he later
played with Blanche Bates in “The Dar-
ling of the Gods”, and with Mrs. Fiske.
P. R. R. CURTAILS LOCAL TRAINS
Sunday Service on Main Line Prevails
Saturday and Monday |
The Pennsylvania Railroad, in accord-
ance with Fuel Administrator Garfield’s
order, has materially reduced its subur-
ban train service.
The Main Line schedule on Saturdays
and Mondays is the same as that on
Sundays, with some additions, as far west
as Fraser. Beyond that point no change
has been made.
Besides the regular “Sunday” trains ad-
ditional trains on Saturdays and Mondays
are: :
Leave Broad St.
Leave B. M.
6.20 a.m. 6.09 a.m.
7.43 a.m. 6.50 a.m.
8.06 a.m. 6.15 p.m.
8.20 a.m.
8.38 a.m.
ALAN DALE’sS” PLAY RECEIVED
_ WITHOUT GREAT ENTHUSIASM
“The Madonna of the Future”, the first |.
Alan Dale, which opened here last week,
was not greeted by Philadelphia as a
great success. More enthusiasm is
prophesied from a New York audience.
“The story”, says the Public Ledger,
“could all be told in a single act, and as
a matter of fact, it is, and is then re-
peated in the second and third. There is
precious little plot development, and, save
in a few instances, one felt that a more
appropriate choice of players could have
been made”.
BERNHARDT HERE IN WAR PLAYLET
To secure large audiences without the
usual high prices and to serve as a link
between the women of France and Amer-
ica, Mme. Bernhardt, now ‘past seventy-
three, is playing twice daily on the vaude-
ville circuit. She appears in the part of
a French soldier.
DOUGLAS FAIRBANKS AND WAR
PICTURES IN BENEFIT PROGRAM
7 ”»>
Douglas: Fairbanks, War Pictures, and
Mutt and Jeff, are offered by the Bryn }
Mawr Theatre next Friday, February Ist,
for the benefit of the Social Service
Work of the Sunnyside Day Nursery,
1211 Thompson Street, Philadelphia.
Tickets, admitting to both afternoon
and evening performances, are twenty-
five cents, including war tax. Checks
may be drawn to the order of Myra E.
Vauclain, treasurer. Mrs. Vauclain was
Myra Elliott ’08.
SPORTING NEWS
Students taking folk-dancing, who
are unable to come to the Thursday
class at 3.45 and who need the period,
may attend the graduate class on
Thursday evening at 9,15.
The graduates have invited mem-
bers of the Faculty to play basket-
ball with them on Thursday evenings.
Three periods of exercise must be
taken in the first half of this week,
combined with the last three days of
the opening week of the semester.
play of the New York dramatic critic, |
At THE BRYN MAWR THEATRE
To-day—“Who Goes There”? Mat.,
2.30; eve, 7and 9%
Coming Attractions
Wm. Farnum in “The Spy”.
Theda Bara in “Camille”. .
“When a Man Sees Red”.
“Dagesiter of the Gods”.
IN PHILADELPHIA .
Broad—“Hamilton”, with George Arliss.
Forrest—‘“Have a Heart”.
Garrick—‘Turn to the Right”.
Adelphi—“A Successful Calamity”, with
William Gillette.
Lyric—“‘Her Regiment”,
Brian.
Chestnut Street Opera House—“The
Passing Show of 1917”. |
Keith’s—Sarah Bernhardt in “Du The-
atre au Champ d’Honneur”.
with Donald
Blizabeth Baldwin, who has entirely re-
covered from her accident on the Sussex,
which was torpedoed when crossing the
Channel, is doing Y. W. C. A. work in
Paris.
SCHOOLS
THE SHIPLEY SCHOOL _..
Preparatory to Bryn Mawr College
BRYN MAWR, PENNSYLVANIA
Principals
Eleanor O. Brownell Alice G, Howland
THE Harcum- ScHooL
FOR GIRLS—BRYN MAWR, PA.
For Girls wanting college prepara
9 thossuah oousee ie ek: ss
Hos Glite not qotns to eefloge the ochool
offers special opportunities to pursue
studies suited to their tastes and needs.
For Girls desiring to specialize in Music é
oc hal; Gare one Galt anon artists as
MRS. EDITH HATCHER HARCUM, B.L.
(Pupil of Leschetizky), Head of the School
BRYN MAWR PENNSYLVANIA
C
~~
HF
when you buy
M
VOILE.
here
CREPE, RUFP-A-NUFP, ‘AMP!
PATRIOTISM DEMANDS THE CONSERVATION OF WOOL
your bit and be both stylish and comfortable in costumes of Silk.
Slit wear like loth and look far handsome. You are sure of quality and
ALLINSON' |
Silks de Luxe
Be sure that the identification marks are on the sel KHAKI-KOOL and PUSSY
WILLOW and on the board or box of WILL O° TH HeWisP
ORA and SLENDORS CREPE.
All Trademark Names
H. R. MALLINSON & COMPANY
“THE NEW SILKS FIRST”
_ MADISON AVENUE--31st STREET
na
-_ INDESTRUCTIBLE
ROSHANARA
NEW YORK
PENNOCK BROS.
CHOICE FLOWERS
Daily Free Delivery Along the Main Line
1514 CHESTNUT STREET
Smart New Models in Georgette Crepe
1120 CHESTNUT STREET
Next Door to Keith’s Seoond Floor
THE MISSES KIRK’S COLLEGE
PREPARATORY SCHOOL
Bryn Mawr Avenue and Old Lancaster Road
BRYN MAWR, PA.
Number of boarders limited. Combines advantages
of school life with private instruction. Individual
schedule arranged for each pupil.
Gymnastics and outdoor games.
WASHINGTON UNIVERSITY SCHOOL
OF NURSING
Nursing offers to women an opportunity
for patriotic service, a splendid preparation
for life and a profession of broad social use-
fulness,
Washington University gives a three years’
course in Nursing. Theoretical instruction
is given in the University, clinical instruc-
tion in the wards of the Barnes and St. Louis
Children’s Hospitals, Washington University
Dispensary and Social Service Department.
Six months credit is offered to applicants
having a A.B. or B.S. degree from this col-
lege.
Address inquiries to a of
Nurses, Barnes Hospital, 600 S, Kingshigh-
way, St. Louis, Mo.
opened a Riding School for
Back Riding and will be
any time.
ring, suitable for ri
The Little Riding School
BRYN MAWR, PA.
TELEPHONE: 68 BRYN MAWR
4 Mr. William Kennedy desires to announce that he has
pean eased to have you call at
raed Seaton. given to children. A large indoor
g in inclement weather.
In connection with the school there will be a training
stable for show horses (harness or saddle).
r
instruction in Horse
IN PATRONIZING ADVERTISERS, PLEASE MENTION “THE ColLEGE News”
~ Coats and Wraps
Reasonable Prices
iw Sides i. Top||
ot Super unity sna Det
THE HANDBOOK |
Mtuetrated and Priced
mailed upon request
BAILEY, BANKS & BIDDLE Co.
~ST RAWBRIDGE
and CLOTHIER
Specialists in- the
FASHIONABLE APPAREL FOR
YOUNG WOMEN
MARKET, EIGHTH and FILBERT STS.
PHILADELPHIA
“The best florists in every city are our
tatives.
For this Reason
WITHIN TWO HOURS WE CAN
DELIVER FLOWERS FOR YOU IN
ANY. CITY IN THE UNITED
STATES THE SAME AS IN NEW
YORK CITY.
Call New York's Flowerphone Plaza 7241
MAX SCHLING, Inc.,
785 Fifth Ave., Cor. 60th St., New York City.”
are waiting at the other end of
our ’ . for . orders, or we will .
reach them by telegram. oe
GOWNS, SUITS,
COATS, WAISTS,
and MILLINERY.
oth AVENUE at 46th STREET
NEW YORK
Artists’ Materi
Brushes, Canvases, Easels,
Waterproof Drawing Ink. Modeling Materials.
F.. WEBER & CO.
Artists’ and Water Colors,
Sketchimg Umbrellas. Fine Drawing and Water Color Paper.
1125 CHESTNUT ST. PHILADELPHIA
SESSLER’S BOOKSHOP
1314 WALNUT STREET
PHILADELPHIA
BOOKS ::::. PICTURES
Waists, Skirts,
Franklin Simon a Co.
A Store of Individual Shops
FIFTH AVENUE 37th and 38th Streets NEW YORK
WILL EXHIBIT
AT THE
MONTGOMERY INN
BRYN MAWR, PA.
MONDAY TUESDAY WEDNESDAY
Jan. 28 Jan. 29 Jan. 30
ADVANCED SPRING FASHIONS
For Women and Misses
Suits, Coats, Wraps,
Tailored Dresses, Afternoon and Evening Gowns,
Gymnasium Apparel, Sport Apparel, Riding Habits,
Millinery, Underwear, Negligees, Etc.
An extensive variety of styles appropriate
for College Women
At Moderate Prices
Shoes, Sweaters,
SODA COUNTER _
"BOOKS OF ALL PUBLISHERS
Can be had at the
DAYLIGHT BOOKSHOP
1701 CHESTNUT STARE
Philadelphia
Saelipiag cat Fob K
As it hould be done >| cata
HAWORTH’S 4
Eastman Kodak Co.
1020 Chestnut St. :
PHILADELPHIA
Suits Blouses
G. F. Ward
1318 Chestnut Street
Philadelphia
Gowns Wraps
Smartness in costuming
begins with the corse. |
If the foundation—the cor-
set—is properly designed
and carefully fitted with a
full knowledge of the figure-
need, the result is all that
one may hope for from the
view-point of appearance,
comfort and health.
For even a last year’s
frock will fall with grace
a Redfern Corset
that is correctly filted.
SM est
are quite as pretty to look
at as they are comfortable
to wear. Their satisfaction
is assured.
$3.50 up
At High Class Stores
IN PATRONIZING ADVERTISERS, FLEASE MENTION “IME COLLEGE NEWS"
sail kos git ee
Gomi: ce Sport
Suits, Waists
For Every Occasion
i
Specializing in Youthful Models---
Reasonably Priced
WALNUT S300
1335-1337 Walnut Street
Opposite Rits-Cariton
ALBERT L. WAGNER
Ladies’ Hair Dresser
Facial Ma 16th St. above Walnut
Hoon Shampoo "Phone, Spruce 3746
HAIRDRESSING MANICURING
_ DENNEY & DENNEY
1513 WALNUT STREET
BELL PHONES
Spruce 4658 Locust 3219
DIM~A-LITE
Will give you FIVE degrees of light from
ONE electric lamp. You can attach it in a
moment.
Ask your favorite dealer to show it to you
JANE BLANEY
516™ FIFTH AVENUE
NEW YORK
DESIGNER AND MAKER OF
G JWNS,
FRICOAS,
NRA?S,
SUITS and HA'S
ROYAL BOOT SHOP
FOR LADIES
with its inexpensive upstairs rental"and immense
outlet saves you from $3 to $5 a pair
1208-10 CHESTNUT STREET
‘THE GREEN DRAGON TEA HOUSE
On Seuth Fifteenth Street at Number Twe-Fourteen
Where the Highest Standards are
followed in Service and Cuts ne
LUNCHEON «= TEA « DINNER OR SUPPER
Table d"Hote andala Carte llamo 730 p.m.”
“The tenia T istechind teisneecre
en eee
oak alone. in. Van heourhous, the
siege, in his graphic sermon ™ Chapel,
Sunday night.
' Describing the treatment of the Arme-
nians in the Turkish army, he said:
“Their rifles were taken away and they
weré forced to act as slaves to the Turk-
ish soldiers, and do nothing but the very
hardest labor. When they had served
their purpose they were separated into
groups of a few hundred and shot down
on the pretence that they had planned a
revolt.
“Orders were issued to the colonels of
certain Turkish regiments to annihilate
the Armenian villages in their district.
I was present in the office of the Gov-
ernor-General when he delivered one such
order. The next day fifty-five thousand
Armenians were massacred. The intel-
lectuals, whose influence the Turks
feared, were literally dumped into the
Black Sea.
“Of the two million Armenians in Tur-
key at the beginning of 1915, there are
now not more than half a million left.
About a quarter of a million more escaped
into the Allied lines”.
Soon after the slaughter had begun
the Turks attacked Van. Dr. Ussher
showed the first message, sent out from
the American mission, to call relief to
the city. It was written on a slip of thin
paper, rolled up in a tiny quill and fas-
tened into a messenger’s hair. The first
attempt was unsuccessful, so twelve
copies were typewritten on scraps of
cambric and given to as many men. Of
these twelve messengers six were killed
and only one succeeded in reaching
Russia.
The Russian Armenians immediately
brought an army to the aid of the city,
which they defended for two and a half
months until obliged to retreat because of
lack of ammunition. It was afterwards
learned that the Russian minister of war,
a pro-German, had purposely ordered the
shells.made too small for the cannon.
Dr. Ussher stressed the fact*that the
Armenians, in spite of the most tempting
offers on the part of the Turks, had stead-
ily refused to give up their religion and
“accept Islam”. He declared that the
massacres were executed under the eye
of German court-martial officers.
~
On account of the concentration of
effort on raising money for the Bryn
Mawr Service Corps, the drive for Arme-
nian relief has been given up. D. Cham-
bers ’19, however, has offered to forward
to Dr. Ussher any personal contributions
for the Armenians.
“Women and War Work” Out To-morrow.
Book by Helen Fraser of England
“Women and War Work”, by Miss
Helen Fraser of England, is announced
for publication to-morrow, January 26th,
by G. Arnold Shaw, New York. The book
is udvertised as a text-book for women
war workers, “designed to give perma-
nent value to Miss Fraser’s work on the
lecture platform’. It contains a foreword
eee Inter-world ‘Letter “Company,
petri proceeds to the Red Cross), to
furnish authentic letters from any source,
tion Box of the New Book Room, and no
orders will be taken for rhymes —
There will be no expurgation—
tor the modest sum of twenty
_ All orders are to be left in the Sugges-
You can hold a conversation
With the great ones gone before;
We give all the hidden lore.
Present favorites, by-gone passion:
Take your pick and be in fashion,
For without our inspiration life will be
an awful bore. Adv.
DR. ARCHIBALD, SILVER BAY FAVOR-
ITE, SUNDAY NIGHT SPEAKER
Dr. Warren S. Archibald, pastor of the
Second Church of Christ at Hartford,
Connecticut, and one of the speakers at
Dr. Archibald’s Bible Class on “The
Spirit of Jesus and the World Crisis” was
one of the most popular at the Confer-
ence and was attended by many of the
Bryn Mawr delegates.
SIX GREAT-GREAT GRANDSONS OF
BETSY ROSS FIGHT FOR FLAG
“When Betsy Ross designed and made
the first flag of the United States of
America she may not have dreamed of a
day when her direct descendants would
go forth under that flag to defend it”,
says the Indianapolis News. Now six of
her great-great grandsons are in the
service and at various training camps.
CONFERENCE CALLED BY
ALUMNA WAR RELIEF COMMITTEE
The War Relief Committee of the
Alumne Association has called a confer-
ence for Saturday evening, February 2d,
contingent on the approval of the plan of
a Service Corps by the Alumne Associa-
tion in their meeting in the afternoon.
The conference is to discuss ways and
means of raising the Alumne’s quota of
the Service Corps fund through local
efforts.
RED CROSS ROOM OPEN IN
AFTERNOONS, SECOND SEMESTER
Also Open During Mid-Years
The Red Cross workroom will be open
every afternoon, as well as every even-
ing, during the second semester, accord-
ing to latest reports from the committee.
The Faculty will have the room Wednes-
day afternoons as usual.
During mid-years the workroom will be
open every evening.
“MILK LUNCH AT THE CLUB”!
Hungry College Fed by Graduates
Mid-year morning milk lunches and
afternoon teas are being served by the
graduates in their club room in Denbigh
for the benefit of the Service Corps.
Their announcement follows:
Silver Bay last June, will preach here
‘next Sunday. :
-| planned for to-motrow night. The speak- | af
ers will begin at Radnor and work around
.| the campus.
A Service Corps rally ‘will take place
directly ‘after mid-year vacation. =~
_ The Varsity Service Corps fund has re-
dttiig. | OxocuoMNA. geen M40.
| ANC TRISH: R, well-bred, h
“AWMUUA TA erz MARTE
to | ceived $138, cleared from Lantern Night.
Youthful
Styles
for
the score.
The Shopping Place of Disoriminating Women Who Know
Girls from 14 to 20 years are finding that Millards have all sorts of charm-
ing things for them. New utility serge frocks are ready, as well as pretty
silk and crepe frocks for “dress up” occasions. Skirts and blouses, too, by
125-127 S. 13th St.
The Shop of
Sensible Pri
Afternoon Dresses
ming fects
aoe
eee ar
oN, gs th
Just Below Chestnut
of Striking Design
the season’s newest materials, col trim -
ol original medals in Wile wl bo
other famous
of Jenny, Lanvin and
29.50 to 225.00
MERCER—MOORE
EXCLUSIVE
FORREST FLOWER SHOP
| 131 South Broad Street
GOWNS, SUITS, BLOUSES, HATS
Offers their patrons superior
service in
Cleaning and Dyeing
| CORSAGES CUT FLOWERS
1702 WALNUT ST., PHILADELPHIA | DECORATIONS
Footer’s Dye Works | J. £. CALDWELL & CO.
1118 Chestnut Street PHILADELPHIA
Philadelphia, Pa. ~ | Design and Make
CLASS RINGS AND PINS
OF DISTINCTION
Shetches Submitted
Jewels—Silverware—Watches
Stationery
“No milk lunch in the morning”!
by President MacCracken of Vassar Col- |
lege.
Miss Fraser is lecturing in this country |
with the approval of the British Govern-
mournful mandate runs
But cheer up! Grinning graduates will |
ment, and spoke at Bryn Mawr January
llth on “Women’s Part in Winning the}
War”,
|
POSTPONED |
“The Romance of the Market”, a special |
article by Mrs, William Roy Smith, ad-|
vertised to appear in this issue, has been |
postponed to the next issue of the News,
that of February 14th.
gladly give out grub!
Pay ten cents, cash or credit, and have
milk lunch at the Club!
Moreover, tea to help you work from
four till dinnertime
May likewise be drunk in Denbigh for
the small sum of a dime.
Come, Staff!
Come, students, by the score!
Come eat with us, come drink with us, |
to help the Service Corps”.
So the
And brave Bryn Mawr crams comfort: |
less that babies may have buns. |
And come, Professors! |
LN PATRONIZING ADVERTISERS, PLEASE MENTION “THE COLLEGE WEws"
MANN & DILK.
1102 CHESTNY. $f.)
Spring models and colors that
are original and new and are
not elsewhere
Street Top and Motor
MANN & DILKS
1102 CHESTNUT STREET
Tyrol Wool
Ladies and Misses
Plain Tailored Suits
94.75 .- 25.75: 3i.t5
Also.
Coats
of the Board of Directors of the College,
“Reconstruction Tasks”.
2. President Thomas, The War Com-
mittee of the Association of Collegiate
Alumne”.
| $. Virginia Kneeland ‘18, chairman of
the War. Council of the College, “The
War Council”.
4. Mrs. Cecil Barnes (Margaret Ayer
'07), “The Work of the National Food Ad-
ministration”.
5. Mrs. Francis Louis. Slade (Caroline
McCormick ex-’96), “The Present Work
of the New York State Suffragists”.
6. Professor Ida H. Ogilvy '96,
Woman’s Land Army of America”.
“The
INSURANCE CO. DOES BIG BUSINESS
216 Campus Policy Holders
Insurance against any or all ills, from
measles to mid-years, is the business of
Sloane and Steele, a 1920 firm. For the
nominal fee of $.25, a policy insuring
against an impending matriculation fail-
ure, a sudden slump at mid-years, or a
miscalculated private reading translation,
may be taken out at the firm’s offices in
Radnor or Merion.
Already 216 such policies have been se-
cured, from which the company will de-
rive $18 clear profit for the benefit of the
Service Corps.. The rest of the money
will be divided up among such policy
holders as suffer failures or measles.
The firm will continue business
throughout the year.
COURSE BOOKS TO BE STAMPED
BEFORE NEXT SATURDAY
Students Asked to Keep Them for
Signature of Professors
All course books are to be stamped by
Dean Maddison for the courses of the sec-
ond semester by six o’clock, Friday, Feb-
ruary ist. Failure to comply with this
regulation involves_a fine of $5.00.
Students are asked not to drop the
books in the box outside the President’s
Office, but to keep them, after getting
them stamped, in order to secure the sig-
natures of their instructors for the second
semester.
Dean Maddison will be in her office to
stamp the books next week every. morn-
ing from 10.30 to 12.30. Students chang-
ing their courses must present with their
books Dean Taft’s certificate as adviser.
CALENDAR
Sunday, January 27
6.00 p. m.—Vespers. Speaker, Miss Ap-
plebee.
8.00 p. m.—Chapel. Speaker, Rev. War-
ren S. Archibald of Hartford, Conn.
Saturday, February 2
Meeting of Alumn@ Association. Alum-
nz Luncheon in Pembroke.
End of collegiate examinations.
End of first semester.
Wednesday, February 6
9.00 a. m.—Second semester begins.
Registration at first lecture required.
7.30 p. m—Class in Comparative Re-
ligions. Leader, Kate Chambers Seelye
"11.
Friday, February 8
8.00 p. m.—Demonstration of Japanese
Dancing by Miss Clara Blattner in the
gymnasium.
Saturday, February 9
8.00 p. m.—Bernard Shaw’s “Candida”,
played by Clifford Devereux Company in
the gymnasium, for War Relief.
Sunday, February 10
6.00 p. m.—Vespers. Leader, T. How-
ell "18.
‘great audience and a lovely time”.
He has given the $604 cleared at the
lecture to the Scottish Regimental
Association.
Major Beith is now on a lecture
tour in the West, on which Mrs.
Beith is accompanying him. He spoke
in Philadelphia last week, before leav-
ing, at the Academy of Music.
“WILFRED THE LUTE PLAYER”
TO GIVE CONCERT IN TAYLOR
Artist Noted for Dramatic Power in
Interpreting Old Folk Songs
An artist who has been ealled a re-
incarnation of the medizeval troubadour,
Thomas Wilfred, lute player and folk
singer, will give a concert in Taylor, Feb-
ruary 15th, under the auspices of ‘the
Music Committee.
Mr. Wilfred, “Wilfred the Lute Player”.
as he is called, will sing a number of Eng-
lish and foreign folk songs to the accom-
paniment of a lute over two hundred
years old. His art is said to consist in
an unusual power of impersonation as
well as in his rich baritone voice and
skillful mastery of a rare instrument.
Like his troubadour prototypes, he has
played and sung at many of the courts of
Europe, among them, Denmark, England
and Sweden. He is not only a musician
but poet, composer, story-writer, and
soldier.
Tickets for the concert in Taylor on
the 15th can be obtained from Ruth Hart,
chairman of the Music Committee, at 50
and 75 cents for members of the college
and one dollar for outsiders.
NEWS IN BRIEF
Thalia H. Smith °17, last year’s Euro-
pean Fellow, was married on October 22d
in New York to Harold Dole, First Lieu-
tenant in the Aviation Corps. Mrs. Dole,
who is President Thomas’s private secre-
tary, announced her marriage last Sat-
urday. Her husband is now in France.
A medical laboratory fitted with equip-
ment to take cultures and test blood, has
been completed at the Infirmary. The
much needed addition was made possible
by a recent anonymous gift.
No 1918 class book will be published
this year, according to a unanimous vote
at the Senior Class meeting last Monday.
The custom of exchanging individual
Senior photographs was voted down at
the same meeting.
T. Haynes ‘19 and S. Taylor '19 have
been chosen, on the recommendation of
the Self-Government Executive Board, to
live in Llysyfran the second semester.
The Seniors will give a reception to the
graduates, March Ist, in the gymnasium.
The committee is the same as that for
the reception to the Freshmen: L. Hodges
"18, chairman; J. Hemenway ‘18, H. Huff
‘18, M. O’Connor ‘18, and M. Rupert 18.
To help in saving the food which, ac-
cording to a list obtained by the Con-
servation Committee from Mitchell and
Fletcher, is needed abroad, the Juniors
and Sophomores are having cards printed
pledging the signer not to eat any of the
food mentioned on the list.
Open Silver Bay meetings after Chapel
Sunday evenings will take the place of
the 9.30 Wednesday meetings next se-
mester. Dr. Fosdick’s “Meaning of
Prayer” will be followed and can be ob
tained through the Book Shop.
Miss Applebee, on account of the clos-
ing of the gymnasium, will have office
hours during mid-years in the Christian
) Association room in the Library.
PiiONE 758
HENRY B. WALLACE
CATERER AND CONFECTIONER
LUNCHEONS AND TEAS
BRYN MAWR
Nights, 7 to 9. "Adults, 18 Cents
Saturday Mat., 2.15. Children, 15 Cents
Afternoon Tea and Luncheon
COTTAGE TEA ROOM
Montgomery Ave., Bryn Mawr
Everything dainty and delicious
FRANCIS B. HALL
HABIT AND BREECHES
MAKER |
Remodeling, Dry
eatrical Costumes
840 Lancast PRG ono orp tgh
ie Bryn Mawr, Pa.
WILLIAM T. McINTYRE
GROCERIES, MEATS AND
_ PROVISIONS
ARDMORE, OVERBROOK, NARBERTH
AND BRYN MAWR
BRYN MAWR AVENUE
Bell Phone 307-A
N. J. LYONS
BICYCLES AND SUPPLIES
BRYN MAWR, PA.
Wheels to Hire, 25c an hour: ‘fcac¢ y.
Flashlights and Batteries for Sale. {kates £1: rpened.
ATHLETIC APPAREL FOR
“COLUMBIA” ATHLETIC apranel Fe
JEANNETT’S
BRYN MAWR FLOWER SHOP
Cut Flowers and Plants Fresh Daily
Corsage and Floral Baskets
Old Fashioned Bouquets a Specialty
Potted Plants—Personal supervision on all orders
807 Lancaster Ave.
Phene, Bryn Mawr 570
THE BRYN MAWR TRUST CO.
CAPITAL, $250,000
DOES A GENERAL BANKING BUSINESS
ALLOWS INTEREST ON DEPOSITS
SAFE DEPOSIT DEPARTMENT
CAREFUL HANDLING A SPECIALTY
FRANK J. FLOYD
MEN’S, WOMEN’S AND CHILDREN’S
OUTFITTER
SHOES, DRY GOODS AND NOTIONS
BUTTERICK PATTERNS
Phone, 375-J [BRYN MAWR, PA.
Miss L. P. Sims Miss M. S. Sims Madame L. Glatz
THE GARMENT SHOP
Millbrook Lane, Haverford, Pa. P. O., Bryn Mawr, Pa,
FOR SALE: AND MADE TO ORDER; Good Shepherd
Fingering Yarn, Collar Sets, Sweaters, Scarfs, Sport Hats, Chil-
dren's Sweater Suits Fancy Articles, Children's Smocked
Dresses, Shirt Waists. Work cheerfully exhibited without
obligation. Telephone, Ardmore 406-J
BRINTON BROTHERS
FANCY AND STAPLE GROCERIES
LANCASTER AND MERION AVES.
BRYN MAWR, PA.
ORDERS DELIVEREO WE AIM TO_PLEASE YOU
MARCEL WAVING MANICURING
SCALP SPECIALIST
The W. O. Little and M. M. Harper Methods
S. W. COR. ELLIOTT AND LANCASTER AVES.
BRYN MAWR 307 J
F. W. PRICKITT—-BRYN MAWR
Is the authorized DRUGGIST to Bryn Mawr
College and students. Messenger calls 11 a.m.
at each hall daily (Sunday excepted) for orders
Whitman's Candies Sold. STORE, LANCASTER AVE.
M. M. GAFFNEY
LADIES’ AND GENTS’ FURNISHINGS
DRY GOODS AND
NOTIONS
POST OFFICE BLOCK
TRUNK AND BAG REPAIRING
The Main Line’s Headquarters for Trunks, Bags
and Suit Cases of thoroughly reliable makes, to-
gether with a fine assortment of Harness, Saddlery
and Automobile Supplies. Phone, 373
EDWARD L. POWERS
903-905 LANCASTER AVE. BRYN MAWR, PA.
D. N. ROSS (Pharmacy) > Penna,”
Instructor in Pharmacy and Materia
Medica, and Director cf the Pharmaceu-
tical Laboratory at Bryn Mawr Hospital.
EASTMAN’S KODAKS AND FILMS
WILLIAM L. HAYDEN
HARDWARE
PAINTS, GLASS LOCKSMITHING REPAIRS
SUPPLIES
ELECTRICAL
COOKING UTENSILS, CUTLERY, ETC.
PHONE 894 BRYN MAWR, PA.
A. W. WILLIS
CARS TO HIRE BY HOUR OR TRIP
DRIVERS WITH .ONG MAIN LINE EXPERIENCE
IN PRIVATE SERVICE
PHONE, BRYN MAWR 738-W
CUT FLOWERS FLORAL DESIGNS
Telephone
GEORGE CRAIG
FLORIST
211 S Eleventh St.
Philadelphia
IN PATRONTZENG ADVERTISERS, PLEASR MENTION “THE COLLEGE Wews”
JOHN J. CONNELLY
Florist
Rosemont, Pennsylvania
Efficiency Quality . Service
ST. MARY'S LAUNDRY
ARDMORE, PA.
See ae
College news, January 25, 1918
Bryn Mawr College student newspaper. Merged with Haverford News, News (Bryn Mawr College); Published weekly (except holidays) during academic year.
Bryn Mawr College
1918-01-25
serial
6 pages
digitized microfilm
North and Central America--United States--Pennsylvania--Montgomery--Bryn Mawr
Vol. 04, No. 14
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-vol4-no14