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1924
CLASS BOOK
BRYN MAWR
COERLEGE
“Oh, what joy
To see a sanctuary
For our country’s youth, ... .
A habitation sober and demure
For ruminating creatures.”’
~~ Four
ott Five
To Dr. Cuartotte Ancus Scort,
a most honored member of our
faculty, we dedicate this little
book and hope it will please her.
Seven
wed
7
Staff
Editorial Board
Editor-in-Chief
Mary Paacus
(Resigned)
Constance D. Lewis
Editors
EsteLLeE NEVILLE
LoutsE SANFORD
ANNE SHIRAS
Business Board
Manager
Mary E. RopNry
Assistants
Ouivia FouNTAIN
Exrsa Mo.itor
Marcaret V. SMITH
HELEN WALKER
Picture Committee
JERE BENSBERG
KATHERINE BRAUNS
RosALIND PEARCE
Rutu Tussy
~~ Nine
7
= Sn a EET a
ee ee : was ~
Eleven
Bee §
t
ith
Tessie Wi Uecax Sm
ene
Class Officers
1920-1921
President
ANNE SHIRAS
Vice-President and Treasurer
ExvizaBetH Howe
Secretary
Etuet TErrt
SELF-GOVERNMENT ASSOCIATION
Executive Board
ELizaABETH PEARSON
UNDERGRADUATE ASSOCIATION
Advisory Board
Marion RussELu
THE LANTERN
Editorial Board
KATHARINE CONNER
THE COLLEGE NEWS
Assistant Editor
FeticE BecG
Business Board
LoutsE How1rz MARGARET SMITH
SONG MISTRESS
IsABEL BLoGG
Se
Thirteen
wh
is
Athletics
When we who write this splashed
our daily-bath water in modest retire-
ment freshman year, we used to hear
groups of tooth-brushing seniors con-
] a ve fide to one another that college was
/
going to the dogs. They never said
1 why—in so many words. But we got
—
the impression (wasn’t it clever of us!)
that the reason ’21 thought Bryn Mawr was going dogwards
was because '21 was leaving. ‘‘Of course athletics,’’ they were
wont to moan, ‘‘athletics can never (Toothpaste, please, Darn—)
be the same any more.’
‘21 left. And athletics, if we may venture the opinion,
went on as stoutly as ever. And this for a very good reason.
‘21 had forgotten to reckon on something—they had forgotten
24. By the way, '22 was still left, too, with an athlete or so to
their credit, and ’23; and even—but we were told to make this
atticle brief and stick to main points, so, as we said before,
there was 24! How Cecil and Copey and other stellar sports
could go away discouraged, after having visited here and seen
us in action, passes comprehension. But of course they were
prejudiced,—there was always a coldness after the Unfortunate
Episode. Every loyal wearer of light blue will recall the Un-
fortunate Episode, I feel sure,—the brilliant
but ill-starred triumph of Estes in our fresh-
man gym meet. Her sole crime consisted in
doing two individuals, (for 6th team) and
doing them beautifully. Such a je-ne-sais-quoi
about Estes on the bars! Or on the horse, for $_—}
that matter! But because she happened not to ae
be a member of either team she starred for, eos aaa
.
—_
~% Fourteen
there had to be a great technical how-de-do, culminating in a
letter from Copey that would have flattened any little freshman
class, meant they never so well!
It speaks well for ’24, I think, that we ever recovered from
this quashing. But recover we did, and the strains of ‘‘Who-
Does’’ continued to vibrate triumphantly over the athletic
fields. And so they continue to this day, or other strains like
them. (No. I take that back, there zs no strain like ‘‘Who-
Does 2)
But what of next year? Bryn Mawr without ’24. Athletics
without ’24! Hockey! Water Polo! Pyramids without Connie
and her pink whatever-it-was waving at the peak. Play-ground
games! No, frankly, we can’t picture these things in the bleak
years to come. If you ask our opinion, and I am sure you do,
this college is going to the dogs. And athletics,—well, of
course, athletics can never be the same again.
ANNE SHIRAS.
~t Fifteen
Summer Schedules
April r4.
Dear Mother,
Excuse paper, but I am writing this in economics class. 1
should have written you before, but college has been hectic these days.
I have the most wonderful plan to discuss with you. Would you
mind if I didn't come up to Egg Harbor this summer? Because six
of us have decided to sail to Vienna and study Viennese basket work.
It's all settled and going to be simply marvelous. We don’t know
yet when we'll leave or where we'll go, or who ll go with us, but
those are minor details that will settle themselves. And we've discov-
ered tt wall be wonderfully cheap. A survey of the exchange situation
shows that a leather suit-case in Vienna is the same price as a boiled
egg in America. So you see, we really are going into all this scien-
tifically. Do say we can go.
Love,
Betty.
April zr.
Dear Mother,
Excuse my not writing you before, but college is hectic these days.
Also please excuse paper. I am writing this in physics class. We
have the most wonderful plan for this summer. The Viennese one
fell through, because we discovered the basket-work course was discon-
tinued sixteen years ago. But this is much better. anyhow. We're
going to get an aeroplane and fly to Iceland for a walking trip. I
was reading an article, and it said there were the most adorable little
inns to stay at all along. It will be marvelously cheap,—we' re
going to walk all the way and come home by way of the Klondike.
Please write me what you think at once.
Love,
Betty.
~% Sixteen
April 28.
Dear Mother,
I forget whether I wrote you or not that the Iceland plan has been
given up. We heard that we probably wouldn't get anything but
canned food up there, and we've had enough of that at college. But
a man has been here lecturing, and he has gotten us all enthusiastic
about taking two months of summer school in the Sandwich Islands.
Really, he was perfectly inspiring. I can’t think why more people
don’t go there. He says there are all the advantages and no disadvan-
tages, and I should think he'd know, living right there, and every-
thing. I'll write you further details as soon as I have a minute—
college is so hectic these days.
Love,
Betty.
P.S. Excuse paper. I am writing this in philosophy class.
etc., cbe., ete.
Nore:—This student spent a nice summer in Egg Harbor
with her family.
~% Seventeen
Rhyme, But No Reason
P. T. Barnum, meeting Plato,
Asked him where he'd been all day.
“I’ve been fishing,’’ answered Plato—
“But the biggest got away.”’
Mother Hubbard and Miss Thomas
Went to Philly on a bat.
"Just one question,”” begged M. Hubbard,
“Tell me where you got that hat.”’
William Howard Taft got sleepy,
Stretched himself upon a shelf.
Something very funny happened—
Dope it out to suit yourself.
One day Wilhelm Hohenzollern,
Tried to wreck the hemisphere.
When he cried “‘where haff the marks gone?”’
Hart and Schaffner answered ‘‘Here.’’
“Biologies”
Did you know that
When the bees
Sneeze
All the crickets
On the path
Laugh?
Yes—they laugh at
Little ants
Pants
And the sight of
Epiderms
Of worms.
B. Howe.
& Nineteen
Faculty Song
(Tune—‘‘Otp Man Noan’’)
I
"Way, ‘way back in the ages dark
The Faculty went to Willow Grove Park.
They couldn’t get a taxi but Schenck had her Ford;
She took the whole bunch as ballast aboard.
The old bus held by the grace of the Lord—
She was a grand old Lizzie.
CHORUS
Schenck drove. She weighed a thing or two,
Lizzie could hardly crawl.
Oh, Miss Schenck she weighed a thing or two, and when we
say a thing or two, you haven't heard it all.
Between ourselves we'll confide to you
She tipped the scales at 2-0-2.
Oh, Miss Schenck she weighed a thing or two,
She had the averdupoiz-z-z.
II
Lizzie rolled off, when along came Gray.
He was in training so he ran all the way.
‘Hark!’ said Izzy with a nervous glance,
Lucy fainted when she heard Gray’s pants.
She hadn't been so shocked since Wordsworth was in France,
She was the same old Lucy.
Il
Oh, they hadn't gone far when the Ford stopped dead.
Jimmy our scientist promptly said,
‘There's a reason why,” but nobody knew it.
Schenck wouldn't move so she let George do it.
He took a look around and they heard him call,
**We've killed a cat, that’s all!"’
CuHoRUS
Poor George, he didn’t know the half of it.
That cat was strong though small.
Poor George, he didn’t know the half of it—the cat was dead,
that much was plain, but that much wasn’t all.
Something told them all was not right,
But good man Delly was the first to see light.
‘Ha, ha,’’ said Delly, as he held his nose tight,
“It wasn’t a pussy at all!”
IV
Geege was out for an awful toot,
You couldn’t keep her off the shoot-the-shoot.
Then she tried the merry-go-round;
Betty fell off and couldn't be found.
They searched Willow Grove for the aesthaytic hound,
But—Betty was a hot-dog.
Vv
Schraeder had his picture taken with a fish
The picture was good—but which was which?
Crenny was analyzing ginger-pop,
Chew dropped his flask and got pinched by a cop,
Alwynn played the hand-organ like a wop,
And Manard was the monkey.
CHoRus
Oh, that bunch they did a thing or two,
They scandalized the town.
Oh, that bunch they did a thing or two, and by a thing or two
we mean they did the park up brown.
Abbie Kirk was on the qui-vive,
The pranks she played you wouldn't believe—
Oh, that bunch they did a thing or two,
They didn’t cut up—Mach!
~< Twenty-one
Faculty Song—Continued
VI
By and by the hour got late.
Willow Grove closed, so they had to vacate.
When they counted noses, reckoning one nose per,
Fenny was missing, which created quite a stir.
(They found him looking down a slot where naughty pictures
were)
They were surprised at Fenny!
Cuorus
Whang-bang, the Ford was on the go again,
Packed with out P.-H. D:s.
Honk, honk, she’s making half a mile an hour, and G. G.
parked on George’s knees as cozy as you please.
Owing to the hot dogs they’d been stowing,
There was less room coming than there had been going.
Poor Lizzie got the bunch home—dbatr—
She never ran again!
-three
Twenty
J
t
Athletics, 1920-1921
All-round Championship won by 1921
HOCKEY
Won by 1921
Captain—M. Russell Manager—E. Pearson
Team
M. Faries K. Elston M. Angell
F. Begg M. Palache E. Pearson
FE. Howe B. Tuttle E. Bailey
M. Russel] K. Neilson
On Varsity
M. Faries
Substitute
E. Tuttle
~ Twenty-four
WATER POLO
Won by 1921
Captain—M. Buchanan
Team
K. Elston M. Buchanan
E Futtile K. Conner
B. McRae
SWIMMING MEET
Won by 1921
Captain—K. Elston
Team
I. Blogg K. Elston
K. Conner M. Faries
M. Cooke H. Mills
E. Neville
APPARATUS MEET
Won by 1921
Captain—E. Tuttle
Team
FoBere S. Leewitz
M. Buchanan E. Molitor
J. Lawrence E. Neville
Fourth Place in Individual Won by
M. Buchanan
Manager—H. Mills
H. Mills
J. Wise
Manager—M. Faries
M. V. Smith
E. Sullivan
E. Tuttic
Manager—M. Buchanan
E. Pearson
E: Tuttle
S. Wood
~t Twenty-five
Captain—J. Lawrence
M. Angell
B. Borden
M. Buchanan
H. Dillingham
E. Howe
J. Lawrence
Captain—B. McRae
B. McRae
E. Howe
Captain—J. Palmer
B. Borden
M. Palache
TRACK MEET
Won by 1924
M. Platt
G. Prokosch
M. Russell
A. Shiras
E. Sullivan
E. Tuttle
S. Leewitz
B. McRae
H. Mills
E. Molitor
M. Palache
BASKET-BALL
Won by 1921
Manager—S. Leewitz
Team
M. Buchanan H. Mills
S. Leewitz
TENNIS
Won by 1923
Manager—I. Wallace
Team
J. Palmer O. Fountain
I. Wallace
On Varsity
B. Borden
Substitute
M. Palache
~% Twenty-six
~% Twenty-seven
S
O
,
b
0
m
0
r
C
Tessie Willcok® Smith
+ Twenty-nine
Class Officers
1921-1922
President—Marion RussELuL
Vice-President and Treasurer—E .izABETH PRICE
Secretary—Mary Louise WuitE
SELF-GOVERNMENT ASSOCIATION
Treasurer—Mary Minott
Executive Board—ANNE SHIRAS
UNDERGRADUATE ASSOCIATION
Assistant Treasurer—Marion RussELL
Advisory Board—Martua CooKxe
CHRISTIAN ASSOCIATION
Secretary —E izaBETH Ives
ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION
Secretary —E .izaBETH Howe
THE LANTERN
Editorial Board—Pameta Coyne, EsTELLE NEVILLE
Business Board—E.izaBetTH Pearson, Mary RopNEY
THE COLLEGE NEWS
Editors—FE.icE BEGG
Assistant Editors—Ouivia Fountain, Saran Woop
Business Board—Loutise How1trz, MarGaret SMITH
SONG MISTRESS
EvizaBetH Howe
> Z
Map Showing Suitable Places to Take Suitors in Bryn Mawr
~< Thirty-one
Sinner’s Son g
When we have charmingly grown old, as we should wish,
With snowy hair, and only smiling wrinkles,
Some think it is the tenor of Parade night
That we'll remember;
Some think it is the fervent adoration
We beamed upon our Seniors and our Juniors,
And some the gay departure of a Friday
And barrenness of Sunday night’s returning
That we'll remember.
Perhaps—my memory’s fickle—but I think
That first night spent upon the towered roof,
Hearing the wind rough-house among the lilacs,
Catching a glimpse, too, of the dawn, who wore
A crescent jewel in his turban’s silk,
I shan’t forget.
Some think it’s May Day, dripping glorious May Day,
That we'll remember;
Some think it’s Senior singing in the dusk,
And some, moist picnics down beside the brook
That we'll remember.
Perhaps—my memory’s fickle—but I think
That first Informal Spoken Reprimand
Delivered in a little private room
By the Self-Government President herself,
A deep-voiced maiden thrice the size of me,
I shan’t forget.
Some think it is their first H.C. report
That they'll remember;
Some think it is a man who spoke in chapel,
And some election to a cherished office
That they'll remember.
Perhaps—my memory’s fickle—but I think
The time that G.G. in her smiling chant
Bade me, a Freshman, tell the class of what
Experience I had in sin, if any,
When I have charmingly grown old, as I should wish,
I shan’t forget. K. ConNER
~% Thirty-two
penmetccmtiirsens ge SS ammm - . -
~% Thirty-three
ot Thirty-four
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~< Thirty-five
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A Boob and Geegum
A G.G. Major, may she rest at last,
Awoke one night from dreaming of a ‘‘Passed,”’
And saw, midst the disorder of the room
Casting a shadow of the deepest gloom,
Meese King writing within a black-bound book—
The Major murmured ‘May I take a look?
What have you there?’ ““Nay,”’ Geege replied. ‘‘A list
Of those who of my course have got the gist.
For whom M. Gayet is not too deep,
Who mutters Jackson clearly in her sleep.”’
“Is mine one?’ ‘‘Nay, not so.”’
The girl spoke low
With her best poker face a moment later,
‘Write me as one who always knew her Pater,
Who writes with ease Swinburnian incantations
And quotes from Genesis to Revelations.”
The next night came a list of those whom Geege loved best,
And lo! The Major’s name led all the rest.
BARBARA LING.
Local Color
They gasp at my refulgence as I’m whisked around the grounds,
And they stare and argue hotly as to how my colour sounds:
There are those who dub me red-hued, and some few who call
me pink,
My roseate complexion is bright-orange, others think.
But—’'twixt you and me, I am no shade to note;
I'm just local color,—Fenny’s overcoat.
SELMA Morse.
~% Thirty-six
~t Thirty-seven
Favorite Campus Jokes
Just for practice certain statisticians on our campus tabulated the five
favorite jokes of the faculty. Patient observation and diligent research led
to the following startling results:
JOKE
. What is fortitude?
Two twenty tudes.
. Prof.—Name five animals of the
Arctic region.
Stude: 1 walrus, 1 seal, 1 whale
and 2 polar bears.
. Man 1n restaurant: Do you serve
crabs here?
Waiter: Yes we treat all cus-
tomers alike.
. Mistress: Have you dusted?
Maid: No.
Mistress: No what?
Maid: No duster!
. When is a sailor not a sailor?
When he’s a plank.
VOTE
Winner with 76 votes. (Guaran-
teed one laugh by every member
of the faculty.)
and Prize with 73 votes. The psy-
chology department doesn’t care
much for it.
This came in 3rd, because some of
the faculty feel they have heard
it before.
33 votes. Among the more do-
mestic members of the faculty
this brings the smile that wins.
5 votes. This tale has its staunch
supporters. In a certain quarter
its popularity is guaranteed, but
we fear it’s only for the few
that it was written.
P. S.—If there’s any doubt remember ‘‘statistics never lie.’
~% Thirty-eight
News 5 UppER
Wheat has been robbed
Since last week.
Hee.
For qettul roommate enfers- To meetings rehearsals etc.
t.
silence and looks.
~< Thirty-nine
“Owed to Bi”
Ah, worm!
That under these becurséd walks
Doth turn,
Segment on segment wriggling,
Undermining this sweet building!
Lay low it with loudest crashes;
And we from out its hashes
Shall choose the worst.
Yard on long yard
We draw
Intestine, pulling hard,
From out one rabbit raw
From smashéd bottles seeping
Come leggéd creatures peeping,
And wormy tapes so hideous,
And every thing insidious,
All heaped up in confusion
And writhing in profusion
Of H,S.
The skeletons come hopping,
Their little bonelets dropping,
That straightway run to find
Things similar in kind,
Perhaps less evoluted.
As HS grows stronger
Things that have been kept longer
In vessels stoppered,
Old ancient pickeled creepers,
Burst out their rubber keepers
“Owed to Bi”—Continued
And legs, and hop and dance;
And with each added prance
Grow more delirious
Until the naked eye
Crosses to see fly by
Hearts, and lungs, and legs,
Ribs, and bursted kegs
Of vile and smelleous gases;
And pickled bugs and bees,
And finger bones and knees,
And cows and sheep,
And little flies,
Kittens feet, and dogfish eyes . .
Ah, little worm,
Return!
I fear
Perhaps [m not ail acre —
Betty Howe
~% Forty-one
Characters Conquer
Margie was all of a twitter. At last she had a chance to play on varsity!
Although she was an all round athlete and had made the college teams in
hockey, track, tennis, and basketball, Mah Jongg had kept her from wearing
the purple bandana. Now the Mah Jongg varsity had been called home
for a wedding, leaving Margie, the sub, to hold up the honor of her college.
The intercollegiate Mah Jongg tournament was Causing much excitement
among the sporting committees of the ‘‘big four’’ Eastern colleges. Betting
was heavy, and the odds were almost even on N—, S—, H—, and B. M.
The day of the games dawned bright and clear. Margie was the first to
roll the bones for East Wind. A mad cheering set up from the side lines in
accompaniment to the first three games, the result of which found the
contestants from N— and H— barred out because their scores were much
below par—6o,oo0o.
Now the fight began in dead earnest. The championship lay between a
bobbed haired girl from S— and Margie. Margie felt a wave of fierce joy
surge over her as she began the first of the three final games. The first two
she played in her own usual, brilliant style and won hands down; she mah
jongged both with hands of all honors (honors were Margie’s forte—she
never played ordinary hands).
Till the end of the second game the girl from S— stared stupidly, but with
the third the stupidness disappeared. She was on to Margie’s game, already
she had “‘gonged”’ red dragons and punged west winds. Margie felt frantic,
but kept a cool, calm, and collected exterior. In her turn she reached for a
tile. Nine of characters! She shuddered. O God, where were those white
dragons? Her turn again. Another nine of characters! Those winds, where
_ had they hidden! The mental picture of the purple bandana faded to lavender.
Suddenly something snapped in Margie’s brain; ‘‘Characters,’’ she muttered
to herself. Why not characters? Dizzy, but determined she discarded
honors one by one, at the same time vehemently punging and chowing
characters. The girl from S— looked puzzled and the sidelines held their
breath. “Mah Jongg,’’ murmured Margie weakly, displaying an entire
hand of characters.
That night Margie, the champion Mah Jongg player, was carried on her
classmates’ shoulders to the chapel, where, summa cum laude, she received
the purple bandana.
~% Forty-two
Athletics, 1921-1922
All-round Championship won by 1922
Captain—M. Russell
M. Faries
FP. Begs
E. Howe
M. Russell
F. Begg
HOCKEY
Won by 1922
Team
K. Elston
M. Palache
E. Tuttle
On Varsity
Substitute
E. Tuttle
E. Pearson
Manager
M. Angell
E. Pearson
K. Gallwey
K. Neilson
M. Faries
~% Forty-three
WATER POLO
Won by 1922
Captain—S. Leewitz Manager—K. Elston
Team
K. Elston M. Buchanan M. Faries
E. Tuttle J. Wise S. Leewitz
H. Mills
On Varsity
E. Tuttle
SWIMMING MEET
Won by 1925
Captain—M. Faries Manager—K. Elston
Team
M. Buchanan R. Pearce E. Tuttle
K. Elston E. Price K. VanBibber
M. Faries M. V. Smith M. Woodworth
E. Sullivan
Fourth Place in Individual Won by
E. Tuttle
APPARATUS MEET
Won by 1922
Captain—E. Tuttle Manager—E. Pearson
Team
F. Begg J. Lawrence M. V. Smith
M. Buchanan S. Leewitz E. Tuttle
M. Faries E. Neville S. Wood
E. Pearson
Fourth Place Individual Won by
M. Buchanan
~% Forty- -four
TRACK MEET
Won by 1925
Captain—M. Buchanan
Team
M. Buchanan E. Molitor A. Shiras
E. Howe M. Russell E. Sullivan
S. Leewitz E. Tuttle
Tie for First Place
M. Buchanan
College Record Broken
Running High Jump—M. Buchanan
BASKET-BALL
Won by 1922
Captain—E. Howe Manager—S. Leewitz
Team
E. Howe M. Buchanan H. Mills
K. Elston . S. Leewitz
On Varsity
E. Howe S. Leewitz
TENNIS
Won by 1922
Captain—\. Wallace Manager—J. Palmer
Team
M. Palache O. Fountain H. Mills
J. Palmer I. Wallace
Substitute on Varsity
M. Palache
~t Forty-five
Tessie Willcox Smi™m
~t Forty-seven
Class Officers
1 Q22-1 923
President—PAMELA COYNE
Vice-President and Treasurer—Marion ANGELL
Secretary—JEAN PALMER
SELF-GOVERNMENT ASSOCIATION
Secretary—MartHa Cooke
Executive Board
Pameta CoyNE Exizasetu Price (Resigned) ExizaBeTH PEARSON
UNDERGRADUATE ASSOCIATION
V ice-Prestdent—VirGin1A MILLER
Secretary—E.oisE REQuA Advisory Board—EstELLE NEVILLE
CHRISTIAN. ASSOCIATION
Treasurer—K ATHARINE VAN BIBBER
Advisory Board
MrriaAmM Faries Mary Louisz WHITE Roserta Murray
ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION
Executive Board—ExizanetH Howe, S. Leewitz, M. BucoanaNn
THE LANTERN
Editorial Board
KATHARINE ConNER (Resigned) Pameta Coyne (Resigned)
EsteLLt—E NEVILLE LoutsE SANFORD
Business Board
Advertising Manager—Mary RopNey
Treasurer—E.izABETH Pearson (Resigned), HELEN WALKER
THE COLLEGE NEWS
Editors—Fruice Beco, Orrvia Fountain, Saran Woop
Business Board—Lovuise How1tz, MarGaret SMITH
SONG MISTRESSES
Dorotuy GARDNER Mary MInotTtr
~% Forty-eight
-nine
Forty
Be 8
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Outline of Mystery
or
How Spumoni Gummed the Works
Scene; Tne Roma. ~ Time. Tur Present.
Tony the waiter, discovered alone, scouring the oyster shells. Enter figure
muffled in a muffler.
Figure In Murrter. Hist!
Tony hastily wheels about, pushing oyster shells and Sapolio under the cash
register.
Tony Gn his own fluent pigeon English) Good-da eve, President
Par—
Pres. P. Hush! Be careful.
Tony (remembering his cue). Pass, friend, up to da table thirteen.
Pres. P. glides warily to table and conceals herself behind ambuscade of
“Spaghetti Roma—with chicken livers—ayc.’’ At this moment there comes a
mystic scratching without. Tony hastens to admit a surprising crew, dis-
Suised in assorted costumes. They are, from left to right: Mme. De Pompa-
dour, The Man with a Hoe (hoe half-mast), Pola Negri, The Wandering
Jew, and a man with a brown leather vanity case, marked S A.K., disguised
as the Three Witches from Macbeth. They take their seats silent]
Pres. P. (oratorically, banging her spoon against a glass). Brethren
and Sistern, why are we here? ;
Man witu THE Hos (anxiously). We thought you knew!
Pres. P. (disregarding interruption). Why, I say, are we here?
Well, for one thing—to elude that eternal, ever-present
ever-snooping Undergraduate Body. (Applause.) Why do
we wish to elude them? (This time the Man with the
Hoe doesn’t bite. He knows the answer is coming).
Because—because—by the way (to Mme. De Pompadour)
Where did you park your Ford?
Moe. De P. (triumphantly). In front of the Toggery Shop.
That will even throw my Major class off the track.
ot Fi ifty
Pres. P. Good! Because, as I was saying, The Grand Lama of
Thibet has written me a letter—(Coh’s and ah’s)—.
Pota Near (tilting her head at her own famous angle, 43° nor nor-
west). The Grand Lama! Ah, yes! He ees a nice boy.
When Miss Thomas and I climbed the Himalayas
Pres. P. (producing letter as if by magic from the muff of her muffler.
Reads)
From Psi U Chapter of the First Buddhist Monastery, Thibet:
Dear Madam, We, the Grand Lama, are about to retire, which will
naturally put the kibosh on Thibet. Having had a chat with your
representative M. Carey Thomas—a good egg—when she was in the
East, we have decided that we like your brand, and should like to
have a member of your graduating class among the applicants for the
position of New Lama. Requirements:
1. General knowledge of the Principles of
Turee Witcues (eagerly). Articulation?
Pres. P. No, Book of Etiquette, Standard Edition.
2. Ability to organize folk dances and play-ground games.
3. Applicable theories on:
(a) How the Camel got its hump.
(b) How the Hairpin got its hump.
(c) How the Bedstead got its hump.
(Choose either 4 or 5, and write on c.)
All applications must be at office of Grand Lama by June 15.
We hope one of your girls makes it!
Yours truly,
GL of 1.
P.S. Efficiency, judgment and maturity of mind not necessary
for this position. (Cheers and applause).
At this moment—alarums without. The kitchen portal opens wide, and the
seventh and last member of the council enters. It is the Dean, disguised as
Spumoni ice-cream. She modestly takes her place in middle of the table. After
she is settled in her saucer, Pres. P. raps on table.
Pres. P. Nominations are now in order for the Grand Lama.
WANDERING JEw. I nominate Miss Gallwey.
Pres. P. Qualifications, if any?
WANDERING Jew. She has had my Critics course.
~ Fifty-one
Outline of Mystery—Continued
Turee Wircues. But can she ood well enough? And further-
more we must consider the intrusion of the ugly neutral
vowel. I forget whether in Miss Gallwey’s case the neu-
tral vowel intrudes or not. (Produces references from his
brown bag).
Pora Nscrr. May I nominate my candidate, Miss Ling, who
can talk to any picture!
WANDERING JEw. Well, that’s all very well, but there aren’t
many pictures to talk toin Thibet. Can she ride a camel?
Can she swat flies? Can she play a tom-tom?
But here the discussion is interrupted by Spumoni, who begins rocking gently to
and fro in her saucer, murmuring ‘‘ But I was thinking of a plan to dye my
whiskers green "” There is a moment of startled silence, then Pres. P., the
first to recover, diverts attention by rapping on the table.
Pota Necri (continuing blandly). Let us further consider Miss
Ling. A Lama must be spiritual
SpuMONI (catching at the last word). Shpiritsh? Yesh, th’sh ri’—
shpiritsh, not the letter of the law!
Horrified pause.
Man witH THE Hor. May I powse a problem?
I nominate Miss Conner. (Facetiously) ‘‘Dog’’ as they
call her.
SpumMonl. Yesh, le’sh talk about dogsh. My little Shandy——
Man witTH THE HoE (continuing bravely). I think Miss Conner
would keep them interested over there. She’s very ver-
satile. Give her a tent and she'd be a circus.
SpuMONI (excitedly). Wher’sh chircus? Hang the expensh.
Le’sh give the elephant another peanut!
Tony, who has been hovering anxiously around the table trying to attract Pres.
P's. attention, now succeeds in catching her eye.
Tony (in stage whisper). ’Scusi—but da police! Da police!
Pres. P. (absently). Don’t interrupt, Tony. Tell them to come
again.
~% Fifty-two
Tony. But dey raida da place. Dey looka for liquor. Dey
pincha da gang.
Pres. P. (with dignity). That hardly interests us. We have
nothing to conceal.
Tony (with increased agitation). Ah, parcheesi—dey pincha
you all. Dey finda da sherry in da Spumoni.
Pres. P. Sherry in the Spumoni! (All eye the poor ice-cream
severely). So that explains it.
Tur Wanpverinc Jew. We must get her out of here. (He's no
hick—he’s been around and understands these situations).
Tony (radiant). Si! Si! I helpa you.
With some difficulty they persuade Spumoni to get off the table, and propel
her to the door. Cheerful to the last, she exits quavering snatches of “Oh
Mister Gallagher, Ob Mister Shean A few moments later comes the
familiar sound of an engine starting under pressure, accompanied by cries of
‘Hold her steady now,” ‘All together!’ “‘Up she goes!’ ‘Oop! Look out,
Chew! " Gradually the chug-chug of the engine dies away as the Ford
rounds Ramsey's corner, leaving the pike peaceful, under the watch of the
eternal stars and the cop on the corner beat.
SLOW CURTAIN
S’ all right about the elections for Grand Lama. Amy
Lowell, though not ‘‘one of our girls,’’ got it unanimously.
(She broke the world’s records in the woman’s black cigar
smoking contest).
~% Fifty-three
To Junior Play-
Curtain Song
1. @ he 5 yd -p- oe
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When Mern «3 brighT on The meen—-Ta-tns old-en T ll -dawn (ts
i aT Tf. : | 5 WOES 5 ]
af a | 7 ] V—T -
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Lost in The btaze oF day Uhen morn ts brioght on the Mar- shes
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Aiea ee ee
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Scld - en there shall The bose Light Fade 2- “eS And whera my
LQ 1 i { ‘. ce 4
b f oo | { Co. f } f
tht oS fpf
a ws
bove shalt we dream To ] day and where shes lov e sh all we
+ f { o—e—
fry—bp— —F | > SE a J p ARI 9 —f—_~-— 5 ——
y tet
dveam fo — day! Dawn ts fled th the Mar - shy hal - Jow
~% Fifty-four
ot Fifty-five
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Where Ghosts of SFars tn The dim ness sfray, and the wa-Ter 6
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ropa he } / n ] Lb 5 eee © Lol | GS |
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Sfreaked With the Slash of the Swal- low dnd all thre The sum-me«r the
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Vv VY a _ a a Pm, =
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po ya uy: Bot where my Lo ve Shatt we deéan, fo da- 4
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blactk om the
(=. Gs
Technique of the Drama
In the great Bryn Mawr gymnasium,
In the hall of the athletics,
Rose a stage to fright the Freshmen,
Show-mad, laboring, light blue Freshmen.
Down in Radnor grew the costumes,
Grew the Dodo’s head (not rabbit)
Grew the chorus clothes, quite quaintly.
Dark behind them loomed the sickness,
The great sickness, Influenza,
Seized upon the show committee,
Dragged them to the Inf., his lair.
There he kept them, and survivors,
Struggling with the scenes and make-up,
Cried “‘Farewell, oh show committee.’’
Cried *‘Farewell, we'll change the scenery,
We will carry on with costumes,
Pin and hook and tie and button.
Do not worry but rest sweetly,
We will carry on to triumph.”’
So they did, but the committee,
Striving with the Influenza,
Filled the lair of the great sickness
With its sneezing and its wailing.
Came the Sophomore year for Light Blue,
All its plays were second raters,
All the plays it chose to favor.
Still it labored, and with Savage,
He, the mightiest of the coaches,
Gave the college tears and laughter,
Shaw and Maeterlinck together:
Sang a song of Gods and Romans
While the lion roared with resin
And the audience roared with him.
~% Fifty-six
Mystic, then, turned Light Blue Juniors,
Gave a play of dreams and fancies,
Play of sheiks and railroad coaches,
—If—the audience missed motion
In the railway: but the mail box,
Royal Mail—of glorious scarlet—
Was a triumph—and a boiler.
And the class enjoyed their playing,
Strangling scenes and lovely vampire.
But they gave no Senior feast-play,
Gave no final demonstration,
Merged themselves in the great May Day
And thus, in the schollers revels,
Passed beyond gymnasium stages,
To the land of the Hereafter.
PAMELA COYNE.
ot Fi ifty-seven
~% Fifty-eight
STATISTICS SHOW
IT PAYS TO ADVERTISE
Recent publications of other
universities have found this
method successful for bringing
their courses to light
Have You Charm?
Do You Vibrate?
Let ME
Show You How
Samuel Arthur King
Testimonial: My success in pantomime in THE
Mirac te is due to Mr. King’s voice
training.—Haroldine Humphreys.
~t Fifty-nine
What did
~ Holman Hunt?
This and fifty other
world-famous secrets
revealed by
G. G. King
Major History of Art
Keep up with
La Vie Parisienne!
Modern French
Literature
by
FE. Morgan Schenck
She knows her stuff!
Why
Zeus Left Home!
(Get a side light on the
old-fashioned way)
Greek Religion
and Myths
If you want to know
VENUS know ME, says
Mrs. Wright
Be a Detective
Know your
friends’ business better
than they do!
Sleuthing
Tracking
Competently taught at the
Dean’s Office
Athletics, 1922-1923
All-round Championship won by 1923
Captain—E. Pearson
F. Begg
E. Tuttle
M. Faries
K. Elston
F. Begg
K. Gallwey
M. Buchanan
Captain—K. Elston
K. Elston
E. Tuttle
M. Buchanan
Captain—M. Woodworth
M. Buchanan
K. Conner
K. Elston
HOCKEY
Won by 1924
Team
E. Sullivan
M. Buchanan
K. Gallwey
On Varsity
M. Faries
Substitutes
K. Elston
WATER POLO
Won by 1923
Team
M. Faries
M. Buchanan
S. Leewitz
On Varsity
K. Elston
SWIMMING MEET
Won by 1925
Team
M. Faries
E. Howe
M. V. Smith
E. Sullivan
Manager—F. Begg
E. Pearson
E. Howe
M. Russell
K. Neilson
E. Tuttle
E. Pearson
E. Howe
Manager—S. Leewitz
E. Howe
K. VanBibber
E, Tuttle
E. Tuttle
K. VanBibber
M. Woodworth
~% Sixty-one
APPARATUS MEET
Won by 1924
Captain—E. Tuttle Manager—S. Leewitz
Team
F. Begg S. Leewitz M. Russell
M. Buchanan V. Miller E. Tuttle
M. Faries E. Molitor M. V. Smith
Second place in Individual won by
M. Buchanan
Third Place in Individual won by
S. Leewitz
TRACK MEET
Won by 1925
Captain—M. Woodworth
Team
M. Angell S. Leewitz E. Sullivan
M. Buchanan E. Molitor E. Tuttle
E. Howe M. Palache M. Woodworth
M. Russell
Second Place
M. Buchanan
College Record Broken
Running High Jump—M. Buchanan
BASKET-BALL
Won by 1925
Captain—E. Howe Manager—S. Leewitz
Team
E. Howe M. Buchanan S. Leewitz
K. Elston M. Russell
On Varsity
S. Leewitz
Substitutes
E. Howe M. Palache
~% Sixty-two
TENNIS
Won by 1923
Captain—J. Palmer Manager—l. Wallace
Team
M. Palache I. Wallace O. Fountain
J. Palmer M. Faries
Substitute on Varsity
M. Palache
Yellow Ties won by
M. Buchanan E. Howe S. Leewitz
M. Faries E. Tuttle
~% Sixty-three
ot raceme
ee ae
UNG JE SERVIRAYG
neon te een
i 8
Elizabeth Snippen Green
Sixty-five
Class Officers
1923 ~ 1924
Prestdent—JEAN PALMER .
Vice-President and Treasurer—MAar1ion ANGELL
Secretary—Mtprep BucHaNnaNn
SELF-GOVERNMENT ASSOCIATION
Prestdent—PAMELA COYNE V ice-Prestdent—E.izABETH PEARSON
UNDERGRADUATE ASSOCIATION
President—E oist ReQua Advisory Board—JnaN PALMER
CHRISTIAN ASSOCIATION
President—KATHLEEN GALLWEY V ice-Prestdent—Mur1aM FArtes
Advisory Board
EvizaBetH HALE Roserta Murray Mary Louise WHITE
ATHLETIC “ASSOCIATION
President—EuizaBetH Howe V ice-Prestdent—SuzANNE LEEWITZ
Senior Member—Mary WoopwortTH
THE LANTERN
Editor-in-Chief—Loutsz SANFORD
Editors—KaTHARINE CONNER, PAMELA COYNE
Business Board
Manager—Mary Ropney Treasurer—HELEN WALKER
THE COLEEGE NEWs
Managing-Editor—Fruicze Beco
Editors—Outvia Fountain, Saran Woop (Resigned)
Business Manager—Loutst Howrrz — Circulation Manager—MarGaret SMITH
SONG MISTRESSES
Dorotuy GarpNer (Resigned) Mary Minott
EuizaBpetH Howe (Resigned) KaTHARINE ELsTon
GLEE CLUB
President—BEATRICE CONSTANT
ART CLUB
President—K aTHARINE CONNER Secretary—Mary Ropney (Resigned)
FRENCH CLUB
President—RoBERTE GODEFROY Secretary—BarBARA LING
SCIENCE CLUB
President—E.izABETH HALE
LIBERAL CLUB
President—Prisc1LLA FANSLER Secretary—EizaBETH Briccs
Advisory Board—Mary RopNey
~% Sixty-six
: SSS ———E
X Sixty-seven
Do You Remember These ?
Where are the snows of yesteryear ?
This question seems to worry poets some.
We'll bite. Where are they? And who cares?
There’s plenty more where those snows came from.
Where are the styles of yesteryear ?
That is the query we've preferred.
Where are the garbs that in their day
We fondly thought the latest word 2
Alas, the Bramley, deemed so chic
In Freshman year—wherte is it now?
Where is the thing we called a hat,
jammed down upon the student brow 2
The striped sweater Sophomore year,
That all attempted—some could wear;
The shortish skirts and turban lids,
The aztec-fragment trimmings—where ?
In Junior year we sought the svelte
Long line. We filleted our tresses.
Our sweaters looked like checkerboards,
And Tut played havoc with our dresses.
This year the slim and tailored lines
(As illustrated in the text)
This year the unpresuming hat,
The flannel fashions this year. Next?
~% Sixty-eight
I
This is the Bramley, otherwise
known as Grossman. All-American
uniform for ’20-’21. Color: preferably
henna. Skirt pleated Gwhen new).
II
Miss Bryn Mawr, ready for any-
thing. A serviceable costume, es-
pecially practicable for walking to
and from the vill. May show the dirt
but doesn’t mind it.
Il
Tit-tat-toe sweater, surmounted by
bobbed hair and ear-rings. If care-
fully chosen as to color-scheme, war-
ranted to distract any professor’s
attention from his classes.
IV
See the pretty suit. See the nifty
shoes. See. the nice sauntlets. Can
this be Dolores herself, showing off
the latest fashions? No, this is not
Dolores. This is a girl student who
has just missed the Paoli.
~ Sixty-nine
AR ae
a
V
Typical of the new era in woman-
hood, this little costume is service-
able and efficient without calling at-
tention to itself. May be worn on the
Bryn Mawr campus Monday, Tues-
day, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday,
Saturday and Sunday, but preferably
not at other times.
VI
A popular one-piece garment, easily
made if you have some old curtains or
a tablecloth around. The creatures in
the foreground are not bounding
gazelles—they are King Tut dogs.
Vil
Short woolly coat, uneven hem line
and small hat all combine in making
this mademoiselle charming. You can
look like her too. In fact you prob-
ably do. Everybody does.
Vill
If you are a real sport, you have
your own initials on your flannel
sport dress. Otherwise wear hiero-
glyphics that might be anybody’s.
For example: ($S#), &%*f {”* etc.)
~% Seventy
IX
Here is something that is coming
more and more into favor in certain
quarters of the campus. Handker-
chief boudoir cap—bizarre, yet busi-
ness-like. Have you one? Would you
wear it if you had?
~% Seventy-one
Rumour Had It
Rumour had a great deal to do with our college career. Even
in our sub-freshmen days there was a certain passage in Vergil
which caused anxious moments for our Latin teachers,—'‘Mo-
bilitate viget, et vires acquirit eundo:”’ subconsciously it was
preparing us for four years of life in a female community. When
we entered, rumour had it that ours was the largest class ever to
be accommodated on campus; we had the best individual voices
and the worst collective singing in college; and we were all
destined to be married by the end of our sophomore year. An
elopement carried off one of our members before mid-years and
rumour had disposed of several others by spring; but do not
think she ended her work there.* Her latest report is that one
of our classmates, ‘‘now a mannequin in Paris,’’ will soon marry
an Italian count, and what she has done with some of out less
adventurous members I could not say—nor what she will do!
Rumour attached herself with particular attention to the
august perpetrator of the Brief, a gentleman credited with
brilliant interviews wherein persiflage of a scintillating kind was
exchanged with the more experienced women of our class. ‘"Miss
Angel”’ and the Harvard wiggle predominated in Freshmen re-
ports, but Sophomore year brought a more interesting story,
wherein a reader, having surreptitiously bobbed her yellow
locks, stood in silence before the Savage and prayerfully re-
moved her hat. ‘“‘My God!’ was all he had to say.
The last Savage rumour tells its own story, ‘how certain
members of the class of 1924, having waited for three quarters
of an hour outside his office for an interview, were rewarded at
last by the sound of a too-familiar voice issuing from the inner
sanctum, ‘Stop it, Howard!”’
*Epitor’s Note:—There’s more in this than meets the eye.
~% Seventy-two
Fama, considering herself beyond the jurisdiction of Self
Government, concerned herself almost entirely with the married
men of the faculty; and being a lady she had always a great deal
to say. But one report told of an interesting encounter between
two married members, when one of them, on the eve of the advent
of a little D——,, found a large toy stork standing guard outside
his office door. Returning the object with admirable prompt-
ness to the office of its suspected owner, he was no less surprised
than pleased to find that it arrived just in time to herald, almost
to usher in, the newest little B————!
Rumour had it that our psychology professor, having acci-
dentally destroyed our class’s examinations, determined the
grades by the simple expedient of drawing numbers from a hat.
Rumour had it that another professor's system was to hurl
the quiz books up his front stairs, and let the hand of God direct
their fall. Rumour had elaborate theories about systems of oral
quizzing and class procedure.
Whenever there has been an epidemic at college rumour has
had more than enough to say, evolving strange diseases for us,
and new victims, and mysterious treatments. This year the pie-
bald pup brought the mumps, and half the college was suffering
from internal swellings. The epidemic was finally brought to an
end byareport of the Dean’s engagement toa foreignambassador.
But best of all for Rumour has been May Day. She has grown
fat and sleek on the food for talk, if not for thought, that we
have given her. We have been able even to share our reports
with the world at large, spreading broadcast over the country
our May Queen's exploits at crocus planting, and rousing the
interest of statisticians in the reports of our hair-cutting. But
May Day’s rumours are too numerous for mention here.
Now that ‘‘our timeless date is come to an end’’ Rumour is
faced with the loss of some of her most valuable material, as
well as her ablest messengers; how fortunate that she can always
spread strange and delightful reports about the fantastic careers
of the class of ’24!
M. L. Waite.
~t Seventy-three
> 2 TAA AT
Se
ae 22 en ae oe
Pea ee
In 1492 the
BZ
Facsimile of Our Major History Report due May Day Week End
% Seventy-four
Elegy
With Apologies to Walt Whitman
O comrade! my comrade! our fearful trip is done,
The ship has weathered every rock, the prize we sought is won,
The end is near, bear up my dear, canst hear the people cheering,
The steady drone in undertone of speeches persevering?
But oh, heart! heart! heare!
Oh the bitter drops I shed,
For here my youthful beauty lies,
Fallen cold and dead.
Oh comrade! my comrade! rise up! I hear the bell,
Rise up—for you the bath is run, and here is soap as well—
For you bouquets—perhaps—and wreaths, for you the people
thronging,
For you reporters at the gate grow hollow-eyed with longing:
Here comrade, my lipstick!
These hairpins for your head!
‘Tis but a dream, that youthful charm
Is fallen cold and dead.
My comrade does not answer; her lips are pallid still,
My sister wears her stays no more; I fear she never will.
The ship is safe (tho’ barnacled), its voyage closed and done;
From tedious toil the gallant goil comes in with object won;
Exult O throngs, and ring O bells!
But I with mournful tread
Walk where youthful beauty les
Fallen cold and dead.
~t Seventy-five
4
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——————
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Graduating with Honor
Summa cum laude
VIRGINIA MILLER
Magna cum laude
KATHARINE VAN BIBBER
MarTHa FIiscHER
Lesta Forp
Cum laude
KATHARINE NEILSON
PRIscILLA FANSLER
BEATRICE CONSTANT
ExizaBetH HENDERSON
Rosperta Murray
Mary Minott
PAULINE SHARP
ELizABETH PEARSON
Mary Woopwortu
EstHer RuHoaps
ROBERTE GODEFROY
European Fellows
VIRGINIA MILLER
KATHARINE VAN BIBBER
Sunny Jim
EvizABeEtH Howe
~~ Seventy-six
Seven
Seventy-
woth
1
Seren
ef
;
I Wonder
They say a Senior’s sentimental
When plodding’s over,
And she has nothing left to do
Except—a trunk or two to pack
With what she can’t afford to give to Junk.
They say a Senior sighs full long
At morn in early June,
Hearing the birds she'll never hear again,
Viewing the sunrise through shadowy leaves
Make colorful the grey-walled, green-floored campus.
They say a Senior downs great, heavy sobs
Those last few sunny afternoons of May,
At thought of final parting from
The coolly-shadowed, lounging cloister walls
Where she has dreamed—and worked a bit.
They say a Senior’s tears quite freely flow
At midnight on a moonlit night of May;
When stars seem twinkling understandingly,
And softly rustling leaves sigh sympathy
To her in mournful anguish.
They say a Senior does these things.
Mayhap she does—
When circumstances are as stated.
But we have never known these things,
Have never felt the urge to individual grief;
With Heaven itself raining our elegy
Through dawn—through noon—through night.
M. RopNEY
ott Seventy-eight
zne
n
Seventy-
J
ae
The Ghosts of Unfulfillment
Time. Just before Commencement.
Scene. The mind of a Senior.
Characters, besides the Senior herself, are the Memories, —
accursed, tantalizing, though already rendered not unpleasant
by the glamour of things past—the memories of the Things-
She-Has-Always-Been-Meaning-To-Do. The ghosts of The
Astronomers’ Club, The Music Club, The Uncollegiate Club,
The Bible Club, The Bridge Club, etc., appear before her.
SENIOR. You look familiar, but . .
AsTRONOMERS’ Cius. We're the things that never came
off, that is, in a niaterial way; of course, psychologically, our
influence was inestimable. And since you thought of us, we
automatically exist, and have to wander round this campus
indefinitely.
Senior. Oh! Six manias in search of an idiot: that idea,
ehe Well, come right in!
AsTRONOMERS’ Crus. Thank you. I must be very pleasant
for you to contemplate: for I represent that youthful ardor
which would leave no field of knowledge unexplored.
SENIOR. How long ago it seems! Yes, I remember, we
were going out on the hockey field every clear night to study
the stars; the only hitch was that there always seemed to be
someone in the show-case who knew rather more about them...
AsTRONOMERS’ Crus. To think that such a project as I
should have been killed by a mere man!
Music Crus. I was nipped in the bud by one greater than
myself, so I can’t even complain. I merely became superannuated
and died a natural death.
UncotreciaTe Crus. Neither of you is to be pitied as much
as I. My death was painful and lingering—a desperate struggle
in which I was ultimately the loser. My sole excuse for being
was inveterate warfare against that monster, that octopus Col-
legiate, which casts its coils one by one about the student: the
collegiate slang, the collegiate bob, the collegiate slovenliness,
the collegiate masculinity, the collegiate complacency!
~t Eighty
SENIor. Oh, it is all true! I have lost my daintiness,
Iam a highbrow, and I am quite convinced that I am the hope
of the world. I had put my trust in you, endowed you with
my highest principles, and I struggled to keep you alive. But
every new hairpin that fell from my head was a thorn in
your side, and the end came when I shirked one of your
meetings to cheer for the basket ball team: you died of the
shock.
Biste Crus. Do you remember how I occurred to you, in
one of your more exalted moments?
Senior. (Oh, Mr. Wells!) Yes: we were going to read
the Gospels aloud, and discuss them thoroughly on odd Thurs-
days. The discussion of the first Thursday was so thorough
that it lasted until seven A.M. Friday morning; which neces-
sitated rather too many cuts if we were to sleep it off each
time. And so you quietly passed away.
Bripce Cius. I was to have the intermediate Thursday, I
believe?
Biste Crus. But instead you debauched loosely over the
entire week, grew wasted with riotous living, and finally came
to a bad end.
Get-Ricu-Quick-Scueme, (who has just trickled in). Moraliz-
ing and bridge are both a waste of time. Now in my nature
there is a practical
Sentor. As I remember it your nature was about the most
changeable one in College.
G.R.Q.S. Creminiscently). Yes, 1 am proud of my multi-
ple personality. Sometimes I was a naive little clothing sale;
sometimes I had the sophisticated dash of a limerick in the
Ledger; now I was an artichoke cooked with incomparable
sauce; again I appeared as Merit insurance, or vulgar specula-
tion with a fifty-trip ticket.
Senior. You're only half a ghost: occasionally you actu-
ally did materialize.
G.R.Q.S. Ah, but not the truly poetic ones! Do you re-
member the plan which was guaranteed to solve everyone's
individual problem for her? It included a private conference,
reading of face and palm, exhaustive soul analysis, and ex-
pert advice on (1) How to express your personality in your dress,
~t Eighty-one
The Ghosts of Unfulfillment—Continued
(2) How to conceal your character by your dress; (3) How to
achieve life, liberty, and the illusion of happiness. This was a
scheme admirable in its daring, assured of its success in its
perennial appeal to the student mind. But alas, you had an
attack of inferiority complex when you were writing the
advertisements. So that was that.
(Enter the Goop Rresotution—which also has many sides
to its nature, but is always recognizable by its sanctimonious
air of melancholy. It is like a missionary with a grievance.)
SENIOR. Cheer up, old thing. You look as though you'd
been stepped on pretty hard.
Goop Resotvution, (én hurt tones). I've been paving hell
ever since 18— when this College was founded. I’ve never had
a chance. First I represent hard steady work all during the
week, all exercise worked off and signed up, week-end absolutely
free; this freedom commendably employed in visits to neigh-
bouring places of interest—museums, factories, Valley Forge,
etc.; Sunday afternoons spent reading in the New Book Room;
regular attendance at Chapel, preceded by regular perusal of
the morning newspaper; all bills paid by the fifteenth of the
month: no more humiliating communications from Sandy Hurst
and the Bryn Mawr Trust Company. Etcetera, etcetera, etcetera.
Everyone thinks of me; then I’m always pushed out of the
way, stepped on: I never get a chance.
Tuz-Suintnc-Morninc-Face-System, (which flashes exuber-
antly into their midst). Stem that flow of oratory, and apply
the scientific method, as I did!
SENIOR. S.M.F.! How splendid to see you again! You
were always a pet child of my brain. But you were too good
for this world—you wouldn’t work after we had rigged you
up, even with the best rope-and-pulley apparatus to be culled
from Dalton.
S.M.F. System. But I was logical at any rate. The idea
was good.
SENIOR. Yes: when we grew impatient with the irritable
mood of those who breakfasted at seven-thirty, we systematic-
ally sought out the root of the trouble, and found it to lie
~ Eighty-two
in the manner of the awakening. For the rude clamour of
the alarm clock we proposed substituting a Victrola, which
would alternate with records of ‘‘Awake my soul, stretch
every nerve,’ and ‘‘Early in the Morning Blues.’’ The same
mechanism was to shut the window, turn on the thermostat,
run the hot water into the tub, and possibly add the finish-
ing touches to the Report due that morning.
Tue S.M.F. System. It was ambitious: but with a little
more perseverance you might have brought me to life. How do
you manage without me?
Senior. It is rather difficult. But we apply the James-
Lange theory with some success: we dance and sing while
dressing, trusting that this significant form of physical activity
will produce in us that gayety of spirit which is usually sup-
posed to precede it. Thus we strive to bring to the breakfast
table the ‘‘shining morning faces’? which your incarnation
would unquestionably have secured for us.
Tue PLan-to-SpEND-THE-NIGHT-IN-THE-LiB, (which has
stolen in with an ominous air of secrecy). A noble effort—which
would have been rendered unnecessary if I had been given free
rein.
Senior. Why! Can I believe it—my first-born, my hardy
annual, in fact. Have you been shrouding yourself in that
corner all this time? How you do savour of dark plots and
hellish consciences! But come out of the bushes, old Pian, I
know you anyhow; and I was always a friend of yours when-
ever you cropped up. |
Tue P.T.S.T.N.LT.L. (mysteriously). Do you remember
the first time you thought of me? It was snowing outside:
your imagination gloated over the great leathern armchairs
before the Library fire: you thought of a long night of reading,
of a delicious doze, of an echoing walk through the deserted
corridors, of a glimpse into the cold, lonely cloister, where the
ghost of a bare-foot monk, telling his beads, paced out his
penance in the snow.
Senior (sighing wistfully). It might have been!
Tue P.T.S.T.N.1.T.L. (seductively). And then when the
Spring came ... do you remember how I occurred to you each
year with more insistence? How the moon shone through the
~% Eighty-three
The Ghosts of Unfulfillment—Continued
leaded windows as you sat there reading, and the soft night
air stole in upon you? You yearned to climb up into a Gothic
tower, to hear from the high crenulated battlements the final
clanging of Taylor bell, the footsteps dying away on the
walks, the last ‘‘good-nights’’ called out across the campus
settling itself for sleep. Then in your airy tower you would
outwatch the stars!
SENIOR. And when the dawn broke we should have
bathed like nymphs in the cloister fountain! Oh, why did it
never come off?
Tue P.T.S.T.N.1.T.L. Cfunereally). Because you would
have been “‘spending the night unchaperoned.’’ (This recol-
lection causes it to lose color and fade dismally away).
SENIOR. Poor thing! It was so romantic and funny and
inevitable. I hate to see it go.
Tue-TEar-WiItTH-THE-Facutty, (elbowing its way in without
ceremony). Courage friend! Console yourself with the know-
ledge that if I never came off it was certainly not your fault.
SENIOR, (é” some confusion). You here? I must say this
seems hardly the place for you; you've taken a step up in the
world, to be at the same party with Taz Goop RxsoLuTIon
and Tue Astronomers’ Cus. (Sotto voce). This is polite
society, so conduct yourself as well as you can, will you?
Tue T.W.T.F. Ggnoring her). Oh, to what glorious heights
of imagination you soared with me. How I rejoiced in un-
trammelled emancipation from exclusively intellectual contacts
and from artificial relationships! In me were created situations
which were the acme of humor: in me, old scores wete paid
off with picturesque melodrama: in me the mercenary laid the
foundations for many an H.C.
Senior. I cannot be severe with you—your appeal is irre-
sistible. Do you remember the time when you constituted a
natty little aéroplane outing preliminary to mah jong at the
Bridge Hotel? Psychology got into an argument with the
History of Art, which commenced heaving red dragons and
bamboos, while Biology cursed, and Politics enlivened matters
with a nickel-in-the-slot piano. That was a gay day!
~t Eighty-four
Tue T.W.T.F., (significantly). Ah, but the moonlit garden
party: that was poetry!
Senior. Check! As a matter of fact, you were always a
pretty good sort whenever you turned up. But unfortunately
the nearest you ever came to reality was when you emerged as
a poem immortalizing our excursion to Willow Grove Park.
What is that noise? (For some time there has been a persistent
knocking at the gate). Would you mind seeing who it is?
Tue T.W.T.F., (from the entrance where it has been poking
its nose about inquisitively, and from which it now withdraws it in
high disdain). It’s a lot of vulgar memories of things that
actually happened. If you're going to let them in, I really
can't stay.
Tue Otuers. Nor I.
(They are pushed into the background by the others who come
crowding in).
SENIOR, (to the departing visitors). Oh don’t go yet. [like you
every bit as well as the Real Things... At any rate, come again,
won't you? I’m almost always home Sunday afternoons .
L. M. SAnForp.
I Ain't No Burbank!
Yetithey turn me loase
On paper, paste, and wire,
Expecting me from crinkly sheets to concoct jonquils,
Roses, poppies and such flora.
From Dennison’s to nature in two twists!
Endlessly—centers I shred and manicure,
Leaves omit, and petals wearily marcel.
Each ‘‘daily four’’ I pinch and prune;
Odd substitutes for those sad bulbs that will have
bloomed
And passed—ere May Day dawns.
Ain’t nature grand?
M. RopNrEy
~t Eighty-five
Athletics, 1923-1924
All-round Championship won by 1924
HOCKEY
Won by 1924
Captain—E. Pearson
Team
F. Begg M. Palache
E. Tuttle M. Buchanan
M. Faries S. Leewitz
K. Elston
Varsity Captain
M. Faries
On Varsity
E. Tuttle M. Faries
F. Begg E. Howe
M. Buchanan
Substitute
K. Gallwey
Manager—M. Russell
K. Gallwey
E. Howe
M. Russell
E. Pearson
M. Palache
E. Pearson
E. Tuttle
~{ Eighty-six
Captain—K. Elston
K. Elston
E. Tuttle
M. Buchanan
WATER POLO
Won by 1924
Team
M. Faries
M. Buchanan
J. Palmer
Varsity Captain
M. Buchanan
On Varsity
K. Elston
K. Van Bibber
Substitute
E. Sullivan
Manager—E. Tuttle
E. Howe
K. Van Bibber
E. Tuttle
% Ei ghty-seven
Captain—E. Tuttle
F. Begg
M. Buchanan
M. Faries
APPARATUS MEET
Won by 1924
Manager—M. Buchanan
Team
S. Leewitz M. Russell
V. Miller M. V. Smith
E. Molitor E. Tuttle
First Place in Individual Won by
M. Buchanan
Second Place in Individual Won by
S. Leewitz
Third Place in Individual Won by
E. Tuttle
~| Eighty-cight
BASKET-BALL
Won by 1925
Captain—S. Leewitz Manager—M. Russell
Team
K. Elston M. Buchanan S. Leewitz
E. Howe M. Russell
Varsity Captain
S. Leewitz
On Varsity—Girls Rules
K. Elston S. Leewitz M. Palache
Substitutes
M. Buchanan
Boys’ Rules
M. Buchanan K. Elston S. Leewitz
Substitute
Eo Howe
~< Eighty-nine
SWIMMING MEET
Won by 1926
Captain—M. Woodworth
Team
M. Buchanan M. Faries E. Tuttle
K. Conner E. Howe K. Van Bibber
K. Elston M. V. Smith M. Woodworth
E. Sullivan
4th Place Individual won by
M. Woodworth
TENNIS
Won by 1926
Captain—J. Palmer Manager—I. Wallace
O. Fountain M. Palache J. Palmer
M. Faries I. Wallace
On Varsity
M. Palache
Yellow Ties Won by
M. Buchanan M. Faries S. Leewitz
K. Elston E. Howe E. Tuttle
Individual All-round Championship Won by
M. Buchanan
JesetiewWlilcox Smith
~% Ninety-one
i ee aed
Ss
8
*
aS
»
-
™
2
tee
Dalton was op-
timistic; it flew
white flags all the
week—that is,until
Thursday. Even
then it did not let
natural phenomena
discourage it, and
though it could
hardly fly a clear
weather signal
through the mist,
it hung out an im-
partially neutral
sign sO as not to
offend either fac-.
tion. But this tact
and optimism did
no good. It rained
Friday. The central committee for once agreed, and we went
to our classes. Saturday we decided to risk it, the general feel-
ing being that if we did not “‘throw our May Day’’ soon no
one in college would have a friend left.
The procession went off without any mishaps beyond the
inability of Friar Tuck to ride his donkey—it was too big and
wild for him! Victory did not fall on Alexander’s head—
and the oxen did not stampede. It was whispered that the
above-mentioned beasts lost 200 pounds apiece through general
worty and excitement. Good Queen Bess was most impressive,
although more admiration fell on her princely bearers. Even
the audience appreciated their correct form. A dear old lady,
fascinated by the one red beard, was heard to remark to its
owner. ‘‘My dear, when you are made up you look just like a
man.’ The dancing on the green was almost as it should be.
The grand stand is said to have wept from emotion at the sight.
‘Robin Hood”’ attracted the largest audience. The glamour
~% Ninety-three
May Day—Continued
of Maid Marian
and her bold out-
law lover was
equalled only by
the thrill of Mon-
day, when Robin
Hood dramatically
flung open the door
of Rock Kitchen
and disclosed Sir
Richard of the Lea,
with his feet on the
stove, eating jam.
St. George and the Dragon was, of course, the children’s
favorite. One little girl ran home in great excitement crying,
“IT saw the Dragon kiss its mother.’’ Whether or not this
phenomenon took place is unrecorded, but he looked ferocious
enough to make St. George's heroism all the more remarkable.
The most valiant soul in the play, in fact in all May Day, was
King Alfred’s bride, who is still black and blue from always
fainting on the same side.
In the cloisters the audience was devoured by mixed
emotions. Whether or not it was due to Philadelphia providing
sherry for its own élite 1s a question—but the Bacchantic
revels of the first day proved too realistic and spirited for some
of our best old ladies.
Campaspe, our flower of womanhood, used her knowledge
of Eve’s technique with great effect on every one, from Alexander
to Samuel Arthur King. Some of the soldiers’ costumes could
not be of regulation brevity because of Philadelphia's aversion
to legs, but those of the little boys made up for the deficiencies
of the military.
Meanwhile the hollows looked for all the world like a com-
munity picnic—that is behind the scenes, of course—sandwiches,
cocoa, dogs and children were mixed with no regard for comfort
or consequences. The audience saw only Titania or ‘“‘lovely
Delia,’ and little knew what order there came out of chaos.
~% Ninety-four
‘The Lady of the May”’ is supposed to have had in the
highest degree the much praised “‘plastic quality,’ it was so
plastic that it was never quite the same play twice running,
an effect unrivalled except when the cast of ‘St. George,”
filled with the spirit of co-operation, said each other's lines
with admirable impartiality. —
The green was a perpetual motion machine; if the band
sometimes became slightly confused it in no way dampened the
ardor of our acting. It may be that the gingerbread men, with
real raisin eyes, had something to do with this, but above all it
was the sight of Miss Applebee in her beard and wig that made
May Day worth while.
On Monday we gained many new hints on how to produce
another May Day: Always plan to have it rain and probably
it will. In the first place there is the admirable effect of flecked
sun and shadow so easily produced by the simple expedient of
exposing stained arms and legs to the rain until they run.
Then, too, with indoor performances no audience can com-
plain of sunstroke or caterpillars in the hair. The possibilities
of novel effects are greatly enhanced, as when in “Robin
Hood"’ the arrow which was supposed to fly through the
window hit the wall instead and neatly bounded back to Robin
Hood. This sort of thing is highly entertaining and guarantees
a laugh.
The scope which May Day gives for the development of
the college girl's ingenuity is remarkable. Any number of
problems are posed
{> fae <2 cr
young minds:—
How to fit twenty-
four dancers into
twenty-four square
feet yet allow them
to Spread their
stuff; how to find
room for both play
and audience in one
hollow. Question,
is it better to givea
~t Ninety-five
May Day—Continued
play without an audience, or have an audience without a play?
Finally, a rainy May Day develops a sense of intimacy and close
co-operation between the actors and the audience that could
never be achieved on an out-of-doors stage. The height of
this subtle effect was reached this year when Eumenides, about
to declaim upon his wretchedness, was prevented from so doing
by an entangling bevy of out-of-town relatives, while ‘‘fair
Delia’’ was suddenly revealed playing bridge with the sextons
behind what tried to be the scenes.
For the success of May Day we have the guarantees of our
aesthetes and business men. Whether it has materially affected
our students’ building remains to be seen. We leave you to
judge the effect it has had on us.
K. GALLWEY
OVERHEARD AT TAY DAY
She “Why y dear ee look jest {Ke a man!”
~§ Ninety-six
~< Ninety-seven
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Avie, Roe . 25 Moreland Terrace, New Bedford, Mass.
© Anperson, ALICE KaTHERINES. ... . -- 304 Tremont St., Lincoln, Ill.
* x ANpEerson, Mary GwyN ...-.-- - 1627 Broadway, Galveston, Texas
ANGELL, Marion WATERHOUSE CaswE LL, 310 Prospect St., New Haven, Conn.
KOARMSTRONG, ISABEL ALLING ©—. . 2 3 5 ae Greenwich, Conn.
eo BAILEY? Pdza CEuARK = "eg 2803 North Third St., Harrisburg, Pa. ~
—— Barber, EvizaBeTH ELLIstON . . 125 East Seventy-fourth St., New York
cows. Baaruaiss. HELENE’, 9. Palisade Ave., Yonkers, N. Y.
y Becc, Fetice MENUEZ
Care of Brown Shipley, 123 Pall Mall, London S. W., England
OBENSBERG, JERE HALDEMAN. . - - 709 Alpine Drive, Beverly Hills, Cal.
Binceman; Anice Russet... 2 3. 12 Granger Place, Rochester, MY:
BLACKWELL, KATHERINE JOSEPHINE
42 East Eighty-first Street, New York City
__— Buoce, Cuarorte IsaBet (Mrs. Thomas Terry Burger)
Melrose Ave. and Blenheim Rd., Govano, Md.
a Borpen; Brancoret BuTEeR ==. +e Interlaken, Fall River, Mass.
A Brauns, KAtHpRINE o 7 2) 2 317 Bae St., Iron Mountain, Mich.
* Briccs, ExvizapetH Hamitton . West 245th St., Riverdale, New York City
XBucHaNnaNn, Mitprep Hrywoop
D-8 Powelton Apartments, Powelton and 35th St., Phila., Pa. =
SCursron, MARY ALICH.2° 603 =~ .316 Vost Ave., South Orange, N. J.
Comin tos |... 225) 9 es .841 Prospect Ave., Winnetka, III.
Compton, Marcaret Starr... . .1509 Mill Ave., Bellingham, Wash.
® MeCONNELLY, MARGARET ( .0 oot. en es > . 77ePine St., New York City
-OCONNER, KaTHERINE ATTERBURY 121 East Sixty-second St., New York City
«Constant, Beatrice Tarpot. . 131 East Ninety-third St., New York City
xCooxe, Martua Love. ee eae Box 3316, Honolulu, Hawail
~% One hundred eleven
GCoru, DOROTHY 6.2 cs a a ee ae Cal.
> ACovne, Frances PAMELA. . . .. Sacketts: Harbor,. N.Y:
sv CROWELL, EvizaBetu Eyre (Mrs. Henry Jacob Kaltenthaler, dr.)
4029 Rosemont Avenue, Drexel Hill, Philadelphia, a ep
—— Davies, Emiry O'NEILL (Mrs. William Vanderbilt, Jr.)
20 East Bey second St., New York City
eee DILLINGHAM, HELENA AYER. . . poe ‘Millburne, N. j.
SOUTHAM, MEARGABRET <0 > ee
— ~»Dunxkak, MARGUERITE Louise . 85 Greenacres Ave., White Plains, ey:
Esersacn, ANNE Getz (Mrs. Paul D. Augsburg)
612 West 115th St., New York City
X Provow -Karueyn; Mabe
ee Estes, EvizaABeTH WaRNER. . . . 2410 West End Ave., Nashville, Tenn:
__—— PErrincer, ExizaBpetH ANDERSON
456 East Twenty-third St., North Portland, Ore.
>Fanster, PriscikLA HARRIET. . - cr Oadside Actes <~ Pract, Pa; *
FariEs, Munchies cio .7806 Cresheim Road, Chestnut Hill, Phila., Pa.
eFENLEY, Mary Jounston (Mrs. Lewis G. Kaye)
1458 Third St., Louisville, Ky.
—— vFercuson, Marjorie JosepHine 139 East Durham St., Mt. Airy, Pia, Pa.
~ FIscHER, Martua Lewis... . 409 Edgewood Ave. , New Haven, Conn.
FrrzGeraLtD, Mary Mitprep (Mrs. George Z. Barnes)
got Washington St., Pekin, Ill.
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oe East Sixty-seventh St., New York City
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OPrEEMAN, Mary Louise... . . 6 South Sixth St., Terre Haute, Ind.
» GaALLWeEY, KaTHLEEN, Care of Mrs. Herman Le Roy Edgar
25 Old Beach Road, Newport, R. I.
—— 6Garpner, Dorotny Carorine (Mrs. oe Butterworth)
608 East Washington St., Greenville, S. C.
> GopEeFRoy, ROBERTE
Chez Mlle Boulade, 6 Rue Vavin (VI iene Arron), Paris, France
o Greco, Janet (Mrs. Asa B. Wallace)
5646 Kingsbury Boulevard, St. Louis, Mo.
ALE, PEIZADETS _ : = 806 Locust Hill Ave, Yonkers, N.Y.
)Hammonn, MartHa BonNeR 122 East Eighty-second St., New York City
‘ Hawkins, Doris AMBALINE ... . . . .35§ Sellers Ave., Millbourne, Pa.-
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~% One hundred twelve
accuse ISHAM, FRANCES PIERPONT 0.7 = ye -Manchester, Vt.
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ercragic yay Many Louise: es 5 ee Cathedral St., Baltimore, Md.
——= Lawrence, Janet (Mrs. Robert McCormick Adams)
25 East Walton Place, Chicago, Il.
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Linc, Barpara Hype, Care of E. E. Ling, Esq.
National City Bank of New York, 11 Waterloo Place,
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s¢=Minott, Mary Saint James, Long Island, N. Y.
o Morrtor, Exsa Leiza . est Chelten Ave., Germantown, Phila., Pa.@
Mors, SELMA . . . _. . 375 Park Ave., New York City
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PONevitte, EsTELLe CarRDWELL Colonia, N. J.
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—— Parsons, Exsre (Mrs. Morehead Patterson)
15 East Sixty-fifth Street, New York City
or Pearce, RosaLinD roo Prospect St., Gloucester, Mass.
_> Pearson, ExizasetH THOM
20 West Chestnut Ave., Chestnut Hill, Philadelphia, Pa.
oPxuities, ALISON . Lawrence, Long Island, N. Y.
= Pratt, Mary Perrine (Mrs. Chancy Hall) rorzo St. Paul St., Baltimore, Md.
4 Pratt, ANNA 8 Haverford, Pa.
——> Prewi'T, JuLia Kargeniwe <0 ee Lexington, Ky.
—Price, ExtzanetH Winston . . . 135 East Sixty-sixth St., New York City
~~ One hundred thirteen
4
*Requa, Exoise GALLup . «oy Bh Beevue Place, Chicago, 111.
ee TRITTENHOUSE, MELUA DENZLER a Broomall, Pa.
» Rowpins, Erizapern 63. 4... Gor ‘Old Lancester Road, Bryn Mawr, Pa.
sRopnry, Mary Emiry .:.4... 2 2194 Notth second St. , Harrisburg, Pa.
Rosenxorr, Frepa Frances. . . . . . 21 North Robinson St:, Phila. Pa.
>RussELL, MARIAN. .. . Da ow oe te ad GP Dat hc Ave nGAe aeay Tay
—Rusr; Evizapeta Firznuch.... . . 1177 Murray Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. —
> Sanrokp; Louse Morr. . . 112 Bast pean St., New York City
_— SAUNDERS, SILVIA ee. ven 7 Chine Se
——Scuirr, Dorotny (Mrs. Richard W. B. Hall)
150 East Seventy-third St., New York City
o SHARPE, PAULINE GARDINER . . . . 1003 Pacific Ave., Atlantic City, N. J.
ae Suimas, ANNE McDowErm: =" , «.7 > . 4841 Ellswotth Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa.-
— Smxnovitcn, Hevena Kincsspury. . . . .-27 Barrow St., New York City
Amity, MarcareT VAUGHAN . . . 1007 South Forty-ninth St., Phila., Pa. -
» SULLIVAN, Etrnor Loomis . . 154 East Seventy-fourth St., New York City
cTatnam, Repecca ° =. a0. Katonah, Wax .
©Taytor, Barsara, Care of Dr. Dexter Whittingill, Via Vabuino, Rome, Italy
© TErrrT, Ere, Grisworp . . . . 131 East Sixty-sixth St., New York City
—sT yADER, MARGUERITE THORNE. . . . 28 East Sixtieth St., New York City
em Tunsy, Ruta PeckKHAM:: <2; 2.2: Ps Hillside Ave., Westfield, N. J.
4 °Tourtie, ExvizapetH Norris . oe ‘Bryn Mawr, a, @
TeV Pinus Kavnenine OO ees Bee ae,
t PWarkux, Heten Bancrorr......- . . 4 121 Maitr St. “Andover, Mass.
f2>Waivace, Ipenz AMpteR. . . +. . |. . 234 Bowen St., Providence, R.T.
———>WeIsER, CHARLOTTE Marsh . . . . . gor Eighth St., South, Fargo, N. D.
a Wis, Mary Larue Dey (Mrs. Henry Monroe)
440 Riverside Drive, New York City
—— Waite, Mary Louise . The Lenox, Thirteenth and Spruce Sts:, Pitla.y ba. *
— Wickes, Carouine Orrouim Younc (Mrs. Daniel Baugh Brewster)
Brooklandville, Md.
—— Wisr, Justine Dorotay: .:... . . 23 West Nineticth ot., New York City
Woon, DARAM | Ae. Ve. Ss Sipser Forty-eighth St;, Phila., Pa.
+ Woopworta, Mary KatHARINE . - os mera Nore Gartisle St., Puila 2 Pa. o
~% One hundred fourteen
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~% One hundred thirty-seven
ee
The Gai beauty
of Tomorrow
is the outgrowth of the school ideals of today.
The att teacher is responsible for helping to dé-
velop those ideals in het classes. Through a well-
organized program of art problems, bringing such
dreams to tealities, the environment becomes the
“Community beautiful.”
For public welfare campaigns, landscape plans,
cleanup, safety and fire prevention posters, the art
classes develop their aims through the use of Gold
Medal products. “Crayola,” “Perma” and “Spectra”
Crayons, Lecturers’ Chalks and “Artista” Water
Colors—each has its own field of direct service
through brilliance and clean texture. Samples and
color charts on request.
Our Art Service Bureau 15
Your Art Service Bureau
Binney & Smith Co.
New York
41 East 42nd Street
~-% One hundred thirty-eight
pecan
% One hundred thirty-eight
IL Jewelers
Silversmths
Stationers é
PHILADELPHIA
The
Gift Suggestion Book
Mailed upon request
Illustrates and Prices
Jewels, Watches, Clocks, Silver,
China, Glass and Novelties
The distinctive Productzons and Importations
of this Establishment
ee
Etiquette of Wedding Stationery
A Book mailed upon request which describes in
detail the correct use of Wedding Stationery and
Visiting Cards
ESTABLISHED 1818
A stobs hirilherty
SGLOTHING;")
mens Furnishing Goods,
MADISON AVENUE COR. PORTY-FOURTH STREET
NEW VORK
Telephone Murray Hull 8800
This is a complete establishment
operated continuously for more
than one hundred years and still
in the control of the direct de-
scendants of the founders
Send for “Historic American Buildings”
BOSTON
TREMONTCOR. BOYLSTON
NEWPORT
220 BELLEVUE AVENUE
THRESHER BROS.
“
1322 Chestnut Street
IGADt
On These Principles We Stand:
Reliable Silks Fair Dealing
Honest Values Courteous Service
Truthful Advertising
IGDU
Stores:
PHILADELPHIA BOsTON CLEVELAND BALTIMORE
you're a believer in outdoor
sports—and in healthy recreation
—then it’s safe to say—you're a
Spalding enthusiast—Tennis,
Golf, Hockey, etc.
Catalogue on Request
Mf fie hig rier
1210 Chestnut Street Philadelphia, Pa.
~% One hundred thirty-nine
Se
Barbara Lee
Frocks of Distinction for Young W omen
To be had exclusively here in Philadelphia
Strawbridge & Clothiet
Market and Eighth Streets
J J. CONNELLY ESTATE MEHL & LATTA
LUMBER, COAL and
THE MAIN LINE FLORISTS
BUILDING MATERIALS
WALL BOARD
Phone, Bryn Mawr 252
ROSEMONT, PA.
1226 Lancaster Avenue Rosemont, Pa.
LLEWELLYN® HENRY B. WALLACE
Caterer and Confectionet
PHILADELPHIA'S STANDARD
DRUG STORE
Telephone, Bryn Mawr 758
22-24 Bryn Mawr Avenue Bryn Mawr, Pa.
1518 CHESTNUT STREET
% One hundred forty
a
\ ! * % One hundred forty
Campion & Company
High Grade Groceries
eo CBilliigaes
Booksellers
All the current books WILLIAM H. RAMSEY
& SON
126 South 16th St. Philadelphia BRYN MAWR 843
Telephone, Circle 2300 The
BRUCK-WEISS, Inc.
Millinery - Gowns
Wraps
6 West 57th Street New York
Bryn Mawr Trust Company
Bryn Mawr, Pennsylvania
Capital $250,000
Every banking Allow interest on
facility deposits
Safe deposit boxes for rent
Compliments of
The
Bryn Mawr Theatre
Mr. Frank, Prop.
Phone, Bryn Mawr 867
THE
HEARTHSTONE
LUNCHEON - TEA - DINNER
Open Sunday
25 North Merion Ave. Bryn Mawr, Pa.
William L. Hayden
Hardware
Curtain Rods, Paints, Brushes
838 Lancaster Avenue Bryn Mawr, Pa.
John S. Trower’s Sons
Caterers and Confectioners
Bell Telephone
5706 Germantown Ave. Germantown, Phila.
~% One hundred forty-one
sa ES ES
Students’ and Library Spectacles
In Genuine Shell and Imitation
(Large Round Oculars)
BONSCHUR & HOLMES
OPTICIANS
1533 CHESTNUT STREET
PHILADELPHIA
Gift Handbook mailed on application
COU, DAINTY
SANDWICHES
FOR PICNICS
ICED DRINKS
emo yn
COLLEGE TEA HOUSE
Open Dalty FROM I TO 7
EventnG Parties By SpecIAL ARRANGEMENT
SODA
Imported Perfumes
POWERS and REYNOLDS
837 Lancaster Ave., Bryn Mawr
WE DELIVER PHONE, BRYN MAWR 921
COSTUMES,
WIGS, ETC.
TO HIRE
For Amateur and Professional
Productions
236 South rith Street, Philadelphia
Furs Stored Summer Furs
EDWIN R. DODGE
Furs. of Quality
N.W. Cor. 11th and Sansom Sts.
118-120 South 11th St.
Bell Phone, Filbert 5115 Philadelphia, Pa.
E. A. Wright Company
Broad and Huntingdon Streets
Philadelphia
Engravers - Printers - Stationers
Commencement Invitations Class Jewelry
Dance Programs Menus
nese Cards Leather Souvenirs
ationery Wedding Stationery
“% One hundred forty-two
\ cee |
~% One hundred forty-two
Sherman Square Hotel
Broadway, Seventieth to Seventy-first St.
New York
Situated in the very centre of the
residential section of the West Side
Stone FINE SHOES
for DRESS-WEAR
SLIPPERS, MULES 1nd. DOho A>
FOR: THe BOUDOT.
CaN BE OBTAINED AT
C.D ee ey
HARRISBURG, PA.
STONE SHOE COMPANY, Inc.
71 FIFTH AVENUE, NEW YORK
~% One hundred forty-three
DRUGS, TOILET ARTICLES,
STATIONERY
oo CIID
Moore’s Pharmacies
Phone, Bryn Mawr 66
Bryn Mawr Avenue Lancaster Avenue
James A. Hour
MaARMADUKE D. SMITH
HOLT & SMITH
SUCCESSORS TO
WuitesipE & McLANAHAN
Reap Estate AGENTS avd BROKERS
N. W. Cor. 15th and Pine Sts. Philadelphia
JEANNETTS
807 Lancaster Ave. Bryn Mawr, Pa.
Bryn Mawr 570
INSURANCE
Fire or Burglary Insurance on students’ personal effects
while at college or elsewhere.
Tourists’ Floating Insurance on personal effects against
all risks in transit, in hotels, etc., both in this
country and abroad.
Automobile Insurance covering damage to car and liability
for damage to property or for injuries to persons.
LONGACRE & EWING
141 S. Fourth St. Bullitt Building Philadelphia
VENTURE GARDENS
2o1-3 SourH Camac St.
‘A DELIGHTFUL, RESTFUL -PLACE TO
TAKE LUNCHEON, AFTERNOON TEA
OR DINNER. VERY MODERATE TARIFF.
SPECIAL ATTENTION GIVEN TO SMALL
DINNER AND DANCE PARTIES. THE BEST
PLATTER DINNER IN TOWN FOR $1.00.
Hairdressing
ana all its branches...
Bryn Mawt Massage Shop
833 Lancaster Avenue
Phone, Bryn Mawr 832
Snyder’s Clothes Shop
CLEANING, DYEING, REPAIRING
REMODELING AND PREssING
Phone 131
829 Lancaster Avenue Bryn Mawr, Pa.
~t One hundred forty-four
~t One hundred forty-four
Fir of the Better Grace
Tree. Fo Siefert
Urb “Waluut Sb
KARCHER&REHN G
INTERIOR DECORATION“ FURNITURE
Our SHOW ROOMS ARE FILLING UP WITH
NEW ARRIVALS OF SELECTED FURNITURE
WHICH WILL APPEAL TO THOSE WHO DISCRIMINATE
IN FAVOR OF THE BEAVTIFUL
LG)
1608-10 CHESTNUTst. 88%" PHILADELPHIA
ot One hundred forty-five
BE Bil Stole
Spector's
CHESTNUT ST. ATJUNIPER
APPAREL OF THE RICHEST
CHARACTER, MODERATELY PRICED
TOGGERY SHOP
831 Lancaster Ave., opp. Post Office
Gowns, Hats, Coats, Sweaters,
Blouses, Hosiery
Sole Agents for
Vanity Fair Silk Underwear
Dressmaking and Alterations
E. M. B. Wisg Phone, Bryn Mawr 259
ARDMORE BRYN MAWR OVERBROOK
BALA NARBERTH
Wm. T. McIntyre
Fancy Groceries City Dressed Meat
Confectioner and Caterer
Own Make Candy, Ice Cream and Fancy Groceries
B.& G. Cleaners and Dyers
Silk dresses dyed any shade
Cleaning and Dyeing
of the better kind
869 Lancaster Avenue
Call Bryn Mawr 1018
Bryn Mawr
American, Italian and French dishes served at all hours
ROMA CAFE
Private Dining Room for Ladies
835 Lancaster Avenue Bryn Mawr
Phone, Bryn Mawr 125
Edw. K. Tryon Company
Sporting Goods Specialists
g12 Chestnut Street
Philadelphia
Afternoon Tea and Luncheon
may be had at the
Cottage Tea Room
Montgomery Avenue
Bryn Mawr, Penna.
Everything Dainty and Delicious
Efficiency Quality
Service
WILSON LAUNDRY
Bryn Mawr, Penna.
- One Aundred forty-six
Overnight Storage
MADDEN'S GARAGE
LANCASTER AVENUE, BRYN MAWR
PLEASE EaATRONIZE
ADVERTISERS
A Shoe for Every Occaszon
From the daintiest of evening slippers, all
the way to sports shoes and riding boots.
plain vamp for informal afternoon
affairs. Spanish Louis heels.
a. The “MYOLO”
/ Lily, A graceful model, with beaded design
‘y Vy //, on vamp for evening wear, or with
Co a
J. & TAGOUSINS
SHOEMAKERS
1226 Chestnut Street Philadelphia
~% One hundred forty-seven
~% One hundred forty-ezghr
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~% One hundred forty-eight
FRANKLIN
PRINTING
COMPAN
FOUNDED IN 1728 BY
BENJAMIN FRANKLIN
514-520 LUDLow sT.
PHILADELPHIA, FA.
~% One hundred forty-nine
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Shih Nite ciate thai, Aen oS
Bryn Mawr College Yearbook. Class of 1924
Bryn Mawr College (author)
1924
serial
Annual
156 pages
reformatted digital
North and Central America--United States--Pennsylvania--Montgomery--Bryn Mawr
9PY 1924
1924 Class book : Bryn Mawr College--
https://tripod.brynmawr.edu/permalink/01TRI_INST/1ijd0uu/alma99100336061...
BMC-Yearbooks-1924