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12, 1919
MADAME BRESHKOVSKAYA
WILL TELL OF RUSSIAN
REVOLUTION
Has Spent Life in Effort to Rouse
Peasants to Overthrow Aristocracy
DENOUNCES BOLSHEVISM
“Tm a Social Revolutionist and I will
be till I die, but God save us from the
Bolsheviki,” quotes the “Literary Digest”
from Madame Catherine Breshkovskaya,
“the little grandmother” of the Russian
revolution, who will speak Saturday eve-
ning in the gymnasium on “he Russian
Revolution as I Have Seen It.”
Madame Breshkovskaya’s mission in
America is to tell the American people
the truth about Russia, and to organize
help for the 4,000,000 Russian children
orphaned by the war and the Bolsheviki
régime. She wants education, books, and
a chance for the new generation in Rus-
sia.
Has Joyful Welcome at Wellesley
Wellesley College greeted Madame
Breshkovskaya, for the second time two
weeks ago. The undergraduates sang to
her outside President Pendleton’s house,
where she was staying, and three stu-
dents gave a Greek dance. After a
speech of welcome from the president of
the Students’ Association, Madame
Breshkovskaya was presented with $100
from the Wellesley War Chest for the
Russian Orphan Fund.
Siberian Exile for 30 Years
Born of the nobility, Madame Bresh-
kovskaya has devoted her life to bringing
about the Russian revolution. Distressed
even as a child at the condition of the
peasants, she labored to teach and ele-
vate them. Soon after her marriage to
(Continued on page 2, column 3.)
Miss Allard Awarded Fellowship
Beatrice Allard, last year’s president of
the Graduate Club, has been awarded the
Alice Freeman Palmer Research Fellow-
ship. by Wellesley College for the year
1919-20. Miss Allard is Mt. Holyoke ‘15,
and for the past four years she has been
doing graduate work in Semitic lan-
guages at Bryn Mawr under the direction
of Dr. Barton. Former holders of this
scholarship are Mrs. Pell, Associate Pro-
fessor of Mathematics, and Mrs. de
Laguna, Associate Professor of Philoso-
phy.
“A MERRY DEATH”
COMMUNITY SINGING TO BE
ORGANIZED BY{HALLS
May Day Sing Planned as‘Climax of
Weekly Practices
Community singing organized by halls,
a special “conference” under a Y. M. C.
A. leader on March 28 and 29, and an
inter-hall competition on May Day are in-
cluded in a schedule drawn up last week
at a joint meeting of the Athletic Board,
class-presidents, song-leaders and the
present singing committee.
Class singing will be in no way inter-
fered with by the community singing,
which is open to everyone and makes no
distinction between mutes and others.
Song-leaders, elected by halls from
nominations made by the present com-
mittee, will make up next year’s college
song committee. The chairman will be
the college song mistress, chosen as usual
at the annual elections of the Athletic
Associations. It is probable that part of
the hall drills will be given up to hall
singing, and each hall will compose a col-
lege song for the competition held in the
spring.
The nominations for hall song-leaders
will be made from those attending the
normal classes in song-leading to be given
in the gymnasium by Mr. Robert Law-
repee on the afternoons of March 28 and
29. Mr. Lawrence, who is at the head of
all Y. M. C. A. camp and community sing-
ing, will speak on singing and its place in
the life of a community on the evening of
March 28. His lecture will be followed
by a sing. He may lead an all-
college sing the next evening.
The climax of the weekly college sings
to be held throughout the spring, will
come on the afternoon of May Day, in a
special celebration on the lower athletic
field, probably in connection with outdoor
folk dancing. The halls will come on the
field by companies, and sing the college
song composed by them before a commit-
tee of judges. The winning hall will re-
ceive a trophy to be kept in the hall.
Ninety people came out for the Com-
munity Sing on Tuesday. Lois Kellogg
20, the Junior member of the committee,
led. Several students were picked from
also
the ranks to lead in turn on the platform.
The committee decided on the following
people for the normal class:
B. Krech
‘21, EB. Taylor21, A. Harrison "20
will be chosen later.
B. Cecil *21,
L. Ward ‘21, L. Reinhardt
Others
99
C. SKINNER STARS AS BARRIE’S “ ROSALIND ” IN VARIETY SERIES
“Merry Death” Distinctively Staged—‘“ Maid of France”
Proves Poor Choice
A MERRY DEATH
A harlequinade in one act, by Nicholas Evreinov.
Pierrot. . Lucile Babcock, graduate.
Harlequin Bertha Ferguson ‘21
Doctor Bessie Ostroff ‘21.
Columbine Sidney Be'ville '18.
Death. Helene Zinsser ‘20.
Stage Manager, Marguerite Krantz ‘19.
THE MAID OF FRANCE
A play in one act, by Harold Brighouse.
eanne G'Arc......... . Lois Kellogg ‘20.
lanche, a Flower Girl...... Virginia Park ‘20.
Paul, a Poilu..... Victoria Evans '?1.
Fred, a Tommy., Marjorie Warren ‘21.
Gerald Soames, an English
Lieutenant..... ..+++Mary S. Goggin ‘21.
A Verger.... Bettina Warburg '?!.
: { Rebecca Reinhardt '19.
Carolers , Millicent Carey ‘20.
| Elizabeth Matteson ‘21.
Stage Manager, Helen D. Hill ‘21
ROSALIND
A comedy in one act, by J. M. Barrie.
Dame Quickly Mary Ramsay ‘19.
Mrs. Page Cornelia Skinner ‘22
Charles
Emily Anderson ‘22.
Stage Manager, Marjorie Martin ‘19.
99
The “Rosalind” of Cornelia Skinner
and the effective, impressionistic staging
of the first play on the program, Evrei-
nov’s harlequinade, “A Merry Death,”
made Varsity Dramatics last Friday and
Saturday, the subject of unanimous con-
gratulations to all the producers, notably
Mrs. Howard Rollins Patch, who coached,
and Dr. Gertrude Rand, who managed the
lighting. The actors in the second play,
“The Maid of France,” by Harold Brig-
house, labored under tremendous difficul-
ties imposed by the mawkish sentimental-
ity of plot and lines.
“A Merry Death” Skilfully Staged
The. striking setting for the Russian
play in reds, purples, black and white,
toned by skilful lighting produce a
definite single effect of luminous dark-
ness, won “A Merry Death” the distinc-
tion of artistic novelty.
Lucille Babcock,
“innocent,” Pierrot, characterized
part completely than of
actors in the play. Bertha Ferguson ‘21
interpreted Harlequin, trifling with Pler-
rot’s Columbine to the minute of his
death, more by movement and attitude
than by speech. A Columbine of great
grace and vivacity, though of small range
of emotion, was pictured by Sidney Bel-
ville "18. Passya Ostroff ‘21
highly satisfactory doctor
In the grim antics of the difficult death
to
malicious
her
the
the
as
more any
proved a
dance, Helene Zinsser ‘20 created the il-
lusion of the skeleton with unusual skill.
Maid of France Realistic
The Jeanne d’Are of Lois Kelloge ‘20,
at first immovably realistic as the stone
statue, and later the living Maid, saved
“The Maid of France” from worse than
mediocrity.
The stained glass saints of the cathe-
dral windows were worthy a better set-
ting than the distractingly spotty stone
wall in which they were set.
The actors and managers of this play
are to be commiserated on its unfortunate
choice, for which they were not responsi-
ble.
Rosalind Nearly Professional
Cornelia Skinner's spirited and mag-
netic characterization of Barrie’s popular
actress, middle-aged in private life, is a
memorable one for the Bryn Mawr stage.
Her acting the savoir-faire of the
professional with very great spontaneity
and charm.
Miss Skinner’s great
Charles of Emily Anderson
had
skill
‘9
made the
seem ex-
ceptionally callow and boyishly sincere,
qualities wholly in keeping with the part.
Mary Ramsay '19 proved a satisfying and
matronly old housekeeper for the famous
actress.
Miss Skinner daughter
Skinner. Mrs. Skinner helped
up the casts on Friday evening
of Otis
to make
the
is
B. M. THEATRE A POSSIBILITY
The possibility of building a cheap the-
atre for college dramatics will. be dis-
cussed at an Undergraduate meeting.
The classes would lend the necessary
money to the Undergraduate Association,
which would borrow on a _ corporation
basis instead of paying the office each
time for the erection of a stage. Starting
the auditorium of the
Building immediately will be an alternate
possibility considered.
The question of enlarging the scope of
the Schedule Committee to include con-
iference with the Office Committee about
' dates of plays and other entertainments
wing Students’
| will be discussed
Why Wait Till Easter?
A stretch of ten weeks between mid-
year and Easter vacation is bound to
have a deadening effect upon everyene’s
effort and enthusiasm, an effect which the
short crowded weeks after Easter by no
means serve to remedy. Yet such is the
schedule to which we are bound when-
ever there happens to be a late Waster.
Many other colleges avoid this unequal
distribution of work by having a fixed
spring vacation, for instance, the last
week in March and the first week in
April. Certainly the advantages of hav-
ing a vacation midway in the semester
are unquestionable, such a vacation af-
fording just the relaxation necessary to
save a certain per cent of our number
from “breakdowns.” For this second se-
mester vacation to be dependent upon a
“movable feast” (which always seems to
fall, perversely, at just the wrong time),
defeats one of the chief ends which the
vacation should serve.
Hunting the Snark
Hunting the snark is nothing to hunt-
ing books in the reserve room, for the
simple reason that there are no books—
it’s alla myth. Two minor French classes
of thirty students each have been trying
to survive on one copy of each required
reading book. There are said to be copies
in the hall libraries, but they are rare and
transient. A class of sixty in Poets are
reduced to the same situation—and what
books there are belong to the professor.
Is not there some way by which the col-
lege can save enough money to buy—say
one book for every fifty people. Much
as the Bryn Mawr student loves her food
there are times before quizzes when she
would willingly sacrifice mushrooms and
other expensive accessories for a chance
at some illusive book.
Sophomore Rules
The term class spirit has been anath-
ema ever since an incident effectively
staged in Bryn Mawr village a year ago
last fall. That incident sounded the
death-knell of the Radical faction then in
control, and the Conservatives, with their
doctrine of sisterly, but not necessarily
Class-sisterly love, have been in the as-
cendant ever since.
They are now beginning to assert their
power in a positive way. They propose
that Sophomore rules be applied with
more gentle ministrations. No more
gowned figures and dark cellars may be
the attributes of the “Reading of the
Rules.” Maybe, instead, the rules will
come to be posted in Taylor or announced
: " Aligone who in taterested please soo me}
ly after chapel any morning in
Taylor.
Helen Emily Kingsbury,
Chairman of the Social Service
Committee.
: IN THE NEW BOOK ROOM
Some of the war poetry suggested by
Miss Spurgeon in her lecture here last
fall, has just been received by the New
Book Room from Bngland. Included are
Mariborough and Other Poems, by C. H.
Sorley (third edition with illustrations in
prose), who, according to Masefield,
would have been the greatest English
dramatic poet since Shakespeare, if he
had lived.
The Old Way and Other Poems, by
Captain Ronald Hopwood, R. N., of which
Miss Spurgeon read. The Old Way, as
“embodying the spirit of the British
Navy.”
Songs of Youth and War, P. H. B. Lyon,
M.C. London: Erskine MacDonald.
Soldier Poets—Songs of the Fighting
Men, compiled by Galloway Kyle, in two
series. A collection of new poems, not
previously published in volume form, by
Captain Julian Grenfell, Edward Mel-
bourne, Sergeant J. W. Street, Sorley,
and others, which “record the aspirations,
emotions, and experiences of men of all
ranks and branches of the army.”
Chicago Poems, by Carl Sandburg, ‘‘dis-
tinguished by the trenchant note of social
criticism and by its vision of a better
social order.”
While Paris Laughed, by Leonard Mer-
rick, “being the Pranks and Passions of
the Poet Tricotin.”
Walking Shadows—Sea Tales and
Others, by Alfred Noyes. Bleven short
stories with wartime plots. 1918: Stokes
and Co,
Colour Studies in Paris, by Arthur Sy-
mons. Collection of essays on French
writers and life in the French capital in
the nineties. Freely illustrated with car-
toons, photographs, etc. Contains 4
chap‘er on Yvette Guilbert. 1918: Dutton
and Co.
The Book of Lincoln, compiled by Mary
Wright Davis. An anthology of poems
and prose extracts dealing with Abraham
Lincoln, supplemented by quotations from
his speeches. Illustrated with photo-
graphs of Lincoln statues and of places
connected with his life. 1919: Doran Co.
Art from Japan
Japanese art work in two valuable col-
lections has been purchased by the
Library for the Art Seminary. They were
both edited in Tokyo by the Shimbi Shoin
Society, and imported from Japan. One
yolume contains reproductions of the
work of Kano Motonabu, a great Japanese
painter. The printing is in Japanese, and
the book opens at the back, tied by thongs
within its box cover.
The second book, “Japanese Temples
and Their Treasures,” contains five hun-
dred plates and colored wood-cuts, with
critical studies in English. This edition,
limited to two hundred copies, was pre-
pared by His Imperial Majesty’s Commis-
sion to the Panama-Pacific Exposition,
“for the purpose of presenting an ade-
quate idea of our art to the American
at Vespers.
people.”
Service—Dr. Elizabeth Kemper Adatns,
Head of Professional Women’s Section,
U. 8S. Employment Service, Washington,
DC.
Employment under Private Firm or
Corporation — Lieutenant-Colonel Robert
C. Clothier, formerly member of the Com-
mittee on Classification of Personnel in
the Army, and Employment Manager of
the Curtis Publishing Company.
The Community in Relation to Industry
—Mrs. Eva Whiting White, Member of
the Federal Commission on Living Condi-
tions, United States Department of La-
bor, formerly head Blizabeth Peabody
House, Boston, and Director of the Bos-
ton School Centers; Elect Head Worker
of the New York College Settlement.
Discussion by Miss Ernestine Fried-
mann, Field Work Executive Secretary,
Industrial Section, National Board of
the Y. W. C. A.
SATURDAY, 2. P. M.
Medicine and Public Health
The Physician and Public Health—Dr.
Martha G. Tracy, Women’s Medical Col-
lege, Philadelphia.
The Physician Abroad—-Dr. Dorothy
Child, lately returned from work with a
Pedriatic Unit in France.
Medical Social Service—Miss Katherine
Tucker, Director Visiting Nurse Associa-
tion, Philadelphia.
Discussion by Miss Antoinette Canon
07, head of Social Service Department of
University Hospital, Philadelphia.
Madame Breshkovskaya Wil!
Russian Revolution
(Continued from page 1.)
a young nobleman, a liberal, she realized
no improvement could be brought about
until the autocratic government was over-
thrown.
Leaving her home, she lived among the
peasants, suffering with them, teaching
them, until for her revolutionary ideas
she was imprisoned, and sent to Siberia
for more than twenty years. After her
release, she continued to rouse the peas-
ants, avoiding the police by tricks. Cap
tured again, she was exiled until the revo-
lutionary outbreak.
Fights Red Guards at 73
“With the end of Russian autocracy
Madame Breshkovskaya was hailed as the
foremost of Russia’s deliverers,” says the
“Literary Digest.” “Then, under the
bloodier autocracy, although she was 73
years old, she took up the fight against
Leniné, Trotzky, and the Red Guards. ‘To
get to this country to enlist help, she rode
horseback scores of miles, lay in hiding
from them, ran risks, and endured priva-
tions most women 50 years younger
would have hesitated before attempt-
ing.’”
Tickets for Madame Breshkovskaya’s
lecture may be obtained from D. Smith,
Pembroke West, for $1.00; members of
the college, 75 and 50 cents.
Tell of
Foundation (an Association for Social /dith”; and “Mr. Berenson Paints Giensee
United States Federal Employment}
Guidance), Philadelphia. Painting.” In the same nuniber Sefiorita
SATURDAY, 9.80 A. M. Dorado has an article on “The Charm of
Industrial Supervision and Employment |Spanish Fairy Lore.” -
Management Pr. Wright will speak in chapel Friday
Thomas’s absence the Department of His-
tory and Economics has taken over Mon-
day morning talks in chapel, and the De-
partment of Social Economy the talks on
Wednesday mornings.
At the faculty tea for the graduate stu-
dents, to be given in Denbigh tomorrow
afternoon, those receiving will be: Dr.
and Mrs. William Roy Smith, Dr. and
Mrs. Frank, Dr. and Mrs. Tennant, Dr.
and Mrs. David, Miss E. Noyes, Miss
Franklin and Dr, Fenwick.
C. La Boiteaux is Freshman song leader
for M. Krech, who has resigned on -ac-
count of merits.
R. Neel has been elected permanent
water-polo captain for 1922.
An anonymous gift of $151 has been re-
ceived by the Christian Association. $100
will go to the Armenians as designated by
the donor and $51 will go towartis the tm-
stallment of a new heating plant in the
College Settlement House in Philadel-
phia by the decision of the board.
B. Clarke '22 has been elected to the
Bates House Committee in the place of B.
Donohue '22, who resigned on account of
merits.
The part of “An Old Woman” in Senior
Play will be taken by Elizabeth Biddle.
J. Palache '22 will serve on the Food
Conservation Committee for C. Baird ’22,
who has resigned on account of merits.
M. Kennard ‘22 will fill Miss Baird's
place on the Employment Bureau Com-
mittee.
L. Kellogg has been elected 1920's song
leader in place of M. Carey, who resigned.
H. Huntting 19 will be Major-Géneral
Stahley in the Glee Club operetta, in
place of G. Hess 20. ®Wdward, sergeant
of police, is J. Peabody ’19.
Dancing is to be allowed by the Bryn
Mawr School Board in the part of the
school building used by the Community
Center. Miss Hilda Smith "10 has been
trying to get this permission for many
months. Until now all dances have been
given in the Fire House.
Mr. Edward C. Newton, author of “The
Amenities of Book-Collecting,” may speak
to the Englich Club on “Old Books.”
Blizabeth Fuller has been elected toast-
mistress for the Senior Fellowship Din-
ner to be held next Friday, March 21, in
Rockefeller.
1922 May-Drop Sophomore Rules
The Freshman Class is considering the
question of abolishing Sophomore rules
hext year. At a meeting held today, after
the News went to press, a plan was
brought up, accorditig to which the tradi-
tiots of college etiquette should be ex-
plained to the entering Freshmen by the
Sophomores at a joint meeting of the two
classes.
ie
et
a
es biti aoe De , Ba AE
nee Reta orig 88, Mae 92 hg :
i se oaacie aaa
3
est gs, :
SEE MODERN STAGING IN NEW YORK
FOR SENIOR REVIVAL
Visit Neighborhood Playhouse
In staging Farquhar’s post-Restoration
comedy, the Senior stage managers, E.
Fuller and G. Woodbury, went to the
Neighborhood Playhouse on Grand Street,
New York, last week to see the methods
of setting and costuming used there.
The Neighborhood Playhouse is run in
connection with a settlement and pro-
duces modern plays and revivals with
actors drawn from the neighborhood and
scenery and costumes executed by
classes in its own workshops. Several
Spanish and Russian plays, several of
Dunsany’s plays have been produced
there, and last week Mme. Yvette Guil-
bert was playing there with the neighbor-
hood cast in “Guibour,” a revival of a
fourteenth century miracle play, the cos-
tumes and setting for which were strongly
reminiscent of drawings by Boutet de
Monvel.
Ingenious methods of making and dye-
ing costumes to secure the desired color
effects were demonstrated to the Senior
managers as well as the painting of the
scenes, all of which are made at Grand
Street. Properties, among them Greek
vases and statues modelled from news-
papers and paperhangers’ paste, were
brought out and the stage lighting gone
over.
NEW PUBLICITY COMMITTEE
WILL ADVERTISE C. A. ACTIVITIES
The newly appointed Advertisement
Committee of the Christian Association
plans to consult with the chairman of
each of the Christian Association com-
mittees every week. A News reporter
will be informed of activities through this
Advertisement Committee.
Posters for all branches of C. A. work
will be made through this committee.
Special advertising will also be done.
Forceful Vespers Talk by O. Howard
“Did you ever think that it is unfair to
others not to pray?” asked O. Howard ’22
in Vespers last Sunday. “If you pray you
have an entirely different attitude, for in-
stance, toward the person next to you at
the breakfast table.”
“Prayer gives power. I should never
have had the courage to watch an opera-
tion at the hospital last summer if I had
not prayed; you may say that it was de-
termination, but where did that determi-
nation come from? Perhaps you think
that you do not believe in God, but if you
have never prayed you cannot know. Give
God a chance to be your partner and you
will not fail.”
Discuss Sentiment in Poetry
Poetesses, instead of poets, were read
and discussed at the Thursday meeting
of the Reelers and Writhers Club. The
poetry of, Sara Teasdale, Florence Con-
verse and Theodosia Garrison was dis-
cussed. Sentiment and sentimentality
were differentiated and their relative use
in women’s poetry noted.
-lheld after the big one,
fie wane Sal tate, ‘The olf phen Same
|been given up because it seemed an anti-
climax to award the cup at a small meet
do The judges, ap-
pointed by the Athletic Board, will be
ere of the Junior and _ Senior
8. There are three holders of the
apparatus cup now in college—M. Mac-
kenzie '18, A. Stiles ’19, and H. Ferris '20.
1919 SCHOOL OF PSYCHIATRY TO
BE HELD IN SUMMER AT SMITH
[Printed at the request of the Smith
Training School of Psychiatric Social
Work.]
Recognition of the need for psychiatric
social workers, which was the basis of
the founding of the Training School of
Psychiatric Social Work by Smith Col-
lege and the Psychopathic Department of
the Boston State Hospital, under the aus-
pices of the National Committee for Men-
tal Hygiene, has been constantly growing
and is now finding expression in other
schools and courses in several cities.
Chief among these is the second training
course to be held in Northampton this
summer. The 1918 school was purely a
war emergency to train students, as soon
as the necessary specialization permitted,
for work in military hospitals for those
suffering with war neuroses or so-called
“shell-shock.”. The 1919 course, while
primarily designed to meet the needs of
the reconstruction period, is also in a
sense a transitional project in that it
prepares students not only to deal with
the more immediate psychiatric problems
of the aftermath of war, but also with the
ubiquitous neuropath and psychopath of
everyday life.
Smith Course Begins in July
The 1919 Training School in Social Re-
construction is organized on much the
same general principles as the 1918
school, but with at least two additional
units, medical social service and commu-
nity work, with possibly a third branch
in child welfare. The curriculum includes
base courses in psychology and sociology
required of all students, and specialized
courses in social psychiatry, social medi-
cine, and community organization, elected
according to the individual interests of
the students. The course comprises two
months’ academic training in theory dur-
ing July and August at Smith College,
with an intervening period during July
and August at Smith College, with an in-
tervening period of nine months’ practical
field work, followed by two months of
additional advanced theory at Smith Col-
lege during July and August, 1920. In-
quiries about the 1919 training school
should be addressed to its director, Dr.
F. Stuart Chapin, of Smith College, North-
ampton, Massachusetts.
Will Give Course in Boston
The School for Social Workers in Bos-
ton has added to its curriculum a course
of ten lectures by Miss Mary C. Jarrett,
Chief of Social Service of the Boston
Psychopathic Hospital, Director of the
1918 Summer School and Associate Di-
rector of the 1919 School. The lectures,
on psychiatric social work, are supple-
mented by clinics at the Psychopathic
Hospital.
Course in New York
In response to a request from social
workers in New York City the New York
School of Philanthropy has announced
the opening of a Department of Mental
Hygiene. Dr. Bernard Glueck, formerly
Director of the Psychiatric Clinic of Sing
Sing prison, now a member of the staff
of the school, will conduct a course of lec-
tures in the fundamentals of Mental Hy-
giene accompanied by clinical observa-
tion of eases. There will also be confer-
ences for the discussion of metal aspects
of social case-work problems met with in
md yok will be: amended peo i ican people
albeit s “nyheter fated
Opera House.” But she added that there
could be no doubt about their enthusiasm
for the League of Nations. —
Ex-President Taft, outlining the princi-
ples of the League of Nations for which
‘he has been fighting for three years, pre-
sented the practical side and refuted ar-
guments brought against the league, said
Dean Taft.. President Wilson’s argument
was that America should assume any re-
sponsibility rather than give up the ideals
for which she entered the war.
HARVARD BOLSHEVIKS THWARTED
IN LITERARY ATTEMPT
New Magazine Comes Out Against Them
Anticipating the project of a group of
undergraduate Bolsheviks to start a mag-
azine at Harvard, an anti-Bolshevik fac-
tion has rushed into print a magazine
holding the “reds” up to satire. The new
publication appears in a bright red cover
under the name “The Harvard Maga-
zine,’ which they have stolen from the
Bolsheviks and copyrighted.
The editors solicit “all MSS, rejected
by Crimson, Lampoon, and Advocate,”
announcing: “Our literary contributions
are free from cramping form and gram-
mar. Our ideas are new. You will like
them. They are within the mental reach
of all of you”
One of the political articles reads: “O
youths, too long ignorant, but long sus-
picious and conscious of many miscar-
riages of justice lurking in the shadows
and noisome dens of University Hall, you
have not ceased to battle for that pearl of
proletariat privilege, liberty of speech.
“Here, where the names of Bliot and
Emerson lend to the air an atmosphere
antipathetic to all forms of constraint, I,
an human being, live condemned to a life-
long torture of incessant stimulation to
lunatic leapings. From dawn to dusk I
may not engage in aught but soul-soiling
drudgery presidentially prescribed.”
FATHER OF C. TAUSSIG SAILS
TO JOIN PEACE CONFERENCE
Dr. Frank W. Taussig, father of C.
Taussig ‘19, sailed for France last
Monday on the transport Great
Northern. As chairman of the Tariff
Commission, Dr. Taussig will assist
Mr. B. M. Baruch in making out the
commercial treaties for the world
connected with the treaty of peace.
Dr. Taussig is on leave of absence
from Harvard, where he holds the
chair of Professor of Economics.
the experience of the workers. Admit-
tance to the course is limited to those
actually engaged in social case-work.
Pennsylvania School for Social Service
Another interesting and important
course is that offered by the Pennsylvania
School for Social Service. Beginning in
February, the school provides six months’
training in social psychiatry and medical
social service as a graduate course for
students who have had an adequate
foundation in college or professional
work.
These schools and courses all demon-
strate the need for highly trained special-
ized workers competent to deal with the
intricate problems created in any envi-
ronment involving a psychopath. And
aside from the alleviative function, the
far more vital object of prevention can
be accomplished only by those so trained
in the technique of this new aspect of the
old problem of social maladjustment.
Marie von H. Byers,
Smith 1916.
President of the Alumne Association of
the Smith Training School.
i Andereen, Gila on Forward Line
Varsity water-polo material, “judged”
from the first practice, held last week,
. i EB. Lanier,
captain, already a strong player on last
year’s sub-varsity, has brought up her
game immensely. Her quickness and ac-
curacy combined to score numerous
E. Anderson '21, a fast center-forward,
bids fair to be a good player, after.more
experience. A. Thorndike '19 put up her
usual reliable defence at goal. Two full-
backs, M. Ballou '20 and D. Hall '19 have
improved and played a steady game. A.
Nicoll ’22 is a promising halfback.
}
NEW PLAY, “MOLIERE,”
RUNNING IN PHILADELPHIA
“Moliére,” a play by Philip Moeller,
_| which opened in Philadelphia last week,
is concerned with the latter part of the
life of the father of French drama. The
play supplements an ever-lengthening list
of plays having celebrities for their lead-
ing figures, a series including “Madame
Sand,” “Disraeli” and “Alexander Hamil-
ton.”
“The play is in three acts, the scene of
the first and third showing the study of
Moliére, in his theatre at the Palais Royal,
Paris, toward the end of the actor-
dramatist’s career. The second discloses
the apartment of Madame de Montespan
in the Louvre."" Henry Miller will play
Moliére; Blanche Bates, the fascinating
mistress of the King; Holbrook Blinn,
Louis XIV; and Estelle Winwood, Ar-
mande Bejart, Moliére’s fickle young
wife.
“The story begins with Moliére’s first
suspicion of Armande’s infidelity; con-
tinues through the tempestuous scene of
the display of the love of Madame de
Montespan for Moliére, which turns to
bitter hatred and concludes with the pass-
ing from the world’s stage of its great
dramatist, during the fourth performance
of his satirical play, ‘The Imaginary In-
valid.’”
Beside the four famous stars who ap-
pear in this play under the direction of
Henry Miller, there is a notable company
which includes Forrest Robinson, Sidney
Herbert, Alice Gale, Paul Doucet and
Frederick Roland.—Public Ledger.
ALUMNA NOTES
Dorothy Shipley ’17 is sailing for
France this month to do reconstruction
work.
Margaret Corwin '12 has given up her
work as assistant superintendent of the
Woman’s Division of the U. S. Employ-
ment Service in Connecticut to go over-
seas with a Y. M. C. A. canteen unit.
Miss Corwin, who was the executive sec-
retary of the Women’s Committee of Con-
necticut State EE of Defence, was
loaned to the U. S. Employment Service
by the council to pera in the organiza-
tion of the women’s work in Connecti-
cut’s tremendous war program. Since
the armistice Miss Corwin has demobil-
ized the war workers and has developed
the women’s division in a peace time pro-
gram,
Georgette Moses ‘16, secretary of the
Committee on Vocational Scholarships at
Henry Street Settlement, is also organiz-
ing girls’ clubs under the War Camp
Community Service.
Marjery Brown ex-'16 has resigned as
instructor of English at Stephens College
and is taking a course under the National
Catholic War Council in Social Service
and Clinics preparatory to going over-
seas.
Esther Pugh ‘15 sailed recently for
France as reconstruction aide in Therapy.
She is to work in the same hospital as
Susan Nichols ‘15.
Helen Butterfield ‘18 is Assistant Com-
putor in the valuation department of the
New York Centra! Railroad Company.
MAKBRS OF FINE JEWELRY
GOWNS, SUITS,
COATS, WAISTS,
100 TO 108 N. STATE ST., CHICAGO and MILLINERY
BOOKS OF ALL Pustisuers |/5th AVENUE at 46th STREET
Can be had at the i ae Yonk
DAYLIGHT BOOKSHOP
1701 CHESTNUT STREET
Philadelphia
Ladies’ and Misses’
Hyland Shirts
Plain-tailored Shirts, made just
like a man’s shirt.
Collars attached or detached.
Made-to-order.
Ready-to-wear.
Also
Ladies’ Gloves & Silk Hosiery
MANN & DILKS
ESTABLISHED 1840
Trunks, Bags, Suit Cases, Small Leather Goods
Hand Bags, Gloves
Repairing
Geo. B. Bains & Son, Inc.
1028 Chestnut Street Philadelphia
The Little Riding School
BRYN MAWR, PA.
TELEPHONE: 68 BRYN MAWR
Mr. William Kennedy desires to announce that he has
instruction in Horse
Se to have you call at
any time.
Especial attention
ring, suitable for
In connection with the
stable
iven to children. A large indoor
dilie tn tadbamaes wentiian.
school there will be a training
for show horsee (harness or saddle).
Ghe John C. Winston Co.
Printers and Publishers
- TYPEWRITER SUPPLIES
Through
THE COLLEGE NEWS
ESTABLISHED 1839
131 So. 13th Street
Mawson’s Furs i
RICH FURS AND STUNNING MILLINERY
Values of furs cannot be conveyed through advertising. Reputation
is the first requisite.
Mr. Mauston is not connected directly or indirettly with any other firm using his name.
FURS MILLINERY
UNUSUAL
GIFTS
GREETING CARDS
DECORATIVE TREATMENTS
Phone: Walnut 1329
Footer’s Dye Works
1118 Chestnut Street
Philadelphia, Pa.
Will Always Be Found at
THE GIFT SHOP
814 W. Lancaster Ave., Bryn Mawr, Pa. |
Offer their patrons Superior
Service in
CLEANING AND DYEING
Smart New Models in Georgette Crepe
STRAWBRIDGE
THIER
Specialists in
FASHIONABLE APPAREL FOR
YOUNG WOMEN
1120 CHESTNUT STREET
| MARKET, EIGHTH andj FILBERT STS,
Next Door to Keith’s PHILADELPHIA
Seeond Floor
Franklin Simon gs Co.
A Store of Individual Shops
Fifth Avenue, 37th and 38th Sts. New York
Announce an Exhibit
of
Newest Spring Fashions
For Women and Misses
AT THE
MONTGOMERY INN
Bryn Mawr, Pa.
MONDAY TUESDAY
March 17th March 18th
Suits, Coats, Wraps,
Tailored Dresses, Afternoon and Evening Gowns
Waists, Skirts, Shoes, Sweaters
Gymnasium Apparel, Sport Apparel
Riding Habits, Underwear,
A selection thoughtfully chosen to fit the needs
of the College Woman
At Moderate Prices
1006-16 Arch Street Philadelphia
IN PATRONIZING ADVERTISERS, PLEASE MENTION “THE OOLLEGE News”
thot.
-engagement to Arthur Bowker Parsons,
B.A., Harvard. Mr. Parsons is wotking
‘for the Y. M. C. A. in Providence and will
:sail for France soon.
re
Deaths 4
Mrs. Roland Conklin, mother of Julia
Conklin ’20, died suddenly on March 3d
at Fort Leavenworth, Kansas.
Dr. Harry H. Weist, husband of Alice
L. Cilley Weist ’97 and father of Helen J.
Weist ex-'21, died suddenly at his home in
New York on March 6th.
SAYS THAT I. G. S. A. STABILIZES
STUDENTS’ DESIRE FOR SERVICE
Miss Mary Gove Smith Tells of Under-
graduate Side of Work
“Exactly what does the I. C. S. A. do?”
was the question answered by Miss
Mary Gove Smith, an organizing secre-
tary for the Intercollegiate Community
Service Association, who spoke in chapel
last Wednesday.
To the undergraduate the I. C. S. A.
gives the inspiration of alliance with
@ national organization, acquaintance
through the speakers’ board with the ac-
eredited social engines of the country, ap-
prenticeship in social settlements, and
opportunity for service during the college
year at settlement and hospital clinics.
Through it a girl’s vague desire to be of
service is stabilized and mobilized. Three
great college settlements—in Boston,
Philadelphia and Chicago—are another
important part of the I. C. S. A.’s work.
Miss Smith quoted Madame Breshkov-
skaya’s praise of Dennison House, the
Boston college settlement, “Here, after all
my wanderings, I find myself at home.”
PLAY IN CLOISTERS WILL BE
GIVEN BY MINOR SPANISH CLASS
“Castillos de Torresnobles,” by Sefiorita
Dorado, will be acted by the members of
the Minor Spanish Class some time in the
spring. Thé play is in three acts,.a com-
edy concerning a duke and a marquise,
who have great difficulties relative to
their betrothal.
The play will be given in the cloisters,
so that an old-world atmosphere may be
created. It was given at Wellesley in
1915, coached by Sefiorita Dorado.
SUFFRAGE CLUB SPEAKER KEPT
AWAY BY NERVOUS BREAKDOWN
Srgjar Tucic, who was to have spoken
on the Balkan situation March 14, under
the auspices of the Suffrage Club, has
suffered a nervous breakdown and will
be unable to appear.
Another JugoGlay is to be secured if
possible to address the club on conditions
in Jugo-Slavia.
Many of "17 and "18 Back for Varsity
Dramatics
Seven members of 1917 and eight of
1918 were back for Varsity Dramatics:
1917, C. Hall, D. Shipley, S. Hind, H.
Harris, B. Emerson, M. Hodge, A. Dixon;
1918, M. O’Connor, S.. Morton, V. Knee-
land, M. Gardiner, C. Dodge, L. Hodges,
A. Newlin, M. Stair. E. Andrews ex-’'19
was also back.
maine MéliVaine ex-17 (Mrs. Blan-
:
5
z
:
t democracy by creating caste feel-
img. Three réforms are necessary to
:
_| make the public school fill the &eed of
every class: ¢@ntralization of govern-
ment; control of education; better
trained teachers; and a solution of the
vocational training problem which will
give “cultured vocationalism.”
Gary System Described
The Gary system was discussed in its
functions as an ideal vocational training-
plant. Essentials of this system are an
eight-hour school day, in proper propor-
tions of play and exercise, intellectual
study, amd shép and laboratory work.
The school is a public utility—a social
center for the community. The children
have no examinations or marks, but are
divided into three classes of “slow, nor-
mal, and rapid.” Any child may go ahead
as fast as he chooses, and does not have
to be held back by having “dumb” ones
in the same class. He is allowed a wide
selection of subjects, but after his choice
is made, he must go on with advanced
courses, so as to avoid the “smattering
of everything” which does not help a
workingman to earn his living. There is
an aim at continuity of work, with no
break between high-school and college.
In religious education the Sunday-
school seems to have failed, because it
has stressed the Bible stories rather than
the teachings of Jesus, and because their
teachers are inefficient as “rushed society
girls or cut and dried old maids.” One
solution would be to have graded church
schools, running parallel to the public
schools from kindergarten to university,
meeting two or three times a week, with
specially trained teachers.
BATES CLUB PLANS MAGAZINE
Will Give Annual Party March 22
A Bates pamphlet with photographs,
cartoons and‘the stories of the different
weeks at Long Branch, is planned by the
Bates Club and will probably be ready for
circulation within the next month.
The annual Bates Party will be given
on the evening of March 22. The com-
mittee in charge is M. Scott '19, chair-
man; M. Littell 20, L. Sloan '20, M. Train
20, F. Beatty '19, and C. Garrison 21.
At a special vesper service the follow-
ing day E. Williams '20 and Z. Boynton
20 will tell of their experiences at Long
Branch.
NO SMOKING AT VASSAR
Poughkeepsie, N. Y., Feb. 26.—A motion
strictly prohibiting smoking by the stu-
dents at Vassar was passed at a meeting
of the Students’ Association on Thursday
evening. This unmistakable expression of
Vassar’s stand is in definite contradiction
of the widely circulated misstatements in
the newspapers, all copied from one story
which started no one knows where and
which was af incorrect report
The new motion, which is inclusive of
all previous ones, puts the strictest in-
terpretation on them, “that no Vassar
student shall smoke while under the
jurisdiction of the college at Vassar, this
rule to be enforced under the honor
system.”—Vassar Miscellany News.
who gave
Labor,” whith
was Mawr
‘delegation, will speak Wediresday, March
26th. The néxt speaker has hot been de-
cided. és
Ex-Ambassador Henry Morgenthau,
Mr. Morgenthau, during his ambassador-
ship to Turkey, 1913-1916, was fm charge
of the interests in Turkey of Great
House Settlement.
Prince Kwo, of Liberia, will speak on
the African Problem. Mrs. Eddy, who
spoke on Industrial Women Around the
World at the Y. W. C. A., will probably
speak on Missions in the Bast. Mrs.
Eddy has spent a large part of her life
in China and Japan and is much inter-
ested in the awakening of the two
countries.
Dr. Harry Ward will sum up the ideals
of service set forth in the Reconstruction
Course and the lecture on home and for-
eign service.
DR. VERNON WILL SPEAK SUNDAY
Dr. Ambrose White Vernon, pastor of
the Harvard Church of Brookline, Massa-
chusetts, will speak in Chapel Sunday
night. Dr. Vernon is one of the most dis-|
tinguished ministers of the Congrega-'
tional denomination. His liberal attitude
toward differences in creed has drawn
Episcopalians, Unitarians, Baptists and
Universalists to his church. He has been
professor of Bible Literature at Dart-
mouth and professor of Practical Theol-
ogy at Yale.
Dr. Potter’s Lecture Postponed
The first social hygiene lecture will be
given on March 24 and not on the 17th as
announced. There will be three lectures
in all. All Seniors and Juniors who have
taken science and Sophomores who do
not intend to return next year may
attend.
Dr. De Laguna Will Speak Tuesday
Dr. de Laguna will speak on “The Re-
sponsibility for Atrocities” before the Dis-
cussion Club next Tuesday. The meeting
will be held in the Merion sitting-room at
8.46.
LOST.—An old-fashioned garnet pin set
in the form of a cross, Saturday between
Denbigh and Low Buildings. Reward
for return. See College News.
1816 Watnut Street
Philadelphia
Come and Hear
MADAME BRESHKOVSKY
“The Grandmother of the Revolution”
on
SATURDAY, MARCH 15, 1919
at 8 P. M.
In the Gymnasium
For Russian Orphan Fund
Outsiders, $1; College, $0.75 and $0.50
COLLEGE AND SCHOOLE EMBLEMS
AND NOVELTIES
FRATERNITY EMBLEMS, SEALS, CHARMS
PLAQUES, MEDALS, ETC.
ef Buperior Quality and Design
THE HAND BOOK
Nustrated and Priced
mailed upon request
BAILEY, BANKS & BIDDLE CO.
PHILADELPHIA
Bachrach
Photographs of Distinction
1626 CHESTNUT STREET
Special Rates to Students
Orage Stupros
New Yor«: 507 Fifth Avenue
BarrmOre: 16 W. Lexington Street
WasHINGTON: 1331 F. Street, North
West
Boston: 647 Boylston Street
STUDENTS DESIRING TO WORK
an hour or more a day can make
Wages of More Than $1.00 per Hour
selling “America’s War for Humanity”
and “Life of Roosevelt.” Send at once
for free outfit, F. B. DICKERSON CO.,
Detroit, Mich., enclosing 20c. in stamps
for mailing outfits.
Phone: Market 29-81
DAVID S.
* Orchestras
Formerty of
BELLEVUE.STRATFORD
And
WALTON HOTELS
IN PATRONIZING ADVERTISERS, PLEASE MENTION “Pur COLLEGE NEWs”
BROWN
Erclusive ”
533 MARKET STREET
PHILADELPHIA
” she dxbiatsiea, “coincides in
large part with the list of instructors at
the Academy, and since any instructor
worth his salt believes in what he
teaches, the medals become simply a
elindsA ‘lead tes World: which youth has]
¢| given its blood to save.” iil
| The fundamental temptation put toj|
-| Christ in the wilderness, said Dr. Fitch, | §
was not the concrete request made, but | papal
the insidious suggestion, “If you are a/ fl]
Son of God;” in other words, don’t trust
your spiritual vision unless it is backed
up by physical assurance.
of us, was tempted not to be true to him-
self.
Christ, like all
means. of perpetuating the very good
teaching standards of the Pennsylvania
Academy.” :
The picture entitled “Summer,” for
which Mr. Colin Campbell Cooper was
awarded the Walter Lippincott -prize for
“the best figure-piece painted by an
American citizen,” Miss King described
as “two ladies under parasols gathering
water-lilies in the best mid-Victorian
manner,—the same sort of thing, only
less strong in color and firm in form, that
the ‘London Illustrated News’ used to
distribute with the Christmas number.”
The prize-winning landscape, “Over the
Hills,” by Charles H. Davis, she charac-
terized as “bright and fresh.”
Miss King declared herself disap
pointed in Mr. Daniel Garber and Miss
Gertrude Fiske, whose work she has dis-
cussed for several years, adding that she
could “see no gain in ideas in either of
them.” Mr. Garber’s “Orchard Window”
was awarded the Temple Gold Medal.
CALENDAR
Friday, March 14
2.00 p. m.—Vocational Conference. Sub-
jects, Farming and Social
Service.
8.00 p.m.—Reserved for
Club.
Saturday, March 15
9.00 a.m.—Senior Written examinations
in French.
11.00 a. m.—Vocational Conference. Sub-
ject, Business.
2.00 p.m.—Vocational Conference. Sub-
jects, Medicine and Public
Health, and Writing.
8.00 p.m.—Lecture by Mme. Cather-
ine Breshkovskaya, “Little
Grandmother,” in the Gym-
nasium.
Sunday, March 16
6.00 p.m.—Vespers. Speaker, H. Holmes
*20.
8.00 p.m.—Chapel. Preacher, the Rev.
Ambrose White Vernon, of
Boston.
Monday, March 17
7.30 p.m.—Current events, by Dr. Fen-
wick,
Wednesday, March 19
7.30 p.m.—Bible Class. Conducted by
Dr. Chew, under the auspices
of the C. A.
8.30 p.m.—Social Service Lecture by Dr.
Jonathan Day, of the Labor
Temple, New York.
Friday, March 21
8.45 a.m.—Announcement of European
Fellowships.
4.30 p.m.—Gymnasium Contest.
6.30 p.m.—Fellowship Dinners.
Saturday, March 22
9.00 a.m.—Senior Written Examinations
in German.
8.00 p.m.—Bates House Party.
Sunday, March 23
6.00 p.m.—Vespers. Speaker, E. Wil-
liams '20, Z. Boynton ‘20.
8.00 p.m.—Chapel. Sermon by the Rev.
Arthur McGifford, of Union
Seminary, New York.
the French
“Cheerful idiots” in a
realm,” college students, including those
at Bryn Mawr, have all “acquired ankles |
and lost ears,” indiscriminately because it
is the thing to do.
conspicuous.
“Corroding self-scepticism, especially
intellectual,” Dr. Fitch declared to be the
reason why so many students, alert and
promising at graduation, fade to insignifi-
cance five years later. “ What they dare
to dream of, they don’t dare to do.” The
colleges are full of “perpetual indecisive-
ness,” the students lose faith, paralyzed
by the complexity of life as study re-
veals it.
Moral cowardice is of like nature with
intellectual. “Wait, hesitate, and we are
lost.”
Religion, concluded Dr. Fitch, is a per-
petual adventure, pilgrimage after God,
and the religious men of the generation
are its pioneers. Out of mental stimulus,
students are getting ideas. If Bryn Mawr
is a true college its students must test
out their ideas.
“You can’t do worse with the world
than your fathers did,” said Dr. Fitch:
“Youth has given itself for the world and
should now remake it its own way.”
Dr. Fitch worked in France in 1917 as
Field Inspector for the American Red
Cross. He is now professor of History of
Religion at Amherst.
MRS. SMITH SPEAKS IN CHAPEL
ON NEW MAP OF EUROPE
Speaking of the new map of Europe,
Dr. Marion Parris Smith, in chapel Mon-
day, began by telling how much easier
would have been the work of the map-
makers if the victory had been a German
one. Now, instead of an entire central
Europe consolidated under one rule—if
not under one ruler—twenty or more
small nationalities have emerged as a
result of the breaking-up and breaking-
down of the Empires of Russia, Germany,
Austro-Hungary and Turkey.
Such little nations as Finland, Ukraine,
Courland, the republic of Russia, Poland,
Czecho-Slovakia, the German republic,
the Austrian republic, the Hungarian re-
public, Jugo-Slavia, Roumania, Bulgaria,
Greece and Albania, Armenia, Syria, Mes-
opotamia, Arabia and Palestine are strug-
gling with each other as a result of one
or more of the three sources of discord:
boundary disputes, racial disputes and re-
ligious disputes.
A peace treaty which attempted to set-
tle such disputes would be ineffective if
it did not provide for some tribunal to
keep in order these struggling nations.
“Study the map of Europe,” Mrs. Smith
advised, “and see how many peoples are
trying to defy the law of physics, which
States that two bodies can not be in the
Same place at the same time. It is only
by studying this problem that we can
offer a constructive plan for peace in
Europe which will last for years after the
signing of the treaty.”
“ludicrous | fl
They would not be].
Kind of Sweater
Laces, Embroideries, Ruchings, Silk
Handkerchiefs and Notions
842 Lancaster Avenue. Bryn Mawr
American Lead Pencil Co.
(217 Fifth Avenue, N. Y.
_ bone
MARY G. McCRYSTAL
Choice Assortment of WOOLS for Bvery
FRANCIS B. HALL
HABIT AND BREECHES
MAKER
Cleaning, Renieel Olieniles
840 Lancaster Ave., 3 Stores West of Post Office,
Syn Mave, Pe.
PHONE 758
HENRY B. WALLACE
CATERER AND CONFECTIONER
LUNCHEONS AND TBAS
BRYN MAWR
BRINTON BROTHERS
FANCY AND STAPLE GROCERIES
Lancaster and Merion Avenues,
Bryn Mawr, Pa.
Orders Delivered. We aim to please you.
JOHN J. MeDEVITT Penne
Tickets
PRINTING c=.
1011 Lancaster Ave. Bryn Mawr, Pa
SCHOOLS |
a THE SHIPLEY SCHOOL
Preparatory to Bryn Mawr College
BRYN MAWR, PENNSYLVANIA
Principals
Alice G. Howland
THE HaRcum ScHoot
FOR GIRLS—BRYN MAWR, PA.
IN PATRONIZING ADVERTISERS, PLEASE MENTION “THE COLLEGE NEWS”
Amite E. Kenpaty
Floyd Bldg., Merion and Lancaster Aves.
MARCEL WAVING MANICURING
JEANNETT’S
BRYN MAWR FLOWER SHOP
Cut Flowers and Plants Fresh Daily
Corsage and Floral Baskets
Old Fashioned Bouquets a Specialty
Potted Plants—Persenal supervision on all erdase
807 Lancaster Ave.
Phone, Bryn Mawr 570
E. M. FENNER
Ice Cream, Frozen Fruits and Ices
Fine and Fancy Cakes, Confectio ns
Bryn Mawr (Telephone) Ardmere
The Bryn Mawr National Bank
BRYN MAWR, PA,
Foreign Exchange and Travelers’ Checks
Sold
3 Per Cent on Saving Fund Accounts.
Safe Deposit Boxes for Rent,
$3, $5 and $8 per Year.
WILLIAM T. McINTYRE
GROCERIES, MEATS AND
PROVISIONS
ABD MONA Ener ont NARBERTH
BRYN MAWR AVENUE
THE BRYN MAWR TRUST Co.
CAPITAL, $260,000
DOES A GENERAL BANKING BUSINESS
ALLOWS INTEREST ON DEPOSITS
SAFE DEPOSIT DEPARTMENT
D. N. ROSS (Pisraucy) *™yaguaW2-
Instructor in Pharmacy and Materia
Medica, and Director of the Pharmaceu-
tical Laboratory at Bryn Mawr Hospital.
BAST MAN’S KOpAES AND FILMS
Afternoon Tea and Luncheoa
COTTAGE TEA ROOM
Montgomery Ave., Bryn Mawr
Everything dainty and delicious
TRUNK AND BAG REPAIRING
Trunks, Treedl Beets « of thoroughly
e makes
Harness, Saddlery and Automobile Supplies
Phone, 373
EDWARD L. POWERS
903-905 LANCASTER AVE. BRYN MAWR, Pa.
Bell Telephone, Walnut 3274
MISS IRENE C. MULHOLLAND
TOILET. PREPARATIONS
Manca. Wavove, Smampoome, Fact Massacn,
Manicunine, Vioter Rar Taratmenr
ROOM 403, WIDENER BLDC.
N. W. Coe, Juniper and Chestnut Sta, Take Local Elevator
College news, March 12, 1919
Bryn Mawr College student newspaper. Merged with Haverford News, News (Bryn Mawr College); Published weekly (except holidays) during academic year.
Bryn Mawr College
1919-03-12
serial
Weekly
6 pages
digitized microfilm
North and Central America--United States--Pennsylvania--Montgomery--Bryn Mawr
Vol. 05, No. 20
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-vol5-no20