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The College New
VOLUME XI. No. 1
BRYN. MAWR, PA., WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 1, 1924
“, Price 10 Cents
FRESHMAN CLASS NUMBERS
MORE THAN HUNDRED
Thirteen Daughters of Alumnae
Among Incoming Students
The Freshman Class will be large again
this year, as 118 new students have been
admitted.
Thirteen of these are the granddaughters
of Bryn Mawr, as their mothers are Alum-
nae of the college.
New York has the largest representation
of twenty-four, while eleven come from
other parts of the state. Eight students are
residents of Philadelphia and twelve are na-
tives of Pennsylvania. There are ten from
New Jersey, seven from Illinois, eight
from Massachusetts, six from Connecticut,
five from Missouri, four from Ohio, four
from California, three from Maryland,
two from Minnesota, two from Colorado,
one from Arkansas, one from ,Washington,
one from Vermont, one from Tennessee,
one from Virginia, and one from Paris.
The members of the class of 1928 are:
Rheta Aaron, Mary Ogden Adams,
Bertha Alling, Julia Blanche Altheimer,
Elinor Beulah Amram, Eleanor Elizabeth
Archbald, Suzanne Armstrong, Carolyn
Elizabeth Asplund, Virginia Atmore,
Elizabeth Haines Balentine, Mildred Alice
Barber, Alice Cordelia Barbour, Mar-
guerite Pendery Barrett, Elizabeth Bethel,
Frances Bethel, Alice Josephine Bonnewitz,
Sylvia Brewster, Evelyn Reed Brooks,
Elizabeth Grace Brown, Lenore Hilbert
Browning, Alice Bruére, Pamela Burr,
Elizabeth Maxwell Carroll Chesnut,
Eleanor Rubidge Cohoe, Frances Evelyn
CONTINUED ON PAGE 6
NINE REGIONAL SCHOLARS
AMONG FRESHMEN
Matriculation Scholarships Among
Others Awarded
Scholarships of various kinds have been
awarded to sixteen Freshmen.
The Matriculation Scholarship for the
New England States was won by Barbara
Channing from the Winsor School, Bos-
ton, Massachusetts, who plans to enter in
1925, while Frances Putnam of the Girls’
Latin School, Boston, Massachusetts, re-
ceived Honorable Mention.
In New York, New Jersey and Dela-
ware, Josephine Young, from the Brearley
School, New York City, was awarded the
Scholarship and Margaret Harper McKee,
also from the Brearley School, Honorable
Mention.
Alice Bonnewitz, of Miss Madiera’s
School, Washington, D. C., won the Schol-
arship for Pennsylvania and the Southern
States, while Georgia Wilson, from St.
Catharine’s School, Richmond, Virginia,
who is also the Frances Marion Simpson
Scholar, received Honorable Mention.
The Scholarship for the Western States
was won by Carolyn Asplund, of the Mon-
ticello Seminary, Godfrey, Illinois, while
Honorable Mention was given to Helen
Hook from the Chicago Latin School.
The Alumnae Regional Scholarship of
the St. Louis College Club went to Carolyn
Asplund, of the Monticello Seminary, God-
frey, Illinois; the Scholarship of Washing-
ton and Baltimore to Elizabeth Dupont, of
Miss Madiera’s School, Washington, D. C.;
the Scholarship of New Jersey to Frances
Cookman, from the Shipley School, Bryn
Mawr; the Scholarship of New England
FRESHMAN COMMITTEE CHOSEN ||
BY JUNIORS
The two members of 1928’s Freshman
Committee appointed by the Junior offi-
cers are Mary Hopkinson and Josephine
Stetson. :
Both girls were captains of the bas-
ketball teams at their respective schools.
Miss Hopkinson was Mayor of Winsor
School, in Boston, from which she grad-
uated in 1923, and Miss Stetson was
head of Self-Government at Rosemary
Hall.
(second scholar) to Catherine Field, from
Bishop Hopkin’s Hall, Burlington, Ver-
mont; the Scholarship of District 4 to Mar-
garget Gregson, from the Lyons Township
High School, La Grange, Illinois ; the Schol-
arship of Western Pennsylvania to Yildiz
Phillips, from the Schenley High School,
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania; the Scholarship
of New England (First Scholar) to Fran-
ces Louise Putnam, from the Girl’s Latin
School, Boston, Massachusetts; the Schol-
arship of New York to Katharine Shepard,
from St. Agatha’s Ss New York City,
and the Scholarshi» of Eastern Pennsyl-
CHANGES IN FACULTY FOR
COMING YEAR ANNOUNCED
English Composition Department Has
Four New Instructors
Professor Charlotte Angus Scott, Alum-
nae Professor of Mathematics, retired in
June, 1924.
Professor Fonger De Haan, Professor
of Spanish, retired in June, 1924.
Professor Rhys Carpenter, Professor of
Archaeology, returned after one year’s
leave of absence.
Dr. Neva D. Deardorff, Associate Pro-
fessor of Social Economy, resigned.
M. Claude Gilli, Associate Professor of
Romance Philology, granted leave of ab-
sence for the year 1924-1925.
The following new appointments are an-
nounced :
Dr. Pell has been appointed head of the
Department of Mathematics.
Joseph E. Gillet, Associate Professor of
Spanish. He is a P. H. D. of the Univer-
sity of Liege, 1910, and was Assistant Lec-
turer in French at the University of Edin-
burgh, 1910-11. He has studied at the uni-
versities of Paris, Leyden, Munich and
Berlin.
Norreys Jephson O’Conor, M.A. Asso-
ciate Professor of English Composition.
He is an A.B. Harvard University, 1907,
and M.A., 1911. He has been connected
with the English Departments of Harvard,
Radcliffe, Grinnell, and Mt. Holyoke.
Hornell Hart, Ph.D., Associate Profes-
sor of Social Economy. He is an A.B. of
Oberlin College, 1910; A.M. University of
Wisconsin, 1914; Ph.D. University of Iowa,
1921. He has studied and taught Sociology
at the Universities of Iowa and Wisconsin
and was head of the Sociological Division
of the Iowa Child Welfare Research sta-
tion, 1921-24,
David Vernon Widder, Ph.D., Associate
in Mathematics. He is an A.B. of Har-
vard, 1920, and M.A., 1923, Ph.D., 1924.
He instructed mathematics at Harvard,
1921-23.
Dorothy Sells, Ph.D., Associate in So-
cial Economy. She is an A.B. of Welles-
ley, 1916; A.M. University of Chicago,
1917; Ph.D. London School of Economics,
1923, and has worked under the Labor sec-
CONTINUE) ON PAGE 4
+
CONTINUED ON PAGE 2
PRESIDENT'S ‘ADDRESS
OPENS COLLEGE YEAR
Need of Facts as Basis for
Discussions and Decisions
is Stressed
EAST HOUSE TO BE OCCUPIED
Bryn Mawr College formally began the
fortieth academic year on Wednesday
morning, when President Park made her
address in chapel.
With the exception of the announcement
of faculty appointments and Freshman
scholarships, which are given’ elsewhere in
this issue, her speech was as follows:
“This assembly opens formally the for-
tieth year of the college. The turning of
many wheels has made it possible. The
college has washed and aired and ordered
itself this summer, done its business, filed
its records, made its appointments. The
faculty and students of last year have
gathered themselves from the land from
the east and from the west, from the north
and from the south. Of the newcomers,
undergraduates here and in other colleges
have moved down the slow road of the
curriculum to the Bachelor’s degree and
appear here today as graduate students.
Small girls have studied and recited, grown
older, filled out cards and written exami-
nations that they might today with shining
morning faces take their places among the
Bryn Mawr undergraduates. All this ac-
tivity is.consummated and crowned at nine
this October morning, °
In the name of the college I welcome
back the graduates and undergraduates of
last year and the newcomers of 1924-25.
The graduate school has the usual num-
ber of registrations. Sixteen resident fel-
lows have accepted appointments one éach
in Latin, Romance Language, History,
Economics and Politics, Education, Psy-
chology, Archeology, Mathematics, Chem-
istry, Biology; two in Social Economy and
Social Research, three Grace H. Dodge
Fellows and one Bryn Mawr Intercollegi-
ate Community Service Association Fellow
—young women who have either already
entered on the work leading to the doctor’s
degree or whose plans are arranging them-
selves to that end, the shock troops of our
small army. The foreign scholars this
year come from Great Britain, France,
Germany, Denmark and Hungary; two
British Scholars from the University of
Oxford and one from the University of
Edinburgh; one Danish Scholar from the
University of Copenhagen; one French
Scholar from the University of Nancy and
Strassburg; one Hungarian Scholar from
Budapest; one German Scholar from the
University of Munich and one from the
Universities of Heidelberg, Freiburg and
CONTINUED ON PAGE 2
GREEN DISCOVERS PARADE SONG
OF’ FRESHMEN
For the third consecutive year the
Sophomores demonstrated their superi-
ority over the Freshmen in the Parade
Song struggle.
1927’s_ sleuths discovered the song,
which was written to the tune of “Row,
row, row, your boat,” and ran, “Sopho-
mores, Sophomores, this is the end of
you. You can never, never, never beat
our shade of blue.”
At Senior singing in the Arch, the
Sophomores replied with “Freshmen,
Freshmen, this is the end of you, The
green has found a way to beat your
shade of blue.”
|
|
a
v.\\
THE
OLLEGE NEWS
The ‘Co | lege® News
t] Rounded in 191g)
Published weekly during the cplfere year in the
intergstiof, Bryn Mawr College
vas a
Managing Editor...... Deak’ SurrH, '26
epiTofis, |
C. CuMMINGs, ’ H. Grayson, '25
ASSISY ANT EDITORS
K. Simonps, ’27
J. Lorn, ’26
M. Leary,
BUSINESS BOARD
‘MANAGER— Marcaret Boypben, '25
Marion Nace, ’25
ASSISTANTS
Exizaretnu Tyson, ’26
N. Bowman, '27
J. Lee, °27
E, Wicpur, '26
M. CRUIKSHANK, '27
Subscriptions may begin at any time
Subscriptions, $2.50 Mailing Price, $3.00
Entered as second class matter, September 26, 1914,
at the post office at Bryn Mawr, Pa., under
the Act of March 3, 1889.
COOK’S TOURS VS. HOME COOKING
An observant person will find little diffi-
culty in deciding into which of the two
classes which comprise the majority of va-
cationists—those who
those who did not—her friends belong. If
went abroad and
you ask after a friend’s summer and she
replies languidly, “O, Europe was much
the same as usual,” then regard her with
awe. She has proven herself a jaded trip-
per, crammed with culture in the shape of
cathedrals and art galleries, a graduate, in
short, of the summer school on T. Cook
and Sons, and Europe holds no secrets for
her. But if your question after her sum-
mer is answered with a glib, “My dear, I
never had such a glorious time in all my
life.
can’t bear to be back,” then—don’t believe
her.
cathedrals among the sands of New Jersey
It was just too wonderful, and I
She was a tripper to nature’s own
or the torrents of Maine.
By their adjectives ye shall know them.
A PLEA
Those of us who are returning to col-
lege, are apt to plunge into the habits of
former years. We fall unconsciously into
the old routine in the excitement of the
first few days, as we again greet our
The thought that perhaps con-
ditions have changed, that we ourselves
friends.
may be different, maybe a little more ma-
In
fact we allow no time for thought. Blindly,
ture, does not seem to occur to us.
unthinkingly, we rush ahead with no pauses
to consider that possibly a new and better
way of living our college life could be de-
vised. Let us stop this year and survey
ourselves, our plans and our habits with
an open mind, willing, nay even eager to
change, if it be for the better.
TO OUR NEW MEMBERS
The obvious things have all been said.
“How do you think you will like Bryn
Mawr?” has been asked and answered, ad
nauseam. We have exhausted the topics
of curricula, of C. A. girls, of former
acquaintances at Bryn Mawr, of the land-
We
hectic nature of college life as exemplified
scape. have commented upon the
by the first two days. We have reassured
our trembling newcomers on every con-
ceivable subject. One in particular, though,
we would stress, even to the point of ba-
nality.
“Really, it is only on our great occa-
sions that it rains like this.”
PRESIDENT’S ADDRESS OPENS
THE COLLEGE YEAR
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1
Rostock. For the first time the scholar
selected by the Chinese Scholarship Com-
mittee is a graduate, not an undergraduate
student, an A.B. of 1922 from Ginling Col-
lege, China. F
One hundred and eighteen Freshmen are
entering the college, nine fewer than last
year. No one of them has a record lower
than a good pass, and no one of them
carries a condition; the college has never
admitted a class with so fair a start, with
so little impedimenta. Good speed to them!
Of the 118 Freshmen, nine are non-resi-
dent. In order to make entrance to the
college possible this year for fifteen more
students than could be housed in the col-
halls
rented,
lege East House ‘has been
To those of us who are respon-
again
sible it has finally come to seem the most
just choice in a dilemma which forced us
to consider not only questions of our own
administration but the responsibility which
we share with other colleges and universi-
ties as public servants of education.
The intention of the President and Di-
rectors at the close of the last college year
was to fill the vacant rooms in the halls
with the most satisfactory applicants for
the entering class. Last year’s Senior class
was smaller than usual and unexpectedly
few students withdrew voluntarily from
college during the summer. With fewer
available rooms on the list than in any
previous year, we found ourselves after
receiving the results of the Bryn Mawr
and Board examinations faced with a great
number of candidates for entrance whose
examination average ranged from credit
to a high pass, whose school records but-
tressed their examinations and who by dint
of their successful attempt to meet the
Bryn Mawr requirements had established
some claim on the college. If we closed
our lists when the halls were filled appli-
cants with a high pass average whose
school records and recommendations
showed they could not be differentiated
from the group directly above them except
by the wisdom of Solomon or: by his arbi-
trary methods must be rejected and left
to make application in late July at other
colleges whose lists were as full as ours.
The President of the Board. of Directors
and myself both decided that we could not
refuse to accept as many more entering
students as would fill the numbers of East
House rooms. We were obliged to reject
many more students who in the old years
of less pressure would have been admitted,
who have fulfilled all requirements and
who we have every reason to think are
ready and able to do college work.
Where should the fifteen extra Freshmen
be put? The best solution would undoubt-
edly have been the assignment to East
House of four students of each college
class, so that the conditions of the resident
halls could prevail there in little, but in
late August a revision of the arrangements
of the upper class students was impossible.
Or the college could use East House as
it uses Bettws-y-Coed—as a small gradu-
ate house—and assign to the Freshmen the
graduate rooms in the halls which would
thus be left empty. In this case the uni-
form and low charge for graduate students
would have made East House a financial
loss to the college. More important than
CAROL CUMMINGS ’25 RESIGNS
FROM THE NEWS
It is with great regret that the News
announces the resignation of Carol
Cummings ’25 from the editorial
board. Miss Cummings has left Bryn
Mawr College. She has been Censor
on the News for several months.
| that, the number of undergraduates we
could added would have been cut
jabout in half. Graduate students, older
women, with the necessity upon them of
far stiffer work
than the undergraduates know must have
have
and more concentrated
separate rooms and therefore only nine
graduate rooms in college could have been
We
have therefore assigned the rooms to fif-
Freshmen.
released for undergraduate students.
teen
I hope I have made it possible for you
who have heard me breathing out threaten-
ings against a house outside the campus
to understand the reasons why I have been
driven into changing my opinion for this
year. “He answered and said, ‘I will not’
and afterward he repented and — went.”
Everyone connected with the administra-
tion of the college will try mightily to
prove that hard though it may be, it is still
possible to carry a few hundred feet away
from Pembroke gates the gains and privi-
leges of college residence, whatever that
vague but real virtue is which added to the
formal academic work goes to make up the
training of the college graduate. And I
shall hope for the assistance of every un-
dergraduate of Bryn Mawr to the same end.
I have come back this winter with a
“concern.” That is a word which as a
member of a Quaker-founded college I
have a right to use and a state of mind in
which as a college president I have a right
to indulge.
The:reason why we are gathered in this
crowded room this morning is that we may
learn, We are at Bryn Mawr for one,
two, three or four years to collect various
facts of geography, history, science, lan-
guage, and so forth,
facts so that they are more conveniently
to organize those
usable, to learn a method of drawing con-
clusions from given facts, and at last to
venture on the basis of our conclusions the
composition of a picture of life, observing
the relation of each of us to herself, to
other individuals like herself, and to the
universe as a whole, that is, to form her
individual philosophy, the thread on which
she will string her actions.
I fly high but I start humbly—“to gather
various facts of geography, history, science
and language.” My concern in the Quaker
sense is with this first step because my con-
cern in the ordinary sense is with you as
students. The particular advantage of the
period of your education formed by the
four college years is the opportunity these
years give to accumulate facts and the
opportunity to learn a safe method of de-
duction. On these two abilities depend the
first steps in the building of one’s philoso-
phy. As I read newspapers and hear con-
versation I believe that these steps are con-
stantly skipped. Conclusions like airplants
flourish without roots. I spent six weeks
of my holiday in Austria. When later I
met Americans outside Austria, for there
were few inside, I heard the most surpris-
ing dicta as to Austrian food, Austrian eco-
nomic conditions, her attitude toward her
loan, toward Germany or Italy. From the
smallest bone of fact was created an aston-
ishing animal of generalization. And I
ought to confess that I joined the other
amateurs and capped their generalizations
with my own! At least my dinosaur was
as good as theirs. The Austrians on their
side were I suspect doing something quite
comparable though perhaps it would be
harder. to stick to humdrum deductions
when one was paying 70,000 Kroner for his
dinner and could easily carry a cool million
in his purse.
Now if many people always constitu-
tionally jump the first step in the forma-
tion of a picture of life, namely, the
gathering of facts, and if in an abnormal
time everyone tends to do so; if conclu-
sions are perennially drawn from non-facts
or half-, third- or quarter facts; and if on
the other hand the most convenient fact-
gathering period in your lives is that in
which you now find yourselves—then let us
recognize both the danger to be avoided
and the opportunity to be seized and set
to work with energy, with persistence and
above all with accuracy to accumulate and
to treasure. I believe ‘hat European forms
of education teach the art of acquiring and
accurate information better than
developed. We are
at producing the fact
and less retentive of it. Our vocabularies
retaining
anything
hazier, less quick
we have
are less exact, our memories less well
trained. And I am not only urging you to
acquire a neater and a sounder mental
process. The actions that follow this irre-
sponsibility in reasoning, that is, the draw-
from inaccurate and
insufficient data taken with the latef.,
poration of such conclusions in one’s phil-
about not merely uncon-
but beliefs and
explosive emotions, all kinds of stupidity
ing of conclusions
osophy brings
vincing arguments rigid
and irresponsibility.
Faculties can teach facts but students
should them and outside class-
room and laboratory should make their
private hoards. We are sure to have at
Bryn Mawr this year much discussion—of
politics, social conditions, and religion. Let
us make a resolution together that such
discussion shall to the best of our ability
have its feet on the ground, nothing un-
proved, vague, inaccurate, presented as
proved, definite, true. It is playing with
fire. For certainly as a result of the dis-
cussions, our points of view will crystallize,
your philosophies will continue to take
shape. Remember the wise words of Leo-
nardo—‘Nothing can be loved or hated un-
less first you have knowledge of it.”
demand
CHANGES IN FACULTY FOR
COMING YEAR ANNOUNCED
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1
tion of the League of Nations at Geneva
six months in 1922-23.
Winifred Sturdevant, Ph.D., Lecturer in
Romance Philology. She is an A.B. Bryn
Mawr College, 1909; Ph.D. Johns Hopkins
University, 1920; Sorbonne and Ecole des}
Chartes, 1920-21. She was Instructor in
French, Vassar College, 1922-23 and studied
in Italy, 1923-24.
In the Department of English Composi-
tion, Miss Marguerite Capen Hearsey and
Miss Margaret Skinner have resigned.
New Instructors in English Composition
are as follows:
Katharine Louise Ward, A.B. Bryn
Mawr College, 1921; M.A., Yale Univer-
sity, 1923.
Grace Hawk, A.B. Brown University,
1917; Graduate Scholar in English, Bryn
Mawr College, 1917-18, and Fellow in
English, 1918-19,
Margaret Jager, A.B. cum laude, with
distinction in English Radcliffe College,
1923, and Graduate Student Radcliffe Col-
lege, 1923-24.
Marion Hendrickson, A:B., Instructor in
Italian. A.B. Smith College, 1924.
Harriette Seville Millar, A:B., Instructor |
in Spanish, A.B. Bryn Mawr College, 1923.
Frederick Pfeiffer, Ph.D., Instructor in
German, Ph.D. University of Zurich, 1922.
Anna Marguerite Marie Lehr, Instructor
in Mathematics. She is an A.B. of Goucher
College, 1919 and was a Reader and Gradu-
ate Student in Mathematics at Bryn Mawr
College, 1919-21; the President’s European
Fellow and Fellow in Mathematics, 1921-
22. In 1923-24 she was a student at the
University of Rome.
Dr. Marion Hague Rea has resigned, and
Dr. Marjorie Jefferies Wagoner has been
appointed College Physician. Dr. )Wagoner
is an A.B. of Bryn Mawr College, 1918,
and M.D. of the University of Pennsyl-
vania, 1922, and was Interne at the Phila-
delphia General Hospital, 1922-24.
In the Halls of Residence, Miss Mary /
Summerfield Gardiner,. Miss Louise Bulk-|
ley Dillingham, Miss Margaret Foster and
Miss Annette Stiles have resigned.
Miss Margaret Bailey Speer, A.B., Bryn
Mawr College, 1922, will be Warden of|
Rockefeller Hall.
Miss Mary Hardy, A.B. Bryn Mawr Col-
lege, 1920, will be Warden of Denbigh Hall.
Miss Marjorie Howland, A.B. Vassar
College, 1921, will be Warden of Merion
Hall. |
Migs Julia Ward, A.B. Bryn Mawr Col-
lege 1923, will be Warden of East House.
{
a
{
THE COLLEGE NEWS
3
Phone, B. M. 1079
MISS M. SHERIDAN
7 STATION AVE., ARDMORE
Exclusive Made-to-Order Gowns
AT MODERATE PRICES
DRUGS CANDY
Perfumes and Gifts
POWERS & REYNOLDS
837 Lancaster Ave., Bryn Mawr
WILLIAM L. HAYDEN
HOUSEKEEPING HARDWARE
PAINTS LOCKSMITHING
838 LANCASTER AVE. BRYN MAWR
PHILIP HARRISON
826 LANCASTER AVENUE
Walk Over Shoe Shop
Agent for
Gotham Gold Stripe Silk Stockings
TWO GOOD PLACES TO EAT IN
The Roma Cafe and Your Home
FOR RESERVATIONS PHONE B. M. 125
PARTIES CATERED FOR
PANDORA’S BOX
31 EAST LANCASTER PIKE
ARDMORE, PA.
Gift Linens, Wools, Hand Crafts
JUNIOR NEEDS, SPORT ESSENTIALS
Cards and Gifts
for all occasions
THE GIFT SHOP
814 Lancaster Ave., Bryn Mawr, Pa.
J. J. Connelly Estate
The Main Line Florists
1226 Lancaster Avenue
Rosemont, Pa.
Phone, 252 Bryn Mawr
Telephone, Bryn Mawr 823 Night: Bryn Mawr 942
ESTIMATES FURNISHED
WILLIAM G, CUFF & CO.
Electrical Contractors
INSTALLATION, WIRING, REPAIRING
855 Lancaster Ave. Bryn Mawr, Pa.
Riding Habits
& Breeches
FRANCIS B. HALL
TAILOR
840 LANCASTER AVE., BRYN MAWR, PA.
3 stores west of Post Office Phone, Bryn Mawr 834
DAINTY
SANDWICHES
ICED
DRINKS
College
Tea House
Open Daily from 1 to 7
EVENING PARTIES BY
SPECIAL ARRANGEMENT
A
“AMERICA'S LEADING HOTEL Jor WOMEN
Why not spend your vacation in the most
interesting city in America?
In a few hours’ time, you could be in the
heart of the Nation’s Capital, enjoying the
places of beauty and historic charm.
The Grace Dodge Hotel with its splendid
facilities for information and sight-seeing
offers accommodations quite ideal.
Ask for illustrated booklet
GRACE DODGE HOTEL
WASHINGTON, D.C.
are eee
CONVENIENT: MODERN- REASONABLE
JEANNETT’S
Bryn Mawr* Wayne Flower Shop
Cut Flowers and Plants Fresh Daily
Corsage and Floral Baskets
Old Fashioned Bouquets a Specialty
Potted Plants—Personal supervision on all orders
807 Lancaster Ave
Phone, Bryan Mawr 578
Telephone, Bryn Mawr 453
THE CHATTERBOX
A DELIGHTFUL TEA ROOM
Regular Dinners or Birthday Parties
by appointment
OPEN FROM TWELVE TO EIGHT
825 LANCASTER AVENUE
THE BRYN MAWR TRUST CO
CAPITAL, $250,000
DOES A GENERAL BANKING BUSINESS
ALLOWS INTEREST ON DEPOSITS
SAFE DEPOSIT DEPARTMEN
—
Bryn Mawr Massage Shop
SHAMPOOING Opposite Post Office
MARCEL WAVING
MANICURING Telephone, 832 Bryn Mawr
FACIAL MASSAGE
NOTIOB—The above, formerly at the Floyd Build-
ing, has moved to larger quarters where we hope to
be better able to serve our patrons.
Phone, Ardmore 12
GEORGE F. KEMPEN
Caterer
27 W. LANCASTER AVE.
ARDMORE, PA.
MOORE’S PHARMACIES
BRYN MAWR, PA.
Drugs Chemicals
Stationeries, Etc.
Bouquets
a dainty little flavor at
Whitmans
1316 CHESTNUT STREET.
TOGGERY SHOP
831 LANCASTER AVE.
opposite Post Office
Gowns, Hats, Coats,
Sweaters, Blouses, Hosiery
Sole Agents for
VANITY FAIR SILK UNDERWEAR
DRESSMAKING AND ALTERATIONS
E. M. B. Wise Phone, Bryn Mawr, 259.
* Jewelers
Silversmiths
Stationers
PHILADELPHIA
THE GIFT SUGGESTION BOOK
Mailed upon request
illustrates and prices "
Jewels, Watches, Clocks, Silver, China,
Glass and Novelties :
The Distinctive Productions and Importations
of this Establishment
ETIQUETTE OF WEDDING STATIONERY
A Book mailed upon request which describes
in detail the correct use of Wedding
Stationery and Visiting Cards
Fancy Groceries Fruit and Vegetables
Wm. T. McIntyre’s
821 LANCASTER AVENUE
BRYN MAWR
Charge Accounts
Ice Cream Pastry
‘« Make our Store your Store”’
MAIN LINE DRUG STORE
ARDMORE, PA.
Prescriptions carefully
Compounded by
A Phin
Registered Pharmacists Avdmevs 1112
FORDHAM LAW SCHOOL
WOOLWORTH BUILDING
NEW YORK
CO-EDUCATIONAL
CASE SYSTEM—THREE-YEAR COURSE
ONE YEAR OF COLLEGE WORK REQUIRED
FOR ADMISSION
Morning, Afternoon and Evening Classes
WRITE FOR CATALOGUE
CHARLES P. DAVIS, Registrar
ROOM 2851
B. & G.
Cleaners and Dyers
869 LANCASTER AVE., BRYN MAWR
Cleaning and Dyeing of the Better Kind
Gloves Cleaned at short notice
DELIVERY SERVICE
©Ond Jewelry...
Direct Oriental Importations
TREASURE CAVE
RUTH BABETTE
202 South Fifteenth Street ==!
J.E. CALDWELL & CO.
Chestnut and Juniper Streets
Philadelphia
GOLDSMITHS. SILVERSMITHS
JEWELERS
College Insignia
Class Rings
Sorority Emblems
STATIONERY WITH SPECIAL
MONOGRAMS, CRESTS and SEALS
PHONE 758
HENRY B. WALLACE
CATERER AND CONFECTIONER
LUNCHEONS AND TBAS
BRYN MAWR
Phone, Bryn Mawr 166 Phone Orders Promptly Delivered
WILLIAM GROFF, P. D.
PRESCRIPTIONIST
Whitman Chocolates
803 Lancaster Ave. Bryn Mawr, Pa.
JOHN J. McDEVITT Programs
= Tickets
PRINTING — sressecc
1145 Lancaster Ave. Bryn Mawr, Pa.
BRINTON BROS.
FANCY AND STAPLE GROCERIES
Orders Called For and Delivered
LANCASTER AND MERION AVENUES
Telephone 63 BRYN MAWR, PA.
FLOWERS SERVICE SATISFACTION
BAXTER & GREEN, Inc.
FLORISTS
129 S. Sixteenth St., Phila., Pa.
BELL PHONE, SPRUCE 32-62
LOUEY VENN BEAUTY SALON
849 LANCASTER AVE
BRYN MAWR
HOURS 9:00 TO 6:30
Phone for Appointment in Evenings
BRYN MAWR 529 W
Telephone, Bryn Mawr 867
The Hearthstone
TEA
LUNCHEON
Minerva Yarns Royal Society Art Goods
McCallum Hosiery Philippine Lingerie
Children’s & Infants’ Wear Imported Handkerchiefs
SYDNEY POOL, JR.
Maison de Lis
Free Instruction in Knitting and Embroidery
Hemstitching—24 Hour Service
Middie Blouses Pleating
E. S. McCawley & Co.
Books
Do you want the latest book?
Are you interested in books worth
while?
We have it or can get it.
DINNER PARTIES
Open Sundays
No. Mecioa Ave.
Bryn Mawr, Pa.
Ardmore 740
121
23 W. LANCASTER AVE., ARDMORE, PA. |
9 HAVERFORD AVE.
HAVERFORD, PA.
The Tailleur with
Graceful
Knee-length Coat
Paris, with her subtle style-
changes has sent forth this latest
ee long coat “Costume”
ju!
It is surpassingly charming
and particularly slenderizing.
aoe becoming to matron or
mai
a
The picture illustrates a lovely model. Shouldn't you
like to come and try it on?
New fabrics—new linings—new “lines”
INSERTED MARCH 17, 1924
4
THE COLLEGE NEWS
BATES HOUSE RUN BY
BRYN MAWR GIRLS ALONE
M. Faries, ’24, is Head Worker with
Thirty-two Volunteers
(Specially contributed by W. Dodd ’26)
Bates House, the summer home that
Bryn Mawr runs for children at Long
Branch, New Jersey, has just had one of
its most successful summers. For the first
time Bryn Mawr ran the house entirely;
M. Faries ’24, was headworker in place
of Miss Lotz from the Spring Street
Neighborhood House and during the two
months was assisted by thirty-two volun-
teer workers. The first week was “clean-
up.” We scrubbed the house, washed win-
dows, ironed curtains, repaired mattresses
and mended clothes. The thirty-seven chil-
dren who came for the next two weeks
were a welcome relief. In all we had 117
children—no girls over twelve or boys over
ten. There were fourteen nursery babies—
six only two years old, and an Italian baby
is utterly appealing, especially when he is
fat and round and brown.
Mrs. Bates bought the house last year
because she felt assured of Bryn Mawr’s
interest and now we can make as many
improvements as we are able to afford.
This summer we had our own workers—
next summer we hope to have Bates clothes
for all the children and gradually Bates
House ought to become a model establish-
ment.
The volunteer workers this summer
were:
1924, M. Buchananan, L. Coffin, K. EI-
ston, E. Howe, L. Howitz, B. Mosle;
1925, C. Cummings, K. McBride, H. Smith;
1926, M. Arnold, W. Dodd, E. Hess, M.
Huber, A. Long, E. McKee, E. Musselman,
H. Rodgers, E. Tweddell, E. Tyson, E.
Young; 1927, L. Austin, M. Brooks, C.
Chambers, A. Dixon, G. Jenkins, E. Mor-
ris, B. Pitney, C. Platt, S. Pinkerton, S.
Peet, H. Stokes, B. Simcox.
NEW COURSES OFFERED IN WRIT-
ING, SOCIOLOGY AND LABOR
Several new and interesting courses are
to be given this fall.
Mr. O’Conor will lecture on the Ele-
ments of Poetry in addition to giving a
course in Experimental jWriting.
An elective course in Anthropology is
being offered by Professor Hart, Mon-
days, Wednesdays and Fridays at twelve.
Professor Hart also gives an elective
in Applied Sociology, Tuesdays and Wed-
nesdays at two.
The Labor Movement will be the subject
of a course given by Miss Dorothy Sells,
Associate Professor in Social Economy,
Wednesdays, Thursdays and Fridays at
three.
NINE REGIONAL SCHOLARS
AMONG FRESHMEN
’ CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1
vania to Sara Walker, of the William Penn
High School, Philadelphia, who also re-
ceived the Simon Muhr Scholarship.
Marguerite Pendery Barrett, from
Moorestown, New Jersey, is the new Foun-
dation Scholar.
The Bryn Mawr School Scholar is Eliza-
beth Cleelan Stewart, of Baltimore, Mary-
land.
Elizabeth Haines Ballantine and Esther
Dykman are the Trustees’ Scholars.
IN PHILADELPHIA
Shubert: “Sitting Pretty.”
Garrick: Ed Wynn in “The Grab Bag.”
Aldine: “The Sea Hawk.”
Lyric: “The Potters.”
Adelphi: “The Goose Hangs High.”
Broad: “Hell-bent fer Heaven.”
Walnut: “The Third Year.”
MARRIED
Robert Murray ’24 to Mr. Thomas Fans-
ler, Jr., on July 9.
Star McDaniel ’23 to Mr. Charles H.
Heimsath, on September 11.
Ruth McAneny ’23 to Mr. Sherman
Loud, on September 27.
GRADUATES HERE FROM
FIVE FOREIGN COUNTRIES
ee
Germany, Hungary, China, Denmark
Send Scholars
Eight foreigners are expected among the
Graduate students that are coming to Bryn
Mawr this fall.
Miss Stockholm, a Danish student, who
was here last year, is returning.
There are three British students, Miss
Janie Campbell, a B.Litt. of Oxford; Miss
Kathleen Theobald, B.A., Oxford ’24, who
will work in History, and Miss Marion
Cameron Gray, an M.A. with First Class
Honors in Mathematics at Edinburgh Uni-
versity, who will specialize in mathematics. :
Miss Ida Babula, a Ph.D. from the Uni- Extra Curricula
versity of Budapest will be the first Hun- Activities
garian student ever to be at Bryn Mawr. Pee
Miss Dju Luh, a Chinese student, an When you want to look your several sizes, tints
A.B. of Ginling College, and a niece of his very best—outdoors So Noieee ee ie
Excellency Hsiung Hsi-ling will also enter. a touch of Colgate s Face cases, with of with-
. ou ee.
Two German students have also regis- Powder is a ee friend. As Laamemwibie
soft as the skin it beautifies. Compact, $1.00
tered and are expected.
AER COLGATE’S
Agnes Clement. ’23 to Mr. William F.
Robinson. ° FACE Pp OWDERS
Irene Wallace ’24 to Mr. David Vogies.
NUTS CHOCOLATE COVERED
A very special appeal to the taste of those who want
the best nut meats the markets of the world afford, com-
bined with chocolate of Whitman’s Super Extra Quality.
There are no combination centers in this package—nothing
Whole Nut Meats but nuts, whole nut meats thickly coated with delicious chocolate.
Brazil We believe the kinds are assorted to a 1
ppeal to most t ®
Filbert Cacstars We know that the package is a first favorite with many saad saiges
English Walnut Clusters of fine confections, and its popularity has increased steadi y for
Almond Clusters aRARY YERKES N
Tiikniss Eicseees juts Chocolate Covered is one of Whi 4
2 itman’s
Pecan. Clusters Quality Group of special candy assortments for dis-
criminating lovers of sweets.
tee Peiegpackase has a special Hallowe’en wrapper for
All Whitman’s chocolates are sold only b
‘ selected
stores in every neighborhood that are iitan on aéices
for the sale of Whitman’s, Every agency receives
frequent fresh supplies direct, Every package of
Whitman’s is guaranteed to be fresh and to give com-
plete satisfaction.
STEPHEN F. WHITMAN & SON, Inc., Philadelphia, U. S, A.
Also makers of Whitman’s Instantaneous Chorolate, Cocoa and Marshmallow Whip
H. B. Wallace, Bryn Mawr Kindt’s Pharmacy, Bryn Mawr Bryn Mawr Confectionery, Bryn Mawr
Powers & Reynolds, Bryn Mawr Bryn Mawr College Inn, Bryn Mawr’ Bryn Mawr College Book Store, Bryn Mawr
William Groff, Bryn Mawr Frank W. Pickett, Rosemont College Tea Room, Bryn Mawr
meer
—
THE COLLEGE NEWS
the parting Freem the levine
family
vr § The Figs Nu fle
Parvy
| KON eli,
a The fiest Cenzi Pede— rf
\The TeTern oF an Onder graduate.
Rest Sor the Weary.
FRIENDSHIP FUND PROVIDES _
NECESSITIES FOR STUDENTS
Student Self-Help Organizations, Aid
Work of European Relief
‘After four years of work, the Student
Friendship Fund announces that it has for-
warded $427,012 for students and profes-
sors in Russia, Central Europe and the
Near East and foreign students in the
United States.
This money, contributed by students and
others, has given food, clothing, and books
to those who needed them. A partial sum-
mary of their report fellows:
The Student Friendship Fund finished
last June four years of work. This Fund
represents America’s share in the larger
organization of the European Student Re-
lief, which was also begun in 1920 to help
the students of Europe finish their univer-
sity courses as a preparation for the enor-
mous tasks of reconstruction awaiting them
after the war.
‘During its four years of activity the stu-
dents of forty-two nations have partici-
pated in it. One hundred and fifty thou-
sand students out of a total of five hundred
thousand in the universities of Europe have
received some sort of direct help which
made possible for them the continuance of
their studies or the attainment of their de-
grees. Seldom, outside of Russia, and
there only during the time of famine and
excessive hardship, has anything been given
without some return on the part of the
students. A nominal charge for meals or
clothing has been asked to keep the stu-
dent from developing a feeling of inde-
pendence, Where a student has been ill,
however. or has had some especial misfor-
tune, clothes are “lent” or a meal ticket
“advanced” so that help is assured.
This is illustrated by the story in a let-
ter written by one of the representatives
of the European Student Relief. This let-
ter tells of a boy with tuberculosis who was
to go.to a-sanitarium for a month or two.
The day before he was to start, however,
he came in to say that he could not go.
When surprise was expressed he was much
embarrassed and at first refused to tell the
reason for this decision, but finally stam-
mered out that he had no clothes. His
overcoat was pinned together to hide his
lack of shirt, but this was not the real
trouble. Even this coat was not his. He
borrowed .it each day from a friend to
come to town from the barracks where he
lived in order to receive his dinner and
then hurried back so that, in turn, the friend
could come also. Fortunately an American
professor had just been through the city
and had donated a suit of clothing. ‘This
was turned over to the young student, who
said, as he went out, “Don’t think I am
going to wear this suit all myself. When
I come back from the sanitarium some one
else will have the use of it, too!”
The establishment and growth of the
self-selp enterprises, which in these four
years have become large and _ influential
organizations in the universities where re-
lief has been distributed, is one of the most
important results which has come from the
relief program. These self-help undertak-
ings, without which the cost of studying
would be prohibitive, have many branches
and many lines of activity: kitchens, tailor
shops, laundries, shoe repairing, printing
presses, employment bureaus, etc. The en-
terprises have a two-fold advantage, for
they not only give employment to hundreds
of students but they reduce the cost of
the necessities to a minimum. It is through
these agencies that many students in Rus-
sia and Central Europe are able to work,
and work they do, often laboring from six
to eight hours a day in addition to going
to classes and carrying on their studies.
Some universities are now open only dur-
ing the evening because of the large num-
ber of “work students.”
An example of these self-help enter-
prises will show their value to the student:
A shoe repair enterprise was one typical
self-help scheme. One or two Hungarian
students saw the need for shoe repairs
among their fellows and thereby a chance
to earn some money. They started a primi-
tive shop with the poorest of tools, and the
work soon overwhelmed them. They re-
alized that if any time was to be left for
study, other students must help. But they
had no money to rent a larger place or
buy the necessary equipment. The Euro-
pean Student Relief representative heard
of this opportunity and invested some of
the relief funds in the shop. Today the
shop has grown to be a real business,
turning out good new shoes for the trade
of Budapest. The profits go to help hun-
dreds of students complete their education.
The initiative of these dauntless young
people is shown by other forms of self-
help. Rooms and places to live are almost
impossible to find near the universities.
In one city in Russia a group of students
found an unfinished building and obtained
permission to use it if they completed its
construction. For weeks they worked be-
tween classes to put it in order before the
winter. Students of engineering, electrical,
sanitary and architectural courses, all did
their share to make the building habitable.
Finally it was finished, except for the
equipment which was beyond the students’
means and ingenuity. It was the part of
the friends in other lands to give them this
final help which made a livable hostel out
of a former shell of a building, and pro-
vided living quarters for more than a hun-
dred students.
In starting and supporting these student
enterprises the European Student Relief
finds its greatest usefulness, for through
them the whole outlook of the European
student has been changed. To work while
studying is now no longer beneath the dig-
nity of a student, and education is a pos-
sibility for anyone who is sufficiently in
earnest to be willing to work his way. It
is no longer the privilege only of the rich
or well-to-do. In the administration of
relief the emphasis is changing from that
of relieving actual suffering, to the giving
of those things which make it possible for
the student to support himself; from cocoa
breakfasts to the kettles and utensils which
will feed hundreds, from old clothes to
pressing and sewing machines, from worn
boots to shoe repair apparatus, and from
second-hand books to printing presses.
The idea of exchange is a further out-
growth of the work: The exchange of
students from crowded universities to less
crowded centers, the exchange of the
equipment of learning, books, laboratory
specimens, paper and other materials from
the countries where they are plentiful to
the countries where they are scarce, and
lastly the exchange of ideas.
The new student magazine, Vox Stu-
dentium, was issued at the request of the
students who were delegates to the con-
ference in Parad, Hungary, and is one
means of meeting this new desire for an
interchange of thought and idea. The an-
nual international student conferences also
give an opportunity for the students of
many nations actually to meet and talk
things over and find out, not how different
each is from the other, but how like.
of this intercourse surely will come an un-
derstanding which may change the whole
trend of international relationships.
Aside from the work for the students
overseas, European students, as well as
many from the Orient, have come to the
United States. Almost all are in need of a
friendly hand to help in learning American
ways, and in many cases there is as real
a need among them as among the students
of Europe. The students of the United
States have made gifts through the Stu-
dent Friendship Fund, to help these young
men and women who have come here seek-
ing both an education and also a chance
CONTINUED ON PAGE 6
Out .
6
THE
COLLEGENEWS
FRESHMAN CLASS NUMBERS MORE
THAN HUNDRED
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1
Cookman, Margaret Cameron Coss, Ruth
Northrup Creighton, Caroline Crosby,
Crosby, Mary Florine Dana, Alita Davis,
Esther Virginia Dikeman, Clarissa Lewis
Dyer, Ruth Elting, Jean Fenner, Martha
Munro Ferguson, Jean Louise Fesler,
Catherine Field, Mary Delafield Fite, Ma-
tilda Pinkham Fowler, Eliza Coale Funk,
Mary Stamps Bateson Gaillard, Ruth Gard-
ner, Emma W. Gillinder, Marian Munroe
Gray, Margaret Gregson, Louise Fulton
Gucker, Helen Guiterman, Laura Margaret
Haley, Eleanor Madeleine Havre, Agnes
Hawkins, Christine McEwan Hayes, Katha-
rine Houghton Hepburn, Margaret Straus
Hess, Sara Louise Hoeffer, Leonore Bea-
trice Hollander, Ruth Whitcomb Holloway,
Helen Montgomery Hook, Mary Hopkin-
son, Jean Fuller Huddleston, Margaret
Hartley Hulse, Magdalen Glaser Hupfel,
May Bodine Jardella, Mary Frances Johns-
ton, Eleanor Robertson Jones, Edna Mason
Klein, Eleanor Lewis, Edwina Ford Lit-
singer, Barbara Loines, Paulina Witherell
McElwain, Margaret Harper McKee,
Helen Fairchild McKelvey, Mary White
Merrill, Lucile Meyer, Dorothy Katherine
Miller, Marion Miller; Rose Elizabeth Mil-
mine, Nancy Douglas Mitchell, Elizabeth
Ripley Moore, Edith Sampson “Morgan,
Margaret Blake Morgan, Jean Hannah
Morgenstern, Mary Emlen Okie, Alice
Helen Palache, Nina Perera, Margaret
Perry, Ruth Margaret Peters, Anne Marie
Petrasch, Mary De Witt Pettit, Yildiz
Phillips, Nancy Morgan Prichett, Frances
Louise Putnam, Florence Bayard Kane
Rhein, Elizabeth Tyler Rhett, Cornelia
Bruére Rose, Margaretta Mathilda Salin-
ger, Gail Elizabeth Sampson, Audrey Toby
Caulfield Sanders, Margery Elder Saun-
ders, Eleanor Schottland, Katharine Shep-
ard, Caroline Ravenel Mason Smith,
Eleanor Leithe Speiden, Eliza Smith Steck,
Leonice Josephine Shaw Stetson, Elizabeth
Cleelan Stewart, Alice Dudley Talcott,
Theodora Thorpe, Helen Norris Tuttle,
Sara Beddoe Walker, Sarah Carr Wall,
Evelyn Wenrich, Dorothy Malone Wheless,
Georgia Wilson, Nancy jWilson, Louise
Wray, Hope Gay Yandell,; Josephine
Young and Marjorie Booth Young.
CALENDAR
Saturday, October 4
11.00 A. M.—Intelligence test for Fresh-
men in Taylor Hall.
8.00 P. M—Christian Association Recep-
tion.
Sunday, October 5
7.30 P.M.—Chapel. led by
Jones.
Dr. Rufus
Wednesday, October 8
4.00 P. M.—President Park’s Reception to
the Freshmen at Pen-y-Groes.
Monday, October 13
Concert will be given by Mr. Sam-
uels.’ Bach program.
Tuesday, October 21
Hampton Institute Concert will be
given.
Friday, October 24
Lantern Night.
Wednesday, October 29
7.30 P.M—Dr Meiklejohn will speak un-
der the auspices of the Christian
Association in Taylor Hall.
Wednesday, November 5
7.30 P.M.—Dr. Meiklejohn will speak un-
der the auspices of the Christian As-
sociation in Taylor Hall.
Saturday, November 8
Sophomore Play.
Wednesday, November 12
7.30 P.M.—Dr. Meiklejohn will speak un-
der the auspices of the Christian As-
sociation in Taylor Hall.
Saturday, November 22
Junior Play.
FRIENDSHIP FUND PROVIDES
NECESSITIES FOR STUDENTS
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 5
to carry back to their own lands the best
of our culture and learning, That they
are doing good work is shown by an inter-
esting report of the standing of the Rus-
Twenty
per cent. are showing superior scholarship,
forty-five per cent. good and twenty per
cent. average. The other fifteen per cent.
are below the passing mark, but this is
mainly due to the difficulties of language.
One student stands first in the whole school
of engineering; several others are the best
in their classes, and six are members of
honorary fraternities.
Contributions which have come this year
from 590 institutions amount to $150,575.
The distribution of these funds from July
1, 1923 to June 30, 1924, including both the
gifts from the students and those from
larger contributors, has been:
sian students in our universities.
RAN ek $254,227.60
Germany and Central Eu-
POO sas cokes t 146,235.18
Foreign students in U.
BocAi essere argc 8,550.00
World’s Student Chris-
tian Federation ..... 18,000.00
But even this generous contribution is
not enough if the need which exists is to
be met and if learning and education in
Europe are to continue without a break.
The greatest need, in order to forward the
reconstruction of the countries on the
other. side of the Atlantic, is educated
leaders to rebuild in every line of life.
The conditions described in the latest re-
ports can only be remedied if all those
who believe in the power of knowledge
and truth continue their intelligent and
friendly help. ;
Extracts from such a report will typify
the need. Doctor Riviera, one of the rep-
resentatives of the European Student Re-
lief, writes from Poland:
“In Lvov large attic rooms in an old
palace are used by the poorest students as
rooming quarters. Equipped with twenty-
five makeshift beds, six chairs, one wash-
stand and one oil lamp they provide shelter
for some eighty students. At the time of
my visit the outside temperature was ten
degrees below freezing, but the two stoves
in the room were without a fire.”
NEW APPOINTMENTS
Evelyn Page ’23, is the new Alumnae
Secretary and E. Rhoads, ’23, is her assist-
ant.
Miss Norah Trevelyan, who was Miss
Applebee’s assistant last year, has been un-
able to return due to the fact that the im-
migration quota from England has been
filled. Her place will be taken by M.
Buchanan ’24.
Miss Hilda Smith, Director of the Sum-
mer School, has been granted a year’s
leave of absence and is now abroad. Miss
Clara Taylor, A.B., University of Wiscon-
sin, is taking her place.
Cc. A. RECEPTION TO BE HELD ON
SATURDAY NIGHT
Incoming Freshmen and Graduates will
be formally welcomed to Bryn Mawr Col-
lege on Saturday night at the reception
given by the Christian Association in the
gymnasium.
President Park, Dean Bontecou, Miss
Applebee, the chairman of the Membership
Committee of C. A., the President of the
Graduate Club, the association presidents,
are among those in the receiving line. M.
Stewardson ’25, president of the Christian
Association, will introduce the speakers,
after which there will be dancing.
President Park will be at home to the
Freshman Class her
Wednesday afternoon at four o'clock.
at house next
Cleaners and Dyers De Luxe
|
THE MAIN LINE VALET or
|
Bernard McRory, Proprietor
2nd Floor, opposite Post Office, Bryn Mawr
Valet Service by Practical
Tailors
Ten Per Cent Discount on
All School and College
k
Positively No Machine fa Wor
ressing Pleating and Hemstitching
Ladies’ Riding Suits to Measure, $40.00 and Up
HAVERFORD PHARMACY
Prescription Drug Store |
HAVERFORD, PA.
Amy’s Shop
Candies
Gifts
Novelties
Cards
857 Lancaster Avenue
BRYN MAWR
PENNA.
hi
Phone, Bryn Mawr 1058-J
You will like the
Geuting kind of
Shoe and the
Geuting kind
of service
Geuting’s Shoes on Display
Every Monday at Beaston’s
GEUTING’S
Three Stores of Famous Shoes
1230 MARKET STREET
1808 CHESTNUT STREET
19 SOUTH ELEVENTH STREET
‘Dainty Lun cheons
WHITMAN’S TEA ROOM
Soda Service and Afternoon Teas, 3-—5.30
One of the famous
quality foods —
’
CHOCOLATE S
Ww
Breakfast :
Luncheons
Dinners
TELEPHONE, ARDMORE 1946
Haverford Ave. and Station Road Drive
HAVERFORD STATION, P.R.R.
Others are Marshmallow
Whip, xxx Sweet Choco-
late, Premium Chocolate,
Pure Powdered Cocoa.
At good grocers’
Made by Makers of Whitman’s Chocolates
Afternoon Tea and Luncheon
COTTAGE TEA ROOM
Montgomery Ave., Bryn Mawr
Everything dainty and delicious
Both
Monotype
Linotype
Composition
WINSTON
oO
Where this Program was Printed
Press-room
and
Bindery
Facilities
Unsurpassed
ment, Large Facilities, At
and Expert Supervision
We offer the services of our Skilled Labor, Modern Equip-
0
Reasonable Prices
Write for Prices on Any Kind of Printing
THE JOHN C. WINSTON CO.
1006-1016 ARCH STREET, PHILADELPHIA
College news, October 1, 1924
Bryn Mawr College student newspaper. Merged with Haverford News, News (Bryn Mawr College); Published weekly (except holidays) during academic year.
Bryn Mawr College (creator)
1924-10-01
serial
Weekly
6 pages
digitized microfilm
North and Central America--United States--Pennsylvania--Montgomery--Bryn Mawr
Vol. 11, No. 01
College news (Bryn Mawr College : 1914)--
https://tripod.brynmawr.edu/permalink/01TRI_INST/26mktb/alma991001620579...
Digitized by the Internet Archive in 2012 with funding from LYRASIS Members and Sloan Foundation.
BMC-News-vol11-no1