Some items in the TriCollege Libraries Digital Collections may be under copyright. Copyright information may be available in the Rights Status field listed in this item record (below). Ultimate responsibility for assessing copyright status and for securing any necessary permission rests exclusively with the user. Please see the Reproductions and Access page for more information.
Colle ge
nn > racemase enemas
+
-VotumE XI. No. 3. \
BRYN MAWR, PA, wataaoar OCTOBER 8,
1924°
Pri¢es10 Cents
LABOR, IF UNAMBITIOUS,
“MAY REMAIN, SAYS PERCY
Prominent Tory M. P.. explains), :
present strength of labor
* though in minority ,
LABOR IS ALSO A- COALITION
“Labor may stay in for several years
provided, it undertakes _no__large meas-
ures.”
This was the summary of the inter-
view given by Lord Eustace Percy,
brother of the Duke of Northumberland,
and one of the most prominent ofthe
younger Tory M. P.s, to the representa-
tive of the “College News” in London
last July.
“It is very difficult to predict for the
immediate future,” Lord Eustace con-
tinued, “but very easy for the next ten
years. Labor is quite as much of a
coalition as the government ‘which pre-
ceded it, and this prevents its having a
definite policy. It is made up of many
widely different elements: partly of Lib-
erals and Tories who broke away because
they felt that the old parties were dead,
and -partly of actual radicals. Thus we
have, side by side in the Cabinet itself,
Ph'l.p Snowden, who is really. a.doctri-
naire Liberal and as ardent a Free-trader
as Cobden, and Sidney Webb, whose pre-
occupation with government by system
is essentially Tory.. For the Tories have
alwa:s stood for system, though both
the old parties have made admirable edu-
cational reforms within the last thirty
years, it was the Tory Education Act of
1902 which was the great act for organi-
zation. MacDonald seems to be pe only
person in the governmerit who combines
these two tendencies. Then, moreover,
we have the real Left, which has. come
to learn that there cannot be government
by program.
“One cannot say whether they will stay
in, their three years. Neither party in
opposition particularly desires a general
election; as long as the government un-
dertakes no large measures, they are con-
tent to let the small defeats, inevitable to
a minority government, pass unchal-
lenged. Labor will not go to the country
unless defeated on some important bill;
it would be silly of them, and succeed
only in annoying the people, who are
bored with elections.
try to block them in every way in order
to force them to appeal to the country.
And I think that from a General election |
both Labor and the Tories would return
strengthened. Py
“It is quite true that both the old
parties-were dead when Labor came in
—we had not recovered from the war, |
and we had no new ideas. But now the
Tories are.evolving a policy once more,
‘and their policy, unlike that. of Labor, |'
is definite and uniform. In course of
time, I believe, the people whose trend
is in the direction of organization will be
absorbed by Conservatism, and the doc-
trinaire people will join Liberalism, and
we shall be back to two parties again.
“But, for the present, Labor has a very
real. for several reasons. In
the first. their work in. education
is very good. Trevelyan is a very able |.
JUNIOR MONTH PICTURED
But I myself. am]:
very eager for a general election; I shall |-
Social Service Stedicd i in Case-work
things.”
of “Junior Month” that I can imagine.
‘After having studied and read and heard
about ‘
having discussed them long and heatedly
theories and” opinions upon. many of
them,
Month” ~and “the heart of things” ap-
peared—the realities whose existence 1
had up to then either taken on faith -or
conjectured about dubiously.
CHRISTIAN ASSOCIATION
With speeches, dancing and refresh-
ments the Christian Association welcomed
the Class of 1928 in the Gymnasium on
Saturday night.
. After a light warm-up on the floor the
-couples-formed-in—line-to-meet-the-faculty
and undergraduate guests of honor, who
later addressed them with words of wis-
dom and welcome,
Margaret Stewardson, °95, President of
the Christian Association, Gicessed the
value of the Association -as a help te-
wards the co-ordination of facts -in the
individual and in college. The spiritual
influence links the separate activities into
a constructive whole which is encouraged
by the comprehensive and tolerant nature
of the Christian Association itself. .
President Park -brought out in con-
nection with the Christian Association its
contribution to the social relationships in
college. These relationships and the ad-
justments of the individual to her: sur-
roundings are as important a result* of
college training as book léarning, ‘and
give the college graduate an advantage
oyer others in the understanding of the
method and importance of. group work.
College institutions, and among them
the Athletic Association, said Miss Ap-
plebee, are only what they are made by
members of the college collectively and
individually... The fact. that each: organi-
zation is complete and running smoothly
should not affect new students.
‘year brings anew opportunity—-to~-de-
velop the organizations according to
what each separate judgment chooses to
contribute to them,
The presidents of the Self-Government
Association, the Undergraduate Associa-
tion, the Graduate Club, the Athletic
Association and the Managing Editor of
the College News, followed with self-
explanatory speeches, poetically, humor-.
ously or seriously expressed.
Afterwards dancing was resumed, in-
terrupted by the circulation of large slabs
of ice cream.
BY BRYN MAWR DELEGATE
‘and Lectures
(Specially contributed by A. Pantser, ’25)
“O turn, and we are in _ the heart ot
These words are the eet description
‘exjsting social conditions,” ‘after
with friends, after having formed pet
I landed at
suddenly “Junior
In this necessarily short account of a
|English Coaches
Each’
arrival three days ago.
CONTINUED on cond 2
| most varied, full, and continuously dif-
ferent month, I shall have to omit telling
about the glorious Sunday spent on Long
Island at the invitation of Mrs. Robert
de. Forest, the president of the Charity
‘Orgagjzations Society of New York; I
shall have to leave out the etary motor
‘|newcomers. °
KEY CAMP IS AGAIN
‘A GREAT SUCCESS
~ 4
Bring Changes
‘in Game
(From an article “Women in Sport’? by Margaret
Goss in the New York Tribune September 28.)
Nothing quite like the Hockey Camp,
which ended yesterday in the hills of Penn-
sylvania, has ever taken place before in the
world of women’s sports. Two years ago,
in 1921,-Miss Constance M. K. Ap lebee, of
Bryn: Mawr College, held the first of -what
‘she calls her “hockey conferences” at Mount
Pocono with a gathering of less than a
hundred girls. The fact that three times
that number attended this year’s camp shows
overwhelmingly that field hockey as a sport
has gained a tremendous foothold in the
United States, as a game essentially for
women, and that interest is becoming’ mo-
mentarily keener, From the standpoint of
women’s sport, this strenuous and highly
concentrated month at Mt. Pocono is one of
the most interesting and certainly the most
novel of the year’s events.
The game, as a game for girls, was brought
to America from England by Miss Applebee
in 1901 and it is spreading like wildfire
throughout,the country. The camp, with its
English coaches, is the mecca for all en-
thusiasts. These 300 girls, their minds seeth-
ing with lunges, push passes and flick shots,
their arms and legs a lot stiffer and more
closely acquainted with “charley horses”
persed to. schools and ‘colleges in the North
and the South and the- Mid-West, where
they will endeavor to give forth all they have
just learned’ and where they will, be- listened
to with a rapt attention. Girls who have
themselves’ coached hockey are reduced at
Mount Pocono to the level of those who
have never wielded a stick and, stung by
the lash of an English tongue, they run as
they have never run in their -lives and won-
der why they ever thought they knew any-
thing about the game.
The idea of the hockey camp originated
with Miss Applebee after the visit of the
English team to this country in 1921, Amer-
ican teams simply had nothing to offer
against the invaders and the need for some
CONTINUED ON PAGE 5
SUMMER SCHOOL WORKERS
DESCRIBE AMUSING SIDE
Rain As Usual Ushers in Summer.
Students
(Specially contributed by the undergrad-
uate. workers at the Summer School, S.
Carey, '25; H. Henshaw, '25; F. Briggs,
25; J. Seeley, '27.)
The Denbigh firebell was silent, but
Susan’s alarm clock jangled helpfully, as
she rushed down the corridor ‘erying,
“Fire drill, it’s a fire drill!”
It was merely another of the queer
customs that those strange college people
had been imposing upon them since their
It had been a
very cheerless arrival. . Ducks would
have revelled in the puddles and dripping
grey walks, but the atmosphere must
have been depressing, to the Summer
School students who stfaggled in at all
j
than they have eyer been before, have dis-
MUSIC DEPARTMENT TO
__ OFFER FOUR CONCERTS
String Quartet, Pianists, and Vo-
calists among artists
to appear
BACH PROGRAM FOR THE FIRST
Four concerts of a varied character are
offered by the Department of Music for
the coming year.
> The first concert, to be given October
20, will be a Bach program by the Eng-
lish pianist, Harold, Samuel, who is recog-
nized in Europe as one of the foremost
interpreters of Bach. On six successive
days in 1921 he gave six recitals in Lon-
don éntirely devoted to Bach’s clavier
music. So successful. was his venture
that he has given this series annually in
London and has also repeated it through-
out England, ~ :
Mr.
a
Samuel’s appearance in college,
which has been made possible by- the
generosity of Mrs. F §. Coolidge, the
founder of the Berkshire Chamber Music
Festival ‘and an. ardent worker to: pro-
mote appreciation of music in this coun-
try, will be his only one in the- vicinity
of Philadelphia.
The program for Mr.
is as follows:
1. Chromatic Fantasie and Fugue.
2. From the ‘Well-Tempered Clavi-
chord”:
Prelude and Fugue in A, Bk. 1.
Prelude and Fugue in C Sharp mi-
Samuel’s recital
nor, Bk.1. -
B dat, Bk, 4:
F, Bk. 2
3. Short Preludes in C major and E
major. ;
Invention in A major.
Bouree in E, minor.
Minuet in G major.
Fantasia in C minor.
. Partita in B flat major.
Prelude.
Allemande.
Courante.
Sarabande,
Minuets.1 and 2.
_ Guigue. :
The Lenox Quartet, which will appear
at the second concert on December 8, is
known as orie of the foremost string
quartets in America. Their program will
include. modern compositions for string
quartet and the Tschaikowsky piano trio
with Horace Alwyne at the pianoforte. _
Boris Saslawsky, who will give a joint
rrecital with Horace Alwyne at the third
concert on February 16, is a Russian
baritone who has appeared. with . great:
success in the United States and Canada.
He is an artist with a fine gift for inter-
pretation and the power of making vivid
the dramatic qualities of his songs. His
program will include folk songs of Great
and Little ~Russia.
» The last concert, scheduled for March
‘16, will consist of modern combinations ot
string “and wind instruments ‘and voice.
The vocalist will be Baron Hesse von
Schenchenty, a Russian baritone, who
as formerly a member of the Imperial
Opera of Moscow, and has been heard
in opera and recitals in the leading Eu-
CONTINUED ON PAGE 6
houts from alf directions. Miss Smith’s
car, although as a rule hopelessly tem?
peramental, was coaxed into meeting all
the trains and even into taking some be-
lated people to the Roma for dinner.
Bryn Mawr, of course, had several
tricks to produce for the delight of the
Among, the most notable
CONTINUED ON PAGE 5.
NEWS BOARD TO HOLD .
COMPETITION
‘A competition for members of the
editorial board of The News for 1926
and 1927 will begin on Thursday, Oc-
tober 9. Those wishing to try out
will please see D.. Smith, Pembroke
West, as soon as possible. ;
®
> lems.
2
4
% HE COLLEGE NEWS
The College News
[Founded in 1914.)
lublished weekly during the coll ar ‘in the
interest of Bryn Mawr Callege
Managing Biitor. +o 4s
- EDITORS.
(', CUMMINGS, '25
‘ K..ToMKINs, '26 -
H. GRAYSON,
ASSISTANT EDITORS
K. Stmonbs, '27 *
. J. Loma, '26
BUSINESS BOARD
MANAGER—MARGARET Boypen, ’25 :
Marion Nagle, 25 -
M. Leary, '23
ASSISTANTS
N. BowMAN, '27
27 ELIZABETH ‘Tyso
J. Lee, '27 ne
Subscript'ons may egin at
Subscriptions, 3 50. Mlb Feet $3.00
&. Wuaw, '26
. CRUIKSHANK, 96
__Kntered. -a8--seeond-—class™matter, Septe .
1914, at the post office at Bry Mawr, Pa, we
under the Act of Maren’ » 1889. 7,
RUSKIN COLLEGE
“Labor education” is a phrase frequently
heard at Bryn Mawr, where we are brought
in close contact with the ideals and objet-
tives of the summer school. Ruskin College,
a somewhat similar organization in England,
is, therefore, of special interest for purposes
of. comparison. Founded 25 years ago it
has a_steady record of progress and—suc-
cess behind it and some of the men who are
prominent in the present Labor Government
in England re:eived their early training
there. Like our own summer school. this
older college aims to fit students for service
in the Labor movement and. the courses in
Economic theory and ‘history, social and
political history, literature, public speaking
and other subjects are arranged with this
end in view.
The college itself, an unpretentious, solidly
~ built building. standing shoulder to shoulder
with one of the oldest of Oxford colleges;
has no official connéction with the univer-
sity. Although the college is small, it has
its_own faculty and_ directors, which pro-
vides the greatest freedom for- development
while at the same time permitting students
to eniov the benefits accruing from life in
a university town. A large proportion of the
‘studen‘s are able to go for only one year,
but second-vear students continue along the
same lines, usually specializing in a particu-
lar branch The class work is carried on in
regular lecture courses, but there are also
smaller groups of students which meet for
further discussions of the subjects in hand.
Realizing the paramount importance of labor
education, Ruskin College aims to send forth
men and women having a competent under-
standing of economic and political prob-,
As in America. the need for adult
education is felt by the labor class and Rus-
- kin College furnishes an opportunity fof
gaining the desired knowledge.
: 4
THE UNDECIDED UNDER- |
GRADUATE .
It is a week of decisions. Shall I hand
in the printed card and .thereby incrimi-
nate myself, or shall I retain it and my
‘ndividuality for something more worth-
while? In an attempt to answer this
query the feverish undergraduate visits
all ‘the classes that she possibly can.
Hoping to fill in that extra hour or two
with ‘a stimulating discourse, she listens
to all table comment, library chat and
sidewalk scandal, and eavesdrops on
Senior Steps, or makes herself obnoxious
to all her friends with constant seeking
after enlightenment.
_ Would it net be most effective if
of professors and their
<
merely recording the readings, make an
intelligent choice for her year’s work.
‘ (
BE NOT AFRAID
‘The seeming preoccupation of this
‘issue of the News with the labor “ques-
tion is no threat for the future. It has
happened as a*result of an attempt to
jsecure for the columns of the college
newspaper something not written by the
editors. _The editors, hope that this year
the News will be full of specially con-
tributed articles, by everyone who has an
idea to expound or an experience to
describe. If the News is to become‘a
real organ of college opinion, it will con-].
tain many such articles, but since they
must. come from beyond the editorial
board the News can only ask for help.
So, if you see a bias in any one direction,
there is an easy way to make +the—paper
more representative, and that way is” for
its readers.
IN THE NEW BOOK ROOM --
‘ The Social Trend; Edward Allsworth
Ross, Ph.-D.,-Lb.D.
“Science and invention have borne us away
from the routes followed by any other so-
ciety,” states the author in his introduction.
“The best we can do is to set watchers to
scan the horizon. The sociologist is just a
man in a crow’s nest who knows no more
of this sea than his fellows. But from his
position he will catch sight of coming dan-
gers. 4 This book is an. attempt of an
observer at the masthead to judge the prob-
able ceurse of the ship—and to counsel how
the shin may avoid trouble.”
Mr. Ross points out the danger of future
over-population, due to the _sdientific pro-
longation of life and to thé-farge birth rate
in the lower classes He studies among
‘other subejcts: Folk Depletion and Rural
Decline, The Changing Domestic Position of
Women. Prohibition as the Sociologist Sees
It, The Legal Dismissal Wage, and,War as
a. Detriment. His ideas are clear, directly
expressed and read without difficulty.
The American Rhythm, Mary Austin.
A physiological and psychological study
of rhythm explaining the development of
aboriginalverse form and the rise of new
American verse forms, followed by “Amer-
indian Songs re-expressed from the origi-
nals. The poet*has found inspiration in ac-
tual Indian songs and in the ifMand atmos-
phere of the North American ‘Continent.
Byron and Greece. Harold Spender.
From the foreword: “The purpose of this
book is to collect together the passages both
of prose and verse, poems and letters in
which Tord Byron gave form. and expres-
sion to that passion for Greece which he
sealed with his death.
Jane Welsh Carlyle.
ily, 1889-1863.
Carlvle himself wrote of them : “As to
talent, epistolary and other, these letters, I
perceive, equal and surpass whatever of best
T know to exist in that kind.”
Richard the Lion-Hearted, Kate Neewiae,
“An attempt to sketch the life
story of a prince who.reigned less than 10
years and lived less than 42, yet whose
personal character, peculiar circumstances,
and adventurous career have given him,
whether deservedly or not a conspic-
uous place in medieval history, and made
hint a hero of romance in every country
from England to Palestine.”
The Dream, H. G. Wells.
Mirage, Edgar Lee .Masters*
‘Georges Reesad ‘Walter Fach. an Ae
Monograph
Letters to Her Fam-
BOOK REVIEWS ay
Blind Raftery. Don Byrne, —
Company.
In the days of the South Sea. ‘ibble
an Irish poet of independent tendencies
marries the Spanish mistress. of his
enemy. The Lord rewards them with
due happiness. There is. no more to the
plot’ than that. Usual imagery, direct-
ness and naivete mark the treatment of
the book. The characters are set types
lightly sentimentalized. From time to
time one finds an awkward charm in the
combination Of poeticaly imaginative de-
scriptions and historical facts brought in
for period color,
. This book follows pleasantly the middle
ron of merit. .
LORD PERCY DISCUSSES ,
_____ LABOR GOVERNMENT
CONTINUED. FROM PAGE: 1
have to refrain from praising the eye
ful plan by which twelve Juhiors, each
from a different eastern college, live to-
gether for a month. and thus. get. more
intimate contact with the activities of
other campuses and a broader outlook
than three years in just one college could
give them. But as for the “Junior
Month” program, I must do more than
ment'on the lectures by great authorities
on social problems, the field trips which,
following upon pertinent lectures, were
therefore all the. more’ valuable, and the
case work, which for all of us was an
entirely new agd enlightening experience.
The lectures seemed to cover every-
thing from individual case work to ipter-
national aspects of Social Service® For
instance, Mr. Calvin Derrick, the director
of the New Jersey State Prison and ‘the
former reorganizer of the New Jersey
State Home for Boys, roused us to the
importance -of prison refotm by the an-
nouncement that 99.9 per cent. of the
people who go to prison eventually re-
turn to sogiety. --He gaveus. agon‘zing
descriptions of the old ctt-and-dried
nethod- of disciplining bad_boys, in @hich
callous mil'tary training, rigorous sur-
‘eillance and the grossest misunderstand-
‘ng and ignorance did more to increave
than to diminish a boy’s desire to do
wrong.
As an example of this old ‘school, we
made a vit to a certain boys’ ,reforma-
tory where a veritable Simon Legree,
with a bunch of clanging keys instead of
a wh'p, held the power to punish and to
‘mould the lives of five- hundred boys
under twenty-one years of age. With
ioy and pride he showed us his- atrocious
‘wo-by-four cells; without shame he
arched us through one after another of}.
his “industrial training classes” which the
hoys were forced to atténd with no re-
gard to their particular abilities. In some
rooms grown boys—practically men—
were standing wth their backs toward
the class as punishment for having
laughed at the wrong time or for having
failed to carry out some petty whim of
their teacher. In one room boys were
being taught an almost pathetically in-
appropriate song about May love and
happiness: and the teacher who was in-
troducing this “spirit of spring” into the'r
lives was a_ hard-faced, stupid-looking
woman with a significant ruler in her
hand—and © was. moreover, absolutely
incapable of keeping a tune.
But a visit to the Children’s Village in
Dobbs Ferry gave an illustration of the
constructive part of Mr. Derrick’s
‘speech. | There the system was built up
a on the principles of individyalization and
bv scéntific and intelli-
Fach cace was considered
| psychiatrist, a
clerk ||
‘Family Social
‘ministry. of education.
Other aspects of Social Service were
taken up just as thoroughly as the above
one, and almost every line of work was
touched upon: Housing and Health, Com-
|munity Work, Medical Social Service,
Child Welfare, Juvenile Delinquency, the
Mental sa Industry, Work with
migration and Case Work. /As regéeds
the last, besides) Miss Toulsey’s admir-
able lectures on the teehhique, purpose
and value of Case Work, we spent three
days-every week in the district trying to
help solve the problems of our particular
family or families. All my doubts on the
value of Case Work were dispelled when
I, saw that besides adjusting the... indi-
vidual to his environment, Case Workers
are carrying on a great work of research,
educational progress and health improve-
ment, and are laying-the-foundations. for
correct legislative reforms.
‘I wish I had space to mention all the
great. people who spoke to us—Miss
Margaret R’ch, associate director of the
American Association for Organizing
Work, Mr. Alexander
Goldenweiser, author of “Early Civiltza-
tion;’ Miss Gordon, Hamilton (a gradu-
ate of Bryn Mawr), instructor of the
New York School of. Social Work, and
many more, but the list would be too
long. I will just add that, owing to the
fortunate fact that “Junior Month” is a
possibility for a member of every Junior
Class at Bryn Mawr, I and my predeces-
sors will not. be the only ones to be eter-
nally grateful to the dénor, who makes
“Junior Month” possible and to the
Charity Organizations Society of New
York that make it such a success.
JUNIOR MONTH DESCRIBED BY BRYN
MAWR DELEGATE
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1
person, and he is following the lines we
had begun to lay down last fall in the
Because of favor-
able conditions he has appeared to be
spending less money than we, and doing
more. In the.second place, MacDonald’s
foreign policy has, apart from minor mis-
takes, been wise. He is better than Cur-
zon and understands Europe immeas-
urably better than Lloyd George. Then,
Labor feels that it is working together.
There has never been such a spirit of co-
operation and fraternity in a government.
But, on the other hand, it has succeeded
by its ‘moderation in alienating the lower
classes, which put it in, although it has
won over the middie” classes, which
opposed it. :
“I think that the effects of the London
Conference, whether it succeed or fail,
will be harmful, but I speak as an anti-
Reparationist, who cannot be brought to
helieve in the Dawes Report.
NEWS IN BRIEF
A meeting of the Undergraduate Asso-
ciation was held last Monday to discuss
a telegram from the Vassar Political Asso-
ciation, inviting Bryn Mawr to send dele- |
gates to a conference to be held at Vassar.
the week-end of October 18. The association
voted that those who were interested in
going be asked to sign a slip posted in Tay-
lor. Three delegates are to be chosen from
this npeak eae)
Dr. Hugh Black to Lead Chapel.
Next Sunday Dr. Hugh Black, from
the Union Theological Seminary, will
preach in Chapel. He gave the Bacca-
laureate sermon at Bryn Mawr last year.
LIBERAL CLUB TO HOLD
MEETING
_ New policies of the Liberal Club
be discussed at the first meeting
of the year in Taylor Hall Monday
~ evenin eo Se The officers are
THE COLLEGE NEWS
MISS M. SHERIDAN
‘7 STATION AVE., ARDMORE
Exclusive Made-to- Order Gowns
AT MODERATE PRICES
we
POWERS & REYNOLDS
MODERN DRUG STORE
837 Lancaster Ave. Bryn Mawr
Imported Perfumes
CANDY SODA
GIFTS
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
Warum Lasst Du Deine Blicke in der
Ferne Streiten,
enn Das Gesuchte Liegt Sonah!
— Heine.
“No. need to go to Philadelphia for a
cozy Ladies’ Dining Room.
ROMA CAFE
has anticipated your need. for the future!
The best of everything!
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 Mancaster Ave. Bryn Mawr, Pa.
J. J. Connelly Estate
The ‘Main Line Florists
1226 Lancaster Avenue
Rosemont, Pa.
Phone, 252 Bryn Mawr
Bryn Mawr 823 Night: Bryn Mawr 942
ESTIMATES FURNISHED
WILLIAM G. CUFF & CO.
Tel.,
_ Riding Habits
& Breeches:
FRANCIS B. HALL
TAILOR
840 LANCASTER AVE., BRYN MAWR,
3 stores west: of P. O.
DAINTY ICED
SANDWICHES
College
Tea House
Open Daily from 1 to’7
EVENING PARTIES BY
SPECIAL ARRANGEMENT
JEANNETT’S
Cut Flowers and Plants Fresh
: Daily »
Corsage and Floral Baskets
Old-Fashioned Bouquets a Specialty
Potted Plants—Personal supervision on _ all
: orders
¢
Phone, Bryn Maw r 570
807 Lancaster Ave.
Telephone, Bryn Mawr 453
THE CGHATTERBOX —
A DELIGHTFUL TEA ROOM
Regular Dinners or
Birthday Parties by appointment
‘OPEN FROM TWELVE TO EIGHT
825 LANCASTER AVENUE
ais
Bryn Mawr Massage Shop
SHAMPOOING
MARCEL WAVING ...
MANICURING
FACIAL MASSAGE.
Opposite Post Office
‘Tel, 832-Bryn Mawr
NOTICE—The above, formerly at the Floyd
Building, haS moved to larger quarters where
we hope to be better able to serve our patrons.
a
e
Bouquets
2
/
Electrical Contractors
INSTALLATION, WIRING, REPAIRING
855 Lancaster Ave. Bryn Mawr, Pa.
Phone, Ardmore 12
GEORGE F. KEMPEN
Caterer
27 W. LANCASTER AVE.
ARDMORE, PA. |
a
2.
PHONE 758
HENRY B. WALLACE
CATERER and CONFECTIONER
LUNCHEONS AND TBAS
BRYN MAWR
~~
Children’s and Infants’
1316 CHESTNUT STREET
Minerva Yarns—Royal Society Art Goods
McCallum Hosiery—Philippine Lingerie
Wear 4,
Imported Handkerchiefs
SYDNEY POOL, JR.
Maison de Lis
Free Instruction in Knitting and Embroidery
Hemstitching—24 Hour Service
Middie Blouses Pleating
23 W. LANCASTER AVE.. Ardmore, Pa.
Ardmore 740
THE BRYN MAWR TRUST CO.
CAPITAL, $250,000
Does a General Banking Business
Phone, Bryn Mawr 166
Phone Orders Promptly Delivered
WILLIAM GROFF, P. D.
PRESCRIPTIONIST
Whitman Chocolates '
PA,
Phone, Bryn. Mawr 824
DRINKS||
A Dainty Little Flavor at l
Bryn Mawr, Pa.| —
MOORE’S PHARMACIES
BRYN MAWR, PA.
*
Drugs
Stationeries, etc.
Odd Jewelry:
Direct Oriental Importations
{TREASURE CAVE
a RUTH BABETTE
—_
We :
== =205 South Fifteenth Street=——
TOGGERY - SHOP
A LANCASTER AVENUE
7 Opposite Post. Office) —
Gowns, Hats, Coats,
Sweaters, Blouses, Hosiery p
Sole Agents for
VANITY FAIR SILK UNDERWEAR
DRESSMAKING AND ALTERATIONS
E. M. B. Wise Phone, Bryn Mawr 259
Fancy Groceries Fruit and Vegetables
WILLIAM T. McINTYRE’S
821 LANCASTER AVENUE
BRYN MAWE
Fi Delivery
Confectionery
Charge Accounts
» Ice Cream Pastry
‘Make Our Store Your Store”
Main Line Drug Store
ARDMORE, PA.
Prescriptions Carefully Compounded by
Registered Pharmacists
Phone, Ardmore 1112
FLOWERS SERVICE: SATISFACTION
'|BAXTER & GREEN, Inc.|,
FLORISTS me
129 S. Sixteenth St., Phila., Pa.
BELL PHONE, SPRUCE 32-62
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.
HAVERFORD AVE. Haverford, Pa.
J. E. CALDWELL & CO.
Chestnut and Juniper Streets
i
& ‘
Chemicals |
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 sptendid
offers accommodations quite ideal.
Ask for illustrated booklet
WASHINGTON, D.C.
Te
pO Uy
PHILADELPHIA
THE GIFT SUGGESTION BOOK
Mailed upon request
illustrates_and prices
Jewels, Watches, Clocks, Silver, China
Glass and Novelties
The Distinctive Productions aud 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
DERN- ONABLE
Afternoon Tea and Luncheon
COTTAGE TEA ROOM
Montgomery Ave., Bryn Mawr
, Everything dainty and delicious
Telephone, Bryn Mawr 867
The Hearthstone
LUNCHEON ; TEA
DINNER PARTIES
Open Sundays ;
North Merion Ave. Bryn Mawr, Pa.
Programs
Bill Heads
Tickets w
Letter Heads
Announcements
Booklets, etc.
John J. McDevitt
Printing ©
1145 Lancaster Ave. Bryn Mawr, Pa.
BRINTON BROS.
FANCY and STAPLE GROCERIES
Orders Called for and Delivered —
Lancaster and Merion Aves.
Bryn Mawr, Pa.
Telephone 63 .
- Philadelphia
GOLDSMITHS
_ JEWELERS
College Insignia
Class Rings
Sorority Emblems —
STATIONERY WITH SPECIAL
MONOGRAMS, CRESTS and SEALS
B&G
Cleaners and Dyers
869 Lancaster Ave. Bryn Mawr
Cleaning and Dyeing
Gloves Clee f
SILVERSMITHS |. fee
: __ like to come and try it on? |
Allows Interest on Deposits
~ eee
t
803 Lancaster Ave.
Pets
facilities for information and sight-seeing
a
A a
»
Py ghus
ust
4 : | THE. COLLEGE NEWS
»
DR. RUFUS JONES SPEAKS - ¢ CALENDAR ; ae aa
‘IN SUNDAY CHAPEL| , ,, fade Hugh Black wilt speak.at|” 1606 AND 1107 CHESTNUT ST.
a ; : hapel.
Religion sof Completely Separated a Sunday, October 19
from Our Modern Life 3 ' Monday, October 20 :
‘ Concert will be given by Mr. Samuels. YQ
“What is the proper feaction to seeing _ g@ Bach program S
7
God?” This was the question asked by ~, Tuesday, October 21
Dr. Rufus Jones, president of the Board Hampton Institute Concert. .
of Trustees, in chapel last Sunday night. Friday, October 24 : : “ee Sipe a
‘Some people, he ‘continued, haye led Lantern Night. as :
lives of Yoneliness and privation/ after Wednesday, October 29
they have had visions; sare on be-| 7.30 P. M—Dr. Meikeljohn will speak un- | Brown or Black Pump
come missionaries in* Savage countries. der the’ auspices. of the Chrigfan Asso- Suede
The thing to do, however, is to “eat and ciation in Taylor Hall. : :
drink,” and after a great religious experi- Wednesday, November 5 oe $12. 50
ence, to return to ordinary . life. The} 7.30 P. M—Dr. Meikeljohn will speak un- ‘
sight of God brings fortification for life’s der the auspices of the Christian Asso-
commonplace tasks. It-is to be hoped ciation in Taylor Hall. The trim lines of this Fump make it
that we shall-always have people who Saturday, November 8 :
dare to die gloriously for a great cause, Jinidr Play. , beautiful on the foot
but not everyone. can do the splendid Wednesday, November 12
things, for most of life is walking, not| 7.30 P. M.—Dr.: Meikeljohn will speak un-
<= e e : ea
soaring. College is not, as is so often der the auspices of the Christian Asso- Waldo M Claflin i Philadelphia
said, a preparation for lifé; it is a piece | ciation in id Hall. =a ‘ — .
of life. : : Saturday, Novefnber 22 . i
One of our greatest mistakes“is our Sophomore Play
attempt to separate life ftom religion,
which we consider an exaltation for the
moment. ‘The everyday world is quite
divorced from religion, but until we join
these two halves of life we shall never
get perfection. We need vision, clarity,
judgment to help_us go through with the
ordinary. The recovery of a sense of |’
God-is~essentiat today.—If educated peo-
ple were as interested’ in values as they
are in facts, we should soon attain it.
Truth and beauty are real, and to these
must return our education. The universe,
with its human life, is spiritual, and Christ
is the supreme revelatiomof the divine in
ordinary existence. God will come to us
if we try to better-our relations with
other people.
NEW CHOIR LIST ANNOUNCED ~
Choir for 1924-1925 has sixteen new mem-
bers of whom ten are freshmen. First so-
pranos—H. Henshaw, '25; M. V. Carey, 126;
F. Thayer, ’25; R. Foster, ’25; D. Sollers, 25;
E. Mallett, ’25; D. Housel, ’27; M. Z. Peas,
27; J. Sullivan, ’27; N. Mitchell, ’28; H.
Yandall, 28; Y. Phillips, ’28.
Second Sopranos—M. Constant, ’25; H.
. Smith, ’25; W. Dunn, ’25; EY Wilson, ’25; ran
M. Shumway, ’25; C. Gehring,,’25: A.
Mathew, ’27; J. Hendrick, '27; M. Jardella,
28; S. Armstrong, ’28,
7
~
First Altos—M. Pierce, 25; E. St. John,
25; J. Schoonover, ’25; V. Carpenter, ’25;| ©
-_E. Carpenter, ’25; E. Parker, ’27; B. Brown, : 4
’28; P. MéElvaine, ’28; E. Murray, ’28. Beacons O t e S VY
Second Altos—S. Carey, ’25;-F. Briggs,
25; K. Adams, ’27; L. Meyer, ’28; A. Tal- i
cott, ’28; R. Tuve, graduate.
a Betweén Cleveland and Rock
CIRCULAR ON STUDENTS’ BUILD- ; ‘
ING AT SMITH IS POSTED | Springs, Wyo., along the night
Undergraduates are ~-'*e+ by the Stu- of ° : :
f dents’ Building Commu:ice tu read the route of the air mail SEIVICE, tall
Smith College circular on the bulletin - every
board in Taylor and to notice the im- : : . *. beacons have been placed
portance of Smith’s Students’ Building. : x twenty-five miles.
“It is the centre of the social life of the i
college. The main hall, with its stage, , ss :
is the scene of Dramatics“ Association : Revolving on great steel towers,
plays. . . . The press room is on the ae ; A
right of the porch. The’ various ‘club Rees ea This achineernent has ier General Electric searchlights, to-
rooms in the building provide meeting made hee le by engineers. ‘ : ot
places for the departmental clubs and : pba get gr wea taling 1,992,000,000 candle-power, Acar
student societies. The Smith College E » working , ' 3 H air-
Association for Christian Work has its 4 Se amutaie of te Post Office blaze a path of light for the
room on the first floor. The rooms of]: De khong kg ors plane pilot.
the “Monthly,” the Student Council, commonplace of life in the new ‘
Alpha and Phi Kappa Psi, and the Glee America which you will inherit. .
Club, are all located on the second floor ‘What the lighthouse is to the acean ;
of the building. The broad stone steps If you are interested to learn | ; ) :
' . . are famous for spring ‘step sings.’ ” . more about what electricity is navigator, these beacons are to the . ‘
: . a _ doing, write for Reprint No. .
AR391 containing a complete
conquerors of the air.
“ay
vied with Sue in folk dancing.
» science department.
“eral desks in tf
“dered
“
f
e
THE COLL
EGE NEWS
.
5
a r
¢
» SUMMER SCHOOL GIVES .
' VARIED EXPERIENCES
a
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1
was the shameful desertion of the elec-
tricity; the’ lights simply refused to go
on.” Consequently everyone gathered in
the gym and warbled rather unwillingly
while a messenger was dispatched for
several dozen candles, upon the arrival of
which the lights ‘contrarily went on.
It rained all the néxt day, but thanks.to
united undergraduate efforts most of the
rooms had been made fairly habitable,
and the more fortunate people were even
. accorded the luxury of a drooping cur-
‘tain or two.
Those lucky enough to
have beds. must.-certainly have been
grateful. ‘had they. seen poor’ Chuck stag-
gering valiantly up several flights of
stairs with a bed in one hand and sev-
ome.
Finajly it cleared up. Evén the Bryn
Mawr weather vane must have had some
pity iff its” metal..heart for the winds
changed, the sun came out and summer
school really began.
Undergraduate responsibilities were
heavy. Two blue hockey skirts wan-
casually into. faculty meetings,
importantly directed professors .through
the “lib,” unconcernedly tripping through the
village streets in a search for fish bowls and
baseballs.
No English coach could have ‘been
more severe than Jan teaching basketball,
and not even Miss Applebee could have
As for
Chuck—well, the pool would not have
been the pool’ without Chuck to scatter
‘buckets of disinfectant in it daily and to
call up all the known authorities. in an
endeavor to find out the proper -number
'. to allow in swimming each week.
The average! day was a busy one. In
the morning there were errands to “be
done in the village, work to be done in
the Science froom.. Have you ever
scrubbed an alligator with a tub brush.
and Ivor’ soap? Have”. you evet
“ coaxed baby caterpillars on to an apple
leaf diet? Goldfish ded under the ten-
derest treatment, but .new stocks were
resolutely brought in. The laboratory
was filled with eager young scientists
mounting butterflies and pickling creatutes
of all descriptions. :
In the afternoons students floundered
hepefully in the pool; in the evenings
there was more swimming, there - was
basketball, volley ball, tennis and folk
dancing. Sometimes* there’ was’ baseball,
but the one faculty- student game ‘quite
finished the poor umpire. 2
Week-ends came with their concerts,
pageants, dances—with the gym to be
. decorated, posters to be made wholesale.
One Sunday a small and select group,
composed ptincipally of undergraduates
sang “Pallas” in the cloisters. Another
time Briggs led “Come, Cheer for Our
College” in chapel.
The undergraduates felt pa
free from rules. Chuck, with mysterious
c~ air,-pulled from behind pictures, keys to
forbidden doors.
Jan, dropping lightly
from a Merion window, appeared in Pem
East one night with a blanket and some
ginger ale. Helen and. Frances gave, a
picnic on the lib tower and threw rasp-
berries at the chimney.
Later, as summer drew on, chloroform!
began disappearing from the infirmary
and stray animals from the campus.
Chuck, Helen and Briggs pursued cats
through hedges and under fences for the
; When all three sick
and homeless creatures had been dis-
posed of, the campus began to look very
deserted. Students thought longingly of
their pets at home; and finally.on August
tenth Summer School broke up. Chuck
was eager to be off to Baltimore where} game.
she is now spending the winter chasing
‘cats (between class hours), but was per-
suaded. to help. bring. order out of chaos:
in’ Pem East, Denbigh ‘and Merion.
Ramor has it that she was pecsiade be
stay by an invitation to sleep in Presi-
dent Park’s bed—but that is rumor.
(An article én the more serious side of
Raiiner School will appear later.)
HOCKEY CAMP IS STRENUOUS EXIST-
ENCE
CONTINUED FROM PAGE Fi
kind of action was obvious if the U,ited
States wanted td enter an with
such an experienced riva nglish coaches
were seit over by the English Hockey As-
sociation and the fall of 1922 saw ‘the first
of the hockey conferences,
Thgre has been a noticeable’ improvement
in American stick work and team play
within the last three years, thanks to our
English teachers, but there is still a lot of
ground to be Covered before the pupil will
be able to outdo the teacher. The trip of
the All-American team to England fast
spring proved that. Not one out of 12 was
a victory.
*Vassar, Bryn Mawr, Wellesley, Smith,
Mount Holyoke, Radcliffe—all were repre-
sented-at-this_year’s camp. Such Southern
colleges and universities as Randolph Ma-
con, Sweet Briar and Agnes Scott, Louisi-
ana State College and North Carolina Col-
lege thought it worth while to send their
players. From the. mid-West. came girls
from thé, University of Wisconsin, Iowa
State Coll@ge and Indiana University. Even
at that the list is not complete. There were
dozens of younger hockéy enthusiasts . from
preparatory and finishing scltools,
Quite a bit of cOmment has been heard
lately to the effect that field hockey is slow;
that if it were more of ,a, game men would
have taken it up long ago. Not being able
to reconcile this assertion with all we had
heard of the game from collegiate friends,
or to account for its uncommon growth in
recent years, we decided that it was high
time tafacat eqtlire a little knowledge at first
hand. Ona dripping Monday afternoon we,
therefore, arrived at Mount Pocono with
full regalia—lacking only shinguards, per-
haps-the-most-_essential- feature.outside_of_a
stick—and_ an open mind. ° :
For the space of the next three or four
days, in the comparfy of several chosen ath-
letes from Bryn Mawr, hockey absorbed us
wholly during the daytime—with a little
time out for meals—and was painfully pres-
ent in our dreams, In the morning session
we learned stick work on the tennis courts;
learned to stop a charging opponent with a
sweeping lefthand side stroke and to rake
the ball neatly from under her nose by a
clever twist of the wrist, or else to “dribble”
at top speed in and out about a column of
empty peach baskets to a running fire of
comment from little Miss Roberts, of Eng-
land.
Then came practice under Miss Partridge.
We laughed bitterly to ourselves as we
charged puffing down and up the field, re-
membering that ‘someone had said that
hockey was a slow game.
Miss Partridge’s’ attention’ was now cen-
tered upon the long, gawky girl from Bryn
Mawr, who played right back for the Reds.
“What’s the matter there? Can’t you
run? You're too big and too slow ever to
make anything but a goal keeper.”
The tall girl shone thereafter between
the goal posts and will doubtless live to
stop many a ball on some “future all-
American team,
There #as much biting cotietaen and
little praise» Afterwards as twenty-two
panting girls left the field the coach was
heard to remark that the “good ones
always got it the hardest—only the rot-
‘ten ones had _éncouragement. " There-
fore, when she turned to us to remark,
“You’ve got an eye.
position and vou're slow, but you've got
Jan eve,” we hardly gknew what to make
of it. n
Hockey appears . to be the -‘eoming
From two local associations in
1921, the United States Field) Hockey
Krumbhaar,. of Philadelphia, has now a
membership. of seven local associations:
New York, _ Chicago, Boston, Baltimore,
Sean Gey es
aemrecs cs REE: and: Greenwich.
as messengers.
You were out of
— ion
More are applying for membership all the
time. With a few more years. of English
coaching and such steady growth of
popularity the’next alkAmerican team to
go to E ngland should give a very differ-
ent account of itself.
FIRE RULES.”
A. Rules for Drills.
I. The purpose of the hall fire drill
shall be to get all students safely out of
the building in an orderly manner. The
actual fighting of the fire shall -be done
by the trained Fire #ighting Brigade,
‘composed of college men, the Head Fire
Captain, the six Hall Captains, and six
Hall Lieutenants (one. from each hall),
all under the leadership of the Superin-
tendent of Buildings. and. Grounds.
[I. The alarm shall be the same for a
drillas for a real fire. One long ring for
emergency. To indicate the place of as-
sembly: several long rings for front door,
several short rings for back door, The
rings should be preceded by one long
continuous ring to arouse the hall,
TIT. “The Hall Captain shall see ‘that
the proper number of short rings are
sounded, depending upon the location of
the fire.
TV. The hall. shall be divided , into
squads (as many as shall he agreed upon
by the Hall Captain, together with ‘the
Head Fire Captain) composed of a defi-
nite number of students a ying near each
other.
V. An Aide shall be in charge of each
squad, who, as soon as the alarm is rung.
shall close open windows in the rooms of
the: students of her sauad, and see that
all students have left these rooms.
VI. Each student when the alarm is
rung shall shut the windows of the room
in which she is at the time and provide
herself with a wet towel and heavy cloth-
ing. (,,*e., a heavy coat reaching below the
knees of a woolen sweater and heavy skirt
Shoes are.alwavs to be worn.) ‘Students
who are not officers shall then walk
quickly and without any noise to the place
of assembly, Each sauad shall form ing
“eparate group at the ‘place of as-
sembly. and each person as she arrives
shall place herself in the proper place in
her squad.
- VI. The first Lieutenant to arrive at
the assembly place, i. e.. Lieutenant: TI,
shall get the roll book and take command.
VIII. The other Lieutenants on arriv-
ing shall report to Lieutenant I. Lieyten-
ant II shall be sent bv Lieutenant I to
the phone, Lieutenant III to the Captain
at the fire to take’ messages. Lieutenant
IV and Lieutenant V to their places in
their own squads. Lieutenant II when
she has finished phoning shall take her
place in own squad.
IX. The Captain shall send messengers
to summon assistance and shall notify
Lieutenant I through Lieutenant III of
the names of those persons she has
in the roll book, the names of these stu-
dents and the names of the Lieutenants |
o
duty.
X. . When the ‘Aide of each squad has
finished. ¢he draughts and .warnings in
the rooms of her squad: she shall go to
her assembled squad.. maintaining _ their
order, and find out“who are missing, giv-
ing the names of those absent to Lieuten-
ant I, who shall mark their names in the
roll book as unaccounted for. The Aide
shall then marshall her squad out of the
building. The Aides. after their squads
have left the buildings, shall remain with
Lieutenant I, ready to be sent by Lieu-
tenant I to find any students« whose ab-
sence she cannot’ account for. °
XI. Each Aide shall have a First Sub-
Aide under her, who shall take her place
when absent. A Second Sub-Aide shall
take charge if the Aide and First Sub-
Aide are both absent. In a fire the Aide
may call dpon her Sub-~Aides to help her
do draughts and warnings. —
XI... No student fet enter the build-
oe |
ing after the alarm has been rung, ¢xcept
officers.
XIII. Fines of 25 cents Shall be im-
posed by the Captain upon all students
who do not close the windows of the rooms
in which they are, who do not respond
quickly to the alarm, who are not prop-
erly prepared, or who cause any noise or
disorder. A fine of $5.00 shall be im-
posed upon anyone ringing the alarm ex- -
cept in case of fire, or not especially in-
structed to ring it for a drill.
XIV. There shall be a series of com-
petitive drills between the Halls, the Hall .
judged to have the best drills receiving a
trophy, purchased with the fines of all the
Halls.
B. Rules for Fire.
I. The alarm must be rung immediate-
ly in continuous ring by the first person
noticing the fire. _No discretion may be .
exercised, The person ringing shall notify
the Captain of the location of the fire,
whereupon the Captain signals by ‘short
rings the place of assembly.
.II. No student shall attempt to fight -
the fire, or save any of her belongings,
byt must go immediately to the place of
assembly, except in case a fire has just
begun, ‘when the Captain may order cer-
tain students to. help her put it out before
the Fire Fighting Brigade arrives.
C. Duties of Hall Captains.
I. To hold a meeting and explain the
fire rules to all students.in her hall. To
impose a fine of 25 cents on any student
for unexcused absence from this meeting.
To explain the rules to the students ab-
sent from this meeting.
III. To divide the hall into squads
with the approval of the Head Captain and
appoint an ‘Aide for each.
IV. To hold meetings of her Lieuten-
ants, “Aides and ~ Sub-Aides, instructing
them in their duties, and discussing the
drills with them.
V. To fine all students whom she or
her officers see breaking the rules.
VI. To tell sick students im advance
that a .drill will take place and excuse
them from attending, ~
VII. To notify her Lieutenants i ad-
vance of. a drill so that assistance will
not be summoned. * :
VIII. To keep a roll book at each
door of the building.
IX. To.go over’ the whole hall at
the beginning of the college year with the
e
CONTINUED ON PAGE 6
who have reported to her, as being on]
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
1280 MARKET STREET
1308 CHESTNUT STREET
19 SOUTH ELEVENTH STREET
Bicaktas
Luncheons
_ Dinners
TELEPHONE, ARDMORE 1946
Haverford Ave. & Station Rd. Drive
- HAY? 3FORD STATION, P. R. R.
6 THE COLLEGE NEWS
4 ‘ 2
Pies eds IN PHILADELPHIA | | . - :
a Adelphi—“The Goose Hangs High” (Last : erg
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 5 Disha i ’ J 4
‘| Lyric—“The Potters” (Iyast Week). w é.
Warden and her officers in order to be| Shubert—“Sitting Pretty.” i —
familiar with all parts of the hall.” Chestnut Street Opera House—“Moonlight.” : 2
LA's | ORGAN AAW Cale kad 644% beh o> a Walnut—“The Third Year” i?
XII o see that the alarm is tested|Garrick—“The Second Mrs. Tanqueray,”
at one gclock every day. with Ethel Barrymore.
XII¥ To inspect the apparatus and] Broad—“The Nervous Wreck.”
see that it is kept in good condition. Forrest—“Musie Box Revue.”
To allow no gasoline, ether, or
; : Moving Pictures
any other explosive to be used in the
Stanley—“Beau Brummel,” with John Bar-
halls. To allow safety matches—to be]. rymore.” ‘
used only in the tea pantries and no} iton—“Feet of Clay. | y \ ‘
papers burned in fireplaces. -| Globe—“Secrets,” with: Norma Talmadge. *
XV. To see that a list of telephone|'p1.-¢—Thomas Meighan in “The Alaskan.”
wars penee by. tia Phone, Aldine—Sabatini’s “The Sea. Hawk.” |
XVI. To attend drills of the Fire} 50. «4 merica.” . i &
___ Fighting Brigade. : a COMING : “
beac as D. ; Hitios of Pree a neanne seg eae Fata Morgana, The Outsider, Artists and : Extra Curricula re
, . : I. To sesist the Hall Captain and take Models, Little Jesse James, Tarnish, Lolli- Activities .
fe their places when absent. -hgat f WI Loose Powder in
II. See Articles VII, VII, IX, X. XII, | : Teac yiate shige md poh ll ne gga :
under Rules for Drills for duties_of_Lieu- MUSIC DEPARTMENT : ; ae b of Cal cal Compacts in lovely
tenants when the Captain is present. sites a touch of Colgate's Face cates, with Or with-
III. “When the Captain is absent, Lieu- OFFERS FOUR CO Powder isa cuit nd. Th poate eat $.50 ,
tenant I shall take the place of the Cap- soft as the skin it beautifies. - Compact, $1.00
tain, Lieutenant II shall perform the du- CONTMNUNO FROM: FAGR |
“6 e
ties of Lieutenant I, and Lieutenant III] |ropean centres. The other artists will : ’
of Lieutenant II. be announced later. :
V. To report the names of all stu- |; -Tickets will be $5.00 for the series and
dents violating the rules to the Hall Cap-| $1.50 for a single concert, and‘may be FACE Dp OWD ERS
tain: obtained from the Publicity Office in ;
V. To attend meetings held by the Hall} Taylor Hall.
Captain.
VI. To act as. Lieutenant in fires in
Taylor, Dalton, Gymnasium, etc.
E. Duties of Aides.
I. See Articles..V, X, XI, XII under,
Rules for Drills.
H ss II. To appoint. First and Second Sub-
t Aides and instruct them in their duties.
III. To report to the Hall Captains
the names of any students violating the
rules. :
IV. To find out each night who of
her squad are absent for the night.
V. To. attend meetings held by the
Hall Captain. ‘
_ VI. To arrange the members of ‘her
squad in a definite order, and see that each
person is in her especial place at drills, so
that she can tell at a glance who are
absent, : ;
TAYLOR HALL DRILLS
3rd floor—Students in Lecture Room H
go down the fire escape.
Students in Lecture Room K_ go
down the stairs.
24g floor—Students in Lecture Room F
(English®° Room) .go across chapel and
down the side stairs.
Students in Lecture Room K_ go
down back stairs.
ist floor—All students go out the neares:
door. ;
. MALTON HALL DRILLS
‘Mist floor—All Students in Physics go out
the nearest door. ‘ i
« 2nd’ floor—All Students in Biology go
; down stairs.
3rd floor—i. All Students.in Chemical
Laboratory go down fire escape at: end
of building. .
2. All Students in Chemistry Lecture
Room go down fire escape at back of
building.
4th. floor—All Students in Geology go
down stairs unless they are blocked—in
which case go down fire escape.
Haverford Pharmacy
Prescription Drug Store
. Haverford, Pa.
_ Dainty Luncheons 7
“ a
meee WHITMAN’S TEA A ROOM . Powies & Reynolds, Bryn Mawr Bryn Mawr College Inn, Bryr Mawr Bryn Mawr College Book Store, Bryn Mawr .
ae 8 ‘ ‘Mievcs & Atkecnics ‘Te 30 H. B: Wallace, Bryn Mawr _ Kindt’s Pharmacy, Bryn Mawr Bryn Mawr Confectionery, Bryn Mawr
Teas, 3—5. , ee a ; R r .
ee & : : eed aes William Groff, Bryn Mawr Frank W. Prickett, Rosemont College Tea Room, Bryn Mawr
¢ aa
»
College news, October 8, 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)
1924-10-08
serial
Weekly
6 pages
digitized microfilm
North and Central America--United States--Pennsylvania--Montgomery--Bryn Mawr
Vol. 11, No. 02
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-no2