Vol. XXII, No. [PRΓCE TWELVE OK NTS] November 20, 1919 Endowment Fund Campaign Extended Until Dec. 1 Alumni Decide to Form a Baseball Association Football Team Defeated by Penn State; Score 20 to 0 Professor Karapetoff Pleads for Greater Research Facilities Published weekly during the college year and monthly in July and August at 220 E. State Street, Ithaca, New York. Subscriptions $3.60 a year. Entered as second class matter May 2, 1900, under the act of March 3, 1879, at the postofnce at ITHACA, NEW YORK. CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS DIRECTOEY WASHINGTON, D, C. llβEOBORE K. BBYANT '97, '98 Master Patent Law '08 Patents and Trade Marks Exclusively 310-313 Victor Building ίTϊ£AΛ>A, N. Y. GEORGE S. TARRELL Ithaca Trust Building Attorney and Notary Public Real Estate jSold, Rented arid Managed NEW YORK CITY CHARLJΰfc A, TAUSSIG A.'B. >02, LL.B., Harvard 05 220 Broadway Tel: 1905 Cortlancl General Practice MARTIN H. OFΓINGEB EE. '99 VAN WAGONER-LINN CONSTRUCTION CO. Electrical Contractors Buildings Wired Anything Electrical Anvwhere General Electric Mazda Lamps 143 E. 27tiι Street NOBTOIJ, BIRD & WHITMAN Utility and Industrial Engineers Ϊ.01 NFeiwlth.YAoivt*e;mue 111 W.CMhiocangrooe St. 88BBorsotoand St.. SweCetlleavnedlanBdldg MBuanlsteiymoBrledg. EOltf? .TEXAS Lawyers 506-9 .Wheat BuilOdfienhgeral; Practice Attorney^ for Santίa Fe Lines Empire; (ϊas &v#uel βp. €, fe;liee,0ortiell 1889-90; P, T. Lomax, WB9a^shiMng. tAo:n; S1m9i1thβ, George CascaciillaΓ Sehool GRADUATES GO TO tJ0BNELL CoUβg«preparatory Sehodl A! High-Grade .Ήoarding School for Boys Summer School July to September, especially for College and University Entrance Examinations. Special Tutoring School Private Instruction in Any Subject Throughout the Year. Trustees, P O, Gpϊnelϊ EyneβtBeaker C.D..Bostwick Our ί!)ΐ9-$0 6 orar h hi* J. P. Troy The Perm State football game last Saturday, w h i l e disappointing in its results, brought comfort to the crowded stands from the fact that the Cornell team got the ball on downs twice within the five-yard lines. The picture shows the intersection of Cornell's goal line and the side line in the lower right-hand corner. The Penn State man carrying the ball was stopped on the five-yard line before Cornell's back-field hid time to get into the action. CORNELL IN PHILADELPHIA The Philadelphia Cornell Club will hold a football smoker on the evening of November 25. Eomeyn Berry, Speedy Eush, Jack Moakley, Leightoii Schoeh, Louis Vorhees, and many old football stars are expected to be present. This is the first event of a busy week, with a Glee Club concert at the BellevueStratford Hotel on Wednesday evening, the football game on Thursday afternoon, and the meeting of the directors of the Associate Alumni on Thursday morning and evening. The Cornell Club will, as usual, be open every day and will serve all meals. The address is 1223 Locust Street. Tickets for the concert and the game may be had by applying there. Concert tickets are $2, and football tickets are $2.50. PITTSBURGH'S NEW OFFICERS At the annual business meeting of the Cornell University Association of West- ern Pennsylvania, held at the Hotel Schenley, Pittsburgh, on October 25, and attended by about seventy-five members, the following officers for the year wei'3 elected: president, Thomas W. Fleming, jr., '05; vice-president, Karl W. Gass '12 secretary, A. N. Slocum '01 treasurer, W. S. Wallace '10; registrar, J. E. Eosenfeld '15; member of the board for three years, C. J. Eamsburg '99 member of the board for two years, John A. Hunter ΌO; member of the board for one year, John W. Todd '06. Prof. Dexter S. Kimball spoke in the interests of the endowment campaign, and Charles M. Thorp '84, chairman, outlined the details as worked out for the district. No subscriptions were solicited at the meeting. Karl W. Gass '12 is chairman of the executive committee for the district. It was further announced that arrangements had been completed for a concert to be given by the Cornell Musical Clubs at Carnegie Musical Hall on the evening of January 2. This will be the first appearance of the Musical Clubs in Pittsburgh since 1916. The following local committee is in charge of the concert: C. M. Ύohe '09, chairman, J. H. Eose '06, W. T. Todd, jr., '16, J. Harry Letsche, jr., '12, and Paul S. Hardy '16. The first weekly luncheon of the season was held 011 November 14 at the Chamber of Commerce. Luncheons will be held each Friday hereafter. All Cornelliaiis within reach of down-town Pittsburgh are welcome. THE MAJOR SPORTS COUNCIL announces the appointment of Eoger W. Hooker '21, of Niagara Falls, as asdistant manager of the crews; and of Dudley S. Nostrand '20, of Jamaica, N". Y., as manager of freshman baseball. The council has awarded fifteen baseball Cs, and a minor sports C to Kirk M. Eeid, of Warren, Ohio, winner of the recent tennis tournament". 100 C O R N E L L A L U M N I N E W S The Universities andResearch Investigation As Essential to Education As Teaching Professor Vladimir Karapetoff of the Department of Electrical Engineering addressed the Cornell Club of Cleveland at a luncheon on October 30, on "The Significance of Beseareh in American Universities." He pointed out the greas unprepai edness in this respect that had become apparent as soon as we joined the Allies, and the important part which science, invention, and research had played during the war. He mentioned as an example the problems that were submitted to him by the National Research Council and by the Naval Consulting Board, and the lack of purely theoretical data which the solution of these problems required. Continuing, he said: 'c Far be it from me to urge greater emphasis upon research in our universities simply for reasons of national safety or because of advantages in competitive' foreign trade. I shall not even urge it because of its evident importance in medicine, agriculture, engineering, or government. No, I believe that our enlightened public opinion should rise to a point where it will demand recognition and 'support of investigators in pure mathematics, in theoretical physics and chemistry, in the study of nature and man, in philosophy, languages and literature, in fact in any branch of human activity, no matter how remote a subject of investigation may be from our bread-and-butter problems. If we are to profit permanently by research, I am almost tempted to sav if we are to become like older civilized nations in this respect, we must give up 'practical' and mercenary ideas on research, and promote research for its own sake. It is like unto the Biblical precept that we must give up the ordinarv sense of life in order to find the higher sense of life. "There are many good-reasons for which pure research should thrive in,universities: in fact, the great universities in Europe are considered natural centers of higher learning and investigation. This function of the universities is not always clearly understood.. in this country even by persons upon ,whom their administration and support are dependent. A teacher in elementary subjects need not necessarily: be an original investigator or deep, scholar. Ί, If he is a 'big brother' to Jiis ,students; lie,,can introduce them successfully ,into the in- tricacies of elementary chemistry or French 1> and leave a beneficial lasting impression upon their forming characters. But a professor of an advanced subject must-be at least a fairly deep scholar if not an original investigator of the first magnitude. Only then can he arouse enthusiasm in his students and open before them wider vistas, that inspire both for knowledge and for action. It useύ to be «n education in itself to sit at the feet of Lord Kelvin or Von Helmholtz. "The situation is this: men of such high caliber sometimes do not find their real power until later in their lives. In the meanwhile the lure of the industrial world, of consulting practice, or textbook writing, too much elementary teaching, hack literary work, lack of laboratory or library facilities, scarcity of research assistants, no appreciation, no place to publish the results of their research, financial worry, and lack of opportunities to travel and to meet fellow workers in other institutions or at conventions—all these factors dull their brilliant powers and bring an irreparable loss to the whole world. These men have no unions, ΰo spokesmen, no influential organs of their own; they valiantly fight their battles each for himself, and they die at their posts meek, faithful, and unheard of. "We hear too much about lack of university buildings, and an impression is sometimes unconsciously conveyed that the principal problem is to get more buildings. But I say that much brilliant pioneer work by men like Bunsen or Faraday has been done with the most meager facilities. A good laboratory tends to encourage purely experimental research at the expense of analytical thinking and deeper interpretation. Curves, tables, experimental data of all kinds, are being published in an alarming quantity by mediocre men who have easy access to laboratory facilities. What we need in this country is more scientific men of prophetic vision, interpreters of the world, men of superior analytic and synthetic power who need no marble halls for their creative output; but such men grow only on a fertile soil, with a background of research and appreciation of culture behind them. These superior men step out of the background of a large number of less gifted investigators and they lean upon those left behind for data, for companionship, and for appreciation and approval. "As far as the higher form of uni- versity life is concerned, that is, research, what we need the most in this country is the correct attitude. Money, facilities, and results will come in due time. This correct attitude may be summarized as follows: "1. Consider all scientific research, no matter how theoretical and remote from practical ends, to be a necessary and important factor in the life of a civilized country and the mainspring of its healthy progress. "2. Eesearch has to be multiplied a hundredfold in all its forms, as is the case in Germany, so .that every young American investigator could easily find his place and problem, and would not feel like the sole survivor of a sunken bark. "3. Do not expect immediate tangible results from a newly established research center, any more than you expect from a recently planted orchard. Take good care of it, and it will bear abundant fruit in due time and for many years to come. "4. Provide living salaries for younger teachers in universities, in order to be reasonably sure of securing a large number of promising young men, who later may develop into research stars of different magnitudes. "5. Do not lay undue emphasis upon experimental facilities and investiga- tions. This country is markedly deficient in high-grade analytical thinkers, capable of sublime generalizations in science. No effort should be spared in seeking out and developing such men, and placing them under working conditions under which they can give to the world their best.'' 661st ORGAN EECITAL Sage Chapel, November 21 Professor JAMES T. QUARLES, Organist. Prelude and Fugue in D minor jί Mendelssohn Andante Stamitz Grande Piece Symphonique Francis The Deserted Cabin Dett Ave Maria Schubert March, from "Lenore Symphony' * __ Eaff Miss IRMELIN NANSEN^ daughter of the famous explorer, Fridtjof Nansen, of Norway, entered Cornell this fall to take a short course in gardening. Her arrival was delayed by the harbor strike in Copenhagen which held up the sailing of the S. S. Stavangerfjord for fifty CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS 101 FELLOWSHIPS IN FRANCE The Society for American Fellowships in French Universities was formed two or three years ago with a view to providing for graduates of American universities, both men and women, the advantages and privileges in France that the Rhodes Scholarships offer in England for young men of several nationalities. As the purpose of Cecil Ehodes was to rnako the Rhodes Scholarships the means of disseminating British culture and British points of view throughout the world, inspiring friendly feeling for Britain and cementing friendships between her and other nations, so this American society hopes to make French culture better known in the United States and to bring the two nations into closer and more sympathetic mutual understanding. The society includes a large group of prominent financiers, educators, statesmen, and scientific and technical men of various divisions of science. Many of them have received part of their training in France, other have resided there for long or short periods for diplomatic, educational, or scientific reasons, and all have a warm admiration for France and a strong belief in the mission of French culture for the rest of the world. By private subscription among themselves and elsewhere they have provided the fund necessary for the endowment of the scheme. The society will offer each year a number of fellowships, not more than twenty-five each year, for advanced study and research in nearly thirty subjects. The fellowships have an annual value of $1,000, are granted for one year, and are reιιe\vable for a second year. The applicants, men or women, must be citizens of the United States, at least twenty years of age, and anust be graduates of a college requiring four years of study for a degree, or graduates of a professional school requiring three years of study for a degree, or must be twenty-four years of age and have spent five years in an industrial establishment in work requiring technical skill. They must also have practical ability to use French books. The secretary of the society is Dr. I. L. Kandel, 576 Fifth Avenue, New York •dity. Applications should reach him not later than January 1 of the year for which the award is desired. Two years ago, as a desirable preliminary to the work it was instituting, the society published a volume on ((Science and Learning in France," which gave a comprehensive survey of French universities, the special lines of work in which the several institutions are best equipped, and the most famous members of their faculties. A copy of this work may be seen in the University Library. WAR HONORS D. S. C. for Farnsworth Ί8 Mr. John Farnsworth, of Washington, D. C., has just received the Distinguished Service Cross which has been awarded posthumously to his son, First Lieutenant Thomas Henderson Farnsworth '18, for extraordinary heroism in action against an armed enemy near Thiaucourt, on September 13, 1918. Farnsworth, with two others, had been sent to bomb German troops in the vicinity of Chambley. They were attacked by a large number of Germans, and he, fatally wounded, and with his observer killed, fought his way back to the American lines, shooting down one Boche plane. He died a few hours after landing his plane, at Jaulny, near Thiaucourt. A notice of his death appeared in the ALUMNI NEWS of October 24, 1918, page 52. Lieutenant Farnsworth was a brother of First Lieutenant John F. Farnsworth ;13, who is with the 51st Infantry at Camp Grant, 111. John Goldhaar '07 Cited John Goldhaar '07 has been cited by both the French and American Governments for his work with the Jewish Welfare Board. The citation follows: ί' Mr. John Goldhaar, of the Jewish Welfare Board, has served in France since July 5, 1918, and as such has performed the functions of executive secretary, displaying aptitude and marked acumen in the fulfillment of his very arduous duties. He has practically unaided been able to organize the activities of the Jewish Welfare Board among the men in the A. E. F., and has in every sense displayed the utmost devotion to his task and loyalty to the men of the A. E. F. and to his country. Not only has he 'made it possible for the Jewish Welfare Board to serve soldiers of the United States, but he( has in every way encouraged and welcomed the soldiers of our allies.'' After being rejected by the United States Army once in May, 1917, and again in July of the same year, Gold- haar finally succeeded in entering the service of the Jewish Welfare Board, and was assigned to Camp Funston, Kansas, in October, 1917. He was the first secretary to go overseas; in France he became overseas field director of the Jewish Welfare Board. He returned -to this -country last August, and was discharged on September 20. His present address is 867 Southern Boulevard, Bronx, New York. E. E. SOCIETY ELECTS Eta Kappa Nu, the honorary society of electrical engineers, has elected nine new members from the senior class in Sibley College: Wesley Bennett Brown, Sidney, N. Y. Harold John Fischer, Buffalo, N. Y.; William Stratton Hadaway, Montgomery, N. Y. Carroll Livingston Homan, Sayville, N. Y. Linus Emerson Kittredge, Lockport, N. Y. George Harold McCarthy, New York City Kirk Mendenhall Keid, Warren, Ohio; William Stouffer Schmidt, Bellefonte, Pa.; Frederic Moore Watkins, Ithaca. A CABARET LUNCHEON Sixty-four attended the usual luncheon of the Cleveland ^club last Thursday at the Hotel Statler. The affair was,known as the "Cornell Haven't Been Luncheon for Those Cornellians Who Want to Be But Haven't Been.77 Bud North, Joe Harris, and the president, W. H, Forbes, starred in leading the singing. There was a short cabaret, and a fine fiveminute talk was given by C. W. Whitehair. TWO LUNCHEONS IN CHICAGO Two Cornell luncheons were held last Wednesday and Thursday in Chicago— the first on the twelfth at the University Club, when Prof. Dexter S. Kimball spoke on "Cornell University and Her Relation to Industry." The following day the usual Thursday luncheon was held at the City Club, when William H. Crumb '95 spoke on "The Development of the Telephone." BOSTON WEEKLY LUNCHEON The Cornell Club of New England is holding a luncheon every Monday at 12.30 in the Cornell Dining Room on the second floor of Hotel Essex, opposite the South Station. On- Monday the speaker was F. A. Fenger '06 and the music was led by William McCarthy '05. 102 C O R N E L L A L U M N I N E W S Published for the Associate Alumni, of Cornell University by the Cornell Alumni News Pubflίΰing- Company, Incorporated. loAaTCo(ifnsnnnhohnduPmuteumuhrrdmmesabebdqleloeliauniynsrenye.cehtnsehdAettmoldi.uyIrf,ecegsnsoduwSutnuseveetWsopreeiltkaneuceNlnemgumykdotebi.t.,vdhei1euersIlw.rsyifsihs)sonuuilWgmcelpcohmuowϊtNobnheewkltedoriiiis;ny.lhblcufe4yoepod0blsurleteabytgtnilhhsiemceirisaaonpystiulduiuelaoegeeabsdnhxsrtiyneaSarudbevxsactrnraicp.et.ioSniFngpolrreiecicegonp$i3ep.s6o0tswtaaeglyveeea1c/r0e,nctpseanyetaascbhlae. hbistcet rsSiispshsetouniauobstlsnsdcuirmniiaspetbdidseouef'ntobshirsraecetnrdoiia.btt sieccreoe nxdtpteoiisnrituarhetaianotctnoe.e fofdefiOcstctthhoesnehsrtouwi nuibulsd-ee payCahbelcekst,o dCroarfntsell anAdlumorndierNs eswhso. uld be made CorrespConordneenlcl eAlsuhmounlid Nbewe s.adItdhraecsasedN—. Y. Managing Editor: R. W. Sailor Ό7 Associate Editors: Clark S. NorthυHp. G'93. Stutz 'B07. S. Monroe '96 Business Manager: R. W. Sailor Circulation Manager: Geo. Wm. Horton News Committee of the Associate Alumni: Nlis.hOHifnf.igceNrWsoCy.oeomsfWp't.0ahn6eMy,aCcooInrnnce'ol9lr8p,AolCruahmtJae.nidri:Pm.NaneDJwoohsdnsPu'0bL8-. WESeaonsotidofrSo,tradPterePsSaidtttreeenrestt;onIRth-aSWceac.,reSNtaar.ilyoY.r,. OTfrfiecae,sur2e2r0; Printed by The Ithacan Entered as Second Class Matter at Ithaca, NVY. Ithaca, N. Y., November 20, 1919 THE NEED OF RESEARCH A small part of the income from the new Endowment Fund will be used, through the payments of salaries to qualified professors, virtually to endow research. A much larger sum of money ought to be used in this way and if the American people could only comprehend the returns on the investment, a far greater amount of time and money would be devoted to this branch of professorial activity. In the first place, experience has shown that in general a person is all the better as a teacher when he is interested in and carries on research work alongside of his teaching duties. Interest in a problem of research keeps him alive and alert, and gives him the proper attitude of mind to be presented and communicated to his pupils. The teacher without interest in research too often comes to regard knowledge as a cut and dried affair; and knowledge thus looked at becomes constantly drier and less enlivening. In the second place, the returns from LITERARY REVIEW research in the way of practical applications of scientific theory to invention Milton's Geographical References and in the way of reconstructing our A Geographical Dictionary of Milton.. ways of thinking can never be com- By Allan H. Gilbert '09. New Haven. puted they run into, figures that no man Yale University Press. 1919. 8vo, pp. can comprehend. viii, 322. Price, .$3.50. Cornell Studies Suppose Newton, instead of working in English, no. iv. out the law of gravitation for himself, It is not generally realized that Mil- had been content to teach Cambridge ton was a geographer of no mean ac- lads what others thought about the force complishments. One may well marvel IIOΛV called gravitation, and about optics, at the number and variety of his, geo- and about mathematics; how long might graphical allusions, for example, when the world have had to wait for the he describes the hosts of Satan, in theory which we now regard as knowl- ''Paradise Lost,'7 without" comprehend- edge. Suppose Darwin, instead of go- ing how full and exact, for his times,, ing on the voyage of the Beagle, had was his knowledge of remote -lands and likewise settled down as a Cambridge peoples. It is when one comes to the tutor; we might still regard evolution subject from the point of view of Dr. as only a crank's dream. Suppose Uncle Gilbert, bringing together what Milton Sam had had no research men to fall thought and said 011 the subject, that back on in 1917; we might still be one perceives how great was the place locked in a life and death struggle with which geography had in his thinking. the Potsdam .gang. Every invention is Dr. Gilbert has thus performed a dis- the product, and sometimes the remote, tinct service to the cause of scholarship,, sometimes the accidental product, of a service which λvill doubtless be in- considerable periods of research, often creased when he publishes the mono- carried on without any clear idea of graph on Miltonic geography originally what the outcome or result will be. intended as an introduction to this dic- Oftentimes, moreover, research in the most unpractical fields has a .direct tionary, but which has swollen to the dimensions of an independent volume. bearing on our daily life. For example, In this work he has brought together the comparative study of the apparently in alphabetical order the place-names in useless subject of folklore has recon- Milton's prose and poetry (except the structed the whole subject of religion addresses of the 'ί Letters of State'' and for the modern world; and this cannot the Biblical quotations of the " Treatise fail toJiave its influence on our atti- on Christian Doctrine") and has tried tude toward the value and right use of "so to explain these names, especially an institution which it has always re- those occurring in the verse, as to reveal quired vast sums to maintain. something of what they meant to the If we pay the professors such a salary as will maintain them without outside work, in most cases they will be oii-ly. too glad to give much or all of their leisure time to research. poet himself.'' To this end the author has collected many quotations, especially and so far as possible from books which the poet actually read. Where this was impossible, Dr. Gilbert has quoted from representative books accessible to the The productivity of Cornell men in poet. . this field has fallen to a dangerously lo\v While dictionaries are proverbially point. Onty by a prompt readjustment dull reading, this is quite out of the of .salaries, such as the new Endowment ordinary run of such books. Many an Fund will make possible, can we hope entertaining hour can be passed by a to see Cornell resume the place which browser in these pleasant paths. For should be hers in the annals pf research example, there are four pages of quo- and discovery. tations from Marco Polo and others about Cambalu (Pekin) two pages on ASSOCIATE ALUMNI DIRECTORS Cathay; three pages on East India; a President Sanderson has called a page and a half on the city of Mexico; meeting of the Board of Directors of the two pages on Moscow; about as much Associate Alumni in Philadelphia for on Naples; over a page on Norumbega, Thanksgiving Day. There will be two in the Penobscot country, whose "men sessions, morning and evening, probably are much affected to hunting; and at the Bellevue-Stratford. The board therefore never give their daughters to will spend the afternoon at the game. any, unless he be well skilled in that CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS 103 game also'' a page and a half on Malabar, with its marvelous banyans and its fig-trees covering "in ground a quarter of a mile7'; two pages on Bizance (Constantinople), with its mosques, especially Sancta Sophia, so interestingly described by Sandys. Occasionally we desire to know more than the compiler tells us. For example, did Milton, connect Elsenora with Hamlet, or Mantua with Virgil, or Lyones with Tristram? What sort of place was Milton 's London $ But these omissions are matters probably of no great relative importance. Dr. Gilbert has wisely omitted etymological studies of the names, since Milton himself was apparently not much concerned with such matters. The book will prove a useful addition to the library of every student and lover of Milton. Books and Magazine Articles Professor Henry L. Rietz, Ph.D. '02, in The American Mathematical Monthly for October writes "On the Teaching of the First Course in Calculus/' and there is comment by the editor of the department of questions and discussions, Professor W. A. Hurwitz. In America for October 11-18 Dean Mary A. Molloy, Ph. D. '07, of the College of St. Theresa publishes an entertaining paper on "Padua and Its Saint," dealing especially with the return of the body of St. Antony from the Vatican at Borne, whither it was removed late in the war for safe keeping. After speaking of Attila, Dante, Galileo, and others and their connections with Padua, she concludes: "Prince and poet, philosopher and warrior, they all have passed and their place knows them no more; but the glory of Antony and his fame are of all time. Once more, despite the shot and shell of the enemy, will his Padua throw wide her gates to welcome him in; once more will resound through the vast aisles of his Basilica ' O Gloriosa Domina!' his favorite hymn, the last words of his dying lips." To The Christian Eegister for November 6 Professor Ealph S. Hosiner contributes an obituary notice of his mother, widow of the late Rev. George Herbert Hosmer, of Dorchester, Massachusetts. Mrs. Hosiner died in Elmira on October 10. The Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science for Sep- tember is devoted to ί ί Modern Manufacturing: a Partnership of Idealism and Common Sense." Walter S. Carpenter, jr., '10, vice-president of E: I. du Pont de Nemours & Company in charge of its development department, contributes a study of 'ί Development— the Strategy of Industry." Joining the company in 1909, Carpenter spent nearly a year as an assistant in the resident engineer's office at two of the company's plants and the next two years in Chile. After giving some time to the investigation of business problems in Europe, he returned to America to join the staff of the development department, becoming in succession assistant director, director, and vice-president in charge. Professor Joseph Q. Adams, jr., Ph. D. '06, writes in Studies in. Philology for October on ' i The Bones of Ben Jonson," discussing the circumstances attending the various disturbances of Joiison 's tomb in Westminster Abbey. Joiison's skull, he believes, is now resting apart from the remainder of the skeleton, '' on the velvet covered top of the leaden coffin of the famous surgeon, John Hunter." OBITUARY Thomas W. Todd '07 Thomas Waring Todd was killed in action on August 28, 1918, after serving for three years with the British Army. Todd was born on April 6, 1882, a son of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Todd, of Baltimore. He attended the Virginia Military Academy, and was a student in Sibley College during the year 1903-4 and the summer of 1904. Ralph C. Lowary Ίl Ralph Cornelius Lowary was killed in an oil explosion in Buffalo, N. Y., 011 November 3, 1917. Lowary was born on October 23, 1888, the son of Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Lowary, of Wellsville, Ohio. He prepared at the Wellsville High School, and entered Cornell in 1907, in the course in arts, receiving the degree of B. Chem. in 1911. T\vo years latter he received the degree of A. M. In his senior year he served as assistant in chemistry. After leaving college, he went to Buffalo, as director of laboratories for the Beaver Board Company, which position he held at the time of his death. He had gone to the plant of the Harris Oil Company to witness the demonstration of the vaperizing process, and was standing near the rear door talking with one of the employes when the explosion occurred. He was knocked down, and died from inhaling the fire. He was unmarried, and lived with his mother at 162 Riverside Avenue, Buffalo. George R-. Nichols, Jr., Ίl George Rosemaii Nichols, jr., died of blood poisoning on October 10 at Lake Forest Hospital, Chicago. Nichols was born. on. May 5, 1890, a son of Mr. and Mrs. George R. Nichols, of Chicago. He prepared at Lewis Institute, Chicago, and Cascadilla School, where he was a student at the time of the Chi Psi fire, in which his brother William H. Nichols '07 was lost. He entered Sibley College in 1907, receiving the degree of M. E. in 1911. He was a member of Chi Psi, the Sunday Night Club, Mermaid, Bench and Board, and the Chicago Club, and served 011 various undergraduate committees. After leaving college he became associated with the American Spiral Pipe Works of Chicago, remaining until 1915, when he left to take an active interest in the Bullock Tractor Company of Chicago. As manager of this company, he successfully developed its business until the outbreak of the war, when he resigned to volunteer his services to the Government, seeking an assignment to the design, purchase, or manufacture of heavy machinery. Because of his unusual professional ability, he soon became a major, and was placed in charge of the production of all gun. carriages for the Ordnance Department in Washington. He made many efforts to get into action overseas, but his requests were denied because of the valuable services rendered in the work in which he was engaged. He received his discharge last spring, and returned to Chicago, where he organized the Unity Manufacturing Company, becoming its president. Under his guidance, the company has already jumped to a profitable production of dies, jigs, and special tools. The Sunday before his death he was in perfect health and played golf all day. The following day he mentioned a broken blister on his foot, but thought nothing of it. The next day blood poisoning had developed, and he was taken to the Lake Forest Hospital, where operations were performed by eminent surgeons in an effort to save his -life. He leaves, besides his parents, his widow, Margaret Billings Nichols, and an infant son. 104 C O R N E L L A L U M N I N E W S INTERCOLLEGIATE NOTES ATTBINOETON the Society of the Claw us to place bronze stars on the window sills of the rooms last occupied by Princeton men who lost their lives in rthe war. Each star will be about eight inches in diameter, and will bear the name and class of the man in whose .honor it was placed. All of them, about •one hundred and forty, will probably be put in position before Christinas. WESTERN EESERVE UNIVERSITY is to •establish at once a graduate course in medicine leading to the degree of A. M., .as well as a number of shorter independent courses for graduate students in medicine. PENNSYLVANIA is about to reorganize her General Alumni Society. Owing to •the war the problem of reorganizing the alumni of the university has been -"hanging fire" for nearly three years. •One feature of the new plan of organization is the elimination of the dues system, and the substitution of a budget, with the money raised by appropriations ίrom the alumni clubs throughout the .country. MAINE has begun the publication of an alumni organ, The Maine Alumnus, which first appeared last month. The University of Maine, the Alumnus announces, has this year 1,187 students, of whom 490 are freshmen. COLUMBIA students in a recent massmeeting overwhelmingly approved of a plan, endorsed by the Columbia trustees earlier in the year, which will compel undergraduates to live either in a dormitory or a fraternity house for at least two years. THE FIRST IROQUOIS INDIAN to take a course at the State College of Agriculture at Cornell, David B. Hill, jr., of ihe Onondaga Indian reservation, registered for the winter course this year. He is a graduate of the Indian school, Onondaga Valley Academy, and studied one year at Carlisle. The Onondaga Indian Welfare Society helped in securing his entrance. THE CORSON BROWNING PRIZE ESSAY subjects for this year have been announced by the Department of English as follows: "Browning's Sophists (e. g. Don Juan, Blougram, Guido Franceschini)"; "Browning's Verse from a Non-Technical ^and Aesithetical Point of View"; and "Browning's Historical Characters in Parleyings with Certain People." ATHLETICS Penn State Wins, 20-0 The football team was defeated by Penn State on Sehόellkopf Field last Saturday by the score of 20 to 0 in the last home game of the season. The defeat was the fourth one this year. The eleven goes to the annual Thanksgiving Day game with four defeats and three victories to its credit. Although the team put up a fine defensive game when State had the ball close 'to the goal line, twice taking the. ball away from its opponents on downs on or inside its own five-yard line, and although, too, it showed occasional flashes of offensive strength, it was no match for the faster, more alert, and more skillful State eleven, which is ranked as one of the best, teams of the East, having defeated Pennsylvania two weeks ago by the score of 10 to 0. The State eleven excelled in knowledge of football but not in gameness or fight. And although Cornell had no chance to win, the team's play in general was superior to that of the week before and it gave evidence that a big rally for the Pennsylvania game is within the realm of probability. The forward pass was the principal factor in Cornell's undoing, State making over one hundred yards by aerial football.1 It was the pass that paved the way for each of the three touchdowns scored. Another big factor in Cornell's defeat was the running of quarterback Eobb who managed to circle Cornell's ends for good gains. It was a play around end that scored the final touchdown in the third period when three times the Cornell line had hurled State back without gain on the one-foot line. The Cornell ends were drawn in, leaving Eσbb an open field for his runs, on which he had good interference. State scored two touchdowns in the second period, one a ten-yard run around by Eobb after a forward pass had taken the ball well into Cornell territory; the other the result of a forty-three-yard run-back of a kick-off b*y Lightner and a series of three passes which brought the ball up to the one-yard line, Hess then making the score. Before the first touchdown was made State reached the three-yard line where a stout-hearted defense by Cornell regained possession of the ball. The team duplicated this fine feat in the third period, taking the ball on downs on the four-yard line. Had Cornell's defense outside of the twenty-yard line been as effective as it was inside, the story of the game might have been different. State's final touchdown was the re- sult of another series of forward passes which took the ball to within one foot of the Cornell goal line. Three times State was hurled back for no gain but on the fourth down Eobb went around right end for a score. Cornell's best offensive exhibition came early in the third period. State was held for downs on Cornell's thirty- five-yard line. A forward pass, Shuler to Finn, made ten yards and another pass^ Shuler to Wilson, perfectly exe- cuted, took the ball to State's twenty- two-yard line. But a third pass failed and Hess intercepted the next pass and broke up the rally. Shiverick's punting and his defensive play were the outstanding features of the game from Cornell's standpoint. On several occasions only his deadly tackling stopped State from what looked like a sure score. The summary: Penn State (2.0) Cornell (0) Brown Cubbage Beck Conover Osborn Henry Higgins Robb Left end Left tackle Left guard : Center Bight guard Right tackle Right end Quarterback Wilson Taylor Straus Horrell Miller Sutton Finn Shiverick Snell Lightner Hess Left halfback Right halfback Fullback Davies Mayer Shuler Touchdowns: Robb (2), Hess. Goals from touchdowns: Cubbage, Conover. Substitutions: Penn State, Griffith for Beck, Edge for Brown, Williams for Robb. Cornell, Hasbrouck for Davies, Lechler for Mayer, Pendleton for Straus, Dodge for Sut- ton, Hoff for Wilson, Reuther for Horrell, Carry for Hasbrouck. Fef eree: James Cooney, Princeton. Um- pire: Fred Murphy, Brown. Linesman: A. W. Risley, Colgate. Time of periods: Fif- teen minutes. Cross Country Championship The Cornell cross country team will compete in the annual intercollegiate championship race to be held Saturday over a six-mile course in Van Cortlandt Park, New York City. Fifteen colleges will participate and they have entered two hundred and thirteen men, although a much smaller number will actually start. The number of contestants, how- CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS 105 •ever, is to be the largest in the history of college cross country running. The Cornell team has improved steadily in the past two weeks and indications are that it will approach closely the high standard set by Cornell runners in similar meets in the past. Seven Cornell men will be entered, and the first five to finish will count in the scoring. Coach Moakley planned to select the team of seven from the following eight runners: Captain T. C. McDermott, J. W. Campbell, J. L. Dickinson, L. E. Wenz, G. H. Stanton, D. P. Avars, C. H. King, and A. L. Lentz. These men have shown the most consistent form in the dual meets and in the recent time trials. The varsity team will leave for New York Thursday and go over the course on Friday. On the same afternoon as the varsity race an intercollegiate freshman cross country race will also be run. Cornell will be represented by a team of seven men, to be chosen from the following eight runners: Eichman, Bonsai, P. Irish, Ward, C. G. Irish, Holmes, Jenkins, and Cadiz. It is interesting to note that the two Irish boys are brothers to Harold E. Irish '16, former Cornell halfmiler and miler, while Cadiz is a brother to A. C. Cadiz '15, former varsity twomiler and cross country runner. Baseball Alumni Meet At the meeting of alumni wearers of the baseball C called by F. O. Afield, jr., '97 last Saturday in Ithaca, twentyone were present. The list included former Coach Hugh Jennings '04, Judge Harry L. Taylor ;88, Jerome Chase '03, Faculty Adviser D. F. Hoy '91, L. D. Clute '13, Frank Clary '17, Abram Bassford '98, Maurice Whinery '02, Charles H. Blair '98, E. P. Young '94, Graduate Manager Eomeyn Berry '04, E. L. Kobertson '01, F. O. Affeld, jr., '97, Howard Cobb '96, Lee Champaign >06, J. H. Harden '19, H. P. Murphy '20, Paul Eckley '17, Harold Cross '20, Arthur Olsen '20, and C. V. P. Young J99. A recommendation was made that a coach be selected from either the American or the National League, if a person with the proper personality could be obtained, and several such persons were •mentioned and their qualifications discussed. The meeting recommended also that the annual game between the alumni and the varsity on Alumni Day, given up in recent years, be resumed this June. Another suggestion was made, that where both teams can agree to it the coaches sit in the grandstand instead of on the players' bench, leaving the initiative in the game to the two captains. An executive committee, charged with drawing up a permanent organization plan, and having charge of the affairs of the organization until its plan is adopted in June, consists of Messrs. Jennings, Blair, Whinery, E. W. Butler '13, and L. A. Corwin '18, with Mr. Affeld as chairman. Athletic Notes The Cornell freshman eleven defeated the Pemi State freshman team last Saturday by the score of 19 to 14, forward passing figuring largely in the victory. The Cornell youngsters scored two touchdowns on passes. A field goal by Carey from the forty-seven-yard line, and a safety completed the scoring. The State freshmen scored two touchdowns. Buffalo school boys captured major honors in the revival of the annual interscholastie cross country race last Saturday over a three-aiid-one-half mile course. Individual honors went to Marvin. Eick, of Erasmus Hall High School, who won first place by less than a yard from Harry Helme of the Lafayette High School of Buffalo. Technical High School of Buffalo won with 39 points. Hutchmson High School of Buffalo was second, Lafayette High School of Buffalo third, Ithaca High School fourth, and Schenectady High School fifth. Three other schools entered individuals, but lacked complete teams. TREMAN LEAVES BANK Eobert H. Treman '78, senior deputy governor of the Federal Eeserve Bank of New York, has lately retired from active service of that institution, in which he has been engaged since July 1, 1916. Mr. Treman has long desired to be relieved of his active work in the bank, which was undertaken only to meet the exigency caused by the prolonged absence of Governor Strong, and later by the problems of war finance arising out of America's participation in the war. On October 2, Mr. Treman renewed his request to the directors of the bank to be relieved of his duties as soon as convenient, and on October 15 they voted to consent to his retirement from active service on November 1, and adopted a minute of appreciation from which we quote the following: "Mr. Treman has now, for more than three years, discharged the duties of the office of senior deputy governor with marked fidelity and distinction. In addition to the general duties of his office he has, from the outset, and during the entire period of war financing, directed the distribution of United States Certificates of Indebtedness in the Second Federal Eeserve District, which led all others, both in volume subscribed and in the wide distribution obtained among member and non-member' banks alike. His written and other contributions to the development of the more general use of trade acceptances have also been notable. "During these years of active service, his character, his qualities of fairness and patience, his good judgment and great ability in dealing with the many important and complex questions which have arisen, have gained for him the complete confidence and high esteem of the bankers of this district, and have been largely instrumental in developing the better understanding that now prevails among member banks of their relation to this bank, and of its policies and operations. '' The directors of the Federal Eeserve Bank wish to express their affection and profound respect for him, sentiments which have grown and developed in these years of close association with him, and to record their acknowledgment and grateful appreciation of the distinguished, unselfish and patriotic service which he has rendered to the bank and to the country." Although Mr. Treman now resumes his residence in Ithaca, he will continue to act as a director of the Federal Eeserve Bank during the remainder of his term. THE FEDERAL AND BELL TELEPHONE COMPANIES are to be merged in Ithaca by February 1, it has been announced, and a single system with automatic 'phones installed. City officials have expressed their intention of fighting an intended raise in rates which would increase the cost of business telephones $1 a month, and that of residential lines fifty cents a month. The switchboard installation is nearly completed. PROF. HENRY N. OGDEN '89 is ONEof a committee formed in the diocese of Central New York for the purpose of conducting a campaign to secure recruits for the ministry. Other members of the committee represent Elmira, Watertown, Eome, and Syracuse* 106 C O R N E L L A L U M N I N E W S ALUMNI NOTES war, came he organized and took overseas the 5th Pioneer Battalion from '92—Professor Michael V. O'Shea, of the University of Wisconsin, was one of £he principal speakers at the meeting of the East Tennessee Educational Association on October 30-November 1, and also spoke before the Tennessee Congress of Parent Teacher Associa- Montreal.'' '93 BL—Arthur L. Andrews has been appointed a member of the newly created Board of Commissioners of the Home for the Feeble-Minded, in the Territory of Hawaii. He lives at 2346 Liloa Eise, Honolulu. tions. '94 AB—Herbert W. Knox is as- '93—A daughter was born on October sistant chief in charge of the welfare 30 to Dr. and Mrs. Arthur W. Booth, of work with the Army of Occupation in Elmira. Mrs.Booth was formerly Miss Coblenz, and has signed for another Jeannette Van Cleef, of Ithaca. '93 CE—The Journal of the Engineering Institute of Canada for September has the following to say about Henry Lordly: "Lieut. Col. H. E. Lordly, C. E., M. E. I. C., who has recently returned from overseas, has been elected a fellow of the Society of Engineers, London. This singular distinction has winter of overseas work. He is doing executive work with the Y. M. C. A., in addition to speaking several times each week. His address is American Y. M. C. A., Coblenz, Germany, A. P. O. 927. '96 PhD—Professor E. Dana Duraiid, of the University of Minnesota, has been appointed economic expert for Poland been granted to Colonel Lordly because and has received a year's leave of abof the engineering work which he has sence from his academic post. Mrs. accomplished overseas while employed with the Imperial Forces. The Society of Engineers has a restricted member- Duraiid and their children will join him in Warsaw. They expect to be abroad only one year. ship and amongst its members are many of the most eminent engineers in the Old Country. The Institute has always had the active support of Colonel Lordly, who has served as honorary librarian for one year, has twice been a member of the nominating committee, and has contributed several papers, the last one being on subaqueous concrete, in which class of work he has had extensive experience. Colonel Lordly has been granted two patents in connection with concrete construction, both of which '97 PhB—Professor Paul S. Peirce, of the State University of Iowa, has Been elected director of the Central Division of the American Eed Cross at /Chicago, and will be absent on leave from the university for one year. '98 PhB—pr. Lee Masteii Francis was elected president of the American Academy of Ophthalmology and OtoE/aryngology at the recent annual meeting in Cleveland. His address is 636 Delaware Avenue, Buffalo, N. Y. have been successful. One of the patents '00—Floyd P. Johnson is in the pro- is for a concrete pile with a jetting and duction department of E. I. du Pont de sucking device, and the other is for a Nemours land Company, Wilmington, Del. concrete block cast around, sand cores. He lives at 400 West Twentieth Street. Before going overseas OAnel Lordly was for many years in charge of the rebuilding of the Lachine Canal, and will in future engage in consulting engineering practice in Montreal. 'Colonel Lordly has had extensive military experience. He is the possessor of both the Long Service Auxiliary Medal and the Officers' Long; Service Decoration., tne latter be- ing awarded while on service overseas. He has been a member of the Executive Council of the Province of Quebec Rifle Association and has won the GovernorGeneral's Medal and the LieutenantGovernor's Medal for the Special Aggregates Competition. Before the war Όl ME; Όl AB—Robert W. Eiley, three-year-old son of Professor Howard W. and Julia Mack Eiley, died at the City Hospital on October 19, of pneumonia. The. bodv. was taken to Eochester for cremation. '01 AB—Dr. Louis C, Karpinski has Been promitted from associate professor to professor of mathematics at the University of Michigan. '03 MD—Dr. James K. Quigley has changed his office address to 303 Alexander Street, Eoehester, N. Y. His residence remains the same, 400 Westminster Eoad. Oolonβl Lordly was in 16 CE—Arthur F. Perry, jr.,'has received his discharge from the service, and is now in the engineering "department of the Texas Company, Port 108 C O R N E L L A L U M N I N E W S Arthur, Texas. He lives at 1901 Procter Street.. '16 BS—A son, Harold E., jr., was born on August 28 to Mr. and Mrs. Harold E. Haslett, Lincoln Avenue, Amherst, Mass. Haslett is Government sheep specialist for the State of Massachusetts, with headquarters at the Massachusetts Agricultural College, '17 AB—Mrs. Catherine Chappelle, of Hόboken, N. J., has announced the engagement of her daughter, Euth Chappelle '17, to Dwight O. Platt, of Idaho Falls, Idaho. Since her graduation, Miss Chappelle has been teaching in the Junior High School at Hoboken. Mr. Platt is a graduate of Oregon University; since receiving his discharge from the Navy, he has been engaged as an engineer with the France-Canada Steamship Company. '17 ME—Ivan Buys has returned from France and is now with Orville Buys and Company, booksellers and stationers, 814 Boss Avenue, Wilkinsburg, Pa. '17 LLB—Allen A. Atwood of Minneapolis, Minn., was sworn in as an attorney on September 16, after passing his bar examination. He will practice law in St. Cloud, Minn., where he has been in the office of Senator B. B. Brower. '18 BS—Stanley J. Angell was married on October 22 to Miss Vinnie M. Eifenbark, of East Masonville, N. Ϋ. He is managing his father's farm at Mt. Upton, N. Y. '18 BS—Harold J. Karr is with the Allied Machinery Company of America, 51 Chambers Street, New York. >18—After leaving Cornell, Colin G. Welles entered the graduate, school of the University of Wisconsin, and is now working for his master's degree in plant FOREST CITY LAUNDRY E. M. MERRILL 209 NORTH AURORA STREET Interest the Prep School Boys in Your Alma Mater Send Pennants, Pictures, Banners to these future Cornellians and prospects. We will mail them direct to their addresses. Rothschild Bros. Ithaca Higgins' Drawing Inks Eternal Writing Ink Engrossing Ink Taurine Mucilage Drawing Board Paste Liquid Paste Office Paste Vegetable Glue, Etc. ARE THE FINEST AND BEST INKS AND ADHESIVES Emancipate yourself from the use of corrosive and ill-smelling inks and adhesives and adopt the Higgins inks and adhesives. They will be a revelation to you, they are so sweet, clean, and well put up and withal so efficient. At Dealers Generally. CHARLES M. HIGGINS & CO.. Mfrs. 271 NINTH STREET, BROOKLYN, N. Y. Branches: Chicago, London pathology. He is also graduate assistant in bacteriology under Dr. William H. Wright, who was a graduate student at Cornell in 1915-16. Welles's address is 1717 Eegent Street, Madison, Wis. '18—Wade L. Bascom was discharged' from the service at Camp Sherman, Ohio,, on July*26; he is now engaged in the wholesale egg business at Youngstownr Ohio, and lives at Farmdale, Ohio. '18 ME—Mr. and Mrs. Harry L. Johnson, of New York, .have announced the engagement of their daughter,. Eleanor Wendell Johnson, to William E. Blewett, jr., of Glen Eidge,'N. J. . '18—James A. Meissner has gone to* Birmingham, Ala., where he has taken a position as practice man in the mills of the Tennessee Coal, Iron, and Bailroad Company, to learn the steel business. '18—Malcolm H. Tuttle is in the engineering department of the Diamond T" Motor Car Company, 4517 West Twentysixth Street, Chicago. He lives at 1515West Monroe Street. '18—In addition to receiving the Distinguished Service Cross and the Croix de Guerre with palm, as noted in a recent issue of the ALUMNI NEWS, Lieut. Lee S. Hultzen has been made a chevalier in the Legion of Honor. He has been transferred to U. S. Army General Hospital No. 2, Fort McHenry, Md. '19 AB—Miss Helen M. Day is teaching mathematics and ancient history in the Avon, N. Y., High School. '19 AB—Miss Helene G. Harbers was married on July 15 to B. T. Harris,. lately of the Air Service; they live at Apartment D-l, 4878 Magnolia Avenuer Chicago. Harris received his ground school training at the Cornell Ground School. '19 ME—Frederick W. Cuffe was married on August 6 to Miss Marie A. Graham, of Toronto; they are making their home at 642 Euclid Avenue, Toronto. Cuffe is assistant to the manager of Motor Sundries, Ltd., of Toronto. '19 BS—Dana G. Card has returned to the University to take graduate work. He lives at 215 Fall Creek Drive, ITHACA Library Building 125 N. Ttoga Street CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS A FULL LINE of Drugs, Rexall Products, and Toilet Articles. KLINE'S PHARMACY 114 N. Aurora St., Ithaca. Business Is Good You CAN AFFORD to come to Ithaca for that suit or Tuxedo. Write for samples. Kohm £&> Brunne 220 E. State St. Jewelers R, A. Heggie &. Bro. Co* 136 E. State Street Ithaca, N. Y. We have a full stock of Diamonds, Jewelry, Art Metal Goods, etc., and make things to order. 4'Songs of Cornell" "Glee Club Songs" All the latest "stunts" and things musical Lent's Music Store Ithaca, New York I have leased a store downtown and have taken my son into partnership. My merchant tailoring business, conducted for years under the name Hyman Goldenberg will be known as Goldenberg & Son 111 N. Aurora St., Ithaca Wanzer &L Howell The Grocers Quality-- Service NOTICE TO EMPLOYERS The Cornell Society of Civil Engineers maintains a Registration Bureau. Complete records of 2,000 Cornell men are on file. Employers may consult these records without charge. If preferred, we will recommend a man to fill pour needs. REGISTRATION BUREAU 165 Broadway New York City Eoom 2601—Mr. Harding Phone Cortland 4800 Lang's Palace Garage is situated in the center of Ithaca 117-119 East Green Street It is absolutely fireproof. Open day and night. Commodious and fully equipped. A full stock of tires and ubes and everything in the line of sundries Official Automobile Blue Book Garage William H. Morrison '90 Ernest D. Button '99 The ail-year-'round soft drink Fellowship—in college or out of it—flourishes best with good food and wholesome drink* Ice-cold Bevo—unexcelled among beverages in purity and healthfulness—is most satisfying as a drink by itself or a relish with food that makes a happier repast* ANHEUSER-BUSCH ST. Louis It must be Ice Gold ήlTΠTTΠTTΠWΠ Ί'ΪM^fφΠM CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS We prefer to send you a money order Your address before Dec. 1st We first pay the dividend to the students in Ithaca—November twenty-second is the last day for that. Then we begin mailing the out-of-town dividends. Have we your address for the 1918-19 dividends ϊ "Concerning Cornell" uConcerning Cornell" will be the Christmas book of the year. This year the Semi-Centennial edition is available which has an added chapter. The regular cloth-bound edition sells for $2.60, leather $3.60, and Semi-Centennial $4160. Postage is paid by us. CORNELL CO-OP. SOCIETY MORRILL HALL ITHACA, N. Y. . , . and at the Marlborough-Blenheim Atlantic City oΛ fact: At the fashionable Marlborough-Blenheim— in the very heart of America's most famous seaside resort, no other cigarette can touch Fatima's sales, just another proof that men who can afford the most expensive straight Turkish brands prefer this moderate-priced "just-eiiough-Turkish" blend. FATIMA A Sensible Cigarette Fαtimα contains more Turkish than any other Turkish blend \cigarette.