CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS VoL XI. No 18 Ithaca, N. Y., February 3, 1909 Price 10 Cents INSTRUCTORS' SALARIES. Board of Trustees Increases BothMinimum and Maximum. In the first announcement of the recent action of the Board of Trustees in regard to the salaries of instructors in the University, it was stated that the maximum salary in that grade had been raised twenty per cent, or to $1,200. A transcript of the minutes shows that more than this was done. The salary payable to an instructor on appointment has been increased from $750 to $800. On his reappointment an instructor's pay may be increased to $1,000, and after he has served two years at this salary his compensation may be increased to $1,200 a year. At the meeting of the Board of Trustees recently held in New York city the following resolutions were adopted in regard to the salaries of instructors. (1) That the salary of instructors on probation be raised from $750 to $800. (2) That the Executive Committee be authorized and empowered on the nomination of the President to appoint a reasonable proportion of instructors who have had annual appointments for at least two years at $1,000 a year to instructorships for a term of two years at a salary of $1,200 a year. Branch of the A. S. M. E. The American Society of Mechanical Engineers recently decided to permit the formation of branches at universities. A Cornell branch is now in process of organization. Under the plan of the society the government of the branch is to be in the hands of an executive committee and an honorary president, all of whom are to be members of the faculty and members of the parent society. These officers are chosen by their colleagues. The students form their own organization and elect their own officers, and their connection with the larger body is maintained through the executive committee. All papers published by the American Society of Mechanical Engineers are to be received by the members of the local branch, and the society is to have the privilege of publishing any papers presented by the branch organization. The purpose is to get prospective engineers interested in the work of the society while they are yet undergraduates. Professors Kimball, Barnard and Diederichs have been chosen to constitute the executive committee. Professor Carpenter has been elected honorary president and Professor Hirshfeld secretary. A Good Word from Horticulturists. The Western New York Horticultural Society, which recently held a meeting in Rochester, paid a tribute to 'Cornell's work in the following resolution: "That the members of the Western New York Horticultural Society most highly appreciate the co-operation given that society in its annual meetings by Cornell University and the Geneva Experiment Station, in their valuable contributions, both in the exhibits that are made, showing the results of long and painstaking experimental work, which individual fruit growers cannot well do, and in the educational support, and contributions that are given from the platform, and in the general discussions of the sessions of the annual meetings." Lectures by the Rev. Hugh Black. On five days of this week and five days of next the Rev. Hugh Black, of the Union Theological Seminary, New York, will lecture before the College of Arts and Sciences. The subjects of the two series are "Studies in a Hebrew Prophet" and "Reconstruction of Theology." The lectures are delivered at 5 o'clock in Room B, Goldwin Smith Hall. Mr. Black was the University preacher last Sunday and he will occupy the Sage Chapel pulpit again next Sunday. JUNIOR WEEK. Many Dances Held—The Masque Does Well with "Oolong." Owing to warm weather, which prevented the holding of the Ice Carτ nival on Tuesday evening, the first event of Junior Week was the Masque's production of 'Oolong*' in the Lyceum theater on Wednesday evening. This comic opera was a revision and enlargement of "The President of Oolong," by Romeyn Berry '04, which was presented by the Masque three years ago. The cast was as follows: Chang Lee, billionaire tea merchant of the island of Oolong, J. Sloat Fassett jr., '12; Chinga Lee, his daughter, J. R. Bolgiano, '09 Mimi, her maid, O. G. Miller Ί l How Mutch, Chang's general manager, F. D. Burnet Ί l ; Ting Foo, foreman in the tea fields, H. 0. Walter '12; John Rogers, 'Oj., who is shipwrecked on the island of Oolong and founds a university there of which he makes himself president Norman C. Mason '09; George Washington Jackson, dean of the u n i v e r s i t y , E . S. W h e e l a n Ί l ; Regi- nald O'Hoolihan, registrar, T. R. Cox Ί l ; Billy White 'OJf, G. F. Hewitt, jr., '10; Prince Joy Boy, a royal personage, W. M. Rose Ί O ; Miss Brewster, secretary to President Rogers, F. M. Callahan '12. There were tea girls, coolies, stenographers, clerks, sailors and retainers. Morris L. Buchwalter, jr., '09, made a hit with a "Salome" dance, and the work of the leading comedians was very good. The songs, in which the chorus had been well drilled, pleased the large audience. After the play came the sophomore cotillion in the Armory. The concert of the Musical Clubs took place in the Lyceum on Thursday evening and was followed by dances at the Alpha Delta Phi, Delta Kappa Epsilon and Phi Delta Theta houses. On Thursday afternoon there were receptions at the Delta Phi and Delta Tau Delta houses and a tea dance at the Kappa Sigma house. 206 CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS On Wednesday the members of the Sun and Widow boards gave "breakfasts" for their guests, and on Wednesday and Thursday there were theatricals at the Psi Upsilon house. Friday night saw the event of the week, the Junior Promenade in the Armory, and on Saturday evening the postponed Ice Carnival was held on Beebe Lake. In an exhibition hockey game the freshmen defeated Cascadilla School, 4 to 2. Persons who have heard the Musical Clubs for several years past said that the concert on Thursday evening was the best the clubs had ever given. The Glee Club sang several new numbers, including Dudley Buck's "Hark, the Trumpet Calleth." Aeneas Duclos '11 and M. H. Landis '08 had solos. The Mandolin Club introduced a bass viol in addition to several violins. This, from the Sun, has a familiar sound: "It is with genuine regret that we bid our fond farewells to our guests of Junior Week. The world has been the brighter for their coming and the memories of their visit will brighten many weary days and nights of study. Without being ungracious to our visitors of former years, may we not say that those of the past week have seemed a bit more charming, and the time for parting is correspondingly more unwelcome. And may we repeat the wish expressed at the beginning that our guests may have learned to know something of the genuine spirit and devotion to Alma Mater; that they may have learned to love her even a fraction as much as we do. With that the week has indeed been worth while and we will await with impatience the time when we shall meet again." Alumni Dinners. Boston, Friday, February 5, 7 o'clock, Copley Square Hotel. Syracuse, Saturday, February 6, 7 o'clock, Country Club. Extra cars leave Syracuse at 6:30 o'clock. Philadelphia, Wednesday evening, February 17, Kugler's restaurant. Last Saturday was registration day for the second term, and instruction was resumed on Monday morning. SANITARY SCIENCE. Thirty Lectures to Be Given in the Course During the Second Term. Announcement is made of the con- tinuation through the second term of the course of lectures on sanitary science and public health. This course was begun this year and twenty-two lectures were given dur- ing the first term by members of the faculty, officers of the State Department of Health and others. Thirty lectures are scheduled for the second term. The lecturers and their subjects are as follows: February 4 and 9—Food adulterations and their detection, Professor Chamot. February 11—Effect of dairy processes on pathogenic bacteria and their transmission to human beings, Professor Stocking. Febuary 16—Dairy hygiene, Professor Publow. February 18—The need of more attention to health in the public schools, W. H. Burnham, professor of pedagogy, Clark University. February 23—Food adulteration, L. J. Vance, Food Expert, State Department of Health. February 25—Statistics relating to early tuberculosis, A. H. Garvin, M. D., superintendent of the New York State Hospital for Incipient Tuberculosis, Raybrook, N. Y. March 2—Waste of wealth in New York State from preventable illness and death, John H. Pryor, M. D., member of Tuberculosis Advisory Board, State Department of Health. March 4—Local quarantine measures, D. M. Totman, M. D., Health Officer, Syracuse, N. Y. March 9—Relation of alcohol to the public health, H. C. Jackson, Physiological Chemist, State Department of Health. March 11—Insects and the transmission of diseases, Professor MacGillivray. March 16—The medical side of the negro problem, C. W. Stiles, United States Marine Hospital Service. March 18—The history of therapeutics, G. W. Goler, M. D., Health Officer, Rochester, N. Y. March 23 — Value of animal wastes in agricultural processes, Professor Cavanaugh. March 25—The betterment of agricultural conditions, Director Bailey. March 30—Transmission and prevention of some infectious diseases, Herbert D. Pease, director of the State Hygienic Laboratory, State Department of Health. April 1—To be announced later. April 15—The law of nuisances and its relation to public health, Professor Hayes. April 20 and 22—Sanitary science, Professor Ogden. April 27—Water nitration, G. C. Whipple, consulting engineer, New York city. April 29 — Water purification. Theodore Horton, Consulting Engineer, State Department of Health. May 4—Principles of sewage purification, George W. Fuller, consulting engineer, New York city. May 6—Sewage disposal, H. B. Cleveland, First Assistant Engineer, State Department of Health. May 11—Limnology, Professor Needham. May 13—Occupational diseases and their prevention, John Williams. State Commissioner of Labor. May 18—Modern housing, Professor Martin. May 20—Heating and ventilation. Professor Carpenter. May 25—Agricultural economics. Professor Lauman. May 27—General municipal sanitation, Walter Bensel, Sanitary Superintendent, New York city. The New Vocational Courses. Groupings of courses designed t < guide students in preparing for the vocations of teaching, organized philanthropy and business management have been arranged by the facility of the College of Arts and Sciences for juniors and seniors in that college, and these groups are printed in the University Register for 1908-9. They are arranged in accordance with the rule which requires a student in the college to choose at the beginning of his junior year a certain group, such, for instance, as History and Political Science, Modern Languages, or a natural science, and to complete in the group thus chosen at CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS 207 least twenty hours of work during his junior and senior years. In the new course for teachers the work mapped out for the junior and senior years consists of twenty hours in Education and Philosophy and twenty hours in the subject the student expects to teach. The other two courses are as follows: COURSES PREPARING FOR THE VOCA- TION OF ORGANIZED PHILAN- THROPY. First Second term, term. During the junior year: Population Statistics... 3 — Municipal Government in the United States — 2 Philanthropy 33 Theory of Evolution. . . . 1 1 History of Philosophy. . 3 3 Total 10 9 First Second term. term. During the senior year: Political Institutions. 3 — Comparative Politics. . . — 3 Research in Philanthropy 2 2 General Ethics 3— Moral Ideas and Prac- tice — 3 Elements of Law 33 Total Π 11 COURSE PREPARING FOR T H E VOCATION OF BUSINESS MANAGEMENT. First Second term. term. During junior year: Financial History of the United States 22 Geography of North America (or of Eu- rope) 22 Population Statistics... 3 — Commerce and Commer- cial Policies —3 Railway Transportation 2 2 Problems of Labor 2— Total Π During the senior year: Money, Credit and Banking 3 General Ethics 3 Moral Ideas and Prac- tice — Public Finance 2 Corporations and Trusts 2 Elements of Law 3 9 3 — 3 2 2 S Total IS 13 CIVIL ENGINEERS' DINNER. Addresses by Members of the Faculty— Plan for a Clubhouse. The fourth annual banquet of the Cornell Society of Civil Engineers was held on Friday evening, January 22, at the Hotel St. Denis, Broadway and Eleventh street, New York. The attendance was larger than ever before, there being 129 present. The Colonial dining room was filled almost to overflowing. The speakers sat at a long table at the north end of the room and the remaining guests were seated at three long parallel tables. The tables were decorated with pink carnations. James H. Edwards '88, who is president of the society and is a trustee of the University, introduced the speakers. In the absence of Dean Haskell, Professor C. L. Crandall '72 answered to the toast "Lincoln Hall— Its Possibilities." He briefly sketched the wonderful growth in the attendance at the College of Civil Engineering in the last five years and the efforts that had been made to care for this increase. He related that, when the college secured the use of all the space in Lincoln Hall, it wasfelt that the question of room was solved for some years, but now, he said, thinsrs were as crowded as ever. He told of plans that had been made to provide still further accommodations. Professor H. N. Ogden '89 outlined the scope of sanitary engineering and said that it was just in its infancy. He said that he hoped to see the course made stronger at Cornell. He spoke at considerable length on the necessity of specializing and said that the profession of civil engineering had now got sb broad that a student could not hope in the four years given for the course to become proficient, from the standpoint of a student, in all branches of the profession. Professor D. A. Molitor spoke on the subject of engineering education. He maintained that this training, especially from its relation to mathematics, both pure and applied, furnished an admirable liberal education. This was the first opportunity a large number of the alumni had of becoming acquainted with Professor Molitor. W. R. Ourand 309 was the next speaker. He told how hard it was at the present time for the students to become acquainted with one another and how hard to maintain the college spirit. He felt that a clubhouse near the campus for the students in Lincoln Hall would be of great benefit to the college. The last speaker of the evening was Albert J. Himes '87, of Cleveland, Ohio. He spoke in a very interesting way of the debt that the alumni owe the college and owe one another. The keynote of his talk was that the alumni should pay their debts, and to do this, he said, they should help the University and one another in every way possible. C. E's. Want a College Clubhouse. Undergraduates of the College of Civil Engineering are trying to work up a co-operative plan for acquiring a college clubhouse. The members of the college faculty are giving the movement all the assistance they can. What the civil engineers hope to do is to obtain a house which may be used for a dining hall. They do not hope to provide in this way for all the 569 students in the college, but would be content with a small beginning. What they want is a nucleus for better acquaintance and more fellowship among the students of the college. It is proposed, if a suitable house can be obtained, to form a club and provide a gathering place, with board for as many members as can be accommodated. The primary object of the scheme is not to run a boarding house but to bring the undergraduates together socially, but it is believed that a student commons, even on a small scale, would be the best means of reaching this end. There are in the college, of course, many fraternity men, and they would not be attracted to a college boarding house, but they would welcome a better opportunity to mix with their fellows and they are as much interested in the project as any. There is a building in College avenue (Huestis street) near the Cascadilla bridge that was erected for a student dining hall a few years ago. It has been closed for some time past. The civil engineers are negotiating for a lease of this house, and if they 208 CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS get it they will be able to provide a second, 178; Michigan third, 93, and dining hall for about a hundred of Johns Hopkins fourth, 76. DOINGS IN ATHLETICS. their number and a place large enough for social meetings for many- Officers Elected in Rochester. At the annual meeting of the Cornell Club of Rochester, held recently, the following officers were elected for the ensuing year: President, James E. Gleason '92 vice-president, Nicholas J. Weldgen '05 secretary, John H. Agate '03 treasurer, Ralph H. Gorsline '89. The following governors were re-elected, to hold office for two years: Leon Stern '89, William O. Boswell y98, James R. Davy '94, John W. Vickery '95, Edward Harris, jr., '00, and William B. Zimmer '03. Orrin Barker '07 was also elected to the board for two years in the place of G. Townley Fries '02, whose term of office expired. A. E. Tuck '98 having resigned as a member of the board, N. J. Weldgen '05 was elected to fill the vacancy. Though some members have been lost during the year by death or resignation, the membership of the club, because of the admission of new members, is the same as a year ago —seventy-five. A University Club is being talked of in Rochester, and present indications are that something will soon be done which will insure its early organization. The Cornell Club men are taking an active part in promoting the University Club scheme. For the coming year the club will continue to occupy its quarters at 235 Main street, East. "Yale has the greatest number of graduates in the pulpit, 85. Harvard is next with 58. Wesleyan, Connecticut, is third with 40, and Princeton Theological Seminary stands fourth with 36. "In the production of successful men of letters Harvard again heads the list, 133 after which come in order Yale, 91; Michigan, 32; Princeton, 31. " I t is curious to find that Harvard and Yale seem to have a monopoly on capitalists, both universities standing far above the others in this respect. Harvard, 48 Yale, 46 Columbia, 22; Princeton, 12. "The greatest number of governors, diplomats and other national officials are trained at Harvard, 29. The other institutions rank considerably below. Yale, 16; Columbia, 13 University of Virginia, 11. "Statistics regarding the favorite alma mater of eminent physicians and surgeons are rather surprising. Columbia, with its department of the College of Physicians and Surgeons, heads the list with 119 graduates. The University of Pennsylvania is second, 104; Harvard is third, 75; while Yale and the Bellevue Hospital Medical College tie for fourth place, each institution showing 35 graduates. "In the lines of research and special investigation, Harvard is in advance, having 133 successful graduates in these branches. Columbia is second, 80; Yale third, 50; Cornell and Johns Hopk'ns are equal Development of "Minor Sports." Another change has been made in the organization of the so-called minor sports at the University. They are now under the direction of the graduate manager of athletics. These sports are lacrosse, tennis, cricket, association football, golf, hockey, basketball, wrestling and fencing. Until within a few years they were independent of one another. About three years ago an association was formed, under control of a body called the Minor Sports Council, on the plan of the Athletic Council, with representation from each of the minor branches. This combination was brought about to insure more careful management and to give the weaker branches access to any surplus of the stronger and more remunerative members of the association. Last fall the graduate manager of athletics was made treasurer of the minor sports, and now a further step toward the unification of all branches of athletics has been taken by making him graduate manager of the minor sports, his office in relation to them being the same now as to the four major branches—football, baseball, rowing and track athletics—subject in the one case to the Minor Sports Council as he is in the other to the Athletic Council. With all these branches of athletics and the Musical Clubs and the Masque, there are now fifteen varieties of student "activity" managed in the office on Tioga street. College Men of Eminence. for fourth, S9 "The statistics in regard to engi- Trip of the Hockey Team. The Yale Daily News has com- neers are also striking. Here A short trip was taken by the 'var- piled a summary of the respective Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute has sity hockey team last week. Games numbers of graduates of the several the greatest number of prominent were played with Williams and the universities of the country who have men, 35; Cornell and Boston Tech. Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute at attained eminence in their profes- are second with 25 graduates each; Albany and with Yale at New York. sions, basing the standard of emi- Yale third, 22, and Harvard fourth, The team lost all three games, but in nence upon mention in "Who's Who" 21." for 1908-1909. Says the News: only one was the winner's score comparatively large. Williams won by 8 "Harvard has the largest number The centennial of Lincoln's birth, goals to 1. The score in the R. P. of graduates distinguished in any one February 12, will be celebrated at I. game was 3 to 2. Yale won at the line—208 lawyers. In the same vo- Cornell University by an address to St. Niςholas rink on Saturday even- cation Columbia stands second with be given by Frank S. Black, for- ing by 6 goals to 3. The Cornell 132, while Yale and Michigan are merly Governor of the State of New players were Captain Yohe, Match- third, each having 108. The Univer- York. There will be no interruption neer, Ford, Smith, Magner, Jones sity of Virginia stands fourth with of University exercises on that day and Vincent, with Crassweller as 63 successful lawyers to its credit. except for the hour of Mr. Black's substitute. "In the training of educators Har- address, which will probably be from In the game at New York, most of vard also leads, with 204; Yale is twelve to one o'clock. the critics said, Cornell showed the CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS 209 greater speed and Yale the better team work. In the first half the teams drove goals alternately and the half ended with the score 2 each. Yale made 4 and Cornell only 1 in the second. Two of Cornell's goals were scored by Magner and the third by Vincent. Cornell suffered ήve penalties and Yale one. Carleton Dederer '04 was one of the goal umpires. The schedule for the rest of the season follows: Dartmouth at Hanover, N. H., Friday, February 5 Harvard at Cambridge, Mass., Saturday. February 6; West Point at West Point, Saturday, February 13; Amherst at New York city, Monday, February 15. After the Cornell team's series of three games with Pennsylvania at Cleveland, the Cleveland Plain Dealer said: "The Cornell seven gave an example of real hockey iln the games with Pennsy that it would be well for the local players to emulate. Those games were rough, but it was of the rough kind that fans enjoy. Not a Cornell player was guilty of a dirty, deliberate trick, and their victories were merited." Some 'Varsity Schedules. Announcement has been made of a dual track meet between the Varsity teams of Princeton and Cornell, to be held on Percy Field on May 15 next. Only two events have yet been scheduled for the indoor season of the track team. These are the Boston Athletic Association meet in Boston on Febuary 6 and the Columbia University meet in New York city on February 13, to each of which a Cornell relay team will be sent. The wrestling team's schedule is as follows: Princeton at Ithaca, Friday, February 12; Pennsylvania at Ithaca, Saturday, February 27; Yale at New Haven, Friday, March 5 Columbia at New York, Friday, March 12 Intercollegiate at New Haven, Friday, March 19; Amateurs of America at New York, Saturday, April 3. In a rough game the Varsity basketball team was defeated by the Columbia University five in the Armory on Saturday afternoon by a score of 47 to 20. Kiendl scored 28 of Columbia's points, throwing twelve goals from the field and four from fouls. With Coach Coogan in charge, the 'varsity baseball squad began indoor practice in earnest on Monday afternoon. Something may be told next week about the outlook so far as material is concerned. Faculty Notes. Dr. Graham Lusk, who has been appointed professor of physiology in the Cornell University Medical College, succeeding Dr. Austin Flint, retired, has been since 1898 professor of physiology in the University and Bellevue Hospital Medical College, a department of New York University. He was born in Bridgeport, Conn., on February 15, 1866, the son of Dr. William T. Lusk. He was educated in private schools and graduated in the course in chemistry at Columbia University in 1887. After that he studied physiology in Munich for four years, and from 1891 till 1898 he taught physiology in the medical department of Yale University, where he took the degree of Master of Arts. He is a member of the American Physiological Society and a fellow of the Royal Society of Edinburgh, belongs to the University and the Century clubs in New York city and is librarian of the Society for Experimental Biology and Medicine. Among his writings have been many contributions to medical journals. In the American Committee for the Seventh International Congress of Applied Chemistry, which meets in London from May 27 to June 2 next, are Professors Dennis, Chamot and Bancroft of the department of chemistry and Dr. Graham Lusk of the Medical College. Professor Bancroft is chairman of the section of electrical and physical chemistry. The January number of the Transactions of the American Mathematical Society contains a paper by Professor J. S. Hutchinson on "The hypergeometric functions of N variables," and a paper by Professor Virgil Snyder on "Surfaces derived from the cubic variety having nine double points in four dimensional space." OBITUARY. MRS. GEORGE L. BURR. Mrs. George Lincoln Burr (Martha Alexander Martin) died in the Ithaca City Hospital on Sunday afternoon, January 31, after an illness of several days. The body was taken to her former home in Virginia for burial. Mrs. Burr was a student at the University in the years 19001902 and 1905-1907, taking the degree of A. B. in 1902 and the degree of A. M. in 1906. She was married to Professor Burr on August 20. 1907. B. H. GUILBEAU. Braxton Honore Guilbeau, professor of zoology at the Louisiana State University, Baton Rouge, died on January 16. He was a graduate of the same institution of the class of 1901. In 1903-4 he was a special student in entomology at Cornell, and he returned in 1907 for another year of work here. For several years he had been director of the Gulf Biologic Station. The current number of Science says of him: 'Owing to heavy university work, he was unable to carry on as much research work as he was ambitious of doing. In summer work at Cornell he investigated the froth production of the 'Spittle Insects/ on which he published a paper in the American^ Naturalist for December, 1908. At the time of his death he had been engaged for several months investigating the parasites of Plusia brassica, confirming the results of French investigators as to the development of many insects from a single egg. Unfortunately this work was left in such a stage that it will be impossible to bring it together for publication." 9 A Correction. By a typographical error the account of the Trustees' meeting in the last number was made to say that the tuition fee in the College of Agriculture had been raised from $125 to $150. The change was made in the College of Architecture. As a general thing tuition in the College of Agriculture is free. Plans are now being drawn in the office of the State Architect for the new barns of the College of Agriculture. 210 CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS SUBSCRIPTION—$3.00 Per Year Published weekly during the college year and monthly in July and August forty issues annually. Issue No. 1 is published the first Wednesday of the college year, in October, and weekly publication (numbered consecutively) continues through Commencement week. Issue No. 40, the final one of the y«ar, is published the last Wednesday in August and contains a complete index of the entire volume. Single copies, ten cents each. Foreign postage, 40 cents per year. Subscriptions payable in advance. Should a subscriber desire to discontinue his subscription, notice to that effect should be sent in before its expiration. Otherwise it Is assumed that a continuance of the subscription is desired. Checks, drafts and orders should be made payable to the Cornell Alumni News. All correspondence should be addressed— CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS, Iitbaca, N. Y. Office: 110 N. Tioga st. WOODFORD PATTERSON, Editor. GEORGE C. PIERCE, Business Manager. JOSEPH C. SIBLEY, J H . , Assistant Business M inaj er. Entered as Second-Class Matter at Ithaca, N.Y. Ithaca, N. Y., February 3, 1909. ROUNDING UP THE HERMITS. Probably the undergraduate civil engineers at Cornell are no more in need of opportunities for fellowship than are the students of any other college here. The reason they are more interested than some others in obtaining a clubhouse for themselves may be that they have had a better means of measuring their deprivation. Every summer the junior civil engineers go into camp for two weeks of field work. A large proportion of the men are comparative strangers to one another when this period begins, but after two weeks of life in the informal atmosphere of the camp, with dinner together in the big tent every evening, the class has made the acquaintance of itself, and the men find out how much they have missed by not getting together more in their earlier years. In other colleges where the number of students is large, as in Sibley and in Goldwin Smith Hall, this absence of communion has been noticed and deplored. It was for this reason that the Sibley museum was converted into a smoking and reading room for students. The College of Agriculture, in as many ways as it may, encourages commingling among its undergraduates. In Lincoln Hall the senior class, which has acquired wisdom and cohesion in the camp, takes the lead in movements for the betterment of the students. The chief benefit to be derived from life in a large university is sup posed to be the broad ning effect of social intercourse with men of various interests and different points of view. To realize its fullest value to the student the university should enable him to mingle with his fellows irrespective of their coΠege or their class. A cross-section of any social unit in a university community ought to show quite as much diversity as there is in the whole community. This diversity is shown, for instance, in the membership of the fraternities, for these organizations, while in one sense exclusive, are in this respect widely inclusive, that they comprise men of all classes and all colleges. It may seem as if a clubhouse and commons for students of one college alone might have a narrowing tendency, but it will be more broadening than no clubhouse at all. With the Cosmopolitan Club and the civil engineers entering a field where the fraternities only have reaped hitherto, we may be observing a new epoch in the social development of Cornell. Our experience in getting along without university dormitories had a parallel centuries ago. Of the early days of Oxford University the Encyclopedia Americana says: "The collegiate system at Oxford dates from the 13th century. At first the students who congregated at the university had no special places of abode provided for them, but had to find accommodation for themselves. As the students found it cheaper to unite and rent a single house in which they might live together than to provide each for himself, they frequently did so, forming halls, hostels or inns. At the beginning of the 14th century, while there were no more colleges than the three just mentioned, there were about 300 halls. As the number of colleges increased, and their growing endowments attracted greater numbers of students, the halls declined in numbers." "The Widow" Becomes Sarcastic. The Powers That Be have decided that the old seal must go, and have called for designs * for a new one which is to embody something which is characteristically Cornellian. Not that the present one is not distinctive enough, but the fact has been evident for some time that Ezra Cornell plus his whiskers does not make an especially happy-looking seal. However, the chief points of interest around the University seem to be minus quantities. Our spacious and luxuriously appointed gymnasium, our famous swimming-pool, our ideal dormitory system, our well-regulated commons, and our extensive athletic field appear to be the major features of the University. The Widow enthusiastically casts her vote in favor of a nice, large, blank seal; typifying some of the things that Cornell lacks.—The Widow. CORNELL ALUMNI NOTES. '80, B. S.—At a large public meeting held in Binghamton last week in connection with the campaign of the State Department of Health for the prevention of tuberculosis, Dr. Charles G. Wagner, superintendent of the Binghamton State Hospital for the Insane, spoke on the subject of "Tuberculosis and its Treatment." Dr. Eugene H. Porter, '80, State Health Commissioner, spoke on "The Campaign Against Tuberculosis." '82, Sp.—Walter G. Smith is the editor of the Pacific Commercial Advertiser, a daily newspaper published in Honolulu. He is a member of the Board of Regents of the College of Hawaii. '90, B. S. in Arch.—W. A. Stevens is with D. H. Burnham & Company, architects, Railway Exchange building, Chicago. '91, B. S., '92, M. S.—Wilbur J. MacNeil is instructor in Oahu College, Honolulu. He lives at 1831 Punahou street. '92, M. E.—Horatio N. Wood, first lieutenant of engineers, United States Revenue Cutter Service, is now attached to the school of instruc- CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS 211 tion of the service. His address is Revenue Steamer Itasca, South Baltimore, Md. '93, C. E.—Robert H. Jacobs is senior assistant engineer with the New York State Public Service Commission of the First District. He lives in Harrington Park, N. J. '93, B. L.; '95, M. L.; '97, Ph. D.—The address of Dr. Frederic S. Crum has been changed to 751 Clifton avenue, Newark, N. J. '93, M. E.—T. C. B. Snell is a structural engineer for the Committee on Fire Prevention of the National Board of Fire Underwriters, 135 William street, New York. He is engaged in making investigations and reports on structural conditions and the conflagration hazard in American cities. '93, M. E.—Norman F. Ballantyne has changed his address to 54 Main street, Ottawa East, Ontorio. '94.—Carl S. Holloway is Superintendent of Public Works of the Territory of Hawaii. His address is Judd building, Honolulu. '95, A. B.—Edgar Wood is principal of the Normal and Training School at Honolulu, Hawaii. '95, M. L.; '98, Ph. D.; '03, D. V. M.—Dr. D. Arthur Hughes, inspector in the Subsistence Department of the United States Army, is this year giving a course of fifty lectures on meat and milk hygiene at the Chicago Veterinary College, Chicago, 111. At that college graduated Dr. A. D. Melvin, present chief of the Bureau of Animal Industry, Department of Agriculture, Washington. He succeeded Dr. D. E. Salmon, Cornell '72, who went to the University of Montevideo, Uruguay, S. A., two years ago for the purpose of organizing an agricultural and veterinary college. '96, Ph. B.; '02, Ph. D.—Carlotta J. Maury has for some time been assisting Professor Gilbert D. Harris in work on the Louisiana State Geological Survey. In the spring she will become an assistant in geology at Barnard College. '96, M. E.—Clarence A. McDonald is principal of the Lahainaluna School, Lahaina, Maui, Hawaii. '97, M. E.—E. C. Hasselfeldt has changed his address from Chicago to 2723 Jackson street, Omaha, Neb. FOWNES GLOVES HERBERT G. OGDEN, E. E., '97 Attorney and Counsellor at Law 'Patents and 'Patent Causes 2 RECTOR ST. NEW YORK are service gloves— wear long and look well while they wear. Alfred L. Nor rig Floyd W. Mundy, *99 J . Norriβ Oliphant, '01 Jas. H. Oliphant & Co. (Members N. Y. Stock Exchange) Bankers and Brokers George K. Woodworth, E.E. '96 20 Broiad St., New York. (Late Examiner, Electrical Division, U. S. Patent Office.) COUNSELOR AT LAW PATENTS AND PATENT CAUSE'S. ELECTRICAL CASES A SPECIALTY. 60 CONGRESS ST. BOSTON, MASS "The Earning Power of Railroads" (1908 edition) by F. W. Mundy, '98, mailed free upon written application C. D. EHRET, E. E., '96. (Former Patent Office Examiner.) Patents for inventions in Electricity, Chemistry, Mechanics. New Land Title Bldg., Philadelphia 3Ttπst National l a t i k CORNELL LIBRARY BLDG. Capital, Surplus and Profits $350,000.00 C. U. '95. REAL ESTATE Insurance, Lots, Plots, Farms and I Acreage Developments. 7 EAST 42 Street BRANCH OFFICE TELEPHONES DEPOT SQUARE 4545 \M S t TELEPHONE 7» New York. WHITE PLAINS Tompkίns County National Bank ITHACA, N. Y. BEX}AN BUSINESS IN 1836 Capital, $100,000 Surplus and Profits, $150,000 We solicit your banking business. ITHACA SAVINGS BANK (INCORPORATED 1868) ITHACA, N. Y. If You Come to Ithaca You stop at the Co-op and look over the books to see if there are any new ones in your line. This is just what many are doing. But if you write us we can tell you what new books are being used at Cornell and you won't have to spend any money for railroad fare. CORNELL CO-OPERATIVE SOCIETY Morrill Hall -- - Ithaca, N. Y. READERS WILL PLXA8I MMNTION TH1 ALUMNI NEWS WHEN WRITING TO ADVBBTIβBBB. 212 Drawing Inks Eternal Writing Ink Engrossing Ink Taurine Mucilage Photo Mounter Paste Drawing Board Paste Liquid Paste Office Paste Vegetable Glue, etc. The kind of Inks andAdhesivesyou are sure to use with continuous satisfaction. At Dealers Generally C.M.HIGGINS&CO.,Mfrs. Branches: Chicago, London 271 Ninth St. Brooklyn, N. Y. CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS '98, M. S. A.—J. Edgar Higgins J. G. WHITE & CO. Inc., is teacher of agriculture andnature study in the Normal School at Hono- Engineers, Contractors, lulu, Hawaii, and supervisor of agri- 43-49ΪExchange Place, - NEW YORK cultural teaching in the Honolulu Engineering Construction and schools. Heis also horticulturist at the United States Experiment Sta- Operation of tion. '98, Ph. B.; '99, LL. B.—Andrew E. Tuck was recently appointed by Attorney^General O'Malley as Deputy Attorney-General from the vicinity of Monroe county at a salary of Electric Railways, Electric Lighting Systems, Hydraulic and Steam Power Plants, Water Works, Gas Works, Irrigation Systems, etc. Reports made for Financial Institutions andInvestors. $4,000 per year for two years. He is a member of the law firm of Hotchkiss & Tuck in Rochester. In London Correspondent: J. G. WHITE & CO., Limited, 9 Cloak Lane, Cannon St., E. C. the years 1898-1900 he was instructor in military science atthe University, and for some time after graduating from the law school he was in the office of Newman & Blood in Ithaca. T. C. POWiER, Helena, Mont., Pres. I. P. BAKER, Vice-Pres. G. H. RUSS, Jr., '03, Cashier. BISMARCK BANK Bismarck, N. D. '00, Ph. B.—William S. Taylor Incorporated 1891. was married on October 20 last to Issues Certificates of Deposits, draw- Miss Susan F. House, of Penn Yan, ing 5 per cent, interest per annum. In- N. Y. Mr. Taylor is practicing law terest payable semi-annually. in WilkesrBarre, Pa. Depositary for the State of North Da- '00, C. E.—James H.Miner is oc- kota, county of Burleigh and city of cupied as assistant engineer in the Bismarck. United States Reclamation Service Correspondence invited. FARWELL TRUST COMPANY Capital $1,500,000 226 LaSalle Street, Chicago, 111 GRANGER FARWELL President JNO J. BRYANT, Jr. Secretary HAVE FOR SALE AT ALL TIMES Municipal, Railroad, Traction, and Corporation Bonds; Yielding 4 % to 6% DESCRIPTIVE circulars sent upon application. Correspondence and ίpersonal interviews invited. READERS WILL PLEASE MENTION THE ALUMNI NEWS WHEN WBITING TO ADVEBTISEBS. CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS 213 in charge of engineering work on the engineer at 4β Cortlandt street, New 135 William street, NewYork. He Gunnison Tunnel of the Uncom- York. is engaged in making investigations pahgre project. This tunnel will be '03, B. Arch.—William G. Purcell and reports on the water supplies six miles in length and will serve was married onDecember 29 to Miss of American cities from a fire pro- to divert water from the Gunnison Edna Summy, Wellesley, '05, daugh- tection standpoint. River to irrigate 1*45,000 acres in the ter of Clayton F. Summy, 1955 Oak- '04, A. B — Alice M. Ottley is in- Uncompahgre Valley. His address dale avenue, Chicago. Mr. and Mrs. structor in botany in Wellesley Col- is Montrose, Col. A daughter was Purcell will be at home after Feb- lege. born to Mr. and Mrs. Miner on August 28 last. ruary 15 at 2311 Humboldt avenue, south, Minneapolis. '04, A. B. '05, A. M.—Announcement has been made of the engage- '02, A. B.—W. H. Pike's address is 781 Monroe street, Chicago. He is assistant manager for Sears, Roebuck & Company. '03. — Mrs. Cynthia Walworth Read announces the marriage ofher daughter, Esther Grace, to Frederic Benjamin Eaton on January 4, in ment of Miss Alice Holbert '08, of New York city, and Arthur Gordon, instructor in the department ofRomance languages. '02. — Elsie Singmaster contrib- Chicago. Mr. Eaton was formerly '05, C. E.—At a convention ofthe utes a story, "The Ghost of Matthias principal of the University Prepara- National Association of Cement Baum," to the February Century. tory School. Users, held in Cleveland last month, '03, A. B.; Όβ, Ph. D.—Dr. George H; Sabine and Miss Mary Winifred Sprague were married in the Presbyterian church at Palo Alto, Cal., on December 14. Dr. Sabine is instructor in philosophy in Stanford University. '03, M. E.—John C.Musgrove has changed his address to 190 Woodlawn avenue, Pittsίield, Mass. He is with the General Electric Company. '04, M. E.—W. H. Thomas is foreman of the roll shop of the National Tube Company at Lorain, O. Harry F. Porter, of Philadelphia, read a paper ontheuse of reinforcement steel in concrete work. In ita His address is 415 Third street. report of the proceedings, Rock Pro- Elyria, O. ducts says that the subject was han- '04, M. E.—The address of A. L. Jones, who is with the General Electric Company in Schenectady, N. Y.. is now 703 Union street. '04, C. E.—Robert C. Dennett is a hydraulic engineer for the Commit- dled very ably. "Mr. Porter," the paper says, "has all the gifts of a writer and an orator, which made his essentially technically paper highly enjoyable as well as convincing." '03, M. E.—James J . Shirley is tee on Fire Prevention of the Na- '05, C. E.—Chester N. Reitze was engaged in practice as a consulting tional Board of Fire Underwriters. married on January 20 to Miss Flor- $22.10 PerYear, at age 35, will buy a $1,000 payment of premiums, cash policy in The Prudential. Pre- and premium loans, extended miums arepayable during the insurance, cash surrendervallifetime of the insured. The ues andmany other valuable policy provides for grace in features. Send for Information of Policies, Dept. 124. The Prudential Insurance Company of America Incorporated as a Stock Company by the State of New Jersey. JOHN F. DRYDEN, President. Home Office, NEWARK, N. J. Dθ IOU Want tO make „ Splendid Opportunities in Selling the Popular 7 New Low Cost Policy. Write direct toustoday. Address Dept. 124. READERS WILL PLKASB MENTION THB ALUM NI NEWS WHEN WRITING TO ADVEBTISBBS. 214 CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS Cornell Luncheon Club at Down Town REISENWEBER'S 57 Maiden Lane, New York One entire floor used by Cornell men and their guests. Any Cornell manwho visits the place during the noon hours will find a large number of other Cornell men there. Private Rooms for Meetings and Dinners. REISENWEBER'S Columbus Circle and 58th street Restaurant. A la carte and table d'hote. Private Dining Rooms. Banquet Halls. Beefsteak Garret right under the rafters. Hotel Cumberland NEW YORK S. W. Corner Broadway at 54th Street Near 50th St. Subway Station and 53rd St. Elevated Kept by a College Man Headquarters for College Men Special Rates for College Teams Ideal Location, Near Theatres, Shops, Central Park. New, Modern and Absolutely Fireproof Most attractive hotel in' New York. Transient Rates. $2.50 with bath and up. All outside rooms. HARRY P. STIMSON, Formerly with Hotel Imperial R. J. BINGHAM, Formerly with Hotel Woodward SEND FOR BOOKLET HEADQUARTERS FOR CORNELL MEN KNOWN AND APPRECIATED From Coast to Coast—as serving the best meals in Chicago. ^Jtotol & HERMAN WEBER COMPANY 111-117 RANDOLPH STREET CHICAGO, ILL. A rendezvous for Cornell men. ITHACA TRUST COMPANY ITHACA, NEW YORK ASSETS 2 MILLION DOLLARS Courteous Treatment. Every Facility. ence Watson Brown, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Johnson Butler Brown, of Snohomishj Wash. The wedding was solemnized at the home of the bride's parents. Mr. and Mrs. Reitze will be at home after February lβ at 2431 Tenth avenue north, Seattle. Wash. '05, A. B.—Alexander Silverman. instructor in analytical chemistry in the University of Pittsburg, was married on December lβ to Miss Elrose Reizenstein, of Pittsburg. '06, M. E.—Clifford T. Darby is manager of the Darby Motor Car Company, of St. Louis, which builds a 15 H P., two-cylinder, two-cycle, friction drive, three-passenger roadster. His post office address is Webster Groves, Mo. '06, M. E.—J. M. A. Johnston is a consulting engineer in Richmond. Va., with office at 203 Bank of Richmond building. Ό6, M. E.—Harold W. Slauson is associate manager of the Technical Press Bureau in New York. He lives at 513 West 134th street. Όβ, M. E.—Harry L. Curtis is electrical engineer for the Minnesota & Ontario Power Company at International Falls, Minn. Όβ, M. E.—William D. Allen is general manager of the Arawatz Mining Company, Silver Lake, Cal. Όβ.—John Newhall is now engaged in the lumber business at North Manitou Island, Mich. He says: "I'm trying to teach the long yell to a bunch of lumberjacks. They go at it right." Όβ, M. E.—Warner D. Orvis has resigned his position as engineer with the New York Steam Compnay and is now with Orvis Brothers & Company, bankers and brokers, 44 Broadway, New York. '07, M. E.—Ήerman Van Fleet has changed his address from Den- GALENA-SIGNAL OIL COMPANY FRANKLIN, PENNA Sole"manufacturers of the celebrated GALENA COACH, ENGINE and CAR OILS, and SIBLEY'S PERFECTION VALVE and SIGNAL OILS. Guarantee cost per thousand miles for from one to five years, when conditions warrant it. Maintain Expert Department, which is an organization of skilled railway mechanics of wide and varied experience. Services of Experts furnished'free of charge to patrons interested in the economical use of oils. STREET RAILWAY LUBRICATION A SPECIALTY Please write home office for further particulars. CHARLES MILLER,President. READERS WILL PLBA81 MSNTIOM THS ALUMNI NEWS WHEN WBΓΠNO TO ADVHBTIβMt . CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS 215 JOHN CHATILLON &SONS 85-93 αiiff St., New York Oity MANUFACTURERS OP SPRING SCALES for weighing, assorting, counting, multiplying, estimating, measuring, testing and for various other purposes. The Manhattan Press-Clipping Bureau Arthur Cassot, Proprietor. Executive Offices 503 Op. Waldorf Astoria. Cambridge Building, cor. 5th Ave. & 33rd St. Established in 1888 New York City Gives the best service of Press Clippings on any subject of interest from all papers and periodicals published here and abroad. Our readers gather for you more valuable material than you could get ordinarily in a lifetime. Our service is the neatest and most thoroughly done. Scrap-books of Clippings are most valuable for reference and your library. Send your order on the subjects of interest and secure our up-to-date service. TERMS lβO Clippings $5.00 1,000 Clippings $ 85.00 «50 " 12.00 5,000 " 150.00 500 20.00 10,000 " 280.00 Send for neat Desk Calendar. ver to 407 Dearborn street, Chicago. '07, M. E.—A. D. Blake is with Westinghouse, Church, Kerr & Company, and is engaged upon construction work at the new Pennsylvania Railroad terminal in New York city. His address is College avenue, Westerleigh, Staten Island. '07, M. E.—Walter S. Wing is in the Pittsburg office of the Universal Portland Cement Company. '07.—P. A. Vannan has taken a position with the National Tube Company at Lorain, O., and his address is 364 Second street, Elyria, O. '07, C E.—T. T. Wright and E. J. Nelson are working for the Mississippi River Commission on river improvement work and are at present in Greenville, Miss. Their address is Box SS3. '08, M. E.—W. H. Lovejoy is employed as a chemist in the filtration plant of the Union Stock Yards in Chicago. His address is 4257 Grand Boulevard. '08, M. E.—Clarence G. Bamberger left Berlin about January 10 for London, where he expected to undergo an operation for appendicitis. His address in London is SO Rosary Gardens, South Kensington. '08, D. V. M.—A. B. Edmonds and E. R. Jackson are government inspectors in Chicago. Their address is 4051 Indiana avenue. '08, A. B.—The address of Emily M. Beeson is 700 Carpenter avenue, Iron Mountain, Mich. We mail to some Graduate nearly every day in the year some one of the many things they learned we carried while they were in college,—from Cornell Songs and Banners to Cross Section Paper or new editions of Technical books. We stand ready to serve you in whichever corner of the Globe you may reside. THE CORNER BOOKSTORES SPALDING'S OFFICIAL 1909 Athletic Almanac Edited by JAMES E. SULLIVAN President of the Amateur Athletic Union. The only publication in the world that publishes a complete list of amateur athletic best-on-r e c or d s and sectional records. The 1909 Athletic Almanac contains a full statistical report ofthe Don't Neglect to Send for SAMPLES. We make clothes for the Alumni in the majority of States Olympic Games of 1908. Replete with photographs never before published. William H. Sisson THE TAILOR Ithaca, N. Y. in the Union. Wheaton & Perry The Tailors of Ithaca. PRICE 10 CENTS. At all newsstands and A. G.SPALDING & BROS. Down-Town \ Two j Up-Town 124-128 Nassau St. f Stores 1 29-33 West 42d St. MAIL ORDER DEPARTMENT far Dropp us sample line a postal of your of Shirtings. Wwaenwtsilal nfodrwwaerdwilsleflof rmwearadsu, reinxpgrbeslasnpkrsepaanidd,guaanraansstoeertma efnitt.ofIfoyuorulianrees tfoorbyeomurarsreileedctlieotnu. soSuetnridt you andyour ushers. DOWN TOWN, 142 ESTATE ST. L. C. BEMENT, TheToggery Shops. HATTER, CRAVATTER, HOSIER, GLOVER AND MAKER OF SHIRTS THAT FIT. ON THE HILL 404 EDDY ST. READERS WILL PLXA8B MENTION T H I ALUMNI NEWS WHEN WRITING TO ADYttTHMUtβ. 216 CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS '08; C. E.—Harris A. Appel is in the mercantile business in Colorado Springs. His address is Iβ57 Gaylord street. '08, C. E.—A. P. Mussi is an engineering draftsman in the Barge Canal Office at Albany, N. Y. '08, A. B.—Dean L. Kelsey is General Secretary of the Cornell University Christian Association. '08, D. V. M.—Leonard N. Case is assistant territorial veterinarian of Hawaii. His address is 1402 Punahou street, Honolulu. '08, M. E.—Ralph W. Howe's address is Box 532, Indiana, Pa. He is employed by the Ohio Oil Company. '08, B. S. A.—Vida R. French is engaged in social settlement work in Buffalo. Her address is 40 Brantford place. '08, M. E.—Harry L. Sharpe's address is 339 Fifteenth street, Buffalo, N. Y. He is with the Niagara, Lockport & Ontario Power Company. If s what an engineer reads Rents collected when due. Remittances promptly made. Why worry and lose? We manage Tivate and business property, investments and estates. We buy, sell and rent property. Tf interested, write, telephone or call on GEORGE S. TARBELL LAW and REAL ESTATE Trust Co. Building Ithaca, N Y Baxter $ Dracy Cater to University trade with Hart, Schaffner & Marx's snappy line of Clothing. 150 East State St., Ithaca, N. Y. CUT FLOWERS Large assortment of all SEASONABLE VARIETIES FLORAL DECORATIONS for all occasions at moderate cost. THE BOOL FLORAL CO. ITHACA, N. Y. New Edition: "SONGS OF CORNELL" arranged for MIXED VOICES with Piano accompaniment just issued. Price postpaid -* - $1.40. Lent's Music Store 122 North Aurora Street. Cornell Livery EDWARD P. SAYRE, Proprietor First Class Coach and Livery 213 South Tioga St. Bell Phone 55 Ithaca Phone 363 SHIRT MAKER. Write for samples aiκJ measurement blanks. Prices $1.50 to $3.00 Fit and workmanshir the best. Clarence E. Head 210 East Seneca Si Ithaca, N. Y. D. S. O'Brien Dealer in Fresh and Salt Meats. 222 N. Aurora St. 430 N. Cayuga 8t. Special attention given to Fraternity Houses. Kohnt a Brunne The Practical Tailors of Ithaca We have made college clothes since 1885. Over Wall's Shoe Store. T. D. SULLIVAN 202 East State Street Successor to H. G. Willson Men's Furnishings. Hats, Cape, Shirts and Tiβt Sweaters a Specialty. that largely determines his degree of success. To keep in touch with the actual practice of the best engineers of the day and with the latest developments in his line of work, every engineer should read the leading journal in his chosen field. The Leading Engineering Journals are: ELECTRICAL WORLD The foremost authority oί the world on all branches of electrical work. Weekly Edition, $3.00. Monthly Edition, $1.00. g1^ The most valuable paper published for the civil and mechanical engineer. Published Weekly—$3.00 a Year. ELECTRIC RAILWAY JOURNAL The undisputed authority on the construction, operation and management of city and interurban railways. Published Weekly~$3.00 a Year. Sample Copies on Request OUR BOOK DEPARTMENT CAN SUPPLY ANY ENGINEERING BOOK PUBLISHED. McGraw Publishing Co. PRESSING CONTRACTS A SPECIALTY Holland Bros. the Cleaners. BOTH PHONES. J. N. HIGH CANDIES GRADE Ice Cream and Soda Water. 114 East State St., - 4 0 0 Stewart Ave. Not Connected With Other Stores. We are showing a full line ot Doggy styles in College Footwear for Fall and Winter Write for catalogue or we should be glad to send samples. Vorhis & Duff 239 West 39 Street, New York 204 E. State St., RKΛDERS WILL PL&ASB MENTION THE ALUM NI NEWS WHEN WRITING TO ADVERTISERS. Ithaca, N. Y.