1922 - Goucher College
1922 - Goucher College
1922 - Goucher College
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Jlforcfnorb<br />
<strong>1922</strong> to 1921<br />
WE belteiJe that<br />
we are wrctcng<br />
en a romanhc •<br />
age. And we know<br />
that ou.r reLa.hon<br />
to 1921 cs a rom.<br />
an tL c attachment.<br />
'Therefot"e<br />
we hope that we<br />
weLL not be regat'ded<br />
as ol.lersteppcng<br />
the Lcm.cts of h.tness<br />
when we go<br />
beyond ou.t' own<br />
cou.ntt'y, and take<br />
fo t" ou.r symboL the<br />
pcne-trce and the<br />
Lotu.s. . . And as<br />
Japan L5 fabled to<br />
brLng forth the riscng<br />
su.n,so m.ay the<br />
eiJents we hu.m.bly<br />
record m.ark the<br />
onset of a spLendLd<br />
et"O. for 1921.
Ten
Trvelve
®ffir.ers<br />
CLARA LATIMER BACON, A B . , A M., PH. D.<br />
2316 North Calvert Street<br />
Professor of Mathematics<br />
A . B., Wellesley <strong>College</strong>, 1890 ; A. ,:vr., University of Chicago, 1904; P h. D., Johns<br />
Hopkins U niversity, 1911 ; appointed Instructor in Mathematics, 1897; Associate P rofessor,<br />
1914.<br />
WILFRED A BEARDSLEY, A B., PH. D.<br />
2122 St. Paul Street<br />
Professor of Romance Languages<br />
A . B., Yale U niversity, 1911 ; Ph. D., Columbia U niversity, 1917; appointed Assistant<br />
P rofessor of Romance L anguages, 1919; Professor, 1920.<br />
]oHN KESTER BoNNELL, A B., A M ., PH. D.<br />
Boulevard Apartments<br />
Professor of English<br />
A. B., L eland Stanford J unior U niversity, 1903; A. M., H ar vard U niversity, 1908;<br />
P h. D., U niversity of VVisconsin, 1916; appointed P rofessor of E ng lish, 1920.<br />
GERTRUDE CARMAN BussEY, A B., A M ., PH. D.<br />
2321 Maryland Avenue<br />
Professor of Philosoph})<br />
A. B., Wellesley <strong>College</strong>, 1908; A. M., 1910; P h. D ., Nort hwestern University, 1915;<br />
appointed Instructor in Philosophy, 1915; Assistant Professor, 1916; Associate P rofessor,<br />
1917; Professor, 1920.<br />
NIELS H. DEBEL, A B., A M., PH. D.<br />
20 19 Duke land Street, W albrook<br />
Professor of Political Science<br />
A. B., University of Nebraska. 1913; A . M., 19'14 ; P h. D ., University of Illinois, 1916;<br />
appointed P rofessor of Political Science, 1919.<br />
RAYMOND PHILIP DouGH ERTY, A B., A M ., B. D., PH. D.<br />
1602 Eutaw Place<br />
Professor of Biblical Literature<br />
A. B., L ebanon Valley Colleg e, 1897; A. iVL, 1903 ; B. D .. Bonebrake Theological<br />
Semina ry, 1910; P h. D., Yale University, 1918; appointed Professor of Biblical L iterature,<br />
1918.<br />
HANS FROELICHER, PH. D.<br />
Traymore and Goodewood Avenues, W. Hamilton<br />
P rofessor of German Lang uage a nd L iterature and Lecturer on Art: Ph. D ., U niversity<br />
of Zurich, 1888 ; Associate Professor of F rench L anguage and L iterature, 1888-<br />
1890; appointed Associate P rofessor of Ger man L ang uage and Literature, 1890; Professor,<br />
1893 ; L ecturer on Art, 1895.<br />
KATHERINE ]EANNE GALLAGHER, A B., A M., PH. D.<br />
Gilman Apartments<br />
Professor of Histor}J<br />
A. B .. Vassar <strong>College</strong>. 1909; A. M .. University of \Visconsin, 1913 : Ph. D., 1915 ;<br />
appointed I nstructor in H istory, 1915: Assistant P rofessor, 1917: Associate Professor,<br />
19! 9 ; P rofessor, 1920.<br />
ANNETTE B. HoPKINS, A B., PH. D.<br />
2100 Callow Avenue<br />
Professor of English<br />
A. B., <strong>Goucher</strong> Colleg e. 190 1: P h. D .. U niversity of Chicag-o. 1912; appointed Instructor<br />
in E ng lish, 19 11 ; Associate Professor, 1914; Professor. 19 18.<br />
Thirteen
Fourteen
®fficen<br />
]ESSIE L. KING, B. S., PH. D.<br />
2321 Maryland Avenue<br />
Professor of Physiology<br />
B. S., Earlham <strong>College</strong>, 1904; P h. D ., Cornell U niversity, 1911; appointed I nstructor<br />
111 P hysiology, 191 1; Associate P rofessor, 1915; P rofessor, 1919.<br />
ERNEST P. KUHL, A B., A M., PH. D.<br />
411 Woodlawn Road, Roland Park<br />
Professor of English<br />
A. B., Indiana University, 1907; A. M., Harvard U niversity, 1908; P h. D ., 1913;<br />
appointed P ro fessor of English, 1918.<br />
FLORENCE PARTHENIA LEWIS, A B., A M ., PH. D.<br />
2435 North Charles Street<br />
Professor of Mathematics<br />
A . B., University of Texas, 1897; A. M. (Philosophy), 1898; A. M. (Mathematics),<br />
Radcliffe <strong>College</strong>, 1906; P h. D., Johns Hopkins University, 1913; appoin ted Instr uctor in<br />
Mathematics, 1908; Associate P rofessor, 1911 ; P rofessor, 1920.<br />
HowARD HuNTLEY LLOYD, A . . B., PH. D.<br />
21 6 East Twenty-second Street<br />
Professor of Chemistry<br />
A . B., Johns Hopkins U niversity, 1912; P h. D ., 1915; appointed I nstructor in Chemistry,<br />
1916; Associate P rofessor, 1917; Professor, 1919.<br />
WILLIAM H. LoNGLEY, A B., A M ., P H. D.<br />
5 11 East Forty-second Street<br />
Professor of Biology<br />
A. B., Acadia University, 1901 ; A . B., Yale University, 1907; A. M., 1908; P h. D.,<br />
1910; Instructor in Biology, 1911-1914; appointed Associate Professor of Botany, 1911;<br />
Professor, 1914; Professor of Biology, 1919.<br />
AGNES Low RoGERS, A M., P H. D.<br />
821 North C harles Street<br />
Professor of Education<br />
A. M., St. Andrew's U niversity, Scotland, 1907; Moral Sciences T ripos, Cambridge<br />
University, England, 1911 ; Ph. D., Columbia U niversity, 1917; appointed P rofessor of<br />
E ducation, 1918.<br />
SAMUEL N. TAYLOR, PH. B., PH. D.<br />
2541 Maryland Avenue<br />
P rofessor of Physics<br />
P h. B., \1\1 esleyan U niversity, 1887; P h. D ., Clark University, 1896; appointed Professor<br />
of P hysics, 1911.<br />
THADDEUS P. THOMAS, PH. B .. A M., PH. D .<br />
Roland and Melrose A venues, Normandy Heights<br />
Professor of S ocial Science<br />
Ph. B .. U niversity of Tennessee, 1885; A . Mi., 1887; P h. D ., Johns H opkins U niversity,<br />
1895: appointed I nstructor in His tory, 1892; Associate Professor of History and<br />
Sociology, 1894; Professor, 1898; Professor of Economics and Sociology, 1904; Social<br />
Science, 1915.<br />
R u TH WHEELER, A B., PH. D.<br />
41 6 Forest Road, Roland Park<br />
Professor of H orne Economics<br />
A. B .. Vassar <strong>College</strong>, 1899; P h. D., Yale U niversity, 1913; appointed P rofessor<br />
of H om e Economics, 1918. -<br />
Fit teen
Sixteen
Eighteen
Twenty
®fficers<br />
S. ELIZABETH VAN DuYNE, A B., M. D.<br />
2121 Guilford Avenue<br />
Assistant Professor of Physiology and Hygiene<br />
A. B., <strong>Goucher</strong> <strong>College</strong>, 1894; :VI. D., \t\loman's Medical <strong>College</strong> of NevJ York, 1899;<br />
appoin ted Assistant Professor of Physiology and Hygiene, 1920.<br />
c. STURGIS BALL, A B.. B. D., s. T. M ., A M.<br />
1415 Mt. Royal Avenue<br />
Instructor in Biblical Literature<br />
A. B., Oxford U niversity (England), 1897; B. D., Yale University, 1911; S. T. M.,<br />
Hartford Theological Seminary, 1913; A . M., Columbia U n iversity, 1918; appointed<br />
Instructor in Biblical Literature, 1917.<br />
VOLA PRICE BARTON, A B .• A M.<br />
Linwood Avenue, Mt. Washington<br />
Instructor in Physics<br />
A. B. <strong>Goucher</strong> <strong>College</strong>, 1915 ; A. M., M t. Holyoke <strong>College</strong>, 1917 ; appointed Assistant<br />
111 P hysics, 1917; Instructor, 1919.<br />
RHODA FAHNESTOCK, B. s .. M. S.<br />
2503 North Calvert Street<br />
Instructor in Home Economics<br />
B. S., Rockford '<strong>College</strong>, 1916; M. S., University of Tllinois, 1917; appointed Instructor<br />
in Home Economics, 1919.<br />
]ANE E. ]OSLIN, B. S.<br />
3620 Fairview Avenue, F ores! Park<br />
Instructor in Education<br />
B. S., Columbia University, 1920; appointed Instructor in E ducation, 1920.<br />
LADEMA M. LANGDON, A B .• M. S., PH. D.<br />
3239 Clifton Avenue, Walbrook<br />
Instructor in Biology<br />
.\. B., Oberlin <strong>College</strong>. 1916; M. S., U niversity of Chicago, 1917 ; Ph. D ., 1919;<br />
appointed Instructor in B iology, 1920.<br />
KATHRYN McHALE, B. S., A M.<br />
2504 North Charles Street<br />
Instructor in Education<br />
B. S., Columbia U niversity, 1919; A. M., 1920; appointed Instructor m E ducation,<br />
1920.<br />
ADELINE ANNE DEMARE, A B .<br />
2524 Guilford Avenue<br />
Instructor in French and Spanish<br />
A. B., U niversity of Kansas, 1917; Certifi cat des Etudes Fran
®fficers<br />
]EAN CUTLEY WILCOX, A B .• A M.<br />
120 East Twenty-fifth Street<br />
instructor in French and Spanish<br />
A. B., <strong>Goucher</strong> <strong>College</strong>, 1915; A. M., Johns Hopkins U niversity, 1917; appointed<br />
Assistant in Romanic Languages, 1917-18; appointed Instructor in French and Spanish,<br />
1920.<br />
HELEN LouiSE ADAMS, A B.<br />
2 I 29 North Calvert Street<br />
Assistant in Ph}Jsics<br />
A. B., <strong>Goucher</strong> <strong>College</strong>, 1919; appointed Assistant in Physics, 1919.<br />
DoROTHY BERGNER, A. B.<br />
5 22 East Twenty-first Street<br />
Assistant in Biolog}J<br />
A. B., <strong>Goucher</strong> <strong>College</strong>, 1920; appointed Assistant in Biology, 1920.<br />
EMMA VIRGINIA DRURY, A. B.<br />
2919 St. Paul Street<br />
Assistant in Education<br />
A. B., <strong>Goucher</strong> ··<strong>College</strong>, 1920; appointed Assistant in E ducation, 1920.<br />
DoROTHY GETZ, A B.<br />
I I I I West Lanvale Street<br />
Assistant in C hemistr}J<br />
A. B., <strong>Goucher</strong> <strong>College</strong>, 1917; appointed Assistant in Chemistry, 1919.<br />
JosEPHINE HARVEY, A. B.<br />
4 39 East Twenty-second Street<br />
Assistant in Chemistr}J<br />
A. B., Mt. Holyoke <strong>College</strong>, 1918; appointed Assistant in Chemistry, 1920.<br />
RuTH NEUHAUSEN, A. B.<br />
722 North Wolfe Street<br />
Assistant in C hemistr}J<br />
A. B., <strong>Goucher</strong> <strong>College</strong>, 1920; appointed Assistant in Chemistry, 1920.<br />
KATHERINE ADELAIDE WATKINS, A. B.<br />
2621 North Calvert Street<br />
Assistant in Ph}Jsics<br />
A. B., <strong>Goucher</strong> <strong>College</strong>, 1917 ; appointed Assistant in P hysics, 1918.<br />
MARY WEBER, A B.<br />
Pikesville, Maryland<br />
Assistant in Ph}Jsics<br />
A. B., <strong>Goucher</strong> C ollege, 1916; appointed .Assistant m Physics, 1917.<br />
MILDRED WHITING, A. B.<br />
419 East Twenty-second Street<br />
Assistant in Ph}Jsiolog}J and H}Jgiene<br />
A. B., Mt. Holyoke <strong>College</strong>, 1919; appointed Assistant in P hysiology and H ygiene,<br />
1919.<br />
MILDRED WINCHESTER, A. B.<br />
207 West Twenty-seventh Street<br />
Assistant in Physiology and H}Jgiene<br />
A. B., W ellesley <strong>College</strong>, 1919; appointed Assistant in P hysiology and Hygiene, 1919.<br />
T D>enty-three
Twent)) -four
Twenty-six
TID cnly-scvcn<br />
I<br />
Appointed, 1920.<br />
®fficers<br />
VELMA L. BRYAN, A B_<br />
3702 Duvall Avenue<br />
Assistant to the President<br />
A. B., <strong>Goucher</strong> Colleg e, 1919 ; appointed, 1919.<br />
Appointed, 1908.<br />
MARY R. CoLBURN<br />
1206 John Street<br />
Secretar:y to the D ean<br />
FRANCES w. TROXELL, A. B.<br />
3312 West North Avenue<br />
A ssistant to the Registrar<br />
A. B., <strong>Goucher</strong> Colleg e, 1912; appointed, 1919.<br />
Appoin ted, 1919.<br />
A ppoin ted, 1920.<br />
A ppointed, 1919.<br />
_\ ppoin ted. 1919.<br />
Appointed. 1919.<br />
A ppointed, 1918.<br />
Appoin ted, 1919.<br />
A ppointed, 1919.<br />
E. CAROLYN NICHOLSON<br />
30 I West Lanvale Street<br />
Secretary to the Registrar<br />
MIRIAM McKEAN<br />
1912 Oakhill Avenue<br />
Assistant in the President's Office<br />
MARY I. CoLGAN<br />
2711 Greenmount Avenue<br />
Assistant Bookkeeper<br />
FLORENCE CoNNoR<br />
2113 Callow Avenue<br />
Cashier<br />
ELSA G. HAYDEN<br />
Elm Avenue<br />
A ssistant in the Business Office<br />
RoBERTA ]AMISON<br />
I 00 I West Lafayette Avenue<br />
Accountant<br />
VIRGINIA RIEHL<br />
2804 Rockrose Avenue<br />
Bookkeeper<br />
KATHERINE C. HANSON<br />
2203 North Calvert Street<br />
Clerk<br />
MRS. A . HARMON-ASHLEY<br />
Glitner Hall<br />
Mistress of Clitner Hall
Twent}!-eight
Thirty-one<br />
•
Thiri)J·five<br />
DR. SNEATH
Gladys Mary Abraham<br />
4303 Grant Circle,<br />
Washington, D. C.<br />
Rom.wnce Languages<br />
Mary, Mary, quite demurely,<br />
Has a smile for all.<br />
When you're out o' luck she'll surely<br />
Listen to your call.<br />
Irene Lillian Alleman<br />
125 North Front Street,<br />
Steelton, Pennsylvania.<br />
Home Economics<br />
Unquenchable spirit,<br />
:.1arvelous pep,<br />
Have caused us to wonder,<br />
And gained her a rep.<br />
Kindness personified,<br />
Cheerful , serene:<br />
All this and much more<br />
Is our classmate Irene.<br />
1 hirty .ix
Thirty-nine<br />
Florence Dibert Bates<br />
1107 De Victor P lace<br />
P ittsburgh, Pennsylvani a<br />
Social Scieqtce<br />
Florence loves brightness<br />
Gayness and lightness,<br />
Florence is fair.<br />
But duty calling<br />
Hard or appalling,<br />
Florence is there.<br />
Ruth Barbetta Bear<br />
Lonaconing, Maryland<br />
English<br />
c\_ journalist,<br />
-Our Teddy Bear;<br />
In Junior P lay,<br />
Her talent rare;<br />
Sometimes "in dutch,"<br />
Always the same;<br />
Droll and naive<br />
As her name .<br />
•
Edna Marie Buhrer<br />
5612 Fourteenth Street, N. W.<br />
Washipgton, D. C.<br />
Biology<br />
An artist who ranks in our class Hall<br />
of Fame,<br />
And though not so wild, is still not<br />
so tame;<br />
An intelliigent girl who is not a grind,<br />
She has what we call an A number 1<br />
mind.<br />
Of virtues she's many, of faults she<br />
has none,<br />
Unless you would designate conscience<br />
as one.<br />
Her whimsical wit's sure to be A<br />
Prop·os:<br />
It never is weak . but it's W eekl:y, you<br />
know.<br />
Dorothy Campbell<br />
2200 Pleasant Avenue<br />
M inneapolis, Minnesota<br />
English<br />
Though Dorothy is from the West,<br />
She is not wild and woolly:<br />
She wins all hearts by gentle arts,<br />
. T he middies know it, full y.<br />
Forty-one
Maybelle Amelia Church<br />
Falls Church, Virginia<br />
Social Science<br />
"Ting-a ling-a-ling" fo r Maybelle,<br />
It always is that way;<br />
For her the Gimle telephone<br />
Works overtime each day.<br />
We think the Army's calling,<br />
But this may not be true;<br />
For Social Science claims her,<br />
Where there's calling work to do.<br />
Judith Clark<br />
9 E . Irving Street<br />
Chevy Chase, Maryland<br />
Romance Languages<br />
One cannot fai l to notice<br />
That Judy is a be:Ie,<br />
Yet she was Literary E d.<br />
Of DONNYBROOK as we:!,<br />
A nd Alice in the Junior P lay.<br />
vVe really wish we knew<br />
How she can write and act and flirt<br />
And shine in c:asses too.<br />
Forty-two
Sabra Clark<br />
Dauphin, Pennsylvania<br />
English<br />
Those who knew her as a Freshman<br />
Love her Even more as a Hall President,<br />
·which is always a Good Sign.<br />
She it was who first and last Gave a<br />
Soul to the Sessrymner Piano.<br />
If you have ever caught one of her<br />
radiantly friendly Glances,<br />
You know why they all Fall.<br />
But if you have ever seen her in action<br />
In the Face of . Difficulty,<br />
Academic or -otherwise ;<br />
In the act of playing up to a friend<br />
Or of Saving a Sinner from Destruction,<br />
You will realize<br />
That James<br />
Has Luck, Discrimination, and Good<br />
Eyes.<br />
Alice Elizabeth Clarke<br />
717 Newington Avenue<br />
Baltimore, Maryland<br />
Biology<br />
Here is little Alice Clarke,<br />
She is quite a science shark<br />
Up in A lfheim Hall.<br />
Bugs and worms and beet;es · wmgs,<br />
Evolutionary things,<br />
She knows them one and a:!.<br />
But she owns another art,<br />
Art of hand and art of heart,<br />
Understanding wide;<br />
Happy ones who reach it find<br />
A generous soul, a gentle mind.<br />
Treasures that abide. ·<br />
Forty-three<br />
I
Sara Turney Cochrane<br />
402 Harrison Avenue<br />
Greensburg, Pennsylvania<br />
Biology<br />
Sara loves to a rgue<br />
\ 1\Tith a sparkle in her eye;<br />
A nd when you think she's cor'nered,<br />
To the other side she'll fly.<br />
He says it oft with almonds ;<br />
And letters dai:y bring,<br />
The yery nutty message<br />
That hi s Waterman doth smg.<br />
Virginia Colley<br />
Centreville, Tennessee<br />
Romance Languages<br />
Her box is always full of mail:<br />
Her major's Romance, you see.<br />
For Annapolis she hit the trail,<br />
She saw and conquered, goes the tale<br />
Now southward bound is she.<br />
Forty-four
Elizabeth N. Connolly<br />
217 Sterling P lace<br />
Brooklyn, New York<br />
Social S cience<br />
In the years to come,<br />
When you hear the thrum<br />
Of a chord on a mandolin,<br />
Or think of the fame<br />
Of an H. P.'s name<br />
In the midst of the world's loud<br />
din,-<br />
It is Betty you see in your memory,<br />
Where you'll find she lingers yet,<br />
In many a guise,<br />
Both merry and wise,<br />
From ball-gown to her annette.<br />
Lillian Mott Cook<br />
Branchville, New Jersey<br />
English<br />
Her diversion is embroidering; her<br />
inclination is generosity to all; her<br />
constant occupation is answering telephone<br />
calls. The first is laying up<br />
treasures in a hope chest; the second<br />
is a natural expression of a large<br />
heart; and may the last be prophetic of<br />
a hearty response at Loving Cup<br />
Service!<br />
Forty-Jive
Marian Thirza Corbin<br />
115 West Liberty Street,<br />
Savannah, Georgia<br />
Romance Languages<br />
Y.Iarian loves moonlight nights;<br />
They interest her, you see . .<br />
Oh NO, we don't mean that at ali,<br />
She loves astronomy!<br />
Emma Evelyn Coughlin<br />
Luzerne, Pennsylvania<br />
History<br />
She's read 'most everything, and bones<br />
it out with great avidity,<br />
But if you're "dumb" she's glad to<br />
give you light;<br />
She knows whereof she speaks, and<br />
speaks thereof without timidity,-<br />
.-\nd somehow more than half the<br />
time she's right.<br />
Forty-six
Kathryn Elizabeth Coulter<br />
Beechwood Avenue<br />
Oxford, Ohio<br />
Biology<br />
It was not until her senior year that<br />
Kathryn realized the superiority of<br />
<strong>Goucher</strong> over the rest of woman's colleges;<br />
but once discerning its advantages,<br />
she let no grass grow under her<br />
feet before she tried it. Kathryn is a<br />
great addition to the Senior Class, in<br />
quality,-not to say in quantity,-for<br />
whoever has gamboled with her in hall,<br />
in class, or in zoology lab, can expatiate<br />
without end upon the soundness<br />
of her gay but absent mind.<br />
Edith Crawford<br />
220 South Fairmount Avenue<br />
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania<br />
Romance Languages<br />
Edith's very dignified,<br />
Until she goes to gym;<br />
She's good at turning somersaults.<br />
She stands on any li mb.<br />
Her marcel is her very own,<br />
In spite of any slander;<br />
To see her dance .a Spanish twir!,<br />
Co uld anything be grander?<br />
Forty-seven
Sarah Cribbs<br />
O il City, Pennsylvania<br />
Social S cience<br />
T here is no ending the line of Sallie's<br />
accomplishments, and in view of<br />
t he high fi nish which characterizes<br />
each and all 0f her achievements, the<br />
word "accomplishment" seem s too<br />
slight a term. Yet it is impossible to<br />
detect anything labored in her most<br />
renowned endeavors ; for by her music<br />
she charms the savage breasts of her<br />
co-dwellers in Folkvang, with as much<br />
ease as she walks into their rooms and<br />
hearts. H er rule as H all P resident<br />
was illustrious; and her accession in<br />
Glee Club resulted in happy subjects.<br />
'J'hose who a re fortunate enough to<br />
know her can testify that the children<br />
in the Settlement are by no means the<br />
only ones to be "served" by Sallie.<br />
Lydia Margretta Culver<br />
1643 Tenth Street<br />
Baltimore, .:VIaryland<br />
Social Science<br />
Margretta 's quiet and always serene ;<br />
To cut any classes she's never been<br />
seen.<br />
I n hard social \vork she spends most<br />
of her time ;<br />
T hat she takes "m ental tests" proves<br />
courage sublime.<br />
Forl)l-eight
Alice Amelia Davis<br />
101 Ingleside Avenue<br />
Catonsville, Maryland<br />
English<br />
A wonder at guard<br />
In basket-ball,<br />
A breaker of records<br />
On Field Day,<br />
A star of an athlete<br />
Always,<br />
And an all around winner<br />
Forever!<br />
Clara Anabel Davis<br />
1701 Park Avenue<br />
Baltimore, Maryland<br />
Ro111,ance Languages<br />
\iVhen you see a blue car parked before<br />
<strong>Goucher</strong> Hall,<br />
You will know Clara Davis is just<br />
within call;<br />
And for work on committees, or<br />
dances or plays<br />
Page Clara,-she'll help you in numerous<br />
ways.<br />
FortJ)-nine
Ruth Delaplane Davis<br />
183 South Second Street<br />
Steelton, Pennsylvania<br />
English<br />
In Marcial Haa<br />
There dwells a maid<br />
To Titian Tints inclined;<br />
Not hers at all,-<br />
But Bill's 't is said,<br />
A re the ones she has in mind!<br />
Helen Myrtle Denton<br />
Evansville, Indiana<br />
English<br />
We've tried for hours, literally, to do<br />
justice to this young damsel, who has<br />
made much more than a Dent in our<br />
heart. Though her sense of humor<br />
has won her wide renown, even yet,for<br />
fear of the Senior Decorum Committee,-we<br />
clare not catalogue her<br />
exploits ; but we can say that when<br />
you're feeling Nutty, Helen is the ideal<br />
escort, and as long as she is guide, you<br />
are 111 no danger of encountering the<br />
sq uelch.<br />
Fitty
Marguerite Drewcile Derstine<br />
1010 Darey Street<br />
Clearfield, Pennsylvania<br />
M artie's hobby was Y. W. C. A.,<br />
and along this line she has achieved<br />
particular fame at three places: at<br />
Cleveland, at the Union and Camden<br />
Stations, and at the Y. Vv. R oom.<br />
From the first of these she returned<br />
an enthusiastic delegate well versed in<br />
the "New Membership Basis." From<br />
the second she emerged "one big grin<br />
of welcome" to poor benighted Freshmen,<br />
and from the third she obtained<br />
that mysterious box, containing our<br />
names, aclclresses, and Y. W. pedigrees.<br />
Mary Evelyn Deveney<br />
Jamesburg, New Jersey<br />
Romance L anguages<br />
You thought her ever quite demure?<br />
She is-you're right.<br />
But just the same she leads our yells<br />
With all her might.<br />
Is real work waiting to be clone?<br />
Just lead her to it;<br />
Instead of George, we've always let<br />
Our Jimmy do it.<br />
Fifty-one
Agnes Doetsch<br />
14 Merrymount Road<br />
Baltimore, Yiary;and<br />
Biology<br />
Agnes runs a Lizzie,<br />
She runs it with a grin;<br />
She often runs to see a show,<br />
But once she got run in.<br />
Dorothy Edmunds<br />
210 West Green Street<br />
Cornellsville, Pennsylvania<br />
Biology<br />
Always reliable,<br />
That's undenia'ble;<br />
In biology lab she can often be<br />
found.<br />
O n committees she's willing,<br />
Her duty fulfilling<br />
As modiste, and milliner widely renowned.<br />
Fi!lJi·lnw
Olga von Ezdorf<br />
901 "The Wellington"<br />
\ i\Tashington, D. C.<br />
Biola g)'<br />
No, we are not discussing a R ussian<br />
Princess (although there is a legend<br />
concerning such an origin) or even a<br />
modern vampire-but a most dainty<br />
little midget with a large name. Olga's<br />
big eyes may put her in . a foreign<br />
class-but her actions are real A merican.<br />
She plans to uphold the U nited<br />
States Navy-and is up on so many<br />
subjects of current interest that she<br />
might well be the Gimle Oracle. One<br />
can always find her circumnavigating<br />
the halls with the same gay good<br />
humor- and we wonder how she sails<br />
such a straight, and easy course<br />
through the Academic.<br />
Mildred Hubert Faupel<br />
811 North Broadway<br />
Baltimore, Maryland<br />
Social S cience<br />
,;_,1i]dred's artistic temperament is so<br />
well balanced with judicial calm that<br />
it is always a pleasure and a relief to<br />
be with her. Whether she goes in for<br />
social work or business, we'll go bond<br />
that she wi ll meet every emergency<br />
with coolness and discretion.<br />
Fitty-three
Margaret Fishback<br />
2709 36th Street, Northwest<br />
Washington, D. C.<br />
English<br />
The responsibilities of leadership<br />
that have rested upon Mamie's young<br />
shoulders have been sufficient to gray<br />
the hair of any but a member of the<br />
redoubtable coterie. But no matter<br />
how knotty were the problems of student<br />
government with which she<br />
wrestled, they were never known even<br />
to disturb her marcel (when she had<br />
one) nor to detract one iota from her<br />
genius for fun-making, or for friendship.<br />
She is a brilliant example of<br />
the fact that a college girl can receive<br />
praise, honor, and adoration without<br />
seeming to be aware of it. Her formula<br />
? Perhaps it is her natural aptitude<br />
for being interested in everything<br />
and everybody-be it an "admirable<br />
bit" in Shakespeare, or a Freshman in<br />
the throes of nostalgia. In other<br />
words, it is just being-herself.<br />
Jeanne Folliot<br />
R ue Paul Bert<br />
Chablis, Y orme, F rance<br />
S ocial S cience<br />
A venturesome maiden IS J eanne<br />
Folliot<br />
For voyaging far from France,<br />
She tackled the worst of our classes :<br />
just so<br />
She vanquished us all with a glance.<br />
She isn't afraid of sure death in the<br />
pool,<br />
And her hair was the first to be bobbed<br />
in the school!<br />
Fifty-four
Naomi Forsythe<br />
3305 Pacific A venue<br />
A tlantic City, New J ersey<br />
Latin<br />
She's done everything here that there<br />
is to do,<br />
From basket-ball clear down to having<br />
the flu;<br />
She's played hockey and baseball, her<br />
favorite sport,<br />
And acts like the pool was a summer<br />
resort.<br />
She's a much beloved comrade, we all<br />
of us say-<br />
This happy, explosive, good sport we<br />
call Na.<br />
Helen E. Freiburger<br />
25 15 Fairfield Avenue<br />
Fort ·wayne, Indiana<br />
Social Science<br />
· \,Yhen Fry brings her racquet and<br />
her grin to a tennis game, 1921 is accustomed<br />
to utter a sigh of contentment<br />
at the start, and a shout of triumph<br />
at the finish . But if by chance<br />
things do go wrong, in tennis or in<br />
temperature, Fry keeps the same old<br />
grin-which seems to be one of the chief<br />
arguments in favor of "man's unconquerable<br />
mind." Social science rhymes<br />
with self-reliance, and Fry ( in a<br />
pinch ) with happy-which we intend<br />
to refer to her friends' mental attitude<br />
when she's around. We didn't put her<br />
in a poem because of the pinch. We<br />
think she's too big for our kind of<br />
poem, anyway.<br />
Fitty-five
Mary Elizabeth Fristoe<br />
Clifton, Virginia<br />
Chemistry<br />
Mary, Mary, never contrary,<br />
How do your test-tubes grow?<br />
Do you ever upset them, or even forget<br />
them<br />
Singing away in front row?<br />
Ailsa Wright Fulton<br />
2211 St. Paul Street<br />
Baltimore, Maryland<br />
English<br />
A quiet, calm, and thoughtful scholar's<br />
mind,<br />
A friend whose loyalty may not be<br />
doubted,<br />
An athlete who excels in every sport<br />
These names but feebly do express her<br />
worth;<br />
For twenty-one has ever found in her<br />
T hat broad, enlightened, honest sporting<br />
spirit<br />
\Vhich guides athletic board to name<br />
and fame.<br />
Fitty-•ix
Virginia Seth Gallup<br />
Oxford, Maryland<br />
Mathematics<br />
Titian Tints ser ve as a crown<br />
U pon a head<br />
vVhich lacketh wisdom, never!<br />
Cheerful calm, sane common sense<br />
She has, 'ti s said,<br />
And lucid judgment-ever!<br />
Margaret Darthea Gantt<br />
Millersville, Maryland<br />
Physiology and H ygiene<br />
Gantt has the sort of personal magnetism<br />
which can make Seniors clamor<br />
to come out for rehearsa ls, tight-fi sted<br />
business-men fight for the privilege of<br />
getting an ad in DONNYBROOK, and almost<br />
bankrupt students implore her to<br />
accept their last three dollars. This<br />
magnetic quality is not limited to the<br />
confines of her subtle smile, for it has<br />
been observed that her solar plex1s<br />
a nd her patellar ligament have an indubitable<br />
attraction for stray hockey<br />
balls, even as the goals have for her<br />
own unerring ones. Gantt declares she<br />
has it on good authori ty that she is a<br />
"hit-or-miss student"; which, being<br />
in terpreted, means that even if she<br />
shouldn't hit the ball, it wou:d never<br />
mi ss her. However, there is no doubt<br />
that she has made a hit with everybody<br />
at <strong>Goucher</strong>, and that we wouldn't<br />
have missed knowing her for all the<br />
money in the D oNNYBROOK treasury.<br />
Fitty-se\!en
Helen Golden<br />
Elkins, \i\1 est Virginia<br />
English<br />
Goldie's a major in English, 'tis true,<br />
Often she'll quote Billie Shakespeare<br />
for you;<br />
L oves Ang:o-Saxon, and gym she<br />
adores,<br />
Dines out quite often, has flowers by<br />
the scores.<br />
She's always receptive in matter of<br />
jokes,<br />
And never 1s backward in pulling a<br />
hoax.<br />
Leona Ker Grady<br />
1118 Habersham Street<br />
Savannah, Georgia<br />
History<br />
Interpretive dancing takes most of her<br />
time<br />
\iVhen Lee is residing in this Northern<br />
clime;<br />
A nd singing old ''Dixie" helps pass<br />
time away<br />
'Till headed for Georgia, she sails on<br />
her way.<br />
Fitt}!-eight
Thekla M. Graff<br />
Edmondson Avenue<br />
Ten H ills, :Maryland<br />
Chemistry<br />
W hen Thekla found in Chemistry<br />
They didn't make mayonnaise<br />
She reinforced it wi th Home E c<br />
For use in F uture Days.<br />
V ernna Mae Growt<br />
1608 Mount Royal Avenue<br />
Baltimore, Maryland<br />
History<br />
Dancing in from New O rleans,<br />
She breathes of orange-blossom :<br />
But just inquire what she means<br />
She'll say she's playing 'possum.<br />
Nor g race nor mirth can cheat her<br />
mind<br />
Of room for projects serious ;<br />
But Evolution and its kind<br />
She fears as deleterious.<br />
Fitly-nine
Dorothy Harrison<br />
Caldwell, New Jersey<br />
English<br />
On knowledge bent,<br />
Where e'er she's sent,<br />
Is Dorothy, we'll say;<br />
Pulls A's and B's<br />
With greatest ease,<br />
And does it every clay.<br />
Madalon Frances Hatfield<br />
Mount Morris, Pennsylvania<br />
Home Econo·mics<br />
When an unfortunate pncler-classman,<br />
still in the "chaperon era," wants<br />
to go anywhere at all, she need only<br />
ask Madalon, to be sure of a good<br />
time. She is always ready- and smilingly<br />
willing. Of course, Madalon<br />
can thus sympathize with the young,<br />
for has not her own career been clotted<br />
(not sparsely, either) with incidents<br />
of a similar nature? Everyone who<br />
has seen the mass of material evidence<br />
in the Sessrymner parlor during the<br />
last four years answers-"Yes !"<br />
Sixty-one
Helen Elmer Hayden<br />
Catonsville, Maryland<br />
Edu.cation and Romance Languages<br />
Though in the kindergarten<br />
She gets mixed up with the kids,<br />
R eally she's a grown-up lady,<br />
And her Buick never skids.<br />
She has histrionic talent;<br />
Her face and ways are sweet;<br />
And in anaesthetic dancing<br />
Her footing's quite a feat.<br />
Leah Shaffer Heindle<br />
612 West 20th Street<br />
Wilmington, Delaware<br />
English<br />
Leah's infectious giggle is one we<br />
would not mind catching, especially if<br />
there were a chance of contracting<br />
with it her ability to appreciate every<br />
situation in which she is placed. She<br />
has proven herself able to carry off a<br />
Japanese Bazaar and an impersonation<br />
of the long-suffering Hero with<br />
an equal excellence, and by her gracious<br />
courtesy has made for h erself a<br />
name in many another field. 'vVe wish<br />
her all the happiness of Hero-with<br />
exem'ption from the previous vicissitudes.<br />
Sixty-two
Mary Louise Hicks<br />
Gambrills, Maryland<br />
Romance Languages<br />
When you were feelin' grumpy,<br />
A nd all the world was wrong;<br />
When flunk slips floated round you,<br />
And the way seemed hard and long:<br />
It was "Hi, there ! Let me tell you<br />
Have you heard the .latest news?''<br />
A nd then before you knew it<br />
She would chase away your b!ues<br />
\ Vith her laughter and her chatter,<br />
With her fun and jollity.<br />
A nd when that midshipman gets her,<br />
\Vhat a lucky man he'll be!<br />
Margaret Edith Hill<br />
224 H igh Street<br />
Watertown, New York<br />
Social Science<br />
A walking map is Peggy H ill<br />
From all of the worl d she has<br />
hailed;<br />
She's English, has lived in India,<br />
A nd then to America sailed.<br />
But best of all she's a <strong>Goucher</strong> girl<br />
true;<br />
Though English, "gets" jokes, as<br />
we note:<br />
She'll soon be a full-fleclgecl A merican<br />
girl,<br />
Since now she can cast a vote.<br />
Sixt]i-three
Edna Lillian Johnston<br />
Front Street<br />
Brownsville, Pennsylvania<br />
Social Science<br />
You'd think by her smile and her amiable<br />
ways<br />
T hat she ·went up on sociable<br />
science;<br />
But social or sociable, it is a phase<br />
T hat we may regard with reliance.<br />
Mildred Bryant Johnston<br />
Elkins, West Virginia<br />
Major: History<br />
Pep, good humor, animation,<br />
Blended in with a ready smile<br />
Always in our estimation<br />
"Billie'' is a friend worth while.<br />
Sixty-fnur
Elizabeth Dennistowne Kane<br />
107 Edgar Street<br />
Kane, Pennsylvania<br />
Ph ysiolog)l and H ygieue<br />
This chemist worked in other labs<br />
Before she made filtrations here;<br />
But we are flattered we can say,<br />
At least she joined us Senior Year.<br />
Elsie Virginia Keith<br />
2423 Maryland Avenue<br />
Baltimore, Maryland<br />
Chemistry<br />
Oh E lsie V. is as busy as a bee;<br />
From dawn till dark she's bustling<br />
In lab, or class, or the library<br />
Or begging, "Please come to tennis<br />
with me!"<br />
What's she to be? A chemist, you<br />
·see,<br />
vVith weighty problems tussling!<br />
Sixt:y->ix
Katherine Stager Kelley<br />
1900 North Second Street<br />
Harrisburg, Pennsylvania<br />
Social S cience<br />
Kather,ine has so much to say,<br />
Her words step on each others'<br />
hee:s ;<br />
You o ften guess that she's about<br />
Her laughter rings in merry peals.<br />
A nd then you run to join the bunch,<br />
And hea r just how it was, from<br />
K itty;<br />
She never yet has passed a slam,<br />
She's neat and sweet, whole-so uled<br />
and- pretty!<br />
Elizabeth Clarke Kieffer<br />
3409 Moeri s Avenue<br />
Baltimore, Maryland<br />
English<br />
She's helped to trace the varied charactery<br />
O f our brief chronicle; in printed<br />
·page<br />
W e see her work revealed, and on<br />
our stage<br />
She showed the Dumb Wife's husband's<br />
Q uandary.<br />
She loves the company of books-indeed<br />
Makes her abode among t hese wise<br />
shelf-dwellers;<br />
We wager some day one of the best<br />
sellers<br />
Will bear her name in gilt for all to<br />
read.<br />
Sixty-seven
Ruth A. Klein<br />
1746 Mineral Spring Road<br />
Reading, Pennsylvania<br />
Social Science<br />
She plays and sings,<br />
Does lots of things,<br />
Makes Lawrence and Warner<br />
House go;<br />
You ·can have the best time<br />
Within reason or rhyme<br />
With Ruth, when her wit doth flow.<br />
Lillian Marie Klopel<br />
316 East North Avenue<br />
Baltimore, Maryland<br />
English<br />
"Baltimore, says she,<br />
"Is not the place for me,"<br />
She'll ·find renown<br />
In another town,<br />
\ i\Then she gets her A. B.<br />
Sixty-eight
Beatrice Helen Kraus<br />
Emersonian Apartments<br />
Baltimore, Mary:and<br />
German<br />
Be a major eel in German,<br />
Sub-majored in art;<br />
And confessed it to be an affair of<br />
the heart.<br />
But from Weekly Office<br />
She falls on her prey:<br />
\Vhen she vamps business-men; they<br />
forget to say "Nay."<br />
Elsie Eva Krug<br />
2828 East Baltimore Street<br />
Baltimore, Maryland<br />
English<br />
To "A's" she's not a stranger,<br />
But her hair's a sign of danger-<br />
So we wonder what in future years<br />
she'll do;<br />
For when she's a missionary<br />
In a foreign seminary,<br />
\Nill she squelch the little heathen<br />
children too?<br />
Six!}!-nine
Frieda Mary Kuhlmann<br />
1837 West Balti more Street<br />
Baltimore, Mary}and<br />
English<br />
The Kuhlmann Sisters pa,ir off we: l ;<br />
They're Titians both, you see.<br />
F ri eda is jolly, and has ideas<br />
As to what good prose should he.<br />
Nettie A. L. Kuhlmann<br />
1837 W est Baltimore Street<br />
Baltimore, Maryland<br />
Chemistr31<br />
Nettie is quiet and serene,<br />
Not much inclined to glee,<br />
Except when she masters a problem<br />
tough<br />
In higher chemistry.<br />
Seventy
Anne Llewellyn Lake<br />
Melrose Avenue<br />
Hampton, Virginia<br />
English<br />
Resume of Her Mad Career.<br />
A Play in Four Acts<br />
Scene- <strong>Goucher</strong> <strong>College</strong>.<br />
Lapse of time-1917-1921.<br />
Cast-Anne.<br />
All the rest of us.<br />
Act l-In which A nne shows her<br />
geniality and burning dramatic talent<br />
enly-one
,<br />
/<br />
Anne Banister Lanier<br />
2934 Parmee Avenue<br />
Birmingham, A labama<br />
Romance Languages<br />
Anne flirted with the birdie<br />
To make her picture real;<br />
She nearly broke the camera's heart<br />
All fortified with steel.<br />
She drinks two quarts of milk a day,<br />
And jazzes at all hours;<br />
She studies many languages<br />
She's quite exhausted ours.<br />
Loretta Crook Lesher<br />
V\f,illiamstown, Pennsylvania<br />
English<br />
That Bumps is brilliant, we can say;<br />
A nd that she is efficient<br />
We'll let the old I. C. S. A.,<br />
Y. Vv. too and Senior Play<br />
Be witnesses sufficient<br />
Yet if we would describe her quite<br />
One thing must we relate,<br />
Winner or loser, wrong or right,<br />
In fair or foul, by day or night<br />
Her path is slim and straight.<br />
Set•enl]i·lll!o
Ivfargaret Emma Letzer<br />
532 North Calhoun Street<br />
Ealtimo.re, Maryland<br />
Romance Languages<br />
Letz, ever peppy, cl·isplaying a grin<br />
To brighten the gloomiest mood you<br />
are 111,<br />
Has interest unlimited-genius for<br />
fun,<br />
[s athlete, and actor, and hustler- all<br />
one.<br />
Selma Linde<br />
1717 East Baltimore Street<br />
Baltimore, Maryland<br />
English<br />
Lo ! a quiet maiden,<br />
\tVith deep reflections laden ;<br />
l n silence she cloth me eli tate.<br />
'l'hen knowingly she cloth debate.<br />
Sel!enty-three
Marjorie Linville<br />
1935 Park Avenue<br />
Baltimore, Maryland<br />
Social Science •<br />
If Marj did not believe that all is<br />
fair in print and ,picture, she could<br />
never have pursued so ruthlessly the<br />
victims of 'her camera, even tracking<br />
the faculty to their lairs. To this day<br />
D r. Lonn and Harriet wonder whether<br />
it was by force or by strategy that<br />
they were prevailed upon to pose for<br />
DoNN YBROOK FAIR of 192 1. B erein<br />
lies the key to Marj's genius. Marj<br />
is a dip!omat in the making, unless<br />
she becomes permanently addicted to<br />
photography.<br />
Marguerite Livingstone<br />
154 Lafayette Street<br />
York, P ennsylvania<br />
English<br />
Oh, Marguerite,<br />
Sweet and petite,<br />
Demure, yet peppy too<br />
Our memories of happy p:ays<br />
A re centered upon you.<br />
W ith winsome face<br />
And quiet grace<br />
Throughout your part you've<br />
moved;<br />
And like the minutes that you write<br />
You hereby stand approved.<br />
S evenlJJ·four
] anice Combs Loker<br />
Leonardtown, Maryland<br />
Romance Languages and Education<br />
Sing a song of Janice<br />
Three parlors full of men<br />
All heard the bold proposal<br />
My, she was flustered then!<br />
How well she tells a story,<br />
Or sings a song to you-<br />
She knows just how to please 'em,<br />
\iVee boys and grown ones too.<br />
Catherine Davenport Long<br />
3.313 Guilford Avenue<br />
Baltimore, Maryland<br />
English<br />
Catherine is one who must have<br />
considered the Principles 'Of Old English<br />
as a "blessing, not a curse"; for<br />
she spent an extra cycle with us in<br />
order to complete her mastery of the<br />
English language. Through it all she<br />
never failed to maintain her equilibrium<br />
with quiet dignity and poise.<br />
Scvcnly-six
Elizabeth Daly Major<br />
Fayette, Missouri<br />
History<br />
0 ! Titian :Maid,<br />
If l may c:aim<br />
One little curl<br />
O ne tiny flame,<br />
From out those locks<br />
With glints of red<br />
Which form a ha:o<br />
'Round thy head-<br />
1'11 come across and pay the F und<br />
The coin for which I've long been<br />
dunned!<br />
(Please) Ref rain:<br />
0, squelch me not<br />
vvrth look supreme,<br />
.-\11 radiant maid,<br />
My T itian Q ueen!<br />
Mary Alice Marshall<br />
Glenolden, Pennsylvania<br />
Social Science<br />
She modifies frocks, makes the basket,<br />
and dances ;<br />
From birth the good fairies have<br />
over her h overed.<br />
But now there's a P rince; and in<br />
short, the romance is,<br />
Well-that her virtues have been<br />
rediscovered.<br />
Sevenl]i-eight
Mary Grace Martin<br />
1527 North Bentalou Street<br />
Baltimore, Maryland<br />
Physics<br />
Not much bigger than an atom,<br />
High ambition fi res her soul;<br />
Education is her hobby<br />
Cali fornia schoo:s her goal.<br />
Sadie Estelle Martin<br />
Rogne! Heights<br />
Ba:timore, Maryland<br />
H ome Economics<br />
L ittle Sadie she ca n work 'and can play,<br />
Litt!e Sadie she is funny and sweet,<br />
Little Sadie has a mission, we'll say,<br />
She'll teach the wor!d what it<br />
oughtn't to eat.<br />
S cl>c nl]!-nine
Henrietta Masbach<br />
1112 North Eutaw Street<br />
Baltimore, Maryland<br />
B iology<br />
Henrietta is an Excellent Specimen,<br />
whether viewed from the standpoint<br />
of her microsc,opic accomplishments,<br />
or from that of her stethoscopic register.<br />
H er lab associates will testify<br />
as one man that she combines a zeal<br />
for quiet and independent investigation<br />
with a most large-hearted readiness<br />
to rescue the perishing from the<br />
arms of the starfish or the trichocysts<br />
of the protozoi)n. A nd wherever she<br />
is known, she is accorded high honors<br />
in that greatest pre-requisite to success<br />
- a sense of humor.<br />
Gertrude Maurin<br />
2717 Baldwin Street<br />
Houston, T exas<br />
History<br />
0 Dixie lass, what made you roam<br />
So very, very far from home?<br />
vVha t made you deaf to Texas' call<br />
A nd ·come to <strong>Goucher</strong>'s "hedges tall"?<br />
It may be love for Baltimore,<br />
And all its theatres galore;<br />
O r just the lure of <strong>Goucher</strong>'s fame,<br />
But we're all mighty glad you came !<br />
Eighty
Minnie V. Medwedeff<br />
5014 \Vesley Avenue<br />
Baltimore, Maryland<br />
Biolog}'<br />
An embryonic prof is she,<br />
Her lab work's scientific glee.<br />
In asking c•ity girls to tea,<br />
And playing basket-ball, we see,<br />
Her pleasures in another key.<br />
Julia Miller Merriken<br />
Belvidere Avenue<br />
Roland Park, Baltimore, :.\Iarylanc!<br />
Rornance Languages<br />
The making of scenery, known as her<br />
forte,<br />
Giyes professional air to our plays.<br />
She's w·ielclecl the hammer, the saw and<br />
the brush;<br />
She's endowed with artistic ways.<br />
And in stating opinions entirely her<br />
own<br />
Great courage she often displays.<br />
Eighty-one
Laura Uhler Millard<br />
A nnville, Pennsylvania<br />
Social Science<br />
\Vhen 1t comes to Shakespeare, she<br />
sheds many a tear,<br />
This girl who can swim, and can trim<br />
up a gym<br />
For a ball.<br />
With her good hockey stick she has oft<br />
turned a trick:<br />
Is rated a star, and a girl above par<br />
By us all.<br />
Katharine Hager Miller<br />
208 South Maple Avenue<br />
Martinsburg, \Vest Virginia<br />
Chemistry<br />
And yet she lives!<br />
36 hours at Annapolis<br />
19 hours in Chem Lab<br />
6 hours at Mt. Holly<br />
! ! ! ! ! at the telephone.<br />
Eight]!- tWo
Pauline Louise Mills<br />
1112 Braddock A venue<br />
P ittsburgh, Pennsy:vania<br />
Education<br />
Pauline makes hieroglyphics<br />
W hen she tries to write her name;<br />
But otherwise she's normal,<br />
And a girl we're prone! to claim.<br />
T he sweetness of her voice, her store<br />
Of wit and humor quaint<br />
Make her beloved; she never plays<br />
At being what she "ain't"!<br />
Elizabeth Fallin Moller<br />
3307 Gwynn O ak Avenue<br />
R omance Languages<br />
Gaily elated,<br />
A nd syncopated<br />
Like a razzy, jazzy t une;<br />
Versatility,<br />
Capability:<br />
'fo "Weekly" Baldy's a boon.<br />
Ever cheery,<br />
Never teary,<br />
P:aying Siamese with Letz;<br />
Eating sweet cakes,<br />
Drinking m ilk shakes,<br />
A ncl whew ! the grades she gets !<br />
Eighty-three<br />
/
Helen Montgomery<br />
Belle P laine, Iowa<br />
She's got the swimming motion,<br />
Though she's from the :.Iiddle \Nest<br />
\Nhere they never see an ocean,<br />
But they see a joke, we guess.<br />
Anna M. Moore<br />
Coatesville, Pennsylvania<br />
Social Science<br />
When we gathered Junior year<br />
To choose our chief, our guide,<br />
\Ve said, " She must have dignity<br />
To rule and to preside;<br />
Must have a sense of humor<br />
For Junior Banquet night;<br />
Must see the right and wrong of things<br />
And make us choose the right."<br />
\ N e mentioned this and spoke of that,<br />
And as each left the floor<br />
She said- and all. agreed with her<br />
"That girl is Nancy Moore."<br />
Eighty-four<br />
/
Esther Elizabeth Murdoch<br />
141 Williamson Avenue<br />
Bloomfield, New J ersey<br />
History<br />
"vVhere 's Esther ?" you ask. \ 1\T ell,<br />
we'll make a stab,<br />
A nd sa,v that you'll find her in chemistry<br />
lab.<br />
She came back this year plus a large<br />
solitaire,<br />
.'\nd now shines in the ranks of the<br />
bunch with bobbed hai r.<br />
Dorothea Louise Myers<br />
Daytona Beach, Florida<br />
Care J. W. :dyers<br />
Physiology<br />
She does so many li ttle tricks, it's<br />
hard to tell them all ;<br />
She sings and plays her uke and keeps<br />
stuff going in the hall.<br />
O ut of the west in her junior year she<br />
came with all her fun;<br />
She always found the time to do the<br />
jobs that people asked her to.-<br />
U ntil as versatile she g rew as her<br />
chameleon.<br />
Eighl)l-five
Nellie Neuhausen<br />
722 North Wolfe Street<br />
Baltimore, Maryland<br />
Chemistr)J<br />
\ Vhen they were dealing out the brains<br />
It must be here confessed of us,<br />
T he Lord gave Nellie half of all<br />
T hat shoul d have reached the rest<br />
of us.<br />
Ruth O'Brien<br />
Greenville, West Virginia<br />
Histor·y<br />
To History she's addicted,<br />
But her sunny disposition<br />
Compels us to insinuate<br />
She'd make a good physician.
Helen Montell Orne<br />
2011 Bolton Street<br />
Baltimore, Maryland<br />
Soria! Science<br />
Helen certainly can qualify for Social<br />
Service work, considering her experience<br />
as delegate to the Des Moines<br />
Student Convention, her silent, efficient<br />
management nf the Bible classes,<br />
and her illimitable capacity for smiling<br />
jocosely at 8 o'clock •in the morning<br />
( to say nothing of all other times)<br />
to the unending wonder of Y. vV.<br />
cabinet. Helen's abilities would make<br />
her at home in any fi eld--even a missionary<br />
field.<br />
Ruth Margaret Owlett<br />
47 Walnut Street<br />
\Vellsboro, Pennsylvania<br />
Philosophy<br />
The courage of conviction<br />
Has this "Scientist" always;<br />
Can see things in philosophy<br />
That leave us in a daze.<br />
In Choir and Glee Club concerts<br />
Her voice soars sweet and true;<br />
And even as her song is,<br />
Is her disposition too.<br />
Eightji-cight
Georgia Paciarelli<br />
322 South H igh Street<br />
Baltimore, Maryland<br />
Romance Languages<br />
True to the spirit of <strong>Goucher</strong> she lives,<br />
Earnest and steadfast devotion she<br />
"giVeS<br />
Gold and blue.<br />
For her loyal support to our class<br />
twenty-one<br />
\ Ve will always take pride in what she<br />
has done<br />
And will do.<br />
Mary F. Parmenter<br />
O range Park, Florida<br />
Ps\'cholog.v<br />
\Vhen Mary does our dirty work,<br />
To rnn a feed or write a rhyme,<br />
It's not a thing of note, she says,<br />
It's'just because she has the time.<br />
She has the time to range the woods,<br />
To dip her toes in icy streams ;<br />
Yet she can give a mental test<br />
O r l·isten to a freshman's dreams,<br />
A nd Oh! the costumes she can make; .<br />
To cut and sew is her delight,<br />
And in between her other jobs<br />
She works for Kalends day and<br />
nig ht.<br />
And so when Mary graduates<br />
And leaves us for another clime,<br />
You'll find she's won each <strong>Goucher</strong><br />
heart-<br />
Because she always has the time.<br />
Eighty-nine
Eleanor Robinson Pearsall<br />
F ranklin Street<br />
Rocky Mount, North Carolina<br />
Oh, fair elusive Eleanor,<br />
\Vhy leave you these gray walls,<br />
To go forever dancing<br />
In Academi c Halls?<br />
] s the Severn the attraction,<br />
O r, perchance, a hurry call?<br />
Anyway, you heed it often,<br />
And you always make 'em fall.<br />
Natalie Lewis Penn<br />
:-1artinsville, Virginia<br />
Romance Languages<br />
As sure as Natalie's titian locks<br />
A re tinted sufficiently bright,<br />
To guide the boisterous Vingolf maids<br />
Through the narrow paths of right,<br />
So sure have Natalie's titian locks<br />
Enough of the redness extracted<br />
To keep ever calm-and a humorous<br />
twist<br />
No matter what rul es be enacted.<br />
Ninety
Marie Eulalie Perkins<br />
1327 Eutaw Place<br />
Baltimore, Maryland<br />
Chemistry<br />
A wonderf!,!l student, but never a<br />
grind,-<br />
One more loyal to college yon ne\·er<br />
could find;<br />
Dut when out of classes, she loves to<br />
"fly high":<br />
\t'/e're afraid that Marie will stay up<br />
in the sky!<br />
Camille Pierson<br />
Chinook, Montana<br />
History<br />
Young Camille Pierson came out of<br />
the \Vest;<br />
Of all the fine arts she loves music<br />
the best;<br />
No task has she ever been known to<br />
neglect:<br />
She has earned from us all both our<br />
love and respect.<br />
NineiJJ-one
Lenora Purple<br />
101 East Twenty-fifth Street<br />
Ba:timore, Maryland<br />
History<br />
For music or studies,<br />
For books or for fun,<br />
L enore, surnamed P urple,<br />
\Vill serve all in one.<br />
She left us, 'tis true ;<br />
But since she returned,<br />
Two fortunate classes<br />
Her virtues have learned.<br />
Margaret Purple<br />
101 East Twenty-fifth Street<br />
Baltimore, Maryland<br />
Biology<br />
?\1argaret was intense in psych,<br />
For P urp:e is her name;<br />
'!'ennis is her specialty,-<br />
She p:ays a dead;y game.<br />
And if to teaching she returns,<br />
Her sorrows will be few:<br />
The work may drive her dippy. but<br />
'T will never make her "blue."<br />
Ninety-three
Alice Rockford<br />
I£)40 James Avenue, South<br />
Minneapo:is, Minnesota<br />
History<br />
J\ dangerous dramatic star<br />
This damsel seems to be;<br />
For she wreaks havoc everywhere<br />
By giggling gleefully.<br />
H er merry heart delights her friends,<br />
Her Benedict, the coach :<br />
Her temper only Beatrice<br />
Would ever dare reproach.<br />
Ruth Elva Ruhe<br />
3200 P resbury Street<br />
Baltimore, Mary:and<br />
Romance Languages<br />
" Where are you going, my pretty<br />
ma,icl ?"<br />
"Nearby old Geneva to teach French,"<br />
she said,<br />
"But for dignity's sake, I first must<br />
take care<br />
To manage by some means to put up<br />
my hair."<br />
Ninety-seven
Gladys Schwabe<br />
Charleston, West Virginia<br />
English<br />
\Vhen Schwabe came to <strong>Goucher</strong><br />
<strong>College</strong>, and found it sometimes<br />
rhymed with knowledge,-that piqued<br />
her pneumogastric nerve. She buckled<br />
down with vim and verve; and<br />
Scribbler and the <strong>Goucher</strong> GI'in proclaim<br />
the class that Schwabe's in. T'o<br />
offices she most a ttractive, despite reserve<br />
and protest active; and when<br />
a subject's to her mind, those in the<br />
class become resigned, and give the<br />
old Missouri system knocks for another<br />
grade that's missed 'em. Her<br />
code of honor wavers never ; her<br />
elfish smile's a joy forever.<br />
Margaret Elizabeth Shaeffer<br />
Virginia Avenue<br />
Towson, Maryland<br />
English<br />
She's quite a fish at swimming,<br />
A nd quite a shark at books;<br />
She's ever tall and stately,<br />
And never fhort on looks.<br />
Ninety-eight
Elizabeth P; Shantz<br />
Linden Terrace<br />
Towson, Maryland<br />
Home Econo1nics<br />
Home Ec is Libby's passion;<br />
She does all in peppy fashion,<br />
And class spirit is her motto to the<br />
end.<br />
If you don't feel very happy,<br />
She is always gay and snappy<br />
And she's everybody's jolly pal and<br />
friend.<br />
Margaret Jaquess Sharp<br />
Poseyville, Indiana<br />
History<br />
Pretty and popular, laughing and gay,<br />
Peg goes along in the happiest way;<br />
Of wit and wisdom she's filled to the<br />
brim,<br />
With a practical mixture of vigor and<br />
VIm.<br />
Ninety-nine
Harriette John Shuman<br />
313 East Street<br />
Bloomsbury, Pennsylvania<br />
English<br />
A jolly pal is Harriette,<br />
Ever ready her aid to lend:<br />
Never neglectful is Harriette<br />
Of w·ork, or fun, or friend.<br />
Elsie Silberman<br />
2308 Tioga Place<br />
Baltimore, Maryland<br />
History<br />
VIe wonder what Els·ie's career will<br />
be; she goes around college in a big<br />
fur ·coat, looking like a debutante, but,<br />
- she also carries a brief-case, looking<br />
like a lawyer's. Whatever it is that<br />
she is going to do, the prospect seems<br />
to thrill her,- if smiles are an indication.<br />
One Hundred
Florence Beatrice Smith<br />
\Vyndcrest Avenue<br />
Catonsville, iVId.<br />
Romance Languages<br />
List her conquests, name them all:<br />
Hockey, track and basket-ball;<br />
And when the lengthy li st is done,<br />
Add all the heart of twenty-one.<br />
Margaret S. Smith<br />
Chestertown, :VId.<br />
SocialS cience<br />
I ,oyal to Mardal four years through<br />
We'll say it's Mardal's good luck,<br />
won't you?<br />
For the fudge s'he makes in the wee<br />
small hours<br />
All Mardal Hall with glee devours.<br />
She's resourceful. artistic-:-a mighty<br />
good sport;<br />
But say, "Grecian nose," if her choler<br />
you'd court.<br />
One Hundred and One
Grace Stanton<br />
54 L Street, Northwest<br />
Washington, D. C.<br />
History<br />
This shy little maid from D. C.,<br />
Is quite fond of her own family.<br />
She's very domestic .. and far from majestic:<br />
Ready for fun, however it's clone.<br />
Her political lore yon never can floor;<br />
A nd besides all of this, that versatile<br />
miSS<br />
Is a shark at U. S. history!<br />
Marian Eleanor Stearns<br />
167 \Vest Chelten AYenue<br />
Germantown<br />
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania<br />
English<br />
To her modest, unpresuming<br />
\Yay of quietly assuming<br />
A ll the work that should be done ;<br />
T o the pass guards live in fear of,<br />
To the "A's" we never hear of,<br />
To her v·irtues one by one-<br />
VVe pay tribute without measure,<br />
K nowing each of us will treasure<br />
Marian's friendship just begun.<br />
One hur.dred and two
Dorothy Steffan<br />
6800 North Eleventh Street<br />
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania<br />
Social Science<br />
From Daisy Chain to president of our<br />
Y. W. C. A.<br />
Steff leaves a train of gracious memones.<br />
She counts her friends by dozens,<br />
knows just what to do and say,<br />
To put the plaintive Freshman at<br />
her ease.<br />
A.nd, best of all, along with her propensity<br />
for mirth<br />
There's something underneath-and<br />
one perceives<br />
She has old-fashioned faith and hope<br />
in all that's good and true.<br />
And li ves up to the things that she<br />
believes.<br />
Ethel Maxine Steuer<br />
JJ West Eighty-eighth Street<br />
New York City<br />
English<br />
A leader, whether her follower s be<br />
Rats or children or class;<br />
A Piper, whether her instrument be<br />
Acti01i or words or brass.<br />
A v.rriter of prose, a master of ver se,<br />
Ballplayer of note at first base-<br />
In cleverness, repartee, humor and wit,<br />
Eddie Stew sets a notable pace.<br />
One Hundred and Three
Carolyn R. Stevens<br />
9 18 Newington Avenue<br />
Baltimore, Mel.<br />
Social Science<br />
Cad Stevens is a friend, indeed-<br />
Her disposition's sunny.<br />
A plea to help the ones in need<br />
Of charity, or social work,<br />
O r men for Proms, she'll never shirk.:_<br />
On Cad we'll bet our monev.<br />
Mary Rebecca Stewart<br />
1404 North Second Street<br />
Harrisburg, Pennsylvania<br />
SocialS cience<br />
l f yo u want a thing well done,<br />
Just ask Becky;<br />
If yo u"re searching for good i un,<br />
Look up Becky.<br />
:\Iardal"s H . P's known fame<br />
As the gamest of the game.<br />
\;Vho? W hy Becky !<br />
One Hundred and Four
Dorothy Rhett Stuart<br />
413 Bretton P lace<br />
Guilford, Baltimore, lVIaryland<br />
Chemistry<br />
A lightening speed swimmer,<br />
A diver of note,<br />
Third team forward- a peach<br />
By unanimous vote.<br />
Mildred Hayman Suter<br />
67 East Hampshire Street,<br />
P iedmon t, \Vest Virginia<br />
Physics<br />
l\Iildrecl, recipient of boxes ga:ore,<br />
Bursting with things that the hungry<br />
adore,-<br />
How we all yearn to live on second<br />
floor<br />
With M ildred!<br />
T o dances and parties she goes every<br />
week;<br />
Of her insight in Physics we can't fail<br />
to speak;<br />
She accomplishes much with a calm<br />
quite unique,<br />
Does :vr ildred.<br />
One Hundred and Five
Jennie Mattox Sutherland<br />
1361 Irving Street, N orthwe3t<br />
Washington, D. C.<br />
Soc·ial Science<br />
Her presidential right hand wields<br />
The gavel with ability:<br />
But when you're dazzled by her left<br />
You grasp her versatility.<br />
\Ve love her steady eyes, her smile,<br />
Her friendly heart, now grave, now<br />
gay;<br />
\Ve wish her luck with her A. B.<br />
And years of joy with her l\1. A.<br />
Dorothy Alice Sweet<br />
691 Taylor Avenue,<br />
Detroit, Michigan<br />
English<br />
For lots of will, and wondrous skill,<br />
vVe'll think of Dotty ever.<br />
She made a name and won much fame<br />
Constructing costumes c:ever.<br />
And for the Blue, in hockey too<br />
She played with pep unceasing,<br />
And with her might helped in the fight<br />
The Seniors' score increasing.<br />
One Hundred and Six
Gladys Colton Tebbs<br />
1019 North Calvert Street<br />
Baltimore, Maryland.<br />
B iology<br />
Gladys C . T. gets an "A" in each class,<br />
And yet she is ever a popular lass;<br />
In Biology lab does all others surpass,<br />
And no one can quell her in logic,<br />
alas!<br />
Emma Elizabeth Thomas<br />
730 Reservoir Street<br />
Baltimore, Maryland.<br />
Socia./ Science<br />
A jumping center simply fine,<br />
A sense of humor most divine,<br />
Season with pep and good sportsmanship,<br />
Roll out thin-and take our tip!-<br />
If directions are followed, we can<br />
promise<br />
You'll find to your bliss you've Emma<br />
Thomas.<br />
One Hundred and S even
Sarah Emma Voorhees<br />
Lafayette Place<br />
Kennett Square, Pennsylvania<br />
History<br />
"Age cannot wither her, nor custom<br />
stale<br />
Her infinite variety."<br />
vVhy do we call her "Freshman ?"'<br />
We know she isn't green.<br />
Because she never will grow up<br />
Or wear a serious mien.<br />
Mary E. Walsh<br />
10 Newburg Avenue<br />
Catonsville, Mary:and<br />
Education<br />
"Too little for great praise"<br />
Mary is little and Mary is gay,<br />
She bubbles with mirth as she goes on<br />
her way;<br />
And yet she's as ready to work as to<br />
play :<br />
A most popular school-marm you"ll<br />
see her some clay.<br />
One Hundred and N_ine
Helen Jefferson Vveber<br />
130 South Patterson Park Avenue<br />
Baltimore, Maryland.<br />
Home Economics<br />
The Titians have told mt:,<br />
I know it is true,-<br />
Her hair may be red,<br />
But her spirit's true blue;<br />
She ·can cook wondrous dinners,<br />
Then fly out to dance ;<br />
And freeze ruddy freshmen<br />
To stone with one glance.<br />
Carolyn Joan Weiss<br />
Park View Apartments<br />
Baltimore, Maryland. _<br />
Romance Languages<br />
Whenever the Weekly was lacking an<br />
ad,<br />
\Vhenever the treasury looked mighty<br />
bad,<br />
When DONNYBROOK Business Board<br />
though life too sad,<br />
Everyone called upon Cally.<br />
And if any time you have heard Cally<br />
smg,<br />
Or if you've seen the marks that her<br />
quizzes all bring,<br />
\Vhy then you must know that there<br />
isn't a thing,<br />
That cannot be done by our Cally.<br />
One Hundred and Ten
Sarah Frances Wolfe<br />
Camden, South Carolina<br />
Social Science<br />
This girl must have a merry heart<br />
So much good cheer does she impart.<br />
She has h er say in Social Science,<br />
And bids the plutocrat defiance.<br />
Eliza Bennett Young<br />
429 West Omsby Street<br />
Louisville, Kentucky<br />
English<br />
'vVe thought our class was pretty fair,<br />
As classes often do ;<br />
Vve thought with .pride ·of those who<br />
led<br />
T he wearers of the Blue.<br />
But now in looking back we know<br />
'Twould not have been the same,<br />
If Liza had not come last year<br />
To add another name;<br />
For Senior Tea, also H. P.<br />
Just mean we're strong for our<br />
E. B.<br />
One Hundred and F ourteen
Katherine A. Young<br />
194 South Bathsdale Street<br />
Memphis, Tennessee<br />
Romance Languages<br />
Kit Young looks languid,<br />
But has lots of pep<br />
At dancing or boning<br />
She has the same rep.<br />
Her projects are many,<br />
From nursing her brain<br />
To seeking for gold<br />
On the broad Spanish Main .<br />
One Hundred and Fifteen
Vice-President<br />
MARGARET GANTT<br />
Corresponding Secretary<br />
MARVEL WILLIAMS<br />
Jessica Acker<br />
Edith Albert<br />
Margaret Anker<br />
Edna Ashburn<br />
Berenice Back<br />
Fe I ice Baron<br />
Mary Berkey<br />
Louise Bichart<br />
Gladys Bishop<br />
Eliza Blair<br />
Drusilla Blackeny<br />
Helen Bowers<br />
Helene Bowers<br />
Evelyn Beeckons<br />
Laura Bretz<br />
Bertie Brin<br />
Bessie 'Calhoun<br />
Eloise Carter<br />
Lydia Cheney<br />
Louise Clagget<br />
Adelaide Clouting<br />
Inez Cohen<br />
Mary Corkran<br />
Mary Craven<br />
Rachel Crumley<br />
Hope Dennis<br />
Ruth Dibert<br />
Ellen Dies<br />
Susan Dryden<br />
Sophie Dunlap<br />
Elsa Ebeling<br />
Rose Esterson<br />
Ellen Everett<br />
Thelma Everngam<br />
Evelyn Ewalt<br />
Reg ina Felsenthal,<br />
Rebecca Flock<br />
Ruth Franc<br />
Esther Franc<br />
Olga Freese<br />
Mildred French<br />
Hazel Frosin<br />
Eleanor Gerberich<br />
Mary Gibson<br />
Laura Gilpin<br />
Nell Gladding<br />
''Deceased<br />
(!Jlazz ®ffirrrz of 1921<br />
President<br />
jENNIE SUTHERLAND<br />
Treasurer<br />
FANNYE RICH<br />
Members at Large<br />
ANNE WILSON<br />
LILLIAN CooK<br />
Ruth Grafflin<br />
Evelyn Gutman<br />
Esther Hahn<br />
Evelyn Haines<br />
Anna Hankins<br />
Alice Hanscom<br />
Helen Harriot<br />
Dorothy Haslup<br />
Dorothy 'Haynie<br />
Beatrice Hebbard<br />
Ruth Hebsacker<br />
Marion Hinds<br />
Lillian Hirschman<br />
Kathryn Hirsh<br />
Esther Holmes<br />
Martha How bert<br />
Anna Hunt<br />
Elizabeth Iddings<br />
Elizabeth Iglehart<br />
Ethel Jackson<br />
Ruth James<br />
Ruth Johnson<br />
Sophia Jolesch,<br />
Margaret Keever<br />
Marian Kerr<br />
Evelyn Lowe<br />
Gladys McDanel<br />
Janet McDowell<br />
Everett MacGowan<br />
Gladys MacKenzie<br />
Feliciana Manriquez<br />
Judith March<br />
Claire von Marees<br />
Cornelia Marvin<br />
Jean Maxwell<br />
Margaret May<br />
Lisle Maynard<br />
Thelma Meid<br />
Helen Miller<br />
Marcella Mitchell<br />
Marie Montzheimer<br />
Maria Mora<br />
Christine Morgenweck<br />
Harriet Morris<br />
Isabel Mullan<br />
Emily Muller<br />
Recording Secretary<br />
MARGUERITE DERSTINE<br />
Sergeants-at-Arms<br />
MARGARET GANTT<br />
ETHEL STEUER<br />
Mary Mumford<br />
Margaret Murphey<br />
Mildred Norris<br />
Sarah Ogilvie<br />
Persis Perkins<br />
Anne Persons<br />
Gladys Pierson<br />
Mabel Powell<br />
Harriet Pressey<br />
Kathryn Rea<br />
Marie Rewalt<br />
Suit Reynolds<br />
Hazel Riden<br />
Lillian Riley<br />
Berenice Rodemann<br />
Sarah Rosenburg<br />
Gladys Rosenstein<br />
Frances Rudd<br />
Sylvia Samuels<br />
Dorothy Schreckengast<br />
Eva Schultz<br />
Louise Shafer<br />
Mary Sherrod<br />
Grace Shipley<br />
Dorothy Shoemaker<br />
Helen Shoemaker<br />
Mary Smith<br />
Maroula Soho<br />
Lamar Sparks<br />
Rae Steiger<br />
Pearl Stewart<br />
Virginia Stonestreet<br />
Phyllis Thomas<br />
Ethel Uhler<br />
Margaret Walker<br />
Pauline Walls<br />
Evelyn Webb<br />
Margaret Wier<br />
Julia West<br />
* Dora Wheeler<br />
Bessie Wiesenfeld<br />
* Ida Williams ·<br />
Dorothy Williamson<br />
Virginia Wright<br />
One Hundred and Sixteen
REEN bows adorning more or less nervous pig-tails,<br />
market baskets containing more or less awe-inspiring<br />
books, and name cards (two o r three), pinned securely<br />
over more or less palpitating Freshman hearts, were the<br />
external symbols of 1921's initiation into the mysteries<br />
of <strong>Goucher</strong>. At that time it would have been indeed<br />
hard to decide whether our sense of ·importance at being<br />
college girls, or our sense of unimportance at being<br />
mere Freshmen, would have tipped the scales. But<br />
when the lordly Sophomores deigned to give us a party<br />
after those first uncertainties of hazing season, we<br />
became firmly convinced that we were an essential part<br />
of <strong>Goucher</strong>,-and a very big part at that, for our ranks numbered more than had<br />
any previous Freshman c:ass. And how proud we felt when, arrayed for the<br />
first time in our :impressive caps and gowns, we successfully avoided marching<br />
beneath that insidious Sophomore banner !-though 1920 to this day declares that,<br />
technically, we did walk beneath it.<br />
At our first appearance on the field of arms,-the tennis tournament,-when<br />
we succeeded in replacing the 1920 gold and white with an improvised blue and<br />
white banner under which the Sophomores went unconscious of their ignominy,<br />
we felt compensated for any doubt concerning our success on cap-and-gown day,<br />
and even for our unequivocal defeat at tennis. Still less did we distinguish ourselves<br />
at our first hockey game; but spurred on by defeat we summoned all our<br />
athletic forces and emerged triumphant from basket-ball,-clespite the fact that<br />
our ranks were depleted by measles just befo re the championship game.<br />
With the coming of spring we had hoped to take our sister-class on the "best<br />
boat ride ever," for they had given us everything precious, from "Prunella" to<br />
helpful hints on <strong>Goucher</strong> etiquette. But since the war was still with us, we followed<br />
the other classes' example in foregoing some of the beloved but costly<br />
college traditions, and gave up the boat ride i.n favor of a simpler affair at Tramp<br />
Rock; where our honorary member, Mr. Sneath, was in spired to sail a miniature<br />
"Kitty Knight" clown an even more miniature Chesapeake Bay. And it was<br />
aboard this boat in spirit, that the Juniors were borne to witness our first dramatic<br />
attempt, "The Masque of the Seasons."<br />
With the signing of the Armistice we participated in our first public parade,<br />
all clad in caps and gowns (our tassels self-consciously on the Sophomore side),<br />
and felt more dignified and academic than ever. Reconstruction being now the<br />
watchword, we did our bit for the Reconstruction Fund by producing "The Man<br />
Who Married a Dumb Wife." Other watchwords during that eventful year were<br />
"Flu" and "Nervous Strain"; but though we suff,erecl from both considerably,<br />
there were compensations.-for the kind authorities granted us several weeks'<br />
holiday (to be sick in ) and deprived us of the pleasure of taking mid-year exams.<br />
But it would take more than mere "flu" to soften our muscle acquired in the<br />
hay fields and peach orchards of the summer before, and accordingly we proceeded<br />
to display our athletic prowess by winning the Freshman-Sophomore<br />
Tennis Tournament and Hockey Game, and again the championship in basket-<br />
One Hundred and Seventeen
One Hundred and Eighteen
One Hundred and Twenty
One Hundred and Twenty-two
One Hundred and Twenty-three
•<br />
1
One Hundred and Thirl:y
Vice-President<br />
VIRGINIA GALT<br />
Recording Secretary<br />
MARIAN KERK<br />
@lass ®ffit£ri'i of <strong>1922</strong><br />
President<br />
CoNSTANCE LITTLE<br />
Corresponding Secretary<br />
KATHERINE PARKER<br />
Sergeants-at-Arms<br />
ELIZABETH ABBOTT ELIZABETH BARKSDALE<br />
E I izabeth Abbott,<br />
2127 Pleasant St., Minneapolis. :\1inn.<br />
Anna Lyde Adams,<br />
Galesmont, Broad Run, Va.<br />
Blanche Alsop,<br />
F r edericksburg, Va.<br />
Mary Armstrong,<br />
11 Goethe St., 'Cumberland, Md.<br />
Anne Bagby,<br />
2929 N. Calvert St., Baltimore, Md.<br />
Florence Barclay,<br />
116 W. 25th St., Baltimore, Md.<br />
E I izabeth Barker<br />
36 F"airfield Road, Yonkers, N. Y.<br />
Elizabeth Barksdale,<br />
119 Cla iborne St., Greenwood, Miss.<br />
Catherine Beachley,<br />
163 S. Prospect St., Hagerstown, Md.<br />
Eleanor Benson,<br />
Hanover, Md.<br />
Rosa I ine Berman,<br />
2002 Broad Ave., Altoona, P a .<br />
Stella Biddison,<br />
Raspeburg, Md.<br />
Mary Louise Bird,<br />
1425 Grand Ave., Davenport, Iowa.<br />
Dorothy Biscoe,<br />
1048 N. Eden St., BalNmore. :vrd.<br />
Esther Bosley,<br />
Sparks, Mel.<br />
One Hundred and ThiriJi-one<br />
Wuuiors<br />
Treasurer<br />
CLAIRE LESHER<br />
Recorder of Points<br />
MARGARET MoNNETT<br />
Ruth Brager,<br />
Seville .A!pts., Baltimore, M1d.<br />
Helen 'Burkhalter,<br />
U. S. Marine Hospital, Mo'bile, Ala.<br />
Katharine Butler,<br />
325 S. 20th St., Baltimore, Md.<br />
Ruth Caplan,<br />
2230 Mondawmin Ave., Baltimore, Md.<br />
Miriam Chalmers,<br />
Rugby Road, GuHford, Baltimore, Mrf<br />
Alma Chesnut,<br />
Hyattsville, Md.<br />
Isabel Chism,<br />
1148 S. Broa d St., Philadelphia, Pa.<br />
Saville Clift,<br />
2105 St. Paul ,St., Baltimore, Mel.<br />
Marjorie Collins,<br />
713 Newington Ave., Baltimore, Md.<br />
Janice Combs,<br />
Locust Grove, Ga.<br />
Katharine Criswell<br />
24 E. Second St., Waynesboro, Pa.<br />
Rose Diggs,<br />
2100 Erdman Ave., Baltimore, Md.<br />
Helen Disney,<br />
1201 Wakeling •St., Frankford, Pa.<br />
Anna Lynne Dodds,<br />
413 De Soto Ave., Clarksdale, Miss.<br />
Gertrude -Donald,<br />
103 Market St., Annapolis, Md.
One Hundred and Thirty-two
Cecelia Littleton,<br />
3413 Liberty Heights Ave., Baltimore,<br />
Maryland.<br />
Dorothy Loventhal,<br />
112 Thirty-third Ave., North Nashville,<br />
Tennessee.<br />
Clarissa Lutz,<br />
124 Market S•t., Blomsburg, Pa.<br />
Marita Lyon,<br />
110 Ridgewood Ave., Glen Ridge, N. J.<br />
Mary McKal1an,<br />
302 Washingt.on .St., Waynesburg, Pa.<br />
Margaret McKee,<br />
6623 McCallum St., Germantown, Pa.<br />
Anna •Malkow,<br />
Weston, W. Va.<br />
Reba Mallinson,<br />
2711 South Boulevard, Dallas, Texas.<br />
Henrietta Masbach,<br />
1112 North E'utaw St., Baltimore, Md .<br />
Marguerite Massart,<br />
604 Chestnut Hill Ave., Baltimore, Md.<br />
Dorothy Massey,<br />
Chestertown, Md.<br />
Gertrude Maurin,<br />
2717 Baldwin St., Houston, Texas.<br />
Sophronia Mayberry,<br />
313 Ridgely Apartments, Birmingham,<br />
Alabama.<br />
Helen Mears,<br />
Tunkhannock, Pa.<br />
Elizabeth Miles,<br />
Marion, Md.<br />
Margaret Monnett,<br />
607 South Sandusky Ave., Bucyrus, 0 .<br />
Melinda Moore,<br />
7342 Brighton Road, Ben Avon, Pa.<br />
Marjorie Moss,<br />
5316 York Road, Govans, Md.<br />
Margare•t Murray,<br />
1719 Madis•on Ave., Baltimore, Md.<br />
Hope Nelson,<br />
122 Third St., Lakewood, N. J.<br />
Mildred Orr,<br />
306 Third Ave., Altoona, Pa.<br />
Katherine Parker,<br />
Ona ncock, Va.<br />
Mary Parker,<br />
Sto.ckton, Md.<br />
Amy Philips,<br />
St. Luke's School, Wayne, Pa.<br />
Elizabeth Phillips,<br />
1628 Linden Ave., Baltimore, Md.<br />
Wunior£1<br />
Mary Polk,<br />
Franklin, Tenn.<br />
Anyce Pollock,<br />
R itter Park, Huntington, W. Va.<br />
Gertrude Price,<br />
127 Hazelwood Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa.<br />
Etta Louise Rasch,<br />
4 Beechdale Road, Roland Park, Md.<br />
Sarah Rawlins,<br />
Seaford, Del.<br />
Mildred Reichard,<br />
2 Altona Ave., Hamilton, Baltimore, Md.<br />
Miriam Rhodes,<br />
3000 Allbemarle St., N. W., Washington,<br />
District of C{)lumbia.<br />
Esther Rogers,<br />
St{)nington Ave., Howard Park, Baltimore,Md.<br />
Mary Rowland,<br />
1204 Madison Ave., Baltimore, Md.<br />
Gertrude Russell,<br />
242 West Johnson St., Germantown, Pa.<br />
Rosa Schaffer,<br />
2566 McCulloh St., Baltimore, Md.<br />
Mildred Schaffner,<br />
44 Fletcher Ave., Mount Vernon, N. Y.<br />
Edith Scheuer,<br />
411 South Perry St., Montgomery, Ala.<br />
Marie Schleisner,<br />
2434 IDutaw P lace, Baltimore, Ma.<br />
E I ise ·Schnauffer,<br />
Brunswick, Md.<br />
Mary Scott,<br />
Hollywood Circle, Williamsport, Pa.<br />
Fanny Shellabear,<br />
Singapore, Straits Settlements.<br />
Jeanette Siegel,<br />
204 South Patterson Park Ave., Baltimore,<br />
Md.<br />
Mary Caroline Soisson,<br />
214 Fairview Ave., Connellsville, Pa.<br />
Julia Sprenkel,<br />
216 Pennsylvania St., York, Pa.<br />
Sail ie Stanley,<br />
301 King St., Kinston, N. C.<br />
Louise Steele,<br />
Irwin, Pa.<br />
Grace Sterling,<br />
2448 Maryland Ave., Baltimore, Md.<br />
Constance Steuer,<br />
55 West E·ighty-eigh th St., New York,<br />
New York.<br />
W inifred Stevens,<br />
Sheridan, Wyo.<br />
One Hundred and Thirty-four
Ethel Stiffler,<br />
Parkton, Md.<br />
Clara Stulman,<br />
2406 Liberty Heights Ave., Baltimore,<br />
Maryland.<br />
Margaret Swigart,<br />
327 E'ssex St., Chevy Chase, Md.<br />
Marion Talbot,<br />
2 Township Road, Dundalk, Md.<br />
Marcia. Thom,<br />
Buffalo, Wyo.<br />
Mary Thomas;<br />
197 East Seventeenth St., Atlanta, Ga.<br />
Marie Thompson<br />
901 Twentieth St., N. W., Washington,<br />
D.C.<br />
Sarah Thompson,<br />
124 West Mt. Pleasant Ave., Mt. Airy,<br />
Philadelphia, Pa.<br />
Mildred Trueheart,<br />
3022 N. Calvert St., Baltimore, Md.<br />
Beatrice Turner<br />
3406 Bateman Ave., Baltimore, Md.<br />
Dorothy Vernon,<br />
Ellenville, N. Y.<br />
One Hundred and Thirty-five<br />
J}uniors<br />
Sarah Louise Voegtly,<br />
1731 Wrightwood Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa.<br />
Henrietta Warner,<br />
Pikesville, Md.<br />
Miriam Washabaugh,<br />
14 N. Potomac St., Waynesboro, Pa.<br />
Isabel Watkins,<br />
2621 N. Calv·ert St., Balt imore, Md.<br />
Agnes Wild,<br />
436 Lorraine Ave., Baltimore, Md.<br />
Esther Williams,<br />
44 N. Second Ave., Emans, Pa.<br />
Eula Williams,<br />
226 W est Works, Sheridan, Wyo.<br />
Elizabeth Willison,<br />
Oakland, Md.<br />
Edna Woodward,<br />
655 McKean Ave., Donora, Pa.<br />
Elsie Witters,<br />
3515 Springdale Ave., Baltimore, Md.<br />
Bertha Wyle,<br />
2409 Bl'ookfield Ave., Baltimore, Md.<br />
Dorothy Zouck,<br />
Reisterst·own, Md.
manifestation of his cruelty, as one of his most horrid machinations for discomfort was<br />
called, in the modern intellectual vernacular, Spring-Quiz. He also achieved great<br />
delicacy of terror by the insistence upon a password of subtle meaning, which though a<br />
symbol of most pleasant desire, yet through its rei'teration became associated with all<br />
manner of mental agonies. This symbol, which we write gasping at our trepidity, was<br />
Legusta.<br />
Among the other gruesome defects of this professorial dynasty was the delight in<br />
treading paths too complex for the young and rather unwilling feet, through dim recesses<br />
impervious to thought. Only the most flagrant of these may be recorded to commemorate<br />
the tortures of this period; but the variety known by the suggestively hideous cognomen o.f<br />
Saglo-Anxon, well deserves the stark and pointing finger of its innocent victims. This<br />
achievement was bound up in a horrid journey, the tracing of whose route from laggan<br />
through laeggjan, to its final destination leggan, was accompanied by all manner of hardships,<br />
over a stormy path fatal to young intelligence and strewn with the gaping jaws of<br />
lost A's and B's. It was consummately ended with an exclamation indicative of gloating<br />
joy, by the tormentor, who, to render the physical agony truly deadly through mental<br />
gallings, remarked upon the beauty of the passage.<br />
All of which rather rambling discourse is merely to emphasize the original premise;<br />
that all happiness is folly, in so much as the multitudinous aspirations of one generation<br />
may never be coincident with those of another. And so with this thought of sorrow we<br />
leave our record to a more evolved posterity, along with other crumpled rose leaves of the<br />
past. ·<br />
"The paths of glory lead but to the grave."<br />
CHAPTER IV<br />
In which the author puts a mighty question to rout by the assistance of the Oracle<br />
Registrari·s, which not only delivers thousands of people from great embarrassment, but<br />
likewise concludes this history.<br />
An Oracle is an institution raised up to comfort and sustain those that are afflicted.<br />
When I came into possession of ·this information, I lifted up a glad voice, for I was<br />
afflicted. For many days my moments of medttation had been shattered by the exuberant<br />
spirits of a tubby roommate, taking form in vociferous slaps on the back, illustrations of<br />
gym exercises on a squeaky bed or a tuneless rendering of "I never knew I could love<br />
anybody, dearie, like I'm loving you." So I set off to the Oracle.<br />
When I was ushered in, I poured forth my woes in a torrent of oratorical and carefully<br />
prepared rhetoric. In vain did I await the tears of compassion. "I perceive," said<br />
One Hundred and Thirty-nine<br />
Reminiscence of<br />
class in which it<br />
was composed
One Hundred and Forty-six
Helen Haviland,<br />
21 Exchange Place, Port Chester, N. Y.<br />
Eltie Haynie,<br />
Pushmatah, Ala .<br />
Wallace Heard,<br />
Elkton, Va.<br />
Irene Heilbronner,<br />
2221 PDplar Ave., Mempbi·s, Tenn.<br />
Elsie Henderson,<br />
611 Water 1St., Warren, Pa.<br />
Virginia Henkel,<br />
W.inchester, Va.<br />
Edna H ieatzman,<br />
1804 N. ICar·ey St., Baltimore, Md.<br />
Mildred Hilberg,<br />
502 Rase Hill Ave., Baltimore, Md.<br />
Lela Holeman,<br />
110 :Garden St., ·Mt. Holly, N. J.<br />
Roberta Hollingsworth,<br />
20·7,1 Bolton •St., Bel Air, Md.<br />
Grace Hooper,<br />
220'1 Maryland Ave., Baltimore, Md.<br />
Ruth Hopper,<br />
25 Wallace Ave., Mount Vernon, N. Y.<br />
Helen Hosp,<br />
Caldwell, N. J.<br />
Hazel Humphries,<br />
W.interthur, Del.<br />
Sara Hurff,<br />
Swedesboro, N . J.<br />
Helen Huttenhauer,<br />
Rei-sterstown, .Md.<br />
Violet Jackling,<br />
316 Westminster Road, Roch ester, N.Y.<br />
Agnes James,<br />
904 Colum'bia Ave., tScranton, Pa.<br />
Florence Jennison,<br />
4016 N. Farragut St., Bay ·City, Mich.<br />
Mildred Jones,<br />
1341 tSe,venth St., W·ash!ngton, D. C.<br />
Sallie Jones,<br />
Owings Mills, Md.<br />
Hilda Just,<br />
300· Fourth Ave., Altoona, Pa.<br />
Cecelia Keilholtz,<br />
12,7 W. Lanvale Sot., Baltimore, Md.<br />
Sara Elizabeth King,<br />
M'urfrees.boro, Tenn.<br />
Evelyn Krumm,<br />
2820 •St. Paul St., Baltimore, Md.<br />
Marrian Kuethe,<br />
2913 Parkwood Ave., Baltimore, Md.<br />
Esther Kuhn,<br />
14)'17 Preston •St., Baltimore, Md.<br />
Katherine Kyle,<br />
Waterbury, ·Md.<br />
Marjorie Lalor,<br />
Catonsville, 1M d.<br />
Esther La Rue,<br />
Kingwood, W.Va.<br />
Helen ·Lentz,<br />
123·0 E. North Ave., Balt!more, Md.<br />
Helen Lethco,<br />
1403 S. Boulevard, 'Charlotte, N. C.<br />
Ella Levin,<br />
2223 Mond•aw.min Ave., Baltimore, Md.<br />
Susanne Lewis,<br />
4210 ·Spruce St., Philadelphia, Pa.<br />
Mildred Lillard,<br />
·Woodrow Apartments, Baltimore, Md.<br />
Esther Lipscomb,<br />
390 E. TIWenty-eighth St., Baltimore, Md.<br />
E I izabeth Locke,<br />
Newp.ort New.s, Va.<br />
Mary •Lockward,<br />
Bloomfi•eld A1ve., Caldwell, N. J.<br />
Dillu Loyd,<br />
668 Pierce St., Gary, Ind.<br />
Clara Lyon,<br />
913 tS. Duke St., Durham, N. C.<br />
Carolyn McCary,<br />
1217 S. Twentieth St., Birmingham, Ala.<br />
Grace McCaulley,<br />
2219 Mt. Holly St., Baltimore, Md.<br />
Rose McClain,<br />
Bellaire, Ohio.<br />
Mary McCrea,<br />
705 Ontario Ave., Kenova, Pa.<br />
Martha McKean,<br />
24 Berkeley St., Uniontown, Pa.<br />
Sadie McKenzie,<br />
Houtzdale, Pa.<br />
Henrietta McNaught,<br />
Stamford, N.Y.<br />
Mary Magee,<br />
2420 _Harlem Ave., Baltimore, Md.<br />
One Hundred and Fort:y-eight
One Hundred and Fitly
Ernestine Stern,<br />
2432 Eutaw Place, Balt!more, Md.<br />
Edith Stone,<br />
53 W. Tioga St., Tunkhannock, Pa.<br />
Charlotte. Stout,<br />
525 N. Wolfe St., Baltimore, Md.<br />
Marjorie Stralem,<br />
14 E. Eighty•second St., Ne·w York Gity.<br />
Perla Strauss,<br />
Clio, S. •C.<br />
Elsie Sullens,<br />
3410 Holmes Ave., Baltimore, Md.<br />
Margaret Sumwalt,<br />
2910 Chelsea Terrace, Baltimore:!, Md.<br />
Alice Swart,<br />
Ash'burn, Va .<br />
Elizabeth Tempest,<br />
West Chester, P a.<br />
Elizabeth Thompson,<br />
218 E. PHt •St., Bedford, Pa.<br />
Eliza Tillman,<br />
Quitman, Ga.<br />
Clarissa Townsend,<br />
57 Bellvue St., Newton, MaRs<br />
O ne hundred and fitt))-one<br />
Lenore Turner,<br />
3406 Bateman Ave., Balt!more, Md.<br />
Dorothy Wagner,<br />
2408 N. Calvert •St., Bal'timore, Md.<br />
Kate Waters,<br />
Park Heights Ave., Baltimore, Md.<br />
Louise Weakly,<br />
2200 RJidg·e Park, BiJ,mingham, Ala.<br />
Marguerite Weeks,<br />
Plymouth, N. H .<br />
E I izabeth Wertz,<br />
'Millersburg, Pa.<br />
Florence Wheatly,<br />
126 Hall Av8., W•ashington, P a.<br />
Anne Willson,<br />
24 N. Lewis Ave., Staunton, Va.<br />
Rose Winsberg,<br />
225 Lincoln Ave., Grove City, Pa.<br />
Leontine Wolff,<br />
25 Holocom'be •St., Montgomer y, Ala.<br />
Helen Wootton,<br />
2116 •St. Paul St., Baltimore, Md.<br />
Marjorie Young,<br />
77 S. Kanawha St., Buckhannon, W. Va.<br />
/
One hundred and Jifty-lwo
One hundred and fitty-eiglll
One hundred and sixty-two
Dorothy Lypps,<br />
Ten Hills, ,stat:on "D," Mel.<br />
Berenice Lipsitz,<br />
2339 Linden Ave., Balt imore, Mel.<br />
Mary Amelia Litsinger,<br />
1503 Mt. Royal Ave., Baltimore, Mel.<br />
Elizabeth McAlpine,<br />
Lonaconing, Mel .<br />
Hel en McCor mick,<br />
542 N. Maple Ave., Greensburg, Pa.<br />
Jessie MacDonald,<br />
335 W. 'Cunningham St., Butler, Pa.<br />
Katherine McDonald,<br />
Route Box 144, Savannah, Ga.<br />
Lau r etta •McKay,<br />
864 Washington St., Holl'ster, Cal.<br />
Clarice McKnight,<br />
636 Pennsylvania St., Johnsonburg, Pa.<br />
Katherine McKnight,<br />
230 N. Fifth St., R·eading, Pa.<br />
L ill ian McLean,<br />
303 F'ranklin Ave., Gastonia, N. C.<br />
Ch ristine 'McWhorter,<br />
Bu ckhannon, W. Va.<br />
Eleanor McMurchy,<br />
1310 Longfellow St., Washington, D. C.<br />
J ane Magee,<br />
5697 Greene St., Germantown, Pa.<br />
Bertha Mag innis,<br />
E llicott City, Mel.<br />
Lovenia Maj or,<br />
217 Eleymont 'St., Media, Pa.<br />
Ethel Mason,<br />
220 Broadway, Meyersdale, Pa.<br />
Mary Masterson,<br />
1620 Polk St, Amarillo, T·exas.<br />
Kyo Matsuo,<br />
Yamato, Japan .<br />
Ruth Matthews,<br />
52 Gorsline St., Rochester, N. Y.<br />
Dorothy Meade,<br />
910 Gorsuch Ave., Baltimore, Mel.<br />
H elen M eeker,<br />
206 E . Seventeenth St., New York City<br />
Rach el Merwin,<br />
,81 Ascan Ave., Long Island, N. Y.<br />
Linda Messick,<br />
Allen, Mel.<br />
One hundred and .1irtu-three<br />
Beatrice Messinger,<br />
Cul,peper, Va.<br />
Marian Messner,<br />
Oxford, Ind.<br />
Katharine Cromwell Miller,<br />
Laurel, Md.<br />
Ruth Miller,<br />
314 Gay St., Phoenixville, Pa.<br />
Elizabeth Mitchell,<br />
Hamilton, Mel.<br />
Mary Elizabeth Mitchell,<br />
Lebanon, Tenn.<br />
Clai r e Blanche M ittenthal,<br />
1921 Forest Ave., Dallas, Texas.<br />
Frances Moore,<br />
809 Napoleon St., Johnstown, Pa.<br />
Imogene Moore,<br />
111 Tennessee Ave., Washington, D. C.<br />
Vi r g i n ia Murphy,<br />
Sumner, Miss.<br />
Sarah Muth,<br />
L Hitz, Pa.<br />
Sara Nachamson,<br />
Kinston, N. C.<br />
Margaret Neely,<br />
Miffl'ntown, Pa.<br />
Louise Nevins,<br />
1116 S. T hirtieth St., Birminghailll, Ala.<br />
Katherine Newbaker,<br />
W indber, Pa.<br />
Katherine Newbury,<br />
1515 Capouse Ave., Scranton, Pa<br />
Emily Newcomer,<br />
1 S. Market St., Mt. Joy, Pa.<br />
Mildred N ewton,<br />
Atlee, Va.<br />
H elen Norris,<br />
280.0 Parkwood Ave., Baltimore, Mel.<br />
E I izabeth Noyes,<br />
Parsons, Kan.<br />
Elizabeth Oldfield,<br />
1000 E. Nlorth Avenue, Baltimor-e, :.v:ld.<br />
Dor othy Oppenheim,<br />
Park Heights and Slade Aves.,<br />
Baltimore, Md.<br />
Eugenia Patterson,<br />
1027 Fourth Ave., Great Falls, Mon.<br />
Marjorie Percy,<br />
226 E . Twenty-fifth St., Baltimore, Mel.
Mamie Phillips,<br />
Linkwood, .Md.<br />
Muriel Pratt,<br />
'Cam p Alfred Vail, N. J .<br />
Audrey Prior,<br />
Car•e Merril-Stevens Shipbuilding,<br />
Jacksonville, F la.<br />
Merritt Quick,<br />
2312 Chelsea Ave., Baltimore, :VI d.<br />
Ernestine Race,<br />
416 Lake Ave., Govans, Balt imor e, Md.<br />
Marion Raff,<br />
330 Raymond St., Hasbrouck Heights,<br />
New Jersey.<br />
Alta Reason,<br />
612 Rah way Ave., Car teret, N. J .<br />
Marguerite Redding,<br />
H ernando, Miss.<br />
E I izabeth Reese,<br />
219 Mifflin St., Joh nst own, Pa.<br />
R uth Remke,<br />
41 Popla r Ave., W·oodlawn, Wheeling,<br />
West Virginia.<br />
Amanda Rex,<br />
El:lg.e Hi\1, P a.<br />
Marjorie Riddle,<br />
220 S. Detwit St., Bellefontaine, Ohio.<br />
Rachel Roberts,<br />
414 Conway St., Frankfort, Ky.<br />
Ida Roch,<br />
83 H ope St., H a mpton, Va.<br />
Katharine Rogers,<br />
Stonington Ave., Baltimore, Md.<br />
Ruth Rome,<br />
256 S:. Ann St., Baltimore, Md.<br />
Jeanette Rosner,<br />
808 Reserv·oir St., Baltimore, Md.<br />
Edith Rothschild,<br />
2317 Eutaw Pl., Baltimore, Md.<br />
Mildred Rouse,<br />
501 W . H amilton Ave., Baltimore, Md.<br />
Louise Rowe,<br />
Nanking, China.<br />
Francesca Savin i,<br />
128 W. E levent·h S t., New York City.<br />
Olive Scales,<br />
2782 Fa·irfield Ave., ·S:hrevepor t , La.<br />
Beulah Schaub,<br />
3536 Gou gh St., Baltimor e, :\fd.<br />
Jlfreslpncn<br />
Helen Scheibler,<br />
327 Alexander .St., Greenberg, Pa.<br />
Florence Schubert,<br />
Pikesville, Md.<br />
Eleanor Sharpless,<br />
5229 W issabickon Ave., Philadelphia, Pa.<br />
Thelma Sigler,<br />
Millington, T enn.<br />
Marion S imons,<br />
20 W. Fourth St., Royal Oak, Mich .<br />
Isabelle Sinn,<br />
101 S. Somer set Ave., Crisfield, Md.<br />
Edna Skinner,<br />
Newfield, N. J.<br />
Florence Skinner,<br />
115 S. P otomac St., Baltimor e, Md.<br />
Pauline Slater,<br />
104 ID. Park Ave., Savannah , Ga.<br />
Ethel Smith,<br />
202 E. Gay St., West Chester, Pa.<br />
M artha Smith,<br />
411 N. Sixteen th St., Newcastle, Ind.<br />
Mary Smyth,<br />
242 H a r vey St., Germantown , P a.<br />
Consuela Soho,<br />
836 N. E utaw St., Baltimore, Md.<br />
Dor othea Stephens,<br />
1714 Summit Pl., Washington, D. C.<br />
Edith Stifler,<br />
622 Wyanoke Ave., Baltimore, Mel.<br />
Annette Straus,<br />
4007 Penhurst Ave., Baltimor e, Mel.<br />
Adelaide Strouse,<br />
Ma r lborough Apts., Baltimore, Md.<br />
Lygia Sutherland,<br />
Glou cester Apts., Annapolis, liVId.<br />
Margaret Sturm,<br />
Sewickley, Pa.<br />
Elizabeth Talbot,<br />
2 Township Rd., Dundalk, Md.<br />
Florence Thompson,<br />
211 W. Locust St., Newark, Oh io.<br />
Sallie Tignall,<br />
68 Market St., Onan cock , Va.<br />
Helen Tilghman,<br />
1310 Tatnall St., Wilmington, Del.<br />
Ruth Titman,<br />
140 N. Market St., Bloomsburg, Pa.<br />
O ne hundred and sixl]!·/ our
Jechebet Topkis,<br />
420 W. Twenty-second St., Wilmington,<br />
Delaware.<br />
Catherine Towers,<br />
1440 Belmont St., N. W ., Washington ,<br />
District of Columbia.<br />
Margaret Trainham,<br />
621 Maryland Ave., Washington, D. C.<br />
Ruth Treide,<br />
3324 Auchentoroly Ter., Baltim'ore, Md.<br />
Harriet Tynes,<br />
126 N. Augusta St., Staunton, Va.<br />
Margaret Tyson,<br />
Cloverdale, Montgom ery, Ala.<br />
Marion Upham,<br />
66 Washington St., Cumberland, Md.<br />
Alice Augusta Vogle,<br />
225 N ." Maple Ave., Greensburg, Pa.<br />
Margaret Vordemberge,<br />
309 Walnut Ave., Baltimore, Md.<br />
Alice Vuille,<br />
810 Washington St., Huntingdon, Pa.<br />
Ruth Wallace,<br />
50 Thirty-seventh St., Des Moines, Ia<br />
Mildred Waters,<br />
2312 Frederick Ave., Baltimore, Md.<br />
Ethel Weinberg,<br />
Lonaconing, Md.<br />
Marguerite Weeks,<br />
Plymouth, N. H .<br />
Ellen Wier,<br />
17 W. Buena Ventura, Colorado Springs,<br />
Col.<br />
Nannette Weis,<br />
2482 Glenwood Ave., Toledo, Ohio.<br />
Rebecca Westerman,<br />
226 S. Fourth St., Columbia, Pa.<br />
Edith Wheeler,<br />
1706 W . Lafayette Ave., Baltimore, Md.<br />
One hundred· and sixty-five<br />
Janet White,<br />
311 S. H enry St., Geneseo, Ill.<br />
Susan Whitford,<br />
2638 Pennsylvania Ave., Baltimore, Md.<br />
Bona Rosina Wich,<br />
2400 W . Lanvale St., Balt'imore, Md.<br />
Jessie Wilkins,<br />
P ine Bluff, Ark.<br />
Matilda Williams,<br />
2307 Ruskin Ave., Baltimore, Md.<br />
May Williams,<br />
Woodbridge, N. J.<br />
Nora Lee Williams,<br />
1225 Garvin Pl., Louisville, Ky.<br />
Ruth Williams,<br />
Box 168, Potland, Pa.<br />
Mary Elizabeth Wilson,<br />
1228 N. Thirtieth St., Birmingham, Ala.<br />
Caroline Wolf,<br />
103 Longwood Rd., Roland Park,<br />
Baltimore, Md.<br />
Gladys Woolner,<br />
640 Moss Ave., Peoria, Ill.<br />
Florence Woolsey,<br />
Hancock, N. Y.<br />
Katharine Worthington,<br />
3405 Morton Ave., Baltimore, Md.<br />
Lucille Wright,<br />
1114 0 St., N. W. Washington, D. C.<br />
Grace Wyckoff,<br />
43 Lincoln St., Glen Ridge, N. J.<br />
Toki Yamazaki,<br />
Kyoto, Japan.<br />
Margaret Young,<br />
Charles Town, W. Va.<br />
Gretchen Z immerman,<br />
441 N. McKean St., Butler, Pa.
One hundred and 3ixl)l-3ix
(<br />
One hundred and sevenl]!-l!llo
N the evening of February 18 Agora presented the A/rest is<br />
in Catherine Hooper IIall<br />
The performance of a Greek play in modern times<br />
is difficult, yet very worth while; it is well for the brain<br />
sated with melodramatic films occasionally to transport<br />
itself to an age when restrained beauty and simplicity<br />
ruled the stage. The illusion, however, to be effective.<br />
must be complete; there must be no intruding of the<br />
present into this world at once remote and human. In<br />
this· fact lies much of the diffintlty for the young performer<br />
who has not himse:f felt the subtle appeal of<br />
Greek culture and the Greek spirit. One touch of the<br />
present, and the veil is rent-Alcestis and her husband<br />
fall from their high and almost god-like estate and become<br />
but puppets in a world of make-believe.<br />
Yet, in spite of difficulties, the performance of a Greek play is always worth<br />
while. From time out of mind colleges have been the bearers of thought from<br />
one generation to another; it is by their efforts and by theirs alone that the modern<br />
world can glimpse from time to time on the stage the life of this ancient people.<br />
Even today the wor!d has need of remembering the Greek ideal; it is we:l that<br />
<strong>Goucher</strong> should do her part in keeping a:ive the love of the true and the beautiful.<br />
The play, from a visual point of view, was exceptionally 'satisfying; the chaste<br />
columns first dim before the dawn, then bathed in the warm mo:ning light, the<br />
backgmund wall of sunny yellow, the Elders o f Pherae with their robes of soft<br />
iris-tinted hues, the silent mourners, the purple-robed Admetus-all blended<br />
together in harmony delightful to the eye. The tableaux were excellently given;<br />
no one in the audience will soon forget the .tragic beauty of Alcestis with her<br />
children, or the loneliness and utter dejection of the 'Servant who, coming f rom the<br />
house -of death, paused for a moment on the steps, alone, a black-swathed figure<br />
in a sunlit world.<br />
Of the actors, Miss Haynie, Miss Davis and M iss Lillard should receive the<br />
greatest praise. They had difficult parts and rendered them creditably. Miss<br />
Steuer, as Admetus, spoke her lines distinctly and unemotionally. The minor parts<br />
suoh as those of .Thanatos, the handmaid, and the children, were consistently wellsustained<br />
and dignified.<br />
By giving a Greek play, Agora has inaugurated a custom that should continue<br />
at <strong>Goucher</strong> in
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One hundred and eighty
"Whatever makes men good Christians makes them good citizens."<br />
Vice-President<br />
:.L\RCUERITE DERSTINE<br />
Corresponding Secretary<br />
ELIZABETH ELLICOTT<br />
:Yiarguerite Derstine<br />
Helen Orne<br />
:Yiargaret Gilman<br />
Constance Little<br />
Marian Kcrk<br />
One hundred and eighty-one<br />
Officers<br />
President<br />
D o ROTHY STEFFAN<br />
Cabinet<br />
Recording Secretary<br />
ELIZABETH TEMPEST<br />
-WEBSTER.<br />
Treasurer<br />
STELLA BIDDISON<br />
E loise Dunbracco<br />
Edna Buhrer<br />
Emma Thomas<br />
Claire Lesher<br />
Elsie Witters
Secretary .<br />
EvELYN DEVENEY<br />
1\GOR:A 'BO:ARD<br />
"The actors are at hand, and by their show<br />
You shall know all that you are like to know."<br />
-SHAKESPEARE.<br />
Costumes<br />
MIRIAM CHALMERS<br />
President<br />
ETHEL STEUER<br />
Properties<br />
ELIZABETH TEMPEST<br />
Scenery<br />
ELIZABETH SANDERS<br />
Treasurer<br />
MARY RALL<br />
One hundred and eig/,ty·ID>o
President<br />
ELizABETH CoNOLLY<br />
Florence Bates<br />
Ruth Bear<br />
Isabel Chism<br />
Julia Coe<br />
Lillian Conn<br />
E!izabeth Conolly<br />
Jane Davis<br />
Florene Erwood<br />
Anna Espenschade<br />
Margaret Fishback<br />
Mildred Hallock<br />
•One hundred and eighty-five<br />
c®!auholiu (!Iluh<br />
"So Nero once, with harp in hand, surveyed<br />
His flaming Rome, and as it burned, he played."<br />
Members<br />
Evelyn Heitshu<br />
Mi:dred Hillberg<br />
Mary Hopkins<br />
Dorothy Howard<br />
Clara Hygen<br />
Elizabeth Kieffer<br />
H e1en Lentz<br />
Marguerite Livingstone<br />
Eleanor McMurchy<br />
Virginia Murphy<br />
-WALLER.<br />
Business Manager<br />
FLORENE ERWOOD<br />
Emily Newcomer<br />
Ruth Narkinsky<br />
Merritt Quick<br />
Mildred Reichard<br />
Nanette Roche<br />
Berenice Rosenthal<br />
Dorothy Stephens<br />
Beatrice Smith<br />
Ellen Wier<br />
Grace Wyckoff<br />
E velyn Wilcox
·"Amid all life's quests<br />
There seem s but worthy one,-to do men good."<br />
Secretary<br />
MARGUERITE DERSTINE<br />
Chairnian of Appeals<br />
HELEN HoFFMAN<br />
Officers<br />
President<br />
LoRETTA LEsHER<br />
Treasurer<br />
H ATTIE ALEXANDER<br />
Publicity Manager<br />
:MARY RALL<br />
-BAII,F.Y.<br />
One hundred and eigl1t)l-six
O U would be surprised to hear how many things G. ouch er is supposed<br />
to have forfeited because of its location in a great city. "Why you<br />
can't have a campus, you can't have pretty buildings and you can't<br />
even have 'Coll ege Spirit"!" sympathize our rivals. And we know the old<br />
maxim ourselves, that one particular person or place can't be endowed with all the<br />
blessings. Yet w h oever distributed them, must have looked upon <strong>Goucher</strong><br />
w ith a kindly eye and cleciclecl in view of all the eviden ce to make us a<br />
suprem e exception to the rule. We make this bold assertion because our<br />
college is almost obscured in a maze of conventional, bald-£ ron ted city houses,<br />
yet we know that there is hidden within its walls a warm, vigorous heart, unified<br />
and pulsating with the beats of its own enthusi asm and in time with the great<br />
outside world as well.<br />
On such gala occasion s as the T hanksgiv ing Dinner, the Coll ege Spirit<br />
party during A lumme W eek, and sing-song, at w hich this indefinable som ething<br />
takes shape and rules the evening-live long in our memories. But we<br />
really do not need these patent signs. Every clay brings fresh evidence of the<br />
all-pervading <strong>Goucher</strong> Spirit.<br />
One hundred and eijlhiJi-sel>en
BIOLOGY<br />
"T o hold, as it were, the mtrror up to nature."-Shahespearc.<br />
CoRONA C o TILLON CLuB<br />
"Come and trip it as ye go<br />
On the light fantastic toe."-Milton.<br />
Ennes<br />
"Fools prepare feasts, and wise men eat them."-Franklin.<br />
HISTORY<br />
"Sit at the feet of History-through the night<br />
Of years the steps of virtue she shall trace."-Bryant.<br />
MATHEMATICS<br />
SCIENCE<br />
TI1'IAN TINTS<br />
"Mathematics make men subt:e."-Bacon.<br />
"For science is like virtue, its own exceeding great reward."-Kingsley.<br />
"From litt:e sparks may burst a mighty flame."-Dantc.<br />
One hundred and eiglrl)l·eiglrt
Literary Editor<br />
HoPE NELSON<br />
Art Editor<br />
BESSIE LINEBACK<br />
"All Authors to their own defects are blind. "-DRYDEN.<br />
Joke Editor<br />
HELEN MEARS<br />
Assistant joke Editor<br />
MARY FISHER<br />
Assistant Business Af anager<br />
CoNSTANCE LITTLE<br />
DoROTHY Biscos<br />
ELEANOR KaHN<br />
One hundred and ninety-one<br />
Editor-in-Chief<br />
MARGARET MuRRAY<br />
Assistant Literary Editor<br />
FLORENCE ERWOOD<br />
Assistant Art Editor<br />
ELEANOR KaHN<br />
Business Manager<br />
MILDRED DuNNocK<br />
Subscription Manager<br />
KATHERINE PARKER<br />
Advertising Assistants<br />
MILDRED TRUEHEART<br />
STELLA BIDDISON<br />
MARY BEATON GIBBS<br />
Class and Club Editor<br />
MARY LOUISE BIRD<br />
Athletic Editor<br />
MIRIAM CHALMERS<br />
Picture Editor<br />
MILDRED KoEHNLINE<br />
Assistant Picture Editor<br />
ELSIE WITTERS<br />
Asst. Subscription !If anager<br />
CLAIRE LESHER<br />
DoRoTHY ZoucK<br />
BEATRICE TURNER
One hundred and nineiJi-ll»o
One hundred and ninet)l-three
"Tho angels should write, still 'tis devils must print."<br />
Editor in Chief<br />
AMY ALLISON<br />
Assistant Editors<br />
Associate Editor<br />
FANNY!
Two hundred
HE 1920 Field Day, which was held on Fensal Court Saturday, 'May 1st,<br />
showed very definitely lack of interest on the part of the <strong>College</strong> as a<br />
whole. Not t.hat the rooters were among the missing when the actual<br />
contest was held; but too many were missing in action during the few<br />
preparatory weeks when pra'Ctice should have been constant and concentrated<br />
if a truly good result were desired. Lack of interest was also evinced by the<br />
fact that too few people came out to support their ·champions by making<br />
standards, which is the way members of the class could help the point winners.<br />
As a result of this the Athletic Association has decided to ·cut Field<br />
Day from the athletic program in the future.<br />
The Seniors won the meet as a result of the splendid co-operation of th.e<br />
entire 'Class; for while their personal points were few, their points gained by<br />
standards were overwhelming. Much interest was added to the afternoon<br />
by the Faculty-Student tug of war; but due to an unfortunate weakness on<br />
the part of the rope it is still in doubt as to which side is the mightier in<br />
muscle-although it cannot be doubted whi·ch has the intellectual supremacy.<br />
The results \vere as follows:<br />
Seniors . ........ .. . .. .. 67 0 points<br />
Sophomores . ..... ... ... 60 points<br />
Freshmer, .... .. ... ... . . 55 0 points<br />
Juniors .. ..... . . . .... . .. 400 points<br />
Baseball Throw Standing Broad JU1ttp Hurdles<br />
1. C. Steuer, '22. 1. 2\II. Koehnline, '22. 1. :vr. Chalmers, '22.<br />
2. E . Smith, '20. 2. J. Coe, '23. 2. H. Mear.s, '22.<br />
3. E. Call, '23. 3. A. Fulton, '21. 3. K. Wisner, '21.<br />
Two !.unclrecl and one<br />
Javelin Throw Rtmning Broad Jump<br />
1. E. Call, '23. 1. K. Parker, '22.<br />
2. H. King, '20. 2. M. Koehnline, '22.<br />
3. D. Groff, '20. 3. R. Hagedorn, '23.<br />
High Jump Fifty-Yard Dash<br />
1. H. :i'dears, '22. 1. L. Whe:an, '20.<br />
2. A . Fulton, '21. 2. M . Norman, '20.<br />
3 E. Smith, '20.. 3. H. Mears, '22.<br />
L . Whelan, '20.<br />
Relay Race<br />
1. Sophomores.<br />
2. Seniors.<br />
3. Freshmen.
Two hundred and two
CONSTANCE ARNOLD, FLORENCE JENNISON<br />
W:£nnis<br />
FLORENCE BATES, HELEN FREIBURGER<br />
N the 1920-1921 tennis season, the Class of 1923, represented by Constance<br />
Arnold and Florence Jennison, surpassed the expectations of<br />
their most enthusiastic supporters. The first match, ·played on October<br />
30th, between them and 1924, whose team consisted of Anna Espenschacle<br />
and Mary Brydon, was not marked by any unusual playing. Before<br />
the set began, the Freshmen were forced to walk under the banner of 1923,<br />
but they kept their colors unfurled until they were safe within the gates<br />
enclosing the courts. Constance Arnold exhibited the best work on the court,<br />
playing a safe and steady game throughout the match ; while ·F lorence J ennison<br />
made a few unexpected strokes to off-set her occasional wild balls. The<br />
Freshmen played moderately well but were inferior in team work and general<br />
ability to their opponents. T he resulting score was 6--4, 6- 2 in favor of the<br />
Sophomores.<br />
The Junior-Senior tennis doubles, played on October 29th, was one of the<br />
poorest matches played on the courts in some years. Helen Freiburger and<br />
F lorence Bates, playing for 1921, beat Eleanor Kohn and Rosa Shaffer, of<br />
<strong>1922</strong>, 6-0, 6--2 in two short uninteresting sets.<br />
The final match between the Sophomores and Seniors, played on November<br />
1st, was the one round of this year's tournament that could really be considered<br />
good tennis. In the first set the Seniors had little trouble in beating<br />
the Sophomore team, cl ue to a la·ck of steadiness on the part of 1923. In the<br />
second and third sets F lorence Jennison picked up admirably and Constance<br />
Arnold continued her steady, strong game, which proved too much for Helen<br />
Freiburger and F lorence Bates. The points were closely contested, and<br />
although the score of 2-6, 6--1, 6-4 in favor of 1923 might belie the fact,<br />
the uncertainty of the outcome was maintained to the encl. 1923 deserved<br />
the tennis cup, for Arnold and Jennison made by far the best team in college.<br />
Two hundred and five
Eloise Gregory<br />
Margaret Brown<br />
Katherine Brown<br />
Ailsa Fulton (Capt.)<br />
Helen Mears<br />
Louise Rhoads<br />
Elizabeth Ellicott<br />
Mildred Hallock<br />
Margaret Gantt<br />
Mildred Koehnline<br />
E I izabeth Abbott<br />
Katherine Wisner<br />
Mildred Brown (Capt)<br />
Beatrice Smith<br />
Ruth Hagedorn<br />
Katherine Kyle<br />
Elsie W itters<br />
Mildred Dunnock<br />
Virginia Galt<br />
Margaret Jones<br />
Katherine Spamer<br />
Mary Brydon<br />
Two hundred and &ix
J}uniors<br />
Miriam ,Chalmers<br />
Dorothy Leventhal<br />
Sara Thompson<br />
Katherine Parker<br />
Helen Mears<br />
Mildred Dunnock<br />
Elsie Witters (Capt.)<br />
Virginia Galt<br />
Anna Lyde Adams<br />
Mildred Koehnline<br />
Elizabeth Abbott<br />
Two hundred and nine<br />
Anna Espenschade<br />
Mildred Newton<br />
Ida Gritzan<br />
Francesca Savini<br />
Dorothy Rose Oppenheim<br />
Mildred Hallock (Capt.)<br />
Mar y Hopkins<br />
Helena Horton<br />
Catherine Hayden<br />
Clara H iggon<br />
Mary Brydon
(<br />
Janet Bagby<br />
Mary Snow Bagby ·<br />
Louise Tull Baker<br />
Mary Carye Bachelor<br />
Katherine Claggett Beck<br />
Mildred Belt<br />
Sara Marie Bond<br />
Eline Marie von Borries<br />
Desiree Branch Clark<br />
Elizabeth Knox Burger .<br />
Mabel Carter<br />
Eleanor Cary Waples<br />
Virginia Caughy<br />
Mary Clendenin<br />
Esther Parker Ellinger<br />
Margaret Ellinger<br />
Elma Erick<br />
Mary Field Sadler<br />
Elizabeth Fleming<br />
Anna Taylor Ford<br />
Ruth French Shriver<br />
Gladys Fulton<br />
Jean Fulton<br />
Helen Gail<br />
Eleanor <strong>Goucher</strong><br />
Janet <strong>Goucher</strong> Miller<br />
U rsule Guard<br />
Melissa Hill<br />
SoRORES I N U RBE<br />
Elizabeth Lucy Hiss<br />
Lilian Hiss<br />
Mary Cochrane Hiss<br />
Elizabeth Iddings<br />
Jessie Loeffler Palmer<br />
Mary Martin Wilson<br />
Martha Claire McDowell<br />
Anna Walters McNeal<br />
Margaret Shrove Moriss<br />
Joanna Ross Pancoast<br />
Mabel Meredith Reese<br />
Emilie Sophie Reinhard<br />
Isabel Woolridge Schmeisser<br />
Mary Goode Woolridge<br />
Doris Eccles Slothower<br />
Mary Spencer Worthington<br />
Marguerite Louise Spieker<br />
Margaret Baker Thomas<br />
Helen Morton Thompson<br />
Mary Florence Thompson<br />
Sara Augusta Tilghman<br />
Miriam Dutton Uhler<br />
Dorothy Welsh<br />
Louise \Vest<br />
Emilie Wilkins<br />
Alice Wolfe Sattler<br />
Virginia Woolen<br />
Margaret Wroth<br />
Two hundred and eighteen
READ -TAYlOR. aAL TO
Judith Clark<br />
Edith Crawford<br />
Josephine Harris<br />
Anne Lanier<br />
Miriam Chalmers<br />
Mildred Dunnock<br />
Eleanor Crowther<br />
Violet J ackling<br />
Virginia Adams<br />
Amelia Appleton<br />
Jean Bass<br />
Theresa Cory<br />
Caroline Gibbes<br />
*Pledged<br />
Two hundred and twenty-one<br />
A
Fannie Spencer Anderson<br />
Margaret Austin<br />
Margaret Baer<br />
Ruth Adams Baer<br />
Rose Baldwin<br />
Lillian Chalmers<br />
Anne M. Dye<br />
Edith Emmons<br />
Isabel FitzPatrick<br />
Marcella Flowers<br />
Elizabeth Hill<br />
Genevieve Hendley<br />
Edith Stevens Hoffman<br />
Marguerite Waters<br />
Lulie P. Hooper<br />
Isabel Hunner<br />
Carolyn Hyatt<br />
Margretta Lindsey<br />
SoRORES IN URBE<br />
Evelyn Martine<br />
Edith M. Martine<br />
Clarinda Mathews<br />
Elinor Mead<br />
Charlotte Gallager<br />
Edna Norton<br />
Nellie Orcutt<br />
Alice Reuter<br />
Edith Riley<br />
Ellen Riggs<br />
Anna Rutledge<br />
Ruth Shaeffer<br />
Isabel Stone<br />
Edith Taneyhill<br />
Fauntleroy White<br />
Eva Wilson<br />
Anne Williams<br />
Isabel Woods<br />
Two hundred and twenty-two
Agnes Chambers<br />
Virginia Clary<br />
Katherine Clarke<br />
Elsie Cox<br />
Mildred Edmunds Dean<br />
Louise Dowell<br />
Marion Hoffman Draper<br />
Elizabeth Eager<br />
Blanche Harmon Eaton<br />
Esther Elizabeth Hahn<br />
Mary Hogue<br />
Nancy Fulton<br />
Aletta Hopper<br />
Margaret Keever<br />
Hester King<br />
Anna Huebeck Knipp<br />
Gertrude Knipp<br />
Margaret Reed Lewis<br />
Harriet Ellis Levering<br />
Wau tiappa Jli<br />
SoRORES IN URBE<br />
Agnes Foote Luce<br />
Mary Johns Hopper<br />
Stella McCarty<br />
Meta Miller<br />
Gertrude Nickerson<br />
Ruth Nickerson<br />
Fannie Robbins<br />
Carolyn M. Sanders·<br />
Grace Parker Soper<br />
Florence Edwards Sumwalt<br />
Mabel Patten Stockbridge<br />
Ethel Hoffman Stone<br />
Francis Troxell<br />
J ohnetta Van Meter<br />
Pamelia W. Williamson<br />
Angeline Griffing Wolf<br />
Mary Nelson Ruth<br />
Rosalie Shreve<br />
Margaret Bevan Teall<br />
Two hundred and twenty-six
Ethelwyn Phipps Austin<br />
Mary Sawyer Baker<br />
Wilhelmina T. Benjamin<br />
Helen Dingle<br />
Elsie Robbins Dodd<br />
Ethel Shriver Dulaney<br />
Laura Gilpin<br />
Alvahn Holmes<br />
Marion 1 ones 1 arman<br />
Francis Robbins Kane<br />
Mary ThomasMcCurley<br />
Virginia Carr Merritt<br />
SoRoREs IN URBE<br />
Hilda Clark King<br />
Marie Ohle Mead<br />
Florence Moore Oehm<br />
Dorothy Sippel<br />
Grace Howard Smith<br />
Clara Wagner Sutton<br />
Agnes Thomas<br />
Katherine Henrietta Treide<br />
Mary Ickes Watson<br />
Agnes Wilbon<br />
1 eannette Wilmot<br />
Nellie Wilmot<br />
Hester Corner<br />
Two hundred and thirty<br />
•
Elizabeth Berry<br />
Bertha Broomwell<br />
Ethel Hendrickson Dorsey<br />
Belle Taylor Doyle<br />
Emma Louise Dulaney<br />
Ethel Addison Elmer<br />
Harriet Balier Ewalt<br />
Evelyn Ewalt<br />
Grace Threadgill Foster<br />
Mary Carter Fusselbaugh<br />
Ruth Graham<br />
Mary van W. Goutrum<br />
Helen Harrison<br />
Ruth Haslup<br />
Katherine Helfrisch<br />
Marian Hinds<br />
Mary Broomwell Hull<br />
Ernestine D. Hutchins<br />
Margery Mathews Lamb<br />
•<br />
SoROREs IN URBE<br />
Hilda Malone<br />
Mary Ward McGraw<br />
Lubelle Sheppard Knipp<br />
Nell Miller<br />
Louise Pennington<br />
Esther D. Smith<br />
Christie Dulaney Solter<br />
Claire von Maries Stief£<br />
Mary Wilson Swindell<br />
Ruth Taylor<br />
Katherine Nash Thomas<br />
Elinor Watts<br />
Kathryn Watson<br />
Mary Colt Wilcox<br />
Charlotte Williams<br />
Dorothy Wilson<br />
Flora Winkleman Wilson<br />
Rita Winkleman<br />
Onolee Wyckoff<br />
TD>o hundred and thiri]}·{our
Helen Atwood<br />
Ruth Heller Bacon<br />
Elsie Bender<br />
Emily Robinson Boyle<br />
Leona Buchwald<br />
Esther L. Cox<br />
Mary Cox<br />
Miriam Connet<br />
Francis Strader Culver<br />
Marjorie Colton<br />
Caroline Diggs<br />
Eleanor Diggs<br />
Cora Scott Doty<br />
Hester Heisse Foster<br />
Charity B. H ampson<br />
Isabel Drury Huebeck<br />
Helen Lamb Hull<br />
Katherine Hopper<br />
Argutte Ingalls<br />
Celeste J an vier<br />
Elizabeth F. Kellum<br />
Alice V. Kiefer<br />
Gertrude Kutzleb<br />
Margaretta Lamb<br />
SoRORES IN URBE<br />
Mary E. Lamb<br />
Kathleen Mallory<br />
Nellie McNutt<br />
Louise Murphy<br />
Louise Murray .<br />
Edith Mendenhall<br />
Sylvania Nagle<br />
Kathryn Price<br />
Mildred Price<br />
Carolyn Potts<br />
Blanche Riesinger<br />
Madge Burnham Robertson<br />
H elene M. Schneidereith<br />
Marjorie Stauffer<br />
Caruline Sadtler<br />
Helen Doll Tottle<br />
Caroline S. Waters<br />
Ray Mowbray Warner<br />
Alice Wood<br />
Molly W ood<br />
Louise VanSant<br />
Elizabeth Van Sant<br />
Eleanor Norris<br />
Emma Drury<br />
Two hundred and thirt:y-eight
R£: .... 0-fA,VLOR , BAt-TO
Mary Anita Arnest<br />
Ruth Coblenz Batzler<br />
Esther Belt<br />
Georgia Belt<br />
Lyda Kirk Bond<br />
Estelle Roehle Byrne<br />
Hilda Devries Davies<br />
Audrey Davis<br />
Emily Davis<br />
Jeanette Davis<br />
Mary Dunlap<br />
Janet Graham<br />
Anna Harrison<br />
Dorothea Blass Hines<br />
Barbara Bogle Hoban<br />
Mildred J ackins<br />
Marian Harper<br />
Mary Lentz Johnson<br />
Mildred Rife Judd<br />
Ruth Kramer<br />
SoRORES IN URBE<br />
Isabel Kerr<br />
Ada Waddington Lentz<br />
Esther Love<br />
Elizabeth T. Luetscher<br />
Alice Mallalieu<br />
Celeste Kleinle Maxwell<br />
Mildred McGinnis<br />
Fay Miller<br />
Ruth Dunbracco Musser<br />
Florence S. O'Connell<br />
Ruth McLaren Pardew<br />
Sara Peyton<br />
Ann Bullivant Pfeiffer<br />
Helen Pract<br />
Eleanor Pract<br />
Eleanor Rose<br />
Catherine Skilling<br />
Letitia Stockett<br />
Edna Strouse<br />
Sara Walker Warner<br />
Blanche Meyers Wilhelm<br />
Two hundred and forty-two
1F.AO · TAVL0R , I3ALTO
Maud Strickland Gallon<br />
Dorothy Joesting Lundvall<br />
Mary Katherine Jo nes<br />
Ethel Linton<br />
Margaret Sapp<br />
Edna Singewald<br />
Ruth Tingley<br />
Margaret Leib<br />
Edith J oesting<br />
Lillian Wagner<br />
Ethel Staley<br />
Mildred Todd<br />
SORORES IN URBE<br />
Jean Curley vVilcox<br />
Margaret Brent Waters<br />
Janet Wood<br />
Helen Barnes<br />
Elizabeth Yardley<br />
Madge Thurlow<br />
Margaret Zouck<br />
Lillian Borroughs<br />
Helen Adams<br />
Jeanette Burke<br />
Margaret Evitt<br />
Dorothy Hinrichs<br />
Two hundred and forty-six
Miss Arnold<br />
Dr. Bacon<br />
Mr. Baker<br />
Dr. Beardsley<br />
Dr. Bonnell<br />
Dr. Braunlich<br />
Dr. Beattie<br />
Dr. Bussey<br />
SENATE<br />
PRESIDENT GuTH<br />
Dr. Cleland<br />
Dr. Debe!<br />
Dr. Ebeling<br />
Miss Falley<br />
Dr. Gallagher<br />
Dr. Hawes<br />
Dr. Hopkins<br />
Dr. Kelley<br />
Dr. Longley<br />
Dr. Lewis<br />
Dr. Lonn<br />
Dr. Lloyd<br />
Mme. de M are<br />
Dr. Nitchie<br />
Miss Pellet<br />
Dr. Peters<br />
111embers Elected 1921 to B eta Chapter of Maryland<br />
Amy Allison<br />
Adele Bluthenthal<br />
Judith Clark<br />
Margaret Fishback<br />
Ailsa Fulton<br />
Two hundred and tort:g-seven<br />
Virginia G allup<br />
Nettie Kuhlmann<br />
Minnie Medwedeff<br />
Nellie N euhausen<br />
Mary Parmenter<br />
Gladys Tebbs<br />
Vivian Vestal<br />
Carolyn Weiss<br />
Katherine Wisner
Two hundred and forty-eight
Two hundred and /itty-one<br />
We've strained our minds for something new for Seniors,<br />
And not a joke or poem could we find;<br />
So the only explanation we can give is<br />
That you are just beyond the mortal mind.<br />
For you have fought and pushed the battle forward,<br />
Regardless either of our sneers or lauds;<br />
You've passed the goal, this mundane life's behind you,<br />
You stand and smile, secure among the gods.<br />
And now we''ve come to this our hour of parting,<br />
Our last great tribute, told nor wise nor well;<br />
vVe have not genius to proclaim your virtues<br />
We only smile for you, and say farewell.
HER FIRST APPEARANCE AS AN AGORA HEROINE<br />
It was the first act. She was nervou!', though sm e oi herself. \Vhat if she should<br />
fail Y et she knew her lines and at the dress rehearsal Dr. Bonnell had almo;,t smiled<br />
his approval. Yes, she wonld make good. The act progressed. She was acting as sh
You are a Freshman-that will excuse anything-you are not supposed<br />
to know anything. Freshmen are not made that way<br />
You see a long line of weary-looking temales outside of the Dean's office.<br />
They register worn-out-ness and woe-begone-ness. You don't see why. The<br />
Dean is a very nice man-you know, because you had to see him when you<br />
came to <strong>College</strong>, and he let you take one of the six subjects you wanted. You<br />
stand and gaze at them pityingly-they look so sad. There are a few Sophomores<br />
there-but you are afraid to ask why they are there. Sophomores hate<br />
to be asked questions. They haze Freshmen.<br />
You falL upon the neck of a Junior passing by. You made a mistakeshe<br />
is not passing by, she has come to join the crowd on the mourner's bench.<br />
You ask her why!<br />
"Because," she says bitterly, "I got a flunk slip. There is one for you in<br />
your mail-box."<br />
* * * * *<br />
Note: In the bit to follow, the closest we come to "Life" is through the<br />
possession of a life-like imagination-which is necessary to picture Dr. Kuhl<br />
and Dr. Hopkins in collaboration upon an essay entitled "The Elements of<br />
Love as :Made Manifest in Browning." To clothe the work in a tunic of<br />
reality we devise the "Convention of the Associated <strong>College</strong>s of the Middle<br />
States and Maryland," of Weekl:y fame, as its final destination; and to heighten<br />
the illusion, we insert here and there a class-room phrase which sounds vague:y<br />
familiar.<br />
Dr. H. begins: "The ideal of romantic love is the crystallization of all<br />
of those springs of humanity wherein this life is enshrouded. In fact if<br />
I may be admitted a somew:hat personal note, I feel that without the experiencing<br />
flame of love idealized in the thought and action of a great soul, our<br />
loveless lives may glide glowering on to eternity as purposeless as the aspirations<br />
of a sylvan snail.<br />
Dr. K. courteously interrupts: "Exceedingly vvell clone. Emphasis<br />
consummately placed. Stunning alliteration, I will add a little thought." He<br />
begins.<br />
"In the concept of romantic love as considered by Mr. Browning, we<br />
have it happily expressed with fine onomatopoeic effect. At times almost<br />
brutally frank, it is counterbalanced with corking figures and-"<br />
Dr. H. (pained): "Please allow me to include some pathos here. I fear<br />
that your experience is not wide enovgh to permit of the broadest understand-<br />
Two hundred and fifty-four
ing and appreciation." Dr. K., too shocked at her temerity to protest, allows<br />
her to continue.<br />
"As I have attempted to bring out there is something startling optimistic,<br />
something romantically robust in Browning's conception of love. Lighted<br />
with lyrical loveliness, his iclocyntric ideals glow glimmering with the true<br />
understanding, the up-welling tenderness, the consummate characteristics of<br />
the great-"<br />
''A most delightful passage," interrupts Dr. K. "But we must have humor<br />
with pathos, the characteristic of Shakspere, to make this a true work of<br />
genius. We must do a little intelligent skipping, ariel so we will pass on to<br />
the end of the essay and compare him to the inexhaustible Shakspere, with<br />
that admirable restraint which is the hall-mark of Art."<br />
"I didn't know," objects Dr. H ., somewhat petulently, "that this was to<br />
be a Shaksperean assembly. Of course, he is very well in his way, but I am<br />
collaborating in a paper upon the great Browning."<br />
"Madame," momentarily becoming Kubler and Kuhler, "no Classic, and<br />
my work must be Classic, is complete without a comparison with Shakspere.<br />
You may never read this, but take it down anyway." He goes on with the<br />
essay.<br />
"Even such a practical man as I am finds it difficult to set before a distinguished<br />
assembly, any quite complete summary of Shakspere's admirable<br />
conception of love. My shrewdest observations, however, lead me to say with<br />
certainty that his character developments are the greatest of all time. Indeed,<br />
although Shakspere never springs surprises, many ·of the ·complexities of these<br />
characters still remain complexities; and whether or no we can testify with<br />
any assurity to the motives of Hamlet will remain the classic example of an<br />
open question for the solution of posterity."<br />
Dr. H., no \vhit intimidated, lashes on her outraged soul to her aid. "I<br />
insist upon inserting here a paragraph on love as made manifest in Mr. Browning's<br />
Lyrics." Dr. K . nods off resignedly.<br />
"The glow of a lofty love transforms life. Out of time and space, skimming<br />
the Eternal, one Soul may call to another and the' meeting will come as<br />
predestined. One moment of love-for that utter happiness are we condemned<br />
to an eternity of lives ; but that moment transfigures us and makes us<br />
-gods. Romantic love-"<br />
Dr. K. awakes. "Let me remind you of the l'. B. K. Senate-meeting," he<br />
suggests.<br />
TDJo hundred and fifty-five
Two hundred and fiftJI-seten<br />
Thel'-e ue_<br />
- fJL.ve.s<br />
iil-nJ<br />
}11 VE$ =
100% Pure .............. . . . ............. _ . _ . _ .. Dr. Williams<br />
Thirsty, Just W hi stle ..... _ ........ . . .. ... ..... .. ..... Harriet<br />
Comes out like a ribbon, lies flat on the brush ........ Mr. Baker<br />
Say it with Flowers ....... . ..................... Miss Burnett<br />
Do your Christmas shopping early .... . .. _ ..... Mrs. Hannaman<br />
Time to re- .. ......... ... . . _ ............... Dr. Bacon<br />
One of the el cious flavors ............ . . . _ . . Miss Childs<br />
Ask the man ns one .................. . .. . ... Dr. Debe!<br />
You don't carry ou wear it, like a watch ... _ ... Dr. Bowman<br />
Chases dirt...... . .............................. Dr. Welsh<br />
You push the butt and we do the rest _ ... . ... .... . .. Dr. Ball<br />
Glorifying the Attic ............... _ ... . . ... Studio in Alfheim<br />
You'll agree, they satisfy . . _ . __ .. _ . . . .. Anglo-Hopkins Quizzes<br />
Happiness in every box (!! !) _. _ .......... . ...... . Post-Office<br />
57 Varieties ... . . .. .. . ........ _ . . ... _ ........ . Noon-day Soup<br />
AN APPRECIATION<br />
There once was a student_ who said :<br />
"Oh, why should I have to take Ed?<br />
If all learning's like this,<br />
I'm sure ignorance is bliss,<br />
For I'd rather be stupid than dead."<br />
ATMOSPHERIC PRESSURE<br />
There once was a major in Lit,<br />
vVho. said "In this line I'm no hit;<br />
"I flounder in seas<br />
"Of Swinburne's similes<br />
"And Milton just gives me a lit."<br />
R. I. P.<br />
vVe'll say there's a habit to dread,<br />
More deadly than arsenic or lead.<br />
Once they get you subpoened<br />
As a Limerick fiend,<br />
You' ll write 'em in tons 'till you're dC"ad.<br />
Two hundred and fifty-eight
Jrouerbs nt 1fiife<br />
The horse is a vain thing for safety. Gym.<br />
A fool's mouth is his destruction. Any class.<br />
Life is a crucible, we are thrown into it and tried. F inals.<br />
W hile we are reasoning concerning life, life is gone. Magazine 111 the<br />
H all. ·<br />
W here there is much light the shade is deepest . P hysi.cs.<br />
W hat a miserable world ; trouble if w e love and trouble if we do not love.<br />
Crushes.<br />
;.ti an is more than constitutions. Dr. Guth.<br />
The joy of meeting not unmixed with pain. No quorum.<br />
Hope against hope, and ask 'til ye receive. Permission from D r. Welsh.<br />
O ne may smile and smile and be a villain. Dr. Carroll.<br />
T hat fellow seems to m e to possess but one idea and that a w rong one.<br />
E conomics.<br />
B etter is a dry morsel and quietness therewith than a house feasting w ith<br />
strife. Dining-room.<br />
Gone, glimmering thru the dream of things that were. History .<br />
W hat can't be cured must be endured. D isablement m eaning exemption<br />
irom gym.<br />
A wise son maketh a glad father. D r. K uhl, Jr.<br />
F ools laugh at their own folly . Executive Board.<br />
It never rains, but it pours. Baltimore.<br />
D elays are dangerous. Charles Street.<br />
Better late than never. Dr. Froelich er's class.<br />
Better never than late. D r. Bussey's c:ass.<br />
V irtue is its own reward. W here ?<br />
Two hundred and tlfl))-nine
Two hundred and sixty-six
Two hundred a n d srxl.JI-seven<br />
.
THE DONNYBROOK BOARD ARE DYING TO GET THESE<br />
Nothing left for us but Epitaphs<br />
Katherine Parker. Our Masterpiece.<br />
Helen. Hie Iacet.<br />
"Come Kitty," we· call,<br />
But no Kitty appears.<br />
We hope that the flames<br />
Haven't frozen her ears.<br />
Here measures her length Helen Mears,<br />
The depression will serve to catch tears;<br />
But what really did it-<br />
Despite how we chid it-<br />
Was the weight of her thought, it appears.<br />
Constance. A. W. 0. L.<br />
Constance was Little,<br />
Platform was brittle,<br />
Lumber has taken a slump.<br />
With it went Constance<br />
And all our remonstrance:<br />
She never survived the first bump.<br />
M. L. Bird. Death by Violence.<br />
Mil Koehnl;ne. Ci-git.<br />
Flutter, flutter, little Bird, Now cracks a noble heart,<br />
Far away from cark and care,<br />
Happy in the world beyond,<br />
For there is no clubbing there.<br />
Two hundred and seven I]!-jive<br />
A tyrant self-confessed, and thereby blameless.<br />
Through eternity we picture her,<br />
Light-struck, in filmy loveliness.
(<br />
Union Trust Con1pany<br />
CHARLES and FAYETTE STREETS<br />
Baltimore<br />
Four Per Cent ( 4%) Interest Allowed on Savings Accounts<br />
Interest Allowed on Deposits Subject to Check<br />
Transacts a General Trust Business<br />
Modern up-to-date Banking Department, being thoroughly equipped to handle<br />
all business pertaining to banking<br />
JOHN M. DENNIS, President<br />
MAURICE H. GRAPE, Vice-President<br />
W. GRAHAM BOYCE, Vice-President<br />
OFFICERS<br />
WM. 0. PEIRSON, Treasurer<br />
JOSHUA S. DEW, Secretary<br />
THOS. C. THATCHER, Asst. Treas.
!I<br />
Tlzc Uni ted Railways and Electric Co .<br />
live, aggressive men and<br />
women,<br />
with constructive thought,<br />
a spirit of helpfulness,<br />
and plenty of punch<br />
the grouch,<br />
the knocker,<br />
the pessimist,<br />
the fellow who tears down<br />
the work of others,<br />
and who impedes instead of<br />
promoting<br />
the growth and development<br />
of the community.<br />
A g1·onch and a pnnch don' t go iogether
The<br />
Fidelity Trust<br />
Company<br />
CAPITAL AND SURPLUS<br />
$2,500,000.00<br />
Charles and Lexington Streets
I<br />
I<br />
rn-<br />
I<br />
ESTABLISHED 1857<br />
Hennegen-Bates Co.<br />
Diamond Merchants<br />
"\iV A'l'CHES, CLOCKS<br />
No. 7 East Baltimore Street<br />
BALTIMORE MARYLAND<br />
J. S. MacDonald Company<br />
Class Rings and Pins<br />
Made to Order<br />
Estimates and Designs Furnished<br />
Jewelers<br />
212 North Charles Street<br />
- Baltimore, Maryland<br />
Diamonds,<br />
Jewelry,<br />
Watches,<br />
Silverware
IMPORTERS<br />
HATS<br />
SWEATERS<br />
MILLINERS<br />
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328 CHARLES STREET. NORTH<br />
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DISTINCTIVE INDIVIDUAL<br />
The Store of<br />
Individual<br />
Shops<br />
Women & \<br />
Misses Shoes<br />
-1st Floor<br />
Men's Shoes Where individuality<br />
---'-2nd Floor<br />
and distinctiveness is<br />
Women &<br />
Misses Suits combined with un<br />
and Coats<br />
- 3rd Floor questioned quality at<br />
Skirts, Blouses a price you are will<br />
Dresses<br />
-2d Floor ing to pay.<br />
Annex<br />
Children's<br />
Shoes<br />
-4th Floor<br />
L. Slesinger & Son<br />
216 N. CHARLES ST.<br />
"Say It With Flowers"<br />
Cut Flowers and Plants for<br />
All Occasions<br />
Isaac H. Moss, Inc.<br />
York Road and Woodbourne Ave.<br />
Baltimore, Maryland<br />
JOHN WERNER<br />
Roses<br />
Lillies<br />
'l'he Pet'int Man<br />
Maryland Distributor for<br />
John W. Masury & Son<br />
Paints and Varnishes<br />
500 N. CALVERT STREET<br />
Orchids<br />
Violets<br />
Carnations<br />
Gardenias<br />
J. A. Ritter & Son<br />
Telephone, f<br />
PLORISTS and<br />
DECORATORS<br />
if<br />
'<br />
Mt. Vernoo<br />
1918 North Charles St.<br />
573<br />
Near Twentieth Baltimore, Md.
We Buy Our Coal<br />
of<br />
A. F. Lawrence<br />
Why Don't You?<br />
"Pollacks"<br />
WM. B. FALL ON } Proprietors<br />
ISAAC DAVIDSON<br />
1!)--<br />
Furniture<br />
Linoleum<br />
Rugs<br />
Agents- -<br />
Seeger Refrigerators<br />
Ostermoor Mattresses<br />
Gunn Sectional Bookcases<br />
HOWARD and SARATOGA STS.<br />
The Great China<br />
Tea Co.<br />
1'EASJ COFFEES<br />
and SUGARS<br />
408 W. LEXINGTON ST.<br />
Near Eutaw Street<br />
Baltimore's Largest Exclusive<br />
Fur House<br />
''<br />
Compliments of<br />
cMilcludls<br />
NEW YORK FUR CONPANY<br />
224 W. LEXINGTON ST.
Jus t as<br />
Com fOrtable<br />
as brotlu?rs<br />
AT ALL LEADING<br />
RETAIL S,TORES<br />
Athletic<br />
Underwear<br />
fo,r Every<br />
U0man<br />
EveryJJay
HUTZLEK BMHERS @<br />
-A Store appealing to a<br />
discriminating clientele<br />
The Arcade Tea<br />
Room<br />
324 N. CHARLES STREET<br />
Luncheon Afternoon Tea<br />
Excellent Food Pro-mpt Service<br />
Sodas and Sundaes Iula's Orchestra<br />
H. E. BOSLEY<br />
Pharmacist<br />
1<br />
'!<br />
.<br />
I<br />
DRUGS, CHEMICALS,<br />
PERFUMERY CANDY<br />
STATIONERY and TOILET<br />
ARTICLES Always on Hand<br />
Charles and Twenty-fifth Sts.<br />
J. Seth Hopkins<br />
Mansfield Co.<br />
:lllllllltlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllltlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll<br />
China Articles in<br />
China, Glass and Novelties for<br />
Gifts and Housekeeping<br />
llllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll llllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll<br />
4 and 6 W. FAYETTE ST.<br />
Baltimore Maryland<br />
The<br />
Dutch Tea Room<br />
314 N. CHARLES ST.<br />
LUNCHEON and<br />
AFTERNOON T'EA I
(<br />
C. & P . Phone St. Paul 1222<br />
Agents Rotary Neostyle Duplicator<br />
H. M. EIDEN CO.<br />
OFFICE STATIONERS and PRINTERS<br />
Opt>. Hanover St.<br />
Residence-<br />
3440 Auchentoroly Terrace<br />
112 WEST FAYETTE STREET<br />
Robert P. Iula<br />
... ORCIIESTRA DE LUXE ...<br />
Music Furnisl1ed for All Occasions<br />
Now Playing at THE ARCADE TEA ROOM<br />
Baltimore<br />
Phone<br />
Madison 3535<br />
From 4 to 6 P. M. 324 N. CHARLES ST.<br />
! ___ _
Schoen & Co., ·Inc .<br />
. lNirOitTERS<br />
Millinery, Coats, Suits, \Vaists<br />
Afternoon and Evening Dresses Furs and Novelties<br />
214 N. Charles Street Baltimore, Md.<br />
(•'J'HR S'l'ORE OF YOU'I'H))<br />
Hanneman Jess Co.<br />
112 W. LEXINGTON ST.<br />
Correct A ]J]Jai·cl S fJCC'ial Emr1lws,is on the Yonthfttl
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Strayer's Business <strong>College</strong><br />
INCORPORATED<br />
CHARLES and FAYETTE STREETS<br />
Baltimore, Maryland<br />
Departments Headed b:y: Degree Teachers<br />
Fully accredited by the National Association of Accredited<br />
Commercial Schools. Presenting newest and best<br />
methods in Shorthand, Typewriting, Commercial and<br />
Secretarial Subjects. Day School and Night School all<br />
the year. Now is the time to begin preparation for an<br />
attractive position. You are cordially invited to call and<br />
talk with us.<br />
Phone 5676 St. Paul<br />
P. S. We have positions for several <strong>Goucher</strong> graduates as teachers. Apply early.<br />
((THE HOME OF GOOD 'l'HINCJS '1'0 EA'lm<br />
THE COLLEGE INN<br />
2305-07 N. CHARLES ST.<br />
Table D'Hote dinner daily 6 to 8 P. M. Sunday 1 to 3. Cuisine and<br />
service not surpassed by any dining room in the City. Special at<br />
tention to Luncheon and Dinner Parties. Everything home cooked.<br />
OUR OWN MAKE PAS TRIES AND ICE 'CREAMS<br />
SALADS AND SANDWICHES<br />
SERVED ALL DAY<br />
DEW NEWBILL<br />
Proprietor<br />
- - .
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II<br />
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De BOIS<br />
313 NORTH CHARLES S'l'.<br />
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SPORT DRESSES 1<br />
SPORT BLOUSES FOR THE WELL DRESSED COLLEGE GIRL<br />
SPORT COATS<br />
NAPOLEON GRAY MARBLE<br />
THE ETERNAL :MARBLE<br />
PRODUCED BY<br />
PHENIX MARBLE COMPANY<br />
KANSAS CITY, MISSOURI<br />
•••<br />
Unsurpassed for Decorative and School Work, Wainscot, Showers,<br />
Toilets, Floors, Interior or Exterior<br />
A Sound Material of Uniform Texture and Color
.... Parkway Flower Shop ....<br />
North Avenue; at St. Paul<br />
"Sr1Y IT WI'l'll PLOTVEilS"<br />
Established 1873<br />
Mt. Vernon 4227<br />
A. H. Fetting Manufacturing Jewelry Co.<br />
DIAMONDS<br />
MANUFACTURERS<br />
Greek Letter Fraternity Jewelry<br />
213 N. Liberty Street<br />
PRECIOUS STONES<br />
FINE MOUNTING<br />
MT. VERNON 5434<br />
WILLIAM J. SINGLETON<br />
Ladies' and Gents' Shoe Shining Parlor<br />
1906 Y2 N. CHARLES STREET<br />
Baltimore, New Yo1·k and Philadelphia Newspapers- Daily and Sunday
Di Paula Bros.<br />
3 E. North Ave.<br />
8 cnrl Ymw S'ick .Friend a<br />
Bca,ntifnl Basket of Fntit<br />
John L. Alcock & Co.<br />
BALTIMORE, MD.<br />
Buyers and Exporters<br />
Black Walnut White Oak<br />
Hickory and Poplar<br />
LOGS and LUMBER<br />
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Pacific Coast Spruce<br />
Oregon Pine<br />
West Virginia Spruce<br />
Importers Circassian Walnut<br />
and East Indian Teak<br />
Compliments of<br />
Betty Wales<br />
DRESS SHOP<br />
Girls!!<br />
When You are Married<br />
Ask Your Husband to Specify<br />
Morgan Doors<br />
In Your New Home<br />
Morgan Millwork<br />
Company<br />
DIST RIBUTORS<br />
113-129 West North Avenue __ _ _<br />
Baltimore - - Maryland
ART PHOTOGRAPHY<br />
By<br />
TOWLES of Washington<br />
STUDIOS<br />
1520 CONNECTICUT A VENUE<br />
Washington, D. C.<br />
62 Awards for superior PHOTOGRAPHY<br />
- !!I
I<br />
Old Fashionably<br />
_ Made<br />
Every Old Fashioned Candy Lover<br />
Should Try<br />
Qlo!onial<br />
r· £ s ==============================<br />
After Recipes<br />
of 1776<br />
,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, Ql an U<br />
=::= ======================== == J I ==============================<br />
COLONIAL DAME CANDY SHOP<br />
1811 N. Charles Street<br />
CHARLES E. KRAFFT<br />
THUS. F. C-LARKE<br />
Near North Arz·e.<br />
Proprietors<br />
Stores in<br />
HAGERSTOWN and CUMBERLAND, MJJ. MARTINSBURG, W. VA.<br />
WINCHES7'ER, VA. SOMERSET, PA.
886 LINDEN AVE.<br />
Baltimore<br />
Get Estimates from<br />
E. B. Taylor<br />
'l'HE LEADING CATERER<br />
The Cheapest Rates for the Best Food<br />
Mt. Vernon 4940<br />
The K and B Delicatessen Co.<br />
HOMEWOOD 4628 2018 N. CHARLES ST.<br />
Dainty Dishes for Parties<br />
Salads, Sandwiches and Cold Meats of all Kinds<br />
Oysters and Imperial Deviled Crabs in Season<br />
Croquettes<br />
SelPctecl Meats, Butter, Eggs and Cheese<br />
Fancy Fruits and Vegetables<br />
P astries<br />
1I om e-madc Bread and Rolls<br />
Jjct Us Estim(ttc on Yonr Pcwf:,ies
.Compliments of<br />
Baltimore 1rust Compa11y<br />
Philadelphia Atlantic City Baltimore<br />
"MILLARD'S"<br />
The Shops of Sensible Prices<br />
Dresses, Coats, Sport Suits,<br />
Skirts and Waists<br />
213 Charles Street-North<br />
THE ELISE<br />
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Millinery and Waists<br />
PRICES REASONABLE<br />
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Boardwalk Shop Brighton Block 215 N. Charles St. Baltimore, Md.<br />
Atlantic City<br />
H. RocHLIN<br />
French Ladies' Tailor<br />
2334 North Charles Street<br />
Every Suit and Dress Made is Under My Personal Supervision<br />
Remodeling Suits and Furs a Specialty
OWARI (THE E'ND)