16
VOL. XXVIII, No. 19 [PRICE TWELVE CENTS] FEBRUARY 4, 1926 Professor Emeritus L. H. Bailey Writes on the Life of the Late Charles E. Hunn Styles in Eating Have Changed Since Boarding House Passed into History Memorial Fund to Professor W. W. Rowlee Presented to University by Kappa Sigma William C. Bell '97, African Mission- ary, Sends His Mite to the Alumni Fund Published weekly during the college year and monthly in July and August at 123 West State Street, Ithaca, New York. Subscription $4.00 per year. Entered as second class matter May 2, 1900, under the act of March 3, 1879, at the postomce at Ithaca, New York.

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Page 1: Professor Emeritus LH Bailey Writes on the Life - Cornell University

VOL. XXVIII, No. 19 [PRICE TWELVE CENTS] FEBRUARY 4, 1926

Professor Emeritus L. H. BaileyWrites on the Life of the Late

Charles E. Hunn

Styles in Eating Have Changed SinceBoarding House Passed

into History

Memorial Fund to Professor W. W.Rowlee Presented to University

by Kappa Sigma

William C. Bell '97, African Mission-ary, Sends His Mite to the

Alumni Fund

Published weekly during the college year and monthly in July and August at 123 West State Street, Ithaca, New York. Subscription $4.00 per year.Entered as second class matter May 2, 1900, under the act of March 3, 1879, at the postomce at Ithaca, New York.

Page 2: Professor Emeritus LH Bailey Writes on the Life - Cornell University

C O R N E L L A L U M N I N E W S

PROVIDENCE HARTFORD

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ROGER H. WILLIAMS, '95New York Resident Partner

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Investment Securities

Philadelphia Albany Boston BaltimorePittsburgh Rochester Buffalo Syracuse

Jansen Noyes '10 Clifford HemphillStanton Griffis ΊO Harold StrongWalter S. Marvin Kenneth K. WardJ. Stanley Davis L. M. Blancke '15

Members of the New York Stock Exchange

Busteescan not tutor in Ithacaduring the college year

but they can

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Resources OverFive Million Dollars

President Charles E. TremanVice-Pres Franklin C. CornellTreasurer Sherman PeerCashier A. B. WellarAss't Cashier Lorenzo Clinton

Visit Ithaca Between TrainsWithout extra charge or loss of business time you

can stop-over at Ithaca when en route east or west viaLehigh Valley. See suggestion below.

Just tell the conductor and deposit your ticket withticket agent at Ithaca.

Example of Ithaca stop-over without extra charge or loss of business time.

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aSleeper may be occupied until 8:00 A. M.bSleeper ready for occupancy at 9 :oo p. M.

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DO YOUneed a position

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know of a position

The Cornell Club of NewYork maintains a

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Page 3: Professor Emeritus LH Bailey Writes on the Life - Cornell University

CORNELL ALUMNI NEWSVOL. XXVIII, No. 19 ITHACA, N; Y., FEBRUARY 4, 1926 PRICE 12 CENTS

THIS WEEK the professors havebeen the hollow-eyed ones. Takingthree or four two-hour examinations

is bad enough, but correcting twenty orthirty times that number of papers issomething else again. The professors whocan pass their whole classes have an easiertime than those who must comfort theweeping bustees, and it is reported thattears are a weapon by no means monopol-ized by the skirted undergraduates. Tomake it more generally unpleasant forevery one, along in the middle of the weeka hurricane blew down from the ArtieCircle. Many students who finished theirexaminations early went home for a fewdays; others are planning to go a littlelater and stay a little longer, about thetime the bust notices appear.

JUNIOR WEEK gets fully under wayThursday, the date of this issue. Duringexaminations the undergraduates are sodeeply buried in study that they seem tohave forgotten the approaching festivityaltogether, but the merchants of the townhave been laying in a huge stock oftuxedos and all accessories for the seniorwho staggers out of his last final to recallthat his house party girl is arriving intown the next day. Prospects are goodfor about the usual number of entertain-ments, approaching infinity as a limit, tobe crammed into the "Week," which isrightly so called, though it lasts only threeor four days.

HIGH SPOTS of the program are theMasque performances of "Lady Luck/'Ned-Wayburn-coached,on Thursday after-noon and evening, and Saturday eveningthe Musical Clubs concert, a preliminaryevent, on Wednesday evening; the JuniorProm, which has long ago ceased to bejunior or a promenade, but which remainsan elaborate, lengthy, and beautifulformal dance, in the Drill Hall Fridaynight; and an athletic doubleheaderSaturday afternoon, consisting of thePennsylvania basketball game and awrestling meet, also with Pennsylvania.

WHILE the University is reveling, itmust also register for the second term.Friday and Saturday are the appointeddays, and the only appointed days, thoughit is now possible for a group of ten or morestudents to register by proxy in advance.There will be lines on the Campus Fridaymorning at nine o'clock-, and there will bemuch pawing over of the contents ofdesks in a frantic search for the secondterm registration coupons which werecasually detached from the first termblanks last fall. "You cannot enter theregistration room without them."

ANOTHER ray of hope goes to the motor-ists. The city officials some time agoordered a snowplow, which got lost enroute, but was finally located hiding in acar in Wilkes-Barre. The officials tiedit in chains and put salt on its tail andsucceeded in getting it to Ithaca, where itnow hungrily awaits the next blizzard whenit can do its stuff.

CHOOSING the psychological moment,the student agents of summer tours haveplaced around the campus attractiveposters telling of both the joys of Europeantravel and the low rates available to stu-dents. The larger steamship companiesare making these student tours annualaffairs, and reserve for their use one or twoentire ships or the second or third cabins,where the service almost equals that ofthe first cabin.

ACCORDING to an article by RaymondWalters, dean of Swarthmore College, inthe current issue of School and Society,Cornell is sixteenth in number of full-timeregular students in American universities,with 5,397 enrolled. The University ofCalifornia heads the- list, with an enroll-ment of 16,294, followed by Columbia with11,727. Of the colleges exclusively forwomen, Smith leads with an enrollment of2,153. Compared with 1920, the full-time enrollment in 29 typical universitiesis eighteen per cent greater.

A DINNER in honor of Dean Georgia L.White '96 was given on January 28 by theIthaca Zonta Club at Willard StraightHall. Mrs. Anna Grace Ίo, Miss MaePeabody, and Miss Ruth E. Davis' 17 werehostesses. Professor Martha Van Rens-selaer '09 was the principal speaker.

THE Psychology of Advertising was thesubject of an address given by ProfessorKarl M. Dallenbach, Ph.D. '13, at thethird of a series of classes being conductedby the Advertising Club of Ithaca, onJanuary 29. He discussed the subject fromthe practical rather than the theoreticalpoint of view.

PROFESSOR Max Born of the Universityof Goettingen gave three lectures thisweek, on "Chemical Processes in the Lightof Physics," "New Methods of QuantumTheory," and "Recent Results in theLattice Theory of Crystals." ProfessorBorn is especially noted for his work onthe latter subject. The lectures weregiven on the Jacob Schiff foundation.

OTHER LECTURES of the week werethose by Professor Dallas Lore Sharp ofBoston University on "The Spirit of theHive," and Montague Free, horticulturistof the Brooklyn Botanic Garden, on"Rock Gardens."

THE regular scientific meeting of theAlumni Association of the Medical Collegewas held in the main lecture hall of theCollege in New York on January 29.Members of the Department of Anatomypresented papers on some of the interestingphases of their recent work. The meetingwas followed by an informal reception inthe hall. Dr. Mary M. Crawford '04 ispresident of the Association, and HaroldS. Belcher Ί6 secretary.

A LINCOLN sedan stood for a few dayson Fall Creek Drive and was believed tcbelong to some one in the neighborhood.The police investigated and found it wasowned by a Brooklyn man, and had beenstolen in New York last Saturday andapparently driven straight to Ithaca. Theidentity of the thief has not been learned,but the police are busy on the case.

Miss Catherine L. Vastbinder '27 ofAddison, and Romaine F. Button '27 ofCanastota were married in Geneva onNovember 20. Miss Leah Bladen '25 ofSyracuse and Miss Lucy Kerr '25 ofHammondsport were bridesmaids, andRobert W. Weeks '27 of Great Neck wasthe best man.

ANNOUNCEMENT has been made of theengagement of Miss Anna Eleanor Roose-velt, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. FranklinDelano Roosevelt, to Curtis B. Dall, sonof Mr. and Mrs. Charles Austin Dall.Miss Roosevelt has just completed thewinter short course in the College ofAgriculture, and is a graduate of MissChapin's School.

THE ITHACA Conservatory of Music andAffiliated Schools have filed a notice ofvoluntary dissolution with the New YorkSecretary of State. It is explained that thedissolution is merely a procedure in prepar-ation for the elaborate expansion which isplanned. The heretofore affiliated schoolswill combine in one institution, with thestatus of a college.

RIGHT REV. G. Ashton Oldham '02,D.D., Episcopal Bishop Coadjutor of thediocese of Albany, was the preacher atSage Chapel on January 31.

THE COUNTRY CLUB house has been cutin two and is being moved from its oldsite to a new location east of TriphammerRoad. It has already traveled some 350yards of its journey. When completed it

will be more accessible to the new golfcourse than in its old position. At presentits chief value is supplying windows for the

small boys to throw bricks and snow-

balls at.

Page 4: Professor Emeritus LH Bailey Writes on the Life - Cornell University

222 C O R N E L L A L U M N I N E W S

Eating in Ithaca

Radical Change from Boarding House toCafeteria as Student Refectory

The opening of a rapid-fire, double-barreled cafeteria in Willard Straight Hall,which can serve seven hundred patrons inan hour, is one indication that styles incollege eating have changed. Unobservedin the raising of million-dollar seats oflearning, vast increases in enrollment, andthe advent of a somewhat jazzy studentlife, a vast transformation has taken placein the manner and methods of partakingof daily sustenance.

Twenty-five years ago students who didnot come into contact with a privateboarding house of some kind were few andfar between. Restaurants and cafeterias,as we know them, were unnecessary, be-cause the student of those days preferredthe comforts of home to speedy servicewith possible indigestion. A survey of thelicensed restaurants in Ithaca in 1900shows there were only sixteen of these inoperation, not including sixteen saloonswhere, presumably, meals and luncheswere served. There were twenty-threefraternities and three sororities listed thatyear, but whether they all had privatedining rooms is not evident. Withoutdoubt some of them did.

In 1925 there were fifty restaurants inIthaca, of which seventeen were locatednear the Campus in the congested sectionon or near College Avenue and Eddy Street.In addition numerous confectionery storesselling light lunches, one or two hotdog wagons, seventy-six fraternity andsorority dining halls, and three Universitydining halls for women. The populationof Ithaca has increased 5,812 since 1900,making a total population, exclusive ofstudents, of 18,948. University enroll-ment has increased from 2,980 to 5> I54> &gain of 2,174 during the same period. Butthe number of restaurants, the 1925 countshows, has increased from sixteen to fifty,a gain of over three hundred per cent.

One obvious reason for the sudden in-crease in the number of restaurants, whichcannot be laid to the increase in population,is to be found in the passing of the privateboarding house. The alumnus who re-turns to Ithaca today must content him-self, provided he does not put up at somefraternity house, with a hurried repast,bolted at random, in a corner of somecafeteria or quick lunch counter; for ifany boarding houses are left they are sosmall and inconsequential as to be practi-cally negligible. With them has passed an-other Cornell tradition.

Of the eating (and drinking) placesfrequented by students twenty-five yearsago but two remain under the same name,and one of the two is now under'a differ-ent management. The Dutch Kitchen,built previously to 1900 but not officiallyopened until 1901, still continues under themanagement of James A. Causer, pro-

prietor of the Ithaca Hotel and more re-cently a city alderman. In appearance theKitchen today is about what it was in thebeginning, except that a new floor hasbeen laid, and a few minor changes havebeen made in the interior decoration. Theoriginal tables and chairs, except thosechairs which in the course of time werecarved with hearts, spades, diamonds, andclubs, are still there. The carved chairshave been given by Mr. Causer to formerstudents, and at least one has travelled asfar as Seattle, Washington. The famedDutch Kitchen pictures portraying shipsand landscapes of Holland, painted by aformer German student still adorn thewalls. The two protruding barrel ends onthe north and south walls greet the visitorwith the announcement, unexpected inthese days of prohibition, "Ballantine'sNewark Export Beer." They were de-signed, decorated, and placed in theirpresent position by Herbert W. Ballantine'17. The pictures of athletes, teams, andcoaches, however, which were so much apart of the Kitchen in other days, havelately been removed and turned over tothe Athletic Association, which, it isunderstood, will have them placed inWillard Straight Hall. The bar has beenconverted into sleeping quarters.

But, if the Kitchen has changed littlein appearance, the purposes for which itis now used are a far cry from the good olddays. Where it used to be distinctly abachelor's paradise it is not an uncommonthing nowadays to hear feminine laughterissuing from its sacred domain. In fact,in its present capacity as a private diningroom catering to special parties, its mostfaithful patrons are groups from thevarious sororities.

The Senate, also begun in 1900 but notopened until 1901, is still a retreat for themale of the species, although the diningroom on the first floor where the bar usedto be is open to members of both sexes.Martin T. Gibbons, who came to Ithaca asa bartender in the old Alhambra Hotel onAurora Street and subsequently openedthe Senate, died last November and themanagement passed to his daughter, Alice.But perhaps because of old associationsand the presence of "Stuffy" DeMun,whose acquaintance among Cornelliansextends into the thousands, the Senate stillcontinues to attract a great many bachelorparties and banquets.

A remarkable feature of the cafeteriamovement and the consequent extinctionof the time-honored boarding house is thesudden springing up of numerous publiceating houses along College Avenue andEddy Street. About 1892 Henry Nor-wood opened the first of these on CollegeAvenue, near where Gillette's Cafeteriastands today. The enterprise thus startedprospered, under the name of The EastHill Dog, until -the size of his businesscaused the owner to move into largerquarters, opposite the famous boardinghouse called the Brunswick, on the present

site of Georgia's Restaurant. Here he re-mained some two or three years until hesold out and the property changed handsseveral times before 1900, when it wasbought by D M. Georgia, the presentowner. Georgia'sj therefore, has thedistinction of being the oldest restaurantin the district.

The example set by Henry Norwood wassoon followed by others, among whomwere John J. Gainey, later an Ithacaclothing merchant, and Jess Norwood,brother of Henry. In 1908 Jim Mahanna,one-time proprietor of the Brunswick andother boarding houses, opened the KornerRestaurant at the corner of CollegeAvenue and Dryden Road, initiating along list of similar enterprises in which hehas engaged since that time. The lastventure of Mahanna, who owns theMahanna Block on College Avenue, intothe cafeteria business was in 1921 whenhe opened the cafeteria now known asGillette's. With the coming of prohibitionand the increase in University enrollmentcafeterias and quick lunch counterssprang up thick and fast, and some placesof business changed hands -four or fivetimes a year. Only a few, Georgia's, theRed and White Cafeteria, the LindenLunch, the Cornell Grill, Dinty Moore'sLunch, and possibly one or two othershave maintained a semblance of perman-ency.

Since ,the opening of Sage College backin the early seventies, the University hasundertaken to supply food for a portion ofthe student body. At first Sage was theonly dormitory on the Campus, but Cas-cadilla Hall was a general residing placefor both Faculty members and students,and dining halls were conducted in boththese buildings. Previously to 1910 thepolicy was to farm out kitchen rights inthese buildings to private individuals whoundertook to supply meals at a stipulatedprice per week. But in 1910 dissatisfactionwith the existing system became so acutethat the University, to relieve the situa-tion, appointed Mrs. Gertrude S. Martinto supervise the management of bothdining halls. Two years later a specialadministrative department was createdand Thomas Tree, who had long beenassistant to the University Treasurer, be-came the first manager of residential halls.

During the regime of Mr. Tree dininghalls for women were opened in PrudenceRisley Hall and Cascadilla, the CoffeeShop was started in Barnes Hall, andcafeterias, open to the public, were putunder way in Cascadilla, Baker MessHalls, the Home Economics Building, andSibley College. The Sibley Dog, whichbegan its career as a quick lunch stand onthe corner near the present site of RandHall, and later flourished as a cafeteria inthe basement of Sibley Dome, wasdiscontinued in 1921, and the cafeteriain the Baker Mess Halls, started dur-ing the war to care for students in theS. A. T. C., was abandoned with the

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C O R N E L L A L U M N I N E W S 223

opening of Winard Straight Hall. Withthe passing of the Coffee House, a similarinstitution was opened at the JohnnyParson Club. The Home EconomicsCafeteria will be preserved as the labora-tory of the college, and Cascadilla Cafe-teria will continue in its present capacity.The operation of Willard Straight Cafe-teria, it is believed, will not greatly inter-fere with the volume of business transactedby the remaining University dining hallsand by private individuals. Experiencehas shown that students are prone topatronize eating houses located near theirrooming houses and, lunches excepted, theonly permanent patronage upon which theWillard Straight Cafeteria may reasonablycount will be that deflected to it by theabandonment of the Baker Mess Halls.

(EDITOR'S Note: The subject of eatingplaces in a college town is not one onwhich a great store of documentary evi-dence is available. The compiler of theabove article has had to depend largely onreminiscences of old-time Ithacans and onan unofficial survey of the present situa-tion on the Hill. It is quite probable thatunintentional inaccuracies or omissionsmay occur in his findings.)

A MISSIONARY'S MITEDean Albert W. Smith '78 has received

the following letter from William C. Bell'97, with a gift to the University whichhas impressed the Cornellian Council asan instance of sacrifice for Cornell and asevidence that the "drop in the bucketfallacy" has not prevented this mission-ary in Africa from giving what he can.

Vila Teixeira da Suva,Bailundo, Angola, Africa,

October 10, 1925.Dean Albert W. Smith,Ithaca, N. Y.Dear Fellow Cornellian:

A short time ago I received your goodletter reviving old-time interest in the oldUniversity so dear to us all. While atIthaca a few years ago on my last furloughI had the pleasure and privilege of beingentertained at the home of Professor JohnL. Stone on Wait Avenue. During a fewmonths I took some special work in variouslines and it was exhilirating to be againon the old campus.

My life work has been spent largely herein Angola, Africa, but many friends I stillhave in the old town.

I wish I might make a larger contribu-tion to the Alumni Fund, and especiallywhen I see the importance of it from everyangle for the advancement of the Univer-sity. But need stares me in the face onevery hand out here, and especially thisyear when a famine threatens. However,who could refuse to give his mite—thevalue of one day's allowance—even amissionary? But I am taking courage inhand and remitting you herewith theequivalent of my allowance for two days,$3.28, hoping that in some way, with thefew loaves and fishes, it may be increasedto feed a multitude! In this you may restassured, that my interest does not wanethough my means are limited.

Thanking you for your letter of theI1 th of April and begging your pardon formy delay in replying, believe me

Most cordially yours for Cornell,WILLIAM C. BELL

THE ROWLEE MEMORIAL FUNDAs a testimonial to Professor Willard

W. Rowlee '88, who died in 1923, theAlpha Kappa Chapter of Kappa Sigmahas established the Rowlee MemorialFund. Although the fund is presented tothe University it is the stated wish thatthe library of Willard Straight Hall shouldbe the beneficiary.

The fraternity has turned over to theUniversity Treasurer a principal sum of$600, together with a complete set of theALUMNI NEWS. From the income it is re-quested that annual volumes of theALUMNI NEWS be purchased for thelibrary in Willard Straight, and that theremainder of the'income be used for otherpurposes of the library.

The memorial to Professor Rowlee isparticularly appropriate in view of hislong and active association with under-graduate affairs. He was for many yearsa member of the Athletic Council as rep-resentative for football, was largely in-strumental in the building of AlumniField, and was chairman of the FacultyCommittee on Student Affairs. In alumnicircles he was until his death the highlysuccessful secretary of the Class of '88 andwas a director and for years the secretary,of the Associate Alumni.

THE COLLEGE WORLD

SPORT STUFF

Examinations end on Wednesday andJunior Week begins the same day. Venusfollows so closely on the heels of Minervathat the two goddesses have a tendency tobump. On Wednesday in the confusedundergraduate mind 1066 may be either animportant date in English history or thetime the train is due to arrive withMinnie on it.

I hope these invading girls may be ableto shake the undergraduates up a bit andput a little life into the place. Nobody elsehas been able to do that this year.

Its fine for undergraduates to be hardworking and well behaved, but I wish thiscrowd wasn't so terribly middle aged.They wear rubbers and apparently haveno emotions. Nothing makes them madexcept their inability to find a desired bookin the library. They gargle their throatsand take life seriously. They are goodbecause it's too much trouble to be bad.

I hope some of these girls start some-thing. R. B.

PROFESSOR JACOB R. SCHRAAM is to bethe editor-in-chief of the biological ab-strapting service soon to be started underthe auspices of the Union of BiologicalSocieties of America, for which the Rocke-feller Foundation has appropriated $350,-ooo. It is planned to publish about35,000 abstracts annually in a series ofvolumes aggregating about 3,500 pages.The work will begin with the literatureof 1926.

THE WISCONSIN alumni committee ap-pointed to investigate the action of theRegents in voting to refuse hereafter allgifts from educational foundations has nowreported against the Regents' resolution.Seven members of the committee signedthe report; one member declined to join init and two other members submittedseparate reports. The report will be con-sidered by the Wisconsin Alumni Board atits next meeting.

A MICHIGAN statistician has found 784Michigan students, graduates and non-graduates, in "Who's Who in America,"engaged in the professions as follows: uni-versity presidents, 19; professors, 226;lawyers, 137; doctors, 66; engineers, 27;dentists, 2; educators, 52; writers, 250;editors, 58; publishers, 7; judges, 51;Congressmen, 40; musicians, 4; businessmen, 29; lecturers, 12; clergymen, 6.

A QUESTIONNAIRE Sβnt to 1090 Sub-

scribers to The Michigan Alumnus wasanswered by 538 persons. The averageage of these was 39 years. Seventy-nineper cent were married, with an averageof 1.54 children. 57 per cent owned theirown homes, 28 per cent rent homes, and 15per cent boarded or lived at a club orparsonage. The average income was$8,497.93, of which $2,993.67 came frominvestments and $5,504.26 from earnings.The average personal purchases amountedto $4,402.36. The average life insurancecarried was $19,784.24. Of the 538 answer-ing, 82 were engineers, 78 lawyers, 49 physi-cians, 44 merchants, 42 manufacturers, 38teachers, 37 bankers and financiers, 22dentists, 14 chemists, 10 journalists andpublishers, 10 retired, and 9 architects.The Saturday Evening Post was the favoriteof 179; The American Mercury, of 15.

THE RE I-ORT of Lehigh's treasurer showsthat Lehigh has assets amounting to$8,041,015.14, of which $4,431,631.82 is inproductive funds. Operations for theyear show a net income of $18,230.64,which reduces the university deficit in-herited from the previous year to $78,257.-

03-

THE CHRISTIAN ASSOCIATION at theUniversity of Pennsylvania has begun acampaign for a fund of $750,000 withwhich to erect and endow a building onthe campus.

PENNSYLVANIA STATE College had lastyear a net surplus of $48,995.29 from foot-ball and a total net deficit of $42,605.03from all other branches of athletics. Thetotal excess of income over expenditure forthe year was $12,171.94.

WILLIAM AND MARY College now has1,048 students, and about sixty more areexpected at the beginning of the nextsemester. There are about one hundredmore students than last year.

Page 6: Professor Emeritus LH Bailey Writes on the Life - Cornell University

224 C O R N E L L A L U M N I N E W S

Charles E. Hunn

Professor Emeritus L. H. Bailey, Writes on a Gardener Who Loved His Plants

To plant lovers who have passedthrough the courses at Cornell in the lastthirty years and more, the name CharlesE. Hunn will remain a grateful memory.There are relatively few persons whothroughout a long life hold plants stead-fastly in their affections and are not ledaway by lures. Mr. Hunn's affection wasthat of the real amateur, the lover of ̂ theplants. All during our long association, Ifelt this rare and sincere quality in him.And when, a quarter century ago, I wasimpelled to make a little book for thehome gardener, I engaged him to write forme, in a summer vacation, a series of shortpractical informal notes that I might besure to keep the amateur's touch. Thecommon questions of everyday practice Idesired to answer, and I said in the pref-ace: "I wish them answered in thesimple and direct phrase of the gardener.Therefore I asked my friend C. E. Hunn,gardener to the Horticultural Depart-ment of Cornell University, who lives withplants, to write advice for one who wouldmake a garden."

Mr. Hunn had been at the State Stationat Geneva. He came to us in the Horti-

cultural Department at Cornell Univer-sity in October, 1894. He remained in thegardening work until his death, a faithfulservice of nearly a third of a century. Inthe course of time, the Department hasbeen divided, for it then included what-ever was taught of pomology, floriculture,vegetable-gardening, plant-breeding, land-scape gardening, and no inconsiderableeffort in botany and allied subjects. It isa testimonial to his usefulness that how-ever many the segregations, he was al-ways retained; and he lived all this timewith his plants, ever becoming moreskilled in their propagation and more de-voted to their care. In the early days hewas a constant and loyal assistant inmuch of the experimental work, and hisname appears as one of the authors ofBulletin 112, February, 1896, on Chrys-anthemums; it appears again as co-authorthe following April in Bulletin 134 on"Strawberries under Glass," and old stu-dents will remember the little make-shiftlean-to greenhouse and the wonderfulcrops he obtained in pots, the pictures ofwhich are in the literature to this day.

In 1905, he was co-author, with Pro-fessor John Craig, of Bulletin 231, con-taining records of the forcing of straw-berries, tomatoes, cucumbers, and melons.He was so much a part of the HorticulturalDepartment that in the absence of thehead officer, he wrote and signed theannual reports to the President of theUniversity in the years 1896-7 and 1897-8.The Horticultural Department was onlysix years old when he came to it, thehelpers were few, the programs were in thebeginning stages. Only those of us whowere in those beginnings can understandthe importance of his devotion to theadventure.

In 1899 Mr. Hunn contributed the mainpart in The Junior Naturalist Leaflet No.4, published in October, devoted to "ABulb Garden," in this enterprise beingassociated with his friend, John W.Spencer, now also a blessed memory withus. He was always interested in the JuniorNaturalist enterprise, which was one ofthe beginnings of Extension Work in thiscountry, and had many suggestions for theplant-growing part of it and for theexhibitions.

This picture will bring back the old days for many students of botany and its allied fields. It shows the head-house of the Botanical Forcing-Houses, to theright the glasshouses of the Department of Botany, and to the left the tower of the Lazy Club House, which was built by the University and equipped at an ex-pense of $600. They stood on the western part of what has now become the Athletic Field. The picture was first published in The Cornell Countryman for May,1906, with the following explanation: "Horticultural Forcing-Houses of Cornell University. The portrait is that of Mr. C. E. Hunn, gardener, who with a kindlyand personal interest has presided here for the past twelve years. The figure in overalls near the door is that of Professor L. H. Bailey. AroVind this cluster ofbuildings, familiar to so many horticulturists, was gathered the inspiration and enthusiasm which resulted in the Rural Science Series, the Garden Crest Series,the Cyclopedia of American Horticulture, and scores of minor publications.''

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C O R N E L L A L U M N I N E W S 225

Mr. Hύnn was versatile in gardening.He was able to turn his hand to any phaseof it. He had the "knack." In the firstdays his interest was chiefly with thefruits, particularly the small-fruits, andthe strawberry remained one of his specialdelights. In Cornell Bulletin 189, April1901, on 'Oswego Strawberries/' his aidis acknowledged as having continued the^field work after the death of Ernest G.Lodeman, who inaugurated the experi-ments at the request of the OswegoCounty Fruit-Growers' Association. Inthe greenhouse he became proficient notonly in the forcing of vegetables but in thegrowing of ornamentals of many kinds.At one time he had charge of some sevenhundred kinds of geraniums; again of alarge collection of begonias, such as is notseen in these days. He was skillful withchrysanthemums. In outdoor gardeninghe was equally successful. He knew hisplants well.

In later years, after the division of theold Horticultural Department, Mr. Hunnwas attached to Landscape Art and thento Floriculture. In this capacity he be-came much interested in shrubs and treesand developed particular skill in themultiplication of them; he became In-structor in Plant Propagation. Theseapplications were developed largelythrough the stimulus of Professor RalphW. Curtis Όi, who came to the Universitystaff thirteen years ago fresh from hiswork in the Arnold Arboretum of HarvardUniversity. A trip that Mr. Hunn tooksix or seven years ago also opened thisnew field to him. This was an automobilejourney that took him from Boston toWellesley in the company of three Cor-nell men then attached to the Olmstedoffice, Blanche, Prellwitz, and Wells; atWellesley he visited T. D. Hatfield, incharge of the famous Hunnewell estate,who showed him his methods of propagat-ing azaleas and similar plants; he camehome rich with seeds and full of new plansfor his work. His problem thenceforth wasboth to propagate coniferous and ericace-ous evergreens and to find out whether theold hybrids of azaleas and rhododendrons,long laboriously propagated by means ofgrafting, will hold their essential charac-ters when grown from seeds. His seedlingsof these plants are now in the CornellNursery and the answer to the questionwill soon be evident. If the plants retainsufficient of the merits of the namedparents, it will be a great gain for economi-cal results and for the popularizing of anoble class of plants. In the old days hehad achieved marked results in raisingexcellent specimen plants of forcing-houseand green-house subjects; and now he hadequal results in producing perfect speci-mens of woody things in the field.

From the first Mr. Hunn was a devotedadherent of the Lazy Club, a group orinstitution (not an organization) thatexerted much influence for many years.The Club met in its new building Novem-

ber 19, 1896, and then the Register begins(the only enterprise of the Club approach-ing formality) this Register recorded threeitems at each of the Monday-night meet-ings: the date; the subject of discussionand the news; the signatures of the at-tendants (there were no members). Inthis first entry the name C. E. Hunn is atthe bottom; and in this position it ap-pears meeting after meeting for he alwaysrounded up the signatures, although insome cases a tardy signature follows his.It is no part of the knowledge of the pres-ent day that those new quarters of theLazy Club were connected with the head-house of the Forcing-Houses, or that thefoundations of the Houses and the oldbrick chimney may be excavated, in somefuture time, from the western part of whathas become the Athletic Field area. TheTrustees heard the petition of the LazyClub and made an appropriation of $600for the building and its equipment. Theillustration shows the head-house with itsvestibule, and at the left the Lazy Clubtower, and to the rear the glasshouses ex-tended, all of which are now buried in thepast. To me, therefore, the passing of Mr.Hunn severs one of the very few remainingties that hold the old and the new to-gether.

The students were fond of Mr. Hunn andhe of them. If they loved plants andwanted to know them and were willing toapply themselves, his patience with themand his devotion were tireless. These re-lations developed into many rare friend-ships that joyed him till the last.

L. H. BAILEY

OBITUARY

CLUB ACTIVITIES

ChicagoAt the luncheon of January 28 the

system was inaugurated of having onemember of the club in charge of the meet-ing. This was George Pond's day and hehad as his guest Charles Francis Stocking'97 of Freeport, Illinois, author of "Car-men Ariza," "The Mayor of Filbert,""The Business Man of Syria," and otherwell-known novels. Stocking gave an in-structive and entertaining talk on "TheSpirit of the Jungle," recounting his ex-periences in the jungles on the banks of theMagdalena River in South America.

Next week the luncheon will be incharge of Erskine Wilder '05.

RochesterThe Cornell Club of Rochester at its

weekly luncheon at the Powers, Wednes-day, January 27, had Hugh J. McWil-liams '12 as the speaker of the occasion.As an undergraduate, Me Williams wastwice leading man in the Masque. He isnow connected with the Ames Iron Worksof Oswego and is in charge of the Syracuseoffice of the Gould Pump Company.

Birchard A. Hayes '74Birchard Austin Hayes died at his home

in Toledo, Ohio, on January 24 of anacute attack of stomach trouble.

He was born on November 4, 1853 atCincinnati, Ohio, the son of the latePresident and Mrs. Rutherford B. Hayes.Together with his mother and brother, hesaw much of the Civil War as they visitedhis father, who was then a colonel of the23d Ohio Volunteer Infantry. While stilla boy, he went to live with an uncle atFremont, Ohio, and there secured hisearly education.

In 1870, Hayes entered Cornell as astudent in the literary course and gradu-ated in 1874 with the degree of B. Lit.While in the University he was active inundergraduate circles as a member ofDelta Kappa Epsilon, No. 3 oarsman onhis class crew, catcher on his class baseballteam, and substitute third baseman on thevarsity team. He was also secretary ofthe '74 Class Boat Club.

After leaving Cornell he went to Har-vard to study law and in March of 1877,before he received his degree in June, hisfather was inaugurated President of theUnited States. For the next two years hestudied and practiced law in New Yorkand then went to Toledo, where he hadsince been a practicing attorney. Hespecialized in tax and real estate law andwas regarded as one of the leading authori-ties of the country on these portions ofthe law.

In 1886 he was married to Miss MarySherman of Norwalk, O., who died inJune, 1924. They had four children,Sherman Hayes Ό8, of San Francisco,Lieutenant Commander Webb C. Hayesof Washington, Walter S. Hayes Ί8, ofTampa, Fla., and Scott Hayes Ί8, ofToledo. Two of his brothers were alsoCornell men: Col. Webb C. Hayes '76 ofFremont, O., and Rutherford P. Hayes'80 of Clearwater, Fla.

Harold J. Babbidge ΊlHarold Joseph Babbidge died at his

home in Brooklyn, N. Y., on January 21.He was born in Brooklyn on November

26, 1888, the son of Mr. and Mrs. CharlesBabbidge. After a course at BrooklynPolytechnic Preparatory School, he en-tered Cornell in 1907 as a student ofmechanical engineering. He joined SigmaNu. After three years he left Cornell.

At the time of his death, he was generalmanager and secretary of H. Planten &Son, Inc., of Brooklyn, and president ofthe Vibro-Shave Corporation in the samecity. He was also a member of the Sonsof the Revolution, the Brooklyn RotaryClub, the Brooklyn Chamber of Com-merce, and the Flatbush CongregationalChurch. Besides his wife, he is survivedby a son, John P. Babbidge, and a daugh-ter, Doris M. Babbidge.

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226 C O R N E L L A L U M N I N E W S

Published for the Alumni of CornellUniversity by the Cornell Alumni NewsPublishing Company, Incorporated.

Published weekly during the college year andmonthly in July and August; forty issues annually.Issue No. 1 is published the last Thursday ofSeptember. Weekly publication [numbered con-secutively] ends the last week in June. Issue No.40 is published in August and is followed by anindex of the entire volume, which will be mailedon request.

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Correspondence should be addressed—Cornell Alumni News, Ithaca, N. Y.

graduate days lacked something thatothers had, have here the opportunity ofpassing on to the younger generation, atsmall cost, a something whose value noone knows so well as does the donor.

LITERARY REVIEW

Editor-in-Chief and )Business Manager jCirculation Manager

R. W. SAILOR Ό7

GEO. WM. HORTON

Associate EditorsCLARK S. NORTHUP '93 FOSTER M. COFFIN '12ROMEYN BERRY '04 BARRETT L. CRANDALL '13H. G. STUTZ '07 J. J. ELSON '22BRISTOW ADAMS L. E. REED '23

Officers of the Cornell Alumni News PublishingCompany, Incorporated: John L. Senior, President;H. G. Stutz, Vice-President; R. W. Sailor, Treasur-er; Woodford Patterson, Secretary. Office, 123West State Street, Ithaca, N. Y.

Members of Alumni Magazines, Associated

Printed by the Cornell Publications Printing Co.

Entered as Second Class Matter at Ithaca, N. Y.

ITHACA, N. Y., FEBRUARY 4, 1926

BOOKS FOR WILLARD STRAIGHTHALL

THE Rowlee Memorial Fund, an-nounced this week as the gift of the

Cornell Chapter of Kappa Sigma for thepurpose of adding to the library in WillardStraight Hall, suggests the many possibleuses for funds afforded by the new build-ing. It points out the fine opportunity forsimilar gifts from individual alumni, fromorganizations, and from informal groups offriends who wish to honor an individual orto perpetuate an idea.

Willard Straight Hall is primarily in-tended to make living conditions morepleasant for those whose privileges arecurtailed by reason of lack of resources ofone kind or another. As it is working out,this benefit is being conferred on the en-tire community, regardless of this limita-tion.

The needs of the hall are almost asdiversified as those of the University it-self. Funds for books, lectureships,dramatics, student activities, social events—for almost anything conceivable—willhere help to expand and elaborate thefacilities already offered. In the mainsuch funds need not be large, but theopportunities are many.

Those of us who have felt that throughforce of circumstances their own under-

COMING EVENTS

Monday, February 8Farmers' Week begins, 8 a. m.Winter course prize speaking contest,

Roberts Hall, 8 p. m.

Tuesday, February 9Meeting, Cornell Club of Utica, Uni-

versity Club, Utica, N. Y., 6.30 p. m.Concert, University Orchestra, Bailey

Auditorium, 8 p. m.

Wednesday, February 10Alumni banquet, open to former regular,

special, and winter course students andmembers of the faculty, 7 p. m.

Thursday, February 11Lecture, W. J. Lawrence: "Hamlet as

Shakespeare Staged It," 8.30 p. m.Eastman Stage Contest, Bailey Audi-

torium, 8 p. m.

Friday, February 12Performance, Annual Kermis play,

Bailey Auditorium, 8 p. m.Meeting, Sigma Xi, Rockefeller A,

8 p. m.

Saturday, February 13Farmers' Week ends, 12 noon.Annual luncheon, Cornell Women's

Club of New York, Hotel Commodore,1.30 p. m.

Basketball, Dartmouth at Ithaca.Fencing, Columbia at New York.

Wednesday, February 17Basketball, Columbia at Ithaca.Freshman basketball, Columbia at

Ithaca.Hockey, Princeton at Ithaca.

Friday, February 19Lecture, Dr. Henry Fairfield Osborn:

"Recent Discoveries in the Evolution ofMan," Baker Laboratory, 8.15 p. m.

Performance, Cornell Dramatic Club,three one-act plays: "Shadow of theGlen" by J. M. Snyge; "The Dumb andthe Blind" by Harold Chapin; "TheMedicine Show" by Stuart Walker, Uni-versity Theater, 8.15 p. m.

Saturday, February 20Annual banquet, Cornell Club of Buf-

falo, Buffalo, N. Y.Performance, Cornell Dramatic Club,

three one-act plays: "Shadow of theGlen" by J. M. Synge; "The Dumb andThe Blind" by Harold Chapin; "TheMedicine Show" by Stuart Walker, Uni-versity Theater, 8.15 p. m.

Basketball, Pennsylvania at Philadel-phia.

Freshman basketball, Rochester Fresh-men at Ithaca.

Wrestling, Penn State at State College.Hockey, Syracuse at Syracuse.

Idylls of the VillageThe Road to Town: a Book of Poems by

Charles Divine Ίi. New York. ThomasSeltzer. 1925. 21 cm., pp. x, 85. Price, $2.

Let us first hear the author himself:"It is a sincere attempt," he says, "to makesome poetic picture of an American com-munity, its life, beauty, and romance. Ihave tried to make you smell hay—alongmy road to town—then gasoline; to giveyou the transition of America from a landwith a rural breath blowing through it tothe land of machines and skyscrapers. Thefact that I have always liked lyric poetry—and have written a great deal of it—haskept this book of narrative verse, I hope,from being more prose than poetry."

Has he succeeded? To some consider-able extent, we think he has. Here arecharacters that stand out and that live inour memory—real men and women, aswell as weaklings, brutes,, and potentialcriminals. But one must remember thatafter all it is only a one-sided view that hegives us, for the reason that the normalvillage life is so natural that one does notwrite about it. Spoon River (which hashad its influence on our author) and theWest Windsor of the poems exist to a largedegree only in the realm of the imagina-tion. The little near-Binghamton villagehas, it is true, formed the basis for thepoems and has contributed some incidents;the rest, if we know anything about suchvillages, is the creation of the writer.

These poems are well worth reading,and contain many beautiful passages andlines. The author has grown much sincewriting his latest work, and shows greatproficiency in the writing of blank verse.

Now and then he lapses; perhaps withintent. We do not like it, and we earnestlyadvise him to stick to the pattern. Noreally great poets allow such five-beat linesas: "Yes, that apple tree is pink . . .pink in Spring"; "The stage no more goesambling through afternoons"; on page 7the line "His wife a cripple. Had a fitsickness" is defective, we suppose, be-cause the printer omitted "of" before thelast word. And further down, they don'tsay, down in Broome County, unless weare mistaken, "Her cousin used to live inOld Creek Road"; they say on.

But a few blemishes like these are trifles.We congratulate Divine on a fine group ofworthy poems.

Some Fugitive VerseWest Virginia Verse of Today: an

Anthology of Magazine and NewspaperVerse, July iQ22-June 1924. Compiledand edited by Ella May Turner, Grad.Scottdale, Pa. Mennonite PublishingHouse. 1924. 19.5 cm., pp. x, 126.

The collection of poems here presentedis a result of a faith in the excellence ofWest Virginia fugitive poetry. The editor's

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C O R N E L L A L U M N I N E W S 227

You trust lock closely to see the mostimportant prrt of this picture—thecables on the ground which bringpower from a substation operatedfrom generators ninety miles away.

Digging coal by wire

To help industry andthe railroad do theirwork more economi-cally is an importantservice, but to savehuman energy is evenmore important. TheGeneral Electric Com-pany designs and man-ufactures the equip-ment by which elec-tricity does both.

TO the Northern PacificRailway belongs the credit

for this thrifty achievement insupplying its own coal.

At Colstrip, Montana, therailroad owned a 180-acre bedof coal, lying almost on thesurface—a cheap, convenientsource of fuel for transconti-nental trains.

But the mining of it offeredpeculiar problems. The waterof the district was so alkalineit could not be used in steamengines. The coal slacked soquickly that it could not bestored.

ALEL

A power line ninety mileslong solved the difficulties.Electric shovels that requireno water now strip the surfaceearth—tons at a time—minethe coal and load it. Giantstorage battery locomotivescf 60 tons capacity haul theloaded trains to the main line,for immediate use.

Industry after industry owesa similar debt to electricity.It is continually tappingnatural resources that man-kind could not otherwise haveenjoyed for another hundredyears.

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228 C O R N E L L A L U M N I N E W S

faith is justified. There is some goodpoetry in this book, and the editor hasshown good taste in her selection.

Most of the poets represented have adefinite idea of form and firmly adhere toit. The opening poem, by Walter Barnes,"The Teacher Speaks," is in free verse andis rather puny by the side of the piecewhich follows it. The poems of KarlMyers forms a remarkable group of whichany State might be proud. He is an adeptin several varieties of meter. William E.Brooks's poem on Memorial Day isespecially fine; but the last line mars itsomewhat: "In the name of our dead«willwe hear? Will we grant them sleep?"Witching is "Louisiana Summer" byMason Freeman; we quote the last fourlines:

Under the cypressesWater creeps.Under the cypressesShadow sleeps.

Books and Magazine Articles

In The Sewanee Review for October-December Professor Frederick M. Smithwrites on "A Tallow Chandler's Wife"—Anne H. Gardiner, friend of Dr. Johnson.Professor John H. Nelson, Ph.D. '23, ofthe University of Kansas, writes on"Charles Gayarre, Historian and Roman-cer." Dr. Guy S. Greene '26 reviewsJames Moffatt's translation of the OldTestament and Evelyn M. Simpson's "AStudy of the Prose Works of JohnDonne." "The Religious Experience ofJohn Humphrey Noyes" by George W.Noyes '92 is reviewed by T. P. Bailey.

In Modern Language Notes for JanuaryProfessor Allan H. Gilbert '09, of Duke,presents "A Source of Peele's Arraign-ment of Paris." Professor T. FrederickCrane reviews Dr. John Koch's "Canter-bury-Geschichten.''

In The Journal of English and GermanicPhilology for October Professor Halldor

Hermannsson reviews Wolfgang Golther's"Ares Islaenderbuch."

In The Survey for January 15 JohnIhlder Όo has a note entitled "MeasuringSticks Wanted."

In The Physical Review for JanuaryProfessor Floyd K. Richtmyer '04 has anarticle on "Magnitude of the K-Absorp-tion Discontinuity."

In The Historical Outlook for January"Making History Graphic" by Dr. DanielC. Knowlton '98, of the Lincoln School, isreviewed by Henry Johnson.

In the Journal of the American Statisti-cal Association for December "The Sizeof Families from Which College StudentsCome" is discussed by Professor WarrenS. Thompson, formerly of Cornell, nowof Miami.

In The American Historical Review forJanuary Professor Thomas N. Carver,Ph.D. '94, of Harvard, reviews "A Historyof Agriculture in Europe and America" byNorman S. B. Graas. "A History of theUnited States Post Office to the Year1829" by Wesley E. Rich is reviewed byProfessor Julian P. Bretz.

In The Philosophical Review for Janu-ary the leading article is by the late Pro-fessor James E. Creighton '92 and is en-titled "Eighteenth and Nineteenth Cen-tury Modes of Thought." Professor Rado-slav A. Tsanoff, Ph.D. Ίo, of Rice Insti-tute, reviews Philippe Meditch's "LaTheorie de Γ Intelligence chez Schopen-hauer." Walter Kinkel's "Hermann Co-hen: eine Einfuehrung in sein Werk" isreviewed by Professor William C. Swabey,Ph.D. '19, of New York University.Johannes Kuehn's "Toleranz und Offen-barung" is reviewed by Professor EmeritusGeorge L. Burr '81. Erich Adickes' "Kantals Naturforscher" is reviewed by Pro-fessor Harold R. Smart '21. Dr. KatherineGilbert '12 reviews Professor C. N.Wenger's "The Aesthetics of RobertBrowning."

"Five Lectures on the Problem ofMind" have lately been published by Pro-fessor G. Watts Cunningham, Ph.D. Ό8,of the University of Texas, through thepress of that institution.

"The Life of Mind" by Professor Elijah.Jordan, A.M. 'c8, of Butler College, hasjust been published by Charles W. Laut& Company of Indianapolis.

Elizabeth Tower '24 is the joint authorwith R. T. Halsey of "The Homes of OurAncestors as Shown in the American Wingof the Metropolitan Museum of Art ofNew York." The book is to be issued in anedition of 201 numbered copies. The deluxe edition will cost $25 and the regularedition (for college professors and others),$15. The illustrations include twentyplates in color and some 225 half-toneengravings.

"Determinism in Education" by Pro-fessor William C. Bagley, Ph. D. Όo, ofTeachers College, has just been publishedby Warwick and York, of Baltimore. Itsells for $2.20.

"The United States Senate and theInternational Court" by Frances Kellor'97 and Antonia Hatvany has lately beenpublished by Thomas Seltzer of New York.

In Flour and Feed for September Pro-fessor Leland D. Spencer Ί8 published anarticle summing up the experiences of arepresentative group of New York feedstores in the use of credit. The conclusionwas that the stores that extended creditmost liberally did the least business andhad the most money tied up in notes andaccounts.

In Industrial Management for Septemberand October the editor, John H. Vande-venter '03, has a serial on "Profits andPerils of Industrial Progress." In theSeptember number Dale S. Cole, M.M.E.'12, discusses the question "What isGoing to Happen to the Small Manu-facturing Plant."

The Johnny Parson Club, the toboggan slide, and excellent skating male Beebe Lake a favorite meeting-place for faculty and students alike. The aboveicture depicts a special feature of the entertainment to be found there. "Don" Martin, crack guard of the Boston Universitpicture depicts a speci .

goal shot by "Shorty" Aronson, Cornell wing.versity hockey team;, has just stopped a

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C O R N E L L A L U M N I N E W S 229

ALUMNI NOTES

'81—Presenting a picture of Govern-mental workings from the inside and anaccount of his relations with the latePresident Woodrow Wilson that has neverbeen printed before, the New York Herald-Tribune has begun the publication of thememoirs of Colonel Edward M. House.The memoirs are to reveal state secrets andthe facts regarding conditions before,during, and after the World War which areproving of extraordinary interest, asColonel House perhaps enjoyed morethoroughly the confidence of PresidentWilson than any other man.

'87 ME—To Professor Harris J. Ryanof Stanford was recently awarded theEdison Medal for 1925 in recognition ofhis work in connection with high tensiontransmission of power. For the pasttwenty years he has been at the head ofthe Department of Electrical Engineeringat Stanford and in addition to being amember of numerous scientific societies,has been an American representative atseveral international conferences on scien-tific matters.

'94, '98 LLB—Last year, the City ofNiagara Falls, N. Y., made a new recordin building activities when constructioncosting over seven millions was done there.

In a recent article in the Niagara FallsGazette, the record is declared to havebeen made possible largely through theassistance given builders by mortgageloan organizations. Especial reference wasmade to the activities of the Nye MortgageCorporation which helped out with muchof the financing. Sylvanus B. Nye is thepresident of this corporation and is saidto be making an enviable reputation forhimself in his particular field.

'05 AB, Ό8 LLB; Ό8 AB—Twin daugh-ters were born on January 23 to Mr. andMrs. Stanley D. Brown (Margaret Jenks708) of New York. Brown is a practicingattorney.

'05 AB—Andrew W. Newberry returnedto New York on January i from SouthAfrica, where he was engaged from Julyto November of last year on an investiga-tion of recent discoveries of platinum inthe Transvaal and Southern Rhodesia.He writes that for the first time since thebreakdown of the industrial system inRussia in 1916-17, the world seems to bepromised an adequate supply of platinumfor scientific and industrial uses. He addsthat in spite of the magnitude of the dis-coveries, the metal remains considerablyless plentiful than gold and will probablybe less easily recoverable. His address isnow 2 Rector Street, New York.

Ό6 ME—Harold G. Stern is the engi-neer and purchasing agent of the Western

Dairy Products Company at 1501 FourthStreet, Seattle, Wash. The concern wasrecently formed through - a merger ofseveral ice cream and dairy plants inOregon and Washington.

Ό6—William R. Harmon is superin-tendent of construction for the AberthawCompany of Boston, Mass., and is now incharge of building several large manu-facturing buildings for the Hood RubberCompany. His address is 100 LangdonAvenue, Watertown, Mass.

;c6 ME—Craig Adair is president ofthe Adair-Day Corporation at 1023Widener Building, Philadelphia, salesagents for the Wheeling Mold & FoundryCompany and for the centrifugal productsof the Penn Mold & ManufacturingCompany of Dover, Ohio.

Ό6 AB—At the annual meeting of theIndianapolis, Ind., Chamber of Com-merce in December, Nicholas H. Noyeswas elected president for the ensuingyear. Noyes is a director and treasurer ofEli Lilley & Company and director of theFletcher Savings & Trust Company inthat city, in addition to being a leader incivic activities. He and his wife and threechildren live at 1328 North DelawareStreet, Indianapolis.

'07 ME—Fred D. Fowler is the super-intendent of tire engineering for the HoodRubber Company, and lives in .Water-town, Mass.

THE BOOK OF VIEWSincludes 138 pictures of Cornell in a handsome, flexible,

embossed art binding.

What one good Cornellian thinks of the Book—JOHN YORKE ATLEE, '72Philadelphia* Pa.

"The Book of Views" received on last Friday has afforded ecstatic,—(just hadto use an unusual superlative), delight to all who have viewed it.

To one who has not visited Ithaca since 1874 it is a revelation!Every "material" donor who made possible the purchase of this wonderful

work of Art at so ridiculous a price, must have at least a subconscious knowledgeof the wellings from our hearts and throats of a sincere "God bless you!"

YOU SHOULD ACCEPT

THIS OPPORTUNITYto renew your youth, to enhance theattractiveness of your library tableand to keep fresh the memories ofof your happiest days.

The Book will be sent to youon approval.

Fill in this coupon and mail it today.

THE BOOK OF VIEWS

32 Morrill Hall, Ithaca, N. Y.

Please send me a copy of The Book ofViews at $6.50. I will look at it on approv-al, and if it is not worth to me the priceasked, I shall be privileged to return it toyou at your expense.

Name

Address

City or town

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230 C O R N E L L A L U M N I N E W S

'07 ME—Wayne B. Wells of New Yorkwas married on December 26 to MissLillian S. Gray of Swansea, Mass., at theBroadway Presbyterian Church in NewYork. They are spending the winter at 25Lafayette Avenue, Brooklyn. After gradu-ating from the University Wells studiedlaw at Georgetown and is now a patentattorney with the American Car & Foun-'dry Company in New York.

'07 ME—The Cook Paint & VarnishCompany of Kansas City, Mo., began thenew year by taking over the Scott-Sullivan Paint Company of St. Louis.Charles R. Cook is the president of tfreformer concern which- has its generaloffices in Kansas City and maintainsfactories or branches in St. Louis, FortWorth, Omaha, Denver, Dallas, Okla-homa City, Tulsa, and Wichita.

'07 ME—The Maislein-Dawson Lum-ber Company was recently organized withheadquarters at Sheboygan, Wis. Theconcern manufactures and wholesaleshardwoods and Horace L. Dawson is thesecretary-treasurer. He is located inChicago with offices at 5 North LaSalleStreet.

'07 ME—Mr. and Mrs. Harold W.Slauson of Kincote, Scarsdale, N. Y.,have announced the arrival of their thirddaughter, Ruth Wilcox, on January 19.

'07 CE—Antonio Lazo, who is as-sociated with the investment firm ofBodell & Company of New York, Provi-dence and Boston, is now living at 1088Park Avenue, New York.

Ίo AB—On January 12, Jansen Noyesbecame the thirty-fourth director to beselected by the Chemical National Bankof New York since it was founded onehundred and two years ago. He is thesenior partner of the firm of Hemphill,Noyes & Company in New York.

Ίi—Leo F. Giblin is vice-president ofthe Foundation Company in New York,with offices at 120 Liberty Street.

'12—Herbert V. Pusch was recentlynamed as trust officer of the SecurityTrust Company of Detroit, Mich. He isliving up to his name as he had been withthe company only four years when chosentrust officer.

'12 BS—On January i, Hawley B.Rogers was appointed chief agriculturalagent of the Erie Railroad, with head-quarters at JamestoΛvn, N. Y. He hasbeen with the Erie for the past five yearsand during that time has been broughtinto close contact with the agriculture ofNew York, Pennsylvania, Ohio, andIndiana.

'13 BChem—Leon S. Finch is presidentof the L. S. Finch Chemical Corporationof Los Angeles, Calif. The concern makeslacquers, lacquer thinners and chemicals.His address is Box 1080, Arcade Station,Los Angeles.

'15 AB, '17 LLB—Mr. and Mrs. HarryA. Dicker of New York have announced

the arrival of a daughter, Marie Esther,on January 18.

'15 AB—Carl R. Fellers is research pro-fessor of horticultural products at theMassachusetts Agricultural College andExperiment Station at Amherst, Mass.,having been appointed to this position onDecember i last. Mail should be addressedto him at the college.

Ί6—Harlow Tuttle, who graduatedfrom Harvard in 1919 with an LL. B. de-gree, was appointed on January i con-fidential clerk to Supreme Court JusticeFrank L. Young of the Ninth JudicialDistrict, Second Judicial Department ofNew York, with chambers at Ossining,N. Y. Tuttle is also practicing law atOssining.

Ί6—Mr. and Mrs. Frederick L. Rhodeof 15 Slosson Terrace, Tompkinsville,N. Y., have another son, Richard K.,born on January 21. Their first son,Frederick III is now five.

Ί6 BS; '21—Mr. and Mrs. Royal G.Bird (Barbara Kephart '21) have a daugh-ter, Margaret, born at Ithaca on Decem-ber 23 last. They live at 111 Ferris Place.

'17 BS—William A. Hoffman is now atthe School of Hygiene and Public Healthat Johns Hopkins University. His ad-dress is 615 North Wolfe Street, Balti-more, Md.

'17 CE—Mr. and Mrs. A. C. Willson ofRock Hall, Md., have announced theengagement of their daughter, Julia M.,to Joseph H. Gray of Elizabeth, N. Y.

'17 CE—Mr. and Mrs. Harry H. Hem-mings have a son, Robert Soutter, bornon December 7, 1925. They live at 331West Nineteenth Street, New York.

'17 CE; '19 AB—Ellsworth L. Filby isthe chief engineer and director of theBureau of Engineering of the FloridaState Board of Health, with offices atJacksonville, Fla. He and his wife(Marion A. Fisher '19) had a second sonborn to them in Ithaca on November 22,1925. Their home address in Jacksonvilleis 1461 Myra Street.

Ί8—Mr. and Mrs. Charles R. McCal-lum of 930 Oakwood Avenue, Wilmette,111., have another son, Worden Locke,born on January 4. McCallum is with theFederal Securities Corporation in Chicago,with offices at Room 1383, 231 SouthLaSalle Street. With the same concernare Paul Wilder '12, Harris Wilder '21,Pickens Johnson '22, and Henry H.Garrett '22.

'19 CE—Oscar J. Sewell is an assistantdistrict engineer with the Illinois Divisionof Highways. He and his wife had adaughter, Doris Caroline, born to themon March 18, 1925, the day of the de-vastating tornado which swept that sec-tion of the country. Their home address is1918 Spruce Street, Murphysboro, 111.

'20, '22 ME—Paul D. Ostrander hasbeen transferred from the fabric develop-ment department of the Goodyear Tire

& Rubber Company at Akron, Ohio, toits cotton mills at New Bedford, Mass.His address is Devon Mills, New Bedford.

'20, '21 AB—Charles D. Mackey wasmarried on May 4, 1925 to Miss Mary A.Meehan of Montrose, Pa., a graduate ofthe Ithaca Conservatory of Music. Theyare now living at 3651 Walnut Street,Philadelphia, Pa., where Mackey is a re-porter for the Philadelphia Record.

;2C—Coleman H. Wheeler was recentlyelected a director of the West CoastNational Bank at Portland, Ore.

'20 LLB—When the Board of Estimatein New Rochelle, N. Y., began operationsat the beginning of the new year, AaronSimmons was appointed second assistantcorporation counsel. He is one of thepopular young attorneys in New Rochelle.

'20—Howard H. Reineman was marriedin Grace Episcopal Church in Chicago onDecember 21, 1925, to Miss CarolineKelly, daughter of Mrs. William G. Lig-gett of Chicago.

'21, '23 BArch—James S. McGraw wasmarried at Wyoming, N. Y., on December27 last to Miss Racene H. Dodson ofWyoming, Rochester '24. McGraw is withThompson, Holmes & Converse, archi-tects of Rochester, N. Y. and New York.He and his bride are living in Rochesterbut next June they plan to sail for Europeand spend the summer in England, France,and Belgium.

'25 AB—Grace H. Connell is teachingLatin, French, and English in the HighSchool at Coeymans, N. Y.

NEW MAILING ADDRESSES'02—Frank Carney, Box 1031, Tulsa,

Okla.'04—Dr. Charles H. Webster, White

Park Place, Cayuga Heights, Ithaca.'05—Paul S. Rattle, 620 Oakland

Avenue, Pasadena, Calif.Ό6—Mary Jones Fisher, Biological Ab-

stracts, Zoology Building, University ofPennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pa.—S. JayTeller, 62 Bretton Road, West Hartford,Connecticut.

Ίi—Thomas R. Cox, 16 Beach Road,Englewood, N. J.

'12—Harold C. Strohm, 330 OaklandAvenue, Bloomfield, N. J.

'13—Fred B. Lathrop, Rio Grande City,Texas.

'19—Willard C. Peare, 95 East Eigh-teenth Street, Brooklyn, N. Y.

'21—Richard D. Densmore, 216 Black-hawk Road, Riverside, 111.—Walker L.Cisler, 38 Winans Street, East Orange,New Jersey.

'22—Harold J. Dudley, 2617 EnsleyAvenue, Birmingham, Ala.

'24—James R. Patten, 6 MontagueTerrace, Brooklyn, N. Y.—David G. Hill,P. O. Box 511, Crystal City, Mo.—Mrs.Claude L. Brownell, 860 Fifth AvenueSouth, ' St. Petersburg, Fla.—Del ReyColeman, 920 Thirteenth Avenue, Moore,Pennsylvania.

Page 13: Professor Emeritus LH Bailey Writes on the Life - Cornell University

C O R N E L L A L U M N I N E W S 231

Wanted—Addresses of These Alumni

Below is printed the second installment of a list of those alumni whose ad-dresses in the files of the Alumni Office were incorrect or insufficient on

January 21. The office will greatly appreciate it if any availableinformation as to the present addresses of these Cornellians is sent

to the Alumni Representative, Cornell University, Ithaca, N. Y.

Remo Fabbri, Sp. Όs-'oό.Adolph I. Fabis, Grad. Ί2-'i3.Benjamin Fagan, 'Q2-'p5 L.L.B., '94, L.L.MMax Fain, Ί2-Ί4 C.Miss Ada R. Fairfax, Όι-'θ2 A.H. M. Fairman, O. '7i-'73Dr. Margaretaio Falcone, Ίs-'i5 Sp. Med.Dr. Charles E. Fanslau, '14-'!? B.V.M.Mark Fargusson, C. '8s-'85.C. W. Farmer, O. '7i-'73A. N. Fauer, Sp. Agr. 'i4-'i5Arthur A. Fauville, '22-'23 Grad.George W. Fay, M. Ίo-'n.Le Grand Feeley, Ί7-Ί8 Law.Dr. Bernard S. Fein, Ίo-'24 M.D.Samuel H. Feinson, Ί8-'22 C.E.Benjaniin Feldman, Med. Ό7-Ό7.Morris Fellman, ΌS-'OQ C.E.Calvin D. Felmer, '17-'20 L.Jason L. Fenimore, 'QI-'QI M.Franklin L. Ferdon, 'QQ-'OS A.B.Henry H. Ferguson, Ό5-Ό6 M.John S. Ferguson, Jr., '97 A.K. S. Ferguson, C. Όa-'oa.W. E. Ferguson, G. '82-'82.DeWitt H. Fessendon, Sp. Ό4-Όs.Alden W. Field, M. Ί8-'2O.Louis Fink, A.B. Ό9-Ί3.M. R. Finkelstein, Med. Ό2-Ό3-R. Finkelstein, B.S. Ίi-'iSW. Finney, M. '13-'!5.H. Fisch, L. Ί4-'iSJ. E. Fischer, C. '03-'04.Mrs. M. Hadwin Fischer, Όo-'oi G.Walter G. Fischer, Ί3-Ί7 Agr.Charles D. Fisher, Ί9-'2O, '23 B.S.Douglas A. Fisher, Ί6-Ί8 A., Agr.Frederick Fisher, Sp. '99-'oo.Gordon B. Fisher, Ίι-'i3 A.K. W. Fisher, Med. Όι-'θ2.Willard J. Fisher, Όo-'oi, Ό3-Ό8 Ph.D.Miss Mary A. Fitch, Ό8-Ί2 Ph.D.Mrs. Theodora S. Fitzgerald, 'i9-'2O Agr.W. G. Fitzgerald, O. '86-'87.J. R. Fitzpatrick, L. '93-'94Harold J. Flager, Ό8-Ίo M.E.Dr. Russell J. Flanagan, Ό8-Ί2 M., D.V.M.Jesse W. Fleck, Ί6-Ί8 C.Mrs. Joseph A. Fleitzer, Ί7-Ί9 A.Harvey C. Fleming, Ί6-Ί7 M.Harry E. Fleming, Ί2-Ί3 A.J. E. Fleming, Ag. '88-'9θ.G. H. Fletcher, Med. '98-'99H. M. Fletcher, Sp. 'θ4-Όs.Miss Helen L. Flinn, Ί6-Ί7 A.Harold L. Flint, Ίo-Ίi Law.Mrs. Ernest M. Flood, Όo-'θ4 A.B.E. Folsom, O. '73-'75.W. H. Folz, Sp. Όs-'oό.James B. Foote, '94-''99 C.Charles B. Forbes, Law Ό4-Ό5.Lewis E. Forbes, O. '7S-'77Stanfell E. Forbes, M. fθ9-Ίo.Miss Mary J. Forbing, '20-'21 A.Daniel H. Fordham, Ίs-Ίό A.Miss G. E. Forrest, Med. Ό5-'o7H. E. Foster, Sp. Med. Ίo.Mrs. L. I. Foster, S-L. '8ι-'82.Mrs. Leroy A. Foster, E. S. Eastman,

'72-'73 Ph. B.Max McC. Foster, '14 Agr.J. E. Fowler, O. '90-'90.W. D. Fowler, M.E. Ό4-Ό8.George L. Fox, Ό4-Ό6 C.Herman Fox, Agr. Ό9-Ίo.M. W. Fox, L. '97-97.P. P. Frame, C. Ό9-Ίo, Ίo-Ίi.William C. Francis, Ί8 G.J. J. F. Frank, G. Όs-'θ7.William M. Fraser, *98-'99 A.Allan H. Frazer, *2θ-'2i Sp. M.A. A. Freedlander, Όo, Όι-'θ7 A.B. '05.David Freedman, Ί8-'i9 Med.William Freedman, S '73-'74R. H. Freer, Sp. '94-'94A. P. French, V Ό4-'θ4.Miss Charlotte C. French, L '9Q-'93M. H. French, L '89-'89.Paul H. Frick, '13-'!5 Agr.Nelson R. Frieberg, Sp. M. Ί7-Ί8.Maurice Friedberg, A. Ίo-Ίi.Eugene Friedman, Ό6-Ίo B.S.A.Isaac Friedman, Sp. Med. Ό8-Ό9.Miss Sarah P. Friedman, Ί9-'2θ A.Arthur Frischman, A.B. '14-'!8.Emil Fritz, L 'QI-'QI.Morris Frochtman, Sp. Med. Ίo-Ίi.M. M. Fromholz, L. Όi-'oi.Miss Sara A. Froomess, 'i9-'23 M.D.Bertram E. Frost, '95-'97 C., O.F. L. Frost, O. '89-'89.Oswald Frotscher, Agr. '09-'7θ.Harry L. Fryer, Όs-Ό6 M.C. V. Fukala, Med. Ό3-Ό4.G. T. Fukushima, G. '92-'93Horace Fuld, A Ό4-Ό5.

C. T. Fuller, A. '90-'96, '98-'99.G. A. Fuller, M '93-'94Miss H. A. Fuller, '77-'78 O.Benjamin W. Fullington, Ί7-Ί8, 'i9-'2θ,

A., Law.Alfred A. Fulton, '09-'7i O.F. V. Funai, Med. Ό2-'θ2.Theodore Funck, C. '82-'82.W. A. Funk, Matr. '98 Med.

C. T. Gache, M. ΌS-'O?.V. G. Gahnkin, M.E., Ί3-Ί6.Austen Galley, M.E. Ό8-Ίι.Walter R. Gailey, Agr. Ίo-Ίi.A. Gallego, M.E. Όs-'θ9.Dr. Theodore Gallup, 'i9-'23 M.D.Gumercindo Gama, '20-'21 Agr.Donald B. Gannon, M.E. Ό7-Ίo.Louis Garbi, Jr., Όi-'os, C.E. '07.Rafael Garcia, C. 'o9-'n.Clifford R. Gard, Ί7-Ί8 A.Henry W. Gardiner. '15 G.W. L. Gardiner, O '74-'74-Edward C. Gardner, A. 'i9-'2θ.Mrs. Elmer Gardner, E. S. DeRush, P.

'9S-'96.Roger W. Gardner, '16-17 L.Davy L. Garrett, 'i9-'2θ Sp. Med.George A. Garrett, L '07.M. B. Garrett, Ph.D. Ό6-Ίo.Louis G. Garrigan, M., A.B. Ό4-Ό6, Ό7-Ό9.Donald E. Gates, M. Ί8-Ί8, 'i9-'2i.Roger H. Gates, '19-'21 M.Elmer H. Gates, M. Ί3-Ί6.Thadeus Gawlikowski, ΊS-'IS Agr.Joseph Gedmin, Ίs-Ίs Agr.V. Gelineau, C Όs-'oό.Harry N. Gellert, Ίo-'i4 B.S.Charles Gennell, Ί4-'i7 A.S. S. George, Ph.D. '14-'!6.Joseph Gershenzwitz, Ίι-'i4 B.S.Miss Helen L. Gibbs, Ίs-ΊS B.S.H. H. Gibson, '13-15 G.A. W. Gifford, Arch. '83-'87G. F. Gifford, B.S. S-L. '76-'8o.Orrin P. Gifford, Jr., M. Όs-'oό.Dr. Joe Gilbert, Sp. Med. Ό7-Ό8.Miss Elizabeth R. Gilfillan, '99-Όι Med.Hermit H. Gill, Ό7-Ό8 Sp.A. D. Gillespie, G. '85-'86.G. M. Gillespie, Med. Ό6-Ό7.Meredith F. Gillette, Ί8-Ί9 A.Quartus A. Gillmore, Ί2-Ί4 M.Arthur R. Gilman, Agr. Ί2-Ί4.H. W. Gilmore, C.E. '99-ΌιIsaac Ginsburg, B.S. Ίo-'i4.Samuel Ginsburg, B.S. Ί3-Ί7.Walter J. Giryotas, Ίι-'i2 C.Miss G. W. Glasier, Ό9-Ίo, A.Benjamin F. Glasser, Ί6-'2O B. Chem.J. M. Gleason, Ίs-'i7 A.Chem.Arthur W. Glennan, Ό2-'θ3 Med.Mrs. E. D. Glenn, Miss E. Downing,

B.S.S-L.' 77-'83.Isadore Gluck, C. Όι-'θ3.Jacob Gluck, Ί3-'i7 Vet. B.S.Kanemaro Goda, Arch. '89-'9O.W. C. Godding, V. Ί3-Ίs.Raul Godoy, C. Όs-'θ9.Sidney J. Goetter, '85-'88 O.Fred Goetz, '96 L.Harry Golberg, 'i9-'23 M., A.B.Jesse M. Goldbaum, Ί4-Ί7, Ί8-'i9 A.B.,

Irving Goldberg, C. '09-'10.Louis P. Goldberg, Όι-'θ2 Med.Simon P. Goldberg, M. Ί4-'i4.Louis Goldberger, Med. Ό6-'θ7.Bernard Goldfield, Sp. Med. Ίo-Ίi.Louis Goldin, Sp. Med. Ίo-Ίi.W. G. Goldsmith, C '70-'73-Hyman Goldstein, Agr. '13-'14.Louis Goldstein, Ίo-'i4 C.Michael Goldstein, A.Chem. Ίs-Ίό.Samuel J. Goldstein, 'i9-'2O M.Peter Goldstoff, Ίo-Ίi Sp. Med.Dario Rodriques Goncalves, Ίι-'i4 M.Ernesto Gonzalez-Farnio, Agr .Ί7-Ί8.E. I. Good, Med. Ό4-Όs.Arthur Goodman, Med. Όs-'oό.Henry Goodman, Όι-'θ2 Med.M. H. Goodman, C. '8o-'8ι.Max Goodman, Ό7-Ίo, '11-12 C.E.H. H. R. Goodrich, C '7O-'7O.Leslie W. Goodrich, '95-'97 M.F. C. Goodwin, C '87-'89.A. B. Goold, Ό8-Ό9 Sp. Agr.Elias D. Gordon, '98-'99 Med.H. I. Gordon, LL.B. '90-'92.J. C. Gordon, Sp. Όι-'θ2.J. R. Gordon, Ίs-'i9 A.Mark Gordon, '98-'99 Med.John M. Gorham, LL.B. '91, B.L. '92.J. M. Gorman, B.L. '86-'9O.Miss R. M. Gortner, G. '99-Όo.Harry Gootlieb, Med. Ό6-Ό7.

Samuel Gottlieb, Agr. Ί6-Ί6.J. B. Gottsberger, M. '95-'97Archie B. Gould, M. '93-'95, '90-Όo.G. B. Gould, Chem. '7ό-'70.H. B. Goundrey, Arch. ΌI-'OI.H. G. Gower, Agr. Ί3-'i4Joseph W. Graff, '94 Law.A. W. Graham, Sp. Όo-'oi.Robert W. Graham, Ί3-Ί6, M.E. '15, G.Arthur H. Grant, '82-'88, Ph.B. '87 G.Miss Edith Grant, '78-'83 Ph.B. '82 G.E. W. Grant, C '70-71.F. L. Grant, M Ό6-Ό9Henry Roderick Grant, Ό8-Ό9 Sp. Ag.B. M. Graves, S. '7i-'7SH. T. Graves, O. '7i-'73William H. Graves, Όό-'o? Sp.E. J. Gray, C. Όs-'oό.Linsley S. Gray, Ί8-Ί8 Agr.Roderick D. Grant, Όo-'θ3 M.E.M.C.Joseph L. Green, Ό8-Ί2 C.E.Miss Mary E. Green, '03 Sp.0. M. Green, Sp. Agr. Ί3-'i4S. R. Green, Med. '07.Henry Greenberg, Ί3-Ί4 Agr.Dudley T. Greene, Sp. '82-'82.William Greenspoon, Ί8-Ί9 Agr.R. C. Greenwood, M. Ί3-Ί6 Ί6-Ί7W. C. Gregg, L '92-'92.Archibald C. E. Gregory, Ίs-'i7 L.Miss Julia Gregory, '83-'84 O.Charles B. Griffith, '86-'88 O.Edwin M. Griffin, '86-'89 A.B.George P. Griffith, Ό8-Ό9 M.Jesse Grim, '12 Sp. Med.C. E. Griswold, M. '93-'94David Grossman, C. '11-12, 'i3-'i5Jacob Grossman, B.S. Ί2-Ί6.Arthur J. Grover, '19-'20 Agr.Wilfred Grover, C. '87-'87Max Grubnick, Agr. Ίs-Ί7Miss Madeline Guffanti, '16-17, Ί8 Agr.Bernard Guggenheim, G Όό-Ό?.Carl Gunderson, '89-'9O C.Jacob Qurtov, Med. 'θ2-'os.William A. Gute, Ό9-Ίo Sp. L.Miss Grace Guthrie, '94 G.1. W. Guthrie, O. '09-'7O.Daniel N. Gutmann, Ί3-Ί7 A.B.

Robert Haberman, Ό7-Ό7 Med.F. O. Hadley, O. '79~'8o.Julius H. Haecker, '14-'!6 C.H. H. Haft, A. '09-Ίo.Frank N. Hagar, '69-'73 A.B.D. S. Hagopian, Med. Ό4-Ό4.J. C. Haig, Sp. '98-'98.Walter Hailey, P. '94-'94Leon Haim, Sp. Ό7-'θ7Mrs. A. W. Hain, A. Wiles, P. '95-'95E. L. Haines, Sp. '97-'oo.Robert M. Haines, '95-'90 Law.R. W. Haines, M. Ό2-'θ4.Gilbert J. Hainline, Ό8-'θ9 Law.Edward Hake, S. '73-'73R. M. Hale, M. '92-94-Simon A. Haley, '20-'22 G.W. D. Haley, S-L '83-'84.Charles F. Hall, M. '89-'89Charles Hall, O. '77-'78.David White Hall, Ό2-Ό3 L.Francis C. Hall, Ί6-Ί8 Agr., M.Hugh A. Hall, '90-'97 Sp.Quincy A. Hall, Ό2-'θ3 M.Roy Hall, L. Ί6-Ί7.Miss Margaret L. Hallman, '17 Agr.Max Halpern, Ί4-'2O B. Chem.P. L. Halsey, A '9i-'94Miss S. L. Halsey, A '93-'93Francis J. Hamilton, O. '90-'9i.Heeg Hamilton, '15 M.Motte A. Hamilton, '16-17 A.T. J. Hamilton, O. '68-'09-W. A. Hamilton, LL.B. '87-'89G. S. Hamlin, Jr., M. Ό9-Ίo.James C. Hammond, C.E. Όo-'oi, Ό2-'θ3.J. D. Hamrick, Agr. '7ό-'77.Miss Mary J. Hand, N '83-'84.V. H. Hanf, L. Ί2-'i4.Fred C. Hanford, '87-'89 LL.B.Newton Hanley, M. Ό8-Ίo, '.ιι-'i2.Miss Bessie B. Hanlon, Sp. Agr. Ί2-'i3Walter J. Hanna, C. Ό4-Ό5-Franφs M. Hannley, 'i4-Ίs Agr.William H. Hapgood, '9i-'92 Arch, Law.William G. Hardenburgh, Ί2-Ί7 A.B.William H. Hardie, L. '89^89.Miss Francis Hardin, Sp. '89-'89.T. W. Hardy, Agr. '73-'74Walter B. Hare, Sp. Ag. Ί2-Ί2.William Harkins, '68-'72, B.S. '72, B. Lit.

'73-Mrs. Eva S. Harrington, Ίo-Ίi G.Miss Florence Belle Harris, '94-'98 A.B. '97.George B. Harris, Sp. Ό7-Ό8.Jaffrey C. Harris, Ό9-'i2, Ί3-Ί4 A.B.Joseph S. Harris, Ό9-'i3 C.E.Clayton T. Harrison, Jr., Sp. M. Ίo-Ίo.Gwynne P. Harrison, M. '97-'97.Richard C. Harrison, Ίo-Ίo Sp. A.Samuel B. Harrison, Sp. Agr. Ί3-Ί4Miss Esther M. Harrowich, '19-'21 A.Stephen E. Hartnell, M. '9O-'92.Noah A. Haseley, Ίι-'i3, Ί4-Ί6 A.Thomas R. Hassall, Sp. Ό6-Ό7.Walton W. Hassler, Ίi-Ίi Sp. M.Frederick W. Haug, Ό4-Ό8 M.E.Miss Adele Haughwout, Sp. '97-'98.Louis Hausman, Ί2-Ί6 M.D.John R. Ha viland, M. Ί2-'i5.

Page 14: Professor Emeritus LH Bailey Writes on the Life - Cornell University

232 C O R N E L L A L U M N I N E W S

Murray Hawkins, Agr. Ίo-'i2.J. A. Hayden, Med. Όo-Ό2.Raymond F. Hayes, Med. '05-'05.Paul Hayhurst, ΌS-'O? G.Frederick H. Hayn, *93-'97 M.E., E.E.Harry T. Hays, '83-'84 S-L.Walter T. Hazel, C. Ό4-'θ4.Sumner M, Healey, M. '9i-'p2.Gale S. Healy, C. Ό8-Ό8.Morgan G. Heap, M. Όo-'θ2.Robert G. Hearne, A. Ί4-Ί6.Frank E. Heath, '72-'7ό B.S.Harry E. Heath, M. '84-'8s.David Hechtman, '19-'20 Agr.R. D. Hedges, M. 'gό-'gό.R. P. Heflyn, Sp. Agr. Όg-Ίo.Miss W. Heimbecker, Med. '98^99.F. R. T. Heinick, Sp. '05-05.Edward Heitmann, Jr., '9i-'95 M.E., E.E.Miss Anna Heller, '16-17, Ί8-'2i A.B.I. Hellman, Agr. '12-13.Walter Hellmers, '19 Agr.John L. Helm, Jr., Ό2-'θ3 A.Edward R. Helmke, '19-'20 C.John F. Hemberger, M.E. Όs-'og.Hughey S. Hemingway, Ό5-'θ9 M.E.J. C. Hemingway, M. Ό2-Ό6.W. H. Hemming, Med. 'gg-'oτ.F. B. Henderson, C. *95-'97.H. W. Henderson, L. Όo-'θ2.Louis F. Henderson, '70-'74 Ph.B.Miss M. Henderson, O. '8ι-'8ι.P. E. Hendrick, Jr., M., C. Ό7-Ό8.George Hendricks, M.E. Ίι-'i5.E. H. Hendrickson, M.E. Ό2-Ό6.N. E. Hendrickson, M. Ό8-Ό8.W. F. Hendry, M. '91-^92 *93-'94.Sadonis E. Henry, '15-19 A.B.L. A. Hequembourg, A. Ό6-Ό6.Edward A. Herbst, '19-'20 M.M. M. Herman, C. 'θ9-Ίo.M. Herman, Law Όg-Ίo.K. E. Heron, C. Ό6-Ό7.W. F. Heroy, Sp. Ό6-Ό7.C. W. Herpel, M. Όo-'oi.O. E. Herring, M. '98^98.S. E. Herrington, M. Ό6-Ό7.Otto Herson, A. ΊI-'II.Paul O. Hertwig, '2O-*22 Sp. Agr.William C. Hespelt, Ί3-Ί6, '17 Arch.C. B. Hess, M. Ί6-Ί8.Miss W. Heston, Ί6-Ί6 Sp. Med.S. D. Heun, M. Όo-'θ2.E. B. Hewitt, Sp. '07.Nathan Heyman, '11-14 C.W. G. Hicks, M. Όό-'o?.Ralph W. Hiett, Ό4-Ό6, '06-07 M.B. J. Higgias, Matr., did not attend.

Med. '98.C. R. Hightower, M. 'θ9-Ίo, Ίo-Ίi.Curtis Hill, '90-'97 C.E.Malcolm W. Hill, Sp. '90-'90.R. T. Hill, ,82-'86 B.S. '87.W. C. Hill, L. '9S-'96.J. F. Hilleary, M.E. '90-'98.F. L. Hillenbrand, Sp. Ό3-Ό6.S. M. Hillman, M. E. Ό3-Ό7.Burton A. Hills, '07 M.C. L. Hine, O. '72-'74James W. Hines, '12-15 Agr.Miss W. L. Hines, G. Ί8-Ί8.Simon Hirsch, '98 Med.Samuel Hirshovitz, '19-'21 A.W. N. Hisey, LL.B. '89-'92.J. Hislop, C. '86-'87H. Hitchcock, O. '73-'74Laurance W. Hitt, Όs-'θ9 Arch.Chung M. Ho, Ί3-Ί4 M.Nelson C. Hoag, '98 L.Amos K. Hobby, Όg-Ίo M.David Hochreich, '13-'14 Agr.W. L. Hockridge, Sp. 'θ3-'θ4.Seth E. Hodge, M.E. '99-Ό3-Duncan Hodges, '20 M.J. L. Hoefler, Sp. '8o-'82.Ferdinand Hoefner, B.S. Ί3-Ί7-F. O. K. Hoffman, G. '92-'93Jacob Hoffman, C. Ί8-Ί8.Leonard F. Hofler, Ό4-Όs Med.J. W. Hofmann, Med. Ό6-Ό7-Miss Agnes C. Hogan, Ί4-Ί7, Ί8-'i9 B.S.

Ί.7, G.Leslie E. Hogue, Ίo-'i3 B.S.Frank Holden, '88 M.Robert T. Holland, '15-20 Ph.D.Abraham A. Hollander, Ό8-Ίo C.Wilgus A. Holman, Ί8-'i9 Med.W. B. Holman; M. Όo-'oi.O. R. Holmes, M., A. Ό8-Ίo.Willard T. Holmes, Ί8 M.Dr. Milo E. Hoisted, M.D. Ί7-'2O.C. L. Holt, C. '90-'9i.Walter C. Holt, Ί7-Ί8 Agr.P. Hornmel, Ό8-Ό9 A.Douglas O. Honnold, *20-'2i M.John L. Hopkins, '13-'! 4 Law.Walter D. Hopkins, '89-'94 A.B., G.G. Hopkinson, Sp. ΌI-'OI.Guy S. Hopper, Όo-'oi Med.S. Hori, Sp. '95-'97Joseph L. Home, '97-*99 M., C., S.A. J. Horowitz, Med. Όo-'θ2.F. D. Horton, O. '98-'97Le R. Horton, LL.B. '93-'96.Israel Horwitz, Ίo-'i4 B.S.John W. Horwood, Ό2-'θ3, Ό4-'θ7 A.B.J. Hoshino, M. 'θ2-'os.J. W. Hosie, Ό6, Ό7-Ίo A.Norman L. G. Houck, Ί8-'2O C.De Witt C. Houghtaling, '14-'!5 Agr.

H. A. Hovsepian, Agr. 'θ9-Ίo.Delton T. Howard, Ί4-Ί6 Ph.D.Dr. Edward L. Howard, Ί6-Ί7 Sp. Med.Harry I. Howard, Ίs-ΊS, 'i9-'2θ Agr., Law.Robert V. Howard, Ό7-Ό9 M.E.F. J. Howell, S-L '77-'78.J. Howell, L. ΌI-'OI.William G. Howell, M. '86-'89.Dr. Murray Howes, Ό7-Ίo D.V.M.Shengtsu Hsieh, '14-'!5 C.M. T. Hsu, Ό8-Ό9 A.Shih-Ta Hsu, Ί8, '20, '21 M.C.E. '20 G.Chao Pei Hu, M. Ί6-Ί7.G. H. Hu, C. Ίo-Ίi.M. T. Hu, A.B. Ίo-'i4.Suh Hu, Ίo-Ίs A.B. '14 G.T. Hu, A.B. Ό7-Ό9.C. H. Huang, '13-'!5 A. Chem.Chun-Tao Huang, '14-'!5 C.Ralph Hubbard, Ί6-Ί7 G.Robert Y. Hubbard, Όι-'θ3 Med.F. W. Huber, C. '99-Ό3-Jesse Huber, '94 L.W. E. Huchting, A.B. Όo-'θ2-'θ3-Ό4.James H. Hudders, '16-21 M.E.Andrew J. Hudson, Όι-Ό3 M.E.W. C. Hudson, Sp. '86-'86.E. H. Hulbert, B.S. '86-'9O.J. H. Hughes, Med. '99-'oo.Raymond G. Hulquist, Όs-'θ7 Law.Miss A. M. Hull, Sp. Ό2-Ό3 Ό7-Ό8.H. M. Hull, Sp. Ag. Ίι-'i2.Albert F. Humphreys, Ό3-ΌS, Ό8-Ίo A.B.C. C. Humphreys, Sp. C. Ί3-Ί4.Miss Anna S. Hunt, Ό8-Ίι Sp. A.Charles W. Hunt, Jr., Ό8-Ί3 M.E. '12,

M.M.E.Gavine D. Hunt, Όi A.Miss M. Hunter, A.M. '97-'98Mrs. Madeline Hunter, A. M. Renold,

Ό6-Ό7 A.Oscar L. Hunter, M. '93-'95Louis S. Huntington, '96 C.Harold W. Huntley, Όo-Ό2 M.James W. Huntley, '15 C.J. Hurlbut, M.E. Όi-Όs.J. M. Hum, O. '75-'77Miss M. L. Hustace, Sp. Όό-Ό?.W. Le C. Hutchinson, C. '96-*99John S. Hyatt, '84-'8s C.Robert L. Hyett, *98-'99 Sp.W. E. Hymes, Ό8-Ίo, 'i3-'i5 Sp.

F. P. lams, A. '74-'74Sotaro Ibaraki, Sp. '89-'89Abelardo R. Icasiano, '13-*!7 C.E.Gregory M. Ignatiev, Όp-Ίi, Ίι-'i2, BS.

in Agr. Ίi, Ms. Agr.D. C. Imboden, Jr., Sp. Agr. Ό9-Ίo.Harrison A. Ingram, Ό6-Ίι M.E.Miss Mary H. Ingram, Sp. '94-'94.Julius Isaacs, Med. '98-01.Dr. Clara Israeli, '13 Sp. Med.Wongse Issarankura, Ί8-'i9 Agr.Hans W. Ittmann, '14-'!5 Agr.Israel Itzkowitz, Law Ί8-'i9.Nicholas Ivanowich, O. '70-'73.Paul D. Ives, M. '86-'87.

William M. Jack, Ίi G.Abram J. Jackson, Όo-Όi V.Donald Jackson, Ίs-Ίό G.Frederick D. Jackson, '21-'22 G.George Jackson, S. '68-'09.Miss Mary M. Jackson, Ί5-Ί6 Agr.Frederick H. Jacobs, Jr., Med. Όs-Ό7Moses Jacobs, Ί6-Ί7 Agr.Miss Sarah A. Jacobs, Sp. A. '11-12.Townsend PL Jacobs, Arch. '79~'8ι.Max S. Jacobsen, Agr. '17-' 17.Max H. Jacobson, Agr. Ίs-Ί6.Gustave A. Jahn, Jr., M. Ό4-'θ7.Frederick W. James, '9O-'9i O.Walter R. James, '16-17 M.E.Milton Jaret, Ό8-Ί4 A.B. '12 C.E.Tennyson D. Jarvis, Sp. Ό4~'θ4.R. A. Jayne, Sp. '93-'94Mrs. Sara D. Jenkins, '93-*94 Sp.Benjamin L. Jenks, Ό8-Ίo, Ίo-Ίi A.Isaac H. Jenney, J92-'93 M.Jay J. Jennings, Lit. '76-'76.L. C. Jennings, C.E. Ό8-Ίo.Verty M. P. D. Jensen, Med. Ό2-'θ3.John S. Jerrmyn, Sp. '83-'83Edgar F. Jester, Ί8 Agr.Frank H. Jewett, M. '8s-'S6.Joseph Joachim, Agr. Ί2-Ί4.Mrs. Bessie P. Johnson, B. M. Penniman,

'93-'94 O.Charles E. Johnson, Όo-'θ2 M.Clinton W. Johnson, LL.B. Όo-'θ4.Donald S. Johnson, Ίι-'i5 C.E.Frank Arthur Johnson, O. '74-74.George A. Johnson, '84-'8s O.George E. Johnson, S. '68-'7i.James W. Johnson, A.B. '13-'!7.James L. Johnson, '95-'97 P.John William Johnson, Agr. '76-'78.Marcus Rodney Johnson, Ό4-Ό7 M.Oscar V. Johnson, Ί3-Ί4 Sp.Ralph William Johnson, M.C. Ό3-'θ4.Miss Tora M. Johnson, Ί8-Ί9 Sp.A,Charles W. Johnston, Ό3-'θ7 M.George K. Johnston, M. '90-'98.Dr. Oscar P. Johnston, G. Med. Όι-rθ3.Richard H. Johnston, A. '97-Όo.Robert M. Johnston, Όo-Ό5 M.E.Thomas K. Johnston, M. Ί3-'i5Albert I. Jones, Sp. '86-'87.Alfred E. Jones, S. '75-75.

Miss Anna C. Jones, Sp. *96-'96.Clinton I. Jones, O. '83-'86.Miss Frances R. Jones, '19-'20 Med.Frank H. Jones, Όs-'θ7 M.Frank H. Jones, '76-'79 Agr.George F. Jones, Sp. Ό2-Ό3 Όs-Ό6.Hiram Thomas Jones, Agr. '74-74.John T. Jones, M.E. Ό9-'i3. ^Miss Laura M. Jones, 'i9-'2θΆ.Julio Jones, C. '84-'8s.Miss Mary M. Jones, Sp. Ag. Ίι-'i4.Maurice F. Jones, Sp. '84-'8s.Newton L. Jones, O. '79-'79Paul S. Jones, M. Όι-'θ2 Ό3-Ό4.Philip C. Jones, M. Όg-Ίo.Miss Ruth M. Jones, Όa-Όό A.Sherman Jones, Όι-'θ3 M.William S. Jones, O. '09-'69Frank S. Jordan, S. '70-70.Benvenuto Jordao, M. '74-'75.Emil Josephson, '17 C.Joseph Josephson, Ό2-'θ3 Med.Miss Mary S. Joslin, '99 Med.Allan R. Joy, Jr., 'i2-Ίs L.Carlos E. Joy, A. Ό7-Ό8.Clarence S. Joy, *7o-'73 A.B.Martin J. Joynt, '15 Sp. Med.Charles D. Judson, Ί3-Ί6 B.S.David H. Judson, Ό3-Ό7 C.E.Louis F. Judson, B.S. '68-'72.Lawrence F. Kaine, Med. ?98-'98.Tyiichi Kairiyama, Ph.B. '95-'9δ.F. H. Kaiser, Ίι-'i3 L.Louis G. Kalanffee, Sp. Όo-Όi.Frederick Kalfur, Ίι-'i5 B.S.Max Kaminsky, Ό3-'θ4 V.Leopold Kann, '99-'99 G.David M. Kaplan, '98-Όo M.D.Maurice Kaplan, Ί7-Ί8 Agr.George L. Kappelle, Med. Όo-Όi.Theodore B. Karp, A.B. Ί5-'i9Alexander Karst, M. '97-'97Samuel Katz, 'i9-'2θ, '21, '22 A.J. H. Kauffmann, Sp. Ίo-Ίi.Abraham Kaufman, C. Ίi-'iSMiss Edith Kaufman, '19-'20 A.Julius Kaufman, Ίi-Ίs C.Samuel Kaufman, Agr. Ίs-ΊS.L. G. Kaufmann, A. ΊS-'I?.Harold E. Kaye, H. E. Kowalsky, Ί2-Ί4

Agr.Boris Kazmann, G. Ό2-Ό2.T. M. Keane, LL.B. '93-'96.Kenneth Keebler, A. Ό2-Ό3.Charles R. Keeler, Ίo-Ίi M.E.A. N. Keener, A. Ό3-Ό4.Sih Sung Keh, Ό8-Ό9 M.Horace S. Kehm, '17-17 M.John J. R. Kehoe, A. Ό9-Ίo.Arthur Rubel Keith, A.B. Όi-Όs.William Keith, '73-'79 B.S. '78.Elias H. Kelley, Όi-Όs Law.M. S. Kelley, Jr., A. Med. Ό2-Όs.C. P. Kellogg, Arch. Όι-Ό3.A. R. Kelly, M. '98^98.Charles E. Kelly, Ί9-'2O C.T. F. Kelly, M. '98-'99.J. H. Kelsey, Jr., L. '93-'94John S. Kelso, Math. '77-'8ι.A. H. Kelton, Agr. '69-'7θ.W. J. Kemp, M. '97-Όι.mp>Hagop G. Kenajian, Όs-'oό Sp. C.John R. Kendrick, Jr., *90-'9i L.Royal S. Kenerson, Agr. '17-18.Daniel B. Kennedy, Ίs-Ίό Agr.Edward H. Kennedy, A. Ίs-Ί6.John H. Kennedy, Jr., Ί8-Ί9, '20-'2i M.William G. Kennedy, Ό2-Ό3 A.Mrs. Alice F. Kent, Alice F. Beller, Ί4-Ίs

Agr.Fritz Kerner, Sp. M. Ό8-Ό8.R. W. Kernochan, O. 793-'93Dr. Henry H. Kessler, Ί2-Ί9, A.B. Ί6,

M.D.Mark Kestner, Med. '03.Truman J. Ketcham, Agr. Ί3-Ίs.W. C. Kettenring, A. Ό6-Ό7._

.ettle, Ό3-'c 'William W. Keti ;-Ό6 Med.W. S. Kidd, Sp. Ό2-Ό2.Richard B. T. Kiliani, Ό6-Ίι M., C.Frank R. Killick, 'θ7-Ίι M.E.Roger E. Kilts, '14-'!5 Agr.Miss E. A. Kinder, G. '88-'88.Ivan R. King, Ί6-Ί7 A.Charles F. Kinkaid, M. '84-'85.E. W. Kinne, S. '7i-'7iGilmore Kinney, O. '7i-'7i.Rufus S. Kirk, '07-08 A.C. H. Kirkland, L. Ό?-Ό8.Andrew Kirkpatrick, Jr., M. 'Qi-'Q2.Allan S. Kirkwood, '98-'99 Med.Benjamin Klein, B.S. 'i2-Ίs.Benjamin S. Klein, '14-*!5 Agr.David N. Klein, Ί8-Ί9 C.Henry N. Klein, '15-17, 'i9-'2θ B.S.Philip L. Klein, Agr. Ί8-'2O, '2O-'2i.Richard M. Klein, '94^98 M.E., E.E.Theodore Klein, '20-'21 A. Chem.Edward Kleinbaum, Med. 'pδ-Όi.Oram R. Kline, C. '09-'!2.Frank H. Knapp, Ό6-Ίι C.E.Ralph W. Knapp, Ό2-'θ3 Med.Dr. C. W. Knauss, M.D. '98-Ό2.George W. Knowles, Ίo-'i3 Agr.Theodore E. Knowlton, '95 Sp.Hugo Koblenzer, '97-'98 M.Chujiro Kochi, G. *99-Όι.Toshitaka Kodama, L. '92-'92.Percy W. Koehler, M. Ό2-'θ3.Raymond W. Koerner, A. '98-'99.

Page 15: Professor Emeritus LH Bailey Writes on the Life - Cornell University

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