n Alum Ass 9 - 9-1976 Archives (College) Horvey A, Andruss Library Blocmsburg Stote College Bloomsburg PA 178)5 Digitized by the Internet Archive in 2016 https://archive.org/details/alumniquarterly100bloo_2 pr I 1 U-ga agg^rg-sj) isfeipr^ gprS! PL No. Fo/. 31 1 THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY STATE TEACHERS COLLEGE 1 1 Ife —• • r-^l OEO-J-MEULf^ DECEMBER, 1929 BLOOMSBURG, PENNSYLVANIA FRANCIS H. JENKINS The Alumni Quarterly PUBLISHED BY THE ALUMHI ASSOCIATION OF THE STATE TEACHERS COLLEGE DECEMBER, 1929 Vol. 31 No. 1 Entered as Second-class Matter, July 1, 1909, at the Post Office at Bloomsburg, Pa., under the Act of July 16, 1894. Published Four Times a Year H. F. FENSTEMAKER, F. H. JENKINS, 76 ’12 - - FRANCIS - HOWE - - Editor-in-Chief Business Manager JENKINS The Quarterly aims to publish from time to time sketches and workers of the school during the years of its existence, as a matter of record and historic interest. In this article it is my purpose to sketch briefly the life and work of Francis Howe Jenkins who retired from his duties in of the earnest teachers connection with this school in 1 925. Since his retirement Professor Jenkins has been giving his and out of season, to the general interests Alumni of the school, through the management of the school Quarterly, which has been revived and given a new lease of life by his energy and enterprise. The result of his work is shown in the fact that the Alumni are today a solid unit behind every movement that aims to forward the interests of the college, with pride and satisfaction in the fact that they belong to “Bloomsburg.” Francis Howe Jenkins was born in Chettenango, Madison County, N. Y., March 15, 1855. His mother, Francies Ridle, best efforts in season of the a THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY 2 dawned; they understood, and reverenced er —-incidentally their patient teach- believing the "keys” the cause of their grand intellectual opening. 895 he became registrar and business manager of the which position he filled with marked success until his resignation in 1925. His office force was always well organized, efficient and devoted to their chief, due to his organizing power, and his ability to bring the best out of his co-workers. The loyalty of his office force was always a marked feature in his department, a direct result of his continuous courtesy, and uniform consideration of others. No tasks he asked of them were ever too great. In the rush of school opening, school reports, or unexpected duties thrust suddenly upon his office, none ever failed him, because he always thought of them first he always took the hardest tasks and the greatest responsibilities upon his own ample shoulders. Again in his business relations In 1 school, ; with the students, his sympathetic understanding of their needs, his constant courtesy and kindness enshrined him in their hearts Among the Alumni None of the old students returning on a' visit, depart quite happy and satisfied with the results of their visits, unless they have seen and conversed with “Prof. Jenkins.” Through all these years he kept the finances of the school above and won for him their lasting friendship. his friends are legions. criticism. quaint humor, His affable disposition, his his genius for making and keeping friends, enabled him to make collections under the most trying conditions hold the patronage of the school and win new patronage. He met the many ordeals of ; the position, pouring ageing mark in out his unflagging the work, but keeping of the real teacher the kindly down sentiment and romance lurking Not man! and had his so! He spirit unstintingly, of youth — and educator. Think not, gentle readers, that while teacher was so seriously energies this staid to business, in the student and he escaped odd nooks all of the soul the of too found the ‘‘Normal girls” attractive, “tete-a-tete” on the front steps of old “CARVER” THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY 3 His father, Benjamin Jenkins, of was a native of Chettenango. Barre, Mass., was a general merchant, and, for many years, Francis received his early cashier of the bank at Chettenango. education first in a private school and later in the public schools of his native town. 1873 he came Bloomsburg State Normal School to movement was suggested to him by teacher. Professor H. E. Barrett, who at that time was elected In prepare for college. his to a position to This on the faculty of the school. In those days the was greatly stressing the purpose for which it was originnamely preparation for college. Its function as ally founded teacher training as yet was only secondary. The citizens of Bloomsburg believed in secondary and higher education, and in founding the Literary Institute had planned wisely and well for school — After three years of study Francis grad- their children’s future. uated in the preparatory course. This was the Centennial year 1876. The college of the boy’s choice tered in September. A interferred with his work, He later en- and interrupted his studies somewhat. took his A. M. degree at Gettysburg, Pa. He began his teaching career in of the public schools in Eaton, N. Y., 880, becoming principal and continued in this po1 884, when he was elected as teacher of English in Bloomsburg State Normal School. In this position he con- sition until the was Amherst, which he severe attack of typhoid fever in 1878 1 tinued until 1893. As a teacher and in all his school contacts, his willingness to serve and to help those who were in need, made him a much loved and respected instructor. His more serious pupils tell with much gusto, of his persistent effort to enhance their knowledge of English construction, his right hand often toying with a bunch of keys, talismanic, as it seemed to them, a symbol of his cheerful efforts to unlock their dark and doubly locked mental chambers. The keys seemed to soothe him into patience with their stupidity, as he slowly but surely “put across” ideas rather large for their untrained minds. Gradually the ideas THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY 4 while incidentally watching the glorious sunsets, or, perchance, supporting the old time “turnstile” by the hour. stile” is modem an old land mark the The strenuous That “turn- student can not apprec- had some unique features too. Well, to be brief, the subject of this sketch became enamored, desperate, engaged, married and lived happy ever after. All this too at the “Normal” and in the gold old “Victorian days” of standards, grace and goodness. ihe cause of all this fine flowery romance was Miss Anna M. Bittenbender, daughter of Conrad Bittenbender, one of the original trustees and founders of the school, a most faithful seriate. seventies — vant of the cause of Christian education. Professor Jenkins was married to Miss Bittenbender on December 22, 1880. They made their home in Bloomsburg, where they have lived ever since. They had one child, Margaret, now Mrs. R. A. McCachran, who resides in also Blooms- burg. Since his retirement Professor Jenkins continues his interin the est school and publication, he has its doings. done much school has yet published. ing It is makes him happier than his pet effort — to to As manager of the Alumni make it the best periodical the the pride of his heart, and noth- hear a word of commendation for the Quarterly. Professor Jenkins has served the institution long and well. He has impress on left his many of the organizations, customs, and policies of the school. Much of the routine of the office work owes its inception to his active and orderly mind. He lived in and for his work. Those who best know his sincere life, how understand every plan for the betterment of the school grew stronger and more sure of success as it was further elaborin his suggestive and logical mind. His courteous, unsel- ated fish attitude institution, is greatly responsible for and its of his connection with enjoy the pupils it. fruits of his labor, and friends. much of the success of the gradual substantial growth during the years We wish him many years of life to and the reverence and respect of his 0. H. BAKELESS. . THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY RALPH DR. E. 5 MILLER The death of Dr. Ralph E. Miller, a member of the Board of Trustees, came as a great shock to the people of Bloomsburg, and to all those connected with the College. Dr. Miller died suddenly at the Craftsman Club rooms at Caldwell Cathedral, on Wednesday afternoon, December Dr. Miller was born 1 1 Grove, Schuylkill County, Octo- at Pine ber 29, 875. After attending the public schools at Pine Grove, he secured his B. S. degree at Gettysburg College and his M. D. 1 He was on the staff degree at the University of Pennsylvania. of the City Hospital at Wilkes-Barre for a year and from there moved to Bloomsburg, where he established himself in practice 24 years ago. He has been a resident of Bloomsburg ever since and during those years, both ous civic activities, one can manded He had an fill. the made full in his profession and in his numer- a place in the community iife that exceptionally fine practice, and he no com- confidence and admiration of his patients. Dr. Miller’s life in Bloomsburg had been closely related with the Bloomsburg Hospital. upon He became a member of the Bloomsburg and had been a member of the staff ever since. His interest and devotion to the institution played no small part in its success. He was a Corporation, Hospital the Board of Managers, a member of the member of the executive committee and a member of the building committee which directed the building of the new hospital. hospital staff his arrival in was a man of intense patriotism, although it was upon which he seldom touched. He saw service in the Philippines in the Spanish-American War, and when the World War broke out, even though he was far beyond the age when many men felt it their duty to enlist, he abandoned his large Dr. Miller a subject practice when the United States entered the medical branch of the service, thrope, war, where he was on duty when the entered the Camp Oglewar ended. He was a and reported at THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY 6 member of the Valley of Bloomsburg Post of the American Legion. He was ciety, the affiliated with the Columbia County Medical So- Pennsylvania Medical Association and the American Medical Association. Ever since the residence of the family in Bloomsburg, Dr. been active in St. Paul’s Episcopal Church of which he had long been a member and of which he had been a vestryman for many years. He was the second president of the Bloomsburg Rotary Club as well as a charter member. During all the years of Rotary’s history in Bloomsburg he had been one of its strongest Miller has supporters in all its activities. had been a trustee of the Teachers’ College for about 9 years, having been appointed to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Charles W. Miller. Masonically, he was a member of Caldwell Consistory, of Dr. Miller Templar and of the Shrine. He was also a member Bloomsburg Lodge of Elks. Dr. Miller had been for years a member of the Board of Directors of the Bloomsburg Bank-Columbia Trust Company, and of the Bloomsburg National Bank preceding the consolidathe Knights of the tion. He was a member of the Board of Directors of the Bloomsburg Country Club. All his life he had been an outstanding athlete, and at the time of his death held the golf championship of the club. Dr. Miller is survived by his mother, Mrs. Levi Miller, of Pine Grove; by his wife and by two children: Ralph E. Miller, Jr., a Senior at Hamilton College, and Miss Mary Ruth Miller, a Senior in Miss Illman’s School, Philadelphia. Funeral services were held at his late morning, December 21 . Burial was made home on Saturday at Pine Grove. THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY 7 STATE BUYS DILLON PROPERTY TO PROVIDE ROOM FOR EXPANSION The and one of the most important, steps in the exBloomsburg State Teachers’ College was completed October 25 when slightly over eighteen and a half acres of land from Charles H. Dillon et. al. for $75,000 was first, tensive enlargement of the transferred to the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania. The property purchased from Mr. Dillon lies between the main school property and the land on which the residence of the president. Dr. Francis B. Haas, stands, just east of the home of Mr. Dillon. With the acquiring of this property the college now owns Penn Street to the residence of game warden Harry Miller near the town line and from Light Street Road to Second Street, except the home of Mr. Dillon and the few homes erected just back of the present college buildings. all the land from When the budget for the present biennium was being pre- pared, Dr. Haas said, Arthur Townsend, secretary of the budget, and Dr. John A. H. Keith, superintendent of the State Department of Public Instruction, visited Bloomsburg and looked over They recommended the property which the college desired. its purchase to Governor John H. Fisher and the transaction was completed and the deed transferred. While no definite plans have been made for the use of the new land in the immediate future. Dr. Haas said, the land will eventually be used for new buildings as the institution grows. The old property line of the institution ended in the road which ran back of the new training school building and the athletic field. Ihe State also owned property from just beyond Mr. Dillon’s home to Mr. Miller’s property line. The newly acquired property links these two plots. THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY 8 The site of the Bloomsburg State Teachers’ College has long been considered one of the finest in the State. Now that have been secured another dream in the progressive building plan of the institution has been realized. the additional acres While the plot may not be used for new buildings in the immediate future it is available whenever wanted and the acquiring of land will not be one of the problems when more money is appropriated by the State for additional buildings. MANY ATTEND TEACHERS’ COLLEGE CONFERENCE The eighth annual conference of the faculties of the State Teachers’ Colleges of Pennsylvania was held at Bloomsburg on November 25 and 26. The general theme of the conference was “The Improvement of Instruction Through Evaluation of Conference Reports and Final Recommendations For Curriculum Syllabi.” The members of the conference began arriving in BloomsThose arriving by train were met at burg Sunday afternoon. the various stations by members of the Bloomsburg faculty, who Most of the members stayoffered their cars for the purpose. ed in the College dormitory. A large corps of students volun- teered to give up two days of their vacation to remain in Blooms- burg and render whatever service was needed to take care of the The students were used as ushers and guests of the College. dining room and kitchen help, and many aided in providing enThe College Orchestra tertainment at the group assemblies. played in the dining room for the dinner Monday evening, and Monday and Tuesday The North Hall Dance Orchestra played in the dining room Tuesday evening, and provided music for the dancing Monday and Tuesday evenings, following the general sessions. for the general assemblies evenings. THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY 9 The conference opened Monday morning with a Visual Education Program, with Dr. Ralph A. Waldron, of Slippery The conference met in the newly decorated Rock, presiding. auditorium Monday afternoon, at which time general announceFollowing this the various ments of the conference were given. groups met and discussed their common problems. At the general session D. J. Monday Waller, evening, the invocation The speakers Jr. was offered by Dr. were Dr. D. B. of the evening Waldo, President of the Western State Teachers’ College, Kalamazoo, Michigan, and Dr. J. A. H. Keith, Superintendent of Public Instruction of Pennsylvania. At the close of the session, Dr. Haas, ter, who was presiding, called to the platform Dr. C. R. Fos- President of the State Teachers College at Indiana, and also President of the Pennsylvania State Education Association. Foster spoke of the work of educators of other days, and Dr. their education in Pennsylvania. He then paid a glowing tribute to Dr. Waller, who gave the greater part of his life to education in Pennsylvania as Principal of the Bloomsburg contribution to State Normal School, School, and as as Principal of the Indiana Superintendent of close of his remarks, Public he presented to Dr. State Instruction. Normal At the Waller a beautiful basket of roses, and the members of the audience rose ot their feet to do honor serving of all to the man whom the praise that they recognized as well de- had been given him. Tuesday morning and Tuesday afternoon were devoted to group conferences, the time being devoted to a final revision of the course of study for the Teachers’ Colleges of Pennsylvania, a task which has occupied the attention of the conferences for the past four years. on Brown, Super- Dr. Foster, of Indiana, presided at the general session Tuesday evening. The speakers were Dr. J. intendent of Schools at Pelham, N. Y., and Dr. Director of Instruction at George Nashville, Tennessee. C. Shelton Phelps, Peabody College for Teachers, THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY 10 In addition to the musical Miss Alma numbers previously mentioned. Caldwell, of the Bloomsburg faculty, sang a group of Monday evening meeting, and on Tuesday evening, two numbers were given by the College Glee Cub, followed by two solos by Robert C. Clark, Instructor in Voice at Bloomsburg. songs at the A new feature of the conference was Student representatives from Conference. the Student Forum all of the Teachers’ Colleges of the State were present, and discussed problems mutual interest. At the close of their resolutions requesting that the Student of they drew up sessions, Forum be continued as a feature of conferences to be held in the future. Bloomsburg was well represented ferences, many members in the various group con- of the faculty presided over spective groups, or presented papers. their re- The general opinion of members of the conference was that the conferences this year was one of the best, both as to the hospitality extended them in Bloomsburg, and as to the amount of constructive work the accomplished. 1928 LOBBY FUND Prof. E. R. Gager, ’99, of the International Correspondence most telling Alumni move- School, President of his class, has just sent out a circular to his classmates, in the interest of the commencement. He also sent a personal check for the fund, which was gladly received and deposited. We like his spirit, loyalty and energy, and thank him for his effort in the good cause. ment launched last The outstanding are coming in. subscriptions to the their subscriptions in that Lobby Fund of 1928 who have delayed paying kindly get we may close out the fund and use it Will those THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY for its 11 purpose. We acknowledge payment of the following subscriptions: Ebbie M. Carlson, Mary Dushanko, Dorothy McCollum, Edna Kulick and Margaret L. Lewis. Their receipts are issued and ready for them. 0. H. BAKELESS. NEW MEMBERS OF THE FACULTY Miss Ethel E. Shaw, of the English Department, of absence without pay during the first is on leave semester and her place be taken by Miss Florentine Leweke, of Napoleon, Mo. Miss Leweke for the past two years has been head of the English Department of Ellsworth College, Iowa Falls, Iowa, and has nine She has a master’s degree from the Univeryears’ experience. will sity of Missouri. Miss Lillian Schmehl, of Reading, will Miss Mary teacher. E. A. Merritt, resigned, as take the place of kindergarten training Miss Schmehl has had ten years’ experience and has a bachelor’s degree from Teachers’ College, Columbia University. For one year she was an assistant in the Horace Mann Teachers’ College, and previous to that time was engaged dergarten work in the School, in kin- Reading schools. Miss Ermine C. Stanton, of Winder, Georgia, will take place of Miss Ruth Beery, training teacher of the resigned. first grade, the who Miss Stanton has had seven years’ experience and is a graduate of Teachers’ College, Columbia University, where she holds a bachelor’s degree. During the past year she took work and before that time was employed vate nursery school in New York City. at that institution at a pri- THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY 12 Thomas P. North, of Rochester, N. Y., will teach education, who succeeding Prof. 0. H. Bakeless retired and Miss Helen M. Richards will teach penmanship and English, succeeding Miss Miss Richards is a member of Christie Jefferies who resigned. the 1923 class of the Teachers’ College. Dr. North is a graduate of Pennsylvania State College, where he also secured the degree of master of sciences. His He had had doctor’s degree was secured at Cornell University. For five years of that time he was diten years’ of experience. and supervising principal of Corborough and Union Township Schools, Jefferson County. For one year he was assistant in rural education at State College. rector of vocational education sica Miss Richards graduated from Bloomsburg in 1923 and from Pennsylvania State College in 928 with the B. S. degree She is a member of the Kappa Delta Pi, the Natin education. She has had five years’ ional honorary education fraternity. teaching experience in both public and private schools. 1 Miss Maude Kavanaugh has been appointed jects of education and juvenile supervision to teach sub- at the Bloomsburg State Teachers’ College this year. Miss degree at Kavanaugh received both her bachelor’s and master's the Teachers’ College of Columbia University and for the past four years has taught at the State Teachers’ College at Minona, Miss. During the summer months of her vacation she went abroad, and she has recently written a South Dakota supplement to the McMurray-Perkins Geography. Miss Ida Gray, of Madison, Wisconsin, has been selected as art instructor. She has taken the position vacated recently by Miss Esther Williams, who has become a member of the faculty at the University of Pittsburgh. Miss Gray received her B. S. from the University of Wis- THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY She has been assistant consin. to the 13 Director of Art York, Pa., school system and Director of Art in the schools of in the Uniontown, Pa. Two burg last the first is members of the faculty who came Blooms- to year are Mrs. Margaret B. Squires and Miss Edna Mrs. Squires Barnes. who other is taking the place semester, J. substituting in the fourth grade during of Miss studying at Columbia University. Helen Carpenter, Mrs. Squires will also Mrs. Etta H. Keller, sixth grade training be absent for study during the second semester. Mrs. Squires has the degrees of B. S. and M. A. from the University of Missouri. She has served as County Superintendent of Schools in Carroll County, Missouri, and as rural Supervisor and Instructor in Education in Jefferson City and Spring- act as substitute for teacher, who will - field, Missouri. one of the Supervisors of Teacher Training She has the degree of Bachelor of Education from the Western Illinois State College, and the degree of Master cf Arts from Columbia University. She has servMiss Barnes in is the Bloomsburg schools. ed as teacher in the schools of Rushville and Dundee, Illinois. ATHLETICS The college has had a most successful football season. schedule called for hard football in The every contest and the boys responded well. Meeting seven State leachers’ College teams and taking five of the games is no mean accomplishment. Homecoming Day the team played a brilliant game and won 3-0 from East Stroudsburg. Those who witnessed the game are unanimous in the opinion that the Bloomsburg team played a wonderVictory came because of real football, not because ful game. of “breaks.” At Kingston the following week the team met 1 ; THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY 14 account of themselves. A on one occasion, and a fall on the frozen ground another time were the only things that prevented touchdowns This statement is not intended to discredit for Bloomsburg. It was a strong, well balanced, the Wyoming Seminary team. But hard hitting aggregation and they deserved the victory. we are proud of the team that represented the college this year. strong opposition but gave a real dropped ball The schedule Coach Booth had that through was as follows : — to plan for and play — October 5, at Bloomsburg -Kutztown State Teachers’ ColBloomsburg State ieachers College, 6. lege, 0; — October 12, at West Chester West Chester State Teach25; Bloomsburg State Teachers’ College, 0. erss’ College, — ers’ October 19, at Shippensburg Shippensburg State TeachCollege, 7 Bloomsburg State Teachers’ College, 0. ; — October 26, at Bloomsburg California State Teachers’ Bloomsburg State Teachers’ College, 6. College, 0; — November College, 0; Lock Haven State Teachers’ 2, at Bloomsburg Bloomsburg State Teachers’ College, 6. November lege, 0; 9, at Mansfield — Mansfield State Teachers’ Col- Bloomsburg State Teachers’ College, November 16, at Bloomsburg — East 7. Stroudsburg State Teachers’ College, 0; Bloomsburg State Teachers’ College, 13. November 23, at Kingston —Wyoming Bloomsburg State Teachers’ College, Seminary, 7. E. H. NELSON. 27 THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY 15 HOME-COMING DAY More than ,000 alumni and hundreds of guests on Saturday, November 23, enjoyed the Home-coming Day program of the Teachers’ College and all were delighted with the exceptionStudents ally fine program arranged for their entertainment. and members of the faculty were busy throughout the day in welcoming the guests and doing everything possible for their convenience and entertainment. The clean cut 3 to 0 victory over East Stroudsburg on the football field was the feature of the program and enough in itself for a successful Home-coming Day. However, it was only one of the features. The day saw the inauguration of a new sport at the College, cross country Shippensburg defeated Bloomsburg 15 to 23 in the running. 1 1 boys finishing on the north side of the athletic field a few minutes after the football game started. Hundreds were at the get-together tea in the gaily decorated gymnasium after the football game and almost ,000, including about 500 guests, were served at dinner. Dr. D. J. Waller, Jr., gave the invocation and the College Symphony Orchestra run, the 1 furnished a program of dinner music. The dining hall was decorated in the Maroon and Gold of Bloomsburg and the Maroon and Black of East Stroudsburg. Streamers in those colors adorned the walls and the backs of the chairs. The dance was the feature of the evening and was attended by hundreds. Sherman’s orchestra, of Berwick, furnished the music and punch was served. A very attractive decorative scheme was worked out in the College colors. The buildings, campus and business section of the town were well decorated. Boulevard light standards and poles held the colors of the rival schools in the business section and the color were used extensively in the exterior and interior of the buildings on the campus. Large welcome signs were displayed THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY 16 at prominent points. The Elks’ the afternoon’s Band and the High School Band added much to program and took part in the victory celebration at the close of the football It was one years. Few evening and game. of the greatest week-ends on the of the guests left until after many of them remained hill the dance in many Saturday at the institution until the following evening. ALUMNI NEWS 1874 James S. Wilson, formerly of Bloomsburg, died recently in Scranton, and was buried in Old Rosemont Cemetery, Blooms- For a number of years Mr. Wilson operated a foundry in Bloomsburg. We regret that we are unable to furnish further burg. details. 1875 Mrs. Carrie Roswell, New Thompson Snyder died Mexico, February 1 1, in St. Mary’s Hospital, 1929. 1879 Ira D. Filson died recently at his home in Ohio. 1883 Attorney D. M. Hobbes, of Kingston, died suddenly Satur- November 30. His death was caused by a heart attack. Mr. Hobbes was born January 1, 1838. He attended a rural school and later came to Bloomsburg, from which institution he was later graduated. For a time he served as principal of day, THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY Academy, and Pleasant Hill later held similar 17 positions at Lu- and Kingston. About thirty years ago, he took up the study of law. He spent the rest of his life practicing in the Luzerne County Courts, and also in the higher courts of the state and nation. Mr. Hobbes was a member of the P. 0. S. of A. and the Odd Fellows. He was a devoted member of the Kingston Methodist Episcopal Church, and was active in the alfairs of that congregation. He is survived by his wife, by two daughters. His daughter, Marie, is a teacher in Kingston, and his other daughter, Mrs. He is also survived by Joseph Pooley, lives in Madison, N. J. four brothers. He was a brother-in-law of Dean W. B. Sutliff. Funeral services were held at his late home Tuesday, December 3, with burial at Nanticoke. zerne, Dallas, Dorranceton, Ashley, who served from 1890 to 1897 as Princiand Conyngham Schools, Wilkes-Barre, died Tuesday, September 24, at his home at Lake Winola. He is survived by his wife, two daughters, a sister and four brothThe funeral was held at his home at Lake Winola, Friday, ers. September 27, and the body was interred in t' e Pittston Ceme- James G. Secor, pal of the Parrish Street tery. 1884 Bird I. Bertels is teaching in Wilkes-Barre. Her address is 22 Carey Avenue. Jean T. MacCullough Dunwell Irvin H. is Winter lives at 1 lives in 0 Regent Monrovia, Cal. Street, Wilkes-Barre and teaching in the schools of that city. 1885 C. Ernest lotte, N. C. Dechant lives at 2016 East Ninth Street, Char- THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY 18 1888 Frank Myers, president of the Class of 1888, and a prominent attorney in Wilkes-Barre, died September 15, at his summer home at Glen Summit. Mr. Myers was Grand Commander of the Knights Templar of Pennsylvania, and had served He also served since 1910 as Grand Recorder of that order. two terms as State Councillor of the Junior Order United AmerMr. Myers was born in Sylvis, Clearfield ican Mechanics. B. County, April 26, 1863. He served for a time as Assistant District Attorney of Luzerne County. He is survived by his widow. Mr. and Mrs. John H. Clapham (Ada Yetter) New York September 15, after a trip ofnearly arrived two years Mr. Clapham travels West Indies and South America. in in the in the in- The countries visited during the recent trip of Mr. and Mrs. Clapham included Jamaica, Haiti, San Domingo, Panama, Colombia, Venezuela, Mergenthaler Linotype Company. terests of the Trinidad, Barbados, Brazil, The return to New trip Uruguay, Argentina, was made by way of the Chile, Peru. Panama Canal and Cuba York. 1889 Malena Mahanoy C. Rhoads Gabbert lives at 1 1 5 South Main Street, City, Pa. Adelaide McKown Hawke is teaching in the schools of Tunkhannock, Pa. Bess Wintersteen (Mrs. R. Avenue, Passaic, N. W. Shelly) lives at 22 Pleasant J. 1890 Mrs. Jennie Kingston. She Ransom Lowe died November 6 is survived by her husband. at her home in THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY 19 1892 who is engaged in community settleChurch at Higgins, North Carolina, recently visited her mother in Bloomsburg. Through the efforts of Miss Robinson, a new church has recently been built to house The church is built of the congregation which she is working. native stone, gathered by the men of the community, and is declared to be one of the finest churches in that section of the State. It provides for the social and recreational as well as the religious activities of the community. During the time the church was in course of construction the membership of the congregation doubled. This, of course, reflects the widespread interest in the building project and the zeal and enthusiasm, which Miss Robison puts into her work. Miss Martha Robison, ment for the Presbyterian 1894 Mr. L. P. Sterner, who retired a year ago, after serving for many years as Superintendent of the schools of Bloomsburg, is now living at 9 Ryers Avenue, Cheltenham, Pa. 1895 M. L. Laubach head of the Department of Industrial Ai^s Normal School at Terre Haute, Indiana. 0. Box 254, Terre Haute. is at the Indiana State His address is P. 1897 Margaret Andreas lives at 342 West First Street, Hazleton, Pa. Helen Elizabeth Lawall (Mrs. terson Heights, Beaver Falls, Pa. at Point Chataqua, N. Y. L. L. Bentley) lives on PatDuring the summer she lives Mrs. Bentley has six children: Eliza- beth, a graduate of Allegheny College; Alan Louis, a graduate THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY 20 now of Cornell University; Jeanne, David, a student at a student at Hood College; Mercersburg Academy, and Richard, at home. 1899 Roberts Ira A. J., where he is lives at Undercliff engaged in Avenue, Edgewater, N. the insurance business. nected with the Connecticut Mutual Life Insurance Mr. Roberts’ second wife died of pneumonia, Emma in He is con- Company. March, 1928. Waverly, N. Y., where Her son, Alvin 0. Severance, was graduated from the Medical School of Johns Hopkins University in June. He is now serving as interne in the Church Home and Infirmary in Baltimore, Md. Roberts Severance lives in her husband has a department store. F. Herman Fritz has recently of Schools in Pottstown, Pa. been elected Superintendent is 509 North Carolina His address Street. Emma land, Ellsw-orth (Mrs. D. C. Smith) lives in Centermore- J. Wyoming County, Pa. 1902 Evan Williams was elected J. Mayor of Nanticoke at the recent elections. 1904 Mrs. Bessie Reichart Corse lives at Boonton, N. 306 Harrison Avenue, J. W. Ray employed by the Chicago, Milwaukee Paul Railroad, and travels over the line constantly. His address is 3709 Pillsburg Avenue, Mineapolis, Minn. and St. Helw'ig is THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY DeWitt (Mrs. Charles G. McBride) Her husband State University. faculty of Ohio Lois ford Road, Columbus, Ohio. 21 lives at is a 1644 member Guil- of the Guy H. Rentschler resides at 837 Dixie Lane, Plainfield, N. He is connected with the Remington-Rand Business Service, J. Inc. Clark E. Kitchen and wife (Mabel H. Parker) are living at Lancaster, California, with their four children, one of whom is a student at the University of California. Ann Challis (Mrs. F. W. Thompson) is a teacher in the Washington Irving High School, New York City. Her husband She and her nine year old son David, live died two years ago. at 480 Carroll Place, Pelham Manor, New York. Elizabeth Albertson mother of seven children. Her eldest son is a student Harvey Hess) is the happy Her home is in Morrill, Nebraska.- (Mrs. at the University of California. McMurray) Harriet Hitchcock (Mrs. Frederick in is teaching Milroy, Pa. Mabel Mead, N. J. E. Mertz (Mrs. Thomas C. Dixon) lives in Belle Allen B. Eister is employed as signal and telegraph foreman by the Pennsylvania Railroad, and lives at 114 South Liberty Street, Plymouth, Indiana. Kimber H. Knorr lives at 339 North Lewis Street, Staunton, Va. dress Margaret Flaherty is teaching is 30 South Fallon Street. in Philadelphia. Her ad- THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY 22 1905 Carrie E. Clark (Mrs. Garry Road, Cleveland Heights, Ohio. C. Myers) lives at 1000 Elbon 1906 The husband and two daughters of Mrs. J. R. Terwilliger (Helen DeWitt) were badly injured in an automobile accident last August. Mr. Terwilliger had taken Mrs. Terwilliger to Philadelphia, and he and his two daughters were on their way Bioomsburg when their car collided with another car near Hamburg, Pa. After being treated at the Hamburg Hospital, they came to Bioomsburg by train. The Misses Terback to williger, former students at the Teachers’ College, returned Pennsylvania State College. this Fall to continue their studies at 1907 Mrs. Helen Mauser Roat Bioomsburg. Eva T. lives at Schwartman (Mrs. Lloyd 339 West Main Street, D. Smith) lives at 2617 Dillard Street, Shreveport, Louisiana. William V. Moyer was the successful candidate for the fice of- of President of Council in Bioomsburg at the recent election. 1908 member of the faculty of the Bioomsburg High School, received the degree of Bachelor of Science in EduIrene Kahler, a cation at Bucknell University, at the annual commencement last June. Alberta Handley (Mrs. John F. Foster Avenue, Chicago, Illinois. McGowan,, lives at 949 THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY 23 Classmates and friends of Willie Morgan (Mrs. V. G. Stein) will to learn that she has be glad recovered from her entirely Her address serious accident of last October. is 3816 Locust Street, Philadelphia. in the High School in Philadelphia. Apartments, the Lancaster Ardmore, Pa. Florence Bedall teaches Her address is Thomas H. Plank died at his home June 5, 1927. We are unable to state where he was living at the time of his death. The death of Mrs. occurred September lingering illness Kimber Hartman home (Ellie R. Deighmiller) Bloomsburg, following a dunng which she had endured suffering with 1 7 at her in fortitude. from Bloomsburg, she served one After her graduation year as assistant to Prof. Hartline, and for three years taught various high schools in Columbia County. in She also taught one year at Elder’s Ridge, Indiana County. For six years she was matron of the at I. 0. 0. F. Orphanage Sunbury, of which institution her husband was superintendent. Because of Mrs. Hartman’s ill health, she and Mr. Hartman were moved to Blooms- obliged to give up their posiitons, and they burg two years ago. Mr. Hartman is now receiving clerk at the College. She is survived by her husband, a son, Henry, dent at the Teachers’ College, by her and also by five sisters father now a stu- and step-mother, and three brothers. Funeral services were held at her late tember 19, with burial at New home Thursday, Sep- Columbia. Burke (Mrs. James Kinney) lives at 336 CumberLebanon, Pa. Her husband, a graduate from Bloomsburg in the Class of 1906, and also of Pennsylvania Agnes J. land Street, State College, is assistant General Manager of the Lebanon plant THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY 24 of the Bethlehem Steel Company. Mr. and Mrs. Kinney have one son. Tom Mabel Wilkinson (Mrs. Walton) lives at 1 North Wal- nut Street, Mt. Carmel, Pa. John E. Piatt is Superintendent of the schools of Wyoming, Pa. May Southwood lives at 34 North Walnut Street, Mt. Car- mel, Pa. who Mrs. Stein resides in Philadelphia, QUARTERLY among many have is a booster for the her classmates, and through sent in their subscriptions. great assistance to the editorial staff members We who of the Alumni Association ciently interested to give a little of their time in Mrs. Stein members is are look- are order more subscribers and more news of the Alumni. lives at 381 6 Locust Street, Philadelphia. ing efforts by her frequent contribu- tions of personal items regarding her classmates. ing for other her She has also rendered Mrs. suffi- to get Stein asking for the correct addresses of the follow- of her class: — Mertie Cool, Nell Cox, James E. Cummings, Harriet Miller, Eleanor Piekarski, Merrill N. Smith, Margaret Woods, Charlotta Geisdorf, Stella (Mrs. George S. Churm (Mrs. S. C. Wright), and Adda Brandon Westfield). She will be very grateful communicate with her. if anyone knowing these address- es will Watkins is President and Treasurer of the ContinCompany, and his home is in Wheeling, West His classmates and friends will be interested in the \Villiam ental Publishing Virginia. following extracts from a letter received recently: “We left home July 26 on — a motor trip to the Pacific Coast, THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY visiting the different offices of Mayo the our firm, and spending a Clinic at Rochester, Minnesota, September 25 week at and arriving home on 15. “I am very much better than I have been, and the Mayos on my second trip there, announced that I had a good chance of complete recovery. “Incidentally, tinental Publishing as I established we established three new offices, so Company now stretches from coast offices at Portland, San Francisco the Conto coast, and Des Moines. “Somehow I must say that I hold Bloomsburg much dearer and closer than I could ever hold my college. Bloomsburg has done much for me.” 1909 On St. James’ Day (July 25, 1929) in the Cathedral of St. Mary and St. John, Manila, the Rt. Rev. Gouverneur Frank Mosher, D. D., Bishop of the Philippine Islands, advanced to the Priesthood the Rev. Robert F. Wilner, Deacon. Mr. Wilner was presented by the Rev. F. C. Benson Beiliss, Rector of the Cathe- and the Litany was The Rev. William L. dral Parish, the Bishop preached the sermon, read by the Rev. Crispino Salustiano. Ziadie, of St. Luke’s Church, assisted the Bishop in the celebration of the Holy Communion. During his diaconate Mr. Wilner has been assisting Stephen’s Mission to Chinese, Manila, but on in St. September he moved to Baguio, Mountain Province, where he will be in charge of Easter School for Igorot boys and girls, assisted by Mrs. Wilner (Alfa Stark 12) a trained and experienced teacher. He will also act as Chaplain of Brent School for American boys and girls, and assist the Rev. George C. Bartter in the outstation work New address: Easter School, Baguio, of the Baguio Mission. Mountain Province, P. I. 1 THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY 26 Fred W. Diehl, Superintendent of the schools of Montour County, member of the Board of Trustees of the Bloomsburg State Teachers’ College and former President of the Alumni As- been elected Vice-President of the Eastern Synod Mr. Diehl has also been elected as a Mr. Diehl has Trustee of Cedar Crest College, Allentown, Pa. long been active in the work of the church, and his election comes as a recognition of his untiring service. sociation, has of the Reformed Church. Madeline V. Bishop (Mrs. Rollin Charles) lives L. in Beth- lehem, Pa. At the home of Mr. and Mrs. Howard Fisher, of Rupert, on Thanksgiving Day, there was solemnized the wedding of Dr. Scott Romain Fisher, of Syracuse, New York, and Miss Margaret The ring ceremony was noon by Rev. W. H. Hartman, of Bloomsburg. Synthia Mathews, also of Syracuse. performed at high Rebecca E. Stroh (Mrs. L. E. Williams) lives in Aledrson, Pa. 1911 Grace Hartman (Mrs. F. L. tor of Christ’s Presbyterian Merle S. Wilkes-Barre. Gulliver His is 880 Hudson Her husband is pas- Artlev) lives at Boulevard, Apartment 202, Bayonne, N. Church in J. that city. teaching in the G. A. R. High School, home address is 1 7 Carey Avenue, Wilkes- Barre. 1912 C. Fisk Brill and Miss Elizabeth K. Scholle, of New York, They are now were marritd Saturday, September 4, 929. living at 333 East 68th Street, New York. 1 1 THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY 27 Harold N. Cool operates a drug store in Los Angeles, CaliHe lives at 4115 Irving Place, Culver City, and is i member of the Board of Education of the latter city. Mr. Cool was graduated from the Columbia School of Pl armacy in 1917, spent a year in the service during the war, and went to California fornia. in 1921. Mr. and Mrs. Cool have three children. 1913 Albert Demaree His address is is 4 School Mabel Shuman is teaching History at Dartmouth College. Street, Hanover, teaching in the New Hampshire. second grade in the schools of Culver City, California. 1914 Vera Colvin (Mrs. C. B. Gorham) has moved from Clark’s Summit to Harrisburg, Pa., where her husband is employed by the Bell Telephone Company. 1915 Pearl Kleckner Piageman lives at R. D. No. Lucretia Hill, S. Lewis (Mrs. V. A. Martin) is 1 , Sewell, N. living in J. Camp Pa. 1916 Death came suddenly and unexpectedly to Mrs. William H. Lauver, nee Mary Seiler, at the Focht Private Hospital at Shamokin, Pa., Saturday, August 10. She had been a patient at the hospital for two weeks and was apparently on the road to recovery when she was stricken with a heart attack and lapsed into unconsciousness, death ensuing almost immediately. THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY 28 graduate of Shamokin High School, For a 1914, and of Bloomsburg State Teacher’s College, 1916. period of four years she taught school at Paxinos, Jeanette and Mrs. Lauver was a At the McAllisterville. latter School and was very active also contributed as a place she taught in the High community and church work. She writer on cooking subjects to a number of in magazines and periodicals. William H. Lauver, In April, 1920, she was married t prominent business man of McAllisterville, at which place she made her home. Her fine womanly character and superior mental traits won her a place in the esteem and love of all who knew her. Surviving are her husband, and Dorothy, six years old, and three parents, sisters. one Burial daughter, was made at McAllisterville. 1918 Edward Yost and Miss Margaret Girton, of Bloomsburg, two of the town’s most esteemed young people, were married in Scranton in October, friends of the couple learned. Following wedding they spent some time in New York. The groom is a graduate of the Bloomsburg Teachers’ College and took a special course in textile work at Paterson, N. J. He holds a responsible position at the local plant of the Bloomsburg Silk Mill. The bride has been employed by that concern. the Margaret L. Brown lives at 1331 K. Street, Washington, She is secretary to the Secretary of the American Economics Association. D. C. Pa. Helen Stroh (Mrs. Harry K. Mayhew) She has one son. Harold J. Pegg is School at Altoona, Pa. teacher of History Mr. Pegg is Home lives in Harrisburg, in the Senior High a graduate of Gettysburg THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY College, 29 and received the degree of Master of Arts Washington, versity of Washington. Seattle, at the Uni- His address is 1819 Sixth Avenue, Altoona, Pa. 1919 Burrell J. Swortwood is teaching at the Industrial School Boys at Kis Lyn, Pa. Mrs. Swortwood, who was Miss Eva Weaver, of the Class of 1912, is also teaching at the same institution. Their home is in Mountain Top, Pa. for Margaret Heiss (Mrs. Chester E. Vastine) is stenographer Magee Carpet Company, Bloomsburg. Her home is in for the Mifflinville, Pa. Mrs. 1 929, at Raymond Lauer (Bess home in Ashland, Pa. Miller) died November 6, her 1929 Keffer Hartline has completed his post-graduate course Physics and Mathematics August, Mr. Hartline work in German left for was Germany Hopkins University. in In to continue his research from the Unibe in Germany for at least a During the past summer, he Universities under a fellowship He versity of Pennsylvania. year, Johns at will and possibly for two years. Marine Biological laboratory at the the largest laboratory of its kind Louise Stearns lives at 91 at Woods Hole, Mass., in the world. 1 East Commonwealth Avenue, Fullerton, California. Jeanne Stroh Whitehall Street, years. (Mrs. James Harrisburg, Pa. Walsh) lives at 1837-A She has a son, aged three S. THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY 30 Evelyn Wagner (Mrs. West L. R. Groves) lives in Moorefield, Virginia. Alice P. Sterner lives at 341 Franklin Avenue, Nutley, N. Mrs. Evelyn ginia. She is Wagner Grover lives in Mooresfield, West J. Vir- the editor of a newspaper published in that town, and known as “The Hardy County News.” Mrs. Grover’s mother will be remembered by older graduates as Miss Gertrude LaSchelle, a former member of the Bloomsburg faculty. 1921 Miss Evelyn Z. Smith, of Berwick, and Lyman E. Cunningham, of Cleveland, Ohio, were married Tuesday evening, September 7, at Brownhelm, Ohio, by the Rev. Ellsworth Scott, pastor of the Congregational Church of Brownhelm. Mrs. Cunningham has been teaching for several years in the schools of Berwick, Pa. The present address of Mr. and Mrs. Cunningham is 0202 Wilbur Avenue, Cleveland. 1 1 Mrs. Paul A. White (Christina Nagle) of Berwick, died at her home Monday evening, September two months duration. 5, following an illness of Following her graduation she had taught for several years in the Children’s is 1 Home in Wilkes-Barre. She survived by her husband and her father, Fred Nagle, of Milton. 1923 Miss Annabelle Sober at East Stroudsburg, Pa., is teaching in the Junior High School and serving with the State Teachers’ College as co-operative Miss Pearl Robbins, of Shickshinny, Pa., and Alfred ton, of Pittsburgh, tember 23, 1929. teacher in that city. were married Mrs. Burton, at the who home S. Bur- of the bride Sep- recently returned from a THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY 31 trip to Europe, taught for several years at Pond taught last now year at Irvington, N. Mr. J. Hill, Pa., and and Mrs. Burton are living in Pittsburgh. Emmett M. Hoyt and Alice J. Taylor, of Hammond, were married Thursday, August 8, 929. N. Y., 1 Mildred Arms risville. Myra Arms ville. is Principal of the Park Manor School, Mor- Pa. Principal of the is Wm. E. Carl School, Morris- Pa. 1924 Miss Stella Malley died in August at the Mercy Hospital, Wilkes-Barre, following an operation for appendicitis. The addresses of Anna M. Booth (Mrs. Archie Winans) Broadway, Pa., Star Route. Edna D. Williams (Mrs. Ebenezer D. Williams) lives at Florence Avenue, Irvington, N. After a long at her home in illness, is 136 J. June Post (Mrs. Herman Wolfe) died Wednesday morning, September Nanticoke, Pa., 25, 1929. Helen A. Lentholt lives at 250 North Main Street, Taylor, Pa. Elizabeth Mathias Edith M. Behr is is teaching in Northumberland, Pa. teaching sixth grade at Lopez, Pa. THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY 32 Mary bridge, N. E. Barrett at teaching in the primary grades at Wood- J. Koch Elizabeth grade is West is teaching Reading and History in the sixth Pittston. At 5:30 Tuesday evening, September 3, Miss Christine Holmes, of Bloomsburg, became the bride of Alton Taylor, also The ceremony was performed by the Rev. of Bloomsburg. Harry F. Babcock, pastor of the First Methodist Church of Bloomsburg. Mrs. Taylor has been teaching for several years at the Third Street School, in Bloomsburg. Mr. Taylor is employed by the United States Rubber Company, at Cleveland, Ohio, where he and Mrs. Taylor are now living. 1925 Elizabeth Marvin lives at ton, N. J. She and a is also 1 304 Springfield Avenue, Irving - teaching third grade in the schools of that city is training teacher for the Newark State Normal School. Miss C. Ellen Andes and Russell Howard, of Nanticoke, were married June 24, 929, by the Rev. Mr. Conway, of Nanticoke. Mrs. Howard has been a teacher in Nanticoke for four years. Her husband has a position as electrician for the Delaware and Hudson Coal Co. Mr. and Mrs. Howard are now living at 52 West Washington Street, Nanticoke, Pa. 1 Alma Evans is teaching James H. Sterner vard Medical School in West Orange, finished his last year. N. J. Freshman year He stood received a scholarship of five hundred dollars. 1 33 Vanderbilt Hall, nue, Boston, Mass. at the Har- first in his class, and His address is Harvard Medical School, Longwood Ave- 4 THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY 33 1926 Miss Marion Booth, of Broadway, Pa., died evening, July 1, 1929, following a brief Wednesday illness. Isabel Ward, of Bloomsburg, and Ralph Hummel, of Creswere married Friday, October 4, by the Rev. I. N. Blair, of Mrs. Hummel has been teaching for the past two years Espy. co, at Vintondale. High School summer. Jessie Hastie, teacher of Latin in the Junior Avoca, Pa., studied at Columbia University Laura Mann, who is teaching vard University last summer. Arlene Johnson Margaret Isaacs is is in last ai Hazleton, studied at Har- teaching fourth grade at Hallstead, Pa. teaching in Hazleton, and lives at 3 1 East Juniper Street. 1927 Fred Kistler ville, is teaching in the Vocational School at Orange- Pa. Verna 0. Medley, of Nanticoke, and Ralph G. Davenport, For two years were married June 20, 1929. of Plymouth, after her graduation, the bride taught in Davenport is The couple spent now living in their Street, Lewisburg, Pa. Mr. associated in business with his father in Plymouth. wedding trip touring in Canada, and are newly furnished apartment at 578 West Main their Plymouth, Pa. made of the marriage of Mary Harold Rudy, of Berwick. The J. ceremony took place March 2, 1929. Mrs. Rudy has, for the Announcement was L. Crist, recently of Wilkes-Barre, and 1 THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY 34 past two years, been teaching in the schools of Bristol, Pa. Mr. Bloomsburg and a graduate of Pennsylvania State College, took up his duties this Fall as instructor of music in the schools at Uniontown, Pa., where he and Mrs. Rudy, a former student Rudy are now Lena at living. Van Horn, who has been teaching E. in the schools at Hershey, Pa., entered Johns Hopkins University Fall to Hospital this begin training as a nurse. Helen Andrews, of Allentown, was a student Columbia at University last summer. is employed in the Technical Service Departand Howell Company, Chicago, manufacturers of motion picture cameras and equipment. His address is 425 Paul C. Foote ment of the Bell North Paulina Street, Chicago. Mary E. Her address Lillian at is Jones Robertson 527 South Main Lottie is I. more Avenue, teaching in the second grade in Scranton. 632 North Main Avenue. is teaching in Jenkins Township, and lives Street, Pittston, Pa. Ross (Mrs. George W. Frey) Philadelphia. Her husband lives at is a 4721 railway Balti- mail clerk. 1928 On Thursday morning, August 2, Miss Helen Moss, of Plymouth, became the bride of Doyle W. Ivy, of Bloomsburg. The ceremony was performed by the bride’s pastor, the Rev. Mr. Lankley. Since graduation, Mrs. Ivey has been teaching in Mr. Ivey received the degree of Bachelor of Science Plymouth. in Educa- THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY 35 928. Bloomsburg, in Since that time, he has been teaching Mathematics in the Edwardsville High School, and has coached various athletic teams in that institution. Mr. and Mrs tion at 1 Ivey are now Miss living with the bride’s Myrna Kashner Caroline E. Spotts Union County, and is is in Plymouth. teaching in Philipsburg, N. J. teaching at Oakland, Kelly Township, lives at R. 4, Mildred Sechak mother lives at Lewisburg, Pa. 87 Coal Street, Glen Lyon, Pa. Catherine B. Johnson lives at 7 95 Lehigh Street, WilkesBarre, Pa. Clelia Masucci is now a student at Beaver College, Jenkin- town. Pa. Ellen A. Schlier city is is teaching 319 West Green in Hazleton. Her address in that Street. 1929 Miss Beatrice Hartman is teaching in the schools of Clear- held, Pa. Elizabeth Munson Fannie E. Hill Joy Munson is is is teaching at Leach teaching in Hill, Pa. Hatboro, Pa. teaching near Scranton. Charlotte Mears Helen Wolfe is is teaching in the schools at Dimock, Pa teaching near Turbotville, Pa. THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY 36 Sarah Krauss teaching near Hazleton, Pa. is Robert Wilson, baseball captain in 928, and Miss Harriet were married Wednesday, October 9, at Cumberland, Md. Mr. Wilson is athletic coach and a member 1 Ivey, of Bloomsburg, of the faculty in the schools of Peninsula, Ohio. Doris Johnson, Lenore Thomas, Lucille Martz and Moore are teaching in On Monday, September 30, Miss Catherine Jackson, of Ber- became the bride of George H. Ludwig, ceremony being performed by the Rev. J. C. wick, the First Presbyterian Church of Berwick, Ludwig are now Audrey Berwick. of Catawissa, the Stuart, Pa. pastor of Mr. and Mrs. where the former living in Catawissa, is em- ployed by the Pennsylvania Railroad. OFFICERS OF THE ALUMNI ASSOCIATION President — R. Bruce Albert, ’06, Bloomsburg, Pa. Vice-Presidents — Dr. D. Waller, J. Jr., ’69, Bloomsburg; 0. H. Bakeless, ’79, Bloomsburg. Secretary —Edward — Treasurer Schuyler, ’24, Bloomsburg. F. H. Jenkins, ’76, Executive Committee Bloomsburg. — Fred W. Diehl, ’09, Danville, Pa., Chairman; Mrs. C. W. Bloomsburg; Maurice E. Houck, 10, Berwick; Harriet Carpenter, ’96, Bloomsburg; Dennis D. Wright, ’ll, Bloomsburg; Daniel J. Mahoney, ’09, WilkesFunston, ’85, Barre, Pa. ALUMNI DAY, SATURDAY, MAY 24, 1930. Reunion Classes:— 1870, 1875, 1880, 1885, 1890, 1895, 1900, 1905, We had a great meeting last 1910, 1915, 1920, 1925, 1928. year. Plan NOW to make the 1 930 reunion the best ever. ” . THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY 37 ARTISTS’ COURSE Five numbers are on the Artists’ Course of the Bloomsburg opened Friby Godfrey Ludlow, State Teachers’ Coilege for this winter, the course day evening, October 1 1 , with a recital violinist. Other numbers on the Friday, course are “Tales of Hoffman, November 22 Mora, the Magician and Company, December 20; Sprague Players in “Back Home,” Friday, opera, Friday, February 7, ; and two piano recitals, Carl and Dorothy Parrish, Friday, April 4. who de- lighted large audiences last winter with lectures on national and Dr. George Earl Raguiel, Philadelphia international matters, will come to publicist, Bloomsburg during the pres- ent term along with other noted lecturers but will speak to the students during the assembly periods. Godfrey Ludlow, who opened the course, is well known to is one of the artists of the National Broadcasting Company. He is an Austrian but has been on a concert tour of America for some time. radio fans and Dr. Francis B. Haas has accepted the invitation of Martin Brumbaugh, former governor of Pennsylvania, to become a member of the Christmas Seal Committee for Pennsylvania, sponDr. Brumsored by the Pennsylvania Tuberculosis Society. baugh is chairman of the State Committee. G. George Earl Raiguel, of Philadelphia, who gave a serof lectures on current events last year in connection with the Dr. ies Artists’ Course, is giving a similar series this year at the regular His first lecture, dealing with “The ProgOur Government Under President Hoover,” was given on Friday morning, November assembly exercises. ress of 1 THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY 38 Plans are changes now in to the electrical for a new power house and and heating systems of the Bloomsburg progress State Teachers’ College that will require an estimated expndi- $139,000. The work will include new steam mains, the rewiring of Waller Hall, Carver Hall and Noetling Hall in conduit, and the capacity of the power house will be increased by the erection of an additional one story brick power building 50x30 feet and 26 feet high and carrying a brick stack 100 feet high and 5/i feet in diameter. It will provide an additional 200 h. p. The work also calls for underground power lines. ture of approximately Miss Anna McBride, for many years Dean of Women at Bloomsburg during the administration of Dr. Waller, died Wednesday, September 8, at the home of her sister in Genessee, New York. Word of Miss McBride’s passing will be received with regret by her former students. Previous to her coming to Bloomsburg, Miss McBride was for eight years principal of the training school at the Shippensburg State Normal School. 1 At the annual meeting held in Harrisburg on September 20, Mr. A. Z. Schoch, President of the Board of Trustees of the State Teachers’ College at Bloomsburg, was elected Vice-Presi- dent of the State Association of Normal School Trustees. ggTIpr^ Sr Po/. 31 No. 2 THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY 111 STATE TEACHERS COLLEGE I! ill * 1 1 Ik OEO .J.K£U.tR_ MARCH, 1930 BLOOMSBURG, PENNSYLVANIA HOWARD F. FENSTEMAKER The Alumni Quarterly PUBLISHED BY THE ALUMNI ASSOCIATION OF THE STATE TEACHERS COLLEGE MARCH, 1930 Vol. 31 No. 2 Entered as Second-class Matter, July 1, 1909, at the Post Office at Bloomsburg, Pa., under the Act of July 16, 1894. Published Four Times a Year H. F. FENSTEMAKER, F. H. JENKINS, ’76 ’12 - - Editor-in-Chief - - Business - Manager MEET THE EDITOR! This section of the QUARTERLY is entirely out of the We have decided that the ALUMNI hands of the big chief. should know something of this gentleman’s looks and history. Hence this special section. Howard Fowler Fenstemaker is a native of Berwick. He 1910 and from His first teaching experience was in the the NORMAL in 1912. Dallas Township Consolidated school where he served as PrinThe next two years he served as Principal of cipal one year. the Chestnut Street Building, Berwick. The summer of 1915 he headed for the University of Michigan and prolonged his residence on the campus until he was granted an A. B. degree in 1918 with a Phi Beta Kappa key thrown in. From 1918 until 1926 he taught Modern Languages in the Highland Park High was graduated from the Berwick High School in School, Highland Park, Mich., with the exception of one year’s leave of absence for army service. During most of that year THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY 2 he was in the Foreign Language Department of the Office of the Base Censor, Paris. In 1919 he was united in marriage with They have two children, Howard Jr., and 926 he came to Bloomsburg to take charge of the Modern Language Department, and almost immediately was handed the job of editing the rejuvenated QUARTERLY. Ruth Nuss, Mary ’12. Louise. In 1 depends on the cooperation of the him our support. His success in this project ALUMNI. Let’s give E. H. NELSON, ’11. THE EDUCATIONAL PROGRAM OF THE COMMONWEALTH Dr. John A. H. Keith Superintendent of Public Instruction (Extracts from an address delivered at the Conference of the Facul- Normal Schools and Teachers’ Bloomsburg, November, 1929). ties of the State “Pennsylvania has been called State. As a matter of Colleges, held at a local self-government fact Pennsylvania has never had local self-government in regard to education. The arm of the Commonwealth has been back of every educational movement. We know the difficulties there have been in this State to secure positive action of law leading to better schools. Those who come from out of the State can scarcely understand the social attitudes that develop in this Commonwealth and the relation of those attitudes toward the development of public education. “We have with us Dr. Waller, who started this Normal School, was State Superintendent, went to Indiana and then came back to Bloomsburg. In looking back over the years he knows how the thing called progress has come about in Pennsylvania. He knows that while Pennsylvania may have been THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY slow taking advanced steps in it has not taken backward steps. “This matter of equalization We sylvania. first 3 have 2582 school is a complex thing districts. When in Penn- the State created the boards of school directors the certification teachers was given into the hands of the school of When districts. that system did not work it was given into the hands of the County Superintendents. It was then taken over and put in the hands of the Superintendent of Public Instruction. When it fails there a place will be found one way or another. “The Commission on Equalization made a report last year. may be secured from the Department. That Commission being unsuccessful, another was appointed to Copies of that report study the State plan of s public financing education. Who and what creates the school districts? The General AsThe General Assembly states how many directors sembly. there must be, what they shall do, what they shall not do, etc. The law says what must be taught, sets up qualifications of teachers, fixes the minimum salaries, and in all except fourth creates class districts provides for increments. was a State system of public education in a in the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania for years. Today there is no tendency whatsoever toward backward steps in education in the Commonwealth. “If there ever Commonwealth There is it has existed a feeling that the appropriations for education are too revenue of the Commonwealth. In this biennium $87,000,000 has been apportioned. Is it possible so to arrange the State’s plan of finanlarge, that they are taking too large a part of the Perhaps more money should be spent instead of less; perhaps it should be spent in different ways so as to bring about better equalization of educing public education to lessen the drain ? cational opportunity. “Out of the many things this to be done in life the members audience have chosen as their business teaching. vocation. teachers. We have chosen to serve We belong to the guild of It is of our society through serving as teachers of teachers. We THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY 4 are not simply passing on a bit of what has been accumulated and is who regarded as worth while, but are passing it on to those again pass it on, and that gives us our status as teach- will ers of teachers. As back a step further, as is the teacher, is the teacher of teachers, so so is the school. is To go the school. “The future of the school rooms rectly but nevertheless largely in the here. We er of those are going to determine who go in of Pennsylvania lies indihands of those assembled large measure the charact- into teaching in this Commonwealth in the and the stamp they give to the present Perhaps youth will depend upon the stamp we place on them. it can better be said that our spirit and attitude towards life, its responsibilities, its duties and requirements will be passed on by them to the boys and girls in our public schools. Therefore our years that lie responsibility ahead, is not simply that of teachers but of teachers of teachers. “Where comes this thing called preparation of teachers? Out of what does it grow? It does not grow out of anything Wherever there except the attitude of the free public school. system for the is a system of public education there is also a preparation of teachers. In the United States the responsibility rests upon the individual State. We have no system of National education and it is not likely that we will have in this country. The power to control education rests with the State. Out of that all of our laws of education come. The sovereign power is, however, the choice and decision of the majority of our people. We have had in this country from the very first the idea of progress. We have had progress and development of our public school system. The industrial revolution changed ideas; it broadened the field of education. Compare a college catalog of fifty years ago with one of today and see the difference of courses. We have had a renaissance of education with the last seventy-five years. It has been forced by the modified econo- mic relations of people, the social relations, the mutual obligations of people. We have been solidified as a people as we THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY 5 Our public school system is not static but and economic condi- never were before. progressive, changing to meet the social tions of life. “If the State to control education is it the curriculum qualifications of teachers, must not only prescribe it must follow through and connect, and it does. You are teachers of teachers. What is it you want of all the boys and girls whom you teach? In the words of John Dewey education is the “reconstruction of experience.” Is not this what you want? You want them to learn to reconstruct their experiences of life in the schoolroom. “Education is not isolated. We are tying it up with the economic life, of our day and generation. We bring into the schoolroom a phase or an aspect of this life of social life, the The value of what the child learns can be estimated by which he can adjust himself to life outside the school room. We want to prepare a generation of teachers who can make Pennsylvania public schools better than they have ever ours. the way been. in What is the thing we call culture? It sense of values which one has or comes to have. tured person the one the dross and who takes retains only all experience of the deepest and thus comes human is that Is refined not the cul- life, weeds out significance of have the understanding of the value and significance of the beautiful works of art, prose, etc. Each individual must work out for himself in his refinements of his experiences all the culture that he ever comes to possess. It can never be passed readymade, each must reconthese experiences, to struct for himself. “The State is willing to pay for fourteen Teachers Colleges devote themselves to the task of preparing a generation of teachers that shall insure through the administration of the pubto lic schools of this the years that lie Commonwealth ahead.” a greater Pennsylvania for THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY 6 LAY CORNER STONE OF TRAINING SCHOOL In taking part in the corner stone laying exercises of the new modern officials Training School Building, held Friday, January 31, Bloomsburg State Teachers’ College referred to and of the the recent acquisition of land adjoining the school property spoke of the training school building as the of new hope structures they program of the Members first link in a chain to see erected in the development institution. and trainand a number of residents of the town were in the audience for the main part of the exercises which were held in the auditorium in Carver Hall. Almost a score of guests were seated on the auditorium platform. It was an important day in the life of the institution. The training school building is the first new structure added to the physical equipment in almost a quarter century, and its significance is greater because the building is looked upon as the first of the faculty, students of the college ing school of several new structures in connection with the enlargement of the institution. 37 years a member A. Z. Schoch, for many of the Board of he now holds; Fred W. Diehl, Superintendent of the Montour County Schools, a member of the Board of Trustees and a former President of the Alumni Association, and Dr. Francis B. Haas, PresTrustees, and for years its President, an office were the speakers at the exercises. Also take part in the program were Dr. D. J. Waller, ident of the College, President emeritus; Rev. byterian Church, and S. Earl Jr., A. Harker, pastor of the First PresN. Rhodes, Director of Teacher Training at the College. All of the speakers spoke of the importance of the training school in an institution which has for teachers. tion They spoke of its business the training of the past achievements of the institu- and expressed the opinion that the future would be a bright one, especially as the enlargement of facilities will enable the THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY institution to 7 do a greater work. Immediately after the close of the exercises in the auditorium the officials went to the new building and placed the strong Takbox, containing a number of records, in the cornerstone. ing part in the placing of the cornerstone were Mr. Rhodes, Dr. Haas and Mr. Schoch. who program those were Joseph L. Townsend, Paul E. Wirt and Mrs. May Harman, members of the Board of Trustees; Dean of Instruction, W. B. Sutliff; Supt. M. E. Houck of the Berwick schools and Eckley Hoyt, of the BerIn addition to those seated on the platform took part during the in the exercises wick School Board; Charles H. Dillon, President of the Bloomsburg School Board; Mrs. Haas, wife of the College President, and President of the Parent-Teachers’ Association; William V. Moyer, President of Council, and R. Bruce Albert, President of the College Alumni Association. The program in the auditorium opened with the singing of America, under the direction of Miss Harriet Moore, and prayer by Dr. Waller. There are in the lives of institutions, the president of the College stated in the opening of his address, as in the lives of individuals, special events worthy of special note. He expressed had arrived at such an event. the thought that the institution He spoke new of the long period since the last building was erected and declared it was fitting that the new building was a training school, for it is generally recognized that the training school in the educational institution is to the scientific school and the hospital is as the laboratory to the medical college. Haas spoke of the significant part the institution has the life of the community and said that guests of the college at the exercises included several who were graduates of the institution, referring to William V. Moyer, president of CounDr. played cil; in Charles H. Dillon, president of the School Board; Mr. Diehl, the Superintendent of Schools in Montour County ; the Superintendent of Schools in Columbia County W. W. Evans, and R. Bruce THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY 8 Alumni Association. The president spoke of the changing of styles and Albert, president of the College now known the cornerstone laying exercises are exercises. but he preferred the former term. struction it is no longer necessary to in to steel con- underway. He spoke of in the cornerstone to the gener- ations yet unborn, declaring that while the young With hold such exercises shortly after the erection of the building gets the value of the records placed said that as date stone country is yet too have such exercises bear the significance they would older nations, yet in time they bear fruit. He referred to the three inscriptions on the stone “Thought The Grandeur of Man,” “Wisdom Is The Fruit of Reflection” and “Education Is The Foundation of Happiness.” In closing. Dr. Haas spoke of dreams which come true and Is new which is the fulfillment of a dream. would be for a building for Junior High School work, a companion building to the new edifice. Ships only return bearing fruit, he reminded his hearers, if they of the training school The next dream, he are out in search of said, it. it gave him to take 37 years he had been Mr. Schoch spoke of the great pleasure part in the exercises. He spoke of the In looking back connected with the institution as a trustee. over conditions at the start of that period and then viewing them as they are today, he said there is reason to be satisfied. There were only two buildings at that time, and in the almost two score years which have followed, eight pieces of land have been acquired and added to the campus. The last tract purchase he spoke of as being of considerable size so that there With the accomplishment of the could be much expansion. past and the prospects of the future and with the institution having as its head an able and esteemed man in Dr. Haas, Mr. Schoch declared that we can look forward to a time when the institution will Dr. be outstanding in the field of education. At the request of Mr. Schoch, Dr. Haas read a letter from John A. H. Keith in which the Superintendent of Public In- THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY 9 hope that the message might be placed He spoke of the value of the training school in a Teachers’ College and congratulated struction expressed the among the records in the corner stone. the institution. Mr. E. N. Rhodes, Director of the Training School, placed the following articles in A the strong box: then copy of the program of the day’s exercises, signatures of the officials, faculty members and students of the college and training school, college catalog, college hand book, latest edition of the Maroon and Gold, College publication, latest edition of The Morning Press, list of the school of the directors districts cooperating teacher training program; an American Flag, the gift Bloomsburg Post of the American Legion; a Holy in the of the Bible, the gift of the Parent-Teacher Association, a college pennant, the gift of the tin Community Government Association, a summer school and a copy of the county institute program of 929. Mr. Diehl spoke of entering the institution “We Science Hall was being completed. the bulle- 1 new training school ings.” He spoke and of the The is but the first trust,’’ in 1 he of a series of 906 when said, “that new build- of the wonderfully fine service of Mr. Schoch responsibilities of the trusteeship of state institutions. trustees, he said, feel that the faculty has a decided responsibility in the business of training teachers and that the students have a great responsibility in preparing themselves for the work. The institution, he told the students, “has been plac- ed for your benefit in order that you may secure training so that you can in turn go out and train the boys and girls of Pennsylvania.” He spoke State last year of teaching as big was 194 millions. business. The cost in the There were 60,787 teachers ,950,000 children. He declared that they can for the institution and that they like to follow graduates’ work as they go out into the world and that the trustees feel deeply gratified when graduates do fine work which is a credit to the institution. employed to teach trustees stand to do 1 all ' THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY 10 With the help of all interested, he said in conclusion, “there no reason why the Bloomsburg of the future should not be a institution and we in turn will do our part to keep Bloomsburg the outstanding teachers’ college.” is greater CONVENTION HELD The Northeastern IN BLOOMSBURG District of the Pennsylvania State Educa- tion Association returned to the scene of hold the ers’ fifth its first convention to annual convention at the Bloomsburg State Teach- College Friday and Saturday, March 7 and 8. teachers from the district attended the sessions, and Hundreds of some of the leading educators of the country appeared on the program. Hosts for the convention were the teachers of the Bloomsburg State Teachers’ College, Bloomsburg and Columbia County and Montour County rural rural schools, and the Danville schools. The convention opened with group programs Friday noon. Immediately after the first after- address at each group con- was held and organization was effectThe general business meeting was held at 4:30, follow- ference, a business session ed. ing the group conferences. Dr. Francis B. Haas extended greetings and welcomed the guests at the opening of the session held Friday evening, at which time Mr. Wood and Dr. Keith were the speakers. At the close of the session, the newly-elected president. Dr. Francis B. Haas, Among was introduced. the speakers who addressed the department section meetings were: Fred D. Slutz, Dayton, Ohio; and Earl D. Bruner, Superintendent of the George Junior Republic of Western Pennsylvania; Henry Klonower, Director of the Teachers’ Bureau and Deputy Superintendent of Public Instruction; Charles D. Koch, Deputy State Superintendent of Public Instruc- ; THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY 11 tion W. H. Bristow, Assistant Director of Secondary Education, Department of Public Instruction; Dr. H. V. Pike, Director of Clinical Psychiatry, Danville State Hospital for Mental Diseases Hollis Dann, Director of the Department of Music Education, New York University; Carl L. Schrader, State House, Boston, and ; others. THE ALUMNI MEMORIAL TROPHY ROOM — — The movement started last commencement that of foundAlumni headquarters and “Trophy Room” is well under way. We are assured that a room will be assigned us before Commencement of 930. The matter of planning the decoration and furnishing of it will not be begun until more classes have been heard from. The success of the plan, however, is assured, and the response from those classes consulted has been generous. A little more time and planning will make possible a very worth while piece of work that will unite more closely than ever the old “College” and the Alumni. We have the hearty support and encouragement of our ever courteous and ing 1 who assures us that an be made by commencement generous President, Dr. Francis B. Haas, assignment of a room or rooms will 1930. Of the fund subscribed for this purpose by the classes in commencement $323 is already in bank in a savings fund ready to begin the work as soon as the assignment of room is made and plans matured. The work will be under the im- reunion last mediate supervision of Dr. Haas and the alumni committee. The Classes not yet consulted will be approached as soon as convenient, according to plan. Watch the “Quarterly” for further information. No one will be slighted and all will be happy to : THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY 12 push the movement good old “Bloomsburg in style. Respectfully, 0. H. BAKELESS. (Treasurer of the Alumni Memorial Fund) The following buted 1 1 879. 884. Class of Class of 1889 Class of for classes are at work or have already contri- : — James Mrs. P. Grimes, Treas. Check $115. Class of 1894. Class of 1 The following have 899. thus far contributed E. P. Gager, H. F. Yearick, L. H. Dennis, Miss ris, Gertrude E. Mor- Dr. J. P. Echternach, Miss Bessie Creveling. Class of $33.00. Class of — 1909 — 1904 Gideon Dr. L. Howell, Daniel Mahoney, Treas. Treas. Cash $30.00. Contributions received from the following were Bloomsburg; Wright, Bloomsburg; Dr. C. Welliver, Wheeler, Shickshinny; A. Bess Hinkley, Danville; J. L. Cash —Walter Mrs. D. D. W. Cressler, Wilkes-Barre; Lillian Rummer, Wilkes-Barre; Jennie Nescopeck; Mrs. M. W. Cook, Cortez; Dr. J. C. Kochczynski, Hazleton; Mrs. C. F. Abbott, Bloomsburg; Anna Kuschke, Scranton; Mrs. G. E. Follmer, Benton; Fred W. Diehl, Danville: Gertrude M. Meneeley, Peckville; D. J. Mahoney, Wilkes-Barre. Birth, Class of Class of Class of Class of 1914— Cash 1919 Wm. — — 1881 — 1880 $25.00. Hoffman, Treas. Check $100.00. Ernest W. Young. Contributed. Miss Dora Marr. Contributed. THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY 13 ROTARY AND KIWANIS OBSERVE ANNUAL COLLEGE NIGHT Kiwanis, Rotanans, trustees and faculty members of the Bloomsburg State Teachers’ College and members of the Bloomsburg and Berwick School Boards, accompanied by their ladies, to the number of almost 500, joined Tuesday evening, January 14, in the annual college evening at the State Teachers’ College. The dining hall of the college was artistically with the college colors, surmounted by a “B” used in decorated, the decora- tion of the columns. Following the singing of “America” the program was opened with the invocation by the Rev. Samuel A. Harker. During the serving of the menu a delightful musical program was rendered by the college orchestra, which also played, as the guests assembled in the auditorium for the second part of the program. During the serving of the menu the Men’s Glee Club, under by ColeridgeBoth numbers were well received by the large gathering. Another delightful feature was the singing of the Kiwanis double quartet. the direction of Prof. Clark, sang “Viking Song,” Taylor and “Santa,” by Ghck-Burton. William J. Brennan, president of the Kiwanis Club, presided over the gathering in opening and carrying the dinner through to its closing moments. H. Mont Smith, vice president of the Bloomsburg Rotary Club, then most happily expressed the appreciation of the mem- bers of the clubs, as well as that of the other guests of the evening, for the delightful entertainment they had enjoyed and the cordial hospitality of Dr. Haas, president of the college, who had made these gatherings possible and who had done so cement the friendship of the community and the college. Upon behalf of the clubs, he presented Mrs. Haas with a beauti- much to ful basket of flowers. The program in the dining room closed with the pledge of THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY 14 allegiance to the Flag and the singing of one verse of the “Star Spangled Banner.” From there adjournment was taken to the auditorium where Col. Philip A. Moore, of the Bureau of Commercial Economics, gave an illustrated lecture on “Teepee Fires and Northern Lights.” OFFICERS OF THE ALUMNI ASSOCIATION President — 06, Bloomsburg, Pa. R. Bruce Albert, Vice-Presidents — Dr. D. Waller, J. 69, Bloomsburg; Jr., 0. H. Bakeless, ’79, Bloomsburg. Secretary —Edward — Treasurer Schuyler, ’24, Bloomsburg. F. H. Jenkins, Executive Committee Bloomsburg. — Fred W. Diehl, 09, Danville, Pa., Chairman; Mrs. C. W. Funston, ’85, Bloomsburg; Maurice F. Houck, ’10, Berwick; Harriet Carpenter, ’96, Bloomsburg; Dennis D. Wright, ’ll, Bloomsburg; Daniel J. Mahoney, ’09, Wilkes-Barre, Pa. ALUMNI DAY, SATURDAY, MAY Classes: 24, Reunion 1905, 1930. — 1870, 1875, 1880, 1885, 1890, 1895, 1900, 1910, 1915, 1920, 1925, 1928. greatest Alumni Day in Plan NOW the history of the to make this the A special College. supplement to the QUARTERLY will soon be mailed to Bloomsburg graduates. Watch for it. f / V 4 &fo J all — THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY 15 ALUMNI NEWS 1880. A CALL TO THE ’80’s Come and be boys and girls again for one day. Come from the North, South, East and West, and meet at “Old Normal” on MAY for a 24th day of reminiscing. Let nothing detain you. COME. CELESTE KITCHEN PRUTZMAN, Secretary. 1881 Miss Mary A. of injuries suffered Lafferty died Friday afternoon, January 24, when a waterback exploded in her home. The Shenandoah Herald had the following account dent of the acci- : “Miss Mary A. Lafferty, the well-known school who was injured on Thursday evening the kitchen of her at when teacher, the waterback in home, 313 West Centre Street, exploded, died afternoon, at Locust Mountain State Hospi- 3:30 yesterday from shock, following the accident. “Miss Lafferty’s injuries were most severe. Her right hand was crushed so badly that it was believed amputation would have been necessary had she survived the shock. Her face and head were badly torn by the force of the explosion and she suffered a deep gash in her right leg. tal THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY 16 “Everything possible was done to stay the hand of death, it was impossible to withstand but her wounds were such that the awful shock she sustained. “Miss Lafferty was born in Minersville, but came to Shenandoah when a little girl. She attended the public schools and was graduated from the High School. She then entered the Bloomsburg Normal School, from where she graduated and then She taught at Nuremburg for two years and took up teaching. then came to Shenandoah, having secured a school here. almost every grade and for a number of Advanced Grammar School. At the opening of the present term a Junior High School was established and she was promoted to the faculty of this school, where she taught up “She taught years taught to the in the in day of the accident. “Miss Lafferty was a conscientious teacher. her work and also her pupils She loved and nothing was more pleasing She than to see her students show aptness and advancement. had a pleasant manner and soon won the heart of her students. She loved her profession and put her whole life into it. She was not only loved by her pupils, but co-workers. She was held in high esteem by the School Board and there were few in Shenandoah who did not know Miss Lafferty. Expressions of regret were heard on all sides as news of the sad accident which terminated with fatal results. “The deceased was a member of the Church of the An- Mary and the Sacred Heart Society. She took an active part in church work and always stood ready to aid in any movement for the church. She was charitable and kind. nunciation, Sodality of the Blessed Virgin “Miss Lafferty 223 West Cherry town. Miss ing, She Mary is is survived by one sister, Mrs. John Bresjin, and one brother, Daniel Lafferty, of survived by a number of nieces and nephews. is Street also Breslin, a teacher in the Jardin Street School Build- a niece.” THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY 17 Enola B. Guie has retired from teaching, and at 61 1 Swede Street, Norristown, Pa. of the Class of ’81, is Her sister, is now living Claudia, also teaching English in the Norristown High School. Annie Weir is living in Plymouth, Pa., after having retired from teaching. 1882. Rev. E. J. Moore, D. Saloon League of Ohio. D., Superintendent of is He was the Anti- a speaker on the program of the 24th national convention of the Anti-Saloon League of America, which was held in Detroit January 15 to 19. 1884. B. Isabel Bertels lives at 1 7 West Rose Street, Cumber- land Apartments, Wilkes-Barre, Pa. S. Ella Young Maggie lives in Millville, Pa. Rogan (Mrs. J. F. Scanlon) is Matron of the Laurytown, Pa., and her husband is the Steward Mr. and Mrs. Scanlon have ten childof the same institution. ren: Marcella, a teacher; Arthur, Civil Engineer at Bryn Mawr College; Mary, a nurse; Clare, a nurse; Jack, a pharmacist; Frances, a teacher; Alice, a nurse; Joe, a law student at Fordham College; Margaret, a teacher; and Ruth, also a teacher. District Home E. at THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY 18 1890. ATTENTION, CLASS OF We of 1 of the every other Keep member of the class, as well as the under- you at the Class Reunion Commencement festivities this year. matter in mind, make your preparations ac- the the cordingly, make of the Class Bloomsburg State Normal School that signed, will be looking for during member desire to remind each 890 ’90 and do not fail to be present ; help to the occasion an outstanding one. JOHN ADAMS, K. President. 4 Fred W. Magrady, of Mount Carmel, has announced his candidacy for re-election as Representative to Congress from the 1 Mr. Magrady has already servHouse of Representatives. 7th District of Pennsylvania. ed three terms in the Rev. Foster U. Gift of Instruction at the Training School, in is now Pastor as well as Superintendent Deaconess Lutheran Baltimore, Md. His Motherhouse address is and 2500 W. North Avenue. 1891. Mark Creasy, principal of the High School at Chestertown, Maryland, died suddenly at his home on Sunday, January 2. Mr. Creasy was born in Mifflin Township, Columbia County. He taught for twenty-two years and for the past fifteen years 1 has been connected with the institution ing at the time of his death. brother, and five sisters. He is in which he was serv- survived by his wife, one THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY 19 1895. Harriet G. Smink died December 3 at her home in Shamoin the Schomakin schools for the 1 , She had been a teacher kin. past thirty-four years. 1899. Gertrude Hewitt Hopkins Somerville, N. J. 130 West lives at Cliff Street, Mrs. Hopkins has just renewed her subscrip- tion to the Quarterly for another five years. lives at 149 St. James J. N. Hake) Mrs. Hake has for Apartment 26, Atlantic City, N. J. the past five years been teaching in the sixth grade in the Atlan- Anna Sandoe (Mrs. Place, City schools. tic 1900. D. L. Bloomsburg Isaiah Krum, & Railroad, died at the Bloomsburg Hospital Saturday W. ticket agent at the Death was due morning, January 18. seases. He had been ill since the first office of the to a complication of di- of December. Mr. Krum employ of the D. L. & W. Railroad for twentysurvived by his wife and four children. Funeral services were held at his late home Tuesday, January 2 with burial at the New Rosemont Cemetery. had been in four years. 1 the He was , Prof. Ziba R. Howell, Supervising Principal of the Schools of Kingston Township, Luzerne County, the ell 7, February 15, at died Mary Packer Hospital, Sunbury, of pneumonia. Mr. Howwas severely injured in an auto accident Tuesday, February while he and a party of others were on their School Directors’ Convention at Harrisburg. tained fractures of both legs, nose fracture, way to the State Mr. Howell sus- and lacerations about the head and face. Mr. Howell was Township schools Supervising Principal of the for three years previous to his death. Kingston He was THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY 20 born at Harris Hill, Trucksville, in He 1881. taught for a few years after graduation from Bloomsburg, and in 1907 was grad- uated from Lafayette College. He held teaching positions in He was Syracuse, N. Y., Perrytown, N. Y., and Orbesoma, Pa. an active candidate for the Schools in Luzerne County. member Mr. Howell was a Grangers, the Odd County Superintendent of of the Dallas Rotary Club, Fellows, and the various bodies He sonic fraternity. office of of the the Ma- survived by his wife and two children. is was held from his late home on Febwas attended by prominent educators from North- His funeral, which ruary 1 8, eastern Pennsylvania. 1902. Bessie Yetter (Mrs. H. B. Eckrot'n), of Danville, died the Bloomsburg Hospital Sunday, February 2, in where she had Death was due to a complication of been a patient for a week. diseases. Mrs. Eckroth had been in ill health for two months prior to her death. She was a member of St. Paul’s M. E. Church, at Danville, and of the Eastern Star Chapter at Danville. She is survived by her husband and one son. 1904. W. Ray Helwig is living in Millbank, Bessie Derr (Mrs. N. S. Sked) South Dakota. lives at 21 East Franklin Street, Pennington, N. J. Ruth T. Turner (Mrs. David G. Martin) lives at 1925 PaAvenue, San Francisco, Cal. Her husband is General Auditor of the Pacific Gas and Electric Company. Harry G. Trathen has been serving as letter carrier in Ashland, Pa., for the past twenty-two years. Sara E. Buddinger is doing secretarial work in Mt. Carmel, Pa. She spent some time in Europe during the summer of cific 1928. Harold C. Cryder is a member of the dental, profession, THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY and practicing at 5 North is Lillian B. Buckalew is Main 21 Street, Pittston, Pa. teaching in the Bloomsburg schools. She has attended several summer sessions at the University of California and at Columbia University. Bessie Goodale (Mrs. Charles Thielmann) lives at 429 31st Street, Woodcliffe-on-the-Hudson, N. J. Emma Hinkley John Saylor) (Mrs. lives 310 Pine at Tamaqua, Pa. Street, Elizabeth Specht is always glad to hear from any of her North Vine Street, Hazleton, is 541 Her address classmates. Pa. 1905. 1000 Elbon Road, chairman of the Child Training Committee of the Welfare Federation of Cleveland, and is a member of the faculty of Cleveland College. She has recently been awarded a nine-month national scholarship in parent education upon recommendation of the National Council of Parent Education of New York. Mrs. Myers will study at the Carrie Clark (Mrs. G. C. Myers) lives at Mrs. Myers Cleveland Heights, Ohio. is University of Cincinnati, the Merrill-Palmer School in Detroit, and the University of Minnesota. The was awarded under a grant of the Spelman Fund for the University of Iowa, scholarship specially qualified leaders in the field of parental education throughout the country. 1908. A. Louise Slocum (Mrs. H. G. Williams) lives at 1024 Main Street, J. Rendham, Pa. Harold Grimes is ing in Danville, Indiana. still loyal to a physician and surgeon and In a recent letter, Bloomsburg and Carrie M. Gray-Hurley to the Class of is 1 is practic- he states that he 908. is another of the loyal daughters of THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY 22 Bloomsburg who have given material evidence of their loyalty by sending in their Alumni Dues for another five years. Mrs. Hurley is doing special work in classes for sub-normal children Her address is 420 Line Street, in the schools of Camden, N. J. Hammonton, N. J. 1909. At the home of Mr. and Mrs. Howard Fisher, of Rupert, Thanksgiving Day, there was solemnized the wedding of Dr. Scott Romain Fisher, of Syracuse, New York, and Miss Margaret The ring ceremony was Synthia Mathews, also of Syracuse. performed at high noon by Rev. W. H. Hartman, of Bloomsburg. Harold L. Moyer, Past Commander of Valley of Bloomsburg Post, American Legion, was recently appointed District Deputy, by the Department Commander. 1911. Ellis Stimpson) lives at 1537 West She has two children, aged nine and five, Pauline Coleman (Mrs. Street, Honesdale, Pa. respectively. Pearle Greene (Brome) lives at Brunswick, A New Jersey. son was born White, of Bloomsburg. J. 309 Harrison Avenue, New She has one November 29, child, a to Mr. boy, aged nine. and Mrs. Herman Mrs. White was formerly Miss Matilda Bush. 1912. Florence Lowrey (Mrs. George Pizer) She has two daughters, and Pa. she is in is living in addition to her Jermyn, home duties, serving as substitute teacher in the Jermyn schools. Frances Westgate (Sheffel) lives in Binghamton, N. Y. THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY 23 Earl Laubach, for several years Principal of the Orangeville Vocational School, has purchased a farm near Benton. expects, for some time He at least, to continue in his present posi- tion. 1913. John Bakeless, Editor of the Living Age, was a recent He gave an intensely interesting account of his visit to the Balkan States last summer, at which time he had an interview with the leader of the revolutionary forces which are trying to secure independence for Mr. Bakeless has the distinction of being the only Macedonia. American journalist who has ever been able to secure an interMichailoff view with Ivan Michailoff, the revolutionary leader. is the leader of the I. M. R. 0., which letters stand for the “Inner Macedonian Revolutionary Organization,” which was founded fifty years ago to fight the Turks, in an effort to free Macedonia It has since then continued to fight the from their despotism. Yugoslav governments which at present control and oppress the same territory. speaker at the assembly of the College. 1915. John H. Shuman, of Bloomsburg, has made formal announcement of his candidacy for the Democratic nomination for Member of the General Assembly. Mr. Shuman was for several years Principal of the Third Street School, in Bloomsburg, but left the teaching profession to enter the real estate and insur- He was elected Bloomsburg Town Council. ance business. last fall as a member of the 1916. Francs G. Scanlon (Mrs. F. J. Gleason) lives at Greenwood Avenue, Lansdowne, Pa. Her husband cal, and is practicing in the above-named city. 274 West is a physi- THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY 24 Helen I. Darrahon ton Junction, N. is teaching in is Principal of the Fisk School at Tren- In addition to her duties as J. Her address the eighth grade. over Street, Trenton, N. is Principal, she 229 J. 1919 . November Elizabeth Miller Lauer died 6, at her Ashland, death being due to an acute heart attack. vived by her husband, East Han- Raymond home She California. Torts in the 1 202 Broadway Arcade He is Law Margaret J. G. Building, Los also giving courses in Constitutional is lo- Angeles, Law and School at Los Angeles. Dyer is teaching in Scranton, Pa. 1921 Ralph sur- Lauer, and a one-year-old son. Gerald Marks, of the law firm of Marks and Lenker, cated at Suite is in Shuman is Dean . of Men at the Thomas Ranken Patton Masonic Institution for Boys at Elizabethtown, Pa. 1923 . Kathryn Gamble and Marjorie Gamble are studying at Bucknell University. Ernestine Hackenberg Institute, is now attending the Moody Bible Chicago. Mrs. Allan 0. Hansen (Madeline Monroe) has resigned her position as instructor in English at the University of Colorado, in order to continue her writing. Mrs. Hansen is living with Mrs. Marjorie Wilner, formerly associated with the Educational Research Bureau at the Bloomsburg State Teachers College. A daughter was born October 29, 1 929, to Mr. and Mrs. THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY Manley J. 25 Mrs. Robbins was formerly Robbins, of Danville. Miss Adeline Rogers. Mr. and Mrs. Robert West are both City, A teaching in Panama Mrs. West was formerly Miss Helen Ike. Panama. daughter was born February 5 to Dr. and Mrs. Roy Nic- odemus of Danville. Dr. and Mrs. Nicodemus recently return- ed to Danville, where Dr. Nicodemus resumed his practice, after having spent several months studying in New York City. Mrs. Nicodemus was formerly Miss Kathryn Townsend, of Bloomsburg. Leah Caswell, of Rummerield, were married bride Saturday evening, October 26, 929. Miss Pratt, of Morrisville, N. Y., 1 teaching in Harrisburg since her now living in Morrisville, N. Y., home Leon the of The bride has been Mr. Pratt graduation. graduate of the Pennsylvania State College. are and Mr. Pa., at the is a Mr. and Mrs. Pratt where Mr. Pratt is the 4-H Club leader. Miss Adelia Jones (Mrs. Windham, Pa. Her husband Franklin is manager Penelton) is living at of a creamery at that place. 1924. Doris M. Morse is teaching schools in White Plains, N. Y. in grade Her address 1 is -B in one of the 48 Park Avenue, White Plains. Frank V. Birch, of Bloomsburg, and Miss Vivian Marie of Upper Sandusky, Ohio, were married at the home of the bride’s parents on Thanksgiving Day. Mr. Birch is a member of the Junior Class at Wittenberg College, Springfield, Ohio. Howey, Patrick Kane has returned to studies for the Bachelor’s Degree. Bloomsburg to complete his THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY 26 A very morning, came pretty wedding was in Saint Cecilia’s solemnized Church, Exeter, Thanksgiving when Mary the bride of Michael Hastings, also of Exeter. has for several years been teacher of mathematics Kelley be- The bride in the Exeter Junior High School. Thomas Roland is Principal Waashington Irving of the School, Scranton, Pa. Grayce Woodring Drums, Pa. Ruth D. Jenkins teaching in the Intermediate Grades in is teaching in the Primary Grades in the is schools of Taylor, Pa. Eva Watters is teaching in Miff linville. Pa. Matilda Mensch is teacher of English in the High School at Espy, Pa. Mildred M. Faatz is Margaret B. Mensch Sara E. Smull is teaching at Forest City, Pa. teaching in Millheim, Pa. is teaching in Danville, Pa. Her address is 3 0 Church Street. 1 Katahryn C. Schuyler Viola M. Kline Pa., is is teaching teaching in in Turbotville, Pa. a rural school near Catawissa, Marion D. Thomas lives at 424 Fourth Avenue, Bethlehem, and is teaching in the schools of that city. Miss Marjorie Sick, of Mehoopany, and Mr. Harry Fasset were married Fasset are at Philadelphia now living in November 8, 1 929. Mr. and Mrs. Albany, N. Y. Mr. and Mrs. Horace Sick are living in Tunkhannock, Pa. Before her marriage, Mrs. Sick was Miss Ella Otten, of Mehoopany. THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY 27 1926. Margaret H. Scanlon is a teacher in Sidwell’s Friends Pri- Her address vate School at Washington, D. C. den Street, Northwest, Lois Sechrist is was married Saturday, December Chester Weaver, of Reedsville, at the parsonage of Lutheran Church, Bloomsburg. at the Fessen- Bloomsburg St. W. 7, to Matthew’s Weaver Since graduation, Mrs. Mr. Weaver taught for two years at Spring Glen, Pa. ployed 4529 Washington. is em- Silk Mill. M. Eleanor Butler is teaching second grade Her home is in Northumberland, Pa. in the Sunbury schools. Ruth Gill is teaching in Blakely, Pa. Her address is 302 First Street. Leora Souder is teacher of fifth grade in Nescopeck, Pa. 1927. Particularly sad occurred at the which Wednesday, Hazleton was the death of Miss Evelyn home of her parents in Harris, Following her January 22, death being due to tuberculosis. graduation at Bloomsburg, Miss Harris taught for a time in the Junior High School at York, Pa., but was obliged to give up her work because of ill health. The following year she felt sufficiently recovered to resume teaching, and was elected to a position in the Berwick schools. Again she was obliged to give up her work, and, for a time, was a patient at the sanatarium at Her condition became worse and she was reWLite Haven. moved to her home. Miss Harris had the distinction of being the first girl to be selected as Ivy Day Orator at Bloomsburg. Miss Announcement was recently made of the engagement of Hope Schalles, of Berwick, and Robert Rosser, of Hicks’ Ferry. Miss Schalles has been teaching in the Berwick schools. Mr. Rosser, a son of Luzerne County Commissioner and Mrs. D. M. Rosser, is a graduate of Cornell University. THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY 28 Nicholas F. Polaneczky address is 2324 N. Mascher is teaching in Philadelphia. His Street. Verna Medley (Mrs. Ralph Davenport) of 578 West Main Plymouth, proved herself to be a mighty daughter of Diana during the hunting season last fall, when she brought down a ten-point buck. It was her first experience at deerhunting, and the first time she had ever handled a rifle. Street, Miss Helen Evangeline Lanning, of Bloomsburg, and Earl M. Deibert, of Riverside, were married at the home of the bride on Saturday, February 15, by the Rev. Harry F. Babcock, pastor of the First Methodist Church of Bloomsburg. Mrs. Deibert has been teaching in the schools of Bristol, Pa. Mr. Deibert attended school in Chicago, and a decorating school in New York. He now has a successful decorating and wall paper business in Riverside. Mr. and Mrs. Deibert are now living in their newlybuilt home at 9 Gearhart Street, Riverside. Esther Welker las is teaching her third year at Hershey, Pa. Hilda Ruggles is teaching third grade Township, Luzerne County, Pa. Rachel j. E. Wolfe is teacher of School at Trenton Junction, N. field Avenue, Trenton, N. J. in the schools of Dal- first grade Her address is in the Fisk 32 North East- J. 1928. Irene Kornell and Harold Davis, both of Scranton, were recently married, and are living in Scranton. Mary Dushanko is teaching in Hazleton. Edna A. Kulick is teaching in Kelayres, Pa. Ebbie M. Carlton is teaching in Courtdale, Pa. Margaret Lewis is teaching in Scranton. ‘Pa., THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY 29 at is teaching in the Primary Grades Her home is in Northumberland. Leona C. Reichenbach is teaching in Northumberland. Louise Baker lives at 222 West Front Street, Berwick, Pa., and is teaching at the Beach Grove School, near Berwick. Geraldine E. Diehl Spruce Hollow, Pa. 1929. Mary Carr is a student at Pennsylvania State College. Elizabeth H. Williams is a librarian in the Scranton Public Library. Margaret Unbewust is teaching in a rural school at Waller, Pa. Claire Brandon is teaching at the Kapp Heights School in Point Township, Northumberland County. Ruth A. Scanlon dress is is teaching at Laurytown, Pa. Her ad- Weatherly, R. D. 2. Mrs. Warren H. Detwhiler, of Philadelphia, widow of a former member of the Normal School faculty, died at her home, Monday, December 9, 1929, after having been ill with pneumonia for a week. Her husband was for many years in charge of the History Department at Bloomsburg. Mrs. Detwhiler is survived by two children, Stanley and Helen. Funeral services at the home, 634 were held Thursday afternoon, December Magnolia Avenue, Germantown. 1 T'e in Prof. 1 , editor wishes to express his apologies for the fact that Bakeless’s interest ng article on Professor Jenkins which appeared in the December number, pages 2 and 3 were revers- ed. Anna Kingman, former Dean of Women at Bloomsnow doing library work in the Massachussetts Institute Miss burg, is of Technology, Cambridge, Massachussetts. THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY 30 A. W. Duy, of Bloomsburg, was appointed a member of the Board of Trustees of the State Teachers’ College at Blooms- burg, to fill the vacanacy left by the death of Dr. R. E. Miller. The appointment was announced December 24, by Governor Fisher. George Dr. during the 80’s, months in P. Ferree, is who was 111., and spends the winter Chelsea, Oklahoma. His brother, Simpson Ferree, located in Artesia, New is an attorney-at-law, and is Mexico. Their father. Prof. member a student at Bloomsburg located in Urbana, J. W. Ferree, was for many years a of the faculty at Bloomsburg. SENIORS PRESENT OPERA One lege years of the most delightful presentations of the present col- was the opera “Chimes of Normandy,” by Planquette, given under the auspices of the Senior Class, Thursday evening, Leading parts were January 16, in the College Auditorium. taken by Helen McCormack, Dorothy Harris, Frona Bingman, Regina Williams, Congetta Pecora, Gertrude Schraeder, Gertrude Furman, Henry Warman, Armand Keller, Fred Berger, Haven Fortner, and Jack Hall. Members of the chorus were the MissBowen, Novak, Shultz, Mary Yetter, Frances Yetter, Decosmo, es Bennage, Riley and Spalone, and Messrs. Richards, MacKenzie, Yost, Roddy, Beagle, Witheridge, Thomas, Edwards and Ferber. The faculty directors were Miss Alma Caldwell, who had charge of the music; Miss Ida Gray, art director; Mrs. Katherine Loose Sutliff, in charge of the dances; Miss Alice Johnston, who directed the dramatics, and E. A. Reams, business manager. : THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY 31 FACULTY DINNER Members of the College Faculty, their wives and husbands, members of the Board of Trustees and their wives, and a number of guests, enjoyed a fine dinner at the College Friday evening, December 20. Guests included Prof, and Mrs. 0. FI. Bake- John Bakeless, Prof, and Mrs. F. H. Jenkins, and Prof, and Dr. Haas showed motion pictures of College activities, which were much enjoyed. less, Mrs. C. H. Albert. NINETEEN COMPLETE Three men and sixteen girls, all WORK students in the two-year work at the close of the first semester. No mid-year commencement was held; the graduates will, courses, completed their therefore, return to take part in the in Commencement Exercises May. The graduates in the course are intermediate : Clare T. Cavanaugh, of Scranton; Marjorie Hemingway, of Scranton; Philip deKarcher, of Bloomsburg; Thelma Kelder, of New Albany; Dorothy M. Keith, of Scranton; Margaret Lavelle, of Scranton; Daniel D. Minor, of Kelayres; Mary Frances Morton, of Berwick; Leo Polniaszek, of Nanticoke; Marion Slack, of Scranton; Marion J. Thomas, of Scranton; Violet Vezo, of Shamokin; and Isabel C. Witkowski, of Scranton. The graduates in the primary course are: Jennie Contoni, of Freeland; Helen McCormac, of Archbald; Mildred Manbeck, of Bloomsburg; Margaret Sredenschek, and Marion G. Young, of Scranton. 1928 LOBBY FUND We further acknowledge payment scriptions since the last issue of the of the following sub- QUARTERLY 32 THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY Mildred Bohn, Margaret D. Keller, Helen Space, Dora Wil- son Risley, Gladys Ammerman, ford, Nicholas Polanesczky. that we may push forward Edith R. Davis, Beatrice San- Please continue the good work, the project. 0. H. BAKELESS. Dr. and Mrs. Francis B. Haas attended the sessions of the American Association of Teachers’ Colleges and the Department of Superintendence of the National Education Association, held at Atlantic City during the week beginning February 23. Vol. 31 No. 3 THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY STATE TEACHERS COLLEGE JUNE, 1930 BLOOMSBURG, PENNSYLVANIA The Alumni Quarterly PUBLISHED BY THE ALUMNI ASSOCIATION OF THE STATE TEACHERS COLLEGE JUNE, 1930 Vol. 31 No. 3 Entered as Second-class Matter, July 1, 1909, at the Post Office at Bloomsburg, Pa., under the Act of July 16, 1894. Published Four Times a Year — - FENSTEMAKER, H. F. F. — - H. JENKINS, ’76 — -- ’12 - - — Editor-in-Chief - Business - — I NEW COLLEGE GYM HOPE OF DR. HAAS IN Manager NEXT BIENNIUM The addition of a building to the college plant each Legislative biennium, is the hope of the Bloomsburg State Teachers’ College, Dr. Francis B. i over 600 graduates Haas, president of the institution, told alumni meeting. ihe building needed next, Dr. Haas said, is a gymnasium with a swTmming pool. This he hopes to see started within the next two years and spoke of the plateau above the new training at the general school building as an ideal place for such a building. The alumni endorsed three projects started last year. They are: The furnishing of an Alumni Trophy room, work on which has already started under the efficient directorship of Prof. 0. H. Bakeless dent; ly ; increasing the scholarship fund to aid stu- and the 100 per with ail The graduating in history, cent, endorsement of the alumni quarter- alumni as subscribers to the publication. class, of 242 members, for the first time joined the association 100 per cent., President Charles THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY 2 John of the class, presenting a check for the memberships to the treasurer, F. H. Jenkins. The meeting opened about 11:15 o’clock with R. Bruce presiding. Former memThey bers of the college faculty were called to the platform. included Prof. 0. H. Bakeless, Prof. F. H. Jenkins, G. Edward Albert, president of the association, Elwell, Jr., Dr. D. J. Waller, Jr., Prof. Charles H. Albert, Jesse Shambaugh, and E. Joe Albertson. Fred W. Diehl, former Y. president of the association, a tee and of the board of member trustees, of its executive commit- and Dr. Haas were also on the platform during the meeting. Prof. W. B. Sutliff, who with E. H. Nelson, audited the books of the treasurer. Prof. F. H. Jenkins, reported a balance He also presented the auditors’ report of on hand of $479.23. the scholarship fund of which D. D. Wright is treasurer. The total amount of the fund is $2,775.26 and 23 students are being given assistance. Prof. Sutliff spoke of the worthiness of the fund and urged contributions so that more students might be aided. Mr. Albert reported that owing to a change in the State law the scholarship fund had been turned over to the Alumni He told of the fine piece of work D. D. Wright, had done concerning the fund, which he declared was Association. treasurer, in better shape than ever before. Alumni Trophy Room, speaking of the furniture now installed in the room which for the comis located in Waller Hall, and outlining the plans pletion of the room to be used by members and the faculty and alumni. He said $800 had been pledged for the room with $340 paid in. The under-graduate class had purchased picThe lobby fund of tures to the amount of $250 in addition. some years ago, put on to furnish the lobbies in the girls’ dormitory, amounted to $486, with some of the pledges yet to be Prof. 0. H. Bakeless gave a fine report of the paid. R. Bruce Albert, class of 1906, when was re-elected president chairman of the nominating committee, recommended on behalf of the committee the re-election Prof. 0. H. Bakeless, THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY of all The other the officers. Presidents, Dr. D. J. Waller, officers re-elected Class of Jr., 3 1867 and were: ViceProf. 0. H. Bakeless, Class of 1879; Treasurer, Prof. F. H. Jenkins, Class of 1876; Secretary, Edward F. Danville, Class of 1909; Mrs. mem- Schuyler, Class of 1924; bers of the Executive Committee: i C. Chairman, W. Funston, Fred W. Diehl, 1885; Class of Miss Harriet Carpenter, Class of 1896; Maurice E. Houck, Berwick, Class of 1910; Daniel 1909 and D. Members institution J. Mahoney, Wilkes-Barre, Class of D. Wright, Class of 1911. and not graduates of the honorary membership in the associa- of the college faculty were elected to tion. upon to speak and was given a standit was most gratifying to look upon the largest assemblage he had ever seen and said it was a token of the splendid spirit of the institution. It was his opinion that every one connected with the institution must be very happy. Dr. Waller’s class of 1867 had a 100 per cent, attendance and the members Dr. Waller and George E. Elwell, of Bloomsburg, were asked to stand and were given an ovation. Dr. Waller ing ovation. I ! 1 I I was called Dr. Waller said Dr. Introduced as the Haas Speaks. man who was always striving make to alumni welcome, Dr. Haas was greeted with a standing ovation by alumni. Dr. Haas said he knew he was facing an audience friendly to the institution and said that by and large an educational institution is merely its graduates. From that point of view an institution guages its success by its graduates. He spoke of his friendships with many of the members of the faculty before coming to Bloomsburg and of the fine cooperation faculty members have given him while president of the local college. He spoke of the purchase within the past two years of a tract of land which gives the institution the finest site of any teachers’ college in the state. He spoke of the state now having 55 acres of land, of which from 25 to 30 acres are now in THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY 4 active campus. He spoke of the new training school building and hoped that the graduates would inspect it. Dr. Haas spoke of the desire to add one building each legislative biennium and said that it was his opinion that the institution due to its co-educational program, needed next a gymnasium with a swimming pool. Work on the building he hopes to see started within two years and spoke of the plateau above the He spoke of which graduates training school as a fine site for such a building. the gratitude the institution has for the way in send associates and friends to the local college. The trphy room. Dr. Haas said, is a fine project. He said that while we do not worship our ancestors it is a fine thing to have them. To his mind the institution has been lacking in memorabilia and a trophy room will perpetuate worthwhile associations and achievements of the past. The alumni loan fund, the in many ways college president thought, was the most splendid thing in a direct practical way that the alumni can do for the students. Mr. Albert introduced then the roll call those seated on the platform, and of classes opened. The Classes Report. was 1874, J. K. Bittenbender, was wonderful to be back. Miss Lorena G. Evans, of New York City, reported for the There were 23 in the class, seven oldest class in reunion, 875. boys and 6 girls. All of the men are dead and of the seven women still in this life four were at the reunion. She spoke of the warm regard the class had for its teachers and of the strong The class subscribed friendships formed while at the school. $1 2.50 to the trophy room fund. The oldest class reporting of Washington, D. C., stating it 1 1 Mrs. Celeste K. Prutzman, of Trucksville, reported for the 880. There were 32 in the class, 6 of whom are still Of those she referred to four as “bachelor girls.” One of the class is still teaching and another, who is instructing men- class of 1 1 living. tally abnormal, she spoke of as “teacher of a nut class.” She THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY 5 spoke of the various occupations of members and said that one man in the class was the rarest of mortals, being an honest real estate $29.00 Lewis l The Nine were back for the reunion. man. scribed to the trophy class sub- room fund. P. Bierly, of Pittston, reported three members back. He had taught The class of 58 has become widely scattered. member of the class was a teacher 43 44 years and another years. He pledged his class to do its full share to the trophy room fund. Rev. J. K. Adams, of Bloomsburg, reported 22 members present of the class of 890. There were 77 in the class and have passed away. There were four ministers in the class, Some are still teaching. Action on the trophy room fund was pledged for later in the day. Mrs. Clementine Herman, a former member of the faculty, was introduced. William E. James, of Mahanoy City, reported 9 members of the class of 895 back. There were 45 members of the class. Some are still in the teaching profession and he pledged 1 1 j 1 1 give his class to 1 its full share to the trophy fund. Edward Klingaman, of Dover, reported 34 of his class of 1900 back. There have been 34 deaths in the class and 81 of the 203 members have married. He claimed its girls Rev. I were still J. the best looking without cosmetics of any class ever graduated and said members of the class He promised trophy room fund. every occupation except bootlegging. - would hear from them on the that were engaged in the college Ezra B. Gruver, of Lewistown, reported that there were 37 of the class of 1905 present and they pledged $100 trophy room fund. to the Mr. Skwier reported for the class of 1910 40 members back. He reported $40.00 in cash for the fund and said the class hoped to give $150 more. with Cape May Court House, N. J., said were 31 of the class of 1915 back and said that a morning huddle had produced $50.00 for the trophy room fund and that more was expected during the afternoon. Dr. Millard Cryder, of there Mrs. L. R. Gruver, of the class of 1920, reported 20 mem- THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY 6 bers back and a pledge of $100. wick, reported $26.00 in 30 of the class of Miss 1 Maryan 925 back. of Ber- Those back gave cash to the trophy fund and pledged $4.00. said 100 members They pledged their share to- Nicholas Polaneczky, of Philadelphia, of the class of ward Hart, 1 928 were back. the trophy fund. President Albert spoke of the class of 1930 joining the association five 100 per members cent, for the of the class first time in history. were present. Twenty- President Charles John pledged his class to support all alumni projects and presented a check for the membership dues of his class to the treasurer. Howard F. Fenstemaker, editor of the Quarterly, asked in the publishing of the book and asked that changnames and addresses be promptly reported. Mrs. F. H. Jenkins urged that members continue as subscribers from year cooperation es of to year. R. Bruce Albert spoke of the projects that the alumni association was continuing and the meeting then adjourned for the luncheon. AMPLIFIERS FOR DINING HALL Almost ,000 persons, including this year’s class of 242 members, attended the Alumni Day luncheon in the college dining hall, the number being the largest in the history of this rapidly growing Commencement event. Ernest W. Young, of St. Paul, Minn., a member of the class of 1880, and for over 30 years a pension lawyer in the employ of the Federal government, was the speaker and stressed the im1 portant part each individual plays in life. The necessity of shifting chairs in order that all could hear the program was responsible for the development of a fourth It was suggested that amplifiers be placed in alumni project. It is not believed the cost, would be prothe large dining hall. Estimates will be secured by the college and the inhibitive. THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY 7 formation will be turned over to the alumni association. A was marched vice i was served by the college and the serThe classes formed on the campus and delicious luncheon excellent. into the dining hall, the college orchestra furnishing the music while the graduates were assembling. of the luncheon, there i 1 P During the serving was group singing under Miss Harriet M. Moore, with the direction of Howard Fenstemaker at the piano. team had completed an undefeated season by defeating Wyoming Seminary during the morning was greeted with prolonged cheering. 5 to Mr. Young, whose class was in fiftieth year reunion, was introduced by Prof. 0. H. Bakeless and spoke briefly on the Announcement that Bloomsburg’s tennis 1 changes of He fifty years. tremendous power in the world and declared but for the people of the stamp of those seated in the banquet hall, the world would not be worth living That statement, Mr. Young declared, was not in any sense in. said that the people exert a blarney. The problems of dealing with children was taken up by the who said that present Americanization is what we are making it. He said we profit largely by mistakes and spoke of attorney You help your community by what you are, whether you will or not, he told them. Every one is an engineer in life and he said the teacher worthwhile was the one who made the pupils think. In closing mistakes as part of experience. he paid a glowing tribute to Dr. D. J. Waller, Jr. THE 1930 COMMENCEMENT Cheeseman Herrick, President of Girard was commencement exercises held Tuesday morning, May 27. His subject was “The Education of Abraham Lincoln.” He analyzed the various factors which worked together to make Abraham Lincoln the great American that he was. He pointed out that Lincoln’s ancestry was of old New Dr. the speaker at the annual College, THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY 8 England stock, extending back eight generations. The history of the family shows that they all possessed the pioneer spirit, and the migration of the family from generation to generation, from New England south to Virginia and Kentucky, and then to Indiana and Illinois, gave Lincoln a background which made it possible for him to understand the South better than any other man of his time. The speaker further stated that the environ- which Lincoln grew up helped to make his great. Another factor in Lincoln s education was that, though he had little schooling, he had a great education, which grew out of the fact that he did not try to learn too many things, but mastered what he did learn. The exercises began at ten o’clock. The class and faculty, speakers, and trustees, attired in academic costume made an ment in came out of the gymnasium entrance, campus and entered the south entrance of Carver Hall. To the strains of a march played by Alexander’s orchestra, the class entered the auditorium and took the seats assigned to them. They were followed by the faculty, speaker, and trustees, who took seats on the platform. The invocation was offered by Dr. D. J. Waller, Jr. PresAfter ident Haas then introduced the speaker of the morning. Dr. Herrick’s address. Miss Harriet Moore sang “The Spring Song Mrs. J. of the Robin Woman,’’ by Charles Wakefield Cadman. K. Miller was at the piano. impressive picture as they marched down W. ident the B. Sutliff, Haas the Dean last of of Instruction, then presented to Pres- candidates for the degree of Bachelor of The candidates were called to the platin Education. The lists of those form one at a time to receive their degrees. who have completed the various two-year courses were then read, and as each graduate’s name was called, he rose from his seat and remained standing until the entire list had been read. Prof. Nelson, of the Department of Health Education, then handed to Dr. Haas the names of those entitled to athletic The award consists of a gold key and a certificate inawards. dicating the branches of athletics in which the various members Science THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY of the class 9 had participated. The audience remained standing until the class had march- ed out of the auditorium. The following are the 242 students graduated from College at the 1 FOUR YEAR COURSE (Secondary Field) Bitler, Luther W., Mainville. Dew, Robert S., Nanticoke. Edmunds, Llewellyn, Nanticoke. Erwin, Anna E., Bloomsburg. Fleming, Kathryn L., Pittston. Fleming, Loretta A., Pittston. Follmer, Winifred, Bloomsburg. | ’ I the 930 Commencement Taylor, Lydia M., Dushore. Wadas, Charles J., Alden Station. Yeager, Hazel V., Catawissa. Yeager, William B., Jr., Dallas. (Elementary Field) Bone, Margaretta M., Kingston. Hoffman, Karleen M., Bloomsburg. Oswald, Margaret L., Scranton. TWO YEAR COURSE Foote, Dorothy M., Bloomsburg. Fortner, Haven W., Bloomsburg. Fritz, Jasper M., Catawissa. Group Ruch, Clarence A., Berwick. Sanders, Hazel M., Benton. Schuyler, Thursabert, Bloomsburg. Sharpless, Myra S., Bloomsburg. Smith, Delmar, Berwick. Stiner, Cyril W., Orangeville. Swartz, Margaret I., Millville. Feister, (Primary Grades 1, 2, 3) I Astleford, Katie F., Hazleton. Audelevicz, Stacia P., Plymouth. Frymire, Richard D., Bloomsburg. Baker, Florence E., Tunkhannock. Beach, Helen M., Shamokin. Gould, Gilbert, Alden Station. Bennage, Ruth L., Milton. Hidlay, Harold H., Espy. Bernatonis, Anna E., Shenandoah. Hodges, Raymond T., Scranton. Bingman, Ferona H., Beavertown. Holuba, Josephine M., Berwick. Bowen, Rachael M., Taylor. John, Charles A., Catawissa. Boyle, Aurelia C., Freeland. Jones, Elfred H., Nanticoke. Branigan, Catherine A., Ebervale. Kalweit, Albert C., Nanticoke. Brobst, Dorothy G., Berwick. Keller, Armond G., Bloomsburg. Brunner, Edith M., Harrisburg. Knoll, Norma J., Nanticoke. Bubb, Frances H., Berwick. Krafchik, Joseph T., Glen Lyon. Carpenter, Mary E., Hazleton. Kraynack, Alex. J., Plymouth. Ceppa, Amelia L., Nanticoke. Michael, Arthur L., Berwick. Conahan, Margaret R., Beaver Miller, Earle R., Bloomsburg. Brook. Nelson, Marie F., Catawissa. Contini, Jennie A., Freeland. O’Connell, Maudrue, Ashley. Pennington, Warren E., Blooms- Cook, Jessie E., Hazleton. Cott, Helen C., Old Forge. burg. Davis, Margaret E., Kingston. Reese, Lillian N. F., Freeland. Richards, Edgar E., Alden Station. Dwyer, Eleanor M., Hazleton. Lorene C., Berwick. Fenwick, Estella B., Scranton. Foust, Cora M., Danville. Fowler, Phyllis M., Berwick. Gallagher, Mary L., Lost Creek. Gavey, Gertrude R., Glen Lyon. Girton, Beatrice E., Bloomsburg. THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY 10 Gorrey, Dorothy M., Bloomsburg. Harris, Dorothy M., Old Forge. Hileman, Dorothy E., Bloomsburg. Hull, Margaret M., Smethport. Isenberg, Anna E., Sunbury. Jenkins, Evelyn, Scranton. Johnson, Mary D., Freeland. Jones, Florence M., Milton. Jones, Gladys E., Scranton. Jones, Kathryn R., Moosic. Keating, Bessie, Edwardsville. Lewis, Ruth M., Kingston. Lindeman, Mary A,, Milnesville. McCormac, Helen F., Archbald. MacKinder, Adeline R., Nanticoke. Mackie, Helen E., Scranton. Manbeck, Mildred R., Bloomsburg. Matelski, Florence T., Plymouth. Miller, Louisa A., Jermyn. Morgan, Sara R., Nanticoke. Morgis, Anna H., Glen Lyon. (Group II Int. Grades 4, 5, 6) Albright, Sarah R., Newberry. Baskin, Vivian M., Drifton. Beishline, Florence I., Bloomsburg. Bogle, Florence I., Milton. Bond, Helen D., Sunbury. Boylan, Mary M., Locust Gap. Bradley, Mary E., Centralia. Brehm, Lucile J., Scranton. Carr, Grayce R., W. Hazleton. Cavanaugh, Clare T., Scranton. Chehansky, Anna, Peckville. Chudzinski, Helen W., Forest City. Clark, Gladys L., Tunkhannock. Cruickshank, mokin. Virginia E., Sha- Culp, Alda E., Mifflinburg. DeCosmo, Margaret L., Hazleton. DeFort, Teresa M., Pittston. DeKarcher, Phillip C., Starrucca. Deising, Dorothy K., Scranton. Donahoe, Sarah M., Lost Creek. Dushanko, Frank Jr., Jeddo. Morris, Elma L., Edwardsville. O’Donnell, Clare M., McAdoo. Dymond, Vivian J., Dallas. Phillips, Olive N. Forty Fort. Edwards, Elizabeth M., EdwardsReagan, Mary R., Lost Creek. ville. Reichard, Grace E., Milton. Robbins, Catherine, Edwardsville. Edwards, Miriam, Benton. Erwin, Dorothy H., Bloomsburg. Rood, Myrtilla E., Laketon. Farrow, Elvira B., Peckville. Rowe, Minnie J., Nanticoke. Fetterman, Alva J. Tamaqua. Samuels, Betty M., Kingston. Forsythe, Miriam R., Lewistown. Schild, Magdalene, Taylor. Foulds, Alice B., Trevorton. Sharpless, Mary A., Catawissa. Smith, Mary M., Lattimer Mines. Furman, Gertrude G., Scranton. Gearhart, Mabel R., Sunbury. Snyder, Helen E., Sunbury. Sredenschek, Margaret J., Forest Gentile, Antoinette J., Pittston. Gibbons, City. Stanton, Mae E., Nicholson. Starick, Ruth I., Sunbury. Vandermark, Ruth, Nanticoke. Vollrath, Catherine E., coke. Mary Northumber- C., land. Grow, Belle F., Montrose. Haen, Dorothy W. Nanti- Haynes, Nancy I., W. Hazleton. R., Wilkes-Barre. T., Scran- Hemingway, Marjorie ton. Williams, Jane R., Edwardsville. Wilson, Dorothy P., Bolivar, N. Y. Houser, Jennie T., Ringtown. Witkowski, Elizabeth E., Nanti- Kapp, Irma C., Bloomsburg. Keeler, Lucy M., Bloomsburg. coke. Keith, Dorothy M.,. Scranton. Wolf, Hilda R., Shamokin. Kelder, Thelma C., New Albany. Young, Marion G., Scranton. I THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY 11 Klischer, Myrtle E. A., Wilburton. Thomas, Marion Krebs, Ruth J., Northumberland. Kupstas, Veronica, Wilkes-Barre. Lavelle, Margaret P., Scranton. Lavelle, Sally M., Centralia. Lord, Grace A., Wilkes-Barre. Welker, Dorothy Macur, Eugene J., Glen Lyon. Miller, Isabella H., Catawissa. Minor, Daniel D., Kelayres. Morgan, Geraldine F., Trevorton. Morgan, Helen M., Danville. Morton, Mary F., Berwick. J., Scranton. Vezo, Violet V., Shamokin. Wagner, Mildred A., Selinsgrove. Weidner, Georgiena L., Trucks- ville. C., Milton. Welliver, Dorothy V., Milton. Welliver, Sara A., Bloomsburg. White, Mary E., Berwick. Williams, Elizabeth M., Peckville. Williams, Mary E., Kingston. Williams, Regina M., Wilkes- Barre. Witkoski, Isabelle C., Scranton. Wojcik, Eva J., Forest City. Yeager, Ruth A., Hazleton. Yetter, Frances, Phillipsburg, N. J. ton. Yetter, Mary, Phillipsburg, N. J. Petroff, Julia, Berwick. York, Janette M., Peckville. Phillips, Mary L., Chinchilla. Young, Ethelda C., Berwick. Polnasik, Leo A., Sheatown. Ransavage, Genevieve M., King- Zebrowski, Lottie M., Kingston. Zehner, Mary A., Sugarloaf. ston. Zimmerman, Katherine M., NurRees, Edith L., Peckville. emberg. Reese, Muriel E., Audenried. Reilly, Catherine D., Plymouth. Group III (Rural Grades 1-8) Richards, Gladys, Shamokin. Biggar, Mabel C., Unityville. Rishel, Mary M., Danville. Davis, Rebecca C., Shumans. Roberts, Charles W., Hazleton. Derr, Wallace, Jerseytown. Roller, Caroline E., Picture Rocks. Dieffenbach, Lavere A., OrangeSchraeder, Gertrude R., W. Hazleville. Myrick, A. Elizabeth, Peckville. Noel, Margaret E., Natalie. Norbert, Genevieve M., Kingston. Novak, Edna E., Scranton. Pecora, Congetta M., W. Hazle- ton. Shenoski, Clara J., Wilkes-Barre. Shultz, Laura M., Kingston. Richard T., Benton. Skladany, Anna E., Larksville. Sibly, Marion E., Scranton. Smith, Sara E., Vicksburg. Snyder, Shirley E., Dallas. Spalone, Margaret R., Hazleton. Stiasny, Mildred M., Scranton. Strausner, Anna C., Danville. Stroud, Mildred W., Sweet Valley. Struck, Margaret F., Larksville. Talbot, Elizabeth L., Shickshinny. Taylor, John D., Wilkes-Barre. Tedesco, Virginia M., Peckville. Slack, Furman, Andrew 0., Northumber- land. Hause, Kathryn V., Lewisburg. Litwhiler, Truman M., Ringtown. McMichael, Hazel R., Stillwater. Mericle, Leatha A., Bloomsburg. Reinbold, Grace V., Nuremberg. Reitz, Jennie L., Leek Hill. Richard, Myrtle L., Elysburg. Schnure, Mary A., Milton. Schooley, Kathryn I., Allenwood. Leona M., Catawissa. Kathryn B., Paxinos. Swank, Orva A., Ringtown. Weaver, Ruth A., Watsontown. Sterling, Stine, Welsh, Myron R., Orangeville. THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY 12 A study of the Class of same these families there 1 930 reveals the fact were eleven mothers, one that from father, thir- and nine brothers who graduated previously from this institution. Which goes to show that they must have been pleased with the work done here. This is true, not only of this class, but all other classes that have gone out from the State ty-three sisters Teachers’ College. MUST BE SERVANT TO BE A LEADER He who cares not to climb the pinnacle of the servant, shall never enjoy the glory of leadership, Dr. Norman of S. Wolf, pastor Matthew Lutheran Church, declared when he delivered St. baccalaureate sermon to the graduating The class and several hundred ed the services which was held members were led the class sional the class. and friends enjoyauditorium. The black caps and gowns, relatives in the college of the class of 242, attired in by their officers, while members of and the audience joined in singing the college proces- into the auditorium hymn “Ancient of Days.” Participants in the service, members of the Board of Trusand members of the faculty followed the class and were seated on the platform during the services as was Dr. D. J. Waltees ler, Jr., president emeritus. Wolf gave the invocation and the assemblage, under Moore, sang the hymn, “His Dr. Francis B. Haas, president of the Majesty and Greatness.” Dr. the direction of Miss Harriet M. college, chose for the Scripture lesson the story reading from St. Matthew 23 The minister in opening : 1 of the talents, 4-46. his sermon said that in looking at youth from the viewpoint of middle age, there was sympathy particularly strong because of the understanding of the require- ments of It life. was the mount of life minister’s desire that the class look out from the during the sermon and endeavor to direct the eye THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY 13 He spoke of his aim as bewidening curves of life. ing to discuss whither the pathways of life were leading. He asked that the mount be considered that of the servant, to see the who cares not to climb the pinnacle of the servant, know the glory of leadership. Dr. Wolf made reference to the Scripture quoting, “If any man will serve me let him take up his cross and follow me” and “Where I am there also declaring he shall never shall my challenge be.” The important questions, the speaker stated, were “Do I know Him? Do I want to know Him? Am I fitted and prepared for the fulfillment of the program which is His?” “Unless we reach the crowning we had better never been He spoke of the Lord as being born,” Dr. Wolf told the class. the greatest firm in the world, one that is never bankrupt, ever powerful. The task tinued. It is of living required the spirit of the servant, he conall that religion is not working but the on us for not making it work, he told the Religion does work when men work and when admitted by burden of proof assemblage. they do not it is lies the deadest thing in the world, Dr. Today we are looking goes unchallenged. at things theoretically In the appeal for service Wolf said. and service there are men and women who are afraid to get under the harness. He said he was an enemy of Socialism because Socialists are afraid of service. In closing the minister told the class “If you want to be crowned you have to take care of every detail of your life. Death is not gloomy to those who walk in the path of the Master.” A quartet from the Bloomsburg Civic Chorus sang “Come To My Heart,” Ambrose. The quartet was composed of Miss Mane Pensyl, Miss Geraldine Waters, Ercil Bidleman and L. P. Gilmore. Dr. ediction. Wolf led in the Lord’s Prayer and pronounced the benThe audience remained standing during the re- cessional of the class. THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY 14 IVY DAY Chilly, biting winds, more suggestive crowd of a colorful game than of the spectacle of a late May day’s mar Monday evening. May 26 the most picturesque of the events of a college commencement Ivy Day. at a football pageantry, failed to — The wind-swept grove where spectators shivered and graduates were thankful for the extra though slight, protection afforded by cap and gown, was again the setting for the program, and its enjoyment was not affected by the untimely collapse of bleachers on which the graduates were seated. Folk dancing provided the color for the evening’s pro- gram, and there were presented the class song and poem, and Day the Ivy oration as well. Leading the march into the grove were the class officers, and 18 girls in white, carrying a chain of evergreens, followed by the long, winding line of gowned figures who received diplomas at the completion of their courses. Dr. Haas, president of the college, read lege catalog — that of 1 869 —some from the first coldeportment of rules for the students of that day, rules that provoked the laughter of another generation 60 years later. friends and relatives of the graduates, them in top coats, braved the evening chill for the program and heard Miss Josephine Holuba, of Berwick, present the Several hundred many Ivy of Day oration. Edgar Richards, of Alden Station, read the class poem, The class song written by Miss Marie Nelson, of Catawissa. concluded that portion of the program. A number of folk dances, in costume, were presented on the pergola, under the direction of Miss Lucy McCammon, by a number of the girls of the graduating class. Their colorful cos- tumes gave a touch of warmth. The Alma Mater followed and the long line of graduates re-formed, marching to the new training school building where the ivy was planted. President John of the Senior class then THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY 15 presented the spade to Arthur McKenzie, president of the Junior class, who responded That concluded the exercises. briefly. Following are the members of the cast the folk dances: who took part in — “Sweet Kate,” English dance Misses Miriam Edwards, Lucy Keeler, Mary White, Sally Smith, Vera Baker, Mary Zaner. “Picadilly,” English dance Misses Edith Bruner, Mary Conahan, Eleanor Dwyer, Mary Wojcik, Mary Gallagher, Bessie Keatmg, Mary E. Williams, Helen Chudzinski, Margaret Noel, — Mary Phillips. “New en, Jessie Cook, May — Misses Ruth Sterrick, Mary Mary Lindeman, Helen Cox, Rachel Bow- Castle,” English dance Smith, Dorothy Harris, Stanton. “Firtur,” Danish dance — Misses Anna Chehansky, Eliza- beth Edwards, Elvira Farrell, Elizabeth Williams, Margaret Spalone, Myrtilla Rood, Dorothy Wilson, Anna Eisenberg. is the class poem, entitled “Hail Spirit of the Tower,” which was written by Miss Marie Nelson, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Nelson, of Catawissa, and read during the exercises by Edgar E. Richards, of Alden Station, president of Following the College Student Council “White and stately stands the tower Guardian of the green, campus and serene. From your noble height You have daily watched Brave young hearts Spirit of the All seeing In their Essay To find Truth’s Way Amid the tumult. We In have looked to you darker hours When despair and doubt Raised a presence ’round about. : THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY 16 We found in you A ray of hope. Your spirit, Noble Tower, Has led us since That first fateful hour We stepped beneath Your glooming portals. We go, on life’s Great Quest, And from its dawn To sunset will be guarded By your sustaining presence.” The Class Song. is the class song which was sung during the exand which was written by Miss Elizabeth M. Williams, of Following ercises Peckville “Goodbye we must be saying We say That we it with regret. should leave old Bloomsburg, Our Alma Mater true. You’ll ever haunt our memories. No matter where we be. Our fondest tributes paying. Oh, Bloomsburg State, to you. “You’ve always guided and helped us In all bygone days. Now we’ll revere and defend you And boast of your deeds. We’ll ever stand united In truth and loyalty, Our fondest tributes paying Oh, Bloomsburg State, to you.” In her Ivy Day oration, in connection with the Ivy ercises Miss Josephine Holuba, of Berwick, Day spoke as follows: ex- THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY Ivy Day 17 Oration. “Classmates, Faculty, Alumni and Friends: we plant the ivy as a symbol of our growing love for our Alma Mater marks another milestone reached in the life of every Senior present. We are standing at As we look the dividing point between two eras in our lives. back over our college life, with its buoyancy, its pleasures, its rivalries and ambitions, its duties and generous friendships, we “This day on which cannot avoid a feeling of sadness, sadness that comes with the thought of parting. “To the outsider, college may mean these walls of brick and stone, these hills and trees, but to us, college embodies Our lives must tell the story. more- an unconscious influence. It is a great debt that we owe our Alma Mater. She has molded our characters and shaped our destinies and only a life of the highest endeavor can repay that debt in full. Without the incollege, fluence of our future growth would be stunted. Just as the beautiful ivy which we plant today needs the sun and rain no matter how rich the soil beneath it, so we need the influence of college, no matter what our heritage. — “This ivy is our May we symbol. in future years say with the poet Then we’ll return, and, seeing it on high, Shall read of life a living history. Strong tendrils and bright foliage above, Below, torn branches and the fading shall We the — leaf. we do. Thus conquer. Thus fail. common branches of one vine arise Thus Sprung from “What is this hill it and nurtured ’neath these that college has given us that skies! will help us to grow with the ivy, to develop ‘strong tendrils and bright foliage above, and leave the torn branches and fading leaves behind?’ “First of all, college has developed in us the power of or- — THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY 18 Those in our profession are continually in conminds that are young and plastic; therefore, if we are to be a guiding influence in their lives, we must have the ability to think, to reason, to decide, and to act and to do it with an open mind. The greatest mark of an educated man is an open mind, the willingness' to accept new truth, no matter from what quarter it may come or how badly it may batter the prejudices of yesterday; the determination to keep growing in tolerance, in wisdom, in patience, in usefulness, up to the very end. It is the ignorant man who knows that he is right he wants by law or force, to punish those who differ with him, and compel all to The educated man knows that progress is accept his views. possible because men do not all think alike; therefore, it is up to the educated man to teach the others what college has taught him tolerance. derly thinking. tact with — ; — ‘Then too, college has given us a love of books, but our duty to keep that love alive. many and they are great, but The gifts of this gift is it is education are outstanding. Litera- and of the moral ture reflects the beauty of the objective world world, and this leads to the highest function of literature; the setting and if ly in up of Our ideals should change with our growth change for the better, we should be constantour libraries we should buy good books and we ideals. they are to debt to — should read them. “And, most of all, college has given us friendships friendships that will endure throughout our entire lives, for the ties are so strong that they will never be broken. ing these friendships, we have developed our In develop- own characters. We We have learned that ‘to have a friend, you must be a have learned that true friendship cannot be forced not come when we friend.’ — whistle or stay when we it will entreat but has cer- tain natural channels. “And college has brought us into contact and women who hold fast to the truth that They have found happiness in to success.’ ‘service last, but for others. with is men the key labor, not for self, THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY “Woodrow Wilson You You will never get will get it 19 ‘Do you want has said: Do you want honor? by serving yourself. Let your slogan only as a servant of mankind.’ it be ‘One for all’ rather than the key to success.” ‘All for distinction? one’ and you too will have CLASS NIGHT A few of the happenings of college remain vivid in the memories of the which will always and become more life class cherished with the passing of years, were dramatized Monday ! May 26, as Bloomsburg State Teachers’ College, class 930, climaxed Senior Day with a Class Night program in the evening, of 1 college auditorium. Scenes that every student knows so well were staged by a couple of score of the class as they “Cases” came in for their made merry last night. usual scoring and the pet hobbies of classmates were also brought into the limelight to the discomfort of the individual And and the delight of the rest. then at the close of the program the class presented to the institution an exceptionally president, Dr. Francis B. Haas. fine portrait of the college was presented by Clarence the institution by Prof. E. H. It Ruch and accepted on behalf of who said that he was sure the picture of the respected college present would ever be an inspiration to those at the institution and to others who would come. Nelson Staged as a class reunion ten years hence, the Class Night program was a rapid moving affair that had many delightful Four students, meeting in the lobby of the institution, features. after an absence of ten years, gave the class prophecy and recalled many of the happenings of college days. During the evening there was a college pep meeting, with in charge, a realistic scene of the girls’ lobby at 10:15 o’clock at night, a page from the kid party of Freshman year and another from the Junior Prom. “Shorty” Edmunds THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY 20 There was a sketch concerning rehearsal for the Junior play “Three Wise Fools” in which members of the cast took part and Seniors provided another fine bit of entertainment with parts of the last college opera “Chimes of Normandy” with solo parts by Miss Dorothy Harris and Armond Keller. Freshman customs were also recalled by a clever sketch and the last of the lighter features of commencement closed with the Alma Mater. SENIOR DANCE members Scores of many of the Senior class of the college of their friends Friday evening. dance which brought mencement program. May and 23, enjoyed the class to a close the social functions of the com- The gymnasium was tastefully decorated in the class coland white and Zimmerman’s Penn-Eastern Orchestra furnished a fine program of music. “Sonny” Parker, an -year-old lad with the orchestra, added a fine feature by singing a number of selections. The patrons and patronesses were President and Mrs. Francis B. Haas, Miss Marguerite Kehr, Dean and Mrs. J. C. Koch, Prof, and Mrs. D. S. Hartline, Prof, and Mrs. E. H. Nelson and Prof, and Mrs. E. A. Reams. The committee in charge of the successful affair was composed of Elfed Jones, Miss Maudrue O’Connell, Armond J. Keller and Robert Dew. ors of green 1 1 President Haas was elected President of the Northeastern District of the meeting held Pennsylvania State Education Association, at the in Bloomsburg in March. A full account of in the March issue of the QUARTERLY. this meeting was given MAY DAY PROGRAM Students of the Training School of the Bloomsburg State THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY 21 3:00 Teachers’ College on the college campus at o’clock Wed- nesday afternoon, May 21, presented a May Day program. “Snow White and Rose Red” which was written by the pupils of the sixth grade with the assistance of Miss Haynes and with the cooperation of Mrs. Squires. May Other poles were used in the entertainment. program were: Minuet, kindergarten; grandmother’s dance, sixth grade; “Oxdansen,” fourth grade; “Liza Jane,” fifth grade; “Sailors’ Hornpipe,” Senior group; “Seven Jumps,” intermediate training school and “Dutch Dance,” “Gathering Peascods,” “Sweet Kate,” “Four Dance,” “Newcastle,” “Old Man” and “Piccadilla,” by the Senior group. Sixteen features of the PROF. HARTLINE HEADS SCIENTISTS Prof. D. S. Hartline, of the Teachers College, president of the Pennsylvania Academy was elected of Science at the clos- ing session of the annual meeting held in Bloomsburg in April. It is a signal honor for the instructor, known among who has for years been Other officers elected were: M. Gress, Harrisburg, vice president; Dr. T. L. Guyton, Harrisburg, secretary; Vernon Haber, State College, assistant secretary; H. W. Thurston, State College, treasurer, and R. W. widely scientists. Dr. E. Stone, Harrisburg, elected and Harrisburg was chosen for the editor. Sixty-eight new members were 1 93 1 meeting. NEWS OF THE ALUMNI We large we are greatly indebted to number members of the Alumni for a owing to lack of space, These items will appear in of personal items which, are unable to print in this issue. September number of the QUARTERLY. There are no doubt a great number of omissions in the lists of those who attended their class reunion. The names are printed as they appeared in the Bloomsburg “Morning Press,” these lists having been obtained in the various rooms where the the THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY 22 Many reunions were held. lists If had been your name this as collected, is not listed as an apology arrived later in the day, and therefore the among after the are not complete. lists those present, please accept the omission has been unavoidable. ; 1875. members of the class of 1875, the oldest in reunion, four of them were back for the 55th year reunion and they had a wonderful day. Members here were Miss LoOf the seven living : rena Evans, Miss New York City; Miss Sade Mary Thomas, Nanticoke; Mrs. F. Bloomsburg; H. Jenkins, Bloomsburg. T. Vanatta, 1878. Nora Hankee (Mrs. John A. MacGuffie) lives in West Pitts- ton. Pa. 1880. There were nine members of the class of 880 back for the year reunion and they had a fine time renewing acquaintOnly 6 of the class of 32 members are ances of school days. still living and the return of more than half of those for the reThose back for the day were Michael union was remarkable. M. Hastie, Nescopeck; Norman N. Smith, Williamsport; Charles A. Ritter, Auburn; Alice H. Fisher, Pottsville; Celeste K. Prutzman, Truckville; Mrs. Ellen Lally, Shenandoah; Bridget A. 1 fifitieth 1 Burns, Shenandoah W. Young, St. ; Horace G. Supplee, Chicago, Ellie T. Golden (Lally) Shenandoah, Pa. C. A. Ritter Company, York City. 111. ; Earnest Paul, Minn. is is an Americanization teacher a representative of the publishers of school and college His home Merrill text-books. is Auburn, Pa. from the ministry and New address N. H. Smith has retired 932 Park Avenue, Charles E. in is living at Williamsport, Pa. 1882. in Mary A. Brugler (Mrs. James H. Mercer) died at her home On March 25, Bloomsburg, Saturday morning, March 29. THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY 23 she suffered a paralytic stroke, from which she never rallied. Mrs. Mercer was born in Frosty Valley January 18, 1862. She Bloomsburg, and was a member of the First Methodist Episcopal Church. She is survivved by her mother, a brother, a sister, two sons, a daughter, and five grandresided most of her life in children. 1885. Three of the members of the class of 885 were back They reported that some of the class of 58 members was still Members back were Anna M. Fox, Millville, N. J.; teaching. Mrs. Boyd lrescott, Berwick, and Louis P. Bierly, of Pittston. Florence J. Cawley is teaching English and Arithmetic in 1 the Junior High School at Elizabethtown, Pa. Anna M. Fox, who retired last year, is now living at 413 West Main one years, Annie Miller Melick lives in after teaching fortyStreet, Millville, N. J. Media, Pa. leader in the activities in her community, as Mrs. Melick may be is a seen by the following list’ of offices which she holds: President of the Delaware County Federation of Women’s Clubs, President of the Women’s Club of Media, Member of the State Tuberculosis Christmas Seal Committee, Vice-Chairman of Press and Publicity of the State Federation of Pennsylvania Women, and ViceRegent of the Delaware County Chapter of the Daughters of the American Revolution. Mrs. Melick has three children. She expects to sail for Europe June 20, where she will spend the summer. 1886. Nolan H. Sanner is a clergyman, and lives at 1250 Peermont Avenue, Donnart, Pittsburgh, Pa. He expects to receive the degree of Doctor of Divinity at Grove City College this year. 1888. Ada Thomas W. Evans) died at her home in Cincinnati, Ohio, on March 12. She was attending a meeting of her chapter of the Eastern Star when the end came. Mrs. Ringler (Mrs. THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY 24 Evans retained her sunny disposition, which so aad endeared her to her friends and classmates. She was very loyal to her Alma Mater, and rarely was absent from a reunion of her class. Her pastor, in speaking of her, said that he had lost a very dear friend as well as a very efficient co-worker in the church. She will be greatly missall through characterized her early ed life life, at the next reunion of her class. Harriet Richardson (Mrs. John Gordon) lives in Norwalk, California. 1889. Mattie Harding has retired from teaching, and ing house for her father and sister in Duluth, is now keep- Minnesota. Miss Harding served as Assistant Principal of the White Haven High School for nine years, and taught in Kingston for eight years. She then went to Duluth, where she taught for ten years, and w as recently retired on a pension. Her sister, Nellie, of the r class of 1 896, is now teaching in Duluth. 1890. The class of 890, with one-third of the living membership back after 40 years, had a real day and had their pictures taken to better preserve memories of the day. The class had 22 1 members present. Jennie D. Kline High School at is head of the English Department Mahanoy in the City, Pa. 1892. Katie Dougher (Mrs. T. E. Fleming) lives in Exeter, Pa. Her twin daughters, Kathryn and Loretta, received Bloomsburg this year. their degrees at 1894. J. is Howard Patterson is located in Philadelphia, where he practicing law, and serving as U. S. Commissioner. dress is 32 South Broad William Buckwalter ton, Pa. His ad- Street. is foreman in the Post Office at Scran- i THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY 1895. For some was the first trip back to the Alma Mater in over a score of years and they were much pleased at the many improvements Those here were: William E. and enlargements they saw. Nine members of the class of 1895 were back. it James, Mahanoy City; Mrs. W. A. E. Brader, Phoenixville F. Schillingman, Turbotville; Mrs. R. Mrs. Benjamin Van ; Mrs. W. Bray, Wilkes- Bar- Joseph Lindsay, Helen F. Carpenter, Bloomsburg; Katherine Cadow, Bloomsburg; Mrs. W. H. Brower, Bloomsburg, and Mrs. Charles S. Kline, Catawissa. Mary Pendergast is teaching in the Camp Curtin Junior re; Freeland; William Sant, f reeland; Mrs. R. Bray, High School, Harrisburg, Pa. Freeland; Her address is 918 North Sixth Street. Nina G. Tague (Mrs. H. A. Frantz) Moorestown, She will sail June 28 for a vacation in Europe, and will spend most of the time at Interlaken, Switzerland. Mrs. Frantz is chairman of the Burlington County Student Loan Fund. lives in N. J. 1896. W. Killam (Etta Thielge) Mrs. L. First Street, E. lives at 1077 Seventy- Brooklyn, N. Y. Gertrude Garrison the Kingston High School. is head of the French Department in She lives at 108 North Vaughn Street, Kingston, Pa. James E. Teple is Special Representative of the Continental Casualty Company, with offices at 277 Broadway, New York. His home address is 22 Sylvan Street, Rutherford, N. J. 1898. Sarah H. Russell grade school in is Principal and Primary teacher in the Watsontown, Pa. 1899. John A. MacGuffie took office January first as Chief Burgess of West Pittston. We are informed that he received the largest number of votes ever given a candidate for that office. ; THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY 26 1900. The class of 1900, a class of 203 members of whom 34 have since passed away, had 23 members back for the 25th year reunion which was held in Noetling Hall. Friendships were renewed and happenings of life at Normal were talked over. Members present were: Rev. J. Edward Klingerman, Dover, Pa.; Mrs. Walter S. Carman, West Pittston, Pa.; Mrs. W. L. Andreas, Kingston; Verda H. Correll, Bath, N. Y. Mrs. William Zimmerman, Hazleton; Mrs. Robert Hartman, Hazleton; Walter H. Jones, Scranton; Frank C. Harris, Bloomsburg, R. D. 3 Carolyn Harman, Hazleton; Mrs. Walter Andrews, Slating; Mrs. M. D. Custer, Hazleton; Mrs. Miles Killmer, Brooklyn, N. Y. Mrs. E. F. Cowell, Wilkes-Barre; Mrs. William C. Wenner, Still; ; water; Mary F. Yetter, Phillipsburg; Winifred Evans, Danville; Bertha Halderman, Shenandoah; Mrs. A. Frank John, Mount Carmel; C. Idella Deitrick, Mount Carmel; Mrs. James Hile, of Catawissa; Raymond B. Tobias, Ludwig, Bloomsburg; Mowery, W. Mount Carmel; Mrs. William Bloomsburg, and Guy A. S. L. Miller, Danville, R. D. 5. C. O’Donnell is an accountant and lives at 2323 North Seventeenth Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Mary F. Adams Yetter is teacher of English and History the Junior High School at Phillipsburg, N. ters, Mary and Frances, class at are members J. in Her twin daugh- of this year’s graduating Bloomsburg. Elizabeth B. Clarke is an instructor in the International Correspondence Schools, Scranton, Pa. Her address is 1519 Gibson Street. 1902. S. Gertrude Rawson Her address ton, Pa. is is Principal of the Louise Larabee has been June 2, Rush School, Scran- 31715 Birney Avenue. teaching at Honolulu, Hawaii. 1930, she received her M. A. degree from the University of Hawaii. THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY 27 1903. Edith Patterson teaching is Junior High School, Newark, N. English in the Robert Treat J. 1904. Alvirda Davenport is teaching in the Junior High School in Plymouth, Pa. Blanche J. Morris (Mrs. Elmer Mast) lives at 211 East North Street, Bethlehem, Pa., and finds her time well occupied with the care of six children. Margaret Seely is teaching in the New York City schools, and lives at 4 Lehigh Street, Hackensack, N. J. Irene Ikeler (Mrs. Donald Sloan) lives at 821 High Street, Mr. and Mrs. Sloan have two children. Williamsport, Pa. 1 Irvin Cogswell is a machinist, employed by the Heath He has pany, Montrose, Pa. fourteen and five, respectively. Daniel L. O’Donnell Bissel Com- three children, aged seventeen, is Company, Trenton, production manager of the MitchelHis address in that city N. J. is 24 Columbia Avenue. John B. Boyer, of Herndon, Pa., has been Assistant County Superintendent of the schools of Northumberland County, Pa., since 1922, and has taught in the summer school of Susquehan- na University since 1925. Womeldorf (Mrs. Abner D. Bentz) lives in York, Pa., where her husband is representative of the International CorMr. and Mrs. Bentz have a son, aged respondence Schools. Effie eleven years. Mrs. Bentz Junior High School in is a member of the faculty of the York. H. MacBean) lives at 159 Balmoral where any member of the class of 1904 will be welcome when visiting in Canada. Mr. and Mrs. MacBean have a daughter, aged eleven. Daisy Andres (Mrs. J. Street, Hamilton, Ontario, 1905. There were 37 members of the class of 1905 back after THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY 28 a quarter of a century and those 25 years that have passed since enough news of classmates to keep all of exchanging information. Those attending were: William J. Farnsworth, Milton, Pa.; Ezra B. Gruver, Lewistown; Sara Milleisen Elwell, Bloomsburg; Gertrude Rowe, Wilkes-Barre; Mary B. Dailey, Wilkes-Barre; Vera Hemingway Housemck, of Bloomsburg; Eshleman Sweeten, of Merchantville, New jersey Katherine Krumm Twogood, of Upper Darby, Pa.; Beatrice Albertson, of Peekskill, New York; Dora Fleckenstine, of Bloomsburg; Elizabeth Mertz Lesher, H. V. Lesher, Claire E. Scholvin, Northumberland; Adelia Mertz BerMary Kirkendall Hagenbuch, Bloomsgen, Harlingen, N. J. Blanche Hartman burg; C. L. Mowrer, Hagerstown, Md. graduation held back busy those ; ; ; Steinle, Scranton; E. C. Steinle, Scranton; Mrs. Charles L. rer, Janet Mowrer, Hagerstown, Md. ; Mow- Clara Bergstresser Fox, Norristown; Grace Roberts Miller, Roberta Miller, Sarah Harris Mary Ormsly, Mary MitAnna Thomas, Edwardsville G. Edward Bloomsburg; Mrs. Norman Wood, Nescopeck; Mrs. Stubbs, Betty M. Stubbs, Wilkes-Barre; chell, N. T. Englehart, Elwell, Jr., Mont. Wilson, ; Millville; Mrs. Paul H. Dildine, Orangeville; Laura Winter Eroh, Hazleton; Bessie K. Grimes, Catawissa; Mr. and Mrs. J. Y. Snambaugh, Harold, Arthur, Walter and Lawrence Shambaugh, of Harrisburg. Jesse Y. Shambach is a member of the Pennsylvania Department of Public Instruction at Harrisburg. Mrs. Shambach was Miss Mary Lowry, of the class of 1910, and a former member of the faculty at Bloomsburg. Mr. and Mrs. Shambach have four boys, aged Street, Camp Gertrude Wilkes-Barre. . Hill, five to fifteen. They live at 2315 Page Pa. Rowe She is Principal of the Franklin Street School, lives at 212 Academy Street. William Jay Farnsworth lives at 552 Cleveland Avenue, He is connected with the Prudential Insurance Milton, Pa. Company. THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY 29 1906 John E. Shambach has been elected Superintendent He will enter on his duties in of the Sunbury City schools. Prof. Shambach Prof. July. is a graduate of the local Teachers’ Col- and was a Principal some years ago of the Millville schools. He is a brother of Jesse Y. Shambach, formerly Superintendent in Berwick, and Miss Mary Shambaugh, formerly an instructor He is the son of Rev. Mr. Shambach, and in the town schools. for two years was instructor in mathematics at the Bloomsburg Normal School. Later he was undergraduate assistant of the Department of Zoology at the University of Michigan for one year; Supervising Principal ofthe high school and grades at Wiconisco for four years teacher of Science in the Moorestown High School, Moorestown, N. J., for three years; elementary school Principal, Scranton, for one year, and Supervising Principal of the Westmont-Upper Loder, joint high school and grade schools at Westmont Borough and Upper Yoder Township for eight years. He comes to Sunbury from Westmont. lege . ; 1907. Helen H. Conner (Mrs. E. R. Victor) lives at 89 Jackson She has three children: Eleanor, who Avenue, Plainfield, N. J. is finishing her Junior year at college; Billy, aged Mildred, aged ten, and six. 1908. J. P. Weinman) states in a renew country agriculturally. All south central part of Idaho, where we live, was irrigated for ago. The Mormons first time less than twenty-five years Stella cent letter: the the Kostenbauder (Mrs. “We are living in a are working hard to win people for their church. Gooding Col- the youngest Methodist college in this section. lege is ally, we are doing all we can to help this school, forward to the day when our daughter er education.” will Mrs. Weinman’s address is Natur- and are looking be ready for a highR. F. D. No. 2, Filer, Idaho. Thomas Francis has been re-elected for another term of THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY 30 as Superintendent four years schools of the $1000 of Lackawanna At the Northeastern Convention of the Pennsylvania State Education Association, Mr. Francis was elected President of the Department of County SupCounty, at an increase of a year. erintendents. Martha James and a party of friends the Tuscania for an extended relatives in Wales, tour of and expects June 13 on She will visit York about the will leave Europe. to return to New end of August. Stella Churm (Mrs. S. C. Wright) lives at 913 South Pop- Allentown, Pa. lar Street, Nellie Bogart lives at Riverside, Pa. Laura Boone spent the summer of 1929 in California. Wesley Sitler lives at 117 North Alexander Street, Los Angeles, California. Mrs. Sitler was Jennie Kline, of the class of 1907. Adda Brandon (Mrs. George S. Westfield) lives at 130 North Dorrance Street, Kingston, Pa. Fred Turek now lives at 3925 Northfield Avenue, Detroit, Mich. Towanaway on Wednesday, May 14, 1930. Mrs. Swartz was formerly Helen Ramsey Hill, daughter of the late William and Catherine Ramsey Hill, of Hazleton. She is survived by her husband and one daughter, Mary Jane and four Mrs. Philip H. Swartz, wife of Dr. P. H. Swartz, of da. Pa., passed brothers, William John ters, E. Hill Mrs. Anna and Chester L. E. Hill, of J. Hill, of Hazleton; Rev. Philadelphia; and Mary Clark and Mrs. Funeral and interment was held of Hazleton. Saturday, J. Hill and Dr. May Hill, 1 Mrs. three sis- H. A. Nettstine, at Towanda on 7. 1909. Joseph C. Kochczynski is practicing medicine in Hazleton, Pa. Fred W. Diehl has been re-elected Superintendent of the schools of Montour County for the fourth consecutive time with- THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY out opposition. Mr. Diehl was first 31 elected Superintendent of 1918, succeeding Charles W. Derr. Under in the supervision of Mr. Diehl the number of teachers who have permanent certificates has increased from 17 per cent, in 1918 Nineteen one room to 90.6 per cent, at the present time. schools have been closed and the work consolidated in Valley and Mahoning Townships. All the rural schools have been improved both in the work being done and also in the buildings, and the work in general throughout the county has been put on the county schools a higher standard. 1910. There were 40 members of the reunion, the class reporting 44 per class of 1910 back cent, present. Some for the of them did not reach the college until time for the general meeting but there were a number on hand for the class reunion which openThose present were: Mrs. Thomas H. Keiser, Mildred Snell Boston, Vivian Laubach, Leila C. Lehman, Berwick Emma M. MacFarlane, Hilda Altmiller Taylor, Cora Frances Lewis, Louella Burdick Smquett, Florence Huebner Buckalew, Annabel Dunkelberger Hilbush, Nora E. Geise, Mrs. Morris Evans, Berwick; Blanche Mertz Bergen, Belle Mead, N. J. Bertha Polley Oakes, Union, R. D. 2, N. Y. Grace Krum Savidge, Turbotviile; Olive Kresge Montanye, Wilkes-Barre; Ida Smith Conrey, Chestnut Hill; Sara Mitterhng, Holidaysburg Kimber A. Hartman, Robert Metz, Harold C. Box, South Canaan and Ralph Wertman, Quakake. ed at nine o’clock. ; ; ; ; M. E. Houck has been re-elected Superintendent of the Berwick public schools for the third successive term. Mr. Houck’c election and the fixing of the salary were by the unanimous vote of the board. A son has been born to Mr. and Mrs. Marion Rice of Bay- onne, N. J. Mrs. Rice was formerly Miss Mildred Deaner, of Mainville. 1912. Harriet Hartman (Mrs. Harold Kline) has, for the past THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY 32 year, been teaching in the Senior High School in Bloomsburg. W. Louise Vetterlein giving private lessons in English to is New York City. left May 23 for a Miss Vetterlein, accompanied by foreigners in her mother, sixty-day tour of Europe. 1913. Donald Baldy, one of Catawissa’s leading business men, died in the Bloomsburg Hospital March 14, 1930. Mr. Baldys’ death came as a great shock to all who knew him and especially so in Catawissa, where he was a prominent figure and active in civic projects. He was born during a leap year, on February 29, and was 34 years of age. He was born and raised in Catawissa, and spent his entire Following his graduation from the Bloomsburg State life there. Normal School in 1913 he entered the mercantile business with his father when the store was located at the corner of Main and Second Streets, Catawissa. He waas then seventeen years of age, and has continued in the business ever since. He was a store, now the R. Baldy Sons’ located at the corner partner in H. of Main and Third Streets, Catawissa. Mr. Baldy is survived by his wife, Mrs. Christine Baldy, and one daughter, Elizabeth Anne, residing on South Third Street, Catawissa his father, Stephen Baldy, residing on North Third Street, Catawissa, and the following sisters and brother: Mrs. W. A. Bachman, of Frankfort, New York; Mrs. G. A. Roddy, of Sharon Hill, and Mrs. Warren S. Sharpless and P. Rupert Baldy, The funeral services were held at his late both of Catawissa. Rev. H. J. Billow, pastor of St. South Third Street. home on Burial was made in the John’s Lutheran Church, officiated. Hillside Cemetery. Margaret Crossley (Mrs. F. Earle Gooding) lives at 334 North Winsor Street, Bound Brook, N. J. Bernard J. Kelley is practicing law in Philadelphia, with offices at 303 Spruce Street. ; 1 1914. Kathryn Merle Erdman is clerk in the Income Tax Unit, at THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY Washington, D. C. Sara Elliott (Mrs. Kenneth and is teaching in L. 33 Cain) lives in Akron, Ohio, the schools of that city. 1915. 1 here were 3 1 members of the class of 1913 back. Mem- bers were on the scene early and remained at the college until when they were undergradThose attending were: Joseph Cherrie, Alde.i Station; Elsie E. Thomas, Mountain Top; Edith M. Saricks, Freeland; Eulah Boone Spiegel, West Pittston; Catherine L. Bitten bender, Lime Ridge; Frances Smith Lewis, Factoryville; Sarah Lischler Menaker, Wilkes-Barre; Helen M. Parks Hutchinson, Tuskegee, Ala.; Esther C. Helfrich, Wilkes-Barre; Martha E Yeager, Hazleton; Dorothy Rice Williams, Hazleton; Lillian Zimmerman, Washington, D. C. Mrs. J. A. Luxtor, Minersvilh;; Martha Baum Moore, Nescopeck; Etta J. Buss Evans, West Nan ticoke; Carolyn E. Klinger, Zechman, Catawissa, R. D. 3; Lois McCloughan Snyder, Catawissa; Ruth E. Pooley, Bloomsburg; Elizabeth Richards, Freeland; Dr. Millard Cryder, Cape Mav late afternoon talking about days uates on the hill. ; Court House, N. J. ; Edith Martin Larson, Laurel Springs, N. J. Ruth L. Koehler, Ethel Watkins Weher, Scranton Ruth Thomas Wanich, Bloomsburg; Kataherine Little Bakeless, New York City; Josephine Duy Hutchison, Bloomsburg; Frances Zarr Post, Forty Fort; Hilda Davis Morgan, Forty Fort; Laura Carey, Ells; worth, Kingston; Adona Piageman, Sewell, R. Pearl Kleckner Miriam LaWall Heller, Wapwal- Sick, Endicott, N. Y. D., N. J. ; ; lopen. Lillian Zimmerman is serving as a Government clerk in Washington, D. C. Her address is 104 M Street, N. W. Sadie M. Crumb was one of the girls selected to attend the London Arms Conference, for secretarial work. The honor was 1 accorded to her for faithful service and efficiency. Miss Crumb served as a yoemanette in the Navy during the war, giving up She is at present attached to the- Burher teaching to enlist. eau of Engineering in Washington, D. C. THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY 34 W. Peageman) can be reached Pearl Kleckner (Mrs. F. Sewell, N. J„ R. F. D. No. 1. Adona Ruth Sick is Librarian in the Union Endicott Her address School, Endicott, N. Y. 1916 Charles F. Schoffstall Street, degree of Master of fall. 1917 Cedar High Lincoln Avenue. 1216 West Laurel to receivve the Arts at Lehigh University this Mrs. Dorothy Miller 212 . lives at He expects Pottsville, Pa. is at . Brower is now living at 1801 East Street, Allentown, Pa. Mary F. McManus is teaching third grade in the schools of Her address is 712 East 6th Street. W. Weaver, of Mountain Top, formerly Elsie Dunlap, has returned to the teaching profession. Mr. Weaver, who was yardmaster of the Jersey Central yards at Penobscot, went to his Eternal Rest August 15, 1929. Mrs. Weaver has Erie, Pa. Mrs. George enrolled in the summer sessions at Pennsylvania State College. Mr. and Mrs. Burrell Swartwood, teaching in (Eva J. Weaver) are the Industrial School For Boys at Kis-Lyn, Pa. 1920 . There were a score of the members of the class of 920 Most of them had been back back for the tenth year reunion. but few times since graduation and they had plenty of interest Those attending were Ruth E. Titman, Bloomsto talk over. burg; Alice Moss, Plymouth; Wilhelmine White Moyer, Bloomsburg; Laura C. Shaffer, Bloomsburg; Alice F. Cocklin, Shickshinny; Fern E. Traugh, Eshleman, Berwick; Grayce Maustellar, Bloomsburg; Margaret Ferree, Oak Hall Station; Marjorie M. Rose, Harrisburg; Lena Kline, Berwick; Ethel Ketrick, M. Elizabeth Petty, Wilkes-Barre; Mrs. Anna Barrow, Catherine Bitting, Ringtown; Evelyn Wagner, Moonfield, W. Va.; Eleanor Clara Griffith, Shamokin; Mrs. James B. Pugh, Edwardsviile C. Montgomery, Hazleton. 1 : ; THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY 35 1922. A Mary Carolyn, was born to Mr. and Mrs. George C. Beckenbaugh, of Philadelphia, on April fourth. Mrs. Beckenbaugh will be remembered by her classmates as Esther I daughter, Welliver. Lillian I [ I : [ Arnold, who has been teaching in Korea, will have June, and will return home. She will and expects to stop on the way to see the Passion Play at Oberammergau. The Rev. and Mrs. Perry L. Smith will take up their residence at Southwest Harbor, Maine, where Mr. Smith has been elected pastor and staff director of a larger parish. Mrs. Smith, before her marriage, was Marion Hart. fulfilled come her contract in via Europe, 1924. Ruth D. Jenkins lor, is a primary teacher in the schools of Tay- Pa. Miss Helen Leutholt and Mr. Lawrence Noakes, of Taylor, were married December North Main Street, Taylor. 1 , 1 928. They are living at 250 Mary Kelley (Mrs. Michael J. Hastings) secretary of the 1924, died March 20, after an illness lasting only a few hours. Mrs. Hastings was married only four months previous class of to her death. 1925. The five year reunion of the class of 1925 was one of much enjoyment to the 32 members who were back. The majority brought news of others and they had a busy time exchanging notes. Attending were: Betty Davison, Scranton; Mrs. Arlie Goodman, Sunbury; Myrtle Wharmly, Plymouth; Elsie Jones, Plymouth; Florence Ryan, Wilkes-Barre; Laura Davis, Scranton; Helen Barrett Baer, Cambra; Gretchen V. Culver, WilkesBarre; Martha Lawson, Shenandoah; Katherine Sieger, Hazleton; Margaret E. Price, Ashland; Mane C. McDonnell, CentralEsther M. Grim, Tower ia; Juel M. Gaughan, Brooklyn, N. Y. City; Ellen Phebey, Wilkes-Barre; Pauline Hassler, Wilkes; THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY 36 Barre; Edith C. Harris, Wilkes-Barre; Pearl Rachel A. Perigo Bolles, Scranton. Juel M. Gaughan is teaching dress in 955 73rd Street, Brooklyn, Marian A. Gower is teaching is Sunbury; Radel, New York Her ad- City. N. Y. first grade the in public Her address is 8 De Windt Street. Miss Gower’s home address is 60 Manhattan Street, Ashley, Pa. Gladys R. Stecker has been teaching in the schools of Carschools of Beacon, N. Y. ney’s Point, N. J., since her graduation. 1926. odist May On Saturday evening. parsonage Orangeville, Pa., Miss Beryl A. Ikeler in the bride of Paul L. Bangs, of County. Miss Ikeler has 1 0, at 10 o’clock, in the Meth- became Greenwood Township, Columbia been a teacher in the Mt. schools and Mr. Bangs has been a successful farmer. Pleasant They will with the bride’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. B. A. Ikeler, of Mt. live Pleasant Township. Announcement is made of the marriage of Miss Arlene E. Sweet and Mr. George H. Mennig, which took place June 15, The couple were attended by 1929, at East Stroudsburg, Pa. The cereMr. and Mrs. James Colman, of East Stroudsburg. mony was performed by the Rev. Alfred Stokes of the First BapAfter June 4, Mr. and Mrs. Mennig will be at home tist Church. at 1715 Sanderson Avenue, Scranton, Pa. During the last four years Miss Sweet had been a teacher in the Lewisburg schools. Mr. Mennig is an engineer for the Bell Telephone Company of Pennsylvania. Mr. and Mrs. Everett Besteder, of Trucksville, have announced the marriage of their daughter, Irene, to William White, The ceremony was performed on March 8, of Whites’ Ferry. They will make 1930, in Towanda by Rev. William W. Lane. their home at Whites’ Ferry. 1927. Announcement has been made ber 7, of last year, at of the wedding on Decem- Orrstown, Pa., of Miss Florence B. Shultz, THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY 37 daughter of Mr. and Mrs. L. G. Shultz, of Millville and Mark I. Fowler, son of Mr. and Mrs. N. W. Fowler, of Espy. The ceremony was performed by Rev. William J. Schultz, of Orrstown, and former pastor of the Espy Lutheran Church. The couple reside at 600 Valley Street, Lewistown. The bride is a graduate of the Bloomsburg High School, 1923, and the Teachers’ College, 1927. She taught for two years at Plymouth and during the past year taught in Millville. Mr. Fowler is a graduate of the Scott Township High School, 1924, and of the local college, 1929, where he received the B. S. degree in education. He is now teaching in Derry Township, Miffin County and at the opening of the Fall term will take up his work as teacher of mathematics and athletic coach at the Yeagertown High School, Mifflin County. Mr. and Mrs. M. T. Shafer are the proud parents of a son, born April 20, 1930. Mrs. Shafer is a member of the class of 927, and her husband was President of the class of 1921. Mr. 1 and Mrs. Shafer’s address A pital, 1 1, is Box 122, Wilkes-Barre, Pa. daughter, Shirley Ruth, was born at the Geisinger Hos- and Mrs. Harry Lindauer, on October Mrs. Lindauer was Miss Sara Seitz. Danville, Pa., to Mr. 1929. 1928 . The class of 928, the youngest class in reunion, had 00 members present and many of these reached the college in time 1 to 1 enjoy the morning reunion held in the gymnasium. Those meeting were: Dorothy H. Gresh, Milton; Mary Blackwell, Scranton; Ebba M. Carlson, Margaret D. Keller, Luzerne; Margaret Lewis, Scranton; Lydia Taylor, Dushore; Nelle L. Daley, Forty Fort; Adelaide Bahr, Scranton; Geraldine E. Diehl, Northumberland; Mrs. Rachel Long Saners, Penn’s Creek; Mrs. Elona Richenbach Epler, Hazel J. Epler, Northumberland; N. F. at the Polaneczky, Freeland; Laird, Mainville; Anna Light Street; Hester L. Mary Alice Laird, Fleetville; Martha H. L. Berninger, Bowman, Dimock; Fay Appleman, Lawrence Creasy. Miff linville Catawissa; Dorothy V. Jones, Pittston; ; Mary N. Williamson, THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY 38 West Pittston; Edith P. Davis, Pittston; Charlotte E. Mears, Bloomsburg; F. A. McHugh, Hazleton; Gladys Dildine, Orangeville; Margaret McComb, Sunbury; Jeanette Hastie, Avoca; Mary Heintzelman, Sunbury. 1929. Martha Laird, who during the past year has been teachin OQ in Vocational High Svhool at Mainville, Pa., was elected President of the Columbia County Young Peoples’ Conference at the meeting held recently in Bloomsburg. ' The fourteenth volume of The Obiter, the annual publica- Bloomsburg State Teachers’ College, attracted much favorable comment. The book is easily one of the best that has ever been published and is dedicated to Prof. D. S. Harthne, Supervisor of the Science Department and for 35 years one of the outstanding members of the faculty of the institution. The dedication is to “one who has proved himself a worthy educator, counsellor and tion of the graduating class of the friend.” Clarence R. Ruch, of Berwick, was the and Jack The asBloomsburg; editor Taylor, of Hanover Township, the business manager. sociate editors were Miss Thursabert Schuyler, Miss Grace Lord, Wilkes-Barre; Eifed Jones, Nanticoke; Miss Ruth Sonner, Honesdale; Miss Sarah Albright, Williamsport; Miss Kathryn Fleming, Exeter; Miss Dorothy Foote, Bloomsburg; Miss Laura Shultz, Kingston and Miss Gertrude Furman, Scranton. The members publication contains photographs of each of the of the class and a list of the activities in 242 which each took part, together with a verse or prose describing them. campus scenes provide one of the book which covers all phases of college life Pencil sketches of tures of the capable and interesting manner. and snap shots of campus activities feain a Photographs of organizations add much to the publication. THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY 39 Francis B. Haas, President of the State Teachers’ College Bloomsburg, and Edward A. Reams, also of the State Teachers’ College, participated in the program at the seventeenth an- at nual Schoolmen’s Week held in Philadelphia from April 2 to 5 under the auspices of the University of Pennsylvania. Mr. Haas presided at a group conference which was con- Houston Hall on the Pennsylvania campus at 1:30 April 2, when “Sources and the Distribution of Revenues For Education” were discussed by Dr. ducted in o’clock Wednesday afternoon, John A. H. Keith, State Superintendent of Public Instruction, in Pennsylvania, and by faculty members from Leland Stanford and Pennsylvania. Mr. Reams was a member of the Advisory Committee for Schoolmen’s Week and presided at a group conference in the Christian Association Auditorium Thursday afternoon, April 3, This conference was devoted to the discusat 4:00 o’clock. sion of “History.” A. Bruce Black, for ment of Penmanship many years the head of the Depart- at the State Teachers’ College and unsuc- Democratic candidate for Representative in the General Assembly from Columbia County in 928, has been appointed court crier by Judge Evans to succeed the late John W. Shuman. Mr. Black took up his duties at the opening of Criminal Court session May 6 and was congratulated by a number of atcessful 1 torneys and others in the court room. Mr. Black was forced to give up his work at the college some years ago because of a gangernous condition which later resulted in the amputation of both of his legs. By grit and determination, he has learned to walk very well on two artificial limbs, using two canes. SUMMER SCHOOL PLANS The annual summer session opens on June 6th, two weeks commencement, and concludes Saturday, 1 following the Spring THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY 40 The July 26th. The fall term opens on Tuesday, September period basis. One period per day with stitute a three semester hour course. Six the normal load for a summer student. credit is seven semester hours a six-day 2. and a halt daily schedule will be organized on an hour week semester will con- hours of A maximum of will be permitted with the special consent will be on collegiate of the president. All of the service may elementary The work basis. Teachers in continue earning credits for the renewal of a partial certificate, or credits for the standard certificate. issuing of initial partial elementary certificates ceased Sep- tember 1, 1927. This is the twelfth annual summer session to Students not living in their homes be held at the institution. live college dormitories. required to in the will be THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY STATE TEACHERS COLLEGE h m US SEPTEMBER, 1930 BLOOMSBLJRG, PENNSYLVANIA $ JOHN WESLEY FERREE The Alumni Quarterly PUBLISHED BY THE ALUMNI ASSOCIATION OF THE STATE TEACHERS COLLEGE SEPTEMBER, 1930 Vol. 31 No. 4 Entered as Second-class Matter, July 1, 1909, at the Post Office at Bloomsburg, Pa., under the Act of July 16, 1894. Published Four Times a Year H. F. FENSTEMAKER, F. H. JENKINS, ’76 ’12 - - Editor-in-Chief Business - Manager JOHN WESLEY FERREE John Wesley Ferree became a member of the faculty of the Bloomsburg Literary Institute in 868. Henry Carver, its first The institution became the Principal, was then in charge. Bloomsburg State Normal School in 1869. Professor Ferree remained an honored and revered member of the faculty for twenty years until age necessitated his retirement from active 1 888. No teacher in the history of the school, more thoroughly identified himself with its scholastic interests and the character development of its pupils than did Professor J. W. Ferree. He was born in Clinton County, Pa., in a little log cabin teaching in 1 about a mile west of Salona, February 2, 1814. His father, George Ferree, of Huguenot stock, had removed from Lancaster County, Pa., early in his life, about 786. His mother’s fam1 THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY 2 ily was of British origin, Hazlett settled in New Jersey about 1 by name, who had migrated and (John Hazlett 700. From here he removed near Sunbury, Pa. Lock Haven, Pa., about 770. Mary Hazdaughter of John, became the wife of George Ferree). Valley, northwest of lett, later settled his family to Nittany 1 Shortly after the birth of John (1814), his father removed where he built and operated a These were the days of no railroads, and flour had to be packed in barrels and transported in flat boats down the Susquehanna river to the markets of the larger centers. This was usually done during the time of the spring floods. to a location south of Mill Hall, flour mill. John’s education began neighborhood of his home. in a little log school-house, in Opportunity for school the going in those days, before the founding of the public schools (1835), was very meager. Often for several years at a time, there was And when no teacher available, hence no school. teacher, too frequently the quality of the teaching deed. The schools were supported by there was a was poor in- subscription, the par- paying a set price, or fee, as tuition per quarter, or term of twelve weeks, amounting to two or three dollars. Each school was a “law unto itself” no supervision; no regular time for beginning or ending the school term; no system of ents, or patrons, — books; no set requirements Whoever came master of “The scholars,” offered to teach the field, as to qualifications of teachers. was usually gladly accepted and beoften to the detriment of his pupils. says Prof. Ferree, in an autobiography written and amusement of his immediate family, “were never surprised if a teacher quenched his thirst from a bottle of whiskey, which he kept by him, or that he took a nap during the school session, because he had too frequently quenchNor were they much disturbed if the teacher took ed his thirst. the whole school, as a precaution, (possibthrashed and rod his much by his potion), lest some pupil might, over ly stimulated as ‘master’ Any location was authority forsooth, question his good enough for a school site; any room or building, good enough for school purposes, whether a log building, used as a for the information THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY 3 sheep fold out of school hours, or perhaps an unoccupied room over a blacksmith shop.” When John was in operating the grist In pair 1829 fourteen years of age, he helped his father mill, his father and operate a flour and wheel wright. as a removed to Bellefonte, in order to mill for James Harris, who had been re- the chief engineer in the construction of the Pennsylvania Canal. Although the lad was now only fifteen years old, during the busy season, when the mill was operated day and night, John took His work consistentire charge of the mill for half the night. ed, not only in grinding wheat into flour, but also in preparing and packing the flour for shipment to the city market. 1830, the father returned to Nittany Valley, The folin the neighborhood. In the fall of and his son hired out to a farmer lowing winter, 1831, he had the opportunity of working for his This school, the best in the valley, board and going to school. was taught by New a Mr. French, who was a native of the state of pronounced this the first real school he had ever attended, under a teacher who really underThe boy was now sixteen years of stood and loved teaching. York. Professor Ferree age. Under this teacher he completed Grammar. studied Kirkham’s His Pike’s Arithmetic, ability and interest in and his work, awakened in the teacher, a deep and sympathetic understanding and interest in this studious and earnest boy. He offered to give the lad extra lessons at night come to the teacher’s although it home for instruction. meant an extra walk if he were willing to This he did gladly, of four miles each evening. One evening after a protracted session of earnest work, Mr. French gave his student quite a shock by saying, “You ought to It seemed, to the inexperienced, prepare for teaching, John.” almost unlettered youth, an impossible goal. How could he, with his meager attainments and opportunities, ever reach a position so exalted as the profession of teaching? Nevertheless, ment of a church in 1834, he taught in Mill Hall. It his first school in the base- was a “subscription” school. : THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY 4 as the public school system did not begin to function as such until 1835. It was a three month’s (12 weeks) term, which was the usual length of term for these neighborhood schools. Between terms the persistent youth followed his trade, that somehow and somewhere he had complet- of plasterer, which ed, during the preceding years. During a part of his first vacahe attended the academy at Bellefonte. Here he studied algebra the first algebra he had ever seen. tion, — autumn 833, he taught his first public school, the township of Lamar, Clinton County, Pa. In the We fathers of 1 here get a glimpse of the had to meet in difficulties establishing the our in educational public school system. memoirs: “I was assigned to the MackOn the morning that the school was to open, I eyville school. found the windows of the school house strongly bolted by the owner of the building and grounds, who declared that no public school teacher should have access to the school house. He said that he did not believe in public schools, and if things went The on in this way, we would soon have a king in America! directors then assigned me to another school in the same district. In many other places in the State, the public school system met Prof. Ferree says in his with violent opposition.” take the liberty of quoting further from his I “In 1836, I began to realize that although at that time life I my own sketch education was too limited, had not yet decided to make teaching my work. “It was my desire for cide to go to Allegheny my knowledge College. This that caused college is me to de- located Meadville, Pa., near the northwestern corner of the state. at As by was compelled to travel I was poorly equipped for At that time the teachers were receivcourse. college a taking per month, for a three month dollars twenty-five ing about source were not very Hence my earnings from that term. Although I was a plasterer by trade, in those days a large. Providence, however, was plasterer’s wages were also small. there stage. were as yet From no railroad, I a financial standpoint, THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY 5 kind to me, and found outside work that enabled my me to continue course.” After leaving college, he continued teaching he was married to Miss Frances Ann Not Herr. Clinton in county, and working at his trade during vacations. until In 1843, 1846 did he finally and permanently abandon his trade, and decide to devote his life entirely to teaching. He was then thirty-two years of age. In 1844, thinking that there were better opportunities for teachers in the South, he, in company with another teacher, journeyed by canal to Pittsburgh, Pa., and from there by steam boat down the Ohio and Mississippi Rivers, to Memphis, Tenn. The change was a disappointment, and, after teaching one term there, he returned to Clinton county. Pa., and taught at Mill Hall. The following year, he decided to go to Portsmouth, Va., and test out professionally another part of the South. Here he remained four years, meeting with delightful and encouraging Toward success. the close of his last term, he was, without knowledge or consent, elected principal of Yates Academy, located about five miles distant from where he was teaching, and at an advance of $400 dollars in salary. He decided not to accept the position owing to his attachment to his school and the community in which he was teaching. The Yates Board of give him up. Trustees was reluctant to He finally consented He taught at Yates two years, which were, to make the change. he says, among the brightest and happiest years of his profes“As money seemed to be no object to that institusional life. tion,” he says, “I was given full power to equip the school to This treatment of me was such, that I felt any extent I saw fit. To me was not only the like a king with unlimited power. school itself a delight, but in the community, I could always feel the glow of the real southern heart.” his 853, he was elected to the position of Higher Methein Dickinson Seminary, Williamsport, These two departments he raised, by earnest work, to the In 1 matics and Natural Science Pa. THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY 6 He was also made vice-principal was of necessity absent from standards of a college course. of the school, and as the principal the school for a large part of the time, thus throwing the responsibilities of administration on Prof. Ferrerr’s shoulders, the became too heavy for one He man. therefore work retained the Higher Mathematics and discontinued teaching the Sciences. During the summer of 1885, while on a short vacation trip to the West, his wife was suddenly taken ill, and died after a woman of rare Christian character, who knew her, devoted to her ome and an She was a brief illness. much beloved by all inspiration to her husband In 1 860 he married in his Miss Diana From dent at Dickinson Seminary. who work. Elliott, this who ad been union resulted a stuthree an attorney-at-law, practicing in Artesia, N. M.; George, a physician at Urbana, 111., and Charles, who died in 899. After teaching fourteen years at the Seminary, he resignchildren, Simpson, is 1 ed his position, in classical and 1867, with the view of founding a private scientific school in Williamsport. 868, he received a call to the He decided to accept this positeacher of Higher Mathematics, at a and tion as vice-principal Later he resumed the teaching of salary of $1200 per year. In the following year, 1 Bloomsburg Literary Institute. He the Natural Sciences. after it became retained his position in this institution the Bloomsburg State Normal School, and con- 888, thus rounding out fifty-five years in He removed, on his retirement, to Minneapolis, his profession. Minn., to give his boys the benefit of the training at the UniverLater he settled at Payneville, Minn., where sity of Minnesota. tinued to teach until he died in 1 1896. His wife survived him until 1918. years of her eighty-six. life at Urbana, 111., She was also buried at Payneville, Professor Ferree was absolute room. While held him very his pupils much in She spent the closing at the age of and died there master Minn. in his own class- respected and honored him, they also awe. He sat at his table in the north- THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY west room of Carver Hall, now room a veritable Jove himself, a combed “a head, hair abundant, ly open with teeth — class filed in called by light, like massive with Pompadour,” mouth slightdrawn to and the suggestion of a smile lingering perhaps a at times and found last la and imposing, figure, just visible, eyes small, gray, slightly exclude the glare of about them E, erect rather portly 7 names, little quizzical, their seats in silence. true it is Then the — as his roll was manner, as though be wasted in that fashion. The class as a whole went to in a hurried, rapid-fire the minutes were too precious to Then the work began in earnest. None were left idle. the board. All were assigned work. One of his former algebra pupils still tells, with a thrill of awe in her tone, of being sent to the board, and in rapid artillery fashion, having the following problem shot at her: “write a-x ax (spelled out and pronounced axe), plus 2ab-ab, etc. SimAll with an incisiveness of tone, and rapplify and explain.” idity that made it student could not be slow or day-dreaming must be on the to the work feel that in A almost impossible to follow the dictation. alert, and highly hand. classes but attentive, giving his best effort Were he otherwise he soon was made he was out of place two pupils were called upon the teaching standing in his Often in that class. to demonstrate with every sense in at the alert, what’s that!” as some dunce blundered, or some to goemetry, same tim “What’s wag , that, attempt- (No time then for nonsense). “Miss H. may leave (pronounced as though spelled live) the room,” uttered in no lamb like tone, and the unfortunate young woman left the room, with the energy that St. Paul evidently had in ed facetiousness. mind, when he said. “This one thing I do.” And the culprit returned not again, until with protestation and even tears, she gave assurance of better things. Sometimes between recitations, for a change and a breath of fresh air, he would walk up and down the hall as classes changed from one room to another, waving his handkerchief from shoulder to shoulder, to remove the chalk dust from his coat, that the too vigorous class work had scattered. Always the THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY 8 poise and dignified presence of a ‘god’’ with a swing, and a vigor which one had to admire. that took in the entire field without an effort, — passing student that failed to “pass in line, He seemed talking.’’ and a remember and a lack for the the set discipline of the eyes before you, erect, and in step — no hewing to the yet always kind, and disposed to to see every thing, firmly enforcing discipline, line, in stride fine figure, ex- unique and clear cut as a cameo, eyes cellent carriage, a face period A mercy. He had a keen sense of humor, as has every successful He could be witty, ironic, or gently sarcastic as ocMany the students who casion required, and yet without hurt. remember the deserved pointed rebuke, the sting of which lastteacher. ed and cured. The special private pet name for the Professor among the boys was “Spookie,” because, forsooth, he had the rather eerie power of seeming very abstract and far away, with eyes almost closed, and yet was very much awake to, and cognisant of, the unobtrusive little fun-loving boys and by-play going on always in a class This quality of the teacher was girls. of in- deed very uncanny and inconvenient to the jolly idler, for, no matter how adroit he aimed to be in putting across his “bright ideas,” or how well he planned his little schemes, he was likely to be exposed at any moment to the vast amusement of his classThis teacher always mates. the trifler. That was all. “How?” lived them. signs. He had He read the knew How too much for the comfort of Echo answers did he do it? with the kind too long. He silently He knew enjoyed the fun. him as a teacher: “The chief cause was not his knowledge, though that was profound, nor his long years of teaching higher mathematbut his sterling character as a man, his knowics and science ledge of human nature, and student psychology his deep symHis character rested upon a broad, deep repathetic nature. His study of the stars and heavenly bodligious foundation. His daily ies, revealed to him with intensity, an infinite God. His son George says of of his success as a teacher ; ; THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY reading of the Bible the Man filled 9 him with the teaching and of ideals of Galilee.” Dr. J. J. Brown, of Bloomsburg, Pa., a student at the Sem1864—7, says: “Professor Ferree was inary during the years of a good teacher, a haps a little warm friend, sympathetic, kind-hearted; per- severe on occasion, as was the manner of schools in But the students respected him, were always loyal those days. with a wholesome awe. They always found him fair, and gracious. He was full of humor, and could be facetious, and even ironic and sarcastic when need arose, among his unruly boys. We liked him; respected him -yes, loved him. We could not help it. He was so sincere and earnest as a teacher; a Christian gentleman always.” to him, kind, — His devoute nature, his familiarity with the English Bible, made al it a rare privelege to hear him lead the evening devotion- service for the students of the dormitory. “Pass me not 0 Gentle Savior” was sung with vigor and enjoyment. reverence and fervor that drove and hearts of He read its hymn His favorite and frequently assigned the Scripture with truths his thoughtless yet sincere home to the a heads and reverent auditors. and language His prayers, too, filled with the very fervor made one reverent in spite of the frivoland buoyancy of youth. One of the old students recalls yet with a thrill, and with uplift, a figure he frequently used in inof the Jewish prophets, ity troducing his prayer, “0 Thou God, Whose center where, and whose circumference is nowhere.” As we those hours today, and ponder them, a part of his daily experience. To many every- is we recall he had made the language and imagery of Ezekiel and Isaiah his own, find these were moments of exaltation memories, stimulating even ies yet. realize that of his old students, and uplift, Incidents, anecdotes, multiply, of these delightful school days, as we I treasured memor- interview the There is danger of becoming proboys and girls of the period. lix. So the memories must be lost to the traditions of the school. John Wesley Ferree was a rare and exceptional teacher for THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY 10 day and generation, and for any day and generation. He impression upon the lives of his boys and girls, and upon his institution. He builded well perhaps better than he knew, because he was a self made man, in the days when opportunity was not waiting on every corner to jostle genius into line, and his left his ; trifle with mediocrity unblushingly. 0. H. BAKELESS. ALUMNI HOME-COMING DAY November A new feature in the life 8. of the college, inaugurated two Home-Coming Day, usually held on the date of the last big home game of the foot-ball season. The letThis will be held this year on Saturday, November 8. the annual Alumni years ago, is ter printed below will Dear Alumni: be self-explanatory: — The Trustees, Faculty, and Student State Teachers College, Bloomsburg, Body of the Pennsylvania, you to attend and participate in the Annual Home-Coming Day festivities on Saturday, November 8, 1930. cordially invites An program is being arranged for 10:30 A. M. the new Training School At the day. The dedicatory address will be will be dedicated. made by tion, Dr. interesting the State Superintendent of Public Instruc- John A. H. Keith. At 2:00 P. M. on Mount Olympus there jwill be one of the best football games of the season when Bloomsburg will meet the strong Shippensburg Teach- THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY 11 Bloomsburg has the best football team that it has had in recent years, so come prepared to see a good game. ers College team. Immediately after the game the gymnasium * will be open for an informal reception and get-to-gether for alumni, parents, and friends of the College, an opand to visit with portunity to see old acquaintances old friends. Dinner 6:00 be served will lobby of Waller Hall. in the we know number who desire sary that room at is absolutely neces: 00 o’clock the to take dinner at the College. evening an informal dance for Alumni and In the 10:00 P. M. sion to all college dances. Men gymnasium from 7:00 to Guest cards are required for admis- card from the Dean It not later than 2 guests will be held in the of dining in the Tickets for the dinner will be on sale o’clock. Please secure your guest offices of the Dean Women of or the before the dance. Kindly pass this invitation along to any of your who may be graduates of Bloomsburg and them to Come Home for the day. friends urge Remember the date, and do not miss Home- Coming Day. Cordially yours, A. Z. Schoch, President, Board of Trustees. Francis B. Haas, President of the College. R. Bruce Albert, President of Alumni Association. Thomas Henry, September President of Student Council. 12, 1930. THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY 12 SUMMER SCHOOL NOTES One of the features of the summer session was a series of four educational conferences conducted by prominent educators in this part of the state. During the first half of the hour, the speaker presented an important educational problem, and the period was devoted to a round table The following was the program of the series: latter half of the sion. discus- — Tuesday, July M. E. Houck, superintendent of the Berwick schools, “The Teaching of Generalized Controls.” 1 . Tuesday, July 8. W. W. Evans, county superintendent of schools, Columbia County, “The One Thing We Teachers Lack.” Tuesday, July of schools, N. E. A. 8. Fred W. Diehl, county superintendent Montour County, “Important Contributions of the Meeting at Columbus, Ohio.” Tuesday, July 15. C. H. Garwood, superintendent of Reading While in Service.” schools, Bloomsburg, “Professional * * * * The Training School had a very successful summer The number of pupils in attendance was the largest that session. the col- lege has ever had. * * * * Dr. Haas was a member of the faculty at the He gave two sion of the University of Michigan. in summer courses, one State Administration, and one in City Administration. ing his absence, W. B. Sutliff , Dean ses- Dur- of Instruction, served as Act- ing President of the College. Prof. E H. Nelson, Director of Health Education, will have a year’s leave of absence this year, studying for his doctor’s degree at and will New York spend the winter University. THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY 13 IMPROVEMENT PROGRAM NOW UNDER WAY Numerous projects of improvements and enlargement of have been going on all summer, and are now nearing completion. The main project is the enlargement of the heating system. The power house is being enlarged by the the physical plant new addition of one boiler, additional machinery, a new stack, Outside underground steam lines, from the and coal bunkers. power house to all buildings on the campus, are being laid. In Carver Hall, the The duit. first electric lighting floor was entirely rewired forming a border to the sky the auditorium has been recircuited to make in con- light in a better distribu- tion of the lighting. Noetling Hall, where the old training school was locat- been entirely rewired. Part of this building is dethe new commercial course, which opened this year. ed, has also voted to The program of replastenng the dormitory rooms and corbegun several years ago, has been carried forward during the summer to the extent that all corridors are now replaslered, and all rooms on third and fourth floors have been comThe plastering in the rooms is a smooth white finish, pleted. and the corridors are finished in white sand. ridors, The Alumni Trophy Room, formerly room K, is undergoing It has been rewired and replastered, and complete renovation. This room will be redecthe steam lines have been regraded. orated, and will be complete in time for Alumni Home-Coming Day in November. The placing of all high tension wires underground has been completed from the edge vault, thus eliminating A paved all of the campus to the transformer poles from the campus. road, constructed ment, has been built from by the State Highway Depart- East Second Street to the rear of THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY 14 North Hail, and the driveway, leading from East Second Street to the side door of Carver Hall, has been paved. A concrete curb has been placed in front of the new train- and the space in the center has been filled with broken stone, which will be covered with chipped stone and oil. ing school in semi-circular form, DR. WALLER NAMED PRESIDENT EMERITUS At a meeting of the board of trustees held ment Week, Dr. D. J. Waller, Jr., was last Commence- officially elected President Emeritus of the College. For several years, Dr. Waller has always been introduced at the College as President Emeritus, worthily bestowed the title and the board has very upon him. was Dr. Waller who took hold of the institution in 1877, was young and struggling, and left it in 890 to become By that time, the State Superintendent of Public Instruction. school had become one of the leading normal schools of the state. He returned to Bloomsburg as Principal in 1906, and It when it 1 920. in that office until his retirement in His is the one personality that has been identified with the institution from its early day to the present, and his participation in Commencement events is always a happy incident for returning Alumni members, especially those who were students here during his continued two terms 1 of office. 1 Paul E. Wirt, of Bloomsburg; Fred W. Diehl, of Danville, and William S. Johnson, of Berwick, have been reappointed trustees of the Teachers College by Governor Fisher. THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY 15 TO THE SUBSCRIBERS OF THE QUARTERLY The QUARTERLY has been self-supporting ever since pubwas resumed in 926, but it has been published on a modest scale because the subscription list would not permit anything more pretentious. We now have eleven hundred and forty subscribers, but we should have at least two thousand to lication make it We we ers; to those 1 a publication of which solicit we shall all the cooperation of these be proud. who are ask you to help increase the subscription who know many members now list subscrib- by talking QUARTERLY. There are Alumni Association who do not know that nothing about the of the QUARTERLY is being published. There are also many who have been subscribers, who have allowed their subscription to lapse. Help us to get them inter- the ested again. Please notify us promptly of any change of address, any deaths, marriages or any other items that graduates of Blooms- burg would like to know. The year begins with the June number. We still have on hand quite a few copies of the June issue, that we can send to who subscription now. be sent to F. H. Jenkins, 216 West Be sure to give your full address 5th Street, Bloomsburg, Pa. and state the class in which you were graduated. Notify us if you do not receive your copies of the QUARTERLY. those will send in their All remittances should F. H. JENKINS, Business Manager. The marriage of Miss Beatrice Fletcher, a former memb- r and Robert F. Ensminger, of Wilkes-Barre, was Miss Fletcher was training teacher in announced recently. fourth grade in 1925 and 1926. Mr. and Mrs. Ensminger are of the faculty, now living in Wilkes-Barre. THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY 16 THE 1930 ENROLLMENT lhe outstanding feature of the enrollment increased number of men — number the largest this of year men is the enrolled the institution since the war. There are this year a total of 75 men, 95 of whom are boarding students and 80 are day North Hall, the men’s dormitory, is no longer large students. enough to accommodate all the men, and consequently a large number are living in homes in the town. in 1 There are 458 women enrolled, which number includes 55 day students. The total number of boarding students, men and women, is 398; the total number of day students is 235. The total enrollment is 633. 303 boarding students and 1 This does not include the pupils in the training school, the School of Music, nor the students enrolled in the Saturday classes for teachers in service, figures for which are not yet available. NEW TRAINING SCHOOL NOW The new training school building IN USE was placed in use for the The building time with the opening of the first semester. will be formally dedicated in connection with Alumni Homefirst Coming Day, November 15. The new buiiding, the first of what is expected to be an extensive building program, is modern in every detail, and is an imposing structure standing on an elevation above the tennis court. The ial first events, the week first was marked by two socwhich was the reception given by the trus- of the College year of and faculty to the teachers of Columbia County, Saturday evening, the trustees, evening, September 5. tees Friday faculty. THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY 17 and College Community Government Association, formal reception and dance for the student body. held an As is in- the cus- tom each year, Freshmen were presented by upperclass sponsors to members of the Board of Trustees and members of the Faculty. A short program preceded the dancing. A short program was arranged by the committee in charge. This consisted of two selections by the College Glee Club, and short addresses by President Haas, and Fred W. Diehl, of the Board of Trustees. 1930 FOOTBALL SCHEDULE — Kutztown, Kutztown. Bloomsburg. — 18— Bloomsburg. 25 — Nov. — Lock Haven, Lock Haven. Nov. 8— Shippensburg, Bloomsburg. Nov. — 27 Sept. Oct. 1 1 at Millersville, at Mansfield, at Oct. Oct. California, at California. at 1 at 15 East Stroudsburg, at East Stroudsburg. THE ALUMNI TROPHY ROOM Will be ber 8. opened for use on “Home Coming Day,” Novem- Watch announcement. Letters are now being buting to the fund. sent out to classes that All subscriptions fund should be in by November mittee be not hindered for funds. are and contributions contrito the commust pay as we go; and we want things right on the grand opening day. Let us hear from you at once. Whatever contributions come in will be credited to the classes to which the contributor belongs, and individual receipts sent as acknowledgment of the funds having been received. 1 0. H. st, that the plans of the We BAKELESS, Custodian. : THE ALUMNI I 1879 Anna E. Her address is Roxby 1 1 1880 Como in Swarthmore, Pa. 2 Cornell Avenue. The present address Street, . Superivsing Principal is . of Ernest W. Young is 2302 Alden Station, St. Paul, Minnesota. Bridget A. Burns is teaching in the J. W. Cooper High School, Shenandoah, Pa. 1882 2531 West 4th Street, Williamsport, Pa., has his home by illness for the past two years. . Frank E. Hill, been confined to Martha Burnette Stiles (Mrs. William H. Brooke) 180 Meigs Street, Rochester, N. Y. lives at 1883 John G. Conner lives at 8 Belmont Circle, Trenton, N. J. He is President of the Conner Millwork Company, of that city. . 1884 428 Walnut . Laura M. Helman lives at Street, Catasaqua, Pa. 1885 Sally Watson is living in Louis B. Bierly lives at Mary C. Sites lives at . Keyport, New Jersey. 925 Exeter Avenue, 1428 North 6th Pittston, Pa. Street, Harrisburg, Pa. Harry 0. Hine is Secretary of the the District of Columbia. states Board of Education of In a recent letter to Mr. Jenkins he THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY 19 will reach you shortly a copy of “CompilLaws Affecting the Public Schools of the District of Columbia, 1804-1929.” The book is marked for the library of the college in the hope that it may have some value to students as it outlines the “There ation of evolution of the public schools of the nation so far as statutes may do The so. s capital, financing of the public schools here by lotteries, in the early days, is of interest. “I admit a personal pride in this contribution to book represents the outcome of many pleasant hours of study and research covering the college, for the a period of three years, in a task that almost wholly devolved on me. “This is sent to you on the assumption that you up on the hill and can give closely identified are still the book such hospitality as it deserves. My visits to Pennsylvania almost invariably include a glimpse at the stately buildings where memories of my assocrun back many iations with stimulating instructors years.” 1886. Pa., Grace A. Leacock lives at 282 N. Maple Avenue, Kingston, is keeping house for her cousins. where she After a period of fifty-two years, spent in actual all but five of which were teaching Jere Reeder, Principal of the Garfield School, Shamokin, retired at the close of the term last June. reached his seventieth birthday in August, and his Reeder Mr. compulsory, therefore in accordance with the retirement was Mr. Reeder has been principal of Pennsylvania School Code. the Garfield Sohcol for the past thirty-three years. Ellen L. Geiser (Seip) lives at Pa. 824 Meixell Street, Easton, THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY 20 N. G. Cool lives at 1 1 2 North 50th Street, West Philadel- phia, Pa. Brown has E. Claire 1887. from teaching, and retired is now liv- ing on Lehigh Street, Truckville, Pa. 1888. William F. Magee is President of the Bethlehem Business College, Wilbur Trust Building, Bethlehem, Pa. After spending two years Adah M. Yetter Clapham is South and Central America, 266 Washington Ave- in now living at nue, Apartment D, Brooklyn, N. Y. 1889. Adelaide ior McKown Hawke High School Marne at is Albertson (Mrs. E. Her address Berwick, Pa. a teacher in the Junior-Sen- Tunkhannock, Pa. Fannie E. Kennard is Elliott Adams) 137 East Sixth lives in is teaching in Street. Meshoppen, Pa. Margaret Stephens Taylor lives at 59 State Street, New Her daughter, Lorena Taylor Perry, is London, Connecticut. a graduate of Connecticut College for Women, and has a young son, Edson Clifton Perry. 1 1890. Mary E. Roberts Wagner is in the dairy business at Shen- andoah, Pa. Susie Mentzer (Mrs. J. Edward Beck) lives in Waynesboro, Pa. ton, Rev. Clark Callendar died June 20, at his home in Scranfor the past eight years he had been pastor of the where He served for thirty-eight Myrtle Street Methodist Church. years in the Wyoming Conference of the Methodist Episcopal Church. He are ministers. is survived by his wife and five sons, all of whom THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY Mary H. Stover, who 21 has retired from teaching, lives in Waynesboro, Pa. Annie M. Elliott lives at 535 Arbutus Street, Germantown, Philadelphia, Pa. Bess J. Holmes (Mrs. A. N. Yost) is living in Bloomsburg. 1891. Annie J. Evans (Mrs. J. William Wall) Carey Street, Plains, Wilkes-Barre, Pa. lives at M6 East Phoebe Shew (Mrs. Mark Creasy) has moved from ChesFourth and Iron Streets, Bloomsburg. tertown, Maryland, to The death of Mr. Creasy, who served for fifteen years as teacher and principal of the Chestertown High School, was noted m the March issue of the QUARTERLY. 1892. Caroline H. Black lives in Newportville, Pa., where she is Principal of the Newportville School. Dr. T. L. Deaver, of Y., 677 Onandaga Street, Syracuse, N. Surgeon-in-Chief at the Onandaga General Hospital. is Ida M. Walter bia County Schools. is Assistant Superintendent of the Colum- Her home is in Catawissa, Pa. 1893. Hervey Smith and Paul Smith, sons of H. Mont Smith, of Bloomsburg, have successfully passed the state bar examinations, which they took last June in Philadelphia. It is probably the first time since the uniform bar examinations have been required in Pennsylvania that brothers have been successful at the same time, and the first time they have taken the examinaThe entrance of these two young men into practice will tions. make the fourth generation of the family to follow the legal profession. May Learn (Mrs. Frank R. Buckalew) has been in Athens, THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY 22 Greece, since September, 1929, with her son Robert, who is Business Secretary of the Near East Relief. She has traveled extensively in Europe, and several years ago, accompanied her husband to Hawaii, when he was an executive with the Near East Relief. Mrs. Buckalew’s home address is 912 Fulare Avenue, Berkeley, California. Miss Minnie Penman, a teacher in the Bloomsburg schools, was severely injured by a fall downstairs at her home during She has recovered to the extent that she will be the summer. able to resume her duties at the opening of the school term. Bridget Flynn died at her home, 3617 Hamilton Street, The body was brought to MaPhiladelphia, on March hanoy City, where interment was made in the Annunciation CeMiss Flynn taught in Mahanoy City until the World metery. She was an able teacher, conscientious and painstaking, War. and was considered one of the most competent teachers in the When the World War history of the schools of Mahanoy City. broke out, she volunteered her services to the government, and was assigned to a responsible position at League Island. After the close of the war, when she was honorably discharged, Miss Flynn was elected a teacher in the Philadelphia schools, and fill27. ed that position with credit Alice Fenner, who until 2029 Highland Street, AllenEurope during the summer. lives at town, Pa., spent two months Minnie Gibbons (Mrs. 1 her death. in W. F. Hosie) lives at 1 382 East 4th Street, Brooklyn, N. Y. Martha Powell Bloomsburg, Pa. is Secretary of the White Milling Company, * Laura A. Romberger (Mrs. John L. Brower) lives in Hern- don, Pa. 1894. Mary L. Frymire (Mrs. Frank E. Kirk) is a teacher in the THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY Junior High School at Milton, Pa. 23 Mrs. Kirk lives in Watson- town. Pa. 160 Louis L. Ansart, Patent Attorney, can be reached at Broadway, New York. Martha Conner is Librarian at the Carnegie Institute of Technology, Pittsburgh, Pa. Euphemia M. Green has retired from teaching, and now owns a gift shop at Englewood, Florida. Nellie ham McDermott) lives at 235 GraHer youngest child, William C. McMaster’s degree from Johns Hopkins Uni- Coffman (Mrs. C. H. Street, Carlisle, Pa. Dermott, received his and versity this year, will teach Allegheny Latin at College, Meadville, Pa., this year. C. Raymond Stecker is 1895. a merchant in Bloomsburg. fore going into business, he taught six terms in Columbia County. M. L. schools of was formerly Nellie M. DeighMr. and Mrs. Stecker have a Mrs. Stecker miller, of the class of daughter Gladys, the Be- 1 908. who was graduated from Bloomsburg Laubach is Head in 1925. of the Department of Industrial Arts at Indiana State Teachers College, Terre Haute, Indiana, a posi- tion which he has held for the past twenty-five years. Anna Sidler (Mrs. P. M. Ikeler) lives in Moselle, Missis- sippi. 1896. W. Arndt) lives at 202 Madison Haven, Pa. After Avenue, Lock the death of her husband four years ago, Mrs. Arndt again entered the teaching profession, and is now teacher of English in grades four, five and six, at the Robb School, in Lock Haven. Florence A. Lins (Mrs. D. Harriet F. Carpenter has resumed her duties at the Bloomsburg High School after a serious illness last spring. THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY 24 Millie Seely 208 Thomas is teaching in She Berwick. lives at East Seventh Street. 1899. Joseph P. Echternach, M. D., has offices at 1207-1208 Medical Arts Building, Walnut Street, at Sitxeenth, Philadelphia, Pa. Warren W. Preston, M. D., is located 32 South Main at Street, Montrose, Pa. 1900 Blanche Letson (Mrs. H. C. MacAmis) is assisting her hus- band, who is Assistant Treasurer and Purchasing Agent at Tusculum College, Greeneville, Tennessee. Mr. and Mrs. MacAmis have one son, who was six years old in July. Josephine M. Cummings is teacher of Edison Junior High School, Harrisburg. is 3632 Brisbane Street, Paxtang. B. Branson Kuhns is Geography in the Her Harrisburg address Secretary of the Milton Trust and Safe Deposit Company, and lives in West Milton, Pa. 1901. Pa. Freda S. Cook is a grade teacher in the schools of Arnold, She lives at 723 Leishman Avenue. 1 Mary G. Belig has charge of Mathematics in the Bookkeeping and Business Senior High School, Bloomsburg, Pa. Edith E. Keller (Mrs. Verus T. Ritter) lives at 356 North Latches Lane, Merion, Pa. 1902. Genevieve L. Buss is teacher of Art in the Thaddeus StevHer address in Wilens Junior High School, Williamsport, Pa. Boulevard. liamsport is 81 Washington Mary Francis Gendall lives at Rockville Centre, N. Y. 333 North Forest Avenue, THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY 1903 William C. DeLong Pa. in the . insurance business in Berwick, Mr. DeLong taught for seventeen years after graduation, and then was engaged His wife ter, is 25 is Anna live at Americanization work in Ida Dreibelbis, of the class of Louise, is in the 1 for six DeLong Mr. and Mrs. eighth grade. years. Their daugh- 908. 1201 West Front Street, Berwick. 1904 . Leona Kester (Mrs. Roland Lawton) Theresa M. Cleveland, Ohio. lives in Millville, Pa. Hammond lives at 2076 East 88th Miss Hammond retired from teaching Street, sixteen years ago. R. L. Jordan, mantown, Pa., is who lives at engaged 56 West Chelton Avenue, Ger- in the optical business. He practices mediX-Ray director at the Nesbitt Memorial Mrs. Howell, who was formerly Jessie M. Boyer, also Hospital. Their two of the class of 904, assists him in his X-Ray work. G. L. Howell lives at Trucksville, Pa. cine at Kingston, and is 1 children are students at Emma Kelminski is Wyoming Seminary. teaching in the schools of Mt. Carmel, Pa. Matilda Black is teaching first grade in the schools of Wil- liamsport, Pa. Nellie Fetherolf (Mrs. C. C. Lesher) lives at 112 North Third Street, Lewisburg, Pa. Minnie V. Fineran (Mrs. P. J. McDonough) lives at 1 78 Pike Street, Carbondale. Blanche Hartzell (Mrs. Harlan Barton) lives at 2 3 West 1 Fourth Street, Bloomsburg, Pa. W. R. Helwig is Assistant Engineer for the Chicago, Milwaukee and St. Paul Railroad, and lives at 709 Pillsbury Ave1 THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY 26 nue, Minneapolis, Minn. Elizabeth Specht (Mrs. William H. Martin) lives at 541 North Vine Street, Hazleton, Pa. Mr. and Mrs. Martin were married September 28, 1929. Emma Hinkley (Mrs. J. P. Saylor) lives in Tamaqua, Pa. 1905 Anna M. Fagan She School. Dr. is lives at . Vice-Principal of 27 East South George Harris Webber, Education and Psychology at the the High Larksville Street, Wilkes-Barre, Pa. Head Department of of the Georgia State College for Wo- men, Milledgeville, Georgia, has recently been commissioned by President Leroy Allen, as Chancellor of the Southeast Region of Pi Gamma Mu, National Social Science Honor Society. This great scholarship society has over a hundred chapters in the various colleges and universities of the country. In addition to its chapter members, there are hundreds of alumni and membersat-Iarge, who include leaders in every important department of Pi Gamma Mu occupies the position in public and private life. field of social science comparable to that of Phi Beta Kappa in the field of literary studies and that of Sigma XI in natural science. Dr. Webber also holds and has held many important positions in church, fraternal, civic and educational organizations. Alice L. Smull Central Grammar is teacher of English and Geography in the School, Danville, Pa. Ezra B. Gruver is in the mercantile business in Lewistown, Pa. Ida Sitler has for ten years been holding the position Professor of Zoology at Hollins College, Hollins, Virginia. the past three years she has been secretary Section of the Virginia years, she has worked Academy in the Entrance Examination Board of Biological For the past two of Science. Biology Division in the State of the of For of New the York. College THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY Mary grade E. Colvin (Mrs. in Clark’s Weldon Systroth) 27 is teaching second Her husband died two years ago. Summit, Pa. Mrs. Systroth has a son, Robert, eleven years of age. 1906. Lu Buddinger (Mrs. Robert Mershon) lives at 901 169th 1 Street, Jamaica, N. Y. Rosa Vollrath (Mrs. E. C. Buckheit) teaches music in Indiana, Pa. Main her Abbie Cantlin (Mrs. Albin Meluskey) Street, Shenandoah, Pa. lives at 206 North Katherine Scanlan (Mrs. John Cummings) died recently at in Detroit. She is survived by her husband and four home children. Marion M. Groff (Mrs. David I. Spangler) lives at 1048 North 4th Street, Reading, Pa. 1907. Mary E. Lillian Weaver (Mrs. Bakeless degeville, Georgia, Wendt who D. F. Evans) lives in Buffalo, N. Y. (Mrs. George H. Webber) of Mill- has finished her term as Worthy Matron of Milledgeville Chapter, No. 272, Order of the Eastern Star, was presented with a handsome Past Worthy Matron’s jewel ai Mrs. Webber has also been a recent meeting of the Chapter. elected a member honored by being of Beta Chapter of Pi Gamma Mu, National Social Science Honor Society, at the Georgia State College for Women. Reba Quick (Mrs. Monroe, Louisiana. Esther A. Wolke is F. H. Lerch) lives at teaching 303 Park Avenue, in Dallas, Pa. Blanche Johns (Mrs. R. Burchard Laurence) Carlton Avenue, Port Washington, N. Y. S. lives at 23 THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY 28 A daughter was born May 9, to Mr. and Mrs. William V. Moyer, of Bloomsburg. Mrs. Moyer, before her marriage, was Miss Wilhelmma White, of Bloomsburg. 1908 Adda Rhodes (Mrs. Arthur . L. Johnson) lives at 724 Wesr Fourth Street, Hazleton, Pa. ior Olive A. Major is teacher of English in the Sulzberger JunHigh School, Philadelphia. She lives at 520 Rogers Avenue, Merchantville, N. J. Mary Southwood is teaching in the schools of Mt. Carmel, Pa. Jennie Yoder (Mrs. Street, Philadelphia, Pa. School and a daughter Her husband mobile Club Pa. is in Edward Foley) lives She has a son who is who is in the at 8134 Hennig a Senior in High second year of Junior High. Director of Publications for the Keystone AutoPhiladelphia. Joseph Shovlin lives at 3731 Spruce Street, Philadelphia, He has two sons and a daughter, now in high school. Joanna Reddall (Mrs. J. M. Watkins) has moved to 1110 Cal. She states that she North Michigan Avenue, Pasadena, would be glad to see any of her classmates who come Pasa- to dena. Rebecca Appleman at the 1 is teaching in Danville, Pa. She lives Blecher Apartments, Danville. Nellie Bogart Sadie L. 7th and Mae She has K lives in Riverside, Pa. Hartman Streets, N. is Industrial Secretary at the Y. W., Washington, D. W. C. A., C. Callender (Mrs. Lloyd Wilson) lives at Kis-Lyn, Pa. five children —one attending high school with the in- coming to Bloomsburg; two attending grade school, and two who have not yet begun to attend school. tention of THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY Helen Seasholtz Miss Seasholtz is is now living at 1 A 5 29 Street, Danville, Pa. a teacher in the Danville schools. Mabel Wilkinson (Mrs. Thomas Walton) Walnut Street, Mt. Carmel, Pa. Florence G. Beddall lives at the lives at Lancaster 1 North Apartments, Ardmore, Pa. 250 Wyoming Avenue, Audubon, William Rarich lives at N. He J. J. is treasurer of Harris H. Grimes, M. D., lives Latta, Inc., Insurance. J. in Danville, 1909 . member Bess Hinckley, a former ty, is Worker Librarian and Personnel Indiana. of the Bloomsburg facul- at the State Hospital for the Insane, Danville, Pa. Irma Jennie Birth School. (Mrs. C. F. Abbott) lives in Espy, Pa. F. Heller is Biology teacher of Miss Birth lives in Scott K. Fisher, M. D., Berwick High 510-512 Keith Build- in the Nescopeck, Pa. is located at ing, Syracuse, N. Y. Carrie E. Van Campen is Supervising Principal of the grade schools at Chinchilla, Pa. Cora M. Major delphia schools. is Supervisor of Handwriting Her address is in the Phila- 6520 Rogers Avenue, Mer- chantville, N. J. 1910 Julia G. Brill at State College. is . Assistant Professor of English Composition Her address is 128 East Nittany Avenue, State College, Pa. S. Tracy Roberts Scranton, Pa. is a teacher in the Technical High School, THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY 30 Bertha Brobst Her address Pa. is is teaching primary grades in the 301 East Fourth Ralph Wertman is in farming near Quakake, Pa. Marie Beach Marr is Manager of the Metaline and Water Company, at Metaiine Falls, Washington. Nora E. Geise is Berwick, Street. teaching Falls Light Junior High School at Nor- in the thumberland, Pa. A B. daughter was born August Sluman, of Smith Hill, 6, 1930, to Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. SiUman Pa. I. now have seven daughters. 1911 J. Frank Dennis is . Director of Manual Arts in the Wilkes- Barre Schools. Mae Chamberlain (Mrs. J. J. Sherman) is Associate Pastor of the Bethany Baptist Church, Scranton, Pa. Mrs. Jennie Tucker Williams is teaching in Wilkes-Barre, Pa. Elsie nock, Pa. Winter (Mrs. Nat. D. Stevens) is living in TunkhanMr. and Mrs. Stevens have a family of five children, the youngest being twins L. May — a boy and a girl, four years old. Steiner (Mrs. George E. Gamble, Jr.) lives at 281 1 North 12th Street, Philadelphia. Ranck) lives at 60 North Ranck Mr. is one of the officials Irene Snyder (Mrs. Dayton L. Front Street, Lewisburg, Pa. of Bucknell University. 1912 Roxie H. Smith and eighth grades in Trucksville. is . doing departmental work in the schools at in the Shavertown, Pa. seventh She lives THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY Mary M. Watts teacher is of the Literature in Her address School, Wilkes-Barre, Pa. 31 Guthrie 901 South Franklin is Street. Bertha Harner (Mrs. Ercell D. Bidleman) lives at 321 Mr. Bidleman, also of the class of Bloomsburg. First Street, 1912, a salesman for Jacob Keller, wholesaler, Bloomsburg. is Lena G. Leitzel (Mrs. C. H. A. Streamer) lives at and W. Knight Avenues, Collinswood, erates the Streamer Pharmacy Ethel McGirk (Mrs. Florence R. ols, May S. E. in Haddon Her husband op- N. J. Collingswood. Eby) (Mrs. Leon S. lives in Ridley Park, Pa. Reynolds) lives in Nich- N. Y. Alfa Stark (Mrs. Robert F. Wilner) is located at Baguio, Mountain Province, Philippine Islands, where she and her husband, the Rev. Robert F. Wilner, 09, are principals of the EasProfessor Jenkins has reter School for Igorot boys and girls. interesting photograph of the school, and the a very ceived ample evidence the fact that Mr. and Mrs. photograph gives of Wilner are doing a fine piece of work. Iris in Ikeler (Mrs. Herbert L. McCord) may be heard her radio extension teaching from Station sponsored by the Moody work has been so room work to an successful that she dress is WMBI, daily Chicago, Her radio was transferred from classschedule this year. Her home ad- Bible Institute, of that city. all-radio 1451 Baltimore Avenue, Chicago. 1913. Elizabeth Sturges is teacher of mathematics in the Thurs- ton Preparatory School, Pittsburgh, Pa. Belrose Avenue, South Luther Hess Espy, Pa. is Hills, engaged Her address is 2956 Pittsburgh. in the coal dredging business at . THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY 32 Mary schools. E. Collins Marie Snyder is teacher of is Her address is grade fifth in the Shamokin 2 4 East Sunbury Street. 1 employed by the state of New Jersey teach and supervise music in the schools of Ocean County. to She was the first one appointed to this position three years ago, when Miss Snyder lives at 26 Water Street, Toms it was created. River. Her sister Shirley, was a member of the class of 1930, the fourth in the family to be graduated from Bloomsburg since 1913. Mary E. Heacock, a teacher in the city schools of Memphis, Tenn., took a two months’ trip to Europe Memphis address is Mae M. Byington is teacher of Social Science Junior High School, Binghamton, N. Avenue, Binghamton. in the New York She Y. Natalie M. Green (Mrs. Arthur Home Making summer. this Her 2879 Catawba Avenue. J. schools. in the lives at East 2 Curran Keach) is teacher of Her address is 63 7 East 21st Street, Brooklyn. Catherine A. Malloy in is the Philadelphia schools. nue, teaching in the Her address is elementary grades 3632 Whitby Ave- West Philadelphia. Ruth F. Nicely (Mrs. H. B. Sterner) lives in Dewart, Pa. Nellie P. Gleason (Mrs. Martin J. and teaching at Clark’s Summit, R. D. Idwal H. Edwards, Captain in White) is keeping house 1 the U. S. Air Service, has been transferred from March Field, California, to Langley Field, With Mrs. Edwards (Katherine Bierman, ’13) and his Virginia. two daughters, he came East on a transport by way of the Panama Canal. Mr. and Mrs. Edwards spent some time in Bloomsburg this summer with Mrs. Bierman’s parents, Dr. and Mrs. Henry Bierman. THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY 33 1914. Sabiila Schobert (Mrs. Earl den Park Manor, Washington, D. Campbell) 310-A Al- Summit Hill lives at C. 1915. Norma Hoag W. (Mrs. R. McCready) lives in Pa. Thomas Elsie E. a is primary teacher at Mountain Top, Pa. Margaret B. Zearfoss (Mrs. Mountain Top, Pa. Crumb Sadie M. Washington, D. William J. is a clerk in Her address C. Richards) Earl F. is the 323 G Cress, M. D., lives at 21 lives in Navy Department at Street, S. E. 1 North 20th Street, Pottsville, Pa. and Dr. Elmer A. Harringwere married June 29, 1929, at the home of the bride’s parents. Mrs. Harrington, before her marriage, was employed in the Radio Department of the Bureau of Mary Brower, ton, of of Herndon, Pa., Washington, D. C., Standards, at Washington. Dr. Harrington is a scientist at the Mr. and Mrs. Harrington are now Bureau of Standards. in Chevy Chase, Maryland. living 1916. at 1 Florence E. Wenner is teaching 50 South Washington Street. Norma L. Hamlin is Lorena E. Thomas Mountain Top, Pa. Emma J. Wilkes-Barre. She lives Postmistress at Falls, Pa. is a primary teacher in the schools Myers is Supervisor of Handwriting Her address is 284 Atlantic Street. G. Harrison Bridgeton, N. in of in 3 THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY 34 Hilda Clark, of Danville, Pa., and Elmer E. of Fairchild, were married December 31, 929. Announcement of the marriage was made May 24, 1930. The ceremony was performed in the historic Presbyterian Church at Gettysburg. It was in this church that President Lincoln worshipped at services held after he delivered his famous Gettysburg address. Milton, 1 Mrs. Fairchild R. D. 2. is the daughter of Mrs. Luella Clark, of Danville, After graduating from Bloomsburg, taught she in Danville and vicinity, and for three years previous to her mar- Northumberland, where she was a popular and Mr. Fairchild is a graduate of Bucknell University, and is a well-known electrical contractor in Milton, riage, taught in successful teacher. where Mr. and Mrs. Fairchild now are living. Kathryn E. Gabbert (Mrs. Charles A. Thomas) South Main Street, Mahanoy City, Pa. lives at 1 1 Earl Tubbs is Division Engineer for the West Penn Powand may be reached at P. 0. Box 499, Greensburg, Pa. 1928. He He has been located in Greensburg since January is married, and has a daughter three years old. W. er Co., 1 Cora G. sport schools. Hill is doing departmental work Her address is in the 2331 West Fourth Mabel M. Anthony (Mrs. George , L. Parsels) William- Street. is teacher of sixth grade in Pleasantville, N. J. R. D. Leidich, Pa., is a member who lives at 33 Crescent president of his class, he has this message to “Be Street, his sure to arrange to be back next year for the 1917 Clarence T. Hodgson York, Pa. His address Earl E. Richards Top, Pa. Tremont, As of the Pennsylvania General Assembly. is is is 1 classmates: 5th reunion.” . Principal of one of the schools 472 in Atlantic Avenue. clerk in a railroad office at Mountain THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY Freda E. Jones, teacher of School, lives at Biology 35 Kingston in the 372 Schuyler Avenue, Kingston, Anna M. Richards (Mrs. W. High Pa. 448 Grove C. Carter) lives at Street, Peckville, Pa. Mary Agnes Warner (Mrs. Davis Smales) lives at R. D. 2, Laceyville, Pa. Her home Margaret Seach is teaching in Toledo, Ohio. is 262 Madison Street, Wilkes-Barre, Pa. address Mary C. C. Kahny (Mrs. C. L. Arnold) may be reached at the Kiski School, Saltsburg, Pa. Erma Porteus, of Berwick, and Paul Brock, of Honesat the home of the bride’s parents, were married July by the Rev. J. H. Ake, Superintendent of the Harrisburg District For the past two years, of the Methodist Episcopal Church. Mrs. Brock was employed as teacher of English in the Berwick Mr. Brock is in the contracting business with his High School. father in Honesdale, where he and Mrs. Brock are now living. Miss dale, 1 1 1918. M. Irene Kerstetter Her address Maine oy is E. 237 West is 1 Richardson teacher of Biology in New York City. 1th Street. is teacher of second grade in Mahan City, Pa. A daughter was born to Mr. and Mrs. David April 28, 1930. Mr. and Mrs. Miller are now B. Miller, living at on 2125 North Pierce Street, Milwaukee, Wisconsin. Roy Ida Wilson (Mrs. Snyder) D. lives in where Mr. Snyder operates a large milk business. is Bloomsburg, Her address 18 West Fifth Street. Mary A. Meehan burg, Pa. lives at 2121 North Third Street, Harris- In June, 1930, she received the degree of Bachelor THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY 36 Lebanon Valleye of Science in Education at han is now Miss Mee- College. teaching in the Harrisburg schools. 1919 Rhoda Crouse Arthur E. is teaching Steward Co., Bloomsburg. is in . the schools at Berwick, Pa. Magee Carpet billing clerk for the His address is Bloomsburg, R. D. 5. Announcement was made June 29, of the marriage of C. Shoemaker and Miss Hazel B. Wayne, both of Bloomsburg. The marriage was performed by the Rev. Harry F. BabGrover cock at the Methodist parsonage, Bloomsburg, on June the couple had sailed from 1 was not announced until after York on their honeymoon trip 1 , but New The bride Bloomsburg schools. Mr. Shoemaker has been the proprietor of the Aqueduct Mills, Bloomsburg. has been teaching for the Helen E. Schools to the British Isles. years past six (Mrs. Adolph F. liamstown, N. Y., where her husband Mr. and Mrs. churches of the town. 1920 Grace 0. Mausteller is the Knapp) lives in of one pastor Knapp have two of Wilthe children. . bookkeeper is in for the Hagenbuch Mot- or Co., Bloomsburg, Pa. Elizabeth Marchetti is teaching in Nurem- the schools at berg, Pa. Marporie M. Rose is with the Pennsylvania Threshermen and Farmers’ Mutual Casualty Insurance Company, of HarrisMiss Rose lives at 3409 Rutherford Street, Harrisburg. burg. Mary lin G. McBride is teacher of seventh grade in the Frank- Street School, Wilkes-Barre. Florence Berninger is teaching M. Elizabeth Petty is teacher of 8th grade in Miff linville. Pa. in the Franklin THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY Street School, Wilkes-Barre, Pa. Her 37 address 93 is Hanover Street. Catherine Bitting is bookkeeper in a bank Ringtown, Pa. at Rachel Patrick (Mrs. William Seitzinger) Tower lives in City, Pa. Alice F. Cocklin is teaching in Shickshinny, Pa. Last Jan- uary, she underwent an operation for goitre, at the Nanticoke She was able to resume her duties before the State Hospital. end of the term. 1921. Emma C. Seltzer (Mrs. Herbert E. Ratsburg) lives in Ring- town, Pa. Mary Brower, of Bloomsburg, who has been taking a post graduate course at the University of Pennsylvania, received her Master’s degree at that institution last June. teach this coming year in She expects a private school at Stamford, to Conn- ecticut. Clara E. Fisher of Mahanoy Supervisor of Handwriting is in the schools City, Pa. 1922. in Kathryn Gamble was graduated from Bucknell University She has been elected Supervisor of Penmanship in June. Collingswood, New Jersey, for the Olwen M. Lewis C. Adelle Pa. Cryder is teaching lives at 71 Miss Cryder teaches first in coming term. Scranton, Pa. South 3th Avenue, Coatesville, grade in the Coatesville schools, and supervises two student teachers from the Teachers College at West Chester. 1923. At the First Presbyterian Church of Camden, N. J., on Sat- urday, June 28, was solemnized the marriage of Miss Josephine Colley, of Bloomsburg, and Edwin E. Howard, of Clearfield. THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY 38 The ceremony was performed by the Rev. Dr. G. H. Hemingway, former pastor of the First Presbyterian Church of Bloomsburg. Mr. Howard is a graduate of Penn State in the class of 1927, and for the past three years has been the librarian at the Bloomsburg High School. Mr. Howard is also a member of the class of 1927 at Penn State and is a member of Theta Zi fraternity, of Kappa Gamma Psi and Phi Mu Alpha, honorary Lambda Sigma, honorary educationand of the Scabbard and Blade, military fraternity. He has been the head of the shop department of the Bloomsburg High School for the past three years, and is now director of in- musical fraternities, of Iota al fraternity, Teachers College at dustrial arts at the State and Mrs. Howard are now A wedding Millersville. Mr. living in Millersville. and simple beauty was Church of Berwick Wed- of exceptional interest that solemnized at the First Methodist nesday, August 20, khen Miss Edna Blaine became the bride of Mrs. Major taught for several Harold W. Major, of Lehman. years in Berwick, acting also as a co-operative training teacher During the period in for Bloomsburg State Teachers College. which she was teaching, she also did advance work at Columbia Mr. Major is a graduate of Wyoming Seminary University. He is now acting as field engineer for and Lehigh University. Mr. and Mrs. Major are the Kooper Company, of Pittsburgh. now living in Kingston. Marjorie S. Gamble was graduated this year from Buck- nell University. Sister Mary Anselm Kane is teaching at St. Mary’s Convent, 161 South Washington Street, Wilkes-Barre, Pa. Helen M. Keller is teaching in Kingston, Pa., and lives at 30 North Welles Avenue. Dodson is teaching in the Franklin Her address is 122 Dana Street. Barre, Pa. Lois Ira C. Markley is school, Wilkes- Principal of the Milford High School. He THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY lives in 39 Beaver Springs, Pa. Jean E. Young teaching is in Upper Darby, and lives in Philadelphia. Helen M. Richards, a member of the Bloomsburg faculty, toured Europe this summer. 1924. Marian K. Andrews is teacher of Art in the Miss Andrews lives school, Ardmore, Pa. Washington Street Slatington, Pa. Road Wynnewood at 431 East Catherine M. Partridge lives at 1106 Court Street, Honesdale, Pa. She is a grade teacher in the Honesdale schools. Edith M. Behr is teaching seventh grade in the schools of Lopez, Pa. Grayce Woodring and F. Indian Lake, N. Y., August 3, Harold Thomas were married at 1929. Mr. and Mrs. Thomas are living in Saltsburg, Pa. Eva Watters is teaching Margaret B. Mensch is in Mifflinville, Pa. a primary teacher at Millheim, Pa. Jane I. Creasy is Home Economics Extension RepresentaHer address is 43 Mamilton Street, Lehigh County, Pa. tive in 1 Allentown, Pa. Clara D. Abbett is employed as a governess at Elkins Park, Pa. Ruth Beaver (Mrs. Ralph Lindenmuth) lives in Numidia, Pa. Alma Thomas is teaching music in Wilkes-Barre, Pa. Beulah M. Deming is teaching in the Burns school, Susquehanna County. She lives in Uniondale, Pa. Anna Singleman (Mrs. Willis Curtis Barnes) is living at 206 THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY 40 Fox Hill Place, West Pittston, Pa. Mrs. Barnes taught in the Hughestown Borough schools for four years, and since her marriage, which took place August 18, 1928, she has been doing substitute work in the same district. Mr. Barnes conducts a meat market on South Main Street, Pittston. Doris M. Morse White Plains, N. Y. is teaching grade I-B in Her address is in the schools of 48 Park Avenue, White Plains. Irma Stephens and W. B. Mensch, both of Bloomsburg, were married April 5, 1930. They are now living with Mrs. Mr. Mensch is a Mensch’s parents, at 143 East Sixth Street. graduate of Gettysburg College and is employed by the Arrow Silk Corporation. 1925. Miss Grace Fite, of Benton, and Harold White, of Berwick, were married June 7, 1929. Announcement of the marriage was not made until June of this year. Mrs. White has been teaching in employed Miss Jr., the schools of Columbia County, while Mr. White as an electrician at the A. C. F. is Company, Berwick. Seybert, of Light Street, and Frank H. Wilson, Alma of Bloomsburg, were married Friday, August 22, by the Rev. Robert R. Morgan, former pastor of St. Paul’s Episcopal The ceremony was performed at the Church, of Bloomsburg. summer home of the Rev. Mr. Morgan, at Cogan Station, Pa. The groom is a graduate of the Bloomsburg High School and atMrs. tended Susquehanna University and Lafayette College. the Light Street school. Mr. and teaching in been has Wilson Mrs. Wilson are now living in their newly furnished apartment at Light Street. Pauline Hossler Her address dress is is 1 is teaching in the Wilkes-Barre schools. 6 Mallery Place. Bronwen F. Rees is teaching 45 S. Thomas Avenue. in Kingston, Pa. Her ad- THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY Helen Barret Baer Pearl Poust is is 41 teaching in Cambra, Pa. teacher of the upper grades at Orangeville, Pa. Martha A. Fisher Her address Alice E. Stead teaching 310 South Front teaching is Minnie Gregart Camden, in teaching is She N. J. the grades in the Sunbury is is schools. in Street. Dickson City, Pa. Pensauken Township, near in 1426 North 16th lives at Street, Philadel- phia, Pa. Rachel A. Perigo Bolles six and seven, in a departmental teacher in grades is the Scranton schools. Her address is 528 Electric Street. Martha Lawson is teaching Elizabeth Stroh lives at Miss Stroh ston, Pa. Mary C. Marie ia, Pa. C. She Lannon teaching Miriam McCullough is 409 West Seventh Lillian Burgess 89 North Dorrance teacher of fourth grade McDonnell is Shenandoah, Pa. Street, King- a teacher in the Kingston schools. is is in in Hazleton. 300 East Park Street, Conyngham Township. lives at in is teaching in Central Her address Hazleton. Street. lives in Wyoming, Pa., and is teaching in the schools of that city. 1926 . Miss Margaret Emmitt ,of Danville, R. D. 4, and Allan A. Wednesday, June 25, in the Buckhorn Lutheran Church, by the pastor, the Rev. D. Lloyd Bomboy. The bride has the degree of Bachelor of Science in Education from Bloomsburg, and has been teaching for the past Mr. Rarig is a gradfour years in the Catawissa High School. uate of Bucknell University, Class of 929, and is a member of Rarig, of Bloomsburg, were married 1 THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY 42 Phi Lambda Theta Fraternity. During the past year he has been commercial representative of the Bell Telephone Company in the Bloomsburg district. Mr. and Mrs. Rarig are now living in Bloomsburg. A. Helen Goulden is teaching at Mountain Top, Pa. Sue Ethel School is teacher of Commercial subjects High School at Halifax, Pa. in the Helen L. Daniels is teaching in the schools of Taylor, Pa. 7 East Atherton Street. Her address is 1 Vera L. 1 Baer (Steeley) lives at 227 East Avenue, East Rochester, N. Y. Alice Budd is teaching first and second grades in Upper Gwynnedd Township, and lives at 131 South Cannon Avenue, Lansdale, Pa. Mary G. Martin and Grace Jermyn, E. Vail are teaching in Pa. Maude Fenstermacher is teaching fifth grade in Catawissa, Pa. Kathryn E. Boyer 127 Faust Street. is teaching in Danville, Pa., and lives at Fae Womelsdorf (Mrs. Bernard Tubick) lives at 245 CenWanamie, Pa. A son was born to Mr. and Mrs. Tu- tre Street, bick November 4, 1929. Margaret R. Isaacs is teaching in Hazleton, Pa. 1927. The First Methodist Church of Berwick was the scene of a wedding Wednesday, June 18, when Hope E. Schalles became the bride of Robert C. Rosser, son of County very pretty Commissioner D. M. Rosser, of Luzerne County. Since her graduation, Mrs. Rosser has been a successful teacher in Ber- wick. Mr. Rosser is employed as superintendent of the Wyom- THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY 43 Ready-Mix Concrete Company, located ing Valley in Wilkes- Barre. Delma E. Myers (Mrs. Arthur Husband) lives at 78 Church Street, Pittston, Pa. Iloff, Mirola, of Wilkes-Barre, Miss Elizabeth J. of Honesdale, were united March 1, in She is Gamber is lives has been teaching at 1 35 Ann Street, Duncannon, Adams F. siteaching near Danville, Pa. Her ad- Danville, Pa., R. D. 6. Mary Elliott Jones 632 North Main lives at Lillian She Pa. Iloff a primary teacher in Coxestown, Pa. Mildred dress Mrs. Honesdale schools. Florence Pa. marriage Saturday morning, of St. Matthew’s 1930, by the Rev. Stephen Tuny, Lutheran Church, Wilkes-Barre. in the and Joseph H. is Robertson is teaching grade two in Scranton. She Street. lives at 527 South Main teaching in the Fort Jenkins Announcement has been made Street, Pittston, Township of the schools. engagement of Miss Pearl Long, of Bloomsburg, to Dr. Elvin F. Axt, of Millville, N. Miss Long J. is at present employed as secretary in the office of the Teacher Training Department at the College. is Dr. Axt a graduate of the University of Pennsylvania Dental School. He is now Maplewood, N. practicing in M. Alma Corman is J. teacher of grades one and two in Co- burn, Pa. Nora Tucker, Manta Ruth and Oce Williams are teaching in Edwardsville. Edith Sweetman Dorothy Connor is is teaching at Taylor, Pa. teaching at Lake Ariel. THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY 44 Inez Husted is secretary to Superintendent Cope, of Lu- zerne County. Ruth Rockwell is teaching in the schools of Wyalusing, Pa. 1928. Miss Ruth Beaver, of Catawissa, and Elwin E. Brooks, of Danville, odist were united parsonage in marriage, Sunday, June in 1 , Mrs. Brooks taught for two years in ray Young. MethW. Murthe Roaring at the Catawissa, by the pastor, the Rev. Creek Valley schools. Mr. and Mrs. Brooks are now living in where the former is in the employ of the State Highway Department. Danville, Marjorie Wallize taught Granville Township last year fourth grade of the in the schools, Mifflin County. Her home is in Lewistown. Anna Mary Hess teaching is in the primary grades at Boalsburg, Pa. Ruth M. Budd is teaching in grades three and four in the Upper Gwynedd Township, Lansdale, Pa. Her home address is Beach Lake, Pa. schools of Adelaide Bahr Anna L. is teaching in Scranton. Benninger is teacher of grades three or four at Dimock, Pa. Rachel L. Long and James married November 28, Penn’s Creek, Pa. Benjamin 1 Y. Miller 929. is were Box 39, B. Sauers, of Mifflinburg, Their present address is a student at Pennsylvania State Col- lege, specializing in Agricultural Education. Esther Lloyd is teaching in Oneonta, N. Y. 50 Spruce Street. Jeanette B. Hastie is teaching in Duryea, Pa. Her address is THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY Margaret D. Keller Ebba M. Carlson is teaching in a primary is 45 Luzerne Pa. teacher schools in the of Courtdale, Pa. Ellen A. Schlier lives at She Pa. 319 West Green teaching second grade is Claude E. Miller teaching is in the Street, Hazleton, Hazleton schools. Junior High School in the at Shickshinny, Pa. Harriet E. issing. Young Her address is teacher of 407 is 1929 Mary A. Ross fifth grade at West Wyom- Seibert Court. . lives at R. D. 2, Sunbury, Pa., and is teach- ing near Klingerstown. Pearl M. Schell teaching is in a rural school near Nurem- berg, Pa. Elsie in Anna She lives at Mary lives in Shaft, Pa., and is teaching West Mahanoy Township. M. Lebo the schools of Hollister teaching is 32 Middle K. Shultz in the schools first grade of Strong, Pa. Street. is teaching near Bloomsburg. Esther Wruble lives at 1227 Main Street, Swoyerville, Pa., and is teaching the Swoyervifle schools. Louise Hewitt is teaching Charlotte E. Mears at is in Luzerne, Pa. Supervisor of Music in the high school Dimock, Pa. Marian E. Young is teacher of fourth grade in West Wyom- ing. Mary leton, Pa. T. O’Donnell Her address is is teaching second grade 123 East Oak Street. in West Haz- THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY 46 Eleanor re, Pa., and L. is Hughes lives at 1 3 Loomis Street, Wilkes-Bar- 1 teaching at Pike’s Creek. Caroline E. Petrullo is teacher of English in the Junior High School at Northumberland, Pa. Kathryn E. Morton taught last grade in the During the summer Lloyd School for Feeble- year in the first Jefferson High School Building, Ariel, Pa. Miss Morton taught Minded Children, in the Marta J. at Troy, Pa. Eleanor Lapinski is teaching second grade in the schools of West Hazjeton. 1930. The marriage of Miss Florence I. Beishline, of Bloomsburg, and Enos E. Barto, of Palmyra, took place Saturday evening, August 30, in the parsonage of the First Methodist Church, at The groom is a graduate of the Hershey High Bloomsburg. School, and has been affiliated with the Hershey Chocolate Company for ten years. Mr. and Mrs. Barto will live in Palmyra until next spring, after which they expect to move into a newly erected bungalow at Hershey. Kathryn B. Stine and Walter Creek, Pa., were married June 22 F. Hufnagle, both of Roaring in the chapel at Valley Forge, The bride will teach by the Rector, the Rev. W. Herbert Buck. this winter at the Oakdale school, while the groom, a graduate of Bucknell University, will resume his duties as Principal of the Roaringcreek Township High School. Mr. and Mrs. Hufnagle are, for the present, living with the former’s parents. Announcement has recently been made of the marriage of Miss Ruth A. Weaver, and C. Jay Muffly, both of Watsontown. The marriage took place December 24, 1929. L