St Hugh's College, Oxford - Club Paper, Issue 1, June 1898

Page 1

*•u0's 4WD Waper. JUNE, 1898.

No. 1.

*sitgO's 111 8. Miss Moberly, President (till July, 1900). E. A. Owen, Vice-President (till July, 5900. W. M. Mammatt, Treasurer (till July, 1900). Vice-President (till July, 1900). C. E. Jourdain, V. A. Simpson (till July, 1899). A. Malone (till July, 1899). D. C. Abdy, Editor (till July, 1900). M. A. Rice (till July, 5898). F. M. Langston (till July, 1898). E. M. Hatch (till July, 1899). M. A. Wilson, Secretary, 21, Disraeli Road, Putney, S.W. (till July, 1900).

34ZemBers. Abbott, A. M. f 82, Boulevard Malesherbes, Paris. The Elms, Cropwell Butler, Radcliffe-on-Trent. f St. Mary's College, 122 Harrow Road, W. *Abdy, D. C. 1Bruges, Belgium. *Ashburner, C. E. f High School, Nottingham. 118, Mansfield Grove, Nottingham. *Barker, C. L. f Escot Vicarage, Ottery St. Mary, Devon. A.Havering Vicarage, Essex. Barter, C. D. • (St. Hugh's Hall, Oxford. 1Shipton-under-Wychwood Vicarage, Oxon. f Slepe Hall, St. Ives, Hunts. Bird, P. Lilian Cottage, Burgh Hill, Sydenham, S.E. f Girls' Collegiate School, Port Elizabeth, S. Africa. Birley, M. H. 120, St. Michael's Road, Bedford. Bulkeley, M. M. f St. Hugh's Hall, Oxford. The Rectory, Morpeth. Burnett, M. E. f St. Hugh's Hall, Oxford. 1Hill Side, Salisbury. 58, High Street, Watford. Cox, Mrs. A. (S. M. Iles). 1St. Hugh's Hall, Oxford. Eakin, M. L. 1The Bridge House, Shrewsbury. *Emmerson, J. A. f Yorkshire College, Leeds. 155, Court Hill Road, Lewisham, S.E. Etlinger, F. von Leanchor, Howth, co. Dublin. Fairbanks, A. L. f c/o J. C. Moberly, Esq., 9, Rockstone Place, [Southampton. 1Melbourn, Wells, Somerset. Fear, H. M.f Spring Villa, Moat Road, E. Grinstead. The Vicarage, Brenchley, Paddock Wood, Kent. Gent, Mrs. H. C. St. Agnes, Torquay.

(S. E. Kershaw).

Goodchild, A. C. f The Willows, Stoke Newington, N. I I I, Eaton Terrace, S.W. f St. Hugh's Hall, Oxford. Grant, M. A. (Linden Road, Bedford. Grattan, E. H. G. f Grey Coat School, Westminster, S.W. (Katharine House, Addiscombe, Croydon. Hamilton, R. E. f St. Hugh's Hall, Oxford. 3, Wallbutton Road, Brockley, S.E. 13M, Cornwall Mansions, Clarence Gate, Hatch, E. M. [Regent's Park, N.W. f St. Hugh's Hall, Oxford. Hedley, C. 17o, Talbot Road, Southport. Ilickinbotham, C. C. E., Woodlands, Rolvenden, Kent. Hudson, H. M. Mayfield, Rugby. f St. Hugh's Hall, Oxford. Jab C. S. (Rose Hill, Freshwater, I.W. *Jourdain, C. E. f 28, Fopstone Road, S.W. (till Aug.) 1Ashbourne Vicarage, Derbyshire. Havergal College, Toronto. Knox, E. M. Langston, B. f United Westminster School for Boys, S.W. 165, Warwick Square, S.W. Langston, F. M. f St. Hugh's Hall, Oxford. 165, Warwick Square, S.W. 141, Banbury Road, Oxford. Lee, M. L. Leafield, Witney, Oxon. 4, Brunswick Square, W.C. Malone, A. Mammatt, W. M. Brookside, Ilkley, Yorks. Marriott, Mrs. J. A. R., 3, Holywell, Oxford. -

Medill, G. I. K. f Bishopsthorpe, York. 1Rostrevor, Denmark Avenue, Wimbledon. Mitchell, W. J. de L., 3, Walton Villas, Hersham Road, [Walton-on-Thames. Olivier, E. M. Wilton Rectory, Salisbury. f Wycombe Abbey School, HighWycombe, Bucks. Owen, E. A. 1Damerham Vicarage, Salisbury. Parsons, G. I. f High School, Falmouth. l3, York Grove, Peckham, S.E. 12, Belsize Road, S. Hampstead, N.W. Penny, E. M. l'rideaux, E. M. C. f St. Hugh's Hall, Oxford. 1St. Saviour's Vicarage, Redland, Bristol. f St. Hugh's Hall, Oxford. Rice, M. A. l Kingscote House, East Grinstead. Avening Rectory, Stroud, Gloucestershire. Selby, G. M. Simpson, V. A. f 16, Abingdon Villas, Kensington, W. 1St. Mark's Rectory, Bexhill, Sussex. Simpson, J.f Apsley House, Torquay. 1Warleigh House, Southbourne Road, Sheffield. Simpson, M. L.f St. Hugh's Hall, Oxford. 1Warleigh House, Southbourne Road, Sheffield. Spackman, R. J. Bowers House, Harpenden, Herts. Sparks, B. M. f St. Hugh's Hall, Oxford. 1Carrington Vicarage, Nottingham. Spooner, E. M. 12, Redcliffe Street, Redcliffe Square, S.W. Stark, H. D. M. f St. Hugh's Hall, Oxford. 131, Highfield South, Rockferry, Birkenhead. Stpton, F. E. f Priory Lodge, Brereton Place, Bedford. 1. Willow Bank, Eynsham, Oxon. Thompson,M.E.Ef Cappleside, Settle, Yorks. Kildwick Vicarage, Keighley, Yorks. Townsend, A. B. f 15, Queen's Street, Hammersmith, W. 124, Upper Phillimore Place, Kensington, W. Turner, J. E. f City of London School for Girls, Victoria 14 , Myddelton Square, E. C. [Embankment, E. C. Venables, E. M. f St.Hugh's Hall, Oxford. 1.4, Norham Road, Oxford. Ward, F. 3, Arundel Terrace, Brighton. Wardale, E. E. f 23, Woodstock Road, Oxford. 1Datchworth Rectory, Stevenage, Herts. 7, Upper Cheyne Row, S.W. Watson, J. Watson, E. B. L. f Girton College, Cambridge. Hunstanton, New Brighton, Cheshire. *Weston, M. D.f r3, Skimoroku, Banctio, Kojimackriku, Japan. o 18, Claremont Road, Cricklewood, N. W. f High School, Bishop's Auckland. White, S. A. 130A, Wimpole Street, W. Williams, A. M. f 6, Bardwell Road, Oxford. lWavertree, Mulgrave Road, Croydon. Bede House, Stamford. Williams, E. ,Wilson, M. A. f High School, Putney, S.W. Horbling Vicarage, Folkinghatn, Lincolnshire. Wilson, H. I. Tudor Cottage, Bushey. Wordsworth,D.Mf Lambeth Rectory, S. E. 1St. Peter's Rectory, Marlborough. Wright, Mrs. C. P. Chaukpazat Gold Mine, Nankan P.O. (New (A. L. Barker). Valley Railway), Upper Burmah.

(H. Robinson).

Matravers, E. C. f Eaton House, Aldeburgh, Suffolk. 119, Howard Place, Carlisle.

• Denotes life-membership. Where two addresses are given, the second is the permanent home address.

The Editor hopes that Members will inform the Secretary of any change of address. All subscriptions should be said at once to the Treasurer and not to the Secretary.


CONSTITUTION OF ST. HUGH'S CLUB.

I.

The Society shall include past students, and present students when they have entered upon their second year. II. The Society shall be called in future by some other name. It shall be called St. Hugh's Club. III. The Committee shall consist of eleven members including the President, two vice-Presidents, Secretary, Treasurer, Editor and Senior Student, and be so representative that, as long as possible, every Club member shall have a personal acquaintance on it. Five shall make a quorum. IV. All officers shall be elected by the Club, as a rule, every two years. Non-official members shall be elected for a year now, and after this year for two years. Voting papers shall be sent' round with names of nominations and nominees. There shall be, as a rule, two Club meetings in the year. V. VI. The Committee shall have the duty of fixing time and place of Club meetings for the year. The Secretary shall send notice of date fixed to every Club member, and a general notice to Hall members, asking for agenda, and nominations should an election be due, and specifying day after which they cannot be made public. Such agenda and nominations shall be sent to the Secretary not later than fourteen days before the Club meeting. Agenda, if any, and nominations shall be sent to every Club member, and a general notice to Hall members, a full week before the meeting. VII. The Hall shall be empowered to send a representative to any committee that the Senior Student cannot look forward to attending. VIII. Separate Minutes shall be kept, (i) of every committee meeting, (2) of every formal Club meeting, and note made in Club minute book of informal Club meetings with names of those present. IX. The Report shall be called by some other name. It shall be called St. Hugh's Club Paper, and shall be issued at least once a year, and be submitted to the Committee before publication. It shall contain amongst other things (r) Names and addresses of all members and list of officers, (z) Resolutions passed at Club meeting held since last number, (3) Letters and notices of general interest, (4) Letter from St. Hugh's Hall, prepared by Senior Student assisted by Committee elected by Hall, (5) Statement of accounts once a year. No change shall be made in the Constitution without a vote of two-thirds of the entire Club. X. (Votes for the purpose can be sent by letter.) A member may be required to withdraw on the vote of two-thirds of the entire Club. XI. XII. The subscription for membership shall be if- a year, or ro/- for life membership, subject to alteration when a year's expenses are known. XIII. Every member of the Club shall be provided with a copy of the constitution. R ESOLUTI ON — That the present Vice-Principal be invited to become a member.

March 31, 1898.


LETTERS AND NOTICES. IT is a great honour to be asked to open the correspondence pages in this paper ; and I should like to take the opportunity of explaining why the St. Hugh's Hall Old Students' Association has become St. Hugh's Club. The S.H.H.O.S.A. was started Nov., 1893, by some of the past students of the Hall who desired to keep in touch with one another and with the Hall through its means. There was no formal constitution, but from the first there was a President, Secretary, and small committee ; an Annual Report was issued. In the last Report the committee expressed its conviction that it had held office long enough, and could no longer be said to represent all generations of St. Hugh's students, and proposed a fresh election of committee members. It seemed to some of us that this was a favourable opportunity for suggesting the formation of a definite constitution. The need of the Society was proved by the constant increase of its members ; but it did not include all who might have joined, and many members expressed a great wish for its re-organisation. The present constitution was agreed upon at a General Meeting on March 31. Some change of name was necessary, for present as well as past students had been already invited to join the S.H.H.O.S.A. The old name being cumbrous as well as slightly misleading, it was resolved to change it to St. Hugh's Club. The greater distribution of officers is intended to relieve the Secretary from overwork ; she will not be any longer responsible for the business of either Treasurer or Editor. The Vice-Presidents will, we hope, be able to be present at any Club or Committee Meeting should the President be unable to attend. It is a pleasure to be able to point out that the late hard-worked Secretary has consented to be on the new committee, though she has refused to continue in any part of her old office. The Club will always remember with gratitude that it owes its existence, in great measure, to A. Malone's capable and kindly work in keeping the S.H.H.O.S.A. together for so many years. The Club Paper ought to be a very important part of the constitution. It will be on the lines of the former Report, but expanded so as to allow of letters and correspondence. We look forward to its being a means of communication between past and present students ; past students with one another, and between all the members and myself. By putting into it all the resolutions passed at Club Meetings since the last publication, every member will be in possession of developments of the Club as they occur ; and those who keep the numbers from the first will have a complete history of it. Some fears have been expressed lest greater organisation should mean less sociability. I do not think it need do so. When there is no business to bring forward, the Club Meetings will be entirely informal ; but should there be any, there is machinery for getting it thoroughly discussed. Whether they are formal or informal, it was expressly agreed at the last meeting that lea was to be considered indispensable, though it was not made part of the constitution : had anyone proposed it as a XVth Resolution, it would have been carried with acclamation. The past meetings of the S.H.H.O.S.A. have, I believe, been

very enjoyable, but unfortunately I have never yet been able to be present at one. The future meetings of S.H.C. ought not to be less well attended or less pleasant. It will depend on the patriotism of the members whether they take the trouble to come or not. Should the President and the Secretary ever find themselves the sole representatives at any duly announced meeting, they mean to enjoy themselves very much all the same, and to have a good tea at the Club's expense ! It is hoped that Club Members will make a point of making acquaintance with one another whenever the opportunity occurs. It is for this reason that both the home and the working addresses are printed in full. When a member is doing school work in some distant part of England, and is far from all former friends, it might possibly be a pleasure to receive a call from another Club Member, even if she should be too old or too young for them to have mutual acquaintances. A common interest in the Hall will perhaps give them topics of conversation for a first visit, and this might develop into further and more friendly intercourse. The Club would be much interested to hear reports of any impromptu gatherings that may take place at a distance, especially when it includes students of very different dates, and a letter written to the Club Paper at such times might be one way of entertaining the party. It can only be to the good of the Hall that all its students should be acquainted, and feel their friendship to one another an important element of its success. I cannot express too strongly the personal pleasure it would be to know that all those who have passed through their student years at Oxford, in St. Hugh's Hall, are ready to stand shoulder to shoulder in their desire to serve it in all ways that may ensure its success. C. A. E. MOBERLY. THE past students of St. Hugh's Hall have certainly had cause to be grateful during the past few months. Those of us who have fulfilled the required conditions, have been made members of the Hall, and now we have been given an opportunity of becoming members of St. Hugh's Club. One goes down from St. Hugh's with the best intentions in the world of keeping—as we say—" in touch " with the College where we have had so much happiness, and with the friends to whom so large a proportion of that happiness has been due ; but it is very difficult to keep " in touch " with things and people for long ; one's visits to Oxford are rare, and so are one's letters to friends. The " esprit de corps " has in it by degrees more and more of " esprit " and less of " corps," and is in danger of growing so spiritual and refined that it will float away altogether I The St. Hugh's Club Paper will, I hope, be a means of keeping our " esprit de corps " a solid fact and of causing us to be more in touch with one another, and also with those students who have succeeded us in our rooms at St. Hugh's, and are now sleeping upon our beds and reading before our fires. I have before me the prospectus of the St. Hugh's Club Paper. Doubtless the Editor is reserving to herself the right of bursting upon us untold and delightful surprises under the heading of " Letters


and Notices of General Interest," but apart from this the contents of the paper promise to be exactly what past students of the Hall want from time to time. The names and addresses of Members alone are of great importance, for very often a letter left too long unanswered brings a correspondence to an end altogether, since we lose sight of our friends once for all. The reports of Club Meetings will bring before us once more the voices of ardent orators at Sharp Practice and other Debating Societies in old days. Further, I look forward with great interest to the letters from St. Hugh's Hall itself, and to having all sorts of details of the life there. The St. Hugh's Club Paper will thus be of interest and value more especially to past students, and it is to be hoped that they will do their best to support it, particularly by literary contributions. The Fritillary is all—more than all—that present students can cope with ; let us give them, by our literary achievements here, a fresh motive for that awe and respect which they all instinctively feel for the names of great ones which have been handed down to them from past generations! E. M. OLIVIER. St. Hugh's Hall, Oxford, May, 1898. Dear " Old Students,"—As Senior Student it falls to me to send you our hearty greetings from St. Hugh's, and to tell you what I can of Oxford and the Hall. I must begin with apologies,. as in writing to ,people of such various generations it is impossible to know what is known and unknown to the majority, and it is more than difficult to hit upon the points of interest which will prove most acceptable. So I can only hope for your forgiveness if I tell you seriously that Queen Anne is dead, and trust you will remember it is often our duty both to bore other people and to `be bored. Please first put yourselves back into the atmosphere of Oxford in the spring, with its peculiar environment of vigour and indolence, of the old world and the new. Colleges, Societies, Socialism, Speculation, Lectures, Time Tables, the Association, the Schools ; the thousand steps that lead up to the Office, the length of Norham Gardens on the way home from the Radcliffe ; Convocation, Congregation, Women's Degrees, election of Proctors ; hurrying undergraduates, Cricket, the Eights, the Union ; all this against a background of dreaming spires and domes, of misty blue distances, of bells and chimes echoed to us across the Parks, of river, water-meadows, cowslips, and fritillaries, and hawthorn to come—and the whole in a setting of soft, gentle, persevering, incessant rain. Realize this, and I think you will remember that for all Oxford's " intellectual stimulus " she has an indolence all her own, and that it is difficult to work in the Summer Term. Of general Oxford news there does not seem much at this moment. One can only indicate sermons, lectures, concerts, meetings, athletics, to shew that things go on much as of old, and that St. Hugh's interest in intellectual and social questions is unchanged. There have been no Bampton Lectures this year. The Dean of course still preaches on the first Sunday in the Cathedral : his sermon last Term on Dean Liddell and " Lewis Carroll " you will all have read, but some may like to know that his sermon a fortnight ago, on the War, was one which many of

us will never forget. The usual concerts and lectures abound. Paderewski and Richter were the events of last Term, but you must think of them not in the Sheldonian, but in the very modern, gorgeously decorated Town Hall. The classical concerts still exist, and are as expensive as ever. Sir John Stainer, Mr. H adow and others, still attract us to the Sheldonian, and very popular are Professor Wooldridge's lectures on the Bellini. But most characteristic of the Summer Term is the river, and here most of all the scene is unchanged. The " Golden Girl " is still punted along, the " Innocents Abroad " steers its erratic course between canoes and randans, and the old love of cushions, light literature and sleep seem to prevail. Only, alas ! the willows have been cut down near Marston ferry, and the cowslips we have been revelling in are nearly over. But now to turn more particularly to St. Hugh's. Come in at the front door, and Andrea del Sarto will welcome you back in his old place. The VicePrincipal lives in Miss Moberly's old room, and the study is now the drawing-room. I think it will interest everyone to know that it is entirely furnished from Miss Moberly's old homes in Winchester and Salisbury, and so even the armchairs have historic associations. The new study is over the library, which is an old friend with a new face, so improved is it in a hundred little ways. Chief of these additions is the beautiful Arundel given by Mrs. Romanes, which forms a centre-piece for the two you will all remember. And we must not forget E. Grattan's oak steps which lend such literary dignity to the room. The dining-room is notyet papered, leaving something for zealous reformers to desire, but Miss Wardale's Turner and the Constable which H. Wilson and D. Abdy gave us do much to adorn the walls. Looking out of the windows we see a reformed garden ! The ivy has been cut away in many places, trees have been lopped, lending an air of lightness and freshness to the scene, the gravel tennis-court has been re-made, and lastly the borders are well stocked with flowers. Of course the lovely background is the same as ever, and the elms and larches and whispering aspens still remain the glory of St. Hugh's. The birds still sing there better than anywhere else in Oxford, the woodpigeons still croon in the trees just outside our windows, and we have already heard nightingales this Term on one or two perfect moonlight nights. And now to tell you something about ourselves. The loss our music sustained when F. Ettinger, W. Mammatt, M. Thompson and others of their generation went down has not yet been repaired. The glee club and orchestra are just now in abeyance, and so at the Sociables dancing only is the order of the day. However, no one remembering Miss Moberly's spirited music, and our excellent floor will pity us greatly, much as we wish for the restoration of our musical evenings. I must mention, too, the party last Term which Miss Moberly gave during Miss Mordan's visit to the Hall. We had music during the early part of the evening with Miss Margaret Barter as our star, and dancing was kept up until tz o'clock with great spirit and enjoyment. The usual societies flourish, with the exception of " Shakespeare," which is less successful than we pretend in the " Fritillary." The " Browning," however, is more generally appreciated than it was when I first came up, not that the enthusiasm of the few under M. Weston's presidency has ever been surpassed. The principal new society is the " Architectural," whose members pride themselves on their strict rules and close


attention to business, but as Miss Moberly was heard to remark, the requirements for an expedition seem to be (r) good roads for bicycling, (2) a good inn for tea, (3) a good church to study. As for " Sharp Practice," it has at last recovered from the ill-effects of the schism of some years ago, and now reaps the benefit of that spirited revolution. For in spite of attendance being quite voluntary, every member of the Hall attends. We have voted its continuance in the Summer Term, and when the vote was passed, a Fresher was heard to exclaim " Well done !" The seniors feel that they owe much to the first-year students for having thrown themselves so heartily into this and other societies. Perhaps this is the moment to mention the Inter-Collegiate Debating Society, lately re-organized under the name of" The Oxford Students' Debating Society." Probably everyone is aware of the changes that have taken place in its rules, and knows that past, like present students, may be full members on payment of 6d. a year, or remain honorary members without payment of subscription. The officers being now elected by the whole and from the whole society, irrespective of College, we are proud that St. Hugh's has the President this Term, the second under the new arrangement. It is an interesting item, too, that the debates are held at a central hall (at present the High School), and are always in the evening. Turning to athletics, our finances are on a sounder basis. There is a fixed subscription to the Games Club, which includes hockey, tennis, boating, and dancing. The enthusiasm once spent on tennis has somewhat transferred itself to hockey, and we long for A. Wilson and F. Etlinger to lead us to victory. But everyone will rejoice that St. Hugh's has at last a hockey team, which has done well and talked much during the winter terms. The " Swan " and the " Ugly Duckling " are in the usual request, and we have a large number of boating members. The basket fitted up for tea-picnics is in great demand, and we expect soon will be much fought for. It is time now to turn to the work of the Hall, of which it is more difficult to give an account. Perhaps statistics as to the different schools may give an idea of the change in " fashions " said to have taken place. The English School has seven, of whom two take their Schools this Term • History, six, two victims this Term; Honour Classical Mods., three ; Mathematical Greats, one, in this Term ; Mathematical Mods., one ; Science, two ; Pass Greats, two ; Pass Mods., one ; Higher Local (going on to English School), one. L. Eakin, who is working for Pass Greats, is also taking the newly instituted course of Teachers' Training. It will be seen from this that almost all of us are working for Honours, and that we are all taking University Schools. This fact speaks for itself. In conclusion, I am sure you would like to hear about our Sunday evenings. The subject last Michaelmas Term was, by request, Genesis I. in relation to modern criticism. Last Term we studied Dr. Moberly's " Ministerial Priesthood," a subject which attracted us, owing to the fact that the author gave an address here last summer bearing on it. This term, at the request of many of us, Miss Moberly has talked about the woman's movement at the present day in connection with Scripture. In speaking of Sunday one naturally thinks of our services in Chapel. I know everyone will like to hear that we now have a

Celebration on one Sunday in Term, as near the beginning as can be arranged. It only remains to mention our beautiful windows—one upper light, " The Resurrection," given by Canon Inman ; " Hope," put in in memory of Mary lye and Mabel Holman ; and " Faith," in memory of Winifred Inman. We hope that all old students who have not yet seen them will visit us soon. This year we have been fortunate in visits from many who have stayed either in the Hall or in Oxford, including Mrs. Gent, V. Simpson, E. Owen, W. Mammatt (twice), J. Spackman, A. Bond, A. Wilson, G. Medill, E. Hatch, D. Abdy (twice), F. Stoton ; and before Term is over we hope that Half-Term holidays may increase the list. I must not forget, too, to tell you that Kate and Ellen are still with us, Kate very proud of having known ten generations of students, and both as keenly interested as ever in the work and athletics of the Hall. Mrs. Davis still rules in the kitchen, but many will be sorry to hear that Mrs. Beauchamp has been ill for many months : we hope next Term she and her bag may re-appear. Once more greetings from the present students of St. Hugh's, and all success to the St. Hugh's Club. MARCIA ALICE RICE, Senior Student. WE venture to quote from a letter from M. H. Birley, telling of a curious coincidence that happened on her voyage to Port Elizabeth, where she is going to teach in the Girls' Collegiate School :— Dunvegan Castle, Jan. 2o, 1898. " I have changed my cabin since Madeira, and am now sharing one with Miss Flamsteed who, I have just found out, was at St. Hugh's, and is going to a school in Cape Town. It is very curious finding out this quite accidentally."

It is probable that next October St. Hugh's will receive its rooth student. St. Hugh's has now several grandchildren. Cecily Marriott, aged six, being resident in Oxford, is known to many of us. A charming photograph of Cynthia and Anthony Cox has been received at the Hall, and news has arrived from Burmah of the birth of Mrs. Wright's little daughter. We are uncertain how large a family Mrs. Daubeny has. If anyone can supply news of Mary Ellison we shall be glad to receive it, as her address is unknown. She has not communicated with the Hall since she went to teach at Birkenhead, in 189o. It was a smaller company than last year that met at St. Paul's Cathedral on Low Sunday ; but no doubt those of us who could not be present thought of St. Hugh's. The Inter-University Tennis Match will be played on Monday, June loth, at Wimbledon. Tickets may be obtained from the Representative, St. Hugh's Hall. The next Club Meeting will take place on Saturday, July 23rd, at 4 o'clock, at 4, Brunswick Square, W.C.



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