JULY. ^ 



CASH ACCOUNT, 

 to. I JT Received j Paid. 



I Mr, Chamberlain thus OoewMei a very In- 

 terestlng position in the administrative his- 

 tory of the university. Introducing busi- 

 s ideas and the "human element" into 

 system for the first time, ho forma 

 connecting link, as it were, between 

 antiquated and the modern methods, 

 The sentleness and nobility of his char- 

 acter were emphasized by his last years, 

 which brought him more than Vila share of 

 sorrows and privations, all borne with 

 uncomplaining sweetness and fortitude. Ills 

 greatest pleasure was to meet or hear about 

 his old "boys," and to recall his days tri 

 "the office." In him Harvard loses an 

 enterprising, loyal and efficient: servant 

 Samuki, Y. RvrcirKUMin, '93 

 Harvard College, Vah. 12. 



T E Cambridge Tribune | 



FEBRUARY 2, 1924 I 



MISS MARY A. DAY 



Miss Mary A. Day, after 30 years 

 in service of Harvard University, 

 passed away at the home of her 

 sister, Mrs." Burke F. Leavitt, 39 

 Garfield street, on Sunday. 



Mary Anna Day was horn, of 

 colonial ancestry, in Nelson, \\ H. 

 October 12, 1853. She was the 

 daughter of Sewell and Hannah 

 (Wilson) Day. During girlhood she 

 moved with her family to Lancas- 

 ter; Massachusetts, and was educa- 

 ted at the Lancaster Academy. 

 From 1871 to 1880 she taught in the 

 public schools of Massachusetts. At 



