Trinity Pawling School - Scroll Yearbook (Pawling, NY) - Class of 1921 Page 1 of 244
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■ (Ellis tuwk yrniutrrii romylptr liy (Bljarlra E. Ulillarii 154 Nassau Street Nttu ttnrk City 4 iFnmunri) Jn this bonk tlte ebitnrs liaue trieb to present something of a picture of fauiling School life— to giue thr friettbs of tlie school some ibea of the artiuities that fill our bags; to shout thr alumni tljat me arc trying to foUmu in their footsteps anb riterish tlie trabi- tions tljey instituteb; anb to prmribe for the present members of the school something tliat mag serue in time to route as a pleasant reminber of a happy year. fttr. Slolju (6. Sittrlu'r in mmgttttfim nf hts intprrat ttt She iJautlimj § rhnnl tljia honk ta rrsprrtfulltt Miratrft H She (Class nf 1921 6 ittr. 3lnhn (6. Untrhrr 7 jOMM YV GillIH Jr. KEiwmi E.V Riper. BeorbeR Cook II Ru55EU.M UI09Y Vku ELCuiErr 8 lUjf tlUiari nf iEMtnrs JOHN W. GILLIES, New York........Editor-in-Chief WILLIAM G. CLUETT, New York Managing Editor KENNETH VAN RIPER, New York Business Manager GEORGE R. COOK. New York. .Photographic Editor GEORGE M. GRAVES, Vermont............Art Editor URBAN MORGAN, Ohio...................Art Editor RUSSELL HALLIDAY, Illinois.......Associate Editor AARON L. EVANS, Ohio...........Associate Editor WILLIAM E. SCHOLTZ, Colorado. .Associate Editor 9 Jlrrstiirnt of the Hoard of aritstrrs of Jlauilttty Srhool Shr Sight Hrurrrnd 10 ill tarn ®. fflamting 10 Pawling Sdjnnl IVas Founded by FREDERICK L. GAMAGE October I, 1907 ICurpuratiint (Otttrrru Dr. FREDERICK L. GAMAGE. President HORACE E. HENDERSON. . .Secretary GEORGE H. DANIELS................Treasurer JAMES M. ELLIOTT.................Ass’t. Treasurer AiHmutrtj Ulnari nf aruntrra The Right Reverend WILLIAM T. MANNING, New York, N. Y., Pres. JOHN K. BRANCH..............Richmond, Va. EDWARD G. BROENNIMAN.. .New York, N. Y. E. HAROLD CLUETT...............Troy, N. Y. JOHN G. DUTCHER.............Pawling, N. Y. CLEMENT E. GARDINER......Garden City, N. Y. SAMUEL I. SHAW................New York, N. Y. HORACE M. SNYDER..............New York, N. Y. CHARLES P. TURNER.......Garden City, N. Y. Dirrrtnrn FREDERICK L. GAMAGE GEORGE W. ANDERSON JAMES M. ELLIOTT HORACE E. HENDERSON JOHN NICHOLS 11 Jfn'itrrirk IGullu'r (ganutgp A.A. m.. S. (E. if. Doctor Frederick Luther Gamage, the Headmaster of Pawling, began his eminent career as a schoolmaster immediately upon his graduation from Brown University in 1882. His first position was that of Greek Instructor in the Delaware Academy, Delhi, New York. In 1885 he was elected principal of the Oxford Academy, Oxford, New V ork, a place which he filled with the greatest success and honor until he was called to the larger and more important task of taking up the headmastership, in 1893, of St. Paul’s Cathedral School, Garden City. Long Island, at that time one of the growing and promising Church schools of the East. H is success at St. Paul’s is attested by the wonder- ful record which he made during the fourteen years in which he guided its destiny. He came into charge when St. Paul’s was a school of about sixty boys. When he resigned the headmastership in 1907, there was a total registration of over one hundred and eighty boys, with a graduat- ing class of almost sixty. An achievement as great as that is a sure guarantee of future recognition; and he had no sooner made public an- nouncement of the fact, during the summer of 1907, that he would open a school the following fall, founded by himself, in Pawling, New York, than it was acclaimed with the intensest interest and enthusiasm by his former patrons and boys everywhere. Consequently he experi- enced no difficulty whatsoever in opening school on the first of October, 1907, in the old Duteher House, at Pawling, with seven masters and eighty-five students. I o the untiring efforts and the sincere devotion of this man Pawling School owes the enviable reputation and phenomenal success which it has won during the fourteen short years of its existence. As headmaster of Pawling, Dr. Gamage has worked along lines of scholarship and character building which he knows from long experience will be best for, and will bring out the best in, every boy who comes under his care. He has always been a strong exponent of fair play and high ideals. He has ever tried to instill into the hearts of his boys those fine prin- 12 WILLAOO.N f, ciples of manhood which are so nobly exemplified in his own character. The reason why he enjoys such splendid and hearty co-operation with the school, and with the Sixth Form in particular, is that he appeals to the side of the boy that is fine and fair, and deals with him, not so much as a headmaster, but as a trusted friend and counsellor who, every boy feels, knows just what is best for him in his own peculiar boyish difficulties. In this way he wins and keeps the hearts of his boys, not only during their preparatory school days, when they are directly under his supervision and guidance, but after they have graduated and gone out into the larger life of college or business. The Scroll takes much pride and pleasure in paying this well-earned tribute to the man who has done so much to make our Alma Mater what it is today. Furthermore, we wish to assure the Doctor that the love and devotion which he showers upon the school is deeply felt and reciprocated by those who yearly go forth from her walls happier and richer boys, both in character and in learning. Alma illalrr Pawling, Itrrr unto thg glory Urartu anb uoirra fonb iur raiar; Uigly anil jogoua rittga tlir rltorua (Cljantrb htj tljg anna in praiar. ahnugljta of tlirr our Ultra rnnoblr; fflrntorira brar our joga prolong; Urnthrra ntrr, ’nratb tlig bannrr. Sing mr tljg iiruotion-aong. Alnta iRatrr, tljou Ijaat taught ua 3faitlj anil rouragr trnr to krrp, Sirabfaat in tljr atrrngtli tljat rnmrth iFrnnt tljr Itilla utljirlt rounii tljrr autrrp. Eurrmorr uiitlj rgra upliftrb JFront thg foatrring rarr utr go, Strong to littr, anb rrnrrrnt brar tlirr ©mr to tl|r lour utr outr. 14 FACULTY 15 JAMES M. ELLIOTT, A. B. Mathematics Mr. Elliott was graduated from Chicago University in 1901. He became Master at North Division High School, Chicago, 111. He came to St. Paul’s School, Garden City, L. I., in 1905, and to Pawling in 1907. During Dr. Gamage’s absence in the winter of the past year, Mr. Elliott was Acting Head-Master. HORACE E. HENDERSON, A. B. English Mr. Henderson was graduated from Bow- doin College in 1879. He was Grammar School Principal in Bath, Me., for two years, and afterwards he became Master of the High School at Bath. In 1883 he was made Principal of the High School at Whit- man, Mass. After teaching ten years there he went to St. Paul’s School, Garden City, L. I., and came to Pawling with Dr. Gamage in 1907. GEORGE W. ANDERSON, A. B. Latin Mr. Anderson was graduated from Yale University in 1904. He immediately went to St. Paul’s School, Garden City L. I., where he taught for three years and came in 1907 to Pawling with Dr. Gamage. 16 JOHN NICHOLS, A. B., A. M. French Mr. Nichols was graduated from Princeton University in 1897. He did graduate work for two years and then taught at Santa Barbara, Cal., for three years. The next year he studied in Paris. On his return he became Master at Morristown School, Morristown, N. J. In 1911 he came to Pawling. ERNEST JACOB REITER, A. B. Mathematics Mr. Reiter was graduated from Muehlen- berg College in 1912. He did graduate work at the University of Pennsylvania for one year, and then went to the Yeates School, Lancaster, Pa. He came to Pawl- ing in 1916. From 1917 to 1919 he served in the U. S. Field Artillery, A. E. F., re- turning to Pawling in the fall of 1919. FRANK SMOYER, A. B. English Mr. Smoyer was graduated from Yale Uni- versity in 1907. He did post graduate work at the University of Munich and at Columbia. Before coming to Pawling in 1919, he was instructor in rhetoric at the University of Minnesota. 17 PIERSON CURTIS Mr. Curtis graduated from Princeton in 1913. From 1913 to 1916 he was a master at The Kingsley School. Then he went to Pawling until 1918, when he entered the Service. He served in the Navy for one year. From 1919-1920 he taught at Browne and Nichols School. He re- turned to Pawling in the fall of 1920. A. E. BERNARD TOMMERS Mathematics Mr. Tommers graduated from Yale Shef- field in 1911. He did research work for two years. He also taught at the New Haven High School from 1911-1912. From 1912-1916 he coached Yale Fresh- men. and in 1916 coached the Yale Varsity Basketball I earn. He joined the Army when war was declared and served for eighteen months as an instructor in the Aviation Corps. After his discharge he was with the Bankers Trust Co. for one year. He came to Pawling in March, 1920. THE REV. GRIEG TABER. A.B., B. D. Mr.Taber was graduated from St.Stephen’s College in 1916 with the degree of A. B. From there he entered Seabury Divinity School from which he was graduated in 1919. He was ordained to the Diaconate in June, 1919, and to the Priesthood in December, 1919. He received the degree of Bachelor of Divinity at Seabury Divinity School in 1920. He was English instructor in Shattuck School at Faribault, Minn., in 1918, and remained there until 1920. During the summer of 1919 he was a mis- sionary at Meeker, Colo. In the summer of 1920, he was Curate at All Saints’ Church, Boston. He came to Pawling in 1920. 18 Sit? iFarulty WILLIAM ALFRED SIMMONS, B.A. St. Stephen’s College Bursar MILNER BOWDEN MORRISON, M.D. Long Island Hospital Medical School School Physician DR. GEORGE RAY HARE Amherst College School Oculist WILLIAM KITCHENER Piano, Mandolin, Guitar and Banjo 19 iFnrmrr Jlauilutg iflastm George Jacobus, Latin and Greek............... 1907-’08 John F. Macklin, Physical Director.............1908-’09 Horace Snyder, Mathematics.................... 1907-’09 William Meldrum, Rector........................1907-’09 Edward G. Kendall, History.................... 1907-’12 Thomas A. D. Jones, Physical Director..........1908-’12 Everett C. Jessup, Latin........................1912-M3 Noble W. Sheldon, Greek........................1915-’16 John R. French, Physics........................1913-’17 Chester H. Sears, History......................1914-’17 Pierson Curtis, English.........................1916-M8 George A. Spencer, Mathematics..................1917-M8 William A. Landis, Physics.....................1917-’18 James Vandervelde, History.....................1917-’18 Roland J. Bunten, German.......................1907-’18 Howard D. Youmans, Bursar......................1910-’18 William L. Dunlap, Bursar......................1918-’19 Leon L. Morgan, Registrar......................1918-’19 Alfred B. Case, English........................1918-’19 Charles E. Martz, History......................1918-’19 Harold H. LaMent. Physical Director............1912-’19 Newton Merrill, History........................1919-’20 Lewis P. Damon, Spanish........................1918-’20 Herbert Borneman, History......................1919-’20 Carl W. Reeves, Lower School...................1919-’20 20 Alumni Assnriatinu ©fttrrrs President JOSEPH B. CARY, 1909 Vice-President WESLEY M. OLER, 1912 Secretary JOSEPH J. SPURR, II, 1915 Treasurer ORLANDO H. HARRIMAN 21 alu' Prrfrrta COUGHLIN CLUETT GRAVES VAN RIPER BONTECOU AUSTIN POSENER RITCHEY CAMPBELL GILLIES ftofrrta James Ver Plank Ritchey, Senior Prefect William Morris Austin, Jr. William Gorham Cluett George Kendall Campbell John Wygant Gillies, Jr. George Millard Graves Berrian Philip Posener Kenneth Ernest Van Riper Reed Vail Bontecou Walter Louis Coughlin u,ljr (Haas nf 1321 27 William Morris Austin New York, N. Y. r i f • SM orrie ’19-’20. Baseball Team, Hockey Team, Glee Club, Rep- resentative to the Sixth Form, Sergeant at Arms of House, Fall Term, St. John’s Society. ’20-’21. Prefect, Baseball Team, Golf Team, Vice-Presi- dent of Sixth Form, Mid- Winter Dance Committee, Vice-President of St. John’s Society, Sixth Form Council, Leader of Glee Club, Hockey Team. Morris came up the East Steps for the first time in the spring of 1919, and ever since then he has been progressing. In the short time that he has been here, he has made teams and committees a’plenty, and now he leaves school with a good slap on the back from all of us. PRINCETON 28 ’20-’21. Honorary Prefect, Capt. Swimming Team, Editor- in-Chief Phoenix; Track Team; Pres. Senate, Fall Perm; Football Team, Dramatic Club, Mandolin Club, Honor Roll. Reed Vail Bontecou Ithaca, N. Y. “Bonty’’ This is the second time Bonty has had a write-up in the Scroll. Last year he grad- uated, and he liked it here so much that he took a P. G. He’s not much bigger than his picture, and yet he won his let- ter in football. He has also done much in a scholastic and literary way. The best wishes of every fellow in school go with him when he enters Cor- nell this fall. 29 CORNELL '18-’19. Ass’t Baseball Manager, St. John’s Society, Glee Club. ’19-’20. Track Team, Manager Baseball Team, Second Football Team, St. John’s Society, Glee Club. ’20-’21. Prefect, Capt. Track Team, Football Squad, Business Mgr. Phoenix, Dramatic Club Cast, Sixth Form Council, Secretary and Treasurer Athletic Ass’n., Clerk of Senate, Fall Perm; St. John’s Society, Glee Club, Dramatic Ass’n., Honor Roll, Weekly Board. One day during the second term of 1918 a little fat chubby outfit came to school. We soon came to know this “outfit as “Chub Campbell of Scarsdale. Since that day he has joined all literary and athletic organizations in school that a person of such weight could be expected to. His success at Williams is assured. WILLIAMS 30 William Gorham Cluett Troy, N. Y. Bill “Chile” ’16-’17. Midget Football, St. John’s So- ciety, Current Events Club, Sec’t and Treas. of Form. ’17-’18. Midget Football, St. John’s So- ciety, Midget Baseball, Current Events Club. ’18-’19. St. John's Society, Current Events Club, Weekly Board. ’19-’20. Fifth Form Cheer Leader, Clerk of House for Christmas Term, Scroll Board, Ass’t Mgr. of Football, Ass’t Circulation Editor of Weekly, Ass’t Prop- erty Mgr. of Dramatic Club, St. John’s Society, Glee Club. '20-21. Prefect, Head Cheer Leader, Sixth Form Council, Sec. and Treas. of Senate for the Christ- mas Term, Mgr. of Football, Circulation Editor of Weekly, Managing Editor of the Scroll, Property Mgr. of Dramatic Club, St. John’s Society. Bill blew in on us in 1916 and from that time on has proved his worth in all phases of school activity. When he first entered school, we noticed the picture of a beautiful girl whom by this time most of us know. We hope and expect that he will not break faith with us who have voted him “the first to marry.” We send him forth with the esteem and deep felt friendship of all of us. 31 WILLIAMS ’16-’l 7. Honor Roll, St. John’s Society, Current Events Club. 17-’18. Honor Roll, Current Events Club, St. John’s Society. ’18-’19. Honor Roll, Weekly Hoard, St. John’s Society. ’19-’20. Honorary Prefect, Honor Roll, Assignment Editor of IVeekly. Walter Louis Coughlin Passaic, N. J. Walter” Walter didn't impress us much the first year he was here, but he certainly did end up strong. Since 1916 he has progressed rapidly in all phases of school activity until now he goes from us with our hearty good wishes. WILLIAMS 32 ’19-’20. Mandolin Club, Track Squad, St. John’s Society. ’20-’21. Advertising Manager of Phoenix, Mandolin Club, St. John’s Society. George Percy Freeland Rochester, N. Y. “Percy” “Jew Boy” “Friedman” “Georgie” ! The only thing we have against him is that he comes from Rochester. He has been here only two years, but in that time he has proved to us how a fellow can go out better than he came in. He is on the Phoenix Board and is a member of the Mandolin Club. You needn’t worry about George, he’ll get along O. K. YALE 33 John Wygant Gillies, Jr. Haverstraw, N. Y. “Johnny” “Juan” ’l9-’20. Head Boy of Fifth Form, Dramatic Club, Cast of “Believe Me, Xantippe,” Scroll Board, Mandolin Club, Assistant Manager Track Team, Third Base- ball Team, Best Examina- tion in Algebra, Best Ex- amination in Spanish, St. John’s Society, Current Events Club, Honor Roll. 20-’21. Prefect, Editor - in - Chief Scroll, Manager Track Team, Manager Dramatic Club, Mandolin Club, Editor Baseball Program, St. John’s Society, Ath- letic Association, Honor Roll. John has accomplished more in his two years here than any other fellow who has ever been with us for that length of time. He has not only supported the Dramatic Club and Scroll Board, but he was also made a Prefect, an honor very seldom conferred on a boy who has been in school for so short a time. If he progresses as rapidly in college as he has here, he will certainly be successful. M. I. T. 34 George Millard Graves Bennington, Vt. fi J ueorge ’17-’18. Honor Roll, Midget Foot- ball Team, Midget Base- ball Team, Best Examin- ation in Latin II. ’18-’19. Honor Roll, Third Foot- ball Team, Midget Base- ball Team. ’19-’20. Honor Roll, '1'r a c k Squad, Art Editor of Scroll, House Debating Team, Best Examination in Cicero. ’20-’21. Prefect, Sergeant at Arms of Senate for Fall Term, Art Editor of Scroll, Track Squad. George came to Pawling years ago, to be exact it wras in 1917 A.D. Nobody knew him at first except as a boy who stayed in all day studying. He is now wrapped up in something much worse than study, namely ART. For the last year he has been busy painting scenery at the Dutcher House or the school barns. We all hope that the next time we see his name it will be below a beautiful girl on a magazine cover. ART LEAGUE 35 Robert Fischer Kohler New Canaan, Conn. “Bob Bob has more admirers and friends than a snake has hips. He’s been here for only two years, and yet he has done al- most everything from playing football to building scenery for the Dramatic Club. Be- cause of his earnest effort he will undoubtedly be successful. So long, Bobbie. CORNELL ’19-’20. Second Football Team, Track Team, Dramatic Club, St. John’s Society. ’20-’21. Football Team, Stage Manager of Dramatic Club, St. John’s Society. 36 ’20-’21. First Football Team; St. John’s Society. Track Squad. Dramatic Club. John Wolsey McKernon New York, N. Y. “Mac” Our only regret is that we haven’t known Mac longer. When we first saw him we all said, “I'll bet that big horse can play football,” and you can bet we were right. He has more nerve, perseverance, and loyalty than anyone in the class, and because of these characteristics he will undoubt- edly play the game of life as well as he did that of football. 37 PRINCETON George Lloyd Murphy Detroit, Mich. Murph” ’20-’21. First Football Team, Bas- ketball Team, Hockey Squad, President of Sen- ate for Winter 'Perm, St. John’s Society. Ihe only trouble with “Murph’’ is that he didn't come to us before this year. However, we must be satisfied and proud to think that we have known him as long as we have. He is following close in the footsteps of his brother, who played quarter- back for Yale last fall. His determination, grit, and man- liness are sure to get him by at Yale this fall. YALE 38 Berrian Philip Posener Whitestone, N. Y. Posey” Bean ’16-’17. Vice-President of Third Form, Midget Football Team, Midget Baseball Team, St. John’s So- ciety, Midget Basketball Team. ’17-’18. Golf Team, Sec’t and Treas. of Fourth Form, Second Bas- ketball Team, Midget Football Team, St. John’s Society. ’18-’19. Capt. and Mgr. of Golf Team, Track Team, Second Basket- ball Team, Second Baseball Team, Hockey Team, Fifth Form Tea Committee. ’19-’20. Track Team, Capt. and Mgr. of Golf Team, Baseball Team, Fifth Form Tea Committee, Basketball Team, Hockey Team, St. John’s Society. ’20-’21. Prefect, Capt. of Basketball, Capt. and Mgr. of Golf Team, St. John’s Society, Hockey Team, Baseball Team, Track Team, Sec’t and Treas. of Sixth Form, Sixth Form Coun- cil, Mid-Winter Dance Com- mittee, Treas. of Senate Fall Term and Winter Term. “Bean” is the father of the class. He has been here five years and is on five teams. He never won an examination prize in his life, and it doesn’t worry him much. He's al- ways happy and should be. He is well liked wherever he goes and is as confident as are the rest of us of his future success. BROWN 39 Tamks Ver Plank Ritchey New York, N. Y. ff j • t Jim There is only this small space in which to sum up Jim- mie’s five successful years here. There is only one way to do this, and that is to say that he was this year’s Senior Prefect. The fellow that is Senior Prefect holds the big- gest position in school and must be a leader in every phase of life. He is the ex- ample for us all. Good-bye and Good luck, Jim. YALE ’16-’17. Midget Football Team, Midget Baseball Team, Current Events Club, Pres. Third Form. ’17-’18. Third Football Team, Third Baseball Team, Hockey Squad, Vice-Pres. Fourth Form; Mid- year Dance Committee; Repre- sentative to Sixth Form. St. John’s Society. ’18-’19. Hockey Team, Track Team, Baseball Squad, Sec’t and Treas. Fifth Form, Weekly Board, Representative to Sixth Form, Midyear Dance Committee, Current Events Club. ’19-’20. Baseball Team, Hockey Team, Second Football Team, Basket- ball Team, Golf Team, Tennis Team, Managing Editor Weekly, Pres. Fifth Form, Sec’t and Treas. St. John’s So- ciety, Dance Committee, Rep- resentative to Sixth Form. ’20-’21. Senior Prefect, Capt. Hockey Team, Baseball Team, Football Team, Basketball Team, Golf Team, Capt. Tennis Team, Editor-in-Chief Weekly, Pres. Sixth Form, Pres. Athletic As- soc., Pres. St. John’s Society, Sixth Form Council, Midyear Dance Committee. 40 ’19-’20. Scroll Board, Football Squad, Baseball Squad, St. John’s Society, Mandolin Club, Glee Club, Swim- ming Squad. ’20-’21. Football Team, Scroll Board, Track Squad, Bas- ketball Squad, Mandolin Club, Glee Club, St. John’s Society, Sergeant at Arms of Senate for Winter Term. William Edmund Scholtz Denver, Colo. Bill” Bill hasn't been here very long, but when he did blow in from the Wild and Woolly West, we realized that among us was a man. We realized it then, and he proved it to us in 1920, his second year in school, when he put his little self up against some of the heaviest guards in this part ol the country. Because of his perseverance and manliness his success is assured. YALE 41 Kenneth Ernest Van Riper Passaic, N. J. “ V an” 7- ’18. St. John’s Society, Cur- rent Events Club, Midget Football Team, Midget Baseball Team, Dramatic Club Cast, Honor Roll, Head Boy of Third Form. 8- ’19. Head Boy of School. Mid- get Baseball Team, Third Football Team, Dramatic Club Cast, St. John’s So- ciety, Basketball Squad. 9- ’20. Dramatic Club, Second Baseball Team, Football Squad, W eekly Board, Scroll Board, St. John’s Society. !0-’21. Prefect, Business Mana- ger of Scroll, President of Dramatic Club and Cast, Weekly Board, St. John’s Society. Van’s talent runs mainly in literary and dramatic lines. He’s been starring in the Dra- matic Club for three years and in his spare time has been win- ning prizes for various best examinations. He also has the honor of having been the Head Boy of the school in 1919. Van is a hard and en- thusiastic worker, and to pre- dict his future is totally un- necessary. 42 PRINCETON ’19-’20. Mandolin Club, St. John’s Society. ’20-’21. Football Squad, Leader of Mandolin Club, Secretary and Treasurer St. John’s Society. Clerk of Senate, Winter Term. Manager Baseball Team. Walter Kellog Whitehead Detroit, Mich. Toto” Walter” Above you see “Toto.” He can laugh harder and longer than anyone on earth. We met him in 1919. He can tear off a mean tune on the banjo and is versed in other direc- tions. We’re sorry that we can’t call him studious and bright, but there aren't many of us who are. He goes to Williams with the rest of the “gang.” WILLIAMS 43 THE CLASS BALLOl' Done most for Pawling—Ritchey 11, Posener 2. Hardest Worker—Gillies 5, Graves 2, Kohler 2. Funniest—Posener 6, Cluett 5. Fakes Life Easiest—Bontecou—Unanimous. Most Popular—Ritchey 8, Posener 7, Austin 1. Worst Nuisance—Freeland 5, Bontecou 4. Best Athlete—Ritchey 5, Posener 3, Austin 2. Handsomest—Ritchey 5, Austin 2, Cluett 1. Wittiest—Cluett 5, Campbell 4. Best Dressed—Whitehead 4, Austin 3, Van Riper 3. Best Build—Murphy 4, Austin 2, Ritchey 2. Most Ambitious—Kohler 5, Gillies 4, Austin 2. Most Likely to Succeed—Scholtz 4, Campbell 3. Laziest—Whitehead—Unanimous Worst Mexican Athlete—Murphy 5, Posener 4, Gillies 4. Noisiest—Posener 7, Cluett 2. Best Natured—Posener 6, Campbell 3. Best Drag—Ritchey 8, Coughlin 3. Needs It—Freeland 6, Austin 3. Biggest Bluffer—Cluett 8, Whitehead 1. Class Baby—Van Riper—Unanimous. Biggest Heart Breaker—Gillies 6, Ritchey 3, Posener 1. Biggest Woman Hater—Kohler 7, Graves 1. Will Marry First—Cluett—Unanimous. 44 45 l )0$T f MBITlOUS BtST Hf TURED 46 MOST POPULAR Noisiest „ ifST WITTIEST ■HUM tst Athlete Biggest heart breaker ■Ht will marry eirst WORST MUISAMCE Laziest 47 She (Elaea iitstnry Looking back over the existence of this class of 1921 from its birth to, 1 will not say its death, but up to the end of its scholastic career, we feel a great amount of joy and pride in belonging to a class that has done its utmost to live up to the standards of the Pawling School. Whether or not we have suc- ceeded is not for us to say, but for those who have grown up with us and for those who have taught us. We have among us, four old fossils, four who can boast of the longest period of service in the class. Those are JIMMIE RITCHEY, BERRIAN POSENER, WALTER COUGHLIN and BILL CLUETT. They arrived here in 1916. From the very minute of their arrival, they have progressed; in fact, they haven’t stopped vet. Jimmie and Bean have occupied enviable places on four teams, both are PREFECTS, Jimmie the SENIOR PREFECT as well as PRESIDENT OF THE SIXTH FORM, and of the ST. JOHN’S SOCIETY. The exceptional talents of WALTER COUGHLIN and BILL CLUETT have, not been evident in the sporting world, but these two fellows have earned enviable reputations in fields just as important to Pawling. Both are PRE- FECTS, while Walter is an Editor of the Weekly and Bill is Managing Editor of the Scroll. The following vear, 1917, saw the entrance of two more members of the class, GEORGE GRAVES and KENNETH VAN RIPER. These are our “Brain Athletes.” Both of these boys are also PREFECTS. They are the most steadfast members of the Honor Roll Brigade. Why, Van even reached the astounding height of Head Boy of the School two years ago. George and Van are on the Scroll Board and Van is President of the Dramatic Club and a member of the Phoenix Board. Of all the candidates who clamored for entrance in 1918, only one, GEORGE CAMPBELL, has survived to see this famous day and year. George 48 is one of the most prominent members of the class, being Track Captain, PRE- FECT and member of the Phoenix Board. I won’t, however, go into details any further. In the year 1919 there occurred the greatest influx of the Pawling School. Bob Kohler joined our number, furnishing us with one of the most efficient stage managers in the history of the Dramatic Club, to say nothing of his ability as a guide on a sight seeing bus. George Freeland, one broad smile, landed in our midst the same year. He has become a syncopating member of the Mandolin Club and is on the Phoenix Board. Then also arrived JOHN GILLIES, our hardest worker, a PREFECT, Editor-in-Chief of the Scroll, and Track Manager. From Detroit, that year, came “TOTO” Whitehead, Baseball Manager and Leader of the Mandolin Club. Our only Westerner arrived then in the person of Bill Scholtz, the hard-hitting boy from Denver. He is a prominent member of the Glee and Mandolin Clubs and of the Football Team, as well as an Associate Editor on the Scroll Board. And now we arrive at the last lap of our scholastic journey and find George Murphy and Jack McKernon granted entrance to our Sixth Form. Those two boys have been among us only a year, but there are no better liked boys in the School. Both of them were on the Football Team, while George was on the Basketball and Baseball Teams and Jack was a member of the Dramatic Club. Having given our attention to the personal history of the class, we will now turn to the history of the class as an organization. In our Fourth Form year, the class began to take a definite shape and form itself with a view to the future Sixth Form days. During our Fifth Form year we endeavored to establish a precedent in behavior and general character as a class. We were extraordinarily well represented in all phases of school activities, scholastic and athletic. We earnestly strove to follow the example of the Sixth Form and the traditions of the school. When we returned to school this year, our officers were already elected, and with this as a foundation we proceeded at once to the work of establish- ing the Sixth Form as a governmental body of the school. The PREFECTS were, of course, appointed by Dr. Gamage. We then elected the Sixth Form Council, which was to deal with disobedient members of the school body, and to enforce our wishes by conciliatory or other means. A common legislative bond was established between the Sixth Form and the rest of the school by representatives elected from the Fifth Form and Fourth Form. With this framework we have built up a legislative body and done our best for the school. We have been a very small class, but our motto is “Quality, not Quantity.” We, as a class, are responsible for failures, but Dr. Gamage and the Faculty are responsible for our successes and our achievements. Dr. Gamage’s Sunday talks are lessons of inestimable value and we will profit by them the rest of our lives. The rule that no Sixth Form can be a success without ab- solute co-operation with Dr. Gamage and the Faculty is inflexible. May the next Sixth Form heed this. Realizing our failures, we warn the class of 1922 to profit by our experi- ence; realizing our few successes, we are not ashamed to urge the class of 1922 to follow our precedent. We yield to the following Sixth Form the position of power, and wish them the greatest success in the fulfillment of their duties. W. MORRIS AUSTIN, Class Historian.. 49 CLASS PROPHECY fagnratiLll 0}he (EhtHB {froplprg Five years after my graduation from Pawling I became addicted to the opium habit, and two years after I had given the Dream God the mastery of my soul, I was a confirmed opium smoker. Every second day would find me toddling off to my Oriental friend’s shop, and in a small room in the back of this shop I passed through more experiences, both pleasant and painful, than any other being. As the smoke dulled my sense, the Genie of the Dream would appear and await my commands as to where our travel for that day should be. Every trip to the little Chinese shop would bring forth some new experience, some new tragedy, acted in the little back room. On the particular day I wish to tell about, my weakened intellect had been strained and strained as if by some idea that could not quite make itself understood. Finally I realized what this hazy thought was, and it came to me that seven years before that very day, my classmates and I stood for the last time as students of the Pawling School. And as I pondered upon this, it occurred to me that it would be a great thing to see what had become of all the old bunch in those past seven years. This idea was still on my mind as I entered the Chinese shop and prepared for my temporary departure from this life. Before I knew it, the Genie of the Dream had read my thoughts, and I was whirled away on a cloud to the busy streets of New York City, which I had not seen in those seven long years. I stopped, and looking around me, tried to pick out some of the old landmarks, when my reverie was broken by the loud clanging of a street car bell, and the sliding of the brakes, as the car barely missed running me down. The face of the angry motorman appeared twisted with rage, and despite the wrinkles of worry and the stains of tobacco, I recog- nized my old friend Bob Kohler, once the Master Mechanic of Pawling, and now the man at the head of that particular street car. Immediatelv my thoughts turned to Bob’s old room mate, and as if by magic, a sign caught my eye that read something like this: “If your clocks don’t run, see McKernon.” Here indeed was the second of the mighty men of machinery of Pawling, and following his father’s footsteps, too. His father, however, was a doctor of medicine, while Mac was a doctor of clocks. As I passed along the side of Sixth Avenue in the shade of the L, my attention was attracted by a most won- derful display of banjos, pen-knives, dice, and hair-brushes, in the window of one of those Faith, Hope, and Charity stores. I stopped for a moment tc glance at the window, and as I did, I fully realized the truth of the old saying “He who hesitates is lost.” No sooner had I stopped than the bearded pro- 50 prietor rushed out, expressed his joy at seeing me, and rushed me into the “darkened-to-fool-you” emporium. As soon as 1 had regained my balance and watch, I buttoned up my coat for safety and took a good look at the proprietor. Beneath the wrinkles and marks of many Yom Kippur days, I recognized my old neighbor, “Jew Boy” Freeman, the model young man. As soon as George recalled me, he told me that another old friend of mine was in his employ. He pointed back at the cage in the rear of the store and there sat old George Graves the Mathematician, figuring up the interest on millions of notes by a Jewish version of the “square on the hypothenuse.” Finally, with great diffi- culty, I tore myself away from Freeman’s place and was pushing on up the Avenue, when I noticed a crowd of people, mostly girls, fighting for places around a drug store window. Naturally my curiosity was aroused, and after risk- ing my life, and spoiling my shine, I got a peek at the attraction. There stood Vail Bontecou in his old silk bathing suit, demonstrating the practical uses of Dr. Coughlin’s electric muscle builder. I was rather surprised at first to see what was drawing the crowd, but I guess after all Bonty has as much right to wear a silk bathing suit as anyone; and as for the utensil he was demonstrat- ing—well, when such an authority constructs a muscle builder it speaks for itself. As I turned away from this motley group, 1 noticed a lean old “knight of the road” supporting himself upon a fire hydrant, which was nearly as red as the end of his nose. Massive shoulders and well formed limbs gave evi- dence of many weary hours spent in startling the boys with tricks on the flying rings in the school gym, but the wear and tear of nights of liquor and cards had torn this figure so much that I hardly recognized old Toto, known in polite society as Walter Whitehead. I spoke to him, and after a few moments his hazy brain recalled me, and I told him of my experiences of the evening, and asked him if he knew what had become of any of the boys. In a dry, cracked voice, he told me that Bill Cluett was running the McCauley Mission for broken-down derelicts. Well, I bade Walter good-night and set off for the Mission, which was just under the Brooklyn Bridge. Here I found the Rev. Mr. Cluett busily engaged trying to quiet one of his guests, who was evidently well started in a fit of Delirium Tremens. I spoke to Bill and started to help him with his charge, when the man suddenly stared at me with his blood-shot eyes. I was here received by the surprise of my life. It was Bill Scholtz, whom I had always imagined as being an ideal man for a Y. M. C. A. leader, but 1 suppose where there is life there is hope. Well, I saw Scholtz safely in a padded cell, had a chat with Bill, and then in the hopes of meeting the rest of the bunch, I set out for the old stamping grounds, the Biltmore. I jumped into a taxi, and in a few moments the driver pulled up in front of the hotel. The door swung open, and I was greeted by the usual flash of gold braids and buttons, but to my surprise the man’s face was represented by his nasal protrusion only. The rest of his head and the greater part of his neck were neatly tucked into a size four Russian cavalry model doorman’s hat. I hesitated and then yielding to the temptation, I raised the lid, as it were, and found beneath it my old friend Morris Austin, still enjoying the lustre of the bright lights, but from the outside. Just then a terrible commo- tion in the lobby attracted my attention. I looked, and at the head of the stairs I saw a shoe-string vendor and knife sharpener being ushered out by a squad of bellboys, their fearless commander at their head. I recognized the bell captain as Fighting Van Riper, the scourge of the Third Form. The pedler’s fate was sealed. With a crash and clatter the unfortunate man landed in the gutter, and as he emerged from the pile of wreckage I saw that it was none other than Bean Posener, the modern Shylock. I turned up the stairs, and one glance around the lobby brought to me one familiar face. It b 1 was my old chum Jim Ritchey, who was now the bustling, hustling, New York representative and sales agent for the Lightning Corn and Bunion Remover. Jim and I had a great old talk and started out to lunch together. As we turned into Forty-second Street, I saw a crowd of small boys led by an imposing looking gentleman. At a second glance I saw that it was the King of Snakes, John Gillies. I spoke to him and inquired if they were all his children. He told me no, that they were merely banner boys of his Sunday School class whom he was taking to Van Cortlandt Park for a good outing and basket picnic. Jim and I saw him safely on the Subway, and then proceeded on our way to the Astor for lunch. We were nicely seated and had given our order when a bustling bus boy emerged from behind a pillar and placed our ice water and butter on the table. Jim pointed, I looked and who should it be but George Campbell. I was about to ask George how the world was treating him when my vision became clouded, and I was not looking at George but at a Chinese attendant who was trying to wake me from my stupor. I arose and went out into the street, promising myself that on the next Alumni Day at Pawling I would in reality see my old “comrades in misery.” GEORGE MURPHY, Class Prophet. 52 Uihr iFnrm (Cmtnril The Sixth Form Council, originated by the Class of 1918, has been most successful as a means of dealing with refractory underformers. The work of the Council has saved much time and trouble for the Sixth Form, particularly when the subject was a misguided member of the lower school. Its success lies in the fact that it is easier to get into close communication with an underformer with a small group than with the entire class. 53 JFnrmer members of the (Class of 1021 UU5-’16 David E. Boynton James Gillespie Edwin D. Flint Philip Lounsberry Strother B. Purdy Hamilton Baker Gordon K. Baldwin Ernest H. Boynton Bruce Brodie Ross M. Dougherty Russell Halliday David W. Hitchcock imr-’iB Phillip S. Lum Bergin A. Mackinnon Samuel A. Peck Erskine M. Perry David Potts Hollis B. Shaw Roger S. Watson George E. Boynton Charles B. Lutz Arthur J. Crawford Urban M. Morgan Richard Dudensing, 3rd. Stuart G. Rutherford Aaron L. Evans William R. Teller, Jr. George J. Helmer Allen W. Thrasher Bennett Walker 101U-’2D Walter H. Hoag S. Hastings King Cyrus H. Polley, Jr. Alan Stevenson Howard O. Wills Albert Biggs George L. Collins Stephen A. Davis Aaron L. Evans 55 56 wlu' (Elasa nf 1931 Baker, Hamilton Hunt..................New Rochelle, N. Y. Biggs, Albert...............................Garden City, N. Boynton, George Edward, Jr..................Brooklyn, N. Y. Brodie, Bruce...............................New York, N. Y. Carvalho, John Bertram................................Hartford, Conn. Colebrook, Mulford Albert......................Rochester, N. V. Cook, George Rea...........................1 renton, N. J. Dougherty, Ross Nelson..........................Brooklyn, N. Y. Evans, Aaron Littell................................Cincinnati, Ohio Greene, John Hutton...................New Rochelle, N. Y. Grosvenor, William Mason, Jr.............New York, N. Y. Hali.iday, Russell................................Cairo, 111. Henshaw, Edward Lyman......................Scarsdale, N. Y. Hurd, Bradley James.........................Buffalo, N. Y. Ivey, George Eugene..............................Denver, Col. Kelley, Leroy Joseph...................................Everett, Mass. Knickerbocker, Kenneth..........................Chicago, 111. Lambert, Albert Bond, Jr.................St. Louis, Mo. Lum, Phillip Livingston Swinnerton--------Chatham, N. J. Morgan, Urban.......................................Cincinnati, Ohio Perry, Erskine Mar.................................Nyack, N. Y. Polley, Cyrus Hamilton, Jr..................Buffalo, N. Y. Shaw, Hollis Baird.......................New York, N. Y. Stoneham, Horace Charles.................New York, N. Y. Swan, Richard Johnston.......................Pittsburgh, Pa. Thompson, Lewis Gordon.................White Plains, N. Y. Washburn, Wilbur Fisk, Jr................New York, N. Y. White, Charles Corwin...........................Chicago, 111. • 1 ' • n 57 Ln 00 (Ttjr (UlnaH df 1923 Qfltc (ClafiH of 1323 Adams, Robert Henry, Jr...............Greenwich, Conn. Austin, Francis Duane.................New York, N. Y. Austin, Willis Phipps...................Norwich, Conn. Barnewall, Nicholas.........................Rye, N. Y. Bizallion, Eugene Charles.............New York, N. Y. Coughlin, Edward........................Passaic, N. J. Crarb, Frederick Gardner, Jr..........Westville, Conn. Devitt, George Wilson.................Montclair, N. J. Duane, Harry Brewerton................Stamford, Conn. Frost, Frederick Jerome...................Nyack, N. Y. Gaines, Harlow Damon..................New York, N. Y. Hamilton, Charles Kingsbury...........New York, N. Y. Harper, John Nusser.....................Crafton. Pa. Lamb, Gilbert Baldwin.................New York, N. Y. Lashar, Walter Benjamin..............Bridgeport, Conn. Lum, Ralph..............................Chatham, N. J. Montgomery, Henry, Jr....................Beacon, N. Y. Morgan, Jaxon ........................Cleveland, Ohio Page, Stanley Hart......................Chatham, N. J. Polhemus, Albert Duryea...................Nyack, N. Y. Randolph, Edmund, Jr..................New York, N. Y. Reidemeister, Frederick Cari..........Englewood, N. J. Scott, Alexander Lyon.................Los Angeles, Cal. Thomas, Colwell............................Troy, N. Y. 59 «ibr (Class of 1024 She (Class nf 1 124 F. S. KIRBY President s E««‘Xg „ THOMPSON viccl5''es,de Beers, Daniel Tracy........... Bennett, George Dunstan... Bissell, Thomas Russell....... Bull, Stephen Moffat....... Bullard, John Augustus........ Carter, Ford.................. Clark, George Beard, Jr....... Cole, Gilbert Lincoln......... Conley, William............... Crook, Gerard Beekman......... de Ruyter, John Louis......... Dessez, Paul Tonnei........... Goodlove, William Francis..... Hamersley, Arnold............. Hamilton, Frederick Johnson .. Hancock, Austin Flint......... Hendrickson, Charles Cyril.... Hodgman, Charles Augustus..... Hollister, George Lee......... Kimberland, Kendall, C. B. G... Kirby, Frederic Stevens....... Landauer, William Ide......... Lane, Arthur Kelsey........... Lathrop, Robert Hayden........ McGoodwin, Preston Buford..... Mansure, John Forsman......... Mead, George Douglass......... Mead, John Jay Stucnell....... Pattison, Harold Harwood...... Potter, Byron Thomas.......... Roberts, John Kennedy......... Shepard, Francis Henry, Jr.... Shuttle worth, James.......... Sturhahn, Edward Marshal!..... Teller, Robert Duerr.......... Thompson, James Daniel........ Weiss, Harry.................. Wheaton, Homer Dam aim........ Woodruff, Robert Henry........ Wustlich, Charles Augustus, Jr Young, Archer Emmet............ .... New Haven, Conn. .... South Bend, Ind. .......Massillon, Ohio . ..Newburgh, N. Y. . .Bridgeport, Conn. ........Chicago, 111. .......Milford, Conn. ..New Rochelle, N. Y. ......New York, N. Y. ......New York, N. Y. ... .New York. N. Y. ......New York, N. Y. ......Ridgewood, N. J. ....New York, N. Y. ......New York, N. Y ......New York, N. Y. Rockville Center, N. Y. .......Scarsdale, X. Y. . . White Plains, X. Y. ......New York, N. Y. .....Kalamazoo, Mich. ......New York, N. Y. ....New' Haven, Conn. .......Hartford, Conn. .....Washington, D. C. ..........Chicago, 111. ...White Plains, N. Y. .Lake Waccabuc, N. Y. ......New York, N. Y. ......Providence, R. I. ......New York, N. Y. . . .New Rochelle, N. Y. ......Douglaston, L. I. ........Hartford, Conn. .........Bayside, N. Y. . . . White Plains, X. Y. ......New York, N. Y. ..........Amenia, N.Y. ......New York, N.Y. .......Hartsdale, N. Y. ......New York, N. Y. 61 Hufterfimn Srprrsentatiurs tn $ xth 3umtt iFifth Storm A. BIGGS C. H. POLLEY 62 H. MONTGOMERY E. COUGHLIN V ©fftrrrs James V. Ritchey..............................President Berrian P. Posener.......................Vice-President George K. Campbell.............Secretary and Treasurer fRpntbprs Head Master (ex-officio) Mr. A. E. B. Tommers..................Athletic Director E. M. Perry VV. G. Cluett W. K. Whitehead J. W. Gillies R. V. Bontecou H. H. Baker A. L. Evans R. Halliday H. B. Shaw 64 A. E. B. Tommers Head Coach 65 66 HB.Shaw 'z% ahr Jfiuitball aram CLUETT (Mgr.) DOUGHERTY RITCHEY COLEBROOK STONEHAM BONTECOU LAMB ER T BA R XI'.WALL KOHL E R McK E RISTON MURPHY BIGGS KNICKERBOCKER PERRY (Capt.) POLLEY KELLEY WHITE SCHOLTZ 1020 jfrwtbaU Aasariation Erskine M. Perry, 1922......................Captain William G. Cluett, 1921.....................Manager Aaron L. Evans, 1922.............Assistant Manager A. E. B. Tommers..............................Coach G. W. Anderson............................Assistant Coach E. J. Reiter..............................Assistant Coach (tltr (train ENDS A. Biggs, 1922 M. A. Colebrook, 1922 TACKLES K Knickerbocker, 1922 W. H. Hoag, 1922 GUARDS R. N. Dougherty, 1922 V. E. Scholtz, 1921 CENTER J. W. McKernon, 1921 HALF-BACKS L. J. Kelley. 1922 A. B. Lambert, 1921 QUARTER-BACK Cyrus H. Polley, 1922 FULL-BACK George Murphy, 1921 ubatttwtra James V. Ritchey, 1921 Erskine M. Perry, 1922 Robert F. Kohler, 1921 Nicholas Barnevvall, 1923 R. Vail Bontecou, 1921 Horace C. Stoneham, 1922 Charles C. White, 1922 69 SuwthaU Aaanriatunt ©ffirrrs (Uif 1020 iFootball Srliriuxlr Oct. 9 Milford ...................P., 3;M., 14 Oct. 16 Kent.......................P., o; K., 42 Oct. 23 Choate .....................P.,6; C., o Oct. 30 Union Freshmen..............P., 23; U.F., o Nov. 6 Hotchkiss..................P., o;H., 68 Nov. 13 Taft .......................P.,o; T., 7 Nov. 13 Taft ..............................P.,o; T., 7 71 ©hr Reason of 10211 Shortly after school opened, candidates for the football team were called out, and the season of 1920 was ushered in with a short practice in falling on the ball, handling the ball, and other fundamentals of football tactics. Erskine Perry, the only “P” man left from the previous season, was appointed captain. The call for candidates was answered by about forty. These were about equally divided between the backfield and the line. The early season work was almost entirely devoted to getting the team into condition and selecting the men who eventually should make up the school team. Thanks to the work of Mr. Anderson, the line men were welded into a hard charging and strong defensive line, long before the end of the season. Our first game with Milford was just a try-out for most of the men, and considering the fact that not one on the team had ever played with his team mates before, the showing was creditable. The following week we were completely out-played by Kent, and suffered our first reverse of the sea- 72 son. The next week was spent in hard and vigorous practice, and showed its value in our defeat of Choate by the score of 6 to o. Against Union the team gave a great exhibition of varied attack, and completely outclassed the heavier though slower team to the tune of 23 to o. By this time the team was beginning to feel the need of substitutes necessary to keep the first team in tip-top condition. Half the team were suffering from more or less serious injuries and bruises, but had to play in spite of it all. Against Hotchkiss we were completely at a loss to try anything. A much heavier line pre- vented all line plunges, and two speedy ends prevented our running around their wings. Hotchkiss demonstrated her re- markable power against Hill the following week. The climax of the football season was reached in our game with Taft. Though handicapped by injuries, our team was able to hold Taft to a small score, and with a little turn of football luck might have tied their very good team. At present our football prospects loom bright for next year; and should the men we now count on prove available next fall, we can rest assured that our start will be much more auspicious than the start of the present year. 73 cl hr Warmth Jfnnthall arant 4 I I Slip arant H. H. Baker...........................Captain A. L. Evans...........................Manager G. W. Anderson..........................Coach arant D. Austin..............................Right Guard H. H. Baker...................................Left Tackle G. Boynton................................ Center F. G. Crabb, Jr.........................Left Half J. B. Carvalho................................Left Guard H. D. Gaines................................Right Guard W. M. Grosvenor, Jr.....................Full Back W. I. Landauer........................ Left End W. B. Lasher..................................Left Tackle L. G. Thompson.............................Quarter Back W. F. Washburn........................Right Tackle £ rltrhulr Pawling Second, 19 Riggs School, o at Lakeville 75 76 3Fmwr |Jaiultng-®aft jfantball (6amrs 1914 Pawling 21 Taft 0 1915 Pawling 6 Taft 9 1916 Pawling 0 Taft 0 1917 Pawling 0 Taft 26 1918 Pawling 6 Taft 7 1919 Pawling 6 Taft 21 1920 Pawling 0 Taft 7 77 Jfmitball '07 L. D. Greene ’08 H. C. Knowles ’09 D. B. Ferguson ’10 M. B. Flvnn ’HR. D. Peck, Jr. ’12 W. F. Clarkson ’13 C. L. Quaintance ’14 E. S. Patterson 15 T. V. Gargan ’16 T. V. Gargan 17 E. B. Babcock ’18 F. R. Spates 19 F. R. Spates ’20 E. M. Perry jfloiitbaU ’08 C. Buckingham ’09 H. C. Knowles ’10 A. G. Deming ’11 A. E. Patton ’12 J. C. Orr ’13 F. B. Dean ’14 T. H. Schmid ’15K. Hayward ’16 G. Noakes ’17 R. L. Carey ’18 F. R. Stead ’19 J. R. Tench ’20 L. V. Dodge ’21 W. G. Cluett ’22 A. L. Evans klhr (£aytains IBaarball ’21 K. K. Knickerbocker ’08 R. H. Schmid ’09 J. B. Cary ’10 A. G. Deming ’ll H. E. Cary ’12 C. S. Reed ’13 T. F. Goldsmith ’14 G. M. Parker ’15 A. Howland ’16 F. Robeson ’17 T. V. Gargan ’18 E. B. Babcock ’19 F. R. Spates ’20 F. R. Spates Shr iHanagrra Saarball ’08 J. P. Mendle ’09 J. F. Lowe ’10 M. Munsill ’ll I. Doolittle ’12 C. C. Taylor ’13 W. Blair ’14 C. Sanderson ’15 C. A. Henry ’16 J Tennent ’17 F. Broenniman ’18 E. Broenniman ’19 R. L. Vilas ’20 G. L. Campbell ’21 W. K. Whitehead Killed in the Great War. arark ’08 J. D. Thomas ’09 R. Hilands ’10 H. Brigham ’ll W. M. Oler, Jr. ’12 W. M. Oler, Jr. ’13 E. F. Upson ’14 C. M. Sanders ’15 E. DeCernea ’16 T. V. Gargan ’17 H. Hallidav ’18 E. M. Perry ’19 J. R. Tench ’20 R. Halliday ’21 G. K. Campbell arark ’08 E. Wuperman ’09 J. B. Cary ’10 T. Dixon ’11 O. Simmons ’12 W. Crossius ’13 C. Chambers ’14 C. Quaintance ’15 W. Cassedy ’16 W. Gamwell ’17 A. Wilkinson ’18 F. Macomber ’19 F. L. Gross ’20 W. E. Almv ’21 T. W. Gillies 78 80 1321 iUasrhall Assnriatum William M. Austin..........................Captain Walter K. Whitehead George R. Cook . .Assistant Manager A. E. B. Tommers (ihr tLrant PITCHERS W. M. Austin S. Page FIRST BASE CATCHERS R. Kelley R. Dougherty W. Washburn SECOND BASE H. Stoneham THIRD BASE G. Murphy SHORTSTOP LEFT FIELD B. Posener M. Colebrook CENTER FIELD RIGHT FIELD J. Ritchey N. Barnewall 81 82 Ufe Season of 1921 With the opening of the 1921 baseball season, the team took the field against their first opponent with five veterans of the 1920 team in their old places. Four places remained to be filled, and so Coach Tommers immediately set about drilling new men for the vacant positions. This work of de- veloping and training verdant talent and also the team in general, was aided by the good weather prevalent in the early spring. Thus, by the time of the first encounter, the Pawling team was well prepared to face the ordeals of the premier games. Before the winter term drew to a close, the prospective battery men went through a light work-out in the gym. These brief practices were extremely beneficial as shown by the fine form Captain Austin showed in the pitcher’s box while the season was still young. Outdoor practice was not held till less than a week before the first game. The attention of Mr. Tommers was then concentrated on the offensive and defensive phases of the sport. The entire squad of about twenty-five candidates was given strenuous and rigid training. When the nine faced Mohegan Lake M. A., it reflected remarkably the result of this strict training. On April 9th, the lid of the Pawling baseball season was pried off with an easy victory. Austin twirled in fine form, striking out fifteen batsmen, and the team backed him up well so that Pawl'ing won easily by 7-0. The following Saturday the nine played its second game with the Williams Freshmen on Weston Field. The team outclassed the collegians 12-5. Here again Austin’s fine work 84 on the slab, aided by Kelley’s play at first base and Ritchey's timely hitting, was instrumental in the victory. The team thoroughly enjoyed their stay at Williamstown and appre- ciated the hospitality shown to them while there. New York M. A. was defeated on Wednesday, April 20th, by the score of 9-0. Murphy’s steady hitting was the feature of the day. Austin, as usual, pitched a brilliant game. A steady rain necessitated the postponement of the N. Y. U. Freshmen game. As the Scroll goes to press, the baseball schedule has hardly advanced to that point where a definite statement can be made concerning the final status of the team. It is certain that the team has made no doubtful start. The play and stick work have been excellent and all tends to a successful season. 85 aljp 1921 iHaspbaU rhfbulr April Sat. 9 Mohegan Lake...................at Pawling Sat. 16 Williams Freshmen............at Williamstown Wed. 20 Pittsfield High................at Pawling Sat. 23 N. Y. U. Freshmen...............at Pawling Wed. 27 Polytechnic Prep...............at Pawling Sat. 30 Hamilton Institute............ .at Pawling May Wed. 4 Mount Pleasant.................at Pawling Sat. 7 M'ilford........................at Pawling Wed. 11 Irvington.......................at Pawling Sat. 14 Yale Freshmen...............New Haven Wed. 18 Crosby.........................at Pawling Sat. 21 Taft................at Pawling (Alumni Day) Wed. 25 Kent...........................at Pawling Sat. 28 Brown Second.. .................at Pawling Tues. 31 Hotchkiss.......................at Lakeville 87 88 89 U,hr 1321 wrark Aaaoriattmt George K. Campbell, 1921...................Captain John W. Gillies..............................Manager A. E. B. Tommers...............................Coach abi' arant George K. Campbell............................Half-Mile Run R. Vail Bontecou...................................P°le Vault Russell Halliday......................Broad Jump, Shot Put Berrian Posener....................................Mile Run Robert H. Kohler.......................................Hammer Throw Philip L. Lum..................................220 Yard Dash Albert Lambert........................High Jump, Pole Vault George Murphy...............100, 220 Yard Dash, Broad Jump Edward Henshaw................................100 ard Dash Harry Duane.....................................Low Hurdles W. Austin......................................+40 Yard Dash R. Lum.........................................++0 Yard Dash John Carvalho..........................................Hammer Throw K. Hamilton........................................Mile Run Harry Montgomery..............................Half-Mile Run 91 (Left) GEORGE K. CAMPBELL Captain 92 puulutg (la ark Kmiris Event Record Name Year 100 Yd. Dash 10 1-5 secs. VV. M. Oler, Jr. 1911 A. Drury 1908 R. G. Jermyn 1914 E. DeCernea 1914 220 Yd. Dash 22 3-5 secs. E. DeCernea 1914 440 Yd. Dash 52 secs. H. Brigham 1910 880 Yd. Run 2 min. 3 2-5 secs. H. Brigham 1910 Mile Run 4 mins. 30 3-5 secs. H. Brigham 1909 High Hurdles 16 1-5 secs. W. M. Oler, Jr. 1912 Low Hurdles 26 1-5 secs. R. V. Hilands 1909 R. G. Jermyn 1914 High Jump 6 ft. 3 5-8 ins. W. M. Oler, Jr. 1912 Broad Jump 21 ft. 9 ins. R. W. Smith 1914 Pole Vault 11 ft. 6 ins. A. B. Lambert 1921 Shot Put 47 ft. 6 1-2 ins. E. F. Perry 1918 Hammer 154 ft. 6 ins. H. H. Webb 1915 Interscholastic Record. jlatulxng its. HUiitp -plains—Dual iHrpt Friday, April 29, 1921 Broenniman Track Event 100 Yd. Dash 220 Yd. Dash 440 Yd. Dash 880 Yd. Dash Mile Run High Hurdles Low Hurdles Broad Jump Pole Vault Hammer Throw Shot Put High Jump First Henshaw (P) Murphy (P) Williams (WP) Darling (WP) Posener (P) Murphy (P) Duane (P) Murphy (P) Lambert (P) Kohler (P) Samson (WP) Lambert (P) Second Murphy (P) Henshaw (P) Austin (P) Montgomery (P) Darling (WP) Halliday (P) Montgomery (P) Halliday (P) Henderson (WP) Carvalho (P) Turton (WP) Junet (WP) Time, Height • or Distance 10 3-5 24 54 2-5 2 15-4 5 10 18 2-5 34 19 9 Ft. 10 4 Ft. 100 Ft. 37 4 Ft. 5 5 Ft. 94 Cl hr i rasmt nf 1921 As this goes to press, although the Track Team has won its first meet, any predict'ion as to the remainder of the season would be quite impossible. However, the result of the first meet with White Plains does make it possible to state that the prospect is very favorable. Eight of last year’s team have returned; and these, strengthened by some very promising material, ought to prove a formidable opponent to any of the schools we meet this spring. Among the new comers to the team, Murphy, Lam- bert and Henshaw look the most promising. On Friday, May 29, the team met their first op- ponents, White Plains, whom they defeated 77 to 31. Murphy was the biggest point winner with a total of 18 po'ints while Lambert and Henshaw followed closely with 10 and 8 points respectively. Halliday, Posener, Duane and Montgomery also did well at point gaining. In the running events, Murphy, Posener, Henshaw and Duane received first places in the 220, mile, 100, and the 200- yard hurdles. In the field events, Lambert won first places in the pole vault and high jump while Murphy and Kohler won the broad jump and hammer throw re- spectively. With this in mind it seems probable that Pawling ought to hold her own in the meets with Taft and Hotchkiss equally as well as in the one with White Plains. 95 ahr Saskrtball arant LAMBERT RITCHEY BAKER, Mgr. KNICKERBOCKER POSENER, Capt. MURPHY 96 Ca PT. Dec. 11. Jan. 15. Jan. 19. Jan. 22. Jan. 26. Jan. 29. Feb. 5. Feb. 9. Feb. 26. Mar 5. (Oftirrni B. Pose ner, 1921.........Captain II. H. Baker, 1922. . . Manager A. E. B. Tommers.............Coach Uihe (Train B. Posener, 1921........L. Forward A. Lambert, 1922........R. Forward G. Murphy, 1921.............Center J. Ritchey, 1921..........L. Guard K Knickerbocker, 1922.....R. Guard rliriUilr Boy’s High School, at Pawling... .B. H. S. Manual Training H. S., at Pawling.. M. T. Brookwood School, at Pawling...........B. Princeton Prep., at Pawling............P. P. Raymond Riordern, at Pawling........R. R. Yonkers H. S., at Pawling........Y. H. S Taft, at Pawling......................... T. Milford, at Pawling....................M Mt. Pleasant, at Pawling............M. P. Choate, at Wallingford.................C. 24; P. 38 32; P.24 11; P.56 P. 34 P. 46 P. 28 P. 24 14; P.31 21; P.25 16; P.31 97 The basketball team of 1921 maintained and duplicated the fine record established by its predecessor of 1920. Pawling lost two games in a course of the ten scheduled. Manual Training of Brooklyn defeated the school early in the season. During the Mid-year Festivities the team dropped its only other game to Taft. The other games resulted in undis- puted victories for Pawling. Before the close of the Fall Term the team won its first game from Boys’ High, 38-24. The work of Posener and Murphy was perfect. The arrival of the Christ- mas recess interrupted the team play temporarily, and Manual Training won a close decision by a 32-24 score. Lambert did some excellent shooting 'in this game. Closely following the Manual Training game, the team buried Brookwood in an un- interesting but fast game, the score being 56-11. Posener and Lambert scored at will. Princeton Prep, was next defeated, 34-11. Biggs starred in this game. Raymond Riordern fell a victim to Pawling’s onslaught by the score of 46-1. Yonkers High School then appeared and after offering stubborn oppo- sition, was finally beaten, 28-17. Posener’s fast work and Ritchey’s guarding featured. H. H. Baker, Mgr. On February 5th, the team after the Midwinter Prom., took the floor against Taft. The visiting quintet played a sound game and defeated the school 27-24 after overcoming Pawling’s early lead. Biggs starred until his injured knee handicapped his playing. The following week Milford ar- rived and was handed a defeat of 31-14. Posener as usual starred. Crosby was forced to cancel their game, so an interval 98 of two weeks elapsed before the Pawling team took another contest. This time it was Mount Pleasant who suffered a defeat of 25-21. Mount Pleasant played 'in good form, and despite the remarkable work of Knickerbocker and Murphy, the visitors managed to keep the score close. To provide an appropriate conclusion to a successful sea- son, the team journeyed to Choate and played a sterling brand of basketball. The score was 3 1-16 'in favor of Pawling, but it does not really indicate the evenness of the game. Posener led the team in this final victory. Throughout the season Captain Posener was the mainstay of the Pawling team. Fast in the midst of action, quick in taking advantage of the breaks in the game, he supplied the example and driving power so greatly desirable for the team’s success. tTljr (SymuaBtttm 99 (Utr Unrkrji arum EVANS, Mgr. COLEBROOK LATH KOI KNICKERBOCKER AUSTIN RITCHEY, Capt. POSENER BARNEWALL POLLEY (Qfttrrra J. V. Ritchey, 1921..............Captam A. L. Evans, 1922.............Manager Slip (Tram J. V. Ritchey, 1921.........R. Wing B. Posener, 1921.. . L. Wing S. Polley, 1922............ . .Rover N. Barnewall, 1923...............Center M. Austin, 1921...................Point K. Knickerbocker, 1922. . . .C. Point R. Lathrop, 1923....................Sub tPrhriiuU' Jan. 24. Hotchkiss at Lakeville H. 3; P. 1 Jan. 29. Kent at Pawling K.0; P.2 Feb. 2. Canterbury at New Milford C. 1 ; P.3 Feb. 19. Taft at Watertown T. 1 ; P.0 101 This season, hockey, as usual, turned out to be a very uncertain sport under our climatic conditions. The team was con- tinually handicapped throughout the season by uncertain ice. Because of lack of prac- tice the team never had the proper op- portunity to develop its full strength. The Kent game, however, showed conclusively that under more fortunate circumstances we should have had an exceptional team. Led by Ritchey, our team showed flashes of re- markable form, which gave abundant proof of what might have been expected had we had better ice and more opportunity to practice. The first game, with Hotchkiss, was a very fast game which re- sulted in the defeat of Pawling. Poor passing on the part of the Pawling line, during the first part of the game, accounted for the fact that there was not a goal scored during this period. However, in the last period the team played much better hockey, but it was in vain, for Hotchkiss scored three goals to Pawling’s one. The next game was played with Kent; and, altho Kent had just beaten Hotchkiss, we defeated them 2-0 in a fast and extremely hard fought game. The work of Colebrook and Polley was excellent. Pawling played the third game of the season with Canterbury School. As the ice was very slow, every man had to play for himself. Polley was undoubtedly the star of this game, which turned out a victory of 3-1 for us. In the fourth and last game of the season we were defeated 1-0 by Taft. It was an exceedingly well played game in which we kept the puck in Taft’s territory the greater part of the time. Had our shots been more accurate, it would have resulted in a victory for Pawling. The work of the defense and Captain Ritchey was spectacular. As five letter men will be on next year’s team, the prospects for a successful season are good. A. L. Evans, Mgr. 102 103 ahr uummittg aram SWAN, Mgr. MURPHY LUM POLLEY BONTECOU DOUGHERTY MORGAN GREENE BRODIE (Captain) MEAD Capt. Bontecou (Ofttri'rH R. V. Bontecou.........Captain R. J. Swan.............Manager A. E. B. Tommers.........Coach altr uli'am R. V. Bontecou. . 100 yds., 50 yds., Relay Dive R. N. Dougherty..................220 yds. C. Polley...................50 yds., Relay J. Morgan...................50 yds., Relay G. Murphy......................Relay R. Lum...........................220 yds. B. Brodie.................... Dive G. Greene.....................Plunge J. Mead.......................Plunge §?rlirimh' Feb. 12. Boys’ High School.......................B. H.25; P.25 Feb. 22. Erasmus Hall..............................E. H. 14; P.39 Mar. 12. Yale Interscholastics.......................P. 5 points 105 Our swimming season was a very suc- cessful one in every way, with one excep- tion, namely, the scarcity of meets. We felt the lack of this in the proper develop- ment of our team. In spite, however, of the cancellation of several dates, which acted as a damper on enthusiasm, the boys stuck to it and practiced regularly. The work of Bontecou, of course, looms up as most brilliant on the team. In the meet with Erasmus Hall he won three first places: the 100-yard dash, the 50-yard dash, and the dive, besides swim- ming on the winning relay team. In- cidentally he broke the school record in the 100-yard dash, and the relay team on which he swam broke the relay record. His work reached a fitting climax when at New Haven in the Interscholastic he won first place in the fancy diving against the best men of the schools of our class. In an unexpected meet with Boys’ High School which came in the absence of some of our best men, the remnant rose nobly to the occasion and tied the meet. As it turned out, if the relay had counted eight as usual, instead of five, we should have won the meet. The future of this sport looks particularly good, as so many of the first team men will be back next year. With their added experience and increased strength, they will no doubt better their past performances. Unfortunately we shall lose Bontecou, and it will be up to Brodie, Morgan, and Knickerbocker to take care of diving. In the relay team we lose Bontecou and Murphy. Dougherty will still be with us for the 220, with R. Lum pressing him as a close second. Both the plungers, also, will return, and in all we may hope for a very successful swimming season next year. R. J. Swan, Mgr. 106 $alr ilntrrarhnlaflttr Swimming iflrrt Saturday, March 12, 1921................................ Yale Pool PAWLING—5 Points—Sixth Place 200 vd. Relay Murphy Polley J. Morgan Bontecou 100 yds. Bontecou 220 yds. Dougherty Fancy Dive Bontecou 50 vds. Bontecou flamling Swimming Hrrorim 100 yds. 1 min. 1 sec. R. V. Bontecou 50 yds. 26 3-5 secs. L. H. Rand 20 yds. 8 3-5 secs. L. H. Rand 220 yds. 2 mins. 56 secs. R. Dougherty Dive 29 7-10 out of 30 R. V. Bontecou Plunge 60 feet in 49 secs. G. G. Depew Fancy Dive 102 points R. V. Bontecou G. Murphy C. Polley Relay 1 min. 26 2-5 secs. J. Morgan R. V. Bontecou First 1921 1917 1917 1920 1918 1914 1921 1921 Note: Bontecou established this record in 1921 the first time Pawling ever entered this event. 107 coc (Ofttrrrii B. P. Posener, 1921 Captain and Manager Site (Tram B. P. Posener...................1921 W. M. Austin. ..1921 J. N. Harper................. ..1923 R. Halliday.....................1922 H. B. Shaw......................1922 rlfpiiule May 26. Milford M; P. May 30. Taft ..T; P. June 3. Lawrenceville ..L; P. June 10. Hotchkiss H; P. B. P. Posener, Captain 109 r TENNI5 0)fitr?rs James V. Ritchey Captain and Manager Slir QJrmn James V. Ritchey Cyrus Polley Albert Lambert Mulford Colebroolc Harry Duane J. Ritchey, Captain £ rhriiulc May 2. Taft .........................................T.; P. May 12. Poly Prep.................................P. P.; P. May 23. Kent ........................................K.; P. Ill W HIT E HEAD abr (Suni®ram KNICKERBOCKER SHAW, Capt. AUSTIN GILLIES H. Shaw, Captain (Otttrmi Hollis B. Shaw...............Captain Walter K. Whitehead. . .Manager tTlir ulram Hollis B. Shaw, Captain Willis P. Austin Kenneth K. Knickerbocker Walter K. Whitehead John W. Gillies § rhriUUp May 3. Hotchkiss (at Pawling) May 12. Taft (at Taft) May 19. Canterbury (at Pawling) May 24. Hotchkiss (at Hotchkiss) KNICKERBOCKER ahr Siflf drum IIALLIDAY, Capt. EVANS SHAW RIFLE (Ofttrcrs R. Halliday................Captain A. L. Evans. . ............Manager £lip aram R. Halliday...................1922 J. W. Thompson...............1922 K. K. Knickerbocker..........1922 H. Shaw.......................1922 A. L. Evans...................1922 § rhrintlr May 19. Erasmus ....................................E.; P. May 25. Handicap Shoot........................ May 30. Jamaica High School......................J. H.; P. R. Halliday, Captain 115 Wrestling T umbling Boxing G. E. Boynton W. M. Austin M. A. Colebrook J. Carvalho G. Bennett A. Biggs G. R. Cook E. Bizallion T. Bissell E. Coughlin G. E. Clark G. R. Crook R. Dougherty G. E. Cole J. DeRuyter J. W. Gillies G. Devitt G. P. Freeland J. Green A. L. Evans R. Halliday E. H. Henshaw F. J. Frost G. Hollister A. K. Lane W. Grosvenor C. A. Hodgman J. Morgan J. Mead C. K. Hamilton C. Polley S. Page F. A. Hamilton E. Randolph F. Reidmeister K. K. Knickerbocker A. Scott W. K. Whitehead W. F. Lasher F. Shepherd R. Lum J. L. Mansure H. A. Shaw F. T. Kirby E. M. Perry J. Stoddard R. A. Teller A. Polhemus A. Young C. A. Wustlich H. A. Stoneham H. Weissenger G. F. Crabb W. E. Scholtz C. Hendrickson R. V. Bontecou 116 3Jhr UlrPBtUng S quai 118 119 120 William Cluett, 1921 Head Cheer Leader Russell Halliday, 1922 Aaron L. Evans, 1922 UEARER5 □ F k THE A W. M. Austin, 1921........................................Baseball N. Barnewall, 1923..............................Football, Baseball A. W. Biggs, 1922........................................Football R. V. Bontecou, 1921..........................Football, Track W. G. Cluett, 1921........................................Football M. A. Colebrook, 1922...........................Football, Baseball R. Dougherty, 1922..............................Football, Baseball J. VV. Gillies, 1921....................................... Track W. H. Hoag, 1922..........................................Football R. Halliday.....................................Football, Track K. K Knickerbocker, 1922................................Football L. H. Kelley, 1922.............................Football, Baseball F. R. Kohler, 1921.......................................Football A. B. Lambert, 1921...........................Football, Track J. W. McKernon, 1921......................................Football G. Murphy, 1921...............................Football, Baseball E. M. Perry, 1922.........................................Football C. H. Polley, 1922........................................Football B. P. Posener, 1921...........................Baseball, Track J. V. Ritchey, 1921.............................Football, Baseball W. E. Scholtz, 1921.......................................Football H. Stoneham, 1922............................F'ootball, Baseball C. C. White, 1921........................................Football W. K. Whitehead, 1921................................... Baseball 122 4- ahr 9rroll Snarii MORGAN SCHOLTZ EVANS HALLIDAY GRAVES VAN RIPER GILLIES CLUETT COOK 2fht B2 Enroll Volume XIV John W. Gillies..... Kenneth E. Van Riper William G. Cluett. . . . George R. Cook, 3rd George M. Graves. . . Urban Morgan........ Aaron L. Evans Russell Halliday William E. Scholtz .....Editor-in-Chief . . Business Manager . . .Managing Editor Photographic Editor .........Art Editor .........Art Editor John W. Gillies, Jr. Editor-in-Chief 125 ahr Iflrrklji Unarii POTTS VAN RIPER SWAN WHITE HENSHAW THOMPSON COUGHLIN BRODIE RITCHEY FROST OLUETT James V. Ritchey Editor-in-Chief Gfhe Wwkh) Volume IX Member of the School Newspaper Federation James V. Ritchey. Bruce Brodie Walter Coughlin. . Edward Henshaw Fred J. Frost. . . . William G. Cluett . . .Editor-in-Chief . Managing Editor Assignment Editor . . .Alumni Editor . Business Manager . Circulation Editor Richard Swan Gordon Thompson Kenneth E. Van Riper Charles C. White Harry Montgomery George K. Campbell 127 00 cThr Jhnrntx Snarb MONTGOMERY HALLIDAY CAMPBELL LAM BERT BONTECOU FREELAND BOYNTON WHITE Sfhr piumtix Volume XIV Reed V. Bontecou Editor-in-Chief Reed V. Bontecou. . George K. Campbell George E. Boynton. Russell Halliday. . . . .....Editor-in-Chief . . . Managing Editor . ..Business Manager Photographic Editor Albert Lambert George P. Freeland Harry Montgomery Charles C. White 129 OJljr Paroling £ rljool Irantatir (Club Program J. W. Gillies................Editor 'IWbr jtti .Vimippr 1 PAL LiNC SChooL i DRAMATIC CLUB Sljr Paroling £ rliool Alumni 0ag iBaorball Program R. Halliday, 1922.........Editor J. W. Gillies, 1921 Business Manager 130 131 i rRx i sTJoms St SOC 1 EITY COftupra J. V. Ritchey.........Pres. M. Austin.........Vice-Pres. W. Whiteh ead.........Treas. J. V. Ritchey M. Austin H. Baker R. Bontecou G. Campbell J. Carvalho W. Cluett Ad. Colebrook iflnnbrra G. Cook W. Coughlin A. Evans G. Freeland J. Gillies G. Graves R. Halliday R. Kohler E. Perry B. Posener J. Ritchey W. Scholtz K. Van Riper W. Whitehead 132 HDriDRS TMOnfton' Hmuu Snll S’txtli iForm R. V. Bontecou G. K. Campbell J. W. Gillies K. E. Van Riper JPifth Jfurrn M. A. Colebrook G. R. Cook L. G. Thompson C. C. White ifimrth JFnrm E. J. Coughlin elitrl) Jffnrm T. Bissell C. Hamilton F. S. Kirby J. D. Thompson MORGAN DUANE ahrl(Drrbr«tra LUM LAMBERT WASHBURN GROS VENOR SCHOLTZ WHITEHEAD BONTECOU GILLIES COOK W. K. Whitehead, Leader ©ffirera W. K. Whitehead... .Leader Mr. Kitchener........Director Piano Drums K. Van Riper A. B'. Lambert, Jr. Saxophones G. R. Cook, 3rd J. Morgan Tenor Banjoes W. F. Scholtz W. K. Whitehead Banjo Mandolins 135 J. W. Gillies, Jr. R. V. Bontecou P. S. Lum W. Grosvenor H. B. Duane G. Washburn C aljr (SIpp (Club SHAW LUM, R. REIDEMEISTER MONTGOMERY HENSHAW HALLIDAY CAMPBELL AUSTIN BOYNTON LUM, P. W. M. Austin, Leader (Offirrra W. M. Austin.............Leader Mr. Kitchener..........Director First Tenors W. M. Austin R. Lum Second Tenors G. K. Campbell H. Montgomery E. Henshaw First Bass R. Halliday H. B. Shaw Second Bass P. S. Lum G. Boynton C. Reidemeister 137 ®lip Jlauilmg 8 rluirtl Siflr ffllub ©fttrrrs Russell Halliday................................President Gordon Thompson............................Vice-President Aaron Evans.....................Secretary and Treasurer iHmbrra C. Wustlich D. V. Potts A. L. Evans H. Shaw B. Brodie C. White R. Adams E. Herrick W. Austin C. Hamilton J. Harper H. Montgomery J. DeRuyter E. Sturhahn J. Thompson J. Gillies Affiliated with the N. R. A. 138 u;bi JJawltnrj School (Sun (Club ©fttrrrH Hollis B. Shaw..............................President Walter K. Whitehead...........................Manager jfflrmbrrs A. W. Biggs W. H. Hoag R. Adams W. Austin J. Gillies A. Evans K. K. Knickerbocker R. Halliday N. Barnewall F. Austin W. G. Cluett B. Posener 139 flawling (Cluit at fair G. Martin S. Vanderbilt R. Carey A. Grover W. Kriess K. Sheldon J. Price A. H. Doolittle H. Phelps T. E. Doolittle W. Hubbard J. D. Schoonmaker, Jr. A. A. McCellan Wm. Elliott, Jr. flauiUng (Club at HiUiama F. A. Howland R. Cluett, 3rd E. Shuttleworth R. Kent W. Quaintance H. Coughlin E. Wallace D. Burnham R. Vilas L. Jeffreys R. Parker W. DeWitt W. H. Barnewall G. Thomson L. V. Dodge F. Newhard R. Gordon W. R. Teller J. P. Cluett $auiltttg (Club at tBrmutt C. Newhard K. Sheehan R. Adams P. Brady L. Lanpher D. Ruble H. Appleby F. Gross A. Goodal F. R. Spates V. Engalitcheff R. Smith 140 141 altr Sramatir (Cluit Sramatic Association (Ofitrrra Kenneth Van Riper. . . .Pres. Urban Morgan. . ..Vice-Pres. John W. Gillies.... Manager M r. Nichols.....Director fHrnthrrs R. F. Kohler P. L. Lum G. C. Lamb U. Morgan H. Montgomery J. W. McKernon J. D. Thompson G. L. Thompson C. Thomas K. E. Van Riper Exmrttue § taff Robert F. Kohler............Stage Manager William G. Cluett...........Property Manager H. H. Baker R. V. Bontecou W. G. Cluett G. C. Campbell E. Coughlin J. W. Gillies G. M. Graves J. N. Harper E. Ivey 143 Qfhc famium § chmH iramatic (Club Presents “Nothing lut th? ohitth” The Cast Bob Bennett........ B. M. Ralston.... Bishop Doran....... Clarence Van Dusen Dick Donnelly...... Gwen............... Mrs. Ralston....... Ethel.............. Mabel.............. Sabel.............. Martha............. . . . K. Van Riper ...G. Campbell ........P. Lum .....U. Morgan ........E. Ivey .....H. Baker H. Montgomery ......J. Harper . . . G. Thompson . . . J. Thompson . . . . E. Coughlin Place-. New York and Long Island Time: The Present Synopsis of Acts Act 3. Same as Act 2. Act 2. Summer home of B. M. Ralston. Act 1. Interior of B. M. Ralston’s office. Produced under the direction of Mr. John Nichols. 144 Nntlmm ®ut the Sfruth” It is seldom the reviewer has so congenial a task as this one—of commenting on Nothing but the Truth, presented by the Pawling School Dramatic Club under the direction of Air. Nichols. This little play, made so popular by William Collier a few years ago, depends largely for its interest on its clever lines and its farcical situations. I he scenes are laid in a city business office and the suburbs. The theme is developed by a series of difficulties confronting a young man who wagers that he can tell the truth for twenty-four hours. The leading character, who ventures into the field of experimental ethics, was taken by Kenneth Van Riper. In previous performances he has been very successful in acting girls’ parts; his “Dolly” in Believe Me Xantippe was the sensation of last year’s theatre season in Pawling. His presentation this year of the embarrassments and vexations of an individual constantly tempted to lie was sustained and artistic. George Campbell, who made his first performance before the theatre public in this play, gave a highly entertaining interpretation of the diffi- culties besetting a broker who tries to sell stock which he would not buy. Philip Lum was entirely adequate as Bishop Doran, who, while taking a flier in Wall Street, depends on his innocence for protection. Urban Morgan was delightfully natural as a cynical young business man. If Urban adds many more dramatic triumphs to those already to his credit, the electric signs on Broadway will soon be beckoning him. Eugene Ivey’s presentation of the typical young broker of the day was enlivened by good lines and an ability to make the most of them. Among the girls’ parts, that of Gwen was taken by Hamilton Baker, who played his emotional role with marked poise and restraint. Ham- ilton was a ravishing beauty. Henry Montgomery took the matronly part of the broker’s wife with dignity and played the scandalized wife effectively. John Harper, as the ingenue, was “fetching”; he cariied the part of an emotional young girl with artistic finish that does cedit to 145 his understanding of the girlish heart. Though Mabel and Sabel al- ways appeared together, they contributed individually to the success of the performance. The former was Gordon Thompson, and the latter James Thompson. Together they turned a most illuminating flash on the methods of chorus girls with credulous matrons. Much of the farce element depended on the clever burlesque of the Thompson brothers. Edward Coughlin, as the maid, interpreted his lines very acceptably. Creditable as the performance was in so far as the acting was con- cerned, the success of the presentation was largely due to Robert Kohler, the stage manager, and his able assistants, John McKernon, Gilbert Lamb, and Colwell Thomas. Kohler’s admirable scenes in Believe Me Xantippe last year signalized that brilliant production. This year his two interiors, one of the office of a city broker and the other of a suburban home, were artistically conceived and ingeniously executed I hese words do little credit to the untiring labor and thought devoted by Robert Kohler and his assistants. The general effectiveness of the scenes was much enhanced by the back-drops painted by Urban Morgan and George Graves. I he management of the adequate and appropriate properties was in the hands of YV illiam Cluett and Reed Bontecou. Bontecou also stepped into the vacancy as prompter at the last moment. John Gillies was the business manager, who, though his activities did not bring him before the foot-lights, had an indispensable part in the success of the show. The Dramatic Club was unusually fortunate in being under the direction of Mr. Nichols. For three years he has produced at Pawling dramatic entertainments, brilliantly interpreted and artistically pre' sented. The opportunity of acting under his direction is no small part of a boys education. If Nothing but the Truth is an earnest of future productions, the school has much to anticipate next year from Mr. Nichols and his Dramatic Club. 146 tUir (Eant THOMPSON. J. COUGHLIN, IVEY MONTGOMEKY MORGA X LUM VAN RIPER HARPER CAMPBELL BAKER THOMPSON, C B. M. Ralston (G. Campbell) Bob Bennett (K. Van Riper) “Nittfjintj Hut % Clarence VanDusen (U. Morgan) Uinttlj” Bishop Doran (P. Lum) 148 Jt Gwen (H. Baker) “Nothing lut thr a ruth” Ethel (J. Harper) Mr. John Nichols (Director) 149 150 151 — a lie Semite Debating aeatn ahe Sjituae Debating (Leant 154 (idjc iFiiurtmttli Annual Senate -Bouse Sebate Resolved:—That further immigration shall be re- stricted. AFFIRMATIVE (House) Richard Swan, Capt. Philip L. Lum Charles White George Cook, Alt. NEGATIVE (Senate) Reed V. Bontecou, Capt. George Murphy William Scholu Kenneth VanRiper, Alt. 3hthgrs Mr. Nichols Mr. Smoyer Mr. Taber Hon tui tljc Affirmatius 155 ©fitters Mr. H. E. Henderson....................President R. V. Bontecou G. K. Campbell W. G. Cluett. . G. M. Graves. . Senate (Christmas JTrrnt ......President ............Clerk ...... Treasurer Sergeant-at-A rms G. Murphy. . . W. Whitehead B. Posener. . . . W. ScHOLTZ. . . tastrr arrm Sjiutse (Christmas arrm W. Hoag....................... M. Colebrook.................. R. Halliday................... C. POLL'EY.................... tastrr iCrrm L. Kelley..................... H. Baker...................... P. Lum........................ U. Morgan................... ........President ............Clerk ...... Treasurer Sergeant-at-A rms .........Speaker ...........Clerk ...... Treasurer Sergeant-at-Arms .........Speaker ...........Clerk ...... Treasurer Sergeant-at-A rms 156 iflih-Hlttttrr Batter GJntnmittcr J. V. Ritchey, ’21 (Chairman) W. M. Austin, ’21 B. P. Posener,’21 A. L. Evans, ’22 F. D. Austin, ’23 (0rhrr of Jfrsturitirs Friday, February 4—Reception and Dance at 9 p. m. Saturday, February 5—Hockey; Pawling vs. Hotchkiss, 11:00 a. m. Basketball; Pawling vs. Taft, 2.30 p. m. Mrs. Henderson’s Tea at 4.30 p. m. Dra- mat'ic Club Play, “Nothing but the Truth,” at 8.30 p. m. Sunday, February 6—Sunday Services 11.00 a. m. 158 (Commencement Jinmt (Committee J. V. Ritchey (Chairman) B. Posener G. Murphy (Commencement IBeck Friday, June 10. Class Day Exercises at 3 p. m. Reception and Dance in the School Building at 8.30 p. m. Saturday, June 11. Graduating Exercises in the Assembly Room at 11 a. m. Presentation of Class Gift. Fifth Form 1 ea at 4. p. m. Prize Speaking in the Assembly Room at 8 p. m. Sunday, June 12. Holy Communion at 8 a. m. Morning Prayer at 11.30 a. m. 159 abc $ l (gift (Cmnmitlcc William E. Scholtz, Chairman Robert F. Kohler George K. Campbell It was decided by the members of the Class of 1921, after much consideration, to give a tablet, commemorating the E. G. Broenniman cinder track, and dedicated to Mr. Broenniman. 160 161 Palps nf 1921 “Passing Show”.........................Class of 1921 “Mid-Night Rounders”.......Occupants of Top Floor “The Bad Man”..................................Urban Morgan “The First Year”............Mr. and Mrs. Tommers “The Mirage”.................................College “The Skin Game”.......................Honor Roll “Way Down East”..............................Pawling “The Tavern”...........................The Tuck Shop “Tip Top”..............................Week Ends ! ! “Good Times”............................... Vacation “The Night Watch”.............................George Lyons “The White Villa”................The Old Tuck Shop “Spanish Love”........................Mr. Curtis “Nice People”....................................The Faculty “The Champion”.................................White “Dear Me”......................................Dizzy “Heartbreak House”........................Room 36 “Toto”.....................................Whitehead “Ladies’ Night”.............................Mid-year Prom. “Enter Madame”. ..............................Echols “The Gold Diggers”.........................Valente’s “The Beggars Opera”..........................Evening Study “The Love Birds”. . . .Cookie Cookie and John’ie Johnie 162 ilht Jformijn Eruunt Name: Birthplace: Ivey..........................................Jackson’s Hole “Dizzy”.............................Rock of Gibraltar Bizallion..................................Zoo Zoo Land Charlie Moon......................................Niger River Freeland....................................Fairy Isles Mr. Taber.................................... Purgatory Knickerbocker..............................Zuider Zee “Toto”.................................Tropic of Cancer Beers...........................West Mountain Mission Landaur ......................................Smolenski Kelley ........................................Kilarney Gillies...........................................Snake River Mr. Anderson......................Holy Roman Empire Crabb..............................................Dead Sea Pattison.........................The Vandal Kingdom Halliday..........................................Cairo 163 From 7:11 P. M. to 7:11 A. M. on the Top Corridor. 7:11 Bontecou’s Victrola stops. 7:13 Bontecou’s Victrola starts. 7 =30 Cluett walks fearfully to Mr. Nichols’ room to tutor. 7 159 Morgan cleans his finger nails in preparation for to- morrow’s work. 8:12 Scholtz hops 'in to bed and starts to read. 8:39 Cluett comes from French weak and staggering. 8:47 Graves pulls a “Rip Van Winkle.” 9 00 The “9 o’Clock Revue” lets out to join “The Midnight Rounders.” 9:01 Polley wearily climbs into bed. 9 :c 3 Morgan slaps himself with cold cream in preparation for his beauty sleep. 9:14 Everyone stops work to listen to Mr. Nichols’ selec- tions from “I Love a Lassie.” 9 :26 Concert ends and hard work begins. 9:28 Hard work ends and “Toto” dances. “We all thank God for his gift of Movement.” 9 145 Whitehead stops jigging, and after bawling out Murphy starts to work. 10:02 Ritchey yawns and then throws a doze. Note: Kohler and Evans have been studying since 7:11. 10:06 Scholtz finishes his book and kisses the pillow good night. 10:30 Murphy gathers together his audience and starts last night’s story all over. 10:48 Posener acts disgusted, swears, and goes to bed. 10:49 Shaw follows him. 164 11 :oo Campbell joins Murphy’s talk and then sulkily goes down stairs. 11 :o8 Lambert looks at Trig, groans, and joins the slumberers. 11 :12 Mr. Nichols comes out. “Just snap your fingers at care.” 11:39 Whitehead lets the bunch know how hard he’s been working, and then with a sneer departs to his castle. 11 143 Knickerbocker throws a trunk down stairs and with a smile of victory on his lips, unfolds his bed. 12:20 McKernon serves coco to the tea fighters. 12:28 McKernon throws Cluett out the transom and Murphy begins anew. 12 141 Halliday joins the party but soon abdicates. 12 :47 Swan and Perry, after divine worship, turn in. 12:53 Evans stops typewriting to “Catherine” and knocks off forty winks. 12:59 Kohler and McKernon go to bed but Murphy keeps right on talking. 1 :oi The Jew boy dons his “Pink'ies.” “Good-night, little girl, good-night.” 2:37 Murphy tells George Lyons about Detroit, and finally goes to bed. 3 :34 Morgan gets up to brush his hair. 5:15 Graves gets up to study. 6 123 Polley gets up so he can say he studied. 7 :oo Bontecou’s Victrola starts. 7:10 “Toto” shimmies down to the washroom. 7:11 Bontecou stops his Victrola. Sums 165 Xomtii mb iRmtuit “Just Like a Gypsy”.........................Grosvenor “Just Snap Your Fingers at Care”..................Mr. Nichols “I’d Love to Fall Asleep”.......................Crabb “I’d Like to Be a Monkey in the Zoo”........Bizallion “It’s Not Your Nationality”...................“Dizzy” “Livery Stable Blues”........................Sheridan “My Cairo Love”..............................Halliday “You’re Some Pretty Doll”......................Morgan “Long Boy”...................................Randolph “Nigger Blues”................................Charlie Moon “Fidgety Feet”..............................Whitehead “Waters of Venice”..............................Swamp River “O Johnny, O Johnny”....... ...........Cookie, Cookie “Forget Me Not”.........................Sixth Form “Skeleton Jangle”................The Thompson Bros. “Going Up”....................................Valente “Oui Oui Marie”...................................Mr. Nichols “Too Much Ginger”...........................Colebrook “Where Do We Go From Here?”...................Posener “I’m Forever Blowing”..........................Murphy “Dear Little Shamrock”.........................Kelley “Dance and Grow Thin”.........................Lambert ”.......................Cook 166 “Ghost of the Saxophone Bmtr 5fahlr It was cold. Yesterday it was cold, but today it was colder. Some of yesterday’s cold had been left over, possibly. Anyway, it was cold. To- day’s cold, together with yesterday’s warmed-over cold, made it very cold indeed. It was snowing. It was only today’s snow, however. But when you said it was today’s snow, you said a shovelful. The ground was covered with snow, if you get the drift. It fell in a drizzle. There was nothing else for it to fall for. The ground was very white. It looked like a New York whitewing who had been run over by a steam-roller. A man trudged across the icy waste with his seven children. Their ages were seven, six, five, four, three, two, and one, respectively. Their father often used to play seven-up with them, but not today. Today was cold and snowy. How was he ever going to get those children home through the blizzard? The snow fell in hailstones. One child slipped and fell into a fjord. They trudged on. The snow came down in anthracite chunks. Another child dropped out of sight in a snow drift. Time passed, and it grew darker. A third child stepped into a crevasse. The snow fell in sheets. The man took an inventory. “Four left,” he murmured, but even as he spoke, another little one slipped on a hidden banana peel and plunged into the sea. It grew colder and darker. A sudden landslide carried off two more of the poor waifs. The father counted the remaining child several times, to make certain he was all there. “Anyhow,” he said, “my wife cannot accuse me of coming home empty handed.” The words were scarcely out of his mouth when the child was out of his custody. A strong wind swept around the corner of the mountain —around the corner of several of the mountains, in fact—and bore the last precious pet out to sea. The man was frantic. How could he face his poor wife, now? What was he to say? Of course, he had to admit it was a cold night, but somehow that didn’t seem like an excuse. He shivered. “It’s turning cold,” he said, in a low voice. “We may have a little snow before morning.” Then, squaring his broad shoulders, he pushed on through the dark- ness and entered his humble cottage. The lights burned low, and a kettle steamed on the fireplace. But the room was empty. He called aloud—but no answer. Then he re- membered! His wife had said she was going out to the movies. Silently, he ate an icicle, and went to bed. Tatler. 167 lr DrtVat nf Earl hrmf God prosper long our noble Murph, Our lives and safeties all. A woeful fighting once there did In Pawling Town befall. To drive the farmers, one and all, Earl Murphy took his way. His army answered to the call And fell into array. The chiefest hearts in Pawling Town To kill and bear away; These tidings to Earl Sherry came In Pawling where he lay. Then to the towrn with raucous noise Earl Murphy did set out. Full five and twenty lusty boys, They raised a mighty shout. Lo! Yonder come Earl Sherry’s men; They make a goodly sight. They use as gleaming armor Some Sheffield milk cans bright. Hut at the sight of Murphy’s men With Earl Murph at their head, Those valiant Pawning Town men Turned fast about—and fled! ‘‘What, ho!” cries good Count Kelley, “The cowards turn and fly; I fear me we must follow them, For fight I must or die.” So forward into Pawling Town They rushed with all their might; They captured ye olde public square And eke ye cannon bright. They take from off a Sheffield can A top, so round and fair. They ram it in the cannon’s mouth And leave it sticking there. And now when Pawling Town men Go out of doors at night, They see the shining can top And shudder at the sight. —H. M., Jr. 168 169 3!u' (CaUntitur Sept. 22. Daylight saving causes slaughter in the ranks; however, by the aid of Montgomery we get started K. O. Sept. 23. Large number of recruits report for football, and Landauer gives them the once over. Sept. 24. Classes start and teachers get a line on the dumbells. Sept. 25. Kohler presents Lionel Barrymore in “The Copperhead.” Sept. 26. Gillies’ harem drops in on him for the day. Sept. 27. Mr. Nichols to Bonty who is trying to pronounce “bru”—Not home brew but the French kind. Sept. 28. The squad is welcomed by Jupiter Pluvius. Some Walk 170 The Squad Sept. 29. The golf links is crowded with “would he’s.” Sept. 30. Posener translating French— “and the savage canaries saw from afar the steeples.” Oct. 1. Oct. 2. Oct. 4. Oct. 6. Oct. 8. Oct. 9. Oct. 10'. Oct. 12. Oct. 13. Oct. 14. Miss Lizzie is kept busy doling out crutches following the first scrimmage. The first team outclasses the second, 19-0. Dr. Gamage reading announcements—“Mr. Smoyer has lost his ‘never slip’ pencil.” Our appetites are sharpened by daily cheering practice be- fore luncheon. Boynton tells Mr. Henderson that the correct meaning of “rational” is “not irrational.” Pawling 3, Milford 14. The movies don’t arrive. Wonder of wonders!! Mr. Nichols gets three compositions exactly alike. How come? The Glee and Mandolin clubs institute their first persecution against music. So-called rvriters enter in the Weekly competition. The cider mill converts at its advent.' The Kick-off 171 Oct. The New Tuck Oct. 17. Oct. 19. Oct. 20. Oct. 21. Oct. 23. 16. Kent defeats Pawling 42-0. Those who played (and there were quite a few) would like to take this opportunity to ex- press their heart-felt gratitude to their gentle rivals. Mr. Smoyer: “Bacchus was the God of Wine. I wonder who was the God of Cigarettes?” Baker—“His brother To Bacchus, I guess.” Veterans of the Kent game drift back from hospitals, in- sane asylums, and the like. Cider corps annihilated. Ammunition confiscated. Whitehead is mortified to find himself in evening study. Survivors of the Kent game defeat Choate 6-0. Visitors at Choate Game 172 You Tell ’Em. Bernie Oct. 27. Oct. 28. Oct. 30. Oct. 31. Nov. 1. Oct. 24. Seven snakes crawl up to Bennett’s School for the afternoon. Oct. 25. The Midgets are defeated, 18-12, by Rumsey Hall. Oct. 26. The Scroll Board battles in Room A about a suitable cover. (Undoubtedly the best side won.) Pawling 2nds, 13; Riggs 0, at Lakeville. First week-ends granted and the bookworms shove off. Union Freshmen lose to Pawling 23-0. Mrs. Gamage gives the “brats” a hallowe’en party. Week-enders come back spouting with tales of their wondrous nocturnal escapades. Mr. Nichols invites Thompson to bring a bed into class so he can really be comfortable. Varsity 19, Seconds 0 173 Nov. 3. Shaw and the rest of the Daniel Boones clean up their guns and traps preparatory to a prosperous winter. Nov. 5. Founder’s Day. Posener wins the annual handicap golf tournament with Shaw as runner up. Nov. 6. The team puts in a pleasant 68-0 afternoon with Hotchkiss. Nov. 7. Straw vote for president. “Joe” Harding 118, “Hank” Cox 2. Nov. 8. Grosvenor takes the leading part as the spotted leper in the well-known play, chicken pox, but— Nov. 9. The audience fails to applaud since the play ended in the first act. Nov. 11. Dr. Gamage appoints Bontecou and Coughlin honorary prefects. Nov. 12. “Compliments of a friend.” The Hotchkiss Game 174 Nov. 13. Nov. 14. Nov. 15. Nov. 16. Nov. 17. Nov. 18. Nov. 19. Nov. 20. The team and a large num- ber of backers go to Taft. Although we are defeated 7-0, we all agree that Taft is the second best school in the world. The big pond gets “hard boiled” and freezes. Jupiter Pluvius gets “hard boiled,” chews ice and spits snow. Tumbling starts and everyone, after doing eight or ten triple, backward, flying Dutchmen, wishes that it hadn’t. Morgan develops dandruff overnight, and so is unable to tumble. Mr. Anderson, helping himself to maple mousse, “If this stuff went through one more chemical process it would be leather.” Knickerbocker elected captain and Evans manager of next year’s football team. Friday—“We beseech thee hear us.” At Taft Taft 7—Pawling 0 175 Nov. 21. Coles came back to see how the school is being run this year. Nov. 22. Mr. Henderson: “What are ‘Weeds of peace’?” Scholtz: “They are dandelions and such things that grow in the battlefields in the time of peace.” Everybody pulls a Thanksgiving MacSweeny. The 8-0’s hold out. The fast is broken! Thanksgiving, cider, turkey, stomach- ache and— Infirmary! ! Georges Carpentier stages an excellent bout in the “Wonder Man.” Admiral Elliott calls a meeting of the yacht club and an- nounces that “motorboating” must be abandoned for the re- mainder of the season. Nov. 23. Nov. 24. Nov. 25. Nox. 26. Nov. 28. Nov. 30. Pawling’s Defense 176 The new boys pick up their shovels and pondward plod their weary way. Mr. Taber: “Why did Nero burn Rome”? Colebrook: “He wanted to get his name in the College Board Exams.” Washburn wants to know “when we go to Choate”? Gym classes organized! Bissell stages a battle getting into his tights. Mr. Henderson: “What is an educator”? Campbell: “It’s a cracker, sir.” First Dramatic Club practice. Ivey tries out for leading lady. Mr. Underhill recites Dickens’ “Christmas Carol.” Pawling 38, Boys’ High 25, in the first basket ball game of the season. Phonographs are released under humiliating restrictions. Ox the Ice at Taft Dec. 1. Dec. 2. Dec. 4. Dec. 6. Dec. 8. Dec. 9. Dec. 10. Dec. 11. Dec. 12. “Colie” 177 “A Spill” Dec. 13. From Polley’s mathematical brain we learn that we have 3 days or 82 hours or 1,440 minutes or 381,623 seconds until vacation. Dec. 14. Trunks packed. Two days more! Dec. 15. Trunks sent. One day more! ! ! Dec. 16. French VI successfully petitions Mr. Nichols and leaves on the 12:10. Jan. 5. Jan. 6. Jan. 7. Jan. 8. Jan. 9. Jan. 10. Jan. 12. Bizallion calls it a vacation, and since we all agree “let’s go!” Mr. Taber reading Ancient History: “The young men after getting well oiled went out to the games.” Archdeacon Spurr speaks, “I ain’t sorry suh, deed I ain’t.” White knocks himself out shadow boxing. Posener translating French, “and the sun shines the earth.” Mr. Nichols: “What do you think the sun is, a celestial bootblack ?” White Studios take individual Scroll pictures. Mr. Taber: “What was the first thing Hercules did?” Grosvenor: “He strangled a couple of snakes, didn’t he?” “Ok Skiis” 178 H i-:n do's Cottage Jan. 16. Jan. 17. Jan. 19. Jan. 21. Jan. 23. Jan. 24. Jan. 25. Jan. 14. As usual Coughlin takes a week to bid his family a fond farewell. Jan. 15. Pawling suffers its first basketball defeat at the hands of Manual Training. Knickerbocker accuses Polley of sneaking up behind him and kicking him in the stomach. Mr. Henderson tells his English VI class many interesting things about his old friend Dr. Johnson. Pawling defeats Brooklyn 56-0 in basket ball. Mr. Smoyer tells Barnewall that he is so wooden that he ought to be able to get work in a marionette theatre. Pawling 36, Princeton Prep. 13, in basket ball. Murphy’s Army gives an exhibition of “the spirit of undress” on the campus. We lose to Hotchkiss 3-1 in hockey although Captain Ritchey played his usual strong game. Jan. 26. Nothing happened Jan. 27. on these days. Jan. 28. “Revenge is sweet.” We de- feat Kent 2-0 in hockey. 179 Murphy’s Army Jan. 30. “Peanuts” reading a French letter of his own composition: “Chere Mabel.” Mr. Nichols: “Haven’t you got the date?” Peanuts”: “That’s not what I’m writing for.” Feb. 1. Ivey starts to learn his part in the play. Feb. 2. “Nothing hut the Truth” successfully presented for the town. Feb. 3. Polley counts the seconds before the dance. Feb. 4. 1 he delicate strain of soft Lydian airs Hoat through the ball- room and corr.oors till the ill-fated hour of two-thirty when me light fantastic toe was sorrowfully put away till June. Feb. 5. Our guests see Taft beat us 27-23 in a very exciting game of basket ball. We jig after the game. The Dramatic Club A View of the School production, “Nothing but the Truth,” receives overwhelm- ing applause. More jigging after the play to music furnished by “Ye Olde Cluh de Vingt.” The “hangers-on” get bawled out by Proprietor Blankinship. Feb. 6. Religion seems to have taken a flunk. Few girls and still fewer boys are seen in chapel. Feb. 7. Echols comes with a bang! ! ! ! Feb. 9. Van Riper leaves as the first bunch. Feb. 10. Boys start to work. Feb. 11. Exams!! ’Nuffsaid! Feb. 12. Exams, end. Boys’ High swimming team appears unex- pectedly. We tie them 25-25 with Captain Bontecou away. The Day; 181 Feb. 14. File infirmary report that Mr. Reiter will be sick for a week causes great mourning among his studious disciples. Feb. 16. “Dark horse” found for the Snakes Club when Gillies gets 20 letters in one mail. Feb. 18. Hockey team defeated at Taft, 1-0. Feb. 19. Special to the Scroll: “To-day the worst blizzard since 23 b. c. occurred.” Feb. 20. Trains, students and “humming birds” fight their way out. Feb. 21. Mr. Reiter gets back on the job again and finds Graves a little behind in his work. Feb. 23. Knickerbocker: “These two values for (x) are Chester- fields.” Mr. Reiter: “What d’ya mean, Chesterfields?” Knickerbocker: “They Satisfy.” Feb. 24. The Athenian wrestlers oil up for the tryouts. Feb. 26. Posener and his cohorts easily defeat Mt. Pleasant. Feb. 27. Ivey delivers his second Philippic in the Senate on “What makes me suc- cessful ?” “Ernie Feb. 28. Mar. 1. Mar. 2. Nature shakes off her white blanket. The head of the English depart- ment urges the House and Senate to come out for the annual “rag-chew- ing” contest. Swimming—Pawling 39, Erasmus Hall 14. Mar. 3. Ivey gets out of “evening study,” and Austin makes the “honor roll.” These are two of the best arguments that miracles still occur. Mar. 4. Mr. Elliott directing stranger: “Mr. Henderson lives in the white farm house on the way to town.” Mar. 5. A very successful basket ball season is completed by a 31-16 victory over Choate. M ar. 6. Washburne elects himself captain of next year’s basket ball team. Mar. 8. “El Texto” and family are attacked from unknown quarters. Mar. 9. The “horsehide” makes its formal debut on the campus. Mar. 10. Halliday asks us if an ice bag will freeze “water on the knee.” Jim 183 “Off for Yale” Mar. 11. The swimming team travels to the Yale Interscholastics. “Bonty” wins the dive. Mar. 12. We said a while ago that we thought the snow had gone but I guess we’re wrong, be- cause Morgan and Freelan pare still wearing galoshes. Mar. 14. Baseball and Track men, Boxers, Wrestlers, Tumblers and Gaines report in the gym for a walk. M ar. 15. As usual Mr. Cole sends us a fine feature in “One Man in a Million.” Mar. 19. Page and Lum plan to exist for three days and four nights on chewing-gum and water. Mar. 20. The train whistle blows, it still blows, it keeps on blowing, it won’t stop. M ar.21. The Terribles and the Scurvys stage the first of a series of mud fights. The Scurvys carry off the laurels. Cook elected Editor-in-Chief of the 1922 Scroll. Mar.22. In the tryouts for the House debating team Evans informs us that all food given to immigrants is just so much stolen from the mouths of his wives and children. M ar.23. Campbell sells a pair of socks to buy a ticket to Utica. “Paradise Regained.” After the Battle April 4. Paradise Regained. April 5. Candidates report for baseball. April 7. Too bad, Cy, that the train from Buffalo was three days late. April 9. We defeat Mohegan Lake Military Academy in the first baseball game of the Season. Lionel Barrymore, Ivey, Lamb, and the rest of the Dramatic Club hold their annual banquet. April 10. Those who like to take Sunday rides with strangers make their debut. April 11. Boys don their B.V.D.’s for the first track practice. April 12. To the great surprise of the Physics Class, Mr. Reiter in- forms them that a violin will make a bridge totter and fall. Freeland, not to be outdone, ups and tells us that he can break an iceberg with his little bugle. April 13. Whitehead schedules no game for to-day but feels justified since he had a team up for us dur- ing vacation. April 14. Polley entertains the Sixth Form by telling them what he was doing a week ago. A Midget Game “Rus” Jumping April 15. Cook gets real angry when Mr. Nichols tells him that he could be knocked over with a feather. April 16. Our former Managing Editor, Cluett, greets the team at Williamstown, where it was again victorious. We shiver that night as we travel to the North Pole with Dr. Mac- Millan. April 17. The boys no longer have to get up at five o’clock to get in their Sunday golf. April 20. Morris pitches us to victory in the third game of the season with N. Y. A. M. April 21. Graves is responsible for the Sixth Form winning the Inter- Class Track Meet. Thank you, George!!!! The“Bench” 186 April 22. April 23. April 28. April 29. April 30. Pach Brothers after twice failing to do us justice return for a third attempt. Only about 113 boys and the faculty play Sunday golf. The first of the “Intelligence Exams” are held. Ivey says that the most famous statue is Venus d’Apollo. The Track Team defeats White Plains 77-31. Bull is in mortal fear that his sea legs will not stand the rough voyage from Beacon to Newburgh. “Bert” Doixg 11 Feet 187 May 1. Whitehead suggests that he assist Mr. Nichols with the play- ing for the morning service. May 3. The English VI class wish to express their regrets that they don’t know everything. May 5. In Mr. Smoyer’s English Class—Kelley explains Fitz-James proposal to Ellen by saying that he was “pressing his suit.” May 6. The Scroll goes to press. THE END. 188 iHntnrluutt Ye mariners of Pawling That guard the corridor Whose emblem has been stainless For seven months or more, Sing once again of victory Again a triumph note And flash a roar From door to door The shout of “MOTORBOAT!” Remember how in days of old You heard the welcome sound? How often after ten o’clock The word would pass around? How then your valiant commodore Would saunter down the hall And thinking all were safe asleep Would startle at the call? You planned to hang the commodore To pin him to the mast You planned to bind him hand and foot, The chance was yours at last. But now the wily commodore You thought was safe in bed Has risen up in black despair And hung himself instead. Ye mariners of Pawling That guard the corridor Whose emblem has been stainless For seven months or more Sing once again of victory Again a triumph note And flash a roar From door to door The shout of “MOTORBOAT!” -H. M., Jr. 189 191 194 Acknowledgments The Board of Editors wishes to express its indebtedness to the following: MR. FRANK SMOYER for his assistance in reading proofs MR. HORACE E. HENDERSON for his Foreword MR. WILLIAM SIMMONS for his valuable help Also to all others who have been of assistance to us 195 Austin, William Morris............40 West 45th Street.....New York, N. Y. Bontecou, Reed Vail...............119 Stewart Avenue......Ithaca, N. Y. Campbell, George Kendall..........Post Road ..............Scarsdale, N. Y. Cluett, William Gorham............Pinewoods Avenue........ Trov, N. Y. Coughlin, Walter Louis............146 Pennington Avenue. .Passaic, N. J. Freeland, George Percy:...........383 Oxford Street.......Rochester, N. Y. Gillies, John Wygant, jr..........24 South Street ........Haverstraw, N. Y. Graves, George Millard....................................Bennington, Vt. Kohler, Robert Fischer........................1...........New Canaan, Conn. Posener, Berrian Philip...........19 Nassau Street........New ork, N. Y. Ritchey, James Ver Plank..........448 Riverside Drive.....New York, N. Y. Scholtz, William Ermund...................................Denver, Colo. Van Riper, Kenneth Ernest.........490 West End Avenue...New York, N. Y. Whitehead, Walter Kellogg.................................Detroit, Mich. Baker, Hamilton Hunt..............34 Neptune Avenue.......New Rochelle, N. Y. Boynton, George Edward, Jr........207 East 17th Street....Brooklyn, N. Y. Brodie, Bruce ............................................New York, N. Y. Carvalho, John Bertram............57 Warbridge Rd.........Hartford, Conn. Colebrook, Mulford Alfred.................................Rochester, N. Y. Cook, George Rea..................413 Bellevue Avenue-----Trenton, N. J. Dougherty, Ross Nelson............841 Park Place..........Brooklyn, N. Y. Evans, Aaron Littell..............1818 Madison Road.......Cincinnati, O. Greene, John Hutton...............160 Lockwood Avenue...New Rochelle, N. Y. Grosvenor, William Mason, Jr.... 125 West 58th Street. ... New York, N. Y. Halliday, Russell ................2908 Washington Avenue.Cairo, 111. Henshaw, Edward Lyman.....................................Scarsdale, N. Y. Ivey, George Eugene............... 1349 Corona Street.....Denver, Colo. Kelley, LeRoy Joseph..............59 Lexington Street.....Everett, Mass. Knickerbocker, Kenneth............4808 Dorchester Avenue. .Chicago, III. Lambert, Albert Bond, Jr..........2 Hortense Place........St. Louis, Mo. Lum, Phillip L. S.........................................Chatham, N. J. McKernon, John Wolsev............. 2 West 52nd Street.....New York, N. Y. Morgan, Urban ....................24 Crescent Apts........Cincinnati, O. Murphy, George Lloyd..............1 Hillhouse Avenue......New Haven, Conn. Perry, Erskine Mar........................................Nyack, N. Y. Polley, Cyrus Hamilton, Jr........483 Delaware Avenue.. .Buffalo, N. Y. Shaw-, Hollis Baird ..............280 West End Avenue...New York, N. Y. Stoneham, Horace Charles..........86th Street Broadway.. (Bretton Hall) New York, N. Y. Swan, Richard Johnston............6319 Walnut Street......Pittsburgh, Pa. Thompson, Lewis Gordon............40 Bush Avenue..........Greenwich, Conn. Washburn, Wilber Fisk, Jr.........409 Edgecombe Avenue..New York, N. Y. White, Charles Corwin.............Plaza Hotel ............Chicago, III. Adams, Robert Henry, Jr...................................Greenwich, Conn. Austin, Francis Duane.............+0 West 45th Street.....New York, N. Y. Austin, Willis Phipps.............265 Washington Street...Norwich, Conn. Barnewall, Nicholas ..............30 Grace Church Street..Rye, N. J. Bizallion, Eugene Charles.................................Middleton Springs, Vt. Crabb, Frederick Gardner, Jr......146 Pennington Avenue. .Passaic, N. J. Devitt, George Wilson.............859 Chapel Street.......New- Haven. Conn. Duane, Harry Brewerton............Marlboro Inn ...........Montclair, N. J. Frost, Frederick Jerome................................... Stamford, Conn. 196 Gaines, Harlow Damon...................................... Nyack, N. V Coughlin, Edward ................24 West 59th Street......New York, N. Y. Hamilton, Charles Kingsbury....850 Park Avenue..........New York, N. . Harper, John Nusser..............1080 Stanford Road.......Crafton, Pa. Lamb, Gilbert Baldwin............440 West End Avenue... New York, N. Y. Lasher, Walter Benjamin...................................Bridgeport, Conn. Lum, Ralph Emerson............... ........................Chatham, N. J. Montgomery, Henry, Jr.....................................Beacon, N. ' ' Morgan, Jaxon ...................Glenmary Farm ...........Gates Mill, O. Page, Stanley Hart...............Edghill Avenue ..........Chatham, N. J. Polhemus, Albert Duryea........114 South Broadway.......Nyack, N. Y. Randolph, Edmund, Jr...........7 East 48th Street.......New York, N. Y. Reidemeister, Frederick Carl.............................. Englewood, N. J. Scott, Alexander Lyon...........••610 South Wilton Place. Los Angeles, C-allf. Thomas, Colwell .................12 Myrtle Avenue.........Troy, N. Y. Beers, Daniel Tracv.......................................Danbury, Conn. Bissell, Thomas Russell..........105 N. Prospect Street... Masillon, O. Bull, Stephen Moffat......................................Newburgh, N. Y. Bullard, John Augustus...........2200 North Avenue........Bridgeport, Conn. Carter, Ford .................... 1411 N. State Parkway..Chicago, 111. Clark, George Beard, Jr...................................Milford, Conn. Cole, Gilbert Lincoln............Prem. Point Park.........New Rochelle, N. Y. Conley, William .......... .250 West 91st Street..........New York, N. Y. Crook, Gerard Beekman............Hotel Marseilles ........New York, N. Y. DeRuyter, John Louis.............39 West 93rd Street......New York, N. Y. Dessez Paul Tonnel.........’.....U. S. Naval Department. Washington, D. C. Goodlove, William Francis.................................Ridgewood, N. J. Hamersley, Arnold ...............32 West 89th Street......New York, N. Y. Hamilton, Frederick Johnson. 850 Park Avenue..........New York, N. Y. Hancock, Austin Flint............ ........................New York, N. Y. Hendrickson, Charles Cyril....... ........................Rockville Center, L. I Hodgman, Charles Augustus........Scarsdale Avenue ........Yonkers, N. Y. Hollister, George Lee............Ridgeview Avenue.........White Plains, N. Y. Kimberland, Kendall..............Hotel Commodore .........New York, N. Y. KirSv Frederic Stevens .......... 712 West South Street... Kalamazoo, Mich. Landauer, William Ide............H West 74th Street.......New York, N. Y. Lane, Arthur Kelsey.............. 73 South Water Street... New Haven, Conn. Lathrop, Robert Hayden........... 83 Gillette Street......Hartford, Conn. Mansure, John Forsman............H45 East 47th Street-----Chicago, 111. Mead, George Douglas............. ........................White Plains, N. Y. Mead, John Jav............................................ Lake Waccabuc, N. Y Pattison, Harold Harwood......... 49 St. Nicholas Avenue.New York, N. Y. Potter, Byron Thomas.............8 Stimson Place..........Providence, R. I. Roberts, John Kennedy............117 East 76th Street.....New York, N. Y.. Shepard, Francis Henry...........11 Serpentine Road.....New Rochelle, N. Y. Shuttleworth, James ......................................Douglaston, L. I. Sturhahn, Edward Marshall.................................Hartford, Conn. Teller, Robert Duerr...................................... Bayside, N. Y. Thompson, James Daniel...........40 Bush Avenue.....Greenwich, Conn. Weissenger, Harry ........................................ Shelbyville, Ky. Wheaton, Homer Damian............Lithgow .................Amenia, N. . Woodruff, Robert Henry...........39 West 93rd Street.....New York, N. Y. Wustlich, Charles Augustus, Jr............................ Young, Archer Emmet..............304 West 102nd Street...New York, N. Y. 197 199 Compliments of BURTON BROS. CO. 267-269 FIFTH AVENUE NEW YORK Crawford, Patton Cannon MEMBERS NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE PHILADELPHIA STOCK EXCHANGE sfer MAIN OFFICE 61 BROADWAY PHILADELPHIA OFFICE MORRIS BUILDING BRANCH OFFICE HOTEL ST. ANDREW COVERT L. GOODLOVE RESIDENT PARTNER 2 ROBERTfON-COLE Sends its sincere Wishes to • PAWLING SCHOOL and to its annual publication •THE 1921 SCROLL at this Commencement . Blest hours of schooldays! then and then alone Vance u)e the rebels close 'round Pleasures Vhrone Quaff the bright nectar from her fountain springs. 3 Compliments of UNITED PIECE DYE WORKS TOURAINE CHOCOLATES On the Campus—Between Classes—On the Hike. A Munch” between meals—A Snack” before retiring. In fact—any old time. HARRY B. DUANE, President Touraine Chocolate Products Stollwerck Chocolate Products Branches in the principal cities in the United States KQUIPPED with many years' experience for making photographs of all sorts, desirable for illustrating College Annuals. Best obtainable artists, workmanship, and the capacity for prompt and unecpialled service. Photographers to 1921 SCROLL” Address requests for information to our Executive Offices: 1546 Broadway, New ork City H. A. Holmes Store Dutcher House Block PAWLING, N. Y. FISHING TACKLE, GOLF GOODS, TENNIS GOODS, BASEBALL GOODS, GUNS AND AMMUNITION. Sporting Clothing and Footwear SWEATERS, CAPS. GLOVES AND SHOES. I ESTABLISHED IBIS O KtHTgG T) butlrmpn rniifirigSnoCis, MADISON AVENUE COR. FORTV-FOURTH STREET. NEW YORK Telephone Murray Hill 8800 We give particular attention to the Outfitting of Hoys and Young Men at Private Schools and Colleges with Clothing, Sporting Garments, English Hats, Haberdashery and Shoes Send for Illustrated Catalogue, also our ‘‘Memo, of Things Taken to School'' handy for classification of the wardrobe BOSTON NEWPORT Tremontcor boylston 220 Bellevue avenue Pach Brothers Compliments of 570 Fifth Avenue SAMUEL EISMAN S' CO. PHOTOGRAPHERS 114-120 EAST 23rd STREET To Pawling School NEW YORK George B. Clark Motion pictures taken at your home. MILFORD. CONN. Demonstrations by appointment. Descriptive pamphlet mailed Suburban Developments upon request. 6 J. H. C. K. EAGLE 'IT Silk Manufacturers PREMIER QUALITY EQUIPMENT FOR ALL Athletic Sports 265 Fourth Avenue U'rite for our Latest Catalog Cor. 21st Street NEW YORK CITY ALEX TAYLOR CO., Inc. 26 East 42nd St. NEW YORK M. H. Treadwell Co. 140 Cedar Street NEW YORK Builders of MECHANICAL GRATES Shaking or Dumping types for Power Boilers Compliments of the WORLD’S LARGEST MANUFACTURERS OF SMALL TOOLS OREENFlEyf PAND DIE CORPORATION_______________I_ GREENFIELD, 9 MASSACHUSETTS !■ 7 STEINWAY THE INSTRUMENT OF THE IMMORTALS IS moving fingers touch the Steinway into life—the master and his instrument are one—there comes a shower of gorgeous sound—a sense of beauty fills the air—there is a hush of breathing while the listener drinks the beauty from each fleeting note. Perhaps the master is Hofmann, perhaps Rachmaninoff. Yesterday it might have been Paderew- ski. Half a century ago Franz Liszt and Anton Rubinstein were kings. But whenever the time and whichever the master, the piano remains the same—Steinway, Instrument of the Immortals. Compliments of a Friend Dr. Harrie M. Wright REGISTERED OPTOMETRIST EYES EXAMINED GLASSES FURNISHED PRESCRIPTIONS FILLED Kodak Developing and Printing a Specialty Films Official Railroad Eye Examiner Tel. 15-R. PAWLING. N. Y. J. G. DUTCHER. President F. C. TABER F. C. TAB R 1st Vice-President Cashier S. T. GREEN J. p. HAIGHT 2nd Vice-President Asst. Cashier The National Bank of Pawling PAWLING, N. Y. CAPITAL and SURPLUS $200,000 Station Restaurant A Good Clean Place to Eat Compliments of PRIVATE DINING ROOM SERVICE PAWLING, N. Y. William r. Teller M. J. O’Brien, Prop. GEORGE H. LYONS Pawling Printing Co. East Main Street Tailor PAWLING, N. Y. Good Book and Job Printing PAWLING SCHOOL Get our Prices and examine our work when in need of Printing ‘TJhis Space Reserved for the y u c fei 'Cy' tute ant fQo Zaaed Tuck Shop Pauling, Ar. Y. Ot. C j 1C Cook’s Linoleum Company Manufacturers of all grades of PLAIN, 'PRINTED, INLAID LINOLEUM and CORK CARPET Executive Offices and Mills: TRENTON, N.J. ii COMPLIMENTARY to the 1921 Scroll Board Here's a strictly neutral Linseed- oil soap. Applied merely with plain water and sponge, it removes all grime and grease, makes the car look like new, and postpones tarnishing and oxidation of the finish. Wonder-Worker Auto Soap, being free from excessive alkali, will not dull the varnish. It is a firm, stiff- bodied soap containing smaller per- centage of moisture than the ordinary Automobile Soap, making it very economical to use. Each 2-Pound Can, ... $0.75 5-Pound Pail, . . . 1.50 25-Pound Pail (Metal), . 6.75 125-Pound Keg, per pound .15 Barrel, 275 Pound “ .15 Barrel, 450 Pound .15 Canada $1.00 2.00 8.75 WONDEn orkeK AUTO SOAP New York Belting Packing Company 91-93 Chambers Street New York City 12 (UnntpHmrntii nf A FRIEND FROM TROY Plaza Hotel Chicago North Ave. and N. Clark St. For Compliments Permanent and Transient Guests of One of the most homelike and attractive Hotels FRED. S. in the city HODGMAN Single rooms with private bath $2.00 per day and up. Two-room suites with private bath $3.50 per day and up. IVe Invite Tour Inspection 13 14 Rossia Insurance Company of America The Fire Reassurance Company of New York American Fire Insurance Corporation of New York . Union Reserve Insurance Company of New York Marine and Fire Reinsurance HARTFORD, CONNECTICUT The Milford School FORMERLY THE ROSENBAUM SCHOOL MILFORD, CONN. SUMMER SESSION WILL BEGIN — MONDAY, JULY TWENTY-FIFTH RESERVATIONS NOW BEING MADE CATALOGUE ON REQUEST THE MILFORD SCHOOL MILFORD, CONNECTICUT 16 The famous and beautiful Mrs. Sid dons by Lawrence. MALLINSON Silk MASTERPIECES ROSHANARA CREPE CHINCHILLA SATIN • Luxurious, heavy, crepy silks unsurpassed for either dresses or suits—endorsed and accepted by America’s foremost creators as the paramount fabrics destined to be permanently popular for expressing Fashion’s highest ideals. PUSSY WILLOW INDESTRUCTIBLE VOILE PUSSY WILLOW SATIN PUSSY WILLOW METEOR SATIN SONATA (All tradt mark name ) By the yard at the best Silk Departments—in wearing apparel at the better Garment Departments and Class Shops Silks de Luxe i 'The National Silks-of International Fame’ NEW YORK No less enchanting and ap- pealing than theoriginal Mrs. Siddons” is Connne Griffith, the Vitagraph star, in her depiction of this charming heroine of the philanderer Lawrence—enhanced by her gown of MALLINSON’S Pussy Willow Satin. 17 Don’t Leave Them Behind Weed Tire Chains on your tires reflect your prudence and intelligence. Brains and Chains must be used for the safe operation of automobiles- PRACTICALLY every car in operation has Weed Tire Chains—in the garage. Even the novice knows there are times when he can- not drive safely without them. The trouble comes in making drivers think to always carry them in their cars and think to put them on the tires “at the first drop of rain.” Give your Weed Tire Chains a chance to perform their mission. Don’t leave them in the garage. Carry them with you and put them on the tires before the elements whip the streets into black deadly skidways. Only a moment of your time and their steel forged protection will be securely chaining your car to safety. American Chain Company, Inc. BRIDGEPORT CONNECTICUT In Canada : Dominion Chain Co., Ltd., Niagara Falls, Ont. Largest Chain Manufacturers in the World The Complete Chain Line—All Types, All Sizes, All Finishes —From Plumbers’ Safety Chain to Ships’ Anchor Chain GENERAL SALES OFFICE: Grand Central Terminal, New York City DISTRICT SALES OFFICES: Boston Chicago Philadelphia Pittsburg Portland, Ore. San Francisco iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniii 18 The Student's Food Drink THE ORIGINAL Is recuperative, nourishing and sus- taining, when one is physically or mentally wearied or overworked. Induces restful sleep when taken hot before retiring. Preferred by many to tea and coffee. Ask For and Get Horlick’s The Original Thus Avoiding- Imitations and substitutes At all fountains. Also sold in sealed glass jars for preparing in room or club. In tablet form, too, ready to eat. All Dealers 19 Edward G Broenniman President Leonard E. Broenniman Vice-Pres. and Treasurer George R. Flach Secretary Broenniman Company INCORPORATED Flour - Grain 457 Produce Exchange NEW YORK TELEPHONE Bowling Green 0900 CABLE ADDRESS “BROENNIMAN” 20 Young Men WhoVe Just Stopped Being Boys WILL like our Boy’s department. You’ll find here good- looking, dependable suits, everything that is correct in haberdashery, sweaters and sports clothes made for real wear . . . and all at prices that will please you as much as the clothes themselves! And if you can’t come to see us, write to us. We’ll be glad to do “long-distance” shopping for you, whether you are buying a new necktie or a complete outfit. ISest Sc Co Fifth Avenue at 35th Street—N.Y. 21 I u F 99 lancee Toilet Preparations ''HE subtle fragrance the evasive TO scent, and the final touch which Crf marks a perfectly gowned woman come from the depths cf the exquisite perfume—Fiancee. A lovely preparation is alluring Fiancee. Indeed, it is merely symbolical of all Fiancee preparations— face powder, toilet waters, sachets, cold creams, rouge, lip sticks. Truly they are as lovely, fascinating, and enticing as the vt ry name. Fiancee, itself. Fiancee preparations are obtainable of but ore firm in each city in America. WOODWORTH Perfumer NEW YORK CITY Dr. Claude Hamer Story Dentist PAWLING, N. Y. Pawling Phone 221 New York Office, 550 West 157th St. New York Phone, Audubon 3709 When yon want the real thing in Sport Equip- ment you in- sti nctively think of “Spalding” A. G. SPALDING BROS. 126 Nassau Street 522 Fifth Avenue New York City. FRANK BROTHERS Fifth Avenue Boot Shop Near Forty-Eighth Street, New York Boots, Slippers, Hosiery for Men, Women and Children Exhibit Shops CHICAGO—Michigan Blvd. Bid?:, corner Washington St. ST. LOUIS—Arcade Building W A5HINGTON— Woodward Building NEW HAVEN—Totel Taft PITTSBURGH—Jenkins Arcade CLEVELAND—Athletic Club Bldg. BOSTON—Little Building SAN FRANCISCO—Whitney Building, 133 Geary Street 23 Sialjjlj A. (brtftuuj LIGHT - HEAT - POWER PAWLING :: :: NEW YORK ggJIOMPLIMENTS A FRIEND 24 De cara Chocolates T F you care for a better quality of chocolates, Delcaras will satisfy you. They are packed in beautiful boxes containing varied assortments of chocolate covered fruits, nuts and cream centers of many delicious flavors. Known for more than 25 years to the discriminating public. If your dealer cannot supply you, try one of our favorites. Delcara Butter Chocolates (as illus- trated). Pound box $1.50, postpaid. Marshmallo ws RE different because of their fine, fluffy tex- ture and delicious flavor. They retain their original goodness. Made of purest materials in sunny, spotless kitchens without contact with hands. We want to send you our booklet of useful marshmallow recipes—free on request. If your dealer does not have Royal Marshmallows, send 70c for pound box, prepaid, 2 lbs. $1.40, 5 lbs. $8.50. ROCHESTER CANDY WORKS 408 State'Street Rochester, N. Y. 25 COLORED REPRODUCTIONS OF Prize Paintings FROM THE SAMUEL T. SHAW COLLECTION at BRAUS, Inc. ART GALLERIES 422 FOURTH AVENUE. NEW YORK CITY LITTLE HALL Tutoring for Harvard CAMBRIDGE, MASS. or Yale Entrance Examinations A Quarter Century Record of Success Experienced Teachers Over one hundred and fifty Effective Work men prepared each summer. Well Equipped Laboratories Ask any one of them if he Excellent Living Accomodations would choose another school Instruction in ALL Subjects if he had to work another Varied Opportunities summer. for Recreation For Full Particulars Ail dress: Gymnasium WILLIAM W. NOLEN, A.M. Tennis Courts Telephones 627 or $190 Little Hall C”. Cambridge, Mass. Boat House Illustrated Booklet on Rer nest 26 O. S. DONALDSON Compliments .Uruggxst. of PAWLING N. Y. “The Other Generation” Go to Gibney’s W. J. KITCHENER For Hardware Plumbing Musical Theory Bicycles, Batteries, Piano and Fretted Instruments Safety Razors, Knives 316 WEST 93rd STREET and Thermos Bottles New York City G. SCHOENIG. Pres. J. J. BEARD, Treas. SCHOENIG CO., Inc. — Kodaks Vt j. Developing Photo upimcmufl printing Supplies i Enlarging 8 East Forty-Second Street COMPLIMENTS OF Dr. M. B. Morrison NEW YORK TELEPHONE, 6336 MURRAY HILL The Harstrom School at Norwalk, Conn. R. F. Sheridan offers exceptional advantages to boys whose preparation for college has been interrupted or delayed. Summer term preparing for the September examina- tions, begins August 1st. Circular on request. Paxi Service PAWLING, N. Y. CARL AXEL HARSTROM, A. M , Ph D , Principal . 27 ({hades £. Uillarh 154 Nassau £ trcrt Jfoui IJurk (£itg $ THIS BOOK PRODUCED COMPLETE BY US .Unite to AiJoprttfipro Pagr American Chain Co., Inc................. 18 Best Co............................... 21 Blankinship, Leland W................... 10 Braus, Inc...............................26 Broenniman Company ..................... 20 Brooks Brothers ........................ 6 Burton Bros. Co........................ 1 Clark, George B.......................... 0 Cook’s Lineoleum Company ............... 11 Crawford, Patton Cannon ............... 2 Donaldson, O. S......................... 27 Eagle, J. H. C. K...................... 7 Eisman, Samuel, Co..................... 6 Frank Brothers.......................... 23 Gibney’s ............................... 27 Greenfield Tap Die Corp................ 7 Griffing, Ralph A....................... 24 Hall-Thompson Co., The ................. 12 Holmes (H. A.) Store .................... 5 Harstrom School, The ................... 27 Hodgman, Fred. S........................ 13 Horlick’s............................... 19 Kitchener, W. J......................... 27 Lyons, George H......................... 10 Mallinson’s ............................ 17 Milford School, The..................... 16 Morrison, Dr. M. B...................... 27 Page National Bank of Pawling, The ........ 10 New York Belting Packing Co........ 12 Nolen, William W., A.M.................. 26 Pach Brothers ........................... 6 Pawling Printing Co..................... 10 Pawling School ......................... 14 Plaza Hotel ............................ 13 Robertson-Cole .......................... 3 Rochester Candy Works .................. 25 Rossia Ins. Co. of America.............. 15 Schoenig Co., Inc..................... 27 Scroll Board ........................... 12 Sheridan, R. F.......................... 27 Spaulding, A. G., Bros................ 23 Station Restaurant—M. J. O’Brien .... 10 Steinway................................. 3 Story, Dr. Claude Hamer ................ 23 Taylor, Alex, Co....................... 7 Teller, William R....................... 10 “The Other Generation” ................. 27 Touraine Chocolates ..................... 4 Treadwell, M. H., Co..................... 7 Tuck Shop .............................. 10 United Piece Dye Works .................. 4 Washburn, Gilbert T., Co.............. 21 White Studio ............................ 5 Willard, Charles L...................... 28 Wonder Worker Auto Shop ................ 12 Wright, Dr. Harrie M.................... 10 Woodworth............................... 22
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