. 411 i . ,. , bf meV. .35: Cl Jag! . I E??? 1. twirl? ; ix 1.. .i ,,,,, tainlwn w aw i i 410 $3 CHAS. M. DECKER ea BROS. Kk ESTABLISHED 1871 ' INCORPORATED 1906 IMPORTERS-GROCERS $1 $3 741' 51 Kg WHOLESALE DEPT. LINCOLN AVE. AND D. L. Es? W. RD. gm BAKING DEPT. - - 151 MAIN STREET. ORANGE, N. J. 7d? GRAIN DEPT. - - RAILROAD PLACE ORANGE. N. J. K1 $3 STORES AT Ex; Orange ' - 1 ' ' 222-224 M3? Street Bloomfield - - - ' 37-39 Broad Street gt? East Orange ' ' 4 537-539 Ma-In Street Summit - - 1 - 29 SQ.Maple Avenue kg East Orange ' - ' 1 335 Mam Street N k - S 11 S d R .11 A $91 East Orange Park Ave and No. Clinton St. ewar event t' an osevx e vs. :9 East Orange - Main and Steuben Streets Maplewoocl 1 ' - - Maplewood Avenue Egg South Orange ' - 29 So. Orange Avenue Valley - ' Scotland St. and Lincoln place $1 Montclair ' 1 1 8 anti 10 Church Street Chatham - ' Main Street 1: - ' QE ASL Our Salesmen Aaout Our Economy plan of purclzasing $ f1; ,.,11 611, , , H - . . 1 gg1agtgz1ajzmazzjiggzzegggfgxazgggzx2762-32322 9213 $33151??? Zr ETUW 00W MONTCLAIR ACADEMY MONTCLAIR, NEW JERSEY I918 DEDICATION thTH a deep realization of the enviable honor we have in possessing a body h of Alumni who have so willingly consecrated their lives to the cause of Liberty and Justice, we, the Editors of Ye Yeare Booke, respectfully dedicate this volume to those former Students of the Academy who have so nobly enlisted in the fight for Democracy. UPPER SCHOOL SCHOOL LOWER IllllJIIIIIIIIIII IIIIIlIIIlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHllIIHIlIllHlIIlIIlLIII YWEARE 60$ seem llllHllllIIIlIIllIIIIIIIHIIILIILIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIITI'IIHIIIIIIIIIIII'IIIIIHVx IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIHIIIIIlHIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIJ7IIWIQI'IJEI E E I - E 5 . GREETING Ye Yeare Booke Board of 19:8 extends a hearty greeting and places in your hands the results of its labors during the past year. We have tried to chronicle faithfully all the school activities during the time when the class of 1918 has been running the last lap of its race behind the portals of old M. A., and hope that this book may be a fitting memorial of this class. As the years r011 by, the Class of 1918 will ever hold dear the associations and friendships formed at M. A., and in this book we embody our farewell and our sincere wish that Prosperity and Success may .reign forever at the Academy. $0 the Students, Alumni, Faculty and friends of' the Academy, w THE FACULTY gm mm 9m , :m 3mm; mm wise :3? m LLHUJIHHIIHIIIIHHIIIlHIHHlIlIIHJIIIlIIHl1JHIIIIIILILIUTHI E YWEARE llllllIllIHTHUTTTHIHHIIIlllIlIIlIHHllHHHIJUIHH'T H'HHIIHUTWA711!!!IHHIIIIIHlHIlLlIJ'HHIIlIlHHLHIIHIIHIIIHIUHIHII 500K: HHHUIH The Faculty Upper School JOHN GEORGE MACVLCAR, A.M. Ypsilanti State Normal School, 381 School, Flat Rock. Michigan. versity, Canada, 83-185. . Principal High '81-'82. Toronto Cni- Union City, Michigan, 386. CHARLES H. GARRISON, AB. Assistant Headmaster English XYesleyan A13. 04 V1011tclai1 Academx 04- CW New York Law School 305- 06. Montclair Academy: 306- 18. GEORGE H. JEWETT, AB. Crrmmz, Frmzdz A'Yherst A.B., '96. Phi Beta Kappa. Academy. 396318. Montclair XVILLIAM H. MILLER, A.M., B.PD, House Master. EValden House Science Millersville State Normal School . 398., Rapho Pub- lic Schools, ,98-302. Principal High School. Glen Academy, Headmaster Rochester University A.B.. A87. Phi Beta Kappa. Rochester University A.M., 390. Montclair Academy, 387-118. 1Villard, Penn. 302304, Millersville State Normal School, '04-'07, B.Pd., Dickinson CoHege. '07-,09, P1113. Mercersburg Academy, 309310. Montclair Academy, y10-318. HOWARD S. TAYLOR, AB. Zliatlzcmafics, English Amherst College, A.B., '14. Montclair Academy, 114418. CLAUDE 1V. MONSON, A.B., Phi Beta Kappa House Master. Academic Building Latin Hamilton College A.B.. 304. Sanford. N. Y., '04- 305. Ohio Military Institute, 305-311. Mt. Pleasant 313916. Montclair Academy, 116-118. Upper School:Continued WlLLIAM COAN, A.M. Bookkeeping Palmer College A.B., ,OZ. Vhitman College M.A., ,05. University of Nevada. Montclair Academy, 14318. CHANDLER T. JONES, A.B. House Master, Bradley House Spanish, English, German Amherst College, AB, 17; Montclair Academy, 17318. JOHN J. SULLIVAN History Boston College, Posse Normal School, ,15; Lexing- ton High School, Mass., 15317; Montclair Academy, y17318. MICHAEL A. MILLER Physical Director Y. M. C. A., Allentown, Pa., 0609; Physical Di- rector, University of Pennsylvania, ,11313; Assistant Gymnasium Instructor, New York University, ,09315; Montclair Academy, !17318. W. LEROY RAISCH Organist and Choir Master of Trinity Episcopal Church, Elizabeth, N. J., !16; Columbia University, B. S., 18; Trinity School of Choir Music -Dip10ma, ,16; Montclair Academy, y17318. ORRIE S. STODDARD, B.S. Mathematics Oswego State Normal School, ,00; Scranton Oral School, 00-01; Columbia University, B. S., 08; Yonkers Public School 01-06; Piqua High School, 08-09; Cranford High School, ,09311; Groff School, 11313; Syms School, 13314; St. Bernardk School, ,14315; Brown Tutoring School, 15317; Montclair Academy, 18. THOMAS H. QUIGLEY, A.M. English, Ancient History Brown University, A.M., ,11; Phi Beta Kappa; Routt College, 11313; Paterson High School, 13315; Dickinson High School, 15316; Lincoln High School, 16318; Montclair Academy, ,18. WILLIAM R. BERGER, A.B., B.D. English Baldwin College, A.B., 07; Drew College, B.D., ,10; St. John,s Military Academy, 1014; Berkeley School, ,14316; Montclair Academy, 18. Lower School HELEN BENNETT JOHNSON Principal New Hampshire State Normal School, y89. Concord N. HQ, 89- 90. Somerville UVIassJ Public School, 90395. Brookline UMassJ Public School, !95396. Belmont School for Boys O361mont, CalJ, instructor, 9901. Principal Lower School, ,01305. Student Teachers College, 05306. Principal elementary de- partment Ethical Culture School, 06-11. Student Cornell Summer School, 12-13. Montclair Academy, 1218. ELLA J. BARROWS Salem Normal School, 97. Danvers Massj Public Schools, 97398. Burlington GHJ Public Schools, 98302. Montclair Academy, 04318. AUGUSTA H, EDWARDS Brockport Normal School, 90. Patchogue Public Schools, 90397. Plainfleld Public Schools, 93394. Patchogue Public Schools, 02- 03. Montclair Acad- emy, 03- 18. JULIE LOMBARD Lombard College A.B., 01. Kingsley School, '04- 07. Cranford High School, 07309. Montclair Acad- emy, ,09318. MAY KACHEL Millersville State Normal School, ,05. Georgetown De1j Public School, 05-07. Ridgewood N. JJ Public School, ,07310. Montclair Academy, 10318. BELLE B. MILLER Birdsboro Training School, 98. Caenaroon Public School, 98300. Birdsboro, Pa., 00313. Montclair Academy, 1618. SAMUEL'VV. ETTINGER JVIanual Training, Drawing Wrashington University of Fine Arts, 1213. Pratt Institute, ,14316. St. Louis Public School, 13-14. Practical draftsman for Missouri Engraving C0. Montclair Academy, 16- 18. MME. CECILE L. CASTEGNIER STEELE French President Alliance Francaise 0f the Oranges, lec- turer in N. Y. and N. J. Glen Ridge XVOHICIfs Club, 13317. Montclair Academy, 14- 18. Senior Class R011 Presidmzt DONALD W. DICKSON Vice-Prvsz'dcnt Mann: V. YOUNGMAN Sccrctary-Trcasm'cr PHILIP A. HOAG Executive Committee Senior Prom Committee YOUNGMAN, Chaimnau YOL'xGMAN, Chairman DICKSON VH1TE CRAIG CUNNINGHAM MACVICAR HITTCHINSON Cruz BobbiNk XVhitE, 1:. DooLittlc Mac VIcar CraIg GarrAbrant YouNgman CunninGham AlthouSe StEiner Hoag DickSon STraight Mac ArThur ShErman DeEtjen DOdd MontEs DeGrEss Fullc HutchiNson ChapmaN SENIOR CLASS uThru thick and thin, both over bank and bush, In hopes her to attain by hook or crook. -Spencer. M. A., 1618; Forum, i16318; Kodak Khib, y16318; Dra- matic Club, t16318; Junior Prom. Committee, ,17; Class Basket- ball Team, 16317; Walden House, ,16318; Montclair Academy Battalion, y17318. W'hence comes the sound of a sweet ukulele and whence do the undulating throbs of a sonorous bass issue? But hold, keep your seats, ladies! ,Tis only Bill Althouse singing the glories of California, for Bill is a true native son, and woe he to him who speaks against the Golden West. William came to 11s in 1916, but at the end of last year decided to venture out into the cold, cruel world and play the game of life. This resolution stuck until the next No- Vember and then the lure of his school-boy days won him over and he wandered hack to the sacred precincts of old M. A. The Forum is honored by his presence and the Dramatic Club is proud of him as one of its most versatile actors. Also he is the champion fusser of the school, and he holds his Iaurels with very little opposition, for it is rumored that he has every fair one of the Pacific Coast on his string. Bill is an ambitious lad, as he expects to work and attend New York University at the same time. We're with you, old HFare thee well! and if. forever, Still for ever, fare thee well? eB-vron. M. A., ,17318; Basketball Team, 18. Early in the Fall Mount Pleasant Academy sent us one of its sterling specimens in the shape of itBurt,y Bobbink. Mr. Miller, who is always interested in extraordinary speci- mensy such as alligators and deviltish, was immediately at- tracted by this product from Passaic, Upon closer examina- tion, his curiosity was so aroused that he determined to analyze the unlucky Victim. Upon analysis, much to his surmise, he found a good quantity of grey matter which had not been evidenced by the subjects work in class. He found 40 per cent. to be athletic ability and 20 per cent. to be a capacity for :1 good time, the rest consisted of numerous qualities which he could not place. , hBurtH was one of our stars in basketball and is also out for tennis this Spring. Aside from athletics he does not take a very active part in the school activities except at dances, where he never tires of tripping the light fantastic. For any further information or particulars, apply to Strafford P. Riggs, Esq. Next year he is going to take an Agricultural Course at Rutgers and we hope that here and all through his life suc- cess may ever be his reward. 18 HI am not in the 11011 of common 111C11. iShakstun'. 11011tclair Academy y06- 18; Class Te1111is Team y15-16; Class S11immi11g Team 115116; Class Basketball Team 15- 17; Capt Class Basketball Team 17;V:11'sity Basketball Team 17- 18; Forum, 115-18; Secretary of 11111111111y 118; Kodak Klub. ,16318 Charles D.Jr.1111.9 been with 119 for quitC a 111111111C10f long 11nd 11311111 VCZIIS. 111 fact if the t111t11 could be lealned 0118 11011111 1110bab1y 11nd out that 11C 9t111ted to attend M. A at the outbreak of the S11a11ish-A111Crica11 XVa1zDuri11g that time in passing thiongh form z1fte11f01111 C1er 1011x1111 thC topmast rung 0f the ladder Challie has gained 911111Ci611t knowledge 10 be 1C91di11g in the illustiious 1701111111 Socieh. He is also 16111 musical playing on almost 11111 1119t1 11111C11t and while so doing his inwzud pleasure 1311 easilx be dis- cerned 111 the 1211i0119 and complicated expressions of his face. C11z111C9 i11tea1119 to go to Lufmettc for his C011e0C course and if such t1i1ia1 obstacles :19 Rozud Ex11111s.aiid ce1tilicatim1 can he 01'C1c0111e he is due there in the fall of 1918. WC 1111 111911 him the 119.91 of success llll dare do all that may become a man. ,-Shakespeare. M. A., y14318; Class Basketball Team, 1417; Class Swim- ming Team, 14317; Class Relay Team, 14317; Class Rifle Team, 45317; Class Tennis Team, 14316; Vice-President Class, ,1617; Chairman Class Executive Committee, 1617; Class Executive Committee, ,17318; Class Pin Committee, y17; Junior Promenade Committee, 17; Sophomore Hat Commit- tee, l16; Rostrum, 15318; Vice-President Rostrum, ,17318; Chairman Executive Committee Rostrum, 17318; Rifle Team, ,18; Dramatic Club, 17318; Prompter hStanding Room Only? ,18; Kodak Klub, ,17318; On Bounds Board, ,16317; Mont- clair Battalion, y17318; Football Team, 16317; Baseball Team, y16318; Academic Building, 17318; Choir, '17318. Craig is the cute little boy of the Senior class, but the size of his body is the only small thing about Coley, for he is one of the higgest-hearted and best natured fellows in school. As for athletics, he is the greatest little man there is. Ask the tackle of an opposing football team how he likes to have Coley bite his ankle and then dodge the brick that will be coming your way. Likewise, in the national game he is supreme, for it is a known fact that Coley has not missed a Fly hall since the days of Auld Lang Syne. He is a member of the Rostrum and they say that he talks with so much gusto that it is necessary to attach huge anchors to the Walden to keep the building from being car- ried away by the heated air. Coley,s choice of colleges is Cornell, but for private rea- sons and College Board Exams, his footsteps have been turned toward Lehigh, where he will sojourn at least a year. Rest of luck, Coley. nPraise enough To fill the ambition of a private man. eCowpcr. M. A., l15-'18; W'alden House, l15-l17; Academic Build- ing, y17318; Forum, l16-l18; Sergeant-at-arms, l17; Treasurer, !18; Junior Prom. Decorating Committee, ,17; Y. M. C. A. Class Committee, 17; Class Basketball Team, y16-'17; Class Tennis Team, y16317; Captain, 17; Rifle Club, y17318; Dra- matic Club, ,17318; Radio Club, '16-,17; Mandolin Club, '17318; Swimming Team, 1617; Second Football Team, l17; Class Ri;le Team, ,18; M. A. B., ,1618; 2nd Lieut. M. A. 8., ll 318. Carlos, our little Guatemalan amphibian, is one of the best athletes in school for his size, and, we might as well add, that is saying a good deal. Likewise he is excellent in his studies. If you doubt that ask Mr. Miller. Cruzls ambition is to get on the All A Club'l and he insists constantly that he will do so as soon as he stops taking Latin. Of course this free-spoken idea is a little hard on Mr. Monson and is probably one of the reasons that Vera does not get better marks in that subject. Also Cruz lives in the Academic building, and Mr. Monyson being the honse-master of that noted place, has his hands full quelling frequent South Amer- ican revolutions. The Forum is proud to have in its midst a representative from Guatemala and the fair sex of the town think Cholly is quite the catch of the season. The college of Cruz,s choice is Cornell, but he is not sure where he will finally go. Nevertheless, when he leaves M. A., 1txhe greatest success is due him whether in college or at wor s. nFor truth has such a face and mien. eDrydcn. M. A., llZ-l18; Forum, 16317318; Executive Committee, Forum. 17; JuniortProm Decorating Committee, '17; Chair- man of Collections, Liberty Loan Committee, llS; Hospital Committee, 17; Dramatic Club, 16317318; Property Man Dramatic Club, ,18; RiHe Club, y16317318; Treasurer Rifle Club, ,18; Executive Committee Rifle Cluh, l18; Class Rifle Team, 17318; Captain, Class Rille Team, 18; Class Tennis Team, ll7; 2nd Baseball Team, 17; 2nd Basketball Team, ll8; Bradley House, 14; Academic Building, 18; Sergeant, B Company, llS; Associate Editor, Ye Yeare Booke, ll8. As Lincoln would say, it is altogether fitting and proper that Howard Cunningham, the boy pugilist 0f Ye Ackey, should follow Cruz in this noble list of Seniors, for Howard and Cruz are as thick as water, and in fact we believe How? ard is the thicker 0f the two, Outside of his living on the western coast of U. S. A. with all the movie beauties we are not in the least bit jealous of llCLmningW for even though he has handled the Liberty 1402111 Subscriptions and the RiHe Club in a manner in which most of us could not, he yet has that pugilistie habit, and in fact, Cunningham often takes a few falls out of White and Craig before retiring for the night. llHowyll has been one of the mainstays 0f the Yeare Booke Board and we wish him the best of luck and know that he will make good at Cornell. 22 A bold bad man? eSpmzcer. Montclair Academy, i10318; Willden House, ,15316; Class Secretary-Treasurer, ,15316; Rostrum, 15318; All-A Club, '15316; Dramatic Club, '15-'17; Football Team, i17; Baseball Team, ,1617; Swimming Team, ,13318; iest Support, ,17; Captain. 18; Taylor Cup, 71617; Second Basketball Team, ,10; Class Basketball Team, ,14316; Class Tennis Team, y'15-'16; Class Relay Team, 14316. It seems to he a tradition of the Deetjen family to make srevesses of its sons in School. Carl, the lust of 3 wt of three, has certainly upheld this tradition in every detail. For instance, in football and baseball he is most excellent and when it comes to swimming he is absolutely without an equal. ttDeetjii is also good in his studies for he in- variably gets on the Honor Roll and once in a while even has his name read out as a member of the 4All A Club.H He has been in the Rostrum Debating Society for several years. which, of course, leads us to CollChIdC that he has considA erable ability as a speaker, Carl is undecided as to which College he is going but Ht present thinks he will end up in Cornell. XVhether there or elsewhere we are sure he will make a success as great as 01' even'greuter than his past one in M. A. 23 HThe glory of a hrm capacious mind. ViPOIW Montclair Academy, ,17318; Forum, ,17318; Rifle Team, ,18; lst Lieutenant, M. A. B., 17-18; Liberty Loan Com- mittee, ,17. DeGress is a new fellow this year, hailing from Stevens Prep. He is also one of those fellows who enable the Public Service Trolley cars to continue running by the deposit 01 a nickel before and after school every day. His chief in- terest in school is on Tuesdays and Thursdays when we have drill. His sterling patriotism is shown in his eagerness and diligence in preparing himself to be ready when the time comes for him to answer the call of Liberty. He is also a good marksman, holding a prominent place on the Rifle Team, and the Forum counts him as one of its illustrious members. Athletics do not greatly interest our friend from Glen Ridge, although he played on the scrubs in football and was also on the second basketball team. Next year he is going to Stevens and we hope that nothing may ever hinder him from obtaining the best that this In- stitute has to offer. May you ever cherish, DeGress, a feeling that your short sojourn at M. A. has hound you by strong ties of companionship to the fellows of. '18. nA daring pilot in extremityF-Dryden. Montclair Academy, i09-t18; Bradley House, '09314; XValden House, ,14315; Academic Buildingy t15318; Class President, '14318; Junior Executive Committee, Junior Prom. Com- mittee, Class Pin and Paper Committee, Dance Committee, '17-,18; Liberty Loan Committee, Pilot Committee, Chairman Conservation Committee, Senior Executive Committee, Ex- ecutive Committee Athletic Association, Grandstand Com- mittee, Rostrum, 15118; Vice-President Rostrum, ,17; Critic Rostrum, y17; Sergeant-at-arms, Rostrum, i16317; Baseball Team, 15318; Capt. Baseball Team, y18; Swimming Team, 1417; Capt. Class Track Team, ,14317; Capt. Class Basket- ball Team, y13315; Associate Editor, Ye Yeare Booke, A11 HA Club, ,16317; Football Team, ,17; Track Team, ,16; Dramatic Club, 14318; Class RiHe Team, ,18; Secretary Rifle Club, ,18; Class Basketball Team, 17318; Basketball Team, y18; Y. M. C. A; Fund Committee. Dickson! What a noble sounding name that is! Close your eyes and you can imagine it to be the title of a king, 21 king of kings. But Dickie is not a king, he is more than that-he is the glorious president of our Senior Class, and a better one there never was. For four long years he has held the reins of 1918 and for four years he has faultlessly guided the class through the sea of school activities. Dick,s athletic ability is known to everyone, and we all agree that it cannot be praised too highly. A good idea of his prowess may be obtained by noting the fact that he has won his letter in almost every sport of old M. A. Beside being our class president he holds innumerable other ofhces in the school, and there is a rumor circulated that Dickie is one of the strongest supporters of the Rostrum. After years of debate and uncertainty he has finally an- nounced that he may spend another year in M. A. and then have his name inscribed on the roster of Cornell. We all wish him the greatest succe55 there. HLX noticeable man VVlth larOe 0r6' 6 '65. D is y 3 wLVO? 0151001111. M. A, yll-llS; Forum, y16318; Treasurer of Forum, 17; Captain Co. A, ll. A. 3., ll7-l18; Radio Club, ,14318; Kodak Kluh, ,15318; Dramatic Club, ,16318; On Rounds Board, 16317; Class Relay Team, 15317; Class Rifle Team, 1618; Glee Club, l17-l18; Choiry y18; Mandolin Club, ,17318; Junior Prom. Decoration Committee, ,17; XValden House, ,16317; Second Football Team, ,17. KlCzlptain Dodd, who did you say he was? the fair dam- sel innuired. llVV'hy, hels that tall handsome fellow with the tin sword, standing out in front of Company Af was the reply. As far as build goes, Hansome is a close resem- blance to a string bean. The true blue patriotism of our fellow Classman is manifested in his eagerness to obtain knowledge of military tactics. Many of us do not realize how beautiful the ride from Montelair to Glenridge, on the P. S. Taxi, is on a cold winteris evening. HHansome claims that as you sit on the seats which are like downy couches, the sweet songs of birds are heard in the distance and the fragrant perfume of Spring Howers is wafted to your nostrils. t;We are inclined to believe that the perfume is more likely to be coal gasfl He is an enthusiastic member of the Forum and for two years has been a high man on the RiHe Team. His activities in athletics are rather limited although he cheerfully submits to being knocked about on the scrub football team. He plays on the mandolin club and has been accused by Youngman of trying to show his musical superiority by playing correctly when practicing a new piece. We Wish you the best of luck at R. P. 1., hiCaptnfl and are sure that you will never let anything short of success reward your efforts there, as well as in after life. nHe thought as a sage, though he felt as a man? eBeattie. Montclair Academy, 17318; Rifle Club, 17318; Kodak Klnh, ,17318; Electrician Dramatic Cluby ,18; 170mm. i17318; Y. M. C. A. Committee, ,17; Liberty Loan Committee, 17; W'alden House, i17-,18. Doolittle is one of our middle-XVest boys, hailing from the state of good atmosphere and Rocky Mountain goats. Colo- rado. Since his arrival last fall, Frederick has introduced many new customs and mannerisms in the school, notable among which is his enviable ability to eat pancakes and his knowledge of mines, the former quality being distinctly Coloradean. Frederick also has the wonderful record of not having failed on a problem in Physics since the days of his childhood. In mathematics he is equally efficient, and we are sure that some of his deductions would put to shame even the great Archi- medes, were that famous gentleman alive today. This mechanical genius of his has led him to be appointed electrician iii the Dramatic Club, and his powers of elocution won for him an honored seat in the Forum. As for college, Frederick has not yet decided definitelyy but his best bet is Cornell. Best success to you there! HMy nimfs as true as steel. vShaIcespeure. Montclair Academy, 44318; Honorable Mention, French, Ye Yeare Booke Board, 17318; RiHe Club, 18; All A Club, 17318; President of Forum, Second Term, 17318. Garrabrant tCabaret for shortl, the gent with the blue eyes and golden hair-no, gentle reader, not blue hair and golden eyesr-stands as an example of what Bloomfield can really produce, if it feels like it. uGarry decided several years ago that the Academy was a good place in which to have his talents improved, so he came here; and since then has been a shilling star in all his undertakings. His smile, which many say is Irish, and we wont argue about it, is the outstanding feature of this boy with the three-decker brain. He is rather unassuming about his Virtues, never- theless he is one of the original members of the All A Club. The Forum has a prominent member in him-in fact, his favorite line of argument is that the Forum is a little better than the Rostrum. Maybe this is the reason they elected him president of the Forum. May he achieve as great success at Rutgers as he has earned here. HBid me discourse, I will enchant thine ear? e-Slzaleexpeare. M. A., 09-18; Bradley House, ,09313; XValden House, '13318; Class Swimming Team, ,15317; Class Basketball Team, '13315; Class Relay Team, ,13315; Football Team, 13318; Captain, 17; Name 011 Swetland Cup, ,17; Rifle Team, 15316; Captain, 1516; Kodak Klnh, y13318: Mandolin Club, 13316; Dramatic Club, llSeIS; Chairman Junior Prom. Com- mittee, yl7; Food Conservation Committee, 17318; Executive Committee, Senior Class, ,17318: Secreta1'y-'l.lreasurer, Senior Class, ,17318; School Song Committee, 173153; Corporal M. A. B., llO-'ll; Sergeant Bugler M. A. 13., 17318; Forum, 1518; Sergeant--at-arms, y17; Vice-Presidenty ,18; School Choir, y17318. Hoag has been with us for quite a few years-in fact, the story goes that Phil First put in his appearance while still enjoying the comforts and ease of a perambulator. However, he has now a different vehicle of transportation in the form of a motorcycle, and we unanimously agree that one of the commonest sights hereubouts is Phil Hitting hither and you on his Harley at a rate of speed that causes people to faint by the hundreds. Besides being the captain of our glorious ll7 football team, Phil is the strong man of the school. If you are skeptical, go out into the gym and have him squeeze the strength-tester up to a million pounds or 50. Likewise he is the champion yarn-teller 0f the school and we boast that his experiences and travels have never been equalled since the days Of Baron Munchausen and the renowned Gulliver. Moreover, they are likely to stand supreme for years to come. Phil is going to Cornell, where he will take an engineering course. Let the greatest success be his! 29 HThe mildest mariners with the bravest mind. -7Popc. Montclair Academy, y17-18; Rostrum, 17318; Executive Committee, Rostrum, ,18; Hospital Donation Committee, ,18; President Mandolin Club, llS; Class Tennis Team, '17318; Lyierty Loan Committee, ,17; Captain, tiBl, Co., M. A. B., ,1 318. Hutchinson is a new fellow this year, and a very worthy addition to the school. We editors sometimes wish that the fellows would come to us and tell us all their bad and good points; in this case, however, there are no bad points to speak of, and the good points speak for themselves in the highest terms. He is quite a student, though that fact wont give him any gray hairs awhile yet; and he is prominent in military doings. Hockey is his favorite sport; almost every day when there is skating you can see him in his car talso in his yellow c030, headed towards one of the frozen lakes. And hels some expert skater, too. His soft, well-modulated voice makes a gfeat hit with the members of the gentler sex; and we believe dancing is his favorite indoor sport, though if he were asked about it, shooting on the rifle range would probably be his answer. Herels success to youy old top, in business: success which we know you will achieve. 3O uHe was a man. take him for all in all, I shall not look upon his like again? iSlmlnxmmra M. A., i163le H'alden House, 16317; Academic Building, ,17318; Dramatic Club. i17-,18; Kodak Klub, ,17318; horum, ,16318; Private, Co. A, M. A. 8., ,17318; Service Flag At tendaiitY ,17318. - Arthur Paul MacArthur, 0111' young transathantic globe trotter, came to our care two years ago. Since then he has proved himself a worthy member of the Class of 1918. Though Mac does not indulge in athletics, his name i117 variably appears on the Honor Roll list and his nCxami marks are to he envied by all. As for styles, if one wishes to see the latest. at short-cut to 34368 boudoir is the quickest, easiest and most desirable method. Paul also boasts of another name. which. however, he keeps more or Less in the dark; this appellation is Arnoux. There! You have guessed it, Arnonx has lived in France. As a result he expects to attevd smnc French college in gay Paree, whither he will hctake himself when navigation is more safe and secure. Good-lrck. old man! 31 Yet in my lineaments they truce Some features of my fathers face.u 'Byrtm. Montclair Academy, 06318 ; Forum, 15318; President, ,17318; Pilot Board, ,16317; On Bounds Board, ,16317; Junior Prom Committee, ,16317; Rifle Club, ,17318: Class Swimming Team, y16317; Class Tennis Team, ,17; Second Football Team, ,16- Y17; Junior Executive Committee, 1617; Senior Executive Committee, 17318. For twelve years Hervey has been steadily progressing 21s a student of the Montclair Academy. During that time, many qualities handed down from his illustrious father have come to the surface. It was greatly due to his business ability that the 1916-17 iiOn Bounds was made a success and that the 1918 Yeare Booke has been made possible. When it comes to soliciting advertisements Hervey is in his element. He can persuade the most hostile advertiser that Ye Yeare Booke is the greatest medium for advertising ever put out. Although it is not generally known, on Friday or Saturday evenings he is not averseein fact, quite the contiearye-to leading his eager steps towards the threshold of some at tractive member of the fair sex. He is a long standing member of the Forum, which has recognized his Virtues by electing him President. He is as yet undecided whether to follow the example of the man with the hoe and join the Crusade against the 130 tato bug or grace some hall of learning with his presence. Whatever your decision may he, Mac, we are sure it will be a wise One and one for which success Will be your reward. Joy is the sweet voice? iCalvridgc. Montclair Academy, 11618; 1Va1den House, '16-'18; Forum, ,17-118; Third Football Team, 116; Second Football Team. 117; Junior Relay Team, 117; Choir, '18; Mandolin Club, 118. The Senior class claims among its members a representative from far off Mexico. Moutes has all the traits of his fore- fathers, including the ability to sing to the accompaniment of a guitar. which combination he is wont to use as Often as he can find a Senorita to listen to him and as long as he can manage to dodge the shower of old shoes, books, etc. He plays this instrument in the Mandolin Club and is partly responsible for the exquisite agouv which this club inhicts upon its hearers. He is another Forumite and also one of the martyrs that make a Warsity footha11 team possible, hav- ing won his 11M 2 last Fall. He was a winning participant in Field Dav and one of the fast meu 0:1 the Junior relay team last Spring. XVe wish you the best of luck at Cornell, Moutes, old boy, and hope that you mav never cease in your attempts to reach the goal that your ambition has set for you. ttO, for a seat in some poetic nook. eHmzt. Montclair Academy, 1618; Junior Pin and Paper Com- mittee, ,16317; Kodak Klub, 16317; Dramatic Club, y16318; Rostrum, ,16318; Ye Yeare Booke Board, 16-17; Academic Building, y16317. Now we come to another member 0f ,18 who hails from Newark. Riggs joined our ranks in his Junior year and we are continually being reminded of how lucky we are in having such an illustrious member of the most illustrious Senior Class. He has always been of a literary bent, being the main contributor to On Bounds last year and writing some brilliant essays this year. His pen is also often guided by the poetic Muse. He is a member of the Rostrum and has taken a very active part in the preparation for the inter- society debate, his sound mature judgment being of inestim- able value on various occasions. Many a fellow lost his heart to that wonderful looking girl in hMiss Civilization, given by the Dramatic Club. We would advise you not to excite the envy and jealousy of the fair sex too much, Ted. He is also an ardent devotee of the terpsichorean art. We wish you the best success at Brown next year, Ted, and also during your P. G. in Columbia Journalism, and hope that your literary fame may be equaled by none. 5.? EMS, 34 W W HOf whom dispraisld were no small praise. eMilfon. M. A., 17318; Academic Building, ll7-l18; M. A. B., ,17- 18; Rostrum, ,17318. New York .presented us With another prize this year in the person of William Steiner, and we all agree that the big city did us a good turn. William proudly upholds the traditions of the Rostrum and is a hard-working member of the Rifle Squad. However, his principal occupation is conspiring with Sam Ettinger in the secret alcoves of the Academic building. His chocolate cakes and newspapers also bring great joy to his neighbors, and how should we get along without William to amuse us with his evening performance of terpsichorean gyrations? He will be one of our representatives in the 1922 class of Lehigh University this year, and we are all sure that he will he a great success there. 35 HHe thought as a sage, though he felt as a man. -Beattic. Montclair Academy, 1618; Rostrum, y18; Rifle Team, :18; Rifle Club; Sergeant, Montclair Academy Battalion, y18. Montclair has the honor of sheltering Sherman tand his automobilei. Most auto-owners brag and boast not only of their automobiles, but of themselves as well. Sherman is not of this kind. He is rather modest about himself. And so it is our pleasant duty to tell you about his exploits with his car. He delights in sending his car Hying up Bloomfield Ave. with his cut-out wide open: thus waking up the whole neighborhood. We remember when he hrst came to the Academy how he startled the rest of us, including Mr. Gar- rison, with his lugubrious English essay on the fate of Shy- lock. He certainly showed the rest of us What we didnit know about English. And his embellishments on his hand printing of outlines and skits would earn a high grading for his notebooks, if for no other reason. All these varied Virtues and many others unmentioned, among them his wit, we know he will use at Cornell in Finding the road that spells success. 36 80. AWW nHe was a scholar, and a ripe good onef -5hakespcarc. Montelair Academy, y14318; Rostrum, 1618; Executive Committee of Rostrum, ,18; All-A Club, ,17318; Dramatic Club, ,18; Orchestra, ,18; Choir, ilS; Director of Mandolin Club, ,18; Kent Prize, i16; Departmental Prize in Modems, yl6; Departmental Prize in English, ,17; Honorable Mention H istory, yl7; Honorable Mention Mathematics, il7; Honorable Mention Modems, 17; Chairman Song Book Publishing Committee, ,16; Chairman Pilot Publishing Committee, l17; Chairman School Song Committee, 18; On Bounds Board, y16-,17; Ye Yeare Booke Board, 17318. Many a savage beast has stopped in mid-flight down the third floor hall on being overcome by the irresistible power of the sweet essence of llragll issuing from the Senior ttmusic- boxf bursting forth in all its glory under the nimble fingers of our musical friend. Although music is his hobby, Arthur has not yet come to the stage when he must boycott the barbers or be classed as one of the common herd. The rough and rocky path of knowledge becomes a path of roses be- fore the approach of this brilliant member of liSumma cum Laude. His exploits in English have made Mr. Garrison begin to fear for Shakespeareis fame. His endeavors in the Kodak Klub are well known, especially at llfeeds. Even ilKodak Bill of the New York Herald is becoming jealous. He has long been an active member of the Rostrum, as his liking for speaking indicates. He has a remarkable record, of which very few can boast, being neither absent nor late to school for four consecutive years. We know that your ideals are of the highest, Straight, and that no ability to attain them is lacking and we are sure that Amherst will reward you as she does all deserving men. t'W'hen you do dance, I wish you :1 wave 0, the sea, that you might ever do nothing but that. 75halccspmrc. Montelair Academy, y16318; Walden House, 1617; Academic Building, 17318; Varsity Football Team, ll7; Varsity Basketball Team, 46318; Varsity Tennis Team, ,17: Capt. Class Tennis Team, ll6; Capt. Class Basketball Team, 16; Class Swimming Team, ,17; Class Relay Team, ,17; Varsity Track Team, ,17; Second Baseball Team, 17; Rostrum, y16318; Mandolin Club, ,18; Dramatic Club, ,18; Rifle Club, 1618; Pin and Paper Committee. A man is judged great either'hy the variety of his ac- complishments or by his superdevelopment in one line of work. In llFredls case the first of these two ways must be followed. Although he does not stand out as an all-around athlete, if you will stop and think a minute, you will realize that he has been on many ,varsity teams since entering school. In football last Fall, he was usually responsible for stopping; the line plunges on his side of the line. For two years he has played center on the basketball team and he was one of the mainstays in tennis last Spring. But athletics is not his only strong point. For instance, he usually manages to hold his own on the Honor Roll and his executive ability was brought out in his career as President of the Rostrum. If success is granted to this society in the lnter-Society De- bate, no little credit will be due him for his diligence and thoughtful work. As a wielder of the pick tmandolin piekl he rules supreme. No one will doubt but that he is unex- eelled in the art of dancing and the pursuit of fair maidens.' The patriotic'side of his nature shows itself in his eagerness to do all he can for his country by working hard during the Summer vacation. Next year he goes to Cornell and we wish him the best of luck. We are sure that a man of such varied talents cannot fail to recognize Opportunity when he meets it and that the Fates have ordained but one attainment for him, Success; 38 dThen he will tulk-good gods! how he will talk. eNatlzaniel Lev. Montclair Academy, 106318; Head Boy, Lower School, y13; Class President, 114-115; Vice-President, y15-116; Secretary and Treasurer, ,16317; Vice-President, 117318; Swimming Teamy 116; Tennis Team, 116; Capt.y Tennis Team, 117-118; Class Basketball Team, 114315; Class Relay Team, 114-116; Class Swimming Team, ,16; Class Tennis Team, 114315; Pilot Board, 117; Junior Prom Committee, 117; Ex. Edit, On Bounds, y15-116; Editor-in-Chief, i16-ll7; Editor-in-Chief, Ye Yeare Booke, '17-118; Kodak Klub, 116; Dramatic Club, ,16- '18; Sec.-Treas., ,17-118; Rostrum, 15-118; Debating Team, '17; Sec.-Treas., '17-,18; Pres, 117; Senior Executive Com- mittee, ,17-118; Honor Committee, 117318; Chairman, Liberty Loan Committee, ,17; Sec.-Treas., Mandolin Club, ,18; Ex- ecutive Manager, Football Team, ,17; All A Clnb, '17-118; Pres, 118; Jewell Cup, 117; Junior Executive Committee; Y. M. C. A. Fund Committee, '17; Chairman, School Dance Committee, 117-118; Chairman, Grand Stand.Committee, ,17. Many years ago in the days of the military, there came to M. A. a little curlyeheaded fellow of ambitions mien. This lad has since made a great name for himself and to the world at large is known as Arthur V. Youngnian. Youngie is Viee-president 0f the class and is one of the most active 0f the active in school affairs. One has yet to . hear of some organization of which he is not a member, and his exceptional oratorical ability leads him to the chair- manship of practically every committee in the school. The only possible way of doing justice to his scholarship is to mention the fact that he is president of the All A Club. Arthur will enter XVilliams next fall and we are sure that his college life will he one tilled with many honorSeas it was in the days of old. so shall it ever be. XCMhi Ne , IIHJHllHHHIHIHIHIIIIIIIllHIlIlIll w. M W: Y E A R E m I 3.5 e'UIIInmIm II J lul IIIIIIIIIIuIIIIIIlngW'pllQQ WBhQKE Q 4:1 :1th I . . lluh-sw Illliillln A Banquet York Times building the other day, I saw a note saying that the Editor wished to see me. Our old editor had recently died and Strafford P. Riggs had been appointed in his place. RiggsI rapid rise from reporter to editor had been the cause of a great deal of admiration in newspaper circles. So with fear and trembling I entered his ofhce, not know- ing what to expect, He told me briefly that I was to represent the Times at a banquet in the grand ball- room of the VValdorf-Astoria, given by Donald XV. Dickson, the well-known millionaire broker. At this dinner there were to be present many prominent men from all over the United States. At the banquet I was seated next to a short, alert, little man with whom I started a conversation. Upon asking his name, he told me, to my surprise, that he was Prof. Craig, the eminent chemist, whose recent discoveries in electricity had so startled the world. Across the table sat Maj.-Genera1 Hoag, the com- mander-in-chief of the United States Aeroplane Fleet. Next to him sat General Dodd, who, although not a yartieularly wealthy man, had won that which money cannot buy, the hearts of his men, After leaving school he had followed his pet hobby and had soon S ITTING down at my reporterts desk in the New 42 He went to France as a captain and there had won quick promotion. The idol of his men, after the war he had gradually risen in rank until now he was Chief of Staff of the United States Army. 4 As the toastmaster rose to announce the first speaker, to my surprise I recognized Garrabrant, who had just lately made such a wonderful success of his aeroplane engine and was rapidly becoming rich. He hrst read a telegram from Senor Carlos Cruz and Fernando Montes of the Gulf Sugar Co., who deeply regretted that they were unable to attend the banquet because of an important sugar deal. He then an- nounced the first speaker, Mr. DeGress. the promin nent engineer, who had just returned from abroad, where he had Charge of the reconstruction work in the regions of France and Germany devastated in the world war. He gave us a graphic description of his work, unconsciously revealing his ability to command men and his power of initiative in meeting every emergency. The next speaker was one whom I did not recognize, but he was followed by my old Class- mate, ItBurtii ?Iobbink, who had become a very in- fluential power m.the new United States merchant marine, which was now the largest in the world, being joined the amiv YEYEARE the head of the largest American shipping company. He was followed by Mr. Howard Sherman of Chap- man 6t Sherman Co, the makers of the famous HSherChap racing automobile which for the last five consecutive years had won the Vanderbilt Cup race. tYe then were entertained by a recital given by Straight, the famous musician, whose opera, ttLtAdrian. had received such an unparalleled ova- tion. The toastmaster shortly called upon Mr. Hutch- inson, the owner of the transcontinental aeroplane service. He spoke with the ease and assurance of a man who had dared great things and won. The realization had gradually been coming over me that there were most of the class of 18 present, so I suggested to Prof. Craig that we try to get the fellows together in the foyer afterwards and have Ju'n W; o o o o IHIHHIIIHl'HlTII'HHHHIIHHIIIIIHHIIHHIHIH'H !!HHHH VI 5x MIIIIHIHIHIIIIHIIllllllHIHllllHHHTIUUIHIHIHHIIllIllHlAqulch' O O G G G :Q J x t w HHIHIIHHIHIIIIIIIHIIHHIIIHIIIHHHIHIHIll'llllHHlHtHlI11.,mlI n5 4 IIIHII In -l a sort of class reunion. wVe finally succeeded in cor- ralling them and also ttFredh thite, who was now the head of a large aeroplane manufacturing plant and a leading man in New York society outside of business hours. XVhile we were talking over old times, Bobbink mentioned that he had recently bought some ships from the firm of Cunningham 8; Althouse, Inc, the largest shipbuilding corporation 011 the Pa- cific Coast. Soon who should come strolling in but our old friend MaCVicar, who owned a large scientific farm out tYest; He said that he had seen Doolittle who was very busy developing copper and silver mines. We had a wonderful time comparing experiences and it brought us back to the old days in M. A. when we had struggled hard to win our diplomas. Quondam Members FRANK D. KENT ROBERT D. KITCHELL FREDK. K. PULSIFER ARTHUR W. NICHOLS KENNETH R. UNGER JOSEPH XV. DORLAND CHARLES C. COLYER NATIVL H. RANDALL JOHN S, BENNETT CARROL B. FLINT jACK WARNER DURWARD S. YATES HUGH G. ASTLETT EDWARD B. Moss LEVAN C. REBER GEORGE SCHWEJTZER P. G. UCHTMAN PAUL M. VANCLEVE R'ARREN A. PRINCE ROGER S. STILEs h The Last of 17 MERRILL MOORE PRESIDENT GLOVER WARNER Each member of the class voted for himself so far. GLOVER WARNER VICE-PRESIDENT MERRILL MOORE Each has again voted for himself. MERRILL MOORE SECRETARY AND TREASURER GLOVER WARNER Again they don't take a chance. GLOVER WARNER JANITOR OF 1917 BUILDING MERRILL MOORE In this case each voted for the other. MERRILL A. MOORE Your name is great . ln mouths 0t witticst censure. eShakespeare M. A., l16-l18; Rostrum, y16318; Secretary-Treasurer Rostrum, 17; President Rostrum, 18; Executive Committee Rostrum, 17318; W'alden House Committee, 1617; Dra- matic Club, ,16318; Minstrel Show, 17; President Dramatic Club, 17318; t'Standing Room Only? 18; Advisory Board Dramatic Club, ,16318; RiHe Club, ,16318; Rifle Team, 16318; Class Rifle Team, 17; President Rifle Club, 17-18; Executive Committee Rifle Club, 17318; Captain Rihe Team, 17318; Class Relay Team, 17; Captain Class Track Team, l17: Winner Pearson Cup, il7; Baseball Team, ,17: Kodak Klub, 47318; President Kodak Killb, 17318; Executive Committee Kodak Klub, l17-ll8; Major, Montclair Academy Battalion, 17318; All A Club, ,18; Vice-President Athletic Association, 317318; Executive Committee Athletic Association, 17313: ,XdVertising Manager, Ye Yeare Books, l17-l18. Major Merrill A. Moore, he of the alliterative cognomen, is chieiiy noted for his ceaseless activity. He is always busy. From early mom till late at night Merrill is in what Mr. Miller would call a Hstate of motion.H Our Major is a serious minded fellow. When he once persuades himself that it is his duty to do a certain thing he does it, and you cannot alter his decision with a stick of dynamite. In addition to lueing Major of the Battalion, he is captain of the ritie team and one of the crack shots who made it possible for M. A. to issue a challenge for :1 ritie meet to every school in the United States. In fact, it is hard to find anything that Merrill is not interested in. He is :1 loyal supporter of the Rostrum, the Dramatic Club. the Kodak Kluh, and as for baseball, he says he would rather play ball than eat muff saidl. Moore hails from Maine and he intends to enter West Point next Fall. We are sure that the saying, nYou cannot keep a good man down? will lind full proof in Merrill's biography and that some tlztv, if he follows his military bent, we shall be proud of the claim that we were his associates hack in ll7 and ,18. L. GLOVER WARNER llHe was a man Of unbounded stomach. --Shakcsl7mre. M. A., ,16313; Rifle Club, 16318; Rille Team, ll7; Forum, 1631-7; Hail to our Worthy P. G. from the sunny South. By the end of last year, Glover had become so attached to the old school that, although having graduated, he decided to con- tinue the cultivation of his tree of knowledge in Montclair. As our friends weak point is eating, the deprivations of a training table 100m up 50 large and imposing when he thinks of athletics that, as yet, he has not had the courage to come out for anv team. He is a memlxer of the IForum, however, and may often be heard declaiming upon the Virtues of this society. He is good nature personihed, his sunny disposition reflecting the climate from where he comes. We know that your geniality will smooth out all the rough places along the path of life, HGlen, and we ho'pe that this path may ever lead upward to the goal of your ambitions. 46 JUNIOR CLASS President Junior Class R011 CLEMENI 1x 1n le Vice- President .................................................................................................. JOHN M. STALIEER Sec; ctary- Treasurer BuCk HaLl DAy ChiShOlm RooSa HClst StauFfer Executive Committee BUCK, Chairman VAN VLECK STAUFEER HERRERA MAXWELL CH ARLES E. AI AXWEIL WhiT e, K. G. Hannay COOPEF HaNey. C. RIggs CourtNey DeBEltraud STumpp CaldwEll BroomE Neel JoNes FIelding CudNey . MaXWEll Dance Commlttee YOTt FELLE, A., Chairlrnan SeagEars HerrEra HERRERA SEAGEARS VaN Vleck VAN VLECK MAXWELL 49 aglllllIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllIllllllllllHHHIHILIIlllllllllllllllll o I llllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllIllHllllllllll'lllllllllllllllLLL : O 0 O O 3 W Y E A R E 0 0 C0 Q Kl: - - G O . . 5 o lllllIHllllIlIllllllllllHllllllIHH!IllllllllIIHIllHIHIIIIlIllHIVsNExJ TlIHIlll-Illlll'lllllllllllllIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllglgllylli your attention is Talbot Broome, T. M. T. ttBroomiell has been with us for a good many years and in the last two or three has developed into quite a tennis player, being a member of the team since 1916. However, this is not his chief, nor most important exercise, as the greater part of his athletic ability is directed towards the chauffeuring of a Chalmers. Broonte was on the School Dance Com- mittee and is also a member of the Forum. Talbot expects to enter Princeton next year and he leaves with our best wishes for success. THE first member of the class of 19 that claims UCK and luck go pretty well together. So it is B in the ease of our Clement. However, Buck has the ability in sports without the help of that little tin god. He is the honorable president of the class, a mem- ber of the Rostrum, quarter in football, forward in basketball, and second in baseball. So now you see that ttClemll is quite some boy. Youill have to hand it to Bethlehem, Pa., for sending us such a sterling product. Hereis luck as captain of next years foot- ball team, Buck. Juniors during his attendance here-now dont be mis- lednfor we only mean that he is lucky LU enough to have been both a day scholar and a boarder. then is the Advertising Manager for uOn Boundsli and has succeeded, even in these economical times, in filling its pages with a goodly number of ads. ttKen played football with the second team last fall and we understand that he played it pretty well, too. Chisholm says he is going to Cornell next year and we wish him the best of luck. KENNETH CHISHOLM has led a dual existence chap, not given to talking much about himself, so it is rather difficult to find out much about him. However, there is one thing we can all vouch- safe, and that is that when it comes to football he is right there with the goods, and no mistake. thoopiel, played a hard game every minute and many a time he ducked his head and dug through the line for a gain and not seldom a big one at that. thoopieh is a member of the Rostrum and we hope to have him with us again next fall. ttCoop,i expects to enter Rutgers in 1919 and we send our best wishes with him. DRURY W1 COOPER. Jr. is a sort of a quiet OBODY seems very sure as to just how llBill' Caldwell entered the ranks of the class 0f 19 but, nevertheless, the fact remains that he was sensible enough to do so and we feel much honored by his presence. ttBilll, is another one of the many athletes of our number, being an enthusiast in all the major sports. By the way, all of our southern friends enthusiasm is not directed towards sports, oh, by no means! Indeed a great deal of it is directed towards certain members of the llfair sex in ll'ashington, D. C. and San Antonio, Texas. lVe all wish you luck, ltBillf, wherever life may lead'you. OUGHKEEPSlE, N. Y., now claims your at- tention in the figure of Paul Courtney. Fish is interested in numerous activities; basket- ball, tennis, baseball and military being the more im- portant ones. The terpsichorean art is also quite popular with him and it is said that he is even now developing a new strangle hold for the hSpaghetti Slip.w He has succeeded in his spare moments in upholding the honor of the Class by playing on the Class tennis and basketball teams for the past two years and by captaining this years Junior Rifle Team. Conrtneyls footsteps are directed towards the Uni- versity of Pennsylvania. Au Revoir, llFish, old scout. of real estate ads, but donT fool yourself for Joe doesWt seem to have aspirations in that line like his dad. joe is an active member of the Kodak Klub lprincipally the llfeed party joe's musical talents lie mainly in the tlniinor sports 0f the jews harp or the harmonica, but he is occasionally seen fingering the frets of his mandolin. Heard, too! May your eyebrows never grow less, Joe. JOSEPH P. DAY, JR. How quickly you think IELDING comes from Glen Ridge and, though of course we personally have nothing against Glen Ridge, we would prefer to have him live in Montclair. Earle is very fond of suggesting new systems for solving Physics problems to Mr. Miller. As for the systems;well, ask Mr. Miller. Fielding is a member and a loyal supporter of the Forum and when he enters Stevens next year he will enter with our wishes for good luck. - HE very sound tlAlii Fulle suggests a step-ladder. The class boasts of the biggest l'young gianti, in M. A. Al's six feet six came in handy on the football team, and the swimming team certainly owes much of its success to his wind and his ttsupere Huousf' Al is a member of the Forum twho wants to raise a row when hes a sergeant-at-arnisD and often has aspirations Oi for an A in Latin. May we hear the sound of your head bumping on the door-tops in M. A. next year, A1. ber of our glorious class and said member is no less a person than the well known tiMovieL' connoisseur, Charles Maurice Hall. Maurice comes all the way from Montgomery Center, Vermont, just so he can room in t'iAecie'i and hold down a seat every Saturday at the t'MoviesYi Hall is a member of the Kodak Klub and of the Forum as well. XWe wish him all kinds of success when he leaves us for Cornell next year. THE Academic building holds at least one mein- BUSINESS man, a man of the world, thatls Haney. thharlie does his best to help out the P. S. R., but quite often he fails in his chari- table efforts and comes to school with WVoodieii Smith instead. W'hen Haney isnt a business man he is a football player. This past year he did good D. illllFlln work on the scrubs and hopes for a position on the 1Varsity next fall. Debating and acting are also in this yo-uthls line as has been shown in the Forum and ttMiss Civilization. Bon voyage to Stevens, old boy! ANNAY has the mild distinction of living in I I W'est Orange. But my! you have to start early to get to school when your home is so far away. At any rate, Hannay claims he arises early and, having no reason to doubt him, we do the next best thing and believe him. Of course, tlItls nice to get up in the inornini -but, well ask him. He is a member of the Forum and the Dramatic Club as well. Hereis luck to you at the University of Pennsylvania. ERRERA, thatls the name you were trying to I I think of. Stutzlsil main occupation seems to be eaptaining teams, for he has not only been captain of our class relay team for the past two years, but has also held that position on the scrubs and on the second basketball team. He is very much inter- ested in the Battalion and is a member of the Junior Executive Committee and a staunch supporter of the Rostrum. The very best wishes of the class go with you, ttStutz, when you leave us for Cornell. L $1M llillllHllHHHlllllllllHLllLlHIIHIIIHIIIlllllllllUTllIllHlllllLLlllu T'il l I G O 0 G YEYEARE Q GWKE O . IllllIlllllllIIUlllllHllIllllllIIIIIUHIIMHHlilllllllllIIIHWIIIIHH: Jr'llIllllLlllllJlIIIlIlllHlHlIIllllIlllllllllIIIIlllllllllllllllllIHKI'IJJAIfIl porting the athletic news for tiOn Bounds? which he has performed creditably the whole year, while his main sustenance is Geometry. Some of Bobis proofs are even getting beyond Mr. Stoddardls power of comprehension, not to mention the rest of us. Jones is a member of the Pin and Paper Committee and of the Forum. Our blessing goes with you when you enter Princeton next year. JONES chief employment while amongst us is re- lVAY back, in 1908 to be exact, HTedii Maxwell A joined us. n,Teddyli claims the distinction of being the only fellow in school who has such a plurality of joints, as was demonstrated in the ttgymli exhibition. Maxwell made his M 2 in base- ball last year, but his greatest occupation seems to be that of holding offices, which he does with much success. He assists Seagears in editing itOn Boundsi, and is also on the ltYeare Bookeh board. The best wishes of the class go with you on your way to Yale Shefheld, ttTedYy RIZONA, ranches and Neel all go together. A Even while in a civilized portion of the coun- try tlArry'l, retains some of his western habits, such as lassoing and the like. Buck whispers that lYalter is quite a eattle-king, and he ought to know after last summer, when he got up nerve enough to entrust himself to this HXVild and lVoolly XValter from the West? Neel was accused the other day of really being in step during drill but we strongly refuse to accept this accusation. lVe all wish ilArry'y the very best of luck at Yale. AST June, Roosa decided that the class ofl19 was the class for him, so he left the ranks of ,18 and joined us so that he could be with a real good classvat least that is the way we figured it out, itRoosieli represents more of the athletic ability of our glorious class, since he plays both football and baseball. He is also one of those who draw forth sweet my music from a banjo-trandolin in the eve- nings over in lValden. but then we all have our weak- nesses. Roosa is bound for Cornell, and good luck to him. LAYTON BEAKES SEAGEARS of St. Au- gustine, Florida! It does sound pretty impor- tant, doesnt it? ttRed, whose activities run along numerous lines, is quite an artist as may be seen both by his work here and in ttOn Bounds? By the way, thn Boundsll reminds us that Beakes is the illustrious editor of our famous paper and that he has overcome most of the many difficulties of run- ning it. Seagears is a member of the Rostrum and llFriends, Romans, Countrymenl, rolls easily off his oratorieal tongue. Football also claims much of his interest. Good luck, ttRedf at Princeton! HIS is no less a person than john M. Stauffer, Vice-President of this never-to-be-forgotten class. In fact, ltJohnnieh was Vice-President of our class in our Freshman and Sophomore years as well, so that you can judge for yourself as to his ability as a leader. Stauffer is always on hand at the school dances but, as he seldom participates, we won- der whether he is there just to show off his tuck or because there is some fair one who interests him. XVhether John is running down a punt, eaptaining the basketball team or covering first base, he makes a mighty fine showing and we look for results when he enters the University of Pennsylvania. HE P. S. R. is thinking of issuing a dividend T to George Stumpp because of his daily contri- bution to these lines. Do not think, gentle reader, that George doesnlt get anything in return I for said contribution. Oh, no! for he gets a free ride all the way from East Orangeethat is, after he deposits his nickel he gets the free ride. However, the P. S. R. is not the only thing that Stutnpp is interested in for he plays football and Ndoes his bitU in the Forum as well. Lehigh will be this chapls next abode and we lose a good fellow when he goes. HE next gentleman to whom we must doff our T hats is Joseph Van Vleck, Jr. Woe;y who has been with us for the last ten years, is the Busi- ness Manager of llOn Boundsll and an indispensable member of the Board. Van Vleck is quite an author- ity on plants, bugs, etc., and can often be found hold- ing long consultations with Mr. Miller. llJoell is also interested in other things, a few of which are: Foot- ball, Pin Committee and the Forum. We expect much of Wool at Cornell and in after life. 9 lulmllp W 11 WYEARE 'u lumIIIN 4 BoQKEH 919 has a real ship of state. a Yott. as one of its 1 members. George has a peculiar friendliness for the honor roll and may be seen running back and forth from 1 P01f, Jewettts on frequent occasions. Yott is quite some troubadour and often rends the air of 1Yalden with the melodious U1 harmony of his voice and uke. He is a member of the Forum and hopes to be one of those long-winded menU when he grows up. Here's hoping not, Yott. Junior. mm. omittee +1 I I l l x wrung ENNETH G. XYHITE is that reckless looking fellow with the aviator's cap who races around town in a queer looking contraption that he claims is an automobile. But those of us who have inspected it hnd that it is in reality nothing more than a very much camouHaged Ford. In his gentler moods NKenny plays football. 11Ke1fy is also a member of the Forum and we wish him good luck after he has raced U1 into Yale Shefheld. Broome Buck Caldwell Chisholm Cooper Courtney Cudney Day, J- Fielding Hall Haney, C. Hannay Herrera Holst Jones Maxwell Neel Roosa Seagears Stauffer Stumpp Van Vleck XV'hite, K. Yott Nickname ooTalbutto ooBuck oKBillol ooRed K5C00p3! oiFiShJ, HCudJ; KiJ'Oe,! ooEarl'o Maurie ooCholly oHanno ooStootzoo ooErny ooJuneso oTeddy 4KAriJ! t1ROSy,, ooBeakso anno ooStumpy orxfani, oKKenny,, ooGeorge Junior Class Horoscope Alark of Distinction Shape Curly Hair His W'histle Color of Hair Saintly Look Nose The WVW ? P Eyebrows His Mackinaw HaW-Haw His Red Shirt Solemnity His Accent Fingers See Buck Length You Know His Humor See Chisholm Smile His Voice His Innocence See Stumpp His Uniform 56 Apparent Aim Die of Tobacco Heart None Vague Learn something Say nothing Modesty Make a team Be a freak Save money All state pick-up Beau Brummel Tell jokes Speak English Play a violin Talk about the South Contortionist Get a drag Listen to Hoag See hOn BoundsH Sleep Run a car Study nature Wreck the Ford Be devilish Life I470rk Any old thing Get out of school Tell about Herrera Get strong Sunday school teacher After dinner speaker Same as ooAinW Selling dirt: Ruin John D. Settling in Verona Doing oPlaneo, Mere calculating Tell about Caldwell V iolinist Nawthin W ork Run the ranch OF Clo, XVriting Loaf. Ask him Be a Darwin Lecture on Andover Anything ;2ikI1. ' IZIVX'; -, 7 , VVILLIAM JOHN HALLIMOND, 105 William Hallimond was born in Bushey, Hertford- shire, England, 1884. He graduated from the Acad- emy in 1905 and then went to Princeton, graduating from there as C. E. in 1909. He enlisted in the Sault St. Marie RiHes, August 10, 1914, and went. with the First Canadian Expeditionary Force, Machine Gun Section, 2nd Battalion, 1st Brigade in September, 1914, to Salisbury Plains, England and thence to Flanders, early in 1915. In the second battle of Ypres, on April 24, 1915, he was reported h'wounded and missing11 and has not been heard of since. 58 PAUL GANNETT O SBORN Paul Osborn was the first American killed after our war was declared. He was a member of an Ambu- lance Section in France. He had been just one week at the front and was wounded while going towards the lines for some French wounded. He died two days afterward and was buried at Mourmelon-le-Grand, France, June 27, 1917. The following is an extract from the address made by the Division Surgeon at the grave of Paul Osborn: r'United as we are now by sorrow and by a com- mon love of democracy and the sacred rights of 11a- tions, we 11011011 and we 5112111 religiously cherish the memory of comrade Osborn, who offered to the ideal the sacrifice of his life. It is permitted to his c011111ades not only to 111. 0111111 their brother but to be consoled 111' the thought that he rests in a noble company of 11e110es;he is now one with a gieat number of French c0i111'ades who have paid with their lives the price of 1ibert1'. I11 the name of France and 0f the Ambulance Se nice I 5211' to volunteer Osborn, thank you 211121 0'0 011-111'.e KENNETH B. HAY, 113. KENNETH B H 11' enlisted in the Medical Re- erve C01 115 Ma1 7th 1917. He was classed as :1 111i1ate and assigned to Base Hospital N0. 10 0f the University Of Pennsylvania. 1Vit11i11 two weeks he sai1ed f011 131113131111 and went to Bhtek- 11001 where he finished his training 111' hard work he was promoted to a hrst class private. He :35 stricken 111th appendicitis 311:1 pneu- 111011i21 set in which resulted in his death on November 29th. He was buried beneath the sod Of the country for whose 1101101, and that Of the United States, he sacrificed his Iife. CHARLES B. BOOTH, ,06, presented the sch001 with a large service Hag, which 110w proud11' Hoats over the e11t1 anee t0 the zisseademie Building. a token of the spirit 11111ch moves the hearts of the giver and recip- ients of this gift. No more fitting gift could have been imagined, for such a loyal Alumnus to give the school. MR. MACYICAR has received a great many very i11- teresting 1ette11sf11011 our Alumni and Associate Alumni 11110 are in the Se111ice describing their life in the t1ai11i11g camps and as much of their work abroad as the censors will permit. '111e following are a few extracts from some of these letters and from two of Coach Jones letters: 1015t Engineers, American Expeditionary Forces, Co. D Tell the boys they donIt realize how lucky they are. I havenIt seen a bed in a month. ePLATT SPENCER. Camp Gordon, C0. K, 326th Infantry, Atlanta, Georgia, January 13, 1918. Last week I was appointed a corporal. 1'1 1k 1k This morning the thermometer registers zero. It is impossible to keep warm in the barracks. I am now hugging the Y. M. C. A. sto1e. We have almost e1er1'thing here to make the life of a soldier pleasant. :11 1 1K The people of Atlanta are very kind to us also. eCORP. DONALD R. SMITH. llllllIIHlHIlHIlHlHHlHlIlllll HIHIHHIHIllllllllllllllllllllllll WEAR Q Headquarters, lOan Supply Train, 27th Division, U. S. A. t $ t The Camp paper for this division is the tt27th Division Gas Attack? :k 3k t I am going to write to six boys known to be in this camp, also four boys in camps near this division, in an effort to get them all together, and in this connection will try and locate any of the other boys, who may be en- camped near us or with us that we may get together. t ,k SF Mrs. Swetland is now living in town with the Kiddies, and as we have a little house on 253 Alabama St, it is my in- tention to have all the boys of this camp and any others that can get off on a Sunday, to dinner with us and we will make our house a kind of ttAcademy Headquarterslt for the time we may be stationed in this camp 2'5 at but please extend my best wishes to the teachers and students of the school; they are doing a fine work and should be given their due credit in their services and patriotic co-operation. t t t. aJACK SWETLAND. Camp Sevier, Greenville, South Carolina. at $ t We have a wonderful crowd of physical directors and they are doing a big work. One not in camp canlt begin to realize just how much this Y. M. C. A. is doing. We work from six in the morning to ten at night. 95 $ A great deal of stress is being laid on hand-to-hand fighting by the othcers and we physical men are teaching this hand- to-hand hghting, which is a combination of boxing, wrestling and jiu jitsu, the object being, of course, to cripple your op- ponent. We physical directors go right out on the drill held and we are given a company about every half hour and this O IIHlHlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllIHHIHHIHIHIHIIHIHlllllllllTlleIEr'HlllllllllllllllllllIhllllllllllllIUHHIlllllHlHllllHIHHHHJIJEILHII 1. U 0 0 0 work is a required part of their training. :k :k it It would surprise you to know how many men there are in some of these regiments who can neither read nor write. Most of the boys of this unit Y. M. 84- come from the mountain regions and are as ignorant as little children. The Y. M. conducts a school for men who can not read nor write. L' t t eVVILL HAZEL. From The Newark StaraEagle. The French Croix de Guerre for bravery has been awarded to Alfred P. Skinner. Base Hospital No. 8, American Expeditionary Forces. Yesterday I picked up a scrap of newspaper from the road- way of a tiny hamlet in France. t t I read on and found that Montclair Academy had beaten Newman 73-0 in football. $ $ t The work in the Army Hospital Serv- ice is now along the engineering line. $ 5': SF In order to bring the hospital up to its required standards it is almost necessary to put up a small Village, with its laundry, sewer system, heating and ice plant. Garages have to be built, and many buildings erected. at t t We,re comfortable, have enough food, although not a great variety. y $ it You really get more news than we do as far as newspapers g0. Our life is one rumor after another, but they all explode very rapidly $ it y and well have to join in the universal chorus, tsGod help Kaiser Bill. -LAWRENCE PAYSON. The following remark was made by a member of Lawrence Paysoxfs unit in a letter to his mother: gThe peach 0f the unit is a fellow named Payson, from New Jersey. He is the one fellow who has never been heard to grumble or kick YWEA about anything since we left home. He is evcryhodyls friend. Lieut. Kenneth R. Unger of the Royal Flying Corps, was selected as an instructor with four others out of a class of one hundred and lifty, to go to Camp Everman, Fort lVorth, Texas, early in the winter. He was in charge of twenty- seven men and six aeroplanes. Early in the spring he went to France. :3 t 9F I am stationed at the naval aviation detachment in Cambridge, at the Mass. Inst. of Technology, taking a ten weeks course in the A to Z of what one must know and be able to do before being sent to the flying school. J have just finished my fourth week, tit $5 V and I have more than once reflected gratefully back upon the military training I had at the School in 1909. $5 it $ Drill at my detach- ment counts fully as much as radio, navigation, motors, gun- nery, theory of flight, rigging, and all the rest of it. ;t :3: t-k Sincerely yours, eHAROLD SEYMOUR. C0. 2 Military Police, 78th Division, Camp Dix, N. J. I am now serving Uncle Sam as one of the Military Police. at $ $ We are on duty thirteen hours, but then we have forty-eight hours to ourselves that we spend mostly in sleep. Our duty is to guard all Government property and take care of all riots and disorders of any kind. i: Our barv racks here are very comfortable and the food is good. t t $ The camp is seven miles long and three miles wide, and a solid mass of buildings. t 9': at One of your teachers is a member of my company, George E. Burlington. eDONALD R. SMITH. heuq. The work here, Probation Reg. Naval Reserve, 3rd Sta- tion, Pelham Park, keeps us pretty well on the jump, but is interesting. I' have been made a petty officer. $ it tk The men are happy and true Americans '45 $5 t and make the best of things. I would be glad to see you if I were only allowed to speak thru the fence. -DURWARD YATES. Pelham Training Station, Barracks 3-C, Pelham Bay, N. Y. I am now in training for a naval wireless operator. It t :F I tried to get up to the last Academy dance, but through the fooling of a couple of fellows, our whole barracks lost all their liberty. eRoLAND FRASSE. ASSOCIATE ALUMNI I took six weeksy training in drilling at the Naval Training Station. $5 V $ I was transferred to the Radio School connected with the Reserve Barracks. The hour set for rising is six olclock week days and seven on Sundays. At half past six we have the Swedish exercise. We have breakfast at seven and eight on Sundays. an it it At eight oyclock we have inspection. Immediately after inspection we have classes $ t V until eleven thirty. It at i: We have dinner at twelve. t t The afternoon classes are from one to four-thirty. There are no classes on Saturday morning. but we have Captainls inspection. asks; Sincerely yours, eCHARLEs J. GALLAGHER. v i .- a n : g U. St Air Service, American Expeditlonary Forces. We had an uneventful trip over. XVe kept guard all the way and a close watch but did not see even a sign of a U-hoat. 5 5 5 We spent four days in England. 5 5 5 Most of us were sick crossing the Channeli 5 5 5 The section of France that we are in is just beautiful. 5 5 5 French soldiers are very friendly, much more than the Eng- lish. 5 5 5 We are now at an advanced flying school, and have finished what they call the ttRouleursF These are planes with Clipped wings so they cannot leave the ground. They are very delicate on the controls. 5 5 5 From there we go to a Nienport 23. 5 5 5 We take Acrobatics here which consist of a Vuille ta tail spinl, spirals, Renversement, where the aeroplane turns entirely over, and the side slip, where the plane is tilted to a vertical position and drops with the lower wing directly towards the ground. 5 5 We are only allowed ten days to completeithese Acrobatics. eltCoach JOKE. Squadron A, Unit 1, Cadet Barracks, Wright Branch, Dayton, Ohio. Before coming here we spent eight weeks at the University of 111., where we studied about the parts, construction, etc.. of aeroplanes, engines, machine guns, and a lot of other things. 5 5 5 It is much like riding in an auto, only smoother. 5 5 5 My first trip was a joy ride. 5 5 On the second trip 1' took the controls. 5 5 5 Finally I was allowed to make landings, which is the most difhcult feature, because the landing speed is forty miles an hourl 5 5 5 Now I am Hying alone, though I dolit loop the loop yet. 5 5 5 This is no place for a nervous man. e5lCoach JON ES. 62 llllllIlllllllHllIHllJllllIlllllllllllllllIllllllllllllllllllilllllllllllleeXr'llHlllllllllllllllllIHIIHIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIHIIIHIIllllllllllllllJJJJl-IHL. ONLY A VOLUNTEER Why didrft I wait to be drafted, And be led to the train with a band; Or out on a claim of exemptione Oh, why did I hold up my hand? , Why tlitllft I wait for a banquet, Why didnlt I wait to be cheered,e For the drafted men get the credit While Ilm merely a Volunteer. Nobody gave me a banquet, Nobody said a kind word; The puff of the engine, the grind of the wheel W215 all the good-bye I heard. And off to the training Camp hustled To be drilled for the next half year, And in the shuffle forgottene For Ilm only a Volunteer. And perhaps, someday in the future, When :1 little boy sits on my knee And asks what It did in the Great W'ar, And his little eyes look up at inc, 1511 have to look back into those eyes That at me so trustingly peer And confess that I wastft drafted,i That I was only a Volunteer. PLATT SPENCER, MONTCLAIR ACADEMY, 517 101st U. S. Engineers, France. 65 Zmme:Dt-O-;UmUZC FRESHMAN CLASS f , M .. 1 w l Zmme:Dt-O-;UITJUZC SOPHOMORE CLASS WYEARE Q IlHlILLLILHIIIIIIllIHIILUHHIIHHHHHIlHll1IlllllllllllllllllUIHQQ Sophomore Class R011 President Vicc-Prcsident JACK HOPKINSON TOUIS OSBORNE Scn'ctaryTrea'smer MILTON FULLE Members DOUGLAS HOPKINSON SIMMS DRYSDALE JONES STAUFFER, D. FULLE, M. MASSON VAN DYK GREENING OSBORNE WATSON REED FRESHMAN CLASS Freshman Class R011 President 1V. XYESLEY D11171s1 JR. Vice-Presia'mzt PAUL SYNNOTT Secrcfm'y-Trrasurer BERNARD DAY A Meeting T was a bleak November afternoon. Little Fresh- they have condensed milk. Another one responded, I ies were seen walking stealthily down the halls 11My mama won't let me drink condenthed milk, be- to Davis1 100111. There was a feeling of mystery cauth it: neakth 111e thick and when I'm thick I have and secrecy in the air. Following these furtive hg- to take cathtor oil and I d0111t like i131 So thev decided ures, .1 slipped unseen into a closet and listened with to have Bordens Giplepared milk for babies also. The bated breath. rest of the menu 11215 to consist of Mellins Food Soon they were all together and the President re- and Zwieback and one said he would not come unless quested that 2111 rattles, nipples. dolls and other play- they had 3 511Ck Of candy. one bright 111116 1303 was things be placed 111 the corner until after the meeting. 11151111C16d 10 bu1 113111 131119 1311165 fOT souvenirs and One little tot suggested that the Freshmen have a 3 rocking 110156 f01 1116111101113Y 011- banquet. This suggestion was responded to by cries The President then told them that the meeting 11215 of glee. The President called for quiet and repri- ov.er T110 disputed the 0.11111e1ship of a doll but the manded the naughty little ones severely, They then President settled the question by taking it 2111211 from talked over the menu and one of them suggested that them and the t110 left 111 a hood of tears. 67 M I LITARY NOTES OFFICERS rIIIIIIIIIII I Montclair Academy Battalion Commandant JOSEPH A HOWE Major M. A. MOORE COM PANY A COM PANY B Captain ' H H. Dodd Captain ............................................................... R. G. Hutchinson 3rd lst Lieut ................................................................... F. B. De Gress, Ir. lsf Lieut ............................................................................ P N. Courtney 2nd Lzeut R. Herrera 2nd Unit C. Cruz lst Sergt I H. A. MacVicar lst Sergt A. Y. Youngman Scrgf C. E. Maxwell 3979f H. Cunningham Sprgt V H. R. Sherman Sergf WV. P. Farnsworth Corporals Corpm'als L. O. ERICKSON, JR. F. B. DOOLITTLE C. D. CHAPMAN D. STAUFFER J. VAN YLECIL P. A. SYNNOTT H. ABBOTT J. HOPKINSON Adjutant .................. lst Lieut. De Gress Sorgh-Matjor .................. G. M. D. Yott Battalion Color Scrgt .................. D. XV. Dickson Battalion Sorgt. Bugler .................. P. O. Hoag Baffalion Quartermaster Scrgt .................. C. R. Buck Bugler .................. IV. E. Snyder 71 Military desire current among the fellows, to have preliminary military training in school. It was hnally decided to do this, Mr. Taylor taking charge of all the fellows who wished training and ttEdi, Kenney also helping whenever he could. Drill was held in the afternoon, any time it could be worked in and even at night, when the fellows drilled by the dim light of the street lamps and practiced road marching. This year, however, the trustees decided to have TOXVARDS Spring last year there was a great optional military training in charge of a commandant. They were unable to obtain a regular army officer because every man who was of any value was needed in the training camps. Captain Howe 0f the Mont- clair Battalion kindly consented to help out, however. A battalion was formed and diligently drilled until now the fellows have obtained a good working knowl- edge of the rudiments of military tactics and have learned to obey and respect their superior officers, which knowledge will be invaluable to them if they are needed in this world war. ? ATH LETICS '- 'v Rd 4411.7 YEYEARE Athletic AssOciation President MR. GARRISON Vice-Prcsident MERRILL A. MOORE Secretary MR. SULLIVAN Treasurer MR, HUBSCIIMITT Executive Committee MR. GARRISON; Chairman MR. HUBSCHMITT MR. SULLIVAN MERRILL A. MOORE DONALD XV. DICKSON PHILIP O. HOAG 74 llHIUIIHHHJLIHHIlIlIHIHHHHIlIHHHIIIILHIIIIlllHllllLlIl TEYEARE J IIllIHIIIlIlIllllHllLlllllllIIIIHIIHIIHIIIIHIHHIIIIIHIIIHHIILL BQQKE lfOOTBALL M HOAG, R, Capt. STAUFFER DEETJEN Room DICKSON HERRERA CRAIG COOPER WILJTE, F. DUNN FFLLE, A. SNYDER BUCK HOAG, W. GALLAGHER YOUNGMAN SWIMMING SMT DEETJEN, Capt. YOL'NGMAN DICKSON FULLE, A CRUZ HOPKINSON SEAGEARS u u 0 O 0 0 O O O O H'HHIUIIHIIIlIllHIHHIllll1mIHHI1llllll11HHHIHHIJIIIIHIIHXGxA? THHHI'HHHIIIlLlll'llllllLWHHlHIIIllIlllIllllIHHHHIH'IISIJJJIIHI THOSE IN SCHOOL WEARING THE BASEBALL M DICKSON, Capt. MOORE CRAIG DEETJEN BUCK STAUFFER TENNIS TMT YOUNGMAN, Capt. W'HITE, F. BROOME RIFLE RMT CUNNINGHAM, Capt. MOORE BASKETBALL BMB STAU FFER, Capt. BOBBINK VHITE, F. BUCK DICKSON TRACK w MOORE DICKSON W'HITE, F. BROOME FOOTBALL TEAM Football MONTCLAIR ACADEM 51 PINGRY SCHOOL 0 Coach Sullivan was very anxious to see 110w the fellows would tlshow-upll in this game. Consequently there were a great many substitutions made. Pingry had a light team and was outplayed during the whole game. On the whole it was a very success- ful beginning of a most successful season. MONTCLAIR ACADEMY 73 NEXVMAN SCHOOL 0 For the first time Gallagher played half-back. XYith Buck for interference he made a touchdown nearly every time he had the ball, scoring four and making two seventy-yard runs. In the second half nearly all our second team was playing and even then Newman could not make any gainsagainst us. MONTCLAIR ACADEMY 27 IRVING SCHOOL 0 From Tarrytown we brought home the third scalp. The team outplayed the Irving boys during the whole game. Only once did they succeed in advancing the ball at all, and then only to meet our stubborn de- fense on the hfteen yard line. MONTCLAIR ACADEMY 35 STEVENS SCHOOL 0 In the Stevens game there was some of the most brilliant lield running done during the whole season. Dunn ran for a touchdown from one corner of the held to the other after catching the ball on the kick- off. Gallagher also ran from goal-line to goal-line, scoring a touchdown. Buck made a wonderful run through practically the whole Stevens team. The whole team played a wonderful game from start to finish. MONTCLAIR ACADEMY 6 BORDENTOWN MILITARY INSTITUTE 6 The fame of this strong team had gone before it and we fully expected one of the hardest games of the season, as it finally turned out to be. The Stevens game had caused a vacancy which could not be easily hlled. Our star quarter-back and captain-eleet, Buck, was out of the fray for practically the rest of the season. Coach Sullivan was hard put to it to find a competent man to fill this position, but he finally and wisely chose Seagears. This was the hardest fought game that we played, as the score indicates. The tackling was so hard that the impact of the tackler and the man with the ball Both teams were uall inll T homas of Bordentown could be heard every time. at the end of the game. kicked two wonderful ltdropsfl one being from the forty yard line. The nervous strain was so great that the Bordentown full-back cried when Dunn crossed the goal line, tying the score. On the punt out, how- ever, Gallagher was so nervous when he caught the ball that he put it on the ground without thinking, and so took away our chance for a goal. He had redeemed himself, however, because it was only by his long runs around end that the touchdown was made possible. MONTICLAIR ACADEMY 21 NEWARK ACADEMY 0 1n the first half of this game we showed our old form, Charging through Newarkls line, and holding them when they had the ball, for four downs. In six minutes of play we made two touchdowns and scored the other one during the second quarter. After this third touchdown was scored, the team seemed to go all to pieces; there was no pep or fight in them, and many a time the Newark team ploughed their way through us, until it was a case of. hold them or be scored on,wand then we seemed to brace up. Deet- jen played quarter-back during this game and for the first time we used the forward pass to a great ex- tent, completing them all except one. MONTCLAIR ACADEMY 19 ST. PAULtS SCHOOL 2 On November 17th, we encountered a team which, like us, had an unbeaten record. They were consid- ered the most promising team on Long Island. We . went into this game with the old fight and showed them what real football was. Their star quarter-back upon whom they depended for long gains through center was dropped in his tracks every time. Deetjen starred for us, showing some drop kicking which is very seldom equalled on ttprepll school teams. He kicked two wonderful x1drops ; one at an angle of forty-hve degrees from the forty-hve yard line. There was a touehback made by both sides. Gallagher in- tercepted a forward pass and ran forty yards for a touchdown. The whole team played real football. After the game Mr. Fulle gave a wonderful dinner to the squad at the New York Athletic Club. MONTCLAIR ACADEMY 41 KINGSLEY SCHOOL '0 The grand Finale of our football success took place on a cold, bleak day just before Thanksgiving vaca- tion when we murdered Kingsley to the score of 41-0. The team played before, but in this game they CCIF tainly showed what good coaching, a willing squad and loyal school spirit can make out of inexperienced foot- ball material. For three years we have not had a single defeat scored up against our Varsity. That is a record of Seasonh Montclair ............ 51 Montclair ............ 73 Montclair ............ 27 Montclair ............ 35 Montclair........,... 6 Montclair ............ Zl Montclair ............ 19 Montclair ............ 41 Montclair ............ 273 h km :. I r $ an t 0 o G G O jfllIHLIEUFUHTHHIllllllHIHHllIlIIIHllIlIHIlIlIJHIIIHHIHIhJJ. which any school can feel wore than proud. Coach Sullivan deserves all the credit in the world for turn- ing out a winning team this year. Ye Yeare Booke wishes to extend to him and t0 Capt. Hoag its most hearty congratulations and also to wish Capt.-elect Buck the best of success next fall. 8 Schedule Pingry School ................ 0 Newman School .............. 0 Irving School ................ 0 Stevens School ............... 0 Bordentoth Military Inst. .. 6 Newark Academy ............ 0 St. Paulhs School ............ 2 Kingsley School .............. 0 Opponents ................... 8 79 BASKETBALL TEAM YWEAM a IGXQKE . LLIHIHIHHIHHIIHITHHIIIHIIHIHHIIIHIHIiHHIllHHllIlllIlH-HRIWIIIHHIHHIIIIIIIIIHlllllllllllllIHHHIIIHHIHHIIIIIIIIHIHI'IIJQW' Basketball Team Season of 1918 Captain JOHN STAUFFER Coaches ............................................................... MR. SULLIVAN AND MR. M. A. MILLER Manager MR. GARRISON nB M B MEN STAUFFER, J., Captain BUCK DICKSON BOBBINK CHAPMAN 1YIL1TE, F. Season,s Record MONTCLAJR 10 MONTCLAIR .. 31 MONTCLAIR 41 MONTCLAIR 50 MONTCLAIR 21 MONTCLAIR 26 MONTCLAIR 26 MONTCLAIR .. 27 MONTCLAIR 11 TotaI 743 St. PeteHs School ............................................................... 29 Verona High School.... 18 Seton Hall School ............................................................... 32 Stevens Prep 14 Peddie Institute .................................................................. 40 N. Y. U 25 Ethical Culture School ................................................... 25 St. PauYs School ................... .. 28 Princeton Freshmen .............................................. 50 Total 761 YEYEARE : E E : HHHIIHIlHlllIlHlllllllllHllIIIIIlHIIIHIIHlllllllJHllllllllllllHV U G 0 O G llllllIllltlHHlHlllllHllllIllllHllHlllIIHIHlHJHlIlllIIIIHlllljhhilfr'llIHIIIIHIIIHHHIIIIIIIIHHNIHIIHIIIIHIIHIIHIHIIHHJIIHEIJHi Basketball UR first game this year was played with St. 0 Peters School. Our team had had barely a week of practice and so was in poor form. St. Petefs outplayed us during the whole game, scor- ing 29 to our 10 points. Our hrst Victory was over Verona High School. This game was played the day after the St. Peters game. The team showed a little improvement over the last game, scoring 31 points to Veronais 18; but there still remained a long hard pull towards SUCcess. After the Christmas vacation, Coach Sullivan re- signed and KtMikeTT Miller took his place. The rest during vacation seemed to have done the team a lot of good, because they won a fast 41-32 victory over Seton Hall soon after school reopened. t At last we seemed to have gotten into our old time stride. The Stevens School team was kept guessing during the whole game, when we ran up a score of 50 points against their 14. Capt. Stauffer starred for us, caging seven baskets, while Bobbink was a close second with hve to his credit. For the first time in the history of the school we played Peddie Institute. Although we were beaten by a score of 40-21, still the team played the best basketball that it had this season. The back-boards were made of glass and so were very hard to judge distances by, without a great deal of practice. Capt. Stauffer succeeded in making six goals and five fouls. He did more individual scoring than any one man on the Peddie team. The next game was the kind of a game that we hope will never again be played on our floor. The team that we played against was the fast Freshman five from N. Y. U. They had us on the run in the first half, but in the second half we showed the 01d come-back and took the lead. There was a great deal of fouling on both sides during the whole game and many disagreements arose, but the climax catite in the last two minutes of play when after a long argu- ment the N. Y. U. Coach took his team off the floor. The score'at this time was 26-25 in our favor, but the game was officially awarded to us by default. On Friday evening, Feb. 7, we broke the clean rec- ord 0f the Ethical Culture School by a score of 26-25. For three years before this they had maintained an unbeaten record. Every man on our team was on the job and played good, fast basketball. Capt. Stauffer did most of the scoring for us, although Buck seemed to get his eye in the second half. The next game was played at St. Paul's School, Garden City. At the end of the first half they were two points ahead of us and during the second half we did not seem to be quite able to make up those two points, losing by a score of 28-27. The game was hard fought throughout and both teams showed good form. The last game of the season was played with Prince- ton Freshmen. Buck was unable to play and the loss of our strong guard seemed to take all the spirit out Of the team. Chapman took his place and played a tine game. Princeton had a wonderful team and outplayed us during the whole game. Towards the end, they caged baskets so fast that when the whistle blew the score was 50-11. John Stauffer captains the team next year and we wish him, his team and coach the best of success. 83 SEBALL TEAM A B Baseball Season of 1918. Captain .................................................................... DONALD WC DICKSON Coach ..................................................................... MR. JOHN J. SULLIVAN Manager .............................................................. MR. CHARLES H. GARRISON THE yVARSITY. COOPER CRUZ STAUFFER, J. DICKSON, CAPT. BUCK CALDWELL, W. CRAIG MOORE DUNN DEETJEN Seasotfs Schedule. Montclair .................................... 19 Horace Mann ................................ Montclair .................................... 7 East Orange High School ..................... 4 Montclair ................................... 6 New York Military Academy .................. 7 Montclair ................................... 12 Stevens School .............................. Montclair .................................... ' Pingry School ................................ Montclair .................................... 0 Barringer High School ......................... 9 Montclair .................................... 12 Bordentown Institute .......................... 13 Montclair ................................... ' St. BenedicEs Prep. ........................... Montclair .................................... Hoboken High School ......................... Total .................................... 3' Total .................................... ' BQQKE Baseball Team Season of 1917 PLATT R. SPENCER MR. C. S. JONES MR. C. H. GARRISON hM MEN SPENCER MOORE DEETJEN PALMER DICKSON Seasows Record Captain Coach Manager BUCK CRAIG CONGDON UNGER STAUFFER MONTCLAIR 2 MONTCLAIR 2 MONTCLAIR 6 MotNTCLAIR . 14 MONTCLAIR 16 MONTCLAIR 3 M0NTCLA1R 3 Total 46 86 CALDWELL HIGH SCHOOL... ........................... 1 CARLTON ACADEMY ............... DICKINSON HIGH SCHOOL. ...... STONE SCHOOL ................ NEWARK ACADEMY ....... KINGSLEY SCHOOL ........................... BORDENTOWN MILITARY INSTITUTE... Total 45 a Baseballe1917 HE Baseball Team last year had a fairly suc- cessful season. Although we lost three games, there was only one team which clearly showed its superiority over us, the other two games being lost by a four to three score. The game with Kingsley was hard fought and was won by Kingsley in the tenth inning by a 4 to 3 score. Newark Academy and Stone School were easily overcome. The team consisted mostly of veterans from the year before. Craig had his old position behind the plate and did hne work all the season. Stau'ffer's reach covered hrst. Buck played his old position at second and was very fast on his feet in nabbing hot grounders. Captain Spencer was playing llshortll as the year before and there were not very many men who could beat his throw to hrst. He also occasion- ally pitched, and had a fast ball which not many bat- ters could touch. He was the mainstay in the' bat- ting order, and played a line game all around. Deetjen covered the third sack with skill due to experience and natural baseball ability. He also could be usually counted on for a hit. In the outfield were Moore, Palmer, and Capt.-elect Dickson. Our regular pitcher was Congdon and many strikeouts were marked up to his credit. Ye Yeare Booke wishes Capt. Dickson and Coach Sullivan the best of luck for 1918. lHllJIIHIIIHHIIIHIIIIHIIIIIIIHHHHHHllllIIHHIJIIIIIIIIIIIIII u. lIIIIHHIIIIIIHIIIIHHHHIHIIIIIHHHHIIIIIIHHHIHIIIIIUHIIIL O 0 . YE, E o o E, s O G I ,0 E lllIlllIIIHIIIIIHHIHJHIIIIIIIII'IIHLIHHH11lHHHHIIIHIIIIIHTDXIQIHIIJIIHHHIHHIIIIIHHHIIIIIHHHIIllHIHlll'UJJlHIHHIHEIJIUTU Montclair Academy Tennis Team Season of 1917 Captain ARTHUR YOUNGMAN Coach MR. G. H. JEWETT Manager MR, C. H. GARRISON Mr M 1w MEN WrHITE YOUNGMAN SEYMOUR BROOME Seasons Record MONTCLAIR 5 LINCOLN HIGH SCHOOL ................... MONTCLMR 1 EAST ORANGE HIGH SCHOOLN MONTCLAIR 5 BARRINGER HIGH SCHOOL ............ MONTCLAIR 1 BATTIN HIGH SCHOOL .................................... Total 12 Total 5 89 Tennis , Season of 1917 Captain Youngman, had a very suctessful sea- son. The scores of the matches themselves do not do the team justice, for the schedule was one of the hardest in years, but credit is due to the individual playing and loyal effort of each man. Youngman is the captain of the 18 team and the LAST yeaiJs tennis team, under the leadership of prospects are very bright, for the entire team is back, with the exception of Seymour. However, this va- Vicancy. Willi be refilled easily, for there are several promlsing players who are eagerly seeking a place on the team. We all wish the greatest success to Cap lain Youngman for the coming season, and we are sure that the same will be his. 90 YE YEARE BOOKE BOARD tum. ii i illl Iii WYEARE Imnlllnl1 -l HUIIIIMUIHIIIIIIIIIILLLLLHHIIIHHIIHHHUIHHlllIlllllllllm 9 mu! , M N nllilllm I 'BooKE .. 'II I... m gum. Ye Yeare Booke Board Editor-in-Chief ARTHUR V. YOUNGMAN Business Afawager HERVEY A. MACVICAR Associate Editors HOWARD CUNNINGHAM Ari Editor PHILiP HOAG Advertising Manager MERRILL A. MOORE D. ARTHUR STRAIGHT CHARLES E. MAXWELL Asst. 1411?. Manager ROBERT GARRABRANT Art C011 tributors CLAYTON B. SEAGEARS tlETHER this Yeare Booke is a success or not, is not for us to say. If we have come up to the standard set by past boards, we have done our part. XVe sincerely hope that this is the case, and if so, the praise is due, to a large extent, to the student body, not excluding the Lower School, who have loyally supported us. XVe wish also to thank our Alumni for the hearty co-operation which 93 C. ALBERT FULLE they gave to our plan to get them in closer touch With the school through the medium of Ye Yeare Booke. We are also deeply indebted to Mr. Jewett for his invaluable help and to Mr. Quigley for his helpful suggestions. And last, but not least, we wish to thank our publishers and all those connected with us in a business way for their kind interest and help. ON BOUNDS ii On Bounds i, Editor-iu-Chief CLAYTON B. SEAGEARS Assistant Editor-in-Chipf CHARLES E. MAXWELL Business iManager Athletic Editor Advertising iManager JOSEPH VAN VLECK ROBERT JONES KENNETH G. CHISHOLM Lower School Editor Exchange Editof RICHARD KLEINHANS LOUIS OSBORNE NCE more has a school year come and gone and former years and has given to the school an interest- still have we found all of the Academyis ac- ing, well-gotten-up paper sprinkled with entertaining tivities faithfully chronicled in our school jokes and some new and well-chosen cuts. The paper, HOn Boundsf, The Board this year, in spite Academy spirit has been much in evidence in this of many set-backs, has upheld the high standard of yearis publication. ROSTRUM LUIUIHIIHIIIHHIIIHIIIHIHIHIHIHHIHIHIIJIHH IIHIIIHIIIH WYEAREI Rostrum F frxf Term President YOUNGMAN Chairman of Er. Com ............................................................ DICKSON Secretai'y-Trpasurcr ..................................................................... MOORE Sergeant-at-Arms CRAIG Executive Committee 501101111 Term Prmidmf Chairman of 13.12 Com ............... CRAIG Secretary-Trcaswcr YOUNGMAN Sergcarnt-at-Arms ............................................................... - VAN DYK MOORE Erecufiz'c Committee r nnlA 1- N; 10L 1w N JROSTRUH 5 LRUG COOPER 1. , HUTCHINSON MOORE STRAIGHT Third Term President XVHlTE San?fary-Trrasurcr .............................. STRAIGHT Chairman of E1. C0111 .................................................................. MOORE Sergcam-at-Arms BUCK YOUNGMAN Executive Committee CRAIG MOORE MEMBERS BUCK DEETJEN SEAGEARS HANNAY OSBORNE VAN DYK CALDWELL, W. DICKSON SHERMAN HERRERA STAUFFFR, D. W'ATSON CHISHOLM REED SNYDER HOPKINSON, J, STAUFFER, J. XYHITE, F. COOPER RIGGS STEINER HUTCHINSON, R. STRAIGHT YOUNGMAN CRAIG ROOSA DUNN MOORE 97 lllllJlHIIIIHHIHHIHIHHIIII1H!lllllllillHlHlIlllllllIIIIHHIHHUP F'IIHIHHHHIHHlllllHIHllllllHHlllllIHllIlHIH'HIHIIHIHIHJL G 0 Y1: D E. g 2 O O i e o o J lHllHIHlllllllllllllllllllIllllHHLlIIHHHIHHIIHHIHHHIHIIQsWHHHHIIIIHHHIllllHlllllIllllllIIHI IIIHIIHIIHHIIHIIIIJJJUIII Rostrum Literary Society a merry little chase as to which was better; ten Ciceros O a long list of successful years, the Rostrum T adds still another year; this one being, per- or one Rostrumite. The Rostrum always stands for haps, one of the most successful of them all. the best in debating; therefore, the membership is lim- At the beginning of the school year there were few ited to twenty-hve, in order that only the most prom- debaters in the society, though plenty of new and ising material for future eloquence may be trained. good material. As the year wore away this material The Rostrum owes Mr. Jones, the Faculty adviser, was developed into the resulting specimens of de- a heavy debt of gratitude for his inspiring zeal and baters par excellence, Though perhaps they are not constant interest for the advancement of the welfare all Daniel W'ebsters, still they could lead great Cicero 0f the society. 98 The Forum Literary Society AST springis graduation took away a good many L of the Forum's best speakers, which naturally left several large gaps to be filled this year. However, in a remarkably short time these vacant places were rehlled and the Forum again came into its own. From that time 011 the entire society settled down to hard, earnest work and, at every meeting, there cir- culated thruout the Senior Room such brilliant snatches 0f oratory 21nd scintillating bits of genius, as to appzlll and overwhelm anyone unaccustomed to those burning streaks of elocution, for which the Forum Society has always been famed. Debates were scheduled for every meeting and the fellows became deeply interested in striving to win out their side of the argument. Innumerable impromptu speeches were also delivered thruout the term and these, of course, greatly benefited the oratorical ability of the members. A vote of thanks must be given to Mr. Monson be- cause of his loyal co-operation and undying interest in all affairs of the society for the past two years. '1 HE FORUM YDYEARE 5 KE IllllIllIHHIHIIIHIHIIIIIHIIHIIIHHIIHIHIImHHHHlIIHHIIIHIV: QHHUJJHHIIIIHHUIIIIHIHIIIHHIJHI HIIHHIIHHIHIIIlllllllHlllllI The Forum First Term Second Term President ................. ...H A. MACVICAR President ........................................................................ R. GARRABRANT Vicc- President .. ................... P. O. HOAG Vicc-Prrsidcnt . ...C. E. MAXWELL Secretarx' ........................................................................ C. E. MAXWELI Secretary ................ ....C D. CHAPMAN Treasurer H. H. DODD Treasurer , L. CRUZ Critic R. GARRABRANT Critic H. A. MLAVCVICAR Sergeanf-at-Amm ........................................................................ C. CRUZ Sergcmzt-at-Arms ..................................................................... W. NEEL E C $H . CUNNINGHAM 5 E , C 't K VAN X LECK .wcutive 0mmitlcezC- D CHAPMAN 5.1ecutiuc 01mm tceB'C- A FULLE r1 MEMBERS CHAPMAN SIMMS BROOME FULLE, M. COURTNEY SMITH, W. JONES HALL CRUZ STUMPP MAXWELL HOAG, P. CUNNINGHAM VAN VLECK, j. MACARTHUR MACVICAR DE GREss WARNER ALTHOUSE MONTES DODD, H. YOTT W'HITE, K. NEEL DOOLITTLE FIELDING YATES HAMILTON, M. DOUGLAS FULLE, C. A. HANEY, C. FARNSWORTH MASSON 101 RIFLE CLUB RiHe Club Prmidmzt M. A. MoORE Serrefary D. tV. DICKSoN Treasurer H. CUNNINGHAM Linn; DoDD, H. CL'NXINGHAM DoOLITTLE DAY, B. FULLE, C. A. DE GRESS FULLE, M. HIE membership cf the RiHe Club this year was T quite large, and the members, thruout the entire season, were very enthusiastic marks- men. The interclass match in January aroused a great deal of competition, for each class was coniident of Victory. However, as may be expected, only one succeeded in winning first place. This honor was WATSON STEINER MACVICAR STEVENS MACARTHUR MOORE SHERMAN SYNNOTT' DICKSON 103 carried away by the Seniors, who gained a decisive margin over the other under-class men. Mr. Jones has succeeded Mr. Obenauf as Faculty adviser and he certainly deserves a vote of thanks for his unselhsh aid and invaluable assistance to the club. Likewise Moore, the president, has done a great deal to encourage the fellows, and as he did for the team, he has made the club a great success. RIFLE TEAM r INIHHllIIIHIHIIHIIHIIIIllllHHIIHIHHIHIIIHHIIIHIIIIIIIIIHII 'LLIIHHIHIHIIIIIIHHHIIHHIIIIIIJIHIIHIHIIHIIIHHHHIIJHIHI111 WYEARE g; BO0K IllllllllllllllllIHHIHIHIIWIHITIH'HlMHJLIJHIIIHIlllllllllmngrx lgr'IIIllIHHIIIllllllllHIH'III1IIIHIIIllIIIHIIUJIIHHIHIHHHIIHJWWJ an ant. RiHe Team MOORE, Captain SHERMAN CRAIG DE GREss CUNNINGHAM STEINER MR. IUNES, Coach MONTCLAIR L- LAWRENCEVILLE 804 MONTCLAJR RORDENTUWN 93wL MONTCLAIR PRINCETON FRESHMEN . 908 MUNTCLAIR 1 EAST ORANGE .Default NIONTCLAIR ' EVANDER CHILD'S . 878 MUNTCLHR 0 NEW YORK MILITARY ACADEMY .................. 921 TOTAT TOTAL ..................................................................... 4445 POSSIBLE TOTAL SCORE ........................... 6000 Fl 7 HF, RiHe Team suffered a bad dep1eti011 in and well-known schools, shot in two cup matches in I - T y 7 . numbers as a result of last year's graduatton, N670 XerM . f0 wmd up the undefeated season, the team Issued 3 general challenge to any Preparatory School in the Moore and the zealous support 0f the squad, the United States. including the leading team in the Na- large 8313 was 1.0171191 MR 101169 is the COECh and tional RiHe Association. The result is not yet known. his tine work merits a great deal of praise. The individual scores are: Moore, 1134; Sherman. , 1120: Dodd, 1110: Cunningham, 948; Steiner, 559: T1115 year the team had a harder schedule than De Gress. 379; Craig. 3-18. The possibletindividual ever before. and besides contesting with several large score was 1200. ' but thru the whole-hearted work of Captain DRAMATIC CLUB YEYEARE 111111111I1111111111111111111IIHHHIHHHIIHHIIHHIH'HHIHH Dramatlc Club Proxidmt MERRILL A. MOORE SecretaryTreasurer ........................................................................ ARTHUR Y. YOLTNGMAN MEMBERS ALTHOUSE LEVY FULLE, C. A. CHAPMAN MACARTHUR FL'LLE, M. CRAIG MAXWELL IjANEY, L. C . Y 111 MOORE SEAGEARs 'LNNHVG 1 M RIGGS STRAIGHT DAVIS , DAY, I. STERLING DAY, 17- DICKSON SYNNOTT HUTCIIINSON DODD, H. YYATSON JONES DOOLITTLE YOUNGMAN HE Dlamatie C1111 1113 has been very active this for their efforts to make young Sotherns out of the year, presenting txxo 011e-act plays. HStand- aspirants for theatrical fame W110 tried for the ing Room Only and ttMiss Civilization? east. N0 little credit is due Mr, Ettiuger for his The 111ai11spril1g Of this activity was Merrill Moore, work in making the scenery and drawing the unique the president, Who has untiringly labored to make the programs. YVe hope that future members may, at plays 21'suecess. The Club is deeply indebted to the least, try as hard as those of this year to make the coaches, Miss Helen George and Mr. T. H. Quigley, annual Dramatic Club evening a success. 107 I H M y BeeKE :W E I my hanq.M Illnillln The Plays N Friday evening, April 19th, the Dramatic Reggie, Van Deuselfs son, Yale, 1918, Club presented two short plays, Standing ARTHUR V. YOUNGMAN Room Only and dMiss Civilizationfy The music for the evening was rewriered by the Mandolin MISS CIVILIZATION. Clubleder the direction of M11. Ettinger. Other at- Alice Gardner, daughter of James K. Gardner, trac-tlons were USpamsh Songsh sung t0 the accom- President Of the L. I. 8x XV. Railroad, ?anlment of 1115 guitar by Fernando Montes, Who was e STRAFFORD P. R1665 dressed in the costume of a Spanish cavalier, he and 'hUncleh Joseph Hatch, alias hGentleman Joe, George Yott also singing hPopular Hits.U CHARLES E. MAXWELL The casts were as follows: JnrickU Meakin, 31mg eReddy, the Kid? DONALD XV. DICKSON . V A N 7 h L 'V. e . QFANDI G R00 I ON X hIkey'e Cohen, ahas hGrand StanC Tkey, James, a servant ............................................. CHARLES CHAPMAN CHARLES A. HANEY Archibald Van Deusen, a retired manufacturer. Captain Lucas, Chief of Police ........................ CARLOS CRUZ MERRILL A. MOORE Policemen, Brakehren, Engineers. Gladys Glade, of the Colonial Stock Company. The property men were Howard Cunningham, C01- JOHN M. STERLING gate Craig, Frederick Doolittle and Donald Stauffer. 108 Q BooKE y IQITIILHIHIIIIIHHIIIIIIII III IIIHHIIIHTTIHIHIIIIIIHHH HIIIHJJJJJAHL thumma Cum Laudett Society President 'XRTH UR V. YOUNG MA N Vz'ar-Prosz'dcut JACK HOPKINSUN 5Nr0fary-Trmsurcr Lows OSImRNE C H A RTER M EMBERS JOGERT JONES DEETJEN DICKSON YOUNGMAN HOPKINsoN, R. PALMER BERNART HOPKINSON, J. BOUT five years ago the custom was started A of reading the names of the fellows who had received . A for tie week in every subject. at the same time the weekly Honor Roll was read. This group of fellows every week was called the HAll A Clulf, Last Spring it was decided to form an organization and all the fellows who had been oh OSBORNE OPDYKE MAXWELL GARRABRANT SYNNOTT CHISIIOLM DAVIS CALDWELL, C. STAUFFER, D. the ttAll A Club at least once during the last three years were to become charter members. Officers were elected and a committee appointed to design an emblem and draw up the requirements for admission thereafter. The emblem Chosen is awarded to 2111 the fellows who have fulfilled the require Tents for ad- mission at the end of every school year. MAN DOLIN CLUB Mandolin Club Prcxz'deut ........... 1 .............................. HUTCUINSON, R. Secretary-Trcaswcr .................................... YOUNGMAN Librarian ............................................... MAXWELL Leader STRXIGHF Faculty Adtz'zxrr ..................................... MR; ETTINGER 15f JUandOlins 211d Malzdalius Uleelelcs Piano HUTCHINSON, R. YOUNGMAN MR. ETTINGER STRAIGHT COURTNEY, P. DODD, H. HOPKINSON C0110 MAXWELL DAL J. SEAGEARS VAN YLECK Guitar Flute Banjo Jlmzdala MONTHS CHAPMAN SYNNOTT WHITE, F. THE MANDOLIN CLUB had a very successful year. from this gathering of musicians. A pleasing feature being conducted on a system of regular practices. of many of the school entertainments near the end At the hrst few rehearsals, rather discerdant noises 0f the school year, was the rendering of popular selec- emanated from the reading room of W'alden House, tions by the Mandolin Club. but later real harrony developed, as might be expected 111 KODAK KLUB IHllllIIIHHIIIIHIIIIIIIIII11HIIJIIUHIIIH llllllH'IIIIHHHI I BOQKE Kodak Klub Praridmt .................................................. MOORE Vicc-Prcsidmzt Sccrctary-Treamrcr ........................................ HOPKINSON .............. SEAGEARS Erccutivc Committee SEAGEARS, Clwirlrimn y ALTHUUSE HALL CALDWELL, C. HOPKINSON H ERRERA , HUAG, P. MARSH MAXWELL CALDWELLJ H1 HOAG, P. OSBORNE DAY, B. HOPKINSON MOORE DAY, J. HUTCJIINSON SEAGEARS DODD, H. JONES STRAIGHT FULLE, C. A. LEVY VAN YLECKI J. FLVLLE, M. MACARTHUR WARNER GREENING THE KODAK KLL'B is the oldest organization in the school. Its purpose is to aid the fellows in taking better pictures, and good results have been accom- plished by means of different competitions. To some fellows the most interesting part of the Klub is the MAKEPEACE 113 WATSON ttfeed but 011 the other hand there are always a large number of worth-while photographs offered for the contests. These photographs are very interesting to the whole school. held at the time of the competitions; ACADEMIC BUILDING STUDENTS Academic Building House iMastcrs C. XV. MONSON T. H. t UIGLEY S. XV. ETTINGER Students DICKSON WHITE HALL CRUZ EVER in the past history of old M. A. has N there been such a number of varied events concerning the Academic. T0 enumerate these events would take entirely too much space, but we may say that the principal causes of these dis- turbances are, as iisay be expected, the two noted 0f- fenders, TVhite and Cruz. Tho slightly differing in size, these two seem to perform in perfect harmony. The former is undoubtedly trying to uphold his pre- vious XValden House reputation. while the latter is aincted by the well-known South American mania 117 CUNNINGHA M MAcARTHL'R CRAIG STEINER for instigating revolutions. At any rate, Mr. Mon- son, assisted by his two trusty colleagues, Messrs. TSami, and Quigley, does his bestA-and quite a best it iseto hold the Ackey 011 the ground. The Only thing detracting from the full joy and bliss 0f the Aekeyites is the complete breakdown of Dickie's 01d Victor. This famous veteran. after many years of heavy service, finally succumbed to Father Time and gave up the ghost: while uttering, as its last words, the chorus of the Kangaroo Hop. WALDEN HOUSE STUDENTS E 5 CourTney AltHonse HerrEm CaIdWell DAy, T. GalLagher Caney NeEl JONes Residents of Walden House MASTERS MR. XYILLIAM H. MILLER, Housmuastvr MR. JOHN J. SULLIVAN Hoag, P. R0053. SUllivan OSborne LEvy YOTt Hoff ReEd STUDENTS H0123 MoOre BUck IIopkinSon MR. GEORGE 1.1. J E w ETT R'. De BEYtI'and DOdd StaufFer mm MonTes SeagEars Snych XVaRner DoOlittle CorRigan HIS was an eventful year for the W'alden House, to say the least. The not enjoying the usual afflictions of 0m old friends Mumps and Measles, the fellows have been blessed with sev- eral pink-eye epidemics. But eventful does not mean disorderly for the deport rent has been most excellent, and the entire credit for this faultless order is due to the mighty arm and iron discipline of Sergeant-Major George B. Dodd, who completely subdued and kept under his thumb many notorious offenders of former Walden House years. The house-inasters, Messrs. Miller, Jewett and Sullivan, all agree that, excepting a few episodes of untimely alarm-clocks, these past terms have been ones of more peace and quiet than ever before en- joyed since the infancy 0f the XValden. As a final word, let us here resolve that this build- ing of the students, for the students and by the stu- dents, shall linger as a pleasant memory of our school- boy days. BRADLEY HOUSE STUDENTS The Bradley House HO-USEMASTERS MR. CHANDLER T. JONES MR. ORRIE S. STODDARD MR. M. A. MILLER STUDENTS STerling Blackwell Hoag MUnoz Van REnsselaer MakepeaCe s AbBott Argilggvell, L' ngd. , , MarViN D2375 B SommEr . Lohgg ' DEnnls LowEnstein VVhaRton DaY, C. Douglas TRANGERS beware! On the western coast of frequent outbursts of piratic fanaticism, but only thru S Lloyd Road, a short distance from Bloomfleld his greatest efforts is the Bradley made safe for the Ave, there is a nest of pirates! This rendezv ignorant trespasser who wanders unwarily into its vous is the lair 0f the Famous Younger Band, and dangerous confines. Nevertheless, in spite of the rigid the world over is known by that fear-inspiring name bans now and then placed upon them, the youthful eBradley House. In this noted place many dire plans pirate residents are undoubtedly the jolliest bunch in are discussed in secret councils, and there Mr. Stod- school, which, of course, is circumstantial evidence dard, like Pompey of old, valiantly strives to quell the 0f the good times they enjoy. ' 122 Entertainments VERYONE became acquainted thru the cordial E reception given by Mr. and Mrs. MacViear 0n the first evening of the SChO-Ol year. The school enjoyed many a hearty laugh when Dunworth and Dobson came to town and entertained in the assembly hall. On October 26th, Mr. Chandler gave a very inter- esting and instructive talk on the Single Tax. 011 Friday, Nov. 9th, a representative of the Mont- elair Battalion entertained us with a splendid demon- stration, in which he revealed the wonders and intri- cacies 0f the Lewis Machine Gun. The following Friday night, the school obtained a clear and vivid glimpse of the Great War thru the excellent lecture Of Mr. Poore. One month later Mr. Brigham, a basso profundo, 124 gave to a delighted audience, several brilliant solos and dramatic recitations. On January 11th, we were immensely entertained and greatly mystified by the excellent sleight-Of-hand tricks of Mr. Jewell. The next Friday night entertainment consisted of a combination performance given by Mr. Shackleford, a banjoist, and the Pathescope Motion Picture Come pany. The humorous songs and witty stories of Mr. Shaekleford amused us greatly, and the movies were of rare excellence. March 22nd certainly was the most anticipated Fri- day of the school year, for 011 that night came the famous gym exhibition of Mike Miller and his trained troop. And without exception, Mike made this one of the best exhibitions in the history of the school. Junior Prom, 19 17 HE annual junior Promenade was held in the T gyirnasium 011 April 27. 1917. The bare walls of the gymnasium were beautifully hidden from sight by a lining of white muslin. Here and there were streamers of green, the class color. The white muslin was afterwards donated to the Red Cross. The Dance Committee had decorated the Senior and Junior booths well. and as a result, the booths were crowded. The ladies had dzmee cards made of white kid, with the school seal and class numerals stamped in green on the outside. The cards for the gentlemen were of green kid, the stamping being white. A11 complimented the Dance Committee, consisting Of How; MacVicar, .Youngian, Craig, Nichols and Dorland, because of their fine choice of orchestra, After the twelfth dance, while the customary light refreshments were being served, the Hawaiian or- ehestra gave us selections from their native music on their ukeleles and Hawaiian guitars, which was a pleasure t0 all. Shall we ever forget dancing with gwell. you know whom we mean, to the tune of their Hpeppiestiy Oiie-step? The patronesses for the even- ing were Mrs. H, Y. Youngman and Mrs. j. G. Mac- Viear. Great credit is due the Dance C0 rmittee, who certainly worked hard to give us such a good time and so successful a dance. IWHIIIHHIHIIIJIIIIIHIIHIIHIHHllIHITHIlllllllllIIIIIIHIIIIIIJIF9 H: M- Senior Prom, 1 91 7 THE farewell dance of the Senior Class was given in the gymnasium on Friday evening, June 8. Sweet-smelling sprigs and leaves formed a picturesque canopy for the pleasure-seekers to dance under. The night was ideal for the dance; it was a delight to stroll 0n the campus between dances, under- neath the stars and moon. The music was entrancing, for which much credit is due to the Dance Com nittee, consisting of Fay, Chair- man; Hopkinson, F. Fulle, Mathiasen and Congdon. The Decoration Committee, F. Fulle, Chairman; Bogert and Palmer, certainly worked hard to decorate the ttgymh so beautifully, and they deserve much praise for it. As a pleasant surprise, dance cards were pro- vided, with the design of the class pin stamped in colors. The patronesses were Mrs. John G. MacVicar and Mrs. Ernest Hopkinson. Commencement AST year, as in former years, the Seniors trans- L formed the gymnasium into a fragrant bower of green boughs for their graduation exercises and their parting gift to the school, the Senior Prom, in the evening. The seats were crowded. with friends and underclassmen. The exercises were opened with a musical selection which was followed by a prayer. Mr. MacVicar then introduced Mr. Talcott XVilliams. head of the Columbia School of journal- ism, and former Editor of one Of the prominent Phila- delphia newspapers. who was the speaker for the oc- casion. He graphically portrayed the history of German diplomacy, proving conclusively that her in- sidious espionage had been an ever-present menace in all European diplomatic events. After this most in- teresting and instructive address, the diplomas were presented to the Class of 1917 by Mr. Frank L. Dyer, President of the Board of Trustees. Mr. MacVicar then awarded the following prizes which are presented each year at Commencement. COMMENCEMENT PRIZES CLASSICSiRUSSELL HOPKINSON Honorable mentioneOSCAR E. MATHIASEN MODERN LANGUAGES!JONATHAN R. RIDER Honorable MentioniD. ARTHUR STRAIGHT MATHEMATICSeRL'SSELL HOPKINSON Honorable mentioneXVALDO E. PALMER, CHAS. L. LUMB, D. ARTHUR STRAIGHT SCIENCE;CIIARLES L. LUMB Honorable mentioniOSCAR E. MATHIASEN, R01;- ERT E, FIELDING ENGLISHeD. ARTHUR STRAIGHT HISTORYgARTHUR V. YOUNGMAN Honorable mentioneD. ARTHUR STRAIGHT THE LUCIA PRATT AMES PRIZES-vawarded for excellence shown in the annual debate between the Rostrum and Forum Societies: FirsteFREDERICK w. FULLE, J11, Second, RUSSELL HOPKINSON THE SEARLE LATIN PRIZESeawarded for, the best competitive examinations in Latin: COMM ENCEMENT PRIZES-Continued Latin Ae FirsteD. ARTHUR STRAIGHT Latin Bt FirsteOSCAR E. MATHIASEN, Second, RUSSELL HOPKINSON THE KENT PRIZEeawarded for the best com- posite examination in English and Mathematics. F irst;ROBERT GARRABRANT HEAD BOY, LOWER SCLTOOLiJAMES BROWN STEPHENS, JR. THE FACULTY PRIZE who, in the opinion of the Faculty, reaches the highest attainment in character, scholarship, department and manliness. This prize entitles the recipient to a gold medal and to have his name enrolled 011 the Eugene AValther Baer Head Boy Tablet. This honor was awarded to RUSSELL HOPKINSON. DYER PRIZE Awarded to the student who has shown unusual literary ability, inventive genius, or marked ability in original scientific investigatione HERBERT XYARNER. CHAPMAN CONDUCT MEDALSeA gold medal was awarded to the student in the Upper School who distinguished himself by gentlemanly conduct, courtesv and manlv depmtveut both in school and all public places. The award was made by the vote of the school to XMXLDO PALMER. A silver medal was 2111 arded under the same conditions to AUGUST DELIN, the winner in the Lower School. ORATORICAL PRIZEiAwarded to those members of the fourth and fifth forms of the Upper School who shall write and deliver an English oration most satisfactorily. First;RALPH ROGERT, second, RUSSELL HOPKIN- SON. 128 wgifx fvggx fw Ala . Z fizz? .V . z. 2d; Amzbgyz. ! . .y XV I$z r??? ???.?ZLA? ,' I X0 J4 1. Day-by-Day 307-Disturbance in XValden. SEPTEMBER ISiBoarders arrive wearing happy smiles at prospect of nine months of school. 19AFirst football practice. Coach Sullivan puts squad thru entertaining grass drills. ZOeNeel and Roosa arrive after ftenjoyableh big city. ZIeSeniors get privileges. Craig and White. ZZeThe masters gird up their 10ins and Start the massacre. 23eF. XVhite declares ehow-Chow and chops were rulers of Egypt. 24eFirst football scrimmage. practice. 25eRumors of no more towels. Riot Act. 26eMr. Miller announces that all tobacco turned in to masters will be well taken care of. Doubtless, Mr. Miller. 27eMilitary drillt Arry gets halled up. ZSMFirst entertainment and after-dinner speeches, Hoag and White delivering the latter; 297Ca1dwe11 breaks wrist by getting into the line of Squatst momentum. stay in Much joy, especially Squats comes out for Boarders read the 130 Evidence turns toward StutZ- OCTOBER leBuek gets a sweater! Mysteriousl! ZaVVhite goes out for football, intending to take Hoagts place. SeMr. Taylor and Garry relate thrilling experiences with girls. 4eMr. Monson and Terry hold terrifle controversy in Ackey. SeGeneral agonization by speeches of Cruz and Cun- ningham. 6eFi1-st game but same old story: Pingry 0t 7eRi0t in Bible class. Mr. Miller sore distrest. 8eHero White saves a beer truck. 9eFootball squad enjoys palatial mud-bath. lOeHoag takes Charge of conversation at the Senior table. lleCOTpIaints against Mr. Hoover. 12 Gallagher wears pink shirt and socks. ISeYott incurs a slight embarrassment at Newman game. 14-Ninny Hall and Fish get lost from church squad. 157Grand peach fight in Aekey. 16eSeniors win tennis match. auspicious speech. M. A. 51-- Capt. Cruz gives LIIIIJIIIIIIIIIII IlllllIIIlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIITIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIllIIIG 5 f- 1- E E n E e DAY- BY- DAY-Chontinued 17eGallagher wears green shirt and socks. tSee Oct. 12Q 18eUnif01ms ar1ive,a11d 011 such perfect hts! 19ePrice of movies goes 11p. MacArthur has day Of weeping ZO-The usual massacre, M. A. 27eIrvi11g 0. ZleAn entertaining talk by Mr. Taylor, a Princeton man. ZZeLiberty Loan Club formed. 7 shows up 011 crutches. 24eLiberty Loan rally. Great excitement. ZSeDrill, and weyre getting real good at it. 267011, for some variety! M. A. 35tStevens O. 27eC00per gives cordial dinner party. ZSeCoaeh Jones returns, and heIs 3. Lieutenant 110w. 29eTrustee meeting. Strange odors permeate the Ackey. SWParadise Garden at the movies draws quite a crowd. Is there a reason? 31eHalloween. Great rumpus in gym, also in XValden. NOVEMBER leIILieutf, Unger pays us a Visit. get that stuff? Where does he 131 ZeJimmy Alexander returns and relates pleasant hair-breadth escapes. 3V-Greatest game of the year: M. A. 6eB0rden- town 6. 4eD001ittle eats 17 griddle cakes. SeVacation tomorrow, everybody happy. 6eElection Day. Althouse drifts back. 7;Ha11 Visits his old home, Overbrook, and appears quite reluctant about leaving. 8eCharley Booth presents school with Iine service Hag. 9hM. A. 19eNewark O, and we thought they had a team. lO-Even 4th team slaughters Opponents. lleNewark disputes game. How do they get that way? IZeMost 0f XVaIden 011' room limits. why. ISeEpidemic of gum chewing in drill. 14-Rostru111 tries to put one over but fails. house follows. ISeNeel gets 011 the Honor Roll. never cease I I! lkIlecture in assembly hall. strike. XV e wonder Rough- XVill wonders Projector goes on DAY-BY-DAY Continued 17WM. A. 15 St. Paul 2. They say Deetj. can kick a little. ISaCudney invites himself out to dinner. people have their nerve, without a doubt. 19-Grand parade to see drafted men go off. Tem- perature: One million degrees below zero. ZOQFirst snow. Little boys, Craig and Dickson, en- joying themselves. 21 On BoundsXy comes out at last happen? 22 Tnvitations for first dance. 23 Van Vleck delivers an interesting, CO lengthy speech. 24 Big game. Montclair 41 Kings1ey 0. Some Whafs going to Girls appear scarce. but slightly Great JO . 25 N0 heat in W'alden. Everyone frozen. 267Galaxy of shining lights shows up for class basketball teams. 27 Various disasters in physics. W. H. M. frantic. 28 1 hanksgiVing vacation. Everyone sadly goes home. 29-2 Thanksgiving vacation. DECEMBER 3 C1assbasketba11. Seniors 17 $013hs. 7 Juniors ZSHFreshmen 9. Hot stuff! 132 4aXYhole battalion of Danie1 BoonesU comes out for Rifle team. 5 Fina1s of basketball: Some game. 6kDramatic Club starts. Judging from material, N. Y. plays worft stand a show. 7 b irst school dance a great success. trips the light fantastic. 8;Fathers meeting. One honorable parent shoots up electric lighting system in Ackey. 9 D001itt1e gets the measles. Too many pancakes. 10;Skating! General rush for Verona LakeA 11 A peroxide Shampoo threatens to make Cruz blond. 12 Exam. warnings. forward to. 13wFirst basketball game. M. A. 10 Jersey City 29. 14-M. A. 31 Ver0na 18. That evens things up. 15 A1th0uSe seems to prefer sitting to standing on icy sidewalk. 16aSam Ettinger is caught reading book entitled: HOW to Get Married. 17 EXams. A multitude of groans. 18gwM0re exams. More groans. 19 Exam. results! Murder and desolationl! 10-Juni0rs 9. Seniors Mr. Monson Something pleasant to 100k ll DAY-BY-DAYeContinue d ZOeS-r-Christmas vacation. JANUARY SkCludney returns in his uniform. a soldier boy 110w. 97A few 60-60ls return. 10 Gall aghe1 bids us fa1ew ell. Good luck, Gal. llelV e enjoy 2111 excellent e11tertai11111e11t. 127155 127, 204 200,156 g0 eal 111g Sunday: Liter- 110011. lSeThe above are still happy. tSee tomorrowj l4eThey get 20 for it, presented by Billy Miller. Sadness reigns. lieGermany has nothing on us, Mrs. Kennedy has found another substitute for food. l6eCu1111111ghal11 brings back the Golden lVest with him. Althouse gets homesick. 177M. A. 42;Set011 Hall 35. Hoag announces hels going to turn out lights at 9:30 to save coal. Note: His roommate is Off the star-list, ngThe Thrift Stamp invades the school in large numbers. lQ--Red Cross work at Snyder's across street, and bandages aren't the only attractions. 20-Sixehar1ded piano harmony. Mackey disturbs Cassiusl listeners. He thinks he's 21eSteve11s hrst and second teams meet their lVater- 100 in gym. ZZelVater goes to the bad. General discomfort. 23el$ill Hazel shmvs up and rampages about the gym at basketball. 24eStar Spangled Lanne1 Day. Some studious bunch. ZSeArry solves the meat problem 1'11 after-clinner speech. 26--Big game. M. A. 227Peddie 40. Tough luck. 27elllandoli11 Club practice. Heaven preserve us from further atrocities. 28702155 Rifle match. Seniors pull down the bacon. 29eAlar111 clocks raise havoc in lYalden. 3M36C011d team smothers Verona by 38e4 score. 3lnAt mass meeting. Dickie says missing alarm clocks should be heard from. Donlt worry, Dick, they will be. FEBRUARY liThe mumps season opens with several victims. ZaM. A. 24eN. Y. U. Freshmen 23. Buck the man-killer. 3il3rimless hats all the rage. that next? 4eG. Dodd appointed sergeant-major. Hearty c011- gratulations. 5;Some polar bears desire the pool opened. 6eRiHe Club formed. Looks bad for the Kaiser. 78Mr. Jewett and Squats disagree. 8eEthical Culture bites the dust by 25-26 score. 9-12wI,incoln and Fuel Holiday vacation. 13eBrainless day-right after vacation. 14HJersey mud almost swamps battalion 011 road march. 15;Everyone amused by music and movie entertain- ment. 16eSt. Paul argues us out of a game. ThatIs a new kind of basketball. 17ePatri0tie 1a11y at church, also at dog- wagon 18eKingsley gets cold feet and seve1s athletic rela- tions. 19-Mr. Miller UV. MJ is endearedy over phone. Edict against usage of same follows. ZO-Vaisity trims Faculty 32- 25. Sam runs a111uck. ZleTwo hour study exterminates boarders ZZeXX ashinotons Birthday Everyone goes back the farm ZSePrinceton Freshmen defeat us. 24-Ha11is iitaXiI, does heavy work. ZSeUpper School picture taken for Yeare Booke. Watch the birdie! Too bad. DAY- BY-DAY-Continued 26eHoag gets rash and annihilates the furniture in French class. 27 XVhois who c0ntest.Ce1ebrities come to the front. 28-Spelling test-and next co res the little spelling class. 29eThis is no day. IVe forgot this isnt Leap Year. MARCH leBaseballs begin to sail hither and you thru the atmosphere. Z-RiHe team has practice match in big city. SeHalf a dozen boarders go home for the week-end. VVhatIs the matter with the Honor Roll? ZIeThe batteries tCraig and Dunny practice in H. S gym. SeGold footballs sh0w up at last. 6WEpidemic of bone trouble in XValden. The worst is feared. 7eSIight improvement in XVaIdenIs condition. 8m-Magnificent display of Northern Lights. Dickie is afraid to go to bed QeRiHe Team wins from Lawrenceville by the skih of its teeth Patriotic rally at theatre, also at drug-store. tSee Feb. 17,1 lleAccident 011 Bloomfield Ave, school attends. lHllJIIHIIIHIHIIIIIHIIIHlllllllllllllllllllllHllllHlllllllllIlllHl' I IIIIIHIIHHHIIIHHIIIIIHIIIlllllllHHHllllllIHIHIHIIIHIUHHL KOO Go 0 O YEYEARE W WQKE X2 0 0 IIIHHllllLlllIlllllllllllllIHIIIHIHHHIIHHlllllHHllIllllllllllllhxAGr'HHUJIHIHIHIIIllIIIIllllllllllllHHllIHHIIHIIIHIllllIllllHHJJLUJL DAY-BY-DAYeContinued IZeHeard in Ancient History: Antony stabbed him- self and perspired in Cleopatrae arms. ISeSChOOl takes :1 day Off and sees Doug. Fairbanks. 14eHeavy rain. Boats supplied in assembly room. ISeOratorical Contest. Cicero put to shame. IGeSeniors stirred by rumors of April graduation. 177VSt. Patrickhs Day. Some harmony in greens. ISgSchool farmers receive agricultural diplomas. 19eNeel almost gets back on the star-list. Better luck next time, Arty. ZOgCruz starts confiagration in Physics. for detailsj tSee him ZleForum-Rostrum riot over debate question. Total casualties six. 227Gym exhibition. ZStharner shows measles. 247Heat wave. Pluto has nothing on us. ZSVSpring fever gets everyone but masters. ZbriMen may con e; men may go, but exanu. come on forever. Yea, verily, theyH-e here again. 27eMacA1-thur has the mumps! N0, yotfre wrong, vtis only a sore tooth. 287Last day before vacation. Par vobiscmn. 29-9--Easter vacation. Mike takes the cake. up after terrihc conflict With XVILLIAM ALTHOUSE. His faults, as people express them, Are so queer we cannot repress them. For when Bill starts out wrong Kidding girlies along, He says he can't help but caress them. His honze out in bright, sunny Ca1., Holds many a Susie and Sal. So when Bill gets the kale, He hits the 01d trail, And eventually ends up in Cal. 135 C. A. FULLE His real name is C. Albert Fulle, His nickname of ttSquatsh suits most bully. For as he goes thru a hall He's 50 exceedingly tall That stooping he fills it most fully. His trouble, so states our dear Squats, Is the shortness of most beds and cots. For if he pulls in his head XYhiIe lying in bed, His feet trespass neighboring lots. 1Most popular Best athlete Best student Most respected Best natured Most generous Grouchiest Wittiest Handsomest Homelicst Best dresser B iggest Pest Best singer Hardest worker Quietest Best dancer Biggest fusser Done most for the school Done the school for most Laziest Noisiest Biggest bluffer Most ladylike ths Who Dickson, 35 Buck, 51 Youngman, 33 Moms; 46 Neel 19 Day 13., 19 Stauffer, J., 17 Moore, 37 Dickson, 25 Dodd, G, 26 Dickson, 32 Greening, 16 Yott, 47 Youngman, 17 Cooper, 19 Riggs, 32 Hall, M., 26 Youngman, 27 Corrigan, 12 Stauffer, J., 14 Snyder, 20 Hoag, R, 32 Riggs, 53 Moore, 17 Dickson, 14 Osborne, 16 Youngman, 13 Hopkinson, 19 Fulle, A., 10 Dodd, G., 13 Yott, 8 Stauffer, j., 11 Marsh, 17 Riggs, 9 Snyder, 15 Hoag, 13., 12 Hopkinson, 11 Krichbaum, 6 White, 17., 14 Riggs, 7 Moore, 18 MacVicar, 10 Neel, 8 CaldweIl, 1V, 1 Snyder, 10 Krichbaum, 7 Buck, 7 Stauffer, J., 9 Hopkinson, 9 Dickson, 12 Stauffer, D., 5 Neel, Chapman, 3 Deetjen, 11 Hannay, 6 Moore, Buck, 2 Chapman, 6 Hall, 6 Ca1dwell, 1V, 8 Moutes, 9 Osborne, 10 Sherman, 5 Youngman, 8 White, F, 5 Dickson, 13 Snyder, 9 Warner, 4 Greening, 15 Cudney, 6 Sterling, 6 lI'IlllllllHllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll llll IlllllllllllllTllllllV YWEARE 1 My Dream of a Faculty Meeting pute, was heard the solemn voice of the Headmaster calling for order. After quiet had been restored it was found that the cause of all the rumpus had been Mr. Monson and Mr. Jewett disputing the ownership of a small pencil, an inch and one-half long. Before the regular order of busi- ness was begun. Mr. Sullivan was requested to put the stump of his two-for-a-niclx'el cigar 011 the window sill until after the adjournment. It was sugd gestetl that Mr. Macl'iear should not look so much like a funeral and that he should put his glasses on right side up. Mr. MaeViear then announced that the meeting had been called to decide whether or not the teachers should be allowed to Chew gum in class. Mr. Garrison took the floor and started to talk, but choked over his ever-present tooth pick. He then carefully began again juggling the tooth pick on the port side of his mouth. He stated that he was very much in favor of granting the teachers this privilege, because he had been chewing the same tooth pick for the last two weeks and it was getting worn out so that splinters got stuck in his teeth; aml that the scarcity of wood was so great that he was unable to buy any more. thereupon Mr. Miller arose and discussed so MIDST the hanging of chairs and cries of dis- long and diverted fro n his subject to such an extent that Mr. Stoddard fell asleep. Mr. Sullivan then suggested that they be allowed to chew Cigars instead of gum. thereupon Mr. Taylor stated that cigars were bad for the teeth. Mr. Sullivan denied this, which started a hot argument. Soon Mr. Sullivan, seeing that he was losing his point, took a brick out of Mr. Jones pocket and hurled it at Mr. Taylor, missing him. however, but striking Mr. Stoddard on the head, who peacefully slept 011. Looking at Mr. Jewett, Mr. Sullivan saw him smiling at him with his eternal smile. This aroused Coach's anger and he asked Mr. Jewett what he lTeallt by laughing at him. Mr. Jewett said he was not laughing. which so greatly angered Mr. Sulli- van that he slapped Mr. jewettls face. Immediately tumult broke loose. Chairs. hooks, ete., flew thick and fast. Mr. Machear ducked under his desk. His ink well was knocked over and the ink went down his neck. During all this rough-house, terrible noises were heard issuing from under a chair where Mr. Ettinger was playing Therels No Place Like Homeil on the Likelele. As soon as Mr. MaeViear had eoure age enough he stuel' his head above the desk and ad- journed the meeting. ths Who in the Lower School Biggest Bhlffer Most Popular BARKER Best Athlete BARKER Best Student PAYNE Best Natured PALMER Most Generous RIDGWAY Grouchiest AMES Wittiest ARANGO Biggest Pest AMES Hardest Y0rker YOUNG Quietest YOUNG Laziest 'CRUICKSHANK Noisiest . LUWENSTEIN VA N LIEW Put it there, miss me. All right old man. Now up in Taft. Now up in Hornell. ' Aw the YanksM are the best. XYell, now fellows, P11 tell you, 171 . WHO SAYS THESE? Ye 1l be over after dinner. Aw I gotta tooth-ache. J Wrell down in Maine. See me. Tenshun to reports. I don't want popularity, I want peace. YWEARE Would You Believe It? Once Cruz failed to complain of the food. Arry took a girl to the movies. MacArthur did not buy a new shirt for a whole week. XVarner talked to a girl for ONE minute without blushing 0r shuffling his feet. Bernard Day had a haircut two months before his cus- tomary time. Coley, for an entire day, failed to call up Elizabeth. Caldwell did not mention Herrera in a conversation. Snyder was modest. W' hite forgot to bluff. Doolittle refused to eat mole than fourteen pancakes. Mome lost his temper. Riggs did not go fussing. Squats licked Dickie. Althouse was quiet. Sherman was serious. Probable Explanation He had the mumps. To win a bet. On limits. He was in love. Nobody knows. He couldnit hnd a nickel. Before they were acquainted. He must have been asleep. Thinking of home. Sick. His girl went back on him. Same as Days. He took him unawares. He had the lockjaw. He sat on a tack. Nmm Niclmanw Mr. MacVicur Mr. Mac Mr. Garrison Garry Mr. Jewett Pop N11: W. H. Miller Billy Mr. Taylor Babe Mr. Monson Cassius Mr. Ettiliger Sammie Mr. M. Bliller Mike M1 . Raisch Herr Mr. Sullivan Conch Mr. Archer Arvhie Mr. Jones Junes Mr. Berger Bergy Mr. Stoddard Stoddy The Masters Noted for Strictness His derby Quietness Emphatic demonstrations Military knowledge Beauty That head of hair Good nature That walk Size Silence V oice Styles Athletic ability Chirf Delight Reading Giving demerits Stroking face Expounding theories Gardening Flunking fellows Playing ukulele Specch-making Conducting singing Coaching Solving problems Running Exploring study Report blanks 140 Chirf occupation Managing school Chewing toothpicks Library work Keeping order in W alden Conducting demerit serv1ce Faz'oritc Exprmsimm Well, Wyou see ifs this way N0-o-0, I hardly think 50!! n0 w , 0T-IOW ? HFm sorry, but it calft be helpa Keeping order in Ackey HIt isrft my fault Drawing Gym work Playing organ Conducting study Keeping order in Bradley Giving hard exams. HYes, but' itys none of my busmessH HComc 011! Come on now! WXW say followsir UThafs the 01d pepper! y X1 really couldlft tell 3: you HVVCH, feHowS Straightening up library Dorft take me seriously Alguing With geom. class uAssuming that I have done this c0rrect1y- MAGAZI NES APPLIED ADVENTURE Reading COSMO after taps. AMERICAN BOX' C1-uz. Bm'ys LIFE-Cops and Robbers. COUNTRY LIFE IN AMERlCA-Stauffer. EVERYBODY,S'Delnerits. Goon HOL'SEKEEPINGfSnydefs room at 7 :10 A. M. HAPPY HOURi6255 A. M. INDEPENDENT; T00 much 50 13; Freshnukid. ILLUSTRATED V0RLD7 F1iday night lectures. LI FE-Boiler Room. JUDGEilXIY. Garrison. PUCKiSCe Hockey. LITTLE FOLKSiThe two p. gs? METRO1,0L1TAN Montc1air Theatre. NATIONAL SPORTSMANW Spanism Hoag. PHYSICAL CFLTURE Demerit service. POPULAR MECHANICS Spain and Bohm. REVIEW OF REVIEWS!Monday breakfast. VANITY FAIR Riggs. Tm: YOUTH'S COMPANIONiAny trot. IIHIIIIHHHHHIIllH-IHIHIll!HHHHHIIHIIIllllllllllIIlHHllllHlU lllIHIIIIIIHIHHHIIUIIHIIIIIIIIIIHHHIHHHHH'IllHIHHHHlLLL G G O G YEYEARE Q ? KEHQKE 0 O IHHllHlHHHIHIIHHHHHHHHIHHUIIHHHHIHH'IIHHHHIIHHIL MUMIIHTUUIHHIlllllHlllllllHIIHHIIIIHHIIIIIIHHHlllllllgthallew 141 YE YEARE BOOKE STAGE TIGER ROSEa Mike Miller. GOING UP !9Tuiti0n. DE LUKE ANNIEiixlr. Hubschmitt. POLLY XVITH A PAST MI . Monson. HER REGIMENTicmnpally A . BUSINESS BEFORE PLEASURE Seni0r Duties. ODDS AND ENDS OF 1917 Ye Yeare Booke. COHANE REVIEWiBOOkkeepillg Exam. BILLETEDw9:3O P. M. YHY BIARRY?7ASL' Garry? ' Bi1ly, 0r Babe.., R'IIATS YOUR HUSBAND DOING? Ask their wives. THE VERY IDEA-DiCkSOHyS graduating. THE KINGiBIr. Mac IILO-FLOVBIF. Jones. THE GYPSY TRAIL-Bloomlield Ave. HAPPINEss-Feb. 9 to Feb. 12. JACK d LANTERN-- 'Hmvdy d0 V Classified Ads. WANTED-Some 01d shirts, the louder the better. COACH SULLIVAN. WANTED S0me0ne to keep our room neat. SNY- DER 8r DOOLITTLE. XYANTED S0me more emdpnwnt-officcr M. A. 1:3. WANTED-Some humor. YE YEARE BOOKE BOARD. XVANTED A11 11011 Bounds Board, apply to MONT- CLAIR ACADEMY. 1VANTED-Ab0ut twenty excuses for lateness. Bum BINK 8z DODD. 1VANTED S01He good gymnasts, like 111yse1f, for March 22. MIKE. 1VANTED A pitcher. BASEBALL TEAM. 1YANTED-A social secretary. EUNNY HUTCHTNSON. 1VANTED A110ther Dance. TIIE WHOLE BUNCH. XYANTED 1 pair of handcuffs, 1 straitjackct, 6 Chains, 1 anklet With ball and chain attached. MACARTHUR 1Cunningham13 rcommatef WANTED1A few privates.1M. A4 13. VVANTED Peace and quiet-GEORGE DODD. W'ANTEDal dozen extra Iarge bottles of Prof. Stopsem's Non-bugling Tonic for Snyder. ALL OF US. 1XK-XNTED S01HE: mandolin players. Musicians 0f the short haired breed preferred. T111c MANDOLIN CLUB. FOR SALE 13 different vests, 12 different styles of trousers, 14 different coats. W'ill be exchanged for one healthy normal suit of clothes. 1PHIL11 HOAG. FOR SALE-Several second-hand demerits. ALL OF Us. FOR SALE 15 pairs of bones, apply DICKSON. LOSTkOne of our members, March 6th. xVALDEN HOUSE. 1108'11 Our hearts on April 27,-MOST OF THE UP- PER CLASSMEN. LOST-The Seniors on June 7. THE SCHOOL. FOUND A number of heads composed of solid bone. MR. MILLER. Students Athletic Supply House 25 Yearg Practical Experience in the Making of ATHLETIC WEAR for the College and School Trade $ase Ball, Tennis, Golf, Camp Wear, CBasket cBall, Gymnasium, Skates and Hockey ARTHUR JOHNSON 8: CO. THEY KNOW THEIR BUSINESS 872 Broad Street Newark, N. J. The Leading Specialists In M ON TCLAIR PR OPER TIES Morristown. Bernardsville and Summit Country Estates and Farms Erank Eughw-Eaglur 0111. MONTCLAIR, N. J. THE CANDY SHOP, Inc. PAGE 55 SHAW CANDIES MAILLARUS SPECIAL TIES MIRROR HARD CANDIES 506 Bloomfield Avenue Montclair, N. J. Telephone, Montclair 2011 Classical Music S Q N O R 7: S COLUMBIA RECORDS and MACHINES We Sell, Rent and Tune Pianos PIRNO 8c MUSIC; 00. MONTCLAIR NEW JERSEY Telephone 2711 H. M. C0 LE 500-502 Bloomfield Ave., Montclair, N. J. DRY-GOODS FANCY GOODS MEWS FURNISHINGS We Lead in QUALITY, STYLE and PRICE CAREFUL comparison cannot fail to con- vince you of this fact. We simply ask you to come and see our goods, assuring all that High Grade and our uniform L092: Prices will be found in every department. Our Men's Furnishing Department is larger and better than ever. -. u-uu-uII-nn-uu-nu-nagu-nu-IWn-nu-nn-uu-nu-u-ng un-m an-nzgzgu llll lgn-llll-lln-lul-IllI-llll-ll$ I DISTRIBUTORS OF PITTSTON COAL The Peerless .1912 thracite Office and Coal Pockets 85 WALNUT STREET, MONTCLAIR, N. J. 2645-Telephone-2646 g: ll-Illl-llll- llIl-Illl-llll-Illl-llll-IIII-llll-IIE$$EII-llll-Illl-llll-llIl-Illl-llll-nll-lln-lIn-IIEQ: 12a: EDWARDOMADISOMCOMPANY Bums . mmwmww . CAMERAS . Ammoymms erRINTING- 1214-29'BIKDMFEDNMON'IUADI'N'J S H O P 514 JACKSDNAVE. 652BLOUMFIELDAVE.N J JERSEYCITY MONTCLAIR ' Home of Manhattan Shirts and Youngis Hats Exclusive Furnishers and Hatters for Men Who Care CHARLES MARK LAUNDRY 646 Bloomfield Avenue Montclair, N. J. Compliments of 133. 133. Knapp 8: 57mm Office Phone Residence Phone 764 Montclair 5336-M Verona THE HOME ELECTRICAU snop WILLIAM H. ROACHE, Proprietor Everything Electrical for Home Needs Electrical Contracting 419 Bloomfield Ave. Montclair, N. J. ESTABLISHED 1859 w. AMES 00. THE JERSEY CITY BOLT AND SPIKE WORKS MANUFACTURERS OF Spikes, Bblts, Bar Iron and Rail Joints JERSEY CITY. N. J. I OUTFITTERS TO o THE AMERICAN ATHLETE Tennis-Gymnasiumo-Baseball ALEX. TAYLOR 5: CO., Inc. ATHLETIC SPECIALISTS Taylor Building 26 East 42nd Street, New York o Opp. Hotel Manhattan ' The Worst Boy in School Can often be made a model student through use of glasses. Before you scold and won'y about your child, be sure that ii is not bad eyesight rather than just ubad boy.n If you suspect that his vision is not pexfect, have your oculist examine his eyes. Cur directory is at your service. E. C. KERN Optician and Jeweler Opp. Savings Bank CALDWELL LAUNDRY, Inc. CALDWELL, N. J. We deliver and collect in Montclair, Glen Ridge and Bloomfield Telephone, Caldwell 34-M GIVE US A CALL FOR INSURANCE THAT INSURES? TALK WITH ERNEST UNDERHILL GENERAL INSURANCE BROKER 85 Eighth Ave. Tel. 6400 Chelsea New York MILLER-CLOTHES for YOUNG MEN RedajI-fow Service Q?! 8 and up P. J. MILLER 589 Broad Street Newark, N. J. Compliments of SJ. 7113. $719111!an Macknet 8: Doremus HARDWARE Newark, N. J. HeTEL meNTGLAIR MONTCLAIR; N. J. OPEN THE ENTIRE YEAR A Family and Transient Hotel of the Highest Standard. Appealing Particularly t0 Persons Desiring Home Comforts and Environment. FREDERICK C. HALL, Lem: Formerly associated with Hotel Bretton Hall, New York City and Hotel Aspenwall, Lenox, Mass. J- HTXRRIS THE FOOTWEAR SHOP SHOES HOSIERY 456 Bloomfield Avenue Montclair, N. J. STAVROS PSARGANOS THE BOSTON CO. Hat Cleaning and Boot Black Parlor CHAIRS FOR LADIES 655 Bloomfield Avenue Montclair, N. J. Just a Minute! When you are out of sorts- with the feeling of lassitnde and no ambition-tone up your system with our Extract of Malt gives you an appetite, invigorates, and brings you right up to par. Get it at Baldwini: and it will be right. D0117t forget that our Ice Cream is the Richest and the Creamiesl in town. Highest in the per cent. of Butler Fat and the lowest in Bacterial Contents. BALDWIN'S DRUG STORE Established 1372 Phones 310, 311 2 Church Street Montclair New Jersey Michael Galiano FIRST-CLASS SHAVING PARLOR Childrents Hair-Cutting a Specialty 648 Bloomfield Ave. Montclair, N. J. For Over a Quarter of a Century We Have Been Gaining Each Year in the Confidence of Our CommunityeTHAT IS WHY WE ASK YOUR PATRONAGE. Diamonds Jewelry H O L T, S Watches Loving Cups Broad and Academy Sts. Medals Newark, N. J. Emblems Opposite Post Office STORAGE Do not neglevt your starting and-lighting bat- t1 n It requires care and attention We are BATTERIES battery experts and will impact and advise 'ynu' about sour battery free 0! charge, regardles: 01 its make. REPAIRS MADE AT MODERTAE RATES. WW WW W WW WWW W? WW7 W WWW W W WWWWWWW WAW W W SERVICE WWW W? W; ??W STATION WWW Tel. Montclair 3246 STANDARD BATTERY 8: ENGINEERING CO. 554 Bloomfield Avenue Montclair. New Jersey All the Town Knows All About It - - KNOWS WHAT? That the only place to have clothes made well is at the Montclair Tailoring Establishment, and that our pressing department equipped with sanitary machinery. sterilizes your clothes to prevent the spreading of Contagious disease gernm Suits Made to Order Suits Sterilized and Pressed 50 Cts. J. M. BOMBHY 189 Glenridge Avenue Montclair, N. J. The Message of the War Savings Campaign is the Finest in the History of Our Country. LEARN IT The Gospel of WGoods and Services War Savings Committee of Montclair Contributed by G. D. MAXWELL New York Forest Products Sales Company, Inc. HARDWOOD LUM BER 543-545 West 24th Street New York CIRCULATION 4300 Eh? mantrlmr 31mm MONTCLAIR, N. J. Established 41 Years Ago by A. C. Studer, Editar Md Pqu'leer TERMS, $2.00 PER ANNUM ,Phone 2905 H. HANDLER DELICATESSEN Salads and Home Cooked Meats Our Specialty Sandwiches 631 Bloomfield Avenue Montclair, N. J. OPPOSITE MONTCLAIR TH EATRE Montclair Public Market Poultry a Specialty FANCY FRUITS AND VEGETABLES Telephone 4646 607 Bloomfield Avenue Montclair, N. J Next to 5 and IOC Store HUMBERT J. GRASSI Gbptirian anh Eruggtat EYES TESTED GLASSES FITTED 550 Bloomfield Ave. Montclair, N. J. EAVIS, DQRLANE 8L CO. INSURANCE Fire, Marine, Life Casualty Insurance Rents and Leasehold, Use and Occupancy, Sprinkler Leakage, Tourist and Other Floaters, Burglary, Profus, Parcel Post, Accident and Health, Workmenk Com- pensation, Employers, Public, Contractors, Teams, Complz'mentx 0f Automobile, Landlord Liability, Fidelity and Surety Bonds, Steam Boiler, Tornado, Plate Glass. Barton Gueistier 135 William Street New York Bordeaux, France Tel. 2984-M Established 1893 I . O I ll Phlllp Desent 81 Co. Shippers of 0m 01 The Home of the Iver Johnson, Columbia, and Racycle REPAIRS OF ALL KINDS BIG LINE OF SUNDRIES 409 Bloomfield Avenue Montclair, N. J. 2SERVICE Telephones6 $33; 6 Montclair ALWAYSH Eager Auto Supply House FRANK H. EAGER, Prop. Everything for the Auto Steam Vulcanizing Goodyear Service Station 336 and 659 Bloomfield Ave. Montclair, N. J. HERMAN ALBERS President Telephone 1602 A RICHARD H. ALBERS See. and Treas Montclair Garage and Machine Shop Automobile Machinists and Electricians Repairing by Latest Methods Delco Systems a Specialty Montclair, N. J. Starting, Lighting and Ignition 654-656 Bloomfield Ave. Office Phones l286-l287 Residence Phones 347-783-R John H. Taylor 8: Bro. Plumbing and Steam Contractors . 219 Glen Ridge Avenue Montclair, N. J. Telephone I 19 THEe. A. TITaS $emratur anh iBainter 50 Valley Road Montclair, N.j Automobile Battery Service Station Automobile Repairs Oxy-Acetylene Welding H E Y E R 34 Valley Road Montclair, N. J . PETER J. HELLER Wholesale and Retail HARDWARE and SUPPLIES PAINTING MATERIAL 36-38 Valley Road Montclair, N. J . Telephone 4226 SEND YOUR ORDER IN TODAY T. MAGLIONE EXPERT SHOEMAKER Let me take care of your Familyk Repair Work MY SERVICE IS PROMPT 682 Bloomfield Avenue Montclair, N. J. I. SEYMOUR CRANE Hardware and Housefurnishing Goods Plumbing and Heating Montclair, N. J. Telephone 679 Montclair Essex T alking Machine Company VICTORS and VICTROLAS Complete Line of Records 514 Bloomfield Avenue Expert Repairing on Victrolas Montclair, N. J . CHARLES J . RIKER Plumbing, Steam and Hot Water Heating J obbing Promptly Attended T0 44 Valley Road, Montclair, N. J. Opp. Montclair Theatre, Telephone 2996 HOW TO SEND FLOWERS ANYWHERE Flowers are the universal subtle language of love and friendship. Fresh cut they now can be sent anywhere in the United States delivered not 24. hours old. Write us mentioning kind of Howers wanted, or if you prefer leave selection to us. We will guarantee satisfaction, appropriateness and deliver at time you specify. Remittance is bonded by the National Surety C0,, New York. Prices never greater than if ordered locally. 1416 Bloomfield Ave. W . Next Door to Post Olfice Phone 438 mnmdair Erna: Glnmpang Bloomfield Avenue Montclair, N. J. THE HERALD OF MONTCLAIR is well printed and appreciated by the discriminating reader. It is a newspaper worth while. Consolidated Engraving Co. 151-155 West 25th Street New York City ESTABLISHED 1813 d? ngm C$EQLEEHEEG$D $211112mmx ?amighing Quota MADI$0N AVENUE 00R. FORTV- FOURTH STREEI' NEW YORK Telephone Murray Hi118800 100th ANNIVERSARY April, 1918 A complete Establishment operated continu- ously for One Hundred Years under the same name and still in the control of the Direct Descendants of the Founders for Outfitting of Men and Boys from Head to Foot with Garments and Accessories for Every Requirement of Day or Evening Wear, Dress, Business, Travel or Sport. Semifor Illzutratad Catalague 11ml Centenary BMHet Uniforms for Officers in the Service of the United States BOSTON SALES OFFICES NEWPORT SALES-OFFICES Yunnamc vvvvvvvvvvvvvvv 220 ErLvau: Avtuux WWW Admission Examinations Tutoring for College Entrance, Annapolis and West Point LITTLE HALL, CAMBRIDGE, MASS. Experienced Teachers Effective Methods Complete Equipment for Laboratory Work Modern Dormitories Opportunities for Athletics Address for descriptive pamphlet telling of the work clone at the oldest and best known tutoring school. WILLIAM W. NOLEN, A.M. Little Hall iiVii 1352 Massachusetts Ave. Cambridge, Mass. Telephones, Cambridge 627 and 3'90 Coijifments of A Friend Phone 3520 PHILLIPS-plzotognqgter portraits made at our studio speak for themselve5 the whole story of quality is told by the finished portrait PHILLIPS STUDIO 563 Bloomfield Avenue Montclair. N. J HIGHEST PRICES PAID for Second-Hand Clothing and Shoes HIGH CLASS Pressing, Cleaning and Repairing M. FROST 2 I 5 Clenridge Avenue Montclair, N. J. Phone 960 Telephone 1394 SORENSEN'S Pure F ood Lunch Room NEVER CLOSED Near Car Barn Montclair, N. J. THIS BOOK WAS PRINTED BY 5 V, E Willis McDonald 55? Co. 33-43 GOLD STREET NEW YORK I TEL. BEEKMAN Ill4-1l15 3,, $ i ART AND COMMERCIAL PRINTERS 1 ENGRAVERS DESIGNERS FRANK A. REEVE CO. GARAGE Hupmobile and Chalmers Motor Cars Montclair, N. J Tel. 694 AK leDk7K7E;--E:-E-K7 C-pinpkaED-pE-p E-L- M W W W W W W W? HS 10 n u 0 rolB 8 mn .mo MN 0 C WWWWWWvaV-vawv Wm WM V N l 3 g1 L i 39-43 GOLD STREE1 NEW YORK V Wt??? ,1 ..... .,..,5.,5., J. .. .7, AAQM,- M..AAM w
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