Princeton University - Bric A Brac Yearbook (Princeton, NJ)

 - Class of 1918

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Princeton University - Bric A Brac Yearbook (Princeton, NJ) online collection, 1918 Edition, Cover
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Text from Pages 1 - 514 of the 1918 volume:

9 M? M mW W ffl MM TO THE PRINCIPAL: Dear sir = This special edition of the Princeton Bric-a-Brac is published annually for distribution among High and Preparatory Schools by the Undergraduate Schools Committee. We will esteem it a great favor if you will kindly place this book in your reading-room. If at any time we can be of assistance in furnish- ing special information regarding Princeton to any of your students, looking forward to a College Course, we shall be glad of the opportunity. Thanking you, we are Very truly yours Princeton Undergraduate Schools Committee Princeton, N. J. WRIGHT CO. PH1LA. iFflrehmrfr Spirit of Arrljaptam — (JD, rail bark ypatprbarj. 8ib limp return. Spirit of ippaaiuttant — $ nutty ta a blunbpr; Jflanboob a atrugglp; ©la Agp a rpgrpt. § ptrit of S ' kppttrtam — G9ur paat ta rlran forgot, (§ur prrapnt ia anb ta not, (Shtr futurp ' a a apalpb arpoplot, Anb rubat bptmtxt ttypnt arr wp? Spirit of iHatprtaltant — Sruat no futurp. Ijouip ' pr plpaaant! ICpt tljp bpab aBt burg tta bpab! Art — art in tlje luring prrapnt, impart utttl)tn anb (Sub o ' rrljpab! Spirit of ©pttmtam — Hbat ntattpr — past, prrapnt, futurp? 3ffor b? iwss bpat uibo ran at uurp pmplog UU}P prrapnt uipII, anb p ' pn trje paat Pttjng. £ tUl lpt ua — bantab rarp anb aabnpaa, Aa wp turn our mrntortca bark, Anb rprall tboap baga of glabnpaa, ' Kpatf? Ujp ©rangp anb tljp llarb. 3ft ta in tljta Spirit of (§ptimtam tljat uip offpr to iPrtnrrtnn tbta barp akplpton of anotbrr rgrlp of baga of glabnpaa ' npatb tlte ©rangp anb Ujp Hark. n x z 0n befjatf of tfje Claste of 1918 tfjis bolutm is! regpectfullp bebtcateb to J t. 5oftn Buncan g paetf) S3 z: z . %  a ' C c -3 £gg S JiThe Princeton Bric-a-Br l Sfe? - Publishes anmialli ' l)i tlie Junior Clagg of JJrtnceton tHntbersitp Volume XLII Class of Nineteen Jmnbreb anb Ctst)t«n Z )t JBoarb Richard Matthews Griffith, California, Chairman Hilary Ranald Chambers, New York, Business Manager David Ross Winans, New Jersey, Photographic Editor Warren Wilson Hampe, Pennsylvania Lochren Donnelly, Minnesota art Urtntors David Rittenhouse Shotwell,, Pennsylvania Stanton Best Coffin, Minnesota Assistant iliismr ss Hanagrr Joseph Clark Buchanan, Pennsylvania The Princeton iir ' ic-a-greic CAMPBELL HALL. L ittfftP l - • Z3PZiJ£LThe Princeton gric-a-Srac ' ;Wrw  _ a 4— t? r-— ? = Untbersritp Calenbar iaiB April 5-7 Spring recess. October 3-7- •• . . .Examination for admission. April 12 . Meeting of the Board of Trustees. October 10-23.. ..Examinations for removal of first and second term conditions. May 10-12.. . . .First part of examination for degree of Doctor of Philosophy. ♦October 10, 3 P- M . . . Formal opening exercises. May 2 4-June 6. . . . Senior final examinations. October 19-21 First part of examination for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy. June 2-I5--.- . Examinations of the three lower classes. October October 22 26.... Commemoration Day. ...Meeting of the Board of Trustees. June 7 . Last day for receiving applications for the Master ' s _degree. November 30. . . . Thanksgiving Day. June 7-I5---- Examinations for the removal of Class F conditions in first and sec- December 19. i-30 P. M. Christmas vacation begins. ond term senior subjects. i9ir June 16 . Junior Orator and Maclean Prize Contests. January January 3. 10.30 A. M. Christmas vacation ends. June June 17 18 . Baccalaureate Sunday. . Commencement Meeting of the January February February 29.... 7-20 21 Last dav for reporting second term electives. First term examinations. Second term begins. June 19 Board of Trustees. Annual meet- ings of the Literary Societies. Class Day. . 170th Annual Commencement. Alum- ni Trustee election. Alumni Lunch- February 22 Washington ' s Birthday. Class of 1876 Prize Debate. June 18-23.... . College Entrance Board examina- tions for admission, held simul- March March 1 7. 12 M Last day for receiving applications for Fellowships and Graduate Scholarships. ....Stated meeting of the Faculty Com- mittee on the Course of Study. ♦The tember fantile 10 taneously in Princeton and else- where. opening of the University was postponed from Sep- 26 to October 10, because of the prevalence of In- Paralysis in New Jersey and the neighboring States. -% € ?!! TSLYhe Princeton 1 ric-a-Brac Ikesfaente of tfje College of Jgeto Sersfep anb Princeton Untbersttp COLLEGE FOUNDED IN 1746 BECAME A UNIVERSITY IN 1896 ACCESSUS EXITUS IRev. Jonathan Dickinson April, 1747 Oct., 1747 tRev. Aaron Burr 1748 1757 fREV. Jonathan Edwards Jan., 1758 Mar., 1758 fREV. Samuel Davies 1758 1761 ISamuel Finley, D.D 1761 1766 tJoHN Witherspoon, D.D., LL.D. . . 1766 1794 fS. Stanhope Smith, D.D.. LL.D... 1795 1812 fAsHBEL Green, D.D., LL.D 1812 1822 | James Carnahan, D.D., LL.D 1823 1854 | John MacLean, D.D., LL.D 1854 1868 t jAMEs McCosh, D.D., LL.D., Litt.D. 1868 1888 ♦Francis L. Patton, D.D., LL.D.... 1888 1902 Woodrow Wilson, Ph.D., Litt.D., LL.D 1902 1910 John G. Hibben, Ph.D., LL.D 1912 ♦Resigned. tDeceased. John € . Sjtbbfii, $bJB., U.S.. Drtsiornt -3 ggg tf The Princeton Bric-a-Br«i£lS £te5 - - tErugtee of tije Umbersittp tErusteeg, ex Officio Gov. James F. Fielder, President of the Board, Trenton, N. J. Johx Grier Hibben, President of the University, Princeton, N. J. life Trustees John A. Stewart, Senior Trustee 45 Wall Street, New York, N. Y, M. Taylor Pyne Princeton, N. J George B. Stewart, D.D.,. .Seminary Campus, Auburn, N. Y Cyrus H. McCormick, 606 South Michigan Avenue, Chicago, 111 John Dixon, D.D 108 West State Street, Trenton, N. J Melancthon W. Jacobus. D.D., 39 Woodland Street, Hartford, Conn William J. MAGIE..556 North Broad Street, Elizabeth, N. J Bayard Henry... 1438 Land Title Building, Philadelphia, Pa Simon J. McPherson, D.D Lawrenceville, N. J Henry W. Green 5 West State Street, Trenton, N. J Alexander Van Rensselaer, 18th and Walnut Streets, Philadelphia, Pa Archibald D. Russeli Princeton, N. J John DeWitt, D.D Princeton, N. J Robert Garrett, German Street, corner South, Baltimore, Md Henry B. Thompson Greenville, Del Joseph B. Shea 501 Penn Avenue, Pittsburgh, Pa Edward W. Sheldon 45 Wall Street, New York, N. Y Parker D. Handy 39 Cedar Street, New York N. Y John M. T. Finney, M.D., 1300 Eutaw Place, Baltimore, Md William Cooper Proctor Glendale, Cincinnati, O Charles Scribner Morristown, N. J John O. H. Pitney Morristown, N. J William Church Osboi:n...7i Broadway, New York, N. Y Henry C. Frick Frick Building, Pittsburgh, Pa gUumnt QTrusteeg Matthew C. Fleming (i9i7),7i Broadway, New York, N. Y. Howard C. Phillips (1918), 937 Commercial Trust Building, Philadelphia, Pa. Wilson Farrand (1919) 544 High Street. Newark, N. J. Henry S. Johnson (1920), 201 Perry Payne Building, Cleveland, O. T. Williams Roberts (1921), 2023 Land Title Building, Philadelphia, Pa. (The date after each name indicates the expiration of term) 12 JHy yflHi JBabib ft. Jfrajer, 20.29. Julp 10, 1837 January 23, 1916 The Princeton Brie- a.- Brae tanbtng Glommttteeg of tfje poarb of Trustees 1910-17 Committee on Finance: Mr. Handy, Chairman; President Hibben, Mr. Stewart, Mr. Pyne, Mr. McCormick, Mr. Green, Mr. Sheldon, Mr. Procter, Mr. Scribner, Mr. Pitney. Committee on Grounds and Buildings: Mr. Thompson, Chair- man; President Hibben, Mr. Pyne, Mr. Henry, Mr. Green, Mr. Russell, Mr. Garrett, Mr. Handy, Mr. Pit- ney, Mr. Roberts. Committee on the Curriculum: Rev. Dr. Jacobus, Chairman; President Hibben, Dean Magie, Dean West, Dean Fine, Rev. Dr. McPherson, Rev. Dr. DeWitt, Mr. Thompson, Mr. Farrand, Dr. Finney, Mr. Fleming, Mr. Phillips. Committee on the Library: Mr. Scribner, Chairman; Presi- dent Hibben, Dr. Richardson, Rev. Dr. McPherson, Mr. Green, Mr. Van Rensselaer, Mr. Russell, Mr. Pitney, Mr. Johnson. Committee on Honorary Degrees: President Hibben, Chair- man ; Rev. Dr. Jacobus, Mr. Magie, Mr. Sheldon, Mr. Farrand, Mr. Scribner, Mr. Osborn. Committee on the Graduate School: Mr. Pyne, Chairman; President Hibben, Dean West, Mr. McCormick, Rev. Dr. Jacobus, Mr. Shea, Mr. Farrand, Mr. Procter, Mr. Fleming. Committee on Morals and Physical Education : Mr. Garrett. Chairman ; President Hibben, Dean McClenahan, Rev. Dr. Stewart, Rev. Dr. Dixon, Rev. Dr. McPherson, Dr. Finney, Mr. Osborn. 14 rn - « g tf The Princeton Br c-a-Br E S P - TOWER OF ALEXANDER HALL. - S .rhe PrincetaT inc-a-grac Jfacultp The Faculty list is arranged in four groups; professors, assistant professors, lecturers, and instructors, in instruction. In each group the names occur in the order of academic seniority. To this list is added the assistants John Grier Hibbex, Ph.D., LL.D., Litt.D. President Stuart Professor of Philosophy Prospect Fraxcis Laxdey Pattox, D.D., LL.D. Ex-President Stuart Professor of Ethics and the Philosophy of Religion, Emeritus Hamilton, Bermuda Henry Bf.mnger Cornwall, E.M., Ph.D. Professor of Chemistry and Mineralogy, Emeritus 12 Morven St. George Macloskie, D.Sc, LL.D. Professor of Biology, Emeritus 239 Nassau St. Charles McMillan, A.M., C.E. Professor of Civil Engineering, Emeritus 40 Bayard Lane Theodore Whitefield Hunt, PhD., L.H.D. Professor of English 72 Library Place William Libbey, D.Sc, Princeton Professor of Physical Geography and Director of the E. M. Museum of Geology and Archaeology Thanet Lodge William Berrymax Scott, Ph.D., LL.D. Sc.D. (Harv. et. Oxon.) Blair Professor of Geology Bainbridge House, 158 Nassau St. Frederick Newtox Willsox, A.M., C.E. Professor of Graphics P. O. Box 63, Stony Brook Allax Marquand, Ph.D., LH.D. Professor of Art and Archaeology and Director of the Museum of Historic Art Guernsey Hall Andrew Fleming West, Ph.D., LL.D. Hon. D.Litt. (Oxon.) Dean of the Graduate School Giger Professor of Latin Wyman House, Graduate College Hermann Carl Otto Huss, Ph.D., Jena Professor of Modern Languages and Literature, Emeritus 6 Mercer St. Henry Burchard Fixe, Ph.D., LL.D. Dean of the Departments of Science Dod Professor of Mathematics 73 Library Place Johx Howell Westcott, Ph.D., Princeton Musgrave Professor of Latin and Tutor in Roman Law 200 Mercer St. William Fraxcis Magie, Ph.D., LL.D. Dean of the Faculty Henry Professor of Physics Erxest Cushixg Richardsox, Ph.D. Librarian Leroy Wiley McCay, D.Sc. Moore Professor of Chemistry Hexry Dallas Thompsox, D.Sc, Ph.D. Professor of Mathematics The Dean ' s House 220 Mercer St. 2 Morven St. n Morven St. George McLeax Harper, Ph.D., Princeton Holmes Professor of Belles Lettres and English Language and Literature 36 Mercer St. Paul vax Dyke, D.D. Pyne Professor of History Pyne Tower, Graduate College 17 The Princeton Bric-a-Hrac ■£ Herbert Stearns Squier Smith, C.E. Professor of Civil Engineering 58 University Place Walter Butler Harris, C.E. Professor of Geodesy Greenholtn Henry van Dyke, D.D., LL.D. Professor of English Literature Elmer Howard Loomis, Ph.D., Sc.D. Professor of Physics 302 Nassau St. Walter Mead Rankin. Ph.D., Munich. Professor of Biology Curator of the Herbarium 5 Evelyn Place Charles Freeman Williams McClure, D.Sc. Class of 1877 Professor of Zoology 2 Morven St. Howard Crosby Warren. A.M. Stuart Professor of Psychology Director of the Psychological Laboratory 133 Library Place Thomas Marc Parrott, Ph.D., Leipsic Professor of English 104 Mercer St. Edmund Yard Robbins, A.M. Ewing Professor of Greek Language and Literature 144 Library Place Alexander Hamilton Phillips, D.Sc, Princeton Professor of Mineralogy 54 Hodge Road Fred Neher, A.M. Professor of Organic Chemistry 148 Library Place Williamson Updike Vreeland, D. es L., Geneva Woodhull Professor of Romance Languages 180 Mercer St. William Kelly Prentice, Ph.D., Halle Professor of Greek 26 Alexander St. On indefinite leave of absence, without salary. Charles Henry Smyth, Jr., Ph.D. Professor of Geology 22 Morven St. Howard Crosby Butler, A.M. Professor of Art and Archaeology Pyne Tower, Graduate College tNoRMAN Kemp Smith, D.Phil., St. Andrews McCosh Professor of Philosophy Howard McClenahan, E.E., M.S., LL.D. Dean of the College Professor of Physics Joseph Henry House, College Place Augustus Trowbridge, Ph.D., Berlin Professor of Physics - 146 Hodge Road Duane Reed Stuart, Ph.D., Michigan Professor of Classics 101 Broadmead Christian Gauss, A.M., Litt.D. Professor of Modern Languages 106 Fitz Randolph Road Edward Capps, Ph.D., LL.D. Professor of Classics 150 Fitz Randolph Road Edwin Grant Conklin, Ph.D., Sc.D. Professor of Biology 139 Broadmead Frank Frost Abbott, Ph.D., Yale Kennedy Professor of Latin Language and Literature 62 Battle Road Henry Jones Ford Professor of Politics The Nassau Inn Malcolm MacLaren, E.E., A.M. Professor of Electrical Engineering 16 Prospect Ave. Edwin Plimpton Adams, Ph.D., Harvard Professor of Physics 12 Nassau St. t Absent on leave, in the British service. 18 The Princeton Bric-a-grac I.uther Pfahler Eisenhart. Ph.D., Johns Hopkins Professor of Mathematics 22 Alexander St. George Augustus Hulett, Ph.D., Leipsic Professor of Physical Chemistry 44 Washington Road Rudolph Ernest Brunnow, Ph.D., LL.D. Professor of Semitic Philology Edgehill, Stockton St. William Foster, Ph.D., Princeton Professor of Chemistry 41 Battle Road Roger Bruce Cash Johnson, Ph.D., Princeton Professor of Philosophy 129 Bro ' admead ♦Robert McNutt McElroy. Ph.D., Princeton Edwards Professor of American History 86 Stockton St. Frank Jewett Mather, Jr., Ph.D.. L.H.D. Marquand Professor of Art and Archaeology 3 Evelyn Place Oswald Veblen, Ph.D., Chicago Professor of Mathematics 58 Battle Road Edward Samuel Corwin, Ph.D., Pennsylvania Professor of Politics 115 Prospect Ave. Harry Franklin Covington, A.M. Professor of Public Speaking and Debate 34 Edgehill St. Ulric Dahlgren, M.S. Professor of Biology Frank Albert Fetter. Ph.D., LL.D. Professor of Political Economy William Gillespie, Ph.D., Chicago Professor of Mathematics David MagiE, Jr., Ph.D., Halle Professor of Classics Absent on leave. 7 Evelyn Place 121 Broadmead 12 Bank St. 101 Library Place Joseph Edward Raycroft, A.B., M.D. Professor of Hygiene and Physical Education Director of the Department of Physical Education 120 Broadmead Henry Norris Russell, Ph.D., Princeton Professor of Astronomy Director of the Observatory 79 Alexander St. John Duncan Spaeth. Ph.D., Leipsic Professor of English 32 Edgehill St. Douglas Labaree Buffum, Ph.D., Johns Hopkins Professor of Romanic Languages and Literature 60 Hodge Road Varnum Lansing Collins, A.M. Clerk of the Faculty Professor of the French Language and Literature Editor of the General Biographical Catalogue 214 The Western Way John Preston Hoskins, Ph.D., Berlin Professor of Germanic Languages and Literature 22 Bank St Max Friedrich Blau, Ph.D., Leipsic Professor of Germanic Languages and Literature 42 Princeton Ave. George Madison Priest, Ph.D., Jena Professor of Germanic Languages and Literature 10 Nassau St. Edwin Walter Kemmerer. Ph.D., Cornell Professor of Economics and Finance 128 Fitz Randolph Road George Brinton McClellan, A.M., LL.D. Professor of Economic History ♦Archibald Allan Bowman, M. A., Glasgow Professor of Logic IPierre Leon Boutroux. D.Sc, Paris Professor of Mathematics Absent on leave, in the British service. t Absent on leave, in the French service. Battle Road 19 The Princeton JSric-a-Brac « Charles Grosvenor Osgood, Ph.D., Yale Professor of English 92 Stockton St. Edward Gleason Spaulding, Ph.D., Bonn Professor of Philosophy 8 Edgehill St. Alan Wilfrid Cranbrook Menzies, Ph.D., Chicago Professor of Chemistry 187 Prospect Ave. Alfred Noyes, M.A. Visiting Professor of English Literature, on the Murray Foundation Frank Henry Constant, C.E., ScD. Professor of Civil Engineering Battle Road Dana Carleton Munro, A.M., L.H.D., Brown Dodge Professor of Mediaeval History 119 Fitz Randolph Road George Harrison Shull, Ph.D., Chicago Professor of Botany and Genetics 60 Jefferson Road Philip Marshall Brown, A.M. Professor of International Law 15 Boudinot St. Warner Fite, Ph.D., Pennsylvania Professor of Ethics 138 Fitz Randolph Road Gordon Hall Gerould, B.Litt. (Oxon.) Professor of English 341 Nassau St. Robert Kilburn Root, Ph.D., Yale Professor of English 31 Chambers St. Charles Carroll Marden, Ph.D., Johns Hopkins Emory L. Ford Professor of Spanish 8 Maple St Captain Stuart Heintzelman, U. S. A. Director of Military Instruction Lucius Hopkins Miller, A.M. Assistant Professor of Biblical Instruction 12 Edgehill St. Henry Robinson Shipman, Ph.D., Harvard Assistant Professor. Class of 1881 Preceptor in History and Politics ?j Mercer St. John William Basore, Ph.D., Johns Hopkins Assistant Professor, John Rutherfurd Preceptor in Classics 101 Library Place Frederick Leroy Hutson, Ph.D., Chicago Assistant Professor, William Alfred Packard Preceptor in Classics The Bachelors Nathaniel Edward Griffin, Ph.D., Johns Hopkins Assistant Professor, John L. Cadwalader Pre- ceptor in English 14 North Albert B. Dod Hall Francis Charles MacDonald, A.B. Assistant Professor, Edgerstoune Preceptor in English The Nassau Inn Frank Linley Critchlow, Ph.D., Johns Hopkins Assistant Professor, Preceptor in Modern Languages 6 Mercer St. William Koren, A.M. Assistant Professor, Preceptor in Modern Languages 105 Fitz Randolph Road Harvey Waterman Thayer, Ph.D., Columbia Assistant Professor, Preceptor in Modern Languages 12 Nassau St. Marcus Stults Farr, D.Sc, Princeton Assistant Professor, Preceptor in Geology 20 Vandeventer Ave. Walter Maxwell Adriance, A.M. Assistant Professor, Earl Dodge Preceptor in Economics Lawrenceville Road (Princeton, R. D. 2). Morris William Croll, Ph.D., Pennsylvania Assistant Professor, Preceptor in English 6 North Reunion Hall 20 - .rhe Princeton Bric-a-grJ S Sfe? -- - Louis Wardlaw Miles, Ph.D., Johns Hopkins Assistant Professor, Preceptor in English 7 Greenholm Charles Rufus Morey, A.M. Assistant Professor, Preceptor in Art and Archaeology 342 Nassau St. William Starr Myers, Ph.D., Johns Hopkins Assistant Professor, Robert Stockton Pyne Pre- ceptor in History and Politics 15 Alexander St. Hereward Lester Cooke, M.A. Class of 1898 Assistant Professor of Physics Philip Ely Robinson, Ph.D., Giessen Assistant Professor of Physics 128 Broadmead Raymond Smith Dugan, Ph.D., Heidelberg Assistant Professor of Astronomy 40 Patton Ave. Charles Ranald MacInnes, Ph.D., Johns Hopkins Assistant Professor, Preceptor in Mathematics 12 Vandeventer Ave. Gilbert Van Ingen Assistant Professor of Geology Curator of Invertebrate Palaeontology 115 Broadmead Philip Howard Fogel, Ph.D., Princeton Assistant Professor, Preceptor in Philosophv 8 South West College ♦Joseph Henry Maclagan Wedderburn, D.Sc, Edinburgh Assistant Professor, Preceptor in Mathematics George Tapley Whitney, Ph.D., Cornell Assistant Professor, Preceptor in Philosophy 33 Jefferson Road Absent on leave, in the British service. Charles William Kennedy, Ph.D., Princeton Assistant Professor, Robert Stockton Pyne Pre- ceptor in English 66 Battle Road David Aloysius McCabe, Ph.D., Johns Hopkins Assistant Professor, Preceptor in Economics 25 Patton Hall Edwin Fitch Northrup, Ph.D., Johns Hopkins Assistant Professor of Physics 30 Wiggins St. George Wicker Elderkin, Ph.D., Johns Hopkins Assistant Professor, Preceptor in Art and Archaeology The Bachelors William Sherwood Fox, PhD., Johns Hopkins Assistant Professor, Preceptor in Classics 21 Jefferson Road Donald Pritchard Smith, Ph.D., Gottingen Assistant Professor of Chemistry 173 Nassau St. Donald Clive Stuart, Ph.D., Columbia Assistant Professor, Preceptor in Modern Languages The Western Way John Stout Van Nest, Ph.D., Munich Assistant Professor of Chemistry Curator of Chemical Laboratories 37 Cleveland Lane Harold Herman Bender, Ph.D., Johns Hopkins Assistant Professor, Preceptor in Modern Languages 120 Fitz Randolph Road Radcliffe Heermance, A.M. Assistant Professor, Preceptor in English 114 Broadmead Allan Chester Johnson, Ph.D., Johns Hopkins Assistant Professor, Preceptor in Classics 34 Bank St. Frederick William Luehring, Ph.M. Assistant Professor of Hygiene and Physical Education no New Moore St. 21 The Princeton Bric-a-Prac Henry Clay McComas, Jr., Ph.D., Harvard Assistant Professor, Preceptor in Psychology 109 Broadmead George Dobbin Brown, Ph.D., Johns Hopkins Reference Librarian 1 South West Brown Hall Herbert Spencer Murch, Ph.D., Yale Assistant Professor, Preceptor in English 1 A, Campbell Hall Thomas Jefferson Wertenbaker, Ph.D., Virginia Assistant Professor, Preceptor in History and Politics in Fitz Randolph Road Oswald Whitman Knauth, Ph.D., Columbia Assistant Professor, Preceptor in Economics and Social Institutions George Erle Beggs, A.B., C.E. Assistant Professor of Civil Engineering 78 Jefferson Road Karl Taylor Compton, Ph.D., Princeton Assistant Professor of Physics 58 Murray Place Donald Blythe Durham, Ph.D., Princeton Assistant Professor, Preceptor in Classics 72 University Place Clifton Rumery Hall, Ph.D., Princeton Assistant Professor, Preceptor in History and Politics 58 University Place Walter Phelps Hall, Ph.D., Columbia Assistant Professor, Preceptor in History and Politics 26 Prospect Ave. Chalfant Robinson, Ph.D., Yale Assistant Professor, Preceptor in History and Politics 55 Battle Road Robert Maxwell Scoon, B.A. (Oxon.) Ph.D., Columbia Assistant Professor, Preceptor in Classics 19 Cleveland Lane Absent on leave. Edmund Newton Harvey, Ph.D., Columbia Assistant Professor of Physiology 293 Nassau St. Hugh Stott Taylor, D.Sc, Liverpool Assistant Professor of Physical Chemistry 43 Graduate College Henry Bartlett Van Hoesen, Ph.D., Princeton Curator of Manuscripts 30 Linden Lane John Bauer, Ph.D., Yale Assistant Professor, Perceptor in Economics and Social Institutions 269 Nassau St. Neil Carothers, Ph.D., Princeton Assistant Professor, Preceptor in Economics and Social Institutions 35 Park Place Norman Brown Tooker, A.B., M.D. Assistant Professor of Hygiene and Physical Education 86 Stockton St. Lewis Robinson Cary, Ph.D., Princeton Assistant Professor of Biology 36 Wiggins St. Henry Bronson Dewing, Ph.D., Yale Assistant Professor, Preceptor in Classics 132 Mercer St. Henry Bernhard Dirks, B.S., M.E. Assistant Professor Civil Engineering 80 Jefferson Road Frank Fritts, Ph.D., Princeton Assistant Professor, Preceptor in History and Politics 31 Graduate College Horace Craig Longwell, Ph.D., Strassburg Assistant Professor, Preceptor in Philosophy 91 Mercer St. William John Sinclair, Ph.D., California Assistant Professor, Preceptor in Geology Curator of Vertebrate Palaeontology Patton Ave. Stewart Paton, M.D. Lecturer on Neuro-Biology Greenlands 22 The Princeton Bric-a-Brac €£ io Boudinot St. 78 Stockton St. William Franklin Willoughby, A.B. Lecturer on Jurisprudence and Politics Henry Lane Eno, A.B., LL.B. Research Associate in Psychology Henry Rutgers Marshall, L.H.D., D.Sc. Lecturer on Aesthetics 7 W. 43rd St.. New York, N. Y. Alfred Goldsborough Mayer, Sc.D., Harvard Lecturer on Biology 276 Nassau St. Rev. Ralph Brower Pomeroy, A.M. Lecturer on Biblical Literature 22 Stockton St. Paul Jules Joseph van den Ven, D. Phil, et L., Louvain Lecturer on Byzantine Studies 76 Murray Place James Waddell Alexander, Ph.D., Princeton Lecturer on Mathematics 34 Cleveland Lane Marion Eppley, B.S. Lecturer on Chemistrv Edgerstoune Clarence B. Farrar, M.D., Johns Hopkins Lecturer on Abnormal Psychology State Hospital, Trenton. N. J. Charles Frederick Silvester Curator of the Zoological Museum Assistant in Anatomy 26 Prospect Ave. Louis Serle Dederick, Ph.D., Harvard Instructor in Mathematics 23 William St. Frank Abbott Magruder, Ph.D., Johns Hopkins Instructor in History and Politics Bickford Apartment Percy Addison Chapman, A.M. Instructor in Modern Languages 6 A, Holder Hall Kenneth Hamilton Condit, M.E., C.E. Instructor in Civil Engineering 95 Library Place Charles Leslie Fleece, A.M. Instructor in Chemistry 54 Murray Place Mason Whiting Tyler, Ph.D., Harvard Instructor in History and Politics 26 Prospect Ave. Milton Argyle Campbell, A.B., C.E. Instructor in Geodesy Cuyler Place, Mt. Lucas Road Evans Clark, A.M. Instructor in History and Politics 35 Jefferson Road Frank Nicholas Egerton, Jr., A.M. Instructor in Electrical Engineering 101 Graduate College Howard Seavoy Leach, A.M. Librarian ' s Assistant 144 Graduate College Theodore Augustus Miller, A.M. Instructor in Classics 52 Blair Hall Donald Leroy Stone, LL.B., A.M. Instructor in English 14 B, Graduate College Ralph Mason Blake, Ph.D., Harvard Instructor in Philosophy 84 Graduate College Roy Joseph Deferrari, Ph.D., Princeton Instructor in Classics 41 University Place Benjamin Franklin Howell, A.M. Instructor in Geology Assistant Curator of Geology 52 Patton Ave. William Orr McConnell, A.B. Instructor in Modern Languages 22 Graduate College Earl Baldwin Smith, Ph.D., Princeton Instructor in Art and Archaeology 24 Madison St. Harry Bruce Wallace, Ph.D., Jena Instructor in Modern Languages 26 Prospect Ave. Arthur Williams, A.M. Instructor in Classics 16 Park Place 23 The Princeton Brie- a.- Brae Arthur Nichols Young, Ph.D., Princeton Instructor in Economics and Social Institutions 43 Jefferson Road Andre Beziat, Ph.D., Chicago Instructor in Modern Languages 21 Chambers St. Carl Campbell Brigham, Ph.D., Princeton Instructor in Psychology 16 South West College Carl Susan Cragoe, B.S. Instructor in Physics 142 Graduate College William Anthony Dittmer, Ph.D., Princeton Instructor in Classics 144 Graduate College Donald Warren Fisher, Ph.D., Harvard Instructor in Philosophy 41 Graduate College Leonard Peter Fox, Ph.D., Pennsylvania Instructor in History and Politics 12J 2 Vandeventer Ave. Norman Richard French, A.M. Instructor in Physics 11 B, Graduate College Byron Cassius Goss, Ph.D., Princeton Instructor in Chemistry 18 Madison St. Stephen Cesar Guigon, A.B. Instructor in Modern Languages 58 W iggins St. Stanley Edwin Howard, Ph.D., Princeton Instructor in Economics and Social Institutions 23 Murray Place Edward Allen MacMillan, C.E. Instructor in Geodesy 35 Park Place Sherley Warner Morgan, A.B., B.Arch. Instructor in Art and Archaeology Pyne Tower, Graduate College Marcel Moraud, Licencie es lettres, Sarbonne, Paris Instructor in Modern Languages 35 Murray Place Josef Antonius Nyberg, M.S. Instructor in Mathematics 52 Graduate College George Adam Pfeiffer, Ph.D., Columbia Instructor in Mathematics Harold Scott Quigley, Ph.D., Wisconsin Instructor in History and Politics 72 Clement Carrington Read, A.M. Instructor in Classics 63 Albert Starnes Richardson, A.M. Instructor in Organic Chemistry Class of Robert Shafer, Ph.D., Princeton Instructor in English Ray Addison Sigsbee, Ph.D., Heidelberg Instructor in Philosophy Herman Lyle Smith, M.S. Instructor in Mathematics 36 Henry Harmon Stevens, Ph.D., Harvard Instructor in Modern Languages Lowell Jackson Thomas, A.M., LL.B. Instructor in Public Speaking Apt. Reuben Axel Wester, A.M. Instructor in Mathematics 23 Madison St. Graduate College Graduate College 1877 Laboratory 10 Nassau St. The Nassau Inn University Place 24 Madison St. I, 293 Nassau St. 35 Park Place Arthur Pharaoh Honess, A.M. Assistant in Mineralogy Francis Wesley Blair, B.S. Assistant in Chemistry Louis Boyd Dobie, Ph.B. Assistant in Chemistry Raymond Henry Fogler, B.S. Assistant in Biology and Physiology 11 B, Graduate College Earle Atherton Harding, B.S. Assistant in Chemistry 52 Jefferson Road 47 Spring St. 55 Jefferson Road 54 Murray Place 24 The Princeton Bric-a-Brac Charles Leo Macy Assistant in Botany Merwyn Clarence Teague, A.B. Assistant in Chemistry John Howe Yoe, M.S. Assistant in Chemistry Arthur Ferguson Benton, A.B. Assistant in Chemistry Malcolm Morrison Haring, A.M. Assistant in Chemistry Benjamin Coe Helmick, M.S. Assistant in Genetics 240 Nassau St. 58 Wiggins St. 58 Wiggins St. II Graduate College 15 D, Graduate College 238 Xassau St. Oliver John Irish, A.B. Assistant in Biology Arthur Leslie Keith, Ph.D., Chicago Assistant in Classics Harold Goss Mow, A.B. Assistant in Chemistry Robert Norton Pease, B.S. Assistant in Chemistry Clarence Edwin Ragsdale, A.M. Assistant in Psychology James Cutler Vickery, B.S. Assistant in Chemistry 71 Graduate College 7 A, Graduate College 21 Graduate College 102 Graduate College 11 Graduate College 25 The Princeton Bri c- a- 5 r ac tanbing Committees; of tfje Jf acuity Clerk of the University Faculty: Professor V. L. Collins. Course of Study : President Hibben, Cha : rman ; Professors Abbott, Conklin, F.isenhart, Fetter, Fine, Fite, Har- per, W. F. Magie (Secretary), McKay, Phillips, D. C. Stuart, West. Discipline : Dean McClenahan, Chairman ; Professors Gil- lespie, Miller, Phillips, Priest, Trowbridge. Entrance: Professor Hoskins, Chairman; Professors Buf- fum (Secretary), Gerould, Gillespie. C. R. Hall, A. C. Johnson, McClenahan, Miles, Spaulding, Van Nest. Library: Dr. E. C. Richardson, Chairman; Professors Adams, Critchlow, R. B. C. Johnson. McClellan, Mc- Clure, MacDonald, David Magie, Mather, Menzies, Russell, van Ingen, Veblen. Music : Professor Gillespie, Chairman ; Professors Brown, Butler, Cooke, Spaeth. Non-Athletic Organizations: Professor Gerould, Chairman; Professors Basore, Heermancf. (Secretary), David Magie, Raycroft, Shipman, D. C. Stuart, Thayer. Examinations and Standing : Dean Magie, Chairman ; Pro- fessors Buffum, Constant, Foster, McClenahan, MacInnes, Priest, Root, Vreeland, Westcott, Mr. Jones (Secretary). Graduate School: Dean West, Chairman; Professors Capps, Conklin, Eisenhart (Secretary), Gauss, Hulett, Kem- merer, W. F. Magie, Marquand, Munro, Parrott, Smyth, Warren. Out-Door Sports : Dean McClenahan, Chairman ; Profes- sors Fine, Kennedy, (Secretary), McClure, Raycroft, Spaeth. Public Lectures : Professor Brown, Chairman ; Professors Brunnow, Kemmerer, Osgood, P. van Dyke, Mr. Close (Secretary), Mr. Darrow. University Extension: Professor Collins, Chairman: Pro- fessors Croll, Dahlgren, McClellan, McComas, Myers, Spaeth. Teaching Appointments: Mr. C. H. Jones, Registrar; Pro- fessors Adriance, Capps, Corwin, Hulett, Kennedy, Veblen. Conference : Professor Abbott, Chairman ; Professors Conk- lin, Fite, Kemmerer, Osgood, Trowbridge (Secretary). Preceptorial : Professor Collins, Chairman ; Professors Blau, Harper, Hutson. R. B. C. Johnson, McCabe, Mc- Clellan, Root, Scoon, Shipman. Committee on Sanitation (Advisory to the Trustees ' Committee on Grounds and Build- ings.) Professor Raycroft, Chairman ; Dr. Finney. Professor Conklin, Professor Loomis, Dr. Paton, Mr. Wintringer (Secretary). 26 The Princeton Bric-a-Brac Biiittv of gfomintstratton John Grier Hibben, Ph.D., LL.D., Litt.D. President Nassau Hall Andrew Fleming West, Ph.D., LL.D., Hon. D.Litt. (Oxon.) Dean of Graduate School Nassau Hall Henry Burchard Fine, Ph.D., LL.D. Dean of the Departments of Science 49 Library Place William Francis Magie, Ph.D. Dean of the Faculty Howard McClenahan, E.E., M.S.. LL.D. Dean of the College Henry Green Duffield, A.B. Treasurer Charles Williston McAlpin, A.M. Secretary George C. Wintringer, E.E. Secretary of Business Administration The Dean ' s House Nassau Hall L T niversity Offices Nassau Hall University Offices Charles H. Jones, A.B. Registrar Gilbert Fairchild Close, A.M. Editor of Official Publications Assistant to the Secretary John Saville Cosgrave Assistant to the Treasurer Roswell Davis, B.S. Superintendent of Grounds and John McDowell Carnochan, M.D. University Physician Helen Gross Infirmarian George McFarlane Galt, A.B. Secretary of the Bureau of Self William James Coan Proctor Nassau Hall Nassau Hall University Offices Buildings Universitv Offices The Infirmary The Infirmary -Help 48 Mercer Street Nassau Hall n -3 - gZg The Princeton Bric-a-er SS g£ ? « 9- BLAIR HALL AND ARCH The {Princeton Bric-a-Bra.c -SmIis!! ! -% gSff? The Princeton inc-a-©rac (irabuate cfjool oll Ethan Davidson Alyea, A.B Clifton, N. J. Randolf Hunter Barkedale, A.B Richmond, Va. Bascom Weaver Barnard, A.B., A.M Asheville, N. C. James Martin Benade, B.S., A.M Bier Run, Pa. Arthur Ferguson Benton, A.B .... Brooklyn, N. Y. William Martz Beury, A.B., A.M Philadelphia, Pa. Francis Wesley Blair, B.S Princeton, N. J. Hunter Bryson Blakely, A.B Wellington, S. C. Arthur Victor Boand, A.B Kansas City, Mo. Henry Newpher Bowman, A.B., A.M Lancaster, Pa. Henry Roy Brahana, A.B Lowell, Vt. Clarence Dietz Brenner, A.B Youngstown, O. Robert Archibald Brotemarkle, A.B Salisbury, Md. Frederick Warner Brown, Ph.B Chicago Junction, O. Sydney MacGillvay Brown, A.B Rockville Centre, L. I. Arthur Francis Buddington, Ph.B., M.Sc, Ph.D., West Mystic, Conn. Lawrence Ladd Buermejer, A.B Reading, Pa. Leonard Victor Buschman, A.B California, Mo. James Cannon, 3rd, A.B Blackstone, Va. Thomas Derby Carey, A.B Moosic, Pa. Thomas Stacy Capers, A.B May wood, N. J. John Franklin Bruce Carruthers, A.B Harrisburg, Pa. Richard Newton Loomis Church, A.B New York, N. Y. William Egbert Coc kfield, A.B., B.Sc, M.Sc, Montreal, Canada Robert Cameron Col well, A.B., A.M Beaver Falls, Pa Henry Ernest Conklin, A.B., A.M Roslyn, L. I., N. Y William Brewer Connett, Litt.B Convent Station, N. J Kenneth Frank Cramer, Litt.B Gloversville, N. Y Norborne Harris Crowell, A.B., A.M Des Moines, la, Ernest Theodore Dewald, A.B., A.M., Ph.D., New Brunswick, N. J John Dickinson, A.B., A.M Baltimore, Md Louis Boyd Dobie. Ph.B Princeton, N. J Earnest Edward Eells, A.B Worcester, Mass Hastings Eells. A.B Worcester, Mass Harold Allen Elson, B.S Philadelphia, Pa NAME ADDRESS Richard Allen Foster, A.B Marion, Pa. Albert Mathias Friend, Jr., Litt.B Ogontz, Pa. Hugh Stuart Fullerton, A.B Springfield, O. George Baer Fundenburg, A.B Pittsburgh, Pa. Xathaniel Howell Furman, B.S., A.M . . . . Lawrenceville, N. J. Henry Edwin Gebhard, A.B Red Lion, Pa. Otis Levi Gilliam, A.B., B.D Carrollton, Va. Antony Pastor Giraud, B.S Guauabacoa, Cuba Newell Trimble Gordon, B.S Boonton, N. J. James Sproat Green, Jr., A.B Elizabeth, N. J. Walter James Greenleaf , A.B Portland, Me. Joseph Lee Grier, A.B - Camden, Ala. Earle Atherton Harding, B.S York Harbor, Me. Horace Egbert Haring, B.S Lancaster, Pa. Malcolm Morrison Haring, A.B., A.M Lancaster, Pa. James Penrose Harland, A.B., A.M Wenonah, N. J. John DeHart Harrison, A.B., A.M Norristown, Pa. Edwin Humphrey Hazen, A.B., B.D., A.M., Middletown, Conn. Benjamin Coe Helmick, B.S., M.S Washington, la. Charles William Hendel, Jr., Litt.B Princeton, N. J. Richard Miner Hewitt, A.B ...Middletown, Conn. William Thomson Henzsche, A.B Baltimore, Md. Arthur Pharoah Honese, A.B., A.M Angola. Ind. Tobey Rutei Hosci Kamakura, Japan Howard Larison Hughes, A.B Trenton, N. J. Harold Llewellyn Humphreys, A.B Van Wert, O Oliver John Irish, A.B Iowa City, la. Charles Paddock Johnson, A.B Norwich, Conn. Robert Malcus Johnston, A.B Greensboro, N. C. Isidor Kaufman, A.B.. A.M Philadelphia, Pa. Henry Thomas Kent, Jr., A.B., A.M Clifton Heights, Pa. George Harold Kinard, Ph.B Leacock, Pa. Lewis Hubert Knight, A.B Wagoner, Okla. Robert Francis LaBarron, B.S Binghamton, N. Y. Richard Venable Lancaster, A.B., B.D Ashland. Va. Tames Neville Land, A.B Santa Anna. Tex. Sidney Lawrence Levengood, Litt.B Wayne, Pa. 30 - sggS rhe Princeton | ric-a-Hrac §rabuate cf)ool oll, ((Honclubed) Ward Willis Long, A.B Spencerville, O. Willard Bostwick Marsh, A.B Clinton, N. Y. Thomas Bradley Mather, A.B., A.M St. Louis, Mo. Oliver Parker McComas, Jr., A.B.... Roland Park, Md. Robert Milton Mclsaac, A.B., A.M Rochester Mills, Pa. John Davidson McLanahan, A.B Princeton, N. J. Joseph McNeill, A.B Germantown, Pa. Harold Coss Mow, A.B West Lebanon, Pa. Cyril Arthur Xelson, A.B., A.M Troy, Kan. George Alexander Norwood, Jr., Litt.B Greenville, S. C. Robert Barnard O ' Connor, A.B Flushing, N. Y. Lewis Philip Ohliger, B.S East Las Vegas, New Mexico Howard Lower Olewiler, A.B Red Lion, Pa. Samuel Earl Orwig, A.B Philipsburg, Pa. Robert Norton Pease, B.S Burlington, Vt. Herbert Towle Perrin, Ph.B Cleveland, O. George St. John Perrott, A.B., A.M Grand Forks, N. D. Ben Edwin Perrv, A.B., A.M Ann Arbor, Mich. Frank Randall P ' ratt. B.S., M.S New Brunswick, N. J. Herbert Rivington Pyne, A.B Bernardsville, N. J. Clarence Edwin Ragsdale, A.B., B.S., A.M Columbia, Mo. Jesse Hale Riddle, A.B., A.M Davis, W. Va. Abraham Aaron Roback, A.B., A.M Montreal, Canada Gilbert Stuart Robertson, A.B., A.M East Orange, N. J. Stewart MacMaster Robinson, A.B Philadelphia, Pa. Joseph Hy ran Roe, A.B Winchester, Va. Lindsley West Ross, A.B Portland, Ore. Reginald Rowland, A.B Clinton, N. J. Frederick Schweitzer, A.B., A.M Philadelphia. Pa. F. Rolland Severance. Litt.B Willsboro, N. Y. Elmer Lentz Shaffer, B.S Philadelphia, Pa. Irvin Sturger Shultz, A.B Watsontown, Pa. NAME ADDRESS Gordon Gowans Sikes, A.B Buffalo, N. Y. Charles Newton Sisson, A.B Jacksonville, Fla. Charles Phelps Smyth, A.B Princeton, X. J. Daniel Lester Snyder, A.B Levele, W. Va. Carl Caskey Speidel, Ph.B Washington, D. C. John Barker Stearns, A.B Portland, Me. James Kirkpatrick Stewart, A.B Wilmington, Del. John Quincy Stewart, Jr., B.S Harrisburg, Pa. William Frederick Stohlman, A.B Brooklyn, N. Y. Frank Stacy Tavenner, Jr., A.B Woodstock, Va. James Henry Taylor, B.S University Place, Neb. Merwyn Clarence Teague, A.B Pendleton, Ind. Robert Stockdale Telfer, A.B., A.M Bloomingdale. Ind. Russell Vreeland Tuers, B.S Paterson, N. J. Paul DeWitt Twinem, A.B Steubenville, O. Simon Ercile Twining, Ph.B., A.M Bowling Green, O. James Cutler Vickery, B.S Washington, D. C. Domenico Vittorini, Litt.D Preturo (Aguila), Italia Chenghua Henry Wang, A.B Ningpo, China Shirley Howard Weber, A.B., A.M Oakland. Cal. Herbert Theberath Weiskotten, A.B., A.M.. .Brooklyn, N. Y. James Wellington Whaler, A.B Wilmington, Del. Donald Sherman White, A.B Indianapolis, Ind. Cameron Whiteford, A.B Northampton, Mass. Elmer Wood, A.B Carmi, 111. William Harrison Woodruff, A.B Green Village, N. J. John Allen Wyeth. Jr., A.B New York, N. Y. Ralph Bailey Yewdale, A.B., A.M Milwaukee, Wis. John Howe Yoe, B.S., M.S Birmingham, Ala. Walter Stewart Young, A.B., A.M Los Angeles, Cal. Stewart Erh Shuin Yui Wu-Chang, China 31 - .The Princeton Bric-a-gr Sfes - ikfjool of electrical engineering SECOND YEAR MEN Lawrence Day Howell Philadelphia, Pa. August John Mundt Trenton, N. J. G. E. Luke Walter VanB. Roberts Titusville, Pa. Brunson Simpson McCutchen Plainfield, N. J. Dudley Willcox Lawrenceville, N. J. FIRST YEAR MEN K. V. Blue Grantwood, N. J. James Quigi.ey Horne Yonkers, N. Y. O. A. DeLong, Jr New York City 32 Deceased Undergraduates 1917 John H. Winter September 12, 1895— September 7, 1916 1918 Ralph Sinclair Mainland September 13, 1894-december 3, 1915 Elbert Raymond Jepson march 28, 1896-december 27, 1915 Edward Joseph Dunn Thomas Hall Abbett 1919 February 3, 1898— February 28, 1916 August 25, 1896— March 12, 1916 Eric Brunnow 1920 July 6, 1899— October 15, 1916 ♦? The Princeton Sric-a-@rac (Elasis! of 1917 OFFICERS, 1916-1917 William Blackshear Moore President William Lippard McLean, Jr Vice-President Rudolph Eberstadt Secretary and Treasurer Jformer ttittt FRESHMAN YEAR, FIRST TERM Howard Pierce Ballantyne President John Steven Humphreys Vice-President Duncan Dunbar Chaplin, Jr Secretary and Treasurer FRESHMAN YEAR, SECOND TERM Frank Trevor Hogg, 2d President Allan Conover Brown Vice-President Rudolph Eberstadt Secretary and Treasurer SOPHOMORE YEAR Duncan Dunbar Chaplin, Jr President Arthur van der Voort Savage Vice President George Tybout Purves Secretary and Treasurer JUNIOR YEAR David Watts Tibbott President Charles Corson Highley Vice-President Norris Dean Jackson Secretary and Treasurer 35 -g— Sgg S?The Princeton Bric-a-gre £ Sfe5 « - Clasft of 1917 NAME ADDRESS David Muir Amacker Lake Providence, La. Knowlton Lyman Ames, Jr Majestic Bldg., Chicago, 111. Thomas Hart Anderson, Jr., Woolworth Bldg., New York City William Stuart Annin..356 Ridgewood Rd., So. Orange, N.J. Carl Franklin Arnold 814 Grand Ave., Laramie, Wyo. Maximilian Justus Averbeck, Jr., 425 West End Ave., New York City Charles Alfred Bahrenburg. . .445 Parker St., Newark, N. J. Philip Stanley Barba. .3107 W. Coulter St., Germantown, Pa. William Bixler Barnitz Barnitz, Pa. Paul Thurman Barnum California, Pa. Myron Knox Barrett. ..2162 University Ave., New York City Alvin Behrer North Westland Ave., Queens, L. L, N. Y. Charles Waggaman Berl 6 E. 3rd St., Wilmington, Del. James Jerome Bettes. . . . Bettes ' Pharmacy, Jacksonville, Fla. Charles Malone Betts, 3rd Elkins Park,_ Pa. Newton Philo Bevin, 2nd 135 Union Ave., Jamaica, N. Y. John Peale Bishop... 311 S. George St., Charlestown, W. Va. John Baxter Black Mansfield, O. William Thompson Black... 200 Seyburn Ave., Detroit, Mich. Frederick Eller Bloom B. and M., Peoria, 111. Hans Arthur Bluntschli 240 Summer St., Paterson, N. J. Walter Melville Boadway 45 Ford PI., Pasadena, Cal. William Gaillard Boaz 8 Church St., Charleston, S. C. Francis Herman Bohlen, Jr 660 Bullitt Bldg., Phila., Pa. John Frederick Bohmfalk, 851 Lexington Ave., New York City William Harbaugh Bovey....39 Broadway, Hagerstown, Md. Gavin Brackenridge 35 Liberty St., New York City Allan Conover Brown Rhinelander, Wis. Charles Edward Brown, Jr 320 S. 5th St., Chicago, 111. Samuel Smith Bryan, Jr Titusville. Pa. Percy He ' ilner Buchanan. . .955 E. Jersey St., Elizabeth, N. J. Harrison Bullock 74 Grant St., Cohoes, N. Y. Charles Henry Burchenal Glendale, O. Sargent Bush 793 W. Broad St., Westfield, N. J. Samuel McClellan Butt Bloomsburg, N. J. George William Cale, 3rd.. 4960 Laclede Ave., St. Louis, Mo. Truman David Cameron 173 Western Ave., Albany, N. Y John Woods Carpenter. ... 1115 Bellflower Rd., Cleveland, O John Russell Carty 195 Broadway, New York City- Horace Tarr Cator 511 Roland Ave., Roland Park, Md John Rea Chamberlin Torresdale, Pa Henry Chapin 127 School St., Springfield, Mass Duncan Dunbar Chaplin, Jr Ridgewood, N. J Michael Augustine Charles. .. .238 92nd St., Brooklyn, N. Y. Norman Merrill Chester, 362 Riverside Drive, New York City William Floyd Clarkson 1253 Shady Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. James Harwood Closson, 3rd. 53 W. Chelten Ave., Gtn., Pa Robert Armstrong Cochran, 3rd Maysville, Ky Arthur Herbert Coffey 332 Union St., Hackensack, N. J Henry Wallace Cohu 22 E. 61st St., New York City LaMotte Turck Cohu 22 E. 61st St., New York City Kent Galbraith Col well 45 Portland PI., St. Louis, Mo. Harold Dean Comey 1426 Superior Ave., Cleveland, O. Samuel Harriot Compton 57 W. 58th St., New York City Palmer Henry Cook Oyster Bay, L. I., N. Y. Samuel Inman Cooper 4103 Walnut St., Philadelphia, Pa. William Prentice Cooper, Jr Shelbyville, Tenn. Alfred Thomas Copeland, 3 City Nat : onal Bank, Columbus, O. Harvey Lawrence Cory 1270 East Ave., Rochester, N. Y. William Miller Cotton. . .2225 Douglass Blvd., Louisville, Ky. Robert Leighton Crawford, 3rd, 41 West 57th St., New York City Modestino Criscitiello, Jr.. 277 Griffith St., Jersey City, N. J. Henry Scholl Culver 5511 Clemens Ave., St. Louis, Mo. Joseph Charles Cuneo 717 Willow Ave., Hoboken, N. J. Ralph Hinchman Cutler 2 Cutler St., Morristown, N. J. Kenneth Mosier Day 350 Winebiddle Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. Frank Julius Deitsch 928 Broadway, New York City Douglas DeLanoy 2 Wall St., New York City Gilbert Curtis Demorest 217 Broadway, New York City William Lawrence Dempsey, 29 Van Wagenan St., Newark, N. J. John Marcus Denison 10 East Read St., Baltimore, Md. 36 The Princeton Bric-a-Brac class of 1917 - S The Princeton Bric-a-B7i S Sfe5 -. 9- NASSAU HALI. IN THREE STAGES OF ITS DEVELOPMENT The Princeton j§ric-a.-@ra.c Mentor (Elagg (Continueb) William Luther Lydecker DeYoe, 689 Broadway, Paterson, N. J Paul Browning Dickey, 375 S. Fairmount Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa Milton Sands Dillon 1 West 72nd St., New York City Charles William Donahoe..824 36th Ave., N., Seattle, Wash Joseph William Donner Oliver Bldg., Philadelphia, Pa Edwin Russell Dorrance, 52 N. Arlington Ave., East Orange, N. J Gregg Dougherty 322 Clinton St., Steubenville, Solomon Richard Dresser. .. 149 Jackson Ave., Bradford, Pa Edmund Hope Driggs, Jr.. 201 Montague St., Brooklyn, N. Y Wells Drorbaugh 311 Centre St., Williamsport, Pa Henry Teasdale Dunn 501 West Bldg., Jacksonville, Fla Anthony Woodward Durell, Jr Woodbury, N. J Edward Durell 701 S wetland Bldg., Cleveland, O Rudolph Eberstadt. . .214 Glenwood Ave., East Orange, N. J Melville Alexander Eberhardt, 5709 Aylesboro Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa John Eldridge Eddy 175 Jackson Blvd., Chicago, 111 William Alfred Eddy Military Academy, Peekskill, N. Y Malcolm Shepherd Edgar Jamesburg, N. J Marshall Lowndes Edgar Jamesburg, N. J Robert Nelson Errington, 32 Maple Ave., Lackawanna, N. Y Bennet Hunter ErteL.83 Greenwich Ave., Hempstead, N. Y Benjamin Franklin Etter. .702-3 Kunkel Bldg., Harrisburg, Pa John Willard Everitt 355 Central Ave., Orange, X. J Vernon Boyd Farr..20 Van Deventer Ave., Princeton, N. J Bernard Henry Thatcher Feustman, 115 Broadway, New York Cit) Stacy Guild Fine R. F. D. No. I, Trenton, N. J. Charles Henry Folwell, Jr.. 434 High St., Mount Holly, N. J. Ernest Hermann Forster. .2613 Fillmore St., Bridesburg, Pa. John Miley Foster 59 Evergreen PI., East Orange, N. J. Pell William Foster, Jr m Broadway, New York City Ludlow Sebring Fowler 39 E. 68th St., New York City Robert Augustus Franks, Jr... 576 5th Ave., New York City Joseph Herbert Frost 14 Carroll St., Trenton, N. J. Randolph Fairfax Funsten. . 1521 Morgan St., St. Louis, Mo. James Wilson Gailey New Park, York Co., Pa. Herbert Rushforth Garsidc.321 W. 100th St., New York City- James McBrayer Garvey, 1612 First National Bank Bldg., Cincinnati, O. Norman Elder Gatens 290 Broadway, New York City Alfred Gottlieb Gennert.1211 Madison Ave., New York City Robert Sinclair Gerstell College Hill, Easton, Pa Harold Frederick Gibson 25 Broad St., New York City Bryant Furbish Gilmour, 264 Stratford Rd., Flatbush, Brooklyn, N. Y James Bartley Given, Jr 463 Muth St., Brooklyn, N. Y James Emmett Gowen.P. R. R., Broad St. Sta., Philad ' a., Pa William Edwin Guy, Jr 10 Portland PI., St. Louis, Mo. Cyril Henry Haas... 448 Central Park, West, New York Citv Crowell Hadden, 3rd 166 Clinton St., Brooklyn, N. Y Percy Edwards Hall Springfield, N. J Robert Sims Hammond 20 Fairview Ave., Orange, N. J John Ralph Hardin, Jr. .40 Mt. Prospect PI., Newark, N. J LeRoy Lowerre Harding 17 W. 76th St., New York City Edward Harris, 2nd 1127 East Ave., Rochester, N. Y. Stanley Edwards Harris, Care of American Vice-Consul, Tripoli, Syria Walter Butler Harris, Jr Greenholm, Princeton, N. J. George Frank Hasslacher. .400 W. 147th St., New York City William Gardner Hay ward 460 2nd Ave., Gallipolis, O. Robert Purviance Hazlehurst, 203 W. Lanvale St., Baltimore, Md. Walter Layton Heath 7 Beekman Rd., Summit, N. J. Robert Elwood Heimbach Quakertown, Pa. Charles Emanuel Heimerdinger, 875 Park Ave., New York City- Frederick Max Heimerdinger, 81 E. 79th St., New York Citv Edmund Samuel Hersh 209 Broad St., Elizabeth, N. J. Ashley Cooper Hewitt 127 E. 21st St., New York City Harvey Merrick Heywood Arden, N. C. John Raymond Higgins Flemington, N. J. Charles Corson Highley Conshohocken, Pa. Paul William Hills 77 South St., Auburn, N. Y. 37 - — aggH SfaEI rince m j ric-a-Prac Mentor (Elags ((Eontinucb) NAME ADDRESS Leslie Cressman H iltebeitel Hendricks, Pa. Henry Leonard Hilton-Green, 517 Baylen St., Pensacola, Fla. Frank Trevor Hogg, 2nd.. 300 S. Dallas Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. George Meade Holstein, Jr., 1327 Watchung Ave., Plainfield, N. J. James Quigley Home 175 Park Ave., Yonkers, N. Y. Harold Boies Hoskins 24 Bank St., Princeton, N. J. Henry Hamilton Hoyt..8o S. Clinton St., East Orange, N. J. William Young Humphreys, Jr., 303 Dallas Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. Theodore Brainerd Hunt Metuchen, N. J. William Spry Hurlock, Jr..i7i9 W. 1st St., Harrisburg, Pa. Charles Jared Ingersoll, 1 1 12 Franklin Bank Bldg., Philadelphia, Pa. David Arthur Iseman, Jr., Care of Washington Trust Co., Washington, Pa. Alan Jackman 4732 Wallingford St., Pittsburgh, Pa. David Ellsworth Jackman, Jr., 4732 Wallingford St., Pittsburgh, Pa. Norris Dean Jackson 483 Grand Ave., St. Paul, Minn. Thomas Dudley Joeck 606 7th Ave., Asbury Park, N. J. Walter Haynes Johnson, Jr., 277 Linwood Ave., Buffalo, N. Y. Luther Goodrich Jones Temple, Texas Theodore Barnum Keating. .576 Delaware Ave., Buffalo, N. Y. David Walter Kempner 343 W. 87th St., New York City Charles Edwin Kennedy ... 1737 Weeks Ave., New York City Ivor Frederick Llewellyn Kenway, 277 Broadway, New York City Arthur Reynold Knott 1 W. 72nd St., New York City Philip Blaine Knowlton Marion, Mass. Walter Burnside Knox.. 1325 Sheridan Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. George Ferdinand Kurzman. . . .25 Broad St., New York City Sealand Whitney Landon, Jr Bordentown, N. J. Harold Leach Laney 48 Danforth Ave., Jersey City, N. J. Charles Foster LaTour 1 W. 68th St., New York City Charles Hazelhurst Latrobe Wilmington, Del. Chauncy Depew Leake 129 1st Ave., Roselle, N. J. NAME ADDRESS Milton William Leggett. .314 Homewood Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. Stuart Mac Arthur Link.. 284 West End Ave., New York City Edward Henry Lorenz 1608 W. 1st St., Dayton, O. William Arthur Lowrie. Columbus Nat ' l Bank, Pittsburgh, Pa. William Lyon Lowrie, Jr.. 861 Washington Ave., Tyrone, Pa. Lewis Nelson Lukens, Jr Haverf ord, Pa. William Wallace Lyons 14 E. 16th St., Atlanta, Ga. William Gibbs McAdoo, Jr., Treasury Dept., Washington, D. C. Richard Harper McCann, 109 E. Washington Lane, Germantown, Pa. Donald Stevenson McChesney, 210 Walnut El., Syracuse, N. Y. Robert Johnson McClintock, Longridge Farm, Lexington, Ky. Donald Sutter McConnaughy.165 Broadway, New York City Gordon McCormick 606 S. Michigan Ave., Chicago. 111. Russell Miller McDonald.. 24 Euclid Ave., Haddonfield, N. J. John Norman McDowell Elkview, Pa. Alexander Laughlin McKaig, 5301 Westminster St., Pittsburgh, Pa. William Lippard McLean, Jr., Bulletin Bldg., Philadelphia, Pa. Edward Ford MacNichol, 2131 Collingwood Ave., Toledo, O. Donald Oliver MacRae, D 6, Champion Apts., Atlantic City, N. J. William McKinley Madden, 140 Hampden St., West Springfield, Mass. Vincent Taylor Manchee 348 Spodina Rd., Toronto, Can. Harold Merriam March American Press, Beirut, Syria Townsend Martin 49 Wall St., New York City Alfred Mathiasen Keyport, N. J. Thomas Henry Miles, Jr., 610 W. Upsal St., Germantown, Pa. Evan Jones Miller 2117 N. 3rd St., Harrisburg, Pa. William Blackshear Moore.. 302 W. 54th St., New York City William Forbes Mudgc.194 Pond St., Jamaica Plain, Mass. Albert Nacht 431 Grand St., Brooklyn, N. Y William Hamlin Neely Miminton, Pa. Paul Daniel Nelson 614 S. Michigan Ave., Chicago, 111. Harry Hobson Neuberger 55 E. 74th St., New York City Frank John Newburv, Jr.... 844 W. State St., Trenton, N. J. 38 The Princeton Bric-g-grac Senior Class (Continucb) NAME ADDRESS John Simmons Nicholas Sand Springs, Okla. Frederick William Nixon 29 hillside Ave., Orange, N. J. Robert Lee Nourse, Jr 1419 Harrison Blvd., Boise, Idaho Herbert Naugle Odell 179 N. 6th St., Newark, N. J. Elkins Oliphant 175 W. State St., Trenton, N. J. James Harold Osmer Franklin, Pa. John James Parker, Jr 2668 Berkshire Rd., Cleveland, O. Reginald Harrison Parsons Shrewsbury, N. J. James Dana Paul 409 Denniston St., Pittsburgh, Pa. Daniel McKee Paulson 515 Wood St., Pittsburgh, Pa. George Walbridge Perkins, Jr. . .Riverdale-on-Hudson, N. Y. Donald Pettit R. F. D. No. 3, Princeton, N. J. Bernard Peyton 55 Liberty St., New York City George Warren Phillips Helme tta, N. J. Kenneth A. Phillips 191 Gates Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. Laurence Phillips 456 Fourth Ave., New York City Richard Alexander Pierce... 39 Kingsbury PI., St. Louis, Mo. Richard Thomas Pilling, Jr Stanton, Del. George Franklin Plympton, 117 Clinton PI., Hackensack, N. J. Richard Chew Powell... 312 W. Upsal St., Germantown, Pa. George Tybout Purves..25 Alexander St., Princeton, N. J. William Joseph Rahill 56 Jefferson Rd., Princeton, N. J. Landon Thomas Raymond. . 1231 Park Ave., Hoboken, N. J. Ralph Williams Raymond 91 South Forge St., Akron, O. Martin Sims Read 600 Vine St., Chattanooga, Tenn. Kenneth McKibben Read... 43 Exchange PI., New York City Stayman Latimer Reed 11 1st St., Clearfield, Pa. William Frederick Reynolds, Jr Bellefonte, Pa. Irving Riker 164 Market St., Newark, N. J. Richard Henry Ritter 507 Greene Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. William Piatt Robertson. .101 N. Market St., Jackson, Tenn. Paul Melford Runyon..i8 Academy St., South Orange, N. J. George Louis Russell, Jr Lewistown, Pa. John Rutherfurd Warwick, Orange Co., N. Y. Henry Grove Rutledge Perryville, Md. Nelson B. Sackett 37 Arlington Ave., Providence, R. I. Arthur Vandervoort Savage. .Chestnut Hill, Philadelphia, Pa. William Scheerer, Jr.... 100 Harrison St., East Orange, N. J. NAME ADDRESS Robert Colgan Schmertz 205 Second St., Jeannette, Pa. Arthur Albert Schmon 423 Avon Ave., Newark, N. J. William Henry Schoen, Jr., Farmers ' Bank Bldg., Pittsburgh, Pa. Rudolph Nicholas Schullinger, 246 West End Ave., New York City Charles MacCurdy Scott 119 E. Linn St., Bellefonte, Pa. John Thomas Scully 1 Broadway, New York City Barrington West Sellers 77 Grove St., Montclair, N. J. Charles Galbraith Semmens Turtle Creek, Pa. Christian Bernard Shea, Care Jos. Home Co., Pittsburgh, Pa. George Brown Sheppard 722 King St., Pottstown, Pa. Henry Dyer Moore Sherrerd Haddonfield, N. J. George Erety Shoemaker, Jr.. 3727 Chestnut St., Philad ' a, Pa. Horace Franklin Simon.. 645 West End Ave., New York City Eugene Carter Burlington Simonin, St. Martin ' s, Philad ' a, Pa. Jewett Fitch Singleton, 1337 Insurance Exchange Bldg., Chicago, 111. Bancroft Walker Sitterly Madison, N. J. Harvey Hassall Smith 236 Barclay St., Flushing, N. Y. Oliver Helmuth Smith. .. .4845 Walnut St., Philadelphia, Pa. James Milliken Speers, Jr., 81 S. Mountain Ave., Montclair, N. J. Herbert Reynolds Spencer 519 W. 6th St., Erie, Pa. Elliott White Springs Lancaster. S. C. George Black Stericker 624 S. 2nd St., Springfield. 111. John Hoffman Stevens.. 402 Mountain Ave., Westfield, N. J. George Rippey Stewart, Jr ...520 Jackson St., Pasadena, Cal. Walter Thaw Stockton 1109 Hinman Ave., Evanston, 111. Ralph Wallace Stoeltzing, 510 S. Linden Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. John Robert Stoltze. .2101 Pillsbury Ave., Minneapolis, Minn. Oliver H. Stout 318 Massachusetts Ave., Indianapolis, Ind. Edward LaNanze Strater, Marine Barracks, Washington, D. C. Perry MacKay Sturges 56 Liberty St., New York City Thomas Hunt Talmage 22 East 47th St., New York City Edmund Taylor, Jr.. 905 Washington Ave., Greenville, Miss. Merlin McFarland Taylor, ion Chestnut St., Philadelphia, Pa. 39 The Princeton JSric-a-Brac •UL Mentor ClaftS (Conclubeb) NAME ADDRESS Cabell Breckenridge Ten Eyck, 19 Belmont Ter., Yonkers, N. Y. William Henry Tenison 2621 Ross Ave., Dallas, Texas David Watts Tibbott 439 W. Price St., Germantown, Pa. Reginald Tickner Sharpsville, Pa. Marion Lowell Turrentine. . . Monticello, Sullivan Co., N. Y. Herbert Emil Twyeffort 61 W. 90th St., New York City Danford Bassitt Tyler South Berlin, Mass. Herman Lansing Vail 3406 Euclid Ave., Cleveland, O. Oakley H. Van Alen Rutledge, Pa. Benjamin Muirheid Van Cleve, Jr Morristown, N. J. William Duncan Van Dyke, Jr., 118 Prospect Ave., Milwaukee, Wis. Harold Willis Vensel 5519 Forbes St., Pittsburgh, Pa. George Graham Vest Centreville, Md. Harold Benson Vollrath 1512 Pine St., Philadelphia, Pa. John Winfield Voorhis, 67 Delaware Ave., Ocean Grove, N. J. Benjamin Stuart Walcott, 1743 22nd St., N. W., Washington, D. C. Kenneth San ford Wales. The Hamilton, 14th and K Sts., Washington, D. C. Marquand Ward 1018 Madison Ave., New York City John David Warfield, Jr.... 4831 Kenwood Ave., Chicago, 111. James Stratton Warren. .. .Lawrence Park, Bronxville, N. Y. Howard Reifsynder Watt, 919 W. Main St., Norristown, N. J Adophus Leo Weil, Jr 821 Frick Bldg., Pittsburgh, Pa. Ross Noble Wetherbee. . . .259 W. Terry Ave., Detroit, Mich NAME ADDRESS Harwood Arend White, 427 E. Fulton St., Grand Rapids, Mich. Franklin Schenck Whitehouse, 137 Monterey Ave., Pelham, N. Y. Francis Beacham Whitlock. . . .307 Franklin St., Marietta, O. Joseph Wickes Chesterto wn, Md. Curtis Chandler Williams, Jr., 1932 Waldeck Ave., Columbus, O. Jerome Baker Wiss 83 Johnson Ave., Newark, N. J. Edgar Thurston Wolfe... Ohio State Journal, Columbus, 0. Henry Wheeler Young 1812 Prairie Ave., Chicago, 111. Richard Ziesing, Jr 10610 Magnolia Drive, Cleveland, O. 40 The Princeton Bric-a-Srac ■e JUniOD GIla£ of 1918 OFFICERS, 1916-1917 Norman Crawford Nourse President Wilmer Jones Thomas Vice-President David Rittenhouse Shotwell Secretary and Treasurer Jformer ©iiittxi FRESHMAN YEAR, FIRST TERM George Washington Young, Jr President Philip Christopher Kauffmann Vice-President Warren Trusdell Stewart Secretary and Treasurer FRESHMAN YEAR, SECOND TERM Philip Christopher Kauffmann President Charles Ramsey Arrott Vice-President Phillips Blair Lee Secretary and Treasurer SOPHOMORE YEAR Courtlandt Van Rensselaer Hai.sey President Charles Ramsey Arrott Vice-President Phillips Blair Lee Secretary and Treasurer 41 • — dggg SSSbl Princeton Bric-a-gr 2 Sfey - - Clas of 1918 NAME ADDRESS Wayman McCreery Allen, 26 Westmoreland PI., St. Louis, Mo. Lawrence Louis Anderson, Jr..I5I7 3rd Ave., Louisville, Ky. Sinclair Wallace Armstrong, 166 High St., Middletown, Conn. Carl Lahl Arnold Saltsburg, Pa. David Ralph Jaques Arnold Livingston, N. Y. Charles Ramsay Arrott Sewickley, Pa. Thomas Everett Babson....io Terrace PI., Arlington, N. J. Frank Crowell Baker 823 N. 5th Ave., Atchison, Kansas Malcolm Merrill Baker 25 E. 26th St., New York City Leo Vaughn Barker 1546 Madison St., Denver, Colo. John Henry Barret Princeton, N. J. Charles Edward Bayly, Jr.. 2000 Arapahoe St., Denver, Colo. William Rodgers Beal.205 S. Fairmont Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. Edward Philip Becker. .1139 Woods Run Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. Averrill Leonard Beekman Bronxville, N. Y. Louis Henley Bieler, 3104 N. Pennsylvania St., Indianapolis, Ind. John Biggs, Jr 1310 W. 14th St., Wilmington, Del. Albert Holbrook Bingham Sedro-Woolley, Wash. Donald Shallenbergher Bixler, 6341 Drexel Rd., Overbrook, Phila., Pa. William Black 716 Arch St., Pittsburgh, Pa. Israel Octave Blake 995 Madison Ave., New York City Wilson Lord Blayney Riverside, III. Leo Blumberg 712 Newark Ave., Jersey City, N. J. Lawrence Boardman. . . . . .598 Lincoln Ave., St. Paul, Minn. Carl Windus Bonbright Imperial Wheel Co., Flint, Mich. Raymond H. Bowers 103 Locust St., Massillon, O. Johnston Alexander Bowman. .. .437 Roscoe St., Chicago, 111. William McKnight Bowman Springfield, O. James Clement Boyd, 314 Upper Mountain Ave., Upper Montclair, N. J. Lee Carrington Bradley, Jr., 36 Idewild Place, Birmingham, Ala. Harry Heckman Brakeley Bordentown, N. J. Daniel Baugh Brewster, Cor. Calvert and Water Sts., Baltimore, Md. NAME ADDRESS Sydney Erskine Brewster Glen Cove, Long Island Jacob Paul Brenner 173 Willis Ave., Youngstown, O. Francis Theodore Bryan, 4th, 1605 Pierce Bldg., St. Louis, Mo. Joseph Clark Buchanan, 664 Philadelphia Ave., Chambersburg, Pa. William Ackerman Buell...s6 Berkeley St., Rochester, N. Y. Harry Jackson Burch. . . . 1921 Calvert St., Washington, D. C. Grover C. Burkert 8238 Broad St., Trenton, N. J. John Hamilton Burns 112 E. 1st St., Wichita, Kan. Lucius McCutchen Butts... 1508 Cherry St., Vicksburg, Miss. Charles Unger Caesar 50 Union Square, New York City William Brodnax Cameron Ravenscroft, Petersburg, Va. Nelson Irving Campbell, 5147 Friendship Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. Alexander Burton Carver, 1 180 N. Broadway, Yonkers, N. Y. Hilary Ranald Chambers 35 W. 71st St., New York City Ssu-tsung Tayu Cheng, 2023 Kalorama Rd., Washington, D. C. George Denison Cherry 700 Rock St., Little Rock, Ark. Alfred Ellison Christie 12 McKinley Ave., Trenton, N. J. Frank Sherman Clowney, 167 St. James PI., Atlantic City, N. J. Stanton Best Coffin 1815 Knox Ave., Minneapolis, Minn. Samuel Dozier Conant.,4479 Washington PI., St. Louis, Mo. Fred Webster Conine Stratford, Conn. Clinton Salter Cook Manasquan, N. J. Norman Hilliard Cooper, 193 Washington Ave., Belleville, N. J. Dudley Clarke Corkran, 200 Goodward Gardens, Roland Park, Baltimore, Md. David Noble Corson. 51 Berkeley Ave., Newark, N. J. Benjamin Hyde Cory 1028 S St., Fresno, Cal. Frederick Ralph Crane.. ..854 Prospect PL, Brooklyn, N. Y. James Creese, Jr Leetsdale, Pa. Edward Savage Crocker, Jr Fitchburg, Mass. John Stafford Cromelin 400 River St., Hackensack, N. J. Jarvis Cromwell 711 Park Ave., New York City Edward M. Cronin ... .541 Broadway, Bayonne, N. J. Archibald Maddock Crossley.514 E. btate St., Trenton, N. J. Edward William Currie Keyport, N. J. 42 The Princeton Bric-a-grac « .91? HIGH HAT PICTURE The Princeton Bric-a-Brac « Junior Oasis (Continueb) NAME, ADDRESS Holbrook Benezet Cushman.-59 W. 51st St., New York City Aaron Barrows Cutting. . .Woolworth Bldg., New York City John Debevoise Decker Greenwich, Conn. Henry Bazing DeGray Ramsay Road, Wyckoff, N. J. William Burr Joseph DeLacy Woodmere, L. I. Charles Toby DeLong. . I3th Chestnut Sts., Philadelphia, Pa. Holmes Van Mater Dennis, 3rd, 140 Nassau St., New York City Elbert Dent 7918 Seminole Ave., Chestnut Hill, Pa. John Lewis Dodd Louisville Trust Co., Lou ' sville, Ky. John Frederick Donoho Plaza Apartments, Baltimore, Md. William McLure Dougherty 325 N. 3rd St., Millville, N. J. Hrwin W. Doyle 900 N. George St., Rome, N. Y. John Henry Drohan 256 Gates Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. Henry Millington Dubbs, Jr. .2S17 N. 8th St., Philadelphia, Pa. Archibald Dudgeon 969 Park Ave., New York City William Grinstead Duncan, The Peaslee-Gaulbert Co., Louisville, Ky. Edwin Blakeslee Dunphy 8 Lombardy St., Newark, N. J. Carl Reese Eaby, Jr 26 So. Dukes St., Lancaster, Pa. James Gait Elder Harrisburg Trust Co., Harrisburg, Pa. Herbert Rucker Eldridge, Jr., Hotel Marie Antoinette, New York City- Richard Eldridge.. Hotel Marie Antoinette, New York City John Samson Elliott 18 Pine St., Morristown, N. J. Callan Edley England 815 Rock St., Little Rock, Ark. Thomas Hopkins English Gillespie, 111. Lewis Gillespie Erskine, 131 Riverside Drive, New York City John J. Ewart 1708 Atlantic Ave., Atlantic City, N. J. Meredyth Hand way E wing.. 6624 Dalzell PI., Pittsburgh, Pa. Junius Parker Fishburn 726 Thirteenth St., Roanoke, Va. Lewis Barr Flinn 503 Delaware Ave., Wilmington, Del. Edwin Dorsey Foster Cape May Court House, N. J. James Apker Foster, Jr.. 958 Madison Ave., Albany, N. Y. Leys Ainsworth France 1801 Cadwell Ave., Cleveland, O. Ralph Charlton Franks Llewellyn Park, Orange, N. J. Samuel Gibson Frantz 64 Battle Road, Princeton, N. J. William Livingston Freeborn. .. .51 Wall St., New York City- Morris N. Geissinger 409 N. 8th St., Stroudsburg, Pa. NAME ADDRESS David Clarence Gibboney, Jr., 7th St., Oak Lane Park, Philadelphia, Pa. Alfred Adams Gillette. .511 N. Washington St., Rome, N. Y. Samuel Godfrey 34 So. Indiana Ave., Atlantic City, N. J. Israel Goldstein 751 E. 168th St., New York City Donald Goodchild Middletown, N. J. Morton Goodspeed 279 Newbury St., Boston, Mass. Harry Block Gordon, Jr Bronxville, N. Y. Thomas Poultney Gorter..32 E. Preston St., Baltimore,- Md. Earle Parker Gowing 739 Lincoln Ave., Wilmette, 111. Harold Stanton Greason 5 Howard St., Newport, R. I. Thomas Barrett Green 954 Broadway, JM., Seattle, Wash. Gordon Clark Gregory 3647 Broadway, New York City George Webster Griffith Ebensburg, Pa. Richard Matthews Griffith, 2801 Orchard Ave., Los Angeles, Cal. Irving A. Guerin Mendham, N. J. Earnest Charles Haaren 147 W. 122nd St., New York City William Burton Haffner 305 W. 97th St., New York City Robert H. Hall Counrantville, Pa. Courtlandt Van Rensselaer Halsev, IS Broad St., New York City Maxwell McGaughey Hamilton 2203 Nebraska St., Sioux City, la. William Paul Hamilton, 1834 Lovering Ave., Wilmington, Del. Wesley Thompson Hammer, 137 S. Unum Ave., East Orange, N. J. Alexander Patton Hammond. .2521 Broad Ave., Altoona, Pa. Warren Wilson Hampe Oval, Pa. Wendell Phillips Harper, 3138 Brooklyn Ave., Kansas City, Mo. Henry Christopher Harrison, Jr., 464 Monroe Ave., Elizabeth, N. J. Edmund Stephen Hayes Eau Claire, Wis. Edgerton Hazard 3089 Broadway, New York City Henry L. Heimerdinger 875 Park Ave., New York City Lynn Helm, Jr 2653 Ellendale PI., Los Angeles, Cal. 4t -3 ggggg ?gThe Princeton Bric-a-SracSS fes - 3Tuntor Class (Continue )) NAME ADDRESS Edward Gideon Herendeen, Jr., in Columbus St., Elmira, N. Y. Pomeroy Jardon Herron 5547 Fair Oaks, Pittsburgh, Pa. Samuel Davidson Herron 5547 Fair Oaks, Pittsburgh, Pa. Hamilton Hicks Englewood, N. J. Victor Fuller Hockmeyer 170 Hockmeyer, Lowell, Mass. James Edward Hooper... 138 Carpenter St., Germantown, Pa. Lester V. Howett 85 Mortimer St., Rochester, N. Y. Thomas Saxton Ireland 1452 Detroit St., Denver, Colo. Robert Linn Irvine Street, Md. Felix Otto Janke 203 West 9th St., Plainfield, N. J. George Tibbals Jarvis, 2nd, Syracuse Cold Storage Co., Syracuse, N. Y. Ferdinand Jelke, 3rd 402 Union Trust, Cincinnati, O. Frederick Winston Johns Warrick Hotel, St. Louis, Mo. Nathaniel Britton Johnson. .. .44 Park Place, Princeton, N. J. James McLair Jones Springfield, Mo. Philip Christopher Kauffmann, Evening Star, Washington, D. C. Bedros Kazan jian, Jr., 71 Willow Drive, New Rochelle, N. Y. Everard Kempshall 27 King St., Elizabeth, N. J. Louis Fairbanks Kendall.. 12 Church St., Saranac Lake, N. Y. Marshall Babst Kiehl 5021 Bayard St., Pittsburgh, Pa. Alson Davis Kimball, 86 Fourth St., Garden City, L. I., N. Y. Donald Branch Knight.. 26 Cambridge Place, Brooklyn, N. Y. William Huger Labouisse, 1544 Webster St., New Orleans, La. William Watson LaForce, 85th St., Broadway, Kansas City, Mo. Lamartine Yarnedoe Lamar, 514 N. Baylen St., Pensacola, Fla. M. H. Lane Ballston, Va. Philip Lane 47 Weston St., Waltham, Mass. Sanford Lawton Crescent Road, Long Meadow, Mass. Phillips Blair Lee Silver Spring, Md. Brian Philpot Leeb 166 Ralston Ave., So. Orange, N. J. Donald Spence Leslie, John Leslie Paper Co., Minneapolis, Minn. Edward Townsend Look.. 107 Maple Ave., Greenwich, Conn. Roland Bruce Lutz, • 546 West Sedgewick St., Mt. Airy, Philadelphia, Pa. Alexander Victor Lyman, 129 Townsend Ave., Stapleton, Pa. Howard Suydam Lyon 84 Gordon St., Perth Amboy, N. J. Joseph Terry McCaddon, Jr.. . .27 E. 22nd St., New York City Robert Harshe McCague Sewickley, Pa. Edwin Douglas McCauley. .522 Vine Ave., Highland Park, 111. Edward Dickenson McDougal, Jr Riverside, 111. Edward Morton Mcllvaine, Jr. .71 Broadway, New York City George Knox Mcllwain. . . .233 So. 41st St., Philadelphia, Pa. Gerald McKeever 59 Booraem Ave., Jersey City, N. J. Paul McKown Martinsburg, West Va. Donald McLennan 404 Seneca St., Buffalo, N. Y. John Scott McWilliams. .149 East Sunbury St., Shamokin, Pa. James Allan Machin 247 Parlsen Ave., Newark, N. J. William McKinley Madden, 140 Hampden St., West Springfie ld, Mass. William Britton Manee..i8o9 Madison Ave., New York City Fendall Marbury, 701 Maryland Trust Bldg., Baltimore, Md. Allyn Jay Marsh 222 Riverside Drive, New York City William Bryan Marvin Storm St., Stroudsburg, Pa. Daniel Leeds Mathews, Jr Oceanville, N. J. Paul Bacon Matlock 2079 Albion St., Denver, Col. Thomas Clark Matthews Sanibel, Fla. William Proctor Matthews. .. .73 BIymyer St., Cincinnati, O. William Stephens Mayer 228 Market St.. Johnstown, Pa. Theadore Charles Meek 2429 So. 16th St., Omaha, Neb. Hildreth Meigs 53 Mansur St., Lowell, Mass. William Weightman Meirs.. ..Weightman Bldg., Phila., Pa. Berkeley Strickland Michael, 3013 Jackson St., Sioux City, la. Francis Armstrong Middleditch, 516 Boulevard, Westfield, N. J. Clark Miller 4924 Wallingford St., Pittsburgh, Pa. Walter Harold Millinger 589 Washington St., Chicago, 111. James Foulds Mills 404 Winthrop St., Toledo, Ohio. Frederick Lee Moore 83 Sussex Ave., East Orange, N. J. 45 The Princeton Bric-a-Brac Jfuntor Clas« (Conttnueb) NAME ADDRESS George Frederick Morgan, Jr., Hotel Martinique, New York City Kenneth Alexander Morris, 237 West Duval St., Jacksonville, Fla. Arthur Benson Murray, 28 University Place, Schenectady, N. Y. Alfred Edward Norris Princeton, N. J. Norman Crawford Nourse, 1519 Harrison Boulevard, Boise, Idaho James Cornelius Oehler, 1002 S. Sycamore St., Palestine, Tex Richard Harley Oiler 71 Brooklyn Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y Samuel Davis Page, Jr. ...1013 Clinton St., Philadelphia, Pa Spencer Eceleston Palmer, 77 Highland Ave., Glen Ridge, N. J Frank Pardee, Jr Hazleton, Pa Oswald Jacob Parisette 535 Third St., Brooklyn, N. Y Percy Parker, Jr 850 Broadway, Lowell, Mass Robert William Parker 1516 Main St., Jacksonville, Fla William Mercier Parker, 2668 Berkshire Road. Cleveland, O Edward Dippolt Parsons. .. .520 W. State St., Trenton, N. J ♦William Allen Butler Paul. .Chestnut Hill, Philadelphia, Pa Miguel Planas 202 W. 86th St., New York City Edgar Allen Poe, Jr 1604 Park Ave., Baltimore, Md Allan King Poole 215 Penna. Ave., East Liverpool, O Dickson Bayard Potter 328 W. 86th St., New York City Richard Greely Preston, 4 Bennington Rd., Lexington, Mass Percy Rivington Pyne, Jr Bernardsville, N. J Hawley Quier 321 S. Fifth St., Reading, Pa John Millington Rankin So. Charleston, O Stacy Barcroft Rankin So. Charleston, O Albert Dudley Reidenger Madison, N. J William Carlyle Repass Russellville, Ky William Wynkoop Reynolds, 724 Webster Ave., Scranton, Pa Leland Chandler Rhodes Short Hills, N. J Lee Hutchings Richardson, Jr Olmsted Falls, O John Layland Robertson, Jr. ..470 Andover St., Lowell, Mass Harding Sanford Roche. .56 East Park St., East Orange, N. J Francis Ryerson Rodgers, 206 N. Limestone St., Springfield, O. Francis Jamison Rue. .Philadelphia National Bank, Phila., Pa. Francis Lazelle Sawers 617 Drake Ave., Centerville, la. Arthur Davis Scarritt,. .3240 Norledge PI., Kansas City, Mo. George Small Schmidt Cassat Bldg., York, Pa. Wolfgang Simon Schwabacher, 191 Broad St., Newark, N. J. Jordan Ralston Scobie 3817 Dewey Ave., Omaha, Neb. Howard Rutledge Selover, 1770 Knox Ave., S., Minneapolis, Minn. Sydney Donald Sherrerd, 133 Euclid Ave., Haddonfield, N. J. David Rittenhouse Shotwell, 1613 N. Front St.. Harrisburg, Pa. Edgar Oscar Silver 66 N. Walnut St., East Orange, N. J. Douglas Cumming Sinclair, 14 East Fifth St., Corning, N. Y. Harry Aaron Sipe 737 No. Highland Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. Craig Ritchie Smith 31 Alexander St., Princeton, N. J. Harry DeWolf Smyth 22 Morven St., Princeton, N. J. Shirley Donald Southworth, 1935 Irwin Ave., N. S., Pittsburgh, Pa. Wallan Barten Speers 345 Fifth Ave., New York City Meade Ashley Spencer in Sturges Ave., Mansfield, O. Frederick Easton Springer Edwardsville, 111. John Waggeman Stafford Huntington, L. I., N. Y. Henry Maynadier Steele, Jr.. 610 Cathedral St., Baltimore, Md. Murray H. Stevens 449 West 153rd St., New York Citv Suart-Riddle Stevenson. .. .6 Union St., Schenectady, N. Y. Charles Irving Stewart 3 Overton Road, Ossining, N. Y. James Harold Stewart. . .1404 N. Second St., Harrisburg, Pa. Warren Trusdell Stewart.. 175 Turrell Ave., S. Orange, N. J. Sam Streitman, Jr 2616 La St., Houston, Tex. David Hays Sulzberger, 516 West End Ave., New York City Arthur Melville Quintain Syme Winnetka, 111. John Chestnut Taylor, Jr Shade Gap, Pa. Raney Startup Taylor.. 113 W. Main St., Middletown, N. Y. William Davis Ten Broeck Drexel Apts. Overbrook, Pa. Shao-ping Teng 2023 Kalorama Rd., Washington, D. C. 46 The Princeton Bric-a-grac Junior Clagg (Concluoeb) Wilmer Jones Thomas Grenada, Miss George Stewart Thompson East Liverpool, O Kirk Illman Thompson 321 X. Perry St., Titusville, Pa Robert Linsday Thompson, Jr., 801 Penn Ave., Pittsburgh, Fa Arthur Bromley Tyler 16 Sidlaw Road, Boston, Mass Alfred Van Horn, Jr Scarsdale, N. Y Ray Whittier Van Tuyl, 4236 Queen Ave., So., Minneapolis, Minn Ernest Louis Vogt 1382 Third Ave., Louisville, Ky Harold von Hasslacher, 887 Kenmore Place, Brooklyn, N. Y Donald Wair 711 Ridge St., Laport, Ind Charles Kenneth Wallace, 246 Ridgewood Road, S. Orange, N. J Kuschun Penn Wang.. 2023 Kalorama Rd., Washington, D. C William John Warburton. .122 East 76th St., New York City Clarence Arnold Ward. . . .428 St. George Ave., Rahway, N. J Herbert Watson Warden, Jr., 1920 Pine St., Philadelphia, Pa John Howell Westcott, Jr Princeton, N. J Charles Trumball White... 246 E. 105th St., New York City Absent on military service. NAME ADDRESS Hans Adolf Karl Widenmann, 905 Castle Point Terrace, Hoboken, N. Y. Frederick Benhad Wille Tillon Road, So. Orange, N. J. John Gates Williams. ..9 Washington Terrace, St. Louis, Mo. David Williamson 944 Park Ave., New York City Edmund LeRoy Wilson 60 Oak St., Forty Fort, Pa. Foster Poullain Wilson, 38 Washington Terrace, St. Louis, Mo. James Wilson, 3rd 423 Van Hauten St., Paterson, N. J. Julius Lane Wilson 156 Fifth Ave., New York City Marion Orr Wilson 702 Press Bldg., Binghamton, N. Y. David Ross Winans 54 Bayard Lane, Princeton, N. J. Cornelius Winant 103 East 71st St., New York City Henry Allyn Wood Box 97, Middletown, N. Y. John Sylvester Woodbridge, 18 Pekin Road, Shanghai, China Frank Edward Woodward, 242 W. Jersey St., Elizabeth, N. J. Joseph Milliken Woods, Jr., 101 E. Third St., Lewistown, Pa. Sydney Longstreth Wright, Jr Logan, Philadelphia, Pa. Jasper Writer 936 Pearl St., Denver, Colo. Frank Anthony Zunino, Jr. ..495 Eighth Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. Doing ambulance work in France. 47 The Princeton Bric-a-Prac ; THE CHAPEL WHIG HALL CLIO HALL The Princeton Brie- a.- Brae ■« mmm 01las of 1919 OFFICERS, 1916-1917 Franklin Butler Christmas President David Kirkpatrick Este Bruce Vice-President George Weldon Funk Secretary and Treasurer Jformer (Bttittrd FRESHMAN YEAR, FIRST TERM Curtis Whittlesey McGraw President Eben Dickey Finney Vice-President Charles Howard Townsend Secretary and Treasurer FRESHMAN YEAR, SECOND TERM Richard Folsom Cleveland President William Alexander Kirkland Vice-President Franklin Butler Christmas Secretary and Treasurer 49 The Princeton Bric-a-Brac CLASS OF 1919 The Princeton Bric-a-grac Class of 1919 NAME ADDRESS James Hervey Ackerman. . 131 Crescent Ave., Plainfield, N.J. Kenneth Wellington Alford, 461 Fourth Ave., New York, N. Y. Edwin Paschal Dinsmore Alyea, 462 Clifton Ave., Clifton, N. J. John Harlan Amen Exeter; N. H. Wyllys Pittman Ames.... 71 Christopher St., Montclair, N. J. Andrew Anderson, Jr St. Augustine, Fla. James Main Anderson, Jr 5506 Jackson St., Pittsburgh, Pa. Marshall Reid Anspach 437 X. Front St., Milton, Pa. Allison Armour. 2nd Princeton, N. J. Nathan Henry Aronsohn 583 Broadway, Paterson, N. J. William Walter Weed Arrowsmith, 208 W. 71st St., New York, N. Y. Stephen Mayer Auerbach, Belnord, 86th St. and Broadway, New York, N..Y. Louis Francis Auger Ridgewood, N. J. William Henry Bade 5116 Third St., Brooklyn, N. Y. Harold Meyer Baer 350 Graham St., Pittsburgh, Pa. George Olney Bailey 901 N. George St., Rome, N. Y. William Reginald Baker, Jr., 43 Crescent Road, Madison, N. J. Grosvenor Lowrey Ball Lawrence, Long Island, N. Y. Robert Fulton Barnett Latrobe, Pa. Henry A. Barton 526 St. Paul Ave., Detroit, Mich. George Kimball Battle. 13 Washington Terrace, St. Louis, Mo. George Louis Theodore Bauhan, 32 Armstrong Ave., Jersey City, N. J. Edwin Stanton Bayer, Jr Mt. Kisco, N. Y. Kenneth Wilfred Beattie, Glenside Ave., Murray Hill, N. J. Haggott Beckhart 433 Pearl St., Denver. Colo. Charles Christian Bell, Jr.... 724 E. High St.. Booneville, Mo. William Wallace Bell, Jr Pittsburgh, Pa. Paul Benrimo 74 W. 69th St., New York City Robert Mooney Bitten, 935 Atlantic Ave., Atlantic City, N. J. George Rogers Bleakley. . . .536 N. Broadway, Yonkers, N. Y. Leonard Lispenard Bleecker, 86 Oakland Ave., Bloomfield, N. J. NAME ADDRESS Frederick McClure Blossom Peoria, 111. Bonham Hagood Bostick Switzerland, S. C. Harold Mark Bowman.... 10 Prospect Ave., Montclair, N. J. Allen Richard Bray Arlington Heights, 111. Robert Hoover Brindlc.52 E. North St., Hagerstown, Md. James Douglas Brown 66 W. Main St., Somerville, N. J. David Kirkpatrick Este Bruce Ruxton, Md. James Elseworth Bryan 602 Henry Ave., Middletown, O. Harold Kidder Bulkley Englewood, N. J. Martin Burkelman, Hotel Montagre, Montagre St., Brooklyn, N. Y. Francis David Butler. ... 1347 Summit Ave., St. Paul, Minn. Stuart Markle Butler 5534 Bartmer Ave., St. Louis, Mo. George Carroll Buzbv (412 Walnut St., Philadelphia, Pa. Philip Frank Cabell 11 Wall St., New York, N. Y. James Gilmore Campbell 416 S. Main St., Butler, Pa. Stuart Carkener, 2nd 3677 Belleview, Kansas City, Mo. Frederick Brush Carter Huntington, Long Island, N. Y. Kenneth King Carter 1021 Broad St., Newark, N. J. Carl Mallan Casey 320 Madison St., Lynchburg, Va. Louis Amadee Cerf, Jr 78 Lloyd Road, Montclair. X. T. Martin George Charles 238 92nd St., New York, N. Y. Franklin Butler Christmas. . .17 Forest St., Fall River, Mass. Henry Morse Clark.. 508 Monongahela Ave., McKeesport, Pa. Robert Dean Clark 96 Virginia Ave., St. Paul. Minn. William Lee Clark 1927 Market St., Harrisburg, Pa. Richard Folsom Cleveland Princeton, N. J. Roger Stahel Cohen.. 2146 Wyoming Ave., Washington, D. C. Samuel Newbold Comly Port Chester, N. Y. Francis Adams Comstock. . . .375 Park Ave., New York City Culver Howard Cook 4022 Jackson St., Omaha, Neb. Jay Cooke, 2nd Chestnut Hill, Pa. John Cooke 291 Adams St., Milton. Mass. Edward Nelson Cooper, Jr Camp Hill, Pa. Frederick Stanley Cooper Rome, Ga. Ira James Cox New Salem, Pa. Robert Cresswell 2122 Locust St., Philadelphia, Pa. 51 The Princeton JSric-a.-Elra.c ■s opf)omore Class (Conttnueb) Chandler Cudlipp 76 Montgomery St., Jersey City, N. J. John Y. Dater, Jr Ramsey, N. J. John Charles Davis.... 828 Pennsylvania Ave., Denver, Colo. Charles Smith Decker Brighton, Mich. Charles L. DeLong. . . . 13th Chestnut Sts., Philadelphia, Pa. James Orr Denby..Care Hupp Motor Car Co., Detroit, Mich. Grant Armstrong Dibert, 160 S. Fairmount Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. Edwin Richard Dibrell, 1012 W. Second St., Little Rock, Ark. Hamilton Maynard Dickinson Wakefield, R. I. Alexander Loxley Massey Dingee Paoli, Pa. John Allison Dodd 307 Belleville Ave., Bloomfield, N. J. Edward Osborn Douglas Troy, N. Y. Bradley Carey Downing 26 N. Pine St., York, Pa. Henry Watkins Doyle 2023 Broadway, Little Rock, Ark. Samuel Wolf Dreyfuss, 339 S. Fairmount Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. Louis Talman DuBois 177 Harrison St.. E. Orange, N. J. Robert Hayes Dunn 1531 Tioga St., Philadelphia, Pa. Richard Price Dunn 501 West Building, Jacksonville, Fla. Wads worth Clark Dunn... 7 East 92nd St., New York, N. Y. William J. B. Edgar, Jr Jamesburg, N. J. J. Edmund Egner 360 Mt. Prospect Ave., Newark, N. J. Charles P. Elgin 1592 Richmond Ave., Columbus, O. Charles Rosenbury Erdman, Jr., 20 Library PI., Princeton, N. J. Harry Augustus Etheridge, Jr., 659 W. Peachtree St., Atlanta, Ga. James Temple Fairgreave. . .407 S. Fourth St., Fulton, N. Y. Eben Dickey Finney 1300 Eutaw PL, Baltimore, Md. Howard MacFarland Fish 610 W. Eighth St., Erie, Pa. William Meade Fletcher, Jr. .. . Bloomfield, Ivy Depot, Va. William Walter Frank... 122 W. Burnett Ave., Louisville. Ky. George Aschheim Frankel Park City, Utah Albert Averell Fraser...228 Raymond Ave., S. Orange, N. J. Harold Smeallie Frazier Franklin, N. Y. Stanley Grier Freck 947 Hepburn St., Williamsport, Pa. Harry Washington Frost. Jr., 50 W. Kirby Ave., Detroit, Mich. George Weldon Funk Box 84, McLean, McLean Co., 111. NAME ADDRESS Edward Gardner Hampton Park, St. Louis Co., Mo. William Alfred Garrigues, Jr., 721 Watchung Ave., Plainfield, N. J. Edwin Albert Georgi South Nyack, Nyack, N. Y. Richard Silas W. Goldman. . .58 E. 83rd St., New York, N. Y. Berthold Goldsmith, Jr Portland, Ore. Ralph Goldsmith 533 Prospect St., South Orange, N. J. William Steele Gray, Jr New York, N. Y. Alexander Macomb Greene, 46 W. Walnut St., Merchantville, N. J. Thomas Watt Gregory, Jr.. 1532 16th St., Washington, D. C. Walter Denison Griffiths — Spuyten Duyvil,. New York, N. Y. Allen Bernard Groover. .. .129 Lomax St., Jacksonville, Fla. Samuel Vincent Guerin, 406 Monroe Ave., Asbury Park, N. J. Francis Warburton Guilbert. . . Green Gables, Racine, Wis. David Wade Guy 10 Portland PI., St. Louis, Mo. Thomas Sewell Hargest, 2nd.... 113 Reily St., Harrisburg, Pa. Paul Ledbeter Hargreaves, Warwick Ave., Jamaica, Long Island, N. Y. Norman Walter Haring 428 S. Queen St., Lancaster, Pa. Arthur Kempner Harris Hotel Majestic, New York, N. Y. Carl Alfred Hasslacher. .400 W. 147th St., New York, N. Y. Edward T. Hastings 204 Third Ave., Joliet, 111. Gardiner Hawkins 1215 Rio Grande St., El Paso, Tex. William Balthaser Frederick Hax, 325 Roland Ave., Roland Park, Md. Scott Hayes 2242 Robin wood Ave., Toledo, O. Augereau Gray Feinsohn, 404 W. 116th St.. New York, N. Y. Thomas Oliver Helm, Jr Bowling Green, Ky. George Watt Henderson. . 131 E. Fayette St., Uniontown, Pa. Wenman Armstrong Hicks... 5812 Fifth Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. Tames Pearson Hill 315 E. North Ave., Baltimore, Md. Charles Edwin Hillegass, Jr Red Hill, Pa. James Kellogg Burnham Hockaday, 3501 Gladstone Building, Kansas City, Mo. Lansing Colton Holden, Jr., 888 West End Ave.. New York, N. Y. Carl Elsworth Holman 31 Fabyan PL, Newark, N. J. 52 The Princeton Sric-a-Hrac £s opfjomore Class (Continue )) NAME ADDRESS John Guerin Howley..4l6 S. Fairmount Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. William Dudley Foulke Hughes, Trinity Rectory, Newport, R. I. Watts Sherman Humphrey, Jr., 945 Genesee Ave., Saginaw, Mich. Herbert Milton 111 188 Clinton Ave., Newark, N. J. James Elliot Irvine Street, Md. Elihu Arthur Samuel Jacobs, Lakewood Hotel, Lakewood, N. J. Lemuel Foster Jamison Aberdeen, Md. Stephen Hunt Jenckes, 916 Turks Head Building, Providence, R. I. Alfred Elliot Jenkins Morewood Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. Albert Gould Jennings, Jr. ..2 E. 82nd St., New York, N. Y. Arnold Huff Jennings 6012 Greene St., Germantown, Pa. Archibald DeBaun Johnson Lincoln University, Pa. Benjamin Franklin Jones, 3rd, 80S Ridge Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. Edmond Thomas Keenan....57 Lincoln PL, Brooklyn, N. Y. Harry Pardee Keller 215 W. Broad St., ' Hazleton, Pa. Donald Wood Kelley 4416 Westminster PI., St. Louis, Mo. William Boulton Kelley 1406 Eutaw PI., Baltimore, Md. Edgar S. Kennedy. .. 117 E. Greenwood Ave., Lansdowne, Pa. Oscar Marchout Kilby Anniston, Ala. Donald Moore King 345 N. Craig St., Pittsburgh, Pa. Gilbert King 1822 Wyoming Ave., Washington, D. C. John Bruce King... 1822 Wyoming Ave., Washington, D. C. Leonard Richard Kinnard. . .357 Aubrey Rd., Wynne wood, Pa. William Conrad Kirbach..942 Market St., Wheeling, W. Va. Freeman Bourdette Kirkendall, 3727 Jackson St., Omaha, Neb. William Alexander Kirkland. . . 1410 Clay Ave., Houston, Tex. Philip Kissam 48 High St., Orange, N. J. Henry DuBarry Knower, Maplewood Apts., Clifton, Cincinnati, O. Elms Thexton Knowlson 20 Davenport St., Detroit, Mich. Philip Miller Kretschmann. . .48 X. 40th St., Philadelphia, Pa John Dryden Kuser Bernardsville, N. J. Richard Francis Lamarche..5S E. 65th St., New York, N. Y. Robert Patterson Lamont, Jr., 1722 Judson Ave., Evanston, 111. George Brandreth Larkin Ossining, N. Y. Oliver Morrison Lawson, Hotel Woodward, Broadway 55th St., New York, N. Y. Luther Richard Leinbach Wyomissing, Pa. James Morris Leopold, Jr., Gotham Hotel, 55th St., New York, N. Y. Artemas Cameron Leslie 243 Fisk St., Pittsburgh, Pa. Thomas McDowell Nelsonn Lewis Watertown, Wis. Thomas Harbaugh Linea weaver. .. .Park Place, Lebanon, Pa. Samuel Lloyd, Jr 12 W. 50th St., New York, N. Y. Henry Coleman Long Uniontown, Ala. Thomas Coatesworth Lord, 623 W. 113th St., New York, N. Y. Edward Hartwell Ludlow 1203 Forest Ave., Evanston, 111. Donald Keith Luke Tarrytown, N. Y. Fred Avery Lybolt Port Jervis, N. Y. Lansden McCandless. . .5056 Westminster PL, St. Louis, Mo. Frank Junior McConnell, 509 Chestnut St., Richmond Hill, N. J. George Boldt McCormick 108 S. LaSalle St., Chicago, 111. Laurence McCormick 108 S. LaSalle St., Chicago, 111. John H. MacCreadie 58 Bellevue St., Lawrence, Mass. Duncan McCulloch, Jr Glencoe, Baltimore Co., Md. John Robison McCune, Jr.. Fifth and College Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. David Blean McDougal Riverside, 111. Robert Davis McDougal, Jr 537 Moss Ave., Peoria, 111. lames Willing Macfarlane, Woodland Road, Pittsburgh, Pa. Ralph Lyman McGean 8314 Euclid Ave., Cleveland, O. Curtis Whittlesey McGraw. .239 W. 39th St., New York, N. Y. Sydney Leaser Mcllvain 630 N. 5th St., Reading, Pa. Ralph Dyer McKee 45 S. Euclid Ave., Bellevue, Pa. Robert Wilson McKnight Sewickley, Pa. John Dennis McMaster. . .39 Bentley Ave., Jersey City, N. J. Charles Fitch McQuiston Dobbs Ferry, N. Y. Roderick Fairchild Makepeace, 275 Wayland Ave., Providence, R. I. David Mandel, 202 New Brunswick Ave., Perth Amboy, N. J. Edmund Scarritt Manny. 5041 Westminster PL, St. Louis, Mo. S3 The Princeton Brie- a- irac opi)omore Class (Continueb) Arthur Wharton Marks Hillburn, Rockland Co., N. Y. Herbert Keller Martin Nazareth, Pa. Howard Washburn Maxwell, Jr., 30 Broad St., New York City John Courtland Maxwell, 400 West End Ave., New York City John Newman May, Jr 49 Pine Grove Ave., Summit, N. J. Clinton Orth Mayer, Jr 907 N. 16th St., Philadelphia, Pa. Gulmer Meriwether, Jr., 421 N. Gladstone Blvd., Kansas City, Mo. Karl Burtner Mickey 1428 W. 65th St., Cleveland, O. Ronald Zeller Mickey 1428 W. 65th St., Cleveland, O. Edward Gallup Miles, Breezemont, Albemarle Park, Ashville, N. C. Austin Jayne Millard 208 High St., Newton, N. J. Armonde Kelsey Miller .219 W. State St., Olean, N. Y. Walter Edwin Mills 222 N. State St., Chicago, 111. John Cruickshank Milne, 2nd, 444 June St., Fall River, Mass. Leo Philo Mirsky 49 W. 83rd St., New York City Archibald Moore Montgomery, 801 West End Ave., New York City George Dorrance Moore, 52 N. Arlington Ave., E. Orange, N. J Milton Darlington Moore Avondale, Chester Co., Pa Robert Grier Moore 154 Pearson St., Chicago, 111 Daniel Clarkson Morgan, Jr Hillsboro, O Wistar Morris Haverf ord. Pa Stanley Mortimer, Jr Roslyn, Long Island, N. Y John Arthur Moss 819 Center Ave., Reading, Pa Paul Victor Mravleg 1062 E. Jersey St., Elizabeth, N. J George Barton Muldaur, Jr Elizabeth, N. J Elmer Ward Munsell Buffalo, N. Y Franklin Goodspeed Muzzy... 414 Broadway, Paterson, N. J John Verplanck Newlin Whitford, Pa Ralph Albert Nicholas 324 S. McKean St., Butler, Pa Arthur Lucien Niles, Jr.... 315 W. 80th St., New York City William Kennedy Nimick 6315 Fifth Ave.. Pittsburgh, Pa Henry Martin Norris 69 Alexander St., Princeton, N. J Arthur Leigh Norton 30 E. 55th St., New York City NAME ADDRESS Paul Robinson Norton 524 Elm St., Reading, Pa. Paul Smith Olmsted Robbinsville, N. J. Paul William Orth 11 S. Front St., Steelton, Pa. Lawrence R. Page 202 S. Union St., Olean, N. Y. Robert Judson Palmer 99 Herkimer St., Brooklyn, N. Y. John Floyd Parker 63 W. 54th St., New York City Philip MacGregor Parker.. 88 Gifford Ave., Jersey City, N. J. Henry Gilbert Woodruff Parmele, Hamilton Ave., New Brighton, N. Y. Robert James Tait Paul, 200 Mt. Vernon Ave., Haddonfield, N. J. William Miller Paxton, 3rd ,.St. David ' s, Pa. Thomas Darlington Peters, 100 Marlborough Rd., Brooklyn, N. Y. Gerald Ross Petterson Princeton, Minn. Robert Sabin Pollard Fairmount Ave., Chatham, N. J. Richard El wis Pope Kenosha, Wis. Milton Grosvenor Potter 420 Franklin St., Buffalo, N. Y. Theron Loveland Prentiss. .228 Orange Rd., Montclair, N. J. Arthur Preyer 205 Roseville Ave., Newark, N. J. Paul Wakeman Price. .350 Ridgewood Ave., Glen Ridge, N. J. Lawrence Martin Proctor 3033 P St., Washington, D. C. Edwin Hasbrouck Proudfit..630 Prospect St., Westfield, N. J. William Allen Putnam, Jr.... 70 Willow St., Brooklyn, N. Y. Godfrey Pyle 2317 W. 17th St., Wilmington, Del. Matthew Stanley Quay Sewickley, Pa. John Howard Raftery Geneva, 111. Joseph Vivian Ralston Columbus, O. Joseph Gales Ramsay Dalhousie Farm, Guyencourt, Del. Richard Harding Randall. . 1 127 St. Paul St., Baltimore, Md. Valentine Kirk Raymond.. 194 Berkeley PI., Brooklyn, N. Y. Cecil Read 313 Laurel Ave., St. Paul, Minn. Laurence Conway Reed 993 Park Ave., New York City John Baldwin Rich 1006 X. Charles St., Baltimore, Md. Frank Snyder Richardson Bernville, Pa. Charles S. Richardson Bernville, Pa. Wildey Clegg Rickerson. . . .141 W. 92nd St., New York City Milton Herbert Robbins Hightstown, N. J. 54 - - gg The Princeton Sric-a-Br EJ lSfey -- - g opfcomore Class ((Honttmieb) NAME ADDRESS Thomas Robins, Jr Stamford, Conn Arthur Alan Rogers, 1415 Mt. Curve Ave., Minneapolis, Minn John Grim Rothermel 208 Windser St., Reading, Pa Robert Greene Rouse Newton, N. J Robert Bromwell Russell, Jr Liberty Grove, Md George Byron Ruth Marshalltown, la Randolph Clothier Sailer Englewood, N. J Hudson Gilmore Samson 433 6th Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa Henry Robert Samstag 307 W. 81st St., New York City Ernest Chauncey Savage Chestnut, Pa. John Foster Savidge 66 W. 50th St., New York City George Demarest Saville. . .304 W. 105th St., New York City John Louis Schaefer, Jr.... 327 W. 108th St., New York City- Joseph Stagg Schmalz 390 Wington Ave., Buffalo, N. Y. Samuel S. Schmidt 902 S. George St., York, Pa. William Wotenbury Scudder Glastonbury, Conn. Sydney Baldwin Self II Center St., S. Orange, N. J. William Ritchie Semans..29 W. Berkley St., Uniontown, Pa. John Schaffer Senseman. . . 154 Sylvan Ter., Harrisburg, Pa. McNeil Vernam Seymour, Jr., 121 Virginia Ave., St. Paul, Minn. Randolph William Shannon, 33 Wavecrest Ave., Venice, Cal. Albert Shaw, Jr Hastings-on-Hudson, N. Y. Frank William Sidler Danville, Pa. Howard Duane Siedler...36 Oakland Ave.. Bloomfield, N. J. George Dickson Skinner. .. .28 Church St., Gouverneur, N. Y. David William Sloan, Jr Cumberland, Md. William Eyres Sloan 1250 E Ave., Rochester, N. Y. Cyril Sloane Sands Point, Long Island, N. Y. Charles Morris Smith, 112 Benevolent St., Providence, R. I. Guy L. Smith 601 Watauga Ave., Johnson City, Tenn. Howard Malcolm Smith.. 35 McDonough St., Brooklyn, N. Y. James Gerald Smith 2339 Williams St., Denver, Colo. Robert Earl Sniffin 32 Badeau Ave., Summit, N. J. Franklin Faust Snyder 425 N. Queen St., Lancaster, Pa. John Auxier Sowards Pikeville, Ky. Joseph Wilbur Spencer, Jr... 74 Taylor PI., S. Orange, N. J. Irvin Auchincloss Sprague, Jr., 118 W. 57th St., New York City Leopold Eidlitz Starr 56 Bayard Lane, Princeton, N. J John James Brown Stoetzer. . .315 1st St., Fairmont, W. Va. Henry Strater 1037 Third Ave., Louisville, Ky. Donald MacQueen Street, 676 Irving Park Blvd., Chicago, 111 Albert Streichenberg 11 Summit St., Glen Ridge, N. J Benjamin Strong, Jr... 4100 Mountview Blvd., Denver, Colo, Louis Bergner Strong 770 Belvidere, Plainfield, N. J William Emery Studdiford, Jr., 124 E. 36th St., New York City Noel Speer Symons, 1606 New Hampshire Ave., Washington, D. C William Brownell Talbert, Jr., 215 N. Mill St., Lexington, Ky Anson Wales Hard Taylor 49 Wall St., New York City James Irwin Taylor 139 N. Warren St., Trenton, N. J John Henry L. Taylor 31 Clinton Ave., Montclair, N. J Walker Taylor, Jr Wilmington, N. C Jacob Teich 43 Beech wood Ave., Trenton, N. J Lasater Terrell San Antonio, Tex Arthur Terry, Jr Short Hills, N. J Gerald Provost Thomas, 259 Broadway, Flushing, L. I., N. Y William Cover Thomas Princeton, N. J Harry Carroll Thompson Baltimore, Md Richard Wainwright Thorington, 2031 Chestnut St., Phila., Pa Louis Felix Timmerman, Jr... 230 Central Ave., Leonia, N. J Robert Hovey Tinsman Kenilworth, 111 James Roller Todd, 145 W. Washington St., Hagerstown, Md Owen Jones Toland Whitemarsh, Pa William Richard Townley..246 Delavan Ave., Newark, N. J Charles Howard Townsend..7i Cleveland St., Orange, N. J Frederick Lathrop Tracy... 1718 Capouse Ave., Scranton, Pa James Clinton Trostle Dillsburg, Pa Herbert Saxe Urmy 290 Mt. Prospect Ave., Newark, N. J Philip Van Deventer. . . .632 Woodland Ave., Plainfield, N. J Henry Pitney Van Dusen. 240 W. Evergreen Ave., Chestnut Hill, Pa Louis William Van Meter Wenonah, N. J 55 The Princeton JSric-a-Bretc s opliomore Class (Conclubeb) William Harold Van Wort Campbell, N. Y Allen Van Wyck Ridgefield Park, N. J George Augustus Vaughn, Jr., 441 Washington Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y Eyvind Melsom Verner Hulton Rd., Oakmont, Pa George Graham Vest Centerville, Md Ellis Julian Waller 218 S. Tremont, Kewanee, 111 Paul Chamberlain Walter. ... 1317 N. 3rd St., Harrisburg, Pa Sumner Francis Dudley Walters 125 S. 13th St., Newark, N. J Frank Dale Warren, Jr 966 Hillside Ave., Plainfield, N. J Hamilton Martin Warren, Rochelle Park, New Rochelle, N. Y Robert Hazelett Washburn 803 Austin St., El Paso, Tex Stephen White Waterbury. .536 N. Broad St., Elizabeth, N. J Samuel Leverett Webster.. 601 W. noth St., New York City John Crawford West, Syrian Protestant College, Beirut, Syria Henry Lamont Wheeler. .. 160 Fourth Ave., E. Roselle, N. J. Raymond Corwin Whitman, 157 Summer Ave., Newark, N. J. William Beaumont Whitney, Jr., 51 1 7 Pulaski Ave., Germantown, Pa. Augustus Monroe Whittingham Milburn, N. J. Edward Van Dyke Wight, Jr Middletown, N. Y. Franklin Lloyd Wilbur. .711 Grand Ave., Asbury Park, N. J. Chester Irving Williams 57 E. 74th St., New York City Arthur Edward Windels 162 Lee Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. John Jacob Winn Mt. Sterling, Ky. John Wintersteen 2220 DeLancey St., Philadelphia, Pa. William Wood Wren Prospect Hall, Frederick, Md. James Thomas Wrightson Easton, Md. George Adolf Wulp 2975 Perry Ave., New York City Edwin Simpson Yeomans, 3530 Gladstone Blvd., Kansas City, Mo. Joseph Samuel Young 1508 Hamilton St., Allentown, Pa. 56 The Princeton Brie- a- Brae raaiTO Qlias of 1920 Officers Eric Marquand Enos President Thomas Dudley Riggs Vice-President John Reynolds Van Cleve Secretary and Treasurer 57 The Princeton Bric-a-grac 1920 FLOUR PICTURE - ggg The Princeton Bric-a-B ci3 Sfe - - Clas of 1920 NAME ADDRESS Marcus Lester Aaron... 402 Winebiddle Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. Shelden Abbett 969 Park Ave., New York City Darwin James Adams 165 W. 58th St., New York City Donald Cameron Alford. . . .461 Fourth Ave., New York City Donald Camp Anderson. 7041 Frankstown Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. William Theodore Anderson, Jr., 3 2 Atterbury Ave., Trenton, N. J James Newton Armstrong, Jr Blairstown, N. J Harold James Ash.... 1793 Amsterdam Ave., New York City Geoffrey Velazquez Azoy, 28 S. Maple Ave., E. Orange, N. J William Evelyn Babcock, Jr. ..Dana Place, Englewood, N. J Edgar Wright Baird, Jr St. Martin ' s, Philadelphia, Pa William James Baird. Jr 812 Pine St., Philadelphia, Pa Henry Drewry Baker 3 Boissevain Apts., Norfolk, Va Francis Meserve Barker. 120 Exchange St., care of W. Noyes, Portland, Me Arthur Page Baskerville. 15 Vandeventer Ave., Princeton, N. J Rice Bassett 1462 Ash St., Denver, Col. Bennett Bradenburg Bates.. 33 West 42nd St., New York City George William Bauernschmidt, 3 University Parkway, Baltimore, Md James Harvey Beal, Jr., 205 S. Fairmount Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa John G. Bechtel Carpenter, Del Donald Fairchild Bigelow. . .415 Laurel Ave., St. Paul, Minn Edwin Black 844 Sheridan Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa Hiram Bellis Blauvelt Oradell, N. J Robert Eugene Blue 82 Bleeker St., Newark, N. J Harold Sherman Bond Boody House, Toledo, O William Kennedy Boone, Jr.... Lake Roland, Baltimore, Md George Edward Bowdoin Elk Ridge. Md John Ritchie Boyd....i75i Corcoran St., Washington, D. C Charles Brandon 210 E. 5th St., Auburn, Ind Harold Frederick Brigham 12 Jarvis PL, Trenton, N. J Bertram Miller Brock.... 49 Midland Ave., Arlington, N. J John Brook, Jr .Princeton, N. J NAME ADDRESS Edwin James Brooks, Roland Ave., Roland Park, Baltimore, Md. William Henry Brooks, Jr St. David ' s, Pa. Eric Brunnow Princeton, N. J. Randolph Elijah Brown. .. .Washington Ave.. Palisade, N. J. Frank Wayne Bruns, Jr.... 423 Madison Ave., New York City Wilhelmus Bogart Bryan, Jr., 1330 18th St., N. . Washington, D. C. Adelmer Rogers Bryon Ridgefield, Conn. Carl Frederick Buechner, Jr., 170 West 59th St., New York City James Spilman Buffington. . . 1232 Asbury Ave., Evanston, 111. Geoffrey Cooke Bunting. . .246 Summit Ave., Jenkintown, Pa. Fairfax Carter Burger Rye, N. Y. John Logan Burke, The Kasson, James St., Syracuse, N. Y. Charles Monroe Butler 315 Iroquois Ave., Detroit, Mich. Henry Franklin Butler 1535 I St., Washington, D. C. Howard Russell Butler, Jr., 107 Library PI., Princeton, N. J. John Randolph Butts 1508 Cherry St., Vicksburg, Miss. Harold Francis Caffrey 269 S ' . 4th St.. Fulton, N. Y. Francis Callery 435 6th Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. Sterling Callisen Princeton, N. J. Charles Ewen Cameron. .. .240 Harrison, East Orange, N. J. John Gordon Campbell Country Club Rd., York, Pa. Rudolf Austin Cannon. .. .2235 Harcourt Drive, Cleveland, O. Charles Lynn Carrick, Jr.. 103 Gifford Ave., Jersey City, N.J. Chester Warner Carson 300 W. Adams St., Chicago, 111. Philip Miller Chamberlin Hightstown, N. J. Stuart Chapin 127 School St.. Springfield, Mass. Walter Franklin Chappell, Jr., 7 East 55th St.. New York City George Howland Chase, 3rd. ..1753 N St., Washington, D. C. Cyrus Clark Great Neck, Long Island Maurice Earl Clark.... 98 High wood Ave., Ridgewood, N. J. Philip Moody Clark 253 Summer St., Boston, Mass. Andrew Lemuel Cobb, Jr Boonton, N. J. Edward Hope Coffey. Jr.... 332 Union St., Hackensack, N. J. Bertrand Wilson Cohn, 210-14 Whitworth Ave., Brookhaven, Miss. 59 The Princeton Sric-a-Prac Jfresfjman Class! ((Eonttnueb) NAME ADDRESS William Randolph Compton, Jr., 18 Kingsbury PL, St. Louis, Mo. Kenyon Bronson Conger, Jr Irvington-on-Hudson, N. Y. Harold Philip Connelly 108 Catherine St., Elmira, N. Y. Frederick Renner Cook I Sunset Ave., Evansville, Ind. Gordon Campbell Cooke 384 Broadway, Paterson, N. J. John Patterson Cotton Princeton, N. J. John Beaur egard Cowan, Jr... Cowan Place, Vicksburg, Miss. Howard Cleveland Coxe 112 E. 56th St., New York City Bertram Faupel Crane... 484 Bergen Ave., Jersey City, N. J. Fletcher Slee Crocker 464 W. Church St., Elmira, N. Y. Wellington Shelton Crouse, 3825 San Rafael Ave., Los Angeles, Cal. Curtis Bean Dall 11 10 Prospect Ave., Plainfield, N. J. Nelson Breintnall Dane 709 High St., Newark, N. J. Donald Danforth 17 Kingsbury PL, St. Louis, Mo. John Rock Daniell 875 Park Ave., New York City Prentice Northup Dean Dalton, Pa. Joseph Albert Dear, Jr., 146 Harrison Ave., Jersey City, N. J. George William Dell Wallingford, Berks, England Kenneth Elmer Demarest..i5 Exchange PL, Jersey City, N.J. Firman Addison De Maris Camden, N. J. John Purnell Dennis Preston, Md. Franklin Shreve Deuel... 18 Mountain Ave., Maplewood, N. J. Howard Xienstedt Deyo..20 Bellevue St., Weehawken, N. J. Charles J. Dieckman New York City Harrison Steele Dimmitt 955 Pearl St., Denver, Colo. Frank Dixon 5538 Forbes St., Pittsburgh, Pa. Samuel Thompson Dodd, Jr., 1101 Nott St., Schenectady, N. Y. Henry Hoffman Dolan Torresdale. Pa. Carl Hermann Donner 281 Summit Ave., Summit, N. J. Frederic Huntington Douglas Evergreen, Colo. James H. Douglas, Jr 4830 Woodlawn Ave., Chicago, 111. William Horatio Downs 1912 E. 9th Ave., Denver, Colo. Henry Russell Drowne, Jr. ..306 W. 78th St., New York City Gerald Fitz-Gerald duPont, 200 Montford Ave., Ashville, N. C. Joseph William Durbin, 2nd, 129 East St., Williamstown, Pa. NAME ADDRESS Harold Frederick Egner, 360 Mt. Prospect Ave., Newark, N. J Henry Sidney Ehret Edgewater Park, N. J Samuel Webster Elwood 3 Milliken PL, Decatur, 111 Gerard Montgomery English, 107 Chestnut Ave., Narberth, Pa Eric Marquand Enos Englewood Inn, Englewood, N. J George Llewellyn Eynon 131 Roup Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. Joseph Fahys, 2nd 54 Maiden Lane, New York City James McCullough Farr, 3rd, 242 S. Franklin St., Wilkes-Barre, Pa. Arthur Hughes Fawcett, 105 Rockview Ave., Plainfield, N. J. John Fennelly, Jr Warwick Blvd., Kansas City, Mo. James Barker Field 728 Ogden St., Denver, Colo. Harry Bcihrne Fine Princeton, N. J. Harvey Samuel Firestone, Jr Medina Rd.., Akron, O. Evan Thomas Fisher 6388 City Line, Philadelphia, Pa. J anon Fisher, Jr Eccleston, Ind. Julian Vincent Flaig 8 N. 2nd St., Pottsville, Pa. Hartley Given Fleming. .6922 Thomas Blvd., Pittsburgh, Pa. Walter Frederic Folmer, 12 Caledonia Ave., Rochester, N. Y. Charles Irving Foster 9 Phillips St., Westboro, Mass. George Gillespie Fox 216 State St., Harrisburg, Pa. James Norris Franz.. 55 Pine Hill, Sault St. Marie, Canada George Corning Fraser, Jr. . .300 South St., Morristown, N. J. Herman Edgar Frey 1646 N. 9th St., Terra Haute, Ind. David Lewis Bartlett Fringer, Pikesville, Baltimore Co., Md. William Ballinger Fyffe, 505 East Laurel Ave., Highland Park, 111. Carl Edward Garnaus..i5 Buckingham Rd., Brooklyn, N. Y. Clarence Maxwell Garrigues, 721 Watchung Ave., Plainfield, N. J. William Urner Gaver Mount Airy, Md. Carl Herbert Georgi Grand View, Nyack. N. Y. Henry Edward Gerstley . .1411 N. Broad St., Philadelphia, Pa. John Porter Gillespie. 5226 Westminster PL, Pittsburgh, Pa. Maurice Stephenson Gould.. 120 W. 32nd St., New York City Gilson Berryman Gray, Jr. ..R. F. D. No. 5, Aberdeen, Miss. John Harrison Gray 1005 James St., Syracuse, N. Y. George Elton Greenleaf Plainfield, N. J. 60 The Princeton Bric-a-Brac Jfresljman Claftes (Conttnueb) Charles Russell Gregor. . .Washington PL, Morristown, N. J George Edgar Hackney.. 80 Morgantown St., Uniontown, Pa John Gerhard Hagemeyer. . . 123 Via Boccaccio, Florence, Italy Thomas Dever eux Haigh...39 Hillcrest Ave., Summitt, N. J Albert Halstead, Jr... 3 Salesianer-Gasse 31, Vienna, Austria Donald Merwin Halsted 98 Hancock St., Brooklyn, N. Y Raymond Leslie Hamilton. . . .654 Clifton Ave., Newark, N. J. William Herbert Hamilton. .130 East 65th St., New York City- Andrew Patton Happer. . . .316 Dickson Ave., Ben Avon, Pa John Marshall Harlan. ... 1132 Marquette Bldg., Chicago, 111 George McLean Harper, Jr.. 36 Mercer St., Princeton, N. J Erdman Harris Pine Road, Sewickley, Pa William Irving Harris.. 29 S. Burnett St., East Orange, N. J Henry Carleton Harrison. .. .6 Erwin Park, Montclair, N. J Richard Hartshorne 121 Church St., Phoenixville, Pa Robert Doremus Hartshorne. ... 15 Wall St., New York City Cecil Prinzing Harvey Newtown, Bucks Co., Pa. Parker Crosby Hatch. .. .Riverbank Court, Cambridge, Mass Severn Teackle Haviland, 1801 Irving Ave., S., Minneapolis, Minn Thomas Heath 76 Soldiers ' PI., Buffalo, N. Y Robert Brown Heiserman 225 Broad St., Sewickley, Pa Snowden Henry Germantown, Pa Reinhardt Robert Herling Lisbon Falls, Me Homer Hart Hewitt, Jr Williamsburg, Pa Baylos Banks Hickman Gainesville, Ga Lewis Haler Hitzrot 625 S. Broadway, Yonkers, N. Y Lester Cody Holmes 24 Willow St., Gloversville, N. Y Richard Joseph Home 175 Hutton St., Jersey City, N. J Arthur Wellington Thorton, Jr., 5331 Wayne Ave., Germantown, Pa Lewis Daniel Houck 107 N. Main St., Mt. Vernon, O Edward Springer Hubbell, 122 Highland Ave., Syracuse, N. Y Harold Jasper Hunt Hightstown, N. J Aubrey De Nvse Hutcheson, 138 Franklin St., Hempstead, L. I., N. Y John Mitchell Hutchins. . .999 Lake Shore Drive, Chicago, 111 Warren Clark Hutchinson, 305 Montclair Ave., Newark, N.J NAME ADDRESS Edwin Floyd Irwin 4103 Locust St., Philadelphia, Pa. Sumner Allen Jackson 68 Ascension St., Passaic, N. J. John Selby Jacobs, Jr 159 Willis Ave., Youngstown, O. John Martin Jamison, Jr Greensburg, Pa. Smith Ely Jelliffe, Jr 64 W, 56th St., New York City John Jay Johns. .. .Denny Robyn Roads, Sappington, Mo. Henry Derr Johnson 326 Clinton St., Brooklyn, N. Y. Walter Frank Johnson Greenwich, Conn. Thomas Nufflin Jones, 3rd, The Lawn Cobourg, Ontario, Can. Samuel Hay Kauffmann, Care of Evening Star, Washington, D. C. Lewis Griffith Kaye 1442 3rd Ave., Louisville, Ky. Clifford Tyler Kelsey..45S Washington Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. Charles Matthew Kerr, Jr Wrightsville, Pa. Frederick Seymour Ketchum, 27 N. 17th St., E. Orange, N. J. John Rice Kimbark 517 S. 5th Ave., Chicago, 111. Frederick Everiss Kessinger, Rome Sentinel County, Rome, N. Y. Hunt Henson Koblegard. 218 East Main St., Clarksburg, W. Va. Benjamin Franklin Kraffert. . . .322 Union St., Titusville, Pa. John Lewis Kuser, Jr Bordentown, N. J. Washington Butler LaForce, 85th St. and Broadway, Kansas City, Mo. Carroll Walton Laird 150 N. 21st St., East Orange, N. J. Rogers Sullivan Lamont 67 Hillside Ave., Newark, N. J. James McCauley Landis, Meiji Gakuin, Shirokane, Tokyo, Japan Gamble Latrobe, Jr Wilmington, Del. George Allen Lawrence 740 Flanders St., Portland, Ore. Peter Roy Lawson Hotel Woodward, New York City John Edward Lee 29 Douglas Road, Glen Ridge, N. J. Roland Franklin Lindblade. . .Allendale Farm, Lake Villa, 111. Alexander Wilson Linthieum, 616 Flanders St., Portland, Ore. Walter Clinton Louchheim, Jr 225 W. 86th St., N. Y. City David Hunter McAlpin, 3rd... 68 William St., New York City Edward Scott Macdermott. .437 Park Ave., Woonsocket, R. I. 61 The Princeton Brie- a-ir ac Jfresijman (Class! (Continue )) NAME ADDRESS William Leonard McEwan, Jr., 906 S. Negley Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. Sidney Leoser Mcllvain Reading, Pa. Eric Ebenezer Mackey. . . .314 Hamilton Ave., Trenton, N. J. Joseph McKee Madden Hamburg Place, Lexington, Ky. Herman Albert Manthai 49 Canal St., Port Jervis, N. Y. John Augustus Mapes, 2nd, 140 West 69th St., New York City Joseph Marks 380 Greenwich Ave., Greenwich, Conn. John Hutchison Marsh, 24 Ocean Pathway, Ocean Grove, N. J. Campbell Marshall. . .207 State Bank Bldg., Little Rock, Ark. William Malcolm Mather.. 55 West 55th St., New York City Russell Barnard Mercer... 87 Woodland Ave., Summit, N. J. David Knight Miller 234 S. 2nd Ave., Mt. Vernon, N. Y. Henry Keppele Miller, Jr., 1 109 Franklin St., Wilmington, Del. John Borden Miller Pasadena, Cal. Allan Buxton Mills 120 Broadway, New York City Joseph Albert Minott 163 N. 19th St., Portland, Ore. Charles Wellman Mitchell, Jr., 9 E. Chase St., Baltimore, Md. James Stephens Montgomery, 185 Greenwood Ave., Trenton, N. J. Herbert Garton Moore 802 S. 48th St., Philadelphia, Pa. John Leonard Moore 601 W. 113th St., New York City Percy Tredegar Morgan, Jr., Los Altos, Santa Clara Co., Calif. Tilghman Vickers Morgan. . .1708 Bolton St., Baltimore, Md. Walter Lovette Morgan, 293 S. Franklin St., Wilkes-Barre, Pa. William Seymour Mossman, 1202 W. Wayne St., Fort Wayne, Ind. Stanley Grover Netts...932 W. Columbia St., Springfield, O. John Baldwin O ' Dea. . . .5132 Westminster PI., St. Louis, Mo. Milton Joseph Offutt Highlands, Towson, Baltimore County, Md. James Aloysino O ' Gorman, Jr., 318 W. 108th St., New York City John Raymond O ' Neill. . .653 Jefferson Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. William Hamilton Osborne, Jr., 213 Highland Ave., Newark, N. J. NAME ADDRESS Gilbert Grant Osmer Franklin, Pa. Courtlandt Otis 161 W. 140th St., New York City Peter Pagano 144 Broad St., Ridgewood, N. J Lafayette Page, Jr Woodstock Drive, Indianapolis, Ind Richard Lloyd Page Paoli, Pa Cortland Parker, 3rd Hutton Park, West Orange, N. J D ' Arcy Parrott 104 Mercer St., Princeton, N. J Joseph Saunders Parry, Jr Harrison, N. Y Albert Tuttle Patterson Fair Haven, Vt Arthur Paul, Graver ' s Lane, Chestnut Hill, Philadelphia, Pa Fremont Carson Peck 381 Clinton Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. Allen Vernon Peden 1017 Bell Ave., Houston, Tex Ross Henry Pentz DuBois, Pa Harry Robeson Perley..iS Chester Ave., White Plains, N. Y, Severt Huse Petterson Princeton, Minn Eugene Alexis Maice Piaget, Llewellyn Park, W. Orange, N. J Harmar Denny Pierce Palisade Ave., Englewood, N. J Crozier Leslie Pike 17 New England Ter., Orange, N. J Mahlon Pitney, Jr 1763 R St., Washington, D. C David Henry Plough, Jr 1340 50th St., Brooklyn, N. Y Frederick Suydam Polhemus, 69 Washington St., Newark, N. J Robert Elliot Porteous. . .61 Madison Ave., Jersey City, N. J Robert Monroe Powell Hotel Majestic, New York City William L. Powers 3232 Loveland Rd., Youngstown, O Harold Milton Preston Tulsa, Okla Thomas John Edward Pulling, 203 Calvert Bldg., Baltimore, Md Rav Foote Purdy 811 Lafayette Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y Wilfrid Pyle 2317 W. 17th St., Wilmington, Del Richard Rafalsky 525 West End Ave., New York City Julius Chalmers Ransom Dannemora, N. Y Hugh Burgess Reed, 2nd, Scrub Oaks, Woodland Ave., Plainfield, N. J Frederick Mowry Reinmund Englewood, N. J Peter Earl Rentschler Hamilton, O Louis Charles Reynolds 340 Oxford St., Rochester, N. Y, Philip Douglas Reynolds Bellefonte, Pa 62 The Princeton Brie- a- Brae Jf resfjman Class (Continued) NAME ADDRESS Hallam Maxon Richardson, 211 Clermont Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. Locke Richmond Union College, Schenectady, N. Y. Thomas Hammer Rickert, 1502 Mahantongo St., Pottsville, Pa. Thomas Dudley Riggs, Jr., Roland and Rehr Aves., Roland Park, Md. John Ritchie Ritchie Oak Park, 111. George Appleton Robbins Rose Lane, Haverford, Pa. Alden Rogers 309 Xorth St., Buffalo. N. Y. Cornwell Burnham Rogers 19 E. 56th St., New York City Lauren Eastman Rogers Laurel, Miss. Maurice Rogers, Ashbourne Rd. and Sringe Ave., Ashbourne, Pa. Francis Pels Rosenbaum. .483 West End Ave., New York City Lewis Howard Rothchild, Public Bank, Broadway and 26th St., New York City Carl Dictor Sandell 112 S. 12th St., Newark, N. J Keyes Dan forth Sanders... 70 Saratoga Ave., Yonkers, N. Y Raymond Sanger 1445 Court PI., Denver, Colo William Lyttleton Savage, E. Graver ' s Lane, Chestnut Hill, Philadelphia, Pa Brooke Eltinge Sawyer P. O. B. 555, Santa Barbara, Cal Bernard Karsch Schaefer. .327 W. 108th St., New York City Lawrence Maymard Schanck, 202 Irvington Ave., South Orange, N. J Joseph Howard Schenck Wynnewood, Pa Edward Schickhaus, Jr 25 Van Ness PL, Newark, N. J Paul Siebert Schoedinger. . . .390 E. Broad St., Columbus, O Albert Henry Schroeder, 52 S. Portland Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y Jay Xevin Schroeder, Jr.... 331 E. Orange St., Lancaster, Pa Emil William Albert Schumann, 27 Glenwood Ave., Jersey City, N. J Carl Edward Schuster 769 Lakeview Rd., Cleveland, O John McDowell Sharpe, 3rd, 315 Lincoln Way. East, Chambersburg, Pa Kenneth Marshall Shaw 1840 Gaylord St., Denver, Colo Ernest Mendenhall Sheppard. 914 Delaware Ave., Wilmington, Del Robert Trowbridge Sherman, 1 103 Sheridan Rd., Evanston, 111. George Hayden Sibley 1650 Logan St., Denver, Colo. Louis Hirsh Sichelstiel. . . .943 Sheridan Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. Andrew Lorimer Sim. ...288 Jefferson Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. James Sterett Sloan Luther ville, Md. Dalton Hayes Smith, 2301 Connecticut Ave., Washington, D. C. Harrison Bowne Smith Bougemont, South Side, Charleston, W. Va. Murray Davidson Smith.... 16 Dickinson St., Princeton, N. J. Palmer Smith, Jr Covington, Tenn. Richard Dale Sparhawk 1667 Vine St., Denver, Colo. Elliott Speer Walnut St., Englewood, N. J. Robert Wade Speir, Jr Valier, Mont. Frederick Craig Squier, Jr., 427 St. George ' s Ave., Rahway, N. J. Charles Grant Stachelberg, 50 Central Park West, New York City James Rich Steers, Jr 37 E. 67th St.. New York City Sidney Andrew Stuart, 820 N. Highland Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. Walter Blair Stewart, N. Carolina Pacific Aves., Atlantic City, X. J James Best Strieker. .. 1800 Emerson. S.. Minneapolis, Minn John Kelly Strubing, Jr., 626 Chestnut St., Philadelphia, Pa Harold Amerman Sutphen, 185 Liberty St., Bloomfield, N. J Dexter Preston Swaney..S47 Highland Ave.. Nestfield, N. J John Starr Taber 129 W. Kenzie St., Chicago, 111 Heinrich Clay Taylor Bloomfield, la Livingston Lodge Taylor 1400 E. Broad St., Columbus, O William Reade Kirkland Tavlor, Jr., 49 Wall St.. New York City Francis Cassidy Thomas Port Lavaca, Tex. Gough Winn Thompson, Garrison Post Office, Baltimore County, Md. Henry Burling Thompson, Jr Greenville Post Office, Del. Wallace Miller Thompson, 71 16 Brighton Rd., Ben Avon, Pa. Livingston Ray Thurman Springfield, Ky. Clifford Mitchell Tinkham Upper Montclair, N. J. 63 The Princeton Bric-a-Hrac « Jf resfjman Class (Concluteb) NAME ADDRESS Philip Beardsley Townley, 246 Delavan Ave., Newark, N. J Roger Corning Townsend. . . .71 Cleveland St., Orange, N. J Robert Maurice Trimble, Jr., 7180 Brighton Rd., Ben Avon, Pa George Augustus Trowbridge. .. .Hodge Rd., Princeton, N. J John Frank Tufel Palisade, N. J Henry Brown Turner. . . .472 West End Ave., New York City Hanford Mead Twitchell, 153 South Oxford St., Brooklyn, N. Y Ambrose Henderson Van Alen Rutledge, Pa John Reynolds Van Cleve 333 W. 10th St., Erie, Pa Benjamin Potter Van Court, Jr., 35 W. Fort St., Detroit, Mich Carl Joseph Vanderlin 839 Arch St., Williamsport, Pa Frank Clinton Vehslage 61 Shanley Ave., Newark, N. J Warren Carpenter Vermeule, 63 Harrison St., East Orange, N. J Alvin Robert Vogt 1382 Third Ave., Louisville, Ky London Snowden Wainwright Short Hills, N. J Hayes McClelland Walker Mercersburg, Pa Harold Rollin Wanless 613 York PL, Chicago, 111 Barclay Harding Warburton, Jr Jenkintown, Pa Lot Reznor Ward, Jr., 121 Mt. Herman Way, Ocean Grove, N. J John Graham Watson Centerville, Md Benjamin Franklin Watts, Jr Leesburg, Fla Frederick Edward Weinberg, 465 West End Ave., New York City NAME ADDRESS Arvin Jesse Welch 583 George St., New Haven, Conn. William Gates Wells Platte City, Mo. Edward Hooper Weaver 42 Broadway, New York City Thomas Gay White 2081 Main St., Quincy, 111. Richard Harrison Whitteingham Millburn, N. J. George tranklin Williamson, 2719 Humboldt Ave., Minneapolis, Minn. Ward Meeker Williamson, 88 A Quincy St., Brooklyn, N. Y. Willis Gilbert Wilmott, 421 Hibernia Bank Bldg., New Orleans, La. John Albert Wilson 416 W. 122nd St., New York City Kenneth Orr Wilson 27 North St., Binghamton, N. Y. Linthicum Alexander Wilson, 616 Flanders St., Portland, Ore. David Charles Winebrener Frederick, Md. David Judson Winton. . . .Mt. Curve Ave., Minneapolis, Minn. John Barkley Witherspoon, 4417 St. Charles Ave., New Orleans, La. Elias Wolf Elkins Park, Pa. David Walker Woods Lewistown, Pa. Robert Cushman Woodworth, 2312 First Ave., S., Minneapolis, Minn. John Sartwell Worden, Exchange National Bank, Olean, N. Y. Loren Luke Wylie 519 Grove St., Evanston, 111. Walter Fairfield Wylie 519 Grove St., Evanston, 111. Frederick Yeiser Cincinnati, O. Alexander Clinton Zabriskie 49 Wall St., New York City 64 -SU- gggg The Princeton Bric-a-BracS Ste -- - dgualtfptng i tubents; NAME ADDRESS William MacDonough Agar, 7 l 2 , 31 Nassau St., New York City Kenneth Wellington Alford, 19, 563 3rd St.. Brooklyn, N. Y. Frederick St. Clair Ball, 18 Montgomery, Ala. Laird Howard Barber, Jr., i6 l 2 Mauch Chunk, Pa. Henry Askin Barton, 19, 526 St. Paul Ave., Detroit, Mich. George Kimball Battle, 19, 1601 Washington Ave., St. Louis, Mo. William H. Beatty, i6 4 Richland Lane. Pittsburgh. Pa. Paul Benrimo, 19 573 Warren St., Brooklyn, N. Y. Allen Williams Bevin, i6 4, 135 Union Ave., Jamaica, N. Y. George J. Bippus, 19 Huntingdon, Ind. Frederick McClure Blossom, 19, Central National Bank, Peoria, 111. Lawrence Boardman, 18, 1336 River Blvd., St. Paul, Minn. George Arthur Bond, 19, 309 Hartford Rd., So. Orange, N. J. Raymond H. Bowyers, 18.... 103 Locust St., Massilon. Ohio Johnston Alexander Bowman, 19, 437 Roscoe St., Chicago, 111. Chester Warner Carson, 20, 300 V. Adams St., Chicago, 111. S. T. Cheng, 18 2023 Kalorama Rd.. Washington, D. C. Archibald Crossley, 18 514 E. State St., Trenton, N. J. Samuel Dozier Conant, 18V2, 4479 Washington Ave., St. Louis, Mo. Charles Smith Decker. 19 Brighton, Mich. William Burr Joseph DeLacey, 18, 233 Broadway, New York City Wyllys Dixon, 16H 241 Franklin Place. Flushing, L. I. Risher A. Dunlevy, 7 l 2 . .412 So. Linden St., Pittsburgh, Pa. Webster LeRoy Edgar, 2 Cazenovia, N. Y. Thomas Allen Ellicott, 19 Ruxton, Md. John Butler Faison, 18, 45 Glenwood Ave., Jersey City, N. J. Francis Scott Fitzgerald, 18, 593 Summit Ave., St. Paul, Minn. Henry W. Ford, 17 1st Nat. Bank. Morristown, N. J. G. R. Glorieux, 1714 944 Clinton Ave., Irvington, N. J. Henry Lawrence Grinnell, 16 2 Grand Rapids, Mich. Herbert Hamilton Guild, 17 Topeka, Kan. Maxwell McGauthy Hamilton, 18, 2203 Nebraska Ave., Sioux City, la. Herbert Hogue Harvey, 17 Newton, Pa. E. T. Hastings. 19 203 3rd Ave., Joliet, 111. Daniel Dean Mercer Haupt, 19 Abington, Pa. Ernest M. Hayes, 18, Tsingchowfy, Chantung Province, North China William Esher Hryl, i6J4 Wynnewood, Pa. Hamilton Hicks, 18 Englewood, N. J. Thomas Jones Hilliard, 17J 2, 1410 Olive Bldg., Pittsburgh, Pa. David Scott Hirshberg, i6J4- Grand Ave., Newburg, N. Y. Stanley Gray Horan Bronxville, N. Y. S. C. Hsu, ( y 2 2023 Kalorama Ave., Washington, D. C. John George Humphreys, J7 ' A, 303 S. Dallas Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. Felix Otto Janke, 18 203 W. 9th St., Plainfield, N. J. Graham Todd Johnston, 17 Riverside, 111. Wyskoff Keach, 19 Wichita, Kan. GORDEN COLTERT KlNG, l7 l 2 , Jones Laughlin Steel Co., Pittsburgh, Pa. Leonard Richard Kinnard, 19, 357 Aubrey Place, Wynnewood, Pa. Freeman Boudinot Kirkendall, 19, 3727 Jackson St., Omaha, Neb. William Barthold Kloppenburg, 19, 7 Cambridge Ave., Jersey City, N. J. F. John Kruse, 16% 1254 Broadway, Brooklyn, N. Y. Richard Lamarche, 19 55 E. 65th St., New York City Ira Tullis Lampley, 18 Eufala, Ala. Philip Lane, 18 47 Weston St., Waltham, Mass. F. Benson Leedom, 18 Lawrence Rd., Trenton, N. J. Charles David Lennox Clarkeville, Texas Edward Morton McIlvain, 18. . .71 Broadway. New York City W. H. T. Mackie. t6] 2 ..2217 DeLancey St., Philadelphia, Pa. Robert L. McKinney, i6j4 Pittsburgh, Pa. 65 The Princeton Bric-a-g rac ©ualifptna gkubente, ((Eonclubtb) NAME ADDRESS John McNulty, 18 1344 2nd Ave., Columbus, Ga J. E. Madden, Jr., 17 Hamburg Place, Lexington, Ky Allyn Jay Marsh, 18 n E. 59th St., New York City Alfred Marshall, yy 2 205 W. 57th St., New York City Daniel Leeds Mathews, Jr., 18 Oceanville, N. J Paul Bacon Matlock, 18 2079 Albion St., Denver, Colo George Tyler Molyneux, 18, 933 Windsor Ave., Bristol, Va Kenneth Alexander Morris, 18, 237 W. Duval St., Jacksonville, Fla George Warren Phillips, 18 Helmetta, N. J Andrew Jackson Post, 17; . 101 Park Ave., New York City Ralph Williams Raymond, 17.. 415 Forge St., Aberon, Ohio Cecil Read, 19 313 Laurel Ave., St. Paul. Minn William Carlyle Repass, 18 Russelville, Ky Lee Hutchings Richardson, 18 Olmsted Falls, Ohio Irving Washington Schwab, 19, 506 E. Elm St., Springfield, Mo. John Robert Serena, i6y 2 . .510 Ringgold St., McKeesport, Pa. Frank Morse Shanbacker, 16 2. .1415 Walnut St.. Phila., Pa. Elbert Miller Shelton Statesville, N. C. Edgar Oscar Silver, 18.. 66 E. Walnut St., East Orange, N. J. Eugene C. B. Simonin, 17 St. Martins, Phila., Pa. NAME ADDRESS Casimir Skarzynski, 17 Warsaw, Russian Poland Guy L. Smith, 18 Johnson City, Tenn James Milliken Speers, Jr., 17, 345 5th Ave., New York City John Waggaman Stafford, 18 Huntington, L. I David Durell Stueck, i6J 2, 59 Reservoir Ave., Jersey City, N. J Eugene F. Summers, 16 2.. ioio Moyan Bldg., Buffalo, N. Y Arthur Richmond Taber, 17 , 12 Library Place, Princeton, . N. J Thomas Hunt Talmage, 17.. 22 E. 47th St., New York City Gerald Provost Thomas, 19.. 259 Broadway. Flushing, L. I O. H. VanAlen, 17 Rutledge, Pa E. Melsam Verner, 19 Oakmont, Pa K. P. Wang, 18 2023 Kalorama Ave., Washington, D. C Clarence Arnold Ward, 17 , 428 St. George Ave., Rahway, N. J Herbert W. Warden, Jr., 18 1920 Pine St., Phila., Pa Francis Beacham Whitlock, 17, 307 Franklin St., Marietta, Ohio Charles Oliver Wiegand. .Washington Hotel, St. Louis. Mo. Forest Love Williams, 19.. 1236 Gallia Ave., Portsmouth, O. T. Y. Wu, 18 Kalorama Ave., Washington, D. C. Note — The numerals after each man ' s name signify the class for which he is qualifying. 66 The Princeton Bric-a-grac •6 Wr mm m , ' ' ' ' :«■ The Princeton Brie- a- 6 r ac The Princeton Bric-a-iira.c - x g tf The Princeton Br c.a-Br S i - V8 - % The Princeton Brie- a- B r ac The iPrincetcm Bric-a-Srac 4i ■ The Princeton Bric-a-Hrac ■• ■ ♦ rM . The Princeton Bric-a-grac The Princeton JSric-a.-Brac NASSAU HALL. V. rfCWkl Jf -3«« ggff!J ?£ The Princeton B nc-a-Brac ALYEA GUILBERT BISHOP WILSON BOWER BOARDMAN STURGES PAYSON COMPTON SCHULLINGER TRIANGLE CLUB, 1915-16 W. SCHEERER GOULD BRASHEAR MANDEL SPEERS KANE LATROBE HIRSCHBERG SILVER DICKEY VANDERHOEF WARBURTON MARSH CLARK LLOYD-SMITH HEYNICEK NELSON BOWMAN HASKELL HAYWARD FRIESELL GIVEN KOCK The JPrmcetp-n Bric-a-Srac «« triangle Club OFFICERS, 1915-16 C. Lambert Heyniger, ' 16 President Wilton Lloyd-Smith, ' 16 Manager P. Mackay Sturges, ' 17 Assistant Manager F. Scott Fitzgerald, ' 17 Secretary OFFICERS, 1916-17 Paul D. Nelson, ' 17 President P. Mackay Stukges, ' 17 Manager E. D. McDougal, ' 18 Assistant Manager William McK. Bowman, ' 18 Secretary E. D. Alyea W. Bower E. Ferguson W. H. Friesell, Jr. O. V. Gould B. M. Grant, 3rd A. L. Haskell C. L. Heyniger MEMBERS, 1916 S. L. Hypes C. E. Kock E. H. Lee W. Lloyd-Smith O. Mandel L. G. Payson L. W. Sellers J. M. Speers, Jr. H. B. Vanderhoef, Jr. W. White E. Wilson, Jr. J. P. Bishop W. F. Clarkson S. H. Compton P. B. Dickey L. S. Fowler J. B. Given, Jr. C. Hadden, 3RD W. G. Hayward MEMBERS, 1917 D. S. HlRSCHBERG P. B. Knowlton C. H. Latrobe E. F. MacNichol T. Martin W. B. Moore P. D. Nelson W. Scheerer, Jr. R. N. Schullinger E. O. Silver J. H. Stevens L. Boardman W. McK. Bowman W. R. Brashear A. T. Clark MEMBERS, 1918 R. L. Farrelly F. S. Fitzgerald E. W. Kane E. M. McIlvain, Jr. A. J. Marsh W. J. Warburton MEMBERS, 1919 F. W. GUILBERT 79 - s S The Princeton Br c-Q.mV S - CAST OF THE EVIL EYE - g The Princeton mc-a-Brac Eebteto of tfje triangle Club easion XE of the most successful seasons that the Triangle Cluh has ever been through was broug ht to a close by the last performance of The Evil Eye in Princeton. June toth. During the year twenty-one performances were given, eighteen on the five thousand mile Christmas trip, in thirteen different cities, and the remainder in Princeton, with the exception of the entertainment at Newark. The plot and dialogue were the work of Edmund Wilson, ' 16. and the lyrics of F. Scott Fitzgerald, ' 17, all three of which were very good. However, the real factor which accounted for a great part of the success of the production 81 The Princeton Bric-a-Srac was the music, most of which was written by P. B. Dickey, ' 17, and F. W. Guilbert, ' 19. This was exceptionally good and was said by many to be better than that of the average musical comedy. The staging was excel- lent, due in a great measure to the efforts of Mr. Lewis Hooper, of New York, and to him also must go the credit of the fine work of the chorus. The costumes also were well up to the average. The plot was a clever travesty on mental aphasia, presented in an original and entertaining manner. The situations were amusing and well out of the ordinary and were enhanced by the clever acting of C. L. Hey- niger, ' 16, and A. J. Marsh, ' 18, in the lead parts. In fact C. L. Heyniger, with his fine baritone voice, was without doubt the star of the performance. An exceptionally good bit of feminine characterization was pre- sented by W. McK. Bowman in character of Dulcinea ; Paul Nelson, ' 17, played a conventional part in an unconventional manner, and L. Boardman, ' 18, took the part of Margot, the old Briton Inn Keeper, in a characterization virtually professional. Of the remaining characters, the one most worthy of mention was that of Monsieur Le Mayor, played by O. V. Gould, ' 16, although A. L. Haskell, ' 16, as The Old Light- house Keeper, F. W. Guilbert, ' 19, as Harris, and J. P. Bishop, ' 17, as Mme. Mirliflore took their parts very well. We cannot close this brief review of the Triangle Club season without a word of praise for the orches- tra. Led by O. Mandell, ' 16, this was the most finished that a Triangle performance has ever had, and earned well the praise it received from all the critics who heard it. Jfeical lumbers; ACT ONE 1. Opening Chorus .Music by F. W. Guilbert, ' 19, and Paul Dickey, ' 17 (nightwatchmen, fishermen and villagers) 2. Nobody Home Music by Paul Dickey, ' 17 (MARGOT, THE MAYOR, AND FRANCOIS) 3. On Dreams Alone Music by F. IV. Guilbert, ' 19 (CLAUDE AND CHORUS) 4. The Evil Eye Music by F. W. Guilbert, ' 19 (JACQUES AND CHORUS) 5. What I ' ll Forget Music by Paul Dickey, ' 17 (the girl) 6. Over the Waves to Me Music by Paul Dickey, ' 17 (JACQUES AND THE GIRL) 82 The Princeton Uric-a-Brac ■6 . iWusftcal lumbers ((Eotulubeb) 7. Jump Off the Wall Music by F. W. Cuilbcrt, ' 19 (boileau and chorus) 8. Finale Music by F. W . Cuilbcrt, ' 19, and Paul Dickey, ' 17 ACT TWO 1. Opening Music by F. W . Cuilbcrt, ' 19 (CLAUDE AND CHORUS ) 2. Harris from Paris Musk by Paul Dickey, ' 17 (MR. HARRIS AND CHORUS) 3. Twilight Music by Paul Dickey, ' 17 (boileau) 4. That ' s My Idea of Love Music by H. B. Gordon, Jr., ' 18, and R. IV. Brashcar, ' 18 (the girl) 5. St. Polycarp ' s Day Festival (a) Other Eyes Music by F. W . Cuilbcrt, ' 19 D. L. MATTHEWS AND OCTETTE P. D. NELSON, ' 17, F. W. GUILBERT, ' 19, L. M ' cANDLESS, ' 19, J. B. GIVEN, ' 17, H. W. DOYLE, ' l8, W. B. MOORE, ' 17, C. H. LATROBE, ' 17, AND D. L. MATTHEWS. ' l8 (b) Folk Dance Music by F. W. Cuilbert, ' 19 (c) Specialty Dance Music by Paul Dickey, ' 17 (C. E. KOCK, ' l6, AND H. F. GIBSON, ' 17) 6. The Never. Never Land Music by F. W. Cuilbcrt, ' 19 Wt J J . (QUARTETTE — BOILEAU, CLAUDE, DULCINEA AND THE GIRL) Ihl 7. The Girl of the Golden West Music by F. W. Cuilbert, ' ig (JACQUES AND CHORUS) 8. Play With Me Music by F. W . Guilbert, ' 19 (QUARTETTE — CLAUDE. JACQUES, DULCINEA AND THE GIRL) ALL LYRICS BY F. SCOTT FITZGERALD, ' 17 83 The Princeton Bric-a-grac « triangle Qllub Production Arranged and Staged by Lewis Hooper. Book by Edmund Wilson, ' 16. Lyrics by F. Scott Fitzgerald, ' 17. Music by P. B. Dickey, ' 17, and F. W. Guilbert, ' 19. Cast The Watchman C. H. Latrobe, ' 17 A Lady J. P. Bishop, ' 17 An Enclish Lady H. F. Gibson, ' 17 Count La Rochefoucauld Boileau P. D. Nelson, ' 17 M argot T. Boardman, ' i8 Francois A. L. Haskell, ' 16 Dulcinea W. McK. Bowman, ' i8 Claude J. B. Given, ' 17 Jacques Louche C. Lambert Heyniger, ' 16 The Mayor Ormond Gould, ' 16 The Girl A. J. Marsh, ' 18 A Man Peasant C. Hadden, III, ' 17 A Woman Peasant G. B. McCormick, ' 19 Mr. Harris F. W. Guilbert, ' 19 Madame Mirliflore J. P. Bishop, ' 17 A Smuggler L. D. Seymour, ' 16 A Highway Robber H. W. Doyle, ' 19 84 __ i « ??? r 3 f S TS Ihw nsK €2 JZLThe Wrmc, - £Z te - % Cborua 1 1 ' W. Bower, ' 16 W. H. Friesell, ' 16 S. H. Compton, ' 17 S. I. Cooper, ' 17 PONIES S. D. CONANT, ' l8 R. F. Barnett. ' 19 M. S. Quay, ' 19 SHOW GIRLS D. S. Hirschberg, ' 16 W. T. Stewart, ' i8 J. H. Stevens, ' 17 G. B. McCormick, ' 19 A. B. Carver, ' i8 L. V. Barker, ' 18 MEN G. B. Dancy, ' 16 D. L. Mathews, ' 18 P. B. Knowlton, ' 17 L. D. Seymour, ' 16 H. W. Doyle, ' 19 W. B. Moore, ' 17 R. C. Schmertz, ' 17 J. E. Eddy, ' 17 L. McCandless, ' 19 C. Hadden, 3rd, ' 17 C. F. Kock, ' 16 G. W. H. Smith, ' 18 G. B. McCormick, ' 17 R. N. B. Fay, ' 16 0rcf)estra G. C. Demorest, ' 17 F. W. GUILBERT, ' 19 R. Brashear, ' 18 H. B. Gordon, ' 18 O. Mandel, ' 16, Leader FIRST VIOLINS H. H. Guild, ' 16 W. G. Hayward, ' 17 A. T. Clark, ' 18 C. M. Smith, ' 19 SECOND VIOLINS CELLOS V. G. Link, ' 16 E. D. Alyea, ' 16 E. F. MacNichol, ' 17 S. L. Hypes, ' 16 W. B. Wilson, ' 19 S. W. Landon, ' 17 CLARINET H. R. Spencer, ' 17 VIOLA J. M. Speer s, Jr., ' 16 CORNETS E. W. Kane, ' 18 W. A. Hicks, ' 19 FLUTES L. W. Sellers, ' 16 G. W. Stewart, ' 17 BASS R. N. SCHULLINGER, ' l7 TRAPS R. H. McCague, ' 18 Coach ed by Richard Weaver 85 - .The Princeton Bric-a-Brd S Sfes - TRIANGLE CHORUS The Princeton Bric-a-Brac triangle Club ££ rt)ebule of performances for 1915=16 Princeton, Casino (Undergraduate) December 18th Princeton, Casino (Faculty) December 20th Philadelphia December 22nd Cincinnati December 23rd Louisville December 24th Memphis December 25th St. Louis December 27th St. Paul December 28th Minneapolis December 29th Chicago . .- December 30th taff L. G. Payson. ' 16 Stage Manager W. F. Reynolds, Jr.. ' 17 Assistant Stage Manager H. F. Armstrong, ' 16 Advertising Manager H. B. Vanderhoef, Jr., ' 16 Electrieian Pittsburgh December 31st Baltimore .January 1st Washington January 3rd New York January 4th Englewood January 5th Newark February 19th Princeton. Casino (Pennsylvania Game) May 13th Princeton, Casino (Harvard Game) May 20th Princeton, Casino (Commencement) June 10th E. O. Silver Assistant Electrieian E. H. Lee, ' 16 Property Man E. Ferguson, ' 16 Costumer Costumes by Eaves Costume Company Scenery by Millard H. France Company Wigs by Winkleman Score published by John Church Company Score Cover Design by K. A. Metzerott. ' 16 Poster Design by H. A. Gilland, ' 16 Program Cover Design by K. A. Metzerott, ' 87 The Princeton §3ric-a-@rac « triangle Club cfjebule of performances for 1916=17 Undergraduate Performance (Princeton) ... .December 15th Faculty Performance (Princeton) December 16th Brooklyn December 19th Baltimore December 20th Cleveland December 21 st Detroit December 22nd Chicago December 23rd St. Louis December 25th Springfield December 26th Youngstown December 27th Pittsburgh December 28th Newark December 29th Xew York December 30th Pennsylvania Game Performance (Princeton) May 12th Harvard Game Performance (Princeton) May 26th Commencement Performance (Princeton) June 16th 88 The Princeton Bric-a-Brac g afet? Jf trst ' fcl8 fttfl l ' le P rot l uc tion of the 1916-17 Triangle Club play every effort has been made to depart as radically as possible from aH S ra the stereotyped pattern upon which the majority of recent Triangle shows have been modeled, and which has met such widespread criticism during the past few years. The book, the lyrics, the music, the scenery, the costuming and the production — all have been conceived along entirely new, not to say, unique lines. Through- out the production the authors have co-operated with the officers of the club in a determined effort to give Prince- ton audiences something entirely novel in a university dramatic production. The very structure of Safety First, the book of which has been written by J. F. Bohmfalk, ' 17, and J. Biggs, Jr., ' 18, is a radical departure from the standard type which many Princetonians had come to believe was indispensable to a Triangle Club pro- duction. The action opens with a short Prologue, in which the purpose and ideals of the play are briefly set forth. In the two acts which follow, three scenes are utilized, making a total of four distinct scenes during the show. The most modern methods of theatrical production have been incorporated in the scenery and costuming, with particular attention to brilliant color com- binations and striking effects. In fact, the scenes have been chosen largely with this end in view and, in particular, the first act. which is laid in a futurist art studio, offers splendid opportunities for the display of the unusual color schemes which the pro- ducers have sought. Unlike the typical Triangle Club musical comedy of recent years, Safety First has been given something of a plot, and even attempts in an unobtrusive but determined way to teach its lesson. It has been called a play of the twenty-first century, and it has been designed primarily as a satire upon the radical tendencies of the present day. Futurist art, the modern femi- nist movements and prison reform are all dealt with in a satirical but nevertheless delightful vein, and the play leaves a de- cidedly pleasing impression which does not depend entirely upon the music and dancing. The first act depicts the studio of a futurist artist, Howard by name, who has organized a school of his followers in a small town near Wilmington, Delaware. Howard, aside from his pretense at art, is in reality an ex-convict, and the plot is compli- cated by the early introduction of two of his former associates in Ding Ding prison. Despite the criminal character of her father, Howard ' s daughter is, of course, the beautiful and innocent heroine. Two metropolitan dilettantes find their way to Howard ' s colony, and it is inevitable that one of them, a part taken by the club ' s president, P. D. Nelson, ' 17, should fall in love with the charming girl. An amusing series of complications, with the proverbial happy ending follow, but the element of novelty has been well sustained throughout. F. Scott Fitzgerald, ' 18, is the author of the lyrics, while most of the music is the work of P. B. Dickey, ' 17; F. W. Guilbert, ' 19, and E. Harris, ' 20. The play calls for fifteen cast parts, with the usual number in the girl ' s ami men ' s choruses. 89 The {Princeton Bric-a-grstc ■e 1 3 l ' i 2 vi H B V til i ♦ i 1 4 1 y ■ B m a 4 n i ' k. A i m - . S 5 ' • ■ V V ■ PRINCETON DRAMATIC ASSOCIATION, 1915-16 COOK PRESTON METZEROTT NOWLAND MAC NICHOL MILNE WIIITLOCK MARTIN KAUFFMAN GOULD BISHOP BOWMAN WHEELER (COACH) WHITE SCHULLINGER BROTEMARKLE SCHEERER 3 he 9 rince:on Brie- a-§r ac Princeton ©ramattc gtestoctatton OFFICERS, 1915-16 R. N. Schullinger, 17 President R. A. Brotemarkle, ' 16 Secretary W. White, ' 16 Business Manager E. F. MacXichol, ' 17 Assistant Business Manager L. G. Payson, ' 16 Stage Manager P. R. Scheerer. ' 17 .l ajter of Properties OFFICERS, 1916-17 T. Martin, ' 17 President W. M. Bowman, ' 18 Secretary E. F. MacNichol, ' 17 Business Manager Assistant Business Manager P. R. Scheerer, ' 17 Stage, Manager Master of Properties FACULTY ADVISORY COMMITTEE Prof. G. H. Gerould Prof. R. Heermance Prof. R. K. Root R. A. Brotemarkle O. V. Gould MEMBERS, 1916 C. L. Hey nicer K. A. Metzerott W. B. Knox L. G. Payson W. White J. P. Bishop P. H. Cook MEMBERS, 1917 B. H. Feustman T. Martin E. F. MacNichol P. R. Scheerer R. X. Schullinger F. B. Whitlock Y. M. Bowman MEMBERS, 1918 P. C. Kauffman P. J. Nowland R. G. PRESTON- MEMBER, 1919 J. C. MlLNE, II. 91 - x gZ The Princeton B nc-a-Prac E Princeton dramatic gtesoctatton S in former years, the Princeton Dramatic Association advanced its standard of perfection in producing last year the delicate satire of Moliere ' s Les Femmes Savantes, translated into English by Curtis H. Page. The difficulty in giving to the play that French atmosphere of the seventeenth century, and in drawing the characters with the ease and sureness for which the author is noted, was largely overcome. Excellent ability was shown in inter- preting the feminine characters of Philamente, Belise and Armande (highly aesthetic ladies of the hypocritical fashions of Moliere ' s time). The development of the details of characterization gave success to the play, and much praise is due Mr. Donald Wheeler, who, as coach, emphasized this point. Formerly known as the English Dramatic Association, the organization has now changed its name, because of the fact that its efforts are no longer restricted to the English drama. Besides the customary performance in Alexander Hall, an additional performance was given in New York City. Cast Chrysale F. B. Whitlock, ' iy Philamente T. Martin, ' 17 Ariste R. A. Brotemarkle, ' 16 Belise W. M. Bowman, ' 18 Henriette G. B. McCormick, ' 19 Armande J. C. Milne, II, ' 10 Clitandre P. C. Kauffman, ' 18 TRISSOTIN R. N. SCHULLINGER. ' 17 Vadius O. V. Gould, ' 16 Martine W. B. Knox, ' 17 A Notary R. G. Preston, ' 18 Lepine J. O. Denby, ' 19 Julien P. H. Cook, ' 17 92 V.HIMLIH ' IS -3 gg£?l ? The Princeton Bric-a-Br cJS Sfes - COMBINED MUSICAL CLUBS, 19 16-17 1 — «3 5S — f3 tWto m 1 .The Princeton Bric-a-Brac £ S£5 «9 1 iflusital Clubs rgani?ation OFFICERS J. B. Given, Jr., ' i W. SCHEERER, JR., H. A. White, ' 17 7 ' 17 i ' icc-President L. H. Bieler, ' 18 I ' icc-Prcsident B. F. Bunn, ' 07. ■i. ' 17 Assistant Manager MEMBERS, 1917 J. W. Carpenter S. I. Cooper G. C. Demorest R. Eberstadt J. B. Given, Jr. P. E. Hall S. W. Lanoon R. C. Schmertz W. P. Hamilton C. H. Latrobe R. N. Schullinger E. Harris, 2nd W. B. Moore W. Scheerer, Jr. W. G. Hayward P. D. Nelson 0. H. Smith W. P. Hazelhurst D. M. Paulson G. R. Stewart W. T. Stockton E. L. Strater H. R. Spencer H. R. Watt H. A. White F. S. Whitehause F. B. Wiutlock R. Zeising MEMBERS, 1918 L. V. Barker J. P. Brenner F. S. Clowney S. D. Conant B. H Cory R. Eldridge P. Lane G. A. Machin R. H. McCague D. L. Matthews E. D. McDougal B. S. Michael MEMBERS, 1919 C. Miller R. W. Parker C. K. Wallace W. J. Warburton D. R. Winans C P. Alyea H. K. Bulkley G. C Buzby M. G. Lharles F. B. Christmas E. N. Cooper, Jr. C. Cudlipp H. W. Doyle H. A. Etheridge E. H. Ludlow E. D. Finney L. McCandless F. W. Guilbert E. B. McDougal E. T. Hastings MEMBERS, 1920 H. W. McGraw H. K. Martin R. W. Shannon C. M. Smith, 3RD J. I. Taylor R. W. Thorington S. Abbett D. F. Bigelow S. Chapin R. Drowne G. M. English J. R. KlMBARK G. Latrobe. Jr. F. S. Polhemus J. S. Montgomery H. M. Preston W. L. Morgan 95 A. Rogers R. W. Speir D. P. Swaney J. S. Worden The Princeton JSric-a-Brac Cfje iWugtcal CluH 1915=16 ' f NDER the direction of Mr. C. E. Burnham and Mr. R. L. Weaver, the University Musical Clubs enjoyed one of the longest and one of the most successful seasons since their organization. Nine concerts in all were given, including joint concerts with the Harvard and Yale Clubs. On the annual Easter trip which took the clubs as far south as Hot Springs, Virginia, the program was greeted by enthusiastic audiences at all of the five engagements. The feature of every program given by the clubs was the solo work of C. L. Heyniger, ' 16. leader of the Glee Club, while Mr. Weaver ' s arrangement of the Harlequin Rag ' ' proved particularly popular on the trip. The program follows : i. Harlequin Rag — Arr. by R. L. Weaver Banjo Club 2. Bedouin Love Song — Foote Glee Club 3. Medley — Arr. by R. L. Weaver Mandolin Club 4. Songs of Waikiki — Selected R. L. Xourse, ' 17 5. a. Oh ! Mistress Mine — Lester Glee Club b. The Steps Song — E. T. Carter, ' 88 Glee Club 6. The Poet and the Coon — Arr. by R. L. Weaver. Banjo Club 7. a. The Shoogy Shoo — Ambrose... ., b. De Coppah Moon — Shelley P. D. Nelson, ' 17; . B. Given, Jr., ' 17 F. B. Christmas, ' 19; C. H. Latrobc, ' 17 8. Selections from The Evil Eye Mandolin Club 9. Blow, Blow, Thou Winter Wind — J. Sarjeant, C. L. Heyniger, ' 16 10. a. Princeton Forward March — K. S. Clark, ' 05. Glee Club b. Old Nassau — C. A. Langlotz Glee Club SCHEDULE OF CONCERTS 1915 November 5 — Joint Concert with Harvard Musical Clubs, Princeton November 12 — Joint Concert with Yale Musical Clubs, New Haven 1916 February 21 — Washington ' s Birthday Concert Princeton 1916 April 19 Paterson, N. J April 20 Charleston, W. Va April 21 White Sulphur Springs, W. Va April 22 Hot Springs. Va April 24 Atlantic City, N. J June 12 — Commencement Concert Princeton 96 The Princeton Bric-a-Brac intercollegiate ( lee Clufc Content ;5 §S§|LT HOUGH competing for the first time, the Princeton Glee Club was awarded first place over the representa- L s=5 tives of five other colleges in the third annual Intercollegiate Glee Club Contest, held in Carnegie Hall, New York, i Jl on March 4, 1916. Honorable mention was made of the work of the Pennsylvania State College organization, also a new competitor, by the three eminent composers and musical critics, Mr. Victor Herbert, Mr. Louis Koem- menich and Mr. John Hyatt Brewer, who composed the board of judges. As a result of the competition, the handsome loving cup which has been offered by the University Club of New York to the college winning the contest three times, will remain in Pr inceton ' s possession for a year. Harvard and Dart- mouth each have one leg on the cup. A silver baton was also awarded to C. L. Heyniger, ' 16, in his capacity as leader of the winning club. According to the regulations of the contest, each competing club is required to sing four songs : first, a humorous piece, chosen by the individual clubs; second, a serious selection assigned by the committee in charge of the competition; third, a col- lege song: and fourth, a selection to be- given by all the clubs in unison. Although these requirements were chosen to exhibit the versatility of the clubs, the decision of the judges was based primarily on the rendition of the second number, McDowell ' s difficult War Song. Following the award of the judges, all the competitors joined under the leadership of Mr. Arthur D. Woodruff, of the University Club of New York, in singing Kremser ' s Hymn of Thanksgiving. The following colleges were represented by clubs: Columbia, Dartmouth, Harvard, Pennsylvania, Penn State, Princeton. The Princeton Club ' s program was as follows: a. The Skippers of St. Ives Schnecker b. The War Song McDowell c. The Steps Song Ernest T. Carter, ' 88 d. A Prayer of Thanksgiving Kremser 97 The Princeton Bric-a-Srac MATTHEWS SPENCER MILLER GUILBERT SWANEY ALYEA PRESTON HAZELHURST WINANS WARBURTON SMITH HAYWARD C. LATROBE GLEE CLUB, 1916-17. BIGELOW MACHIN CUDLIP BRENNER WATT CHRISTMAS WALLACE MONTGOMERY SHANNON WHITLOCK CHARLES SCHULLINGER DEMOREST G. LATROBE BARKER CONANT MICHAEL GIVEN BURNHAM (COACIl) MOORE SCHMERTZ PAULSON The Princeton Bric-a-grac James Bartley Given. Jr., ' 17 Leader FIRST TENORS Charles Egbert Burxham Coach M. G. Charles, ' 19 R. Eberstadt, ' 17 F. W. Guilbert, ' 19 W. G. Hayward, ' 17 H. Y. McGraw, ' 19 J. S. Montgomery, ' 18 P. D. Nelson, ' 17 A. M. Preston, ' 20 R. W. Shannon, ' 19 O. H. Smith, ' 17 L. V. Barker, ' 18 S. D. Conant, ' 18 R. P. Hazelhorst, ' 17 G. A. Machin. ' 18 B. S. Michael, ' 18 SECOND TENORS R. C. Schmertz, ' 17 D. P. SWANEY, ' 20 C. K. Wallace, ' 18 W. J. Warburton, ' 18 FIRST BASSES SECOND BASSES E. D. Alyea, ' 19 D. F. Bigelow, ' 20 F. B. Christmas, ' 19 C Cudlipp, ' 19 G. C. Demorest, ' 17 H. W. Doyle, ' 19 W. P. Hamilton, ' 18 C. T. Hastings, ' 19 L. McCandless, ' 19 W. B. Moore, ' 17 R. N. Schullinger, ' 17 H. R. Spencer, ' 17 H. R. Watt, ' 17 J. P. Brenner, ' 18 F. S. Clowney, ' 18 R. L. Eldredge, ' 18 E. D. Finney, ' 19 C. H. Latrobe, ' 17 G. Latrobe. Jr., ' 20 D. L. Matthews, ' 18 Clarke Miller, ' 18 D. McK. Paulson, ' 17 R. W. Speir, ' 20 F. B. Whitlock. ' 17 D. R. Winans, ' 18 99 The Princeton Brie- a- Brae MANDOLIN CLUB ETHERIDGE MARTIN LANDON POLHEMUS DROWN E ROGERS MORGAN K I M HARK TAYLOR M ' CAGUE STOCKTON BULKLEY WORDEN C. SMITH MICHAEL LANE CHAPIN CORY Will TEH OUSE WHITE CARPENTER SCHEERER Z EI SING S. I. COOPER HALL E. STRATER COOPER ABBETT PARKER HAYWARD LUDLOW - U«««gggg S The Princeton Br c- -B SS % ? 2- MRNDOL1N CLUB William Scheerer, Jr.. ' 17 Leader Richard L. Weaver .Director FIRST MANDOLINS S Abbett, ' 20 S. I. Ccoper, ' 17 F. S. Polhemus, ' 20 F. S. Whitehouse, ' 17 H. K. Bulkley. 19 R. H. McCague, ' 18 C. M. Smith, 3rd, ' 19 R. Ziesinc, Jr., ' 17 J. W. Carpenter. ' 17 R. W. Parker, ' i8 W. T. Stockton. ' 17 SECOND MANDOLINS E. N. Cooper, Jr., ' 19 P. E. Hall. ' 17 W. L. Morgan, ' 20 B. H. Cory, ' 18 J. R. Kimbark, ' 20 J. S. Worden, ' 20 FLUTES H. A. Etheridge, Jr., ' 19 E. H. Ludlcw. ' 19 G. R. Stewart, Jr., ' 17 GUITARS S. Chapin, ' 20 P. Lane. ' 18 A. A. Rogers, ' 19 J. H. L. Taylor, ' 19 H. R. Drowne, ' 20 H. K. Martin, ' 19 E. H. L. Strater, ' 17 R. W. Thorington. ' 19 G. M. English, ' 20 H. A. White, ' 17 VIOLINS CELLO W. G. Hayward. ' 17 B. S. Michael, ' 18 S. W. Landon, ' 17 101 The Princeton Bric-a-Brac BANJO CLUB BUZBV MARTIN POLHEMUS DROWNE ROGERS MORGAN KIMBARK ABBETT D. MILLER STOCKTON BULKLEY WORDEN CHAPIN CORY BOARDMAN 1-ROST WHITEHOUSE CARPENTER SCHEERER WHITS ZEISING S. I. COOPER M ' CAGUE HALL LUDLOW COOPER ETHERIDGE M DOUGAL SMITH HARRIS E. D. M ' DOUGAL PARKER The Princeton Bric-a-Srac 13 BANJO CLUBl Harwood A. White, ' 17 Leader Richard L. Weaver Director S. Chapin. ' 20 G. C. Buzby, ' 19 BANJOS D. B. McDoucal, -19 E. D. McDougal, ' 18 H. A. White, ' 17 H. K. Bulkley, ' 19 E. X. Cooper, ' 19 H. R. Drowne. ' 20 S. Abbett, ' 20 J. W. Carpenter, ' 17 S. I. Cooper, ' 17 BANJOLAS H. K. Martin. ' 19 F. S. Polhemus, ' 20 R. W. Parker. ' 18 A. A. Rcgers, ' 19 MANDOLINS B. H. Cory, ' 18 P. E. Hall. ' 17 J. R. Kimbark. ' 20 W. L. Morgan, ' 20 C. M. Smith, 3rd, ' 19 W. T. Stockton, ' 17 W. Scheerer, Jr., ' 17 J. S. WORDEN. ' 20 F. S. Whitehouse, ' 17 R. Ziesing, Jr.. ' 17 PIANO F. W. Guilbert, 19 TRAPS R. H. McCague, ' 18 BASS VIOL E. Harris, ' 20 FLUTE H. A. Etheripge, ' 19 103 The Princeton Brie- a- Brae ORPHIC ORDER. ROCHE RODGERS LAN DON SITTERLY CRISCITIELLO CAMERON MICHAEL MIODLEDITCH FA1SON SMITH SKINNER WALLACE SCHEERER MAC NICHOL CHESTER HAYWARD The Princeton !Sric-a.-E3ra.c W. SCHEERER, Jr., ' 17 T. B. Faison, q. W. G. Hayward, ' 17 M. Criscitiello, ' 17 B. S. Michael, ' 18 C. M. Smith. 3rd, ' 19 E. P. D. Alvea. ' 19 H. H. Guild, ' 17 G. R. Stewart, Jr., ' 17 R. W. van Tuyl, ' 18 Horn N. M. Chester, ' 17 J. M. Speers, ' q ORPHIC ORDER! OFFICERS W. Scheerer, Jr.. ' 17 President E. F. MacNichol, ' 17 Leader N. M. Chester, ' 17 Manager C. K. Wallace, ' 18 4ssistant Manager G. R. Pettf.rson, ' 19 Librarian MEMBERS Violins ' Celli H. H. Brakeley, Jr., ' 18 T. M. Foster, ' 17 S. W. Landon, Jr., ' 17 A. Rodger, ' 20 C. K. Wallace, ' 18 S. H. Petterson, ' 20 B. W. Sitterly, ' 17 W. C. Dunn, ' 19 Bass Viol P. M. Chamberlain, j 2o E. Harris, ' 20 W. I. Harris, ' 20 H. Greason, ' 18 Clarinets H. S. Roche, ' 18 H r Spencer, ' 17 W. S. Mossman, ' 20 G. R. Petterson, ' 19 T. G. White, ' 20 E. H. Ludlow, ' 19 Trumpets Timpani W. A. Hicks, ' 19 B. Peyton, ' 17 Trombone Percussion Accessories W. B. Cameron, ' 18 S. G. Frantz, ' i8 Violas Pianist F. A. Middleditch, ' 18 G. Skinner, ' 19 Flutes 105 The Princeton Bric-a-grac Ckari.es Egbert Burnham Choirmaster L. H. Richardson, ' 19 Organist H. G. Hayward, ' 17 M. G. Charles, ' 19 FIRST TENORS O. H. Smith, ' 17 F. W. Guilbert, ' 19 W. M. Weidman, ' 17 R. W. Shannon, ' 19 S. Bush, ' 17 S D. Conant, ' 18 R. C. Schmertz, ' 17 J. A. Machin, ' 18 SECOND TENORS L. V. Barker, ' 18 B. S. Michael, ' if C. S. Richardson, ' 19 W. P. Hamilton, ' 17 H. R. Spencer, ' 17 FIRST BASSES E. P. Alyea, W. B. Moore, 19 J. S. Woodbridge, ' 18 H. M. Clark, ' 19 R. N. SCHULLINGER, ' l7 C. CUDLIPP, ' 19 C. H. Latrobe, ' 17 C. Miller, ' 18 SECOND BASSES F B. Whitlock, ' 17 D. R. Winans, ' 18 J. P. Brenner, ' 18 E. D. Finney. ' 19 106 -% zZ£¥ The Princeton trie- a- Brae THE DAILY PRIN CETONIAN BOARD BIELER PARKER CRO M W ELL ARROTT WALES BONBRIGHT HAYES CRESSWELL CHAPIN FISH BORN KTRKLAND STRATER VOGT CHERRY BROWN HEY WOOD NICHOLAS LUKENS M KAIG The Princeton Bric-a-Srac ©atlp $rincetonian CHAIRMAN John S. Nicholas, ' 17 MANAGING EDITOR Harvey M. Heywood. ' 17 BUSINESS MANAGER Lewis N. Lukens. Jr.. ' 17 EDITORIAL CHAIRMAN Alexander L. McKaic, ' 17 EDITORS C. E. Brown. Jr., ' 17 H. Chapin, ' 17 V. Drorbaugh, ' 17 K. S. Wales, ' 17 C. R. Arrott, ' 18 C. W. BONBRICHT. ' l8 J. Cromwell, ' 18 J. P. Fishburn, ' 18 P. Parker. Jr., ' 18 E. L. Vogt. ' 18 R. Cresswell, 3RD, ' 19 W. A. KlRKLAND, ' ig H. H. Strater, ' 19 ASSISTANT BUSINESS MANAGER L. H. Bieler, ' 18 ASSISTANT CIRCULATION MANAGER G. D. Cherry, ' 18 109 The Princeton Bric-a-Brac THE TIGER BOARD, 1916 WHITE BOYD SMITH COMSTOl K BOARDMAN FOSTER SHOTWELL HERENDBEN SLOAN E STERICKER WILDE CARPENTER BOADWAY JACKMAN SCHMON a ■iP fr: Princeton Sric-a-g - F - Tfe- ,  ««« a- _ «s i = s ne rgLC cag - a==-3 . r Princeton l tger MANAGING EDITOR BUSINESS MANAGER Walter M. Boadway, ' 17 John- W. Carpenter, ' 17 ART EDITOR CIRCULATION MANAGER Alan Jackman, ' 17 liiismr ss Drpnrtmnit Arthur A. Schmon, ' 17 A. L. Weil, Jr. C. T. White, ' 18 (Cbttorial Department E. G. Herendeen. ' 18 J. M. Foster, ' 17 L. Boardman. ' 18 D. R. Shotwei.l, ' 18 A. G. Gennert, ' 17 J. C. Boyd, ' 18 F. A. Comstock, ' ig G. B. Stericker, ' 17 R. L. Bruch, 18 J. V. Xewlin, ' 19 11! - ggf The Princeton Bric-a-Br rfS Sfe -ff BIGGS NICHOLAS NASSAU LITERARY MAGAZINE BOARD NEWLIN BAYLY m ' nichol BISHOP GARV HICKS m ' kaig - U- ggg S the Princeton Bric-a-BracS Sfe5 ,J - Jlaggau Hiterarp Jflaga tne MANAGING EDITOR John Peale Bishop, Jr., ' 17 EDITORS Alexander L. McKaig, ' 17 F Scott Fitzgerald, ' 18 Charles E. Bayley, Jr.. ' 18 John S. Nicholas, ' 17 John Biccs, Jr.. ' 18 John V. Newlin, ' 19 Business Manager Edward F. McNichol, ' 17 Assistant Business Manager Hamilton Hicks, 18 Circulation Manager James M. Garvey, ' 17 113 The Princeton Bric-a-Prac %Z THE PICTORIAL REVIEW BOARD BOADWAY M CHESNEY The Princeton Bric-a-Brac Princeton pictorial etteto EDITOR-IN-CHIEF Edward Durell, ' 17 PHOTOGRAPHIC NEWS DEPARTMENT Donald S. McChesney, ' 17, Manager Luther G. Jones, ' 17 EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT Edward Harris, 2nd, ' 17 Richard H. Ritter, ' 17 Leo V. Barker, ' 18 Warren W. Hampe, ' 18 BUSINESS DEPARTMENT Walter M. Boadway, ' 17, Business Manager William B. Barnitz, ' 17 Harold S. Greason, ' 18, Circulation Manager 115 The Princeton Bric-a-Prac 1917 BRIC-A-BRAC BOARD. OLIPHANT JACKSON MILES ZEISING DUNN COPELAND -S gggg The Princeton Bric-a-gracS Sfes - - tlTfje Princeton pric=a=Prac 7olume XLI Class of Jltnetten JMnbreb anb £s ebenteen THE BOARD Henry Teasdale Dunn, Florida, Chairman Thomas Henry Miles, Jr., Pennsylvania, Business Manager Norris Dean Jackson, Minnesota, Photographic Editor Elkins Oliphant, New Jersey Alfred Thomas Copeland, Ohio ART EDITORS Walter Melville Boadway, California John Miley Foster, New Jersey ASSISTANT BUSINESS MANAGER Richard Ziesing, Jr., Ohio 117 The Princeton Bric-a-grac PRESS CLUB. PARKER MACHIN MATTHEWS HARGREAVES RITTER CHRISTIE DEMPSEY BLACK DUNN -3  g2gg S The Princeton Bric-a-Br cJl Sfes -—?- $re££ Club OFFICERS W. L. Dempsey, ' 17 President W. T. Black, ' 17 Secretary-Treasurer MEMBERS, 1917 W. T. Black W. L. Dempsey H. T. Dunn R. H. Ritter MEMBERS, 1918 A. E. Christie T. C. Matthews A. L. Machin P. Parker, Jr. MEMBERS, 1919 M. G. Charles P. L. Hargreaves The Press Club is an undergraduate organization whose individual members are correspondents for the more import- ant Metropolitan dailies. All the news of Princeton goes out to the press of the country through this organization. 119 -3« gg£gl S The Princeton Sric-a-Br s PRINCETON UNIVERSITY PRESS The Princeton JSric-a-Brac Princeton Umbersrttp $re££ OFFICERS Charles Scribner, ' 75 President M. Taylor Pyne. ' 77 Vice-President Clarence B. Mitchell, ' 89 Treasurer C. Whitney Darrow, ' 03 Secretary-Manager COUNCIL George A. Armour, ' 77 Robert Bridges, ' 79 George W. Burleigh, ' 92 C. Whitney Darrow, ' 03 Parker D. Handy, ' 79 John G. Hibben, ' 79 Charles W. McAlpin. ' 88 Clarence B. Mitchell, 89 M. Taylor Pyne, ' 77 Archibald D. Russell Arthur H. Scribner, ' 81 Charles Scribner, ' 75 Augustus Trowbridge Andrew F. West, ' 74 Charles Scribner. Jr., ' 13 Parker D. Handy, ' 79 Clarence B. Mitchell, ' 89 TRUSTEES M. Taylor Pyne, ' 77 Archibald D. Russell Charles Scribner. 75 The Princeton University Press maintains a publishing and printing establishment in the interests of the University. In addition to its publishing business the University Press also prints and distributes the University official and student publi- cations, and does practically all of the printing work for the various departments of the University. The University Press building and its equipment are the gift of Mr. Charles Scribner. of the Class of Eighteen Seventy- five. 121  S __fffr f t ff LThe Princeton I : J W 11- e :t=_3 « ' Jformer Prtc=a =prac Officers; YEAR VOL. CHAIRMAN BUSINESS manager art editor 1876 I A. B. Turnure, ' 76 1876-77 2 P. R. Pyne, ' 78 1877-78 3 C. Talcott, ' 79 1878-79 4 D. M. Massie, ' 80 1879-80 5 F. G. Langdon, ' 81 I880-8I 6 E. B. Critchlow, ' 82 l88l-82 7 O. H. Grouse, ' 83 1882-83 8 C. T. MacMullin, ' 84 1883-84 9 J. K. MUMFORD, ' 85 1884-85 10 M. Halstead, ' 86 1885-86 11 J. W. Elder, ' 87 1886-87 12 J. H. Pershing, ' 88 1887-88 13 R. E. Speer, ' 89 1888-89 14 J. M. Yeakle, ' 90 1889-9O 15 C. F. Howell, ' 91 189O-9I 16 V. L. Collins, ' 92 • 189I-92 17 H. R. Daniels, ' 93 1892-93 18 M. H. Sicard, ' 94 1893-94 19 T. S. Huntington, ' 95 1894-95 20 C. B. Bostwick, ' 96 1895-96 21 W. S. Harris, ' 97 1896-97 22 R. D. Dripps, ' 98 1897-98 23 George K. Reed, ' 99 1898-99 24 Charles Yeomans, ' 00 1899-OO 25 Walter E. Hope, ' 01 John L. Rogers 1900-01 26 Otto T. Mallery, ' 02 Charles A. Cass IQOI-02 27 Franklin L. Wright, ' 03 Frank H. Little ICO2-O3 28 Edward McP. Armstrong, ' 04 Harold C. Smith 1903-04 29 Kenneth S. Clark, ' 05 Henry Swan Henry O. Milliken I9O4-O5 30 Singleton H. Baird, ' 06 Paul S. Seeley Kenneth S. Goodman I905-O6 3i Charles T. Larzelere, ' 07 Newell W. McIntyre Richard S. Barbee 1506-07 32 Robert C Clothier, ' 08 Thomas Taliaferro Lawrence M. Thompson 1907-08 33 Earle T. Holsapple. ' 09 Herbert A. Boas John I. Scull I908-O9 34 James S. Dennis, 2nd. ' 10 William H. Flammer James Boyd, Jr. 1909-10 35 Ira F. Bennett, ' ii Louis Stewart, Jr. Theadore S. Paul I9I0-II 36 George W. Bunn, Jr., ' 12 Carl W. Jones Jacob Riegel, Jr. I9II-I2 37 Earl L. Douglas, ' 13 Samuel D. Bell Warren R. Smith 1912-13 38 John M. Cald, ' 14 John H. O ' Neill A. C. M. Azoy, Jr. 1913-14 39 Donald Myrick, ' 15 James F. Adams Robert H. Scannell 1914-15 40 James R. Stockton, ' 16 John M. Raymond, Jr. Henry G. Gilland I9I5-I6 41 Henry T. Dunn, ' 17 Thomas H. Miles, Jr. Walter M. Boadway NOTE: The first board to elect a business manager was that of the class of ' 01. Th ; first to have an art editor was the class of ' 05- . The Princeton Uric-a-Brac Princeton lumm OTieefelp EDITOR Edward M. Xorris, ' 95 ASSOCIATE EDITORS Professor Christian Gauss Donald Grant Herring, ' 07 Bernard- S. Horne. ' 90 EDITOR OF THE UNDERGRADUATE WEEK H. T. Dunn, 17 Walter E. Hope, ' 01 BOARD OF DIRECTION Charles W. Halsey, ' 98, Chairman V. Lansing Collins, ' 92 Charles Scribner, ' 75 C. Whitney Darrow, ' 03 BUSINESS MANAGER C. Whitney Darrow, 03 123 The Princeton Bric-a-Prac ■s 5 z x w The Princeton Bric-a.-grac3 CLIO HALL i — -  — - 3 gg SM. Princeton Bric-a- BF Sfe ■   _ $ y Trmm.r ' Cliosopinc H octetj FOUNDED 1765 Officers Chairman w . B. Barnitz, ' 17 . ,W. A. Eddy, ' 17 Jfacultp Member S. L. Harris, ' 17 F. F. Abbott E. S. Corwin J. G. Hun E. P. Northrup J. D. Spaeth J. W. Basore H. F. Covington T. W. Hunt C. G. Osgood C. W. Spencer H. H. Bender U. Dahlgren E. W. Kemmerer F. L. Patton D. R. Stuart M. F. Blau R. Davis W. Koren W. K. Prentice H. W. Thayer A. A. Bowman L. S. Dederick W. Libbey W. M. Rankin H. D. Thompson C. F. Brackett G. W. Elderkin A. W. Long E. C. Richardson H. van Dyke R. E. Briinnow H. B. Fine E. H. Loomis E. Y. Robbins P. van Dyke D. L. Buffum H. J. Ford H. C. McComas. Jr. T. DeC. Ruth O. Veblen E. Cary C. Gauss C. R. Maclnnes R. M. Schoon W. U. Vreeland V. L. Collins W. Gillespie M. MacLaren S. Shellabarger H. C. Warren K. T. Compton W. B. Harris D. Magie. Jr. H. R. Shipman T. J. Wertenbaker E. G. Conklin R. Heermance W. F. Magie E. B. Smith A. F. West F. H. Constant D. G. Herring L. H. Miller H. S. S. Smith VV. F. Willoughby H. L. Cooke J. P. Hoskins W. S. Myers X. Kemp Smith W. W. Willoughby H. B. Cornwall G. A. Hulett F. Neher igir T. H. Anderson J. F. Bohmfalk P. H. Cook C. H. Folwell. Jr. R. P. Hazlehurst C. F. Arnold Y. H. Bovey A. T. Copeland E. H. Forster R. E. Heimbach M. J. Averbeck, Jr. P. H. Buchanan H. L. Cory J. H. Frost C. E. Heimerdinger W. B. Barnitz C. H. Burchenal M. Criscitiello. Jr. 1. W. Gailev F. M. Heimerdinger P. T. Barnum D. R. Burnes D. A. Depue R. S. Gerstell I. R. Higgins A. Behrer S. Bush P. B. Dickev J. B. Given, Jr. C. C. Highley T. J. Bettes J. W. Carpenter A. W. Durell. Jr. H. F. Gibson L. C. Hiltebeitel C. M. Betts J. R. Carty E. Durell G. R. Glorieux H. L. Hilton-Green N. P. Bevin, 2nd T. R. Chamberlain M. L. Edgar J. R. Hardin, Jr. T. Q. Home P. G. Bigler D. D. Chaplin. Jr. M. S. Edgar S. E. Harris T. B. Hunt T. P. Bishop N. M. Chester R. N. Errington W. B. Harris. Jr. W. S. Hurlock, Jr. H. A. Bluntschli J. H. Closson. 3rd J. W. Everitt G. F. Hasslacher A. Jackman W. M. Boadway H. D. Comey W. H. Floto 127 W. G. Hayward D. E. Jackman, Jr. ■rtC ?r c U tZ yftyttnr - « J £ SgLxte__ Princeton Brie- a, graciiSfe - w $ xtmt ? ' Clto5opl)ir s ocifti (Conttnueb) L. G. Jones T. H. Miles, Jr. L. Phillips B. W. Sitterly H. L. Vail A. R. Knott E. J. Miller R. A. Pierce H. H. Smith 0. H. Van Alen G. F. Kurzman W. B. Moore R. T. Pilling 0. EL Smith B. M. Van Cleve S. W. Landon A. Nacht S. L. Reed E. W. Springs J. W. Voorhis H. L. Laney W. H. Neely A. V. Savage R. W. Stoeltzing K. S. Wales C. F. LaTour P. D. Nelson R. N. Schullinger P. M. Sturges H. R. Watt W. L. Lowrie, Jr. E. Oliphant R. C. Schmertz E. Taylor, Jr. F. S. Whitehouse L. N. Lukens D. W. Orrick C. G. Semmens M. M. Taylor J. Wickes W. G. McAdoo, Jr. J. D. Paul H. F. Simon C. B. Ten Eyck E. T. Wolfe R. H. McCann D. Pettit J. F. Singleton M. L. Turrentine R. Ziessing, Jr. R. J. McClintock iaiB M. M. Baker W. B. Chamberlain, Jr. W. F. Folmer W. H. Labouisse S, E.. Palmer J. H. Barret G. D. Cherry E. D. Foster L. V. Lamar A. K. Poole C. E. Bayly A. E. Christie L. A. France P. B. Lee H. C. Porter W. L. Blayney F. S. Clowney S. G. Frantz R. B. Lutz W. S. Schwabacher L. Blumberg E. M. Crane I. Goldstein H. S. Lyon S. D. Sherrerd L. C. Bradley, Jr. E. S. Crocker, Jr. B. Gordon J. S. McWilliams D. R. Shotwell H. H. Brakeley. Jr. E. W. Currie G. C. Gregory F. Marburv C. R. Smith J. C. Buchanan H. B. Cushman G. W. Griffith T. C. Matthews I. H. Stewart H. J. Burch A. B. Cutting I. A. Guerin T. C. Meek J. C. Taylor, Jr. G. C. Burkert W. B. J. DeLacy H. C. Harrison, Jr. C. Miller W. J. Thomas L. M. Butts H. M. Dubbs E. Hazard Z. R. Miller F. B. Wille W. B. Cameron J. G. Elder H. L. Heimerdinger F. L. Moore D. R. Winans N. I. Campbell T. S. Elliot W. A. Huston D. A. D. Ogden S. L. Wright. Jr. A. B. Carver J. P. Fishburn B. Kazanjian, Jr. 1313 J. H. Ackerman R. M. Bitten J. G. Campbell J. O. Denby H. M. Fish M. R. Anspach G. R. Bleakley S. Carkener, 2nd E. R. Dibrell M. Fletcher N. H. Aronsohn L. L. Bleecker F. B. Carter H. W. Doyle G. A. Frankel W. W. Arrowsmith F. M. Blossom L. M. Cerf, Jr. S. W. Dreyfuss A. A. Fraser H. M. Baer B. H. Bostick S. N. Comly L. T. DuBois H. S. Frazier G. O. Bailey A. R. Bray E. N. Cooper R. H. Dunn S. G. Freck H. A. Barton P. A. Bream F. S. Cooper W. A. Eddy W. A. Garrigues, Jr. G. L. T. Bauhan R. H. Brindle I. J. Cox W. J. B. Edgar W. S. Gray. Jr. E. S. Bayer, Jr. J. E. Bryan C. Cudlipp H. A. Etheridge, Jr. W. D. Griffiths P. Benrimo P. F. Cabell C. S. Decker 128 J. T. Fairgrieve T. S. Hargest The Princeton Bric-a-Srac « Cltostopljic £s ocietp (Conclubeb) N. W. Haring E. T. Hastings C. A. Hasslacher C. E. Hillegas, Jr. A. E. Hilton J. G. Howley W. D. F. Hughes A. H. Jennings W. C. Kirbach P. Kissan H. D. Knower P. M. Kretchmann J. D. Kuser R. P. Lamont, Jr. G. B. Larkin D. K. Luke R. W. McKnight J. D. McMaster C. F. McQuiston D. Mandel A. W. Marks H. K. Martin C. O. Mayer, Jr. L. P. Mirsky A. M. Montgomery S. Mortimer E. W. Munsell VV. K. Nimick P. W. Orth R. J. T. Paul G. D. Peters M. G. Potter A. Preyer P. W. Price E. H. Proudfit W. A. Putnam, Jr. J. G. Rothermel G. B. Ruth R. C. Sailer H. R. Samstag E. C. Savage J. F. Savidge W. W. Scudder S. B. Self M. V. Seymour, Jr. A. Shaw, Jr. F. W. Sidler G. D. Skinner C. Sloane R. E. Sniffen F. F. Snyder T. W. Spencer, Jr. D. M. Street C. F. A. Streichenberg J. I. Taylor W. C. Thomas F. L. Tracy I. C. Trostle L. W. Van Meter A. Van Wyck E. M. Verner H. W. Warren S. L. Webster T C. West H. L. Wheeler, Jr. E. Van D. Wight, Jr. A. E. Windels W. W. Wren M. L. Aaron D. C. Anderson H. J. Ash G. V. Azoy H. D. Baker A. P. Baskerville G. W. Bauernschmidt H. B. Blauvelt C. A. Brandon J. Brook, Jr. IT. F. Butler H. R. Butler A. S. Callisen C. E. Cameron B. W. Cohn K. B. Conger, Jr. H. P. Connelly F. R. Cook J. B. Cowan, Jr. B. F. Crane W. S. Crouse P. N. Dean J. A. Dear, Jr. K. E. Demarest G. L. Eynon J. V. Flaig G. G. Fox J. G. Hagemeyer A. Halstead, Jr. R. Hartshorne C. P. Harvey R. R. Herling A W. Horton. Jr. S. E. Jelliffe, Jr. C. M. Kerr, Jr. F. E. Kessinger J. M. Landis J. E. Lee D. H. McAlpin J. A. Mapes C. Marshall R. B. Mercer J. B. Miller, Jr. J. S. Montgomery 102fl P. T. Morgan, Jr. W. S. Mossman F. C. Peck A. V. Peden E A. M. Piaget F. S. Polhemus R. M. Powell H. M. Richardson T. H. Rickert G. A. Robbins C. B. Rogers K. D. Sanders W. L. Savage E. M. Sheppard M. D. Smith P. Smith, Jr. J. B. Strieker L. L. Taylor L. R. Thurman J. F. Tufel, Jr. A. H. Van Alen W. C. Vermeule H. M. Walker T. G. White G. F. Williamson D. J. Winton E. Wolf R. C. Woodworth A. C. Zabriskie 129 The Princeton Bric-a-grac Clio ftall $rt?e Contest SENIOR ORATORICAL CONTEST First Prize E. Childs, ' i6 Second Prize O. A. DeLong, Jr., ' 16 SENIOR-JUNIOR EXTEMPORANEOUS SPEAKING CONTEST First Prize B. B. Atterbury, ' 16 Second Prize CM. Tappen, ' 16 GENERAL PRIZE DEBATE First Prize S. D. Sherrerd, ' 18 Second Prize J. C. Taylor, Jr., ' 18 WINNER OF JUNIOR ORATORICAL CONTEST W. B. Barnitz, ' 17 SOPHOMORE ORATORICAL CONTEST First Prize R. B. Lutz, ' 18 Second Prize J. C. Taylor, Jr., ' 18 LYNDE PRIZE First Prize B. B. Atterbury, ' 16 Second Prize C. F. Martin, ' 16 Third Prize CM. Tappen, ' 16 FRESHMAN DECLAMATION CONTEST First Prize C Sienkiewiz Second Prize R. C. Sailer 130 ft — « ? s « = T)Tttlhw LThe Princeton Bric-a-Brac S? — 9   jAlj- c « American OTljtg g octetp OFFICERS, 1916-1917 R. H. .President W. H Johnson, Jr., ' 17. . , Treasurer H. R. Spencer, ' 17 Secretary W. H Millinger, 18 ) of Council W. S. Humphreys, ' 19 ( Jf atultp ffltmbtvi Woodrow Wilson J. H. Capps 0. L. Gilliam L. W. McCay G. M. Priest E. G. Spaulding John Grier Hibben F. L. Critchlow N. E. Griffin C. F. McClure P. Reeves D. L. Stone Moses Taylor Pyne M. W. Croll G. M. Harper R. M. McElroy A. S. Richardson D. C. Stuart E. P. Adams R. S. Dugan E. N. Harvey C. McMillan C. Robinson E. Swift W. M. Adriance L. P. Eisenhart F. L. Hutson E. McWilliams P. E. Robinson A. Trowbridge J. W. Alexander, 2nd M. S. Farr C. W. Kennedy A. W. C. Menzies R. K. Root Q. E. Twining E. B. Baxter F. A. Fetter F. C. MacDonald L. W. Miles W. B. Scott J. S. VanNest P. Boutroux C. L. Fleece M. MacLaren C. R. Morey C. F. Silvester J. H. M. Wedderburn G. D. Brown P. H. Fogel . A. Marquand H. S. Murch W. J. Sinclair J. H. Wescott P. M. Brown W. Foster F. J. Mather T. M. Parrott N. K. Smith G. W. T. Whitney H. C. Butler G. H. Gerould D. A. McCabe A. H. Phillips C. H. Smyth, Jr. F. N. Wilson E, Capps iair D. M. Amacker P. H. Buchanan G. C. Demorest B. H. Feustman T. J. Hilliard C. Leake C. T. Bagby, Jr. H. Bullock T. W. Denison F. S. Fitzgerald P. W. Hills W. M. Leggett C. A. Bahrenburg T. D. Cameron W. L. DeYoe J. M. Foster G. M. Holstein, Jr. A. C. Lewis V. B. Barr H. T. Cator M. S. Dillon L. S. Fowler H. B. Hoskins S. M. Link M. K. Barrett D. D. Chaplin. J r. E. R. Dorrance O. Fowler H. H. Hoyt E. H. Lorenz F. Rechtel. Jr. R. A. Cochran E. W. Doyle R. F. Funsten C. J. Ingersoll W. A. Lowrie C. W. Berl H. W. Cohu S. R. Dresser A. G. Gennert D. A. Iseman G. McCormick J. B. Black L. T. Cohu E. H. Driggs. Jr B. F. Gilmour W. H. Johnson, Jr. A. L. McKaig L. C. Bleeker K. G. Colwell W. Drorbaugh J. E. Gowen L. G. Jones E. F. MacNichol F. E. Bloom S. I. Cooper R. A. Dunlevy W. E. Guy, Jr. D. W. Kempner D. 0. McRae W. G. Boaz W. M. Cotton H. T. Dunn P. E. Hall C. E. Kennedy D. K. Mackay F. H. Bohlen, Jr. J. C. Cuneo M. A. Eberhardt R. S. Hammond I. F. L. Kenway J. E. Madden W. H. Bowman, ' _ r. R. H. Cutler R. Eberstadt L. L. Harding G. C. King V. T. Manchee G. Brackenridge K. M. Day T. E. Eddy A. C. Hewitt A. R. Knott T. Martin S. S. Bryan, Jr. D. DeLanoy B. F. Etter H. M. Heywood 131 C. H. Latrobe A. Mathiasen The Princeton Bric-a-Prac WHIG HALL The Princeton Brie- a- 3 r ac American 3KHf)tg £s ocictp (Continued) F. J. Newbury, Jr. J. S. Nicholas F. W. Nixon R. L. Nourse, Jr. H. N. Odell J. H. Osmer J. J. Parker, Jr. R. H. Parsons D. McK. Paulson L. L. Anderson S. W. Armstrong D. O. Arnold T. E. Babson G. L. Ball D. E. Bardwell L. V. Barker E. P. Becker R. C. Bell J. Biggs. Jr. W. Black C. W. Bonbright J. C. Boyd J. P. Brenner D. B. Brewster T. T. Bryan, 4th G. P. Buell W. A. Buell M. Burkelman E. P. D. Alyea A. Anderson J. M. Anderson, Jr. A. Armour W. R. Ball K. W. Beattie H. Beckhart R. C. Bell G. W. Perkins, Jr. K. A. Phillips G. F. Plympton R. C. Powell G. T. Purves L. T. Raymond R. W. Raymond M. S. Read K. M. Reed J. V. W. Reynder, Jr. W. F. Reynolds, Jr. R. H. Ritter 1). X. C. Ross G. L. Russell, Jr. J. Rutherford P. R. Scheerer W. Scheerer, Jr. A. A. Schmon C. M. Scott B. W. Sellers G. B. Sheppard G. E. Shoemaker, Jr. E. C. B. Simonin C. W. S. Slagle H. R. Spencer J. B. Stevens J. H. Stevens C. M. Caesar J. Campbell S. T. Cheng S. B. Coffin N. H. Cooper B. H. Cory J. Cromwell H. Van M. Dennis, 2d L. Donnelly W. M. Dougherty W. G. Duncan C. R. Eaby, Jr. R. Eldridge, Jr. L. G. Erskine J. J. Ewart M. H. Ewing R. L. Farrelly L. B. Flinn J. A. Foster, Jr. D. C. Gibbony A. Gillette S. Godfrey D. Goodchild H. S. Greason W. B. Haffner W. W. Hampe R. A. Harper W. P. Harper E. Hayes P. J. Herron S. D. Herron H. Hicks C. N. Hillyer J. E. Hooper S. G. Horan T. S. Ireland F. O. Janke N. B. Johnson W. W. Bell J. D. Brown D. K. Bruce G. L. T. Bauhan F. C. Burger F. D. Butler G. C. Buzby W. L. Clark R. F. Cleveland R. S. Cohen Jay Cooke, 2nd P. Cooper R. Cresswell J. C. Davis A. Dingee J. L. Dodd 1918 L. F. Kendall E. H. Kerper A. D. Kimball E. T. Look A. V. Lyman W. W. Lyons J. A. Machin W. B. Manee W. B. Marvin D. L- Mathews W. S. Mayer R. H. McCague E. D. McCauley G. K. Mcllwain P. M. McKown D. McLennan W. W. Meirs A. E. Meyer, Jr. B. Michael 1919 B. C. Downing W. C. Dunn C. R. Erdman, Jr. E. D. Finney R. S. Goldnian A. M. Greene R. Goldsmith A. K. Harris G. R. Stewart, Jr. W. T. Stockton I. R. Stoltze E. L. Strater W. H. Tenison H. E. Twyeffort W. D. Van Dyke, Jr. H. W. Vensel H. B. Vollrath W. H. Millinger R. G. Moore F. L. Nyers E. A. Poe. Jr. R. G. Preston P. R. Pyne, Jr. H. Quier W. W. Reynolds L. C. Rhodes N. D. Scarritt G. S. Schmidt, Jr. H. R. Selover H. A. Sipe S. D. Southworth W. C. Speers M. A. Spencer F. E. Springer W. T. Stewart S. R. Stevenson G. Hawkins W. B. F. Hax T. O. Helm W. A. Hicks J. K. B. Hockadav M. Ward J. D. Warfield, Jr. J. S. Warren A. L. Weil, Jr. H. A. White C. C. Williams, Jr. T. B. Wiss H. W. Young J. W. Zerega S. Streetman, Jr. D. H. Sulzberger S. P. Teng K. I. Thompson A. Van Horn, Jr. R. W. Van Tuyl E. L. Vogt C. K. Wallace W. J. Warburton C. A. Ward H. W. Warden, Jr. T. H. Wescott, Jr. C. T. White H. A. Widenmann D. Williamson I. M. Wood. Jr. W. B. Wilson J. S. Woodbridge A. H. Jennings E. Keenan D. M. King G. King L. R. Kinnard W. S. Humphreys, Jr. W. W. Kirkland E. A. S. Jacobs E. T. Knowlson A. E. Jenks S. Lloyd 133 8 — sg£S 1 iTi¥ | B . .The Princeton I3ric-a-@rac 5 — 3 e ' American KUf)ig g ocietp ( donrlubtb J. M. Leopold, Jr. J. C. Maxwell P. S. Olmstead H. G. Samson L. E. Starr H. S. Urmy A. C. Leslie J. N. May R. J. Palmer B. K. Schaefer W. E. Studdifordjr. P. Van Deventer T. C. Lord G. Meriwether P. M. Parker J. L. Schaefer, Jr. N. S. Symons A. Van Wyck J. R. McCune A. J. Millard W. M. Paxton J. Schmalz W. B. Talbot H. P. Van Dusen F. J. McConnell W. E. Mills R. S. Pollard S. S. Schmidt I. H. Taylor E. J. Waller D. McCulloch, Jr. G. D. Moore T. V. Ralston J. S. Senseman J. H. L. Taylor P. C. Walter J. H. MacCreadie T. C. Moore V. K. Raymond R. W. Shannon A. Terry S. F. D. Walters 1. W. MacFarlane D. C. Morgan T. B. Rich D. W. Sloan, Jr. H- C. Thompson F. D. Warren R. L. McGean J. A. Moss F. S. Richardson T. G. Smith R. W. Thorington A. M. Whittingham S. L. Mcllvain R. A. Nicholas M. H. Robbins J5. D. Southworth 0. J. Toland C. I. Williams R. D. McKee A. L. Norton R. G. Ruse I. A. Sprague W. R. Townley W. B. Wilson J. 0. McXulty P. R. Norton R. B. Russell. Jr. T. A. Sowards C. H. Townsend J. Wintersteen 1920 D. J. Adams A. L. Cobb, Jr. C. R. Gregor P. R. Lawson H. R. Perley G. L. Smith T. N. Armstrong, Jr J. P. Cotton G. E. Hackney W. B. LaForce M. Pitney, Jr. H. B. Smith W. E. Babcock, Jr. C. B. Dall T. C. Haigh G. A. Lawrence W. L. Powers R. D. Sparhawk H. A. Barton N. B. Dane D. M. Halstead C. D. Lennox T. J. E. Pulling R. W. Speir, Jr. R. Bassett F. A. DeMaris, Jr. W.H.Hamilton, Jr. E. E. Mackey R. F. Purdy C. G. Stachelberg J. G. Bechtel T. P. Dennis R. L. Hamilton J. M. Madden R. Rafalsky W. B. Stewart R. E. Blue H. N. Deyo J. M. Harlan T. H. Marsh H. B. Reed, 2nd H. C. Taylor H. S. Bond H. S. Dimmitt G. M. Harper. Jr. W. M. Mather P. D. Reynolds H. B. Thompson, Jr. G. E. Bowdoin F. A. Dixon W. I. Harris W. L. McEwan, Jr. L. Richmond G. W. Thompson H. F. Brigham S. T. Dodd, Jr. D. D. M. Haupt H. K. Miller. Jr. • J. R. Ritchie P. B. Townley B. M. Brock H. H. Dolan S. Henry D. K. Miller F. F. Rosenbaum R. C. Townsend W. H. Brooks, Jr. F. H. Douglas H. H. Hewitt, Jr. C. W. Mitchell, Jr. L. H. Rothchild H. B. Turner R. E. Brown C. H. Donner L. H. Hitzrot W. L. Morgan C. V. Sandell T. R. VanCleve F. W. Bruns W. H. Downs L. C. Holmes T. V. Morgan R. Sanger B. P. VanCourt, Jr. W. B. Bryan, Jr. H. R. Drowne, Jr. L. D. Houck H. G. Moore B. E. Sawyer F. C. Veslage A. R. Byron J. Fahys, 2nd E. S. Hubbell T. L. Moore T. H. Schenck. 3rd H. R. Wanless C. F. Buechner, Jr. A. H. Fawcett H. J. Hunt M. J. Offutt E. Schickhaus, Jr. L. R. Ward. Jr. C. M. Butler 1. F. Fennellv, Jr. A. D. Hutcheson J. A. O ' Gorman, Jr. P. S. Schoedinger T. G. Watson J. S. Buffington T. B. Field W. C. Hutchinson J. R. O ' Neill J. N. Schroeder, Jr. B. F. Watts, Jr. R. A. Cannon H. B. Fine E. F. Irwin W. H. Osborne, Jr. C. E. Schuster W. G. Wells T. G. Campbell C. A. Foster, Jr. S. A. Jackson G. G. Osmer R. W. Schwab F. E. Weinberg C. L. Carrick. Jr. G. C. Frazer T. S. Jacobs, Jr. C. Otis E. W. A. Schumann R. H. Whittingham F. A. Callery T. N. Franz L. G. Kaye R. L. Page K. M. Shaw W. M. Williamson J. Carson, Jr. H. E. Frey F. S. Ketcham D. Parrott A. L. Sim D. C. Winebrenner, 3d P. M. Chamberlain D. L. B. Fringer W. B. Kloppenberg T. S. Parry, Jr. G. H. Sibley D. W. Woods, 3rd W. F. Chappell, Jr. C. B. M. Garrigues H. H. Koblegard A. Paul T. S. Sloan L. L. Wylie G. H. Chase, 3rd C. E. Garmaus B. F Kraffert R. H. Pentz D. H. Smith W. E. Wylie M. E. Clark G. B. Gray, Jr. C. W. Laird 134 The Princeton Bric-a-Brac OTfng ftall $rt?e Contests TRASK PRIZE First Prize W. H. Johnson, Jr., ' 17 Second Prize S. D. Sherrerd, ' 18 FRENCH MEDAL DEBATE First Prize M. Gates, ' 16 Second Prize A. Hunter, ' 16 JUNIOR EXTEMPORANEOUS CONTEST Pirst Prize W. H. Johnson, Jr., ' 17 Second Prize G. B. Sheppard, ' 17 JUNIOR ORATORICAL CONTEST First Prize L. G. Jones Second Prize G. B. Sheppard Third Prize P. Cooper Fourth Prize H. R. Spencer FRESHMAN DECLAMATION CONTEST First Prize B. H. Beckhart Second Prize J J- Schmalz I G. Meriwether, Jr. First Prize H. P. Van Dusen Second Prize J. H. MacCreadie INTERCOLLEGIATE DEBATERS W. H. Johnson, Jr., ' 17 A. Hunter, ' 16, Alternate FRESHMAN INTERCOLLEGIATE DEBATERS B. H. Beckhart H. P. Van Dusen D. K. E. Bruce R. A. Nicholas Alternates 135 The Princeton JSric-a-grac SntercoIIegtate debating Seams JOHNSON TAPPEN MARTIN TAYLOR BARN1TZ ATTERBURY SHERRERD COOPER - ggz tf The Princeton Bric-a-Sr S Sfe? - Hfatercollegtate ©etrnte March 24, 1916 Debaters Against Yale Debaters Against Harvard J. C. Taylor, Jr., ' 18 W. H. Johnson, Jr., ' 17 B. B. Atterbury, ' 16 S. D. Sherrerd, ' 18 C. F. Martin, ' 16 C. M. Tappen, ' 16 W. B. Barnitz, ' 17 VV. P. Cooper, Jr., ' 17 Question — Resolved, That the United States should adopt a system of compulsory military service modeled after that of Switzerland. The result of the debate was a unanimous decision in favor of the Princeton Affirmative Team over Harvard at Princeton and a similar decision was awarded the Princeton Negative Team over Yale at New Haven, thus winning the Intercollegiate Championship for the first time since 1912. The Harvard Affirmative Team also defeated Yale at New Haven. Jf restfjman intercollegiate ©etrnte May 5, 1916 TEAMS Debaters Against Harvard Debaters Against Yale J. G. Howley H. P. VanDusen H. W. Doyle G. O. Bailey B. H. Beckhart R. A. Nicholas C. A. Sienkiewicz D. K. E. Bruce Question— Resolved, That the United States should grant complete independence to the Philippine Islands within the next five years. The negative won in each of the three debates. Princeton defeated Harvard at Princeton, and lost to Yale at New Haven. 137 The Princeton Bric-a-Prac s DEBATING COMMITTEE SHERRERD BARN1TZ PERKINS EDDY - U ggZg? rhe Princeton Bric-a-BracS Sfes - Bebating Committee OFFICERS W. B. Barnitz, ' 17 Chairman S. D. Sherrerd, ' 18 Secretary MEMBERS, 1917 MEMBERS, 1918 W. B. Barnitz G. W. Perkins, Jr. W. W. Hampe S. D. Sherrerd W. A. Eddy A. A. Schmon Belta g tgma fjo debating Jf ratcrnttp OFFICERS W. H. Johnson, Jr., ' 17 P resident J C. Taylor, Jr.. ' 18 Secretary FACULTY MEMBERS F. A. Fetter A. S. Richardson D. L. Stone MEMBERS, 1917 MEMBERS, 1918 W. B. Barnitz , W. H. Johnson S. D. Sherrerd J. C. Taylor, Jr. 139 -3 «gggff! The Princeton Bric-a-Brac l 5fe5 J - Clafitf of 76 $ri?e ©etrnte February 22, 1916 PRESIDING OFFICER Professor Theodore W. Hunt, ' 65 AFFIRMATIVE NEGATIVE H. S. Frazier, ' 19 W. H. Johnson, Jr., ' 17 S. D. Sherrerd, ' 18 B. B. Atterbury, ' 16 JUDGES Rev. Ralph B. Pomeroy Professor M. W. Croll L. J. Thomas Question — Resolved, That the United States should adopt a system of military service modeled after that of Switzerland. The prize was awarded to Walter H. Johnson, Jr., ' 17. Annual Sntercla s Oratorical Contest February 22, 1916 PRESIDING OFFICER Edward Lane Shea, ' 16 SPEAKERS H. W. Doyle, ' 19 The Age of the Specialist S. M. Link, ' 17 Preparedness R. B. Lutz, ' 18 Science and the Liberal Education O. V. Gould, ' 16 Senior Oration JUDGES P. E. Moore L. J. Thomas C. R. Williams The prize was awarded to Roland B. Lutz, ' 18 140 rrgw n The iFrince ton Brie- a- Brae DONA HOE MOORE ATHLETIC EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE BUELL LATROBE COWEN GRIFFITH BEHRER The Princeton Bric-a-Brac fWTV Lr ftrO 5 T WEAIRIEIFIS) r CLASS OF 1916 E. B. Bamman (F) J. McF. Barr ..(F) 1915; (T) C. H. Bischoff (T) L. H. Boland (F) 1913, H. G. Brown ...(F) 1913, 1914, B. Bullock. 3rd (B) A. M. Butler (C) J. E. Butterworth (F) J. M. Carey (T) W. M. Davy ..(T) 1914, 1915, G. C. DeLacv. Jr (S) W. H. Deyo (B) 1914. B. Douglas (B) 191s. W. H. Friesell (S) P. H. Gadebusch (C) 1914. F. Click (F) 1913. 1914, L. L. Glover (T) C. L. Heyniger..(F) 1915: (T) J. Hoyt (B) 1914. 1915. A. A. Kelleher ( B) D. M. Lake (T) H. M. Lamberton. Jr., (B) 1914; (F) 1913, 1914, B. C. Law..(B) 1914. 1915. 1 (F) 1913. 1914. T. Larsen (F) E. H. Lee (C) 191S. R. R. Lester (S) V. G. Link (B) W. D. Love. Jr (F) 1914. W. S. Mason (T) J. J. O ' Kane (B) 916 915 916 916 914 915 916 916 915 915 916 916 915 916 916 916 915 916 916 916 915 916 915 915 9 5 916 916 916 915 914 916 (LDJT TUIIL J. R. L. Otis (C) 1916 G. A. Peacock (H) 1914 H. J. Richardson (T) 1915. 1916 A. N. Selby (S) 1916 E. L. Shea, (B) 1916; (F) 1913, 1914, 1915 G. G. Sikes (C) 1916 A. H. Snowden ....(T) 1914, 1916 A. W. Talley (B) 1916 G. C. Wallace (T) 1914, 1916 CLASS OF 1917 K. L. Ames, Jr.. (F) 1914, 1915, C. H. Burchenal (S) D. D. Chaplin, Jr (B) R. A. Cochran, 3rd..(C) 191s, K. G. Colwell (T) R. L. Crawford, 3rd.(T) 1915. D. DeLanoy (C) C. A. Dickerman ....(F) 1914. E. H. Driggs. Jr..(B) 1915, 1916 (F) 1914, 1915. R. Eberstadt (F) 1914. J. E. Eddy (F) 1915. A. G. Gennert .(F) 1914. 1915, G. Gillespie (F) C. C. Highley ..(F) 1914, 1915. F. T. Hogg ...(F) 1914. 1915, C. T. Ingersoll (C) T. B. Keating (B) T. E. Madden (T) R. H. McCann (C) 916 916 915 916 916 916 916 915 W. L. McLean, Jr., (r) 1914. 1915. 1916 W. B. Moore (T) 1915. 1916; (F) 1914, 1915, 1916 R. L. Nourse, Jr., (T) 1915, 1916; (F) 1915, 1916 J. D. Paull (C) 1916 W. J. Rahill (F) 1914, 1915 A. V. Savage (C) 1916 J T. Scully (B) 1915. 1916 C. G. Semmens (F) 1913 H. D. Sparks (C) 1915 D. W. Tibbott....(B) 1915. 1916; (F) 1914. 1915, 1916 J. B. Wiss. (G) 1915, 1916; (W) 1916 CLASS OF 1918 C. V. Halsev (F) 1916 C. Jackes (T) 1916 P. B. Lee (B) 1916 O. J. Parisette (F) 1915 D C. Sinclaire (T) 1916 R. L. Thompson (B) 1916 W. J. Thomas (F) 1916 C. A. Underwood (T) 1916 M. O. Wilson. (T) 1916; (F) 1915 1916 CLASS OF 1919 G. W. Funk (F) 1916 C. W. McGraw (F) 1916 ♦J. J. Winn (F) 1916 B— Baseball F— Football C — Crew G— Gym. Men who won P for the first time this year. 916 916 916 916 916 916 916 916 916 916 916 H— Hockey S — Swimming T — Track W — Wrestling The Princeton Bric-a-grac The Princeton Bric-a-Srac 1916 FOOTBALL SQUAD. The Princeton Bric-a-Brac JfootbaU OFFICERS, 1916 F. T. Hogg, ' 17 Captain C. R. Arrott, ' 18 Assistant Manager N. P. Bevin, ' 17 • Manager J. H. Rush Field Coach C. C. Highley W. McLean . R. L. Nourse, A. G. Gennert F. T. Hogg . . C. H. Latrobe M. O. Wilson J. E. Eddy .. A. C. Brown K. L. Ames, Jr E. H. Driggs lr CLASS 1917 1917 1917 1917 1917 1917 I9l8 1917 1917 1917 1917 TEAM AGE HEIGHT WEIGHT POSITION 21 5. 11 153 Left End 21 21 20 22 21 21 2.3 22 22 22 SUBSTITUTES 6.0 5. 1 1 5-n 6.2 6.1 5.10 5-u 5.10 5.10 5-1 1 183 187 180 201 184 154 165 170 158 172 Left Tackle Left Guard Center Right Guard Right Tackle Right End Quarterback Left Halfback Right Halfback Fullback PLAYER H. D. Comey R. Eberstadt G. W. Funk G. Gillespie C. V. Halsey C. W. McGraw W. B. Moore . D. W. Tibbott W. J. Thomas J. J. Winn ... CLASS AGE 1917 22 1917 21 I919 20 I9l6:4 23 1918 20 1919 1917 1917 I9l8 1919 21 21 21 20 i8 HEIGHT WEIGHT POSITION 5-9 152 5-10 163 5-ii 178 510 170 6.2 207 6.1 187 S-ii 173 510 172 5.11 160 6.1 176 SEASON ' S RECORD September 30. October 7. October 14. October 21. Princeton 21 Princeton 29 Princeton 3 Princeton 33 Holy Cross .... o North Carolina. . o Tufts o Lafavette o October 28. Princeton 7 November 4. Princeton 42 November i i. Princeton o November 18. Princeton o Quarterback Halfback E nd End Tackle Tackle Halfback Halfback Halfback End Dartmouth Bucknell . Harvard . Yale 3 o 3 10 Totals — Princeton, 135 ; Opponents, 16 ebieti) of tfje 1916 Jfoottmll g eagon LTHOUGH a tabulated summary of scores shows six victories and only two defeats, the football season of 1916, when viewed as a whole, must be considered a keen disappointment to the followers of Princeton football. Starting the season with an eleven composed entirely of veterans who had had a year ' s experience under the new coaching system and with the best second-string material in several years, Princeton was generally considered a championship possibility. As the season progressed without any serious setbacks, the deficiencies noticeable in the early season play were gradually eradicated and the possibility of victories in the final and most important games of the season seemed good. The failure of the team to realize these expectations in the Harvard and Yale games stamped the sea- son as a failure. 147 -3 gggg ?S The Princeton Bric-a-BracS Sfes - HARVARD GAME. The Princeton Bric-a-Brac ■s i. SCRIMMAGE IN THE NORTH CAROLINA GAME. 3. DRIGGS RUNNING BEHIND PERFECT INTERFERENCE. 2. J. E. EDDY, ' 17, QUARTERBACK. 4. DRIGGS GOING THROUGH THE LAFAYETTE LINE. 5. BROWN BEING TACKLED BY THE ARM. -3 £gg The Princeton Bric-a-Br g Sfes -— - Because of the epidemic of paralysis and the consequent late opening of the college year, the preliminary practice was held at Lake Minnewaska. Unsatisfactory conditions there retarded the work of the coaches somewhat, but by the time the team returned to Princeton, the men were well grounded in the fundamentals of the game and a start had been made at evolving a strong defense. The first two games of the season, as anticipated, resulted in easy victories over Holy Cross, 21-0, and North Carolina, 29-0. Poor teamwork was the most noticeable fault, and during the two weeks following, particular emphasis was laid upon the de- velopment of a strong, concerted attack. Individual brilliancy rather than good team play enabled the Varsity to defeat Tufts on October 14, 3-0. As the game progressed, Princeton ' s attack crumbled and Tibbott ' s drop-kick from the 45-yard line prevented a scoreless tie. The following week revealed an encouraging development in nearly all departments, and on October 21, Lafayette was overwhelmed, 33-0. A tendency toward uncertain tackling alone marred this satisfactory victory. The following Saturday, Dart- mouth brought a light, powerful eleven to Princeton and during the greater part of the game, the Varsity was bewildered by their opponents ' dashing attack. However, Princeton also uncovered a latent offensive power and several new formations were worked with considerable success. A 65-yard run for touchdown by Driggs late in the game gave Princeton the victory, 7-3. A week later, Bucknell offered but slight resistance and were easily defeated, 42-0. Thus far, Princeton had scored a total of 135 points against her six opponents and had kept her own goal-line uncrossed. During the week preceding the Harvard game, much time was spent in overcoming the minor faults in the team ' s play and in practicing several new formations. Princeton clearly outplayed Harvard in the first half and was several times in posi- tion to score, but the team was unable to deliver the necessary drive and the opportunities were wasted. The absence of Tib- bott was keenly felt when two attempts at placement kicks failed. Harvard forced the play early in the second half and had soon driven Princeton well back into her own territory. Here a short punt and an unfortunate penalty gave Harvard the opportunity to kick a field goal, which proved to be the only score of the game. Although defeated, Princeton fought gamely and showed the results of excellent coaching. The Varsity ruled a strong favorite over Yale and the latter ' s 10-0 victory in the final game of the season on November 18 was a surprise to a majority of the critics. As in the Harvard game, Princeton was the aggressor during the early part of the game and twice worked the ball to Yale ' s 15-yard line, only to lose it there on questionable generalship. At the begin- ning of the third period, however, the tide turned in their opponents ' favor, for an inexcusable failure to catch the kick-off put Yale in position to score an easy field-goal. Shortly afterward, Yale recovered a Princeton fumble and a forward pass brought the ball to the Varsity ' s 2-yard line. Three attempts at the line failed, but on the fourth down LeGore plunged through left tackle for a touchdown. Late in the game, Princeton uncovered a splendid passing attack, but were unable to score. The most striking weakness in the season ' s play was the persistent tendency of the backs toward fumbling which, instead of disappearing, became more pronounced as the season progressed. Poor generalship and failure to take advantage of the breaks of the game were also responsible for many wasted opportunities. The early season injuries to Latrobe and Moore were unfortunate, while the absence of Tibbott in the last two games because of a sprained knee was the largest handicap which the team experienced. Although as individuals the men played brilliantly, satisfactory team work was not developed until late in the season. The most dependable players were Captain Hogg, Gennert and Nourse in the line, and Driggs in the backfield. The latter ' s con- sistent punting, line-plunging and passing were important factors in the team ' s attack, while the three center men formed a stonewall defense at all times. Particular mention should be made of the sterling leadership of Hogg, who not only played a steady game himself but proved a capable and inspiring captain. ISO - «- gggSi S The Princeton Bric-a-Br c Sfes - COACH J. H. RCSII, ' 98 Copvright, International Film Service, Inc. CAPTAIN F. T. HOGG, ' .7 TRAINER KEENE FITZPATRICK -3 -«ggs£ The Princeton Brica-Brac te - - 1 - ii : . ' -• • .(; m P f B J r- - :,tt, . ,. ' • ' ' ■ YALE GAME. The Princeton Bric-a-Srac l 19 gmmmarp of Princeton ' s Complete Jf ootball Eecorb 1869 to 1916 Amherst Army Brown Bucknell Carlisle Indians . . . Chicago A. C Colgate o Columbia Law School o Columbia University.. I Cornell 3 Crescent A. C o Dartmouth 3 Dickinson Elizabeth A. C o Fordham o F. and M o Gettysburg o Georgetown o Holy Cross o Harvard 8 Lafayette 1 Lawrenceville Lehigh o Johns Hopkins o VICTORIES TIES Princeton 10 o Princeton 5 3 Princeton 5 o Princeton 7 o Princeton 6 o Princeton 1 o Princeton 1 o Princeton 1 o Princeton 12 o Princeton 13 o Princeton 5 Princeton 9 1 Princeton 3 p Princeton 2 o Princeton 3 o Princeton 5 o Princeton 1 o Princeton 2 o Princeton 4 o Princeton 13 1 Princeton 21 2 Princeton 3 o Princeton 25 1 Princeton 3 o VICTORIES Maryland A. C o Manhattan A. C o Michigan o Navy I N. Y A. C O N. Y. University .... o North Carolina Orange A. C o Pennsylvania 2 Pennsylvania State... O Rutgers 1 Stevens o Syracuse o Swarthmore o Tufts o Villa Nova O Virginia Poly o Virginia o W. and J o Wesleyan o Williams o Yale 23 Total 39 VICTORIES TIES Princeton 2 o Princeton 2 o Princeton 1 o Princeton 8 3 Princeton 1 o Princeton 3 o Princeton 2 o Princeton 7 1 Princeton 30 o Princeton 5 o Princeton 29 o Princeton 23 o Princeton 5 o Princeton 2 o Princeton ...... 1 o Princeton 9 o Princeton 3 o Princeton 5 o Prin ceton 6 o Princeton 13 o Princeton o 2 Princeton 11 9 318 23 Compilations by Parke H. Davis, ' 93 Princeton : 324 victories, 43 defeats, 23 ties. 153 The Princeton Bric-a.-@ra.c Pfc j ftMY« !, i}ftita k mm I IB DARTMOUTH GAME. DARTMOUTH GAME. DARTMOUTH GAME. HAR T ARD GAME. YM ' ii -  gaf The Princeton Br c-a-mV c S - THOMPSON HOYT VARSITY BASEBALL TEAM, 1915-16 0 KANE TIBBOTT DO WD PURVES DRIGGS BULLOCK (MGR.) KEATING SHEA DOUGLAS CLARKE (COACH) LAW (CAPT.) LINK LEE SCULLY ROTHENSIES -3 .ggff ffSj.The Princeton Bric-a-BFHcj iStes- — ■ Jtoetmll OFFICERS, 1915-16 OFFICERS, 1916-17 B. C. Law, ' i6 Captain E. H. Driggs, ' 17 Captain B. Bullock, 3RD, ' 16 , Manager C. W. Donahoe, ' 17 Manager C. W. Donahoe, ' 17 Assistant Manager W. A. Buell, ' 18 Assistant Manager W. J. Clark Coach W. J. Clark Coach TEAM B. Douglas Catcher E L. Shea Third Base V. G. Link Pitcher E. H. Driggs Short Stop R. L. Thompson Pitcher J. Hoyt Center Field J. T. Scully First Base P. B. Lee Left Field B. C. Law Second Base D. W. Tibbott Right Field A. W. Talley Second Base T. B. Keating Right Field N. B. — This comprises only those men who won their letters. ftebteto of tfje Baseball Reason, 19154916 T the beginning of the 1916 baseball season Princeton, always a contender for the baseball championship under the coaching of Bill Clark, seemed doubly fitted for the season because of the excellent material at hand. Soon after the season ' s start, though, Deyo was lost to the team because of ineligibility, and that coupled with erratic playing in the early games, hin- dered the Varsity from making a very brilliant showing. The final record of fourteen vic- tories out of twenty-three games put Princeton in ninth place among the Eastern colleges for 1916. The material at hand, despite the loss of five 1915 men, was by no means poor, for Captain Law, Scully, Tibbott, Driggs, Douglas and Hoyt from the 191 5 team were available as a nucleus upon which to build the nine. A fast infield combination, consisting of Scully, Law, Driggs and Shea, was used during nearly the entire season, and for the most part played excellent ball. Douglas caught behind the bat and proved to be one of the most consistent hitters on the team, besides having the ability to hold men on the bases. His steadying influence was felt not only by the pitchers but by the whole team. The pitching staff, although somewhat broken by the loss of Deyo, finally developed as the season went on, and in the final games was instrumental in defeating Yale. Link, Chaplin and Thompson were the most dependable men in the box and were used in all the important games. Tibbott and Hoyt after the first few weeks of the season easily won the positions of right and center fields respectively, while the other outfield place was more closely contested, Lee finally getting the choice by his timely batting. Four out of the first five games were easily won, owing to the hitting of Shea and the pitching of Link and Chaplin. The Southern trip during the Spring recess was very discouraging, with two defeats and but one victory. Erratic batting was probably the chief cause of the poor record, for the team seemed unable to hit at the proper time, and men were time and again left on bases. The loss of the two Cornell 157 The Princeton ISric-a-Brac games may be attributed to the same cause, for Russell held the Varsity to a total of four hits in the two contests, the final score being i to o in each case. The Virginia game, however, went to Princeton, thanks to a long home-run in the ninth inning by Driggs. The two games following, with Brown and Williams, showed the Varsity to much better advan- tage, with decided improvement in batting and fielding. They lost to Dartmouth the following week, however, but shortly after defeated Pennsylvania, 6 to 5, in a very loosely played game. In the first Har- vard contest the Varsity showed up very poorly, for although Princeton outhit Harvard, the latter won when the Princeton infield went to pieces and made eight costly errors. The second game of the series was considerably better played, but likewise went to Harvard. Although a large part of the season may be called unsuccessful, the final series with Yale proved a redeeming feature that cannot be denied. The first game went to Yale, at New Haven, 5 to 2, due to a home-run and two three-base hits by Mudge and Shepley. The Commencement game on June 10 showed a reversal, for Yale ' s pitching staff was completely touted, and Princeton seemed to have recovered from its batting slump, for the final score came to 7-5 in favor of Princeton. The deciding game, played at Newark, was by far the best of the season. Link ' s steadiness in the box being the outstanding feature. Neither team scored until the last half of the ninth, when Shea walked, advanced to second on Scully ' s single, stole third, and went home for the winning run on Law ' s bunt. LINK BACKING UP DOUGLAS IN PLAY AT THE PLATE -3 gSgg ?S The Princeton Bric-a-BfJ 2 Sfe - 3- pattmg berage£ AB. R. H. SB. Driggs, ss 80 15 22 2 Douglas, c 83 8 22 6 Hoyt, cf 87 9 23 3 Shea, 3b 57 3 15 7 Tibbott. rf 62 8 16 8 Dowd, p 4 o 1 o Lee, If 89 13 22 8 Chaplin, p 18 2 4 1 Law. 2b 66 7 14 4 Thompson, p 24 1 5 o Hammond, rf 5 o 1 o Talley, 2b 26 2 5 o Scully, lb 67 7 12 3 Keating, cf 34 4 5 1 O ' Kane, 2b 8 o 1 o Link, p 26 o o o Rothensies, 3b 12 1 o o Cory, If 2 o o o Purves, c 1 o o o Campbell, p 1 o o o Claire, p o o o o Team Batting 223 SH. PC. •275 3 .265 2 .264 1 .263 5 .258 .250 - ' 47 1 .222 1 .212 1 .203 .200 .192 1 .179 •147 1 •125 4 .000 1 .000 .000 .000 .000 1 .000 Jf telbtng gfoerage G PO A E PC Talley, 3b., 2b 9 13 17 o 1.000 Thompson, p 8 3 18 1.000 Keating, rf 14 5 o o 1.000 Dowd, p 2 o 6 o 1.000 Purves, c 1 5 o n 1.000 Hammond, rf 2 2 o o 1.000 Campbell, p 1 o 1 o i.ood Scully, lb 21 186 2 2 .989 Hoyt, cf 23 54 3 1 .982 Tibbott, rf 17 38 3 1 .976 Douglas, c 23 117 42 9 .940 Law, 2b 18 55 38 6 .939 Lee, If 22 31 3 3 .918 Link, p 13 5 27 4 .888 Rothensies, 3b 4 5 10 2 .882 Driggs, ss 22 32 52 13 .865 Shea, 3I1 17 29 31 14 .810 O ' Kane, ss 4 2 2 1 .800 Cory, rf I o o o .000 Claire, p 1 o o o .000 Team Average 937 159 The Princeton Bric-a-Brac Princeton bs. arbarb, Jfirst 4£ame PRINCETON AB R H Lee, If 5 i i Tibbott, rf 5 o 2 Hoyt, cf 2 o 1 Driggs, ss 5 o 2 Douglas, c 5 o 1 Shea, 3b 5 o 1 Scully, lb 3 1 1 Law, 2b 4 2 2 Link, p 1 o o Thompson, p 2 o o §0 ' Kane 1 o 1 tKeating o 1 o PRINCETON, MAY 20, 1916 PO A E 3 O I OIO 3 I 2 4 HARVARD AB R H PO A E Coolidge, cf 3 2 1 1 o o Nash, ib 3 1 1 9 1 o Abbot, 2b 5 2 o 4 4 o Harte, c 4 3 2 5 2 o Mahan, p 5 o 2 1 1 o Beal, 3b 5 o 2 1 1 1 Fripp, If 4 o o 1 o o Percy, rf 4 o o 2 o o Bothfeld, ss 3 1 o 2 2 2 36 8 26 11 Score by Innings : 38 5 Princeton . . Harvard . . 27 §Batted for Link in fifth. tRan for O ' Kane in fifth. ♦Hoyt out, hit by batted ball. 0003002 1 202030 o—5 1—9 Stolen bases — Nash, Mahan, Beal, Law, 2. Sacrifice hit — Nash. Two-base hit — Driggs. Three-base hits — Mahan, Harte. Double play— Driggs to Scully. Left on bases — Princeton, 10; Harvard. 8. Struck out — By Mahan, 5; by Link, 3; by Thomp- son, 1. Bases on balls— Off Mahan, 4; off Link, 6; off Thompson, 1. Wild pitch— Link. Passed bail— Harte. Time of game — 2 hours, 25 minutes. Umpires — Johnston and Westervelt. r Princeton bs;. I ale, Jfirst ame NEW HAVEN, MAY 27, 1916 PRINCETON AB R H Lee, If 4 2 o Tibbott, rf 3 o o Hoyt, cf 4 o 2 Driggs, ss 4 o o Douglas, c 4 o o Shea, 3b 4 o 2 Scully, ib 4 o o Law, 2b 4 o o Link, p 3 o o po o o 3 3 5 3 7 2 A O O I 3 2 4 o o I YALE AB Johnson, ss 4 Snell, 2b 4 Vaughn, cf 4 Shepley, rf 4 Rush, ib 4 Munson, If 4 Early, If o Mudge, c 3 Kinney, 3b 3 Garfield, p 2 R I O o 3 1 o o o o o H I o I 3 2 o o 2 O O PO O 5 A 5 I o o o o o o I I Score by Innings : 34 2 Princeton Yale 24 32 o o 5 o — 2 x— 5 27 Sacrifice hits — Tibbott, Hoyt. Stolen bases — Johnson (2), Lee. Three-base hits — Shepley, Mudge, Hoyt. Home run — Shepley. Double play — Driggs and Law. Passed ball — Douglas. Struck out — By Link, 3 ; by Garfield, 4. Bases on balls — By Link, 1. Left on bases — Yale, 4; Princeton, 5. Time of game — 1 hour 50 minutes. Umpires — Westervelt and Johnston. The Princeton Brie- a- Brae Princeton Us. arbarb, g econb Pamr CAMBRIDGE, JUNE 3, 1916 PRINCETON AB R H Lee, If 4 o 2 Tibbott, rf 4 o i Hoyt, cf 4 o o Driggs, ss 2 o o Douglas, c 4 o o Shea, 3b 4 o o Scully, lb 4 o I Law, 2b 3 i I Thompson, p 2 o o Talley o o o xO ' Kane i o o PO o 2 5 o Score by Innings : 32 I Princeton Harvard . 24 E HARVARD AB I Coolidge, cf 3 o Nash, ib 4 Abbott, 2b 2 1 Harte, c 4 o Mahan, p 4 o Beal, 3b 4 o Knowles, If 4 o Percy, rf 2 o Reed, ss 2 o — 29 5 — Ran for Scully in ninth. 2 xBatted for Thompson in ninth. o o o o 1 o o o o — 1 00020003 x — 5 Three-base hit — Lee. Home run — Harte. R H PO A E I I 3 I I 6 O I I O 4 2 2 2 10 2 2 3 I I I 3 O 1 O 3 8 27 Left on bases- Sacrifice hits — Abbott, Reed. Two-base hits — Knowles, Scully. Harvard, 5; Princeton. 8. Struck out — By Mahan, 9; by Thompson, 1. Bases on balls — Off Mahan, 3; off Thompson, 2. Passed ball — Douglas. Hit by pitcher — By Mahan, Driggs; by Thompson, Percy. Time of game — 1 hour 55 minutes. Um- pires — Westervelt and Johnston. Princeton bs. |9ale, g econb §ame PRINCETON, JUNE 10, 1916 PRINCETON ' AB Lee, If 4 Tibbott, rf 4 Hoyt, cf 4 Driggs, ss 2 Douglas, c 2 Shea. 3b 3 Scully, ib 2 Law, 2b 3 Thompson, p 1 Link, p 2 R o 1 2 2 I o 1 o o o H O I I o 2 O I I o o PO o 3 1 7 2 8 5 o o 27 7 Batted for Kinney in ninth. Ran for Conway in ninth. Score by Princeton .... Innings : Yale Stolen bases — Douglas, Holden, Vaughn base hits — Douglas, Tibbott. Double play— 5 1-3 innings ; off Garfield, 5 in 6 innings ; By Thompson, o ; by Link, 5 ; by Garfield, Thompson (Holden), by Link (Johnson) Johnston and Westervelt. Time — 2 hours, YALE AB Johnson, ss 4 Snell, 2b 5 Vaughn, cf 3 Shepley, rf 4 Holden, If 2 Bush, ib. 4 Munson, c 4 Kinney, 3b 2 Garfield, p 3 Walsh, p o Watrous, p 1 Conway o Thomas o R O O I o 2 I O o o o o o H O O O O I 2 2 O 2 O O o o PO o I 4 32 24 5 o 1 3 3 x — 7 o 1 o 4 o o o o o — s Sacrifice hit — Douglas. Sacrifice fly — Shea. Two-base hits — Law, Munson. Three- Driggs to Law to Scully. Hits — Off Thompson, 6 in 3 2-3 innings; off Link, I in off Walsh, 1 (none out in 7th inning) ; off Watrous, o in 2 innings. Struck out — 4; by Walsh, o; by Watrous, 2. Hit by pitcher — By Garfield (Scully, Driggs), by Left on bases — Princeton, 8; Yale, 6. First base on errors — Yale, 1. Umpires — 10 minutes. The Princeton Brie- a- B r ac . PRINCETON AB Lee, If 4 Tibbott, rf 4 Hoyt, cf 3 Driggs, ss 3 Douglas, c 4 Shea, 3b 3 Scully, ib 3 Law, 2b 4 Link, p 3 Princeton bsi. g ale, tEfjtrb (game NEWARK, JUNE 14, 1916 R O O O O O I o o o H O O O O I o 2 I O PO o I 4 2 11 3 4 2 o 31 1 4 One out when winning run was scored. 27 Score by Innings : Princeton. Yale YALE AB R H PO A E Johnson, ss 3 o o 2 2 o Holden, If 3 o o o o o Early, If 1 o o 1 o o Vaughn, cf 3 o o 1 o o Shepley, rf 2 o o 3 o o Snell, 2b 3 o o 1 4 o Bush, ib 3 o 1 o o Munson, c 3 o o 8 o o Kinney, 3b 3 o o o 1 1 Garfield, p 3 o o o 1 1 26 o o I 25 I — I o — o Stolen bases— Douglas, Hoyt, Shea, 2; Vaughn. Sacrifice hit — Law. Double play— Johnson to Snell to Bush. Struck out —By Link, 10; by Garfield, 7. Bases on balls— Off Link, 2; off Garfield, 3. Hit by pitcher— By Link (Shepley, John- son); by Garfield (Hoyt). First base on errors— Princeton, 2; Yale, 1. Left on bases— Princeton, 7; Yale, 3. Umpires- Johnston and Westervelt. Time — 1 hour, 50 minutes. f rnm - OUT AT THE PLATE 162 The Princeton Bric-a-Srac Wjje ecorb DATE SCOI April I, Princeton 2 6, Princeton o ii, Princeton 1 12, Princeton 9 15, Princeton 4 20, Princeton 1 21, Princeton 1 22, Princeton I 26, Princeton 4 29, Princeton o May 1, Princeton 14 3, Princeton 3 6, Princeton o 10, Princeton 7 13, Princeton _ 6 17, Princeton I 20, Princeton 5 24, Princeton 4 27, Princeton 2 30, Princeton 7 June 3, Princeton 1 10, Princeton 7 14, Princeton I E OPPONENTS SCORE Villa Nova 1 Fordham 4 Williams o Rutgers 1 Brown 1 Maryland Agr ' l College... 2 Virginia 2 Georgetown o Union 2 Cornell 1 Lawrenceville 3 Virginia 2 Cornell 1 Williams 1 Pennsylvania 5 Dartmouth 3 Harvard 9 Brown 3 Yale 5 Pennsylvania 2 Harvard 5 Yale 5 Yale o AT .... Princeton . . . . Princeton Princeton .... Princeton . . . Providence . College Park Charlottesville . . Washington .... Princeton Ithaca Lawrenceville .... Princeton Princeton .... Princeton .... Princeton .... Princeton .... Princeton .... Princeton . . . New Haven , . Philadelphia ... . Cambridge .... Princeton Newark 163 The Princeton Brie- a- B r ac Princeton ' s; Complete pasiebaU Eecorb, 1860=1916 Victories Acme o Active i A. and M. (Va.) . . o Alaska 3 Albright o Alert o Allegheny I Amherst 8 Andover 1 Athletics (Phila.). 18 Atlantics 6 Auburn o Baltimore (E. L.) . 2 Boston (N. L.) ... 8 Bordentown o Bowdoin I Brooklyn (N. L.) . 6 Brown 17 Bucknell o Buffalo 1 Burlington 2 Carlisle o Catholic Univ. ... 1 Centennials I Chelsea 2 Cleveland 1 C. C. N. Y o Colgate o Columbia A. C. . . o Columbia Law .... o Prince ton Vic- First tories Ties Game I 1894 1883 I 1 90S s 1876 I 1909 I 1884 1884 20 I l87S 6 1889 9 1863 1 1863 1 1883 191 1 1876 1 1889 3 1908 2 187S 36 I 1870 3 1902 1885 1 1866 1 I9OI 1914 l87S 4 1873 1883 1 IOX)0 2 1914 1 1897 1 1893 Vic tories Columbia Univ. ... 1 Cornell 10 Cuban Giants .... 1 Dartmouth 2 Defiance o Detroit 2 Dickinson o Dolly Varden .... o Domestic 1 Easton 2 Eckfords 1 Edgehill o Elizabeth o Englewood F. C. . . o Enterprise o Eureka 1 Exeter o Flyaways o Fordham 5 F. and M o Georgetown 19 Germantown o Gettysburg o Harvard 52 Holy Cross o Holyoke 1 Illinois 1 Indianapolis 1 Jersey City 5 Johns Hopkins ... o 164 Prince- ton Vic- tories 17 28 I 19 I O 6 1 1 o o 5 2 16 3 28 45 7 o o o First Ties Game 1868 Keystone 1 1880 Kleintz (Phila.)... 1 1888 Lafayette 1880 Lawrenceville o 1879 Lehigh o 1881 Long Island o 1896 Louisville 1877 Manchester 1 1883 Manhattan o 1874 Maryland A. C... o 1872 Mercersburg o 1896 Metropolitans o 1897 Michigan o 1890 Montclair o 1877 Montgomery A. C. o 1864 Monumentals (Bait, o 1903 Murray Hill A. C. o 1874 Nameless o 1877 Navy 1895 Neptune 1 1893 Newark o 1874 Newark 1904 New Bedford 1 1868 New Haven o 1900 New York (N. L.) o 1879 New York (A. L.) o 1902 New York Univ... o 1877 North Carolina . . . o 1879 Notre Dame o 1887 Olympics Prince ton Vic - Vic- First tories tories Ties Game I 1883 I 1878 4 32 1873 19 O 1892 20 1890 I 1886 1 O 1876 2 O 1879 -0 9 1881 1 I 1898 2 I 1906 5 I 1881 5 1882 3 O 1899 1 1895 ) 1 O 1884 1 1894 2 O 1874 2 1906 1 1870 3 2 1870 3 2 O 1883 1 1878 2 1 1875 17 1 1881 2 I9II 8 I 1899 4 1912 2 1914 1 1863 The Princeton JSric-a-Brac s Princeton ' s! Prince- ton Vic- Victories tories Ties Orange I 2 o Orange A. C I 7 o Penn. State 7 7 o Philadelphia 9 2 o Pittsburgh (X. L.) 1 o o Pittsburgh o 1 Providence 1 o o Quaker City 3 I o Rahway o I o Resolutes 2 3 I Richmond 1 o 1 Rose Hill o 1 o Rutgers 17 o South Orange . . . . o 1 o Compilations of Parke H. Davis, Complete itaeball Becoro, I860 First Game 1873 1891 1895 1874 1897 1914 1881 1885 1891 1873 1896 1870 1866 1910 ' 93- Victories Southwark o S. I. C. C 3 Stars (Brooklyn), o Stars (N.Bnswck.) o Stars (Syracuse)., o Stevens o Syracuse 1 Trenton 6 Tri-Mountain o Trinity o Tufts o Union (N.Bnswck.) 1 Union College o Univ. of Penn 19 J nnce ton Vic- First tories Ties Game I 1880 3 I 1874 2 1863 1 1862 2 1876 1 1913 4 IOO4 7 1871 1 1770 6 1903 4 1900 1 1879 2 1895 24 2 1879 l9l6(Conclubeb) Prince- ton Vic- Vic- First tories tories Ties Game Ursinus I 8 o 1905 Utica o 1 o 1879 Vermont o 3 o 1879 Villa Nova o 5 o 1910 Virginia 9 24 o 1886 Washington 3 3 o 1881 W. and J o 2 o 1904 W. and L o 1 o 1896 VVesleyan I 8 o 1892 West Virginia o 4 ° 1899 W. and M o 1 o 1907 Williams 4 12 o 1864 Worcester 2 o o 1879 Yale 72 53 2 1868 DRIGGS BATTING 165 The Princeton Brie- a- B r ac z o o s m W ►4 - S The Princeton Bric-a-gr S Sfes - - VARSITY TRACK TEAM, 1915-16 ERSKINE WHITE BARRET JELKE UNDERWOOD FREDERICK RIEDEL LARSEN SHOTWELL KEENE FITZPATRICK (COACH) TACKF-S GENNERT WILSON SINCLAIRE MADDEN COLWELL NOURSE HARVE1 LAKE (MGR.) COPELAND CAREY SNOWDEN DAVY MOORE RICHARDSON WALLACE BARR FLOTO ROBERTS BINGHAM BISCIIOFF GLOVER CRAWFORD PAUL ZUNINO DECKER The Princeton Bric-a-Brac « ebieto of tfje tErack Reason, 191546 HEX a call for track candidates was made early in the fall term, an unusually large squad of men reported, many of them from the 1914-1915 team, and also several promising men from the 1918 Freshman squad. The weak point seemed to be the distance runs, for the places of such men as Mackenzie, Cooley and Hayes were hard to fill, although Barr, Glover, Durell, Riedel and Brackenridge were still in college. The field events and hurdles, however, appeared well taken care of by Carey, Davy, Nourse, Gennert, Crawford and Frederick, all of whom had been Varsity men the previous year. Captain Moore was easily the fastest man in the sprints, but Snowden Madden, Richardson and Wallace were all capable of good performances. The annual fall handicap meet, won by the Freshmen, brought to light some good men among the 1919 squad, although no accurate judgment could be made, owing to the liberal handicaps. On March 4th Princeton sent ten men to the Indoor Intercollegiates in New York, and captured the two-lap relay race with a team composed of Wallace, Eddy, Richardson and Moore. Princeton ' s only other score was a third in the shot-put. The following week Princeton entered twelve men in the Meadowbrook A. C. Meet, one of the most important indoor events of the year. The Varsity mile relay team placed second to Harvard, finishing ahead of Cornell and Yale; while in the regular events Princeton took three second places and one third. The indoor season was brought to a close with the interclass meet, finally won by 1918 after a very close race with 1917. The outdoor season began with the Caledonians, on April 1st, which developed into one of the closest interclass meets in years. 1917, with six first places and three seconds, barely nosed out 1916 by one and two-thirds points. Owing to a high wind the times were rather slow, the best performances being in the dashes, won by W. B. Moore, ' 17, in 10 1-5 and 22 3-5 sec. respectively. The Annual Penn. Relays, on April 28th and 29th, had Princeton entries in ten events, but the Varsity was only able to score in five of them. R. L. Nourse, ' 17, again broke the intercollegiate javelin throw record, with a distance of 177 feet 4% inches, while Gennert placed fifth in the same event. In the various relay races Princeton was more successful, taking points in four events : second in both the Varsity and Freshman mile relays, fourth in the sprint medley, and fifth in the two-mile relay. 169 The Princeton Brie- a- B r ac With high hopes the team went to New Haven on May 6th for the annual dual meet with Yale. The result proved a disappointment, however, for Yale with ten first places had no trouble in winning by a score of 66 1 2 to 36 2. The next week the University of Virginia team came to Princeton, and was easily defeated, 83 to 34. The Varsity ' s showing at the Intercollegiates in Cambridge was not up to that in 191 5, scoring a total of but ten points. The most creditable performance was by Captain Moore, who won the 220-yard dash and placed a very close second to Smith of Michigan in the 100. H. J. Richardson, ' 16, took fifth in the quarter-mile, that being Princeton ' s only other score. Taken as a whole, the track season could not be called successful, but the fact that interest in the sport continues to increase materially promises better results for the future. CRAWFORD, PRINCETON, AND FARWELL, VALE HIGH HURDLES 170 -% s ! S LYhe Princeton B Copyright, International Film Service, Inc. W. B. MOORE, PRINCETON, WINNING THE FINALS OF THE 22 0-YARD DASH, 1916 INTERCOLLEGIATES. SMITH, MICHIGAN, SECOND; VAX WINKLE, CORNELL, THIRD; TREADWAY, YALE, FOURTH; KAUFMAN, PENN, FIFTH. SMITH, MICHIGAN, WINNING 100-YARD DASH AT INTERCOLLEGIATES. MOORE, Copyright, International Film Service, Inc. PRINCETON (FAR RIGHT), SECOND. -3  gSg The Princeton Bric-a-gr cjS Sfe —ff- MURRAY, STANFORD, WINNING THE 120-YARD HIGH HURDLES AT THE 1916 INTERCOLI.EGIATES. The Princeton Bric-a-Elrac ; POTTER, CORNELL, WINNING THE TWO-MILE WINDNAGI.E, CORNELL, WINNING THE MILE FOSS, CORNELL, POLE VAULTING MEREDITH, U. OF P., BREAKING INTERCOLLEGIATE RECORD IN THE 440-YARD DASH Sntercollegtate QTracfe iffleet, Posftou, 1916 a rf.muvi :£LThe Princeton Brie- a- graces! S5 —?- «« «VJfe - . Princeton = gale rack jHeet YALE FIELD, MAY 6, 1916 EVENT FIRST SECOND THIRD TIME, HEIGHT, DISTANCE POINTS PRINCETON POINTS YALE ioo-Yard Dash . 220-Yard Dash . 440- Yard Dash . 880- Yard Run .. One-Mile Run .. Two-Mile Run . 120- Yard High Hurdles 220- Yard Low Hurdles Broad Jump Pole Vault .Treadway (Y) .. . Moore (P) . Richardson (P) . .Overton (Y) .Overton (Y) .Young (Y) ..Farwell (Y) .... Crawford (P) .. .Hampton (Y) .Oler (Y) . Buck Keyl (Y) .Braden (Y) .... ..Brown (Y) .Moore (P) .Treadway (Y) . .Cooper (Y) .Barker (Y) ... .Colwell (P) ... .Glover (P) . Snowden (P) .Stewart (Y) ... Jackes (P) .Barr (P) .Underwood (P) . Bischoff (P) ... .Davis (Y) .Wilson (P) .... Nichols (Y) ... Gifford (Y) tie. .Nagle (Y) tie .. .Heyniger (P) . . . .Walden (Y) . 10 2-5 sec - 50 3-5 sec , 1 min. 57 2-5 sec. .4 min. 23 4-5 sec. .9 min. 57 4-5 sec. 3 5 6 1 3 3 2 6 2 tyi 3 2 5 3 2 7 5 5 6 2 6 6y 2 8 5 6 66 ' A Crawford (P) . .Farwell (Y) .Madden (P) Davy (P) and .Johnstone (Y) . Gennert (P) .. .22 ft. 8 in .6 ft .11 ft. 6 in .43 ft. 10 in . 144 ft. 7 l 2 in. . . . Final Score Shot Put Hammer Throw 37 ' A 174 - rhe Princeton Brica-BracS SSfe - Princeton Virginia racfe Jlteet UNIVERSITY FIELD, MAY 13, 1916 TIME, HEIGHT POINTS POINTS EVEN T FIRST SECOND THIRD DISTANCE PRINCETON VIRGINIA ioo- Yard Dash ...Moore (P) Snowden (P) . . . Jelke (P) io 1-5 sec 9 220- Yard Dash ...Moore (P) Snowden (P) ...Barret (P) 21 4-5 sec 9 o 440- Yard Dash ...Richardson (P) . . Norris (V) Stone (V) 51 sec 5 4 880-Yard Run ....Norris (V) Floto (P) Barr (P) 1 min. 55 2-5 sec. . 4 5 One-Mile Run ....Colwell (P) Abbott (V) Underwood (P) . .4 min. 25 sec 6 3 Two-Mile Run ...Glover (P) Paul (P) Bischoff (P) 9 min. 52 3-5 sec. . 9 o 120-Yd. H. H ' dles. Wilson (V) Buttelle (V) Crawford (P) . . . 16 2-5 sec 1 8 220- Yd. L. H ' dles. Crawford (P) ...Wilson (V) M. O. Wilson (P). 25 sec 6 3 Broad Jump Beasley (V) Roberts (P) Round (V) 21 ft. 3 in 3 6 High Jump Davy (P) Crawford (P) ...Archer (V) 5 ft. fc g in 8 1 Pole Vault White (P) Carey (P) and Erskine (P) tie . . . . 11 ft. 6 in 9 o Shot Put Sinclaire (P) ....Barker (V) Larsen (P) 42 ft. 11 7-10 in. .. 6 3 Hammer Throw ..Gennert (P) Nourse (P) Barker (V) 136 ft. 11 in 8 1 Final Score .... 83 34 175 The Princeton Bric-a-Prac ■ML Copyright, International Film Service, Inc. MEREDITH, U. OF P., WINNING 440-YARD RUN AT INTEKCOLLEGIATES, 1916. RILEY, DARTMOUTH, SECOND; CRIM, CORNELL, THIRD; WILLCOX, HARVARD, FOURTH; RICHARDSON, PRINCETON, FIFTH. The Princeton Bric-a-grac « Cfje intercollegiate gs octatton of tije Amateur tf)lete£ of America The Intercollegiate Association of Amateur Athletes of America, with an active membership of twenty-seven universities and colleges, is now in the forty-second year of its existence. Although the object of the organization is the protection of the mutual interests of the different colleges which comprise the Association and the advancement and improvement of amateur athletic sports in American universities, it has up to this time attempted to exercise jurisdiction only over intercol- legiate track and field meets and cross-country runs. In addition to the championship meets in track and cross-country, held annually under the auspices of the Association, all track competitions of any nature participated in by its members must be conducted under the rules and standards of the Association. The requirements for membership are severe and the Associa- tion has maintained a high standard of amateurism in its activities since its founding. The organization is affiliated with the Amateur Athletic Union. OFFICERS Treasurer, Creigh M. Heydecker Columbia March 1916-September 1916 Donelson M. Lake, Princeton President Roger F. Evans, Dartmouth Vice-President G. Harold Kimber, Syracuse Vice-President Secretary, George G. Brown, Jr N. Y. U. September 1916-March 1917 ALTON Behrer, Princeton President W. E. Sanderson, Syracuse Vice-President EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE C. W. B. Townsend : Pennsylvania F. P. Clement, Jr Harvard A. H. Bunker Yale P. F. Sanborne Cornell N. E. Tourteli.otte M. I. T. F. E. Starrett Brown S. S. Shannon Pennsylvania Theodore Clark Harvard Richard Bentley Yale C. S. Cooper Cornell N. E. TOURTELLOTTE M. I. T. J. Storer, Jr Brown Thornton Gerrish ADVISORY COMMITTEE G. T. Kirby, Columbia Chairman Harvard Romeyn Berry . Cornell Amherst Bowdoin Brown California Colby C. C. N. Y. Columbia Cornell Dartmouth Fordham Georgetown Harvard MEMBERS Haver ford Johns Hopkins Lafayette Leland Stanford Maine M. I. T. Michigan New York University Pennsylvania State Pennsylvania Princeton Rutgers Swarthmore Syracuse Yale 177 The Princeton Bric-a-Prac ioo-Yard Dash 220-Yard Dash Annual fflttt I. £. 2L 9. 3. a. Held at Harvard Stadium, Cambridge, Mass., May 27, 1916 WINNERS TIME, HEIGHT OR DISTANCE 1. H. L. Smith (Michigan) 10 sec. 2. W. B. Moore (Princeton) 3. E. A. Teschner (Harvard) 4- A. F. Van Winkle (Cornell) S. H. L. Treadway (Yale) 1. W. B. Moore (Princeton) 21 3-5 sec. 2. H. L. Smith (Michigan) 3. A. F. Van Winkle (Cornell) I 4. H. L. Treadway (Yale) v 5. F. Kaufman (Penn.) It. T. E. Meredith (Penn.) t47 2-5 sec. 2. E. C. Riley (Dartmouth) 3. W. D. Crim (Cornell) 4. W. Willcox, Jr. (Harvard) 5. H. J. Richardson (Princeton) f 1. J. E. Meredith (Penn.) . . . . fi niin. 53 sec. ] 2. W. J. Bingham (Harvard) Half-Mile Run 3- L. C. Scudder (Penn.) ) 4. G. M. Taylor (Cornell) v 5. C. Peterson (Syracuse) L. V. Windnagle (Cornell).. 4 min. 15 sec. H. L. Carroll (Michigan) One-Mile Run 3. J. W. Overton (Yale) 4. H. R. Wilson (Leland Stanford) 5. R. G. Brown (Mass. Tech.) 1. D. F. Potter (Cornell) ... .9 min. 32 3-5 sec. 2. J. S. Hoffmire (Cornell) Two-Mile Run { 3. E. Frey (Cornell) 4. J. C. Corwith (Cornell) 5. J. T. Putnam (Cornell) 1. F. S. Murray (Leland Stanford) ... . 15 sec. 2. L. 3. T. 4- J. 5- J. 120-Yard Hurdles S. Murray (Leland Stanford) . E. Grubb (Cornell) L. Preble (California) K. Norton (Leland Stanford) W. Farwell (Yale) 220- Yard Hurdles High Jump Broad Jump Hammer Throw Shot Put Pole Vault (A. W. R i J. O. Joh IC. C. Gifl WINNERS TIME, HEIGHT OR DISTANCE i. F. S. Murray (Leland Stanford) 24 1-5 sec. 2. J. V. Farwell (Yale) 3. J. K. Norton (Leland Stanford) 4. D. M. Brown (Penn. State) 5. W. A. Savage (Bowdoin) 1. W. M. Oler (Yale) 6 ft. 2 1-4 in. F. L. Maker (California) fA. W. Richard (Cornell) ohnstone (Harvard) iifford (Yale) II. T. Worthington (Dartmouth) 24 ft. 1-4 in. W. M. Oler (Yale) W. M. Sisson (Leland Stanford) F. L. Maker (California) F. M. Hampton (Yale) C. C. Gildersleeve (California) .. 155 ft. 1 in. G. W. Leadbetter (Bowdoin) D. H. Richardson (California) C. F. Hagemann (Cornell) C. A. Pudrith (Dartmouth) H. B. Leversedge (California) .46 ft. 2 2 in. C. W. Spears (Dartmouth) A. W. Richards (Cornell) E. R. Caughey (Leland Stanford) J. M. Braden (Yale) F. K. Foss (Cornell) !W. I. Newsletter (Penn.) E. L. Sewell (Penn.) K. R. Curtis (Syracuse) H. C. Buck (Yale) J. D. Nagel (Yale) .12 ft. 8 in. tNew Intercollegiate Record. Ties former Intercollegiate Record. SUMMARY Cornell 45 Yale 29 Leland Stanford 22 California 22 Pennsylvania 18 Dartmouth 14 Michigan 13 8. Harvard 11 9. Princeton 10 10. Bowdoin 5 1 1. Syracuse 3 12. Penn. State 2 13. Mass. Tech 1 178 -3 « g2£!! The Princeton Bric-a-BF S Sfe5 « g- $rtnceton tEracfe Eecorbsi iirmg tlir U fst autbenticattb l ccort 5 mabe bp Princeton flJtn at am ' Rrconnntb Smateur fumes EVENT RECORD HOLDER ioo- Yard Dash 9 4-5 seconds J. H. Rush, ' 98 220- Yard Dash 21 . ) W. L. Dawbarn, 09 3-5 seconds „, D , „ , ' J W. B. Moore, 17 440- Yard Dash 49 seconds J. H. Colfelt, ' 00 120-Yard Hurdles 15 2-5 seconds M. Dwight, ' 11 220- Yard Hurdles 24 2-5 seconds A. W. Stewart, ' 15 Half-Mile Run 1 minute 53 2-5 seconds C. H. Kilpatrick, ' 99 One-Mile Run 4 minutes 21 3-5 seconds I. D. Mackenzie, ' 15 Two-Mile Run 9 minutes 40 seconds J. S. Eisele, ' 07 Running High Jump 6 feet 2] 2 inches G. P. Serviss, Jr., ' 02 Indoor High Jump 6 feet i}4 inches W. M. Davy, ' 16 Running Broad Jump 23 feet 2J.-2 inches. L. H. Simons, ' oS Pole Vault 12 feet % inches T. Fiske, ' 14 Indoor Pole Vault 11 feet 5 inches C. Vezin, Jr., ' 09 i6-Pound Shot Put 44 feet 2 inches A. H. Bissell, ' 12 i6-Pound Hammer Throw 168 feet 7 inches J. R. DeWitt, ' 04 American College ecorbg JBting the JBeeft autlif imratrb J ccorbsf mabe bv Course j tn in anp Ktroani;eb amateur 6ame event record holder college ioo-Yard Dash 9 3-5 sec H. P. Drew So. California ( B. J. Wefers Georgetown 220-Yard Dash 21 1-5 sec I £■ £ Craig Michigan I D. F. Lippincott Pennsylvania - H. P. Drew So. California 440-Yard Run 47 2-5 sec J. E. Meredith Pennsylvania 88o-Yard Run 1 min. 52 1-5 sec J. E. Meredith Pennsylvania One-Mile Run 4 min. 14 2-5 sec J. P. Jones Cornell Two-Mile Run 9 min. 17 4-5 sec T. S. Berna Cornell T R. Simpson Missouri 120-Yard Hurdles 15 sec F. W. Kelley So. California C F. S. Murray Stanford 220- Yard Hurdles 23 3-5 sec . f T C £ ra f n lein Pennsylvania ° J I J. I. Wendell Wesleyan Running High Jump 6 ft. 6 l A in G. L. Horine Stanford Running Broad Jump 24 ft. 7 4 in M. Prinstein Syracuse i6-Pound Shot Put 48 ft. 10 in R. L. Beatty Columbia 16- Pound Hammer Throw 175 ft. 10 in K. Shattuck California Pole Vault 13 ft. 1 in R. A. Gardner Yale The Princeton Bric-a-Prac S. C a. a. a. a. Crack Eecorbs 220- Yard Dash 21 1-5 sec. EVENT RECORD HOLDER COLLEGE YEAR ( B. J. Wefers Georgetown 1896 100- Yard Dash 9 4-5 sec R. C. Craig Michigan 191 1 J. E. Patterson Pennsylvania 1913 ( B. J. Wefers Georgetown 1896 R. C. Craig Michigan 1910-1 1 D. F. Lippincott Pennsylvania 1913 2-5 sec J. E. Meredith Pennsylvania 1916 R. Meredith Pennsylvania 1916 P. Jones Cornell 1913 S. Hoffmire Cornell 1914 S. Murray Stanford 1916 C. Kraenzlein Pennsylvania 1898 I. Wendell Wesleyan 1913 . M. Oler Yale 1915 440- Yard Run 47 880- Yard Run 1 min. 53 sec J One-Mile Run 4 min. 14 2-5 sec J. Two-Mile Run 9 min. 23 4-5 sec J. 120-Yard Hurdles 15 sec F. S A. I J- Running High Jump 6 ft. 4V2 in W 220- Yard Hurdles 23 3-5 sec. Running Broad Jump 24 ft. 4 l 2 in A. C. Kraenzlein Pennsylvania -. 1899 16-PouND Shot Put 48 ft. 10M in R. L. Beatty Columbia 1912 16- Pound Hammer Throw ..165 ft. $4 in H. P. Bailey Maine 1915 Pole Vault 13 ft. 1 in R. A. Gardner Yale 1912 LEVERSEDGE, CALIFORNIA, SHOT PUTTING The Princeton gric-a-gracU SAVAGE DE LANOY 1916 VARSITY CREW LEE OTIS GADEBUSCH PAULL COCHRAN -g gg The Princeton Bric-a-Brac iBfe  - Creto OFFICERS, 1915-16 R. A. Cochran, 3rd, ' 17 Captain A. M. Butler, ' 16 Manager G. W. Perkins, Jr., ' 17 Assistant Manager Dr. J. D. Spaeth Coach OFFICERS, 1916-17 R. A. Cochran, 3rd, ' 17 Captain G. W. Perkins, Jr., ' 17 Manager D. S. Leslie, ' 18 Assistant Manager Dr. J. D. Spaeth Coach POSITION NAME WEIGHT AGE Stroke, (Capt.) R. A. Cochran, ' 17 160 23 7. J. D. Paull, ' 17 164 20 6, P. H. Gadebusch. ' 16 182 21 5, J. R. L. Otis, ' 16 183 22 ' Tarfittp, 1916 HEIGHT YEARS POSITION NAME WEIGHT AGE HEIGHT YEARS 4, E. H. Lee, ' 16 185 21 6.4H second 6.2 second 3, R. H. McCann, ' 17 165 21 6.2 first 6.2 2 first 2, D. DeLanoy, ' 17 165 20 6.2 first 6.3J 2 second Bow, A. V. Savage, ' 17 162 21 5.10 first 6.2J 2 first Cox, G. G. Sikes, ' 16 106 20 5.4! first ace£i DATE FIRST SECOND THIRD PLACE DISTANCE WON BY April 20, 1916 Princeton Harvard Princeton, N. J...iJ-jj miles 2 feet May 13, 1016 Princeton Navy Columbia Penn 1 7-16 miles One length Phila., Pa May 27, 1916 Cornell Princeton Yale Ithaca, N. Y 2 miles 10 feet 183 - g Sg The Princeton Brica-gracS Bteg - - Creto ebteto ICv Sfi NDER the coaching of Dr. J. Duncan Spaeth and the captaincy of J. R. A. Cochran, 3rd, ' 17, Princeton rowing en- joyed the most successful season in its history. Starting the season with only three veterans, and with inex- perienced material to pick from, Dr. Spaeth turned out the best crew which has ever represented Princeton. Yale, Harvard, Columbia, the Navy and Pennsylvania were all defeated. Cornell proved the only stumbling block, finally winning a hard-fought race on Lake Cayuga by a margin of nine feet. Dr. Spaeth, in a review of the season said, Three elements are necessary to a fast crew : power, form and spirit. Short on power the 1916 Princeton crew made up for this in form and spirit, and Captain Cochran ' s eight will go down and deserves to go down in Princeton rowing history as the Fighting Crew of 1916. The season opened on April 20th, when the ' Varsity met Harvard on Lake Carnegie, and won the closest race ever rowed there, defeating the Crimson shell by a scant two feet. Princeton jumped into a lead of a quarter length at the start, rowing a thirty-six stroke. Captain Cochran gradually dropped to a thirty-two stroke and by the time the mile-post was reached had increased the lead to three-quarters of a length. Then Harvard ' s tremendous power began to tell, and Princeton ' s lead be- gan to be gradually cut down, until at the finish the ' Varsity crossed the line only two feet ahead of the Harvard shell. Both crews were timed at 9 minutes, 2 l 2 seconds. The Princeton crew : Stroke, Captain Cochran ; 7, Paull ; 6, Gadebusch ; 5, In- gersoll ; 4, Lee ; 3, Otis ; 2, DeLanoy ; bow, Savage ; cox, Sikes. The Childs Cup was again brought to Princeton when the ' Varsity defeated the Navy, Pennsylvania and Columbia crews on the Schuylkill at Philadelphia on May 13th. Columbia took the lead at the start but Princeton soon overcame it, and from the quarter-mile mark on was never seriously challenged. The ' Varsity finished a full length ahead of the Navy. Columbia came in a length behind Navy, while Pennsylvania was two lengths behind Columbia. The time was 7 minutes flat. Due to the enforced withdrawal from rowing of Ingersoll the crew had been reorganized after the Harvard race. The seating was as follows : Stroke, Captain Cochran ; 7, Paull ; 6, Gadebusch ; 5, Otis ; 4, Lee ; 3, McCann ; 2, DeLanoy ; bow, Savage. The Yale-Cornell-Princeton triangular regatta was held on Lake Cayuga at Ithaca on May 27th. Yale caught the water first, but was soon overtaken by Cornell and Princeton, and from then on the race was between Cornell and Princeton, Yale being seven lengths in the rear at the finish. At the quarter-mile mark the ' Varsity led by a quarter of a length; at the half- mile the two crews were even ; at the mile mark Cornell began to take the lead and held it up to a quarter mile from the finish, when Captain Cochran started a terrific spurt which resulted in bringing Princeton abreast of Cornell, and in a few strokes more in giving her the lead. But when only one hundred yards from the finish line there was a break in the boat, and before Princeton could recover Cornell shot by and won by the length of the forward deck. The official times were: Cornell, 11 min- utes, 21 1-5 seconds; Princeton, 11 minutes, 23 1-5 seconds; Yale,n minutes, 32 4-5 seconds. 184 -%« ggZg? The Princeton Bric-a-Br S Bfes - Cfnlb Cup Eecorb YEAR WINNER PLACE COURSE ♦1879 Pennsylvania, Schuylkill River l l 2 miles i88o Columbia, Schuylkill River i88l Princeton, Schuylkill River i882 Pennsylvania, Schuylkill River ♦1883 Pennsylvania, Schuylkill River ♦1884 Pennsylvania, Schuylkill River i88s Cornell, Schuylkill River YEAR WINNER PLACE COURSE i886 Pennsylvania, Schuylkill River i} 2 miles i887 Cornell, Schuylkill River ♦1889 Cornell, Schuylkill River 1912 Columbia, Lake Carnegie 1914 Columbia, Lake Carnegie 1915 Princeton, Lake Carnegie 1916 Princeton, Schuylkill River Four-oared Crews. Princeton did not race from 1885 to 1912. 185 % u ■tf ' fl JE  ._,.._ sZ XXft rn LThe Princeton Bric-a-Brac -2  £ rf M 2± =t - . ' Pasetmll Captain ' 6o. L. W. Mudge ' 75 J. M. Woods •89. W. H. King ' 03. F. G. Pearson ' 61. L. W. Mudge ' 76 J. M. Woods ' 90. C. C. Dana ' 04. C. G. Stevens ' 62. L. W. Mudge ' 77 D. Laughlin ' 91. C. C. Dana ' 05- G. T. Wells ' 63. H. C. Milspaugh •78 E. Furman ' 92. L. A. Young ' 06. S. J. Reid, Jr. •64- H. C. Milspaugh ' 79 . C. B. Wigton ' 93- P. King ' 07. J. L. Cooney ' 65. E. P. Rankin ' 80 W. S. Horton ' 94- C. S. Mackenzie ' 08. E. H. W. Harland 66. W. H. Wickham ' 81 A. McCune ' 95- J. H. Brooks ' 09. W. R. Sides ' 67. R. F. Little ' 82 . O. Rafferty ' 96. J. Bradley ' 10. F. T. Dawson ' 68. E. A. Van Wagenen •83 J. M. Harlan ' 97- W. W. Wilson ' 11. S. B. White ' 69. E. P. Rankin ' 84 J. M. Harlan ' 98. F. W. Kafer ' 12. C. H. Sterrett ' 70. W. H. Buck ' 85 D. Edwards ' 99- F. W. Kafer ' i3- F. D. Worthington i. A. Van Rensselaer ' 86 J. P. Shaw ' 00. A. R. T. Hillebrand ' i4- B. K. Rhoads ' 72. T. K. Bradford ' 87 A. H. Larkin ' 01. W. E. Green ' i5- O. S. Greene ' 73- A. Pell ' 88 E. O. Wagenhurst ' 02. W. J. Steinwender ' 16. B. C. Law ' 74- D. Patton ' i7- E. H. Driggs Jf ootball Captain ' 69. W. S. Gummere ' 81 P. T. Bryan ' 93- T. G. Trenchard ' 05. J. L. Cooney ' 70. A. Van Rennselaer ' 82 E. C. Peace ' 94- T. G. Trenchard ' 06. H. L. Dillon ' 71- A. Johnson ' 83 A. Moffat ' 95- L. Lea ' 07. J. B. McCormick •72. D. T. Marvel ' 84 C. W. Bird ' 96. G. Cochran ' 08. E. A. Dillon ' 73- C. 0. Dershimer •85 C. M. DeCamp ' 97- G. Cochran ' 09. R. C. Siegling ' 74- I. H. Lionberger ' 86 H. S. Savage ' 98. A. R. T. Hillebrand ' 10. E. J. Hart ' 75- C. Denney ' 87 E. O. Wagenhurst ' 99. W. H. Edwards ' 11. E. J. Hart ' 76. A. J. McCosh ' 88 H. W. Cowan ' oo. H. W. Pell ' 12. T. T. Pendleton ' 77- W. E. Dodge ' 89 E. A. Poe ' 01. H. W. Pell ' i3- H. A. H. Baker ' 78. B. Ballard ' 90 E. A. Poe ' 02. R. T. Davis ' 14- H. R. Ballin ' 79- B. Ballard ' 91 R. H. Warren ' 03- J. R. DeWitt ' IS- F. Glick ' 80. F. Loney ' 92 P. King ' 04. 186 W. L. Foulke •16. F. T. Hogg The Princeton Bric-a-grac ■£ , Captains of Princeton Qfrack Yearns; 1874=1917 ' 74 J. H. Vandeventer ' 85 J. B. Harriman ' 96 R. Garrett ' 07 W. M. Armstrong ' 75 J. H. Vandeventer •86 G. B. McClellan ' 97 R. Garrett ' 08 J. C Atlee ' 76 F. Dunning ' 87 W. M. Spalding ' 98 H. C. Potter ' 09 R. A. Gamble ' 77 J. A. Campbell ' 88 F. S. Thompson ' 99 J. F. Cregan ' 10 J. T. Moore 78 J. A. Campbell ' 89 H. H. Janeway ' 00 J. F. Cregan ' n J. M. Dwight 79 H. G. Marquand 90 W. S. Dohm ' 01 A. W. Coleman ' 12 H. M. Sawyer 8o C. H. Dodge ' 91 J. S. Roddy ' 02 A. W. Coleman ' 13 R. B. Thomas, Jr. 8i F. G. Landon ' 92 P. VREDENBURGH, 2ND ' 03 D. S. Horton ' 14 T. FlSKE ' 82 G. Westervei.t ' 93 W. B. WOODBRIDGE ' 04 L. M. Asbit ' 15 I. D. Mackenzie 83 W. C. Osborn ' 94 G. R. Swain ' 05 R. E. Williams ' 16 W. B. Moore 84 A. G. Fell ' 95 D. R. James ' 06 W M. Armstrong ' 17 W. B. Moore HEAT OF 100-YARD DASH AT INTERCOLLEGIATES. SMITH, MICHIGAN (LEFT); SNOVfDEN, PRINCETON (RIGHT) - ggg The Princeton Bric-a-Br 2 Ste5 « 3- oe jTtelb HROUGH the voluntary contributions from Alumni of various classes, several thousand dollars has been raised to be expended in the interests of the University as a memorial to John Prentiss Poe, Jr., ' 95, who was killed on the British front last winter while fighting gallantly as a member of the famous Black Watch. Mr. Poe was a mem- ber of a prominent Princeton family and while an undergraduate here took an active part in the athletic and other activities of the college. In view of Mr. Poe ' s interest in Princeton athletics, the Poe Memorial Committee has decided to expend the money entrusted to them in an addition to the athletic equipment of the University. During the past summer a field, 600 by 375 feet, located just south of Goldie Field, has been laid out and graded and will be ready for use early in the spring. This ad- dition to the grounds now in use for athletic purposes fills a serious need which has been felt for some time by the Department of Physical Education. The new field will be for the general use of the students and will be known as Poe Field. As a further tribute to Mr. Poe, the committee is planning to erect a handsome memorial flagstaff on the field from which an American flag will constantly fly. The base of the staff will be in the form of a memorial monument with spaces for appro- priate inscription and designs in relief, depicting the events of Mr. Poe ' s career. The flagstaff itself will be constructed of per- manent material, probably bronze, and will be in keeping with the rest of the memorial. When entirely completed, the field and monument will prove a fitting tribute to the memory of one of Princeton ' s most famous graduates of recent years, and at the same time a very useful gift to the University. 188 r r y . • z run on _jb SPORTS H The IPrmceton Bric-a-Elrac FOSTER FOLWELL (ASST MGR.) RAHUL CLICK FERRFE BASKET-BALL TEAM, 1915-16 VAN DER VOORT (MGR.) PAULSON m ' tigue (CAPT.) BUTTERWORTH CUNEO LUEHRING (COACH) HAAS DAVIES The Princeton Brie- a- Brae Pennsylvania Princeton Cornell ♦Pennsylvania DATE December 4, December 8, December ii, December 14, December 17, December 23, January 10, January 15, January 19, January 25, February 12, OFFICERS, 1915-16 J. B. McTigue, ' 16 Captain H. F. van der Voort, Jr., ' 16 Manager C. H. Folwell, Jr., ' 17 Assistant Manager F. W. Luehrinc Coach OFFICERS, 1916-17 C. Haas, ' 17 Captain C. H. Folwell, Jr., ' 17 Manager L. L. Anderson, II, ' 18 Assistant Manager F. W. Luehring Coach TEAM R. B. Ferree, Jr., ' 16 Forward C. Haas, ' 17 Forward J. B. McTigue, ' 16 Center T. J. Davies, ' 16 Guard W. J. Rahill, ' 17 Guard SUBSTITUTES D. McK. Paulson, ' 17 Forward P. W. Foster, ' 17 Forward J. E. Butterworth, ' 16 Center F. Glick, ' 16 Guard J. C. Cuneo, ' 17 Guard INTERCOLLEGIATE LEAGUE STANDING defeated won lost per cent. 8 2 .800 8 2 .800 5 5 -500 Princeton in the playoff for the championship. RECORD FOR 1915-16 Yale Dartmouth 3 Columbia 1 WON LOST PER CENT. 5 500 7 .300 9 .100 Princeton . Princeton . Princeton . Princeton . . Princeton. . Princeton. . Princeton . . Princeton . Princeton. . Princeton . Princeton. score opponents score 36 Commonwealth A. C. 12 27 St. John ' s College... 22 31 C. C. N. 27 24 Manhattan College . . 20 19 Cornell 17 28 Crescent A. C 25 19 Lafayette 10 22 Pennsylvania 26 24 Columbia 12 18 Yale 19 37 Swarthmore 9 DATE February 16, Princeton . . February 19, Princeton . . February 23, Princeton . . . February 28, Princeton . . . March March March March March 3. 9, 10, 11, 29. Princeton Princeton . . Princeton . . Princeton . . Princetonf. . score opponents score 16 Columbia 12 33 Dartmouth 29 . 28 Pennsylvania 20 25 Dartmouth 22 . 24 Yale 19 22 Cornell 19 14 Syracuse 22 30 Union College 18 4 Pennsylvania 16 ♦Games away from home. fPost-season game at Philadelphia for championship. The Princeton JSric-a-grac MORRISON (COACH) FAIRIKIEVE CROSS COUNTRY TEAM, 1916 BRACKENRIDGE SAl ER SHEPPARD STEVENSON ZUNINO COPELAND (CAPT.) SHOTWELL HELM TRACY BEIIRER (MGR.) BOYD The Princeton liric-a-@ra.c OFFICERS, 1916-17 A. T. Copelani), ' 17 Captain Alvin Behrer, ' 17 Manager Richard M. Griffith, ' 18 Assistant Manager TEAM J. C. Boyd, ' 18 G. B. Sheppard, ' 17 G. Brackenridce, ' 17 D. R. Shotwell, ' 18 J. T. Fairgrieve, ' 19 S. R. Stevenson, ' 18 T. O. Helm, ' 19 F. L. Tracy, ' 19 R. C. Sailer, ' 19 F. A. Zunino, ' 18 THE RECORD November 4 — Princeton, 35; Yale, 20; at New Haven. November 11 — Princeton, 21; M. I. T., 40; at Boston. November 25 — Intercollegiates, at New Haven. Betmto of 1916 Reason With only four of last year ' s men back, the prospects for the season were not very bright. Moreover, the team was han- dicapped by the loss of Captain Copeland, who had to stop running on doctor ' s orders. Shotwell was easily Princeton ' s stellar performer. By placing first in the M. I. T. meet and by pushing Overton, last year ' s Intercollegiate champion, through- out the race and barely losing out at the finish, Shotwell gives promise of placing well up at the finish in the Intercollegiates, at New Haven, on November 25th. The team was defeated by Yale on November 4th, but a week later showed improve- ment by defeating M. I. T. in a victory due to a well-balanced team. Shotwell, Zunino, and Fairgrieve should do well at the Intercollegiates, and with but two of the team graduating, next year ' s prospects are very bright. 193 The Princeton Brie- a.- Brae ■e . P. J. HERBON GOLF TEAM, FALL, 1916 MAXWELL GRINNELL S. D. HERRON The {Princeton Bric-a-grac § GOLF OFFICERS Gerard B. Lambert President John S. Cosgrave Secretary-Treasurer BOARD OF GOVERNORS John S. Cosgrave Allan Marquand Thornton Conover Howard McClenahan A. M. Harmon M. Taylor Pyne Emerson Howe Percy R. Pyne, 2nd G. B. Lambert E. Y. Robbins E. M. Norris A. D. Russell GREENS COMMITTEE B. S. Horne. Chairman Charles McInnes Thornton Conover UNIVERSITY GOLF TEAM W. A. Lowrie, ' 17, Captain D. C. CORKRAN. ' l8 P. J. Herron, ' 18 P. Parker, ' 18 (golf Bebteto of 1915 H. L. Grinnell, ' i6J4 S. D. Herron, ' 18 H. W. Maxwell, ' iq G. B. McCormick, ' 19 Princeton defeated Harvard in the final round of the team championship in the annual fall intercollegiate golf tournament at Pittsburgh by the score of nine matches to none. The team drew a bye in the first round and defeated Yale in the semi-final round four to three, winning two out of three four-ball matches and two out of four singles. In the final round Princeton did not lose a match. In the individual championship Princeton qualified six men. D. C. Corkran, ' 18, reached the finals by defeating S. D. Herron, ' 18, and McDonald of Illinois, only to lose to Hubbell of Harvard in the finals, one down. May 4, Princeton 3 May 11, Princeton 4 May 16, Princeton 8 THE SCORES— SPRING, 1916 Dartmouth 2 May 17, Princeton 4 Pennsylvania 2 May 24, Princeton 6 Yale 1 Pennsylvania 2 Trenton G. C 8 THE INTERCOLLEGIATES— FALL, 1916 Team Championship — First, Princeton ; runner-up. Harvard. Individual Championship — First, Hubbell, Harvard; runner-up, D. C. Corkran, ' 18. 195 The Princeton Brie- a-ir ac At -2 Mi 1 1 Ik - Ik- Hj BTIp1 1 j?j [|K!m1 1 1 1 1 Jk k_ W 1 1 H k v J k v f) H K| 0 .■ P ■ 1 P P jl V WJbA Tx tJII V 11 H ■ S dL FOGGITT (COACH) GIFFIN WISS GYMNASIUM TEAM, 1915-16 FIELD OSMUN (MGR.) ROBERTS (CAPT.) SCHWABACHER WILLIAMS The {Princeton Bric-a-grexc GYITX OFFICERS, 1915-16 F. C. Roberts, Jr., ' 16 Captain J. E. Osmun, ' 16 Manager J. N. McDowell, ' 17 Assistant Manager OFFICERS, 1916-17 S. I. Cooper, ' 17 Captain T. N. McDowell, ' 17 Manager S. R. Stevenson, ' 18 Assistant Manager TEAM C. R. Smith, ' 16 W. T. Field, ' 16 H. A. Williams, ' 16 J. B. Wiss, ' 17 P. G. Giffin, ' 16 S. I. Cooper, ' 17 W. S. Schwabacher, ' 18 H. A. White, ' 17 F. C Roberts, Jr., ' i6, Captain ftebteto of tfje Reason The winning of the Intercollegiate meet at Pennsylvania marked the close of Princeton ' s most successful season in gymnastics. Out of four meets the team won three, defeating Pennsyl- vania, the Navy and Yale. The victory over the Navy is the first in seven years. The only meet lost was that to New York University. Much of the success of the team is due to the individual work of Captain Roberts, ' 16, and J. B. Wiss, ' 17, who won the All-Around Championship this year for the second time. DUAL MEETS DATE SCORE OPPONENTS SCORE February 11. Princeton 27 Pennsylvania 27 March i i, Princeton 13 New York University 41 March 18, Princeton 36 Yale 17 March 31, Intercollegiate Meet at Philadelphia won by Princeton. TRIANGULAR MEET March 4, Princeton 2 1. Princeton 2. Brown SCORE OPPONENTS SCORE Pennsylvania 13 Navy 20 All-around Intercollegiate championship won by J. B. Wiss, ' 17 EXHIBITION March 25, Newark Academy, Newark, N. J. INTERCOLLEGIATE STANDING 3. Pennsylvania 5. Chicago 7. Haverford 4. Yale 6. New York University The Princeton Bric-a-Sra.c ■fcl HOCKEY TEAM, 1915-16 MALLON (COACH) VANDERHOEF (mGR.) COWEN (ASST. UGH.) KEENE FITZPATRICK (TRAINER) COMEY J. HUMPHREYS COIiU CLARKSON CUSHMAN RUE FORD SCHOEN PEACOCK (CAPT. ) SCULLY HILLS - ggg The Princeton Brica-gracS Sfes - - V o GAMES Princeton 6 Princeton 5 Princeton 2 Princeton 1 Princeton 3 Princeton o Princeton 2 Princeton o Princeton 1 Princeton 3 S. P. S. .. Yale Yale Yale Dartmouth Harvard .. Yale Harvard . . Yale Yale OFFICERS, 1915-16 G. A. Peacock, ' 16 Captain H. B. Vanderhoef, ' 16 Manager J. E. Gowen, ' 17 4ssistant Manager OFFICERS, 1916-17 W. H. Schoen, ' 17 Captain J. E. Oowen, ' 17 Manager L. V. Lamar, ' 18 Assistant Manager Bebieto of tfoe ocfecp g as;on, 1915-1H HE ' Varsity Hockey Team displayed promising possibilities in the preliminary games of the season, defeating Yale in two of three practice games during the Christmas vacation, and q||| Sfc winning 6-3 from St. Paul ' s School soon afterward. How- ever, as the season advanced, the team did not develop as did its opponents, due mostly to a lack of sufficient practice. In respect to individual ability the Princeton seven compared favorably with their opponents in practically all departments of the game. Hills, the best shot on the team, together with Cushman, made up a strong offensive com- bination. The defense was centered around J. Humphreys and Captain Peacock, while Ford at goal was ranked equal to any goal-tender in the League. The team, in spite of the excellence of individual stars, was too greatly handicapped by want of regular practice to prove equal to its opponents. A hockey rink at Princeton might have produced far different results in last year ' s team, as well as in those that have gone before it. TEAM H. W. Ford. ' 17 Goal J. T. Scully, ' 17 Point J. G. S. Humfhreys, ' 17 Cover Point W. H. Schoen, ' 17 Center G A. Peacock, ' 16 Rover P. W. Hills, ' 17 Left Wing II. B. Cushman. ' i8 Right Wing SUBSTITUTES W. F. Clarkson, ' 17 H. D. Comey, ' 17 H. W. Cohu, ' 17 W. Y. Humphreys. ' 17 G. I. Lawyer, ' i8 F. J. Rue, ' 18 199 The Princeton Bric-a-Brac , CHAPIN (ASST. MGR.) CATOR SOCCER TEAM, 1915-16 CAMERON SWATLAND WINCHELL JACKSON HOLDEN (COACH) CAREY HUMPHREYS MOORE GATES (CAPT.) HOSKINS WELLE BAILEY (MGR.) FOWLER The Princeton Bric-a-Prac % . OFFICERS, 1915-16 Moore Gates, ' 16 Captain F. W. Bailey, ' 16 Manager H. Chapin, ' 17 Assistant Manager OFFICERS, 1916-17 H. B. Hoskins, ' 17 Captain H. Chapin, ' 17 Manager R. H. McCague, ' 18 Assistant Manager TEAM, 1915-16 A. H. Jackson, ' 16 Goal P. E. Moore, ' i6 Left Fullback H. T. Cator, ' 17 R ' ght Fullback H. B. Winchell, ' 17 Left Halfback H. B. Hoskins. ' 17 Center Halfback T. M. Carey. ' 16 Right Halfback T. D. Cameron. ' 17 Outside Left Forward M. Gates, ' 16 Inside Left Forward D. M. Weller. ' 18 Center Forward O. Fowler, ' 17 Inside Right Forward W. Y. Humphreys, ' 17 Outside Right Forward SUBSTITUTES D. M. Lake, ' 16 Right Halfback N. Miller, ' 16 Forward D. C. Swatland. ' 16 Forward GAMES PLAYED, FALL SEASON, 1915 16, 23, 2Q, 6. October October October November Xoyember 13, November 16, November 20, November 23, November 29, Princeton. . Princeton . Princeton. , Princeton . Princeton. . Princeton . . Princeton. . Princeton . . Princeton . , 10 3 1 5 2 1 4 opponents Trenton All-Star Cornell George School . . Harvard Yale Columbia Pennsylvania Haverford Cornell I o o o I o 5 4 o INTERCOLLEGIATE LEAGUE STANDING WON Haverford 5 Pennsylvania 4 Yale 3 Colurrbia 3 Princeton 2 Harvard 1 Cornell o LOST tied POINTS I II 2 8 2 I 7 3 6 2 I 5 4 2 5 I I ♦Games not counted in League Standing because of ineligibility of Princeton players. 201 The Princeton Bric-a-Srac SULLIVAN (COACH) SELBY SWIMMING TEAM, 1915-16 NORRIS KAZANJIAN GREEN SHIPMAN LESTER FRIESELL (CAPT.) BURCHENAL MATHIASEN The Princeton Bric-a-Srac OFFICERS, 1915-16 W. H. Friesell, ' 16 Captain N. Miller, ' 16 Manager C. H. Latrobe, ' 17 Assistant Manager Frank Sullivan Coach OFFICERS, 1916-17 C. H. Burchenal, ' 17 Captain N. D. Jackson. ' 17 Manager Percy Parker, Jr., ' 18 Assistant Manager Frank Sullivan Coach TEAM C. H. Burchenal, ' 17 G. C. DeLacy, ' 16 W. H. Friesell, ' i6 T. B. Green, ' 18 G. M. Shipman, ' 16 INTERCOLLEGIATE MEETS date score opponents December 17, Princeton . . 39 C. C. X. Y. January 20, Princeton . . 28 Pennsylvania February II, Princeton.. 46 February 25, Pr ' nceton . . 22 t i March i. Princeton . . 25 sr-TC Ma r ch 7. Princeton . . 27 March 10, Princeton . . 29 March 17, Princeton . . 24 OTHER MEETS SCORE 41 42 26 38 Gi B. Kazanjian, ' 18 R. R. Lester, ' 16 A. E. Norris, ' 18 A. X. Selby, ' 16 score • 13 • 25 C. C. N. Y 7 Yale 31 Columbia 28 Columbia 26 Yale 24 Pennsylvania .... 28 4 opponents score Harvard 12 Brown 8 Navy 25 All — Baltimore 24 Yale .... Princeton Columbia lost 4 EVENT 50- Yard Swim. ioo-Yard Swim. 220- Yard Swim . DATE February ' 19, Princeton February 26, Princeton Ma rch 4, Princeton March 4, Princeton INTERCOLLEGIATE LEAGUE STANDING WON LOST P.C. 6 2 .750 Pennsylvania 5 3 -625 C. C. N. Y 5 3 625 INTERCOLLEGIATE INDIVIDUAL CHAMPIONSHIP Columbia University, New York, March 24, 1916 WINNERS TIME OR DISTANCE EVENT WINNERS ■ Schlaet, Yale 254-5 sec. Fancy Dive Friesell. Princeton no points • Vollmer, Columbia 57 3-5 sec. Plunge Lehmann. Pennsylvania 75 ft. .Vollmer, Columbia. .. .2 rain. 344-5 sec. Freshman Relay. .. .Princeton 1 min. 49 sec. 203 WON 4 c P.C .500 .000 TIME OR DISTANCE The Princeton Bric-a-Prac TENNIS TEAM, 1915-1916 RIKER COMPTON (MGR.) BEEKMAN COFFEY (CAPT.) - x« gg!! g The Princeton Bric-a-Prac SSfes - - 0llictr of Unibertfitp Qtennis association 1915-1916 A. H. Coffey , ' 17 Captain W. Y. Fillebrown, ' 16 Manager S. H. Compton, ' 17 4ssistant Manager 1916-1917 A. H. Coffey. ' 17 Captain S. H. Compton, ' 17 Manager D. S. Bixler, ' 18 Assistant Manager UNIVERSITY TEAM 1916 A. H. Coffey, ' 17 I. Riker, ' 17 W. B. Knox, ' 17 L. A. Beekman, ' 18 R. C SCHMERTZ, ' 17 B. B. Atterbury, ' 16 IN DUAL MATCHES 1916 Princeton 6 Princeton 6 Princeton 5 Princeton 5 Princeton 3 Princeton 1 Johns Hopkins o Navy Cornell 1 Williams 1 Harvard 6 Yale 8 Singles I. Riker, ' 17 UNIVERSITY CHAMPIONS (FALL) 1915-1916 A. H. Coffey, ' 17 FRESHMAN TOURNAMENT, SPRING 1916 Won by Harold K. Bulkley Doubles L. A. Beekman, ' iS 205 - gggf The Princeton Bric-a-gr S Sfe f- IIEYL SCUDDER CHAMPIONSHIP WATER POLO TEAM, 1916-16 N. NOURSE MILLER (MGR.) HELM LATROBE SELBY (CAPT.) KA1IN WARDEN SIIIPMAN The Princeton Bric-a-grac Kin Fao . s IT] OFFICERS, 1915-16 . Selby, ' 16 Captain X. Miller, ' 16 Manager C. H. Latrobe, ' 17. Assistant Manager Fran k Sullivan Coach OFFICERS, 1916-17 C. H. Latrobe, ' 17 Captain N. D. Jackson, ' 17 .Manager Percy Parker, Jr., ' 18 Assistant Manager Frank Sullivan Coach OR the fifth successive year the ' Varsity Water Polo Team finished the season without a defeat. Not only did they show a powerful offense, rolling up a total of 335 points, hut also presented a strong defense, permitting but 12 points to be scored against them, none of these being from touch goals. Pennsylvania finished the season in second place. Due mainly to the able coaching of Frank Sullivan, five of the six places on the Intercollegiate Water Polo Team were filled by Princeton men. H. W. Warden, ' 18, playing his first year on the team, has the distinction of having scored 230 points, but one less than the combined efforts of the forwards on the other four teams of the league. Captain A. N. Selby, ' 16, playing on the team for the third year, has three times been placed on the Intercollegiate team. It is due to the interference of Selby and Xourse that Warden was enabled to score so frequently. A. N. Selby, ' 16 Captain . . N. C. Nourse, ' 18 H. W. Warden, ' i8 68 Princeton Princeton Princeton 45 Princeton 35 Princeton . . Pennsylvania Yale TEAM .R. F. A. M. Kahn. ' 16 .L. F. C. H. Latrobe, ' 17 . ...C. G. M. Shipman, ' 16.... . R. B. L. Helm, Jr., ' 18 Substitute • L. B. R. C. Heyl. Jr., ' 16 Substitute . ...G. M. Scudder, ' 16 Substitute GAMES C. C. X. Y o Princeton 50 Pennsylvania 6 Princeton 25 C. C. N. Y 1 Princeton 58 Yale 1 Princeton 28 LEAGUE STANDING WON LOST P.C. 8 o i. 000 Columbia 5 3 625 C. C. N. Y 4 4 -500 Columbia o Columbia 4 Yale o Pennsylvania o WON LOST P.C. 3 5 -375 o 8 .000 207 The IPrmceton Bric-a-Hrac J 1 Hi i j V j • x - t niKANKR (MCR BUNNELL WRESTLING TEAM, 1915-16 IROWN JONES FRANTZ (CAPT.) CORY (ASST MGK ) OEHLER KARL ( COACH ) The Princeton Brie- a.- Brae « OFFICERS, 1915-16 A. M. Frantz, ' i6 Captain S. L. Phraner. ' 16 ■. . .Manager H. I,. Cory, ' 17 Assistant Manager OFFICERS, 1916-17 J. B. Wiss, ' 17 Captain H. L. Cory, ' 17 Manager S. G. Frantz, ' 18 Assistant Manager Betrieto of tfje Reason Starting with but one veteran, Coach William A. Karl, in his first year at Prince- ton, brought the wrestling team through a fairly successful season, winning five of nine meets, including those with Yale and Harvard. The team captured second place in the Intercollegiates, held in Princeton. Wiss, Beaty and Captain Frantz were the most consistent winners during the season, losing but two, three and four bouts re- spectively. Five experienced men, captained by the 115 pound Intercollegiate cham- pion, J. B. Wiss. ' 17, will form the nucleus for next year ' s team. DUAL MEETS DATE SCORE Dec. 11, 1915 Princeton. . . . 10 Dec. 18, 1915 Princeton. . . • 19 Jan. 15, 1916 Princeton . . . • 2?, Feb. 12, 1916 Princeton. . . ■ 17 Feb. 18, 1916 Princeton. . . . 6 Feb. 10, 1916 Princeton. . . • Feb. 25, 1916 Princeton. . . • 15 Mar. 4. 1916 Princeton . . . Mar. 11, 1916 Princeton . . . . 12 SCORE N. Y. Y. M. C. A... 14 X. Y. Boys ' Club.... o Columbia 3 Harvard 4 Penn State 20 Cornell 21 Pennsylvania 10 Navv 24 Yale 11 INTERCOLLEGIATE MEET, MARCH 17-18 Cornell, 24 points. 3. Lehigh, 12 points. 5. Columbia, 1 point. Princeton, 14 points. 4. Pennsylvania, 11 points. 115-pound class won by J. B. Wiss, Princeton 125-pound class won by Wigsten, Cornell 135-pound class won by Hiss, Lehigh 145-pound class won by Milligan, Pennsylvania 158-pound class won by Sager, Cornell 175-pound class won by McKeage, Cornell I ' nlimited class won by Dorizas, Pennsylvania J. B. Wiss, ' 17 115 pound class L. C. Jones, ' 17 135 pound class J. C. Oehler, ' 18 135 pound class TEAM J. W. Beaty, ' 18 145 pound class A. M. Frantz, ' 16, Captain 158 pound class D. G. Turner, ' 16 175 pound class W. V. Jewett, ' 16 Unlimited class 209 The Princeton Bric-a-Srac cordon (mgr.) GUN TEAM, 1915-16 HEWITT TURNER (CAPT.) HILTON-GREEN REED BETTES (ASST. MGR.) The Princeton Bric-a-Brac « ' } ?. tf f£ a 5= OFFICERS, 1915-16 D. G. Turner, ' 16 Captain H. L. Gordon, Jr., ' 16 Manager J. J. Bf.ttes, ' 17 Secretary-Treasurer OFFICERS, 1916-17 C. U. Caeser, ' 18 Captain J. J. Bettes, ' 17 Manager E. S. Hayes, ' 18 Secretary-Treasurer TEAM, 1915-16 I). G. Turner, ' 16 C. B. Shea, ' 17 Nelson Reed, ' 16 H. L. Hilton-Green, ' 17 A. C. Hewitt. 17 C. U. Caeser. ' 18 1919 FRESHMAN TEAM W. W. Bell. Jr. (Caft.) K. W. Beattie E. R. Gardner T. W. Gregory D. C. Morgan W. K. Nimick H. C. Thomps n INTERCOLLEGIATE SHOOT (Held at New Haven, May 6, 1916) Princeton 451 Yale 448 Dartmouth 352 1919 1919 at Lawrenceville 134 Lawrenceville 122 1919 DUAL SHOOTS 1919 at New Haven Vale 1919 163 1919 149 1919 1919 vs. Lawrenceville 122 Lawrenceville 114 211 The Princeton Bric-a-Elrac ■8 HASS1.ACHER K1JOADS RIFI.E TEAM, 1015-1916. ML ' RDOCK RAYMOND METZEROTT BREWSTER LINDER HARRIS COL. LIBBEY (COACH) CROSS (CAPT.) HEINTZ (MM.) KENYON The Princeton Bric-a-Brac « Jig? Princeton ttte Club, 191546 , v ' OFFICERS, 1915-16 iK f L i B. Douglas, ' 16 ; President 4L ' : -4 ; „- ' 2 H - c - Cross, ' i6 Captain A Y-(- J- E. Heintz, ' 16 Manager ' ■•• ii t - v - Col. Wm. Libbey Coac t .IfV jj - OFFICERS, 1916-17 tj££ S I W. B. Harris, Jr., ' 17 Ca am SiWS V ; C. G. Vest, ' 17 Manager _., ' Col. Wm. Libbey Coach ■ s. r team ■. ' ' fe. H. C. Cross, 16 J. R. Rhoads, ' 16 G. F. Hasslacher, ' 17 w-cr :. n. T. Kenyon, ' 16 J. M. Raymond, Jr.. ' 16 J. Q. Horne, ' 17 jSp ■ r d K. A. Metzerott, ' 16 W. B. Harris, Jr., ' 17 S. E. Brewster, ' 18 W ' JSt %- J- E. Murdoch, ' 16 df W ' W ' 1 - nS- 1919 FRESHMAN TEAM . ■ ¥ 3B 0 ,i fg, A. Anderson, Jr. W.B.Kelly A. Shaw, Jr. ' 1eK ?■ ' ' • ' ' ? ' F. Burchell (Capt.) R. H. Randall W. E. Studdiford, Jr. ffiUH V ' A. L. M. Dingee A. A. Rogers A. W. H. Taylor vi ? £ R p RuNN MEMBERS, 1917 HlflFT F fit TTTRj r.h.cutl« j. q. h 0R n E g. g. v est lajlil icL •WjUUiJ ' W. B. Harris. Jr. E. C. B Simonin R. C. Wilson G. F. Hasslacher H. L. Vail MEMBERS, 1918 S. E. Brewster W. B. Haffner Clark Miller W. S. Schwabacher S. L. Wright, Jr. J. S. Cromelin D. S. Leslie D. B. Potter MEMBERS, 1919 A. Anderson, Jr. R P. Dunn W. M. Paxton, 3 rd A. A. Rogers C. F A Streichenberg Fjord Burchell W. B. Kelly R. H. Randall A. Shaw, Jr. W. E Studdiford, Jr. A. L. M. Dingee „„„„„„„ , BaA A - W - H - Taylor MEMBERS, 1920 S Chapin W. B. LaForce H. B. Turner C W. Laird T. L. Kuser J. F. Fennelly Joseph Fahys, 2nd A. W. Horton T. H. Rickert G. E. Greenleaf S. F. Dupont F. S. Ketchum G. A. Robbins 213 The Princeton Bric-a-grac ALEXANDER HALL. -3  gg ?S The Princeton Sric-a-Br S Sfeb -- - MAXWELL MOORE 1919 FRESHMAN BASEBALL TEAM SAVAGE GRAY BAUHAN (CAPT.) £LE BADE WHITMAN SCUDDER WRIGHTSON HOSKINS (MGR.) FRECK The Princeton Uric- a- Brae 1919 JPageMI OFFICERS G. L. T. Bauhan, ' 19 Captain H. B. Hoskins, ' 17 Manager E. H. W. Harlan, ' 08 Coach SUMMARY After a season of mediocre success, the 1919 team finished with a well-earned victory over Yale Freshmen, defeating them 5 to 4 in ten innings. The team was handicapped in the early season by several shifts in the coaching staff, but improved con- siderablv toward the end. TEAM S. G Freck Catcher H. G. W. Parmei.e Pitcher M. D. Moore First Base H. C. Maxwell, Jr Second Base W. H. Bade Third Base G. L. T. Bauhan Shortstop W. Taylor, Jr Left Field W. S. Gray, Jr Center Field J. T. Wrightson Right Field E. C. Savage Substitute FRESHMEN Lakewood H. S. at Princeton 9 Haverford at Haverford 9 Peddie at Heightstown 5 Lawrenceville at I.awrenceville 14 Exeter at Exeter 2 GAMES OPPONENTS FRESHMEN OPPONENTS 4 Andover at Andover 1 3 8 Hill at Pottstown 1 3 12 Mercersburg at Mercersburg 9 7 1 1 Princeton Prep, at Princeton 2 4 10 Yale (1919) at Princeton (10 innings).. 5 4 217 The Princeton Brie- a.- Brae BEATTY KKENE FITZPATRICK (COACh) VAN METER RAYMOND MUSSKI.I. 1919 FRESHMAN TRACK TEAM KISSAM BUZBY HEINSOHN VAUGHN TIMMERMAN VERNER TERRELL LONG HELM FUNK LARKIN M QUISTON ERDMAN (CAPT.) TRACY FAIRGRIEVE READ CHARLES VAN WYCK VAN DYKE (MGR.) QUINN The Princeton Sric-a-grac Jf restfjman Qfrack l am (CLASS OF 1919) C. R. Erdman, Jr., ' 19. Keene Fitzpatrick .Captain W. D. Van Dyke, Jr., ' 17. Coach .Manager rtnccton=|9ale Jfregfcman {Eracfe ifleet UNIVERSITY FIELD, MAY 6, 1916 TIME. HEIGHT, EVENT FIRST SECOND THIRD DISTANCE 1 00- Yard Dash . . . De Cernea (Y) ..Read (P) Thompson (Y) . . . 10 2-5 sec 220- Yard Dash . . . Xiles (Y) De Cernea (Y) ..Read (P) 23 sec 440-Yard Dash ...Clark (P) Van Meter (P)...Niles (Y) 50 4 5 sec Half-Mile Run.... Charles (P) Cheel (Y) Long (P) 2 min. 3 2-5 sec. . Mile Run Raymond (P) . . . Fairgrieve (P) ..Pratt (Y) 4 min. 39 4-5 sec. Two-Mile Run ..Stanley (Y) Tracy (P) Helm (PI 10 min. 31 sec. ... 120-Yard High Hurdles Erdman (P) Rodman (Y) . . . . Larkin (Y) 16 1-5 sec 220-Yard Low Hurdles Rodman (Y) Erdman (P) Simonson (Y) ...263-5 sec High Jump Tie between Rodman (Y), Porter (Y) and Quinn (P).5 ft. 6 in Broad Jump Kissam (P) Munsell (P) Simonson (Y) ...21 ft. 7 in Pole Vault S. Potter. K. Potter. Keith and Parker, all of Yale, tiedio ft. 6 in Hammer Throw. .Otis (Y) Morris (Y) Funk (P) 123 ft Shot Put Rodman (Y) ....Funk (P) tied. ... Thompson (Y)..-38 ft Final Score POINTS PRINCETON, 2 I 7 6 7 3 2 2 2-3 7 1 3% 47 1-6 19 POINTS YALE, ' 19 6 7 1 2 1 5 3 6 5 1-3 I 8 7 56 5-6 219 The Princeton Bric-a-Brac 1 Princeton =$emtgptoanta Jfrestfjman Wvatk Jfleet EVENT FIRST i oo- Yard Dash ...Read (Prin.;) ... 220- Yard Dash ...Read (Prin.) ... 440- Yard Dash ... Smith (Penn.) . 880- Yard Run .... Charles ( Prin.) . Mile Run Price (Penn.) .. Two-Mile Run . . . Betts (Penn.) .. 120- Yard High Hurdles Erdman (Prin.). 220- Yard Low Hurdles Erdman (Prin.). Run ' g High Jump.Quinn (Prin.) Run ' g Broad JumpKissam (Prin.) Pole Vault Smith (Penn.) Hammer Throw.. Funk (Prin.) . Shot Put Funk (Prin.) . TIME. HEIGHT, POINTS SECOND THIRD DISTANCE PRINCETON, .Frazier (Penn.) . .Van Wyck (Prin.)io 1-5 sec 6 .Smith (Penn.) . .Van Wyck (Prin.) 22 2-5 sec 6 .Clark (Prin.) ...Van Meter (Pr.).sosec 4 Walker (Penn.) . .Long (Prin.) ....2 min. 3 3-5 sec... 6 Raymond (Prin.) .Fairgrieve (Pr.)..4 min. 38 sec 4 Helm (Prin.) Tracy (Prin.) 10 min. 19 1-5 sec. 4 Wickersham (Pn.) Buzby (Prin.) . . . 16 sec 6 Wickersham (Pn.) Buzby (Prin.) ...25 3-5 sec 6 Toomey (Pn) tiedHampton (Penn.). 5 ft. 614 in 4 Jacobson (Penn.).Munsell (Prin.).. 20 ft. 2V2 in 6 . V ' nG ' kle(Pn.) tiedRead (Prin.) ....10 ft. 6 in 1 Wharton (Penn.).Wray (Penn.) ...Ill ft. 5 in 5 Van Ginkle (Pn.).Eretresvaag (Pn.)37 ft. 3 3-4 in 5 Final Score 63 19 POINTS PENN, ' 19 3 3 5 3 5 5 54 220 - .The Princeton Sric-a-Brg l Sfes - 1919 Jfresifjman pasfeettmll Wtam OFFICERS H. G. W. Parmele, ' 19 Captain C. H. Folwell, Jr., ' 17 Manager F. W. Leuhring Coach TEAM H. G. W. Parmele Forward L. McCormick Forward C. W. McGraw Center B. C. Downing Guard W. C. Stone Guard G. L. Ball Guard F. A. Read, Jr. SUBSTITUTES H. W. Maxwell GAMES Princeton, Princeton, Princeton, Princeton, Princeton, Princeton. ' 19 ' 19 ' 19 ' 19 ' 19 ' 19 SCORE .. 25 .. 60 ■ • 23 ■ • 32 ■ • 32 • • 34 OPPONENTS SCORE Lawrenceville 25 Company 1 22 Peddie 52 Lawrenceville 11 Yale, ' 19 19 Yale, ' 19 22 221 Lfhe Princeton Bric-a.-gra.c I 1919 FRESHMAN CREW DAVIS ACKERMAN ARMOUR HUMPHREYS PAXTON KNOWLSON M ' CONNELL CHRISTMAS The Princeton gric-a-Brac 1919 Jfrestfjman Creto Although there was very little good material for the Freshman crew, and although the final results make the season appear unsuccessful, the members of the crews are to be congratulated for their showing. The men were inexperienced and exceptionally light. In addition to this the crews were broken up in mid season by an epidemic of measles, and thus suffered greatly. There were but two races, one of which was won and the other lost. In the first race of the season on May 6th, the Freshmen defeated Central High by one and one-quarter lengths on Lake Carnegie, rowing over the Henley course in 7 minutes and 7 seconds. On May 27th the Cornell Freshmen defeated both Yale and Princeton on Lake Cayuga, rowing over a two-mile course in 11 minutes and 27 seconds. Cornell was one and two-thirds lengths ahead of Yale, with Princeton a poor third. NAME POSITION B. H. Davis Bow J H. ACKERMAN 2 A. Armour, 2nd 3 W. S. Humphreys 4 W. M. Paxton, 3RD 5 WT. HT. 147 5-8 150 5-io 152 5-n 162 5.10 1 S3 5-io STATISTICS AGE NAME POSITION 20 F. J. McCoNNELL 6 20 F. B. Christmas 7 20 A. Terry, Jr Stroke 20 E. T. Knowlson Cox 18 WT. HT. AGE l62 5-10 20 157 5-10 22 153 5-II 20 122 5-5 20 223 The Princeton J3ric-a-@rac 1919 totntming OFFICERS, 1915-16 H. M. Ill, ' 19 Captain C. H. Latrobe, ' 17 Manager Frank J. Sullivan Coach January 22, 1916 POINTS Lawrenceville 29 St. Paul ' s School 4 1919 21 February 19, 1916 POINTS Mercersburg 28 1919 25 RECORD OF MEETS February 24, 1916 POINTS Rutgers (1919) 20 1919 33 March 2, 1916 POINTS Swarthmore College 14 1919 39 March 8, 1916 POINTS West Philadelphia. High... 29 ' 919 25 Interclass Meet POINTS 1919, 2nd 19 A. Anderson, Jr. R. H. Foresman E. A. Georgi L. C. Holden, Jr. H. M. Ill L. R. KlNNARD TEAM T. C. Lord G. B. McCormick T. L. Prentiss M. S. Quay W. W. SCUDDER E. A. Georgi 1919 RELAY TEAM L. C. Holden, Jr. H. M. Ill T. C. Lord Princeton 1919, first. March 24, 1916 INTERCOLLEGIATE FRESHMAN RELAY RACE Yale 1919, second. Columbia 1919, third. Time — 1 min. 49 sec. 224 -% «gggg The Princeton Bric-a-Brg fes - 1919 OTrestUng MEET 1919 o Yale, 1919 28 TEAM D. W. Kelley 115 pound class J. J. Winn 158 pound class R. W. Shannon 125 pound class G. W. Funk, Captain 175 pound class J. A. Dodd 135 pound class E. H. Proudfit Unlimited class J. E. Bryan 145 pound class 1919 WLattv $olo March 8, 1916 1919 45 West Philadelphia High o TEAM H. M. Ill C. P. V. Mravlag, Capt R. F. J. W. Spencer, Jr L. F. R. B. L B. G. 225 -3 ggZg The Princeton gric-a-Br S fes - 1919 Jfrestfjman Semite tEeam TEAM H. K. Bulkley Captain-Manager H. K. Bulkley A. Preyer W. M. Fletcher T. H. Lineaweaver MATCHES Princeton, 6 Pennsylvania 1919, o Princeton, 4 Hill School, 2 Princeton rain Yale 1919 1919 §pm Ceam S. Lloyd, Jr Captain J. N. McDowell, ' 17 Manager Wm. Foggitt Coach TEAM J. Cooke, II W. S. Humphrey, Jr. G. B. McCormick H. W. Doyle S. Lloyd, Jr. R. W. Thorington MEET 1919 11 Newark Academy 25 226 -  !g tf The Princeton Bric-a-Br c Sfe? - 1919 Soccer J. C. West Captain H. Chapin, ' 17 Manager W. Holden Coach TEAM A. M. Greene Outside Left R. H. Randall Right Halfback E. C. Savage Inside Left J. C. West Left Fullback A Preyer Center Forward O. J. Toland ' Right Fullback W. D. Griffiths Inside Right J. C. Davis Goal A. Shaw, Jr Outside Right J. W. MacFarlane Left Halfback Substitutes — E. A. Fowler, R. F. Lamarche, W. B. Whit- W. Morris Center Halfback ney, Jr., S. M. Butler, A. Terry, Jr. GAMES PLAYED 1919 o Peddie Institute 2 1919 1 1916 1 1919 4 1918 1 1919 o 1917 2 In the fall interclass series, 1919 finished in second place. 227 The Princeton Bric-a-grac « LAWTON (MGR.) LAW SON WILSON GEORGI LINDBLADE KELSEY 1920 FRESHMAN FOOTBALL TEAM. C. CLARK BOONE WAIN WRIGHT TWITCHELL CRUICKSHANK RIGGS ROTHCHILD MORGAN BUECHNER COFFEY ALFORD FREY STRUBING (CAPT.) JONES VANDERLIN HERLING TRIMBLE MITCHELL The Princeton Bric-a-grac Jf restfjmatt Jfoottiall tEeam OFFICERS J. K. Strubing, Jr., ' 20 Captain S. La wto n, ' 18 Manager B. E. Cruickshank Coach TEAM P. Pagano Left End C. T. Kelsey Left Tackle C. J. Vanderi.in Left Guard C. Clark Center P. M. Clark Right Guard T. D. Riggs, Jr Right Tackle C H. Georgi Right End J. K. Strubing, Jr Quarterback R. F. Lindblade ' . Left Halfback R. M. Trimble, Jr Right Halfback W. K. Boone, Jr Fullback SUBSTITUTES T. M. Jones ' .Lett End P. R. Lawson Left End L. H. Rothchili) Left Guard T. V. Morgan, sth Left Guard H. M. Twitchell Center H. E. Frey Right Guard C. F. Buechner, Jr Right Guard D. C. Alford Quarterback C. W. Mitchell, Jr Right Halfback K. O. Wilson Right Halfback L. S. Wainwright Fullback R. R. Heri.ing Fullback E. H. Coffey, Jr Fullback date Oct. 14. Princeton, ' 20 Oct. 25. Princeton, ' 20 Oct. 28. Princeton, ' 20 Nov. 4. Princeton, ' 20 Nov. 11. Princeton, ' 20 Total — Princeton, ' 20 RECORD SCORE opponents score o Mercersburg 13 7 Peddie 13 Exeter 39 . . 40 Hamilton Institute ■ . . 13 Yale, ' 20 58 . . 60 Opponents 123 229 - — S JSTgji Princeton gric-a-Br cjl Sfes- - - THE GYMNASIUM INTEJV-CLASS ATMLE1 The Princeton f3ric-a.-Bra.c ■ML HOLDER HALL. The Princeton Bric-a-Brac Cxecutibe Committee of tlir 3mtracollegiate gtijletic Association OFFICERS N. D. Jackson, ' 17 Chairman B. S. Walcott, ' 17 Secretary R. L. Crawford, 3rd, ' 17 Treasurer C. H. BURCHENAL W. M. Cotton R. L. Crawford, 3RD C. Hadden, 3RD W. G. Hayward COMMITTEE H. L. Hilton-Green E. J. Miller G. M. Holstein, Jr. F. J. Newberry, Jr. T. B. Hunt D. Pettit N. D. Jackson R. W. Raymond K. M. Reed B. S. Walcott R. N. Wetherbee H. A. White 233 The Princeton Brie- a- Br etc Snterclaste Snboor VLxatk jffleet 40- Yard Dash. . . 440- Yard Dash. . 880- Yard Run... { 1. Mile Run 2 3- 40- Yard High f 1. Hurdles 2. i 3- 40- Yard Low f 1. Hurdles s 2. t- 3- winners time, height or distance A. H. Snowden, ' 16 5 sec. H. S. Frazier, ' 19 F. Jelke, ' 18 J. H. Barret, ' 18 53 sec. W. W. Lyons, ' 17 M. G. Charles, ' 19 J. C. Boyd. ' 18 ... .2 min. 10 2-5 sec. A. N. Durell, Jr., ' 17 M. G. Charles, ' 19 K. G. Colvvell, ' 17.. 4 min. 38 2-5 sec. H. A. Riedel. ' 16 C. H. Bischoff, ' 16 C. R. Erdman, ' 19 6 sec. M. O. Wilson, ' 18 R. L. Crawford, ' 17 R. L. Crawford, ' 17 5 3-5 sec. M. O. Wilson, ' 18 C. R. Erdman, ' 19 EVENT High Jump Broad Jump . . . Pole Vault . . . Shot Put { { DINNERS TIME, HEIGHT OR DISTANCE W. M. Davy, ' 16 5 ft. 8 in. W. P. Quinn, ' 19 tied R. L. Crawford,- ' 17 1. E. W. Munsell, ' 19 21 ft. 14 in. 2. W. W. Lyons, ' 17 3. P. Kissam, ' 19 1. J. M. Carey, ' 16 10 ft. 6 in. 2. L. G. Erskine, ' 18 3. F. I. Jones, Jr., ' 18 1. D. C. Sinclaire, ' 18 40 ft. 3 in. 2. C. L. Heyniger, ' 16 3. R. Eberstadt, ' 17 CLASS SCORE 1918 26 points 1917 23 points 1916 22 points 1919 19 points 234 The Princeton 8ric-a.-Srexc Calebonian Mantes _1f ortp f if tfj Annual Class tfinmpioiislnp fleet of tlir Princeton 3Tracfe atfilctit Association ioo- Yard Das 220- Yard Dash 440- Yard Dash. . . { { 880- Yard Run One-Mile Run 120- Yard Hurdless 220- Yard Hurdles winners time, height or distance 1. W. B. Moore, ' 17 10 1-5 sec. 2. F. Jelke, ' 18 3. J. H. Barret, ' 18 1. W. B. Moore, ' 17 22 3-5 sec. 2. J. H. Barret, ' 18 3. F. Jelke, ' 18 1. H. J. Richardson, ' 16 52 2-5 sec. 2. R. D. Clark, ' 19 3. G. C. Wallace, ' 16 1. W. M. Barr, ' 16 2 min. 1 3-5 sec. 2. W. H. Floto, ' 16 3. E. S. Decker, ' 16 1. K. G. Colwell, ' 17. . .4 min. 30 2-5 sec. 2. V. K. Raymond, ' 19 3. C. A. Underwood, ' 18 1. C. R. Erdman, ' 19 17 sec. 2. R. L. Crawford, ' 17 3. H. D. Harvey, ' 16 1. R. L. Crawford, ' 17 27 sec. 2. C. R. Erdman, ' 19 3. M. O. Wilson, ' 18 WINNERS TIME, HEIGHT OR DISTANCE Two-Mile Run Broad Jump High Jump Pole Vault Shot Put Hammer Throw Glover, ' 16. ... 10 min. 7 2-5 sec. Bischoff, ' 16 B. Paul, ' 18 W. Lyons, ' 17 21 ft. 1 in. Roberts, ' 16 Munsell, ' 19 Davy, ' 16 5 ft. 10 in. between R. L. Crawford, ' 17, J. Madden, ' 17 and W. P. Quinn, ' 19 Tie between J. M. Carey, ' 16, and H. A. White, ' 17 n ft. 6 in. 3. A. H. Bingham, ' 18 1. D. C. Sinclaire, ' 18 41 ft. $Y 2 in. Larsen, ' 16 3. C L,. Heyniger, ' 16 . Nourse, ' 17 133 ft. 6 in. Gennert, ' 17 Larsen, ' 16 ( 1. L. L. ...{ 2. C. H. ( 3- W. A ( 1 w. w 2. F. C. I 3- E. W. ( 1. W. M. 2. Tie be ( E. Ma i; ( 1. D. C { 2. J. C. I 3- C. L ( 1. R. L. .. 2. A. G. I 3 J. C. 1917 42 2-3 1916 , 41 SUMMARY 1918 1919 17 16 1-3 235 The Princeton Brie- a- Brae annual Jf all J|anbtcap Crack Jlleet Held Under the Auspices of the Princeton University Track Association University Field, October 30, 1916 WINNER HANDICAP ioo-Yard Dash. i. R. D. Clark, ' 19, 4 yds... 2. R. E. Brown, ' 20, 4 yds. 3. R. L. Rafalsky, ' 20, 4 yds. TIME . 102-5 se C 220- Yard Dash 440-Yard Dash. 120-YD. Hurdles. 220-Yd. Hurdles. { 1. S. A. Stewart, ' 20, 5 2 yds. 22 4-5 sec. 2. R. D. Clark, ' 19, 4 yds. 3. R. E. Brown, ' 20, 5 yds. 1. J. H. Barret, ' 18, scr 53 3-5 sec. 2. H. G. Long, ' 19, 4 yds. 3. J. B. Cowan, Jr., ' 20, 7 yds. 1. C. R. Erdman, Jr., ' 19, scr. . 16 1-5 sec. 2. R. L. Crawford, ' 17, scr. 3. G. A. Trowbridge, ' 20, 4 yds. 1. C. R. Erdman, Jr., ' 19, 3 yds. .25 1-5 sec. 2. R. L. Crawford, ' 17, scr. 3. G. C. Buzby, ' 19, 11 yds. High Jump Pole Vault Broad Jump 1919. 1920. 1918. 1917. WINNER HANDICAP TIME i. B. M. Brock, ' 20, 4 in 5 ft. 10 in. 2. W. B. Dane, ' 20, 6 in. ( J. E. Madden, ' 17, scr. 3 ' (G. C. Buzby, ' 19, 4 in. 1. H. H. Nevin, ' 18, 1 ft 12 ft 2. L. G. Erskine. ' 18, scr. 3. S. Lloyd, Jr., ' 19, 2 ft. {i I 3. 1. W. W. Reynolds, ' 18, 2 it.22h.V2m. P. Kissam, ' 19, 2 ft. 3. W. B. Dane, ' 20, 3 ft. SUMMARY 26 21 18 6y 2 236 The Princeton Bric-a-Brac WLntim it? Xtfe afcring Club OFFICERS, 1916 John Grier Hibiien Honorary President R. L. Nourse, ' 17 Vice-President A. N. Selby, ' 16 President Frank Sullivan Secretary-Treasurer Frank Sullivan Director of Swimming N April 27, 1914, Frank Sullivan organized the first and what is today the only Collegiate Life-Saving Society in America. Since that time not only has the club itself grown with ever increasing interest among the under- graduates and graduates, who have demonstrated their interest by returning to qualify for the diploma offered by the society, but also the idea has taken root among outsiders. Within a few years it is thought that this move- ment will develop into one of intercollegiate interest. The purpose of the society is to develop control and confidence in the water, to stimulate interest in life-saving and swimming, and to provide instruction in the technique of rescue work. Two classes of awards are made each year. 31 diplomas, which are recognized by all life-saving societies in this coun- try, have been awarded, while 25 efficiency medals have been given to those who passed all tests save the three fancy dives and the time tests for the two swims. The tests required are as follows : 1— Swim 100 yards in 1 minute and 20 seconds 2 — Swim a quarter-mile in 8 minutes 3 — Swim 50 yards fully dressed, followed by 4 — Undressing in the water 5 — Swim 100 yards on the back, using the legs only 6 — Running front dive 7 — Back dive 8 — Front jack-knife dive 9 — Back jack-knife dive 10 — Surface dive, bringing up a human subject in position for carrying 11 — Three methods of release from wrist, back-strangle and arm-and-body holds 12 — Carrying a human subject 100 yards, using three differ- ent methods 13 — Demonstrating the Schafer method of resuscitation 14 — Written explanation of artificial respiration and after treatment of the apparently drowned 237 The Princeton Brie- a.- Brae LlmUf rsiti ' 11 iff 5 aUmg Club ((ConrluUrb) LIFE-SAVING CONTEST 1914— ist, R. C. Heyl, ' 16; 2nd, F. E. Bloom, ' 17; 3rd, B. 1915— 1st, F. E. Bloom, ' 17; 2nd, R. C. Heyl, ' 16; 3rd, A. E. Brower, ' 15. Norris, ' 18. 1916— 1st, H. W. Warden, ' 18; 2nd, A. E. Norris, ' 18; 3rd, F. E. Bloom, ' 17. FORM SWIMMING CONTEST 1914— ist, E. J. D. Cross, ' 14; 2nd, C. H. Burchenal, ' 17; 3rd, 1915 — ist, A. N. Selby, ' 16; 2nd, R. R. Lester, ' 16; 3rd, H. M. G. Smith, ' 16. Davis, ' 17. 1916— ist, C. H. Burchenal, ' 17; 2nd, H. M. Ill, ' 19; 3rd, L. C. Holden, ' 19. DIPLOMA WINNERS G. K. Wight, ' 13 C. H. Burchenal, ' 17 C. A. McWilliams, ' 16 R. C. Heyl, ' 16 R. L. Bruch, ' 17 A. M. Kahn, ' i6 A. McLanahan, ' 12 R. S. Martin, ' 16 M. Scudder, ' 16 H. M. Hessenbruch, ' 14 E. J. D. Cross, ' 14 D. L. Gill, ' 14 F. W. Luehring B. Brower, ' 15 A. E. Norris, ' i8 A. N. Selby, ' 16 H. W. Warden, ' 18 N. B. Fiske, ' 18 F. Marbury, ' 18 D. A. D. Ogden, H. M. Davis, ' 17 F. E. Bloom, ' 17 E. W. Day, ' i6 R. R. Lester, ' 16 H. A. K. Widenmann, ' 18 L C. Holden, ' 19 H. M. Ill, ' 19 18 A. M. Whittingham, ' 19 H. S. Urmy, ' 19 L. Helm, Jr., ' 18 D. K. Luke, ' 19 MEDAL WINNERS W. F. Reynolds, ' 15 L O. Magai, ' 15 L. E. Morris, ' 15 W. A. West, ' 16 R. H. Scannell, ' 15 R. B. Porter, ' 15 L. C. Baldwin, ' 15 A. Preyer, ' 19 J. W. McFarlane, ' 19 W. W. W. Arrowsmith, W. H. MlLLINGER, ' l8 N. P. Davis, ' 16 A. H. Jennings, ' 19 W. Taylor, ' 19 S. Mudd, ' 16 ' 19 J. RUTHERFURD, ' l7 F. D. Butler, ' 19 E. Taylor, Jr., ' 17 S. C. Reynolds, ' 16 J. C. Davis, ' 19 V. T. Manchee, ' 17 A. R. Knott, ' 17 B. Kazanjian, ' 18 J. W. Everett, ' 17 H. M. Dubbs, ' 18 238 The Princeton ISric-a-Brac ■£ JJtntf) Annual Regatta Jfrtbap, jSobember 17, 1916 Distance, I 7-8 fflilrs Junior Varsity (10 Seconds) Varsity (Scratch) H. S. Roche Bow A. V. Savage Bow E. D. McDougal No. 2 P. M. Sturges No. 2 B. S. Michael No. 3 F. B. Christmas No. 3 N. M. Chester No. 4 D. DeLanoy No. 4 B. P. Leeb No. 5 R. H. McCann No. 5 J. A. Machin No. 6 A. Terry, Jr No. 6 E. B. Dunphy No. 7 J. D. Paull No. 7 A. V. Lyman Stroke R. A. Cochran, 3rd Stroke G. E. Shoemaker Cox E. T. Knowlson Cox No times were taken Third Varsity (20 Seconds) ...H. B. DeGray . . .J. W. Spencer ...S. B. Coffin . . .F. McConnel, Jr. ...W. M. Paxton, 3rd ...H. V. Dennis . . . S. Godfrey ...L. C. Rhodes ...C. R. Eaby Jgobtce Bate Crew C (Freshman) S. T. Havalin Bow F. A. Dixon No. 2 G. W. Thompson, 3rd.. No. 3 L. C. Reynolds No. 4 D. J. E. Pulling No. s J. B. Strieker No. 6 G. A. Trowbridge No. 7 G. C. Fraser Stroke J. E. Lee Cox JBistance, 3-4 iflile Crew A (Freshman) . . . M. S. Gould . . .W. M. Mossman . . .K. B. Conger ...A. Halsted ...A. D. Hutchinson . . .F. Calling . . .G. E. Bowdoin ...P. C. Hatch ...S. C. Jelliffe No times were taken Crew E (Freshman) J. G. Campbell Bow H. F. Bughan No. 2 R. Bassett No. 3 J. B. O ' Dea No. 4 C. M. Garrigues No. 5 T. W. Bauernschmidt. .No. 6 G. F. Williamson No. 7 C. M. Kerr Stroke F. F. Rosenbaum Cox Crew B (Freshman) . ..M. Pitney, Jr. ...W. Chappell ...H. J. Ash . . . G. E. Hackney ...W. B. Bryan . . . S. H. Kauffmann . . .J. A. Menott . . . F. C. Burger ...T. J. Burke 239 The Princeton Bric-a-gra.c Hfatracollegtate athletics CANE SPREE INTERCLASS SWIMMING CHAMPIONSHIP Thursday Night, November 11, 1915 Held Decem ber 16, 1915 POINTS LIGHTWEIGHT CLASS H. S. Roche, ' i8, beat A. H. Jennings, ' 19 ; time, 4 min. 27 sec. 2nd— 1919 19 3rd — 1918 14 MIDDLEWEIGHT CLASS J. W. Beaty, ' 18, beat J. E. Bryan, ' 19; time, 2 min. 29 sec. 1916 Team — Martin, Lester, G. C. DeLacy, Jr., Selby, Brereton. HEAVYWEIGHT CLASS T. C. Meek, ' 18, beat J. S. Schmalz, ' 19; time, 21 min. 2 sec. A. E. Norris, ' 18, set a new Princeton record of seventy- two feet in the plunge, beating the former record by six INTERCLASS SOCCER inches - Won by 1916 A. H. Jackson E. P. Bird INTERCLASS WATER POLO MEET J. M. Raymond, Jr. N. Miller M. Gates R. C. Heyl, Jr. Held December 16, 1915 J. E. Heintz D. C. Swatland Won by 1918. J. P. Twaddell J. S. Armstrong „ ,,, . at at n 1 u 1 n vr : ' _ _, ' „, , Team — Warden, N. Nourse, Parker, Helm, Crane, Norris. P. E. Moore D. M. Lake e «...„. w - . Substitute — Widenmann. INTERCLASS WRESTLING Lightweight-]. A. Dodd, ' 19, threw S. G. Frantz, ' 18, in 7 HANDBALL CHAMPIONSHIP, 1916 min. 15 sec. Singles— Won by E. S. Carter, ' 16. Middleweight— F. Marbury, ' 18, threw J. E. Bryan, ' 19, in Doubles— Won by E. C. Bamman, ' 16, and T. B. Niles, ' 16. 5 min. Heavyweight-O. J. Parisette, ' 18, threw E. H. Proudf.t, ' 19, FINALS OF THE INTER-CLUB RELAYS in 2 min. 15 sec. Cap and Gown defeated Terrace. 240 The Princeton Brie- a- Brae Sntracollegiate gtfjlettcg— (ContmuetO BASKET-BALL Upperclass Series Cap and Gown J. D. Baker C. Hadden, 3RD J. M. Carey I. Riker W. Y. FlI.LEBROWN P. SCHEERER D. B. Watt Sophomore Series. . C. E. England L. B. Fi.inn A. V. Lyman Freshman Series A. G. Heinsohn A. B. Groover J. B. King G. B. McCormick Team VII M. A. Spencer E. L. Wilson J. M. Woods, Jr. Team III L. McCormick M. D. Moore G. B. Ruth W. R. Townley NOVICE WRESTLING MEET WINNERS J. Russell, Jr., ' 16 115 pound class M. L. Edgar, ' 17 125 pound class C. L. Woodbridge, ' 16 135 pound class F. Marbury, ' 18 145 pound class O. Toland, ' 19 158 pound class G. W. Funk, ' 19 175 pound class W. vanD. Jewett, ' 16 Unlimited class ALL-AROUND SWIMMING CHAMPIONSHIP POINTS 1st— H. M. Ill, ' 19 44SK 2nd— T. B. Green, ' 18 412 3rd — A. E. Norris, ' 18 409 EVENTS 50- Yard Swim. 100- Yard Swim. 220- Yard Swim. Plunge Fancy Diving.. 50- Yard Back Stroke Life Saving WON BY TIME, DISTANCE OR POINTS Tie between R. R. Lester, ' 16, and H. M. Ill, ' 19 26 sec. H. M. Ill, ' 19 61 sec. H. M. Ill, ' 19 2 min. 56 1-5 sec. A. E. Norris , ' 18 67 ft. A. Anderson, ' 19 7i points Tie between T. B. Green, ' 18 and A. Anderson, ' 19 40 4-5 sec. A. E. Norris, ' 18 46 4-5 sec. INTERCLASS INDOOR RELAYS Undecided tie between 1916 and 1919. 1916 G. C. Wallace, Jr. H. J. Richardson A. W. Bevin H. S. Frazier E. W. Munsell A. Van Wyck 1919 E. S. Decker J. McF. Barr F. C. Roberts M. G. Charles C. Read R. D. Ci.ark 241 The Princeton Bric-a-Hrac Sntracollegiate t{)leticg— (ConclubetO INTRACLASS BASEBALL Uppcrclass Series R. Eberstadt, p. C. H. Latrobe, c. F. S. Whitehouse, lb. D. C. McGrath, 2b. D. McK. Paulson, ss. Sophomore Series J. C. Taylor, Jr., p. R. M. Griffith, c. H. M. Steele, Jr., ib. B. Kazanjian, 2b. G. L. Ball, 3b. Cottage C. H. Folwell, 3b. W. F. Clarkson, If. H. H. Hoyt, rf. W. L. McLean, cf. Quadrangle F. D. Avery, ss. W. J. Thomas. If. J. P. Fishburn, cf. L. C. Bradley, rf. GOLF TOURNAMENT (FALL) V. A. Lowrie, ' 18, winner; H. W. Maxwell, ' 19, runner-up. TENNIS TOURNAMENT (FALL) SINGLES Won by W. B. Knox, ' 17 Runner-up, H. K. Bulkley, ' 19 DOUBLES Won by A. H. Coffey, ' 17 and V. L. Beekman, ' 18 Runners-up, W. P. Knox, ' 17, and I. Riker, ' 17 A CLOSE PLAY AT THIRD 242 The Princeton Brie- a-ir ac Sitterclass (dpmnasiium fflztt Held on March 22, 1916 EVENTS WINNERS EVENTS WINNERS f i. H. A. Williams, ' i6 { i. W. S. Schwabacher, ' 18 Horizontal Bar.. 2. F. C. Roberts, Jr., ' 16 Indian Clubs R w Thori ngton, ' 19 [ 3. S. Lloyd, Jr., ' 19 f 1. H. W. Doyle, ' 19 Side Horse j ' C R ' Smith ' ' l6 Tumbling I 2. F. C. Roberts. Jr., ' 16 ( 2. R. W. Thorington, ' 19 (3 h. A. White, ' 17 f 1. S. I. Cooper, ' 17 r ,, p. G _ Gjffin, ' 16 Parallel Bars... 2. F. C. Roberts. Jr., ' 16 Flying Rings ) 2. H. A. White, ' 17 (.3- S. Lloyd, Jr., ' 19 [ 3 W. T. Field, ' 16 SUMMARY 1916 25 1919 13 1917 9 !9i8 5 243 - g tf The Princeton gric-a-gr g jSfes - - THE LIBRARY. I7MT£K SCIiOL AS XI C likfias? 1 ATHLETICS g — The Princeton JSric-a-Sr ac - ioo-Yard Dash. 220- Yard Dash. 440- Yard Dash . 880- Yard Dash. QTtoenttenj Annual intersdjolagtic tErack Barnes; One-Mile Run. Two-Mile Run... HELD AT PRINCETON, MAY 13, 1916 WINNERS TIME. HEIGHT OR DISTANCE I. Brewer, St. Alban ' s 10 1-5 sec. 2 Wright, Lawrenceville 3. Davis, Mercersburg 4. Brownville, Mercersburg 5. Austin, Jamaica H. S. 1. Brewer, St. Alban ' s 22 2-5 sec. 2. Davis, Mercersburg 3. Brownville, Mercersburg 4. Maxam. St. Alban ' s 5. Wright, Lawrenceville 1. Maxam, St. Alban ' s 51 4-5 sec. 2. Whiteman, Mercersburg 3. Chapman, Mercersburg 4. Bushnell, Hill 5. Gadd, Central H. S. 1. Meredith, Mercersburg 1 min. 59 4-5 sec. 2. Prizer, Hill 3. Stone, Horace Mann 4. Hill, Mercersburg 5. Glass, Hill 1. Reed, Mercersburg . .4 mm . 29 sec. (New Record) 2. Hill, Mercersburg 3. Carter, St. Alban ' s 4. McGoughran, West Orange H. S. 5. Steers, Hill 1. Meredith, Mercersburg. 10 min. l ' 5 sec. 2. Harmer, West Philadelphia H. S. 3. Lukens, Central H. S. 4. Burke, Mercersburg 5. Helfrich, Mercersburg 20- Yard Hurdles 220- Yard Hurdles s High Jump 1. 2. 3- 4- 5- winners time, height or distance Smalley, Central H. S. ...16 1-5 sec. Massey, Hill Trowbridge, Hill Stark, Mercersburg O ' Brien, Lawrenceville 1. Smalley. Central H. S. . 2. Massey, Hill 3. Trowbridge, Hill 4. O ' Brien, Lawrenceville 1. Sweet, Lawrenceville . . 2. Ash, Hill 3. Stark, Mercersburg . Jjermyn, Hill I Riggin, Peddie 1. Maxam. St. Alban ' s 2. Brown, Jamaica H. Broad Jump ( 3. Smalley. Central H. . I Uebelacker, L awrenceville I Davis, Mercersburg S... S. s. . .25 4-5 sec. ft. 10 in. 21 ft. 9P2 in. JUe I Da ( 1. Haslam, Central H. I 2. Stark, Mercersburg Pole Vault 3. Sweeney, Hill J 4. Bullock, Mercersburg Shct Put 5 Gardner, Hill 1. Wallace, St. Alban ' s . 2. Barker, Mercersburg 3. Oesterle, Mercersburg 4. Brownville. Mercersburg 5. Ash, Hill .11 ft. 7 in. 44 ft. gV 2 in. Hammer Throw. Stark, Mercersburg 144 ft. 2. Lewis, Hill 3. Oesterle, Mercersburg J 4. Angell, Mercersburg (. K. Shevlin. Hill Mercersburg by first time last year, under the previous Maxam, of St. Alban ' H. S., 22; Lawrencevi 2; Peddie, 1 1 2 . winning the Twentieth Annual Interscholastic Track Meet gained a second leg on the cup that was offered for the The best performance was by Reed, of Mercersburg, who ran the mile in 4 minutes, 29 seconds, which is two seconds Princeton Interscholastic record. Smalley, of Central High, with 13 points, was the highest individual scorer, while 5, had a total of ia. The following was the score by schools: Mercersburg, 6g l 2 ; Hill, $7Vi St. Alban ' s, 30; Central lie, 15 ; Jamaica H. S., 5; Englewood H. S., 5; West Philadelphia H. S., 4; Horace Mann H. S., 3; West Orange H. S., -3« « gtf S The Princeton Bric-a-BT g Sfes - - JSattonal Sntersdjolasttc Ulx tk Becorb EVENT RECORD HOLDER SCHOOL YEAR fE. E. Xelson Volkmann 1008 100- Yard Dash 9 4-5 sec C. Hoyt ...Greenfield High 1913 (.W. J. Carter Chicago Univ. High 1914 220-Yard Dash 21 2-5 sec W. J. Carter Chicago Univ. High 1914 440-Yard Dash 48 4-5 sec J. E. Meredith Mercershurg 1912 Half-Mile Run 1 min. 55 sec J. E. Meredith Mercershurg 1912 One-Mile Run 4 min. 26 2-5 sec S. B. Berry Redlands 1914 Two-Mile Run 9 min. 51 3-5 sec C. Boughton Newark Central 1914 120- Yard Hurdles 15 2-5 sec H. Whitted Citrus Union , 1912 220- Yard Hurdles 24 2-5 sec C. Cory Chicago Univ. High 1913 Running High Jump 6 ft. 3$ j in W. M. Oler, Jr Pawling 1912 Running Broad Jump 23 ft. 7 l 2 in P. G. Stiles Culver 1913 Putting 12-LB. Shot 55 ft. 9 in A. M. Mucks Oshkosh High 1912 Throwing 12-lb. Hammer... 197 ft. Y 2 in L. J. Talhott Washington, Pa 1907 Throwing Discus 139 ft. s ' 2 in B. L. Byrd 1910 Pole Vault 12 ft. 6 1-16 in C. Borgstrom Univ. S. California Prep 1913 One-Mile Relay 3 min. 27 1-5 sec Los Angeles High 1910 Princeton Sntersdjolasttc racfe ecorb£ Made at the Interscholastic Meets at Princeton event record holder school year 100- Yard Dash 10 sec W. Hoganson Lewis Institute 1904 220- Yard Dash 22 1-5 sec J. A. Rector Lawrenceville 1900 440- Yard Dash 49 1-5 sec J. E. Meredith Mercershurg 1912 IIalf-Mile Run 1 min. 55 sec J. E. Meredith Mercershurg 1912 One-Mile Run 4 min. 29 sec H. Reed Mercershurg 1916 Two-Mile Run 9 min. 51 2-5 sec C. Boughton Newark Central High 1914 120- Yard Hurdles 16 sec I. Hall Mercershurg 1908 220-Yard Hurdles 25 3-5 sec Hammitt Mercershurg 1912 Running High Jump 6 ft. 2 l 2 in J. B. Spraker Berkeley 1899 Running Broad Jump 22 ft F. S. Risley Mercershurg 1905 Putting 12-lb. Shot 49 ft 8 in L. J. Talbott Mercershurg 1907 Throwing 12-lb. Hammer. . . 190 ft. 9 in L. J. Talbott Mercershurg 1907 Throwing Discus 11 1 ft. 7 in J. R. DeWitt Lawrenceville 1900 Pole Vault 12 ft. % in R. Mercer George School 1909 One-Mile Relay 3 min. 31 1-5 sec Brooklyn Manual 1908 247 The Princeton Bric-a-@rac « Sntergcfjolagttc g totmmtng Jileet HE Fourth Annual Princeton Interscholastic Swim.ning Meet, held in Brokaw Tank on February 12, 1916, was easily won by Brookline High School. The entry list, slightly smaller than last year, numbered 116, from 16 schools. The feature of the meet was the work of Handy, of Brookline, who bettered the Interscholastic and Inter- collegiate records in the 100 and 220-yard swims. Bird, also of Brookline, set a new Princeton Interscholastic record by plunging the length of the 75-foot tank in 52 seconds. POINT SCORE SCHOOL POINTS Brookline High School 27 Polytechnic Preparat ory School ( Brooklyn) 10 Lawrenceville 9 Hamilton Institute 8 West Philadelphia High School 6 St. Luke ' s School 3 SCHOOL POINTS All Hollows Institute 3 Lansdowne High School _. 3 Princeton Preparatory School 2 DeVVitt Clinton High School 2 St. Paul ' s School, Garden City 1 Central High School, Philadelphia I SUMMARY 50 Yards. 100 Yards. 220 Yards. WINNERS SCHOOL TIME OR DISTANCE 1. Cann, Hamilton Inst 26 sec. 2. Prendergast, Brookline H. S. 3. Shields, Poly. Prep. 4. Rogers, St. Paul ' s 1. Handy, Brookline H. S 564-5 sec 2. Uhl, Lansdowne H. S. 3. Georgi, Princeton Prep. 4. Prendergast, Brookline H. S. 1. Handy, Brookline H. S. 2 min. 29 3-5 sec 2. Cann, Hamilton Institute 3. Luke, Lawrenceville 4. Dippy, Central H. S. Plunge for Distance . Fancy Diving. 200- Yard Relay Race winners school time or distance 1. Bird, Brookline H. S. 75 ft. in 52 3-5 sec. 2. Carroll, All Hollows Institute 3. Remmey, Polytechnic Prep. 4. Tilden, West Philadelphia H. S. 1. Maxwell, Lawrenceville. .91.71 points 2. Coit, St. Luke ' s 3. Mory, Lawrenceville 4. Ommerle, West Philadelphia H. S. 1. Brookline H. S 1 min. 48 3-5 sec. 2. Polytechnic Preparatory School 3. West Philadelphia High School 4. DeWitt Clinton High School New Interscholastic record. New Princeton Interscholastic record. 248 The Princeton Bric-a-Srac Snter fjolaattc QTennis tournament, 1916 The Twenty- fourth Annual Princeton Interscholastic Tennis Tournament in singles, held on May 6th, was won by Mc- Cord, of Lawrenceville, who defeated Reimer, of Poly Prep., the runner-up, in three straight sets. Helm, of Hill School, who reached the semi-finals for the second successive year, and who was picked as the best of the ten entrants, was eliminated by the Lawrenceville man. By his victory McCord won the right to compete for the National Interscholastic Championship at Forest Hills, Long Island. Silver cups were awarded to both the winner and the runner-up. SUMMARY Preliminary Round— McCord, of Lawrenceville, defeated Francis, of Poly Prep., 6-4, 6-2; Davies, of Roselle High School, defeated Worcester, of Hill School, 6-2, 6-4. First Round — McCord, of Lawrenceville, defeated Hendrickson, of Ridgewood Preparatory School, 6-0, 6-3; Helm, of Hill School, defeated Kent, of Poly Prep., 6-2, 6-3 ; Reimer, of Poly Prep., defeated Benedict, of Roselle High School, 6-4, 7-5 ; Davies, of Roselle High School, defeated Leigh, of Lawrenceville, 6-2, 6-2. Semi-final Round — McCord, of Lawrenceville, defeated Helm, of Hill School, 6-3, 4-6, 6-4: Reimer, of Poly Prep., de- feated D avies, of Roselle High School, 7-5, 6-4. Final Round — McCord, of Lawrenceville, defeated Reimer, of Poly Prep., 6-3, 7-5, 6-2. 249 The Princeton Brie- a- r ac BLAIR ARCH AND TOWER. The Princeton Bric-a-Srac PRINCETON ARCH CLUB The Princeton Brie- a- Brae Irincetott rci) Club FOUNDED 1911 OFFICERS George F. Pi.ympton, ' 17 President George R. Stewart, Jr., ' 17 Vice-President Edmund Taylor, Jr., ' 17 Treasurer William B. Cameron, ' 18 Assistant Treasurer Sinclair W. Armstrong, ' 18 Secretary BOARD OF TRUSTEES Albert B. Craig, ' 15 President George F. Plympton, ' 17 Treasurer Francis Speir Fred. Ingraham, Jr. William E. Guy MEMBERS, 1916J4 Ferdinand J. Kruse Danford B. Tyler MEMBERS, 1917 David M. Amacker Marshall S. Edgar Vincent T. Manchee George R. Stewart, Jr. William S. Annin William E. Guy Alfred Marshall Robert F. Speir Carl F. Arnold Robert P. Hazlehurst Frank J. Newbury, Jr. Edmund Taylor, Jr. John R. Chamberlain David A. Iseman James H. Osmer Joseph Wickes Willard L. DeYoe Gordon C King George F. Plympton Curtis C Williams, Jr. Malcolm S. Edgar Sealand W. Landon Landon T. Raymond Deceased MEMBERS, 1918 Sinclair W. Armstrong John D. Decker Edgerton Hazard George F. Morgan, Jr. Sydney E. Brewster Archibald Dudgeon Marshall B. Kiehl Harold M. Planas George P. Biell Ralph C. Franks Mark A. McCloskey Jordan R. Scobie William B. Cameron 253 The Princeton Brie- a- Brae •a CAMPUS CLUB rtf T r le Dtns. % l- ? SAiThe Princeton Brie- a- Brae 3 Hir -, S) fc«KK««5 Jk - = =_3 , «««2 ' Campus Club FOUNDED 1900 OFFICERS Walter M. Boadway, ' 17 President Perry E. Hall, ' 17 Treasurer BOARD OF GOVERNORS Melvin Spencer, ' 10 Treasurer John H. Clapp, ' 02 R. P. McClenahan, ' 02 A. W. Riley, ' 04 MEMBERS, 1917 W. W. NlSSLEY, ' 14 Alvin Behkkr John M. Denison Walter L. Heath John H. Stevens Charles M. Betts Herbert R. Garside William H. Xeei.y Reginald Tickner Walter M. Roadway James McB. Garvey John J. Parker. Jr. Herman L. Vail Percy H. Buchanan Rryant F. Gilmour Harvey H. Smith James S. Warren John W. Carpenter Perry E. Hall George B. Stericker MEMBERS, 1918 Rcss N. Wetherbee John Biggs, Jr. Leys A. France Richard H. Oller Arthur D. Scarritt Dudley C. Corkran William W. La Force William M. Parker Craig R. Smith Edward Crocker, Jr. Alexander V. Lyman Francis L. Sawyers Harry D. Smyth Edward M. Croa ' in 255 ■ L 0C2g! ££3M Princeton Bric-g-gr c Sfe5 - CANNON CLUB The Princeton JSric-a-Brac « Cannon Club FOUNDED 1898 OFFICERS, 1916-17 Charles H. Burchenal, ' 17 President Callan E. England, ' 18 Fice-Presidcut Harold L. Laney, ' 17 Secretary-Treasurer Robert L. Thompson, Jr., ' 18. .Assistant Secretary-Treasurer TRUSTEES David Mahany President Albert W. Harris Graduate-Treasurer Carlyle Garrison Secretary Albert I. Paine Charles S. Wills Ernest C. Wills Kenneth H. Backus Charles H. Burchenal Horace T. Cator Edward E. Ford MEMBERS, 1917 Robert S. Gerstell Donald S. McConnaughy Jewett F. Singleton John J. Glenn Harold L. Laney Charles S. Roberts Bernard M. Shanley Ralph W. Stoeltzing C Breckenridge Ten Eyck David R. J. Arnold Lawrence Boardman George D. Cherry Erwin W. Doyle MEMBERS, 1918 Callan E. England Alson D. Kimball William B. Garrett Allyn J. Marsh Victor F. Hockmeyer Joseph T. McCaddon, Jr. Felix O. Janke Alfred E. Norris Rorert Parker Robert L. Thompson, Jr. 257 - Sf The Princeton Bric-CL-mr c Z p - CAP AND ( ' .OWN CLUB The Princeton Bric-a-Elra.c ■6 Cap anb oton Club FOUNDED 1891 OFFICERS D. D. Chaplin, Jr., ' 17 President George W. Purves, ' 17 Vice-President William L. Dempsey, ' 17 Treasurer Norman C. Nourse, ' 18 Assistant Treasurer Robert H. McCague, ' 18 Secretary BOARD OF TRUSTEES H krbert L. Mills, ' 04 President Charles D, Baker, ' 13 Treasurer J. Whitney Baker. ' 04 Secretary Marshall F. Mills, ' 02 C. M. Butler, ' 10 G. R. Hanks, ' 15 Milton S. Dillon, ' 17 D. D. Chaplin, ' 17 MEMBERS, 1917 D. D. Chaplin, Jr. Samuel H. Compton H. Lawrence Cory William L. Dempsey M. S. Dillon Joseph W. Donner Wells Drorbaugh Edward L. Duer, 2nd Crowell Hadden. 3RD C. C Highley T. B. Keating Thomas H. Miles, Jr. Robert L. Xourse, Jr. Elkins Oliphant George T. Purves W. Fred Reynolds, Jr. Irving Riker John Rutherfurd Arthur V. Savage Paul Scheerer William Scheerer. Jr. P. MacKay Sturges W. D. Van Dyke, Jr. John H. Barret Louis H. Bieler William McK. Bowman- Lucius McC. Butts MEMBERS, 1918 John F. Donoho Edward G. Herendeen Donald S. Leslie Robert H. McCague Edward D. McDougal Norman C. Nourse Herbert W. Warden- Milton V. Wiese David R. Winans 259 The Princeton Brie- a- Brae PRINCETON CHARTER CLUB The Princeton Brie- a.- Brae Princeton Charter Clufc FOUNDED 1901 OFFICERS Edward F. MacNichol President Stuart M. Link Treasurer Frederick L. Moore Assistant Treasurer William A. Buell Secretary Oliver C. Reynolds, ' 04 John A. Stewart, ' 05 BOARD OF GOVERNORS Edwin H. Burk, ' 09 Allan Da vies, ' 10 Carlton B. Riker, ' 13 Lewis N. Lukens, ' 17 MEMBERS, 1917 Maximilian J. Averbeck, Jr. Douglas DeLanoy Xewton P. Bevin Henry Chapin Robert A. Cochran, 3RD Kent G. Colwell Samuel I. Cooper Randolph F. Funsten LeRoy L. Harding Edward Harris, 2nd Harold B. Hoskins Stuart M. Link Lewis N. Lukens, Jr. Edward F. McNicholl Richard H. McCann John S. Nicholas James D. Paull George W. Perkins, Jr. Kenneth M. Reed Rudolf N. Schullinger Robert C. Schmertz Herbert R. Spencer Thomas H. Talmadge Marquand Ward MEMBERS, 1918 Wilson L. Blayney William R. Brashear William A. Buell Eno Campbell Hiliary R. Chambers, Jr. Arthur T. Clark Edwin B. Dunphy Harold L. Greason Maxwell M. Hamilton Wendell P. Harper Alfred B. Littell Brian P. Leeb William P. Matthews Berkeley S. Michael Frederick L. Moore David R. Shotwell Stuart-Riddle Stevenson Warren T. Stewart Charles K. Wallace John H. Westcott, Jr. 261 The Princeton Bric-a-grac CLOISTER INN CLUB The Princeton Bric-a-grac Cloister 3nn Club FOUNDED 1912 Clarence P. Freeman, Sterling Galt, Jr., ' is OFFICERS Arthur A. Schmon, ' 17 President Benjamin M. Van Cleve, ' 17 Vice-President Henry G. Rutledge, ' 17 Treasurer James F. Mills, ' 18 4ssistant Treasurer James Creese, Jr., ' 18 Secretary BOARD OF TRUSTEES Charles E. Bingham, ' 13 President Raymond T. Hoopes. ' 13 Secretary-Treasurer ' 14 Louis M. Washburn, ' 15 Bethune M. Grant, 3rd, ' 16 Henry G. Rutledge, ' 17 Thurston J. Davies. ' 16 MEMBERS, 1917 Myron K. Barrett Philip S. Barba Frank Bechtel, Jr. J. Harwood Closson David N. Corson David A. Depue E. Russell Dorrance John W. Everitt Vernon B. Farr George F. Hasslacher Theodore B. Hunt Chauncey D. Leake Milton W. Leggett Henry G. Rutledge Arthur A. Schmon Oliver H. Smith Merlin McF. Taylor Benjamin M. Van Cleve Cornelius C. Vermeule, Jr. Harold A. Butz Alfred E. Christie James Creese. Jr. William M. Dougherty James G. Elder MEMBERS, 1918 Irving A. Guerin Dwight J. Harris Walter A. Huston- Howard S. Lyon Richard H. Marshall Thomas C. Matthews James F. Mills James C. Oehler William W. Reynolds Meade A. Spencer Frederick R. Warburton Jasper Writer 263 The Princeton gric-a-Brac €2 COLONIAL CLUB The Princeton Bric-a-Bra.c « Colonial Club FOUNDED 1891 OFFICERS Knowlton L. Ames, Jr., ' 17 President Ivor F. L. Kenway, ' 17 Secretary-Treasurer Percy Parker, Jr., ' 18 Assistant Secretary-Treasurer BOARD OF GOVERNORS George W. Yuengling, ' 01 Chairman Alfred Ely, Jr., ' 03 Treasurer Francis W. Dinsmore, ' 04 Childs Frick, ' 05 Richard B. Duane, ' 10 Coleman P. Brown, ' 05 John Farr, Jr., ' 09 Irving B. Kingsford, ' 13 MEMBERS, 1916 William M. Agar Henry L. Grinnell, Jr. Knowlton L. Ames, Jr. Oliver E. Cromwell Harold F. Gibson MEMBERS, 1917 Henry L. Hilton-Green Ivor F. L. Kenway Kenneth B. Logan J. Edward Madden, Jr. Paul D. Nelson Charles W. Nevin, 2nd Edgar O. Silver Joseph S. Shanley Wayman Mc. Allen Frank C. Baker Donald S. Bixler Edward M. Crane MEMBERS, 1918 Aaron B. Cutting William B. J. DeLacy T. PoULTNEY GORTER Gordon C. Gregory Earnest C. Haaren Campbell Jackes Hii.dreth Meigs Paul J. Nowland Percy Parker, Jr. Dickson B. Potter Arthur M. Q. Syme 265 The Princeton Bric-a-Hrac •ML UNIVERSITY COTTAGE CLUB The Princeton Brie- a- Brae (Hmbersittp Cottage Clut) FOUNDED 1887 E. Hicks Herrick, ' 88 Bernard S. Horne. ' 90 Erskine Hewitt, ' 91 George C. Fraser. ' 93 OFFICERS Rudolf Eberstadt, ' 17 President Henry T. Dunn, ' 17 Financial Secretary Harry B. Gordon, Jr.. ' 18 -Issistant Treasurer BOARD OF GOVERNORS Richard E. Dvvight, ' 97 Chairman Norman H. Donald, ' 03 Treasurer James McA. Pyle. ' o ' i Secretary Henry W. Lowe, ' 97 Edgar Palmer, ' 03 Rudolf Eberstadt, ' 17 Clinton V. Meserole. ' 98 Charles S. Fayerweather. 05 (Ex-officio) Elroy Curtis, ' 00 Marion Eppley. ' 06 Henry T. Dunn. ' 17 William O. Morse, ' 02 Dean Mathey. ' 12 (Ex-officio) MEMBER, 1916 ' 2 Robert L. McKinney Gavin Brackenridgk W. Floyd Clarkson Charles W. Donahoe Gregg Dougherty Henry T. Dunn MEMBERS, 1917 Rudolf Eberstadt Charles H Charles H. Folwell. Jr. Oswald Fowler James B. Given. Jr. Henry H. Koyt Latrobe Douglas G. McGrath William L. McLean, Jr. DeCourcy W. Orrick Daniel McK. Paulson J. Van Kirk Richards B. Stuart Walcott Franklin S. Whitehouse Richard Ziesing. Jr. Daniel B. Brewster Alexander B. Carver Samuel D. Conant Harry B. Gordon, Jr. MEMBERS, 1918 F. Winston Johns E. Winslow Kane Richard L. Farrelly F. Scott Fitzgerald Philip C. Kauffman W. Huger Labouisse William M. Madden Gecrge W. H. Smith J. Gates Williams Foster P. Wilson 267 - - gaf The Princeton Bric-a-B7Hc Sfey - ■0- IK % ... ■ ■. . fi4i fas •KM II it r i: ' jsjfffjf ' . , v«(cSw ' ' ■ -- ■-- S t f fe ai- DIAL LODGE The Princeton Brie- a- Brae ■s . ©tal Hobge FOUNDED 1908 INCORPORATED 1912 OFFICERS Bernard Peyton, ' 17 President Robert J. McClintock, ' 17 Treasurer Hamilton Hicks, ' 18 Assistant Treasurer Harold von Hasslacher, ' 18 Secretary BOARD OF TRUSTEES Wilfred J. Funk, ' 09 Chairman Lyman C. Butler, ' 10 Secretary Alfred V. S. Olcctt, ' 09 Treasurer T. H. McCauley, ' 12 Charles D. Orth, Jr. James J. Porter, ' ii Bernard Peyton, ' 17 MEMBER, 1916 Hartford H. Davis Charles A. Bahrenburg Hans A. Bluntschli Truman D. Cameron Kenneth M. Day Malcolm M. Baker William Black Francis T. Bryan, 4th Frederick W. Conine Frank S. Clowney Frederick R. Crane MEMBERS, 1917 William A. Eddy Robert N. Errington Charles H. Grant Walter C. Knox Edward H. Lorenz Robert J. McClintock MEMBERS, 1918 John E. Egner Herbert R. Eldridce Richard L. Eldridge James A. Foster, Jr. George W. Griffith Raymond Harper Hamilton Hicks Edwin D. McCauley Arthur B. Murray Spencer E. Palmer Bernard Peyton Ralph W. Raymond Francis Y. VanSchoonhoven Edward D. Parsons Sam Streetman, Jr. Kirk I. Thompson Harold von Hasslacher William J. Warburton 269 The Princeton Jlric-a-Srac ELM CLUB The Princeton Brie- a.- @rac €lm Club FOUNDED 1895 OFFICERS Harvey M. Heywood President William D. Duncan Vice-President James E. Hooper Secretary Kenneth A. Phillips Treasurer Ernest L. Vcgt Assistant Treasurer BOARD OF GOVERNORS Nathan S. Schrceder, ' 98 President Charles Presbrey, ' o5 Vice-President Paul T. Bruyere, ' 01 Treasurer J. Sedgwick Cooke, ' i i Secretary Jcseph H. Greenwood, ' 05 Assistant Secretary Arthur J. A. Sullivan, ' 13 I rT , , , ,, , „ J Undergraduate Members Charles O. Xichoi.s, ' 16 ) T. Hart Anderson O ' Hara D. Brereton Harrison Bullock William M. Cotton MEMBERS, 1917 Alfred G. Gennert Harvey M. Heywocd Alan Jackman David Jackman, Jr. Charles E. Kennedy Charles LaTcur William W. Lyons Kenneth A. Phillips Richard Powell Eugene C. B. Simonin Lawrence L. Anderson, 2nd Elpert Dent, Jr. William R. Beal John H. Drohan Stanton B. Coffin William G. Duncan Benjamin H. Cory MEMBERS, 1918 Louis G. Erskine James E. Hooper W. C. Repass Howard R. Selover Wallace C. Speers Ernest L. Vcgt 271 The Princeton §Sric-a-@rac PRINCETON GATEWAY CLUB The Princeton Bric-a-Brac Princeton dlatetoap Club FOUNDED 1913 OFFICERS Harrington W. Sellers, ' 17 President Stanley E. Harris, ' 17 Vice-President Sargent Bush, ' 17 Secretary Marion L. Turrentine, ' 17 Treasurer-Manager Assistant Secretary Assistant Treasurer-Manager Grover C. Burkert Sargent Bush Ernest H. Forster John H. Frost MEMBERS, 1917 Stanley E. Harris John R. Higgins Arthur R. Knott Harold M. March Evan J. Miller Barrington W. Sellers George B. Sheppard George E. Shoemaker, Jr. William H. Tenison Marion L. Turrentine MEMBERS, 1918 Carl R. Arnold Thomas E. Babson Leo V. Barker Henry M. Dubbs John J. Ewart Edmund H. Kerper Munson H. Lane Roland B. Lutz Donald McClennan Gerald McKeever Paul McKown John O. McNulty Theodore C. Meek Walter H. Millinger Halley Quier Albert D. Reidinger Leo H. Richardson Frederick E. Springer Charles A. Underwood Ray W. Van Tuyl Donald Wair Charles T. White Hans A. K. Widenmann Julius L. Wilson Henry A. Wood John S. Woodbridge 273 The Princeton Brie- a- Brae IVY CLUB The Princeton Brie- a- Brae Stop Club FOUNDED 1879 UNDERGRADUATE OFFICERS Norms D. Jackson, ' 17 President Charles J. Ingersoll, ' 17 Treasurer Phillips B. Lee, ' 18 Secretary Courtlandt V. R. Halsey, ' 18.... Assistant Treasurer BOARD OF GOVERNORS R. Lawrence Benson, ' 01 President Rudolph L. Walton, ' 05 Treasurer Norman Armour, ' 09 Secretary Paul Van Dyke, ' 81 Chester Griswold, ' 99 Percy R. Pyne, 2nd, ' 03 Oliver Harriman, Jr., ' 83 John W. Converse, ' 00 Howard H. Henry, ' 04 Adrian H. Larkin, ' 87 H. Frazier Harris, ' 03 A. Perry Osborn, ' 05 Wm. S. Whitehead, Jr., ' 91 XORMAN S. MACKIE, ' OQ Alvin S. S. Devereux, ' 12 James E. Gowen, ' 17 Frederick F. Alexandre Francis H. Bohi.en Charles E. Brown, Jr. Henry W. Ford Pell W. Foster, Jr. James E. Gowen Thomas J. Hilliard Paul W. Hills Frank T. Hogg John G. S. Humphreys MEMBERS, 1917 William Y Humphreys Charles J. Ingersoll Xorris D. Jackson William G. McAdoo, Jr. Gordon McCormick John V. W. Reynders, Jr. William H. Schoen, Jr. Arthur R. Taber Henry W. Young Charles R. Arrott Frederick D. Avery Leonard Beekman Israel O. Blake Carl W. Bonbright Jarvis Cromwell Holbrook B. Cushman Morton Goodspeed Courtlandt V. R. Halsey George T. Jarvis MEMBERS, 1918 Ferdinand Jelke, 3rd Lamartine V. Lamar Phillips B. Lee Rodman B. Montgomery William A. B. Paul Percy R. Pyne, Jr. Edgar A. Poe, Jr. David Williamson- Cornelius Winant 275 The Princeton Sric-a-Srac ■s KEY AND SEAL CLUB The Princeton Bric-a-Sra.c Eep anb S eal Club FOUNDED 1904 Henry W. Buxton, Henri Schwob. ' 06 94 UNDERGRADUATE OFFICERS Frederick W. Nixon, ' 17 President Nelson I. Campbell, ' 18 Vice-President Paul T. Barnum, ' 17 Treasurer Edward P. Becker, ' 18 Assistant Treasurer Stayman L. Reed, ' 17 Secretary BOARD OF GOVERNORS Harold S. Richard, ' 06 President Gilbert N. Hunting, ' 07 Secretary Roger Hinds, ' 06 Treasurer Kenneth M. McEwan, ' 06 Albert S. Richardson, ' 13 Ralph B. Higgins, ' 12 Sterling Morton, ' 06 Lawrence D. Howell, ' 13 Kenneth V. Blue, ' 16 Paul T. Barnum George W. Cale, 3rd Prentice Cooper Melville A. Eberhardt Bennet H. Ertel James W. Gailey John R. Hardin, Jr. G. Meade Holstein, Jr Thomas D. Joeck Everard Kemps hall MEMBERS, 1917 Arthur C. Lewis William L. Lowrie, Jr. Paul B. Matlock Frederick W. Nixon Frank Pardee, Jr. Stayman L. Reed Nelson B. Sackett Hunter D. Sparks Harold W. Vensel MEMBERS, 1918 Edward P. Becker Harry H. Brakeley, Jr. Nelson I. Campbell John S. Cromelin Edward W. Currie Carl R. Eaby, Jr. Edwin D. Foster William L. Freeborn D. Clarence Gibboney, Jr. Rudolph J. Goerke Samuel Godfrey Nathaniel B. Johnson Donald B. Knight William C. Lyman William B. Manee Harry A. Sipe Frederick B. Wille Edmund LeRoy Wilson Joseph M. Woods 277 The Princeton Brie- a.- Brae PRINCETON QUADRANGLE CLUB Ot . mmtt frV JT | s ., Z±iZLThe Princeton Bric-a-@rac -i Z2y =J 1 Princeton ©uabrangle Club FOUNDED 1901 OFFICERS George L. Russell, Jr., ' 17 Treasurer John C. Taylor, Jr., ' 18 Assistant Treasurer BOARD OF TRUSTEES Robert L. Crawford, 3rd, ' 17 Secretary Wm. C. Armstrong, ' 04 C. Ames Brookes, ' 05 H. O. Milliken, ' 05 George F. Green, ' 05 MEMBER, 1916 William H. Beatty, Jr. MEMBERS, 1917 James J. Bettes John P. Bishop Robert L. Crawford, 3rd Gilbert C. Demorest Anthony W. Durell, Jr. Donald O. MacRae Ludlow S. Fowler Alfred Mathiasen Alexander L. McKaig George L. Russell, Jr. MEMBERS, 1918 Howard R. Watt John D. Warfield John H. Winter Charles Bayly, Jr. J. Clement Boyd Lee C. Bradley, Jr. Charles U. Caeser Meredith H. Ewing Edmund S. Hayes Junius P. Fishburn Lynn Helm, Jr. Earl P. Gowing Bedros Kazanjian Richard M. Griffith Henry M. Steele, Jr. J. C. Taylor, Jr. Wilmer J. Thomas Charles F. Turner Alfred Van Horn Deceased 279 - S The Princeton Jric-a-grac -THE ■ TERRACE • CLVB • PRINCETON • N ■ J The Princeton j§ric-a.-gra.c Princeton terrace Club FOUNDED 1904 OFFICERS Jerome B. Wiss, ' 17 President W. Gardner Hayward, ' 17 Vice-President Kenneth S. Wales, ' 17 Treasurer Warren W. Hampe, ' i8 Secretary BOARD OF GOVERNORS Gustav C. Wuerth, ' 07 Chairman James S. Eadie, ' 10 Secretary-Treasurer Waring L. Dawbarn, ' og Kenneth S. Wales, ' 17 Theodore S. Sill, ' ii Fredk. H. Birkenhauer, ' 10 Edward S. Castle, ' ii W. Gardner Hayward, ' 17 Jerome B. Wiss, ' 17 Warren W. Hampe, ' 18 MEMBER, 1916i 2 Elmer E. Childs John B. Black John F. Bohmfalk Charles W. Berl Samuel S. Bryan, Jr. Henry W. Cohu MEMBERS, 1917 La Motte T. Cohu W. Gardner Hayward Palmer H. Cook John X. McDowell Benjamin F. Etter Herbert N. Odell John M. Foster Lawrence Phillips Gilbert R. Glorieux Frederick V. Schaettler Charles McC. Scott James M. Speers, Jr. Herbert E. Twyeffort Kkxxeth S. Wales Jerome B. Wiss Albert H. Bingham Jacob P. Brenner Xorman H. Cooper Henry B. De Gray Samuel G. Frantz William P Warren W. Hampe Lester V. Howett Louis F. Kendall Daniel L. Mathews, Jr MEMBERS, 1918 Hamilton William S. Mayer John S. McWilliams Clark Miller Oswald J. Parisette Allan K. Poole Sydney D. Sherrerd Douglas C. Sinci.aire Raney S. Taylor George S. Thompson 281 The Princeton Brie- a- B r ac •£ . TIGER INN rf rr 3i «s ST?Tnth t % rt- Tf Zi LThe Princeton gric-a-grac lrn N „ l «u« «sva :a SS-J ' Ctger 3nn FOUNDED 1890 INCORPORATED 1892 OFFICERS - Marion O. Wilson, ' 18 ! ice-President S. Davidson Herron, ' 18 Assistant Secretary-Treasurer BOARD OF GOVERNORS Franklin Murphy, Jr., ' 95 Vice-President Rcswell C Otheman, ' 07 Secretary Frederic J. Moses, ' 92 . Charles W. Luke, ' 08 Dickson Q. Brown, ' 95 MEMBERS, 1917 George W. Bunn, ' 12 Allan C. Brown Paul B. Dickey Philip B. Knowlton John T. Scully Arthur H. Coffey Edmund H. Dricgs. Jr. William B. Moore Charles G. Semmens Harold D. Comey John E. Eddy William F. Mudge Herman F. Straw Alfred T. Copeland Isaac B. Grainger Donald Pettit David W. Tibbott Charles A. Dickerman Graham T. Johnstone William J. Rahill MEMBERS, 1918 John W. Beatty Pomeroy J. Herron John M. Rankin Francis J. Rue, 3RD Harold B. Collins S. Davidson Herron Stacey B. Rankin Marion 0. Wilson Alexander P. Hammond Sanford Lawton John L. Robertson, Jr. 283 The Princeton Brie- a-Srac PRINCETON TOWER CLUB t Tho ■ssscs WESzzm z -t sne rrmceTon oric-a-esracv-sss - Princeton Cotoer Club FOUNDED 1902 OFFICERS W. Butler Harris. Jr., ' 17 President S. Davis Page, Jr., ' 18 4ssistant Treasurer Lewis B. Flinn, ' 18 Seerctarx BOARD OF GOVERNORS W. Henry Abbot. ' 04 Sinclair Hamilton. ' 06 Raymond T. Fish. ' 13 Wiley H. Burford, ' 16 Sidney T. Holt, ' 03 Harry J. Sohmer, ' 07 Harry C. Crcss, ' 16 MEMBERS, 1917 William B. Barnitz James L. Horne William A. Lowrie John R. Stoltze William T. Black Walter H. Johnson, Jr. M. Sims Read George G. Vest Ralph H. Cutler Luther G. Jones Richard H. Ritter Harold B. Volrath Robert S. Hammond James E. Kimber Walter T. Stockton Harwood A. White W. Butler Harris, Jr. MEMBERS, 1918 Lewis B. Flinx William W. Meiks Harding S. Roche Arthur B. Tyler Wesley T. Hammer S. Davis Page. Jr. George S. Schmidt, Jr. Douglas M. Weller J. Allen Machin Richard G Preston James H. Stewart Sydney L. Wright, Jr. I ' f.xdall Marbury Leland C Rhodes William D. Ten Broeck 285 The Princeton Bric-a-grac WHIG HALL. CLIO HALL. -3« g£g ?g The Princeton Bric-a-BracB Sfes - WILSON LATROBE UNDERGRADUATE SCHOOLS COMMITTEE. HOGG LANEY F. MOORE MCHESNEY TAYLOR B. MOORE The Princeton JSric-a.-Brac Unbergrabuate ikfjools; Committee J. H. Barrett, ' 18 W. A. Buell, ' 18 OFFICERS H. L. Laney, ' 17 Chairman S. M. Link, ' 17 Secretary EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE H. L. LANEY, ' 17 Chairman D. S. McChesney, ' 17 J. C. Taylor, Jr.. ' 18 ENTERTAINMENT COMMITTEE S. M. Link, ' 17 Chairman H. D. Comey, ' 17 C. H. Latrobe, ' 17 W. B. Moore, ' 17 F. T. Hogg, ' 17 F. L. Moore, ' 18 M. O. Wilson, ' 18 289 The Princeton Bric-a-grac Unbober Club F. T. Hogg, ' 17. T. H. Anderson, Jr. J. B. Black F. T. Hogg A. C. Lewis OFFICERS .President M. S. Gould, ' 20. MEMBERS, 1917 C. F. LaTour W. F. Mudce . Secretary-Treasurer E. O. Silver E. D. McCauley E. S. Hayes MEMBERS, 1918 R. G. Preston R. L. Bruch R. Goldsmith W. A. Kirklanu MEMBERS, 1919 R. F. Makepeace J. H. MacCreadie C. Read W. A. Garrigues, Jr. W. E. Sloan F. D. Warren, Jr. H. B. Blauvelt W. Bryan B. W. Cohn MEMBERS, 1920 G. E. English H. B. Fine M. S. Gould H. C. Harrison F. M. Jones, 3RD J. S. Montgomery L. H. Rothchild J. M. Sharp E. Speer 290 The Princeton Bric-a-Srac gssfjebtlle gdjool Club OFFICERS A. C. Brown Pr esident M. B. Kiehl, . Secretary-Treasurer A. C. Brown E. W. Springs MEMBERS, 1917 A. T. Copeland H. M. Heywood D. Pettit MEMBER, 1918 M. B. Kiehi. MEMBERS, 1919 B. H. Bostick H. D. Knower R. P. Lamont E. G. Miles J. W. McFarlane R. R. Vance H. S. Bond MEMBERS, 1920 H. S. Firestone J. N. Frantz L. Page, Jr. R. T. Sherman 291 The Princeton Bric-a-Brac fcr i inM fc to -j a J nbpjitfc lii V 4i4i : t J:.--.: XX .1 . , - ' e j; 3 fe j itfriLbtt . j :- ,. k uA Bl liasL V ••- .; . ■ ' V- ' .• ' ■ . _ - y - J -! ' . , « JBarrtnger J|tgf) g cf)ool Club MEMBERS, 1917 A. A. Schmon W. L. Dempsey MEMBER, 1918 J. A. Machin MEMBERS, 1919 C. E. Holman R. S. Urmy R. C. Whitman MEMBER, 1920 C. V. Sandeli. 292 The Princeton Bric-a-Brac Pake g djool Club OFFICERS S. B. Coffin, ' 18 President G. R. Pettkrson, ' 19 Secretary-Treasurer D. J. Winton, ' 20 ' Freshman Director MEMBERS, 1918 S. B. Coffin H. R. Selover MEMBERS, 1919 G. R. Petterson A. A. Rogers S. T. Haviland S. H. Petterson MEMBERS, 1920 J. B. Stricker G. F. Williamson D. J. Winton R. C. Woodvvorth 293 The Princeton Bric-a-Prac £i Cutler g cf)ool Club OFFICERS H. W. Cohu, ' 17 President A. VanHorn, ' 18 Vice-President J. F. Parker, ' 19 Secretary-Treasurer R. Lawson, ' 20 Freshman Director H. W. Cohu MEMBERS, 1917 LaM. T. Cohu A. J. Post H. E. Twyeffort H. C. Harrison MEMBERS, 1918 F. Morgan A. VanHorn O. M. Lawson A. L. Norton MEMBERS, 1919 J. F. Parker J. F. Savidge W. E. Studdiford MEMBERS, 1920 G. Bond R. Lawson 294 The Princeton Bric-a-Brac ; €a t ©enber J|tgf) cjjool Club MEMBERS, 1917 J. S. Nicholas P. B. Matlock L. V. Barker MEMBERS, 1918 T. S. Ireland J. Writer MEMBERS, 1919 B. H. Beckhart J. G. Smith MEMBERS, 1920 H. S. Dimmitt Rise Bassett Dale Sparhawk K. Shaw J. B. Field Raymond Sanger F. S. Titsworth, ' 93 HONORARY MEMBERS L. J. Thomas R. E. Kester • -gorge Sibley E. H. Lee, ' i6 295 3„ t T tf T ri 3? -if Wto L tw -i L 9 U LThe Princeton Bric-a-Prac M «2±£ t=s-5 -• ' - • ' ■ I 1 - Cxeter Club OFFICERS M. O. Wilson, ' 18 President R. N. Wetherbee, ' 18 Treasurer MEMBERS, 1917 Gregg Dougherty A. G. Gennert W. M. Madden H. H. Neuberger A. L. Weil R. N. Wetherbee H. R. Garside H. M. Heywood MEMBERS, 1918 S. Godfrey H. Hicks P. Lane H. M. Nevin J. M. Woods, Jr. M. O. Wilson MEMBERS, 1919 J. H. Amen R. F. Cleveland W. S. Humphrey R. G. Moore B. Strong A. Van Wyck M. G. Charles E. O. Douglas J. M. Leopold C. S. Richardson L. F. Timmerman, Jr. E. V. D. Wight F. B. Christmas G. Frankel J. C. Milne, 2nd F. S. Richardson MEMBERS, 1920 A. L. Cobb H. Frey G. M. Harper J. M. Madden F. M. Rheinmund K. O. Wilson W. W. Frank G. B. Gray L. H. Hitzrot D. K. Miller H. A. Sutphen 296 a mfrtWQj ' u E Z = MZn . ■ a ,. ' t g ? !y% _ •_ l= - - . j s _ i ne rrmceion ©ric-a-©rac T a -«b=- s - UR f$ m? ' 5? EL : x ■ S - ' 1 1 - P -- ' - i. . ULE J||IUU ' ■51 ' - ■■kti !■ as ft ' r- ■ H. M. Steele, Jr., ' 18 Oilman Country ikftool Club OFFICERS MEMBERS, 1917 H. T. Cator C. H. Latrobe . .Secretary-Treasurer D. B. Brewster W. B. Cameron D. K. E. Bruce R. D. Clark D. C. CORKRAN T. A. Ellicott E. D. Finney MEMBERS, 1918 B. Gordon T. P. Gorter MEMBERS, 1919 W. B. F. Hax H. D. Knower W. B. Kelly R. H. Randall G. II. S. S. Schmidt M. Steele, Jr. S. Schmidt G. W. Bauernschmidt E. J. Brooks W. K. Boone, Jr. J. Fisher, Jr. G. E. Bowdoin D. L. B. Fringer MEMBERS, 1920 G. Latrobe, Jr. M. J. Offutt C. W. Mitchell. Jr. T. J. E. Pulling T. V. Morgan T. D. Riggs, Jr. B. J. E. Sawyer S. Sloan 297 A mlM SS w ■ . 3== mrzz - a fy « « L= - - „ s r ic rrmce ion ©r c - a- © r ac c j!5L - b=-- ,  - « • %,-Jai tty m i ji ' jfet ' K 3 m JXm r ■ 8 - y 1 ' 1 ' ■T l Bte! W ' BB? Hi ■ fMfiBJSMMM| , t - Jlabetf orb ikfjool Club OFFICERS , Secretary-Treasurer MEMBERS, 1917 MEMBERS, 1918 C. C. HlGHLEY E. OLIPHANT D. S. Bixler W. H. Ten Broeck MEMBERS, 1919 MEMBERS, 1920 L. R. Kinnard J. A. Moss J G. Campbell J. H. Schenck W. Morris J. V. Newlin 298 lYfff - f r x Xthnrn 1 £ £ The Princeton Br c-CL-Brac £%g z t S «DjJ ort ' M ' . ■■.- ' V fttli cf)ool Club OFFICERS ... ' • 1 = S. M. Link, ' 17 H. K. Bulkley, ' 19. . President JJK v | i : i t ' J ; J. H. Beal. ' 20 Freshman Directors ♦ - F R. B. Heiserman, ' 20 .1 4 ' 3 MEMBERS, 1917 •■ . f k D. D. Chaplin, Jr. G. W. Perkins, Jr. D. DeLanoy J. M. Dennison B. Peyton J. Rutherford M. S. Dillon W. Scheerer _. J. W. Donner P. Scheerer ■f 1 ■ - - S. R. Dresser G. B. Sheppard Kc . — :, - m — O. Fowler R. A. Franks H. R. Spencer J. R. Stoltz ■ W. E. Guy, Jr. H. B. Hoskins T. B. Keating S. M. Link W. L. McLean, Jr. E. L. Strater T. H. Talmage W. D. VanDyke. Jr. H. A. White MEMBERS, 1918 F. DeL. Avery B. H. Cory L. Helm, Jr. E. M. McIlvain, Jr. W. C. Speers W. R. Beal A. Dudgeon E. H. Kerper S. D. Page H. W. Warden J. Biggs, Jr. R. C. Franks E. T. Look J. G. Paul J. H. Westcott, Jr. C. U. Caesar C. V. R. Halsey R. H. McCague MEMBERS, 1919 H. K. Bulkley J. A. Dodd F W. GUILBERT A. H. Jennings M. S. Quay. Jr. J. Cooke E. D. Finney J. K. B. Hockahay H. P. Keller W. B. Talbert, Jr. J. C. Davis C. F. DeLong L. C. Holden MEMBERS, 1920 J. R. McCune I. C. Williams S. Abbett G. C. Fraser L. G. Kaye L. Richmond G. A. Trowbridge J. H. Beal W. H. Hamilton B. F. Kraffert C. B. Rogers J. R. VanCleve W. F. Chappell, J R. R. B. Heiserman M. Pitney A. H. ScHROEDhR W. G. Wilmont H. R. Drowne J. M. Hutchins F. S. Polhemus 299 J. R. Steers The Princeton Bric-a-grac LAWRENCEVILLE MEMORIAL HALL L % • TrTlYvn,,. 3 q iThe Princeton Sric-a-Brac S? - « «-2i - S HatorencebtUe ikijool Clut) OFFICERS J- T. President P. C. -President Treasurer J. R. T. H Daniel, 20 ) ,. , E at Hj ' 20 J Preshman MEMBERS, 1917 Directors K. L. Ames, Jr. G. W. Cale R. S. Gerstell T. B. Hunt R. N. Schullincer 0. H. Smith M. J. Averbeck, Jr. P. B. Dickey H. Hilton-Green G. T. Johnston R. C. Schmertz c B. Ten Eyck H. Bluntschli M. A. Eberhardt G. M. Holstein, Jr. T D. Paull J. T. Scully K. S. Wales C. H. BURCHENAL C. H. Folwell, Jr. W. B. Harris, Jr. t Riker MEMBERS, 1918 F. C. Baker F. T. Bryan R. Eldridge G. W. Griffith K. A. Morris H DeW. Smyth J. H. Barret J. H. Burns, Jr. L. A. France F. O. Janke A. E. Norris K. I. Thompson C. E. Bayly L. M. Butts S. Frantz P. C. Kauffmann H. M. Planas F. P. Wilson I,. H. BlELER W. B. J. DeLacy W. L. Freeborn B. Kazanjian A. K. Poole D. R. WlNANS L. C. Bradley ' H. Eldridge T. B. Green J. S. McWilliams MEMBERS, 1919 F. L. Sawyers C. O. Bailey G. A. DlBERT D. W Guy A. K. Miller H. M. Xorris H H. Strater G. A. Bond H. W. Doyle G. W. Henderson A. J. Millard L R. Page T. I. Taylor A. R. Bray C. R. Erdman, Jr. W. Hicks A. M. Montgomery L. C. Reed W . Taylor, Jr. F. S. Cooper J. Fahys, 2ND F. B. KlRKENDALL D. C. MORGAN G. D. Saville L. Terrell S. Lloyd, Jr. H. W. Frost, Jr. E. T. Knowlson G. B. McCormick W. R. Semans G. P. Thomas E. H. Ludlow G. W. Funk R. Lamarche L. McCormick H. M. Smith A. M. Whittingham D. K. Luke L. W. Gregory, ' , r. T. M. N. Lewis R. D. McDougal, Jb J. C. Maxwell C. W. McGraw MEMBERS, 1920 • J. J. B. Stoetzer J- S. Young R. Butler F. S. Crocker T. Heath H. G. Moore A. L. Sim R. H. Whittingham G. C. Bunting T. R. Daniell E. F. Irwin L. A. D. Parrott J. S. Taber T. B. Witherspoon J. R. Butts F. S. Deuel S. H. Kauffmann A. V. Peden F. C. Thomas J. S. WORDEN C. W. Carson W. B. Fyffe F. E. Kessinger F. M. Reinmund H. M. Twitchell F. T. Yeiser H. P. Connelly 301 The Princeton Brie- a.- Brae W. B. Barnitz J. P. Bishop W. H. Bovey H. A. Butz F. M. Clowney J. E. Egner J. G. Elder M. R. Anspach R. H. Brindle H. M. Clark S. G. Freck jHercerstfmrg Club OFFICERS W. B. Barnitz, ' 17 President R. H. Oller, ' 18 Secretary-Treasurer MEMBERS, 1916 L. H. Barber, Jr. MEMBERS, 1917 S. S. Bryan J. N. McDowell W. S. Hurlock, Jr. C. G. Semmens C. E. Kennedy MEMBERS, 1918 J. P. FlSHBURN R. H. Irvine T. C. Mathews P. McKown R. H. Oller J. M. Rankin MEMBERS, 1919 J. E. Irvine T. H. Lineaweaver H. C. Long K. B. Mickey R. Z. Mickey M. D. Moore F. W. Sidler F. L. Tracy G. Gillespie R. W. Stoeltzing O. H. Van Allen S. B. Rankin W. W. Reynolds J. C. Taylor, Jr. I. J. Cox J. G. Rothermel W. W. Wren C. A. Brandon C. B. Dall J. W. Durbin C. M. Kerr, Jr. J. M. Landis J. E. Lee MEMBERS, 1920 L. R. Thurman C. J. Vanderlin H. M. Walker W. G. Wells 302 -%- ggS S .The Princeton Bric-a-Bra ' Sfe? - fflt Sermon gdjooi Club OFFICERS I. A. Guerin President W. J. B. Edgar Secretary-Treasurer I. A. Guerin MEMBERS, 1918 C. A. Underwood G. A. Waddington P. Benrimo W. J. B Edgar MEMBERS, 1919 H. S. Fraser A. Van Wyck P. Wight H. J. Ash MEMBERS, 1920 R. R. Herling K. D. Sanders J. TUFEL 303 The Princeton Brie- a- Brae « , J?etoarfc gcabemp Clufc OFFICERS R. Eberstadt, ' 17 President C. K. Wallace, ' 18 Secretary-Treasurer R. Eberstadt J. M. Foster, G. R. Glorieux T. R. Hardin H. H. Hoyt MEMBERS, 1917 T. D. Joeck H. N. Odell I. Riker J. B. Wiss H. B. DeGray E. B. Dunphy L. G. Erskine W. T. Hammer MEMBERS, 1918 B. P. Leeb W. S. SCHWABACHER W. T. Stuart C. K. Wallace N. H. Aronsohn W. R. Baker, Jr. E. J. Dunn A. E. Hilton MEMBERS, 1919 H. M. Ill J. N. May J. D. McMaster F. S. Muzzy G. Parker, 3rd R. S. Pollard R. W. Shannon W. R. Townley C. H. Townsend P. Van Deventer S. W. Waterbury B. M. Brock C. L. Carrick G. C. Cooke N. B. Dane MEMBERS, 1920 K. E. Demarest H. F. Egner C. I. Foster R. L. Hamilton W. C. Hutchinson R. M. Lamont W. H. Osborne L. Schanck E. Schickhaus E. A. Shumann P. B. Townley R. C. Townsend 304 The Princeton Sric-a- r ac iSetoman isdjool Club OFFICERS C. W. Donohoe, ' 17 President J. A. O ' Gorman, Jr., ' 20 Secretary-Treasurer MEMBERS, 1916 ' 2 W. M. Agar W. L. R. Edgar MEMBERS, 1917 C. W. Donohoe P. D. Nelson F. S. Fitzgerald B. M. Shanley F. Callery G. F. DuPont MEMBER, 1919 L. C. Reed MEMBERS, 1920 J. L. Kuser, Jr. J. A. O ' Gorman, Jr. 305 The Princeton Bric-a-Brac $eduomen (Elufo OFFICERS W. M. Weidman, ' 17 President W. A. Huston, ' 18 Secretary-Treasurer J. W. Gailey MEMBERS, 1917 R. E. Heimbach L. E. Hiltebeitel W. M. Weidman E. W. Currie E. D. Foster MEMBERS, 1918 W. A. Huston J. F. Mills C. S. Richardson C. E. Hillegass, Jr. MEMBERS, 1919 H. K. Martin J. C. Trostle MEMBER, 1920 R. H. Pentz 306 -  gg The Princeton gric-a-Br S Sfes - I. O. Blake H. C. Coxe $ontf ret Club OFFICERS P. B. Knowlton, ' 17 President I. O. Blake, ' 18 Secretary-Treasurer E. M. Enos, ' 20 Freshman Director MEMBER, 1917 P. B. Knowlton MEMBERS, 1918 MEMBERS, 1919 P. B. Lee F. Jelke, 3rd A. W. H. Taylor P. Kissam F. A. Comstock MEMBERS, 1920 E. M. Enos T. M. Jones A. W. Linthicum D. H. Smith W. R. K. Taylor, Jr. 307 The Princeton Bric-a-grac j J- . I ' . ' 1 . J 2 _ 1 H ' «P ■ ' ' iir ' inr nmi« ii wtfal W. F. Clarkson P. B. Dickey J. W. Donner T. J. HlLLIARD C. R. Arrott W. R. Beal IHjabpgtbe cabemp Club OFFICERS W. A. Lowrie, ' 17 President S. D. Herron, ' 18 Secretary-Treasurer MEMBERS, 1917 F. T. Hogg G. C. King J. G. S. Humphreys M. W. Leggett W. Y. Humphreys W. A. Lowrie MEMBERS, 1918 E. P. Becker P. J. Herron S. D. Herron M. B. Kiehl A. L. McKaig D. McK. Paulson H. W. Vensel Clark Miller H. A. Sipe J. M. Anderson H. M. Baer MEMBERS, 1919 J. G. Campbell S. W. Dreyfuss J. G. Howley W. K. Nimick E. M. Verner H. G. Fleming J. P. Gillespie A. P. Happer MEMBERS, 1920 L. H. Sichelstiel W. M. Thompson 308 fhe Princeton Bri c- a- B r ac •is , is t. eorge ' g ikfjool Club OFFICERS P. W. Foster, ' 17 President W. A. Buell, ' 18 Secretary-Treasurer P. W. Foster MEMBERS, 1917 Y. F. Reynolds M. Ward MEMBERS, 1918 W. A. Buell M. Goodspeed MEMBERS, 1919 W. D. F. Hughes O. M. Kilby R. P. Lamont S. H. Jenckes MEMBERS, 1920 A. Paul E. S. MacDermott G. A. Robbins H. F. Butler A. T. Patterson G. B. Larkin L. Taylor 309 -3 ggggg ?gThe Princeton Bric-a-@rz S Sfe - - PROSPECT SECTICXNAL CLVBS The Princeton Brie- a- B r ac OFFICERS J. D. Warfield, Jr., ' 17 President E. D. McDougal, Jr., ' 18 Vice-President G. W. Funk, ' 19 Secretary-Treasurer ' Freshman Directors R. T. Sherman, 20 ) K. L. Ames,. Jr. F. E. Bloom C. E. Brown J. E. Eddy W. L. Blayney E. P. Gowing E. D. MacCauley MEMBERS, 1917 G. T. JOHNSTCN P. D. Nelson G. McCormick J. F. Singleton MEMBERS, 1918 J. A. Machin E. D. McDougal, Jr. H. C. Porter G. B. Stericker W. T. Stockton J. D. Warfield, Jr. H. W. Young A. M. Q. Syme A. R. Bray G. W. Funk A. S. Klein, Jr. R. P. Lamont MEMBERS, 1919 E. H. Ludlow G. B. McCormick L. McCormick D. B. McDoucal R. D. McDougal W. E. Mills R. G. Moore J. H. Raftery D. M. Street E. J. Waller MEMBERS, 1920 J. S. BUFFINGTON C. W. Carson J. Douglas S. W. Elwood W. B. Fyffe J. M. Hutchins J. R. KlMBARK R. F. Lindblade J. R. Ritchie R. T. Sherman J. S. Taber H. R. Wanless T. G. White L. L. Wylie W. F. Wylie 312 The Princeton Sric-a-Brac Btsltelseg m R. A. Cochran W. M. Cotton L. L. Anderson, Jr. J. H. Barrett W. W. Frank T. O. Helm, Jr. L. G. Kaye OFFICERS W. W. Lyons President L. L. Anderson, Jr Vice-President W. B. Talbert, Jr Secretary-Treasurer A. R. Vogt Freshman Director MEMBERS, 1917 W. W. Lyons J. E. Madden R. J. McClintock J. F. Singleton J. L. Dodd W. G. Duncan J. F. Parker J. A. Sowards J. M. Madden MEMBERS, 1918 W. C. Repass MEMBERS, 1919 H. H. Strater W. B. Talbert, Jr. MEMBERS, 1920 L. R. Thurman E. L. Strater E. L. Vogt J. J. Winn A. R. Vogt 313 - %SLThe Princeton Sric-a-BracS Sfes - LOMG !9LllD CLUD A. Behrf.r N. P. Bevin M. A. Charles P. H. Cook K. W. Alford M. BURKLEMAN F. R. Crane W. H. Bade G. L. Ball F. B. Carter M. G. Charles D. C. Alford C. Clark E. C. Garnans M. S. Gould E. H. Driggs, Jr. B. H. Ertel O. Fowler H. F. Gibson W. B. J. DeLacy T. H. Drohan A. D. Kimball J. Fahys, 2ND P. L. Hargreaves E. T. Keenan H. W. Maxwell, Jr. D. M. Halsted H. D. Johnson T. C. Kelsey J. R. O ' Neil MEMBERS, 1917 B. F. GlLMOUR J. B. Given, Jr. C. Haddf.n, 3RD MEMBERS, 1918 D. B. Knight K. B. Logan R. H. Oller MEMBERS, 1919 S. Mortimer F. McConnell R. J. Palmer D. Peters MEMBERS, 1920 F. C. Peck D. H. Plough, Jr. R. F. Purdy OFFICERS F. R. Crane, ' i8 President K. W. Alford, ' 19.. . .Secretary-Treasurer D. C. Alford, ' 20. .. I , H. D. Johnson, ' 20..) ■ Freshman Directors A. Nacht K. A. Phillips R. H. Ritter O. J. Parisette H. von Hasslacher W. A. Putnam, Jr. V. R. Raymond C. Sloane H. M. Smith H. M. Richardson A. H. Schroeder A. L. Sim H. H. Smith P. M. Sturges H. E. Tw yeffort J. L. Wilson F. A. Zunino, Jr. G P. Thomas G. A. Vaughan, Jr. C. O. Weigand A. E. Windels J. F. Tufel C. l£. Twitchell W. M. Williamson 314 « £ fltC i «? 3flT?nBjhw_ % i l-The Princeton liric-a-Brac, ' ' ' VV H , a ,  ac ssi -«is=-3   - ' flARYU N£ 1 CLUE 3 OFFICERS C. H. Latrobe, ' 17 1 D. Brewster, ' 18 R. H. Randall, ' ig v Wy J. Fisher, Jr., ' 20 | T. D. Riggs. ' 20 J I ' rcsh man Directors MEMBERS, 1917 J. P. Bishop W. H. Bovey H. L. Cator J. M. Denison D. W. Orrick C. H. Latrobe G. C. Vest R. P. Hazlehurst J. WlCKES H. G. Rutledge MEMBERS, 1918 D. Brewster C. D. F. Brune D. C. Corckran T. P. Gorter W. L. Henry C. S. Lane P. B. Lee F. Marbury E. A. Poe MEMBERS, 1919 H. M. Steele W. H. Wilson C. T. Bagby, Jr. F. M. Barker R. H. Brindle D. K. E. Bruce I. J. Elliot E. D. Finney W. B. F. Hax W. B. Kelly D. McCulloch, Jr R. H. Randall R. B. Russell, Jr. J. B. Rich MEMBERS, 1920 D. W. Sloan, Jr. H. C. Thompson W. W. Wren J. T. Wrightson G. W. Bauernschmidt W. K. Boone G. E. Bowdoin E. J. Brooks J. P. Dennis J. T. Ftsher D. L. B. Fringer W. U. Ganer C. W. Mitchell T. V. Morgan M. J. Offutt T. J. E. Pulling T. D. Riggs B. C. Sawyer J. S. Sloan G. W. Thompson J. G. Watson D. C. Winebrenner, 3RD 315 -3«« gg ? The Princeton Bric-a-S7i[E Sfes - dTb mSBLf L i nn D c OFFICERS J. R. Stoltze, ' 17. D. S. Leslie. ' 18. President . Vice-President A. A. Rogers, ' 19. . J. B. Stricker, ' 20. . Secretary-Treasurer . .Freshman Director L. Boardman S. G. Frantz J. R. Stoltze S. B. Coffin D. S. Leslie MEMBERS, 1917 MEMBERS, 1918 N. D. Jackson R. W. Van Tuyl F. S. Fitzgerald H. R. Selover F. D. Butler C. Read D. F. Bigelow J. B. Stricker R. D. Clark A. A. Rogers S. T. Haviland G. F. Williamson MEMBERS, 1919 G. R. Petterson MEMBERS, 1920 R. C. Woodworth S. H. Petterson M. V. Seymour, Jr. D. J. Winton 316 The Princeton Bric-a-Brac Jflts ourt Club OFFICERS R. F. Funsten, ' 17 President F. W. Johns, ' 18 Vice-President J. K. B. Hockaday, ' 19 Secretary-Treasurer J. Fennelly, Jr., ' 20 ) Freshman Directors D. Danforth, ' 20 J G. W. Cale, 3RD K. G. COLWELL H. C. Culver R. M. Davis MEMBERS, 1917 R. A. Pierce R. F. Funsten W. E. Guy W. M. Allen G. K. Battle W. R. Brashear S. D. CONANT H. B. Gordon C. Jackes MEMBERS, 1918 F. W. Johns W. W. LaForce A. D. SCARRITT R. W. Upshavv G. Williams F. P. Wilson S. Carkener C C Bell, Jr. S. M. Butler MEMBERS, 1919 E. R. Gardner D. W. Kelley D. W. Guy G. Meriwether J. K. B. Hockaday L. S. Schroeder K. L. Wallis E. S. Yeomans L. McCandless W. R. Canyston, Jr. W. B. LaForce MEMBERS, 1920 D. Danforth J. B. O ' Dea J. Fennelly, Jr. G. H. Sibley J. J. Johns W. G. Wells 317 The Princeton Sric-a-Srac ■5 JJeto Cnglanb Club Henry Chapin. ' 17... Percy Parker, Jr., ' if OFFICERS President R. F. Makepeace, ' 19. .Vice-President A. R. Bryan, ' 20 . Secretary-Treasurer .Freshman Director W. S. Annin H. Chapin MEMBERS, 1917 D. R. Burnes W. M. Madden P. B. Knowlton W. F. Mudge A. T. Post N. B. Sackett S. W. Armstrong F. W. Conine E. S. Crocker, Jr. J. D. Decker H. S. Greason W. M. Allen F. B. Christmas H. M. Dickinson R. H. Haire A. R. Bryon S. Chapin P. M. Clark M. Good speed V. F. HOCKMEYER E. T. Look S. Lawton MEMBERS, 1918 P. Lane H. Meigs M. A. McCi.oskey R. G. Preston MEMBERS, 1919 W. D. F. Hughes R. F. Makepeace G. M. Heinzelmann S. H. Jenckes J. H. MacCreadie J. Q. Milne MEMBERS, 1920 C. I. Foster R. R. Herling C. Halsted, Jr. W. F. Johnson P. C. Hatch, Jr. E. S. Macdermott P. Parker, Jr. J. L. Robertson, Jr. G. W. H. Smith A. B. Tyler G. A. Waddington T. Robins, Jr. W. W. Scudder C. M. Smith L. B. Strong. 3rd J. Marks A. T. Patterson A. J. Welch 318 rfTy j tg T-Wmr . % ts 2ff The Princeton Bric-a- Brac S5fe3 t. _• « !£. mum P $emts toama Club OFFICERS W. S. Mayer, ' 18 V tee-President ]. R. Van Cleve. ' 20 f ' . -Secretary MEMBERS, 1917 P. T. Barnum W. Drorbaugh Y. Y. Humphreys, Jp . W. A. Lowrie G. B. Sheppard S. S. Bryan, Jr. J. E. Gowen J. G. Humphreys W. L. Lowrie, Jr. G. E. Shoemaker, Jr. J. R. Chamberlain C. C. Highley C. J. Ingersoll E. J. Miller H. R. Spencer W. B. Chamberlain, Jr. F. T. Hogg, 2nd M. W. Leggett C. M. Scott H. B. Vollrath S. R. Dresser MEMBERS, 1918 C. R. Arrott M. H. Ewing R. S. Leidy W. W. Meirs G. S. Schmidt W. R. Beal D. C. Gibboney, J r. H. R. Lewis Clark Miller H. A. Sipe D. S. Bixler G. W. Griffith R. B. Lutz S. D. Page D. R. Shotwell H. A. Butz P. G. Herron R. H. McCague W. A. B. Paul J. H. Stewart H. B. Collins S. D. Herron G. K. McIlwain H. Quier K. I. Thompson J. Creese, Jr. W. A. Huston M. H. McLaughlin W. W. Reynolds R. L. Thompson E. Dent, Jr. E. H. Kerper J. S. McWilliams C S. Richardson C. F. Turner C. R. Eaby, Jr. M. KlEHL W. S. Mayer F. J. Rue, 3RD J. M. Woods J. G. Elder MEMBERS, 1919 J. M. Anderson S. Dreyfuss B. F. Jones W. Morris O. J. Toland R. F. Barnett R. H. Dunn H. P. Keller R. A. Nicholas F. L. Tracy W. W. Bell M. Fletcher D. M. King W. K. Nimick H. P. Van Dusen G. C. Buzby G. W. Henderson A. C. Leslie P. R. Norton E. M. Verner J. G. Campbell W. A. Hicks T. H. Lineaweaver P. W. Orth W. B. Whitney R. Cresswell f. G. Howley J. R. McCune, Jr. W. M. Paxton, 3RD J. Wintersteen G. A. Dibert A. E. Jenkins J. W. Macfarlane M. S. Quay J. S. Young A. L. M. Dingee A. H. Jennings R. D. McKee MEMBERS, 1920 E. L. Savage M. L. Aaron H. H. Dolan G. M. Harper, Jr. W. F. McErwan, Jr. J. N. Schroeder, Jr. D. C. Anderson P. DOOLITTLE E. Harris H. G. Moore J. M. Sharpe E. W. Baird, Jr. J. W. Durbin C P. Harvey W. L. Morgan L. H. Sichelstiel W. J. Baird. Jr. G. M. English R. B. Heisermax G. G. Osmer S. A. Stewart J. H. Beal, Jr. G. Eyron S. Henry R. L. Page J. K. Strubing, Jr. E. Black J. McC. Farr, 2nd H. H. Hewitt. Jr. A. Paul G. W. Thompson W. H. Brooks, Jr. E. T. Fisher R. Heulstone R. Pentz R. M. Trimble, Jr. G. C. Buntinc J. V. Flaig A. W. Horton, Jr. P. D. Reynolds A. H. Van Allen F. Callery H. G. Fleming E. F. Irwin T. H. Rickert J. R. Van Cleve J. G. Campbell G. G. Fox J. M. Jamison, Jr. G. A. Robbins H. M. Walker P. T . Dean H. E. Gerstley C. M. Kerr. Jr. M. Rogers E. Wolfe F. A. Dixon J. P. Gillespie G. E. Hackney B. T. Kraffert W. L. Savage J. H. Schenck, 3RD D. W. Woods The Princeton Bric-a-Brac D. H. Amacker C. T. Bagby, Jr. F. Bechtel, Jr. C. W. Berl T. J. Bettes T. P. Bishop W. G. Boaz W. H. Bovey L. L. Anderson G. L. Ball L. C. Bradley, Jr. D. B. Brewster L. McC. Butts W. B. Cameron D. G. Cherry G. Brackenridge H. T. Cator R. A. Cochran J. M. Denison H. T. Dunn G. E. Durell W. P. Hamilton R. P. Hazlehurst D. C. Corkran W. G. Duncan R. Eldridge H. R. Eldridge, Jr. C. E. England J. P. Fishburn OFFICERS Edward L. Strater, ' 17 President William G. Duncan, ' 18 Vice-President Richard H. Randall, ' 19 Secretary-Treasurer G. B. Gray....) _ , T T f freshman Directors O. Latrobe, J R. 1 MEMBERS, 1917 G. M. Holstein H. H. Hoyt L. G. Jones J. G. Locke W. W. Lyons J. E. Madden, Jr. W. B. Moore MEMBERS, 1918 B. Gordon T. P. Gorter H. C. Harrison W. H. Labouisse L. V. Lamar M. H. Lane D. W. Orrick R. T. Pilling M. S. Read W. P. Robertson B. W. Sellers J. F. Singleton E. W. Springs C. S. Lane P. B. Lee F. Marbury T. C. Matthews J. C. Oehler R. W. Parker J. H. Stevens E L. Strater E. Taylor, Jr. W. H. Tenison G. C. Vest J. Wickes R. C. Wilson, Jr. E. A. Poe, Jr. F. M. Shelton H. M. Steele, Jr. S. Steilman W. J. Thomas E. L. Vogt 320 The Princeton HSric-a-Brac gxmtfjern (Club, (Comlubeb) MEMBERS, 1919 A. Anderson, Jr. L. T. Dubois S. F. Jameson E. G. Miles W. B. Talbert C. T. Bagby R. P. Dunn W. B. Kelly J. F. Parker A. W. H. Taylor R. H. Brindle H. A. Etheridge O. M. KlLBY L. M. Procter W. Taylor D. K. E. Bruce E. D. Finney G. King R. H. Randall L. Terrell J. E. Bryan T. W. Gregory J. B. King J. B. Rich H. C. Thompson C. M. Casey A. B. Groover W. C. Kirbach R. B. Russell L. F. TlMMERMAN R. S. Cohen C. G. Hawkins W. A. KlRKLAND D. W. Sloan. Jr. J. R. Todd F S. Cooper W B. F. Hax H. C. Long J. A. SOWARDS R. H. Washburn E. R. DlBRELL A. G. Heinsohn M. J. Lyons J. J. B. Stoetzer J. J. Winn H. W. Doyle T. O. Helm D. McCuLLOUGH H. H. Strater J. T. Wrightson S. W. Dreyfuss H. D. Baker F. M. Barker R. Bassett G. W. Bauernschmidt W. K. Boone, Jr. G. E. Bowdoin E. J. Brooks W. B. Bryan, Jr. J. S. Buffi ngton H. F. Butler J. R. Butts G. H. Chase, 3rd B. W. Cohn W. R. Compton, Jr. J. B. Cowan, Jr. D. Danforth J. P. Dennis T. Fennelly, Jr. J. Fisher, Jr. D. L. B. Fringer W. U. Gaver G. B. Gray. Jr. MEMBERS, 1920 B. B. Hickman J. J. Johns S. H. Kauffmann L. G. Kaye H. H. KOBLEGARD W. B. La Force G. Latrobe, Jr. T. McK. Madden C Marshall C W. Mitchell, Jr. T. V. Morgan J. B. O ' Dea M. J. Offutt A. V. Pedden M. Pitney, Jr. T. J. E. Pulling T. D. Riggs, Jr. L. E. Rogers G. H. Sibley J. S. Sloan D. H. Smith P. Smith, Jr. W. R. K. Taylor. Jr. F. C. Thomas G. W. Thompson L. R. Thurman A. R. Vogt J. G. Watson B. F. Watts, Jr. W. G. Wells W. G. Wilmot D C. WlNEBRENER J. B. WlTHERSPOON 321 -3 «- sg2ffl The Princeton Bric-a-@re l 5fe - 3-  Es!tern Club C. F. Arnold F. C. Baker L. V. Barker C. E. Bayly, Jr. A. H. Bingham B. H. Beckhart C. H. Cook R. Basset H. S. DlMMITT W. H. Downs F. H. Douglas OFFICERS J. S. Nicholas, ' 17 President B. S. Michael, ' 18 lice-President J. C. Davis, ' 19 Secretary-Treasurer MEMBERS, 1917 C. W. Donahoe J. S. Nicholas MEMBERS, 1918 J. H. Burns, Jr. P. B. Matlock T. B. Green B. S. Michael T. S. Ireland N. C. Nourse J. C. Davis G. A. Frankel MEMBERS, 1919 F. B. Kirkendall G. B. Ruth MEMBERS, 1920 J. B. Hield B. Sawyer G. Lawrence K. M. Shaw P. T. Morgan, Jr. G. Sibley R. Sanger R. D. Sparhawk R. L. Nourse, Jr. F. L. Sawyers J. R. Scobie D. Williamson R. W. Shannon J. G. Smith H. C. Thomas H. C. Taylor J. B. Miller 322 The Princeton Bric-a-Brac ■ML ismmmarp of £s tubentg bp £s tateg STATE G. New York 16 New Jersey 22 Pennsylvania 40 Ohio 6 Maryland 5 Illinois 3 Missouri 7 Massachusetts 3 District of Columbia 1 Minnesota 1 Kentucky 3 Colorado 2 Indiana 5 Connecticut 3 California 7 Michigan 1 Delaware 1 Florida o Virginia 7 Texas 2 Wisconsin 2 Rhode Island 2 West Virginia 2 Arkansas 1 Iowa 1 TOTAL IN E. 1917 1918 1919 1920 Q. I916 86 79 9i 80 6 358 6 70 67 82 91 8 346 2 76 63 79 64 5 329 17 15 11 12 4 65 10 11 20 16 62 11 8 18 15 1 56 6 11 14 7 2 47 7 13 3 4 30 5 4 6 7 2 25 2 6 8 7 24 2 3 5 4 4 21 1 6 4 8 21 1 3 3 6 1 19 1 5 4 4 17 2 3 4 16 3 1 6 2 2 15 2 3 3 6 15 3 6 3 1 13 2 2 1 12 2 2 4 2 12 2 4 2 1 11 1 2 5 1 11 1 1 2 2 8 2 3 1 7 3 1 1 1 7 STATE G. North Carolina ... 2 Mississippi o Tennessee 2 Georgia 1 Louisiana o Maine 4 Kansas 2 Alabama 1 Nebraska o Oklahoma 1 South Carolina .... o Washington o Oregon 1 Idaho o New Hampshire.... o Nevada o North Dakota ... 1 South Dakota o Utah o Wyoming o Vermont o Montana o Foreign 18 Totals 176 TOTAI IN E. 1917 1918 1919 1920 Q. I9l6 1 2 2 7 2 5 7 2 1 1 6 1 2 1 1 6 1 1 2 4 1 5 2 S 1 2 4 2 2 4 1 1 4 2 1 3 1 2 3 2 3 1 1 2 1 1 2 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 3 3 4 6 1 36 9 326 337 395 369 43 1655 323 The {Princeton Brie- a- Brae 1 Comparative £s ummarp of Representation by States 191M91B STATE igi I New York 346 New Jersey 305 Pennsylvania 289 Illinois 51 Maryland 46 Ohio 44 Massachusetts 29 Missouri 27 District of Columbia 24 Kentucky 23 21 18 16 16 15 14 13 11 10 10 9 8 8 7 7 7 6 Delaware Indiana Michigan Tennessee Connecticut Minnesota Texas Virginia Colorado Iowa West Virginia Alabama North Carolina Florida Rhode Island . . Washington Georgia 1916 353 333 336 48 54 63 30 45 26 20 12 16 14 9 21 21 10 12 IS 7 8 6 5 16 10 3 5 Louisiana Oregon California Nebraska Wisconsin Arkansas Kansas Maine Mississippi New Hampshire Vermont Montana North Dakota . . South Carolina . Utah Wyoming South Dakota . . New Mexico Nevada Idaho Oklahoma 1911 6 6 5 4 3 2 2 2 2 2 2 o o o o o Totals 1421 Foreign 21 Grand Totals 1442 1916 3 2 18 5 14 7 6 4 2 4 o o 1 3 2 3 1577 38 1615 324 ODD The [Princeton Brie- a- B r ac COPELAND NICHOLAS HOSKINS JACKSON SAVAGE PHILADELPHIAN SOCIETY CABINET. JACKMAN G E. HARRIS W. B. HARRIS, JR. PKRKINS LUKENS DUNN The Princeton ISric-a-firac $f)tlabelpl)tatt octetp W t Christian Association of Princeton ©nibersirp OFFICERS George W. Perkins, Jr., ' 17 President Arthur V. Savage, ' 17 I ' ice-President Charles W. McAlpin, ' 88 Treasurer SECRETARIES Thomas S. Evans, ' 97 General S. M. Shoemaker, Jr., ' 16 Associate J. S. Burgess, ' 05 Foreign Missions Rev. R. B. Pomeroy Episcopal Church Rev. O. F. Gardner, ' 01 Presbyterian Church Chapel, N. D. Jackson, ' 17 Finance, L. N. Lukens. ' 17 Courses, A. V. Savage, ' 17 Press, J. S. Nicholas, ' 17 CABINET Missions, A. T. Copeland, ' 17 Preachers, Town Work, A. Jackman, ' 17 Life Work, H. T. Dunn. ' 17 W. B. Harris, Jr., ' 17 Summer Camp Deputations, H. B. Hoskins, ' 17 Industrial Service, W. B. Moore, ' 17 Hand Book, S. M. Link, ' 17 F. T. Hogg, ' 17 THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS 82 Ex-Ofiicio Charles W. McAlpin, ' 88 Treasurer John Grier Hibben John McDowell, D.D., ' 94 Chairman J. Ross Stevenson, D.D. T. H. P. Sailer, Ph.D., ' 89 Rt. Rev. Paul Matthews. ' 87 Jas. E. Bathgate, Jr., ' 94 Robert E. Speer, D.D., ' 89 Robert Garrett, ' 97 Edw. L. Howe. ' 91 Assistant Treasurer Lucius Hopkins Miller, ' 97 Ralph W. Harbison, ' 98 Xorman M. Thomas, ' 05 Raymond B. Fosdick, ' 05 T. Newell Pfeiffer, ' 08 Arthur A. Schmon, ' 17. L $aul ' £ g octetp OFFICERS President Edward P. Becker. ' 18 Henry P. Van Dusen, ' 19 Secretary . Vice-President 327 - U S The Princeton Bric-a-BracS Sfe? - - $rinceton anb ertrice 5 = RINCETON and Service was the title of a series of meetings which were held in Princeton last December by Mr. Raymond Robins, of Chicago. At that time, many of the undergraduates were moved by his appeal to feel a strong desire to engage in some field of Christian Service and during the winter and spring the many oppor- tunities for special service work which were presented to the Princeton undergraduates were eagerly seized. Largely through the efforts of J. S. Burgess, ' 05, a member of the Princeton Y. M. C. A. staff in Peking, who spent the past winter on furlough in Princeton, C. L. Heyniger, L. D. Seymour, L. Sweet and E. B. Wall, all of the class of 1916, were sent to Peking in August to be connected with the Princeton center there and to teach English, music and athletics. The presence of these four strong men will mean much to the staff in Peking, and their going also indicates a renewed interest among the undergraduates in the work in the foreign field. Toward the end of the college year great interest was aroused in the vast work of the Young Men ' s Christian Association among the armies of Europe. Dr. John R. Mott and Mr. E. C. Carter made strong appeals for men and money to continue this work. About twenty students were eager to undertake the trip to Europe, but for various reasons only five found it possible to go. Weir Stewart, ' 15, who last year was Associate Secretary of the Philadelphian Society, is the leader of the so-calle 1 Princeton Unit, which is now located somewhere east of Suez ; and with him are D. B. Watt and C. Woodbridge, ' l5, and A. T. Clark and G. A. Waddington, ' 18. Their headquarters is known as the Princeton Hut and their work is sup- ported entirely by Princeton. As the result of the Northfield Conference, five Princeton men heard the call for Y. M. C. A. workers with the American troops on the Mexican border. J. S. Burgess, ' 05; S. M. Shoemaker, Jr., ' 16; G. W. Perkins, Jr., ' 17; W. W. Hampe, ' 18, and D. McCulloch, ' 19, spent a large part of the summer at McAllen, Texas, providing entertainment and comfort for several of the New York State regiments. Still other Princeton men are now engaged in driving ambulances in France. Princeton is justly proud to add these new names to the long list of distinguished missionaries of past years who have caught their vision while students at Princeton and have gone out to give it to the world. 328 The Princeton JSric-a-Brac Princeton Summer Camp HE past summer marked the establishment of the Princeton Summer Camp at Bay Head, N. J., on a more per- manent basis with the purchase of a valuable piece of property adjoining the old camp site on the Metedeconk River and the addition of new equipment to the extent of about one thousand dollars. Although the early closing of the camp on account of the infantile paralysis epidemic interfered somewhat with the plans for the summer, almost one hundred poor boys from New York, Philadelphia and Princeton were given outings varying from two weeks to a month. Through the kindness of several benefactors, two new shacks were erected during the summer for use as sleeping quarters and it is planned to eventually discard the present building in favor of the more satisfactory and healthful housing accommo- dations afforded by the shacks. Tentative plans have also been evolved for the more efficient organization of the camp in future years. Ideally located on high ground near the Metedeconk River, the camp affords an opportunity to boys from the settlement districts of the large cities to spend a happy and healthful vacation at the seashore. The boys are under the constant super- vision of Princeton students who serve in the capacity of counselors, nearly all without remuneration of any kind. The oppor- tunities for healthful play are numerous, while the moral side of the boys ' lives is taken care of by frequent talks on serious subjects by the camp counselors and visitors. Mr. and Mrs. T. S. Evans were at the camp throughout the past summer as directors and the following Princeton men served as counselors: Chief Counselors — W. B. Moore. ' 17, aid D. D. Chaplin, ' 17; Camp Physician— G. E. Twaddell, ' 12; Volunteer Counselors — K. E. Stockton, ' 14; A. M. Frantz and E. S. Carter, ' 16; J. E. Eddy, C. H. Folwell, Jr., A. Jackman, and R. C. Schmertz, ' 17; S. P. Teng, ' 18; R. D. Clark, H. M. Ill, J. D. McMaster, R. C. Sailer, H. D. Siedler, H. P. Van Dusen, R. C. Whitman and G. A. Wulp, ' 19; H. N. Deyo, ' 20. 329 - ■x ag g The Princeton Bric-a-Br c Sfe? « - W$t JUortitftelb Conference FTER an absence of more than live years, the Princeton delegation returned to the Northfield Student Conference last June. This change to Northfield from the conference for students of the Middle Atlantic States held at Eaglesmere, was deemed advisable because in the future, the dates of the Eaglesmere Conference will conflict with the Princeton Commencement. Although the Princeton delegation was smaller than usual, those who attended derived deep spiritual inspira- tion from the conference. The reports of conditions at the front in Europe were particularly appealing, while the pres- ence of a number of Canadian students who have felt the horrors of war more deeply than our American college men, lent an unusually serious spirit to the deliberations of the conference. Five of the Princeton delegation left almost immediately- after the close of the session for service under the Y. M. C. A. on the Mexican border. The program of the Northfield Conferences consists in daily Bible and Mission Study Classes, frequent addresses by men prominent in all lines of religious work and numerous small, informal conferences, while all the afternoons during the session are reserved for athletics and recreation of various kinds. The delegates have a splendid opportunity to meet and ex- change views with representative men of other colleges and to get some small insight into the vast work conducted in this country and the foreign field by the Young Men ' s Christian Association and the Christian Church. Many thousands of Ameri- can college men and women attend the student conferences which are held each year in various parts of the country. Foreign nations are also well represented by their citizens, who are now students in American Universities. The Princeton delegation at Northfield consisted of the following: J, S. Burgess and H. A. Walter, ' 05; J. McPherson, ' 14; W. Stewart, ' 15; S. M. Shoemaker, Jr., ' 16; G. W. Perkins. Jr., and A. V. Savage, ' 17; S. T. Cheng, W. W. Hampe, S. P. Teng and C. K. Wallace, ' 18; H. D. Knower, D. McCulloch and R. C. Sailer, ' 19. 330 - U gggg The Princeton Bric-a-gri l Sfe? -— - W t Princeton (Hntoergitp Center in Cfjtna vEiir Peking §?oung ffflen ' s Christian Association By J. S. Burgess, ' 05 O hold up before the leaders of one-fourth of the human race Princeton ' s highest ideal of clean athletics, sound scholarship, civic and social service and religion, and through these leaders to guide to the paths of a progressive Christian civilization the mighty and rapidly changing Chinese nation is Princeton ' s task in Peking. Under the leadership of R. R. Gailey, ' 97, our former all-American center, in the three years since our large building was opened on one of the principal streets of Peking, the educational and political center of China, the foundations of the most far-reaching work have been well laid. Some 2000 college men, officials and merchants, are members of this great club, making use of its spacious social and read- ing rooms and dormitories, crowding its large auditorium to hear lectures or watch the moving pictures, and making use of the gymnasium and shower baths. There are in the schools almost half the number of students that attend Princeton, learning modern business methods or modern languages. To the 11,000 college and high school students of the capitol, A. T. Hoagland, ' 06, is bringing the gospel of sound health and clean sport. He manages the intercollegiate track and football of the city. In social service lines we have led by organizing 500 college men in a great club, which conducts three playgrounds, the only ones in the capitol of a million people. Free night schools for the poor have been opened, and the first rough social survey ever made of a Chinese city has been made by the Princeton staff. The work has become really indigenous. The Chinese directors themselves raised last year $25,000 for all the local running expenses and $17,000 for improvements in our present plant. Princeton gave $10,000 for the support of the men. For every dollar invested by Princeton men the Chinese gave $4.20. The late President Yuan Shih Kai has flung down a challenge to all Princeton men. After years of personal acquaintance with Mr. Gailey and careful study of his work, he became convinced of its great importance as a character building and con- structive agency. Through the Ministry of Interior he recently gave a plot of land with 250 feet frontage on the new model boulevard of the city. The chief authorities of the nation, who sixteen years ago ordered all foreigners and Christians in Peking killed, now challenge us to build, two miles d ' .stant from our present location, in the heart of the official and student life of the nation, a plant twice the size of our present one. The staff of the Princeton University Center in China at present is composed of the following: R. R. Gailey, ' 97; D. W. Edwards, ' 04; J. S. Burgess, ' 05; A. N. Hoagland, ' 06; Donald Carouthers, ' 15. This year, from the class of 1916 four leading students went out to spend a year in teaching English and athletics. They are : C. Lambert Heyniger, Lennig Sweet. L. D. Seymour, Barry Wall. These men are making themselves felt among the college men of the capitol. 331 The Princeton Bric-a-Srac MURRAY DODGE HALL . jrt 7f -j . , _i? 3 ' !fflR 1 w_ _ S_ t W5 sT ' W ?u  ; «-V - n Bric-a- §ra -7-V-e, ' -Vwnn « «« Ci  - j !LT ne IrrmceTcr C r £J £s£? ' - ' SJntbemtp reacfjers, 191647 1916 February 18... .Open October IS-- ...President John Grier Hibben February 25 — . Open October 22 Professor Rufus M. Jones, Haverford College. March 4... Father Harvey, Officer, Order of the Holy- Cross October 29.. . . . Rev. Robert Davis, Englewood, N. J. March 11... . Father Harvey, Officer, Order of the Holy November ■ -. . . . Rev. Maitland Alexander, D.D., Pitts- Cross burgh, Pa. March 18... . Dr. Graham Taylor, Chicago November 12. . . . . Rev. Harris E. Kirk, D.D., Baltimore, Md. March 25... . Rev. G. A. Johnston Ross, Union Theo- November 10.. . . . Bishop F. J. McConnell, Denver, Col. logical Seminary November 26 Bishop F. J. McConnell, Denver, Col. April 1 Rev. G. A. Johnston Ross, Union Theo- logical Seminary December 3- 1 hanksgiving Recess April 8... . Easter Recess December 10 Rev. J. Douglas Adam, D.D., Hartford, April 15... . Prof. Edward A. Steiner, Ph.D., Grinnell December 17.. ...Rev. J. Douglas Adam, D.D., Hartford, University Conn. April 22. . . . Prof. Edward A. Steiner, Ph.D., Grinnell December 24.. . . . Christmas Recess University December 3I-. . . . Christmas Recess April 29. . . . . Rev. William E. Merrill, D.D., New York May 6... . Fletcher S. Brockman. International Com- 1917 mittee, Y. M. C. A. January 7-- . . . Rev. Harry Emerson Fosdick, Union The- May 13... .Rev. Albert P. Fitch, D.D. ological Seminary May 20. . . . Rev. Albert P. Fitch, D.D. January 14. . Rev. Charles W. Gilkey, Chicago May 27... .Rev. Willis H. Butler, Boston January 21. . . . . Rev. John McDowell. D.D., Baltimore, Md. June 3- ■• . Open January ?R Rev. John McDowell. D.D., Baltimore, Md. June 10. . . . Open February 4-- . . . Robert E. Speer, D.D., New York June 17... . baccalaureate Sermon, President John February 11 333 Grier Hibben -3 - «ggEg ? The Princeton Bric-a-Br ciS fes - pureau of H tubent elf=Help HROUGH the Bureau of Student Self-Help, remunerative employment is secured for a limited number of students of small resources who are desirous of earning a part of their college expenses. The University offers to remit one hundred and twenty-five dollars ($125) from the charge for tuition to A.B., Litt.B., and B.S. students of limited means and good scholastic standing, this remission being in the form of a loan which the student is expected to repay to the University after graduation. Positions as waiters at the University Dining Halls are available, enabling a student to obtain a remission of all or a part of the charge for board, ($6.00 per week). Tutoring is a very remunerative occupation and any student of high scholastic standing may receive official authority to serve as a qualified tutor at pay varying from a dollar to a dollar and a half per hour. Through the Press Club, an under- graduate organization, correspondentships for the leading metropolitan dailies may be secured, while Princeton agencies for out of town firms pay excellent commissions. A clothes-pressing establishment, a shoe-shining parlor, and a baggage express are conducted under student management. Many students also earn money by caring for furnaces, yards and gardens in the town, acting as ushers and gatemen, etc., and selling score-cards, university publications and souvenirs at the athletic games. Opportunities are open for students with experience in stenography or typewriting. With the exception of tutoring and correspondentships, nearly all positions are in the hands of the Bureau of Self-Help. Tentative plans have been made by the Bureau in conjunction with the officers of the class of 1917 to obtain positions for graduates without employment and it is expected that before the end of the current year this new department will have been added to the work of the Bureau. Although there are many sources of employment open to undergraduates, the opportunities for Freshmen are somewhat limited and entering students are urged not to count on too much assistance during their first year. After allowing for the remission of $125 on account of tuition and all or a part of the board charges, new men are advised to have enough ready cash to meet the balance of expenses of Freshman year. The Secretary of the Bureau will be glad to hear from any man who may be thinking of coming to Princeton with the expectation of securing some employment during his college course. In fact, it would assist the work of the Bureau if all who expect to need employment would write to the Secretary before the opening of the college year, stating the fact and indicating in what sort of work, if any, they have had previous experi- ence. All communications should be addressed to Mr. George McF. Gait, Secretary of the Bureau of Student Self-Help, 48 Mercer Street, Princeton, N. J. 334 r? i H The Princeton Bric-a-Prac l THE 1917 SENIOR COUNCIL BEVIN MOORE HOGG GIVEN LUKENS DEMPSEY BISHOP DRIGGS CHAPLIN COCHRAN EHRKR JACKSON DONAHOE PERKINS EBERSTADT DUNN m ' kaig The Princeton JSric-a-Brac OFFICERS George W. Perkins, Jr President Charles W. Donahoe Secretary MEMBERS Alvin Behrer Manager of the Track Team Newton P. Bevin, 2nd Class Election John P. Bishop Scholarship Duncan D. Chaplin Class Election Robert A. Cochran, 3rd Captain of the Crew William L. Dempsey President of the Press Club Charles W. Donahoe Manager of the Baseball Team Edmund H. Driggs, Jr Captain of the Baseball Team Henry T. Dunn Chairman of the Bric-a-Brac. Rudolf Eberstadt. .Chairman of the Dining Halls Committee James B. Given, Jr Chairman of the Musical Clubs Frank T. Hogg, 2nd Captain of the Football Team Norms D. Jackson Class Election Lewis N. I,ukens, Jr., Business Manager of The Daily Princetonian Alexander L. McKaig, Editorial Chairman of The Daily Princetonian William B. Moore Captain of the Track Team George W. Perkins, Jr., President of the Philadelphian Society 337 -3««- g£!!? S The Princeton Bric-a-Sfi S Sfe? - - DINING HALLS COMMITTEE. CLEVELAND IRVINE VAN CLEVE HAMPE LEEB SHERRERD BONBRIGIIT M DO WELL CHESTER EBERSTADT PERKINS REYNOLDS The Princeton Bric-a-Brac 1 R. Eberstadt K. M. Chester C. W. Bonbright R. F. Cleveland Wot 3Btmng=?|alte Committee R. Eberstadt, ' 17 Chairman N. M. Chester, ' 17. Secretary MEMBERS, 1917 J. N. McDowell G. W. Perkins, Jr. MEMBERS, 1918 W. W. Hampe B. P. Leeb MEMBERS, 1919 J. E. Irvine C. W. McGraw MEMBERS, 1920 J. R. Van Cleve E. M. Enos The purpose of the Dining Halls Committee which is composed of undergraduate representatives of all four classes, is to constantly keep in touch with conditions in the Halls, to supervise the service and inspect the food, and to receive criticisms from the students. The actual management of the Halls is in the hands of a salaried manager. W. F. Reynolds, Jr. S. D. Sherrerd J. C. West 339 -3 «gg2gg S The Princeton Bric-a-Br££Jl Sfe5 Jg- THE NEW DINING HALLS ■ — gC S EJ Princeton B ric-a-Brac ■e . QTfje JJeto Btntng ftalig N October 10. 1916. at the opening of the Fall Term, the new Dining Halls were formally presented to the Uni- versity by President Hibben. At that time two of the four wings of the building were completed — the part ad- joining Holder Cloisters and the kitchen building — and with these accommodations the Dining Halls Committee was able to provide seating room for both the Sophomore and Freshman classes. During the summer the old University Hall had been removed, the eastern wing of the new buildings completed, and the foundations of the Nassau Street section laid, with the expectation of finishing that part by Easter. The Holder wing, ready for use at the opening of college in the Fall, consists of two halls, each seating 240 men. Until the completion of the other wings, these two halls accommodate the two lower classes, the Sophomores in the north room fac- ing on Nassau Street, and the Freshmen in the south room toward Campbell Hall. In order to take care of both classes with the limited seating capacity, the meal hours were lengthened somewhat, and at dinner the classes were divided into two sections, to avoid the congestion which might occur at that time. The meal hours adopted were as follows : breakfast, 7.30 to 9 A. M. ; luncheon, 12 M. to 2 P. M., and dinner, 5.50 to 7.10 P. M. In connection with the new Dining Halls the University during the summer built a three-story brick dormitory on the corner of Tulane and Spring Streets, for the use of the employees. This building, equipped with steam heating and elec- tricity, provides a comfortable and sanitary dwelling place for the men who handle the food at the Dining Halls. 341 The Princeton Bric-a-Hrac POLITY CLUB EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE CROMWELL PERKINS HEY WOOD PROFESSOR BROWN ff fy — IS XStCn — a - SLXh§_. Princeton Brie- a ©racSSfe ■ j__ J$ a j international $oUtp Club The International Polity Club was formed two years ago by a small number of undergraduates interested in discussion of international affairs and has increased rapidly in size and importance until it now occupies a prominent place among college organizations. Most of the meetings have been in the nature of discussion groups and dinners for members only, but the Club has also held a number of public lect ures, giving Princeton an opportunity to hear such men as ex-President Taft, Hon. John Bassett Moore, Dr. Dernberg, Norman Angell, and many ambassadors from foreign nations. OFFICERS, 1916-17 Prof. Philip Marshall Brown. ....... .H Harvey M. Heywood, ' 17 onorary Chairman Chairman EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE Alex. L. McKaig, ' 17 George W. Perkins, ' 17 Jarvis Cromweli . ' 18 MEMBERS, 1917 J. P. Bishop H. Chapin K. G. Colwell P. Cooper A. T. Copeland H. L. Cory R. L. Crawford H. T. Dunn W. A. Eddy J. E. Gowen H. M. Heywood T. G. HlLLIARD P. W. Hills H. B. Hoskins A. Tackman L. N. Lukens W. G. McAdoo, Jr. D. S. McChesney MEMBERS, 1918 A. L. McKaig T. Martin A. Mathiasen J. S. Nicholas J. J. Parker D. M. Paulson G. W. Perkins, Jr. J. Rutherford A. V. Savage C. C. Williams J. B. Wiss L. C. Bradley W. A. Buell S. M. Butt J. Cromwell J. P. FlSHBURN H. S. Greason W. W. Hampf. T. S. Ireland D. S. Leslie G. K. McIlwain J. A. Machin B. S. Michael C. Miller MEMBERS, 1919 W. H. Millinger R. D. Preston P. R. Pyne S. D. Sherrf.rd J. C. Taylor A. B. Tyler E. L. Vogt D. Williamson D. K. E. Bruce F. D. Butler H. M. Clark R. F. Cleveland J. Cooke R. Cresswkll C. Cudlipp W. W. Frank E. R. Gardner H. P. Keller G. King O. M. KlLBY MEMBERS, 1920 W. A. KlRKLAND S. Lloyd A. A. Rogers M. V. Seymour, Jr. H. H. Strater H. P. Van Dusen F. D. Warren D. F. BlGELOW W. B. Bryan J. E. Lee 343 R. Porteous T. J. E. Pulling The Princeton JSric-a-Brac LAW CLUB. PURVES HIGGINS CHESTER WILLIAMS COOPER IIASSLACHER LUKENS GILMOUR PARKER AVERBECK COL WELL HALL FOWLER BUSH HARRIS LOCKE FROST BUCHANAN DONNER CRAWFORD DUNN WETHERBEE HARRIS The Princeton Bric-a-Brac Princeton Untbergitp lato Club OFFICERS Edward Harris, 2nd, ' 17 President Sargent Bush, ' 17 Secretary-Treasurer MEMBERS, 1917 M. J. Averbeck, Jr. D. R. Burnes S. Bush N. M. Chester K. G. Colwell P. I. Cooper R. L. Crawford, 3rd. D. A. Depue W. L. DeYoe J. W. DONNER H. T. Du.vx J H. Frost J. W. Gailey P. E. Ham. E. Harris, 2nd G. F. Hassi,acher J. R. Higgins I.. N. Lukens W. W. Lyons A. Mathiasen VV. F. Mudge J. J. Parker, Jr. D. M. Paulson G. F. Plympton G. T. Purves R. N. Wetherbee J. WlCKES C. C. Williams J. Bigcs, Jr. J. F. Donoho T. S. Trelan d J. O. McNulty F. Marbury W. S. Mayer MEMBERS, 1918 C. Miller W. S. Schwabacher F. E. Springer A. D. Scarritt W. T. Stewart D. H. Sulzberger 345 -  5f The Princeton Bric-a-Br c Sfe g 1 - ENGINEERING CLUB JARVIS MADDEN JfOWETT HOGG LATROBE FOLWELL INGERSOLL CHARLES JOHNSON GOWING M CONNAUGHY DRIGGS EDDY The Princeton Bric-a-Prac ; engineering Club OFFICERS M. A. Charles, ' 17 President MEMBERS, 1916 G. Gillespie O. D. Brereton M. A. Charles W. B. Garret E. H. Driggs MEMBERS, 1917 F. T. Hogg J. E. Eddy C. J. Ingersoll C. H. Folwell C. H. Latrobe W. M. Madden D. S. McConnaughy J. VanK. Richards E. K Go wing G. T. Jarvis MEMBERS, 1918 L. V. Howett W. B. Johnson 347 The Princeton Bric-a.-fgra.c CLOSSON BARBA GOLSTEIN MEDICAL CLUB. EDGAR ELDER WILLSON LEAKE AMACKER GIVEN KERPER SCHULLINGER CRISCITIELLO The Princeton Bri c- a- B r ac Untoersttp Jlebtcal Clut) OFFICERS C. D. Leake, ' 17 President J. L. Wilson, ' 18 Vice-President E. H. Kerper, ' 18 Secretary P. S. Barba J. R. Carty M. Criscitiello, Jr. MEMBERS, 1917 J. H. Closson, 3rd C. D. Leake J. C. Cuneo L. N. Lukens R. E. Heimbach D. M. Am acker J. B. Given, Jr. W. A. Bueli. H. H. Brakeley, Jr. L. B. Flinn I. Goldstein E. H. Kerper M. H. McLaughlin A. K. Poole MEMBERS, 1918 J. L. Wilson E. B. Dunphy H. Brakeley B. S. Michael J. G. Elder J. C. Oehler MEMBERS, 1919 P. V. Mravlag M. G. Potter MEMBER, 1920 R. R. Healing 349 The Princeton Bric-a-Srac RIGHT WING CLUB M 1DOO GO WEN EBERSTADT m ' grath OLIPHANT AMES LATROBE BROWN AGAR CLARK SON SILVER ORRICK m ' kimney INGERSOLL COMEY MILLIARD HOGG SCHOEN DONAHOE The Princeton HSric-a-Brac tgf)t OTtng Club OFFICERS T. J. Hilliard President H. D. Comey Secretary K. L. Ames, Jr. A. C. Brown W. F. Clarkson H. D Comey J. F. DONAHOE R. Eberstadt J. E. Gowen T. J. Hilliard F. T. Hcgg C. J. Ingersoll W. G. McAdoo, Jr. D. G. McGrath E. Oliphant D. W. Orrick W. H. Schoen E. O. Silver W. D. Van Dyke, Jr. 351 The Princeton Bric-a-greic Cfjess; Club OFFICERS, 1915-16 E. S. Carter, ' 16 Captain I. Starr, Jr., ' 16 Manager Mr. W. W. Young, ' 99 Graduate Representative OFFICERS, 1916-17 J. R. Chamberlin, ' 17 Captain Manager Mr. W. W. Young, ' 99 Graduate Representative E. S. Carter, ' 16 J. R. Chamberlin, ' 17 I. Starr, Jr., ' i6 TEAM, 1915-16 B. Franklin, Jr., ' 16 R. C. Wilson, Jr., ' 17 W. B. Chamberlin, Jr., ' 17 G. E. Shoemaker, ' 17 A. M. Frantz, ' i6 V. T. Manchee, 17 E. G. Miles, ' 19 D. H. Kenyon, ' 16 DUAL MATCHES, 1915 November 5th November 12th Princeton 4 Princeton 8 Harvard 2 Yale 2 INTERCOLLEGIATES WON LOST TIED POINTS Columbia 10 1 1 io l A Princeton 6 6 o 6 Harvard 5 6 1 554 Yale 1 9 2 2 352 The Princeton Brie- a- Brae E3C 3C3 Cfje fHattrfmrg Camp MONG colleges and Universities, Princeton had by far the largest comparative representation at the Plattsburg Military Training Camp during July and the early part of August. Of the undergraduates fifteen per cent., approximately 235 men, attended the encampment, as compared with five per cent, from Harvard and four per cent, from Yale, these two institutions being the nearest to Princeton in representation. Furthermore, no other College or University was so extensively represented in the instruction and management of the camps as Prince- ton. A large number of Princeton Alumni, also, attended the August and September encampments. On account of the tremendous increase in the enrollment of the camp this year it was impossible to organize any Prince- ton Teams as in the previous year. The only organized meetings of Princeton men were in the evenings, when all gathered to sing Princeton songs. President Hibben, Chairman of the Advisory Board of College Presidents of the National Reserve Corps, visited Plattsburg and delivered two addresses, one to the two Senior Regiments and one to the two Junior Regiments. Not only at Plattsburg did Princeton men show their enthusiasm for Preparedness, for the University was represented at the military encampment at Monterey by eleven undergraduates and fourteen Alumni, while quite a number participated in actual service on the Mexican border. In addition quite a large group took part in the Civilian Volunteer Naval Cruise. The faithful and hard-working Committee in charge of the Princeton delegation was composed of the following: J. W. Morgan, ' 16 (Chairman); W. R. Willoughby, ' 16; P. W. Foster, ' 17; W. J. Thomas. ' 18; R. F. Makepeace, ' 19. 353 -% ? T£Lrhe Princeton B ric-a-Srac CI CLIO HALL AND WEST HALL. The Princeton Bric-a-Brac 1917 DANCE COMMITTEE STURGES DONNER TIBBOTT BEVIN EBERSTADT HADDEN SCULLY REYNOLDS OLIPHANT The Princeton j§ric-ct-Bra.c Senior $romenabe Committee P. W. Foster, Chairman F. F. Alexandre N. P. Bevin J. W. DONNER R. Eberstadt C. Madden, 3rd D. W. TlBBOTT W. B. Moore E. Ol.IPHANT W. F. Reynolds, Jr. J. T. Scully P. M. Sturges 357 The Princeton Bric-a-Brac Suntor $romenabe Committee E. M. McIlvain, Chairman C. R. Arrott P. C. Kauffman C. V. Halsey P. B. Lee C. K. Wallace 358 The Princeton Bric-a-Brac opJ)omore deception Committee H. K. BULKLEY C. R. Erdman, Jr. E. D. Finney S. Lloyd, Jr. D. B. McDougal C. W. McGraw 359 The Princeton iSric-a-grac L .. FITZ-RANDOLPH GATEWAY v.rtfewctM m The Princeton Brie- a- Brae Eetra pect, 19154916 September On the hottest day of 1915 there drifted into town some eleven hundred men, accompanied by eleven hundred trunks, and thinking thoughts of eleven hundred vacations spent to the taste of each. Likewise on the same day there arose from the sum- mer camps of Nassau Street and University Place four hundred sighs — first to express relief at the passing, or failing, of con- ditional and entrance exams., and then a sigh for the summer spent in Princeton ' s arid wastes — arid but for the Nass., of course. The summer was not without its advantages, however, for Princeton opened to find itself runner-up in Intercollegiate Golf and Tennis. And to keep the early students company there had come a horde of football men, experiencing the coach- ing of Speedy Rush for the first time. As if to vindicate the worth of two weeks ' work, the Varsity trimmed Georgetown FrocUrnation HEREAMER 39 INSTEAD Of M J cuts will be Allowed. on the 25th of the month, 13-0. Much hostility was aroused when the faculty announced that 39 was to be the highest num- ber of cuts allowed. So rather than suffer mutiny, a peace offering in the form of optional daily chapel was made, and, need- less to say, was accepted by the undergraduates. After careful inspection it was found that the new dining halls had really been started. However, so great was the fear of discovery that all work was in entrenchments. The only change in the old Commons was that student waiters took the place of the foreign legion — a good change, and one which proved distinctly successful through practice. 362 The Princeton Bric-a-Srac (October Although President Wilson caused somewhat of a stir when he came to Princeton to cast his humble vote, still the chief source of interest during October was football — and worthily so, for five teams with high aspirations were forced to bow to Captain Glick and his men, with the following scores: Rutgers, io-o; Syracuse, 3-0; Dartmouth, 30-7; Lafayette, 40-0, and Williams, 27-0. The Freshmen with very light material to pick from, won three out of their five games, losing only to Exeter and tieing Peddie. One day someone conceived the idea that a few class officers might come in handy — rather a foolish idea, but nevertheless the experiment was tried on 1919 without any bad results, so the other three classes followed bravely, and entrusted their fondest hopes (and class dues) on the following men: 1916 — President, E. L. Shea; Vice-President, C. L. Heyniger; Secretary-Treasurer, L. G. Payson. 1917— President, D. W. Tibbott ; Vice-President, C. C. Highley; Secretary-Treas- urer, N. D. Jackson. 1918— President, C. V. R. Halsey: Vice-President, C. R. Arrott; Secretary-Treasurer, P. B. Lee. 1919— President, C. W. McGraw ; Vice-President, E. D. Finney ; Secretary-Treasurer, C. H. Townsend. In the meantime a few intracollegiate sports tried to claim attention. The fall handicap track meet was won by the Freshmen, thanks to the sym- pathy and generosity of the handicappers. In the baseball series, 1918 presented a clean slate of victories, and even 1919 could not dispute that. The golf championship went to the lot of S. D. Herron, ' 18; the tennis singles to I. Riker, ' 17, and the doubles to L. Beekman, ' 18, and A. H. Coffey, ' 17. A drum with a P-rade behind it saved the day for Clio and Whig, for with such inducements as these no normal Fresh- man could resist the temptation to join, especially if a gut English course be thrown in. The latter part of the month of October was comparatively a time of ease and leisure, for the faculty appeared to be literally wrapped up in the cause of Woman Suffrage, and not until the bill was black-balled in New Jersey did they display even a fleeting interest in affairs of the mind, other affairs seeming to demand too much attention. 363 - S The Princeton 5ric- -Brac ■6 JJobember If an allusion to Medieval History is permissible, November might aptly be termed the Dark Ages, with the 6th and 13th as the two blackest spots. The former date marks the victorious visit of Mahan, while the latter denotes an astonish- ing and wholly unexpected come-back by Yale. Perhaps some consolation was furnished by 1919 when their football team bought half-fare tickets to New Haven, and emerged tired and hungry, but with a 21-16 victory to their credit. However, ll ' J NoVMQE R If I.: fi rfPM let us leave the subject of football to the mercies of next year, and consider such cheerful subjects as the Senior Prom., the Cane Spree, won by 1918, and the Intercollegiate Cross-Country Meet, in which Princeton ' s representatives finished in third place. Very probably the brightest spot in November was the three days of Thanksgiving recess and— 364 - S JThe Princeton Bri nc-a-Brac December Probably the darkest spot in the month of December, which was an interesting combination of basketball, Raymond Robins ' Meetings, and The Evil Eye, was the three days following this vacation. The new Triangle Club production was given with characteristic excellence, and after entertaining Princeton twice, left en masse for their 5000-mile trip on the road, to the envy of the half-dozen other members of the University. In the athletic line, minor sports held up their part, for the basketball team disposed of the Commonwealth A. C, 36-12, and Cornell, 19-17; while the swimming and water polo teams took on C. C. N. Y. and sent them home for more practice. The Inter-class Swimming Meet, won by 1916, featured a new Princeton record, when A. E. Norrls, ' 18, by plunging 72 feet, put even a U-boat to shame. Another noteworthy event was the election of F. T. Hogg, ' 17, to lead Princeton in football during 1916. On December 22nd the old reliable vacation special again rolled down towards the Junction, bearing with it several hundred worn-out students, leaving their books (also worn-out) for a badly needed rest. 365 The Princeton Brie- a- Brae January It was like pulling teeth to get the undergraduates back to college on or in the vicinity of the 6th, but double cuts did the job in the end, and for a few days the chief diversion was the old slogan, Have a good vacation? If a prize had been offered to the concoctor of the best answer, money says that a member of the Triangle Club would get the proverbial brown derby, for their experiences ranged all the way from Memphis to St. Paul. To return again to real athletics, January ' s record showed about an even break for Princeton. The hockey team defeated Dartmouth, 3-1, and Yale, 2-1, but had to yield two games to Harvard, 3-0 and 2-0. In basketball, Lafayette was let down easy, with a score of 19-10, while Yale, in a very close game, finally won out by the narrow margin of 19-18. Princeton produced a good bunch of wrestlers, and were able to squash all the pep out of Columbia ' s representatives when they turned up with fond hopes of avenging the aquatic defeat that their beloved brethren from C. C. N. Y. had suffered from the Tiger. The swimmers did their share and scored a 28-25 victory against U. of P. The water polo team then appeared on the scene, and made sure that the Quaker boys were thoroughly drowned before finally sending them back to Philadelphia with a 68-6 score to their discredit. A pleasant feature of January was the beginning of a series of concerts by the Kneisel Quartette, and also a recital by Mme. Calve. 366 The Princeton JSric-a.-Bra.c Jfebruarp Mid-year exams., with their traditional nightly volleys of musketry, brought an enforced vacation for some and a chance for more education to others, in addition to copious quantities of cold coin to the ever-ready tutoring schools. By the tenth of the month the worst was over, and college went on again as serenely as ever, disturbed only when the Junior Prom. I — TO TH E TRm brought in its flock of feminine beauty, arrayed as Solomon in all his glory. A great deal happened in the athletic line dur- ing February, some of it pleasant and some of it very much the opposite. The swimming team defeated C. C. N. Y., did like- wise to Harvard, to the tune of 41-12, but lost to Yale, 31-22. The water polo team, nevertheless, was on hand that evening, including the reliable Warden, and Yale was allowed only one goal, on a penalty, while Princeton was piling up a goodly thirty- five. Basketball was also successful, with the following victories and no defeats to score against the month of February : Swarthmore, 37-9; Columbia, 16-12, and Pennsylvania, 28-20. The wrestling team won from Harvard, 17-4, but lost to Penn. State, while the hockey seven had to bow to Yale twice. Although February was not altogether successful from the athletic point of view, still 1919 looks back on it with a good deal of joy, as the time when they were allowed to dress as human beings once more. Let us be duly grateful for this small bit of pleasure. 367 The Princeton Brie- a- Brae iflarcb March was a very successful month — if success is to be measured by achievements — for two athletic championships came our way when the gym. and water polo teams both won Intercollegiate titles, the latter for the fifth consecutive year. Our representatives in swimming, basketball and wrestling deserve plenty of credit also, for they not only managed Yale without any trouble, but in addition finished second in their respective championships. The diminutive J. B. Wiss, ' 17, deserves decor- ation for his achievements, for he not only took an Intercollegiate wrestling title, but also was awarded the All-Round Gym. Championship for the second t : me. A few elections took place during March, for 1916-1917. W. H. Schoen, Jr., ' 17, wa; chosen to lead hockey; J. B. Wiss, ' 17, wrestling; and P. D. Nelson, ' 17, to guide the social efforts of the Triangle Club. The Philadelphian Society and the Class of 1919. as if moved by one inspiration, took unto themselves new officers. G. W. Perkins. Jr., ' 17, and A. V. Savage, ' 17, were elected president and vice-president respectively of the former; and the following men became officers of 1919: President, R. F. Cleveland; Vice-President, W. A. Kirkland, and Secretary-Treasurer, F. B. Christ- mas. The Glee Club thought they would add another championship to our list, so with C. L. Heyniger to do the singing, they burst into joyful sound and were unanimously awarded the Intercollegiate Trophy. Another branch of indoor athletics also did nobly — debating to be exact — and both Yale and Harvard failed to get more than a bad second place when they crossed words with Princeton. (Rumor has it that they both thought the subject was the Swiss Naval instead of Military System. Be that as it may, .) 368 The Princeton JSric-a-Srac gpril The month of April brought baseball back again into the limelight, for on the first the team started the season off well by defeating Villa Nova, 2-1. Several other teams also tried their luck, and Brown, Williams, and Rutgers went away dis- appointed, while Fordham and Ursinus were able to score victories. The Varsity crew, with R. A. Cochran, ' 17, as stroke and captain, met Harvard ' s eight, and in one of the closest races in many eons, finally won out by a mere foot. The P. D. A., with an earnest and worthy ambition to out-do the Triangle Club, staged Les Femmes Savantes, a French comedy (as the learned may deduct from the title). Authorities still differ on the respective merits of the two — every one to his own taste. Princeton again proved itself the center of learning when it was announced that the Rockefeller Institute would drive its stakes on the shores of Lake Carnegie. At about the time when Spring vacation was coming around, an epidemic of our friend, the measles, began to run wild around the campus, finally endearing itself in the hearts of the undergraduates when a week was added to the meagre Easter recess. This gave time for the baseball team to journey to warmer climes, and take games from the Maryland Aggies and Georgetown. The Musical Clubs also migrated South and managed to find time, among their many social engagements, to give a few concerts. So the end of April saw the University scattered to the four winds, blessing measles with every breath. 369 The Princeton Brie- a- Brae ■ JWap On the first of the month the University once more convened, and the following day baseball began again, with Virginia the first victim. Victories over Williams, Brown, and Penn. followed, but as many defeats must also be recorded — at the hands of Cornell, Harvard, and Yale (for further data on the subject of P-Y baseball see June ). Tennis then began its season by winning its first two matches, from Cornell and Williams. Although Alfred Noyes is quoted as having said that All except scoundrels wish for Peace, the University Gun Team, with scant regard for the authority, proceeded to break the Intercollegiate record, proving conclusively that Princeton is in favor of preparedness (New York Tribune take notice). Our navy was also on the job, and won the American Henley at Philadelphia, defeating crews from Columbia, Annapolis, and Pennsylvania. At Ithaca, in a triangular race, they outclassed Yale, but placed second to Cornell. The month of May marks a decided step of advancement in the choosing of major sport managers by putting them partly in the hands of class elections and partly competitive. During the latter part of the month an announcement was made that next year ' s Triangle production would be called Safety First — rather a wise sequel to The Evil Eye, and we wish it all success. 370 The Princeton Brie- a- B r ac s June The first two weeks of June were as usual crowded with many events. Thoughts of the final exams, had harely been put aside when Commencement, Princeton ' s 169th, arrived, with its accompaniment of brass bands and reunions, etc. The tenth was a memorable date, for it was then that the Varsity evened up the series with Yale, by a 7-5 victory. For some unaccount- able reason, that fine city of Newark was chosen to stage the final contest, and just to finish up the year right, we again defeated Yale, this time 1-0. 371 -3««««ggS2g ?gg,The Princeton Bric-a-gr S Sfes - THE SUN DIAL AND McCOSH HALL The Princeton Bri c- a- B r ac CLASS OF 1916 The Princeton Bric-a-Sra.c Claa of 1916 Leon Abbett, Jr 909 Park Ave., New York City Virginius Wilkins Alexander, 802 W. 6th Ave., Pine Bluff, Ark. Ethan Davidson Alyea • Clifton, N. J. Hamilton Fish Armstrong. .. .58 W. 10th St., New York City James Syng Armstrong 166 High St., Middletown, Conn. Boudinot Bakewell Atterburv. 154 W. 86th St., New York City Ferdinand Whitall Bailey.. 539 Boundary St., Sewickley, Pa John Merrill Baker Goshen, Ind Joseph Dill Baker, 3442 Auchentoroly Terrace, Baltimore, Md Edward Beeker Bamman..23 Chambers St., Princeton, N. J Carlton Banigan 395 Ellison St., Paterson, X. J Fritz Krupp Barbour 11 W. 53d St., New York City John McFerran Barr Cherokee Drive. Louisville, Ky Yervant Basmadjian Constantinople, Turke Arthur Ferguson Benton. .. .406 Hancock St., Brooklyn. X. Y Leigh Bamber Bergen. .. .217 Hamilton Ave., Paterson, X. J Osborne Tatmon Biddlc.iiio Jackson St., Wilmington, Del Albert Buseh Bingham 678-80 Water St.. New York City Emerson Prall Bird 445 Ellison St., Paterson. N. J Carl H. Bischoff 1717 N. 42d St., Philadelphia, Pa Kenneth Voris Blue Grantwood, X T . J Wallace Bower. ... 1645 X. Washington Ave., Scranton, Pa Samuel Andrew Bowman. .. .815 E. High St., Springfield, O Robert James Boyd, Jr Auburn. Neb O ' Hara Denny Brereton. . . . 124 5th Ave., Chambersburg. Pa Robert Archibald Brotemarkle Salisbury, Md Harold Gilmore Brown.... 248 S. Broad St., Elizabeth, X. J Lawrence Brown 17 Montgomery Place, Brooklyn, X . Y Edwin Chapman Buchanan. .289 Hancock St., Brooklyn, N. Y Benjamin Bullock, 3d Ardmore, Pa Milton Joseph Bunnell.. 70 Monticello Ave., Jersey City, N. J Wiley Harolson Burford Ocala, Fla William Jay Burke 338 Roseville Ave., Newark, N. J Robert Williamson Burns West Carrolton, O NAME ADNRESS William Judson Burr. Jr 284 Springs St., Trenton, N. J Allan Macy Butler 288 Palisade Ave., Yonkers, X. Y James Ebert Butter worth. .352 Pelham Rd., Germantown, Pa Charles Lawton Campbell, 519 S. McDonough St., Montgomery, Ala Ralph Newton Campbell, 5147 Friendship Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa Joseph Maull Carey Glenside, Pa William Irving Carpenter, Jr., 2201 Girard Ave., S., Minneapolis, Minn Edward Sterling Carter Washington, Conn Robert Tappan Chaplin. .2236 Q St., N. W., Washington. D. C Elmer Ellsworth Childs Lyons, X. J Verne Clair 172 Park Ave., Orange, X. J Robertson Lispenard Cleveland, 701 Madison Ave., New York City Holt Wilson Cookingham. Ladd Tilton Bldg., Portland, Ore Kenneth Frank Cramer, 22 Woodside Ave., Gloversville, N. Y Dana Ramsey Crocker. .. .309 Maynard St.. Williamsport, Pa Harry Carl Cross 2446 X. 31st St., Philadelphia, Pa Bryan Grimes Dancy 922 St. Paul St., Baltimore, Md John Willett Danenhower, 212 Washington Ave., Haddonfield. X. J Thurston Jynkins Davies, 309 Monmouth St., Gloucester City, N. J Xathaniel Penistone Davis.. 58 Mercer St., Princeton, X. J William Myron Davy.. 317 Atlantic Ave., Atlantic City, X. J Robert Holmes Dawbarn. . . . 105 W. 74th St.. New York City Xeil Booker Dawes 1803 Chicago Ave., Evanston, 111 Edward Spaulding Decker, R. No. 2, Hilldale, Wayzata, Minn George C. DeLacy, Jr Woodmere, N. Y William Stanley Dell.. Care of Brown, Shipley Co., 123 Pall Mall, London, S. W., England Oscar Anderson DeLong, Jr Montclair. X. J. David Ralph Demaree Newport, Pa. 375 - - ?? ?£LYhe PrincitorT mc-a-Brac 1 (Elagg of 1916 ( (Continued) William Hornbeck Deyo Xapanock, N. Y Herbert Esbenshade Diller Leaman Place, Pa Edmund Davey Dodd, 307 Belleville, Ave., Bloomfield, N. J Wilson Farnsworth Dodd.. 99 Valley Road, Montclair, N. J Byrd Douglas 132 8th Ave., South Nashville, Tenn Julian Noyes Dowell, 3026 Xewark St., N. W., Cleveland Park, Washington, D. C Arthur Charles Dunn 667 E. 18th St., Paterson, N. J Donovan Russell Ellis 416 Central Ave., Newark, N. J Raymond David Evans 2417 Sarah St., Pittsburgh, Pa Frank Loren Farrell 6424 Penn Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa Russell Nicholas B. Fay.... Grove St., Chicopee Falls, Mass Percy Orr Fendrick Mercersburg, Pa Eric Ferguson. ... 124 Cherry Valley Rd., Garden City, N. Y William Thayer Field 976 Broad St., Newark, N. J William Young Fillebrown, 2121 LeRoy PI., Washington. D. C Will H. Floto 329 Broadway, Wellsville, O Louis Gerisch Forney 1950 E. 90th St.. Cleveland, O Harvey Haven Frank 1003 Green St., Harrisburg, Pa Benjamin Franklin, Jr.. 166 W. Horter St., Germantown, Pa Angus Macdonald Frantz....64 Battle Rd., Princeton, N. J Thomas Lothrop Frederick, 64 Richmond Ave., Buffalo, N. Y William Henderson Friesell, Jr., 5871 Darlington Rd., Pittsburgh, Pa George Thompson Fritz... 3903 Spruce St., Philadelphia.. Pa Clinton Walter Frontz Hughesville, Pa George Baer Fundenburg 5805 5th Ave., Pittsburgh. Pa Richard Way Furman 44 Livingston St.. Trenton, N. J Ervant Gabriel 215 Columbia St., Weehawken, N. J Paul Halmuth Gadebusch Badeau Ave., Summit. N. J Lud well Ebersole Gaines Fayetteville, W. Va Charles Thornton Garrison Wilkins Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. Moore Gates Robert College, Constantinople, Turkey Paul Ganson Giffin 299 Lincoln Ave.. Orange, N. J Logan Blair Gill Overbrook, Philadelphia, Pa NAME ADDRESS Henry Gibbas Gilland. . . .78 North St., New Bedford, Mass. George Gillespie Nothingham, Pa. Frank Glick 30 Stevenson St., Pittsburgh, Pa. George Washington Glick, Jr. Care of James W. Orr. Atchison, Kan. Laurence Litchfield Glover Haddonfield, N. J. Harr y Lincoln Gordon. Jr 1019 Lenox PI., Cincinnati, 0. John Dickason Gould, 201 Traction Bldg., Indianapolis, Ind. Ormond Valentine Gould 26 W. 69th St., New York City Bethune Morse Grant, 3rd, 709 S. Perry St., Johnstown, N. Y. James Sproat Green, Jr., 463 N. Broad St., Elizabeth, N. J. Arthur Nolan Harrigan, 391 West End Ave., New York City Frederick Van Lennep Harrison, 6 Erwin Park, Montclair, N. J. Harold Dortic Harvey 96 Broadway, New York City Amory Lawrence Haskell 19 Cedar St., New York City Henry Lloyd Haupt , Abington, Pa. Bennett Heath 714 E. Adams St., Muncie. Ind. John Eishler Heintz 221 1 Broadway, New York City- Robert Chapman Heyl, Jr Wynnewood, Pa. Charles Lambert Heyniger 202 Wall St., Corning, N. Y. Ralph Pratt Hinchman, Jr. ...349 Broadway, New York City John Carl Williams Hinshaw. .Hotel Astor. New York City- Robert Bertram Hollander. . .24 W. 70th St., New York City Jesse Hoyt 969 Park Ave., New York City Herbert Beecher Hudnut. . . .245 N. Heights, Youngstown, O. Allan Hunter 57 Rubidoux Drive, Riverside, Cal. Samuel Loomis Hypes. ... 1126 Michigan Ave., Evanston, 111. Arthur Hartt Jackson.. 692 West End Ave., New York City Thomas Brown Jackson, 30 Bradford St.. Charleston. W. Va. Benjamin Charles Jones 311 nth St., Tyrone, Pa. Brady Rimby Jordan 5851 Pierce St.. Pittsburgh, Pa. Alfred M. Kahn 17 W. 75th St., New York City William Machenzie Kalt 124 E. 64th St., New York City Albert Aloysius Kelleher 57 E. 95th St., New York City David Gregg Kennedy Lansdowne, Pa. 376 - The Princeton Bric-a-B cjS Bfes -—?- (Illaga of 1916 (Olonttmiea) Herbert Henry Kennedy, Jr., 4950 Greenwood Ave., Chicago. 111. Andrew Trowbridge H. Kenny, 85 Eliot St., Detroit, Mich. Douglas Houston Kenyon, 322 W. 100th St., New York City- Nelson Townley Kenyon, Care of Kenyon Kenyon, 61 Broadway, New York City- Ernst Philip Kief el Lamar, Ind. William Campbell King, Jr., Cor. Bayard and Xeville Sts., Pittsburgh, Pa. Russell Louis Klotz Singac, N. J. Frederick Hammond Knight, 1620 22nd St., X. W., Washington, D. C. Oliver Dudley Knight.. 4433 Westminster PL, St. Louis, Mo. Charles Edward Kock Belle Alliance, La. Donelson Martin Lake, 534 S. McLean Blvd., Memphis, Tenn. Henry McClelland Lamberton, Jr Winona, Minn. John Larsen McHenry, 111. Bernard Carter Law St. David ' s, Pa. Elliott Hugh Lee 1201 S. 16th Ave., Denver, Colo. Robert Ridenour Lester, 3400 Campbell St., Kansas City, Mo. Vergil Gentry Link 417 Summer Ave., Stamford, Conn. Edward Stabler Lloyd Red Bank, X. J. Wilton Lloyd-Smith Elmira, N. Y. William DeLoss Love. Jr. ...354 Laurel St.. Hartford, Conn. Oliver Parker McComas, Jr., 1019 X. Charles St., Baltimore, Md Robert Huston MacCready Wood Ridge, N. J Paul Beattie MacCready Wood Ridge, N. J Paul A. G. Machemer 3214 Disston St., Tacony, Pa Thomas Parker McKee, Jr Hamilton Square, N. J Robert Lincoln McKinney. . 1047 Shady Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa John Davidson McLanahan, 30 Vandeventer Ave., Princeton, X T . J John Burlinson McTigue Far Rockaway, N. Y. Clifton Alexander McWilliams, 219 E. Dewart St., Shamokin. Pa Oscar Mandel Grantwood, N. J Christian Frederick Martin Nazareth, Pa NAME ADDRESS Richard Spink Martin 21 E. 16th St., New York City- Joel White Massie 639 S. Court St., Montgomery, Ala. Elmer George Meier — Care of J. H. Hersch Co., Cor. Mon- roe St. and 5th Ave., Chicago, 111. Henry Jay Melosh 89 Gifford Ave., Jersey City, N. J. Kirk Alexander Metzerott, Metzerott Bldg., Washington, D. C. Emory Jacob Middour Quincy, Pa. Neville Miller 1454 4th St., Louisville, Ky. Severance Allen Millikin. Mayfield Taylor Rds., Cleveland, O. Edwin Knox Mitchell, Jr 57 Gillett St., Hartford, Conn. Philip Molt 333 3d St., Weehawken, N. J. Kirk Moore 56 Beaver St., New York City Perry Ervien Moore 125 Euclid Ave., Hackensack, N. J. John Williams Morgan 439 West St., New York City Lester Mount Princeton, N ' J. Thomas E. Mount 1040 Audobon St., New Orleans, La. Stuart Mudd 47 University PL, St. Louis. Mo. John Guild Muirheid 310 Roseville Ave., Newark, N. J. John Edgar Murdock. . . .414 S. Maple Ave., Greensburg, Pa. Eugene Aquila Nebeker..3i9 Ocean Ave., Santa Monica, Cal. John Howard Neely, Jr Mifflintown, Pa. Walter Benno Neuburg 32 Broadway, New York City Charles Osborne Nichols.. 38 Woodland Ave., Summit, N. J. Thomas Burnet Niles 514 W. I22d St., New York City George A. Norwood, Jr., Ainsworth O ' Brien-Moore, 2926 Brighton Ave., Los Angeles, Cal. John Joseph O ' Kane, Jr., 23 Linden Lane, Princeton, N. J. Lewis Philip Ohliger, 701 Hamilton Terrace, Kansas City, Mo. William Henry Osborn 40 E. 36th St., New York City John Eliot Osmun 76 Lenox Ave., East Orange, N. J. James Russell Ix well Otis.... 66 Church St., Bethlehem, Pa. Francis Dana Payne Mertic Metal Works, Erie, Pa. Laurence George Payson..i53 Tenafly Rd., Englewood, N. J. Grant Allen Peacock 2209 Oliver Bldg., Pittsburgh. Pa. Francis Rawle Pemberton, Jr... 66 Broadway, New York City 377 The Princeton Brie- a- r ac « (Oass of 1916 (iContiiuifb ) NAME ADDRESS Solomon Phillips Perlman, 112 S. Broad St., Trenton, N. J. Winthrop Morgan Phelps, 17 W. Union Ave., Bound Brook, N. J. Stanley Lansing Phraner, 385 Jefferson Ave., Brooklyn, X. Y. Gilbert Ledger Pitcairn, 97 Harrison St., East Orange, X. J. Harry F. Porter 14 Division St., Trenton, X. J. Edgar Leroy Potts... 2521 Frankford Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. Henry Stewart Price 435 Clinton Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. Carlton S. Proctor 3014 R St., X. W., Washington, D. C. John Marshall Raymond, Jr., 438 Lafayette St., Salem, Mass. Xelson Reed 5329 Wilkins Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. Richard B. Reed 303 X. Jefferson St., Van Wert, O. Sanford Cobb Reynolds, 33 Pintard Ave., Xew Rochelle, X. Y. Jay Roscoe Rhoads. . . .2228 W. Tioga St., Philadelphia, Pa. Herbert James Richardson. 1554 Peabody Ave., Memphis, Tenn. Hans Albrecht Riedel...849 President Ave., Brooklyn, X. Y. Herbert Dern Ritchey 1116 13th Ave., Altoona, Pa. James Bradford Ritter. 180 E. Walnut Lane, Germantown, Pa. Frank Calvin Roberts, Jr Wynnewood, Pa. Samuel Stewart Robinson Saltsburg, Pa. Kenneth Henry Rockey, 138 Wardwell Ave., W., Xew Brighton, X. Y. Harold Russell Robinson. .. .84 Milford Ave., Xewark. X. J. John Xoel Robinson Academy Ave., Sewickley, Pa. Walter Arnold Rukeyser. .The Breakers, Atlantic City, X. J. George Sebastian Runk, Jr... 10 W. 77th St., Xew York City John Russell. Jr. ... Philadelphia Trust Co.. Philadelphia, Pa. Herman Schaan Schwabacher. . 191 Broad St., Xewark, X. J. Mason Scudder 75 Vandeventer PL, St. Louis, Mo. Norman Waterbury Scudder Glastonbury, Conn. William Willis Sealy 2424 Ave. J, Galveston. Tex. Arthur Xoel Selby 165 Santa Rosa Ave., Oakland, Cal. Lee West Sellers 77 Grove St., Montclair, N. J. Lawrence Damrosch Seymour, 193 West St., Xew York City William Carleton Shanley, Jr.. 271 W. 72nd St., Xew York City- Edwin Compton Sharp R. D. 3, Millville, X. J. NAME ADDRESS Edward Lane Shea 90 Palm St., Xashua, X. H. Elmer Allan Sheets. Jr.... 480 X. Broadway, Yonkers, N. Y. Joseph Henry Shepherd Box 1016, Memphis, Tenn. George Marshall Shipman, Jr Belvidere, X. J. Gordon Gowans Sikes 129 Xorth St., Buffalo, X. Y ' . Samuel Moor Shoemaker, Jr Eccleston, Md. Carleton Robinson Smith.... 780 Forest Ave., Xeenah, Wis. Mowry Smith 780 Forest Ave., Xeenah, Wis. Charles Phelps Smyth 22 Morven St., Princeton, X. J. Allan Hanson Snowden. . . .605 Cathedral St., Baltimore, Md. James Milliken Speers. Jr., 81 S. Mountain Av£., Montclair, X. J. Isaac Starr, Jr Stenton Ave., Chestnut Hill, Pa. Walter Knickerbocker Starr, 56 Bayard Lane, Princeton, X. J. Claude Richmond Stauffer Leola, Pa. Murray Hoffman Stevens.. 449 W. 153rd St., Xew York City James Roosevelt Stockton. .325 Market St., Jacksonville, Fla. David Durell Stueck, 59 Reservoir Ave., Jersey City, X. J. Donald Clinton Swatland. . . . 15 Milford Ave., Xewark, X. J. Lennig Sweet 1075 Humboldt St., Denver. Colo. Allen Williamson Talley 266 W. 89th St., Xew York City Clarence Muir Tappen . . . .810 Grand St., Jersey City, X. J. Harrison McClure Thomas, Cap and Gown Club, Princeton, X. J John Watson Thomson, Jr.. 309 Clinton PI., Hackensack, X. J. Charles Sanford Tippetts St. Petersburg, Fla. Norman Balderston Tomlinson, 27 Western Ave., Morristown, X. J. Charles Daughtry Towers. 305 E. Church St., Jacksonville, Fla. Michael Gavin Traylor P. O. Box 280, Richmond, Va. Charles F. Troxell 2400 X. 29th St., Philadelphia, Pa. Donald George Turner Corning, la. Pierrepont ICdwards Twitchell, 153 S. Oxford St., Brooklyn, X. Y. Armin Adams Uebelacker, 267 Summit Ave., Hackensack, X. J. -378 -3 ggZf? ?S The Princeton Bric-a-Br l Bfey --- - OllagS of 1916 ((Uondubcb) NAME ADDRESS Harman Blauvelt Vanderhoef, Jr., 18 Washington PI.. New York City Henry Ferdinand van der Voort, Jr., 614 Central Ave., Dunkirk. N. Y. Harold Surfleet van Doren Newark, N. J. Eugene Nelson Van Dyke Revons, Pa. James Cutler Vickery, 1839 Mintwood PI., N. W., Washington, D. C. John Verdenburgh Wadsworth, 370 Franklin St., Buffalo, N. Y. Ceorge Clayton Wallace. Jr Paducah, Ky. Edward Berry Wall 432 E. Broad St., Columbus, O. Loring Baker Walton Hingham. Mass. Donald Beates Watt Marietta Ave., Lancaster, Pa. William Armstrong West, Syrian Protestant College, Beirut, Syria NAME ADDRESS Walter White, Care Mrs. Harry White, Safe Deposit Co., Baltimore, Md. Archibald Wiese 5708 Forbes St., Pittsburgh, Pa. Henry Augustus Williams. .. .385 Park Ave., Paterson, N. J. Westel Robinson Willoughby, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, Md. Edmund Wilson, Jr Wallace St., Red Bank, N. J. Homer Best Winchell 601 Ocean Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. Frederick Reginald Wolff 58 E. 80th St., New York City Caspar Lignon Woodbridge Shanghai, China Edgar Foster Woodman 163 N. Main St., Concord, N. H. Reynier Jacob Wortendyke. Jr., 108 Bentley Ave.. Jersey City, N. J. Charles Milbank Young. 263 Lexington Ave., New York City 379 The Princeton i§ric-a-Brac STOCKTON FRANTZ 1916 CLASS DAY COMMITTEE LAKE DOUGLAS HARVEY ATTERBURY DAVIES PAYSON SHEA HEYNIGER GLICK TIPPETTS %«  «ggaf?l Sg,The Princeton Br c-a-mrQ,c - Cla s Bap Cxercteea of tfjc 0nt 2|unbrebtl) anb ixtp=nintf) Annual Commencement June, 1916 OPENING EXERCISES Master of Ceremonies. .Charles Lambert Heyniger, X. Y. Class Oration Stanley Lansing Phraner, N. Y. Class Poem William Stanley Dell, X. Y. IVY EXERCISES Ivy Oration Charles Sanford Tippetts, Fla. CANNON EXERCISES Class History James Roosevelt Stockton, Fla. Address by Class President Edward Lane Shea. X. H. Presentation Xeville Miller, Ky. Roll Call by Class Secretary. . Laurence George Payson. X. J. Class Prophecy Hamilton Fish Armstrong, X. Y. Class Ode— Words and Music by Samuel M. Shoemaker. Jr. COMMENCEMENT EXERCISES Salutatory Ethan Davidson Alyea, X. J. Valedictory Boudinot Bakewell Atterbury, X. Y. CLASS DAY COMMITTEE Edward Lane Shea, Chairman Laurence George Payson, Treasurer Boudinot Bakewell Atterbury Angus Macdonald Frantz Charles Lambert Heyniger James Roosevelt Stockton Thurston Jynkins Davies Frank Glick Donelson Martin Lake Charles Sanford Tippetts Byrd Douglas Harold Dortic Harvey NASSAU HERALD COMMITTEE Laurence George Payson, Chairman Benjamin Bullock, 3rd Stuart Mudd Lennig Sweet Harold Dortic Harvey 381 The Princeton Bri c- a- 3 r ac 1 SWATLAND LEE MOLT CARTER FRANKLIN KENYON ALYEA ATTERBURY PHI BETA KAPPA. TAPPEN SHEETS BINGHAM WOLFF KOCK TIPPETTS DELL WINCH ELL OSBORNE BIDDLE KNIGHT SMYTH KENNEDY NEWBURG VICKERY MUDD _irf?ft ' —fZ lffiWRn — % « 2SXhe_ Princeton Bric-a- Prac Sfe § x P (O PSn Peta luppa Vv. _ Peta of Jgeto Jersey Organized Provisionally in 1895 Charter Granted in October, FACULTY MEMBERS 1898 ■ n I D. L. Buffum G. H. Gerould David Magie. Jr. 11. R. Shipman 1 jhl IJTF ' B H. C. Butler William Gillespie W. F. Magie H. S. S. Smith aUf ri|4 b E. Capps N. E. Griffin Allan Marquand N. K. Smith 1 , A L. R. Cary G. M. Harper L. W. Miles C. H. Smyth, Jr. G. F. Close John Grier Hibben C. R. Morey J. D. Spaeth V. L. Collins E. G. Conklin J. P. Hoskins G. A. Hulett D. C. Munro W. S. Myers E. G. Spaulding D. C. Stuart w F. H. Constant T. W. Hunt Frederick Neher D. R. Stuart H. B. Cornwall A. C. Johnson E. F. Northrup H. W. Thayer r - H. F. Covington R. B. C. Johnson C. G. Osgood, Jr. H. D. Thompson F. H. Critchlow E. W. Kam MERER T. M. Parrott Augustus Trowbridge i Ulrich Dahlgren C. W. Kennedy F. L. Patton Henry VanDyke D. B. Durham William Libbey A. H. Phillips Paul VanDyke F. F. Abbott L. P. Eisenhart E. H. Loomis W. K. Prentice Oswald Veblen E. P. Adams G. W. El.DERKIN G. B. McClellan I. E. Raycroft W. U. Vreeland J. W. Basore F. A. Fetter Howard McClenahan E. C. Richardson A. F. West H. H. Bender H. B. Fine C. F. W. McClure E. Y. Robbins I. H. Westcott M. F. Blau Y. FlTE R. M. McElroy P. E. Robinson G. W. T. Whitney P. L. Boutroux William Foster L. W. McCay R. K. Root W. F. Willoughby A. A. Bowman W. S. Fox Malcolm McLaren H. N. Russell F. N. Wilson G. D. Brown Christian Gauss C. McMillan W. B. Scott Gen. A. A. Woodhull R. E. Brunnow MEMBERS, 1916 C. N. Young E. D. Alyea K. F. Cramer D. H. Kenyon W. B. Neuburg C. M. Tappen B. B. Atterbury W. S. Dell F. H. Knight W. H. Osborn C. S. Tippetts 0. T. BlDDLE B. Franklin, Jr. C. E. Kock E. A. Sheets, Jr. J. C. Vickery A. B. Bingham H. D. Harvey E. H. Lee C. P. Smyth H. B. WlNCHELL K. V. Blue R. C. Heyl P. Molt D. C. Swati.and F. R. Wolff E. S. Carter D. G. Kennedy S. Mudd MEMBERS, 1917 S. W . Landon G. R. Stewart, Jr. M. L. Turrentine J. W. Voorhis 383 The Princeton Brie- a.- Br etc ftonor? Conferred 1915=16 jenior onormen Valedictory Boudixot Bakewell Atterbury Latin Salutatory Ethan Davidson Alyea Jf inal Special honors Philosophy and Psychology. Highest Honors — Ethan Davidson Alyea. High Honors — Benjamin Franklin, Jr. Honors — Thurston Jynkins Davies, Nathaniel Penistone Davis, Edwin Knox Mitchell, Jr., Stanley Lansing Phraner. Modern Languages. — Germanic. High Honors — Walter Benno Xeuburg. Romanic. High Honors — Robert Holmes Dawbarn, George Baer Fundenburg, Brady Rimbey Jordan, John Noel Robinson. History and Politics. High Honors — Kenneth Frank Cramer, Clarence Muir Tappan, Charles San ford Tippetts. Honors — Dana Rumsey Crocker, Frank Loren Farrell, Doug- las Houston Kenyon, John Williams Morgan, William Henry Osborn, Charles Daughtry Towers. Mathematics. Honors — Fred Reginald Wolff. Mathematics and Physics. Highest Honors — Edward Sterling Carter. High Honors — Robert Chapman Heyl, Jr. Honors — Kenneth Voris Blue, Oscar Anderson De Long, Jr. Economics and Social Institutions. Highest Honors — Boudinot Bakewell Atterbury. High Honors — Elmer Allen Sheets, Jr. Honors — Kenneth Henry Rockey. Classics. High Honors — Donald Clinton Swatland. Homer Best Winchell. Honors — Verne Clair, Henry Augustus Wil- liams. English. High Honors — Harold Dortic Harvey. Charles Francis Troxell. Honors — Hamilton Fish Armstrong. Chemistry. Highest Honors — Charles Phelps Smyth. High Honors — Arthur Ferguson Benton, Albert Busch Bingham, James Cutler Vickery. Honors — Lewis Philip Ohliger. Fran- cis Rawle Pemberton, Jr. Biology. High Honors — Stuart Mudd, Isaac Starr, Jr. Civil Engineering. High Honors — Frederick Hammond Knight. Honors — Russell Louis Klotz, Charles Edward Kock. 384 L SW S ?Z$ M ASS©QA = The Princeton Brie- a- Br etc ALUMNI ASSOCIATION OF NASSAU HALL Job E. Hedges, ' 84 Chairman WESTERN ASSOCIATION OF PRINCETON CLUBS Alfred T. Carton. ' o ; Secretary 76 W. Monroe St., Chicago, 111. PRINCETON ENGINEERING ASSOCIATION Charles H. Higcins. ' 03 Secretary 30 Church St.. New York, N. Y. Arkattoaa PRINCETON ALUMNI ASSOCIATION OF ARKANSAS J. V. Johnson, ' 03 Secretary State National Bank Building, Little Rock, Ark. (California PRINCETON CLUB OF SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA Daniel S. Ham mack, ' 06 Secretary American Bank Building, Los Angeles, Cal. PRINCETON ALUMNI ASSOCIATION OF NORTHERN CALIFORNIA AND NEVADA Platt Kent, ' 09 Secretary Standard Oil Bldg., San Francisco, Cal. (Colorado ROCKY MOUNTAIN PRINCETON CLUB Frederick S. Titsworth, Esq., ' 93 Secretary Equitable Bldg., Denver. Col. Splautare PRINCETON ALUMNI ASSOCIATION OF DELAWARE John F. Xeary, Esq., ' 00 Secretary Du Pont Bldg., Wilmington. Del. SiHtrirt of (Columbia PRINCETON ALUMNI ASSOCIATION OF THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA NEWTON K. Fox, ' 09 Secretary Washington Loan and Trust Bldg., Washington, D. C. Sbaljo PRINCETON ALUMNI ASSOCIATION OF IDAHO F. B. Carter, Esq., ' 05 Secretary 310 Boise City National Bank Bldg.. Boise. Idaho. Slltttoia PRINCETON CLUB OF CHICAGO William S. Warfield, 3RD, ' 10 Secretary First National Bank Bldg., Chicago, 111. Indiana PRINCETON ALUMNI ASSOCIATION OF INDIANA Thomas A. Hendricks, ' 02 Secretary 1 127 N, Meridian St., Indianapolis, Ind. Soma PRINCETON CLUB OF CEDAR RAPIDS Arthur Poe. ' 00 Secretary American Cereal Company, Cedar Rapids, la. 386 The Princeton Sric-a-Srac « Kentucky PRINCETON ALUMNI ASSOCIATION OF LOUISVILLE Richard G. Knott Secretary The Evening Post, Louisville, Ky. JHarglann PRINCETON ALUMNI ASSOCIATION OF MARYLAND Horatio W. Turner, ' 09 Secretary 1214 Garrett Bldg., Baltimore, Md. ilasBarijuBettB PRINCETON ALUMNI ASSOCIATION OF NEW ENGLAND Francis L. Coolidge, Esq., ' 84 Secretary 166 Devonshire St., Room 31, Boston, Mass. mulligan PRINCETON ALUMNI ASSOCIATION OF MICHIGAN A. E. VanCourt Secretary 870 Jefferson Ave., Detroit, Mich. Minnesota PRINCETON ALUMNI ASSOCIATION OF THE NORTHWEST Frank P. Leslie. ' 14 Secretary 3d Ave., So., and Fifth St., Minneapolis, Minn. ffltBannrt PRINCETON CLUB OF THE SOUTHWEST Gordon T. Beaham, ' 01 Secretary Care of Faultless Starch Co., 1025 W. 8th St., Kansas City, Mo. PRINCETON CLUB OF ST. LOUIS Harold H. Short, ' 05 Secretary 310 Chemical Bldg., St. Louis, Mo. Nebraska PRINCETON ALUMNI ASSOCIATION OF NEBRASKA Arthur R. Wells, ' 95 Secretary 524 Omaha National Bank Bldg., Omaha, Neb. •Nero 3erBeg PRINCETON ALUMNI ASSOCIATION OF NORTHERN NEW JERSEY Robert R. Laidlaw, Esq., ' 04 Secretary 58 Sherwood Place, Englewood, N. J. PRINCETON ALUMNI ASSOCIATION OF HUDSON COUNTY, N. J. Otto F. Seggel, ' 03 Secretary 42 Lincoln St., Jersey City, N. J. PRINCETON ALUMNI ASSOCIATION OF MONTCLAIR AND VICINITY Benjamin E. Messler, ' 03 Secretary 4 Holland Terrace, Montclair, N. J. PRINCETON CLUB OF NEWARK Harry F. Bliss, ' 06 Secretary 240 Grafton Ave., Newark, N. J. PRINCETON ALUMNI FEDERATION OF NEW JERSEY Howard Carter, ' 01 Secretary 100 Broadway, New York, N. Y. PRINCETON ALUMNI ASSOCIATION OF THE ORANGES Franklin W. Fort, ' 01 Secretary 17 Carleton St., East Orange, N. J. PRINCETON ALUMNI ASSOCIATION OF PASSAIC COUNTY Robert Williams, Jr Secretary 385 Park Ave., Plainfield, N. J. 387 The Princeton Bric-a-Srac PRINCETON CLUB OF PLAINFIELD Albert D. Beers, ' 07 Secretary 734 Watchung Ave., Plainfield, N. J., PRINCETON CLUB OF TRENTON Edward D. Miers, ' 08 Secretary American Bank Bldg., Trenton, N. J. Nrui $ark PRINCETON CLUB OF NEW YORK Samuel J, Reid, Jr., ' 06 Secretary 121 E. 21st St., New York, N. Y. PRINCETON ALUMNI ASSOCIATION OF NORTHERN NEW YORK Edward E. Rankin, ' 09 Secretary Cherry Hill, Albany, N. Y. PRINCETON ALUMNI ASSOCIATION OF CENTRAL NEW YORK Stuart F. Raleigh, ' ii Secretary Merrell-Soule Co., Syracuse, N. Y. PRINCETON ALUMNI ASSOCIATION OF LONG ISLAND C. D. Robert, ' 04 Secretary 261 Hicks St., Brooklyn, N. Y. PRINCETON ALUMNI ASSOCIATION OF ROCHESTER AND VICINITY T. C. Briggs Secretary 22 Lakeview Park, Rochester, N. Y. PRINCETON CLUB OF BUFFALO Frank P. Southworth, ' 08 Secretary Chamber of Commerce Bldg., Buffalo, N. Y. (§bw PRINCETON ALUMNI ASSOCIATION OF CINCINNATI Cecil H. Gamble, ' 05 Secretary Gwynne Bldg., Cincinnati, O. PRINCETON ALUMNI ASSOCIATION OF NORTHERN OHIO J. H. Drummond, ' ii Secretary 221 Electric Bldg., Cleveland, O. PRINCETON ALUMNI ASSOCIATION OF TOLEDO Dr. William G. Rice, ' 93 Secretary 240 Michigan St., Toledo, -O. pptttiaylttama PRINCETON ALUMNI ASSOCIATION OF ERIE Samuel L. Gilson, ' 08 Secretary 614 W. 8th St., Erie, Pa. CENTRAL PENNSYLVANIA ALUMNI ASSOCIA- TION OF PRINCETON UNIVERSITY W. H. Musser, Esq., ' 96 Secretary 215 N. 2nd St., Harrisburg, Pa. PRINCETON CLUB OF PHILADELPHIA Walter W. N. Righter, Esq., ' 06 Secretary 1223 Locust St., Philadelphia, Pa. PRINCETON ALUMNI ASSOCIATION OF WESTERN PENNSYLVANIA Robert D. Christie, Esq., ' 08 Secretary 121 5 Union Bank Bldg., Pittsburgh. Pa. PRINCETON ALUMNI ASSOCIATION OF NORTHEASTERN PENNSYLVANIA Gilbert S. McClintock, ' 08 Secretary Lock Box 233, Wilkes-Barre, Pa. 388 _ ,The Prin ceton ©pnnpaafp PRINCETON ALUMNI ASSOCIATION OF TENNESSEE Walter H. Watkins, Esq., ' oo Secretary Hamilton National Bank Bldg., Chattanooga, Tenn. Qtotu THE BORDER ASSOCIATION T. B. Newman Secretary Xewman Investment Company, El Paso, Texas. PRINCETON ALUMNI ASSOCIATION OF TEXAS Charles C. Cresson, Jr., ' 95 Secretary Alamo Bank Bldg., San Antonio, Texas. Utah INTER-MOUNTAIN PRINCETON ASSOCIATION Renwick S. McNiece, ' 07 Secretary 1 136 Blaine Ave., Salt Lake City, Utah. Uaaljutgtmt PRINCETON CLUB OF SEATTLE J. H. Watrous Secretary 202 Marion Bldg., Seattle, Wash. Jffnreign PRINCETON ALUMNI ASSOCIATION OF INDIA C. D. Thompson, Jr., ' 05 Secretary Princeton Hall, Christian College, Allahabad, India. PRINCETON ALUMNI ASSOCIATION OF SOUTH AFRICA Rev. Clinton T. Wood, ' 92 Secretary Mission Institute, Wellington, Cape of Good Hope. PRINCETON CLUB OF HAWAII Rev. E. B. Turner, ' 06 Secretary 778 King St., Honolulu, Hawaii. PRINCETON ALUMNI ASSOCIATION OF JAPAN John S. Burgess, ' 05 Secretary 3 Sancome Mitosirocho, Kanda, Tokyo, Japan. PRINCETON ALUMNI ASSOCIATION OF SYRIA George B. Stewart, ' 06 Secretary Syrian Protestant College, Beirut, Syria. PRINCETON CLUB OF PARIS Persifor F. Gibson, ' 85 Secretary 115 Rue de la Pompe, Paris. France. ■ mi Immmi! lHf ll : l ' l ' i- ,t ' The Princeton Brie- a.- Brae W$t rabuate Council of Princeton Umberattp OFFICERS W. E. Hope, ' oi, Chairman 49 Wall St., New York City Francis Speir, ' 77, Vice-Chairman, 52 Wall St., New York City H. G. Murray, ' 93, Secretary Princeton, N. J. CLASS REPRESENTATIVES ' 82 John Larkin 44 Wall St., New York City ' 83 F. C. Roberts.. Real Estate Trust Bldg., Philadelphia, Pa. ' 84 A. G. Todd 165 Broadway, New York City ' 85 J. Woods Brown 1510 Walnut St., Philadelphia, Pa. ' 86 W. F. Timlow 7 Wall St., New York City ' 87 John W. Queen... 15 Exchange Place, Jersey City, N. J. ' 88 Dr. B. VanD. Hedges, 518 Watchung Ave., New York City ' 89 Henry C. Irons 101 Park Ave., New York City ' 90 John I. Bright 1701 Chestnut St., Philadelphia, Pa. ' 91 E. A. Poe 1604 Park Ave., Baltimore, Md. ' 92 V. L. Collins Princeton, N. J. ' 93 H. G Murray Princeton, N. J. ' 94 Malcolm Lloyd, Jr 328 Chestnut St., Philadelphia, Pa. ' 95 D. Q. Brown 11 Broadway, New York City ' 96 Dr. Charles Browne Princeton, N. J. ' 97 A. A. Gulick 120 Broadway, New York City ' 58 C. W. Halsey 842 Broadway, New York City ' 59 J. H. Harrison 810 Broad St., Newark, N. J. MEMBERS- ' 81 William T. Vlymen Hempstead, N. Y. ' 77 Francis Speir 52 Wall St., New York City ' 81 F. G. Landon 29 Broadway, New York City ' 87 A. H. Larkin 54 Wall St., New York City ' 87 W. S. Arbuthnot 801 Penn Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. ' 89 P. A. Rollins 32 Nassau St., New York City ' 91 G. F. McKinney 52 William St., New York City ' 91 L. C Woods Frick Bldg., Pittsburgh, Pa. ' 92 George William Burleigh. . .52 Wall St., New York City DISTRICT REPRESENTATIVES TO SERVE UNTIL OCTOBER, 1919 ' 79 F. H. Lord.. Room 305, 120 Liberty St., New York City ' 93 N. Booth Tarkington, or University Club, Seattle Wash. 1100 N. Penn Ave., Indianapolis, Ind. ' 00 John Stuart Railway Exchange Bldg., Chicago, 111. ' 95 Charles L. Hamilton. .815 Liberty Ave.. Pittsburgh, Pa. ' 03 T. S. McPheeters. Jr Rialto Bldg., St. Louis, Mo. ' 00 F. P. King 32 Nassau St., New York City ' 01 W. E. Hope 49 Wall St., New York City ' 02 Charles A. Cass 200 5th Ave., New York City ' 03 A. C. Smith, Jr 24 Broad St., New York City ' 04 Howard Henry Ft. Washington, Pa. ' 05 Coleman P. Brown 2222 Pine St., Philadelphia, Pa. ' 06 S. G. Etherington 341 5th Ave., New York City ' 07 G. S. Rentschler Hamilton, O. ' 08 A. C. Studer. Jr Montclair, N. J. ' 09 H. G. Tread well, Care of Tiffany Co., 5th Ave. and 37th St.. X. Y. C. ' 10 L. C. Butler 30 E. 72d St., New York City ' 11 Maitland D wight 150 E. 72d St., New York City ' 12 F. D. Halsey 25 W. 45th St., New York City ' 13 R. B. Thomas. Jr 259 Broadway, Flushing, N. Y. ' 14 J. M. Colt. Citizens ' Union, 41 Park Row, New York City ' 15 Donald Myrick 151 Bowdoin St., Springfield, Mass. ' 16 L. G. Payson Englewood, N. J. AT-LARGE ' 93 G. C. Fraser 20 Exchange Place, Nev York City ' 94 J. E. Bathgate. Jr., Care of John Darling Co., 456 4th Ave., New York City ' 95 A. C. Imbrie 320 Broadway, New York City ' 96 E. L. Ford Ford Bldg., Detroit, Mich. ' 98 H. C. Potter, Jr 605 Chestnut St., Philadelphia, Pa. ' 03 R. C. McNamara 623 S. Wabash Ave., Chicago, 111. ' 03 C. H. Higgins 30 Church St., New York City The Princeton Sric-a-Brac gfobrebtattong A. S., Alexander Hall, Seminary. B., Blair Hall. B. S., Brown Hall, Seminary. C. Campbell Hall. C ' y, Cuyler Hall. E. B., East Entry, David Brown Hall. E. M. W., East Middle Entry, Witherspoon Hall. E. W., East Entry, Witherspoon Hall. G. C, Graduate College. H., Holder Hall. H ' m, Hamilton Hall. H. S., Hodge Hall, Seminary. L., Stafford Little Hall. L. P., Lower Pyne Building. M., Madison Hall. M. D., Middle Entry, Albert B. Dod Hall. N., Nassau Hall. N. E., North Entry, Edwards Hall. N. M. R., North Middle Entry, Reunion Hall. N. R., North Entry, Reunion Hall. X. W., North Entry, West College. P., Patton Hall. S. D., South Entry, Albert B. Dod Hall. - S. E. B., South East Entry, David Brown Hall. S. E., South Entry, Edwards Hall. S M. R., South Middle Entry, Reunion Hall. S. W., South Entry, West College. S. W. B., South West Entry, David Brown Hall. T. H., Thomson Hall. U., University Hall. U. P., Upper Pyne Building. W. B., West Entry, David Brown Hall. W. M. W., West Middle Entry, Witherspoon Hall. ' 79 H., Seventy-nine Hall. The names of students are followed by the designation of their several classes ; the name of each student is followed also by an abbreviation indicating the department to which he belongs, viz.: a, Academic Dept. ; s, The John C. Green School of Science; e. e., The School of Electrical Engineering; f, Fellow; g, Graduate School; p. s„ partial student; q, qualifying. Officials in caps and small caps. 392 The Princeton Sri c- a.- Brae Umbersttp Putlbtngg ERECTED Nassau Hall 1756 The Dean ' s House 1756 Stanhope Hall 1803 Prospect 1849 Dickinson Hall 1870 The School of Science Building 1873 Chancellor Green Library 1873 Marquand Chapel 1881 ERECTED Chemical Laboratory 1891 Alexander Hall 1892 Isabella McCosh Infirmary 1892 McCosh Hall 1007 Palmer Physical Laboratory 1908 Guyot Hall 1009 University Dining Halls 1916 ©ormttorie DORMITORIES STUDENTS ACCOM. DORMITORIES STUDENTS ACCOM. West College 1863 64 Reunion Hall 1870 65 Witherspoon Hall 1877 80 Edwards Hall 1880 82 Dod Hall 1800 77 Brown Hall 1891 86 Blair Hall 1897, 1907 115 Little Hall 1899, 1902 no Upper Pyne Building 1896 19 Lower Pyne Building 1896 18 Seventy-nine Hall 1904 Patton Hall 1906 Campbell Hall 1909 Holder Hall 1910 Hamilton Hall 191 1 Cuyler Hall 1912 48 103 60 149 41 86 393 The Princeton Brie- a-irac Btrectorp NAME ADDRESS Aaron, M. L., ' 20 s 19 E. W. Abbett, S., ' 20 s 142 H. Adams, E. P., Professor 12 Nassau St. Ackerman, J. H., ' 19 s 96 B. Abbott, F. F., Professor 62 Battle Road Adams, D. J.. ' 20 s 10 P. Adriance, W. M., Ass ' t Professor, Lawrenceville Road, Princeton, R. D. 2 Agar, W. M., ' q 138 Nassau St. Alexander, J. W., Lecturer 34 Cleveland Lane Alford, D. C, ' 20 s 33 H. Alford, K. W., ' 10 s 33 H. Allen, W. M., ' 18 s 98 Nassau St. Allen, W. M., ' q 30 Wiggins St. Alvea. E. D., ' f 122 G. C. Alyea, E. P. V., ' 19 s I S. D. Amacker, D. M., ' 17 a 5 W. B. Amen, J. H., ' 19 a 6 A. C. Ames. K. L., Jr., ' 17 a 00 Nassau St. Ames. W. P., ' 19 s 134 H. Anderson, A., Jr., ' 19 s 12 B. Anderson, D. C, ' 20 s 5 N. D. Anderson, J. M., Jr., ' 19 s 9 S. E. B. Anderson, L. L., Jr., ' 18 a 5 E. B. Anderson, T. H., Jr., ' 17 s 2 S. E. B. Anderson, W. T., Tr., ' 20 s Trenton, N. J. Annin, W. S., ' 17 s 8 N. E. Anspach, M. R, ' 19 s 3 B. Armour, A.. 2nd, ' 19 a 14 C. Armstrong, J. N., Jr., ' 20 a 17 E. W. Armstrong. S. W., ' i8 s 261 C ' y. Arnold, C. F., ' 17 a 12 S. D. Arnold, C. L., l8 a 17 S. E. Arnold, D. R. J., Jr., ' 18 s 121 L. Aronsohn. N. H., ' 19 s 132 H. Arrott, C. R.. ' 18 s 31 C. Arrowsmith, W. W. W., ' 19 a 44 H. NAME ADDRESS Ash, H. J., ' 20 a 39 University PI. Auerbach, S. M., ' 19 s 06 H. Auger, L. F., ' 19 s 6 S. D. Averbeck, M. J., Jr., ' 17 a 4 W. W. Azoy, G. V., ' 20 s 15 Edwards PI. Babcock, W. E., Jr., ' 20 a 47 University PI. Babson. T. E., ' 18 s 144 C ' y. Bade, W. H., ' 19 s 52 L. Baer, H. M., ' 19 s 14 L. Bahrenburg, C. A., ' 17 a 124 H. Bailey, G. O., ' 10 a 22 H ' m. Baird, E. W., Jr., ' 20 s ! 75 H. Baird, W. J., Jr., ' 20 s 13 U. P. Baker, F. C, ' 18 s 152 L. Baker. H. D., ' 20 s 15 Edwards PI. Baker, M. M., ' 18 s 24 B. Baker, W. R., Jr., ' 19 s 7 U. P. Ball, F. S., ' q 19 Bank St. Ball, G. L., ' 10 s 22 P. Barba, P. S., ' 17 s 27 C. Barber, L. H.. Jr., ' q 3 N. D. Bardwell, D. E., ' q 56 Jefferson Rd. Barker, F. M., ' 20 s 312 H ' m. Barker. L. V., 18 s 4 N. R. Barksdale, R. H,, ' g 34 G. C. Barnard, B. W., ' f 8 A. G. C. Barnett, R. F., ' 19 s 122 L. Barnitz, W. B., ' 17 s 43 ' 79 H. Barnum, P. T., ' 17 s 23 L. Barret, J. H., ' 18 a 34 H. Barrett. M. K., ' 17 s 5 S. R. Barton, H. A., ' q 11 H ' m. Baskerville, A. P., ' 20 a 15 Vandeventer Ave. Basore. J. W., Ass ' t Professor 101 Library PI. Bassett. R., ' 20 s 14 Edwards PI. Bates, B. B., ' 20 s 1 U. P. Battles. G. K., ' 19 s 7 L. P. 394 The Princeton Bric-a-grac Utrrctorj (Continueb) NAME ADDRESS Bauer, J., Ass ' t Professor 269 Nassau St. Bauernschmidt, G. W., ' 20 s 6 S. W. B. Bauhan, G. L. T., ' 19 s 17 N. W. Bayer, E. S., Jr., ' 19 a 21 H. Bayly, C. E., ' 18 s 2 A. C. Beat, J. H., Jr., ' 20 s 142 H. Beal, W. R., ' 18 a 90 P. Beattie, K. W., ' 19 s 83 P. Beatty, W. H., ' q 15 L. Bechtel, J. G, ' 20 s 8 B. H. Becker, E. P., ' 18 s 12 S. M. R. Beckhardt, B. H., ' 19 a 5 V. M. W. Beekman, L., ' 18 s 34 C. Beggs, G. E., Ass ' t Professor 78 Jefferson Road Behrer, A., ' 17 a 12 N W. Bell, C. C., Jr., ' 19 s 105 H. Bell, W. W., Jr., ' 19 s 81 B. Benade, J. M., Assistant 4 A. G. C. Bender, H. H., Ass ' t Professor 120 Fitz Randolph Road Benrimo, P., ' q 39 University PI. Benton, A. F., Assistant 11 G. C. Berl, C. W., ' 17 s 82 Nassau St. Bettes, J. J.. ' 17 s 11 B. Betts, C. M„ 3rd, ' 17 s 14 N. M. R. Beury, W. M„ ' f 126 G. C. Bevin, A. W., ' q 5 S. M. R. Bevin, N. P., 2nd, ' 17 s 13 S. W. Beziat, Andre, Instructor 21 Chambers St. Bieler, L. H.. ' 18 a n H. Bigelow, D. F., ' 20 s 12 W. W Biggs, J., Jr., ' 18 s 42 C. Bingham, A. H., ' 18 s 02 B. Bippus, G. J., ' q 2 S. W. B. Bishop, J. P., ' 17 s 9 W. W. Bitten, R. M., ' 19 s 2 N E Bixler, D. S., ' 18 s 42 H. Black, E., ' 20 s 83 B Black, J. B„ ' 17 s 7 S. M. R. NAME ADDRESS Black. L. W., ' 20 s . . . : 16 S. E. Black, W., ' 18 a 93 H. Black, W. T., ' 17 a 7 B. H. Blair, F. W., Assistant 55 Jefferson Road Blake, O., ' 18 s 33 C. Blake, R. M., Instructor 84 G. C. Blakely, H. B., ' g 408 H. S. Blau, M. F., Professor 42 Princeton Ave. Blauvelt, H. B., ' 20 a :..-.. .25 C. Blavnev, W. L., ' 18 s 133 H. Bleakley, G. R., ' 19 s 10 W. M. W. Bleecker, L. L., ' 19 s 10 W. M. W. Bloom, F. E., ' 17 s 304 H ' m. Blossom, F. M., ' q 7 S. W. B. Blue, R. E., ' 20 s 8 W. B. Blumberg, L., ' 18 s 6 S. W. Bluntschli, H. A., ' 17 s 114 B. Boadway, W. M., ' 17 a 52 C. Boardman, L, ' 18 s 11 A. H. Boaz, W. G., ' 17 s 16 L. Bohlen, F. H.. Jr., ' 17 s 68 L. Bohmfolk, J. F., ' 17 s 113 B. Boland, A. V., ' g 202 H. S. Bonhright, C. W., ' 18 s 34 C. Bond, G. A., ' q Hill Bond, H. S., ' 20 s 12 S. W. B. Boone, W. K.. Jr., ' 20 s 12 A. H. Bostick, B. H., ' 19 s 343 C ' y. Boutroux, P. L., Professor Absent on leave Bovey, W. H.. ' 17 s 143 C ' y. Bowdoin, G. E., ' 20 s 7 A. H. Bowers, R. H., ' q 1 S. R. Bowman, A. A., Professor Absent on leave Bowman, H. M., ' 19 s 66 Nassau St Bowman, H. N., ' g 18 Madison St. Bowman, J. A., ' 0 164 Nassau St. Boyd, J. C, ' 18 s. 21 B. Boyd, J. R., ' 20 s 9 E. M. W. 395 The Princeton gric-a-Srac JBittttotp (Continueb) NAME ADDRESS Brackenridge, G., ' 17 s 8 N. W. Bradley, L. C, Jr., ' 18 s 34 H. Bowman, W. M., ' 18 s 20 W. W. Brahana, H. R., ' f 81 G. C. Brakeley, H. H., Jr., ' 18 s 8 S. E. B. Brandon, C. A., ' 20 s II Alexander St. Bray, A. R., ' 19 s 12 M. D. Brenner, C. D., ' f 12 G. C. Brenner, J. P, ' 18 s B. W. B. Brereton, O. H. D., ' q 31 S. E. Brewster, D. B., ' 18 s 81 H. Brewster, S. E., ' 18 s 163 L. Brigham, C. C., Instructor 16 S. W. Brigham, H. F., ' 20 s Branch Bldg. Brindle, R. H., ' 19 a 9 W. M. W. Brock, B. M., ' 20 s 15 N. D. Brook, J., Jr., ' 20 s 22 Spruce St. Brooks, E. J., ' 20 s 19 Edwards PI. Brooks, W. H., Jr., ' 20 s 31 L. Brotemarkle, R. A., ' g 12 A. S. Brown, A. C., ' 17 s 26 C. Brown, C. E., Jr., ' 17 a 62 ' 79 H. Brown, F. W., ' g 210 H. S. Brown, G. D., Reference Librarion 1 S. W. B. Brown, J. D., ' 19 s 17 S. W. Brown, P. M., Professor 15 Boudinot St. Brown, R. E., ' 20 s 8 W. B. Brown, S. M., ' g 14 D. G. C. Brubaker, R. E.. ' 17 a 49 B. S. Bruce, D. K. E., ' 19 a 1 A. H ' m. Brunnow, R. E.. Professor Edgehill Stockton St. Bruns, F. W., Jr., ' 20 s 101 B. Bryan, F. T., ' 18 s 22 ' 79 H. Bryan, J. E., ' 19 s 64 Nassau St. Brvan, S. S., ' 17 s 65 B. Bryan, W. B., Jr.. ' 20 s 25 C. Bryon, A. R., ' 20 s 31 University PI. Buchanan, J. C., ' 18 a 12 C. NAME ADDRESS Buchanan, P. H. ' 17 s 12 N. W. Buddington, A. F., ' g 1 A. G. C. Buechner, C. F., Jr., ' 20 s 10 P. Buell, W. A., ' 18 a 14 ' 79 H. Buermeyer, L. L,., ' f 73 G. C. Buffington, J. S., ' 20 s 14 Edwards PI. Buffum, D. L., Professor 60 Hodge Road Bulkley, H. K., ' 19 a 2 N. D. Bullock, H., ' 17 a 3 S. E. B. Bunting, G. C, ' 20 a 80 P. Burch, H. J., ' 18 s 54 C. Burchenal, C. H.. ' 17 s : 92 H. Burger, F. C., ' 20 s 310 H ' m. Burke, J. L., ' 20 s 24 Hill Burkelman, M., ' 19 s 12 Park PI. Burkert, G. C, ' 18 a 48 Mercer St. Burnham, C. E., Choirmaster 31 University PI. Burns, J. H.. Jr., ' 18 s 14 B. Burns, R. W., ' 17 s Buschman, L. V.. ' g 20 A. S. Bush, S., ' 17 s 15 S. W. Butler, C. M., ' 20 s 85 P. Butler, F. D., ' 19 s 6 S. D. Butler, H. C, Professor Pyne Tower, G. C. Butler, H. F., ' 20 s 113 H. Butler, H. R., Jr., ' 20 s 113 H. Butler. S. M., ' 19 s 143 H. Butt, S. M., ' 17 a 307 H ' m. Butts, J. R., ' 20 s 6 N. D. Butts, L. M., ' 18 s 11 H. Butz, H. A., ' 18 a 9 S. R. Buzby, G. C., ' 19 s 12 P. Cabell. P. F., ' 19 s 9 B. Caesar. C. U.. ' 18 s 72 P. Caffrey, H. F., ' 20 s. . ' . II Vandeventer Ave. Cale, G. W., ' 17 s 43 ' 79 H. Callery. F., ' 20 s 32 H. Callisen, S. A., ' 20 s 15 Vandeventer Ave. 396 The {Princeton Bri c- a- B r ac ©(rector? (Conttnueo) NAME ADDRESS Cameron, C. E., ' 20 s 6 M. D. Cameron, T. D., ' 17 a I N. E. Cameron, W. B., ' 18 a 361 C ' y. Campbell, J. G., ' 19 a 141 L. Campbell, J. G., ' 20 s 18 E. W. Campbell, M. A., Instructor. . .Cuvler Place, Mt. Lucas Road Campbell, N. I., ' 18 s 10 N. R. Cannon, J., 3rd, ' g 105 H. S. Cannon, R. A., ' 20 a 4 N. M. R. Capers, T. S., g 54 B. S. Capps, Edward, Professor, 150 Fitz-Randolph Rd. Carey, T. D., ' g 103 H. S. Carkener, S., and, ' 19 s 63 ' 79 H. Carnochan, J. M., M. D., Univ. Physician 34 Mercer St. Carothers, N., Ass ' t Professor 35 Park PI. Carpenter, J. W., ' 17 s 6 W. M. W. Carrick, C. L., Jr., ' 20 a n M. D. Carruthers, J. F. B., ' g 32 A. S. Carson, C. W., ' 20 a 15 Edwards PI. Carter, F. B., ' 19 s 462 C ' y. Carter, K. K., ' 19 s 5 S. W. B. Carty. J. R., ' 17 s 123 H. Carver. A. B., ' 18 s 2 L. P. Cary, L. R, Ass ' t Professor 36 Wiggins St. Casey, C M., ' 19 s 7 S. D. Cator, H. T., ' 17 a 2 A. H ' m. Cerf, L. M., Jr., ' 19 s 95 P. Chamberlin, J. R., ' 17 s 82 Nassau St. Chamberlin, P. M., ' 20 s 33 S. E. Chamberlin, W. B., Jr., ' 17 s I2 X X Vandeventer Ave. Chambers, H. R., Jr., ' 18 a 138 Nassau St. Chapin, H., ' 17 s 451 C ' y. Chapin, S., ' 20 s 31 University PI. Chaplin, D. D., Jr., ' 17 s 413 C ' y. Chapman, P. A., Instructor 6 A. H. Chappell, W. F., Jr., ' 20 a 2 C. H. Charles, M. A., ' 17 s 38 N. E. Charles, M. G., ' 19 s 47 University PI. NAME ADDRESS Chase, G. H., 3rd, ' 20 a 8 U. P. Cheng, S. T., ' 18 s 6 S. M. R. Cherry, G. D., ' 18 s 44 ' 79 H. Chester, N. M., ' 17 s 32 P. Childs, E. E., ' q 36 N. E. Christie, A. E., ' 18 a 8 S. R. Christmas, F. B., ' 19 a 66 Nassau St. Church, R. N. L., ' g 12 Boudinot St. Clark, C, ' 20 s 75 H. Clark, E., Instructor 35 Jefferson Road Clark, H. M., ' 19 s 53 H. Clark, M. E., ' 20 s 40 N. E. Clark, P. M., ' 20 s Hill Clark, R. D., ' 19 s 3 S. W. B. Clark, W. L., ' 19 s 9 A. H. Clarkson, W. F., ' 17 s 116 Nassau St. Cleveland, R. F., ' 19 a 6 A. C. Close, G. F., Editor of Official Publications. Closson, J. H., 3rd, ' 17 s 27 C Clowney, F. S., ' 18 s 33 B. Coan, W. J., Proctor 7 N. Cobb, A. L., Jr.. ' 20a 93 P. Cochran, R. A., 3rd, ' 17 a 41 S. E. Cockfield, W. E., ' f 1 B. G. C. Coffey, A. H., ' 17 s 7 N. W. Coffey, E. H., Jr., ' 20 s Hill Coffin, S. B., ' 18 s 11 S. E. B. Cohen, R. S., ' 19s... ' . 66 C. Cohn, B. W., ' 20 s 39 University PI. Cohu, W. H., ' 17 s 154 L. Cohu, L. M. T.. ' 17 s 154 L. Collins, V. L., Professor 214 Western Way Colwell, K. G, ' 17 s 20 P. Colwell, R. C, ' g 21 G. C. Comey, H. D., ' 17 s 241 C ' y Comly, S. N., ' 19 s 352 C ' y. Compton, K. T., Ass ' t Professor 58 Murray Place Compton, S. H., ' 17 a 30 P. 397 The Princeton Bric-a-Srac ML Dirrrtori ' (Continueb) NAME ADDRESS Compton. W. R., Jr., ' 20 s 19 University PI. Comstock, F. A., ' 19 s 12 H ' m. Conant, S. D., ' q 7 L. P. Condit, K. H., Instructor 95 Library Place Conger, K. B., Jr., ' 20 s 39 Univers : tv PI. Conine, F. W. ( ' 18 s 8 S. E. B. Cctnklin, E. G., Professor 139 Broadmead Conklin, H. E., ' g 11 C. G. C Connelly, H. P., ' 20 s 72 L. Connett, W. B., ' g 114 G. C. Constant, F. H., Professor Battle Road Cook, C. H., ' 19 s 19 S. W. Cook, C. S., ' 18 s 92 B. Cook, F. R., ' 20 s 46 Hill Cook, P. H., ' 17 a 3 S. R. Cooke, G. C, ' 20 s 1 23 L. Cooke, H. L., Ass ' t Professor Absent on leave Cooke, J., 2nd, ' 19 a 73 H. Cooke, J., ' 19 s 71 L. Cooper, E. N., ' 19 s 95 B. Cooper, F. S., ' 19 a 76 H. Cooper, N. H., ' 18 s 9 W. B. Cooper, P., ' 17 a 13 W. W. Cooper, S. I., ' 17 s 64 ' 79 H. Copeland, A. T., ' 17 s 26 C. Corkran, D. C, ' 18 s 3 C. H. Cornwall, H. B., Professor Emeritus 12 Morven St. Corson, D. N., ' 18 s 172 Nassau St. Corwin, E. S., Professor 115 Prospect Ave. Cory, B. H., ' 18 a 90 P. Cory, H. L., ' 17 s -.30 P. Cosgrave, J. S., Ass ' t to the Treasurer Stanhope Hall Cotton, J. P., ' 20 s 7 W. M. W. Cotton, W. M., ' 17 a 91 B. Covington, H. F., Professor 34 Edgehill St. Cowan, J. B., Jr., ' 20 s T04 P. Cox, I. J., ' 19 s 19 W. W. Coxe, H. C, ' 20 a 342 C ' y. name address Cragoe, C. S., Instructor 142 G. C. Cramer, K. F., ' f 92 G. C. Crane. B. F., ' 20 a 16 Park PI. Crane, F. R, ' 18 s 3 A. H. Crawford, R. L., 3rd, ' 17 a 4 S. W. B. Creese, J., Jr., ' 18 s 9 N. R. Cresswell, R., 3rd, ' 19 a 73 H. Criscitiello, M., Jr., ' 17 a 22 N. E. Critchlow, F. L., Ass ' t Pofessor 6 Mercer St. Crocker, E. S., Jr., ' 18 a 9 A. H. Crocker, F. S., ' 20 a Hill Croll, W. M., Ass ' t Professor 6 N. R. Cromelin, J. S.. ' 18 s 19 N. E. Cromwell, J., ' 18 a 74 H. Cronin. E. M., ' 18 s 3 B. H ' m. Crossley, A. M., ' 18 a 23 William St. Crouse, W. S., ' 20 a 163 Nassau St. Crowell, N. H., ' f 40 Mercer St. Cudlipp, C, ' 19 s 106 P. Culver, H. S., ' 17 s 1 N. M. R. Cuneo, J. C, ' 17 s 18 N. W. Currie, E. W., ' 18 s 9 S. E. Cushman, H. B., ' 18 s 82 Nassau St. Cutler, R. H., ' 17 s 5 M. D. Cutting, A. B., ' 18 s 34 ' 79 H. Dabney, L. M., Jr., ' 20 a, Dahlgren, U., Professor 7 Evelyn Place Dall, C. B., ' 20 s 31 P. Dane, N. B., ' 20 s 15 N. D. Danforth. D., ' 20 s 19 University PI. Daniell, J. R., ' 20 s 15 Edwards PI. Davis, J. C, ' 19 s 6 E. B. Davis, R., Supt. of Grounds and Buildings. .. .Stanhope Hall Day, K. M., ' 17 a 15 L. Dean, P. N., ' 20 s 15 Edwards PI. Dear, J. A., Jr., ' 20 s 11 W. W. Decker, C. S., ' q n H ' m. Decker, J. D., ' 18 s 101 P. 398 The Princeton f§ric-a.-E$ra.c 6 J itutotp (Continued) NAME ADDRESS Dederick, L. S., Instructor 23 William St. Deferrari, R. J., Instructor 41 University PI. DeGray, H. B.. ' 18 s 17 B. Deitsch, F. J., ' 17 a 65 C. DeLacy, W. B. J.. ' 18 a 98 Nassau St. DeLanoy, D., ' 17 a 15 L. P. Dell, G. W., ' 20 s 22 Vandeventer Ave. DeLong, C. F., ' 10 a 22 P. Demarest, K. E.. ' 20 s 34 P. DeMaris, F. A.. Jr., ' 20 s 32 S. E. Demorest, G. C., ' 17 a 41 H. Dempsey, W. L., ' 17 s 25 S. E. Denby, J. O., ' 19 s 161 L. Denison, J. M., ' 17 s 84 H. Dennis, H. V. M., ' 18 a 144 L. Dennis, J. P., ' 20 s 10 Madison St. Dent, E., Jr., ' 18 s 14 U. P. Deuel. F. S., ' 20 s 80 P. Dewald, E. T.. ' f 54 G. C. Dewing. H. B., Ass ' t Professor 132 Mercer St. Devo, H. N., ' 20 s it Alexander St. DeYoe, W. L. L., ' 17 s 162 C ' y. Dibert, G. A., ' 19 s 43 B. Dibrell, E. R., ' 19 s 61 L. Dickinson, H. M., ' 19 s A. B. Dickinson, J., ' f 15 B. G. C. Dickey, P. B., ' 17 a 185 L. Dieckman, C. J., Dillon. M. S, ' 17 a 62 P. Dimmitt, H. S.. ' 20 a 11 S. W. B. Dingee, A. L. M., ' 19 s 53 L. Dirks, H. B., Ass ' t Professor 80 Jefferson Rd. Dittmer, W. A., Instructor 144 G. C. Dixon, F. A., ' 20 s 39 University PI. Dixon. W., ' q 30 S. E. Dobie, L. B., Assistant 54 Murray PI. Dodd, J. A., ' 19 s 16 B. Dodd. J. L., ' 18 s 3 A. C. name address Dodd, S. T., Jr., ' 20 s. 20 S. E. Dolan. H. H., ' 20 a 184 L. Donahue, C. W., ' 17 s 141 C ' y. Donner, C. H., ' 20 s 83 P. Donner, J. W., ' 17 s 13 ' 79 H. Donoho, J. F., ' 18 s 42 H. Dorrance, E. R., ' 17 s 311 H ' m. Doughertv, G., ' 17 s 101 L. Dougherty, W. M., ' 18 s 1 E. M. W. Douglas, E. O., ' 19 a 309 H ' m. Douglas, F. H., ' 20 a 15 University PI. Douglas, J. H., Jr., ' 20 s 10 M. D. Downing, B. C., ' 19 s 11 X. W. Downs, W. H., ' 20 s 162 L. Doye, E. W., ' 18 s 1 D. H ' m. Doyle, H. W., ' 19 s 22 H ' m. Dresser, S. R., ' 17 s 61 P. Dreyfuss. S. W., ' 19 s 62 H. Driggs, E. H., ' 17 s 41 P. Drohan, J. H. ' 18 a 5 E. M. W. Drorbaugh, W., ' 17 s 54 ' 79 H. Drowne, H. R., ' 20 a 19 University PI. Dubbs, H. M., ' 18 a 10 S. W. B. DuBois. L. T., ' 19 s 107 P. Dudgeon, A., ' 18 s 311 C ' y. Duffield, H. G., Treasurer Stanhope Hall Ducan, R. S., Ass ' t Professor 40 Patton Ave. Duncan. W. G., ' 18 a 12 H. Dunlevv, R. A., ' q 2 W. W. Dunn, H. T., ' 17 s 3W.M.W. Dunn, R. H., ' 19 s 20 N. W. Dunn, R. P., ' 19 s 42 L. Dunn, W. C. ' 19 s 33 L. Dunphy, E. B , ' 18 s 11 S. M. R. du Pont, G. F., ' 20 s 28 Vandeventer Ave. Durbin, J. W., ' 20 s 4 Hill Durell, A. W., Jr.. ' 17 s 143 L. Durell, E., ' 17 s 2 B. H ' m. 399 The Princeton Bric-a.-Pra.c ■s . Btrcctorp (Continued) NAME ADDRESS Durham, D. B., Ass ' t Professor 72 University PI. Eaby, C. R., Jr., ' 18 s 31 B. Eberhardt, M. A., ' 17 s 131 H. Eberstadt, R., ' 17 a 6 W. B. Eddy, J. E., ' 17 s 90 Nassau St. Eddy, W. A., ' 17 s Murray Dodge Hali Edgar, M. L., ' 17 a 2 E. M. W. Edgar, M. S., ' 17 a 2 E. M. W. Edgar, W. J. B., ' 19 a 6 N. M. R. Edgar, W. L., ' q 142 C ' y. Fells, E. E., ' g 20? H. S. Eells, H., ' g 203 H. S. Fgerton, F. N., Jr., Instructor 101 G. C. Egner, H. F., ' 20 s 123 L. Egner, J. E., ' 19 s 33 B. Ehret, H. S., Jr., ' 20 s 30 Mercer St. Etseniiart, L. P., Professor 22 Alexander St. Elder, J. C, ' 18 a 3 N. R. Elderk !N. G. W., Ass ' t Professor The Bachelors Eldridge, H. R., Jr., ' 18 s 183 L. Eldridge, R. L., ' 18 s 183 L. Elgin, C. P., ' 19 s 19 N. W. Ellicott, T. A., ' q 10 N. M. R. Elliott, J. S., ' 18 a 4 E. W. Elson, H. A., ' g 23 G. C. Elwood, S. W., ' 20 s 1 U. P. England, C. E., ' 18 s 44 ' 79 H. English, G. M., ' 20 s 321 C ' v. English, T. H., ' q 24 N. E. Eno, PI. L.. Research Associate 78 Stockton St. Enos, E. M., ' 20 s 221 C ' y. F.pplev, M., Lecturer Edgerstoune Erdman, C. R., Jr., ' 19 a 20 Library PI. Erskine, L. G.. ' 18 s 17 B. Errington, R. N., ' 17 s 12 N. M. R. Ertel, B. H., ' 17 s S3 ' 79 H. Ftheridge, H. A., Jr., ' 19 s 43 B. Etter, B. F., ' 17 s 44 B. NAME ADDRESS Evans, T. S., Sec ' y Philadelphian Society Murray-Dodge Everitt, J. W., ' 17 s 71 H. Ewart, J. J., ' 18 s 4 VV. M. W. Ewing, M. H., ' 18 s 3 S. D. Eynon, G. L., ' 20 a 27 Vandeventer Ave. Fahys, J., 2nd, ' 20 s 310 H ' m. Fairgrieve, J. T., ' 19 s 12 N. E. Faison, J. B., ' q 18 Bank St. Farr, J. M., 3rd, ' 20 s 10 E. B. Farr, M. S., Ass ' t Professor 20 Vandeventer Ave. Farr, V. B., ' 17 s 20 Vandeventer Ave. Farrar, C. B., Lecturer .-..Trenton, N. J. Farrelly, R. L„ ' 18 a 103 B. Fawcett, A. H., ' 20 s 3 W. B. Fennelly, J. F., Jr., ' 20 s 22 L. Fetter, F. A., Professor 121 Broadmead Feustman, B. T., ' 17 s 13 N. E. Field, J. B„ ' 20 s 11 S, W. B. Fine, H. B., Professor 73 Library Place Fine, H. B., ' 20 s 5 N. M. R. Fine, S. G., ' 17 a 7 Madison St. Finney, E. D.. ' 19 s 42 P. Firestone. H. S., Jr., ' 20 s 5 U. P. Fish. H. M., ' 19 s 32 ' 79 H. Fishburn. J. P., ' 1.8 s , 22 C. Fisher, D. W., Instructor 41 G. C. Fisher, E. T., ' 20 s 47 University PI. Fisher, Frederick, Mechanician 10 Dickinson St. Fisher, J., Jr., ' 20 s 7 A. H. Fite, W., Professor 138 Fitz-Randolph Road Fitzgerald, F. S.. ' q 185 L Flaig, J. V, ' 20 s 13 N. D. Fleece, C. I... Instructor 54 Murray PI. Fleming, H. G., ' 20 s IS Edwards PI. Fletcher, W. M., ' 19 s 73 B. Fhnn, L. B., ' 18 a 82 P. Fogei., P. H., Ass ' t Professor 8 S. W. Fogler, R. H., Assistant 11 B. G. C. 400 The Princeton Bric-a-Brac Mvettotp (Continue )) NAME ADDRESS Folmer, W. F., ' 20 s 14 E. W. Folwell, C. H., Jr., ' 17 s 52 H. Ford, H. J., Professor Nassau Inn Ford, H. W., ' q 24 ' 79 H. Foresman, R. H., ' 20 s 8 N. W. Forster, E. H., ' 17 a 7 M. D. Foster. C. I., ' 20 s 4 U. P. Foster, E. D., ' 18 s 38 L. Foster, J. A., Jr., ' 18 s 73 P. Foster, J. M., ' 17 a 7 N. D. Foster, P. VV., Jr., ' 17 s 24 ' 79 H. Foster, R. A., ' g 23 G. C. Foster, W., Professor 41 Battle Road Fowler, E. A., ' 19 s 7 B. Fowler, L. S., ' 17 a 121 H. Fowler, O., ' 17 a 363 C ' y. Fox, G. G., ' 20 a 3 W. B. Fox, L. P.. Instructor I2J4 Vandeventer Ave. Fox, W. S., Ass ' t Professor 21 Jefferson Road France, L. A., ' 18 s 1 S. E. Frank. W. W., ' 19 s 15 S. E. Frankel, G. A., ' 19 s 15 E. W. Franks, R. A., Jr., ' 17 s 41 ' 79 H. Franz, J. N., ' 20 s 4 VV. B. Frantz, S. G., ' 18 s 9 N. R. Fraser, A. A., ' 19 s 21 H ' m. Fraser, G. C. Jr., ' 20 s 2 C. H. Frazier, H. S., ' 19 a Hill Freck, S. G. ' 19 s 33 P. Freeborn, VV. L,., ' 19 a 10 Madison St. French, N. R., Instructor 11 B. G. C. Frey, H. E.. ' 20 s 29 N. E. Friend, A. M., Jr., ' f 42 G. C. Fringer, D. L. B., ' 20 s 7 S. E. Fritts, F., Ass ' t Professor 31 G. C. Frost. H. W., Jr., ' 10 s 21 L. Frost, J. H., ' 17 s 12 E. B. Fullerton, H. S., ' g 81 G. C. NAME ADDRESS Fundenburg, G. B., ' g 94 G. C. Funk, G. W., ' 19 s 51 B. Funsten, R. F., ' 17 s 20 P. Furman, N. H., ' f 14 B. G. C. Fyffe, W. B., ' 20 s 8 S. W. B. Gabriel, E., e.e 1 S. E. Gailey, J. VV., ' 17 s 12 N. M. R. Galt, G. McF., Secretary Bureau of Self Help.. 48 Mercer St. Gardner, E. R., ' 19 s 11 P. Garnaus, C. E., ' 20 s 10 E. M. W. Garside, H. R., ' 17 s 2 B. C. Garvey, J. M., ' 17 s 243 C ' y. Garrett, VV. B., ' 17 s 310 H ' m. Garrigues, C. M., ' 20 s 19 University PI. Garrigues, VV. A., Jr., ' 19 s 106 P. Gauss, C, Professor 106 Fitz-Randolph Road Gaver, VV. U., ' 20 s 14 Edwards PI. Gebhard, H. E., ' g 15 Dickinson St. Geissinger, M. N., ' q 12 Chambers St. Gennert, A. G., ' 17 a 104 H. Georgi, C. H., ' 20 s 72 B. Georgi, E. A., ' 19 s 5 S. E. B. Gerould, G. H., Professor 341 Nassau St. Gerstell, R. S., ' 17 s 92 H. Gerstley, H. E., ' 20 s H : ll Gibboney, D. C. ' 18 s 24 B. Gibson. H. F, ' 17 s 11 ' 79 H. Gillespie, G, ' q 138 Nassau St. Gillespie, VV.. Professor 12 Bank St. Gillespie, J. P., ' 20 a 10 L P. Gillette, A. A., ' 18 a 60 P. Gilliam, O. L... ' g 305 H. S. Gillies, R. C, ' 18 s .32 N. E. Gilmour, B. F, ' 17 s 1 S. E. Giraud, A. P.. ' f 1 B. G. C. Given, J. B., jr.. ' 17 s 4 L. P. Glorieux, G. R., ' q 5 N. VV. Godfrey, S.. ' 18 s 31 B. 401 The Princeton JSric-a.-E§ra.c 2Strectori (Continued) NAME ADDRESS Goldman, R. S., ' 10, s 132 H. Goldsmith, R., ' 19 a 7 R Goldstein, I., ' 18 a 9 S. W. Goodchild, D., ' 18 a. . . 27 M. D. Goodspeed, M., ' 18 s. 14 ' 79 H. Gordon, B., ' 18 a 8 E. W. Gordon, H. B., Jr., ' 18 s 1 I, P. Gordon, N. T„ ' f 18 Madison St. Gorter, T. P., ' 18 a 98 Nassau St. Goss, B. C., Instructor 18 Madison St. Gould, M. S., ' 20 s 39 University PI. Gowen, J. E., ' 17 a 171 L. Gowing, E. P., ' 18 s 3 S. D. Gray, G. B., Jr., ' 20 s 93 P. Gray, J. H., ' 20 s Hill Gray, W. S., Jr., ' 19 a 14 H ' m. Greason, H. S„ ' 18 s 25 M. D Green, J. S., Jr., ' g 61 G. C. Green, T. B., ' 18 a in L. Greene, A. M., ' 19 a 32 C. Greenleaf, G. E., ' 20 s 23 N. E. Greenleaf, W. J., ' g 103 G. C. Gregor, C. R., ' 20 a 31 University PI. Gregory, G. C, ' 18 s 112 H. Gregory, T. W., Jr., ' 19 s 84 B. Grier, J. L.. ' g 408 H. S. Griffin, N. E., Ass ' t Professor 14 N. D. Griffith, G. W., ' 18 s 101 H. Griffith, R. M., ' 18 a 16 N. W. Griffiths, W. D., ' 19 a 19 S. W. Grinnell, H. L., ' q 138 Nassau St. Groover, A. B., ' 19 s 222 C ' y. Groi ' .s, H., Infirmarian Infirmary Guerin, I. A., ' 18 a 6 E. M. W. Guetin. S. V., ' 19 s 31 ' 79 H. Guigou, S. C., Instructor 58 Wiggins St. Guilbert, F. W., ' 19 s 40 P. Guild, H. H., ' q 15 M. D. NAME ADDRESS Guy, D. W., ' 19 s 312 C ' y. Guy, W. E., Jr., ' 17 a 332 C ' y. Haaren, E. C, ' 18 s 98 Nassau St. Haas, C., ' 17 s 1 M. D. Hackney, G. E., ' 20 s 3 S. E. Hadden, C, 3rd, ' 17 a 43 P. Haffner, W. B., ' 18 s 164 L. Hagemeyer, J. G., ' 20 a 15 University PI. Haigh, T. D., ' 20 a 39 University PI. Haire, R. H., ' q 11 N. E. Hall, C. R., Ass ' t Professor 58 University PI. Hall, P. E., ' 17 s . 10 S. R. Hall, W. P., Ass ' t Professor 26 Prospect Ave. Halsey, V., ' 18 s 65 H. Halstead, A., Jr., ' 20 s 12 U. P. Halsted, D. M., ' 20 s 42 B. Hamilton, M. M., ' q 42 N. E. Hamilton, R. L., ' 20 s 24 Dickinson St. Hamilton, W. H., Jr., ' 20 a 24 H ' m. Hamilton, W. P., ' 18 a 61 B. Hammer, W. T., ' 18 s 63 P. Hammond, A. P., ' 18 a 24 L. Hammond, R. S., ' 17 s 4 E. M. W. Hampe, W. W., ' 18 s 5 A. C. Hanzsche, W. T., ' g 4 A. S. Happer, A. P., 3rd, ' 20 s 94 P. Hardin, J. R., Jr., ' 17 s 32 B. Harding, E. A., Assistant 52 Jefferson Road Harding, L. L-, ' 17 s 21 ' 79 H. Hargest, T. S., 2nd, ' 19 a 6 S. E. B. Hargreaves, P. L., ' 19 a 7 Park PI. Haring, H. E., ' g 15 D. G. C. Haring, M. M., Assistant 15 D. G. C. Haring, N. W., ' 19 a 93 B. Harlan, J. M., ' 20 a 308 H ' m. Harland, J. P., ' f 148 G. C. Hawer, G. M., Professor 36 Mercer St. Harper, G. M., Jr., ' 20 a 14 S. W. 402 fhe Princeton Sric-a-Br ac ©trcctorp ((Honttnucb) NAME ADDRESS Harper, R. A., ' i8 s 12 E. W. Harper, W. P., ' 18 s 163 Nassau St. Harris, A. K., ' 19 s 66 H. Harris, E., ' 20 s 131 L. Harris, E., 2nd, ' 17 a 62 ' 79 H. Harris, S. E., ' 17 a 15 S. W. Harris, W. B., Professor 5 Greenholm Harris, W. B., Jr., ' 17 a 5 Greenholm H arris, W. I., ' 20 a 26 M. D. Harrison, H. C, ' 20 s 82 H. Harrison, H. C, Jr., ' 18 a 43 L. Harrison, J. D., ' f 33 G. C. Hartshorne, R., ' 20 s 14 S. E. Hartshorne, R. D., ' 20 s 82 H. Harvey, C. P., ' 20 s 16 S. E. Harvey, E. N., Ass ' t Professor 293 Nassau St. Harvey, H. H., ' q 16 S. E. Hasslacher, C. A.. ' 19 s 312 C ' y. Hasslacher, G. F., ' 17 s 44 B. Hatch. P. C., ' 20 s 31 University PI. Hastings, E. T., ' q 25 N. E. Haupt, D. D. M., ' q 16 S. M. R. Haviland, S. T., ' 20 a 4 A. C. Hawkins, G., ' 19 s 1 W. W. Hax, W. B. F., ' 19 s 1 E. B. Hayes, E. M., ' q 52 University PI. Hayes, E. S. ' 18 s 72 P. Hayes, S., ' q 134 H. Havward. W. G., ' 17 s IS N. E. Hazard, E., ' 18 a 18 S. W. Hazelhurst, R. P.. ' 17 a 9 E. B. Hazen, E. H., ' g 44 Wiggins St. Heath, T., ' 20 s 41 B. Heath, W. L., ' 17 s 132 L. Heath, W. T., ' 20 s 41 B. Hf.ermance, R., Ass ' t Professor 114 Broadmead Heimbach, R. E., ' 17 a 10 S. E. Heimerdinger, C. E., ' 17 s 71 P. name address Heimerdinger, F. M., ' 17 s 71 P. Heimerdinger, H. L., ' 18 s 24 P. Heinsohn, A. G., ' 19 s 9 E. W. Heintzelman, Captain S., Director of Military Instruction, Princeton Inn Heiserman, R. B., ' 20 s 131 L. Helm, L., Jr., ' 18 s m L Helm, T. C, Jr., ' 19 s 9 A. H. Helmick, B. C., Assistant 238 Nassau St. Hendel, C. W, Jr., ' g 23 Jefferson Road Henderson, G. W., ' 19 s 40 P. Henry, S., ' 20 a. . . . 24 C. Herendeen, E. G., Jr., ' 18 s 34 ' 79 H. Herling, R. R., ' 20 s 39 University PI. Herron, P. J., ' 18 a 35 P. Herron, S. D., ' 18 a 35 P. Hersh, E. S., ' 17 s 112 B. Hewitt, A. C., ' 17 s 421 C ' v. Hewitt, H. H., Jr., ' 20 s 18 S. M. R. Hewitt, R. M., ' g 2 A. G. C. Heyl, W. E., Jr., ' q 70 P. Heywood, H. M., ' 17 s 141 H. Hibben, J. G, President Prospect Hickman, B. B., ' 19 s 13 S. E. Hicks, H., ' q 21 P. Hicks, W. A., ' 19 s 15 C. Higgins, J. R., ' 17 s 17 N. E. Highlev, C. C., ' 17 s 13 B. Hill, J. P., ' 19 s 2 E. B. Hillegass, C. E.. Jr., ' 19 a 7 N. M. R. Hilliard, T. J.. q 68 L. Hills. P. W., ' 17 a Vandeventer Ave. Hiltebeitel. L. C., ' 17 a 37 N. E. Hilton, A. E., ' 19 s 15 S. D. Hilton-Green, H. L., ' 17 a 71 B. H irschberg, D. S., ' q 363 C ' y. Hitzrot, L. H., ' 20 a ' . .91 P. Hockaday, J. K. B., ' 19 s 42 P. 403 The Princeton Brie- a- Brae 1 Btrrrtorp (Continueb) NAME ADDRESS Hockmeyer, V. F., ' iS s 138 Nassau St. Hogg, F. T., ' 17 s 41 P. H olden, L. C, Jr., ' 19 s 2 N. D Holman, C. E., ' 19 s 5 A. H. Holmes, L. C, ' 20 s 15 S. M. R. Holstein, G. M., Jr., ' 17 s 11 N. M. R. Honf.ss, A. P., Assistant 47 Spring St. Hooper, J. E., ' 18 s 1 A. H. Home, J. Q.. ' 17 s 65 B. Home, R. J., ' 20 s 32 Mercer St. Horton, A. W„ Jr., ' 20 a 3 N. E. Hoskins, J. P., Professor 22 Bank St. Hoskins, H. B., ' 17 a 32 P. Hosoi, T. R., ' g in H. S. Houck, L. D., ' 20 s 24 Dickinson St. Howard, S. E., Instructor 23 Murray PI. Howell, B. F., Instructor 52 Patton Ave. Howett, L. V., ' 18 s 34 Vandeventer Ave. Howley, J. G., ' 19 a 9 S, E. B. Hoyt, H. H.. ' 17 s 6 W. B. Hsu, S. C, ' q 17 Olden Ave. Hubbell, E. S., ' 20 s 15 N. M. R. Hughes, W. D. F., ' 19 a 9 S. W. B. Hulett, G. A., Professor 44 Washington Road Humphreys, H. L.. ' g 93 G. C. Humphreys, J. G. S., ' q 3 L. P. Humphreys, W. S., ' 19 s 133 L. Humphreys, W. Y., Jr., ' 17 s 48 Vandeventer Ave. Hunt, H. J., ' 20 s 12 N. D. Hunt, T. B., ' 17 s 15 B. Hunt, T. W.. Professor 72 Library PI. Hurlock, W. S., Jr., ' 17 s 7 W. W. Huss, H. C. O., Professor Emeritus 6 Mercer St. Huston, W. A., ' 18 s 6 E. M. W. Hutcheson, A. D., ' 20 s 15 Edwards PI. Hutchins, J. M., ' 20 s 24 H ' m. Hutchinson, W. C, ' 20 s 34 P- Hutson, F. L.| Ass ' t Professor The Bachelors name address 111, H. M, ' 19 s 4 A. H. Ingersoll, C. J., ' 17 s 28 Vandeventer Ave. Ireland, T. S., ' 18 a 6 E. W. Irish, O. J., Assistant 71 G. C. Irvine. J. E., ' 19 a 3 S. M. R. Irvine, R. L., ' 18 a 3 S. M. R. Irwin, E. F., ' 20 a 109 P. Iseman, D. A., ' 17 s 36 P. Jackes, C, ' 18 s 28 Chambers St. Jackman, A., ' 17 s 92 P. Jackman, D. E., Jr., ' 17 s 92 P. Jackson, N. D., ' 17 s 3 W. M. Y. Jackson, S. A., ' 20 a 9 S. M. R. Jacobs, E. A. S., ' 19  .._. 11 E. W. Jacobs. J. S., Jr., ' 20 s 11 Bank St. Jamison, J. M., Jr., ' 20 a 162 L. Jamison, L. F., ' 19 a 14 S. M. R. Janke, F. O., ' q D. W. B. Jarvis, G. T., ' 18 s 82 Nassau St. lelke, F., 3rd, ' 18 s 65 H. Jelliffe, S. F.., Jr., ' 20 s 3 E. W. Jenckes, S. H., ' 19 s A. B. Jenkins, A. E., ' 19 s 104 B. Jennings, A. G., Jr., ' 19 s 14 H ' m. Jennings, A. H., ' 19 a 6 E. B. Joeck, T. D., ' 17 s 2 S. D. Johns, F. W., ' 18a 10 W. W. Johns, J. J., ' 20 s 19 University PI. Johnson, A. C. Ass ' t Professor 34 Bank St. Johnson, A. D., ' 19 a 2% S. E. Johnson. C. P., ' g 2 B. G. C. Johnson. H. D., ' 20 s 21 C. Johnson. N. B., ' 18 s 44 Park PI. Joh nson, R. B. C, Professor 129 Broadmead Johnson, W. F., ' 20 s 49 Park St. Johnson, W. H., Jr., ' 17 s 51 L. Johnston, G. T., ' q 115 B. Johnston, R. M., ' g 8 A. G. C. 404 The Princeton Bric-a-grac Btrectorp (Continued) NAME ADDRESS Jones, B. F., 3rd, ' 19 s 134 L. Jones, C. H., Registrar N. Jones, F. I., Jr., ' 18 s 2 E. B. Jones, J. M., ' 18 s 60 P. Jones, L. G., ' 17 s 51 L. Jones, T. M., 3rd, ' 20 s 31 University PI. Kalt, H. L., ' q 138 Nassau St. Kauffman, P. C, ' 18 s 112 L. Kauffman, S. H., ' 20 s 6 N. D. Kauf man, I., ' f 52 G. C. Kaye, L. G, ' 20 s 44 C. Kazanjian, B., Jr., ' 18 s 63 H. Keach, W. M., ' q 15 Bank St. Keating, T. B., ' 17 s 13 ' 79 H. Keenan, E. T., ' 19 s 10 S. M. R. Keller, H. P., ' 19 s 42 P. Kelley, D. W., ' 19 s 143 H. Kelly, W. B., ' 19 s 42 P. Kelsey, C. T., ' 20 s 13 P. Kem merer, E. W., Professor 128 Fitz-Randolph Rd. Kempner, D. W.. ' 17 s 28 C. Kempshall, E.. ' 18 a 23 L. Kendall, L. F., ' 18 s 411 C ' y. Kennedy, C. E., ' 17 a 5 S. R. Kennedy, C. W„ Ass ' t Professor 66 Battle Road Kennedy, E. S., ' 19 a 22 M. D. Kent. H. T., Jr., ' g 6 B. G. C. Kenway, I. F. L., ' 17 s 64 C. Kerper, E. H., ' 18 s 5 S. W. Kerr. C. M., Jr., ' 20 s 22 S. E. Kessinger, F. E., ' 20 a 11 Alexander St. Ketchum, F. S., ' 20 s 34 B. Kiehl, M. B„ ' 18 ? 41 L. Kilbv, O. M.. ' 19 a 2 B. Kimball, A. D., ' 18 s 24 L. Kimbark, J. R., ' 20 s 31 University PI. King, D. M., ' 19 a 222 C ' y. King, G, ' 19 s 74 B. NAME ADDRESS King, G. C, ' q 41 ' 79 H. King, J. B., ' 19 s 74 B. Kinard, G. H., ' g 103 G. C. Kinnard, L. R.. ' q 14 X. W. Kirbach, W. C, ' 19 a 9 N. D. Kirdendall, F. B., ' q 6 S. E. B. Kirkland, W. A., ' 19 a 2 B. Kissam, P., ' 19 s 5 S. W. B. Kloppenburg, W. B., ' q 46 Wiggins St. Knauth, O. W., Ass ' t Professor Absent on leave Knight, D. B., ' 18 s 19 N. E. Knight, L. H., ' g 317 H. S. Knott, A. R., ' 17 s 14 W. W. Knower, H. D., ' 19 s 73 B. Knowlton, E. T., ' 19 s 4 B. Knowlton, P. P... ' 17 s 7 N. W. Knox, W. B., ' 17 a 7 N. W. Koblegard, H. H., ' 20 s 39 University PI. Koren, W., Ass ' t Professor 105 Fitz-Randolph Rd. KrafFert. B. T., ' 20 a 64 L. Kruse, F. J., ' q 2 B. H. Kretschmann, P. M., ' 19 a 13 S. M. R. Kuser, J. D., ' 19 s 362 C ' y. Kuser, J. L., Jr., ' 20 s 32 H. Kurzman, G. F., ' 17 a 28 C. La Barron, R. F., ' g 12 Nassau St. Labouisse, W. H., ' 18 s 13 N. W. LaForce, W. B., ' 20 s 22 L. LaForce, W. W., ' 18 s 1 W. M. W. Laird, C. W., ' 20 s 34 B. Lamar, L. V., ' 18 a 82 Nassau St. Lamarche, R. F., ' q 9 M. D. Lamont, R. P.. Jr., ' 19 a 103 H. Lamont, R. S., ' 20 s 38 S. E. Lampley, I. T.. ' q 19 Bank St. Lancaster, R. V., ' g 204 Nassau St. Land. J. N., ' g 15 C . G. C. Landis, J. M., ' 20 a 3 W. W. 405 - ggg The Princeton Bric-a-Sr c Sfe5 - - Bircctorp (Continued) NAME ADDRESS Landon, S. W., ' 17 s 5 W. B. Lane, M. H., ' 18 s A. E. B. Lane, P., ' q 44 L. Laney, H. L.. ' 17 s 17 W. W. Larkin, G. B., ' 19 a 23 ' 79 H. LaTour, C. F. ( ' 17 s 2 S. E. B. Latrobe, C. H., ' 17 s 84 H. Latrobe, G., Jr., ' 20 s 63 B. Lawrence, G. A., ' 20 s Hill Lawson, O. M., ' 19 s 64 Nassau St. Lawson, P. R., ' 20 s Hill Lawton, S., ' 18 s 11 S. D. Leach, H. S., Librarian ' s Assistant 144 G. C. Leake, C. D., ' 17 s 311 H ' m. Lee, J. E., ' 20 s 31 P- Lee, P. B., ' 18 a 31 C. Leeb, B. P., ' 18 s 19 M. D. Leedom, F. B., ' q R. F. D. No. 4, Trenton, N. J. Leggett, M. W., ' 17 a. 94 H. Leinbach, L. R., ' 19 s 35 S. E. Lennox, C. D., ' q 47 University PI. Leopold, J. M., Jr., ' 19 a 5 B. Leslie, A. C., ' 19 a 84 B. Leslie, D. S., ' 18 s 35 L. Levengood, S. L., ' f 32 G. C. Lewis. T. M. N., ' 19 s 12 M. D. Libbf.y, W.. Professor Thanet Lodge Lindblade, R. F., ' 20 a 32 Mercer St. Lineaweaver, T. H., ' 19 s 122 H. Link, S. M., ' 17 s 61 P. Linthicum, A. W., ' 20 s 39 University PI. Lloyd, S., Tr., ' 19 a 9 M. D. Long, H. C., ' 19 s 7 S. D. Long, W. W., ' g 213 H. S. Eongwell, H. C., Ass ' t Professor 91 Mercer St. Loek, E. T., ' 18 s 42 C. Loomis, E. H., Professor 302 Nassau St. Lord, T. C., ' 19 s 62 B. NAME ADDRESS Lorenz, E. H., ' 17 a 124 H. Louchheim, W. C., Jr., ' 20 s 54 B. Lowrie, W. A., ' 17 a 22 H. Lowrie, W. L., Jr., ' 17 s 5 N. R. Ludlow, E. H.. ' 19 s 15 C. Luehring, F. W., Ass ' t Professor no New Moore St. Luke, D. K., ' 19 s 5 L. P. Lukens, L. N., ' 17 s 13 B. Lutz, R. B., ' 18 s 4 S. R. Lybolt, F., ' 19 s 5 L. P. Lyman, A. V., ' 18 a 17 S. R. Lyon, H. S., ' 18 s 20 S. W. Lyons, W. W., ' 17 a . 5 E. B. McAdoo, W. G.. Jr., ' 17 s 116 Nassau St. McAi.pin, C. W., Secretary N. McAlpin, D. H., 3rd, ' 20 a 308 H ' m. McCabe, D. A., Ass ' t Professor 25 P. McCaddon, J. T., Jr., ' 18 s 91 H. McCague, R. H., ' 18 s 35 L. McCandless, L.. ' 19 s n P. McCann, R. H., ' 17 s 37 S. E. McCauley, E. D.. ' 18 s 21 P. McCay, L. W., Professor 2 Morven St. McChesney, D. S., ' 17 a 432 C ' y. McClellan, G. B., Professor Battle Road McCenahan, -H., Dean of the College, Joseph Henrv House, College Place McClintock, R. J., ' 17 s . 91 B. McClure, C. F. W., Professor 2 Morven St. McComas, H. C, Jr., Ass ' t Professor 109 Broadmead McComas, O. P., Jr., ' f 76 G. C McConnaughy, I). S., ' 17 s 138 Nassau St. McConnell, F. J., ' 19 a 2 W. B. McConnem., W. O., Instructor 22 G. C. McCormick, G., ' 17 s 64 ' 79 H. McCormick, G. B., ' 19 s 40 P. McCormick, L., ' 19 s 40 P. MacCreadie, J. H., ' 19 s 25 N. E. 406 The Princeton Bric-a-Brac Btrectorp (Continued) NAME ADDRESS McCulloch, D., Jr., ' 19 a 56 C. McCune, J. R., Jr., ' 19 a 71 L,. Macdermott, E. S., ' 20 s 54 ]_. MacDonald, F. C, Ass ' t Professor Nassau Inn McDonald, R. M., ' 17 s 18 N. W. McDougal, D. B., ' 19 s 182 L. McDougal. E. D., Jr., ' 18 s 182 L. McDougal, R. D., Jr., ' 19 s 6 B. McDowell, J. N., ' 17 s 8 S. E. McEi.roy, R. M., Professor Absent on leave McEwan, W. L., Jr., ' 20 a 15 University PI. McGean, R. L., ' 19 s 97 B. McGrath, D. G., ' q 116 Nassau St. McGraw, C. W., ' 19 s 51 B. Mcllvain, E. M., ' q 43 H. Mcllvain, S. L.. ' 20 s 43 Vandeventer Ave. Mcllwain, G. K., ' 18 s 12 W. B. MacInnes, C. R., Ass ' t Professor 12 Vandeventer Ave. Mclsaac, R. M., ' g 6 B. G. C. McKaig, A. L., ' 17 a 72 H. Mackav, D. K., ' q 3 B. S. McKee, R. D., ' 19 s 103 B. McKeever, G., ' 18 s 17 N. W. Mackey, E. E., ' 20 a 106 H. Mackie, W. H. T., ' q McKinney, R. L., ' q 363 C ' y. McKnight, R. W., ' 19 a 442 C ' v. McKown, P., ' 18 s... 4 S. R. McLanahan, J. D., ' g 30 Vandeventer Ave. M acLaren, M., Professor 16 Prospect Ave. McLean, W. L., Jr., ' 17 a 331 C ' y. McLennan, D., ' 18 s 5 S. W. Macloskie, G., Professor Emeritus 239 Nassau St. McMaster, J. D., ' 19 s 5 S. E. B. McMillan, C.. Professor Emeritus 40 Bayard Lane MacMillan, E. A., Instructor 35 Park PI. McNeill, J., ' g 307 H. S. MacNichol, E. F., ' 17 s 54 ' 79 H. NAME ADDRESS McNulty, J. O., ' q 7 Park PI. McRae, D. O., ' 17 s 212 C ' y. McQuinston, C. F., ' 19 s 431 C ' v. McWilliams, J. S., ' 18 a 142 L. Macfarlane, J. W., ' 19 s 343 C ' y. Machin, J. A., ' 18 a 7 S. W. Macy, C. L., Assistant 240 Nassau St. Madden, J. E., Jr., ' q 138 Nassau St. Madden, J. M., ' 20 s 31 University PI. Madden. W. M., ' 18 s ...30 N. E. Magie, W. F., Dean of the Faculty Dean ' s House 73 Nassau St. Macie, D., Professor 101 Library PI. Magruder, F. A., Instructor 122 Nassau St. Makepeace, R. F., ' 19 s 2 B. Manchee, V. T., ' 17 s 114 H. Mandel, D., ' 19 s 95 B. Manee, W. B., ' 18 s 5 W. W. Manny, E. S., ' 19 s 122 L. Manthai, H. A., ' 20 s 5 N. E. Mapes, J. A., 2nd, ' 20 a 32 L. Marbury, F., ' 18 a 82 Nassau St. March, H. H., ' 17 a 61 ' 79 H. Marden, C. C, Professor 8 Maple St. Marks, A. W., ' 19 a C. E. B. Marks, J., ' 20 s 49 Park PI. Marquand, A., Professor Guernsey Hall Marsh, A. J., ' q 64 Nassau St. Marsh, J. H., ' 20 s 10 S. E. B. Marsh, W. B. ' g 2 A. G. C. Marshall, A., ' q 114 H. Marshall, C, ' 20 s 39 University PI. Marshall, H. R., Lecturer. . .7 W. 43rd St., New York, N. Y. Martin, H. K., ' 19 a 31 N. E. Martin, T.. ' 17 a _ 121 H. Martins, C, Supt. of Library Purchase Dep ' t, 176 The Western Wav Marvin, W. B., ' 18 s La Vake PI. 407 The {Princeton Bric-a-grac Birectorp (Conttnuel)) NAME ADDRESS Mather, F. J., Jr., Professor 3 Evelyn PI. Mather, T. B., ' g 41 University PI. Mather, W. M., ' 20 s 11 L,. P. Mathews. D. L., ' q 4 W. M. W. Mathiasen, A., ' 17 s 11 B. Matlock, P. B., ' i 413 C ' y. Matthews, T. C, ' 18 s 3 N. R. Matthews, W. P., ' 18 a 8 A. H. Maxwell, H. W., Jr., ' 19 s 13 ' 79 H. Maxwell, J. C, ' 19 s 11 N. D. May, J. N., Jr., ' 19 s 95 P. Mayer, A. G., Lecturer 276 Nassau St. Maver, C. O., Jr., ' 19 a 62 H. Mayer, W. S., ' 18 s 62 L. Meek, T. C, ' 18 a 2 W. M. W. Meigs, H., ' 18 a 82 Nassau St. Meirs, W. W., ' 18 s . . . .63 C. Menzies, A. W. C. Professor 187 Prospect Ave. Mercer, R. B., ' 20 s 9 E. M W. Meriwether, G., Jr., ' 19 s 64 B. Michael, B. S., ' 18 s m S. D. Mickey, K. B., ' 19 a 7 E. ' M. W. Mickey, R. Z., ' 19 a 7 E. M. W. Middleditch, F. A., ' 18 a 452 C ' y. Miles, E. G., ' 19 s 13 A. H. Mii.es, L. W., Ass ' t Professor 7 Greenholm. Miles, T. H., Jr., ' 17 s 243 C ' y. Millard, A. J., ' 19 s 102 B. Miller, A. K.. ' 19 s 51 C. Miller, C., ' 18 a 41 L. Miller, D. K., ' 20 s 18 S. E. Miller, E. J., ' 17 s 5 N. R. Miller, H. K., Jr., ' 20 s 8 B. H. Miller, J. B., ' 20 s 441 C ' y. Miller, L. H., Ass ' t Professor 12 Edgehill St. Mtller, T. A., Instructor 52 B. Miller, Z. R., ' f| 72 B. Millinger, W. H., ' 18 s 3 E. B. NAME ADDRESS Mills, A. B., ' 20 s 31 University PI. Mills. J. F., ' 18 s 8 N. R. Mills, W. E. ' 19 a 19 N. W. Milne, J. C, 2nd, ' 19 a 211 C ' y. Minnott, J. A., ' 20 s 8 L. P. Mirsky, L. P., ' 19 s 53 B. Mitchell, C. W., Jr., ' 20 a 12 A. H. Molyneux, G. T., ' q 172 Nassau St. Montgomery, A. M., ' 19 s 11 N. D. Montgomery, J. S., ' 20 s 16 E. W. Moore, F. L., ' 18 s 13 S. D. Moore, G. D., ' 19 s F. W. B. Moore, H. G, ' 20 s 111 H. Moore, J. L., ' 20 a 35 N. E. Moore, M. D. , ' 19 s 10 N. D. Moore, R. G., ' 19 a 82 B Moore, W. B., ' 17 s 90 Xassau St. Moraud, Marcel, Instructor 35 Murray PI. Morey, C. R., Ass ' t Professor 342 Nassau St. Morgan, D. C, ' 19 s A. B. Morgan. G. F., Jr., ' 18 a 43 L. Morgan. P. T., ' 20 s 35 Hill Morgan, S. W., Instructor Pyne Tower, G. C. Morgan, T. V., ' 20 a 9 U. P. Morgan, W. L-, ' 20 s 3 A. H ' m. Morris, K. A., ' q 64 Nassau St. Morris, W., ' 19 s 10 S. D. Mortimer, S., ' 19 a 12 H ' m. Moss, J. A., ' 19 a .1 N. D. Mossman, V. S., ' 20 s 14 Edwards PI. Mow, H. G. Assistant 7 A. G. C. Mravlag. P. V., ' 19 s 12 ' 70 H. Mudge, W. F.. ' 17 s 41 P. Muldaur, G. B., Jr., ' 19 s 10 N. W. Munro, D. C, Professor 119 Fitz-Randolph Rd. Munsell, E. W., ' 19 s 5 W. M. W. Murch, H. S., Ass ' t Professor 1 A. C. Murray, A. B., ' 18 s 12 S. E. B. 408 The Princeton Bric-a-grac Btrectorp (Continueb) NAME ADDRESS Murray, H. G., Sec ' y Graduate Council 62 Nassau St. Muzzy, F. G., ' 19 s 4 A. H. Myers, W. S., Ass ' t Professor 15 Alexander St. Nacht, A., ' 17 s 9 N. M. R. Xeely, W. H, ' 17 a 52 C. Neher, F., Professor 148 Library PI. Nelson, C. A., ' g 112 G. C. Nelson, P. D., ' 17 s 102 H. Netts, S. G, ' 20 s 5 Madison St. Neuberger, H. H., ' 17 s 305 H ' m. Newbury, F. J., Jr., ' 17 s 15 P. Nevvlin, J. V., ' 19 s 242 C ' y. Nicholas, J. S., ' 17 a 2 B. H ' m. Nicholas, R. A., ' 19 s 17 S. W. Niles, A. L., Jr., ' 19 a 2 U. P. Nimick, W. K., ' 19 s 141 L. Nixon, F. W., ' 17 s 32 B. Norris, H. M., ' 19 s 69 Alexander St. Northrup, E. F., Ass ' t Professor 30 Wiggins St. Norton, A. L., ' 19 s 23 M. D. Norton, P. R., ' 19 a 47 Tulane St. Norwood, G. A., Jr., ' g 11 A. G. C. Nourse, N. C, ' 18 s 14 S. D. Nourse, R. L., Jr., ' 17 s 14 S. D. Noyes, A., Professor, N yberg, J. A., Instructor 52 G. C. O ' Connor, R. B., ' g 2 B. G. C. O ' Dea, J. B„ ' 20 3 19 University PI. Odell, H. N., ' 17 a 7 N. D. Oehler, J. C, ' 18 a 8 N. R. Offutt, M. J., ' 20 s 8 S. M. R. O ' Gorman, J. A., Jr., ' 20 a 11 M. D. Ohliger, L. P., ' g 26 S. E. Olewiler, H. L.. ' g 17 A. S. Oliphant, E., ' 17 a 7 S. E. B. Oiler, R. H„ ' 18 s 3 C. H ' m. Olmstead, P. S., ' 19 s 13 Bank St. O ' Neill, J. R., ' 20 s 42 B. name address Orrick, D. W., ' q 3 L. P. Orth, P. W., ' 19 s. 244 C ' y. Orwig, S. E., ' g 33 B. S. Osborne, W. H., Jr., ' 20 s 7 W. M. W. Osgood, C. G., Professor 92 Stockton St. Osmer, G. G, ' 20 s 98 B. Osmer, J. H., ' 17 s 98 B. Otis, C., ' 20 s 15 Dickinson St. Pagano, P., ' 20 s 146 Nassau St. Page, L., Jr., ' 20 s 31 University PI. Page, L. R., ' 19 s 51 C. Page, R. L., ' 20 s 10 Madison St. Page, S. D., Jr., ' 18 a 16 M. D. Palmer, S. E., ' 18 s 12 S. E. B. Pardee, F. Jr., ' 18 s 2 S. D. Parisette, O. J., ' 18 s 10 S. E. B. Parker, C., 3rd, ' 20 a 161 L. Parker, J. F., ' 19 s 102 B. Parker, J. J., Jr., ' 17 a 4 S. E. B. Parker, P., Jr., ' 18 a 82 Nassau St. Parker, P. M., ' 19 a 36 L. Parker, R. W., ' 18 s 112 H. Parker. W. M., ' 18 a in L. Parmele, H. G. W., ' 19 s 121 L. Parrott, D., ' 20 a 104 Mercer St. P rrott, T. M., Professor 104 Mercer St. Parry, J. S., Jr., ' 20 s . 10 Madison St. Parsons, R. H., ' 17 s 10 S. W. Paton, Dr. Stewart, Lecturer Greenlands Patterson, A. T., ' 20 s 54 L. Patton, F. L., Ex-President Hamilton. Bermuda Paul, A., ' 20 a 47 University PI. Paul, R. J. T., ' 10 s 9 W. M. W. Paul, W. A. B., ' 18 a 16 N. W. Paull, J. D., ' 17 s 39 S. E. Paulson, D. M., ' 17 s 72 H. Paxton. W. M., 3rd, ' 19 a S3 L Pease, R. N., Assistant 21 G. C. 409 The Princeton Brie- a- Brae JStrectorp (Continueb) NAME ADDRESS Peck, F. C, ' 20 S 14 P. Peden, A. V., ' 20 s 12 L. Pentz, R. H., ' 20 s 15 University PI. Perkins, G. W., Jr., ' 17 s 232 C ' y. Perley, H. R., ' 20 s 15 University PI. Perrin, H. T., ' g 31 G. C. Perrott, G. S.. Jr., ' f 104 G. C. Perry, B. E. ' g 128 G. C. Peters, T. D., ' 19 s 23 M. D. Petterson, G. R., ' 19 a 2 S. VV. B. Petterson, S. H., ' 20 a 8 E. B. Pettit, D., ' 17 s 120 Nassau St. Peyton, B., ' 17 a 332 C ' y. Pfeiffer, G. A., Instructor 23 Madison St. Phillips, A. H., Professor 54 Hodge Rd. Phillips. G. W., ' 17 s Helmetta. N. J. Phillips, K. A., ' 17 s 5 E. M. W. Phillips, L,., ' 17 s 11 C. Piaget, E. A. M., ' 20 s 7 H. Pierce, H. D., ' 20 s 24 Dickinson St. Pierce, R. A., ' 17 s 66 L. Pike, C. L., ' 20 s 26 M. D. Pilling, R. T., Jr., ' 17 s 66 L. Pitney. M., Jr., ' 20 a 53 C. Planas, H. M., ' 18 s 2 Nassau St. Plough, D. H., Jr., ' 20 s 22 Vandeventer Ave. Plvmpton, G. F., ' 17 s 162 C ' v. Poe, E. A., Jr., ' 18 a 81 H. Polhemus, F. S., ' 20 s 44 C. Pollard, R. S., ' 19 s 5 S. E. B. Pomeroy, Rev. R. B.. Lecturer 22 Stockton St. Poole, A. K., ' 18 s 142 L. Pope, R. E., ' 19 s 8 W. M. W. Porteous, R. E., ' 20 s 12 Park PI. Porter, H. F., ' 15 ee Murray-Dodge Hall Post, A. J., Jr., ' q 124 L. Potter, D. B., ' 18 s 71 B. Potter, M. G. ' 19 a 54 H. NAME ADDRESS Powell, R. M., ' 20 s 8 A. E. M. W. Powell, R. C, ' 17 s 3 S. E. B. Powers. W. L., ' 20 s 34 S. E. Pratt, F. R., ' g New Brunswick, N. J. Prentice, VV. K., Professor 26 Alexander St. Prentiss, T. L.. ' 19 a 11 ' 79 H. Preston, H. M., ' 20 s Hill Preston, R. G, ' 18 s 63 P. Preyer, A., ' 19 a 21 H ' m. Price, P. W., ' 19 s 44 H. Priest, G. M., Professor 10 Nassau St. Proctor, L. M., ' 19 s « 2 E. B. Proudfit, E. H., ' 19 s 17 M. D. Pulling, T. J. E-, ' 20 s 24 Dickinson St. Purdy, R. F., ' 20 s 10 E. M. W. Purves, G. T., ' 17 a 53 P. Putnam, W. A., Jr., ' 19 s 153 L. Pyle, G, ' 19 s 23 B. Pyle, W., ' 20 s 15 Edwards PI. Pvne, H. R., ' g 8 Greenholm Pyne, P. R., Jr., ' 18 a 33 C. Quay, M. S., ' 19 a 16 B. Quier, H., ' 18 a 6 S. R. Quigley, H. S., Instructor 72 G. C. Quinn, W. P., . ' 19 s Hill Rafalsky, R., ' 20 s 24 Dickinson St. Raftery, J. H., ' 19 s 31 H. Ragsdale, C. E., Assistant 102 G. C. Rahill, W. J., ' 17 a 56 Jefferson Rd. Raleigh, T. L., ' q 46 Vandeventer Ave. Ralston, J. V., ' 19 s 7 E. W. Ramsay, J. G., ' 19 a I B. Randall, R. H., ' 19 s 263 C ' v. Rankin, J. M., ' 18 s 116 B. Rankin, S. B., ' 18 s 116 B. Rankin, W. M., Professor 5 Evelyn PI. Ransom, J. C, ' 20 s 15 Edwards PI. Raycroft, J. E., Professor 120 Broadmead 410 The Princeton Brie- a- Brae Btrectorp (Conttnueb) NAME ADDRESS Raymond, L. T., ' 17 s 10 S. W. Raymond, R. W., ' q 7 B. H. Raymond, V. K., ' 19 s 28 N. E. Read, C, ' 19 s 42 L. Read, C. C, Instructor 63 G. C. Read, M. S., ' 17 a 22 H. Reed, H. B., 2nd, ' 20 s 2 M. D. Reed, K. M., ' 17 a 21 ' 79 H. Reed, L. C, ' 19 a 7 B. Reed, S. L., ' 17 s 53 ' 79 H. Reidinger, A. D., ' 18 s 9 S. W. Reinmund, F. M., ' 20 a 105 P. Rentschler, P. E., ' 20 s 15 Edwards PI. Repass, W. C, ' q 28 S. E. Reynolds, L. C., ' 20 s 20 M. D. Reynolds, P. D., ' 20 a 31 L. Reynolds, W. F., Jr., ' 17 a 43 P. Reynolds, W. W., ' 18 s 9 S. R. Rhodes, L. C, ' 18 s 2S1 C ' y. Rich, J. B., ' 19 s ' .76 H. Richardson, A. S., Instructor ' 77 Laboratory Richardson, C. S., ' 19 a 12 S. W. Richardson, E. C, Librarian 220 Mercer St. Richardson, P. S., ' 19 s 12 S. W. Richardson, H. M., ' 20 s 45 Vandeventer Ave. Richardson, L. H., Jr., ' q 21 M. D. Richmond, L., ' 20 a 1 C. H ' m. Rickerson, W. C, ' 19 s 10 W. B. Rickert, T. H., ' 20 a 32 Mercer St. Riddle, J. H., ' g 15 F. G. C. Riggs, T. D., Jr., ' 20 s 31 University PI. Riker, I., ' 17 a 42 ' 79 H. Ritchie, J. R., ' 20 a 24 Dickinson St. Ritter, R. H., ' 17 a 4 E. M. W. Roback, A. A., ' g 7 B. G. C. Robbins, E. Y., Professor 144 Library PI. Robbins, G. A., ' 20 a I B. H ' m. Robbins, M. H., ' 19 s 14 M. D. name address Robertson, G. S., ' f 92 G. C. Robertson, J. L., Jr., ' 18 s 138 Nassau St. Robertson, VV. P., ' 17 s 3 E. M. W. Robins, T., Jr., ' 19 s 122 H. Robinson, C., Ass ' t Professor 55 Battle Rd. Robinson, P. E., Ass ' t Professor 128 Broadmead Roche, H. S., ' 18 a 11 A. H. Rodgers, F. R., ' 18 a 8 N. M. R. Roe, J. H., ' g 8 B. G. C. Rogers, A., ' 20 s 231 C ' y. Rogers, A. A.. ' 19 s 2 W. B. Rogers, C. B., ' 20 a 9 L. P. Rogers, L. E., ' 20 s 64 L. Rogers, M., ' 20 s 27 S. E. Root, R. K., Professor 31 Chambers St. Rose, J. B., ' q 13 ' 79 H. Rosenbaum, F. F. ' 20 s 14 Edwards PI Ross, D. N. C, ' 17 a 32 P. Ross, L. W., ' f 7 A. G. C. Rothchild, L. H., ' 20 s in B. Rothermel, J. G., ' 19 a 7 E. B. Rouse, R. G., ' 19 s 64 Nassau St. Rowland, R., ' g 31 A. S. Rue, F. J., 3rd, ' 18 a 55 C. Runyon, P. M., q 5 M. D. Russell, G. L., Jr., ' 17 a 13 S. W. Russell, H. N., Professor 79 Alexander St. Russell, R. B., Jr., ' 19 s 8 N. E. Ruth, G. B., ' 19 s Hill Rutherfurd, J., ' 17 a 62 P. Rutledge, H. G, ' 17 s 3 E. M. W. Sackett, N. B., ' 17 s 15 B. Sailer, R. C, ' 19 s 2 D. H. Sampson, H. G., ' 19 s 81 B. Samstag, H. R., ' 19 s 21 H. Sandell, C. V., ' 20 s 27 N. E. Sanders, K. D.. ' 20 s 21 N. E. Sanger, R., ' 20 a 27 Vandeventer Ave. 411 The Princeton Bri c- a- B r ac l ©irectorp (Conttnueb) NAME ADDRESS Savage, A. V., ' 17 a 43 P. Savage, E. C, ' ig a 211 C ' y. Savage, W. L-, ' 20 a 20 E. W. Savidge, J. F., ' 19 a 9 S. W. B. Saville, G. D., ' 19 s 21 L. Sawyer, B. E., ' 20 s 6 S. W. B. Sawyers, F. L., ' 18 s 14 B. Scarritt, A. D., ' 18 s 1 W. M. W. Schaettler, F. V., ' 17 s 14 A. H. Schaefer, B. K., ' 20 s 81 P. Schaefer, J. L., Jr., ' 19 s 81 P. Schanck, L. M., ' 20 s 42 S. E. Scheerer, P. R., ' q 322 C y. Scheerer, W., Jr., ' 17 s 322 C ' y. Schenck, J. H., 3rd, ' 20 s 39 University PI. Schickhaus, E., Jr., ' 20 s 51 H. Schmalz, J., ' 19 s 32 Mercer St. Schmertz, R. C, ' 17 s 10 S. R. Schmidt, G. S., Jr., ' 18 a 251 C ' y. Schmidt, S. S., ' 19 a 263 C y. Schmon, A. A.. ' 17 a 311 H ' m. Schoedinger, P. S., ' 20 a 15 University PI. Schoen, W. H., Jr., ' 17 s 116 Nassau St. Schroeder, A. H., ' 20 s 32 Vandeventer Ave. Schroeder, J. N., )r„ ' 20 s 19 University PI. Schullinger, R. N. ' 17 s 15 S. D. Schumann, E. W. A., ' 20 s 23 P. Schuster, C. E., ' 20 s 24 Dickinson St. Schwab, I. W.. ' q 12 Park PI. Schwabacher, W. S., ' 18 a 351 C ' y. Schweitzer, F., ' g 206 H. S. Scobie, J. R., ' 18 s 8 E. B. Scoon, R. M., Ass ' t Professor 19 Cleveland Lane Scott, C. M., ' 17 s 82 Nassau St. Scott. W. B., Professor 158 Nassau St. Scudder, W. W., ' 19 a 6 N. W. Scullv, J. T., ' 17 s 90 Nassau St. Self, S. B., ' 19 s 9 B. NAME ADDRESS Sellers, B. W., ' 17 a 13 N. M. R. Selover, H. R., ' 18 s 11 S. E. B. Semans, W. R., ' 19 s 172 L. Semmens, C. G., ' 17 a 341 C ' y. Senseman, J. S., ' 19 s 8 C. H. Serena. J. R., ' q 53 H. Severance, F. R., ' g 104 G. C. Seymour, M. V., Jr., ' 19 s 3 S. W. B. Shafer, Robert, Instructor 10 Nassau St. Shaffer, E. L., ' f 6 A. G. C. Shanbacker, F. M., ' q 3 U. P. Shanley. B. M., ' 17 s .- 102 H. Shanley, J. S., ' q 90 Nassau St. Shannon, R. W., ' 19 s 11 S. E. Sharpe, J. M., 3rd, ' 20 a 39 University PI. Shaw, A., Jr., ' 19 a 62 B. Shaw, K. M., ' 20 a 27 Vandeventer Ave. Shea, C. B., ' 17 s 341 C ' y. Shelton, E. M., ' q 47 University PI. Sheppard, E. M., ' 20 s 47 University PI. Sheppard, G. B., ' 17 s 21 S. E. Sherman, R. T., ' 20 s 12 S. W. B. Sherrerd, H. D. M., ' 17 a 41 C. Sherrerd, S. D., ' 18 s 9 W. B. Shipman, H. R.. Ass ' t Professor 27 Mercer St. Shoemaker, G. E., ' 17 s 61 ' 79 H. Shotwell, D. R., ' 18 s 41 N. E. Shull, G. H., Professor 60 Jefferson Rd. Shultz. I. S., ' g 21 A. S. Sibley, G. H., ' 20 s 4 E. B. Sichelstiel, L. H., ' 20 a 10 U. P. Sidler. F. W., ' 19 s 6 S. E. B. Siedler, H. D., ' 19 a 11 ' 79 H. Stgsbee, R. A., Instructor Nassau Inn Sikes, G. G., g S3 G. C. Silver, E. O., ' q 90 Nassau St. Silvester, C. F., Assistant 26 Prospect Ave. Sim, A. L., ' 20 s Hill 412 The Princeton Bric-a-Brac 30irector| (Continue!)) NAME ADDRESS Simon, H. F., ' 17 s 8 W. W. Simonin, E. C. B., ' q 141 H. Sinclair, W. J., Ass ' t Professor Patton Ave. Sinclaire, D. C, ' 18 s 5 A. C. Singleton, J. F., ' 17 s 51 ' 79 H. Sipe, H. A., ' 18 s 12 S. M. R. Sisson, C. N., ' g 8 B. G. C. Sitterly, B. W.. ' 17 a 1 E. H ' m. Skarzynski, C, ' q 16 Vandeventer Ave. Skinner, G. D., ' 19 s 11 W. B. Sloan, D. W., Jr., ' 19 s 108 P. Sloan, J. S., ' 20 s 15 Edwards PI. Sloane. C, ' 19 a 84 P. Smith, C. M., 3rd, ' 19 a 12 ' 79 H. Smith, C. R., ' 18 a 9 N. W. Smith. D. H., ' 20 s 7 W. B. Smith, D. P., Ass ' t Professor 173 Nassau St. Smith, E. B., Instructor 24 Madison St. Smith. G. L., ' q 15 Bank St. Smith, H. B., ' 20 a I S. E. B. Smith, H. H., ' 17 s 16 C. Smith, H. L., Instructor 36 University PI. Smith, H. M., ' 19 s 32 ' 79 H. Smith, H. S. S., Professor 58 University PI. Smith, J. G., ' 19 a 2 S. M. R. Smith, M. D., ' 20 s 16 Dickinson St. Smith, N. Kemp, Professor Absent on leave Smith, O. H, ' 17 s 82 Nassau St. Smith. P., ' 20 a 161 C ' y. Smyth. C. H., Jr., Professor 22 Morven St. Smvth, C. P., ' f 22 Morven St. Smyth, H. D., ' 18 a 311 C ' v. Sni ' ffin. R. E., ' 19 a 84 P. Snyder, D. L., ' g 52 B. S. Snyder, F. F.. ' 19 s 262 C ' v. Southworth. S. D.. ' 18 a 6 S. W. Sowards, J. A., ' 19 a = S. D. Spaeth, J. D.. Professor 32 Edgehill St. NAME ADDRESS Sparhawk, R. D., ' 20 a 27 Vandeventer Ave. Spaulding, E. G., Professor 8 Edgehill St. Speer, E., ' 20 a 321 C ' y. Speers, J. M., Jr., ' q 11 S. W. Speers, W. C, ' q 21 B. Speidel, C. C, ' f 6 A., G. C. Speir, R. W., Jr., ' 20 s 33 N. E. Spencer, H. R., ' 17 a 232 C ' y. Spencer, J. W., Jr., ' 19 s 2 D. H. Spencer, M. A., ' 18 s 20 S. W. Sprague, I. A., ' 19 s 33 L. Springer, F. E., ' 18 s 2 W. M. W. Springs, E. V., ' 17 a 103 H. Squier, F. C, Jr., ' 20 s 18 M. D. Stachelberg, C. G., ' 20 s 54 B. Stafford, J. , ' q 28 Chambers St. Starr, L. E., ' 19 s 56 Bayard Lane Stearns, J. B., ' g 15 C. G. C. Steele, H. M., Jr., ' 18 s 63 H. Steers, J. R., Jr., ' 20 s 9 L. P. Stericker, G. B.. ' 17 s 306 H ' m. Stevens. H. H., Instructor 24 Madison St. Stevens, J. H.. ' 17 s 6 W. M. W. Stevens, M H.. ' 18 s 4 S. M. R. Stevenson, S. R., ' 18 s 83 Mercer St. Stewart, C. I.. ' 18 s 16 Bank St. Stewart, G. R., Jr.. ' 17 a 22 B. Stewart, J. H., ' 18 s E. E. B. Stewart. J. K., ' g 36 A. S. Stewart, J. Q., Jr., ' f 12 G. C. Stewart, S. A., ' 20 s 83 B. Stewart, W. B., ' 20 s 3 M. D. Stewart, W. T.. ' 18 a 8 A. H. Stohlman, W. R, ' g 14 A. G. C. Stockton, W. T.. ' 17 s 51 ' 79 H. Stoeltzing, R. W., ' 17 a 143 C ' v. Stoetzer, J. J. B., ' 19 s 5 E. VV. Stoltze, J. R.. ' 17 s 64 H. 413 The Princeton Bric-a-Brac Minttovp (Continued) NAME ADDRESS Stone, D. L., Instructor 14 Dickinson St. Stout, O. H., ' 17 s 14 N. E. Strater, E. L., ' 17 s 23 C. Strater , H. H., ' 19 s 3 B. H. Street, D. M., ' 19 s 13 A. H. Streetman, S., Jr., ' 18 s 73 P. Streichenberg, C. F. A., ' 19 s 6 N. R. Strieker, J. B., ' 20 s 300 H ' m. Strong, B., 3rd, ' 19 a 133 L. Strong, L. B., ' 19 a 100 P. Strubing, J. K., Jr., ' 20 s 104 P. Stuart, D. C, Ass ' t Professor The Western Way Stuart, D. R., Professor 101 Broadmead Studdiford, W. E., Jr., ' 19 s 36 L, Stueck, D. D., ' q 9 S. D. Sturges, P. M., ' 17 a 42 ' 79 H. Sulzberger, D. H., ' 18 s 351 C ' y. Summers, E. F., ' q 1 E. W. Sutphen, H. A., ' 20 a 11 E. B. S wanev, D. P., ' 20 s Hill Syme. ' A. M. S., ' 18 a D. W. B. Svmons, N. S., ' 19 a 31 H. Taber, A. R., ' q 52 ' 79 H. Taber, J. S., ' 20 a Hill Taggart, E. B., ' 19 s 102 B. Talbert, W. B., Jr., ' 19 s 12 B. Talmage, T. H., ' q 15 L. P. Tavenner, F. S., Jr., ' g 7 C. G. C. Taylor, A. W. H., ' 19 a 2 U. P. Taylor, E., Jr., ' 17 a 94 H. Taylor, H. C., ' 20 s 101 B. Taylor, H. S., Ass ' t Professor 43 G. C. Taylor, I. H., ' 19 s D. W. B. Taylor, J. C, Jr., ' 18 s 2 E. W. Taylor, J. H., ' g 78 G. C. Taylor, J. H. L., ' 19 a 46 L. Taylor, J. I., ' 19 a 34 N. E. Taylor, L. L., ' 20 s 24 S. E. NAME ADDRESS Taylor, M. McF., ' 17 s 41 C. Taylor, R. S., ' 18 s 163 Nassau St. Taylor, W., Jr., ' 19 a 10 A. H. Taylor, W. R. K., ' 20 a 221 C ' y. Teague, M. C, Assistant 58 Wiggins St. Teich, J., ' 19 s Trenton, N. J. Telfer, R. S., ' f 78 G. C. Ten Broeck, W. D., ' 18 s 11 S. M. R. Ten Eyck, C. B., ' 17 a 52 H. Teng, S. P., ' 18 s 26 N. E. Tenison, W. H., ' 17 s 12 E. B. Terrell, L., ' 19 a .- 3 B. H. Terry, A., Jr.. ' 19 s 16 H ' m. Thayer, H. W., Ass ' t Professor 12 Nassau St. Thomas, F. C, ' 20 s 8 S. W. B. Thomas, G. P., ' q 172 L. Thomas, H. M., ' q 3 N. D. Thomas, L. J., Instructor 293 Nassau St. Thomas, W. C, ' 19 s 20 N. W. Thomas, W. J., ' 18 s 13 N. W. Thompson, G. S., ' 18 s 101 H. Thompson, G. W., ' 20 s 15 Edwards PI. Thompson, H. C, ' 19 a 141 H. Thompson, H. B., Jr., ' 20 s 62 C. Thompson, H.. D.. Professor 11 Morven St. Thompson, K. I., ' 18 s 22 ' 79 H. Thompson, R. L., Jr., ' 18 s. 82 Nassau St. Thompson, W r . M., ' 20 s 24 Dickinson St. Thorington. R. W., ' 19 s 108 P. Thurman. L. R., ' 20 s 11 Alexander St. Tibbott, D. W., ' 17 s 41 P. Tickner, R., ' 17 s 132 L. Timmerman, L. F., ' 19 s 23 ' 79 H. Tinkham, C. M., ' 20 s 24 Dickinson St. Tinsman, R. H., ' q 7 U. P. Toland, O. J., ' 19 s 16 H ' m. Tooker, N. B., Ass ' t Professor 86 Stockton St. Townley, P. B.. ' 20 s 51 H. 414 The Princeton Bric-a-Brac Btwctorp ((Hontinueti) NAME ADDRESS Townley, W. R., ' 19 s 53 B. Townsend, C. H., ' 19 s 12 P. Townsend, R. C, ' 20 s 23 P. Tracy, F. L-, ' 19 s 61 H. Trimble, R. M., Jr., ' 20 s 94 P. Trostle, J. C, ' 19 s 31 6. E. Trowbridge, A., Professor 146 Hodge Road Trowbridge, G. A., ' 20 s 231 C ' y. Tuers, R. V., ' g 41 University PI. Tufel, J. F., ' 20 a 47 University PI. Turner, C. F., ' 18 a. 3 C. H ' m. Turner, H. B., ' 20 a 94 B. Turrentine, M. L., ' 17 a 15 N. W. Twinem, P. D., ' g 410 H. S. Twining, S. E., ' f 91 G. C. Twitchell, H. M., ' 20 s 41 B. Twyeffort, H. E., ' 17 s 103 P. Tyler, A. B., ' 18 s 82 P. Tyler, D. B., ' 17 s 24 M. D. Tyler, M. W., Instructor 26 Prospect Ave. Updike, A. R., ' q 8 S. R. Urmy, H. S., ' 19 s 7 S. W. Vail, H. L., ' 17 a 61 C. Van Alen, A. H., ' 20 s 64 B. S. Van Alen, O. H., ' q 18 L. Van Cleve, B. M., ' 17 s 2 A. H. Van Cleve, J. R. ' 20 s 11 L. P. Van Court, B. P., Jr., ' 20 s 85 P. Van den Ven, P., Lecturer 76 Murray PI. Vanderlin, C. J., ' 20 s Hill Van Deventer, P., ' 19 s 11 N. M. R. Van Dusen, H. P., ' 19 a 32 C. van Dyke, H., Professor Absent on leave van Dyke, P.. Professor Pyne Tower, G. C. Van Dyke, W. D., Jr., ' 17 a 171 L. Van Hoesen, H. B., Curator of Manuscripts. .30 Linden Lane Van Horn, A., Jr., ' 18 s 9 N. W. Van Ingen, G, Ass ' t Professor 115 Broadtnead NAME ADDRESS Van Meter, L. W., ' 19 a 18 N. E. Vanneman, J. S., M.D., Ass ' t University Phvsician, 14 Park PI. Van Nest, J. S., Ass ' t Professor 37 Cleveland Lane Van Schoonhoven, F. Y., Jr., ' q 16 N. E. Van Tuyl, R. W., ' 18 a 93 H. Van Wart, W. H., ' 19 s 15 Vandeventer Ave. Van Wyck, A., ' 19 a 97 B. Vaughn, G. A., Jr., ' 19 s 13 P. Veblen, O., Professor 58 Battle Road Vehslage, F. C, ' 20 s 10 Madison St. Vensel, H. W., ' 17 a 131 H. Vermeule, W. C, ' 20 s 71 H. Verner, E. M., ' 19 s 104 B. Vest, G. G., ' 17 a 82 Nassau St. Vickery, J. C, Assistant 11 G. C. Vittorini, D., ' g Nassau St. Vogt, A. R., ' 20 s 31 University PI. Vogt, E. L., ' 18 a 12 H. Vollrath, H. B., ' 17 s 212 C ' y. von Hasslacher, H., ' 18 s 3 A. H. Voorhis, J. W., ' 17 a 2 S. E. Vreeland, W. U., Professor 180 Mercer St. Wainwright, L. S., ' 20 s 31 University PI. Wair, D, ' 18 s 3 E. B. Walcott, B. S., ' 17 s 241 C ' y. Wales, K. S., ' 17 s 3 S. R. Walker, H. M., ' 20 a 41 Park PI. Wallace, C. K, ' 18 s 19 M. D. Wallace. H. B., Instructor 26 Prospect Ave. Waller, E. J., ' 19 s 13 L. Wallis, K. C, ' 19 a 7 S. E. B. Walter, P. C, ' 19 s 61 L. Walters, S. F. D., ' 19 a 64 B. Wang, C. H., ' g 24 G. C. Wang, K. P., ' q 3 Madison St. Wanless, H. R., ' 20 s 32 Vandeventer Ave. Warburton, B. H., Jr., ' 20 s 151 L. 415 -   £g The Princeton Brica-Prac SBjfe - - Btrectorp (Continueb) NAME ADDRESS Warburton, W. J., ' 18 s 16 W. W. Ward, C. A., ' q 15 Vandeventer Ave. Ward, L. R., Jr., ' 20 s 111 H. Ward, M., ' 17 a 52 ' 79 H. Warden, H. W., ' 18 s 43 H. Warren, F. D., Jr., ' 19 a 34 L. Warfield, J. D., Jr., ' 17 s 36 P. Warren, H. C, Professor 133 Library PL Warren, H. M., ' 19 s 412 C ' y. Warren, J. S., ' 17 s 16 C. Washburn, R. H., ' 19 s 8 C. H. Waterbury, S. W., ' 19 s 54 H. Watson, J. G., ' 20 s 14 Edwards PL Watt, H. R.. ' 17 s 143 L. Watts, B. F.. Jr., ' 20 s 14 Ed wards PL Webster, S. L., ' 19 s 82 B. Weber, S. H., ' f 146 G. C. Wedderburn, J. H. M., Ass ' t Professor Absent on leave Weil, A. L., Jr., ' 17 s 104 H. Weinberg, F. E., ' 20 s 14 Edwards PL Weiskotten, H. T., ' f 74 G. C. Welch, A. J., ' 20 s 2 M. D. Wells, W. G., ' 20 s 46 Wiggins St. Wertenbaker, T. J., Ass ' t Professor, in Fitz-Randolph Road West, A. F., Dean of Graduate School Wvman House West, J. C., ' 19 a . ..11 N. W. Westcott, J. H., Professor 200 Mercer St. Westcott, J. H., Jr., ' 18 a 200 Mercer St. Wester, R. A., Instructor 35 Park PL Wetherbee, R. N., ' 17 s .2 B. C. Wever, E. H., ' 20 a 15 Edwards PL Whaler, J. W„ ' g 9 Park PL Wheeler, H. L., Jr., ' 19 s 11 W. B. White, C. T., ' 18 a 4 N. R. White, D. S., ' g 14 D. G. C. White, H. A., ' 17 s 64 H. White, T. G., ' 20 s 4 S. E. NAME ADDRESS Whiteford, C, ' g 91 G. C. Whitehouse, F. S., ' 17 s 138 Nassau St. Whitlock, F. B., ' 17 s 123 H. Whitman, R. C., ' 19 s 5 A. H. Whitney, G. T., Ass ' t Professor 33 Jefferson Rd. Whitney, W. B., Jr., ' 19 s 10 S. D. Whittingham, A. M., ' 19 s 33 ' 79 H. Whittingham, R. H., ' 20 s 33 ' 79 H. Wickes, J., ' 17 a 9 E. B. Widenmann, H. A. K.. ' 18 s 13 E. W. Wiegand, C. O., ' q 112 L. Wight, E. V. D., ' 19 a „. 15 N. W. Wilbur. F. L., ' 19 s 31 ' 79 H. Wille, F. B., ' 18 s 38 L. Williams, A., Instructor 16 Park PL Williams, C. C., Jr., ' 17 a 22 B. Williams, C. I., ' 19 s 153 L. Williams, F. L., ' q 8 M. D. Wilbams, J. G., ' 18 s 112 L. Williamson, D., ' 18 a 74 H. Williamson, G. F.. ' 20 s 4 A. C. Williamson. W. M., ' 20 s 11 Vandeventer Ave. WiLi.ouc.HBY, W. F., Lecturer 10 Boudinot St. Willson, F. N., Professor Stony Brook Wilmot, W. G, ' 20 s 31 University PL Wilson, E. L., ' 18 a 1 E. M. W. Wilson, F. P., ' 18 s 1 L. P. Wilson, J. A., ' 20 a 18 W. W. Wilson, J. L., ' 18 s 102 P. Wilson, K. O., ' 20 s 11 E. B. Wilson, M. O., ' 18 s 11 S. D. Winans, D. R., ' 18 a 10 N. E. Windels, A. E., ' 19 s 62 Wiggins St. Winebrenner, D. C., 3rd, ' 20 a 184 L. Winn, J. J., ' 19 s 3 A. C. Wintersteen, T„ ' 19 a 96 B. Winton, D. J., ' 20 s 301 H ' m. 416 The {Princeton ESric-a-Brac, % ©trectorp (Contlubcb) NAME ADDRESS Wintringer, G. C, Secretary of Business Administration, Stanhope Hall Wiss, J. B., ' 17 s 5 N. W. Witherspoon, J. B. ( ' 20 s 181 L. Wolf, E., ' 20 s 12 S. E. Wolfe, E. T., ' 17 s 30 Mercer St. Wood, E., ' g 4 B. G. C. Wood, H. A, ' 18 s 102 P. Woodbridge, J. S., ' 18 a 6 S. R. Woodruff, W. H., ' g Lawrenceville, N. J. Woods, D. W., ' 20 a 3 A. H ' m. Woods, J. M., Jr., ' 18 a 10 N. R. Wood worth, R. C, ' 20 s 300 H m Worden, J. S., ' 20 s 6 W. W. Wren, W. W., ' 19 s 10 N. D. Wright, Jane, Art Ref. Librarian Art Museum Wright, S. L., Jr., ' 18 s 16 M. D. Wrightson, J. T., ' 19 s 23 B. name address Writer, J., ' 18 s 12 W. B. Wu, T. Y., ' q 9 Madison St. Wulp, G. A., ' 19 s 7 Park PI. Wyeth, J. A., Jr., ' g 15 E. G. C. Wylie, L. L., ' 20 a 11 Alexander St. Wylie, W. F., ' 20 a 11 Alexander St. Yeiser, F. T., ' 20 a 181 L. Yeomans, E. S., ' 19 s 63 ' 79 H. Yowdale, R. B., ' f 51 G. C. Yoe, J. H., Assistant 58 Wiggins St. Young, A. N., Instructor 43 Jefferson Rd. Young, H. W., ' 17 s 115 B. Young, J. S.. ' 19 a 10 A. H. Young, W. S., g 22 G. C. Yui, S. E. S., ' g 24 G. C. Zabriskie, A. C., ' 20 a 10 E. W. Ziesing, R., Jr., ' 17 s 101 L. Zunino, F. A., Jr., ' 18 s 13 C. PRINCETON AT PLATTSBURG 417 The Princeton Sri c- a- Brae 1 H OS 5 o u 05 U Q nJ o s o p w o z « H Z w f- Ciff I 5 tea n c The Princeton HSric-a-grac INDEX Abbreviations 392 Advertisements 419 Alumni Associations 385 Alumni Weekly 123 American Whig Society 131 Athletic Department 141 Athletic Executive Committee 132 Banjo Club 103 Baseball Section 155 Baseball Captains ' 186 Basketball Section 191 Bric-a-Brac Board (1917) 117 Bric-a-Brac Board ( 1918) 7 Bric-a-Brac Officers, Former 122 Bureau of Student Self-Help 334 Calendar 10 Chapel Choir 105 Chess Club 352 Class Day Committee ( 1916) 380 Class Day Exercises (1916) 381 Class Roll, 1916 375 Class Roll, 1917 36 Class Roll, 1918 42 Class Roll, 1919 51 Class Roll, 1920 59 Ciiosophic Society 127 Clio Hall Prize Contests 130 Commencement Department 37 3 Crew 181 Cross-Country Team 193 Dances 355 Debate Section 137 Deceased Undergraduates 34 Dedication 6 Dining Halls Committee . 339 Dining Halls, The New 341 Directory 394 Dramatic Department 77 Electrical Engineering, School of 32 Engineering Club 347 Faculty 17 Football Section 145 Football Captains 186 Freshman Athletics Department 215 Glee Club . . . . ' 99 Golf Section 195 Graduate Council 350 Graduate School 30 Gun Club Section 211 Gymnastic Section 197 Halls 125 r lockey Section 199 Honors Conferred 384 Interclass Athletics 231 420 The Princeton HSric-a-Brac « Snbex (Conclubeb) International Polity Club 343 Intcrscholastic Athletics 245 Intracollegiate Athletic Executive Committee 232 Junior Promenade Committee 359 Law Club 345 Mandolin Club 101 Medical Club 349 Miscellaneous Department 335 Musical Clubs Organization 95 Nassau Literary Magazine Board 113 Xorthfield Conference 330 Officers of Administration 27 Orphic Order 104 Phi Beta Kappa 383 Philadelphian Society 327 Pictorial Review 115 Plattsburg Camp 353 Presidents of the University II Press Club 119 Princeton and Service 328 Princeton Dramatic Association 91 Princeton University Center in China 331 Princetonian Board 109 Princeton Etchings 67 Publications Department 107 Qualifying Students 65 Religious Organizations 325 Retrospect 361 Rifle Club Section 213 Right Wing Club 351 St. Paul ' s Society 327 School Clubs 287 Sectional Clubs 311 Senior Council 337 Senior Promenade Committee 357 Soccer Section 201 Sophomore Reception Committee 360 Standing Committees of the Board of Trustees 14 Standing Committees of the Faculty 26 Summary of Students by States 323 Summer Camp 329 Swimming Section 203 Tennis Section 205 Tiger Board 1 1 1 Track Section 167 Track Teams, Captains of 187 Triangle Club 79 Trustees of the University 12 University Buildings 393 University Life Saving Club 237 L T niversity Preachers 333 University Press 121 Upper Class Clubs 251 Water Polo Section 207 Wearers of the P 143 Whig Hall Prize Contests 135 Wrestling Section 209 421 The Princeton i§ric-a-E§ra.c NORTH WEST Genuine Kangaroo Shoes COOLEST— STRONGEST— MOST COMFOR TABLE Manufactured by all leading shoe manufacturers, including WALKOVER SHOE CO. REGAL SHOE CO. CHURCHILL ALDEN CO. JOHNSTON MURPHY EMERSON SHOE CO. Be sure to asfy for genuine Kangaroo and tal e no other •rv CLOTHING, ypenty ixtttw |fttnti£lfut£ mtwb , MADISON AVENUE COR. FORTY-FOURTH STREET NEW YORK Telephone Murray Hill 8800 Clothing for Every Requirement Ready Made and to Measure Suits and Overcoats for Business, Dress or Sport English and Domestic Hats and Shoes Shirts, Cravats, Collars, Pajamas, Underwear, Hosiery and Gloves Dressing Gowns, Travellers ' Requisites, Leather Goods Waistcoats, Caps, Sweaters and Mufflers of Shetland or Angora Wool Imported Pipes, Tobacco Pouches, Cigarette Cases, etc. Liveries for all Menservants Our New Illustrated Catalogue Containing more than One Hundred Photographic Plates will be sent on request BOSTON SALES-OFFICES LITTLE ' S BUILDING TREMONT COR. BOYLSTON ST. NEWPORT SALES-OFFICES AUDRAIN BUILDING 220 BELLEVUE AVENUE BROOKS BROTH ERS ' New Building, convenient to Grand Central, Subway, and to many of the leading Hotels and Clubs The Princeton Bric-a-grac ■ML GRADUATE COLLEGE BY PICTORIAL REVIEW E. C. JAMESON LYMAN CANDEE President Vice-President GLOBE RUTGERS Fire Insurance Co. Ill WILLIAM STREET NEW YORK CASH CAPITAL $700,000 Assets October 1, 1916 Surplus to Policyholders $ 1 2, 1 26,984.25 $6,048,242.40 W. H. PAULISON J. T. GORDON Secretary Secretary J. H. MULVEHILL PRINCETON AGENT W. L. LINDSAY Asst. Secretary Asst. Secretary H. R. Chambers, Jr. 138 NASSAU STREET PRINCETON z o d z o ? D o _l L±J o Q Z o -J ? Ik o CI oc Q u D K s 0) | ? 0) o 8 z I D U) z I u z u e H in u o a: 4 I r- ■ Z 0. S o o a: O u z K u UJ c I- (0 z X o 10 in PRINCETON TUTORS ' ASSOCIATION TUTORING CAMP IN MOUNTAINS July 10 to September I TUTORING SCHOOL AT PRINCETON September I to October I FRANK FRITTS, President PRINCETON, N. J. m } rA v|y __J F I W l ■ -w- Wi ' ' w K 1 «■ fm jjifyi ji M ' MUSICAL HEADQUARTERS Largest and Best Chosen Stock m the Country. Catalogues Free on Request CHAS. H. DITSON CO. 8-10-12 East 34 th Street . . NEW YORK II VAS, ir, AND K. .. (jENNKRT, ' 17 CHOOSE _____ ana USE Fou $2.50 up THAT LAST5 A UrET | ME From Your Local Dealer L. E. Waterman Company, 173 Broadway, New York CHARLES N1LL Baker For the Clubs Everything in the Pastry Line 20 Witherspoon St. PRINCETON, N. J. PHONE 416 J LOUIS KAPLAN 29 Witherspoon Street PRINCETON, N. J. Pays the highest prices for Students ' Cast-off Clothing. Also have on hand some Brooks Model Clothing, which we sell at very reasonable prices. The Princeton Bric-a-Srac McCOSH WALK vii The achievements of one of America ' s greatest retail organizations in producing the highest type of Clothing for Men at the lowest possible prices, are represented Dv McCreery Special Hand-tailored Suits Overcoats at $22.75 Full Dress and Tuxedo Suits at the McCreery Standard Price — 28.50 Will always be obtainable, in every size from 34 to 46, including stouts, longs and shorts. Jilways featuring the latest styles in Men ' s Furnishings Scarfs Gloves Shirts Collars Hosiery Standard Underwear House Coats Lounging Robes Bath Robes 5th Avenue James McCreery Co. 34t h street NEW YORK Established 1872 by i:. A. Wriftht Wriilht Quality Excelled by None Engraving and Printing J FORI Onr M an nfactaring [Plant, Uro.id and Huntingdon Sts. Colleges and Schools is a special feature with us and the high standard of our workmanship is not only known from coast to coast as representing the best in Engraving and Printing, but it has penetrated foreign lands with credit. Our facilities are the most modern, and we offer you the advantages that we enjoy through the strength of our forty-four years ' rigorous maintenance of a peerless standard. Thousands upon thousands of our student friends have remembered us after bidding farewell to their Alma Mater, and are coming to us day after day for their Wedding Invitations, Dance Programs, Business Station- ery, Calendars, Bonds and Certificates, as well as all their Engraving and Printing requirements. Retail Store and Showroom 1218 WALNUT STREET E. A. WRIGHT COMPANY PHILADELPHIA PRINCETON REPRESENTATIVE-PRINCETON UNIVERSITY STORE Salesrooms,! Offices ]and factory BROADIANDjHUNTlNGDON STS. The Princeton Brie- a- Brae CANE SPREE BY PICTORIAL REVIEW FLOUR PICTURE C. M. HEDDEN COMPANY MAKERS OF Fine Soft Fur Felt Hats OFFICE AND FACTORY 232-242 Thirteenth Avenue NEWARK, N. J. Let Your Next Hat be a Hedden FOR SALE AT ALL FIRST CLASS HATTERS AND FURNISHERS Victor Victrolas and Victor Records Victrolas Always in Stock, ranging in price from $15 to $100 OTHER MACHINES ON ORDER Our Stock of Records is constantly increasing and we probably have on hand the selection you want. : : : -THE- Princeton University Store HOTEL IMPERIAL Nearer to Everything than Anything BROADWAY, 31st TO 32nd STREET, NEW YORK CITY At Herald Square, the radial centre or tranportation to all parts of the city. One block from Pennsylvania Station, a few minutes from Grand Central Terminal, Subway, Surface and Elevated Service, direct to the Hotel, which is in the midst of the fashionable theatre and shopping district. HEADQUARTERS FOR COLLEGE MEN Rooms, $1.50 per day and up With bath, $2.50 per day and up The famous Palm Garden Restaurant is one of the most attractive rooms in the city, and easily reached because of our central location. You will find it a delightful place to entertain your friends. Imperial Home Dinner served daily in Palm Room from 6 to 8.30 P. M. DANCING EVERY AFTERNOON, EXCEPT SUNDAY, FROM 4 TO 9 P. M. Send for Circular A, giving particulars of Hotel, with map of New York City WILLARD D. ROCKEFELLER Manager Theres something abcutthcra youll like- Twenty Quarter FW Herbert . Iareyton London Cigarettes I expect to pass thru this life but once If, therefore, there be any kindness I can show, or any good thing I can do to my fellow human beings, let me do it now. Let me not defer it, or neglect it, for I shall not pass this way again. Edmund Courtnay — Earle of Devon JL.-.JN twit ARCHWAY CF HOLDER BY PICTORIAL REVIEW INCORPORATED 1865 TELEPHONE No. 91 NATIONAL FIRE AND MARINE Insurance Company No. Ill BROAD STREET H. C. TROWBRIDGE Secretary ELIZABETH, N. J. CHAMBIzRSBURG TRUST CO. CHAMBERSBURG. PA. Capital . . . $200,000.00 Surplus . . . 230,000.00 Total Assets . . 1,550,000.00 CARROLL COMPANY DRY GOODS HOUSE FURNISHINGS FURNITURE, BEDDING FLOOR COVERINGS 16 Nassau Street PRINCETON, N. J. The Princeton Brie- a- B r ac ■6 HOLDER COURT BY.MOONLIGHT BY PICTORIAL REVIEW TURKISH CIGARETTE TURKISH Tobacco is the WORLDS MOSTFAMOUS Tobacco for CIGARETTES U. S. DEPOSITARY BEING A DESIGNATED DEPOSITARY OF THE UNITED STATES, THIS BANK IS UNDER GOVERNMENT INSPECTION AND SUPERVISION OUR METHODS, THOUGH CONSERVATIVE, ARE MODERN AND LIBERAL, AND OUR CUSTOMERS ' INTERESTS ARE CAREFULLY GUARDED IN EVERY POSSIBLE WAY THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF PRINCETON RESPECTFULLY DIRECTS ATTENTION TO A STEADY INCREASE IN THE FOLLOWING FIGURES, ITS BUSINESS, WHICH IS WHICH REVEAL SIGNIFICANTLY SUGGESTIVE Number of Depositors Deposits Number of Depositors Tkposits 1894 . 225 . . $ 34,423 1907 .... 2395 $509,000 1897 .656 .... 90,635 1909 . ... . 2592 . 587,000 1900 . 720 ... 228,092 1914 .... 2860 821,000 1903 . 1281 .... 358,294 1915 .... 3100 980,000 1906 .. . 2280 .... 450.000 1916 .... 3274 . 1,060,000 WE REGARD THE CONTINUED GROWTH OF THIS INSTITUTION A CREDIT TO THE ENTERPRISE OF THE COMMUNITY AS WELL AS AN EVIDENCE OF APPROVAL OF OUR METHODS AND BUSINESS POLICIES ALBERT S. LEIGH, President OFFICERS WILLIAM LIBBEY, Vice-President DAVID M. FLYNN, Cashier NEW JERSEY PENNSYLVANIA TRACTION COMPANY Fast Line: 35 Minutes Princeton to Trenton 35 MINUTES Half-hour Service Saturdays and Holidays from Noon to Midnight Smoking Compartment in Every Car Co f tn e nesi a t it W. 3CSC R. L. XOURSE, ' i7 - - gg The Princeton Br c-o.-mVEc S! J - BY PICTORIAL REVIEW SWIMMING MEET Co tl]c Ctlumni We extend a greeting, and take this opportunity to thank them for their generous patronage. Repeated orders from them convince us that they are well satisfied with our methods. We want to be pleasantly remembered by you who will soon be ALUMNI. We are prepared to furnish you with Princeton Souvenirs or anything pertaining to Princeton. If it is a book by a Princeton man, we can procure it for you- Give us a trial. Mail Orders Given Prompt and Careful Attention. (Lfye Princeton University Store ;i H . : BY PICTORIAL REVIEW PROCTOR DINING HALL GRADUATE COLLEGE When You Have Succeeded Perhaps you also will retire to your farm. Of course a farm without cows is not a farm and unless there are reg- istered Holsteins, they are only scrubs. Why is a man on the scrub football team? Just because he is not good enough to be on the Varsity. We have a herd of some 1 50 tuberculine tested Holsteins headed by Sir Prilly Segis. Let us know your wants. We are in the position to satisfy them ' . Beaver Dam Stock Farm JULIUS SCHMID, Prop. MONTGOMERY, N. Y. CLOTHES OF REFINEMENT AT MODERATE PRICES The Test of Supremacy is Comparison Dartmouth Street, Trinity Place and Copley Square, BOSTON The best hotel in Boston in my judgment after years of experience. Try it and be convinced. Complimen ' s of A SATISFIED PATRON. TELEPHONE. JOHN 2997 Arthur F. Hours Co. , Inc. FIRE and MARINE INSURANCE 80 MAIDEN LANE NEW YORK 1 1 nyx m Hosiery SILIv SUPREME IN STYLE AND DURABILITY A STYLE SUITABLE FOR ANY OCCASION FOR MEN, WOMEN AND CHILDREN Sold at All Quality Shops Emery -Beers Company, inc. Wholesale Distributors GENUINE CIGARS PHILADELPHIA Restaurant and Tea Rooms TABLE D ' HOTE AND A LA CARTE A cordial welcome is extended to all Princeton men Book of tickets at reduced rates now obtainable STUDENT MANAGERS P. OHLIGER, ' 16 F. B. CHRISTMAS, ' 19 Treasurer B. H. FEUSTMAN, ' 17 J. E. BRYAN, ' 19 A. H. JENNINGS, ' 19 C. MARSHALL, 70 Kftttluwrtlj ApartmptttH Single and double rooms. Shower baths, steam heat, electricity 39 UNIVERSITY PLACE EDDY, 1917 W. M. LEIGH Ready-to- Wear Clothing and cTHen ' s Furnishings | ress uits a S pecialty DOMESTIC AND FOREIGN WOOLENS 66 NASSAU STREET Princeton, N. J. The Princeton §Sric-a-flrac CAMPBELL HALL HUDSON RIVER BY DAYLIGHT No better way to view the lovely scenery of this historic river than from the decks of a swift, palatial Day Line steamer. ' Washington Irving ' Robert Fulton ' Hendrick Hudson Albany The fastest and most beautifully appointed river steamers in the world. Service daily except Sunday, between New York and Albany, with way landings. All through rail tickets via New York Central or West Shore R. R. accepted on all boats. Orchestra, restaurant. Day Line Steamers are in commission from about the middle of May until about the end of October. Send 4c. in stamps for summer literature HUDSON RIVER DAY LINE Desbrosset Street Pier New York  g ,The Princeton Bric-a-gre l Sfep ?- BLAIR TOWER FROM CAMPUS m THE flavor and fragrance of BLUE BOAR are new —distinctive and delicious — pro- nounced, yet deli- cate. Blue Boar is the most scientifically cor- rect and perfectly- balanced of all pipe mixtures. Each of the choice to- baccos of which Blue Bdar is made is cut or broken by the Rough In the new Pocket Package 25c ROUGH CUT THE AMERICAN TOBACCO COMPANY Cut method, to the precise degree of fine- ness which preserves and emphasizes the natural flavor and aroma of the leaf. If you are a man whose critical taste cannot be satisfied by the tobaccos in common use — you may now find in your favorite pipe a new zest, a new com- fort, a new and infinitely delightful companion- ship, by smoking Blue Boar. Foil Wrapped, Moisture Proof and Convenient I B ©MIPLIMENTA Y Cc P. D. - m m ■■■ ■  •• •■ If 1 IfI i£ito 1 | n Hi fr sMI ■«. - INTERIOR OF GYM BY PICTORIAL REVIEW Richard L. Weaver INSTRUCTION COACH OF MANDOLIN and BANJO CLUBS AND TRIANGLE CLUB ORCHESTRA ...ESTABLISHED 1894... W. L.Perrin Son (fcnrral Agntta 73 MAIDEN LANE N. Y. CITY All Kinds of Insurance The Princeton Bric-a-Srac £ THE HALLS Clothing Haberdashery Head wear and Clothes for The Car JACOB REED ' S SONS Persgjjgilly selected Outfitters for Thousands of WeTT- Dressed Yo u n 1424-1426 Chestnut Street Philadelphia FRANK BROTHERS Jflrftlj, Awtut? Snot ffytyap Near 48th Street New York BUILDERS OF SMART COLLEGE SHOES Princeton (Exhibit 62 ZftCassau Street REPEATING and AUTOLOADING SHOTGUNS and STEEL-LINED SPEED SHELLS REMINGTON UMC adopted everywhere — in the field and at the traps— shot by more of the sportsmen who are setting the pace in shooting than any other make of guns and shells. Remington-UMC is the Perfect Shooting Combination SOLD EVERYWHERE Remington Arms-Union Metallic Cartridge Co. WOOLWORTH BUILDING, 223 BROADWAY, NEW YORK U M FPU : • .il: -  ± 5 mn i • . tvi RUSH OF ' 18 AND 19 Why Should YOU Have a Typewriter? BECA USE — It will enable you to get more out of your college course. BECA USE — It will mean higher marks in your studies. BECAUSE— t will add to your standing and prestige with the professors. BECA USE — You can keep carbon copies of notes, lectures and theses. BECA USE — A knowledge of how to operate a typewriting machine will be useful to you as long as you live. The Silent Model 8— L. C. Smith Bros, typewriter— is so quiet that you can run it with- out disturbing other students near you. It has many other exclusive features that you should hear about. Call us on the phone or drop a card. THE SILENT SMITH ' Model 8 PRINCETON UNIVERSITY STORE Typewriters to Rent NeTD and Factory Re-builts For Sale F. H. ROSS 1 00 William Street N. Y. CITY Telephone, John 4876 L. R. VOGEL H. R. LEWIS Jfctasatt 3|ttn Opposite Campus 52 Nassau Street PRINCETON, N. J. BY PICTORIAL REVIEW QfaAhwrkd r Uhe Well Bore Pipe ESTABLISHED 1851 Trad ' Ccpf M.rk Clean and Dry. All Sizes. KAUFMANN BROS. BONDY, New York Blafyely Laundering is Correct I T is the laundering by which all others may safely be judged. It is the result of a lifetime of study — the sum total of what can be obtained with a combi- nation of expertness, modern methods and the finest machinery man ever devised for helping the work along. Those who know it best have been our customers for over a score of years. It has improved with the years until it has reached present-day perfection. There ' s nothing quite as good, and there never WILL be any better, because we propose keeping far enough ahead of the procession to make catching-up impossible. So, to avoid taking chances, use Blakely Laundering. W. L. DEMPSEY, Agent 25 SOUTH EDWARDS Cotnpiiinenta ol a cy tiett3 G. T a CO. C H. LATROBE, ' 17 Mtstyxma of Mtn a Blpts. HROADWAY AT 40tii STREET NEW YORK Metropolitan OPERA IIousk Building OUR CLOTHES Are successfully represented at a number of colleges in the East. We visit 60 NASSAU ST., PRINCETON. Every Monday at Kopps ' Complete Lines of Correct Dress Suits, ready-to-wear, or to indi- vidual measure. Broadway and 22nd Street NEW YORK THE HONOR OFTHE PATRONAGE OF MEN REQUESTED THE VANDERBILT MOTEL THIRTY FOURTH STREET EAST at PARK AVENUE NEW YORK CITY y N HOTEL DESIGNED TO APPEAL TO THE CONSERVATIVE Juhwayjiaiion ai Hotel Entrance MERCER P«s £U. «k M 22-73 SPORTING MODEL A HIGH-GRADE FOUR-CYLINDER CAR- ADDITIONAL CYLINDERS IN THE MERCER WOULD BE A SUPERFLUITY ercer utomobile ( o. TRENTON, N. J. Brown Brothers Co. 59 WALL STREET, NEW YORK Fourth and Chestnut Streets 60 State Street Philadelphia Boston INVESTMENT SECURITIES Foreign Exchange Commercial Credits Cable Transfers Foreign Collections CERTIFICATES OF DEPOSIT Accounts Received, Subj ect to Check, on Favorable Terms Brown, Shipley Company London Founders Court Lothbury, E. C. Office for Travelers 123 Pall Mall, S. W. LORD TAYLOR 38th Street FIFTH AVENUE 39th Street The Men ' s Shops These Lord Taylor sections are splendidly equipped with every essential for The Well Dressed Man ' s Fall and Winter Outfits Haberdashery Neckwear, Shirts, Pajamas, Dressing Gowns, Bath Robes, House Coats, Hosiery, Gloves, Umbrellas, Canes, Handkerchiefs — of notably fine qualities and correct style. Men ' s Clothing Styles of the very moment. Fabrics of the finest. Tailoring that meets the highest sar- torial standards. Such are Lord Taylor Clothes for Men. GROUND FLCOR FOURTH FLOOR Men ' s Shoes Footwear of the best American and imported makes for dress, business and sports wear ; in every wanted leather and many smart new lasts. GROUND FLOOR Service — prompt and efficient. Prices — the lowest compatible with high quality standards. - gg ,The Princeton Bric-a-Br S S?fe5 - «9- VIEW OF CAMPBELL ALEXANDER HALLS rf PROFESS OR STUDENT GRADUATE The Can find their every need at prices that appeal Booths, Stationery, Cigars, Tobacco and Athletic Goods at Princeton University Store Then, too, we have the thing that is new in Souvenirs, Pins, Pennants, Etc. Mail Orders Solicited xli. franklin Simon do. Fifth Avenue, New York rfen ' s Shop s 4 to 16 West 38th St., N. Y. Exclusive Clothes Ready -to- Wear for Young Men Furnishings Imported and Domestic Shoes The newest lasts finest leathers You are cordially invited to visit our Men ' s Clothing, Furnishing and Shoe Shops, when on your visit to New York m ' A L. - JTIll II I iimkj ■Bel III Wm 1 jffl 1- 5 ' ' v HP l 9 Im il TOWER OF ' 79 Comfortabl FATI MA Gzcy CLTe tte s j;± . tdtis 20 for nl i xliv THE HOTTEL CO. OF TRENTON AT THEIR PRINCETON STORE EVERY DAY Cross Gloves, Knox Hats SOFT SHIRTS A. J. RUBY ' S SMART SHOES For Every Occasion EXCLUSIVE AGENCY THE PLAZA 5th Avenue at 59th Street NEW YORK FACING CENTRAL PARK $4.00 per day upward 6.00 Single Room, with bath . Double TEA AND SUPPER DANCES IN THE GRILL ROOM ' FRED STERRY, Managing Director Clothes of Quality and Distinction ARE THE SORT PRODUCE® BY D. H. KRESGE EXCLUSIVE TAILOR FOR COLLEGE MEN 1 13 South Sixteenth St., Philadelphia Represented at Princeton every n ee . 1914 MAR CHING UP NASSAU STREET xlv Telephone, Courtlandt 1934... SEELIG DELSON Q nilots 5 BEEKMAN STREET NEW YORK TEMPLE COURT BUILDING, ROOM 315 5th Avenue and 59th Street NEW YORK CITY FACING CENTRAL PARK ROOM AND BATH . . . $2.00 PER DAY UPWARD ST. PATRICK ' S DAY P— RADE Wm. A. Read Co. Investment Securities NASSAU AND CEDAR STREETS NEW YORK CHICAGO PHILADELPHIA LONDON BOSTON xk, William Moore DEALER IN STUDENTS ' FURNITURE and CLOTHING Highest Cash Prices Paid 46-8 SPRING STREET PRINCETON, N. J. Phone, Bell 378... MARSH COMPANY PRINCETON, N. J. Pharmacists Prescriptions Compounded from Purest Drugs and Chemicals Obtainable Full Line of Toilet Articles and Sick-room Suppli es Jnrt pit fJfniel T. S. Fasanella 58 NASSAU STREET Artist Merchant Tailor Cleaning, Pressing and Repairing Ladies work a specialty SHOE SHINING G. w FUNK. 1919 xwa E. A. Wright Company Philadelphia are the printers and makers of the Plates in the Princeton bric-a-Brac Salesrooms, Offices and Factory Broad and Huntingdon Streets Retail Store and Showroom 1218 Walnut Street xlviii - ggl ? The Princeton mc-a-Brac BLAIR TOWER FROM STATION _J xlix Just the Pipe for You! ▼ WELL Always a clean, cool, dry smoh.e MANUFACTURED BY WM. DEMUTH CO. 230 5th Ave. New York City Frank B. Hall Co. Average Adjusters AND Insurance Brokers Established for Over Twenty-five Years Employ a Staff of Experts in All Branches of the Insurance Business if s? REPRESENTED IN LONDON BY MESSRS. SEDGWICK, COLLINS CO., Ltd. 7 Gracechurch Street, E. C. Also in Petrograd, Hamburg, Genoa, etc. DETROIT OFFICE DIME BANK BUILDING Special Representatives in Boston, Philadelphia New Orleans, Chicago and San Francisco 26 Exchange Place New York Telephone, Hanover 6767 DAD STRUVE ' S Arcade Motion Pictures PARAMOUNT PICTURES SHOWN HERE Fire-proof Ground Floor Theatre BOWLING BILLIARDS Joe Sippley Majestic Restaurant YOUR SPECIAL DISH TO ORDER 4 Nassau Street PRINCETON, N. J. THE NAME OF GULICK Is a guarantee of satisfaction and stands absolutely for the strongest possible value in materials and workman- ship. Quality has always been the GULICK watch- word, and any article bearing their trade-mark will be found to represent the highest standard. THE FOOTBALL AND BASEBALL UNIFORM BUSINESS is a very important feature of our trade. The universal satisfaction that they have given has enabled us to establish them in every college and school of any im- portance in this section. GULICK COMPANY, UNIVERSITY OUTFITTERS o ne Cause of B rain Fa g Continuity of thought, concentration of the nvnd, speech, errors in mathematical and clerical work, as well as nervous exhaustion, are frequently due to EYE STRAIN Let us replace your quickly. Send by broken nail or lenses. We do it messenger to the APPLEGATE LENSE MAKERS 9 E State Street - - Trenton, N. J- ■w COMMENCEMENT P— RACE The Official photographs in this book were made by photographers to Princeton University The Princeton Brie- a- B r ac McCOSH AND SUN DIAL CHARLES BOGERT General Agent at Westwood, N. J. INSURANCE FOR golden hill building National Fire and Marine 1 1 1 William St., New York City, N. Y. Insurance Company OF Licensed Broker FOR THE STATE ELIZABETH, N. J. OF NEW YORK AND NEW JERSEY Fire, Marine, Burglary Liability, Automobile and Plate Glass ESTABLISHED 1865 MOZART N o U N a -JC z 3 « UJ THE COLLEGE CHEER ELIN AUTO SUPPLY CO. DISTRIBUTORS OF MOHAWK QUALITY TIRES 27-3-5 Halsey Street Newark, N. J. HOLDER TOWER Economy Auto Supply Co. 268 Halsey Street NEWARK, N. J. Tires of Standard Maizes Only No Seconds Telephone 6840 Market ALWAYS ON THE GO r • YALE GAME AT COMMENCEMENT THE C. H. KOSTER CO. Originators of Refined, Appropriate and Elaborate Decorations Illuminations To Princeton University And For Celebrations Entertainments Mags, Banners, Ribbon, Badges and Fireworks Displays Office, 2 I Park Place NEW YORK Telephones e.nat Barclay C. H. KOSTER F. F. KOSTER President Treasurer H. W. KOSTER Secretary Peter H. Conklin ALL KINDS OF INSURANCE 55 John Street NEW YORK Telephone 421 5 John. . . M. E. LaVAKE SUITABLE GIFTS FOR ALL SEASONS Ivi The Princeton Bric-a-gretc PATTON HALL AND TENNIS COURTS lvii E TIMES SQUARE THE CENTER. OF NEW YOR.K. J i THE ABOVE PICTURE SHOWS THE Hotel Woodstock Forty-third Street, Near Broadway Times Square, New York The Best Moderate Price Hotel in New Yor 365 ROOMS 270 £ATHS EUROPEAN PLAN ONLY ROOM WITH USE OF BATH .... $1.50 TO $2.00 Room with Bath $2.00 TO 4.00 - ■■ (2 persons) 2.50 3.00 ' (2 persons) 3.00 5.00 W. H. VALIQUETTE Managing Director A. E. SINGLETON Assistant Manage? Urn LITTLE HALL COMPLIMENTS OF The Geo. E. Keith Company MAKERS OF WALK-OVER SHOES This Edition of THE BRIC-A-BRAC Printed by the E. A. Wright Bank Note Co. was Bound by Murphy - Parker Company Edition Binders Builders of large editions of College Annuals 701-709 Arch Street Philadelphia Heeremans AT THE Old Flower Shop Can Supply Any- thing in Flowers at Reasonable Prices. 40 Nassau Street PRINCETON, N. J. 1834 1916 Princeton Bank and Trust Company Capital . . $100,000 Surplus and Profits $200,000 OFFICERS EDWARD HOWE President EDWARD L. HOWE Vice -President C. A. SEIDENSTICKER Sec ' y and Treas. SANFORD B. WHITE Asst. Sec ' y JOHN W. LEIGH Asst. Treas. lvix Sanitary Barber Shop Under First National Bank FRED KIENLE Custom Shoemaker R pairing Neatly Done Boot Black Parlor Cleaning of White Shoes Term Tickets for Shoe Shining 60 Nassau Street R{ ' SI I D. M. CARUSO KCerchant bailor Cleaning, Pressing and Altering 1 NASSAU STREET PRINCETON. N. J. Nassau Halt is opposite mr. HIGHLEY MEYER DAVIS- MUSIC Jin Orchestra Extraordinary Headquarters The Bellevue Stratford Philadelphia The New Willard WatSington Hotel Belvedere Baltimore, Marylar.d At all Sophmore, Junior and Senior Promi. HOTEL LUCERNE SOI west Sk vent-ninth St. Nkw York City ARTIH ' R T. HARDY, MANAGING DIRECTOR Located between Central Park and Riverside Drive, on one of the most desirable corners of the exclusive residential district of the upper west side. HORSMAN— Tennis Rackets unsurpassed in 38 YEARS I Fulfill every demand of the Tennis Player. Do not select a Racket for 1917 until you have seen the new MODEL AAA If your dealer can ' t show it, write to us. The PERFECT Tennis Ball is the AYRES Used the world over by players who know. We are Sole U. S. Distributors. Write for Catalogue E. I. HORSMAN CO., Inc. 11-15 Union Square New York City Rollins-Burdick Hunter Co. INSURANCE CHICAGO Insurance Exchange Telephone, Wabash 83 1 NEW YORK 80 Maiden Lane 1906 IN THEIR TENTH REUNION COSTUMES lxi JS FUR COATS ivUm fak or en j 11 1 Fashionably cut All the desirable fur used for collars and lining. Fur Robes, Caps and I iVfl B Gloves. C. G. Gunther ' s Sons Established 1820 391 Fifth Avenue Jgk U NEW YORK • •«•• •. NOURSE THROWING THE JAVELIN ST, PATRICKS DAY ART Ixii PRINCETON MEN I ™ WORLD VISION op CHRIST ' S KINGDOM SUBSCRIBE FOR THE MISSIONARY INTERNATIONAL INTERDENOMINATIONAL THE INDISPENSABLE MISSIONARY MAGAZINE 25 Cents Per Copy $2.50 Per Year EACH EDITION CONTAINS: -Latest Events from all fields; Original Arti- cles by leaders; the Cream of Current Missionary Literature from other Magazines; Best Methods for workers ; Themes, Outlines, Ideas and Illustrations for speak- ers on missionary subjects ; Live Editorials. PUBLISHED BY THE Missionary Review Publishing Co.. Inc. 1E6 Fifth Avenue, New York City Robert E. Speer Walter McDougall President Treasurer Frank L. Biown Delavan L. Pierson Vice-President Secretary Telephone Connections EDWARD WECK SON CUTLERY RETAIL 148 Fulton St., N. Y. 45 Nassau St., N. Y. 473 Fulton St , Brooklyn WHOLESALE 206 Broadway, N. Y. 140 S. Dearborn St., Chicago FACTORY 135 Johnson St., Brooklyn GUARDIANS OF THE PEACE STUDENT SUPPLIES RESTAURANT TheJiggerShop INCORPORATED 64- Nassau St.. Princeton, N.J. Youmans Hats For Young Men YOUMANS DERBY Leaders for Over a Half Century 581 FIFTH AVENUE AT 47th STREET ST. PATRICK ' S DAY P-RADE lxiv COLLEGE AND SCHOOL EMBLEMS AND NOVELTIES FRATERNITY EMBLEMS, SEALS, CHARMS, PLAQUES, MEDALS, ETC. of Superior Quality and Design THE HAND BOOK Illustratedand Priced Mailed upon Request BAILEY, BANKS BIDDLE CO. Diamond Merchants, Jewelers, Silversmiths, Heraldists, Stationers CHESTNUT STREET PHILADELPHIA MOORE THE ORIOLE Official Organ of the Somerset Hills Bird Club Bernardsville, New Jersey This magazine is issued semi-annually and contains beside colored plates of the Audubon Society, articles by many prominent ornitho- logists. The price is $1.50 per year or 75c. per copy. All communications should be addressed to the Somerset Hills Bird Club, Bernardsville, New Jersey. CHARIOT RACE ON NASSAU STREET lxv Ixvi THE COLLEGE FAVORITE EL TORO Porto Rican Cigars 5c. They have that mild, satisfactory aroma you want They are made in Porto Rico. EL TORO Cigars will certainly please you. — TRY THEM JAMES HIGGINSON Tailor IMPORTED AND DOMESTIC WOOLENS Exclusive Patterns SUITS MADE TO ORDER $25oo up 36 Nassau Street PRINCETON, N. J. AMES EBERSTADT COMEY AND BROWN C. C. Skirm 68 Nassau Street Princeton, N. J. IMPORTER OF COMOY ' S LONDON made PIPES and Smokers ' Articles lxvii VICTROLAS $15 to $400 J KjJ All the Victor Records Always u u ORMES INCORPORATED 411 FIFTH AVENUE 2381 Broadway at 87th Street ST. PATRICK ' S DAY P-RADE ST. PATRICK ' S DAY P-RADE lxviii The Princeton Bric-a-grac ALEXANDER HALL CLOISTERS. I a as- i s wf 2? Q z fti St co 7d 1 5 „ - ■ 2r B 8 ' fij : pit rl 1 ! J, ! 3 1 ? I 2 £ 05 a • o a. o o_ s LEg p- ,«. I Q_0 ,— — 50o-=- ;_ 1 3 I ■ ! F D0o '  -■ 5. I I f-SPQ?- Hill O  jr Z q 3 I 2 § 3 s D- B. •© 3 S 3 „ S. | c S i— i .  DO o en O 3 Q s p O V: 6 £. a. Oq n a a. gl s 3 3 ft w O S a g  c ft «• Q- -i 3 2 n o ! n o 3 W Q 8 n ' re o B-ac c o. o 8 B ft _ ■ 3 Q Q Q 5 ' § E S 3 _ § la 3 8 OQ 3 OE O ft 3 O o =r ■J 2. ft r ST B ft — 0-2- 5 a. 3 5 3 73  2. 3 3 ft 3 9 5 3 a f 3. 3 ft o c -1 ■ 2. 2 1 M O a, kli •-  • Q- o $ 3 «- o 2_ n a- p 3 S ' S2. ft I s I ' c ft Q_ s 3 a s 3 w a- ftj CA O O 2. Li M U on o o r a 3 S ' 3 a ft ft 2_« 8 §. § a. ■ . s ' l 3 B B 3 c o •■ c S to m . o o o- 2- ■ u S a. O Q £ OQ r f f 3 E o o a s b OQ - i c S I crTo S. 9 C R •  ' ST C f o n 3 oq o- c- c X) 9 B O ft i s - 3 o B) to f o 3 c n Co 3 c n 3 Oq «• 3 Hi n 3 -t 3- £ Ixx The Princeton Bric-a.-Sra.c THE GYMNASIUM One of the leading 5 c cigars s Uhda p Manufactured in the 1st District of Pennsylvania by D. F. FLECK, Reading, Pa. The {Princeton Bric-a-Brac 3fabex to gfobertteemente Applegate li Bailey, Banks Biddle lxv Beaver Dam Stock Farm xxi Blakely Laundry xxxvii Blue Boar xxviii Bogert Insurance liv Brooks Brothers ii Brown Brothers xxxix Carrol Co xiv Caruso, D. M lx Chambersburg Trust Co xiv Chesterfield Pipes xxxvi Clinton Wire Cloth Co lxx Commercial Union Assurance Co v Complimentary, B. Co xxvi Complimentary, C. P. D xxix Complimentary, G. T. M xxxvii Complimentar y, W. H. T xviii Conklin Insurance lvi Copley Plaza xxii Dad ' Struve li Demuth Co 1 Ditson Co v Economy Auto Supply Co lvi Elin Auto Supply Co lv El Toro lxvii Fasanelli, T. S xlvii Fatima xliv First National ' Bank xvii Fleck, D. F lxxii Fort Pitt Hotel xlvii Frank Bros xxxiii Globe Rutgers iv Gulick Co H Gunther lxii Hall Co 1 Hedden Co xi Herremans lix The Princeton Sric-a-Srac Higginson, James lxvii Horsman Co lxi Hottel Co xlv Houts Co xxii Hudson River Day Line xxvi Imperial Hotel xii Jigger Shop lxiii Joe ' s (Sippley) li Kangaroo Shoes i Kaplan, Louis vi Kenil worth xxiii Kienle x Knickerbocker Hotel xxxii Koster Co 1 vi Kresge, D. H xlv Lavake, M. E lvi Leigh, W. M xxiv Little Golze xxii Lord Taylor xl Lucerne Hotel lxi Marsh Co xlvii Matthews xxxviii McCreery Co viii Mercer xxxix Meyer, Davis lx Moore, Wm xlvii Mozart 1 v Murad xvi Murphy- Parker Co lix Nassau Inn xxxv National Fire Marine Insurance Co xiv Netherland Hotel xlvi New Jersey Penna. Traction Co xviii Nill, Chas vi Onyx Hosiery xxiii Oriole lxv Ormes lxviii Perrin Son xxx Plaza Hotel xlv Portuondo Cigars xxiii Princeton Bank lix Princeton Tutors ' Association v Read Co xlvi Reed ' s Sons, Jacob xxxiii Remington U. M. C xxxiii Review of the World lxiii Rollins, Burdick Hunter Co lxi Ross Insurance xxxv Schaefer, F. I lx Seelig Delson xlvi Simon Co., Franklin xliii Skirm, C. C lxvii Tareyton Cigarettes xiii University Store (Alumni) xx L ' niversity Store ( Smith Typewriter) xxxiv University Store ( Victrola) xi University Store xlii Vanderbilt Hotel xxxviii Walkover Shoes lix Waterman vi Weaver, R. L xxx Week Son lxiii Whitehouse Hardy xxxvii White ' s Studio Hi Wolcott Hotel lxvi Woodstock Hotel lviii Wright Co ix Wright Co xlviii Youman ' s Hats lxiv - x g5Sf ,The Princeton Bric-a-ef c Sfeb - HARVARD GAME. TH JQt


Suggestions in the Princeton University - Bric A Brac Yearbook (Princeton, NJ) collection:

Princeton University - Bric A Brac Yearbook (Princeton, NJ) online collection, 1914 Edition, Page 1

1914

Princeton University - Bric A Brac Yearbook (Princeton, NJ) online collection, 1915 Edition, Page 1

1915

Princeton University - Bric A Brac Yearbook (Princeton, NJ) online collection, 1917 Edition, Page 1

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Princeton University - Bric A Brac Yearbook (Princeton, NJ) online collection, 1919 Edition, Page 1

1919

Princeton University - Bric A Brac Yearbook (Princeton, NJ) online collection, 1920 Edition, Page 1

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Princeton University - Bric A Brac Yearbook (Princeton, NJ) online collection, 1921 Edition, Page 1

1921


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