Princeton University - Nassau Herald Yearbook (Princeton, NJ)

 - Class of 1908

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Princeton University - Nassau Herald Yearbook (Princeton, NJ) online collection, 1908 Edition, Cover
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Text from Pages 1 - 122 of the 1908 volume:

11'W1f111'W'1111111'-117111111111111111111z111:1i1+11111r:12 1 1 - 1 11. 11 1:11-'1j:1.g,f .11 M1111 11 ,,h1H'1f,kg1g.1, 11111 11 - . .. 1. 'Q , t M11 1111, '. .,:' ., '11 !' ' ,,', ,u.l,,11.., 11 ,I MW3 'I M, 0, 1 1 -1' 1 1 ' 1 'ff ' .1 1, 1 l. ' zh11 ,J11 ' K' 'J' 1 1 1 4 12 ' 1 11 .1 dv A 11.1 1 1 MT' I1 N 1. . 11 1 V 1 1 ' 4 W X! I ' M .11 1 1 1 1 1 1 ,1 1 11 'rf 1 ' 1,1 W1 1111 1, , A 1 V, 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 , V1 W : 5 1 1. 1 1 311, 111, ., 1 .1 11 ,R 1 11, A111 MQGMXL THE NASSAU HERALD OF THE CL1455 OF 1908 PRINCETON UNIVERSITY VOLUME XLIV EDITORS W S B M W O D N J G F O L BG M CLASS DAY JUNE EIGHTI-I MCMVIII Printed by Princeton University Press gaiuiamun Gu thv 6112155 nf 19113 is muzi rurhiullg hrhiratrh thin iitiie unlumn with im Irlzwaurrh mvmuriza nf ilu hugs that are nu mute. -Glyn Ehflnra Class Appointments ' CHALMERS MARTIN IHAMILL. .......... .......... P resident EDWIN HANSON WEBSTER HARLAN ..... ....... V ive-President JAMES LEE :KAUFFMAN ............. ...................... S ecretary LOUIS ERWVIN BEALL ....... ............. M aster of Ceremonies LEWIS CASPAR WISTER ....... ..... A cting Master of Ceremonies AUSTIN GARDETTE NIAURY ...... .......,........... C lass Prophet ROBERT WRIGHT FORSYTH, IR. .... .......... C lass Historian ROY SARLES DURSTINE ......... ..... P resentation Orotor ALLISON ELLSWORTH STUART ..... .... ..........., I v y Orator THOMAS STREET CLARK ........ .................... C lass Orator THOMAS STREET CLARK .......... ..... C lass of I876 Prize Debater HENRY JACKSON VAN DYKE, HI .... ...................... C lass Poet HENRY LESTER JONES ................... X1VaShirIgtou's Birthday Orator Class Day Committee. E. H. NV. I-IARLAN L. E. BEALL I. A. BELL, IR. G. M. BROWN R. C. CLOTIIIER O. L. DAVIS, JR. R. S. DURSTINE E. C. FISH D. E. GENSLER L. B. GEORGE E. R. HALLIDAY I. B. MCCORMICIC R. PETERS, IR. W. I. PHILLIPS D. H. MCA. PYLE A. E. STUART T. S. TALIAFERRO R. E. THIBAUT W. T. WEST L. C. WISTER I. HAVRON, IR. Memorial Committee. F. LEAKE A. C. STUDER W. A. GILL M. T. PYNE, IR. L. C. WISTER Nassau Herald Committee. W. S. BERGLAND G. G. FLORY W. O. DAVEY L. B. GEORGE Class Ode Committee. G. S. LOOMIS D. H. MCA. PYLE R. W. XIVALLACE Album Committee. J. A. BELL, IR. E. R. I-IALLIDAY P. HARVEY n Cap and Gown Committee. C. D. CHAMPLIN O. L. DAVIS, IR. R. W. FORSYTH, IR. Washington's Birthday Oration HENRY LESTER JONES. Ladies-I merely say ladies because they embrace the gentlemen, this being leap year, you know,-and members of the class of nineteen hundred and eight and one half. I am forced to make this latter distinction to include such illustrious members of the University as Mackinaw Bill Foster, Ernie Mecabe, the little Indian, Bones Fluhart and numerous others who at least belong to the class of 1908 in spirit if not in body. They are a crowd of reformers, if I may say so, who having realized the error of their ways, and having repented, have accepted the invitation from the faculty to spend an additional half year within the walls of this institution. And right here I want to say that those unfortunates who have come to me with hard luck tales such as, Mother and Louise are going to be here to-day and if you tell any- thing about me, what will they think ? -I want to say to these fellows that they are in wrong, and that mother and Louise are going to have their eyes opened to a few facts this morning. There's Dave Pyle for instance who has worried me to death lately, and lost considerable weight during the last month fearing that I would say something that would injure his great social prestige. Now to tell the truth I had no thought of mentioning Davels name. In the first place, I don't know of anything he's done that's Worth mentioning, and then I prefer to remain on earth and not monkey with any tin god. Ernie Mecabe is truly a remarkable personage, in fact, one of the seven most remarkable men that ever rode in a taxicab. He can do almost anything at allg he has been known to hold five aces at a time and to turn many dazzling air springs and never mov' a' di feet, gymnastically speaking. By his ambidexterity and clever manipulation of the Paste-boards, he has kept the money market of 5 The N assaa H erald Princeton in almost constant fluctuation for several years. In this he has been well supported by Howard Taylor, sur- named '4Fish, and Chap Spencer, two well known crooks and bridge whist and poker entrepreneurs. Among this crew I would mention by all means, lest he be slighted, Ralph Haley who plays Bridge one night and poker the next and between the two he makes a living. To return to the Macabee, Ernest is also a decided fusser, and the girls will prove his downfall yet. In short he is wild about girls and has been growing wilder every year. For some time he has been collecting various kinds of talcum powder and perfumes. I-Ie is a trifle sensitive on this point but nevertheless an authority on all such matters. So now almost before he meets a fair damsel, with a few whiffs of the air he can tell just what perfume she is using. So if you see Ernest walking along at any time with his nose in the air, don't think for a minute that he is stuck up or proud: O, no, he is merely scenting the air and endeavoring to addto his knowledge of perfumery. I must tell a rather embarassing incident that he lived through, a decided faux ,bas to be sure, but one which he was not at all to blame for. It seems that Ernest was up at the St. Nicholas Rink skating with a couple of very nice ladies one afternoon, and accepted an invitation home to dinner with them. Of course-who wouldn't? In the course of the evening as he was about to take his departure he started to look for his skates and was feeling under the lounge for them. I-Ie couldn't seem to locate them, and one of the young ladies said Can't you find them ?,' All the time he was feeling around under the lounge, and said No, I've got hold of a leg. Why, a leg of the couch of course, but for some reason Ernest-seemed to be in wrong, and with a hasty good-night, left on the run. VVhen I-Iam Donovan came into these parts he was told that he would have to give up wine, women and song. Well, he's fooled them all for he never gave up anything but the song, and is still with the ship with bells on. So I-Iam did not play in half as hard luck as Emil Joy, who had to give 6 1 ' 42 4 Washingtoniv Birthday Oration up football in Freshman year. He is a modest sort of chap, but nevertheless will be flattered, no doubt, at my making this public announcement that he would now be playing on the Varsity in Football or Soccer, if he had not had his chances cut out three years ago. From that date Emil has had a complete set of works without an appendix. When Clint Green was a freshman at this University, he had wonderful and very far fetched aspirations in the Baseball line. One morning as he was walking across the campus en route from chapel, he came up to Dummy Wells with his gushing manner, and all flags flying and said, Hello, Dummy, how about a good pitcher this Spring ? Capt. Wells was very gentle with this poor little Freshman, and allowed him to return to his room without having broken any bones. Clint, however, did not deign to show his face on the diamond that Spring for after this incident he had a very much more correct idea of his abilities. But having outlived the effects of this lesson, he decided that he would not be baffled by any temporary set-back of this kind and the next Spring, realizing that he was now a big Sophomore, he determined to make another offer of his services, and show to the baseball world just who Clint Green was. So he came up to Sammy Reid one day in just the same way he had approached Wells the year before, except that he thought himself a bigger man than then-if that situation were at all possible. Well, he walked up to Sammy and slapped him on the back and said, How about a good second base-man this year? QClint, being an all- around man, thought he would try second base this time for a hunch.j Well, Sam slapped him on the back too, but a little lower and with his foot. Clint was off on the run and never stopped to ask any questions. He probably would never have stopped this side of Penn's Neck if he hadn't run into the arms of a preceptor down here by Brown who hurried him up to his room and gave him a cup of tea to quiet his nerves, and bolster up his broken spirit. As a last resort Clint went out for the Chapel Choir, and by George! he made that. But word came last summer of an Athletic 7 V The N assau Herald . Parson, out in Oregon and we found this to be no other than our Clinton Green. It seems that he had received an offer from some unsuspecting and out of the way burgh out in Oregon, and had condescended to go out there and preach the gospel for a while. But where does the Athletic come in. It didn't seem possible that he had inveigled them into believing that he was an athlete. O, No, it seems that Clint made use of many gesticulations, and put in a hard day's work while he was delivering a sermon on a Sunday morning. This quite explains the Athletic Parson' and the rumor that was circulated around that Clint was out in Oregon working to beat hell. Cort Smith and Dusty Miller had quite an experience down here in Brown one night with one of them there preceptor guys. Having equipped themselves up on Nassau St., well, for mountain climbing, they crossed the campus and prepared to scale the rear end of Brown Hall, and to disturb the peaceful slumbers of Billy Gill and Tim Pfeiffer. They mounted the fire escape and started up, Cort hrst and Dusty following. After they had mounted some sixteen stories as Dusty thought, Cort thought he would duck in the window and give the boys the glad hand. For some reason Dusty preferred to remain out in the fresh air,-it was a fine large evening, and there was a beautiful View from where he was, 8zc., Sze., Sze.,-at any rate fresh air was the word. From the noises that the room soon gave forth it was very evident that Cort was most decidedly in wrong. In short, he had gotten in the wrong room. It was a preceptoris room he had landed in and not Billy Gil1's. It seems that Cort had stood on the wash stand and jumped right on the poor man's face. The very idea. They had then closed in on one another and had an exciting heart to heart talk. The preceptor finally permitted Cort to leave, having apologized to him for getting in the way of his feet. Next day Cort thought it up to him to slip this aforesaid preceptor some sort of an apology. So that afternoon he went up and told him how sorry he was and that he would never do it again and that it was all a mistake, 8zc., Sze. 8 P17 asliingtowfs Birthday Omtion Well, it seems that the preceptor had not recognized in the dark this preceptee of his, but now that he knew who it was, he prepared to eat him alive. Cort lost all desire at once for remaining in Princeton, and he has lived in such constant fear of this man that he has stayed away from Princeton until just week before last in order to give this awful event a chance to blow over. One morning in Philadelphia Dutch Maury and several other students were sitting around the room recovering from the effects of a big night. Dutch was still asleep. A little mouse ran across the Hoor. A few minutes after that Dutch sat up in bed with a start and said Gee whiz, Com- rades, did you see that? The other fellows drawled out Ye-es. Thank God, said Dutch, and fell back, dead to the world. One night up in New York when Dutch was feeling pretty fine, he made a bet with one of his contempo- raries that he could consume one hundred oysters at a sit- ting- To have and to hold. CDutch has a weakness for oystersj. Well he lost the bet that time for he got away with seventy, and then gave it up,-I mean the attempt to eat a hundred. There were a few incidents connected with the Senior peerade last Pall that were indelibly impressed on our mem- ories and on the steps of Whig Hall, thanks to the gener- osity of Harry Grub-worm Kase with his internal decora- tions. And none of us, Pm sure will' ever forget how fetching George Smith looked on that day. You remember he appeared as a perfect lady on that occasion and a perfect lady he remained throughout the entire fray, impossible as it may seem, for George surely did look most attractive and quite the finest looking thing in skirts that had been in Princeton in many a day. He just had the straight front down cold. There was simply nothing to it. I mean there was a great deal to it. And all George would say that day was 'Fellers,' I don't want any money, all I want is a good time. Wlietlier he had a good time I don't know,- but I doubt it very much for T noticed he was with George Harrison most of the afternoon. VVell, George CSmithj 9 The N asscm H erald had a narrow escape that day and has never ventured to don feminine garb again. And now in passing we must have a look at the Gold Dust Twins, Harry Kase and Ed. Case, the former never known to use Water externally, the latter never known to use it internally. just think what a rebate they would get from the Water Company each year if they only roomed together. Why don't you try to arrange it-Harry and Ed? And I must not fail to mention the bald-headed row in our class. just take a look at these fellows and see what a hard working class we are. There's Gus Studer. It's kind of tough luck to be both bald and fat, isn't it Gus? But Gus has only to blame his would-be love escapades for his loss of hair. Then there's Dud Guillaudeu, and How- ard Iones with scarcely a hair on his head, Bill March and Sammy Gallaher add their old bald pates to this crew, and there's Alex Leonard, one of the baldest of the bald. He has even less hair on his head than Chap Spencer had on his upper lip during the exams, and you all know what a sight that Was. Chap's attempt at raising a mustache was an utter failure-simply couldn't do it. Charlie Champlin is a sly little fox CI suppose I might as well kill you as scare you to death, Charliej. He is a good example of how very deceiving appearances are. A You wouldn't suppose to look at him, that Champ ever had a thing to do with girls, but there's where you're all fooled, for he fusses with the best of them, but carries most of his conquests on under cover of the night. You should have seen him one evening last Spring making love to some fair damsel down here on Nassau St. I think Miss Shockefeller was her name. It was a warm evening, but there was no reason for Charlie to get so tropical. So look twice, here- after, before you decide how much Champ thinks and knows about girls. Tom Clark was strolling across the fields down at Penn's Neck during one of his little vacations there. A farmer passed him, and turned around and had a good look at him, and was heard to remark, Waal, I see snakes in the next IO Washingt0n's B irthday Ovation generation all right, all right. You know there is not much to Tom except his length. I think the farmer must have meant adders for Tom is one of our prize mathematicians, and can multiply very rapidly. I think Tom is one of the unluckiest men in college. The past three years and a half have been more or less of a lottery for him during which he has drawn many blanks. There are some things which are pretty hard to under- stand around this college, that is outside of the stunts the faculty perform. I have reference to a remark of which Walt. Clark is the author. He said the other day, I'rn tired of being Charlie Penrose's ideal, I wish he would get another one. just think of a man daring to say a thing like that. And it seems strange to me that Joe Vander- voort-I know joe was in one of his trances-should go up to the Registrar's office, as he did the other day, carrying a poker outfit with chips, cards, etc.,-but without much sense,-and asking if they would tell him how he came out in Biblical Literature. It is hard to understand why the faculty presented Mule Watlcins with a month, when he would much rather have had a copy of Three 'Weeksf' I wonder if it's true what I hear about George I-Iarrison's making his last will on the ire-escape the other night. I hear that Clayt Robbins bought a bag of makings yesterday. It doesn't seem possible, and, frankly, I can't believe it, but I'll warrant that Louis Cummings got wind of it in short order. If so, there's nothing left of it now. Louis Cum- mings gave an exhibition of cool nerve at a debutante's tea over in Brooklyn last Fall. Louis was invited to this coming out, I think it was, from four 'til seven, usual hours. Well, Louis the day before called up this young lady and asked if he might come a little late, and wear evening clothes. She said Yes , thinking I suppose that he was going to some dance later in the evening and wanted to get dressed then. It seems that this young lady had planned a dinner after the tea for a few of her special friends, and Louis naturally had not been invited. I-Ie had gotten wind of it, though, and was determined to try and ring in on it-hence the II The N assau Herald evening clothes. About quarter of eight the next night fthe tea was all over at seven, you knowj the few who had remained for dinner were sitting around and Louis dropped in on them. Well, just ma'be they weren't glad to see him. It was about the biggest frost that could have been invented. Louis took off his hat and coat in the most matter of fact way. No one knew just what to do. Finally, one of the young ladies decided to take the situation, and Louis in hand. She asked him if he knew he hadn't been invited. I-Ie said Yes,,' very cooly. She asked him what he expected to do. Why, stay right heref' said Louis. She didn't stop to argue with him any more but grabbed him by the coat collar,-she must have been some buxom child of nature-and hustled him out. Louis had been thrown down many times by girls but this is the first time he had been thrown out. I-Ie felt very much put out over this affair, and has absolutely refused to go inside the house since then. Corky Nichols is a funny man. I met him up at the Imperial the day of the Carlisle game, last Fall, and hap- pened to ask him how he was feeling. O, fine, said Corky, if I felt any better, I'd have to go to bed. Nick had a wonderful experience after the club dance last Spring. I-Ie was walking up McCosh Walk about 3 A. M. mad as a hornet. I think he must have been in wrong at the dance and received a large-sized lemon from some heartless maiden. Corky sure had his Irish up and he proceeded to take it out at once on a woodpecker, a sad bird as he called it, that he discovered in a tree on President Wilson's lawn. Well, such a fight as they had. The woodpecker started to pick at Nick and up the tree Nick went after him. You all know some of the choice words and phrases that Corky can let slide when he's a mind to, and how blue the air gets on such an occasion. Well, the air was not only blue that night, there were several large rainbows hovering around that tree. Presently the poor old woodpecker, thoroughly disgusted at the language Corky was handing out to him, I2 Woshingz'01i's Birthday Omtion Hew away and Corky meandered home, feeling much relieved for having gotten so much out of his system. Ladies, I still say ladies merely, for I notice a couple of them back there taking advantage of their Leap Year privi- lege. O, rubber! Well, ladies, do you know we have a real live Singer building in this college. This is no other than I. Rumble Wood, the third edition of Innocence Abroad. I-Ie sings and sings beautifully too. There he sits over there. Isn't he cute? Book Warner is a man without much affection for the colored people. In fact, he has no use at all for the niggers. Book comes from Baltimore, and before he entered Prince- ton he was thinking of preparing at some Northern school. I-Ie wrote up to the principal of Mercersburg, I think it was, stating that he was thinking of entering there, preparatory to Princeton. But he must irst know whether or not they admitted colored scholars COf course, if they did, Book would never go near the place, though he did not mention this fact in his letterj. The principal of Mercersburg wrote back to this effect. It has not been our custom, hereto- fore, to admit colored men, but after thinking the matter over we have decided to make an exception in your case. Well, you can imagine Book's feelings when he read this. It was all they could do to restrain him from going up to Mercersburg and committing murder. Speaking of affection, I think Dick Cowan and I-Iac Barler are two of the most affectionate students that ever lived. You should have seen them crossing the campus on their way home from the big party down in the I-Iollow last Spring. They walked along with their arms around each other, and every few minutes they would stop, and embrace each other. First one would exclaim, and then the other, O, Ki-d, aren't we just looney. Marshall Bruce is in rather a bad way. I-Ie has gotten so thin that it is almost impossible for him to take a bath on account of getting between the sprays of the shower and refusing to get wet. Penn Harvey is a very much worried boy. He has been T3 The N assau H erald looking around for a job for next year but he has found it impossible to secure any employment, for all the firms are afraid of violating the Child Labor Law. I might mention in passing that Gib McClintock got up in a street car in Philadelphia the other day and gave his seat to two ladies. Spike McKaig and Bill Poster got a hunch to go to New York one Saturday night about I2 o'clock and left with several others, Ed. Miers among them, on a three minutes notice via Trenton, for the Big White Way. What do you know about that? Spike and Bill had to go to chapel the next morning fSundayj and so were forced to return to Princeton on an early train long before they were ready to. As they walked into chapel Bill handed St. Peter two theatre ticket stubs and asked him for a couple of programs. Well, of course, I don't know but this seems like a very peculiar performance to take place in chapel on Sunday morning. I reckon they thought they were about to see the Top o' th' World. I rather think they felt that way at least. But I guess we can excuse Spike and Bill on account of their being up so late, or rather, so early the night before. Guy Grandin has a wonderfully clever scheme of beating his way on the P. R. R. For instance, when he gets on a train he takes off his coat in a hurry and plants himself down in a seat and becomes absorbed at once in a big news- paper, to give the impression that he has been on the train for some time. Well, when the conductor comes through, Guy never looks up from his paper but just sings out mileage In this way he has been able to save many thousand miles. We appreciate Guy's getting the better of a monopoly such as the P. R. R. but we can not exactly commend such a scheme as his to accomplish this end. There is another money saving device that Guy has worked to advantage on several occasions. I-Ie was sitting around a table at the Waldorf with some other students one day. When it came to his turn to pay for the round, he rather reluctantly said, Well, what will you have fellows ? When the check came in he fingered it for a few minutes and then said, Do you know fellows, this is the easiest place in I4 Washington? Birthday Ovation New York to slip out of without paying. I'll show youf' And with that he threw a large sized tip of a nickel on the table, picked up his hat and coat and walked out past the unsuspecting cashier. I wish you all could have the benefit of hearing Charlie Luke sing Love me and the world is mine, some night about I2 o'clock. Regularly once a Week Charlie will stop at the head of the Walk going down to Patton and reel off all the verses of this song. If you are not awake you soon will beg and Charlie performs this stunt so regularly and seems to get so much satisfaction out of it, that I think it's what we might call a bar relief. Lawrence Thompson, W. C. T. U., Chapel Choir, and Whig I-Iall enthusiast, is a horribly inconsistent man. He has- been preaching against drinking in this town for more than three years, and the first thing he did at a tea the other day was to put his foot up on the rung of a table and blow the whipped cream off of the chocolate and all over the company. I guess all who were present at the Senior dance at the Inn last Fall will remember Dud Guillaudeu and Tren Marshal on that night. They came up from downstairs during supper and played charades with each other, much to the amusement ot the students present, but decidedly to the discomfiture of the ladies. But they were good, all right. In fact, Mr. Taylor, the manager, seemed to think they were so good that he locked them up in a room so that he could have them play for his own special benefit after the dance was over. That same night Tay Pyne led a cotillion down to Ren- wicks about I o'clock, and finding everything shut up, he gave orders to remove the iron grating and enter through the cellar. They then wandered through the kitchen and proceeded to scramble a few dozen eggs. Some one re- marked, Suppose these eggs are bad, remembering, no doubt, that they belonged to Renwick. O, says Tay, What the devil do we care, we are not going to poach them. O, 15 The N asskm Herald Taylor has a good head on him all right. He had a peach of a one on that night. I..et's have a look at the would be pol-iticians in this col- lege-Hammy Hamil and Tom Taliaferro, the man who spells his name one way and pronounces it another-little Tommy Taliaferro, called T. T. sometimes for short. These two students were Democrats. At least, they thought they were. To tell the truth, they didn't know much about it and they attempted to boom in this college last Fall Mr. Katzen- jammer for Governor. Tom Taliaferro did it principally to be contrary. VVell, they worked hard and we admired that anyway. I But it was such a hopeless task they started out on, and they were such a helpless pair for any such under- taking. It was a pitiful sight to see these two walking across the campus hand in hand trying to gather together some supporters. I think Sport Moore, Louis Kaplan, and a couple of waiters from the Nass finally joined their ranks. After a while they decided they would hold some sort of a meeting so they got together to dope out a big speech that Hammy would deliver at this gathering. Well, the meeting got started anyway. Hammy got up to speak with that smile of his on that won't come off, and said, Gentlemen, 'elect Mr. Katzenjammer to the Governorship of this State. He is a man for the people, with the people and against the public. If you elect him, he will do you good, better than you have ever been done before. I don't know what kind of a line of talk he thought he was handing out, but he got no further and both Hammy and Tom wisely decided to withdraw from politics for good. Talia- ferro went back at once to his favorite hobby, leading cotil- lions and running some sixteen competitions simultaneously for Asst. Business Manager of the Tiger. And Hamill went back to peddling chocolate and running a lunch room up at University Hall. Here's the bum politician sitting right behind me. Have a look at him. The night after the eXam's Mike Kelly' and Jorge Munoz joined forces at the Inn and formed the Irish American team, intending to enter a six day's race at the aforesaid 16 I W czshingtonir Birthday Oration place. But Mun was unable to keep up the fast pace that the Irishman set for him, so they gave up that project and formed themselves into an International Fire Dept. O, they did very valuable work around this campus, ladies and gentlemen. They put out a great many fires in each dormi- tory, and where they couldn't find any they made one, and incidentally just escaped a big fire at the hands of Jack, the Cop. We appreciate the service they rendered and are glad they escaped the constables. Well, I have about come to the end of my ropes and in closing I Want to say, fellows, that I hope all these little stories I have told in good part will have been received in the spirit in which I have told them. I7 Class Cration THOMAS STREET CLARK. The purpose of academic training is two-fold. It aims to give the individual greater powers of understanding and appreciation. It aims to give society a more intelligent and a more efficient service. As we leave Princeton after four years of such training, we expect to live broader, deeper lives because of our academic experience. We expect to render society larger and more efficient service in our chosen field of activity. Naturally our activities will be along very different lines. Our manner of life, our acts and aims, now cease to be the same. And so in summing up the specific relation of our Princeton training to our future activity it is difficult to find a common ground. There-is one held of activity, however, which will demand the services of each and every one of us. A field to which our preparation here bears a definite relation. We are all of us to live under a government which de- pends for its stability and efficiency upon the services of its citizens. The character and action of popular govern- ment must rest in the last analysis upon the character and action of the individuals composing it. The political re- sponsibility of the citizen is direct and all important. Our governmental institutions are new and in the larger sense untried. They are constantly being put to the test by powerful antagonistic forces. Our state was founded upon principles more or less theoretical and apparently of limited application. Guided by these principles we have developed a complex civilization tremendous in its intricacy and extent. Are our institutions fitted to the demands of such a civiliza- tion? This is a question which this generation must an- swer. As we enter upon our political responsibility com- plex and powerful forces are theatening good government on 'every side. The tremendous power of organized wealth, protesting labor and social revolution, wide spread corruption, self seeking influence of all kinds, these are as dangerous foes as ever were foreign hostility and dis- 18 Class Oration union. Such forces can be met and overcome only through the services of our citizenship. Our political responsibili- ty is of first importance. Government is one of the first things to be cared for. It is the very guarantee of our opportunities and our civilization. The relation of our Princeton training to political ac- tivity is not hard to analyze. In such a commonwealth as ours education is the cause as well as the effect of good government. We stand as exponents of liberal and efficient education. Our responsibility must be proportionately great. VVhat then characterizes efficient citizenship? Wliat are its functions and how are we specially prepared to perform them? The first characteristic of the efficient citizen is sound and discriminating judgment. He must be able to form true estimates of men, of issues and of principles. He must be able to distinguish clearly between the real and the seeming, between the true and the false, between the wise and the mistaken. This is no simple task. The complexity of our modern life gives rise to intricate problems. Issues are clouded by a ,thousand and one considerations. Lines are not sharply drawn. To judge truly is a most difficult task and yet the decisions of the citizen lie at the very roots of our political action. To see clearly, to think straight not to be misled by the superficial and the specious. That is a first requisite to efficient citizenship. For performing this func- tion our academic training has specially fitted us. A cer- tain writer recently summed up the value of a college educa- tion by saying that it enables the graduate to know a good man when he sees one. Surely this is one of its values if not the chief one. To know a good man, a good principle, a good law, a good reform when we see one. If liberal training dose anything it gives us perspective and discern- ment. It places us well up the mountain side where we get a broad view and one properly proportioned. Once judgment is passed the efficient citizen becomes a partisan. He must abide by the verdict of his judgment with unfaltering resolution. Self interest and indifference I9 The N assaa Herald must be overcome. Here also is no easy task. The com- plications and conflicting interests of our modern life, the fierceness of the struggle, self seeking of others about us, all these make it difficult to eliminate personal inclination and self interest. The absorbing activities of our modern life lead naturally to an attitude of indifference toward pub- lic responsibilities. Self seeking and indifference are the natural foes of good government. Loyal and active adher- ence to the dictates of sound judgment. This is the second characteristic of efficient citizenship. Hereftoo We are specially prepared. If Princeton has not taught us to forego self interest for principle, to disregard temporary in- convenience and loss in carrying out great purposesg if we have not learned to sacrifice self in accomplishing mighty tasks and Winning real victoriesg then indeed we have missed much of Princeton's lesson. I But the citizen's duty is not limited to Wise choice and faithful adherence. His influence must be a Wider and a more effective force. His own decision, his own ballot, the performing of his individual duty is not the end of his responsibility. Our political system is a system of leader- ship. The men of lesser ability and training must be in- fluenced and led by those better fitted. Leadership is a necessary element in every activity. It is an all important element in political activity. Leadership in this sense does not mean office holding alone. The governor of a state in- fluencing his constituents is a leader. John Jones talking to john Smith after a days work may be no less a leader. Our political failings are largely due to the fact that the wrong men, the men not fitted to lead, are influencing the people. Let the right man assert himself and the people will follow. Political education must be carried on by those who are litted mentally and morally to lead. If We have received special training then special responsibility rests upon us. By example and by active effort we must make our inliuence a real leading force. Enlightened leadership by the citizen, responsible leadership by the official, these are the real remedies for our political ills. Such leadership 20 Class Omtion demands courage and ceaseless endeavor. It involves in- convenience, misunderstanding and self sacriflce. But it is the chief element in the citizen's responsibility. Surely courage and effort are no small part of Princeton's lesson. Our training then means that we are responsible in the high- est degree for active, efficient citizenship. To choose, to follow, to lead, this, in short, is our public duty. Doubtless all this seems a material and more or less com- monplace application of academic training. To be sure it is only a limited phase of Princeton's influence. The greater and more subtle influence of these four years upon us can be found only in our own hearts. It cannot be ex- pressed. The spirit, the associations, the fellowship, all the golden glory of our Princeton life, these have but little to do with creeds and responsibilities. Truer manhood, broader understanding, greater powers of appreciation, wider opportunities for individual growth 3 all these Prince- ton-has given us, together with the four happiest sunniest years of our lives. Yet Princeton must stand for some- thing more than individual growth. We are false to our trust if Princeton's influence is felt only within ourselves or in our own intimate circle of life. Our academic fellow- ship must grow into something larger and deeper, a true fellowship of service. Our academic ideals must stand for something more than individual development. They must become dynamic forces. The simple creed which I have been applying to our political relations has a far wider sig- niflcance. It is a creed of service. Adherence to it is the outward expresison of internal growth and power. It makes academic training a potent force. It has a direct ap- plication to our every activity. The more subtle influences of our life here are for our hearts alone to know. But if Princeton has made us wise, sincere and brave she must also have given us the will to strive and to serve. In all our activities wherever our lot may fall, wise judgment, faithful adherence and courageous activity will be demanded of us. To choose, to follow, to lead. To choose wisely, to follow faithfully, to lead bravely. Such is our responsibility as sons of Princeton. 21 Class Poem BY HENRY J. VAN DYKE, III. I A voice from the outer world Rings in our ears to-day, e Urging us forth from these classic walls 3 Like a martial trumpet it rouses and calls: Pause not nor stay No time to delay,' The great world hath need of you, Up and away! II Four times, good comrades, on our campus fair The fourfold change of Seasons has roll'd by, And with our thoughts and memories of friends Is mingled inextricably the dear Aspect of Princeton in her varied garb. Golden, glorious Autumn came And touched our campus trees with flame Through the breathless, wistful haze Of short Indian Summer days All the leaves came flutt'ring down- Yellow, red, and golden brown. In the drear days of November, Streaming from a cheerless sky, Raging through the naked tree-tops Silver rainstorms trampled by. 'Neath the frosts of bleak December Woods and fields lay sere and brown, Till within a single night Myriad snowflakes whirling down I Wrought a world of virgin white To dazzle morning with the sight. In those days the blood would tingle , To the sleigh-bells' merry jingle 22 The N aissau Herald VVe, thy weakest sons and latest, Render thee our humble praise: Graciously receive, accept it As a pledge of by-gone days. In the pleasant paths of Learning Thou hast led our wayward feet 5 Delving in the Master-Workers, Thou hast taught us life is sweet, Guided by thy noble servants, Heart to heart, and mind to mind We have struggled, fallen, risen, Seeing where we once were blind. 1 How for this shall thanks be given, Honoured Mother, to thy name? See, thy other sons have brought thee Glorious deeds and well-earned fame. I-Iumbly now we stand before thee- Thou shalt know us by this sign: Lo! we pledge thee love and vigour Of our manhood :-all in all, for we are thine! IV To part from friends in the afternoon of life Were cause for secret tears, for then the ways Lead through the silent, thoughtful groves of twilight, But we part, good comrades, you and I, At the glad hour of sunrise. Now we go To take a larger share as citizens Of the whole earth. Come! Now, we face the world Together. fFriends are true.D Have we not faced Our little college world as men and friends? Have we not played a miniature game of life,- Voting, electing Captains, Presidents, Publishing papers, making rules and laws, Talking in solemn conclave, toiling with Our myriad interests. Now we go to seek A larger field, a greater chance for service: Still we stand together as We stood Before, though greater distances divide Us each from each. 24 Class Poem What if our chance to serve Seem to us large or small-it matters not! Still shall we struggle bravely as in days gone by We fought for Old Nassau. When each man strives With all his might how sweet were victory, And yet how painless were defeat! l 24 bk is X elf PF bk Knighthood is dead? What saidst thou, friend? Th No need of knighthood in these modern days? Thy very words do prove the need. Are there No wrongs to be redressed, no noble deeds That wait a doer? Is not woman still To be protected? Nay, the world cries out Eagerly, ceaselessly for men-at-arms To fight for Honour, Chivalry and Right. No longer do the crested knights ride forth VVith sword and lance, on gallant chargers borne, But in the city's grime and everywhere, Throughout this labouring world, in hospitals, In law-courts, in the universal church, In governmental ofiices and all The honest business of our varied' life They nght for all the things that make true men And women. You shall know them, not by plumes And swords, but by their knightly deeds and all The gentle attributes of chivalry. This is the mighty world that needs us, friends, CComrades of four sweet yearsj, and shall we then Face it with sadness, ever glancing back In useless longing for the years gone by? Nay, rather let us say farewell with tears Of gratitude, and with the memory Of Princeton deeply burned by Love's clear iiame In every heart, then let us turn and go Into this glorious world, our hearts made glad By noble aspiration and high hopes. V Noble it were in the morning of life ere is CWhen the heart beats full with each deep-drawn breathj To march with banner and bugle and fife In the foremost ranks of a gallant strife To strike for the Right and to die the death! 25 Class Poem Or the hiss of polished steel As the skater darted by Like a swallow through the sky. Then the fires of love burned bright On the hearthstone of each friend As we whiled away the night Weaving tales that had no end. ,Soon within our hearts we felt, CFaint at first and far awayj, Pulsings of new life that told Of the coming of the May. Then the maples blossomed red, And our hearts rejoicing knew That the promise of the Springtime With its ageless, endless wonder COld as life yet always newj In the meadows, hills, and gardens, Once again had fallen true. Underfoot the grass was green, Overhead the sky was blue, And the birds sang madly, gladly, Till we thrilled with rapture, too. Through the misty nights of April When the stars but dimly shone, In the gladness of May sunshine Sweet with fragrant odours blown From the roses in the garden And the wild-liowers in the grass, We have felt the joy of Springtime Through our very pulses pass. In the mystic hour of twilight, By the ancient ivied wall, We have sung and dreamed and wondered On the steps of Nassau Hall Till our hearts seemed wide as all the world And love was all in all. A III Alma Mater Princeton, hear us, Fair and very fair art thou With the crown of ageless wisdom Resting on thy noble browg 23 The Nassau H eraid With faces set to the bright-rising sun, Of danger and death let the coward prateg We have pledged our manhood, and one by one We fight till we die, or the Right Be done: To Vict'ry we go, nor heed we our fate! 26 Ivy Oration A. E. STUART. Fellow Classmates and Friends of Princeton:- The occasion which calls us together to-day is an old one. The task to be performed is small in deed, yet great in its import. The planting of the Class Ivy is at once a memorial and a symbol. It is the memorial of a body about to leave Princeton and dissolve into its separate units of humanity. It will bear testimony to the fact that the class of IQO8, after four years of domicile in this institution has com- pleted its undergraduate life and that its members are now enrolled among that wider fraternity known as alumni. Moreover this Ivy is a symbol of how our hearts will ever turn back to Princeton, no matter where we may be. As the tendrils of this small plant will creep over the walls of Old North, spreading farther and farther apart, yet ever dependent upon a comomn root for each step of their growth, so the sons of Nassau, scattering at graduation, remain bound together in spirit through a love for their Alma Mater that is deep and sincere. Long ago we pledged ourselves to the traditions of Princeton. We entered with avowed intentions of be- coming loyal Princetonians and we have found the very atmosphere full of that ineffable something which is called Princeton Spirit . From the first her traditions charmed us. They were to us the magic note of by-gone genera- tions which time had aided with a sort of cumulative veneration and they enhanced our eagerness to become a part of Princeton that we too might live amidst the tradit- ions of the past and through their influence become a united 27 The Nassau H erald class. In this hour when retrospections are so frequent, We realize that We have become a part of Princeton. Four years of the pleasantest associations have united us by a common bond. We are loathe to think that friends must part, for the friendships formed here are of the kind that are truest and best. They are Written too deeply in our hearts to be soon forgotten. In the years to come there will be a rush of pleasant memories as we live again, in our minds, the days and scenes now passing. Yet a fund of such recollections, happy as they may be, is not all that We may take with us. Princeton has her ideals as Well as her traditions-ideals of friendship, of faithfullness and of honour. These ideals she has sought to impress upon our characters in such a degree that they will remain with us and be our standards of ambition for all that is best in life. So now at the parting of the ways, though our reverence for the past and all its attachments has not abated, we find that Princeton has but used the past to build our futures. As we once pledged ourselves to her traditions, let us now, ere we cross the threshold, pledge ourselves to stand by her ideals likewise. Thus will the class of 1908 give proof of its loyalty to Princeton that will last long after We have gone. We have learned many lessons here and by the steady evolution of time, as it has led us through our term of col- lege life with its manifold activities, We are brought face to face with the battle of life. If We have failed to develop a fair degree of confidence in our ability to meet this en- counter, vve have been lacking in ambition. If We have failed to learn what Princeton rightly demands of us, We have been lacking in sincerity. Princeton asks the impos- sible of no man. Her criterion is that every man must do his best in Whatever he undertakes to do at all. This is but a fair return for the moral and intellectual advantages which have been ours for the past four years. Graduates of this institution have attained fame and distinction in many Walks of life. But the great form of usefullness for college men, no matter what may be their particular pursuit, 28 Ivy Omtion is in shaping public opinion. This forum has been well supplied by Princeton with capable leaders in the past. The annals of the American Revolution are proof of it, and the men who have thus won distinction in public life have like- wise reflected just honor and glory on their Alma Mater. Abraham Lincoln held as a maxim that he who moulds public opinion goes deeper than he who makes statutes or pronounces decisionsg he makes the execution of statutes and decisions possible. In a democratic country with such vast domains as our own, public opinion is the pulse by which one can gauge the political health of the nation. It is the vital life of a free government and is seldom insin- cere. Yet it is subject to two great dangers. The one lies in the fact that it sometimes rests upon unsound premi- ses and therefore its activity leads to erroneous results. The other, and the greater danger, is when the people be- come inactive and opinion becomes passive, even submis- sive. Even in our college interests We have seen the potent force of opinion. Pew universities are in such quick sym- pathy with their undergraduates as is Princeton. More in senior year than ever, when by the very circumstances of our position we have been compelled to take an active part in forming it, we have come to realize how opinion rules. Its fallacies have been as apparent here as elsewhere for they are, after all, nothing more than the errors to which any body of men are susceptible, when passing judgment as to how they will be governed. That is of vast importance to us, for the nature and composition, the strength and Weakness, of public sentiment is not easily understood and the experiences which we have had should prove invaluable aids. Public opinion may be influenced by a spontaneous whim of the moment and in its eagerness, it is apt to go astray- the result of hasty and unguided thinking. It is not only the opportunity but the duty of the man with a mind trained to careful thinking to aid, either by leading or by following as his own personal merits may determine, in directing public opinion back to sane and rational principles. 29 - The Nassau H erald Doubtless it is impossible to make all the people think, as many of them merely acquiesce in the conclusions reached by others. This adds greatly to the responsibility of those men who have had 'such training as fits them for sound thinking. Nor is it the duty of these same men merely to mould public opinion. They must go further and develop it into such organic shapes that it will ever find adequate means of expression. Thus it will become a constant and not an occasional force expressing the intelligent Will of the people, free from disguising incumberances. Another attribute of citizenship, which a Princeton man should carry With him when he leaves here, is enthusiasm. When the people become inactive and negligent as to how their agents perform the tasks imposed upon them, evils creep into our political life. Like a house that stands empty and uncared for, decay sets in. From this lethargy public opinion must be aroused or the destructive force of neglect will have penetrated to such depths that by violence alone can the people regain their powers. An earnest citi- zen, With enthusiasm for the success of his efforts, can do much to keep public opinion such a rationally active and constructive force that intervals of disinterest and its corol-- lary distrustl', will be unknown in American life. The demagogue who disgusts us because his enthusiasm is un-- attended by deliberation will no longer iind an opportunity to exercise his degrading influences. A penetrating and unfailing light Will be cast into Whatever dark holes politi- cal action may have become lost in. In this field there is Work for every true Princeton man. The cause is altrustic and there are many grades of promotion open to any who may attain to them. The first and most important step is, of course, the bottom one-namely that each man himself must be a good citizen. Here We must start and care need be taken to build Well the foundations. Unless, then, there is a gross misapprehension prevalent as to the usefullness of a college man, it lies first in the fact that he has been taught to think and that once convinced of a certain truth he is an energetic toiler seeking to further 30 I vy Omtion his cause. Can it be that Princeton oversteps her rights and transgresses her claims, when she demands that every one of her sons should be, nrst of all, a good and active citizen, and afterwards a good tradesman or lawyer. Surely there is no injustice in such a claim. It is, on the other hand, an obligation that any one should be proud to bear and diligent to execute to the best of his capacity. My friends, the hour of separation is at hand. Words of farewell and God-speed are uppermost in our minds. It is a time, not of sadness, but of seriousness. It is well at this juncture of our lives that reflection and ambition should meet and be recast in the same mould, to the end that the lessons of the past may be the corner-stones of future hopes. Then there will be no vain regrets in after-years, and, when our thoughts turn back, as they constantly will, to the friendships and associations of college days, there will be only pleasure-the knowledge of a task well done. 31 President's Address CHALMERS MARTIN HAMILL. Fellow Classmates : To-day is a day of joy and of sorrow. joy because we have reached the goal for which We have Worked unceas- ingly for years. We are rightfully glad and happy because for the first time in our lives We have accomplished some- thing really vvorth while. We have laid out a place of Work with a definite end in view--our graduation- and by honorable effort We have attained that end. But now that We have attained it can We think of it as an end in itself? Can We accept it as a surcease of success? Far from it! It is but a means to an end Whose attainment must be in the future-that future into Whose clouds of uncertainty our searching eyes can vainly seek to penetrate. Very soon We shall turn our backs upon Princeton to go forth into the world, to take our places as men, to join the unnumbered throng that has gone out before us. The doors of this institution will close behind us and we shall be launched upon the sea of life to be baffled by many a storm of perplexity, defeat, and disappointment. Shall We then resign ourselves to a fatalistic sense of our insignifi- cance and our inability? Shall we sit passively by and see our gifts, our advantages, and our heritage as sons of this our Alma Mater Waste themselves away from sheer stag- nation and neglect? God forbid! Rather let us enter into that World with all the courage, strength and fire that is in us, retaining always a Hrm grip on the principles of truth, purity, and honor which have ever been instilled into us here at Princeton and clinging even to an unfaltering faith in the mercy of God-thus embodying in our lives the fun- damental elements of true manhood. 32 Presidenfs Address But our joy righteous and sincere though it be is hidden in sorrow. I say sorrow because I believe that many of us have' begun for the first time to realize that we are gathered together to-day to celebrate the last occasion in which our class as a part of this university is to participate. Our college days are over, our boyhood gone. With the realization of such a present comes irresistibly the sense of hitherto undreamt of responsibilities for the future-comes too a great Wave of memories which surges upon our minds and takes every thought in delightful recollection of times the happiest imaginable. .But they are all past-all gone forever. Gone too but ever present in our hearts are those days of sadness When God in his infinite Wisdom saw lit to call to their eternal home the three of our Classmates who repre- sent us in the life beyond-one as a Freshman, one as a Sophomore, one as a Senior. When the class Wreath is broken let every one of us take a Hower and offer up a prayer that the recollection of their friendship, their purity, simplicity and sweetness of life may ever be for us a guiding light in times of temptation, doubt and despair. Our days here are numbered. The whole Round Table is dissolved. We leave, some of us to return only after years of absence-some of us never to be permitted to re- visit the scenes of their College days. But Wherever We go, Whatever may be our calling in life, Whether it be lowly or exalted, let us every one remember that with him are the best Wishes for his happiness and success of every man in the Classg that in his hands is the fair name of our Alma Mater, that as he lives so shall she be judged. With this thought constantly in our hearts let us strive honorably and diligently and faithfully for the honor and glory of Prince- ton. 33 Class Prophecy AUSTIN GARDETTE MAURY. Ladies and Gentlemen-Scholars, Students and Members of I908.' A little while after a certain evening this year when I was made very happy indeed by the announcement that I was destined to look into the future of my classmates, I began to realize the difficulty of throwing myself into a Gus Brown or even Dusty Miller comatose state of dreaming dreams and seeing visions. Time went on and the problem assumed large proportions, even like Pop Drayton's waist measurement-I tried every scheme I knew of for passing away but none seemed to produce the desired result, as I was only able to dream of the two campus dignataries and faculty meetings. After a great deal of worry about my predicament I began to feel as old and care worn as Yump Stuart thinks he is. My stock in the Prophecy business sank low and I was almost persuaded to join with Deak Neff in his pessimis- tic view of life as a whole-I tried from night to night to dream a dream but succeeded only in injuring my health and incurring considerable expense--At last my efforts were crowned but unintentionally and unexpectedly. It happened thus: Easter Monday at Atlantic City was calm and peacefulg fTaylor Pyne and Fred Leake having left the evening be- forej. I was seated in a rolling chair at the end of one of the piers waiting to see the fish haul. For some reason there was a delay. The Sun was warm, the breeze light and the broad ocean gently heaving. A great drowziness came over me and a feeling of delicious contentment. 34 C lass Prophecy Everything seemed strange yet not altogether unnatural. I was being wheeled along again and I became aware of a tremendous building to my left. It was of white marble with innumerable columns Whose massiveness and stateli- ness would have put to shame even the legs of Ted Stoever In the midst of it rose a dome as disproportionately large as Sid Crawford's head. Struck with vvonderment I asked the chairman what it might be. That, said he is the building of the Ideal Inter- national Institution of Universal Knowledge-an outgrowth of the Preceptorial system, started about Hfty years ago. The namestartled me but not so much as the striking fam- iliarity of the voices behind me. I turned quickly and with difficulty recognized the galic features of Bill March partly hid behind a magnificent set of Donegals . Our meeting was effusive. I always thought Bill would make good- you can't imagine how well he executed the job of wheeling my chair. My curiosity was aroused. I went in. There was John Kelly standing by the door dressed in a watchmans uniform, he had no doubt qualified for the job by reason of his long practice in staying up nights. John immediately took me up to the heart of the institu- tion, the office of the organizer. A sign on the ground glass door read, Joe Green indefatigable, resourceful advisor- Information on any topic in this world or the next, Wliere, when and Why to do every thing. Inside amid the clicking of typewriters and the hum of voices Joe could be seen seated at a large desk, a telephone connection at each ear, Writing with both hands, giving ad- vice to scores of anxious and eager persons. I-Iis assist- ants posting bulletins of the very latest news of happenings all over the world of any degree of importance whatever. Thanks to joe and his information bureau I learned that Tom Taliaferro's great love for giving the girls a good time had given place to his greater natural instinct for en- gineering stupendous financial deals. 35 The N assaa Herald . Taliaferro, Harlan, Gallaher Co. were instigators of a movement to transport all Africans back again to Africa. Through the effective oratory of G. Brown Qwho ended all his most positive speeches like the great Roman-The negro must be transportedj the scheme had come to a head. The North and South had united to ship back the sons of Rastus to their native shores. Tom and Co. were furnishing the ships. They had secured the backing of Congress and all that was necessary to begin operations was President Chal- mers Ha1nmill's sanction. Here was a hitch-Tom and Ham could not agree as to who should get the larger profit. No doubt there was an equal amount to be said for both parties to the deal. It is only to be regretted that Bones Fluhart was not there to settle the matter as he can argue equally well on either side of a question and always convince-Chimself at leastj that he is right. It was not my good fortune however to ind out how the affair ended- But Tom probably got the money all right. just a word here about Ham. His irreproachable record. Early inspired by Bryan's presidential tactics, he resolved to test his college experience. The personal acquaintance of every man, woman and child in the United States was his slow but sure method. First he was a conversational cul- throat in a tonsorial parlor-then sought a wider field. He next took a nice job as a ticket chopper for the Metropolitan St. R. Y. Co.,r-a most strategic point. A week or so at each station was enought to make him intimate with every patron-A good morning and hand shake to each as he passed though his gate. A few years employed thus in the various large cities was enough. As the swollen waters of a stream in spring rush onward carrying all before it just so was Ham placed in the Vlfhite House by popular ac- clamation. Ham's future may be great and glorious but Bob Cloth- ier's is even greater. The story of Robls success was com- mon talk in the halls of the Institution. How Bob began soon after graduation to lay the foundation for a wonderful career as a gospel shop magnate, feeding with spiritual food 36 Class Prophecy the souls of thirsty Princetonians-I-Iow his monument of fame soon rose above ground and the corner stone was laid for a lasting and mighty edifice that was to endure all storms of adverse criticism as stubbornly as the snow clad peaks of the mountain ranges survive the excentricities and inconsistencies of the ever varying barometrical and ther- mal conditions of the elements. I-Iow from year to year he added slowly but surely to his monument of fame clear beautiful crystal stones of truth dug from the depths of the quarry of human affairs by the ceasless toil of his fountain pen and the skilful contortions of his artful mind. And how from the exalted height of the almost finished monu- ment his range of vision extended nearly to the uttermost conhnes of the campus. And lastly how his life struggle was realized--his monument of fame completed-its high- est point reached when he found himself seated in a revolv- ing chair at a desk as the editor of the Princeton Star ex- pressing the sentiments of the nation and letting loose the dogs of war to his multifarious subscribers all over Mercer County. At hearing all this startling news my head fairly whirled but it was not all I was to hear or see ether for at that moment who should appear but Pop Drayton-a little more substantial, but in general contour and elevation the same. What he was doing at the Institution I could not imagine. His sleeves were rolled up and he wore a white apron-whether he had become a sculptor, broker, or bar keeper was hard for me to determine from his dress. He did not enlighten me in our few minutes conversation. It was my impression that he was not a sculptor but probably was a member of one of the other two professions as he had always at college been an enthusiast for both diversions. Nothing pleased me more during my sojourn than to hear that both Deak Neff and G. Graham had been fired by an ambition to benefit man. Each had won distinction in his own way. Deak as a philosopher and G as a scien- tist. Deak, bald headed and bare footed, dressed as a monk, teaches a very frantic Philosophy on street corners 37 The N assau H emld to any who will listen. His teaching consists chiefly of the doctrine of the dishonesty of the bulk of the people and warnings to all to be on their guard against every one else. He has a large following all over the world but is es- pecially strong in mining camps, reform schools, work- houses, prisons, and penitenteries. To imagine G. Graham as a scientist was hard for me. About as hard as it is for Eddie Ong to keep out of a light, or for Guy Grandin from butting in, or even as hard as it is for Dore Kalish to refrain from talking for two minutes by the watch. But a scientist he had become, a man who seeks to benefit society by discovering open secrets. The Prohibition movement it seems had given way to more advanced ideas. The question no longer was how to pafohibit drinking but how to drink without the resulting inconveniences of expending money and becoming intoxicated. Night after night exhausted by prolonged and conscientious efforts to discover the method he was brought home on a stretcher. In the morning after being revived by electric batteries and told his own name he started undaunted on his quest anew. His is a truly noble work. . It was very gratifying to me to hear so much news of the members of I9o8-To hear into how many fiields they had entered-Now for instance there was Charlie Luke making a great success of playing the clown in a travelling circus. He really had become famous and his name was a regular household word for amusing the children. Poor Dick Thibaut has become an out and out invalid, suffering from indigestion and stomach trouble acquired sympathically no doubt from his college room mate, the afore mentioned Charlie Luke. I Tom Gailey had bent all his stupendous brain and will power in the direction of northern exploration, even pen- etrating so far once as a certain unmentionable country. His efforts had not been fruitless either for he had dis- covered on one of his trips a sort of half bear and half man that after close examination turned out to be none 38 Class Prophecy other than Ray Mount. The forrestry business it seems had been too much for Ray and his natural instincts made him obey the call of the wild. He had backed up his plate to nature. The book Tom wrote containing observations on the phenomena of nature showed the very keen insight of a subject that a man is apt to develop at college. The book is used exclusively in almost every kindergarten in the land. While thinking over the various careers of which I had heard my eye caught sight of a large poster which an- nounced in high type. l Talks and Debates by prominent men of the day, on vital and interesting subjects at 2.00 p. m. How to acquire the drink habit privately, N. P. Wheeler 2.23. Chinese laundries-their uses and abuses D. H. MCA. Pyle 2.25. Long distance Sleeping C. Sewall at 5 o'clock-Grand Debate q J. Kauffman fafhrmativej vs. T. Clark fnegativej, ques- tion Change the name of Pennsylvania. A note at the bottom of the poster stated that while the judges were making their decision Dusty Miller would entertain the audience with his famous King Boho story for the edification of the English speaking people. Violent hand clapping and shouts of that what I liken- Fine -caused me to open a door to a room that the noise seemed to be coming from. There was Tom Clark, who had evidently just hnished a powerful and masterly speech. To my great surprise the audience was composed of only one person-Fred Leake, seated in the front row making enough noise for a hundred or so. If the judges liked the speech as well as Fred did there was no doubt that Tom would win. His marvelous elo- quence and persuasive arguments would sweep away all opposition. On leaving the debating hall I noticed a faint odor of something burning. People seemed to be hurrying about in a very agitated manner-an increasing crowd of excited persons pouring in at the entrance of the institution?-oub 39 The Nassau H erald side there was a haze of blue smoke with an occasional spark of fire darting through it. From all directions people were madly running toward the building. The smoke grew denser and the rain of sparks and ashes was coming down now thick and fast. The entire population for miles around had sought shelter within the stone walls of the building. But no, just outside, still two persons could be seen seated on the smoking grass playing-I think-at mum- bly peg -who were they? I rubbed my eyes and looked again-Could it be true? Could those two persons sitting out there in that rain of fire be Howard French and Willie Wilmerding. Apparently fifty years of every day life after a college course had not taught these two men to seek shelter when it rains. I began to feel uncomfortably warm and suffocated with smoke. I had a vague feeling that I was burning up, At this point I awoke with a start and realized that I must have been dreaming for my lighted cigarette had fallen from my hand and was burning slowly but surely, a large hole through my coat and other clothes. The Ideal Institute had only been a dream after all. I did not mind the hole in my coat for I had dreamed a dream-and in the words of Hosf' Spencer our greatest after dinner speaker-bar-none- I had been waiting for months to do this. . It is a much easier task for me to prophesy the near future-How in these last few days every member of the class of 1908 will give expression to that which is best in him for the good of 1908 and Princeton. Life after college is harder to forecast but this of all things is most certain- That each one of us will cling to Princeton friendships what ere befalls, as cling the ivies to Old Nassau's walls. 40 Class History ROBERT W. FORSYTI-I, JR. Freshman Year Before I begin the history of the Class of 1908 I would like to say a few words concerning the source of most of the information contained in it. Our class is exceptionally fortunate in having as a mem- ber a real live Bulletin board fthe only one in captivityj which goes by the name of Gib McClintock. just as soon as he arrived in town the sales of Daily Princetoniansl' were reduced so that the paper was almost forced out of businessg because Gib set to work at once to make a large number of acquaintances and no one who was ever ac- quainted with him felt the need of a newspaper. In spite of the fact that he did not quite ruin the Prince- tonian, his ability to collect and disseminate news is well recognized and he must be considered as the appendix to the Class I-Iistory. On the 22d of September 1904 President Wilson for- mally extended the welcoming hand to the members of our class who had been driven into Chapel by the Sophomores and after what seemed a very short service turned them over to the Orange and Black mob outside for the informal greeting. For the next two weeks Princeton looked to us like an impressionist landscape picture except when we were stopped to furnish amusement for some Sophomores and most of the Witherspoon Street 'four hundred' As you doubtless know, anyone named Green has an easy opinion with Sophomores right away and our two emeralds Clint and joe were popular from the start. joe was always in great demand as he had some peculiar ideas about horse- ing and Clint was not far behind. The latter took his 41 The N assau H erald medicine in a fatherly 'Sophomores will be Sophomores' sort 0f way that didn't distract at all from his popularity. These two were constantly being taken for each other much to the disgust of both, especially to Ioe's who said that he didn't mind looking like Hamill but he certainly hated to be taken for Clint. The day after the opening at College we assembled in the old Gym., in spite of efforts to prevent and proceeded to' have our class officers elected for us by some obliging juniors. When the dust settled it was discovered that the oficers elected were, presidentg Vice-President W. I. Phillipsg secretary-Treasf urer. Cow Phillips is still in College. It was decided to have the Cannon Rush that same night as it was the only date that suited French and our chances would have been very poor without him. So about half past seven we formed on University place and marched over to the Campus. There we found a few frightened Sophomores huddled around the Cannon and chased them away. The next morning the Princetonian reported that the rush had been won by ,O7 but this statement was contra- dicted by Gib McClintock and also the Trenton Times which came out with the following choice item. . . . The rush had been in progress about five minutes when a big freshman pushed through the crowd and placed his hand upon the cannon. This constitutes a victory and after giving three cheers for their class the freshmen dispersed. I think that we may safely conclude that the Prince- t0nian's statement was erroneous. The annual Freshman-Sophomore base-ball game re- sulted in a tie, the score being I to I, but would undoubtedly have been a victory for 1908 if the game had not been stoppped. At any rate we considered the game as ours and had a very successful p-rade on the strength of it. Foot-ball now occupied all our attention and we began to feel that we had something in common with the rest of the university. 1908 was well represented on the big squad 42 Class H istovfy and still had enough good players left to turn out what is generally acknowledged to be the best freshman team in the history of Princeton. This team under the captaincy of Mut Douglas finished a most successful season by defeating the Yale freshmen IO to 7 on Nov. 5th. The features of the game were a goal from the field by Douglas and a brave attempt of Bill Bergland's to block a kick with his front teeth. ' We were all on hand a week later to see the Yale game and although we lost the game I2 to 0 and yelled ourselves hoarse we got some idea of what it meant to go to Princeton. With the exception of the Cane Spree, which 1908 won owing to the work of Dickson and Neff the rest of the Eall passed by without anything happening worthy of note. After the Christmas vacation we returned to be confronted by the Mid-year Examinations and all of us got busy. Westervelt, Wood and a few others to show the faculty what they knew, the rest to conceal what they didn't know. The awful ordeal was finally over but alas we had to say good-bye to many, many friends. Even 'Bull' Cummings was able to stay with us only by twisting the wrists of the faculty until they succumbed to his brute strength and let him remain. On Washingt0n's Birthday Ray Mount Won the light- weight wrestling bout but we lost the other two bouts to ,O7 largely on account of over confidence. In the first part of March we held a class meeting to fill the offices left vacant by the mid years and elected Emil Joy president, 'Cow' Phillips vice-president and Jim Mc- Cormick secretary-treasurer. By this time it was getting very spring-like and we began to devote less of our time to studies and more to education. The freshman base-ball team composed fof Garrett p. Halliday c. Hamill Ib. Throckmorton 2b. Harlan s. s. Eish 3b. Houston l. f. George c. f. Clark r. f. with Fish as captain in spite of the fact that it lost to Yale '08 was a team to be proud of. 1 43 The Nassau Herald On May 17th Harvard defeated Princeton in base-ball for the first time in ten years, the score being 6 to I. May 26th 'Les' Simons hit the take off for the first and last time in his life and won the Intercollegiate broad jump. June 5th the base-ball team defeated Yale I8 to 2 but the men were so Worn out running around the bases that Yale won the two remaining games. We had been led to think by the owners of the freshman houses that during Commencement week our rooms would be more desirable than our company so after we had held our Sophomore p-rade we dispersed for the summer va- cation. Sophomore Year Everybody turned up several days before College opened for our Sophomore year in order to take some of the surplus cash of the entering class in exchange for anything from banners to reserved Chapel seats. The members of the Press Club however were the first to arrive on the scene and soon had the papers full of 'per- fectly killing' stories about the new preceptors being taken for freshmen with the usual funny complications. Soon all were on the job taking away the jobs they had sold carrying larger headaches under still larger horse hats and trying to look as if they enjoyed it. The only people who really derived any real pleasure from wearing horse hats were Gus Studer and Pop Leonard who had'nt used Herpicide in time to save it. After our features had been re-arranged to suit the upper- classmen we allowed the freshmen to hold their elections in the Old Gym and waited for a chance to get even. That chance came the same night at the Cannon rush where there was no one to help them. In less than no time we had them seeing Cannon to right of them, Cannon to left of them, Cannon in front of themi' and then Cannon behind them. Owing to this, no doubt, they claimed the rush and said that their hero was one joe Gish, Gib McClintock assured us however that the name belonged to a dog and the fresh- 44 The N assau Herald now so the mid-years passed Without much excitement and turned our energies to making life miserable for the fresh- men. This was made easy by a couple of timely snow storms and We Wound up the performance on the 22d of February when Latimer, Ormond and Dickson Won all three of the Wrestling bouts from IQOQ. The same night we watched Halliday and Clark help the basket-ball team polish the Gym floor with Yale. The rest of the winter passed by Without any excitement besides several Trask lectures and concerts by the-Kneisel Quarter and Ernie Mecabe started the Spring by Winning the Intercollegiate Gymnastic Championship and having his P tatooed. About this time the Triangle Club presented the play Tobasco Land. Howard Stuckey suggested that from the name the show must be pretty hot stuff but did'nt raise much of a scream and was persuaded not to send his little joke to the Tiger, Life and other funny magazines. It was in this play that Roy Durstine made the great hit as Shifty Sadien. At least that was the prevalent idea with Roy until the Press in its criticism mentioned Slutty Sadie as having a voice like a fog horn and a face like a prize lighter. That cured him. On April 24th IQOS Won the Caledonian Games and the day after ,lack Havron and Don Gensler were elected assist- ant managers of the Track and Base-ball teams respectively. The base-ball team Was now Well on the road to the Championship and we savv Pennsylvania defeated once and Harvard tvvice with the greatest satisfaction. On June 2d Nubs Harlan the only classmate We had on the team broke up the first Yale game with a tvvo-bagger and in the second game a Week later batted in two runs in the ninth inning. Both games were Won by Princeton by the score of 3 to 2. Wlien We separated for the summer vacation We left be- hind us the ashes of all moveable barns and unprotected bicycles which had composed the championship bonfire. .46 C lass H istory Junior Year During the summer very disquieting rumors were afloat concerning the invasion of the old 'burg' by the W. C. T. U., and we fully expected on our return to have our bags of 'bull' snatched away and to see the 'Nass' turned into a branch of the Philadelphian Society. No wonderful inno- vations however met our anxious eyes and we soon settled down for what we had been told was the best year in the college course. The session was opened formally in the Chapel on Sep- tember 2oth and informally at the Inn by Eddie Ong, Glen Flory and kindred spirits. No longer bothered by under- class worries and restrictions we spent our mornings at lectures our afternoons watching foot-ball practice and our evenings, in social gatherings devoting all the rest of the time to our studies. . Early in the Fall we elected Hamill president of the Class, Wistei' Vice president and Thibaut secretary-Treas- urer after which we settled down and watched the career of the foot-ball team. 'Cap' Wister went out for the team and soon showed that he had the all American nailed and Nubs Harlan at last consented to go out if only to prove that he knew nothing about the game. jim McCormick and Cow Phillips went out from force of habit and with these men from '08 playing the team started out on the road to glory. The smaller games passed by with only four points worth of accident and on the 27th of October we followed the team to New York to see Cornell beaten. Five minutes after the game started we had five points scored against us and things looked rather discouraging. But the team only waited for Vandervort to get a little even money and then showed how quickly fourteen points could be scored. After we had beaten Dartmouth 42 to o we sat back and laughed at the joke we were going to spring on Yale. For some reason or other however our joke didn't work out quite right. Yale arrived on Nov I7th with the usual eleven and also an extra man who played at umpire. 47 Class History men afterward acknowledged that they had lost the rush. But in order to settle the matter we let them win the base- ball game so that they would p-rade and then develop the latent track material in their class. Cn September 29th we elected W. Phillips president of the Class, T. N. Pfeiffer Vice president and L. B. George secretary-Treasurer. The Fall Track games resulted in an easy victory for us and a little later John Kelley and Sid Crawford won second and third places respectively in the Cross Country run. Those get your suitings for the Yale game circulars which were pushed into our rooms, when we were out, re- minded us that the big game was at hand and soon we were on our way to New Haven. In spite of Mr. H. D. Skillman's prediction Yale won the 'gameg but we had the distinction of being the only team to score on them .that year and people say that the circulation at New Haven was minus a considerable number of checks. Ham Donovan proved this by cashing in on the way home. On Dec. 2d, we welcomed the visitors who had come to see the Army-Navy game as they walked into town from the Junction. The chief result of the game was the oppor- tunity it gave to the Curator to kick for a raise in his salary. Our representatives in the Cane Spree were Orncond, Dickson and Wheeler. We took all three canes away from IQOQ so easily that the spree was hardly interesting. On this occasion Pete's ability to handle foot-ball men was clearly shown and a few days later he was elected assis- tant manager of the team. Christmas came before we could convince the Dean that we ought to be allowed to visit our uncles in California and we left town for a short two weeks. Gn our return we found that Much Osborne had been playing on the hockey team and that on account of his keeping training, the Nass was in very poor financial condition. For a while Charlie Luke had to support the place single handed. We were getting used to the process of elimination by b 45 The N assau Herald The game had been in progress only a few minutes when Cap Wister made a touchdown very easily, too easily in fact, because the umpire didn't see how it could be done in straight foot-ball and gave the team a chance to try it again. Thereafter the ball was chased up and down the Held with no resulting score and the game ended 0 to 0. But the gun team had defeated Yale on the day before so we went away for Thanksgiving with something to be thankful for. The first thing we noticed on our way back was that the lake was nlled with water. Such a thing we had not imagined possible and as we had already made up our minds that hockey games would be played on roller skates we were not a little pleased. In celebration of this great event Mr. Carnegie came to town and formally presented the lake to the University at the same time causing the faculty to loosen up and give us a holiday. Several days later Jim McCormick was elected foot-ball Captain for the next year and Pete Vlfheeler was pro- moted to manager. Then Christmas came and the musical Clubs and Bill West left for the southern trip. It is pretty hard to find out much about that trip but from all accounts it was a success except for the sickness. Cn the way back by the Clyde Line Dick Cowan was very sick, so Gib tells me and his friends were afraid for a while that he would pass away. The motion of the boat may have had some- thing to do with it. While the vacation was still in full swing we heard that Columbia had won the Intercollegiate chess championship. Our team was greatly handicapped by lack of weight. On our return we found that we could not get any further in our college career without taking another chance to Hunk out so we took the exams and then went up to New York to see the hockey team beat Yale. With this game Princeton won the championship and 'Much' Osborne was elected Captain for the next year. On Washington's Birthday Tom Clark and jim Kauffman won the Debate and oratorical contests respectively. This , 48 Class H istory holiday was conspicuous by the postponement of the Junior prom. On March Ist the Princetonian changed hands Dis- honest Clothier was given a chance to get rid of those Whom is the joke on Editorials. A little later on in the month the Swimming Team won the Intercollegiate cham- pionship and the Debating Team defeated both Yale and Harvard at the same time. After the Easter vacation Taliaferro allowed the Junior prom. to be held, introducing however the novel idea of allowing spectators to watch the prom from the track for the small consideration of one dollar. Dr. Faustusn was presented by the English Club on Apl. 26th in order to show the student body what the Tri- angle shows would be like if run by the faculty. This play was remarkable for the good acting but interest centered chiefly about the large number of catchy songs. About this time the track team was defeated by Yale by the score of 54 to 50 but the meet was in doubt until the last event was over and the defeat was far from discourag- ing. However to get even with the game the team ran away from Columbia 83 to 34 and wound up the season by winning the Intercollegiate meet at Jamestown. The base-ball team had been playing all during the season with the usual success and 'after it had defeated both Penn- sylvania and Harvard twice we considered the championship ours. Before we could claim it however we had to go through the formality of a couple of games with Yale. The first one at New Haven was won by the score of 9 to 7 in a twelve inning game. But in this gameYale had made her final effort and we won the next game and incidently the championship on june Sth without any whirl wind finish being necessary. After this game Nubs Harlan was elected Captain of the next years team. A few days afterwards, while the championship bonfire was burning we took the steps and bid farewell to our old friends of ,O7. 49 The N asscm H erald Senior Year How 'Doc' Topley knew that Boulder jones was com- ing to town, unless of course Gib told him, was a puzzle to all of us. just as soon as we returned Tay Pyne at the head of a committee, pushed his new mustache over to the Street to find out what was the cause of the change in his vocation. Doc's reason so, he said, was that he had heard of a rough neck who was coming from Texas and wanted to be in the business where he could stop most of the cash. Needless to say he has not regretted it yet. This point being settled we looked around to see what changes had come over the campus. McCosh Hall had been completed, the Old Gym no longer obstructed the view but the Comet discovered by Professor Daniel had to be taken for granted. Zack was on the job however backed by a flock of magazines to convince anyone who was at all sceptical. At last we got everything straightened out and settled down for our year. . After College formally opened we . won the interclass base-ball series in accordance with the time worn custom and started to get ready for the senior p-rade. You know a senior p-rade takes an awful lot of prepara- tion and some of the fellows had to start some time before- hand in order to be properly prepared. A couple of them, I wont mention names, became so worn out by the process that they went to sleep and forgot all about the large occas- ion. . Harry Kase showed up though, on the steps, of Wliig Hall, all he had. A On October 24th we re-elected C. M. Hamill president of the Class, E. H. W. Harlan vice president and I. L. Kauffman Secretary-Treasurer. This being done we de- parted for Ithaca to see the Cornell game. Much to the surprise of everybody we lost the game 5 to 6 and Jim McCormick made a speech which the journal wouldn't print. As a result of it the team Worked harder than ever' and a week later won a I6 to O game from the Indians. All during the Fall we had been watching the building of the Sun Dial and trying to iind out how the stock market 50 V I 'Sci-1 R T- sa: . ' - Y' - fifwrf . 'wfvz-H., vXf.'. .-:11:- z':1:-rv fc - ,L-1 vf3R!9izSiafxs:v-mwcscw ' - , 3-Z'.2xgf'1'r,.f I V - - -V ,--------fm '-J'-W, 5 N' ' -1-QM 1 x i 5 - I., X , . .4 1. :,, 1 - ii' 1 4 L V A I ,-'.:,, , .-L' I5 -4 w V . E E , A U Nw Class H istovfy was coming on from the inscriptions on the Column. The finishing touch was the mounting of a figure on the top of the column which caused no end of comment. The figure looked somewhat like a bird but everyone was completely in the dark until it was announced that this was a statue of Pfeiffer. The Dial was formally presented to the Univer- sity by Ambassador Bryce in the name of Sir William Mather on Oct. 3Ist. The much talked of 'Regatta' was held on Carnegie Lake on Nov. Sth and in order to lend dignity to the occasion Mr. Carnegie came to town withla trophy for the winning crew. We all assembled on the shores of the Lake and amused ourselves by throwing Mut in the water until it was time for the race to start. There was a delay for a little while because they could not End a shoe horn big enough to get Bert Malin in the boat but Hnally the gun was tired and the race was on. At first it looked as if the race would be a tie but the senior crew gradually forged to the rear and were only saved from last place by the freshmen whose boat was a better drifter. On Nov. 16th everyone left for New Haven confident of at last seeing a foot-ball victory over Yale while 1908 was in college. Such was the coniidence indeed that some started to celebrate the victory before the great event came off and went out to see the game full of excitement and happy anticipation. It is hardly necessary to go into the harrowing details of the game, as they are pretty well un- derstood by now, so let it be sufficient to say that Yale won a great victory by the score of I2 to IO and that those who celebrated before hand 'crossed their bridges before they were hatched' ' On Nov. 2ISt the Cross County team defeated Columbia. Dec 6th The Yale debaters succumbed to Tom Clark's oratory and changed their minds about the question at issue. Dec. 15th Tommy Thompson bought a pipe and started to smoke. In less than two weeks he could blow smoke through his nose and before the Christmas vacation was over, he was an expert smoker. VVhen some one remon- SI The N assau Herald strated with him and said dont you know that people often die from smoking Tommy showed that he had started on the downward path be replying I dont care how often I die. The winter passed by with the usual giddy whirl of Murray Hall addresses and lectures and Spring came with the catalogues of the Albany teachers' Agency and the 'dont drudge your life away, be a drug clerk' circulars of corres- pondence Schools reminding us that our college life was nearing the close. During the Easter vacation the Triangle Club took its western trip which has become famous as the only time that Taliaferro didn't make money. On this trip after a smoker given to the club Studer and Durstine went around town buying up Easter fiowers. They haven't yet accounted for the fact that the next day they could count only half as many fiowers as they thought they had. In the meanwhile the base-ball team had been having a successful southern trip and returned in good shape for the championship series. Pennsylvania was the first on the list of victims and on May 9th succumbed to Walt Clark's pitching after a twelve inning game. The second game a week later put them out of the race entirely. Cornell and Harvard were defeated in turn and now Yale alone is left to dispute the championship. With the final exams passed the Faculty's last hope of keeping us away from our diplomas has vanished and now Senior vacation is here with the sad realization that we must soon say our final farewell to Princeton. To say anything more now would be to encroach upon the grounds of the prophet and the History of the Class is closed with the hope that the future history of 1908 may be even more illustrious than the past. 52 y Presentation Oration ROY SARLES DURSTINE. Mr. Chaiwnan, Ladies and Gentlemen, and Mentbers of the Class of 1908: I-Iow-how in the name of Mark Anthony, Cleopatra, Patrick I-Ienry, Daniel Webster, and Tom Clark, can one do full justice to such a colossal aggregation of intellectual athletes without dipping the pen in sunlight, then soaring aloft into the ethereal realms of sesquipedalian English, and doing a metaphorical handstand in superlative sub- limity? I-Iow ? I ask, and Echo answers, I-Iow ? Now at the very start of this display of linguistic fire- works which I am about to hand you, and for which many of these upturned faces before me have waited in anxious anticipation for months and months and months, it is my intention to say a few words in the strictest confidence to those who are here at the invitation of this motley throng before me, whether it be in the role of fathers, mothers, sweet-hearts, best-bets, next-to-bests, or also-rans. After these exercises have been brought to a close, as these inno- cent youths are leading you across the campus, they will break through the crust of ice which in enveloping you as a result of what I am going to tell you, and they will declare that everything I said about them was a deliberate false- hood, and that I always did have a vicious and disagreable nature. But I am going to save them that inconvenience by telling you now at the very start that the one and only reason that I am here is to give one of the world's best ex- hibitions of falsifying, fancy lying, and generally pervert- ing the truth that has been witnessed since Ananias was on the job as President of the Fable-Builders Union. So just remember this: Don't believe a single word I am going to say. If, unwittingly, I allow a single grain of fact to slip 53 The N assau H erald into this oration-that's what the program calls it 5 look for yourself-that grain of fact will be so dishgured, con- cealed and disguised that its own mother wouldnft know it. For the nonce I am a delusion and a snare. But- One crisp October day last fall a little handful of men were seated around a blazing fire trying to discover some new kind of club which they could organize to add to our natty fall line of clubbings. Upon investigation it was found that all necessary ministering was being done by the Ministerial Club, all the lying was being attended to by the Law Club, the students, pressing was well handled by the Press Club, absolutely no germs were escaping the German Club, plenty of canodling was being done by the Canoe Club, but as far as could be ascertained positively no hunt- ing was being done because there was no Hunt Club. It came like an inspiration to that little handful of men-a hunt club must be organized. Unfortunately at least three fingers of this handful of men were members of the Junior Class, and so they are beyond the pale of this awful ros- trum. But we have with us to-day at least two of the charter members. D. Hunter McA. Pyle, note the appro- priateness of the name when parted on both sides, and M. Taylor Pyne, Ir., the only living follower of the hounds who never rode a horse. Let us skip the harrowing details incidental to the founding and incorporation of the club, and take a short journey down to Spreehold, New jersey, where the initial run was held. The ushers will pass among you selling excursion tickets at a reduced rate by special arrangement with the Pennsylvania Railroad and T. S. Taliaferro. If you don't come back with the crowd on the block ticket, Tom says you will have to pay your own fare. Well anyway, the club house was reached and everyone had secured a mount, always excepting Taylor Pyne who could not be tempted to venture off the piazza, because there wasn't a steward in the club that could keep pace with a galloping horse. So we will have to confine our attention to Dave, but my word! he was worth it! From pink- 54 Presentation Omtion topped boots, and solid gold crop to pink coat and tall hat, he was the dressiest little hunter that ever took a cropper, fwhatever that isj. With cries of I-Ii! Hi l and 'fl-lark my beauties ! he led the pack in the most approved manner, sitting his horse like any member of the New York Traffic Squad. The man who told me stationed himself at a point of vantage some three miles from the club, where the natural conditions were particularly well adapted to observe from a hidden position the feats of horsmanship about to be per- formed. Seated behind a high stone wall, he looked out upon a grassy slope which rose quite abruptly to a consider- able height. Half-way down this incline is situated a rail fence of the sure-spill type. This proved a severe test, as will be shown later. Scarcely had he taken his position when a muffled thundering of hoofs announced that Dave was coming, and coming some. Dashing down the billowy slope with the speed of the 20-Hour Special he came, the nattiest little horseman of the entire cry. He was better than a cry, he was a yell. But unfortunately he was was riding a shine jumper. The first try at the bars resulted in the charger attempting to take the fence backwards, but Dave was a sport, and refused to let his horse reverse. On the second trial things looked better until within a foot of the rails, when the faithful steed thought of something, crossed his feet in a neat sailor's knot, stopped to con- sider, and looked before he leaped. Not so Dave. With- out a moment's hesitation he went at the fence like a thoroughbred, shot over his mount's head like an arrow, and slipped through the rails in topping form, landing fairly and squarely in the midst of that minute riverlet. The brim of his top hat remained on the other side, and the fence was wrecked, but otherwise he came to grass without a damage. Here's another horse for you, Dave, and here is one for Taylor too. Have you all been noticing the air of regal splendor with which our peerless president has been sitting during this afternoon's proceedings? There he sits, Chalmers, the First, King of Princeton, in his own right. Do you know 55 The N assaa H erald if it weren't for Ham long ago the University would have been obliged to put up the shutters, refuse admission to in- coming students, and stop handing out learning to the throngs clamoring at her doors? It's true, why, last fall When, in the temporary absence of President Wilson, Vice- President Hamill was getting the place in running order, I met him on the campus one day and stopping him as he elbowed his way along among those lofty elms I said, Say, I-Iam, can I see you a minute ? I-Iam pulled out that little notebook and after running his eye thoughtfully down the page, he said, Let me see. This is the 21st of September. If you'll come around to my room at II.3O on the evening of December 9th I'll be able to give you ten minutes, but unless its mighty important don't bother me until after mid-years. But Ham is a grand little guy to have on hand in a crisis. For example, he was. one of the Democratic bosses in the campaign for Governor last fall. One of the purely social incidents of the campaign was a wager which I-Iam made with one of the fair dames on his calling list. Now this is a very delicate matter for it seems that the stake was nothing more nor less than one nice, small, cute, cunning, little kiss. Now as you all know I-Iam's party lost the election and so, like the honest man he always is, I-Iam paid up without a murmur. Next morning, however, all the papers protested the election and claimed that the Demo- cratic candidate had won after all. So faithful I-Iam re- turned to the winner of the Wager and demanded the object in question be paid back-which it was. But on a recount of it was found that the first returns had been correct, so like the true sportsman he is, I-Iam paid up for the second time or was it the third?-I've lost count. I have the whole story from the eyes of a lip-witness who maintains that Ham was for following the matter up, perfectly con- tent to have as many protests and recounts as the state managers could arrange. just step up I-Iam and put on this mask. Now you'll be all right even if there should be another recount. 56 Presentation Omtion Will some one please give Bill West a friendly tap on the shoulder and Wake him up? Oh, hello Bill! With us again, I see. Feel better after that siesta? I wouldn't mention Billis propensity for drifting away right out in meeting this way, if it weren,t the best thing he did. On the level that boy can do a Rip Van Winkle at a moment,s notice that would make the Sleeping Beauty look as if she had in- somnia. But there are so many things Bill can do well- honestly I could talk from now till next Commencement telling you things that Bill has done. There was one time, though, that Bill Wasn't asleep. Of course I don't mean that time he forgot to have a train meet the Glee Club at the Junction when they were returning from Lakewood, thus bringing out the world's only cross- country glee team. But, as Rudyard Kipling says, that's another story. Still this also happened on a railway train. It was the summer after Sophomore year and Bill was on his way to a house party in the Adirondacks. I-Ie was travelling with another fellow and their host had written them to look out for two charming young damsels and the inevitable chaperon who were expected to catch the same train a little way out of New York. As the train paused at the critical station Bill glanced in the mirror, rearranged his tie, pushed a lock of hair over that ever-increasing bald spot, and arose with easy grace just as the feminine trio entered the Pullman. One of the young ladies was already known to Bill and his companion, so after greeting him profusely-Bill was always very tropical among the ladies- she presented him to the older woman and then stepping quite close to the other girl, whom Bill had already copped out as an easy winner, fairly shouted, Myrtle, -that wasn't her name but it will do- Myrtle, may I present Mr. West P The fair but hearingless maid smiled pleasantly, and Bill somewhat abashed but game, did a rapid side-step across the aisle, neatly tripping over the chaperon's feet, and began a long distance conversation at close range. Well, all day long Bill stuck to his post and when the train reached Utica and he flew to the platform to get a breath of 57 The Nassau H erald air he was so hoarse he couldn't say a word. That night when the camp was reached the secret came out. Of course you know the answer. The girl had been Stringing Bill all day long, for having heard of his propensity for whispering sweet nothings, she had throught it prudent to have his small talk overheard by the rest of the occupants of the car. .On the level if he had opened a window they could have heard his every word in Chicago. I-Iere's a megaphone for you Bill in case you ever encounter another one like that. - Every time anyone speaks of fussing I think of jack Havron. Jack is an awful success with the ladies, though his seemingly indifferent exterior would lead you to think otherwise. just to show you what a Chesteriield he is when there's a woman in the case, Jack lives in Passaic, N. J., you know, and one day last summer one of the local Gwendolyns called him up on the phone and told him that she was expecting a girl to visit her, and wouldnit jack drop around that evening. jack appeared and everything went well until he was left alone on the porch with the strange maid. Then conversation lagged a little and so Jack pro- duced a box of cigarettes, and asked the dame if she minded if he smoked. The young lady hesitated a moment, and then murmured something about she would rather he wouldn't if he didn't mind. Well, that's too bad, re- marked Iack as he set fire to his Murad. All of which goes to show what the prevalent ideas of chivalry are in the upper ten of Passaic. Speaking of cigarettes naturally leads one to I-Iam Dono- van. Not because he ever had one of his own, stop rolling those makings, I-Iam, and give them back to the man who owns them. Smoking is the best thing Ham does, and he's been doing it for some time too. Once he almost stopped, and I think such an important event is worthy of mention. It happened when Ham was nine years old, and at that time he was very crazy about a little girl who was staying at the same summer hotel. Of course they were all for being married at once, and Ham was saving his pennies to furnish 58 . Presentation Omtioiz the house, when suddenly a cloud came over their young lives. It seems that the little girl discovered that he was a devotee of thefilthy weed, and after she had a good cry, she told him gently but with decision that lips which touched cigarettes should never touch hers. Ham thought for a moment and then decided to get along without smok- ing, and they kissed and made up, and everything was lovely. Well, things went along all right for a few days and then Ham simply had to have a smoke. So he sneaked out behind the proverbial barn, where all youthful smokes are smoked, and was ,sitting there puffing away to his heart's content, when suddenly around the corner came the object of his affections. Sol Hamilton Donavon! she exclaimed, you have deceived me. Ham tried to crawl out of it, and hemmed and hawed, but at last the girl de- clared that if he persisted in his smoking habits everything would be over between them. Ham, she said, It's either cigarettes or me. He looked at her for a moment and then replied with characteristic irony, Oh Hell! I'll take cigarettes l Here, Ham, see what Santa Claus brought you. The next little delicious morsel of refined humor which I have to offer you this after-noon, is a shriekingly hilarious one-act farce, entitled The Preceptor's Delight , or How- ard French at His Best. Scene-One of those small rooms in McCosh. Time-Any morning preceptorial hour in Am. Hist. Cast: The Preceptor The Other Students: Bee Failey,'Glen Flory Qwho, by the way is one of the editors of the Nassau Herald, and so was in a position to blue pencil this speech of mine as much as he liked. I only just discovered that he has cut out com- pletely a reference I had made to him describing a series of games held Sophomore year. I wonder if G. Brown could fill in the details, could you G.? What? Oh, I un- derstand, they came after all, did they? But to get back.j 59 The N assaa H erald john Farley, Art Ryan, Bill Gill, and jeff Graham, the oldest living undergraduate now in captivity. QAS the bell stops ringing the Other Students Ble slowly into the room, nodding pleasantly to the Preceptor. Glen produces the makings, john Farley and Bee Failey look interested, john rolls a cigarette passing the papers and Durham to Bee, who rolls one and puts the making in his pocket. The Preceptor has been talking steadily for some time, but is unable to extract an intelligent answer from anyone. The Preceptor- Mn Gill, what do you think of the per- durance of the Confederate States ? Bill Gill-''Why-a-er-a-I-a-why-don't-er-know. CI-Iaving delivered himself of this pithy rejoinder, Gill fades away for the rest of the hour.j The Preceptor- Mr, Farley P jolin- Why the thing I don't understand about their per- durance is that if they did perdue- Failey-fcoming out of his trancej- Purdue! Purdue! Purdue! Rah! Rah! Raw I QThunderous footfalls are heard without-without What? I suppose. Without a doubt-the door opens, the orchestra concealed in the jungle just outside the window plays Hail to the Chief I Enter Howard French, with a chord in G. Ta-de-da! The Preceptor and Other Students all salam to the ground, one student takes his hat, another his coat, the Preceptor places a chair for him.j I-Iovvard-fbeginning as soon as he entersj- I'd like to know right now what right you-ve got to start this hour before I get here. Why haven't I as much right as the next one to get here when you begin? Answer me that. No, don't answer me, it will take too long. And another thing, just because I have a recitation just before this one down near Kingston is no reason why I shouldn't get all there is out of this course. Goodness knows there's precious little at best, and thereis another thing that I'd like to have under- stood now that we are discussing this question, and that is you don't know how to run this course anyway. Wliy, if 60 Presentation Omtion I couldn't map out the reading better than you have, I- The Preceptor- It,s very good of you Mr. French, to make these suggestions to me, and- Howard- Suggestions? I don't suggest., I'm telling you whatls whatll' CSomebody lets a nickel fall on the floor. Prolonged scuffling of feet, Failey and Flory go under the table after it, and stay there matching and shooting for it.j The Preceptor Cwith a great effortj- We were discussing when you came in, Mr. French, the legality of the perdur- ance of the Confed-H g Howard- Legality? Vlfhy, whoever said thre was any legality in that? I don't know whether I think the Con- federate States had a right to secede or not, or whether their perdurance can be said to be a sign of - Ueff Graham presents him with a bag of Durham, but to no availj - it isn't often that I raise a kick in this course, but after I have read my twenty-five hundred pages, or whatever it is, I'd like to know how you have the nerve to expect us to-H fThe Perceptor shrivels up and blows away, the Other Students have long since fallen asleep. Spot-light on Howard French. Quick Curtain.j Here you are, Howard, here we have something nice in the way of a laurel-wreath. Wliat size wreath do you wear? 6 and 7-8? Then this will just fit you. And will Bee Failey, the Indianapolis Kid, kindly appear? Some of the fellows in that division were in about as wrong as a girl I heard about the other day. It seems that this young person was peculiar enough to wear a rat in her pompaclour, and crazy enough to lose the rat in question. It's peculiar to wear a rat, but it's lunacy to lose it if you do wear one. W'ell, this maid found it was gone, so she used a shredded wheat biscuit instead, and I'll be blamed if she wasn't arrested for violating the Pure Food Laws. I wonder if that girl was up at the Briarcliff Race this spring. How about it, jun Vanderhoef P I mustn't forget 61 The Nassau H emld to tell you about the time one of our lambs lost some of his golden fleece while following the cars. . It took place at Briarcliff this spring when Jun Vander- hoef started out to make one of those professional manipu- lators of the walnut shells sorry that he had ever taken it up as a life work. .lun was strolling along beside the track asking people how soon the race was going to start when his attention was attracted by a little group of men gathered around a table. He stopped and glanced at the little crowd for a moment, then a moment more, and inally his listless expression changed to one of intense interest as he saw the man who was running the shell game hand over bill after bill to the bright young fellows who were guessing where the elusive pea was located, and guessing right. Something seemed to be Wrong with this man's ability to shuffle the shells, for time after time the guessers took the other's money. This was really too easy, thought Jun, and it was a crime to let it slip by. He fingered his own roll of bills anxiously and made bets with himself on the next three casts. Every time the recalcitrant pea was where he had prophesied. Une of the disinterested spectators turned to him and remarked in a confidential whisper, This guy's a cinch, why don't you take a chance P Oh no, answered jun, I don't gamble. He said it without smil- ing, too. His companion laughed pleasantly, just pleasantly enough. Neither do I, he said, this isn't gambling, it's like taking a crutch away from a cripple. Jun nodded and saw the man on the other side of him pull in ten dollars. He gripped that roll tighter, but didn't move. I'll tell you what I'll do, said his amiable friend, you and I will each put up tive and I'll leave it to you to pick out which shell it's under. That sounded all right to Jun, so he put his finger on the shell Linder which he had seen the pea go, and held it down while his friend produced a five spot, and then his friend held his linger on the shell while ,lun did likewise. Of course, you all know the answer, and Jun is now a wiser 62 Preseittation Ovation and a poorer man. Here are some shells, jun. See if you can't fool the man next to you. Well, everybody gets fooled now and then. Wliy even our trusty force of campus sleuches get out on the wrong twig accasionally. One night last winter one of the watch- men came running up from down Brown way, and dashed into police headquarters with the startling intelligence that the biggest party in years was being celebrated down in the corner of Brown, and that the welkin was being rung like Trinity Chimes. So the detachment then on duty took off his coat, and shaved, and put on a clean collar, and brushed off his clothes, and strolled down to see what was the matter. Sure enough from down in the direction of Brown there was an awful racket, that sounded as if every song-bird in college had accumulated a small but effective parcel, and was attempting to corral a few loose wisps of clustering harmony. Hot foot up the stairs dashed the duet of sleuches, and bursting open the door where they heard the sound, they found Ken Lanning, Bill Finney, and Fred Hutchinson drinking sweet cider and eating Uneeda Biscuits, the while they voiced a few stray ditties. just to remind you of that little party, boys, here are a few little trinkets. Speaking of trinkets reminds me of the things we had to eat on the Triangle trip this year. For Tom Taliaferro announced some time before the tour began that after a scientific investigation covering a period of several weeks, he had discovered just how much nourishment the human body has to have to subsist, and that based on this knowl- edge he had arranged a schedule of meals for the club. Each man was promised at least one meal per day and a place to sleep, but he could have two meals if he didn't want to sleep, or if he was willing to dispense with eating he could have a place to sleep day and night. Well the first thing Tom did when the trip started was to call the roll. I say the roll advisedly for it was the only one sighted on the entire tour. After the roll had been called, and every- one was greatly refreshed by this subtle way of catering to 63 The N assaa Herald the inner man, a dispute arose as to who was going to be allowed to use Hugh Ferris' meal-ticket. Dave Pyle de- clared that since there really was nobody of that name, he was the nearest to it because he said the line, but Tom maintained that Hugh Ferris was the man blamed for everything about the show, and that he guessed the ticket belonged to him. But the Pennsylvania Railroad put Tom's best laid plans to the fritzerine, when the dining car man refused' to hand out breakfast for under seventy-live ko- pecks, and so the club had some real food. Tom, here's a menu card, possibly you can think out something you would like. fTelephone bell ringsj Hello, yes . . . who? . . . Mr. john Myers? Yes, right here . . . what? . . . you don't want to speak to him? . . . you just want to tell . . . to tell . . . what? oh, yes . . . you just want to tell me something about Johnnie Myers .... Is that it? . . . Well, go right ahead .... That's what we are all here for .... Yes .... Yess. . . . Where did you say? . . . At a house-party last summer . . . yes .... All the rest were on the piazza and john was sitting down on the lawn with-what? . ' . . yes . . . perhaps . . . do you think she would mind? yes . . . go on . . . yes .... Everything was quiet on the porch, when this voice came from the lawn ...yes .. .yes . . . yes . . . anditsaid what? oh, yes . . . it said Ouch, john, look out for my ring on that hand. Well thank you . . . what name? She's gone. Do you want me to call any number for you, John? Here's something for the man who has those real affinity phone conversations. Well, I have reached the point where it is customary to clear the throat, and advance a very feeble hope that every- thing that has been said and so on, but Fm going to skip all that, and just say so-long, I'm glad to have known every one of you. 64 1908 Memorial Fund The subscriptions to the Class Memorial Fund should be made to A. C. Studer, jr., 29 Forest St., Montclair, N. I. No better Class spirit could be shown than by paying promptly, as the money collected is immediately invested. Also much time, labor, and expense will be saved to the committee by prompt payment. Secretary's Notice If the Class of 1908 shall remain a unit after graduation, it is absolutely necessary that every man make it a rule to answer all communications addressed to him, to keep the Secretary appraised of any change of address, and to help him in the collection of data by the voluntary sending of information. The co-operation of every member of the Class is urgently requested in this matter. CSignedJ JAMES L, KAUFFMAN, Columbia, Pa. 65 Cla ss Ode Words by H. E. -Iov Music by WXLLIAM SCHROI-:DER I Eight ls' l EHiTQF4ir: S. 'W Qfniigifiiiifisiggsssszzig ' wsasalfvfdig-317- ?gg,13FE.5sLwvNqig,sf'1 him . , jg- .sk JJM fi MWFELI ' 1 f l s missflj F ' J ?E4TlEf-V3 I N., ..z m FN 'sm,f,f ff- mw si s r VE VTP E -A 5 Ax v vw 1 v Ii m , 0 s Hhtglfqs X i 1 V' ' ff fffy . . ' H -20 v L 'QE59 E' Ev fy W fs +1 I 1908 Class Cde I. We've played together, comrades! We've picked the flowers by the way. It's now to the walls and over, It's now to the fray- It's now to the fray, my comrades, Out from the ields of clover Up to the walls and over. II. We have been happy, comrades, The years have seemed as but a day- Days of recruiting are over, It's now to the fray- It's now to the fray, my comrades, Out from the fields of clover Charging the walls and over. III. Let's pledge each other, comrades, Let's pledge our 'hearts like men to-day, fight 'till the last is over die in the fray- die in the fray, my comrades- fight 'till the last is over, to the walls and over. To Or Or To Up IV. To her who is our mother, Comrades, we pour our souls to-day, We leave her in fields of clover We go to the fray- We go to the fray, my comrades, For her 1et's fight-and over, Up to the walls, up to the walls and over. -H. E. .Toy '08 67 IN FIEFIORIAVI Paul T. Jones Edwin D. Heim Louis E. Beall The N assaa Herald Intended Vocations Business ......... ....... 5 6 Reporter .......... Law .........,..... . .. 51 Mining Engineer . . .. Civil Engineering 22 Diplomat Manufacturing ........ I7 Publisher ........ Ministry ............... IO Y. M. C. A. Secretary Electrical Engineering ....... 9 Politics ............. Medicine ........... .. .. 7 Railways .. Journalism ......... .. 6 Financier Teaching ...... . . 6 Astronomer .... . Real Estate .. 3 Illustrator .... Brokerage . . . . . 3 Lumber Business . . . . Banking . . . . . 3 Loafing ........ . . . . . Architect .... . . 3 Gentleman of Leisure Mining .... ....... 2 Second story man .... Political Preference Republicans .... ....... I 43 Prohibitionists Democrats . . . ....... 61 Independents .. . . Religious Preference Presbyterian . .. ....... 89 Mormon . . . . . . . Episcopal ....... . .. 48 Universalist . . . . Methodist ........ . .. 22 Christian .. Congregationalist .. . . . . 8 Lutheran . . . . . . . . Catholic .......... . . 8 Agnostic ......... . Baptist .... . . 6 Christian Science .. . . Unitarian .... . . . 3 Spiritualist ..... . . . Jew ....... ..... 3 No preference Favorite Sports Baseball ..... 54 Bridge Tennis .. . 36 Basketball Football ...27 Soccer Sailing IO Poker ..... Golf ...... 7 M. T. Pyne, Ir. Diabolo ..... 6 Sport Moore .. .. Swimming... 6 Loating........ Hockey 5 Hunting Canoeing .... . . . 5 Beanbags . . . . Autoing . .. 4 Camping .. Riding . .. 3 Rowing Boxing .... 3 Polo Track .... .. . 3 Ping Pong . . . Shooting .. 3 Drinking .. 70 Spooning Fishing .. Squash Wallcing History . . English ..... Politics ...... Mathematics .... Science Economics ....... Physical Geography French ........... Chemistry ........ Astronomy . . . Philosophy . . . Poetry ..... Graphics ..... Physics ......... Human Nature . . . Geodesy .......... Frame structures . Blonde Brunette Gibson Albino Classic ....... Grecian .... . . . . . . Stright Front .... Statuesque ..... Black .... Auburn . . . Southern . .. Adipose .... Spanish .... Helen .... Mary ....... Margaret . . . Dorothy . . . Summ ary .. I Sleeping .. .. I Billiards .... . .. I K Geo. Smith I Favorite Studies ......54 Spanish 42 Biology 20 Sewerage ....16 Latin...... I0 Electricity .. 9 Hydraulics . . 8 Woman . .... . . . . 8 Money and Banking .. 7 Roman Law .. .. 6 Bridge .... . .. 5 Bib. Lit..,... .. 5 Architecture . .. 4 The Library .. .. 4 Father's .... . . . 3 Time Tables . . .. 3 Sporting Page 2 Topley's...... Favorite Style of Beauty .........117 Undulating Serpentine 74 Simple but Girlish .. 2 Faded blonde . 2 Her's ......... 2 Intelligent 2 Dark Brown 2 Auburn . I Robust ............. 1 Any Kind With Money I Marie Dressler ...... I Malay ............... I Egyptian I Fair, Fat and Forty .. Favorite Woman's Name -31 Eiizabefh ..... . 26 Ruth .... 24 Alice ...... II Katharine 71 Summary Courses of Study Academic ......................... 139 Scientific . .. .. .. .. 25 Engineering . . . , , , 33 Litt.B. ...... .... 5 3 Total ,,,,, 250 Societies- Whig . . . . . . 88 Clio .. . . . . 38 Bom iw- 1880 .. . . 2 1881 . 2 1882 .. . 5 1883 .. . 7 1884 .... . . . 34 1885 .. 65 1886 .. . . . . 83 1887 .. 36 1888 . .... . 3 1889 . .... . 1 Om' Maxima- Age at Graduation .... ..... 2 8 yrs., 5 mos., I0 days. Weight .........,... ................... 2 I5 lbs. Height ........... ............. 6 ft., 4 in. Our Minima- Age at Graduation .... ..... 1 9 yrs,, 4 mos., 20 days. Weight ........... ................... I I0 lbs. Height .................. ...... ....... . 5 ft., 2 in. Our Average Member- Age at Graduation ..... ..... 2 2 yrs., 7 mos., 8 days. Weight ............. ................. 1 53 lbs. Height .... .... ..... 5 f t, QM, in. 69 Edith .. Rose .. Eveline Iris .... Mabel Isabelle . Bridget . Adelaide Marie .. Marian . Virginia Mariouch Jennie .. Eleanor Gertrude Shirley . Phyllis . Ellen . .. Jessie .. Fanny .. Ada .... I i Gladys .. Sadie .. Gwendolyn .. Anne ...... Marthy .... Emily .... Tennyson .,.. Kipling .... Byron ....... Shakespeare Burns ....... Longfellow .. Browning West ....... Keats .... Joy . .......... .. Coleridge . ........ . Tertius van Dyke Milton .............. Ella Wheeler Whilcox Gray .................. . . Pope ..... Lowell . . . The N assau H erald . . 4 Bertha . . . . 4 Electra . . . .. 2 Martha . - - 2 Florence . . - - 2 Maggie . . . . - - 2 Arline . . . - - 2 Lizzie . . . - - 2 Polly . . . . - - 2 Sappho . . . - - 2 Inez . . . . - - 2 Fritzie . . - - 2 Rachael . . . - - 2 Suzanne .. . - 2 Prudence . . . - - 2 Floradora . . . -- 2 Jane . .... . . - - 2 Bedelia ..... . - - I Arawana . . . . I Tessie..... -- I Flossie . . .. . . . I Annie . . . . . - I Rosaline .. I Her's . . I Virgilia . . . . .. I Guilielma . . . 1 Ethel........ . . . . . . I Euphrosyne . .. Favorite Poets 71 Holmes ..... 26 van Dyke I6 Emerson .... I2 Palmer Cox . . . I2 Wordsworth . 8 Omar Khayyan 8 Homer ....... 5 Whitman ..... 5 More .... 4 Butler .. 4 Riley ..... 4 Sykes ........ 3 Drummond 3 Blake ....... 2 Horace 2 Hugo 2 Lanier .. 72 Wagner . . . Clark ...... . . . Beethoven . . . . . . Herbert . . . Verdi . . . Chopin .... Grieg Nevin Mendelssohn Rubenstein . . . . . . . . Lehar ...... . . . Durstine . . . 3 . . Hamill .... Kalisch .. . . Pucinni . . . Handel . . . Gounod . . . Schubert . . Brown .... Black . Golden .... Blonde .... Dark .... Light . . . Red ..... Sandy . . . Auburn . . . Peroxide ....... . . . Chestnut ......... . . . Princeton Blonde .. . . . . Yellow ......... . . . Purple .... Blue .... Blue ...... Brown .... Grey .... Black . . . Green Pink .... Hazel ..... Violet .... Dark .... Summary Favorite Composers Langlotz .. Bach .... Mozart .. Liszt Strauss .. Flotow Veit Sankey . . Gorecki . . Hoffman Edwards Sullivan .... Schuman Hewitt ............ . . Rossini .... Williams and Walker Liadow ............. Favorite Color of Hair Doe ...... Buff . . . White .... Crimson . . . . Sorrel .... Garnet . . . Flaxen .... Ash ...... Blue-black . Fair False ..... Natural .. Real Mud Bay ........ Favorite Color of Eyes Slate ...... ... Blue-slate .... Steel ...... Lavender .. Roan ..... Sloe Mauve Her's .. The N assaa H erald Favorite Woman's College Baltimore ..... Mt. Holyoke . Nat'1 Park Sem. .. . . . Randolph-Macon Trenton Normal Newcomb .. . . . . Castle ......... Ursinus .... . Miscellaneous Statistics Wellesly . . . ......... . . 40 Harvard 38 Vassar ...... .... 3 5 Smith ........ .... 3 1 Bryn Mawr .... .... 2 3 Carter School . . . . . 4 Barnard ........ .. 3 Sage ......... ......... 3 Number of men six feet tall or over Supported themselves wholly ..... Supported themselves in part .... Entitled Entitled Athletic Number Literary Number to Wear varsity P .. to wear numerals prizes won ...... winning athletic prizes prizes won winning literary prizes .. Contributed to publications ........ Number whose work was accepted Summoned before the faculty ...... Times summoned before the faculty Sent home by faculty ............ Times sent home by the faculty .. Number Number conditioned .............. of conditions . . Received pensums . . . .. Greatest Number pensum ChoursD arrested .......... Wear glasses ........... Began in college ...... Have pawned articles .. Smoke Began in college Stopped in college .... Chew tobacco ...... Began in college ..... Stopped in college ............ Dance . .... .......... . .......... . Consider dancing morally wrong Play cards .......................... Consider card playing morally wrong .... Number have kissed girls ........... 74 2 1 I I I I I I ....39 .. 7 ....58 1 1 47 202 52 54 37 58 41 97 454 20 25 141 453 79 I5 36 S5 I7 83 I74 58 19 18 6 6 I82 23 190 23 I6O The N assau H emld Number having girl correspondents ..... Total number of girl correspondents .... Number engaged ........................ Number have been rejected ................. Favorite of Class Denomination.. .... ........... Study . .................. . Most Popular Professor .. Political Party ........ Author ........... Language .......... Foreign Language .... Hymn .- ............ . Song .... Poet ...... Composer . . Woman's Name .... Woman's College .. Style of Beauty .... Newspaper, ........ Weekly ........ Book . .... . Beverage Tobacco Cigarette .... Cigar ..... .................... Hall of Fame Best All Around Man ..................... Done Most for Class ..... Done Class Most .......... Most Popular ................. Developed Most Intellectually .... Developed Most Physically .... Developed Most Socially Has Aspirations .......... Handsomest . . . . ............ . . . Prettiest . ....................... . Most Lady-like Cno competitionj Best Football Player .............. 75 ....148 ....495 ....27 23 . . . .Presbyterian . ... ...History . .. . .Garfield . . . . . .Republican ....Elinor Glyn ...........English ...........French Lead Kindly Light ......Old Nassau . . . . .Tennyson .....W'agner Helen Margaret Wellesley Harvard ...........Blonde ...New York Sun ..............Life ...........Bible ............Water .....Bull Durham .. . ....Ramesis II . . . .Romeo and Juliet . . . .Harlan ........Hamill . . . .Taliaferro ........Hamill ..........Stuart McCormick ' Ormond ..........Pyle . . . .Taliaferro . . . .Wister ........Pyle ......r.Rouse . . . . .McCormick Summary Best Baseball Player Best Basketball Player . Best Hockey Player ..... Best Track Athlete . .. Close Second . ....... . Best Gymnast .............. Best All Around Athlete Busiest Man ....,........ Never Caught Loafing .... Laziest Man ............. Another Loafer .......... Most Likely to Succeed ..,.. A Coming Magnate .... Most Respected Man . .. Best Debater ......... Best Orator ..... ..... Some Spellbinder .... Best Musician ......... . . . .Harlan . . . .Halliday . . . .Osborne .. . .Connors .......Atlee .....Mecabe . .Harlan . . . . .Taliaferro .. . . . .Hamill . . . .Adams .......Gil1 ......Stuart . . . . .Kauffman ..........Hainill T. S. Clark S. Clark .....Kauffman .....Robbins Most Knock-kneed ....... . . .McCarter Finest Legs Cdead heatj Stoevef Connors Talks most and says least ..... ...... P arkin Extremely Garrulous .... . ETEEEIQI. Hungriest Man ........ . . .Braddock Also Eats ......... ..... S toever Thirstiest Man .......... ..... G raham Never Known to Refuse .... . Pyne , Donovan Most Awkward .......... ..... P hillips Rather Kittenish ............ Goppoldt Vernon Worst Poler Chands downj .... .... W estervelt Brightest .................... ..... H avron Wittiest Man .... ...... D urstine Thinks He Is .... ......... S tuckey Class Sport ........ .... G eorge Smith Thinks I-Ie Is ........ ..... G eorge Smith Has a Similar Idea . .. ..Cummings Best Natured ........................... .... H alliday Rather Sunny .......................... ...... G eorge Most Desperate Fusser Cno competitionj .... .... T aliaferro Thinks He Is ............................ ........ S tuder There' With The Small Talk .... Myers Brek Jones 76 The N assaa H erald Biggest Bluffer ................... X1Vorst Gossip Cno cornpetitionj .... Most Politic ..................... Most Likely Bachelor Favorite Cup Candidate .... May Win Out ......... Best Dressed ........ Best Built by Tailor . . . Best Built by Nature Worst Knocker .............. Handy With the Hammer . .. Class Baby ............... I. .. . ............Ioy McClintock .. . . . . .Hamill Goppoldt Peckham ..........Ioy E. Jones . . . . . . .Bell ...Lambert . . . . .McCormick . . . . . . .Neff . . .Springer mbull Wood ....QQQi. rL1L' Colleges Represented Amherst ......... Beloit . ........... .. Bucknell ........... Boston Technical .... C. C. N. Y... .... Kentucky ........ Kenyon ...... Lafayette .... Lake Forest Lehigh ..... Mercer ...... Monmouth Oberlin .... Rollins . ..... . St. Stephens S. P. V. ....... . Tulane . ............. . University of Texas Williams ............ 2 I I I 2 I I I I I I 2 I I I I I I I What 1908 Has Done For Princeton Abolished hat-lines. Aroused Hall enthusiasm. Four years. Completed Andy's Loch. Removed gate on McCosh Walk. Established Topley in a good busines Initiated McCosh Hall. Held the Quad System for downs. Discovered the Daniel Comet. 77 s and then supported him. Summary What Princeton Needs Most A University Club. A man to take Harry Garfield's place. More students. A change in the Blue Laws. Less reforms and a hook outside the Nass. for Woody to hang on. Subway to Preceptorville. 'Ulm Crow cars on Johnson trolley. Another class as good aslI908. What Would you Do if you tan the University Commit suicide. Have Preceptorial Conferences on the Campus instead of in Kingston. Institute a good C. E. Department. Run it into debt, probably. Abolish Chapel. Not bother the studes so much. Quit glooming on old customs. Resign. Restore Keg Hollow. Cut out exams. and have a trolley to Patton Hall. Make more money than even Bunn is making. Why is 1908 P1-inceton's Greatest Class ' It got through with 225 men in spite of all the experiments tried on it. Ca fva, .ram dire. Because we were here before the Preceptors came, and still survive. Were never defeated in cane spree. Done most towards raising the standard. 78 Miscellaneous Statistics Class Gfficers FRESHMAN YEAR CFIRST TERMJ. President-F. WV. Ritter. Vice-President-R. Q. Baker, Secretary-W. I. Phillips. ' SECOND TERM. President-H. E. Joy. Vice-President-W. J. Phillips. Secretary-I. B. McCormick. SOPHOMORE YEAR. President--W. I. Phillips. Vice-President--T. N. Pfeiffer. Secretary-L. B. George. JUNIOR YEAR. President-C. M. Hamill. Vice-President-L. C. Wister. Secretary--R. E. Thibaut. SENIOR YEAR. President-C. M. Hamill. Vice-President-E. H. W. Harlan. Secretary-J. L. Kauffman. Junior Orator Appointments. CLIO. WHIG. H. R. Stiles, H. NV. Elliott W.. P. Dunn, E. A. Brennan T, S. Clark, I. L. Kauffman Washingtonis Birthday Oratoffs. Freshman Year-C. I. Greene. Sophomore Year-H. W. Elliot. Junior Year-I. L. Kauffman. Senior Year-H. L. Jones. 79 Miscellaneous Statistics l7Vashington's Birthday Debaters. Freshman Year-H. J. van Dyke, IH. Sophomore Year-T. S. Clark. Junior Year-T. S. Clark Senior Year-T. S. Clark. Hall Prize Men from 1908 CLIO HALL. Freshman Year. Sophomore-Freshman Extempore-2d. W. D. Van S Declamation-Ist. H. R. Stiles. 2d. E. H. McLean. Debate-Ist. R. Thompson. 2d. W. D. Van Sickle. .Sophomore Year. Sophomore Inter-Hall Debate-R. S. Durstine. H. I. van Dyke, IH I. R. Krieble. Junior Year. Junior Prize Debate-Ist. K. H. Lanning. 2d. C. C. Wolferth. Senior Year. Ist. R. Thompson. 2d. I. R. Krieble. Senior Original Contest- WHIG HALL. Freshman Year. Freshman Prize Debate-Ist. T. S. Clark. zd. R. C. Glenn. Freshman Speaking Contest-Ist. W. Elsing. 2d. E. A. Brennan. Freshman Essay Contest-I. T. Wood. S ophomorer Year. Sophomore Inter-Hall Debate-I. T. Wood. W. Elsing H. W. Elliott. Sophomore Oratorical Contest-T. S. Clark. W. Elsing. 85 ickle. The N assau Herald Junior Year. Competitive Debate-H. W. Elliott. Junior Essay Contest-W. L. Haven. Junior Prize Debate-Ist. J. F. Dulles. 2d. I. T. Wood. Senior Year. French Medal Debate-T. S. Clark. University Debaters J. L. Kauffman Freshman Dcbaters T. S. Clark, K. Lanning, T. S. Clark, H. VV. Elliot, W. Elsing. General Honors Freshman Year. A Academic-Fir.rt Group. D. C. Coyle, I. T. Wood, W. W. Westervelt. L. G. Butler, C. R. Carey, C. S. Davis, J. F. Dulles, W. Elsing, Second Group. W. P. Finney, Jr., R. C. Glenn, W. H. F. Grau, E. H. W. Harlan, J. W. Haulenbeck, C. F. Hosford, G. A. Leonard, M. B. Magoiiin, A. H. Ormond, G. M. Overton, S. Price, I. H. R. Stiles, H. S. Stuckey, A. S. Swartz, Jr P. M. Taylor, C.W. Vernon, C. H. Weelans, D. C. Willard, C. C. Wolferth, S cientijic-First Group. E. R. Hulbirt. Second Group. George Looms, Jr., Civil Engineering-First Group. John Havron, Jr. 81 Miscellaneous Statistics Second Group. J. V. Bishop, R. V. Frost, G. G. Cornwell, R. P. Lingle, L. E. Dale, W. A. March, S. E. Dolph, W. C. Springer. Class of 1883 Prize for English Harold Holmes. Sophomore Year. Academic-First Group. D. C. Coyle, A. H. Ormond, I. F. Dulles, H. R. Stles, M. B. Magoffin, W. W. Westervelt. Second Group. E. R. Andrews, J. R. Krieble, W. H. Braddock, K. H. Lanning, LaF. L. Butler, G. W. McCarter, M. K. Cameron, I. S. Price, C. D. Carey, W. Schroeder, W. Elsing, H. S. Stuckey, W. H. Grau, A. S. Schwartz, Ir., C. S. Green, C. Wheelans, E. H. W. Harlan, C. C. Wolferth, C. F. Hosford, I. T. Wood. L. A. Knott, Scientific-First Group. E. R. Hulbirt. G. Looms, Jr Second Group. Penn Harvey. Civil Engineering-First Group. John Havron, Jr. Second Group. G. G. Cornwell, R. V. Frost, LeR. E. Dale, I. Munoz, T. E. Fell, C. N. Read, Class of 1861 Prize D. C. Coyle, with honorable mention of C. D. Carey. Francis Biddle Sophomore English Prize Roy P. Lingle 82 The Nassau Herald Class of 1870 Sophomore English Prize H. E. I oy. Junior Prizemen First H ouor Prize-Divided equally between D. Westervelt. .McLean Prize-H. R. Stiles. junior O1-ator Medals First-W. P. Dunn. Second-T. S. Clark. Third-H. R. Stiles. Fourth-J. L. Kauffman. Class of 1876 M euiorial Prize for Debate-T. S. Clark. Dickinson Prize-I. F. Dulles. Class of 1870 Junior English Prizes. Old English-W. Schroeder, with honorable mention of H. J. v Dyke, IH. English Literature-H. I. van Dyke, III. T. B. W auarnaker Eriglish Prize-W. P. Dunn. Mary Cuuuiugharh Humphreys fuu-lor German Prizes. First-C. H. Hosford. Second-A. H. Ormond with honorable mention of C. C. Wolferth. Stiuriecke Scholarship-W. Elsing. lunior Honormen Academic First Group. H. R. Stiles, H. I. van Dyke, III, W. W. Westervelt, I. T. Wood. Second Group. D. C. Coyle, W. Elsing, A. H. Ormond, W. Schroeder, I E. R. Andrews, J- L- Kauffmafl L. L. Butler, G. A. Leonard, L. G. Barton, Jr., E- H- MCLCHH, M. K. Cameron, M- B- MP1g0f5U K I. . D. Miller, S. Price, W. P. Dunn, H . W. Elliott, H. L. Goas, A. E. Stuart, C. S. Green, H. S. Stuckeyi J. C. Green, A. S. Swartz, Ir., F, YV, Hgagey, VV. Vernon, Jr., C. F. Hosford, C. H. Weelans, R. B. Jones, C. C. WVolferth. Ss C. Coyle and W. W. 811 Miscellaneous Statistics School of Science Iunior Honormen B.s COURSE Second Group. G. M. Brown, G. Looms, Ir., P. Harvey, W. R. Neff, E. R. Hulbirt, R. E. Thibaut, Ir., R. G. Robinson, A. Rvan. C.E. COURSE. First Group. I. Havron, Ir. Second Group. G. G. Cornwell, F. F.. Fell, L. E. Dale, E. C. Fish, R. V. Frost. Athletics Point Winners in the Caledonian Games. Freshman Year. 100-yards Dash-W. B. Connors, second. 220-yards Dash-W. B. Connors, second. R. Higgins, third. 440-yards Dash-R. C. Fender, second. 880-yards Run-W. P. Comstock, first. One-mile Run-R. P. Lingle, third. Two-mile Run-I. H. Kelly, first. 120-yards Hurdle-L. H. Simons, third. 220-yards Hurdle-L. H. Simons, third. Running High Jump-L. H. Simons, second. T. S .Clax-k, tied for third place Running Broad Jump-W. B. Connors, third. 16-lb. Shot-I. B. McCormick, first. W. B. Connors, third. Sophomore Year. 100-yards Dash-W. B. Connors, second. I. Kalisch, third. 220-yards Dash-W. B. Connors, tirst. 440-yards Dash-R. C. Runyon, hrst. H. L. Power, second. L. B. George, third 880-yards Run-I. H. Kelly, second. Two-mile Run-J. H. Kelly, second. Running High Jump-T. S. Clark, first. 84 The Nassau Herald Running Broad Jump--W. B. Connors, Hrst. L. H. Simons, second. I6-lb. Shot-W. B. Connors, hrst. I. B. McCormick, second. .lrmior Year. loo-yards Dash-S. Rulon-Miller, first. W. B. Connors, third. 220-yards Dash-W. B. Connors, nrst. 440-yards Dash-I. C. Atlee, first. Two-mile Run-I. H. Kelly, third. 120-yards Hurdle-T. N. Pfeiffer, third. 220-yards Hurdle-G. M. Brown, second. Running High Jump-T. S. Clark, tied for second. Running Broad Jump-L. H. Simons, first W. B. Connors, second. I6-lb. Shot-I. B. McCormick, first. W. N. Thompson, second. W. B. Connors, third. - Senior Y ear. loo-yards Dash-W. B. Connors, second, 220-yards Dash-J. C. Atlee, first. W. B. Connors, second. 440-yards Dash-I. C. Atlee, hrst. W. S. Bergland, second. 120-yards Hurdle-T. N. Pfeiffer, first. 220-yards Hurdle-W. S, Bergland, second. T. N. Pfeiffer, third. Two-mile Run-J. H. Kelly, second. Running High Jump-T. S. Clark, tied for second Running Broad Jump-L. H. Simons, first. W. B. Connors, second. I6-lb. Shot-W. N. Thompson, second. W. B. Connors, third. Football. J. B. McCormick, Captain. N. P. Wheeler, Manager. 1908 Men on the Team. I Brown, Ritter, Harlan, Stanard, McCormick, W'ister. Phillips, 35 Miscellaneous Statistics Baseball. E. H. Harlan, Captain. D. E. Gensler, Manager. I908 Men on the Team. Cook, Wister, Harlan, Heim. 1908 Football Team. G. C. Douglas, Captain, Baker, Beall, Beggs, Bergland, Bissell, Markley, Phillips, Ritter, Rosentield, Winter. 1908 Baseball Team. E. C. Fish, Captain 3 Cooke, George, Halliday, Bissell, Huston, Wister, Martin. Entitled to wear 'Varsity P, I. C. Atlee, R. M. Brown W. B. Connors, F. R. Cook, D. E. Gensler, I. Havron, Ir., E. H. W. Harlan, J. B. McCormick, E. W Mecabe, W I. Phillips, F. W. Ritter, S. Rulon-Miller, L. H. Simons, N. P. Wheeler, L. C. Wister. Entitled to Wear Class Nnmerals. Connors, Higgins, Fender, Comstock, Lingle, Kelly, Simons, Clark, T. S., McCormick, Kalisch, Runyon, Power, George, Reiter, Rosenfeld, Beggs, Phillips, Baker, Bissell, Douglas, Winter, Markley, Bergland, Watkins, Carey, Ryan, Foster, Fruit, Mecabe, Halliday, Horton, Huston, Donovan, Nichols, Clark, M. B., Clark, W., Martin, Grey, Wister, Cook, Dickson, Mount, Neff, Forsyth, Ormond, Latimer, Thompson, Hamill, Fish, Mahn, Gibson, Wolferth, March. REPRESENTATIVES IN WRESTLING. Freshman Year. Light-weight ...... ................ R . I. Mount Middle-weight ..... ...... W . R. Neff Heavy-weight ..... ..... .... I . R. Dickson Sophomore Year. Light-weight.. ..................... ...... E . Latimer Middle-Weight Heavy-weight ...... REPRESENTATIVES IN CANE SPREE. Freshman Year. . H. Ormond I. R. Dickson Light-Weight.. ..................... Latimer Middle-weight ..... ................. R . Dickson Heavy-weight ..... ...... ..... W . R. Neff 86 The N assan Herald Sophomore Year. - Light-weight ...... ...................... ...... A . H. Ormond Middle-weight .......... . ...... .... I . R. Dickson Heavy-weight ................. ..... N . P. Wheeler Wrestling Team. E. Latimer, Captain. R. W. Forsyth, Jr., Manager. A. I-I. Ormond, R. I. Mount. Basket-ball Team. E. R. Halliday, Captain. T O. L. Davis, Manager. Clark, T. S.., Ryan, Fish, Thompson. Swimming Team. C. P. Ralli, Captain. W. C. Springer, Manager. Soccer Team. E. R. Voigt, Captain. J. D. Cowan, Manager. M. K. Cameron, F. W. Heagey, A. F. Martin. Gun Club. P. C. Wood, Captain. Wheeler, Throckmorton. V I. F. A. Phillips. Tennis Association. W. H. Colvin, President. M. T. P ne, Ir., Vice-President and Captain. Y H ockey. R. D. Osborne, Captain. F. Leake, Manager. Gym. Team. E. W. Mecabe, Captain. .W C. Springer, Manager. Crawford, Miller, S7 Miscellaneous Statistics Track Team. J. C. Atlee, Captain. J. Havron, Ir., Manager. Kelly, McCormick, Pfeiffer, ' Connors, Simons. Literary Boards The Princeton Tiger. Roy S. Durstine, Managing Editor 5 C. N. Smith, Art Editorg Thomas S. Taliaferro, Business Manager 3 Editors-Thompson, Vernon, Stuckey, Alexander. 1908 Bric-a-Brac Board. R. C. Clothier, Chairman, T. S. Taliaferro, Business Manager, O. L. Davis, Assistant Business Manager Q L. M. Thompson, C. N. Smith, Art Editors, I. R. Dickson, H. E. Joy, D. H. MCA. Pyle, H. I. van Dyke, Editors. Daily Princetonian. R. C. Clotheir, Editor-in-Chief, O. L. Davis, Associate Editor, K. D. Miller, Assignment Editor, R. C. Glenn, W. A. March, W. I. Phillips, A. S. Swartz, Editors, Henry L. Jones, Business Manager. Nassan Literary Magazine. Henry J. van Dyke III, Managing Editor, J. P. Alexander, L. L. Butler, H. E. joy, L. M. Thompson, I. T. Wood, Editors, C. H. Weelans, Business Manager. Nassau Herald Board. William S. Bergland, William O. Davey, Glenwood Flory, Louis B. George. MISCELLANEOUS Senior Council. ' W. J. Phillips, Chairman, J. B. McCormick, E. H. W. Harlan, R. C. Clothier, R. S. Durstine, D. H. MCA. Pyle, H. I. van Dyke, HI., I. C. Atele, J. Havron, Ir., C. M. Hamill, N. P. Wheeler, Ir., D. E. Gensler, H. L. Jones, T. S. Taliaferro, W. T. West, L. E. Beall, Jr., G. M. Brown, O. L. Davis, J. L. Kauffman, S. Rulon-Miller, L. C. Wister. 88 The Nassau Herald Monday Night Club. D. H. McA. Pyle, President, L. E. Beall, R. C. Clotheir, R. S. Dur- stine, C. M. Hamill, I. A. Huston, I. L. Kauffman, E. R. Stoever, A. E. Stuart, T. S. Taliaferro, H. I. van Dyke, IH., L. C. Wister. Ph-iladelphian Society. H. I .van Dyke, IH., President, W. Elsing, First Vice-President, E. R. Andrews, Treasurer, L. M. Thompson, Bible Study, C. M. Hamill, Membership, D. H. MCA. Pyle, Finance, R. Thibaut, Freshman Re- ception, T. N. Pfeiffer, Deputation, I. P. Myers, Peking and Town Club Fund, I. C. Green, Librarian, W. Elsing, Mission Study, I. L. Kauffman, Employment Bureau. Chess Club. C. Williams, President, I. F. Dulles, A. R. Chalmers, W. P. Finney, E. P. Miller, Ir. , M unicipal Club. ' R. C. Clothier, President, A. E. Stuart, Secretary, Beall, W. Clark, Davis, Gensler, I. C. Green, Hamill, Harlan, Havron, Huston, H. L. Jones, Joy, Kauffman, Leake, McCarter, Mecabe, Pfeiffer, Phillips, Pyle, Read, G. D. Smith, Taliaferro, Wheeler, Wister. Triangle Club. Roy S. Durstine, President, Thomas S. Taliaferro, Manager, W. M. Bane, H. A. Barler, J. C. Coons, F. Leake, I. P. Myers, C. N. Read, A. L. Rose, H. I. van Dyke, III. Glee Club Organization. D. H. MCA. Pyle, Leader, Butler, Barton, Boynton, Catlin, Clothier, Davey, Fruit, Gilmour, Hamill, Haulenbeck, Hosford, Houston, Loomis, McClintock, Pomeroy, Rose, C. Smith, L. Smith, Spencer, Stiles, Studer, Thibaut, West, I. T. Wood. Canoe Club. L. M. Thompson, Commodore, Andrews, Barrett, Braddock, Dale, Elliot, Flory, French, Goppoldt, Heagey, Lanning, Mettler, Miers, Southworth, Stuart, van Dyke, Westervelt, P. C. Wood, I. T. Wood. Press Club. C. N. Smith, President, F. H. Bockoven, R. M. Forsyth. . 89 Miscellaneous Statistics English Club. H. S. Stuckey, President, L. M. Thompson, E. A. Brennan, W. Schroeder, H. E. Fowler, W. Elsing, C. Brook, I. P. Alexander. French Club. R. B. Jones, President, L. C. Cummings, Secretary 3 H. W. Elliott, W. M. Griscom, Ir., H. E. Joy, G. A. Leonard, M. B. Magoihn. 1908 Dance C ommittee. T. S. Taliaferro, Chairman g W. C. Horton, Treasurerg E. M. Drayton, F.. C. Fish, W. E. Foster, D. E. Gensler, G. A. Gray, C. M. Hamill, J. A. Huston, H. E. Joy, D. H. MCA. Pyle, F.. R. Stoever, A. C. Studer, W. T. West, N. P. Wheeler. Dining Halls Coniinittee. C. M. Hamill, Chairman, L. E. Beall, R. C. Clothier, D. E. Gensler, W. R. Neff, D. H. MCA. Pyle, N. P. Wheeler. Upper Class Clubs Campus-Barton, Catlin, Connors, Dickson, Gilson, Grandin, Greene, Haulenbeck, Hosmer, R. K. Johnson, Mettler, Murray, Ralli, T. B. Reed, Shedd, Spadone, L. M. Thompson, Wells, I. T. Wood.. Cannon-Barrett, Case, Champlin, Colbron, Elder, Flory, Fluhart, Higgins, Mahany, Marlin, Runyon, Southworth, Throckmorton, Warden. Cap and Gown-Clothier, Durstine, Forsythe, M. B. Iones,Leas, K. D. Miller, Myers, Pfeiffer, W. I. Phillips, Read, C. N. Smith, Studer, Talia- ferro, Trimble, Vanderhoef, van Dyke, West, Wheeler. Charter-W. Clarke, Cowan, Davey, Fruit, H. L. Jones, H. E. Kline, Martin, Mecabe, McClintock, I. F. A. Phillips, C. D. Spencer, H. F. Taylor, Wallace, Warner. Colonial-Brown, Bruce, Cappeau, Crawford, Dolph, Drayton, Failey, Gilmour, Gregory, Howard, McCarter, Ream, Shumway, Talbot, Toland, Vander Voort. Cottage-Bell, M. B. Clarke, Gallaher, C. S. Green, Gill, Joy, Kauff- man, Marshall, Maury, Neff, Ong, Osborn, Pyle, Stuart, G. D. Smith. Elin-Adams, Bacon, Corbin, Donovan, Fish, Foster, Glass, Gray, Kain, McKaig, Miers, Nichols, Nuttall, I. F. R. Scott, A. H. Scott, Swartz, A. H. Spencer, Watkins. Ivy-Beggs, Bergland, O. L. Davis, George, Guillandeu, Halliday, Hamill, Lambert, Leake, Pyne, Scully, Stoever, Wister. Q0 The N assaa H erald Key and Seal-Banning, Bishop, Carter, T. S. Clark, Dale, Haley, Hazard, Jackson, H. C. Jones, R. B. Jones, Leonard, Loomis, Munoz, Parkin, Williams. Quadrangle-D. H. Clark, Elliott, Galey, G. A. Harrison, I. W. Harrison, P. Harvey, W. H. Kline, Springer, March. Terrace-Bockoven, Boynton, Cummings, Elsing, Fowler, E. Latimer H. R. Latimer, Lexow, McDermott, Simons, Stuckey, P. M. Taylori W. N. Thompson, P. C. Wood. Tiger Inn-Beall, Gensler, Harlan, Havron, Herron, Horton, Huston Lichty, Luke, McCormick, Mount, Russell, Peters, Thibaut. Tower-Andrews, Bane, Christie, Farley, W. H. Grau, Hackett, S G. Harvey, Hawes, Hosford, Houston, Lingle, Looms, Price, Pomeroy, Shafer, T. L. Smith, L. W. Smith, Stevens. Sophomore Clubs Aldar-ic-Dulles, Finney, Hutchinson, H. C. Jones, King, Magoflin E. P. Miller, Robinson, Serfas, C. P. Smith, van Wageman, Weelans C. Williams, Wolferth. Avolyn-Baker, Barton, Blatchford, Boynton, Brook, Butler, Came- ron, I. H. Clark, Comstock, Cornwell, Crane, Davidson, Dunn, H. E Foster, Fowler, Glenn, Grau, Hill, Hosford, Hoster, Knott, Kuttroif E. Latimer, H. R. Latimer, Looms, Miles, Ormond, Rose, Rupert Stuckey, P. M. Taylor, W. N. Thompson, Turner, Vernon, Wadleigh Whittemore, P. C. Wood. Durbar-Braddock, Brennan, Brockmeier, Carey, Daniel, C. S. Davis Dunham, Elwood, Fell, French, Frost, Gilson, Goppoldt, Heagey, W. M Johnson, H. C. Jones, R. F.. Jones, Kilgore, McLean, I. S. Price, Stiles Kerr. Elzfaduf-Abbey, Benjamin, Bane, Bruce, Christie, W. Clarke, Colvin Connors, Davey, Dickson, Farley, Fish, Forsythe, Fruit, C. I. Green Hackett, Handy, S. C. Harvey, Haulenbeck, Hawes, W. Houston, Kain Keepers, Leonard, Lingle, Lothrop, McClintock, McKaig, McKinnon Mahn, Mecabe, Parke, I. R. Phillips, Phinney, I. H. Price Reed, Shafer, Simons, L. W. Smith, T. L. Smith, Spadone Stevens, H. F. Taylor, L. M. Thompson, Warner, Wilson, Winans, I T. Wood. Kiadi-Baker, Beall, Beggs, Belden, Bell, Berry, Bergland, Bokum Brown, Broesel, Cappeau, M. B. Clark, Cook, Corbin, Dallrneyer, Dolph Douglas, Drayton, Flory, Forgan, Gallaher, George, Guilladeau, Himall W. A. Henon, Holden, Holland, Joy, Kauffman, W. Kline, Lambert Luke, Leake, Markley, Marshall, Martin, Mount, Neff, Nicholson, Ong? Osborne, Prizer, Pyle, Pyne, Read, Ritter, Russell, Scully, Shumway Stannard, Stoever, Toland, Vanderhoef, Wister. QI 2 7 D J 7 1 1 1 J 1 i i I v Miscellaneous Statistics Navana-Barrett, Brokaw, Clothier, O. L. Davis, Donovan, Durstine Failey, Gill, Gilmour, Gregory, Halliday, I. W. Harrison, Haugheyi Havron, Holmes, Howard, Leas, E. M. Miller, K. D. Miller, Myers, Nichols, Peters, Pfeiffer, Phillips, C. N. Smith, G. D. Smith, Spencer Studer, Talbot, Taliaferro, Thibaut, Trimble, van Dyke, Vandervoort Watkins, West, NVheeler. Volaro-Allen, Banning, Barler, Bishop, Bockoven, Carter, Catlin T. S. Clark, Cowan, Cummings, Dale, Elbert, Elliott, Elsing, W. Foster, Fender, Grandin, Gray, Haley, Hazard, Jackson, Jefferson, R K. Johnson, R. B. Jones, H. L. Jones, Kelly, Lantz, Lexow, Marsching, McCarter, McDermott, Mettler, Munoz, Parkin, Pomeroy, Ralli, Rob- bins, Sipmson, Sewall, Voigt, Wallace, Wells. Xalco-Adams, Bacon, Bissell, Case, Champlin, Colbron, Crawford, Dorsey, Doyle, Elder, Fluhart, Galey, Gensler, Glass, Harlan, P. Harvey, G. A. Harrison, I. A. Herron, Higgins, Horton, Huston, H. E. Kline Lichty, March, Markham, Mahany, Marlin, Maury, McCormick, Miers Nuttal, Perley, Runyon, A. H. Scott, I. F. R. Scott, A, H. Spenceri Southworth, Springer, Stuart, Swartz, Throckmorton, Warden, G. W. VVilliams. Q2 9 P 7 A Ex-Members of 1908 W'ILLIAM THOMAS ADAMS, JR. WOODBURY ABBEY ........... HENRY ABBEY ............... MONTAGUE ALLEN ........... SAMUEL ATLEE, H. .......... . WILLIAM MCFADDEN 'AVERILL. JEROME ALEXANDRE .......... JUDSON EVERETT BENJAMIN. .. HAROLD AUGUSTUS BARLER .... . . . . . . . . . .Corinth, Miss .. .... Northport, N. Y . . . .BaltimOre, Md .Park City, Utah . .Fort Madison, Ia . . . . . . .Beaun1Ont, Texas . . . .New York City . . . .New York City . . . . .Chicago, Ill WALTER HARRIS BACON, JR .... . . .BridgetOn, N. J HERMAN BROESEL, JR. ...... . JOHN V. BISHOP .......... GEORGE BISSELL ........ DEWITT BROKAW ......... WILLIAM RANSTED BERRY. . . HOWARD RAYMOND BADEAU. . . . ALFRED ERWIN BARTBERGER. . . JAMES JEROME BELDEN, H.. . . . . .New York City .Columbus, N. J Cleveland O '.1.Bi5fnf1e1d, N. ij. . . . . .Philadelphia Pa . . . .Sun1mit, N. J . . . .Pittsburg, Pa . . . .Syracuse, N. Y PERRY BELDEN ....................... Syracuse, N. Y SYLVESTER GRISWOLD BRYAN ....... CHARLES A. D. BURK ........ RALPH PERRY BYLES. . . . .... . DANIEL BROWN BENTLEY ..... .Bound Brook, N. J . . . .Philadelphia Pa . ..... Bradford, Pa .....NewtOn, N.J RICHARD DRUMMOND BOKUM, JR. .......... Chicago, Ill JOSEPH FULTON BOYD, JR. .... . Chambersburg, Pa JOSEPH DILWORTH BEGGS ....... ....... V illanova, Pa HORACE KELLOGG CORBIN. . . . FRANK HOUGH CAREER ...... ALFRED HAROLD COHEN ...... FREDERICK RUSSELL COOK .... . . . .Elizabeth, N. J . . . . .NewtOn, N. J . . . .BroOklyn, N. J .. ..... Arlington, Mass HARRY WHITEHILL CLEVELAND. .J ...... Newburgh, N. J PAUL TOWNSEND COLBURN .... WALTER PHILLIPS COMSTOCK. . 93 . ..... New York City . . ....... Chicago, Ill Ex-Membevw Class JOHN ALOYSIUS CAREY. ........ . ROBERT SUTHERLAND COOK. . . CONRAD QUINBY CARVER, JR.. .. EDWARD EARL.CI-IANDLEE ...... EDGAR TRUESDELL DUSENBURY .... . CLIFFORD SYLVESTER DAVIS .... JOHN JULIAN DICK. ........ . JOHN ROBINSON DICKSON .... EDGAR ALBERT DORSEY .... HERBERT DAY DUNNING .... ROB'ERT J. ELDER. ........ . ROBERT C. FENDER. ..... . FRANK THOMAS FOLEY .... ROBERT RUSSEL FORGAN.. . . . GEORGE AUGUSTUS GRAY ...... OTIS ALLAN GLASEBROOK, JR.. . . JOSEPH KARL GILCHRIST. ..... . ERSKINE HAZARD ........... LANGDON WIGHT HOWARD ...... DAVID MARKHAM HANDY ....... JOSEPH ALEXANDER HERRON, JR. .... . WILLIAM ANDREW HERRON, JR. ...... . 908 . . ...... Brooklyn, Pa Cedar Rapids, Ia . . . . .SlIarOn, Pa .Philadelpl1ia, Pa . .POrtvil1e, N. Y . . .AnniStOn, Ala . . .New York City . . . .WacO, Texas .Dickeysvilln-2, Md Indianapolis, Ind . . . . . .DaytOn, O . . . . .CheSter, Pa . . . .St. Paul, Minn . . . .EvanSton, Ill . . .MalOne, N. Y . .Elizabeth, N. J . . . . .LebanOn, O . . . .RichmOnd, Va . .PlainfIe1d, N. J . . . . . .New Orleans, La .MOnOngahela, Pa . . . . . .PeOria, Ill OSCAR WILLIAM HOSTER ........ East Rutherford, N. J GEORGE HUGHES HENRY ...... HENRY HEWITT ............... WILLIAM SINCLAIR HEYNIGER. . . CLARENCE LEWIS HOLDEN ...... FRANCIS RAYMOND HOLLAND. . . WILLIAM JOHN HALLIMOND. . . EDWIN DANIEL HEIM .... . . . . . . . WARREN PALMER HOSMER .... JOHN D. HAUGHEY ........ '. LAWRENCE G. HAUGHEY ...... ARCHIE CHURCH JEFFERSON .... REEVES KEMP JOHNSON ..... SYDNEY FERGUSON JACK .... PAUL TENER JOHNS .......... WILLIAM KEMPTON JOHNSON. . . 94 . . . .......... Erie, Pa . . .TacOma, Wash . .... Corning, N. Y . . .Bennington, Vt . . . Pittsburg, Pa . . . . . . .New York City Schuylkill Haven, Pa .YOungStOWn, O . .Plainiield, N. J ..Plainfield. N. J. . .St. Paul, Minn. . . .ROSC1UOHt, Pa. . . . . .HasletOn, Pa. . . Pittsburg, Pa. Hackensack, N. The N assau H emld HARRY WINFIELD KASE ....... DANIEL LUCIUS KIMBERLY.. . . . PERCY KUTTROFF ......... EDWARD BRUSH KING .... ROY PETRAN LINGLE.. . . . MORTON LEXOW ........ BURR GEORGE LICHTY ..... MARTIN WILLIAM LANTZ .... CHARLES VVORTH LADOW .... ERASMUS DARWIN LEAVITT .... ELLIOT C. R. LAIDLOW ...... COEY ALFRED LAFEVRE .... CHARLES W. LUKE ...... DAVID MAHANY. ........... . MALCOLM MCKINNAN ........ ..........NeWark, N. J. . . . .Neenah, Wis . . . .New York City . . . . .New York City. . . . . . .Philadelphia, Pa South Nyack, N. Y .. . . . . . . .WaterlOO, Ia .. . . . .BuffalO, N. Y .. . . . . .Albany, N. Y . . . .SO1nerville, Mass . . .New York City ........DaytOn, O . . .New York City . . . .New York City . . ....... Detroit, Mich ALFRED WOODWARD MARKI-IAM ....... West Plains, MO ROBERT LIONEL MARSCHING. . . ALEXANDER TERTIUS MARTIN. . RALPH DANIELS MARLIN. . . . . . . . .New York City . . ..... Philadelphia, Pa . . . . .PittSburg, Pa GEORGE WADE MARTIN ........ .... S Omerville, Mass SAMUEL STEWART MITCHELL. . PAUL EMANUEL MOSES ....... . . . . .BuffalO, N. Y .........NewYOrk City GEORGE KIMMEL MOSES ............. QI-Iagerstown, Md MONTGOMERY FORSTER MCCULLOUCH ..... Louisville, Ky JOEL DAVIS MADDEN, JR. .............. Ossining, N. Y JAMES CAROTHERS MILLIGAN ........ .... S Wissvale, Pa EARL JOSEPH MOON ........ WILLIAM GEORGE MOLLER. . . MICHAEL SCHALL NILES .... JOHN NUTTALL ............. GRANT MARTIN OVERTON. . . . JOHNSON ORRICK ....... ...... TIMOTHY NEWELL PFEIFFER. . . JAMES SANFORD PRICE ........ JAMES P. A. PHILLIPS ....... HAROLD LINDEN POWER .... WILLIAM MANN PRISER ...... NATHAN GRIER PARKE, II.. . . . 95 . . . . St. Louis, MO . . . .New York City ...........YOrk, Pa . . . .Nuttalburg, W. Va . . . .PatChOque, N. Y . . . .BaltimOre, Md . . ..... Philadelphia, Pa ..........Er1e, Pa .....TrentOn, N. J . . . Indianapolis, Ind . . . . Philadelphia, Pa . . . . . . Scranton, Pa Eff-Jbfefzzbcrs Class HARRY B. PHINNY, JR.. ..... . . JOHN HOSIE PRICE ............ VVILLIAM BROWNLOW PATRICK.. CALEB CLARENCE PEIRCE ........ RAYMOND RUSSEL .......... SUMNER RULON-SMITH ...... FRANK CLEMENT ROBINSON ..... RALPH CHARLES RUNYON ..... . THOMAS BAIRD REED ....... LOUIS MARSHALL REAM ....... WALTER LITTANER RICHARD ..... FREDERICK VVILLIAM RITTER, JR. VVILLIAM EARLE RUPERT ....... BENJAMIN FRANKLIN REITER. .. MAXWELL KENNEDY REYNOLDS. . EDWARD ARTHUR ROSENFELD .... ALBERT ALPHEUS ROYCE .... AMEDEE SPADONE, H. .... . JOHN F. R. SCOTT ........ HAROLD MABEE SIMPSON.. . . . CHARLES DU PUY SPENCER .... JOSEPH SHERMAN .......... REES TOWNSEND SCULLY ..... GRANT THOMAS STEPHENSON .... RICHARD STOCKTON .......... ALLAN J. C. SCHMUCK .... SANFORD SAMUEL ....... EDWIN STANNARD .......... ELMER WINFIELD STRYKER .... EDWARD DALE TOLAND, JR. ..... . ROBERT TRIMBLE, JR.. ............ . . of IQOS . . .New York City Scranton, Pa . ...... Denver, CO1 . . .Phi1ade1phia, Pa ..Detroit, Mich . . . .Philadelphia Pa . . . .C1arinda, Ia . .New Rochelle, N. Y ..Cle1nenton, N. J .New York City ..... . . . . . .New York City. . . . . .GreenWiCh, Conn ..PottStOwn, Pa ..Phi1ade1phia, Pa . .Marquette, Mich .New York City . . . . .Rutland, Vt .New York City .Philadelphia Pa . . . .Newton, N. J ........Erie,Pa. . . . .WeStiie1d, N. J. . . . Pittsburg, Pa. . Marinette, Mich . Princeton, N. J T . . . . . .La.Wrence, N Y. . L .New York City. . . . .St. Louis, MO. . . . .Bound Brook, N. J. . .WynnewOod, Pa. . .GlenosbOrne, Pa. ALBURTO MARTIN THROCKMORTON. .... Birmingham, Pa. ARTHUR HUBESTY TURNER ............. Plainield, N. J. EARLE HULIPHREY TAYLOR .... HENRY GENET TAYLOR, JR.. . . RICHARD COOPER TAYLOR ...... . . . . .Camden, N. HERBERT MARMADUKE TILDEN. . . . . .Philadelphia Pa. HARRY GRAY TREADWELL ...... 96 . . .New York City. . . Springfield, Mass. . . . . .Camden, N. J. J. Ex-Zllembers Class of IQO8 JOHN BATHGATE VAN WAGENEN ....... WALTER DELAVAN VAN SICKLE .... New CHARLES VEZIN, IR. .... . JOHN RANSOM WADLEIGH LEMUEL STEWART WELLS KENNETH BEARD VVARDEN .......... .... THEODORE BROWNING WHITTEMORE ..... RALPH BARKER WILSON ,.........,. DONALD CAMPBELL XIVILLARD ...... . . . FREDERICK MARMADUKE XNINTER. . . . . . JOHN EDWARD WOODRUFF. ....... . . . CHARLES F. J. WOOLDRIDGE .... . lV.lERILL KNIGHT WATERS ..... . . . FRANK BROCKVVAY WHITING.. . . . . RALPH BARKER WILSON ..... .. GEORGE WALTON WILLIAMS.. . . . . . . 97 . .NeWark, N. I Brunswick, N. I .YOnkerS, N. Y Haverhill, Mass New York City .Utica, N. Y .YO1TkerS, N. Y ..PittSburg, Pa .BlOOn'1field, Pa ..Orange, N. I Elizabeth, N. I . .LOuiSville, Ky Lakewood, N. I .Neenah, Wis.. . . ..PittSburg, Pa Charleston, S. C STATISTICS Class of 1908 Statistics ABBREVIATIONS. A.Qh1?Hi.S.6.ikcademic H, t Songs ..... fgjongregationalist gournalmgournalisrn 1N1VZEeth.E1...1NlGethotdist Episc'p'l 1Pcrot.......groteis1tant 1. .. Inerican is ory on. ec... onic ection urisp..... urisprudence in ........ IDIS ry .......... epu- ican B.S ........ Scientific Cont ..... ..Contractor L ..... . .... Local Option Miss ....... Missionary I R.A.O-.....Ret. Army Ofiicer B3-Dt ------ B3JD'f31St D .......... Democrat Lit ......... Literature Moham. . .Mohangmedanism Teach ..... Teaching Bus ...... ..Bus1ness Du.Ref....Dutch Reformed Luth ....... Lutheran P ...... .... P rohiloitionist Tr1g.......'Pr1gonometry C...........Clio I E,E ........ Electrical Engineer M i..... .... M ugwump . Phys.G....Phys1cal Geogra- Unit ....... Unitarian Cath ...... .Catholic Q Eng.Lit...English Literature M.E ....... Mining Engineer phy U.P.-...---United PPGSDYTGF- C.E ........ Civil Engineer Epis ...... .Episcopal Math ...... Mathematics Pol.Econ..Political Economy ian C.S ..... ...Christian Science I ...,... Independent Med ........ Medicine Pres.......Presbyter1an W.........Wh1g Chem-.----Cllemlstry K... Know Nothing Ment.sci..Menta1 Science . S. tr l E E 3. ,g , I NAME. Rnsinnnon. 5 . . ,,, 3 3 W W Q' - - , Z' ..: , 5 2' 5 '23 3 3 25' 5 Q' U 'cs .Q 44 'r -9 1- P '-' 'F' EI ,-. T E S7 ,rx an .zz '5 eng 5,3 'S Q ' f' SP : 13 'e .21 S E I0 E Sf Z Z E Q 5 EES 1? 5 s Q5 nn e at E4 iflamsh W.JT.i, Jr .... Litt. B. gg5i'gh,J Miss .... ........... 5 W. B ....... May 22, '86 168 6 Bus ..... . .. Epls. . . .. .. D- Economics- - - BQSSDHU- - - - Ting- exau er, . ......... A. B. . etferson t., Jackson, Miss ............... . ....... 9 S. W. B .... Dec. 7, '87 128 - 8 ...... .... P res ....... D' French ...... Tennis... Jupe. Andrews, E. R ......... A. B. Berwyn, Ill. .,.....,......... 10 E. B ...... Dec. 9, '84 175 5-11 Bus ........ Pres ....... R- History ..... Tennis.. . Andy. Atlee, J. G ........... Litt. B 903 Fourth St., Fort Madi- . son, Ia ................... 24 B ......... Oct. 24, '82 150 G ...... .... ........... R - ..' .......... . . . ..... . . . Cox. guitin, .......... 2llJc?miIRiEei'i, N.kJ..A ...... 7 S. M. R .... Jan. 12, '86!140 5- 815 Law ....... Prot ....... R- History ..... Football .... Bill. a er, . .... ..... . -ar en roo ve., :1- maicu, N. Y .............. 3 W. M. Mar. 17, '87 190 G Doctor ..... ........... R - English ..... Baseball..- Bane, W. ....B S. 1434 Washington Ave., Den- I ' . ' ver, Col ................. .. 33 '79 ........ Sept. 24, '8Gl153 5- 8 Doctor..,.. Pres ....... R- Biology ..... Baseball... Bill. Banning, E., Jr ..... ..A. B. clo Banning Q Banning, Mar- quettc Bldg., Chicago, ni.. 7 M. D ....... Aug. 7, '85 140 5- S Law.....,. Pres ....... R, ,W English- .--- Fwtball ---- Eph- Barler, H. A. C ....... Lltt. B. 1918 Arlington Pl., Chicago.. 60 P ...... May 18, '86 156 5-11M Manuf ..... G. S ....... R- V Woman ..... ...,....... . Hap. Barrett, H. C .......... A. B 16.Washington Pl., Newark.. 181 L ......... Mar. 13, '86 170 5- 9 Law. ...... Cath ....... D- I Jurisp ....... Boxing. .... Huie. Igaitonj LA Jr ....... 112 gV1llsboro,PN. Y .......... lg ....... 161113. E, gvoctor ..... gpis. .. .... ghe1Ii:Sgy-g- gaselgall .... 1332115-t. l e , . ., r ......... . arneffie, a ............. .... ' ' c . , - us ........ res ....... - ree oe s enms. .. o nme Berghaus, ........ lagging Stgt H:grisb'g1:'Cg B.... Igeb. 27, 153 E- 6 Eriesthood.. gpis... .... gui Lit.... Ilfooltlsall ---- gfigie- ergan, . ......... ... . ares ., ato.. . .... c. 7 1 -1 f.E ....... res ....... . isory ..... 'is ng.... 1 . Bishop, J. V ............ C. E. Columbus, N. J .......... A .... 7 B ........... July 2, '86 145 5-11 ........... ...... . .... R . Math ....... Hunting ---- Bish- Blatchford, W.W., Jr.Litr. B. Atlantic City, N. J .......... 37 Wiggins st Nov. 28, -122 5- 5 Law ....... Epis....... R. Poetry. ----- Football ---- 1312111211- Bockhoven, F. H ....... B S Basking Ridge, N. .... 3 W. W ..... . Mar. 1, '87 126 5- 4 E. Pres. D. Physics..... Wrestling.. Bock. Boynton, F. L .... Braddock, W. H.. Brennan, E. A.... Brook, C. ...... . Brown, G. M.. ...... Brown, R. M ..... Bruce, J. M. H... Butle1', L. L ...... Cameron, M. K... IPRPIPV' P-PPP 'ufrlirt WWUWWEUPFUPU EFJFTFIFIHUUUUUUUUUUUUUQOQ OOOOOOQQOOOOOOOOOOO ezwesfeeeeesgeeggge-56 222262.-..5555255f:.5215 5s5Eg5w55qFe5w1,5m5E5: gvgseagzpgpgggezpee rgesffg-E5EegF?55?b5g2 -gprssaffffnpege rg 8122111539 S' Ffpfnpgss' p5:15?2F?1 fZ'j?L15'f7wQF'F 51- : ' 5oQF.1,9I:1:J5:'f'F'r'2' f grgnf Q9UHQ5 2If L,5f21:1F1?UQp-:'E:ju5 :2I25:m11a2:zL,: 9::- g IQf'Iw-Qrlzzgg' 1:5111 .:::.g::Z:g::gg191:3gOF',:g.:1.2g'-g:gg1?':3:' ':::Z::::2:'--:-:2-'-1'21I- :--::-:ef -- -. -::,: -.-: '--333: --..:.r' lE'f::EE::::Esf:fEi:7ffEff:f5E.'2EiEff:35:57ffEf5 3P?r?bvriPP?'Q?+'5Qg:1Qep1oP?Q P'Q?f'P'?+'??E5?-9921552550251 wnmwwmwwwweeswsmswmswws wswwwwwmwsewwmwmsws 3 1 50th St. New 6 W. - 322 York St., Jersey York. . . Cit y .... 99 Short Av., Edwardsdale, Pa Princeton, N. J. . .. ...... . .. 11 214 E. 13th St., Ind auapolis. . 2118 S. Broad St., Elizabeth. 1112 N. Calvert St., Park Place, Pa ..... North East, Ind .... 153 Dithridge St., Pl Stroudsburg, Pa.... Balto . . . iE5151li12f I 111 Belmont Ave., Jersey City 285 Henry St. Broo 1. 332 E 88th srf, New lyn ..... York. . . Hammondsport, N. Y ...... .. 723 Ridge Ave., Allegheny... N.1 .... Summit, N. J' ............... e 440 West End Ave., 3813 Euclid Ave., G1 Cortland, N. Y ..... Chestnut Hill, Phila Bryn Mawr, Pa .... Velalld . . 2151511151 I 349 Pacino Ave., Pittsburg. .. Stoueham, Mass .... 275 River St., Wilke s-Barre. . 570 N. Broad, Elizab'h, N. J. 1359 Girard St., Washington. 13 Holbrook St., N ams, Mass ....... Pelham Manor, Merion, Pa ......... Pl., Syra 52 Montgomery, 5 The Hartson, . Hawthorn, Pa ...... . 118 Waliiilt St., E.Or Connellsville, Pa. . . orth Ad- N. Y ........ 'Riddiivs C ..... USB ange,N.J. 741 E. 10th Ave., Denver .... ay 732 Webster Av., Ser 39 E. Hancock St., Lton, Pa Detroit. . 244 S. 21st St., Philadelphia. 565 First St., Brooklyn ...... 67 South St., Auburn, N. Y.. Basking Ridge, N. J ........ 1531 Tioga St., Phil adelphia. 497 E. 17th St., Brooklyn .... St. Louis, Mo .... 209 S. 9th St., Monm Murfreesboro. Tenn. Lakewood, N. J. . .. Downsvllle, N. Y . . . Indianapolis, Ind. . . 55111, ' ini 11 S. D ....... Jan. 23 M. D ...... Nov. 9 E. M. W... Sept. Home ........ Aug- 85 P .......... Nov. 41 '79 ........ Aug. 21 '79 ........ Mill'- 168 Nassau St 52111- 11 S. M. R... Jan. 96 B .......... Jan. 20 S. E ....... June 40 P .......... Mar- 11 E. B .... .. D90- 1 M. D ....... May 20 P ....... Sept. 5 W. M. W. Allg- 14 M. D ...... Avril 11 N. D ...... Aug. 22 P .......... July 1 S. M. R .... M-HY 44 '79 ........ July 6 N. M. R .... Jan. 61 B.. ........ April 61 B. ......... Oct. 3 S. R ....... -THD- 43 L .... . ..... April 16 E. W ...... Aug. 4 S. R ........ May 46 L ..... .... S ept. 14 B ..... .... F eb. 21 .... Aug. 24 L ....... MSS' 7 S. E ....... . Nov. 41 .... Nov. 35 L ..... .. April 13 B ..... .. Nov. 7 U. .. Feb. 5N. ..May 6 U. P. ...... Feb. 11 N. W ...... May 163 L. ........ Feb. 4 S. W ....... Dec. 1 S. W ....... Aug. 33 P. .... ..... D ec. 38 L .......... Aug. 7 Park Place. April 2 S. D ....... Sept. 6 M. D ....... Nov. I2 W. M. Jan. 185 P .......... May 22, 15, 3 282 21, 2, 24, 11, 7. 16, 19, 5. G. 16, 12, 17, 20, 11 27, 4, 4. 31 17, 6. 18, 25, 31, 24, 4. 14, 14, 29, 14, 2. 22, 2. 6. 30, 7, 29, 25, 17, 14, 13, 25, 3. 11, 29, 16. 25, '86 '87 '82 '84 '85 '85 '86 '87 '86 '87 '85 '86 '87 '86 '85 '87 '86 '87 '85 '84 '87 '85 '85 85 '88 '87 '84, '87 '86 '85 '86 'S5I '86 '85 '86 '86 '84 '87 '85 '85 '83 'S-J I' '86 '85 '85 '85 '85 '84 '84 1615-11 16516 54 158 5-10 129 5- 5 160 5- 9 180 5-11 150 6 120 5- 6 150 5- 0 135 5- 6 150 5-11 145 5-11 135 5- su, 1418 6 145 5- 7 145 5-10 142 5- 7 150 6 175 5- on 175 6- 4 163 5-10 160 5-11 145 5- 9 178 6 122 5- 4 164 5-10 145, 5- 2 150 5-10 160 6 129 5- 611 120 5- 711 135I5-1055 150 5-1032- 150 5- S15 '155 6- 2 160 5-10! 175 6 148 5- 6 160 5-11 135 5- 0 158 5-111,Q 157 6 150 5- 915 152 5-11 143 5- 015 175 5-11 140 5- 71,6 134 5- an 140 5-10 110 5-10 Law...... Enjoyment. Law . ..... Ministry. . Manuf .... Bus ....... Bus ....... Teaching. Law ...... C. E ...... M.E ...... . C. E ...... Law ...... Bus. Bus. Bus. Bus. LilW...... LHW . ..... J ourualism Law ...... Bus ....... Bus ....... Law ...... C. E. . .... Engineer. .. 0. 11 ..,.. . 11d5.'.'.' .'.' 11. 11. . . . .. Astronomy: Bus ....... Engineer. .. Bus ....... Financier. Broker ..... C. E.. .... Bus. .... . . Ministry. . Bus ....... E. E ...... Ministry . . Law ...... Ministry . . Law. ..... Bus ....... 5...--.'..-' Mormon .... ' Cath ....... Meth. .... . . Pres ....... Pres ....... Epis ....... Pres ....... Meth. .... . . Pres ....... Pres ....... Cong. . Epis ....... Epis. Pres ....... Spiritualist npis ....... Epis ....... Pres. , ...... Agnostic. . . Pres ....... Meth. .... . . Cath ....... Jewish ..... Pres....... Epis. ..... . Cong ....... Univ ....... 013Lisf1'1i.i11I I Pres ....... Pres ....... Pres. Pres....... Meth. .... . . Cath ....... Epls ...... Epis ...... Pres ....... Pres ....... Pres ....... Pres ....... Cath ....... U. P ...... Unit ....... Pres ....... Meth.. . . . . . 10. P. 1c. IR. W D. ,xv D. 1 R. R. 0. R. o. R. R. R. 1 R- IW R. R. R. 1W P ,W D. R. 0. R. W R. 11' R. W R. W R. nf D. YY R. R. ,IW R. IG. R. D R R C. R R. C. R. R F R. D. D. D. R. IPX R. 1C. R. C. R. C. D. W R. TV R. YV R. VV D. YV R I .Philosophy . . Woman ..... English ..... English ..... English. . . . . Geology English ..... ng. Lit .... History ..... Math ....... 'Graphics .... Latin ....... GreekPr.Life History ..... History ..... Math ........ Bridge ...... Poetry ...... Government. Politics .... . Finance ..... History ..... History ..... Math ....... .Gen. Science lPoetry ...... Math ........ Astronomy . . Economies. . . Graphics .... Phys. Geog. History ..... English ..... 11if1i.3sI6i31SS'I I Math ........ English .... . Hum.Nuture. English ..... History . .... Latin. . History ..... English ..... Sailing ..... Football. . Baseball. . Tennis. . . . Ping-Pong Tennis .... . Baseball. . Baseball. . Hockey. Baseball. .' Bridge .... . . Golf .... Football. . Fishing . Sailing . . . Bean-Bags. . Football. . Baseball. . Poker. . . Skating. Tennis. . Baseball. . Track .... Baseball . . Autoing. . Football. . Sailing. . . Shooting. . Autoing. Tennis. . Canoeing. Tennis. . Sailing. . . Baseball. . Baseball. . Autoing. Sailing. . . Polo .... Sailing. . . Sailing. . . Baseball. . Baseball. . Reading. . Tennis. . Swimming Tennis .... . Tennis .... . Baseball. . Tennis. . Frank. Bill. Pat. Gus. Marsh. But. Frog. Gop. 17Gu Ed. Pussy. Al. Champ. Dick. Bob. Dave. Maur. Tom. Wal t. Bob. Bill. Bill. Johnnie. Corb. Shorty. Dave. T. Sid. Lou. Ray. Zack. Bill. Husky. Lew. Wee-Wee Mick. Pop. Skipper. Cal. Bill. Durst. Mutt. Chris. Harry. Rabbit. Ellie. B. 0 6 8. . -ri. .J 2 E E , NAME. RESIDENCE. tj t. . m V3 W 5 2 3 5 5 : E2 E' 5 g. 43 ELM '5 S -1 E .e s S 2 e Z. P E O El V5 P 2.9-1 In B. 2. Farley, J. G., Jr.......A. Anniston, Ala .......... . .... 4 N. R ....... Oct. 29, '87135 Bus ...,.... iPres. Hum. Nature Running Jack. Fell, F. E ............. .C. 32 Sweets Ave., Trenton ..... 10 N. M. R... Jan. -, '80 140 Engine .II-'res ....... Chemistry... Baseball Finney, W. P., Jr .... ..A. Moorestown, N. J .......... .. 9 N. M. R .... Jun. 20, '89 145 Minlst 'Pres ..... .. History. .... Tennis ..... Bill-Fin Fish, ....... fC. 2547 N. 18th St., Phila ...... M, W., Sept. 21, :Sg145 Engine None ....... Geodesy ..... gaseballn.. Flory . .......... tt. Dayton, Ohio ................ ........ . . Sept. 21 8 160 us ..... ..... E ng ish ..... useba .... en. Fluhffrt, T. L ..... .... L ltt. 435 Salem Ave., Dayton, O... 14 B ......... . Jan. 12, '85 145 Mining.. Pres ....... Phys. Geog. Football .... Bones. F01'SYfh. R- W-. 'TF--'Litl 813 S- G1'11C0 'Sf-. Ri0hmoud,Va 5 N. R......, Mar. 9, '86 160 Law.. Epis ....... History. .. Diabolo. Bob. Foster, W. E ........... A. Atlantic Highlands, N. J .... 1 E. W .,,.,,. April 2, '87'137 Law.. Epis.. ..... English... Hockey. Bill. Fowler, H. E ...... ...A. Mansfield, Pa ................ 53 Univ. Place -T11119 17. '33 140 Tenchi Pres- English... 3115002111--U Herb. French, C. H .... ...A. -12 Henry Pittsfield, Mass... 13 S. W ...... Jan. 13, '87155 Law.. EDis...... History... Hockey. Howard Ilfirost, .... ?latkins,PN. J .............. 31 M. WU, lgrec. 25, 1237 lgus ..... Ilgleth.. ..... Science ..... Ilgaseballn.. Bob. fruit, . T ..... . . . . . . aron, a .................. .......... a Y , 1 ' U ific T05 ---- . - - HiSt01'Y- - - flseb' 11- - - - Fred- Galey, T. M ....... . .... C. 316 Negley Av., Pittsburgh,Pa 24 P .......... Feb- 19z '34 153 M111111f-- PWS -4-- Nature ---- .. Camping. Tom. Gallaher, S. M. ...... Litt. 1102 Kanawha St., Charles- I town, W. Vu.. ............ 51 '79 .... April 23, '86 14215 Bus... ED1s.... . English... Tennis.. Sam. Gensler, D. E .... .... C . clo H. J. Gensler, U. S. Sen- 1 I ate, Washington, D. C.... 111 L ........ . Feb. 7, '86150 Engine Cath ....... Nature ...... Baseball .... Don. George, L. B ..... .... B . 121 N.Co-mmou St., Lynn, Mass 24 '79.. ....... Milf- 21. '85 155 BUSH- EWS- HiSf01'5'. .- B21Seba11.... LOU. Gill, W. A ..... ...A. 19 Montgomery Pl., Brooklyn. 12 S. E. B..., Mar. 4, '86 160 Bus... Cong. ...... English... Football.... Billy. Gilmour, H. C ..... ...A. 936 Broad st., Newark, N. J. 181 L ......... Dec- 27. 'SG'215 Law.. Barr.. Jurisp.....- Sai1ing..... Gill. gilson, 5 ..... Stl? it.,SilDrieMPaf .... 4 S. R. .... Aug. 11, '86 170 Law.. Meth. ...... PO1ifiCS--- F00tba1l.... Sam. ass, . . . -u ., longom- ery, Ala ................... 66 L... ....... Juli' 9. '86 162 Journa Pres ....... E g1'sh... Fo tb ll.... P . Gienn, R. C .... ...A. 301 E. Front, Berwick, Pa... 1 S. W ....... June S, '86120 JOUFD3. Meth. Egglish-H Tegnig.. Bglgy Goas, H. L ...... ...A. sc1my1kn1 Haven, Pa .... 14 N. M. R... May 4. '84 146 Teafhi Refer --------- . Marb1es..... Goppoldt, P. R .... . .... C. 108 Jerome St., Brooklyn.... 11 N. M. R... Oct. 1, '84160 C. E ...... Pres.. Astronomy Swimming.. Gop. graham, hlicantclgiir, J .......... 'E9..... ..,, get. 122, '34 160 grook ..... Igone ....... English... Tennis...... G. ran in, . 1 ....... 1. i one, a ................ '. B .... ., au. F160 us... re. ,G Mt' , Grau, W. H ..... ..... A . 119 E. College St., Louisville, 35 P .......... June 13? 583155 Publis Prez ....... Hisgnig... Bgsglgirgi... Inlgian 311225. S .... Ilgivgxd S31tleaSt., Trenton... 33 W. ..... gig- E. 'gi Eres. 11i'r1e?ch.h.. gz1ilin'g..... ' . .... . , u ............... . ......... - ,' ins es ....... ' . Green, J. C ...... .... . A. Avondale Ave., Cincinnati... 10 E. W ..... , April 12, '8713G Teachi None ....... Histkoigfg Caigggng .... Jojent Gregory, F. A ........ Litt. 1921 N. Meridian, lndianap'l's 43 L. ......... Dec. 3, '86 142 Bus... Pres ....... History... Baseball .... Greg Griscom, W. M. ........ A. Bryn Mawr, Pa ............. 5 B. .......... July 27, '87 170 Law.. Morro English... Drinking .... Gris' Guillaudeu, D ...... Morristown, N. J ............ 3 N. D ....... May 21, '86 145 C. E.. Epis....,,, .Math ........ Baseball..... Dud- Hackett, G. D. ..... 416 Morewood Ave., Pittsburg 5 E. M. W... Feb. 16, '85 173 Bus... Pres ....... Chemistry. Baseball.... Pat' Haley, R. J ........ 2822 Jackson St., Sioux City.. 10 W. W ..... July 10, '86 137 E. E.. Pres. .... .. Hydraulics.. Baseball. 'Liz' Halliday, E. R ....... Lltt. 539 E. Town St., Columbus, O. 13 B .......... Mar. 2, '86 155 Real E 'Pres ....... History... Basketball.. Han, P S 142 190 Hamill, C. M ......... Harlan, E. H. W. Harrison, G. A ...... Harvey, J. R. P. .... Harvery, S. G ..... Haulenbeck, J. W ..... Haven, W. L., .Tr ....... Havron J Jr ...... , ., . Hawes, E. P ..... Heagey, F. W .... Hill, R., Jr ..... .. Holmes, H. ...... Horton, W. C ..... Hosford, C. F., Jr .... Houston, W. S ....... Hnlbirt, E. R.. . . . . . Huston, J. A., Jr. Lltt. reerrreeeewer F' v- rr T' ...B ...C. Hutchinson, F. R ....... B Jackson, J. H .......... A. Johnson, H ........... Litt. Johnson, W. M ......... A. Jones, H. L ........ Jones, H. C ..... Lltt. Jones, M. Lltt. Jones, R. Litt. Jones, R. B ..... Joy, H. E ..... .... A . Kain, W. F .... . Lltt. Kallsch, I ........ Kauffman, J. L ...... ..A. Keepers, G. A .......... A. Kelly, J. H ..... . Litt. Kerr, J. T ...... .. Kilgore, R ..... .. ...B Kimball, R. H ...... ...A. Knott, L. A ...... .... A . Krleble, 1. Lambert, G. B .... ....B Lannlng, K. B .... .... A . Latimer, E ....... ...B. Latimer, H. R .......... B. Leake, F.... ......... Litt. Leonard, G. A.... .... A. Loomis, E ............... G. Looms, G ......... ....Litt. Lothrop, G. V. N ....... A. Luke, C. W ........ ..Lltt. McCarter, G. W. C ...... McClintock, G. S. McCormick, J. B.. . . . McDermott, W. . . .C Lltt A. B 825 N. 7th, Terre Haute, Ind. B Bel Air, Md ................. E. 6951 Frankstown Av.,Pittsburg S 909 N.Spring St.,Pensacola,F1a S 463 Main St., Orange, N. J.. B. Walton, N. Y .... . ........ .. B. 7 'Maple Av., Morristown, N. J. E Hotel Irving, New York ..... B. 727 Summerlea, Pittsburg... B. Cochranville, Pa ..... . ....... B. Britt, Iowa ...... . ........... E. Boonton, N. J ............... E. 118 Moss Ave., Peoria, Ill... B. Butler, Pa ................... B. 338 Pacilic Ave., Pittsburg.. S. Lovelton, Pa ...... .. ........ E. Academy Ave., Sewiekley, Pa. S. Alexandria, Pa ............. . B. 1101 Wash. St., Wilmington.. B. 455 Park Pl., Brooklyn ...... B. 522 23d St., Ogden, Utah .... B. 55 Walnut, E. Orange, N. J.. B. Norwich, N. Y.. ......... B. Houston, Tex ....... .... B. Belvidere, N. J ....... B. Louisville, Ky .......... B. Barroquilla, Colombia, S. A.. B. 177 Olive St., Dallas, Tex... B, 92 Bleecker, Newark, N. J... B. Columbia, Pa..... ........ B, Beallsvllle, Ohio .......... ppwwwwpewwwmwmwwwwwm Sioux City, Iowa... ........ . 921 Reed St., Erie, Pa ...... Minneapolis, Minn ........... Atlanta, Ga ................. 1630 Brook St., Louisville .... Norristowii, Pa .............. St. Louis, M0 ............... 24 Model Ave., Trenton, N. J. Wilmington, South Carolina.. Wilmington, South Carolina.. 357 West End Ave., N. Y... Syracuse, N. Y ...... . ....... Wilkes-Barre, Pa. .......... . 1626 First St., Louisville .... 440 Jefferson Ave., Detroit... 194 Riverside Drive, N. Y... 1080A Broad St., Newark... Wilkes-Ba1're, Pa ............ 112 Magnolia St., Boston .... 1025 Broad St., Newark..... 5 S. R ....... 51 '79 .... 102 P .... .... 1021? .......... 33 '79 ........ 95 B .......... 1 S. W. B .... 42 P .......... 14 M. D ...... 9W.M. 9 W. W ...... 1 E. B .... ... 21 L .......... 2 E. W ....... 5 E. M. W.. 5S. Ed ....... 21 L ....... 1N. M. R .... 24 L .......... 6 N. R ....... 9 YV. M. W 215 .... .. .M. W 66 L .... .. 2W. M. W 2 S. W. .. 3S. R ..... A. B ..... . 6W. B .... 6OP ..... m 2n.M SUPQI 2S.M s.Mfn .W. R. 90 N. St. . . 5 5 w 2 N. D. U. P. S. W. N. W. P. . . . '79. . . '79... '79... r-UF-BDUIUKGI CFU-li-H510 S.E.B N. M. w.wIII SKI 'EIS -Aug. 2, May 12, Mar. 20, Mar. 22, Feb. 7, Sept. 14, Jan. 20, Sept. 2, Aug. 30, June 20, Oct. 14, April 6, Feb. 2, April 26, May 15, April 9, Aug. 25, Nov. 3, June 6, July 20, Mar. 3, Dec. 15, May 14, Oct. 25, June 3, Jan. 4, June 5, Mar. 24, Oct. 20, Jan. 18, July 19, June 18, Nov. 8, June 2, Oct. 24, Nov. 14, Sept. 27, May 15, Nov. 7, Dec. 5, Aug. 16, Mar. 3, Dec. 7, June 5, Nov. 22, Oct. 18, Feb. 9, Aug. 22, Dec. 27, Mar. 21, Nov. 22, '84, 1 86 '85 '87 '87 '86 '84 '85 '85 '84 '86 '85 '85 '87 '84 '86 '86 '86 '86 '84 '85 '86 '84 '86 '83 '88 '84 '84 '86 '86 '84 '85 '82 '84 '80 '87 '81 '86 '86 '86 '85 '85 '86 '84 '86 '85 '85 '87 '86 '84 '84 180 160 170 140 155 172 132 160 160 145 160 140 150 145 150 150 165 170 145 135 150 168 145 17 2 170 150 178 135 135 145 145 135 147 165 145 154 145 154 135 141 138 153 148 148 145 156 174 195 124 Cr '?'? 9 CF'i '?'C'99 9 9 9 G ? r ? ? ? : 9 '?'5 ?'?'?''7 9CF5 ? : -7''?'9 5 '8 ? 9 'F'f f'Q'r ?'5'9 '? ?'?'?' n-s- p-u- r- s-I H 1-A x- x-A y-A H p-1 DBF-0-ll-H-P-'O CDCDCJEGT CDQCOf2U5fDU5P -'IFICDD-lfPf3CDl mUJ QCD'-U-AKIQTWCJ GRC OCXJIOQDH XS Ei' E-'E if 3135 S 713 El' S S K 257335 - w www I rw Mm - - Spggfggpgegggggggggg:5meE555ge55559E55S95gE955p?555 ?F??E9E5??eaFE?:F:55-???g?E?5?F?5U?5??3??U555?????? ::::P5n:::ffrs:1::Q8g:::g:5:E:::E5:M::5::35:g::u:: :::::?::':--:2:::IF2g:::a:':5:::55:5::3::35:?:::::: ... .... ..jj.:ZZ.::.D:Z.5.p:.E...:j.:..I..jj........ - - - - - - P-cs -Q - ,- '11 1-1 -4 Q 5 EFETSSE:155555:s5EEg55?:5555935E55555E?5gE55ES55555 ?Q??F3F::F?Fe?:cse?oSe2:FesiirirgsseegeeoFEEPQFEEFS g5-- ---' '-- '- 2:': 'P: :'-rg: ::::g::::::::::::: 'U'::::: :::::: :::::::::::::2:Zw::::P::: ::::::::: ISI ..... ..... . ......::....:.:c:.:.:l............ F F?FFFWFFFPFPFTFFPFFFFFFWFPFF PFPFFFFFFFFWPFFFPFBB Politics ..... Rom. Law.. English ..... Physics .... . Phys. Geog. Phys. Geog. English ..... Math ....... Arts ...... . . English ..... English ..... Frame Struc Geodesy ..... Politics ..... Politics ..... Physics. .... Astronomy. . Embryology . Brown Study Jurisp. English ..... History ..... Economics. . Politics ..... English ..... English ..... English ..... Languages. . Int. Law .... Politics ..... History. . . . . English ..... . Mon. 8: Bank Bib. Llt .... Rom. Law.. History ..... English ..... Architecture . Math . .... . . Comfort ..... Electricity. . English ..... History . .... Hydraulics . . Politics ..... Chemistry. . . History ..... Politics ..... Architecture Football .... German ..... Baseball. . . . Football .... Hockey ..... Bridge ...... Diabolo ..... Tops ........ Tennis ...... Sailing. . . Soceerf . Swimming. . Tennis ...... Baseball. . .. Baseball .... Tennis. . . . . . Baseball .... Baseball .... Baseball .... Diabolo ..... Swimming. . Football . . Tennis ...... Baseball .... Baseball .... Baseball .... Tennis .... . . Football .... Football .... Track .... Golf. . . .... . Football .... Baseball .... Bridge ...... Baseball .... Tennis ...... Football .... Loafing ..... Tennis ...... Riding. . . . . . Riding ...... Hockey ..... Baseball Autoing Tennis .... . . Sailing. . . Baseball. . . . Tennis .... . . Riding. .... . Football .... Football .... Ham. N ubs. Harry. Penn. Sox. Jim. Roy. Jack. Prince. Haguey. Rod. Sherlock. Dit. Snitz. Bill. Ray. Eve. Hutch. Jock. Hard. J ohnie. Hank. J onesie. Mutts. J onesy R. E. Brek. Emil. Freddie. Dore. Jim, Kauf. Mose. Johnny. J immie. Dick. Kim. Louie Batwood Ik. Jerry. Ken. Emp. Herb. Skin. Alex. Dae Dae. Dlnger. Nigger. Charlie. Mac. Glb. Mac, Jim. Mac. bm . E . F., 5 3. ,gl NAME. RESIDENCE. is . . ,, 3 gi U2 W 5 ,,, E' .J . 5 E 5 'E 5 L' 3 5 I-D 'U 'Q IE is -5 is 3 5 2 'L' : 2 E .29 en 3 is-1 31'-7 2 2 E 'S S Q' E o L 2 'E L' : - Q o ca is gn 5 :im as-I 5. in In lllcliaig, E. S ..... Litt. B. Yhilzidclphia, Pa ..... .. S W. B ...... . Nov. 1, '86 149'5- 9 Law ......, Epis. ., R- .......... Tennis ...... 'Sp1ke. McLean, D. H.... ..A. :San Juan, Porto Riee.... .... 14 S. W ..... . Oct. 19.'S61-17 5- 9 Medicine... P1-es ..... R- ,Biology ----- ClU'l091l1g----1MaC- i1eNen-, R. S .... .... A . Di-lieviiie, N. J ...,,,, ..,:17 S. E ....... sept. 23, 'S5 140 5- 51,6 Lew ....... Pres., .... R- -:History -.--- Bos--0111 .--- 'BOD- iingornn, M. B .... ....A. Mercer, Pa .............. ...'10 S. W ....... sept. 9, 'S5 l65'5-11 Medicine... U. D- -IChvm1st1'y--- Tennis.-.-..'Ma0-, , Mann, B. R ..... Litt. Ha'-tc-l Sr. James, Phila ,,,,,, E8 W. B ....... June 30, '851S1l 6 Manuf ..... Meth. .... I- 'Astronomyn Drawing... 'Roaring Bill. March, W. A ..... .... C . l5ridgnpui't, Pa .,,,,,,,,,,,,, ,l52 B ..... ., . Jun. 1, 'S-I 158 5- T C. E ....... LUtl.lCl'lIl1, R' HISUQYD' ----- F00tbil11-- 23111- Marshall, T. H ...... ...A. New Yer-1: ................... A. B .... . .... Sent- 5. 'SG 126 5- 5 Danning.... Pi-ee ..... D- English ----- B11so0fi1l----.Tf211- Maury, A. G ..... Litr. sc Stockton st., Princeton... .... .... Mar. 30. '55 130 5- S R0f11F1stuto EPis---.- D- Hlsfsff '--'- Bas--0211 ---- iD'1tFh- Mecnbe, E. W .... .... A . Grange, N. J ................ '11 P ..... .... S cpt. 14, 'SG 1237 5- 9 Bus ........ Pres ..... R- HiSC01'Y ----- GfYlIlll2lStlCS QEFIHS- Mettler, T. H .... East Millstone, N. J ...,.,,, 94 B ..... ..,, B iar. 29, 'S41-156 Law ...,.,, RCfOl'u1Qd,- R. Pub. Finance Baseball .... ITOII1- Miers, E. D ..... ..A. 22S.0verbrool:Av-.Trenton,N..T 5 W. B ........ Oct. 16, '35 170 6 Bus... ...,, Meth .,,, R. History. .... Football.. 'Ed. inner, E. P ..... ..A. 156 N. mi st., Newer-if ...... 10 s. w ...... Oct. 18, 'ss 113 5- sw Ministry... Epis ..... R- Psychology.. Sailing... QPU- Miller, K. D ..... .... A . 109 E. 7341 st., New York... 12 S. E. B .... Avril 27. '87 163 5- 3 Law ....... Pi-es ..... R- Politics ----- Tennis ------ -Dusty- Mount, R. I .... .... B . East Orange, N. J .,.,,,,.,,, 111 L .......,, July 7, '85 145 5- S Bus ........ Pres ..... R- Geology ----- 31150111111 ---- 'Beal'- Muuoz, J ....... .... C . Chihuahua, Mexico .......... . 4 B ........... ADi'i1 23 '86 135 5' 3 C- if '----- - R- 021111. D- ASt1'0u0mY-- Football ---- .Jack Mun' Myers, J. P ..... ...... A . 14 Macomb, Plnttsburg. NX. 7 W. M. W... June 1, 'so 150 6 Bus ........ Pres ..... R- Euelisho .--- Tennis ---..- 501111010 -TECH Nerf, W. R ...... Lint. Geneva, Ill .................. 92 P -.-.-...-- Nov- 5. '85 175 5-11 Bus--. -.... Elvis --... R- History ----- Walking ---- Desc.- Nieheis, o. o.... Liu. Wiinnngten, o ....... . ....... 20 P .......... Mar- S. '85 140 5- 0 I-0110115---. - ----- - R- Spanish ----- P01101 ------- Gome- Oug, E. M .... .. ...B Forbes and S. Negley Aves., ' ' ' Pittsburg, Pa ............. . 22 P. . .... SQDC- 26. '85 150 5-7 'A Bus ----- Pies ---- - R- Math -------- Tennis- Ed' Ormond, A. H .......... A. 276 Nassau, Princeton, N. J.. --... . ........ .Tuly 17, '87 170 5-10W Law.. ..... Pres ..... Philosophy.. Wrestling.. Arch. Osborne, R. D .... Lita. Hutton Park, unoi-enge, N.J. 92 P. ...... July s, '85 145 5- 9 Manuf ..... Epis ..... R- English ----- Hockey. .. M0100- Pai-kin, H. C .... Litt. 723 Madison st., Chester, Pe. 34 P .......... Dee. 8, '84 142 5- 7 Law ....... Meth. .... R- Economicsn Siiiling-H ,DOC- Peters, R ....... .... c . . Gui-den city, Long Island .... 7 W. 11. W... May 5, '87 145 5- 714 0.11 ....... Epis... R. Graphics .... Golf -....... P010- '?feiEtfer, T. N .... ..A. Merchantville, N. J ..,,.,,., 12 S. E. B .,., Nov. 3, '86160'5-10 Law ...... , ...... , D. Woman ..... Football .... -Bird- Phillips, W. .T .... ..A. 1525 Wash. Av., Scranton, Pa. 94 P ...... -Tall. 29, '85 210 6- 215 Bus .... Pres. ., R. History ..... Football. . .. pow. Penierey, W. 11.. ..A. P.. Chambei-shui-g, Pa ........... 3-1 '79 ......... Mor- 7. '87 150 6 ...,,,, Pres ..... R- History ---.- Baseball -.-- H111- Pnee, J. s. ...... 150 W. sch sn., Erie, Pa ..... 13 S. W ...... June 23, 'se 147 5- 8 0.11 ....... ......... R - History ....- Football.. Sanford- Pullen, E. C ..... ..,1. Higntsrewn, N. J... ......... .. .... ........ F eb. 27. '85 156 5-10 Bus ---... .. Meth- -... R- History ----- C5H02i11s----PU11sY- Pyle, D. H. MCA. ..A. 673 Fifth Ave., New York... 9 L. P ........ Mar. 19, 'SGl175,G. 1 Bus ........ Pres .... . R. History ..... Riding ...... Dave. Pyne, M. T. ...... ..A. B. 253 Madison Ave., New York 9 L. P ........ Nov- 5. '85 170 6- 2 Gelii- of Lei ---- R- Hum- N00110 G- Sisiih--H Tay- Riiih. c. P .... .... o. 167 W. ssrn sf., New YO.-ie.. 34 P ........ .. Mar. 22, '85 160 5- 9 G. E .... None ..... R- Sewo1-a.ze-.- Sailing.-... Cusfi- Reall, G. N ...... .... C . Pawtucket, R. I ............ 1 U. Pyne .... Dec. 10, '86 132 5- 7 C. E ....... Epis. .... L. None ........ Tennis ...... Reed Bird- Rhodes, J. R ..... ..A. Newton, Iowa ............... 7 Park Place, Dec. 31, '83 187 5-11M Ministry... U. Pres.. R. English ..... Baseball .... Dusty. Roblnns, C. An... ..A. Lakewood, N. J .........,.,, 8 S, R ,,,,,,, April 29, '87 147 5- 815 Undecided.. Bzlpt .... , R. Politics ..... Baseball .... Rllbble- Robinson, R. G... Litt. ze Anaibon Pl., New oneans 6 s. E. B ..... Dee. 18. 'S01305 6 Bus --.-. Christian. D- Pub- Finance Baseball ---- Robbie- Rose, A. L ....... ...-1. 309 W. 81st St., New York.. 36 L .......... June 21, 'SGl155l5- SW Law.. ..... Unit ..... R. None ...... .. Aquatics .... -ll-Bud. Rouse, J. R ..... ..A. Blue Anchor, N. J ........... 12 N. D ...... Aug. 21, '85Il65I5-Hy, Teaching... Meth. E. R. Math ....... Spooning .... Rouse. .Lltt. Schroeder, W. . . . . . . Ryan, A .......... .. Schultz, Scott, A. H .... Thibaut, R. E., Jr ...... Thompson, L. M ........ Thompson, W. N ..... Toland, E. D., Jr .... Vanderhoof, G.W., Jr van der Voort, J. N. van Dyke, H. J. III.. Veron, C. W., Jr ..... Voigt, E. R ...... . ..... A. .Litt. NVarner, D. L ........ Watkins, J. M .... .. Weelans, C. H ........ Wallace, R. W ...... West, W. T ........ ..A. C. K ......... . .A.. .Litt. 515355221150 S2333 ::E.E.E'5..EiE555a9'3 -USEFZHSEE'-3 535255 Qsggegcesflsmi-'S .'5:1:'F3:+Q:1,g:'Q, 1 5f',3Qg 233- - F- F529':1-5505 ' '-1 ' . - - -- off 'ra ' 1523555 5 F ' 5 QHPPP new H5 Q ' m Q wF2Q? F225 U pn '95 51:11-3IPU2Q'r:1 . - Ff pI.,g Q..-:::m.5-5.QUE-lfzjw...-.IU-.... :::,,,.L,::g:gf?:: .:::2::EU2f g ....-,-,L-4....,,.. U....-..--- , 25225515525 52252 5252555285252 P?'?'??f?'?1'??9 PQQPP ??'?'???f'FP013??'?'S'1 PETE' ECE reef-rf S T 5 ' ..A. ..A. ..A. ..A.. ..A. .Litt. 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FT...-,pq-..,..g..-g,,.vq', ::::::::g::Ef:::::e:::'f'2:::::?'::'fQ?f::: WMM UJUJW WWUJUJIDEIJUUDU 26 W. 95th St., New 250 W. 88th St., New 250 Susquehanna Ave Pittston, Pa ....... Whitemai-sh, Pa ..... New York City ...... York. . . York. . ., West 61-1 Central Ave., Dunkirk, N.Y ............. . Princeton ...... . . . . . Morristown, N. J .... New York City ...... 323 N. 9th St., Paduc Baltimore, Md ....... 1535 oak st., Chattanooga. Trenton, N. J ....... 622 Cooper St., Camde ah, Ky . n, N. J. l1O 40 9 2 1 0 2 4 0 96 1 12 54 7 5 19 4 24 41 1 1 40 6 4 G 7 NV. M. S. S. R... E. B.. W ,. U. Pyne- ..... W. B.. E. B.. N. R.. S. E. Blair. . E.M.W .... 3 L .... '79 .... S. R... N. R.. S. M. Nassau Blair. . L ..... M. D. P ..... N. R... U. P .... E. B.. P P ..... 9 E. M. 84 B ..... 41 L... 12 ..... .94 8 W E11 110 '42 05 1 l 7 41 S3 8 13 5 7 42 9 84 - B... S. D.. N. R.. B ..... 'RIII Inn. vyIIf E. M. W .... U. P.. Univ H ..... B ..... TV. M. U. Pyno. . . YV. M. Univ H ..... '79.... S. E. B l'CYVlI B .......... Nov. Jan. July Nov. May July Nov. Mar. Sept. Nov. Dec. Nov. June May Nov. Nov. Mar. Nov. Jan. July May Sept. April April Feb. Mar. Aug. Sept. Mar. Nov. Aug. Feb. Ang. Jan. Mar. Dec. Dec. July Jan. May Sept. May April July Sept. Dec. 28, 10, 2-1, 11, 17, 23. 18, 1. 25, 10, 6. 20, 17, 80, 10, 22, 20, 8. 3. 30, 13, 13, S, 18, 21, 11, 20, 28, 5. 10, 12, 5, 1. 3, 12, 11, 5, 2, 18, 30, 9, 7.. 25, 3, 3. 7. .x '81 11815- 914 '82 14015 8 '81 150!5-1015 '80 142 5- 0 '84 160 0 '81 150 5-11 '87 175 5- 81,0 '80 160 0- 111. '851100-5-11 '85 120 5-. 015 '83 157 5- on '80 170 5-1114 '87 102 5-nn '80 138 5-101,42 '80 150 5- 8 '85 172 0- 22 '87l140 5- 01. 84l1-10l5- 5 '80 108 5-uw '80 140 5-10 '85 137 5- 7 '84 160 5- 81,4 '87 160 0- M - 165 5- 8 '80 158 5-11 '86 150 5- 7 '80 160 5-10 '87 154 5- 0 '85 145 5- 0 '80 126 5- 82 '85 156 5-1033 '84 158 0 '80 140 5- 8 '80 165 5-115511 '85l170l6- 11,5 '85 175 0- 1 '80 180 0- 2 '85! 152, 0 '87 145 5-11 '80 125 5- 015 '80 0 'SG 160 '86l141 5-11 14S G 'S6Il30 5- 7 , W 5561152 5- 7 'S5l15OI5- 'HQ '85Il58I5-10 Journal. . . . Ministry . . . Bus ........ Undecided.. R. Concrete? Brokerage.. Banking... . Pen pusher. Bus ........ Bus .... . . . . Undecided.. E. E ....... Bus ........ Bus ........ Bus ........ Illustrator.. Law. ...... Undecided. . Law. ...... Bus ........ Manuf ..... Engr ....... Law. ...... Law ....... Teaching. .. Law ....... Law ....... Bus ........ Law. . ..... Banking... . Banking.. . . J ournalism. Wall D. bus Surgery .... Real Estate Railways... Bus ........ Bus.. ...... Ministry. . . Paper bus.. Bus. Bus. Law . ...... Law ....... Law ....... Bus .... Cath .... E . Prot. Prot .... Meth.. . . Epis .... Lutheran.. . Sabarite Epis . . . . Bapt .... Pres .... Pres .... Epis .... Cath .... U. P... Els IJ ....... Meth. E. . . Israclite. .. None.... Pres.'. .. Pres. . .. Mormonfit None.. . . . .. Cong ....... Prot. EPis....... Elvis. Unit ....... Pres. Pres ....... Pres ....... Pres ....... Pres ....... Bapt ....... Pres ....... Pres ....... Meth. .... . . Epis .... Pres....... None ....... Pres .... . . . Pres ....... Pres ....... Christian.. . Pres ....... Pres ....... Bapt ....... Pres. . . E .... :user-'gcrpacwsyvsvzsvcusf avsvgvsvsu wpasvsuwpgvguzppejzizsasnlzf PF' 'SU FQUUU ' 1 UND R. R All ........ English ..... Am. Hist. . . History ..... None. . ..... Bank 85 Cnr. . Phys. Geog. Phys. Geog. . History ..... English ..... History ..... Nature ..... English ..... :iHistory. . . .. Languages. . English ..... I English ..... iFrench ...... 'J urisp .... . . English ..... '.H1st01-y ..... 'None. .. History ..... None ....... Law ........ English ..... .German . .... History ..... History ..... Pub. Financ History ..... Philosophy. . Chemistry. . English ..... English ..... English ..... Novels ...... Latin. . Poetry . Bridge . Politics ..... History .... . Hum. Nature Politics ..... History ..... Math ...,... lSasrball .... Basketball . . Baseball .... Baseball .... No ......... Tennis ...... Baseball .... Mumbly Peg Tennis.. . .. Tennis. . . . . Track ...... Diabolo ..... Golf ........ Baseball .... Baseball .... Swimming. . Boxing ..... Billiards .... Football .... Swimming.. Football. . Football. . Tennis. . Squash. . . Football. . Football. . Diabolo. fBaseball. . Baseball. . Track .... Baseball Walking: Wrestling. . Football . . Canoeing . Tennis. . . . .. Tennis ...... Golf ........ Sport Moore . Sport Moore. Sleep ....... Soccer ..,... Tennis. . . . . . KM. '11, Pyne. :Baseball .... !Basehall .... :Golf ........ I Art. i Dutch. Chess. Scottie. 1 Scull. Ted. Buster. Dolly. Eddie. i Shum. Sim. Bogin. 1 IG. I 7 ID. 7 l . Smitty. I Lemon. . Court. Q s01. fared. 1Hos. Q Chap. Bert. Parley. Ruf. Ted. Yump. Jack. Gus. Scup. Bs t. Tom. Fish. P. M. Bill. Dick. Tommy. Pat. , Ed. Vander. Snake. Tertius. Hig. Ernie. lBob. Booker. Mule. Qollie. lBill. 1' y. 2 E . . E 2. ,, NAME. RESIDENCE. og . . ,,, S 8 'D 1 1: in . :J 5 c: z: o o Q3 05 0 S 13 +3 3 2 2 5: fi fi J 2 Z' 5 .EP ij, 15 .2 5 5 5 eg gg Q, ... U .-. Q, G ra is El Q2 0 --4 O O Q9 I-4 5-1 5 d C2 Q o :ra E Q S frm. n. a In e Westervelt, W. .A. B. Beinerville, N. J.... ... 14 S. W ...... Oct. 27, '82 118 5- GM Teaching. .. Pres ....... R. . Nature Study Canoeing. . . . Westie. Wheeler, N. P., Jr. .... A. B. Endeavor, Pa ....... .... 9 4 P ...... Sept. 4, '85 165 5- 8 Lumberman Pres ....... R. Geodesy .... . Qeadingntizhe P t 1 assau 1 .. e e. Williams, C ....... . .... A. B. Nashua, N. H ......... .. .... 11 W. W ..... Dec. 13, '84 133 5- 6 Undecided.. Cong ....... R. Spanish ..... Diabolo ..... Willie. Wilmerding, L. G. . .. . .B. S. 47 Maple Av., Morristown, N. J 13 N. D ...... Dec. 4, '86 162 6- BQ Broker ..... Epis ....... R. French ...... Shooting .... Willy. Winans, J. ..A. B Princeton, N. J ............. 21 Morven St. May 17, '87 149 5-1115 Bus ........ Pres ....... D. Phys. Geog. Baseball .... Symie. Wister, L. Litt. B 53 Fisher Lane, Germantown. 6 U. Pyne ..... Feb. 4, '88 173 6 Bus ........ Epis.. ..... R. English .... . Tennis .... ..-Cap. Wolferth, G. C .... ..A. B. Clarksboro, N. J.. ....... 4 W. M. W... May 18, '87 191 5-11:54 Medicine... Pres ....... D. English ..... Basebullu.. Wooly,- Wood, I. T ...... . ..A. B Princeton ................... 20 Bayard La Dec. 22, '86 205 5-11M Law.. ..... Meth ...... R. Eng. Lit .... Golf. . .. .... Trum. Wood, P. C .... ..... A . B. 205 Evaline St., Pittsburg... 13 W. W ..... ,Aug. 29, '85 165 6- 1 Law.. ..... Pres.. ..... R. History ..... Shooting .... Cliff. We Shall Hope that the CLASS OF 1908 can look back with pleasure, as We do, on our three year business acquaintance. If these business relations have been pleasant, We bespeak a continuance of your patronage as an old grad. our shortcomings We crave your pardon, with a sincere promise that with each passing year we are determined to grow H bigger and better. Your mail orders will have, ALWAYS, our prompt attention The Princeton University Store , 1 l 2 ' X Y 'X N llfll f' ' E eg: vff.ff:. fx f N H X f - , 'J ' f'15f:fiZfZ 1 G-fl . E 5- f.:':.f I 'ih' 7 :.,,.ie6,N.:,. .1 .J-nl L 1 Q' sf 1 PH 415' WNNQS px SVG E Tailors to the MAJURITY ofthe Better Dressed College Men I.H,ErBEASQ N .P FQLL5!! QSZE- SS We would rather sell two suits and make two dollars each than sell one suit and make ive dollars WHELAN FQ. STAFFORD College Tailors Philadelphia, Pa. IN PRINCETON EVERY WEEK C. V. GULICK UPPER PYNE BUILDING PRINCETON, N. J. ATHLETIC OUTEITTER T0 PRINCETON MEN Reunion Banners furnished on short notice Exquisite line of Steins, Loving Cups, etc. Telephone 282 F. A. BWMAN Pnlrnrruu Urrvrnsurv Paras PRINCETON, N. J. BUUK ANU .IUB PHINTINE Printers of i907 and 1908 Nassau Heralds ' THE HOTTEL C0. Hatters, Haberdashers and Shirt Makers 33 East State St., Trenton, N. J. WHAT IS I908 IJUING? Pmrcrrun ALUMNI Wrrrrr. B. F. MCMANUS 3? PHOTOGRAPHER to the Classes of the University jacob Ree 's Sons Clothing, Furnishings and Hats SPEOIALLY PLANNED FOR YOUNG MEN'S WEAR. AUTOMOBILE WEAR 1424-1426 CHESTNUT ST., Philadelphia 'When you play--Use the Best AYRES' CHAMPIONSHIP LAWN TENNIS BALLS ARE THE BEST MTF:-, L fi L it' Lf gg 519' if-C' - V N !06 l'q- . xi' X 1 iv ll T' :?,Q --T' ' I- H I- T I 331' Il' if. TIIiU'fIi'I 'Q li .ui ,I.n.l.L ,nj N - 317+ XNA ' Dffigwym' r' '21-sl rlt The cheapest too, for one outlasts two of any other make. 'I'here's nothing experimental about this famous English Ball manu- factured by F. H. Ayres of London. It was the adopt- ed ball of England for twenty-five years, was the first ball known to Ameri- can tennis, and is one of the balls now authorized by the National Lawn Ten- nis Association. lt costs no more than any other authorized ball, and it out- classes all the others. Sole agents for the United States. f',Mf.l'I'f'f' LJ ' :NN Nxt fl' H ff'l VXVXVTQXSRIN I N N, IIIII Il .- I ' , ff if I, NI' :V N 'i in Nils X D -T Wxflvf Rx Nstwk x :xx 4 Q I XWTS-V' 5 fi? 19' ' Xxxlb' x be 24,5 I if e ij mi '-Z'- KE-,-0?-' ' 'Y 'A F ll: T32 Wa 'ss-gefuewaze E. I. HORSMAN CO., 365-367 Broadway New York HORSMAN TENNIS RACKETS FOR 1908 are unexcelled in up to date design in quallty of work- manship and H mso NEW MODEL S 'l he Centaur Double Frame and Double Hesh The Seabright ' Narrow Form Cane Shoulders The Expert Close Centre Cane Handle l t . - - . y . . I wtf' - .. if i rm' 1 I 5, if it n y The Model A-I, Patent Stringing 1834-1908 The Princeton Bank Capital, 3IO0,000 Surplus and Prohts, 3100318.42 Deposit, May'14th, 1908, 58011758.14 R. M. ANDERSON GEO. A. ARMOUR C. C. CUYLER ' H. E. HALE J. H. WIKOFF DIRECTORS EDWARD HOWE E. L. I-IOWE FILHER HOWE S. S. PALMER WM. P. ARMSTRONG OFFICERS W. H. POWELL M. TAYLOR PYNE A. D. RUSSELL BAYARD STOCKTON EDWARD HOWE, President EDWARD L. HOWE, V.-President C. A. SEIDENSTICKER, Cashier SPECIAL TIME DEPOSITS draw interest at the rate of 3 per Cent. payable January and july. Money left on special deposit will be entered in a special book and any Sums so deposited on the lirst three days of January, February, March, April, May, july, August, September, October and November, Wlll draw interest from the first of such months respectively. SAFE DEPOSIT AND STORAGE VAULTS. BOXES FOR RENT FROM 53.00 UP. By the laws of New York inheritance tax is imposed not only on the estates of RESIDENTS, but also on the personal estates of NON-RESIDENTS found in New York. There is no lineal inheritance tax in New Jersey. William M. Leigh MERCHANT TAILOR CLOTHING, IvIEN's FURNISHINGS, Etc. 66 Nassau St., Princeton,NJ. MYRIIN E. LAVAKE .IEWELER Princeton Souvenirs ARTHUR SCIIWARTZ, Ph G. N a s sa u - Pharmacy Next Door to First National Bank C. A. WHITE Millinery and Furnishing Goods 70 Nassau Street Princeton, N. J. U1ZiUL'7'J'i4jl Ribbon: Bell Telephone 6 Joseph S. Hoff MEANS AND VEGETABLES 56 NASSAU STREET The PRINCEIPN IIOUSE ALL STUDENTS CORDIALLY IN- VITED TO DROP IN AND RE- NEW THEIR FORMER ACQUAINTANCE JOHN TOPLEY C. C. SKIRM CIGARS and SIVIOKEIEUS ARTICLES 68 Nassau Street Princeton, N. J. Special Line of BEB Pipes WILLIAM L. BRINEII Graduate N. Y. College of Pharmacy The DRUGGIST and PHARIVIACIST 44 Nassau St, Princeton, N. J. E. A. WRIGl'IT'S Engraving House LEADING HOUSE FOR COLLEGE ENGRAVING AND PRINTING OF EVERY DESCRIPTION Menus, Dance Programs, Invitations, Commencement Invita- tions and Class Day Programs . '. . '. . '. Insert Printer for - University of Pennsylvania 1906 Record, Brown University IQO6 Liber Brunensis, Cornell ,University I906 Cornellian and many others . '. . '. .'. . '. . '. . '. . '. . We have suitable plates for every National Fraternity FRATE RNITY STATIONARY Special prices to Fraternities and Class Committees Complete Facilities for turning out College Publications. Before order- ing elsewhere compare Samples and Prices . '. . '. . '. 1108 Chestnut St., Philadelphia, Pa. RENWICKSI4 The CoIlegian's RESTAURANT Nassau Inn and Rathskeller LLPRINCETON, N. I. AT HOME OR ABROAD THE FIRST NATIUNAL BANK UP PRINUBTUN is prepared to serve you in a satisfactory manner Lellees qf Cffeelil and Tffcwelleffs' Cheques Issued Available lhe World Ovfeff. ALBERT S. LEIGH, Pres't WILLIAM LIBREY, Vice-Pres't DAVID M. FLYNN, Cashier Edw. C. Kopp BICYCLES AND PHOTO SUPPLIES 54 Nassau Street, Princeton, N. J. Amateur Developing and Printing


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