Princeton University - Nassau Herald Yearbook (Princeton, NJ)
- Class of 1909
Page 1 of 125
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 125 of the 1909 volume:
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V , 7 fwm... Mari' QWL--qi TI-IE NASSAU HERALD OAF THE CLASS O1-71909 PRINCETON UNIVERSITY VGLUIVIE XLV EDITORS J c B N J B J c o 1-1 L D N .1 J G P CLASS DAY JUNE FIFTEENTI-I IVICIVIIX 111111, .1 11112111 R7 1,1 11 01,3411 1 11 1 1 r L. .1 111-1 1,1 .. f ' '11 '111 V '11 1 11i7111f'1111, 1 'QL1 '1 ' Q1 ' PM-1-11.1 1 1 1 1 1 ' .r-1Y.'. 1 1 ' - .,- E'1EW'W1' ' ' 1152111 1' 1- N ':1. 1 ' W.. 1 1 1 1-11111 ' Y 1111.2 ' 411,11 .1 11111. 151 1 1' pm 11 111, 1 111 ' ll 11 ' . Q' 'fx -.1 . i1g11 13:5 1111 1 -UW'-f-Q-1 - - 11 11'-1 '13 ' T1 1,11 X 1-51' - -'fl 5 11 .5.,,, 1 .1 . 11111: .1 Tl-3' 1'111l11-'- Q 1 1 -7 I I ,1I:1,1511, 5311-1-11 1' 1 1 1 - 1'-1-1.1 -g .1'11' 1 ' '11 Q- Y11., 1 51,1-. 1 ' 1 .11 7. -1 1 1 X .Q I-5 11..1l'. ' ' ' 1'-1 11'1111 1 'lf 1 .. 3111'- 1.f- '1i,.1- 1. 11 ' 111 , 11 1111115 1. fPifinQ55g i,M..1,t?d'1'7?521' 1 11, . ' if 111 1- -.911fzU1f'1'1f:'1..11 ' 111141111111 111 vl'.--1-.11 1' 1 V 1verSity1g'v1: .111 ' - - . ' - 1 -GW, .ski 1 1 nn J.. -1:11 'LQE1' 1 'X ' 'jk-M !. 9f !'--1 ' 1 1 11 1. ' 15.11 1.1-1 pn- .1111 I 1 1 '-- 'P11-1111 '111'-g. 1 1 ' 1 '1 '- T-'1:g1 - - .1 1 1 : .1111 1,1 11 1 k . ,Il.l1ft:-Nh . ..1, 1 .11 1 r.f1 1' 1112,-.1','n111 11 1 .1-11 1.1. 1 1231-. 1 . 3 111 Y-.F-Y1 11.5. 111 X X lx ' M11 ' 21 11 1 1 1,111,1- 54?..r1 .1, 11 . N f M ' V . ', 1.11 if ,-5.1-11,'1 1 1 L 1 , 1 21711-111 , .1 1111.1 11-1. 1 - '1'. 'kT't1 1111 :1 r-1.1. -1.1. --.11 1 T-'111 - 1 . 1 , 15,117-wt -11-1, , 11.11 1 1 13'51L j,m'1. V 1??1'.E' ' . V321 '!'Fl 1'f 1 -1 My 1 1 Imn.. 1 'sf ' - , ' I. af 511 1. 1 1 1 1 1. i 1.11 1 1 1.1-11.11,-11 . N11 W 1 '11 1 1 ,11 M X ia Yi 41'A'1- 1 11, 1 11,2 11 1 A111-1 , M114 I 1, N 1 j,.1. 'T' -111. 1 T145 1' 1 ' 111, , ' ' .r'. '1 . . .ww ' ' . , 1 ' ,Qgflj-.-1. 1111 '11 1 1 E71 111.11-1.7 ' 11 A w W , ,f 1- 1 1 1 VZ 1' 11 ' ,A . 1 1 J. ' W' :A 1 1 ' .fi Z1'!9 111 1 1 N11'-1',111,1 1 1- 1 L -Ulf L ' 11 1- ' 1 1 ' ' 11.2 ., 1. J '. , 111111111- - 1.11 . 1 -.3 1 '11'1'11 1' 11 1 1 1 ,1..!,11 11. 3.,., 1 A A. 11 W 15' 1 V 'qIwr'4'f'1fFb1AN1 X ' 1 1 . M . ' 1 ' 1 :111 ,.,a' 112- 1111 111. 1141, - -1 . 1 -111.11 .1g , '1 A J-111.-2211411-.111 1 1 1, 1? 1? 1 ' 1. .1 1 .1 1 :-'- 1i'1 111111, 11 1-12, x ' 1 1j'11, 1-.11-PF 114- rf'f1. ,I 1 1 P161 '1 1-' 1. 1' - ' Z - 1'1- ' -'111'- .'1.,-7:1111 1' 1' .1:11:1.:,,-3' 1 A17-'R'-,.11 11 11.11. 1 1 1 Salutamus ifor four sbort years v0e've striven bere 'lmiost scenes we'll ne'er forget, Strong in the strengtb of olo massau 'tLil1e'Il ftgbt our battles get. Bo with sweet memories of past oeeos wut place we now' resign, 'ENC oeoicate tbis treasureo book Th' praise of 1hineteen:nine. I Class Appomtments EDWARD ALOYSIUS DILLON .................................. President NEWTON RUSSELL CASS. ...... ........ V ice-President JOSHUA COOLEY BRUSH ..... ................. S ecretary .....Ma DAVID OSBORNE MEESE ...... NORMAN ARMOUR . ........ HORATIO WHITRIDGE TURNER.. . . . . . . . . . . NORMAN FRANCIS CARROLL.. NATHANIEL EWING, JR ..... HUGH CHAPLIN ............ FRANK CHARLES LAUBACH.. WHERED JOHN FUNK ....... .....ClassOf ster Of Ceremonies Class Prophet .Class Historian . . ..... Presentation Orator Ivy Orator Class Orator I876 Prize Debater ........Class Poet FRANK LOUGHRAN CUNNINGHAM ........ Washington's Birthday Orator Class Day Committee. N. ARMOUR W. J. HALLIMOND I. C. BEAM E. C. KELLEY A. E. BOOTH A. A. LITTLE B. I. CARR I. D. MACDONALD H. CHAPLIN N. S. MACKIE C. S. COXE D. O. MEESE H. L. Down H. F. OSBORN N. EWING, JR. W. N. OTTINGER I. GAY I. W. SURBRUG, IR. T. I. GILLESPIE, IR. C. VEZIN, IR. Class Memorial Committee N. ARMOUR E. M. DODD J. L. BREESE, JR I. R. MAURY H. F. OSBORN Nassau Herald Committee I. C. BEAM H. L. Down B. J. CARR I. GAY Class Ode Committee E. G. BOTHWELL W. I. FUNK J. I. SCULL Class Album Committee W. M. PRIZER A. H. SAMUELS I. W. SURBRUG, IR. Cap and Gown Committee I. L. CHAPMAN ' A. A. LITTLE N. B. MCWILLIAMS Washington's Birthday Oration FRANK LOUGHRAN CUNNINGHAM The truth, the whole truth and nothing but the truth- except a few teeney weeney white lies. Ladies and Gentlemen and so forth down to Senior-P-radeless Seniors, good morning! I beg to call your attention to the fact that this is not an oration, it is an invective. It is an educational invective. I observe that Family is present-the object of this invective is to put Family wise. The good we do here at college lives after us, goes home with us, and Mother and Father and all the dear Brothers and Sisters hear about us, but our little fads and foibles are in- terred in the books of the Discipline Committee and our risque posters and art nouveau bric-a-brac are dedicated to Sport Moore. And so when students have come to me and said, See here, please donit tell this and that story on me 5 I am going to have a girl down, I have simply replied, I am glad. It is better she should know at once. And this brings us to Laurie Dowd, who as we all ought to know by now is I-Iugh Chaplin's roommate. You'd never believe it of Laurie with that cherubic countenance of his, but it's true! On the way down from New York the other evening Laurie gave an excellent object lesson on How to Enlarge One's Acquaintance without Introduction. There was a very nice looking girl traveling alone. Laurie walked straight down the aisle, put a freshman out of the seat next her and sat down himself. Then he went through the regular formula, I-Iaven't I met you before somewhere? Your face seems so familiar, etc. When the train reached Princeton Junction Laurie was shedding a few real tears and hoping that if she ever came to Princeton she would let him know, so that he could meet her 5 The N assau H erald at the station, show her the campus, tell her which was really Whig and which was really Clio, and give her a ticket for the 'Gym. Meet. Now what do you think of that? Bill Leeper Went to Trenton one evening-he really did- and in that town ran across Doc Boice, Kid Fox, Doc Huddleson, Dutch,' Knauer, and several others holding an '09 reunion. 'fDoc invited everyone to step up and have a little something. Some of the students took beer, some Scotch. At last it came to Bill. Well, Bill, What's it to be PM Ale Ale PM Yes, ale. But what kind PU Ginger Ralph Gamble had heard the old saying, Love me, love my dog. On October 19th he decided that it was about time he had begun to love the dog. So he Wrote to her and said, Dear Miss So-and-so, will you loan me your dog. I Want to learn to love it dearly. Miss So-and-so wrote back, Dear Mr. Gamble, I am sending you Brindle Beauty on the 6.15 train. Take good care of him and don? let him get his feet Wet. So Brindle Beauty arrived. Ralph tried to pretend to the student world that it was his dog. But of course no one believed him. It was a good dog and must have cost at least 3 5 cents. He took it to his room and the smoke almost killed it. He took it to Senior lectures and bored it to death, and then When he took it to his club he was forced to feed it in the cellar and the only food he could think of suitable for a dog Was Shredded Wheat Biscuit. Ralph was burnt IO cents for these. He soon decided that love was entirely too expensive a passion, so one morning bright and early back goes Brindle Beauty to Miss So-and-so. But Ralph was clever. He had taught that dog tricks! So that now when Miss So-and-so looks out the Window at the stars over the clustering roofs of Port Deposit and wonders if Tommy What's-his-name is going to take her to the next prom., 6 Washingtovfs Birthday Oration etc., etc., etc., with never a thought of Gamble, up from the front yard floats the voice of Brindle Beauty: R-R-Ralph, R-R-Ralph, R-R-Ralph. I have a good story on one of the Dodge twins, but I can't tell it because I don't know which one it's on. You see, coming in fresh-sophomore, I've only had three years to discover the difference between them. I believe the record time for this discovery is four years, tive days. Ferdie Mayer is one of the most dapper dressers we have. He comes about as near being the glass of fashion and the mould of form as anyone amongst us. In freshman year '-'Ferdie used to have his washing done by a private individual yclept Mrs. Iimpson. One Thursday Mrs. Iimpson brought Ferdie's wash and methodical Ferdie immediately went over it, checking off the pieces. Mrs. Iiinpson hadn't left the house before Ferdie discovered something missing. ' Oh, Mrs. Iimpson, Mrs. Iimpson, there's two pairs of my silk socks missing. Everything you sent came back! called Mrs. Iimpson. You know you never did have such a hell of a lot of silk socks, Mr. Mayer! Have you ever heard of Nat Ewing? Have you ever heard of-the Hunt Club? Well, when you hear of one you hear of the other. Nat divides all his time into two parts-he is always either hunting debates or debating hunts. On re- turning from his last hunt with the Dashaway Country Club, when asked to tell us all about it Nat averred that the only hunter he had seen all day was a picture of one on a bottle. Under the picture of the Hunter was written the word Rye, and-well, that day's hunt was done. A rather interesting anecdote is told of Herb Morrow. While playing pool one evening some one said, Spot the six- teen ball, Herb 1 Herb walked all around the table, picked up every ball and then said, Where is the sixteen ball F I told this story to Dick Hartshorne, and he said, Well, where was the sixteen ball, in one of the pockets ? 7 The N assaa H erald For the benefit of those present who do not play pool I will add that in the game of pool only fifteen balls are used. lt is a very simple game. You take a stick and poke the balls into the pockets-however, this is not exposition, it is an expose. Bill Meese had a big trip to Cornell last year. He went up on Friday night so that he'd be sure to be there for the football game on Saturday. On Saturday morning he called on a girl and became so engrossed in a discussion of co-educa- tion that it was not until 5 p. m. that Bill guessed he'd be going to the game. After Bill had departed Mamma, who had heard the last remark, asked Daughter if she thought Mr. Meese ever indulged ? Mamma should have been with Bill that night at the Savage Club Smoker. Bill's order for drinks corresponded closely to the color scheme of the spectrum. Cn the way from the smoker he lost his dress suit case, got into the wrong fraternity house and had to return to New York next morning in evening clothes. En route, ap lady, seeing the gleaming bosom of the shirt front, said: Waiter, can you tell me where the dining car is located ? Bill rose to the occasion. Madam, the cars on this line never eat. This brings us-I hope you are following the logical se- quence-to those who are about to leave the ranks of Bache- lors to join the Order of Benedicts. It is interesting to notice how love does affect different people. Now, you can always tell just where the object of jack Surbrug's affection is loca- ted by his eyes. If he comes along with them focused on a point fifty miles away, you know the lady is in New York, if they're focused on the horizon you know it's Palm Beach, while if there is a wrinkle between the eyes, you know he hasn't had a letter in two days. But when Aubrey Bunting doesn't get his daily letter he just can't eat, while on the other hand if such fate befall Har- old Medina, he takes double portions of everything. I almost forgot. This summer Harold and Miss 1 used to sit up on the deck of I-Iaroldls launch while Harold's small 8 Waslimgtonk Birthday Omtion brother sat below in the cabin and ran the launch. Brother had strict injunctions never to come up on deck before an- nouncing his ascent by the ringing of a bell. I wonder why. Eli Ogden dropped into a room full of seniors a couple of weeks ago, Anybody want a syllabus in history F No, Nop, No, Not to-night, um umf' etc. What's the matter, fellers ? said Eli, didn't write it!', Johnnie Scull is famous for his well known facial re- semblance to a member of the Faculty. Last Fall a freshman actually came up to him and said, Oh, Professor, will you please give me the Latin assignment for Monday ? Johnnie Scull's room looks like the office of the Editor of Town Topics with the-girls-all-call-me-Otto Sprague playing the part of the lady typewriter. Every few minutes there is a knock upon the door and the latest scandal of the Campus comes through the letter slot, Jimmie Blank and Billy Dash were just seen walking across the Campus! What can they be hunching ? says John, there must be a deal on. For why should they walk together if there weren't. Who ever walks together unless there's a deal on? I never do. Mercy, Gtto, make some tea. I must keep my nerves up ! It all happened in Newark, N. J., by the shores of the gleam- ing Passaic. Norman Carroll thought he had at last discov- ered his I-deal. Back and forth for months went the billets- doux. I-Iere's a specimen of the correspondence: Dear i I cannot tell you how I love you. Yet if I do not tell you how I love you, how will you ever know how I love you. Please answer in your next. Yours without a struggle, u NORMAN. For one year Norman kept the Horists and confectioners open on Broad Street and then-curses!-the villain entered. I-Ie was fifty-eight years old, and patted Norman on the head when the lady introduced them. I-Ie began to put in a strong bid for the maiden, and Norman being in Princeton most of the time was at a disadvantage, having to compete at a distance 9 The Nassau H erald of forty-seven miles. And one day the Newark Sunday Call announced the marriage of the lady to the antique-and Love's young dream was shattered. Alas! Never rnind, Nor- man. just wait until you're fifty-eight. josh Brush has also had his little heart throbs. Every- thing was coming along nicely until last year, when the lady suddenly changed her mind and married the other man. Josh received a picture postal from her during the honey- moon. It read: Dear josh: Are having a fine time. Wish you were with us. It is an awful bore for Philip, to have to see that the bags are checked. W'e now approach Frank Keen, of the captivating blue eyes. Frank decided one day in December that he would like to go to New York-but it happened to be raining and he didnlt want to get wet. Suddenly an idea struck him. He went out into the hall and called over the banisters to the-he called to the-why, he called to the janitress. Ch, Kitty-I mean Mrs. Stevenson ?', Yiss, Mr. Keen. Have you got an umbrella you could loan me ? Yiss, sir. So Frank gave her three cents, took the umbrella, went to the city, and-lost it! But on his return to Princeton, having lost the umbrella, of course he couldn't return it-so he bought Mrs. Stevenson a pair of rubbers. Jack McDonald is a C.E. He doesn't get much chance for general culture of the brain in his curriculum so he tries to get some general knowledge by reading Current Events, the Literary Digest, the headlines of the New York Evening Journal, and questioning A.B. students. The other day he looked up from his Mechanics, and quite unexpectedly, said to his room-mate: Say, Squire, who's Pope now P Who's Pope? Why Pius X, of course. Well, who's this Pope Toledo I hear people talking about ? Rip Ropes heard the last rendition of Wagner's opera, Parsifal, in New York. Rip didn't learn much about the IO Washingt01t's Birthday Omtion opera, but he knows all about the girl who sat next to him. You know the performance of Parsifal takes five hours, Rip says: I started to bicker with her right after the opening chorus. She dropped her opera glasses and I heard them drop, and so I picked them up and said, Are these your opera glasses, and she said, Yes That was right after the open- ing chorus, and as the opera lasts five hours, Rip had four hours and Hfty minutes to make good. And he did! I tell you it's very few of us who can compete with Wagner. While at the Northfield Conference with the Philadelphian Society this summer, Bill Ottinger went out on the river with another fellow in a sailboat. Quite suddenly the sky darkened, a squall came up, the waves dashed higher and higher, and the boat rocked fearfully. Bill, said the other fellow tragically, if this keeps up, she's going over. Neither of us can swim. Bill, in a few min- utes, both of us will be in Heaven. Bill, at the tiller, said, God forbid. Have you ever had tea at Freddie Stohlman's? Well, Fred- die gives the flossiest teas in college. It is raining steadily outside. It is four o'clock. VVe knock at the door of 64 Blair: Why, come in, wonlt you. Let me take your slicker . . . . Do step into the study. Fearfully wet outside, isn't it PU The study is done in neutral tints of green, and dec- orated with high art pictures. There is a very dim religious light furnished by an antique Roman lamp. I-Iow will you have your tea? Lemon or cream-Sh I-a little cognac P-two lumps ?-Will you light your cigarette at the lamp please-it is a custom we have here. At this point Harry Black is discovered through the gloom vigorously engaged in puffing on an unlighted cigarette. Fred- die sits down and says, Well, I-Iarry, have you been reading any 'Oscar Wilde' lately F Yes, F reddieg I have ust finished Lady Windimereis Fan. f'And how did you like it, I-Iarry P Well, I'll tell you Freddie. It was clever, scintillating, bril- liant, marvellously witty and perfectly ridiculous! II The N assaa H erald At this point you-but then it is really awfully good tea. Speaking of Freddie Stohlrnan reminds me of his room- mate, Al Little. Al was manager of the basketball team this winter. One night the team played a game in Baltimore. Al disappeared soon after. The team went to a hotel and went to bed. The fellows came down in the morning for breakfast. The clerk came up, and addressing Bill Meese- said, Breakfast? Breakfast P Why Mr. Little came in late last night and ordered breakfast for I o'clock. And the team was scheduled to take the 9.1 5!l! It took A1 three days to catch up. W. Randolph Sides, otherwise known as Randy, made an awful social blunder last summer. I-Ie was playing bridge on the veranda of the hotel with three girls. The cards had just been dealt. The dealing lady said, I pass. Randy's mind had been wandering back to the days of his sophomore year in University I-Iall. In a fit of abstraction he picked up his hand. The first thing he saw was three kings. I open for iive, ' said Randy. In a heart-to-heart talk not long ago Spencer Phraner was quoted as having said, You know, I really like sarsaparilla better than ginger ale, but when I am out with the fellows I always take ginger ale because it looks so much more like beer. Ernest Wyckoff is one of our rural representatives. I-Ie hails from Stroudsburg, Pa., and is proud of it. When Ernest first came to Princeton he went to the Nassau Inn for lunch. A waiter came up and handed him a bill of fare. Ernest said, What's this. The waiter said, A bill of faref' Ernest looked puzzled for a while. I-Ie looked at the back' of the paper, the front of the paper, the edges of the paper, then he put his hand in his pocket and asked resignedly, Well, how much is it ? I-Iere is a little narrative of Jack Farr. A great many of us don't know lack, but we hope to have the pleasure of' an introduction before june. You'd never believe to look at Jack to-day that this could have happened in Freshman. year, but it did. I2 Washmgtonfs Birthday Ovation Hjacku had a bid to a high-noon wedding. When he sud- denly thought of it at 8 a. m. on the morning of the marital festivities, he remembered that he didn't have a frock coat. He rushed up to the first student he met and cried: Have to go-Wedding-Dear-Girl-Friend Mine. Got-a-frock-coat- you-can-lend-me ? Yes, jack, there's one up in the closet of my room. jack rushed up, but instead of getting a frock coat he got an overcoat with silk lapels-and in this he went to the wedding. Didn't have a good time? Why, he never knew the difference until the bride's mother said, Aren't you rather warm in that overcoat, Mr. Farr ?,' Waring Dawbarn is one of the fastest men we have-that is in the way of dashes. He is a past master in the art of fuss- ing, but he makes a faux pas every now and then with the best of us. The other night, while making a call, the young lady said, HO, Mr. Dawbarn, won't you smoke ? Waring felt his pockets dubiously, and then, quite unconsciously dropping into the vernacular, said, Got the makins ? Walter G. Dunlop, more endearingly known as Doggie, hails from Washington, D. C. He runs down there once or twice a week just to keep his linger on the pulse of nations. He can tell you off hand just what the Queen of Sweden thinks of Al- exander of Bulgaria, and why the Duke of Marlborough wasn't invited to Edward VH's last tea. Entre nous, Walter thinks he would make an awfully good king himself. After the Tri- angle Club performance in Orange last year, Walter was in- vited to spend the night in New York. His host, on bidding him good night said, just leave your shoes outside the door. james will see that they are polished. The next morning Walter arose and looked outside the door-no shoes. He waited and waited and then-he waited. No shoes. Downstairs the host was waiting breakfast, upstairs Walter sat on the edge of the bed and waited for the shoes. At length james remembering the shoes, brought them up. What Wal- ter said to James has been expurgated. When Doggie,' at last appeared in the dining-room at II.3O, not wishing to cast I3 The Nassau H erald reflections upon his host's butler, he made no explanations. It was too bad he didn't, however, for the hostess thinks to this day that Walter had been sleeping off a little-er-hang- over, which is a pity, for as we all know, Doggie never in- dulges in anything stronger than pineapple sundaes. Pop Whaley arrived in town on September 12th. Some one seeing him on the campus said, Hello, Pop! what are you back for-conditions ? Pop took him all in commiseratingly from head to foot, then he said, Conditions? Hell! Pm here for football! The saying used to be If you see it in the Sun it's so. Since Art Samuels joined the Editorial Staff, however, the dictum has changed. It reads at present, lf you see it in the Sun it probably isn't so. Here is an excerpt from his contribution to that paper after the fire on Witherspoon Street. The contlagration which now threatened Patton Hall, the residence of the well-known com- poser, Mr. Arthur H. Samuels, aroused the collegiate spirit of the students. A bucket chain was started from Patton Hall to Loch Carnegie. Buckets were dipped in the water, filled and passed along the line with telling effect and-as a result of the heroic efforts of the students-this morning Patton Hall stands intact, but there is not a drop of water left in the lake. One night last year, while touring with the Triangle Club, Doc Smith was lost-he won't say how-in a Western town. He walked and walked and walked, but couldn't seem to get anywhere. At 3 a. m. he wandered into the back yard of a plumber shop. There were several tubs lying about. Doc climbed into one, pulled another over him and fell asleep. When the curious plumber cautiously lifted the top tub at 9 and let in the sunlight Doc waved a hand limply in the air and said simply, Go away, go away, I am a perfectly contented oyster and you are just horse-radish trying to annoy me V' Bill Zinsser was invited to dine at a very fashionable resi- dence he had never before visited. He had met Daughter, however, and wanted to make a strong impression on Father. When Bill's machine drew up before the house, a man in I4 Washingtonis Birthday Ovation evening clothes hurried down the steps and opened the door of the car. Bill jumped out, grasped the man by the hand in a vice-like grip. I-Iow do you do, Mr. Brickmaker. I'm mighty glad to know you. Your daughter and I are quite chummy- At this point the man in evening clothes interposed, Pardon me, sir, but I am the butler. Hugh Chaplin is one of the most-anxious-to-please-men in collegef In freshman year some sophomores passing I-Iugh's rooms shouted Lights out. I-Iugh seized his brand new incandescent and placed it out on the Ere escape! Wuz , Howard stroked on the victorious Senior eight this fall. This time last year he didn't know quite as much about rowing as he does now. One day while the crew was at work the coach on the bank picked up his megaphone and shouted, Number 4, are you rowing backward or forward ? One seldom thinks of Judge,' Cooper, Mrs Cupper of the Triangle Club, as an athlete, but he is. A student said to Judge one day. Judge, how did you come to make the Gym team? You're not very strong, are you ? Judge said, My muscles may be small, but they are supple-very supplef' Two birds of the same intellectual feather as Judge are Johnnie Buchanan and Mort Fry. I overheard a trian- gular debate between the three not long ago. The question was, Resolved that the Peripatetic Tendency of the Primate was not characteristic of the Stone Age. ' When Judge in his argument at last erred in saying that the Primate of the Stone age was shortwaisted, Johnnie and Mort immediately showed the fallacy of -the undistributed middle. Judge was forced to admit he was wrong. This is the only historical record of JudgeH ever admitting that he was wrong. You all heard what Eddie Dillon said when he introduced me? Well, here's where I have the comeback. Fellows, I've got a peach on Ed ! Oh, it's a wonder. Now listen-you see it was this way . . . oh, I forgot . . . I guess we'1l 15 The Nassau Herald let Ed down easy .... I guess we won't tell any stories on Eddie Dillon this morning. Cl70ice from galleryj Why not ? QS1mgj Because he's married now! 16 Class Uration HUGH CHAPLIN. This is a period not to be duplicated in all our future living. Probably never again will there be so definite a dividing line be- tween any epochs of our lives. We entered this place boys. We leave it men. ' At this important juncture, it is right that we repair for a few moments to this place of quiet to reckon with the past and forecast the future. For only by a thoughtful considera- tion of the four years now ending shall we be able to realize their true significance and relation to the life which is to de- velop. ' We cannot enter properly upon the labors of maturity until we have gained a thorough understanding of ourselves, our purposes in the World and the relation of this completed prep- aration to these purposes. A survey of the past four years will impress us with the fact that, in spite of a nearly similar curriculum, college men learn very differently, each according to his own peculiar nature. They learn as they see and their points of View are widely variant, which is to be expected. But a closer scrutiny will disclose, among these differences, experiences which all of us must have had in common. These four years have indeed been barren if they have not been the means of individual development, self-realization and the at- tainment of self-control, self-government. Each in his own way, has widened his horizon through acquaintance with dif- ferent kinds of people, new modes of living and the wealth of ancient knowledge. New interests and sympathies have been awakened, so that now, having outgrown the narrow con- lines of youth, We End ourselves broadening into full manhood. Who here does not remember the thrill with which he first realized himself a responsible man, in Whom confidence and I7 The Nassau Herald self-reliance had replaced timidity and irresolutiong Who felt himself suddenly possessed of the power of self-control? We pass through the same experience as Mr. Kipling's Ship That Found Itself. And our satisfaction at the final discovery is similarly complete. As we are now about to leave this place of common interests for a world of varied opportunities, We will find our paths continually diverging. The different conditions of life and dif- ferent occupations make this unavoidable. But even there We shall find strong ties binding us togetherg and strongest of them all will be our common duty to our country as citizens. A prominent speaker recently addressing a Princeton audience said, No man can be a Christian who does not take an interest and a part in politics. This may seem an extreme statement of the-case, but at least we can say that no one is a truly educated man who does not take an interest in politics and cares so little for the Welfare of his country as to be unwilling to bear his share in its government. We have already had our first lesson in citizenship, for one of its fundamental requirements is subordination of personal in- terests to the common good, and this principle is firmly grounded in the very life of this University. It is a legacy which Princeton in particular bequeaths to its graduates. But the important point for us to realize is general, not par- ticular. It is that the nation has a right to expect more from its college men, as a Whole, than it can from those who have not had such advantages, and that which it will expect most is a greater enlightenment of mind-doing many of the same things which uneducated men do but doing them 'twith a dif- ference. Enlightenment means the consideration of ques- tions in the large. It should be the duty of every educated man not to bound his View of political problems in space by provincialism and in time by the mere present. I-Ie should see that all political actions concern the nation at large, both now and for future generations. He has no right to live in poli- tics as from hand to mouth, or as after us the deluge. En- lightenment means the application of the principles found in the 18 Class Poem WILFRED J. FUNK The campus now lies clad in green About us, and is sweet with spring, And our sober senses bring A softened beauty to the scene. The sultry, slow-winged days of June Are fragrant with the scent of flowers: One by one the golden hours Are stealing from us, all too soon. Arm in arm the seniors pass Along the walks beneath the trees, And feel the blessing of the breeze, And speak of Princeton and their class. Like some fair maid each blue-eyed day Comes bearing gifts to us again And gracious memories, and then With sweet reluctance steals away. The twilight fills a heart with ease, The quiet elms content the mindg ' Strange messages steal down the wind And whispered answers stir the trees. The soft-blown airs of Fancy stir Among old days-the God-sent throng Of days-the dreams-the vagrant song- The memories time cannot blur. Our careless, curious eyes have scanned The giant ruins of the past, And now, with beating hearts, at last, Within the mighty shop we stand. The massive, quarried shafts rough-hewed By that titanic century Now gone, are given to us that we May raise a citadel to God. 20 Class Poem O gracious mother grant that we May gain the simple faith again And strength, that blessed the fishermen Below the hills of Galilee. We turn to leave, and feel the thrill Of all the life that lies before, The sun-lit lands we may explore, The youth, the health, the strength, the will We turn to leave, our feet are set In parting ways-our hearts confess That all their joy and eagerness Are mingled in one pure regret. Be near us, Alma Mater, when We breast the fight where strength is born, And by thy memory, may we scorn To yield, but rise and strive again. Be near us when the lights are grown Dim, and tremble in each gust, And would go out-then give the trust That makes Death proud to claim his own. The ship in the ofling sets her sails, The snow-white drift of canvas fills, The dark hull swings and keels and veers And the shouts of our comrades fill our ears, In the early dawn Of a misty morn As we drive for the open sea. Behind-the following harbor swell, The twinkling lights, a distant bell, Beyond-the great, grey, buffeting sea, And the broken gleams of a star. 21 Senior Class Omtion history of the human race, which only the educated man can properly perceive. Dr. Lyman Abbott has said that a citizen must know lan- guages, that he may converse with men about himg life, that he may understand meng literature, that he may know the thoughts of the men of the pastg and especially that he must know and understand the laws that govern society. But he also said that education must train men not only to know but to will, to purpose, and to pursue as well. For four years we have been learning to know and have not infrequently asked ourselves why we havepbeen learning so much that seemed re- mote from the practical business of buying and selling, of min- ing and engineering, of practicing law and medicine. The an- swer to this question will be found in the application which we make of knowledge to things wider than our personal and private interestsg to the affairs of the nation and humanity. Henceforth we are to will, to purpose, and to pursue as well as to know. And it is not more activity in the administration of the gov- ernment that the nation just at present needs, but rather a more intelligent direction of this activity. Here the college graduate will ind his obligations. After all it is not so hard to die for one's country-anyone can do that,-a college man no bet- ter than another. It is hard to find men who will and are able to live for their countryg to carry on its government wisely and well. The nation must look to the college graduates for such men. We have received exceptional advantages, and must expect to carry exceptional responsibilities. No liner illustration can we give of our deep devotion to our Alma Mater than to strive courageously to fill our place in the world wisely and as would become Princeton men. We cannot to-day know what we have got from 'this place. It is only in the future that the true sig- nificance of the past four years may be seen. T9 Ivy Oration NATHANIEL EWING, JR. Friends and Fellow Classmates: The planting of the Class Ivy is merely symbolical of the fact that we are gladdened in the brightness of our Alma Mater's glory. It stands as a memorial of a class which has honestly done its best and which will endeavor to continue to do its best to the honor and glory of its Alma Mater. The traditions of Princeton we have long cherished 3 her ideals we have always maintained to the best of our abilityg and her president we honor and revere as a man whose first and only thought is the welfare of Princeton, and who is a representative of the highest type of enlightened patriotic citizen. H Amid these scenes we love so well, we have been afforded a training which is the best any American University can give. But as the time comes for departing on our several ways, we must realize that this education is as nothing unless we use what has been given us for the benefit of our fellow men. The fundamental idea of education is to train men for citizenship. At the present time we are living under a legal regime, and every question becomes in its last analysis a political one. As college bred men there are two fundamental things to which we must always adhere: the first is our responsibilityg the second our duty. Proportionally speaking, the number of col- lege men is few, and it is to the college man that the masses are looking for guidance and light in the great public questions of the day. We stand to-day on the threshold of opportunity, and our op- portunities are vast and varied. In our four years at Prince- ton we have been enabled to look beyond the hills of mater- ialism down over the valley where things are worth while from an altruistic point of view. There is a cry of reform to-day 22 I 'oy Omtion by which we must not be deceived. We should not allow our- selves to become subject to the demagogue who is swayed by every passing wind. We must be careful in a period of such agitation, as that through. which we are passing, that we sharp- ly distinguish between reform for progression, and reform for reform's sake. Probably the greatest force with which we have to deal is public opinion, and we, in our station of life, are most influen- tial in the formation of public opinion. Upon our shoulders must rest the burdens of the commonwealth. In this age, when a man's influence may be so great, both through the power of personal contact and through the press, it behooves us, that what influence We exert, shall be for the best. In as much as we are so influential in the formation of public opin- ion, which is the greatest force of all in the solution of the problems which confront us, it is our paramount obligation that we should see to it that public opinion be formed upon sound and rational lines. Doubtless we shall find the tasks of the larger world, into which we are soon to step, harder and more exacting, and times will come when what little confidence we have acquired will seem to fade away into the dim distance. It is easy for a man to iight for his ideals when the trumpets of victory are sounding in his ears, but it is a test of true manhood when we carry a point although all forces seem to be opposed. Our duty, not only as Princeton men, but as men trained to the high- est efiiciency is that we should put in practice what we have ob- tained through our experience for the betterment of mankind. There is a cry to-day for men who have an intelligent under- standing of values as well as of great public questions, and in- telligence is the key to success. This duty we owe not only to ourselves and to our Alma Mater, but to our country. Those of us who may enter the public service in some capac- ity or other, must rise above the average man of the day and not consider only the localities but look beyond and take to heart the welfare of our country as a whole. Those of us who will be engaged in business or professions other than those bor- dering on the public service must realize that if we take no ac- 23 The Nassau H erald tive part in the things of the day we can at least be good citi- zens. It must be remembered that the glory of every University as well as of Princeton is reflected in the men which she turns out. It is our privilege as well as our duty to take such a stand in the work of the larger world into which we are about to go and do our part of that world's work in such a way that the glory of our Alma Mater shall never be dimmed. For a man to lose himself in the singleness of his purpose is the best way in which he can become most efficient in furthering a just cause and in rendering a service to others. It is indeed with sadness that in a few more hours we must leave these scenes We love so well and part from the men with whom we have been associated so closely in the past four years. Now that we have come to the parting of the ways, and as to- day we are a unit both in body and spirit and to-morrow we shall be a unit only in spirit, may God in His infinite power grant that we may fill our responsibility and realize our duty and return in part the honor and glory with which our Alma Mater has so beneficently bestowed upon us. 24 CLASS DAY COMMITTEE 1 , . x Presic1ent's Address EDWARD A. DILLON We can scarcely realize as we are on the point of saying goodbye that four years have come and gone since that Sep- tember night on which we stormed the very place Where We are gathered to-day for the last time. The spirit of that night has been with us during all these years. It has mingled in our work and in our play. It has taught us to love Princeton with unselfish loyalty and unswerving devotion. To-day we feel its potent influence so strongly that we are unable to restrain the feelings and sentiments that go surging through us at the thought of leaving the place We love so much. We realize only too well that when we say goodbye it is good- bye forever. Goodbye to friends who are true, teachers who are kind and pleasantg goodbye to all these fairy scenes where boyhood merged to manhood. For four brief happy years we have been cruising along sunny shores with every advantage of Wind and tide. But now We must go forth into the Wide unknown and seek our fortune in more turbulent seas. But We go forth with the seal of the University indelibly stamped on our charactersg with stout hearts and ready hands, prepared to carry on the duties and sacrifices that Princeton expects of her sons. We are steeled for the fray with the armor of our predecessors. The aggressive fighting spirit of protest for the right that stirred the fathers of this college in the days of seventy-six has settled on this class. The spirit that prompted us to defend and keep inviolate those cherished customs and tradi- tions when threatened by the hands of invadersg the spirit that taught us loyalty for a cause that looked hopelessg that applied the spark of enthusiasm to a team down and out, com- pelling fate to enter the lists and stem the tide of victory. Princeton has taught us all these things, independence, self- 25 The Nassau Herald reliance, undaunted courage. Relying on these teachings, prof- iting by mistakes of the past, we are prepared to meet the sterner responsibilities of the future with confidence and strength. But during the lull of life's battle, while the roll of drum is hushed, let us not forget the debt of gratitude we owe the mother who has fostered and nourished us during all these years. We are proud of her material and intellectual progress, of her wealth and beauty, but prouder still of her ideals, her teachings, proud of her tremendous influence in the building of this nation, in the betterment of mankind. Wise hands are carefully moulding her future destiny, a destiny that will con- tain the characteristics of our highest hopes and desires. If I should prophecy that future, Sydney Carton like of old, I would see Princeton foremost university of the world, leader in the new thought, new culture and new democracy, I see new customs, new traditions framed on the destruction of the old to meet the ,changing tendencies, I see a class of men go forth each year strong in character, in purpose and in intellectg but I see no class go forth as yet more enthusiastic than the present, more proud of its Alma Mater or more loyal to those future aims in which it hopes to share. Unfortunately, the hand of fate has deprived many members of that pleasure. Some of those classmates who cheered from the old gym, who fought with us shoulder to shoulder the night of the rush, are missing to-day, sharing neither our heri- tage nor our feeling of satisfaction. An all-wise Providence has called several to Himself 5 the rest have fallen by the way- side in the race for knowledge and experience. We who have run the good race, who have passed the Greek and Calculus of the curriculum, are now to be rewarded with the University certificate, a token of work well done. When we view that cherished parchment let us dwell for a moment upon the memory of the missing and those who have gone to their reward. Our thoughts will wander to those freshman days when we were all united beneath the shadow of Old Nassau, within the pealing radius of her bell working zealously for Princeton and 1909. 26 N Class Prophecy NORMAN ARMOUR People often make the mistake of assuming that prophesying and lying are synonymous with one another. This mistake undoubtedly arose through the fact that the ,Princetonian weather report is known as a prophecy, instead of which it should be called by Ha- shorter and uglier name. Exactly where the subtle distinction between the two lies, I am not prepared to state, but perhaps I can illustrate it. If, for example, I were to predict that some time in the near future Fat Cauldwell should refuse a mint julep, or Spud Auerbach work himselfpto death, or Hewitt Reynolds die of starvation, that would't be prophesying, it would be lying. It is with mingled feelings, therefore, that I realize I have been delegated to deliberately dissolve the pipe dreams that various ones among the sea of happy faces that I see before me Cto cull a phrase from the Nassau Litj have formed for the future. Sam Shellabarger never wrote a truer line than that which has become the motto of our glorious class: Where ig- norance is bliss, 'tis folly to be wise, or, as Doc Smith has paraphrased it: If a man enjoys being dumb, what in hell's the use of trying to be a smart guy ? I-Iowever, all this is neither here nor there, as Al Little remarked, when he lost his vest in Baltimore on the basketball trip. Our business has to do with the future, not with the past, so, discarding Nash Matthews, let us proceed into the realms to come. Cn one of those hot, sweltering days in the latter part of May, I was strolling down to the Varsity field to watch St. Yves practicing for his Marathon race with Bill McGee, scheduled for July. Cn the way I met Chick Turner, who was bubbling ove-r with the latest piece of college gossip. I-Ie said that Roy Dickinson was to succeed Mr. Bunn as Curator of Grounds 27 The N assau H erald and Buildings. Roy had been chosen partly because of his extensive knowledge of century plants, and also because of his fluency in the lingo of the American Dago. We arrived at the field just in time to see Charlton Henry and Charlie Coxe emerge in running clothes, rejoicing like strong men to run a race. Having tied for the best legs, they had decided to settle the matter once for all. Frank Cunning- ham had been chosen to act as the modern Paris, because of his great sense of humor. He is one of the reputed authors of the Bicker-bird, which at once entitles him to a place in the Who's who among the fun-makers. After some delib- eration Frank presented the golden apple to Charlton, claiming that while Charlie's extremities might give him the advantage in the long run, Charlton's legs enabled him to look down on the rest of mankind, which was too great an advantage to be overlooked. In his disappointed rage, Coxe aimed a huge piece of Peter's chocolate at Cunningham's head, which flew wild and hit me in the eye. I remembered nothing more. I was awakened by a terrible noise right beside me. It sounded like Doc Riddle ordering another round. Lying in the middle of the road I discovered a huge machine, with an enormous pair of wings, that lay flapping like some great disabled bird. My lirst thought was that Eddie Booth had' gone crazy, and, thinking he was an angel, was trying to fly. On examining the creature more closely, I discovered it to be' an aeroplane. Prostrate beneath it, apparently dead to the- world, lay none other than Josh Brush, our honored Secretary. Somewhat brought to my senses by the sight of josh in such a characteristic attitude, I dragged him forth and demanded an explanation. I-Ie looked much older, and there was a grave- expression on his face that we are accustomed to associate with men who take life seriously, like Shorty Plaut and' Tommie Tomlinson. VVith that inborn Egyptian politeness, that never torsook him, Josh invited me to accompany him in a joy ride. Remembering the fatal end of Lieut. Selfridge in Wright's machine only last year, I hesitated, at the same time- explaining why. Where in the name of Earl T. Holsapplee have you been in the last thirty years? ejaculated Josh. 28 Class Prophecy Why, that happened away back in 1908. This is 1938, and I am just starting in on a tour round the world to gather the students together for our 30th reunion. Jump in. Feeling like Bill Ottinger after one of his thirty-hour sleeping sessions, I mounted, and in less time than it takes Les Booker to get from a I2 o'clock to the Nass we were bowling along at 500 .miles an hour. Josh explained that we were still within the city limits of Philadelphia, which accounted for the slow rate of speed. The first thing that caught my eye was a solitary figure seated on the rim of William Penn's hat on top of the City Hall. Gn a closer View it proved to be Wilson McNeely. We gave Mac a hailand asked if he wanted any assistance. I-Ie explained that he was all rightg that Johnny Gay, now Mayor Gay of Philadelphia, had delegated him to keep the lid on the town, and as William Penn was supposed to represent the town, why Mac was doing his best to fullill his orders to the letter. That's alll' We left him lighting a six-round battle with a couple of irate pigeons, knowing full well that it would take more than Mads 150 odd, or rather extraordinary, pounds of avoirdupois to keep the lid on the city of brotherly love as long as Buck Dougherty and Bill Prizer numbered themselves among its illustrious citizens. Happening to look down, we caught sight of Bill going in to his tailor to have a suit tried on 3 or was it the Bellevue? Buck was with him, so it must have been the Bellevue. I-Iastening on we soon saw the topless towers of Fred Ankeney's little town lying far beneath us CTrenton, I meanj. We actually caught sight of the Duke himself, giving his inimitable exhibition of how to miss the last trolley back to Princeton. As we neared New York, a sudden speck appeared on the horizon about the size of a man's hand. At first we thought it must be Shorty Dietrich in his famous representation of a swallow-Shorty never took a drink-but as the speck as- sumed human proportions, we discovered it to be jim Breese in a 1938 B. L. M. aeroplane racer. Jim was Hashily dressed in the awe-inspiring uniform of an officer of the law. The whole thing was so incongruous that we burst out laugh- 29 l The N assaa Herald ing in his face. Breese informed us with an angry flush Qnot a straight flush, Jim-I-Iutchins, I meanj. Breese, I say, informed us that we were under arrest. f'What, Iimf' I cried, you a plain cop. Certainly not, responded Breese, I am an aeroplane cop, which is a great deal higher than a plain cop, and what's more, you'll have to cough up a S100 line. To my surprise, without a murmur, almost with delight, josh produced the sum demanded. I understood, however, when a moment later he whispered, Class Assessment, don't say a word? We were now above what I judged to be the most fashion- able quarter of New York, because we saw directly below us the immaculately dressed figure of Percy Parsons showing a round half dozen of girls a perfectly delightful time. Sud- denly we ran into one of the many advertising kites so much in vogue. This particular kite stated that Messrs. I-Iart, Schaffner and Marx, leading tailors to collech men, begged to announce that their representative, Mr. George Armstrong, was in town with a most unusual display of summer waist- coatings, trouserings, cravattings, shirtings, hosierings and mufti goods ever gathered together on this side of the Atlan- tic. 'Ihe offer was a tempting one, for knowing George's taste, we felt sure that the announcement was no exaggeration. josh was all for going down and seeing it, but just then we came across a small kite which stated that Jack MacDonald was also in town with a pair of boxing gloves, so we decided to keep on. Suddenly the wireless telegraphy machine began to show signs of action CI omitted to mention that the aeroplane was fitted with all the conveniences of a modern hotelj, and josh read off the following message. It was dated Boston and addressed to Pop Peckham, Princeton, N. I.: Come up at once. Am crazy to see you. No signature. Feeling that we had taken an unfair advantage of Pop, we hastened the mes- sage on to its destination and continued our journey. A few moments later, however, we caught the return message, which read: You must be crazy if you want to see him. From this we judged that it never fell into Pop's hands. 30 2 . Class Prophecy Everything was now plane sailing and we struck west- ward. It suddenly occurred to me, on seeing a large Ann- heuser-Busch sign, that I had heard somewhere that Senator Iones was running for Mayor of St. Louis on the prohibition ticket. We decided, being good Prohibitionists ourselves, to go out and lend the Senator a hand or vote, whichever he needed more. On arriving at Missouri's little capital, we had no difficulty in locating the scene of action, for the first sight that met our eyes was Doc Riddle, Grant Thorburn and Jamie Jamison marching lock-step into a large auditorium, singing A Big Night To-night. Within the huge building all was bustle and excitement. Norman Mackie was stationed at the door as bouncer, in which difficult art he had received good training at college. He was having a hard time of it, however, fora band of a thousand suffragettes, headed by Shorty Phil- lips, had stormed the entrance. Shorty immediately com- menced delivering an eloquent address in behalf of the suf- fragettes, beginning We want what the men have got, but his voice was drowned by hoots and hisses. Beyond, standing immovable above the crowd, statuesque and impressive, like Daniel Webster facing the U. S. Senate or Frank Meyers poised for a Yale debate, stood Senator Jones. The same genial smile that we know so well played lightly over his features. Suddenly some one, I couldn't see who it was, but it sounded like Tug Murray, moved that the Senator be unanimously elected. We didn't hear the motion seconded, and certainly the No's had it on the vote, but so great was the personality of the Senator that he walked unaided from the hall acclaimed by all as the successful candidate. One Suffragette remarked as he went past, It was your smile, Senator, that carried the day. t Our next stop was Salt Lake City, where the first familiar figure to greet our eyes was the lithe, sinewy form of Herb Morrow. Poor Herb! He looked as worried as' Dug Ballin after receiving his black hand letter. He explained what a terrible predicament he was in. It seems that two of his wives had died on the same day, and he didn't know which one should occupy the front hearse. Not intending to mix our- 31 The N assau H erald selves up in a domestic feud, We left hurriedly. It was not until some time later that we learned how Herb settled the mat- ter, and the method he chose reliects great credit on his ingenu- ity. I-Ierb. merely passed quietly away and decided the thing by leading the procession himself, leaving the others to fall in as they thought best. In the meantime the aeroplane was reeling off miles by the thousands, sailing across the Pacihc with the same easy motion that Rich Hartshorne coasted into Carnegie Lake, lightly clad, on a wheel, for a quarter. Passing over the sacred city of Lhasa, in Thibet, we saw the Dodges perched on the highest pinnacle of a pagoda, drinking claret lemonade. They informed us that they were the second man ever to have entered the city, having gained an entrance by hook and crook, Bayard by hook and Cleveland by crook, disguised as fakirs. Our speed had now attained such a height that I doubt whether even Frank Cist's Cadillac could have caught us when suddenly the Atlantic loomed into view. On the horizon appeared the strangest craft I have ever seen. As she approached closer We were able to make out Captain Selby at the helm, and with such an old hand in charge, had no fears for the good ship. Newt Cass was standing on deck, munching a hot dog and singing Honey at the same time. Suddenly we heard a shout, Rock ahead l We saw Don Gil- pin and jim Maury throw Tommy Tomlinson overboard, their idea being, I suppose, that as Tommy was too lazy to keep up with the ship, she might slow up for him. All to no avail, however. A moment later there was a grinding crash. The rock proved to be a submerged portion of St. I-Ielena, blown up by Socialist Trimble, to efface all traces of the despot who had died there. As soon as Bill Meese learned this he immed- iately struck up Napoleon,', to Fat Wagner's disgust, this being the only song ever written that Fat couldn't sing the tenor to. Someone suggested waving Pinky I-Ienderson as asig- nal of distress, when it was noticed that his hair had turned white with fright. We wired down to find out if any assistance were needed and the message came back that Iack Farr had established mental-telepathy communication with the Prince- 32 Class Prophecy tonian office, and they had promised to send the dispatch boat, Hugh Chaplinj' to the rescue. With a turn of the helm our craft soared heavenward. Iosh informed me that we were off to the planet Mars to look in on a half dozen of the C.E. Department who had gone up there to dig a canal. As soon as the great planet came in view we were rewarded by a remarkable sight. Gene Kelly, Io. Salis- bury, Rees Scully, Harry Weiss, Ed Baker and Max. Reynolds were seated around a small fire. They had gone up in a balloon which had been insecurely fastened and floated away, leav- ing them stranded. Desperate with hunger they had finally de- cided to eat Ed Baker's dog. Ed pleaded for the dog, even offering himself in its place, but they explained to Ed that, while nothing personal was intended, they preferred the hound. To add to their troubles Harry Weiss had grown so thin that the gravity on Mars which was never powerful, no longer held him down, 'and the rest of the fellows had to take turns holding him. We sailed away, leaving all the food and drink tablets behind that we could spare. One food tablet was equal to a whole beef-steak dinner at the lnn, so they had plenty of provisions to last for some time. In the meantime big things were happening in diplomatic circles. Fred Stohlman and Harry Black had made diplo- macy their life work since leaving college, and after twenty years of faithful service had been appointed Minister and Secretary, respectively, to Guatemala. At the time, this rising little country was fighting a plucky uphill fight against the British Empire. When Fred and Harry arrived to assume their responsibilities, for some reason or other, they were taken for Englishmen and not allowed to land. Fred protested that he wasn't as English as he tried to be, and Harry said that while he sided with England in the present crisis, he would use his influence with the President of the United States to see that the Monroe Doctrine was upheld. Harry's inliuence with the President was too big a thing to be lightly overlooked, so they were permitted to land, provided Stohlmann discarded his john Bull tweeds and Black did away with the monocle which he was wearing at the time. 33 The Nassau H erald Meanwhile we received word that an enormous earthquake had taken place just outside of Newark, a little village up-state, whose chief claim to fame rests in its being the birth-place of that immortal vaudeville artist, Norman Carroll, alias James Hardig of Bluffshire fame. Immediately hastening to the scene of action, we found things in a terrible state. -The en- tire population of Newark had gathered together in a panic- stricken circle about the size of an ordinary Glee Club Concert audience, and were being rendered helpless with laughter by Norman Carroll, who had started in to cheer them up but soon realized that he had carried it a step too far. The poor crea- tures had nothing to eat except a huge fossil which had been thrown up by the earthquake. Prof. John Beam, of the Geological Department of Princeton, who had been immediately informed of the find, had declared it to be a fine specimen of a Duck-billed Dinosaur, and immediately sent for his assis- tant, Dr. Surbrug, to help him cart the specimen away. With the last hope of food having disappeared, the inhabitants of Newark werelbeginning to despair when Harry Osborn hap- pened to blow into town on his way for a Week's end hunting at Plainfield. He took the situation in at a glance, organized an Earthquake Commons and inside of twenty minutes had the thing working on a paying basis. He made the fundamental mistake, however, of assuming that the inhabitants of Newark could eat what they feed to the Freshmen. The people began dying off rapidly, and inside of two days the total number of deaths from indigestion was twice aslarge as that from the earthquake, while the remnant were praying for another earth- quake to relieve them from their sufferings. Not being able to stand the sight any longer we passed on. Being now in the vicinity of Princeton, we began keeping our eyes open for the beautiful new chapel which had been erected in memory of the late Nathaniel Ewing, President of the Uni- versity, who had died of overwork trying to discover a new method of raising the scholarship without decreasing the num- ber of students. Nothing was to be seen, however, on account of a heavy fog, which was as damp as a Senior smoker at the Inn. Suddenly we heard a bell tolling. Steering for it, a ' 34 Class Prophecy tower loomed up out of the mist. There was a sudden crash. Josh shrieked, It's the new '09 Memorial Tower, and we were falling. I had a dim vision of quads scattered around in promiscuous confusionf Familiar faces loomed up from clois- tered dormersg faces that I realized belonged to another gen- eration that had come to follow in the footsteps of their fathers. And glorious footsteps they were, too, with strides difficult to follow. A steady march onwardg with the same goal ever in view, the same ambition animating the heart of every man, to win for Princeton some laurel which he might lay at the feetsof his Alma Mater. ' 35 Class History HORATIO WHITRIDGE TURNER Freshman Year Some four years ago in the early days of September the hush that presages a great event closed in on this rustic burg like a summer twilight. Natives gathered in clusters here and there and with bated breath whispered of the coming milen- nium. And then our glorious class arrived. At the very start we showed extraordinary traits. For while it had been the custom, time out of mind, for classes to come rushing to the -slaughter from all points of the com- pass, the great bulk of our class was here already. He lives here. His name is Wagner. Well, after Fat's cap had been made to order and Harry Black had reconciled himself to wearing one of those horrid black jerseys, we all assumed that Hugh Chaplin expression and softly as possible pushed open the door of college life. Come here, Freshman, yelled the Sophomores from the other side of University Place, and the subsequent search for flaws in our character or color in our raiment made U. S. customs officials appear mere children in our eyes. The pride that cometh of being real Princeton Freshmen had a terrible shock that day as we were told to fall in and manipulate a lock step to the 'ccircus maximusf' To quote Norman Armour, Who but a prophet would have imagined as we told the girls at North East that we were Princeton men and stood for manhood as opposed to anything Womanly Cyou know Norm's so good looking he has to dis- courage the great majority of the fair sex to keep them all from falling in love with himj, Who would have imagined, I say, that two days later we would stand for . . . two hours and let ourselves be honed? Well, altogether we were pretty busy those first days, trying to combine presence of mind with 36 .5 1 git ww In ef, , ttf v :In f 'Gill-. ?55if'L ' ,,5:p-fggl .g 5741,-31 'I ' rzfipf I .fn ,, Q-ig, Y f , lf I , , AT n ' 1 gl. ui: 'I' l -I I , . '74 L- 'fg,..N'4-1 TS? , M, '13 -aff-1 E? -i, - 5-p'f ' I 1 , WJ- Af. J r hi. -' .1 1 - .K . ' ,' 51' 'Lid ' : .I :f ' v, -N I 1- V -yeh? .6 fa: A -iff:-+ . ' -1 A lr , , V . ' X ..,.,,5,g , ,-.N V , 3.5 . 1. U fm :L P Class History absence of body, or, in other words, attend classes and avoid those guardians of our unrest at the same time. However, it was not until our class election that things really started off with a rush. Kid Fox led the class to victory by being every- where at the same time. All in his vicinity were afraid to take any active part in the fray for fear of striking a child and thus having saved the day Kid thought it a mean trick that he was not allowed to read his prepared speech advocating him- self for President. George Fryer, Tub Waller, and Hen Chapman were selected to run the class. Kid got two votes for President. Perhaps' they let him cast two ballots because he always travels on a half-ticket. That night we had the real fight 'around the cannon, and we won, of course. John Scull proved this to the satisfaction of the Trenton Times the next day by explaining that he must admit that his actually touching the cannon was more or less of an accident. You see, said John, some Sophomore brute hit me and I fell right under the wheels of the darn old thing. John's blufling started then and education has nourished it. Ralph Gamble wrote to Maryland that night, 'Tm making a big hit up here, the Sophs are so jealous they're trying forcibly to keep me from hobnobbing with the big guns. Horsing kept up for several weeks longer, and in the meantime our class spirit was fos- tered. We began to love 1909 and her members and the com- mon fear and hatred of our arch enemies thrilled us into a brotherhood threefold sacred. We look back with keen pleas- ure now on the times when we were horsed and acknowledge no resulting evil. VVe hope sincerely that the powers will weigh well the expediency of killing a custom at least harmless and perhaps beneficial. The Sophomore-Freshman baseball game came off Oct. 7th. The game was called after the fifth inning by the Seniors, who decided that if the score was 3-o then it would be 9-O by the end of the ninth, and that too much success was a bad thing for Freshmen. Immediately after the game 1909 founded a new college custom by marching from the field to University Hall. Some opposition was encountered on the way, but, thanks to Nat Ewing, the key to the situation was discovered and joe Cook beat an opening through which 37 The Nassau H erald the class passed in triumph. Football and Divisionals now held our attention. Our class team was entirely successful, winning all but the Yale Freshman game-a course to follow which is the duty of all good Freshmen teams, for did not the learned H. D. Skillman say, As your Freshmen do so shall your Varsity not ? There was some dispute as to who was Captain of our Class team, Jimmy Breese and Bill Purves both having their backers. Suffice it to say that Jimmy's athletics since that time have been limited to jigging whenever a petition of one vote is offered by those present. Nov. 18th and 30,000 people witnessed the Yale game at New Haven and saw us defeated 23-4. Bill O'Brien, Tub Waller, Eddy Dillon and Fred Tibbott represented 1909. After the game we were sad and crushed, but we had learned Princeton spirit. We had heard about it in mass-meetings, but we learned it at New Haven, when every 'point that Yale scored made us love Princeton just that much more.- Everybody got back Monday morning, tired and penniless, but proud of our team even in defeat. ln midnight bicker sessions every play was replayed a thousand times, and in the many arguments that resulted Pop Whaley was universally chosen as arbitration court of last resort. Thanksgiving recess arrived and '09 departed. Here was our first appearance at home as college men. The tales which our doting families heard of Princeton were only equalled in size by the turkeys which We ate. Alexander Martin at this time earned the name to which he now an- swers-Watch-Hey Turkey fHuh Pj. Two weeks more of the mathematics office and real work saw Xmas staring us in the face and the fatted lamb bleating all over the land. From Xmas to mid-years a hush fell over our little town, except every night at nine, when Bill Latta would stick his head out the window and shout Fresh Firef' and the rest of the campus would get up betting pools as to what Bill had said. Exams gave some thirty-five of our classmates a compelling desire to enter the busy world or the Yale Law School. Charlie Coxe and Eddie Dillon distinguished themselves on the hockey team about this time. The two main features of the spring were the baseball team and the Triangle Club. '09 was represented at 38 Class History University Field by Dillon, Vaughn, Sides and Heyniger, who were the mainstays of the team. At the Casino by Treadwell and Cass as principals, Fox, Johnson, Mayer, Peacock, Verner, Stannard, Burnett, Craven and Turner in the chorus, and Benedict, Mosher, Stohlman and Robinson in the orchestra. We won the first Yale game at New Haven by 3-2 and the second game here a week later by the same score. On May 26th Ralph Gamble secured a place in the Intercollegiates. The few of us who resisted that Home as soon as possible feeling and braved Commencement, worked like Trojans to bury completely yonder little cannon, but later were as proud as the team when the flames of victory lighted up the faces ofa 'thousand rejoicing Princetonians. Sophomore Year September 20th crept slowly upon us, and even those of our class who did not have important dates with the committee arrived in town full soon. For were there not Freshmen to be reared up as Princeton men? 'KPam Hucheson in his how I made the Tiger would say that to rear upi' meant to horse, and Norman Carroll would probably have murmured Upon my Soul, but they were Sophomores then, and Sopho- mores are gay young bloods. We spent our days sitting on the University Place fence, swapping yarns of summer conquests between horsing bouts, except in the afternoon, when we sauntered down to football practice and whistled at the Fresh- men when they left early. At night we'd form volunteer Iire brigades and march around town putting out lights with a word. Bored somewhat with this mode of life, we butted in on the Freshman election, iand in the last fight around the old Gym introduced the Preceptorial System into class rushes-a few of our more doughty warriors taking the whole affair upon their hands and holding conferences with five Freshmen to a teacher. Some Freshman took '4Pop Pecham's shirt as a souvenir, but Pop blacked the Freshman's eye and made him return the collar buttons. The cannon rush was a repe- tition of the morning. The inter-class baseball series was won by the Seniors, the play being strictly aggressive in every way. 39 The N assau H erald Football now held our entire attention, and after getting suffi- cient daily exercise in running Martthons between Preceptors and interpreting the Prince, we complacently spent the after- noon in watching the team slaughter our more humble oppo- nents. This was interrupted long enough to elect our class officers. Cass, President, Little, Vice-President, and Gamble, Secretary and Treasurer, proved to be the will of the class, so those men set about taking up their arduous duties. Jack Farr wouldn't vote in this election because he didn't know any of the candidates. On Oct. 27'El'1 we played Cornell in New York, and, though frightened a bit at the start, tinished in style to the tune of 14- 5. The whole college followed the team to The Red Mill that night and attention was divided be- tween the Varsity boxes and the stage.- Later certain Prince- ton Studentsn who spend their days Hitting around behind the counter at Seigel Coopers, painted the town red, much to the delight of the New York Sun and the Princeton Star. The Cane Spree came out even. When everyone congratulated Harry Trimble on winning his bout he appeared insulted and remarked, Why, that was my kid brother, fellows. So I felt thoroughly at home all the time we were fighting. We were all in nervous excitement now, the Yale game was at hand. After mass-meetings and prayers and prophecies and other various omens, we witnessed the big game and saw the officials decree the score 0-o. Why, we are yet wondering. Though we scored, they thought perhaps Eddie Dillon was holding and called the play off on the supposition. Photographs and other evidence later showed that nothing was further from Eddie's mind or the truth. On Dec. 5th we got Burt Carr for Foot- ball Manager, a holiday and Carnegie Lake officially presented. It is hard to say which was appreciated most. In the after- noon, when Mr. Carnegie was reviewing the Loch from a tug boat on the canal, it is said that Wheat Chambers followed up and down the tow-path at intervals yelling Boo! in hope that he might scare some one from the tug into the water and by a timely rescue make his name and fortune. The plan failed. Xmas and Mid-years arrived at their accustomed times, but the glamour of their images was soon eclipsed by 40 Class History the hockey team, which finished a perfect record on Feb. 9th and secured the championship. After a bit more of horsing, Gym exhibitions, Kneisel Quartets and other almost spring activities, the numberless invitations in every mail to inspect this or that suitings made us finally realize that we were almost upperclassmen. The Auto-Mo grass ran here and there over the campus and the happy studes, with pipe in one hand and james' Psychology in the other, lay by the hour here and there under the tall elms dividing their attention between the springs of thought and the thoughts of spring. The baseball team and the Triangle Club both scored victory after victory. Pennsylvania and Harvard were disposed of in lively order and Yale fell an easy prey in two straight games. Commence- ment came and the peach crop blossomed fair and abundant. We stayed just long enough to see that the Freshmen built a really good bonfire, assumed the dignity of stately Juniors and scattered to the four winds. Another year had passed with its great amount of joy and some sorrow, and our college days were one-half gone. Junior Year Juniors! Upper Classmen! And the best year of college at hand! Such were our thoughts as we drifted in on every train. Hello! How are you? Have a good summer? ,Got any con- ditions? Thus were those first days spent, and then, having deposited our just arrived smile and hand shake, we slipped on a soft shirt and talked things quietly over in front of Gulick's. And oh, the happiness of those moments in front of Gulick's. 'Every passerby offered a new topic of conversa- tion, every pause a new request for the makings Where did that Preceptor come from? Say, d'you know Topley has changed his point of view? He used to be on the outside looking in and now he's on the inside looking out. Oh, look at that queen coming, watch me get a smile. And so the days go and the fall grows old. Our new class officers were elected, Meese, Chaplin and Ottinger being chosen to shape our class destinies. Football waxed strong and fortunate until we fell to Cornell by one point. Nothing daunted, we returned 4I The Nassau Herald to prepare for Yale and watch for the time when the Sun Dial should be completed. On Oct. 31st Ambassador Bryce offici- ally unveiled the timepiece. No one has ever quite interpreted the features of the dial. Some shark in Economics said that the writing on the column represented stock quotations on time loans. The bird on top has also puzzled many. Percy Parsons, who cannot talk without making very poor puns, decided he'd find out who it was supposed to be and went over 'late one night and talked to it. Some portions of the conversation were over- heard by the eavesdropping Chapel. Hello you, sad Bird, said Percy, I'm a Little Fox, Strange, perhaps, but Keen in this Cass. Hearing a Fiddler from a Farr, with a Howell I began Rising, and not finding my Keys, with Strong Ropes Brushed down the Sides of the House. Cist went the Breese. Le Fevre was on me, but I felt Gay and Dougherty Annin Armour of Green Glass it was Maresi Matter. To you I Fluhart to Overholt the Riddle of who you are-but now by the Beam of red Thorburn Ober Your Scull I'm Weiss- You're Curly Peacock? Percy even went further and told us the next day that he just couldn't make that bird soar. The Indians were beaten I6-0, and then we went to New Haven and tasted the joy of victory after the first half and the bitter sweet of defeat after the game. However, to see Eddie Dillon catch Cow Philip's kick-off in the second half was worth the trip, and Eddie was unanimously chosen as Captain for Senior year. A University Club idea now prevailed and Hugh Chaplin argued long and loud that we ought to have such an institution. As everyone agreed with him from the start, Hugh undoubtedly won the debate, but the money wasn't forthcoming and we are still waiting. While the rest of the college were enjoying all the comforts of home at Xmas time, the Glee Club took a trip. They went to Scranton, Buffalo, Erie and Cleveland, and in each place introduced Campus Singing instead of the old-fashioned boiled shirt brigade. A large drop of Nassau Hall was carried on the trip, and the studes would gather in front of this, garbed in iiannels and soft shirts, and call on certain prearranged groups or indi- viduals to play or sing. At the finish of the concert everyone 42 Class History would yell for himself or neighbor as at a regular Singing, and then leaving Jack MacDonald and the Freshmen to roll up Nassau Hall, would wander over town to get a jigger. Alto- gether it was Very realistic. The faculty now sent us word by Bill that we'd have to take Mid-years as usual, so we got Very busy and all but a few survived the onslaughts. Wash- ington's Birthday fell on the 22nd, and brought with it a Prom, thousands of pretty girls and a dash of spring weather. Mort Fry and Nat Ewing talked the judges into awarding them Oratorical prizes and We all concluded that they certainly were some Bicker Birds. About this time a New York Socialist arrived on the scene and announced a meeting to be held in Murray Hall. Hearing that Harry Trimble had strenuously upheld the honors of Socialism in Economics Class one day, and knowing that with Harry around any blood-red banners might be dispensed with, the Socialist called upon him to preside at the meeting. Glad to do the honors, Harry took great delight later, when the Socialist called for general dis- cussion, in telling this or that Professor who volunteered a remark that he was entirely out of order. When a giant fire- cracker was tossed in the window and exploded directly in front of the rostrum, the meeting adjourned. A Socialist Club was organized that same night. Harry was President, Bill Stockton, Vice-President, and both of them the Club. Spring came and the baseball team started off on a series of victories. N. Y. U. came first, and even Hatch Treadwell's Song couldn't save the day for the New Yorkers. Gulick's benches again became popular and our evenings were made delightful with Senior Singing. Cornell, Pennsylvania and Harvard were disposed of by the team in consecutive weeks, and only Yale remained to join the victims. In the meantime the Triangle Club showed us what happened Whe11 Congress went to Princeton. judging by the play, a Congressman's life in those days was as thrilling as it is to-day. Commencement drew near and we watched with sorrowful eyes our Senior friends making preparations to depart. Rain favored Yale at New Haven and called off the game in the fourth inning with Princeton in the lead. The following Saturday a victory here 43 The Nassau Herald set the Kaleidoscope of Commencement into motion and all of the gaities which have confronted us during the last few days passed before our vision. The game won, howling pee- rades, noisy bands, joyful grads, pretty girls, puffing autos, and, to top it all, beautiful spring weather. Leave takings soon began, and the steps officially taken over by our class, gradually the roar of college rattled down to the station, to the junction and away. The town and campus were left in a summer hush that was only broken by echoes from the Polo Grounds, where a crowd of joyful maniacs were loosing the doors of pande- monium and making faces at the Yale locks. Senior Year Oh, the dignified and serious air with which we Seniors sauntered around our campus early last fall. Every member of the class had the feeling that, as this was his last year in Princeton, he meant to show the best that was in him now. The ninth inning had come, the score was against us, and we had to rally. Everybody felt that way and wanted to look it. We all took Nat Ewing as a pattern and tried to get his air of Now I'm on my Way to save the Nation. Nat in his turn got a telephone, engaged a Secretary and started out to inter- view the faculty in regard to some much-needed reform. But the Trustees had beaten them to it and we gasped a bit when we learned that the Gym team, the Tennis team, the Golf team, the Triangle Club and the Musical Clubs had to limit their activities to local fields. Surely this was very unkind to the local fields. 0n Oct. IST No. 6 was elected Captain of the Crew. We uninitiated in nautical terms, subsequently learned that No. 6 and Norman Armour were one and the same person. That same night we had the first of our Class Smokers and later sang on the steps. The whole affair was a great success, The Inter-Class Baseball Series resulted in a victory for us, and, the championship peerade safely off our hands, we -turned our attention to Politics. Pam I-lucheson was very busy now rounding up the Bryan party and worse yet keeping him rounded up. He would go out of town every once in a while and Pam would have to haunt the railroad station until his 44 P,1',f- -51325571-' 3491 1, .' ..'1'iH-Ef11Lf2 T ff 1'WS-'fTf'LfT':2ffff1ii'V 133' 'B 'C fl 312' :A .Y-.1-11:91. L-1 'qw .rg - - C11 lf.U.WHl1'f 's '1.LfL't - f1- 1 1 -n1'fLfi2?u, 1P,. lm . M . l-.r-.jy . 1 F1 1 1... 9- 1 . 11.1, --,- .1 t i +, MXDJ 1 'rw ' ry 1 f1. 1 1 1 -U'1,'T' -K m 1 4' ' I .1 ' ' A - 'li' an V :FJ ' 1114-U . 5 ' I ' H- V , 1 1 1: -1 -4 . , 1, 5,59 - 1,fgi11g13 ' .1111 1. -f ri .1 ,. '.'-V -. 1' 1 - - 1Y11'1'e--H' .',-' .I '5'I,1 1 11. J., ' tt. MY' 1 .- 1 ' '- - ,. ' ' ' . 141.55 r- '. .gk 1, -fy .s 1 V ' ,' 4 ' 'EV' 7'E i'. L. . V 1 .1-U '-'fs 7: . 'll 1 . A . ,, Y , .. I . 1. , . . L-: . - - . .Q 1f -1 : A -11' 4.1:. -. 1 . 5 -VQA . 1 1 1, 1'-I. .'f 'ij ,v .1 ' 3,41 'A '-iglfi,-io, L2 -.i1 1 1 .14-my ' 1 1 .4 f ' i A, i, I AA - . I ti. lj 1 V 1 V gil , . , 1 ' ' '..,g- 11-1, . 1. 1 , '15 t, .1 ,, - ..1 1,1 -1 1 - ' A 1 3 f 3' JL ...L., 1- V Q!-1.1. .5 i . 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It X 1415.-1 , 1- '-1 '11 1 ...J-14, ' ri C lass H istory return was assured. College Politicians were deeply stirred by the gross infraction of a Clio I-Iall peerade just before the fall initiations, but the Wluigs assumed such an air of offended dignity that they took unto themselves even more of the curious than usual. On Oct. 19th the circus came to town and the entire undergraduate body, assisted by the number of full V. P. I. rooters-I mean the full number of V. P. I. rooters-turned out to take in the show. Interest was cen- tered on the side show to such an extent that the main tent was very much slighted, though a full canvass would have revealed an enthusiastic audience about the dancing pavilion. Soon some one decided to help the circus men in getting the tent down and cut the guy ropes. As the tent billowed to the ground, a shot rang out, followed by a bedlam of shrieks, but Charlton I-Ienry jumped into the breach, and reaching up some seventy feet, like the Statue of Liberty, held the tent aloft with his sinewy right hand, while Pats Caldwell exhorted the crowd to keep cool. Let us leave our scholarly classmates struggling to extricate themselves from beneath the ruin of this faux pas four paw Salome and examine the results of our Class election Oct. 28th. Eddie Dillon, Squire Cass and josh Brush undertook the leadership until death do we part. This was the second family Eddie had undertaken to run within the year. The National Election day dawned bright and early and Pam's smile broadened. The vote of all who intended to get on the raft with Taft had been challenged, and on the strength of this coup dletatl' Pam bet all of his money on Bryan. If he ever paid up he lost a good deal. In the meantime the foot- ball situation was far from encouraging. Tie games with Syracuse and VV'est Point and a defeat at the hands of Dart- mouth made us realize that only Eate could stave off a Yale victory. Fate was against us and a cold, drizzling day rubbed in the knowledge that our class had gone through college with- out seeing a championship team. On Dec. 3d a verdict was reached in the Moot Court Trial and Ralph Gamble was at last committed to the State Asylum, his latest prank having been the murder of joseph Gish, his i 45 The Nassau H erald athletic rival. The murder took place in 400 Blair in our Freshman year and the body was not discovered until the foundations were being excavated for 777 Hall. The body was identified by Bill Coan, who said he recognized the bier and remembered the party. The winter wore on, Mid-years were passed and the bell was sounded and the tape set for the last lap. Princeton now gave further proof that she had the Faculty for abolishing things by shutting down on horsing. The horseless age had come to stay. Of course, we had to retaliate and communications gave the Prince copy for days. Finally the Class meeting was held which is famous for two speeches. The one by Lorry Dowd on the subject of You know Pm his roommate, and the other by Spencer Gordon on Kicking against the bricks. On March 3d two carloads of kindred spirits journeyed to Washington to inaugurate Mr. Taft. On setting out they were amply stocked with all kinds of eats and drinks, but they had such a Wet time in Washington that Taft had to sign up indoors, and the party arrived home with only the porter still corked up. On March I3'El'1, due to the simple but all inclusive message from Dr. van Dyke, the Wireless Club came to our notice. Paul Findley and Bill Butler were the chief hello girls of the institution. St. Patrickis Birthday arrived and the Irish element indulged in mental fireworks in trying to discover a proper celebration. The result was such that even Dutch Knouer almost became green with envy. Properly to describe Al Little, and Riis Scully rowing the hearse, Charlton Henry on his pocket edition of a Western pony, jack Farr and Fat Caldwell as mounted police, Mary Groeneveld as the widow, Norman Armour as head pallbearer and jim Maury and Don Gilpin trying to seem awake, would be a proper task for Art Samuels, but not being a member of the Press Club, I refrain. Suffice it to say that Old College Customs was laid to rest with all due sublimity. On April 2nd the Duchess of Bluffshire made her debut at the Casino and received much applause, and what is quite unusual, a favorable criticism. To speak of the Black Hand would be to jeopardize the safety of Dug Ballin, so the story of how he brought that society to ask for mercy will be related by Nor- 46 Class H istory man Carroll, the Class Santa Claus, who at the same time will present Dug', with a deadly weapon with which to protect himself for the rest of the afternoon. St. Yves soon came to town and the Marathon fever took hold of the student body. Rip Ropes might be seen every afternoon garbed in a pair of pink pajamas for overalls crawl- ing from the Varsity field to Blair Hall at ten dollars a crawl. The baseball team, track team and Triangle Club kept us busy following their careers and the Faculty in passing that last mile post to our diplomas. That over, we faced two weeks in which to prepare for leaving Princeton, weeks spent in looking back over the four years of happiness as Princeton boys and preparing for a life time as Princeton men. Gur joys, our sorrows, our cares and luck, a great deal of the sweet and enough of the bitter to make it real have been mingled in the Alembic of memory and have come forth a pure and strong love for Class and Alma Mater. Such a love that at any future time when two or more of our class shall meet together the spirit of Princeton shall move them to Tune every heart and every voice And bid every care withdraw And all with one accord rejoice In praise of old Nassau. 47 Presentation Oration NORMAN F. CARROLL Greetings, fond mammas, fond papas, one and onlies, fuss- ers, fussees, and ye prospective embarkers on the surging sea of life. A merry handshake to you, one and all. My position this afternoon is presumably that of leading hammer wielder of the Senior Class. I am supposed to drag out the trusty mallet from the malletry and bring it down relentlessly on the cring- ing craniums of various respected and suspected members of the illustrious Ought-Niners. I am expected to ferret out from their past lives, both dim and recent, various little items of information anent their goings-on, while wandering through the mazes of their college course, both in and out of class- room, principally out. I am called upon to report gay and festive doings of various foolish fellows which are warranted to bring a gust of guffaws from their gloating confreres, and a look of astonishment on the faces of their proud parents. But this, in the main, is not my intention. Far be it from such. Far be it from me to hand out various Sledge-hammer blows on the devoted heads of my fellow-chasers after the elusive sheep-skin, and then be chased from here to Lawrenceville by' a revengeful crowd bent on overtaking me and carelessly waft- ing me from this mundane sphere. Nay, Nay, Classmates, one and all, I merely intend to request various individuals to extend their right wrists, whereupon I shall bestow upon them sundry trenchant taps, gentle but firm, which will be calcu- lated to promote a tickling of the risibles, however slight the aforesaid tickling may be. So, having delivered myself of this pungent peroration, I am about to embark on my careless knock-fest. May I spare none. Voila! First, I must unfold a tale that startled the college world last April. Dame Rumor and the peerless Prince had spread it abroad that the Black I-Iand was in Princeton. Shades of Bill 48 Presentation Omtion Coons, could such be so? Yea, verily, for list, gentle hearers, down in the confines of dear old Brown, there dwells a dashing fellow, Douglas David Ballin by name. Douglas plays the heavy,parts in the Triangle Club soirees. Last year he was a bold bad Indian, this year a surly, scheming Black-hander from sunny little It. During the course of this year's show, Douglas delivers various sly digs at the expense of the ebony- mitted crew, and he had not been able to sleep well o' nights for fear that they would be on his trail, bent on separating him from himself with a ready bomb. Finally such nearly occurred. One day in April, Douglas, after wading through the various sweet-scented billet-deux sent him by various admirers of his Hackett-like rendition of the part of Angelo, discovered at the bottom of his pile of mail an evil-looking envelope post- marked Easton. With trembling fingers, Douglas opened the envelope. What did he find therein? Ah, gentle hearers, I can scarce continue. 'Twas a Black Hand note and read as follows: Meester Ballin, you make fun of us in theatre. If you do not stop, then look out. The Black Hand is laying for you. And a dirty palm was depicted at the foot of the note. This letter, if the truth were known, was the concoction of one Clinton Roy Dickinson, a clever devil, and, believe me, a wily Wag. Roy had thought to have some innocent diversion at the expense of the guileless Douglas. Little did he antici- pate the terror that would be bred in the heart of his victim. But, seeing that Douglas was impressed muchly by the note, Aha, quoth Roy, Hmethinks there is food for thought in this. I shall summon my fellow wags, and we shall harry the unsus- pecting Douglas exceeding muchf' So Roy, having called Art Samuels, Josh Brush and Frank Laughran Cunningham, Presi- dent of the Triangle Club of Princeton University, to his aid, the following scheme was hatched, a scheme which for diabol- ical cunning and consummate daring is unmatched in the an- nals of criminology. There is an innocent-looking fellow of Italian extraction, Tony by name, who does odd jobs around the clubs down on Prospect. Very good. Frank Laughran suggested that Tony would be an eminently fitting Black Hand agent. Too true, 49 The Nassau H erald quoth the others, and Tony was enlisted. The plan was this. Tony, well disguised as a Black Hander, was to go to Dugis room, hand him a Black Hand note and simultaneously a phoney bomb was to be hurled through the window. All worked well. 'Twas a dark and stormy night. All over the campus the wind sighed dreamily through the trees and the pining pines rustled. Down in the tall grass between Patton and Brown a dark figure might have been seen skulking along, and ever so often hiding between the blades of grass to prevent observation. This was little Arty Samuels, armed with a large rock. But more of him anon. About 9 o'clock, Douglas D. Ballin was ensconced in his favorite Morris chair, poring lustily over his favorite syllabus- Lectures on Money and Banking, or How to Make a Million in a Year, by Prof. Royal Meeker-when a knock, soft and purring, but yet a knock, was heard on the panel. Come in, said Dug. Enter Frank Cunningham, stealthily. Dug, he said abruptly, there is an air of mystery about. I just saw a Dago outside who seemed -Bang! Bang! Bang! Knock No. 2. Dug was turn- ing green. Come in. Enter Tony, a la Black Hand. Slouch hat, red neckerchief, mustache, all the details furnished by wardrobe mistress, Josh Brush. Tony stalked to the table and laid down a note. The note read, There are five fingers on the Black Hand and the fifth is in Princeton. Beware. Dug by this time is entirely green, but red, purple, Vermilion and all shades of the rainbow are fighting for the privilege of coloring his physiog. Exit the fifth finger in the person of bewildered Tony. Dug looks appealingly at Frank Cunningham. Frank with well-simulated terror arises and says, 'fGood Heaven, Dug, let's get out of here. This was Art Samuel's cue, Art had been waiting patiently outside, prepared to hurl his bomb At these words of Frank's he took a rock as large as himself and carelessly wafted it through Dug Ballin's win- dow. Cunny dives under a divan, Dug with remarkable alac- rity starts to climb the side wall. But the wall inconveniently being perpendicular, he gives up in despair and resigns him- self to immediate destruction. No explosion taking place, he arises and exits quickly, leaving Cunny under the divan and 50 P1'ese1'Ltation Ovation Art in the tall grass outside convulsed with merriment. Dug spent the rest of the evening making overtures to Eddy Booth and the police department of Princeton to hunt out the das- tardly bomb-thrower and jail him. But Eddy and the depart- ment firmly declined to have anything to do with the wretched affair, declaring it out of their jurisdiction. Dug refused to go to Baltimore the next day until the hoax was fully ex- plained, much to his relief. All the papers got the story and for a few days Dug's life was made miserable. Speaking of Black Hand and Roy Dickinson, Roy had a dashing experience with Black Hands himself back in Sopho- more year. It sems that Roy while sharpening his pencil in preparation for the daily toil cut the favorite digit of his left hand somewhat severely. Profuse was the bleeding there- from, and our reckless Roy was affrighted. I fear me blood poisoning, he said, I shall put some alcohol on the little finger, and it shall be made well again. Eorthwith, he hied him homeward and bathed his little patties in alcohol. But a little later a horrible thought struck him. Earlier in the day he had been cleaning a very rusty pair of skates with the same alcohol. Suppose by some chance the alcohol has become contaminated by the rust, and I have poisoned my precious finger. Horrible thought! Distractedly he rushed forth, seeking salvation, and by some happy chance ran across John Scull, a very j ocund jokester in his way. John, gasped Roy, What's good for a poisoned finger ? John had a sudden inspiration. Ink, he said unhesitatinglyg black ink. Just add hot water and serve. Not kidding me, are you ? said Roy. Certainly not, said John, soak your hand in it and keep it on half a day. So Roy rushed to the University mutual benefit store Cdividends of fifty cents declared every three yearsb and purchased a bottle of Pomeroyis best war- ranted black. He went to his room, mixed the ink with some water, soaked the injured hand in it for about ten minutes, and when he withdrew it, Roy had about the blackest hand ever seen this side of Italy or Witherspoon Street. It was stained a rich, mellow ebony. After two hours, Roy started to remove it, but nary a remove. Eearfully obstinate ink, said SI The Nassau H erald Roy, and rubbed, removing much cuticle, but no ink. I-Ie looked at the Pomeroy bottle. It was marked indelible. He looked at his hand. It was indelible. Then he looked for Scull, and he is still trying to get even, and even now you may see traces of the stain on the initial digit of his left hand. Frank Cunningham extinguished-pardon me-distinguished himself on the Triangle Club trip to Washington. I occupied the same stateroom with Frank on the sleeper to Washington. The night before the Washington show I retired very early, being anxious for a good night's rest in preparation for the show on the morrow. As I entered the stateroom, I heard a confused mumbling noise. I listened intently. 'Twas Frankie. He was murmuring softly in his sleep, I-we-I am honored. I feel more than words can tell-I-representing Princeton Triangle-I-I-am-H etc. I thought Frank had disarranged his gray matter very materially, but on inquiring in the morn- ing I learned that he had written a speech that he intended to deliver when we met William. Howard Taft at the White House that day. The speech ran something like this: Presi- dent Taft, Dear Sir: I, as representative of the Triangle Club of Princeton University, am not insensible to the honor you are doing me-I should say us-in allowing me-us-to meet you here, and I-we duly appreciate it. I feel delighted and enraptured, awed. I-we will ever hold fresh in my-our memory this occasion. Mr. Taft, I-we pay our respects. We are happy to meet you, sir. Truly a notable speech, and with a true Edmund Burke tinge. Frank was all agog over his effort. As we entered the throne room of the White House we were herded together, preparatory to being led to the introduction. Great was the jockeying for position among members of the Club, but Frank, in spite of his naturally shy and shrinking disposition, managed to be first in line. At length the great moment arrived. Mr. Taft's aide-de-camp announced Frank's name and Frank approached coughing im- portantly with speech memorized perfectly. I -began Cunny feelingly- Glad to meet you, Mr. Cron -said Mr. Taft, pleasantly, and then with a side arm motion he wafted Cunny 52 Presentation Oration past and out of sight and hearing, and poor Frank's speech was never speeched. Mr. Taft is the quickest handshaker that ever shook. He sticks out his palm, grasps yours, and just wafts you away. Freddie Stohlman, clad in spats, ascot and cane, approached Mr. Taft soon after Cunny, prepared to make an impression. Freddie has become fearfully British, don't you know-bally clever English checked suitings, and all that sort of rot, and he has an idea that he looks perfectly dashing. So on this occa- sion, he planted his cane firmly on the floor and with perfect pose and arms akimbo greeted the Chief Executive, prepared to hold a few minutes' converse with him. But such was not so. Out came Mr. Taft's How de clof' out came Mr. Taft's hand and out and away went Freddie, propelled by the inevitable side arm motion. Unfortch, Freddie-It was Bill's busy day. George Armstrong has also become fearfully English. George wears pretty socks and hankies, and he just doesn't care who knows it. If any of the common herd, the hoi polloi as it were, approach him, George becomes awfully annoyed. The other day a rude fellow of George's acquaintance stepped on the toe of his well-polished boot, and do you know-George was so angered he immediately scratched him off his visiting list, and the fellow hasn't attended a single affair of any promi- nence in Manhattan since, due to George's boycott. True! WVho has not heard of Ralphie Gamble, the modern Mer- cury? And the answer comes back swiftly. None has not heard of Ralphie. He is our favorite trackster. Every week or so Ralphie issues forth in a perfectly stunning track suit, Hits down the course, has a medal or two pinned on his palpi- tating heart, and retires, resting serenely on his laurels. Ralphie has won so many of the aforesaid medals that it is becoming a fearful bore. He longs for new fields to conquer. It's all very well to outsprint the various sprinters that sprint. I want to get in the real hero class, said Ralphie. An Andrew Carnegie medal for me. How to be a hero was the burning question. Soon the opportunity came. 'Twas the night of the big fire, and all through the town not a mortal was moving, not even Bill Coons. 'Twas darkly dark, when down in 'With- 53 The Nassau H erald erspoon Street, the darkest part of town, a sudden glare lit up the sky. Now Ralphie is a light sleeper, and this momentous night his head was feeling especially light. Morpheus refused to behave. Ralphie was uneasy. Suddenly he awoke with a start. Intuish had aroused him. I cannot sleep, said Ralphie sagely. Something tells me some deviltry is afoot this nightf' Ralphie rushed to the window, stuck out his brilliant bun, and lo, lo, and also behold, over athwart the atmosphere towards Darktown a baleful glare lit up the sky. A fire, a fire, quoth Ralphie, with unerring instinct. Here's a chance to join the Carnegie medal crew. I must marshall my merry men and away. So, seizing his megaphone, he rushed out on the green greensward and roused the sweetly sleeping simple students with clarion cries of fire, and again ire. The University turned out and went fireward. When Ralphie reached Wither- spoon Street the fire had consumed two dwellings and was well on its way to a third. Ralphie was wild to be heroic, but to his chagrin not a single frightened female was hanging out of a single window beseeching some convenient hero to save her che-ild. Not a single distracted individual was roaming the street calling upon someone to rescue her valuable jewels, third floor rear. Ralphie was in despair. Andy will never hear of this, he said, I must be up and doing. So, seizing a hose, he squirted water frantically, some on the burning structures, but the great majority of the fluid on the unsuspecting stu- dents, to their extreme gratiication. Then, snatching up a genuine iireman's axe, Gam broke several neighboring win- dows, having heard that that is always done by a real live fireman. Arty Samuels and his hardy press gang followed anxiously about, jotting down these various details and prepared to wire Carnegie as soon as Ralph had pulled off his heroics. Sud- denly a confused cackle rent the air. Down the street there was a shed and therein a family of chickens. I-lere's my chance, cried Ralph, follow me, Arty. ' So, without the slightest hesitation, and though the fire was on the same block, Ralphie plunged into the shed, broke down the door with powerful blows, and rescued the whole cackling family. Not a ' 54 Presentation Omtion single feathered life was lost. Had they perished, Princeton would have been eggless for months. And to whom the credit? To none other than Ralph A. Gamble, of Yankton, So. Dakota. Truly a gallant lad. That same night another momentous event occurred. Herb Morrow, Reddy Milne, Curly Peacock, Pinky Henderson and Harry Trimble, all charter members of the Vermilion Club, were down at the big conflagrash seeking what they could prevent from being devoured. They had waged wilful warfare on the obstinate blaze, thus entitling themselves to a place in the Princeton Press columns, and had all assembled for a short meeting near the gas tank. You remember the fear that was inspired by the presence of this same gas tank. Everyone was afraid that a spark might ignite the tank and all Princeton might be moved several miles toward Trenton as a result of the explosion. Consequently, when the crowd of students saw Herb, Reddy and the other members of the gallant, auburn- locked crew assembled near the gas tank, a great shout of fear arose. When they saw those five flaming red thatches out- lined against the side of the tank, they cried, Great Heavens, the fire has spread to the gas-tank, and every hose in commis- sion wasturned on them and they all got extremely soused. You all know Buck Dougherty-he of straw-colored hair and placid physiog. One night at Philly, Buck was not feeling very well. Try as he would, his head persisted in swimming. Buck was ill. A joy ride in the cool night air will just do me the best of good, quoth Buck, so borrowing Charlt Henry's car, and assembling Pats Caldwell, Tommy Tomlinson, Dick Este, and other members of the Princeton W. C. T. U., Buck started off for Princeton, but, like Buck, Charlt's car wasn't feeling very well that night, and about every mile the car would give vent to a cough, hesitate and then compose itself to slum- ber. Buck was already in the arms of the overworked Mor- pheus. Fats and Dick would fuss with the invalid machine while Tommy superintended the job industriously from the tonneau. Buck every once in a while would start up, murmur a few sweet nothings about the perversity of the car, and then relapse into slumber, while Fats Caldwell would say feelingly, 55 The N assau H emld This is poor, or Pm a snakef' When they finally reached Trenton, they gave the car up in disgust, stored it in a garage and boarded a trolley for Princeton. Buck was still semi-con- scious, but occasionally murmuring Blow your horn, drive faster, 'etc., etc. When the trolley reached Lawrenceville and stopped, Buck started up in great anger, and yelled, f'Tommy, look in the carbureter, this damn machine has stopped again ! much to the amusement of his faithful escorts. That was an awful bull of Buck's. - V Speaking of bulls, do you fellows remember the awful bull Hugh Chaplin made down at the Walker-Gordon farm? Dick Este's car, in which Buck has his ride, is famous. It is called by all who have ever ridden in it the Petulant Polly. It is subject to fits and starts. It will go along swimmingly for a while, then become dejected and stop for a prolonged rest. It is the most perverse machine that ever existed. The other night, Dick, While on his way back from New York, lost his way and jumped out of the Polly to examine a sign-post. When he returned the machine was not there. The clutch had slipped and Polly had Hed. After a two hours' search Dick found his auto cavorting merrily about in a neighboring meadow. Dick started for the machine, but it kept on until it met a stone wall, where, strange to relate, it stopped, and Dick spent the rest of the night nursing it back to life. Dick says it is the most wonderful thing he ever saw. Next I call to mind a little stunt that Arty Samuels was engaged in down in dear old Washington. Arty is our pet composer, the chap who wrote all those lilting melodies for the Triangle show. All the dear girls simply rave about him. Arty thinks he is the one and only Oscar, as a whisperer of sweet nothings on a moonlit porch. Also as a sartorial artist, Arty is some excellent. He leads the Triangle Orchestra, and when the Club was down in Washington, Arty appeared for the over- ture garbed just fit to kill. Clad in an Axel Lofquist suiting, a Cluett shirt, a Kaskel Sz Kaskel vest, a Budd tie, Frank Bros. pumps, Arty just didnit care. He was there to win hearts. just before wielding his trusty baton for the opening number, Arty just chawnced to cast his eye around the orchestra, and 56 SENIOR COUNCIL 4 , P1'ese1ztatio1i Ovation whom should he spy directly behind him in the first row but a charming maiden whom he knew and admired exceeding much. Alia, quoth Arty, a conquestf' All through the first act when opportunity offered Arty would turn around and ex- change merry glances with the fair damsel in the first row. He was delighted. He would turn around and say to himself, She loves me. Would look around and see her not observing his classic countenance, and would murmur dejectedly, She loves me not. Then again, She loves me, etc. Finally, in the Fairyland song came the climax. If you remember, in Fairyland, the stage is entirely darkened for a brief space to allow the ponies to enter with a ship of ribbon which is the piece de resistance of the song. On this occasion, however, the lights were switched on too soon, and where was Arty? In- stead of being prepared to lead his merry men in the orchestra, he was bending down holding sweet converse with the maid in the first row, oblivious to all else. The spot was turned on Arty and he awoke, amid the plaudits of the multitude. Speaking of Washington, Walt Schaff took a trip down there for the inauguration. He visited the Congressional Library and enjoyed the decorations very much. On his return, Jim Maury asked him, How did you like the mural decorations, Walt P Walt lookedidoubtful. He thought a moment, then said hesitatingly, I didn't think much of them, but weren't those pictures on the wall fine ? O, Walter! How could you? Cale Peirce went up to New York about three weeks ago with Art Samuels and a few other scoundrels. Art and the others, Cale excepted, were clad in conventional winter head- gear, but Cale decided he would be original. In the spring a young man's fancy lightly turns to thoughts of straw hats and mint juleps, and though it was wintry weather, Cale decided he would indulge in both. On the train and on Broadway, he was the subject of numerous stony stares and excited exclama- tions. But what cared he? He was looking simply stunning in his new Knox straw-Gulick's 34.00. All went well until they sallied down Broadway after dinner. Cale was just strut- ting along, Art Samuels and the others hanging humbly in the rear. Suddenly a loudly dressed, loudly spoken maiden spied 57 The N assau- H erald Cale's chapeau. She gave one look and then shouted in a loud Voice, Well, Great Scott, kid, where did you get that lid, and after one swift unerring sweep of her right forearm the pride of Cale's head and heart was being playfully kicked about by a nearby taxicab. Frankie Keen, that handsome young Lothario, one of the prettiest boys in the Whole class, who goes about ladykilling, had an embarrassing experience last month. Frankie gave a dinner party to a bevy of fair maids at the Waldorf in New York. During the serving of the many courses of this elab- orate collation, one of the party expressed a preference for artichokes. Artichokes be it, said Frankie agreeably. Now Frankie had never before met with the genus artichoke, so when his was served he was entirely at a loss as to how to attack it. Glancing stealthily around the table for information, he found to his dismay that everyone was politely waiting for him to start. Well, here goes, groaned Frankie, and seizing knife and fork he started in on the toughest leaves of the animal-plant. Now an artichoke must be handled with extreme care, and there are only a few of the outside leaves which are tender and toothsome enough to be edible. But Frankie knew this not at all, and so he hacked awayat the tough leaves of the plant with scarcely any result. My kingdom for a saw, he groaned. Finally he demolished the dainty and ate it leaf for leaf, nearly choking in the accomplishment of the feat, and affording his guests much amusement. Frankie, I am a little bit surprised. You must become better informed in artichoke- ology. Sadie Sidwell, of Frankfort, Indiana, when he first came to college, was simple, very simple. Four strenuous years of col- legiate strenuosity have rubbed off the rough edges, and Sadie is now a full-iiedged college man. But when he blew into this town in Freshman year, Sadie knew naught of city or college life. I-Ie came from Frankfort, Indiana, by gum, where they congregate at the station when the daily train drifts by, and Where Uncle Tom's Cabin at the Opry House is the gala event of the season, next to Frank W. Robbins' three-ring circus. QCount 'em, three rings.j Consequently, Sadie was anxious to 58 Presentation Oration see what a real town looked like. He had never been to New York, so Josh Brush and Dug Ballin, the merrymakers of Brown Hall, offered to escort him around the big city. When they disembarked from the ferry at 23'I'd St. amid the clanging of trolleys, the chug-chugging of the buzz wagons, the noise of the traffic, and the general stir and bustle, Sadie was amazed. He thought long and silently. Finally he could control himself no longer. Say, he said to Josh and Dug, there must be some big show in town to-night, ain't there, with all these people running around ? Ch you Sadie! Norman Armour and Charlt Henry, the Adonis and the Sport, respectively, of the Class, were dining at the Inn not long ago. Suddenly Charlt started and said: Say, Norman, gaze on your right. Norman gazed. A divinity in blue, a dream, a vision, a dazzler, a peach, was seated at the next table, and, could he believe his optics, was smiling at him winningly. Gee, Charlt, said nonpariel Norman, I charm her. I guess this is poor. Soon after the divinity departed, as did Norman and Charlt, needless to state. She went out into the office, put on an automobile coat and entered a waiting auto. Up and away, James, she said to the chauffeur softly. Norman and Charlt, leaning over the porch rail and smiling sweetly, were in des- pair. Would she not vouchsafe but a glance, one pitying glance? Finally, just as the machine started, with a sweeping bow, she turned and with the sweetest smile on earth hurled a bit of paste-board in Norrnan's direction. Victory, said Nor- man. 'fHer card ! Then he looked at the card and it read as follows: Crabtree's garage. Best in the state. Workman- ship quick and eflicient. Try us. Curses, said Norman. Stung, said Charlt. fCurtainj. Whom do I see sitting in a prominent position over there and striving to look unimportant? 'Tis none other than Nathaniel Ewing, Ir., of Bryn Mawr, Pennsylvania. How are you, Nat? How is the college coming. Nat runs the college, you know, people. He also directs the destinies of nations, but di- recting the college is his main employment. As soon as Nat hit the place he looked it over and decided he would like to run it, and it has been running ever since trying to prevent him from 59 The Nassau H effald running it. But he certainly has given it a run for its prover- bial coin. Nat is President, Chairman and Director of the In- tercollegiate and Intracollegiate Bureau of ACTIVITIES AND IN- ACTIVITIES. Nat is the crux of the situation. He is the pivot around which all college activity revolves. If Nat falls ill, the whole college ceases to college, and hangs over the sick bed, sobbing For heaven's sake, Nat, recover, the college is going to the caninesf' On the whole the college has survived Nat's efforts pretty well. But once he let the college slip a cog. It was last month, when our Freshmen were to debate Cor- nell's cubs at Ithaca, and Columbia's young ones down here. Fred Osborne was managing this particular dual dual-meet, but Nat feared that if he we1'en't personally concerned things would of necessity go wrong, so Nat mixed in with the following start- ling result. Nat sent our affirmative team to debate with Cornell, who was also upholding the affirmative, and kept our negative team down here to agree with the negative team from Columbia. The teams were very polite and agreed perfectly with each other's arguments, but naturally there was not too much debat- ing. Have a care next time, Nat. Here, let me crown you as dashing director of the destinies of Princeton University. You have all heard of Tommy Tomlinson ,the President of the Princeton University Industrial League. Tommy is one of' the most industrious men that ever industed-not. Tommy is the living example of Carlyle's principle of Work for work's sake. But the only work he cares to do is laboring to avoid doing any work. Tommy is a chap who is always bored to death. He was at a dance last month with john Gay. It was about the fourth dance and Tommy was yawning. Then a pretty girl entered the room. Who's that, John P said Tommy with a feeble show of interest. O, thatis Mrs. So- and-so, said johng She was married last Christmas. Oh, said Tommy disappointedly, the only pretty girl l've seen to- night. You needn't introduce me to any more people. I am leaving. Good-night, and he left, yawning, before the dance- was half over. You've also doubtless heard of the omelette twins, Ham and Egg Ober, and also how Dug and Ham, the fellows who- 60 Presentation Omtion look exactly alike except for I-Iam's specks, are engaged in a continuous sartatorial war. If Dug gets a particularly natty shirt from Sam Budd, I-Iam goes him one better with a tear- fully fetching vest from Kaskel. They also bribe all their ladies fair to provide them with knit ties ,and vie with each other to see which Will get the prettiest. At present Dug is ahead by one heliotrope cravat and a Wonderful green creation from Chase, of New I-Iaven, but I-Iam is still fighting, and the result is still in doubt. And now I must cease. I am not going to bore you by Wax- ing poetic, and telling you how you are about to embark on a frail bark on the raging sea of life, to be tossed about by the cruel Waves of temptation and misfortune, at length to arrive in a safe and sane harbor free from care and woe, No, I merely Want to ask pardon of any whom a chance 'word or phrase may have offended, and to ask them to let it pass and appreciate that it was uttered merely in the spirit of good- natured banter. Those whom I have knocked, I have knocked with a hearty will, but with a heart full of cheer and regard for every one of them, and I simply Wish before ceasing to extend to the Class of 1909, one and all, a cordial hand-clasp and a sincere Auf-wiedersehenf' 61 1909 Memorial Funcl The subscriptions to the Class Memorial Fund should be made to N. Armour, Princeton, N. J. No better Class spirit could be shown than by paying promptly, as the money col- lected is immediately in-vested. Also much time, labor, and expense will be saved to the committee by prompt payment. Secretary's Notice If the Class of 1909 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. QSignedj I. C. BRUSH, 113 West 69th St., New York City. 63 1909 CLASS ODE Timm melody md Tenor, U Music by E. G. BOTHWEKL :Je-ajfigwadqsgwdfdx ? Ji gi? 195- ,Q Q W fa? FH-WV' 2 'w W frfr B? SSGS ,D514-i?'i6LJDJ!ZJ..D iefifgli-faffg V jig WF psi V E V V I - -:Jr-ini 23:22 3145? 9? ggeffis All ffifffg ffm E' M' P V fc if i I. Yi 'l-- Y .- lhwggfvf? S I ' 1 n I I I f. EEZ i iii H in-A ll V. Hi ! J 4 J J 4 L.- 6 ' - .1 l9wi1w-2555 F P Pgwfxk yy gfjg KW' is 5 FE T-ggi -Ji J Z f2',- y9i jL ivgiigligigf ,il Q QQ b?J.12T.E,5 5jIH,J.k 4, fFfVVVVVELEVrVi??93I . MJ JJ?'TNQi,jl,1L MV?-iFVVbVEg?ELE5lL! gV?'1 1909 Class Ode Swiftly speeds the passing hour, Hall and spire fade from the light, Glancing halos crown each tower Where the moon holds court to-night. Songs we sing of wine and love and gladness, Songs of friendship fond in. memory, Anthems once more raiseg her sons shall praise Nassau's fame eternally. Fairy dreams before us hover, Past the future's cross-roads now Life is beck'ning like a lover, Wreathing crowns for every brow. Still we turn to what has been our glory, Still shall turn in sadder days to beg Alma Mater hail, nor ever fail Nassau's fame eternally. -S. Shellabarger. 65 IN MEMORIAM Joseph Stokes John B. Snakard Summary Courses of Study Academic . . . ......................... . . . 148 Scientific ............ .. , 27 Engineering . . . 1 43 Litt.B. ....... I I 53 Total 271 Societies- Whig . . . , , 86 Clio . . . , . 75 Bom in- I878. . . . I 1879 ...... 1 1882 ...... 3 I883 ...... , , 4 1884 ...... . . 25 1885 ..... , , 45 1886 ..... .. 94 1887 ..... . . 50 I888 ..... , , 20 1889 ..... 5 Our Maxima- Age at Graduation- .... ..... 3 1 yrs., 3 mos., 9 days. Weight ...... ....... ......,........... 2 4 9 lbs. Height .... ...... .... 6 f t., 5 in. Our .Minima- Age at Graduation .... .... I 9 yrs., 2 mos., I4 days. Weight ............. .... I .............. 1 I4 lbs. Height ........,.. .............. 5 ft., 3 in. Our Average Mentber- Age at Graduation ..... .... 2 2 yrs., 3 mos., 6 days. Height ....... . . . .... . . . . 67 .150 lbs Weight ........... .............. 5 ft., 9 in- The Nassau Herald Favorite Style of Beauty Robust .............. Fair, Fat and Forty.. Statuesque ...... ..... Black .............. Auburn ............. Adipose ............. Undulating Serpentine Simple but Girlish .... Intelligent Cleopatra . ........ . Favorite Woman's Name Blonde ...................... 105 Brunette .................... 50 Any Kind With Money ....... 25 Dark Brown . ............ .. IO Grecian . ........... .. 6 Straight Front .... .. 6 Faded blonde .... .. 4 Spanish ...... . . 3 Classic . . . . . 3 Southern . . . . . 2 Her's. . . ............. . 2 Helen .... ............ 2 o Mary .... .... 1 9 Margaret 16 Elizabeth ... ,... I0 Bridget . .... .... I 0 Polly IO Ruth ..... . . 9 Frances ..... . . 8 Dorothy .... . . 7 Virginia .... . . 6 Alice . .... . . 5 Mabel .... . . 5 Fanny .. . . . . 5 Virginia .... . . 4 Phyllis . . . . . 4 Anne .... . . . . . 4 Katharine . . . . . 3 Edith . ...... .. 3 Mariouch .. .. ... 3 Shirley ... ... 3 Gladys . . . . . 2 Marthy .. . . . . 3 Electra ... ... 3 Florence 3 Floradora . . . .. 3 Annie ...... . . 3 Marie .... . . 2 Ellen . .... . . 2 Emily .... . . 2 Bertha ...... Martha .... Sappho .... Fritzie Suzanne Arawana ..., Tessie ..... Flossie ....... Euphr-osyne .. .. Isabelle . .... . Adelaide Eleanor Gertrude ,... Jessie ..... Ada ...... ..... Gwendolyn Melchissedecca .. . .. Arline .. ....... . . Lizzie ......... Inez .... . . . Rachael . . . Prudence Jane ...... . Olga .... Rosaline .. . Her's .. . . . . Guilielma ., . . Ethel . ........ . Sagismunda .. . . Shakespeare Tennyson . Kipling Burns Byron . Milton Longfellow Browning . Coleridge .. Funk ...... Holmes .... Keats . .... . Wordsworth Wagner Bothwell Samuels Beethoven . Herbert Verdi .... Chopin ..,, . Grieg . .... . Nevin ..... Mendelssohn Rubenstein McDowell Pucinni .. . .. Handel . . . Brown .. . . Golden . . . Black .. . .. Dark . . . Blonde . . . Light .. . . . Blue .... Red ....... Peroxide . . Sandy . . . Auburn .. . . Summary Favorite Poets 55 Whitman .....40 Emerson ....3o Hugo I5 Gray IO Pope ro Lowell 9 vanDyke...... 6 Omar Khayyan.. 5 Homer ..... 5 Sykes 4 Blake 3 Horace 3 Lanier Favorite Composers 35 Gounod 32 Schubert 30 Langlotz I0 Bach 8 Mozart .. 6 Liszt .... . 5 Strauss . . 5 Flotow . . .. 5 Sankey .. 5 Hoffman .. 4 Edwards . . 4 Sullivan . . . .. 4 Schuman .. .. .. 4 Rossini Favorite Color of Hair ........85 Chestnut ....6o Yellow ..,.35 Sorrel.......... . . . I5 False ........ . . . . . . IO Princeton Blonde . . . I0 Buff ......... . . . 9 Purple . ..... . . . 8 White . . . . . . 7 Crimson . . . 5 Flaxenn... 5 69 The N assaa H erald Favorite Color of Eyes Blue ....... ...QI Brown .. ...88 I-Ier's 20 Black I5 Dark I4 Grey I3 Violet . 6 Roan ............ .. 5 Steel ....... Sloe . ...... . Lavender Green .... Pink .. . . Hazel .. Mauve Favorite Woman's College Vassar ...... .............. 4 O Bryn Mawr 37 Wellesley .. .. ... 35 Smith ...... . . . I5 Barnard .... II Baltimore .. .. .... .... 5 Castle ......... Mt. Holyoke Nat'l Park Sem. Ursinus ....... Randolph-Macon Trenton Normal Miscellaneous Statistics Number of men six feet tall or over.. ....,........ . Supported themselves wholly ........ Supported themselves in part ..... Entitled to wear varsity HP . .. Entitled to wear numerals ..... Athletic prizes won .............. Number winning athletic prizes .... Literary prizes won. ............ . Number 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 some by the faculty .... Number conditioned . ........... . Number of conditions .... Received pensums . ..... -. . . Greatest pensum Choursl.. . . . Number arrested . ........ . Wear glasses ........... Began in college ....... Have pawned articles .... Smoke ............... Began in college .... Stopped in college .... Chew tobacco . ..... 70 4 3 2 I I I I 4 3 3 2 I I 33 I0 47 I4 35 ....I8o 47 69 SI 64 25 86 367 31 40 154 503 82 I5 I9 QI 18 64 198 IOI 23 I2 Summary Began in college ...... ........... Stopped in college ............... Dance ..... - ...................... . Consider dancing morally wrong.. . .. Play cards ........................... Consider card playing morally wrong .... Number have kissed girls .......... .... Number having girl correspondents .... Total number of girl correspondents ..... Number engaged . ................... . Number have been rejected.. ............ . . . . A Favorite of Class Denomination .......... ............ ........ Study ....................... Most Popular Professor ......... Most Popular C.E. Professor.. . .. Most Popular Preceptor ....... Political Party . ........ .. Author . .......... . Language ... ...... . Foreign Language .... Hymn .............. Song ............ Composer .... Poet .......... Woman's Name. . . . Woman's College ..... Style of Beauty .... Newspaper ....... Weekly ........ Book ....... Beverage .... Tobacco . . . Cigarette - .... Cigar ....... ......... ........ Hall of Fame Best All Around Man ....................... Self-elected ......... Done Most for Class ..... Done Class Most ...... Most Popular ....... 71 4 5 .....179 I8 .....2o4 ...43 .....I82 .....174 .....457 ...3o ...34 . . . . . Presbyterian . . . . .. History ........Axson . . . . .McMillan . . . .Mcllwaine . . . . .Republican ......Kipling English French .....Lead Kindly Light Nassau Wagner and Bothwell Shakespeare Helen ' ' Mary Bryn Mawr . Vassar .............Blonde New York Sun Life ........Bible .........Water . . ...Bull Durham ...Ramesis II . . . .Bock Panetela 5 Meese ' ' ' lk Wagner . . . .. Breese . . . .Dillon . . . .Ewing . . . .Meese The Nassau H emld Developed Most Intellectually .... Developed Most Physically ..... Developed Most Socially ..... Handsomest . .................... . Prettiest ........................... Most Lady-like Cno competitionju.. Best Football Player ............ Best Baseball Player ..... Best Basketball Player ..... Best Hockey Player ..... Best Track Athlete ...... Best Gymnast ............. Best All Around-Athlete ..... Busiest Man ............. Never Caught Loafing ..... Laziest Man .............. Another Loafer ....... Most Likely to Succeed .... Most Respected Man .... Best Debater .......... Best Orator .......... Some Spellbinder .... Best Musician ....... Most Knock-kneed ..... Finest Legs Cdead heatj .... Talks most and says least .... Hungriest Man ......... Also Eats ..... Thirstiest Man .... Most Awkward ....... .. Rather Kittenish ............ Worst Poler Chands downj .... Brightest .,................ Wittiest Man Thinks He Is .... Class Sport , ........ . Thinks He Is ....,..... Has a Similar Idea .... Best Natured ........................... Rather Sunny ........................... Most Desperate Fusser Cno competitionjul.. 72 . . . ..Fenninger Dowd ' Vezin . . . . . .Cass Armour Zinsser ......Hill .......Dillon . . . .Vaughn . . . .Meese . . . . .Phillips . . . . .Gamble Dowd . . . .Dillon . . . . . .Ewing . . . ..Holsapple . . ..Tomlinson . . . .Stevenson C. Myers . . . . . .Ottinger . ............. Fry .............Laubach W. P. Hutcheson .........Bothwell . . . . .Whaley Cox Henry Groenevelcl h Buchanan .......Medina . . . . .Thorburn .......Selby .....Dodges ........Booth .....Can'1pbell Stauffer F enninger . . .Cunningham . . . . .Carroll ........Henry . . . . .Armstrong . . . .Passarella . . . J. Murray . ...Morrow . . . .Vezin Summary Thinks He Is .................. There With the Small Talk ..... Best Read .................... Worst Boot-licker . .......... . Biggest Bluffer ................... Worst Gossip Cno competitionj .... Most Politic ........... ......... Most Egotistical ...... Most Likely Bachelor .... Favorite Cup Candidate .... May Win Out. ........ . Best Dressed. . . . . Best Built by Tailor .... Best Built by Nature.... Worst Knocker ..... Class Baby ..,.. . . . . .Zinsser P. Hutcheson . . . . . . ,Shellabarger Black . . . .Dillon . . .Scull Ewing .Cooper Berry ' Findley Bunting Whaley Kelly Mackie Quinn Fox ....Dowd ......Annin 5 Whaley 1 Keen Colleges Represented Bucknell ............................... ....... . . . Centre College, Ky ........................... George Washington . ..... . Lawrence College, Wis .... Marietta . ............ 1 . . Mars Hill . . . Michigan . ................... , N. Y. U. ....................... . Occidental College, Los Angeles .... Brooklyn Polytechnic Institute ..... Swarthmore .................... Westminster, Mo. .. .. Wisconsin .... ..... Wittenberg, O. ................................... . . . . I I I I I I i I 2 2 I I I I What 1909 Has Done for Princeton Put Jack Whyte out of business. Started class smokers. Made two Deans necessary. Started rowing. Gave up Senior P-rade. Cut graft out of Athletic Association Abolished Inter-Club Treaty. 73 and put it on new basis. The Nassau H emla' What Princeton Needs Most An efficient daily paper. A few old customs. Money. ' Systematic management of all athletics. A championship football team. What Would You Do it You Ran the University Establish a college brewery. Hang myself. Fire Bunn and investigate Curat0r's oiiice. Fire some obnoxious members of Faculty. Take fossils off discipline committee. Abolish exams and cuts. Why is 1909 Princeton's Greatest Class Helped to win three baseball championships. Had four years of Preceptorial System. First class to eat in the Commons. Had two men on three periodicals. Best yet! 74 Miscellaneous Statistics Class Officers PRESHMAN YEAR CFIRST TERMD President-G. H. Fryer. Vice-President-P. E. Waller. Secretary-I-I. S. Chapman. SECOND TERM President-E. A. Dillon. Vice-President-G. H. Fryer. Secretary-N. Ewing, Ir. SOPHOMORE YEAR President-N. R. Cass. Vice-President-A. A. Little. Secretary-R. A. Gamble. JUNIOR YEAR President--D. O. Meese, Vice-President-H. Chaplin. Secretary-W. N. Ottinger. SENIOR YEAR President-E. A. Dillon. Vice-President-N. R. Cass. Secretary-I. C. Brush. Junior Orator A pp oin tm ents cLIo WHIG Ewing, Ir. I. G. Buchanan Freese M. H. Fry C. Laubach L. D. Jennings C. Myers R. L. Thomas Washingtonk Birthday Oifators Freshman Year-G. H. Fryer. Sophomore Year-F. C. Myers. Junior Year-N. Ewing, Ir. Senior Year-F. L. Cunningham. 75 The N assau Herald WUShi71gf072,S Birthday Debaters Freshman Year-J. C. Cooper. Sophomore Year-W. T. Stockton. Junior Year--M. H. Fry. Senior Year-F. C. Laubach. Hall Prize Men from 1908 CLIO HALL Freshman Year Sophomore-Freshman Extempore-Ist. W. W. Hackman zd. E. C. Olds. Debate-Ist. F. C. Myers. 2d. F. C. Laubach. Sophorhore Year Sophomore Inter-Hall Debate-J. C. Cooper. F. C. Laubach. F. C. Myers. Junior Year Junior Prize Debate-Ist. F. C. Laubach. zd. H. E. Dietrich. Senior Year., Senior Oratorical Contest-Ist. W. La Roe, Ir. zd. W. Stewart. WHIG HALL Freshrharf, Year Freshman Prize Debate-Ist. I. G. Buchanan. 2d. VV. T. Stockton. Freshman Speaking Contest-Ist. E. G. Bothwell. 2d. S. Gordon. Freshman Essay Contest-Ist. C. T. Plunkett. zd. R. L. Thomas. 3d. D. Roberts. Sophomore Year Sophomore Inter-Hall Debate-W. T. Stockton. S. G. Duncan. M. H. Fry. Sophomore Oratorical Contest-S. G. Duncan. W. T. Stockton. 76 Miscellaneous Statistics Junior Year Competitive Debate-M. H. Fry. Junior Essay Contest-E. S. Wells-Kerr. Junior Prize Debate-W. T. Stockton. Senior Year French Medal Debate Won by M. H. Fry University Debaters N. Ewing, Jr. M. Fry F. Laubach General Honors Freshman Year Academic-First Group J. G. Buchanan G. A. Harrer, Jr. J. C. Cooper, Jr. J. H. Huddleson, Jr L. Fenninger J. T. Arms, Jr. D D Ballin L. H. Booker A. C. Bruce Burnett C. H. N. F. Carroll J. H. Clark, Jr. H. L. Dowd C. W. Driver M. H. Fry S. Gordon Second Group R. L. Thomas I. Thomas S. Hinton L. Howard L. D. Jennings R. W. Johnston W. LaRoe, Jr. N. B. WcWilliams H. R. Medina R. H. Mulford D. S. Shultz C. A. Southerland W. T. Stockton Scientific-Second Group E. W. Beckwith E. T. Fiddler R. Hartshorne P. D. Wilson Civil Engineering-Second Group E. G. Bothwell H. W. Dolph 77 C. H. Shaner I. Y. Stauffer J The Nassau Herald Class of 1883 Prize for English I. Y. Stauffer Honorable Mention-I. H. Drummond - Sophomore Year Academic-First Group I. G. Buchanan I. H. Huddleson, Ir I. C. Cooper, Jr. S. B. Murray, Jr. L. Fenninger I. Thomas M. H. Fry R. L. Thomas S ecoud Group D. D. Ballin W. LaRoe, Ir. L. H. Booker N. B. McWilliams A. C. Bruce H. R. Medina C. H. Burnett F. S. Niles F. L. Cunningham J. C. Peacock C. W. Driver C. K. Phillips S. Gordon S. W. Phraner G. Henderson L. P. Scott R. H. Hill W. Shand S. Hinton S. Shellabarger F. A. Hollowbush D. S. Shultz L. D. Jennings C. A. Southerland E. S. W. Kerr W. T. Stockton R. Strange Scieutijic-First Group E. T. Fiddler Second Group W. W. Arnett A. H, Berry E. W. Beckwith P. D. Wilson Civil Engineering-Second Group I. L. Chapman C. H. Shaner M. A. Campbell I. Y. Stauffer Class of i861 Prize R. H. Hill Francis Biddle Sophomore English Prize I. Thomas Monorable Mention-J. C. Peacock Class of 1870 Sophomore English Prize S. Shellabarger Honorable Mention-E. S. W. Kerr 78 Miscellaneous Statistics Junior Ptizemen First Honor Prize-Divided equally between L. Fenn inger, I. Thomas and M. A. Campbell. McLean Prize-P. C. Laubach Junior Orator Medals First-F. C. Laubach Second-F. C. Myers Third-M. H. Fry Fourth-I: G. Buchanan Class of I876 Meinorial Prize for Debate-M. H. Fry Dickinson Prize-L. Fenninger ' Class of I870 Junior English Prizes Old English-D. Roberts, with Honorable Mention of S. Shellabarger English Literature-S. Shellabarger T. B. Wanamaker English Prize-I. Thomas. Mary Cunningham Humphreys Junior German Prizes First-I. Thomas Second-L. H. Booker Junior Honor-men Academic First Group I. G. Buchanan I. C. Cooper, Ir. L. Fenninger T I. Thomas Second Group R. E. Annin, Jr. D. D. Ballin C. H. Burnett B. Dodge M. H. Fry S. Gordon D. P. Green E. S. W. Kerr W. LaRoe, Ir. R. L. Thomas School of Science Junior LITT.B. COURSE First Group E. T. Fiddler 79 J. H. Huddleson, Ir. H. R. Medina S. B. Murray, Ir. N. S. Mackie I. H. Ober I. C. Peacock C-. K. Phillips S. W. Phraner L. P. Scott W. Shand S. Shellabarger K. G. Stern Honormen I The N assau H erold Second Group W- F- LCCPCT M. Matter B.s. COURSE Second Group A. V. S. Olcott P, D, Wilson c.E. COURSE First Group M. A. Campbell I. Y. Stauffer Second Group J. L. Chapman C. M. Dennis E. L. Wagner Athletics Point Winners in the Caledonian Games. Freshman Year 100-yards Dash-R. A. Gamble, first. 220-yards Dash-R. A. Gamble, second. E. C. Tittmann, Ir., third. 880-yards Run-D. O. Meese, fourth. , One-mile Run--E. H. Kelly, lirst. W. L. McGee, second. R. P. Parsons, third. Two-mile Run-L. I. Reynolds, fourth. 120-yards Hurdle-A. H. Niblack, second. F. M. Tibbott, third. 220-yards Hurdle-A. H. Niblack, second. Running Broad Jump-F. M. Tibbott, third. Sophomore Year 220-yards Dash-E. C. Tittman, Ir., second. 440-yards Dash-E. C. Tittman, Ir., second. A. M. Conger, third. 880-yards Run-N. Floyd, third. One-mile Run-W. L. McGee, second. R. P. Parsons, third. Two-mile Run-W. L. McGee, second. Running High jump-R. E. Jamison, tied for second 80 Miscellaneous Statistics fimior Year Ioo-Yards Dash-R. A. Gamble, first. 880-yards Run-A. McC. Conger, third. One-mile Run-W. L. McGee, first. Two-mile Run-W. L. McGee, first. Pole Vault-C. Vezin, Ir., tied for second. 100-yards 220-yards 440-yards 120-yards 220-yards Senior Year Dash-R. A. Gamble, first. W. L. Dawbarn, second. Dash-W. L. Dawbarn, first. Dash-A. M. Conger, second. Hurdle-H. G. Turner, third. Hurdle-W. J. Leeper, third. Pole Vault-C. Vezin, Jr., first. Running Broad Jump-H. L. Dowd, first. One-mile Run-W. L. McGee, first. R. P. Parsons, second. 4 Football E. A. Dillon, Captain. B. J. Carr, Manager. 1909 M en on the Team Booth Bishop Dillon Cass Dowd Tibbott O'Brien Stanard Baseball R. Vaughn, Captain. W. R. Sides, Acting Captain. D. Ober, Manager. 1909 M ew on the Team Dillon S. Phillips Heyniger Sides W. H. Myers, Ir. Vaughn 1909 Football Team Purves, Captain, Breese, Coxe, Dowd, MacDonald, Mackie W. M. Milligan, Moffet, Jones, Csborn, Stewart, Stratton. 1909 Baseball Team W. H. Myers, Ir., Captain, Berry, Dixon, Drewes, Gay, Kelley, Jones I. W. Murray, Phillips, Seeley, Selby. S1 t The N assan Herald Entitled to Wear 'Varsity P Booth, Bishop, Carr, Cass, Conger, Dawbarn, Dillon, Dowd, Gamble, Heyniger, McGee, Meese, Ober, Sides, Tibbott, Vaughn, W. H. Myers, Jr., S. Phillips, O'Brien, Stanard. Entitled to Wear Class Nnrnerals Armour, Brush, Breese, Caldwell, I. W. Chambers, I. L. Chapman, Cist, Conger, Cooper, Coxe, Dawbarn, Dixon, Drewes, Gay, Spencer Gordon, Hallimond, Hartshorne, Howard, Kelley, King, Keys, Little, MacDonald, Mackie, I. W. Murray, W. H. Myers, Jr., Osborn, Passa- rella, S. Phillips, Prizer, Scott, Selby, H. Trimble, Vaughan, Wagner, Whaley. A REPRESENTATIVES IN WRESTLING Freshman Year Light-weight ..... .................... Middle-Weight ..... ............... Heavy-weight. .... .................... . Sophomore Year Light-Weight ..... .................... Middle-weight. ..... ......................... . M. Dennis F1-eese R. King M. Dennis F. Cist Heavy-weight. ............................................ R. R. King REPRESENTATIVES IN CANE SPREE Freshman Year Light-Weight ..... ................................ ...... C . F. Cist Middle-weight ..... ........ . . ...... J. A. Cook Heavy-Weight .... ................... .... E . Stanard Sophomore Year Light-weight ..... .................... ..... H . W. Trimble Middle-weight ...... ........ .... ....... . I . A. Cook Heavy-weight .... .................. ...... C . F. Cist W1'estl1'1zg Team R. R. King, Captain. T. I. Gillespie, Manager A. G. Ober, Ir. M. Passarella Basketball Tearn D. O. Meese, Captain. A. A. Little, Manager. Keys Surbrug Swlrnrning Tearn I. W. Chambers, Captain. W. F. Stohlman, Man-ager. H. Kimball H. P. Medina K. G. Stern 82 M isceilaneoiis Statistics Soccer Teain G. Henderson, Captain. I. H. Nutting, Manager. C. S. Coxe R. P. Parsons P. Kent C. D. Spencer A. T. Martin H. W. Sherrill A. G. Ober L. P. Strong A. F. Martin Gun Club W. I. Latta, Captain. H. A. Smith Tennis Association F. E. Dixon, Vice-President and Captain. Gordon Tomlinson Hockey C. S. Coxe, Captain. W. H. Myers, Ir., Manager. Brush Phillips L Gym. Team H. L. Dowd, Captain. W. F. Stohlman, Manager. Cooper H. Kimball Vezin Track Tea-in R. A. Gamble, Captain. D. O. Meese, Manager Dawbarn McGee Conger Parsons Dowd Vezin Literary Boards ' The Princeton Tiger Milton Matter, Managing Editor, E. T. Holsapple, Business Man agerg E. H. Burk, Assistant Business Manager, Spencer Gordon, C. T Plunkett, W. P. Hutcheson, F. L, Cunningham, I. G. Buchanan, H. R Medina, Editors. Daily Princetonian H. Chaplin, Editor-in-Chief, D. Ober, Managing Editor, I. H. Clark Ir., Assignment Editor, I. G. Buchanan, M. Matter, E. C. Olds, R. L Thomas, Editorsg C. R. Dickinson, Business Manager. 83 ! The Nassau Herald 1909 Brie-a-Brac Board Earle T.,Holsapple, Chairman, Herbert A. Boas, Business Manager, James C. Hutchins, Heman L. Dowd, Assistant Business Managers 9 John I. Scull, Alexander R. Howell, Art Editors, John C. Beam, Hugh Chaplin, Edward A. Dillon, Spencer Gordon, Editors. Nassau Literary Magazine John C. Cooper, Jr., Managing Editor, Steuben B. Murray, Business Manager, John G. Buchanan, Wilfred J. Funk, Milton Matter, Spencer Phraner, Charles T. Plunkett, Platt Kent, Editors. Nassau Herald Magazine H, Laurence Dowd, Chairman and Business Manager, John C. Beam, Burton J. Carr, John Gay, Editors. Miscellaneous Senior Council B. J. Carr, Chairman, E. A. Dillon, H. Chaplin, W. N. Ottinger, N. R. Cass, F. L. Cunningham, J. C. Cooper, Jr., M. Matter, R. Vaughn, R. A. Gamble, M. H. Fry, D. Ober, D. O. Meese, J. D. MacDonald, W. G. Dunlop, W. J. Hallimond, A. E. Booth, J. Farr, Jr., E. C. Kelley, F. C. Laubach, H. F. Osborn, Jr. Monday Night Club W. M. Prizer, President, D. Ober, Secretary, N. Armour, H. Chaplin, W. G. Dunlop, T. J. Gillespie, Jr., E. C. Kelley, N. S. Mackie, D. O. Meese, W. H. Myers, Jr., H. F. Osborn, Jr., E. C. Selby. Philadelpliian Society W. N. Ottinger, President, A. E. Booth, J. C. Brush, J. G. Buchanan, B. J. Carr, N. R. Cass, H. Chaplin, E. M. Dodd, F. C. Laubach, A. T. Martin, D. Ober, H. F. Osborn, Jr., H. W. Turner. Municipal Club D. O. Meese, President, H. W. Turner, Secretary, L. H. Booker, W. A. Butler 3rd, H. S. Caldwell, B. J. Carr, N. R. Cass, H. Chaplin, C. F. Cist, J. H. Clark, Jr., H. L. Dowd, N. Ewing, Jr., J. Farr, Jr., M. H. Fry, R. A. Gamble, T. J. Gillespie, W. P. Hutcheson, P. Kent, M. Matter, C. W. McNeely, D. Ober, E. C. Olds, H. F. Osborn-, Jr., R. P. Parsons, Jr., A. H. Samuels, W. R. Sides, W. H. Zinsser. Triangle Club Frank L. Cunningham, President, Walter G. Dunlop, Manager, G. A. Armstrong, D. D. Ballin, H. W. Benedict, J. C. Brush, C. H. Burnett, N. F. Carroll, N. R. Cass, J. C. Cooper, T. S. Craven, N. Ewing, Jr., N. K. Fox, A. R. Howell, O. W. Mosher, Jr., A. H. Samuels, J. I. Scull, W. F. Stohlman, H. G. Treadwell, H. G. Turner, A. W. Verner, C. Vezin, Jr. ' 84 Miscellaneous Statistics Glee Club Organization N. R. Cass, Leader, Burnett, Carver, Craven, Dodd, Gilpin, Hardison Howard, C. P. Hutchinson, Meese, Moore, Mosher, Nutting, Passarellai Reynolds, Samuels, Silvers, Wagner. Canoe Club R. R. King, Commodore, Arnett, Brady, Butler, I. S. Chapman Dodd, C. Dodge, Groeneveld, Howard, Huddleson, Kimball, Matter: A. V. S. Olcott, Phraner, A. E. Rankin, Rogers, Schultz, Vezin. . Press Club A. H. Samuels, President, Dodd, Hinton, Jahn, F. C. Myers, Strange, R. L. Thomas, Wilson. A ' English Club Hartshorne, Henderson, Laubach, S. B. Murray, I. W. Murray, Niles F. D. Sanford. German Club W, F. Stohlman-, President 5 Armstrong, Butler, Dietrich, Sprague H. Chaplin. French - Club H. R. Medina, President, Connett, Jennings, P. Kimball, King, Maresi, I. W. Murray, Scull, Vezin, Zinsser. I909 Dance Committee N. Ewing, Ir., Chairman 3 Ankeney, Brush, Carr, Coxe, Dunlop, Floyd, D. P. Green, Little, Mackie, Mayer. Dining Halls Conirnittee W. J. Hallimond, Chairman, Carr, Chaplin, C. E. Dodge, Meese, W. H. Myers, Ir., Osborn. Upper Class Clubs Campus-Arms, Booth, Burnett, Carpenter, I. Chapman, D. P. Green, Hottstaedt, Hoffman, C. P. Hutchinson, H. Kimball, Koch, Leeper, Lippincott, Mulford, S. Phillips, Sands, R. H. Smith, Thompson, Titt- mann, Wallace, W'i1son. Cannon-Ankeney, Bishop, Booker, Iahn, Jamison, Jones, Matheny, Moffett, Riddle, Stevenson, Sensenbrenner, Stratton, Thorburn, Vaughn, Watson, Wiess. Cap and Gown-Chaplin, Dowd, Gillespie, Hetzel, W. P. Hutcheson, Hutchins, Keys, Matter, Mayer, McNeely. Charter-Brady, E. H. Burk, Cooper, B. Dodge, C. Dodge, Floyd, Graff, Henderson, Kent, Martin, A. C. Myers, A. G. Ober, Ir., Parsons, Spencer, Zinsser. 35 The Nassau Herald Colonial-Boas, Bunting, Caldwell, Carroll, Clark, Dolph, Este, Farr Henry, MacSherry, M. K. Reynolds, Surbrug, Whaley, Wi1d'er. 7 Cottage-Auerbach, Dunlop, Ewing, Gamble, Gill, Gilpin, Keen Maury, Meese, W. H. Myers, Ir., Schaif, Samuels, Salsbury, Treadwelli H. I. Turner, H. W. Turner, Verner. Elm-Baker, Earle, Feick, Fox, Gordon, Ivins, Latta, Mahn, I. W Murray, Plaut, Ropes, H. A. Smith, Trimble. Ivy-Armour, Beam, Breese, Cass, Coxe, Dillon, Dixon, Dougherty Key and Seal-Ackerson,-Annin, Bonner, Cist, Cook, Conger, Fry 7 Hagenbuch, Hildebrant, M. Hutchinson, Lawrence, Longstreet, Mor- row, Nutting, G. Olcott, Seeley, Stockton, Truax, Weaver, Zimmerman. Quadrangle-Armstrong, Ballin, Black, Brush, P. Chapman, Dickin- son, Gray, Holsapple, Howell, D. Ober, Ober, Olds, Peirce, Scull Sprague, Staiford, Stohlmann, Vezin. Terrace-Barchfelt, Buchanan, Budd, I. Chambers, Dawbarn, Dodd Y Hartshorne, Howard, House, Medina, McWilliams, F. Myers, Ottinger, Overholt, Roberts, Strange, R. Thomas, Wyckoff. Tiger Inn-Adams, Boice, Carr, Douglas, Holden, Jones, Kelley, Mat- thews, Morton, Niblack, Peckham, Rising, Rockwell, Selby, Sides, Snak- ard, Tibbott. Tower-C. Adams, Boyd, Bothwell, Cameron, S. Gordon, Hallimond Hinton, Lupfer, Maulsby, Milne, Nichols, Rentschler, L. Richardson, A. Sanford, Silvers, Shellabarger, Walter. Sophomore Clubs Kawcma-Boas, Baker, Beam, Carroll, Cass, Chaplin, Chapman, Clark Dodges, Dolph, Dowd, Este, Ewing, Fryer, Gay, Gillespie, Hetzel Heyniger, Hutcheson, Hutchins, Keys, Little, Matter, Mayer, MacDon- ald, Meese, Mitchell, Olds, Parsons, Pierce, Peacock, Reynolds, Schaif, Stohlmann, Tomlinson, Tonnele, Treadwell, Turner, Vezin. Diawl-Adams, Andrews, Armour, Auerbach, Baker, Berry, Bokum Boyce, Bunting, Byles, Chapman, Caldwell, Coxe, Dillon, Dixon, Dough: erty, Douglas, Dunlap, Farr, Gill, Henry, Holden, Keen, Kelley, Kim- ball, Mackey, Matheney, Mathews, Maury, McSherry, Murray, Myers W. Myers, Niblack, O'Brien, Osborn, Paris, Peckham, Prizer, Purves Ralston, Rising, Salsbury, Samuels, Selby, Smith, Snakard, Stanard, Stokes, Verner, Whaley, Wilder, Wilson. I Elkova-Berry, Couse, Fiddler, Findley, Freese, Glover, Hollowbush Huddleson, Jennings, Kellog, LaRoe, Murray, Northwood, Peacock, Phillips, Rogers, Shoemaker, Shultz, Southerland, Stauffer, Winn. Y omdu-Abbey, Ankeney, Annin, Ballin, Barchfeld, Beckwith, Beld- ing, Booth, Brady, Bruce, Brush, Burk, Burnett, Carpenter, Chapman, Dawbarn, Dodd, Earle, Feick, Green, Hallimond, Hartshorne, Hilde- brant, Hoifman, Hattstaedt, Holsapple, Hutchinson, Ivans, Latta, Lup- 86 J Gay, Heyniger, Little, Mackie, MacDonald, Osborn, Pfizer, Tomlinson. i 1 ! Miscellaneous Statistics fer, Lyon, McKaig, McNeely, McWilliams, Morrow, Milne, Mulford, Myers, Olcott, Ottin-ger, Phillips, Sanford, Shellabarger, Seeley, Sidwell, Scull, Slocum, Stewart, Stockton, Stafford, Tittmann, Trimble, Vaughn, Wallace, Walter, Wilson, Zinsser. Vanco-Adams, Bothwell, Booker, Carr, Cook, Dunning, Fox, Gam- ble, Gilpin, Glaser, Gordon, Stephen Gordon, Gray, Graff, Hutchinson, Iahn-, Jamison, Jones, I. Jones, Kent, Knauer, Longstreet, Morton, Nichols, Ogden, Plaut, Rentschler, Riddle, Ropes, Sensenbrenner, Shim- berg, Sides, Smith, Stevenson, Surbrug, Thorburn, Tibbott, Turner, Vaughn, Wiess, Zimmerman, Rowno-Ackerson, Arms, Beck, Baer, Bonner, Boyd, Budd, Clark, Fry, Funk, Hagenbuch, Hardison, Hays, Hosmer, House, Howard, Kelly, Koch, Lawrence,-Lippincott, Mitchell, Moore, McCulloch, Rey- nolds, Sands, Sayer, Smith, Sprague, Stern, Strong, Thompson, Truax Wagman, Wyckoff. ' Vikard-Blodgett, Blum, Buchanan, Cameron, Carver, Cist, Cobb, Con- nett, Dietrich, Driver, Fenninger, E. Greene, Hollenbeck, Hunt, Lau- bach, Maresi, Niles, Passarella, Phraner, Perrine, Plunkett, Quinn Robinson, Sargent, Scott, Sherrill, Sickelstiel, Strange, Stryker, Shaner, Thomas, R. Thomas, Weaver, Webb. Lzwale-Armstrong, Arnett, Benedict, Black, Butler, Chisholm Cooper, Colborn, Crosby, Drewes, Dickinson, Ehrehart, Floyd, Groene- veld, Henderson, Hinton, Kerr, P. Kimball, King, Mosher, Nutting, A Ober, D. Ober, I. Ober, Olcott, E. Rankin, H. Rankin, Reid, H, Rey- nolds, L. Richardson, Roberts, F. Sanford, Silvers. 37 Ex-Members of 1909 L. R. ADAMS .... A. K. AITKEN. .. I. ALEXANDER.. . . M. C. ALBRIGHT. L. A. ANDREWS.. J. W. ANGELL. . . J. .ARCHIBALD .... I. Y. ARMS, IR. . . W. B. BAER ..... R. A. BAKER. ..... . W. H. BARNETT ..... . E. R. BECK. .... . E. W. BECKWITH .... .... T. E. BEDDOW ..... . P. BELDEN ...... F. N. BELDING ..... W. R. BERRY .... W. C. BICKFORD. R. D. BOKUM ....... S. B. BOSWORTH ..... R. S. BOYESEN .... M. O. BRADLEY.. .............................Chicago, Ill .. ..... Trenton, N. I. . .Stamford, Conn. .......Hatf1eld,Pa. .. ..... Flushing, L. I. .New York, N. Y. .Hightstown, N. I. .Washington, D. C. ....New York, N. Y . . . . .Cohocton, O .St. Louis, Mo . . . .Havana, Cuba. .East Orange, N. I . . . .Nanticoke, Pa . . . . A. . Syracuse, N. Y . . Rockville, Conn . . ..... Philadelphia, Pa . . . . . . . .Muskogee, I. T. . . . . .Chicago, Ill . . . . ..Utica, N. Y . . . . . Chicago, Ill . . . ......... Chicago, Ill C. A. BROESEL. .... .... N ew York, N. Y M. H. BROWN. .. A. C. BRUCE .... . . ..... Springfield, Ill. . . . . .Richmondf Va. R. D. BYLES ...... ..... B radford, Pa. I. C. BULLITT ....... ....Philadelphia, Pa. W. H. CARPENTER. ..... .... N ew York, N. Y. C. O. CARVER, JR .... ....... S haron, Pa. H. C. CHAPMAN ..... ...... P ittsburg, Pa. A. W. CLARKE. .. S. M. CLOUD.. . .. , , .... Flushing, N. Y. . . . . . . . . .Philadelphia, Pa. Ex V. I. COBB ..... . R. CONGER .... -Members Class I. A. COON ....... G. G. CORNWELL. .. L. D. COSGRAVE ....... G. Y. CUNNINGHAM.. . . . F. L. CURTIS. ........ . F. R. DAVIS ....... H. N. DAVIS ....... E. E. DENNISTON.. I. I. DICK. ......... . I. N. DRUMMOND .... F. EARLE ......... M. D. EASTON.. . . . VV. S. ELDRIDGE ..... G. O. FERGUSON.. . . C. FISHER ........ G. H. FRYER .... W. W. GIPE ..... W. GLASER. ...... . E. F. GREEN ....... W. W. HACKMAN. R. HAGENBUCII .... W. I. HALLIMOND.. . . . C. T. HANNA ..... F. B. HARDISON. ..... . . G. A. HARRER, IR. . . W. A. HARRINGTON .... . . H. M. HARVEY ...... I. R. HATTSTAEDT.. S. HAYS ............ C. L. HEULINGS.. . . I. H. HENTZ, 3RD... W. S. HEYNIGER. . . R. W. HITCHCOCK ..... A. T. HOBBS. ....... . VV. P. HOFFMAN. . . C. L. HOLDEN.. . . . 39 Uf -T909 . .. . . .New York, N. Y. . . . . . .RoSemor1t, Pa. . . . . .Morrtclair, N. I. . . . . .Iacksonvi11e, Fla . . . . . . . .PittSburg, Pa. . . . . .WaShington, D. C. . . . . . .P1ainf1e1d, N. . . . .New York, N. Y. . . . . . Newark, N. I. . . . .New York, N. Y. . . . . New York, N. Y. . . . . .Germar1town, Pa ..E1izabeth, N. I . . . .Arco1a, N. I ....Cape May, N. I. . Brookline, Mass . Bloornsburg, Pa . . . . .PottStown, Pa. . . . . . . indianapolis, Pa. . . . . .Mt. Vernon, N. Y . . . .Buffalo, N. Y . . .BrummerviIle, Pa. . . . . .B1OomSburg, Pa .New York, N. Y . . . .A11egheny, Pa .. . .Geneva, N. Y Briar Cliff Manor, N. Y ......NeW York, N. Y . . . . . . . . .DetrOit, Mich .......ChicagO, Ill . . . . .0verbrOok, Pa . . . .MooreStown, N. I . . . . .GermantOwn, N. I .. . . . . .Cor11ing, N. Y .. . .New York, N. Y .......Newark,N.I .....New York, N. Y . . . .BC1'111iI'1g'EOI'1, Vt J. S. HAULENBEEK. . F. A. HOLLOBUSH. .. C. W. HUNT, JR .... C. L. JOHNSON ..... R. W. JOHNSTON.. . . G. C. JONES ...... E. H. KELLY ..... J. E. KETTLE ,.... R. D. KIEFER ...... J. C. KENNEDY.. . . . C. E. LARABIE.. . . C. H. LATIMER ..... A. C. LEONARD. .... . H. M. LONGSTREET.. O. C. LYON ........ D. H. MCALLISTER. . S. P. MCKAIG. .... . S. H. lWACSHERRY.. L. MARICLEY ....... R. P. O. MATIiENY.. E. N. MATTHEWS. .. H. H. NlAUKLEY .... E. C. MAY. ........ . . . . .... .Watertown, N. Y. . ........... Bala, Pa. . . ..New York, N. Y . . . . . . lndianapolis, Ind New Bloomfield, Pa . . . . .YoungStown, O . . . .Sioux City, Ia .. . .New York, N. Y . . . . . . ..Bellevue, Pa . . . . .Brooklyn, N. Y . . . .Deer Lodge, Mont . . . . .West Ashland, Wis . ........... Wayne, Pa .....Matawan,N.J .. ...... .Caldwell, N. J . . . ..... Brooklyn, N. Y . . . . . . . .Philadelphia, Pa . . . .Baltimo1'e, Md . . . . .ChiCago, Ill . . . ...... Springfield, Ill . .... New York, N. Y . . . .Frederick, Md . ..... Maywood, N. J E. A. MEWHINNEY ..... ....... O xford, N. J V. R. MILDEBERGER. T. L. MILLER ....... J. C. MILLIGAN ..... R. MITCHELL ...... R. H. MITCHELL.. . . S. S. MITCHELL.. . .. J. A. MOFFET, JR. . . . . . . . . . .Platte Clove, Y . .... New York, N. Y . . . . .SwisSvale, Pa . . . .Glen Ridge, N. J .. .... Caledonia, N. Y . . . . .Buffalo, N. Y .. ...New York, N. Y. C. B. MOORE ....... ..... S t. Louis, MO L. S. MOSCRIP ..... ....... T Owanda, Pa W. E. MUIR ........... ..... M orristown, N. J M. T. MUNKITTRICK ..... ....... S ummit, N. J W. A. MYERS ...... J. A. NEILSON.. . . A. H. NIBLACK .... . . .......... Springfield, O. New Bloomfield, Pa. ...........Chicago,Ill. Ex W. D. O,BRIEN.. . . A. D. OLYPHANT. . I. D. GVERHOLT. . . A. S. PAGE ...... I. F. PARK, IR.. .. A. M. PARKER .... C. P. PARKER ..... C. N. PEACOCK.. . . I. G. PENNINGTON. M. H. POINDEXTER C. S. POWERS ..... W. M. PURVES .... C. L. REID ......... -M 611'LZ787'.S' Class of IQOQ South Norwalk, Conn . . . . . . .Trer1ton, N. I .........WooSter, O ........OSwego,N.Y L. I. REYNOLDS ...... W. E. RICHARDSON ..... R. G. ROLSTON. ..... . E. A. ROSENFELD.. . . . A. L. SANDS ...... W. SAYER ....... L. M. SCOTT ..... I. M. SCUDDER ....... H. B. SELDEN ..... I. S. SENSENBRENNER .... G. R. SERGEANT. . C. R. SIIIMBERG.. I. H. SHOEMAKER.. B. L. SIMMONS. . M. S. SLOCUM. . . I. H. SMITH ..... W. M. SMITH, IR .... I. B. SNAKARD... H. B. SPEERS ..... E. STAGG, IR ..... E. STANARD ...... M. STERRINGER. . P. M. STEWART.. W. T. STOCKTON. I. STOKES ....... QI . . . .Wheeling, W. Va . . . . . . . .Stafford, Pa . . . .Deadwood, S. D . . . . .Pittsburg Pa . ..BaltimOre, Md . . . . .'I'Opeka, Kaus . . . . .YoungstoW11, O . . . . .PrincetOn, N. I Indianapolis, Ind . ...New York, N. Y . . . . . . .Bernville, Pa New York, N. Y New York, N. Y . . . .Newport, R. I . . . . .Brooklyn, N. Y . . .Princeton, N. I. . . . . .Trenton, N. I . . . .Greenwich, Conn. .........Nunah, Wis . . . .Philadelphia, Pa . ..... London, Eng . . . . . .Lockhaven, Pa. . . .WaShingtor1, D. C. . . . . .OsSining, N. Y. . . . . .Sewickley, Pa . . ..Nett1ewoOd, N. I . . . . . . .TituSville, Pa. . . . . .Pine Bluff, Ark. .. . . . .Leonia, N. I . . . . .St. Louis, Mo. . . ..I-Iarrisburg, Pa . . . . . .Cleveland, C . . . .IackSonville, Fla . ...New York, N. Y F. E. STRAAT ..... W. L. STRATTON ..... .... E. VV. STRYKER ..... ..... New York, N. Y. .Mt. Vernon, N. Y. Bound Brook, N. I. W. B. STRYKER ....... ........ T renton, N. I. I. S. THOMPSON, JR H. TOBEY ......... F. M. 'ILIBBOTT .... E. C. TITTMANN. . . T. M. TONNELLE. .... .. F. W. TRAVIS ..... C. TRUAX, IR ..... A. W. VERNER .... C. L. DE VICTORIA. P. E. WALLER ..... W. R. WARWICK. . . L. VVASSERMAN .... I. WATSON, IR .... P. B. WEAVER .... D. W. WEBB .... H. WEST ......... F. B. WHITING .... L. R. WILDER ..... W. M. VVILKINS. . . G. E. WILKINSON.. G . . P. Wmn ......... . T. S. WOODRUFF. .. R. WOOD ......... F. K. ZERBE ..... . .... ...... B altirnore, Md. .New York, N. Y. ..Philade1phia, Pa.. . . . ..St. Louis, Mo. . . .New York City . . . . .BroOk1yn, N. Y . . . . . .ChicagO, Ill . . . .PittSburg, Pa .New York, N. Y .Skaneate1eS, N. Y Long Branch, N. I . .New York, N. Y . . . . .New Castle, Pa . . . .Be11efonte, Pa . .NaShvi11e, Tenn . .Toledo, O . . . .Neenah, Wis . . . .EvanSton, Ill ... .Buffa1o, N. Y .......York, Pa . . . .NaShua, N. H . . . .NewtOn, N. I . . . .TrentOn, N. I . .Philade1phia, Pa STATISTICS 'OKI '9-100W 1-TOGS' ' 'P-W0 HUGH! ' 'H A ' ' 'GSB-id ' ' ' -199515133 W8 '9l915T L8. 'S '-WN ' GL. V91 'FJ '3.QS-TGQTIIPTIO 1S 1951-WIKI 'EI 899 'H 'O' ' ' ' ' ' 'H 'E 'T-V509 H108 IIBQQSUH, 'fl1UW AAA 'H ' T159-Id ' 199U!3UfEI L 'Q SST 981 'GZ 'EUV ' ' ' EI VS. Fd 'KUWISSTIV AV UOISIIBIAT STST 'GI 'O 'S 'ET 'IWMTI108 'BHJPEI IIUql00nI ' ' K-1lSFm9lIO ' 'H 'QS9-ld ' H0 S '9 Q6T LS: 'ST XIUI ' 'I SVTQ ' Tk-I 'P-Toll-W-TH 9AV U053i3UI' TZT 'S'H ' EI 'V 11008 .HUGH .... unqosna . ..... ummali ..I .H .Slam ....,.. .SHS QKOPQ Q91 Q9 I mmf ........ 3 IL .......... mow .EHQIBH .QS amd 909 .H .V .... .... 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'9 '-WW HHS 'XGIV Z1 B3 OD .laqssouuq 'xoog eqmim 'q 'V --'------ -lumens .qoa ........ 8 .H ..... qsugum .O .... . .. .slam .. Aysq Z -9 O91 884 .IZ .ldas ...... H -N 8 ................. L, .N aaguluo qlnos -8 .V .......... ...H .agunhus .DWI ........ H .H ...... .woes .O .H . .slam . .H .O Z ,9 QM SSL W HMV ...... H .S 8 .. . .. . ........... E .N .uolaauud -H .O .... . . . .H .,I .guons i .Impala ........ H05 .... Summa .QW -.Hi . .mnq ..... .mmm 9 -Q on 98: .ZI .ww ........ El F9 . . . ..... ,MNOMH .mmwo QQ .3 .V ....... J .M ,Humming P11 Pa Pa r' Pu Pu Pv zo 4 rn g ra Q U m nv sw :g 3 3. E 2 o 2. fb 0 ro E. 3 5, 5 sae as-.3 E, fg, .rf Q 5 ff. P1 ,... ,.. P1 ,-, P-1 ,... x:' Q. 0 ' rr- rf '1 m 07 Q o F' .-+ p 0 SD ff, cn cu '4 D E. ld 5 P ' 14 5 Pg, Q rg Q3 53 ' 'gi 'aommcllsml -NWN ' o 5 2- 21 -2' gf F ESTABLISHED IBIB CEE ET Mae 'ii D t t YJ'-Q 'AX Qvntlemmuaf gum-numbing vhs, BROADWAY COR.TWENTY'5ECOND ST. NEW YORK. 1 . , Y. ,,,Y . ...- ,.-.- , ,Y,,Y, ,-s.-M-.- Y ...,Y, , ---W -.,., CLOTHING-Ready Made and to Measure. FURNISHINGS-Usual and Unusual. ' HATS-From London and the Continent. SHOES-Conforming to the English Model. Riding, Hunting and Polo Garments, Motor Clothing, Liveries, Fishing and Shooting Suits 5 Flannels for Golfing, Tennis, etc. English Blazers. Polo Ulsters. Trunks, Week-end Cases, Luncheon Baskets, e Illustrated Catalogue on request. to WE SHALL HOPE That the CLASS OF l909 can look back With pleasure, as We do, on our .full college course business acquaintance. THROUGH These relations We have been able to increase I our business, and We bespeak a continuance of your patronage as an H old grad. FOR Our shortcomings We crave your pardon With a sincere promise that with each passing year We are ff determined to grow bigger and better. YOUR MAIL ORDERS WILL HAVE, ALWAYS, OUR PROMPT ATTENTION THE PRINUETUN UNIVERSITY STURE A - .wwgww f . 5 F 0 MANU ACTURER DESIGN RTER 1.12. NEWMAN Manzjacturing jfeweler Established over Thirty Years in the Business of Designing and Making College, Fraternity and Club, Pins, Badges, Rings, Pendants, Medals, Tro- phies, Src., in FINE GRADE ONLY The finest goods in these lines at Princeton are of our make II John Street NTEVV YIDRJC od rintin CATALOGUES BOOKLETS FOLDERS PERIODICALS Prompt Deliveries Fireproof Vaults for Storage Mail and Express Job Print 9-15 Murray Street NEW YORK Telephone 7880 Cortlandt Hotel Cumberland l W S. W. Corner Broadway at 54th Street NE Near 50th St. Subway Station and 53rd St. Elevated ,Q - 332, ep El 0 Bge fill ' . .. ll-..f:.' . ll l ,, rg3E5!lgig-f Special Terms for Headquarters for College Teams College Men I Ideal Location, Near Theatres, ff Eiibz'-'fzagf-rg: EX EIE Shops, and Central Park , 5-2 Esgg iflceiiy' fb gi vi El M2 T um gig New, Modern, and Absolutely Fireproof 55f3'f'37fi3 Tfi,,, ' . . .if il EEE gggzgjx f Most Attractive Hotel ln New York : T ' t R t S ' h B h d .ii :V , ransien a es 2.50 wit at an up N 55 - N1 Y 4- E5.'f1f:!5 .??' .':15f 27.1 - ' Ten Minutes' Walk to 20 Theatres inf' gi--2435 iklx E 55ff '!fi- r,g5.5gfl'11l,, SEND FOR BooKLETs , HARRY P. STIMSON R, J. BINGHAM . F 1.7-j '-em 555:-1 Farmzrly with Formerly 'wifh X ,fs 1 Hair! lmjizrial Hale! Woodward V 1.. - A. B. MATHEWS Sz CO. 'Cailors S. W. CORNER ELEVENTH AND SANSOM STREETS PHILADELPHIA, PA. The Partnership of PETERSON 8a MAT!-nzws was dissolved July thirty-nrst, Nineteen eight ,T Stylish Smartly Cut Clothing For Young Men We are producing the finest garments for gentlemen that brains, skill and experi- ence can evolve, at prices that are only possible with our perfect tailoring organ- ization and inexpensive location. Ourlarge four-story building is devoted entirely to the business. WM. LYONS IZIIM. PORTER H. J. LYONS S- C. LYONS . L. L ONS Sr CO. STOCKS, BONDS, GRAINAND COTTON 43-49 EXCHANGE PLACE 41-43 WALL ST. NEW YORK 5TH AND MAIN STREETS LOUISVILLE, KY. Private VWMS Zo all Princqnal Cities BRANCH OFFICE Fifth Avenue Building Fifth Avenue and 22d Street New York Telephone 6994 Gram. TELE Members of New York Stock Exchange New York Cotton Exchange New York Produce Exchange Chicago Board of Trade Merchants Exchange of St. Louis Louisville Stock Exchange 6765 PHONES 6766 HANOVER 6767 AT HOME OR ABROAD as Ghz jfirst National 1IBank as of I llbrinceton IS PREPARED TO SERVE YOU IN A SATISFACTORY MANNER Letters of CREDIT and TRAVELLER'S CHEQUES 1 issued available the World over ALBERT S. LEIGH, Pres't WILLIAM LIBBEY, Vice-Pres't ' DAVID M. FLYNN, Cashier DEERIN 81 COMPANY Leading New Jersey Tailors 817 Broad Street NEWARK, N. Branch.- 17x Broadway, N. Y. City Corner Courtland St. At NASSAU SHOW ROOMS Every THURSDAY and FRIDAY During College Year THE TRUST GUNIPANY F AMERICA N E VV Y O R K 37-43 Wall Street COLONIAL BRANCH 1 LONDON : 222 Broadway, New York Q Q5 Gresham, London, E. C. Capital and Surplus, 58,000,000 O F F I C E R S OAKLEIGH THORNE, President JOHN E. BORNE, Chairman Executive Committee WILLIAM H. LEUPP, Vice-President HEMAN Down, Vice-President H. B. FONDA, Treasurer ' . FRANK L. HILTON, Secretary Goon TENNIS DEMANDS A GOOD , ziz :la mm 525555 Q-'iiIif5as.fs.f zmszuagiiiia sauna:-sea rgggggg.. li'5 nE .u aims H. .5 W 423.55 leillllnagi Ig in-E'E!EEBE9 F f ,-:afkqzm n nl-...::. 435. Riff 'N ' E 4 HL 55: 1 Ning, 55 g , ,. 'sfazexzs u an I: zsawaiwzf an E s an i n dia... xiii Q . av f in .. IL I I ,yy ra 5 l 5525 u u I fe, Jag? Q ' ,xqaf . ff- I B :iii -:.:it .Mnnuulsa1 ff' --fe:'g-gggnffw aiggyg-7:ry,5 A H ,411-.,I -I . I 39445112 qmfzfgsij i?e:f5f7gt, :fm shits?- , Ti r 45, 1 1 7v I .2 ,I Q Q J S. RACKET Perfection in Racket making is attained in the HORSIVIAN Model A-X ' KNEW FOR 1909, Don't buy until you see it. If your dealer cannot show it, write to us. GOOD TENNIS DEPENDS NO LESS ON THE BALL We are Sole U. S. Agents for the cele- brated F. H. AYRES CHAMPIONSHIP BALL. Used the world over by players who know. Selected for important open tournaments in 1908, held under the aus- pices ofthe U. S. N. L. T. A. Send for Cafalague. E. I. HORSMAN COMPANY 365-367 Broadway . NEW YORK 1 834--- 1909 Use mtinceton amz CAPITAL, S100,000.00 SURPLUS AND PROFITS, S 1 1 0,845. 1 5 DEPOSITS, April 28, 1 909, S798,843.7 5 Edward Howe J. H. Wikoff HQ E. Hale R. M. Anderson DIRECTORS E. L. Howe - S. S. Palmer W. H. Powell M. Taylor Pyne Bayard Stockton Fisher Howe Geo. A. Armour Wm. P. Armstrong C. C. Cuyler A. D. Russell O F F I C E R S Edward Howe, Pre.vz'a'mi Edw. L. Howe, Wke-Pre.fz'a'e1zz' C. A. Seidensticker, Cashzkr The character of a Bank is determined largely by the personnel of its Directors and the atten- tion they give to its affairs. The Directors of The Princeton Bank are chosen from the foremost business men of this community. They are en- thusiastic in their efforts to keep the management of this bank up to the highest standard of effici- ency and are at all times kept familiar with the details of its business. Sludenis' accazmls 7'ec:fz've fareful and murleous a!!mz'z'on. PARK CARPET NI LLS A PHILADELPHIA, PA. PARK MILLS-WILTON S and VELVETS PARK MILLS-TAPESTRY BRUSSELS PARK MILLS-Extra Super IN GRAIN CARPETS JOHN OAY'S SONS, ING. TRENTON AVE. AND ANN STS.-HOWARD AND NORRIS STS. JACOB REEDDS SONS Clever ideas, smartly executed, give REED'S Clothes and Outfittings a pro- minent position in catering to Young Men. Extremes or freakish styles are not tolerated 5 everything is in good taste and correct form. Clothing, Haberdashery, Headwear, Auto Apparel and General Cutfittings for Men. 1424-1426 CHESTNUT ST. PHILADELPHIA I-IORTON'S ICE CREAM Charlotte Russe, Water Ices, Fancy Ices, - Cakes, Etc. Used by nearly every- body. Try them. You will like them. SDEPOTS: 305 Fourth Ave., 142 West 125th St. 598 Sixth Ave., Ito East 125th St. 115 Park Row, 302 Columbus Ave. NEW YORK CITY COTRELL lt LEONARD ALBANY, N. Y. Makers of CAPS GOWNS and ' HOOD To the American Colleges and Uni- versities From the Atlantic to the Pacific Class contracts a specialty A lllielrnms fgifi in ang Home The Most Popular College Songs ........ S .50 The Most Popular Home Songs . . . . . .50 The Most Popular Love Songs . . . . . .50 The Most Popular National Songs ....... .50 The Most Popular Piano Pieces ........ .75 The Most Popular l-lumourous Songs fin prep., .50 The Most Popular Banquet Songs Cin prep., . . . .50 The Most Popular Sacred Songs fin prepj . . . .50 The Most Popular Vocal Duets fin prep., . . . .50 The Most Popular Piano Duets . . . .75 The Most Popular Mandolin Pieces Solo Mandolin . . . .50 Second Mandolin . . .50 Guitar Accompaniment . . .50 Piano Accompaniment . . .75 Standard American Airs Mandolin Solo . . . . . .50 Mandolin Duet .... . . .60 Mandolin and Guitar . . . . . .60 Mandolin and Piano . . . . . . .60 l00 New Kindergarten Songs . . . . . . l.00 Songs of the Flag and Nation . . . . .50 School Songs with College Flavor . . . . .50 Songs of ALL the Colleges ..... . . L50 Songs of the WESTERN Colleges . . . . . . L25 Songs ofthe EASTERN Colleges . . . . . 1.25 50 New College Songs ........ . . .50 New Songs for College Glee Clubs . . . . . .50 New Songs for Male Quartem .... . . .50 Songs ofthe University oEChicago . . . . . L50 Songs of the University of . . . . . . L25 Songs of the University of New Mexico . . . . l.25 Songs of the University of Pennsylvania ..,.. L50 Songs of the Pennsylvania State College . . . . : l .25 Songs of the University of Virginia . . . . . 1.00 Songs of St. Lawrence University . . . . l.25 Songs of Beloit Colleie ....... . . . l.25 Songs of Bowdoin .......... . . . L25 Songs of Comel Agricultural College ...... 1.00 Songs of Haverford College .......... l.25 Songs of Wmhinmon and Jefferson Colege . . . l.25 Standard American Airs Cmedleyl ....... .60 Enchantment fwaltzl ........ . . .50 Motor Cmarchl ..... . . . . .50 Wming cw:-1111, ....... . . .50 Wwing flove song, ............. .50 Tell Me You Love Me fsongj ......... .50 New Songs and Anthems for Church Quartets, feleven mtmbersl each. lO to .30 At Bookstores, Music Dealers, or the Publishers. Hinds, Noble 8: Elclreclge 31-33-35 West 15th st., N. Y. city RENWICKSA The Collegiaifs RESTAURANT NASSAU INN AND RATHSKELLER .pRlNCETON, N. J. W. M. LEIGI-1 Merchant Tailor Ready:to:Wear Clothing and 1VIen's Furnishings 66 NASSAU STREET 2 : PRlNCETON, N. J. lLAgent for ALEXANDER'S SHOES I WILLIAM L. BRINER Graduate N. Y. College of Pharmacy EDW. C. KOPP T Bicycles and Photo Supplies 'Gbe Eruggist ' gm, AMATEUR DEVELOPING ujbaymgcfgt AND PRINTING 44 Nassau St. PRINCETON, N. J. 54 Nassau St. PRINCETON COOK 8z BRANCH C. C. S K I R IVI A Dealer in BILLIARD CIGARS and ROOMS Cigars, Tobacco and Pipes 62 d 64 NASSAU STREET Smokie:-'s Articles SPECIAL LINE OF B B B PIPES 68 NASSAU STREET B. . MCMANUS I photographer TO THE CLASSES OF THE UNIVERSITY O . r VV right COLLEGE ENGRAVER, PRINTER, and STATIONER llO8 Chestnut St., Philadelphia Commencement Invitations Dance Invitations and Programs 4 Menus, Fraternity Inserts and Stationery Wedding Announcements and Invitations Class Pins, Visiting Cards 1 Samples cheerfully sent on request CHThe Princeton Light. Heat and Power Company hold themselves ready to attend your wants upon notice. F. SEHIFEH Sanitary Barber Shop First National Bank Building ST UVE' Bowling Alleys BILLIARDS AND PO0L Y 1109- i X -Y ,lug . . 9- ,.. - l :J , ,,- -: . .. , A 1 , 5' '. ufipl' 11-.4 - I Nl '.7l?' . I 1 A. li 3 F ff 15 ill? , , . ' 'HMV thsl I 0 S I The ec s xt o e Fou-r slmple workmanllke a e a rubber highly polished ass r with a. gold pen D0inf tipped w 1 for a lnfetnme and always wrxte D t k to see the Clip Cap X where TL f '-KVM Co we 69m,0lW,,,F2J194 BSCHUOLSTBOSTUN ZOSSTATESTCHICRGO 74ZMARKET5T..SRN FRANCISCO 136 STJAMESSF MUPTTRFHL IZGOLDEN LITNT l0NDON,T.C II ' 0 I1 ll 1 0,1-y ,, I 'lil in xv- il ll -I' In ' IIu.. 1-fa I . ' ' I Q I- I I ' E .- ' 5 I I ' 0, no' -. . - ' 1 .1 -- n I1 a t-:- ,' 0. . - v f o ' : s: g :ur Q ?. I ' Q - 0 r I ' 2. D e ' n t 3 4 -- 1 , f , ' ' K- e .- c 3 I I i l I I I , N ' ' , - ' a a ' 3 I ' :- f : u : I , 1 - ' - . N , lu- nf, . - E . gliif . ,. .. -- - A QGLQL ' it T V ' 5:-45.121,1.-gg:!A?5+?.m1yL2f22ZQLEFumstf5uru25rfwwxqz1,:l ,fV:11x:::,g554 fdif 19,53 T'T7T ' -- - f-A 2.-nailz.,,Tf':.-.:.1-'mimifr:I-af:-n---'raw-.li-4'ca1Lfn,g:5'hQf55Q., magQiggggzj,gtivggfgugigly.',.gW,.A:,,R K, ,. 'I I . . . . . . l , The Reason for Simooese We would rather sell two suits and make two dollars each than sell one suit and make five dollars .... Whelan S: Stafford College Tailors, Philadelphia, Pa. Qin Erimoeton Every Week Edw. J, VAN MARTER ARTHUR ssuwARTz,Pl1.4i. Dealer in N Fine Stationery, Blank Books, Mag- a S S a u azines and Novelties. Princeton Pharmacy Post Cards, Fine Assortment. Monogram Paper a Specialty Ne t Door to X STORE, 86 NASSAU STREET First Natifmal Bank
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