it is contemplated to use it for rowing. The property is supplied with town 
water and electricity. 
Belmont is within easy reach by train or car from Cambridge, Wayland, 
Lincoln, Weston,Waverley, Watertown, Waltham, Lexington, Arlington, 
Winchester, and Medford. The approximate time necessary to cover the 
distances from the above named places is given below: 
From Belmont Centre tea. minutes’ walk via Pleasant, Clifton, and Prospect Streets. 
From Cambridge by electric car from Harvard Square (18 minutes); by train from North Cam¬ 
bridge Station (8 minutes); from Cambridge Station (6 minutes). 
From Waverley by train (3 minutes). 
From Waltham by train (8 minutes). 
From Wayland by train (23 minutes). 
From Weston by train (16 minutes). 
From Lincoln by train (26 minutes). 
From Arlington , Winchester , Lexington , and Medford by electric car to Arlington Centre with 
motor bus (10 minutes) connection to school. 
A fine macadam automobile road goes direct to the school from Belmont Centre via Clifton and 
Prospect Streets and Park Avenue; to the school direct from Arlington Heights or from Arling¬ 
ton via either Pleasant Street or Highland Avenue. 
From Cambridge the school is reached in less than 15 minutes by automobile, and from Boston and 
Brookline in 25 minutes. Motor bus accommodations will also be provided if deemed advisable. 
Advisory Board 
Rev. Samuel McChord Crothers, D.D., of Cambridge 
Dean Henry W. Holmes of the Graduate School of Education, Harvard University 
Robert W. Kelso, Secretary of Boston Council of Social Agencies 
Assistant Dean David M. Little, Harvard University 
Very Rev. Edmund S. Rousmaniere, D.D., of Boston 
George Cheever Shattuck, M.D., of Boston 
Edwin P. Stickney, M.D., of Arlington (Physician to the School) 
The headmaster will be R. Heber Howe, Jr., S.M. (Harvard), Docteur de 
l'Universite (Sorbonne). Dr. Howe was for twenty years a master at Mid¬ 
dlesex School, Concord, Mass., from 1920 until 1922 a graduate research 
student at Harvard University, and is Director of Rowing with a corpora¬ 
tion appointment in the Department of Physical Education. At Middlesex 
School he was master of Hallowell House, head of the Department of 
Natural Science, and Secretary of the School. Dr. and Mrs. Howe and sev¬ 
eral masters will live at the school. The boarding pupils will therefore have 
the advantage of an intimate family life. 
The School will fit boys for college, and the curriculum will provide a 
well-balanced course based upon the English educational system, with an 
open-minded embodiment of modern methods. The personality of the teach¬ 
ers will be given primary consideration. The School intends to do every¬ 
thing in its power to graduate students possessed of agile, disciplined minds, 
and in whom an ambition for service through learning has been aroused. 
School will begin at 9 a.m., and will close after the afternoon play and 
study hour. There will be a recess of half an hour in the morning, dinner 
will be served at one o’clock, and the afternoon will be spent in outdoor 
play, and in a study hour. On Saturday the school will be open for special 
instruction, supervised recreation, and interscholastic matches. For the com¬ 
ing year, boys from seven to fourteen will be accepted into the six lower 
classes. In each following year a class will be added to complete the pre¬ 
paratory course of ten classes. The tuition of four hundred and fifty dollars 
will be payable in advance in two equal installments, September 1 and 
February 1, or in nine equal monthly payments, September to May; the 
tuition of boarding pupils will be twelve hundred dollars. Dinner will be 
served to day-students at cost. A competitive scholarship is available. 
The headmaster may be met by appointment and the school property 
