[1] The club acquired a hand-run printing press and produced the short-lived magazines Oriflamme (banned by the university for its radical content) and Sirocco.
[3] After graduating from university, in 1935 Glover and partner John Drew established the Caxton Club Press as a commercial printer and publisher.
They acquired a larger machine-run printing press and established themselves in unused stables in Christchurch's central city.
In 1936 the name was shortened to the Caxton Press, and they published works by Mason, Glover, Curnow, Ursula Bethell and D'Arcy Cresswell, as well as a collection of poems from Tomorrow magazine.
[3] During the World War II, Glover served in the navy but publications continued, including Beyond the Palisade, the first book by James K. Baxter (1944) who was then eighteen.