Class Notes

CLASS OF 1875

OCTOBER, 1906 Henry W. Stevens
Class Notes
CLASS OF 1875
OCTOBER, 1906 Henry W. Stevens

Charles P. Bowman, with his wife and two daughters, is pleasantly located at Citronelle, Alabama, a town about thirty miles from Mobile, where the breezes from the Gulf temper the extremes of winter and summer.

Quincy A. Myers, after continuing his first law partnership for twenty-four years, his partner having now retired, has formed copartnership with Charles E. Yarlett, Esq. Mr. Myers has been active in the Bar Association of the state of Indiana, especially on the committee on Jurisprudence and Law Reform, and in this connection has secured important legislation. He has been president of the Commercial Club of Logansport for several years.

George D. Towne, M.D., is continuing in the general practice of his profession at Manchester, N. H.

Jarvis Dinsmoor is still actively engaged in the practice of law at Sterling, Ill.; he has recently published a lay sermon upon Ralph Waldo Emerson . and Abraham Lincoln, which has been highly commended and widely read.

Samuel E. Wadhams continues his real estate business at Duluth, Minn. He is engaged in numerous enterprises at the head of the Great Lakes.

Charles A. Rich (architect of all the new buildings at Dartmouth), ever since leaving College, has been constantly at work at his profession, going once in two years to Europe for a short rest. About everything in the way of building has fallen to his lot, but principally his work has been designing large structures in New York, and among the different universities and colleges. His professional life has been eminently successful. The present autumn the oldest of his three daughters will go to Europe to continue for two years her musical studies.

Alfred E. Sears, Jr., has been a resident of Portland, Oregon, since 1879. He has been judge of the State Circuit Court since 1896 and has just been reelected for a term of six years, being presiding justice of the Fourth Judicial District. He has refused a position upon the Supreme Bench of the state. He has contributed many articles for the American Law Review, Central LawJournal, American Lawyer, and other legal publications, and was last year president of the Oregon State Bar Association, and for seven years has occupied the chair of Equity Jurisprudence at the Law School of the Oregon State University. He is president of the Oregon Humane Society, Prisoners' Aid Society, and of various other eleemosynary and philanthropic societies.

Secretary, Henry W. Stevens, Concord, N. H.