Class Notes

CLASS OF 1906

November, 1912 Harold G. Rugg
Class Notes
CLASS OF 1906
November, 1912 Harold G. Rugg

Thurlow M. Gordon has been appointed special assistant to Attorney General Wickersham in connection with the Commerce Court, as the result of an examination in which there were four hundred candidates.

John Howard Kingsbury was married in Albany, N. Y., July 9, to Alice, daughter of James F. McElroy '76. Mr. and Mrs. Kingsbury sailed early in September for Bardezag, Asiatic Turkey, where Mr. Kingsbury has a position as teacher of English.

Jesse Witherspoon Gage was married in Cambridge, Mass., July 24, to Miss Henrietta Deltefson, Radcliffe '10.

Percival Jerauld Holmes was married August 16, in Arlington, Mass., at the home of the bride's mother, Mrs. Ada B. Merrill, to Miss Louise Belle Merrill. Mr. and Mis. Holmes will be at home after November 1 at 60 Heath St., Winter Hill, Somerville, Mass.

A son (Harry Parsel Wayman, Jr.) was born to Mr. and Mrs. Harry P. Wayman in Chicago, October 3.

Oscar E. Gibb is principal of Atkinson Academy at Atkinson, N. H., a school which has the past summer celebrated its one hundred and twenty-fifth anniversary.

Elizabeth, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Edward B. Redman, was born at Pasadena, Cal., September 12.

Ralph D. Beetle has been granted leave of absence at Dartmouth, and with his family has gone to Princeton, where he will continue his studies in mathematics.

Frank Howard Kelley died August 27, 1912, of arthritis, a disease from which he had been suffering for six years. Kelley was born in Roxbury, Mass., May 14, 1883, received his preliminary education in the Boston schools, and prepared for Dartmouth at the Roxbury Latin School, where he graduated in 1902. At Dartmouth he specialized in French, and received special honors in the subject. After graduation he entered the employ of the National Express Company in Boston, and later was connected with the New York, New Haven, and Hartford Railroad. During his long illness he studied all the modern languages and the classics, and became well versed in these subjects. Had health permitted, undoubtedly he would have gone into graduate work preparatory to a life of teaching. Kelley was a quiet, likable, studious fellow, a man whose death will be greatly felt by all members of 1906.

Secretary, Harold G. Rugg, Hanover, N. H.