Class Notes

CLASS OF 1906

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

The Sixth Annual Report was published in July, and is a pamphlet of 69 pages, containing a directory of the class, letters from many of its members, and other matter of much interest. We take some items from it:

Dr. Marshall L. Ailing (D. M. S. '09) is in practice in Lowell, Mass., living at 617 Westford St.

Thurmond Brown (Tuck '07) is in real estate insurance business at Prince Rupert, British Columbia.

Herbert W. Cummings is chemist for the E. E. Sutherland Medicine Company, Paducah, Ky.

Malcolm J. Edgerton is now with Callaway, Fish and Company, investment bankers, 37 Wall St., New York.

Clarence T. Gray went to Cleveland, Ohio, in May as manager of the bonding department of the Aetna Accident and Liability Company for Ohio and southern Michigan. He is living at 3907 Prospect Ave., S. E.

Arthur D. Holmes, Ph.D. (Johns Hopkins 1911) has a position in the Department of Agriculture at Washington as scientific assistant in the nutrition investigation work.

Arthur O. Kelley is teacher of physiology and football coach at Soldan High School, St. Louis, Mo. During the summer he conducted a summer recreation camp for boys in northern Wisconsin.

Erion H. Neal is with the Conway .Lumber Company, Conway, N. H.

George D. Terrien is New England representative for the Ladies' World, with office at 24 Milk St., Boston.

Ernest A. Thompson has a law office at 18 Tremont St., Boston.

Ralph J. Thompson is New England representative of N. W. Ayer and Son, advertising agents, with office at 111 Devonshire St., Boston.

James A. Blatherwick was married in Westfield, N. Y., April 10, to Miss Frances Rood. He is engaged in mining at Kingsley, Mariposa Co., Cal.

Joseph J. White, non-graduate, is assistant secretary of the Pressure Lighting Company, 30 Broad St., New York.

Stephen S. Cushing, during the session of the Vermont legislature, is at Montpelier as clerk of the joint committee on revision of bills.

Foster E. Guyer has been appointed instructor in French in Dartmouth College. Since 1911 Guyer has held . a fellowship in the Romance languages at the graduate school of the University of Chicago. The last summer he spent in Spain.

Felt, Paul, Scribner, and Varick were among the Boston and Manchester delegation who came to Hanover for Dartmouth Night.

Neil S. Buckbee (T. S. C. E. '07) has been since last March, engineer for the Corrugated Bar Company, Buffalo, N. Y., living at 535 Woodlawn Ave.

Ephraim J. Smith passed his examination for admission to the Vermont bar October 3', and will be admitted to practice in January, when he will have made his required time as a student.

Rev. Howard James Chidley was married at Pelham, N. Y., October 23, to Florence Elizabeth, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Harris Bradbury Burrows.' They will be at home after December 10 at 17 Hillyer St., Orange, N. J.

Members of the class of 1906 will regret to hear of the sudden death of Harvey Sumner Macullar, caused by a falling tree in Fabrica, Negros Occidental, P. I. After graduation Mr. Macullar took a course in forestry at the University of Minnesota, where he also coached football. Among other post-graduate work were degrees in civil and mechanical engineering. He engaged in the lumber business in the Northwest with varied success until March 25, 1911, when he went to take charge of the logging and railroading of the Insular Lumber Company of Manila, P. I. There he achieved a decided success through executive ability in handling and instructing the natives in modern ways of lumbering. It was on an inspection trip to the woods that he met his death. A big log being skidded to the railroad struck an obstacle and swung round, snapping down the tree behind which Mr. Macullar had run when he saw the danger. This tree, in falling, struck him across the forehead; he regained consciousness for an instant, but died within an hour. Mr. Macullar, born March 2, 1883, married Irene Elizabeth Marsh of Detroit, Mich., November 24, 1910. Funeral services were held in the Episcopal Cathedral of Manila, October 3, 1912, the body cremated, and brought to the States for burial.

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