Class Notes

CLASS OF 1900

May 1915 Natt W. Emerson
Class Notes
CLASS OF 1900
May 1915 Natt W. Emerson

LeRoy R. Sawyer is managing editor of the Philippine Craftsman, a publication largely devoted to the interest of industrial education in the Philippine Islands. It is published by the Bureau of Education at Manila. Mr. Sawyer is now acting superintendent of the Philippine Normal School, which also is located in Manila.

Mr. and Mrs. Robert Jackson announce the birth of a daughter, Hope Jackson, January 21, 1915.

Benjamin F. Prescott has recently been appointed judge of the municipal court district of which Milford, N. H., is the center.

The Wyandotte Worsted Mills, controlled and managed by Nathaniel Barrows, are now making blankets for the Canadian government. A considerable part of the product of this mill is khaki for the use of the Canadian soldiers. This mill is doing a very large business by changing its product from worsteds and woolens to lines which are in demand because of the war.

F. E. Jennings is acting for the second year as chairman of the Everett school committee. He has been a member of the com- mittee for four years. This is also his second year as trustee of the Everett Library.

Rev. Roger A. Dunlap has been appointed chaplain of the House of Representatives of Connecticut.

Herbert L. Trull, non-graduate, has been appointed to the school board of the town of Tewksbury, Mass.

The annual round-up of the Class of 1900 was held at the American House, Boston, on March 13. The following attended: Rankin, Keyes, Tuttle, Hadlock, Mahoney, Lewis, Rogers, Fairfield, Stickney, Wentworth, Prescott, Cook, Merrill, Gibbons, McDavitt, Fletcher, Arundel, Butterfield, Wallace, Jennings, Emerson, Snow, Baldwin, Atwood, Mathes, and Gibson. This is one of the largest dinners the class has held. Professor Keyes addressed the gathering on different subjects connected with the business administration of the College, which were of unusual interest. The principal topic of interest was the Fifteenth-year Reunion, which is to be held in Hanover next June. Frederick E. Jennings, who is chairman of the committee, outlined the plans which have been made. The class was particularly favored by the attendance of some of the men, who came from a considerable distance to be present: L. W. Tuttle from New Haven, Conn.; Professor Keyes from Hanover, N. H.; Stickney from Rutland, Vt.; Prescott from Milford, N. H.; Cook from Waterville. Me.; Butterfield from Suncook, N. H.; Snow from Hartford, Conn.; and Mathes from Dover, Me. There were twenty-six men in all—nearly twenty-five per cent of the total membership of the class.

Secretary, Natt W. Emerson, 30 State St., Boston