Class Notes

CLASS OF 1910

June 1917 Sturgis Pishon
Class Notes
CLASS OF 1910
June 1917 Sturgis Pishon

The western representative of Waitt & Bond, .Inc., the large cigar manufacturers of Boston, is Philip M. Forristall. The superintendent of the Boston factory—the largest cigar factory in the world under one roof is James M. Porter.

The Vermont State Board of Education has recently published two pamphlets written by its executive secretary, Rollo G. Reynolds, relating to special interesting courses in the high schools of the state.

Lewis M. Williams has joined the editorial staff of A. W. Shaw Company, Chicago, publishers of System and Factory. He has just moved to Evanston, Ill., into a real Dartmouth colony, but the trouble is that they are all '07, '08, '09, and '11—he is the only 1910 man there. However, there is no cause for worry, as it takes but one Tenner to leaven a Dartmouth loaf.

As a member of the National Talking Machine Sales Corporation, of Boston, Walter G. Wilson travels through the Middle West. His headquarters are with Rike-Kumber Co., Dayton, Ohio. On February 17, he was married to Miss Lillian B. Williams of Dayton, and is at home at 137 Wroe St., Dayton.

When he is not coaching baseball at Hanover Horace B. Chadbourne is in the sheep raising and lumber business at Harmony, Me. He is also a frequent contributor to Youth's Companion.

Many Dartmouth undergraduates have volunteered for service in France with the American Ambulance Field Service. As Fords are used there for ambulances Nathaniel A. Sherman has offered the services of his company and service station (Burnett & Sherman Inc., 955 Commonwealth Ave., Boston) to instruct the volunteers in the driving and repairing of Fords.

In the list of 1917 handicaps recently given out by the Massachusetts Golf Association one man is at scratch, while R. Raymond Gorton and three others are given one stroke.

The vice-president of the Citizens State Bank, Huntington, Ind., is Paul M. Taylor, who lives at 715 North Jefferson St.

Robert J. Hunter is with Stone & Webster, 147 Milk St.. Boston and lives at The Princeton, Winter Hill.

The managing superintendent of James Phelan & Sons (Shoe manufacturers) of Lynn, Mass., is William H. Murphy, Jr.

William H. Woolner is office manager and assistant purchasing agent of Thomas G. Plant Co., manufacturers of Queen Quality and Dorothy Dodd shoes, Jamaica Plain, Mass.

Joseph J. Davidson is teacher of English in the Boys' High School, Louisville, Ky.

The transportation engineer and supervisor of stores of Continental Motors Corporation, Detroit, Mich., is Joseph C. Brusse, who is living with H. Cheever Comey at 634 Drexel Boulevard.

Guy A. Coburn is salesman for the B. F. Sturtevant Company, Provident Bank Build- ing, Cincinnati, Ohio. He is married and living at 2624 Stanton Ave., W. H.

Royal W. Hyde is a salesman for Stranahan & Company, SO Congress St., Boston.

The assistant superintendent of The Lamson & Sessions Co., manufacturers of nuts, bolts, and rivets, 2188 Scranton Rd., Cleveland, Ohio, is Harold L. Judd. On July Ist he intends to move to 1100 Forest Ave., Lakewood, Ohio.

The engagement was recently announced of Mae P. Bartley, 1433 North 29th St., Philadelphia, to James Percy Nourse. The latter is vice-president of the Pennsylvania Supply & Equipment Company, 421 Widener Building, Philadelphia.

Dr. Harold E. Winchester has recently taken up the practice of medicine in Flasher, N. D.

John J. Ryan has resigned from the Washburn-Crosby Company to go with The Fidelity and Casualty Company, 212 Wells Building, Milwaukee, Wis.

Leslie C. Bartlett is with the Eastern Paper Company, 213 South American St., Philadelphia.

The town of Belmont, Mass., is sending an ambulance to France, and Frank O. Robinson is one of the four men who have been appointed to go with it.

The Vermont State Committee of Public Safety has been conducting a strenuous campaign during the last few .months, and Rollo G. Reynolds has been one of the most forceful speakers who have helped the movement.

In the New England division of the officers' training camps the following are training for commissions at Plattsburg, N. Y.: Marvin C. Taylor, Company II; Hoitt N. Charlton and R. Raymond Gorton, Company V; Maurice C. Blake, Company VI; Herbert G. Coar and John C. Warnock, Company IX ; Howard Fall, Company XIII; Raymond B. Seymour.

Harold E. Washburn received his master's degree at Harvard last June, and has been appointed instructor in French at Harvard for the coming year. He has now come to Hanover, however, to take a course of six weeks in the Tuck School to equip him for service in the quartermaster's department of the army.

A daughter was born to Mr. and Mrs. Burton C. Miller, March 22, 1917.

Mr. and Mrs. Henry E. Gooding of Hartford,. Conn., announce the arrival of Robert Emery Gooding on April 21, 1917. Hen is office manager of the office furniture department of Flint Bruce Co.

One of those training at Plattsburg for an officer's commission in the cavalry is Marvin C. Taylor, who served several years in the state cavalry. Up to the time of his departure for the training camp he was a "special policeman" in Worcester, Mass.

The largest American flag in the country is said to be that which practically covers one side of the huge building of Wm. Filene's Sons Company, Boston. Large flags of all the allies are also flown. A. A. Ricker has had charge of the display.

Miss Gretchen Kreuger of Newark, N. J., has recently announced her engagement to Clarke W. Tobin of New York city.

The latest news from Lieut. Ernest G. Small was that the Destroyer Duncan was on submarine patrol "somewhere on the Atlantic coast." His latest letter bears the post mark of Fortress Monroe, Va.

On May 22, Whitney H. Eastman moved from Edgewater, N. J., to Chicago, where he is manager of the Chicago plant of Midland Linseed Products Company, 927 Blackstone St. For several years he has been secretary of the New York Alumni Association of Sigma Phi Epsilon.

Miss Edna M. Haskell, daughter of Mrs. J. E. Haskell of Worcester, Mass., was married to Charles F. Hitchcock in Worcester on February 19. Mr. and Mrs. Hitchcock are living in the former's home town, where he has been a consulting forester for several years.

Massachusetts with its first Dartmouth governor, Samuel W. McCall, has been leader in the preparedness movement, and it has been particularly fitting that the chairman of the Senate's Committee of Military Affairs is James E. MacPherson. The latter has ably assisted the governor in helping to place the commonwealth on a sound preparedness basis.

Theodore R. Smith is member of the firm of Hinsdale Smith & Company, 23 Hampden St., Springfield, Mass., dealers in leaf tobacco He is also a member of the board of selectmen, Agawam, Mass.

The vice-president and treasurer of Thomas Young, Inc., linen importers of New York city, is James H. Young, who lives at 617 East 21st St., Brooklyn.

Edson W. Keith has left Manchester, N. H., and is now with the Central Aguirre Company, Central Aguirre, P. R.

John H. Dingle is representative of the Massachusetts Mutual Life Insurance Company with offices at 2020 Harris Trust Building, Chicago, Ill.

Since leaving Cuba, Guy R. Carpenter has been associated with the St. Louis (Mo.) Globe-Democrat.

Henry H. Hobbs, who graduated from Yale in 1910, is the representative of the Standard Oil Co., in Paris, France. During the first year of the Great War he served in the American Ambulance Corps in France.

The Trenton, N. J., resident engineer for Stone & Webster is Ralph W. Noyes, who was transferred there from Boston a few months ago. His offices are at 400 Pennington Ave.

Albert G. Meehan is married and is practicing law in Stuttgart, Ark.

Charles J. Fay, who is selling group insuring for the Travelers Insurance Company, He can always be located through the main offices at Hartford, Conn.

Secretary, Sturgis Pishon 44 Bromfield St., Boston