Class Notes

CLASS OF 1900

December 1918 Natt W. Emerson
Class Notes
CLASS OF 1900
December 1918 Natt W. Emerson

Governor McCall of Massachusetts appointed Henry N. Teague of Williamstown in June as a member of a commission to consider the decline in the sheep industry and related agricultural matters.

George W. Tong has entered the army service and has been commissioned as a captain. He is located at Base Hospital No. 1. Williamsbridge, N. Y.

W. H. Fletcher is director of the course for teachers' training in the Junior High School at Oshkosh, Wis. He is also teaching concrete geometry and elementary science in the State Normal School. While the class congratulates him on the importance of his new position, it regrets that his work takes him so far from 1900 headquarters.

Mr. and Mrs. Julian W. Phillips announce the birth of a son, Sidney Hazen.

C. E. Paddock is now instructor at Wentworth Institute, Boston, Mass. His home address is 16 Littell Road, Brookline. We surely do welcome Paddock to the Boston fold.

Dr. James J. Buckley entered the government service early in September. He was commissioned a first lieutenant, and is situated at Camp Greenleaf, Chickamauga Park, Ga., Company 25 A, Batt. No. 7.

H. M. Holland returned to Galesburg, Ill., to look after his farming interests in that section. Any letters sent to Galesburg will surely reach him.

A letter from Lt. Col. Frederick J. Barrett states that he is still connected with the Ga. The epidemic was as serious there as in other places. He states that Major E. B. Bigelow is on duty temporarily at the same post. Bigelow was quite ill in the early summer, and was relieved from duty for several months.

George Merrill has been very actively engaged in intelligence work during the past year. He has traveled all over the country and rendered very efficient service. He returned to Gloucester just in time to take an active part in the stifling of the epidemic. With that great, big heart of his, he threw himself into the work. If we could tell the story of all of Doc's activities during the past year, it would be of great interest to all his classmates. He says that it was even more interesting than the sessions of the Constitutional Convention of which he was a member.

Jasper M. Gibson has been transferred from the Chicago office of the Clinton Wire Cloth Company, and is now connected with the home office in Boston. His family is in Clinton.

Secretary, Natt W. Emerson, 10 State St., Boston