Class Notes

CLASS OF 1900

October 1919 Natt W. Emerson
Class Notes
CLASS OF 1900
October 1919 Natt W. Emerson

The following announcement will certainly prove of interest to every 1900 man: "Mrs. William Aitken announces the marriage of her daughter, Jean Noble, to Dr. William. Stickney, on Saturday, August the second, nineteen hundred and nineteen, Newcastle, New Brunswick."

Closely following the announcement of the marriage of Dr. William Stickney, we have received the following: "Mrs. Sophia Emma Stockwell announces the marriage of her daughter, Addie Brown, to Professor Embert Hiram Sprague, on Thursday, August the twenty-eighth, nineteen hundred and nineteen, Bangor, Maine." Professor and Mrs. Sprague were to be at home after September 16 in Orono, Maine, and it is expected that they both will attend the 20th reunion in Hanover the coming June.

The surviving bachelors of the class are as follows: W. B. Edwards, N. J. Gibbons, E. J. Jonakowski, J. W. Manion, G. F. Merrill, H. N. Teague, L. W. Tuttle, A. R. Virgin, Joseph Wentworth. It is only fair to say that there are signs of waverings on the part of one or two on this list, so it is not proper to say that all are confirmed. This list is printed purely as a matter of record, there being no desire to criticize or to infer that any particular case is hopeless. This comment simply closes with the usual phrase: "The sympathy of loving friends."

L. R. Sawyer has accepted a position as principal of the high school at Ponce, Porto Rico. This school has eighteen teachers and 650 pupils. Roy is now returning to his old haunts, as he taught in Porto Rico before going to the Philippines.

A. T. Fowler, who was captain of an engineering section throughout the entire war in France, has been discharged from service, and is now taking up his work again with the U. S. Geological Survey. He has been assigned to do special work for the National Park Service. This will consist of mapping the floor of the Yosemite Valley on the scale of 400 feet to the inch. This will certainly be an interesting work. Mrs. Fowler and two small children will go with him. If anybody has an opportunity to visit the Yosemite Valley, it is very likely that A. T. can tell him just what is in every nook and crevice of it.

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