Class Notes

CLASS OF 1900

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

George Boyd has been made assistant treasurer of the Harmony Mills.

Mr. and Mrs. E. R. Cate announce the death of their oldest boy, Randall Swift. The sympathy of the class goes out to them at this time.

For fear that all the members of the class of 1900 do not scan the advertising carefully in the ALUMNI MAGAZINE, we would call their attention to the first pages of that section. Please note that H. M. Tibbetts is manager of the Nugget Theatre. He offers a wonderful line of films, and it behooves every member of the class when in Hanover to patronize this emporium of amusement.

Captain Charles A. Proctor secured his discharge from the service about January 1, and has resumed his duties at Hanover.

Mrs. Paul C. Wilson has been, appointed state industrial commissioner by Governor Alfred E. Smith of New York. She becomes the highest salaried woman ever on the pay roll of that state, receiving $8000 a year.

Henry N. Teague is having an unusually active career as an associate director of construction development for the Department of Labor. He has held conferences in the states of Illinois, Indiana, Ohio, and Wisconsin, and in the East. He is now in the Far West, carrying on this very important work with his usual vigor.

Dr. James Joseph Buckley enlisted in the service and received a commission as lieutenant in July, 1918. He was stationed at Camp Greenleaf, and then reported at Base Hospital 121 at Camp Sevier, S. C. His unit was expected to sail in two weeks when the armistice was signed. He resigned in November and returned to private practice in Milton, N. H.

J. M. Gibson has accepted a position in the business department of the Charles H. Tenney Company, 201 Devonshire St., Boston. This firm affords an engineering and accounting service to a large number of New England corporations. Gibson's home address is 5 Braemore Road, Brookline, Mass.

Judge B. F. Prescott is managing a course of lectures and demonstrations for farmers in Milford, N. H., to be given early in March. He hasn't forsaken the law for agriculture, but had the job thrust upon him as secretary of the Milford Board of Trade.

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