Harry B. Stearns is a member of the firm of Marshall and Stearns Company, manufacturers of wall beds, 1152 Phelan Building. San Francisco, Cal.
Walter Young purchased a country residence in North Brookfield, Mass., this past year, and he and Mrs. Young have been passing the summer there.
O. S. Stetson is the manager of the Worcester offiice of J. S. Bache and Company New York, bankers and brokers. His address is 390 Main St., Worcester, Mass.
The legal matters pertaining to the issue of $2,500,000 preferred stock of the Great Eastern Paper Company, Ltd., was in the hands of Lyon and Lilly of New York. Walter Hastings Lyon is the senior member of this firm.
Daniel P. Trude is serving his second year of a six year term as associate judge of the Municipal Court of the city of Chicago. He is associated in the general practice of law with his father and uncle in the City Hall Square Building, and is a member of the American, Illinois, and Chicago Bar Associations.
Dr. Harlan F. Curtis has sold out his practice in East Longmeadow, Mass., and started in August on an auto trip to California. He intends to do postgraduate work in Chicago and later settle in the West.
Henry Salomon is investment officer for the Rhode Island Hospital Trust Company of Providence. He is also interested in several industrial concerns, as well as serving on the board of directors of the Providence Boys' Club, the Providence District Nursing Association, and the Rhode Island Boy Scouts. Salomon is married, and has two children Henry, Jr., and Nancy.
Irving E. Forbes of Manchester, N. H.. left this summer for California, where he will enter the orange growing business near Los Angeles. Forbes has been practicing law in Manchester for the past twenty years, and upon his departure was presented with a leather traveling bag by his associates in the legal profession.
Harland E. Cate is still with the Draper Company at Hopedale, Mass., where he has been for the last four years.
Phebe Hine Hathaway, wife of Harold P. Hathaway, passed away at her home in Woonsocket, R. I., last September. She is survived by her husband and two small daughters.
A rustic chapel has been erected on Sebago Lake, at East Sebago, by Camp O-at-ka, a camp of boys of the Episcopal church of the diocese of Massachusetts, under the auspices of the O-at-ka Association; St. Andrew's is the name by which the little chapel on the lakeside is known, although it is a memorial to Frederick William Gentleman, who was for twelve years assistant director at Camp O-at-ka, and who died two years ago. Mr. Gentleman was the director of the Galahad Club of Cambridge, Mass., at the time, of his death. The erection of this beautiful chapel is in line with all the high ideals and purposes for which Camp O-at-ka stands, for although it is one of the many boys' camps in Maine, it is doubtful if any other camp has accomplished a greater amount of beneficial results than O-at-ka.
E. Percy Stoddard of Portsmouth, N. H. entered the contest for the Republican nomination as a candidate for the Governor's Council at the September primaries, and another classmate, Charles W. Fletcher, was also a candidate for the Council from the Fourth District.
Channing Cox in his capacity as lieutenant governor of Massachusetts has extended the greetings of the Commonwealth to many conventions and gatherings held in the state the past summer. He was honorary president of the Wellfleet Old Home Week Association and was active in the recent Pilgrim Tercentenary Celebration held in that town. Chan was an unopposed candidate for the Republican nomination for governor at the September primaries, and was nominated by one of the largest votes ever received by that office.
George E. Pingree has returned from an extensive trip to Europe in the interests of the International Western Electric Company. He and his wife visited nearly every country in Europe, with the exception of Germany and he has some valuable first-hand information in regard to conditions abroad. "Ping' is strong for Belgium, and feels that they are coming back faster than any of the other nations.
Upon the death of his father, Rolfe W. Smith was elected treasurer of the Richardson Piano Case Company of Leominster, Mass. Rolfe has been connected with this concern ever since his graduation. This company if the largest manufacturer of piano cases in the country, and they have just completec an addition that doubles their plant and output.
"Bill" O'Leary, Jr., is evidently a chip of the old block. He has just been designated by the faculty of the Lawrence High School as business manager of the high school Bulletin for the coming year. Although O'Leary will be but a junior next year, he was chosen for the position because of his consistent good scholarship, and his appointment leads automatically to the management during his senior year. Twenty-five years ago his father. Lawrence (Bill) O'Leary, now principal of the Hood Grammar School, filled a position on the editorial staff of the same school paper.
Should anyone have items of interest regarding others of the class, the secretary would be truly thankful and appreciative. of the receipt of such information.
Secretary, Everett M. Stevens, 127 Federal St., Boston, Mass.