After two years' service, Major Frank Wheatley has left Uncle Sam's employ and has opened an office at 366 Commonwealth Ave., Boston, where he is specializing in Xray work.
"Pete" Sargent, another of Uncle Sara's medicos, has set up a Boston office at 240 Newbury St., his practice being limited to orthopedic surgery.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Francis West announce the marriage of their daughter, Marion Elizabeth, to Mr. Kenneth Stevens Ballou, on Thursday, January 1, 1920, at Wollaston, Mass. "Ken" has started the New Year well, even if he is determined to live in Wollaston.
Mark Adams on leaving the army settled in the East, preferring it to the Pacific Coast as it brings him nearer Hanover, and is doing foreign trade at 200 Fifth Ave., New York, Room 240.
Harold S. Card is too essential to the army to be discharged just yet, but is hoping to relinquish his uniform—sergeant, first class, Engineers, First Division—in the very near future.
Dutch Irwin, our genial president, has fully recovered from the rigors of the war, and is now in the advertising game with the Martin V. Kelley Company, at Toledo, Ohio.
F. O. Robinson went over early in '17 as a private, came back as a captain—decorated and all that—, and is now working with the United Shoe Machinery Company and living in Belmont, Mass.
The class baby, David Hedges, has a second younger brother, Samuel Hamilton Hedges, born July 30, 1918. "Cap" promises to have the whole trio of huskies at Hanover in 1921.
After serving with the French, British, and eventually American armies, "Hopper" Allison returned to the United States, and shortly thereafter took unto himself a better ninetenths", following the good example of the majority of the class. Ruth Hovey of Hartford, Conn., of a Dartmouth family, became Mrs. "Hopper", and they are now at White Sulphur Springs, W. Va., where "Hop" is associate physician at the Medical Institute, doctoring the poor in health but rich in wealth.
Major Howard M. Clute, after serving in France and Belgium, decided Boston was a better place, and is now "physicianing" at 520 Commonwealth Ave. While across, Clutey visited Westminster Cathedral, London, with Miss Josephine Price of London and Malta, where they were married on July 23, 1918.
Dr. Rolf C. Norris has been discharged from the Medical Corps with the rank of Captain after serving nearly four years with the British and American armies in France, and has resumed practice at Methuen, Mass.
Secretary, Richard F. Paul, 98 Milk St., Boston