Class Notes

CLASS OF 1904

May 1920 Harry B. Johnson
Class Notes
CLASS OF 1904
May 1920 Harry B. Johnson

C. M. Lockwood is a fruit rancher in Opportunity, Washington. He has been most successful, and has now twenty-five acres under fruit. His specialty is apples. He is also director of the Opportunity State Bank.

Sixteen men of the class were in the service, fourteen of whom were in the United States army or navy; one, Egbert, who served in the Russian army with rank of brigadier general; and one, Ford, as captain in the British army, Medical Corps. Two men served with the Y. M. C. A., Bullock and Freeman; one with the Red Cross, Pelkey. Three men served in Washington in executive capacity, Gray, Brewer, and Streeter. Further interesting statistics of the class are gleaned from their recent report, as follows: Of the 144 men on the rolls whose whereabouts are known and about whom statistics have been gathered, 120 are married, 24 single; there are 195 children, of whom 98 are girls and 97 boys.

Mr. and Mrs. Edwin R. Bartlett announce the birth of a daughter, Margaret Barbara, born March 4, 1920, at Niagara Falls. Mr. Bartlett is works manager and assistant treasurer of the Hooker Electro-Chemical Company at Niagara Falls, N. Y.

Mr. Albert Terrien announces his marriage to Mile. Desneiges Dufoux, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Louis Hector Dufoux, on April 7, 1920, at the Church of the Nativity of the Virgin in Montreal, Canada. Mr. Terrien is one of the prominent lawyers in Nashua, N. H.

A son, Matthew Washington Bullock, Jr., was born April 4, 1920, to Mr. and Mrs. Matthew W. Bullock at 20 Sarsfield St., Roxbury, Mass. The Concord Statesman gives an account of an address given before the students of New Hampshire College by Bullock, who is now secretary of the Urban League, urging them to consider the seriousness of the Negro problem.

Secretary, Harry B. Johnson, 4 Glendell Terrace, Springfield, Mass.