Class Notes

CLASS OF 1911

July 1920 Richard F. Paul
Class Notes
CLASS OF 1911
July 1920 Richard F. Paul

Mrs. W. H. Barkdull of Toledo, Ohio, announces the engagement of her daughter Helen to James M. Irwin. The class has long awaited opportunity to congratulate Dutch. It has the opportunity; it does.

Benjamin M. (Ben) Stout is attorney for the Central Trust Company of Chicago.

William E. (Jack) Herron is still in Inverness, Florida, combining citrus fruit growing and a Ford agency. Is this the proper material for B.L.T.?

Mr. and Mrs. Clarence (Eben) Holden have been in America on a five months' leave, and returned to China in June.

C. A. (Dutch) Waterbury is with the Corning Glass Works, Corning, N. Y., makers of Pyrex baking ware, the article so indispensable to all home baking. (Advt.)

Arthur J. (Art) Ganley is a practicing physician at 30 Walnut St., Newark, N. J.

Trueworthy F. (Dud) Dudley is now with the National Carbon Company, Niagara Falls.

Arthur S. (Duke) Dunning is sales manager for the Kelley-How-Thomsbn Company, wholesale hardware, Duluth, Minn.

Robert G. (Bob) Kimball is manager of the Boston office of Henry W. Mason and Company, cotton, at 54 Kilby St., Boston.

Mr. and Mrs. Harrie S. Whittemore of Middletown, Ohio, announce the engagment of their daughter Margaret to Mr. George M. French of Nashua, N. H.

S. B. (Mac) Macomber is now office manager of the traffic department of the New England Telephone and Telegraph Company, the same outfit he has been with for years, but a new and better job.

S. F. (Sarge) Eaton announces that a new infielder of great promise has just arrived, Sargent Sheffield, born May 16, 1920, at Portland, Maine.

The Rev. John R. Scotford is pastor of the Glenville Congregational church, St. Clair Ave., Cleveland, Ohio.

Boston newspapers had a news item of interest to us all under date of June 2, 1920, namely; that Fred Harris had piloted his grandmother on her 87th birthday for a ten minute ride in his airship.

H. B. (Hen) Seaver is teaching in the agricultural department of Rutgers College, New Brunswick, N. J., and giving some supervision to his farm at Englishtown.

W. S. (Biff) Thompson is one of the partners of Sykes Thompson Company, candy manufacturers, at 1362 E 3rd St., Cleveland.

C. K. (King) Moses, after a lengthy and varied experience in Italy, the Adriatic, the Mediterranean, and the Sahara desert, is stopping in America for a few months before going to China. He is combining Chamber of Commerce work with his writing, with a permanent address at 7 5th Avenue, New York city.

Thornton (Heinie) Chase, Jr., is still a captain in service, temporarily stationed at Camp Gordon.

The Rev. R. W. (Bob) Barstow has accepted a call to the South Congregational church at Concord, N. H., and leaves Woodstock this summer.

Carroll R. Ward won the degree of Doctor of Law cum laude at Yale at the recent commencement.

A recent item in a Chicago paper reports Raymond C. Thorne as engaged in superintending the erection of a $100,000 house at Beverly Hills, a suburb of Los Angeles, Cal.

In order to get suggestions for our Tenth next year, or maybe it was just love for Hanover that prompted them, fifteen of the class attended Commencement this year for one or wore days. Post, Al Wheeler, Wheldon, Chick Jordan, Troy, Wee Kimball, Coggins, Warren, Dick Chase, Fred Harris, Thurber, and Paul met Burleigh, Dunham, and Gooding up there. Individually and collectively we made a vow to beat 1910's. record of 115 or so reunioners, which is a new highwater mark in Point of numbers, eclipsing the record of 108 made by 1911 at its Fifth.

Harry Waterhouse is with the Stevenson Corporation, industrial engineers, at 10 State St., Boston, handling candy factory accounts or them. At present he is reorganizing a candy factory in Chattanooga, Tenn., where he expects to remain until winter.

J. J. (Spunk) Troy is in Boston for a few weeks preparatory to a business trip abroad.

J. F. (Jim) Malley is about to become a blushing groom, after which event he plans to desert the business at Randolph for his former one at Rochester, N. Y.—the German-American Button Company.

Dr. and Mrs. H. M. Clute announce that Charles Edward is the best baby yet born. He arrived early in June, and already shows signs of being as noisy as his father.

J. B. (Jack) Welch is married. A recent call at his office brought forth the news that Jack was away on his honeymoon, hence the deduction that he is married.

C. G. (Charlie) Stebbins is one of the active men with the Templeton Manufacturing Company, 117 Business St., Hyde Park, Mass.

A. A. (Al) Hormel has an executive position with the Crocker-Burbank people, Fitchburg.

P. W. (Phin) Whiting is in charge of the biology department at Franklin and Marshall College, Lancaster, Pa. He plans to spend the summer at Cold Springs Harbor, Long Island, and in the fall will be in charge of the biology department at the St. Stephen's College at Annandale-on-the-Hudson.

Capt. P. J. (Pat) Hurley will be instructor at the summer training school at Camp Devens.

H. W. (Chub) Pease has bought a large farm near Redmond, Washington, forsaking the Coast and Geodetic Service.

The class has issued a challenge to all other classes from 1910 to 1920, claiming that we will beat them all in filling our quota for the Alumni Fund and in percentage of contributors. We have won on the first part of the challenge, and are hoping every man will contribute a little something at least, so that we can make good on the second part of our boast.

Robert S. (Bob) Shackford is with the Elliott Fisher Company, 44 Bromfield St., Boston.

Maj. Russell B. Patterson is with the American contingent at Coblenz, Germany, Army P.O. 927.

Robert S. (Bob) Sault is a supervisor of music in the schools of Lawrence, Mass.

The engagement is announced of Kenneth F. Clark and Elizabeth Marshall, daughter of former state senator Henry Marshall.

David L. (Dave) Fitz is the Miami manager of Sawyer-Godfrey Company, fruit shippers of Florida.

Secretary, Richard F. Paul, 98 Milk St., Boston