Class Notes

CLASS OF 1911

August 1921 Nathaniel G. Burleigh
Class Notes
CLASS OF 1911
August 1921 Nathaniel G. Burleigh

At the class meeting during the Tenth Reunion, the following executive committee was elected to serve for the next five years: N. G. Burleigh, Chester C. Butts, Richard F. Paul, from New England, Warren F. Kimball from New York and the South, and Edwin R. Keeler from Chicago and the West. At a later meeting of the executive committee, the following class , officers were elected for the next five years: president, R. F. Paul; secretary, N. G. Burleigh; treasurer, W. F. Kimball; class agent, John Pearson. Please address all communications of interest to the class to the Secretary at Hanover, N. H.

Mr. and Mrs. Harold E. Burtt announce the arrival of Benjamin Pickering on June 7, 1921.

Harry M. Bicknell is a member of the firm of Whiting and Company, investment securities, at 105 South LaSalle St., Chicago.

The marriage is announced of Elsie Olive and Warren F. (Wee) Kimball on Tuesday, June 14, at Arlington, Mass.

Mr. and Mrs. John H. Card announce the arrival of John Henry, Jr., on June 8.

On Wednesday, April 20, occurred the marriage of Harriet Weiffenbach, Vassar 17, and Frederick W. Long, at Denver, Colo.

Mr. and Mrs. Amos W. (Jack) Crooks announce the arrival of their third daughter, Pauline Ruth, on May 13.

Thornton (Heinie) Chase's home address is 4710 17th Ave., N. E., Seattle, Washington.

Frank S. (Whit) Whitcomb was forced to undergo a surgical operation, which made it impossible for him to attend the Tenth.

W. S. (Bill) Carlisle had his house sold from under him, and it is reported that the family is now living in a 10x12 tent on the east side of the Indian Hill Golf Club.

Railroad accommodations being so poor, Ed Keeler was forced to buy a new Packard in which to transport his family and Warren Agry's to the Tenth.

Rollie Hastings and his wife and family lately returned from Los Angeles and Arizona. Barring a broken arm for young Rolland, four or five new tires for the Dodge, and meeting Spunk Troy in Los Angeles, there were no casualties on the trip.

We are informed by one of the Boston papers that Chester A. Jenkins, who has been such a successful coach at the Huntington School where he has been seven years in charge of a track team that has lost but two indoor meets and who this last year won the interscholastic medley relay championship of America at the Penn Carnival, has left Huntington to become track coach at Bates College and also to become a member of the faculty there.

Lester M. (Liz) Harding has at last succumbed to the inevitable weakness of man. Her name was Miss Martha Morton Lea of Elkins Park, Pa. The date was June 25.

Secretary, Nathaniel G. Burleigh, Hanover, N. H.