Class Notes

CLASS OF 1906

March, 1922 Ralph Thompson
Class Notes
CLASS OF 1906
March, 1922 Ralph Thompson

Freddie Walsh has left the pastorate of the Union Congregational church at North Reading, Mass., to accept a call to Bethel, Conn.

Ed Pearson is a partner in the investment-banking business of Schwabacher and Company at the Palace Hotel Building, 665 Market St., San Francisco. Ed boasts of a seven-and-a-half-year-old daughter Jane.

Ralph Scott sends word from Tallahassee, Fla., that he has plenty of room and a welcome for any of the boys that are down that way. Ralph may come North next summer.

Guy L. Sickman is now engaged as estimator for Fred T. Ley and Co., general contractors, at Springfield, Mass. His home is at 155 Belmont Ave.

Buckie Kraft of the K-M Supply Company, 123 West 8th St., Kansas City, Mo., now has a well-balanced family, consisting of two daughters, one seven years and one five, and two sons, one three years and the other six months. Buckie lives at 1412 West 50th St.

Dana B. Gove represents the American Agricultural Chemical Company, and is on the road the greater part of the time. His home is at North Weare, N. H., and his Boston address is 92 State St.

Crawford Bishop has returned from China and has been attending the Washington Conference in Washington, D. C., as special correspondent of the New York Evening Post, with headquarters at the Evening Post Washington Bureau.

A. R. Tarr is teaching in the Lynn (Mass.) English High School. He is now living at 5 Chancery St., Lynn. Tarr has two daughters, Virginia, twelve years old and Eloise four.

Herbert W. Cummings has changed his address to 319 Beachwood Ave., Trenton, N. J.

Alan Parrish has been in the contracting business ever since he left Hanover, and just completed a contract calling for thirty miles of pavement. He is still at Paris, Ill., and has two daughters, one twelve years old and the other seven.

Chet Everett is consulting engineer in the water works business at 30 East 42nd St., New York. Chet was married to Ruth Melius in 1919, and has two boys, Theodore Joseph, born February 8, 1920, and Robert Rivers, born June 21, 1921. His home is at 9 Halycon Place, Yonkers, N. Y.

Chub Chase, who is practicing medicine at Salt Lake City, has just returned from a three months' trip to Alaska. Chub is plant surgeon for the Utah Copper Mills.

Art Farrington is now manager of the Winchester Store, 422 Main St., Worcester, Mass.

E. Everett Clark has removed from Ansonia, Conn., and is director of Americanization in the Everett schools department at Everett, Mass.

The Secretary was glad to get a letter from Luther M. Beal, who writes that he is enjoying good health at Sandwich, Mass., and is looking forward to the publication of a new class report.

Watson Smith advises the Secretary from New York that he has just entered Watson, Jr., age six months, in the class of 1942. It was a peculiar circumstance of fate that it should have , been Watson who drove Joe White to the hospital in France after Joe had been gassed. That was the last time Watson saw Joe.

Pitcher Glaze dropped into the weekly Dartmouth lunch at the Hamilton Club, Chicago, and spent an interesting half hour with the Secretary. Pitcher is athletic director at Lake Forest University, Lake Forest, Ill.

At the annual meeting and banquet of the Chicago Dartmouth Alumni Association, Nat Leveroni was elected president, and Walter Dakin was elected member of the executive board.

Kid Gleason represents the National Cash Register Company in Chicago, and lives at the Parkway Hotel, 2100 Lincoln Park, West.

Jocko Griffin is with the Western Electric Company of Chicago, and lives at 119 South Cuyler Ave., Oak Park, Ill. Jocko has modestly refrained from telling much about himself since he left Hanover, but he and the Mrs. have been busy preparing Jocko, Jr., aged 7, to play center the way his daddy did.

Don McIntire and the Secretary reuned to considerable extent at Don's office at 417 South Dearborn St., Chicago, where Don represents the Findex Company of New York. Don hopes to get East for the Dartmouth-Harvard game.

Will those members of the class who made snap-shots of the 15th Reunion last June please send the films to the Secretary for the forthcoming class report. (Please jump up and do this now before you read any further.) Thank you.

Bug Gardiner and the Secretary had a little reunion at the Milwaukee Station in Minneapolis last month with the the thermometer at 32° below and Bug with his grip full of heavy red flannels headed for the wilds of North Dakota. Bug was about to look over a timber tract eleven miles from the railroad station, for the Winston Brothers Company, general contractors, 801 Globe Building, Minneapolis. Bug says he has no complaint blanks to make out, and that Minneapolis is a real place to live in.

Toot Bourne is Northwestern States Manager for the Portland Cement Association, Minneapolis, and is living at 1406 Yale Place.

Dan Hatch is general sales manager for the Dominion of Canada for the Barrett Company, Ltd., Montreal, and announces that young Dan is entered for the class of 1928. After a mighty pleasant reunion dinner at the Windsor Hotel Dan treated the Secretary to an old-fashioned pung ride to the R. R. station one block away. Dan was completing arrangements for the annual dinner of the Canadian Dartmouth Association, at which Louis Russell and Judge "Deacon" Smith were expected.

At the annual banquet of the Dartmouth Alumni Association of Boston the following '06ers were present: Art Chapin, Max Hartmann, Tug Warton, Tom Connell, E. A. Thompson, Randall Cooke, Lyme Frazer, Dennie Dennison, Charlie Main, Percy Holmes, Bill Bell, George Swasey, Cliff Perry and the Secretary.

Secretary, Ralph Thompson, 7 Creedway, Taunton, Mass.