In fitting manner 1916 has registered wholehearted support to . the commemoration of the lives of those men of Dartmouth who made the supreme sacrifice. Gloriously represented on the Honor Roll of the College, 1916 still "carries on" that the sacred memories may live forever. At the "over-the-top" meeting of the Memorial Field committee on Jan. 19, 1922, Niheteen Sixteen stood fourth among the classes, with a total of $4460.
Call in the hounds : "Shorty" Hitchcock has at last located the elusive "Hap" Socony Ward in the asphalt roofing business in Buffalo, N. Y., thereby upsetting the belief that "Hap" might have been the victim of the "tongs" at a Chinese tea party.
"Shorty" further states that "Ed" Riley ran across Pres. "Ed" Knight in the "Windy City" delivering a lecture on "high and low coal". Is this a cause or an effect of the lull in the West Virginia mountain battles!
"Cliff Gammons is associated with the law firm of Warren, Garfield, Whiteside, and Lamson, 30 State St., Boston.
"Pete" Cleaves is with the Girard Trust Company of Philadelphia.
"Ed" Craver is secretary of the A. J. Bates Company, shoe manufacturers, Webster, Mass.
"Fred" Bailey is "hanging out" with the Regal Laundry Company of Boston. "Cleanliness is next to godliness", eh Fred!
Louis Bell is passenger agent of the Atlanta and West Point R.R. Co., the Western Railway of Alabama, and the Georgia Railroad, with offices at Augusta.
The announcement in the February ALUMNI MAGAZINE that "Eskie" Eskeline was on his way back to this country turned out to be premature. "Esk" now writes that he has been transferred to Vladivostok, Siberia, for a few months.
"Rog" Evans is very comfortably located in Shanghai, China, as evidenced by his recent letter. "There are no less than 45 Hanoverians now in China, Japan, the Philippines, and India. As for ourselves (Rog and wife), we are settled at last in a pretty stucco house of our own, new, six-roomed with ample garden and verandahs, American in plan with every modern comfort and convenience, but fifteen minutes from the office by ricksha. 'Hobey' Marble and Bill Hale are also here; and we have every comfort and pleasure that home could possibly afford, except your friendships." The translation of "Rog's" business card announces him the president of the Shanghai and Canton Silk Corporation. Accept our heartiest congratulations, "Rog."
De Witt Stillman is connected with the Chicago investment house of Taylor Ewart Co. "Witt" has two young hopefuls headed for the hills of New Hampshire.
Dan Lindsley, of Newberry and Lindsley, writes in from Coeur D'Alene, Idaho, that Ford sales are quiet, with good prospects, however, for the coming season.
"Bob" Bartlett is with the Western Electric Company in New York city.
"Joe" Cheney is secretary of Ditto, Inc., manufacturers of duplicating machines and supplies of Chicago. "Joe", Jr., celebrated his first birthday Dec. 24, 1921.
"Bob" Brown is located in Peterboro, Ontario, with the Canadian Nashua Paper Company, Ltd.
E. H. Gumbart is selling steel rails for the Bethlehem Steel Company, traveling between Chicago and the west coast.
At the annual Boston alumni dinner, held in Symphony Hall, Jan. 26, Sixteen was represented by a delegation of forty men. What say, New York!
"Charlie" Cressy, now with Marshall and Company of Boston, has raised the "ante" on Roger Babson by expounding an additional index of business conditions.
"Joe" Larimer has recently taken unto himself a wife and a sheepskin, the latter proclaiming him a member of the Chicago bar.
Livy Cole is production manager of the Cole Manufacturing Company, stove makers. If Livy and "Ed" Knight ever started talking business, it would be a "heated" discussion.
"Tog" Upham is keeping the "pipes" tuned up with the Henry W. Upham Company, "The Community Music Store", of Maiden.
"Doc" Greeley is touring the Middle West on a business trip for the Winchester Repeating Arms Company and appears to be setting up a new record for cross-country attendance at alumni luncheons.
"Pike" Larmon is "pedaling" along with the Meade Cycle Company of Chicago.
"Ros" Magill is "killing two birds with one stone", teaching law at the University of Chicago and practising with Hopkins and Hopkins.
The engagement of Miss Mary Frances Thurston Collins of Alton, R. I., to William H (Bill) Brown was announced recently. Miss Collins, a graduate of Moses Brown School, is teaching in the Lansdowne Friends School, Lansdowne, Pa. while Bill is principal of the Amherst, Mass., High School.
Miss Mary Lodge and John H. (Jake) Menset were married on December 23, 1921, at Troy, N. Y.
The marriage of Miss Ruth Hutchinson of Brighton, Mass., Smith 1921, to Granville B. Fuller took place Saturday, February 18. Jesse Fenno, "Gene" McQuesten, and Cliff Bean were among the ushers, and endeavored to accord the happy couple a rousing send-off.
Among recent arrivals the Secretary is pleased to announce the following:
Mr. and Mrs. Louis H. Bell-Courtenay Walthall Bell, Feb. 11, 1921.
Mr. and Mrs. Max E. Bernkopf—Sally Ann Bernkopf, Jan. 10, 1922.
When "Gil" Tapley knocks on your door for your annual contribution to the Tucker Alumni Fund, do your best for Dartmouth. 109% of our quota for 1921; "over again and twice as loud" for 1922.
Keep in touch with your Secretary, that the College may know what and whom you are doing and where.
Lyman G. Perkins and Miss Dorothy Cates were married in. Haverhill, Mass., in January. The home of Mr. and Mrs. Perkins is to be at 30 Fountain St., Haverhill.
Secretary, H. Clifford Bean, 38 Algonquin St., Dorchester, Mass.