The second issue of the Sixteener appeared on February first; a bulletin of twelve pages.: If your copy failed to reach you, notify the secretary.
The opening shot has been fired in the Alumni Fund drive, for 1922. We have last year's record of 109% of our quota to uphold.
"Fletch" Andrews is enrolled as a freshman in Western Reserve Law School. He attends classes from 8-10 A.M., rides twenty miles to the factory of the J. H. R. Products Company, at Willoughby, Ohio, where he works until late afternoon, and then returns home to spend the evening in study. "Fletch" has a daughter of eighteen months, who is already a contributor to the Alumni Fund.
"Bob" Sherer is connected with the U. S. Gypsum Company of Chicago—but again, a name means nothing, for we know that "Bob" gives everyone a square deal.
Paul Gavard is a recent addition to the Boston 1916 organization. Paul is with Samson and Murdock Company, 246 Summer St.
George Kreider is associated with the First National Bank of Springfield, Ill.
Carl Merryman is in the import business with offices in Chicago.
"Ernie" Frey announces from Buffalo that Dave Shumway expects to locate there in the near future. "Hap" Ward and "Marty" Linihan are the other 1916 men located in the "Queen City of the Lakes."
Ralph George recently returned from the Miami shores after an exhausting six weeks' pursuit of the wily tarpon.
Johnny Gile concluded his short stay in Boston about March 1, and has now returned to take up active practice in Hanover.
Nineteen-sixteen to a man feels the deepest sympathy for Shirley Harvey in the loss of his wife and baby boy on February 19.
F. St George Smith is connected with the American Linseed Company in New York.
Larry Hayward expresses his feelings for the old associations in the following appropriate style: "I find, after six years out, that it gives me a peculiar feeling of delight just to meet and talk to a sixteener. Talk about the tie that binds, I feel '16 has it 100%."
And while on this subject Harry Goldman recently sent in a few lines of interest. "I happened to be in Niagara Falls, N. Y., on business when I read that the Dartmouth Alumni Association of Central and Western New York were holding their dinner on Saturday, January 21. It was a most wonderful evening, and I ran across "Ernie" Frey and "Marty" Linihan, who pumped me dry about the boys in New York. We had a special car into Buffalo through the kindness of Randolph McNutt, that grand old man of '71. I was his guest at the Markeen Hotel, which I learned afterwards that he owned. That's real Dartmouth hospitality." Right you are, Harry, right you. are!
Mr. and Mrs. Carl C. Staats announce the marriage of their daughter, Edna Frances, to Mr. Benjamin J. Eastman on February 4, 1922, at Fort Worth, Texas.
Mr. and Mrs. Edward Dana Knight announce the birth of Edward Dana, Jr., on January 29, 1922.
Mr. and Mrs. Edward P. Hutchinson announce the marriage of their daughter, Ruth, to Granville B. Fuller '16 on March 4, 1922, at Brighton, Mass. "Gene" McQuesten, Jesse Fenno, and Cliff Bean were in attendance as ushers.
Are. you lining up for the 1916 Saturday night "catch-as-catch-can" event planned for the middle of April in Boston!
Vivian Fletcher is in the Federal Reserve Bank in Boston, and is living at 10 Oxford St., Cambridge, Mass.
Secretary, H. Clifford Bean, 38 Algonquin St., Dorchester, Mass.