Class Notes

CLASS OF 1909

August, 1922 Joseph W. Worthen
Class Notes
CLASS OF 1909
August, 1922 Joseph W. Worthen

Jack Mason has just come to Boston as comptroller of the New England Confectionery Company.

"Brownie" Foss has just been detailed to the American Consulate General at Constantinople, and may now be reached at that address.

"Nat" Howland writes a good letter from Bellagio. To many of us that name is a letter in itself. He writes in part: "Now that I have the family settled at my old headquarters in Berlin, Mrs. Howland is able to travel with me again. After Easter we came down through Germany and Switzerland into northern Italy — Milan, Turin, and the lakes — and now we are in and about Interlaken. If any of the fellows are planning to come over this summer — according to the papers here they expect hundreds of thousands of Americans this year — I certainly hope that they will drop me a line at the address in the letterhead. I shall be in Paris the greater part of June, then in Amsterdam and Brussels on my way to the Baltic for the holidays. After the middle of August I expect to be in London for a month. I shall be mighty glad to see any of the fellows, and hope that I can help them a bit in making their plans."

R. L. Wing writes that he has changed his address to Saylesville, R. I.

R. M. Johnson is now with Choate, Larocque, and Mitchell, 40-42 Wall St., New York.

L. R. Dean, professor of Latin at Denison University, Granville, Ohio, writes that he was married in 1920 to Miss Belle W. Bream of Gettysburg, Pa.

Phil Avery is architecting a high school, a country club, and a hospital in Laconia, N. H. He is understood to be thoroughly familiar with the road between Boston and Laconia.

Roy Abbott's home address since July 17 is 38 Chestnut Ave., Eaton Park, Cranston, R. I. He has recently become superintendent in charge of operation, development, and production, for the United Lace and Braid Company.

Joe Hatch announces the arrival of a son, Joseph William Hatch, on June 18, 1922. Mother and son both doing well, thank you.

Harold Bales is finishing his third year in Milford, N. H., as superintendent of School Union No. 40, comprising Milford, Amherst, Mont Vernon, and Brookline. He superintends about 40 teachers and 1000 pupils, scattered over several square miles, in schools ranging from a little remote one-room outfit with a half-dozen youngsters to a high school enrolling over 200.

Frank Bartlett is engaged in the bond business in Chicago with a Cornell man named Gordon,—going strong.

"Buster" Brown writes from St. Paul that he is still selling advertising for the Webb Publishing Company, spending most of his time in Ohio, and Michigan and points between there and St. Paul. He sees the Naught Niners in Chicago and Cleveland occasionally.

Harold S. Clark is to teach at Lawrence Academy, Groton, Mass., the coming year.

Secretary, Joseph W. Worthen, 404 Shawmut Bank Building, Boston