Class Notes

CLASS OF 1908

November 1923 Raymond R. Marsden.
Class Notes
CLASS OF 1908
November 1923 Raymond R. Marsden.

Ralph P. Currier, who has been in school work as teacher and superintendent since 1908, has joined the ranks of the farmers. This summer he refused re-election as school superintendent in Wilton, N. H., and bought a large farm at Ponemah, N. H., where he has 1800 birds and plans to make a poultry farm of imposing size. His place was recently the center of a cyclone, which damaged his buildings to a considerable extent and killed a large number of birds.

Arthur D. O'Shea, who is an officer of everything that has officers in Laconia, was this summer put on the board of directors of the new Country Club in his city. They say he swings a mean mashie.

Art Lewis is in danger of buying a 200-acre farm on Cape Cod. He visited Howard Cowee and the other Dartmouth fellows on the Cape, and now Mrs. Lewis has almost succeeded in weaning him away from Winnipesaukee as a summer playground. The farm is all picked out.

Classmates who enjoyed Ralph Crowley's hospitality at the Charles River Country Club after the '22 Harvard football game have been back this summer to let him show them the way around the golf course. They say he is as good a host after a golf game as after a football contest.

Bub and Mrs. Shaw started early in July, via Ford and trailer from Providence, headed for the West Coast, where he will practice medicine. On the way they visited Bill Knight at Rockford, Ill. About the first of August they were seen leaving Terry, Montana, their home for several years. Since then the trail has been lost.

F. J. McAuliffe is sculping in the studio of Mrs. Harry Payne Whitney in New York. At present he is working on a statue of Buffalo Bill for Cody, Wyoming.

The class will learn with deep regret of the death of Mrs. Ned Darling at Hillside Cottage, Lake Kushaqua, N. Y. Mrs. Darling has been Ned's constant companion in his fight for health, and finally contracted the malady from which he was suffering.

Wink Fiske, besides carrying on his private practice in Pittsburgh, is on the faculty of the University of Pittsburgh, lecturer at St. Francis Hospital, and chief orthopedic surgeon of the West Pennsylvania Hospital. Someone conceived the idea that he was not busy enough, so he has just been made consulting surgeon of the Sewickley Valley Hospital and chief consulting surgeon of the new State of Pennsylvania Marine Hospital.

Johnny Glaze has been appointed advisory coach of football, and was in Hanover for the Norwich game.

Assistant Secretary, Prof. Raymond R.Mars den, Hanover, N. H.