Class Notes

CLASS OF 1914

May, 1923 Clyfton Chandler
Class Notes
CLASS OF 1914
May, 1923 Clyfton Chandler

The returns from the recent postal card have brought replies from practically all the men. A mere handful are undecided about the 10th reunion next year. The others are already planning to be present. Talk it up — the committee is getting busy with preliminary plans.

Jack Field is general sales manager for the J.P. Burton Coal Company of Cleveland. Among those buying and selling the precious combustible with him you will find Chick Chase, late of Boston, Johnstown, Pa., and elsewhere.

Sig Larmon has charge of the Columbia Graphophone activities in Ohio, with head- quarters in Cleveland. Sig is secretary of the Cleveland association, and active in the Saturday luncheons for Dartmouth men, held at the Hotel Statler. Any 14ers in Cleveland should get in touch with Sig and Jack Field.

Jim Ramage is with the Franklin Paper Company and Johnny Hazen is with the Taylor Logan Company, both in Holyoke, Mass. Johnny has lost the larger part of his hair in the paper business, but Red is sticking close to his.

Squint Herlihy may be located in the trust department of the First Trust and Savings Bank of Chicago.

Rufe Sisson and Hal Castle are still with the Racquette River Paper Company, Potsdam, N.Y.

Hen Koelsch in his migrations about the globe has halted in London at the National City Bank headquarters.

Hen Lowell is located with the Converse Rubber Shoe Company of Maiden, Mass. Rumor has it that Hen had something to do with those radio boots.

Gus Fuller may be found with the Jones and Laughlin Steel Company in Cleveland. Al Munkelt is with the same organization in Pittsburgh.

Add to our list of prominent educators L.D. White at the University of Chicago and Dike Saville at the University of North Carolina.

Sam Cole sells shoes for the Lane Shoe Company, Lowell, Mass.

Bill Gilbert is knee deep in literature at the Congressional Library, Legislation Reference Service, Washington, D. C.

The Richardson Company of Melrose Park, Ill., claims Al Overton.

Rugar Young admits to being a real estate broker in Joliet, Ill.

Hal Morse ought to be able to reach Hanover next year if the trains run. He is with the Chicago, Milwaukee, and St. Paul Railway Company at Deer Lodge, Mont.

Another wild address is Skull Valley, Arizona, where Gail Gardner herds bovines or something. Gail may be reached at Prescott, Arizona.

Ken Fuller is helping advertise the publications of Ginn and Company, Boston.

Bill Breslin tells us he is in the advertising game in Troy, N.Y. Address him at the Byron G. Moon Company.

Howard Bowman is in Philadelphia with the Winchester Simmons Company.

Hal Pease is handling supplies of some kind under the firm name National Process Company, Inc., New York city.

Le Spore is helping supply the world with crayons from the plant of the American Crayon Company, Sandusky, Ohio.

Jesse Babcock is in that honeymooners' paradise, Niagara Falls, but Jesse has to work at the plant of the Hooker Electro-chemical Company.

Elmer Robinson may be responsible for these handsome eyeglass advertisements in the magazines over the Shur-On trademark. Elmer is with the Shur-On Optical Company, Rochester, N.Y.

Rubber Floyd has gone clear to the Pacific, and located with the Goodyear Textile Mills in Los Angeles.

Ernie Kimball and Everett Barnard are both selling wool for Boston houses. The former is with the Walker Wool Company and the latter with the Beacon Wool Company.

Another one of the 1914 steel magnates is Hinman, out in Warren, Ohio, with the Trumbull Steel Company.

Secretary, Clyfton Chandler, 30 State St., Boston