Class Notes

Class of 1910

May, 1924 Whitney H. Eastman
Class Notes
Class of 1910
May, 1924 Whitney H. Eastman

Harold P. Jackson has been elected secretary-treasurer of the Casualty and Surety Club of New York. With the exception of one year in newspaper work and two in army service, his work since graduation has been entirely in the line of insurance. Since 1921 he has been in New York in the office of the Norwich Union Indemnity Company, and has been assistant secretary of this company since March, 1922, and a vice-president since July, 1923.

H. C. (Cheever) Comey has at last been located in Cleveland, Ohio. Cheever is with the Patterson Sargent Company, a large paint manufacturing concern. He has taken the oath never to stray from the Tenner fold again. Special request is made to Tenners who read this article to write to Cheever and make him feel that he should drink often at the Tenner fountain and bathe regularly in the waters of his Alma Mater.

Wanted: a first class real estate man. If you don't mind working for a 1911 man apply to Mahlon W. Hill, Center St., at Commonwealth Ave., Newton, Mass. Apparently there are not any good real estaters in the class of 1911. Of course Hill knows he would get a better man in 1910. Hence Q. E. D.

Our class was as usual gloriously represented at the annual dinner of the New York Alumni Association meeting held at the Hotel Plaza February 19. The following rang the bell: Coleman, Cutler, Forrista.ll, Hunt, Jackson, McClintock, Pratt, Raabe, Richmond, Sickman, Otto Taylor, Tobin, Vander Pyl, Wiggin, and Ray Seymour.

Ben Williams must think we don't have the Saturday Evening Post in Milwaukee, for he recently slipped in a story for- us in the Sunday Journal Magazine Section, March 2. The title was "Thrifty Stock." You would sure think Ben picked apples to put himself through college after you read this one. Just the same, whether we get the Post m IVlilwaukee or not, the newsboys have it in Chicago, and one of Ben's headliners entitled "Partridge" furnished very interesting reading en route from the Windy City recently. Beware, you bachelors of the class. Read this story. If you see a partridge in the road when you are out touring, don't run over it ' with your Rolls-Royce.

Sid Whipple in a blaze of glory is inundating the public press in Denver, Colo He is hailed as editor-in-chief of The DenverExpress. He has a good bed at home, 2289 Glencoe St., but says he seldom gets time to use it. Sid says it's lots more important to get the paper on the street before the ink gets dry. He sleeps while the ink is drying.

Secretary, 707 53d St., Milwaukee, Wis.