Can anyone tell us where this disappeared dozen men are ? W. W. Angell, McCauley Carter, Harold E. Cereghino, Richard W. Ellis, E. F. Flindell, Samuel G. Fletcher, George J. Jaeger, Howard E. McClure, Alfred I. Merritt, Charles F. Harden, Charles W. Rivoire, John P. Young.
And by the way, we didn't put these names down in order to practice penmanship. Please give each one a good slant, and send us am dope you can corral. Thank you.
"Bill" Daley writes from Hamilton, Mass., that he is not doing anything of importance, just now. We guess that that makes it unanimous. But on the other hand, to show bot ends of the ferry boat, let's submit the evi dence that goes to disprove the above broad assertion. Here is some of it unadorned an regular.
"A!" Albee, in his own leather business in Montreal.
"Hockie" Hockenson, assistant manager of Schraft's Summer St. store in Boston.
"Cap" Palmer, assistant secretary of membership committee, Boston Chamber of Commerce.
"Hi" Streight, Ike Phillips, Dick Townsend, Walt Kurts, studying law at Harvard.
"Gus" Meleney and Sammy White, endeavoring to get a cake of soap in every home for Proctor and Gamble.
George Morrell in Ottumwa, doing something for the Morrell Packing Company.
"Joe" Bruning, a newspaper man and married, in Wheeling, W. Va.
"Johnny" Read, purchasing manager for the firm of Gregory and Read, shoe manufacturers, in Lynn.
"Ted" Barstow, teaching school in Rochester. "Tex" Scaling, a lone range rider in Texas ranching circles.
George McKee, selling Schraft's candies in Boston.
"Ly" Harding and Jimmy Broe, selling life or some such insurance in New York.
"Phil" Kimball, in the advertising department of Houghton Mifflin Company, Boston, "Ches" Bixby, with the W. E. Bixby Company, Haverhill, Mass.
"Phil" Jellison and "Ken" Way, some more telephoners. "Ken" gets honorable mention for being married.
"Stan" Richmond, a wool man in Boston.
The best part of the above information came from Brooks Palmer, who is with the Wachusett Thread Company, Boston. This makes Brooks high man in our class news contest, and places him far in the lead for the beautiful silver mounted salad fork, which the winner of this novel contest will receive. Thank you, Brooks.
Depend upon it that Twenty-Three is going to rupture a cartilage to do its part in getting a Dartmouth Club in New York, and Jim Landauer, who has just lately returned from a short stay in Cambridge to barter with mankind for Manhattan Island, under the colors of Douglas Ellman, realtor, is assuming the burden of seeing that we do. Anyone who wants to help along" in this big" shot proposition, just drop "Jim" a line. And although each of us owed the club ten fish as our re duced initation fees last fall, by the time the folks start coming back from Palm Beach the Twenty-Three Benny who has not come clean will naturally be a marked man. We're going to use that edifice when it looms up and we're going to help make it loom.
And now that we're talking of New York Jack Taylor, the Western Electric wizard, is the class representative in this cosy little haven While his clear blue eves have embraced most of the urban representation, if he has missed you, send him your name and you automatically go on the mailing list of the most exclusive and sporty coterie of the metropolitan district.
"Jack" Stanley has got him a new girl. He works for the Seaver Howland Press in Boston, about Franklin St.
I don't remember whether we mentioned "Bud" Friedman. Out in Milwaukee, exclusive of beer, he deals in all men's furnishings.
"Red" McPherson is a student in Gettysburg, Pa. Evidently there must be a college at that spot, although we do not know its name.
"Al" Emerson had a fire in his room up at Hanover. His leather bound Aegis was consumed by the voracious flames, and he would appreciate an opportunity to procure another. He also wants to get married. If anyone can furnish him with either of these, his address is 313 Topliff Hall.
"Lymie" King is another of the "Fratres in Benedictine," or possibly it would sound better to say that he is married, prosperous, and living in Cleveland.
"Ed" Grevatt is one of the few TwentyThree boys who is learning to recognize molars, incisors, and bicuspids. He's at Penn 'Dental.
"Jack" Dempsey will look like a theater curtain by the time he gets through. He works- for the Johns Manville Company in Manville, N. J., lives at Hotel Asbestos, and labors in a magnesia mill.
It' can be said with some assurance that "Mqx" Hubert has a mustache, at this imprint. Now, will he sell bonds in New York!
"Bub" Eaton, the former Boston schoolboy hockey star, as they say in the Hub, is with the Griers-Pfleger Tanning Company in Boston. He is another one of these joes not averse to matrimony.
"Jake" Molla has a fine chance to prove whether the buffaloes on the nickels ever sit down, or something to that effect. He is with F. W. Woolworth, learning the chain store business.
It is seldom that one of the graduates of Dartmouth's graduating classes, numerous as the years, remains in Hanover to recoup a few of the parental dollars which the rocky hillsides and the flinty but anyway "Donnie" Donovan is lingering on location with the Dartmouth Press, and he brings all the rich mature discipline of the Amos Tuck School to that enterprise. ,
"Bob" Esmond will graduate as ensign from the spring class at Annapolis. "Sherm" Windsor of Shippan Point, Stamford, Conn., is the treasurer of Boucher, Inc., New York. He has been married for years and compliments that estate by two children Either they are both boys, both girls, or one is a boy and the other is a girl. As is apparent, we are not incontrovertibly sure on this score.
"George" Wile is a coat salesman in our favorite city.
Ward Hilton will be glad to hear from any of the Chicagoans. Besides being the class's representative in the Windy City, he is with the Hartford Accident and Indemnity Insurance Company of Chicago, and lives at 204 Davis St., Evanston, Ill. Ward will be happy to help any of you out with money, a lodging, any . number of meals, a fine paying job, or in a hundred and one ways care for your interests as all class representatives do. Since the best I can hope for is a violent death at Ward's hands pursuant to the above, I must excuse myself to enjoy these last precious moments.
ERNEST FOX NICHOLS 1869-1924
Secretary, 48 Erwin Park Road, Montclair, N. J.