Class Notes

Class of 1901

August 1924 Everett M. Stevens
Class Notes
Class of 1901
August 1924 Everett M. Stevens

The first 1901 golf tournament of the season took place at the Winchester Country Club, Winchester, Mass., May 27, 1924. Three teams of three men each competed, and the match was won by a team composed of Capt. French, Hoppy, and Jim Kimball. Henry Taylor, Johnnie Ward, and Dungie Crowell finished second, while Jim Smith, Gillie, and Chan Cox were in third place. All golf enthusiasts in the class had better send in their names to Capt. French, so that they may be advised of the next contest.

The Joe Colbys have returned to Montreal from a two months' trip to Europe. Joe writes he was greatly pleased to see on the Rue Rivoli, Paris, a picture of the Dartmouth Campus, which seemed good to see, especially so far from home.

Dr. Charles Whelan announces the removal of his office to 395 Commonwealth Ave., Boston. His practice is now limited to X-ray diagnosis, X-ray therapy, and radium therapy.

Goochie writes from Honduras that he is on a trip through some of the tropical divisions of the United Fruit Company, which will keep him away from the States until the end of the year.

Frank E. Cudworth, lately .engineer for Patrick McGovern, Inc., of New York city, employed on the Jamaica Bay Boulevard and the Staten Island-Brooklyn Tunnel, resigned the first of the year to accept a position as superintendent with the Kenn-Well Construction Company, and will be employed on the steam generating station of the Edison Company at 14th St. and East River, New York city.

Mrs. Earl F. Whitaker is conducting a course of lectures on current events at Bay Ridge, Brooklyn, N. Y., where she resides.

Capt. French, for many years a disciple of Henry Ford, has now forsaken him, as rumor has it. He has been seen driving a new Buick sedan in and about Newton Center.

A letter from Bill Sykes in Rio Piedras, P. R., reads as follows: "I am a plain dirt farmer. I depend entirely upon pineapples to keep tobacco in my pipe. I have now about 80,000 plants, and expects to ship around 1500 boxes this spring. I have a grove of 400 citrus trees, a patch of sugar cane, and of sweet potatoes. I find tropical agriculture exceedingly interesting, and I would not swap jobs with any man in the world. I am planning to go to the reunion two years from this spring. Just think, I have ten years' accumulation of stories to work off on the boys. I will probably bore them to death." We'll take a chance, Bill. If your new stories are as good as you told last time, Ned Calderwood will have to bring a new notebook to take them down.

Secretary, 42 Orange St., Nashua, N. H.