Class Notes

Class of 1919

June, 1926 Philip H. Bird
Class Notes
Class of 1919
June, 1926 Philip H. Bird

Back again a second month with enough dope to last until you boys kick through with some letters as to your whereabouts and doings.

Cliff Hayes dropped in the store last Thursday, clean from South Caroline. He has been assigned to the Pacific Mills offices in New York.

Running a close second was Jimmie Davis, one of our New York followers, who reported that he was enjoying married life in Jamaica, L. 1., and was keeping in touch with live Nineteeners while traveling his route of advertising agent for the Farm Jowrnal.

Some letters, received indirectly through Russ Potter, who by the way is high mogul of the North Suburban district of the Telephone Company in the fair town of Boston, and coming as it were from one Spider Martin, who also by the way is our chief collector for the Alumni Fund, may be of interest to you.

You who want news of the class to appear in the Alumni Bulletin and yet won't take the time to write me a letter of information about yourself might enjoy the following:

Will I. Levy is now with the A. I. Namm and Son Company of Brooklyn, N. Y. He left Wm. Filene's Sons of Boston, where I saw him last. When did you go, Will, and why?

Sherin Green writes from Paris that he was married in Constantinople the first of the year. From one near-by city to another in five months, where are you now, Sherm ?

You know, men of 1919, if you won't drop us a line each time you jump the rent, how in the interests of the class can we give out the dope?

Red Murphy is now with the Florence Oil Stove Co., and temporarily located in Buffalo. Now to show how you boys double cross a fellow Nineteener, the last letter I had from Red said he was coming to Boston in a few days to work for a living and would drop in and see me. Do you get the idea of what's expected of you men yet?

Bill Eads is president and treasurer of the Eads Brothers Furniture Co. in Fort Smith Ark.

John Goss has moved to New York and represents the Massachusetts Mutual Insurance Co. It's about time these galloping New Yorkers were given a chance to save their lives in a New England company.

Stub Stoughton has been transferred to Seattle, Wash., and is with Stone and Webster in the Electric Building.

Mose Jones is on the Minneapolis Journal, and is crabbing about lack of copy under 1919 in the Alumni Bulletin. Why not send in some dope, Mose, and help me fill space.

Be it known that Russ Potter, Leland Bixby, and Jack Cannell are boasting the recent addition to their families of sons and daughters. Let's hear from the rest of you folks.

Charlie Biddle writes from Hongkong, China, that he has found the best city in the world. I doubt if he wears a pigtail yet, but he may run a laundry.

The marriage of Miss Marguerite E. Malone to Frank A. Pedlow took place at the Cathedral of the Immaculate Conception, Albany, N. Y., February 11.

And now the dope has run out again till next issue, but before signing off, listen:

The bills for class dues are in the mail. Some of you boys will be surprised when you find out how much you owe the Class Fund. Don't sidetrack that bill if it looks large. Pay us a chunk of it, and Chug Sears will write you again for the balance. See you later.

Secretary, 5 West St., Boston