Class Notes

CLASS OF 1907

NOVEMBER 1927 Charles P. Woodworth
Class Notes
CLASS OF 1907
NOVEMBER 1927 Charles P. Woodworth

Good news from Dick Southgate indicates that he has completely recovered his health. He has written that he is through with big cities, and be in Woodstock and Hanover much of the time in the future.

The last report from Crick (Crocker) was that he had left LeRoy, N. Y., where he was vice-president of the LeRoy Cold Storage Company, and hoped to settle in Boston and engage in business there.

Printed in several New Hampshire dailies was the report that Norman Cushman led the cheering at the New Hampshire Harvard Qub clambake, at Rye Beach, N. H.

Marl Taylor's father died at Haverhill, on September 13.

Arthur H. Leavitt, who for years has been in the consular service in Egypt and later in the exporting business on his own account, in Constantinople, has returned to the United States, in order that his children may be educated here, and he has secured a position in the Trust Department of the National City Bank, New York city.

The following is from one of the Boston papers: "Dr. and Mrs. Robert C. Cochrane, of Brookline and Marblehead Neck, entertained a group of friends at a dinner dance at the Corinthian Yacht Club last evening, the occasion being especially in honor of Mr. and Mrs. Geoffrey Lyttleton Lowis, of Mayfair, London, England. Mr. Lowis, an ex-lieutenant commander of the British navy, is now a member of one of the largest brokerage firms in London, and is a member of the Bath, Garrick, and Hurlingham clubs. He is a son of the former governor general of India. Mrs. Lowis, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. W. G. Kennedy, of Boston, was graduated from Dana Hall in the class of '25, and attended Miss McClain's School in Paris, during the winters of '25 and '26. She was married to Mr. Lowis in London, August 4, 1926. Mr. and Mrs. Lowis, who are stopping at the Hotel Braemore, this city, will be here for a fortnight, and then start on an automobile trip through the White Mountains with Mr, and Mrs. Kennedy."

Mrs. Kennedy, who owns and operates the antique shop, called "The Spinning Wheel," on Fayette St., has acquired the entire house, to take care of increased business.

Mrs. J. Harper Blaisdell, wife of one of Winchester's selectmen, is interested in politics, and a Winchester item in the Boston Globe reported that she directed the tea for the Women's Republican Club, at their first regular meeting of the fall season.

The Boston group held a dinner dance the night of the Harvard game at the Weston Country Club, this innovation taking the place of the annual dinner for the men of the class, which customarily came the night before the Harvard game.

Mrs. Nickerson has written that the memorial for Nick at Peckett's on Sugar Hill will be completed in the fall. She has suggested that the class plan to visit Peckett's and inspect it, at their Twenty-fifth Reunion. This is an excellent idea for the next reunion committee to adopt.

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Secretary, 131 State St., Boston