Class Notes

CLASS OF 1912

NOVEMBER 1929 Alvaro M. Garcia
Class Notes
CLASS OF 1912
NOVEMBER 1929 Alvaro M. Garcia

From the file of 1912 news during the summer, there doesn't seem to be very much going on except looking ahead to the coming football season. The class luncheons are again started at the Dartmouth Club, and New York members will be on hand again the first Tuesday of each month, anxious to entertain visitors.

Billy Baxter, as reported in the last issue, was married on June 15, and is now residing at 325 West Main St., Madison, Wis. Billy has been appointed district manager for the Rough Notes Company of Indianapolis.

Doc O'Connor and family have been summering at their old stamping ground, West Hampton, L. I.

Dick Eemsen, with Mrs. Remsen and the oldest boy, Junior, spent three weeks on a Wyoming ranch, returning via the Canadian Rockies.

Wally Jones has been on the seashore of Northern France, and returned with Mrs. Jones and the two children the latter part of September.

Jim Erwin's vacation has been spent with his family in Maine.

It is now two years since our Fifteenth Gathering at Hanover. We are almost at the halfway point of that time until our TWENTIETH REUNION. Contact with each member of 1912 is difficult through the small number subscribing to the ALUMNI MAGAZINE. Some other method will be used, so that some news is linked to each classmate from now on until we meet again. The executive committee will go into active session early this fall, and plans will be laid for the future. A line now and then of news of yourself or of some other member is necessary in order to publish a news column.

The Tuesday, October 1, gathering of 1912—the first for the winter season at the New York Dartmouth Club, was represented by Dick Remsen, Fred Day, Joe Boylan, Randy Burns, Dooly Doolittle, and Lee White. The next gathering will be Tuesday, November 5, followed by the first Tuesday of each month.

A 1 Smith has a new address. Through the courtesy of Mac Rollins' Club News, we reproduce this news item. "A 1 Smith has deserted the New York fold to go to the heart of the corn belt and become vice-president of the C. G. Conn Company, the people who make musical instruments. They have a swell letter head adorned with slip horns, drums, silver-lined cornets, piccolos, and saxophones. At the top is a picture of the factory, which looks as if it stretched from Elkhart to South St. Paul, and contained enough assorted and assembled noises to make the subway sound like the soothing notes of a kitten's purr. If Al's out there to find the way of applying a Maxim silencer to a saxophone, it's all right with us."

Al's address is 340 E. Beardsley Ave., Elkhart, Ind., and his business address, care of C. G. Conn, Ltd., Elkhart, Ind.

Hutch Biery is now residing at the Hartsdale Towers, Hartsdale, N. Y., and his business, the McCall Publishing Company, has moved to 230 Park Ave., New York. Hutch recently won a prize in golf at the tournament of the Advertising Men's Convention.

Tex Morris' business address is IXO2 Columbia St., San Diego, CaL, and his residence, 1619 Myrtle Ave., San Diego.

Hugh Eaton has moved to Naugatuck, Conn. His business address is at the factory of the United States Rubber Company, Naugatuck.

Jogger Elcock has been getting his name in the papers quite frequently as a coming golfer of note and as a member of Lido on Long Island, capturing his share of prizes during the past season. His handicap is quite a matter of moment.

Ev Gammons has been coming out of Cohasset now for over a year, and while we think none the less of that beautiful village, we are living in hopes that he will be keeping his promise that he will really emerge.

The Cornell game in Hanover on November 16 is a fine opportunity for a 1912 reunion. Headquarters will be at the Inn the night before the game and Saturday morning. Even though the game may be broadcast via radio, you cannot afford to miss the 1912 reunion in Hanover.

Secretary3 1452 Broadway, New York