We have referred before to Kris Kristeller's practicing law in White Plains (N. Y.). He is the filling of Graves, Kristeller and Teale, attorneys and counselors at law.
Bob Dewey wrote to your old snooper some time ago, and addressed the letter to Hanover, where it was received by one Francis Horn, an undergraduate and a cousin of Miss Charlotte E. Ford, alumni recorder. Mr. Horn was puzzled, and by chance showed it to Miss Ford, who sent it on to this department. So now it seems that Jean Alice Dewey was born to the Deweys on May 17, this year. And that Chick Hatch, Gladiola Tycoon, is somewhat improved in the bad back condition that hit him last spring. However he has eight men and two girls working amidst the fragrant blossoms, and is, we think, solvent.
And it also seems that Hal Holway has been shifted to the Dallas outpost of Ernest W. Brown, Inc., fire underwriters. And that John Dana (Holbrook Hall, Fleetwood district, Mt. Vernon, N. Y., Hants, Hants, Hants) is the tennis champion of his apartment house, a wee lean-to housing but 300 families.
Mr. and Mrs. James A. Hamilton announce the birth of Joan, November 6.
Llewellyn Smith is adjusting insurance in Manchester-on-the-Merrimac, N. H., 406 Amoskeag Bank Building; home, 706 Beech St.
To your list of construction superintendents up behind your clock add the name of Russ Harmon, as zealous a citizen as labors for T. Stuart and Son Company, Watertown, Mass. When day is done Russ is at 29 Holman Road, Auburndale.
Sterling Hawley (production engineer) is financially dependent on American Chain Company, Bridgeport, Conn., and lives in the same lovely city at 508 Courtland Ave.
Bob Bartlett has gone into the business known as "expediting." He performs this peculiar function in the purchasing department of Stone and Webster, Boston (brickwork, lathing, grading, etc.). Home, 65 Hartford St., Newton Highlands.
Charley Brooks turns in a report indicating that at least one merchant hasn't gone chain.
Max Budnitz, famed New Britain-Springfield Committee, has associated himself with F. L. Roberts and Company, Springfield, Mass., and has cut out that commutation.
Bill Wilkinson (public relations) has come down into the Village, 136 West Fourth St., hard by our own old home.
His Tuck tricks are helping Leighton Tracy in Tracy, Robbins-Squiers, Inc., Hartford, Conn. They are contractors and builders.
Gray Dodds, it can now be told, is engaged as a merchant at 234 Main St., Paterson, N. J. (Home, 521 East 28th St.)
Ralph Brucker, another of the W. T. Grant Company vassals, is in the Paterson, N. J., store, but lives at 280 Gregory Ave., in beautiful Passaic.
Dan Daniell (Famed 75-miles-in-one-dayhiker): "Each Twoter seems to appear in time to receive one of the small cards enclosed as this year's contribution." The small card announced the birth of Samuel Holway Daniell (weight 144 ounces). We think this is the third Daniell, but have lost count. Dan contributes several items, and observes that he visited Hanover at Commencement time for a few days.
John Wood and Edna Van Xngen Lee were married November 1, in St. Luke's, Montclair, N. J. The wedding was followed by a reception at the Women's Club. The Woods will live at 41 Fifth Ave., Gotham, where they will be at home after December 15. Mrs. Wood is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Charles T. Lee of Montclair.
Letter from Memphis from Ray Atwood, there to begin an itinerant six months on the inspection staff of Universal Credit Company (Ford's easy-payment-plan subsidiary). Ray was to go to Texas next.
Hal Green, famed bass-horn virtuoso, is now occupied with supervising around Boston for the A. & P. Company (groceries) for whom he has worked for a long time. He lives at 2 Howe Hill Road, Stoneham, Mass.
Joe Cohen, a Massachusetts boy who came to The City, is living at 610 Ovington Ave., Brooklyn. He does his selling capers over here.
Chuck Canfield is either employed by or dominates Canfield Paper Company, 62 Duane St., New York city. He commutes to Chappaqua.
Jim Moody, long gone from our midst into the steppes of Texas and New Mexico, has returned to Boston, and has become a salesman for Harris, Forbes and Company. He is living at 24 Carleton Road, Belmont.
We sat with Dr. Jake McKoan at the Yale game, who said that the McKoans welcomed their first child, a girl, in May.
Ed Lane continues to wholesale footwear from the prim fastnesses of 555 Atlantic Ave., Boston, and to live at 25 Coolidge Ave., Needham.
Fragmentary note on R. B. Cate: With Empire Carpet Corporation of Boston, headquarters at Montpelier, Vt.
After the Yale game at New Haven some of us dropped in to see Dr. and Mrs. Dick Stetson, who had a buffet supper ready and waiting, to our great joy and deep gratitude. Among those present: Mr. and Mrs. Walt Sands, Mr. and Mrs. Charlie Rivoire, Mr. and Mrs. Spenny Smith, Jake McKoan, George Moore, and your correspondent.
When we talked with Secretary Oley Olsen at the Tuck School a while back, he said that all that stands between him and a Chicago Ph.D. is a chapter to be completed in his thesis, which has to do with the system of dairy co-operatives in Denmark. He visited that cheery land this summer to pick up the last few facts.
Hal Clark is living at 218 Washington Blvd., Springfield, Mass., but how he aids the nation's business we do not know.
Phil Leighton (W. T. Grant Company dependable) lives at 100 Houston St., Mobile, Ala.
Mr. Frederick Henry Dennis of Newton, Mass., has announced the marriage of his daughter, Viola Mabel, to Gaylord Anderson. After December 1 the Andersons are to be at home at 137 Englewood Ave., Boston. Gaylord has completed his whirl at the Albany Hospital, and is now back in Boston as the next step in the healing art.
From Teheran, Persia, we were saluted today (November 9) by Ralph Rubins. Our last Twoter postcard followed him even therewe get our man. Here are the tidings. In July, 1928, Ralph and Miss Katherine Fredrickson of Watertown, Mass., were married, and soon after went to Persia, where a railroad has been under way. In June of this year a son, Fredrick, was born to them in Teheran. From the letter: "I have almost embraced the faith of the Mussulmans, but I am afraid I shall have to give it up because they are not allowed to drink—and that would never do in the States." The Rubins intended to return to New York via Russia in time for the Dartmouth-Navy game.
Secretary, 40 West 9th St., New York