Class Notes

CLASS OF 1913

APRIL 1929 Warde Wilkins
Class Notes
CLASS OF 1913
APRIL 1929 Warde Wilkins

Jeremy More arrived out in Denver, Colo., at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Robert E. More on January 21, 1929.

"I presume you'd like to hear the latestJanet, February 6, 1929, weight 7½ pounds." Mr. and Mrs. N. C. Lenfesty, announcing from Summit, N. J.

At the fathers' and sons' lunch of the Dartmouth Club of Washington, held on February 22, four of the eight Washington members of the class were present, and furnished five sons. Chippie Semmes won the high honors again, with three sons present, while Stub Stoughton had his oldest boy (he has a third, born in January), and Don Evans had his two-and-a-half-year-old son. Edmund Freeman had no sons. Fifty-six attended, which Buck claims is pretty near the high water mark for the club.

Stub Stoughton is still secretary of the Dartmouth Club, and Buck Freeman is secretary of the Lunch Club. Buck was in Boston for a hurried trip at Christmas time, but the class secretary was in New York catching the "flu."

General Willson is New England distributor for the Kentucky Rock Asphalt Company of Louisville, Ky.

It is our sad duty to report the death of Freeman C. Doe in New York. "Buck" was 39 years old. The burial was private. An obituary notice appears in the Necrology.

Secretary, 40 Broad St., Boston