Secretary
102 North Sheridan Road, Highland Park, Ill. As a new and impressive manifestation of the "Dartmouth Spirit" or "the old peppah" or something, I offer my effort to put this column together, the while headed east on the Boston Century. I suppose what with the depression and the competition from trucks and airplanes the N. Y. C. is hard put to it to keep the road-bed in shape.
Most of this month's news items are concerned with gents whose biographies have never before been submitted in this MAGAZINE. (Come, boys, a rousing Hooper-Dooper for the new recruits!)
Doug Curry, Kentuckian of Harrodsburg„ went to Harvard Law for three years, hooked up with Rouse & Price, attorneys of Covington, for four years, and only recently set up all by himself. Doug married Susan Hawley in June of last year.
We offer above a picture of C. E. Goss and wife taken when the ceremony was only a few days over the hill. She was Priscilla Carpenter of Berlin, N. H., home of Walt (Neanderthaler) Rahmanop. Goss is a big brassiere and panty man with W. T. Grant. He writes that Loosh Ruder is going great guns with his underwear mill, that Freddy Steinhilber is buying for the Lincoln Stores, and Marshall Brown is an engineer. A toast to the next Goss child, due November 6 of this year.
Until this year Payson Jones was a textile man. He's selling now for the Phillips Ribbon and Carbon Co., Inc., and lives at 21 Standish St., Newton Highlands, Mass. Got married nine long years ago, and there are two Jones boys. Their mother used to be Priscilla Greenough.
This guy must have a lot of fun. He is yachting and general sports writer for the New York Herald Tribune, the Sportsman, and other magazines. Married, and may be reached in care of Herald Tribune, 230 W. 41st St., New York city. The name? W. H. Taylor.
Stan Richmond authorizes this quotation: "I'm married, have a dog, am in the wool business, and that's the story." Give him a bell at 32 Linnaean St., Cambridge, Mass., and cheer him up.
Cap Palmer, illustrated, writes: "I have been working like the devil and that covers, for anybody in the building supply busine?" in this glorious year of prosperity, both business and pleasure. No vacation—only the help get those. The most impressive sight in Hanover is the pretty clothes. Don't the boys look nice? Recently I conversed with one of the comrades in '23, now a Y. M. C. A. worker. He asked me how the Norwich game came out, and when I told him we were trimmed 30 to 0 he said as how things have changed since our day. And yet he lives, breathes, walks, talks, and has much of a human semblance. Brooks Palmer is married. The retreat is apt to become a routBrooks was the bulwark of the faithful. I'm trying to save Bob Smith, but it looks bad. With those two gone, anything can happen."
Remember T. S. McConnel? Sure you do! Well, he's a big lavatory and tile man now, with the Eljer Company, Pittsburgh. He carried the same kind of samples before his present connection for the Standard Sanitary Manufacturing Company. Mac married Dorothy Clark of Beaver, Pa., four years ago, and is still there—at 482 Second St. Little Susan appeared in the McConnel picture during the February thaws of last year.
Bob Lane went from the New York World to Hornblower and Weeks. Look him up at 233 West 77th, New York city.
W. B. Smith's a bond salesman, available at Box 354, Boston. He got married a couple of years ago, to Lucia Richmond of Brookline. Sandra Smith will be three months old come November 23.
John and Margaret Neithercut Windsor joined battle in June '23. Together with daughters Mary and Margaret you will find them after a tough scramble up Toilsome Hill Rd., Bridgeport, Conn. John is secretary of the Bridgeport Hardware Manufacturing Corp.
Get this from G. Gordon Fisher ex-'23: "I graduated from Princeton in 1924. However each year I have wandered up to Hanover—it's a great place!" Fisher is with Spencer Trask in New York. Lives at Grayswold, Garth Road, Scarsdale.
H. ,H. Schaaf is office manager of the Sweeney and Jones Company, advertising agency of Cleveland. Address 2634 East 83d St., Cleveland.
New business! More volume! That's the big idea in this bounteous year! And with this in mind the Chemical Bank and Trust Company of New York engaged Clint Wells to stir up the bucks. Clint was formerly with the Provident Mutual. Locate him at 290 Oakwood Ave., Orange, N. J.
"Wacker" Wackerhagen, Apt. 203, 1130 Main St., Racine, Wis., is purchasing agent for the Twin Disk Clutch Company of Racine. Wacker got married a year ago June to Mary Virginia Lewis, and they have a kid named after her Ma. Mrs. Wackerhagen is very, very, delightful, and a fine running mate for her splendid husband.
Jim (George Bancroft) Taylor, of the virile whiskers and the bog callers oblongata, got through with the Navy (Lieut. U. S. Navy Medical Corps), and practices medicine and surgery in Johnstown, Pa. Married Ruth Snell last June, after a whirlwind courtship, at Drexel Hill, Pa. Reach Jim at 408 Franklin St., Johnstown.
f PERSONAL DEPARTMENT
George Weston: George Ferguson wants his money back.
Stan Richmond: Send the Secretary the picture of you shearing a sheep.
Charlie French '24: Write Jim McCabe, Fort Garry, Manitoba, Canada, the name of the guy who bummed around Europe with Jim whose last name sounds German.
George McKee: Jim Dodge would like to collect the two bits you borrowed freshman year.
Inspector Grogan: The Secretary has some dope on Tex Scaling, the amateur bootlegger. Mat Hubert: Ed Camp wants you to see the family and have a drink.
Fred Flickinger: Please answer a letter F. H. Reed wrote you the early part of 1921. John Gilliland: Larry Miles inquires about your creeping paralysis. He wants a letter.
Alumni Records Office: Send John Myers '23, 12 N. 7th St., Camden, N. J., the address of Phil Leighton, '22 or '23.
READY-TO-WEAR GOSS AND BALL AND CHAIN
CAP (PIPE-LINE) PALMER AND ACT
ALL THE'NEWS THATS UNFIT TO PKINT