Thomas L. Sullivan gives a "now permanent" address as 24 Boyandale Road, West Roxbury, Mass. He is instructor in French and Spanish at the Dorchester High School for Boys.
It is our sad duty to report the death of Buttsey Riddell on October 27. He attended the Harvard game in the Stadium on Saturday, and died suddenly on Monday of an acute dilation of the heart. Later an obituary notice will appear in the Magazine.
Nelson Gay was in Boston for a while this summer, but is now located in Minot, N. D., with the Ward Mercantile Company, as credit manager for this wholesale grocery concern.
Jay D. Runkle is merchandise manager for the William Hengerer Company in Buffalo, X. Y., living in Buffalo. He was in Hanover last June, and is likely to appear often, as Buffalo is nearer than Dayton, Ohio.
Line “Hole-in-One” Wilson is in charge of hotel reservations in San Francisco for the round-up and gathering of the Indians for the Big Game with Stanford. The official bunkhouse is to be The Fairmount, and Line certainly knows that hotel.
Edmund A. “Buck” Freeman took a vaca- tion sightseeing, classmate-visiting tour this summer in northern New England, and writes: “I visited my usual haunts, spending delightful days with two of our too silent classmates, Ernest Thomas and Ben An- drew. Ernest has two daughters, and Ben a son and a daughter. 1 was in Hanover for a night and a forenoon, and called at the hos- pitable home of Dr, Harry French. I missed Bob Conant, as he was at golf, but inspected his attractive new home from the outside. It is good for people to get back to Hanover during the summer and to ‘loaf and dream.’ In Bethel, Vt., I met another couple of ab- sent members, Bede Washburn and Ig Noble. Ig had the unique honor of being ap- pointed postmaster (he had previously served; by a Republican administration, although he is a Democrat. You ought to have seen his knickers and all that goes with them. Back in Washington I met Don Evans on the street, and he was very enthusiastic over progress in Ha nover. About the same time, I had a ride in Chippey femmes’ limou- sine. We are to he congratulated on having so good a class agent and so loyal a class. It is the number of contributions that count in the long run. more than the size of them.”
Secret art), 40 Broad St., Boston