Class Notes

CLASS OF 1893

MARCH 1931 Harlan C. Pearson
Class Notes
CLASS OF 1893
MARCH 1931 Harlan C. Pearson

A Boston Herald article about Carter Inks says in part: "Through the years, personality has continued as the center of the company's unfoldment, the business having been wisely directed in recent years by Richard B. Carter, president: George P. Metcalf, vicepresident; and Charles B. Gordon, treasurer and general manager."

We learn from the Alumni Office that the new addresses of Frank B. Pelton are: business, 2207 Collins Ave., Miami Beach, I'la., residence, 151 N. E. 51st St., Miami, Fla.

In the Vermont legislature Dr. Herbert S. Martyn was made a member of the standing committees on Public Health and State Institutions. There were four women members of the former committee and two of the latter, so the Doctor probably enjoyed his committee room work. Writing us from Montpelier, the King was modestly silent about his own activities, but mentioned the prominence at the state capital of such Dartmouth men as Howland '87, C. M. Smith '91, Gordon '83, Cushing '06, Safford '08, and others.

While Doctor Martyn seems to be our only lawmaker this winter, our more numerous law-dispensers are heard from. In the Lawrence, Mass., district court, the other day, developments in the trial of a theft case led Judge F. N. Chandler to give directions to court attaches which resulted before the day was over in a successful raid on a speakeasy. Despite his vigorously voiced views on Prohibition, it can be said of the Judge that "he seen his duty and he done it," on this occasion as on all others.

The Associated Press recently carried a story from Derry, N. H., about the arraignment before Judge E. B. Weston of a man charged with selling a "short load" of wood. The defense was that the wood made a full cord in its four-foot state, but when it was sawed twice and then measured, it had shrunk. The dispatch said Judge Ted "took the case under consideration," and we have not yet heard whether or no he sentenced the defendant to supply the plaintiff with enough sawdust to make up the difference.

A welcome result of the publication of the 93 Aegis board group as a "mystery picture" last month was the receipt of a letter from Judge Edward Griffith of Manchester, Vt., who writes that his son, Charles Gould Griffith, probably will be a member of the class entering Dartmouth next fall.

Secretary, 104 North State St., Concord, N. H.