Class Notes

CLASS OF 1922

MARCH 1931 Francis H. Horan
Class Notes
CLASS OF 1922
MARCH 1931 Francis H. Horan

Your own Paul Pry has held his whisht for the last couple of issues of this MAGAZINE for the good reason that every bit of information, rumor, or mere gossip that he could impound he did impound in the chaste pages of the Christmas number of the Twenty-Twoter. Since that time to the date when he writes (February 7, three days before the deadline) he has gathered a few more bits of news offered herewith.

Assistant Professor of Comparative Literature Herbert Faulkner West, A.B., was a visitor to New York during the Christmas holidays, seeing publishers about a book he has under way.

Leo Hayes has as a home address 68 Woodlawn St., Jamaica Plain, Mass., but his business address is in another location, Cia. Minera Agrilar Tres Cruses, Province Ju Ju, Argentina. Mining engineers get about, no doubt of that. They say they can't get good jobs where there are no mines.

Truman Redfield is living in Ralston, Neb., and working in Omaha, where he is manager for an insurance company.

Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Moses have set up their new home at 94 Maple St., Springfield, Mass.

John Salmonsen is with the Travelers Insurance Company, Philadelphia office, and is living at 4718 Chestnut St.

New address for Perley Knapp: White Farms, Cairo, N. Y.

Jere Robinson is a real estate broker in Cleveland, according to our information, being at 16041 Euclid Ave. (which must be a long avenue), and he lives at 1847 Haldane Road that city.

Apparently Sandy Sanders has shifted from his Oklahoma base, we being informed that he can now be reached at 80x.464, Springfield, Ohio. We hereby turn the search over to Nicholson and Shoup.

Rev. Everett Shaw, one of our few parsons, is now living in Alexis, Ill., of which hamlet we had not hitherto heard.

Ralph Grandfield is operating in the banking way at 67 Milk St., Boston, and lives in Wakefield, 21 Lafayette St.

Every so often the peripatetic Charley Throop sends in a report. At the time he wrote he was located in Maiden (Mass.), on a tour of duty for his long-time employer, Koppers Construction Co. of Pittsburgh, makers of by-product coke ovens. Charley goes wherever they sell one of the cute little things and trains workmen in running it. He spoke of seeing Hutch some time ago, which is more than these old eyes have done in years.

Haskell Cohn picked from the list of recent incorporations in a racing form called the Boston Evening Transcript the particulars of the incorporation of a company to be called "John Glennie, Inc." The incorporators are three ladies, and the capital is $100,000. The implications of the whole thing are so fraught with interest that we leave each reader to resolve the problem for himself.

Lawyer Cohn, long with Hale and Dorr, Boston lawyers, reports that Marjorie Hilda, his daughter, is one-plus years old. Mrs. Cohn was Harriet Segal, sister of Phil Segal '23. They are living at 75 Beaconsfield Road, Brookline, but with an eye on a more suburban spot.

Marshall Jones Company, Boston, have just published a book by Dick Tapley, "Rebecca Nurse, Saint But Witch Victim," being the story of a victim of the witch persecutions in which the old Puritans reveled in their spare time. We wish the book well, there being so few publications by any of our flock.

We are constantly having it suggested to us, both by the married and unmarried, that our Tenth Reunion would be the better if the number of wives present were at less than a minimum. We could give the names of our advisors—and they are many—but will not. We take no position in the matter, being a public servant ready to do the will of the people, but we do not know the aforesaid will.

Bill Shirley reports the marriage of Arthur Stewart to Sadie Marion Griffiths of Durham, N. H., last September. They live next door to the Shirleys. Bill suggests that a lawyer would have the field to himself in Durham, there being none there.

Ray Wason sends good wishes to the Twoter, and avers that he still is building homes in Boston, at a loss, he claims.

AN OPEN LETTER TO T. T. METZEL '23 (?)—Was the subject in controversy ever president of the class of 1923?

Secretary, 40 West 9th St., New York