Class Notes

CLASS OF 1922

FEBRUARY 1932 Francis H. Horan
Class Notes
CLASS OF 1922
FEBRUARY 1932 Francis H. Horan

We are informed that David Rivo is a doctor of physick and chirurgeon in Buffalo, his surgery being situated at 896 Genesee St. and his domicile at 423 Potomac Ave.

Llewellyn Smith files a new Pittsfield (Mass.) address: 127 Appleton Ave.

Robert Hight has informed the college office that his new address in South Portland, Me., is 35 Warren Ave.

From Orono, Me., we hear of Prof. Dick Wood, who expounds history to the students of the state university, and works away (as he did in Cambridge last summer) on his Ph.D. thesis. Said thesis, on dit, concerns the New England lumber industry. Dick's Christmas card was a plain white card with the words "Have a Fresh Christmas Card," enclosed in cellophane.

Bill Rex reports that he is living in Evanston (2600 Eastwood Ave.) off gains made in Chicago in the service of the Continental Illinois Company, investment bankers.

Once in a while there comes a report of Mac McCoun, who is a denizen of Kansas City. The latest is that he lives at 4746 Roanoke Parkway, and serves the puissant Harding Cream Company.

Beyond saying that he is a writer resident at 60 Gramercy Park, Manhattan, Cecil Goldbeek admits nothing.

New address (obtained through the P. O.) for Nort Younglove: Park Manor Apartments, Olympia, Wash.

We call your attention to the announcement of Bernie Keltner's tragic death in the Necrology section of the MAGAZINE.

Ralph Blanchard has taken up residence at 71 Silver St. in Springfield, Mass., home of the Carlisle Hardware Cos.

The peripatetic Moody is now to be found where you'd have thought he would have gone long ago, Beverly Hills, Calif., his address being North Rodeo Drive.

The New England editor of the TextileWorld (J. Austin) is now resident in Newton Center, 19 Oakwood Terrace.

Albert Acker is reported to be in Cleveland. Address: 1805 Vassar Ave.

A big write-up in the Boston Herald of a dinner held in Boston discloses that the director and president of the New England Group of the Financial Advertisers Association of America (C. Earle) was the king-pin of the affair.

We hear that Carl Davis has been at the Corey Hill Hospital in Boston undergoing treatment.

George Victor (Gubby) MacDermott continues to sell to industrial users the vapors manufactured by the Boston Consolidated Gas Cos.

Hal Burnham recently entered the life insurance business in Boston.

Ray Atwood should be thanked for several of the foregoing items. He inquires about George Weed, about whom our last information was that he was at the Peddie School, Hightstown, N. J.

Born on November 13, 1931, to the Larry Hendersons, Janet Leonora. Larry Jr. is three. Ted Davidson spent an evening with the Hendersons in Indianapolis recently, while away from Chicago on a business trip in the interest of the Patent Scaffolding Company.

Secretary, 2700 Que Street, N. W., Washington, D. C.