Class Notes

CLASS OF 1911

MARCH 1932 Prof. Nathaniel G. Burleigh
Class Notes
CLASS OF 1911
MARCH 1932 Prof. Nathaniel G. Burleigh

A letter from Jack Ingersoll has a suggestion in it which may appeal to others. If there is sufficient demand, I expect it can be done. It should, however, be remembered that 1910 and 1911 were pretty much contemporaries and that running two columns without duplication is likely to prove difficult. Also it means much material will have to be furnished by classmates themselves. So unless you fellows want to do the job, don't fall in line with Jack's suggestion. Anyhow, here's his letter:

"I have been particularly impressed with Hap Hinman's '25 Years Ago' in the 1910 letter of the Altjmni Magazine. Several of the fellows have also mentioned it to me.

"Isn't there some way you could work that idea into our 1911 letter? I hate to admit that we can take anything from 1910, but damned if I don't hand it to them on this.

"Things are very much in the air with me just now, but I hope soon to be able to give you a definite and permanent address. Bill Carlisle is here at present, living at Hotel Cedar, 1116 No. State St. He had dinner with me the other night and is looking fine."

I was pleased to hear from Bert Dugdale before Carnival that he and Mrs. Dugdale were to be here for the festivities. Having had to give up the Twentieth at the last moment Bert has been particularly keen to get back here ever since. It Was therefore a disappointment that Bert and the Mrs. didn't show up after all. We had the band all out and ready to go when they arrived.

However, Hen Seaver blew in just as the party was breaking up Sunday afternoon, and we had a long bull session. Hen is now back with his first love, the Niagara Sprayer Company, and has moved his family back to Flatbush, where they are living at 327 East 19th St., Brooklyn, N. Y.

Printer's Ink, of date of January 21, 1932, contains a statement of Jim Mattes relative to radio advertising. Jim says if the advertisers give the audience a well-balanced program of entertainment, radio will continue to be a welcome advertising medium and there will be no excuse for government interference.

Hap Hinman is a good secretary for 1910, as he is always passing along to me items about 1911. It seems he got to chatting with a waiter in the hotel in Albany recently while he was waiting for his soup to cool and found that he came from Fort Dodge, lowa, and being proud of his native heath, and learning that Hap was a Dartmouth man, he went on to tell how one John Schaupp was a big shot in the city there, a member of the school board and a generally useful citizen. He even went so far as to produce John's picture, taken from one of the recent issues of the Fort Dodge paper. Sure, he looks hale and prosperous.

The following announcement was recently received, having become effective January 1.

"Arthur C. Spalding and Francis M. Qua, the latter formerly of Qua, Howard, and Rogers, announce that they have formed a partnership for the practice of the law with offices at 306 Chalifoux Building, cor. Merrimack and Central Sts., Lowell, Mass.

Secretary, Hanover, N. H.