Class Notes

CLASS NOTES

October 1933 L. W. Griswold
Class Notes
CLASS NOTES
October 1933 L. W. Griswold

Editor

Note No. l—None of the following notes were written by those mentioned. If you have any to write, send them in, they will be printed the way you want them.

John Holmes Hinman, "Rosy," has three sons in -Dartmouth besides being vice-president of the International Paper Company. Crawford H. entered this fall; Edward B. is a junior and Howard D. a senior.

Erastus Beethoven Badger 111, Winchester, Mass., big man in the Badger fire extinguisher manufactory, has a daughter nearing the age of two.

Van Ostrand Perkins of Watertown. N. Y., son of Allan Moore, "Si," completed his plebe year at Annapolis last June. Allan is in Watertown applying first aid to a concern which manufactures papermaking machinery.

Morton Hull, Holyoke, Mass., recently added beer to the lines carried by his wholesale grocery house in that city.

Harold Sawtelle "Hobey" Hobart, third baseman the year Johnny Glaze was about the only other regular left on the varsity ball team, is in the marble business with offices in Rutland and a dozen other places. Hobey probably holds the class record for miles traveled annually. He goes to Colorado and such remote places with the greatest of ease. The Tomb of the Unknown Soldier is one job the Hobart quarries point to with pride.

Charles LeMoyne "Jeff" DeAngelis, end on a Dartmouth team which eclipsed Harvard plenty in the stadium in 1907, returned to Hanover for the first time in a quarter of a century last June. Jeff, after 15 years as assistant and full-fledged district attorney of Oneida county, New York, was defeated a year ago.

Harold Winslow "Honkum" Joyce is residing in Dedham, Mass., where his wife and full-grown stepdaughter occupy the kind of a home which makes the erudite antique collector envious. Honkum is interested in a garment concern, writing a weekly column for the Dedham Breeze, the horses, the old pasteboards.

Chester Warren Melville, "Chet," is lord of the Chestnut Hill, Mass., manor and interests handed down by the family founders. Chet, it is rumored, is one of the few who was able to hang on to what he had previous to 1929 and add considerably thereto through knowing how to manipulate a falling market.

Malcolm "Mike" Stearns, after calling on all classmates from the Atlantic to the Pacific while trying to put various products of Drug, Inc., on their feet, has finally settled down to occupancy of an office at 581 Boylston St., Boston. Mike explained his proposition to the writer, something about tripling your dough and getting nine per cent for the privilege. He has a dozen or 15 salesmen under him and says the public is "investment minded."

Laurence Metcalf "Larry" Symmes continues as top man with Brooks Brothers' investment house in New York. Larry took a job immediately after Commencement in 1908, doing the from-office-boy-to-president act without batting an eyelash.

Albert Richard Chandler, the Rufus Choater of our time, has capitalized his brain work in a smooth manner. He is now just about the head man in the psychological department of Ohio State.

Roland Edward "Pop" Chesley continues with the schoolbook concern with which he has long been associated. Pop is a bach with headquarters in Utica and an Airedale which accompanies him, night and day, pleasure bent or no. Pop and the dog occupied the same bed at the 25th, the latter attending all the business meetings, etc.

Winthrop Austin Griffin is a big shot with the A. T. & T. Cos., at the New York headquarters. He lives at Montclair, N. J., or East Orange, in the winter and at Orleans, Cape Cod, in the summer. "Griff" has a boy in the junior class at Hanover, And right here is the pay-off—the lad is named "Hobart" after 1908's redoutable third baseman who is in the quarry business.

John Baldwin Glaze, 1908's class marshal, football and baseball captain, and so forth, was all set to attend the 25th reunion. At the last minute a twister took the roof off his home at Niagara Falls, N. Y., and word came to start the Norton factory at Niagara Falls, Ont., of which John is the head man. Since the factory hadn't been operating for 18 months, Johnny thought it best to call off the trip to Hanover. He gets back to the place frequently, as he is still connected with the football board of strategy. He scouts each season, attends conferences in Hanover.

F. Joseph "Flossie" McAuliffe, the Worcester aspirant to honors intellectual, who was one of the best backs Hanover ever received but couldn't force by midsemester exams, is understood to be again chief of the New York studios of Mrs. Harry Payne Whitney, New York. Mrs. Whitney designs such projects as the Buffalo Bill memorial at Cody, Wyoming, the Ferdinand and Isabella monument at Palos, Spain, and the like. Flossie works 'em out, goes on long trips to see that they are erected in the proper manner.

John Alexander Clark's son, John McLane Clark, is the editor and proprietor of the New Canaan, Conn., Gazette, which recently celebrated its first birthday by staging a valiant campaign for new subscribers. John the Younger was one of those Junior Fellows while in college, if you know what that is.

Up to the opening of college this month, the following members of the class of 1908 had been represented by sons in Dartmouth: G. C. Blodgett by Freelan M., 1936; E. T. Marsh, George H., 1936; P. L. Thompson, Laforrest H., 1936; L. G. Treadway, Richard F., 1936; W. G. Griffin, Hobart W., 1935; W. H. Harriman, Benjamin R., 1935; J. H. Hinman, Edward 8., 1935; H. K. Rogers, Keith P., 1935; C. P. Skillin, Edward J., 1935; J. H. Hinman, Howard D., 1934; A. G. Alden, Douglas W., 1933; H. L. Stone, Hudson C., 1933; J. A. Clark, John M., 1933; R. L. Giles, Harlan F., 1932; H. H. Snow, Tower C., 1931; W. G. Carr, Wallace G. Jr., 1928. Perhaps you have noted there is only one "Junior" in the bunch.

Recent advices from the realm of the selective process as practiced in Hanover indicated the following sons of 1908 fathers would be in a position to answer present when the class of 1937 was called to order for the first time: Gordon, son of Gordon Blanchard; John D., son of John A. Detlefsen; Robert H., son of Jasper S. Dunham; Crawford H., son of John H. Hinman; William 8., son of Arthur B. Rotch; Kendall, son of Malcolm Stearns.