Class Notes

Class of 1893

May 1935 Harlan C. Pearson
Class Notes
Class of 1893
May 1935 Harlan C. Pearson

The perquisites of a class secretary are few and far between, but the other day two that were worth-while came our way. One was a photograph of the last word in '93 class babies, Miss Grace Griffith, age nine years, with the same nice smile as her daddy. Our first class baby, Perley Dustin Baker, will be 38 on May 8 and was a college professor, as he is now, at Norwich University, before Miss Grace was born. She and her father, Judge Edward Griffith, expect to be in Hanover next June to see their son and brother, Charles Gould Griffith, get his Dartmouth diploma.

The other perquisite was a neat package labeled as from "Calef's Big Store, Famous for Old Cheese, East Barrington, N. H.," and contained a sizable hunk of the tastiest cheese that ever accompanied New England doughnuts and apple pie. The Senator's customers for this cheese come from most of the states in the Union and some foreign countries. He modestly gives the credit for its excellence to the natural "aging" qualities of the big cellar under his big store, but we guess it took some good management on his part to develop the business to its present size.

The Secretary has just had a call, the first in a long time, from Judge Edwin Bell Weston of the Derry, N. H., municipal court, who went back into ancient history, told us about the 1933 reunion, which we missed, and extolled the services as a lifesaver on that occasion of Horace Greeley.

Mrs. Jennie E. Runnells, Fred's widow, has been re-elected president of the woman's club at Nashua.

Secretary, 104 No. State St., Concord, N. H.