Fifteeners have acquired another member of the class in the person of Barbara Gates Everett, daughter of Dr. E. E. Everett of Westwood, who was married to Earl E. Clough on June 6, in the presence of such able Fifteeners as the Benninks, the Masons, and the Downings. While we never have met the good lady, nor do we know as yet what the "going away" suit was, Barbara comes well recommended, and is admitted to the class as such. Address: 323 High St., Westwood, Mass.
News from further and yon:—Bob Frothingham is with Vacuum Oil,—Raffineria di Napoli, S. A. 1., Casella Postale 155, via Argine ai Granili 226, Napoli (anyhow, we saved the stamp); John Bache-Wiig has come to life, last time we met him was ten years ago in Montreal,— John was making paper out of straw, we were making paper out of a spruce tree. John is now an engineer on the Quoddy Project Art Hornblow was in the news on June 27, making Myrna Loy, Mrs. Hornblow with the assistance of Justice Pardo of Ensenada, Lower California. . . . . Russ Kelly has moved from Utica to Cazenovia, N. Y Ken MacPherson writes from Palmyra, N. Y Caleb Rogers, formerly in Syracuse, N. Y., as an accountant, has changed his location to Augusta, Me.,-undoubtedly to check up on the election, having in mind,—"As Maine goes so goes the nation." .... Jonnie Johnson's letters may be addressed to So. Orange, Mass Our genial and efficient president, Kell Rose, summered on the Jersey coast in July and at Lake George in August,—even a banker has some privileges Thorn Pray, the broker from Philadelphia, and Zeke Carpenter, the paper dealer from Omaha, cooled themselves on Cape Cod this summer. Don't that beat all?
The unofficial observers at Commencement in June were Earl and Barbara Clough, Jack and Kay Mason, Lee Graham and Rebecca Merritt (Who is she, Lee?), A 1 Sherman, Dick Merrill, and Gerald Cobleigh, headquarters being in Crosby Hall. Others undoubtedly were there, but our reporter could not see them.
Turk Turner sends in the following clipping from the Troy, N. Y„ Gazette:"Last week Jack Mason, who shot his wifein a rage, was required to pay the costs andsentenced to six months in jail. WHATPRICE RAGE?" Turk questions the possibilities of the above, but we assume that Jack, just now returning from his third fishing trip to Canada this season (the lucky dog), might well have been shot himself. Anyhow, whether it is murder or libel, George Rowell 'lB has this day agreed to represent both sides,—that is, Turk's and our own.
The night before the Harvard game, Friday, Oct. 23, the classes of 1914 and 1915 will hold a joint get-together at the Parker. I his meeting has become an annual affair, and a word to the wise should be sufficient. Casey Jones will be there, and it has been reported that he has perfected a new instrument, something like a cross be- tween an oil stove and a cot bed.
As a notion, might we suggest that the readers of these columns help your Secretary a bit? We have to collect news, and not make all our items out of guess-work, although we try to make them out of whole cloth. Please help; our address is Orleans, Vt.
On the Steps of Crosby, June, 1936
Secretary, Orleans, Vt.