ALL OF US marvel at the amount of business John McElroy '03 and Hap Hinman must dig up in unexpected places, and always on fall week-ends. In Hanover, Boston, New Haven, Ithaca, Princeton, must live their best accounts! The less daring of us, however, follow the Big Green at our own expense. And this fall plenty of us have increased the mortgage on the old home to pay for heart failure treatments after that Yale fright.
If you're in town any Wednesday, come up to the Princess Pat Tea Room at 23 Dove Street for the regular weekly luncheon. You'll always find Hap Hinman '08, Jim Pelletier '19, Ronald "Bunny" Lodge '19, Pren Carnell '26 and brother E. Bradley Carnell '30, and Rog Donner of '33 baseball fame. And often Art Hopkins '08, and Football Player Ward Donner '31, J. S. Ferris '13, Don McDonald '20, and Ned De Rouville '20, who makes half the envelopes in the country at his factory in Cohoes. And John Akin '26, and Frank B. "Pushemup" Morey '20, who comes when his corns have been cut, and Bob French '19, upon whom "Pushemup" leans and vice versa. And if you'll let us know a bit in advance we might coax out "Nuts" Poole '18 or "Ted" Sonnenfeld '21, or who knows, even Gordon of the 76 others who hibernate ealry. Bridge '24 or Ernie Barvoets '24, or any
By the time these notes are in print, the Annual Dartmouth-Cornell Jamboree and Smoker on November 12 at Kapp's Restaurant will be over, and Sid Hayward, the principal speaker, wil lhave gone on his official way West to Ithaca—business again and everyone will have forgotten the morning after. Perhaps by then Dartmouth will be Ivy League champions. And Bachelor Brother Secretary, Joe Ross '22, for whom I'm pinch-hitting, will have returned from an extended South American trip with a new list of addresses.
Among the missing this year are Eugene F. ("oh! how I miss you tonight"), McCabe '21 who staggered to a big job with Tidewater in New York City, Skater Jack Shea '34 who forsook the Law to take a government job at Lake Placid, and Ernie Lanoue '32 who went to New York with the State Labor Board. Also Larry Sommer '34 who left Montgomery Ward flat and hied himself to the West Coast.
Some new names have been added to our rolls. Henry Blake Barbour '35 of Watertown, N. Y., Harold G. Turner '36 of Waterford, N. Y., Schuyler Cornthwaite '35 of Ballston Spa, William J. Crangle of St. Johnsville, Vt., Ed Shea '36 of Lake Placid, and Jas. S. Holden '35 of Bennington, Vt. all at Albany Law School. These embryo lawyers keep so busy that we don't see them often. Also we welcome to membership Arnold S. Hatch Jr. '36 who has joined his father '07 at the Fuld 8c Hatch Knitting Mills, Chas. M. Stern Jr. '36 who is associated with Jim Mathes in the advertising business, and Wm. T. Wyman '36, son of William U. Wyman '07. William T. by the way, is the youngest special agent of the Aetna Casualty of Worcester, Mass.
Four years from now we'll welcome to our list Raymond Hotaling '40, who was President of the Student Council at Milne High; Ist. Lt. Peter J. Linden '40, Joseph Wheeler Harpham '40, and John F. Mathieson '40, expert swimmer, all from the Albany Boy's Academy, and James C. Ruch '40, Mercersburg.
The visit of the Musical Clubs is past history, but we did enjoy them immensely, and best of all, a profit permitted a contribution to the Dartmouth-in-Moosilauke Fund. Here's to the "Clubs" visit another year, with the 'Aria in G Flat" and the "Rumpus in B Minor" backseating in favor of Men of Dartmouth and Joeffrey Amherst and 64 more like them. Mr. Cobleigh please note. —HAROLD K. Ross '18.