Class Notes

1900

November 1950 LEON B. RICHARDSON, CLARENCE G. MCDAVITT
Class Notes
1900
November 1950 LEON B. RICHARDSON, CLARENCE G. MCDAVITT

Cut Tirrell has sold his house in Montreal and has bought a country place at Lakeshore, 14 miles west of that city on the Ottawa highway in the town of Pointe Claire. Here he is located but a five-minutes walk from his daughter and with his son only three miles away. He has now a bungalow, complete on the first floor and with one room finished upstairs. He has 15,000 square feet of land the care of which will give him plenty to do. His new address is 20 Condover Road, Pointe Glaire, Montreal 33, Quebec.

Mrs. Gilbert Balkam, now living in Harwichport, Mass., reports a bit late the arrival of another grandchild, raising her present total to six. The latest is Ellen Laurin Balkam, daughter of her son Bob, born Feb. 12, 1949. Her family is widely scattered, Stephen being in California, Bob in Washington, D. C., Gil in Long Island and Lucelia in Belmont, Mass.

Mrs. Harry Davis has moved from the house which she has long occupied in Plymouth, Mass., to a new home at 3 North Green Street in that town. Her four children also have homes in Plymouth. Her daughter Katharine, who is unmarried and is employed by the Plymouth Five Cent Savings Bank, lives with her mother.

Ben Prescott and Arthur Wallace made their usual visit to Hanover to attend the Holy Cross game, and incidentally called on the secretary. Both may now be regarded as permanent residents of Milford, N. H., Ben from times to which the memory of man reaches not, and Arthur, who has carried on a medical practice in that town for some time, has how established a residence there, still retaining, however, his office in Nashua on a part time basis.

The class will be grieved to learn of the death of Eleanor, daughter of the late ArthurKimball, which took place in Washington, D. C., on August 2. She was a graduate of Smith in the Class of '29 and of the Law School of the University of Michigan in '32. A member of the Michigan bar, she carried on a successful law practice in Battle Creek for a number of years and was also prominent in the various civic affairs of that community. In 1943 she enlisted in the Waves and taught naval law in the Midshipmen School at Smith College. Later she was stationed in Washington reviewing files of contracts for congressional investigations. She attained the rank of lieutenant (j.g.). In 1946, having left the Navy, she resumed her practice at Battle Creek and was also editorial manager of the legal research section of the Law School of the University of Michigan. In November, 1949, she assumed, in Washington, D. C., the position of associate with the Committee on the Legal Status of Women of the American Association of University Women. She is survived by her mother, a brother and three sisters. She was unmarried.

Secretary, Hanover, N. H. Treasurer, 212 Mill St., Newtonville 60, Mass.