Class Notes

1906

May 1951 EDWARD B. REDMAN, NORMAN RUSSELL, PROF. MAX HARTMANN
Class Notes
1906
May 1951 EDWARD B. REDMAN, NORMAN RUSSELL, PROF. MAX HARTMANN

A letter from Winifred Glaze advises that she and Pitcher have decided to start life over again. They have chosen a site among the pines of California on the hills of Cambria Pines, a strip of land that projects out into the Pacific Ocean about 215 miles north of Los Angeles. They have selected a lot on the highest point with the ocean on one side and the mountains on the other. Will camp out there while they build their house. For company they have two beautiful thoroughbred sable and white collies and a blue-grev Persian cat.

Fishing and hunting in the vicinity is excellent so if Pitcher is as good at those sports as he was in football and baseball, they won't starve. The welcome sign will always be out for any Dartmouth man who comes along. Winifred says Cambria Pines is a real paradise for a couple of nature lovers.

Olive Blood reports the arrival of another grandchild, Roger Blood Miles born in Washington, D. C. on February 28.

Word has come that Nat Leverone is recuperating at The Breakers in Palm Beach Fla., after a serious operation.

Walt Powers spent St. Patrick's Day in Hanover. Presume he went up to watch "Type Hitchcock's Peerade."

Ben Mathes has joined the sales staff of Al Werly, realtor, in St. Petersburg. He will make a specialty of hotel and income property.

At a recent exhibition of the Northern Vermont Artists held in Burlington, two of Mrs. Earle J. St. Clair's paintings were selected for exhibition.

Rumor has it that Lonnie Russ was married recently but I haven't yet received anv of the details.

After 25 years Carl Warton has been retired by the Boston Herald under protest as Cart says he never felt better and has no desire to quit working.

It looks as though Craw Bishop intends to remain in Japan for some time as he has rented a house at 101 Haramaehi, Bunkyo. Tokyo.

Harold Rugg spent Easter Sunday in New York on his way to Myrtle Beach, S. C., for his spring vacation.

Bill Wood had breakfast with me two-mornings in late March. As an officer in the Air National Guard he was here to make a check of the air-field in Rye, N. Y.

Joe Nuelle spent ten days in Dallas, Tex., visiting his daughter Betty. Although he could have had two extra days there if he had taken an airplane he refused to go on anything but a railroad train.

Two more loyal members of the class passed on in March. Rev. Elwood Erickson on March 11 and Joe Smith on March 23.

New addresses:

Gus Ayers—295 Buckingham Way, Apt. 401 San Francisco 27, Calif.

Craw Bishop—101 Haramachi, Bunkyo, Tokyo, Japan. Carl Warton—116 Myrtle St., Boston 14, Mass.

Secretary, 37 East 39th St., New York 16, N. Y.

Treasurer, 9 Pond St., Newburyport, Mass.

Class Agent, 208 Fuller St., Brookline, Mass.