Obituary

Deaths

October 1951
Obituary
Deaths
October 1951

[A listing of deaths of which word has been receivedwithin the past month. Full notices may appear in thisissue or may appear in a later number.]

Brooks, John P. '85, June 16 Davis, Edwin B. '89, July 24 Redenbaugh, William A. '93, Aug. 4 Bolser, Charles E. '97, July 29 Temple, Winfield '97, Aug. 13 Tuttle, Morton C. '97, July 19 Fowler, Alvah T. '00, Sept. 3 Manion, Joseph W. '00, Aug. 8 Halliday, Frank W. '01, Aug. 14 Morehouse, Theodore C. '01, June 9 Smith, James S. '01, June 14 Colton, Chauncey C. '03, June 13 Grant, William W. '03, June 30 Maguire, Peter J. '04, Sept. 3 Warner, Arthur E. '04, Aug. 31 Willard, Ira O. '04, June 24 Deering, William H. '10, Aug. 10 Gorton, Robert R. '10, June 28 Prescott, Edgar B. '10, July 28 Price, Walter M. '10, May 18 Backus, Sidney K. '11, July 19 McMahon, Raeburn R. '13, July 2 Woolard, Eben R. '13, Oct. 17, 1949 Lanterman, Herbert D. '15, Apr. 30 Mason, John R. '15, Sept. 12 Young, George B. '15, July 3 Bettes, Charles C. '16, June 13 Mcßeynolds, Frederick W. '17, July 6 Poole, Lyman C. '18, July 26 Whelan, Thomas J. '19, June 26 Small, Lyndon F. '20, June 15 Zuckerman, Harvie A. '22, June 8 Breen, Thomas G. Jr. '23, July 26 Chipman, Norris B. '35, Aug. 7 Gurney, Fred P. '26, Sept. 8 Lenke, Mark A. '26, June 21 Rose, Robert S. '27, Aug. 26 Andrews, J. Frederic '28, July 25 Thompson, Alberto F. Jr. '28, June 17 Sisson, Frederick R. Jr. '29, Aug. 14 Benoist, Edmond G. '30, July 12 Earle, John R. "30, Aug. 13 Byrne, William A. '31, Aug. 10 Sankey, Richard E. '31, June 29 Sprague, Herbert C. '31, Feb. 3, 1953 Ziemen, J. Elting '33, Aug. 8 Alter, Robert L. '35, Aug. 7 Heye, Carl W. '35, June 30 Mclntire, Frederic J. Jr. '39, June 18 Cochran, Robert S. '57, Jan. 7, 1956 Giles, Raymond L. '08m, Aug. 3 Frost, Daniel C. '28th, May 30, 1952 Harris, William A. '15t, Aug. 20 Woodbury, William B. '06a, Oct. 19, 1956 Filene, Lincoln, A.M. '16, Aug. 27 Roberts, Kenneth L., Litt.D. '34, July 21

Faculty

CHARLES ERNEST BOLSER died of a heart attack at his home in Hanover on July 29. Born in Amesbury, Mass., February 16, 1875, the son of Charles Foster and Augusta (Eastman) Bolser, he came to Dartmouth from Amesbury High School. He was a member of Sigma Chi and graduated in 1897 with Phi Beta Kappa rank. Elected captain of the track team, he held the New England intercollegiate record in the half mile race. His early interest in athletics continued throughout his life. For 18 years he served as a member of the Dartmouth Athletic Council and played a large part in bringing the undergraduate recreational program to its present campus wide participation. He was one of the earliest advisers of the Outing Club and one of the members of its Council for many years.

After graduating with honors in chemistry, Professor Bolser went to Germany, then the Mecca for graduate study in chemistry. After spending three years at the University of Goettingen, where he received the Ph.D. degree, he returned to Dartmouth as an instructor in chemistry. Promoted to assistant professor in 1907, he became full professor of organic chemistry in 1914 and retired as professor emeritus in 1945. A pioneer in chemical blood analysis, he was also professor of physiological chemistry in the Dartmouth Medical School from 1920 to his retirement.

Professor Bolser's teaching was always distinguished by his insistence on patience, diligence and a high degree of accuracy. "To know facts is not enough" was one of his principles, "one must have reverence for facts." His emphasis was always rather on teaching than research for he felt "the teacher's influence upon the student counts the most and is the most important."

On June 30, 1903, in Amesbury, Professor Bolser was married to Ina Chivers who died in 1953. He is survived by two nieces and his brother-in-law, Arthur H. Chivers '02.

1885

JOHN PASCAL BROOKS died in a hospital in Portsmouth, N. H., on June 16. He was a resident of Eliot, Maine.

Born in Kittery, Maine, September 24, 1861 the son of James W. and Ann (Wilson) Brooks, he prepared for college at Phillips Exeter and was a member of Beta Theta Pi. Graduating from the Chandler Scientific Department in 1885, Mr. Brooks spent the next five years in engineering practice in Boston with the firm of J. Edwin Jones. From 1890 to 1897 he was instructor in civil engineering at Lehigh University; 1897-1906, professor of civil engineering at State University of Kentucky; and 1906-11, associate professor of civil engineering at University of Illinois.

In 1911 Mr. Brooks was elected president of Clarkson College of Technology. During his presidency the college grew from an enrollment of 57 to more than 400, and gained a high reputation among engineering schools with its alumni holding positions of honor and trust throughout the nation. In 1929 he became president emeritus. Both Dartmouth and Clarkson conferred the honorary degree of Doctor of Science on Mr. Brooks.

The author of several books and articles, he was a member of the Triangle Engineering Society and the American Association of Civil Engineers. He had served his Dartmouth class for many years as president and class agent.

On June 25, 1888 Mr. Brooks was married to Maude Perkins, who died in 1892. On June 4, 1903 he was married to Belle Clark Pearson, who survives him with a son, Raymond, and a daughter, Elizabeth.

1889

EDWIN BELL DAVIS died as his home on Hamilton Road in New Brunswick, N. J., on July 24.

He was born in Lawrence, Mass., June 13, 1866, a son of Bryan B. and Amelia (Lockwood) Davis. His preparation for Dartmouth was at the Manchester (N. H.) High School. He graduated with the Class of '89 with highest honors, a member of Delta Kappa Epsilon and Phi Beta Kappa.

Immediately following graduation, he taught one year at the New Brunswick (N. J.) High School, then one year at the Academy in Salt Lake City, Utah, later at the New Hampshire Agricultural College two years in Hanover, and one year after it had moved to Durham, N. H. He studied at the Sorbonne and the Ecole des Hautes Etudes in Paris in 1894 and 1895, then began teaching at Rutgers College. In 1904 he became head of the department of Romance Languages, a position he held until his retirement in 1941 as Professor Emeritus. In June 1913, he was appointed Officer d'Academie by the French Government. His summers were often spent abroad in study and travel, chiefly in France and Italy. Other summers were spent at the Lake Placid Club in New York State, or in Hanover, where much of his time was given to study in Baker Library.

On August 11, 1892 he was married to Elizabeth Stetson Norris, who died in March 1957. His survivors are a son, Donald Edwin Davis, Rutgers '17, of St. Albans, Vt., and a daughter Elizabeth Kidder Davis, Mt. Holyoke '20, who has made her home with her parents.

1893

WILLIAM ALFRED REDENBAUC.H died of a heart attack in Mount Vernon, Wash., on August 4.

In college he was a member of Phi Delta Theta and Tiger and graduated with Phi Beta Kappa rank. He returned to Dartmouth in 1893 for graduate work in biology and geology and received a Ph.D. degree in 1897.

Then began a distinguished career in teaching: 1897-1905 he was head of the science department of the QuinCy (Ill.) High School: 1905-07, instructor in chemistry, University of Illinois; 1907-22, head of the science department, Lincoln High School, Seattle; and head of the science department, Broadway High School, Seattle, 1922 to his retirement in 1942. Since his retirement he had made his home in Friday Harbor, Wash.

On August 2, 1899 Mr. Redenbaugh was married to Mary Louise Farr of Hanover, who died in 1948. He is survived by his daughter, Mrs. Dorothy Brimacombe, a newspaper publisher in Las Vegas, Nevada.

1897

GEORGE EDWARD TENT died at the Barnstable County Hospital in Pocasset, Mass., on June 3. His home was in Hatchville, Mass.

He was born in Chelsea, Mass., December 2, 1874 and prepared for college in the Chelsea schools. He was a member of Theta Delta Chi and Sphinx.

After graduation Mr. Tent became associated with the New England News Company in Boston, but was forced to retire in 1916 due to ill health.

On February 19, 1901, Mr. Tent was married to Marion Dale, who died in 1922. He is survived by a son James and two daughters, Mrs. Elizabeth Hopkins and Mrs. Margaret Wicander.

MORTON CHASE TUTTLE died at his home, 1005 Center St., Newton Center, Mass., on July '19.

Born in Milford, N. H., June 29, 1875, the son of Charles B. and Cornelia (Chase) Tuttle, he transferred to Dartmouth after one year at M.I.T. He was a member of Psi Upsilon and Sphinx.

After graduation he was associated with the Carter's Ink Co., until 1900 when he became general manager for the Aberthaw Construction Co., where he became a recognized authority on reinforced concrete. In 1923 Mr. Tuttle formed his own company, the "Morton C. Tuttle Co. It would be impossible to list the big constructions for which he was responsible, but the firm letterhead, depicting a high-waisted concrete bridge, against a background of spider-web derricks, the Empire State Building and Niagara Falls, gives some picture of his far-flung enterprise. During World War I he served on the War Industries Board .and contributed greatly to the war effort.

Throughout an active and busy life "Hiram" Tuttle always found time to serve Dartmouth. He was secretary of his class, 1924-32, and president of the Secretaries Association, 1930-31. He was class agent, 1927-29 and from 1933 to the time of his death. From 1918 to 1920 he was president of the Boston Alumni Association and was president for many years of the Dartmouth Educational Association. A member of the Alumni Council, 1913-14 and 1917-20, he was elected to the Dartmouth Board of Trustees in 1924 and served until 1936, when he became Trustee Emeritus.

On June 4, 1907, Mr. Tuttle was married to Alice Kidder, who survives him with their daughters Cornelia, Mrs; Eugene L. Klein, and Edith, Mrs. Francis S. Wilson. Leonard W. Tuttle '00 and Donald D. Tuttle '00 were brothers.

1900

JOSEPH WILLIAM MANION passed away after a long illness at his home, 8 Forest St., in Cambridge, Mass., on August 8.

Joe was born June 9, 1877, at Galway, Ireland, the son of Patrick and Margaret (Keaney) Manion. In 1879 the family came to the United States and eventually settled in Weymouth, Mass. Joe entered Dartmouth from the Weymouth High School in the fall of 1896. He liked to play baseball and was a member of the class team.

After graduating from Dartmouth, Joe served for five years in the educational system of the Philippine Islands. Coming back to the States in 1905, he became assistant manager, secretary, and treasurer of the Newton Firebrick Co. of Albany, N. Y. In 1915 he became secretary of the New York State Roadbuilders' Association. In 1918 he became affiliated with Rathborn, Sard Stove Co. in Albany. After two years with this company, Joe entered the wholesale furniture business in Massachusetts with which he remained until his retirement. In 1921 he marrid

Catherine Jones of Albany. Joe had a genial, quiet, kindly disposition. He was a trustworthy business man, and an exemplary husband and father. In college he was known as a philosopher, and often came out with wise, thoughtful, and pithy remarks. He had an even, poised, balanced temperament which enabled him to meet reverses with courage and equanimity. One of our classmates says of him: "He had a wonderful memory for athletic events, incidents of undergraduate days, and details of the lives of everyone of his classmates. He was great good company, full of original ideas, broadminded, and had a fine philosophy of life. He had a sly humor and was a delightful person to be with."

He is survived by his wife, two daughters, Kathlene who lives in Cambridge, Joan Patricia (Mrs. Arthur J. Weldon) of Newark, Del., and three granddaughters.

1903

CHAUNCEY COREY COLTON, for 16 years judge of the Duluth Municipal Court, died June 13 at St. Mary's Hospital, Duluth, Minn. His home was at 1802 East 4th St.

He was born March 3, 1883 at Princeton, Ill., but prepared for college at Danvers (Mass.) High School. In college he was a member of the varsity football team and of Phi Delta Theta. Chauncey studied law at Northwestern University where he again played football under Walter MacCornack who had also been his coach at Dartmouth. After a short stay at Jackson, Minn., he began the practice of law in Duluth.

He was one of Minnesota's best known members of the Masonic fraternity. A past master of the lodge, past high priest of the chapter, past commander of the commandery, he was Past Grand Master of the Grand Lodge of Minnesota and past potentate of Aad Temple of the Mystic Shrine. He was a member of the Elks and several clubs, and was an ardent hunter. He was state adviser to the American Bar Association, a director of the 11th Judicial District Bar Association, and a member of the Minnesota State Bar Association.

Chauncey married Margaret Sydney Hall, who died in 1937. He later married Elizabeth W. Colton, who survives him with his son, Hall Colton '35.

WINFIF.LD LAWRENCE RICE died at his home, 2621 N.E. 10th Ave., Fort Lauderdale, Fla., on May 24.

Born in Maiden, Mass., February 20, 1880, he prepared for college at Hyde Park High School. He was a member of Phi Delta Theta.

After teaching for a short time in the high school in Aurora, Ill., he joined the faculty of Brooklyn Polytechnic Preparatory School, 1909-12. He then taught for some years at the High School of Commerce and later taught at Boys' High School in Brooklyn, his field being history and civics. He was later, for eight years, in charge of civic studies for the New York City Board of Education. From 1940 to his retirement in 1950 he was chairman of social science studies in the Flushing High School. He received an A.M. degree from Columbia in 1913. For 18 years he was chairman and treasurer of the New York City central committee of the Junior Red Cross.

He is survived by his wife, Veronica A. Rice, and a nephew, Roger C. Rice '14. Emerson Rice '87 was a brother.

WILLIAM WEST GRANT died at his home, 101 S. Humboldt St., Denver, Colo., on June 30 after a long illness.

Born in Davenport, lowa, June 27, 1881, the son of William West and Adeline (Mosely) Grant, he moved to Denver when he was a boy, and there prepared for college at East High School. He was a member of Psi Upsilon, Casque and Gauntlet, the Aegis Board and the Dramatic Club.

After graduating from Dartmouth he attended Harvard Law School for one year, then received his LL.B. from the University of Virginia in 1906. Returning to Denver, he began the practice of law, which he continued until forced to retire in 1951 due to ill health.

Bill Grant was one of Denver's and Colorado's leading citizens. He once said, "In my professional life I have been assailed by conditions that have made for constant activity." A past president of the Colorado Bar Association, he was a member of the American and Denver associations, and the American Judicature Society and American Law Institute. A member of the Denver School Board, he served as president for one term. A past president of the Colorado Civil Service Commission, he had been Colorado chairman of the Committee to Defend America. One of Colorado's leading Democrats, he served as chairman of the Democratic State Assembly and treasurer of the Democratic State Committee. He ran for mayor of Denver in 1935 "because he felt the town needed fixing up," but was defeated. In 1944 he declined the senatorial nomination. A vestryman of St. John's Cathedral and St. Andrew's Church, he was Diocesan trustee, member of the National Council of the Episcopal Church and chancellor of the Diocese of Colorado. Riding to hounds was Bill Grant's greatest hobby and he served proudly as joint master of the Arapahoe Hunt. He had served as a captain in the field artillery during World War I.

Bill Grant's devotion to Dartmouth was manifested in many ways. One of the staunchest supporters *of the Great Divide Association, he had served as its president. A member of the Alumni Council, 1925-31, he was elected an Alumni Trustee of the College in 1931. In 1941 he was made Life Trustee and was Trustee Emeritus from 1951 until his death. Dartmouth conferred the honorary A.M. degree on him in 1931, and in 1952 the University of Denver conferred the degree of LL.D. In 1949 King George VI named him an honorary member of the Order of the British Empire for his work in promoting a better understanding between the U. S. and Great Britain.

In 1951 a stroke forced Bill Grant to retire from his law practice but, undaunted, he took up writing and published "Such Is Life," a history of Denver. Another stroke paralyzed his right side, so he learned to type with his left hand and prepared a history of the Arapahoe Hunt.

On November 3, 1906, Bill Grant was married to Gertrude Hendrie of Denver, who died in April 1956. Mrs. Grant, like her husband, was a social and civic leader in Denver. He is survived by his sons, William W. Grant Jr. '31, Edwin H. Grant '30; his grandson, Edwin H. Grant Jr. '53; a daughter, Mrs. Uvedale Lambert; and fourteen grandchildren.

1904

CHARLES JOSEPH LEDDY passed away in the Wentworth-Dover Hospital, on May 8, after a long illness.

Born October 6, 1879, in Newfields, N. H., Charlie grew up in Epping. From there he went to Exeter Academy and was a classmate of Myron Witham. After one semester at Holy Cross, he transferred to Dartmouth and was with us a year. His parents, who were devout Catholics, wished him to enter the priesthood. After graduating from St. Anselm's College, he was a member of the New Hampshire legislature for two years and was ordained into the priesthood in 1908.

He served as assistant in St. Anthony's and St. Joseph's parishes in Manchester; pastor of St. Mary's in Hillsborough, N. H., where he remained until 1945, and pastor of St. Joseph's Church in Manchester. He was elevated to the rank of domestic prelate with the title of Right Reverend Monsignor by Pope Pius XII, in July 195 a.

A pontifical funeral mass was celebrated on May 11. Matthew F. Brady, Bishop of Manchester, presided. Myron Witham and Al Terrien represented the Class. Charlie left a brother and sister and several nieces and nephews who reside in Epping, N. H.

IRA ORLANDO WILLARD, of 20 Congress Street, Keene, N. H., died at his home on June 24 after a long illness.

Born in Sutton, Vt., June 14, 1881, he prepared for college at Lyndon Institute. He served as a railway mail clerk on the St. Albans-Boston run and was clerk in the local post office for 21 years until his retirement in 1948.

He was representative from Ward 1 to the General Court in 1949 and 1950. He was active in the Federation of Post Office Clerks as president of the New Hampshire federation and later represented the Granite State in the national federation. He was also district representative of the Retired Civil Service Employees.

Members of the family include his wife, Mrs. Inez (George) Willard; two sons, Bernard E. of Keene and Robert I. of Miami, Fla., and two daughters, Mrs. Eugene Fuller of Keene and Mrs. Alden Wilder of Munsonville.

Flowers and messages of sympathy were sent to the family by the Class.

1910

ROBERT RAYMOND GORTON died on June 28, at Fish Memorial Hospital, DeLand, Fla. His home was at 125 S. Marydell, DeLand. Funeral services were held July 2 in Boston and burial was in Newton Cemetery. The Class was represented at the funeral by Jim Everett, Charlie Fay, Hazen Jones and Jess Wilson.

Ray was born July 6, 1887 in Plainfield, N. J., son of Robert and Carrie (Maxson) Gorton. He prepared for college at Newton High School. In college he was a member of the varsity golf team for three years and captained the team in senior year. He sang on the Glee Club, in the College Choir, and was a member of Phi Gamma Delta and Sphinx.

In the years between graduation and World War I, Ray was a salesman. He attended Plattsburgh Officers' Training Camp, was sent to France in July 1918, and saw service in the St. Mihiel Sector. He was promoted to Ist Lt. in November 1918.

Ray entered the insurance field and in 1932 became a special agent with the Sanborn Agency, Boston, for Connecticut Mutual. He was a director of the Brae Burn Country Club and was the club golf champion seven times. An oufstanding event in his golfing career was his performance when he met Bobby Jones in the national tournament. After he retired and took up his residence in Florida, three years ago, Ray became a member of the DeLand Country Club and the DeLand Lawn Bowling Club. He was a member of the University Club of Boston.

Ray was married to Ida Hobbs, in Brookline, Mass., October 11, 1926. She and a sister, Mrs. Stanley C. Stillman of New York, are survivors.

EDGAR BROWN PRESCOTT died on July 28 at his home, 771 Main St., Laconia, N. H., after a long illness. Jess Wilson represented the Class at the funeral services which were held July 31 in St. James Episcopal Church. Burial was in Union Cemetery.

Ed was born April 30, 1888 in Lakeport, N. H. He prepared for college at Laconia High School. In college he was a member of Phi Gamma Delta.

Following graduation in 1910, he attended Tuck School and then went with Field So Cowles, Boston, to study the insurance business. In May, 1914, he returned to Laconia and became a member of his father's insurance agency, operated under the name of Melcher & Prescott. At his father's death Ed became manager and continued in this insurance business until his death.

Ed saw service in World War I. He went overseas in July of 1917 in the American Field Service as an ammunition truck driver attached to the French Motor Transport Service. He was a member of the American Legion.

Dartmouth meant a great deal to Ed and he was always in Hanover for official and informal reunions. His will provides a bequest for the College, the income from which will be credited annually to the Alumni Fund.

Prominent in the life of his community, he had been an active worker in St. James Episcopal Church, a charter member of the Laconia Rotary Club, director of the Laconia Federal Savings and Loan Association, trustee of Holderness School, member of Mt. Lebanon lodge, F & AM, Pythagorean council, R and SM, Pilgrim commandery, KT, Laconia Chamber of Commerce, Massachusetts Horticultural Society, Laconia Historical Society and the New Hampshire Historical Society.

Ed never married and had no immediate relatives surviving.

WALTER MILTON PRICE died May 18 in Flushing, N. Y. He had been in poor health for a long period. On March 27 he suffered a stroke and was taken to Queen's General Hospital. The end came at Meadow Park Nursing Home where he had been since May 1. Interment was at Presbyterian Cemetery, Brooklyn.

Few classmates called him Walt because when he arrived in Hanover in freshman year he set himself up in business as "Price the Presser" and that name became like a trademark for him. Walt was born February 26, 1884 in Augusta, Kentucky, and came to Dartmouth from Andover Academy.

Walt spent the first year after graduation selling shoes in the southern states for the Fred Douglass Shoe Co. of Haverhill, Mass. He then returned to his home city, Indianapolis, to take a teaching position in the public schools. He was made assistant principal. During World War I he served as Overseas Secretary for the YMCA, stationed in St. Nazaire, France. He was married November 21, 1914 in Indianapolis, to Beulah Wright, a school principal.

After her death in 1928, Walt gave up teaching to study under Oscar Seagle at the Music Colony at Schroon Lake, N. Y. He completed his training in 1932. In 1933 he had a prominent part in a Broadway hit, "Run Little Children." Just when he was meeting with success in his musical career, his health broke down and his latter years were discouraging ones. However, he apparently retained that winning smile and cheerful disposition, familiar to all in 1910, for the one who cared for him for the past several years, in reporting the particulars of his passing, wrote, "Dartmouth has never sent out a finer man."

1911

SYDNEY KINNEY BACKUS died at the Utica, N. Y., Hospital on July 19. Sid was spending his vacation with his family at their cottage on an island on Third Lake, Old Forge, N. Y. He was stricken with an intestinal hemorrhage but lived only a few hours after he was taken to the Utica Hospital.

Sid was born in Rome, N. Y., June 19, 1887, and attended Rome Free Academy. In college he was a member of the Glee Club and College Choir and participated in the Prom shows. Following graduation, he taught at Vermont Academy for two years, then graduated from Yale Law School in 1916 and entered practice in Rochester, N. Y., with his brother Oswald. He was actively engaged in this practice until his death. In 1918 he was married to Ruth Haven, who survives him with a son Richard, two daughters, Priscilla and Ann, and three grandchildren.

In 1921 he bought a home in Webster, N. Y., where he became active in the town management as justice of the peace and a member of the Board of Supervisors for eight years and was a commissioner of the West Webster Fire Department-. He belonged to the Webster Rotary Club, Corinthian Temple, F&AM, and Emanuel R. Wilson Post, American Legion, of which he was a charter member. He had served in the Army in World War I.

Memorial services were held in the Presbyterian Church in Webster. The class and Dartmouth have lost not only a fine gentleman but a most loyal alumnus. The high regard in which he was held is indicated by the resolution of the town board of Webster which related the many activities in which he had been engaged for the town and reflecting credit and honor to his position and "always found him gentle and considerate in manner and speech, and friendly and cooperative in bearing."

LEROY LENTELL DOWLEY died at his home in Worcester, Mass., on June 10. He entered Dartmouth from Hyde Park high school and on leaving college in 1909 entered the clothing business there with his father. Two years later the firm moved to Worcester, having taken over the Ware Pratt Company with which Roy was associated, first as vice president and since 1940 as president. He also was president of Wells and Coverly stores in Syracuse and Troy, N. Y.

He was an active member throughout his life of the First Baptist Church. He was a member of the Worcester Club, East Chop Beach Club, Worcester Rotary Club and Worcester Chamber of Commerce.

He leaves his wife Marion, a daughter and two sons. Funeral services were held in the First Baptist Church.

1913

RAEBURN ROBINSON MCMAHON died July a in St. Petersburg, Florida. Raeb was born on July 1, 1890 at Stowe, Vt., son of Cornelius L. and Hattie (Robinson) McMahon. He prepared for Dartmouth at the Stowe High School, but left college at the end of his sophomore year.

He was in the automobile business at Stowe and Morrisville, Vt., and was also interested in maple sugar and syrup. He retired in 1947.

He married Alice Taylor of Montreal on June 6, 1919. Edward R. was born on June 17, 1920; Shirley on July 11, 1922, and Cornelius T., September 16, 1923. Alice died in

Mac was a member of the Vermont legislature, as representative from Morrisville, for three terms and was a County Senator for two terms. He was elected as a Senate Member to the Governor's War Council.

Mac was a public spirited citizen and served as chairman of the School Board for ten years and as chairman of the local Rationing Board during the war. He was active in the American Legion and a member of the Masonic Commandery and Mt. Sinai Shrine.

He leaves his wife, the former Marietta Demars of Newport, whom he married in lass, and his three children.

Funeral services were held at the Community Church in Stowe and burial was in the family lot at Riverbank Cemetery.

1915

HERBERT DILLISTIN LANTERMAN died in Charleston, W. Va., on April 30.

Born in Paterson, N. J., March 13, 1893, he prepared for college at Paterson High School. He was a member of Lambda Chi Alpha and returned to Thayer School for his C.E. degree in 1916.

From 1916 to 1921 (except for a year in the Navy during War I) and again in 1926-27 he was with the Turner Construction Co. From 1921 to 1926 he was with the A & P Tea Co. In 1927 he became superintendent of con- struction for Carbide & Carbon Chemicals Corp. in Charleston, and continued with them until his death.

On September 2, 1922 he was married to Helen Southworth, who survives him with their sons, Robert S. and Richard S.

GEORGE BENHAM YOUNG, a member of the Cleveland law firm of Jones, Day, Cockley & Reavis since 1939, died on July 3 in New York Hospital after a long illness.

George received his A.B. degree from Dartmouth in 1915 and an LL.B. degree from Western Reserve University in 1919. He was a specialist in corporate law. In college, George was a member of Beta Theta Pi, Phi Beta Kappa, and Round Robin. He also belonged to the Union Club of Cleveland. In World War I, he was a lieutenant in the Aviation Section of the Signal Corps.

In addition to his Cleveland residence, he and Mrs. Young maintained an apartment at 1185 Park Avenue in New York City and a country home in Barnard. Vt.

Surviving are his wife, Mrs. Agnes Brooks Young, a novelist; a brother, Wallace and a sister, Mrs. Kenneth Bates.

Services were held at the Barnard Village Cemetery, the Rev. Edward Mayo Green officiating.' The family requested that flowers be omitted, suggesting that gifts may be sent to the Sloan-Kettering Cancer Research Institute, East 68th St., New York, N. Y.

1916

PARK JERROLD LARMON passed away June 5, after an illness of several weeks in a Long Island hospital. He is survived by his widow, Mrs. Louise Spalding Larmon; a sister, Mrs. George F. Brown of Wilmette, Ill., and two brothers, Sigurd S. Larmon '14 of New York and Prof. Russell R. Larmon 19 of Hanover. His home was at 215-11 32nd Rd., Bayside, N. Y.

This fun-loving classmate was born in Stanton, lowa. December 26, 1893. During undergraduate days "Pike" was captain of the freshman and sophomore tennis teams, was on the varsity tennis team two years and was the college doubles champion in his junior year. He was a member of Phi Gamma Delta.

At the time of his death he was a department manager of the Grinnell Corporation, having spent some thirty years with this company. Previously he worked for the Barrett Company of Chicago, efficiency engineers, and later for the Mead Cycle Co., of New York and the U. S. Construction Co., of Boston.

During World War I he was a 2nd Lieutenant in the Ordnance Department, U. S. Army. His passing, coming at a time when classmates in New York had been led to believe he was improving rapidly from a heart attack, was a shock. "Pike" was a man congenial in any company, constant in his loyalty to Dartmouth and to the Class of 1916, and one who enjoyed his life thoroughly.

191 8

LYMAN CHAMBERLAIN POOLE died suddenly at his home in North Chatham, N. Y., on July 26.

Born in Albany, N. Y., May 25, 1896 he was graduated from Albany High School. In college he was a member of Psi Upsilon and Dragon. In May 1917 he enlisted and served overseas as a machine gunner with the 27th division. After the war he was with the Liverpool & London & Globe Insurance Co. In 1926 he became a partner, with his brother, Edward S. Poole '11, in the insurance firm of J. Edward Poole & Co. which had been founded by his father.

He was a member of the Fort Orange Club, American Legion, a past master of Masters Lodge F&AM, and a past president of TriVillage Fire Company and a member of the Old Chatham Hunt Club.

On June 29, 1940 he was married to Marjorie Alexander, who survives him with a son, John C., and a daughter, Mrs. John G. Zeiger, and his brother.

Lymie Poole had a host of friends among Dartmouth men and he will be greatly missed.

1919

PHILIP HERRICK BIRD passed away on June 2 at the age of 61. In his death, 1919 and Dartmouth have lost a very loyal and devoted classmate and son. He was born in Allston, Mass., on March 11, 1896, attended Brookline High School and entered Dartmouth with the class in 1915. He left college in 1917 to enlist in the Navy and, after World War I, entered the family business of M. T. Bird Co. in Boston, of which he subsequently became president. Due to ill health, he retired some years ago but continued to be active, as far as he could be, in both Dartmouth and his own business affairs.

He served the class as head agent for the Alumni Fund until he was stricken with a coronary attack and had to give up this task.

It so happened that Rock and Alice Earle Hayes were with him on his boat for a Sunday cruise in Hingham, Mass., when his fatal heart attack occurred, and, despite all efforts, there was nothing that could be done for him.

The funeral was held on June 5 at the Evangelical Congregational Church in Hingham and burial was in the Evergreen Cemetery. Present at the funeral as honorary pallbearers were Spider Martin, Jim Davis, Jack Clark, Art Havlin, Bunny Burnett, Ray Hinds, Jigger Merrill, Al Googins, Casey Bevan, Maury Hall, Howie Cole, Chuck Eaton, John Chipman, Bill White and Rock Hayes. Charlotte Eaton, Mildred Chipman, Marion White and Alice Earle Hayes also attended.

Phil is survived by his wife Helen and two daughters, Mrs. Meredith Jones of Maryland, and Fabia Bird of Hingham; a son, Malcolm, who is serving in the Navy at Pensacola, Fla.; and a brother, Courtney, of West Newton, Mass. To all of them goes the sincere sympathy of the class in their sorrow. Phil was a wit and a personality and all '19ers will miss him.

THOMAS JOSEPH WHELAN died at Baker Memorial Hospital in Boston on June 26. His home was at 145 Tracy Ave., Lynn, Mass.

Born in Lynn, Mass., January 3, 1894 he attended Worcester Academy, and then entered Notre Dame. He transferred to Dartmouth in 1915 and spent one year with our class. He later attended Georgetown and Boston College.

After service in the Navy in World War I he played professional baseball and football until 1926, when he became coach of all sports at Lynn English High School. In 1942 he became acting principal of the school and in 1944 was elected principal.

He is survived by his wife, Mrs. Mildred Killen Whelan, three sons and two daughters.

1920

LYNDON FREDERICK SMALL died in Rockville, Md., on June 15 "from circumstances he had given the work of his lifetime to alleviate for others." His home was at 6750 Greentree Rd., Bethesda, Md.

Born in Allston, Mass., August 16, 1897, he prepared for college in the Needham schools. Standing high in sciences, he nevertheless took all the English courses he could, and at Dr. Bolser's suggestion took German and learned it well. Despite an interruption of six months during which he served in the Coast Artillery during World War I, he was elected to Phi Beta Kappa in his junior year. An ardent "chubber" he won, in his sophomore year, a competition for chalking up the most miles of hiking over D.O.C. trails in one year. His record was 533½ miles!

After graduation "Red" Small went to Harvard on the Henry Elijah Parker Fellowship, and there received the A.M. degree in 1922. After teaching inorganic chemistry at M.I.T. for a year, he returned to Harvard on a teaching fellowship to work under Dr. James B. Conant. In his final year he became a DuPont Fellow with full time for research with Dr. Conant. After receiving his Ph.D. in 1926 he received one of the coveted Sheldon Travelling Fellowships to study under the famous Prof. Wieland in Munich, who secured for him a National Research Fellowship to spend a second year in Munich. Here Dr. Small chose the field of research to which he devoted the rest of his life - narcotics.

Returning to the United States, Dr. Small went to the University of Virginia where he organized the chemical research for the Committee on Drug Addiction of the National Research Council, under the Rockefeller Foundation. A clinical laboratory in Michigan under the leadership of Dr. Nathan B. Eddy carried out the pharmacological work. Dr. Small referred to the period, 1928 through 1939, as the most prolific of his career.

In 1939 Dr Small became head chemist of the Public Health Service's Division of Chemotherapy and in 1948 he was commissioned scientist director of the Experimental Biology and Medicine Institute of the National Institutes of Health. His work on alkaloids was interrupted for several years during the war by extensive research on antimalarial drugs, sponsored by the National Research Council. The cooperative effort to discover a cure for malaria was considered second only to the discovery of the atomic bomb.

Hundreds of new compounds, some derived from morphine and others from simpler starting materials were prepared by Dr. Small and the experts working with him. The first drug to show promise was a new compound called metopon, which after years of testing on cancer patients, is now being manufactured, under a federal government patent, and widely used to relieve pain. This was his supreme achievement, for since his mother's death from cancer, he had been driven by the desire to do something to relieve the agony of human beings condemned to the torture of incurable cancer.

In 1938 Dr. Small was named editor-inchief of the Journal of Organic Chemistry. He was the author of more" than 75 technical papers and co-author of two books. He was elected to the National Academy of Sciences in 1941 and from 1942 to 1945 served on the Panel of Antimalarials of the National Research Council. In 1931 he was a technical expert to the U. S. delegation at the Geneva Narcotic Conference; in 1937 he went to London as an American representative to the Opium Assay Commission of the League of Nations. In 1950 Dr. Small was awarded the Hillebrand Prize of the Washington Section of the American Chemical Society for his outstanding contribution to the chemistry of alkaloids. At the Dartmouth commencement in June, which he was unable to attend, just a few days before his death he was awarded an honorary degree with President Dickey's citation "One of the rarely talented research chemists of our time, your original and persevering work on opium alkaloids has gone far to bring the oldest human burden of unbearable pain within the beneficent reach of modern medicine. You graced the campus as an undergraduate with qualities of mind and spirit that were Dartmouth at her best; today that best as realized and exemplified in your life and work, is gratefully bespoken by the award of your College's doctorate of science, honoris causa."

Dr. Small was married on December 30, 1921, to Marianne Clayton Brown, who survives him with their son, Donald C. Small, and daughter, Mrs. Ruth Farren.

1922

HARVIE ANDREW ZUCKERMAN died June 8 in New York City. He had a long illness after a serious operation from which there had been very little hope for recovery.

Harvie was born in New York City on February 6, 1901, the son of Henry and Annie (Steinberg) Zuckerman. He prepared for college at Choate School. During his four years at Dartmouth he was a member of The Arts, a frequent contributor of literary articles, and an active participant in student theatrical presentations. As a senior, he was vicepresident of the dramatic association.

Following graduation, Harvie was associated for three years with Alfred A. Knopf, Inc., New York publishers. He then began preparation for his life's profession as a minister of the Episcopal Church. Following service as a lay assistant with Calvary Church in New York, he attended the Protestant Episcopal Theological College in Edinburgh, Scotland, where he received his divinity degree in 1931. He was subsequently ordained by the Episcopal Bishop of New Hampshire, Hanover's own John Dallas.

Harvie began his ministerial career in New York City at St. Paul's Church. He later became chaplain of New York's Calvary Mission. In 1937 he became minister at All Saint's Church, Littleton, N. H. where he served for eleven years. Subsequently he was in charge of two churches in Connecticut, St. Peter's at Monroe and St. Paul's at Huntington. His last assignment was as Rector of Old Wye Church in Wye Mills, Md. Prior to his passing, Harvie was living at 301 East 66th Street, New York City.

Harvie was a beloved and admired member of the Class of 1922 He had many friends and he devoted his life to the service of his fellow men.

He is survived by his wife, Mary Blair Williams, to whom he was married in 1929. Their children are Mary Blair, who is a married daughter, Michael who is also married and has a son, and David, the youngest son who entered Dartmouth with the Class of 1961 this September. Harvie was also the uncle of Buck Zuckerman '52, son of Paul S. Zuckerman of New York City. The Class of '22 extends its deepest sympathy to all the family.

1923

The Class was saddened when word came of the untimely death of SHERMAN BALDWIN on June 11. Sherm was one of a dozen men in the class who have always ranked as "Mr. 1923." The Sherm Baldwin pages in the Secretary's scrapbook abound with evidence of his activities promoting Dartmouth College and his class. The files of the DARTMOUTH ALUMNI MAGAZINE attest to the years of vital Baldwin contributions to College, the alumni association and the Class of 1923.

Ellie Baldwin writes as follows: "I keep asking myself WHY should Sherm be taken? We had so much to look forward to and so fortunate to be living in this beautiful country, free to enjoy skiing and golf, and at the same time completely happy in his leisurely job of 'hotel biz.' "

Sherm was born in Brookline, Mass., November 24, 1901. After graduation he started with Swift & Co. On April 10, 1926 he married Eleonor Lyon. During their first year of married life he travelled New York state and Massachusetts selling wool. He met Mr. Bell of the Bell Company in Worcester who took an interest in him and offered him a job. Sherm rapidly advanced in the Bell Company, becoming production manager and later vice president. Retiring from this company after 25 years, Sherm moved to Manchester, Vt., where he became associated with John H. Ortlieb of the Orvis and Wilburton Inns. Here Sherm and Ellie entertained many of their Dartmouth, Boston and Worcester friends who made the trip for golfing in the summer and fall and skiing on Big Bromley in the winter. And it was very fitting that here the services were held in the Peru Congregational Church, with burial in the Lyon family lot.

During his 25 years of residence in Worcester, Sherm was active in the First Unitarian Church, serving as an assessor and a member of its prudential committee. He served as president of the Worcester County Dartmouth Club and a full term as a member of the Dartmouth Alumni Council. He also served as a member of the advisory staff of the DARTMOUTH ALUMNI MAGAZINE, being elected to this committee by the Dartmouth Secretaries Association in 1942.

Sherm's son Lyon graduated from Dartmouth in 1950 and is now located in Fitchburg where he is news director of WEIM. His daughter Sally is the wife of Dr. Robert D. Utiger of Clayton, Mo.

FRANCIS JOSEPH BEACH passed away on April 16 in Pittsburgh, Pa. At the end of his freshman year Joe left Dartmouth to become a dealer in oriental rugs and continued in this field until 1935 when he joined the Pittsburgh Post Office as a clerk. Promotions came rapidly and he was General Foreman of mails at the time of his death.

In World War II he served as Army Courier Officer for three years in the South Pacific theatre attaining the rank of captain.

On September 2, 1925 he married Margaret M. John, who survives him with their two sons, Edmund J. and John J.

THOMAS GEORGE BREEN JR. of Kingston, Mass., died on July 26 of a coronary attack. Tom roomed with Roy Billings, Roy Height and the late Don Gallagher in Middle Mass in his sophomore year. He was in Dartmouth but two years.

Tom has been for 25 years a senior sales representative for the New England office of the Jones and Laughlin Steel Corporation. He is survived by a son Peter and daughter Diana.

1925

NORRIS BOWIE CHIPMAN died of a heart attack in Zurich, Switzerland, on August 8, at the age of 56. He was counsellor in the American Embassy at Belgrade, Yugoslavia. A native of Washington, D. C., he prepared for Dartmouth in the schools of that city, and later studied at the School of Oriental Languages. He joined the foreign service in 1928 and had served at Riga, Paris, Moscow, Cairo, Rome, Bonn, London, and Belgrade, as well as in the State Department in Washington, where, according to Press Officer Lincoln White, his colleagues were greatly shocked by his sudden death.

Norris was married in 1935 to Fanny Camille Bunand-Sevastos, an artist. She and a daughter, Claudette, survive him, as does his mother, Mrs. Gertrude N. Chipman of 2401 Calvert, N.W., Washington. He was a member of the Chevy Chase Club and the Union Club of Paris. Memorial services were planned to be held in Washington.

Norris was one of a goodly company of Americans who serve their country faithfully and well all over the world. Their names are seldom known and their rewards are small, except in inward satisfactions, but they bring honor to themselves and pride to those whose privilege it is to have known them.

ELLIOTT BROCKWAY LYMAN died in the Holyoke, Mass., Hospital on May 6, after a long illness. He was born July 5, 1903 in South Hadley, Mass., the son of the late John Elliott and Emily (Brockway) Lyman, and attended the high school in that city. He lived there all his life and only last February was named South Hadley's "Outstanding Citizen for 1957."

Following his graduation from Dartmouth, he joined the Crocker McElwain Co.; in 1927 he went to the Holyoke Water Power Company, where he became assistant hydraulic engineer in 1931, and chief dispatcher in 1950, which post he held through the remainder of his career. His life was marked by devotion to his community. In 1949 he was appointed to the South Hadley School Board and served as its chairman from 1952 until poor health forced his retirement in 1956. He was town moderator in 1933-36 and 1943-46, a member of the Lions Club, a Mason, chairman of the trustees of the Gaylord Library, treasurer of the Evergreen Cemetery Commission, and a deacon of the First Congregational Church. He was a member and former chairman of the Western Massachusetts Engineering Society.

Survivors include his wife Mary, to whom he was married in 1934; a daughter, Emily; a brother, Hiram Lyman of South Hadley, and several nieces and nephews. He is buried in Evergreen Cemetery, in the city in which he was born, lived, and died.

El was one of those quietly devoted people whose good works accumulate out of all proportion to theiir unassuming gentleness. His community has lost a fine citizen and Dartmouth a loyal son. He brought honor to both and will be remembered with pride and affection.

1926

The Class o£ 1926 was saddened to learn at its reunion of the passing of our beloved classmate WILLIAM LAWRENCE LARY who died suddenly at his home, 1025 2nd St., Santa Monica, Calif., on May 15.

Bill was born in Lawrence, Mass., April 8, 1906, the son of Laurence O'Leary '01 and Carolyn Carpenter. He was graduated from Lawrence High School in 1922 and from Dartmouth College in 1926 and the Amos Tuck School in 1928. While in college Bill was active in the musical clubs and a member of Phi Sigma Kappa.

After leaving Hanover, Bill attended the West Coast School of Banking in Seattle. He was former assistant vice-president of the Los Angeles branch of the Bank of America, and at the time of his death, was manager of the finance division of the American Ceramics Branch of Santa Monica, Calif.

During World War II he served with the Navy in the European Theatre of operation with rank of Lieutenant Commander.

He leaves his wife, the former Virginia Cleland, whom he married in 1935; a son Lyn; a brother, Joseph A. O'Leary '29; three sisters, Miss Helen M. O'Leary, Mrs. Carolyn F. O'Keefe and Mrs. Eileen Flaherty.

Bill was returned to his native Lawrence for burial.

The Class of 1926 extends its heartfelt sympathy to his family.

MARK ANDREW LENKE died suddenly from coronary thrombosis, on June 21, in Fair Haven, Vt. Mark came to Dartmouth from Erasmus Hall High School, Brooklyn, and was with us only until February 1923. He then entered St. Lawrence Law School, New York, where he received his Bachelor of Laws degree in 1927.

After practicing law in New York for several years, he joined the Joe Lowe (Popsicle) Corp., first as attorney, later as vice-president and member of the board. He was also vicepresident of Natural Sugars, Inc. Mark gave up active business in 1942, and retired to free-lance writing and painting at his home in Sands Point, Long Island. In 1953 he moved to a 200-year-old home in Fair Haven, Vt. There he served as Town Agent, Auditor and Library Commissioner.

In 1935 Mark was married to Rea Lowe, a Smith graduate. Their three children, Margot, Michael and Patricia, survive him. After a divorce in 1953, he was married to Eleanor Mindling, a Bennington graduate. In addition to his wife and children, Mark is survived by his mother, Mrs. Frances Lenke, and his brother, Dr. Sidney E. Lenke '26.

1928

JOHN LEONARD KILLKELLEY died of a heart attack on May 7 at his home, 2 Stevens St., Nashua, N. H. He was born in Nashua, November 21, 1905 and entered Dartmouth after graduating from the local schools. Len was a member of KKK, Sphinx, and played freshman and varsity football.

After graduation he got his law degree from Boston College Law School and returned to Nashua to practice. He was a member of the N. H. Bar Association and the Nashua Country Club. Seven years ago he suffered a coronary attack but recovered and resumed work.

Besides his widow, Agnes, he is survived by three sons, J. Leonard Jr., Davin and Sean; a daughter, Elizabeth; a brother, Thomas of Meredith, N. H.; and a nephew, Thomas J. KillKelley who made his home with the KillKelleys.

1929

FREDERICK REYNOLDS SISSON JR. died at his home, 160 Cabrini Blvd., New York, N. Y., on August 14 at the age of 49. He was editor of Paper and Paper Products, a semi-monthly trade magazine of Walden Sons & Mott, Inc., publishing company.

Fred was a native of Potsdam, N. Y., and son of the founder of the Racquette River Paper Company in that city. He was elected to Phi Beta Kappa while at Dartmouth and, after graduating, attended Harvard College and Columbia University where he received a Master's degree. He spent the next ten years there in the classical languages department as a teacher of Greek and Latin.

In 1943 Fred joined Walden Sons & Mott, Inc., as an editor of its magazine, PaperCatalog, and of the concern's ABC Guide, a directory of the paper trade. He became managing editor of Paper and Paper Products in 1948 and editor in 1956.

He was a member of the Paper and Twine Club and active in the Fort Washington Collegiate Church. He had a summer home in Cotuit, Mass.

Surviving him are his widow, Christine Woefle Sisson; a daughter, Penelope Cook; a son, Frederick R. Ill; and a sister, Mrs. Alfred S. Walden.

1931

WILLIAM EBER WOODRUFF, of Esworthy Road, Route 2, Germantown, Md., died on May 2, in Suburban Hospital, Bethesda, Md., due to injuries received in an auto accident the night of April 25. "Eber's" funeral was held on May 6, in the Bethlehem Chapel of Washington Cathedral. Merrill S. Rosengren '31 flew from Denver to attend the funeral and be with Eber's family.

Other alumni at the funeral were John W. Moxon '29, Wendell Schuh '29, and Berchmans T. Fitzpatrick's ('30) wife. George R. Hull '18 represented the Dartmouth Club of Washington.

"Woody," as he was known after leaving college, was born on April 3, 1908, in Lakewood, Ohio, the son of Eber B. and Helen (Herron) Woodruff. He graduated from Shaw High School, in the Cleveland area, entered Dartmouth with the class of 1930 but graduated with 1931. In college Eber concentrated on his education, his major being English, which served him so well in his busy post-college years. He was a member of Alpha Tau Omega.

On May 16, 1938, at Kingston, N. Y., he and Harriet Cranston were married. Harriet and their three daughters,- Anna 13, Helen 11, Harriet 5 survive. In lieu of floral remembrances Harriet requested that donations be made to Dartmouth College, among others.

RICHARD EBEN SANKEY died of a heart attack on June 29, in Del Mar, Calif. The Class was represented at the funeral by Cliff Power, Bob Zimmerman and Vance Dickerman.

Dick was born in Seattle, Wash., July 20, 1907, and prepared for Dartmouth at West Seattle High School. In college he was a member of Sigma Chi, Sphinx, and was on the varsity boxing team.

Shortly after leaving college Dick joined the Merchant Marine, and in 1934 became a broker, having his own company. After two years he became a director, treasurer and secretary of Triplex Corporation of America in Chicago, but in 1943 resigned this position to take a commission in the U.S. Navy, serving as Lt. Commander at the time of his return to civilian life in 1946.

On moving to San Diego, Calif., he went with Arnold Realty Co., with whom he was associated until 1953 when he moved to Del Mar and became a partner in the Del Mar Realty Company, his occupation until shortly before his death. He was a member of his local Rotary Club, San Diego Realty Association, and the Rancho Santa Fe Country Club.

In 1936 Dick was married in Yakima, Wash., to Margaret R. Gambee who survives him and is now living at 3678 8th Ave., San Diego 3, Calif.

Dick will be deeply missed by all who knew him during and since his undergraduate days. He worked hard to get through the financial strains of college, holding down as many as five different jobs at the same time. His dedication to his postgraduate undertakings brought him success and glory, and many times Dick has told his close friends that Dartmouth made this possible for him. He manifested his devotion to Dartmouth by his regular and generous contributions to the Alumni Fund. His greatest quality was the sincereness with which he made and retained friends in all walks of life. To have known Dick is to have become "richer." The whole Dartmouth alumni group was enriched by his being.

1935

CARL WILLIAM HEYE died in Nantucket, Mass., on June 30, apparently ot a heart attack, while trying to rescue his son, Theodore, who was floundering in the water. The boy was saved.

Carl, who was 44, lived at 26 Lawrence Rd., Scar.sdale, N. Y., where he operated his own real estate business.

Born in Brooklyn, the son of Carl T. Heye, who was president of Guardian Life Insurance Co. of America, Carl was graduated from Pawling School before entering Dartmouth. He lived in Westchester County most of his life and was a member of the Scarsdale and Westchester realty boards.

He is survived by his wife, Cynthia Harbison Heye; three daughters, Leslie, Jocelyn and Cynthia; a son, Theodore; his mother, and a sister, Miss Marianne Heye.

Prof. Charles Ernest Bolser '97

Morton Chase Tuttle '97

William West Grant '03

Lyndon Frederick Small '50