Sixteen of our classmates still carry on. A brief look at our activities and our present addresses will help us to keep in touch.
1. Appleton, Box 615, R.D. 1, Bellmar, N. J. Teddie is retired after long years in the field of accounting.
2. Balch, 302 Main Street, Stoneham, Mass. Billie has retired after many years of engineering and construction with time out to participate in all the wars he could find. His awards were many, given for efforts beyond the demands of duty.
3. J. D. Brown, Richford Hotel, Rochester, N. Y. Long activity with maps for schools, maps developed to teach local history.
4. Frank Drew, 60 Glenwood St., Maiden, Mass. He has worked in titles as a lawyer does with backward tracing (to the Indians). Some old records are outstanding. Here is one from a Connecticut record: The land had been stolen from the Indians but the Yankees wanted to record a good title by resolution of the Council which reads: "Resolved that the Earth is the Lord's and the fullness thereof; resolved that the Earth be given to the Saints; resolved that we are the Saints."
5. W. H. Ham, 118 Brooklawn Ave., Bridgeport, Conn. Surveying state and town lines in Massachusetts and Rhode Island. Worked on sewers and water supply as a sanitary engineer; on reinforced concrete construction and design for seven bridges, dams and factories. Later built homes for industrial workers, nine villages with 1300 brick homes.
6. Henderson, 52 Williams St., Rutland, Vt. Rancher, orange growing and then long years as a minister - one of the best. John is now retired.
7. Holt, 45 Pleasant St., Newton Center, Mass. Lawyer for income activity. Collecting of interesting fine arts items. Use of color photographs of nature's hidden treasures to the extent of becoming a connoisseur.
8. Kelly, 68451 East Pleasant Row, Parkway, Indianapolis,-Ind. Medicine for income and lots of activities with guiding youth in athletics. He is also connected with a savings bank as director and former president.
9. Morse, 59 Commonwealth Ave., Boston. Early years manufacturing of hats for women. Later years he has been in the bond business.
10. Noyes, 14 North Ave., Melrose Highlands, Mass. Lawyer, church work and a close student of ethics. He is a former president of the Twentieth Century Club of Boston.
11. Pender, 40 Wyatt St., Garden City, N. Y. Lawyer with many activities connected with Dartmouth football teams and athletics in general, particularly at the time the Ivy League was formed. He is now active in law in the New York area.
12. Rowe, Warner, N. H. A few years of teaching and long years making fine books with the Plimpton Press. Teddie is now retired.
13. Sibley, 509 State Mutual Bldg., Worcester, Mass. Lawyer, judge and with all the keenest wit of our class. He is a combination of President Coolidge and Mr. Dooley. I hope he answers this charge as he has other items about him in the ALUMNI MAGAZINE.
14- Ward, 9 Bellevue St., Worcester, Mass. A long-time doctor and also a leader in the movement to eliminate river pollution. This movement is of great importance to all of New Eneland.
15. Smith, 480 Belmont Ave., Springfield, Mass. Erdix is a true fisherman like Sir Isaac Walton, only more so. He takes time off to earn a living as a surgeon, but in trout and salmon runs, better keep well if you are one of his patients.
16. Watson, Warner, N. H. He is our longtime minister and has had no other activity. He is outstanding in his chosen profession. His life has been in the church. He was born in the parsonage in my home town, a few days after my own birth.
Secretary, Treasurer and BequestChairman, 114 State St. Bridgeport 3, Conn.