Having been laid up on the shelf for the past two months, there hasn't been much class secretarial work accomplished, but in any event, we don't want to break the continuity of the column by having a month with no letter, so we'll give you what we have as it has trickled in.
An interesting clipping comes to me from the College office from the San Francisco News of September 8, setting forth in detail the wedding of Al Livingston and Mrs. Dorothy (Cooper) Willis at a simple ceremony at the home of the bride. The bride's mother, Mrs. Frank Cooper, was matron of honor, and Al's best man was Carl Melugin. The new Mrs. Al is a graduate of Leland Stanford and a Kappa alumna and during the present war has been an ardent and active worker at the Stage Door Canteen for servicemen, as was Al, and it was here that they met. After an extended honeymoon, they will reside in San Francisco where Al for many years has been an executive of the Prudential Insurance Co.
Fall was on us before we knew it, and the usual intrepid crew which seldom misses an opener in Hanover was on the job at the Holy Cross game George Simpson, Eben Clough, Howie Wing, Jack Mason, Speed Henderson, Kike Richardson (with his partner Sam Woolcott). The boys were particularly pleased to meet in Hanover Pat Gear who hasn't been to any gatherings lately. It wasn't much of a game, nor did it show much in the way of future prospects, but after all, it was an opener and it was in Hanover and it was an annual gathering, and therefore, be it recorded, extremely satisfactory. And as for me, it was a good weekend, for most of them made the trek back to Boston by way of Lawrence and visited with me for a couple of pleasant hours.
The deadline for copy falls so close to Boston events of the month that, to get a full report, it will need to go over to the next issue —but as this is written the Boston group intends to make a real event of the Notre Dame game, before, at and after, with, I understand, quite a contingent of New Yorkers coming over.
Change of addresses supplied by the College office: Lt. Col. Marvin L. Frederick, 2923 So. Columbus St., Arlington, Va.; Thomas D. Hamson Jr., 3409 W. Laurelhurst Drive, Seattle, Wash.; Clarence L. Wanamaker, 1230 6th Ave., New York 20, N. Y.; Walter Wanger, 515 S. Mapleton, Los Angeles, Calif.
EDITOR'S NOTE: The paragraph in lastmonth's issue about the death of Warren E.Carleton should have been the last item in the1914 column rather than the first in the 1915notes. The printer is sorry and so are we fornot catching it.
Secretary, Box 697, Lawrence, Mass. Treasurer, . 31 State St., Boston, Mass.