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Page 65 text:
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'iv . , -r-' :L L: -:J L: :L L: :L LE :Q L: :L L: :U L: :Cl L: :Li D: il L: :LJ 5 L: P The Arms Student I ZWLWLWLWLLWLLTL .LWJLLTJL-7f'aTfJl.7r.L1TLf E53- ' :Q I E eel lege 3-H: Louise C. Didge has not been heard from for several years and no information can be found as to her whereabouts. Luna Johnson married Edward Fuller and moved to Berkeley, California where she still resides. George Merrill made his home in Greenfield for several years as Superinten- dent of the Water Works. Within a few years he and his family have moved to Ware, Massachusetts, where he has a sim- ilar position. Preston Comstock has for a great many years been editor of an Elgin,Illinois, news- paper. He has been in poor health for the past year and a half and is at a camp in Wisconsin where he is recovering from a serious attack of heart trouble. Among the states in the Union honored by the class are Massachusetts, Vermont, New York, and Washington. Somehow the name of Bessie Fisher is always associated with the thought of books, and she is literally Among My Books and is happy in her work with all kinds of books and people. She is in charge of the reading room at the Fellows Athenaeum, one of the larger branches of Boston Public Library system. This branch handles 35,000 books, besides mag- azines. As a diversion she is taking courses in subjects in which she is interested and says to the class that work is a fine thing, and a certain amount of play a fine thing, too. Her present address is 49 Langdon Street, Cambridge, Massachusetts. Grace Ware - how well we all remember L: :cl L: :LJ L: :LJ L: ICJ L: :LJ L: :LJ L: :U L: :J L: dl L: :J L: ii el ..r The death of Harry Goodell made the . u J., E first break in the class. gel' Vtltlghthi 'Hamm fllltl off books hlflugrlg 5'1- ..r I t 1 rms. e r1e ac mg orawie u, E Mary LOOIDIS LMrS Zerah F1Sli0l died H not feeling exactly satisfied with this, took EQ- .r few yearsnlater. She left two children, one up business and Commercial work, This JE -DE of Wh0II1 IS HOW 8 fI'0ShII18I1 at ATIIIS- was more to her taste, but this couldn't I-fl :fe , have been entirely satisfactory for she later 3 our meer' reeenl' less was In the deal? married, and is now Mrs. Harley Hoag of Q :LV ef Charles Cenedyf one ef Greenfield S 11 Pleasant Street, Newport, Vermont. 1- L? most Pfomment doctors- glsrehuebaaii is with the T. adrmco. 20- 'L The four remaining members make their elf amty- clmefsts O . r' an rs' J- -L? home in Shelburne Falls. Miss Laura Hoag and Llzme' according to accounts' E Pr: Brown, who for seme time was located in Another one of our number has wandered' EU- 1 New York City: ls new employed ln the far, Paul Guilford. His ambition took him J- D: errlee ef Mayhew Cev and hves el' her heme to Brown University from which college he :ll -1' on Maple Street. Last fall she entertained was graduated He lives in Washington 3-'E I, - - ' Lf the feuewmg members el' e delrghrfrrl State and has a wife and two children. il :U dinner at the Sweetheart Tea House: Annie According to reports he is doing very Well .r- D: Swan, of Bridge Streetg Grace Hicks, Mrs. in the Salmon Cannery business. QU- :IL E. L. Eldridge, Masonic Ave.g Winnie L .r- E Carpenter, Mrs. C. A. Loomis, 31 So. , Minnie Dwight is the wife of a success- 1 --L Maple Streetg Dorothea Binder, and Mrs. ful farmer in Colrain, Massachusetts. She ig' E Charles K. Pierce, Bridge Street. has three children. Two have been grad- -1. --L uated from Arms and she has a boy, a iq- L? senior, here now. One grandson is hers also. I? -L If you wish to reach her, address Mrs. :U -nf? 1894 Wilson Hillman, Griswoldville, Mass. WJ: 'WL -D? . d Clid Wlltite, no, not by that game! The :FUJI 1. , ignity o is position deman s the real -G'-5 To the Arms Student- thing, Charles E. white! He is ofnee Fe- '-1. The class of Arms Academy 1894, as it manager at the Lamson and Goodnow EQ- -D? separated, numbered ten. Now it has gained Manufacturing Company at Shelburne JE, 'DE another ten, yes, and more, too, including Falls, Massachusetts, makers of all kinds :Q J children and grand-children for there are of cutlery. You may reach him there or at TJ: 'LE two grandmothers in the class. his home on Bridge Street. :ifld -r J'- le il F' . - H' JL .L .L L LL J. JL JL JL LL JL JL 'J L JL JL JLTJLTJLWLWLWLWEQSP LH H if T 'TV dlE,'lTTlT'TlT Tf TF'TF'lTlTTTJV t,
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Page 64 text:
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rv a ZWJLWLWATLWLTL LTLTJLTLDTQTLTJD 53' I :J s Eel In 5 C C The Arms Student l tl ' it 1'-Il the office, as Mr. Henning became husband With a purpose strong to bravely do and D: QU: and partner both. Lila says that they work dare. p il: hard and the hours are long, but it does not s :G B,-11: matter as their brains are occupied and Now again a link is severed, E: D: they are contented. And our dear Maud has gone 9 :U af' A letter from Mark Brown bears a Fifth icfeee the 1'lVe1', to that blessed heavenly ' B: Avenue address, which reminds us 'that Shore- , p -:1- j Mark has made steady progress in his She has left el fel! Yeung daughter ' Q 7 cc aa E: chosen profession of dental surgery and Vlhe to Anne has gladly gone, qfj E that, even midst the severe competition of She S an A 1 Student there, 5 Sophomore- ' gl: New York City, he has met a notable . Q-'rl success. Mark is very happy in his home Just 3 few more Years, then Arthur BI D: circle, where three children and two grand- J01HGd the hePnV ranks above. :il 'If children give a zest to the present and a Seen dear Bertha followed after- Li if meaning to the future. NQW, alas! I d f :DQ .-L Four of us were happy to meet- all too With lockstfastfturtnlng gray, an ootsteps :U ll: briefly-at the complimentary dinner O l f H0 so .ee. 1890 1 D: Q given Professor Cowell in 1925, the first H y our remam m C ass' :L-PI J meeting in some cases since the day of , ,, ,, 1- 'L graduation We stepped out of the dim NOW heres to dear Old Arms, ig' .CW land of memory and became realities again. 'Jw best' Schegl In gba landij he rt JW: -L We trust that the reality will remain. ay pmspen y an Onor e r pa 1 :Q -DJ? W . . . And the class of 1890 sends a greeting, 1- .1 A e tare lone in our loving gratitude to each and any I 53- -lrl? aSg'g5iat?SnSeEVli?:'gerg?1i 22126821135 forlvgg That comes from every loyal beating heart. L. . J-' jg prosperity and success attend her days! Anna Morse Page' fil- -C-'5 f With ai?ctLonate greeting, dear Student, .. gl- -,. rom my us and and myself I am 1- '- Ever most cordiall ours Bertha Andrews Koenig--Deceased. rv Q: Y y f 1 Q' GRACE CANEDY TUPPER. Hattie Blanchard Raycroft, Florida, Mass. 50- 5 Arthur G. Merrill-Deceased. 1: -C5 ' Anna Morse Page - Shelburne Falls. il -D5 1899 Maud Purrington Johnson-Deceased. QT Q ,TWaS in the month of June Annie Ritchie Megathlin, Peterborough, QUE ll: . Skies and earth were all attune N' H' W. ill: 1 And Nature's chorus sang her gayest lay, Charles L. Smith - Deceased. 5-T :5 ll2lf'l1f3gS,ill'31n?30.l?Cfn3nti1Hsiiisses Geofge E- Stratton -' Montana- Lk F v v ' i 1 -r or twas 1890s graduating day. WJ: -1. g: . . . . 23 ..r Wlth his life Work 1ust begun, 1892 -L And his armor scarcely donned :Q D: . . f . :VL ghgrlle left us far a briggteiworld on high, The class of 1892 graduated with ,chip l LGI: n so our mn S were ro en, teen members of whom ten are still living. 1. -1' And to us sorrow came, J- E As we our well-loved Cl8.SSII18,lZ6 fond Minnie Mann, Who married Dr. Ernest .I Q qt g00d'hYe- Sweet, has traveled widely. She made her gl' -IE' , I home for several years in Honolulu but L. -L Then thqyears Just huffled en recently Dr. Sweet was transferred to a 5.3- -ll? filled Wlth lliughtefftleyi endi Song, I new position in Germany where he has 1. 1 any a as , some imes sa ness, goom taken his family, 53- D: and care L '-Qtr But with lifted hlead, step light, We suppose that Lydia James is still ij' -li? Each one boldly marched along located in Granville, N. Y. L Ji Ti il 5 JT J LLLALLLJLJLJLLJLJLJ E523 Qliruirilrfl-rtrlhrilrihr-L-rhrllrilir if T 'W 'W 'W if 'W 'W 'W W Q53
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Page 66 text:
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:UE Eu: D: ....!' T2 Ti 5 E .J' 'L E 'ii .r -L. L? '-L. -5 E: JLWLTJ LWTJ Lit' LWTJL J 'FLW Hi? J LTA La? as E ls Li E E 'DE if E51 .-V 5 I D: Ei The Arms Student I O FLW l1TfJl.'iT'Jl1'TfJ'1'fJL'1fJl1 Q LU' shud JL HUA Mm UTLLWLWLTLTLWLTE 52,- :Q E531 1313 lg Mary Hunter, after teaching a few years, married, and is now Mrs. Mary Abraham of North Tarrytown, New York. Her hus- band conducts a painting and paper hang- ing business. Edward Dickinson, always a thinking man, has plenty of time for this favorite diversion. He lives alone on a farm in Charlemont, Massachusetts. Mrs. C. A. Stewart, 27 Lincoln Street, Greenfield, Massachusetts is the present address of our Sadie Miller. She has one daughter who is attending Bay Path Institute fitting herself for a commercial teacher. They also have an adopted son. Mary Reynolds is the wife of William Tilliman, Rector of the Episcopal church at Port Henry, New York. They have two children. 4 Alice Burrington, Mrs. John Temple, has gained a residence in Shelburne Falls having lived there for the past twenty- three years, her husband being in the meat businessj She has three children all of whom have been graduated from Arms. She also has one grand-daughter to her credit. Wishing the Arms Student many success- ful years, We are most sincerely yours, THE CLASS or 1894. 1895 I think the Class of '95 has the distinc- tion of being the smallest class to 'graduate from Arms and, also, of being a hit-a-miss class, as Phillip 'Merrill was the only one to graduate who had been a member the whole four year. The class was formed in the last days of the special class which many of the entering students joined, deciding later on their final class. Among the early members were: Alice Gould Mitchel, who married soon after leaving school, has become the mistress of Mitchel's Strawberry Farm on the Buckland Road. Vivian Griswold Williams of Ridgewood, N. J. left school at the end of the second year to attend board- ing school. Edith Gillett Jones was a member of the class but,did not graduate. She now lives in Shelburne Falls. Frank Innis, another early member, left school the last year to enter Merrick's Clothing Store as a clerk and is now pro- prietor of one of Shelburne Falls' three clothing stores. Maud Davenport Wilder, recently deceased, leaves a son who is a sophomore at Arms. Most of the seven members to graduate joined the class in September 1893. Marion Orcutt Ferguson taught in several local schools, later studying music at Poultney, Vermont. She married Rev. Harry Ferguson, a Methodist preacher of New York State, where they have had a number of pastorates. For nearly four years she has been at her old home in Buckland caring for her father who passed away last October. She is now with her husband in West Chazy, N. Y. She has no children. Elinor Fife Buell is living in Boston where Mr. Buell's business is located but spends her summers at their home in Shelburne Falls, living there most of the time. Her children were attending Arms from which two have graduated and are now in college. Her youngest is in high school. I am unable to hear anything about Blanch Elmer only that she married and went to New York City. Carrie Bolton Kingsley was a success- ful teacher finally marrying and living in Jacksonville, Vermont and later in North Heath where she died in 1914. She had no children. S Mary Gould Davenport taught a short time, then married Walter Davenport of Colrain living a short time in both Colrain and Rowe. They moved to Shelburne in Shelburne and now in the Patten district She has four children all of whom have attended Arms, one graduating in the class of 1922, andlater from M. A. C. in 1926 i 6 D: Fl l :G D: :G D2 :U ll: so L: :G D: :fi B: :fi ll: :U lk: FQ lst il I 55 : f-I lf: a sg iii' -Fi ST ii il sg sg fi ,H- 1 - f is :Q . ., 1. J. 1... J... 'l.. 1903 where she has since lived, first at East A irq- :il L-- s Q'.L7f'.L.W.IE1TJL'fJ1if'L.i?J LTJ LW LTLTJ WJ LW Lv-J LTA LWLWLWLWJLWLTLWJL ' g 64 ffl JT..
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