122 THE ALUMNI JOURNAL 



CLASS NOTES. 



At the recent meeting of the A. Ph. A. the papers submitted by Otto 

 Raubenheimer, of Brooklyn, Class '88, were read by Acting Secretary 

 Wilbert and commented upon by him. He said it repaid any one the 

 long journey to have the privilege of hearing these papers: Milk of 

 Bismuth, Liquor Picris Carbonis and Burrow's Solution, contrbuted by 

 Otto Raubenheimer, and he urged careful attention to them when they 

 appeared in print. He has been elected chairman of the section on 

 Practical Pharmacy and Dispensing at the recent meeting of the 

 American Pharmaceutical Association in Los Angeles, Cal., and will, 

 no doubt, prepare an interesting as well as instructive program for the 

 1910 meeting of the A. Ph. A., which will be held at Richmond, Va., 

 May i6th, 1910. 



We regret very much to learn that our old chum and alumnus, Billy 

 Hoburg, has not been feeling very well lately. He writes that he has 

 been under the weather some time and has not been able to go around 

 much and see his colleagues. His father has been confined to bed for 

 some tme. He wishes to be remembered to all the boys and girls. 

 Billy has his business at 1292 Nostrand Avenue, Brooklyn. 



Chas. A. Lotz, '00, was the happy recipient of twins (a boy and a 

 girl) on September nth. Quite a record — who's next? 



William Pruss, '04, of Brooklyn, held a voting contest for the most 

 popular school teacher last month. Each five-cent purchase entitled the 

 purchaser to a vote in Billy's drug store at 92 Hamburg Avenue. 

 Wonder did Billy make friends with some of those pretty teachers ? 



For hints on window dressing call on Fred. Linning. He has those 

 in the Stuyvesant section of Brooklyn "beaten to a frazzle." 



I saw Tommy Davies talking to a lady in a sheath gown at Brighton 

 last week. It took him an hour to find out that he was standing on 

 the wrong side of her. 



Nelson S. Kirk, '94, has two stores in Brooklyn, N. Y., one, his 

 headquarters, is at 168 Rutledge Street and the other (branch), 329 

 Park Avenue. His sign also reads Kirk Drug Co. How is that for a 

 hustler? You can't keep a good man down. 



