THE ALUMNI JOURNAL 35 



in the shops of various kinds, without detracting one bit from their 

 lieart's warm beating. 



Young men, if you want to go to the bad, you can get there (juick 

 enough ; but if you want to be honest and care-free, take the world 

 easy. Don't rush through things. Be easy and honest. There is work 

 enough for )ou all. There is honor enough for you all. But go where 

 you may, do not forget that you are an American citizen. Claim all the 

 honors of being one and remember the Flag! That it is your own, 

 and that }our fathers have made it respected from one end of the 

 globe to the other. 



CLASS NOTES. 



"Blizzard Class," 1888. 



Those present at the dinner held March 12, 191 3, at Terrace Garden, 

 were : 



E. F. Miller, who ow-ns a store in Tremont. 



Wm. G. Kugler, who is traveling for the Seamless Rubber Co. 



J. Graham Reeves owns a store in Yonkers. 



A. A. Jackson owns a store in New York City. 



W. A. Keyler owns a store in Bloomfield, N. J. 



Emil A. Bischoff practices medicine in New York. 



J. P. Frawley owns a store in Bangor, Me. His son, a student at 

 the College of Pharmacy, was also present. 



Chas. W. Bartlett owns a store in Brooklyn. 



Louis Wedel owns a store in Brooklyn. He has developed into a 

 great yachtsman and is Commodore of a Yacht Club. 



F. P. Tuthill is a professor in the Brooklyn College of Pharmacy. 

 He also travels for Parke, Davis & Co. 



Walter S. Reed practices medicine in Long Branch, N. J. He is 

 the President of the Class of '88. 



Mrs. Rose S. Brunner is the good housewife of Dr. Brunner. She 

 was on the roll of honor and won a set of chemical apparatus in con- 

 sequence of it. She admitted that she still remembered some chemical 

 formula, but that the science of housekeeping had superseded phar- 

 macy in the last 25 years, 



Arthur T. Brown has a store in Sag Harbor, N. Y. 



