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g_ THE KENTUCKY ALKUMNUS. 35 l
} From the profuse compliments showered on the members by our fair . i
  guests, similar meetings will be in order this winter. The married members are `
` heartily in favor of these open meetings as it eliminates tl1e necessity of an `
i S explanation, inasmuch as the time worn club excuse no longer passes the censor. `
— R G. Cutler, wife and children, Mary a11d Samuel (1034), attended the
,_ Golden _lubilee, making the trip in their automobile. Immediately after the
“ football game they wended their way to Chicago, making the entire trip with only i
` one minor mishap, a puncture.
  The writer was the other member of the club to attend the ]ubilee, having
=j planned his vacation at this time.
_l. H. Gardner, `ogt, vice—president of the Alumni Association, was our
‘ honored guest for a few clays having come from Tulsa, Okla., to investigate the . t
7 \\farrior Coal and Oil fields. [
C George A. Scott, `I3, and wife have returned to Paducah, Ky., to locate after ,
` 21 sojourn of three months in this locality. George came to recuperate from a ;
slight fever. \\`hile here he and his wife were the guest of relatives at *
- Roebuck Springs. l
_} A. B. Haswell, ’11, o11r efficient secretary and treasurer, llIlS entirely recovered  
*. from his attack of typhoid fever. He recently returned from his former home in  
1 Hardinsburg, Ky., where he was tl1c guest of his parents for a 1UOlltll.  
' Guy Jeffries, `ig, has left the Sea Board Air Line and l1as accepted a more 1
" responsible position in the Land Department of the Tennessee Coal, Iron and [
l- Railroad Company. Q
- Occasionally we hear from R. G. Stevens, '13, wl1o travels extensively in the  
interest of .~\labama Power Company. "Bob" recently returned from \\'est 1 »
v_ \il1`Q`lIllIl with the girl of l1is choice. F
Our former President, _I. Miles Sprague, wishes to matriculate his son
_, Edmond Scott Sprague in tl1e Cla.ss of 1037. Notwithstanding his son and his y
’ *·—_ "Hiver," _l. Miles still finds time to devote to the interest of the club.
_ NE\\’ YORK CLUB. .
g _ Bv L. L. ].E\\`lS·, President. j
lt has occurred to the writer that, in place of selecting men, here and there,
Q   as fit subjects for this article, it would be interesting to take some one of the i
if ° big concerns and write of tl1e men connected with it.
1 · The following will serve to give you an idea of what some of the men whom ¥
I the University llZlS furnished, are doing for the \\`estcrn Electric Company in ,
d l, New York. _ _ ,
1 R. C. Hopgood, of tl1e Class of 1016, entered their employ as apprentice in _
,. ¥ Chicago, immediately after graduation. He advanced to tl1e engineering depart— 1
' , ment, to Engineer of Methods in the cable shops and to Cable Engineer in a {
1 few years. He was then transferred to the patent department and soon after l
took up the study of Law in Kent College, Chicago, Ill., and traits- E
ferred from Chicago to New York. ln 1012 he entered the New York Law  
School and was admitted to practice in the State of New York in lt)l.t, and has 1
i since been in charge of certain branches of their patent and allied work. He {
ul · married Miss Margaret Brown, the daughter of an old State man, in November,  
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lf A. Akin, of the Class of 1005 passed immediately from tl1e work of ]
W I apprentice to that of Development Engineer. He has found development work l
T} _ congenial and has been very successful in this field, devoting l1is entire time  
~ _ from 1007 to tl1e present time to this kind of work. He was married in 1008 to )
`Y; Q Miss Ayline lones, of Princeton, Ky. l
M ·;_ C. C. Stackhouse, ’o4, went from the apprenticeship work to the \\`esting— ’
V » house Electric Company, tl1ence to the Steel Corporation and back to the l
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