Page 117 - 1926 February - To Dragma
P. 117

280 TO DRAGMA OF ALPHA OMICRON PI

elers, opticians and department stores. Enjoys it, and we are happy
together." (34 Benefit St., Providence, R. I.)
the Tlohses osyf mhperathmyotohfere. very Iota is extended to Lucie Burwash in
muchMabreytteTr,ehMonaryh.as been quite i l l with the flu. Hope it's much,

     Bertha Stein is teaching in a Mexican school this year, and
expects to be thoroughly Mexicanized by the end of the term.
     Bee Lery and her mother are in San Louis Obispo, just a few
blocks from Nina G. Abbery. Bee reports that Nina's baby is ador-
able—very light hair and one mass of ringlets.
     Mate Giddings spent an afternoon with Ruth Newton shortly
before Christmas. She reported that Minnie Pido was getting quite
experienced in vaccination—she vaccinated some 1,200 people before
Christinas.

paignThaelumbanzaaearhealndd, nCethteridstmabaosutca$r1d20.sale which the Urbana-Cham-
Ray Wesson is back in La Crosse, Wis., after trying teaching
last year, and has decided to be a librarian or  .
     Kay, Anna Kirk and Ruth Newton, bless 'em, voluntarily sent
me most of the above news. It was a mighty thoughtful act on
the part of each of them, for they know I'm almost down in the
gulf, where Iota news items are few.

                                              KNGAGEMENTS

      Kay reports that Helen Wolfe has "gone and got herself engaged
to Henry ("Hank") Erskine—one time of Sparta, Wis., now of Chicago."
Chicago."

                                                MARRIAGES

     Dorothy Hull to Mr. Bergman at the Hotel Lincoln in Urbana,
with a beautiful ceremony.

                                                  BIRTHS

proudA onfewhersobnoytso. Ruth Bernreuter Watts in October. Ruth is mighty
     Margaret Helen, born to Elsie and John Waldo, Nov. 7, 1925.
     Richard Lantz Dickinson, new son of Mildred and "Dick," born

Aug. 31, 1925, at Eureka.

                                                                   MARY CAI.DWF.LL WEDGE.

                                             TAU
      During the first week in December Betty Bond forsook us for
 Chicago. She visited Mary D. Drummond and attended the Found-
ers' Day banquet in that thriving village.
      St. Margaret's Academy in Minneapolis appreciates Alpha Os.
Dorothy Hines '25 is the second Tau girl in recent years to teach
there.
      New York has temporarily claimed our own Gertrude Hartman
'18. She is pursuing a library course, there.
      The newly weds, Bernice Nelson Gambell '24 and her recently
acquired husband, have announced that they will attend the winter
formal. Bernice is working with Joanna Colcord in the Children's
Protective Society. She is a warm admirer of her co-worker.
      Nora Rolf '23 was recently seen in a Minneapolis street car.
She is associated with the Minneapolis public school system in a
medical advisory capacity.
     Laura Hartman '12 is separated by a mere continent from Ger-
trude. She is now a true Californian. Nothing is unusual save the
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